Torch runner turns patriotic by Robert W. Gissing Imprint daff When the Olympic torch came to this area January 5, University of Waterloo student Allyson Haggerty was one of the relay runners, carrying the Calgarybound flame for 1.8 kilometres. Her name, like those of the other torph bearers, was picked at random from among millions of entries in a nation-wide lottery. The runners were chosen from a private draw because the
employees of sponsor PetroCanada were barred from participating. When I met up with her between classes at St, Jerome's College for this interview, she still wore her distinctive red and white Torch running suit. Allyson is a second-year mature student and a single mother-of three, an active volunteer in the community and a member of the Mature Students Advisory Group. She is studying psychology and would like to combine
unless I applied.' It made me reassess my patriotism." About the organization of the event Allyson went on to say, "right from the start we felt that they (the torch relay staff) were there for our benefit. Never once did they make us feel like we weren't wanted. They (the organizers) were there to help get the torch to the most people as possible." The relay torch was charted in such a way as to get a s many Canadians as possible to within two hours of the route. It was planned that more than 20 million people would be able to reach the route during its 88-day trek.
this with journalism, forensic psychology being her eventual goal. I asked her about what her first impressions about being selected. "I received a special delivery letter saying that I was a potential runner, I had to write a short essay on why I wanted to run and answer a skill testing question," she said. "When I got the phone call, I did a little victoay dance around the kitchen. Later, I thought, 'I could have never been chosen
Asked how she felt while carrying the torch. Allyson said, "I felt 10 feet tall. The runner who was with me told me that I was in complete control, I could set my own pace and I could slow right down for my family to see if I wanted to. "The torch was heavy to start with because they had put a fresh canister of fuel in it. so when I passed the torch onto Joe (Joe Donham] my arm was aching. I didn't notice the cold at all. I saw my kids but I didn't even notice my own sister taking pictures of me beside them, the feeling was so great. When I passed continued on mw 12
Obituary
Car accident kills UW'chaplain by fanice Nicholls I m d n t staff Rev
map1
I
Allyson Haggerty of UW beams with pride as she carries the Olympic torch in Kitchener.
I
Throngs of people American line the torch route by Robert W. Gissing Imprint Staff January 5 marked the day that the Olympic Torch Relay came to the Kitchener-Waterloo area. High winds and cold temperatures didn't stop throngs of people from lining the route from Highland Road to Queen Street to greet the flame a s it made its way to a short ceremony at Kitchener's City Hall. The 10-member team that ran it through this section of "day 50" came from the area; Joe Dmham from Queensmount School in Kitchener ran the flame on its last leg to city hall. The ceremony was attended by some 2,500 people. Awards were given to torch relay volunteers, Awards were also presented to volunteers for their outstanding contribution to amateur sports, at a early morning pancake breakfast in Market Sauare.
city two silk flags commemorating the torch's stop. These flags were apparently stolen by two St. Mary's High School students, witnesses say, at the end of the ceremony, but were later returned with no charges laid. The runners, as well as the crowd, seemed very excited by the morning's activities and the whole operation went along very smoothly. A small group of demonstrators proteaters were also in attendance, protesting PetroCanada's drilling operations on Alberta territory that is claimed by the Lubicon Indian band. Allyson Harrerty, a secoadyear mature student at the University of Waterloo, ran with the torch for 1.8 kilometres. The caravan will have traveled a total of 88 days and covehd 18,000 kilometres using everything from dog sleds and
new VP (Academic) by Mike Brown Imprint staff A replacement has been found for Tom Brzustowski who vacated the post of vice-president (academic) last term for a position in the Ontario Government's Ministry of Colleges and Universities. A special university committee chaired by UW President Doug Wright has selected a candidate from outside the university. A person associated with the committee, who asked not to be identified, said this week the nominee is apparently from the Unjted States and is familiar with the institution. The name will be revealed to
'ai$iri &ky+dw@~h& ry 3 b aEdr B'i%f&ntwhile
travel York's &ar and a tractor-trailer, ocm e cumxi early Sunday morning. A 32-year-old woman travelling with York was sent to hospital but has since been releahed. York. 47, was returning from Arkansas after spending Christmas with?ris mother. Originally from that state, York came to Canada to avoid the draft during the Vietnam War. He eventually became a Canadian citizen. A funeral service is scheduled for 2 p.m. today (Friday) in Toronto at Timothy Eaton Memorial Church. A memorial service wiH be held in MacKirdy Hall at St. Paul's College a t 2 p.m. on January 10. The memorial service is being sponsored by St. Paul's and the MacKirdy Chaplaincy Association, of which York was the president. There will be no regular Sunday service at St. Paul's January 10; services will resume January 17. York had a Ph.d in English Literature and was known for his book Trapper. He also taught in the English department at UW and wrote a column in Imprint for several years called Let's Talk About.. . A nature lover, York loved to live and canoe in the wilderness. He was an ordained migister with the United Church of Canada and served in several parishes in Ontario.
Federation of Students University of Waterloo
--~
El
,
ELECT1,O.N PROCLAMA.TION Nomination papers will be available
for the following
positions:
President Vice-President, Operations and Finance Vice-President, University Affairs and Members of Students’ Council Nomination period, Presidential & Vice-Presidential candidates: Open: Monday, January 4, 1988 Close: Wednesday, January 13, 1988 Nomination period, Candidates for Students’ 0pe.n: Manday, January 4, l988 Close: Monday, January 18, 1988 .7
Students’
CAMPUS
materials
CENTRE
Seats to be elected
are as follows:
Arts Regular Arts Co-op ....................................... Engineering.. .................................... ES. Regular ...................................... E.S; Co-op (both streams). ........................ H.K.L.S. Regular ................................. H.K.L.S. Co-op [both streams] .................... Independent Studies .............................. Mathematics Regular .............................. Mathematics Co-op ............................... Science Regular .................................. ; Science Co-op (both streams) ........... Renison-..........................* ............... St. Jerome’s ......................................
Council:
BOARD
’
1 1 I
Terms of Office: Twelve months from the Annual General Meeting which will be held the last week of the winter term. Qualifications
for Elections
All candidates must be full members of the Corporation, i.e., they must be registered undergraduate students who have paid their Federation fees. Nomination papers are available in the Fbderation Office located in room 235 of the Campus Centre Building
SENATE
ELECTIONS Centre
Board
are
ELECTIONS
The following undergraduate seats on the University of Waterloo Senate are up for election: Arts, Enviromental Studies/Independent Science and At-Large.
Nomination
Nomination
forms are available
from January
1988,
in the
Secretariat’s
Needles
3060.
Nominations
forms are available Office,
from January Campus
ELECTIONS
4th to
Centre,
room forms must be returned 4:30 pm. on Wednesday, January 13, 1988.
ALL
2 2
..........
Arts, Engineering ‘A’, Enviromental Studies, H.K.L.S., Independent Studies, Math and Science. in the Federation 235. Nomination
1 1 1 1 1 1
must be camera-ready.
The following seats on the Campus up for election:
13th/88
4 1 3
.....................................
Information on the duties of the President; VicePresident, Operations and Finance; and Vice-President, University Affairs is available in the Federation Office (Campus Centre room 235). Notice to Presidential and Vice-Presidential Candidates from “Procedures Governing Elections and B.yElections” “The Election Committee shall establish a mail-out to all off-term co-op students of the Presidential and Vice-Presidential ballots including, if desired by the candidates, a statement of each candidate’s campaign platform. The statement will be in the form of one typewritten 8%“~ 11” (or metric equivalent] page (may be double-sided) and must be submitted for publication no later than the closing day of nominations. The required number of copies will be duplicated by the Election Committee and will be completed within five working days of the close of nominations, At a time and place set by the Elections Committee, each candiate must supply a minimum of two persons for stuffing envelopes for the mail-out.” All submitted
Council
by
TAKE
Wednesday,
PLACE
ON FEBRUARY
Office,
must be returned
January
13, 1988.
9 & l&1988.
Studies,
Hall,
by 4:30
4 to 13, room
pm. on
Pub gciers feel tax hike by judy Imprint
This blustery scene was a common photo by Mike Brown
F” n
g
scene
this week.
It’s going to cost more to drink the cold away this term at UW. Both Federation Hall and the Bombshelter have increased the price of bottled beer’as of January 4, A bottle of domestic beer at the Bombshelter now costs $2.05 - up from $1.95. Prices increased 35 cents at Fed Hall where a bottle now costs $2.20. Andrew Abouchar, Federation of Students vice-president (operations and finance), said the increases were a direct result of Finance Minister Michael Wilson’s “Christmas gift” (increases in the so-called sin taxes on booze and cigarettes) and the Ontario Breweries’ subsequent price hikes. He explained that the increases, which amounted to $1.15 per 24-bottle case of beer, were not expected at the end of last term but the tax increases over the holidays made it necessary for the UW pubs to match prices. He also commented that he hoped students would understand the need for the increases, adding, “I think they get their money’s worth.” Prices were last raised a year
ago. Since then, there have been several cost increases that both Fed Hall and the Bombshelter have managed to absorb. The first was last September when liquor prices increased and the second was in October when wage increases were implemented,
Bombshelter
manager
Cathy Whyte said every effort was made to minimize the price hikes but it was impossible to absorb an increase of more than $0.05 a bottle. The Bombshelter operates on a break-even policy and the increases were necessary to cover overhead costs. She said there have not been many complaints so far and, “the wait staff really likes the price at $2.05." Wait staff at Fed Hall said they had noticed only a few com-
plaints and people generally accepted the increases with ng problem. Fed Hall also operates on a zero profit margin so the 35 cent increase there was also necessary to cover costs. Manager Chuck McMullan explained the increase was $0~05 more than at the
Bombshelter
because
they
try to maintain a 33 per cent beverage cost policy: with a cost increase of $0.05 a bottle, students pay three times that. He emphasized that Fed Hall beer prices are still lower than in the Waterloo community.
Those who drink liquor have only temporarily escaped price increases. Liquor prices will increase later in January when the Liquor Control Board of Ontario announces its increases in the wake of the federal tax hikes,
The President’s Advisory Committee on Equal Rights for Women and Men [PACER) has issued a call for members of the UW community to express concerns to the committee. Concerns should deal with the subject of equal rights with regard to UW policies or procedures, the committee says, and all concerns will be heId in confidence: The committee will discuss any concerns at its next meeting, scheduled for plif-January The members of the coAmittee may be contacted directly, or a wrltten submlsslon prepared. Trevor Boyes, the committee chairman, may be contacted at ext. 2263; submissions may be delivered to committee secretary Rosanne Atwater-Hallatt in NH3060.
tteA
/i#$$
campus
Holland8 staff
/
UW Chaplains’ ecumencial Marriage Preparation Course, 1988 Place: Seigfried Hall, St. Jerome’s College Fee: $20 per couple, $10 per person Time: 7:30-10 pm., Mondays, Jan. 1%Feb. 8
Session #1: Jan.
11: Living-Loving
Relationships
leaders: Ed and Leslie Johnson, Bob and Carol Hudgins,
Session #2: Jan. 18: Roots and Family Systems leader: Dr. Sharon Verneiro, Ph.D., Psycologist, Lutherwood Assessment Services Session #3: Jan. 25: Decision Making and Value Clarification leader: Bishop Morse Robinson, Renison College &?SSiOIl #4: Feb. 1: Conflict Denial Resolution leader: Dr. Sharon Verneiro SeSSiOIl #% Feb. 8: Finances leader: Grant Russell, M.B.A., C.M.A., Associate Professor, School of Accountancy, UW each session opened with a brief devotional-by a UW Chaplain coffee available at each session, a wine and cheese party the final evening . a certificate issued at the end of the course indicating to your pastor, minister, or priest that you have completed the Marriage Preparation Course.
STAFF WAN-TED WINTER ‘88
l
l
To register, contact Shelly MacDonell, Registration
The UW Chaplains and joint programs
St. Jerome’s College.
deadline: 7 pm., Jan. Il.
an association of chaplains offering individual including denominational and university-wide
are
chapel services, discusion groups and pastoral counselling.
Applications are being accepted now for disc Jockey, door staff & kitchen staff. Time available during the day Is an asset. Application forms are available at Fed Hall.
Federation Hall A division of the Federation of Students University of Waterloo
-
Limits sought on .Fest to lure vou outd-oors university area multiple dwellings by Marie Sedivy Imprint staff A bylaw to limit the number of multiple-family buildings in residential areas surrounding Waterloo’s two universities is currently under study by municipal council. Last month, city council recommended an interim control bylaw to prohibit the conversion of single-detached dwellings in the Central Fountain Neighbourhood to duplexes, triplexes, or boarding houses for a period of one year. This area is bounded by Bridgeport Road to the south, Central Street to the north, and runs from King Street to Waterloo Park. While the actual number of units affected is not significant, the move may be setting a precedent dangerous to students seeking affordable housing in an already tight market. Some residents of the neighborhood presented council with a petition requesting a change in zoning because they felt their neighborhood had reached a balance that would be upset and cause neighborhood decline if more dwellings were converted. The petitioners pointed out that 70 of 106 residential properties (66.1 per cent) are owner-occupied, 18 are boarding houses, and the remainder are multiple residential buildings. At present, the area is zoned “general resident ial”. This zoning allows for multiple dwelling residential properties, whereas the “single residential” zoning allows for single unit dwellings only. The petitioners argued the number of boarding houses and multiple dwellings have increased dramatically due primarily to the neighbourhood’s proximity to the universities.
DAILY
They are fearful of a continuation of this trend in light of the fact that nearly half of the single dwellings are owned by people over 65 years of age where ownership change is likely in the near future. According to Ted Carlton, Federation of Students president, many areas near the university, especially those to the north and the east, are now zoned single residential. He says it is natural for students to want housing near the university, and when some areas are zoned single residential, students will cluster in the nearby general residential areas. “In general residential zones where there are still a large number of single family dwellings, the families want to see other neighborhoods housing students as well,” explains Carlton. He says all areas near the universities need to be opened up to students, and believes that students and families ‘can live in the same neighborhood without major difficulties. One problem with the freeze on conversions in the Central Fountain area, says Carlton, is the lack of guidelines as to what constitutes a healthy balance. As he points out in a letter to city councilors: “In the future, will a balance be proclaimed when 33.9 per cent of the dwellings in an area are non-single family owner occupied residences? Or will a balance be achieved when the single family residents simply deem it to exist?*’ “The encouraging side to this,” says Carlton, “is the comprehensive study that is being implemented as a result.” He stresses the need for the Federation of Students to work with the city, and points out the severe lack of a base of data regarding student housing in the K-W community.
by Kelly Cascone Imprint staff The week of January 18-23 is planned by , the Federation of Students to be a fun-filled week of distraction to ease students back into the-new year of assignments and midterms. This year’s Winter Carnival is a revived event. The week long itinerary includes events ranging from traditiona ice sculpturing to events like three-legged snow soccer. Laurier and UW are participating in some of the events collectively. The MS, Winter Carnival pageant is an in-drag beauty contest held at Laurier. Talent night is another activity in which Waterloo will compete at Laurier against their best. The Northern Pikes will perform at the Turret. The admissions will be the same for students at either university. Fed Hall’s usual $1 sign in charge will be removed for Laurier students on the specified dates. The week’s weather may be cold but that will not stop Fed Hall’s beach party or the polar pool plunge which takes place outside the Bombshelter patio. This is a most entertaining event where people get prizes for diving into a pool of sub zero water. This year, the Federation of ‘Students’ International Students’ Board will again bring tom
The Federation of Students election is to be held next month. On February 9 and 10 the positions of president, vice-president (operations and finance] and vice-president (university affairs) are up for grabs. New students’ council members will be elected as well. About ~,CICICI co-op students will be sent ballots and campaign information on January 19. Each candidate gets an 8x11
MONDAY
TUESDAY
WEDNESDAY
Large Pizza
Meat-ball Sandwich
Any 3 Sandwiches
Pick-up or Eat-in onty
%i 3 Cokes Delivered
$1.99
$9.99
$12.99 PASTA SANDWICHES . ITALIAN DELI . HOT SPECIALS
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CATERING PARTY PLAITERS PANZEROTTI W’LOO DELIVERY
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The week winds down with an awards presentation for all the game winners. As well, the coveted carnival cup is awarded to the high spirited team of the week.
Job rating s planned
by Andrew Rehage Imprint staff There is now somewhere for students to turn if they feel ripped off or really disappointed about their work-term jobs. The Student Advisory Council has picked up an idea first started by the Engineering Faculty. Ross Orrett, acting chairman of the advisory council, has expanded the Engineering Unwant Ad to be applicable to coop students in all faculties. “We want students who come back from a work-term to give their opinion good or bad, so that other students have an idea what to look for when they apply for jobs,” said Orrett in an interview this week. This is the first year the system will be available to all students and is designed solely to help students. Students returning from a work-term will now be asked to fill out a Student Workterm Summary questionnaire. The questionnaire is short
and student are asked to answer them honestly in order for the advisory council and other students know exactly what to expect for individual employers, “If a student really feels that the employer was misleading in the initial job description or a bad employer, we would like to know about it. If, on the other hand, the employer is excellent, we would definitely like to know that too,” said Orrett. The work-term summaries are completely confidential. Even though students are asked to incIude their names, their names will be blacked-out and replaced with a reference number. All of the forms will be filled at the Career Info Centre along with the company job descriptions they are applicable to. If you wish to fill out a form, they are available at the Career Info Centre. The Student Advisory Council will meet every second Tuesday starting next Tuesday and all those interested are welcome to attend.
Would-be Feds face deadline by Derik Hawley Imprint etaff
SPECIALS
3 hemi Four Cokes Free Delivery
you the opportunity to sample exotic tastes from around the world. You will see fascinating dances from across the globe. The Cultural Caravan will feature a concert by Messenjah in Fed hall at night.
sheet of paper to make his statement to students on work terms. Nominations began January 4 and will close on the 13 for the president and vice-presidents. January 16 is the deadline for students’ council nomina!ions. To qualify as a candidate one must be registered as a student. More information is available at the Fed office in the Campus Centre. The Federation of Students is an important part of the university ai they - provide undergraduat& with both services and
representation. The Federation operates Fed Hall, the safety van, the Ombudsman and the Bombshelter. The president heads the student government. He has a seat on both the senate and board of governors. The senate governs academics and grants all degrees. The board of governors sees to the operation of the institution. The president is the spokesman for students complaints. The vice-president [operations and finance) is respbnsible for the day to day running of the
)K\\ FRANCESW’S
r3
EAT IN TAKE OUT DRIVE THRU PHONE AHEAD
GIANT PIZZA SLICES $1 .#O
33 University Ave., Waterloo 746-4111
1Stringent no-smoking policy now in effect across campus , by Phil Birnbaum Imprint staff
Thank you for not ,smoking
Smoking is now completely prohibited in most UW buildings and significantly restricted in others following the implementation of a new smoking policy on campus January 1, Policy No. 29 forbids smoking in _-all areas except those specifi_ tally designated as smokingpermitted. Those areas include rooms or apartments in residence, Fed Hall, the Bombshelter, and specifically designated rooms in the Campus Centre, Smoking is no longer permitted in such places as the CC Great Hall, the Math building’s third floor lounge, and private offices. Smoking is banned in all academic buildings - their staff, faculty, and students will be required to leave the building to smoke. The action corn& following recommendations made by a UW committee formed last year to review campus smoking policy. The committee consisted of a representative from each of various campus organizations, including the Federation of Students and the Graduate Student Association. The recommendations of the committee were eventually accepted by UW President Doug Wright, who issued policy No. 29 last June 1. The policy called for an immediate ban of smoking in most public areas, but allowed it in private offices and some lounge areas until last week, when only specifically approved areas would remain available for . J 1 smoking.
!I
Those smoking areas were decided by the UW Management Board based upon submissions to the committee. The Management Board, which consists of the faculty deans as well as the vice-president (academic) and V-P (University Services) Pat Robertson, retains the power to amend the list of smoking areas. Robertson said there were only “a handful” of objections to a smoking ban raised to the committee, and added that he ex-
pects no formal complaints to the policy now that it is ineffect. “We certainly understand that it might be a hardship for some people who have smoked for a long time. . . but it’s the trend in society and people have accepted it,” Robertson said. Robertson said the new policy is similar to smoking policies already in effect at the University of Guelph, Wilfrid Laurier University, and others.
