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An original movement drama by Gordon Davis. 600 p.m. Conrad Grebel Chapel. Note time change. is having a meeting. Vegetarian Yoga Feast follows. Free! For further information please call 888-7321.5:OO p.m. 51 Amos Avenue, Waterloo. are holding their organizational ’ meeting. Come out and get involved. 7:30 p.m. CC 135. trip to Wellesley Applebutter and Cheese festival. All welcome. 9:00 a.m. Meet in front of CC. Research Shortcuts Workshop lo:30 a.m. Info Desk, Arts Library I Land and Sea
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Cmpus Events , - Friday, September 25 - 1981 - 82 Permanent Employment Interviews. If you intend going through graduate interviews for permanent employment, please pick up a registration package in the Career Information Centre or the Scheduling Counter on the first floor of Needles Hall. Attention: Graduating Students. The Department of Co- ordination and Placement will be offering seesions on resume writing this fall. Sign up sheets will be posted on the bulletin board on the first floor of Needles Hall. Sessions are Oct. 5., 12:30 p.m., October 6, 12:30 p.m., Oct. 7,12:30p.m., Oct. 13, 11:30 p.m., October 15, 11:30 p.m. All sessions will be held in Room 1020, Needles Hall. Land and Sea - viewpoints of Prince Edward Island. Charlotte Hammond and Felicity Redgrave - paintings, works on paper and sculpture. Organized by the Con- federation Centre Art Gallery and Museum, Charlottetown. UW Gallery Hours: Monday through Friday: 9 a.m. - 4 p.m. Sundays 2 p.m. - 5 p.m. Showing till October 11. Science Society Election nominations open. The three positions up for election are 1.) President, 2.) Vice-President, 3.) Secretary-Treasurer. Nomination forms and duty descriptions are available at the SciSoc Office ESC 101A. The signatures of ten supporters are required for nomination. Making A Killing. Slide presentation and discussion on Canada’s role on America’s re-armament. The Blue Room in Conrad Grebel Cafeteria. Sponsored by the Peace Society. 12 noon. Bombshelter opens at 12 noon, D.J. after 9 p.m. Feds, no cover charge. Others, $1.00 after 9 p.m. Salad and Sandwich Bar Hours: Monday &Tuesday 12 noon till 6p.m.) Wednesday and Thursday: 12 noon - 6 p.m. and 8 p.m. - 11:30 p.m. Friday: noon till 11:30 p.m. Jumua’a (Friday) Prayer. Sponsored by the Muslim Students’ Association (M. S. A.) 1:30 - 2:30 p.m. CC 135. Outer’s Club - Beginners Rock Climbing. ry land session (no wet rocks). We will be teaching knots B nd basics about rockclimbing to prepare you for Saturday’s climb. You mustattendthissessionifyouwanttoclimbonSaturday.Betty Rozendaal at 886-4776, or Ike van Cruyingen at 886-0146 have more information. 4 p.m. CC 135. International Speaker from India: Joshua Daniel discusses yoga and T. M. from a Christian perspective. Come and hear and discuss at HH 280.4 p.m. Sponsored by W. C. F. Little Oktoberfest - presented by Recreation Students Association. Warm up for the Oktoberfest celebration with a live Oktoberfest band! HKLS - $3.00 Iwith I. D. Others - $3.50. Waterlod Motor Inn, 8:00 p.m. l%e Earthern Mug - Coffee House sponsored by WCF. Muffins,assorted teaandcoffee.Liveentertainment.8:OOp.m. - midnight, CC 110. Fed Flicks - The Formula starring George C. Scott and Marlon Brando. r:OO p.m., AL 116. Feds $1.00, aliens $2.00. The Psychology Society isholding a “Welcome Back Pub”. New students welcome. Just follow the signs to have a great time! 9:00 p.m. - 1:00 a.m. Psych Lounge 3005. - Saturday, September 26 - Outers Club trip to Wellesley Applebutter and Cheese festival. All welcome. 9:00 a.m. Meet in front of CC. J/oshua Daniel: see Friday. 7 p.m. CC 113. Bombshelter opens at 7:00 p.m. with the inevitable D. J. But atleasttheyhavetheArmourAttackmachine.Feds,nocover. Others, $1.00 after 9 p.m. Fed Flicks - see Friday. - Sunday, September 27 - The Outers Club is going on a hike on Sunday along the Guelph Trail. Everyone is welcome. Bring a lunch and a car if you have one. 9:30 a.m. Meet in front of the CC. Campus Worship Service: University a.m. HH 280. Drs. Graham Morbey. of Waterloo. lo:30 Outer’s Club - Kayaking. Free instruction and practice time. No previous experience needed. 4:00 - 6:00 p.m. PAC pool. Beware the chlorine-sharks. The Bhakti Yoga Club is having a meeting. Vegetarian Yoga Feast follows. Free! For further information please call 888-7321.5:OO p.m. 51 Amos Avenue, Waterloo. Light of the World. An original movement drama by Gordon Davis. 600 p.m. Conrad Grebel Chapel. Note time change. Future Survival: a film investigating the consequences of ignoring the direction this planet seems to be heading. Part of the fall concert and film festival by Maranatha Christian Club. 7:oO p.m. MC 2065. Free admission. There will be a time of singing and sharing at the end of each event. From Montgomery to Memphis, a film on the life and work of Martin Luther King, will be shown with an introduction by Professor D. Smucker. The film is sponsored by the Federation of Students and Waterloo Peace Society. Free admission. 7:30 p.m., AL 116. Chapels: Conrad Grebel Chapel. 7:00 p.m. Coffee and discussion to follow. - Monday, September 28 - Nominations open for WPIRG student board of directors. Three positions are open. Pick up forms at WPIRG office, Campus Centre room 217A. 9:00 a.m. - 12:30 p.m. until October 5. Health Studies Student Association Meeting. All Health’ students welcome. 3:30 p.m. CC 135. mmbshelter opens 12 noor;. Unavoidable D. J. after 9 p.m. Feds, no cover. Others $1 after 9:00 p.m. Salad and Sandwich Bar Hours: Monday &Tuesday, 12noon - 6p.m. Wednesday and Thursday, 12 noon till 6:00 p.m.xand 8 p.m. - 11:30 p.m. Friday, 12 noon till 11:30 p.m. (but just try andget saladafter six - can you get it? Heck, nooooo!) UW Debating Society is holding organizational meetings. Come out and learn the art of debate Call 884-1988 for more information. 5:30 p.m. Conrad Grebel College, Rm. 107. The Historic Society presents the film La Grande Illusion at 7:00 p.m. AL 113. This film is the first in a fall series of classic cinema shown every Monday night (except Thanksgiving). Cost is $1 per film or $5 for entire series. Generations of Resistance, recently released film on the pass laws and apartheid in South Africa, shows at Emmanual United Church, 22 Bridgeport Road East, Waterloo at 7:30 p.m. Part 1 of the Southern Africa: The Next Stepfilm/speaker series. $1.50 admission. For further information contact: CUSO, ext. 3144; WPIRG, 884-9020, or Global Community Centre 743-7111. $8.00 for the series. Catechism for the Curiousand For Those Wanting to Make Professlon of Faith. 8:00 - 9:00 p.m. at Conrad Grebel College. Dr. Kooistra. The Vegetarian Club is having seven cooking workshops. Experience satisfying vegetarian cooking by tongue, tummy and mind. Love demonstrations and recipe handouts. Free! 5:30 p.m. Psych Lounge, 3005. - Tuesday, September 19 - Jewish New Year 5742 (today and tomorrow). Note: the Waterloo Jewish Students’ Association (WJSA) invites you to the 1st Bagel Brunch of the year. Tuesday Oct. 6. CC 110. 11:30 a.m. - 1:30 p.m. Research Shortcuts Workshop for Sociology students. lo:30 a.m. Information Desk, Arts Library. Brown Bag Film Series - When Did You Last See Yourself On T.V.? A survey of media stereotypes (30 minutes) 11:30 a.m. Psych 2083. Sponsored by Women’s Studies ext. 2880. Bombshelter - nothing new, see Monday. Research Shortcuts for Recreation students. 2:30 p.m. Info Desk, Arts Library. Are you a Disciple of Jesus? Waterloo Christian Fellowship supper meeting. 4:30 - 7:00 p.m. HH 280. See you there. The Outers Club general meeting. New members are welcome. Upcoming trips will be discussed. 5:30 p.m. .CC 135. The Chess Club is having their organizational Everybody welcome. 7:00 - 10:00 p.m. CC 113. meeting. The Great Debate: Morality Requires a Supernatural Foundation. Dr. Jan Narveson and Dr. Oliver O’Donovan will be deba’ting. 8:00 p.m. Theatre of the Arts. WCFpresentation. - Wednesday, September 30 - Bombshelter - nothing new, see Monday. Research Shortcuts Workshop - for English Literature students. 2:30 p.m. Arts Library Information Desk. World of Dance Series. To Dance is to Live. Jim Sky, resident of Six Nations Reserve and one of North America’s leaders of traditional Mohawk Dance, performs with his dancers. Humanities Theatre. 4:30 - 5:00 p.m. $2 admission. For further information contact ext. 3357. Waterloo Christian Fellowship - See Tuesday. Heldat St. Jerome’s College, Rm. 215,4:30 - 7:00 p.m. Christian Perspectives Lecture Series: God, Man and World in Western Thought: HH 334, 4:30 - 6:30 p.m. Drs. Graham Morbey. Chapel: Conrad Grebel Chapel. 4:45 - 5:15 p.m. Wednesday Night Discussion Fellotiship. Special Lecture: Science and Knowledge by Dr. Kooistra. 6:00 p.m. Common Meal. 7 p.m. Bible Study lectures. The Junior Farmers of UW are holding their organizational meeting. Come out and get involved. 7:30 p.m. CC 135. Planning Courses with Goalsin Mind. Speaker: Dick Knight, Academic Advisor, Arts Faculty. Part of the talks,workshops, and discusslon of Perils, Pitfalls and Pleasures of Being A Mature Student. 7:30 p.m. Humanities 334. Sign up for the above session. Isobel Mackay, ext. 2147. Gay Liberation of Waterloo (GLOW) sponsors a coffee house. For further information call 884-4569 (GLOW) anytime. 8:30 p.m. CC 110. Cinema Gratis presents Same Time Next Year 9:30 p.m. Campus Centre Great Hall. Free. Sponsored by the Campus Centre Board. - Thursday, October l- Scisoc Election nominations close at 4:30 p.m. Nomination forms available at ESC 101A. Bombshelter - no news,is good news. See Monday Mature Student’s Program. A Woman’s Choice: decision- making. Pat Carter, Manager, Student Services, Conestoga College talks. 1:30 p.m. Humanities 373. Helping Yourself in Health Care is another Brown Bag seminar featuring Connie Clement, community healt worker, at 12:30 p.m. - 2:00 p.m. in CC 135. Clement describes strategies people can take to control their health care without doctors. Research Shortcuts Info Desk Arts Library. Workshop for Economics students. The Amateur Radio Club. Come in and try our equipment and meet a lot of really interesting “Hams.” Everyone is welcome and memberships are available. 4:30 p.m., E2,2355. UW NDP Club organizational meeting. &th returning and new members are encouraged to come. 4:30 p.m. HH 344. Frulica - a dazzling dance production from Yugoslavia. Tickets $9.50, students/seniors $8. 8:00 p.m. Humanities Theatre. Tickets available at the UW Arts Centre Box Office. The Engineering Society presents Glider at 8:00 p.m. in Ruby’s, at Waterloo Motor Inn. $3 for Feds, $3.50 for others. Tickets available at Eng Sot or Federation office. Research Shortcuts Workshop lo:30 a.m. Info Desk, Arts Library for Economics students. ‘Bombshelter - see Monday. Fed FLicks - Nine to Five starring Jane Fonda, Lily Tomlin and Dolly Party. 8 p.m. AL 116. Feds $1.00, Others $2.00. Funny. - Coming Events - Department of Athletics Annual Flea Market. Saturday, October 24th 9:00 a.m. - 3:00 p.m. in the Main Gym, PAC. Cost $10.00 per booth, plus 10% of take. For further information contact Peter Hopkins, Campus Recreation ext. 3532 or Room PAC 2040. Any Baha’i’s on campus who wish to form a &ha’i Club or who wish to contact fellow Baha’i’s please phone: 886’4097. October 3 - Elephant in My Pajamas. A one man show on Groucho Marx created and performed by John Bay. 8:OOp.m. Theatre of the Arts. Tickets $9.50, students/seniors $8.00 Available at the UW Arts Centre Box Office. October 3 - Federation of Students presents Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark at Bingeman Park. Ticketsare $6.50 for Feds, $7.50 for others and are available at the Fed office. I Friday, September 25,198l; Volume 4, Number 10; University of Waterlloo, Waterloo, Ontario I
Transcript
Page 1: 1981-82_v04,n10_Imprint

Cmpus Events , - Friday, September 25 -

1981 - 82 Permanent Employment Interviews. If you intend going through graduate interviews for permanent employment, please pick up a registration package in the Career Information Centre or the Scheduling Counter on the first floor of Needles Hall.

Attention: Graduating Students. The Department of Co- ordination and Placement will be offering seesions on resume writing this fall. Sign up sheets will be posted on the bulletin board on the first floor of Needles Hall. Sessions are Oct. 5., 12:30 p.m., October 6, 12:30 p.m., Oct. 7,12:30p.m., Oct. 13, 11:30 p.m., October 15, 11:30 p.m. All sessions will be held in Room 1020, Needles Hall.

Land and Sea - viewpoints of Prince Edward Island. Charlotte Hammond and Felicity Redgrave - paintings, works on paper and sculpture. Organized by the Con- federation Centre Art Gallery and Museum, Charlottetown. UW Gallery Hours: Monday through Friday: 9 a.m. - 4 p.m. Sundays 2 p.m. - 5 p.m. Showing till October 11. Science Society Election nominations open. The three positions up for election are 1.) President, 2.) Vice-President, 3.) Secretary-Treasurer. Nomination forms and duty descriptions are available at the SciSoc Office ESC 101A. The signatures of ten supporters are required for nomination. Making A Killing. Slide presentation and discussion on Canada’s role on America’s re-armament. The Blue Room in Conrad Grebel Cafeteria. Sponsored by the Peace Society. 12 noon. Bombshelter opens at 12 noon, D.J. after 9 p.m. Feds, no cover charge. Others, $1.00 after 9 p.m. Salad and Sandwich Bar Hours: Monday &Tuesday 12 noon till 6p.m.) Wednesday and Thursday: 12 noon - 6 p.m. and 8 p.m. - 11:30 p.m. Friday: noon till 11:30 p.m.

Jumua’a (Friday) Prayer. Sponsored by the Muslim Students’ Association (M. S. A.) 1:30 - 2:30 p.m. CC 135. Outer’s Club - Beginners Rock Climbing. ry land session (no wet rocks). We will be teaching knots B nd basics about rockclimbing to prepare you for Saturday’s climb. You mustattendthissessionifyouwanttoclimbonSaturday.Betty Rozendaal at 886-4776, or Ike van Cruyingen at 886-0146 have more information. 4 p.m. CC 135. International Speaker from India: Joshua Daniel discusses yoga and T. M. from a Christian perspective. Come and hear and discuss at HH 280.4 p.m. Sponsored by W. C. F.

