1986-87_v09,n07_Imprint

Page 1

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Second Class Registration

Number

NF5453,

Kitchener,

Ontario

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Vol. 9, No. 6 July

,-WateHoo,

25, 1986

CFS/Feds:lawsuit bv N&l Bonnor r&print -staff A- settlement was reached last week between the University of Waterloo’s Federation of Students <and the Canadian Federation of Students (CFS) ending a two year dispute that had threatened to end up in court. The dispute cefitered around Waterloo’s membership in the National Union of Sttidents, CFS’ predecessor. The Waterloo Feds claimed

$25,000 in mispaid fees, while the. NUS/CFS claimed $17,000 in withheld fees. The out-of-court settlement calls for the Waterloo Student Federation to pay the CFS $5,000 over the next two years - giving the university prospective membership in the na* tional student organization - and for the CFS to pay the UW feds $5,000 if and when UW successfu!ly applies for full membership in CFS.

Tvve&y-seven _couples p&-ticSpated in the Delta Omega Chi danceathan at Vitfage I, July 18-l 9. Thirteen couples cOtipleted the fuli 16 hours. More,than $4,000 was raised. Proceeds to go to Big Brothers. Photo by Preet Khalsa

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Ontario

and 20year olds are still too young to handle the responsibility, will form the basis of the student groups’ defence of the current laws, said Forrest. By increasing the age limit, the government would be telling many young people their elected officials

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settled. out of Court In addition, the CFS agreed to foot the $1,500 bill for running the student referendum at Waterloo that would be necessary to achieve full membership, as long as this referendum is called no later than March 31, 1988. UW Federation President Scott Forrest called the settlement “a well: balanced agreement” that is “good for Waterloo students.” “The CFS has changed drastically in recent years,” Forrest said. “They’ve become a stronger lobby ing force that’s of benefit to students. More lobbying has more effect on government, so by settling with the national student movement we’re really investing in higher quality education. We’re investing in the future.” CFS executive bff icer John Casola had much the same to say. ’ “The CFS is very, very pleased with the agreement,” Casola said. “It took a long time to reach this decision. We found a enuine willingness to negotiate on the part of the new Fed administration.” While cautioning that “no one came out ahead” on the deal, Casola said that the agreement “set the precedent that the CFS is a referendum-based organization, so that students dust be consulted before a university pulls out.” The dispute first surfaced in 19Si, ,+,+-when theNational~Uni~nlu~.Students (NUS) delegated its responsibiliti& to the’new Canadian Federation of Students, in effect becoming a dummy corporation: As a NUS member,. the UW Student Federation continued to pay fees to NUS, but did not join the CFS. In 1983, a general meeting of the UW student council passed a motion to pull out of NUS and cease fee

Liquor Act under review

,.by Steve Kannon Imprint staff Any attempt by the prtivincial govemment to raise the legal drinking age to 21 will be fought by an alliance of university student councils and campus pub associations, says the chairman of the, Ontario F&d&&ion ,of Students. Matt Certosimo said this week the, ’ age of majority issue is seen as a possible attack on the lib&ties of university students. The age limit is the most contentios part of the Liberal’s current review of Ontario’s Liquor Licences Act (LLA). “Raising the drinking age to 21 won’t solve any problems,” he said in a telephone interview.4 “l’m particularly confident in this case .. . that we can succeed (ifi) influencing govemment policy.” Many of the province’s student groups agreed this week to develop a common cburse of action for dealing with the government’s AdMsory Committee on Liquor Regulations, formed June 4 by Minister of Consumer and Commercial Relations Monte Kwinter. The agreement was reached July- 22 at a University of Toronto meeting. Scott Forrest, Federation of Students president at the University of . Waterloo, said Wednesday the groups will make recommendations about many aspem of the LLA review, including supporting changes in the regulations governing special occasion permits.. The weakness of’arguments for raising the drinking. age, such as 19

feel they are too childish to thiAk for thems&lves. An increase would also cau& financial difficulties for most student unions in the province. Student-operIContinued on page 3 Campus

Ring Road accident

payments beginning the following year. However, then-UW’ Student Federation president Tom Allison uriilaterally decided to withhold Waterloo’s 1983 NUS fee as well. The NUS chairman at that time, John Doherty, did not recognize Waterloo’s withdrawal until May 1,1984, claiming UW was a member of a democrafic organization and must therefore abide by a decision of a majority of its students. In October of 1984, NUS launched a civil suit against the Waterloo Feds for the fees withheld in 1983, which , amounted to $17,000. ‘NUS also claimed interest charges and court costs, which would ‘have amounted ‘to an additional $13,000 today. In retaliation, UW student council recommended, at an October 14 meeting that same year, that the

Underfunding.

Feds launch a suit ‘against NUS to claim $25,000 in membership fees paid to NUS from 1981 to 1983, alleging that, NUS had ceased to exist from the time it amalgamated with the CFS in 1981. . Since then, lawyers on both sides ’ have been at work putting together their c&es, amassing legal bills th&both sides admit are ‘.‘iri the area of $5,000”. The Waterloo Fed position was based solely on a technicality until recently,. but when Fed president Forrest was informed that it probably would not hold up in court, more emphasis was placed on a negotiated settlement. ’ “We just sat down at a table and tl.acked it out,” Forrest said of the settlement. It was in the students’ best interest to reach an agreement.

Conference

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More $$$ sought’ .,

gates from such groups as the Ontaby Phil Birnbaum . , rio Secondary School Teachers Imprint staff Federati,on and the Canadian AdMore effective and organized govanced Technology Association. vemment lobbying, and the possibility of increased government funding ’ Also in attendance were various representatives, includas early as October, are the results of government ing Bob Richardson, executive assistthe UW-sponsored underfunding avt $,o$he \@nister of co!lFge& q,n& conference, organizers say. Called “Fund Universities, Fund . UtliVWSftieS, and former UW ‘PreSident Tom Allison, yepresenting, the the Future,” the conference, held Ontario Treasureis office. NDP postJulj~ 1 l-1 3 at UWs Village Two, secondary education .critic Richard brought together representatives of Allen and Kitchener MPP David Ontari& universities and educaCooke appeared to answer questional organizations to develop ideas on ,fighting chronic uriderfunding at tions from delegates. post-secondary institutions. The majority of the conference inBoth the UW administrat@n and volved delegates working in groups Federation of Students have been td make recommendations on speespecially concerned with govemcific aspects of publicizing the univerment funding of universities, claimsity funding issue. ing insufficient government support Presentations and ‘written reports is threateniiig Waterloo’s excellence were made .on raising cofimunity in such fields as computer science awarecess, raising government research. Concern has been increasayareness, aspects of campus allianing since a ban was imposed on ces, and alliances across the educaUWs controversial computer service tion community. I fee, which had been raising an anThose recoinmendations will be nual $1.8 million for the univerlsity. considered by the various universiAttendirig the conference were unties which will act on them and report dergradutite representatives from back at a second conference to be most Ontario Universities, several continue-d on page 2 Province graduate representatives, and dele-

Biker. lqospitalized by Neal Bdnnor imprint staff 1 A University of Waterloo student is in serious condition at @e KitchenerWaterloo Hospjtal following a motorcycle accident early Thursday morning on Ring Road. ’ Joseph Louis Cayouette was admitted to the intensive care unit of K-W Hospital after suffering severe head injuries in the accident, which occurred at 130 a.m. opposite the Psychology building on the east-bound lane of Ring Road. The bike’s passenger, Martin Ci. Barclay; also a UW student, was treated for minor injuries, at the hospital and released. According to witnesses, Cayouette’s bike was travelling at about 50 mph. when it skidded out of control, jumped the curb, and struck a lamp post, coming to rest against a car in parking lot H. Passersby, including Impririt staff member Doug Thompson, quickly alerted campus security of the incident. Security immediately called for medical assistance. Two ambulances. were sooq on the.scene. “I was driving home from the Gqptis’ Centre when I. saw a man kneeling on the grass waving for help,” Tht>mpson said. “I saw two guys lying immobile on the grass and sped off to security fast. When I got back to the scene, security was already there.” “The bike’s seat was lying 50 feet away,” Thompson said. “We checked around but could only find one helmet. One guy was in convulsions and theye was a lot of blood, while the other guy just lay there stunned.” . According tothe police, Cayouette is a 21 year old engineering student from St. Hyacinthe, Quebec. Waterloo Regional Police were still continuing their investigation when Imprint went to press Thursday afternoon.

Three alternative bands played at the Coronetlast weekend. Featured were Vital Sines, Bell Jar and.Magg$ Fodder. See Arts section.


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Engineerin’c. by Suzanne Griffith ’ Imprint staff Students at @e University of Waterloo have been called everything from “yuppies” and “workaholics” to “technoids”. We go to a “suitcase university”. Everyone knows and talks about our problem of student apathy, but no one seems to do anything about it. + A group of 2B Computer Engineering sttidents have decided to,try. They call themselves Students Against Apathy and meet frequently to discuss problems in the engineering department which they find contribute to a lack of student involvement in extracurricular act&&

studentslact ., _-. -

against

ties. the heavy weight of exams. The stuThe group points to the lack of - dents find this strong emphasis’on communication as one of the basic marks and rankings against other problems in their.faculty. To take the members in the class fosters compefirst step in promoting communicatition. More importantly, say organiz‘tion between faculty and students, ‘ers, it-encourages the engineers to professor Michael Magazine, chairavoid betting ‘involved in extiacurricman of the Department of Manageular activities in order to ensure they msnt Science, agreed to substitute a the mar& hossible. regular M Sci 3 11 class on July 4 with It was suggested the Facuky of Ena discussion with ‘Engineering Dean gineering stop ranking members Bill Lennox and a’ class of students within each class. According to orfroth -all specialties’ within Engineerganizer Daniel Pei, one class average ing. may be 80 per cent, and another The group. discussed a variety of class average may be 55 per cent. topicsof concern to the students. Consequently, ‘a student with a 60 The, most common complaint i,s per cent average may be ranked low the faculty’s emphasis on,marks and in one class, but high in another.

gethighest

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4370 King $tm ETst - ‘KitdhenW~ OntA

.- 653 mfad@ ,

The ranking - creates . problems other than fogtering dompetition, he said. When employers are deciding which students ,they w$l interview, they are presented with the resume and transcript of each applicant. The engineers feel employ&s will only intetiew the highest ranking students in the class, group members have determined. Often studenti with middle to. low ranks do not get any interviews at all. If the rankings were not- placed on the transcripts, students would have the opportunity to “sell themselves” at the interview based on qualities other than rank. The students would, of course, have the option to supply their ranking at the. interview. . ... . . .. . . In addition, pnvlleges sucn as opportunities to work with orofessors on research projetis, 0; to be a teaching assistant are handed put to the top. ranking students only. This creates problems particularly with the assistant pdsitions. Many of the students s+cted to teach have-little or no interpersonal skills ok teaching experience. Teaching assistants should be chosen not only for their knowledge on me subjeci, but for their ability to tesich as well, says the new group. , The enbineers also point t? the forms they filled out in high school to gain admittande to- Engineering at Waterloo. This form states that UW was not only looking for people with high marks, but they ‘wanted well rounded people who excel in athletits and have participated in extracurricular activities. Dean Bill Lennox says thiB form has been successful in narrowing down the applicants th& faculty will accept. It even led to r&fusing admittance to a few students who had averages of more <than 90. per :+Q;-JyJ $$NJl~; -QQ$>&~)@~~$;jQ.;;