The following are the only areas on campus where smoking is still permitted, following the implementation of UW’s Policy No. 29: Campus Centre: Smoking permitted in the Bombshelter, as well as the smoking lounge, room 113. Wild Duck Cafe has a smoking section. Fed Hali: Smoking permitted. A non-smoking area is available at lunch, South Campus Hall: Laurel Room and Festival Room have smoking sections. University Club: Smoking section available. Grad House: Smoking area on first floor. Villages, Minota HaRev Residence, Married Student Apartments: >moking permitied in residents’ rooms/apartments.-
Single
Studying
leaves
isn’t
l l l
our
flexible
Students at U of G recently staged a protest against the planned cutbacks in spending. The protest, which took place outside the office of the board of governors, was led by student council VicePresident Chris Moore, Three students entered the meeting to state their case and the campus police were order to throw them out. The remaining protesters turned their attention to the security officers and reinforcements were called in. The rally was disbanded after the board closed the meeting to students. The student council has demanded an apology. University
of Toronto
A recently retired History professor, Archie Thorton, was asked by university President George Connell to write a paper outlining a plan for U of T to divest itself of its South African interests. The iniversity presently has followed many policies of conditional divestmek -in accckdance to the federai government’s Code of Conduct I Also at U of T, a graduate student is suing the university because of cockroaches in her residence. University
of Alberta
The university’s policy of mandatory retirement under that prcivinces individual rights protection Olive Dickasbn, who had challenged the university’s her retire, will be allowed to continue her tenure.
has ruled illegal act. Professor right to make
free time?
no blind dates confidential friendly, caring staff relaxing atmosphere
NOW OFFERING 6 MONTH MEMBERSHIPS! about
Univsrsity of Calgary The University of Calgary may expand its co-op program. Currently only the Chemistry department has a system in place. The Humanities, Social Science and Science faculties are being considered for the program. According to the U of C Gauntlet, Dr Fin Campell (VP for priorities and planning) said although no formal proposal . . has been made, the response from the departments has been favorable. University of Guelph
ISTINGUISHED
your scene?
you little
l
Ask
of Manitoba
again?
New to this area? The bar scene
University
The Manitoba student council recently assumed control of* the campus newspaper, the Manitoban. Despite a petition calling for a referendum, the council voted to create a Students’ union controlled publishing board. It is felt that this could result in loss of jobs and that the Manitoban could loose its objectivity.
memberships
for co-op
c
students1 The Distinguished Teacher Award is a coveted title, for which UW students can nominate their outstanding instructors. Three awards are presented at convocation each year, and the winners retain the Distinguished Teacher title for the duration of their careers at Waterloo.
INTRODUCTION SERVICE 420 Weber St. N. Suite 1028 Waterloo N2L 4E7
-r
(519) 746-1245 (Next
to Krazy
Kelty’~)
-
To nominate a deserving teacher for a DTA, please contact Office: Needles Hall, RM 3005. This year’s canmaim February 5, 1988, but nominations are requested sooner,
the TRACE
deadline is if pussi&.
OpImON
0
All opinions expressed are those of the authors
Sunday shopping
free trad&‘I I
Listen, for I am about to force my morality on you. No kidding. Sunday shopping is wrong. Even on Boxing Day, a legal holiday which this year had the misfortune of falling on a Saturday. Through a loophole in provincial legislation, smaller stores were allowed to open on the following day, Sunday - against the law, but with the law’s permission. Successful Boxing Days sales are being used as a springboard for the widening of Sunday shopping, as predicted. They are a poor indication of Sunday sales as many stores has astronomical savings on many products; stereo stores were the worst offenders. Store owners, especially owners of small stores, can’t afford to drastically reduce prices every Sunday. Even though it is a poor indicator, people are treating Boxing Day as a soothsayer of Sunday sales success. Although the high sales of Boxing Day cannot be matched, Boxing Day becomes yet another faise premise supporting the need for Sunday shopping Boxing Day shoppers were also a weird lot. The K-W Record ran a story on the Monday following Boxing Day in which many of the shoppers interviewed claimed to be against Sunday shopping, but felt an exception could be made for Boxing Day. Many said they were out shopping because “what would one more shopper do”. This kind of attitude, and lack of logic, may well just bring Sunday shopping to Kitchener and Water.a
WELCOME TO CANADA
loo.
But the problem of Sunday shopping lies beyond Boxing Day, it lies with the attitude that places money above all else above the law and above the spiritual. Area stereo stores &ed their normal rational: they take in enough mone make Sunday opening fines worth it. This selfish belief is a f Pagrant anti-social attitude as it ignores the laws that society has set to make society function. Criminals ignore the law to profit too; the parallel is obvious: what laws can be justifiably broken? None. Not even by respectable stereo store owners or jewelers or grocers or tailors. Not by shoppers who are shopping in defiance of the law and who are equally at fault. The provincial government began this mess when it abdicated its responsibility to govern Sunday shopping laws to city councils. Waterloo Mayor Marjorie Carroll is right when she claims that this issue will pit city against city in a battle for the retail dollar. Once one city in an area opens Sunday shopping, other cities in the area will practically forced to open Sundays as well. The provincial government has tabled legislation to protect full-time workers from working Sundays, but it will not protect part-time workers. Solicitor General Joan Smith displayed the poor logic that characterizes the handling of the Sunday shopping issue when she said that not every worker can be protected from working Sundays. Nonsense: the original retail laws that banned Sunday shopping protected everyone. Call it religious tradition, sacred belief, or even a common pause day if you want, but Sundays are for people, not for the buck. John Hymers
Tom York will be missed With the death last Sunday of Tom York, the University of Waterloo community has lost one its most valuable members. As the United Church chaplain for both UW and Wil-I frid Laurier, Tom served as a counselor to students in need of ‘someone to talk with. Yet this was not Tom’s most significant contribution to the university; his genuine love for life and his willingness to share that zest with others is what made Tom such a popu-
lar figure on campus. While other faculty members seemed content to wallow in mediocrity and relative obscurity, Tom preferred to put himself forward; he was never afraid to be outspoken or to take risks, traits which easily separated him from the the run of the mill faculty and administrative types at Waterloo. Tom, and his ever-present hound Snuffy, were familiar sights on campus, particu-
Where 3 are you Doctor Wright The University of Waterloo’s president is missing in action. That’s right, he is M.I.A. Dr, Wright has created a situation whereby he is a type of ambassador for this school. His duties on campus have shrunken away. In terms of maintaining a strong presence on campus and familiar relations with students, University of Waterloo President Dr. Wright has abdicated.
In fairness to Dr. Wright, it should be noted that his commitments to university business outside Waterloo rather than on-campus are important; yet, should they be his priority?ll Evidently, he believes the operation of this institution benefits from concentrating on private enterprise and gcvernment dealings. Dr. Wright is rarely in the Imprint’s headlines because he is very difficult to get in touch with. The once vigorous relationship between the student press and the,university president is now impotent. Today’s university’s are production-line factories of prac 5-
cal skills. The climate for independent, autonomous universities is waning, Like other universities in Ontario, UW is getting to be more and more of an extension of the govern$ment. Men like Dr. Wright represent this trend as they take on job descriptions much like high ranking civil servants. There once was a time when the name of the university president was known by every frosh and froshette. The name of Dr. Gerald Hagey was known by every student during his reign as president of the University of Waterloo. So was the name Dean Wright while Dr. Wright was Dean of Engineering in the sixties. Waterloo’s vice-president [academic) has absorbed the oncampus responsibilities of the president. UW is about to get a new VP. Let’s hope he is a good one, considering the quality of student life depends on it. Dr. Wright was out of town this past week with a scheduled return to campus today. Mike
newspaper at the University of WaIt is an editcriaJly independent newspaper publishedby Publications, Waterloo, a corporation without share capital.mrinzt is a member of the Ontario Community Newspaper AaaociaAion (OCNA). Imprint publishes every second
Steve Kannon
Brown
Imprint Imprint
Editorb@
is the student
terloo. mm
Bditmdaahief Anbwatmuifar
larly at the PAC. He enjoyed the contact with students and always had time to speak with anyone who approached him. And, of course, he always had an interesting opinion to share with others, especially when he frequented the Imprint office. Let’s Talk About. , ,, Tom’s column in this paper, was his weekly chance to communicate his perceptions of life on campus, philosophical trends, or sometimes just a whimsical notion designed to amuse, His writings weren’t always shatteringly relevant, but they often provided real insight, the result of Tom’s many experiences and his ability to get to know people. Tom was a character. That word probably best describes the image people at UW have of Tom York, He came in contact with many people and I doubt very many ever forgot him; he had too much of a physical presence for that to happen. He was always quick to praise, always encouraging - these characteristics earned him much admiration. Those who knew him were happy to call him friend. God bless, friend.
stave-n
Board mmer
MmJm3fh Heather Nelles
1.
’
, ‘“.
ImpAnt w&o11188 letters from our readers. The f0rumPagesa;re ds8@n0dt0provids an opportunity to present vim8 on various issuw. Opinions expressed in lette?, columns, or other articles on these pages am those of their authors, not Iqrin%. send let&rs to lIn*w tg e-mail. Send or bring letters on paper to ~~,CC140.]Lettersonpaper~betgpedanddopblespacedllThedeadlFneis 690 pm. Mon&y. MRXimllm length Is 400 WOMB, Although longer pieces w be accepted at the editor’s discretion. All matmial is subject to editing.
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Writer looking to form NDP youth group on UW campus To the editor,
Ontario New Democratic Youth;it is my job to help interested individuals at all schools become orI am always distressed to note that there is no New Democrat ganized into viable, active groups. Because I am also the president of Youth organization at the University of Waterloo. This void bothers the NDP’ club at Wilfrid Laurier University, I am in a particularly me not only as a new Democrat, but as a person who wishes to see a good position to help New Demofully representative political de- ’ crats at UW. My reason for writing, therebate on all university campuses. As the campus organizer for the fore, is to call on all New Demo-
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Scott Piatowski 67 Broadmoor Ave Kitchener, Ontario or [WLU
by
This year’s winter Olympics in Calgary is going to have a lesson attached to it: Native Indians. Ac‘companying the media hype on this year’s Olympics will be the story of a small group of Cree Indians in Northern Alberta. The Lu’ bicon Lake band’s aim is to promote their campaign to gain legal ownership of their ancestral land. To do this, the band is organizing an internatiorial -boycott of an -Olympic arts festival in Calgary; and a peaceful vi@1 for the cross Canada torch r&y.
Less than two decades ago,the Lubicon Cree enjoyed a healthy community sustained by a huntertrapper economy. There was no welfare and no alcohol problems. Now, annual income from ttapping is down 92 per cent - the annual income for a whole family is $400. As a result, 95 per cent of the community has been forced to go on welfare. One in four of the
band’s members
are being treated
for tuberculosis caused nourishment, and alcohol
by malabuse is on the rise. The community is disintegrating. ,
What is’t,he cause bf this change?
Search
Students’
Union)
Where to begin? by the Student
Vocational
Advisors
The number of students who have no idea as to what serives are available to them in Needles Hall is surprising. This is especially true-of non co-op students, These students have not made this charming building their second home, as have their co-op counterparts. As a result, many miss out on the valuable information and guidance which can be obtained there. This leads to much unnecessary frustration in the job search process and the feeling that nothing is offered for those not enrolled in co-operative programs. For those of you who are beginning your summer or permanent job hunt, the Department of Career Services is your key to success. Located in room 1001 in Needles Hall (behind the black door), Career Services assists “all students” in their job search. Staff are willing to help you through their many years of experience and knowledge of the current workforce, and through the services provided. All you have to do is ask. The following summary will help familiarize you with the services provided: Graduating Student Interviews (GSI) - Graduating students who are looking for permanent employment are encouraged to register for the GSI program. Employers wishing to recruit new graduates advertise positions in the Grad1 and GradII papers which are available in the Career Services office. Employers visit campus and hold interviews for prospective candidates during the winter term. It should be emphasized that this service is for “all” students. Registration forms are available in NH 1001. Alumni Referral Service (ARS] - This a computer matching service which matches qualified candidates with job opportunities. Students able to begin permanent employment within one or two months and UW alumni are eligible to participafe in the ARS. are scheduled in each of Job Search Workshops - Workshops the three academic terms to help individuals at all levels of studies prepare for their career search. Topics include self-assessment, resume writing, letter writing etc. are available year-round on an Individual Advice - Advisors appointment basis to discuss career/job search problems, goal setting, information gathering, the job market or any other topic important to you and your career. So if you’re looking for a job and don’t know where to turn for information and advice, Try Needles Hall, and remember that its not there just for the co-op students.
Up until 12 years ago, the Lubicon were living in geographic and cultural isolation. Then, in 1970, the Alberta government built an allweather road into the area and a number of oil companies moved in,
The effects were disastrous
on the
Lubicon’s economy and way of life, as their traplines were bulldozed and wildlife were frightened away in the process of oil exploration,
Unfortunately for the Lubicon, the land on which they have lived for centuries has never formally been constituted as a reserve. Because of their isolated location, the
band was missed in 1899 when Indian agents travelled through the area tp sign treaties with native groups. Hence, th;e‘$were unable to prevent the oil cotipanies from ruining their land. The Lubicon Cree have not just been sitting passively by however. The band has fought back with every means at their disposal+ but most of their efforts have been rewarded with disappointment - of failed court challenges, and go-
vernments
that seem unmeved
by
the justice of their case, or the need for rapid action. Oil exploration is big business, and the Alberta government has been making a great deal of money from the Lubicon’s land in oil royalties, So the province is pressuring Ottawa to make the reserve as small as possible. At the centre of the present fight for a land claim is a dispute over band membership, on which the size of a-reserve is based. The Lu-
bicons
are making
the basis
their
claim on
of unextinguished
abo-
riginal title. This would grant band membership to all members of aboriginal ancestry who claim __ ties to the community.
formula of membership
128
Based on a
acres per member, a of 457 would give
them a reserve of 90 square miles. But the federal government wants to base band membership according to the terms on the Indian Act. If they used recent amendments to this act, the numbers would be close to the Lubicons’, but Ottawa wants to apply an unamended formula that would cut membership in half. Lubicon band chief Ber-
nard Ominayak
says that to accept
such an agreement would split the community and make the situation even worse than it is now. Meanwhile the Alberta government is continuing to sell petroleum rights in the area. The
fighting
Lubicon to
obtaintitle
Chris
Imprint
Alta. Indian band will use Olympics to gain publicity To the editor,
band
f ; v, ,‘.
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:;y
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has
been
totheirland
for 49 years. If the present situation is not resolved very soon, the band fears the disintegration of their community and culture will become irreversible. So the band has decided to introduce a new approach: drawing public attention to their plight. The band has organized an in-
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crats at the University of Waterloo to contact me. I’m as eager to help as I am to see the formation of an NDP club at Waterloo.
N2C lY6 745-6966 884-1360
,:... _.,:, :::,,: _. ._., ..y,, ,.::::_.
~~~~~~,, :~~~~7
Gerrard staff
(a pseudonym)
Here we are, back again for another term of work, parties, assignments, and the myriad other things that we seem to be able to fit into a brief four month period of university. I am back for my last term. I will (hopefully) get my degree at the end of this term, and say “so long” to Waterloo for an indefinite period of time. And then it is out into the real world! Scary! But I am getting ahead of myself. That column is supposed to come at the end of term. I am l~ooking forward to this term, believe it or not. My school workload is not excessive, and I will be involved in many other interests that will consume my time, And I view this term as another stage of growth in my life. Last summer was a difficult term for me because a relationship 3f almost two years ended rather’abruptly. My partner tried to show that it was not such a big deal, and that things should just go 3n as if nothing had happened, although I do not think that is how he really felt inside. However, I will probably never know for sure.
So I spent most of the summer and this fall dealing with that and with all the other hurts inside me which the break-up revived. Things are now much better, and I have learned much about myself, my “ex”, and people in general. I have also made some wonderful friends in the process. I think (or perhaps I would like to think) that I have grown a great deal over that last six months. I feel I am ‘,‘back on track”, and that I am, at least somewhat, in control of my life again. The Farther along the road of life I get [oh my God, I am starting to sound like an “adult” - better do something about that), the more 1feel as if I am in control of much less than I would like to be; but I am, also slowly and .painfully becoming comfortable with that. Gay men and wtirnen have 8 gr&t detil’with which to,come to terms. We - people in general, fhat is - all do. We have been raised in a’societv that, for nien, teaches tiS .to3e.emoti~tialljl underdeveloped, and to fit into the “masculine” role model. For some reason I seem to have been able to get in touch with my Feelings relatively early in my development. But I am still fruskrated and angered by the men I meet that have not done so. Do not misunderstand me, though. I am not really angry at them, mostly aecause I understand [firsthand experience) why they are so emotionally “closeted” (now there is a new use for that term - I :hink I like it). I am angry at “the world“ for conditioning men to be :hat wry. As a bit of an aside, guys, whether you are straight or gay, maybe it is time to recognize your owncloset, and come out of Lt. And that closet does not have to be a sexually oriented one, zither. In that sense, many gay men (perhaps all) have two closets from which they must exorcise themselves - that is not easy. And gay women have their own particular fights, too. I realize I am out of my element, here, so forgive me, women, if I am wrong [and correct me, too, if you will). Gay women do not have the same problem with acceptance as gay men do. They donot because the have not got that far yet. They are often still struggling wit x existence. For a long time, same-sex attractions between women were simply assumed to be for [straight) men’s benefit - sort oflike titillating foreplay to “the real thing” [heterosexual sex). Thus, gay women did not really exist. So how do you fight for :qual rights and fair treatment for yourselves when people refuse to believe you are what you say you are in the first place? Bit of a nasty “catch twenty-two”, is it not? Gay women still have a long way to go - longer than we gay men. Gay women have to demonstrate that their closets in fact do exist, and then have to come but of them. So much struggle ensues so that we can simply live as we want. After all, I am not telling ever one else to live as I feel I must. I really want to be left alone an B have the same rights and dignity as your everyday typical J. Q. Public. Is that really so much to ask? I do not think so. It takes work though - a great deal of work on’everybody’s part. We need to start to rework the “fabric of our society” [yes, I am borrowing words from the “literalists”). We need to examine motives, and try and see if the ideas behind the actions are really sound, or are they just a pattern of conditioning we have fallen into without any real thought. Enough rambling. These have been some of my reflections on my state of affairs and how I perceive the world. Some food for thought for you. More to come next week. ternational artifact=
boycott exhibit.
of an Indian in
the
Olympic
arts festival this winter. The exhibit is featuring the heritage of Canadian Indians with displays of their work and culture. Ironically the major sponsors of the exhibit are the same oil companies that are destroying the Lubicon’s lands. The band has already received support for the boycott from 28
museums. -. . . . . . . The band is also recelvlng support across Canada for peaceru1 demonstrations along the Olympic torch relay. The group is using the relay for its protest because the sponsor Petro-Canada is one of the companies involved with the des-
truction Hilary
of Lubicon
Rollingson
land.