Little Oktoberfest - presented by Recreation Students Association. Warm up for the Oktoberfest celebration with a live Oktoberfest band! HKLS - $3.00 Iwith I. D. Others - $3.50. Waterlod Motor Inn, 8:00 p.m. l%e Earthern Mug - Coffee House sponsored by WCF. Muffins,assorted teaandcoffee.Liveentertainment.8:OOp.m. - midnight, CC 110. Fed Flicks - The Formula starring George C. Scott and Marlon Brando. r:OO p.m., AL 116. Feds $1.00, aliens $2.00. The Psychology Society isholding a “Welcome Back Pub”. New students welcome. Just follow the signs to have a great time! 9:00 p.m. - 1:00 a.m. Psych Lounge 3005.

- Saturday, September 26 - Outers Club trip to Wellesley Applebutter and Cheese festival. All welcome. 9:00 a.m. Meet in front of CC. J/oshua Daniel: see Friday. 7 p.m. CC 113. Bombshelter opens at 7:00 p.m. with the inevitable D. J. But atleasttheyhavetheArmourAttackmachine.Feds,nocover. Others, $1.00 after 9 p.m. Fed Flicks - see Friday.

- Sunday, September 27 - The Outers Club is going on a hike on Sunday along the Guelph Trail. Everyone is welcome. Bring a lunch and a car if you have one. 9:30 a.m. Meet in front of the CC. Campus Worship Service: University a.m. HH 280. Drs. Graham Morbey.

of Waterloo. lo:30

Outer’s Club - Kayaking. Free instruction and practice time. No previous experience needed. 4:00 - 6:00 p.m. PAC pool. Beware the chlorine-sharks.

The Bhakti Yoga Club is having a meeting. Vegetarian Yoga Feast follows. Free! For further information please call 888-7321.5:OO p.m. 51 Amos Avenue, Waterloo.

Light of the World. An original movement drama by Gordon Davis. 600 p.m. Conrad Grebel Chapel. Note time change. Future Survival: a film investigating the consequences of ignoring the direction this planet seems to be heading. Part of the fall concert and film festival by Maranatha Christian Club. 7:oO p.m. MC 2065. Free admission. There will be a time of singing and sharing at the end of each event. From Montgomery to Memphis, a film on the life and work of Martin Luther King, will be shown with an introduction by Professor D. Smucker. The film is sponsored by the Federation of Students and Waterloo Peace Society. Free admission. 7:30 p.m., AL 116. Chapels: Conrad Grebel Chapel. 7:00 p.m. Coffee and discussion to follow.

- Monday, September 28 - Nominations open for WPIRG student board of directors. Three positions are open. Pick up forms at WPIRG office, Campus Centre room 217A. 9:00 a.m. - 12:30 p.m. until October 5. Health Studies Student Association Meeting. All Health’ students welcome. 3:30 p.m. CC 135. mmbshelter opens 12 noor;. Unavoidable D. J. after 9 p.m. Feds, no cover. Others $1 after 9:00 p.m. Salad and Sandwich Bar Hours: Monday &Tuesday, 12noon - 6p.m. Wednesday and Thursday, 12 noon till 6:00 p.m.xand 8 p.m. - 11:30 p.m. Friday, 12 noon till 11:30 p.m. (but just try andget saladafter six - can you get it? Heck, nooooo!)

UW Debating Society is holding organizational meetings. Come out and learn the art of debate Call 884-1988 for more information. 5:30 p.m. Conrad Grebel College, Rm. 107. The Historic Society presents the film La Grande Illusion at 7:00 p.m. AL 113. This film is the first in a fall series of classic cinema shown every Monday night (except Thanksgiving). Cost is $1 per film or $5 for entire series. Generations of Resistance, recently released film on the pass laws and apartheid in South Africa, shows at Emmanual United Church, 22 Bridgeport Road East, Waterloo at 7:30 p.m. Part 1 of the Southern Africa: The Next Stepfilm/speaker series. $1.50 admission. For further information contact: CUSO, ext. 3144; WPIRG, 884-9020, or Global Community Centre 743-7111. $8.00 for the series. Catechism for the Curiousand For Those Wanting to Make Professlon of Faith. 8:00 - 9:00 p.m. at Conrad Grebel College. Dr. Kooistra.

The Vegetarian Club is having seven cooking workshops. Experience satisfying vegetarian cooking by tongue, tummy and mind. Love demonstrations and recipe handouts. Free! 5:30 p.m. Psych Lounge, 3005.

- Tuesday, September 19 - Jewish New Year 5742 (today and tomorrow). Note: the Waterloo Jewish Students’ Association (WJSA) invites you to the 1st Bagel Brunch of the year. Tuesday Oct. 6. CC 110. 11:30 a.m. - 1:30 p.m.

Research Shortcuts Workshop for Sociology students. lo:30 a.m. Information Desk, Arts Library.

Brown Bag Film Series - When Did You Last See Yourself On T.V.? A survey of media stereotypes (30 minutes) 11:30 a.m. Psych 2083. Sponsored by Women’s Studies ext. 2880. Bombshelter - nothing new, see Monday.

Research Shortcuts for Recreation students. 2:30 p.m. Info Desk, Arts Library. Are you a Disciple of Jesus? Waterloo Christian Fellowship supper meeting. 4:30 - 7:00 p.m. HH 280. See you there. The Outers Club general meeting. New members are welcome. Upcoming trips will be discussed. 5:30 p.m. .CC 135.

The Chess Club is having their organizational Everybody welcome. 7:00 - 10:00 p.m. CC 113.

meeting.

The Great Debate: Morality Requires a Supernatural Foundation. Dr. Jan Narveson and Dr. Oliver O’Donovan will be deba’ting. 8:00 p.m. Theatre of the Arts. WCFpresentation.

- Wednesday, September 30 - Bombshelter - nothing new, see Monday. Research Shortcuts Workshop - for English Literature students. 2:30 p.m. Arts Library Information Desk. World of Dance Series. To Dance is to Live. Jim Sky, resident of Six Nations Reserve and one of North America’s leaders of traditional Mohawk Dance, performs with his dancers. Humanities Theatre. 4:30 - 5:00 p.m. $2 admission. For further information contact ext. 3357.

Waterloo Christian Fellowship - See Tuesday. Heldat St. Jerome’s College, Rm. 215,4:30 - 7:00 p.m. Christian Perspectives Lecture Series: God, Man and World in Western Thought: HH 334, 4:30 - 6:30 p.m. Drs. Graham Morbey. Chapel: Conrad Grebel Chapel. 4:45 - 5:15 p.m. Wednesday Night Discussion Fellotiship. Special Lecture: Science and Knowledge by Dr. Kooistra. 6:00 p.m. Common Meal. 7 p.m. Bible Study lectures. The Junior Farmers of UW are holding their organizational ’ meeting. Come out and get involved. 7:30 p.m. CC 135.

Planning Courses with Goalsin Mind. Speaker: Dick Knight, Academic Advisor, Arts Faculty. Part of the talks,workshops, and discusslon of Perils, Pitfalls and Pleasures of Being A Mature Student. 7:30 p.m. Humanities 334. Sign up for the above session. Isobel Mackay, ext. 2147. Gay Liberation of Waterloo (GLOW) sponsors a coffee house. For further information call 884-4569 (GLOW) anytime. 8:30 p.m. CC 110. Cinema Gratis presents Same Time Next Year 9:30 p.m. Campus Centre Great Hall. Free. Sponsored by the Campus Centre Board.

- Thursday, October l- Scisoc Election nominations close at 4:30 p.m. Nomination forms available at ESC 101A. Bombshelter - no news,is good news. See Monday Mature Student’s Program. A Woman’s Choice: decision- making. Pat Carter, Manager, Student Services, Conestoga College talks. 1:30 p.m. Humanities 373. Helping Yourself in Health Care is another Brown Bag seminar featuring Connie Clement, community healt worker, at 12:30 p.m. - 2:00 p.m. in CC 135. Clement describes strategies people can take to control their health care without doctors.

Research Shortcuts Info Desk Arts Library.

Workshop for Economics students.

The Amateur Radio Club. Come in and try our equipment and meet a lot of really interesting “Hams.” Everyone is welcome and memberships are available. 4:30 p.m., E2,2355. UW NDP Club organizational meeting. &th returning and new members are encouraged to come. 4:30 p.m. HH 344. Frulica - a dazzling dance production from Yugoslavia. Tickets $9.50, students/seniors $8. 8:00 p.m. Humanities Theatre. Tickets available at the UW Arts Centre Box Office. The Engineering Society presents Glider at 8:00 p.m. in Ruby’s, at Waterloo Motor Inn. $3 for Feds, $3.50 for others. Tickets available at Eng Sot or Federation office.

Research Shortcuts Workshop lo:30 a.m. Info Desk, Arts Library

for Economics students.

‘Bombshelter - see Monday. Fed FLicks - Nine to Five starring Jane Fonda, Lily Tomlin and Dolly Party. 8 p.m. AL 116. Feds $1.00, Others $2.00. Funny.

- Coming Events - Department of Athletics Annual Flea Market. Saturday, October 24th 9:00 a.m. - 3:00 p.m. in the Main Gym, PAC. Cost $10.00 per booth, plus 10% of take. For further information contact Peter Hopkins, Campus Recreation ext. 3532 or Room PAC 2040.

Any Baha’i’s on campus who wish to form a &ha’i Club or who wish to contact fellow Baha’i’s please phone: 886’4097.

October 3 - Elephant in My Pajamas. A one man show on Groucho Marx created and performed by John Bay. 8:OOp.m. Theatre of the Arts. Tickets $9.50, students/seniors $8.00 Available at the UW Arts Centre Box Office. October 3 - Federation of Students presents Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark at Bingeman Park. Ticketsare $6.50 for Feds, $7.50 for others and are available at the Fed office.

I Friday, September 25,198l; Volume 4, Number 10; University of Waterlloo, Waterloo, Ontario I

Page 2: 1981-82_v04,n10_Imprint

the \

Orchestkl Manoetjvres- 1 in the Dark .

’ I I

. . -

/

SATURD-A& OCT.~ 3rd -- 8:OO .pim. at

-BlN’GElUiAN PARK T .TlCKETS AVAILABLE at

i The Fed Oifice, Record World3

,

and Records on Wheels I .

-present.

A&es y- .-

TUESDAY, ObTOl$ER li f t ea wing.

Walter Ostanek Band &

CLiCK .’ - /

-GOOD FOOD ,

GO.OD D,RINK .I

Tickets availabl’e at the Fed Office \

,’ _. 7

I

Thurs. Ott m.1 st - * , Monday, Sept. 28th Tbesda$Sept.-29th Wed. Sept. 30tn j

11:3b .yDO’S & DON'TS ABOUT INTEtiVIEWS, SEARCHING FOR A JOB? . WRITING R&UME?, CAREER PLANNING .

TO ~CONDUCTED BY CAREER PLANF;ING -co DUCTED BY CAREER PLANNING -CONDUCTED‘BY COUNSELLING

~~CACEMEMT & VLA~EMENT

-CONDUCTED BY CAREER PLANNING SERV-ICES

x:00 . & PLACEMENT I __-

'5 )

LOO. WRITING REbltik . 3

CAREER PLANM ING DO’S & DON'TS ABOUT INTERVIEWS CO-OP OPPORTUNITIES

TO -CONDUCTED BY CAREER .PLANN'ING -CONDUC!TED BY COUNSELLING -CONDUCTED BY CAREER'PLANNING -CONDUCTED BY COTORDINATION%

& PLACEMENT 2:30

& PLACEMENT SERVICES 8 PLACEMENT - - .

2:3o _ . ' 1_ . , I -_ TIME MANAGEMENT: DONLJ LET YOU AND CREDIT

TO' ' YOUR TIME MANAGE YOU!

I' -CONDUCTED BY UOFW LIBRARY

-CONDUCTED BY AMERICAN EXPRES

.4:30 * \ -. - . r - - -'-

,I &II c&u&ion .grou-ps in Campus Centre Rfn. 135 ,’ 4,. &TOUR OF~STUDENT ~VICES AVAILABLE, IN NEEDLES HALL, MONDAY TO THURSDAY, 12:30 AND~~~~o~~~~ING FROM RECEPTION DESK, MAIN FLooft

-. ~\FILM "THE. INTERVIEW: WHAT TO EXPECT" WILL BE SHOWfl ‘IN THE CC, ,Nk& ROOM 135, MON-THURS

l sEE TIE DISPLAiS IN THE CAMPUS CENTRE GREAT HALL, MONDAY TO THURShY I

,ALL THIS F6R FRii! I \

Page 3: 1981-82_v04,n10_Imprint

,-News I - l Friday, September 25,198l. Imprint 3 / UW and report seeing eye to-

The University of Waterloo Part of the reason for the low percentage of foreign students is that they cannot obtain work permits toqualify for the popular co-op pro- grams. Therefore the Uni- versity believes that qualified Canadian students are not being displaced by foreign students.

through its unique co-opera- Centre for Process Develop- industrial research and de- The report was prepared on tive programs and contract ment, The Centre for Occupa- velopment park on campus, the request of university presi- research activities. UW has a tional Health and Safety, The which would house research dent Dr. Doug Wright to research grant income which Centre for Information Theo- laboratories of established inform the Board of Gover- totaled $8,221,853in 1980-8 1, ry, and The Centre for Ac- companies, and provide start- nors and the Senate of the which was a 22% increase over counting Research and Edu- up accommodation for new reactions of the University of

has been faced with a set of recommendations from Z%e Report of The Committee on the Future Role of Universi- ties in Ontario which will force the University to be responsi- ble and accountable for its administration practices. The university has responded to these proposals with a report to the Board of Governorsand the Senate.

Accessibility of the Univers- ity to all kinds of students is one of the issues raised by the report. Of high priority to the committee are students, facul- ty, and staff who have disabil- ities which range from blind- ness to confinement to wheel- chairs. UW reports that it is continuing to improve its facilities and services for the disabled on campus and is also working on a program to integrate disabled students into the co-operative pro- gram.

The question of access to the University is also raised con- cerning students enrolled in correspondence programs. The University uses a format of audio-taped lectures to supplement text material and has boasted an enrollment of 1,300 students in 1980-81.

Visa-student enrolment po- ses another question of stu- dent accessibility. The total percentages of full-time stu- dents admitted to UW on student visas in fall 1980 were 4.30% undergraduates and 24.0% graduates. Of these figures, the report states, “We do not regard these percent- ages as excessive; however, we continue to monitor the num- ber and quality of foreign students admitted.‘*

Research, research funds, and equipment were other issues raised by the Report to the Board of Governors and Senate on the University’s Position or Performance. The report suggests that “adequate resources should be provided to ensure the maintenance in the universities of a strong base for both basic and applied research.” The University states that it is “striving to improve Canada’s position in the world.”