&cross

apathy . written form at all. % The problem with this system lies in the fact these “well rounded pm pie” arrive at Waterloo and are immediately swamped with work and forced to compete for marks, said Pei. They are faced with a dileqma: do they get involved with extracurricular activities? Or do they devote 100 per cent of their time to studying, tryins to be one of the highest ranking students in order to get a job? Most engineers opt for the second solution, and become stifled, he said. Instead of broadening their horizons and participating the way th4 used to in high schqol, they devote all their time to studying. As a result, engi. . r+s . .r become. . more_C_.and more. alie_. nated trom the rest ot the university. Mahy of the engineers who atL tended the meeting voiced a desire for a more well-rounded education. At present, an engineer has only five non-technical options to choose from a very short, specific list. The engineers would like to- have the chance to select more thah five nontechnical options from the university calendar, said Pei. This way they would have mdre choice in course stibjects. And, as opposed to atten,ding large classes with only engineers, they would be able to attend classes with students from all faculties. ,This group, lead by Daniel Pei and Pet& Labon will reconvene in January. They plan to hold a series of discussibns in large lecture. halls with - Dean Bill Lennox and th,e heads of various specialties within Engineer7 ing. Labon said that next term; instead of just talking about these concerns, they want to actually do somgthing about them. They do not, however, have any specific stfa!egy ,, a, p@r?ed at -@,ig;poil;lt~.~. ._ : _ i . ;,;:j :-f;;!.\;“i;;’ I-6’‘k 1:r;j,q ‘:‘>f;; 5;: f’l .G!;sZ ’

fr0.m .LULU’s

- OPEN7

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DAYS\ A WEEK

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fLimit’ Studertt eVicticyb9 prwince by Ten-i Shewfdt day (JuI) 24). ‘Matt Erikson,. Federa/ ’ fore& mandate is to examine the Imprint staff tion ‘of Students vice-president for issues relating to room&s and The arbitrary eviction of students university affairs, delivered the comboarders and to try to ensure there is - ih roomer/boarder situations is a mittee’s findings to the Ontario Task - &I adequate supply of accommodamajor problein and should be dealt Force on Roomers, Boarders, atid i tions for. low-income single people, with by the protince, a University of Lodgkrs. \ develop ’ and. maintain adequate Waterloo committed has deterThe provincial task force was comstandards’ in accommodation and to mined. missioned in March and has been respond to specific areas of need as The Student Housing Issues Cdmtraveling across the province listenthey arise. mittee made its recommeildations ing to compl&.s and recommendaIn his recommendations to the to an Ontario government task force .tions about Ontario’s current task force, Erikson said the housing which conirened in Waterloo yester- ’ roomer/boarder legislation\. The task situation in Waterloo has become critical and will become even more desperate for students as landlords ‘convert more units to ~family-only dwellinas and as home-owners reduce the number of students they take in because of strict new municipa,l Ia& governing lodging houses. The.Student Housing Issues Corn-. \ . . by Phil’ Birnbauril . mittee study found there are nearly Imprint staff 4,000 students in roomer/boarder siStudents should take the leadership role against underfunding and media tuations and this nuinber may be incoverage of the underfunding problem should be a‘priority, recommends the creased by the foreseen housing University of Waterloo underfunding conference report. releaSed thii week shortage and by landlords who are The report’ is a summary of the ‘activities of the July -1l-13 conference, avoiding Landlord Tenant Act obli,which involved delegates from Ontario u&ersitieS and educational oiganizagations by ren’ting-out separate tions in planning an4 recommending actions to fight university underfunding. Media contacts should be established and maintained, the rebort says, so “P.S.E. [post-secondaryeducation] issues making news -till become commonpl$ce and people’s exposure to P.S.E. issues will be increased.” ’ The report says media coveragewill also increa&govetiment awareness and concern; and therefore suggests such publicity before the provincial continued from page 1 ‘goiem’ment budget expected in mid-October. It suggests providing media pubs would lose an eswith “human examples of the problem,” as weli as heavy expobure during ’ ated.campus September orientation by providing an academic bent to media-covered : timated 60 Per cent of their revenues, the OFS found. If that was the case, events. UWS main student pubs, the Bomb&In addition, groups are asked to “promote to the commtinity what the shelter and Fed Hall, would be, seuniversity can offer [it],” and to publicize _university or’ student-sponsored riously affected. charity events as ways in which the university provides community benefit. Bombshelter manager Harry Warr Such promotional activitiesare +st handled by an individual campus or group rather than by a province-wide group, the report says, a$hough differsaid the Campus Centre watering ent interest groups on campus (staff, administration, faculty, students) should . hole would close its doors in the. wake of such legislatitjn. Already op try to resolve any differences and work together. erating at a l&e during the summer, It recommends that stirderits, not administration or faculty, take the leaderthe pub could not s@nd the serious . ship role against underfunding, and suggests the campus group consist of . . drop in clientele, he said. The Federfive students and only two each of staff, administration, and faculty. ation of Students would be forced to A government statement On the role of education sho@d also be among put all its effort into keeping Fkd Hall, the goals of the education ?otimunity, the report says. “The government doesn’t have a policy or direction for what they would like with its laige mortgage, in oper$ioti. For its part, Federation Hall would to see education become,” Federation of Students president Scott Forrest probably haJe to open itseif to the said. “Do they want accessibility or quality, b$.h, ‘or neither?’ He said a firm public to stay &float, said assistant statement on the government’s educatioli policy would gi.ve the education mangger Catherine Whyte. Althoughdommunity someming conqrete it could. challenge. such a move would n6t be feijsiblk Other major recommendations of the report include: . - Promotion of P.S.E. as lessening Canada’s dependence on foreign tech- ’ ul:lder current regulations, widening the possible clientele-b&e wpuld nology; likely be the only option. - Eventual lbbbying of Federal gaernment as-well as provincial; “At least half our (customers) are - Underfunding “action”we&s” of demonstrations, publicity; undergraduates under 21,” she said. - Study of voting patterns of communities for more effective lobbying; “(We) couldn’t even break even - Compilation of research statistics to support arguments for P.S.E.; - Working across the educat@n community, including high school students . under *ose circumstances.” While uni\iersity groups haye been ,and administration. I. gearing up for a struggle over the age -. continued from page 1 of majority issuc3, the government committee is looking at much more than this single issue, said chairman Steven Offer, the Liberal MPPTor Mississaug,a North. * Offer, who is Monte Kwinteis parliamentary secretary, said in an interheld next month & Ryerson Poly&chtober, in the hope the‘ budget will ’ view t&Is tieek age is only a p&t of the reGew which will make a comprenical institute in Toronto. inciease univeisity funding. hensive study of Qntario’s liquor Many. of the recotimendatioris Although the various universities and participating groupsdll aa in- laws,: many of which7’are “antideal with boosting public and godependentlyi the province-wide co- quated”. vernment awareness of underfundordination of the underfunding d&e “1 think it’s important to keep-in ing through ‘increased media till become the responsibil@y of’the coverage of relevant group activities. perspective that the age is but one of . Federation of Students President . OFS, which will be organizing nexf the reference points. Of course , Scott Forrest said the . short-term nionth’s and ‘all future confeknces, (there’s) lifes,tyle advertising, the regForrest said, but ‘added UW will con- . ulations surrounding licensed estabgoal is extensive media coverage before the provincial budget, which is tinue to take an active interest in its lishments of all kinds is something ‘_ \ organization. _ expected to be tabled in mid&-

Meciia coverage <of J uhd’erfkmdirigTurgedm

~ rootis with common living areas rather than whole houses. Currently there is no legislation to cover roomers and boarders and many are harassed and arbitrarily evicted, the committee found. .In demonstrating the problems of student roomer/boarders, the report outlined some actual cases received by the university’s Legal Resource Office. In many cases stud&s were threatened with eviction if ‘they sought action on illegally increased rents or substandard living conditions. As well, many -students whd moved out of unfit or substand?rd units often forfeited ‘much money incltiding the last month’s rent. In his recommendations to the task force, Er’ikson stressed security of tenure wasa priority issue. Ensuring that students could be housed for a fuced period of time and not arbitrarily thrown into the streets is a necessity, he said. Erikson also . reported that if other recommenda-

as-keel tions tG *.improve safety standards were, adopted, they would’ have no effect if the students could be threatened with eviction upon reportihg an infraction. c Another iecommendation from the report calls for the province to determine if- roomers and boarders are covered under the ResidentialTenancies Ati, in which case laws such as rent review would be applicable. ’ As well, Erikson’s report recOmmended the quality of units be addressed by the task force, and that standards be set in conjunction with city bylaws. Although the protincial task force will be looking at other types of roomers and boarders, such as single mother? and the elderly, th;e UW re- * port notes the situation for students is unique and extremely import& in this area. That fact must be kept in mind when the governtient formu- ’ lates any new laws regarding roomers and boarders.

Campus pubs .@tr’isk

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I Provincewid’e co‘rordination sought

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the age limit, which is of great concern, as well as “With respect to the age, one has the whole thing with respect to speto &ly take into accoirnt the ratiocial occasion permits. That’s also n nale behind the number (19) as op something where we think there can posed to the number (itself),” he be an awful lot’of good work ‘done said. “The rationale behind 19 is that with respect to ferreting-out how the - it’s the age at which’ people . . . were pec$e perceive .the problem.” out of high schijol. The reason 19 Because of public concern, howwas picked is because there was ever, age of majority will be one of the some perceived worth in disallowing major parts of the review, admitted drinking #within the high school sy? Offer. tern. “k’s certainly part of the mandate, “We should look at the reason bebut it falls right within the scope (of tiind the beneficial results of keeping the review), he said. “k’s indeed one the age of drinking out of the high of the issues that I’m receiving someschool system. If that is still perceived of the largest amounts of corresponto be the best reason, then following dence ori.” that will *also dictate what the,age will Various interest groups, including be,” said Offer. M.A.D.D (Mc$hers Against Drunk Keeping-- alcohdl out of high Driving)’ -and ‘P.R.I.D.E. (Parents to schools may be the thing to do, but Reduce Imp&red Driving Everyuniversity stu’dents can’t -be jumped where), have~prompted this aspect of into the same category, said Ce&othe review through goveinment lobsitiq, The OFS and the various cambying campaigns. pus federations will work to dispel tie -Most arguments advocating the stereotypical image of iiniver&y stuage increase are based solely on dents, he said. emotional reasoning and don’t “People think students do .nothing match actual statistics, said the OFS but drink all the time, especially durCertosimo. To counter these efforts, ing Septemer (orientaiion). ,We’re ‘the OFS plans some lobbying of its gging to dispel the attitudes brought own, he said. on by a few bad apples.” Other groups, such as the hotelStlid&nts have to let thkir elected “/tioter and tavern associations, are repre$entatives know of their C&I expected to join forces with the stutern, he said. Both the OFS and the dent groups. UW federation are urging interested With an e’iection expected in the students to-get involved in letting the near future, the political costs of alieknow how they feel., \ nating students and dealing an eco- . government The provincial committee will be nor’nic blow to the entertainment travelling to 18 centres in Ontario industry will likely make the govemlistening to public input on the matment think-twice. about the increase, ter. Representatives from Ontario’s said Certosimo. universities will attend the meetings Although the provincial cqmmitin their areas. The committee comes tee is far from ma,king any con& Kitchener in September, when the siot?s . pet* @! Offer, the age *Qf toFederation of Students will. make a FaJoW SeemS to have been Pegged presentation , s;aid scoti Forrest . at 19 to keep drinking out of the high . . . schools. The committee GI be assessing if that is stilt the criteria for. \

