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Winter term in review
All tImnew& by Peter Brown Imprint staff
,
January 1990 Sean Conway, provincial Minister of Colleges and Universities, announced an eight per cent hike .in university tuition for the 1990-91 academic year, as well as an identical increase in funding gI;ants, albeit for neti ‘programs rather than for support of existing ones. This translates into just a 2.5 percent jump for UW, just half of annual inflation. Both administrators end stud&t groups disagreed with the increase. - The UW Senate reviewed a report on the status of women showing that &presentati& of women on campus hasdch&ged little since 1978. The most striking statistics were numbers of full time faculty positions, with women making up between 26.9 percent (HKLS) and I.7 percent (Engineering). - The debate surrounding the Canadian Federation of Studints was renewed as the UW Feds planned a membership referendum in conjunction with February’s executive elections. The outcome of this vote would determine whether students would pay an extra two bucks per term so that UW can be a full member in the student lobbying group* - The faculty of Human Kinetics and Leisure Studies (HKLS) announced a name change to Applied Health Studies (AHS),
- Ontario NDP leader Bob Rae went toe to toe against Prof. John Ridpath on the topic of “Capitalism vs Socialism: Which is the moral system?” Left-winger Rae scored an emotional victory. - Long-time student representative Tim Jackson was elected as the chairperson of the Ontario Federation of Students, much to the relief of all Imprint photographers+ Last year, he lost. - UW president Doug Wright spoke to his “people” in a socalled state of the university address, followed by a question and answer period. Wright identified “dwindling financial support” as the key issue facing university leaders today, Professor Len Guelke, president of the faculty association, sJamme.d Wright in the question period abotit lack-of cons&ation from professars in the university’s Fourth Decade report. , February
- Cam signs for the Fed election an crCFS referendum heated up (if that’s the, right term] with candidates s eaking during sparsely popu Pated f?rums (as, ustial]. Also, various rumours of Fed campaign misdealings surfaced to the collective yawn of the campus. - And. the ‘winners are: John Vellinga (pregidentj, Kim Speers (vice president - university affairs), and Tess Sliwinski (VP operations. and finance). Oh yeah, and yes to CFS. - Another controversial debate: this time, abortion crusader Dr.
that fits - International Women’s Week
For Tim Jackson (far right) victory tasted finger-licking good ..+ his Yes-CFS campaign was successful, and he was efected chairman of the Ontario Federation of Students. ImprIM pbto Henry Morgentaler versus Dr. Paul Ranalli, spokesman for Canadian Physicians for Life. Despite ro-life demonstrators outside t Re theatre, it was a tie. - Prime Minister Brian Mulroeey aid a visit to the Valhalla Inn Por a speech before the Confederation CIub. His arrival was apticipated by ambitious student aetivists who plastered the UW campus with Mulroney “wanted” asters. - Water P00 engineering students voted 94 percent in favour of a $75 Voluntary Student Contribution to be paid each term toward improving undergraduate education in their faculty. - UW president Doug Wright was appointed as the Prime Minister’s representative on the
newly formed Council of Ministers of Education. He is already a member of the PM’s national advisory board on science and technology.
MaN
.
- The Feds planned a referendum on plans for a Student Life Building for the end of the month, but it fell through for administrative reasons. - Consumer actfviit Ralph Nader spoke at WW, voicing his concerns about big business and the possibility of UW becoming a “research lab for the. Fortune 500+‘1 - Winterfest arrived at UW, and the Feds’ Big Tent was a huge success.
was celebrated here, with events ranging from dance performances to craft fairs. - Over 200 UW engineers pulled together to raise money for ch_arity. What did they pull? A b% all the way to Kitchener (a 6.5 km jaunt]. - Fed executives joined students from across the. province in a march on Queen’s Park protesting underfunding. One protestor beckoned Minister of Colleges and Universities Sean Conway to “eat my shorts,” Unfortunately, it was March break and there was no one home. - The Waterloo Warrior men’s volleyball squad, seeded fourth going in; scored a bronze medal, at the Canadian finals in Wi& nipeg. - The old.Fed executive of Readman, Collins, and Wdowczyk handed.over the reins of power’ to Vellinga, Sliwinski, and Speers. - The Feds started a new secur: ity force called the Uriiversity Student Escort Team as a iconjunction to the current Seftity Van service. Members of. the team will escort people around . campus after dark, - In an interview wijh Imprint,’ Doug W$ght lamented Canada’s abysmhl splnding on research and development and opined on the economy and social pcograms. - Fleur Macqueen ended her one-year term as Imprint editorin-chief, and long-time titaff member Paul Done took over ‘the job.
-Lewis celebrates Earth Day early
Lewis, statmg that he has long been fascinated by the tension between economic development and environmentalism, began in familiar territory: the UnitedNations, where he witnessed Norwegian Prime Minister Bruntland’s tabling of the report
make development sustainable to ensure it meets the needs of the present wjthout Compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs.” However, Lewis pointed out that one of the most challenging and important quests facing environmentalists since 1987 is to find a workable, practical definition of sustainable development and give it substance, urging UW’s Environment,al Studies students specifically to take a tough look at sustainable development. Before any constructive programs or actions can be considered, we must know what exactly it is that we’re discussing, and indeed. there are manv who see the expression as a &ntradiction in terms: “Increasin@ly, there. are large numbers of skeptics who think the phrase was a mistake from the outset: as long as you have the yard ‘development’ in a definitibn of the environment, you’ve had it. And the
by
modifying
by Chris Wodskou Imprint staff “I must admit to being no expert on the environment+” quipped Stephen Lewis at the Theatre of the Arts on April 5, ‘jbut that’s never -impeded me from opinionating before. In fact, that only makes me consistent with athe political leadership of this country.” From that point, the former Canadian Ambassador to the United Nations and Canada’s leading proponent of social democracy, presented by UW’s School of Urban and Regional Planning as part of the first Pragma Council, regaled a willing audience with his passionate and informed views of the environment, his vision for the future of the globe, and the eloquence for which Lewis is renowned. Specifically, Lewis addressed the thorny and oftdisputed issue of sustainable development;‘one
of the
foci
of the
Pragma Council, a colloquium of academics,. politicians, and the business community concerned with issues in regional planning with a view tq improving quality of life and preserving the environment.
her
commission
on environ-
mental development, Our Cornmon Future, on October 5, 1987, It was a report that galvanized the U.N. and theglobal community with its positing of the con‘kept of sustainable development: “Humanity has the ability to
‘sustainable’
won’t
the business community, “sustainability” of profits may be of the utmost concern. The recent Globe 2000 Conference in Vancouver, which featured an‘ address by Mme Bruntlend, was attended in good part by corporations* which seem to have - em_ braced the environmental ethic, but was beset by large numbers
of protestors outraged at corporate participation, feeling that corporations have sensed a shift in the public mood and copsciousness and are trying to pick up on environmental concerns and catchphrases as a cynical marketing strategy (are you
Continued on page-4
Newsgrou.ps h”al t”.ed
,i by Paul Done Imprint staff
As you sit down at your computer terminal this term and log on to the computer system, you may notice a change when you enter the newsgroups. As of April 27, the “alt.” hierarchy of newsgroups will’ no longer be distributed
over
the
UW
compu-
will be unavailable to users, News of this development first leaked out through another newsgroup designated “uw.cgl.” The order to end the distribution of the “alt.” hierarchy was made by Tohnny Wong, the Assistant Provost for Computer and Information Services. At present he is away and unavailable
for
comment
until
May
14.
Roger Watt, who implemented mean anything because the de- ter system. order, circulated a Off-campus users will be able Mr. Wong’s velopers will always take things to access these newsgroups until message through the “uw.genovefi.” newsgroup The paramount danger in the today, May 4. After that fhE eral” computer term is its vagueness; the -word ” home of eclectic, new.sgroups ,.. which stated that he- had been instructed to make no comment “development” is anathema to such as “alt.sex.bondage,” “altand “alt *hackers -until Mr. Wong’s return. most environmenta,lis.ts, and to ,t-win-peaks,” . .~
* _’ 6, ’ C. : , +; k ‘4,
b
4
Imprint,
NEWS
Friday, May 4, 1990
Western consumerism
is main culprit
1
continued
from page 3
reading this, David Nichol?) * “I’m not here to pronounce judgment,” Lewis concluded an this point. “1 am here merely to say the debate is now raging, and it’s a fascinating debate. And for students of urban and environmental planning, this desperate struggle togive substance to tension bet ween development and the environment and to see what it means in terms of intelligent academic discussion.” The other big development since Bruntland’s 1987 address, according to Lewis, has been the way climate change-global warming specifically-has become a focus of concern in the international community at all levels. “I have heard Mme Bruntland say that the effect8 of climate change, if they go unchecked, will be worse than a nuclear war. And there aren’t people up in arms after.ward accusing her of exaggeration or hyperbole: most of the world’s scientists concerned by climate change share her view.” . But in spite of the alarmingly laissez-faire policies many western governments adopt where the environment is concerned, Lewis feels heartened and excited by the amount of activity and dialogue within the academic, scientific, public, and even political forums on global warming, Since the landmark conference on the changing climate held in Toronto in June of 1988, there have been conferences in Washington (1988) and
Cairo (1989), endless resolutions passed by the General Assembly of the UN, andtheestablishment of an intergovernmental panel with representatives from over sixty countries attempting to draft standards, targets, and conventions regarding greenhouse emissions-the panel is due to release its report in August of this year. Lewis took great pains to stress the gravity of global warming, chronicling the potentially catastrophic fallout if the emission of greenhouse gases is not significantly curtailed over the next’twenty to thirty years. The possible flooding of such low-lying coastal regions as Bangladesh, Egypt, Indonesia, The Netherlands, Australia, and The Maldive Islands could mean the emergence of up to fifty million environmental refugees. U.S. agricultural production has significantly dropped, a trend that could continue in Cgnada and the Soviet Union with terrifying consequecces for the developing world’s underfed. Also, concomitant with the destruction of rain forests is’desertification, a phenomenon which has already rendered the 1980’s a “lost decade for Africa. And if Africa continues in a state of impoverishment, it will be a lost generation. The prospect that climate change should further exacerbate the assault on the human condition is almost more than one can contemplate, But in scientific terms, it seems utterly likely.” “But,” he continued, “the fascinating thing is that we all know
the answers. There is no mystery to it. We have to stop the emissions of carbon into the atmosphere and the dramatic regeneration of forests across the earth is absolutely necessary.” The western wor’ld has been the-main culprit in effecting the atmospheric crisis, but as the widely documented destruction of rain forests in South America and Indonesia suggests, collaboration with the developing world is crucial if current trends are to be arrested or reversed. However, Lewis cites Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe’s response to Bruntland’s report at the UN a’s perhaps the m’ost succinct statement of the developing world’s position on sustainable development: if the industrialized world is moved to act on acid rain, the greenhouse effect, etc., fine, but they cannot count on the developing world’s active participation-until the western world is prepared t.0 deal with poverty, the developing world is not prepared to deal with theenvironment. “It wasn’t a threat: it was simply an explicit putting of a position which all developing countries must necessarily embrace. As deeply as they may be committed to economic development that is compatible with the environment, they are not prepared to have conditions dictated to them which will further exacerbate the conditions of their people, and they are not prepared to be told they haveI to
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preserve the environment when the only way their people can live is by farming the land which has already been overfarmed, cutting down trees which can barely survive, or desperately attempting to flee the encroachment of the desertification which is destroying so much of, the developing world.”. In” other words, “a world where poverty is endemic will always be prone to environmental catastrophes.” Lewis sees the onus as clearly being on the western world to relieve the third world’s debt load before its cooperation can be expected. Figures obtained from the World Bank show that “the developing world is paying out 50 billion dollars more in interest to the wealthiest nations on earth than they take in annually. It’s an obscenity almost beyond expression. Their debt load is not the fault of the societies themselves, but the fault, I am willing to argue, of the insensitivity of the developed world. If there is no transfer of resources or technology, then you cannot ask the developing world to collaborate in defense of environment.” While Canadians can be proud of the initiatives taken by our federal and provincial governments to ameliorate environmental destruction in many respects’ Lewis is dismayed by the lack of commitment our government has shown in following up on its resolutions. Canadian environmental standards, such as the 1988 proposal to reduce the combustion of fos-
sil fuels by 20 per cent by the year ZOOS, were regarded by some as benchmarks by which other nations would measure their environmental progress, but Canada’s environment ministers gathered in August 1989 “to discuss the implementation of the recommendations and they decide not to do it. They need more research, not unlike Reagan’s response every time he was pressed on the acid rain issue, It’s positively insufferable,” “But much worse was this astonishingly simple-minded paper put out by a fellow I quite like, tucien Bouchard, a framework for discussion on the environment. On page 5 they write, ‘In the process of burning fossil fuels, Canadians are the world’s fourth largest producers of carbon dioxide on a per capita basis.’ Now that rings an alarm. And it rings another alarm: the statistics are wrong. .In fact, Canada ranks second behind the U.S, That’s worrisome in an authoritative paper.” Furthermore, Canada has failed to make good on its promise of two years ago to open an environmental research centre in Winnipeg, and has fallen behind Norway, Sweden, The Netherlands, and Australia in terms of concrete environmental progress. Symptomatic is Canada’s seeming predilection for developing nuclear energy, still a huge environmental question mark, instead of pursuing research into safe, renewable energy sources.
