1990-91_v13,n23_Imprint

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Faculty Faculty Faculty Faculty Faculty

of Arts . Facult of Human Kinet of Mathemati of Arts l Facul of Human Kinetics & Leisure-Studies * Independent Studies

l Faculty

of Ads

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uman Kinetics & Leis atics l Faculty of Scie. l Faculty of Arts l athematics l Faculty Faculty of Engineering l

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CARRWR PlLulWlwQ JOD SHARCH WORKSWPS

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Environmental Cseers Thurs., Mar. 7, 1:30 to 230, NH1020, . VOLUWTIIRS

WIRTRR

1991

Are needed to assist two btind students with library searches, reading and essay %-UP sheets and workshop PrePara- writing. If anyone would like to volunteer tion bndout~ available in Career Ser- to help these students, please contact v’ices, NH 100%the weekprior to Rosemary Ambrose, Services for Perworkshop. Classes held in NH1020. sons with Disabilities, NH 2051, X2229. planning for a Career - 1 hour - the foundation upon which all job search activities are based. Thurs., Jan. 24 11:30 to 12:30 ; Wed., Mar. 6 - 6100 to TOO p.m.

s uxm#le Home is looking for evening and weekend receptionists. Week days between 4:30 p.m. and 7130 p.m. and on weekends between 8:30 a.m. and 7:OO p.m. These positions will give people a chance to both work with seniors and Job Sear& - 1 hour - a look at creative meet the public. If interested contact and traditional methods Of finding jobs. Chris Cameron, 893-8482, ext, 303. Tues., Feb. 12 - lo:30 to 11:30 ; Mon., Mar. 18 -1 I:30 to 12:30 p.m. Summer Jobs - 1 hour - learn how to discover the array of summer jobs available. Tues., Jan. 29 - 1 I:30 to i2:30 ; Mon., Mar. 4 - 3:30 to 4:30 p.m. , . Owrseas Jobs - 1 hour - discover ways and means of finding jobs overseas. Tues., Jan. 15 - 12:30 to 1:30 ; Thurs., Feb. 7 -2:30 to 3:30 p.m.

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SCHOLARSHIP

NOTICNS A licatim deadline is January 1spp g1 1 unless ot~~~~~~tated:

31,

FACULTYOF ENGNERING J.P. Bickell Foundation Bursary - avail-

Employ-_1hour- howto abletoallChemi@Eng.

Biology Club Bursary - available to all Biology. J.P. Bickell Foundation Bursar& - available to upper year Earth Science. Ontario Rubber Group/Rubw Chemistry Division Award - available to all 36 Science students who have demonstrated interest in the rubber industry and related fields. -~CULTY~FAPPLIED HEALTH SCIENCES Mark Forster - deadline Jan. 12 - available to 3A and 3rd year Regular Kin. Michael Gellner Memorial Scholarship available to all 3rd year Regular Health Studies & Kinsiology, Andrea Fraser Memorial Scholarship available to 3rd or 4th year Kinesiology. Ron May Memorial Award - available to 3rd or 4th year Recreation. R.A.W.C.O. Award - available to 2nd year Regular Recreation students - Special Application. FACULTY OF ENVIRO NMENTALsTuDIEs Marcel Pequegnat Scholarship - avaifable to 3rd year Environment and Resource Studies and Planning students - Special Application. GENERAL AWARDS L BwRsARIES Canadian Federation of University Women - KW Chapter Bursaries deadline Jan.. 31 - available to fult-time upper year fernate students. Don Hayes Award - deadline +anuary If - available to all based on etiracurricular activities - Speciai Aplication. Masonic Foundation of Ontario Bursaries - deadline Jan. 3 1 - available to alt final year undergraduates, appointment with the Awards Off i&r is required - Special Application. Mike Moser Award - deadline January 11 - available to al I 3rd or 4th year based on

Engineering ocate information about employeFs to Canadian Hospital prepare for job selection and interviews. Society’s Combined National and Ontario Scholarship - availableto with Mon., Feb. 4 - 3:30 to 4:30 p.m. an interest in the health care field. Canadian Society for Civil Engineering mm~&ti hterview8INetworking Award -available to Civil & Mech. student 1 hour - enhance your proficiency. rhurs. Jan. 24 -12:30 to 1:30 ; Wed., who show an interest in Building Science, please contact Dr. Eric Mar. 6 - 7100 to 8:00 p.m. Burnett. Resee Writing- 1 hour-techniques for Keith Car Memorial Award - available to writing an effective chronological, mod- 3rd or 4tb year Chemicat Eng* ified resume. Mon., Jan. 14 - 11130. to Chevron Canada Ltd+ Scholarship March 28 - available to 3B Win- fl a mqm 12:30 ; Wed., Jan. 30 - 3:30 to 4:30 ; deadline _ rues., Mar. 5 -1 I:30 to 1,2:30 ; Thurs.; ter term. John Deere Ltd. Scholarship - deadline Mar. 14 - 12:30 to 1:30 p.m. RVRRY YotlDAY March 28 - available to 3’6 Mechanical Letter Writing - 1 hour - letters can bean Eng. E. Deleuw Transportation mportant key to getting your job. Man,, Charles Jan. 14 -12:30 to 1:30 ; Wed., Jan. 30 - Scholarship - deadline Feb. 28 - available to 48 Civil Eng. - Special of Debates, at 5:30 p.m. New mem4;30 to 5:30 ; Tues., Mar. 5 - 12:30 to I:30 Application. Thurs., Mar. 14 - 1,130to 2130. Dow Chemical Canada Schotirship tnterview SW I- 1 hour-tips on how to available to 38 Chemical Eng. e Monday nights - call 884~GLOW. prepare effectively for job interviews. Gandalf Data Limited Award - deadline rather than regular meetings on Wed., Jan. 16 - 12:30 to I:30 ; Tues., Feb. Feb. 28 - available to 18 and above, Elect., Sys. De., or Comp. Eng. days,drop bytheGLOWoffice Mon5 - 3:3O to 4:30 ; Wed., Mar. 13 - 6100 to Murata-Erie North America Inc. Award rom 7- 10 to browse the library, talk to 7:00 p.m. deadline March 28 - avai table to 3B.Elecr-womyn, or just hang out. trical & Computer Eng. [nterview Ski&~ II - 1 hour - “hands-on” session where you can practice answer- Ontario Rubber Grouo/Rubber Chemisng questions usually asked in intenriews. try Div. Award - deadline Jan. 31 Wed., Jan. 16 - 1:30 to 2130 ; Tues., Feb. availate to alt 3B Eng. students who have 5 - 4:30 to 4:30 ; Wed., Mar. 13 - 7:OOIo demonstrated an interest in the rubber industry and related fields. 3:oo p.m. ‘P.0.E.T.S. Pub 8130 - 1:oO a.m., CPH Ready Mixed Concrete Assoc. of Ontario 1337. Musicians bring your instruments. h&view Skills III - 2 hours - practice Award - deadline March 28 - available to Everyone is welcome - licensed. selling your skills. Wed., Jan. 16 - IO:30 38 Civil Eng. :o 12:30 ; Mon., Mar. 11 - 12:30 to Alan W. Shattuck Memorial Burs@y Women’s Centre holds meetings at 7 p.m. available to 4th yr. Civil Eng. 2:30 p.m. in room 217 at the Women’s Centre. All Shell Canada -Ltd. Award - deadline are wetcome! Qsdg Yourself in the Job Interview - March 1 - available to 3rd or 4th year. 2 l/2 hours - expressing yourself more Jack W iseman Award - available td 3rd or juccessfully. Wed., Feb. 6 - 6:30 to 9:00 4th yr. Civil Eng. students whose work WVmRY WRDRISDAY 3.m. in NH3001 ; Tues., Mar. 12 - 3:30 to term report has been graded as outstanding and must focus on Con200 p.m. struction o? Project Management. MS. Yolles & Partners Ltd. Scholarship - l GLLOW (Gay and Lesbian Liberation of Wonren: Recognizing & Overcoming 3arriers to Success in the Workplace - 1 deadtine March 28 - available to 38 R,, Waterloo) holds coffeehouses from 9-11 Civil Eng. in’ room 104 of the Modern l/2 hours - analyzing organizational Languages ’ Building. Ttie GLLOW climate, etc. Thurs., Jan. 31 - 12:30 to Suncor Bursaries - available to all Chemical or Mechanical Eng. Special phoneline is staffed weekdays 7-10 p.m., 2:OO p.m. Application. providing information and peer counsell1 ing. Message at other times; call 884Preparing for the Job Search - SaturFACULm OF GLOW. lays Jan. 19 and Mar. 9. - “hands-on” ARTS _ nrorkshop for graduating students. lo:30 Grout. Meets everv o 12:30 - determining.your interests and Arts Student Union Award - deadline r Ihnhist D&u&on strengths, and defining important Feb. 28 - available to undergraduate m Wednesday irom 7:oO td 9:oO pm.-& students who are actively involved in Global Community Centre in Waterloo, aspects of the job. 12:30 to I:00 - bring University Student Affairs with a. Topic and group vary weekly so that all /our lunch. I:00 to 2:45 - researching minimum 0LeralI average of 70% women are welcome anytime. For more x=cupations in the Career Resource information ext. 3457 or 578-3456. Zentre. 3:00 to 500 -selling your James C. McKegney Memorial Award deadline Feb. 28 available to upper year qualifications in a resume and Arts with outstanding performance andi Lpgram’e Evangelirl Fellowship Bible nterview. or extra-curricular activities in the HisStudy. DC1304 at 7:30 pm. All are panic Area one in Peninsular Spanish Graduating Students Studies and one in Spanish Amerim Interviews 1991 - J&. 7 to Feb. 8. Graduate II is Studies. FASS Writm Meetings - come be a part of available on Friday, January 4. Late Pos. FACUETY OF the c&v who write that crazy yearly show. ings begin on a weekly basis starting MATHEMATICS . Everyone welcome (we mean it). 7:30 p.m, January 14. Electrohume 75 Anniversary Mc51!523. --_. __mp$ahip deadline March 28 avail Shuknt Career AScience. mice hours begin week of Jan. 7 ; for able to 3Btimpuer Quantum Information R;esou+ces ltd. nformafion on times and locations, Awards - available to 2A Cumpu&r nquire in NH1001 or phone 888-4047. Science - Special Application. Shell Canada Limited Award - available Summer Job Fair to 3rd or 4th year. rues., Jan. 22, IO:00 to 3:00 p.m., Cam)us Centre, Great Halt. FACULX’Y OF SCIENCE

I!

extra-curricular activities - Sp&ial Application. Queen Elizabeth Silver Jubilee Awards value $5,000 for one year of undergraduate study in a student’s second officiaf language (English or French). Candidates must be Canadian citizens or landed immigrants who have sucessfully completed 2 years of a University program and one year of University studies in their second official language. Interested candidtaes should arrange to see the Awards Officer. Special Application. Tom York - essay approximately 2,500 words, interested candidates should submit essay to St. Paul’s United College.

l%ursd&,

Saturday Hours! - take advantage of special Saturday hours to research employers, occupations, educational opportunities, work/study abroad and more. Jan. 19 - 11:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. ; Jan. 26 - IO:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. ; March 9 - 11:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Tours - TOWS! -find out what we have to offer . . . information concerning occupations, education, employers,

Cantp Mess Kit - environmentally frien&dly alternative to disposable dishes and cutlery. lt will hold an entire meal and comes complete with quality stainless steel utensils. This is an effort by Food Services and WPIRG. Kits will be available through all Food Services outlets. Any customer using Campus mess Kit and Lug-a-M~ug will be entitled to a free refill of a regular beverage at all Food Services cash Operations. 0ffer will expire M.afch 30, 1991. Student Career Advisors for Winter term. You can benefit by receiving training in all areas of career counselling. Volunteers are needed 3-5 hours/week. Ap-plications available in Needles Hall. If your Club or student society wishes to book the Campus Centre Great Hall, please call the Turnkey Desk. We are always open to your suggestions, critiques and comments.

LRatn how to use the Library’s online catalogue. 50 minute session. Meetatthe Information Desk at the Dana Porter Library,

Davis Centre Library - I:30 p.m. tnformation Session for Graduate Students. Meet at the Information Desk.

Extended Hours - we are open from 8:30 a.m. to 7:00 p.m. every Thursday. Our resources include information on various occupations, employers, educational opportunities, work/study abroad, and more.

Tutors Wanted each term to assist with Conversational and Written English. Contact Sheryt Kennedy, international Student Office, NH 2080.

YDURS A s8ssIows

W--m,Ml@ Learn how to use Computerized Indexes & Astracts. CD-ROM. 2:30 p.m. Meet at the Information Desk at the Dana Porter Library.

RRSOURCI CINTRI

K-WNewmis a new womens social group to meet other new comers. Call 7471658 - first Wed. of month at rink in p8rk.

LIBRARY IIIfDRMATlDU

Information Session for Graduate Sttidents. 1:30 p&m. Meet al the Information Desk at Dana Porter Library.

Information about other awards and bursaries is available from the Student Awards Office, 2nd Floor, Needles Hall. ’ CARRIR

work/study abroad and summer and part-time jobs. Jan. 14 - 2:30 ; Jan. 15 lo:30 ; Jan. 16 - 2:30 ; Jan. 17 - 2:30 ; Jan. 18 -10330.

J-17

Dana Porter Library - 1:30 p.m. Learn how to use Computerized Indexes & Abstracts. CD-ROM. Meet at the Information Desk. fr#rllrrlrmrvyl8 cae Centre Library: 12:30 p.m. Research Workshop in how to use Chemical Abstracts. Meet at the lnformation Desk.

olaying games. Check in the Clubs Room iCk215) for further details.

with Turnkeys for the room number.

formation call Gennie at 576 ave at 884-l 177.

RVRRY f RIDAY

Do you think you have a drinking problem? Perhaps Alcoholics Anonymous can help. Weekly meetings open to the public held in the Heatlth& Safety Building Meeting Room (ask receptionist) on Fridays at 12:30 pn~ or call 742-6183. Chine Christian Fellowship meetings every Friday at 7:00 pm. at WLU sem inary building, room 201. Contact Mike Liu at 747-4065 for rides.

CResmuce Centre Extended Hours 8~30 a.m.- to 7:OO p.m. Our resources include information on various occupations, employers, educational opportunities, work/study abroad, and more. JilaCb&-comeoutandjointhefunfrom 2:45 - 3:45 at Siegfried Hall (near St. Jeromes College). No auditions. for more info call Chety, 746-5236.

WribQfs’ Workshop: 2-4 p.m. in Psych. Lounge (PAS Buitding). Poetry, short stories, scripts, novels, etc. Bring pencits, copies, and an open, critical mind. Lbow for a friendly environment to have both intellectual discussions and fun? Join our weekly study sessions at 7130 p.m., Campus Centre rmrn 110. Association for Baha’i Studies. All welcome! EVRRY SUNDAY

Womyn’s Group - this terni rather thati : . + Thursday meetings we will have t&n&y 1: ws EveM Fellmhip evening .night drop-in in the GLOW office. See TMC& 7:QOpm. at 163 University Ave. W. (WA), apt 32 I: Atl are w&v. For more ’ “Mdndays’~ for. dqtaik. -. information, call 884-5712. - - * WATSFIC - the Waterloo Science Fiction Club, is holding meetings at 6:30. Come out and meet other tans of Science Fiction, Fantasy, Comics, Wargames, or Role-

FASS Writers Meetings - those crazy writers are at it again, and they want YOU. Help write the shows that raved about. 7:30 p.m. Everyone welcome.


Speers speaks at Citi Hall

Students fight Condo proposal , by Peter Brown Imprint staff

clear that further terms suggested by the Council would be considered by his client. Kay explained that the Cobbler Hill partnership had “lost money from the start” because of the turning down of numerous applications for rent increases above provincial guidelines. He also cited rising costs of carrying the property, including municipal taxes that rose from $85,742 in 1987 to $155,050 last year. The application also offers existing tenants discounted rates on purchasing the units in the future. Following Kay’s presentation, Councillor Woolstencroft raised the issue of whether the city would be able to legal1y enfsrce the commitment that all of the units in the complex would remain rental for five especially after other yea=, individuals began to purchase units. She asked that the opinion of the Council’s solicitor be obtained.

The Cobb1er Hill Estates townhouse complex will not be turning into condominiums any time soon, if Uw students have anything to say about it. On Wednesday night in the Waterloo City Council chambers, Vice President, University Affairs Kim Speers, accompanied by a posse of 15 tenants and other concerned students, made a presentation at a public meeting about the conversion to condos of 256 PhiIIip Street’s 68 units. “The Federation of Students strongly objects to this proposal,” Speers told the Councilloxs present. ‘The student rental market remains in desperate need of accessible and affordable student accommodation.” Speers feels that conversion of this complex to condos would erode the supply. of student housing. Defending the proposal was Gary Kay, a solicitor for the applicants, numbered company 488682 Ontario Limited. ‘me applicant has no intention to take these units from the rental market in the near future,” Kay said. He stressed the terms of the kmdlord’s application, which include the right for existing tenants to remain in their units for 10 years after registra-

Kim gets grilled by the press Photo by Peter Brown tion of the property as condos and the stipulation that the entire complex would remain rental housing for five years after registration. Kay felt that this length of tenure

A n&w landlord ’ for some students byRterBlmm ImprhIt

staff

Students living ‘at the 256 Phillip Street townhouse complex returned from their Christmas holidays to find that their landlord is in financial difficulty. In fact, students who had already handed in their rent cheques for January, 1991 could be liable for that rent to the landlord’s creditors. The solicitors of Counsel Trust Company, the holder of the mortgage on Cobbler Hill Estates, as the 68-unit complex is called, sent a letter to all tenants there on December 27,199O. This letter explained that Kaimor Management Ltd., also known as numbered company 488682 Ontario

“move turmoil at 256 Phillip ” Limited, was in arrears on payments for the $3.4 million mortgage on the property, purchased in 1987. The letter from Holden Day Wilson solicitors in Toronto told tenants to pay all currently due and future rent to another property management firm, and warned that “Counsel Trust Company will hold you responsible for any and all loss, costs or damages which it may sustain” if rent is paid to Kaimor.

