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Note: Imprint publishep every other Fray and suspens/e-filled new radio âdrama on during the summer. The deadline for I --Thursday, July 17-. Campus Events is 4:OO PM #the Tuesdqy -
CKYS FM. Telephone them, and make
preceeding publication. surethey put it on at the right timethis time
-Friday, July ll- . around. Thatâs at 10:00 P$l. Then go back
The Bahaâi Campus Club presents âan ,, J informal presentation and open discussion
to the pub. 1 ht 8:00 PM in CC 113. â
I âThe Partyâ sponsored by the Gay Liberation of Waterloo begins at9 PMin the
--Monday, June 14- The Legal Resource Office (CC 217A) continues to be open, now playing the 11:OO;
3rd floor of Humanities (HH 373/378) The Legal Resource Office (CC 217A) to 1:00 and 7:00 to 9:00 slots. Womyn and men are welcome for an will be open from 2:30 - 4:30. Bring in your evening .of dancing and conversation. new lease before you sign it. Couldnât hurt.
,-Friday, July 18- Licensed. Admission is $2.50, Members $2.OQ and $1.00 off for everyone arriving Sunset at about 9:08 PM tonight, Donât
- Fed Flicks presents Arlo Guthrie in , Aliceâs Restaurant, at 8:00 PM tonight-
before 10 PM.. miss it. and tomorrow night at Physics 145.
Fed Flicks features Manhattan; staring -Tuesday, July 15- Admission: $1.00, for fee&paying fed
Woody Allen and Dianne Keaton, tonight members with 1:D. $2.00 for aliens.
and tomorrow night in physics 145 at 8PM. . A public forum on Ac.id Rain, The Silent ; âThe Lega Resource Office (CC 217A) Admission is $1.00 for feddies with I.D., Crids will be held by theWaterloo Public .
Interkst,Research Group (WPIRG) at 7:30 will be open from 10:00 to 12:00 today. ,
$2.00 for aliens without I.D. PM in Physics 145. -Saturday, July 19-
I, The Outers Club sponsors kayaking in _ the PAC pool 2:30-4:30 p.m. Contact The Legal Resource Office (CC 217A) Celebrate the end of term with the HKLS
Judy at 886-1449 for more information. â will be open from 7:dO to 9:00 PM. 5 Semi-Formal! Cocktail hour (happy hour) is 6-7, PM, a buffet dinner will be served at
â/
/ . .
Bring your own walrus.
sponsors the Agora Teahouse at 8:30 PM in The Waterloo â Christian Fellowship
the Modern Languages Alcove (weather permitting).
Come out any time during the evening to
-Wedqe&day, âJuly 16â
meet friends at a coffeehouse sponsored
. \
by the Gay Liberation of Waterloo
The WCCF presents an Outdoor Suppeâr \ (GLOW). Coffee, tea, and donuts ark
r and Sharing in the Laurel Cr
% ek Bar-be- I
available. Phone 884-GLOW for @form-
que pit (if- it rains, HH2 0 with a ation on events in the gay community.
microwave). Topic: âThe Art of âSharingâ. There will be a iked Cross Blood Don& / I / Clinic from 2:00 to 4:3O,in the afternoon
.
7:00 PM&l Dancing, Dancing, Dancing to the sounds of â!Tabloidâ begins at 9 PM in Ballroom B at Bingeman Park. Tickets
<available from Lindaat 886-0136, Roseanne at 884-6195, the PAC receptionist or Paula Kirwin (Kin Department, MC 6th floor) at $18.60 per couple, $lO..OO/single.
Margaret Ellison, soprano, Lilian Kilianski, contralto,. Roy Lichti, Baritone, and Kenneth Hull, Piano, perform at 8PM at 57 I I
-Saturday, July 12--
I â and 6:OO to 8:30 in the evening at the First Young St. West. Tickets are $7.00/$4.00.
\ United Church (King and Williamstreetsin Presented by the KWCMS.
The CC Games Room features a Snooker Waterloo). Quota: 300 doners. y Tourney with first prize being a new pool
Camp Bi-Mee-Luv (what CKMS is for) is âAt 7:3Q in HH 280 âthere will be a on at 10:00 tonight with episode three
cue (value $60.00). Double elimination; again, for those few who missed it the first $5.00 entry fee. The tourney, held over the
Discussion Fellqwship with chaplain â, - Remkes Kooistra; \ time.
*
weekend, is limited to the first 16 people . 1â 7 . _ 9 who sign up by Thursday.., , ,, ,
-The Federation of Students presents Cano in a free outdoor concert beginning at 2:00 PM on the Village Green. Refreshments will be available. Keep your own out of sight. _- .I . An evening with Monica Gaylord, pianist, is held at 57 Young Street West, Waterlod,â. at 8:00 PM. Tickets are $9.00 (students/ seniors $5.00) by mail order from KWCMS- or reserve by phone 886 1673.â
\ 2Wednesday;âJuly 16: 1 Itâs here! Itâs real! Episode Three of Camp
Bi-free-Luti hits the airwaves on CKMSat -1O:OO tonight. Itâs not titled âThe Director meets the, Triffidsâ but anything else would be telling too much. Tune in.
Cinema -Gratis (campsus centre free movies) presents Shane, a great movie filmed some time ago that in many ways is a quintessential Western. It will ~ probably take away half a dozen people or so from
us -Wednebday, Jâuly 23- \ A âTermination Celebrationâ will be held at South Campus Hall to celebrate the end of
* classes! Please accept this annoucement as your personal invitation to attend the Kin Pub, the event of the term. everyone welcome! The pub begins at: 9 PM and bodies will be removed at 1 AM. Come and liquidate (former and present villagers) Price is only $1.00 (cheap!) See you there!
For information on the GLOW coffee-, house se&last weekâs entry.
I The CC Pub CIOSS~B for the ,rest of the â summer. It will reopen with a new face.
Camp Bi-Meg-Luv. Admission is free (to
\ Letâs give it a sendoff that Rita will never â_ boJ>.
The K-W Chamber Music Society (thatâs what KWCMS stands for) presents
forget! &âLegal Resource Office (CC.217A) â\ the Stratford Ensemble summer woodwind . â wil be open from 3:00 to 5:00 and 7:00 to â quintet with Sydney Bulman-Fleming on
Before giving the pub a sendoff, tune into Camp Bi-Mee-Luu the funny, thrilling,
900: Come in for some exciting legal , piano, at 8:00 PM at 57 Young Street West. opinions.
. Admission is $8.00/$5.00.
(r .I , a, . ~ \
\
\ , . ,
W~,&glo st,uder& think of the . â F&+Eke .Stpike [h&v shall we
say it) onanbm? , â-I j ,I Y .:
(inhluded firsbee golf and / I football. There was a bar- , be que ,which served ham- burgers and hotdogs. Pop
* iâ and watermelon were also , available. -â f
â - The :-event .;hadjl a âvery -- I good. response,. partly
-. . L 1â â owing to , the âexcellent weather that day,. The
â â turnkeys thought-- that .it was Zvery su.c+ssfulât, â 4
âThere a,re some thoughts :. , I &,of making âThe Big Oneâ an -_- _ \, . - / \ _âj annual event or,of making it j
hart. of the Orientation 1 . / s+ a@ivitiesin. the fall. How; I _ ,- ,ever,- nothing concrete. has
. Y - yetbeendone in either of . yFâ .,.these dire&ions. t _ â.
I . /
,~~p~~u~lGzp hours, _ be o,pkn three . announqed the results of In the presidential race, âscience Faculty, the larg-
1. eveningsa weeâk and Friday-. the twelfth Sir Isaac New- in which .the main issues est facâulty, .at WLU for a
* The Campus Centre morninâgs~~ _ *ton ohvsics â.scholarshiP . stressed by the candidates- four-year/term, effective
Two of the new; volun- r * ---- -----------rr
Housing Commiâ-- L-- Septembeâr 1.
Lt.ltIt: 11as ex-amination (SIN). This wereentertainment and the
recentry announc ed that on teers âare second year âlaw- âYear the exam was writtenâ need â for exp&+rien+ed: Dr. Mu&aster succeeds
,.âweekends s...and 1 -after .5,:00., _ w
yeekdays, â students, bringing to three .- leadership, Ji Balcom de- Dr,â Gerald Vallillee who
hen the the:numb<er of,law students by i900. highâ school stu- fegted Eany , pposition by, 6â ha,s â held, the position .of
FâH&<Bing Offing j i i closed, . . givfng _ their time to help. hII dents from across thecoun- . ;&- ;7 - â , ,1 l . yg- gainin.â â760/i oftheâvote, 6$%i *dean for, the âpast eight
â-the Campus Cen &.&â Bbaird sâ-â. -UW: st.u&ntâs~ with their.â::: trY and ,beyon*d~ fip the, .j _ more t Q
l&ai ]nl&tsies; - ! I ! ,; \\ majority..of the contestants an his nearest rival, :
, i will provide âan au?Xiliaw
â&&corn attributed . his. I years. ,: â . .+ â r ,
The indoming dean was
âservice if thede mand for . the servioe is still great:
Students will t z$ .able to .- consult â the CC
~RfWWfl whbh M :Housing :
Jiil have ?sidences. -_ * Jit y ,m*aps, and the &housing
kRq--; coQwa)& jo&. ~ominâg- from4 âGntarâio. . victor,y to the reputationhe Wener welcomes fhe, new . About ten of the---highest
born in Sud-bury and is -a had gained by his work on 1966 graduate of WLU in
volunteers atâ a: time when. ranked stu&nt$ .icI;I the two,,: - \$he qq@ering chncihnd many students are coming . hour ,multiple a&ice+ and in for Landlor&nd Tenant
Ian âthe executive and ,,his honours Geography. He took - a masâterâs degree at
âdssay exam âwiil%e ,offered - rep&sentation of Engsoc at _ Clark University, Wor- A.ct-relatedassistance. â national engineering tin-
âMany â students,â says _ Iâ I.. -$I. !- SIrj sk&oia&fi& or assist- ferences , - -tester, Mass., in 1968,and
antships to &dy physics . .I followed that- with, a
Wener; â?.âareâ bringing us +xat uw. ,.I .âl Bob dro,ss : was elected doctorate from the same their leases; beTore 2hey 1
,_. â The-â best .-mark â in
! mswJ.;ara CL-n +L,-c this the
first vice p,resident,beating â university in 19722. % â .Y;,, : ,
-contest.! was. achievedâ byâ \ out )enhifer Thiers by-only .*
itive,: Whileâa graduate student
mearcine, will ease, ,prob- â. Stepthen G,ermann ^ - from..â 21 votesih the only contest>. he wona Clark fellowship
lems overâ this coming. âW$y ,HIgh â S&&o1 \ in that could. be mlled,&se; and a Canada * Council;
school year.â 1. ! . Burlington, &&who w&e âKaren.: Zetzs&e, became Doctoral Fellowsh@p. He
The: [email protected] Of-â ,r?&â perfect. paper. ,-.- secretary by winning 6~6% *has written articles for
- -,of the%ote. Judy;~Runnalls ; .i journals: and contributed fi&, Js: L located .$nâ the .â 1 - Campusâ â Cen-tre,. CC ,2liA âLâ l
â 2 )â was! de&red, ,Femme-,Eng âf chapters- to several major
and ig &irreptly open Mon- I\ \ .chai%person wit& 76% of the \â texts.