FOR=
8
Can we expect a truly fair trial for J. Demjanjuk?
by Borys
Sozanski
7987 - The year that wasn’t
prove11 guilty beyond any reasonable doubt. This principle of justice has repeatedly been under scrutiny at the war crimes trial in Israel. There is increasing evidence which suggests that Demjanjuk is not receiving a fair trial and that Israel has a poor case in justify this man’s persecution. One of the crucial aspects of the trial is the need for funds to enable a proper defence. Israel has not made any funds available to the defence. By contrast, in j the 1960s when Adolf Eichmann, an admitted Nazi, was on trial for war crimes, Israel provided his defence with unlimited funds. In the Eichmann case there was no doubt he was guilty of the accused crimes. In Demjanjuk’s case, however, there is increasing evidence which raises reasonable doubt about the strength of the prosecution’s case. Israel has refused to provide the defence with the necessary funds to cover the exorbitant costs of this international trial. If justice is to pred vail, Demjanjuk must be allowed a proper defence. The Canadian Charitable Committee in support of John Demjanjuk’s family was formed in 1986 to raise funds for Demjanjuk. His family is bankrupt
John Demjanjuk is a retired 67year-old Cleveland autoworker born in Ukraine. Extradited from the United States in 1986, he is accused of being Ivan the Terrible, a vicious war criminal who helped exterminate more than 850,000 Jews for the Nazis at Treblinka death camp in Poland in 1942 and ‘43. He is currently on trial iri israel for alleged war crimes+ The trial has attracted international attention. Demjanjuk has steadfastly denied he is Ivan the Terrible, claiming he is a victim of mistaken identity. Demjanjuk’s son, John Jr., and son-in-law, Edward Nishnic, visited Kitchener last month to inform the community of the latest developments at the trial, as well as to raise urgently needed defence funds, The Israeli government is admittedly using the trial as an opportunity to educate the young generation of Israelis about the horrors of the holocaust. This show trial aspect exerts tremendous pressure on the judges to convict Demjanjuk, regardless of the evidence. After all, if the judges rule in his favour, wouldn’t they be discrediting the facts of the holocaust in the minds of the children? The basic principle of justice in any democracy is that an accused person is innocent until
continued
by Rob Day 3
And now, without further ado, the second annual “Read ‘em and Weep” examination of the psychic predictions for the last 12 months, this year brought to you by those friendly folks at the Star. And-who should we pick on but that premier predicter, that First Lady of Prognostication, who else but Jeane Dixon, who shows a good deal of chutzpah if nothing else by bombing out year after year and coming back for more, And so, to business. The world reeled in shock as David Hartman failed to become one of the highest-paid inspirational speakers in the world, while Hollywood brat pack groupies are still waiting to see if “a promising film this summer will break Sean [Penn’s) string of career setbacks.” (Those of you who follow this sort of thing are no doubt aware of Penn’s latest setback, the fact that Madonna decided NOT to divorce him.) Elsewhere, we were told in no uncertain terms that, “energy will remain abundant as oil and gas prices continue to slump, causing more headaches for OPEC”, while “mass suicide, as in the Jonestown tragedy, will take many lives early this year.” On the international political scene, Dixon stated that, “Pope John Paul II will confront Soviet party boss Mikhail Gorbachev in a dramatic showdown. The result will be farreaching changes in life throughout Eastern Eua highly unlikely scenario given that rope”, Gorbachev is riding a tidal wave of popularity while poor John Paul’s last North American visit left him feeling about as popular as a bobcat in a phone booth. Hot on the heels of Dixon’s alleged prediction
on page 9
of Ronald Reagan and his munchkins in the Iranamok scandal, we were no doubt saddened to learn that, “further investigations will uncover a second scandal backstairs at the ,White House, when it will be discovered someone betrayed his country for money.” But have no fear, since “the President’s best weapon, the truth, will vindicate him of personal responsibility in both affairs.” (I did not make this last one up.) In the show biz arena, we were warned that, “Barbra Streisand. . . will be disappointed in an artistic endeavor which does not measure up to her standards” (fascinating, what with her latest movie getting rave reviews), while “hard work will pay off for Joan Rivers as her late-night talk show builds audience ratings this winter.” This should come as a relief to Rivers, who is currently suffering from the delusion that she has been canhed. A glaring oversight on Dixon’s part was no mention whatsoever of one of the worst marine disasters in history off the Philippines toward the end of last year, a bit of news that was undoubtedly crowded off the page by the fact that Tom SelIeck would drop out of Magnum, P.I. And while we’re on the subject of Ms. Dixon, why not check back a tad further to remind ourselves what we may yet have in store? From 1986, we are still waiting for the White House investigation into a fleet of UFOs seen by thousands at an open-air rock concert, for Princess Stephanie of Monaco to OD on drugs and spend several months in a coma (who would notice?) and, from years further back, for Bill Cosby to quit TV and run for Congress and for actress and cosmic flake Shirley Maclaine to marry Woody Allen. And I suppose we can only breathe a sigh of relief that Ronald Reagan hasn’t yet taken up break dancing.
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A fair trial? continued
from
page 8
following 11 years of legal battles in both Israel and the U.S. According to Nishnic, the defence has cost more than $5OO,UOO and is expected to cost another $250,000. This is not a clear-cut There are some disturbing concerning the trial itself.
case. facts
Perhaps the most controversial aspect of the trial is whether the three Jewish judges can be impartial and unbiased considering the alleged crimes were committed against the Jewish people, This concern appears to be justified by a disturbing comment made by presiding judge Dov Levin. In reference to Demjanjuk’s previous testimony, Levin was quoted in the official court transcript as saying: “So he told the truth, so what”. This judge will be making a ruling on Demjanjuk’s life. John Demjanjuk Jr. said that it has been extremely frustrating for the defence to present its case because the judges continuously interrupt its efforts, not allowing the defence to make its points. “Evidence by the defence which is very much relevant to the case is repeatedly ruled irrelevant and it is not admitted into the courtroom,” said Demjanjuk Jr. According to Demjanjuk Jr., the qffice of Special Investigations (OSI), the Nazi hunting body of the U.S. Justice Department, is systematically withholding information which would exonerate his father. Recently, a U.S. district court ruled that the OS1 must release these documents immediately. However, nervous OS1 officials appealed the ruling in an obvious attempt to stall for time, hoping the verdict will come before their documents are released. A half-dozen survivors have identified Demjanjuk as Ivan the Terrible. According to Nishnic, however, more than 50 survivors of the Treblinka death camp could not identify anyone they knew. In fact, they have contradicted themselves and each other. They have altered sworn depositions taken in 1947
in which they swore Ivan the Terrible was killed. They are contradicted by first-person accounts from Treblinka produced in 1943 immediately following the camp’s destruction. The authenticity of the prosecution’s key piece of documentary evidence is also in serious doubt. A Nazi ID card supplied by the Soviet Union puts Demjanjuk’s height at 5’9”, although he is actually 6’1”. Oddly enough, he is shown wearing a Russian uniform on a Nazi ID card. Six prosecution witnesses have testified the ID card is authentic. However, Julias Grant, the chemist who uncovered the 1983 fake Hitler diaries hoax, recently testified the card is a blatant Soviet forgery. Chemical tests performed on the card indicate it contains traces of titanium dioxide, a chemical not in use until the 1960s. Nishnic says Demjanjuk’s name does not appear on any Nazi lists anywhere in the world. “If he was Ivan the Terrible, his name should be on the top of Nazi lists around the world. Yet it is nowhere to be found,” he said, Nishnic says he and his wife Irene lost everything after he quit his successful job as an engineering salesman in Cleveland and used his life savings to fight for justice for his father-in-law. “The family has literally been put through hell,” said Nishnic. Demjanjuk told him several times that if he were Ivan he would have ended it long ago, said Nishnic, adding that if he thought Demjanjuk was guilty, he “would not lift a finger to help him. I would walk him up to the gallows myself.” Orest Lytwyn, president of the University of Waterloo Ukrainian Students Club, said the club is raising money to provide Demjanjuk with much needed funds. “Mr. Demjanjuk is bankrupt and has not received any financial assistance, while Israel has allocated unlimited funds to the prosecution,” said Lytwyn. The entire world is watching this trial and it will be the ultimate jury in deciding whether or not Demjanjuk received a fair trial.
in social and ecological
issues
can be used in-house or photocopied. WPIRG is currently investigating means to computerize our resources and obtaining access to available information data bases like the Canadian Centre for Occupational Health and Safety. Are you worried about the indiscriminate WPIRG’s research is also unique. We offer you dump& 0.f toxic waste, the silent destruction of the opportunity to take part in research projects our lakes and forests by acid rain, or thedisproaimed directly at heIping overcome a social injusportionate distribution of the world’s resources tice. To date UW students have helped research and the problems created? Have you often thought several publications including: Acid Rain the Siabout doing something about it but couldn’t find a lent Crisis, Chemical Nightmare: the Unnecessary way to get involved? Legacy of Toxic Waste, the For 15 years the Waterloo Public Interest Re- Social Impacts of Computerization, Worker’s search Group (WPIRG) has provided an outlet for Guide to Solvent like-minded UW students to actively work on a Hazards, and Waste Management Master Plans variety of environmental and social justice issues. What You Should Know. Our latest publication, Through research, education, and action students available free at the WPIRG office is the K-W have gained insight into the interrelationship be- Tenants Guide 1987. This year we will be continutween different social issues while improving ing work on their skills and prbviding valuable information to the waste management and housing issues. the community. We will examine ways of expanding recycling WPIRG is located in the General Service Comon campus through a recycling Workgroup. ,We plex (GSCJ room 123 beside the Waterloo Credit will compile a fact sheet on excess packaging in Union. To get to our office, first locate the big the grocery store. We will continue to lobby with smokestack, this building is the General Service the Citizen’s Network on Waste Management for Complex. The WPIRG office is situated in Section changes to waste management policy in Ontario. A of this building close to the Ring Road and We will co-ordinate the organization of workdirectly across from the new Computer Building. shops for the industrial sector on waste reduction, The salaries for three staff people, along with and we will organize a conference for early programming expenses are derived from a $3 per summer on excess packaging bringing citizens, student per term fee which is refundable during government , and industry together to discuss this the first two weeks of each term. Financial and important issue land to work toward its resoluorganizational direction is provided by a sevention. If you would like to get involved in any of member board of directors, elected in early fall. If these projects contact Cameron Wright at WPIRG. you would like more information about becoming WPIRG can also provide you with an opportuna WPIRG director contact the WPIRG office in ity to organize educational events for fellow stuSeptember. dents and the community in our Social Justice and The key ingredients for WPIRG are the resource Ecology Workgroups. Workgroup members select centre, research, and education/action. event topics, speakers, and audio visual equipUnlike the university libraries, WPIRG has con- ment. They also prepare press releases, posters, centrated on bringing together a number of impordisplay tables, and handle other logistical details. tant social justice resources. We have a large If you are interested in becoming involved contact selection of books, files and periodicals available, WPIRG at 884-9020 or ext, 2578 for more informaA partial list includes acid r&n, community develtion. The first ecology Workgroup event this term opment, economics, energy, industrial waste, food, health, housing, international development, will be a talk by Dr. Katherine Davies, public health, Toronto, linking ecology and feminist labour, Latin America, media;native people, techissues. The lecture is scheduled for January 21, nology,and water quality. Books and periodicals can be borrowed for a two-week period and files 7:3U p.m. in AL 124. by WPIRG
staff
Laymen’s Evangelical Feihwship
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ALL Jemw mid, Idan,
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WELCOME
‘Coma unto ma, dl ye that l&our and am heavy md I will glva you red.- ( Matthew 11:28 )
by Sharon E. Frey Imprint staff Until last November, I never had the dubious opportunity to experience discrimination of any kind. As a WASP, a young individual, and a woman (though that still hasn’t affected my employment opportunities), I don’t press publicly for acceptance of an alternative lifestyle, nor do I have an extensive police record. I was just an ordinary student on a work term. But that was the problem - I was a student, and I seemed to get selective treatment because of it. It’s as if the fact that I’m a co-op student merited an attitude I found puzzling and restrictive to my on-the-job performance: “She’s only a student .‘I So, fitting the role of the inquisitive co-op student, I began my search to find out WHY co-op, students are treated different.* Are co-op students special employees? Should we expect special treatment? Are regular short-term employees treated with such brevity? Are their ideas ignored, their presence merely tolerated just because they’re there only temporarily, and, with luck, gone in a short time? It’s my guess I’m not the only co-op who has previously held selfish thoughts about co-op work terms. Sure, we pay $250 over and above tuition, supplies, and additional fees. But, we anticipate generous pay in return for our four month efforts at work, and we expect to be “street smart” at the end of the four months, It’s an attractive deal for the student, and it’s not unrealistic for the employer to want something in return. One co-op employer frankly stated, “Employers expect new employees to instantly provide for the firm in a lucrative sense.” With a pause and a glance at this naive co-op, he sympathetically added, “Well, nobody is looking for brilliant people. They’re looking for good people, and our
m .. ..: :: : I’ .:. ,, : .,:.,., ‘..< ” :.:.:.”: new employees have to not only be good, but they have to be good for the company.” According to rim Wilson, director of Co-operative Education and Career Services at the University of Waterloo, “Co-op students are bright. They have to be bright to get into the program in the first plal;e.
“These students are also eager and aggressive,” he adds, “and the employers, recognizing that these atie students placed in a unique learning situation, take advantage of their eagerness on the job, answering the students’ questions, and helping them learn as much as possible,”
Great philosophy. And probably true in many cases, yet one can’t help but wonder what went wrong in the case of this third year English major. While working for a firm near Toronto, her initially favourable impressions of the company sharply dwindled from day one. During
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an orientation session, she was shown an outdated slide show as an introduction to the firm. No efforts were made to personally introduce her t6 the rest of the employees explq,ining their function, and how h&r job interacted with theirs, The staff employee who was temporarily assigned to her (the other two initial job contacts were still on summer vacation when the co-op’s contract began) basically endured the questions, and was confusing and vague in answering. You feel like nobody gives a damn,” the student laments. Her frustrations are still obvious: “A co-op student comes into a situation and doesn’t know what the heck is going on. We should be placed with someone who can explain things well, as we admittedly have many questions.” The rest of her work term was spent going from employee to employee, asking if he or she needed help with anything. Employees took advantage of the situation and continued to single her out whenever they needed items photocopied or parcels retrieved. Other than these spontaneous “joe-jobs”, she didn’t have much else to do, no serious projects to tackle. “It’s very hard to look busy when you have nothing to do all day,” she sighs. “Things were very difficult.” Wilson says, “The students are being paid a wage to work, not to observe work. We don’t feel observing work is as conducive to learning as doing the work,” he says, adding that “research has been done on the different types of learning and found learning takes place outside as well as inside the classroom. ‘Only work works’, and these co-op students should learn as much as possible on their work terms.” Wilson addresses the problem of uncaring supervisors by stating “Supervisors change so often. A few have had co-op students working under them for years now, and some are new at the job. The co-ordinators meet with the supervisors and acquaint them thoroughly with the co-op program and its philosophy.- We provide as much information as we can. Never really gaining a true indication of which employee was her immediate supervisor, the co-op ended her term feeling isolated, very inferior+ and unsatisfied with the whole experience. “They [the company) have to take an interest in you so you can take an interest in them. I’m just not interested in going back.” The world of business exists primarily to turn over a profit. gut sometimes this goal inhibits fair treatment of an employee. Should one expect a lack of helpful assistance, little attempt made to make sure the new co-op employee feels at home? “The COop student has the least amount of experience and the least amount of time in the company,” says the English student. “They must be considered a person, a valuable resource, not just a coop.” Since the student is there basically for the job experience, there is no real sense of loyalty to the firm, no long-term commitments. This lack of commitment to the company and its long-term goals might be sensed by other and the seemingly employees, uncaring student’s presence res-
contlnued
on page 11
11
Work term experience contlnued
Co-op reference book provides a few insights
from page 10
by Sharon E. Frey Imprint staff
Employers must treat co-op students as regular employees co-op is to benefit fully from the work term experience. ented. Often it’s not the case, and the student is happy to remain with the company for that short length of time, getting an overall sample of how different companies work throughout his/her work terms. Wilson states+ “Most co-op students spend two work terms with the same employer, but it varies in different faculties.” Wilson echoes this, stating, “The co-op student should be treated like any regular employee. And if the student performs exceptionally well on the job, the student should be given additional job responsibilities. And if co-ops encounters problems during their work term, they should first try to handle the situation themselves, because it gives them self confidence. The next step is to contact their co-ordinator. And if the coordinator is not available, the next contact is the placement advisors on campus who are there most of the time. ” According to the co-op employer, “We’ve lost that apprenticeship stage in which young people are encouraged to observe senior workers, and then eventually try things on their own, at first under close supervision. Young people used to come into the company from underneath.” His observations indicate students now come out of university with the idea that they can always start at the top, eager to try out their theories learned in class. “This is not possible in all cases,” he says. “And more importantly, they miss gaining the wisdom they can develop from starting at the bottom. When the older and younger employees work together, they both benefit. The older employees can pass on all they’ve learned in the company to the younger employees, and the older employees gain a new perspective on life and the work at hand. A valuable practice has been lost.” There have been both good and bad work terms. Some students anticipate their return to the job at the end of the next academic term and there are a proportional amount of those co-ops disappointed with what happened during the past four months. Students can avoid a bad work term experience by researching the firm thoroughly before the job interview. The Career Information Centre at the main entrance to Needles Hall can help, as well as co-ordinators who can give the names of some of the students who have previously held similar jobs in the same firm. Some excellent work reports written by co-op students are also available to those who
if the
want to get a better idea of what sort of work term to expect. An invaluable new release is the “Co-op Student Reference Book”, filled with specifics for students on their first work term. And, ask questions during the interview. Don’t be afraid to find out as much as possible about the job’s working environment. Being a co-op can be a plus. Other employees may be more open and friendly, seeing that a student Deeds help in the company in finding their way around. Once people find out you’re in a co-op program, some senior employees will never let you forget it once for the four months you’re there. One student remarks, “They’re all interested in the co-op program itself, and all you have to do is mention the word co-op and they rant and rave about it.”
Faculty members know it. Employers are well aware of it. Professors are gratefu1 for it. It’s a well known fact that the archetypal co-op student cruises through academic terms and work terms floating on a cloud of inquiries and questions. Next to the phrases “work term” and “work report”, “why” is the third most frequent word uttered by the average Waterloo co-op student. Here’s some examples: Ever wonder why you never get the job you apply for? Why do you have to pay both federal and provincial tax? why can I never get to my employer on the phone when I absolutely have to? Why do I have to submit my resumes on time? Put your mind somewhat at ease+ and devote yourtime to more important things (such as “why can’t I buy absolutely all the copies of Pop Goes the World on vinyl, CD, and cassette and make one huge flaming funeral pyre for Friday night fun?). Soon, “The Co-op Student’s Reference Book” will be available for intimate perusal and enjoyment. “For me, this whole thing is very exciting. So many things happen that are unique to UW,
and we need to have a policy on things,” says Olaf Naese, Liason co-ordinator. His enthusiasm for the release of the reference book [hopefully by the end of this month) is catching. The book encompasses all faculties, with some exceptions in the Architecture faculty. “The policies are ‘pertinent to them, such as the resume preparation and the innovations skiiis,” says Naese. “Architecture students don’t have to go through the Want Ads, but the rest of the reference book has information that is useful to them.” It’s a project that’s been under consideration for over two years now, Economics student Melissa Van Kessel, Arts student Margaret Vreugdenhil, and ret student Patti Murphy have all worked on the book at some point, and have “had a lot of input in this handbook, de: serving much of the credit.”
~
I
The Student Advisory Council has looked over the draft copies of the book, and Naese expects more comments from themselves once the .students . . I book is released. l
Largest
Independent
Grocery
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Store
Located on Westmount off University Full Service, Full Line 20,000 sq, ft. Supermarket Post Office, Lottery Tickets, Friendly Family Service.
You are invited to an lnformation session on programmes, application procedures, deadlines, etc.
at 10 am., 3004
Until mass copies are available, special inserts will be printed up and circulated to coop students. “At this point,” says Naese, “circulation is limited to first-year stream A coop students.”
.Waterloo’s
FACULTY OF LAW Common Law Section
January 12,1988 Needles Hall, Room
A “never-seen-before” detailed explanation of the computer ranking process is included in the report. Copies can be obtained, for an as yet undetermined fee, for those students- in upper co-op years interested in taking a look.
M R.GRtIMZE
UNIVERSITI? D’OTTAWA UNIVERSITY OF OTTAWA
Tuesday,
The “handbook” consists of more than 100 pages chock fuI1 of information especially salient to co-ops. A later edition will be typeset, with photos and cartoons - creating a more aesthetically pleasing guide.
Your Serving
Satisfactlon your
needs
is our
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for the last 4 years.
We wilt gladly accept your cheque with your Student Card. -
50 Westmount
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Our Famous
3 FOOT SUB You Have To See It To Believe ltil
Interview time again? GET YOUR RESUMES ~ TYPESET WHILE YOU WAIT!! Call for appointment. 579-8396 or 745-6468 after 5:30.
