1983-84_v06,n22_Imprint

Page 1

1

l~ntestCampus Rec schedule inside!l


Imprint. Friday, January

-

Friday,

Jan. 6 -

Poetry WLU is looking for submission of poems, prose, short stories or journal entries (typed, double-spaced) and graphics (black line 5 in. x 7 in. or smaller) for its annual issue. Send SASE, Deadline Jan. 15/84. All works considered and we welcome new writers. Send to Poetry WLU, Eng. Dept., Wilfrid Laurier University. Discount Bus Pass for $97. This pass is valid for the first four months of 1984 for travel on Kitchener Transit buses, and the offer applies only to full-time students. Passes are on sale until January 12th in the Federation office, C,C235. There is an additional charge of $2.00 for a photo I.D. Card if applicable. Photos are available in the Federation offices from 11 a.m. till 3 p.m. Each day until the 12th of January. For more information, call the Fed office at 885-0370 or ext. 3880. Bombshelter opens 12 noon until 1 a.m., Monday to Friday. Saturday 7 p.m. - 1 a.m., after 9 p.m. Feds, nocover; others$l.OOafter 9 p.m. FASS 1984 - Last night of auditions for the funniest show in February. Actors, techies, poster people and musicians welcome. Humanities Theatre, 7:30 p.m. Bring running shoes and right hemisphere of brain. St. Jerome’s Performing Arts Series presents Gallipoli, Peter Weir (Australian). 8 p.m., Siegfried Hall. Admission $1.00. ’ Fed Flicks - Raiders of the Lost Ark, starring Harrison Ford anh Karen Allen. s p.m. AL 116. Feds $1.00, others $2.00.

- Saturday, Bombshelter Fed Flicks

Jan. 7 -

- See Friday. -

See Friday.

-Sunday, International folkdancing.

Jan.B-

Folkdancing. Recreational Beginners are welcome and

instruction will be provided. Partners are not needed. When: every other Sunday evening starting today at 7:30 p.m. Adult Recreation Centre. King and Allen, Waterloo. Fee $2.50 per person. For further information call 5762653 or 579-1020. Fed Flicks

in Nigeria. Computer.

-

Bombshelter

Jewish Student Association presents Premiere Bagel Brunch with delicious Montreal Bagels. For more information please call Deb at 886-9866 or Gary at 7461784. Come out for great food. Don’t forget: $5.00 membership fee. 11:30 a.m. - 1 p.m. CC 110. Debating Club meets in St. Jerome’s Come out and join the fun. 5 p.m.

OSAP Clinic. 9:30 - 4:30 p.m. Main Floor Campus Centre. Sponsored by the Education Commission, Federation of Students.

Tuesdav. Clinic -

Bombshelter

,

Jan. 10 -

SeeMonday -

Jan. ll-

Bombshelter

- See Monday

See Monday

Bus Pass - See Friday ’ Noon Concert featuring John Tickner, Free trumpet. Sponsored by CGC Music Dent. 12:36 p.m. Conrad Grebel College Chapel.

- see Monday

Waterloo Christian Fellowship Supper Meeting. 4:30 p.m. in EL2536. Guest speaker will be Glyn Owen, speaking on “Love Your God”. Debating Club meets in St. Jerome’s Come out and join the fun. 5 p.m.

- Friday, OSAP

Jewish Students Association Premiere Bagel Brunch with delicious Montreal Bagels. For more information please call Deb

-

see Monday

I I

Campus Monday,

Events are , due at

Clinic

Jan. 12 -

- See Monday.

I

500 p.m. for Friday

publication.

- Thursday,

Jan. 13 -

- see Monday

Fed Flicks - 48 Hours starring Nick Nolte and Eddie Murphy. 8 p.m. AL 116. Feds $1.00, others $2.00.

“Why a Rabbi believes in Palestinian Rights”. Rabbi Reubin Slonim will be speaking in the Humanities Theatre at 8 p.m. Admission is free. Sponsored bv Palestine Heritage.

Information Meeting. Education a priority in Nigeria. Lucy eckard, CUSO teacher 1976-78,81-83 will present education

Clinic

Bombshelter

Junior Farmers Club organizational meeting for the term. Members old and new are invited to come out and get involved. 8 p.m. HH 373. Call Ken at 744-5912 for more info.

OSAP

229.

Parachute Club back in the area for their second performance. Get tickets earlyin the Fed office. Sponsored by Bent of the Federation of Students. 8 p.m. Waterloo Inn.

Science for Peace presents the awardwinning documentary film, “How Much Is Enough”, the story of the uncontrolled growth of the world’s nuclear weapons arsenals. Admission free. Biology 1, Rm. 271, 7:30 p.m.

Cinema Gratis presents Omeqqa Man. 9:30 p.m. Campus Centre Great Hall. Sponsored by the Turnkeys. Free.

See Friday

NDP Club (UW) Organizatonal Meeting to discuss plans for the term and the upcoming provincial convention. Open to all interested students. For further information Phone Rob* 743-2335.12:30 p.m.CC 135. *

see Friday

Students of Objectivism - Two taped lectures: interview with Ayn Rand a by Raymond Newman (Oct. ‘80) and“WhyIam for Fre,e Enterprise” by George Reisman. Everyone is invited. CC 135,7 p.m.

, CUSO

- See Monday

Bus Pass -

Bent of the Federation of Students present Reverend Ken and his Lost Followers. Free show before Cinema Gratis. 7:30 p.m. Campus Centre Great Hall. .

229.

I

at 886-9866 or Gary at 746-1784. Come out for great food. Don’t forget, $5.00 membership fee. 11:30 - 1 p.m. CC 110.

&

Jewish Student Association/Hillel First General Meeting. Want to get involved? Want more information? Want to see who is in town? Want to attend the Wine and Cheese? Come to MC 6091A to find out. Don’t forget the Bagel Brunch on Monday and Thursday. For more info call Deb - 8869866 or Gary - 746- 1784.

Jan. 9 -

Bus Pass - see Friday.

-

Clinic

Bus Pass -

Bombshelter is open from 12 noon until 1 a.m. Monday - Friday; 7 p.m. - 1 a.m. Saturday. D.J. after 9 p.m. Feds, no cover; others $1.00 after 9 p.m.

OSAP

Wednesday,

OSAP

- See Friday.

- Monday,

7:30 p.m. Rm. 3005, Math Info ext. 3144.

6,19&a

university

I

Free to the

community.

Imprint

reserves the right to edit. I

..C~sifieds Personal Gay young man wishes to meet same for friendship and fun. 1 am not into bars or clubs. Doug, 579-l 505. No cranks or harassing calls please. II Are you a Turtle? Laurel - when do we meet in the back of the truck again? will you pout? ML.. You bet your sweet ***I

am.

High! Thorn and Tecks have returned for the final blow out. Ein Prosit! What’s a Turtle? Blatant filler ad to separate the last from the next; aren’t we at Imprint sweet?

I’m a Turtle. She’s a Turtle. They’re all Turtles. Wouldn’t you like to be a Turtle too? Be a Turtle... (sung to the tune of Dr. Pepper).

For Sale 2 Oak, 2 steel office desks, oak swivel chair, odd chairs, credenza storage cabinet, wardrobe, table mirror, chest of drawers, 884-2806. Hondo Acoustic Guitar. Mint condition. 6 months old. Asking $190.00. Case included. 893-j 152. E.P.I. Tower Speakers. For professional use or quality listening. $500.00 eakh. Call Sandy/ leave message 74% 8001 or 885-0308.

1 I I I I

Wanted Good guitarist is looking musicians or a band to with. Personal preference jazz-rock but likes to anything. Call Daniel 2625 or ext. 2847.

for jam is play 884-

Applications for part-time employment in the Campus Centre for the position of Turnkey will be accepted from January 2nd, 1984 to January 6th, 1984. All Applications must be submitted at the Turnkey desk by 6 p.m. on January 6th, 1984.

TYPiw Typist - 75c/ page. Executive secretary wishing extra work

after hours will students. Proficient, typist. Satisfaction teed. Call 886-6988. Quick Day Near book

bookings accepted; thesis, papers, letters, etc. Anna 886-

type for accurate guarap-.

9746.

Maggie Can Type It! Essays, thesis, letters $1 .OO per page. Resume $5.00. Minimum cha_rge $5.00. “Free” pickup and delivery. Phone 743-l 976.

typing on qualify paper. after, same day service. Seagram Stadium. May ahead. Phone 885-1353.

Typing. $ I .OO/ page IBM Selectric; carbon ribbon; grammar/ spelling corrections; paper provided; proofreading included; symbols/ italics available; work term reports, theses, essays. 579-55 13 evenings. Downtown Kitchener location.

Experienced typist, IBM Selectric, Engineering Symbols. Reasonable rates, will pick-up and deliver to campus. Mrs. Lynda Hull, 579-0943.

Theresia’s Typing Service. Resumes-Reports-Thesis. 576 1997.

Ottawa -- available January. Nice new bachelor. West end. Near bus. Unfurnished. $350 /month. Call Ruth 576-8932.

I I I I I I I I Purchase any 8 or 12 slice pizza at the I regular price and receive a 2nd pizza I of equal size and value for $2.00 more I with this &upon I I I \ I I I I rl-~~~~~.D~lll~~~~~sl,~~~~~~,-~r-~

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. 1

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Classifieds are due Monday, 5:00 p.m. 20 words for 75~ plus 5c/ extra word. Imprint reserves the right to edit.

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Coupon valid Sungay through Thursday on pick-up and in the dining room only. One coupon per customer per visit. Not valid for Deep Dish Pizza, Father’s Night Special or on delivery orders.

I I I I

Licenced Uiider L.L.B.O. We Honour Visa, Mastercard, American Express

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324 HIGHLAND KITCHENER 7446311

One responsible 2B Co-op student wants tidy furnished apartment close to campus starting May 1984. Will share, alternate, sublet, or lease for remainder of University. Richard (Toronto) 233-65 17 (will reimburse caller).

Female room-mate wanted to share large two-bedroom apt.

Offer Valid Only At

28 KING ST. N. WATERLOO 8864830

Housing Wanted

Housing Availtable

Courteous accurate and reliable typing, adjacent to campus; 80a:/double spaced page;

PLUS 1

605-l 80 prybeck Crescent. Share Master Bdrm, fully furnished, $140 per month, $70 for the first month. Call Sandy at 885-0308 or 7458001.

1

I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I

January 19, 1984

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Imprint.

’ N~wsjiirorn

in September. Words, the September newest service provided by the Federation, is a word processing service primarily for resumes but also for Fall enrolment is 15,088 full-time undergraduate essays,, term papers, letters, etc. Rates are students; 1,332 full-time graduate students; 7,535 competitive and the service is available to all feepart-time students. Total - 23,955. paying members of the Federation. Words is Faculty of ,Mathematics sets up new Division of operated out of the Federation offices in the CC. Mathematics for Industry and Business with Dr. Federation Hall progressed very smoothy until William Pulleyblank as director: It will focus on early November when it was tendered for research and teaching in math-related areas of construction. When the tenders were opened the business, industry and management. Faculty - lowest was more than $400,000 over budget. The members from WLU’s school of business are building is currently being modified to bring the expected to become involved. project within budget; and will be re-tendered in late Several UW faculty members are honored January. When the tenders are opened in early including: Prof. Gerry Mueller, chemical engineer February it is expected that a contract will be - Sons of Martha Award from the Association of awarded at that time and that construction will Professional Engineers of Ontario(APE0); Murray follow shortly thereafter. An advisory committee Moo-Young, APE0 outstanding achievement has been set up to monitor progress and to medal and also honorable mention in Ernest C. advise the President of the Federation. Each society Manning Foundation (one of two honored, out of has been asked to name one representative to the 113 persons nominated); Prof. Frank Karasek, committee, which will also number all the members chem,istry, named Frederick Wachtmeister profesof the Board of Directors of the Federation. It is sor at Virginia Military Institute, during fall term; expected that the committee will meet once a week Dr. William Dyck, Germanic and Slavic languages during the month of January and less frequently in ’ and literatures, book published in his honor. the following months. Imprint sponsors workshop for student reports KW Transit passes are now available in the with Trent Frayne, Globe and Mail; Joe Sinasac, KFederation Offices to all ful-time students at the . W Record; Jack Adams, ,U W information services; University. $97 buys four separate passes, each good Prof. Mack Laing, UWO’s school of journalism, for one month of unlimited travel on the transit Len Gamache, former Imprint editor. system. Anyone wishing to purchase the passes must Institute for Experimental Mechanics is establishfirst buy a photo ID card from the K W Transit ed oncampus, Prof. Jerzy Pindera, civilengineering, Authority in the main bus terminal next to Kitchener director. Market Square. Federation fees have been ,indexed to inflation as ~ October the result of an amendment to the Federation ByLaws passed a general meeting in November. The National Universities Week (October 2-8) annual increase will take effect each September but launched with giant street dance in downtown must be ratified at each Annual General Meeting. Waterloo, sponsored by students, Oct. 1. . The first increase will occur in September of 1984 ~ New rink on campus, Columbia Icefield is subject to ratification in March. officially opened, in conjunction with National Another By-law amendment, passed in November Universities Week. The $1.5 million rink is being now afforts the Federation the opportunity to financed entirely by students. pursue charging the Federation fee to part-time New addition to St. Paul’s College opens. students on a pro-rated basis according to the UW officially launches Institute for Biotechnumber of courses a student is registered in.’ * nology Research with “Biotechnology Day”, with The arena, visitors from government, Canadian and U.S. named Columbia Icefield, was biotechnology industry, and others. officially opened on October 2 and has been tremendously well received by almost everyone on Hon. Donald J. Johnston, minister of state for ’ campus. There is a free skate every week day at noon. science and technology and minister for economic Varsity hockey has settled in and most intramural development, federal government, visits campus hockey and broomball has beenscheduled in the new and reports he is favourably impressed. , arena.- Day-long computer workshop assesses impact of Federation Bus tickets to Toronto are now being computers on (1)industry; (2) education and-(3) sold from Monday to Friday. The only catch is that leisure. you must purchase your bus ticketduringthe week in Prof. .Ken Ledbetter reported 88 per cent of first year students passed the English Language which you want to travel. Proficiency examination; in 1976, when the As of September 1, 1983 the Federation’s Student examination was introduced, only 53 per cent Supplementary Health Insurance Plan is being ’ underwritten by Mutual Life Insurance Company. passed. Prior to September 1 the underwriter was ConfederFall convocation saw honorary degrees awarded to Signe and Robert McMichael, founders of The ation Life Insurance Company. The change was made in order to realizea reduced premium increase; McMichael Canadian Collection, Kleinburg,and to a savings of slighly more than 25 per cent was Prof. Murray Klamkin, University of Alberta, formerly of UW. realized.‘ . b

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11 am - 1 am Thurs Friday

November -

The largest meeting in the history of the Canadian Association of Sports Sciences, hosted by UW’s kinesiology department, was held in Kitchener, with 18 invited speakers and 146 research papers. A dinner at the Harbour Castle Hilton Hotel, Toronto, raised half a million dollars in support of a newly established J. Page R. Wadsworth chair in accounting and finance, at U W. The chair is named after a distingished Canadian banker, now retired, and former chairman of U W’s board of governors. A number of administrative changes were made within the university following the resignation, last summer, of Bruce Gellatly, vice-president, finance and operations, who is taking a similar post at the LJniversity of British Columbia (starting Jan. 1, 1984). Pat Robertson has been named vicepresident, finance and operations; Jack Robb has been named treasurer; Prof. Wes Graham has been named dean of computing and communications; Ernie Lucy has been appointed director ofemployee and student services. A new feature was added to U W’s thriving (6,000 students during the fall term) correspondence program: teleconferencing, to a number of offcampus locations including locations in Ottawa, Toronto and Sudbury. The Faculty of Engineering announced a new student award, the Sir Casimir Stanislaus Gzowski Medal, for excellence in communication. - . . .

