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                    <text>�The Argus Page 2 · March 7. ·1991

continued on p,a ge 8
Perhaps the assumption of
Any
commentary or edia student as being white and
middle class is the source of torial messages are those
In the wake of Black Histhe problem. .Perhaps ~e of the authors and are not
tory Month Iain disappointed
problem is the assumption of necessarily those of LUSU
with the apparentlack ofcon..:
the supremacy of European or Lakehead University,
sciousness-demonstrated by
ideas. Anti-racist education and may not reflect the
my peers and the public at
challenges the hegemony views of the entire Argus
membership ~
large. Consciousness of iswhich suggest that whites are
The Argus welcomes
sues of race or culture Is not
mentally, morally and culsigned
letters to the
the exclusive responsibility
turally superior.
.
Editor-in-Chief,
however
of Blacks or people of colour
In the ftnal analysts it is
the
paper
reserves
the
but instead is a part of our
not so much the intent of
right
to
reject
or
edit
history and education which
education which is important
any submission. We will
is often neglected. This lack
but rather is the effect. We
not print anything • that
of responsibility has been
must attempt to seek the bias
goes against our editodescribed in sociological terof an educational system
a bias.
rial policy set by the
minology as "miseducation"
which gives us a great deal of membership.
The signillcance of not
and the solution which _is
the same tnfonnation. As Enid
~ving Black teachers or
commonly offered is termed
Lee put it "we don't want to,
professors ts historically
WORLD'S FAIR
"anti-racist education". •
symbolic and disturbing to
teach monoculture at the
Enid Lee spoke at Queen•s
Black youths. The fact that
expense of other cultures
CELEBRATES NATIVE
UIJiversity last year about
Black writers, movies, ideas
because to do so would be to
developing anti-racist educaGENOCIDE
and accomplishments have
teach an impoverished edution. Inherent in the notion of
largely been suppressed is
cation."
by Anne .lfcKfnnell
developing an anti-racist
v1rtually un1mown. Thfs ts also
VICTORIA (CUP) - Fart of
education is the foregone
true for many other groups
.l;Jradley Bair
the "age of discovery" theme
conclusion that our presently
because of the legacies of co4th Biology
for the 1992 World's Fair is a
established educational syslon1altsm and slav
•
celebration of the 500th anniversary of Columbus' arrival
in America.
But for native people in
Canada the world exposition
in Seville, Spain, ts nothing to
celebrate. ,
"It's a reai slap in the face
for native people to hear that
our oppressors are having a
party to celebrate killing our
people and committing .cultural
genocide through the use of
force,tt said Alex Jamieson, a
native student and a member
of the University of Victoria's
aboriginal rights group. '
. I.any Guno, a native New
Democrat member of the legislative assembly, agreed, saying the 1992 World's Fair w1ll
serve only to commem.orate 500
years of native oppression.
"People must ask themselves
why, after 500 years, have the
Western notions of individual
rights, equality and all those
wonderful values failed so totally to improve the conditions
of life among the aboriginal
communities," said Guno.
In response, some native
people want Canada to boycott
the fair which runs next year
• from Apr. 20 to Oct. 12.
"'Ibere are still questions
about whethe!'we have the tfght
to self-government or the ca\
pacity to govern ourselves
despite thousands of years of
evidence," said Guno. "It is a
perfect time for aboriginal
people to focus attention on
these questions by boycotting
the.World'.s Fair. •
"I think there will be an
·overall 1&gt;ublic llllderstanding
~~~~,
that native people do not want
to celebrate an :event that destroy.ed .systematically our inCanada, you would join an educated, experienced
If you have an interest in accounting, why not consider
stitutions of government, sociand ethical group of professionals equipped to pursue
a career with Canada's property/casualty, or general
ety
and culture ...
successful-careers at the local, provincia1, n ational or
insurance'industry? In fact, the indu,stry offers -a wider
Jamieson
said 1t would be a
even international level.
variety of career choices than yqu ever imagined.
symbolic
gesture
for Canada
Choice,
challenge,
satisfaction
and
security.
They
Accountants yes, but also systems analysts, lawyers,
to
boycott'
the
fair.
are just some of the rewards you'll enjoy through a
. ' managers, loss prevention engineers, investment
"We must try to dispel the
career in the property/casualty insurance industry.
specialists, investigators, marine underwriters, aviation
belief
that when the rival comFor more information , contact Les Dandridge,
adjusters and many more. The choice is yours.
•
munity
arrived they saved us
B.A.,
AIIC
at
The
Insurance
Institute
of
Canada,
Genernl insurance is also an industry that encourages
from
being'Savages."
481
Uoi:versity
Avenue,
-6th
floor,
To_ronto,
Ontario
you to acquire its own l~vels of professionalism.
Aboriginal ·people in North
MSG 2E9 (416) 591-15721'ax: (416) 591-1678.