Career Services Workshotm Career Services will be conducting a series of workshops on effective means of securing employment. Open to all students, these one and two-hour workshops are held in Needles Hall, Sign-up sheets and preparation handouts will be available in NH 1001 one week prior to the workshop. 4 Knowing yourself/occupations The first step in deciding/re-evaluating what job(s) you want and assessing your qualifications to prepare working for writing your resume. Jan. 13 .*,,,,***~.*~.~~..~*.~.**~~...*...*.*.**... l&30 to 11:30 Feb. 1 .*.............*.**+*..,..~....*.....**.,,... 12:30 to 1:3O Feb. 10 .***,,.*....*..*.,.......*..*..... . . . . ..*.****.*... 6to 7 Feb. 25.......................... . . . . I,.. . . . . .** . . . . . 3130 to 4:30 Information gathering interview Considering some different career and use an informational interview what those careers are really like, Feb. 10 .*****..**..*.**...*..........*..*....~~~.* ’
options? to gain
Learn how to set up valuable insight into 11:30
to 12:30
Resume writing Techniques to write an effective chronological, modified chronological or functional resume. Analyze excerpts from actual resumes. Prerequisite: reading Career Services resume writing pamphlet. Jan. 11 .*...,***.**...............,~**.*.*.s***.*. 11:30 to 12:30 Feb. 4 ..m..*.....*..*.**....*......*..*.,...*.,.,.. l2:30 to 1:30 Feb. 10 . . ..**~.*...*.....~.~**.***..,,,.~...........*....~ 7 to 8 Mar. 1 .****......................~.....~.*~**.*.. 11:30 to 12:30 Mar. 8 . . . . . . . ..**.~........**..........**...*.****** 3:30 to 4:30 Resume critiquing Bring your own resume for analysis. Prerequisite: Jan. 18 . . . ..*.**...*....**...*.....*~......**~**.* Jan. 20 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..*....*..****...~***....*****. Feb. 2 . . . . . ..*.*...a.*.**....**.*****...*.......**. Feb. 11 Feb. 16 .*L.~~~.~~.*..~..*..............*.~~~...*.*.** Feb. 29 . . ..***.**....*...*.....*..***........*..** Mar. 10 . . . . . . ..1....*.*......*****.**...***....... Mar. 15 ..*.~.~.....**~*~.....~~,~**~,........*.*..*. Mar. 16 . . . . . . ..**.*.............*.***...**....m*.**. l
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resume writing 11:30 to 12:30 3:30 to 4:30 12:30 to 1:30 12:30 to 1:30 4:30 to 5:30 10130 to 11:30 12:30 to 1:30 3:30 to 4:30 3:30 to 4:30
Graduate 2 UCPA checks/questions Drop in anytime between 3:3O and 6 p.m. to have your LJCPA/resume checked for Graduate 2 applications.
Jan, 11 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..I...*.****.......*.........**,.
I 1
$3
& Magazines
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OFF ANY USED BOOKS
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RESUME SEhVlCES
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Job search strategies Combining creative and traditional your search for employment. Mar. 10 ..****..*...**..m...**........*..*.. Mar. 23 .
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kinkoHs University shop6 Pklro II
470 Univetdty Ave. W. wat8rbo Phone
746-3363
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methods
. . . . .3:30 to 4:30 . . . . 11:30 to 12130
*.
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l
to map out
l
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Researching an employer Locating and learning about employers using community resources and employer information such as annual reports. Mar. 9 . . . ..~~.~.~.....~~...~~~~.~..~~...~~~~..... 11:30 to 12:30 Researching employers for on-campus interviews Using annual reports and other on-campus resources to prepare for graduating and co-op interviews. Jan. 12 .~~.~....~.~~~~..~........... * . . . . ..3:30to4:30 l
Interview skills, part 1 Dynamics/mechanics of an interview. aration areas. See taped excerpts from Jan. 12 . . . . . . ..*~.~.****..**..~*~*...*..*...*~**.. Jan. 14 Jan. 20 ,***........,.*..*....~....*,,~....*,***..~ Feb. 9 . . . ..***.*.***.*............*..*.*.....***..... Feb. 22 ..*..**....*.........*...~**..**...*,...**. Mar. 3 l
*...****..........*.**.................**.*..
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Explore the four major prepactual interviews. 11:30 to 12:30 7 to 8 p.m. 10:30 to 11130 3:30 to 4:30 11:30 to 12:30 2:30 to 3:30
Interview skills, part i Practice your responses to questions usually asked in interviews. Prerequisite: Interview skills, part 1. Jan. 12 **.......*...**I*........**.**....*. . . . . . . . . 12:30 to I:30 Jan. 14 . ..****....***...*.......**....,,..*,......~** 8 to 9 p.m. Jan’. 18 . . . . . ..*..**.*....***..*.***.*......*.......** 1:30 to 2:30 Jan. 19 . . . . . . ..*..*..**..*.*.*..*.........***....* 1X30 to 12:30 Jan. 20 ..**.....*.**..**...**...~....**..*..*..... 11:30 to 12:30 Feb. 9 4:30 to 5:30 Feb. 22 12:30 to 1:30 Mar. 3 .*.*.**....***.**,.**..........**~...*........ 3:30 to 4:30 .
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catrtlnued from puge 1 the fla-me, I got into the chase van it was then that I noticed that I was drenched with sweat.” Allyson’s preparations for the big day, which included lokilomet re training runs, was severely curtailed in due to a bout with lobar pneumonia in October. Poor health kept her from training for almost eight weeks. To retrain and get her strength back, she relied heavily on dance. “I used my background in ballet jazz to prepare,” she said. When I asked her what she would take away from all of this she said, “It’s very personal. It’s the oneness of being a part of so may others running, that there was no one that I saw who was jealous of me running and that I was running for all those who couldn’t. When my children are old enough to understand it can be an inspiration for them.” While researching this interview, I went through the crowds and listened to what the people along the route said as well as felt the excitement when the flame from Greece passed. I talked to this little seven-yearold girl, and she was all smiles and excited because she had a candle that was lit from the torch. I guess Allyson Haggerty and this child have much in common. Both took part in a once in a lifetime event, and bbth went away from it with memories that will stay with them for the rest of their lives.
University appointment continued
from
page
1
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Asserting yourself in the job interview Expressing yourself more successfully and overcoming personal difficulties. See yourself on video to monitor verbaVnon-verbal communication in mock interview. Prerequisite: Interview skills, part 1. Jan. 21 . . ..~~~~.~...~.....I~...~............~~..~.~ 11:30 to 1:30 Feb. 23 . ..~**.~....*.*...~I*....*....~~...**~.*.*.*.. 3:30 to 5130 Ministry of Colleges and Universities
Ontario Student ASSiStaflG~
Ontario Lyn Mcteod, Minister
Program 1987-88
’ I
Apply now! . Tom
The .deadline for. submitting your T987iB8 OSAP application form is 90 days before the end of your school year.
A sharp, professional resume says a lot about you. Come to Kinko’s for crisp, clean copies of your cesufne an specialty papers with matching envelopes. It’s fast. AffordaM. And very impressive.
.
job search
Networking Discover the secrets of the easiest, most effective and most neglected way to get the job you want: how to use your personal contacts effectively in your job search. Feb. 3 .***..**......*..***...,***......*....*...*.. 11:30 to 1:30
l
1
3:30 to 6
Letter writing Preparing effective letters - cover, broadcast, thank you for informational interview, thank you for job interview, accepting job offer, declining job offer. Practice writing a cover letter for a job description you bring to the workshop. Jan. 11 . . . . . . . . . . . . ..*....*....**...*........*..... 12:30 to 1:30 Feb. 3 ..,..*.*......***.............,.*.........~.... 3:30 to 4:30 Feb. 4 1:30 to 2:30 Mar. 1 . ..~~**.**.**~.*~...*.....*~.*.....*.*...... 12~30 to I:30 ,...,~,*......*.*...**.....*...*~*..*......~~* 4:3O to 5:30 Mar. 8
l
New & Used Books
The Flame
One OSAP application form tets you apply for: l Ontario Study Grant l Canada Student Loan l Ontario Student Loan If you have previously received an OSAP loan and have not negotiated a new loan this year, you should contact your Financial Aid Administrator, bank, or lending institution to obtain the forms that must be filed in order to continue your interest-free status.
If you have already applied to OSAP and wish to appeal for additional funds, you should contact your Financial Aid Administrator imnwdiately. For further information and deadline dates for an appeal, contact your financial aid off ice.
Brzustowski
the university senate Jan@ry 18. The nomination will be fitified by the board of governors eight days later. It is the senate who makes the initial decision. The board of governors is expected to give a quick final okay. No problems are anticipated with the appointment. The job involves maintaining research and exposure to students in the lecture halls, the candidate must oversee the daily operations of the university as the Provost while everything within the academic sphere falls within the person’s responsibility as well. Brzustowski vacated the post in
;Septcmber
after
the
provin-
cial election. Premier David Peterson invited Brzustowski to join the ministry of colleges and universities as the deputy minister, He had planned on returning to his faculty position full-time this June. The Queen’s Park appointment merely quickened the search for the out-going V,P.
I
Resources
Limited
Quantum Information Resources Limited, one of Canada’s leading computer systems development firms, currently employs more than 450 computer professionals serving North America’s major public and private sector organizations.
Technical
Trainee
Program
Trainees will be integrated into large sophisticated project teams in both Canada and the U.S.A. utilizing the very latest project management disciplines and structured architectural philosophies. Quantum is jointly committed with its clients in meeting the information systems demands of the eighties and nineties by providing a comprehensive set of services:
Information Systems Consulting A practical hands-on approach to consulting in such diverse areas as strategic planning, hardware/software evaluation, security audit, office automation, feasibility studies and contract negotiations.
Contract Systems Development A guaranteed fixed-price systems development approach covering the complete project, from functional specifications through programming and implementation, and controlled by a disciplined project management team.
Application Maintenance The assurance of on-going application software support, guaranteeing the daily production schedule is met through the provision of system, language and on-line programming support in large IBM environments.
Project Staffing The provision of skilled computer professionals from project managers to programmers, supplementing client in-house staf f for long or short term assignments.
The Quantum
Challenge
For 1988, Quantum Infwmation Resources wish to hire 25 highly-motivated, progressive technical trainees to’join the growing ranks of Waterloo graduates who made the right choice in 1987. Graduates like: Fred Buzhaker Quang Dang Stephen Fenton James Fung Helen Jacobs
Andrew Main Graig Morgan Stephen Morris Rob Webster Stephen Murphy
Mark Patzer Carla Petrich Rick Robichaud Mark Rooney Marlene Masschelein
Cathy Stasiak Monique Tevrutche Ron Bevan Steve Yuska Wendy Martin
Interested? Quantum staffer’s and ‘87 Waterloo grads now on various project assignments will be happy to tell you more. Plan on attending our Wineznd Cheese reception to be held on Monda# January 11,1988 from 7:00 p.m. to IO:00 p.m. at the University Club. For further information please call WC Kulokas or Eugene Henry at (416) 598-1311.
uuantum~
Secral named wes n -
The University of Guelph has named Dr. Brian Segal its next president. Segal, who has been president of Ryerson Polytechnical Institute in Toronto since 1980, will assume his new position at U Moo on September 1. He sucl ceeds current Guelph President. B.C. Matthews, who was also president of UW from 1970 to 1981.
Edmund Guelph’s
Bovey, chairman of Board of Governors,
said Segal “brings scholarly achievements, proven leadership abilities, and well-developed administrative skills which are essential assets in meeting the challenges of the future.” AS president of Ryerson, Segal led such major changes in academic direction as a shift from diploma to degree studies, the development of an office of research and innovation, a centre for industrial development, and a $15-million Ryerson/governmerit/industry centre for advanced technology education. A senior policy consultant on social policy and telecommunications, Segal recently organized and chaired the first national forum on post-secondary education and research. He currently holds such positions as chairman of the national innovations advisory committee of the Federal Department of Employment and Immigration, director of IBM Canada and director of the YMCA of Metropolitan Toronto. Segal and wife Bunny have three children.
.BEROLSPRINGS FORWARDWITH ANEWWAVE j OF-COLOUR 1 Blue Tide, Miami Green, Flamingo Pink and Lilac Dream - Today’s designer colours add fashion sizzle to Berol pens and mechanical pencils See them at Your
Campus
The- Vegetarian World A Biblical perspective by Dawn Miles Did you all have a good Christmas break? I did, but I ate too much. My mother theorizes that Christmas is nature’s way of preparing the body for winter. Because it is close to Christmas and because Christianity seems to be a popular topic in this paper (for example, the big discussion about whether gays are Christian or not) I thought I’d discuss the strong links between this religion and vegetarianism. That these links exist may surprise some people; one doesn’t ordinarily think of the two ideas together. With the exception of the Seventh Day Adventists, there isn’t much encouragement from the Christian church for vegetarian members. However, there is a vegetarian tradition in the Christian church that started with Jesus himself and has run through the church’s history. There is much evidence that Jesus was a vegetarian, The similarities between the first followers of Jesus and a Jewish sect called the Essenes have led scholars to believe that Jesus was an Essene himself. The Essenes held vegetarianism to be a basic part of their life. Also, Jesus’ brother James the Just was raised a vegetarian by his parents. It follows that Jesus would have been raised a vegetarian as well. The New Testament is often cited as proving that Jesus wasn’t a vegetarian. There are many references linking him to the consumption of meat and fish. However, these don’t necessarily prove anything. Most references to “meat” are due to a misunderstanding of the vernacular used in the King James version of the Bible. In the language of that day, “meat” meant “food”. When traced back in the original Greek manuscripts all these references contain the Greek word for food, not the word for meat. The references to fish are believed to be symbolic. In the original language (Greek
again) the word for fish, icthys, is an acronym that stood for “Jesus Christ, Son of God, Savior”. Not only was Jesus a vegetarian himself, he did not want other people to eat meat either, This is shown by his frequent condemnation of animal sacrifices. In Biblical times many people believed that all slaughter of animals required a sacrifice. In fact, a strict interpretation of Leviticus 17 implies this. By disallowing animal sacrifice Jesus was also, in his society, disallowing all killing of animals. Prophesies of the coming of Christ also indicate a preference for a vegetarian world. The words of Isaiah are interpreted as prophesying the coming of Christ+ The same passage says that the wolf, lamb, little child and snake will all lie down without fear and none of them will hurt or destroy one another. In such a world all the creatures must necessarily be vegetarian and it is this world that is to be brought by the coming of Christ. Many of the first church members were vegetarian. These included Matthew, James the Just, Paul and Peter. The very first Christians, who were called Nazoreans, were vegetarians, as were the Ebionites, a sect that evolved from the Nazoreans. Among the fathers of the current Christian chulach there were inany vegetarians. Clement of Alexandria, Origen, Tertullian, Heironymous, Bonifiice, John Chrysostom and Basilus the Great all abstained from meat. Most of the monasteries practiced vegetarianism as well. The present day Trappist monks continue to be vegetarians Regardless of history, vegetarianism would seem to be a logical extension of Jesus’ teachings. His teachings focus on non-violence and poverty, Vegetarianis’m applies the principle of non-violence not only to humans but to animals as well. Also, as meat is a wasteful luxury item for the rich and as abstention from meat makes more food available for the poor and hungry, vegetarianism is an extension of the principle of poverty.
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’ sttll a. good the by Peter Dedee Imprint staff
than virtuosic command of voice seemed the right way to appeal to emotion, so much so that it The area’s punk underground appeared as if the violent-looksurfaced on December 5,1987 in ing crowd would join in; a small, small room in the big, Nomeansno drove their peculbig, University Centre at the Uof iar brand of speed-jazz-thrash Guelph. Originally billed as a right through the concrete D.O.A. extravaganza and then a blocks of my cranium and Nomeansno single shot, the tickled my medulla. This band is skinhead and mohawk folk were not your typical under-talented unexpectedly treated to both over-hyped punk band formed to bands as Guelph continued to exasperate the media and dull distinguish itself as a cultural the sensibilities of your average centre in an unexpected display punk who props up his do with of non-frugality. Elmer’s g!ue. Deep in the insistLocals Shadowy Men on a ent rhythms of persistent perShadowy .Planet landed in the cussion there was an middle of THE ROOM in briloverwhelming display of talent. liantly tie-died attire and deliThe use of jazz modal chords is vered the most effective and something not too common in emotional acoustic set of music baser music. but the crowd that I have experienced in a very, seemed overpowered and gaped very, long time. A very percusstupidly at Nomeansno rocking sive attitude juxtaposed well out in five-four time. Surpriswith two melodic acoustic guiingly, nobody seemed eager to tars. Grating vocals conveyed dance and bang to the foot-movimportant messages dealing ing beat. This disappointed me with racism, brotherhood and greatly+ Unfortunately, the conenvironmental concerns. The set servative attitude prevalent in consisted of strange and obscure the twin cities and surrounding cover tunes from prison inmates area seemed to be responsible for in Vancouver, ’60s and ’70s blues this lack of excitement and inacartists and children’s compostivity. I was so depressed that I ers. The treasure of the &vening decided not to stick around for was Who Killed the Ri*er.:. : the final act and went to an endprimitive conveyance of belie 7 of-term party instead. Sorry. and melody through the use of The party was pretty bad anyacoustic instruments and a less wav.
Zappa at Princess by lohn Znchariah imprint staff Run, don’t walk, to the Princesg Theatre this weekend to see Zappa, the 1983 film from Danish director Bille August (Twist and Shout). Stark yet compassionate, the picture will come as quite a surprise to those who think that S.E. Hinton-derived products like Rumble Fish represent the zenith of the cinematic exploration of adolescence. Zappa stands head and shoulders above that movie, and most others of its ilk. In a better world, it would be required viewing for all teens, regardless of race, creed or sex. Zappa is a pet fish, the property of Sten (Peter Riechert), who leads an ersatz *‘gang” dedicated to petty theft and mischief for the purpose of living the good life. Also in this gang is the burly but gentle-natured Mulle (Morten Hoff), whose membership in the gang has been secured only through the execution of some pretty humiliating acts, like eating a tree slug. The last member is the angelic-looking but spineless Bjorn (Adam Tonsberg), who seems to exist only to please Sten, who he idolizes. However, the constant debasement of Mulle at the hands of Sten, and the increasing havoc which the gang is wreaking,
create a moral conflict in Bjorn’s young, impressionable mind. Eventually, he must confront Sten directly to resolve it. It is Tonsberg’s portrayal of Bjorn’s struggle that makes Zappa so intensely interesting to
8jorn,
Sten
watch. A penetrating examination of how young teens manipulate each other, as well as why they do, Za pa is touching, charming, an cf chilling. Don’t get left out, ‘cause its worth those Premiere Prices!
and MulIe I
Black power a~sadt at the Concert HalI by Paul Done Imprint strff On vinyl, Public Enemy harness the most monstrous raw noise at tack on the planet. Their debut album, Yo! Bum Rush The Shuw!marksthe point where the rhythmic dynamics of hip-hop absorbs the aggravation value of raw noise, They are the only rappers with radical political views to have emerged in the ’80s.
Public
Enemy
and SlW
Boxing Day marked the first Canadian appearance of Chuck D. and the rest of the posse as they rolled into The Concert Hall, After the usual interminable wait associated with hiphap shows, Chuck D. an@ FlaGour Flave, Public Enemy’s mouths, stormed the stage, preceded by their ideological leader, Professor Griff. He was accompanied by the Uzi-toting Security of The First World (or SlW’s) who took up position at the side of the stage and kept their shaded eyes on the proceedings.
Though the n&se assault of Public Enemy becomes even more fierce onstage, their olitits succumb to the more ii asic imperatives of mob incitement. Instead of a message. of black brotherhood, antipathy toward whites was the prime feeling which was aroused, Chuck himself lost control of the crowd as was shown when his request that “everyone take the hand of the brother next to you” was greeted with a shouted “FAGGOT”. The noise was made no less shattering by the mob rule. _--In particular, Rebel Without a Pause and Bring The Noise exploded as they never could on record.
At this point ,Publid Enemy are rabble-rousers who happen to make a brilliant racket. The upcoming release of their second LP, Trikes A Nation of Millioar ta Hold Us Back should determine whether their unmatchable sonic blitzkrieg will be accompanied by more serious political st antes.