.” JOBS I

JOBS L\JO@S ’ For Fall-‘86T

Scoops Scoopers .Fed Flicks Manager \ Fea( .Fficks Workers WORDS Processing Operator I

Pick up Application&~

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COMMENT

4,

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Imprin!,

Friday

July

25, 1986,

Let’s be sndbby! _

by Flew

Macqueen

Imprint

staff

Recently, upon opening the Kitchener-Waterloo Record, I was’once again amazed at the smallmindedness of some of the people living in this area. In an article entitled “Not all neighbours embrace non-profit housing bid” on page Bl of the July 16 Record, a number of Kitchener residents living near a vacant lot at Joseph Street and Linden Avenue, the proposed location for a low and middle-income housing project, were given the opportunity to express their opinions on the proposal. Though many of the people interviewed by the Record were not opposed to the project, it was comments like the following from Liz Utley of Troy Street (east of the site) that really got my dander up: “We don’t need more houses. here. I don’t like to sound snobby, but it is like the old saying - not in my backyard.” With the vacancy rate in Kitchener-Waterloo at 0.04 per cent as of April 1986, just where should these people live? I wonder if the people who oppose these kind of projects are also the ones who worried about their property values going down when their neighbours wanted to put granny flats in their backyards. (Granny flats are small self-contained apartments that allow elderly people to live near their families but maintain an independent residence). And speaking of housing problems, have you heard some students want to rent out that place across the street? Well we don’t want their kind around here either. Just who do these people want living in their neighbourhoods? Why, more middle-class WASP families of course! They will often admit that people on low incomes (unemployed people, recently released psychiatric patients, immigrants, welfare recipients, pregnant teenagers, battered wives, students) have housing problems and yes we should do something for them - but just don’t let them come near this neighbourhood. Bringing such housing to the neighbourhood would force many of these people to face up to the hypocrisy between their words and their actions and to ask themselves why it is they get richer as others get poorer (If Statistics Canada findings are correct, one in five Canadian families is poor, the poverty line for a family of four in a major urban area being $20,800 a year). Subsidized housing projects would help students by increasing the vacancy rate in low-income housing. But it is the narrow attitudes like those expressed by some people regarding this specific housing project, people who probably don’t have limited incomes, or have children struggling to find reasonable accommodation in a university town, that hold us all back from improving the situation. . Well I don’t think we want to live near you either.

“Margaret, about our little quarrel over sanctions: I’ve consulted my advisers as to the ’ traditional British method for resolving disputes with the Crown. . . .”

The

opinions expressed in

this

space are

those

of the author

and do not necessarily

Editorial

Board

Editor-in-Chief Assistant Eaitor Production Manager Business Manager Mvertising Manager MwrtisingA8sistant Heati Typktter Typesetter Arts

Editors

Sports Eator Photo Eator Office BIanager Computer Technician

,

Steve KIannon Neal Bonnor Doug Tait Janet Lawrence Janet Lawrence Suzanne Griffith Doug Thompson Cindy Long Andrew Saikali G?Paul Done Jo-Anne Longley Preet Khalsa Cindy Long Peter Lum

Staff Meeting July 25, noon

the views

of Imprint

staff.

Appeasing South African racists will bring disaster by Doug Thompson Imprint staff

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), and a member of . m University Press (CUF). Imprint publishes every second &i&y d~theSpringtermandeveryFridaydu.ring the regular terms. Mail should be addressed to Imprint, Campus Centre Room 140, University of Waterloo, Waterloo, Ontario. N2L 3Gl. Imprint reserves the right to screen, edit, and refuse advertising. -Imprint ISSN 0706-7380

reflect

Sanctions? Or no Sanctions? What is the best way to avoid a bloodbath in South Africa? Everyone other than white South Africansseems to agree, the answer is to end apartheid. How to end apartheid? This is thearea of international disagreement. On the one side you have the entire Commonwealth, except for Britain, and all of black Africa arguing that Pretoria has only diluted apartheid because of international pressure, and so the international pressure must be increased. On the other, you have Britain and the U.S., South Africa’s two largest trading partners arguing that blacks don’t know what’s good for them, and that continued, even expanded trade, is the way to end apartheid. Because these two govern(ments are so overwhelmingly outnumbered on the stage of international opinion, and because of the obvious economic conflict of interest in preserving trade with Pretoria, it is understandable that the AngloAmerican objections to sanctions are viewed with considerable cynicism worldwide. While saying they don’t like apartheid with their mouths, their actions continue to support it. No wonder people Like Desmond TUTU, black South African Archbishop, react to Reagan by telling him to “go to hell”. South African whites have no-intention of dismantling apartheid. This has become dramatically obvious. Even the so-called rel,axing of the regime is usually more a change of nomenclature than an improvement in economic or political rights for the blacks. And most of the softening rhetoric from Pretoria is precisely because the relatively minor sanctions so far undertaken have successfully pressured the South African government to do as much as it has. The apartheid regime will not end until it isforced to end, and there are only two things that can force it. One iseconomic pressure, so that the economic costs of apartheid are greater than the benefits’to whites. The other is violence. And sanctions, the only option which can bring change without violence, must’be backed by the U.K., South Africa’s largest trading partner to be really effective. It is amazing how many people are duped by the hypocritical drivel that Reagan and Thatcher throw up as a smokescreen to cover the most crass commercial greed. Sanctions would hurt the blacks, “the very people we are trying to help”, they say. Reagan says we must not abandon South Africa to the Soviets. Yet, if the blacks in South Africa are denied hope of political improvements by American and British refusals to join the international boycott, has this not left them with no place else to turn

except Moscow? Sometimes I just cannot believe the dense stupidity and blatant non-sequiturs packaged in vapid White House statements. Yet 70 per cent of South African blacks want sanctions. From their point of view, apartheid hurts more than sanctions. Even the Queen herself has been forced to take unprecedented political action domestically to register her disapproval of Maggie Thatcher’s cruel policy. It must surely be totally clear by now that the odious spectre of apartheid will lead to a brutal civil war in South Africa in which thousands will lose their lives unless the Commonwealth, and most especially the United Kingdom, takes strong and decisive action to end apartheid. Even the economic self-interest of the U.S. and the U.K. is only served in the very short-term by their selfish policies. Nor is the strategic security of South Africa served by failing to stand against apartheid. Continued oppression will lead to civil war. That will ruin the economy and invite Soviet intervention. Only if apartheid is ended quickly will the economic interests of foreigners be secure. Only if apartheid is ended quickly will political stability arrive in South Africa quickly. And apartheid can only be ended by united anddetermined action to impose genuinely punishing sanctions. And if sanctions fail, then the world must take stronger action to remove the ugly scourge of racism from the world. Apartheid is no more tolerable than Nazi anti-semitism. Civilization cannot endure governments which adhere to these ideas. Indeed, there is a strong case to be made that sanctions should be backed up by a joint Commonwealth naval blockade of all South African ports, temporarily seizing South African assets, and denial of travel visas to all white South Africans. Such an overwhelming economic war of liberation need not cost a single life, but could force the whites to compromise. Indeed, they would be left with no choice. Failing that, how can one argue with South African militants who suggest that since the West is unwilling to act, they must take matters into their own hands, and start a war? Should sanctions fail to be imposed with vigour, South Africa is doomed to an incredibly ugly and violent future. Which all leaves one asking why it is that Thatcher and Reagan, alone among the world’s leaders, cannot see that? The glitter of South African gold and diamonds has clearly blinded them so they cannot even see their own genuine self-interest. There is an object lesson in ttiat for all of us. Greed destroys one’s ability to recognize what’s going on. The lust for money blinds one to injustice. And the fear of the Soviets seems to lead people to play right into their hands.


Imprint welcomes comments and opinion pieces from our readers. The F&urn pace is designed to provide an opportunity to present views on various issues. Opinions expressed in letters, columns, or other articles on this page represent those of their authors and not Imprint. Letters MUST be typed, double-spaced, and signed with name and telephone number, and submitted to CC 140 by 6:OO p.m. Monday of the week of publication. Maximum length of letters: 200 words. Anyone wishing to write i.onger opinion pieces should contact the Editor-in-Chief. Ail material is subject to editing.

Laughs Pub not funny say- disgruntled. students

.

should receive some token of unTo the editor, never before seen a more arrogant and uncaring attitude on the derstanding from the organizaLast Tuesday, July 17, some part of council. This is not a matter tion at fault. friends and I attended the Laughs of dollars and cents, but one of T. Kim Nguyen Pub held bythe Village One Council. This event was to consist of principle, in which the unsatisfied 3A Systems Design comedy acts provided. bv Yuk!Yuks; followed by a DJ and dancing. An all-you-can-drink ticket cost $8. The evening started off well, To the editor: ings, and specifically the zipperwith a rather successful opening head who pilfered my towe,l and On Monday morning,-1 went to act which ended at 9 p.m. Drinks wristband. . .) are probably raising the PAC as I do every day for a had been served since 7:30, so by your eyebrows. “What’s with her swim. When I was getting ready the time the feature act was to doe-eyed naivete? It’s dog-eatto leave, I noticed that my cassette start, many people there were dog . . _ . everyone gets stuff was unravelled, and while I was quite inebriated. The feature perstolen.” I know that. My roomunsnarling it, someone glibly former refused to begin until the mate had her wallet stolen in the snatched my towel and wristband audience quieted down. UnfortuArts Library about two weeks ago, off my locker door, about a foot nately, the audience simply got and I’ve had sums of money lifted away from my nose. louder and rowdier. The feature from my pockets and purse. But How she did it will always reperformer made some rather c’mon . . . what kind of pond life main a mystery to me; I have to lame jokes in the meantime, saystoops to stealing towels from admit, it was -a pretty smooth ing “I don’t care if you people heist. But what really impressed under people’s noses . . .? won’t listen, I’ve already got the Whoever you are, I hope that me was the incredible amount of cheque...” you’re impressed with yourself, gall and immaturity that that perI asked a don if she could possibecause I’m pretty disgusted. If I i son displayed, invisible as she bly do something about the auwere you, I couldn’t look at myself was. Apparently this sort of thing dience’s behavior by perhaps in the miiror without throwing up. has happened before, and I can using the stage microphone to ask I mean, ‘was stealing my soggy understand that the PAC staff’s them to please calm down. Howtowel really all that satisfying? hands are tied. But what the hell ever she refused to do so. Did you get a rush or something? does one have to do . . . stuff her When the performer’s allotted If you have a grudge against me towel in her mouth to prevent Arttime ran out, he simply stepped’ personally, and don’t want me to ful Dodgers from practicing their down from the stage, and that swim, please come see me in percraft? Pretty.extreme measure for was the end of his “comedy” act. son and state your grievances. I’m a university, but obviously someThe audience, meanwhile, hardly not an unreasonable person to one is qualified to be a student noticed and continued in its deal with. here while still retaining the marowdy drunkeness. My friends Oh, and by the way: Thanks. and I’ left in disgust, after:having _,-turity level of a 6% year old. You really made my day. spent $8,e$ch@.this evening of , ‘Now; alot of you (particularly those of you who get your jollies ‘-Paula Elliott frustration. I found out later that Yr. 2 English swiping other people’s belongthe chaos had worsened after we Thankyou for support! had left, and that fights had broken out, bottles had been tossed around the hall and people had been thrown out for misconTo the editor: his patience and writing hand duct. I am writing this letter to thank (that’s 160 lengths!). all the people who helped send I later asked one of the event’s’ Though I was unable to win any organizers, Christine Fretwell, if it me to Dearborn, Michigan. Withmedals, the.weekend was very rewould be possible to obtain a parout your support it may have been warding. I met a lot of new tial refund, since I had not reimpossible. for me to attend the friends. Hopefully I can improve turned to the party later that International Dwarf Games. my skills, to possibly attend the night. She refused on the basis Games next year (Philadelphia!). Though countless people conthat I had enjoyed the emcee’s act Again, thank you to all very tributed in more ways than one, and the opening comedy act, and much. that I had had three drinks as well. I’d like to specifically thank She also quoted from that night’s Shane, Wally, Kirsten, Goober, John Young Rick K., and especially Jack C. for Village Council meeting, saying 1 B Mathematics that the Laughs Pub was “. . .in the past and it should stay in the past . . .” She also compared the Laugh Pub’s cost to that of a comparable evening at Toronto’s YUkYuks club. She stated that nowhere had there been a guarantee concerning the quality of’ the entertainment at the pub, and that by paying my $8 I had taken my chances. The evening at the Laughs Pub provided very little entertainment value at all in light of the frustration and disgust I felt for the drunken behavior of many people in the audience, as well as for the incompetence of the organizers in their almost nonexistent and feeble attempts to “calm” the audience. The organizers most certainly could have done much more to allow the comedy acts to continue, but in their failure to do so, I believe that I am entitled to a partial refund on the ticket price. Any reputable organization would have the decency to admit its guilt and appease its clientele, Village council, however, believes that it can hide behind a resolution saying “the past is the past and we we should look forward now.” Obviously, Village council has a captive clientele and could not care less about the people it is supposed to represent. Having spent five terms in Village One, including two terms on the council. executive, I have