As a Fellow or Associate of The Insurance Institute of
and South .America will be
holding a conference in 1992
to discuss the impact white
people have had on native
peoples, Jamieson said.
The Graduates of The Insurance Institute of Canada.

Dear Editor

tern is racist and must be
changed. Enid Lee questioned
why there is such resistance
to this ldea. The very nature
of racist education, Canadiari's form of subtle racism,
and dental for the sake of not
feeling guilty were: some of
therationalizationsofferedto
explain this resistance.
When history books depict
the history of the world as the
history· of the western world,
th~e- books are denying
people of colour their own
history while teaching that
their history is not worthy of
study. For this reason the
body of knowledge which is
~hosen must be reviewed.
Whose culture and experience is=reflected' here must
qe analyzed. The celebration
of Columbus Day is a typical
example of reiftcatlon of white
culture. The arrival of Columbus marked the beginning of the annthilation and
enslav~ent of eo les of

colour by European peoples.
To ignore this fact is to celebrate without acknowledging
injustices. 1llis is a distortion of history.
Part of the undoing antiracist education is the deeuropeantmtlon of education.
To begin this we must exam- . '
ine the underlying principles
of what we consider education. The eurocentric cultural
preference w:Juch ts inherent
within our current educational
systeitl- is usually seen as
being •neutral". This alone is

..

~Dle of Canada's best a c c ~.tninds
. the.• lllSUnlD.Ce_
•
are m.
.....:...~..... ,.
•

Canada's Insurance Professionals

�I

,

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - T h e Argus Page 3 March 7, 1991 .

ARGUS ET,ECTION GUIDE
Tony Le Blanc: Vice President Finance
'

What do you foresee the
revenues from the Student
Centre In it's first year to be
-and what do you plan to do
with any surplus or deficit?
I am convinced-that we l£lll
have a surplus next year. To
begin with, we will not be giving
"liquor Services" a percentage
of sales any more--the use of
Cafeterias for staging events
will stop. We w1ll be draining
potential food revenues from
the cafeteria ~cause the quality of food w1ll be better in our
building. The Centre is also
capable of hosting banquets,

receptions and other special
functions which we, LU, or the
City of Thunder Bay may use.
Now that the capacity will be
700 and programming will be
intensffted, together with the
excellent media on the new
buildingsofar, there can ONLY
be a surplus. I would spend
the surplus in three ways. First,
I would ~et up a fund for capital
improvements so we may advance with technology and make
repatrs to items that could break
down. Secondly, I would increase the volume of services
and programming. Lastly I
would put the money back into
the Centre to subsidise the
prices of food and alcohol-making= food and drinks inexpensive. It is not fair for LUSU
to squeeze more money than

we have

to from the students

who own the building.
As VP Finance, it ls your
duty to put together the
Student Handbook. Considering the current recession
how would you go about
making tt profltabfe and use-

ful?
•
First off, placing your priority on an economic drive to
make money, may seriously
risk the quality of the event or
servi'ce being planned. As a
"non-profit" corporation operating in a captive market without competitors, the VP Finance
!llllfil consider · the Students
needs first rather than focusing on a p~rsonal accompli~hment to make money and look
good. Without another Hand-

book on Campus to compete
with, the elected person may
have their objectives misgutdea
as to the importance of quality
verses a source of revenue. I
can guarantee you that with
my experience so far with producing the Handbook last year,
I will prevent it from losing
money and, at the same time,
retain the level of excellence
that you expect.
As for the "Space Crunch"
on campus for Clubs and
organizations, how would you
like to see the problem
solved?
By coordinating the influence and power I've had with
chairing various committees,
•more Club offices will be erected
with the proper funding. I have

already given 5 office space~
away this year and expec1
another 5 to be gtv~ out nexi
year, with the privacy they hav&lt;
always asked for. Through tht
work I have accomplished thm
.far, there will be m -spac&lt;
crunch" for Clubs next year
As for funding, I have ~
urged Clubs to spend their al
located amounts. Any_ Clut •
president can 'tell you that Nex:
year, in order that inore Clubf
can effectively spend theL
budgets I will permit them tc
prepare their own budgetai)
requests and, I will continue tc
allow them the opportunity o
re-allocating money. Increas·
Ing the level offunding to Club~
by 10-15% of LUSU's annua
income in order fo match wha•
it once was; is a prime concerr
of mine.

Wendy
Snelgrove:
Vice President
.Finance
serious problem, quite probaperiod, the annual payment is
because overstafflng and addido not believe that any mor,
bly the Aesthetics Lounge w1ll
be converted into more club
office space. In addition many
departments have already offered space to academic clubs.

How do you plan to deal
with the issues of club fundIng and the current lack of
club space?