December U W’s biology department was given an “A” rating by the Ontario Council on Graduate Studies, best rating it is possible to receive. The Financial Post reported glowingly of UW’s research involvement with industry in Canada -particularly high tech industry. It noted a number of industries has spun off from the university through the success of graduates. d

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$5

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and Saturday 11 am - 3 am Sunday 4 pm - 12 Midnight

the University

Gallipoli

Friday,

PICK UP, DELIVERY, AND EAT-IN CALL 886-6122 160 University Ave. W., Waterloo (In

further ‘pgrade the ‘ystem. ’ Waterloo’s Very Large Scale Integration (VLSI) Group, part of the Institute for Computer Research, received the largest grant ever made to a university by NSERC - $1.6 million over the next three years, for continued work on the VLSI area; thegroupalso hosted the First Canadian Conference on very Large Scale Integration. Canadian writer Susan Mu&rave spent the fall term on the campus as writer in residence. Waterloo’s co-ordination department reported 98.8 per cent of co-op students were placed in work term jobs, during the fall, a considerable improvement over placement figures for the previous three terms. The improvement was made despite the fact more students were lookingforco-op jobs.

AUTHENTIC

Submarines starting at $2.25 We also have lasagna, panzerotti and garlic bread.

Hours:

International Business Machines announced it will be marking a computer network system developed on the UW campus, Waterloo microNET. Under the marketing agreement between the company and Waterloo, the university expects to receive $4 million, over the next four years, most of which will be spent to service customers and to

featuring

presents .. ti

3

6,1984

Fall term re-G&wed by Bob Whitton Special to Imprint

by Tom Allison Special to Imprint Words began operating

Friday, January

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Building I

The result is each specialist within the group tends to focus on his or her own unique area of concern, throughout the design process, and no one has a handle on the qeustionas to how all the innovations, taken together, will affect the building’s inhabitants. Izumi, who designed the Saskatchewan Centre of the Arts in Regina, Yorktown Psychiatric Centre (among others), and who consulted on the Centre in the Square, Kitchener, is currently a

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consultant for the design division of the federal government’s Ministry of Health and Welfare, the Canadian Commission of UNESCO’s cultural committee, and the National Museums Construction Corp., which is in the process of designing national museums in Ottawa. He has also acted as an expert witness in such.litigations as the Bronx Development Centre where the issue was perceptual design for the mentally retarded. Parents oft he centre’s patients sought, and gained a court injuction against occupancy of the building that state officials called a “refuge and sanctuary” and parents called “an architect’s nightmare of a submarine.” As a consequence of his dealings with various design committees and professionals, Izumi has become somewhat cynical about this approach to design. “1 believe architecture must be an ‘environmental art’, an art that exists for the humans who live in a building and not for the architects who design it,“says Izumi. . “Architecture is not holistic enough. There are symbolic and conceptual aspects to design that are simply not addressed.*’ Izumi gives the example of a stair rail designed strictly from an engineering perspective. “A railing might be perfectly solid to an engineer, but to a partially paralyzed stroke victim it might seem unstable; it might cause such a person to feel insecure. Thestroke patient is not assured because an engineer estimates the railing is safe; he.wants it to look nd feel safe as well. “There are many such examples. Right here on the university’s campus you see how designers have not been able to deal with

Visitors

basic human experiential factors. In many classrooms thereisan insensitivity shown by ventilation noise and poor illumination. Architects have also been very insensitive with audio characteristics. It is impossible to project one’s voice suitably in some of our classrooms.” Dr. Izumi feels such design problems are a result oft he fact that “environmental research” a combination of social, psychological and engineering research - is not “human” enough. “Environmental research methodologies are patterned after those developed in the physical and natural sciences, somewhat softened but not necessarily humanized by those of the social sciences,” he says. “Thus, design based on this research stressed functional, not human needs.” “Unfortunately, this attitude becomes intractable, and so does the building it inspires. The ethical question is: Do you design environments to fit people, or do you select people to fit environments?’ Izumi hopes the next generation of architects will be both aware of, and able to resist the pressure of social policy, so the environments they design will be more accessible to all segments of the population. “As the world gets more crowded,” notes Izumi, “there will be no room for this kind of environmental differentiation. Many people from many demographic and cultural orientations will be forced to live together; we must find waysto accommodate them all in one space and let them feel enhanced by it, not institutionalized.”

Some of the specific computer systems developed on the UW campus and requently asked about are: (1) the “Janet” network, a local area network of IBM PC’s and (2) the Waterloo Micronet system, which is a network of microcomputers, minicomputers and mainframe (large) computers. Under a recently-announced agreement between UW and IBM in the United States, the latter markets the Micronet system and Waterloo services the customers. The arrangement is expected to produce $4 million of revenue to the university in-the next few years, most of which will be spent servicing customers and further updating the system. A typical visit includes a presentation by Dr. Don Cowan, providing an overview of educational computing at Waterloo, and a presentation by Paul Dirksen describing the many aspects of the Department of Computing Services. Details about the “Janet” network are presented by its designers, Jerry Bolce and Adrian Weerheim. Time is also alloted for a tour of the Department of Computing Services and demonstrations of UWdeveloped computer software. Some of the software demonstrated includes interpreters for a variety of computer languages including APL, Basic, Fortran, Cobol and Pascal) as used on-microcomputers. These are known, collectively, as the Watcominterpreters. “Most visitors tell us they’re impressed and that they’ve learned a lot,” Uttley reports. “Many are already users of Waterloo software and others have purchased it asa result of their visit,” She says it looks as though theinflux of visitors isgoing to continue; in fact, it could increase as Waterloo’s reputation continues to spread.

One consequence of the University of Waterloo’s I growing fame as a centre for computer research is that a steady stream of visitors (individuals and groups) have been treking to the Kitchener-Waterloo community to find out what’s going on. They have come from other Canadian universities, community colleges, from the United States (the list includes Cornell, several campuses of the State University ’ of New York, Georgia Tech, Ferris State University in Michigan), and from many European installations including the directors of the International Business Machines Scientific Research Centres in Europe. “There has been a good deal of publicity of late concerning some of the computer software developments that, have originated on this campus,” says Jennifer Uttley, of U W’s Computer Systems Group, “and this seems to be attracting people.” Most visitors spend a full day on campus and her job includes making the arrangements for visitors including co-ordinating speakers and tours of the various computer installations on campus. Tours and presentations are tailored to the interests of the visitors. Broadly speaking, the visitors are interested in the new computer software being developed on campus, and particularly the software involved in educational . programs that make use of microcomputers.. The visitors : I are interested in how U W studentslearntousecomputers,’ and how they use computers in learning a wide variety of other subjects. Some visitors are also interested in how UW makes use of computers to handle ,many administrative tasks. . . everything from keeping track of library books to maintaining student records and budgeting\ expenditures.

GRAND-OPENINGPARTYWEEKJAlW14

m

~D&zships Students who wish to apply for the position of Don in the Student Villages for the academit year 1984/85 should obtain an application form from the Housing Office in Village 1, or from either Village Office, and must sub-

mit it to the Warden of Residences, Housing Office, Village 1, prior to the end of January, 1984. Applications received after January 3 1st cannot be considered for ap‘pointment for the Fall Term 1984.

1

List

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Imprint. Friday, January

z

needs total approach

Before this century, most buildings in North America were erected under the direction of a head carpenter; only the most formal buildings - a church or city hall, for example - would require an architect. In the last hundred years, the march of progress has enlisted not only the services of architects but armies of psychologists, sociologists and engineers to the building industry, and a University of Waterloo professor thinks this proliferation of experts has created a design process that loses sight of the human perspective. Kiyo Izumi, of U W’s Schoolof Urbanand Regional Planning, believes the specialization has fostered improvements in design. But he is also concerned that the new sophistication has not been integrated into what he calls a “total approach*’ to architecture; that is, it has produced groups of experts who really don’t function the way a group should because they can’t understand each other’s jargon

Up to

e

AT THE MAYFAIR)

from

CFNY’s

Favo&


’ News Vision I

.(.

.

problems

Over 400 years ago Leonardo da Vinci first observed a visual phenomenon that is now being used by optometry researchers to provide ‘improvements in visual perfoi’@ance tests, contact lens design, and for checking.the presence of c&neal edema (swelling of the cornea). The phenomenon is also used to determine how well the two eyes function toget her. Painters have long known about the phenomenon, called “border enhancement”. 1t occurs whenever the eye sees a border between contrasting brightness and darkness. Both the brightness and darkness are enhanced or amplified on either side of the perceived border; thus, a painter will exaggerate horizons with bright - / dark colors to mimic the eye’s natural ability to reinforce contrasts.

diagnosed

“It’s an inherent neural‘ mechanism in all animals to sharpen/enhance visual perception of borders. The eye is far superior to any camera in this respect,” says Dr. Arnulf Remole, University of Waterloo. Dr. Remole was intrigued by the border enhancement phenomenon several years ago and he is now using the phenomenon in his research at UW’s school of optometry - the only English-speaking school of optometry in Canada. “Whereas letter charts and line grids can be used to measure many aspects of the eye’s performance, border enhancement works better if we are interested in mbre subtle changes in the visual system,” reports Dr. Remole.

Association

Kosher

Toronto

and Montreal

Bagels

Monday, Jan. 9 and Thursday, Jan. 12 llr30 a.m. - 1:OOp.m. cc 110 For information,

call .Deb Goid at 886-9866. \

General,Meeting Jan 11 5tO0 p.m. MC6091A Wine and Cheese Jan 17 517p.m. Faculty Club

Everyone’ Welcome!

Border enhancement is also helping in the diagnoses of cornea1 edema (swelling -of the

Winter -Library Orientation January 6 Library

tours:

lo:30 a.m. & 2:30 p.m. Meet at the lnformation

Desk, Arts Library.

January 9 Library

Tour

- 2:30 p.m. Meet at the Information

Desk, Arts Library

January 10 Library

Tour

-- 2:30 p.m. Meet at the Information

Desk, Arts Library

.

January 11 Library Tour - 2:30 p.m. Meet at the Information Desk, Arts Lib&-y Card Catalog Sessipn - 2:00 p.m. Meet at the Information Desk, Arts Library

January 12

/

Library Tour - 2:30 p.m. Meet at the Information Desk, Aits Library Information Sessions for graduate studevts - 2:30 p.m. Meet at the Information E MS Library A. \

.. 1 .? I.., ,. . .

Januarv 13 J

Library

Desk, Arts or

,

Tour

- 2~30 p.m. Meet at the Information

Desk, Arts Library

.:

First Bagel Brimch featuring

cornea). Dr. Remole has discovered a relationship between scaterring in the retinal image, the occurence of cornea1 swelling, and border enhancement. “It seems scattering, apd subsequent widening of border enhancement bands, occurs simultaneously with the appearance of cornea1 edema. With-border enhancement, we can detect even the most minute amounts of scattering,” says Dr. Remole. Another diagnostic application of border enahncement is in the detection of binocular vision problerps .- physical misalignment of the eyball that prevents a person from fixating both eyes on the same point. “Again,” notes Dr. Remole, “border enhancement is a very helpful diagnostic technique.” i Binocular imbalance is a very comm,on ~ problem, and border enhaqcement tests measure misalignments more accuratey than any other method available. “Other tests measure fixation disparity that is perceived, but cannot measure the actual physical misalignment which causes the disparity:’ says Dr. Remole. Dr. Remole’s border enhancement research is being funded with an on-going grant by the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council (NSERC). $95,000 has been awarded thus far.