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NEWS
Imprint, Friday, May 4, 1990
Love at firs-t tackle byP&&CMSUI The Daily HeraId Brown university Providence, Rhode Island Four community members will remove themselves from the Brown’s single scene tomorrow afternoon by vowing in two separate ceremonies, to spend the rest of their lives with each other. These four individuals are married, however, not getting becausethey cannot legally do so. These four are lesbian women. Maj Bonnet ‘89 and Tara Simsak ‘91 will take part in a “commitment ceremony” at 230 pm. in Manning Chapel in which they will exchange rings and vows, The ceremony, which will not be performed by a religious leader, will be “short and sweet,” with friends singing to the couple. “It’s not the traditional wedding” Simsak said. “We’re dealing in uncharted territory here.” Angela Taylor ‘91 and Carolyn Robinson ‘88, who prefer to refer to their celebration as just a “ceremony,” will have Associate Pastor Corelyn Senn perform the ceremony at 3:00 pm. at the First Unitarian Church of Providence. “Unitarians pride themselves in being socially conscious,” Robinson said. During the ceremony, passages will be read from the Bible and Senn will say Benediction. The celebration conclude with a wine will ceremony. Bonnet, a high school basketball coach and aspiring writer from southern New Jersey, and Simsak, a psychology major from Denver, met on the rugby field and have been romantically involved for the past six
months.
“It was love at first tackle,” they said. They have chosen to marry now, in the middle of the school year, so that it will be easy for friends to attend the ceremony and the reception in the Brown Faculty Club. The couple took their honeymoon over spring break in Hawaii.
Simsak are walking down the street holding hands and a group of guys yells “Dykes!,” Simsak will yell back, ‘You betcha!” “You have to take it with a grain of salt,” Simsak said. Besides dealing with prejudice, Bonnet and Simsak, as well as Taylor and Robinson, have to deal with a
“Gay and lesbian couples cannot file joint income taxes, receive insurance policies a Or . . . retiebe credit .” , We’re not making a political statement,” Bonnet said. “we just love each other and want to spend the rest of our lives together.” The celebration will be attended by approximately 100 people, most of whom will be female members of the Brown community. “About twothirds of the people will be women,” Simsak said. Both Bonnet’s and Simsak’s parents are planning on attending as well as Bonnet’s two aunts, great uncle, brother and brother’s girlfriend. d Though both Simsak and Bonnet said every member of their families has a “different level of comfort” with the fact they are lesbians, they feel they have the support of their families. “People who don’t feel comfortable about it and who don’t understand it are still coming because they love us. That’s the great part,” Bonnet said. “My parents have been dealing with this homosexuality for a cou-
pie of yearsnow.” Bonnet and Simsak have approached the myriad problems facing them-in perspective and with a’ sense of humor. Bonnet said that if she and
‘egal
system geared toward heterosexuals. For example, neither couple can be legally married, and lesbian sexual acts are illegal in Rhode Island and in many other states. In order to receive some of the rights which married heterosexual couples take for granted, both lesbian couples wiIl sign a Durable Power of Attorney. This legal document allows the couples to bill and make medical decisions for each other in the event of a serious injury or illness which renders one of them unable to make decisions. This document, however, only addresses a few of the problems. For instance, gay and lesbian couples cannot file joint income taxes, receive insurance policies or, in many cases, receive credit. “Carolyn works for Brown and I work for the state of Rhode Island ,” Taylor said. “I have better benefits than Carolyn, but I cannot give them to her.” Says Kris Renn, Brown’s student life coordinator for gay, lesbian and bisexual affairs, “There’s absolutely no legal recognition for homosexual ,parents. Akj the existing laws were written fur heterosexuals.”
5
Committee looks for new dean From Al!an George Chair, Nominating Committee
for the Dean of Arts
The process of electing and appointing
the Nominating
Committee for
the Dean of Arts has now been completed and has held its first meeting. The members of the nominating committee are: Sandra Burt, Political Science Pierre Dube, French Larry Haworth, Philosophy Ted McGee, Church Colleges Carol Peterson, Biology Ann Roberts, Fine Arts Angie Sauer, Graduate Student Gordon SIethaug, English Kim Speers, Undergraduate Student with Peter Burroughs as a non-voting staff observer and myself as Chair. / The Committee is proceeding with the initial selection of candidates and invites nominations and applications for the position of Dean of Arts for a five-year term beginning July 1,1991. At this time, the Committee seeks only internal candidates. a Written nominations or applications may be sent to John Bullen, Committee Secretary, University Secretariat in Needles Hall, or to any member of the Committee. Nominations and applications will be treated in confidence and are to be received no later than June 15,199O. In the meantime, you are encouraged to discuss the appointment of the Dean of Arts with any member of the Nominating Committee and, in particular, to bring to the attention of the committee any issues you regard as important to the faculty in the decade ahead.
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6 Imprint, Friday, May 4, 1990
Helpless Sometime last month, CBC decided to air the National/Journal before the 9:30 Kings/Oilers second round opener, so I ended up watching Barb Frum interview Premier of Nova Scotia John BuchI anan about his views on Meech. According to lohn, the country has three options if Meech is not ratified and Quebec (John’s pronunciation is cwee-bet] eventually separates. One, the country will somehow survive without it, two, the Atlantic provinces will form their own nation, or three, the Atlantic region will join the United States, assuming of course that they want them. Listening to Barbara trying to make a conversation and coming up with 5 minutes of inane babble, from a provincial Premier no less, I had an revelation similar to John Belushi’s in The Blues Brothers, when that ray of light hit him in the church, The reason that an incredibly large proportion of Canadians don’t have a clue about the Accord suddenly became clear. Whenever the government is going to force anything through the House of Clowns with their majority, and knows it will become law, they take out full page ads in newspapers, air television and radio commercials, and print up a @zillion non-recyclable pamphlets. Recent examples are Free Trade, the GST, and annual budgets. It is odd when a government seemingly so anxious to explain its policies to the ignorant masses suddenly clams up about Meech Lake. The Mob that is the Mulroneyites have chosen to let the press battle it out in innumerable endless editorials, comment pieces, and features rather than actually explain their version of it. Almost anyone who can
voters read knows the essential purpose of Meech Lake, but the government has neglected to make the slightest attempt at informing the public about the contentious clauses in the deal. Even when the Prime Minister flashed his grin at the nation in a supposed television address to the nation, we received little more than a history lesson and reassurances that Meech was the right thing. When they announced the GST and Free Trade, an information hotline was set (l-800-267-6620 for the GST, 8:30-500 weekdays) and. twelve pounds of books and pamphlets were sent to you if you wanted. It is upsetting that the government has let this important issue be debated ad nauseam in the media by bureaucrats and other self-proclaimed authorities. Perhaps I’m too young, but I cannot recall any other policy that has been so controversial and the government has made no realistic attempt to promote any possible benefits of it to the voters. Even with countless intellectuals explaining the pros and cons daily in the newspapers, I would doubt that 5% of the population could sustain a Meech Lake Debate for longer than thirty-six or thirty-seven seconds, Mr. Gallup has given the Tories a fairly good indication of this problem, but the government doesn’t give a shit,, except upon the voters, June 23rd will come, and so will the 24th, It will pass or die, We are powerless. Sit and watch and wait. That is the role imposed upon this generation of voters,
From the editor Do not adjust your newspaper, Imprint is experiencing technical difficulties . . , If the paper looks rather strange this week, it’s because we were forced to typeset our copy using two different typesetters because of a breakdown in our regular machine, On another note, our banner and forum page layout have been revised hope you like them - Paul.
Imprint Elditorial Amwtaa
Edmr
Editor
l
Editor
.
Ed&tar
Arta Editar. Photo
Unfortunately, your situation is not unique. The landlord is correct in that yo-J should have given at leastsixty dayswritten notice to terminate your tenancy. The landlord could move against you in Small Claims Court by suing you for $630.You could attempt to dis-
pute the claim by claiming damagesfor the landlord’s failure to comply with the Landlord and Tenant Act. Unfortunately, it would have been better if you would have’ brought a Repairs Application against the landlord while in possession.By filing a Dispute and a counter claim to a potential Small Claims Court action, you will have the right to argue for compensation for the lessening of the enjoyment to your premises due to the landlord’s failure to do the necessary repairs. It is probably unlikely that you will get a fuI1set off
of $630 against a landlord’s claim for rent. If you are able to convince the sitting judge that your use of the property was severely curtailed by the needed repairs, there is a strong likelihood that the landlord’s claim would be reduced.
perty Standards By-Law officer, you should
attempt to tie pictures of the areasthat need repair, These photographs could be quite useful in court to convince a sitting judge that the landlord is not complying with the Landlord and Tenant Act. We still suggest direct contacts with the lan-
dlord prior to going to court since it will enhance better landlord and tenant relationships if the parties can talk to each other and solve mutual problems.
Would all of last term’s WATPUB reps please contact me as soon as possible, Your names and numbers are not on file in the office. Call me at 888-4042. Thanks. Tess Sliwinski Vice-President (Operation and Finance)
The world is too little with us; late and sore, Spending and spending, we lay waste our soil: Little we see in nature that is not spoil’d; We have given our birthright away, a sordid score! This Sea that wretches Her contents to the shore; sewage,
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have written evidence of the need of repairs, the landlord will probably be in the mood to do the work for fear of being taken to court.
If written requestsfor necessaryrepairs are not answered, you could initiate a Repairs Application in District Court. Along with evidence that could be provided by a Pro-
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The Iast part ol the answer is my advice on what you should have done. When you occupied the premkes, you should have forced the landlord to make a written commitment to do repairs. This written commitment could be used againsta landlord in court. If the landlord knows that you
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over to the Credit Bureau to collect $630.I am - afraid it is going to affect my credit ratink but 1 still don’t want to pay the rent since the landlord failed to do the promised repairs.
.
. . * . . 1. . Stephen FW!her
suhnae
of the premises. Now the landlord has contacted me sawg I didn’t give him a Notice of Termination and that he wants two months rent. I do not want to pay him but he has turned it
.
mwsdrri8&8e..
matmmm
Question: Last July t moved into a basement apartment in a house in Kitchener. I am a month to month tenant with no lease.When I looked at the basementapartment prior to going into it, I noticed that the bathroom ceiling had holes in it and that it was bulging in many areas.I asked the landlord about it and he said that it would be fixed sometime in the near future, Also there were some broken screensand a closetdoor was hanging improperly. The landlord told me not to worry since these areas would be fixed as soon as possible.After the first few months, the landlord had clonenothing and 1 complained to him but he s&l that he didn’t have the materials to do the -necessary work. The bathroom ceiling began literally to fall apart and thus I couldn’t usethe bathtub and I just looked at the situation and said I have to get out of this place. I found another place in Januaryand I just moved out
Board
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A chowderhead writes To the editor,
I generally find J. Hagey’s asinine comments too laughable to warrant comment, but his “Freddy Awards” in the March 30 Imprint really ticked me off. I must be a “chowder head” too becauseI completely support the “anally retentive stunt” to sto the university library’s subscription to PIay& y. I spoke to Bruce MacNeil (x2112) at the library and he said the reason the library subscribed to Playboy was it represented “good literary writing.” C’mon Bruce, we stopped buying the line ‘1 buy it for the articles” a long time ago! I’m sure the guys who used to cut out the pictures from the magazine (when the library subscribed to it in its paper version) were appreciating Playhosl’s“good literary writing.” I’m sure that when the move to go to microfiche was made, the choice to go to colour (five times more expensive than than black and white per MacNeiI) was made in order to enhance the the magazine’s “good literary writing+” Yeah, I bet the ati& and intewkws look reaIly hot in colour. But now it’s only on black and white microfiche so I’m supposed to chill out. “Good literary writing” (and that’s debatable) does not compensate for the sexism which runs rampant in Playboy. Colour or not, a magazine which features nude women laying around in sexualIy suggestive poses and come-get-mepouts is sexuallydegradingI see no place at a university library for a magazine which depicts wotien as sex objec& as“entertainment for men”1 wonder what the reaction would be if the library subscribed to a magazine that read ‘Entertainment for Whites” and was replete with racist images of a particular group? It’s time that the library seriously reconsidered it’s sexist position. Literary value
.
should not override humanistic value; we cannot justify degradation of a particular group in societybecauseof its “literary” merit. And since you’re not above name-calling, Mr. Hagey, &ow me to lower myself to your level to say that Imprintmust be really desperate for-contrib&ons if they continue to $nt your anally retentive, chduvinistic, and insulting articles &d interviews. Simmin Hirji 4A Chartered Accounting “Literary valueshould not ovewidehumanktic value.*. ’’Guessits time to startthosebookpyres bumin: MS Hi@? Juyce,Faulkner, Baldwin, Richard W@ht . . . what great author hasn’t ofended som-eune,sumet&e? Universitiesme &out enlightenedstudy - not ret&x-my censorship ukkr the guise of some misbegotten ‘;hum&ism” -zd.