I believe that the club funding situation will not be solved
simply by giving more money
to clubs. I plan to discuss, with
each club, areas they would
like. monies increased, new
areas for.funding. and the 5&lt;:JJ/o/
50% contribution funding formula. I will.then design a new.
club budget form, and mailitto
club presidents over the summer. I also believe that the use
of the Study as a rental facility
will give clubs and residence
a,n excellent way to raise funds.
Finding space for clubs is a

Explain the financing of
the Student Centre.
•
The Student Centre costs
approximately $3. 7 million,
including construction costs,
professional fees (architect etc.)
furniture and equipment, and
assorted other costs. The
University will take out approximately $2. 75 million dollars in
. promissory notes for LUSU by
the end
of
constructlorr.""LUSU ••
"
... .\
is charged
prime rate of interest which is caJ,culated on a
monthly basis. Everyyear. the
Student Centre levy is collected
by the University and used to
pay off this debt. At the rate of
11 % and a 25 year repayment

-

$335000. Next year our levies
should be over $370000. The
excess monies may be directed
towards the loan, retiring it
more quickly, may be used to
overcome an· operating deficit,
or may be directed towards
services and programming for
students.

tion~ staff training will be
needed in the first year. We
should still make a profit, and
I would return this to the
students in the form of additional programming, additional
services, increased club funding etc. I~ ther~ is an operating
deficit, the unused portion of
the Student Centre levy can_be
used.

What do you foresee the
revenues of the Student
Centre to be?
What do you think salaWe have an agreement with
ries for iusu executives
Versa to provide management
should be for next year? .
services for the food operation
J\n appropriate salary for the
of the Main Events Hall. Our LUSU executive is about
consultants predict' our food ,,.$15,000. All the executiv.e
sales to be $334912, bar sales positions are full-time, includof $513354. After deducting ing the summer; iri fact I plan
the cost of the product. staff, to work many more than 40
programming etc. there will be hours per week. We still have
a profit of$213633. This figure to pay rent and food and the
fs not quite accurate because assorted other costs ofliving. I
not all costs are included and

money is appropriate.

What services for stu
dents do you think LUSl
should be developing?! will continue to listen t,
environmental
group:
(ECHO), and students anc
will make every effort to se,
continued environ_menta
reforms. Other seJ:Vices
would like to see expandec
for students include the Stu
dent Security Service and th
Ombudsman and our typin
room. I would like to create ;
typing pool where student:
could get resumes and pa •
pers typed for less than th•
current "going rate". I woul,
work with the V.P. Studen
Issues to put these ideas int,
place. I am always open t
further ideas from studente
for services to the students.

-Cassandra Koer1en: Vice President Student
Issues
Audit Committee are alread)
What do you feel ,are the
major academic issues on
campus and how would you
address them?
The most important academic issue on campus right
now is the proposed abolishment of supplemental exams. I
feel that the best way, as students, we can ha"te liiput on
this matter is to have to get
together and have pro-active
representation on the Senate
and Senate Executive committees. We should take the first
step in soMng the problem,
and not wait for something to

implement pro-active plans to
happen. Another solution would
possibly be an advisory com- \ change these attitudes.
mittee comprised of faculty,
administration and students,
What are your goals and
to investigate the problem and
objectives for the coming
arrive at a reasonable solution.
year?
The following are the most
Do you feel that there ls a
important goals that I have for
problem with sexism, racism
the upcoming year. There is a
and homophobia?
need on campus for better
Although it is not blatant or
communication between the
obvious the problem of sexism,
students and the Student Unracism, and homophobia exion. I want to make .the stuists on our campus. There are
dents aware of the decisions
many instances where we are
that are being made by the
unaware that we are being eiBoard of Directors and get more
. tlier sexist, homophobic or
student input on those deciracist. It underscores much of
sions. I also· feel that it is imwhat we say and the way we
portant to have a unified stuact. The first step to solving the
dent voice on senate and senproblem, is to identify it within
ate committees. I will strive to
ourselves and then through -keep the student representainformation campaigns try and
ti~ informed on how students
feel on issues like supplemen-

tal exams and together it is
possible to make a stronger
impact. Quality programming
is something else that I want to
improve on campus. With our
new satellite dish it will now be
possible to have first run movies as well as major sporting
events in the new student
centre. This will enable the
students 'to stay on campus
and see these events fre~. instead of having to pay a cover
charge at a bar in town. LUSU
ls always striving to bring quality
bands and events on campus.
and I will continue this sound
tradition.

Security on Campus ls a
big issue; how will you address this issue?
Programs like Student Security and the Campus Safety

in place to help the securil}
problem on campus. I woulc
make sure that students util
ize these services that are avail
able. As well I would take th&lt;
findings of the Safety commit
tee and fi1W-t to get better light
Ing on our pathways and in om
corridors. I have worked tc
install phones aro9nd campui
that will directly link up witl
the security office.