The office of Lanning J. Abramson, the solicitor who wrote the letter, confirmed to Imprint that Counsel Trust could legally demand January’s rent from tenants,even if they had not seen the letter until after January 1. The office also suggested that students who had already given their cheques to the landlord try to cancel them as soon as possible. Those who had not handed over a cheque yet should not do so, but should send their rent to the company listed on the letter, CBS. Property Management Inc. of Hamilton. Another suggestion made by Abramson’s office for students whose cheques had been cashed by the Iandlord was to contact Counsel Trust to explain the situation and ask that they not be held financially responsible for January’s rent again. Imprint ‘was. unable to contact Counsel Trust before press time to ask for comment on the situation, but their solicitors could provide us with the person responsible for this mortgage, Concerned tenants should contact:

Janet Iaconis re: Mortgage no. 556077054 Counsel Financial Services Corp. 36 Toronto Street, Suite 400 Toronto, 0ntario M5C 2C5 (416) 866-3092 , .1 ,_

satisfied a wquirement of the Rental Housing Rote&o? Act that a condo conversion “does not adversely affect the supply of affordable housing in the municipality,” He also made it

Councillor Andrew Telegdi, who chaired the meeting suggested that perhaps the Waterloo Co-operative Residence Inc,, whose property is directly north of 256 PhiEp St., might be interested in purchasing the Cob bler Hill property. In Speers’ presentation to the Council members, she strongly rejected the idea thatstudents might be included in the ownership market for

potential condominium units. ‘Fc jr the solicitors (of the landlord) to sul gest . . . that it is feasible (for studentr $ to purchase a condominium . , . is ludicrous and totally unrealistic,” sh le said. “Over 50 per cent of universit Y students in Canada receive some so: rt of loan or grant from th le governments, meaning that neithr :r the student nor their parents ca n afford to send them to school, nevc !r mind purchasing a condo.” Speers also cited an informal sumIvey conducted by herself and other 23 the day before in the townhous le complex. Of the 68 units, 58 respor Ided, .tith four agreeing with the prc )posal to convert the complex int 0 condos. Six units expressed an interest in purchasing a unit if th e proposal is approved by Council. A S well, she pointed out that only two c>f the 68 units were not occupied b Y students, those two being adrninistrz blive staff of the complex. ‘This townhouse complex is th best place for students to live whd attend the University of Waterloo fo -obvious reasons,” Speers said. Hun dreds of students could be displace{ by the approval of this proposal, sh continued. Afterwards, other students agreec arguing that the applicant’s guarante that the units would remain part c therentalstockforfiveyearswasti leading, since most students ar tenants for only three to four years.

.

WLU Admin. squeezes Cord by Paul Done Imprint staff

After a recent histojf of turmoil and controversy, The Cord, Wilfrid Lauder’s official student newspaper may be confronting its most serious crisis yet. Following controversy surrounding alleged “toilet humour” in The Bored, The Cord’s spoof hue published at the end of November, WLU’s administration has delivered the editorial staff an ultimatum: publish, and remain faithful to, an ethics code, or face closure.

years articles about a series Gf panty raids in Laurier’s dorms, and an editorial cartoon which harshly depicted a WLU faculty member, have not only ignited the fi.uy of the campus, but have also led to libel action against The Cord. In 1989, a column which was written under the pseudonym Bill Needle (the name was borrowed from the fictional Second City Tekvikn character), led to the withdrawal of The Cord’s membership in the Canadian University Press. (Imprint is not a member of CUP.) The Cord is officially a part of the

November’sspoof issue contained toilet humour which annoyedand uffended some The Bored featured a cover which depicted Saqta Claus standing in front of a urinal. Inside were stories entitled “Shit-in planned,” accompanied by a picture of a dog defecating; “Jocks just not for cocks,” a story which described a female equivalent of the jockstrap; and “Dirty Story,” a parody of “Waiting for Godot” which describes four men discussing bodily functions in a bathroom. This is not the first time that The Cord has raised the ire of studen& andlor faculty at WLU. .In the past few

Wilfrid Laurier University Student Union, under the umbrella of WLUSU Student Publications Board. Thus, the WLU administration is well within its powers to not only threaten, but also follow through on threats to stripThe Cord of its status, but also to bar it from distributing. A roughly similar set of circumstances in the late ’70s led to the formation of Imprk 7&e Chevmn, uw’s previous official student paper, had alienated much of the student .population, and after its demise,

Imprint emerged from the ash@ Unlike the circumstances which SUI round The Cord, I’?ze Chevmn’s man date was withdrawn by the student of UW themselves in a referendun conducted by the F&Aeration c Students. The students of Wilfric Laurier University were asked fo their opinion in a sin&r referendun in 1989. The result of the referendurr though close, extended The Cord’ mandate. Imprint is in a somewhat differen situation than The Cord; thou@ curbed by ties to the Federation u Students, and resdence in universi! space, Imp&t has editorial ant financial autonomy, and must main tain fiscal and editorial responsibilit in order to maintain its status as a co; poration. It must remain answerabll to the student body in order to main tain its status as the official studen newspaper. WLUSU has been considerin] granting this type of status to Th Cord since it would force the paper tr seriously consider its position withil the university community, and tl closely monitor the content of th paper. As it stands, though, the pape may not survive the current crisis t see this idea through to frzlition The ultimatum extends only unt the middle. of this month, therefor the outcome of this latest chapter i the stormy history of student joul nalismwiUsoonbeknown,


4 Imprint, f riday, January 11, 1991

Feds support fund Federation of Students ITress Release The Federation of Students of the University of Waterloo supports the Ontario Confederation of University Faculty Association, the Council of Ontario Universities, the Ontario Federation of Students, and the Confederation of Ontario University Staff Associations, quest to establish a memorial fund to End Violence Against Women on University Campuses. The fund would be in memory of the fourteen women students slain last December 6th in Montreal. Its mandate would be to fund projects to eliminate sexism and violence against women at Ontario Universities. Projects could include educational ventures (workshops, teach-ins, women’s studies programs), or improvements to campus environments (lighting changes, security services). The women students, faculty, and staff, have bee9 the targets of men’s violence for too long at the University of Waterloo. Women have spoken out against violence before and after the Montreal Massacre. We begin when they do not provide funding for programs such as the Memorial Fund. We don’t want society to only think about violence against women on

.

It’s cold out there, but it’s warm in here .., (L-R) Calvin Tripp, Peter Dillon, Sean Broolcs, Federation Safety Van drivers celebrate the arrival of the shiny, new passenger van. Photo by J.P. Tedesct

Guns, drugs, and the CIA by Jennifer Bertram Public Issues Board December 6th. It happens every day and every hour in Canada. We want violence against woman to stop now. We need this program. Our lives are in danger.

On Thurs., Feb. 24, at 8:00 p.m., Michael Levine will be taking corruption to UW students. His speech at Federation Hall, entitled “Guns, Drugs and the CL4,“and dealing with the Drug Enforcement Agency’s false war on drugs, is sponsored by the Public Issues Board and the Board of Entertainment of the Federatibn of Students. Born in the South Bronx, Michael Levine was educated early in the cruelty of life. As a teenager, realizing that his lifestyle consisted of gang membership, street fights, heavy drinking. and numerous close scrapes with the law, Levine joined theUSAirForceattheageof19inan attempt to save himself from his environment. Soon, Levine became a military police officer and a sentry dog handler. He became an avid student of boxing and the martial arts as an outlet for his aggressive instincts.

For more information, please’ contact Kimberly SPeersj Vice Resident University Affairs, Federation of Stucients, University of Waterloo at (514)888-4042.

OfficialLanguages_ Monitor*Program Under a program funded by the Department of the Secretary of State of Canada, the Ministry of Education in conjunction with the Council of Ministers of Education, Canada, invites students to apply for the position of second-language monitors (French or English) for the academic year 1991-92.

Monitu~ (part-time) Official-languages monitors must be full-time postsecondary students usually studying in a province other than their own. They will work between six and eight hours per week under the supervision of a second-language teacher. Some francophone monitors will be assigned to French schools outside Quebec. For eight months participation in the program, they will receive at least $3,500 and one return trip between their home and the host province. To be eligible for part-time monitor duties, students must have completed at least one year of postsecondary studies or will have completed such studies by the end of the 1990-91 academic year.

Michael

Levine

A WHOLE WORLD OF FM’VOUR I

just moved into your corner of the world

Monitws (Full-time) Full-time monitors must have completed at least one year of postsecondary studies, Duties consist of assisting second-language teachers (French or English) in rural or semi-urban areas usually in a province other than their own for 25 hours per week. Some francophone monitors will be assigned to French schools outside Quebec. Monitors will receive up to $10,000 for 10 months of participation. They will also receive two return trips per year between their home province and the host province. They may also receive a settling-in allowance of up to $770 and a maximum of $1,110 for commuting expenses within the host province,

+ardwiches

4 Soups + Salads

140 University Ave., W., Waterloo 29 King St., E., Kitchener , s

72591934 7494978

Application forms and program brochures may be obtained from placement offices in postsecondary institutions, or at the address below: Manager, Monitor Program Ministry of Education Education Liaison and Exchange 14th Floor, Mowat Block, Queen’s Toronto, Ontario M7A 112

Branch Park

. ... .

Du:y completed application forms must arrive at the address indicated in the information package, postmarked no later than February 15, 1991. Qualified candidates will be required to attend an interview.

Ontario

Ministry of Educatm

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Council of Ministers qf Education, Canada

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i Present this coupon before ordering. Not valid in i conjunction with any other offer. Good only at i participating Schlotzskvs* Restaurants in *.i Canada only. .. . Offer Good Thru January 19,1991 .4

“(applies to men and mmen equallyl

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APiJY SIZE SANDWICH

Depattmcnt of the Secretary of State ot Canada

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He left the Air Force and graduated from Hofstra University with a degree in accounting: III pursuit of more excitement and action, he joined the’ US Treasury Department & an enforcement agent Craving even more action and danger, he transferred to the Treasury Deparhnent’s Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms division where he posed as an “outlaw biker” in order to develop the largest bomb seizure investigation in US history. To this day, no one has equalled his record for undercover cases, arrests, and seizures that he established in 1968. Imine joined the Customs Bureau’s Hard Narcotics Smuggling Unit in a response to the discovery of his brother’s drug addiction. His undercover work in this field led to the destruction of an &tire international heroin smug@ing ring. On the conception of the Drug Enforcement Agency, Mr. Levine was d&ted to teach his acquired undercover skills to agents in addition to his role as an active combatant in the so-called “drug war.” In this capacity, Levine set a record for undercover actions and arrests and was promoted to the DEA’s Country attache to Argentina and Uruguay. It was here that he managed to penetrate the Roberto Suarez Bolivian cocaine cartel that was threatening to take over the entire government.


Imprint, Friday, January 11, 1991 5

OFS ‘Conference ScheduleSunday,

Jan-y

13

7:00-8:30 pm: Orientation, MC4040. 8:30-l&O0 pm: Caucus, MC4040.

8:3Oam-12:OO pm: Opening Plenary, Great Hall. 1:30-3:00 pm: Women’s Caucus, MC5158. 3:oO-4:OO pm: Regional Caucuses (4), Fed Hall Boardroom, DC1331, MC6005, MC4044. 4:00-6:OOpm: Charles Pascal “Vision 2000,” DC1302. 7:00-10:00pm: Committees (5), Fed Hall Boardroom, DC1304, MC4062, MC4064, MC4039 JOc

Tuesday,JanuarylS 9:OO-IO:30 pm: Women’s Caucus, MC4064. 10:30am-12:OO pm: Doug Wright, MC5158. l:3O-3:OO pm: “Racism on Campus,” Fed Hall Boardroom. 3:00-5:00 pm: Committees (5), Fed Hall Boardroom, MC4039, MC4043, MC5045. 6:3&7:30 pm: Caucus, MC4039. 7:30-8:30 pm: Regional Caucuses (4), Fed Hall Boardroom, MC4034, MC4044. 8:30-lo:30 pm: Commissions (7), Fed Hall Boardroom, MC4044, MC5045, MC6005, DCl304, DC2577. Wednesday,

January

’ MC4042, MC4039,

MC4039,

IVERSITY of WATERLOO

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9:OOam-12:30 pm: Workshops; “Sexual Harassment,” “Homophobia,” “Keith Spicer Commission,” X1302. 2:00-5:00 pm: Committees (5), Fed Hall Boardroom, MC6005, DC2577.

1:30-5:30pm: "Rod

Fraser on University Funding,“‘~unding DC1302. 7:00n10:30 pm: Grill Session, Fed Hall Boardroom.

Alternatives,”

Thursday,January17 9:00-lo:30 am: Committees (5), Fed Hall Boardroom, MC4044. 10:30am-12:OO pm: “Queen’s Park Update,” DC1302.

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6 Imprint, Friday, January 11, 1991

Considering Reprinted from Forum, tion of UW newsletter.

the Faculty

Associa-

At its Fall General Meeting the Faculty Association of the University of Waterloo (FAUVV), agreed to form a committee to examine the whole question of the presidency in the context of the forthcoming search for our next president and the role of this office in the future &he university. We want to look at the question of the presidency well before the formal proceedings begin (in a year from now) for selecting a sucessor to President Wright so that we can focus on prim ciples rather than personalities. We hope to have our committee in place in the next few weeks. This committee will be seeking out the opinions of faculty, staff, and students with a view to ensuring the full participation Of the university community in helping to define the kind of values we wish to see in our next president and the role we think he or she should have in the internal governance of the university and its external relations. It is hoped that we can present the report of the committee to all members of the Presidential Search Committee when it begins work a year from now. The university has changed its character over the past few decades and faculty members and, to a lesser degree, staff and students have gained a good deal of say in the governance of most universities. Yet notwithstanding some progress that has been made, much remains to be done both here and elsewhere to strengthen the collegial component of university governance. When Burt Matthews was selected as president of UW in 1970 he won the office in an open contest with two

Forum

UW’s next. president other candidates in a process that involved the university community. Since then we have moved backward in terms of openness of the procedures for appointing and reappointing our top adm.ir+ators. Many individuals do not have a -sense of being involved in the governance of the university, and there is much unhealthy cynicism about how decisions are made. In our modern university there are fortunately many checks and balances on administrative authority and professors are generally well-proted from arbitrary decisions by institutional safeguards including such things as tenure and formal consultative committees such as the Faculty Relations 1 Committee. Notwithstanding these positive elements of security and shared govetince, the president of the university remains a critical figure in setting a tone for the institution and in providing leadership that can encourage or discourage hdividual participation in university life. There is still, both here and elsewhere, too much reliance on on older values of institutional governance that emphasize authority, hierarchy, deference, secrecy, and exclusivity. Our female colleagues have been in the forefront of exposing the weaknesses of systems of governance that rest on authority and their efforts suggest ways in which the governance of the university should and must be changed in the interests of us all. The challenge we face in finding a new president is, in the tit instance, fundamentally a question of values, not personalities. We want to hear from the university community about the values they want in our next president - to have an open discussion on what we feel are the values needed in a person to lead us in the future and the role we want him or her to play.

We need, I believe, a president who sees himself or’herself as our equal, who is open, vulnerable, and trusting. We need someone who is secure in his or her open person and wants to consult with the university community - faculty, staff and students - not because consultation is seen as good public relations, but because the university has talented people with good ideas. We need inclusive leadership to tap this reservoir of ideas. We need a person who will encourage honest and frank discussion of our problems, someone who will create an environment in which tolerance and commitment to reason can flourish with mutual respect. We need& person who will provide internal leadership as well as representing the university exter’ nally and educating the public about the role of universities in society. Old-fashioned values associated with order and control that lean tow?rd authority, hierarchy, deference, secrecy, and exclusivity need to be modified and replaced by ones which emphasize tolerance, equality, compassion, inclusitity, openness, and sharing. As we move into the 199Os, we need a president with a vision for our times, with values that are in keeping with the changing human and intellectual needs of our university and with a general directive from the university community as to what it expects of the person holding the presidentiaI office. In future issues (of &mm) we will keep you informed on the activities of our committee looking at the subject of the presidency in the context of the future of our university.

currently reviewing records that reflect the taste of the majority of students on campus. I for one would like to see that change. (And I think I can speak for the current Arts Editor as well.) So in case anyone is still uncertain, let me shout it out loud: the door to C;C 140 is always open. Imprint is ahuys accepting new writers, and the Arts Section is no different. So if you feel your musical tastes are not adequately covered in the section, and you can turn a graceful phrase, p/ease volunteer. Staff meetings are held Fridays at 12:30 pm; newcomers are always welcome. But of course, the issue doesn’t end there. It would be a foolish conceit for me to believe that the above proclamation is going to result in a flood of dedicated young music writers pouring into our office. Being realistic, the state of the record reviews is likely not g6ing to change very much. So what 1 would like to do is question some of the basic assumptions readers make when they dismiss the record reviews as invalid. In the first place, I question the need for a record review section that “represents the tastes of the majority.” Rolling Stone is a nice safe, mainstream publication, and the current issue is always available at the Turnkey Desk in the CC. Communication is the basic purpose of any publication, no matter what its’ nature. I see no need to communicate what is already widely available elsewhere. But this is a student newspaper, you say. Its communications should be useful and relevant to the majority of the students. To which I say, there is no reason they need not be. Till the day I die, I will maintain that much of the music reviewed in the Arts section would actually be appreciated and enjoyed by the majority of the students - zyrhq heard it. Of course, they won’t, because people prefer to remain faithful to their tried-and-true idols,

is:

Editorial Board

Editor-in-Chief .**.**........***.***..~.* Paul Don Assistant Editor vacar News Editor ,....*...**...,.........*.****.~..*** vacar News Assistant ................................ vacar vacar Features Editor ................................. Science Editor .................................. vacar Sports Editor .................................... vacac Sports Assistant ............................... vacar Arts Editor vacac Arts Ash&ant ................................... vacar Photo Editor ..................................... vacar l .,....*...*.*.*~.*.m...*.*..*.

.......................................

