1984-85_v07,n17_Imprint

28
Friday, November 9,1984; Vol. 7, No. 17; The Student Newspaper; Universityof Waterloo; Waterloo, Ontario. Feds recognize 2 out of 3 new clubs by Mathew lngram Imprint staff At a recent meeting o i the Committee ol I'reaidents. a Marxist-Leninist study group was denied ollicial recognition as a club b) the tederat~on o l Students. S o reason was g i ~ c n b) the Conimittce (or the dcc~sion. 1 he meeting. held this past I huradaq, No\eniber 1st in the tederar~on uflices. was conbcned to cons~dcr the recognition ol three organi/ations -- the Marxist-Leninist Study Group (M LSG), the Committee Against Imperialist War Preparations (CAIWP). and the Greek Students Association (GSA). '1 o be rccogni~ed b) the tederation as an ollicial chb. an organi~ation must csacnriall) adhcrc to dcnioc~-alic membership principles. In return lor th~a ~rccognit~un, a club rccei\ea Irce room-booking pri\ ~lcgca in the Campus Centre to a maximum ol ten hours a week, as well a i~)lorniation-posti~lg pribileges, and other benelits. ' The CAIWP was granted ollic~al club status at the :Committee meeting b) an almost unanimous dcc~slon. alter a presentation b) CAIWI' president Mann) Gitterman. I he Marxist-Leninist group was denied similar ollicial recognition b) the COP. lollow~ng a PI-cscntation b! MLSG president .IcSl' Conwa) and a closed discussion b) the Committee lroni which MI-. Conwa) and, lmpriltt wcr; excluded. Whcn asked wh) no I'eaaon was gi\vn lor the C oninrittce's decision to den) club status to the M 1.SG. tederation pl-eaidc~rt 1 om Allison said that there was more than one reason 101- the dcnial, and the Committee dccidcd not tu stc~gle one out as an ollicial statenrent. Faentiallq. according to Mr. All~aon. the reasons lo1 dcn>ing thcgroup here tmolold: lirstl). it masdecided b) the COI' that the intctitiwns ul the MLSCi as outlined b) Mr.,C'onwa> delined it more a , an "academic" 01-gani/ation (as ind~catcd b) the group's t~tlc). and hence more \uitud to recognition b) the Arts htudcnt Union. Sccondl). MI-. Alliaon raid. the teduration's Icgal I rcsponrib~lit) lor ollic~all) rccugni/cd clubs w a discuascd; it was pointed out that an) action tahcn b) a ~ccogni/cd club or club nrcniber ua5 cllecti\clq sanctioned b) the tcdcration, and that th~s could ha\e lay-waclr~ng ~nipltcations in a case oi a politicall)-oriented organi/ation. At one pu~nt 111 the nicctlng. Mr. A11isu11 stated that sc\eral nrcrnbcra ol the MLSG bad "a track rccoid lor in\ol\ing students in I~tigation" and asked Mr. Cunua) 11 this sort ol act)\ 11) would continue in the luturc. Mr. Cunwa) stated that it would. 11 the kcdcratiun cont~nued to "encourage rtudcnts in illegal acti\ tic". %hen asked to cOIiliiicnt 011 1111sstatenrent 1 ~ 1 1 u \ ~ ~ n g the meeting. Mr. C'onwac said that some Mar.\ist-lxninist literature ol his was destroqed by another student during Wlm S~rnon~s's adni1111strat;un. I his was allcgcdl) done \\it11 the cunacnt 01 M r . Simunia..and Mr. C'onwa) sub~cqucntl~ tuoh the other student to court. 1 lie Icgal lees lor ~III\ othef student were p a d b) the Federation. tIe \\asconacqucntl) charged \\it11 "malic~oua nl~achiel". thuugl1 he did nut ~ c c c ~ \ c a c~iniinal record. Mr. Allison's impression ol the incident was that the student in question was Jewish, and was d~streased bq what he pcrcei~ed to be anti-Semitic elements ol Mr. Conwa)'a literature. Howc\er. dul-ing the resulting 11-id. thejudge made it clear that the leallct in question did not promote racial 01 ~rcligioua hatred. Mr. Allison also ~nadc mcntlon dl the lact that 11 was \\ell- hnou n that Mr. Cunwa). along with 1'101essor D O L I ~ N ahlstc~i (a ~ncnlbcr ol M L.SG,), had bcen in\ul\cd rccetitl) lna 5150.U00 libel su~t concerning COIIIIIICII~~ n~adcab~ut a ~OIICC ollicer. .I lie su~t \\as subscqucntl) rcaol\ed in the olliccr'a la\ou~. 1)ut is bc~ng appcalcd. Mr. All~sun sad that 11 mas the cunsidcrat~~~ns 01 tlicsc e1e111>. conlb~ned with the lavt that tljc groupcould I.CL~I\C ICCO~II~~~VI~ Irum e~thcr thc.A~ts Student LIIIUI~ ur the LI~I\~I~II! itsell. that rcsullcd III the C o~~rni~ttcc'a dcc~siun. klv alau sad that the decision not to glant club status \rga 111 Fishing for dope: is it pot or tea? by T.A. Crier Imprint staff The UW Security Force "thought they had the drug bust of thecentury" when they entered the Theatre of the Arts and Sound a bag of fake marijuana, sa) s Douglas Abel, chairman of the UW drama club. 1 he lake dope was a prop lor the play. Ft~hmng, about a group ol '60's h~ppic\ 11)1ng to make 11 In the '70'\. M r Abel thinks that the cleaning stall must have found some dead ch~ckens In the garbage and phoned Security The ch~ckens. he says. were also props foi the play and were purchased in the state In wh~ch they were found The\ were not. he rifles. an airgun and a 22, used as props, and discovered a car and a motorcycle backstage. Security contacted Mr. Abel and told him that they had taken the "marijuana" and the rifles. and that they couldn't have them back. 1 hey also inquired as to why live chickens were being beaten on stage. and ordered that the vehicles be removed. I n reiterating his content- ion that the marijuana was lake, Mr. Abel said that "for one thing, our budget is such that we couldn't afford to use real dope". Mr. A.E. Romenco, director of Campus Security. could not be reached lor COllllllelll. A\' \\ell. 01l1e1- accurit) pcraon~rcl uere 1101 prepared to cunlnlcnt o ~ r the ~~ic~deiit. .IUW student assaulted in N.Y. bar no \\a) intciidcd as a dcn~al 01 the gl-oup's I-ight to c.\iat. 01. as a condc~nnat~on ol 1ts p~n~ic~plcs. U hen rcaclicd lo1 cummcnt ai Iris Irumc. MI. C onwa! sad that the Curn~i~~ttcc'a d~acuss~oi~ 01 "pc~sonal nrattcrs" iega~d~~~g 111s paat \\as an e.~ee~c~sc 111 "cl~aractcrassass~~~at~c)~~ llc alau bald that hi\ group had nlct all the c~ Itcrla lo1 club slatus and that the Comnrittcc'\ dcciriun \\as a ~csult 01 " 1 ) ~ 1 w n a l p~cjud~cc' . MI. Con\\a) \\elit mi to sa! that 11uaa ub\~oua that MI. All~sori and the ut11c1 IIIC~I~CI~ 01 the C'OIIIIIII~~CC \\VIC "pulit~call>p~cjud~ccd" and "a11t1-denic1~1at1c". A linal nutu: '111s Greek Student Association was accepted unanirnouslq as a tederatio~~ club b) COP. b) Dave Sider Imprint staff :UW student. Al 1.a t-lanlrnc leal-ncd last wechcnd. Nobcinbcl 2-4. that being a "good Samaritan" can be dangerous. He was partici- 1 pating In the Malh Socict) I road trip !o Late Show. a bar in Nragal-a talls, New Yorh. 'I he part) soured around 3 wet-c getting read! tu Ica\c. A scuflle b~ )kc out in \ \ h ~ c l ~ f three bouneer~ assau1tcd a Waterloo aluck'nt. I he b+lancc ol the CIOH~ rcportedl) stood atuund matching. and no one made an) ellost to stop the light. Acco~d~ng to La I Ianmc. he attempted to bleak up the ~IOIII a~~d hichcd and piinclicd 111 the h c d .dtc~lalling to tire l10u1. I.atcr. he IC-e~~teted the b a ~ IU w~quirc abuu~ the nanlcs 01 the bouncers \\ho aasaultcd hlnL t he ll1~nagcl 01 l.atc Show said. "bet' out u1 ~ h u cauntr!. 1.111 nut gl\~ng LOU an> llallrcs, I'oiics In \I.I~I.I t dlls. \c\\ 1 <*It,. \\ClC c011tilr.tcd to 4cc .ibuut pubhthlc C~UIILIII. hut a~tlwut il \uq~e<t the> NCIC 1a.m.. as the M a b students light. but was hlchcd 111 th~ 1 a I ld~lini~ talhcd 10 not p ~ c l ~ i ~ c d to du a~~\tll~nfi. Lyrical eroticism an: ;azz classicism I and more?!! North G South at different poles. Page 3 ~ nll the clues thar s wit to'hint.

description

Mr Abel thinks that the cleaning stall must have found some dead ch~ckensIn the garbage and phoned Security The ch~ckens. he says. were also props foi the play and were purchased in the state In wh~chthey were found The\ were not. he At a recent meeting oi the Committee ol I&#39;reaidents. a Marxist-Leninist study group was denied ollicial recognition as a club b) the tederat~onol Students. So reason was gi~cnb) the Conimittce (or the dcc~sion. :UW student. Al 1.a t-lanlrnc leal-ncd last wechcnd.

Transcript of 1984-85_v07,n17_Imprint

Page 1: 1984-85_v07,n17_Imprint

Friday, November 9,1984; Vol. 7, No. 17; The Student Newspaper; University of Waterloo; Waterloo, Ontario.

Feds recognize 2 out of 3 new clubs by Mathew lngram Imprint staff

A t a recent meeting o i the Committee o l I'reaidents. a Marxist-Leninist study group was denied ollicial recognition as a club b) the tederat~on o l Students. S o reason was g i ~ c n b) the Conimittce (or the dcc~sion.

1 he meeting. held this past I huradaq, No\eniber 1st i n the tederar~on uflices. was conbcned to cons~dcr the recognition ol three organi/ations -- the Marxist-Leninist Study Group ( M LSG), the Committee Against Imperialist War Preparations (CAIWP). and the Greek Students Association (GSA).

'1 o be rccogni~ed b) the tederation as an ollicial chb. an o r g a n i ~ a t i o n must csacnriall) adhcrc to dcnioc~-al ic membership principles. I n return lo r t h ~ a ~rccognit~un, a club rccei\ea Irce room-booking pr i \ ~lcgca in the Campus Centre to a maximum o l ten hours a week, as well a i~)lorniat ion-posti~lg pribileges, and other benelits. ' The C A I W P was granted o l l i c~a l club status at the :Committee meeting b) an almost unanimous dcc~slon. alter a presentation b) CAIWI ' president Mann) Gitterman. I he Marxist-Leninist group was denied similar ollicial

recognition b) the COP. lo l l ow~ng a PI-cscntation b! M L S G president .IcSl' Conwa) and a closed discussion b) the Committee l ron i which MI-. Conwa) and , lmpriltt wcr; excluded.

Whcn asked wh) no I'eaaon was gi\vn lor the C oninrittce's decision to den) club status to the M 1.SG. tederation pl-eaidc~rt 1 o m Allison said that there was more than one reason 101- the dcnial, and the Committee dccidcd not tu stc~gle one out as an ollicial statenrent.

Faentiallq. according to Mr . All~aon. the reasons lo1 dcn>ing thcgroup here tmolold: lirstl). i t masdecided b) the COI' that the intctitiwns ul the MLSCi as outlined b) Mr.,C'onwa> delined i t more a, an "academic" 01-gani/ation (as ind~catcd b) the group's t~t lc) . and hence more \uitud t o recognition b) the Arts htudcnt Union.

Sccondl). MI-. Alliaon raid. the teduration's Icgal I

rcsponrib~lit) l o r o l l ic~al l ) rccugni/cd clubs w a discuascd; i t was pointed out that an) action tahcn b) a ~ccogni/cd club or club nrcniber ua5 cllecti\clq sanctioned b) the tcdcration, and that t h ~ s could ha\e lay-waclr~ng ~nipltcations in a case oi a politicall)-oriented organi/ation.

A t one p u ~ n t 111 the nicctlng. M r . A11isu11 stated that sc\eral nrcrnbcra o l the M L S G bad "a track rccoid lor i n \o l \ i ng students in I~t igation" and asked M r . Cunua) 11 this sort o l act)\ 11) would continue in the luturc. Mr. Cunwa) stated that i t would. 11 the kcdcratiun cont~nued to "encourage rtudcnts in illegal acti\ tic".

%hen asked to cOIiliiicnt 011 1111s statenrent 1 ~ 1 1 u \ ~ ~ n g the meeting. M r . C'onwac said that some Mar.\ist-lxninist literature o l his was destroqed by another student during Wlm S~rnon~s's adni1111strat;un. I his was allcgcdl) done \\it11 the cunacnt 01 M r . Simunia..and Mr . C'onwa) sub~cqucn t l~ tuoh the other student to court. 1 lie Icgal lees lor ~III\ othef student were p a d b) the Federation. tIe \\asconacqucntl) charged \\it11 "malic~oua nl~achiel". thuugl1 he did nut ~ c c c ~ \ c a c~ in i i na l record.

M r . Allison's impression o l the incident was that the student i n question was Jewish, and was d~streased bq what he pcrcei~ed to be anti-Semitic elements o l M r . Conwa)'a literature. Howc\er. dul-ing the resulting 11- id. thejudge made i t clear that the leallct i n question did not promote racial 01 ~rcligioua hatred.

M r . Allison also ~nadc mcntlon dl the lact that 11 was \\ell- hnou n that Mr . Cunwa). along with 1'101essor D O L I ~ N ahlstc~i (a ~ncnlbcr ol M L.SG,), had bcen in \u l \cd rccetitl) l na 5150.U00 libel s u ~ t concerning COIIIIIICII~~ n ~ a d c a b ~ u t a ~OIICC ollicer. .I lie s u ~ t \\as subscqucntl) rcaol\ed in the olliccr'a l a \ o u ~ . 1)ut is b c ~ n g appcalcd.

Mr. A l l~sun sad that 11 mas the cunsidcrat~~~ns 01 tlicsc e1e111>. conlb~ned with the lavt that tljc groupcould I.CL~I\C I C C O ~ I I ~ ~ ~ V I ~

I rum e~thcr thc.A~ts Student LIIIUI~ ur the L I ~ I \ ~ I ~ I I ! itsell. that rcsullcd III the C o~~rni~t tcc 'a dcc~siun.

klv alau sad that the decision not to glant club status \rga 111

Fishing for dope: is it pot or tea? by T.A. Crier Imprint staff

The U W Security Force "thought they had the drug bust o f thecentury" when they entered the Theatre of the Arts and Sound a bag of fake marijuana, sa) s Douglas Abel, chairman of the U W drama club.

1 he lake dope was a prop lo r the play. Ft~hmng, about a group o l '60's h~pp ic \ 11)1ng to make 11 In the '70'\.

M r Abel thinks that the cleaning stall must have found some dead ch~ckens In the garbage and phoned Security The ch~ckens. he says. were also props fo i the play and were purchased in the state In w h ~ c h they were found The\ were not. he

rifles. an airgun and a 2 2 , used as props, and discovered a car and a motorcycle backstage.

Security contacted Mr . Abel and told h im that they had taken the "marijuana" and the rifles. and that they couldn't have them back. 1 hey also inquired as to why live chickens were being beaten on stage. and ordered that the vehicles be removed.

I n reiterating his content- ion that the marijuana was lake, M r . Abel said that "for one thing, our budget is such that we couldn't afford to use real dope".

M r . A . E . R o m e n c o , director o f Campus Security. could not be reached lo r COllllllelll. A \ ' \\ell. 01l1e1- accurit) pcraon~rcl uere 1101

prepared to cunlnlcnt o ~ r the ~ ~ i c ~ d e i i t .

.IUW student assaulted in N.Y. bar

no \\a) intciidcd as a dcn~a l 01 the gl-oup's I-ight to c.\iat. 01. as a condc~nnat~on ol 1ts p~n~ ic~p lcs .

U hen rcaclicd lo1 cummcnt ai Iris Irumc. MI . C onwa! sad that the Curn~i~~t tcc 'a d~acuss~o i~ 01 "pc~sonal nrattcrs" i e g a ~ d ~ ~ ~ g 111s paat \\as an e.~ee~c~sc 111 " c l ~ a r a c t c r a s s a s s ~ ~ ~ a t ~ c ) ~ ~ " . l l c alau bald that hi\ group had nlct al l the c~ Itcrla lo1 club slatus and that the Comnrittcc'\ dcciriun \\as a ~csul t 01 "1)~1wnal p~c jud~cc ' .

MI. Con\\a) \\elit m i to sa! that 11 uaa u b \ ~ o u a that MI . A l l~sor i and the ut11c1 I I I C ~ I ~ C I ~ 01 the C'OIIIIIII~~CC \\VIC "pulit~call> p~c jud~ccd" and "a11t1-denic1~1at1c". A l inal nutu: '111s Greek Student Association was accepted unanirnouslq as a t e d e r a t i o ~ ~ club b) COP.

b) Dave Sider Imprint staff

:UW student. A l 1.a t-lanlrnc l e a l - n c d l a s t w e c h c n d . Nobcinbcl 2-4. that being a "good Samaritan" can be dangerous. He was partici-

1 pating In the M a l h Socict) I road tr ip !o Late Show. a bar i n Nragal-a talls, New Yorh. 'I he part) soured around 3

wet-c getting read! tu Ica\c. A scuflle b~ )kc out i n \ \ h ~ c l ~ f three bouneer~ assau1tcd a Waterloo aluck'nt.

I he b+lancc o l the C I O H ~

rcportedl) stood atuund matching. and no one made an) ellost to stop the light.

A c c o ~ d ~ n g to La I Ianmc. he attempted to bleak up the

~IOI I I a ~ ~ d hichcd and piinclicd 111 the h c d .dtc~ lalling to tire l10u1.

I.atcr. he IC-e~~teted the b a ~ IU w~qui rc a b u u ~ the nanlcs 01 the bouncers \ \ho aasaultcd hlnL t he ll1~nagcl 0 1 l.atc Show said. "bet ' out u1 ~ h u cauntr!. 1.111 nut g l \ ~ n g LOU

an> llallrcs,

I'oiics In \I.I~I.I t dlls. \c\\ 1 <*It,. \\ClC c011tilr.tcd to 4cc .ibuut pubhthlc C~UIILIII. hut a ~ t l w u t il \uq~e<t the> NCIC

1a.m.. as the M a b students light. but was hlchcd 111 t h ~ 1 a I l d ~ l i n i ~ talhcd 10 not p ~ c l ~ i ~ c d to d u a ~ ~ \ t l l ~ n f i .

Lyrical eroticism an: ;azz classicism I and more?!! North G South at different poles.

Page 3 ~

nll the clues thar s wit to'hint.

Page 2: 1984-85_v07,n17_Imprint

.

axnpus Events . , Imprint. Friday, November 9, 1984. -, .

- Fri., Nov. 9 - - Sat., Nov. 10 -

MathSoc presents: Wine & Cheese, South Campus Hall. See Classifieds under “Personal for further inlo.

The Early Childhood Education Centre 10th Anniversary Open House. All former preschoolers 1 and their families, former students and, friends are invited to drop by and celebrate this event on Saturday, November 24, 1984 from 3:00 to 5:00 p.m. Refreshments will be served.

Economics Society presents a Faculty-Student potluck dinner on Nov. 14 from 6 - 10 p.m. in PAS 3rd floor ‘lounge. B&g your -favourite dish (dessert or main course). Prize for the best!

FRYDAY PUBS!! held every Friday, 12 noon till 4 p.m., in Hagey Hall room 280. Weekly specials! Non- alcoholic beverages always available. Sponsored by the Arts Student Union.

Applied Studies with Engineering and Dance, is co- sponsoring a pub at the Kent Hotel tonight. Watch posters for details.

The Progressive Conservative Campus Club will be choosi$ delegates to the Provincial Leadership Convention on November 27 at 6 p.m.

Things They Never Told You In Science 000: ask a senior Chem student about work terms (or tell a junior student what they’re like) and have a beer at the University Club. 1 - 3 p.m. First year chemists & biochemists especially welcome.

Chinese Christian Fellowship speaker meeting topic: “Using Our Gifts” by Rev. S. Knights. 7:30 p.m., WLU Seminary Bldg, Room 201. Refreshments and fellowship afterwards.

The Mug Coffeehouse 8:30 to 11:30, in CC 1 10. Come out to enjoy live entertainment. An opportunity to meet and talk to new people in a relaxing atmosphere, and delicious snacks - homemade cookies, muffins, etc., as well as tea, coffee, and apple cider.

Bombshelter opens at 12 noon. DJ Friday Afternoon 1:30 - 5~30 p.m. (no covercharge). DJ every evening at 9:00 p.m. Feds: rio cover. Others: $1.00 atter 9:00 p.n~.

FEQ FLICKS: Indiana Jones & The Temple of Doom, starnng Harnson Ford. AL I 16, 800 p.m. Feds: $ I .OO with I.D. card. Others: $2.00. There will be a second show at lo:30 p.m. on Friday and Saturday night.

Salatul Jumu’a (Friday prayer) organized by the Muslim Students’ Association, Univ. of Waterloo. CC 135. 1:30 p.m.

Birth Control Centre: Our trained volunteers provide nonjudgemental, confidential counselling and information on all methods of birth control, planned and unplanned pregnancy, subfertility and V.D.. We also have an extensive lending library and do referrals to community agencies. Our hours are 9:30 - 4:30 daily & Wednesday evenings 7:00 - 10:00 in CC 206, ext. 2306. We advocate responsible sexuality.

FED FLICKS: see Friday for details.

Bombshelter opens at 6:00 p.m. DJ after 9:00 p.m. every eiening. Feds: no cover. Others: $1 .OO after 9:OO p.m.

- Sun., Nov. 11 -

Outer’s Club Bike Ride to St. Jacobs and Conestoga. A short but interesting ride for our last scheduled tour of the season. Meet in front of CC at IO:00 a.m. /

Holy Eucharist: 9:30 a.m. and 1 I 100 a.m. St. Bede’s Chapel. Anglican Campus Ministry.