What do you feel are yow
best and worst qualities?
I feel that the best quality I!
my enthusiasm. Whenever
begin something new, I give th&lt;
best that I can from beglnnin1
toend. Asformyworstquality
it would have to be that I tenc
to gettmpatient when the Job a
hand is not being followec
through properly.

Marc Leona·rd: Vice President
Student Issues
tatlve as an
would not be a problem. The

dents.
Quality and amount of
equipment for all courses
• requiring lab equipment and
supplies outdated and nof
enougl}.
What do you think are
The ·library is small and
the major academic issues
books that are important are
on campus and how would · not available unless you are
you address them?
using inter-library loans.
There are three major
The dramatic increase in
academic tssues facing stuenrollment (19%) and the
\

increased class sizes which
has left some students wtth,out seats.

Do you feef there ls a
problem with sexism, racism and homophobia?
The only problem with
sexism, racism and homophobia ts with the people
who feel th1s way. Without
these people at L. U., there

way I propose to rid the
University of this problem
is to educate these people
on the facts.

What are your goals and
objectives for the coming
year?
I would like to increase
community relations by
having a student represen-

ex-officic
member of the city council
I would like to organtz,
clean-up programs anc
bottle drives _run by stu
dents. I would like to see tht
events in the new Studen
Centre increase in numbe:
and be more popular anc
-advertised.

continued on page 8,
see "Vice"

,,

�Toe Argus Page 4

It ts LUSU election time

again.

VOTE VOTE VOTE
VOTEIIII Use your democratic

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JIJUS((J

Information Session_
Lakehead University
Mon., Ma,ch 11, 1991
12 _ 1:30 p.m., Univ. Centre
Senate Chambers

POSITIONS AVAILABLE:
?CIENCE
GRADUATE
SCHOOLS*

*all professional schools .except Education
who vote In the fall by-election.

HELP
WANTED"
••
Applications are now being·accepted •
•

~ . , , lMI&lt;mwiJrJ, ]lM,
~1lfla

THE

PIKES
ith special guests

~
~
Tickets at LVSU .or fflB Auditorium.
.

•

for the new events •hall/pub. •Forms
can be picked up in The Study. Drop
off completed forms to Liz in The Study.
Interviews commence in April.

NORTHERN

Students oni,,.$15

STUDIES 1
8

NOMINATIONS :
OPEN MARCH 11
CLOSE MARCH 15
FURTHER INFORMATION IN
.
LUSU OFFICE

~
'0

7
2

ARTS

JP1RU!i'SW113
((J!,ft : fl/o,(s

-

MARCH26

11WlEPll13

Ilkxsilm

-

LAKEHEAD UNIVERSITY STUDENT
UNION
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
ELECTIONS

Vlflcl unlil Mardi 16th. 1991

. .r---

-

privilege; not everyone in this
world is able to choose their
representatives, we are
amongst the lucky.
By the way, I was acchmned
(which means that no one ran
against me so I automatically
serve as president next year).
I encourage each and every
one of you to read the submissions that the candidates
have given to the Argus carefully, since 1t is one of the
best ways that you can discover the various candidates
stands on the issues. I would
like to also encourage every.one to attend the all candidates forum in the Study on
Monday, March 11. This is
your opportunity to ask questions and hear debate. I will
be there as well to answer
any questions that you may
have. Everyone is allowed to
attend, alcohol will not be
. served during the forum.On
a different election note, the
Argus
has
a
new
editor_in_chief. Congratulations go out to Travis Belrose,
who was elected just the other
day. I look forward to working with Travis in the next
year, and I am confident that
the high standard of excellence the Argus has always
had will be maintained, and
more space will be found for
_the President's Report. See
you in 168 hours.
••• Goodbye. Mickey. • 1

•

Genenll Adm.ission.-$20
.
Tickets on Sale flwrsdtqJ Feb. 28

�~ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - T h e Argus Pag~ 5 March 7, 1991

It's that Time of Year
to say. If anything, it will educate the voter on what the
hot issues are.
ltRule
4 Don't assume there are any issues
is abuzz with debate -- Who ~owe vote for this year!? But
you see, some of us down here are on our fourth year
ml Rule 5 Be on the lookout for candidates that promise
covering these elections so we can put our stressed heads
something they have no control over. For example, an
together and probably predict the winners anyway.
improved library--you cap kick and scream all your want .