Len Guelke president, Faculty Association sity of Waterloo

of the Univer-

Do we need “normal” reviews? I+ a year I was Editor of Imprint’s Arts section, and I’m still a steady contributor. So when t leafed through the responses to the paper’s Reader’s Survey, I naturally had a special interest in seeing what readers made of the Arts Section. Respondents made a number of criticisms of the section. Many points were valid; others were so ridiculous that they do not even bear discussion. However, what I’d like to address here is a common perception of the nature of the Arts section; and I’d like to point out a few mistaken assumptions that many readers seem to have made. We received many comments based on a common gripe against our record review pages. Rather than print all of the comments, Ill just list some of the more articulate and representative ones. 1. “Doesn’t represent tastes of students at all. Should solicit reviews from non-staffers.” 2. “VEFY narrow scope, narrow range, narrow-mindedness. VERY disappointing section.” 3. ‘Try to review records that the real student& may be interested in. ie Who the hell is Alice Donut?” 4. “Why can’t you review people and groups that we have heard of besides the radical unknowns? This section only reflects a very limited variety of musical taste.” Well, first of all I’d like to point out that there is no editorial bias or conspiracy against “mainstream” record reviews. Quite simply, the tastes of our writers determine the nature of the records they review in the section. As an editor, I should not and could not “assign” a popular record to a (volunteer) writer who has no interest in even listening to it, much less reviewing it. If the record review pages display an “alternative” bias, it’s because that bias exists in our writers. To be frank, there are in fact no Arts writers

1Imprint

and are uncomfortable exposing themselves to bands they haven’t heard of\ (especially ones with funny names like Alice Donut). This attitude also explains CKMS’s lack of popularity among the general student populace. (A real trgaedy, because the radio station offers you a chance not just to read about, but to ht7ar new and exciting trends.) I’m ge&alizing you say - who am I to pontificate on what people want? Well, I’m just going on the comments we received in the readers’ survey. We received no criticisms of the actual records reviewed:‘that is, people didn’t say “Why do you review bad albums?: Instead, they said “Why do you review albums we’ve never heard of?” There is quite a difference there, ladies and gentlemen, and with that in mind, it sincerely irks me that wek the ones being accused of narrowmindedness. The appreciation of music, I think, works on a building block level. Bear with me, while I explain. Any fan of “alternative” music has almost certainly already been exposed to more mainstream sounds. Yours truly, for instance, is the proud owner of every Bruce Springsteen record ever released, and you will part me from my copy of the Stones’Exile on Muin St. only when it has been pried from my cold dead hands. My point is this: I do not like (most) mainstream music, but at least I have been exposed to it. Therefore I have some background from which to dismiss it; I have formed some rationale by which to decide that this music isn’t something I care to listen to. Can you say the same for the alternative music you dismiss without ever having heard? Who is being narrow-minded here?

Derek Weiler

Photo Assistant

................................

Staff

vacar

.

Production Mgr. ..... ..Lauri e Tigert-Duma vacan Production Asst. .............................. General Manager .............. Vivian Tambeal Business Assistant ........................... vacan Advertising Manager ........ ..Arlen e Peddil Ad Assistant vacan Proof Reader .................................... vacan .....................................

Board of Directors Trevor Blai Paul Don .................... Stacey Lobil Directors at Large .............. Joanne Sandri: ..................................................... Dave Thomsol Derek Weile Staff Liaison

President Vice-President Secretary-Treas.

.................................

...........................

..........................

Imprint

is the official student newspaper at th of Waterloo. It is an editorially ir newspaper published by Imprir Publkations, Waterloo, a corporation withot share capital. Imprint is a member of the Ontari University dependent

Community

Newspaper

Association (OCNA during the Fa be addressed t 140, Universit NZL 3Gl. Ma can also be sent via e-mail to imprint*watmat .Waterloo.edu. Imprint reserves the right to screen, edit an refuse advertising. Imprint ISSN 0706-7380. Subscripticm rates avaiIabIe upon request.

Imprint publishes every Friday and Winter terms. Mail should Imprint, Campus Centre, Room of Waterloo, Waterloo, Ontario,

Contribution List Sandy Atwal, Jen Bertram, Pete Brown, R&I Burkhardt, Phillip Chee, Andy Dalby, Jen nifer Epps, Bill Falshaw (Raoul Duke Jr.] Michel Ann Fraser, l? Hohnholz Gesiarz, Bar bara Jo Green, J. Hagey, John Hymen Andrew Kinross, Andy Koch, John Masor Craig Netterfield, Rich Nichol, Andrew Papr Shannon Reynolds, Joanne Sandrin, Jei slater, Bryan Smyth, Kim Speers, JP Tedescc Dave Thomson, Wim Sex Hunk van der Lug Chris Waters, Derek Weiler (Lance Manion) Chris Williams.

lmagi,ne 5 the GST is good

Let us suppose just for a minute or two that the Goods and Services Tax is actually a good thing, like the government tells us it is, To use a cliche, suspend your disbelief. Then we must answer the question of why so many people hate the idea. Answer: Because most of us do not understand it. Is it too much to ask of the Finance Department to treat the electorate as rational thinking persons? Why must they distribute pamphlets that give so little useful informa-

‘tion and read like a politician’s speech. Why do we have to watch silly cartoons about the GST?

If it truly is necessary to replace the manufacturers’ sales tax with this value-, added tax, why not make a sincere effort to explain the thing? Whai is wrong with being concise and honest? SimpIy taking out a fullpage ad in newspapers that would clearly explain - rather than vaguely discussing -

the tax would have been easily accomplished and might even have brought around more public support for it. Most Albertans, who have never even had a provincial sales tax before, are under the mistaken impression that everything is going to be taxed an additional seven percent. Of course, a large part of the country is under that

wmtinued

to page 7.

1We Recycle


.. The forum pages are designed to provide an opportunity for all our readers to present their views on various issues. The opinions expressed in letters, columns, or other articles on these pages are strictly those of the authors, not Imprint. Send or hand deliver your typed, double-spaced letters to Imprint, CC 140. Imprint is also accessible through e-mail at imprint%vatmath. Be sure to include your phone number with all correspondence. The deadline for submitting lettkrs is 5100 p.m. Monday. The maximum length for each entry is 400 words, although longer pieces may be accepted at the editor’s discretion. All material is subject to editing,

Parking woes at Columbia

I can’t b&eve a crock of shit.

To the editor,

Hey,T.im, speak up!

I am currently a resident of the Columbia Lake Townhouses. I have lived here for four terms. Each year the rent has increased to accommodate rising costs, the price for upkeep of the grounds around the townhouses etc, and I can appreciate this. . Every townhouse was allotted one parking spot and all you had to do was simply fill out a form and you received your parking sticker. Pretty straightforward stuff. I was on my co-op term in the fall and am now subletting one of the townhouses. When I went to get my parking sticker, I was informed that it had to be picked up at campus security instead of the housing office, where it has been for the past years. After filling out the necessary forms, I was informed that they wanted forty-eight dollars for me to park at my own house. Not ten, twenty, or thirty dollars, but forty-eight. Why not make it fifty? The books will balance more easily that way. This is a heck of an increase from paying nothing to park. Apparently our parking lot was sold and now security is in charge of it. These bloodsucking parasites are charging us money to park where it used to be free. Isn’t this extortion? I have been informed that the parking will be rigidly enforced. What is this, a make . work project for our campus cops? Lets get those quotas up boys. Wouldn’t their time be better spent catching that fruitcake transvestite flasher who’s been assaulting women, or have they already? I hope some administrative type writes an explanation to this letter. I’m sure that they’ll quote rising costs and finances generally to make me look like some stupid undergraduate student. But I hope I’ve made my point.

I had to write this letter. What

fi--l!F 4B Kin

+

An open letter to Tim Jackson, dent of the Ontario Federation (OFS)

acting Presiof Students

In the closing weeks of last year, newspapers and televisions brought us the news that the council of Ontario Universities and Colleges were planning to increase tuition next September by 40 to 50 per cent. Strangely enough, there was no mention of this being a decision reached through discussions with the Canadian Federation of Students or OFS. In fact as I scanned the newspapers and watched the TV, I could find no mention of OFS or CFS, anywhere. This I though was strange. After all didn’t Tim jackson tell us just last year that, like OFS, CFS was a strong lobbying force. Did not this same Tim Jackson then become president of OFS. Is this not the same person and organization that is now strangely silent given a real student problem and issue? Now 1 asked myself “was it because Tim and OFS don’t really care about students?” No, I don’t think that’s it. Well then “is it maybe that nobody else cares about them!” Well yes, this really does seem to make sense. After all, OFS and CFS don’t really provide any leadership in anything. Oh they make a few posters and provide us with Travel Cuts. Thanks guys. But real leadership, I haven’t seen anywhere. Meanwhile, we are facing a serious situation regarding university access. A situation that is going to affect every new student who

G.S.T

l

continued

impression as weU Where money is involved and people are not informed, the natural reaction is to withdqw. me most recent and close to home example is the Student Life Building referendum. Digressing no further, let’s get back to those concepts of honesty and conciseness. In most areas of government, anyone who is important enough to make a speech about anything doesn’t have enough internalized knowledge to have much more than the faintest idea of what they are speaking about. But this tax is a different matter. They’ve had this thing planned for well over a year. Sure it’s a complicated tax, what with all these exemptions, clauses and rebates, but it doesn’t take much effort to explain the basics of the tax.

plans on comir&to university. A 40 per cent increase in one year is pret@ dram&c stuff, and U of T has already started to make it law. But OFS and CFS cannot be found. They are’ not a strong lobbying force, they are not a force at all, you can’t be when nobody cares about you So I ask you Tim, am I missing something, or is OFS, like CFS, just another useless bureaucracy? Pat Fisher

Editor’s Note: If you ‘d like mswem to these and more! - quejl*ons. Km and the whole OFS posse will ride into town next week (Jan I3-18)for a major conference. hosted _by our own fair institution

Mulroney’s “we’re not doing it to be pop ular, we’re doing it because it’s good for Canada” just does not cut it. The ultimate goal of politiciahs is re-election, which requires popularity or at the very least some degree of acceptance. It is a catchy patriotic phrase though. And, stacking the Senate to pass the GST was not the most reassurhg move Brian could have made. Everyone knows that politicians ignore the electorate, to some extent in nonelection years, but this guy is setting some kind of a record for arrogance. What will be the cumulative effect of the Mulroney Yea=? Not another Conservative majority. To remember is to end all idiocy. Well, we can hope. Dave Thomson

TODAY 12:30 p.m. . Editorial Board Elections All Positions Open! IMPm,

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Imprint,

OSAP system needs to be revamped Meration of Students Press ReIease The Federation of Stud&s of the University of Waterloo supports in princip%, “A Recovery Plan For Ontario’s Universities”, a reposal presented by the Council o P Ontario Universities. The PpdposaI involves a $410 million increase 4-t funding to universities to hetp combat the chronic underfunding universities in Ontario face today. The COU Recovery Plan involves two components: two-thirds of the cost ($273m) to be borne by the govemment and one-third ($137m) by the students and is to be implemented over a four year period. The Federation of Students believes students should be fiscally responsible for their education to a certain extent; however the tuition fee increase proposed by COU is not acceptable. The rise of $550.00 in !uition fees as proposed by COU is too dramatic in light of the government’s current commitment to the funding of post-secondary institutions. There were no promises made during the election nor was there any mention of post-secondary education in the throne speech - post’ secondary education remains a silent issue.

Board

On November 29, 1990, the General Meeting of the Federation of Students approved the establishinent ‘of a Human Rights Board (HRB). Beginning this term, there will be an official student body mandated to “ensure that the University of Waterloo provides an environment wherein its members can pursue academic excellence as well as personal and social growth free from all forms of discrimination and harassment.” The Board will initially include four “Commissions,” each of which will have a specific focus.. Challenged The Physically Students Commission will organize events to raise awareness of the various needs and contributions of physically challenged students that

11, 1991

9

Midnight Sun retires to Ontario Science Centre

There should be a freeze on tuition fees until the government has subsidized the education system to the extent of’the other provinces, bringing Ontario’s per-student funding to the average level for the other nine provinces. The funding of postsecondary education in Ontario must become a priority with both the federal and provincial governmentsit must be seen as an investment not a hindering expenditure. /. The COU’s lack.of com&mentto reforming and funding the OSAP program fs apparent in this report and should be addressed before any tuition increase is implemented in order that universities be as accessible to as many students as possible. Only when the government subsidizes post-secondary institutions to the degree of the other nine provinces and only when the government revamps the current Ontario Student Assistance Program will the Federation of Students consider supporting the proposal put forth by the council of Ontario Universities. For more information, please contact Kimberly Speers, Vice President, University Affairs, Federation of Students, University of Waterloo at (519) 888-4042.

Beautiful, eh? Too bad its’s a museum @ece. from WV News

Bureau

aboriginal rights. The Commissioner will be Christine Chambers. The Gay and Lesbian Commission will contribute to the ongoing efforts to raise awareness of the issues and rights pertaining to the large number of lesbians an gays enrolled at UW. Through this commission the Federation is taking a clear and active stand againsi the homophobia and bigotry which are st@ common on our campus. There will be two Commissioners, Sue Maslip and Brent Hamilton-Brown. Finally, since UW is not isolated from the rest of the world, human rights here will not be realized independently of larger events. Accordingly, the External Commission will focus on human rights in the national and international contexts. Among other things, this will involve liason with Amnesty International. The External Commissioner will be Simon Ross.

Imprint

Michigan, is being retired for now, said Prof. Alfred Brunger. UW has agreed to allow the centre to display the car until December 1993. ‘This will allow people to get a chance to look at a solar car up close,” he said.” The Midnight Sun, which made its fmal run around the university campus in November, will be transported to the centre about Jan. 14, he said.

The Ontario Science Centre in Toronto will be the home for the next two years for the University of Waterloo’s Midnight Sun solarpowered car. The student designed and built car, which took part in last summer’s 1lday General Motors 3,000 kilometre Sunrayce USA from Florida to

Feds establish Human Rights Board Bryan Smyth Human Rights

FridayJanuary

TRA-VEIL

CUTS

file photo

The motor, controller, batteries, and computer have been removed but the exterior of the bright-yellow, futuristic-looking car with its array of solar panels looks the same as it did during the race. The car was on display at the centre during September and other Uw cars, including the winners in the Shell Fuelathon competitions, have been shown there, Brunger said.

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“part of larger human r[ghts moverned are often overlooked by most students. This commission will work with the Physically Challenged Office to improves services on campus. The position of Commissioner has not yet been filled.

The Aboriginal, Race, and Ethnic Relations Commission is designed to raise awareness of all forms of racism especially those on campus peculiar to the university structure and curriculum - and to organize against these. In the coming term, we will out I particular emphasis on -

k@

---,j

While the HRB is new, it is part of a growing trend at Canadian universities. Students are recognizing that it is our responsibility not only to provide an equitable, prejudice-free education, but ako to enswee that these changes extend beyond the campus. If yuo want to hetp the HRB succeed, if you have suggestions, if you think that we’ve neglected something, and especially if you want to get involved, please contact either chair, Brad Regher or Bryan Smyth, at ext. 6305, or drop by roomI CC224.

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10 Imprint, Friday, January 11, 1991

Universitv students are heaviest drinkers -

-

w

population has a higher proportion of drinkers than the post secondary population. of greater concern, AhhOl aWareneSS represents a -however, is that over 10 per cent of mjor problem in Canadian univerthese students suffer negative cons? cities and colleges today. Statistics quences as the result of alcohol misindicate that 80 per cent of students use. Problems reported include poor 3n any one campus drink alcoholic grades, financial loss, breaking the kVerageS. hl fact, I70 Other Single law and sm difficulties. Mmy of Kim speers

these problems often only become evident later in life, after years of alcohol abuse. llriding habits developed while in school often remain with the student for the rest of his/her life. Whiie there are several organizations who offer treatment for the problems caused by alcohol misuse,% is clear that prevention is the

abstinence, but responsible dkkinp; behaviour. If you ire g&g to dr& do so moderately and rtot to excess. The BACCHUS ( Boost Alcohol Consciousntis Concerning the Health of University Students) philosophy continues, stressing several other points including: knowing your own limit; not drinking to be ‘one of the

BACCHUS has been operating under the Public Issues Board of the Federation of Students for numerous years and has had many activities and educational campaigns. Changes to the constitution in November stipulates that the BACCHUS Commission under the Public Issues Board become a service of the Feds.

~m$asiies and models the positive. BACCHUS, named after the God of Wine in &ssical Greek mytholow, is such a program It promotes not

crowd’; being considerate of others who don’t want to drink; and not driving when you’ve exceeded your limit.

This change in structure occurred because the Federation of Students would like to see more students become involved in promoting responsible drinking both on and off &pus. Hence, -the board would have a wider volunteer base in turn giving the board a larger and more prominent role on campus.

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Imprint, Friday, January 11, 1991 11

NeWS

Public Enemy has a new member

Public Enemyp F&lay, Jan-

Dateline: 4,199l

‘WE ARE A WAR!?!” SISTER %XJLJAH, PE’S FIRST RECRUIT h

ONLY FEMALE

MEMBER,

PROM-

ISESTOHELI’RAISETHEANTE JWENHIGHER:

Before Tuesday, Sister Souljah was known to PE fans, friends, and enemies mostly from her appearance as a cynical newspaper reporter in the video”Brother’s Gonna Work It Out.” Her dropdead delivery of the line “And there you have the poke version”, after hearing one video cop cover up for his fellow officer’s ‘Vii Beach” brutality, was so unnerving that MTV requested (and got) a disclaimer at the end of the f;ideo before thev would show it. However, it’s been her latest work on Terminator X’s recent record and video, “Buck Whylin” (from the upcoming album, Terminator X & Ihe Wey of the Jeep Beats) that has people pumped. While Chuck D shoots some of his strongest, most angry lyrics yet, Sister Souljah somehow weaves in and out of X’s war drums and scratch marks like a heat-seeking missile screaming its way toward detonation. People come away from the record, according to one West Coast dj “impressed, intimidated, and excited.” Who is Sister Souljah? Well, as of Tuesday, January 1, 1991, the New York based activist is a full-fledged member of Public Enemy. The unprecedented*move heralds an entry into what Public Enemy leader Chuck D calls “the next phase - putting words into action for survival and self-defense.” Says D, “She adds a dimension to PE that we’re looking for, We think we can take what she does around the world.” He elaborates. ‘Public Enemy has put in four years getting closer to its goal of 5000 Black leaders by 1995. Now, people are ready. They just need to be filled with direction. Sister Souljah’s clear as to her focus and she adds a female element to our agenda. Sisters are looking for something, and she can even take it to that next level. Our main concentration has been on the brother’s, and brothers continuousIy need to be worked on. But brothers are get-tin’ it from a lot of sources now.” Sister Souljah agre&, and returns the praise, “PubIic Enemy has played a very important role in the revival of Black consciousness around the world. They’ve made African people feel good about ourselves and introduced the world to clips of our hidden and stolen history. For that reason alone, they’ve been a powerful mind-builder for youth worldwide. I’m hyped about the possibilities PE presents f&r ‘the future.” Asked to characterize his new comember, Chuck D is quick. “A do-er. A mover and a shaker. Shell get it done whether we’re involved with her or not, so it’s best to just put a supercharger behind her.” And Sister Souljah’s guals are equally clear. One is the completion of a Hank Shocklee/Bomb Squadproduced album later this year. The otfier is “to be able to introd&e to the world a feminine voice, a feminine feeling, and a feminine attitude, as strong, and as compassionate, and as committed as that of Chuck D’s, for the same purpose of building African people and moving forward.”