Here the question of money must inevitably come up. The report wants adequate fund- ing for the replacement of research equipment. U W agrees with this proposal, but half of the equipment here is , over ten years old and to replace it would require a 3 million dollar per year ex- penditure. ‘During the last ten years, however, capital funds for new and replacement, research and teaching equip- ment has averaged only 1.4 million dollars.

A further proposal was that the Universities should devel- op closer links with industry and government particularly when research relevant to the academic purpose of the university is being done. Waterloo has very close links with industry and government

A better way l . b ’ One very frequent miscon- ception people have about rejecting ‘the consumer life- style is the notion that one must either accept technology as a lump sum including all of the negative aspects, or deny it all and live a caveman-like existence.

Waterloo Public Interest Research Group’s (WPIRG) first Brown Bag Seminar, held this past Thursday featured Joe Umanetz, a high-school teacher and innovator, who gave a talk entitled “Building with Wind and Sun” which related the story of the construction of his home.

Umanetz stressed that it’s not an “either - or” proposi- tion. One can have the comforts of technology with- out paying the high prices usually demanded. Umanetz has demonstrated the truth of the statement with events of his own life.

Five years ago, Umanetz decided he did not want to continue living the typical consumption oriented life. He wanted to be self-sufficient, but in such a way as to maximize the positive impact of his lifestyle on future generations. In addition, Umanetz did not want to pay the costs demanded by large manufacturing companies, be they in terms of money or the environment. As a matter of ethics he wanted as much control over his own life as possible. ,

J

Since shelter and food are two necessities of life, Uma- netz addressed those problems first. To him the logical thing to do was build an energy- efficient house. He initially found himself hindered in this because of his complete lack of knowledge about carpentry. Umanetz’s brother helped him pour the footings for the foundation so that whatever else was done later would at least stand up. Most of the work done on the’house was accomplished through the friends.

The first winter Umanetz spent in his new house was’the stereotypical horror story of a city dweller moving to the country. The stove that was supposed to do the heating didn’t. Firewood rotted and became unusable. And the money he had available ran out very fast.

By the second year the house was habitable enough for Umanetz to turn his attention to his next project: windmills. The first one lasted almost one week. The second fared slightly better and didn’t fly apart until two years later. Umanetz then gave up on making his own windmills and bought one.

Nowadays Umanetz says he wants to build another house. He feels he’s learnt so much in building his first house that he wants to apply his new knowledge to another.

Julie George

the previous year. With the aid of research

funds UW has set up several research centres, such as The

cation. In addition to these already

established centres, the Uni-; versity has plans for an

enterprises as well as addition- al space for university contract research and other develop- ments.

Waterloo to The Report ofthe Committee on the Future Role of Universities in Ontario.

Peter Luscombe

Senate updated on sports Controversy and media

attention on the subject of Ontario universities offering first party scholarships to intercollegiate athletes has stirred Uw’s President, Dr. Douglas Wright, into havinga report prepared for the Sen- ate and the Board of Govern- ors to explain the issue.

Totzke explained to the He pointed out that while Senate that the decision was Ontario universities still will made because, “we were not be offering the scholar- backed into a corner (by the ships there, “will be no CIAUj and felt it would be -significant impact on the unfair to deny students the program (at UW) as it now opportunity to play in a exists. His rationalization for national championship.” this was the claim that some

schools -- particularly those in the Maritimes -- have been offering ‘first party’awards for some years and all that the CIAU has done is to legalize what was previously for bidden.

Peter Saracino -

The report was received by the Senate at it’s September 2 1 meeting along with a hort presentation by Carl Totzke, president of the Ontario Uni- versities Athletic Association (OUAA) and Waterloo’s Di- rector of Athletics.

Waterloo’s position has been, according to the report, “one of opposition to the philosophy of financial a- wards, specifically for athletic participation. Beyond the philosophical opposition, it has been consistently stated that the priority of financial needs just to maintain current programs, precludes the pos- sibility of instituting a pro- gram of ‘pay-for-play’ for the participants.”

Waterloo was one of the OUAA members that had supported a provincial’ boy- cott of national champion- ships as a response to the Canadian Interuniversity Athletic Union (CIAU) deci- sion to permit athletic schol- arships of the ‘first party’ nature.

First ‘party’ scholarships are those that are granted directly by the university as opposed to ‘second party’ (money provided by an a- gency external to the univer- sity but available only to high school graduates of the donor province) and ‘third party’ (awarded by the federal gov- ernment to athletes of national team potential and the recip- ient can go to the Canadian university of his/her own choice) awards.

The boycott cost UW the prestige of holding the CIAU men’s basketball finals, even though a meeting of the OUAA two weeks ago de- cided that Ontario universities would return to national competition.

Simonis still look good Federation president Wim

Simonis is proud of what he has done over the summer term. Three areas he has been working in are improving society relations, getting stu- dent transit rates and co- ordinating co-op housing.

On August -8 and 9, the Federation sponsored an On Campus Organizing Confer- ence. Representatives from various societies, faculty and the. Federation attended. According to Simonis, “the turnout was much higher than expected .” Forty-five stu- dents from almost every soci- ety and college and twenty university officials (including a brief appearance by Presi- dent Doug Wright) attended workshops designed to im- prove on campus relations. Another conference is planned for November.

Simonis plans to s.ubmit to council the creation of two new federation positions - a Society Liaison Officer with Clay Melnik being considered and a Residence Association Liaison Officer for which Paul Grenier is being considered. The two would chair ad hoc

committees in- charge of set- ting up the next conference and of holding a review of the Federation and its structure.

Simonis states he welcomes such a review of the Federa- tion structure, but he cautions that it is “often the people, not the structure that makes things work.”

Little was accomplished in getting reduced rates for students on the transit system. Simonis wants to co-ordinate his efforts with Wilfrid Laurier University and Conestoga College, neither of which were open during the summer. However, even with these two now in session, he says “It looks like it’s going to beleft up to us to do most of the work.” The transit commission did publish a report at the end of the summer which shows that student orientated bus routes (such as numbers 7 and 8) are at least breaking even, if not making money, while suburb runs are run at a deficit. Thus, according to Simonis, “uni- versity students are actually subsidizing the bus system.” He hopes to use this as an

argument for reduced student rates.

Since August the-Feds have had someone working on a computer programme design- ed to match co-op students with available housing in advance to their arrival on campus. They are also working with other universi- ties to compile housing lists in other cities for the January and Summer terms. At theend of the summer a “Share the Moving Cost” board was developed in conjunction with the Rides Board in the Cam- pus Centre. Poor advertising resulted in the board not being effectively used this term, but Simonis hopes it will become more useful in the future.

Simonis hopes to “develop a feeling amongst Alumni mem- bers that they have something to offer” to co-op students. He hopes to gain their co-opera- tion in introducing students to the towns where their work- terms will be. Simonis will be __ enlisting their aid at the annual general meeting of Alumni during Homecoming week.

Cathy McBride

The originals they’re not but The Grottybeats copy the Beatles ‘well enough to keep the blind guessing. Yeah, yeah, yeah! photo by Susan Montonon

Page 4: 1981-82_v04,n10_Imprint

Imprint is‘ l&e student nMirspaper & the Universiw of Waterloo. Iti @ an editorially independent newspagyr publishedby Imprint FubUcations, Waterloo, a torpor &ion’ vyithout .&are-.capitaJ. ‘Imprint is a member *of .Canadian TJniversiQy Press (Cup), an orgaqiza~on of mowthan 60 s&dent newspap& 4ctiss m I,mprint is also ‘a, member of the Ontari~Communi~~’ Newspaper Association (OCNA). Imprint publishes

’ every F~$day w the re@las terms. Mail shouldbe addressed @ “Imp@nt, Campus Centre Rooin 14O,Uni- versily of Wakloo, Waterloo, Ontario.” , -t

Imprint: ISSN 07067380 Imprint reserves’the right to screen, edit, t

and refuse actverfiising. 2ndclasspostagere@sQ’a~otiapplledf~r ,

+F i

We’re in a terrible hurry. We really are. You ’ wouldn’t believe it. So fast we can’t even list

names - just the ones that come to mind like Anna, Ed, Reter, Peter, Roger, Christine, the proofreaders, Virginia,

_ Susan, Chris, Michele, Dave, Tim, Prab- akar, Mark, Julie, and everyone else. Well, we tried. Thanks, Verna. Lots. Pat, too, Anne Marie too. Debbie too. Enough, gotta

1 go. Roger took the cover. JWB.

’ Sde~e endangered by cmzse~dsm in government ’ . \ , / Perhaps\ strictly speaking, this Computer programs with a high opinion, Senator William Prox- be even tighter than it is now.

does,not belong in a campus paper, *f degree of “discrimination” could mire, D-Wise. is a fool. An idiot. I Think about that for a- moment. but I (think I that it has strong beadapted for usein severalareas: ,, Words too strong for me to use. We are not living in ideal times repercussions that will affect us at f , communications being -one of the After Proxmire attacked the 3: now; what happens then? ’

program, NASA movedSETI into _ ~Waterloo. 1 .- ,most obvious. Highly sensitive This reluctance to fund basic SETIfius been cancelled. antennae for commercial use its exobiology program, very blue-sky research is always a

SET1 is the Search for Extra- would result, A new outlook. And quietly. This summer, Pro;imire problem for universities. The \ j terrestrial Intelligences. if we had< indeed contacted an did it again: he waited until classical story is that when Queen The , program was meant to’ aliean race out in space the effort SenatorHarrison H. Schmitt was Victoria asked Faraday what good ’

’ develop antenna designs and computer programs which could

would most assuredly have been away. Senator Schmitt is an ex- electricity was; Faraday replied,

) well worth it. , “Madam, of what use is a new-born

! separate the numerous space I And now it is dead. astronaut; he has been to the moon. He is an avid supporter of NASA.

“noise” from what could\ actually ’ baby‘?”

, / \ _ be a message from other civiliza-

’ tions somewhere in space. ’ An The reason is very simple. This is ‘such a dangerous thing

I think one of my babies just died. ’

Senator William Proxmire didn’t because the tendency to say, “Any Finally, Proxmire criticized ambitious project perhaps; but qne like it. Three years ago, it received budget cut is a good cut” is going to SETI by saying, “It is hard enough that should be done. his wonderful ‘Golden Fleece affect basic Research and Devel- to find intelligent life right here in

: ‘The results of SET1 could have Award”, given to programs -that opment in the universities. It’s \ Washington.” been enormous, even if we had never found another civilization.

___ the honourable Senator feels are where we are -- look around you. You’ve got it, Billy! wasting money. In my personal Budgeting for schooling is going to John McMullen

Page 5: 1981-82_v04,n10_Imprint

- Friday, September 25,198l. Imprint 5 -

A student’s they get into their third and fourth years the pattern changes and the males spend just a little more time working than do the females.”

He says that while the primary focus of the research was to determine just how hard students work and how much leisure time they have, the researchers looked at a number of Waterloo. Between 82 and 83 percent say they

university educations than do females. They also are less willing to accept a lower-than-fair salary than are females. Females are not only willing to accept less, they also expect less.

The students were asked if they are satisfied with the education they are getting at

fiii hard - are; they would enrol1 at Waterloo and in the same faculty and department, if they had to do it all over again. Students in the faculty of human kinetics and leisure studies expressed most satisfaction with the social life and the general educational backgrounds they are getting, at Waterloo; engineering students expressed most satisfaction with their career prospects, though theyareless happy about the social life than students in some of the other faculties.

1 0 Z

long hours, much work

University students work longer hours than the average nine-to-five employee.

This is part of the findings of a series of studies done by a group of UW graduate students under the direction of Drs. Jiri Zuzanek and David Ng, department of Recreation. The studies began in the fall of 1977 and continued in 1979 and 1980.

The average student in first or second year Arts puts in a 48 hour week, attending lecture, reading, writing essays, and so forth. The average HKLS student puts in a 52 hour week. Average Math students work 56 hours per week and the average Engineering student up

, to67hours... or close to ten hours a day, seven days a week.

“These studies were carefully done,” Dr. Zuzanek reports. “A total of 270 students were surveyed. They were asked to keep time budgets - records as to what they did with their time every 10 minutes throughout an entire day. We secured time budgetscoveringa total of8 10 student days or three complete days for each student surveyed.”

The studies were begun by Steve Shane, who has since graduated. More recently, Steve James, a graduate student, and Peter Schaefer, Cheryl Ross and Wendy McNutt, undergrads, have been involved. /

The studies show university students put in hours far in excess of the 35 and 40 hour weeks that are standard in business and industry. But they still manage to find-considerable time - between 32 and 34 hours a week - for leisure activities such as playing sports, watching TV, listening to records, partying and so forth.

This is relatively easy for students who live in university residences because they spend little or no time on such things as grocery shopping,

who room in the community, or rent apartments or town houses, may spend much more time on such “housekeeping” functions. They report their days seem terribly busy.

“Some students get married and take on additional obligations,” Dr. Zuzanek says. “These have an impact. But marks don’t drop off; perhaps married students learn to organize themselves better.”

He says the surveys show third and fourth year engineering students are able to cut back their work week considerably.. . from67 hours to about 54. Arts and HKLS students work about the same number of hours in upper years as they did in first and second years, though arts students are more apt to become involved in some form of part-time work. Arts students were found to average six hours a week in part- time jobs in their third and fourth years; HKLS students work about 2.4 hours a week on the average. Engineering students do virtually no outside work.

“We found university students are by and large pretty hard working,” says Dr. Zuzanek, who would like to see these studies go on. “But they don’t work as consistently as office or factory workers. You may see a student go a whole day, on occasion, without working very much. Next day though, he or she will pile up an enormous number of hours. But it averages out to a fairly stiff work load.”

The UW researchers found there doesn’t seem to be much difference between male and female students.

“The common wisdom is’that females study more than males,” says Dr. Zuzanek, “and this seems to be true for first and second year students; females work one hour a week more

other areas. “For example,” he says, “we asked our

subjects what they thought of the workloads in faculties other than their own. HKLS students seem to feel that students in engineering, mathematics and optometry have heavier work loads. Engineering students felt their work loads are the heaviest except for the optometry students. Environmental studies and arts students are aware that they spend less time working than do students in other faculties.“.

The five leisure activities that seem to occupy most of the students’ free time are: 1) watching TV (about eight hours a week, or

from 20 to 25 per cent of total free time); 2) conversations with friends (one hour per

day); 3) participation in active sports and physical

exercise (half an hour a day); 4) partying and going out to pubs (half an hour

a day); and 5) simple resting.

HKLS students seem to be more heavily engaged in active sports and partying; engineering students are the most active in university club<, societies and interest groups; arts students outdo others in reading and conversation; math students spend more time in unspecified “free” ways.

“Certain things about the survey may raise various questions,” comments Dr. Zuzanek. “For instance, the amount of time students spend reading books for pleasure is rather small.. . only48 minutesa week. Moreover, if it weren’t for arts students the average would only be about 25 minutes a week. This is far less than the amount of time they spend at cards or other table games which totals 40 minutes a week.”

The students were also asked about salary expectations after graduation.