Of course we won't tell you who we think. will win for fear
about inadequate library seIVices, but LUSU 1s Nor going
of coercing any opinions (the press does that sometlmes).
to get us a better library. Or better yet. candidates tliat
For those first year students deciding who to vote for, don't
promise fiscal responsibility. No one person in LUSU has
wony, the name usually becomes pretty obvious as the
strtct control of finances. Decisions are made by a collecelection heats up. Some Advice? Okay.
.ttve of many people, and must follow a pre-detenntned
Pwe 1 Don't. read election posters: They generally - budget (made the year before). Most of all, promises of
improved communication are not to be believed. When is
reflect only the Job description and are desJgned strictly to
the last time somebody in LUSU stopped and asked you
help increase a cand.tdate's profile. Keep in mJnd that they
what you thought about something? Happens vety rarely.
are not used to give an in-depth look at the way a candidate
Even the Argus has been scraping at the walls trytng to
thinks, If you ·do take tile time to stop and read them, see
squeeze information from LUSU. and we·re probably the
if there are any spelllng or grammar errors (it has happened
before).
best way to get communieate new things to the students.
We have a wall down here in the Argus where we post-up
flRule 2 Do go to the all candidate's debate in the Pub
LUSU press releases. It's empty.
(March 11th, 11 :30). It~ probably the only chance you11 get
to ask the candidates the questions that are burning in your
BRule 6 Read the Argus Election Guide. These quesmind. You should tiy and have a good mtx of specfftc and
tions are written by Argus staffers so that the candidates
general questions. because you will not only find out how a
can sell themselves to the students (after all, politicians
candidate stands on an issue. but you can measure their
are a :puy/sell commodity). Answers tend to be inflated
performance. If you can make a candidate squirm during a
with rhetoric that the editors might have missed, so take
question, then you're on the right track. Try not to slander
everything you read with a little salt.
- anybody. Just ask the candidate the most thought-out and
mi Rule 7 VOTE. If you're one of those people who combest fabricated question you can think. of. and three things
plain about the way LUSU operates. then don't be a
might happen: a) they11 put their foot in their mouths b)
hypocrite. Exercise your democratic right to put the rtght
they11 throw some manure at you, or c) they might have a
person 1n the position.
good answer. For anybody asking questions, (a) and (b) are
The acclamation of President Middleton deserves-some
your primacy objectives.
attention. Talk about apathy -- nobody ran agatnst Ian.
l]Rule 3 It ls worthwhile to hear what a candidate has to
This makes him more popular than George Bush makmg
an antl-~usseln speech. An election would have; been
say if they end up addressing your class. Usually. these
niee because it would bring up some important tssues
little speeches prove to be insightful when trying to figure
that deserve attention. But, what's done ts done.
out a candidate's personality or profile. If you really get
Finally, congratulations to Travis Beb;:-ose who was
bored, then tiy and actually IJSTEN to what the person has
elected as the Argus Editor-in-Chief for next year.
okay.,. so its LUSU election tlme and the Argus office

Defending The Fifth
Estate

~

There 1s lo: go~ on In the w~rld rtght now, but for
the Argus there is a pressing concern that exists close to
.home. The concern is LUSU's proposed Argus poUcy that is
going to be discussed Thursday March 7 at the :t;.USU BOD
meeting. Actually, concern is too ltght of word in this
situation, threat ts more applicable at this tfine.
Why are we upset-with this new Argus policy (printed last
issue)?. Basically. our objections are twofold; we dislike
having an impeachment process that is out of the hands of
Argus members, and we dislike the role of a proposed Argus
Editorial Board (AEB) as tt is currently stated.
The two problems are interrelated. An advisory board is
actually a fair idea, but only insofar as it would be used as
a mechanism for constructive criticism and advice. Attaching the weight of the power to impeach would damage this
advtsoxy factor as the Editor In Chief would harbour a
certain degree of suspicion concerning the motives of the
Board members offering their optntons on the paper.
; The impeachment concept is quite-alarming 1n itself. The
fear here Ues 1n the ability of people who are not Argus
members to remove the Editor on what could amount to
personal vendettas and differences of op1n1on disguised as
infringements on the Statement Of Principles. In case you
are not aware, we have an impeachment mechanism of our
own, if the need ever surfaced.
; In t11,e March 4, 1991 Maclean·s. the stoty of the former
editor of The Patriot. Joseph Reedy. ts briefly told. He wrote
an anti-war editorial for the Kutzdown. Pennsylvania publication he edited·. The president of the company that owned
the pap·er, did not share Reedy's opinion. ~o he was dismissed. Examples such as this one are intimidating when
the basic principle of free speech can so easily be infringed
on by entitles outside of the editorial staff themselves.
Another ·factor is the fear of quick release based on
honest mistakes. Consider the infamous "Why I Hate Men"
edition ofAnalyst Annie that appeared in the November 29,

Faisal Ali
1990 Argus. A case could be made for that section being
sexist in nature. Fortunately, Faisal's abfilty as an editor
was not questioned by a crusading AEB, so we were able to
correct the problem internally, increasing our vigilance for
future issues of the paper.