“We’re doing independent testing ofcontact lenses here ;it U W using this technique,” says Dr. Remole. “Other researchers are also testing wetting solutions for contact lensesand artificial tears by measuring border enhancement response to scattering. 1

Pat Robertson, previously U W’s director of academic services, has been named vicepresident, University services. Reporting to Mr. Robertson will be: Bill Deeks, administrative services director; Ernie Lucy, director of personnel and student services; Shaun Sloan, director of plant operations, as well as the directors of theaudio visual- and co-ordination and placement departments, the university librarian and the registrar. Besides Robertson, other senior administrators reporting directly to the president will continue to be: Jon Dellandrea, director, development and university reltitions, and Jack Brown, secretary. The university’s academic and research divisions will continue to report to the vice-president, academic, Dr. Tom Brzustowski. A director of computing . and communications is also expected to be Pat Robertson appointed in the near future, also to report to Photo courtesy Infcknation Servkes Dr. Brzustowski. Two senior positions, created during the University of Waterloo’q recent internal reorganization, have been filled. Dr. Douglas Wright; President, has announced J.G. (Jack) Robb has been appointed treasurer of the University, and that E.S. (Ernie) Lucy has been appointed director of employeeand student services. Robb is reporting to the President; Lucy, to the vice-president, University services, D.P. Robertson. The appointments became effective‘ Dec. 1. A resident of Stratford, Robb is an accountant who joined the University in 1974. He has served as director of accounting and; for the past two years, as director of financial servicss.Prior to coming to the University he held executive posts both in Canada and in the United States. Lucy has been at U W since 1968. He has been director of personnel and, as well,a part-time professor and director of UW’s academic program in personnel and administrative studies. Prior to coming to U W he held executive positions in industries in Barrieand Guelph as well as in New Jersyand New York. He hasalso taught and conducted research in social psychology at the University of Minnesota and the University of Illinois.

5 *

6,1984

better

“On both the bright and the dark side of the border, there are regions of enhanced brightness arid darkness. The distance these regions extend from the border can be measured by specifically designed procedures,” he says. Dr. Remole stresses that as an everyday test for vision, border enhancement isn’t yet practical, although it is very useful in research. Border enhancement can be used to test light scattering (diffusion) in th,e eye caused by contact lenses. Scattering causes very subtle retinal blur that does not affect visual acuity, but does warn of possible cornea1 d&nage in the eye - alwaqs a concern of contact lens wearers. Scatteiing also causes the band widths along light/dark borders to get wider, and this is what Remole measures. The quality of the lens can be determined by the way scattering affects border enhancement band width.

Three new positions filled in Admids re-organization ,

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Imprint.

ah Imprint We try to make Imprint as diverse as possible so that everyone will fine something of interest in our weekly paper. And while that is our intent, we know that we can’t please everyone. Which is why we encourage feedback on what you do and don’t like about imprint. This can be done formally through a letter to the editor, or informally by dropping by, by phoning in, or dropping us a line. imprint also encourages student involvement by inviting students to join our staff. Whatever your interests, there is probably a spot for you on imprint. Whether it is writing, photography, drawing,,administration, management, production, or lay-out, imprint can use your services. Of course, if you are interested in such things but have no experience, we will train you. Unlike being trained in school, being trained to get involved with imprint takes virtually no time at all. Within a week, you can be working on the paper along with the rest of us. Involvement with the paper can be at many different levels One of our present staff members comes in for about two hours a week. Another does a record review once a month. And another is here about twenty five hours a week. It all depends on your schedule and how much time you want to give up to the paper. It doesn’t matter to Imprint, because we’d rather have you here for two hours a week than none at all.

Drunk

There

is no question

bussing

And if you are really keen on newspaper work, you can apply for one of our part-time paid positions. The pay is not great (actually is pretty bad) but it does offer great opportunities for students who want to get involved or want to pursue journalism or related careers.

&I984

it

At present, the following positions are open: Distribution manager, lay-out co-ordinator, news editor, sports editor, managing editor, advertising assistant, as well as various other assistant positions. We realize that not everyone will be interested in newspapers to that extent, so Imprint welcomes any student at whatever their level of interest. Don’t be shy - drop down and see us or give us a call and we’ll . see what we can work out for you. Because the vast majority of our staff are volunteer students, you can understand why we need people to join us. Even if it is only two hours a week, we still need people. All the statements about a student newspaper only being as good as the students who put it out have already been said, but it is still true. imprint will continue to publish issues every Friday this term whether you join us or not. How good those issues are, and how much input you have into them depends on whether you join us or turn the page and forget all about it. clou hutton

Imprint is the student newspaper at the University of Waterloo. It is an editorially independent newspaper published by Imprint Publications, Waterloo, a corporation without share capital. Imprint is a member of the Ontario Community Newspaper Association (OCNA). Imprint publishes every second F’ridgy during the Spring term a.ndeveryFriday during the regular terms. Mail should be addressed tc “Imprint, Campus Centre Room 140, University of Waterloo, Waterloo, Ontario.” Imprint: ISSN 0706-7380 2nd Class Postage R@istration Pending Imprint reserves the right to screen, edit, and refuse advertising. Contributing Staff: Deborah Austin, John W. Bast, Kathryn Bereza, Vicki Beninger, Frank Bon, Jim Boritz, Doreen Brown, Leanne Burkholder, Alison Butlin, Harold Bransch, don button, Bob Butts, Raymond Cheng, Rob Clark, George Elliott Clarke, Jack Cooper, John Davie, Rob Dobrucki, Donaid Duench, Karen Duncant, Carol Fletcher, Todd Furlani, Rod Garratt, Michele Gauthier, Sanjay Gael, Janice Goldberg, Joanne Graker, Kirsten Gunter, Sylvia Hannigan,Judy Hartman, Dave Herron, Bill Humphries, Aeyliya Husain, Jim Jordan, Jim Kafieh, Jane Kalbfleish, Kathleen Kelly, Jennifer Kennington, Corinne Knight, William Knight, Simon Lee, Catherine Leek, Glenn Love, Mark Lussier, Tim MacNeil, Heather Martin, Ron McGregor, Neil McInnis, Andrea McKenzie, Alan Mears, Patricia1 Michalewicz, Glen Moffat, Clark Morris, Kathe Nahatchewitz, Doug Parker, Tim Perlich, Thomas Persoon, John Pauli, Patti Presti, MichaelProvost, Greg Pruner, Fabio Pucci, Josephine Rezo, Diane Richards, Nathan Rudyk, Vinay Ruparell,Anthony Saxon, Barbara Ann Simpson, Fraser Simpson, Robin Slaughter, Paul Totten, Dan Tremblay, Tony Van Oostrom, Alan Vintar, Alicia Vennos,Terry Voth, Ed Wailer, Jaclyn Wailer, Doug Warren, Linda Watt, Ron West, Simon Wheeler, John Wieczonek, Chris Wodskou, Karen Young, Sue Young.

may be the answer

that drinking and driving is dangerous and must be stopped. Anyone who has driven in that condition, has been in a car with a drunk driver, or has seeon one swerve by knows that a drunk driver poses a serious risk to himself, and, most importantly, to others who happen to be in his way. Granted, there will always be those that disagree, but there is enough statistical and clinical support of the effects of alcohol on one’s ability to drive an automobile to warrant. preventing drunk drivers from driving. Unfortunately, the problem is how to stop it. The Federal government, in their infinite wisdom, have chosen the superficial solution - making the penalties for drunk driving more severe. The latest proposal from the Federal legal beagles is to hand out automatic lifetime liscence suspensions for any drunk driver who causes a death and is convicted of dangerous or careless driving. In addition, the government wants to give the police more freedom to take blood samples and administer breathalizer tests. Various other laws and penalties are also being considered in Federal legal circles, but so far not one mention of alternative measures has been heard. L There is no question that drunk driving must be stopped, and stricter enforcement of stiffer penalties will definitely cut down on the number of drunks trying to navigate our roadways, but not even the death penalty will totally eliminate drunk driving unless the government looks at the alternatives. Presently, anyone out for a night of drinking has only three alternatives for getting home: walk if you happen to live close enough, take a taxi, or drive yourself home (driving with someone else who has been drinking amounts to the same thing). Since Kitchener-Waterloo buses stop running at midnight or shortly thereafter, the buses are ruled out for anyone who wishes to stay at a bar until closing time, which leaves cars, feet or cabs. Expecting people to walk home is pretty unrealistic, so that leaves the choice between a cab and one’s own or a friend’s car. Cabs, however, cost a fair bit of money, and all the politicians who piously maintain that anyone who can afford to go out for a drink can afford to take a cab home have obviously been living on their $60,000 a year salaries for too long. The only way drunk driving is going to be

January

better!

drivers:

Better

Friday,

J reduced significantly is by extending bus service and making sure that all drinking facilities in the city are serviced by those buses. Then enforce drunk driving laws and penalties. There is no other way. Period. Before one can discipline someone, you first must provide a reasonable alternative. Presently none exists, and until one does you can’t realistically expect people to comply. Once a viable alternative is there, there will be no excuse for drunk driving and anyone who drinks and drives will deserve all they get. The bus idea, of course, is not a new one. It has been kicked around for years now. And every time it comes up, the taxi companies squawk and complain that they will lose too much business. W/hich is pure bunk. Taxi companies are not against limiting drunk driving _ they love it because it means more business for them. But they sure don’t want to share that market with any transit company. Fact is that only approximately 15 per cent of Kitchener-Waterloo residents use Kitchener Transit anyway. The cab companies will certainly get their share of the market. In fact, they will probably see an increase in business as it becomes more and more socially unacceptable to drink and drive. Now the law part. Once an alternative is available drinkers will have no excuse for driving. Therefore, it should be made illegal to drink and drive. Period. None of this .08 stuff. Make it illegal for anyone to drive a car if they have alcohol in their blood stream. Make the first offence a one year liscence suspension, and double it for each subsequent offence. Harsh, perhaps, but since there is no excuse for drinking and driving, there is no need to excuse harsh laws. Of course, money hungry taxi companies and a government that shies away from increasing subsidies (which they would have to do to increase bus service) where it can’t be seen will undoubtedly keep increased bus service a pipe dream. Bar owners will suffer, but taxi companies will be happy. And the good old government will be able to wash their hands of the whole thing because they toughened-up the drinking and driving laws. Aren’t governments fun to watch just before elections? dOI1 tN.lttoPl

Submission Deadlines* Campus

Events

Monday,

5 p.m.

Classifieds

Monday,

5 p.m.

Sports

Monday,

5 p.m.

Monday,

5 p.m.

Entertainment

d

Features

Friday,

News Display

Ads

3 p.m.

Tuesday,

12 noon

Tuesday,

12 noon

Forum

Anytime

*It will be assumed after a deadline intended

that material submitted has passed was not for that issue.

Imprint Events* 1)

Friday, Jan. 6 2 p.m. Returing Staff meeting

a

Monday, Editorial

3)

Wednesday, New staff

Jan.

11

1:30

p.m.

41

Wednesday, New staff

Jan.

11

3:30

p.m.

Thursday, Deadline Feb. 4th

Jan. 9 meeting

5:30p.m.

Jan. 12 12 noon for additions to agenda meeting

Thursday, Jan. 12 Deadline for Editorial applications Friday, Editorial

8)

Saturday, Policies

Jan.

13

Board

for

5p.m. Board

1 p.m. elections

Feb. 4 12:30 and Proceedures

p.m. meeting

L 0 ?


,

UW’M~xist-Leninists Only a <few students presently attendinb the University of Waterloo will remember how the Chevron once used to be-an influential journal. sponsored and financed by the Federation of Students. The Chevron was, in fact, the official student newspaperat U W. However, in 1978, thestudentsat U W voted in a referendum by a four to one majority to discontinue Federation support arid sponsorship for the Chevron and its mainly Marxist-Leninist staff. The Chevron was eventually replaced by the Imprint as the newspaper officially representing the students at UW. Since then, the Marxists-l.cninists on campus have ~ maintained a low profile. Recently. however, they have become more visible, as evidenced by a lecture series celebrating t_heKarl Marx Centennary. All educated people should understand the essence of Marxism-Leninism. Such knowledge would help them todcfend democratic society against the unending injrigues of the Marxists-Leninists and to understand correctly what they mean, euphemistically. by peace, freedom, anti-racism and democracy: Marxism developed from the teachings of German philosophers of the XIXth Century. Karl M&-x and Friedrich Engels. Their most influential students were V.I. Lenin and J.V. Stalin. Stalin, however, was not much of a philosopher: rather, he became notorious as an organi;/er of concentration and extermination camps, and as a destroyer of all the democratic freedoms and rights in several countries. In spite of the fact that his crimes and .political errors are widely known, he became one of the saints of the- Marxists-Leninists who, interestingly enough, claim that after Stalin’s death, Marxism-Leninism degenerated almost everywhere. Just as a sideline, this leads me to posean interesting question. According to the Marxists-Leninists. theirs isa perfecf doctrine which &able to solve all of the world’s problems. This doctiine has been put into practice in at least twenty countries. world‘wide, and yet, has only been successful. according to our campus communists, in one oft hem. Albania. On the other hand, fithe USSR, China. Poland, Czechoslovakia. Hungary, Bulgaria,. FR;&ania, East Germany, Yugoslavia, Mongolia. Vietnam. Laos, Cambodia, Mozambique, Angola. Ethiopia. Cuba, Guayana, and Grenada, nations originally imple menting Marxist-Leninist prescription, have all fallen short oft he deal. i Thus, even if wh belie-vi ~hatthe.,I&$a~+ist~~L.eninists say. ther,e is only onechance inabout. that Marx’ism-Lgninism will not be a failure. From this, we may conclude -- and our MarxistsLeninists must confirm it - that Marxism-Leninism is not a perfect teaching. On the other hand, its chance of failure is quire high. But, let us look systematically at the teachingsof Karl Marx. It is wonderfully unambiguousand simpledoctrine. Perhaps that is ,