~â-Hlgfiâ:t~rpqjutâ- ;.;bilklots. ca;;ii, Dave >J _â f
s I â _â, , ;
-w- - - - -~~- I â.
iupplying ~ nes (local. le seeking*. onsibility â
I, CC Board will-be s free use of telepho
*calls only to t.hos . housing, I, âr-p
â +hi$h they#re ta from âthe. Fidel
- Student&~ The tc will be locat-ed to the turnkey âde!
Iking over â ;&ion of &phones i the left oâf <K ien ai;J 1.
. .
* / Sixâ houses, âwhich had -been us&l as classrooms
â 1 ~ _ and faculty, offices :for j ,,Wqfrid Laurier University.
are to -be demolis ed in-the h # near future.â
i . , . âThe c_ampus of Wilfrid . Laurier ,University! will
L i _ -look-more attractive short- . , 1 l-v,; now that six older
; -alqove. â,,,
days from. .2:30* to 6$0, . Tuesday,s ; fr,or$ $:30-6:06, Wed&@ays- fi)oti â3:dO to ,;. 5:Od, apd ,Thtir&lays :froâm
i _ \ homes -on IBricker Street along â. one ,side of the campus, are being. torn.
_. _ $&own.,â! said Lauridtâs.press , -. $&legse,-
, ; Space. provided by the new building has also al-
-.lowed the university to I -7 remove manyâ â portable,
\ 1 &ssrooms from camp-us. s \ - â. Wes -Robins!on, WLUâsâ
- n I@h$sical and planning dir; : , I â -Y âector, said, the space oc- L. I . 1 ~._ â i. I . t
\ .\ j
_----- H. _- s- _
We- apoiogise tof. the. members $of Waterloo Co-, operative Residence Inc. r:.. ----~ r-i- - %--L----1---
: 2, The Legal, Resource df- â.
fice (LRO), following a ~.successful driveâ to âfind t new _ volunteers, has an-
nounced * that ,it will. be rate in the his.tory ,of the. graphy Department - at _ the meeting, at âleast 100
!d âY
Friday; Jbly 11,198O.. Imprint 3 ST 4 ,
A . . .
Ads, sigtis âand bursaries diScuSsed at CC Board meeting .? c â to go over policy, meet the
turnkeys, and clarify the role of his advisoqy capacity.
The Board also dis- c-ussed- the fact thtit no nominations for thâe empty positions on the CCB had.
person. I been forthcoming after: a The first item on the two we.ek extension. .
â Several options were plaints by Terry Good, a considered, including ap- local landiord, that his pointments to the Board, â rental units were not being however the motion to advertized in the Campus recommend people to the Centre.
Loca1 landlord TerrY GoOâ President for appointment
â Good first expressed his voicei complaints to the died for.lack of a seconder ,
objection to the presence of and- the decision ,
the press, saying that -he .Campus Centre board at its meeting of July 4th.
reach&$t,o leave the Boast
thought it was to be a in its present state until closed meeting and that he Good questioned the October when elections-are didnât expect coverage of Boardâs comâmercial adver- to be held. If there is no the proceedings. After this response at this lime,
recommedations are to be 1 made.
meeting continued and The.Campus Centre board discusses advertising,~ signs, bursaries, the Chairpersonâs
-It was next noted at the Good asked why he could meeting that the Chair- pot advertize his houses 6n report and receives their latest liason person.
â .
the CC bulletin boards. ., â Photos by John W. Bast personâs Report, outlining the job description of the
âIâm just an individual chair, along with the \- with houses to rent âto statement of philosophy
students,â he said, and argumentsâ on the matter. the alcoves. The filial-sizes Federation, Imprint, and turnkeys would like to with respect to the position
went on to add that he had ânever been treated in such
Chairperson Judy Carter would be determined b.y the campus centre pub, the consider having such a of Chairperson and op-
brought the discussion to a the Board in consultatioân games room atid the sign as well. erations Co-ordinator, had a negative, cruel and close by saying that the with the Physical Plant cafeteria wou!d also be a As Part of the meetingâs been approved by Pres-
vindictive manner.â Good Board would check their and Planning, he said, and good place for signs. Desire proceedings, the latest ident h;latthews.
said that the Carnpu$- policy atid let âGood know added that after speaking was expressed by several resource person was intro-
Centre was âpersecuting in writing whether or nat to graphicists he had been members of the Board to
The report explained the duced to the members of terms of reference of the
. the students because they commercial have to spe/nd $30 for a was
advertising told that the signs could be have sketches and cost the Board. Elton Nantais, Campus Centre Board, its
allowed in the colour-toned to match the estimates, and to consult
the â with the operations co- Of Security, is âthe newest function, orga&zation and
housing listâ from a C;mpus Centre. main- colours of non-voting liason between responsibility.
housing locator firm to building. _ oxdinator when she re- an external department \. find out about .his houses. - âFederation Precident - The suggestions were turns in one week. I and the C-C. As the final item of a
Although members og Neil Freeman was the next given a. positive reception Chrter then asked for a Nantais, in answer to a% * lengthy agenda, it was
âthe Board mentioned that, tQ address the B$ard, with and. :,,&?yeyal II of the _ show of ban& indicating question on security from announced that about half theri? were a number of his propod for signs for futinkeys present corn-. approval for thti idea in- the Board, toldâ those the money present-in the âunanswered questionsâ the Campus Centre. Free- mented on the difficulty principle but reserving the present that members bf CC Bursary Fund had been
concerningâ Goodâs state- man stated that. the signs students have in finding . right to discuss the size campus security are act- given to students-who were
ments; Good was not should beâplaced seven or offices in the Campus and final appearance of the - u.ally police officers and in need. of financial
challenged since it was eight feet up âin the Centre, and the number of signs, Approval was given -must takeâinto account the assistance. The bursary
deemed that .the Campus abutments found in the times they are asked for with-â the comment that law, as well as university fund of $2,800 repre-
Centre policy on com- corners of the great hall to directions; such signs would be âpolicy. Nantais mentioned sents the interest on money
mercial advertising would direct students to the Freeman stated that, in especially welcome during that he will be attending a in the CC enrichment fund.
âtake care of Goodvs harder-to-find offices in addition to signs for the _ - orientation, and that the meeting with the turnkeys Marg Sanderson .â.
I Wgs\ there ever such a
trodbled pubas UWâs own little Bombshelter? It seems that every student president has had to grap- ple with itâs unsuitabilities.
This time around, stu- dent president Neil Free- man has shouldered the issue, with plans for moving and enlarging -the bar, removing walls, rei decorating; in general, he is working towards an over- alIâ face-lift for,-the pub.
Pub manager Rita Schneider says that there will be food available but it I has not been âsettled whether it will be standard Food Services fare or sbme- thing more adventurous. âWeâre hoping that a sand- _ _- wichlsalad bar type sit- uation can be set up where more choice is availableâ said Schneider.
Pinball and shuffleboard will still be available and Schneider says there will be a dance floor.
Initially, the costs of this project were estimated to be $50~000. This estimate was decided by UWâs Phys-
Federation President Neil Freeman shows councillors what the new pub will look like on aâguided tourâ. Above, the corridor between pub and washrooms; the pub-side wall Will go, providing easier access to washrooms,among other bigiidvantages. Photo by John W. Bast
ical Planning department. refrigeratqr, things eke 14, j and will take four But the 6efinite figure that.â weeks. Opening night will
has now been reached and Last year, improvements be the first night of classes,
i,s a much more digestible fo the pub and its sound when students willâ get a chance to judgethechanges
$28,750. However, Free- equipment were made at a for themselves man says that âthis is a COSVOf $20,000.
.
construction cost only. It Freeman says conâstruc- Marie Smith doesnât include decorations, tion is ,to start Monday July Liz Wood
.
~~
Sumwat fire still - c a big mystery Early on the morning of Wednesday, July 2, a fire
broke out in a rehearsal room in the Theatre of the Artâs in the Modern Languages Building. Damage was estimated at $10,000, although it -could go- higher.
, The fire began shortly after 12:15, after those rehearsing for Sumwat Theatreâs Murder Take Two had left the room, and before 3:05, when firefighters arrived on the scene. Damage --included -Some costuines and props, the cupboard, a piano in the rdom and some of the adjacent rdoms (whicâh were starched by smoke).
Nick Ozaruk, the safety officer at UW, in- âGestigated the scene of the fire two or three times before concluding that the cause could not be determined. Although it was clear that the fire had started in the wardrobe, its contents were totally destroyed, leaving no evidence to work with.
Earl Stieler, the_atre technical director, Felt that *Ozarukâs estimate of between $5,OOc@nd $10,000 was too low.
Stiler said that members of thq cast had moved some of the costumes out of the wardrobe and into \
+ his office, before leaving that night. . There w-as, at one point, atheory that a hot ironleft
in the wardrobe started the blaze, but Stiler did not think that that was theâ case. âWould it spark âsufficiently to start a fire?â he questioned. âI donât see how naturally it could have started.â
He didnât seem to think that-somebody hadstarted the fire, pointing out that the bvilding, the room and the wardrobe were locked at the time. He ceded the possibility that a person with a master key could have gotten into the room, but that person would still have had to get into the wardrobe, which had a different lock unit, where the fire started. ! The fire nearly meant the closing of the show, related Steve Hull, a member of the cast. The cast met and discussed thesituation, deciding to perform that evening.