Holy Eucharist 9:30 a.m., Village 2, East Lounge, Room 102. Anglican Campus finistry.

Christian Worship on Campus. lo:30 a.m., HH 280, sponsored by Huron Campus Ministry. Everyone welcome. Chaplain Graham E. Morbey.

St. Paul’s College: Wesley Chapel. Sunday Service: 1 1 am - 12 noon; Holy Communion: first Sunday of

every month. Sunday evenrng Fellowship Service: IO p.m. Everyone IS welcome.

Laurel Creek Nature Centre: Dam Breakdown! Who Needs It! Open house all day. At. 2:00 p.m. a walk Lhe Laurel Creek reservoir, and a tour ot the Dam building will give us the “insrde story‘ on the reasons tor the annual drawdown of water in the reservoir and the mechanisms that control this.

Chapel Service: Mennonite Doctrrne Series. Conrad Grebel College, 7 p.m.

Sermons on Mennonite Doctrine: A cntrcal study trom the vantage point of the Bible and current ecurnenrcdl thought. Cottee and dIscussIon tallows the service. Conrad Grebel College Chdpel. Article 18, Love dnd Nonresistance.

Fed Flicks: see Friday tor details. One show only tonight.

- Mon., Nov. 12 - Morning Prayer: 9:00 a.m., St. Bede s Chapel. Anglican Campus Ministry.

The Fifth Annual Arb Lectum Seihi~l9844M

Freedom in Society R.L. Fowier “Slavery, Freedom and the Artes M6edes” November lsth, 1984,8:00 p.mb, Theatre of the Arts, Modern Languages

Technology for Development: CUSO Information Meeting with Nick Fog, CUSO Technical Officer and slide presentation of technical development projects in Tanzania and Zambia. 7:30 p.m., 3004 Math G Computer Building, University of Waterloo. 885- 121 1 ext. 3144 for details.

Abortions: Stories from North and South. A documentary that will provoke both relection and discussion. CC 135, 2 showings 12 p.m. and 1:15 p.m. Sponsored by the Women’s Centre.

Biology Undergrad Society (BUGS) holds meetings once a week on Wednesdays from 11:30 - 12:30 p.m. at the Gleave Library.

Students of Objectivism presents a live tale “Charity In A Selfish Society” by Dr. Gordon Stubley. Discussion will follow. All welcome.

Cinema Gratis: The Hunger &Just A Gigolo. Movies begin at 8:00 p.m. in the Campus Centre Great Hall. Free!

NDP Club -.-- Executive Meeting - Discuss Guest Speakers for November - Campus Centre Rm. 110 4:30 p.m.

House of Debates; Come enjoy a great debate in St. Jeromes’ room 229 at 6:00 p.m. There will also be public speaking so don’t miss it.

GLLOW (Gay and Lesbian Liberation of Waterloo) Coffeehouse in CC 1 10 beginning at 8:00 p.m. At IO:00 p.m., those interested will leave CC 1 10 to

rendezvous at the Club downtown Kitchener. Call the ‘r GLLOWline for details (884-4569). Rides available.

Evening Prayer and sermon. Conrad Grebel College Chapel: 4.30 p.m.

Waterloo Jewish Students Association/ Hlllel invites you to our bagel bruncthes. A great place to meet people and hear speakers. I 1:30 - I :30 p.m. in CC I IO.

A Meeting of the IBM PC Users Group LVIII be held in Math and Computer Room 2009. Everyone welcome. .

Brown Bag Seminars: Computer Grdphics As An 12:30 p.m., Prof. Jim Garnder, Geography Aid In Complex Human Problem Solving. Dave Department: Report on the Vancouver Conference Fuller, Management Sciences. l2:30 p.m. CPH on “Nuclear War, The Search for Solutrons.” AL 105. 3385. - Thurs., Nov. 15 - Bombshelter opens 12 noon. DJ dfter 9:OO p.m. every evening. Feds: no cover. Others $ I .OO after 9:00 p.m. Contemporary Films as Laurier: Films will be shown dt 7 p.m. rn Room 2E7 ot the Arts LSulldrng as part of Laurier s Monday evening film studies course. AdmIssIon IS tree and everyone welcome. Tonight s

tllm. Closely Watched Trains (Menzel, 1966).

--Tues., NOV. 13 -:

Morning Prayer, 9:00 a.m. St. Bede’s Chapel. Anglican Campus Ministry.

University of Waterloo Gymnastic Club practice. Beginner’s welcome. 4:30 - 7:00 p.m. Upper Blue PAC.

Morning Prayer 9:00 a.m., St. Bede‘s Chapel. Anglican Campus Ministry.

Waterloo Jewish StudentsAssociation/Hillel invites you to our bagel brunches. A great place to meet people and hear speakers. 1 1:30 - 1130 p.m. in CC I IO.

Student Advisory Council - Meetrng number 5. The Council rneets to discuss current concerns of CO-OP students. All welcome! (4:30 NH 1029)

Bombshelter opens 12 noon. 1 uedsay Night Movie: “Splash” lrom 7:00 - 9:00 p.m. No covercharge. DJ after 9:OO p.m. every evening. Feds: no cover. Others: $1 .OO after 9:00 p.m.

WCF Supper Meeting. Jesus Christ’s Claim to be Lord - Gord Carkner. 4:30 - 6:45 p.m. Etlgrneenng I, Room 2536.

Women’s Centre Meeting at 5:30 p.m. Bring you dinner. All women are welcome. CC 150B

There will be a’meeting of The Board of Academic Affairs at 4:30 p.m., upstairs at the Graduate House. Topics on the agenda will include Bovey Commrssron and course critiques. All concerned students are welcome.

Women’s Commission Public meeting - We will be discussing past & tuture directions ot the Commisslon. Anyone Interested rn learning more dbout the Commission or grvlny suggestions welcome.

Stunning exhibition of over 100 contemporary posters, from theatres around the world, organized by the Richmond Art Gallery, British Columbia. Posters trom as fai- away as China, Australia, New Zealand, Brazil and Poland are presented, promoting theatre productions ranging from Shakespeare to Cinderella. This fund exhibitron clearly illustrates the humour and sophistication of today’s poster art. Free Admissron. Art Gallery, Theatre ot the Arts, Modern Languages Building. Monday to Friday 9-4, Sundays 2-5. Nov. I5 - Dec. I6

University of Waterloo Ciymndstlc Club practice. Beginners welcome. 4:30 - 7:00 p.m. Upper Blue PAC.

Free Noon Concert featuring UW Stage Band directed by William Janzen. Sponsored by CGC Music tiepar tmen t.

“Living with Cancer”: Group Session. North Waterloo Unit, Canadian Cancer Society. Adult Kecreatlon Centre, corner of King & Allen Streets, Waterloo. 886-8888.

Bombshelter opens at I2 noon - Live Entertalrlrnent from 4130 - 7:00 p.m. Featuring Glen Chdtten. DJ after 9:00 p.m. Feds: no cover. Others: $ I .OO after 9:00 p.m.

Canadian Films at Laurier: Films will be shown at 7 P.m. 111 Koom 2E7 of the Arts Building as part of Laurier s luesday evening tilm studies course. Admissron I S tree and everyone IS welcome. 1 onlght s tilms: Paperback Hero (Pear son, 1973).

Students For Life: Campus pro-life group I S holding a meeting this week in CC 1 10 at 4:30 p.m. New members are welcome. Come out and join us this week.

- Wed., Nov. 14 - Morning Prayer: 9:OO a.m., St. Bede’s Chapel. Anglican Campus Ministry.

Holy Eucharist: I2:30 p.m., St. Bede’s Chapel.. Anglican Campus Ministry.

Folk E Blues: Jam session. All welcome. The Folk& Blues coffeehouse will be held on 1 hurs. Nov. 22 SO come out and practice or have fun. Brrng your iinstruments. 7 - 10 p.m. CC I 10.

MathSoc Presents: Pink Day. Wear pink, think pink, and drink pink. Pink Day i’s a MMT production.

NDP Club - Guest speaker: Paul Forder, Ontario F ederdtion of Labour - “Technoiogical Change: ‘four future on the line” - Arts Lecture, Rm. 202 1 I:30 d.171.

Exploring the Christian Faith: 7:30 p.m. Wesley Chapel, St. Paul’s College. Leader: Chaplain Graham E. Morbey. All welcome.

House of Debates: Come participate I I I a great lebate 01 Just watch. We will meet In St. Jerome’s Oljrn 229 dt 6:(10 p.m.

Huron Campus Ministry Fellowship: 4130 - 7:00 p.m. Common Meal: $t. Paul’s Dining Hall. Fellowship Meeting: Wesley Chapel, St. Paul’s College. All welcome. Graham E. Morbey, Campus Chaplain.

Gays of WLW Video Night wl th “The Dresser”. 8 p.m. (n Room 4-30 I (History Lounge) Central Teaching IXurldin~, WLU. Popcorn s I .OO Come on out and relax!

A Electrolysis

Studio f+ee consultation 81 Student Rates

744-7561 93Q King St. West, Kitehener (across from K-W Hospital)

Page 3: 1984-85_v07,n17_Imprint

-- -\ . -. :: . **,.-:, __ : .- _ !rOj@nlc, Friday,- Nqveqber, .9,. 1984, -= 3 - ( . .. ’ 1 . . . A% Noith-South dialogue: Imprint \ inteiyieivs Dr. Palkhda I: You h2ve spoken at great length especially about Mrs. Gandhi’s assassin@ion, the last B&hours1 My question is

called Partners in Developmtyl’t. He said the North and

related in nature. With the raid on the Golden Temple and South are partners _ and he advocated the type of

assistance which has now become the current coin in the subsequent discovery of ammunitions by <the Indian which the dialogue is being carried on. Alter that, till Government, the Indian Government has had an 1974. nothing verv substantial was done. But after that. intelligence failure. How would you comment in regards till the Un&d Nations was persuaded to pass a

.:.:.:. :::::;:, :::p:: to the fact that the extremist elements were able to resolution proclaiming the New lntern’ational Economic

::;:g . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .:::::::::::<g<:: :::::::::::::p::::: ; ~~~,$*~~~~ penetrate Mrs. Gandhi’s house? . ’ Order and that started the ball rolling. In the last ten

:~~:~:~:::~:~:~:~:~: :::::;::::y:::::: x.:.2>:.;:.:.:.:, .:.~:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.: Dr. P: Well; that again gives you food for thought. It

:::: y::::.J::<,:: years we had a number of meetings in a number of $$$$$c: ,.<,.,: . . . . k ::::::::::::.::y:,:

makes you realize that our intelligence 7s exir-kmely forums, so the dialogue has b&n going on. 1 am going to :::.:.:.:.:.: :.:.:.:

weak. How can the extremist elements, as you say, get speak tonight on The sun never sets o?n the North-South into the hoqse of the Prime*Minister without the Prime dialogue, because in some part of the world, somewhere, Minister knowing about it? It means failure of ii is still going on. intelligence. How -could heavy artillery get into the 1: How conspicuous is the role of ideology in the Nor;h-.-

Golden Temple without the Government-beyng aware’ol it? 1 Again, failure of intelligence. If your intelligence faii’s you so hopelessly i-n domestic affairs, how do you- know that iri war time you will be able to cope with the enemy. It is a very serious problem and you have raised a- valid point. I: T-he other thing is, of course, Mrs. ’ Gandhi’s assassination, which is a national crisis. What about recent events in India such as in Andhra Pradesh, in Kashmir and o’f course, the Punjab? The earlief one is Assam? - How serious are the divisive forces- in the country? Dr. P: It is unfortunate that the events of the last, I would say, 12 to 18 months show ” num6er of totally wrong actions. I think the action taken in Sikkim, in Kashmir and in Andhra Pradesh was indefensible. But the only thing is [hat these mistakes do not justify this kind of - what Bernard Shaw called - the extreme for’m of censure. You, can’t.censure a person who has taken wrong decisions. Thtiie are always w+ys t,o yactify mistakes. In. . ? aa_

~other\~tiqi-$,*,& a-dFm.&r&y the-r-e arp,way’s.ol;~~ctif’ying: nlistakes. .As I havelmysejf ~aid;~.t~ey-were-.very serious Imistakes,--but they haye to be dealt with ir&demo~ratic waj .-It is a little’longer, bu1-j.t i’s ~~&.only~~$.~~y in-tie,.

-1”yy-b rTGn* -__ I-- --. .

I: Agaill, [he recent even.ts have over-shadowt!d the main purpose p,f jlotir visit. You are going to be‘~alking on the North-South dialogue. W?ll you briefly elucidate on the concep’t of North--South? - Dr. P: Well, the North comprises the developed countries, Canada, United= States, U.K., Western democracies i,f Eu.rtipe; Japan, Australia; the South comprises. cbuntri6s of South and South-E&t Asia, pl’rica,, Lalln America ‘,ahd .!also the Middle :East cqtir]l-l.ries, oil; rich countries. This dialogue started in-1974. Iri fact, the orie persun who was responsible for the notion was Peal;son, the former Canadian Prime Minister, that the,Nbl+th mtist come t,o t ht: aid of t he.Sou t h. He published ti book in is+)

South dialogue, considering t.he fact-ihat the& are conservative gover;iments in the major Western democracies? Dr. P: Well, politics has played a very major role iI1 the shaping and (tirmulation of this dialogue, that is rather unfortunate and ‘very often wrong ,sta’nces have been- taken. The Soyth, 1 am going to point uut tonighl, has ti very good case,. but badly argued. 11’ [here was more 01 persuasive‘ element on the part of the South, the North would give it a belter hearing. I: Specifically, what do you think oi’ the Unit&d States bulling out of UNESCO. How does this fit into this? Dr. P: There is a viewpoint. I must say I am tempermentally against forming judgements which are in favour of the South, or mycountry and things like [hat. Looking at it fairly, I think the United States has a strong viewpoi,nt, it being the main donor, money was being squandered for useless purposes which have nothing tu db .with the lifewor,k a.1 tine-sco, and time and again, they _

saidit v$as’nGt.-!he tiay, Whe.~l,th$y did not list&; it-was better- tp &et.ciut,. The~~efore it i-s not ,as-if’ justice is on lhe side of the South. The North had a g:ood viewpoint, the South nlkist consider it and pay proper attention. There

s are soci.&!Jis! -Go-gn_tries, there are communist cou+*i,e_s, -_- which want to propagate t’heir kind 6f socialism, their- kind of conlnlunisnl.“‘?‘hgn there are coZntries which are

’ as-non-aligned as the leaning ‘Piss, and with thal kind 01 alignment you inject ‘your own socialism or communism inio discussions. l’he North says this is no way Lo run these international agencies. . I: What do you think of Prime Minister Trudeau’s peace mission?

File photo

Trudeau had-a‘ viewpoint, which is an honorable one bul at the same time, the people thought the money was being wasted.

c I: What do you think of’ ~l-6 super p)owers’s arms build up. It is U)vyian to assume that there could be SOnlt Sort of

mtide;*atc levels trf disarmament? Dr. P: You know what it IS: 11 bolh sides do it. Yes. UuJ - you cannol ask just onv side to do 11. Why can’t you ask the Soviet Union to do it? ‘I’hey never listen to you. They ’

, do ,Th+t. they like: You are always preaching ,to - deniocl;acies, “redtice $K!nq!i!en1s”. They s,ay it is a1righ.t -~ . ‘: 10. reduce but., .it Ihere is au Armageddon, and. thel;e. ‘is-, F: 1:; cunflagratiun, .ltieedom will be &str~ygd. .L think tl!ose , ..I ,, who are spending their mouey ‘LO preserve lr&edonr( -

Dr.+% Again, there is a viewpoint. It was gen~uine and sin&i-e in’ what’ he ‘was doing. In thes; ‘thing-s th&l:& ‘ii

-always a[gray -area, where various viewpoinls have icJ be

’ considered. 1 think [he mistake human beings make 1s: this is right, or this is wrong, but this is never SO in lil’e. ‘i’here are alwv;lys various aspects ol’ a siluation. Noti

. - ’ _ .- ,c _

z -

rowthr -, ‘ives for g 7 impend the North’s willingness to give m’eaningful aid.

international econoniic was ever to be achieved.

by Carolyn Ellis . new Imprint staff order

“Man tiill do. the rational thing, but only after exploring all other things.” This was but one of the observations on North-South dialogue offe‘red by this year’s Hagey Lecturer, Mr. Nani Palkhivala. 1

On‘ October 31, Mr. Nani

Realism and a capacity for self-criticism are crucial if‘ solutions to global poverty and the widening economic gap between “rich” and “poor” are to be- fouhd.

l’alklii~ala, lormcr 1 ndian Ambassador, to Washington and prornincnt lndian industrialibt. ol’lercd his recomniendat.ions 1’0 I

r‘esu.li ing North-South ikuch

11 HIS tuo-part Hagc\- Ltxturc. . t

With’ wit and an appro- 3riate :quote for every occasion, Mr. Palkhivala .ressed that global interdep- ndence rcqu’ired ncu pproaches if sqme kincJ of‘ a

Mr. Palkhivala argued that the case fbr the South is “so strong it almost argues itself”, but “mindless nationalism” and poor ad\.ocacy have undermined its credjbility. “Condemning the North is

- hardly a brilliant strategy for eliciting its support.” .

The North, dn the oiher hand, is suffering from “compassion fatigue”. Past examples in the South _ of corruption, poor manage-’ merit and inappropriate

I inkcstmcnt hate dampened

Taking a humanist yiewpoint on the subject, Mr. Palkhivala identified seven imperatives for growth in the global economy which would make strid es to solving global

‘disparity. Peace, world co- operation, economic free- dom, population control, ecological awareness, energy conservation and a sense of‘ respect f‘or life were necessary, he said, if these global issues

Mr. Palkhivala noted the inappropriateness of past preoccupation with quanti-

r tative-rather than qualitative - development, Rather than

f‘ocus on Gross National Product. he suggcstcd that “Gross National Happiness.” would ma kc at better measure.

VP re-appdinted bI. . XkWxtiori . . I Douglas b’right, president academic officer. of th.F

01’ the Unikcrsit) 01 Waterloo. university, responsible for recently announced the \instruct,ion and research in all appointment of‘ Prof’. Thomas programs. BrLustowski- as bite- president, acadmi.c, 1‘or.a third Prof.- Brztistowski, 47, has term. been at U W since 1962. He

,The appointment, (r,qrn was. first appointed vice-. July 1, 1985, to June 30, 1988, ‘president, academic, in 1975. was r6commended by UW, Senate and has been apprdvkd Prio; to that he served as by the boii+d of,governors. I chairman of the mechanical I . .eng?tie&ing depaitment and

The ,vic,e-$esid$+ : as’\ ass’aciate ddan. of academic,‘ iS tlX!: @$cipal. .’ f$gin&&ing. . ‘,

-,-- ,v r- I . ..e I r:~.,01* ,s. 3 , .l.l L, W.-z. -*4-~.+“+ m i ,- .P- * ‘-7 1*- ?,,. . -I ‘T -I’ .- .- . . “’ ‘, I

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You should not neglect agitation; each:of you should make it his task. - Ferdinand Lasalle (1825-l 864) ’

America chooses, the world loses “The Masses are Asses”. Never has there been

more of a reason to believe in this statement than this past week, when Ronald Reagan was once again elected to the presidency of the United States.

It certainly shduldn’t come as a surprise that Americans, iike blind sheep, would join the Reagan bandwagon, assuming that he has prompted much

economic prosperity. They are ignorant of the fact that he is quickly spending the U.S. into another depression. Reagan and Darwin have much In common in their ideologies. The rich are getting richer and the poor poorer.

Unfortunately, Americans vote on a mood and a whim, rather than with a necessary consciousness of tihat is real and what IS false. They are impressed with “red, white and blue rhetoric” and are awe- struck by a leader who thinks nothing of playing an emotional Machiavelli.

Americans are reluctant to question Reagan’s Ieckless disregard for civil liberties. They seem content to have government intervention in regards to their religion and morals. This leads one to question is 6od really a Republican?

The majority of Americans are being fooled by this smooth President, who in a blase and comical

\ attitude makes light of bombing Russia, and is barely questioned or condemned; a President who refused to comment on the CIA pamphlet urging “neutralization” (assassination) of Sandinista

officials in Nicaragua; a President who has destroyed any diplomatic ties with the Soviet Union, and provided only superficial arms control talks; a President who spends thirty billion dollars on his pet “Star Wars” project; a President who enjoys flexmg his military arm whenever he gets the opportunity. This is the choice of thirty-five states and ninety-five million Americans. What a sad day for the States and what a black day for the world.

Even when Mondale clearly won the national debate and revealed Reagan for what he really IS, a leader ridiculously misinformed of the issues wrth a truckload of advisors attemptmg to mask this Ignorance with scads of “Amercca the Beautiful” garbage. Anyone with a dlscernmg eye, which IS apparently not common among Americans, can smell the deception from afar.

On the extreme ethnocentrism, this patriotic sentiment is almost sickeningly sweet, analogous to eating too much chocolate, one is bound to purge sooner of iater.

On a larger scale, are people not frightened by the fact tha‘t the world’s leading democracies are being led by Reagan, Thatcher and Mulroney? Reagan’s chant, “You ain’t seen nothing yet”, reverberates In my mind. I’m afraid not for myself, but for the children, who, If the$ are grven the chance to even exist, will have to deal with the aftermath.

(,‘urol k’letchvr

Proxy war heats up: do nukes await? The latest development in Central America must

have caused U.S. President Ronald Reagan and his strategic advisors some stress. Soviet fighters and attack helicopters are reportedly being sent to Nicaragua. Shades of the Cuban Missile’Crisis! It would seem that the Soviets want the Media Master to put his army where his mouth is. Does he have the guts? Can we afford to find out?

Mr. Reagan’s.favourite foreign distraction, which he has used in the past to avoid public attention on domestic issues, has turned into a trap, and he is presented with some very tough choices.

But Mr. Reagan is notorious for having little real grasp of international affairs. It IS likely that the same

facelessly courageous advisors who made the mistake will be relied upon to fix it. These cold warriors could have avoided this conflict by accepting rather than rejecting the fledgling Nicaraguan state.