“We were amazed at how accurate they are with respect to their salary expectations,” Dr. Zuzanek says. “Engineering students, for instance, feel they will be able to earn about $20,500 a year right after graduation, and we are informed this is about right. Human kinetics and leisure studies students expect about $14,500; arts students expect about $13,700 and th’ is is about right.”

Students were asked not only what salaries they expected, but also what salaries they would consider fair and reasonable.

The engineers expect toearn more than what Q they really believe is “fair” the survey showed. HKLS students, on the other hand, think that about $16,000 would be fair but they expect to get about $1,500 a year less than that amount.

Male students seem more confident they will

Students were asked what kind of financial help they are concerned about: loans, scholar- ships, grants or jobs. They are interested in loans . . . especially the students who expect to earn good incomes after graduation and who feel confident about paying them off. ’

The surveys show it is the topstudents(high grade averages) who do the most studying. Among the top engineering students, for instance - those whose marks average 85 per cent or higher - the tendency is to study 68 hours a week or more. Students whoare barely able to get by or who don’t in fact succeed average 51 hours a week of study. Inter- estingly, the under achievers - the students who have the ability to get higher marks but who are content to just “get by”, do the least amount of work. . .48 hours per week on the average.

.

HKLS students are interested in continuing their studies after graduation, seeking masters’ and PhD degrees. Engineers are less interested, possibly because they expect to get very well paying jobs with the bachelors’ degrees.

“We had a number of other questions that are somewhat apart from the main thrust of the survey,” says Dr. Zuzanek. “For instance, we asked what subjects the students were least well prepared in, prior to coming to university. They listed these in the following order: 1) English; 2) Mathematics; 3) physics and chemistry; and 4) ‘other things’.” They asked students living off campus if they would walk to and from campus alone in the

8”

venings (after dark). Fifty per cent of the emale respondents said they would hesitate to

do so, fearing for their safety; 25 per cent of the males also said they would hesitate to do SO.

Dr. Zuzanek says he hasn’t heard of any other study of this nature among Canatian university students. He has heard of some in the United States but finds they have beendone in such a way that the results cannot be easily compared.

He says he and Dr. Ng are interested in con- tinuing these studies partly because carrying them out forms a useful learning experience for

cooking, washing dishes or cleaning. Students than their male counterparts. However when be able to get a job that relates to their Y 1

their students.

‘HThaf a0 you want to be when you grow up?

by EdKristufek and&ma Marie Hubbard

RobertCalder aimGardner Dave It&Beth Theresamtffiro aaxin mnv.61.Profa aulecmg 3rdYear @en. Sci. A pro kinesiologist or a professiona,l I don’t know, -be an applebecause I don’t know A physiotherapist but ask me later rock star. people will polish me. ‘when I grow up.

Page 6: 1981-82_v04,n10_Imprint

Cbrotibt Motor :Hotjel CoRONET’S CENTRE STAGE

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j_ ’ Wed; Night: in The Pit: ‘- University of Wate>rloo Amatuer Night

‘, I- ’ \ . IF-YO,U EVER NEED A ROOM-FAST - , i- 1 THiNK OF THE #CORONET! . .

As the price of gasoline con- He spoke to the first tinues to climb more interest is Chemical Engineering De-

/ being shown towards the de- partmental seminar of the velopment of alternative fuels. term, Tuesday Sept. 22.

Far from the glamour of (As a word of caution, these solar space stations or the‘airs’ gatherings are not for the weak _ of bio-mass, lies the lowly in spirit or mind. Geared for black lump-coal. Large Can- graduate students and pro- adian reserves and economical fessors, any lay language is left prices make it an ideal alter- behind at the door. Our un- native. usual gutteral slur is replaced

by a mire of technical terms Coal does not have the and leaps of knowledgeable

problem of being difficult to faith.) handle. This is due to its large Getting gas from coal is not, size compared to the energy a new idea. Nazi Germany contained in it. To extract the powered their war machine energy from coal by burning during the end of the war using not only produces noxious just such a techniquela similar smells but diminishes the process to that discussed at the chances of catching fish in lecture. Northern Ontario -acid rain. Starting with the black

metamorphosized dinosaur A way around coals’ dis- remains there are two basic

advantages is to convert it into approaches: direct or indirect a liquid similar to gasoline. liquifaction. Although energy is lost (it Pulverized lumps of coal are always is), the end product can blasted with hot, highpressure be a convenient high octane hydrogen which decomposes liquid suitable forany Porche out useable gases and oils like a or Alfa Ro,

‘r eo. gigantic express press. This is

an expensive method as it Professor W. D. Deckwer takes a lot of energy (it’s

from the Technical Univer- scarce, remember) to synthe- sity of Hanover, Germany, size hydrogen in the first place. was at UW to discuss the Dickwer’s discussion cen- feasability of such a plan. . tred around the second, or m-

direct method. Here coal is given the heated, high pressure treatment with steam and oxygen. The two break it down into basic elements; carbon monoxide and hydrogen.

From these building blocks engineers create a new fuel. Surprisingly enough this tech- nique is fairly simple. The gas; is bubbled up through a mixture of hot (200 - 300, degrees C) wax and catalysts.

As the little bubbles of carbon monoxide and hydro- gen surge to the top, chemical reactions transform them into heavier elements. Gasoline as we know it is simply a very tricky mixture of carbon, hydrogen and oxygen. As for the mysterious catalysts, they are simply‘ substances that help a reaction without sticking around at the-end.

The reactions involved in this transformation from sim- ple to complex are still not understood. Although the process sounds easy enough, don’t rush for the kitchen stove, pressure cooker and parrafin in hand, to stew up a little home brew. As with most engineering and development work, the princples of the matter are by far the easiest.

Getting things to work economically is the real chal- ’ lenge. With this process,

111 Ted Bennett 0 .D. j l l real problem. In other words, thermal efficiency has been the

Optometrist too much heat (or energy) is used in the bubbling com- pared to the heat that can be obtained from the coal.

55 Erb St. East Suite 303 Dr. Deckwer has developed a technique to raise the level of

c*

cess can be used for animal ,_ feed.

Ed Kristufek ’

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Page 7: 1981-82_v04,n10_Imprint

News /

Friday, September 25,1981. Imprint 7 ,-

deal of difficulty in attracting Science. It found that the ans and the federal govern-

CompSci near brink I Computer Science at the nearly 1,300 students per year. fourteen people - grad stu-

University of Waterloo is in a The number of students in it dents, visiting professors, and state of crisis. has increased over 30 per cent part-time faculty - fro

between the Spring 1979 and Since 1977 twelve faculty Spring 1980 terms

“wherever it could get them”,

have left the computer science . in order to alleviate the stress.

program while only eleven This number addes to the 37

replacements have been hired. According to J. A. Brzozow- regular faculty members in

Two more are expected to ski, Chairman of the Depart- their teaching of the 51

leave this year and four are ment of Computing Science, undergraduate courses that

expected to be hired. the department needs at least Computer Science offers. He

ten new faculty members to admits that the situation is

This lack Of growth in accomodate the influx “not healthy” for students or faculty numbers comes in the . the department and consti- face of blossoming under- tutes a crisis. graduate enrollments. One Brzozowski states that the Waterloo (amongst other course, CS 140, now serves department has “borrowed” universities) is having a great

people with Ph.D.s who can teach computer science. The base salary for an assistant professor here is $21,852 per year; an associate prof starts at $28,408. A Waterloo co-op student who graduates with a B. Math will start with an average salary of $22,500.

supply of new Ph.D.s was ment has regulationsdeterring about twenty per cent of the their being hired in Canadian demand. universities.

Some observations of the report were:

* About 250 new Ph.D.s graduated in 1979 as com- pared with 1300 positions seeking Ph. D.s

* Fewer than 100 new Ph.D.s sought academic posi- tions as compared with over 650 academic positions known to be open.

The Computer Science De- partment is looking to indus- try and business for help, according to Brzozowski. He believes that, although sup- portive, the university has done all it can for the program, given the tight budgetary constraints placed on it by the provincial government.

s Arts prez changes

To supplement incomes about one third of the com- puter science faculty are doing outside contract and con- sulting work at the expense of research. “They ought to be able to survive with just one job,” says Brzozowski.

Another aspect of the prob- lem is the small number of Ph.D.s that are produced each 5 year in total. “The Snowbird Report” was produced from a meeting in July, 1980, of the 83 heads of departments in Cana- da and the United States that grant Ph.D.s in Computer

* Undergraduate enrol- ments doubled since 1975 with only nominal increase in lab space and faculty size over the same period.

UW and the University of Toronto are Canada’s major producers of computer science Ph. D.s, about twelve per year. The country as a whole produces nearly twenty. Of those some are non-canadi-

Industry has already helped U W by providing some equip- ment for research work, which Brzozowski believes has been given for services already rendered. He hopes that they will contribute to Watfund (UW’s corporate and alumni fundraising program)and that that money can be used to buy state of the art equipment and support research work.

Peter Saracino

The Arts Student Union by-election (article V, section At the full council meeting. (ASU) is faced with an upheaval in its executive positions.

Kevin McInnis, elected to the position of president las winter term, resigned from that post on the morning of September 18. McInnis stated that the reason for his resig- nation was “a minor problem but I don’t want to talk about it.”

President pro-tern, Murray Spackman (previously vice- president), maintains that MC Innis’ main reason for resign- ing was academic. According to Spackman, McInnis did not wish his reasons to be known as he does not want his chances of winning a later election ruined.

A letter concerning the transfer of authority issued by Spackman stated that “The President of the Arts Student Union resigned for reasons of a delicate and undisclosed nature.”

Spackman, under the ASU constitution (article V, section 6, subsection 1) assumes the role of the presidency. As this shift in positions occurred during the fall term, the constitution states that “ Council shall (a) appoint the

6, subsection ii). Contrary to the constitu-

tion, Spackman states that it is optional whether or not coun- cil appoints a Vice-President. Spackman also maintains that “I can’t find in the constitution where the (office of) Vice- President has to be filled”.

“Technically, I don’t see why we have to have one (a Vice- President)“, he asserted.

on the 30th of this month, Spackman will announce the opening for interim Vice- President. McInnis’ resig- nation will be formally an- nounced at the same meeting.

McInnis is now acting in the capacity of an advisor. Spackman explains that Mc- Innis “keeps in touch, drops by periodically, and gives advice”. Anna Lehn

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BOX OFFICE OPENS TOMORROW, SEPTEMBER 26 Tickets available at the Central Ticket Office, Hum. Theatre U. of W. 885-4280 or at The Centre in the Square 578-1570

Page 8: 1981-82_v04,n10_Imprint

.~, ’ qg!&&&p .‘, _,, , .-’ . . ./.. ,,<p.., . ,!, _ ,I - . .-y i - -- ’ r-: ., - \ , Friflgy, Septembe’r,?2,1981. Imprint I$,

I -- ’ \ ,

. Gotid wcusic a rough tradb *

I \ Tuesday night, at the Cen-

tre in the Square, Carole Pope and -Rough Trade proved themselves again to be’one-of the most entertaining groups in Canada; and in fact any-

*- where. Their performance has a tea’trical tone ‘to it due to

J Pope’s stage presence, and so remains just as interesting to‘ watch the seventh time as it is the-first.

Rough Trade began in 1974, and although the group has undergone personnel c han- ges since then, the duo of Carole Pope and ‘Kevan Staples has remained as the core, composing all the music.

Promising Female Vocalist - this after lo-odd years of per- forming. Following the suc- cesaof Avoid Freud, a new record, For Those Who Think Jung, has just been released.

The concert wasa mixture of new, old and older songs. They played a total of twenty songs plus two more in the encore. They more widely known songs, It’s A Jungle, and High School Confidential (the single from Avoid Freud) were, as to be ex- pected, very well received. ~

’ With- High School Con- fidential, the AM radio lis-

In 1976, a direct-to-disc teners were left without a . .album, Rough Trade Live,

‘was released but not until the

Songs on the new album range from older, unreleased ones such as Baptism of Fire to new ones with. titles as Bodi& in Collisiok, Bloodlust, - and All Touch (the new single to be released soon). All Touch was, in fact, to be heard twice; oncsduiing the first set and then as the last song in the encore so that the audience could not help but remember it.

As is to be expected some - songs were better than others.

A buzzing sound that came from the speakers obscured many of the more cqmplex lyrics, and hampered the ‘overall ‘quality of the ‘music.

doubt as to what the two / This was a disadvantage in the censored words in the lyrics introduction of some of the

fall of 1980 did .they achieve were. new songs which seemed to amore diversified following Everything the group. did rely more heavily on ‘word with their first commercial was enthusiastically applaud- imagery. album, Avoid Freud.- ed and on more -than one So Good, an older song

-_ - also in 1980, Carole Pope occasion, whistled and -was, as it usually is, used for _ won the Juno Award for Most cheered at as weir introducing “the boys in the

.+ I

Thursday, October 1st will be the first visit Dragoslav Dzadzevic,. and have developed a to Kitchener-Waterloo of the internationally - style that is uniquely their own. They perform celebrated Yugoslavian dance company the highly diverse dances of the six republics of

I “Frulica”. This exciting company of 22 today’s Yugoslavia with a vigor and flam- . . dancers and singers from Belgrade will present boyancethatis nothing short of breathtaking. s a two-hour spectacular of song and dnace in The dances encompass many moods, from

the Humanities Theatre, to open the 198182 the hardships of fishermen to the flirtatious - season. The evening gets- underway at 8p.m. r;: moments between soldiers and pretty girls,

and tickets are “still available. from the silent yet savage Blamotch to. the ’ The parent company of “Frulica’?, which is lyrical Biljana, in which the girls weave a veil for

called Frula; has toured to North America on the new bride. The new programme of works _ many previous occasions and to rave reviews. to be offered on this tour include the premiere This fall of 1981, the; dompany returns -as , of new court and historical dances dating back “Frulic%.for- its fifth annual tour andkncludes to medieval times. --

_ members of the famous- D&en Company. -. Tickets for I the performance are $9.50 . The 22 carefully selected.singers and dancers (Students, Seniors $8.00) available ,at the UW have been rigorously trained ’ by Director Arts Centre Box Qffice, Humanities Theatre.

band.” To songs composed, by ‘Rough Trade, for the ill- fated movie, Cruisin’, we_re performed as‘ well as the satirical, Is it Art? and Grude- B Movie. Physical Violence, which Pope once remarked was her favourite song on Avoid Freud, was performed with gusto.

The effort-put into the show made each song appear to be new, as if performed for the first time.

I

, I El~~tiyo-jrriusic coming _ .