U W safety considered An Open Letter to Doug Wright

This letter is in response to the recent letter and petition regarding safety on campus written by graduate students from the Urban Planning department. I have been involved with the issue of safety of campus ior three years now. As safety commissioner for the Women’s Issues Board” as cb.rperson for the MB, as Women’s Commissioner for the Ontario Federation of Students, and as Vice president, University Affairs for the UW Federation of Students, I bve tried to make safety an issue on this campus. For the most prt, the university administration has been very supportive of the initiatives I have taken in respect to the education campaigns, the workshops, the speakers, and the services I have introduced to the student body. ln fact, the walk home campaign currently in place is operating from the university’s security department and has been operating because of financial and physical support from security and the Dean of Students’ office. Many of the university’s women, such as Doreen Brisbin, Phylis George, Ann Roberts, Beth Moore-Milroy, Lindsey Domey, Swani Vetharnany-Globus, Anne Innis-Dagg, are active on committees that enhance women’s status on campus whether it be making the external environment safer or instituting pIans to attract and retain female faculty.

In the past four years, the Federation has implemented numerous services and has developed many programs to increase awareness about women’s issues and the issue of safety on campus. Some of the actions taken include: A. A safety audit and numerous surveys developed to study safety on campus. B. Education campaigns on date and acquaintance rape; sexual harassindecent exposure, and ment, violence against women. C. A safety van providing campus students with a safe home seven nights a week

D. A walk home program providing those people on campus with an escort if requested. The student employees also patrol the campus between calls. ’ E bbbying all levels of government to provide more funding to universities and colleges to help eliminate violence against women on campus. F. Providing information and services to local school boards to help them inform the elementary and secondary-level students about violence against women. G. Trying to eliminate all forms of discrimination in events and services.

TORONTO-BAYVIEW

SCHOOL

offride

As shown, the Federation of Students is dedicated to making UW an accessible campus for all students, faculty, staff, and visitors. I feel the letter written by the graduate students in the Urban Planning department was written without consulting organizations prior to its release. To make accusations such as one woman did to myself that “nothing is being done on this campus with respect to safety” is ludicrous. Furthermore, when a member of this committee states to the current Women’s Issues Board Chair, with respxt to the Student Security Force, that she “doesn’t want to be walked around campus by some 20-year old,” I find&is comment somewhat inconclusive. Does this mean that the woman feels better if a 40-year old man walks her around? Obviously, this service provides safety to numerous students as recent statistics have shown the service was used by 209 students, faculty, and staff in the past three months. To simply implement physical changes to the campus, as this letter SU@%t$ is not the answer to the problem of violence agamst women on our campus. Over 60 per cent of sexual assaults are date or acquaintance rape (when the rapist is known to the woman). Although there is a safety audit being undertaken at our university, only producing physical changes to the campus may lull women into a false sense of secu&-y. Physical changes are not going to change the misogynist attitudes that are alive and well in today’s society.

REGIONAL

CANCER

OF RADIOTHERAPEUTIC

. INWTES

Also, numerous student Ieaden contacted my because of the way thy petition was worded. It simply stated “Do you’ want safer routes to the lib rary?” Obviously, everyone on thti campus. would appreciate safe1 routes to the library; however, then was no mention of mention, to many of those who signed it, of the solutior to this problem. Although I commend this committee f&r initiatingp~~gr~wts” movej safety an issue on meilt.to campus, a‘-. yisanissueandit % wiIlatways~meuntileverywoman canwalk’~ghthiscampus without fear. The committee should

be contacted and perhaps they cam meet with rkpsentatives f&n tht committee& and oqpktions sc they &come knowledgeable on whaj each group does with respect tc safety. I also feel because the con-

cerned students have the educational kckground in urban planning thai they should be contacted to participate in the safety audit of the campusFinally, I would recommend that the Student Committee for Campus

Safety use gender-neutral in future correspondence, university administration

language as both the

and the Federation of Students,have policies on the use of such language. For additional information on the Federation’s role in promoting safety on campus, please feel free to call me at ext. 3780.

KhlSpW VPUA,

Federation

of Students

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The scientist by PhillipChee Imprint staff The most talked about probIem, the one that transcends all boundaries in academia, is the environmental crisis. It has also been the “media darling” for the past couple of years, the current Gulf crisis notwithstanding. Cutting through all the hype and rhetoric, have we gotten anywhere in alleviating the problem? More importantly, have scientists eased or exacerbated the debates that are still lingering? For example, two years ago, one of the more prominent health/environmental issues was the controversy over the affects of the pesticide Alar. Although the Exxon Valdez oil disaster was the more talked about environmental story of 1989, support was overwhelmingly one-sided for the politically-correct position. The Alar situation was a little more subtle. Subtle from the scientific side that is: the consumer advocacy groups were the more vocal ones in helping to speed its removal from the market. Daniel Koshland, editor of the journal, Scimce, suggested that the public overreacted in the case of Alar in apples and cyanide in Chilean grapes. But Edward Groth of the Consumers Union of the United States, says about Koshland, that”like most scientists pontificating on risk, he shows that he has severe tunnel vision.” Besides claiming to correct some of Koshland’s factual errors over the level of risk pertaining to Alar, Groth contends that scientific facts are only part of any discussion of risk and public health policy. Any sort of talk must face up to values and moral considerations, for “public response to risk depends far more heavily on such value and ethical dimensions of the risk than it does on the quantitative magnitude of the hazard.”

as sage

To add some perspective, Bruce Ames, Nobel laureate and inventor of the Ames Test, the most widely used protocol in mutagenicity studies, states that 99.99 per cent of pesticides are natural plant products, used by a plant to protect itself from fungi, insects, and man He adds that consumers ingest 10,000 times more natural than synthetic pesticides. He lists the following foods that contain a

cent of its carrying capacity with salmon to satisfy the market for sport fishermen but at the same time there are severe restrictions on consumption aimed at this group because of carcinogens in the fish. Yet it ?snot the recreational fishermen that need to worry, but the subsistence fishermen and the fish-eating birds such as the bald eagle and osprey. In Gillett’s estimation, we have

“scientists neednot be arrogant and patronizing to the public” a few,to 4 million parts per billion that have been demonstrated to cause cancer in laboratory rodents: anise, apples, bananas, basil, broccoli, Brussels sprouts, cabbage, cantaloupe, carrots, cauliflower, celery, cinnamon, cloves, cocoa, comfrey tea, fennel, grapefruit juice, honeydew melon, horseradish, kale, mushrooms, mustard, nutmeg, orange juice, parsley, parsnips, peaches, black pepper, pineapples, radishes, raspberries, tarragon, and turnips. However, some critics of Ames have pointed out that many synthetic pesticides are novel entities that biological systems have never encountered before. Of course natura1 pesticides haven’t created epidemic cancer rates natural selection has been at work for thousands of years. But Ames replies that general defense mechanisms of humans and animals do not differentiate between natural and unnatural chemicals. This dwelling on danger creates a sort of ambivalent attitude toward the environment writes James Gill&t of Cornell University in an editorial in Environmental TUxiCUZU~ and Chem&~, (vol. 9, pp401-402,199O). Lake Ontario’ is stocked to 103 per

experiences and ,methods that have not been put into practice in Canada, as vet. hvely discussions are expected to result in the afternoon workshop sessions. It is the hope of the organizers that these sessions can be tailored to generate planning initiatives that are useful not only for the Oak Ridges Moraine, but any-

The-keynote speaker in the early iafternoon is expected to be a minister where in Ontario. Speakers will present European and American experiences, against a backdrop of Ontario realities and theory. of Ontario’s provincial government. The cost to attend the ‘one-day symposium is $45, lunch and beverages included. Attendance will be limited to 250; hence, early registration of interested individuals is advised. You may mail your registration, with a cheque payable to Pent University’, to the attention of ‘Greenwiys and Green Space Symposium’, Geography Department, Trent University, Peterborough, Ont. K9J 7B8. I Telephone enquiries should be made at 416-294-4660 (Fred Seamann).

Corn and Writefor Science cc140

byAndrewPape $%&I to Imprint

I

What are the different types of printing styles I can use with WordPerfect? (For my resume, essays, reports, etc.) 1

types of printing styles are commonly referred to as fonfs. The number of fonts available depends on the printer being used. Using the school’s laser ie. Math building, Engineering) a nurnkr of fonts are available. Two fon used in industry are Times Roman and Helvetica. If possible, one avoid using Courier (eg. Like this). With some printers (lasers) you can the size of the font. This is referred to as the point size, the larger the point sizei

s is Times Roman 8 point

I’his is Times Roman 12 point

his is Times Roman 16 point is is Helvetica

The Ontario Trails Council and Trent. University will present a sym* I #-.. ~posium on btvenways ana c~reevl Space on the Oak Ridges Muraine. The event will take place on Friday, February 22,1991, at Trent University in Peterborough. Planning. recreation, legal and health professionals, politicians, bureaucrats, and citizens from across the Moraine are invited to participate in this effort in co-operative planning. Those attending will be presented with an array of planning-related

Science and Society

Tips,of the Week omputer Tip #20 -

been overly fearful of cancer risk because of our fear, lack of control, ‘and lack of familiarity about synthetic chemicals. His solution is to provide better perspectives, especially when using cancer as an endpoint of risk. He rightly states that we have not “been stricken with a massive cancer epidemic from exposure to chlorinated hydrocarbon ~ solvents and pesticides through the early 1970s.” Scientists need not be arrogant and patronizing to the public he states, but should respect their fears and concerns and provide wise advice.

planning on the. Oak Ridges Moraine

8 point

is is Helvetica 12 point

his is Helvetica 16 point ew column has been provided to help students with personal computers. . r-y week for this column. For any other questions do not hesitate to call -3284 and ask for Gordon. n

Pugwash is much more than a mdl town in Nova Scotia. It is an organization that groups people from nany disciplines who are concerned Ibout the social, environmental, and lthical implications of science and ethnology. Some of the issues that Zugwash members have pursued nclude: the military use of science nd technology, development of the tid World, bio-medical ethics (ie. Lew reproductive technologies), ~n$ronmental degradation, comu@?r technology ethics, agricultural levelopment, and @ound water lollution. The birth of the organization ccurred in 1957 after a group of wenty-two scientists met in “ugwash, N.S. to discuss the roles nd responsibilities of scientists in the lucleat arms race. Albert Einstein nd Bertrand Russell were behind the lffort for such a meeting to occur. Members of the Waterloo chapter will be participating this term in egional Pugwash conferences in bronto and Montreal, and a national onference in Ottawa. The first conErence, on Jan. 18-20 titled PopuZu‘un and lkvebpment, will be held at le U. of T. Scarborough Campus, nd will involve members of the ntemational Development Studies silty. Several issues will be conidered in lectures and workshop disussions, including a look at possible

solutions to development and population growth problems. One such problem is the cycle of population growth, poverty and environmental degradation, which is self-perpetuating in many societies, On Feb. l-3, a regional conference on energy use will be held at McGill University, and on March 16-18, the national conference, titled 0@0ns for the F’UWP will be held at Carleton University. More details wilI follow in future articles. Pugwash’s flexible, interdisciplinary approach makes it possible for all types of involvement at a loc& regional, national, or inter-

national level. This term, we will be looking for ideas for possible events such as having speakers, discussions, workshops or f&ns. In 1992, Pugwash will be sending representatives to the UN Conference on the Environment to b held in Brazil. Pugwash offers something for everyone. Come out to our fkst meeting of the term on Tuesday, January 15, 4:30 p.m., in CC138 if you are interested. We wiIl be talking about the Population and Development Conference at the meeting (at the very least, there will be free coffee and doughnuts). Call Mark at 7254712 or Andrewat 725-4576 for more information.


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Features

14 Imprint, Friday, January 11, 1991

Z?ie Gulf Ctik:

Ali opinions on this page ate &ridy those if the author

, The Hidden Agenda

byJobImprint staff A thorny issue among those who oppose the United States deployment of forres in Saudi Arabia and the Persian Gulf is whether and to what extent Iraq’s invasion and conquest of Kuwait ought to be condemned A related question is to what extent should Canada support the United Nations and its resolutions‘dealing with the Gulf Crisis. The issue has beqn much mooted by international law expe* gr@ $her supporters df a world legal order. For y&ark they have relied upon the UN Charter and the intern&ional law prohibition against the aggressive use of force in order to condemn the US’s adventures in Grenada, Panama, Nicaragua and elsewhere in the world. They have also put great faith in the UN and attempted, albeit unsuccessfully, to use it as a check against US jingoistic designs. Today, however, the world faces a situation that plays havoc with the well worn assumptions about international law and the UN This time it is the President of the US who is loudly condemning Iraq for its “naked aggression.” It is the US Congress that recently passed a resolution condemning Iraq for “clear violation of the United Nations Charter and fundamental principles of international law.” It is the US that has called upon the UN Security Council and engineered resolutions condemning Iraq, imposing a biodcade, and, for the fir& time since the Korean War, authorizing the us42 of force. This time the opprobrium is aimed at a Third World country, not the US, and thesupport is overwhelming. But should it be? The hypocrisy of the US position must be rwed. The world can be guaranteed that the application of international law will not be even-handed and that the US will still have the freedom to invade wherever it wants, when it wan& Tomorrow will likely bring new Bnamas, Grenadas or even Viet NiUllS. Yet, despite the obvious d&&minatory enforcement of the tenets of international law, many still demand that Iraq must be COIF

demned and be required to withdraw from Kuwait. Their chief argument is that such a stance is necesary if condemnation of future US infractions will be possible. They argue that condemning Iraq now an4 not letting the aggression stand will create a precedent which will make such adventure by the great powers more difficult. It is likewise with their support for the UN and its resolutions. These, they say, must be supported and will provide a -good edent the next ‘time the JJS invades aTEzd‘. world country. Such $&zti~~, the n&essity to preface any condemnation of the Us with a condemna. tion of Irao is fraught with danger. It is too reminiscent of the speeches by Democrats in the US Congress against aid to the Contras, which invariably began with loud condemnations of the Sandinistas; &.h the plaintive cries of the opponents of war in F%ama who felt a compulsion to begin by trashing Manuel Noriega. While there is merit to various of the criticisms of Iraq, the merit is outweighed by the mischief and obfuscation caused by a condemnation of Iraq, a demand for withdrawal from Kuwait and uncritical reliance on the UN. First, this argument promotes the fiction that the violation of international law against aggression has something to do with why the US is sending 450,000 troops into the Gulf. As President Bush asserted, Saddam Hussein’s “aggression &I not stand.“The world should realize the moral integrity of international law is not the driving force behind US policy in the Gulf; it is not to protect any principle of international law or prohibition on aggression. The US does not give a damn about international law. Apart from its own invasions of third world countries, it thumbed its nose at the World Court decision requiring an end to the funding of the Contras. Recently it promulgated a policy authorizing the kidnapping of MtiOMh of. other countries, avoiding the legal process of extradition, in what it openly admitted was a violation of intemationallaw. The US isusingthe shield of international law to cover an imperial adventure in the Gulf; Canada should not be assisting it.

Lvictory 4is certain.”

Reuter

“There wi.ll be no more Vietnams.” CP Secondly, continuation of this fiction is dangerous because it obscures the real reason the United States is in the Gulf. As President Carter said in announcing what has been named the Carter Doctrine: “Any attempt by any outside force to gain control of the Persian Gulf region witl be regarded as an assault on the vital interests of the United States.” One US senator recently pointed out the Soviet Union was no longer feared, but rather “an Arab aggressor seeking to control Arab oil” The US is in the Gulf to control access to oil, build military bases and dominate the region. To the extent the Canadian government gives legitimacy to the US deployment we help hide the real reasons from the public. Thirdly, not only does reliance upon inter~ti0~1 law and a blind condemnation of Iraq hide why the US is in the Gulf, it prevents us from examining Iraq’s motivations, as well as the history and political reality of the Middle East Iraq had more than an arguable claim that Kuwait was stealing oil from the Rumaila oil fields that straddle their border, that Kuwait, at the behest of the US, was produckg more than its OPEC quota and that it had been d@&access to tple sea. And this is above and bey~ti& the Iraqi claim, not originated by Sadd& Hussein, that Kuwait itself was an artificial tenitory created by the imperial powers after World’War I from an area that had historically been Mesopotamia (ancient Iraq) for thousands of years. Iraq tried to solve its dispute with Kuwait peacefully, but without success. In the longer term and larger historical picture, the invasion may well be seen as an attempt by a third world country to control third world resources and not, as Kuwait was doing, selling its patrimony-on the cheap to the industrialized world. The toppling of the Kuwaiti monarchy may also be an historic step in the ultimate demise of the incredibly undemocratic sheikdom system, a system supported by and in thrall to the US. Fourthly, the reliance on the UN as a means of avoiding a war is unlikely to work and is proving to be extremely dangerous. As the> US is using international law so it is using the

UN as a cloak for its own hidden agenda. This is recognized by senators of the US Congress. How can we fail to recognize it? Have we forgotten Korea? Does it change matters if the , USSR delegate remains to vote rather than depart -into the corridor? US Senator Hollings, in a recent Congressional debate, pointed out that the Madministration has used these Security Council resolutions as sugar _ coatings for what remains, in essence, a unilateralUS response in taking on Saddam Hussein” The world is not what it was even a year ago; there is no power willing to face up to the United States and certainly no strong voice for the Third World. The UN can be dominated by the US and may well provide, as it seems to be doing in this case, an imprimatur, for United States and Western

hegemony. The bottom line on the US deployment and impending w&r is the industrialized world’s continuing domination of the Third World’s resources. The new world order is really

the poor oi for the Sc+@#as there were- one 0~ +*ch

perhap

a veto;

once

members,

there will be again

The position espoused here is nota rejection of the value of international law, it is a recognition of the present reality. Condemning Iraq and demanding withdrawal from Kuwait should not be a principal focus or a demand of Canada. We must not place our reliance in a UN that can be manipulated to cover imperialism. We must not lock ourselves into demanding Iraq’s withdrawal, which, if taken to its logical conclusion, will justify a war.