The right to be ri(d)gid To the editor,
I recently read with some concern that the “Ridgid -Tool” is now to be called simply the ‘“Tool.“1 alsounderstand that this is part of the holy war against sexismand is considered to be another sign of the progress made by Waterloo Engineering students. Unfortunately, in this casecannot agree. I view this as a gross display of ignorance on the part of +hose involved and I find their actions gallingThe simple facts about the “Ridgid Tool” make this whole fiascocomical, as I intend to demonstrate. The word “Ridgid” obviously refers to a male erection but-why is it mi& spelled? I guess engineers sin$y cannot spell It cannot have anything to do with the fact th$ our holy wrench was made by the “Ridgid Tool” Company of Ohio. Well, even if it does I suppe the comFy was named for sexistreasons.You know the cotipany is sirn-
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BOARDOF ACADEMICAFFAIRS- PubticationSenate, Course Evaluations : CREATtVEAR'@"BOARD+Prod+Mio&Publication;Pubticity . BUARDOFEISTERTAIIYMENT-Travel.BOAR-DOF COMMUNICATION -lUeclia,.video,Marquee INTERNATfONALSTUDENTSBOARD; Activities,Publica@ns ASSISTANTHANDBOOKEDITOR A commissionerworks under the chairpersonand if they continue anythingduring the month they are in office, then they will receive between$20.00and $30.00for their efforts. It’s a great way to get involved and it’s a great way to meet new people. If interestedin any of these positions, pleasecome up to the FED< office, CC 235 and ask for Kim or Tess.
ply catering to sexist macho maintenance men who buy the tools. I guessit has nothing to do with the fact that the company is located in Ridgeway,Ohio (look, there’sthat silly “d.” Imagine that!). Well, it looks like we’re going to have to blame the founding fathers of Ridgeway, Ohio for the name of our forever “Ridgid TOOL”Those sexist bastards! How could they, with a clear conscience, name their town “Ridgeway?” Couldn’t they seethe obvious connotations and consequences of their actions? ,Istrongly agreethat sexismis an intolerable thing. its major cause undoubtedly is ignorance. The vast majority do not propagate sexism knowingly or do not understand the damage it can cause.
The ignorance that needs to be addressed in this “Ridgid Tool” issue (or non-issue) is concerning the origin and meaning of the name.1 hope EngSoc takes the time and has the “genitalia” to do waht’s necessary; to educate the public on the “Ridgid Tool”‘s origin and to restore its proper name. We must refrain from senselessacts like this one and must not treat sexism as a taboo where every witchhunt is tolerated. T&e a dqep breath and put the torches away. hrren Becker Chem Eng ‘88
Hey bud’! To the editor, On the 29th of March, I attended the ‘Funeralto I-IKLSChristening of AHS”pub at the Bombshelter. While sitting with some peopIe (whose namesI still don’t know!), the Bombshelter manager approached our table with an empty bottIe of Budweiser in his hand. It seemsthat the bottle had been left by our table, and a while later, so had a second. As Bud is not sold at the ‘Shelter, management naturaUy reached the conclusion that r-
log
we were the ones who had brought it in, which although was a logical conclusion, an entirely incorrect one. Since we obviously couldn’t identify who brought it, we were all asked to leave. Disappointed . - .- asPI am, .. .I can’t . . fault the stafffor their decision,alter all, deduction is what we’re taught here. Who I am rather annoyed with is the pathetic person who brought in that beer. Thanks a lot, pal. Your moronic actions wrecked the evening for three people. After a lifetime of commercials, you truly believe that
one particular result of the liquid generated by rotting hops and barley was worth illegally sneakinginto a placethat doesalmost nothing but sell the samething! I suppose I’m talking about alcohol and other drugs. I watch the incredible rates of consumption of these substancesin amazement. Simple statement - anyone who requiresuse of thesechemicalsto enjoy themselvesis a thoroughly uselesshuman being. It is so easyto have a great time without intoxicants.I avoid hangovers, alcohol poisoning, overdosing, looking like an idiot, losing control, bad breath, falling asleep, throwing up (wow - must be fun!), running out of money, and not being able to drive home. It’s pretty sad watching a party die becausethe alcohol has run out (“Oh man, it’s finished - party’s ovei’). Why is alcohol required at everything? Tim Collins is proud of the fact he wasable to get a liquor licensefor The Tent. Did it accomplish anything? My academic environment is one which currently worships beer and encourages drinking it at every possible opportunity. Why? There isn’t a single beneficial aspect to it, and a huge number of detrimental effects, especially for students. Rememberthat our primary reasonfor being here is to study, not to party, asyou can party anywhere, anytime, even if you flip burgers for a Iife. :Nemm Syd 28 Civ Eng
2 ! I ; i I i ; f i
8
Imprint,
NEWS
Friday, May 4, ‘I 990
Earth Day: solitude and multitude Toronto’s
Nathan
Philip
Square
fitti. There were also more quiet cetebrations elsewhere. Ironically, the idyllic lake pictured to the left is a man-made bodyof water, Laurel Creek Reservoir. A city or a natural ecosystem: we have the power to create and maintain both.
Photos by David Thomson
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1 STUDENT’S COUNCIL. SUMMER ELECTION
Nominations for representatives to Student’s Council open on Friday May 4, 1990 and close on Friday May 11, 1990 to fill the following seats:
1 seat ARTSCO-OP SCIENCE CO-OP 1 seat . ENGINEERING 2 seats 2 seats MATHCO-OP Nomination forms are available in the Federation Office (CC235) and must be returned to that office no later than 4:30 pk. ! on,May 11.
ELECTION COMMITTEE
SCIENCE
UW Information and Public Affairs Many Ontario cabinet ministers and backbenchers can expect calls from their local university representatives this spring as the Liberal government prepares to unveil its budget. Billed as “spring lobbying activities” by the Council of Ontario Universities, the focus will be on oneon-one meetings with politicians intended to express the 16 universities’sense of emergency concerning recent provincial funding announcements for post-secondary education. As well, university reps want to voice concern about further repercussions of the federal budget’s planned cap on transfer payments to the provinces for social services, including education. Also high on the agenda is the gathering of documentation by each university, illustrating the particular problems each is experiencing as they attempt to cope with everdwindling support for base operating budgets. Figures gathered by the universities in the wake of recent provincial funding announcements show that actual grants for operating expenses in 1990-91 will rise by around three percent, still well below inflation. COU also plans to devote an entire issue of its newsletter 7%~ Ufli\&ties lirpc7n to the accumulative effects of the financial crisis. It will be distributed in the first week of April. Key to the lobbying efforts are the with the provincial meetings treasurer, senior cabinet members, local MMPs, and opposition members. Universities are being asked to
draft a resolution for consideration by boards of governors along the theme “we can’t do the job with funds available.” Local newspaper editorial boards will also be approached under the theme that there is genuine crisis and that support is needed to help communities and taxpayers understand what is going on. For the long ten-n, university .executive heads will meet after the budget to evaluate its implications, and what can be done to make postsecondary education a key issue in the anticipated provincial election. UW will cooperate in several ways, provost Dr, Alan George said. Material specific to this university is being gathered which illustrates some of the areas in which it is being hit the hardest by the financial crisis. Among the most serious problems, George said, are the faculty renewal and pressure on base operating budgets. Faculty renewal is a serious problem since many of Waterloo’s professors, hired in the late 1960s and early 197Os, are marching to retirement together in the next century. And it will be extremely difficult and costly to replace them because of market forces, including private industry competition and the needs of other universities to renew faculties. Operating b&get woes have only become worse in the last year because of added pressure brought by the health levy and pay equity. *Both policies were imposed on employers, including universities, by the province. Moreover, inflation continues to outstrip provincial operating grants by at least three or four percentage paints each year.
9
Researchers look for cause of Spina Bifida
Spring lobby by Martin Van Nierop
Imprint, Friday, May 4, 1990
WATERLOO, OntA novel research project at the University of Waterloo holds promise for revealing the mechanical causes of one of the most common human birth defects - spina bifida. A team of scientists, supported by graduate and undergraduate students, has received a grant of $25,320, renewable for a second year, from the EasterSeal Research Institute to tackle the spina bifida problem. Principal investigator, Dr. Wayne Bradland, civil engineering department, believes a major breakthrough will require collaboration by embryologists, medical doctors, and people with experience in image processing and computer graphics. He has gathered a multidisciplinary team including, UW embryologists, Drs. Morton Globus and swani Vethahny-Globus, several engineering and biology students, University of Manitoba biologist Dr. Richard Gordon, and neurosurgeon Dr. Roland0 Del Maestro, director of the Brain Research Laboratories at Victoria Hospital, University of Western
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During normal human embryo development, a sheet of cells called the neural plate undergoes significant shape changes to produce a closed tube, called the neural tube, that subsequently develops into the brain and spinal cord. When the neural plate does not produce a tube that is sealed along its entire length, development. of the spinal cord and brain is sever& impaired. The resulting neural tu birth defects may include several rms of spina bifida
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NEWS
Imprint, Friday, May 4, 1990
’
AND LAfW THAN LIFE.THE
Team ‘lead by Civil Eng. rprof. “z-4m
Spina bifi& often proves debilitating, with permanent partial paralysis and, until recently, ahnost certain death in severe cases. Although corrective surgery enables many spina bifida victims to enjoy a reasonable quality of life, spina bifida still
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UNLICENSED remains a serious problem and its prevention is of great interest to the m&dicaIyfofession
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The objective of the project is to study the mechanical properties of neuraI plate cells and to use the data to generate a computer simuIation of the three-dimensional mechanicaI interactions associated with normal and abnormaI neural tube for-
LICENSED
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Marsland
Dr.,
Waterloo
ll-li.lti0n.
Advanced techniques for the represenbtion of complex threedimensionaI shapes will be used to describethe shapeof the embryo and provide a system for cataloging the data collected on cell shapes and cytoskeletalmorphology. The approach is unique in that it is an attempt to relate ceil behaviors to subceIIuIar force-generating mechanismssuch asthe cytoskeleton The University of Waterloo team of researchers believes that this approach wiII provide a unified understanding of the three-dimensional mechanics of neural IX&~ formation and will help to e&plain what goes wrong in cases where spina bifida occurs’ Dr. Brodland has for several years been working on mathematical modehg of structures that undergo large shape changes under load, This is a relatively new area in engineering, as most structures are spkc*caIIy designed so that they do not change shape perceptibly. UW biologists Globus and Vethamany-Globus have worked more than 25 years in experimental embryology as welI as abnormal foetal development. Efforts in their’ laboratories are centred on the problem’sembryoIogicaIaspects,including determinatidns of embryo shape. and neural plate cell shape changes, using histological techniques and scanning electron microscopy, at different stages of tube closure. As well, details of cytoskeletal morphology are being determined using immunocytochemical localization techniques.Data obtained from these studies wiII be used by Dr. Brodlind to generate computer simtitions of neural tube closure.