, Electronic music isnot a new phenomenon. European The music of OMD combines the best qualities of earlier bands such as Tangerine Dream and Kraftwerk have been synth-music. Humphreys and McCluskey know how to use playing synthesizer-dominated music for the past decade. . the synthesizer as a musical instrument, not just as a

Then, in the mid ‘70’s, along came DISCO with all its producer of strange sounds. Their use of rhythm silliness, and the credibility of electronic music wept down programming and electronic pert ussion ‘is innovative, the drain. Not that it was all bad; people like David Bowie, varied, and doesn’t become too tedious. - Brian Eno, and Giorgio Moroder (all Europeans) were

1 making innovative, interesting electronic and disco music. What I like best about OMD k what they decided not to \ It’s just that the good stuff got lost in the tidal wave of junk- do:’ there are no 20 minute muzak-noodlings that make - :

’ disco. Tangerine Dream hard to listen to, and they don’t use that Now that the disco craze is all but dead, electronic music hideous thump-thump-thump and stupid lyrics that make

. is starting to regain some of its respectibility; Most of the American disco impossible to listen to. The end result is good synth-music of to&y is coming from (youguessed it)’ music that is melodic, has good rhythm, and doesnr Europe. One of the better new bands is an English outfit overpower the listener. You can dance to it, or just sit and

_ . called Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark (OMD). i listen to it 2- it’s excellent for both. The core of*OMD is the team of Paul Humphreys and --

Andy McCluskey. They recorded their first, self&led .,’ Electronic music will be an important art form in the

1980’s, but right now there are few bands that are doing it album as a duo, ‘with additional musicians on a couple of. - well consistently. Orchestral Manoeuvres is one of them. cuts. The release of their second LP, Organization, saw ’ Orchestral Manoeu,vre3- is playing at Bingeman Park, the addition of percussionist Malcolm Holmes as a full-time Kitchener, on Saturday October 3. Tickets are $6.50 (for band member. 4 Fed members) and $7.50 (others). Peter &heffel .

Saturday, September 26 >

EngSoc, Presents a Glider Pub

i . -

Benefit Concert for the Sunbeam Home. ’ Ruby’s, Waterloo Motor Inn, 8:00 p.m.

Major Hoople’s Boarding House with the K-W Symphony. $3.00 Feds, $3.50 Others.

E entre in the Square,9:30 p.m.

10.00, $12.50. Friday, October 2- . c

Tuesday, Septeniber 29 K-W Symphony with* London Symphony. Alex Hauser, Peking Opera of China Centre in the Square, 8:OOgL.m. $10.00, $14.00, $17.50

conductor. Janice Taylor, contralto. ’ Centre in the Square, 8:00 p.m.

($2.00 off for students, children and seniors) 1 $10.0, $12.50, $15.00

Wednesday,Septembei 30 - --- . Students/Seniors $8.00, $10.00, $12.50. i

World of Dance Series,, “To Dance is to Live” Humanities Theatre, 4:30 p.m. $2.00 at the door.

,Peking ‘&era of China, Centre in the Square $10.00,$~14.00 $17.50($2offforstudents,children,seniors) . ,

Thursday, October. 1

Saturday, October 3 .. ’ Federation of Students presents Orchestral Manoeuvres Bingeman Park.8 p.m. $6.50’Feds, $7.50 Others. Available

* at the Fed office, CC 235. . \ Elephant in my Pajamas, Theatre of the Arts;8:00 p.m.

CJW .Arts Centre presents Frulica - Yugoslavian Dance Humanities Theatre, 8:00 p.m. $9.50; Students/Seniors$8.

in- Tickets $9.5!, Students/Seniors $8. Tickets available at the Box Office, Humanities Theatre.

_ .

L

,

When Rough Trade got a ing their individual instru- \ recording contract their show ments and moved into the began to exude a slickness song-ktitude. ’ that was not compatible with Comments overheard from the bar settings which they the audience were extremely were still> playing. The show, favourable. Rough Trade, however, transfers well to a playing for approximately two larger stage such as the hours, certainly gave the Centre. audience more, in terms of

songs and enthusiasm, than The beginning was im- most other performers today.

pressive with drummer Bucky I hope fhat their eventual Berger on stage -alone. Then greater success - -will- not solitary members of the group change this approach. . walked onstage to start play- Susan Montonen

John Bay as Groucho Marx from the one may show, “An I Elephant in My Pajamas”, being presented Saturday, October 3

at the Theatre of the Arts. Tickets are available at the UW Arts Centre Box Office for $9.50, students/seniors $8.00. .

Page 9: 1981-82_v04,n10_Imprint

-mew8 1’ Friday, September 25,198l. Imprint 9 -,

The Great Debate The debate entitled “A Case

for Morality: Secular or Christian?’ will take place on September 29th at 7:30 pm in the Theatre of the Arts. “The Great Debate”, sponsored by Waterloo Christian Fellow- ship, hopes to resolve the question of whether morality requires a supernaturalfound- ation. Dr. O’Donovan, a professor of Christian theol- ogy at the University of Toronto will defend the resol- ution while Dr. Narveson, a professor of Philosophy at the University of Waterloo will oppose it.

Nominations sought for board of cc Nominations are requested for representatives on the campus centre board, representing the following:

Undergraduate students - one each from arts, engineer- ing A, engineering B, environ- mental studies, HKLS, inte- grated studies, mathematics, science.

Graduate students - one. ‘Faculty members - two

(includes faculty of the church colleges).

Staff members - one. Nomination forms and full

information are available from the university secretar- iat, phone ext. 3 183. Nomina- tions must be submitted to the chief returning officer, uni- versity secretariat, by 3 p.m. October 2 1, and elections will follow if necessary. Those elected or acclaimed will serve for one year from November 1, 198 1, except for the faculty representatives, one qf whom will serve for two years.

Helping Yourself to Health Care

“Not all healing comes from your doctors’ hands, most health care is done by the individual”, notes Connie Clement, community health worker in Toronto, and speak- er at WPIRG’s Brown Bag Seminar on Thursday, Octo- ber 1st at 12:30 pm in the Campus Centre Room 135 at the University of Waterloo.

Focusing on the strategies that people can apply to help themselves in health and to improve the treatment they receive from medical practi- tioners, Ms. Clement offers positive alternatives to de- pendence only on the hospital and specialist. In a time when medical fees are skyrocketing and every consumer faces extra “user fees”, _ learning about improved self-help health care will be good news indeed.

Arts Students Get Informed An Arts Student Assembly

is being planned by the Arts Student Union (ASU) for Wednesday September 30. The assembly is intended to be of an educational nature.

The main assembly meets in Arts Lecture Hall, Room 116 at 3:30 where the following persons will address the audi- ence:

Murray Spackman, ASU President

Dr. Wright, UW President Dr. T. Brzustowski, Vice-

President, Academic Wim Simonis, Federation

of Students President Information booths will be

set up following the main assembly at which various arts departments will be represent- ed. Students still undecided as

Waterloo

Public interest Researr h

Group

Nominations for

WPIRG Board of Directors will be received

September 28 to October 5 at the WPIRG office Room 2 7B, Campus Centre

Elections Monday, October 19, 1981 l two or one year term l hire staff 6 set WPIRG policy l oversee budget, fiscal matters l determine research and education priorities

For forms, and information contact WPIRG, 217B, Campus Centre, 8g5-1211, ext. 2578

BLUEGRASS CAPITOL OF CANADA PRESENTS

Friday & Saturday September 25 & 26

SPECTRUM from Lexington, Kentucky

Featuring This Year’s Grand Masters North

American Fiddle Champ!

DON’T MISS THEM!

BARTON’S INN NEW DUNDEE, ONTARIO

to their major will be able to speak with department repre- sentatives.

Student services will also be represented at the booths.

The Arts Student Union will be serving coffee and dough- nuts gratis to all attending. Homecoming

Homecoming Weekend ar- rives Friday, October 2 and Saturday, October 3. Warm- up for th‘e two day series of high spirited events starts at 6:30 pm on Friday at the Faculty Club. Most Home- coming events will be open to everyone at UW, not just the returning alumni. Register at ‘Homecoming Headquarters’ in B.C. Matthews Hall and get into concerts, tours, lectures and a pub crawl{(to name a few of the many events).

Big things are happening for Homecoming ‘81.

Watch for the blimps. Proficiency Examination Results

New students in five Faculties--Arts, Environmen- tal Studies, Human Kinetics and Leisure Studies, Mathe- matics, and starting this year Science--wrote the English Language Proficiency Exam- ination on September 9.

84% of the 3,011 students writing the Exam passed with a score of 50 or higher. These results are appreciably better than last year, when only 75% passed.

1980 1981 High Pass 43% 42% Pass 32% 42% Fail 25% 16%

Of some interest is the fact that there was no increase in the percentage of students who wrote with genuine compe- tence (those in the High Pass category), even though con- siderably fewer students this year were unable to put an essay together at all (those who scored below 50 on the Examihation).

Pass/ Fail percentages by Faculty:

Pass Fail Arts 86.7 13.3 ES 84.0 16.0 HKLS 84.8 15.2 Math 83.0 17.0 Science 81.6 18.4

Amnesty International _ An international writers’

congress entitled “The Writer and Human Rights” will be held at the Ontario Institute for Studies in Education, University of Toronto, Octo- ber 1st to 4th, 1981. It is designed to be a public discussion of the writer’s role in such issues as censorship, propaganda, and political ex- ile. European, American, African and Asian writers will participate.

The four days of events will include workshops, symposia and public readings, in addi- tion to a theatrical presenta- tion Saturday evening. Addi- tional readings will be held at Harbourfront, from Septem- ber 29th to October 6th.

Many well-known writers including Margaret Atwood, Marie-Claire Blais, Irving Layton, Michele Lalonde, Michael Ohdaatje, and Mor- decai Richler will be attending the congress. For more information call (4 16)978- 3 184 or (4 16)977-8444.

\ I

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The Great Debate Resolved: Morality requires a

supernatural foundation The Secular Case: Dr. Jan Narveson

Philosophy, University of Waterloo The Christian Case: Dr. Oliver O’Donovan

Toronto School of Theology Moderator: Drs. Graham Morbey

Chaplain, UW /WLU What is the basis for meaningful existence?

Are absolutes outdated? Who decides?

Theatre of the Arts (Modern Languages Building, U. W.)

Tuesday, September Xi,1981 8:OO p.m. A W. C. F. presentation

Artistic Endeavours Present

Fri. Sept. 25 Sat. Sept. 26 L’Etranger plus the Young Lions & D.V.8 (3 bands $4 at the door) Upstairs at the Kent

Mon. Sept. 28 Cfrom England) The Shakin’ Pyramids

($4 adv. $5 door) Waterloo Motor Inn

Thurs. Oct. 1 1 Fri. Ott 2 (From Pittsburgh)

The Five ($3 at the door) Upstairs at the Kent

Sat. Ott 3 (From England) A Certain Ratio

($6 adv. $7 door) Upstairs at the Kent

Fri. Oct. 9 (From England)

John Otway and Wild Willie Barrett ($5.50 at the door) Upstairs at the Kent

In Concert - In co-operation with CKA4S-FA4 Sat. Oct. 24 (From Scotland) SIMPLE MINDS

$7 adv. $8 at door. Humanities Theatre, U.W.

Page 10: 1981-82_v04,n10_Imprint

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Page 11: 1981-82_v04,n10_Imprint

-

Critique in-Crystal Here’s a little something for you, she continues, handing over a small box wrapped in sea-green paper

I’ve read your book: Elephant &Ice with Santa Claus romping all over it. with much interest, says the red-haired co-ed, The bow looked close to Indian Ocean green. to the Sun-Man poet. I’ve also seen Thank you, says the poet, your poem: The Upside-Down Elephant unwrapping the gift anxiously who was a Poet. to discover a tiny crystal elephant Poetr+~ The elephant image seems to rampage throughout your work.

basking in the translucent light of its own body.

Pressing, the poet asks: what do you think of my poetry? Look again at the-elephant as it stands on your writing desk. \ He did. =s A very lopsided elephant was staring back at him curiously.

Prose Rienzi Crusz

Death I By Amber

When he was younger he used to satre into a lump of amber that sat on the knick-knack shelf in the living room. Somehow he never connected the beautiful winged creature within the mindless, crawling things he crushed idly on picnics, and he would spend hours examining it from all angles, turning it this way and that, watching the image distorted by bubbles and ’ imperfections in the ancient resin. He%would try to imagine the feelings of the proud, doomed insect as it realized its plight, its vain struggles to get free, its mounting panic as the liquid drew it down. But the hard chitinous planes of its face offered no clues, and he soon learned that there was no room within the tiny brain for the noble emotions he had ascribed to it. There were other diversions, other obsessions, and the lump of amber receeded, as all knick-knacks must, into tissue-wrapped limbo in a shoebox at the back of some hall closet.

She spent seven days in his life, seven nights of punctuation at a time when it seemed his existence would always be an ungrammatical stream of endless words, pounding with break- neck benzedrine haste through reams of meaningless adjectives, hasty polysyllabic mouthfuls. Writing frantically past midnight at the kitchen table in his basement apartment, an array of coloured pens and pencils laid out in geometric precision, he had mailed off pieces of his life to people he had no right to know, and she, bless her soul, had caught some of them. Their only real communication had been through those letters, desperate attempts to break out of the grey dimension he inhabited, into a world where delightful tangents are common- place and clever literary allusions need not be debased by giving voice to them. When he heard she was coming to visit, he was reluctant to abandon the fragile shelter of his dual universe, to come out from behind his mask of ink.

He was afraid that what would result (if, indeed, there was potential for love other than in his fevered imagination) would be a timeilapse parody of a true relationship: a television approximation with rumblings of discontent at the half-hour, violent breakup at twenty minutes to, and reunion in time for tearful parting immediately preceeding the sponsor’s final message. What actually happened was more discontinuous: a baby carriage rolling down a hill towards a rising drawbridge, abrupt darkness as a projector out of control self-destructs, a fuge played by a mad, demented fiddler, fingers flashing nimbly over his instrument, stilled by a single, echoing gunshot -

“I’m not very skilled in the mechanics of romance,” he mumbled as they sat awkwardly angular on a small couch, and she laughed and brushed away half-a-hundred fears in knife- edge fantasties, afternoon classroom daydream.s of intimidating satin and crinoline, stolen unreturned glances in the hallway. In the days that followed he rediscovered the little intimacies, the clumsiness, the public and private limits. They would walk mitten in glove through winter fields, and large, lazy flakes of snow would fall as if on cue. Yet for all the touching, he felt that she remained somehow intangible, that if he squeezed hard enough the illusion would dissolve and his arms would pass right through her. There was a hazy air of deja vu cast over his time away from her, a faintly reminiscent tingle in his fingertips.

, I I

I-

machine as he sat clasping her at the kitchen table: a young goldenhaired girl and boy, they split the room into solemn and carefree halves. Rocking back and forth on the white enamel, they smiled knowingly at each other and compared notes. From time to time he could discern an intonation or fragment of conversation, and in desperation he tried to drown out their mocking laughter with the beating of her heart. He could feel it disintegrating, theatrical slow-motion jet plane coming apart at the apex of its parabola, as if he was suspended on a steep shingled roof: dare he relax? dare he tense further?

In a darkened room, side-lit by a single bare electric bulb down the hall, she sat angelic in diabolical party costume, a star on her cheek, eyes closed and hands clasped in her lap. He tried to think of the words that came to him so easily in the lone coolness of his bed, but none presented themselves. So, melodramatic to the end, he kissed her once gently, whispered goodbye, and arose, duffel coat swirling cinematically, to pass out of the sliding .door and close it ever-so firmly behind him.