,

-draw fire

why Marxism has found such wide support. and not the least, ourselves through our proletarian liberals and conservatives, do we then have a dictatorship of the prqletariate? among people who by their class origins would not normally Certainly not. The notion‘ “proletariat” has a somewhat belong to the Marxist;Leninist camp at all. It says: Society develops because the forces of production and the relationships ,different meaning. A p.roletarian is given a wage for his work, but of production develop, consequently, all of society is orgamzed only enough to allow him to survive from day to day. The around them. Everything else depends on them: politics,culture, proletarian can live only as long as he is working. A proletarian, poetry. Moreover, society is evil because it is divided into the by his labour, does not create any property for himself. This much I surmise from Marx’s Kapital. exploilted and the exploiters. The former think/everything up, work hard, and are given less and less for their efforts. The latter The proletarian is an unskilled manual worker. The skilled do nothing except take everything from the others, spoil things workers are not proletarians, rather ‘they are “worker for them and, in general, act as parasites. The exploited are the aristocrats”, as Marx described them. Thisisan important point. proletariat, and the future belongs tot hem. The exploiters are the The proletariat is not supposed to own anything beyond the bourgeoisie and they are the evil on earth personified. How easy barest means of survival. No car, no TV set, no pension, no it is for frustration, anxiety and anger, even against oneself, to fit unemployment insurance, no hope for tomorrow. i-nto>uch a schematic view. Wipe out the bourgeoisie in a grand This is what Marx ,called kxploitation. It is no wonder he revolution, and we will have eliminated evil from the world. believed that revolution was the only hope for these Anyone who criticizes this schematic view, immediately proletarians., He also believed that their poverty would become becomes an enemy of humanity, progress and his own children. worse and’worse, and that the relative number of proletarians would increase until they formed anabsolute majority of society. After all, the trend towards world revolution is inevitable. But - let us ask again: is this really the case? Anything you may do to avoid revolution is reactionary. If, however, you commit crimes in the name of the revolution, you People are not atoms that move in pre-determined orbits. are beinqprogressive. because you are aiding the forces impelling instead of the &-aduql proletarization and impoierishment of humanity forward. humanity, something quite different occurred. In countries with the most rapid industrial development, production evolved not The Communist Manifesto -- a booklet written by Marx and in the direction of a further intensification of labour and the Engels ~- says this, and all communist parties in the world swear by it: “Of all the classes that stand face to face with the increasing exploitation of a growing proletariat, but towards bourgeoisie today. the proletariat alone is a really revolutionary improving the technological standards of production. Hand in hand with that went an increase in wages from a bare minimum to class. The other classes decay and finally disappear in the face of a level that could guarantee a more-or less decent standard of Modern Industry; the proletariat is the special and essential e product. The lower middle-class, the small manufacturer, the _ living. The proletariat is a revolutionary class because it has nothing shopkeeper, the artisan, the peasant, all these fight against the bourgeoisie. to save from extinction their existence aS fractidns to lose but its chains. But when the proletarian begins making of the middle class. They are, therefore, not revolutionary but more than a minimum wage, everything changes. The conservative. Nay more, they are reactionary, for they trie toroll proletarian can save money, deposit it in a bank and receive interest. But interest is a form of gain without labour, actually a back the wheel of history.” Theproletariancan And so the proletariat, always poorer, always growing in surplus product, and thereforeexploitation. nl:mber, swallows up all the other classes until finally all that . retire and live on a pension. But a pensign is albo:a part of the remains are the proletariat itself and the capitalists. At the . surplus product, and therefore, a form of exploitation..’ A proletarian can even be happy. You may perhaps find a real moment, its time has come to save humanity. The revolutionary proletariat in somg of the developing countries,-but not where natufe ofthe proletariat, its destiny as the agent of greateve’nts Marx most expected it. and its independent ‘etiistence is unquestionably the, ,inost fundamehtal ‘principle of all Marxist parties in the world. The Changes in technology caused a lot of other changes as well, revolutionary proletariat justified their existence and without it, pne of which was a transformation of the social structure of populations. they quite simply could not exist. There are fewer and fewer manual unskilled We should ask ourselves, however, if this is really the case‘? workers in the labour force. In the United States from 1958 to Everything depends on the definition of the proletariat. In a 1977 alo,ne the proportion of factory workers dropped from 37% to 33.4%, a process diametrically opposed to Marx’s prophecy. footnote to the 1888 education of The Communist Manifesto, On the other hand the number of employees with a university Engels wrote: “By proletariat (is meant) the class, of mqdern education grew in the same period from I 1% to 15. I%, and the wage-lab’ourers who, having no,means of production of their own, are reduced to selling their labour-power in-order to live.” number of office workers from 14.5% to 17.8%. From this it follows that the number of the inheritors of Marx’s proletariat is gradually declining. Richard Bellmann, a mathematician for the That needn’t be such a bad thing. Almost everyone 1know sells estimated that by the year 2000 only 2% of his labour-power in one way or another. To a state, a factory’, a Rand Corporation, the work-forde would manufacture all the goods necessary fort he bank, a university, a company whose owner is not an individual material well-being of the whole of society. Others estimate the but a carporation usually made up of individuals who are also percentage& 3- 1I %. merely selling their labour-power. By that definition, therefore, Marx’s revolutionary proletariat has silently vanished into anyone could be a proletarian - ministers, kings, executive history. Thus, the basic assumption upon which the Marxistsdirectors of General Motors. Are we all pr,oletarians, and was Leninists Marx therefore right’? And because we, the proletarians, govkrn _ ^ _ have built-their political philosophy is wrong. This is the fundamental reason why it is a system bound f’or failure. S. Reinis Dept. of Psychology

Parkdale . ~ ’ Pharmacy,

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We’re having a real sale on a real treat. Three thick layers of real hot fudge and

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e Passes are on sale in the Federation of Students’ Office in the Campus Centre. @Passes are on sale until

Opera;:

by the Federation

of Students

-

Jan. 12, 1984

Vasses are good for the first four months of 1984.

Needs

@Passes are $97.08 for four months plus $2.00 for a photo I.D. Card if applicable. Photos are available in the Federation Offices from 11:00 a.m. - 3:00 p.m. each day until January 12th. 2. Essays

*Passes allow you to make as many free trips you want, anywhere the K-W Transit System travels. @For more information, Federation of Students or ext. 3880.

Experience is not necessary as training is provided

$ I.25 per page. double spaced. $1.80 per page. single spaced. Prices and conditions for single letters are the same as for essays.

3. Letters

lnformatienal tin

Multiple-letters, where the single same letter is going to more than one person, are $ I .50 for the first letter and 50~ for each additional letter.

phone the at 885-0370

*with the new four month discount bus pass, which sells for $97.00 This offer applies only to full-time students-and is valid only 6n K-W Transit buses.

eets

Price List $7.50 for the first page $5.00 for each additional page One copy is provided of each page. Additional copies are 2% each.

Wed, Jan. 11 b 1984 6 p.m. in CC Room 113

Storage of material for one year is irxluded and disks may be purchased f( $5.00 each.

If you cannot attend the meeting or if you wish more information, please leave your name and phone number at the Federation CXfice,

A!9 For More Information: Call $85-0370 or on campus ext. 3880, or drop into Room 235 of the Campus Centre

cc 235

$55

11 return q

ours

Fee-paying

H No tickets 1

Jan 9-13 . . . . ..o.....*....*....... 9:30 Bo 4:30 A IO:00 to 3:oo Jan 16-20 .e*..0...0..0.0.00.0000 Jan 23-27 ..o..oo~.0*.0oooooooe.o fblB..o.o..o...O*eoe 1 Jan30&31

Federation

members

only

sold on bus

Tickets

sold beginning Campus Centre Room

H Departs the North 430 on Fridays JE W&urns Sundays ( Brewer’s Retail

Monday, 9 a.m., Fed Office, 235 Bring your I.D. card

Loading -

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(by M&C)

at 9:00

p.m. from

at 130 and

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Sponsored by Education Commission Federation of Students tucknts at 8854370


/

variety -in this wiriter7sA x~~tertairiment’ I _’ ^

4 r by don button Imprint staff Entertainment-wise, the Kitchener-Waterloo .area can’t compete with the variety foundinToronto, but what is here tends to be highcalibre to make up for , it. -Between local attractions, University facilities, Federation. of ,Students sponsored events, and the variety of student society events, University of Waterloo students can usually find something to do.~ The followinq list is by no means complete (unfortunately no such thing exists,) and nothing is explained in the detail in which it deserves due to space limitations, but it should give a good idea of what is available, where it is, and when

to go.

FedFlicks

.

Fed Flits are aired at 8 p.m. in room 116 of the Arts Lecture Hall, and offer students the opportunity to see first rate movies for only $1 .OO. Non-feds must pay $2.00.. The following comprises the line-up for the Winter term: ’ Jan. 6-S Raiders of theLostArk; Jan. 1315 48 Hours; Jan. 24-22 Trading Places; Jan. 27-29 An officer and a Gentleman; Feb. 3-5 Air-plane I, Airplane 11; Feb. lo12 Stczying Aliue; Feb. 17-19 Gallipoli; Feb. 24-26 Psycho, Psycholl; Makh 2$ - The Meaning of Life; March 9-11 Star Trek, Star Trek 11; March 16-18 The ’ Lords of Discipline; March 23-25

I/ - x

Ei. ..:.:... ::::y $3 . _, SF ::+. :*< .@ 3# &. $g, *+ $g i$;> ;y::

_

Bunneymen are likely bands to perform at end of the Winter term pubs, although neither have.,been confirmed yet. In addition, Bent promoter Gary Stewart hinted that if he has a chance to *I get other top bands in> he might add.:.: ::.:.: y::;:.:::> ~f$$~$ another Bent pub to the Winter term -.:.FF;$$ ,... ~~:;~~;~~. . ...= schedule. :..y :.h:: ’ I For more information on Bent pubs, phone extension 2358 or watch for ads in Imprint. Kitchener’s own WEA recording

artists, Messenjah, wares to the delight of UW on January 26th.

Centre

in the Square

will once again be displaying

their reggae

.

tonight, with Jean- Jacques Beiniex’s Some of the- students’ work is on The winter kicks off at the Centre in the Diua scheduled for 8 p.m. on Feburary display on the third floor of Hagey Hall, Square with the Kitchener-Waterloo 10th. Admission to each film is $1.00. and can be viewed whenever the building’ Symphony Orchestra’s Masterpiece SerFor more information on St. Jerome’s is open. In addition, there is a viewing ies with pianist Dickran Atamian on events, phone 884-8110, ext. 51. gallery in room 195 of Environmental January 13th and 14th. On January 20th m-3 Studies which is used for teaching -and 21st, the KWSO continues with theirpurposes but is also open to the public at Flashdance. Humanities Theatre Pops series with Nexus, and the month various times. ‘Tar more information, contact Chuck This term, Humanities Theatre has a ends with a performance by the Canadian - For more information, contact Ros- , Williams of the Federation of Student’s schedule that is sure to have something Chamber Ensemble in The Studio at anne Hallatt at extension 2442. Board of Entertainment, ext. 2358. for everyone. Sylvia Tyson and the Great Centre in the Square. Speckled Bird kick;off, the Humanities February starts with,+another KWSC) b.../ : - Cinema K-W Art Gallery .. . . .Gratis I Master@& Series performance, AIDA, . line-up for the ‘Winter term on’January The K-W Art Gallery, located at 101 The Campus Centre screens free films ! followed by the Lee Greenwood Country 14th.’ On January 18th, the Ba’rtok Quartet Queen St. North in Kitchener, will feature every Wednesday night in the Great Hall * SHow.on February 8th. Greenwood, the will perform in the Theatre of the Arts, the paintings and silkscreenings of K-W (the open squ&-e in the middle of the CC). Country Music Association’s Male Vocalwith the highly-acclaimed stage product’ native Bruce Herchenrader until January ist of the Year for 1983, is joined, by the Single films start at 9:30 p.m. and double ion of On Golden Pond occuring . 15th. At the same time, a selection of bills start at 8 p.m. Canadian Female Vocalist of the Year for simultaneously at Humanities Theatre. , abstract paintings. by Don McKay will be . The following films are scheduled for 1983, Marie Botrell. Erich Kunzel joins the on display. Winter term: KWSO on February 10th and 11th in a Both performances are at 8 ~-ml Two kids shows, Alligator Pie on continuation of the Pops series, and On January 11th and 25th, and on Jan. 4 Clambake, Gidget Goes Hawaii, January 21st and Jim and Rosalie on February 8th and 22nd, the Gallery will Pardise Hawaiian Style, Girls on the Bobby Vinton will be in town on FeburaryFebruary llth, conclude a year long featxure a free film series on Canadian Film Beach; Jan. 11 Omega Man; Jan 18 14th for a special Valentine’s Day show. children’s series that has been well Artists, including Bruce Elder and Robert Harvey; Jan. 25 Maltese Falcon, CasaHarpsichordist Douglas Haas performs in by area kids and teachers. Frank. At the same time, the Gallery will c The Studio on Feburary 17th, and the -received blunca; Feb. 1 Where the Buffalo Roam; Surprisingly, a few University students Tokyo~ String Quartet follows on Febrube, displaying abstract paintings by Don Feb. 8 The Man ‘Who Would -Be King; ,have been spotted in the’audience as well. McKay, landscape photos by James Feb. 15 Eueryting you Always Wanted ary 25th, Canada’s foremost modern Jazz lovers will be pleased to learn that Blackburn, and wildlife paintings by Tim ’ to Know About Sex, Midsummer Night’s dance company, Les Ballets Jazz de Jon Hendricks and Company will be Wheeler. Sex Comedy; Feb. 22 sThe World Montreal, will perform on February 26th, making their only Canadian apperance at According to Garp; Feb. 29 Life of Brian; -with the big band sound of the Spitfire From January 5th through to January , Humanities Theatre OP March 20th. 15th, videotape art will be screened that March 7 Elephant Man; March 14 Diva; Band closing out the month on February -_ Winner of two Grammy Awards for fetures works by five artists, including March 21 Changeling; March 28 The 29th. ’ Birdland and Corner Pocket, Jon Noel Harding and John Sanborn. This Day The EarthStood Still; April 4 Day at In March, guest conductor Agnes Hendricks is a noted jazz great that jazz show received critical acclaim during the Races, LVightat the Opera. ‘ Grossman will lead the’ “W&d’s most Toronto’s Festival of Festivals. For more information or confirmation recorded saxophonist”, Paul Brodie, on fans will find hard to miss. March 23rd and 24th, and the ‘KWSQand . * _’1 Unfortunately, one of the biggest On January. 19th, the Gallery opens of films, either consult Campus Events in of the Humanities Winter Iinpliint or contact the turnkey desk in violinist, Jeremy Constant in another I attractions -with the works of two well known artists, term schedule, Quiet in the Land, ha5 A survey of the paintings by Joseph. ’ the CC. . ’ “performance in the Fops series on March / been cancelled. Quiet in the Land is quite Drapnell, and the colourful, acrylic 30th and 3 1st. an elaborate and expensive production, paintings and narrative descriptions, of For more information about Centre in Bent Pubs . and Toronto Free Theatre was forced to the Square performances, phone 578Canadian Ojibway, Richard Bedwash, _ Bent (Board of Entertainment) of the 1570. Phone 7454711 for more informat. cancel their tour ‘because the Western ‘are featured. d Federation of Students has a number of Canada part of their cross-country tour For more -information,,on K-W Art 1 ion about Kitchen&-Waterloo Symphpubs planned for the Winter term, most of, _ ony Orchestra never materialized, and they would lose Gallery showings, phone 579-5860. . activities. which will be held upstairs at the Waterloo ‘too much money without those exttta InnThe highlight of the term’s pubs will ’ St. Jerome’s ’ - shows. - -Arts Centre Gallery be George Thoroughgood. The date for ! People who already have tickets for thathas yet to be set because ThoroughThe University of St. Jerome’s College The UW Arts Centre Galleryisthepride Quiet in the Land can get full refunds at good is waiting for the release of a new I (across Laurel Creek) offers a wide range of onxampm art displays because of the the Humanities Box Office inHagey Hall, album’before touring: Late February or of ~events -to students of UW and the ality of the displays-and the imagination ’ although a Humanities spokesperson early March is the expected time for a pub , affiliated church colleges. From lectures ~said that they would also be willing to use -with which. the local artist’s work is , with him. to’-films, plays, and music, St. Jerome’s displayed. . the full value of the tickets towards Parachute Club on January 12th and The first display scheduled ‘for the , frequently has high calibre productionsat another Humanities show this term, next _MeSsenjah on January 26th will kickdoff ‘:- = a very low admission charge. Winter term is called Paper Veils, which ( summer, even next year. the -Winter term. Both bands are proven The highlight. of _ the Winter term, features unique veils of paper made from \, For more :information / on Humanities $uccess.es in previous ‘Bent pubs, and are, .^ offerings is the. internationaJly..-acclaimed ground-up coloiired rags, augmented by Theatre event& phb<eextension2126. ,’ expected to have continued success.’ jazz saxophonist, Pat Labarbera,and the .. . / photographs depictind the 19th century L I_ - ’ ,A m&l in Cambridge ‘in which they were Messenjah is presently cutting an album .A /- Pab -Labarbera.Quartet. This jazz great,--m- -* student Ed ,, I ,in$hestates. ’ ,&ho previously, played with Chuck produced and the stages of their Students in UW’s Fine Art Department ,,~~$r&ges in Vogue will probably be the Mangione,,will be performing on January production. Andrew James Smith is the’ band &&&-r&g at the January~6t~Bent ;.!. ~,~2&l$@ :8;3O:i.;m, ‘Admi&ionis $3&@-,.,. ‘- ,- I :~ : are&b@ for t-he qu,$ity of their work, and - artist, and will be pn hand for the display’s ‘1.met.6 c;t$i &-‘f-&&, m~~ez<fi{~~ in, St::.- ] *-sahe -fitid ‘Arts. $&A ha$e &pe ~$~,:ta <, opening at. 8 p;m. on January 12th; : : .*,, $gb, with David1Wilcox to. follow in e.arly I. j+&e?$ .lY-teria (GAgi f-i,& -s-.&s,. pe-& ‘.’ 2 : I/ Fef&tiarc. i. . - \. , ’ w;> >- : . _,I ,I achieve‘+ notoriety ’ in the. community fur _ -‘1 their work after local showings.. .. i Cont’d .pg. 13 Simple Minds and Echo and the Weir’s Gallipo?i.will be screened at 8 p.m. l