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Dr. Gordon, a .&log&, has a Iongstanding interthe xauses of s - bifkia and has done consideron neu.raI r ‘*rimental’+search tube development. Brodland and Gordon have been colbborating for
several years. . Dr. Del Maestro, the neurosurgeon on @e team, brings a wealth of knowledge and experience in the ~hkaI aspectsof spina bifida and its
related disorders, One of the reasons why so littlehas been done in this field to date, is that it is not possible to tackle this problem solely from the viewpoint of one discipline. A muItidiscipIinary approach involving both engineers and bioIogis& is essentiaI to find answers to the questions raised Moreover,
these people with widely different training must understand, in detail, what the other is saying. It is hoped that a computer simulation of the type BrodIand is develop ing may provide new apprmches to understanding the causes of other types of birth defectsas well, including eye defects, cardiac defects, and cleft lip, which are also known to be causedby abnormal shapechanges in
sheetsof embryonic tissue. A further advantageof a computerbased model is that as more specific information becomesavailable about the cytoskeleton and shape changes associatedwith neuraI tube develop ment of human embryos, the technique can be used to model human
embryos and to perform computer experiments of the effects of specific
alterations in cell behavior. In addition, these techniques may be useful for understanding the behavior of cell sheets under conditions of wound healing and reconstructive surgery. This research is important because it represents a major, interdisciplinary initiative to understand the fundamental cause(s) of spina bifida. Its success would provide a solid foundation for possible action directed towards the prevention of this relatively c~ommon and severely debilitating birth defect. Relatedresearchis currently being supported by an operating grant from the Natural Sciencesand Engineering ResearchCouncil of Canada {to Dr. Brodland). Seed money for this project was previously provided by the Spina Bifida Association of Canada and the Spina Bifida and Hydrocephalus Association of Ontario. Prof. Brodland can be reached at (519) 885421 I, ext. 6211
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Spirit of the West: sensitive CeIts Spirit of the West concert Fed Hall March 30 ..*......**........*....*......... by Peter Brown Imprint staff For the second year in a row, BEnt booked a Celtic-influenced band into Fed Hall on the March 30 before exams (last year; Hothouse Flowers). This year, it was Vancouver’s latest sensation Spirit of the West, making a stop on March ,Z Add they did not disappoint the pbcked house, supplying a typically superb perform,ance: sometimes raucous, other times delicate, and
always riveting. The band members stuck to, their usual practice of trading instruments, with Linda McRae periodically handing her bass guitar to Hugh McMillan and John Mann taking\ over acoustic guitar from Geofelement in the glass and steel Fed Hall, the band still threw itself
into the show. The joint was charged with energy from start to finish as Spirit of the West concentrated on its latest LP Save This House, as well as 1988’s Labour Day, the record that finally broke through to central Canada. Spirit of the West is the kind of band that attracts a loyal and enthusiastic following, and it showed that night. The dance floor was a mass of swaying and jigging bodies, and the front onequarter of said floqr was the closest to Celtic slam-dancing you’ll find this side of a Pogues concert. The energy pulsed especially high during such rollicking drinking tunes as “The Crawl”, “Home for a Rest”, and “The Old Sod”, when lead singer John Ma n incited the crowd with a h wling, grimaced vocal delivery % d stomping, staggering trips around the stage. Sure, this band is fun to listen and dance to, but its politically left lyrics are the true source of their success with theuniversity crowd. Well, not exactly. Spirit of the West is also the kind of band whose concerts are
a bit hard to read, It seems as though.the bulk of the crowd is there just to hop about from one foot to the other to the spritely beat of the band’s traditional Irish and Scottish-influenced rhythms,,, and to drink their faces off doing it. .
forward but poetically exThe band ended their main set pressed social comments, with a chronicle of the Exxon including their current hit “Save spill, “Dirty Pool,” and soon reThis House+” which uses the fa- turned for their first encore, the miliar metaphor of the planet as highlight of the show. “Take It the “house” of humans to highFrom the Source” is a song about light the state of the world. bigotry in general, and homoOther of the band% sentiments phobic bigotry in particular. are quite accessible, from a la- T,his, Spirit of the West’s most ment about the end of live lightpowerful song by far, centres house operators on the west around a man in a restaurant coast, “Darkhouse,” to a diatribe telling the narrator that he against the Thatcher governshould be in an asylum because ment in Great Britain, “The he is a “faggot.” Mann replies: Hounds That Wait Outside Your “You tell me who @kes the blame Door.” for his being so scared, so unLike most good political aware, that held fire his fear bands, the acoustic ones any- without an ounce of shame.” It is way, Spirit of the West also ex- this song that supplies Mann presses personal conflicts in the with the chance to show his gripsame succinct but beautiful way. ping vocal style. The new album has a great example of this which they played early in the set, a song about being the “Last to Know” about ’ the breakup of a relationship: “When you’re blind with love, The band wrapped up the you need a seeing eye friend.” ’ show with “Roadside AttracThey also included their tion” from Save This House, a quaint ode to communal life, song about our morbid obsession “Water in\ the Well,” one of the with tragedies like car accidents. few vocals supplied by Geoffrey Altogether, they put on a fine Kelly (“The Old Sod” was show, a appropriately steamy another.). end to the frigid winter term,
frey Kelly for a couple of tunes. They also brought along a drummer who lent a hand on the odd song. Though flat at spots, as though they were tired of touring or feeling out of their down-to-earth But at the same time, many of stage-pressifig folk know the words, implying that they listen to the band regularly and thus have some knowledge of, and agreement with, the band’s progressive views. It just seems that the rough, drunken enthusiasm shown by some fans clashes a bit with the thoughtfulness of the lyrics that they were singing along with. But that’s just me. Of course, Spirit of the West had no shortage of their straight-
fIREHOSE
Burnin’
down the house .
fIREHOSE Monday May 1 Traehetetia, Guelph . . . . . ..**...~*.**..**....**..*.**. ’ by John Hymere Imprint staff The West Coast punk scene
Puppets, Richard Hell, and the Minutemen fed off of each other and helped to define a sound. Of this list, the Minutemen were the odd men out. Though at time4 they approachedthe noise threshold of punk, they usually c0ncerne.d themselves with playing in a minimalist jazz influenced fashion. But they had the anger, and withD. Boon, they also had the politics associated with p nk. The rr D. Bocjn died and the Aft~ the Ohio hunting trip _.. Minutemen were no more. Sometime in the mid-Eighties, EdEnd of the ancient history. ward Crawford approached the two surviving Minutemen (Mike fIREHOSE rolled into Watt and George ,Hucley) with Guelph’a Trasheteria last Monthe intent of forming a new band, day t?T-erforrn to a rather small After his legendary persistence, Zwd. They played a hell of a lot the two relented and fIREHOSE ‘af unreleased material and was formed. leaned toward their third LP, al‘,-L’~‘,‘~.t’l’,~~-,~t-~~,~~~~~.~~~.~~,.l,~~~t,r b’
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most completely shunning the first two albums. The new stuff displayed no real change in attack; it showcased their tight rhythm section of Watt (bass) and Hurley
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strongly influenced by R.E.M. and Camper Van Beethoven. This is evident in his tunes, where melody and “popness” ac- , count for more of the sound then Watt’s rhythm oriented pieces, And live, they have the ability to meld these. two styles together. Both ‘Crswford’imd Watt ark accomplished showmen, almost Clownish at times. They are entertaining, and this is’the greatest asset of Crawford. Punk is about expression, while pop is about fun. And the Minutemen were hardly fun. Yet, the song selection was partly problematic. They ignored their most well known material, only playing “Chemical Wire” off of the first album. They left many ears thirsty in this regard. Still, this was a minor flaw; what they played, they played great. The encores were the highlight of the show, as is rarely the case. (drums). They are simply excelSelecting a Minutemen song, lent musicians, and Watt plays “The Red and the Black.” a Who the bass as if it were a lead guisong, “A Quick One While He’s tar, Away,” and Public Enemy’s “SOHowever, Crawford is not a phisticated Bitch,” fIREHOSE virtuoso on the guitar: he is thoroughly competent and no more.1 proved that great songs can stay great in certain hands. But he is a great songwriter, Ldbil: ‘4 r’C’l’t’l-b’+‘b’#‘l >s4#.cl+LCl,trh*l -
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12 Imprint, Friday, May 4, 1990
Ian McCulloch: sinas. sDeaks ! u
by P. Hohnhoh Imprintstaff
Gesialz
The lank Ian McCulloch arrived 45 minutes late for hi press conference Friday afternoon at the Diamond Toronto. Club in downtown McCulloch, looking obviously tired, had just flown in from Montreal,
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the group anymore. Lyrically, before that, most of what I wrote about concerned me feeling that I was in the best group in the world. Later on, I couldn’t write anpore lxcause I didn’t feel that way. 1 thought The Bunnymen had gone kind’ of stale. We didn’t get along as people either,” said McCulloch in his quiet Liver-
couches.
that I am still in control, but I’ve got thesevibrant, young musiciansgoing a bit more apeshit than 1would normdly. I’m glad that the new stuff for the next album is harder and groovier. I’m too youhg to be a total crooner, although, last night I was crooning really ,great,” said the 31 year-old McCulIoch in reference to his Montreal performance. When asked if he ever got sick of listening to music McCulloch replied: “Yeah, everybody gets sick of everything they like, and then something happens,and the crowd is great, and then 1 think I really like this.” Halfway through the press conference, McCulloch became more jovial when someone mispronounced his name and called him Ian McLauchlan. “Who is Ian McLauchlan? What a classic,” chuckled McCulloch as he lit a cigarette. McCulloch also gave advice to aspiring musicians by instructing them to write good songs and use Graphic Hairspray. Beforeending his conference to coiff his hair, McCuIIoch finally answered a ques-
Pete De Freitas in a
Notes/quotes from the press conference With microphones on, McCulloch complained about the weather between sipsof scotch from a plasticbeer cup. He left his tinted glasseson during the conference and resembled the late Roy Orbison. His moptop hair,
however, .assured everyone in the room that it was not Orbison reincarnated.
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This was the first North American jaunt for McCulloch since his departure from the group Echo and The Bunnymen in November 1988.“I was fed with The Bunnymen, and it was something I thought I would end replied anyhow,” UP doing McCulloch when asked why he left his former group to pursue his own recording project. “I didn’t believe in
up
motorcycle accident. There are no legal implications, according to McCuuoch, becausehe is not contesting the use of the group’s name, and since he has no problems receiving royalties from songs previously recorded. Asked if his new project was being accepted, he replied: “I’ve acceptedit. And people seem to be taking to it. It’s different: we’re not playing the CNE tonight, but I’m glad.”
McCulloch’s album Cmdkhd was releasedin the faI1of 1989. Produced and performed primarily by McCulIoch and Ray Shulman, the album also features. the Cocteau Twin’s Liz Fraser on the title track. Although McCulloch and Fraser
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McCulloch is going to record his new aIbum, with his touring band, during tie summer and have it released in +ptember or October. It’s stuff I’ve @@ten since being with the lads. It’s good because it means
pudlian accent. McCulhh’s departure from the group was less than amiable. Questioned about the choice the other band membersmade to continue performing under the name of Echo and The Bunnymen, he replied: “I don? like it, no. It’s not Echo and The Bunnymen, it’s more like ‘and the’. I
of drummer
--
Vivid Scene.
where he had played the previous night. ’ Dressed in black with a hooded green sweatshirt underneath a leather jacket,McCulloch seatedhimself in a large Edwardian wing-tipped chair. Thirteen university students . mean, 1 wouldn’t do it*” The group representing various campus radio retains two original members, since stations sat surrounding him on McCulloch’s departure and the death zebra-striped
-~~
Ian exposes his secret identity as Arts God Trevor Blair knew each other’s work, they had never met until the recording. The session, McCulloch said, went very well. “It was the album that 1wanted to make that year. I wanted it to be reflective,” said mellow and McCulloch. McCulloch is on tour with three relatively unknown musicians he brought together. He hopes that alI three will become permanent mem-
.n
bers but the decision is up to them. “They make me laugh,” said McCulloch. In addition to their sense of humour, the band members, who are younger than McCulloch, get him to listen to tapesof obscurebands.On his own, McCulloch listens to a lot of what is in the British independent record charts, including The Stone Roses, The Sugarcubesand the Lxnd cuyently on tour with him, Uitra
4
w
tion about his album cover: “The reason that my head’son the cover is
becauseit’s my album. I was going to put my willie on the cover but . . . ” McCulloch’s tour ends in Los Angeles on April 15 and then he, his band and his willie head off to play a Japanesetour.