Photos Presse Quotes

from from

AP,

Agence

Reuter, CP

France-


Imprint,

II

3

-

II

Master Debators Waterloo’s House of Debates competed at the eIeventh annual World Debating Championships which Were held“ at the University of Toronto from December 29 to January 6. Waterloo was represented by Mark Weber and Landon Young on the A team, and by Ljuba Djurdjevic and Rahul Gangolli on the B team The tournament consisted of 142 teams representing universities from countries around the world. In the preliminary section of the consisting of nine tournament, trounds .of debate spread over five days, the A team won seven of nine debates, defeating such luminaries of the debating world as oxford’s A team, Dalhousie, and Australia National University. The B team, experiencing world-class competition for the first time, heId their own, and showed great promise for the future. At the end of the regular portion of ‘the tournament Waterloo A stood in

sixth place, tops amongst Canadians, and qualified for the sudden-death playoff r0unds. Unfortunately, they fell in the first playoff round to a team from McQuarq University who later went on to the semi-finals, losing to Dalhousie. McGill A emerged as the eventual victors, in an a&Canadian final As a consolation, Mark Weber wm tenth place in the public speak: ing competition and had the seventhhighest individual points total from the debating.

Competition wasn’t all the toumament was about. The Waterloo representatives had the opportunity to meet people from all around the world, learning about other cultures and ideas. &we& the tournament ~tmssed partying and socializing of a world-class magnitude. All in all, Waterloo was well-represented to the rest of the world, during a fun and exciting week.

Friday,

January

11, 1991

15


Federation of Students University of Waterloo

ELECTION .- ., ’ PROCLAMAT ION Nomination papers will be available fora.the following positions: D

President ’ Vice-President of Operations and Finance Vice-President of University Affairs and Members of Students’ Council Nomination period, Presidential, Vice-Presidential and Students’ Council candidates: Open: Friday, January l& 1991 Close: Fhday, January 18,199i Information on the duties of the President; VicePresident of Operations and Finance; and VicePresident of University Affairs is available in the Federation Office (Campus Centre room 235). Notice to Presidential & Vice-Presidential jkm

“tiedures

Governing

Elections

Candidates

and By-Elections”

Students’ Council Seats to be elected are as followq:

4 Arts Regular ................................................................................. 1 Arts Co-Op .................................................................................. 3 Engineering .................................................................................. 2 E.S. Regular ................................................................................. 1 E.S. Co-op (both streams) ...................................................... 1 H.K.L.S. Regular ......................................................................... 1 H.K.L.S. Co-op (both streams) .............................................. 1 Independent Studies ................................................................. 1 Mathematics Regular ................................................................ ................................................................... 2 Mathematics Co-op 3 Science Regular .......................................................................... 1 Science Co-op (both streams) 1 Renison *,**~.,~*....,,*..*.....*.....*...~..*..*~*..**...*.*.~..*.*~~.,***~~~~..*...*......... 1 St.wJerome’s ,..*...*.**..*...***.*......~.*~**~***~*.*..****.........*.......**.....**..*..... .l ..*.*..*.....**.........*.*.***...*.......***

“The Election Committee shall establish a mail-out to all off-term co-op ,students of the Presiderztigl and VicePresidential ballots including, ifdesired by the candidates, a statement ofeach candidate’s campaign platform. Thestate.ment will be in the formofone vpewritten 8 l/2 “x 11” (or metri? equivalent) page (may be double-sided).and must be submitted for publication no later than the closing day of numinatiuns. lIhe required number of copies will be duplicated by the Election Committee and will be completed within five working days of the close of nominations. At a time and place set by the Elections Cummittee, each cundidute must supply a minimum of twupersons for stu@rzg envelupesfur the mail-out. ”

Terms of Office: May 1,199l to April 30,1992.

Qualifications for Elections: All candidates must be full members of the Corporation, i.e., they must be registered undergraduate students who have paid their Federation fees. Nominatioh papers are available in the Federation Office located in roam 235 of the Campus Centre Building. I

All submitted materiak must be camera-ready.

SENATE

ELECTIONS l

The following undergraduate l l

seats on the University of Waterloo Senate are up for election:

Engineering, Mathematics and At-Large (terms to April 30,1993) Applied Health Sciences and Environmental Studies/Independent

Studies terms to April 30,1992)

Nomination forms are available from January 4 to l&1991 in the Secretariat’s Office, Needles Hall, room 3060. Nominations must be returned by 4130 p.m. on Friday, January 18,199l. Elections will coincide with the annual Federation of Student’s elections (February 12 and 13).

ALL ELECTIONS

TAKE PLACE ON FEBRUARY 12 & 13


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This page is produced as a service by the Federation of Students, which i&cc&d in the CumpusCentre ~CICNY 235(above the Imprint office. Tickets to pretty till anyiidng on cum pus can be purchased atthe Fed office. FWnore information abou , any event advertised on ltds page, please call 8884042.


Warrbrs

Athenas

Lorentz and Williams spark successive comebacks

Ice Warriors show character in consolation win CIAU TOP10

Warrior Hockey . bybdrewKinross Imprint sports

Men% Hockey

The hockey Warriors didn’t repeat 5s tournament champions at the innual Duracell Hockey Challenge ast weekend at Varsity Arena in Toronto, but they did win the conolation championship in style. Despite a loss in their opening match with he Regina Cougars, the Wtiors &aged not one, but two, third period comebacks in games against the bchester Institute of TechnoIogy v) Tigers and the York Yeomen to End up as the consolation winners. For a time, it looked like the hriors were going to continue their -holiday Season slide and bow out of he tournament quietly once RIT built .~pa 3-l advantage midway through to go for the extra attacker but they he consolation semi-final. could not find the equalizer. The But bow out they did not. move almost allowed Lorentz comIan Pound resurrected the squad in plete a hat trick, but his shot at the he nick of time - three seconds empty net was blocked by a defender. wfore the close of the second period On Saturday morning at 1O:OO am, - when he slid a quick shot from the the Warriors returned to the ice to ;Iot past Rochester goalie Mark Hill. face York in the consolation final. II’herejuvenated Warriors went to the Lorentz picked up where he ,left off dressing room down by a goal and the day before by opening the scoring hen came out to play a spirited third at 6:32 in the first period. Clark Day miod, overcoming RIT 4-3, comcreated the opportunity when he pliments of two goals from Dave absorbed a check in order to aIIow arentz. Lorentz’s first goal came just Darren Snyder Gme to centre the 197 into the third period and then he puck to brentz, who was parked in scored again, shorthanded, baffling front of the net, and one-timed it past he goalie orl the short side on a quick the York goalie. Jreakaway. ButYork, paced by two goals frqm Continued pressure on the part of fifth-year veteran Brian MacDonald, Waterloo prevented Rochester from . went up 4-l by 11:58 of the second getting past centre ice with any period. However, that was all York organized rush. The RIT goalie finally wrote. On this day, Pat Daly made it to the bench with 22 seconds exchanged his checking skills for

1. UQTR 2. Alberta 3. Calgary 4. Dalhousie 5. Wtifrid Laurier 6. UBC 7. New Brunswick 8. Wderloo 9. Western Ontario 10.Regina touch around the net and tucked in a rebound for Waterloo’s second goal just 25 seconds later. Down by two at the end of the second period, the Warriors must have decided that an effort twice as strong as what they had put forth the day before, was required. And they delivered. The spotIight focused on John WilIiarns, who originated several 2-l and 3-l’s and set up two goals - by Rod Thacker on the power play and Steve Scheafer - in the process. The score knotted at 4-4, Williams circled around the York net, this time held on to the puck himself and caught the top left hand corner of the twine behind the York goalie. Daly added insurance at 13:33, capping off the onslaught of five unanswered goals and a consolation final victory, 6-4. Meanwhile, the Regina Cougars

proved themselves to be the dark horse of the tournament. After defeating CIAU sixth-ranked Waterloo, they went on to knock off Toronto 4-3 and fifth-ranked Laurier 5-3, to win the gold medal. In Waterloo’s opening game, they fell prey to Regina 5-3. Tony Crisp, Jamie Maki and Jim David scored for Waterloo. The Warriors resume regular season league play this Sunday afternoon at the Columbia Icefield at 2:30 pm, playing host to Queen’s Gaels. Waterloo takes their undefeated 8O-2 league record into a second half of the OUAA season @at is significantly more challenging than the first. The team has two encounters each witi pere’nnial powerhouses Laurier and Western and also will face the 10-O number one ranked University of Quebec, Trois Rivieres.

Men’s Volleyball 1. Manitoba 2. Calgary 3. Lava1 4. Waterloo 5. Sherbrooke 6. Dalhousie 7. Saskatchewan 8. McMaster 9. Toronto 10.British Columbia

Smith anti Smith top tourney kill numbers

Plague upsets Sherbrooke to take Mizuno bronze Warrior

Volleyball

After some rocky performances in ecent weeks, the University of rVaterloo voIIeybaII Warriors comTied forces to take the bronze medal k the Mizuno ExcaIibur Volleyball roum.mm this past weekend in g0rt.h York. The Black Plague swept highly outed Sherbrooke in the third place natch 15-5,15-13,15-12, to win their hare of tournament hardware. This is a good sign because the tight-team event boasted six of the nest elite teams in the nation: Laval lranked 2nd in the CIAO), Shergrooke (3rd), Calgary (5th), McMas:er (6th), Waterloo (7th), and UBC (9th), according to rankings released &ore Christmas, plus two strong contenders, York and Toronto. Waterloo was also recognized on he tournament all-star team with the rower hitting duo of Steve and Scott Smith (both 6’6”). They finished first md second in the overall tournament nttack stats with 9.7 and 9.3 kiIl.s per prne (Maybe with numbers like that,

we should shir, the twins over to the Gulf for some”reaIly mean action.) Calgary’s Tom EIser Was named tournament MVP. Other players receiving all-star recognition were Andy Cameron (Calgary), Stephane ‘Go&in (Naval), Michel Gazes (Naval), and Christian Lariviere (Sherbrooke). For Friday and Saturday, the teams were split up tit0 two pools of four for a three-match round robin session to determine the rankings for the Sunday playoff matches. The tournament draw put Waterloo in Pool “A” along with Laval, UK, and York. Pool “B” comprised of Sherbrooke, Calgary, I&Master, and Toronto. In their opening match, the Warriors ‘doubled up on UBC in the first two games by identical scores of E-7. UBC stole game three 15-12, then Waterloo took revenge and showed no mercy in the match winner, 15-4. Also on Friday, the Black Plague met up with OUAA conference rival and tournament host York. The Yeomen surprised UW in game one 15-9, but a perennial wake-up call by Shantz motivated his squad to take the next three (15-9,15-l@ 15-9). Un Saturday, the Plague finished off round robin play with a tough battle against the Lava1 Rouge et Or, the defending national champion. Unfor-

tunately, the Rouge et Or were too powerful for Waterloo and won three straight close games (15-13, >17-16, 15-8). Then, the eight teams were split up into two groups once again: the teams with 3-O and 2-1 records in round robin play advanced to the championship semi-finals, while the l-2 and O-3 squads were relegated to the consolation round.

In Zhe championship draw, Calgary swept Waterloo 3-O (15-7,1511, 16-141, and Naval was victorious over Sherbrooke 3-l (16-14, 12-15, 15-12, 15-10). The consolation semifinals saw McMaster defeat UEK 3-l (15-6,15-17,15-8,15-7), and Toronto clean out York 3-O (15-7, 15-11, 1511).

Finally it was money time. SunWaterloo’s next league action will day’s matches decided who would be Wednesday, January 16 at Brock fir&h where in the tournament. The University, witi an 8 pm start. seventh place match between UK and York was a sporadic affair but the hosts succumbed to the men from the West coast 3-2 (6-15,15-10,15112,315,15-g). Toronto defeated McMaster for the second time in the toumamerit, 3-O (15-8,15-10,16-14), to take the consolation championship. Waterloo marched into the b#mze ” medal game in a rage, established authority early, and cleaned Sherbrooke’s clock in a miraculous upset 3-o (15-5, 15-3, 15-10). WI+ was even more amazing was the fact that the Warrior defence held Sherbrooke star Christian Lariviere to only six points in the entire match. Two memorial awards are currenCalgary received the gold medal, tly available to undergraduates. The surprising Lava1 in a very entertainMike Maser Bursaly Fund is for junior ing championship game, 3-2 (6-15, or senior students who are experienc1511,6-15, 16-~14, 15-11). ingfinancial difficulties and who have achieved a high level of accomplishment in extra-curricular activities. The Black Plague returns to action this weekend in the Winnipeg The Dun Hayes Mcmoriul Award is for students who are aaivefy Invitational at the University of Wininvolved or contribute to athletics or nipeg. By the luck of the draw, the sports therapist function at the Waterloo is in a fairly weak pool and University or within the comshould finish first. If they finished munity. second in their pool, the Warriors would probably play a semi-final The application deadline is today match-up with the nation’s number (January 11, 1991). Further inforone ranked team Manitoba, the mation is available from the Student favorite in the other tournament pool. Awards Office in Needles Hall.

Mike Moser Award Applications Are Due Today


sports

Imprint, Friday, January 11, 1991 19

-

Duarte sets. UW free throw record challenging Dalhousie Tournament in Halifax this past weekend. Three of the eight participating teams were CIAU ranked. “We played very well in our three games, but could not play the last six minutes,“summed up Waterloo skipper Don McCrae. The Warriors have had a mixed starting out slow with ’ pre-season, o~ytwowinsinsevenstartsandthen rebounding to go 6-l through the latter half of November and December. This recent triad of losses pulls their record back to .500 basketball at 8-8. But the trip did have its highlights.

With the good, there is sometimes the bad. After a doqtinating gold medal performance at the Can-Am Tournament in Windsor two weekends ago, the Waterloo Warrior basketball team could not muster a win at the

Sophomore sensation Mike Duarte shot a flawless 17-for-17 at the free throw line in Waterloo’s final game against LPEI Sunday afternoon. That ties the record for most number 0f free throws made by a Warrior in one game, a feat origi.nalIy set by Jerry Raphael in 1963 (17-for-25). Duarte’s 170for-17 sets a new record for the highest individual perfect free throw shooting game in UW basketball history. “Setting the record came as a big surprise,” said Duarte. “I really didn’t know about it until Coach told me this week”

Waterloo began the tournament Friday n&ht in a match-up with the host Dalhousie Tigers before a crowd of 365 at the Dalplex It was a dose, tight, textbook-w opening half. Warrior points leader Sean VanKoughnett, a 6’7” forward, was given lots of pressure and managed only a trey, while Dalhousie scoring king Dean Thibodeau (6’8”) eked out only three baskets inside. The Tiers up by a deuce, 38-36, at the-break The defence loosened up li&-i promdrl%inthesecondhaKConsequently, Thibodeau went on an unstoppable bucketfest in the paint to give the Tigers control, and the win 8 l-69. VanKoughnett received Player of the Game honours for Waterloo, collecting 15 points (including &for8 at the line) and four assists. Duarte, sbphomore forward Chris Moore,

Athenas’ valiant comeback falls. short of Western t Athena

11 with the battle only seven minutes old. Moments later, the Mustang sniper Mommersteeg nailed a trey, and two more baskets later, they were up U-11. Western then put on a fullcourt press to which the Athenas answered with a shallow press break that wasn’t working. So, Waterloo head coach Denise Dignard called a timeout and made a few adjustments. Her crew came out of the huddle to pull within four points, 34-30, before the Purple Satan nailed a waning seconds basket to end the half. Waterloo fell asleep once again in the second frame, as the ‘Stangs went on a 12 point run. The nap was laced with several unforced turnovers by WV. Then the comeback began to gather momentum, spearheaded by Kraemer’s drives to the basket and Murray’s shots from outside. Western’s Lubke fouled out with three minutes left in the game, which halted any further threats of a Mustang cakewalk. Waterloo rebounded to pull within four points, down 65-6 1 with one minute left, but that would be the final score as the defences @ok control. “It was that 12 point lapse that really hurt us,” said Dig&d after the game. “The team fought back well, but we ran out of time,” The big thing that hurt the Athenas during the scoring lapses was turnovers, committing 17 compared to only six by UWO. It was a horrific game for both sides as far as the shooting stats went. Waterloo managed only 31 percent accuracy on fieM goals, while the Mustangs weren’t much better at 38. Xowever, both tetis had solid numbers at the line: the Athenas nailed 76

Basketball

by Rich Nicbl Imprint sports

Nothing is more frustrating in competitive sport than a valiant comeback that falls just short of the win The Athena basketball team knows that after nearly upsetting the highly touted Westem Mustangs, but instead falling short, 65-61. The loss slipped Waterloo’s league record to l2, which ranks fifth in the eight-team OVVIAA West division. Third-year guard Brenda Kraemer paced the attack for the Athenas with 22 points, five assists, and three rebounds. She went lU-for-12 at the free throw line. Freshman point guard Tina Murray scored IO points and grabbed five rebounds, fellow rookie Marion Fernandez chipped in eight points, and junior Sara Bradley also drained eight points while topping the rebounding numbers with seven. Team pivot LRah Ann Erickson muscled through for four offensive I rebounds. Veterans Ilde Lubke and Debbie Kraemer hit the double digits for Western with 24, and 21 points respectively. Waterloo’s Brenda Kraemer held the Mustangs’ points leader Michelle Mommersteeg to a measly 10 points. Lubke shot an impressive ll-for-15 from the field en route to the win. Pam Fleck led the boards for the purple and white with seven. The game began with the two teams eqding each other basket for basket and the score was knotted ll-

percent of their free throws and Western sank 67 percent. Waterloo had the edge in rebounding, 30-27. Next action for the Athena cagers is tonight (Friday) when they begin the first game of a weekend doubleheader , with the Lakehead Lady Nor’Westers at 6 pm here at the PAC. The second game will take place on Saturday ni&, same time, same place. Then & Wednesday, January 16, the Brock Badgers wiU be in town for a 6 pm tip-off here at the PAC. Brock squeaked past the Athenas, 5147, in. iheir f&t league match-up down in St. Cather& last Nove& ber, ti revenge is the motive.

junior point guard Jason Fbag ant third-year center Dave Rosebush all hit the double figures. Poag also hat seven assists and second-year pivo Bruce Vanloon was credited titt Six.