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I’ve never read anything by Piers Anthony before, but in checking with other people withrespectableopinions, it appears in Anthony isn’t a likeable sort of writer. His books are not populated by charming people doing pleasant things; rather,I’m told, he’s very much a sexist, very violent, and his stories have MINING or MINERAL ENGINEERING and the farthest things from happy endings. EXTRACTIVE orPRbCESS WALLURGICAL ENGINEERING Refugee is entirely consistent with this evaluation; yet has something else - it’s an absolutely riveting story. I don’t think there was a moment I didn’t feel distaste for what I was readingboth the style and the subject matter - but I finished the more than 300 pages in one (long) evening. to students wishing to enter the first or subsequent professional The book presents itself as the first book in a series of five year of a degree course in Mining or Mineral Engineering books called Bid of a Space Tyrant. The series is a biography, and Extractive or Process Metallurgical Engineering. ostensibly written about the Tyrant of Jupiter, the dictator of For applications contact: that planetary system in the 2600’s. The Secretary, Canadian Mineral Industry Education Foundation, “Oh,” thought I to myself. “Another remake of the Roman P.O. Box 45, Commerce Court West, Toronto, Ont. Empire and all the stories available therefrom. Poul Anderson or does this much better.” The Dean of Engineering Then I started reading - and bought the book. I hadn’t even Applied Science seen the rape scene, just twelve pages in. As far as I was concerned it might as well be a Roman Empire generic story CLOSING DATE: FEBRUARY 10, 1984 who cared? The style had spoken to me. It’s a hard style to define. It’s in the first person; the language is just a little archaic; the narrator is very self-centred, egotistical and overconfident, and virtually everything described is violent, leads to violence, is a recovery from violence, or has an undercurrent of violence. The story, in outline, is fairly simple. As the title of his volume suggests, it’s a refugee’s story. The Hubris family (the whole. book is like this - when there’s symbolism, you know it!) live on Callisto, a moon in the Jupiter system, in.2615. The whole solar system has been colonized, including the Saturnian moous and some of the Uranian and Neptunian systems as well. Earth’s political and social woes have followed man into space; Callisto is under the control of a decadent aristocracy of whites; the Hubris family belongs to the Spanish minority, who are downtrodden and oppressed. - Though they are about as well-to-do as possible for Spanish-Callistans, Major Hubris (the father) feels his children will have a better chance in the freer society on Jupiter (which seems to have been colonized by North Americans - in fact, I get the impression the ConfederationofJupiterisaU.S.A. parallel). So they make plans to leave. How do you get around cheaply in the solar system (when you have a matter-to-energy drive?) Why what Anthony calls a “bubble” - take a heavy plastic sphere, mount a cheap drive at “Futon can be folded into day couch. one end and an airlock on theother,andyouhaveaspace barge. *Layers of cotton breathe. Slow and ponderous, it’s just fine for hauling cargo - or *Recommended by Chiropractors. refugees. In fact, they’re so cheap some spacemen can get the *Rolls up for easy transportation. capital together to purchaseanolder model, and make illicit runs *LOW prices. from sources of refugees to Jupiter - not unlike from Cuba to SINGLE $119 L\WlBLE$139 QUEEN $149 Florida. Easy money.

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Unfortunately for said\\refugees, such ships, combined with fast regular space ships with the matter-conversion drive, make easy victims for pirates. The world of the 2600’s is plagued by piracy. The Hubris family (Hope, the protagonist of this story; his sisters, Faith and Spirit; and the parents) take passage on such a bubble, bound for Jupiter. The book concerns their journey - or, I should say, Hope’s journey, for he is practically the only one of the several hundred people who make the entire journey alive. The book isabout the moulding of the future Space Tyrant - what made him who he

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is. The experiences Hope Hubris goes through would change any person, especially an impressionable young teenager. Pirate ship after pirate ship accost the bubble, each one exacting a toll. The first set of pirates robs them, then gang-rapes Hope’s sister. The second ship is a little more polite, but the result is about the same. The third viciously rapes most of the women, and kills all of the men. The fourth enslaves them all for 2 time. The bubble goes off course, and they begin to run out o food. . . they are forced to turn to cannibalism (they have, aftes all, all the corpses of the dead men lashed to the outer hull). Hop6 acquires, and loses, his first love. He is forced, indirectly, to kil her himself, as he evacuates the air from the bubble to kill off the nth pirate crew to pass through. In the end, he and his sister (by now the only ones left alive) arc taken by one last pirate vessel, where Hope’s sister must remail as a semi-slave, to buy his freedom. Incredibly, he escapes ant makes his way to Jupiter where (surprise!) they aren’t acceptin; refugees any more. (Although he is accepted, in the end, bj accident - a bureaucrat, by random chance, finds Hope speak English - the entrance requirement to Jovian society.) This book moves from viciousness to visciousness disapppointment to disappointment, all in the most sensationa graphic style. It was so awful to read I couldn’t stop. I could jus barely stomach this kid being kicked in the guts time after time but I kept on reading. Such is Piers Anthony’s style. Try this on for size: I guarantee this is a random sampling fror the book. I just opened it, flipped pages, and started to read. These were real brutes. It seemed they weren’t interested in acquiescence. They wanted violence. I heard them hitting the women; I heard the screams . . . One woman was thrown on the deck immediately above our cell. We heard the thumpof her body and that of the pirate who bestrode her.. . I froze for the moment, and watched (blood) dripping from our access panel. The blood had to be coming from the woman who still lay above us, and it could not be the result of any minor scratch. The pirate had stabbed her. I can’t decide if I can’t wait for the next book to come out. . . or I’11donate my copy of Refugee to the Used Book Store. Actually, 1’11probably keep the copy, and I’ll probably buy tk next one. Much as I deplore the events related, I think I’ hooked. I left with the thought that in no way did I enjoy wha read; but I don’t think I could pass up the second volume.


/ ImprinbFriday,

/

.-

No one seems to remember much of John Brunner’s work, :cept for his two-big successes, The Sheep Look Up and :and on Zaniibar. There is a reason for this: by and large, unner is dull. He has to latch onto a really, really good theme r a book in order to make it sustain interest, because his writing jle does not sparkle, hypnotize;or otherwise grab the reader% tention. It plods. He has a laborious attention to detail (not a d thing) but he.finds it hard togenerate any element of urgency command the reader’s dedicated interest. Mo.st of the rest of j books have their moments, but by and large they are very :gettable. ’ ’ . . - _ ..The Crucible -pf Tim& is in this class. What’ it is, is an cellent example of a science fiction writing exercise. The :roductidn reads like this:

It is becoming more and more widely accepted ’ that Ice Ages coincide iuiththepassage of the Solar System through the spiral armsof,our galaxy. It therefore occurred to meto wonder what would become of a species that evolved% intelligence just ?-‘ before- their planet’s transit of a gas-cloud far . denser than the one in Orion which the Earth has recently - in cosmic terms - traversed.

’ , L

lf nothing else, it is refreshing to find asciencefiction novel that .f :urns to the roots of mainstream science fiction 1 the literary ;ting of a scientific hypothesis. Onthe other hand, there’s a ison mainstream science fiction isn’t that-popular - it can be exciting as a history lecture .on one of the : duller aspects of *.i cient R~ussian peasants . . . To add to this underwhelming beginning,it soon. becomes parent that Brunner is going to document the entire recorded tory of his chosen race.’ The whole thing - more than 5,000 3is worth. . LTnfortunately, again, the characters he documents are not all it, interesting. For qne thing, the important characters in. ~nner’s race history are all scientists or proto-scientists 8fronomers, toboot) who all-go through similar 1ives:‘They Je a rough life, they make their discovery, they seek ways to 5s it on-to later generations while making a highflown moral tech about how their race m.ust be saved (when in many ways, :ir race is prov%rg to be an evolutionary dead end) and they die, _ . Ially from the coming or going of the ne-xt or mqst recent Ice .’ ’ e. Allvery noble,.but I didn’t find much to hold *my interest: I 3n the other hand, many of them areadmirable in one way qr Ither. Here, for example, seems to-be Brunne&statement of :al scientist&ood. Behind the somew.hat-confusing termingy, thereare some really good thoughts: ’ - s1 “Have we not found rem&s of animals such as I none of us had seen or heard of?Have we not then encountered similar beasts in strange new-waters? -. And are we ourselves not different from. our : .’ ancestors? It follows that if the stars blaze up it must. be for a reason-we shan’t comprehend until_ we work out tihy there’are creatures - or where 1 - unknown to us on this small planet!” . 1s “we understand each other,“‘Yockerbow said a soberly: “I was so afraid when you.invited -us to .come with you . . 1” ,’ “Ah, but we’re all bound on one’ quest,” ’ .” Barratongstabbed. “Some of usseekananswerto a single mystery - you, Yockerbow!yYou wanted to find ‘out why syphonids and cutinates could never pump water above a certain level. On the. way to a solution, you saved your city from beingwashed away. You still don’t know all the reasons why the original phenomenon presented, but ybu have suspicions, don’t you? AndArranth has just ~ drawn my dear old partner whom i’ve trusted in storm and floe- time, trusted under the onslaugh tof heaven’s crashing meteorites y drawn him too by some miracle into the charmed circle where I hoped to lure him long ago” (this with a dip to her) “and for that I thank you ma’am -” // _