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Conspiracy Theories I
ackering Wall.” The crowd
Friday, May 4, 1990
drum. He a@ performed several songs from the upcoming album. The only problem with M~Cdloch’s performance was hat the music was amplified too loud. Therewasnoreasonforthissincethe~ musicianship was excellentmd there -~III~IIIIIIIIIII~IIImI~ImwII--~ were no mistakes that needed to be covered up. Ultra Vivid !$ene, the opening act,
from page 12
At the Diamond Club, the performance went beyond everyone’s expectations. McCulIoch sang to 3 sold-out audience. The music had a much tougher and harder edge to it than the samepieceson McCullo&‘s
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..-dzAcenovel: .,_Quincunx In his quest, he ventures forth from small town nineteenth den-
Quincunx
Charles Palliser
but because of the sheer amount of the dramatis personae introduced. As an aid, the author includes a five page list of characters, and several family’ trees. They are almost indispensable as the novel draws to a close. Quincunx itself is a Latin word that translates loosely into “a thing that is made up of five part 3”. Hence the ‘five families, Palliser continues this division
tury England to encounter a myriad of. London’s/’ ills, from con-men to murderers, from madhouses to. debtors orison. But these efactors and diabolic loca Fions all have one thing in common. They are all tied in to a century-old conspiiacy which binds five families in an all-out war: each trying to claim the inherit ante of a vast estate.
Balant ine 788 pgs.
by John Hymars Imprint staff The weather is bad, the vision bleak, and the squalor overwhelming. Andthe plot? Thicker than proverbial ketchup. Yeah, Charles Pallister is no post-modernist. The Quincunx, being his first novel, has its flaws but they aren’t fatal enough to obscure the brilliance that went in to it. , The Quin’dunx is a stunning novel of immense proportions: both its physical size (781 pages) and its scope (the entirety of Victorian English society.) Basic&$ the book’s narrator, John Mellamphy, recounts his attempts to regain his rightful inheritance, It was denied him by a cabal’s legal acrobatics and criminal shenanigans.
8
Quix ass
Though all have claims and manners by which to affect such a possession, only lohn has the true claim. Thus the plans of the others r;‘evolve around John. Some want him killed, and some want him kept safe, but for nonaltruistic reasons. The plot is made complex by two wills and a codicil to the first one. In various combina-
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tions, each of the families finds an advantageous situation. To explain these combinations would require a review about the size of Palliser’s book, so I shan’t
John finds himseif in, Thus, The Quincunx requires an incredible amount of attention: almost an insane amount. The book is peppered by rela-
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in to the physical properties of the book; it is divided into five arts, with each part having five Eooks, and each book having five chapters. Each part is named after one of the families and deals, for the most part, with that specific family. But because of the relations of each family, all the families act in each part. As the-book is a period novel, Palliser is .very careful to spin the tale in Dickensian fashion/ Using such Victorian tricks as addressing the reader while simultaneously apologizing for the intrusion, Palliser well conjures the spirits of James and Dickens. But he does not become possessed by them: the plot itself is grand conspiracy; theory that fits along nicely with anything that Vague magazine has etter printed. And therein lies t’he interest of the book. It is a perfect statement on the human condition where money and power become paramount over everything, including blood relatives. What was true of Victorian society is doubly ue today, but substitute Big Busi ess for the families, and the eart i ‘s precious resources for the estate. The book is also great entertainment: a true page turner. His style is sweeping and beautiful, full of quaint English phrases and bizarre underclass slang. Though perhaps a might too long, with a slightly trite ending, it is a good read. But the book has one serious drawback that requires a giant leap of faith. Though John, as the narrator, almost consciously avoids giving his age, the action in it transpires from his birth to about his eighteenth birthday, with the bulk occurring around his ages of eight to thirteen. Often he advises his mother; and he does possess a keen legal mind. Such actions do not seem likely of a preteen. Perhaps living in such conditions forced him to grow up.fast, and.#erhaps in reality this happened. But I found myself having to willingly suspend my belief. o matter. An intricate and inte ii sting novel like this should be read and re-read.
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A capacity crowd was privileged Jastweek to see~0 hours of inspired dance. Billed “%!udolf Nureyev and Friends,” the performance provided a spectrum of selections, resulting in over two hours of ballet. While anticipation for the talented Tartar was high, the audience sat patiently throught the first piece,a pas de six from ikpoli. which featured the other dancers which are touring with Nureyev. While it was slow and not exactly an inspiring opening - marred with out of synch group work and a hesitancy of emotion - it provided an introduction to these dancers and their talents, not unlike the required figures in skating or gymnastics. More cleverly,it built a restlessness among the spectators;nay, a yearning for the Master. In the second piece,, SongsOf A Wayfarerhe came. In this piece an elderly man must come to terms with the aging process and the new limitations it puts upon him. Nureyev made this piece central to the whole performance. He himself is now fifty-three, old in many professions,but ancient in the grueling discipline of ballet. So convincing was his portrayal of an aging dancer who can barely keep up to the younger rnpn (played brilliantly by CharlesJude) and is at a lossof breath by the end, that half the crowd at intern&ion thought that, indeed, Nyeyev himself was only coasting on past achievements. But that was only the genius at work, for he wasnot the tired old,man at all in the second half of a night which called onto stagesuch diverse pieces as an adaption of Eugene Ionesco’s 75e Lason to 73EeMuur’s Pavane(a variation on the theme of
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Some ofcanadds areintheti The night also revealed that the master has a comp@ent protege in the personage of Charles Jude. His precision and flowing style is, even for this ballet-illiterate hack, emotional. Not to be outdone wasthe tanta&icPrimaBallerina,Isabelh&ia Seabta,a L&in American who we can expect great things from in the future. After the hal curtain call the evening proved its pods: one, that Kitcheher is full of appreciative ballet fans; two/that The Centre In The Square could stand to book more of this type of high culture, for the market is there; and three, just becauseyou get older doesn’t meari you can’t,get better.
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best cOmpW.terminds imy.
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by Paul Done Imprint staff I’m sure that Fear of a Black Planet is not the third Public Enemy album that Chuck D visualized when he and Hank Shocklee created the concept 5 years ago. Like the boxer he so often resembles on the stage; jabbing, feinting, ducking, Chuck has rolled with the punches thrown at him by hostile media, and has used the turmoil and upheaval within and without Public Enemy as fresh fuel for the fire of creation. The great self-contradiction contained within the concept of Public Enemy finally came home to roost when a black Washington Times reporter, David Mills, published the interview with Professor Griff (ex-PE minister of imformation) which was the match to ignite their incendiary politics of exclusion. Excluding whites, the larger group which contains that subset known as “oppressors,” from the struggle for black empowerment is one thing. Excluding blacks women, gays, bourgeois, wannabe’s - just doesn’t fit. The ensuing explosion of antiPE resentment nearly ended the group for good: and, for a time, it seemed the group had disappeaTed. The group dragged itself
from the ashes though, and has begun the process of selfregeneration. Single-mindedness, extremism - they produce literary and artistic statements of immense power and certitude. Public Enemy’s second album, It Takes a Nation of Millions to Hold Us Back, was such a statement. It’s crystalline purity of intent gave it a force which made less committed, more temperate groups sound shallow. Its force and perfection, however, was also its weakness: Nation’s singularity translated into intransigence. You either had to accept it or reject it. Discussion was impossible. In contrast, Fear of a Black Planet, magnificent title aside, is a far more human record: flawed, but more worthwhile for it. There.are still contradictions on this album, but they stem from the conscious process of ideological redefinition, not from dogma which is built upon a basic flaw. The black situation in America defies easy solutions, especially solutions which exclude segments of the black population. Chuck D is moving tentatively toward an inclusionary redefinition of black/black and black/white relations; a difficult but necessary process, The major t-hematic thrust of Fear is contained within three songs spread throughout the LP: “Pollywanacracka,” the title track and “Revolutionary Generation.” The first two discuss interracial relations - “POlly” an examination of blacks’ derision toward other blacks who are involved in interracial relationships. “Fear of a Black Planet” is a condemnation of white fear “I been wonderin’ why/Peoples livin’ in fear/Of my.
shade.” Chuck D attempts to reintegrate women into the PE sphere with “Revolutionary Generat ion” - “There’s been no justice for none of/my sisters.” Clearly, these are issues which contain far more gret area than, say, the anti-drug sentiments of “Night of the Living Bassheads,” or the reductionist antiestablishment sentiments of “Fight the Power.‘+ “Revolutionary Curiously, Generat ion” actually exposes more contradictions than it solves. For elsewhere, on “Burn, Hollywood, Burn,” guest rapper Ice Cube (ex of NWA) expresses a completely different attitude toward women “Ice Cube is down with the PE/now every single bitch wanna see me” . . I say what!?! Not only does the content of the songs address issues which have previously been excluded from the palate of themes, but likewise, Chuck varies the position from which he approaches the problem. Specifically, “Pollywanacracka” shows Chuck ditching his customary stentorian bark - and the authoritarianism it implies. Instead, he delivers the rap in an exaggeratedly funky drawl. For the most part, the rest of the album attacks the usual selection of easy targets: the police in “Anti-Nigger Machine” - “Instead of peace the police/just wanna wreck and flex:” the establishment in the guise of emergency services in “911 is -a Joke;” the system in “Who Stole the Soul” - “Intentional rape system, like we ain’t paid enough in this bitch/that’s why I dissed them,” The two tracks which have attracted the most attention so far have been the first single,‘
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“Welcome to the Teriordome” and the Aids song “Meet the E that Killed Me.” Muchmusic established a new standard for boneheaded censorship in the name of decency when they banned the video for “Terrordome” - based upon owner Moses Znaimer’s reaction to the lines “Crucifixion ain’t no fiction/so-called chosen frozen/apology made to whoever pleases/still they got me like Jesus” and the accusations of gnt i-Semitism which resulted.
fragmentary samples which are used as linking devices are contained within the songs, rather than being glorified with phony song status. One especially successful exDeriment is thelinking of two separate songs, “AntiINigger Machine” and “Burn Hollywood Burn” with a phone conversation. These musical dissimilarity gives in to the cohesivenes created by the call. While It Takes a Nation of Mil“ens to Hold Us Back was a more
Let’s play world domination! Meet the G that Killed Me,” a chgin-reaction account of Aids acquisition, should certainly catch some flak from the usual anti-PE sources for its antihomosexual opening “Man to man/I don’t know if they can/from what I know/the parts don’t fit.” Chuck claims though that “G” stands for girl, not gay. Other rappers have followed Public Enemy into the exploration of thematically cant inuo us LPs, but just as the competition appears in their rear view mirrors, PE once again drops the hammer and pushes the art form ‘way beyond their competition. Fear is a huge album, clocking in at around 65 minutes, with 20 tracks, Unlike the 16-song Nation of Millions, there is no obvious filler on the new LP. The
perfect album than Fear of u Black Planet, it was so onlv because its narrowness of ideoiogy allowed it to be so0 Fear shows Chuck D to be escaping the strictures imposed by an exclusivist attitude toward black power. The reconciliation and inclusion of the previously excluded segments of the black population is a difficult process, but it is absolutely essential for the ideological growth of the group. Public Enemy may never make another album as near-perfect as Nation of Millions, but the kickin’ beats and rapid-fire samples of Fear still produce an immeasurable visceral charge. Combined with a growth in ideological complexity, I’d say that’s a fair enough trade.
RECORD REVIEWS ing joy through their music, revealing the secretsof the forest, sercretsthey have gleaned in the night, as the bansheeshowl and the wolves bay at the white face of the moon Well, All About Eve come acrossa bit like this, if you can forget that Julianne Regan is singing backup for The Mission, The band’s new record Scuriet And Other Stories offers an honegt dose of introspective fun.
by John Zachariah Imprint staff Imagine troubadors wandering manthrough woods, strumming dolins- and cranking hurdy-gurdies. Elves and hobbits caper at their feet as dyads and facries flit about their heads. At each town, they are welcomed, merry wanderers bring.:: :
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Okay, Ill stop hedging: I like the album. Not a lot, but enough to say that it’s provided more than one moment ,of listening enjoyment. The title track is most enjoyable, a brooding story of alienation, and others, like the bluesy “Blind Lemon Sam,” are boss as well.
by Derek Weiler Imprint staff Get ready, get set for some more hype about Manchester’s Stone Roses.This, their self-titled debut LJ?, was first released last summer and actually reviewed back then by yours truly. I’m reviewing it again for two reasons, First, it’s been r-e-released (with a new cut, “Fools Gold”) and in ti leir attempt to push it, the record
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needs V 0 2 u n
Am the Ressurrection” - continue to captivate me, and Ill always have a soft spot in my head (I mean, heart)
for “(Song for My) Sugar-Spun Sister.” Not only that, but the added track, “Fools Gold”, is a damn fine piece o’work, funky as ail git out. “Fools Gold” is currently out as a single,and while at almost ten minutes it’s a bit too much, it still does a lot to enliven the proceedings here. dh, cool cover too.
“it,” that unknown quality which sends this stuff into the stratosphere of good. Oh well, A for effoxt. .