Towel snatcher -

Don’t say bad things To the editor: There is an old saying that goes “if you can’t say something good about something, then say nothing at all”. How I wish Paul Done had adhered to this in his “Baaadness at the Bamboo” review. But no, he states “Though the jazz at the DuMaurier Int’l jazz festival may have been mediocre. ” This, statement is absolutely : . incorrect. It begs the question, did Mr. Done actually attend any of’ the jazz at the festival? I have my doubts. For the sake of accuracy there were many fine performances at this year’s festival. Indeed there were some incredible shows! The first night of the festival had for

Wright’s

instance James ‘Blood’ Ulmer and the first North American appearance by the Soviet group The Ganelin Trio. Both of these artists were superb. And what about the David Murray quartet? Consider the 1986 VSOP band with Herbie Hancock, Brantford Marsalis, Al Foster and Ron Carter. The list goes on with several other wonderful shows that happened that week. However, detailing them for Mr. Done would probably only land on deaf ears. For the record, Paul did give a decent account of the two shows he saw. It’s too bad that he missed the jazz that was all around. Dot Hight CKMS;FM .

idea IS wrong

To the editor: In the article “Wright speaks out on UW’s future,” which appeared in the July 11 Imprint, Dr. Wright’s response to the question “how do you feel about foreign students?” generated mixed feelings in the international student community. There was agreement with his assessment of the government policy on international students. His statement on the political benefits of the students, however, gave the impression that international students’ countries were uncivilized, totalitarian states. This is a grossly inaccurate re-

presentation of these countries. The vast majority of these countries have a long history of democracy, and where other political forms exist, these forms are to a large extent best suited to the society and culture of the country. No country represented on campus could conceivably be considered uncivilized. It is a pity that an otherwise laudable response is marred by the misconception that part of it generated., Osford Ogis Chair lnterriational Students Board Federation of Students

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by Neal Bonnor Imprint staff I

Just thought I’d finish off the term with a few in particular, really, just a few words - nothing comments. . For instance, I don’t know about you, but I think sumtier stinks as a school term: it’s too damn hot and muggy most of the time to get any work done! When the weather is so nice, it’s hard to study in the air conditioned library all the time, and there are so’ many distractions qutside. I think the summer school term should be abolished! Next, I’d like to applaud all those student people who actually got off their butts this term and did something besides studying. It takes courage to write for the newspaper, to work for the Feds or a society, to participate in a sport - to commit yourself to something. It’s a shame how many students don’t take this (free) golden opportunity to develop themselves in ways beyond the intellectual. I don’t know if it’s the students at Waterloo, or university students in general; I can only guess that the socio-economic background that you come from makes yqu complacent. Despite. this, or maybe because of it, the system seems to work; Canada is a functioning, vital society that anyone would be proud of. Somehow, this doesn’t .really surprise me: if everyone was as active

Loss of Innocence

as I would like, no doubt greater conflict would result, making society more difficult to live in. I guess the best I can hope for is to make sure that those students who want to do something besides studying are given the chance: that the opportunity is made available .. . What about South Africa? It’s an historical fact that sanctions and blockades are not very effective tools of coercion. Blacks in South and southern Africa are calling for the West to impose these measures, with the full knowledge that such actions would hurt them the most. That they are so willing to suffer demonstrates their desire for change, for the abolition of apartheid. Yet aren’t they really just calling for help from the West, in whatever form? Isn’t it up to the West to determine what form these actions should take? Why limit ourselves to ineffective sanctions and blockade, as called for by the blacks? No matter what the call is for, however, the West will not act until 3t is ready: that is, until public pressure convinces the politicians that the repression of 20 million people is more important than profits and a secure supply of vital minerals. Only then will the West, and the international community in general, be willing and able to take the tough action required to end apartheid swiftly, with minimum bloodshed: a direct United Nations military force intervention. So much for my little chat! Until winter then.

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by Andrew SaikalS Imprint staff America lost its innocence in Vietnam. Actually, it probably lost it a hell of a long time before that, but the. media wasn’t around to capture it on film. Thanks guys. Canada, by comparison, is still a virgin, at least in the watching eyes of the world. And perception is what counts isn’t it? Does that, after all, not shape reality ‘? We are what we appear to be - in the eyes of others. So let’s bring the point (and I’m scrambling for one right now) let’s bring it closer to home. Most of us are about to embark on a four month excursion into the “real world”. Whether we’re at IBM or at PSC or at any other acronym - is irrelevant. Corporate structure is corporate structure be it privately run dr publicly’managed. We, the co-ops, become the young emissaries of the ivory tower, sent out into reality to explore, affect, change (though not too much), and return great rewards to corporate academe. So that, then, is the goal - to play the role as it must be played the corporate student who switches between the mask of the academic ivory tower and the mask that is worn on work term. And in all likelihood we never, either way, come anywhere close to seeing the real world. Nor, hidden behind our emissary masks, does reality ever see us as we really are. The chances are there L- when we. hide behind the shield of convention its largely our own fault. On work term, its kissing ass .. . on campus, its g_etting your piece of it. \ The best co-op is not the yes-man, nor is it the shit-disturber. Its the one who’s not afraid to rock the boat a little. I mea-n, that is how we and they progress, is it not ?The whole idea is to bring fresh ideas seen through fresh eyes -to bring this into the real world. So open your eyes - say what you think, and don’t give a damn about how unorthodox it may sound. As for gn-campus, people are either far too serious, or not serious enough. Many tend to take every question raised as either a crusade, a band-wagon to hop on, or they take it as a vicious attack upon themselves. Or else they’re so blind to what is going on that the questions float over their heads and mean absolutely nothing out of the context in which they were raised. In here and out there, there’s a lot to be offered. All that needs to be done is to expand the field of vision that is so often narrow and constr.icted. And loosen up a bit -observation and exploration can be two of the three most individually satisfying activities around. And when you do take a stand on something -you damn well better believe in it and be willing to fight for it, or else all the serious concern is nothing but shallow words - meaningless. As the young adylts that we are, we’re here to break out of the womb. The. problem is that far too often the womb extends beyond childhood and is as pervasive on campus-when w6 try to conform, attaching ourselves to the umbilicat norm. it also pervades in the hermeticat.ly sealed corporate wor?d when we put on mask numbed two. Feati of acting naturally, Q# being ourserves i.s the greatest barrier to‘browth, and td breaking the cord. We lose’out innocence, and with it our inhibitions, when we learn to break free. So ditch the masks - open your eyes and look around. Take it aU in - take d deep breath - and be youcsetf. A@ lighten up once in a .,*hi~~ S : ‘. ‘aft&r & its ani)i ‘rock and toi-I;, don&a.- think ? S . ,’

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Housing, computer by Ten-i Shewfelt Imprint staff The American government has been more helpful than its Canadian counterpart in keeping Ontario informed of progress in the free trade negotiations, says a Kitchener MPP involved in the process. David Cooke, chairman of the Liberal’s Standing Committee on Economic Affairs, said last week the U.S. has been more attentive of the the province’s role in the talks. Cooke made his remarks to a small gathering of students and faculty July I5 at the University of Waterloo. The committee, one of the few of its kind in the country, was established by the province to deal primarily with the issue of free trade with the United States. Committee members have been to Washington several times and are going again this week to meet with American free trade envoy Peter Murphy’s assistants, as well as with interested senators and congressmen, said Cooke. .. Although the Peterson gbvernment is against free trade because of the potential damage to the industrialized areas of Ontario, the Liberals feel the committee is needed to educate the Americans about Canada, Ontario, and our economy, he said. The province also intends to open a permanent office in Washington next year to deal specifically with this

I

idea of greater education, as well as Ontario/US. trade relations. Not only has the government accomplished much with respect to free trade, said Cooke, it is also doing well with regards to student issues. Last month, the government brought down a decision outlawing incidental fees (including UW s computer fee) as of May 1987. Many saw this as a step in the right direction, he

-

tlifting, where he pressed 200 Ibs., by Jo-Anne Langley and the other in the 50-metre freesImprint Staff tyle swim. He also placed fifth in the When John Young travelled to 25-metre freestyle and ninth in all of Dearborn Michigan a week ago to his track and field events. participate in the Dwarf National Because of the competitiveness of Games, he wasn’t expecting the the 4050 competitors, Young found amount of organization or competihimself under much more pressure. tiveness that he found. The other competitors had trained a “The games turned out to be more good deal more than he had, but psychological than I’d expected,” says Young, after returning with two * then he only decided to give it a shot four weeks- before the opening cefourth place finishes, one in weigh-

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the five per cent increase will not be matched by provincial dollars. in actual terms, students are still paying more for their education. Cooke said he will encourage the government to reconsider this issue in light of the Liberal position on increasing access to education. Student housing problems have also been indirectly dealt with by the government, he told the audience.

UW dwarf places fourth

SYNTAX

July

25, 1986

fe.es and free trade

said. Cooke, who attended the under-, ‘funding conference at Waterloo last week, said until he arrived at the conference he was unaware that students disliked the government’s decision. UWs Federation of Students has said the new policy, which disallows computer fees but pro vides for a- one-time five per cent increase in tuition, is unfair because

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remonies. Young went into the games with an open mind, not knowing what to expect, but like every athlete, he had dreams, of bringing home some hardware. When he couldn’t come up with that elusive goal, he settled for the mental rewards. “I wanted to see how I ranked and I found out. I’ve always been athletic and had to compete with people of average height. It was a great experience to finally com-

There has been a large increase in the number of applications and grants for provincial low income housing, especially in the KitchenerWaterloo area. Although students are not eligible for low income housing, they indirectly benefit because for every person that moves into subsidized housing, another low cost house or apartment is freed for possible student use, he said.