Thibodeau topped all scorers witt 26 points & XI-for-15 from the fielc -_ nine rebounds, and four assists Luckily, Dabusie marksman Kevir Donovan was having an off night aI the trifecta (3-for-lo) or else the damage could have been worse. Ht had 20 points. With a much &ller crowd of 30 on hand Saturday afternoon, Waterloo’s consolation semi-fina1 opponent was the Acadia Axemen In carbon copy fashion of their tournament opener, the Warriors equalled Acadia basket-for-basket in the first

Wontinued to page 2W

Two B-ball Doubleheaders WATERLOO is. LAKEHEAD ’

Friday, Jan. 11 - 6 p.m. Athenas 8 p.m. Warriors Saturday, Jan. 12 - 6 p.m. Athenas 8 p.m. Warriors All games at the PAC

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20

Imprint,

Friday,

January

11, 1991

sports

Athletes 0’ the Week

Warrior

swimmers hot in Florida fly relay -

by Jeff Slater Imprint sports

Florida; Fort Lauderdale, your idea of a vacation; NO. The members of

UW’s varsity swim team found this out during a two week training camp. Although the tip included the joy

BRENDA KRAEMER

December 28-30, Kraemer was named to the Toumam ent All-Star

- Basketball

The University of Waterloo is pleased to have selected Brenda bemer as Female Athlete of the Neck She is a third-year Kinesiology ,&dent from Walkerton, Ontario. This past weekend the Athenas dayed a league game against Wesem, which is one of the best teams in Mario this year. In this game, Craemer was top scorer for the ithenas with 22 points and top ebounder with seven rebounds. luring this game she also held Wesem’s top scorer to only ten points. At the Ryerson To&am&t held

Week. He is a first-year Accounting student from Waterloo, Ontario. The 67” forward for the basketball Warriors led the team over the holidays in two invitational tournaments. VanKoughnett was named MVP at the Can-Am Tournament in Windsor (in which the Warriors won the gold), and he was twice named Player of the Game despite losses in the Dalhousie Tournament January 46. VanKoughnett is the leading scorer on the team and has star&d an optimistic venture into the Warrior’s regular season beginning at home to Lakehead this Friday and Saturday, January 11 and 12 s&ting at 8 pm:

Team. Despite the fact that she was not in the top scorers, she was given this award for her strong defensive play and leadership on offence. This is the first time this season that an Athena player has won a torunament

all-star selection.

SEAN VA?WOUGHNE?T ball The

University

of

- Basket-

Waterloo

is

pleased to have selected Sean VanKoughnett as Male Athlete of the

Writers NeededFur The Fullowing Spurts Athena Athena

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of seeing Colorado flag down Notre Dame, the main thrusts of the trip were the two a day practices without the outside i.nBuence of school. Hopefully the teams have received the impetus they need as they race towards championships. The only reprieve of the training camp came on New Year’s Eve as the

I

teams challenged in the Dead Kennedy stirn meet against all Division II, NAIA and other Canadian schools. The men’s team placed an admirable third only to be out done by the women’s second place finish. The women’s team was led by veterans Tami Lee, Andy Kenyon, and Kim Boucher,

Finnish sun.

work

term

fresh from a cold

to the Florida

Self-proclaimed kings of distance, Jason Krupp, Mike Cash, and Brad 0esch, scored Waterloo’s only vic-

tory of the meet taking the fly relay. On Friday the teams travel to Hamilton to challenge Mac. The men’s team is currently ranked tenth in the nation but will be in tough against a second ranked Marauder squad. Facing a similar challenge the women are aiming at the Brock Badgers the following Saturday.

B-ball continued l cont’d. from page 19. twenty minutes. They spread their attack over the entire floor, while Acadia concentrated on getting the points f?om inside. Halftime score: 39-35 for the Axemen. Second-year forward John Hamilton joined VanKoughnett to put on the scoring jets in the second half. But, they could not keep up with CIAU veteran Ted Byrne, who bettered his first half total of 12, with 13 points after the break Acadia pulled away in the last five minutes, winning 76-62. The Player of the Game for Waterloo was, once again, VanKoughnett with 18 points, five rebounds, and three assists. Duarte and Hamilton drained 10 points apiece, while Rosebush led the Warriors in rebounding with seven. Byrne led the Axemens’ offence with 25 points, 16 rebounds, and two assists. The overaII team stats did not show much of a difference in Waterloo’s tourney opener, but one comparison definitely stuck out like an eyesore in this contest. UW was outrebounded

37-22, most of that spread occurring in the second segment. Our cagers >ounded out the weekend against the UPEI Panthers in the seventh-place game. Down 4234 at the half, the Warriors could not generate a promising comeback and, forcing the Potato Province to the free throw line, they lost 80-67. What hurt the team was shooting a dismal 32 per cent on field goals, compared 50 per cent accuracy by UPEI. Duarte took Waterloo Player of the Game honours this time round. He paced the attack with 28 points, including the aforementioned 17 at the charity stripe. VanKoughnett scored 17 points, and Hamilton ripped down seven rebounds (three on offence). Greg Alford and Paul Gordon led the bthers with 28 and 18 points respectively. Waterloo begins league play tonight (Friday, January 11) at the PAC at 8 pm in the first part of a weekend doubleheader against Lakehead. Game two will take place Saturday night at the PAC, also with an 8 pm tip-off. The following Wednesday, the Brock Badgers come to town for an 8 pm contest at the PAC.


I Imprint, Friday, January 11, 1991 21

spom

Campus

Recreation

-

C-Ret team registrationsdue today! Board at gym level in the PAC between Blue and Red North (down the Campus Ret hall from the tote desk). As well, today is the final entry date by Barbara Jo Green for all leagues. Entries must be in by 1 * Imprintsports D.UI at PAC 2039. For those of YOU ‘who are involved as captains kd referees, take note of the meeting Happy New Year! Yet another year times next week that appear on the has past and the tune has come to January Activity Calendar in. the make your New Year’s Resolutions of Campus Ret Brochure. getting fit and staying in shape a Campus Ret offers other opporrealitv. If vour bodv is beg&g for tunities to students who want to Ret involved such as Job and Student exe&se, you’re readmg theget&& Leadership positions; 14 to 17 Stucle. Campus Ret can help you! Hopefully during this past week, dent Assistants are hired by Campus you endured the line-ups and regisRet each term. For job descriptions tered for one of the many programs and Fall 1991 applications see the PAC Receptionist. Application and clubs offered by Campus Recreation. If you are still interested in pardeadline is Friday, February lst, 4:30 ticipating, you have a last chance. Late pm, at PAC 2039. Registration for Instructional ProThis term the following positions grams are being held in the Blue are still available: Refenzes: ($5.51-$7.61/game) HocActivity Area today (Friday) between key, Volleyball, Basketball, Ball Hoc12:30-1:00 pm, Should thii be a bad key, Broomball time for you drop by PAC 2039 and Referee-in-chief: ($55~$150/term) see if there are any openings available early next week. Broomball If you missed the first meeting of a . Tournament Convenom ($25450) Tennis, Squash, Broomball, Mixed club you are inter&ted in there are Volleyball contact names listed on the Club

ANDY CURRAN

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($6.78”$B.O2/hour) Squash, Tennis Volunteers are always needed by Campus Ret and your involvement would not only be fun, but good experience in organizational and administrative activities. See PAC Receptionist in 2039 for more information about any of the above positions. For all of you tennis enthusistsget your rackets ready. There will be a Tennis Doubles for Men and Women Tournament at the Waterloo Tennis Club. There will be A,B,C levels of play with a minimum of two matches, The fee to participate is $4.00/player and there is no limit to the number 01 teams. Preliminaries for the toumament are Sun&n. 27 9 a.m. to 6 p.m, and the finals will be held on Sun., Feb.3 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. The final entry date for this event is Monday, January 21 by 1:00 p.m. in PAC 2039. Until next week, remember, active living means moving everyday, a little more, a little more often. So whether you take a leisurely swim in the PAC pool or simply take the stairs instead of the elevator, just do it ‘cause a little fitness does a lot. IIMhCtO~:

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‘Athena Volleyball

Basketball

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THlJflSDY, JANUARY 17,1991.

_ Waterloo’ Jewish Students Association Presents Our Famous Anizual Wine and CheeseParty l

Featuring:

Good Kosher Wine

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Fun Times

8:OOp.m. to 2:00 a.m.

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ikfilli Vhilli

Milli Vmilli have taught an entire world the truth about Pop music. Pop music is marketing and not much else. Pop is a way of turning a fast buck, and quite simply rivals politics in honesty. But it took a

“scandal” for us to notice. Entertainment has become an industry. This sad fact reflects even sadder on the population entertainment enslaves; entertainment has reached, and perhaps surpassed, the importance that it received under the Caesars in Rome - VCRs, as statisticians love to point out, are commonly found in the homes of the chronically unemployed. With such a healthy, perhaps even recession-proof entertainment market (even Gone J+?&J theWind was made in the Great Depression), the marketers of pop music all vied for market share. Starting in the 195Os, they quickly realized that the best way to acquire an audience (read: purchasers) was to put image first. Now, in Milli Vanilli, image his almost reached its logical conclusion; for in MilIi Vanilli, the two petimers-(Rob PiIatus and Fab Morvan) are performers in appearance only, Regardless of being hypocritical, or even “wrong” such an impersonation is the direction in Which pop has always been traveling. Yet, it was not until the late 1980s that this fact became more than just dirty laundry for the entertainment industry. At the end of the decade we were left wondering if Rick Astley’s voice was doctored. But still, rumours had flown before in the music world - the Cars were charitably rumoured to have sent a clone band on tour and less charitably, waxen dummies, and Elvis was rumoured not to have been able to play guitar. However, Elvis still sang, dnd Fe Cars still wrote music and performed it regardless of what they did on tour. MilIi Vanilli can barely speak English. Yet, in the perverse minds of the pop industry, it mattered not a whit how the duo conversed, for they had the pop-star star quality. When interviewed about the band’s amazing success in early 1990, Fab claimed that it was his hair that made him famous. t thought he was being toague in cheek, though I did agree. It turns out that he was more’honest than he realized. Their hair was what made them what they

became. And it made them what they are to this day - wealthy as all get out. No amount of shame can take away the- cash that they made from their number-one hit album and singles and from their dance-act record setting tour. No, they laughed all the way to the And laugh all the way to the bank is exactly what they were meant to do. Sure, they became personally wealthy, but their true success is measured in what they could do for their employers. They were no liability for their record company, their tour promoters, or their merchandisers. Milli Vanilli were merely an image, but look how much money they made. Without writing “Sympathy for the Devil,” their names became as recognized as the Rolling Stones. With out voicing a word, the duo achieved the notability of Simon and Garfunkel. Why? Beta-dse of their hair. Image equals money. Milli VaniIli most clearly Jlustrate this.. The rumour that the two couldn’t and didn’t sing was not a rumour in the music

Visions and Inventions Shannon ReynoIds S~tormprint

T

he first exhibition of 1991 entitled Skim and Invention:

Dmwings and Paintings by Robert Mmhemzult opened last Thursday at the University of Waterloo Art Gallery where it can be viewed, during gallery hours, until February 10th. If you’ve seen one tree, you haven’t necessarily seen them all. The landscapes of Robert Marchessault are unique creations. The works in Vision and Invention, which range from nearly pure abstractions of form, colour, and texture, to painstakand reaIisti~Iy rendered ing drawings, share a common o*

Marchessault’s imagination. Inspired by nature but never seeking to copy it, Marchessault assembles rememb&d natural elements into plausible, though illusionary, landscapes. The shgw features recent works of the artist, including his submission to “Political Landscapes” a recent

world. It was known - and known wel1, for months before the news “broke.” But it was the music world that awarded MU VaniIli its first and definitely only Grammy award. It was an act of pure cynicism disguised as an award for artistic achievement. What the award really said was “good going dudes, you made us a pile of cash.” Perhaps it can be argued that the industry should have taken back the award - but I disagree with this stance and maintain that they ought to retain the award on the basis that the award is a sham in the first place. However, the fact that the industry shipped the duo reaIly is moot and not all thatimportant. What is important is what the industry did next. They awarded the Grammy to the werUP. Here, the industry showed its true colours. Here, the industry showed that what mattered was not the performance, but the perceived performer. If the duo were the stuff that Grammy award winners were made of, then it only follows that whoever did the

bv Robert

Some however, are attempts to capture the mood and texture of unfamiliar landscapes as in the series inspired by the rugged texture of the unifying element in this exhibirich surfaces of tion. The Marchessault’s works are not accidental. Working quickly, some-

actual singing for them was just as deserving of the award. But the no name who did the crooning waz merely a voice - he definitely did not have hair. And without hair, a Grammy is merely a dream. The response to the MiIli Vanilli fiasco was just as calculated as was their meteoric success. Everybody tried to milk their downfall - radio stations declared themselves ‘Milli Vanilli Free,” the tabloid media (both paper and electronic) undertook exposes and the mainstream press quoted a ten year old girl who called them scum. Yes little girl, there is no Milli Vanilli. Milli Vanilli’s downfall was a boon to the press. This “serious” story seemed to call for soul searching in the entertainment industry. Stop selling illusion, seemed to be the cry, give us the true goods. Give us reality. The public, us, wanted reality because we did not want to be made fools of. These two black Germans with funky hair passed themselves off as. singers - and this pissed us off. But really, why should it? Why can’t singers be actors in the same manner as screen actors? We do not get upset when stunt men fill in for actors. People do not really die in movies, and pretty girls are not sawn in two by bearded magicians. We know that this is illusion, image, and we accept it. It is now time for us to grow, up and accept it in the music world too. What does it &ter who really sings? The actors in Milli VLniIli just represent two more mouths in the entertainment food chain, and they should not concern the consume= of pop. We were entertained by Milli VaniIli before we knew the shocking truth, and we should have continued to have been entertained. The only real problem lies in the fact that the actors who were Milli Vanilli got a drammy Award as skgers. This is duplicitous. They were not singers, and therefore they never deserved the award. But hoever waS foolish enough to think that the recording was good art in the f&t place should have given the award to the true singer. A new vocabulary is needed, and a new understanding. Milli Vanilli were not a pop group, but an entertainment group, They were the pretty package for the goods. We now know this, and we sbouId now expect this of aU entertainers, music or otherwise.

Marchessault

tribes as his “touchstones,” take much longer to complete than the’ paintings, but are worked in a similar manner. In drawing, Marchessault draws, erases and redraws many times to achieve a soft, atmospheric effect. Close examination of the drawing surface reveals thousands of tiny

“I think that Z shall neversee,a poem us lovelyas a twe” Gotland, an island just off the coast of Sweden. These tinya--1landscapes . 1. . . are the most abstract 01 tne collecnon. Texture, more than anything else, is exhibition of several artist’s works. Most of Marchessault’s pieces in the current exhibition reflect the landscape of south western Ontario.

times with only a palette knife, Marchessult employs a technique of. _ _ . . painting and scraping; working and reworking the canvas surface until he achieves the desired layered effect. Marchessault’s drawings are as textural as the paintings. Typically, the drawings, which Marchessault des-

arcs covering the entire work. These tiny lines, while uniting the drawing, .* .* . e-m_ 1--L .___ create an mterestmg fenslon t3erween the illusory depth of the landscape and the flat surface of the paper. Another type of tension appears in h 1 I-chessault’s two most recent painI + Inspired by a contemporary

German artist who employs t& pfinciples of yin and yang in his work, Marchessault has created two works which combine representational landscape images with stark abstract forms. r Robert Marchessault curredy lives in the Owen Sound area where I he and his wife, sculptor Teresa 1 Cullen, work in separate but adjoining studies. A custom studio coupled i wiih the ample acreage of his Prr, . perty means inspiration for Robed t MarchessauIti5ascloseasawaIkwitl. 1 the dog. and paintings 01f’ - The _ --drawings e I . . Robert Marchessault may be mewed/ Men 11:0()~~d 4:0()pm Mm-8 day to Friday, and between 200 pm and 590 pm on Sunday. The University of Wak&o ti Gallery b located h the Modem b-g= ~w.

i


, . .

1 r.

1


Arts

:-

.lmprint,

Friday,

January

11, 1991

25

Blind Boys in ‘effect Five Blind Bays from Alabama Bermuda Union, 131 BlcNw St. war, To?vntD Dee 20,199O

by Craig &t&field Imprint staff

I

f you’ve ever seen a Reg Hartt film screening you know how he loves to ramble on about the topic ofthe day.