Imprint’s
Top Ten .Movies of 1987
Barfly The Big Easy Full Metal Jacket Man Facing Southeast My Life As A Dog
Night Zoo Raising Arizona The River’s Edge The Running Man The Untouchables
Hip .HiaP’S best in ‘87 by Paul Done Imprint staff 1967 will be looked back upon as the watershed year in hiphop. It took novelty, but hip-hop finally went big-time in 1987. After hanging around on the fringes for a full decade, a couple
of white groups - Aerosmith and the Beastie Boys, pushed this blackest of magics into the public
eye.
tion doesn’t the company
The
colour
connec-
end there: Def Jam which helped break rap to the masses is masterminded by a portly, white college dropout named Rick Rubin. For a long time “Def Jam” were the codewords of hip for a select white audience of hip-hop lovers. By the end of the year packs of splotchy-faced 16-year-olds roamed the streets with the familiar tonearm logo painted onto the’ backs of their jean jackets.
Predictably enough, the best hip-hop being made (Public Enemy excepted) was not on Def Jam - small labels like Prism, Profile, Sleeping Bag, Fresh, Boogie Down Productions, Cold Chillin’, Luke Skywalker, Zakia, and a thousand others combined to put out a flood of innovative, exciting music. So much so that it was impossible to keep an track of what was going on. The New York hip-hop
hegem-
ony was broken once and for all by rappers from Philadelphia,
L.A., England and pretty much anywhere people had an ear for the def. This fact merely made the task of hip-hop fans that much harder. The most significant development for hip-hop in 1987 is the emergence of the hip-hop album as a viable and worthwhile form. Singles will always be the natural form for rap, but this year
anywhere
Eric B. & Rakim,-LLCool
Enemy,
J, Public
Schoolly-D,
Jazzy Jeff and Fresh Prince, Public Enemy, MC Shan and Salt’n’Pepa [to name a few) all released excellent hip-hop albums. In a tragic note, DJ Scott La Rock, who was widely acknowledged as the brightest light on the hardcore inner-city rap scene, was gunned down in an act of gang violence on the very day he signed a major contract with Sleeping Bag records. R.I.P. You want more names? How about Ice-T, Mantronix, Steady B, Roxanne Shante, Biz Markie, Derek B., Two Live Crew, MC Shy-D, King Sun D Moet, Ultra Magnetic MC’s, Kool Moe Dee, The Skinny Boys, Original Concept, Spoonie Gee, Kings of Pressure and on and on the list goes. 1988 will be just the same, only better. Grab hold of the hiphop express before it crushes you.
Tune in and turn on!
IMPRINT ARTS DEF INITIVE
Research
ISCS of 1987!
Assisbt
meetiizg diverse business needs
Icumant 2. That Petrol Emotion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Babble 3. The Smiths . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Strangeways, Here We Come 4. The Housemartins The People Who Grinned Themselves To Death Yo? Bum Rush The Show 5. Public Enemy ..,..*...,.r.*.*. 6. Tom Waits . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Frank’s Wild Years The Ideal Copy 7. Wire .*..............**..........a.*,... 8. The
Go-Between8
l
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At CIBC, the Marketing Research Department of our Marketing Division is playing a key, leadership role in supporting and enhancing the delivery of profitable and comprehensive products and services. Indeed, it is our ability to accurately identify information requirements, establish relevant objectives and recommend appropriate courses of action that will ensvre that the Bank meets its overall goals now and for the years to come.
Tallulab
..*...*.*Io....*m...,.~*...
9. The Replacements . . . . . . , . . . . . . . . Pleased To Meet Me The Joshua Tree 10. u2 .*.....****.**............**....... 11. Echo and The Bunnymen.. . . . Echo and The B;;;;rng l
12. 54:40
l
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Brave Words 13. The Chills .*...Y....*....*.*...m*..*..... 14. REM . . . . . . . . .*em.* . . . . . . . I,.... . . . . . Dead Letter Office In My Tribe 15. 10,000 Maniacs *.,*...*..*I**.*..........* Calenture 16, The Triffids . . . ..***.**~.*....***....~*...*. Dreamtime 17. The Stranglers **..*...............***...*. Whatever 18. Doughboys .**............*...I.......****** 19. Bruce Springsteen . . . . . . . ,. . . . . . a . . . . . Tunnel Of Love , . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Outskirts 20, Blue Rodeo . . ..*...***.....
Reporting to the Research Manager, you will be involved with all aspects of our market research function. This will focus on proposal and report writing, data analysis and maintaining/accessing data through our Research Library and computer files. You will also develop and prepare charts, tables and graphs of internal and external research data and liaise with endusers during research studies. Importantly, this is an all-encompassing role and one which will provide significant exposure to all phases of our research projects.
l
Con$lied ‘h
by Chris and Dan ,.
In addition to being a university graduate, ideally in a business related discipline, you must have two to three years’ relevant market research experience. Superior analytical and communications skills are essential. Exposure to personal computitig would be a definite asset.
“ .;” _.:, -
We offer a competitive salary, comprehensive benefits, and unique opportunities to further your career and professional development in an quality-driven environment,
1 $20.** OFF a complete eye
I’lease send your resume, in confidence, to: Ms. S, Simone, Employment Officer, Human Resources, Individual Bank, CIBC, Commerce Court Postal
set of E& eyeglasses
examinations
Station,
arranged 1 I
Toronto, Ontario
M5L lA2
Jacqueline Bruner: DJ, Fed Hall and CKMS 1. That
Petrol
Emotion . . . . . . . . . . . . Babble
1: Concert
V8
On out n The Sun rNild Years . Outskirts ‘I My Tribe . Show Me LX.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . The Joshua Trw a DFU Document 9. Guadalcanal Diarv . . . . , . . . . . . . . . . . . 2x4 10. Robbie Robert& , . . Robbie Robertson
Chris Wodskou: Imprint Arts Editor
1.‘be Bepkacmento t fleased To hh88t
0.
Me
2.TbeChillr...... . . . . . . _. . . . Brave Words 3. The TriGdo , . . . . . . . , I _. I,. . . Calenture 4. Tfut Petrol Emotion . . . . . . . . . . . . Babble 5.TbeCreeps... . . . . . . . . EnjoyTheCr88ps 6. Eric B. and Rakim . . . . . , . . , . Paid In Full 7. REM.. . , , , , . . , . . . . . . . . . *. *. . Documerrt 8. The !bitbs Strangeways, Here We come 9. Doughbay6.. . . . . . . . . . <. . . . . . .Whatev8r 10. Throwing Muses.. -. . . . . . The Fat Skier
I\lLm...
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Paul Done: Imprint Arts Hack
Ed Draw
Movie
1. (tie) Rebel Withour a PausePubIic Enemy (B-side) 8. & Rakim t Know You Got Soul -Eric 2. K&BI & Deadly LP . . , . . . , . . . , . . Just-Ice 3. Criminal Minded LPsCotr La Rock & KRS
GUY
John Rhymers: Imprint Arts Type 1, XTC ........................ Skylarking 2. Tom Waits .......... Frank’s Wild Years 3. 54:40. ....................... Show Me 4. The Slranglers. ............. Dreamtime 5. Garden Bower.. .......... ..Cmnin g TY 6. Jr. Gone Wild ...... .LWS Art, More Pop 7. Articles Of Faith. ........... In This Life 8. Cuadalcanal Diary ................. 2x4 9. Sislers of Mercy ............. Floodlands 10. The Hobeemartins .... The People Who Grinned Themselves To Death
Don Kudo: Imprint and CKMS 1. Tht Replacements . Pleased TO Meet Me 2. Dinosaur . . . . . You’re Living All Over Me 3. Husker DuWarehouse: Songs and Stories 4. Jr. Gone Wild . , . *. . .-IASS Art, More Pop 5, Doughboys . . . . , , . . . . . . . . . . . . -Whatever 6. That Petrol Emotion . . . . . . . . I . . Babble 7. Change of Hiart . . . . . . . . . . . . Slowdance 8. 13 Engines. . . . . . . , . . . . Before Our Time 9. REM.. . . . . . . . , . . , . . . . *.. . . . mDocument 10. The Smithsstrangeways. Here We Come
SSSHEARS
l
_.-_-
Brian Cowhig: DJ, Bombshelter and CKMS l.REM........
. . . . . . . . DeadbtterOffice
2.UZ.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . The Joshua Tree 3. Wire 4.Sinerd O’connar The Lion and The Cobra .
John Zachariah: Imprint Arts Editor 1. Jill Jones . ..* . . . . ,...,, . . . . . . JillJon 2. Wiseblood . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Dirtdish &DJ,I Stcinski and Co.“lhe Motorcade Sped
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kid
COW
4. Ecl&&&.TT)r~..---... Bunnymen 6. The Smiths.. . , . . . . . Louder Than Bombs 6. sly and Robbie . . . . . . . . . . . Rythrn Killers 7. Runones . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . , . . . Animal 8oy 8. U2 .................... The Joshua Tr& 9. Blue Rodeo .................. Outskirts 10. 10,000 bnhcr . . . . . . . . . . . In M y Tribe
5. Summe Vega . . . . . . . . Solitude Standing 6. The Hourcdnr . . . . . The F+8Opl8Who Grinned Thems8lves To Oeath 7. Bruce springeen . . . . . . funnel of Love 8. ‘f%e CdourF~ld . . . . . . . . . . . . Oetception 9. Mojo Nigoa and Skid RoperBo-Day-Shusl lO.MealPuppels .*........,*. . . ..HuevaII3 l
4, I&ale Steven. . . Freedom-No Compromise 5. Public Enemy . Yol Bum Rush The Show ZY&CO f On A Night Like This 7. Kraftwerk , . , . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Electric Cafe 8. Bruce Springsteen . . . . . . Tunnel of bV8 9. The Mirsion Soundtrack Ennio Morricone 10. The P~~laitnen . . . . . . This Is The Stw
6.Buckwlta
.......*....-.&,%.“A
*hn Ry*n’ Imprint Arts TvPe 1. Danielle I)lx .,. . . . . . . . . . . . lnlq Bloaters 2. Coil.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Horse Rotorvator 3, That Petrol Emotion . . . . . . . . . *. . Babble 4. Win . . . . . . ..I.... . . . . . ..Th9#8iSlC~ 5. Jmified Au&BI~~ of IUUMU . 1987: What The Fuck Is Going On? 6. The Creepera Rock and Roll: Licorice Flavor 7. Co-Beweenr . . . *. . . . . . . . . . . . . . Tallulah 8. G~eandra Complex . . . . . . Hello America 9. Anthmx , . . . . . . . . . . *. . Among The Living No Number Ten From John
m Perlich: Arts Writer John Hiait . . . . , . . . . . . . Bring The Family The chillr. . . * . . . . . . . . . . . .~sm~y8~\?cp_rds 1 Adkinr , , . , , . . . . . . The WHd Man . . . . . . . . . . . sign ‘O’TheTimes Sister I..,...,.............
Dee Wight: CKMS Program Director l.TomWairr . . . . . . . . . . . Ranks Wild Years 2. Hoiger cmhy . . L1 Rome Ramsins Rome 3. Wire . . . . . . . . . . ..s....... h8kh1 cow 4. Snakefinger’s Vcd Virgh Night At’ Desirabls Objects 5. Screaming Blue Messiabr. . . . . Bikini Red
l
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Dirtdish SUfpriS8 Sugis8 Sur-
FILLET Of SCROO
6. TImI. Petrd Emolion . . . . . . . . . . . . bhbi8 7.RareAir .,,, ,.,+ . . . . . . . . . HardToEkbat
8. Thin white Rope . . . . . . . . . . . . wonheed 9. Sinad t.btinaor fh8 thl SIld Th8 tbbfD 10. (tie) Power Tools. . . . . Strange Meeting World Saxophone Quartet Dances and BalItiS Andrew
Photo Editor
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Kiss MD Kilr 6Ae Kiss Ma
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The Kick
Eye of The Hurricane .m8 Northern Pikes Docum8nt 7. Untoucbabler Soundtnck , . Ennio Morricone 8. ‘Ihe Mers.. . . . . . . . . . . . . Dreamtims 9. G~UH Vohaire . . . . . . . . . . . Don’t Argue 10. The Colourfkld . . . . . . . . . . . . Oecaption Aimman
. The Joshua Tree ys, Here We Come Dead Letter Office IO. Washington Squarer . . . , , Washington Squaws
Eehcn and
. . . . . . ..*....*.......~~..*...
41 The 6. The Na&crn Earth Sun Mom
Eu~\s~~ws
6. REM..
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debut, Exorciee This t\laeteland. Admittedly, stuff like Open The Skies and Singing Machines is pretty pallid, but elsewhere, synth jockeys Pete Carnac (who played for labelmates and fellow Aussies Severed Heads on their. '86 tour) and Kath Power use’ their instruments to forge an iron grate of sound for Jacqui Hunt to wail and croon through. Thus, the lead-off track, I C&se My Eyes, drives its point home with devastating clarity: a killer drum program kicks some sampled newsmen through the song while Hunt’s innocent voice creeps in over top. The title track is nothing to write home about, but then come Open Grove and 4 x IO Cell (For Craig], both of which merit repeated listenin
by John Zachariah Imprint staff Any electro-pop band who lists amongst its influences Kate Bush and the Cocteau Twins (yikes) see.ms destined to bear bland fruit - ie. murky and dense’ pastel strokes of sound driven into the ground by some ill-programmed beat box. But Australia’s Single Gun Theory, signed recently to Vancouver’s industrial noise label Nettwerk, have issued an imnressive
Raise My Soul follows soon pop excellence, but Exorciee after, and proves itself to be a Tbis Wasteland is still a beguilmoving bit of pop. The exubering piece of work, and should be ant The Red Sunshine is what especially welcome Down Under The Big Sky would’ve sounded by those left cold by Severed like if Kate Bush listened to MinHeads and anything SPK has istry. And that’s about all. done since the nightmarish It’s no benchmark of synth.+ ‘hd&id Dance. Try it on for size.
This may not be a wise thing for a music writer to admit to, but The Chills leave me at a loss for words. Released last fall, House With A Hundred Rooms leaves me in the position of being positively rapt, but, dammit, it’s so hard to put into words. Like, how do you verbalize a melody so gorgeous that it puts a lump in your throat with nothing more than its awesome beauty? Maybe it’s the pulsing piano, or the sentimentally dreaming 1
,
Ybod for what f ails ya!” II -DR. DISC tl
lyrics hoping for golden years to come, or Martin Phillipps’ singing of an effortless melody, but House With A Hundred Rooms is a consummate work of pop that leaves you begging for more. Then prepare to have your heartstrings tugged at until they nearly snap on Party In My Heart as Martin bemoans, “I threw a party in my heart and nobody showed up? Melodramatic? Mawkish? Not on your life! Self-mocking despair has never sounded at once more good-natured and genuinely heart-rending. Morrissey should do so well. On the strength of this threetracker on top of previous Chills triumphs like Brave Words and Kaleidoscope World, would it be safe to say that The Chills are the world’s premier pop band? I’d put the farm on it.
NOW TWO KITCHENER LOCATIONS 150 KING
ST. W., &
172 KING
by Chris Wodskou Imprint staff
ST. W.,
(FORMERLY RECORDS ON WHEELS)
743-8315
W
Waterloo Jewish Students Association
Mystery
Trivia Giveaway
No.ll
Presents
Our Famous Annual Wine and Cheese Party Thursday,
Jan. 14th.
8:00 PM. PAS 3005 (Psych Lounge) $2.00 ADMISSION
cm5 bJe?s to Featuring Good Wine Kosher Wine Fun Times Stimulating Conversation
See old friends make new ones!
THIS
WEEK’S
CC~
i4o.
SPONSOR:
.#r c w-1
160 University Ave.W., Waterloo University Shops Plaza 8841SUB-1
.
.
.
.
..~.~..~~.....C.....~........~........~........~.~....~~........~
Record
,
-
by Trevor Blair Imprint staff WEA Canada delayed the release of This Corrosion into the_ new year, depriving it the exposure it needed to dominate those plentiful top 10 lists of '87, Oh well, there is always ‘88. Word aance has it both the blistering ’ epic and the album are resayI 1. ror immediate domestic release, so net vour monev ready. ” Fhodland oiens with the Sisters’ second single-in-waiting, Dominion-Mother Russia, another Jim Steinman collaborac tion. Andrew Eldritch, the essence of the group, regrets having missed genesis (the event, not group), and insists on
Top Eight Records/Tapes/CDs For week ending December
* 19
1. Eurythmics **.*~..~*.****I.......**....*..........*... Savage 2. Depeche Mode .**~*.*.*~~*...*L.***~.... Music for the Masees 3. Smiths .~*..*~*~*~~*...***.*...... ’ Strangeways, Here We Come 4. Jane Siberry . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . The Walking 5. Bryan Ferry Bete Noire 8.INXS......*........*......:~ ..*...~....*.*.*..**.*.**.. Kick 7. Men Without Hats . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Pop Goes the World 8. Elton John Live in Australia
by John Hymers staff * Imprint Guadalcanal Diary is often compared to another band from Athens Georgia: one with a sudden legion of many fans. But I won’t compare them to anybody; they are a great band in their own right with the own sound. 2x4 is the band’s third disk in as many years and it shows a progression in both music and theme. Walking In The Shadow of The Big Man was a spacey, country and gospel influenced album; Jamboree was a melodic album with some real rockers and many religious references (but they never hit you over the head with their Bible-belt style.) 2x4 is a straight ahead rock and roll album, mostly stripped of the humour that also characterized Jamboree 2x4 is a drum dominated album. John Poe plays the drums as an instrument and not merely as a beat maker. Rhett Crowe rounds off the rhythm section with a bass that most definitely makes its presence felt. They provide a firm foundation for their own brand of rock and roll. However, there are maqy bands playing rock and roll right now. What lifts Guadalcanal Diary above the crowd is their attitude toward their music; they seem to realize that music is just music and they treat it accordingly.
Store’s
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Just Arrived 1. 2. 3, 4. 5.