No matter how the U.S. handles the crisis, it will lose something. Those faceless advisors, whose places are assued in VIP bunkers, may try to out-stare the Soviets, which could lead to direct Soviet-U.S. armed conflict, and war, or they could choose to lose face and mend fences with the Nicaraguans.

Personally, I’m going to start thinking about getting a Firearm Acquisition Certificate, and enough food and ammunition to last a long, long tin-i-e. Iltr r-id Br-cbu-rtr ((II

Tolerance & regpect for differences It IS hard, nay , impossible to imagine what is

happening In India at the moment. We read the horror’ stories; people being dragged from trains, beaten and set aflame. How can we possibly comprehend the situation as we go about our business in peaceful Waterloo?

Each of us, though, can play a part in avoiding the spread of violence to Canada. Living in a multicultural society as we do, we must be tolerant of others’ ideas and beliefs just as we take for granted that others will be tolerant of ours.

We are fortunate not to have been born in a country with ever deepening political and religious rifts. We are fortunate not to have been born in a country where you must shave your beard because it is a symbol of your religion, because it might incite-others to kill you. We are fortunate indeed.

There is nothing any one of us can do iri the short run to halt the violence in India, but we can set an example to the members of the warring factions living in Canada by according them the same respect we accord ourselves.

T.A. Grier

Imprint is the student newspaper at the University of Waterloo. It is an editorially independent newspaper published by Imprint Publications, Waterloo, a corporation without share capital. Imprint is a member of the Ontario Community Newspaper &ociation (OCNA), and a member of Canadian IJniversity Press (CUT). Imprint receives national advertising from Campus Plus. Imprint publishes every second Friday during the Spring term and every Friday during the regular terms. Mail should be addressed to “‘Imprint, Campus Centre Room 140, University of Waterloo, Wat,erloo, Ontario.” Second Class Mail ‘&gistration No. 6453. Imprint reserves the right to screen, edit, and refuse advertising. ImDrint: ISSN 0706-7380

Submissi

Campus Events Monday, 5 p.m.

Classifieds Monday, 5 p.m. Sports Monday, 5 p.m. Entertainment Monday, 5 p.m.

Features Friday, 3 p.m. News Tuesday, 12 noon Display Ads Tuesday, ‘l2 noon Forum Anytime

“4t will be assumed that material submitted after a deadline has passed was not

intended for that issue.

Im *

Editor George Elliott Clarke Assistant Editor Carl Davies Production Manager Doug Tait Advertising Manager Christopher Ricardo Scipio

Advertising Assistants Hilkka McCailum & Shayla Gunter

News Editors Signy Madden & Dave Sider

Arts Editor ’ Claudio Cacciottl Assistant Arts Editor William Knight Sports Photo Editor Bob Butts Photo Editor Anna Marie Hubbard Office Manager Nimet Mawji Head Typesetter Llane Smith Typesetters Angela Evans

Kathy Vannler Bookkeeper Rob Van Ekeren Assistant Bookkeepers Doris Prets

& John Tracey

Contributing Staff

Richard Lewis, Richard Clinton, Richard Elis Preston, Liane Smith (that C&% typesetter. sometimes 1 just want to scream), Jack Kobayashi, Doris Prets, Jeff Suggett (and the further misadventures of Max Sleppy), Alan Yoshioka, Gillian Ying, Patrick Hayes, Hilkka McCallum (the born- again pagan), Carol Fletcher, Nimet Mawji (who kept me company on the 2:00 am trip to the printers in Guelph), Kathy Vannier, Claudio Cacciotti (with the superfinger hat!), John Tracey, John Zachariah, J.D. Bonser (what do those initials stand for?), Ricardo Scipio, Lindsay Lennox (any road trip will do), Mathew Ingram, Rob Van Ekeren, Sandy Townsend, Bob Butts, George Elliot Clarke (whose political alliances are flexible), Doug Tait, Dave Sider, T. Alexander Crier, Mike Upmalis (aargh . how did “women’s field hockey” get left out of that story?), Chris Wodskou, Steve Wescott, David Browman (who always wanted to know what he looked like when he was thinking), Nosh Dimshaw, Carl Davies, Shayla Gunter, Cathy Somers, Rob Allen, Will Knight (who braved wind, snow, . . . to distribute the papers), David Jackman, Signy Madden, Mitchell Edgar, Anna Marie Hubbard, Tim Perlich, Ross Morrissey, Alex Weaver, Catherine Eckenswiller, Carolyn Ellis, Julia Smith, and lastly, special thanks to Joyce Peterman (who suggested the Campus Question).

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@tammar errars w#l not be currected.

The value of a liberal education To the editor:

Over the past few weeks 1 have seen a number of letters in the Imprint expressing extremely facultist points of view. Rather than reply to any single one of them, 1 have chosen to reply to them all with this letter.

The Merriam-Webster dictionary defines the word UNIVERSITY as follows:

Everybody knows.... About the middle ground

by Zeke Gerrard (a pseudonym) ” I just had a long talk with a friend who was quite critical

of this column, and I think he was right. I apologize. Not for offending people who are upset by the very

existence of a gay column, but for some of the attitudes I’ve expressed to the rest of you. You, who are nice, open- minded people, you who inhabit that “middle-ground” proposed by Glenn Svarich.

Yes, Glenn was right, I have stereotyped my readers, and for that, I am sorry. I’ve been writing for (or rather, at) the wrong audience, the anti-gay fringe. I’ve been busy trying to deflate myths that most of you don’t believe, defending myself against raving -- ahem.

I wanted to reach out to a wide audience that included the far fringe, but as you’ve seen, my way of dealing with them is pretty combative. Why pick a fight? Because I’m angry, really angry about the anti-gay myths I’ve heard. I’ve seen firsthand their power to destroy lives, and I want to do everything I can to stop them. (Saying “This-is-a-myth-This is-full-of-beans” is, however, generally ineffective -- it just antagonizes people who disagree and leaves the rest of you wondering why I’m so defensive. )

I was once aninhabitant of the “middle ground” where most people live. I had no really firm beliefs about homosexuality. I was just a nice, open-minded small “I” liberal kid. “Live and let live” and all that. I recognized that I didn’t know much about the subject though, and so my

, opinions were open to change. (That’s a distinction I failed to make in this column: between defending ideas stubbornly and simply believing them.)

I was quite willing to listen to other opinions: the people I heard included, yes, a few bigots, but mostly they were “moderates”, who insisted that the status quo was just fine, and that the gay radicals were just as wrong as the other side. (I never found out what the gay radicals were actually saying, only that i t was “really extreme”). So I stayed in the middle, and like most people, believed a few positive things about homosexuality and a few negative things.

And then I began to realize that I was gay, and the negative ideas began to haunt me. I didn’t know how to challenge them; I didn’t even know there were reasonable people who disagreed with them. I had to find out the hard way, by going through a lot of pain, alone and afraid, because ~lol~o~l~~ 11atl C\IJI- spollr~n llp...maybe that’s why I’ni angry.

Anyway, it’s time to start writing for the many instead of the few. I’ll try not to dwell on all those things that “everybody knows”; this column willhave a new name next week. I’ll be talking not so much about who we aren’t as about who we are.

Pats on the back To the editor:

3 he purpose of this letter is to call for more Imprint articles and letters from the general student body, that promote our ‘Unikcrsit!. Haking attended W’aterlio 1‘0 I four j’ears, I habe concluded that students at Waterloo would rathe ;ritlci/e our school instead ot portraying it as the excellent University that it is.

Don’t get me wrong, constructive criticism belongs in our newspaper. However it needs to be balanced by “pats on the back” lor areas of the campus that arc thus ;icser\ ing.

So take a minute between class and write a paragraph 01 more about what you like or

enjoy at U W. Ihere are the well known assets of escellent acadmics and a lop-rated co- op sqastem. However let’s gibe credit to less publicl/ed areas. He\;, the campus is beautitul and clean because of that crew of men in green hats. Wa>, to go guq3! Isn’t Scoops a great break in jour day! 1 had some super times in residence, on the SOCCt’l field. at the Bombshelter, and at the Grad Club.

I’ve met some ama/lng people with whom 1 hope to keep in contact for a long time. So tell the student bodb

what >ou like about this school and K W through OL//. new spapcr. Blair Davies. 4B Civil Engineering

II. an In,stitution of‘ higher Icarningauthori/ed to conlcr degrees in barlow special l‘lcldb (as theology, lau. and medicine) as well as in the arts and sciences gcnera11~.

Obviously this definition is somewhat dated, but in essence. correct. It states that a university is an “institution of higher: learning”.

Higher learning is a somewhat nebulous concept, but the following quote from Dr. David Starr Jordan, first president of Standford University, at the dedication ceremony of‘that same institution, should at least define its intent:

“We hope to gi\e our students the pricclcbs lcgac> 01 the educated man. the pouer 01 knoulng \+hat wall! is..1 hc hlghci education should...hclp to Ircc them Iron1 the dead hands 01 old traditions and to enable them to lorm oplnion.4 uorth! ol the I IC~ eLidcncc each nt’~ da! brings bclorc them.”

The intent of this letter IS not to embrace one viewpoint OI antoher, but to point out the value of‘a liberal education; “an education which broadens the students knowledge and awareness in each of the major areas of’ human knowledge; significantly deepens it in one or two; and prepares him or hei for a lifetime 01‘ continual learning in the baried and changing application of‘ knowledge to career and personal life”. I

A university is not a degree mill. If what you want is a specialised education, then vou don’t belong here. A certificate in computer science, engineering, or arts can be easily obtained . f‘rom a community college without the “pain” of a liberal education.

T-he most frightening aspect of this is that while we fight amongst ourselves, Edmund Bovey is recommending to the Government of Ontario, that universities should be separated into specialized institutions, denying us our right to a liberal education.

As an example of a liberally educated man considei Leonardo Da Vinci - scientist, artist. doctor of‘ medicine. and engineer. The Mona Lisa is one of the most famous paintings ever executed, his anatomical drawings of human musculature are still in use, and in theory his flying machines will fly. No all of us can bc a Da Vinci, but his example should at least serve to inspire us. Alec Saunders 2B Math Don Cleghorn 2B Civ. Eng. Geoffrey Musgrove 3 yr. Arts Janice Hill 3 yr. Arts

A Frosh-Eye View ’ Voices From the Past

by Shayla Gunter Donny Osmond lied. I read somewhere, probably in 7‘igcjt

Beat, that none of the Osmonds were allowed to date until age sixteen. But Donny, the love of my life (at seken), sang “Go Away Little Girl” at only age thirteen - maybe fourteen. In it he sailg, “I’m dating somebody else, 1 must be true.” So hc lied. He wasn’t old enough to date yet.,The “little girl” must have been really gullible. 1 mean e\lr/:rbod\* knew c~\~~/..\‘t/?it~g about Donny. At least my circle of friends did.

W/lb’, you may be asking yourself, am I talking about Donny Osmond? Good question. While home for Thanksgiving, I stumbled upon some old tapes 1 had made of’ my long since banished albums. 1 had e\erl bodq’s fjords: ‘1 hc Osmondb, Captain and Tennille, T<jny Defranco, The Partridge Familq and 1 think my all time favourite, Shawn Cassidy; although now the mere mention of’the name registers in ml stomach the same feeling (ie. nausea) as pickled calves brains.

1 started listening to e\er>thing I had taped. Prom1scs. Oh boy did those guqs promise prepubesccnt girls such dreams. Constant reminders of their heartfelt Iccl~ngs for hall 01 iVorth America. Da\ id Cassldq telling me “tic thinks hc IOICS mc”, -1 on) Delranco ahking me to “>~Ic the last dance for him” and L)onn> calling me 111s “Sunsll~nc Lad)“. 0~ ! What thohc words could do for a girl’s ego ! Lc)~t songs lrom > OLII- idols! Hcaij sigli!

I t OCCUI-s to 1111‘ that kids toda> do not hale idols ot‘thclr o\\ n. Sure. there’s Michael Jackson. but latcl! It st’cms that pcopl~ 01 all ages 1oLe him. not just preadolescents.

Kids listen to the radio and ~njol the songs. I IIC> think gmups arc great. -1 hey talk about Bill! Idol and Van Halcn. Where hake all the teenybopper singers gone’.’ With videos the kids rcceibc such strong messages. Sex. kiolencc, wcirdncss. No gocd, clean, innocence anymore. Little girls have no one young to c;-oon to them and to inhabit their dreams. Little b0q.s end up

dreaming about C’indq Laupcr or the “legs” girls. .I hc\. grow U P

too fast. What the children ot this Liorld need arc some clean cut, cute,

high-Loiced teenybopper singers. Ma> be not exact replicas of Donnl and Shaun, but something like them.

I hink back to ~oui-“!,oung”4ears. Remember thes~mplic~t~‘! Wcli, 11 ma) bc OICI- but that doesn’t mean L\C can’t reminisce. I hunk ! oung and (break Into song here)...“Ma\, tonlot row, be a

pcrlcct da~...Ma! ~OLI lind loge and laughter along the ua>. Ma> God hccp ! OLI in his tender care . ..tlll hc brings us together again . . . ..Goodnight E\cr>,bod>“!

Soapbox is a new feature, intended as a forum for individual Imprint staff members to express their opinions.

Kafieh Replies by James Kafieh

1 \\a~ imprc>s~d b> ! our cllort to rclulc m> art~clc -.Rcl ugccC. 1 do \\ ibll ! ou had documcntcd lhc source 01

‘! OLI1‘ quorc,\. Ilo\\c\ct. \\or~-! root, I lound all 01 thctll b> ill! X I I . 1 OLI see. I loo 11a\c iI cop> 01 .1/j I/l.\ UllCl /.U(.I.\. I

rccCl\ cd 111) cop! “ \ \ 1111 tl1c cxmpllnlc~I~~ 01 tl1c ~‘on.\Lllate

Page 6: 1984-85_v07,n17_Imprint

The Vexing Voice by Hilkka McCallum

Ah, the voice! The slight intonations, the naughty nuances, the The biight on the female voice is the restrictions put on it, Past flippant fibs. Communication is often marred or made j and present. Historically, the sweet, gentle, safe and low voice pleasurable by the tone of one’s voice. was consldered a necessary quality of the ultimate female. The

On the phone, the voice is the only indicator of one’s gender perfect Elizabethan woman in Shakespear’s time could not have and one’s emotions. The process of fixing basic assumptions (or a shrill voice else she was labelled “a shrew, harridan, magpie, prejudices) to a person is often determined by the voice. virago, termagant (or a) scold” (Susan Brownmiller, Femininity).

For instance, on the telephone, a basic assumption is that a Rousseau, the 18th century French intellectual, was in favour of man’s conversation should be short and to the point while a educating women -- in poster and elocution. He wrote that woman’s conversation supposedly wanders through fields of everyone should encourage a woman’s “pretty manner of verbiage. prattling”. “Oh lovely ignorant fair” it must have been to be a

A woman’s voice can be blight or bliss. She need not worry French woman. about having too low a voice since she can soften the tone to Kant, the German philosopher, felt that women should “love make it sultry and breathless. pleasantry” and “be entertained (only) by trivialities”. Yes, the

However, when a man’s voice is too high he is considered women did have freedom of speech -- in the area ofnonsen&al either a wimp or definitely gay. The falsetto male voice frivolity. challenges the macho integrity of the average deep-voiced jock. Historically, me; held the view that women couldn’t use

The fear males have of high-voices is hidden in their jokes harsh words or sounds for fear of upsetting themselves, I about castration. The popular notion that men become falsetto “knowledge is power, and the lack of it is charmingly feminine.” when kicked in the groin is unscientific. (S. Brownmiller)

At puberty, the larynx is permanently enlarged by a surge of Girls who want to catch a man should obviously keep their testosterone. This enlargement means the male voice is traps shut for fear of revealing sporadic intelligence. Laugh, permanently and irreversibly deepened. smile and twitter with pleasantries!

t what was said (a comment from Crebelspeak):

If Bruce had a rocket launcher... As a response to this situation, Bruce Cochburn, on his latest

album sings: “lf 1 had a rocket launcher, some son of a bitch would die!“. Hearing Cockburn do this song live in consrt this summer stirred something; something exciting and meaningful, a desire to fight for a rightful liberation. But at the same time I was Uisturbed and scared to think that such strong feelin

% s

could be manitest in basically wanting to blow somebo y I away. And what disturbed me more was that it was Cockburn who was bringing out these emotions in me. The man who had brought me to a deeper understanding of spirituality and even, may 1 saq, Christian discipleship, is now condoning and yea even encouraging the use of weapons of death. And 1 was yelling, dancing and applauding my approval. Does this make me a libcratron theologian. Wait a minute, 1 haLtz to th :! W’hat uould 1 do in that situation’! 1 was speaking to a I’rienc

had traccllcd to hiicaragua. 1 ~zas told OI pacifihtrcdcsirch bcln& deepened. Seeing the love and warmth of the people, and the hope for peace in the face of what is-being forced upon’fhem. Cockburn brings out this aspect in tunes like “Dust and Diesel”. Non-violence is a fofce in the revolution but so is violence.

Perhaps the only conclusions we can draw to the question of using a rocket launcher is this. As kingdom builders, in this case revolutionaries, we are called but not all are called to be the same thing. We each have a different calling, in Paul’s language, ‘...not all can be the hand or the heart...‘. But all are part-of the same body. Each part is supportive and vital to the other, but there is solidarity. My calling may be different from the Sandinista bol-;ler part01 soldier. He may have his rocket launcher and 1 ilave my weapon of hope. Fred lhartin

To the editor: I recently attended a presentation by Donald Heath,

chairman of the Committee for Nuclear Defence, entitled “Nuclear Weapons: a defence”. 1 was scared. Scared by a mentality which calls f8- I greater nuclear arsenals, and which if adopted could only lead to dire results.

Mr. Heath started by stating that the Soviet Union is a statist government with total disregard for human rights. He then Lalled for a total boycott of the Soviet Union: no cultural, economic or social exchanges, not even diplomatic relations. Where will this lead us? How can two countries which fear each other coexist if they have no contacts and so live in perpetual mistrust and paranoia?

Former Prime Minister Pearson stated this well in his Nobel Peace Prize acceptance speech, “...how can there be peace between peoples when they dd not understand each other, and how can this be when they do not know each other?” More cultural exchanges, not less are required. Otherwise the U.S.S.R. can paint a picture of the West as she desires, while we view the Soviet Union a5 “ . ..the source of all evil”. This could only lead to war. --

Mr. Heath t’hen deplored the nuclear weapons freeze movement. He said, “I‘he strong win, and so we need the strongest weapons: nuclear weapons”, or again, “Why should we 1‘recLe since our weapons do not thrcatcn us?“. If the Soviets used the same argument, the arms race would then go into an eier accelerating spiral, with ever decreased security.

The point the freeze movernent is trying to make is that the continual build up of‘ nuclear arms is threatening our very ocistence. Rear Admiral Eugene Carroll (ret. USN), who helped plan Nuclear War lighting strategies under Reagan, recently said, ” . ..both sides are building weapon systems which in times 61’ crises will become totally unstable and make war a near certainty in this century.” H&pointed out that these were not weapons, as they could be used for no other purpose but to destroy mankind.

In closing, the words of Albert Einstein come to mind: ,L . ..with the splitting of the atom everything has changed but our ual of thinking, and SO UC dritt towards unparalleled catastrophe.” In placing our blind trust in these instruments 01‘ death. NC ha\c rishcd our future and the f‘uturc of‘ all mankind. By adopting Mr. Heath’s policies, this would no longer be a risk. but a certainty. Tom Green Integrated Studies

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Page 7: 1984-85_v07,n17_Imprint

The j,oke’s on* Tom To the editor: - lethargic, and rather amusing to watch, much like a sick joke is

1 read with ‘amusement your interview with Federation of rather amusing to hear. 1 must confess, I thought he was doing a Students’ President, Tom Allison, three issues ago. (Imprint, ,masterful job at playing the class clown. October 19, 1984) It was with equal delight that 1 read of the And now, the front page of last week’s Imprint (October 26, problems with the new Fed Hall and the results of the recently 1984), tells us that $110,000 had to be borrowed to pay for Fed held, OFS referendum in the last issue of the Imprint. Hall. This is all the more surprising coming in the wake of Mr. Particularly, 1 am concerned about some comments that Mr. Allison’s strident affirmations that the Fed Hall project was Allison felt he was qualified to make about the University of going to come in under budget. The Imprint article also goes on Guelph’s Central Students’ Association. to recount how Mr. Allison kept everybody in the dark abdut

Mr. Allison called the UGCSA a “joke”, and passed off a the whole mess. letter of concern from the CSA’s Board of Directors as a joke as wkll. Well, Tom, the joke is on you. Not only did you lose your

The Waterloo student body is certainly the big loser in this giant run-around by the chameleon named Tom. When

referendum against,the Ontario Federation of Students, but it questioned by Imprint reporters about some of his campaign seems that your pet project - the Fed Hall - is having some promises he noted that al! of them were under review or had financial difficulties, and to top things off, your Creative Arts been shelved. Good answer, Tom, that will probably throw Board Chairperson has resigned because he felt that he couldn’t anyone off the scent that can’t read, write, or speak English. trust you. Wait, I’ll bet you burned your toast this morning, too. Still, Mr. Allison would try and throw everybody off the scent

Mr. Allison said that the CSA at Guelph should get its act tbgether before criticizing- other university, student

by getting rid of unfavourable Imprint staff. That’s quick thinking on Mr. Allison’s part - get right to the root of‘ the

organizations. Much to my surprise, I noticed that the CSA at problem. Tee-bee, I’m almost on the floor at this point. (5.xcuse Guelph does indeed have its act together, providing one of the me, while 1 wipe the tears from my eyes.)_- _. - most cost-efficient administrations in its history. Not only.that, Anyhow, the students at the Unicersity of Guelph ~111 sit it seems that the Waterloo Feds are having a lot of trouble back and see what is in store in the next (and hopefully final) getting their act together. In fact, I noticed some disagreement chapter of this hilarious new sitcom starring -1 om Allison and between co-op students and other students in the CiFS referendum. Ah, well, fun is fun, isn’t it? ” -

his executive of buffoons. Keep up the funny lines, l‘om, wc’rc killing ourselves oicr here in Guelph.