January

6,1984

Yockerbow- was hai’&aid the admircrl had lost , track of his own peroration, but he was wrong,for -he concluded it magnificently. ’ “And here we are together on the-sole straight course whichanyofourpeopleought tochoose!All of us a little angry with the universe because it seems to want to mislead us - all ofusdetermined / to.find an answer to at least one mystery before our time. runs out -+ all of us resigned to the certainty , _ that we shall uncovermany other mysteries in the solving of our own! Pe.rhaps the time-may come when there are no more’ouestions to be asked; if that is so,\ that’s ,when,the world will end.“’ _Something that has occasionally troubled me about books is why did the’author choose the-characters in it? The answer oi course, has to do with keeping the novel interesting, and, what axe the author has to grind. Both of these reasoni make sense. One aspect of this book (I don’t want tocall it a fault) is, it is a history of this world-but the only characters we-meet are its Copernicuses; its Newtons, its Admiral Nelsons, Magellans, Christs and so forth - the really big doers. What would ahistory of the wo,rld look like if the only characters in it were, not only the biggies, but albo only the good biggieslet’s agree to leave out all the wars, Hitlers, Stalins, and possibly the Erik the Reds, and -I concentrate on meeting everyone with an IQ of Einstein or over, or everyone who founded a peaceful religion. It may be here that The Crucible of Time suffers a major failing - if it sets out to be a race-history; then it only tells the good parts. . ’ - Brunner’s subject race is not humanoid. This leads to interesting (an~d often weirdly confusing, until you understand the key to it) terminology and mixing of language. Again, this may not beamistake,butitisverydistr&tingfromtheflowofthe novel. I imagine Brunner’s thought went something like this: One of best excuses I’ve heard for, when describing the ranking system of arace umpteen lightyears from earth,and still using titles like “Major”, “Baron “;“Countess”and the like is, this very quickly gives the reader-an idea of where the creature fits into his planet’s social scheme - a leader, or a drawer of water and hewer of wood. Of course, this also applies to common, everyday actions a character might take. Brunner uses this technique to the fullest; but his race, since they have little to do with the human” form, sometimes isn’t suited to the familiar sentence or word Brunner chooses to show what they’re doing. The result is at worst confusing, at best a very-weird construct. For example, words like “barque”, phrases like, “with agony’ stabbing through his every tubule”, “his mantle bloated and discoloured, a sure sign of cresh”, certainly provide meaning to, the reader if taken in context; and I suppoSe Brunner is being true to-his history in not defining his terms separately, but expecting the reader to interpolate --. but the interpolation is real work on the reader’s part. His indiscriminate use of the letter “q” is’often odd, too; Use of works from older language such as “sacerdote” and “trencher” (as in “trencher:plant”) are certainly valid. Yet it remains odd thdt this totally alien race keeps being described in subtly-altered human forms. (Yet how else could an author-do it? He can’t use a human character to define things for US - there are no humans in this book at all!) Despite its faults, this book has depth and thoroughness; Brunner is enough of a writer that the reader can be made to feel sympathy for thecreatures described (though perhaps not as much ai he had intended); and, as I said, it is refreshing to get back to hard core science fiction once in a while. However, I am pretty sure that this book will not appeal greatly even to science fiction fans; it is too long, not able to sustain interest, and the . conclusion is foregone - enough clues are given in the beginning to make the reader feel sure that thisrade;str’uggling to survive, will indeed survive (actually, even the cover gives it away!). Brunner need;. to go back to Stand on Zanzibar to find a theme that more people will understand; either that, or write shorter novels.. I note’ that Parts I and II of this book have previously appeared in .Isaac Asimov’s Science Fiction ’ Magazine and that might have been the best -strategy for , Brunner: divide this’book. It/is too long as it sits. .

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Imprint. Friday, January

by Douglas Maskell Imprint staff Since 1983 is over, it is now time to review the better moviesof the year and try to pick the best. It was not a particularly good year for movies. In fact, after the excellent movies of 1982 this year seems almost anti-climactic. It oculd easily be dubbed the year of the sequel, with Superman III, Jaws III, Psycho II, and The Return of the Jedi. This year slo mark@l the return of 007, James Bond, -to the silver screen in two films and portrayed by Moore and Connery, the two originals. With Bonda marketable product again it was hilarious to watch these two Geritol us&-s. battle it out for the box office victory. There were only a few runaway successes this year, the most notable being the mega-hit Return of the Jedi which grossed over $245 million to rank third on the all time money making list, just behind E.T. and Star Wars. Perhaps the most unexpected Above: Peter Capaldi (left) and Peter Riegert in Local Hero. Below: box office success was the relatively low budget Flashdance with its cast of unknowns. It started both a fashion erase with Under Fire: An excellent film which looks at the various everyone wearing their ripped and ragged clothes rather than problems and the recent revolution in Nicaragua. Nick Nolte throwing them out and started a marketing trend. The sound 0 (Rich Man, Poor Man) portrays a photojournalist caught in a track, in a most innovative marketing move, was ieleased before web of conflicting loyalties and deadly gunfire. the film which stirred up interest in the movie even before it was The BigChill: The close friends of a suicide victim, who were released. close companions during the golden age of the 1960’s, spend a It was also a year for new, young actors, such as Tom Cruise weekend together and discover how they have changed, which and Matt Dillon, both of whom made big splashes in 1983. Tom leads to conflict and reconciliation. Superlative cast! Cruise made his starring debut in one of 1983’s best comedies, Local Her,o: A wonderful comedy about a young man who is the delightful Risky Business, and later starred in All The sent by a large pi1 corporation to buy up a small Scottish villate, Right Moves, a story about a young football player’s quest for a but instead falls hopelessly in love with the place. scholarship. Matt Dillon, - with two .excellent films, The Bumble Fish: A film which explores teenagedisaffectionand Outsiders and Coppola’s disturbing Rumble Fish, has to be alienation, well portrayed by new star Matt Dillon. Black and the candidate for the Sylvester Stallone speaking award. white photographly lifts this film above other problem teen After sorting through the various flops and semi-successes of pictures. Coppola at his finest! - the year, the gems slowly emerge. It is always tough to pick the Grey Fox: This excellent Canadian film tells the story of Bill top ten movies of any year but this year is especiall<hard for two Miner, Canada’s legendary train robber. A stellar performance reasons, the first being the fact that Silkwood and The Right by veteran actor Richard Farnsworth. ThisfilmisadefiniteshoeStuff have not arrived in the region; the second being the area’s in for at least a few Genie Awards. lack of theatres which show foreign films which are sometimes Zelig: Woody Allen’s look at the pain of fame and celebrity the best ‘of the year. In the list composed below, there are no through the person of Leonard Zelig, a human chameleon with numbers since it was really to difficult to pick ten and then have no identity of his own. Filmed in adocumentarymanner, the film to number them. mixes actual footage and film in a most innovative method. Definitely one of Allen’s best to date. Return of Martin Guerre: This vivid and sometimes confusing French film presents us with one of this year’s finer \ foreign films. A masterful tale of imposture and deceit in seventeenth century France starring Gerard Depardieu:Easily my choice for best foreign film. Monty Python’s Me.aning of Life: A rollicking and hilarious satire of the world’s problems. Their jabs at religion, education and society in general were never wide of the mark. Unfortunately, this troupe offers no real solutions, but they do $10.00 on Software have plenty of ridiculous suggestions. The restaurant scene has to be the winner of thistyear’s Grossest Scene award. $25.00 on Calculators up to $100 >*06 Never Cry Wolf: The sensitive and powerful portrayal of a $50.00 on Calculators over $100.00 Canadian Government researcher dispatched to examine the extent of the wolf problem in the Canadian North. Stunning photography by Carrol ballard and a quality performance by Charles Martin Smith. Almost as gbod as the book. Deposit is not refundable. Trading Places: a superb comedy which released Eddie Murphy from the realm of television and successfully breaks Dan eckroyd’s jinx for bad movies. This film, ignored by many, has to be one of this year’s beter comedies, even better’than Hours: &OO a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Risky Business. ;

Kim Bassinger

in The Mm

6,1984

Who Loved

Women.

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Imprint. Friday, January 6,1984

Variety

cont’d

From March 1st to April lst, there will be a two part display with exhibits from students and faculty of the University of Regina as well as a juried photographic display from the Lynwood Art Centre. From April 5th to June lOth, 40KingSt. S., &per will be featured. This unique display will include works by up to 20 local artsts who worked at 40 King St. S., Upper. At that location was a studio that became quite a place for local artists over the last ten years. The studio was closed last April, and is now student housing. There is no admission charge to the UW Arts Centre Gallery, which is located in Modern Languages. Anyone who would like more information should contact Earl Styler at extension 2128.

On Campus

Museums

Some students pass their whole careers at UW without visiting one of the three on-campus museums that are not only very interesting, but also first rate. - The three, the Games Museum in B.C. ‘Matthews Hall, the Biology and Earth Sciences Museum in Biology II, and the Optometry Museum in the Optometry Building, as well as the UW Archives at 156 Columbia St., offer frequently I changing displays that are the perfect way for a museum lover to pass an avertoon. And best of all, there is no admission .charge. I I The Biology-Earth Sciences Museum in room 317, iology II, has changed quite a bit in rece 1,t months. Space shortages within the department have forced the museum to use part of its space for teaching, bu i they have as many displays as before. In addition, new display cases are on order, and when they arrive the

museum will have a special mineral exhibit from the national Museum of Man for a while. For more information on the Biology-Earth Sciences Museum, contact Peter Russell at extension 2469. The Optometry museum is the only one of its kind in Canada, and is of interest not only to optometry students but to the public at large as well. The museum has exhibits that trace the historical progression of optometry, and includes early optical instruments and equipment as well as a variety of spectacles and contact lenses. In addition, there is a postage stamp collection that features stamps that have . an optical orientation, like the East German series that was issues with different optical instruments pictured on the face of each. There is also aTdisplay portraying the historical progression of eye examination techniques. The musuem ison the third floor of the George Thoroughgood won’t be coming to Waterloo until after the release of his new album, but Optometry Building and is open to the he will be here. public whenever the building is open. For blood typing, a muffin bake-off, a nutrition more information on the Optometry America and Europe, including hand bingo, jugglers, blood alcohollevel tests,a Museum or group tours, contact Cathy blown glass marbles and ivory gambling photo contest and a clown. Johnson at extension 3405. chips. Also included is a bagatelle table Health Services spokesperson, Linda The Games Museum is also a relative comissioned by an extremely wealthy local family. Davenport, says that the response has rarity as museums go, featuring nothing been very good so far, and that she is but games and game related artifacts. The There are hands-on games for people expecting a lot of people for the two day present exhibit, Compendium of Games, to try as well as displays of the more event. will be on display until March 16th and delicate artifacts, and. the Games Museum is also a research centre available to Carousel of Health ‘84 will be open focuses on a games compendium, a chest from 10 a.m. until 9 p.m. on February lst, of games and game pieces. any student who’s research involves and from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Feburary All of the unique and varied displays are games of any kind. 2nd. There is no admission charge,andall from the private collections of local The Games Museum is located in B.C. residents. Included are hand-made and Matthews Hall, and is open to the public are welcome. artisan-made games as well as manufrom 9 a.m. until 5 p.m. Monday through factured games, and all of the displayed Friday. For more information on the Grand River games and game pieces are from the 1850Games Museum or group tours, contact Conservation Authority 1900 period. Mary Tivy at 888-6380. The highlights of the exhibition are the UW Archives includes just about For nature lovers, the Grand River the University has ever done, elaborate and expensive games that were - everything Conservation Authority could provide made specifically for the wealthy of North and interested viewers can the outlet for those tired of the concrete - follow UW’s progress through maps, photos, pubjungle. They offer a wide range of activities lications and assorted collectables. for individuals or groups as well as opening their hiking trails to the public at For more information, phone extension 2445 or drop by 156 Columbia St. certain times. during normal business hours. Scheduled activities include an open _ house on January 8th, hikes to the woodlot bird feeders on January 15th, a Health Fair bug’s eye view of winter hike on January Campus Health Promotions and 22nd, a snowshoeing expedition and Health Services-will be holding a health snowman building competition on Janextravaganza on Feburary 1st and 2nd in uary 5th, and a workshop with noted the Campus Centre. Assisted by Health nature photographer Peter Bissett on and Welfare Canada, the fair will feature Feburary 12th. displays, games eand contests on a wide For more information on these and range of health-related topics. other Grand River Conservation AuthorCalled Carousel of Health ‘84, some of ity events and opportunities, phone 885the features are: an OPP crash simulator, 1368 during normal business hours.

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Cut the end off of broken nut crate. (8) Dust, perhaps, an ornamental knob. (4) Goodbye, advertisement that is proper. (5) ’ Quiet review of a preliminary performance. (7) An order to the insecure for use by laymen (2-2-8) 1 will come out of America, perhaps, with photographic equipment. (6) Attack a part of a boat, we hear. (6) It will remember the music of a band instrument. (4-8) Beg for devilish knowledge‘? (7) Son that is creating a racket. (5) He is killed by a bull, we hear. (4) Where an excited American lives? (2,1,5)

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Part that lifts up from a snare. (4) It’s even worn by the army. (7) Might be no rope cut for this argument. (7-5) Walk quietly and tie pot deftly. (6) ,.q,-v-7 That previous form .of yours. (5) :r, ” A huge thundershower is a cause of ruin. (8) Affection that could knot up your insides? ( 12) Cutting things a Chartered Accountant might come up with. (8) I will go in, perhaps, 13 of the United States. (7) Cover up the shelter. (6) Enticing musician of fabulous renown. (5) Yield the offspring, we hear. (4)

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House returned as a campus residence. It now houses faculty offices and music faculty space which would be relocated to the new arts centre. Students voted 61 per cent in favor of the project with a 32.2 per cent turnout. There were 829 ballots cast in favor, 5 16 against and six spoiled. Renovations to the Theatre Auditorium include an enlarged stage, new lighting and the addition of retractable raked seating. In stage one of the project, a wing would be added to include a rectal hall and practice room for the music faculty.