Imprint is$he student newspaper at the University of Waterloo., Itâis an editO* iI&pnbnt n&wapapee puljlls&3d byâ Imprint Public&&ions Waterloo; a corporhtion without share -pita& University of Waterloo, Waterloo, Ontario. Phone 885- 1660 or extension 2331 or 2332. Imprinkis a member of the Canadian Universitly Press (CUP), a student press orgeation
I of 63 papers across Canada. Iniprint is also a member of the Ontario Weekly Newspaper Association (OWJ!TA). Jmprint publishes everyFridayduringtheterm.Mailshouldbeaddressed to âImprint, Campus Centre Itoom 140.â We are typeset on
, campus with a Camp/Set 510, pa&e-ub i$ likewise done on campus. Imprint: ISSN 0706-7380. \
i
Editipr -
I Câ
* .Marg Sand&& Advertising Managgr , John w. Bast
âBusiness Manager Sylvia Hannigan lbws Editor _ Stu Dollar ArtsEditors Celia Geiger, M. Drew Cook
What do you think of the Federit from the feebike strike?
-Ed Mahoney Co-o.p-Eqglish 2 -
They really hadâno choice;bec&use there was no support from othr universities or on the campus
\ Carol Stefflbr
4th Year Kinesiology . I see nothing wrong with the decision; I donât see that they had any other choice. We arenât in such bad shape. I
Y ,
ionâs decision to withdrawits support by Carl Friâbsen
/- . .
Kathleen McPherson , 2nd Year Man andâEnvironment
Iâ .am not in favour since the Federation reversal in policy has left students more confused than ever about what to do about rising
tuition costs.
/. Larry Li â
I think the strike should proceed if there is adequate student support. I agree that it is unfortunate that
j the Federation support was with- drawn in an unconventional man- ner.
Bert Narain \ J 4th Year Political Science
Theyâve made their point and have shown the administration, that
-they canât shove students around. People who are pushing for a general meeting are just trying to get their two centsâ worth and get their shots in at the Federation of Studentstofurthertheirownends.
Carole Titcombe 4th year English
Iâm pro the fedâs decision; it was democratic. If there were sup- posed to have been 13 Councillors at the meeting and âonlyâ 12 showed up I believe the method used was fair and democratic and not a dirty trick.
Footnotes to history: t&e who vi&k& on this weekâs +tAe Were l!&aZg- San&3oh -(lQ68), @@a Hannigan (1969), John W. Bast (somewhere between 1984 and 2115), Stu Dollar (1929), Celia Geiger (1564), M.Drew. Cook (1877), Carl Friesen (lQ@), Marie Smith (lQ63), Liz Woo@ (1945), Dan w (lQlS), Bruce Moran (lQSS), l@lie Robinson (1974), F%&tok;l Gurd (1926), J&Snow (????), Tom McNally (197O),AlanAdamson (1896), Libi Stewart (18813, Peter Scheffel (1927), Jesus Zar&r (1967) and EK (1776). Ifsome h&vebeenforgotten,thatâs all righq history soonjopgets us d. I-( 1960) am loo& foqwazdtotakingco mmandofmyownforoes,hapwinthe knowledgethatIwasabl~,forashortwhi@anywaytotaIk to Fâran( 1455,1872an$,perhaps, 198O).SorrgBernie,but they cut my story up; it w&8 great speculating with you anpvay. Cover photo by Brian McLa.ughl.in
*.Pub decision by Freeman, and Couimil-Iacks thought
Federation president Neil Free- man has received approval from
. Council for a cause that we never expedted to receive priority during his tenure.
The student pub in the CC, known as the Bombshelter, is to receive a I
, facelift which will cost $28,750 for construction. Incidental costs are certain to raise that figure.
When Freeman was campaigning for office, he eschewed such matters as entertainment in favour of what he considered to be more pressing
_ matters of concern.@ theMarch 3rd Council meeting Freeman said, he believed he won the elâection on the
. issueâ of cutbacks in education and his stand on the tuition hike.
At the June 1st Council meeting, actually held in the pub so that explanations ,of the physical changes could be shown to Councili notâ many questions wereâ forth-
â coming. Council gave approval for the spending of up to $50,000 for the pub by a vote of 9-3-l. Pub renovations will bepaid for with so- called âold moneyâ or money -not spent in the past that has always been kept on hand as a protection against emergencies and hard times. No one asked how much of this
- money remained. No one asked if alternatives had been considered.
.pecor will consist mainly of posters and decorations on the valls.-No one asked what these will be, what they
will look like, or what they will cost. Certainly their material and design should be of concern in an estab- lishment where patrons can some- times
kâ ecome exuberant.
Fr eman has already, with the approval of Council, spent large amounts of student money on television ads ($6,000) and afee hike strike (cost unknown) for which he appeared at the time to have measurable support, but cancelled anyway. Y
Slightly expanded seating, food of an undetermined, nature, and the addition of domestic beer, appear to be the few known results for spending so much on a pub whose acoustics and ambience will almost
-certainly be&possible to improve. The smaller room where one can at least hear oneself talk at times, will become a larger room.
The final cost and many other *details are still unknown.
As an alternative to doing som.e- thinglnow for the sake of doing it, a capital fund might have been created.-A truly viable pub overhaul with revamped acoustics and sound and a fâquiet pubâ area could have been well planned for the future. - As a bottom line, moreâ infor- mation should have been forth- coming from the executive, and Council should have demanded it before reaching a decision.
Liz Wood
Waterlob Public Interest Research Group (WPIRG), a* university group sup- ported by student fees, is feeling the squeeze, -Three staff people,. six filing cabinets,â and 9 resource library are sh,aring a South Campus Hall office that previousiâj? was only used to house the calculatoi. for the UW Staff Credit Union. The filing cabinets-and the door danndt be opened simultaneously in ihe one
I Wellâer, staff researcher at WPIRGâstated that he feels
~ âreseritful that student organizations -like our- selves are given such a low priority.â In addition to operating l its research centre, which, in 1979 loaned materials to about 600 people and provided& information âto many oth- er?, WPIRG has brouâght speakers to campus, oper- ated workshops and pub- lished materials,, WPIRG is
Lappin was on holidays and was *unavailable for comment?
Weller thinks that t; ctirreGi WPIRG office is unable to handle the two to three ,students who daily use the.resource centre. He ectimates that in Septem- ber, from six to seven, students will vyish to u&e the centre at once.
In addition, WPIRG _ must be equipped to handle stâudent fee refunds:
hundred ,square fogt\rQom currently sponsoring a . a
which the WPIRG resource fopurn relating to acid rain WPIRG is a growing. Phil Weller behind his desk-permanently.
organization. It is planning centre has ~been operating which will take place Jlly , more forums and spkaker
pholo by EK
in sin ?
May. 1-5. . â events than it has ever had . WP RG was located in Welled admits that Ernie cn p&t years. Weller
an office fOurtimes the size -Lappin @ Physical Re- does not knbw what can be of its present location from sources and Plannâing at done to find alternate , * \
January of 1977 until it- the; University, who offer- accomodation by -the fallâ t was force.d to move this e,d the South Campus Hall term. He admits, âIâm
\ \ -
&perienced typist with IBM t/
May ~XV make wa ârenovaâtions in the Iii!
for location, has been .syrn- afraid of whBtâs ,goin$ to Lost / + â * access, courtesy ,tiai ter
building. â â \ ysics pathetic to WPIRGâs nee.ds; happen in September. The $ re,,,ard for 1 hunt pro- typewriter will tYPe essays, available. Trojqân â Self-
but to date has been unable- organization will definit- âAlthough they do not to locate. suitable âspace; . ely be âcompro@sed.â
fessional squash racquet in theses~ resumest etc* Promptt Storagen 8g3-2222- ^ - pay a rental fee, ,Phil Lappinâs office stated that ~ _ keslk Robinson
PA6 mid-May. Black fnish accurate services and re- ABC Disc Jockey services.
Things go better, I , -. sliot as he left wo,rk. âThis
storage? ext. 3869. Residence: 8861 . . . _.^ -_ timental vdue. i anyone I- Lo& monthly rates, 24 hour 8492.
1
âbut not for worker6 in Guatemala\ j
_. The workers of the Embotella- dora Guatemalteca (the Guat- emalan subsidiaiy of Coca Cola)
I fought a bloody battle for years fo certify their union and force management- to negotiate 3 contract with them. Butâ repression of the work& didq end. Recent âviolent âiriciderits - intimidation, beatings, kidnap-
â pings and murders - directed again& Coca Colaâs .Q@emalan workers have sparkedâ stx+rmg reaction in many countries. Scandinavia, Australia, New Zealand, Spaih &&&4&i&o have all initiated constimer 2nd worker boycotts of Coca -Cola, Fanta .and !3prite.
brings the toll of murdered Coca Cola workers to six in recent months.
The Editoi, Enclosed please find a letter
of support for the Guatemalan people, and protest agaitist recentabdtictias of Guâatemalan trade< unionists by the countryâs
c military , ,government - under Lucas Garcia.
The Waterloo Public Interpst Research Group, representitig the student body of â the .LJniyer+ity of Waterloo, wishes to send an open lcetter of support tp -the people and &specially the
On Saturday, June 21, the. headquarters of the Nationdl Lab-our Central were. raided by government â tiilitary/police an-d most of the Executive Committee, between 25-30
national pnion leaders, were abducted and are still missing. This is -the most overt âattack to- date tigainsf thelorganiied trade -union movement, and indicates that the military regime of Lucas Garcia is bent tip&* eradicating âthe entire leadership of tbe trade union. _
found it please contact, Steve (885-3997) anytime. There is a reward. For Sale -- â VivitarAuto Zooin lens:â75 260 mm F 4.5.with skylight and polarizing filters. In excellent conditi6n. $130 firm. Gerhard Mitlmann, 886-9525 ,,
Typing
, ,, L :
Experienced ctypist, essays, resumes, theses, etc. Y No
We encourage other don- cerned peoâple to write similar
math I papers.- Reasonab.le rates. bestmount area. Call 743-3342., .
fiade unionist? of Guatem+a. On Friâday, June 20, E$gar. Ititters of protest, and to join in _ 1 1 .