The main reason LUSU wants this proposal discussed ls
to have a safety valve to turn to if the Argus totally went out
of control, espousing sexism, racism, and homophobia. It
should be noted that we had a statement of principles based
on U1e Canadian University Press standard before LUSU
instituted a policy of their own. That ts just one good reason
why our discretion in dealing with these matters should be
trusted when it comes to the content of our paper. Another
is the · fact that in the past three years we have not let
anything severely offensive be printed on our pages, making
this policy seem like an effect to a cause that has not
occurred.
If LUSU requires an Argus policy to protect themselves
legally, something should be worked out to defend against
the potential worst case scenarto. But. as the policy is now
written. it is too general and open to interpretations and
that has Argives around here thinking ·u p worst case
scenarios of their own.
Any person that thinks that we are merely paranoid need
only look as far as The Lexicon situation at York University.
There, the student union is tiytng to shut down the paper
•-permanently. Their major reason for doing this is that
they do not like what The Lexicon has to say about them all
of the time. The history of this conflict is too long to go into,
but it shows the risks a student newspaper can face when
dealing with sensitive Student Unions.
I will close with a quote from an American journalist
named AJ. Liebltng that I found 1Ii Maclean's this week.
"Freedom of the press belongs to those who own one·. The
Argus is not financially a~tonomous, therefore we do not
own our press. For the most part. LUSU has realized the
importance of allowing us to exercise our freedom of the
press.
This right should not be comprfilmised.

. . . .. . .__Travjs_Belro.se_._..1 .

�The Argus Page 6

March 7, 1991

ENTERTAIN

•

The eyes have it-- irs mad max as the mad prince

Laxdal at_., the Movies

Photo by'S.Balogh

The ~kydiggers Jammin' in the Study

by Brian Laxdal

DIGGING SK·v AT THE STUDY

,,,.

Howie
corded material they hope ..accordtng to Peter Cash,
(Saturday March 2) In
have a lot of new material
to put on their next r-elease.
the Study, The Skydiggers
All of their songs met with
waiting to be worked out
played to a frenzied. sweatenthusiasm and brought
Ing crowd that had sold out
and recorded.
the show a few hours earwelcome relief from the beatDespite the dr1nk1ng and
lier. At the door, L. U. 's beefibox damage the DJ's tnructed
the new rules governing bar
est bouncers rr.J. Thunderbetween sets.
room brawls in the Study,
thighs and Stink) kept the
"nlere's a magnetic force
the night proceeded withwµtch keeps drawing us to
drinkers away from the
out problem. Although
Thunder Bay," said Andy
stricter security in the pub
dancers and never smiled.
Mail.e, the band's lead singer.
made going to the washOn stage, The Skydiggers
"And besides, it's convenrooms and returnJng to your
played their first show at
table difficult, I relt safe.
iently located between WinLakehead University and
nipeg and Toronto." •
After the concert, The
their first show since tourThe Skydtggers' latest
Skyd1ggers were accessible
Ing with Blue Rodeo last
tour, which took tj:lem and
to the audience. Much of
month.
Blue Rodeo across the Marthe crowd stayed behind
The Skydiggers have
itimes and the West Coast , afterwards to talk to the band
played Thunder Bay before.
before coming back to Thunand invite them to various
but orily at Croes 'n Rolls for
parties while they were
der Bay, lasted six weeks.
smaller audiences. In the
After Saturday's concert, the
packing up their equipment.
Study, the band played two
sets comprised of originals . band had plans for a week's The Skyd1ggers have tried
rest in Toronto before perto get a show at the univerfrom their last album. cover
sity before, but have never
versions (such as Neil
forming again tn Montreal
and Ottawa. The SkycUggers
been able to~cotncide their
Young's "Rock.in' in the Free
had no date for their followschedule with LUSU's until
World" and the theme song
up album's release, but.
Saturday's perlormance.
to Spiderman). and unreby W. Fenrick and

r••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••~

co
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FREE
CASSETTES!_
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.

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ENTER HERE!!!

=·

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That's right, we are giving away two free
h
'
tapes t is week. Just answer the skill testing
question, and drop off your entry at The
Argus Office. The fir~t two correct answers .
1 • drawn will win either the new Daniel Ash (of
: - Love &amp; -Rockets), or the new RUN - DMC =·
album. Winners will be identified in next
1 week's issue.