,

He knows he will never see her again; their bodies may meet, but she won’t be her and he won’t be him, and at best a slightly poignant memory will hang in the air between them, twisting like a wraith of smoke trying to escape. She will always be out of focus, fuzzy like a computer-generated portrait, or a painting held too close to the eyes. But if he cannot deblur the immediate past, he at least recognizes a sensation he sought long ago; and . he knows now the calmness in the mind of that Paleolithic insect, the quick, deliberate wingbeats as it flew towards the glistening tree, the electric feeling as it touched the golden sap, and the absolute, complete contentment as it sank slowly down into warm sweet sticky oblivion. Prabhakar Ragde

Kitchener April 1980 - Sharbot Lake September 1981

Page 12: 1981-82_v04,n10_Imprint

Friday; September 25,1981. II

men a armm nf n&lc! an degree that people could-not paces -in various solos and six and eleven. The lack of ex- to..:Ru by’s, for instance, the talk and joke. . ( ’ aim is to have fun, ‘dance, But when the purpose of socialize, meet new people - social (folk) dance is changed, to make your own enter- an essential element is lost. tainment. Some may want to Suddenly the focus is not to impress each other with their each other in the group but to expertise on the dance floor the ,outside LA an audience, but on the whole, every& not ’ previously considered. wants to enjoy themselves. c The dance is no longer for the Shakethisorthat,startatrain, enjoyment of .movement but improvise, or play with the ‘old to entertain outsiders. Neither standard’ dance steps. steps (being repetitious and

Folkdance once worked on not being spectacular), nor \ that principle. People came floor patterns (with the focus togetherinastructured,social being into the circle) lend

’ context.- The dancing steps themselves. to this change I themselves might be intricate, very successfully. A theatrical

.enough to be a challenge; presentation is called for but often the floor patterns were seldom attempted.

duets. When they were not ex- pressionless, they seemed to wish they were anywhere but up there on stage.

pression, however, was not peculiarto the youngsters.

complicated, but not to the This explains the deadly I boredom that grew at the ww. . . .A

That is a problem with high- land dancing - there are few ~ dances that lend themselves to dramatic interpretation; it is considered more as a compet- ition rather than a dance - who jumps the highest, has the fastest footwork, the best carriage of the arms, etc. The “Sailor’s Hornpipe” came closest to this concept. The young girl showed good exten- I sion (flexibility& the hips and the strength to lift the legs high) and twinkling feet that ’ crisscrossed like braided hair. But for the rest, the girls . . . . . .

The German dancers did group dances only. This il- lustrated the more obvious social dance roots of Ger- manic society, than the single dancer idiom of the Scats. The intricacy of the highland steps was matched by plastic floor patterns of the German. Watching the German group inter-action, partnering and circling was at first quite enjoyable. But unless one gets in there , and does these dances, interest soon flags.

I believe the place of various ethnic dance groups in the spectrum of dance styles, cannot be understated. But in . . - . . . .

WQrld Of Dance series opener were obviously inexperienced order to gain a more authentic --~~;e ~~b~h~;~~ ---i;;ii;d;-i;;;;rbut not feel of the folk dance without

the stylizations ethnic dance groupe, both from the Kit- The Schwaben Club con-‘ integrates (for performance chener- Waterloo area. This trasted sharply with the High- purposes), a more informal writer hopes that those pre- land group; in age of dancers, presentation format, wherein sent in the audience examined , style of dance and music. The the audience can become and compared the two folk German group members were groups, searching for reflec- between the ages of forty and

participants, would be more appropriate.

tions of each culture in the re- sixty; the Scottish, between Chris Bauman spective dances, rather than . wait to be entertained.

The ,highland dance group contained six young dancers. 5 They were put through their

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. The Canadian Opera Com- terbus -King in an earnest pany (COC) opened its1981- desire to remain faithful to her 82 season last week at the .husband; the King is skeptical O’Keefe Centre with a lux- of the powers, of the proph- uriant productipn of Verdi’s etess, and by directly acting to Un Ball0 in Maschera (A make one of her prophesies Masked Ball), sparing no come true, proves to himself expense in the quality of sets, that he is in control of reality. costumes, or singers. The tragic and ironic fulfil-

Director Lofti Mansouri’ chose to stage Un Ballo ih

lment of her prophesy of his death proves that the King,

Maschera in the 18th cen- like the rest of us, is not at all in tury court of the Swedish King / control of his own fate. Gustave III, as Verdi or- -,= iginally planned it, and not in The COC production mas- its now conventional setting of terfully heightened this ten- colonial Boston: This story of sion between appearances seditious court intrigues, regal and reality: the curtain rose

I adultery, and political assas- onto the scene of a lgthcen- sinations, could not be tol- tury theatre stage preparing erated by the Neopolitan for a production of the opera. authorities nor any other of This technique of an opera the shaky thrones of Europe. within an opera involves the The opera was therefore audience itself in the problem censored (something too fam- of distinguishing appearances iliar to Ontario theatre goers) from reality. and the bitter Verdi was corn:- But people go to the opera pelled to switch the setting not just for the drama but for from the European site of the music, and on this front the Sweden to the distant Amer- production. also deserves ican continent. heaped-on praises. Soprano

By choosing the Swedish Martina Arroyo as Emilia setting, the COC . not only dominated the production achieved a moral victory over with her superlative voice, censorship, but also allowed overshadowing even the im- itself the opportunity to luxur- pressive performances of iate in the magnificent bar- Michail Svetlev as Gustavus oque setting. and the celebrated Louis

The splendiferous over- Quilico; whose Count Ankar- statement of Wolfram Shal- strom (Renato) was some-

. icki’s set design, from the times a bit stilted. ’ gargantuan tapestries (where This is not to say that

the libretto calls only for a Arroyo overpoweredthemale portrait) to the elaborate pro- leads. ’ jections of immense mirages The trio at the gallows in the of rococco architecture as a second act was excellently backdrop added immensely to balanced. Arroyo’s com- the effect of the drama; which, manding performance did, for the purposes of ‘the 19th however, overpower Steela

’ century opera was equally Silva’s Ulrica and their duet in overstated.

That the sets and costumes the first act did suffer from im- balance. :

were dazzing is nothing un- ’ The performance of Cara- usual for a COC production; lyn Tomlin in the secondary but in Un &llo in Maschera role Of Oscar was an unexpec- the ability to produce an ted pleasure, especially the illusion of reality is crucial to a technically demanding pas- successful production of the sage in her defence of the pro-

\ I work. phetess. A recurring theme of the Her performance was a

work is that appearances are sparkling jewel in a well gilt I illusory: the King’s Chan- crown.

cellor chances upon. his wife in The COC continues its the armsof his friend the King, season with Offenbach’s The

: and assumes from the ‘ap- Tales of Hoffman which ’ pearances that his wife is being plays at the O’Keefe until

unfaithful when in reality she October 2.. - was fleeing from the adul- 7 David Dubinski

,

i . ’ ,

i , 4

\

\ /

Page 13: 1981-82_v04,n10_Imprint

Purchase Your Diamond

Gemological Appraisal With Every Purchase

30 Kin9 St. West Kitchener 579-1750

30 Main St. (G)Cmbrldge

623-3390

Found 1st. Sponsored by the Lesbian Turntable, Brand New! BSR Organization Of Kitchener

Small Indian leather purse McDonald, 200 BAX, Bel-

(LOOK). Open to all women. drive, Automatic Turntable. north of Lot B. Phone 885- 2625 or leave message for Ray Past Masters Club, only 4 the Asking low price. $125.00.

at 885-1222 ext. 3 195. Genius. Box 6427, Station Phone John at 884 ,6,1

“A”7 Toronto, Ontario Musicians - Sound Buffs!

Lost M5A lE3. For sale, Yamaha Frequency

Divider and microphones. Ex-

Black Labrador Retreiver. Has a grey face - female with a brown collar. REWARD - If seen or found please call 884-2974 (Dee). Lost in Waterloo.

For Sale 50 Watt 3 Way Speakers for sale. I year old. $440 M.S.L. sell $200.884-9607 oncampus.

cellent condition for P. A. system or as individual use. Call Steve 8934701 after 4:30 p.m. or Room 339, Dept. of Philosophy, Hagey Hall.

Student Stereo - Brand name

T. I. Calculator near Married Computer owners! 16K RAM stereo equipment at discount

Students Apartments. If upgrade for model I TRS 80 or prices We’ll beat any pricer .

found please return to 161 expansion interface onlv ~11 Doug 884-5899.

University Avenue West, $40.00. Includes installatioi Free - Full colour booklet - No. 3 12 (M.S.A.) or call and guaranteed. 576-6929. a preview of the New Brit- 884-738 1. Thank-vou. annica 3 - plus a list of other

d

Personal Theatresports improv- work- shops on campus. Interested? Call 885113 13.

Windsurfer: used only one season - green, orange and yellow sail, No. 213249, in- cludes bungeed uphaul, $1050 call Doug 888-7 166.

books from Encyclopedia Bri- ttanica Publications Ltd. Yours free - phone Art Ahrens - 578-1447.

Services Womyn’s Coffeehouse is Speakers for sale: max 6o moving from CC 110 to 41 watts/ch. 3 way - 2 tweeters,

Student needed to take care of

Margaret Avenue, Kitchener., 7 year old girl from 4 to 6 p.m.,

transmission line, 12 inch 4 8:30 p.m. Thursday, October woofer, call Doug 888-7 166.

or 5 days a week, $5/day, Westmount Waterloo area.

The Stratford Festival announces a special student seat sale - $7.50 for the balance of the season, all performances, any seat. You can buy the best seats in the house at time of purchase for only $7.50 . . . until October 31st. Limit of 4 tickets per customer, a proper Student I.D. must be shown. Come and - sit-in this Fall . . . enjoy our Fall Festival of Comedy. Offer subject to availability.

sttxdent Sit-h Wild Oats by fohn O’Keeffe The most affectio&t<comedy gypsy wanderers.

ever w&ten about the theatre and i :s

The Visit by Friedrich Diirrenmatt adapted by Maurice Valency Alexis Smith and William Hutt: two extraordinary talents in an explosive drama of greed and revenge. “The Visit is a blockbuster!” -Ray Conlogue, THE TORONTO GLOBE AND MAIL

Shakespeare at his most eiuberant, energetic and comically inventive. “Sustained hilarity”, --Bob Pennington, THE TORONTO SUN

The Tamin by William S a

of the Shrew akespeare

A lively battle of the sexes. Vibrant, toughly funny, extraordinarily entertaining . one of the popular

hiti bf this season.” ---Terry Doran, THE BUFFALO EVENING NEWS

The Misanthrope by MoliGre Translated into En&h verse by Ruzhard Wilbur

“Bedford brilliant in the title role . . . his Alceste is cherishable.” -Jay Car-r, DETROIT NEWS “Superbly balanced ensemble acting . . . design ravishingly beautiful . . directed with admirable skill.” -Myron Galloway, MONTREAL SUNDAY EXPRESS

The Rivals by Richard Brinsley Sheridan One of the most endearing, enduring and entertaining comedies in the English language. “Sparkling cast makes this production one not to be missed”. -Carolyn A McKeone, THE STRATFORD BEACON HERALD

HOW TO BUY TICKETS:

Phone long distance (519) 273-1600 and use your VISA or MASTERCARD.

29th Season June 15 to October 31

Call Donna Crossan evenings or weekends 745-2009.

Will do light moving with a small truck. Also rubbish re- moval. Low rates. Call Jeff 884-283 1.

TYPiW Typing by Flash Fingers. All deadlines met. IBM Selectric II. Essays, theses, cover let- ters. Will deliver. 576-3883. Ellie.

Typist. 25 years experience. No math papers. Olivetti Editor III, reasonible rates. Westmount area. Call 743-3342.

Experienced typist; fast, ac- curate work. IBM Selectric. La’keshore Village. Reason- able rates 885-1863.

Disk Jockey Service A. B. C. Disk Jockey Ser- vices. Add a professional touch to your party, banquet, wedding, or reception! You want good music, in all styles and tastes: we have it. Call Paul on campus at ext. 3869 or residence 886-8479.

Help Wanted I You can type 60 W.P.M. or better? Imprint is looking for fast, accurate typists willing to learn to operate a typesetting machine (the machine that typeset this column!) and work at inconvenient hours. Reasonable pay. Only a few required - apply fast! Call John W. Bast at ext. 2331 or come to the Imprint office, Campus Centre rm. 140.

Distributor wanted for in- tensely popular but heavy student newspaper (you’re reading it.) Move 12,000 papers from Guelph in your van or small truck (must be enclosed) to various places on campus. Pay negotiable but in the neighborhood of $50. Call ext. 2331 or drop by the Imprint office, Campus Cen- tre rm. 140 and ask for Sylvia or John. Drummer for New Wave/ Pop Band, recording contract, up- coming album, weekend gigs. Call: 578-0906.

Imprint Classifieds cost 5Oc for 20 words and 5C for each additional

FREE FILMS OF INTEREST TO

WOMEN AND MEN.

(Bring your lunch)

Tuesday, Sept. 29th Psychology Rm 2083

UNIVERSITY OF WATERLOO

11:30 a.m.

Page 14: 1981-82_v04,n10_Imprint

N&u i”“ravis~cG&e novel Q; +zust forlkZacDtinald fibas \ -2 _ Free Fall in Crimson you believe a man in his late packaged to look like sleazy

, John D. MqcDonald thirties evading and killing a ~ suspense fiction. There are , ritzhenry and White- highly trained guerilla unit? wonderful new characters, a

side, 1981 MacDonald did it, and The whole plethora of old char-

On the book: Green Ripper won-the Amer. : acters from previous books ican Book Award for Best

back on track. In fact the entire series has a definite pattern (McGee’s outlook on life is getting bleaker every ttime), but all of the stories. were independent. In fact it was a sort of game tofind the references to other stories.

keeps half, and give the rest back to the innocent.”

I’m pretty sure that John D. Mystery of 1979.) After eight- (would you believe Lysa

MacDonald never wanted to Dean?), an intricate plot,

do anything more than write.. een books, there is still more to ‘Travis McGee than we

believable action, Meyer, and

-. I’m sure of that because he ‘suspected. social commentary of the sort

does it so well. It is effortless, What that me-ans is that the that weary-but-hopeful knight _

with characters and plot that nineteenth Travis McGee errant McGee dispenses.

are always intricate and be- But there are changes in the

book isout, and itgivesa lot of ’ lievable, no matter how- un- what w&e been reading

offing (and I think that Num-

believable it really is. (Would ber 20 will be momentous: a

. - McGee for, even when it was major event), starting with the . \ 1

fact that McGee is aging, He is slowing down, not as sure of himself as before. After all, McGee served in Korea, which was great when the series started (1964), but it makes McGee forty-seven, with every break Ican think of. For the purposes of fiction, say that McGee is in his early forties. ;

And Meyer, the hairy econ- omist who lives on his cruiser, The Jdhn Maynard -Keynes, and sometimes helps out. It is Meyer who keeps McGee in touch with humanity.