The OFS referendum on the campus at Waterloo can be seen J. David Akin by some, including some Imprint writers, and certainly by Chairperson myself as an overwhelming rejection of Mr. Allison’s Ontarion Board of Directors administration. His personal vendetta against OFS was devoid University of Guelph of any substance, let alone imagination. Mr. Allison was bland, ’ Grielph, Ontario

Gay - .is’ %carey “k &sler ‘l - To the editor: society, but thats just the way 1 am. It’s people that become

1 see that my previous letter has generated a fair amount of upset when. others protest against gays that are half of-the response. Good. That is exactly what it was intended to do. My problem, because they are encouraging’ others to accept letter was my gut response to the homosexual situation, and homosexuality as a normal part of society. Well, guys, 1 think brought a lot 01 unpleasant replies from those who just aren’t as that is a big mistake. I would like my kids to grow up straight, much of a redneck as myself (it is only fair to say, though, that I pardon me for being such a redneck. a- had far more favourable reactions to my message than I believe in freedom of choice, but unfortunately, 1 also unfavourable). believe that this choice that gays make is not one that should be

I do agree that perhaps the message was a little too unsubtle, advocated by society or by them. They should not be allowed to however, my point did get across. Some feel that 1 am influence the thinking of others, and society as a whole should prejudiced, ignorant, lacking in compassion, and just an all not encourage them. Be gay, Mr. Gerrard et al, but pleasedon’t around not nice guy. Please, people;this is not true. 1 am kind to push it on us. animals, pro-women’s rights, non-racist, good to my mother, So, to those who were offended -by my article last week, I- helpful to elderly people, why, the list goes on and on. I have not led the sheltered life certain people seem to think I have. I have

apologize for upsetting you, but that viewpoint is shared by fal more people than you may suspect (if not with quite the same

seen the many ‘joys’ homosexuality brings to society, and this is vehemence as 1 have). To those who say that 1 react like this what makes me so dead set against it. I have seen several of my because my masculinity is threatened, I say, you’re wrong. Gays friends change over to the other side, and the radical changes do not make me feel less of a man. (Hell, I’ve got engineers and that occured in their personalities was scarey. They started to women to do that to me) They just make me feel sad that soclctj treat members of the opposite sex with great contempt and has reached such a point of decay. My message is still the same, became just generally miserable people. What turning gay does though, and because some people are ofl‘cnded at the thought to people is not pleasant. that someone doesn’t like queers like they do doesn’t change mq

My point is public acceptance of homosexuality will only mind. I don’t think homosexuals belong in a normal society. serve to encourage it more and more until it becomes more and I never will (sorry, Mr. Hutton). common than Engineers and sheep. I’m sorry, but that idea Craig Eisler scares me. So call me a radical for wanting to live in a normal Math

IS being compromised 1 To the editor: questions whether council is tion. Even during these un_dcr serious temporal

Regarding last week’s actually the financial decision restricted hours the students’ restrictions, wc regard these article on 1.S.: making body” of I.S. In fact, -files are kept under lock and files as constitutivc of the

I) The memo referred to in the VP did not question this at key. The files, composed history of I.S. and therefore the article exists, but was all, but gave the co-ordinator largely of personal documents absolutely essential to the actually delivered to I.S. at an the power to administer at1 of and normally kept open, are preparation 01‘ our defence. audience with Dr. Brzustow- I.S.‘s financial and spatial ot great \aluc to 1.S. students ski to which the program was concerns by fiat. + seeking information about Eariy closing of the door’s summoned on Oct. 9th. At University resources and hake and securing of‘ the I‘iIcs is an that audience we were 2) We Curcently face having been vital to them in affront to the Program and informed for the first time 01 I;$.‘s doors open only from 9- formulating their degree dceplq compromises OUI

the present situation. I was 5, Monday to Friday, in proposals. At this time, as WC rcsourccs at a critical period. paraphrased 111 the article as contradiction to o’ur struggle to product the saying that “the memo traditional 24-hour opcra- mandated internal t-c\ iew John Carnegie

Jduka pub aids apartheid . To the editor: Breweries is owned by boycott ’ campaign 0 1’ Ibn‘t it about trmc that the

I was pleased to learn that Rothmans of Pall Mall which Rothmans and Carling Unikcrsity of U’atcrloo joined the University of Wat&loo in turn is controlled by a O‘Kecfc, 1% hich has met lfith t h e c ii m p a i g n against Federation of Students was South AI‘rican cornpan)‘. popular participation across apart heid’.’ sponsoring a performance 01 l’hcrel‘ore. by consuming this country. Marnie Hayes ‘Ju’luka”, the racially mixed Carling O’Kce1.c products, we 4fro-rock band from South as Canadians arc helping to 4frica. However, 1 was l’lnance and maintain the

a sign of the times

disappointed to discover system 01; racial segregation _.__.,.__.__....... -. _ .I.._....-.. _

lpon arrival at the show that and black oppression in he o*nly brand of -beer South Africa, knoMAn as available (and this was a apartheid. As an attempt to student bar where drinking destabilise business in South >cer seemed to be of great Africa and thus act in ” mportancc) was that with the solldaritj with black Lictims /“!-. abel “Carling O’Keefe”. of South African government

For those of you who are policicb, there exists an Inaware, Carling O’Keef~ organised and growing

/

Soapbox is a new feature, intended as a members to express their opinions.

forum for individual Imprint staff

Gizm0sta.n comes to grips with Gromyko By Hilkka McCallum

New York-“Gizmo versus Gromyio, long live Gizmostan”, cheered the crowd of 30,000 as Prime Minister Rochefort Gizmo of Gizmostan stood up to speak at the opening ceremonies of the Youth Anti- Communist (Y.bC) Convention. The Convention was held on Sunda} April ! irst to protsst the Russian iniasion of Gizmostan and to ap-I.%ud PM Gizmo for his successful ne&&ation of an oil treaty between the two

‘nations that led to the withdrawal of Russian troops from Gizmostan.

Gizmostan was founded as a Russian Republic in 1919. Years of internal political warfare and Russian military intervention led to a Buddist takeover in 1955, at the height of the Mao era. After a decade of relative peace, but social disintegration, the Socialist Democratic Party was put back into power by the military. Russia panicked when in 1966 Gizmostan loosely allied themselves with South View-Nam. Fearing a Capitalist trend would catch on in the republic Russia tightened its military strength in the surrounding satellite states.

Gizmostan” was forced to elect in the Communist Christian Republicans to keep tradGng tiesopen with Russia.

In 1979, former PM of Gizmostan, Allistair Gizmostich, felt that Gizmostan was ready to sever ties with Russia altogether. A few years of angry debates at the UN followed, which ended in a Russian invasion in 1983.

On Friday, March 30, the Russians announced plans for the total dismantling of armed forces in Gizmostan. This was an unprecedented move. Most political experts expected Russia to’crush any further revolts as they did in Poland. In Poland the Russians enforced military rule and squashed any public demonstrations. This seemed to be the direction that Gizmostan was following. Gizmostan wasn’t even lucky enough to have the “public eye” of the’ world on their couritry.

But Gizmostan handled the matter diplomatically by asking the United States to back their plan for a conciliatory oil treaty with the Russians because the USA had potential economic interests in Gizmostan.

Both President Reagan and PM Gizmo had hoped for a peaceful settlement because Gizmostan could become one of the largest importers of oil to America. The Treaty ws painfully negotiated for 13 months before Russia even considered withdrawing troops.

According to Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko, the reason for the hasty settlement was “to open doors to the west because people must know that Russia does not intend to start global warfare.”

“If you can see the light, stand up and fight!” was the message Gizmostanian officials had for the rest of the Eahtcrn Bloc alter the Sokicts withdrew Iron1

Gizmostan.

Boycott no way to break apartheid down by Mathew Ingram Imprint staff

Miss Hayes brings up an interesting point’in her letter concerning the selling of Carling O’Keefe beer at the recent Juluka concert. As Miss Ha\,es notes, Carling O’Kcclc is ouncd by Rothmans 01‘ fiall Mall. which is controlled by a South African company.

As an attcmpi to “destabilize business” and thereby “act in solidarity with black victims of South African government policies”, Miss Hayes suggests a-boycott of Rothmans and Carting O’Keefe, and asks “Isn’t.if about time U of W joined the campaign against apartheid?”

The first thing 1 would say to Miss Hayes is that no one could ‘possibly agree with her sentiments any more than I do, with the possible exception of-the South African borkcrs thcmsclccb. Apartheid is a kilt discasc inlccting the country, and something must be done. Unfortunately, 1 must disagree with Miss Hayes’ method of expressing solidarity. It is a nasty fact that economic sanctiops of the kind proposed do very little to alleviate the conditions the black .worker experiences in South Africa; in fact, such sanctions can even do the opposite..

1 would refer Miss Hayes to the interview with Juluka’s Johnny Clegg in last week’s Imprint. Upon being asked about the uscfulncss of sanctions, Clegg replied, “The people it’s going to hurt are the black people. An dkerwhelming majority of black workers said they didn’t want sanctions to be applied, they prefer all kinds of ,othcr pressure . ..until blacks have business rights in white arc+, economic sanctions aren’t going to help.”

It ib painfully unfortunate, but regardless of how much one wishes to aid the oppressed South African blacks, economic sanctions are simply not the best means of doing so.

Page 8: 1984-85_v07,n17_Imprint

Imprint. Friday, November 9, 1984.

Minto mistaken To the editor:

What follows is an attempt to refute the argument put forward by W.R. Minto that a moral society must be based on rejection of “mystical” or “irrational” concepts.

It seems that the initial premise on which the argument is based is not properly defined. Minto states that “Man is a thinking, living, rational being.” While I would not dispute that man lives and thinks, 1 question the use of the word “rational”.

Man observes a logical system at work in the world around him, this seems to be essentially tautological in nature and is thus accepted. However, such a system is learned by empirical means, and as sucli can only be applied to empirical concepts. Logical type systems deal only with form and order, not with

--?he:>%me of .an observable. There is then a method of comi;ehension that is extra-logical. Hence the argument that ethics are- outside of reason, since reason is taken to mean logical reason. A total understanding of our reality must reyuire- both logical and extra-logical systems; thus when we speak of man’s rationality we must understand that we refer to both types of systems.

In terms of applications to our world, logical systems take on forms such as science, while extra-logical ones appear as arts. Attempts to apply both systems, and thus attempts at a total understanding of man and his world, are found in forms such as the social ‘sciences (uhich by necessity arc more than pure science). Following the argument used by Minto, but with this new definition of man’s rational nature, we find that the varied

oppressive or immoral social systems are indeed caused by a denial of a man’s reason. Such a denial means a denial of man’s right to think for himself and act accordingly. This includes denial of both ‘intellectual’ and ‘artistic’ freedom.

If we accept morality as “action...in accordance with man’s rights (to reason),” and these rights include the right to use extra-logical systems, then what we end up opposing is not mysticism-altruism specifically, but just the’altruistic’ intrusion into another’s rights. This would apply to the dogmatic assert ions of either religious, Marxist or scientific Organisations. We can no more reject an individual’s concept of ‘God’ than we can his concept of a ‘scientific world-view’. All that can, or need be rejected are his attempts to f‘orce.others to reach the same conclusions. (ie: attempts to restrict a man’s rights by restricting his rationality.)

A moral society then must include all types of thought and opinion‘, and must be prepared to defend the right to these. Attempts to stop people from believing .in God and any consequences that they wish to imply f‘rom such a belief is just as immoral as trying to prekent belief‘ in science.-Qett--es-n argue for or against the existence of God all you like, but si%ce you will have to use a logical system you will get nowhere!) A moral society must only reject intrusion into reason, it does not require rejection of‘ ‘mystical’ belicf‘s. J. Butcher “Non-applied” Physics

.The new game in town To the editor:

1 am writing with regard to the article by Mike Upmalis in the November 2nd issued entitled: “Almost a fairy tale finish to season.”

At first 1 thought this was a new game, called “What’s My Sport”, but then 1 realized that it’s not new: 1 remember having seen if before in the Imprint Sports pages. The object of the game, it seems, is to read the article and try to deduce what sport is being covered. As a student who takes an interest in the various Waterloo teams, but doesn’t follow any of them in great detail, 1 found this to be a wonderful challenge and 1 accepted it at once. Here is what 1 came up with:

Scores of 3-l and 2-O made it seem unlikely that the sport was basketball, so 1 scratched it immediately from the list. The team is coached by Judy McCrae and, by chance, 1 know that she coaches curling. Could that be it? No, you don’t score goals in

Criminallv To the editor:

d

This has a reference to your comment in last week’s Imprint. 1 strongly condemn your ill-conceived interpretation of the whole episode, not only for making heroes of the assassins 01‘ our beloved Prime Minister Indira Gandhi but also f‘or your ignorance about a democratic country and its history. The level of‘ your ignorance is so magnified that you have been utterly \+rong Iron1 the LCIJ uorci GAhIJHl Mhich ~0.u 1;~~~ mis~pcllcd a.\ G HAh Dl throughout the test and about \+ !lom ~OLI ha\c urittcn.

.

It was certainly not your territory to write so authoritatively on such a complex issue without gathering facts and figures, and studying them. You have done dishonour not only to such a responsible position such as yours but also to the general reader a11d the millio~ls 01 pcoplcs, bc thcq 01 an> rcliglous 1a1th or nationalit>. ‘I hose so-called “intcllcctuals” u ho ha\ c made heroes out of‘ the murderers of Mahatma Gandhi, John F.

curling, and besides, it is unlikely that the curling team would be in post-season play already. Let’s see, what else does Judy McCrae coach? Hmmmm...Wait a minute, here come some useful clues: the sport involves eleven players, and (sometimes, at least) it is played on astrotur!‘. Now, 1 think 1 can guess the sport: soccer. If‘ 1 happened to know Penny Smith, Kathy Soetl, Debbie Murray or Ellen Clark, that would probably clinch it, but, unfortunately, 1 don’t, so 1’11 have to do without that kind 01’ confirmation.

Well, I’ve made my guess and 1’11 stick to it. Now, 1 simply have two questions: how do 1 l‘ind out if I’m right, and what do 1 win it‘ I’m !‘irst to come up with the answer? P.S. 1 am pleased to knou that the Waterloo team is making the trip to the ClAU nationals, and 1 wish them the best ol‘luck in whatever it is thq’re pla\ing. Hugh John Cooke Civil Engineering

ignorant Kennedy, Martln Luther King, Anwar Sadat and Mrs. Indira Gandhi, to cite a f‘ew, h’a\c helped perpetuate crime In the society. Citing poctrq does not make a good editorial i! it is quoted on a wrong occasion. As a student >ou ought to stud) the issue completely, and ponder on uhat >‘ou write. I hc loss 01 Mrs. Indira Gandhi is a loss of mlllions ol‘lndians l‘or whom she serced lil‘e long till her death. You should hale watched the li\c telecast 01’ her l‘uneral which would hake glken a glimpse ol‘our great country and those countless ‘mourners. Let me quote t\\o Indian philosophlcal stanzas. which are scl!‘-explanatory.

Dr. k’ogesh Yadav Chemical Engineering Department

~~

Of harm and homosexds To the editor:

Something about our school environment is wrong. Zeke Gerrard’s and Craig Eisler’s articles have raised an extremely important legal and philosophical issue, yet.nobody hah noticed, as thq arc too bus) slandering each other uith ,opinionated beliefs. 1 would ask you all to remember that we are university students, not grade nines who would push beliefs on each other. Let us look at the issue objectively and we might achieve something.

NON, it appears after much intcrprctation on mq part that Mr. Beaton and Mr. Urlocker respectfully, are arguing for the concept of freedom of speech. This is expected as we live in a democratic society with liberal tendencies. It seems they believe that Mr. Gcrrard has a right to write about whatever he wishes about homosexuality in our school newspaper. Mr. Eisler thinks not. l‘he issue then has to do with public decency. Would the world be a lovely place if everybody wrote what they wished? I think not. Consider the following analogy. -

I ;LIII ;I chrld tnolcstcr. comnionl~ hno~n as ;L I’cdophill1ac, (‘I hi5 is ;I phjcho-x?lual disorder according to the D.S.M. Ill, listed at 302.20) in academic circles. 1 wish to write about the positive aspects ot rape, that is the rape of a nine year old child. M\ \i ondct-lul once 01 bell-1ulliIInie1it that lollous is unparalleled and I wish to pass these feelings on to the general public. 1 don’t think many of you out there would defend my right to do so. 1 am sick and perverted but more importantly it would ollcnd public deceuc;S,.! 0 be allowed to, it appears simply w rang. I‘his IS knoun as ths Harm- Prificiple.

I hc Harm Principle thc’n IS detcrmincd b!‘ OMO xparatc quc5tion5 111 our Icgal 5~xtcni. I hc Ilrst yuc~tion abh5 11 rllc’ material in question goes against public moral standards, the s&ond asks about the harml’ul el‘lccts that it may cause to society. IVotc the I‘irst question can bc answered In the positive but the second ma> ansN,er primarily in the negatikc. In buch a cast. the publishing ol‘ the material would bc allobcd.

Ivo~ UC hacc in our possession an established criterion to sol~c such problems. let us apply it to this cast. l‘he first issue that mubt bc ansbcrcd rests on the point about homosexuality itscll‘. Does it ol‘lend public standards of decency?

Homosexuality, in my bicw. (and many others). is thought to bc some sort 01’ dc\iancc or abnormalit>,. Its cause is not dctcrm~ned as Jet but it maq bc one of the following or a combination thcrcol:

(I) An organic d>slunction ol‘ sonic hind, cause still unknown. It is 1nost lihel~ due to chemical imbalances or hormone imbalaucc.\. (Sort 01 llhc C;IUSCS 01 schl/ophrcnia. it rest5 on the same csplanation.)

(2) It is a mental illnclss in general and defined as a psycho- scsual disorder.

(3) External t’actors arc Inloi\ed. Sociological or bchakioural psychological cxplainallons. II the rcadcrs 01 this letter bcl1cbe as I do, that homosexualit> is a d~scasc llhc thar ol pcdophllla. thcu NC nlu~t ahh ou~xI\cb il UC

should alloy it to be written about. I his though is still problematic. for does It attach public standards’!

Homoscxua)it> is ot court a scsual dcbianq. Sex is a subsumed under the class 01 moralit>. It has also been argued that is is an abnormalit!. that the majorit> 01‘ the public do not participate or indulge in homoscxualit!. It is then a dckiance 01 moralIt>. An> major deviance 01‘ moralit> goes against public standards 01 moralit!. (.I his IS sell-c\ Idcnt m hen UC consider the dclinition 01 ‘standard’). It muht then. logicall), lollo~ that it \\ill ollcnd man!, people or the gcncral populace. So Me nio\c onto our newt question. I5 it harml‘uI to the public’!

.I hi5 is the major qucst~on. .I hc alli1mali~c aii5bcr uill but-cl> o\err~dc an! con~idcrtion~ 01 Ircc sp.ecch. I hc problem hc1-c is that I p~~~sonall~ cannot am~c at a conclusion. it must bc a collective decit*~on 01 the studcut hod!. or a particular dcclsion b! someone in ~OL~CI- llhc our editor.

SUI-cl> rnan~ biill argue that MC don’t ha\c to read Mr. Gcrrard’s colun~n e~cr! \\cch. but is not this just begging the question’! I his position itscll IS acceptable only 11 MC ansbcr 111

the negative to the second question. I ~111 put up Mith MI-. Gclmrd’s colun~n e~cq ucch,‘il’ you. the public, will decide it is not l1arn11 ul.

U c IIIUS~ h~\\e\cr bc c~trcmcl~ carclul u~th OUI decision. It tlla! Icad to the ~cnso~~llip 01 an! lhlIig rlial is dr\ Iant and 11‘1’5 lace I I . \ \c clon’l \\a111 1111.\. on lllC other hand. II \\c allo\\ MI.

G~~.iard’s articles to contlnuc. \\ here hill Bc drab the IinC’! C‘onsider no\\. ni> carlicr analogy. It IS ultiniatt~~ the student’s collccti\c decision. It must I thinh bc made rather soon. Mark B. Harrington Philosophy President

Clarke wrong about Gandhi, Sikh To the editor: 01‘ the action taken. I he President of‘ India, the titular head of‘ Ecen then she did not like what she was forced to do.

Mr. Clarke, in a commentary you regret the ‘breaking of men the government at the time ot‘that action (and now) happens to Al‘ter the action against the terrorists in the Golden Temple ot stone: In particular )ou mourn the assassins 01 Indira be a Sikh. And does not the l‘act that Indira Gandhi still retained she said “I‘his is not a time for celebration. As a mother my Gandhi. (Gandhi, by the way not Ghandi). That will no doubt Sikh bodyguards, till the moment ol‘hcr death show that she did heart bleeds to hear that many people hace been killed in the offend rnost of your Indian readers. However you do have the not distrust the Sikhs as a uhole? opcrati:;n”. right to mourn any killer you desire to. You may not like it Mr. Clarke, but wc along with all political \‘c ~-call/c that ~OII arc a bu>j man. Mr. Clarhc. WL‘ 1\no1\

But don’t you think it would be a nice idea to get >four l‘acts partles and leaders in India. condemn uquall~~ both the lunatic5 that you don’t hake time for in-depth research before writing a straight before you write a commentary? who killed Mrs. Gandhi and those who indiscriminately cornmcntar-4.

slaughter Sikhs in reccnge. (And we do not apologise l‘or You seem to lump all of the Sikhs together as if they were one describing as lunatics those fanatics who try to divide 0~11 But don’t >‘ou lee1 that the dead deserve something better

homogeneous aggrieved community. (‘She seemed to have little secular country along religious lines.) than sanctimonious humbug? understanding or compassion for the Sikh minority’ and ‘as she Surclq Mrs. Gandhi ~a.\ no angel. ((‘an all> pollticlall allord We approkc 01‘ the contents of this letter: hardened against the Sikhs’ are some of the phrases you used.) to bc one?) She did ‘imprison her politif:al opporlents and

That is definitely not the case. The majority of Sikhs are loyal 5ubpcnd democratic rights’. But that is bcblclc the point. Nilotpal C‘hakra\anti, H. F’enkateshy, J. F’eurkta Haman, V. and patriotic citi/.ens of lndia, who do not sympathise with the Hamakrishnan,’ Dr. t\l. Shankaran, A. F’enkataramana, C’. separatists. The lndian army contains a high proportion of‘ What is important to note is that Mrs. Gandhi’s government Sankar, A. Hamesh, A, SankaranevraJanan, S. C‘hattopadyay, Sikhs. The fact that a few of them mutinied has received M/ah initially quite reccpti\e to demands l‘or the greater regional K. C’hattopadyay, Mahendra Singh, Hanjan Singh, Durga enormous attention; the fact that most of them remained loyal autonomy ol’the Punjab. (1 hc majority ol’the people 01 Punjab IClisra, Haj Srivastala, I;sha Srivastava, I’ogesh l’adav, has not. The force which acted against the terrorists in the a1-c Sil\ll.r but that dots not nlahc those dcm.il.lds ‘Sikh’ \-‘asanti l’adab, Amit Bhadra, I\iandini Bhadra, Shakuntla Golden Temple contained many Sikhs including two of its demands). Mrs. Gandhi only hardened when a l‘anatic l‘ringc 01‘ Haha, Dr. Indira Debr Adapa, Hanlbabu Adapa, Krishad commanders. A leading Sikh priest Baba Santa Singh approved agitators raised separatist slogans and resorted to terrorism. Hana, Sy ed Mohamed, Dilbagh Singh Broca, Prasanna Sahoo.