PRIYATE STORAGE SPACES FOR RENT 6y THE MONTH
/ II store it - U IoCkâit - U k&p*& kay
the boycott of qoca Colt. . 4 ti Kay Elgie Try our . s
Phil Weller classifieds!
WPIRG , â -L\
- You rent ttie. space you require
SIZES AVAILABâLE: 5â~ 5â, 5â x lbâ, 10â i 10â lp: x 15â. 10â~ 20â, 10â~ 25â, 10â~ 30â -
\
R E P A I R S TO ALL M A K E S - S K A T E E X C H A N G E -
\ * SELF STORAGE tilNi WAREHOUSE _ -COURTESY TRAILER 555 Faiiway Road, Kitchener AVAILABLE _ I
I
Accobmod@ion iti. thb Vik@es . for the Winter Term 1~98% . 1 _- â, .:
âOn--campus, 5 - i0 minute walk to cYlassroom4 . All m-&s seven drays a week â â\ e-.. ~ _ T-elephonCn every room Cable TV inevery room (extra charge] â ,â â 1 Rooms dleaned and linen changedâweekly. â \ I i . \
T I,-. . Singles -(if available) $997<. I -.
Interconnecting $962 .. .Do.ubles $927 â . - - â.,
I ._
* : Please apply to: Housing Officâe , University of Waterloo Waterloo, Ontario . â
\ . ,
tiOti aLOCATED YEFRY CPOSG T6 THE !JNDVE@WiTY , 1
Man-Fri: . 65 University Ave; E. setlsam k 9p;ml 9am-9pr& , -Waterloo, Ontarit , Sun: loan-i -â6pm â
884-2091 X I , *Also at Plaza 561, Hespeler Rd, HWY-241 Cambridge, Galt, 623-0200 .â ,
;he.subject.:â ,:.. , _ 1 ,- , . *,- r* : ---. - L. solicited before *th& final Task .Fo&e repopt is - .
. . . draft&d. I ... . c L ââ . . ) . . . c â*Thi$,-&jc-fy &&&no powef to pi;t its* ,. â I .â âThere WS?@~ so&eâ&d faces at âthati&eeting,â
Cormu-lq.tion@ intp)yac;t.ice: ,â â _ . . ,+ +, says Pars,@d NnrJS âwas:toâbe alloyed. tb-meet
. . a f- â- with the ~@l+J!~~c~ in-the s&mer.asâa sjlecial * \ a.,. . ,â \
LâThe foim&n-of the -Task Fo-roe itself &ems &&cessioi! âNdw -ii: se&n&* ad@ .â,pakr, <bat the
-~T6~k#.orce w,iJl q&y &%w .t.he gtio&p âtâo provide ( ticouragirig. âThe ,r;iandate toâ- review . -&d - qrtitilateâ altt&atiVes -is a-broad .en&gh one to
! âciarifi&ioI;Iââ regarding -t!hair~%-PQbmissiqn. â3 ,* . s-titi& Jike tie .w-onât b-e ablâe to sit:do&n:with r
4$w.* +sta&al prcrgr~~S;,~~~p&sing-~o take. .; â 6$oi accoun#,ati it doii!-â-d& *6,-6ALG,>k,A cbLrl~rr+
thein to,a& questiolls and discuss ti&tt&s,â he :L-. dâ
&rGi$pation~ -projectiom
,odjr,has 00 poâwer 10 put i-ts rormulatlons into \ Jarge were interested as wel& .. r ,-c.â bragiice; &is a comrinitteeâ tq, fecomxp$bd. âThe- k bL. â%stea&tif orie or tw& â âa& &rce.? sWl,? siyâs th& mâanclaie âfdfiort _
-ten moreâpe:ople on thi PT c
bt~h to th& Colincil of Mipis]terg ,of âEd$âation, -T&k â Force, -w&h i;voâti âd âbe-- a burden,â. .S&id-
:atiada, an.! to the,Secret,+u$tif;Statebythe fall of _ . Trempe,, the Task Force.& accepting brief&âan&
âTh6 Canad& @u&t- Loan Act,? sta& ,an _ : â+ CJJZ&&c .($a: information patikage sent to provide badkgrouid fbr â-- , x. âI a j 3
Q$;lâ~and &Gin. liv bn&,of the*ajoGqncerns of â:-thst âover -600 orggnizations, bodies I,. ahd -â* potential submittbrs, âprovided for loan assistan+
indiiriduals had%een contacted.â The Ontayioâ âwâ [u-dent Feder~~ns,âgndâior~aniz~tjons such qs 7 .
,, : - z - to be granted to-students qga!ifyi- g for &dwi&ng â I .
hi, Ontario Federatjon of Stlidtits (QFS) w,ith . â .:â, \ 1 ,
r !âMost stGâdent tinions areâin tl â to puruse educ+ii on a @U-time . asis it the post- % ii .Mrs Ethel <Mc
â â â second&y level,~ ,il;hi, would, : without i such as-. . minister. in the&% h2~o~~~~*entâs scheme. : ~ - â .- . â1 ;. . -Mciella$ is .tia. &stance, - be unabl$ I to a@$eve their .&cad$tiic . Tl& -,.Vformafisn of âthe-, Task FarCe ,w& yeâ .8 â difâfrcultgwsition tgget-th,iti i$tâkChl â~poten@l.â , : Liâaisqti and -#~@31 nnouâtice-d by the C!ark G$&rnmedt as early.@ togethif biJiree I&. / â : â 9 .:, i 1 ,Participating provinces, ,such as Ontario, have the University: Af ,ct$ber of $979; to&- âinvest&te Gurrknt and ,_ â ; .â . 1, â\ â â :*Iâ â,- . . * â
I within the qmEnist
Deadlideg ihave-%een iet atid passed ftir -the -- pSo&aas of grants, burgaries; loan retiissions, and, .
rii-pâiised pSogram3 V &or - gti,verhment. â loans, < gather&$ of- &#&ati&%%d the feceiviqg &f
â-work study *program.s which comphment and are 1 , .?ntarloâgov.ern~â tisnts;akd @h&for&s of fina-ncial as&tan&! ad@inigtereQ-in associatiti eith the WLP. I -, +dministratlon .D:
, 1 -I â bri@s.;AT$he ~~~~~t~fffffffffffffffffffffffffffffff -point%i$.âjufie 1,: * lg@$- âf& â - âpolic$perso$&n . s The.Qntario S@d&t A&&#an& &&ram (&&) submission of briefs is see+bv OFS, for Fxample, ,, Such an appsi! - states 9s its Qbjediye t,he leticburagetieht - atid â
. â hs -fâcle#~ly âa$.upr&listic âda&â according ta that ,I students wondieril drganiza~~o~~~â,l.~.o~~:;:~~cent .j ewsletter: â!If th-e
?ssistqce -;bf 1 âacâademically qualified -and fin- .(@eenâs Park âi$ ;GOI
â y;. go.verr& irtb . 9 _ -.tie,f+$p inter? .--~npuj, ..:;:&f&l.f&-.: hub 1 ted in &t~Irig real an&$ly needy Ontario reside@â in &der.that they
a&$ ., ..Ga$&ed * might âhave ac&s%to@ostseconda~y edticaticiri.: the iyportanceiwl
missions I argum~nts~fo~~~pro3;9m,~ntg! the,n ghc$ Ltiou-ld T â
Uli;;lep the O&rio Study Gra$t Plmhgra@s a&: -- *
â st$?~~~~;~~u;,..d
realize that m&tâ,stu-deht III&S are io a difficult â available for the first fouTyears,of post-secdndary ed&ati&; corresponding to eight gent eligibility Iâ~ .only, ihat M&41 *.._
+pd$itiap to get @&mat&ial tqgether by June 1st.â , â yperiodg post-s_erconflary e&&ion undertaken in - adminisâtrationan 4 - It is notâ,known &t this time how mar&student uni&$ hhve managed to meet.the deadti&eor how
the pasf. in. @t,@@ or elsew~er~~is.~o+dere~ and ,-, bpt did not elabor part-time +$$~*is pra&ediagaifist Ihe fnaxiQum bi+groun&or PUi
the lack ogbpGparadQn@me will eff&t the qiiality 1) .pâer&&$bl~ eligi@it~~eriods; .A . â - âLbr &ppointmen*:tl / deputy miiGster2 of their submigsions.
Gbi BraCk;,UWâs âb$ef ,w& complet$ by the June ,(âsome sort @report wquld. be m.ad& , j several-reqtiests fc
= ,;yifj.wbjJ o~,-&&&+,b~t t& â : â Accoriling to *-o I
<. , Although, ,a&ording to Fideration researcher
., I dtie=datT, (slightljl_mbre +.a? onemonth aft& the ; l
Yoti fhe same fluor
-. advertisementsâ .hid 1 ap.peared) +&era4 &her âI mlnlst&s: wo~&$&~~&&,$ âthis â -_ j - *+:â. floor$the Mowa : stirdent federations :had beenâ.har&pre&d to c â WC?-SâfO bedone. . ,â _ . . _ _ .
-â .have,ha,d mush+to
gather and procqss the* necessary &formation.+ order to produce aâ brief tiy theâdea,dline.~NUSts Jeff . â.
âI â âIt i$ with these two types of assistance, CL@, and
s studeht aid.â y&y _% - the TaBk ForGeâ ia .-
Parr said-he belit?ved*thaât OFS, atid its eiuiv&le#\, - 6 <more importaInt$ OSAP, that sfudentjbderations inâ nâ. â- whtih they me& IV : &ganiz&ons QI Alberta, British Qltimbia, ti@va _ -\ On&i6 wij!. cog&n, themselves when they make
* âScoti& &d Manitoba, &,Gell &- @US and the - â âAsso&ia@ of dollegesâ Canada (AUCCj had âall=
th& r+ommknd&ions -to &e- governinbnt $ficiaie* â â ,â Finally, student
â their ske pt icis rni a - -- sitting.on the TaskLForqeS30m@ttee.
Finally?, the CMEC litis n$ agreed to make the final Says OF& â2t&
bee6 unable &I meet theâ Ju$e 1st deadline. The . : . Council of Onât&ria Universities -(COU) an-d, the
Ontario Councif ,,ef eniverbit y, Affqirs (OCUA) report. of the Task ppez p&&c. While student . . ?.