. pete with people on my own scale and come out at an above average level.” There were only four Canadians competing in the games, and the rest were Americans. Young plans to compete again next year, in Philadelphia, but will definitely start training earlier in order to be better prepared. His only regret at this year’s competition was that he was unable to attend the convention which followed -

.


FEATURE.

The right shoes prevent injury by JoAnn Hutchison Imprint staff

I

I hate buying shoes.. Not just because I amembarrassed about my foot size, but because of the overwhelming and intimidating selection of sportsshoes in myriadsof designs, colours, constructions, materials, and weights. An athlete, whether professional or recreational, should be concerned about getting proper footwear, since footwear prptects against injury not only to the feet, but to the legs, knees, hips, and lower back. Proper shoes can also en- hance performance. There is no such thing as the perfect shoe which suits everyone’s needs. Basketball shoes, aerobics shoes, tennis shoes, and running shoes are all specially designed for specific sports and should not be used for ,sustained use in other sports. When buying shoes, you need to consider the sport you participate in the most. You should also be prepared to tak.e the time to look around-and experiment with shoes to see which shoe best fits your foot size and shape, body weight, and your personal manner of movement. You should try on a variety of different shoes and walk around in them to see how they feel. If possible jog around the store in them to see how they feel (if you feel a bit silly doing this you may prefer to run on the spot in the change room). Finding a pair of shoes is an exercise in selective shopping. The following pointers may help you select an appropriate pair of jogging shoes: 1) Length - A shoe properly fitted for length will usually leave about a half-inch between the end of the big toe and the front ofthe shoe. This allows space for the foot to expand when running. 2) Width - The sides of your feet will feel firmly enclosed, not too snug and not too squeezed if the width of your shoe is correct. When looking for shoes, be sure to wear the socks you wear when running. (NB: Just make sure you wash your socks thoroughly before before going shopping - you’ll get better service this way!). If you forget to wear the proper socks, do not be afraid to ask the salesclerk for some. 3) Sole Construction - The best running shoes have 2-3 layers of rabberized material which make up the sole. The most durable shoes have a tough outer sole with a “ripple” or “gripper” pattern. Ripple type soles work best on hard surfaces such as asphalt and cement while gripper type bottoms which have rubber studs or points on the sole work best on dirt or cinders. Gripper soles may wear down quickly when used extensively on cement. Above the outer sole, there should be another layer of rubberized material which runs the entire shoe length to provide a cushion. The_third layer, the heel wedge, is directly under the heel apd runs forward to the ball of the foot. This layer is sometimes a different colour than the other layer

4) Heel Lift - The heel lift, which is the difference in height between the heel and toes in the shoe, is provided-by the heel -wedge. Distance runners need this this heel lift since it relieves strain on the calf muscles and Achilles tendons during running by tilting the body gently forward. The ideal heel lift is debatable but most experts say good shoes should have at least one-half inch of heel lift. 5) Flexibility - Since the foot flexes when it pushes off the toes during each stride, the runnjng shoes should flex with it. If the shoe does not bend under the ball of the foot, extra stress is put on the legs thus risking injury to the shin and Achilles tendon. If you cannot bend the shoes without forcing them, the shoes are-too stiff to run in. On the other hand, a shoe that bends too easily might not provide enough cushioning. 6) Midfoot Support - The outer sole of shoes you buy should lie flat on the ground from the heel to toe, especially at the midfoot under the arch. 7) Upper Shoe - Most shoe uppers are built of nylon, leather, sv<ede, or a combination of the three. It is a matter of personal preference as to what is best. 8) Heel Counter - The heel counter is the hard piece around the back of the shoe that provides stability to ward off all kinds of possible foot, heel, and tendon problems. It should be strong and rigid and cup the entire heel to hold it firmly inside the shoe. 9) Weight - Shoes weighing 10-12 ounces seem to provide enough protection and support without being too heavy for training.

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-British realism at Expo annoys Consulate

Al and George of the Yuk!Yuks performed at the show was welt-liked, the audience left something

Village Great Hall July 17th. While the to be desired.Photo by Preet Khalsa

fails Yuk!Yuks

Crowd

jokes seemed to fall on dead ears or by Jo-Anne Longley ’ slip into drunken minds. Both acts Imprint Staff Free booze, good comics, bad.:- ,_ also had to Fontend with a less than --sound and a late start qesulted in& ” ‘adequate sound system and tiund 1.4 up editing a lot of their material beevening in the ,ess than humorous

T singing duo Al and George. Their $ material consisted of several rousiw,.&~i~~+gg&cd& to univeg&gp-:. ?- li$@(or life in general),’ iri@luding 9: s! SQJKJtitbk$~F&z sSpqm&G>atif S&TCJ ’ w:l$ch went tQ.-the ~tine’@#he @each , j, B;jys$@$‘~n F&l Another,‘j&&, f “, @p&d oie &ewi$fkalt;with aqed:{ - 7 I.-.I actor George Burns. The audience kept drinking and Al and George kept singing. Their humour was fo? the most ‘part sharp, on target an8 contentious, but then the people they were playing to were still somewhat coherent. They were fresh in comparison to feature comic Jim McAleese, whose

good performance turned out to be *an exercise\ in give and take,, The audience was obvi&sly rowdy and ba‘i-ely let theXcon$gs get their lines out. The audience~,was let dowi be-

had a hard time finding a giggle. When he did come up with some-

McFarlane as a condescending snob from Laurier. -Emcee Simon Rakoff who was successful in first appearance in the show, when ,.he cut up <arioLus inembers’ 6f the audience, also found it difficult rousing the audience in the latter half of the show. So what could have been a really

best place for, ‘the type of performance the trotipe gave. The sound was bad and t%helighting, lo.;sy. It is also not a good idea t$lef the %udience get inebriated #‘before ‘the -*I\ show even begins.’ The troupe is good and its reputation proves it, but the comedians have to be seen in a proper setting.

by Paul Done, Imprint staff RPM, located in a disused warehouse, was the perfect setting for Test Department’s display of fury and industrial intensity. Their show, only their second Canadian appearance, was an aural and visual barrage of unparalleled power and aggression. The Test Department ethic is based qn a two-pronged rejection of the empty intellectualisation of music and events and, secondly, is an attempt to expose the modern methods of propaganda and sociaiization to which we all fall victim. Their music consists of layer upon layer of harsh metallic drumming (using whatever objects they can find as instruments), combined with voices and random noises played on a reel-to-reel tape recorder.

I

No one knew what to expect from the Canadian debut of The Mercy Seat. Not Fernando the drummer, not Pat the bassist, not Zena the chant&se, not even little Gordon Gano the guitar player. There was that show a few weeks back that managed to dredge up a meager 200 of the faithful following a 24,000, two-night Violent Femmes sell-out in Milwaukee. ‘It was a cold night”, they laugh uneasily. Thankful upward glances were in order as the mighty four strolled confidently stageward in their glitzy Sunday best to the applause and screams of “Gordon, Gordon” from the near capacity crowd of mostly club regulars. Obviously they didn’t know what to expect either. When the church started to roll, it was Zena upfront, smooth ‘n’ boulful while Gordon added the obligatory “oh, Lord” to his jagged yet ever-sotasteful guitar frills. They didn’t forget to bring along that good old revival with I’ve Got My ticket, Can I Ride? whose sweaty passion unglued Gor-

don’s Bible hickin’ shades from his nose. Things’got hotter still with a pew stomping version of As Long As I’ve Got King Jesus, leaving no doubt as to Zena’s full-throttle, buttshaking sincerity (“You can’t judge true belief by the length of your skirt!“). Fernando then joined Gordon for a stirring duet of I Saw The Light, perplexing some members of the audience to the point of their leaving or singing along. The surprise of the evening was the self-penned New Born Soul that effectively blended Go-Go drumming patterns and phrasing with a gospelly call and response - a gas! Holy rollicking homages were paid throughout the night to The Caravans and the Davis Sisters culminating with a bone crunching Let The Church Roll On. Poor Gordon’s parting words that “This is a real band! This is not a hobby . . . we’re even gonna make records!” fell amongst shouts for Add It Up and Blister, while others milled around, dazed, wondering what “This church stuff’ was all about. . . hey man, everybody knows that God made rock ‘n’ roll!

In an evening of alternative Coronet, hosted area bands Fodder.

An expose on modern methods of propaganda

Working under the umbrella sociEvidence qf Test Department’s al/artistic collective known as the political bent was the presence of Ministry of Power, Test Department Alan Sutcliffe, a British miner who use the symbols of industrial militaspoke about being beaten and jailed rism such as fatigues, the crunch of * by police, whti out&mberedl pickemetal on metal, harsh white light, .ters by 150 to 2.5 .during a demonshaved heads and violent visual ir&.* stration in the British miners’ strike ages to attack this very ideal - Slav‘of 1984-85. Test Department cite ,~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~:~hi~:~~~ occurred during this strike as perhasp+ the p&jmar-y reason,. f-or. their., I .y,-: Dti+i @ the ~&pf%&jj+f&& ‘Zf . t & music’s increasing polifical content show, such as the mock bat& and the single event which most march, complete with bagpipes, ar$l made them aware of the death of accompanied by images depic ti& true democracy in Wtstern society. the;.ludicrousness of war and the -z&k - ,I

Test Department **fi%. Utter: Inspira :~‘A .;. ‘Y-

is tion

shah tobk pla& at Expo & Britain Day. Their total shunning by the British Consulate indicates the kind of effect they have had on those Brit-

Hey man, God made Rock ‘n’ Roll! by Tim Perlich Ir;lprint staff

ons who are aware of their existence. Furthermore the British diplomats went so far as to phone Test Department to request they not play Expo since the Government wanted to present a positive image of Britain rather than the searing beam of truth that is Test Department. During the show in Vancouver, Test Department’s stage construction included two WWII tanks and a mock battleship cannon pointing into the audience.

music, Kitchener’s Vital Sines, Bell Jar

and

Maggot

I ciety into crystallin& focus. At their best, Test DepartmeLt combine the primif; energjlr anh of kbrror and r@culsion in the face of “the ’ sinister. mihd-control and division of humanity practiced by media, governments and industry. Utter inspiration and relevance.


i

WLBum8

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Richman

by Paul Done ‘Imprint staff The Fountain of Eternal Youth seems to have soaked Jonathan Richman at some point in his life. Here he is in his mid-30’s still singing about corner stores and malteds with the wide-eyed wonderment and joy normally reserved for children under 10. It’s Time For Jonathan Richman and The Modern Lovers marks a return to form for the Modern Lovers and is perhaps their best stuff since 1979’s Back In Your Life. Though only’ Asa Brebner is left from the original Lov-