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1983: Mmic becomes a way of life - ripped clothes in by John H. Qavey Imprint staff In 1983, music became more than just a means of entertainment, music became a way of life. Instead of just buying records, people dressed to the music, danced to it and lived to it. The music took a step alongside the world towards a colder technological society. While people played with their home computers, musicians did the same with their synthesizers; as the fear of various diseases heightened, people began dancing with themselves; although I’m sure it’s for more than just sanitary purposes, and as people dance now their eyes are glued, not on some attractive person but rather the 12 foot video screen. For the industryasa whole the year was very profitable, thanks to the return of the multi-hit superseller albums Thriller, Synchronicity, and Flashdance which dominated the number one spot on Billboard for most of the year. For the b uyer the year offered some great talent but in a wide selection of packages. There are imports and domestics, EP’s, LP’s, remixes and you name it. With such a confusing choice can’ the public (yes, that’s you and me) be blamed for hometaping? For Canadian talent, at home they did little more than fill the CRTC quotas for Canadian content, although this year they did it in fine style with great albums released by The Parachute Club, Rough Trade, Rational Youth and Toronto. Abroad Candians fared much better, gaining considerable respect and sales. Bryan Adams has become one of the most popular male vocalists in the States. Montreal’s Men Without Hats topped the

Cashbox charts in the U.S. with their smash The Saftey Dance and got up to an amazing number three on the tough to crack British charts. In the musical calendar, 1983 was the year of the video. With MTV in the States, Top of the Pops in England and all the indigenous counterparts, videos have become more than a form of entertaiment but rather something that can make or break a group. Videos are great since they can give groups the constant exposure they need without tourning. The making of videos has become so expensive that new groups can’t afford to make the glossy videos that get the attention and the airplay on the top 40 style format of MTV. The video can be a beautiful art form if handled properly as is the case, needles to say, with Michael Jackson or Bonnie Tyler’s radiant video for Total Eclipse of The Heart. Not only is it necessary to have a good video these days, you also must have the look. Duran Duran, Culture Club all have the look and the record sales to match.

Rumble Fish Stew+ Copeland A&M On celluloid, Rumble Fish, based on S. E. Hinton’s classic novel, is an unsettling portrait of disturbed youth. As one of the better 4merican films of this year, it succeeds so well becuase of it’s excellent employment of the :lements to enhance the film which is a banquet ‘or the senses. The movie is visually potent, and ‘or the ears it is relentlessly powerful. In amongst all the illterviews with the Police ibout their album Synchronicity, drummer Stewart Copeland kept hinting at how excited le was over the solo project he was doing for -rancis Ford Coppola, and this talented nusician, who grew up in the Middle East and vhose father played trumpet with Glenn tiiller, has drawn from his bag of tricks to nake a very unique soundtrack. With the film core to Rumble Fish, he has succeeded where ew writers do with soundtracks. Instead of an lbum that produces number one hits and lots If free advertising, (Flashdance for example), e has made an album that enhances and nriches the film as a soundtrack should do but eldom does.

Simply

of

Copeland, who wrote the music and played most of the instruments including piano, drums, banjo and typewriter, has taken credit as beingtherhythmatistofthealbum. Copland explains that, “A rhythmatist is a specialist on rhythm and how it can be used for many ends.” Assuming this role, Copeland creates a type of music that is jazzy, reggae but primarily folk-sounding just like the mid-West style of Tulsa where the story is lotted. The album is entirely instrumental, except for one track (Don ‘t BOX Me /y2), that is co-written and sung by Stan Ridgeway of Wall of Voo-Doo. While the soundtrack compliments the film, it also appears that the inverse is true. Without the film, the listener would have trouble appreciating the rather unpleasant and frightening sound that radiates from this album. One remarkable thingabout thisalbum though, is that without knowing anything about the film, the central theme of time running out is expressed clearly in Stewart Copeland’s brilliant instrumentation. To appreciate this album one really has to view the film (which 1 strongly urge you to do) and even though the album might not be pleasant to listen to, it is an artistic achievement that Copeland should be proud of and that is much more deserving of an Oscar than anything Marvin Hamlisch or Henry Mancini have ever made.

Fo

The Country Gentlemen, one of America’s remiere bluegrass bands, is celebrating its 5th year in show business. The Gentlemen erformed their first show in July of 1957, in a nall Virginia night club. From such humble zginnings, the band has progressed in 25 zars from college gigs and bluegrass festivals ) world tours and the great stages of Carnegie all and Lincoln and Kenney Centres. CBC Stereo’s Simply Folk brings this worldavelleing band to Canada on Saturday, Jan. 7 8:05 p.m. when host David Essig joins The entlemen in a studio concert session from gronto’s Jarvis Street studios. Charlie Wailer, the band’s founder, still lchors the group. He is the emcee, lead lgerandguitarist,andhasworkedwithsome the biggest names in bluegrass music.

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Some very promising artists emerged in 1983 such as the Eurithmics and Tears for Fears and some old artists started showing some new promise such as The Rolling Stones and Herbie Hancock. In my opinion the album of the year was the fantastic War by U2 which was head and shoulders the best of this or for that matter any other year, mysongof the year would be the stirring Sweet Dreams by the Eurithmics. All in all, 1983 was a very good year and with all the new talent there will be more than just Big Brother to watch out for.

Rumble Fish an artistic achievement to be proud by John H. Davey Imprint staff

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WATERLOO

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-

_Basketball

Badminton games: Jan. 14, I5,-at Queen’s

Next

Basketball

Next games: Jan. 6, 7, tournament Queen’s. Jan. I 1, here vs. Guelph, 8 p.m. Jan. 14, at McMaster, 4 p.m.

,

At Ryerson tournament, Dec. 28-30: Waterloo,68, Laurentian 58 . Waterloo 98, New Brunswick 64 York 90, Waterloo 83 (OT) . Next games: Jan. 5-7, tournament Acadia Jan. 11, at Laurier, 8 p.m. Jan. 14, here vs. Guelph, 8 p.m.

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Track and Field Volleyball Next

Next meets: Jan. 13, at York Jan. 14, at McMaster

Volleyball:

matches:

Jan.

10, hene vs. Toronto,

8 p.m.

Jan. 12, here vs. Windsor, 8 p.m. Jan. 13, 14, Waterloo Invitational

correction

Next matches: Jan. 6-8 at York Excalibur Jan. 13, home vs. Guelph, 8 p.m.

Wrestling

.

Next meet: Jan. 7, at Western

Next tournament: atio;lal

Columbia is an independent, non-sectarian, coeducational * institution offering grade 11, 12, 13 and latiguage programs in an international environ: ment. Applications from area and overseas students are now being entertained.

Columbia Secondary enjoys an International accreditation for its disciplined approach to education. As such; more than 90% of Columbia graduates have been accented into the university of their choice.

Muskoka

Next meets: Jan. 13 at York Jan. 14, here, vs. McMaster

Squash Swimming

9 a.m.

Skiing

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Next meet: Jan. 13, at Collingwood,

Skiing

Next meet: Jan. 7,8 at Midland/ Jan. 14, at Guelph

WateI;loo 5, McMaster 3, Dec. 2 Next games: Jan. 6,7 at West Point Jan. 1 I, h<re vs. Laurier, 7 p.m. Jan. 12, at Guelph, 7:30 p.m. <\

Next bonspeils: Jan. 7, here at Granite Club ’ Jan. 14, at Toronto Next meet: Jan. 13, at Collingwood,

Hockey

0

-at

-

Next matches: Jan. 13, at Queen’s, 7:30 p.m. Jan. 14, tournament at Queen’s.

In a December 2nd articl,e on the University of Waterloo volleyball Warriors, Brian Jackson was incorrectly referred to as Brad Jackson. Imprint apologizes for any inconvenience.

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score -was tied, 45-45, at the half, a Savich and York gua,rd &lark Jones hit often from outside. With little time left, the Yeomen were up by six, but Waterloo again came back, A three point play by Steve Atkin, nursing a sprained ankle, tied the score at 78 going into OT. During the extra five minues, “we did nothing”, as York got an early lead, and held on to it. Jones was named the tournament MVP, after scor”ing 24 points in thk final. Both Peter Savich, who had 70 points in three games, and , --

topped Regina 105-95, and McMa&er, 85-68. . Steve Atkin (55), shown here in-the N&$th The unranked Marauders posted the biggest final, made a three-point play to send the York u,pset of.the tournament by ousting St. Francis yame into overtime. Xaviei (5th in the rankings) by the score of 77Imprint photo by Mark Lussier 69.

Although Atkin was only able to play about Manitoba Bisons took the consolation title by half the Yorkgame, heshould befineforaction defeating Ottaba 95-92 in overtime. this weekend at the Acadia tournament. Less The third-ranked Brandon Bobcats folfortunate is rookie guard Rob Froese, who lowed Waterloo’s Naismith example by missed the entire tournament with his own winning their own Blue and Gold tournament. version of a sprained ankle. He’ll probably They did so with- ease, demolishing Ottawa warm the bench in Halifax. 97-76 and then Dalhousie, 88-76,.in the final. Dave Burns, who was a major factor in the Lethbridge, ranked tenth, won theconsolation 66-65 triumph over York in the 1983 OUAA game against Ottawa by the score of 91-67. championship game, has rejoined the Warriors They had been defeated by Dalhousie, 96-95 in for the regular season and beyond. He OT, in an opening-round game. concentrated on academics in-&e fall, taking a In Ottawa, the host Carleton Ravens won heavy course load, to lessenhis winter studies. their own tournament, a round-robin also Also joining the Warriors $ Frank Naus, who involving McGill, UPEI, and Guelph. Both the had played for Cameron Heights C.1. of Ra,vens ‘and UPEI finished with 2-l records, Kitchener with Froese and forward Acdy but Carleton won due to their 67-65 comeback Balogh. His presence makes it possible for _victory ovkr the Panthers. McGill, at l-2, ‘McCrae to play an all-Waterloo County unit, wound up third by defeating Guelph 83-68. consistingoftheabovethree, Savich,and Dave The Gryphons’ only victory was a 62-59 Moser. triumph versus Carleton. Inothertournamentsacrossthecountry,the McCrae believes that this weekend’s Aeadia Victoria Vikings continued their domination <tournament will be the “toughest tournament of univssity basketball by claiming the this year” that.the Warriors are entered in. The first game for Waterloo will be against the I983 Wesman Classic in Winnipeg. They took the championship with a 90-68 domination of the East Regional champion, St. Mary’s, and their Calgary Dinosaurs, an impressive team last drip-dry mascot. They will play either St. season, but yet to be ranked in this one. Francis Xavier or Assumption, a U.S. school. Dalhousie was awarded third place after al ~ in their second game. Other clubs at the tournament include York and Brock. 87-85 squeaker over the host club, and the -1


by don button . Imprint staff Coaches, athletes, and fans were all abuzz at last spring’s Athletic Awards - Banquet when the realized just how well the University had done in athletic I endeavours in the 1982/83 season. It was a banner year for the University of Waterloo athletes, with many pleasant surprisesand honours being added to the traditional strengths of the Warriors and Athenas. But last year’s tally of success is almost sure to be eclipsed by this year’s aecomp,lishments. The 1982/ 83 season brought four Ontario C.hampionships and one National Championship berth to U W. So far in 1983184, the University has claimed two Ontario’ Championships and one National Championship berth. And the best’is yet to come:

Men’s Basketball The Warriors were on a three tournament winning streak when they broke for Christmas, winning a tournament in Ottawa, the Guelph Invitational, and their own Naismith in consecutive weeks. Lead guard Peter Savich was named tournament M VP in all three. Unlike last year when the Warriors earned a berth in the Nationalchampionships by winning their. host division, Waterloo will have to win a regional to quality for the CIAU finals next March in Halifax. Conveniently, the Midwest Regional will be held in the PAC on March 9th and 10th. As the host team, the Warriors are automatically. Led by ’ returning All-Stars Peter Savich, Steve Atkin, and Paul Van Oorschot as well as a much improved _ Randy Norris and the return of Cal Kiel at point guard, the Warriors have a starting five that can both run and jump with the best of them. In addition, Bruce Milliken and Paul Boyce have come off the bench and played like starters, and along with promising rookies and returning

consistent playei-s; give Waterloo an ex-

OUAA West crown with their regular season opener at Laurieron January 11 th, and then play their home opener January 14th at 8 p.m. against Guelph.

Worn&z’sBasketball Waterloo (3-2) Windsor (3-2), and Brock (3-O) head the OWIAA West with ‘Guelph (2- 1) close behind, indicating that the second half of the OWIAA ‘West season is going to be extremely tough. Unless disaster strikes, Brock will most likely repeat as division champs, and an undefeated season is not out of the question since their three wins so far have been without the services of All-Canadian Candi Lohr, who will be rejoining the team for the Winter term. Waterloo, Windsor and Guelph will fight it out from there. Led by Patti Edwards, Kim Rau, and Anneliese Dyck, the Athenas are going to be tough to keep out of second place. Guelph, however, beat the4thenas earlier inthe season and could be the sleeper in this season’s standings. Windsor is good, but can be beaten. Guelph and Waterloo will probably fight it out for second place, with

Windsor falling in fourth place.

Western defend Ontario February

for play-downs, and then their championships at Championships at Guelph IOth, 1 lth and 12th.

will the on

’ Field Hockey Last year the Athenas narrowly missed out on a trip to the CIAU’s, and coach Judy McCrae predicted that this season they would win the right to compete for the National Championship. She was \ right. The Athenas made their first ever trip to the Cl AU’s, and had their first AllCanadian, Lisa Bauer. The team finished sixth in the country at the championships, and McCrae says that a return trip for the Athenas is unlikely next year due to the graduation of three key players: sweeper Beth Kewley, and “St. Peter” Savich was MVP of three straight national team players Jean Howitt and basketball tournaments, and made the Lisa Bauer. One national team player, tournament all-star team, a fourth. Debbie Murray, remains, and will be part Imprint file photo of the nucleus of next year’s team. The tiuelph’s Sylvia Ruegger dominated always consistent Sylvia Boyd, and two both the OWlAA’s and the CIAU’s, but players who went-from being average to Marjama’s powerful finishing kick was c very strong this season, Kathy Goetz and good enough for a fifth place finish in the Ellen Clark, will join Murray as next \ ClAU’s and All-Canadian status. year’s returning standouts. Marjama graduates this year, but will This year’s success was due to a great ,be remembered as being a part of the team effort by six or seven players who rebuilding of U W’s cross-country teams were also individual standouts. The team under coach Alan Adamson: In 1979, concept will be stressed again next year, Marjama finished 53rd in the OWIAA’s and if the Athenas get a couple of strong and since then no Athena hasfinished that freshmen, they could, be returning to the low. national stage in two years. Harvey ‘M‘itro and Rob Hardy led the Warriors into the OUAA’s, but finished out of the medals. This is the first year that U W has had an

FigureSkating

official figure skating team; before the 1983-84 season, skaters could represent their The University of Waterloo shocked the university curling .wdrld last March when both the Athenas and the Warriots brought home Ontario Championships.

school

but

on an individual,

level.