DIK VAN DYKES . . ..I*.~.*.~~~~**~..**.**~* Nobody Likes . . . Ant Farm Grunt Various Art is ts on Stone . . . . . . . . . . . . The Alberta Compilation Mannheim Steamroller and Mason Williams.. . . . Giabsicai Gas Various Artists . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Hiding Out (soundtrack] l
******.....*..***.****.........*.......,....*
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Based on soles at the Record Campus Centre, University
Humility does not give a band carte blanche but it works for Guadalcanal Diary. Lips of Steel gives 2x4 the strongest ending of any album I heard in 1987. It is representative of the entire album with its heavy-handed drumming and the choppy guitars of Murray Attaway and Jeff Walls. Little Birds is the sole slow song on the disk and the album suffers for this locak of slow, beautiful songs like Littie Birds. Jamboree an awesome album tor tts mix or
melodic songs and hard rockers, Oh well, you can’t eat your cake and have it too . . . everytime, Guadalcanal Diary can be counted on to release a strong record consistently. After three albums, I like them as much as ever, 2x4 was one of last year’s best albums; I would have ranked it first but I only received the album in December. If you have never heard Guadlcanal Diary, listen to them and have a little faith in America’s greatest band.
being around for the apocalypse. Dominion foreshadows the crimson empire raining destruction down on complacent Americans hiding under their mobile homes. Eldritch insists on being the king in the land of the blind and sees: “a lighthouse in the middle of Prussia, A white house in a red square.” Intense political visions polished with I dirk waters run throughout and ultimately unify the entire album. Dominion starts off simply enough, but soon develops into a miniature epic all its own. The final chorus rumbles out of nowhere. builds to a blinding intensitv, and violently plummets, plowing a way for first Flood song.
soulmate and now .fellow Sister Patricia Morrison (ex Gun Club), titled Lucretia My Reflection continues on the destruction theme-the king professes: “I hear the roar of a big machine. Two worlds and in between. Hot metal and methedrine. I hear empire down I . . Love lost, fire gt will. Dum-dum bullets and shoot to kill, I hear. Empire down.” A love song of sorts, Lucretia chugs along with an assured addictive rhythm, suddenly explodes into an Eliot-influenced social observation which examines the environments on both sides of Eldritchs’ skin: “I hear the sons of the city and dispossessed Get down, get undressed Get pretty but you and me, We got the kingdom, we got the key We got the empire, now as then, We don’t doubt, we don’t take direction, Lucretia, my reflection, dance the ghost with me . . ,” Side one closes with a song consisting of only voice and piano. The minimalist approach was suggested by a fan, and 1959 is Eldritchs’ proudest accomplishment. Side two opens with This Corrosion. Instead of putting the short, single version on, Eldritch pushes the dance formula to an extreme, resulting in a further remixed II-minute aural assault. The choir vocals and abyss-1 chorus thrust-the single into’,the UK top 10. The reworking .of the song is most felt near the end: the chorus gets more insane, more intense, and when you think its about to subside, it doubles up in intensity again and again.The cassette will contain the first This Corrosion b-side: Torch, and the CD contains both Torch and Colows* Floodland is a rollercoaster of passion and sentimentality, set in a grim but familiar world. Eldritch claims the album is in fact one multi-faceted song with central themes of water and the bomb running throughout. This album is a great work worthy of time and thought. Both musically and lyrically, The Sisters as a collective have developed, elevating Floodland to masterpiece status. ’
The Flood songs (I&II) reveal Eldritch both burdened and revelling in an uncertain energy which he somehow channels into the album. These songs offer different perspectives on Eldritchs’ alienation and unify the other ,rtracks. A written for his
by Chrie Wodakou Imprint staff For all its chirpiness, The Housemartins’ London 0 Hull 4 was my favourite record of 1986. Passionate and virtiolic, bt:t, more importantly, compassion ate and wry, the Hull foursome proved that it is possible. to be politically committed without being dour, over-serious sloganeers. Imagine my anticipation, then, when I forked over the bills for The Housemartins’ new album, charmingly called The People Who Grinned Themselves To Death. While not quite the sardonically jolly jaunt lthe name may suggest, the title track rekindles the magic of old, an upbeat, soulful stomper decrying smug complacency: “The people who grinned themselves to death/Smiled so much they failed to take a breath/And even when their kids were starving/They all thought the queen was charming. Shades of the brilliance of Get Up off OUr Knees and Flag Day, hardline Marsist polemics softened by humour and a genuine feeling for the oppressed, even if the oppressed just don’t dnow any better. But this is a very different Housemartins this time outas clever as ever and the songs gallop along with the usual catchiness, but The People just isn’t much fun with the possible exceptiun’of the tongue-in-cheek character sketches in Five Get Over Excited: “I am guy from Camden Town7 My hair is curly
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but I gel it down/ My clothes are black but my hair is brown/ I’m lreaIly into early Motown.” Yeah, a lot of people took exception to the directness and openhanded didacticism of their debut, but at least you knew what they were on about, For about half of The People, they sound just as though they got up on the wrong side of the bed and are bitching at anything that gets in their path. I Can’t Put My Finger On It lives up to its title degenerating into a pointless and excessive rant: “I’d like to take the time to bite/ Their neck and make it bleed/ Or maybe I could put holes/ In their Daddy’s Harris Tweed.!’ Elsewhere, they cross over the line to the fashionable paranoia of “everybody’s out to screw you” on You’d Better Be Doubtful and make a downright spurious, overwrought+ and misinformed attack on the world’s real oldest profession on Me And The Farmer, coming off like spoiled city kids who thought that spending summer at Uncle Fred’s farm would mean no more than catching fireflies and going on hayrides. Maybe I’m just a little biased, seeing as I come from a farm and all, but geez, lighten up a bit, guys, you’re just a pop band for God’s sake. Where’s the heart, the forward-looking of Get Up Off Our Knees and Lean On Me? “And eff you, too, mate,” they the title song, say, “wottabout The World’s On fire, Bow Down, Build? Yeah, yeah, great songs every one of ‘em and call me a softie, but I think I’d forgive ‘em everything for these songs, unflinching, but still melodic and warm. And it must be admitted that The People Who Grinned Themaelve# To Death is a very worthy album, but I don’t know about you, but I’d rather hear a consoling voice than one that ceaselessly reminds of how lousy things are. and sampling tomfoolery of the best hip hoppers - Pump Up The VoIume is a grand heist, having the cheek and gall to rob everybody blind and rub their noses in it. The feeling is that the success of M/A/R/R/S is more than a mere dance sensation. Pump Up the Volume represents a watershed, a legitimation of the controversial art of sampling, essentially the unabashed theft -of another artist’s music, notably James Brown in rap circles. Kinda like T.S. Eliot (I think) said: “Good poets borrow, great poets steal.” And this isn’t one of those l
by Chris Wodskou’ Imprint staff * If you’ve ventured within a hundred miles of a dancefloor in the past six months, chances are you’ve already heard this collaboration by Colourbox, UK rappers AR Kane, scratching by DJ CJ Mackintosh, and sampling by Dave Dorrell and John Fryer, one of the yenr'a best dance singles and a surprise megahit in Europe. The roster is impressive, but more stunningly - and this is the reason for its brilliance and popularity - it is an unlikely, complete, and nearly seamless fusion of a myriad dance genres. The hypnotic groove of House, the polyrhythms of Co-Go, the scratching .
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of the same song” jobbers. Check the flip for the AR Kane noisemeets-melody of Anitina which brings to mind Mark Stewart and The Maffia’s wonderful Stranger Than Love. Not exactly the rap you’d expect from this crew, but you won’t be diaappointed if you try pumping the volume on this one, too.
by Andrew Rehage Imprint stuff
.I;;:,: \
An acquired taste, to say the least, is needed to enjoy Gary Numan’s music. For me, Gary Numan is a reflection of the past. His music has been described as timeless but it will always be apart of a time capsule buried in
my memory. Can you remember back to Numan’s 1979 dance hit Cars? That song will always take me back to junior high and our Grade 7 dances. Many people will associate that song with a specific time period in their lives. Gary Numan has been around for more than 10 years (which is surprising these days) and his latest release is a some what welcome reprieve from many of the musical disappointments of 1987. Gary Numan: Exhibition is a collection of his most popular work up to date and contains such earlier chart hits as Are Friends Electric? and I Die: You Die, Much of the compilation contains Numan’s very metallic techno-pop music which is characteristic of the artist, Numan is said to be an innovator in the music world for use use of the synthesizer and a pioneer of the thick analogue sound. (He completely rejected all other instruments on The Pleasure Principle album released in 1979) As far as we Canadians go, it is said
that Numan discovered our very own Nash The Slash during his TeleTour ‘80. Besides being a compilation of Numan’s album work up to 1983, Exhibition updates his progress with two new versions of Cars (‘E’ Reg Remixed Model] and the ‘85 release Change Your Mind. To complete the Exhibition, the album contains two previouslyunreleased songs, No More Lies and Voices and a glossy fourpage “biography”. With the two new releases, Numan shows a softer side to his music, which was already hinted at with Change Your Mind. Hzs sound is no longer so hard, pulsating, or metallic and reflects his willingness to alter his style to stay ahead of a very progressive audience. Gary Numan: Exhibition is probably a turning point for Numan as an artist and will show his direction for ‘88, The double album set is a must for all diehard Numan fans and a good change for those open to new things. Strangely enough, it works; I’ve really grown to like it, His other offering is an instrumental that seems orphaned without the visuals of a movie. It would have never made him famous, but it doesn’t turn one’s stomach. Zander Schloss is best described as Eugene Chadborne fronting Flaco Jiminez and the San Antonio Tex Mex Band, which is to say interesting. S&XI Y Ketchup, his sole tune on the disk, is quite funny and memorable.
by John Hymers Imprint staff
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I don’t like compilation albums and I don’t like movie soundtracks. Straight to Hell is a compilation movie soundtrack. It features the Pogues, Joe Strummer, Elvis “what’s his name this month” Costello, Zander Schloss, and Pray For Rain. This a good line up, but it doesn’t quite meet my expectations. The album is not good; it is not bad. It is mediocre. The Pogues have five songs on ‘the album, two of which are really good, the rest of which are forgettable. Rake at the G’ates of Hell, and If I Shall From Grace With God showcase the frantic energy of the Pogues, this time in a country vein. Joe Strummer tries his best to sound like the Moody Blues of the 1960s with Evil Daring.
Pray For Rain is so boring that it is hard to form an opinion on them. Why waste words. However, it is easy to form an opinion on Costello’s effort; this time under the guise of the MacManus Gang. He doesn’t sing and his voice has always been his best instrument. Costello is quite disappointing Straight To Hell, the movie, has not been released to t heatres, but it has been released on video cassette. The album is a good soundtrack; I’m sure it fits the movie well. But, as an autonomous piece, I wouldn’t recommend it to anybody.
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Flowers in the Attic, based on the novel by V.C. Andrews, is a disappointing movie to those who have read the captivating book series. The movie’s biggest shortcoming was the dialogue, which was predictable, primary and forced, The Dollan&aner family was cast to the exact specifications of the book; some readers may be satisfier! with the r75vie b,pzcse -.
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by Peul Done Imprint staff Gangsters don’t look like Shaft anymore. Battle-gear running shoes and parkas have replaced Italian loafers and fur coats as the inner-city uniform of the late-‘80s. The martial thump of hardcore hip-hop forms the soundtrack for the wars on the streets of the Bronx, Queens and Brooklyn. With the cruel irony intrinsic to hip-hop, gang warfare has already claimed the life of DJ Scott La Rock - hip-hop’s brightest talent. With partner Blastmaster KRS One, La Rock recorded Criminal Minded, the best and most popular inner-city rap album yet released. At the time of his death, La
it was interesting to see the novel visualized. One of the main reasons the novel was intriguing was its imagery. However the imagery in the movie was presented very blatantly. The movie - the lack of keeping with budget of the ers obviously get away with
assuming Andrew’s fans would be sure to attend. The movie was promoted as a horror-thriller, something the book, and the movie, was not. It appears the last scene was thrown together to satisfy such a requirement.
is set in a mansion scene changes is in the obvious low film. The producthought they could this poor quality,
Rock had just signed a contract with Sleeping Bag records, and his first duty would have been to produce Just-Ice’s second LP. In the wake of La Rock’s demise, KRS has teamed up with Just-Ice “The Original Gangster of HipHop” for Kool b Deadly, that LP. La Rock’s ghost inhabits the beats and lyrics of Kool 8 Deadly - from Ice and KRS’s repeated dedications to “. . I our Brother Scott La Rock” to the fact that Criminal Minded is sampled and referenced throughout. Just-Ice has already lived up to his “gangster” moniker, having been accused of murder in 1986, He was eventually cleared of all charges, but the legend grew, helped by the Washington Post magazine, which splashed his badass mug across their cover under the headline “Murder, Drugs and The Rap Star”. Did I mention that the corpse was a pusher? In-contrast to the defections to rockism on the part of hip-hop’s bi& three Run-DMC, The Beasties and LL Cool J, Just-Ice is dedicated to reclaiming the raw spareness which characterized
The ending of the show w‘as dramatically different from the book. It was a shock to the audience. The conclusion clearly left room for a possible sequel. hip-hop in the days when Flash, Bambaataa and Kool Here played in the parks. Check the one-bass-beat-per-bar minimalism of the title track for the polar opposite of Run-DMC’s wall-ofguitars rock-rap. Kool & Deadly buzzes with a grainy liveness not heretofore seen on a rap album. The hi-hat stutters and clicks like a syncopated timebomb, the kick drum implodes into a black hole of bass-noiae while the snare discharges like the kick of a 9mm. Like his first album Back To The Old School, Kool h Deadly reverberates with the din of two musical styles in collision - hip-hop and reggae. This ain’t UB40’s reggae though, Just-Ice plays with rockers dancehall reggae stripped of all vestiges of warmth and rasta good-humour. If you go to New York and get mugged by a bunch of kids wearing kangaroo jackets and sneakers, check their JVC blaster, I’ll lay odds they’ve gut a tape of Kool 8 Deadly jammed in the deck. It’s brutal, materialistic and nihilistic - and the best, deffest album of 1987.
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Romancing the newspeople by John Zachariah Imprint staff The release of James L. Brooks’ relatively well-done Terms of Endearment in 1983 began a trend which has spawned some of the most unimaginably boring pictures ever made. Brooks’ film, dropped into a market glutted with teen exploitation and tacky science fiction, made Saturday at the Bijou safe for Mr, and Mrs. Middle-Aged America again, but in its wake came the likes of The River, Places In The Heart and Crimes of The Heart, all inoffensive lid-shutters of the first degree, If you’ve seen all these movies, and become thoroughly jaded with the “mature, real-life adult drama” genre, take heart, and take the time to see Brooks’ new picture, Broadcast News,
which betters, by a Jong shot, all of its predecessors, including Terms of Endearment. Brooks drew on his personal experience as a newsroom employee to spin the tale of a love triangle involving the world’s best network anchorman, Torn Grutinick [William Hurt), the world’s best news producer, Jane Craig (Holly Hunter), and the world’s best field reporter, Aaron Altman (Albert Brooks). Grunnick is a ding-a-ling, a vapid bubble head who got his plum of a job thanks to his good looks and winning charisma. Which is why Jane (a know-it-all who really does know it alI) is at a complete loss to explain why she is attracted to him. But she is, and falls in a big way, much to the consternation of Aaron, who has been secretly in love with her for the longest time. This is
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Each character is wonderfully drawn, but never drawn out. Hurt is perfectly oily, Brooks plays the intrepid journalist with a touch of the pantywaist, and Hunter is stunning. She surpasses the almost impossibly high standards she set for herself in Raising Arizona, creating a labyrinthine and touching character. Which is is important, since she is the lynchpin of the story. As the events unfold, and as the characters are betrayed by them, we see how important the good performances are. And we see James La Brooks in his moment of triumph, his writing and directing skills at their peak. If all sissiespacekjessical&gesallyfield movies were this good, there’d be no need to complain.
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FILM NOTES: I was in warm [but culturally unliberated) Clearwater for the holidays, so I caught up on lots of commercial pictures. But now we’re back, and all I got to say is if you spend $6.50 or whatever on a film you’re crazy, and videos are wimpy. (Just a poor man’s sour grapes, I guess.) There are many places on campus and nearby where you can view a good, probably underrated, film for $3 or less - or even for free. And since you can’t accuse this venerable institution of providing a well-rounded education, I suggest that you use films as an escape and as a kind of enjoyable place to learn about real life. (Something that’s perhaps missing in my stats class.] If you don’t take my advice, than this article is just pissing in the wind, isn’t it? So, in order to not waste my time, I offer a Princess membership to the person who can suggest the best way to have this article read by the most people for the least money. And free passes for those who discover new venues (local community organizations, course films etc.). In the meantime, nail this article to your wall every week, and enjoy yourself. FILM PICKS: Zappa, Willie Wonka, Family Viewing; Princess. Day of the Triffids; Cinema Gratis. {I trust the Turnkeys.)
FILM VENUES: FED FLICKS (FF), Arts Lecture Hall 116 ($1 Feds, $3 Non) FEDERATION HALL, (Free. Films to be announced. 888-4090) CINEMA GRATIS (CG), Campus Centre (Free with set-up.) ST. PAUL’S (STP), French Lounge, in French only (Free.) CANADIAN STUDIES (CDNST-C*), Room 201 St. Paul’s (Free.) UW-C*, ,in PHY 145 unless listed otherwise. {Free,) WLU-SU FILMS, Student Union Bldg. 1El [$3.99 Non-WLU] PRINCESS CINEMA, 6 Princess St. [$2.75 or $3.50, Members) GORGE CINEMA, 43 Mill St., Elora ($3 Members, $4 Non) * C denotes course films. Be early and quiet, OK?
Brooks,
Hunter
and Hurt
Air supply at Princess by John Ryan Imprint staff I was not in the mood, exams were imminent and I’d eaten too much at supper but Rare Air made me forget my troubles and brought a smile to the lips of this crusty critic. They played to a sell-out crowd at the Princess, one night in December. For more than two hours they churned out their mix of Celtic folk and jazzfunk. Even the band were unsure of what to call their music. Bagpipe-funk was as good a term as any, They started with a bagpipe
solo, then a dual bagpipe attack, and when the drums came in it was easy to see why men used to follow these instruments into battle. Stirring. Things got even more swinging with the entry of the hyper-active bassist. They played both originals and traditional songs. I’ve always maintained that drum solos deserve death, Rare Air almost made a believer of me but two solos was a bit much. The lengthy monologues did disturb the pacing. I understand that they do have to catch their breath once in awhile but I wish
they were somehow more slick about it. They didn’t use the electric guitar until the encore. Though I hadn’t missed it I wondered why they hadn’t used it sooner. The band stopped swinging and started rocking. Wow, I hadn’t seen a band get so into their music since Live Skull two years ago. The sound quality was excellent, popcorn was available and though more dancing space would have been nice I had a hell of a time despite myself.
FRIDAY, JANUARY ,8: STP La Couleur Pourpre [En francais, SW video) a 18h30. FF Highlander (w/ Christoph Lambert) at T&9. WLU-SU La Bamba (catchy tune, that) at 8. PRINCESS Zappa [see Arts preview this issue] at 7. Heaven (Documentary by Diane Keaton) at 9%. GORGE I’ve Heard The Mermaids Singing (brilliant) at T&9. SATURDAY, JANUARY 9: FF Highlander [w/ Sean Connery) at 7&9. PRINCESS Heaven (d: Diane Keaton) at 7. Zappa (Danmark, 1983. Premiere Prices [PP)) at 9:15. GORGE I’ve Heard The Mermaids Singing (CanCon) at 7&9. SUNDAY. IANUARY ‘*a !lt “. n FF Highlander (Lambert slices immortc.,, ,Icl uL PRINCESS Heaven (USA. 19861 at 7 Rebel Without d Cause. r (&/ lames Dean) at 9. GORGE Mermaids (good acting; Canada, 2987) at 7&9. MONDAY, JANUARY 11: PRINCESS Willie Wonka’s Chocolate Factory (ya!!) at 7. Asphalt Jungle (d: ]ohn Huston; USA, 1950) at 9:30. GORGE Straight To Hell (CL Alex Cox) at 7&9. TUESDAY, JANUARY 12: CDNST-C The Drylanders (first full-length NFB fiJm) at 7. PRINCESS Family Viewing (director Egoyan will attend) at 7. Gates Of Heaven (about a pet cemetary in CA, PP] at 9. GORGE Straight To Hell (made in three weeks) at 7&g. WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 13: CG Day Of The Triffids (scary old sci-fi thing) w/ Cowboys Don’t Cry (short] at 9:30 (come early). PRINCESS Gatee Of Heaven (USA, 1978. PP] at 7. Family Viewing (Canada, 1987. PP) at 9%. GORGE Rouge Baiser (set in 1950's Paris] at 7&9:10. THURSDAY, JANUARY 14: PRINCESS Family Viewing #Canada is wierd. PP) at 7. Gates Of Heaven (the USA is wierd. PP) at 9. GORGE Rouge Baiser (my friends say it’s great] at T&9:10. a a----------
-“I
THE D,,,Y by Trevor Blair Imprint Staff J.G. Ballard is now perhaps best known due to Stephen SpieIberge’ adaptation of his novel Empire Of The Sun - a tale drawing largely on Ballerde’ experiences ae a child in a Japanew war camp. The success of the book and the subeequent movie deal largely influenced his latest work The Day Of Creation, Published in Canada in early October, it coincided with his reading at The Festival of Authors in Toronto. Dr. Mallory runs a medical clinic in a small town near the borders of Chad and Sudan; his efforts become crippled as guerrilla paramilitary activities kill off his patients, and he becomes obsessed with thoughts of bringing water to the area, bathing social and political suffering in healing waters. A stream, a river, and then a channel begins to inexplicably flow through the barren region, and Mallory becomes convinced that the waterway was borne out of his desires. The colourful and bizarre characters who inhabit Port-la-Nouvelle become fused in Mallory’s mind with the river, and he regards them as manifestations of it. A young girl, Noon, in particular, with her slim fertile body, becomes engulfed and intertwined in Mallorys’ desires to reach the rivers’ origin. With powerful imagery and a knack for keen social observation, Ballard creates a world where reality and perceptions intertwine and ultimately only really exist in the hazy waking hour of dreams. Mallorys’ confused desires at times contradict his actions, praviding a dangerous undercurrent of uncertainty to the quest. He buys the river and namesit after himself. The references to Mallory, whether it be man or stream, become intertwined in he mind of the reader, as they are in Mallorv’s mind.