Take it Mth you go. . Itiprint subscriptions cc 140

ers, Richman’s supporting cast (including backing vocals from the godlike Barrence Whitfield) does an outstanding job. It’s Time For... sees Jonathan returning to old, familiar lyrical territory as seen in Shirin and Fahad, which seems reminiscent of Abdul and Cleopatra from 1979, and Corner Store, which is a logical extension of Shopping Mall. One of Jonathan Richman’s strengths as a songwriter is that he writes about every subject he encounters with a fresh view - free of preconceptions and symbolism. Thus, when he sings about The Desert, it’s with a charm and warmth that’s instantly winning. Jo Jo is.okay with me and so’s It’s Time For Jonathan Richman and The Modern Lovers, an album for the young, foolish and young at heart.

you when $5 _I

by Andrew Saikali Imprint staff It’s interesting to note how the “classic” rock baods of the late ’60s and ’70s face existence in the ’80s. Some have the good sense to bow out gracefully while their music is still great and while their fans are still loyal. The late Pink Floyd is an example. Others are forced into premature defunctdom - Zeppelin. Still others plug on, forgoing the imljending defunctdom-, opting instead for a painful musical death. They downgrade their music in a (successful) attempt to widen their audience. Their songwriting is butched up, but at the expense of the acoustic sensitivity that %&as responsible for much of their cult following to begin with Genesis,. Yes, Moody Blues etc.etc. In the ‘8Os, these bands have delivered extremely predictable albums yielding well-polished mediocrity, tempered with only the occasional suggestion of past excellence. The musicians have advanced technically and production has improved, but in light of their past recordings and thei< current competition, high calibre mediocrity seems to sum it up rather well. The Other Side of Life, the latest release from the Moody Blues is no exception. It’s not bad, but it’s not anything particularly new - nothing you haven’t had a taste of already on their other recent albums - the vastly superior Long Distance Voyager for instance. The harmonized melodies are still there, and the LP “sounds” good. Hayward, Lodge, Edge, Thomas, and Moraz are not musical novices by any stretch of the imagination. But the songwriting, the very foundation of music, to which musicianship and production add colour, is, in a word, boring. The best songs, relatively speaking, are. Your Wildest Dreams, I Just Don’t Care, and the title track - each tiith its share of introspective lvrics and simple, .

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by Mike O’DriscoII Imprint staff Don’t let the name fool you, this album has nothing to do with jazz, and even less to do with meat cleavers and cold cuts. What it does have to do with just just about everything else you could imagine. The Jazz Butcher (what is this guy’s name anyhow?) is one of the more original and imaginative individuals to arrive on the music scene in a long time. In 13 Screw-you-I’ll-do-what-I-feellike tracks, the guitarist-vocalist

Johnathan

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catchy melodies. More hits will be generated, the album will continue to sell well, their audience will widen, the royalties will increase, and the Moody Blues will believe that popularity means quality, and so their next LP will be vet another iteration of the formula

vicious cycle. It’s sad to think newer fans will think of Gemini Dream or Your Wildest Dreams as classic Moody Blues. The Other Side of Life is riot Days Of Future Past, nor is it anything particularly new. But then, do you really expect it to be?

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JUST ARRIVED 1. Dayglow Abortions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Warnina 2. Eric Johnson . . . . . , . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Tone; 3. Screaming Blue Messiahs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Gunshy Based on sales at the Record Store, Campus Centre, Lower Mall, University of __. . Waterloo.

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Scott Merritt ...................................... Gravity is Mutual Smiths ......................................... ..Th e Queenisdead Eurythmics ................................................ Revenge Big Country .............................................. The Seer Cure ....................... .-. ..... Standing on a Beach - The Singles Madonna.. .................. . .......................... ..Tru e Blue Bowser & Blue .............................. It Ain’t Easy Being White Peter Gabriel ................................................... So Luba ..................................... Between the Earth and Sky Spyro Gyra ............................................... Breakout

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you missed last night’s at R.P.M. in Toronto, out, you’re not alone, bad.

-There are, however, some dubious moments on the albu’d sucn as the inclusion of Shout to The Top, the only record Weller has ever regretted releasing. Furthermore, there are some ill-advised restructurings of The Lodgers and The Whole Point of No Return. The tracks on Home and Abroad actually constitute part of the soundtrack to the new Style Council live videobf the same name. Unfortunately, a lot of the great stuff like Soul Deep and Sig Boss Groove, arguably the Council’s two best songs, aren’t on the album. Thus, though Home and Abroad ‘provides a decent sampling of The Style Council’s efforts to this point, it really isn’t too great an investment compared to their studio efforts.

SpecialOrders 1PoExtraCharge ‘+_....a.

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by Paul Done Imprint staff Home and Abroad may be as close as we unlucky North Americans ever come to experiencing The Style Council live as Paul Weller’s fear of flying keeps him close to home. Unfortunately, with the exception of a few bright moments, Home and Abroad doesn’t really distinguish itself from the Council’s studio efforts. The highs on the album are the smoking versions of My Euer Changing Moods, Head Start For Happiness, and the climactic last track, a .leng: thened, muscular interpretation of Internationalists which approaches a Redskins-like intensity. In general, Home and Abroad shows Paul Weller’s improving control of his voice in ballad settings and testifies to the fact the angry young man hasn’t lost any of the clenched-teeth fury-,tihich marked, .I , his recordings with The Jam.

RIXORD

,.I .,

manages to incorporate a touch of pseudo new-wave, hard core punk, 50s drivel, acoustic mind trips, and country parody. Sound diverse? It is, but despite the variety the album does maintain a sense of unity. At times it reminds one of an Echo and the Bunnymen feel, at times it harkens back to the days of Velvet Underground, but don’t let that fool you, the music belongs to no one but the Butcher himself. . The work is tight, well produced, and fun. Attempts at .humour in music are often futile, but not this time. If you’ve ever dreamed of Death Dentist, owned a coat made from the skins of dead Jim Morrisons, or th’ought of Frank Sinatra as your friend, this one’s for you. The Jazz Butcher hails from the

dingy underground pubs of England where he first surfaced in 1983. This is his premier North American release, and if it fails to attract a following, it will at least confuse a lot of people. Flanked by several equally bizarre companions, The Butcher is now touring on this Side of the ocean. The band consists of Max Eider on guitar and vocals, Mr. Jones on drums and vocals, and two bassists that trade off throughout the album; Felix and David J. (Get the feeling that these guys would rather remain anonymous?)

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ARTS,

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Friday

July

25,1986

-Nuclear nightmare novel original and satisfying Fiskadoro Denis Johnson Vintage/$6.95

.

by Chris Wodskou Imprint staff Following up on the success of Denis Johnson’s award-winning first novel, Angels, Fiskadoro should prove to be as important and stunning as his fiction debut. Johnson gives the almost too familiar theme of life-after-the-holocaust a fresh and vibrant treatment, eschewing the sensational for serious reflection on today’s society and a haunting, almost bittersweet vision of the future. Fiskadoro is much more than the Apocalyptic portrait of the savage post-nuclear wasteland of Mad Max and its ilk.

Johnson’s prose is a strange and exotic combination of the mystical and the lucid Set in the predominantly Cuban settlements of Twicetown, Marathon, and The Army in the Florida Keys of the mid-Zlst Century, the disjointed plot follows Fiskadoro, a 14 year-old boy whose name means “fish-man”, through a series of traumatic events that lead to a disturbingly uncertain future. After acquiring a clarinet, he sets out to find Anthony Cheung, the manager of The Miami Symphony Orchestra, who is the only man who can teach him how to play. Intertwined with the deaths of Fiskadoro’s parents are subplots surrounding Cheung’s fearful obsession of the former world and Cheung’s grandmother’s fragmentary recollections of her hellish evacuation out of Vietnam. But Johnson’s plot is really only a device. to develop the more important and powerful atmospheric and allegorical undercurrents. Told with subtlety and grace, Johnson’s prose is a strange and exotic combination -of the mystical and the lucid. Fiskadoro and his

people are gentle, uneducated folk trying to cope in and make sense of a hostile, yet oddly beautiful world reminiscent of a harsher, grimier, more sinister version of The Old Man And The Sea. This sometimes surreal landscape is made familiar by the shards and scraps of contemporary pop culture which keep cropping up, taken to their logical extremes. Houses are decorated with auto parts such as steering wheels nailed all over the walls and signal lights flashing persistently, there is a notorious pirate given almost messianic reverence who calls himself Cassius Clay-Sugar Ray, and The Miami Symphony Orchestra is comprised of people who own damaged instruments they don’t know how to play. Not only is the wasteful, meaningless transience of today’s culture 1 (or lack of it) satirized, but all of our supposed cultural achievements are debased and mockingly made inetfectual. Johnson’s greatest talent, however, is as a story-teller. His understanding of the tradition of the great folk epic and of the evolutionary simplification and contamination of languages gives a rich earthiness, and vividness to the stories told by Cassius Clay sugar Ray and to the wonderfully idiosyncratic dialogue. Pidgin English is mixed haphazardly with pidgin Spanish to produce a queerly poetic language.

Houses

are decorated’with auto parts.. .

It would be tempting to categorize Fiskadoro as a work of magic realism, but it is beyond that. It is a bizarre, nighmarish world of dre.amlike unreality which doesn’t require a leap of faith or the taking of implausible events for granted. But it gains a startling immediacy through playing on speculations about our forseeable future, our shared nuclear nightmare. A completely ing novel.

original and satisfy-

Johnny Sunday Picnic. Bierdo

Little John (above) and his band as well as Jimmy July 27, at noon, in the Southern Ontario Blues The event will be held on Oregon Dr., Kitchener Bros., The Lucky Dog Band and surprise guests;

Fantasyland uncommonly by Neal Bonnor Imprint staff Life is a labyrinth. Out on your own in the big world, there’s no one to help you when those important decisions have to be made, when you’ve got to take a stand, develop your own morals and values, decide what’s most important to you in your life. There are many paths to choose from, many doors to open, and many dead ends. You’ve got to trust in yourself to make the right decision. Once you’ve made a decision, you’ve got to be strong and stand by it, no matter what the sacrifice. Above all, don’t take anything for granted. This is life. This is Labyrinth. Produced by George Lucas and directed by Jim Henson, Labyrinth is an exceptional movie in this day and age of violence-worship, moral prostitution, and sexual saturation: it has none of it.

Johnson, will be performing Association Second Annual (Doon) and will include The

setting for real issues

What it does have is a straightforward plot upon which rest numerous lessons of life, a stimulating setting and an imaginative cast reminiscent of Alice in Wonderland. The movie begins in the real world. Sara (Jennifer Connolly), the adolescent innocent, bored of life and upset with her socially mobile parents, takes refuge in a make-believe world of sorcery and goblins. Left to babysit her kid brother (stillin-diapers Toby) by her party-bound folks, Sara calls up the magical forces of the underworld (personified by David Bowie as the chief goblin) to take him away. Once obliged, though, Sara realizes her mistake, and calls for Toby’s return. Alas, Mr Evil is not very accommodating, but does give her an out: if you can reach the castle through the labyrinth by the time the clock strikes thirteen, Toby will not turn into a goblin.

Enter the labyrinth, with all its weird and wonderful characters: a tea-toting worm, an acned elf lonely for company, a lumbering giant orangutan of gentle disposition, and a courageous fox with a stiff upper lip, to name a few. On the side of evil is an army of outrageous under- , world creatures, a crystal ball full of tempting delights, and of course the ever-appealing bad-guy leader with the strong voice. As Sara’s determination slowly takes her closer to Toby, again and again the labyrinth tests her strength, challenges her preconceived notions, and forces her to trust in herself and others 1 in other words, teaches her the lessons of life. Needless to say, Labyrinth is ideal for the kids - probably the best children’s movie to come out in a decade. If you’re still a kid, it’s for you!