Page 9: 1984-85_v07,n17_Imprint

9,-,

Sex-uallv,abus.ed ‘children by Patrick Hayes Imprint Staff

society, including judges, social workers, physicians, and lay people. The ‘commlttee initially found it- di.fficult to get co- operation from the existing childprotectionagencies,“then it began to snowball,” he said. The committee also “found strong concern and support from the public and government agencies:

“flawed and useless,” he said. There is no detail of the type and degree of assault, no age or sex identifiers, and no agreehent on identifying what constitutes child sexual abuse. One in four female and one in ten male children suffer some

‘orm of “fairly serious sexual assault,” Professor Robin Badgely told a packed iuditorium at Wilfred Laurier University 3n November 1st.

One in foqr assailants will be a family member, half will be a friend or known to the victim, and one in six will be strangers.

Professor Badgely, an accomplished behavioral scientist and researcher from the University of Toronto, was the chairman of the federal government’s Committee on Sexual Offenses Against Children, The committee, appointed in December, 1980, released its repoqt in August of t’his year, following

extensive research across Canada. When asked how such a report could hope to address a

problem which has plagued mankind for centuries, Professor Badgely replied, “It would be socially callQus not to try.”

“The best interests of the child,” was the central concern of the committee’s work, and to find the “most effective means possible” to address the problem.

Although the body of research &as conducted under the Liberal Government, Professor Badgely said he had first been contacted by Joe Clark’s Conservative Government in 1979 and asked to undertake the study. Following the return of the Liberals to power the proposal was confirmed. The study was non-partisan, said Professor Badgely, and a mat-ter of cdncern for both sides of the House.

In addition, the committee was made up of a cross-section of

lmprint photo by J.D. Bonser

The committee conducted 14 major national surveys which looked at overall population, child protection services, 11 major hospitals, 28 police agencies across Canada, indiiiduals who had. been convicted, and many others.

The major problem identified in the current system was a lack of co-ordinated effort on the part of welfare professionals across the country.

The idea of the child not being able to give evidence in court must also be revised, he said. Currently, children are unable “to speak for themselves at legal procedings,” and the current laws question the validity of a child’s testimony. However, surveys concluded that c nine out of ten doctors and police officers believe accounts by the children are true, whereas child welfare practitioners tend to be more skeptical. ’ -

Two other- areas which fell under the purview of the

Work was “fragmente’d,” he said. “Territorial walls between occupations (within the social services) are high,” as are “attitudinal levels,” which have “high walls and roadblocks” to effective communication.

“Many children receive no assessment or inadequate assessment,” he said. Half of the assessments conducted are not within the first 48 hours, the other half not within a week of the incident. Children are also likely to be left in the home where an incident has occured.

cbmmittee were juvenile prostitution and child pornography. Children who tend towards that end of the social scale are the “cast-offs of Canadian society,” he said. “Half are from broken homes and two-thirds have less than a grade eight education.“’ They come from all walks of life and have no, or very limited job skills, and-are frequent and heavy users of alcohol and drugs, he said.

Areas needed to be addressed in order to strengthen ’ Lerification co-ordination include child wcllarc a‘gcncies. educational - cervices, ,health services, research, law enforcement, and the criminal law. In this area, Professor Badgely noted a need to “eliminate old laws. remodel some workable laws and initiate and regroup new legislation.”

The eight recommendations made within this portion 01’ the committee’s research included stronger social services initiaticcb. emphasis on education and the enforcement services and sanctions against “clients”, who could face a prison term of up to two years, and pimps, who would face a term o,l up to 14 years.

“l‘his is a deeply rooted tragedy and will be difficult to resol\ie,” hc said, “adequate assistance and protection has not been achicved...thc stage is now set for public dialogue and

In addition, the information system currently in use was. debate. WC will hate to wait,” he said.

NDP kills “1 1 Dead L by Julia Smith Imprint Staff

At a recent NDP meeting on campus, the first item taken up wasan apology for the “sens- ational-ist’: .-publicjty posters, which featured the title 101 Uses jbr a Dead _ Liberal.

The meeting, which dealt with the New Democrai’s role in Parlia- ment, al’tcr the political sha kcup on Scptcmbel ‘4th’ had, as its bpcahcr, I Mr. Rob Dobrucki. Mr. 1 Doburcki. the current lprcsidcnt 01‘ Ontario’s ;lvDI’ Youth, is an aaccrcditcd authority on

Canada’s third part). A rcccnt graduate 01 Waterloo. Mr. Dobruchi was’thc local ,\ outh part} lcadcr l’or two J’cars, In~~thc last clcction. hc ran as a candidate lor tl>c riding 01’ Wellington North.

Mr. Dobrucki sees a bright future for his party, both federally and provincially. He is confident that the NDP will make large gains, especially in Ontario, leaving the Liberals in third place after the next

*election. Where, then, is a dead

Liberal to go? The obvious course, said Mr. r

Dobrucki, is to follow closely in Conservative footsteps, hoping that the Tory recipe will- remain successful. From the evidence of the last election, this, to a certain e.\tent has already happened, , as people strained to find some noticeable difference between the “Bay Street ’ Bobbsey Twins”.

Another direction open to them, according to Mr. Dobrucki, would be to change from their Blue suits into reformer gear, dredging up old slogans and strategies to pres$nt to ’ the tiorld, the true cause of

Liberalism. This tactic, Mr.

Dobrucki sees as a potential threat, obvious- ly, not placing too much confidence on the discernment of Canadian voters. He p&nts to their position of “noble reformers” as being a

. farce, using as evidence, proven pay-offs and patronage appointments.

In his mind, only the NDP is truly sincere. He points to such things as its work in Women’s Rights advances, and nuclear issues, as indicators, 01’ his party’s stand f‘or “the people”.

Villages semi- I

formal .to raise money for Big Sisters by Shayla. Gunter mprint staft

M ill bc donated to the Monq raising c~cntb hate included a, print sale, a collcc llollx, and a bale 01 lottcq tichcts b> all i illagcrh.

the Heart Fund. the ‘1 err> 1. 0 .\ t . 0 u I1 d a t IO I1 , t 11 c C‘liildt-en’s Rotal.> C’cntrc and the Sunbeam t lomc ha\c bcnclittcd lrorn the Villagcb’ contributlonh.

Kitchcncr and Waterloo hacc each contrlbutcd hall the cost 01 the bust!, to bc ubcd 101 transportation to and lroni 13ingcman I’arh in an cllort to di~courag:c drinh!ng and dri\ irig.

to cochtailh as hi.1 p.m., a large lionic.\t)Ic dinner at s,C\cli. the ralllc drab\ at eight tliirt! arid all-night dancing. starting at ni nc.

.I hc llltli annual I’i!lagcs cmi-lormal \\ i l l bc held on koicmbcr 17 at Bingcman ‘arhls Marshall Itall.

l-a5t Jcar tliirti thousand ollars cs as raihed and onatcd to hunbcarn, Home. a cntrc lor handicapped and ztardcd children.

‘1 1115 >car the nionq ralscd

KItclicnL’r-WiltL’rjC)O Big Sisters organisation. .l llC,x organisation has set a goal 01 s 100,000 so that thq ll1i.i)

purchase thu hour on Lrb Street that tlq ilrc prcsc~ltl~

Icahing.

t illagc resrdcnccs started ralhing Illonq lor charities in Scptcmbcr 01 19&O. .I Iq began ~Ircir “goodi\ il.l“ projects a5 a \\a_\ 01 p1.01 ing to

tl1c conlmllnlt~ that tlq L\CI’c tlot as disrcputablc a!, tiq mcrc thought to bc. Since then

S‘tudcnt support has been o\cr\\ hcllning. Lath Ilollhc

ha.\ bbccn challcng:cd to sell thu t11ost lotlcr\ tichcth I \ 1111

~c~\il~cis 01 ,knc!. beer. and pi//a.

.I oronto Harbour. the band lor tl;lc c\cnitlg is being donated b> the t.cdcratron 01 Stlldcllth.

I hc cost lor‘ the scml- lormal ih thirty dollars a couple and there I\ i l l bc a cash bar. -1 ichcts arc aLailablc b> phoning the V I or 12 ollices 01’ 1 roni an\ i’iliagc Don.

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Page 10: 1984-85_v07,n17_Imprint

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OTTAWA (CUP) -- After staginga six-hour sit-in,Oct.‘3 I in the little recourse for’ their own rights.” solicitor.general’s-&fice, the mother of one of the Vancouver Stewart says. her son was transferred without any warning. Five is ecstatic’ that her son will be transferred this month from After repeated attempts by letter in the summer to find out why Archambault ,prison near Montreal to a penitentiary in his he was transferred, themother says corrections services Canada native B.C. . officials told her he was moved because he was considered a

Agnes Stewart, mother of 27-year-old Doug Stewart, says “security risk” at Kent. The authorities also told her Doug had her son ended his hunger strike Oct. 3 1, the same day solicitor- to be separated from other members of the group. _ general Elmer Mat Kay j expressed regret that his office had erred in making Stewart’s initial transfer from B.C. ’ r Stewart .entered the government building housing the

Stewart, who received a six-year-sentence in June for his part solicitor-general’s office Oc’t. 3’1 at 10.a.m. and went directly to ‘in the 1982 bombing of a B.C.-hydro power station, enteredthe- ‘the 13th floor to see MacKay. An hour later, guards took.her to 26th day of h’is hunger strike when the announcement came. the 4th floor, where transfer services officials work: She said

“1 was prepared to stay in that building until the police federal communications officer Dennis Finlay told her that the carried me out or until 1 received assurances that Doug w’ould decision )egarding Doug had been made the day. before. be moved,” she said. “1 .am very relieved, they have put us Around 3 p.m. Finlay showed her the news-release outlining the through a lot of anguish.” decision.

Stewart began refusing food Oct. 6 in protest of his transfer “I think ttiey would have stalled me as long a$ they could get from Kent Penitentiary, a maximum security prison, to away with it,” ,she said. “1 think’ if 1 hadn’t been there they Archambault in July. Because he cannot. speak French, wouldn’t have agreed to make the transfer.” Stewart says he was isolated and mi’streated in-the prison.- Stewart was then escorted to the building’slobby so both she

w I -

In a news release issued after the sit-in, the solicitor-general and Finlay could make- a statement to the waiting media.

. said his office made and -“apparent error” in transferring “1 was shaking. 1 was so happy. It’s been a wonderful day for

,Stewart arid called for a full re,port on the issue from a all of us,” she said.

-the corrections commissioner. ,- But Stewart is still worried about Doug’s health. On her last visit, he appeared thin and pale, she said. She hopes the prison’s

bbAs-a result of (a) review (of the transfer), it would appear that all required steps in the initial transfer.were not followed,” the news release said.

Doug’s mother, who was informed of the decision an hour and a half after the announcement was_ made to Doug’s supporters outside the building, says the solicitor-general’s office handling of the matter was “scandalous”.

“I think they probably did’make a mistake. They did not have legitimate grounds for Doug’s transfer,” she said. “I think there is an awful lot of sloppiness in the system. Prisoners have so ’

doctor gradually introduces food into his system. A physician from outside the prison listed his condition as critical last week.

The news release said Stewart would be moved when he is physically fit.

Said Doug’s l’over Ruth Fahlman: “We’re assuming the prison guards know how to deal with someone who’s gotten off a hunger strike.”

demoistrations ,

Simultaneous in support of Stewart and her son occurred in Vancouver, Toronto, Montreal and vigils were .held in. Hamilton, Kingston and London,, Ontario. ’ ,

I ,

\

.,Visiting-friends or going on a shopping spree? Let Gray,Coach take ydu there for less. Depart any day but Friday from ’

- November 1 to D,ecember 13 and return -_ within Seven days.and save! save! save! L - - . .

HU‘NTSVILLE, Te.xas-1 reading: ‘*Bring back ’ Old (RNRi CUP) -- Hundreds of Spa&y”, ‘the nickname for students chanting pro-death . Texas outmoded electric slogans and >w’aving mock 1 -chair, and “Hit me with your lethal‘. syringes cheered the best shot (injection)“, _’ One Ott, 28 execution’ of a demonstrator carried a mock- convicted . murderer in, up of a four foot syringe.. -

: Huntsville, Texas. In his final statement, t j Barefoot, 39, asked for

.As Thomas Andy Barefoot forgiveness and said he held was execu.ted by lethal _ no bitterness towam anyone. injection, students from ’ Barefoot was convicted of

, nearby Sam Houston murdering a police officer. University cheered and yelled Efforts by his lawyer to have slogans like “We’re’Republic- the death sentence stayed ans.” were rejected by the U.S.

They carried placards Supreme Court.

M.athS0.C presents . . . \. ’ - . .

Grey Cup,Part$

. in / FED HALL

Sun. Nov. 18th 1:OO' pm. ’

’ Game time 3%) pm. I -J . FRE$.MUNCHIES

_ Tickets: $2.00 Feds

$3.00 others \ .

.Aiailable-in the j , MathSOC office MC3038

Fed office CC

Page 11: 1984-85_v07,n17_Imprint

Imprint staff 1 -

- On November 15th’on university campuses -

Black armbands will, be available at the

all across Ontario, including the University of ’ forum for those who wish -to display their

Waterloo; students and faculty will be taking dissatisfaction in a more vis.ible fashion than mere attendance.

part in actions designed to protest the’. A petition drafted bv, the OFS, which-began underfunding of Ontario univ.ersity circulating at UW beginning Monday,, Nov. ii i.. education. 5th, emphatically states the unacceptability of

the current situation, and is to be prcsentcd in the House of Commons on the 15th; as well, a

form letter will be made available to students with an attached tear-off portion, and drop boxes will be placed about campus to rcccivc these portions. I’he accumulated responses to this lcttcr will be collected by the Federation. and delivered to the Honourable Dr. Bctte Stephenson.

This Provincial Day of Action was suggested by delegates to the Fall- OFS- Conference as being appropriate, as it is the day the Bovey Commission on the Future Development of the Universities of Ontario is due to make its report to the Honourable Bette Stephenson, Minister of Education.

Action being taken differs from campus to campus across Ontario: London’s Western students are planning a march culminating in a rally at City Hall, marches of various kinds are taking place in Toronto, and at Sudbury’s Laurentian University the students are planning a variation on the car rally,: with loudspeakers atop the cars and accompanying guerilla theatre events.

At the University of Guelph, the day of action agenda includes pickets on campus, a rally at Branion Plaza, and -a community gathering in St. George’s Square after a march. As well, there is to be an educational . Forum held downtown to discuss the effects of underfunding.on staff and students._ -

Guelph CSA vice:president external Jim Rv2t-n h2c alc;n enrnllrnud “ctllAentr -nA c+~Tf*

There will also be an information boothset up in the Campus Centre the--week ofthe 15th, to provide students with a knowledge of the issues involved in the Protest.

When asked about the ways in which U W’s actions differ from those of other Ontario universities, Mr. Klungel said that he was attempting to strike a middle ground of sorts - that our scheduled events are far more “activist” than U W has been in the past, yet lessso than the University of Guelph. In this

-‘way, Mr. Klungel said, he would be able to assess the level of student interest that exists in these events, to plan future events accordingly.

-‘J-a- -a-Y W.-u- W..“VU1U~“” ULUU~IICO L+IIU JCc.a+11

to take the‘ day off from classes as a form of / ,

non-vtolent protest. Here . in Waterloo, Federation vice- Feds Public Forum’

president e> eternal, Peter Klungel has organized a r lumber of protest manoeuvres. ON CAMPUS ’ . - I

A

including talks given in classes and a “Forum” 2 **GSA-SIAC tind the FEDS are organizinga (of much the same nature as Guelph’s) in the . PUBLIC FORUM at 12:30’ion Nov. 15) in Arts quadrangle. Representatives- from the the open area between the Arts Lecure Hall. Federation, Graduate Studies. OFS. the - and the Arts-. Library.. ” Students and Faculty Association, the Staff ‘Associ&on, and the ‘Administration will be present to

administration representatives willsbe invited, as well as the media. -.

,speak and answer questions concerning the **Information booths will be set up in- the nature and Ieffect ,of the underfunding Grad House and the Campus Centre!

I of Ontario. .;.c TJ? -_-_ - ,225 -_

Dntario will be,dctin$in. protest’ of the Bavey Commi.$&n’, .Re,bort ‘&&

demhhding iminediatb P&a&e’- of* the- recom.metidatCons- for. rp- . struCturing the University system.. . Our PLAN~OFj%CTlON - . \ .inclades: ,--.

&iu&tio.n t&rough classroom j death- Qf .the ,jJnive&y sysfem as

‘Hle. know iti. (Hbt’eho~o.lateirGilE be , . speaking,. infofmatio.n- booths, :-sVved)x _ ’ I ‘~ f I, . :

speaker forumsand post&rS; . r : It-5 -is not ,&nou-@h to. talk among .: 0 oursei*evs6 i The :- &u,c,i,af -day.. has, Fore. letters to be sig+d.,by every ; arrived, atp&@w& must (take a&t@&! - student atid mailed ’ to . Bette z .’ - _’ Contact .Peter’- Klungle & Kathryh’

Seymo:w b at, elxt.- 3880 to GET

Page 12: 1984-85_v07,n17_Imprint

tTT ‘. &~~d.campub, . _ 4 Imprinf. Friday, November 9, 1984.

.

Ninth- annual charity run This weekend the students of‘ St. Jerome’s and Nootre ’

qame Colleges at the Uni;crsity of Waterloo host thcil ninth annual “Charity Run”. l‘he run itself‘ is a continuous 1100 khl relay marathon where a pair run the 2.7 hm distance around the unikcrsity’s “Ring Road”

\ every fif‘teen minutes I’or 51 hours. The event kicks off with the opening cercmonie~ at 3:30

in the St. Jerome’s courtyard this Erida) Noccmbcr 9th with cpntinuous running until the Charit) Run Mass at 730 pm on Sunday clcning.

Money is not raised in the traditional ‘pledge per milt campaign but rather bq associated cbcnts such ah,; a Charity Run Pub, a ral‘llc with o\cr $1000 I I I pri/cs, a mail out campaign and a car dri\c.

An) additional contributions would bc patI_\ appreciated, all funds raised this >xar will bc don’atcd to Anselm: House. ’

Marc inl‘ormation ma) bc obtained bj c“ontacting thih year’s co-chairpersons; Stclc C‘on~taIltiIic-S~4-5(,~~ 01. I hcrcse Rcillj ‘X&4-59.15:

SKI MONT STE ANNE AT CHRISTMAS!! baJJ

Your Package Includes:

The travel company of Cl% . ” ’

l 5 nights accommodation l Return bus transportation from $219 . (quad)

- l Daily transportation to and from the-slopes l 6 days of ski passes for all lifts at Mont Ste Anne OTHER PACKAGES AVAILABLE, CALL US TODAY!

TRAVEL CUTS TORONTO TRAVEL CUTS T&ONTO U of T, 44 St. George St. 96 Gerrard Street East

4 16 979-2406 416 977-0441 Call toll free: l -800-268-9044

yes, the ASU ‘still ho& the in..&noUs FRYL3a4Y

/ PLgis! yes. they are held in HH 280,U noon to4pm. yes. then! are weekly speciakf

yesi- they sefve tit dcks. . so, corlze out and see what

* you are missing!

Jo,bs available , The following Fall 1984 part- time positions are Still available and full-time $udents interested in these positions should apply for them in the Student Awards Office, second floor, Needles, Hall. Alumni Canvasser, Environ- mental Studies: Skill in comJnunicating on the telephone and accuracy in recording’ information. Liaison telephone canvassing. Conference Helpers, Geography: I o assist CL ith the registration, audio-visual equipment and p-ub;lic relations for conferences. Good communicatiqn skills required.

Research Assistants, Dance: Dance students will be given preference. To file, type and perform junior research tasks.

i

Student Assistant, Chemi- stry: Third or fourth year Chemistry student. Testing and.developing detailed write-

Ups of instructions for new’ undergraduate lab experi- ments. Rate of pay: $6.00/ hr.

Student Assistant, Chemi- stry: Third or fourth year- Chemistry, co-op Chemistry or Bio/ Chemistry student. Overseeing of the instru- mental lab C2-262 for spectroscopic measurements, demonstrating lab equip- ment.

Student Darkroom Super- visor, Environmental Studies: Firm knowledge of blacka,lh white photographic p~~occs~.

Must be congenial and reliable. Rate of pay: $4.00

Student Information Officer, Architecture: Ability to communicate with a broad range of people, possess writing and graphic skills.

Unless otherwise stated all bositions are paid at the rate of $5.00 per hour.

J.H. Wade Financial Aid Officer Student Awards Office

38 King St. N. ,- Waterloo

(1 block north- of Erb)

home of the.“folded over pizza” . p&Up,‘EATmtN OR

HOME DELIVERY r -

Campus Question I

by J.D. Bon‘ser

What is your respons- ibility in helping to end the famine in Ethiopia?

Katherine Clarke Dan Struthers Geography 2A Mech. Eng. 2A Understanding the To ensure that the problem and talking to government acts on the people and sharing behalf of Canadians in ideas so we can all extending whatever aid under,stand - it better. is appropriate.