This time, he, ends up en- ‘listing (coercing?) the aid of a motorcycle gang. It is as long j and complex as any plot in the series, but he needs them.

His age hasn’t affected his

COLES the book people!

. >

performance with women, however (as Masters and Johnson said it needn’t); he is still the same McGee in that respect. He is in mourning - still - the death of his love, Gretel, but life must go on.

After trying for a short time to lead the Straight Life, McGee longs for involvement in something. Ron Es&land offers McGee half of his father’s fortune (which Ron didn’t inherit) if T. McGee can find out who killed his father._

Travis has to call in a few ,debts and doubts before he tracks things down to a dis-. aster movie filming in Ohio - Free Fall.

If you have read the other books, you will read this one - and- that gives me cause for complaints. I think MacDon- ald is counting on that.

In a sense, the last three novels (Empty Copper Sea, Green Ripper, and Free Fall in Crimson) can be looked at as I one long novel: T&is McGee finds love, loses love

,and gains revenge, puts his life * L. , L -

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Serving th&U cd w *GUITARS *STRINGS - *AMPS *Mu&al Instruments

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ASL’Attention ” *‘attention ~ Accounting’ - . . ~Stu;dents

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@even&Canada Taxation will once again hire over 200 accounting graduates for positions

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We offer: - a carefully structure4 Nous offrons: - \ un programme d’entraf- training program; nement soigneusement

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I - excellent long term ’ career opportunities;

- d’excellentes possibilites de carriere a long terme,

- varied and challenging work assignments.

- des projets de travaux varies etinteressants.

If you are interested, we want to talk to you. \

Si vous 6tes interesse nous souhaitons en parler -avec vous. Nos agents d’information seront sur le campus le Our briefers will be on campus September 29.

Consult your placement office for the time and place; and\be sure to pick up a copy of our book-

Veuillez consulter ‘votre agent de placement pour

l@$titled “Careers - Taxation Auditor De- l’horaire et l’endroit et assurez-vous de prendre une

$+pm&t Program.” copie de. notre livret publicitaire intitule

;.- ; “‘Car&e - Le programme de formation des v&in-

.^ Y .’ _ ., . , I, cateurs de l’impet.“.

Now, Free FA1 borrows freely from previous novels. Lysa Dean, Boone Waxwell - names pop up, characters pop up. I would not blame a non- initiate for gettingconfused: (I wouldn’t blame them for getting confused reading this, either.) - It is as though MacDonald, forced to accept that people will keep buying them, has given up pre- tending that they are inde- pendent, and knows that just his audience of “loyal fans”are* reading these books. Further, the epilogue sets the scene for Book Number 20, almost blatantly. It broadly hints that Meyer is going to get into trouble soon. Perhaps.

But mostly, I read the Travis McGee series for the tidbits like this. Scene: A big city. The Dog Parade has started, and McGee happens to be sitting near a post, so the action is heavy. There is a prepon- I derance of poodles.

‘This is the most desperate breed there is. They are just a little too bright for the servile role of dogdom. So their lone- liness is a little more ex- . . . . .

There are a number of mild flaws. There is also good writing. Not a vintage McGee perhaps, but worth the read.

! Strictly in terms of sus- pense fiction, the novels are excellent; they surpass most of the “good novels” being published. MacDonald is, simply, so’ good at what he does that you have to keep reading. I’ll read anything if it . . .

On the series: I mentioned the Travis

McGee series, reeled off a few titles, and he said, “Oh, you mean the colour books.” It’s true; each of the books has a colour mentioned in the title. One of the minor thrills of each book (for me) is reaching the point where the title is ex- plained. I mean, The Tan and Sandy Silence. (*sigh*)

But there is more to these than MacDonald’s marvellous writing and occasional poetic

turn of phrase.. There L is ’ McGee himself (and MeyQr!). ’ _j .s A .C . __ _.-

has his name on it.

crucwting, then- welcomes more frantic, their desire to please a little more intense. They seem to think that if they could just do everything right, they wouldn’t have to be locked up in the silence - wc_iw, sleeping, brooding, enduring the swollen bladder. That’s what they try to talk about. One day there will appear a super-poodle, one almost as bright as the most stupid alley cat, and he -will figure it out. He will suddenly realize that his loneliness is merely a byproduct of his being used to ease the lone-

McGee, self described: “I wished to be purely McGee,

liness of his Owner.- He’ll tell , . the others. He’ll leave mes-

. that pale-eyed, wire-haired girl-finder; that big shambling

sages. And some dark night

brown boat-bum who walks they’ll all start chewing

beaches, slays small- fierce throats.

fish, busts minor icons, And there are even’ fun argues,’ smiles ‘and disbel- ieves, who waits until the

parts - but you gotta go through the scary parts to get

money gets low,and thengoes there. Hell, it’s all fun. out and takesit from the taker, . John McMullen

Page 15: 1981-82_v04,n10_Imprint

.-The Arts Friday, September 25,1981. Imprint 15,-,

Rotten records deserve thii kind of review It is an ill-kept secret that record critics don’t have to

buy the albums they review; they’re mailed to the paper free of charge by various companies. Unfortunately, this means that anyone wanting to get the new Supertramp album gratis is out of luck; the companies don’t waste time promoting releases they know are going to sell. It’s the obscure items like the first album by Ziggy Schwartz and the Clap from Vicki that need promotion.

These unwanted albums pile up on the desks of Arts editors all across the country, especially those raised on the ethic that it is a sin to throw unused goods away. Periodically they become too much of a menace to navigation, and some poor staffer is assigned the thankless job of doing the whole lot in one article. So it was that on last Saturday morning Ifound myself in my basement with a pair of headphones, a bottle of cheap brandy, and the latest crop of fresh faces.

I had neither the time nor the alchohol to listen to all of them, so I made myself a deal that I would listen to cuts that appeared interesting untillhad heard two badones, at which point I’d switch to the nextjalbum. Pouring an initial shot of brandy into my china teacup, I uncapped my pen and was all set to go. various obscure bands various silly titles various presumptuous labels

The first record was by Tygers of Pan Tang, an album called Spellbound (MCA). The name appealed to my sense of preten- tiousness, but turning over the cover I saw that the group was composed of five Rot ky Burnette clones, all with hair below their shoulders. It was evident that they were cashing in on the current heavy-metal resurgence in Eng- land. Actually, there have always been heavy-metal fans; it’s just that the success of Sid Vicious made innumerable garage bands realize that in the chaotic British music scene there is a market for anything, no matter how stupid.

My first selection was Mino- taur, which didn’t count as it was only 21 seconds long. Hardly an auspicious start. Tyger Ray fea- tured a riff that was stolen from Rush; ! tried to place it but the rest of the song kept interfering, something about a place the singer didn’t want to stay. Mirror started out as the usual half-assed epic that this sort of band plays when their hands get tired, so when it exploded into power chording halfway through, I had a good excuse to take it off. The record sailed over my head, bounced off the back wall, and landed intact on the floor.

Ah, these new inferior albums. When I first played Frisbee with the second Carpenters album, it

had a decided tendency to hit the little trouble getting it off the turn- I couldn’t resist the song titled Z pavement on edge and come table; it stuck to the spindle and I Want You To Be The First. You spinning up at you with a chip had to snap it in two. guessed it. Things like this do not taken out of it. After several Bob Van Dyke’s album was happen in real life and they tosses, the record had turned into called Only Two Lives to Live certainly do not happen to me. a lethal weapon whose deadly (MCA). I did not have enough They could have used this as the

crescent edges could tear great alchohol in me to figure out why he theme song for Endless Love gouts of flesh from your handsand had stopped at two, and set about and spared us all the agony of yet leave them blood-soaked mops. I rectifying the situation. The Hun- another Christopher Cross hit. finally had to resort to stretching garian White Wine Romance The other cut I tried was titled Spellbound into an ellipse. seemed by far the most exotic Who’s That Look In Your Eye.

The promo sheet slipped into title. “I have certain trepidations in Cute. Real cute. the Dean Conn album (A & M) regards to leaving Y O U , ” sang The brandy was getting low, so I started out, “To look at him he’s Bobby, and I was halfway through skipped a couple and got to the been around. Blue jeans, worn scribbling that down when I real meat. Helen Reddy hascome boots, beach-boy blonde and a realized that all the lyrics were full a long way since the militance of “I knowing look in his eye. Not of ten-dollar words. The joke was am woman, hear me bitch/Buy my tough, not soft, innocent, but . . . made weaker by the fact that I’ve songs and make me rich.“; 26 been around.” The song Z Could had Hungarian white wine, and it’s musicians are credited on Play Be So Good To You promised the awful. Me Out (MCA), not counting the boasting I had expected from a beach-boy blonde, but contained a little too much begging to be dignified. We’re in This Love Together gave me an AM- summer feeling, with its bouncy, almost infectious melody, until I started listening to the lyricsat the end of the first refrain.

entire string and horn sections. Do It Like You Done It When You Mean It was interesting not only for the ungrammatical syntax but for the problem of how to fit that

Like berries on the vine/You get sweeter all the time. I had a

Side 2 was a wasteland, with song titles like I’m Sorry, It’s Too Late, It’s Ouer. The final cut was called Crazy Love (why does no one sing of sane love?) which I started to listen to, but took off when I realized I had heard Van Morrison do it a long time ago. A few good cracks on the cover of the table disposed of Bobby, and for good measure I defaced all the pictures of pretty women on the

many words into a single line. (It took four chord changes). I cued up Play Me Out just for the pleasure of hearing it beg and then denying it at the end of the first chorus. Then I put the album on the amplifier to heat it up and turned the cover inside out so I wouldn’t have to look at her face. The room was rotating slowly at this point; Ihad toadjust thespeed of the turntable to avoid possible inertial effects.

Dazzling dance production direct from Yugoslavia! 22-member company of singers and dancers including artists from the famous

“Diogen” Co.

THURSDAY, OCTOBEii--’ j’ Himanities Theatre, 8 p.m.

Students (and seniors) $8.00 All others $9.50

r “JOHN BAY is the definitive GROUCHO”-PEW Tear,“Ritz” \ I

Songs, a brief history of the Marx brothers, hilarious anecdotes, monologues and the famous one-liners

“a loving, humorous and respectful tribute to a legend”

Information: 8854280 UW Arts Centre Box Office, Humanities Theatre

cover. Taffy McElroy had The Heart-

break Kid written beside her cover picture. She looked incap- able of seriously damaging her own heart, let alone anyone else’s. Twenty-six people were credited as musicians, not counting God knows how many in the string section. Her voice had a slightly breathy quality caused by singing above her vocal range.

Conway Twitty is known in some circles as the King of Country Music. For some in- explicable reason both cover pictures are out of focus on Rest Your Love On Me (MCA), and it

wasn’t the alchohol, ‘cause I checked the next day. None of the titles looked the least bit inter- esting. I settled for IStill Believe In Waltzes, which I last heard while speeding through Texas unable to reach the tuning dial on my car radio, but it lasted only 30seconds when Irealizedit wasn’t the AM hit version. The title song was written by Barry Gibb; I wanted to hear the old codger sing falsetto, but he didn’t. This album is still intact; I couldn’t be cruel to someone who’s so obviously going to die soon.

The best for last, and just in time; the bottle was empty. The cover of Barbara Mandrel1 Live (MCA) features a closeup of BM herself, without the marginal distractions of her two sisters, faking an orgasm with the help of a microphone. On the shrinkwrap was a sticker saying “Entertainer of the Year”, although it was unclear which year they mean or even who ‘they’ were. I thought Billboard put an end to this nonsense when they crowned Diana Ross “Outstanding Female Entertainer of the Century.” Perhaps we should declare some- one “Most Stupendous and Daz- zling Performer of Any Age and Any Sex,“and shut everybody up.

There were somanygood titles, but an obvious first choice was Z Was Country When Country Wasn’t Cool; the conceit of the conclusion forced upon one by the rules of English, if not the rules

j of logic, was irresistible. The only a exciting part was when George

Jones sang a line or two near the end (orgasm time again) and I was trying to remember how the cueing mechanism of my turn- table worked when Barbara announced that she was going to do her favourite song of all time.,& turned out to be The Battle Hymn of the Republic, arranged and adapted by no fewer than seven people. Hailelluja! What a di- vinely-inspired way to end the marathon! Thesongstartedwitha musical quote from “God Bless America.” I stood up to offer tribute, and fell over.

Prabhakar Ragde

ANNUAL OKTOBERFEST OPERETTA Spectacular

sets and costumes THE Featuring an all star cast

with the KJTCHENER WATERLOO SYMPHONY

Company of 122

Franz Lehar’s

Tuesday & Wednesday - October 13,14 Friday, Saturday, Sunday - October 16,17,18 8:00 p.m. $10.00, $12.50, $15.00, $17.50, $25.00 Ttckets also avaltable at Oktoberfest offlce- i; Ontarlo S t S Kitchener

Page 16: 1981-82_v04,n10_Imprint
Page 17: 1981-82_v04,n10_Imprint

Friday, September 25,1981. Imprint 17-,

Wounded-- Warriorsl get Lanced It was a disappointing

opener for the Warriors this season. They came up on the wrong side of a 27 - 4 win, falling to the Windsor Lancers.

Before the game ever star- ted, the Warriors were at a dis- advantage because of numer- ous injuries that kept Bill Riel, Paul Schreyer and Rich Adamson out of the game completely and hindered the

sprained ankle, a concussion mecki. In the second quarter that took out an offensive line- however, the Lancers made man and pulled quadriceps good after latching onto a that brought Tony Stajcer out fumble to take a lead they only of action. Rob Dobrick, cited improved upon. Two con- by Coach Wally Delahey as verted touchdowns and two “our best linebacker” also had field goals finished the Lancer to come out of the game when tally and gave them a healthy he tore ligaments. win.

The Warriors who were left The Warriors defense ap- managed to hold the Lancers peared able throughout the in .the first two quarters. game, holding up against the Waterloo put their four points Windsor attack, but offen-

Tyre11 brought the Warriors into good scoring position they were unable to muster the force to get into the Lancer end.

Coach Delahey said Rug- gieri “played a super ball- game,” and the Warriors are depending on similarly good performances from both Rug- gieri and Tyre11 who are nursing pulled muscles.

Next week the Warriors performance of those remain- on the board early with a wide sively the Warriors floun- meet Western. Of all the ing. Throughout the game the field goal attempt, and a dered. Even when the efforts of Ontario teams Western is the injury tally grew: one re- successful field goal by Chel- Dom Ruggieri and Terrie early season favourite. Unseen

Cross country team wins run r/

Waterloo’s cross country Athenas opened their season on an encouraging note; a team victory and an individual championship at the Royal Military College Invitational in Kingston last Saturday.

Starting slowly and running together, Lana Marjama and Lisa Amsden moved up. through the field until Lana pulled away in the end to win in 19 min., 58 sec. ahead of Queen’s Fiona Duckette, with Amsden taking third place. Other Athenas in the race were Jacquie Gibson and Patti Moore (sixth and seventh re- spectively). Nicole Durocher and Rhonda Bell took ninth and tenth respectively, and Debbie Salzman took twelfth place.