A Tale. of 1 wo sequels: Psycho III (bad), Aliens

.

Bell Jai at the Coronet

by John Zachsriah Imprint staff Here, in this final issue of Imprint for the spring ‘86 term, you the reader are presented with a Tale of Two Sequels . . . The first one being Psycho 111, which brings back Norman Bates as the reclusive motel owner with the unhealthy mother fixation. This outis somewhat stale, ing, sadly, though, and the picture is infused with very little suspense; instead, it relies on gory death scenes for effect. And despite good performances by both Anthony Perkins and Diana Scarwid, the film is pretty pallid. It’s bad news for Maureen Coyle (Scarwid), a disillusioned nun-intraining who arrives at the Bates Motel after escaping her convent. Maureen’s initials, M.C., are embossed on her suitcase, and are the same as Marion Crane’s, who Norman offed in the shower not so long ago. Seeing Maureen’s suitcase sets Norman off and he takes an unhealthy interest in her. At the same time, a reporter takes an interest in him. In the end, four gruesome deaths later, the reporter confronts

Norman/Mother in the Bates, household. The ending shouldn’t be given away for those intent on seeing the picture, but don’t hold your breath for a tricky twist ending. Because everyone knows about Norman’s problem with his mother, Psycho ZZZis ultimately uninteresting. Its reliance on a well-flogged premise is its downfall. Such a problem does not cripple Aliens, sequel to the much-celebrated yech-fest, *

Nothing

,

new

with

Norman’s

Alien. Alien’s is an unbelievable movie, truly dazzling and breathtaking and is escapist fare in the best sense of the term; for two hoursand fifteen minutes, you will forget about everything but what’s on the screen. It succeeds for two reasons: a) it makes no attempt to mimic the tone of its predecessor, and b) it stars Sigourney Weaver. Alien was basically a monster movie set in space, and its primary

(ok)

aim was to scare. AIiens is an action movie, and an impressive one. Ripley (Weaver) is brought out of deep freeze after 57 years of floating about the galaxy, whereupon she is told that a colony of earthlings has been on the Alien planet for 20 years. When they lose contact with the colony, they ask Ripley to go back to the planet with a team of marines to fight the aliens. Hers, however,is only an advisory capac-

mother

says

critic

ity. The unsuspecting marines arrive on the planet, and are quickly killed off, leaving Ripley in (more or less) charge. She attempts to lead the remains of the force to safety. As Ripley, Weaver is fabulous. She is assured and believable and despite able acting from other players (i.e. Micheal Biehn), she is definitely the centrepiece. As for Aliens, it is worth the price of admission; don’t close your eyes for a minute of it.


pus. Rec. has y choices for fun and fitness by D.M. Glazebrook Campus Recreation Each term, thousands of students, staff and alumni participate in the Universit.y of Waterloo’s intramural sports Since the league programs. sports are a major part of Waterloo life for a good portion of the campus, I thought this C-R rookie reporter should check them out. I spoke with Patti Murphy, Mike Montgomery, and Dwayne Mott, the C-R Student Assistants in charge of league sports, to get the inside story on intramUrals at Waterloo, Last Sunday’s Ring Road bicycle race attracted a large crowd, and earned the EngjneerMurphy is the coordinator of Photo by Doug Thompson ing Society much praise for good organization. the “co-recreational” leagues. For C-R illiterates, Co-Ret is a level of play designed to be fun. There are no awards, no referees, no points systems and no playoffs. The co-ret season ’ starts off with team entries early leading scorer for the Moments captain Shashi Malik had these in the term. Teams are usually by Charlotte Schwartzentruber throughout the season, averagwords to say following the vicBasketball wrapped up for made up of academic departing about 20 points per game, tory. “It was an all around team ments, classes, residence floors another term (boo hoo sob-sob) effort,” as in each game all playor gangs of friends. Once spring and it ended with a climax as A Division ers contributed to the total team teams were submitted, Murphy many semi-final and final games The six teams were incredibly “We had our ups and points. developed tentative schedules were the kind that make spectawell matched in ability, such downs during the season but for for the season, which she finaltors sit at the edge of their seats. that upsets prevailed in both the the big games we hung together”. ized after meeting with team Bl Division semi’s and the finals. After a half B2 Division captains. Organizing 214 teams The sixth-ranked Aliens detime score of 21-21, the third Dog-Eat-Dog battled Spurn of sports in less serve credit for their efforts place Walking Wounded de- \ in five different the Moment for the B2 division than two weeks made for a very against the third-ranked Pink feated the second place Celtics championship. Dog-Eat-Dog busy start of term, Murphy adFlamingoes in the semi-finals. for a final score of 40-37. The dominated through the final mits, but she made it through The game almost went into overfourth ranked Hounds lead by game for a 50-39 victory. Doug with the help of friends and time, however the Flamingoes Doug Grettani with 23, upset the Arnell, spokesperson for the ‘captured the one-point lead in roommates. first ranked Air Jordan team in a the last few seconds. Peter In co-ret play, things run winning team, commented “we 49-41 victory, earning themRoorda led the Flamingoes with pretty much by themselves once had aspirations of winning the selves a position in the finals. the season starts. At the end of 19 points and Mark Eckenrath Bl finals but are happy to win It was the Hounds and Walkthe term, teams are given a I led the Aliens with 16. the B2 championships,” saying ing Wounded in the finals. The chance to participate in “ChalIt was an easy semi-final for “It is a bitter-sweet victory”. lead was exchanged throughout the Pas Outs. Shashi Malik lenge Days”, put together by voFred Ma, captain of Spurn of the the game and could have been ‘dumped in 20 points for their 47lunteers with the help. of the Moments attributed the loss to won by either team. The Hounds 24 win over Dr. Jeds. recreational coordinator. If the domination of Dog-Eat-Dog were ahead at the buzzer and you’re not particularly into the The final game featured the on the boards. Dean Byers declaimed the 57-53 victory for the Campus Recreation scene and first-ranked Pas Outs and the serves mention for his consistent Spring 86 A Division Championfans’ favourites the Pink Flaminyou’re looking for a way to some offensive efforts. He was the ship. goes. The Pas Outs held their poexercise and have fun, a co-ret sition and captured the Bl team could be the perfect soludivision championship. Winning tion for you. For those with a more serious interest in team sports, competitive leagues offer a structured

Campus

. Performance Refunds now available

Performance refund vouchers are available to team captains. If your team is eligible for a refund, present your cash receipt or valid I.D. to the PAC receptionist. You will be issued a voucher for the appropriate amount owing which can be cashed in at the Cashier’s Office, Needles Hall. This must be done before the end of the term..

Ret Basketball

Summe~r Ice Hockey ends aood season

by~~~c~~a~~~~e~~~~~~key ;;t;, ;;ztThha,ppLeunfiecdh +-&&z season’is now over. I will take the opportunity to thank the slavers for an outstanding sea-. son: The regular schedule-went off with only a handful of minor incidents and only one default. Thanks to the game officials for doing a consistently good job. On the organizational side of things a few names to mention are Robin Wyllie, Dwaney Mott, Mike Montgomery, and Peter Hopkins. Without their help the season could not have been so successful. Now for the playoff results. As to be expected, there were a few surprises. Us won the A division in a close over-time battle with I

Gang? In the B division, the Null Spaces blanked the Casual Assassins 4-O in another unset. And Chem Waste, the team’that finished the regular season with a record of four losses and one tie went big to finish with three wins, taking the coveted C division title over the Chemquistadores. All in all the entire season went very well. Thanks again to everyone involved and have a good summer and work term. See you in the winter. Also, if anyone has any suggestions for the summer ice hockey league, please submit them to Peter Hopkins, PAC 2040.

Larry’s Byrds win Women’s B - Ball by Paul Marchildon Once again the C-R Women’s basketball championship title has been taken by Larry’s Byrds. The Byrds finished first overall in the league with West B Oldtimers not too far behind. the Oldtimers were fighting an uphill battle in the championship game

_

that ended 43-24. The Bvrds showed a good deal of stamina in that game when they lost Karen Clarke (fouled out) and continued to play to victory with only four players. As well, congratulations go out to East Quad for winning the consolation final over the Mech Magic, 36-16. -.

format for play. This term, of Dwayne Mot-t, coordinator and Mike Montgoconveners, mery, coordinator of referees, oversaw the running of these leagues. The competitive level of play also begins with team entries and finalizing of schedules. Mott worked with league conveners to straighten out scheduling problems, while Montgomery supervised referees-in-chief to ensure games were properly officiated. Teams in the competitive leagues are grouped into “A”, “B” and “C” levels of play, according to interest and skill. Strict rules of play and eligibility are enforced throughout the season and standings are updated weekly. After several weeks of play, the conveners and their coordinator set playoff schedules that eventually determine league champions. Reflecting on the season that has just come to a close, both Mott and Montgomery ,are pleased with the success of the competitive leagues. This spring, 94 teams -competed in four sports. The beginning of the . term, end of term and pay dates were busy for both Montgomery and Mott but they’ve enjoyed the term. Montgomery is extremely pleased that it was not necessary for the Protest and Conduct Board (the regulatory arm of Campus Recreation)to meet this term to resolve conflicts. This term’s competitive leagues have offered a great way for the campus to let off some steam and enjoy the sunshine this summer. Though Campus Ret leagues have finished for the summer, they start up again in Septemeber with competitive and CoRet leagues in eight different sports. Check out the possibility of joining a team when you get back on campus for the fall or winter. As Mott would say, Campus Recreation leagues are an “awesome” experience,

.

.