;ztew of student
ha4 both- c~mpQ$n&d of inapprop;ia& dead&es,::iâ â=. ,â fed+tions and @dent inteKe$ groups continue to _
â c#. foe full availahilit$ of @&committeeâs findings, + is -_ fiinishedLi We _ -; he$iaid. There fii;is-beenno official p&@$iirhof an . : the gpireratienâtgeyet has in &de no iritiv$ to com$$, ch&ges that&o1
extension to this early cut-off âdate;-but P&ter BirI, Say@ BFS?if the-Task, Force is @ally,ix$erested in ad . , NUS express& information officer.@ OFS, hasst&+d that briefs â broad- public dâ IsdusSion on;t+tdpic then it pust prov@cia! goyer are still being &ibmiâNedâand that the info&&ion a contained iri them will presumably be takenjnto
a$ee to see the final ,decitylisbf the;@tiup made _, piiblic as well.â
+ âTagkârorce /are.;na . into soliciting s
consideration.. â -â -The student assi$tance&ogr&s which the: â, :
* i â
;Whbq asked t&&eent o&he pbssibility of: 1 ..such
through st@em publiGation: GMl@,s Trempe st.#ed that 1 . -â. througIi$he;&ayi
Task For& will- studyâ w& .thos&%&&6d to the some so&;;jf resort wotild be mad6 âo&e why 06 . p submisgions.â k financial&e&d? of stud&s â(loan&& grant&for : -annthe but .6he ministers qwould.&odse howâ Said Parr, %veâ example) rather tl$+n ,those, basg :m wademic this-. was to beâdone. fien@e himself âcouldnâtâ I- the best, b& prer
: . a&ie$&ndt &,f. .â+tht+r: factorgsZ>-~..Ftie yarg@ say-w/hi& way-~hay.wo~ld,chooseâ a-nd said that :a 7 x - -;. . - ? ,I. - * - :
\ .
\ / lib .â . . 8
+ 1, ;,The J&%rryL Proieqt r : â > ,- â Q-f& Mu&- âDoâ%he ~$&&&â 1 _ :â .- â c~nfortn~ty of itie; ~âSho*ti&Stalââ, âghe
M$t Is Risinâgâ, âdâguaiant&d ball jerker, aid .I â ~ ,â,
, COlUmbia
-Ol$â-Dr. J., itâll be hard- to en&ion youâ - /shares vocal choreâs with lead Singer R&lph
gumn&g a mke b$side someone ,other Mormon, on âI$.& At A Glaric?â.
All in all,-Dr. J. makes cleatâthat he is, arid . . ;- th~s$@&.le&@~& &..-jLgw pro&: &+. t x
.-,;H- peti sotieâ rocking ditt@s -&out soniethirig : ., * _ lqJ$!.&Y&&&& . ~~Q$~ g&&&j&@*- Yw@â&g&
. -worthy of notick, âaed not just another i>l$ J< . oth@rihan-th&tyranical s~bjugationof liyy c fake. - â â . , â râ â 8
: C..<â ,. d ~~~.thr~u~~~~~~~~ring,processes~ r *Let The Musk Lb The ?&ins. smokes . of thought control in academia land (i%k j like an exhausted Ho&z&and should push
â â Fr$.$lj;â i â l l shell -otit -the pesos to, ptirkbas& _ Perrây; beyond?& pqgcho-barrier â of the I _ - . your::first vinyl ve\xation. 1 : âAero-mythâ he. had &come. .,. y â; â A *fWing Stdne reviewer stated that tI$s â_.) âRest assured Kiddies; ,this- album ;is; a :
\ .â w&s >:the fineqt â album Aercismith I *ever- _ L pleasaritâ break fr0.m j the ,e&r+creasing Ta 8 . rna~$I$. Personally, Iâd like, to shovie his , .monotony and homogenization :of Qtice
, ii preteâiitious geliitalia a&k up from wheqce I New Wave s&r$ick. , \ - l they, :-came; z h6weâv F~ r consideritig the
\ ostentatious ânatur/e of inost wiiters inâ the- â Welcome b&k heavy&eta{, 1 hello gi>od ;,
taste. What took $a-~? long? field; it -will - suffice to âsay;& âCheap shot _ ?, . . .
My -f&ourite cuts are the t.wo that cl& - .a otit*s<de t&o. âD&e ,Ydurself to Deathââ is
abptit a,kid whose patents are real hipâ. You / know the type. Dad got A âT-shirt custom madb -for, I@,. .Saying âGive Me Poât Not
/ ..+Qoz&~~ ayl&&+, well âf@he wee akigh- 1 ; ! tech Dev6 suit, She chaqged her âname :to
Xe+xâ. âI&adlinesâ is d songâabout some Of -the crazg- things people will dti to get--their
I blames in the- newspaper. Things like climbing a building in &b-ffeeiing <weather with no clothes on, or even detting jailed. It doesnât riiatter what you do, j&t so long as âA. ihundred million people-saw my. faceâ.
All in all, an- excelleht Album fr$ Mr. I Cooper! et., al. Rating: Aâ. â .â â , â
,. \ - \ âPeter Scheffei ^_
..a ~ Nazareth , M&&âiti Wgndqrland .
The trouble is thht the pyeviouâs st&$ient& quite tkue even without âthe/words âgood
!asâ. Yqu can get away with playing th&ame i stuff for âonly so long, maybe four albums. â
But. ten glbums?!?! Come on. g_uys, even , BhkSabbath-@ld. ehanw.en&h&*
even Kiss didnât-stay with the same sound. r I ask you again, pIetise-&nât~misunder- . stand-my ranting,-%&& Wonder&md is a,,
good râecord (but not great). It has enough heavy-metal h6oks to grab the male ,14- to l&year. 014 market and Iâm sure -that there will be a large nbmber â of people from outside this social class tbt would enjoy it too. Itâs . just that I was :a wee bit disappointed, th&âs all. Rating: EL
> - I Peter Scheffel â ._ - _
- A&M.- + .- ) I hadnât &tened to Nazareth too much
I Iâ 1â Evenix& Stqncjkds cpI/ 1 ?._ne Jags
&land I m . . . e
front cover since Manuel Charlton decided to be kriown 1 hree ot the tour taces on the as Manny (no connection) about five years r gaze at you expectantly. âBuy me,,, their
ago. ft tiasnât that I didnât like themâ, I did eyes plead. The fourth face is tot kingakay, (still do). Itâs just that I started to become his eves behind sunglasses. k ie is qui,te - interested in a lot of new groups and they % cert&n that you Ml1 buy this record.
kind.of go! lost il l the shuffle. Anyway, I was After all, The Jagssave dene everything
intkresteâd in hearing what they wereâinto possible to make thi â â 1s aloum seu. . nowadays. I was aware of their growth from- \ The cover might : catch you? âeyeinthe
1 a four-mati to a âfitie-tiari b&n& with the â-stores; with those fo ur modem yc Iungmnin . - e_ _ - addition of guitarist Zal Cleminson (formerly their f&%onable fashions standinginfront of -
â
Alice Qoper .
- wit_h tl%&ensational Alex Harvey Band) last a fashionably . modern building. - 1 nere-s a .l 1 I year, atid I also wanted to h@ar\ if he has-had ,catchy little logo for yoy to draw on me oacK
of âyour. jean jacket c â 1 1 any effect oti. the rest 6f Nazareth in their la&t album, Mu/ice. in Woriderland. ~ . . â,F On thâe inside are 11 glossy littl
. ..LL.h -,ce ?;,,A c,.. A AA .,:,
)r ouy on a oaage. Aa . -- le ditties, all
u1 WIIIL: 1 ale a:lllr=u IUI A.~*I. alfplay. They sing ever-so-sveec harmonies about vodern
f loye and. lust; about breaking a heart or having oti8 broken.--There are several arty song& whose âlyrics- ake id vague that you
-_ could spei7d .houisâ figuring, out their every meaning. Wotu! There are even a couple ofâ mellow.numb&s with which you can recline.
Theyâ.try to sducd ânew wavyâ, but not â na$y.-Ever+gossible rough edge has been
hew,tiâoff. Theyâve e\ien called in The Buggles, thdse n& masters of assembly-line pdâp who
â . recently joined Yes, tb remix several songs in hatâ11 help salves, wonât it? *
: , j . Flush the-Fashion .
W kner BT&hers %,
* The words â lice Cooperâ are going to 5
4 f ighite varying ..irntigtis -in ihk minds of -*-- sent people. Some will think only. of
le wierd guy. with a chickâs r&meâ, rs Will rec&ll (dr possib!ystill believe) the
stories that Alice us&d to cut off the heads of
differ , âScm @the]
live chickens on s!age,: or that he played _ Wally in Leave it to Beauer. .I donkbother
myself with &ch trivialities; to me, Alice Cooper r&&t -just one thing: the best , A --- - .- -f II-- .qn3- n- *- -1
, I - _-
fimerican rocK group QI me /u s. rerioa. Well, â those two.â words now mean .
sdmething else to me: Nush $39 Fushi@ is r -
, - oqe of the bett?r &bps ,tha% I have heard thic I marâ
,about âthe lowest life forms_ - could take pqt , p+lly. -Thatâs quite a stro.ng
. state&n+ +n S.L Iâ mdke, what , with --sornd. outstan+ IY,-C?IV X-- 41iu& ,havitig been reledse~ iri
i tweeti -past and- futu& mu&l exc&sid& tha na\ct civ ti .;ldnths, s(Pink Floyd; Clash,
byâb& part.26 _ ~~~-~+75~;~1 -tee )iâ&t Ibcai?,& help it. - I .- ~ :
â -It% -o&r. it ha&ened, and if I ,âso;nd - rcaIly llnc L1113 &record! ,I . 1 , â-
â sIig&& oveiwrouih? itâs because I inay be A Iâ- t- a ->ârne., first-rate -help in putting,
â T- â one ,df *the few. people \ with the intestinal . . ..V U.VUI.. ,sgether, including -.Paver 1All mc+nwr. in.w Elton Jbhn), Flo & .eddie,
. , coti,bo was &as p&e& a s pg writ&g-live &t %
allu ~1uuu~=l &y Thomas Baker (Queen, I â
G I&ge/Plarft, B&k +nson, âJagg& Cars and others). The ,resuit &â,. well, uh, -=lrhn T better 1gi6e the opibion of an exoeit.
?..:nuI$bei of square picas â(how d&es- bqe fit 3 nkrn 01 n
j squayq pica into a r6und burr&w? &f:$bo.ut that &hich I h&l h6ped o aGoid L â I-
mouthing similar, --. L..U.