Mark Kraft Physics graduate None. Feeding them is okay for the p&sent. Education (about contraception partic- ularly) is what is really needed 80 that future generatic)ns might have a chance to live. (Can’t you ask easier questions relating to “real” life‘?)

Leslie Butler English grad student 1 should give what I can in terms of time and money, and inform myself of the Canadian government’s response so that 1 can vote responsibly on the issue in the future.

Shari Segall Appl. Studies 3B Pushing my MPP to pressure the federal governmen! into send- ing relief over there.

Simpson Lam Elect. Eng. 1A I don’t know.

No pay raises. No Christmas botius.il

’ No pension plan. But we may have just the job for .you. It’s challenging. It will prove just how adaptable you are. And it will give you the chance to see another part ‘df the world and experience another culture. CUSO, Canada’s largest, independent international development organization currently has a variety of Third World jobs available:

-Water Resources Tech&an/ Engineers -Hydrologists

-Road 2% Housing Construction Supervisors ,

-Computer Lecturer , Analyst , Systems Administrator & Data Process Manager

-Accountants & Small Business Co-op Advisors Information Meeting :Mon.Nov.lZ at 7:30 p.m.

3004 Math & Computer Bidg. _- Guest Speaker : Nick FOG , CUSO Technical Officer

Contracts are for two years. Salaries are low ($4,006-$8,000 per year), but are adequate for overseaS’ living costs. Benefits include health/dental/life insurances, transportation, resettle- ment allowances, languages training and furniture storage subsidies. Placement takes at least six to- eight months and can be difficult for families due to inadequate medical and educa- tional facilities for children. Couples yg be con‘sidered if jobs are available for both part- ners. To apply, please send two copies of your r&urn6 to the CUSO office in your area (CUSO has offices in most major centres - check your phone book) or to:

ClJSO 2d80 Needles Hall , Waterloo ext.3144

Page 13: 1984-85_v07,n17_Imprint

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Page 14: 1984-85_v07,n17_Imprint

AtiVEETlSEYENT ADVERTISEMENT ADVERTISEMENT

16 Y Lost in i*Weektv

As shown on r CBS news,

this dramatic befote-

and-after

comparison.. . This is Professor S . P . at the age of 92, before taking H3.

This is Professor S . P . 3 years later.

SAY “I LOVE Y&J” WITH . . .

S&W’s Long-

Awaited .45 .

ABONE: S&W M645 was worth the wait.

Page 15: 1984-85_v07,n17_Imprint

Dear Pink Tower+=* Me & my zpode live in a bunch rangalow. The wonderful thing about ' exquisite Spode is th at he/zhe adds beauty and distinction to ev ery period, every bat kground. So give your delighted generations ageless elegance and delight your guests.

perz?iration stains, no zmudged make-W. Just ahint of a light touch of perfume to enhance rather than to hide and conce&l.Oo). It'3 easy to leave. pro grezztlup in the air. The quickest way, for both individual8 and bay-bees is to stop planning while th'iz countries pork piles up dollarz for thiz countr$ez' people. Next time you chew a choD try this menu

lose to the head and try to drive ~ rry- a nail into it. --

Sighed, the\oldezt zmooth.ie,

Phantom of the 5th Hole.

II - *B-B-Q Bibz 438$4 ibuy l-lb man, no belt Dear Phantom=*+

. Of courze an abuzed child may set fires, sulk, steal or fight. He'll love his bizcuitz zoDped in gravy. 9e'll drift thru the oil lab oratoriez where more than 200 Scientiztz and Tech nologiztz are working, working, wooorking 'r ound the clock to imp rove prezant adolescent by-productz(and/or may contain mother toldmme what it takes to be a lady. Be,immaculate- zhe zaid'! White gloves , white zhoez must al

ways be z?otlezz! 3e j dainty-zhe zaid! No

T/&lb woman or older child, no pins l/2-lb younger child, no pads, no odour) Baked por-'tay-toe or dinner rolley-polleez,

(French Schticht iz fine too!) Tozzed wieners with a variety of dressing8 including Frwrencch and Roquefort. Dezzert: DeeD ApDle Pie on mother with cream and krafty- cheeze.Mmm. Now top it off with a generous protion of young animal loin.

Food iz our Buzinezz,

your muh-thhur, PINK TO'flR.

Recipe for aHome-Made \

Bwbecue c \ Hey I . DON’T -mm---- forgEt thi! fine Arts show &

Furry Kitty Balls * Soft Acrilan Plush tp

tickle your whiskers

as fascinating, titalatin eN hlole in .pne >side

relieved of agbnizin

&ELL O! TODA Y /‘VE A 7-/P TO

:..WATCH OUT FOR CABLE R2LI&

Page 16: 1984-85_v07,n17_Imprint

GERM is out! Call again. ABC

The Wine and Cheese, but what about a theme? Can’t have a W&C without a theme! Let’s see...Slagfest...as that happens any way...Cheap wine?...SCH?...around 8?... Saturday?...November?... 1984?...Yah!... 1984... Peanut Butter! Thanks a lot ove, Well at least you didn’t fall asleep Saturday night.

9re you Italian? If you are, aren’t you tired of seeing people eating pizza with a knife snd a fork? If yes, then support the Society Against Fork and Knife Eating Pizza People. Please call. My name is Guido. Phone: RU4-PIZA.

Eskimo Pie Face Kid: Happy Anniversary. I am sure glad you are here with me because you mean a lot to me. Love always, Hawaiian. Hugs and Kisses.

Yov. 10 1984: 8:45 p.m, Suspect leaves house. He’s tasy to follow his PINK TIE is a dead giveaway. 3:00 p.m.: Suspect arrives at <OUTH CAMPUS HALL nformants tell me this is the flATHSOC WINE AND CHEESE. Rumour has it it’s notorious.

Yake “pass me another beer”, 2 household phrase, draught Nim! 1984?... Joni Joni Joni YackYackYack Joni Joni Joni Yuck Yuck Yuck Sue Stone: Congratulations on a Great effort by a “Great” athlete; finishing 2nd woman in field of 12,000 in the Washington Marathon. To the “Kidnapping Crew” who came knocking at midnite. You’re ail too sweet for words! P.S. Hope you can play cops as well as you soap windows. CD. alias “the Deserter”

BOOKS?... Animal Tours Inc. I, Walter S. Xrasznozon will guide people/groups thru down- town T-0. at no cost!! I speciaiize in the Yonge St. Corridor and specifically Ryerson Polytechnical institute! (Trust me, I’m 23 years old and do I ever know J.O.) I even have well developed legs from my tours. If interested call 746-LEGS {catchy eh?!) P.S. I don’t do girls, I’m taken.

He-Bear: After a year, I’ve still just begun to reaiize how big a part of my life you are. You’re a bear - bare eseentiai (sometimes just a bare bear). Here’s to forever. Love your She-Bear This X-mas ski Mont Ste Anne For $249. 5 nights accomoda- tion in Quebec City, 5 days skiing, return transportation to campus. Phone Jurgen 884- 1752 or Allison 746-4320. $75 deposit.

Winter home needed for smaII car - sheltered, dry, and accessible for light mechani- cal work. University/West- mount area preferred. 744. 9526, 7-8 a.m. of after 10 p.m.

To Bruce (that ain’t jello ‘cause it shakes so nice): We love the way you move and groove and the things you do to a pair of pants. Half out of breath, we want a rain-check for the Slumber party and foot massages. We’re good little girl scouts (how do you like your cookies?). Are you a good little boy scout? (You know: be prepared!)...the Coffee Girls. 901 p.m.: Suspect pays $4.00. He’s secretly slipped 3 FREE wine tickets. The Pink Tie must have been a signal. 904 p.m.: Not a “MATHIE”, I pay $5.00 and enter the joint of music and dancing. Getting a glass of wine for a song, I lose the suspect.

Anti-SHLOW League: If Gumby Destruction is your game contact Sir Lee Gonzo (a.k.a. Dave) at H.Q. V2 EE 118 (across the trenches from 119). BUT DON’T BUG ERIC, PHIL YILL GET MAD. SHLOW (Slanted Head Lovers of Waterloo). if the tangent of the obliquity of your head is equal to I, Dr. Bert Slash wants you! Office; V2 EE I 19 BUT DON’T BUG PHIL. J.C.: in the green morning of the stoned cows, and a’ shepherd playing his sweetest flute, under the angel-crows and the cruciforms of pines and elms, let us meet. GEC A.M. Slug et al wish you a be- bop-belated, .post-dated, happy-go-luck, birthday (with hugs & kisses from the pin-up and the peacemaker).

Dearest K, Together we’ll walk through these special times, side by side, but when I’m

, sneaking up from behind I’ll give your “‘assets” a 10. Loving you, Jane. P.S. Convince me you are as wonderful as your mother says your are. Carbonate cookies. Lantanide liqueur, and potassium punch are not on the menu at the Chem Club Christmas Party. Nov. 29, KW Naval Associa- tion Hall (on Weber); good DJ and a buffet included in ticket price. Available in Chem Lounge. C2- 172. If you are interested in forming a women’s support group, please call Janet 884-5476 or the Women‘s Centre ext. 3457 and we will arrange a mutually convenient meeting time. Thank you. George Orwell?... Dave (Co-op Math 4 stream): This is green eyes from the bus - give me a call. 884- 7259.

Wim! You sure know how to party Big Guy. Thanx for ail the great ideas that made our party the best one yet. North G. GLLOW (Gii the Loser Liberation of Waterloo) interested gumbies phone the gumby-line for details, or better yet, come in person: V2 EE 119. BUT DON’T BUG PHIL! 9:05 p.m.: Then she walked into my life.

Math Frosh and Froshettes. Orientation ‘84 revisited (or if you missed it). See you at the Wine & Cheese. Big Brothers and Sisters. This guy goes into this fresh fish store and says - Hey got any fresh fish. P.S. You’re gorgeous I.L.Y. - J.D.A.

330 Weber Street Nort Canada N2J 3H6 s ( T ‘Toronto Line (416) 4 Telex: USA ITT 4994596 Toronto Office: ($16) 964-6362

R, why must you be so shy? YOU came to visit once, why not again? Would love to ride your motorcycle. See ya in the vicinity of Barcelona. P.S. Response is a must.

Happy Birthday Pooh, Love Piglet, Eyeore, Wol, Kanga (and Roo), Tigger, Rabbit (and relatives) and Christopher Robin.

,ANIMAL FARM?...

TWIT: It’s been 4 months, and “slipping into something more comfortable” has never sounded better! Love, FL Sensational Susan Stone: Way 2 go in the U.S.M.C. Marathon! Can I have your autograph? (for my friend Ted) EJ.M. Sillyness!... Hi Mom. Having great time. Wish you could be here. Trip rough but food exotic and natives quite friendly. Other day they showed me game with huge orange fuzzy bail - really exhilerating! How are B&K&J&C? Give my love. GERM. Waterloo Sucks In February. Take a break in Ft. Lauderdale. 10 days only $319.00 return via luxury coach. You deserve it! Book now. Call Sue at 886- 5267. I am starting a petition to legislate that 0 = 1 by popular demand. Anyone. interested in helping me have this bill passed, and therefore become a natural law, please send your signature and a brief explanation of your reasons why to: 23 Austin Dr. *3A, Wat., Ont., N2L 3X9. My name is Theodore. Happy Birthday Cal, Wishing you ail the best for the year to cum. May your bondage be delightful and I hope all your whips and handcuffs come true. Lash LaRue. Happy Birthday Ernie (alias Dad). Wishing you a happy day and may ail your wishes come true. Your daughter.

Hyns Baby. Happy belated birthday from your buddies. We still like you despite your choice of men. (But I don’t mind, 0.33) This is to certify that Dave “Abdui Hussein” Nanderam has successfully completed the UW International Snake Charmers course. Indira would have been proud baby!! Congrats. go out also on his spectacular showing on the Geog. 125R mid-term. The Harem Girls. X0X0X Wanted: K.S. alias “Illegal Alien” being sought by local RCMP officers concerning a certain transaction which was made In the Colombian currency, the kilo. Last seen completing a railroad somewhere up north. Immigrant. That’s it and Animal Farm Wine and Cheese tomorrow! Cheap Wine and Wild people, some of them are even fun! Let’s go wiid...The notorious Pink Tie.

Reward $100 for Sunnydale or Phiiiip St. townhouse for Winter terms only. 884-l 752. Wanted, as soon as possible, self-contained suite in Waterloo area, for woman, non-smoker, 744-4849.

3 Girls Need 3 bdrrn. Townhouse. Preferably close to campus and furnished. Patti 884.3822. 4 Bedroom Townhouse or hou$e from January to April ‘85. Preferably close to campus. Please call 746-3575.

---

LAx3t

Lost: One mind, description: closed & empty. if found please return to Federation offices. c/o The vice-president of moral rectitude.

Lost, one gold-coloured shaeffer pen with initials W.C. Please call Wayne: 746-415 I. Has sentimental value.

Lost: Woman’s gold Seiko watch. Lost on campus weekend of Oct. 20th. Phone 884-7576. Reward.

2-bedroom apartment flat. Available spring ‘85. Completely furnished, very attractive, next door to Waterloo Town Square. Rent: $350 for two persons; $300 for one. Call G.E. Clarke at UW ext. 2332 for details.

Share Luxury House. 20 min by bus to campus, short walk to Market Square. Gourmet kitchen, washer dryer etc. Quiet & comfortable. Furnished bedroom $250 a month, unfurnished. $225 includes utilities, parking. No lease. Available Dec. 1. Jane, 579-5513.

Room-mate wanted for winter term/85 to share fully furnished 2 bedroom apartment. Next to Sunnydale. Rent $225/month; call 746- 4777. May-Aug ‘85 - 3 bedrooms of fully furnished 4 bedroom townhouse available. 2 bathrooms, fully equipped kitchen, TV with converter, phone. 15 minute walk to UW. Close to Sunnydale, Kwikie, laundromat. 249 Cedarbrae Ave. Call 884-3205 evenings.

Reasonably priced, furnished, Toronto penthouse apartment for rent. Available for January 1985 work term. Located in Scarborough corner of Warden and Finch. Conveni- ently located 5 min. from 40 1, near banks, bus stops and shopping mails. Near Bank of Montreal and IBM complexes. 3 bedrooms, 1 l/2 bath- rooms. Preference given to females. Phone; 4 16-495- 0646. Summer ‘85: 2 roomies needed. Real house near corner of Hazel and Columbia. Non-smokers only. Lisa 746- 1685. 3 non-smoking girls wanted for top level of attractive 4- bedroom townhouse. Located at King & Columbia, 20 min. walk from campus. Furnished. Approx. $165/mo. Call 746- 3836. 4 bedroom bungalow for Winter sublet. %OO/mo. PIUS utilities. 2 bathrooms, laundry, backyard, big driveway. CaII 578-9945.

Winter ‘85 and/or Summer ‘85 - Room to share in a l&o bedroom apartment. Fully furnished, laundry facilities in building, parking, close to Parkdaie Plaza. Female, non- smoker. Phone: 746-0988.

Summer Term ‘85 - Cheap luxury housing. 6 Single rooms in ail-student house. Console T.V.-stereo, panelling throughout, broadloom, partly furnished, very negotiable. 886-0338. Winter and/or Summer ‘85. Roommate wanted to share 2 bedroom apt. Fully furnished, laundry facilities, modern building. $ i75.00./month. 742-870 1.

4 bedroom lownhouse in SUNNYDALE! LO minute walk to campus: 5 minutes to Zehrs, liquor, beer, etc. Sublet May-Sept. ‘85. I-ease available! Phone Eric or Stephen at $86. 7082. JAN-APRIL 1 room available in 4 bedroom h&use. Clean, close, comfortable and affordable at $12O/month. phone 746-420 1.

House to sublet Jan-April ‘85. Room for 5 withrn walling distance of University. Rent negotiable. Dishwasher, washer, dryer. Call Rob at 576 1676.

OTTAWA: Modern one bedroom apartment on bus lines, sublet January 1 st, close to shopping mall, laundry

$ ym/sauna in building. 436/month. Phone Ross or

Mandy lsenegger (613) 738- 0548. I_ TORONTO: Jan-April 85. Large, clean 3 bdrm. condo available. On bus route, 10 min. to Kipling subway, partly

‘furnished, washer-dryer, near shopping mall. Only $700/month! (416) 621-l 852. (Evenings) Small Castle Available in Sunnydale for Summer ‘85. Disguised as townhouse. Cheap rent. Option to extend for alternate terms. Accomo- dates 3 or 4 people. Call 885- 6378. Pronto to AVOID DISAPPOINTMENT. Co-Ops: Looking for a place for the summer and maybe alternating terms? 4 bedroom townhouse, 20 minutes to campus. $400.00 month. Call 684-7369. Winter Term: Clean, quiet non- smoker needed to share semi- furnished 2 bedroom apt. Close to campus (University G l$t$2 $175/month. Call 746.

ROOMMATES WANTED FOR WINTER TERM/‘85 2 bedrooms available in a 519 Sunnydale Unit. One room is upstairs, one room in partly finished basement. Call Winn 746-4 124. House - 5 rooms for rent, living area, kitchen, TV, washer & dryer, close to bus route. Access to pool and weight room. $40 - $55 week. PH. 744-5333. WANTED: 1 Female Student to share a 2-bedroom apartment Jan/85-Apr/85. Your own room, apt. mostly furnished, please call 743- 6066 anytime.

,wanted - Blind student looking for someone to run with 3-4 times a week. Contact Steve: 884- 9476.

Secretary will do fast efficient typing of student papers on Smith Corona typewriter. Reasonable rates. Lakeshore Village area. Phone 886-6124.

Quality Word Processing and/or typing of Resumes, Essays, Theses, etc. Multiple originals. Fast, Accurate service. Delivery arranged. Diane, 576- 1284. TYPING: Essays, theses, engineering/group projects, typed accurately and quickly. Have Math/Greek symbols. Lakeshore-Sunnydale area. Call Joan: 884-3937. Typing - only 75c per page (d.s.) Typist holds English degree, lives on campus (MSA), speiiing corrected. Call Karen 746-3 127.

Typing: $1 .OO/page IBM Selectric; carbon ribbon; grammar/spelling correc- tions; good quality bond paper provided; proofreading included; sym hoi/italics available; work term reports, theses, essays. Personaiiied service. 579-55 13 evenings. Downtown Kitchener location.

Typing plus --. Cornpuscribe Word Processing. Eftlcient reliable service /or your resumes, work reports, papers, etc. Advantages include computer spelling checks, second drafts, perfect final copy, multiple originals. Our LASER printer guaran- tees best quality in town at reasonable prices. Call ;‘43- 2269 for details.

MAGGIE Can Type it! - Essays, Theses & Letters $1.00 per page - Resumes $5.00 - “Free” Pickup & Delivery - Phone 743-1976

Word Processing! Fast, dependable service $1 per double-spaced page. Draft copy provided. Near Seagram Stadium. May book ahead. Phone 885- 1353.

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Nanaimo Bars - A true Canadian confection. Rich chocolate, creamy butter filling. $6 for 8” X 8", including on-campus delivery. Call Susan, 884-7002.

Goya Stratocaster Replica, solid maple, new condition, complete with hard shell case, amplifier, books and accessories. $300 576-6253.

1977 Plymouth Arrow. 600 miles on new engine, AMFM Cassette. All season radials, in good condition. $4,000 or best offer. 742-9699.

Konica Autoreflex T - 35 mm automatic exposure SLR camera, c/w 52mm standard lens, zoomm telephoto, 2X teleconverter, automatic flash and case - $250. Call Stevo at 885-3476.

1976 XS65OC Yamaha - in very good shape, black glass with red pinstriping, c/w muihoiiand shocks, Jardine Exhaust, luggage rack, $850 negotiable (Mike) 886-4979.

Cyclists: Discount prices on clothing and accessories. Uitima Professional Shirts - $32, Shorts - $28. Brancale Helmets: ABS - $25, Leather - $18. Zefai HP Pump - $13 and much more. Call Rick: 746-3758 after 6.

Only 39,shopping days left until Christmas! Avoid the rush and shop at the Autumn Arts Crafts Fair. November 20,21, and 22 in the Campus Centre. Sponsored by the Turnkeys.

FREE Estimates. Get your room, apartment, or house painted over Christmas. Quality work at student prices. Phone Brian 746-420 I.

English Tutor: University (English) Graduate. Available for help in solving any language-related pro biems. Specific problems or iong- term. Reasonable. 885-4743.

Ski Mont Ste. Anne this X-mas Dec. 27-Jan I. Includes 5 days skiing, 5 nights luxury accomodation (Quebec City), return transportation to UW campus. 249.00 Phone Allison, 746-4320 or Jurgen 884 I752 before Nov. 20.

Will do light moving with a small truck. Also rubbish removal. Jeff 884-283 1. Will alter and repair all types of f.:lothing at very reasonable ates. Phone 885-5774.

Page 17: 1984-85_v07,n17_Imprint

Bruford showed, at least as eloquently,, that they were’ . .L

by RokMorrissey . I . . _’ At other times they would swap’back and forth,‘Mr. Moraz - Igprint staff ’ comfortable without the bloated surroundings of the using the full range of the piano, and Mr. Bruford miraculously

Progressive Rock Group. matching this range with an array of sticks, brushes, hands, and Last week, I revealed a bias towards Bill Bruford and his Sunday, November 4, they played stripped down to the fancy footwork.

music. 1 was criticised for just mentioning King Crimson, not acoustic kernel of their respective electronic lairs, Mr. Moraz the dozens of other musicians he has worked with on different leaving Moody Blues’ keyboard banks for a very ordinary Two extraordinary solos were -placed between the projects. _ grand, while Bruford left the automagical Simmons drums imprpvisations which comprised the concert. The first was Bill

Most of these artists share a special quality; perhaps one + behind for a more modest conventional kit. Bruford’s top forty cover of ‘!The Drum also Waltzes” by Max could call them meta-musicians.. Their presence on record or I saw a performance of a-piano/percussion duo at the Music Roach. In the‘ past. Mr. .Bruford’s solos have been either too stage brings a great sense of expectation to the educated ear. . Gallery in Toronto, last year. -An avante-garde -french horn brief, or wandering without focus. This time he started by They bring with them a context to compliment the music. We player was strumming his instrument with the mouthpiece\ strongly stating a theme, then exploring different textures, can follow their journey through the import 1 bins, across while his partner plucked strings layered with aluminum -always to touch base before starting a new variation. Patrick diffe-rent* groups and sessions, confident that we-are going to foil...very serious. There were a few subtle differences between Mom& solo was similar, but the exploration was more drawn find great ,music. that duet and the one that entertained at the Humanities out, relying on the orchestral nature of the instrument to .