Guerilla leaders such as Captain Kagwa and General Harare fight each other to pursue their own obsessive dreams. Even with their immediate tools of destruction, their conflicts seem superficial compared to the turmail in Mallory’s heart, Professor Sanger, a has-been documentary film maker, tianifests Ballards’ views on film and the reality it creates, while at the
Bailard’s creativity, allowing the magical writing process Mallory is created from-to overlap and emphasize the relationship between himseIf and the river. The Day Of Creation relates a magnificent series of events combining to deliver an absorbing and compelling trip delivered through the dream perspective of a man half insane. Most dreams drift away when
keen social observation same time emphasizing the reality created through all artistic processes. “We had entered Q riverside garden planted for the day of our arrival. Watching this pastoral scene through the spokes of the helm, I could aImost believe that my own imaginotion wus inventing the river as we moved along r’ts course.“Mallorys’ delusion cleverly mirrors
faced with sharp reality, asif the consious mind defends its existence for fear of fading away itself. This dream haunts forever. Ballard has once again opened wide his genius in the form of a doorway to perception. From out this doorway flows a sparkling goldmine of images ripe and rich enough to quench the barren undiscovered corners of the mind.
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Jeff “Monoman” ConnoHy and the Lyres played a dissapointing show at the Silver DoHar in Toronto New Year’s Eve.
Greg Keeler and Blue Rodeo, on the other hand, played an impressive set at fed Hall on December 4th.
Applications are now being accepted at the Federation of Students’ Office for the position of chairperson, Board of Academic Affairs for Winter Term 1988.
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R SPORTS
a
Hockey Warriors storm into New Year take a 2-0 lead to the locker room. The Blues manhandled UW in the opening frame. Only the gymnastics of UW goaltender and tourney MVP Mike Bishop kept the Blues in single digits. But in typical Warrior fashion, UW snapped out of its coma in the second. Andrew Smith got the snowball rolling when he blasted home a torpedo from the point at 3:04. Before you could gather your thoughts, Steve Balas deadlocked the contest just 45 seconds later. The Warriors ignited, pulling ahead at l&41 on a marker by gritty John Goodwin, to lead 3-2 after 46 minutes. In an entertaining third period, Steve Linseman notched the clincher at 7%. The pesky centre one-timed a pinpoint pass from Chris Glover into the lower corner df the net.
by Mike McGraw and Todd Coulter The Waterloo Warriors hockey team is making a g,reat deal of noise in the CIAU. Showing some ill effects of Christmas binging, UW captured the championship title at the North York Invitational tournament last weekend. UW fought back from a twogoal deficit to down the U of T Blues 5-3 in Monday night’s final at the Seneca College Arena. Waterloo’s most impressive victory was a 2-t overtime squeaker against the powerful York Yeomen. In the preliminary round, UW edged Northern Alberta Institute of Technology 3-2. Toronto caught the Warriors napping early in the title match. The Blues opened the scoring at 958 of the first and added a power play marker at 17% to
Yet the Blues refused to succumb, pulling within a goal at l&04. But Waterloo’s Smith applied the coup de grace with just 30 seconds remaining as he slapped his third goal of the tourney into an empt net. Hardworking John Dietric ii racked up three assists in the game and was named Waterloo’s Player of the Game. In Saturday’s opening round, the Warriors definitely looked like a team which hadn’t played since December 2. Appearing sluggish and rusty, UW scraped by NAIT, 3-2. The story of the game was the goaltendingof Waterloo’s Jamey Solloman. Solloman made a rare start and kicked out 28 shots in leading UW to the close win. He was named UW’s Player of the Game. Smith scored Saturday’s winning goal as he banged home an airborne rebound late in the
third period. Linseman and Dan Tsandelis both counted shorthanded goals in the second stanza to round out the scoring. On Sunday, the Warriors faced the nation’s number-one ranked team, the Yeomen. York was without several of its key players who were participating with Team Canada at the Spengler Cup Tournament. The Yeomen drew first blood in the opening period, a lead which lasted until late in the third period. Warrior goaltender Bishop stood tall in stoning York the rest of the way. David Long knotted the game with 8:23 left in regulation time to send it into overtime. Overtime was a short but sweet affair. Tenacious forechecking kept the Yeomen hemmed in their own end. At 2:38, Clinton Ellicott blasted a low slap shot from the point off a Goodwin rebound to bulge the twine. Bishop was Waterloo’s Player of the Game, as he turned aside 33 shots in a solid effort. Linseman was chosen centre on the tournament all-star team. The Warriors resunie league play tonight (Friday) as they travel to London to face everybody’s arch rivals the Western Mustangs. On Sunday, they journey to the land of polar ice caps to play the Laurentian Vojrageurs in Sudbury.
Warriors nick Hawks in Brickfest by Mike McGraw. Imprint staff Maybe it was the cold Waterloo weather which numbed their hands. Perhaps the effects of New Year’s Eve hadn’t worn off yet. Whatever it was, neither the Waterloo Warriors or the Laurier Golden Hawks seemed able to shoot a basketball Wednesday night at Laurier. In what can best be described as an offensive drought, the Warriors hung on to nick the Hawks 58-54 to open the OUAA regular season. “Neither team played well on offence,” noted WLU coach Chris Coulthard. “But both clubs played hard on defence,” Waterloo coach Don McCrae echoed his counterpart’s sentiments. “We took each other out offensively. This is the lowest scoring game I can remember us being in with Laurier.” It was obvious early on that this was not going to be an offensive gem, After 6 minutes of play, UW led 8-O. In fact, it took
P
WLU 6:l;j , tg notc,h its first basket. The scrappy, unorganized play continued throughout the first half, bringing flashbacks of last season’s Waterloo-Laurier playoff game. All the action consisted of banging and bruising in the paint. Waterloo managed to muster some offence, and led by 16 at one point, taking a 31-19 lead to the dressing room at the half. The Hawks offensive attack was a horrid display of roundball they shot a ghastly 28 per cent from the field in the half. Coulthard was honest about his team’s play in the first half. “As bad as we played we were lucky to be only down by 12. We should have been down by 30.” Waterloo shone in comparison, but shot just 41 per cent itself from the floor. If you saw the start of the second half, you might have thought a new game had begun. The Hawks came screaming out of the dressing room and ripped off 12 straight points to tie the game at 31.
“We did a poor job early in the second half,” said McCrae. It took the Warriors 4 minutes to find the iron in the second half. While WLU was forcing steals and scoring points, the Warriors seemed disillusioned and their attack crumbled to the hardwood. Neither team led by more than 4 points the rest of the way, as the grinding, bang it out in the lane style continued. Waterloo pulled ahead 55-52 with 1:00 remaining on some pesky grinding by guard Rob Froese. UW’s lead appeared in jeopardy as Chris Troyak missed a breakaway lay-up with less than 20 seconds remaining and the Warriors up 56-54. But on the ensuing turnover centre Jamie McNeil1 wrestled a rebound away on defence to seal the victory for UW. Waterloo shot a nauseating 36 per cent in the second half, while Laurier improved to 43 per cent. Froese was right at home in this blue collar style game, notching 24 points to lead all scorers. He hit on 8 of 8 free
throw attempts, all of which were products of his bruising drives down the lane. McNeil1 also profited from the bashing pace, netting 13, Troyak played a confident game, especially on defence, as he started at point guard for the injured Tom Schneider. McCrae indicated that Schneider might return for tomtirrow’s (Saturday) home opener against Guelph. Mike Alessio paced the Hawks with 17 points, including a flawless 7’for 7 night from the charity line. Brian Demaree added 8. Coulthard felt his team played a solid second half. “When it came down to the last half-minute we had a chance to win it - that’s where you want to be. It could always be worse.” He praised the play of Froese, calling him “a cool customer. Time and time again he did the job.” McCrae was content with the win, commenting, “It’s a stqrt.”
-
HOT GOALTENDER: Mike &hop took home the MVP trophyat North York.
PUCK NOTE&The Warriors better get used to their black [away] jerseys - 9 of their 15 remaining games are on the road . . . Sniper Jamie McKee returns to the line-up this term . I , UW went on a la-game unbeaten streak after Christmas in 1986Waterloo’s regular season record is 7-2-2, good for third lace in the OUAA central, beR ind Western and York. 87.
l
l
With reference to his club’s number-10 ranking, McCrae offered, “I’don’t know how they (the selection committee) got that, but I guess you’ve got to take it away from us now.” Elsewhere on Wednesda night, Western annihilate yd Guelph, 92-63, and Brock edged Windsor, W-89. The Wa’rriors play host to Guelph tomorrow (Saturday) in the PAC at 2 p.m. Fans are reminded that there will be a contest for the best banner prior to Saturday’s game. Next Wednesday, Waterloo travels to St. Catharines to face the Brock Badgers. , HOOP NOTES: The Warriors have a tough schedule after Saturday’s game against Guelph. They have to play Brock, Windsor and Western on the road in successive games . . . WLU’s Rcb Galikowski is out for the season.
WARRIORS B’ BALL VS. GiJELPH Sat., 2
I I
SHEER SOREDORM: This foul shot Laurier. Waterloo edged the Hawks, photo by Steve Watera
was about as exciting as it got Wednesday 58-54 in a game devoid of offence.
night
at I I
Jan-
9th
pm. at the PAC Banner
Contest
.
6
Sea Cruise
Junior Walker & The All Stars
Dance to the Music
Argent
MY Guy
Brenda Lee
Sweet Nothins
Sly & The Family Stone
Hard Days Night
Drifters
Dancin’ in the Streets
Mary Wells
Midnight Rambler
Spencer Davis Group
This Magic Moment
Arthur Conley
Shotgun’
Martha Reeves & The Vandellas
Sweet Soul Music
The Beatles
Gimme Some Lovi n’
Frarikie Ford
Hold Your Head Up
Rolling Stones
i
Doo what? See if you can match the tunes with their perfortiers!
OUAA West B-Ballpreview
Graduation
takes its toll on teams
by Mike McGraw Imprint staff
the young Warriors tined for another ride.PREDICTED FOURTH
Most OUAA West basketball coaches aren’t sleeping well these days. Graduation has reared its ugly head once again, stripping OUAA all-stars from five of seven teams. A host of new faces will take to the hardwood this season, while some old but less noticeable ones will become the stars of 1988. Only Windsor and Laurier were left unscathed by this year’s rash of player turnovers. For Windsor, this most likely spells success. For Laurier, well, they didn’t really have anybody to lose anyway, The OUAA makes the NHL’s playoff format look sensible all seven teams make the playoffs. The only incentive is to finish first, which provides a bye to the semis and the privelege of hosting the semis and finals. Here is a preview of this season’s roundball hopefuls (last season’s records are in brackets]. WINDSOR LANCERS (6-S): The Lancers were spared in the onslaught of turnovers, returning 10 players from last season. The back court is unrivaled in the division with all-star Matt St.Louis and Scott Thomas. With the introduction of the threepoint line, these two became a deadly tandem. Silk shooting Carlo Bonifero only pads this scoring punch. The front line is definitely a bulky bunch with Andre Morasutti, Henry Valentini and Ken Schweitzer. As if this isn’t enough, 6’4” forward Greg Nekkers has returned from Simon Fraser in Vancouver. Noone in this division can match Windsor’s depth, scoring punch or experience. If they can shore up last season’s Swiss-cheese defence, the Lancers will be untouchable. Coach Dr. Thomas should plan on a trip to Halifax.PREDICTED FINISH - FIRST WESTERN MUSTANGS (7-5): Graduation claimed all-stars Chris Cavender and Pete Van de Bovenkamp plus guards John Mikhail and Pod Armst.rong. Consequently, Western has become a good back-up band with a star soloist - last season’s frosh superstar, John Stiefelmeyer. The term “sophomore jinx” hasn’t entered his vocabulary as he’s burned up opponents everywhere in the pre-season. Veteran role players Jeff Petter and Terry Thomson provide leadership and additional scoring. Guard James Green is yet another important member of Stiefelmeyer’s supporting cast. If Stiefelmeyer continues his allCanadian year and his team-
McMASTER
YOU WON’T SEE HIM THIS SEASON: Paul Boyce (33) is one of several stars who have finished in the OUAA. Boyce was the West division MVP and an all-Canadian last season. l4is absence has sent the Warriors scrambling to put some scoring back in their line-up. lmpflnt
appear desrollercoaster FINISH -
MARAUDERS
(7.
5): At first glance, the Marauders might appear like a junior varsity team. The defending division champs caught the worst of the turnovers, losing 11 players. Three of the casualties were allstar Peter Ross, big man Ralf Rosenkranz and fleet guard Jasper Naus. In fact, only four remain from the 1986-87 squad. The back court remains strong with flashy play-maker Perry Bruzesse and tiny shooter Craig Muir. But up front, only 6’9” Mike Preocanin is left to fight it out, putting pressure on frosh Glen Gosse to perform. With such a massive overhaul, Mac will have a tough time staying above .~OCI this season. Halifax is just a mirage, coach Barry Phillips has some rebuilding to do.PREDICTED FINISH FIFTH LAURIER GOLDEN HAWKS (l11): Tampa Bay Buccaneers, Toronto Maple Leafs, Los Angele’s Clippers, and Cleveland Indians. The Hawks have followed in the gloomy footsteps of these pathetic franchises. Most of the members of last season’s sacrificial lamb remain, but are now a little older and a little stronger. Three-point gunner Rob Galikowski is hobbled by shin splints, but can be spelled off in the back court by speed mer-
chant Tony Marcotullio. Red shirt Ron Moravec returns to add beef a front court led by Brian Demaree and Linus Azuliablis. Once again, the Hawks will play track meet basketball with a lot of three-point howitzers. WLU won’t be as anemic as last season, but don’t expect it to break SOO. Only Guelph will spare WLU the mustiness of the basement. PREDICTED FINISH - SIXTH GUELPH GRYPHONS (e-6): The departure of prolific scorer and all-star Jeff Root deprives Guelph of its most lethal weapon in school history. Naturally, the Gryphons were counting on allstar centre Serge Bolzon for most of their scoring. But misery enjoys company - Bolzon broke his collar bone and is out for the season. Without this 6’8” giant, the only things worth noting about the Gryphons are coach Tim Darling’s suits, Gritty sophomore guard Ray Darling will have to dig down deep to give Guelph any kind of scoring what soever. Rookie Pat Sullivan must mature instantly as he assumes the point guard duties vacated by -* Darling. The remainder of the roster is a vacuum of depth and experience. Guelph is basically helpless, Root was the back court, Bolzon was the front court. They should replace Laurier as division doormats. PREDICTED FINISH SEVENTH
file photo
mates grind effectively, Halifax is a possibility.PREDICTED FINISH - SECOND
plays how
to his potential, far they can
no telling go. PRE-
BROCK BADGERS (S-4): Remember those four Badger thugs who crushed opponents last season - two of them are gone. Allstar Rich Lianga and Rob McCrae have departed taking with them a lot of points, rebounds and bruises, But all-star Kevin Moore and burly 6’7” Kelly Grace are still around to stalk the paint. Point guard and nifty shooter Mark Gilbert will have to be a back court in himself, especially in the scoring department, 6’4” forward Morley Willoughby adds more scoring power to the front court. The Badgers won’t be as bruising as last season, but they’ll still be tough. The height of Brock’s success depends on Moore. If he
The absence of all-Canadian Paul Boyce is sadly evident UW no longer has a one-man scoring and rebounding machine. All-star guard Rob Froese handles most of the scoring now along with fellow guard Tom Schneider, But the Warriors need more production from their front court, an area which became a tragic flaw last season. 6’9” Jamie McNeil1 and John Bilawev-have both shown flashes of brilliance, but need to score in double figures for UW to win. Froese has proven he can muck out a lot of points - but he’ll need help. If some of the rookies mature in leaps and bounds, UW stands an outside chance, But after an often gloomy preseason,
DICTED FINISH - THIRD WATERLOO WARRIORS (7-5):
Holidays bring joy and pain to Warriors by Mike McGraw Imprint staff Waterloo Warrior basketball coach Don McCrae found both a present and a lump of coal in his stocking over Christmas. The gift consisted
of a victory
in the consolation final of the Ed De Armon Memorial tournament at Ryerson. But the discovery that guard Tom Schneider would miss the Wednesday’s league opener definitely put a damper on the holiday spirit. “We were just getting ourselves organized. . and down he goes,” said McCrae, whose club l
was riddled with injuries in the preseason. Schneider is recovering from surgery to drain water from his knee. Strained knee ligaments hampered the fourth year guard last season. It is hoped he’ll return
for
tomorrow’s
(Saturday)
home opener versus Guelph. Schneider was an important factor in the Warriors’ triumph at Ryerson. In UW’s three games, he notched 48 points, “We rely on him for scoring punch,” added McCrae. The Warriors were relegated to the consolation round after they were pasted 89-63 by the U
of T Blues. The Blues have risen to prominence again with the return of perennial all-Canadian Fred Murrell. Murrell burned Waterloo for 37 points. Schneider had 19 while Rob Froese added 18 for Waterloo, McCrae
was frank.
admitting.
“We botched up.” He added, “Toronto’s one of the top five teams in the country, but we played poorly.” Waterloo rebounded with a 74 64 win over the York Yeomen. Schneider paced the Warriors with 16 and Froese chipped in 14. In the consolation final, Waterloo drubbed the Calgary Di-
nosaurs, 80~64.~ Froese led the way with 31 points and Schneider added 23. “We showed improved play over York and Calgary,” said McCrae. The Brandon Bobcats capped the title at Ryerson. their second tournament win of the Yuletide break. The stacked line-up of teams also included Simon Fraser and the host Ryerson club. The Warriors finished the preseason with a very ordinary 7-7 record. Somehow, the Warriors are ranked number 10 in this week’s CIAU rankings.
Although the win was encouraging, Schneider’s injury creates a large gap in Waterloo’s line-up. “We had hoped to have ourselves organized and ready to go after things in league play,” said McCrae, “but we’re still an unknown quality.” AROUND THE COUNTRY: The Victoria Vikings are -the top ranked team in Canada as 1988 begins. The Bobcats check in at number two. The rest of the top 10 includes, 3. Saskatchewan, 4. Acadia, 5. Toronto, 6. Manitoba, 7. Bishop’s, 8. Western, 9. St.Francis Xavier, 10. Waterloo.
30
sPoR!!l!s
Campus
Sports
When you are busy getting your schedule in order for this term, don’t forget to plan for
EVENTS
Campus Ret involvement. There are many organized events, such as fitness, squash or swimming lessons, but you must register at the beginning of the term. Watch the Imprint for registration de-
WARRIORS BASKETBALL
-
Jan. 9, Guelph, PAC, Jan. 13, at Brock
2 p.m,
HOCKEY
7 Jan. 8, at Western - Jan. 10, at Laurentian NORDIC SKIING - Jan. 9, Midland-Bar& SQUASH
Champion-
- Jan. 13, McMaster, PAC, p.m. VOLLEYBALL - Jan. 8, York Tournament
8
Monday, January - Instructional
- Jan. 9, at Windsor - Jan, 13, Laurier, PAC, 8 p.m, CURLING - Jan. IO, London Bonspiel NORDIC SKIING - Jan. Q, Midland-Barrie exhibition SWIMMING
- Jan. p.m.