- â different froti all,
s __ orece
they were both (very thâe âCooper albums that
!ded them. Very asto&, Shane, . ( _, thrhgh qtl;ongl.y, : right.- &om: âtfi& &&&ng , ..m..:..c< â@$
/L chords of, t;he?.&gst..;song: : NazpreihT has, _ always been u)hat, I like $0 refer to asâ a
F$ i
, .â âguitar bandâ (as opposed to iust being a â. band with âaâ guitar - _ 1 please-donât ask me to I
âexplain); and he fits -intq this format very well. (For an excellent exdmple of what this man cali. da/ with a suitar.â check ot the
1 b
SAHB (âwithout Alex)âYalbtii ~ourpla~. Btii Iâm getting off the subject.) All the Nazareih - --.- --__
,albims in the past *five years or- so were I produced by guita,rist Chdrlton, but for- -. w - /
%hotsâ at - both âPerry and Aero%tiith, â â donjâu&g tip chime&al cbmparisons be--. â L
, .
- \
-
to the album. . ,q .f Let The âMusic DQ -The ,Talking COI-&S
across^as a mainline dosage of u#ettered+. 1 un$l@d rock ân roll - itâs relentlessâ in 3% _
~ attacK..: Itâs raw, and before youâ &xp&lâ a - - , . - di&runtled high of, âOh yea;anqther Black *â ] ;. Oak Arkatisas sbecial,â let me tell yo;â that 7 .â this, album contaihs Some of theâfanciegt;
4. .&i&tic& @itar !icks . this side of sheer 1 spontaneity. .d- . -
P&y. has always/been & fast-drdw axe I ,. -âI . manipuâlatoc?. goo&g -Litgin Strats tiith t /
:. fiyper-spaceâ efficieficy. Check.out âBreak I Son&â the hlbumâs high tempo instrumentâal. /
\ \.
. Dice *in Wonde&nd thev em&&d the! c 1 he Jags even throw in .a cquple of reggae- s 4ervi;ces â_ of an outsid&.a
a---.# - -
auitaristâ- ----
A!ff like breaks. Thatâs getting popular qbw, @nât â h fans? Not too miuCh reggae, though @
@ âSkbnkâ _Ba.x&. (Areâ- &&I &&ning to it; -Rus g$f â understand whyâ I call N&areth a guitar 4 the white North American mai-ket wonât B g, band? Hope so.) buy undiluted I&& of the Black,Man, will . _. a.
Often referred to as a Chuik Berry âhit and : â missâ riffer, Perry p@esâ once and for all
,I. that the hand is quicker than the eye..â I.. , Joe strains his voca{âchords on âConflict â ; of. &terisstâ, Perryâs satiric jibe at_ the ,
Another big difference _ between- the Nazareth- of this record-âand thaât of my
âthey?â ._
Singer Nidk Watkinson splits. his-time â . . _A -- - tiieârriories i& vocalist I& MdCaffert,y. This 1 â - . between imitating Elvis Costello and Joe : 2 . _ .
+ gu) h&s the Ability ,to sing +&prise, - surprise); _ heâs not â%e screscher I re- I here is a very-good chance that you will member. He do$ 3 veiy good job on - like Euening Sta@urds. Thereâis also a good Cleminsonâs ballad âHeart Gârown Coldâ,â. I change that your,mymâand?&d will like it.â ,
,was trury impressed.. y Unfoitunately, t$e& chawes are .not
There is a good chaqce tl-i?j Ira Naymamwill like it. -.
enough. Donât getâme wrong, Naâzareth stillâ- I ddnât like it. 1 .
sounds aâ .:goqdâ;aF they did five years ago. 7 ,_ _. Tom-McNally
\ . - \_ .
Jackson. Canât go wrong. the?, can you? - A. a- - _
! .TheArts . .B&yies.. _ I Friday, July lâl., 1980. Imprint 9 - i
New - . L theatre will
0 featureart, \ â algd foreign film greats
For those of us who enjoy foreign language and what are usually termed ânon- commercialâ films, and those of us who donât wish to feel rushed into seeing a first- run film because it is only being screened for a week in thearea, there is some good news.
Cineplex corporation,, a Toronto firm, which has converted Kitchenerâs old Eatons store basement into a six-screen film complex held its opening ceremonies Wednesday July 2, and began operations the following day.
The philosophy behind the cineplex concept .is a rather simple one. Theatres with large seating capacities (and conse- quently large overheads and operating expenses) must attract an equally great audience and, hence, are limited to films which are expected to be commercially successful.
According to Cineplex, American rights for foreign films are usually acquired if the US distributor is satisfied that the film upon its opening in New York City will generate sufficient revenue to recoup the substantial costs required to launch the film there. New York is the most important urban market for such films and isthe centre from which reviews and other publicity eminates.
Because of costs, many motion pictures are never purchased and released in the US and are therefore unlikely to appear in Canada.
By increasing the number of screens along with the seating capacity, art, foreign- language and other films more likely to attract specialized audiences can be shown profitably.
Pelicans aid father/son relationship
Storm Boy, one of six films now playing at the recently opened Cineplex theatre in Kitchener, is a film adaptation of a childrenâs story written by Australian author Colin Thiele. First published in 1963, the book Storm Boy has become a standard in the Australian school system and has been introduced, in the last few years, into the cirriculum for -some school boards in Canada.
The book, while classified as a childrenâs story, should not be ignored by adult readers. It is written with a skill and a sensitivity which will not be lost on anyone.
Like the book, the film Storm Boy has an appeal which transcends age barriers.
It tells the story of a boy (Storm Boy) and his father, a man who is running away from something in his past. His escape leads them to The Coorong, an isolated and beautiful sweep of coastline south of Adelaide in South Australia.
The man, known as- Hideaway Tom (played by veteran actor Peter Cummins) lives with his son (12 year old Greg Rowe in his first film role) in a shack among the dunes. The pair survive on fishing but their living is subsistence at best.
Their existence remains a mystery to the boy and his questions are evaded by Hideaway Tom who seems to sink further and further into his own protective shell leaving his son more âand more lonely and
âAt Cineplex, the weekly operating costs â per cinema have been reduced significantly to allow a greater variety of these specialty films to be shown for a longer duration to Kitchener audiences,â says a press release from the firm.
Maria Braunâ at a time when Germany is- destitute.
. Everything is in short supply. Wedding dressed are traded on the black market for - shaving brushes and great literature is valued because it can be burned for warmth.
The theatre complex itself is more or less what one would expect: a great ..deal of functional and not wholly unpleasant decor
parallels her - most of it white. There~ are theatre cubes for seating areas, wall graphics giving directions to the various screening rooms, and the inevitable popcorn and soft drink counter.
Germany
Grief is a luxury and noble gestures are i3eformed with world-weary resignation rather than with pride. Only after her husbandâs apparent death is confirmed does Maria commit herself to another man.
Mariaâs husband Hermann returns to find her with the other man. There is a struggle
The sound, alas, is not what one would expect from- a new and obviously costly complex. Whether this is the fault of inferior speakers or of poor amplification in the projector is difficult to say, but the result gave an otherwise enjoyable screening of Fosseâs All That Jazz a rumble-and-boom soundtrack that was both frustrating and uncomfortable.
The adequacy of the screen, however,* was a pleasant surprise. In spite of Drabinskiâs confident talk about the âin- timacy of atmosphereâ provided by a small theatre, a twelve-foot screen sounded much too small to do justice to a highly choreographed multi-cast film. It was perfectly acceptable though; there was none of the feeling of shrinkage that one experiences, for instance, when one watchâ- es a film on a television screen and has to squint for the titles or the action during a long shot.
*
during which Maria kills her black lover to â â Rainer Werner Fassbinderâs The Marriage save her husband, but it is Hermann who
of Maria Braun is a good film. It has been shoulders the blame for the death and who competently written, produced, photo- is sent to prison. Again Maria must wait for graphed and performed. A few of the her one and only. She learns to use her perfromances are very good and some of feminine charms and her knowledge of the photography is excellent. English in order to win the favour of a
Hanna Schygulla, who plays Maria, is an German industrialist, an important job and a attractive, good actressâwho has been well good salary. photographed. She is not, however, a new Peter Marthesheimerâs script parallels Marlene Dietrich. I donât understand why Mariaâs progress and development with that her performance is being described as one of post-war Germany. Germany has pro- of the âgreatest ever to reach the screenâ. gressed from physical poverty and coldness
to materialsim and spiritual poverty and @ Director Fassbinder comments upon the economic and political ironies of the post- coldness. WWII âGerman economic miracleâ in this Maria is not unscathed. Although she movie. He also deals with the interplay maintains a degree of aloofness from the between idealism, materialism and cyn- daily business affairs she must deal with, this icism. self-proclaimed âMata Hariâ of the German
The problem with The Marriage of Maria economic miracle becomes confused and at ] Braunâ is that it lacks unity between the times even cruel. She has become street- storyâs intellectual base and the suppoosed wise in a business sense but her emotions humour and humanity of its characters. The remain somewhat naively idealistic. film lacks any real warmth of spirit. One or She sees Hermannâs return as an two scenes manage to achieve intellectual eventual panacea. The audience is never, ~ and artistic integrity but generally humour given a chance t;b see much of how Mariaâs and tears have been scattered about the hopes for her ideal turn out. I wonât reveal script rather haphazardly. the ending but I must state that it seems like
Characters in this picture are least a self-indulgent mess to me. believable when they laugh or cry. Most of Throughout the movie, Fassbinder com- the roles seem rather * flat and like ments on the frailty of tender emotions in a cardboard. Odd, for a film that is supposedâ world filled with violence and materialism. to deal with communication and emotion. he seems pessimsitic as to their ability to
Maria Braunâs actual marriage ceremony survive in the modern Germany he is the filmâs starting point. Her city is being perceives. bombed and she and her groomâmust tackle Fassbinder, however, is clearly not in the fleeing minister in order to get him to control of the film. His social and political a sign the necessary legal documents. message is clear but the reasoning behind
Mariaâs husband is quickly hustled off to certain twists of plot and, cinematic â/ the Russian ,front and is reported missing at techniques is often difficult to understand. the end of the war. Maria maintains hope The endingâs significance seems overblown. that her âone and onlyâ will return and she If at times during the film you find yourself remains a romantic during a time that is confused, donât chastise yourself. It may âbad for emotionsâ1 well be the fault of confused writing and
She begins her search for the happiness direction. Marg Sanderson , that she equates with her husbandâs return ~ Dan Kay
The variety offered at this new complex is impressive. Included in the opening attrac- tions is a second-run award winner (All That Jazz), foreign films (Fassbinderâs Marriage of Maria Braun from Germany, Newsfront from Australia) a childrenâs picture (the much acclaimed Storm Boy) a domestic offering (The Changeling) and an Olivier classic (Henry V). A 3-D âcreatureâ movie is scheduled in the list of upcoming features.