Two of these musicians met’ on stage last Sul>day, at the Theatre. .

extend his journey. Humanities Theatre. #Firstly,-Mr. Moraz and Mr. Bruford seemed to be having fun This. return back to the beginning again, the heart o;their

Someone asked if Robert Fripp, the diarist and lecturer, was _ both with the music and each other. They were always aware of improvisation, occurred throughout the concert., and could I worried that Robert:Fripp, the Rock star, would seem like the - - each other, sometimes Patrick Moraz leading, literally almost describe the concert as a.whole. The audience came in emperor. with no clothes; Mr. Fripp .replied how could he, while - pounding out streams of chords while Mr: Bruford coloured in with high expectations for the duo, and left with higher.ones for shouting himself that he has no clothes.: Patrick Moraz and Bill the spaces with a vast array of textures and shades. the future: a fitting tribute to these meta-musicians. _

I \

by Mathew Ingraitr - . imprint staff _-

( . Time Gut magazine in London ca.lled it t’an extraordinary,

black, erotic fairytale”, and Robert Nye of The Guardian wrote: “This is the most brilliant first novel* that I have read in years". - ~ ’ * _ - _- L *

The novel in ‘question is The Staig, &nd it is. the first-from a rivetting young writer by the name of Rikki Ducornet -- though it is by no means her first literary effort. She has also produced four books of poetry, two children’s books, and one book of short tiction entitled The &fcher’s Tales, and has illustrated books by Susan Musgrave and Jorge Luis Borges, among others.

On Wednesday, October 31st in the-Graduate and Faculty lounge in Hagey-Hall, Miss Ducornet read three short chapters from the beginning of her novel, a strangely vibrant and compelling story of the childhood and maturation of a young girl in a small town in France, in 1874: . -.+

The main character, Charlotte, lives with a shrewish aunt and a stuttering uncle--her .mother having died while -giving birth to her. The title refers to Charlotte’s birthmark, which-the author describes as a dark, purple, slightly furry stain, in the shape\of a dancing h8re. b -- _ -

In the passage read by Miss. I&cornet, Charlotte is-taunted, mercilessly by her schoolmates, and thereafter forced to grow up in seclusion at her aunt and uncle’s home--leaving only to attend Mass and church .‘funeraIs. With&&toys, Charlotte , .

transforms small stones into the images of Jesus, Mary, and Joseph; God is represented by a large pail, into which Charlotte speaks to produce the “hollow”, resounding voice she associate’s with the Deity.

In, perhkps -the. most vivid segment read by Miss Ducornet, Charlotte travels to ‘a wedding, where -her aunt spends the majority of the ceremony huddled in anger in the outhouse; later, the bride is put up for bids from the guests, and’her uncle expounds, about-her shortcomings inan effort to keep the bids down. ,

.-After bursting into tears, the bride retires for a night of nuptial bliss,‘and in the morning the bloodstained b.edsheet-is displayed for all .the guests to see; Charlotte’s birthmark is rubbed in thee blood by her aunt, in the hope that its magical properties will diminish the h!emish, which is perceived as a mark of evil. h

According to Miss Ducornet, the novel’s two ,major themes are the power adults have to impose their own twisted versions 01 reality on children, -and the individual’s ability to transcend- there perceptions. ,

The book draws heavilyion Gnostic ideas of the inverted nature of Good and Evil in the world, as well as Miss Ducornet’s own research into small French towns of the period, an,d it is the combination of these two influences that gives the work its tremendous poetic intensity and vivid imagery.

Rikki Ducornet’lives in Le Puy-Notre Dame, France, and her -novel The Stain can be ordered thro,ugh the Ca,mpu,s.-

Rikki Duc&et: ” . u rive~tit~g young wriier “. - . 1 -

boobstore. ’ _ ’ ._a I* _.

Page 18: 1984-85_v07,n17_Imprint

I’ , - i’

y John Zachariah ’ and B. Part A (the ,first two- DePalma wasntt satisfied Gth mdrint staff cbr ! thirds of the movie) is the mere boredom; he made this

Brian DePalma?s neti -confusing part, filled with one offensive to boot. How murder mystery”, Body sib n e’ ‘after s&ne of offensive? In one scene, p double, which * opened here 8 meaningless (or uproarious) woman is murdered ,with a November 2nd, drew some- dialogue, all of ivhich seems to . concrete drill. As well, women leavy audience jeering the lead nowhere and all of which are debased so badly here’ light I saw -it, and probably ’ is boring that it wouldn’t be inconceiv- till is. Andrightly so; the only Part B is also boring, able to picture people imes during which this movie ‘ despite-<the fact that it is not stomping out of the theatre jn’t brutally boring are those confusing.. Linking these two because of this fact alone. Jhen it becomes so ridiculoCis boring parts together is the hat is makes A$rd House, gloriously ineffective acting.of And the most incredibIe Dok credible. Craig ;Wasson who, p&ing part is’ how Mr. DePaha

The pi&ire, quite simply, . the hapless : Jake Scully, may could have the gall to assert ills flat on its face from the be referred to as the “fall guy” that he came up with this noment it begins. in this movie. story himself when it’s such a

Botiy Double can basically All of this may sound patent (though inferior) ripoff be divided into two-‘-parts. A reasonably harmless, but Mr. of Vertigo. *_ -- * c_ I . . / . _

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Page 19: 1984-85_v07,n17_Imprint

I

. , . _

-i ,_ * Imprint. .Friday, November 9, 1984. 19 ,-,.

by Wayne MAis/ Imprifit staff ’

The 1980’s has often been described- as the Information Age. Today, the amount of info. available to us -far exceeds that of, say, even five years ago. ’

The single most ’ respon- sib16 factor for this * has undoubtabiy been video.

I Judging from The New Media 1984 festival last weekencl in Toronto, video is. intent ‘on speeding up this progress many times further.

, This was the second’anhual video festival, this year held at

- Ontario Place. Not only was it ,a showcase for the latest

technological advances in . video; but it also attemfited to

examine the medium on an ethical and artistic level. Many guests from different branches of t’he video industry were on hand to discuss the implications , of

’ living in a video age. Music video arid videb art

were hot tdpics for the weekend. John ‘Scarlett- Davis, who has done videos for Simple Minds, Cocteau Twins, Scritti Politti, etc., and John Sanborn (“Big Electric Cat” video) were particularly cynical of the direction music v&leo is going.

*y Both -are video artists, prima’rily whs do protiotional

- videos for bands in order to * finance their other .projects. - &a&it-Dqvis and Safiborn

had got together the night :;. before to watch the various

music video channels on TV and made a list of the cliches used in’making bdnd promos: lots of dry ice, ‘musicians putting sunglasses on, ahd, of course, excessive use : of sc_antily clad sirls. ’

* mance art was also a topic of -was Toronto Matrix by Naq minutes of vidi?o! effectively. discussion:- This was , the June Paik, the pioneer of- To tell the truth, I came The only moving work I symposium that Brian Eno video art. It consists of 60 TV _ away from the festival feeling saw all weekend was a

, was to participate in, but as it monitors arranged in. an :diss’atisfied with the present videotape made by Max Almy turned out, Mr. Eno didn’t ’ in.verted triangle, with .condition -of video art. My which addressed the aliention show all weeken,d. However, constantly changing,‘imagesr impression is&at video is an of. video head-on, It was * William Buxton, a composer/ Plenty of. computer’ Graphics inherently cold and deperson- simply an enhanced image of performance artist/sCie;itist were used through nuch’ of alized medium. Seein a face .irying to con;lmqnicate at the Un&ersjty of Toronto, the artwork. .: . geometrical shapes fly around with iomeorie while describ-

‘showed some of the We saw The Aduent&es.of the skyline of a city does ing what it was like to be possibjlities ’ for video and Andre and Wally B. made by &bsol@ely nothirig for me. - inside the TV..f‘I have no idea

- music ‘~i’i7 a- lii/~ sP-ttinB. . . Lucasfilms, using state of the c That is not. to say that.4 .’ where, I am,’ everqijhing is M;: Buxton’s interest is in art computer’ ,graphics for don’t think video art has a unfamiliar. There’s not much

interactive music video, \ dnimation. It looked basically future. I’m -convince’d good to desc,ribe. It’s a:landscape of where one medium directs like a high definition cartoon, things will come out df all. this, no points of reference..” It the other. ’ but it’ used no less than 17 given enough time. For all the reminded me very m&h of a

He showed a tape of a’ powerful cotiputers, (2 of advances Being, made, video broadcast of an astronaut performance where he which were CRAYS) and cost is still a new art form, and it cut-off from the world with no controlled video cameras by a an enormous amount df will be up t6 the artists to use hope of ever rejurning. Very Lyricon (a sort of .electronic money. All for o@y two alj of this technology scary. _

They also had a gb at the bands themselves (their drug habits, alcoholism, egbs, etc.) and, the worst culprits of all, the record company executive;.

. saxophone). When he_ blew sharply into his instrument the picture swit‘ched between

~ cameras &ruptly. Similarly, ‘, by blowing spft- the pic’ture ~ dissolved between can&t-as

They also p&&d -out, that making music videos was cot

I an art form- but a &aft that, however well the videos were made, still comes downto one thing: to sell the band. Both Mess=. Sanborn and Scarlett-Davis would like to see a more collaborative relationship between musician and video artist to move away from the Staleness that exists now in the mClsic video field. ’

slowly. ’ -

He. implied that -this technique just scr-atched the surface of tihat could be done with interactive music video and was disappointed that no-

Many interesting points were brought up concerning

-Rrcea&shjp. -David Croneh- berg, film-maker of Video- drome, Dead Zone, etc., w&s particularly vehement in his attack on censorship, stating that it was. based ‘on two things: fear and the want of

* the power td control what people see.

, one else was exploring this at the festival. (Frankly, I was too.)

There was an dbundatice of what might be termed v@eo art at the festival-- installations, video tapes and

The people involved in censorship are afraid that people who see rape and murder on television will be

i- more prone to commit these crimes themselves. -Mr. Cronenberg argues that rapists/murderers are. _ __. .

The use of video in perfor- even a laser light show. - H laser cut. triggered oft by much more-

One of theemost noticeable Imprint photo by Wayne Morris. indirect stimuli and that there

A phalanx of video screens: video killed the rudio star? \ -_ . Imprint photo by W&ne Morris

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is a big distinction between- I what people see in real Iif and ‘,

-what they see on TV. ? The question of $hy Mar*<

Brown isn’t, locked up after- : viewing all these horrible s. scenes was brought up as‘ * . well. ; . Another interesting fact ‘is ‘4 the ’ Onfario government - spent $2.5 million on a two- + lyear cbmmision to exgmine’ how eeople readt to sex and

. violence through ‘the media. - Its results stated that theire.is. no causal. relationship between what people’ see on ” TV and what they do. They _ also made a reoommendation . ;to end ,a11 censorship i& ~, adults.- The results of .this . .

-commission were of cours$,’ - not publicized. ’ _ The festival&elf felt the’ effect 6.f the Ontario Censor Board at woik as’ it had t6 ’ show a number of private screenings. to bypass the rules : ’ of ce&orship; One of these -- was the pr’emiere screening of Ij * Not Qead Yet, a documenl , tary of the hardcore scene in ?;or,on;o. ; s /

Mostly shot at the now: ’ defunct. Turning Point, it.,, featured ~bands such as’*

‘Youth, Youth, Youth, Jolly Tambourine Man, APB, and Bunch of Fucking.Goofs. !.t .

was extremely well, made .using very high-quality video ’ equipment complete with ’ digital sopd. _ There has’ bee6 some-

appre,h&nsion that the video X would end up- ,beingk.> derogatory 3 to the punk culture but this couldn’t bG”* farther frotn the #truth. Not Dead Yet shows a very, ,i humanistic and o.ften/_ humGus side of the i hardcore was of life. It-shows ’ b e 0 p.1 e‘ rej$cting the: hyljocrisies of -soci&$y, I- 4 concerned about the threats to their freedom of living life i’ as they choose, includind the imminence of nuclear war.‘; ’

-It is a highly- entertaining +:‘ piece of *work, but’ since’ neither the .bands‘ nor the’,. r makers were willi& to s’ubniit’ *’ 1’ it to the Censor Board, it is:’ doubtful that you will.see this :‘ publically in Ontario.

It was a long weekend with.- r almost too much to absorb all !. at once, but nonetheless well worth it. The third New Media.. festival has already been, scheduled for Oct. 14,?0; 1985, so it seems video is here I to stay.

m

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Wednesday 9 Nov.14 : i, Tickets available at Bass i I i I outlets and Bqllinger’s’ b

Page 20: 1984-85_v07,n17_Imprint

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Page 21: 1984-85_v07,n17_Imprint

416 9790WtB6 Strangei Than Fiction Seven (7”) Wild Summer, Wow! : Various (LP) Treasure Cocteau Twins (LP) The Cucumbers ’ The Cucumbers (I.$) 1

by Tim Perlich’ ’ . Imprint staff

Now on .The ‘.Higsons’ -Upright label,- Serious Drinking release their riew LP They May Be Drinkers Robin, Bit They’re Also ‘Human Beings. ’ This is So& 84

- Manchester band Foreign Press release their second single “Set Your Love In-Motion” next week.

Rockabilly Psychosis

Hot on the heels of hit gingle ,“M&imba Jive”‘, Red ’

Various (LP). ’ Various (LP) _ ’

Guitars release their debut album S~OLVTO Fade this week. - Daficq’ I I Reggae giant, Gregory Isaccs is putting out a new LP s u c k- p on the Rough T&de label. The 13-song live recording’ Live At Ttie Academy Brixton is released next week

’ Feeping up their tradition of quality, Kent is &easing a Jackie Wilson collection called The S&l Year while

Respect Yourself Flashlight

Ace releas& a Little Richard greatest hits compilatioti. When Doves Rap --- The flame is burning brighter than ever for The \ ’ Cocknelj, Translation

Redskin8 who have signed a n& deal with Decca. The D&t Go Lose It Baby fir?$t release on the new label is “Keep On Keeping On”. Boomerang

_ Success goes to-the strdng!

Ka 4

e Gang /

_ Pa iament - Rappers’ Rap J Smiley Culture + Hu& Masekela

’ Xmal Deutchland

-7fi5X%3,s~&dskou f ? . .r Public”, an a.pp-qxbie torch ~01~9 of sorts IOI- lY84 (in the Imprint &!i& c .’ ,.__ _

“A l,air o* I;&?‘ ,__ . ’ \

*) . Orwellial’l sense). The bdss and drums create al oppressive, e~;“‘m~dljrig unapljrsvingly fyorn the cover, authoriiative beat, &ICII evokes the inldge 01 a parade 01

are the tirst indications t tR at Ranking Roger and-Dave Wakeling goose-stqyng dims. The lyrics, whch begill by denwndin~,. have decided to leave the meii~~i&qt The E11qlish Beat +hilld\ “Come and join the federation”, take the lorm of a recruiting and push on with General PubtEas debut album, Ati The Rage. Messrs. Roger Jnd Wakeliny were, of cc&se,,the. nucleus of

commercial ior a government which dictates every move of its peq->le. _I

the Beat, +e.of Britain’s moSt beloved,bands of’thqarly 80’s, a but sin&^ that band’s dehise,’ thqi hpe c&-xen~rah.l $-~g$~~~;

eflorts on General Public. i. 1 * ..- . L.. F General Public IS a six-piece outfit with MI-. W&&UJ diqd

’ Rank&g Roger ‘it+the spcitliyht helped out by such luqlin&ne&&+ s&Ii& Jones of Clash fame and Sa.xa (one of the refugees,from

*

The Beat) on. occaSiona sax. Their sound is decidedly similar t.0 tljdt o! The Beat, but the rollicking, fun-lovilig phiGbphy has’ ~ been h-yely abandon led-. ’ ,The ~v&:rl&ig ikhe OI ,Gelleral Public’s t-nuslc is ‘the <, IlTdivldual’s reacttlon to the !&caring bureaucracl& C)I iY84. Many of the songs are d&initely Orwelllal;l ill their outlook, l&lUSdly, All 7‘tw Kuye is remarkcrbly sim~l.ar to Spqxd Ljeul 5~1 use In its amazmg varie t; and looseiy ska-based ‘rhythms. The album is ati eclectic collf&~ion 01 nlusicdl styI& wMI still

niaititclins,Ihat shared eoninioli rtiot. ‘. .‘Hot You l-e C&ii” is done 111 the vem 01 The Beat’s

seenmgly ~~~~sensical songs like *‘Spa Wld Me”, wl~le “-I&de)-ness”, d ringer for. d Motown arrangement, soulids remarkably like a Supreme< ditty. “Anxious” dnd “Are You Ledding Me On”, on the ,~other hand, ,dt’t’ much more reggae-flavoured in their use of beat and horns.

Throughout A/l 7’t1e Rage, General Public ~-&IS luck t0 thehies colicerning the impotence 01 the average person 111

today’s SJCle~y. “BUIWI~~ Bright . 1s poweml III its Lxmqug,

mqAm1g arrmgmellt md is a ,b~tter attack owl the apathy OI people WhJ wotl’t opp,ose the powers that be, eves) 11 they know ‘ 1 tlldt ttw gNa-llnlellt dllcl socxty cI1-e UllJust Llllcl coI2upt.

“As A &~tter OI Fact” IS a bitter reply t0 this. It ;I&S L&U jXJWU the curnnlon \IiIm llas agdi~lst an autlm-ildridil g3overnrnent wheel Dave Wakeilns sillgs; “It’s cl mat tel 01 &ISS, F&t to 94 told, And idst $I get tisked.‘: ” ‘-

I‘he album seems centered, t~iouyl~, 01) ihe song, “Gew~ dl

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For the iveek ending November 3 Just Arrived: New Releases

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John C. Routley, &A.

Page 22: 1984-85_v07,n17_Imprint

Imprint. Friday, November 9, 1984.

Elvin Jones at St. Jeromks Whenever there’s talk about the great Jazz drumers,

the name of Elvin Jones always crops up. He is one of a handful of drummers who has changed the face of jazz: not Just the way we hear it, but the way musicians compose it .

Elvin Jones was born in the 1920s in ‘Pontiac, Michigan. A selftauyht drummer, he started playing in Junior high school. He got a practice pad, a set of sticks and he listened to the best: Dubby Rich, Jo Jones, Chick Webb, and Kenny Clarke.

Mr. Jones made his first money as a percussionist at a local country club where he was told to “just keep the I hythm.“‘ In the late 4Os, after a stint in the army, he went to the legendal y Detroit, playing a club called the Grand River Street until the piano player vanished one night with the band’s paycheck.

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He moved on, another club, The Blue Bird, and this time he hit gold: among the musicians he backed were Miles Davis, S onny Stitt and, of course, the great Charlie, Parker.

And then, New York. He auditioned. for the Benny Goodman Band, but blew it because the audition piece, Sing, Sing, Sing, was a number he always hated. He joined Cha -1 1 le Minyus‘ band, cut his first record for Columbis, J is f or J azz, and as the curtain cdme down on the 5Os, he loIned JohI] Coltrane.

Unlike many percussionists, Mr. Jones writes music. When he composes a tune, he hears a melody in his head, puts it down on pdpe~, “then 1 worry about it until it become coherent .*’

“PLyIlls J~LZ 1511 t something 1 do at night,” Mr. Jones says, “It‘s nly function in lite.“.

Two shows Fri. dnd Sdt. Wd art ;It 830 pm. dt St. \ Jerome5 C&se.

Stage Band This term you will have

three opportunities to experience the powerful sound of UW’s own Stage Band. The Band performs a full range of musical styles -- blues, rock, fusion, funk, big band -- with an emphasis this term on contemporary jazz. Drawing from the libraries of Count Basie, Maynard Ferguson, Spyro Gyra, the Boss Brass and other acclaimed bands, the UW Stage Band has been providing audiences with varied and exciting perform- ‘antes for two years.

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leadership of director Bill Janzen, the band has built up a large stock of veteran players. The co-op program forces the band to form again every term. This reformation means that each term presents a new group of seventeen players, offering a variety of soloists and styles.

The band augments ‘their performances with spin-off combos, excellent in their own right, that often play original numbers.

You will be able to hear these Waterloo students perform at:

*a free noon-hour concert on Thursday, November 15 in the Humanities Theatre;

*Fed Hall (Yes, il- will be open by then) at 9 pm Thursday, November 22, or;

*the end-of-term-but- before-exams concert on Saturday, December 1 at 8 pm (following the Concert Band), also at the Humanities Theatre.

If you like jazz, or if you just ‘like good music, it is well worth your while to spend an hvur with- the UW Stage Band.

Notice of Executive Board Vacancies

A4pplications are now invited for the following vacancies on the Feder- ation of Students Executive Board for the remainder of’ the Council year 1984-85

Chairperson, Creative Arts Board take ojjice on Nov. 2&h/84

Chairperson, Board of Entertainment take ojjice on Jan. M/8.5

Vice-Chairperson, Board of Entertainment take ojjice on Jan. M/85

Vice-Chairperson, Board of Academic Affairs take ojji’ce on Nov. 26th/84

Vice-Commissioner, Board of Education take ojjice on Nov. 2&h/84

Written applications stating qualljications must be submitted to the undersigned no later than 4:30 pm, Wednesday, November 21st, 1984 s

Tom Allison, President Federation of Students

A Streetcar Named Desire

A Play By Tennessee Williams

Directed By Ned Dickens

Thursday, November 15th y 8p.m.

Friday 9 November 16th) S&9 p.m.

Saturday , November 17th , 5&9 p.m.

Sunday, November 18th 9 2 p.m.

Theatre of the Arts Feds - $5.00 . Others - $6.00

Tickets Available at the HUManities Box Office

The First 100 Tickets Purchased For Each

Evening At The Fed Office Will Gain Free

Admittance To The Grand Opening Of Fed Hall

After The Show.