This race, which involved more than three miles of struggle against the wind from Lake Ontario and the hills around Fort Henry, was only the first part of a novel tri- athon. That evening the team was required to survive a gruelling Queen’s track party and follow it up, still half asleep, next morning with a run through the marshes at Catarqui Conservation Area.

Next weekend the season begins to take serious shape with the York Invitational at York University. It will be a first chance to survey the teams from Guelph and York as well as showing Queen’s closer to their full strength. These are the teams, along with Western, that figure alongside Waterloo in the battle for medal places at the OWIAA Championships in Sudbury, Octber 3 1.

The meet at York will also present a first opportunity; to see several of the promising Athena rookies run since most were unable to be at RMC due to previous committments.

The new field includes Andrea Prazmowski, a su-ten minute 3000 meter run;ler from Oshawa; Lisa Campeens bf Kitchener; Ulrike Zugelder of King City; Cathy Somers of Mississauga and Maureen Anglin of Toronto. Nicole Durocher of Vankleek Hill who had a promising run at RMC is also a rookie.

How Waterloo fares this year in cross country and indoor track will depend largely on the contribution of the new Athenas.

Warriors lose UW rugby coach Derek In the second half, Queen’s

Humprhey has cited lack of struck again with four more experience’as the main reason tries, three converts and a field for the junior varsity’s 41 - 3 goal. Towards the end of the loss to Queen’s Golden Gaels game when Queen’s was last Saturday. moving the ball with author-

Despite keeping Queen’s ity, the Warriors, undaunted, confined to their own end for kept theirspirits up,fightingto the first few minutes and scoring, a field goal, the War- riors fell apart from then on.

After that field goal Queen’s led all the way. They scored

16 - 3 at the half. likes the basement spot!) Most of the strums (the The varsity Warriors didn’t

offensive starting position in fare much better, falling 21 - rugby, comparable to a foot- 0 to the Gaels. ball snap) showed crisp pit- Score was not the only dis- thing by the backs despite appointment since Queen’s some hard hitting by the ~ fans outnumbered Warrior Warriors. Waterloo’s for- fans. With a few games under wards were able to hold their their belts to gain confidence own but the strum-half and the Warriors should improve. the other backs who lack Fan support would certainly experience couldn’t quite put help the cause! it’together. Mark Priddle

Western appears very likely to repeat as OWIAA champs, having retained most of last - year’s powerful squad and added Annelinse Ransier, one of Ontario’s top high school distance runners.

Guelph, who placed second last year, remains strong,

boasting Janet Pegrum, Janet Beatty and Sylvia Ruegger. Queen’s has added Anne Marie Malone to its squad now that she has returned to Canada after having a bad experience with a U. S. track scholarship.

Alan Adamson

they were-boasting a he&thy turnout of 135 men to training camp and in their first game they proved pre-season as- sumptions valid by crushing York44- 1.

With injuries handicap- ‘ping them the Warriors will have to hope for quick healing and effective practice to give the Mustangs a run for the money next week.

V. Butler

PEKING EXPRESS Chinese Fast Food (next door to University)

Excellent egg rolls & chicken balls

EAT IN or TAKE OUT

150 University Ave. W (at the corner of Phillip)

884-9220

Temple Shalom 1284 Ottawa St. E. Kitchener, Ontario

High Holy Day Services

Erev Rosh Hashanah

Monday Sept. 28, 8:00 p.m.

Rosh Hashanah Tuesday, Sept. 29

1O:OO a.m. 2:30 p.m. -

children’s service

No1 Nidre Wednesday, Oct. 7

7:30 p.m.

Yom Kippur Thursday, Oct. 8

1O:OO a.m. Access off Conestoga

Parkway, Fischer Drive. For further information,

call Mavis Boorman, 745-333 1

The monthly Pass -a convenient way to travel! Kitchener Transit patrons now have a choice of either paying exact cash fare or showing a monthly pass when boarding a bus.

The pass consists of 2 parts, a permanent PHOTO ID PORTION and a renewable MONTHLY PORTION. When obtaining your photo ID portion you will receive a convenient plastic holder to display your pass in when boarding the bus.

003501

03501 L 1981

MONTH

Kitchener Transit Monthly Pass

MONTHLY PASSES are valid for the calendar month shown on them and ALLOW YOU UNLIMITED RIDERSHIP ON ANY DAY OF THAT MONTH. PHOTO ID CARDS are available at the Kitchener Transit Passenger Terminal at a cost of $2.00.

MONTHLY PASSES are available at the Transit PassengeqTerminal and at all Zehrs Markets; just ask for them at the courtesy counter. Cost for the monthly portion is $25.00 for adults and $13.00 for Senior Citizens and Students (elementary and high school). Your photo ID card must be presented when purchasing the monthly portion of the pass. 8857373

Kitchener Transit Monthly Pass

BUY yours now!

-P YUKOlii JAC ( ATCACKI

R elease 2 fluid ounces of Yukon Jack, a dash

of juice fromIan unsus- pecting lime, tumble them over ice and you’ll have skinned the Snake Bite. Inspired in the wild, mi the damnably cold, this black sheep of Canadia

Page 18: 1981-82_v04,n10_Imprint

, * 1.

Dep_artinent of National Defence )_ Tt)e department of Nation&Defence has an ongoing requirement

-for graduates interested in civilian careers, in Scientific research and development and in social and strategic analysis and opera- tional research. National defence-p’resently employs 550 Defence Scientists, two-thirds of whom possess advanced degrees with specializaG&s in: I ~

-’ Physical Sciences ’ < Mathematics Biological Sciences Social Sciences

- or degrees in: ,

Engineering I Computer Sciences or Applied Math l

Defence Scientist recruiters will be visifing‘your campus soon to interview graduates. For information and application forms, see your campus placement officer or contact:

The Recruitment Off icek . Directorate of Defence Scientist Careers

National Defdnce Headquarters Ottawa, Ontario KIA OK?

Telephone: (613) 995-6906

Open to both men-and women. ’ ’ I

fl* Public Service Fonction.publique ’ Canada -Canada

I

Moving your body can feel really go,od after busting your brains in search of the ever-

<elusive solution to “the big -praem.” The positive phys- ical and psychological effects of exercise have been widely written abdut.

Unfortunately, many people overextend them- selves the first few times out, often resulting in-a visit to the Athletic Injury Clinic. The more physical gctivity ydu engage in, the more opportun- ities you have to get injured. However, certain preventative measures can be taken to reduce your chances of getting hurt.

Inflammation is the process by which -the body repairs damaged tissue. Enzymes are released by the injured cells to initiate t,he inflammatory pro- cess. These- enzymes cause increased permeability of blood vessel walls, resulting in decreased ability of the ves- sels to retain fluid, blood cells, and serum (plasma plus white

_ blood cells). These substances leak out into surrounding tissues and the area begins to Swell.

Overuse injuries are 1 the most common type.- They are caused by doing too much, too soon, too fast. Often the persbn cannot recall the exact moment the injury occurred.

These injuries result from repeated- stresses on the body over time, eventually leading to a noticeable injury. Usually the victims are musclerand tendons.

The white blood cells be_ i to repair the damage y IT engulfing debris, such ai dead cells in the. area. In addit&n, fibrinogen is released to cause clotting of blood and lymph fluid that has escaped from ruptured capillaries and lymphatic vessels. This clot- ting prevents further insult to damaged tissues.

Musqle and tendon fibres may tear when placed under a stress they are unaccustomed tb, resulting in a reaction

In most cases, more inflam- mation occurs than is needed to repair ‘the damage, leading to an excessive build-up of fluid in the area. When this fluid pressed against nerve endings, pain results. ’

Tg prevent overuse injuries,

called inflammation. .

begin- activity gradually ai a slow pace and for a short time period. As these workouts become more comfortable, in- crease the intensity and dura- tion slightly, slowing down again if you begin to tire or

, hurt. These gradual increases toward your goal will give a good result and will help prevent injuries.

If,you conceive an un\;lanted child, it’s too late to be sorry ’ If you co,ntract venereal disease, it’s top late to be sorry If you develop side effects as a’result of using another form of birth

control, it’s too late to be sorry. Y I Use ele&6nically tested quality condoms manufactured by

- \ I Julius S&mid. I

t ‘b . Be safejnstead of sorry - - I i!E! ’ ’ )iius schmid. -’ < , ‘_ .

If you have beea training a ! while and feel yqu are’ fit, but

begin to notice aches and pains, consider other factors

\. which, predispase the body to injury.,

For example, if you have. recently changed your shoes or the surface you run or play dn,

, the stresses on the body are altered. These changes affect not only the feet and ankles, but the legs, knees, hips and back as well.

Considering that each foot strikes the ground hundreds of times, or even thousands, during any sport inyolving

running, these stresses quickly J add up. Activity should be temporarily reduced so the body can gradually adapt to change. Also, check to see if your footwear is worn. If so, it is not likely providing the support your body needs for exercise. s

Keep in mind that the principle of graduql increases in duration and pace applies to the trained as well as the un- trained participant. If you are used, to running eight minute miles but decide to try a six minute pace one day when you feel like you have the world by the tajl, you may find yourself hurting the next morning.

It is possible to overtrain. If ydu work out hard every day, your body never has a chance to recover from the stresses of _ exercise, and overuse )symp- r toms.,are likely to develop. The _ best strategy is to have lighter - workouts interspread with your heavier days.

Have . you begun an ad- ditional physical diversion recently? If so, you may feel , * sore due to the overall increase in physical activity.

When plagued by the over- use -syndrome, the best cure is either rest or reduced activity, depending on the sever&y of the injury. Be sure to ice the - area after. any activity since cold constricts the blood vessels in the area and less fluid will leak into the surrounding tissues. i Gradually increase activity ’ only after pain’ has subsided.

An acute (immediate) injury may be: lr .A’sudden major muscle or’

tendon tear, known ‘as a stiain,

2. A tear of the ligaments con- necting bones I together,

‘called a sprain, or 3. A cotitusion; or bruise. -

,, These types of injuries may be caused by the playing con- ditions (e.g. potholes, rough _ play) inadequate previous conditioning, ‘or , improper warmup.

If you suddenly begin ex- ercising muscles, tendons and

Meaty pieces of chicken wings, served mild, medium or hot: with celery sticks, carrot sticks and blue +eqse dip. Munch a bunch with a friend fo! lunch, as ah appetizer or late night snack. Mother’s dhicken,wings..anoth\er good reason to come on home to Mothe+. ,

Half order.of 10 pieces _ F$lo&&~ . $2,89

..~-

k-1 L

Pizza Padour & Sp&hetti I-bus& FULLY LICENSED Char&x & Mastercard Accp

No Delivery Charge Ever To Campus From Wate\rloo Location - 28 King St. N. Waterloo

Page 19: 1981-82_v04,n10_Imprint

ligaments are prone to tearing. A thorough warmup, includ- ing stretching, loosens up the muscles and increases their

blood flow, takes the joints through their full range of motion, and raises body tem- perature, respiration and heart rate. These processes

’ ready the body for action:and , help prevent injury. : \

water. The back of a toilet tank works well in this capacity.

A tensor bandage should be snug enough to provide com- pression, but not so tight that fingers or toes turn blue. It should be removed while

sports I

for anxioz4+ j&&s , level, in the PAC. Brian range of joint motion and Farrance and his student as- muscle strength begin to sistants will place you on an return to normal, you will be appropriate rehabilitation advised to resume moderate program. activity.

If the injury is still swollen, ice will be applied to reduce muscle spasm and anaesthe- the the area. This icing could

3H-k LI GA f&&S. be followed by a regimen of

I stretching and/ or light ex- ercises, depending on the

Increasing circulation to the area through exercise will help remove the products of in- flammation. Continue icing before and after any activity.

Resume full activity grad- ually and do not return tc competition until you have regained full muscle strength range of joint motion, ant freedom from pain.

Tammy Horne

severity of your problem. Muscle contractions which occur during exercise act as a pump to help move products of inflammation out of the

Waterloo Jewish Student’s

Association Invites You To The 1st I

Bagel Brunch of the Season (5742) in

I+ I;\.,, r. .-.-I -/.I-- y” ‘., 7r ‘, ,i .” t

Cooling down with light jogging and stretching after your workout is also import- ant. This gradual stoppage of activity prevents blood from pooling in the lower limbs (which would lead to a decrease in blood returning to the heart and placing strain on it) and removes byproducts of exercise, such as lactate, from the muscles via circulation, preventing stiffness.

If you become a victim of an acute injury, it is important to get ice on it immediately to constrict blood vessels and slow down inflammation. Do not massage the injury or attempt to “run it off’, as this increases circulation to the area, compounding the prob- lem of excess inflammation.

Use a wet towel filled with ice and strap it on the area with a tensor bandage. The com- pression provided by the tensor will help to control swelling. If no ice is available, apply a cold, wet tensor and immerse the injured site in cold

sleeping, to prevent stress on the circulatory system.

Keep ice on the area for only 10 - 15 minutes at a time. After 10 - 15 minutes, a vasa- dilation response will occur in the area, to prevent excess cooling of the tissues. The result is increased blood in the area, which you do not want. ‘Therefore, remove the ice for 10 - 15 minutes, then apply it again. Repeat this treatment as often as possible for a couple of days.

Elevating the injured limb will also aid in decreasing blood flow to the problem site.

In summation, the .key is Ice Compression, and Elevation (ICE).

If you are in doubt as to the severity of an injury, summon medical aid, such as hospital Emergency or an ambulance.

Therapy should begin on the acutely injured area as soon as possible. .

UW’s Athletic Injury Clinic is located in Blue North, lower

reapplied to reduce the circul-

occurred during therapy.

c

PEKING EXPRESS Chinese Fast Food

(next door to University)

Excellent Egg Rolls & Chicken Balls

EAT IN or TAKE OUT

150 University Ave. W (at the corner of Phillip)

884-9220

Oct. 6 from II:30 a.m. to

I:30 p.m. If you cannot attend and want

more information call 884-2428.

Getanew skit on math.

“The Texas Instruments new TI-40 and TI-55-11 calculators have angled displays for easy-to-see-answers!’

The slanted display makes these calculators more interested in the TI-55-11, which easier to use at arm’s length-and that’s just the comes with ihe Calculator Decision-Making beginning. The economical TI-40, with built-in Sourcebook. The TI-55-11 features 56-step functions like trig, stat, logs, roots, programmability, multiple memories,

Page 20: 1981-82_v04,n10_Imprint

show your undergraduate- University .of .Waterloo I.D. card to cashier

bp Till You Drop (Little Sister, Down In Hollywood,

I Can’t Win,, Go Home Girl) \ , (Video-Verite, Neon Girls, Take Me To War,

Hesitate) Nothin’but a Tease) ’ > $6.61 Fed Member $5.61

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’ Max Webster _

Diamonds, -Diamonds (Greatest Hits plus 2 unreleased songs:

Gravity, Summer’s Up, Hot Spots) $6.61 Fed Member.$5.61-

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Storm Warning ’ (If the Wind Could BlOw my Troubles Away,

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(Till Tomorrow; Empty Chairs, Sister-Fatima) . $4.97 Fed Member $3.97

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