With this surfeit of choice one can perhaps expect to pay a b,it more than at, say, Elora, where variety exists, but where only one film at a time is screened. _
All in all,âit should be interesting to note the reaction of local movie-goers to the increase-, in variety.â With the ~opening of Cineplex, Kitchener has effectively doubled the number of its theatres. This may well be what theatre-goers have been waiting for, for auite some time.
troubled. creates instead moving character reversals. Quebec) are for the most part Hollywood The arrival of two poachers who callously
shoot down a pelican turns the boyâs life around. He meets Fingerbone Billy (played by David Gulpilil, who also starred in Walkabout) a wandering Aboriginal who has taken to living off the land in the Coorong. Fingerbone frightens off the poachers and together with Storm Boy adopts and rears t
The father witnesses his sonâs blossoming and learns, both from the boy and from Fingerbone Billy, once again to trust and to be tolerant.
The film is a tribute to the Australian film industry. Despite the fact we, here in Canada, seldom have a chance to view any Australian productions, they have dev-
epicswith token Canadian content. -
Storm Boy was made for $300,000. Itâs doubtful that the Canadian industry could make a promo for one of their films on that budget.
Withâ the opening of Cineplex, however, the. three orphaned pelicans, recent off- eloped a strong home-grown industry audiences in town will have a chance to see a spring of the poachersâ victim. renowned for their high-quality work. good variety of films from Down Under.
This chance occurrence, reminiscent of so The situations which have created a need Coming up soon are My Brillian t Career with many boy-meets-dog stories, is not, how- 1 for domestic film industries in Canada and Judy Davis and The Chant of Jimmy ever, tautological. The sensitivity of the film Australia are similar but here the com- Blacksmith both recently-made, full-length (and the book for that matter) and the power parisons end. Australian films are Australian of the cinematography avoids bathos and films while Canadian films (outside of
features. In addition Cineplex will offer a wide selection of high quality European films.
- c comedy, &ith a mystery story holding it Marney Heatley as Amy impresses Ian! Allen :I together, (That is a generalization. The final as Trevor in a big way in Sumwatâs Murder
stews. qf the play were, not funny, were-in / â fact high19 dramatic, and at both perform-
Take Two. Photo by Preston Gurd
atices vastly effective.),., _ i IFwould have been better if the audience
âhad let it stay a mystery, though. Probably not - that would require more of a
: : The plot of Murder Take Two is the
recitation of the plot than space provides. So
$ lstrongest point of the pa&age. It is a good. âyouâll have to guess. Or contact a writer.)
: â.* -1 mystery, it has elemen& âof a good comedy, Jim Gardner, as Mark, is probably the
â. --, and allow$ for decent character develop- most correct decision of the show. The man
âi-: -rent, thqugh tithin fairly narrow limits,. I whoplayedâDr. Whomâand whoperformed
i et should qy ,that âtoo much of it is devoted to t âThe Show So Farâ in recent FASSes,
i!*,: qornedy;?, this is not,, _ to -say that the displays depth that we knkw wa.$ there, but
i:;~~;?~yst&iousâ elements. are. slighted. The corn& out much more clearly in this role than
~~;~p&& â@$&.&Qn is brillja&t, though to .a any other. It wouldnât be telling tqo much to
~&+tee $the more intektual mysteries, it s&that-heâs the keG to the play-thatâs there
i;â ] â @igb t &@ simplistic. for you to guess in his facialexpressions and
2; , L ._ That trul$ impress& eeâ.is that ihe attitudes throughout the play but these are
;$â: resoluti& âof the play 4 not; so far/as I can easy to misinterpret without knowing the final resolution. Watching him the second
,iâ I perceive, ,âGardeneriall\)â, or in the styleâ of * time through, I couldnât help but admire the 1â 7 -- .
;: . i * ,
1 J . , Sumwat Theatre. Wh&t does it mean to iâ) you? -It: .r&ans Jim Gardner, Ian! Allen,
any of the other writers. Familiarity with their
!.,â Gil,lian Tâeichert, Marney Heatley, Ron style; I think, made rnh about 50% right in guessing whodunnit; but the true answer was
. - Dragushan, Be!mie Roehl, and probably a â couple ofjâother, people U+O canât get acting
, , outlandishly unusual for these people. F Unusual or not, itâs good. - / out-of their blood after FASS is over; it means (I really wonder if I should teil ,the eriâdin& :, almost the only completely student-run
amatetir drama production of the summer; : and up until this year itâs meant the riotous 1 good humour of FASS with a much more â cohere$t and sophisticated script. : On Wednesday night of last week Ivieweh
a really gripping, in some places frightening, . murder mystery. Oh; it certainly had many
elements of comedy in it, but that was mainly X in the realm of comid relief. Some spots of the : .play certainly needed that release from tension- , portio& of the play wereâquite electrifying. 8 Saturday night, the audience was looking â for laughs. And found them. Although the
cast told me,singly afid in groups ihat they I. were trying to uash la{ghs, I couldnât help ; but think that t 1 ey hammed it up a little in ; response âto the audience. The Saturdayâ
âI performance had more of the elements of a
fact that his face showedthat he knew what was happening, what itall really me&-hut nobody else, especially the audience, did. ,
It is interesting to contrast -Mark with Ian Allenâs Trevor. Trevor is a clown character, funny, and meant to be (except for one scene
- where he shows some sensitiv?ty - and that moment works well.) In Itâs Just A Stage Heâs Going Through (the first Sumwat) Ian
-. I plays a similar character, but one with more brains. In this play, the brains are given to Gardnerâs character. I Should say thit Gardner should have- been given more humour; Ian should have kept some.of the
/insight; it would have made him make three- dimensiQna1. But it is hard to work everything
- into a script, and âIan is a natural clown. Another interesting pairing is Gillian
Teichertâs Jocelyn and Marney Heatleyâs Amy. Anyone who has seen these two actre+ses over âa period of a couple of years and who haye enjoyed their development as I have, must have been pleased to see them âswitch rolesâ. Usually Teichert plays the
â bitch, the âhutchâ character, the self- righteous independant type.
Heatley, onde Sarah Goodbody (I think â that say5 it all) as a rule plays much the
opposite. In Murder sheâs a passionately angry, Machiavellian shr&w who mercilessly dominafes her husband and who is prepared to use her not inconsiderable, physical
r
The others (and Iâm sorry they cannot be dealt with in gi-eater detail) - Linda Carson playing Roberta, Richard LeBer as Ed, Bernie Roehl as Keith, Ron Dragushan as Daniel and Ian Chaprin as Sam were more than adequate. Roehl and Chaprin deserve special note for the formerâs character- izatiog in a difficult role; the latter for being able to hide a really fine talent for so long. Chaprin has great potential. -
Murder Take Two is up to the standards we have come to expect from these people and if you missed it youâve missed a fine sample of amateur theatre.
Keep it up, Sumwat. John w. Bast
Life, and ultimately human life, emerge> from the.water. Now the cradle of life is being poisoned.
â/
2 Itâs taken fiGi albu&, an untimely suicide, a gradual yet
â pqw aln&t complete lyrical ;, conversion- from French td â1 ,English, and thiz unbridkd
âFT persistence td succeed in a
j-. - field where tiany falter-but
Cano has finally begun to 1 : enjoy t& fruits on iti en- â! 72 &+vourr, _ :i
Ii With their first two albums, Cano stryggled< undef the
,: ,sh-ackles of a primarily French _ heritage in an Anglo-orienfeâcl
2 ryecording industry and co?- : sumer market.. With that
hurdle cleared, Eclipse, fhe ; third album came ~ acr&s
heavily insrjir.ed by the suicidal . â i â demise df d An&e Paietient, : ,the-. groupâs Y inspitiajional-
: Ieadei and &&ted frere to - barsd memberâ Ra&el.
; : ; Rendezuo& w&he groups ,. musical &sw&r t6 a skeptical i &oild whq ~ieigqdâ accept- â .: ante -, of ,âihe Sudbury Cbl-
v lective becauseâ of\ their un- _ â p&lictabil$y /and inability. to
cafiture pv recognizable market. t
Entliusiasm was growing ; â;. md through the rigours of
: .constant touring the band i â-so& realized that there was
â sufficient space for a bilingual :. ,z â entourage of âmusicians ln
Iâ E@sh Ame@ca,. : The Federatiovf Students
1â : +otdiallp. inet& LOU tdbpen ;â 9i âyo$râ heart. to a iband that has : : ;suffered all atid. managed to âj; shine all the b&&&r. -â- $ee you on the Common at
i 3 2pm, Sat&day,â, the 12th of I ~&.hly. Au resekvqir. â, .
BLAKE EDWARDSâ D(JDLEY MOORE JULIkANDREW.5
60 DEREK
~~~~ LTTINGED TALE ABdlJT A M A N WlTH DCTfIAORMhlARY- POWER$ . . . .
âBates is absohitely superikâ - Jay Scott GLOBE
charms against the rather eager Trevor for her own en&.
This switching of roles seeined to doâboth actresses considerable good. Teichert carried the role off well, playing with a sensitivity that did not overstep (an easy descent) into melodrama. Perhaps the true tragedy of the play is that her character is ,killed. She doesnât deserve it in any way, but she gets it. We are sorry she does.
Heatleyâs biggest problem has always been her voice. Sweet and husky when low, she tends to grow a trifle nasal when louder. I have found this an occasional distraction in earlier works, but in this case it works to her advantage. ,
-ACID RAtN A Public Forum: Examining what former- Environment Minister John Fraser. has called âThe most serious
--environmental problem Canada has ever faced.â
- mm Kain: 1 ne alent Lrisis; ;,;?iizir, a 25 minute slide show ,$â :.::;:;. ;..: ,,,.., y::::. .&gg$fj
_-
+-
0 A presentation by.WPIRG 1: researcher Phil Weller, and
l -A question, answer and discussion period with
- ,------ -I*19cm- , . : ~~.~~~.~~~~~~~.,:~.~
researchers from t,he Dept. . of Biology and the Dept. of
h
systems &sign Engineering, u. Qf w. I
4 I
.