Creative Arts Board Students

Page 23: 1984-85_v07,n17_Imprint

ht ga -83 by Mike Upmalis Imprint Sports

Waterloo’s men B-ballers won their I‘i I t h straight game last Friday against the Toronto Drifters of the Ontario Mens Senior league. Waterloo, in a consistently strong performance, won 96-83, in a game they led from beginning to finish.

Top scorer of the garne was Randy Norris with 28 points. Paul Savich was next with 22, including going 7 for 8 from the free throw line, and Paul Boyce accounted for another 19 points.

Waterloo opened up a six point lead before the Drifters got on the score board. Waterloo played strong against a very talented team in the first half and kent the lead between five and thirteen points.

1

Waterloo started the second half a little cold with some sloppy passing a fC\lr bad plays that saw the Drifters twice close to within three points. Coach Don McCrae took one timeout after the second time the lead closed to ,within three, and Waterloo came back to first half form and outplayed the Drifters for the balance of the half to close.

Coach McCrae felt that the team improved defensively but had brohcn dou II ol Icnal\ cl~ c)\c‘r the hall time.

“You can’t ask for improvement minute by minute in a game”, McCrae said. However, it appears that Waterloo is a disciplined enough squad that can be pushed back onto their own good fqrm.

Harry Van Drunen, returning after a two year absence fits well into his role as the “sixth Warrior”. On the court there were no obvious miscues and there was a good steady flow to Waterloo’s play. Van Drunen scored 8 points in the game, all coming from the outside, Van Drunen actually went four for five, missing only once from inside the key.

Waterloo, in Van Drunen and Boyce in particular, has established a long threat to balance the inside work of Randy Norris. Boyce connected on 6 of 8 shots from outside.

Ra lld} Norris, complement his stro-ng scoring performance had the job of defending against former Canadian National.

and Duke University player, Cam Hall. While stopping Hall might be done more ef’f‘ectively with a small cannon, Norris defended well, impeding Hall on the hoops without drawing many fouls. Norris picked up three personals, the third coming late in the game.

Rookie guard Jerry Nolfie didn’t play last night. He was a valedictorian at his high school convocation at Humberside in I oronto.

Waterloo is playing this weekend at the tip offtournament in Guclph. Waterloo meets Queens tonight, Friday night tit 7 p.m. Waterloo plays next on Saturday at 3 or 7 p.m. against York of Siena Heights (an American School out of Michigan). Finals will be held on Sunday. Other teams include Laurentian, Guclph, Western and Piitsburgh.

Warrior Basketball 1984-85

h 0. Na IllC 3 .I crq S olli 4 Craig Bcda 5 Hcrni c Ah arc/

10 Rob k-rocsc

12 Marcc! IVau!,

1’0s. tt1. G uasd 5’ IO” (i uard 6’ I .’ Guard 5’1 I ‘.

G uard h’3”

t 01-M il1.d O’S” 20 HaI-r-4 Van 1)1-uncn t l)!‘ii ad (I’4”

21 I’cter Sa\ich t- O!‘\\ at*d (1’5” 33 I’aul Bo) cc c‘clltl~c h-0”

34 Da\ c M oscr I- WV% urd 0’2” 3s I om Schncidcl (i uard 6’0”

5-c I< and) h on-i s C‘cntrc ’ 7 ‘0”

I t 1 cad C‘oach Do11 M &‘I tic

J

ck Warriors play to their potential By Sandy Townsend Imprint staff

There was no comparison between the Warrior team last weekend at the Columbia lcefields and the one that returned two weeks ago from Sudbury with their tai!s between their legs.

It was the “first time they’ve played to their- potential” said coach Jack Birch. ‘I he team has to lea!-11 the baxics Iirst bclorc they can work on polishing their skills.

,

The Warriors struggled for a well-deserlzd split of theit games. On Friday night, November 2, before a large but hubducd crowd, the team !o\t a hcartbrcahcr. 3-l. to Queen’.\. On Suriday, the Warriors ended their three game losing skid bq defeating the Brock Badgers, 7-5.

Despite being outshot, 42-27, by Queen’s, the Warriors were in t!lc game right up until the final moments. Peter Croustz made se\zra! outstanding sakes to keep the contest close. CI-OLIX is a player who, according to Birch, “has to play well f‘or the team to do ~vell”. On Friday night, his solo effort wasn’t enough.

‘1 he lirbt pcrlod has scoreless, boti1 lc;lIll~ feeling cac~ll other out and playing a tight checking game. ? 11~‘ Golden Gaels opened the scoring in the second period. Their consistent

pressure had the Warrior defence chasing bodies that just weren’t there. Twice the Warriors had a chance to either frec/.e the puck or ice it, but they failed.

I‘he game opened up after the Gaels scored. Warrior Rob Pearce notched a marker to draw the teams lebel. Gaining assists on the play were Kent Wagner and Andrew Smith. I‘hat left the game tied at the end of the second period.

as they narrowed the margin to one, on a goal by Jafl‘ Walters. Before the period ended Jeff Braleau, with help from Blair Webster and Chris White, put the Warriors back in front by two.

In the third, the Gaels put the icing on the cake with two ‘Foals, the final into an empty net. 3

On Sunday, November 4, the Warriors rode the stalwart

In the second period, Steve Mcldrum scored the Warriors second shorthanded effort goal of‘ the game. Drawing the assist was Todd Morgan. Brock refused to wilt under t hc pressure and they came back to trail b>, only one at the end of‘ the period on

1p ta agoals by Greg E‘oy.

goaltending of Peter Crouse and Jay Green’5 hattrick to a 7-5 \,ictory okcr the Brock “Beep Beep” Badgers. I he game was

“not a classic” but Birch said, *. I Ii 0 points arc 1\\ 0 points and LI c ncd tl1cn1’~. tic \\;!s happ! L\IIh the goal scoring outbui-51

because it “indicates that we can put tl?,c puck in the net”.

In tht: third, the Warriors fired two power-play goals before t!lc period was l‘ilc minutes old. -1 Ilc lirst was lrom the stich of Ja> Green and the eventual winner was fir-cd by Rick Hart. Brock crept bath as Greg Eoy complctcd his hattrick but Green carncd his o~+n f‘cdora with the insurance marker less than a minutt’ and a halt !al.cr.

The Warriors opened the scoring c\,ith Jaq G~cen’s first ta!!), Late 111 the third pc’i-iod the Warriors i-an into a string of a powerpla> cfiort, at I :46 of the first period. Steve Cracker \+‘a~ L~nnecc~sar~ pcna!tic.\. I hc Badgers prcsscd forward but despite credited with an assist on the p!a>. ‘1 hc’> strctchcd their lead to a l‘lum-r> 01‘ actilit) around the Warriors goal the> could only 2-O when Jack McS~r!c> set up Rick Hart loi. a s!lorthanded add one more ,goa!, that b) Pat Del‘a/io with file minutes togo. goal at 3:30. I !~c Warrior5 ne\t home game is 7:30 p.m., Nobcmbcr 1 1,

Imprint photo by James Scott

\I ;t~C1~!00’~ At l1cm 1 icld hochc> tcanl rnadc a trip the second >car III ;I I’()\\ to the C‘IAL natlollals. I Iq

ma> ha\ c come back \\ it h 110 \ \ iilS. but thq came bath ranhcd silt11 I I I the

nalloll and still nunlbcr one II1 O!ll;lrlo.

w atc~‘loo Ilc\\ out O I I

‘1 ucsda~. October 20~11 a11d altc1 SOI11C pl’acllcc 011

the Iizlds ii) \‘ictor!a bcix

set to plq 011 I llLl!3da~,

Xoicmbcr 1st. U’hrrt tl1q L\C!‘C not set

lo1-3~as Itlrcc inches 01 \\cl. hca\>. ~110~5 on the 11clds 0 I1 I llu!xia! morning.

O\cr the objcctlons 01 wmc 01 the teams, the

In L1 alcrloo’lr nllnd. tllils itilt, a blch!,ing. I hc OC> /IA Iinals Ilad been pla! ccl O I I

A~tl~otlll~l and b ~llC~‘lOO had pla! cd 3c’\ Cl aI stl~ollg

ganlcS 011 lllC ca1-pct. I IlC blcsbing ~si.15 mr.\cd I I I that

ga HlCS Illal I\ oLrld bc no!lllal!~ spread O\C!’ 1\\ 0

da! s had to bc p!a!cd I I I

OIlC da!.

U’atcrloo drc\\ into a pool \\lth I ictoria and St. Mar+. \I i.llc!‘!l~l~ \\ as behind 2-O to L~cloria al the hall and alter Alison I3!~0\\ II ’S !o!lc goal 01 the

gi.l Ill c 1 0 I . U’ ;L t c I’ 1 o 0 , t’ictoi-ia lini~hcd kilItlia4-I u 111. Victoria later beat 1’orh I-0 in a game to scttlc the national title.

\c atcr101~ and S C M

1st L I I ISU Ich both \~cnt into tlic g:amc c\ ith the idea that rl1q \ \ CI’C c\ elll! matched

arid hot h capable 01 \5 Inning the game. -1 hc ganlc was tlcd l-l until S C \ C I I minutes Iclt. u hen

SCM HI-UI~SM ich scored the b\ inning goal.

Coach McCrac Iclt that U’atcrloo plchcd up altcl the goa1 and had two solid shots on goal, one just u idc, a lid the othcl

doppcd b> the UN B goalie.

Page 24: 1984-85_v07,n17_Imprint

‘YUKON JhCKA~ACKT4.I eFrost Bite. W arm several small cubes

of frozen water with 1 ‘/z ounces of Yukon‘ Toss in a splash of sp soda and you’ll have the Frost Bite. inspired in the wild, midst the damn- ably cold, this, the black sheep of Canadian liquors, is Yukon Jack.

The blacksheep of Canad ian i 1 q uoTs. Concocted with fine CanadianWhisky 1

For more Yukon Jack recipes write: MORE YUKON JACK RECIPES, Box 2710, postal Station “U,” Toronto, Ontario M8Z 5Pl.

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Page 25: 1984-85_v07,n17_Imprint

BIGGER PIECES BEllER VALUE I II! a.

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&in‘ Schfield Water Polo . t Bet,h Keyvley l6el&&ckey -__ : .,

- Kevin comes to the Unversity of Waterloo :- . -( 8Coming~toU-W~ from G,eorgetowri, Ontario,

from Colombia, South America. He is -in ‘: Beth is in fifth ‘ytiar Art-sand in her final yeEar-. second year Mathematics and swims on the of competition with the Athena field hockey> Warrior Swimming team as well as cabtains - team. She Started her career as a forward and the Water Polo team. 1 has played. the. last two &years as the

Kevin was instrumental ‘in Waterloo’s -sweeper/ fuliback. -This ‘year she was the’ fourth place finish in the Challenge Cup -Athena’s penalty stroker and ‘has s&jred four Tournament at McMaster University this-past , strokes for the season. She is al& the penajty weekend. Waterloo’s record in the, round corner striker and has one of the harde.st hits robin was 2 wins, 2 losses and 1 tie, a record in. the game.

, r

identical to the University of Ottawa. Tbis past weekend at the National However Ottawa’s goals for cminus goals . Championship held at the University , of ,.

i aginast was le,ss than that of Waterloo’s, British Columbia, Beth’s defense was: leaving Ottawa with the:th:jrd p&e finish. . invaluabfe to the Athenas. l.u . .- ,, \

B-ball’ Athen& ..I.; j$eiJ*-- ~q$!&&&:~;~ -,& .:,:..4 ’ . ; : _. I . ~by Ca@dyn Ski “= i, , The: Waterlo. - Atheria.s ’ ’ . . ventured to Ottawa this ‘past ,‘T: week-end. to participate in the Carleton Robins‘ lnvitatiorial- .-’ Basketball t,ournament. a-

The i L.,A&hej&s.r camp; o’ut- +,. strong m ,th~‘;“o@~&j,ggarne

. . j .‘ _ . “.L*,* y<‘r. : ;$$2+ _ against the Otta-wa~ C;l~~‘~.G~~~~~~.:: ii,~~p: ;r,~

:: The women dominated the &i@C 1 ram the opening tip-off -G =. urrtil the: final, mi&ites; .whe$ “‘:‘- t;he Ottawa club n-r&de a - _’ I’, strong come back to‘finish the - -. game with a 3-point difference, 57-54, L ‘. ’ i. _I * ,’

Heading into‘ the champ- ’ _. .i i,onship round the Athens faced’ the top notch- Concordia team who are ranked in nationally.

the top five

Waterloo played- an -I ._ o’utstanding game, however l

the experienced Concordia club took advantage of W:aterloo’s errors, and capitalized on them; winning the game &I-55. Once again, great ,.tf$mi work was displayed by’ the Waterloo _: club, with’ Lorraine Lawrence’ ’ having&n excellent ‘game.

.In the final< game, the .-- ,r’: Athenas ’ met the‘ Brock ’ , . Badgers. However 1 the

Athenas -Ii11 to the strong Brock team with the-Badgers pulling away to a 78-62 victory in the -final minutes, -’ / The Athenas are definitely looking forward to a successful season and a-r-e hosting their. league opener against ‘University of Guelph Cjryphons at 6:OO p.m. at the P:A.C.

Join us for some excitkg :.: ’ --’ .:‘.[ asketball action!

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Page 26: 1984-85_v07,n17_Imprint

Imprint

Imprint is Fun! Join it!

Imprint. Friday, Noye-cber, 9, 1984.

V-ball Warriors beg,in season on winningnote \ by Steve Funk

The volleyball Warriors started their 1984-85 season right where they left off the year before--on a winning note. This past Friday, November 2, the Warriors travelled to London, where they tangled with the Mustangs of the University of Western Ontario.

The Mustangs. will undoubtedly present the

greatest challenge to Waterloo’s stranglehold on the OUAA West title. The Warriors, boasting a strong nucleus of veterans, and a promising crew of rookies, defeated the Western crew by a match score of 3 to 2.

The opening four games were evenly played, with the Warriors winning games I and 3. After the explosive Mustangs forced the deciding

fifth game by winning game 4, the frenzied capacity crowd anticipated a home team victory.

Such was not tobe, though, as the Warriors thrashed their opponents, and copped a quick 15-3 victory and a check mark in the “W” column.

Waterloo’s Dave Ambrose, on his return from a tour with the National team, displayed moves normally requiring two

men. Ambrose consistently penetrated the Western defence, not only with his front row attacks, but also with poignant thrusts from the back row.

Owen Jones, the handler of Waterloo’s setting duties, continually frustrated the Mustangs with his varied offensive selections. High- flying Brian Jackson, errorless Ron Clarke: and the

acrobatic Jim Cook all played crucial roles in the victory, but it was a spectacular stuff block by Steve Funk in the decisive fifth game which effectively quashed all hopes of a Western victory.

Rookie Head-coach Rob Atkinson, as an.ex-Mustang; was ecstatic with the win over his “Alma Mater”.

Next home game: Friday. Nov. 9, PAC at 8:OO p.m.

The lowest price for a North American-built car gets you a 1984 Chevy Chevette Scooter Coupe with hatchback convenience. Cut pile carpet. Reclihing full-foam bucket seats. Electronic ignition. Radial tires. Peppy 1.6 litre overhead cam 4cylinder engine. 4-speed manual trans- mission. Rack-and-pinion steering. And 3 years Repair Protection at no extra cost! All for a bottom-line that sends it to the top of the class!

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Page 27: 1984-85_v07,n17_Imprint

sports , Imprint. Friday, November 9, 1984. 27,: .

_- \ . S&ash Tournament/ Results ’ I Sports Comment&y: by Diane Brown

I Campus fro&line troops I by Sandy Townsend

In my brief stay here, our athletic teams have proven themselves to be worthy ambassadors for our University. They have not always been as successful as we, would have like, but then, that isn’t their only function. There have been no scandals, no riots, no scholarship violations and they have done nothing to disgrace themselves or the Universitv.

In my humble opinion, the Warriors and Athenas’are ready, willing and able to serve as the front-line troops in the UW diplomatic corps.

This university is well respected in the academic and business zommunity and has a well-deserved reputation for its teaching excellence. Its reputation with the general public is a different. story.

When they think of Waterloo, they think of computers, math and engineering students, career-oriented programs, the world’s worst student pub and students who are frankly, ,in one word, loring.

There is however, a chance to salvage this hard-won but dismal reputation. The key is our athletic teams.

I’m sure that all of you have seen the antics of U.S. college students at games when those games are being televised. You [now, the silly ones who paint their faces and go crazy. You can Gther dismiss those students as silly drunk p.reppi& or admit hat,-hey, those guys know how to party. ,

This same phenomenon does happen in Canada. There are he annual pilgrimages by Queen’s students to Montreal for the Kill McGill” game. Or the Panda Game between Carleton and Ittawa. Or a Western Homecoming game against anybody. I :ould go on.

Our chance to change our reputation occurs every time a Yarrior or Athena team plays. Sometimes though, the efforts of I few backfire when no one else joins in the cheer. Without any kelp, those brave souls do look silly. The four man wave at the ecent hockey game was an example of this.

The upcoming Naismith basketball tournament supplies you /ith a perfect opportunity to paint your face, dress up, act silly, cream and cheer and generally act like a non-University of Vaterloo student (that is, boring). One game may not change ur reputation but at least it will be a start.

But, hey, be careful out there and remember that you are upporting UWs neti diplomatic corps. And maybe, just maybe, /e can convince our exalted leader, Dr. Wright, to,give more Toney to our athletic teams ins&ad of ‘the boring computer zsearch hacks. After all, who do you believe is a better mbassador for UW?

Men’s and women’s squash singles tournament: Last weekend was perfect for squash. The racquets were hot, the ball

1 were hot, the courts were hot and most of all, the players were hot. In Men’s A Division, David Sowerby just squeezed by Graham Zabel by

a score of 1 O-9 in the first game but came back hard in the second game with a score of 59-O. In Men’s B Division, Pool A, Dave Champoux was , victorious over Baiiy Stemmler. The victory, however, was not easy;

Men’s Single Badminton Tournament

scores were 7-9, 9-5 and 9-7 for Dave Cahampoux. In Men’s B Division, Pool B, Sam Garcea won over Grant Casbourne with scores of 9-7 and

by Karen Chadwick On Tuesday night the semi-finals were played. After a no loss record

90. In Men’s C Division Byron Cooper beat Brian Murphy. In Women’s A

throughout the tournament Ng Choon Heng conceded to Barry Stemmler in the Men’s B final. Congratulations to both for such an

Division Diane Dolay had a good game against Kelly White. Diane won both of her games with scores of 9-7 and 9-5.

Congratulations to all those who entered, both for their participation and their effort. Good Stuff!

interesting game to watch. In the Men’s A final game Mike Roberts emerged the champion defeating Samliel Lau. Honourable mention mu& also be given to Glen Svarich for wearing the most colour coordinated outfit. Thanks to all those who participated - hope you had

/

Sammy Singlet’s Report on sports ’

SAMMY is on holiday until next week, so the convener will write a little story about play-off format.

The play-offs Will start this Sunday, Nov. 11 at 3:45 pm in the PAC. Warriors squash team: There will be 18 men’s games and 4 tiomen’s games that day. The women’s’ finals will be played on Wednesday, Nov. 14 starting at 7:30 p.m. Be sure to catch the action!

There will be a lot of excitement in the men’s play-offs as there will be a total of 7 championships. In the A championship, the Niners and On Pro will be looking to play in the final. Spurt, the Flyin’ Eyes and’ the Dirty Dawgs are prime candidates to take the Bl play-off.

There are four other B play-offs as well, all of which will be very competitive as teams will be almost equal in terms of skill and determinations.

Buckyland and the Fmsh Busters are forces to be reckoned with in the C league.

The men’s play-offs will continue for three weeks on Sundays and Mondays. The most exciting actions will come during the finals. The A, Bl , B2 and 83 championships will take place right after the Naismith final has been-Played on Sunday, November 25, 1984, starting at 5:()0 p:rn. ihe B4, B5 and C Championship will be played on Mon. Nov. 26 starting at 7:00 pm. Come on out and support youi friends or fhvourite teams over the’next few weeks. Good luck to all -teams Dlavina!

Costigan m.akes it first Playing in the Number I

position, Warrior’s Captain, Mike Costigan, led the team to victory over Guelph’s powerful Royal City Squash Club, to nail down first place in the strong Western Ontario g-team league.

Cost&an used his power game to advantage in defeating (iuelph’s number I ranked player, 1‘6m. Vanas- elja, .3-2, while Bruce Lee

wc?t to Rob Calder who defeated Bill Szkotnicki in a marathon match which saw Clader use his stamina and speed in the fifth game. r winntrs to-r Clutlph wtrt d,“: \ . 1 > \I s Thomas who defeated Rob Bowder 3-O and Dale Lockie - who out-played Ron Hurst in a 5-game duel. .

Warriors are undefeated in leagui play and Captain,

There are still a couple of spaces open,to anyone interested in the St. display of‘ shot tia’king ‘and best ‘season ~ cvcr, being John’s Ambulance Course which will be held November 16, 17, 18. good length. Anyone’ interested should contact,PAC Reckp’tioni’st at PAC 2040 7’he other Waterloo victory

uJ&l’cated in the number 1

.I position.

. . . _-. .w Nominations Are NOW

Being Accepted For‘

MathSOC Executive

-President , Vice-President , Treasurer

For The Summer Term 1985

Nominktion Forms

SAvailable From MathSOC

MC 3038

J LUNCHTIME & LATENIGHT

- Nomination Peri,od Closes

4:30 p.m.Tues;Nov.I%h

Page 28: 1984-85_v07,n17_Imprint

Federation Ha I’ /

. opening, N~~erber 15,16,171 8-lam \ come have a look _ y \ '

L

\ 81nt d of the Federation of Students presents

THE TUITION RAFFLE q L

TUITION PARTY THURSDAY A NOVEMBER A 22 1984 ’ A

FED HALL ’ DRAW at 10 pm

Raffle tickets $2.00 Available from -

-\ FED OFFICE

Our MONEY TREE has better than 1 in 20 odds that yo)i co&J -

WIN yoitr TUITION or GREAT PRIZES !!

’ Federation Hall - ’ ’ name contest ! ’

j prizes and c&h y ’ , to be Won

details in next weeks Imprint s