Im
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pretty much indistinguishable from dozens of other British guitar bands. However, I find IGe still been listening to The Stone Rosa an awful lot in the past year or so. The record’s highlights - ‘(I Wanna Be Adored,” “She Bangs the Drums,” “Elephant Stone,” the first half of the overlong “I
17
Scurlet And Other Stories doesn’t have
the most lumbering way, while the image, but the song is still rather versesfloat on a delicatefilm of guitar, Cr good. Other than that, the record is pretty bouyed aloft by Julianne’s rather lovely voice. The video reinforces the forgettable. The songwriting . is alright, rather lame “wandering troubador” - _ the_playing - _ _ is competent, but
The album’s first song, “Road To Your Soul”, is a primo example of the band’s new, self-professed “folkmetal” direction. The chorus rocks in company has been kind enough to send me aflee copy. Second, I’m not certain I gave the album a compl&!y fair shake last summer. If memory serves,I dismissed the album as essentially mediocre, and claimed that the Stone Roses were
Imprint, Friday, May 4, 1990 _*
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books! Those of you who’ve read ne Mists of Avdon by Zimmer-Bradley will delight to Wayne’s skillful interpretation. If D&D isn’t your bag, fear not: there’sa tune called “The Grapes of Wrath”! “The dignity.. . of labour. . . ” a real tear-jerker.
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Their next albums lacked the edge of their first two; only Up on the Sun . unce apon a time, tlhe hIeat Pupcame close to recapturing it. But the pets were a loud thrasn1 .tlana WYU~ turn of the decade came to their resstrong melodic tendencies. “Imposscue and helped them to rediscover ible,” you say, “for that’s contradica their roots. imprint
staff
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tory! Yea, at least the reviewer doth foam at the mouth with verbal d&rhea,“ Nay, I pray infoyou: quick listens to their first two disks bear out thisfixl. Then the Arizona desert that they
call home overcame them and infused within their souls the spirit of the Grateful Dead. the rock& turned mellow! Harmony took over and they underwent a period wherein1 L--cney c-l IUIactually sang (REM wasn’t the tl131 go from mumbling to singing).
MERRY‘WIDOWS
in the way. This a1bumis not metal in any wav-rr thou& reliant on the Dower chord _-._-- iflesh&t their sound, ihey only use g overtop of an already complex song structure. In terms of lyrics,their writ+ ing;is as impenetrable as ever: sort nf Mumem p resents .1 ruppets me * . F&negan’slWakeDut to music. I _. .asm days of old, where the power chord A&ding the &al comment or e was primary to - the -* secondary counaany sense- of self-importance, the try twang whi ch so characterizestheir Meat Puppets have quietly gone work. nmnstem 1n is a work of unabout recording their besteffort since mitigatea *br’U“liance which only turns Meatfippets IL As you read these sour 4In the -* last m song. ht no matter; words, they are touring feverishly. aura1 salpb * lres like “Attacked By And then, knowing them, they’II Monsters” and “Nil “-*‘ght if the Fire peacefully repair to their desert 1.T =*- * m -I Weasel” I simply jump off of the pIat- whilst Monstetx remains criminaIl,v ter and overt rhelmanfling that gets obscure. .
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by Trevor Blair Imprint staff If you’re looking for someone to champion your favourite socialcause, don’t call Wayne Hussey, for Wayne is quite confused. It’s not that you can’t make heaps of money off of being confused, far from it; Wayne and The Mission have sustainedtheir entire careerson the wayward confusion of the late 80s. Their Dungeons and Dragons lyrics set to an ultramodernized goth sound created an aural cartoon-world where peop1e like Waynecould fail off cliffs and survive, or as in their “Tower of Strength”video, shoot Iightning bolts from their hands to defeat evil monsters. How can I as a reviewer hone to be -objectivewith the Mission? &%-the thrill of stupidity has me in its embrace,I can only listen to the wisdom of “Mumbo-Jumbo . . . HocusPocus” Wow! You’d never guessthat these songs are based on uclual
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There were times I laughed, times I cried, but to be perfectly fair to those
of you who’ve already got God’s Own Medicine: these tunes are tired rehash. “Sea Of bve” and “Hungry as the Hunter” had me humming but a packagebookended by the wretched “Amelia” and ‘Lovely:” “I believe irr sunshine, I believe btit__ - __ --_. in friendship, . most of all . . . 1 believe in yoooOOU.” urp. As for the Delivemxe FP, the *‘free boxed set” packagingis flimsy, suspicious, and psychologically damaging - avoid it at all costs. this record is by no means great, it is promising. The weaknessesof this record lay mostly in the performances of Little and Gould, as I said before, most of the songs on this album have been recorded before, and, are a little stale. The biggest problem, though, lies in their style of harmonizing. Gould and Little cave beautiful voi&s but their voices sound exactly the same, and they always sing a third or a fifth apart. As a result, the vocals are very
* 5 b @ 9@ 0
I’ve aImost forgotten about their socia1cause - good thing it’s mentioned on the press release. “AMELJA”! - the ‘ycompassionate” song about child-abuse. Compassionately,Wayne wrestles with a young girl, abusing . . . uh, no Wayne wrestles with the abuse a young girl. . . uh, well maybe “wrestles” isn’t really the word I’m searching for . . . Moving right a1ong.A few months ago I implied that “Butterfly On A Wheel,” sounded like a Cure song; I’m sorry, I was wrong - it’s definitely Echo and The Bunnymen.
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by Rhwrda Riche Imprint staff Suzanne Little and Michele Gould have been, performing together as Lava Hay for more than a couple of yearsnob. They also look exa&y the same, but tit is just an aside. Most of the material on their Nettwerk debut has already been recorded independently. As a result, songs that were innovative and fresh two years ago seem derivative in the age of the
tndigo Girls’and Julia Fordham. Not that Lava Hav are quite as mainstream as I&. Fordha&, i?s just
inevitable that LavaHay will be lost in an avalanche of folksy, female singers.Its too bad, becausealthough
On an up note, the songs themselvesare pretty good, more pop than folk and lyrically strong. Guest appearances from members of the Grapes of Wrath and the Water Walk don’t hurt either. The besttracks,“Fall With You”, “Wild Eyes”, and the _ single “Won’t Matter”, were produced by Steve (Faith No More) Berlin. B&n gives these tracks an edge that nothing else on the album can match. , If Lava Hay were to go into the studio right awaywith a bunch of hastily written tunes, and if they got SteveBerlin to produce it, they might end up with a record with some soul. If they didn’t harmonize so much their &ngs might really soar. If you take a chance and buy this record maybe they1 sell enough copies to make another, better album.
L
CONESTOGA C0LLEG.E SCHOOL OF BUSINESS
is now acepthig applic@ionsto he COMPUTER PROt3&dufME~ANALYST PROGRAM
Conestoga College u For further information phone + 748-5220 ext, 507 .
ARTS
Imprint,
Friday,
4, 1990
19
that tradition of deliciously over the top self-pity. Granted, no-one can ever match “Last Night I Dreamt That Somebody Loved Me,” bl~i give them
they are simply boring and ineffectual.
There are some definitively great POP tunes on this record. “Salvador Dali’s Garden Party:” tongues are firmly in cheek; this reads like an article from Pe@emagazine. “Paradiseisfor the Blessed:” and “not for the sexobsessed,” warns vocalist Daniel Treaty. “Sometimes I Think YOU Know Me Better Than I Know
credit for trying. There’s a real subtlety here, a real
attention to detail, that (along with the POP element) invites comparisons to the Chills. Unfortunately, Treaty’s airy voice can get to be about three times as irritating as Martyn Phillips’. Also, one complaint Ievelled at the Chills and their like is that “all the bloody songs sound the same”, and that’s doubly true here. Oh well, there’s a handful of keepers here. Enjoy ‘em.
Myselfz” great, driving, propulsive, pretty, and with a great Smithslike title to boot. Speaking of Smiths comparisons, there’s -_--- _ also _~_~ a tune called “All Mv Dreams Are Dead” that carries c&
by Derek Weiler Imprint staff
May
‘This is typical Fire Recordsstuff,” saysJohn Hymers as the new Television Personalities LP plays in the backgrbund. I ask him what he means. “Well,” he tells me, “Fire Records is the label the Close Lobster; are on.” I understand him at once; Pn’vilE-geis exactly the kind of
very melodic, very British POP that constituted the Close Lobsters’ Foxheads Stalk ThisLand album, and the Blue Aeroplanes’ j-eindloverp/une (another Fire release). ,0f course, the thing about POP is that if it’s not done very very well, it ain’t no good.
On &bout half of
pn’v&ge, the Television Personalities do it very very well. On the other half,
‘The montaignais
language (innu
Aionun) has no equivalent for the word ‘music.’ To us, music is everywhere; it vibrates through everything” (Kashtin). So Kashtin
prefaced.This philosophy is reflected both in lyric &d style df singing. A rough translation of each song is included on the album jacket; the songs are all in Innu Aionun. . D>lightful south American and
by Stacey Iseman Imprint staff c.
“’
-
.,.,,.. .:.:
.,
,,. l .j I .>.’ ‘.‘7 i. I,
:\
in from the bearestelevator (not that is necessarilf-bad,just inappropriate in the Kashtin context). Powerful vocal expression annihilates any language barriers. Kash tin is a reaching 6eag rending albuh.
1. GRADUATING STUDENTS
Well, C~rty Hurt has walkedthrough the FIELRS OF FIRE and now he’s back with a BANG He hadfume and fortune, but he realized IT AA??
by Derek Weller Ilqwint staff
Sucked dry and left for dead, displaced teen idol Corey Hart has returned, older and wiser for the experience. Not surprisingly, Corey insists that his new LP, Bang, is the one that will earn him artistic credibility. Sorry Corey, better men
than you have tried.. , just ask Shaun Cassidy, Leif Garrett or The Village People. Bung consists mostly of either overblown ballads or weak-kneed funk. Through it all rings Corey’s earnest, melodramatic, oh-so-credible singing voice. “Rain On Me” sounds much like Paula Abdul with Corey’s
I BARTA PL.
F
\ ENOUGH, so now all he wants isALITlIE LOW. And he deservesit, because I CANT HELP FUG IN LOVE with this album. There’s no doubt that Corey has grown up, he doesn ‘t have tu hide behind SUl%LASSES AT NKXiT anymore, he’s not afFaid toshow the world his EURASIAN EYES, This is an album that destroys ail buunduties: Uncle Sam and CUM&WE KIEVcan both groove to it. Well, ajer a greQt album like this. one thing is sure, this BOY IN THE BOX wilt NEKER SURRENDER. 0 my friends: forgive me. I have walked with The Beast, and his name
SPECIAL (Northfield
. w
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of Massachusetts at Amherst invites you to Trinity
College
SUMMER SEMINAR: DATES: June 28,199O - August9,1990 COST: Basic Cost $2,600 * ti
APPLZC4TIoN
PElpToD EXTENDED
A wide range of courses is offeredin English Li-
Englishmma
ERB ST WATERLOO
Eye Examinations
off Weber)
The University
.e
K-W’s Finest Eyewear Boutique
Independent Opticians: John A. Haney, Thomas D’Arcy
,,
WEBER
is Corey.
’
1 -
START YOUR CAREER OFF RIGHT WITH
even as much stupid fun as some of Abdul’s stuff. Corey, when you shoot for the level of PaulaAbdul and miss, you must seriously question your existence. Facedwith such awesome,uncompromising banality, I can only simper meekly. Years of relative hipness desert me in seconds; the facade of taste crumbles into dust. Dazed, I hear The Beast speak my name, beckon me with his scaly finger. I can only follow.
: .‘:
voice substituted for hers, but it’s not
stiairis dominate the calypso instrumentals; bluegrass and folk flavour this mix. And very fittingly. The very gentle, and beautiful songs can only be fauIted for music that very occasionally sounds like it was piped
’
TO MAY 12 *
the following fields: BritishElistory Art lwaory
Shakespeare-in-Repermy
crcati* writing
All mwsesmughtus futuriuisand smallsetninarsfy British Fm.dty
+
-
FIELD TRIPS: To Waswick, Stratford, London, many other places
FOR MORE XiVFORMATION CONTACT: Neal Sltipley, Direclor OXFORD SUiWVER SEMINAR Office Bartlett Hall, Room 378
MC4021 Monday May 7th, 4:30. Election of New Executive & Planning for Events
or call (413)545-1914 *
or (413)5,45-2627
Includes: program and most coursefees,rmrn and partial board at Trinity College, doer.not include trans-AtlanticFare, The Oltksk American
Summer
Progrum in Oxford
Sprigg football
camp
r
Last year th e PIavoffs Th is year: t he / cup! l
Warrior
crew. Paul Meikle brings speed back to the secondary after a year’s absence due to a broken ankle. Another welcome return will be Gord Faucet who missed his freshman year with a knee injury. Quick-footed sophomore Lionel Felix will probably be shifted from cornerback to safety, a move which he should 7 adjust to easily.