,’ (gunsmoke grey) A’mord .Durex hour tu-rn-around, if you book ahead). Wheels, white frame, 1985 model, Close (near Seagram Stadium),’ de- / PERSONALS immaculate condition. $497. Ask for pendable. $1 per double-spaced page. Henry at 886-3142 . Resumes $3 pet: page. Draft copy alEUROPE TRIP! Travelling partner ways provided. Phone 8851353. MORE MEATfor less. End of term spewanted. Leaving after exams. AmsterWILL DO fast efficient typing of stu: dim, Switzerland, N. Italy, S. France, . cial prices. Burgers, Ribs & Steaks. , dent papers on Smith-Corona typewCall Joel, 886-2137. Paris? Call Scott 884-1444. riter. Reasonable rates. Lakeshore HUEY LEWIS, one pair of 4th row PENNY W., MICHELLE L., Sandy .B.; Village. Phone 886-6124. AuJohn D., Nancy G. - Best of luck in . stands at cost, CNE Grandstand, gust 30, Call Linda, 746-4136; PRO TYPING service. Resumes, Let. , Teaching Option...Gary Y. ters, Reports, Theses. Low rates, fast ’ RETURN AIRLINE ticket, Toronto to K.M.H., M.P.O’., R.A.C., J.C. - Espeservice. Also do TvDe-set Resumes. Vancouver (Expo), Aug 1 to 4. Best cially glad that we had time to hatie Call 742-2259 or 744-8443. Offer. Sonja, 742-2270. I fun this term! Happy holidays! See you next term! Gary.. 4 AIR CERTIFICATES (Wardair) each HOUSING AVAILABLE worth $50, valid l/2 year. Can be us&d LAST C.HANCE. End of term ‘Meat on one flight at 15-20% discount. 10 Sale. Beef, ribs and burgers at wholesad. bikes, T.V., Kitchen tables, DouFQR RENT to grad or fourth year fesale prices. Call The Meat Man Joel at bie bed + mattress. 578-5991. male fully furnished house, Kitchener 886-2137. 579-8206, September 1986, car neSAILBOARD. Ten Cate “Leaper” funFASS PERSON who is not playing cessary. I b with a full deck. Dave Shipley has your ~ board. 150 litresm 5-6 m2 sail, footstraps, fully rtitractable daggerboard. nine of hearts. Phone 885-0456. Phone 746-0887 or 824-l 885. FOR THOSE who missed.it: ‘Dave ac-’ BICYCLE - Raleigh 12-speed light, tually did have an anchovy dacquiri at touring. Just overhauled with some the Keg on Sunday. In fact, he had +.r,rr new parts. Excellent condition - $200 LVVU. (New $500). Call 746-0887 or 824ATTENTION NERDS: Thanks for mak18RG * . VVI. . ing this a good term for SO many Friday July 25, I977 MONTE CARLO Landau, very women on campus. Look for our first good condition, V8 350 engine, air, : meeting in the winter term: “Nerds ps.pb, new allcseason radials, new ra- 3 FED FLICKS: ROCKY HORROR PICand Passion: Are they mutually excluTURE SHOW, starring Tim Curry and diator, moving (must sell), asking E;\lb>” assorted groupies. 8:00 p.m., Physics $2,000. 888-6988, evenings. _ CHESS ANYONE? I’m an interested’ 145. HONDA HAWK - 400 cc, $900, fairing amateur.looking for opponents. Barry EVERY FRIDAY NIGHTat 900 pm., the and luggage with 10,000 kms. Negoti_ 886-8629. aquatics staff will be holding “The Big able 2 Colin, 884-6481. DAZGO: THANKS for the laughs and Splash”, a night of water fun for those WEDDING DRESS - Size 9/lp. Tradithe heated tongue lashings. Have a who like doing more tha.n swimming. tional, lace bodice and sleeves, high good weekend and a g‘ieat fall term. THE HERITAGE RESOURCES CENTRE open neck. ‘Matching peak hat and FRFSH OF the campys unite! Your (U of W) is offering a<series of 3 field veil. Will sell separately. Call 886time has come to sfep into the world of trips for children and seniors to local 0509. the upperclass! Congratulations on s natural and cultural heritage areas. QUEENSIZE WATERBED, semi-mohaving made it this far with apologies For idformation, call Carql or Mark at tionless mattress in a natural varto the offended. BAC, you’re right, you 885-l 211 Exts. 3942 or 3066. nished pine frame with side rails. can’t overlap! STEP RIGHT UP FOLKS! to an exhibit Includes bedding and heater - 7 EAST 3: How do I love thee? Let me 1months old. $350. Call (416) 769of Carnival Ganies in the Museum and count the ways! From mumbles’and Archive of Games. Enjoy ball toss $81‘9 after 6 p.m. accents and moleish confusion to 3rd games, ,the wheel of fortune and SUZUKI GT 185 Two stroke motorcyle. floor parties and drunken wanderings. penny arcade machines. Bring change ‘12,000 miles, 1975 model, Good conThanks for the summer fun and mega for the machines and popcorn. Admisdition, will certify. Grea’t bike for comlaughs. It’s been a hoot! sion FREE! Open Weekday? 9 - 5 and muting, peppy and economical. Sundays 1 - 5. B.C. Matthews Hall. 578-9225: I SERVICES LIVE MUSIC at the MUG: Food, people, a good time for all. See yourself at the MUG. 8:00 - 12:OO pm on the BODY CHECK fitness appraisals WANTED PAC patio oi CC 110. make y0v.r summer, great through fitq~~2s~ : iai?d ;;a:w%FighJ loss,, Lpro,grams. ’ MODELS (FEMALE) wanted for studio .‘.@r$~nq ji;qd c,qu~,qYj$g‘ .ap$ f&w _’ :@tibto@a~hy.~ ,Good- makeup/hair , Saturday. June ‘26 -re: +i!&k: $&&6~30. * * t t ’ , $’ :. ,. a*, : quired for session(s). Renumeration in CLOWN HUGS: Trained clov\;n will enB & W-8” X’ 10” orints. 885-6877. FED FLfCKS: ROCKY HORROR PICtertain at’ birthday ptirties, promoTURE SHOW, starring Tim Curry and tions, picnics 0; other special events. ., assorted groupies. 8:00 p.m., Physics TYPING Ballooti aniinals. face oaintirin, active 145. . aames. Reasonable rat&. Phone 888STEP RIGHT UP fol’ks!, an exhibit of j 6057. ’ 25 YEARS experience - 75c per page Carnival Games, continues until Ocdouble spaced. Westtiount area. Call WILL DO light moving with a small tober 31 at the Museum and Archive 743-3342. ’ truck. Also aarbane hauled away. Call of Games, Burt Matthews Hall, Free. Jeff 884-2631. TYPING 30 years experience. 75c Weekdays 9-5, Sundays l-5. double spaced page. IBM Selectric. SEARCHING FOR a job? Do you want BOMBSHELTER - OPEN 700 p.m. to Essays, resdmes, theses, etc. Westto contact many prospective employ1:OO a.m. Campus Centre. .mount-Erb area. CaJI Doris 886-7153. ers at one time? Let me help you reach THEATRESPORTS season finale. Yes them. You prepare the-mister letter PROFESSIONAL TY-PING. Essays, it’s your last chance to see TheatreSand the list of companies. I will proterm papers, theses etc. Fast, accuports before September. Bring your duce a seriesof individually addressed .rate -and .dependable service. $1 per friends for live, improvised comedy. letters and envelopes. My rates are double’ spaced page, call 886-4347 Feds $2.50, otheis $3.00. reasonable - a valuable investment (Sonia). in your future employment. I will also UNIVERSITY GRADUATE (English and Sunday Juty 27 prepare your resume. Call Judy’at Latin) available for word processing of 886-l 648 anytime. ’ re&mes, work reports, term papers, MASS ever-v Sunday at St. Jerome’s, NEED TO move? Give us a call., 744letters to employers. Editing available. 9:30 a.m. ahd 11:3d p.m. 2420 dr pager # 6581586. . Personal computer and letter-quality or-inter. Disk storage for efficient reviCHAPEL SERVICE at St. Paul’s Uriited &ions and multiplecopies. Draft copies College, 1‘1 :OO a.m. Communion 1st optional. Phone Judy, 886- 1648. Sunday of each mbnth. Rev. Dr. Tom York conducting. FOR SALE TYPING; $1 .OO per double spaced .--”. ““.% .,.. . page,. close to University - ,MSA Call ANGLICAN CAMPUS MINISTRY: Karen 746-0631, Eucharist Sunday at 10:00 am., St. MIECE BATA 2.1” Triathalon Bicycle. Bede’s Chapel, Renison College. Full Shim&o 600 EX with Biopace SAME DAY word processing. Fast (2431”CZi:

-

-746-I!#03 .. _

.

9

RESPONSIBLE ROOMMATE wanted td share 2-bedroom apartment at Brybeck and Westmount, September to December. Approx. $250, Call 88681 84. BLUEVALE ST. N. TOWNHQUSE Jai\. 87. 3 Co-op students; mature, responsible NON-SMOKERS. Option Sept, 87. Partially furnished, all utilities, telephone, garage. $270 - $290 p.p./month. 416-277-4966, weekdays suppertime. LIVING ACCOMODATIONS - pl;s wage in exchange for cafe of hine yr. old. Call between 4-8 pm. 893-1487.

HOUSING APARTMkNT

WANTED

WANTED

- 4th

yearfe-

-, ,,

Wednesday

July

/,

30

CINEMA GRATIS: Cam’pus Centre 9:30 p.m. Free! Varsity Blues, and Local Hero. A double feature! HURON CAMP& MINISTRY fellow’ship. Wednesdays 5 p.m. Wesley Chapel, St. Paul’s College. All Welcome. Chaplain Graham E. Mqrbey. EVENiNG PRAYER and sermon. Conrad Grebel College, 4:45 p.m. LAST DAY OF CLASSES! Bombshelter open at NOON with B.B.Q. on the patio. Rock & Roll after 9:00 pm. THE WoMEN’S CENTRE &ill be presenting the film “An Easy Pill To Swallow” as part of its continuing film series at 12:30 pm. in CC 110. Everyone welcome.

_ Thursday

July

maie student seeks two-bedroom apt. ($350/mo.) for fall/winter/slimmer. Must be near universities. Please call I Cindy at 578-9225. -THREE PEOPLE looking to share or lease a townliouse for the September to Aofil term L furnished or unfurnished. Call Deb at 746-6583. SENIOR. FEMALE Seeks bachelor/l bedroom apt. for Sept./86, Waterloo or Kitchener. Will pay for Aug: if necessary. Call 886-5577. FEMALE -DESPARATELY looking for accommodation in student tqwnhouse. tinder $2OO/mo. Marie: 416535-61 16, or 851 Bathurst St., M5R 362, Tpryto. PHYSICIAN COUPLE seeks a house for’rent as early a$‘possible. Call 742. 8192. Ask for Dr..‘:Mdhzy

31

Sunday

Friday

August

1

.

. EVERY FRIDAY night.at9:OO p.m., the aquatics staff will be holding “The Big Splash”,~a nightof Water fun for those who like doing more than swimrriing. BOMBSHELTER - open 12:OO n.oon?o 1:OO a.m. Campus Centre. B.B.Qevery Friday afternoon of,,the term. Come and enjoy some burgs in the suri.

* Saturday -

August

2

BOMBSHELTER - open 7:00 p.m. to 1:OO a.m.aCamp+ Feritre, ’

-I

3

I’

INFORMAL Worship, with dis&ssion following: 7:00 p.m., Conrad Grebel College. Every Second Sunday of term. MASS every Sunday at St. Jerome’s, 9:30 a.m. and 11:30 p.m. , CHAPEL service at St. Paul’s United College, 11:OO a.m. Communion 1st Sunday of each month. Rev. Dr. Tom _ York conducting.

Tuescjay

August

‘i

5

“‘LIVING ‘WITH CANCER” Pra’ctical guidance and information provided by health professionals for cancer patients, friends and families. Every other Tuesday,‘7:30 to 8:30 pm. at the Adult Recreation Centre, 185 King St. S., Waterloo.

Wedpesday BOMBSHELTER‘Open 12:OO noon to 1:OO a.m. Campus Centre. /

August

August

6

WATSFIC (Waterloo Siience Fiction Club) meets every Wednesday-at 7:00 pri7. in CC 3388. HURON CAMPUS ministry fellowship Wednesdays) 5 p.m. ,Wesley Chapel, St, Paul’sCollege. All Welcome. Chaplain Graham E. Morbey. EVENING PRAYER and sermon. Conrad Grebel College; 4.145 p.m. BOMBSHELTER - open 7:00 p.m.. to 1:OO a.m. Campus Centre. ’ THEMAS: Informal discussion 5:30 CC s 138B. Communication beiween faculties is the objective. THE WOMAN’S CENTRE will be oresenting “Journ&y for Survival”‘- and slides from Kenya:This will be the last event in the summer film series. Come to CC 1 IO at 1,2:30 pm. Everyone welcome.

.

I


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