, .Tuesday, July 15 7.30 pm â Physics Building, Kdom 14k - '
University of Waterloo Sponsoked by the Wa@oo Public Interest Research Group (WPIRG)
. .
Because the fees of UW students helped fund * the publication of this book WPIRG offers : this book to students at the cost price of $2.50 per copy. Non-WPIRG members $4.75 A
This timely book details the terrible environmental tdll caused by acid rain and examines the causes and various solutions to whatâhas been called the EnvironMental Crisis of the Eighties.
i Available at the WPIRG OificelSCH Room 223, University ofâ Waterloo
i Friday, July 11,198O.~lmprint11 ,L
/
âCaGdian athletic scholarships , tabledfor one year by CIAU
region to counterbalance the disadvantages of its small schools and small pop- ulation.
Ontario and Quebec, on the other hand, haire the advantages of geography and population: the former keeps travel coZ?ts to a minimum while the latter provides abundanât raw material for their athletic contests. âWe canât be too . smug and demanding in our position,â said Totzke in reference to the position taken by Ont,ario schools which, in ieneral, are opposed to scholarships but may tolerate them in other regions.
âThose schools that want them (scholarships) will have them, those that donât, wonât have them,? Totzke commented.
indicati ve of some _ kinks need to be worked which
out.
The issue of athletic scholarships in Canadian universities: was voted down, then in a second vote was passed before being tabled for on/e year at the CIAU (Canadian Intercol- legiate Athletic Union) meetings two weeks ago in Halifax.
An ad hoc committee -composed of three support- ers of the scholarship proposal and three people opposed to the idea was formed under the chair of Bob Pugh, CIAU president.
They will begin meetings in August and will prepare three position papers for September, January and next spring.
The kinks to be worked out are many. For British Columbia, a province on the verge of instituting its own program, the intent is to keep B.C. athletes in the province. For the Atlantic provitices, the intent, ac- cording to Totzkk, would be to attract athletes into the
This rather confusing series of events indicates a certain amount of mixed feelings on the part of athletic representatives from across the country.
According to UW Athletic Director Carl Totzke, âThere is a strong majority (of schools] that want schol- arships.â Nevertheless, theâ reasons various regions may want scholarships are as diverse as their geography qnd the tabling of the issue is
From left to right: Sharon Lane, Sylvia Malgadey and Lori Dinello (identity offourth runneris unknown) raceto wirein 100mehurdles. photobyAlanAdamson
Final summer meet for At-henas The heart of Ontarioâs
tobacco country mgy seem an unlikely setting for a major track meet. Never- theless, the Tillsonburg Kinsmen Invitational Track , Meet last Friday drew athletes from Canada, the U.S., and Great Britain, not to mention the University of Waterloo, which was rep- resented by three of last yearâs track-and-field Ath- enas.
The most- noteworthy Athena performance came in the womeânâs 800 metres. Lisa Amsden, in only her second race of the season at this distance, took th6 lead at 500 metres and coasted home to win-in a meet-recdrd time of 2:12.0, improving her own nersonal best bv a full secoid and ahalf. â highlight of the meet was a swing.
Sylvia Malgadey easily sub-four-minute mile by reached the finals of the 100 Rich Harris of Colorado metre hurdles, and there ran State in the final individual 13.9 seconds, two-tenths event of the night. It appears faster than Sharon Laneâs that this is the first mile run old meet record. Unfort- under four minutes in unately, this was good Southwestern Ontario, a enough ofily for third place comment mdre on the state as Lane, Canadaâs premiere of the mile in Canada than on sprint hurdler, finisher first, Harrisâ performance, which followed closely by Lori was far from extraordinary Dine110 of Chicago., for him.
Faye Blackwood, showing signs of fatigue as her long track season draws to a close, ran the 400 metres in 56.0 secon,ds, cansiderabl-y off her personal best, but still finished in the medals in third place.
The major remaining fixture on the summer track and field schedule is the , Ontario Seniors Champ- ionship in the first week of August. After âthis meet, competing Athenas will have about a month a/rid a half before. the collegiate cross-country and track seasons move into full
For the few spectators not related by.Blobd or friend- ship to any competitors, the Intramural soccer action bet ween Simba (shirts) and the Caribbean Students (skins). Simba
wonZ-0 photobyJesusZarzar .,
Itâs play off time in Inttiamurals .I Muscle up through strength training b -
the Lakers outclassed the. Pick-ups 76-47.
In the B championsjips, â Theâ Hookers were top ranked as the only unde- .
After an enjoyable, rain Approximately 100 teams in 4 activities will be vying for nine different Intramural championships in the next 10 days. This summr, the
-calibre of play and sports- manship has been at an all time high. There has been extremely close games, superb officiating, very few injuries, conduct problems or defaults. This augurs well for all concerned going into the final rounds.
free schedule, teams are diligently preparing for the playoffs. The games begin Saturday at 8:30 am and extend until 7:00 pm that night. In the event of rain, all games will follow the same format on , Sunday. There will be three different championships, âA level, B level (top 16 records) and B consolation (remining 12 teams).
In A league, 5 te/ams are vying for top spot. Bit disturbers have the best record but the Maple Buds are a close second. Mudhens, Roots and Masterbatters are capable of upsetting anyone.
In B league, the Anar- chist are fanatical about being ranked first with a perfect 8-O record. âHowever, there are several teams that are potent&l ov&throtiers - Rowdies, Gravy Sucking Pigs and Math 69ers. Watch out for the Ret Rowdies as the upset team.
This is the fourth in a six-part series of articles written by Bruce l6Ioran of the Campus Health Promotion office in Health Services.
thâe specific joint angle at which the isometric force is being applied and that there is often an undesireable riSe in blood pressure. âL
Isokinetic devices allow the muscle to work against a resistance that permits
- movement at a present fixed speed. This --enables the msucle to generate maximum
tension throughout its entire range of motion. Used extensively by the sports medicine and physical rehabilitation disciplines, this method of training is not feasible for many due to the expense.
The most conventional method for imprbving strength is weight training. The individual may progressively add resistanck as strength increases, thus providing feedback in regards to im- provement. Strength gains are greatest
â when a heavy weight is used for six to eight repetitions: Muscular endtirance may be improved by using a light weight for twelve to fifteen repetitions. In the beginning stages of your progyam start off slowly; doing too much at once provokes muscle stiffness and discour- agement. Proper breathing is also very important; the basic rule is to exhale on exertion. if you are training to improve strength for a specific sport, train the hustles with exercises or movem.ents as
j close as possible to those used in the actual skill.
Although weight training provides an excellent means for developing and maintaining strength and endurance, it does little to aid weight reduction due to the relatively low caloric expenditure. With weight training being performed in short bursts of activity, it iâs also relatively ineffective in improving cardiovascular fitness. Next weekâs article will discuss how to use âaerobicâ activities to improve heart and lung efficiency. Ira Nayman
feated team in all leaguek with a 70 record. North D Alumni and the. Leaders cou,ld unravel the Hookers. , North 1 96eraand Impaired may sober up and shock a few people.
For an exercise program to be complete it must, include some aspect of strength training. A strength training program provides extra energy which is needed to complete daily activities with relative ease, improves physical appearance and enhances performance in many different sporting activities.
Strength is the maximumtension that a muscle can ex_f3rt in a single contraction. Muscular endurance refers to the ability to stistaintmuscle contraction. Muscular strength and endurance is specific to the muscle group. An individual may display high levels of strength and endurance in the leg muscles, but may have relatively low levels in the arms. Therefore, in designing your program, you should be very careful in selecting egercises for the different areas you want to improve.. Muscular strength and endurance are closely related, a stronger person is able to work longer at a specific task than a weaker person. However, both can work for the same time if the task is equally proportional to the level of strength.
To improve strength and endurance the muscle must work aâgainst an applied external resistance. This type of âover- loadâ on the muscles may be provided through isometrics, isokinetics or weight training.
In isometrics, musctilar tension is developed without shortening themuscle involved. This is accomplished by pushing against immovable objects such as a doorway frame or against opposing limbs. When initially introduced, great strength gains were reported using isometrics. However, recent findings suggest that strength gains are limited to
Womqiâs â Soccer Basketball .i Very keen and close
In womenâs basketball the TNT Tigers, paced by Kim Alexanderâs 20 points, s- defeatedâthe Cheetahs 52-32. Ann Kuehn notched 6 points for the Cheetahs. All State was victorious over St. Paulâs by a score of 24-17. , Ellen Sutton contributed 10 points for AI1 Sttite. Lynn Bourinot, sank 8 points for St. Paulâs. All State picked up their second win of the 1 night when they outscored the Ball Handlers 32-23. Playoffs begin July 17 at 7 pm in the main gym.
competition has been the featur summer soccer lea- gue. It appears as if anyone can upset on any given day. In both leagues, no one went through undefeated.
In A league, Dirty Feet are j ranked first with defending
champions Caribbean Stud- ents ranked seventh. This league has been so close that anyone of the seven teams could emerge victorious6 It should be noted that the âfeetâ have tiever won an A championship and in a foot game, maybe, this is the year of the âfeetâ.
In playoff action, Math will meet Simba who are hot, while the stuggling Caribbeans will face a surging Village 1 to decide two semi-final spots. Mon- tezumaâs Revenge will battle East Quad for the right to meet the âfeetâ in the other seim-final.
Menâs Basket bhll In A league, Activated
sludge have dredged their Co-Ret
slow Pitch to the number one ran-king with a 6-l record. However, this level is known for its curious upsets.
The Dogs knocked off t&e Northern K@cks 4.8-32 end will meet Activated Sludge in the semis. The other semi will see The Lakers and 4A Kin battle it out as Kin beat 2B Mech Eng 44â36, while
There will be an org- - anizational meeting, Thurs- day July 17 in PAC 1001 at 4:30 for those interested in a Co-Ret Slow Pitch tourney.
You must sign u^p in PAC 2040 by July 14th. The tournament will begin July 18. s-oft ball
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