13, McMaster,
PAC,
As of January 6,1988 WARRlORS BASKETBALL - Toronto 89, Waterloo - Waterloo Waterloo ;&KEY - Waterloo
8
-
74, York 64 80, Calgary 64
Waterloo Waterloo
registration: [squash, cross-country maintenance, St. John first aid, CPR and any openings Sun.) IO a.m. to 2 p.m., Blue Activity Area. - Entry Deadline (I p.m., PAC 2039) Ball hockey, ice hockey (men’s], volleyball, basketball, indoor soccer, floor hockey, innertube waterpolo - Applications Due (I2 noon, PAC 20391 Pool-staff, cross-country ski instructors ’ - Club Meetings: Outers: 4:30 p.m., CC 135 Weight training: 6 p.m+, CC 135 Archery: 8:30 p.m., Red Activity Area Kendo: 7:30 p.m,, Studio 2
Area due
;2
3, Northern
Alberta
2, York I 5, Toronto
3
noon, PAC 2039) Club Meetings: 4:30 p.m., CC 135 &ydiving: 4:3O i,rn., CC II3 I Badminton: 6 p.m., CC 135 Rowing: 6 p.m., CC 113 Emestrien:
At Little Caesars@ youalwaysget two pizzas.SOthere’splenty to go around. Becausewhen youmakepizzathis good, onejust isn’tenouglP
1 II 1 1
Two PIZZAS small
Pizzis
7:30 p.m., Blue Activity Area 7:30 p.m., Red Activity Area Wednesday, January 13
skiing, bike from Fri. &
.
broomball,
Instructional Late Registration: I2:30 to I:30 p.m,, Red Activity Area - Applications due (I2 noon, PAC 2039) Squash instructqrs, tennis instructors, fitness instructors - Meetings: Skating instructors: 5 p.m., PAC 2045 Pool staff: 6:30 p.m., Pool Men’s ice hockey: 4:3O p.m., CC I35 Co-Ret broomball: 4:30 p.m., CC 110 Table tennis club: 7:3O p.m., Blue Activity Area Wrestling: 6 p.m., CC II3 Hockey referee clinic: 6 p.m., CC 135 8r 8 p.m,, Columbia Thursday,
January
-
InstruXonal L&e Registration: to 1130, Red Activity Area - Meetings: Fitness instructors: New: 430 p.m., Returning: 5:30 p.m., PAC IO88 Tennis instructors: 5 p.m., PAC 2045 Squash Instructors: 6 p.m., PAC 2045 Basketball: Men’s: 4:30 p.m., CC 135, Women’s: MO, CC II0 Ball hockey: 5:45 p.m., CC 113 Irinertube waterpolo: 5:30 p.m., PAC 1001 Indoor soccer: 4%) p.m., CC 113 Referee clinics: Basketball: 6 p.m., CC 135, Ball hockey: 7 p.m.,CC II3 Cross-country ski wax % equipment clinic: 7-9 p.m., PAC IO89 - Free Ice Practice Time More than 25 hours of free ice time is now available from the PAC Receptionist for the week of January 11-15, 1988. Apply immediat&iy.
12:30
SUPPLY TEACHERS The Roman Catholic Separate School Board requires supply teachers in all subject areas for secondary and elementary school in the Cambridge area. should be forwarded
cost vail
Kitchener, Parkdale
Plaza
Icefield
14
*
to:
D.A. Schnarr Assistant Superintendent of Human Resources 91 Moore Ave., 4
with Cheese and 2 Items Not
dates
Arts:
Resumes
s7psize
&trd IWITS an,1 ema cheese awlable at addltloml only WIW cuuoon at partIc p&q Lit le Cdesats any other ~ff,ftrlr 3ne coupon per customer Exdm: Feb. 27/08
Fencing: Martial
Exercise bikes and rowinn machines - There are severalixercise bikes on the second floor of the PAC for your use [Blues and Red South). If you have never tried a rowing machine, now’s your chance. ft’s on the second floor (Red South). Progam details may be found in the Winter 1988 Campus Recreation brochure. These programs and facilities are for vou so plan now to make use of th’km.
-
3, PAC.
A PAR FEEDS A FULL+lOUSE.
!
Tai Chi, weight
11
Tuesday, January 12 - Instructional late registration 12130 to I:30 p.m., Red Activity Skating instructor applications
63
2 -
skating,
Sunday,
ATHENAS BASKETBALL
Ret
-
Friday, January 8 Instructional registration: (swimming, training, tennis, squash, scuba, yoga) IO a.m. to 2 p.m., Blue Activity Area. January 10 - Instructional registration: Fitness: 4 to 6 p.m. Social dance: 6:30 to 7:30, Gym
and racquets can be rented at the PAC equipment centre. Squash and racquetball -Just book yourself a court the day before you want to play. Need a partner? Simply sign the partner% board near the equipment centre. Swimming - Drop in for a relaxing swim and sauna after your night class. Approximately 30 hours per week are open for recreational swimming.
Campus
-
SWIMMING
information
tails for these and many other Campus Recreation programs (and job opportunities). If the organized activities are not for you, there are still many other Campus Ret events for you to enjoy, including: Open gym times - Open gyms are available for activity on a first come, first served basis. You can use the gyms to play badminton or basketball, If badminton nets can be signed out
hportant
exhibi-
tion - Jan. 8, Individual ships, RMC
Recreation
by Angela Bunn Campus Recreation
in short UPCOMING
’
II, Waterloo
N2G 4G2
740-42?0
if further
information is required please ,578-3660 Ext. 210
call:
*--G-=-Yw@-
CLA8SIFIED
31
TYPING Mountalneerlng
bootr - cork insulated soles. Xlent condition. Ladies size 7. $100.00. Louis8 ext. 2311.
Rerumes
typeset while you wait1 Call
Frlendr
- Is a volunteer organization devoted to working with children who could bene,fit from a one-to-one relationship. We need male and female volunteers who could work 1 to 3 hours per week in an elementary school setting. Workshops offered. Call Friends 742-4380 or Canadian Mental Health Assoc. 744-7645.
for appointment. Lase Graphix. 7456468 5:30 till 930. Also essays, reports, etc. Good rates.
Frlenda and Lovers is a new nonprofit discrete introduction service for students by students. ‘Ladies Special’ free trial membership. Inquiries, suggestions: P.O. Box 8081, Substation 41, London, Ontario. N6G 2B0.
TYPING Fast, accumte
typing and letter quality word processing. Resumes, essays, theses, business reports. Free pickup and delivery. Call Diane, 5761284. 30 ye8n experience; electronic typewriter, .85 double spaced page. Westmount area. Call 743-3342. -
Easy money.
The Federation of Students urgently needs people todistribute event poisters on campus. Set you own hours. Fringe benefits. Apply at the Fed office, CC 235. Get involved with the Feds.
Graat pay. The Federation of Students urgently needs poster designers to promote campus events. We supply materials. Fringe benefits. Get involved with the feds.
Fut, profeaalonal -word processing by university grad. Pick-up/delivery available on campus. Grammar, spelling, corrections available. Suzanne, 886-3857.
Rmumer and work reports word processedl 8 1.35 per double-spaced page. Resumes $4 per page. Printed copies 30 cents per page. Includes: One draft copy, ‘one good copy (letter quality printer and 20tb. white bond paper), Near Seagram Stadium. Phone 885-l 353.
Word PfoC@88lngl $1.35 per doublespaced page. Resumes $4 per page. Includes- one draft copy, one good copy (letter quality printer). Near Seagram Stadium. Phone 885-l 353.
HOUSING
AVAILABLE
Room avalbble in spacious furnished two-bedroom apartment on Westmount and Victoria. 8260/month includes use of furnished bedroom with desk, bed, typewriter, TV, stereo, microwave. On bus route, rides available to school. Female, non-smoking. Call Sharon 742-3843. Newly renovated student rooms available on second floor of a professional King Street building. Optimal location. Must be quiet, ciean responsible tenants. $3OO./month includes everything. 7456661/576-7082.
Fsmals
wanted to share townhouse. $200. plus utilities. Call 747-0010. HOUSlNO
Two
PERSONALS
PERSONALS
WANTED
commutlng
professors looking for. home/apartment Waterloo area for winter semester. Will house-sit or rent {reasonable). Call 888-4556 during day.
Futon Man: Me and my futon are finally back in town. What do you say, let’s my futon and your futon get together to...do whatever it is that futons do best. Luv, your persona! fnasseuse.
OOM anybody out there like the new Star Trek? In its year-in-review, the Kingston Whig-Standard said: “October - Star Trek: The Next Generation debuts somewhat less than badly. The new series has an English captain with a French name, a doctor called Crusher, a telepath with amazing powers of clearage and a pointynosed android called Data. The twohour pilot ends with a shot of jellyfish mating in space”. Anyone interested in doing research to see if gravity is interrupt-driven, please write 80-3 Churchill St., Waterloo, Ont., N2L 2X2. My name is Theodore. Lynne P is carrying out a study on the sexual habits of previously incarcerated males’(esp. men from Mimic0 Correctional Center). Willing to pay for sexual favours. Bonus monies earned for perverse sexual acts. Call now. South 2, Room 305. 884-6456. Deva mlne:Tonightwe begina termof wine-savouring (“At least it’s 12% alcohol”), serious sharing, bed-wrestling, and hot and wet breathing. Missed you and your bobos terribly. Catch my attention sometime. Yours in bondage, Devushka.
Pregnant?
A happy loving couple would like to provide a warm home for your unborn child. Working with government ficenced agency. Call (416) 764-9588. pregnant? A loving couple iq eager to adopt and provide a home for your unborn child. Working the government licenced agency. Call collect (416) 925-8225.
PARTY FLORIOA! Spend Spring Break in hot, sunny Daytona Beach. Student prices and student orientedDon’t miss out. Call Terry anytime. 893-0473.
LOST GIHS@S lort in December. If you have found a pair, please call 884-9848. Toahfba Walkmm. I have lost a Toshiba Walkman on campus sometime after November 16th. This Walkman was on loan to me. If you have found it please call me at 884-9848. Reward.
FOUND :Sllver ring found in a black glove in SCH giftshop December 1987. Call Kathy 745-6468 to identify and reclaim.
Jan. 4. Set of car keys outside Physics building. Phone 746-4088.
CALENDAR FRIDAY,
JANUARY
TUESDAY,
8
FED
FLtCKS. Hig blander. Christopher Lambert, Sean Connery. Showtimes are 7:DO pm., and 9:oO pm. in AL 116. Feds $1 .OO and NonFeds $3.00.
DANA PORTER and Davis Centre Library Tours. IO:30 am. and 1130 pm. Meet at the Information Desk in the library you wish to tour.
UNIVERSITY
MAP and Design
Library Tours. Library tours upon request. Enquire at the Public Services ‘Desk, Environmental Studies I, room 246.
SATURDAY, FED
JANUARY
0
FLICKS.
Highlander. Christopher Lambert, Sean Connery. Showtimes are 7:00 pm., and 9:oO pm. in AL 116. Feds $1 .OO and NonFeds 53.00.
SUNDAY, LAYMEN’S
JANUARY
10
EVANGELICAL
Fellowship International. Evening service at 700 pm. 163 University Ave., W, Apt. 321 (MSA). All are welcome.
FED FLICKS. Highlander, Christopher Lambert, Sean Connery. Showtime is 800 pm. in AL 116. Feds 81 .OO and Non-Feds $3.00. MONDAY,
JANUARY
11
UW STAGE
Band. Auditions from 7:DO to 9:30 pm. Sign up at the Music Office, Rm. 266, Conrad Grebel College, for an audition time. Sponsored by the CGC Music Dept. and the Creative Arts Board. WATERLOO JEWISH Students Association/Hillel - First Bagel Brunch of winter term. Join us for bagels and conversation. St .OO. 11:30 am. - I:30 pm., CC 135. Call 886-4567 for more info.
General
meeting. Waterloo Jewish Students Association/Hillel - election of new executive, planning for winter term events. Come out and get involved. 4:30 pm. - 6130 pm., CC 135. HOUSE OF Debates: An organizational meeting will be held at 5:30pm. in St. Jerome’s rm. 229. If you are interested in debating but can’t make this meeting leave a note in our mailbox in the Fed office. INTERESTED IN helping a child with special needs with school work7 Big Sisters of Kitchener-Waterloo and Area are holding a training session for Homework Helpers. If you are 18 years of age or over and can help a school aged child, call 743-5206 to register.
JANUARY
THURSDAY,
12
UW UNIVERSITY
Choir. First rehearsal of winter term. 700 pm., Conrad G rebel Cot lege, Rm. 156. Robert Shantz, director. Sponsored by the CGC Music Dept. and the Creative Arts Board. POST NEW Year party. Young Liberals of the University of Waterloo. 9100 pm., Grad House. Join !he party in action. Start the new term “en beaute”‘.
A REPRESENTATIVE
from the Common Law programme, University of Ottawa, will be on campus to speak to interested individuals. IO:00 11:30 am., NH 3004.
VEGETARIAN CLUB welcomes all to come and enjoy a vegetarian potluck dinner in the Psych grad lounge, 3005. at 5:30 pm. Just bring a vegetarian delight with you, all else is provided. WEDNESDAY,
JANUARY’
13
CINEMA GRATIS. Th,is weeks feature: Day of the Triffids starts at 9:OO pm. in Campus Centre Great Hall. Movies are free of charge. KITCHENER~WATERLOO and Area Big Sisters require volunteers to befriend girls and boys between the ages of 4 and 17. If you are a special person who is 20years of age or older and can give 3 hours a week to a child, then we need you. Big Sister training begins, today. Call 743-5206 to register. One year commitment required. LAYMEN’S EVANGELCCAL Fellowship International-. Bible Study in CC 138 at 7:30 pm. All are welcome.
MOVIE N1GtiT. The Fountainhead, starring Gary Cooper. Black and white videotapes (1947). 7:30, AL 207. Presented by Students of Objectivism. All welcome. . WOMEN’S
CENTRE
first meeting of the term at 5:30 pm in ML 232. Everyone is welcome. Come on out and find out what we are about.
TERM
PAPER Research Workshop. 230 pm. These introductory workshops are designed for the student who wants to learn how to use the
library
more
effectively.
The
fetus
be on saving time and effort library. Meet at the Information Dana Porter Library.
JANUARY
II
RAGEL BRUNCH
-Waterloo Jewish Students Association/Hillel - bagels, O.J., conversation, etc. 11:30 am 1:30 ptyb., CC 135. $1 AXI. Call 8864567 for info. WINE AN0 Cheese Party. Waterloo Jewish Students Association/Hillel Kosher wine, stimulating conversation. See old friends, make new ones. 800 pm, PAS 3005. Call 886-4567 for more. info. DANA PORTER and Davis Centre Library tours. lo:30 am., 1:30 pm.,and 7:30 pm. Meet at the Information Desk in the library if you wish to tour. Tours last approximately 40 minutes.
UNIVERSITY
‘MAP and Design library tours. Library tours upon request. Enquire at the Public Services Desk, Environmental Studies I, room 246. FRIDAY,
JANUARY
15
FED FLICKS. Spacebatls. Mel Brooks, John Candy. Showtimes are 700 pm., and 900 pm. in AL 116. Feds $1 .oO and Non-Feds $3.00.
JOIN THE conspracy of hope1 We fight for prisoners of conscience, fight against torture and the death penalty. Meetings are Wednesdays, 7i30 pm., 1388 in Campus Centre. WATERLOO GO Club invites all interested persons to open play every Wednesday at 7:30 pm. B.C. Matthews Hall, Room 1040, for more information phone 8884424. GLLOW COFFEEHOUSE. An informal gathering of people who enjoy light conversation, coffee and fun times in a comfortable setting. 800 11 :OO pm., CC 110. For more details call 884-GLOW. WEEKLY
BAGEL BRUNCH, every Monday and Thursday, 1 t :30 am. - I :30 pm. Campus Centre. (See Turnkey for room number). Waterloo Jewish Students’ Association/HilIel. Join us for bagels, O.J., friends, etc. $1.00.886-4567for more info. STUDENT VOCATIONAL Advisors are offering help in identifying skills and interests, writing resumes and letters, developing interview skills and more.For Program Co-ord., JoAnn Hutchison. 9:30 - 4:30 in NH 1004.
TUESDAY8 STUDENT VOCATIONAL Advisors are offering help in identifying skills and interests, writing resumes and letters, developing interview skills and ,more.For the faculty of Arts, Evan Noden, lo:30 - lZ:OO, ML 334 - Env. Studies, Romany Woodbeck, l2:30 2:30, ESI 344 - Science, Nora lbra him, 1 :OO - 2:30. ESC 251, LIVING WITH Cancer group meetings The meetings are held every other Tuesday, 7:30 to 8:30 pm. at the “Adult Recreatin Centre” in Waterloo, starting December 8. 1987.
WATSFIC
(University of Waterloo Science Fiction Club) meeting. Upcoming events: Video Niaht aid a -D & D iDungeons & Dragons) Tournament. CC 138, 6:30.
LAYMEN’S
EVANGELICAL
Feilow-
ship. Bible study. CC 135 at 7:30 pm. All are welcom& EXPLORlNG THE Christian faith. Informal discussion of Christianity with Chaplain Graham Morbey, 7:30 pm., Wesley Chapel, St. Paul’s College. All welcome.
TAMIL
LANGUAGE classes for elementary school age children will be held under Heritage Language Program from 9:00 - 11:3Oam. at Victoria School, 50 Joshep St., Kitchener. For more information call 747-0991,8852726 or 885-0338. SUNDAYS ANGLICAN SERVICES St. Bede’s Chapel, Renison Collage 9:30 am. Prayer Book Eucharist. - 1l:OO am. Contemporary Eucharist Moose Room, Men’s Residence, Renison College. INFORMAL SERVICE with contemporary music; coffee and discussion to follow. Conrad Grebel Chapel at 700 MORNING WORSHIP every Sunday. The Rev. Dr. Tom York celebrant. Communion first Sun. of each month. 11 :OO am. at St. Paul’s Colleae. LAYMEN’S
EVANGELICAL Fellowship. Evening meeting. MSA, 163 University Ave. W., Apt. 321, at 7:oO pm. All are welcome, CHRISTIAN WORSHIP on Campus. lo:30 am, HH 280. All ca’mpus people welcome. Sponsored by Huron CamDUS Ministti.
HURON
CAMPUS Ministry Fellowship. 4:30 meal, 5:30 bible study. (St. Paul’s College). MacKirdy Hall. All welcome. THURSDAYS
BAGEL BRUNCH, Waterloo Jewish Students’ Association/Hillel, CC 110 every Monday and Thursday f 1:30 am. - 1;30 pm. {holidays excepted) Please join us for bagels, friends, con;rs$ion, Styrofoam cups, etc. Only I . STUOENT VOCATlONAL Advisors are offering help in identifying skills and interests, writing resumes and letters, developing interview skills and more.For the faculty of Arts, Marc Lamoureux, 10:00 - 1130, ML 338 Env Studies, Romany Woodbeck, 12:30 - 2:30, ESI 344 - Math, Kevin Lasitz, II:30 - 2:00, MC 3035. FRlbAVS
will
ONGOlNG
EVENTS
ONGOING EVENT: Visitors are invited to discover and explore The Great Puzzle Exhibit. It’s a puzzlement for everyone with spots of puzzle trivia, riddles, mazes, films, guest speakers, special events and a “hands-on” game area. Free. Monday - f-ridayg-5, Sunday l-5. B.C. Matthews Hall, Museum and Archive of Games. 8884424.
WORKSHOPS TEACH Good Study Habits. This seriesor workshops is designed to help students develop effective study habits such as efficient time management, note taking, reading as well as preparing for and writing exams, will begin lthe week of January 18, 1988. Each two hour workshop will continue for four weeks. Interested students can register at the recedon
desk
of
Counsellima
Serui-
ces. Needles Hall Rm. 2080.
in the Desk,
WATMARS OPEN House. 11:30 am., 12:30 pm., and 1:30 pm. Online demonstrations of the library’s computerized reference service. Meet in the Watmars office room 1560, Davis Centre Library.
VOCATIONAL Advisors are offering help in identifying skills and interests, writing resumes and letters, developing interview skills and more.For the faculty of Arts, Evan Noden, l2:30 - 2100, ML 338 - HKLS, Sonia Savelli, 9:30 - 11:20, BMH 1040 - Math, Kevin Lasitz, 12130 1:30. MC 3035.
SATURDAYS
STUDENT
EVENING sermonPm.
PRAYER with choir and Conrad Grebel Chapel at 4:30
THEMAS: The original social cult. Interesting people, interesting conversations. Chanting and flower selling optional. 5:30 - 700 pm., CC 138.
STUDENT VOCATIONAL Advisors are offering help in identifying skills and interests, writing resumes and letters, developing interview skills and more.For the faculty of Science, Nora Ibrahim, 1:30 - 300, ESC 251 - HKLS, Sonia Savelli, 9:30 - 11:20, BMH 1040.
TIME MANAGEMENT and Procrast, nation. Students who procrastinate and have trouble organizing their studies may be interested in this twohour workshop (continuing for four weeks). Interested students can register at the reception desk of Counselling Services, Needles Hall, Rm. 2080.
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