Now the Athenas have their own coach, Lou Davidson, and are looking to build

Whether Waterloo will finish in second the program to-a competitive’“-level in a 6 h or not will largelydepend on how they fare I I very short time? - . ’ roster that is capable of pl-ayingmany, L against Guelph-* on January .I lth..,The To 6peat ai such wou’id be a major feat for The skaters ,who will, represent UW at different styles of -,trbskCtb4ilI:‘al~~bii~~“ ‘Y‘(game i&here at 8 p-m., and a win would put the two teams and is -not Very likely, the OWIAA figure skating cha.mpionship ,, they have consistently been ahead enough the Athenas in goodstead to stay ahead of however both teams will be proceeding >’ i at Western on I.February 18th will - be to’ stick with their preferred style of play.% ,the rest of the field. with th.e intent of repeating as champions. , chosen %byFebruary - lst, ,based on .the . 1..__’ Still, they can open ‘up to a’running~game ~ Cr& countiy The Athenas and Warriors will be results of. invitational: “. ‘1 1‘ ” ’ tournaments at or closedown to a press if necessary, and’ c,oacbcd by Judy McCrae, who is already YorkVonJanuary:,l 3th, and at Queen’son * I ) of the cross-. coyntry opposing coaches: have to figure out I The highlight beginning the process of letting the January 28th. I ’ ’ season for U W was Lana Marjaina, who strategy to deal with not one star, but ,on campus determine -? Athena to’ win an I various foursomes seven and that is enough to beat most )-,*. :tme the first I - -C)WlAA medal, and thus the first Athena’ which,is the best. Late in January, U W,will teams. send a women’s and a men’s team to :o c!ualify for the ClAU’s. McCrae’s troops start their run for the ICI This -year’s -foot.ball team, was: a dismal sight, with the defence playingtheirhearts’ I out while waiting for the offence to join them. They did@ until the last two games of the season when it was too late, and the Warriors finished in sixth place in the OUAA with a one win, five loss and one tie record. Eight Warriors were named to the AllStar team in what was to be the Warriors t best season in a long time under second year coach Bob McKillop. McKillop is in the process of rescuing the Waterloo football program, and had expected much better things from his team. Next year the team will probably be close to a playloff spot, but quarterback/ kicker Stan Chelmecki is graduating and the team is in desperate need of a quarterback. The calibre of next year’s quarterback will probably determine the success of theteam, whichal~o~~llf’~~~d~~~’ have a couple of younger, receivers develop to replace starters ’ who’.‘are graduating. ;< Football fans should not expect too much too soon,/’ but McKillop is a proven \ Baumlisberger, Kathy Goetz, Lisa Bauer, Beth ‘Kewley, Jean The Athena field hockey t&am finished second in the OWIAA, and ceptionally

strong

bench.

- Coach Don- McCrae has’ assembled a

_-

sixth in Canada’. From left to right, bottom row: Anne Marie Jackson, Shari Carter, Ellen Clark, Sylvia Boyd, Janine Imada, Sharon de Souza, Debbie Murray, Penny Smith; top row: Iris

Hpwitt,

Linda Devette,

Coach

Judy McCrae.

i

, Imprint

photo

by Bill kmphreys

FhotbaU’

Cont’donpgJ8r

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I8

Imprint. Friday, January

sports, place. In addition, UW’s Steve Cracker led the league in scoring for most of the first half of the season, and remains in the race for the scoring championship. The Warriors play two exhibition games against the U.S. Military Academy at West Point today and tomorrow, and open the second half of the regular season at home against the second place Laurier Golden Hawks at 7 p.m. at Columbia Icefield.

Banner year cont’d winner and will have the team fighting for -the top of the OUAA within three years.

Golf After finishing third at the OUAA Championships last season, the Warriors claimed a second this year, and served notice that they would be back to try for the topspot next year. 1 a:,t year’steamwas led by Gord McKechnie and Glen Howard, and they proved to be theleaders again this year. McKechnie broke the course record with a 68 in the OUAA semi-finals to lead the Warriors to a second place finish in that tournament, ironically behind the University of Toronto, and a berth in the Ontario Championships. In the finals, Toronto was again too much for the Warriors, and claimed the Ontario Championship.

Rugby By the nature of the game, winning in rugby gives one the bragging rights until somebody beats you, and the Warril rs and Trojans can sit back and brag until next September. Both the Warriors, U W’s varsity team, and the Trqjans. U W’s club team, claimed Ontario Championships last November to make Waterloo the best rugby school in the province. The Warriors went through the entire season without a loss, including an exhibition game against a visiting team from Covent-r-y, England, and the Trojans lost only once to give UW a combined rugby record of 17 wins, one loss and one tie.

Gymnastics Coach Kevin Eby has been leading his charges through training in preparation for the ranking meets on January 21st at Western and February 4th at Queen’s. Based on U W’s performance at these two meets, a team will be selected for competition at the provincial championships at York on February 12th.

Skiing Alpine skiing (downhill) at Waterloo is a low budget affair, and it will remain as such this season, making it very hard for either the Athenas or Warriors to better their sixth place finish at last year’s Ontario Championships. Races run every Friday at Collingwood starting on January 13th until the finals on February 9th and 10th. Nordic Skiing (cross-country) is another matter entirely. Nick Scheier coached the Warriors and Athenas into a force to be reckoned with in collegiate nordic skiing, and last season the Warriors came

Hockey Coach Jack Birch promised that he would build the hockey Warriors into a contender once Columbia Icefield was placed at his disposal, and he seems to be doing just that. The Warriors are in fourth place, only seven points behind the undefeated University of Toronto, and at one point in the first half of the season had climbed to a tie for second

bHEMAGIC

MOUNTAIN

Roth the varsity and club rugby teams won OUAA championships. Here, Dave Hunter and Chr1s Skelton lead an offensive charge against RMC. Imprint photo by Bob Butts

fourth in the province, with the Athenas collecting their third consecutive Ontario championship. Unfortunately, this yearcould bealittle different. Sheier has turned over the coaching duties to Donna Elliot, who won’t have quite as much to work with as Sheier did. The Warriors will remain basically the same, and strong performantes from Tim Cooke and Ian LoweWylde could prevent the team from slipping below fifth. The Athenas lost Wendy Meeuwisse to graduation, and coach Elliot and returning standouts Pat Wardlaw and Jacquie Gibson will have performed a miracle if they claim a fourth consecutive title. They should be competitive however, and should remain in the top three or four in the province. Dry-land and roller training has been extremely successful for the teams, and if the snow holds out they will be able to get in a lot of training between now and the Ontario championships February 1Oth, 1 lth and 12th in Sudbury.

Soccer This just was not the year for the soccer Warriors. They finished the seasoninfifth place with three wins, seven lossesand two ties. Four of their seven losses were by one goal. In addition, the better the Warrior player was, the earlier in the season he got injured, or so it seemed. For coach John Vincent, it was the tvne of season that one tries to forget, and he’is looking forward to next year when his players should be healthy and readv to go

Squash Despite the fact that the overall souash program at U W is stronger than it hasever been, grabbing an Ontario title would be next to impossible for either the Athenas or the Warriors. Both teams will probablv finish in the top four, behind the ‘big time

Cont’d onpg. 19

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Burner ‘yearcont’d squash;, universities, York, Toronto,‘ and’ Westecn. . The Athenas have been more successful than have the Warriors in the past; tieing for the Ontario title three years ago, but Barney Lawrence has whipped the’ Warriors squash program int,o shape by making the players more competitive and adding two international courts. Still, it is -doubtful that th:y will finish higher than Fourth - v&i& equates to about sixth or seventh in the country. Squash fans can follow the Warriors :hrough the Waterloo Invitationaltomor-ow, and the Athenas at their invitational >n January 20th and 21st. OWIAfA Championships are at Queen’s o*n Feburary 17th and 18th, with the OUAA inals set‘for February 1 lth and 12th at X. M.C.$r Kingston. . \

Track andFiekl

SynchronizedSwiinmihgI_ Synchroniied swimming has grown in eaps and bounds at U W in the last couple kf years, but is still a long way from being ompetitive with the top schools in’ the ountry. The loss of team MVP, Carol iutchinson, and not having a pool deep nough to practice in are m-ajor obstacles’ or the Athenas to overcome this year, but hey will continue-to work their way to the op under coach Dr. Helen Gordon. . ..

Swihmirtg~ The Warriors only qualified four simmers for the CIAU’s’ last year, but ill managed a fourth place finish in the )UAA’s. This year they should be about ie same, or a little stronger. The’ Athenas, however, are bound to ip somewhat from last year’s perforlance. Led by Lynn Marshall, the’team nished second in -Ontario and seventh in ie country. Unfortunately, Marshall has

,.-.

.: -.

J

first‘ half of the volleyball season, every g&uated> and:‘gone on to do graduate’ indication is that no sport is going to rival’ work at Cambridge’ University, and “the volleyball in success this season.* The bronze medals she gold, and two are presently undefeated at 5 accumulated at last year’s Cl AU’s are not A Warriors one - going to be easily, replaced. The A,thenas - wins and Olosses, and the Athenasare better at 6 wins and 0 losses. The Warriors will still- be competitive however, an.d are ranked fifth in- the country, and the there is still little dangerof them handing Athenas are not included on the top ten over their swimming crown to- the Warriors . .,. .I list, despite having an identical record with the’YorkYeowomen,w,hoareranked The Athenas and Warriors kick off the Winter term, with* meets B at York on. third. Last., year’s Athenas travelled to the January 13th and MC-Master on January . OWIAA Championship tournament only 14th. to lose, and the Warriors made. it all the way to the OUAA final before losing an OUAA game. Both seem intent on ‘U W’s track and field team are not yet avenging their losses. although it will be strong enough to be considered serious much tougher for the Athenas to claiman competitors in the team standings, but like Ontario championship than it will be for the cross-country teams have becqme the Warriors. ’ stronger under the tutelage of Alan The Warriors ,have not lost a regular Adamson. Both the Warriors and season game since February of 1982, and. Athenas are oreeping slowly up the. .have already beaten the strongest teams in standings, but their progress can best be the province this season: York, Toronto, seen through outstanding ~ individual Western and Guelph. performances, which used to-be few and. The Athenas-host Tqonto on January far between and now occur annually. j 10th. and Windsor on January 12th, and -- In the OWIAA’s in Sudbury, Elaine then will attempt to. be. ,bad hosts by Veenstra led theAthenas with ag,old in the winning their ’ own .1ournament on high jump. Sandy Almond found a bronze January 13th and 14th:x, I medal, as did Elizabeth Reisch, and-the ‘The Warriors travel to the York relay team finished sixth. ‘, Athenas Excalibur on January 6th, 7th and 8th For the Warriors, OUAA points came. which is one of the toughest tournaments from sixth place finishes in relays, a , in the country. After that they travel to bronze from Jeff Joslin, and a silver and a another of the country’s other toughest bronze from javelinists Peter Shaw and, tournaments, the .Winnipeg Invitational. . Kris Riseling., At York, the Warriors will’ be:facing Both the Athenas and Warriors turned Toronto, Laval, and Ball State; a ranked to indoor track and field after the Ontario American college team. In Winnipeg, they championships, and coach Adamson has will face three other teams ranked in the - high hopes for the two teams, top ten in Canada-, as well as the University @ The twoteams travel to tournaments at ,’ of Southern California., ’ . : .: . iI _ York, Windsor and Laurier in preparatThe big one for the Warriors,‘however, ion for the championships at Windsor on is on January 10th when they host the March 2nd and 3rd. Guelph Gryphons, who are at the other end of two Warrior streaks -3 their last regular seasonloss was to the Gryphons, . ’ in Feburary 1982,,andltheir lasthomefoss Based on the standings at the end of the’ ?was to the Gryphons, in Feburaryl-981,

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I. / , . ~~&~&” - Two former Warrior All-Stars returned ’ * to the team this year togiveamuchneeded shot in the arm to the water polo program. M’ike Oberemk, the all-time leading ’ Warrior scorer, returned as an assistant K coach under Lou Wagner, and John Saabas returned to th/e pool as a star.ting ’ forward . Oberemk and Saabas weren’t enough, however, as the Warriors couldn’t - dislodge the perennial champion -MCI Master Marauders. ‘The team could be back to their OUAA Championship calibre 198 1 year very shortly however, as fifteen of the 22 man roster were rookies this season. Next season should see. the team nearer the top1 and by theend of the following season’,%hey could be on top of 1 the OU AA once again. , ’ Wrestlig

@

Wrestling, one of UW’s only claim to athletic fame in the past, lagged awhile but now seems to;be getting back ontrack. Under coach John Gourlay, two UW wrestlers, ‘Abe Beuckert and Daiv Tainguay, wonOUAA medalsand trips to the CIAU’s last year: This year Gourlay’s’assistant from last year, Egon Beiler, is coaching the team, which is compensatingfoihck of quantity and spirit. Abe i” by sheer determination Beuckert ’ continues to be the best wrestling Warrior, but people like Eric Hessenthaler, Glen Utt-ley, Roger Berschm_ann, ’ Gord MacDona1.d. and Colin Marshall are starting to win ‘medals as . ‘.well. The W,arriors areextremely optimistic , about their team this year after finishing . second in a meet at ‘McMaster that ‘included some of the best in the province, They will take their high spirits toQueen’s on January 13th and 14thi and then to Guelph ‘on January !2 1st ,as .part of their warm-up to;fhe. OUAA finals February 18th atGuelph, ’, .. .r -<

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