•: Complete this lyric: You know that" would be untrue/

•

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1•

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you know thqt I would be a liar/ If I was to say to you/ girl we
couldn'tgetmuchhiger/ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

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~--------------------------------·

Sieentne With the Enemy
Julia Roberts plays an abused wife who fakes her death
to escape her monster of a husband. However, when her
plan goes awry s,he must face the very person she ts running
·from, for her very sUIVtval. The villainous husband m~es,
this often predictable thriller work and puts you on the edge
of your seat. $6.50
•
Silence of the Lambs •
This is a disturbing movie that keeps you watching even

when you don't want to. Jodie Foster plays an F.B.I. trainee
that must use a jailed serial killer to catch a serial killer that
ts killlng young women. The story Is really inconsequential
because 'the movie Is really a showcase of the dark slde·of
human nature. Anthony Hopkins plays Hannibal "'lbe
Cannibal" Lecter who kills his vtctuns and eats their body
parts. We see the darkest of human nature which we can't
explain away as not betng part of the human race. They are
human beings. You may leave the theatre wondering who ts
sicker: the psychopaths or·you! $6.00
Scenes From a Mall
This is a- horrtble movie l:ltarrtng two outstanding actors.
Woody Allen and Bette Midler. This movie is not written by,
directed by, (or as it seems from Woody Allen's dull perlormance), acted by Woody Allen. It would seem Woody needed
to make some money to support his own movies at the
faltering Orton Pictures and did this horrtble movie for the
money. Laughs are few and far between and it seems that
the terrible sound system at the Paramount Theatre might
have saved nie from further disappointment. $1.QO
Warlock
This movie was delayed from release for two years, due to
court battles, after it's studio New World Pictures went
bankrupt. This, however, was no great loss. This B-mOVie
about a wmock In the 1600's going to the pres,ent to help
Satan unravel creation has some good moments but they
are not enough to make this film stand on solid ground.
$2.00
-

L.A. Story

This is a true Steve Martin comedy tn the spirit of "All of
Me" and "Roxanne". ltspoofslifeinLosAngeleswlthwitand
style and shines due to a hilarious perlormance by Sara
Jessica Parker as a fun-lovtng valley girl. Good laughs for
your . hard-earned dollar. Catch Rick Morants' parody of
Hamlet. $7.00

Hamlet
The outstanding movie based on Shakespeare's play
brings back the splendour of the spoken word at a time
when viol~nce seems to be the way Hollywood speaks.
However, dQn't fret, the climactic sword fights'leave enough
.death for even the most blood-thirsty of vie'Yers. A beautifully shot film with great performance_s. $7.50
Opening Friday: The Hard Way (James Woods) ; Mr. and
Mrs. Bridges (Paul Newman}

-

�_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __:___ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _~------=---The Argn~ _Page 7 March 7. 1991

RTAINMENT

aW&amp;~B-l
, !

·,'•

I,.,,
I

Blue Rodeo The safe picldor Group of the Year Juno

20th JUNO Anniversary
A Good Night For Canadian Music
by Chad Sharp
backed by an incredibly
If you are a fan of Canatalented band qualified Blue
dian Music, you were in _luck
Rodeo for Group of the Year
March 3rd as the Juno
honours. Then, for the grand
Awards were broadcast on
finale, The Tragically Hip
nation-wide television. Once
were awarded the prestigthe viewer was able to overious and highly competitive
look the terrible medieval
Canadian Entertainer ofthe
dungeon set and the anYear award, beating out the
noying monologue of host
artists Allanah Myles, Colin
Paul Shaffer, the program
James. Kim Mitchell and the
was extremely ertjoyable.
' Jeff H~ey Band. It seems
"Live" seemed to be the
that the Hip are finally retheme of the night with over
ceiving the recognition they
a dozen artists perfonning
deserve.
on the stage. The acts ranged
The evening was then
from the rap of M.C. Hamcapped off by a tribute to
mer, the rock of the NorthLeonard Cohen. the most
ern Pikes. the Country of
recent inductee into the
Prairie Oyster, to a great
Juno Hall of Fame. The
acappella number by Sue • unquestionable genius of
Medly, which proved to the
Cohen added to the first class
viewer just how deserving
quality of Canadian music
she was of the Most Promisfor more than two decades.
ing Female Vocalist award
What makes the Junos
that she won.
so much better than any
Colin James and Celine
other music awards proDion each won two of the
grams ·are the facts that all
"Big Six" awards. Celine left
the music is top-notch and
Vancouver with both Female
it is au Canadian. We should
Vocalist of the Year and, Albe proud of our country's
bum of the Year for her algifted musicians, and we
bum Unison. James was
should continue showing
awarded Male Vocalist of the
our support by recogntiing
Year for his hif "Just Came
their talents with awards like
Back" which is from the
the J~os. We can be sure
Sudden Stop LP.
that the future of music in
Two strong vocalists
Canada is very promising.