He’s a ramblin’ guy. The first time I saw one of his diatribes was at the Cabana Room in Toronto; he was going on about how he couldn’t play bars when he started outi Oddly enough, churches accepted him with open arms. It wasn’t until his shows became really popular that he could move out of the church basements and show his film collection in nightclubs. The Five Blind Boys from Alabama have gone through a similarly contradictory change of venues, but in reversk order. They started forty five years ago playing in churches, which you’d figure is where a gospel band ough2 to play. Elut now they tour the bar circuit almost exclusively, because churches don’t want to charge their congregations to see a band. Judging by the crowd at the Bermuda Onion, I’d say that nightclubs’ patrons have accepted the Blind Boys with open arms. With one hand on his hip and the other pointing into the audience, band leader Clarence Fountain Ied his Blind Boys through two sets of funky soul and down-home testifyin’. “Like we sing it down in Alabama,” is how Clarence described the second, more powerful, set Not even the huge glass backdrop could suck +he

p0Wer out of th$i peiformance. Their voices haven’t shown

any

signs of letting up after nearly

five

decades of spreading The Word. They plowed through songs like “If I Had a Hammer,” where Jimmie Carter, leadfirough the crowd by one of the sighted members, wailed until the crowd was up and singing with him. He damn near tore the roof off the club when he held a note for sixteen bars and then smoked through the rest of the song. Of course, Clarence proved that he’s no slouch either. The range that he covers is fantastic. He usually stays up near the top of his register, but when he drops those bass notes, he belts them out with enough power to rip flesh off the devil or any’ of his minions that may have mistakenly strayed into the audience. l%e hand that backed up the Rive Blind Boys was a basic two guitar, .bass, and drums combo. The fourpart harmonies were strong enough &at anything more would have been ‘redundant. The drummer did a fine iob considering this was his first time

._,.,,

with the. band; he was given a few and filled the rest in well enough that only his contrasting colour gave him away as a possible stand-in. The. or@inal drummer had his tour, and coitus, intemrp ted the night before and had to fly

cues from the two guitarists

back to Alabama. It was his stage banter which hinted that a shrewd businessman lurks -beneath the angelic voice of Clarence Fountain. Comments like “AlI of our albums are guaranteed. If you don’t like it, 1% take it back - if I ever come back” showed that he doesn’t rely on prayer alone to put food on his

table. If the Five Blind Boys ever make the trip up from Alabama again, be sure not to miss them. You can bet that people won’t be there to return a* *a*. the albums that they bougnt at uus ihow. But in the meantime, the Bermuda Onion has plenty of shows to satisfy even the hungriest R&B appetite: Otis Rush UanW 15-20)# the Persuasions (March’19-241, and the Holmes Brothers (May 13-19).

Legti to dance i :

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Arts/Film

26 Imprint, Friday, January 11, 1991

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’ Hzkgizaduw~

Sot

Film

wdves

.Costner dames with Dmzces ?-Kth Wolves Directed by Kevin Custner bY sennikr EPPS Imptit staff

.

T

he LJW Fine A&s Fti Society is twginhhg *e new year with a series called “Great Films of France.“The work of such renowned filminakers as Claude Chabrol, Marcel Came, Louis Malle, and Andrzej Wajdawill be represented, and popular performers like Stephane Audran and Gerard Depardieu appear in several of the films. Several ,of the films are coproductions between France and another country. For example, the January 17th screening is a collaboration between France and Egypt: Youssef Chahine’s GouG%ye BWJPUrPe. It depicts Napoleo& inva&on of Egypt. * The next two Thursdays in January feature The Unfaithfil Wife, a 1969 &I by Chabrol, and Juliept4, or the Kty of Dreams, a 1951 Came picture. The other titles in the program are:

S&s,

Cop Au

F/in, Danton,

The

and Golo, the Island of Love, as well as MalIe’s story of adolescence in the Nazi regime, Sbilor’s Three Crowns.

Lacombe

Lucien

In addition, the film society is joiningwith NUMUS to bringafestival of Canadian avant-garde films to the community during the weekend of kb. 8-10. These will include films and videos by Peter Mettler, Meredith Monk, Lawrence Brose, Johnathan Silverman, and Brian Eno. More information can be obtained from 885-1211, ext.. 2442.

M

ichael

Blake’s

Lkmm

Mth Wolves, is U&I-

first

novel,

pressive. It breezes by without impact, written in very short paragraphs and chapters, which often fail to build dramatically. The hero, Lieutenant Dunbar, is always “sharply” and “severely handsome,” and he’s more perfect than Mary Poppins: “No amount of failure could flag his spirits, and he scrambled over every obstacle with the kind of good humor and determination that makes a person fun.” Blake has trouble describing feelings, gasping out’ passages along these lines: “Like so much chalk wiped from a board with one swipe,-his heart and hope had deserted him all at once. SoGewhere deep inside, a switch had been thrown &d Lieutenant Dunbar’s light had gone out.” , The good news is, that contrary to widely expressed opinion, a movie can indeed Be better than the book What director Kevin Costner adds to Dances with Wolves in transferring it to film is just what it needed: passion and clarity. Blake’s screenplay follows the book closely, but he always had the skeleton of a good story anyway. In Costner, the tale finds a skillful teller. Costner’s directoral debut does what too few films ever do; it takes a story of major moral significance and thinks it through. Costner doesn’t sell out, (even though this is a movie squarely aimed at the mass audience) and he doesn’t go muddle-headed. Even before Jein-Jacques Annaud, anthro omorphized his main charac!ter in iii e Bear, wilderness pictures have gone soft and phony when dealing with combustible subject matter. A controlled, honest approach, as exhibited in the masterful Carol Ballard film of Farley Mowat’s book Nafer Cry WOK is a rare bird. Costner 1has been brave. Dunbar is played by Costner, and we first see him as a Union soldier suffering the hellish battle conditions of the American Civil War. The army is very disorganized, and with friends like these hospital workers and commanding officers, who needs grey-

coats? Dunbar is so sick and tired of his pain and the stagnation around him that he rides out in front of the enemy, willing to die. Miraculously, he survives, but the gesture is misinterpreted as courageous, and he is rewarded with a post of his own choosing. He chooses the frontier. He wants to see it ‘before it’s gone.” ‘On his way to the outpost, Dunbar encounters more twisted, slothful individuals, so that when he finds himself alone at a small hut in the middle of nowhere, it’s a relief. Some of the best scenes of the film show Dunbar solitary at his outpost; he talks to his horse, is adopted by a wolf, sings, writes in his journal. Before he knows it, he has made contact with a neighbouring tribe of Sioux Indians. (They are Comanches in the book, but two years after the civil war the Comanches actually let themselves be moved to a reservation in Oklahoma and perhaps Costner didn’t want that kind of postscript.) The friendship between Ihnbar and the tribe grows slowly, giving us time . to get to know the Indians as individuals: Wind in His Hair is a brave warrior and hot-head, and his grand gestures have a lovely poetry; Smiles a J-.ot is just a boy, and talks like one (“It was my idea only to stea1 the horses, not to fall off,” he says in dis-

Great Grad Portraits Great Prices

gust to a younger, clumsy companion); Kicking Bird is a quiet, thoughdul, good-humoured holy inan; Ten Bears is the laconic, contented chief; and Stands With a Fist was orphaned from her white family by the ferocious Pawnee Indians and eventually serves as interpreter between Dunbar and the Sioux. Graham Greene, an actor from Winnipeg, plays Kicking Bird, and says that the cast added a great deal of the humour themselves. Kicking Bird has some charming scenes with his wife. Rodney E. Grant is a valiant, statuesque Wind in His Hair, and Floyd Red Crow Westerman’s placid Ten Bears is a memorable figure of wisdom. Mary McDonnell, a Broadway actress, is poignantly awkward trying to translate for Dunbar, and when the pair fall in love it’s a delicately handled romance. There are also several distinctive characters outside the tribe, notably Tony Pierce as the puerile, malicious Spivey. There is definitely an oldfashioned quality to the movie, despite the three-hour length and the subtitled dialogue of the Sioux. John Barry’s music has that big-movie soar, and there are a number of action sequences. But the non-verbal power of the Indians’ war whoops changes our concept of battle scenes, and the violence carries flickers of meaning

I

all the time, since we can’t help thinking about it philosophically, even as our hearts thump in excitement. The core of the film is paradisiacal. Dunbar discovers “harmony” in the daily life of this enlightened, joyous band. “1 had never known people more eager to laugh, more dedicated to each other.” He goes out on a buffalo hunt with them and Costner manages to stage it in such a way that it does not seem a vicious power struggle; the hunters are one with their prey, and Dean Semlera’s lensing combines with Neil Travis’cutting to make it a transcendent experience. We believe Dunbar when he says: “I knew for the first time who I really WaS.”

Dunbar initialIy comes across Stands With a Fit in a field, wounded. He bandages her in the stars and stripes, and it’s a clever use of iconography. The whole f&n is underscored with the ominousness of what we know will come. Of course the white men resurface, and they bring with them a baroque villainy that is stunning in its intensity. But Costner has the courtesy to acknowledge the audience’s guilt and shame. We don’t have to actuall) watch the destruction. He ends hi: movie with the camera on a cliff highabove the vulnerable Indian corn munity. It’s a powerful statement.

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In the grand tradition of all pontificating bluesmen, Stevie Ray foresaw his own future before its fiery finare. His prophetic musings clutter the lyrics and r& with uncanny vision while his voice oft warns us that he knew what was toming. You scoff? Examine the hard evidence that the text provides: the first cut is titled “Hard To Be”, need I say more; the second is ‘White Boots” the very color of Stevie’s boots when they found his body. Some of the other IitIes are also eulogistic: “Good Texan” (and the ladies can attest to that) while others dwell on the moment of doom; ‘Tick To&” and then “Baboom.” With this reasoning you can argue?

But is that all there is to it? What about the other songs? It is with them I see the truth surrounding Stevie’s demise. The first suspicious mark is “Hillbillies from Outerspace”, its importance stressed by its traditional approach in instrumentation with an overview to insurrection. This thgme>is continued in “Lung Way from Home” Stevie Ray Vaughn was not killed in a plane crash, he is being he@.&p+~, by aliens! “Why eIse woukf he siijg ‘Woke up this morning t was alI alone” in a tune called, ‘%lephone Song?” I teU you why, cause he wants us to build an ET phone to get in touch with him. His sad memories of fatiily are found in “Mama Said,” “Brothers” and even in the titIe of the album, “Family StyIe.” The only song left unmentioned may provide a clue to the frequency needed for contact, “D/FW.” Yep, that’s what happened. But even if I’m wrong (which I certainly am not!) this platter is diverse enough and good

enough (especially the second side with those sizzling instrumental pieces) to warrant a thumbs up and a purchase if you tie this kind o’bluesiest tuneage. Now go away boy, you bother me. “Dig for-Fire (the pointIess remix)” is pretty lame and uninteresting. The

m .

pijciesmake good again

by Lzrnce Manion Imprint staff This is actually better than I’d expected from Black Francis and the gang. The new Pixies Z2”does not, of course, represent any sort of growth or development for them, but at least it displays no further decline. That may be all we have any right to hope for at this point.

by P. Hohnholz Imprint staff

Gesiarz

The perfect metaphor: a dulI bubblegum pink cover imprinted with a photograph of a bare torso recalling scented memories of childhood; the reappearance of people from the past; and broken promises. Sunlight bathed the golden gIow. Polyester checkered-red pants and someone lifting a baby-blue short-sleeved shirt. Somewhere, a long time ago, the summer ended.

Ten albums and a decade later, Felt’s pIans were fulfilled. To exist for a decade and create a great body of work, and to then stop and do something different, was desire of the idiosyncratic lead singer/songwriter Lawrence. What the voyeuristic cover of Bubblepm Per&m4 conceals is an extraordinary compilation album. Felt’s previous comUnlike pilation,Gold Mine Trash, which was released after Felt left Cherry Red Records, Bubblegum Peeme reflects the pop perfection that the band established so successfully.

“Velvety Instrumental Version” (fear not, this is no “instant B-side,” for there’s no other version to this song that I’ve heard) and “Santo” are $andard _ Pixies formula: abrasive thrash.that is PO{ enough to go down ’ easy. But they actually sound better than almost anything on the Bossano~u album. Not bad. Worth hearing, even.

Twenty clean, clear guitar tunes with melodic keyboards are presented. The matetiil mirrors the cotident musical development of Felt during their Creation Record years. The music swirls past. The succinct lyrics create a collage of emotions. I didn’t mean to hurt yuu/Butyuu got to understand/ I was @kg to enjoy myse!fJt was thejmt day of the yeur/ Aud Iook what I have done/ I didn’t think &out yuur feelings/ I, just went ahead and done what I wanted/ And I’ve been bad/I’ve beeti su bad. Felt’s songs exceed the trivial narcissism achieved by popular music. The self-reflective Iyrics of Lawrence are painful and excessive visions of the fearful consequences of bodily secretions, of the body in ruins, and of the parasites who feed upon this disaster. What other band could do a cover version of the Beach Boys’ “Be Still” and make it sound morosely impor@nt enough to raise questions about one’s 03sr;a existence? The song por-

trays high emotiona realism for a cynical culture. Lawrence once complained that his hometown of Birmingham was a really awful dulI pIace.to live. “I’ve got no social life, no girlfriend. I look at the phone and say please ring. It’sthat bad.” If Lawrence aspires to be the first person in history to die of boredom, then what will happen to the rest of us? Sometime after Felt’s final performance in the spring of 1990, Lawrence left for New York City with promises of a major record deal. Two months later he returned to Birminghdm. The name of his new project is Denim.

This will not..x&ve to be a long review, fo7 even the prosaic diabetic. 1 cannot drone on with witticisms about this album. I will now divide YOU

into

two

groups.

The

first

likes

the kind of music that pIays in the back of shopping mails and discount stores;

“Beatles on Hammond” Strings plays Floyd” and buy it. The other group are those don’t notice the music when we and have no intention of buying

“101

or they who shop such

drivel, %ut might be conned into reviewing it. Not that I’m bitter about Rviewing this sterile pIatter of regurgitated elec-

tropo(o)p instead of getting something nice and sweet from the weekly bag of goodies, it’s just this is a lousy aIburn. Soca is a high powered Caribbean music that produced that dance hit a whiIe back, Buster Poindexter’s sweaty version of “Hot! Hot! Hot!” (ten brownie points if you can name the original a&t) and to have it retreaded on a Casio keyboard ensem-

ble by some twit in Germany not only in an insult to true music, nay, true art, it is also a sound reason to call German reunification a complete and utter failure as it allows the creation of contrived crap by cheap privateers that too closely resemblesthat media-

hyped Lambada craze dance records of yester-year and has nothing to do with any decent form of musical expression, let aIone the privileged and send fusion that is Soca. There. I said it. I just hope they don’t try to seIl a dance movie with the album.


. Arts/Records I

28 Imprint, Friday, January 11, 1991

[ by Andy Koch Implintstafi bylkdtW42iIff

Ilnprintstaff

This is the song with the video that’s been getting Madonna into trouble alI over khe place lately. “A celebration of sexuality,” she calls it, and whooooo, is it ever. Y!know, I’ve never seen vinyl sweat before . . . “Justify My Love” is Madonna’s return to her dance-pop “roots,” and is a welcome antidote tolin Breathless (her ill-fated foray into antiquated ’30s music). The song is a dizzying slow bum of sexiness. A great hiphop beat (peat, because it was stulen

by Christopher hnprint staff

Waters

Have I seen Carly Simon lateIy? Well, actually, no. Oh wait a second.. . Wasn’t she on IhirtysometJling a couple of years ago? Remember the episode where S4elissa got to take Carly’s picture for her album cover, and consequently she got to go to a swell record release soiree. Then the rest of the thirysomething gang turns up and gets

Public Enemy! - ed.), spooky washes, and Madonna’s own heartfelt (well, groinfelt, let’s

say) vocals all combine to make this piece no less than brilliant. Is anyone else getting very warm in here?

to drinking and Elliot brings Miles (because if you remember this is just after Micheal and Elliot’s ad agency went under but before they got the job with DAA) to try to impress him but a drunk Elliot screams at Miles creating quite a scene and embarrasses poor Melissa who runs out into traffic screaming “I just want to be loved.”

a couple of months back getting her zen readjusted on a remote tropical island with the Dalai Lama.

hrn

keyboard

Oh. . . Didn’t she win an Oscar last year for the soundtrack for Working Girl? But everyone totally missed the announcement because they were holding back Tom Cruise who wanted. to pick a fight with Daniel Day Lewis because Lewis reportedly took the last piece of cheese encased in black wax. Hold it. . . It seems to me that she of the Rich and Fkmous who have dated James Taylm

was on Lifestyles

Anyhow Carly Simon’s new album is out in record stores everywhere. It has many songs written by Carly Simon on it. Will lice, the bass player from the World’s Most Dangerous Band on Late Night with David Letterman, plays, of all things, the bass and shares the vocals on one song. The title track is used in the movie Postcardr;Jiom the Edge but not in its entirety. And the answer to the question: Have You Seen Me (name& Carly Simon) Lute&? Is yes and no. But whether or not I hear this album again does not really matter. It sounds nice ’ but it is a bit old for my taste. Actual19 I will probably never see this tape again because my Mom stole it to listen to in her Jetta; and I am not allowed near my Mom’s Jetta.