Football
by Rich Nichol
Imprint rtaff
The 1989 Rridiron Warriors. led by. the &zardry of CIAO Coach of the Year Dave “Tuffy” Knight, finally put the University of Waterloo back on the map in - Canadian varsity football. After five embarragsing years without a win, they knotched a 4-3 regular season record last season, before falling to the eventual national champions (the Western Mustangs) in the OUAA semi-finals, But the big question now is can Waterloo repeat their Cinderella story of one year ago? With Tuffy on the sidelines once again, football fanatics are keeping a sharp eye on the once taunted Warrior crew, With this in mind, over 50 players began spring camp -on April 20, determined to keep the winning momentum alive. “Attitudes were great and we got a lot accomplished,” said Knight. “We’ve had a chance this past week to look at,recruits who haven’t played at UW before, and I cati honestly say that competition for positions-is the best ever. We definitely have a lot more depth.” Returning players had the chance to shake the rust off their wheels and get back into the workout mode in preparation for the fall. “I was disappointed that we didn’t execute better and some injuries occurred that hurt us a bit,” added Knight. “Buf we made some great progress . We’re ahead of where we were at this point in the last two years.”
The departure of three-time All-Canadian Dave Shaw leaves a gaping hole in the backfield. That, combined with a couple of unfortunate injuries midway through camp, may force Knight to hunt for replacements in the fall. Veteran linebacker Paul Kilby injured his hip, but it is not too serious. Other returning players include Dave Brush, Bob Casey, Benoit Drouin, Jeff Lake, and Scott Wlodarcyzk. The arrival of some promising rookies should increase potential according to recruiting reports, LINEBACKERS:
Watertoo and Tom Here is each unit
needs depth coming out of the backfietd, but starters Orvitte Beckford, Dave RoDret, Chartier should be gecure. photo by Rich Nichdl a quick assessment of Oliver also made an impressive Chartier solidify the h,alfback from spring camp: showing as he enters his junior spots. year. * QUARTERBACK: With the graRECEIVERS: Knight dubs the .duation of veteran pivot Brian RUNNING BACKS: According receivers “green as grass.” The Lenart, the Warrior coaching to Knight, there is not a lot of strength of the unit is a concern, staff is concerned with the youth depth in this unit, but progress is but the determination of such improving regulars as Joe Jeffrey, Jodie Schnarr, and Brian Rayner should change all that. “We’ve had a chance this past week to look- at Coaches may look for a tall rookie to take a possible starting recruits who haven’t p’layed at UW before, and I
can honestly say that comp‘etition for positions is the best ever.” Tuffy Knight of the quarterbacks. “We have a ways to come before we can decide on a starter,” said Knight. Sophomore Dave Sharp looks to be the leading candidate right now, showing great speed on running plays at camp, Andrew
good. The high-octane power of Orville Beckford should keep the fullback position secure+barring injury. Veteran Dave Ropret and 1989 Ray Owens Memorial Award winner (awarded to the UW MVP versus Laurier) Tom
role this fall.
OFFENSIVE LINE: This may become the deepest unit on the team. “Competition for positioss on the offensive line is going to be keen,” said Knight, All five starters from last year [Marshall Bingeman, Ross DePalma, Jeff Smith, Alan Rydman, and Terry Cantwell) will be returning, with several worthy players vying to dethrone. Bingeman, an OUAA all-star in 1989, enters his fifth and final year of eligibility with the Warriors. Cantwell received team Rookie of the Year honours last season. SPECIAL TEAMS: Place kicker Peter Tchir raised the eyebrows of several CFL scouts in 1989, and should repeat his performance in this, his draft year. As of yet, Waterloo has no punter and hopes to fill this position through the incoming freshman class. Last year, Lenart doubled as punter throughout most of the season.
Bhllet-like cornerback Paul Meikle may get the call to fill the shoes of Warrior graduate and first-team AllCanadian Richie Chen, who was drafted by the Calgary Stampeders earlier in the year. Dave Ropret and Marc Loisel are the other qualified candidates.
PUNT
“Only 40 more paces and then we start digging, boys !” Tuffy searches for buried football talent photo by Rich Nichol during spring camp
Overall, this year’s team showed great potential and expectations for the upcoming season.’ The Warrior freshmen begin practicing on August 22, with the veterans to follow suit two days later, Waterloo’s only exhibition game of 1990 will be September 8 against the Concordia Stingers in Montreal. OUAA reguIar season action for UW debuts with a bout against the Guelph Gryphons in the Royal City on September 1~. “We are a better football team than last year, but I don’t know if
The secondary unit is great: fast, solid, and finally deep” Chris Triantafilou
RETURNERS:
SECONDARY: coach
DEFENSIVE LINE: This squad showed great improvement through the course of the 1989 season. Included in that recognition is defensive end Len Willems who had an impressive rookie year. OUAA all-star and two-time Doug Shuh Award winner (outstanding UW lineman) Mike Lane will anchor the line at nose tackle, along with the always colourfu1 Mark Yarmel. Four other returning players will challenge for a position on the D-line.
Chris
Secondary unit
Triantafilou
refers
to his squad as “great, solid, and Steve finally deep.” Veteran Futyer anchors the toughened
we will win more games,” said Knight. He will have a more accurate assessment after he sees how many rookies
show up
at UW this August. with a strong recruiting process behind them now, the Warrior coaches remain that their miracle optimistic work will pay off once again. Who knows? Last year’s goal was the playoffs. This year it bvill probably be the Vanier Cup.
SP0Kcs
.
Imprint, Fridayr May 4, 1990
UW to host national recreation conference Courtesy of the CIRA
The Canadian Intramural Recreation Association’s Twelfth National Conference is being held at the University of Waterloo’s Conference Centre from May 13 to 16, this year. It is anticipated that over 350 delegates from all educational levels across Canada and the United States will be at Waterloo to participate in an outstanding professional and social program over the three days. The conference organizers are very excited to have three excellent keynote speakers for the conference. On Sunday evening, May 13, Jerry Ewen will involve the delegates in his presentation on “The Healing Power of Laughter and Play.” On Monday morning, Dan Clark will “Motivate”
the delegates at UW’s Federation Hall. Again at Fed Hall on Tuesday morning, the conference is honoured to have Rick Hansen, Canada’s Man in Motion, convincing the audience of the need to integrate our recreational programs and services in schools.” Throughout the conference, there will be workshops on student leadership, legal liability and risk management, computerization of leisure services, what’s new in facilities, and developing personal and professional power, As well, there are over 30 individual presentations for all educational levels covering a wide range of topics: club programs and problems, lifelong games, student presentations, and panel discussions. Of course, what would a conference be without a few social experiences? The organizers
21
St. Paul’s United College College Dim, St. Paul’s College
have planned a full range of special events to make the conference playful and to have the delegates “Get Connected,” in keeping with the annual theme of CIRA. There will be a New Orleans New Year’s Eve Casino Party on Mother’s Day, a Mystery Country Pub Tour, and an Awards Night and Disco. A special feature on Wednesday morning will be a carousel of ideas in which numerous individuals will have the opportunity to discuss their ideas with one another. This will be followed by a unique series of student presentations from elementary’ secondary, and post-secondary institutions, If anyone is interested in more information on registration’ program, accommodation, ticket prices, etc,, please contact Peter Hopkins, Conference Co-Chair at (5193885~1211, Ext. 3532.
Female graduate student with experience and interest in residential life will be interested in this position. Contact Dr. Pauline Greenhill at St. Paul’s College, GW, 885-1460 for an application form. Final date: May 15/90.
STUDENT CARD - NIGHT 1.S THURSDAYS
w
KENSED
BY THE LL.B.0.
- KING CENTRE 255 KING ST. W., KITCHENER. 576-7750
HUDDLE1 The Warrior6 gather for spring camp to prepare for the summer’s training regimen. photo by Rich Nlchd
BEACH SALE MAY 3rd - 15th
Read -Over 1,000 words per minute
BODYGLOVE
’
VUARNET O.P.
OFFSHORE CATCH IT Improve Comprehension b+ 10 to 15%
100%
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Improve Concentration and Retention Requires 30 Minutes of Homework per Day
Six week course begins Wednesday May 23rd from 7-9 pm:MC4063. Fee including course materials is $90 (Feds), $95 (NonFeds). Contact the Fed Office, CC235, Ext.4042.
SHORTS T-SHIRTS NEW
SWIMWEAR
EXCITING COLOURS DESIGNS
&
BIKES & TENNiS ALL 160 UNIVERSITY AVE. W. WATERLOO SAT 9-6 MON - FRI 9-9 Beside McGinnis Landing 886-0711
z
. I
22
Imprint,
Friday, May 4, 1990
’ SPORTS
’
Campus Retreat.ion
Play whatever moves you, May 1990
Put SomePlay in Your Life! Welcome back to Campus! It’s that time of year again, time to hit the books and time to play for the fun of it by getting involved with campus recreation. The spring 1990 term is packed full of activities for everyone. Pick up a Campus Recreation brochure, it contain8 all of the information you need to know. You could join a club, T,ake a fitness class, or just get a group of friends together and play a pick up sport, Learn new sport8 to play by enrolling in one of our instructional programs such as squash, tennis, or golf. Perhaps improve your swimming strokes for those hot, sunny weekend8 by the water. If YQU enjoy team sports, we offer both men’s and women’s competitive and recreational leagues. Many of these. groups are o en to both sexes. The entry dead Pine for team sport 8 is Tueaday, May 8 at I:00 pm in PAC -. 2030. Campus recreetion also gives eople ti great opportunity to rl ecome involved as student leaders and affers a wide variety of job opportunities. Each term, student assistant8 are hired to help with the administraticm of the Campus Recreation program. Whether you would like to earn some extra money or just gain leadership experiencer come and see u8. Fill out an application and put your special -skills to work, Instructors, pool staff,
h
Sunday
Tuesday
Monday
club executives and conveners are just a few of the positions available. Registration will be held next week in gym 3 so don’t miss it!
ay)
Ritnesa registration is Monday, May 7, from ,430 - 8:30 pm. Racquet sport and social dance registration are from 7:30 - 9:oO pm that 8ame evening. Sign-up for
Cycle & Sports Lid. WE CARRYz Marinoni, Concord, Nishiki, Norca, Raleiuh. - -w- -r Peugeot, Miata -
REPAIRS AND SERVICE FOR ALL MAKES AND MODELS
2290 KING ST. E., KITCHENER 893-2963 Mon. - Wed.: 9-6; Thu. 8; Fri.: 9-8; Sat.: 9-5
ENTER ZIGGY’S K-W CLASS’IC BICYCLE,ROAD RACE
1 I
I
all other special interest program8 is Tuesday, May 8, from 4:3,0 - 8:OO pm. Late registration will be held in the blue activity areg from 12~0 - 1:30 on Wed-
Featwin& Good Wine Koslger ‘Wine Fun Times Stimulating ConversaGm When: TuesdayMay 15th Where: Psych Lounge, Pas 3005 8~00 p;m. + Time:
DATE: Sun.; May 6/90 LOCATION: Hidden Valley Road EVENTS START FROM 8 a,m. TO 1 I:20 a.m. l
Registration Open& 90 minutes -Before Event Call Ziggy’s at . 893:2963 for details &&‘& *
9..* .
.
nesday, May 3 and IO. So please take 8ome time put of your bus schedules and get involved il y playing whatever moves you,
Waterloo Jewish’ w Students Association 1 Presents * Our Famous Annuals Wine and CheeseParty
Trillium Ontario Cup Series
L
1 Saturday 1
j 27
/
ALL,
1 kidsry
6
P
HOURS:
T whesday 1 Thundw
$2.00 members
$lrlO/nronth - Summer 1990.1 Bedroom left, semi-furnished, laundry, new carpet, recently painted, parking. 397 Hazel 7465141.