The notion of the “power trio” is usually associated with the world of hard rock and metal. But the likes of Rush, Triumph and Motorhead dd nbt hold a monopoly on this term. Trios such as the Minutemen, the Rhythm Pigs, and NoMeansNo have gaLed mc&st notoriety with their talent and their creative approach to their music. Following in the footsteps of these bands, has been California’s Victim’s Family. The Family has quietly released three albums over which they have perfected their metal, jazz, and funk influenced-hardcore sound. WRite Bread Blues (recorded in Vancouver with NoMeansNo’s John Wright) is nothing new for the band, but is a joy to listen to nonetheless. The rule of the day here is-loud and fast, but the band’s skill and versatility is easily evident. They shift almost effortlessly from the frenzied funkthrash of “Say It Like You Mean It” (one of the best hardcore tunes I’ve

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rarely let loose the way they might. The lyrics are a cut above as well. The Family is not the first band to attack the junk food-couch potato culqture of the USA. However, the novel approach taken on White Bread Blues is a lot of fun, especially on such tracks as “Bloated Housewives”, “Supermarket Nightmare”, and “Nirvana” (“We’re just sitting ‘round waiting for

“sitting round to achieveNiwund heard in ages) to the laid back R’n’B flavourof “Caged Bird”. But while the songs are more than adequate, it’s the wild and amazing instrurriental breaks that make repeated listenings a pleasure. My biggest regret though, is that Victim’s Family fail to delve further into their funk and jazz influences. They tease you here and there but

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Arts/Books

By way of hearsay By Way Of Deception

.,l&or

Ostrovski with Claire Hay

Stoddart,

371 pages, $24.95

by John Hymers Imprint staff

B Y&y of

keption purports to be a “devastating insider’s portrait of the Mossad’; instead, it comes aross as the work pf a bitter man who is venting his anger. The book is only devastating in one manner, which complete lack of facts and evidence. Any thinking person should feel completely insulted by Ostrovsky and Hoy who make grand assertions that are backed up only with their SOcalled inside knowledge. The Mossad is Israel’s CIA; they se its spies and its front line of defense from the Islamic world. The state of Israel is quite paranoid, but justifiably ~0, The Jewish II&OII is Gill reeling from the Holocaust, suffering from the world’s periodic anti-. semi&m, and facing extinction from Islam. Thus, they set up their spy service as a way of maintaining their aut 1nomy. I ; ctor bstrovsky is a Canadian Jew ‘wh became involved with ‘the ,I if Mossad, eventually taking the training that led to his becoming a K&a, or “case-worker” (spy). Shortly aft&r arriving at this level, he was dismissed improperly, he says, by his bosses who . maliciously ignored intelligence he reported; had they acted on his information, he claims, then the state of Israel would have avoided the embarrassment they received after forcing a plane to land that did not contain the PLO officials they thought were on board. Claire Hoy is the Canadian journalist whom Ostrovsky tells his taIe through. ’ The @st part of the book deals with his training and leads up to his dismissa1; the

second part is concerned with specific episode6 that Ostrovsky alleges t&t the Mossad was involved in. The two authors look at his training in depth, and in the process ought to lose half of their readership. His training should be familiar with anyone who has se& a James Bond flick, and ihe length they dedicated to it in the book is ridiculous, By Way@ Deception gets really lost in this section and seems to lead absolutely nowhere. I Also comparable tha womanizing cotiorkers with. Of succumbed to all the free sex around him,,and the tone he assumes when he broaches this subject is the tone of moral superiority. Such value loaded passages weaken an already

he

I? Bennett

Times Cafe, Toronto

January 5th

bY J- Hasey Imprint staff

‘Ti?Txw are those who labour to construct . something soiidfiom all this muck; But I’d rather roll around in it, Outside the toilet, who gibes a shit? Oh. lin @kin ‘jaded f you’ve never heard of Joe till then don’t feel too bad, Joe has I been hiding in the best place for any musician who disdains the damning trap of fame and fortune - the underground-of Canadian folk music. Armed with only a guitar and harmonica and supported by Willie P. (I hope not, that’s obscene) Joe played and sang a collection of his own songs. This material comprises some of the funniest, fresh material to be written in the last decade or so. His classics were played with vigor and a spontaneity that instantly won the crowd. The facet of Joe’s music that plays at the listener first are the lyrics. Sometimes touching

January

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damning as the two want to be, book is seriously flawed by a lack of corroborative evidence. Ostrovsky says, essentially, “I was in the Mossad, trust me.” But he was not involved in most of the incidents he describe, he merely read about them in Mossad files.

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sometimes biting always funny and entertaining, the words are the centre of the music. They speak for themselves: “Philosophers and poets, Those who run, those who walk, civilization is just a lot of talk; how can metaphysics compare to being happy with your hair” from “Happy With Your Hair” or from “All The Mutant Starlings,” “And the atom whose heart is broken has achieved it’s El Dorado, the whale that’s beached and bleaching is converted to a condo, but the earth is spinning forward in the motion of the clocks, geometric in its greed straining for the equinox” and of course the parodic ‘Homo Love,” ‘You see them fags uptown, they’re just a bunch of flakes. They’re only into homo love for dress up’s sake. They don’t appreciate the fashion statement a hard hat makes, when you’re up on the big steel making homo love.” But these, a mere smattering of Joe’s words, fail to present the impactfiey had when sung by the jester himself. His voice car$ed a unique quality of selfmocking insanity with simul-taneous deep sincerity. The next layer to this melodic onion is’ the genuine musical ability and inventiveness of both Joe and Willie I? (he should have gone before we left home.) Joe’s harmonies and choice of odd chord progressions were constantly engaging and moving, displaying his deep knowledge of the guitar. Not a slack, Wiiie P. (j&t go for Christ’s sake!) blew harp with energy and clarity. The sounds were sweet and blue; the phrasing funky and hip. On sound alone the evening -swelled, the addition of original material the coup de grace. Finally, the stage rapport with which the two cavorted with the audience and each other created the almost impossible intimate

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In the first section, the two go on at great length about his training, and how most of it was given to teaching him how to fabricate stories and identities. Now that he is turned informant, why should we trust him? 1 can’t believe that the Israeli government actually tried to have publication of this book banned. If the Mossad kanted to sow disinformation, or lead people off the trail with pointless yet seemingly damaging informa1 tion, they could not have done a better job themselves. Kinda makes me wonder.

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Arts/Books

30 Imprint, Friday, January 11, 1991

There’s some bad karma in Argentina

Ian Adams

looks

becoming

BecotigTania by lint Adams McClelland & Stewart, 304 pages

by John Mason Imprint staff

0 set a novel in the Argentina of the sc+callecHXrty War of the 1970’s requires an author - espe&&y a Canadian author - to say something not only insightful but original about events that have become a virtual cliche of horror.

T

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in Argentinian literature itself, as writers such as Osvaldo Soriano, Marta Traba, David Vinas and many others swept aside metaphysical preoccupations in an attempt to deal with - in literary terms at least - one of the great barbaric acts of this century. What Ian Adams does in Becoming Tania is to depart from this trend, and in an example of imagi$tion falling far short of the extraorevents of those times, present what is ultimately a disappointing creation The book’s tantalizing cover refers to Becoming Tania as a novel mixing Marx, revolution and mysticism, but this is not really true. Only mysticism finds a home here; any Marxist concepts there may be are as inverted as the red flag flying over a guIag. And the efforts at revolution are so wrapped in mysticism they lose all credibility. Ostensibly, this is the rather confused tale of a young, wedthy Argentine who rejects not onIy his family’s wealth in favour of mysticism, but his friends’ anti-government activism in favour of empty geshxes and mental confusion. In the process, he loses contact with his girlfriend ha, who has probably been picked up by the police. Tarot cards wedged firmly into his pocket, Nicolas meets a woman named Tariia, and begins to enjoy inexplicable powers that allow him to envision the last days of Che Guevara in his disastrous attempt to start a Latin American revolution in the jungles of Bolivia. These visions are connected to Tania, who becomes a cipher f&r another Tania, an East German Stasi agent who loves Che but betrays him Nicolas is picked up and tortured for reasons never quite believable; even the chief torturer acknowledges

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that they have nothing on him. But It is also interesting to note how all Nicolas is recruited to act as a of the female characters - the invismessenger for right-wingmilitary ible Lara, Tania, and her East German officers, finds out that Lara has lost namesake - are invariably lithe and her mind anyway, and allows himseIf , beautiful and great in bed, unlike the to die in a plane crash, dark, short peasant women they Ultimately, this novel seeks to would like to see liberated, With characters Iike these, other impose mystical reasoning on the least mystical of events. The military faults tend to surface. The dialogue is dictatorship of the 70s imprisoned often wooden. It reads as though the and tortured thousands of students, novel were actually written in labour leaders and ordinary citizens. Spanish and poorly translated into Both its roots and its effects are English. The frequent Spanish interpalpably real. jections d songs, remarks, whole bits In spite of all that happens in this of conversation -- can only annoy the story, of the interweaving of Nicolas’ non-Span&speaking reader, as they tale with Guevara’s, it does not exaccome without rhyme or reason. tly zip along, Its worst fault, however, Having said that, the interweaving lies in its characters, and their lack of of the tales is skillfully achieved, the purpose. desperation and harshness of the There is nothing to like in Nicolas guerrilla’s jungle life is well desand his inane musings on karma. cribed, and the ending is actually ,Unexpectedly handed three grenquite apt. ades by a crazy man in the street, It is just too easy to look at events in Nicolas feels that he has become “the Latin America and ponder whether unsuspecting medium t,o neutralize Latin3 are simply prone to violence, the karma that would undoubtedly whether there must be some cultural have added only more pain and sufreason why they keep on suffering fering to this world.” One is left with > under repressive regimes, or (as no idea why it is that Nicolas should Nicolas would have it) whether there have visions revealing that Che is simply a lot of bad karma there. Guevara was captured and Intellectuals in smoky cafes do this assassinated rather than killed in batall the time, and then are justifiably tle, since the man’s politics mean forgotten. What happened in Argennothing to him anyhow. Nicolas can tina was very real and had very real only interpret Che’s death as some reasons. All or any part of it makes for kind of personal drama. fascinating literature, and frequently There is even less to like in Tania has. and her empty and irritating political But the characters in &coming sloganeering. All her Maoist rhetoric Tania skim over top of all this reveals is an essentially elitist young dreaming, enveloped in their own woman with fixed ideas on what is inadequacies -- while we wait for politically correct. some hook that might really bring us Che Guevara himself comes across to Buenos Aires, not just its as a pitiable if honourable dupe, while geography, and make this situation sharp and understandable. A political the German Tania who betrays him is so corrupt and self-serving that it is thriller must have some politics, not almost a pleasure when the Bolivians simply be about people who think finally knock her off. they do.

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CLASSIFIED contact our office at (416) 924-6221. Student workshops: January 5,26 - February 23 - March 30 -,April27, 199 1. Business apportrnrity - earn an unlimited income monthly at home. tf you are tired of scraping by call Colleen at (416) 8783419. P&rto Vallarta - Beechfront condo in Puerto allarta available for $7OO/wk. Sleeps up to 6 people. Perfect for eading week or end of term. Call Wayne at 8886459. Thank YOU! - to all Ottawa co-op students who answered my survey. Without you, I wouldn’t have finished by last work report! Juiie Cochrane

COUWD Set of keys - found in parking lot behind University Plaza Jan. 2 around 7 p.m. Car keys, house keys, etc. -just on keyring. For info 725-8883.

WAN-MD Auditio~t~~January 12 - for Watertoo Gilbert and Sullivan Society’s - The Sorcerer - Call Don 886-3932 or Donna 744-3 146 for lead/chorus auditions. Parking Place! - near King and Central for January to April, 1991, Will pay. Call Julie or Rich at 725-8669. NBLP WAmmO Greatopporhrnltyfor a substantial income - part or full-time with an International Environmental company. Earnings of $40&$7OO./mo. Part-time. Call Marc at 725-0249. Weight Lnss Program: female students, staff and facutty are needed for a study run by the Psychology Dept., U of W, on the effectiveness of a self-help program for weight loss. You can participate from your home or residence and you will receive $15. at the completion of the study for participating. For more information please contact Heather at ext. 68 19 between 12100 p.m. and 500 p.m. Monday to Friday. Babysitter requ&ed: professional friendly family requires sitter for afterschool hours 4:00 to 5130 nightly, Close to University. Cal 746-2007 evenings. TYPINO ‘I&@ & Word Processing. Reasonable rates. Erb and Westmount. Call 7433342. Ward Processing? - look no further! Fast, reliable, accurate service. Reasonable rates. Call Betty 886-6361. Fxpezienced typist will take care of all your typing needs. Fast efficient bservice. Westmount-Erb area. Phone 886-7 153.

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AvAILABLL - share condonimium students, microwave, Near Zehrs Superto April 3 I, 1991. Call

PmRsoMLs $100. Jhwy Prize! A.C. Forrest Memorial Prize is awarded for a UW undergraduate essay on human relations in social, political or economic contexts. Must be accompanied by letter from course instructor. Full details: Dr. Russet Legge, St. Paul’s United College - m-1 460. Deadline: January 31, 1g9’jy: 3 “. -.... .>, Tw iu Art Therapy - The Toronto & Therapy Institute offers a two year training program in Art Therapy which grants a diploma. Individuals interested in a Masters degrw program, offered in co-, operation with Lesley cdlege should

MNounerMrNT8 Hoaeshne - oti a safe, fully screened introduction wtvice to people interested in shared accommodation. Homeshare is a program sponsored by the Sociat Planning Council, Region of Waterloo, and the Ministry *of Housing, for details call 5?89894.

The Seal Justke Action Groupmeds reguiarly throughout the term to coordinate educational events and civil disobedience actions ranging from speakers and leafletting to blockades. Past actions have included the Dis ARMX campaign, NATO out of Nitassinan actions and ongojng solidarity with the Innu, Christmas Anti-War Toys action, and a continual focus on non-violent resistance to militarism. For details, call 884-3465. piuured ParentI Waterloo Region is looking for mature, caring women and men to volunteer with our agency as counsetlors. We are a commuinity-based proc&ice agency whose focus is on family planning and sexuality issues. Call 7439360. K-WNewcomm - is a new womens social group to meet other new comers. Call 7471658 - first Wed. of month at rink in park. Tuh Waded each term to assist with Conversational and Written English. Contact Sheryl Kennedy, International Student Office, NH 2080. Campus Mw Kit - environmentally friindly atternative to disposable dishes and cutlery. It will hold an entire meal and comes complete with quality stainless steel utensils. This is an effort by Food Services and WPIRG. Kits wilt be available through all Food Services outlets. Any customer using Campus mess Kit and Lug-a-Mug will be entitled to a free refill of a regular beverage at all Food Services cash operations. Offer will expire March 30, 1991.

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pbti old: &&TY Exhibition opens at the Seagrati- &i&urn Oct. 2, 1990 to January 3 1,199 1. For further information contact Lynne Paquette at 885- 1857. Comeand~+partoftheCaribbeanStudent ASsociatiah (CSA) every other Thur&ly stew*n. 34 in-ccl35, @ls of inter&in&j even&m scheduled for tFii& term. See you $Fre! r - ‘P1 Stud&” c & GST - Most students 19 or over eligibf& for the GST Credit - also students under 19 if married or a parent it’s not too late to apply for credit but you must file a Tax Return & GST Credit application - these forms are available at

January

11, 1991

CLASSIFIED District Taxation Offices. For more information l-800-267-6999 (touch-tone phones) ; l-800-267-5656 (all other types of phones). Field Study Program in the Himalayas, India. July 10 - August 20, 1991, Cost: Approximateiy $2,000.00 , return airfare will be paid by C.I.D.A. (subject to approval). For an application and other info write to: India Field Study Program, Dept. of Environment & Resource University of Waterloo, Studies, Waterloo, Ont., N2L 3G 1. Completed applications with three references must be received by February 1, 1991, .

IMPRINT

HkvE YOU registered for your new Ontario @Health Card?? After Jan. 1, 199 1, you’ll be asked to present your new Ontario Health Card for health services in Ontario. For further info about registering, @ease call your local Ministry of Health Office.

Staff Meetings are every Friday at 12:30

Undergraduate marks available starting Janaury 16. If you are a registered, oncampus, full-time undergraduate student this term and are expecting a Grade Report from the Fall 1990 term, you may pick it up at the registrar’s office beginning January 16 (Grade reports for St. Jerome’s and Renison registrants will be available at the colleges,) Grade reports for part-time students will be mailed, as welt as for co-o students on a work term. ID card identification will be required for those grade reports that are picked up. Independent Studies and Engineering students can get their grade reports in their departments.

Campus Centre Room 140

Clamof ‘91 Grad Gift Raffle. Win a trip for two to the Dominican Republic, a CD portable stereo, a 1991 Schwinn Woodlands mountain bike and any other prizes. Get your tickets for only $3.00 or 2 for $5.00 at SC. Sot., Math Sot. or Eng. Sot.

“Volunteers Are Most Welcomed”

UCTURrnS Free lectures presented by WLU and University of Waterloo every Monday at noon at the Main Branch of the Kitchener Public Library. January 14 to April 8 excluding Easter. Winter topics are: January 14; Community accessibility for disabled seniors. January 21 - Natural disasters January 28 - Women mystics in the Middle Ages February 4 - Speciat needs students: the post-econdary level February 11 - Atmospheric disaster February 18 - A retrospect of the oral history program at KPL February 25 - Artificial intelligence March 4 - The past, present, and future of church music March 11 - Perspectives on Lester 5. Pe;trson March 18 - Endangered spaces: Yukon national parks March 26 - Free Trade after one year April 8 - Naturai alternatives to a lawn

Cohwon down it’s great fun! +

UPCOMING EVENTS

Student Cveer Advisors for Winter term. ~omb&&~ & Grill: 12-4 p.m. matinee You can benefit by receiving training in all free - Mike Something (solo) areas of career counselling. Volunteers are needed 3-5 hours/week. Ap-plications Fed I&U: 8:OO p.m. - 1964 “As The available in Needles Hall. Beatles” If ywr Club or student society wishes to book the Campus Centre &eat Halt, please call the Turnkey Desk. We are always open to your suggestions, cfitiques and comments.

imprint, Friday,

founder of LACAC and member of Waterloo Historical Society and Architectiiral Conservancy of Ontario. Hilliard Hall, First United Church, Waterloo, 8 p.m-. For further info call 886-7125. Fly KPL - 8:00 pm. Special Guest: Dr. George F. Atkinson, UW. Slide presentation. KPL Main.

B,lknuuy= FRFX Drop-in Legal Clinic - 3:OO p.m. to Bombshelter a Grill: 8100 p.m. - “One” . 6:00 p.m. one or more lawyers from the Reggae Dance Funk Band. Law Offices of finszer, Sloane & Pinchen wilf be in attendance at WCRI Main Office, M-,-f4 Clayfield Building, Block 2, 268 Phillip Oq+~&d me&ng for the United Church Campus Ministry Co-ordinating Grout. Come and be WI of this new idea/ actioi group. Staff ‘Lounge, St. Paul’s Cqllege. 5:45 to 6:45 p.m. m~tivc qe & Self Destructive . ..a1 Behaviour - 7:00 p.m. Prof. Al Evans, UW. KPL Forest Heights Branch. Ideas $ lseues - 123noon, Dr. Peter Dunn, WLU, Faculty of Social Work KPL Main. . me origins of Modern Japan - 700. Dr. Merrill Hunsberger, WLIJ. KPL Main. ~~~.‘s UW yaung Li&& - general meeting, Davis Centre Lounge (DC1301), 7 pm. All are welcome.

.

CUI&II l%dedim of University Women, KW Chapter, ho& Marg RowelI,

Street* -9-18 Wah!ho BbodDonor Clinic, First United Church, King & William Sts., 1130p.m. until 800 p.m. Quota: 350. -TlwrrbJ,Jrwlvyqt w Harrar Picture Show in AL. Tickets available next week outside Science C & D. AlI pr-ds to Science Grad Bell * Myth, ~WSMSI& Christian Consciousness - 790 p.m. prof. ~&=tene~~~k~, UW. KPLMain . -_ . Lave and Hs Myth - 7:OO p.m. br. Peter Erb, WLU. Stanley Park Branch. Bomb&l-Bar L Grill - 8:OO p.m. Marty Putz, Barry Kennedy, Mike Wilmot.

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