One r00m available in spacious townhouse. May to August. Pool, washer, dryer, microwave, BBQ. Univtiity and .Westmount,close toamenities, 5 min. walk to campus. Rent negotiable. 725-0559. Plan ahead1 For two women. Two bedrooms, small study, eat-in kitchen, bath, sundeck, laundry and lounge with colour TV. Limited parking. $295 per person includes utilities and cable. Available August 1st. 745-8770 or 005-2900. Nen;tyj;fumb@d bedlsitting room in five women house. Two baths, 2 kitchens, laundry and cobur cable TV. $275. Includes utilitiesand cable. Velas Residences for Wm. 885-2908 or 745-8770. Blwrrpht St. Townhouse for rent in September. Finished basement, free parking for 3, air-conditioned, yearly lease. Call 742-9792 evenings. May - Aqpt 1990. Room for sublet, Hazel St. Furnished, including bed, desk, Parking. Share sink, cupboards, washroom and kiichen.Private, quiet. Negotiable. Call Debbie collect. 613-7279469.
\
IN@ W-0 Rcimunate Iseeks room, June lst, yearround, preferably with psych students. Close to bus route, shopping, laundry. Apt. building ideal. Can pay about‘ $225/ month. Am 44 years old, male. 743-3227 please leave message.
/
PRRSDRALS
1990/9X OSAP Applications -The delivery of the 1990/91 OSAP applications has been delayed until the end of April. Students are asked to complete a “Request for OSAP Application” form in the Student Awards Office. The applications will be mailed as smn as they are available. Please submit your application no later than June 15, 1990.
For sille: 1989 Gardin Tri-Cross Hybrid Bike. Columbus chromoly frame plus forksMavicMA4Orims.ShirnanoEXAGE group set. Custom paint job. Many other accessories. Must be seen !! Less than 300 km $575 or best offer. Call Shawn at 5786153 or 1-941-3445.
The Titi Art Therapy Institute and the Institute for Arts and Human Development at the WesleyCollege Graduate School in Cambridge Mass., have completed arrangements for a co-operative program of studies leading to a masters degree in the expressive arts therapies, Students and graduates of the Toronto Art Therapy Institute 2 year diploma program, are eligible to apply to the Lesley Coltege Masters degree program in the Expressive Art Therapies where their graduate - level training at the Toronto Art Therapy Institute will be given credit as part of the Lesley Masters program. To compleb their Masters degree, sludmts spmd ho summers at Lasley College for 2 fiw week periods. If you would like to tive further information about this joint effert, piease contact our office and a staff person will be pleased to talk to you. 216 St. Clair West Avenue, Tel: 924-6221
Futrms: Double with bolsteras headboard, a firm sleep. $75 or B.O. Single deluxe softer sleep, rarely used $75.8& in good condition. We will deliver in K-W. Call 7465283.
‘MCARAGUAN Work/Study Tour. Volunteers need@ for this year’sCanadian Light ‘brigade. July 14 - Aug@ 18. Call 746‘2653. - b
ONGOlNiS
DC&& Futon & Frame for sale. Foam co< with only 1 year’s use! Mint condition! $275 or best offer. Call 746-0105. Moving sale, excellent prices! Six piece bedroom suite; wooden dinette tabie, matching chairs; two accent chairs; beds*& lamp; coffee table; bookshelf; ironing board; couch (excellent shape). Qrolynne, ext. 2488.578-6774.
Waterloo Pat&s Workshop Spring Sale. Friday, May 11,199O. 6100pm - 9:00 pm. Saturday, May 12,1990, IO:00 am - 4100 pm.‘Hilliird Hall. First United Church. Corner of King and ‘William Streets, Waterloo,
smvIcms
Sexuali Resource Centre is looking for ‘volunteersto @bvide information to others. Forjnformation visif Campus Centre Room 206: *
Translation Setvices. (English - French) Gail Chantal 884-1970 ext.2398 or 8851211 ext. 2249. GARY’S MOVING - man with small cuG van and appliance cart available weeknights, weekends. $30/hr. in KitchenarWaterloo; out-of-town extra - Gary 746-7160.
HUP WANnD .I ,<
COUQ~&Don ,poSition,St.- Paul’s College. Fernale’graduate student with expedience and interestin residen#&iife will be in&rested in this positjon~f&e year c~!-@ati with 2nd @ar”?ene&~-Contict Dr. -Pauline Greenhitl at St. Paul’s College, UW, 885 1460 for an applicatlan form. Final date fur applications: May 15, 1990.
I BV8RY TRURSDAY
Jazz Choir - The UW Jazz Choir meets every Tuesday at 1O:OOpm in Siegfried Hall, New membersare always welcome. For more information contact mvid Fisher at 884-6565. See you there.
iGLOW (Gays and Lesbians of W terloo) operates a coffee house every VA d nesday in room 1 IO of the Campus Centre at
BagelslThe Waterloo Jewish Students Association/Hillel presents a weekly Bagel Brunch every Thursday from 11:30 am to 1:3O pm in the Campus Centre. Check with Turnkey for the room number.
3457 or 578-3456.
.
byme&~ Evangelical Fellowship bible study. CC 110 at 7:30 pm. All are welcome. For more information, call 8845712. FASSWriter’s M&in@8 - Come be a part of the crew who w@ that crazy yearly show, Everyone welcome (we mean it!} / 7:30 MC 5158.
Deadline: St00 pm, Monday, prior to publication.
Fw&, ~CBMI word processing by University c Grad (English). Grammar, spelling, corrections available. Laser printer. Suzanne, 886-3857. IXPERENCED ‘IYFIST will type anylhing. Reasonable rates. Fast e#Ment service. Westmount-Erb area. Call m-7153. IMPROVE YOUR GRADE! Top quality typing, grammar and spelling errors corrected, sentence structure smoothed. Westmount at University. 885-5952. WORD PROCESSING. Fast, accurate, dependable. Letter quality. Competitive rates. Same day Service often available. Call Betty, 886-6361. 3Syearsexperience; .95 d.s.p. typewritten; $1.25 d.s.p. Word Processor. Erb and Westmount area. Call 743-3342. RIDK W-0
faculties: 3:30 pm - 5:OO pm. Wednesday, May 16, 1990. Humanities Theatre. /’ In these sessions attendants will be registered to participate in 199W91 Graduating Students intervievjs -Receive their Graduating Students Interview registration kits - Havethe graduating interview process explained and be shown how to complete an ACCIS form.For more infor/ mation call ext. 2896. Cmtre for Motorcycle Safety at l-lumber College in Etobicoke are holding classes during the week and on weekends throughout the Spring, Summer and Fall. Students learn to ride on brand-new Yamaha motorcycles and those who successfully complete the 17 hour course and pass the final test will receive their “M” class permanent motorcycle license. Call (4 16) 675-5005. Exhibition provides 9 Hidden Tnasurcs insight into the variety and breadth of The Seagram Museum’s collections and celebrates the history, art and technot- ! ogy of the wine and spirit industry. Exhibit ’ will run through to September 9, 1990 at The Seagram Museum. Admission is free.
a S&al Justice Action Group meets regularly throughout the term to coordinate educational events and civil disobedience I - actions:. I ranging: -lfrom speakers and leafletting to blockades. .l%+tactions have included the Dis ARMX ,cqmpaign, NATO out of Nitassinan ANiWNClM8NTS ~’ ., acti$ns and on-going solidarity with the i, . . .. lnnu, Christmas Anti-War Toys action, and a continual focus on non-violent Dr. David Suzuki, winner. of the 1990 resistance to militarism. For details call Auditions: Creative Arts Board and Wiigahd Awad. for Canadian Ex- ’ Upstage Productions are holding &4-3465. cellence, will be a giving a brief public auditions for Patricia Joudry’s “A very address at 3:OO pm. University of HOUSING: Homeshare - Waterloo Modest Orgy’T May 7 - 8 at 6:30 pm. Waterloo Humanities Theatre. AdmisRegion offers a safe, fully screened Theatre of the Arts. Call 746-7682 for sion free but tickets required. Call i% introduction service to people interested details. &ntre for Society, Technology and in shared accommodation. Homeshare Values at 885-1211. ext. 6215. 0rientition Sessionsfor 1990/91 is a program sponsored by the Social Planning Council, Region of Waterloo, Graduating Co-op Studeilts who will be Doon Heritage Crossroads Collection of and the Ministry of Housing, call 578off campus in the fall. Applied Health Historic Quilts will be available for view9894. Sciences, Arts, Engineering, Environina from now until July 2 at the Wellintim mental Studies and Mathematics C&y Museum and Archives .Coi& tion is of both pieced and appliqued work dating from 1850 - 1950. Mennonite Writers Conference comes to Conrad Grebel College UW. May 10 - _ 12. Contact Kim Jernigan, 885-1211 ext, 2329.
Womyn’s Grwtp - meets in CC 135 (usuaily) at 8:30pm. Come out and enjoy SATURDAY, MAY 12 movie nights, educational evenings, dances, road trips and casual discussions. For weekly events call 884GLOW or listen to 94.5 FM, Thursdays ~~~ ~ighb h Latin h&a: K-W from 6-S pm. Latin American Support Group presents the Guatemalan theatre group satire - ‘lklienation” The Stud-t Ch&&ian~ Movement “Caminante’s” the influence eof the mass meets to discuss issues of injustice. The depicting media in the lives of Central Americans. SCM is an ecumenical group that challenges people to live out their faith in Also Latin American folk singers. Help our efforts to stop human rights action. For more information call 725fir violations. St. John’s Lutheran Church. u-4IL3. 22 Willow St., Waterloo 7:30 pm. $3.06 Join the Warriors Band! Practice every admission’ Thurs. at 5:30 in the PAC, room 2012 (Blue North). New and old members SUNDAY, MAY iS welcome. We can provide instruments.
Feminist -ion
Group. Meets every Wedhesday from 7:00 to 9:00 pm at ic fobal Community Centre. Tepic and 1group vary weekly so that all women are welcome anytime. For more info. csli ext.
Payable in advance!
-ton - IMr. Regular rides wanted. ,Happy to shgre costs and .driving.@II Tqm Slee. ext. 4099, or (4 16) 5256379.
,.A
“Come and be a part of the Caribbean Students Association (GSA) every Tuesday at 5130 pm in CC135. A number of interesting events are scheduled for this term. See you there!”
for each extra word.
4 - 4 dmver legal & letterfiling cabinets.7 2 drawer. 4 off ice desks. $30 to $130 each. oflice swivel chairs stend & highback. Typing desk & much more $20 to $65 each. Call 664-3334.
CALEN’DAR’
Howe of Debates meets in Physics 313 at 500 pm. New members will be welcomed ecstatically. Come out and argue with us!
25”
03 1966 Suzuki Forsa - Excellent condition -Custom paint - Low mileage - $7$00 or best offer. 746-23 10.
Tqti Wan@: ‘Sot, 280, social statistics. Spring term. 746-3419. -’
NcwGrildadon’tforge~thealumni Referral Service in ymr search for your first job. Application forms may b&picked up in Needles Hall. Rm 1001. ,/ . , . ‘, .
Rate: 20 words for %Y 10" for each extra word. Non-students: 20 words for $400,
RVRRY CRmDAY Chhntst Christian feflowship meetings cwerv fridav I at 7:OO pm at WLU ----,
Seminary Bldg. Rm 201. ‘Contact Mike Liu at 747-4065 for rides. ~0 YOUthinL you have a drinking problem? Perhaps Alcoholics Anonymous can help. W&kly meetings open to the public held in the Health & Salty Building’ - Meeting Room (ask receptionist) on Fridays at 12:30 pm or call 742-6183.
Mother’s Day - Season’s Opening. Bring mother and grandmother to a special 1914 mmemoration of Mother’s Day. Walk down memory lane in our turn of the Heritage village. Doon century Crossroads. 1O:OOam to 4:30 Pm. 1914 admission prices. 5 cxnts per ~I’s&.~ IIVIRY
IUWDAY
t;lymcn’s Evangelical Fellowship evening service. 7:oO pm at 163 Uiversity Ave+ W. (MSA) Apt. 321. All are welcome. For more information calI 884-57 12.
NOTICE OFSUMMER Beginning Monday, April 30, 1990 the Book store and Gift Shop will be open from 8~30 am. - 4~30 pm. Monday to Friday.On September 4, both stores will return to a 9:OOam. - 5100 pm. schedule. From Tuesday, May 1% to Friday, July 27, WVillage 1 Tuck Shop will open from 4~00 pm to 8:00-pm. Monday to Friday. For May and June, the Varsity Sports Shop will open from 11~30am - 200 pm. Monday to Friday.
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PC FACTORY K-Wâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s 2nd most respected name in computer hardware, 170 University Ave. W., (University Shops Plaza II) Waterloo Fax: 747-0932 Tel: 746-4565
OPERATING HOURS: 10 am - 6 pm Mon -Wed 10 am - 8 pm Thurs & Fri; 10 am - 4 pm Sat. *These special prices &weavailable only to students, faculty, and staff of U W of WLU. ID must be w&able.