~

er Side

by Travis Belrose
Who were 1lte Doors? If
you really want to find out,
this movie would be a fairly
p.oor place to - start. Oliver
Stone, director of such great
movies as Salvador, Platoon,
and Talk Radio;has sadly decided to pursue an intensely
personal rendering of Jim
Morrison's life. The final result of this effort is an inaccessible movie that serves as
more of a psychological case
study than as entertainment.
much less art.
A more accurate title for
this movie might- have been
"A One Dimensional Look At
The Fall Of Jim Morrison".
This movie is not about The
Doors, and the misleading
nature of the title should be
understood. The other three
Doors (John Densmore, Rob
Kreiger, and Ray Manzerak)
are only incidental characters that we meet only when
it seives Stone's purposes.
This is unfortunate because
The Doors were definitely more
'than one man in real life.

The only purpose this
movie seems to have is to
mythologize Morrison's plight
as the troubled artist. A
Toronto Star_crttic count-ered
this myth, "It's the lie of the
60s, as seen through a smoky
reatview mirror and interpolated by a con man [Stone)
with an arresting, grandiose
visual style."
Stone spares nothing in
his attempt to funnel his impressions of Mon1son into our
psyche. including coqjecture.
One example is the acid trip
in the desert portrayed in the
movie when the entire band
'comes together'. It is a pretty
stirring moment -- too bad it
never happened. Drummer
Densmore denies it occurred,
claiming that "He (Morrison)
would be the last person I'd
drop acid with". Aware of thi~
forgery, a healthy suspicion
about the events of the niovie
is fostered, dampening the
impact ofreal events such as
Jim and Patricia's Wiccan
marriage, or Morrison's alleged indecent exposure in

Magnus Theatre Presents

A wickedly observant comedy by the author of
•
. EDUCATING RITA

Pay-What-You-Can Matinee
Saturday March 9, 2:00 pm
639
. . ~c~µghµn Street

. , Box Office 623-1321

Miami.

The character of Jim Morrison ts not done justice either. Val Kilmer portrays him
adequately within the restraining limits Stone confmed him. Former Doors
manager, Bill Siddons, accused Stone in PREMIERE
Magazine of focussing "virtually exclusively on the more
sensational side ofJim's personality and not the man I
knew... ".
There is no doubt that
Morrison had a self destructive personality, but that is
not all there was to him. In
the fine tradition of Dylan
Thomas, Morrison drank
himself into oblivion. What
Mon1son (and some of his _
fans) forgot, was that it takes
much more than an early
death to make a writer of
lyrics a great poet. Morrison
did have his darkstde, darker
than most, but he was much
more than a symbol of chaos
and self destruction.
There are a few cameos of
note in, this movie, if Billy
Idol's forgettable appearance
is ignored. Crispin Glover is
great as Andy Warhol. and
the real Patricia Kennely performance as the witch who
marries Jim and Patricia adds
. a touch of irony to the scene.
The parody of Ea Suijlvan ts
overdone however, a grotesque
vision likely bas«r&lt;I on some
kind o,f Stone nightmare:
Stone's myopic vision in
this movie is tirlng. The 135
minutes spent fJt the theatre
were not wasted, but they
could have been spent more
productively (watching Home
Alo~ again fof instance). This
movie ts not worth $7 .50 to
see, but for $4.00, the excellent cinematography and portrayal oflate 60s culture may
vindicate your outlay in cash.
For those who truly want
to learn more about The Doors,
save your money· and f&gt;y a
greatest hits package from
Elektra Records. The movie
deseives no more than a 5
out of 10, but the music gets
an 8.

�The Argus Page 8. March 7, 1991

Vice Preside.n t Student Issues ·

.,.

I would also Uke to Increase relatlons with Confederation
College by having sports and particlpatlon challenges as well as
social events. The main thing I would l1ke to do ts Increase the flow
of Information and knowledge between the student body, LUSU
and AdmJnistratton. Also in this I would like to ensure that the
student body ts well represented on the LUSU committees and Admlnistrattve Councils and committees be reasonable and competent student representatives by screenln~ them before nominatton.
Should the Student Unlon become Involved lD non-academlc taauea? Give an ezap,.ple of one.
I believe that LUSU should take a stand on non-educational
issues that affect the students at L. U. Since the students will one
• day be members of the working community they should be made
aware of issues that don't always revolve around their education.
such as the GSf or the Unillngual resolution.
Security on Campus ls a bll las~; how will you add.re.. thle
, ..ue?
·:
.
IntheeyesofthestudentsatL.U. securltylsabigbeue. Besides
keeping the security officers and the student sec_urtty service. I

CORRECTION •

1

wouldalsollketohave alistofstuderttvoluntecrs who would be available to walk ~tudents
hame when the studerit securtty ts busy. As
well I would like to see a self-defence program
implemented on campus to be run by 'students or an officer of the Thunder Bay P«i)lice.
This would increase awareness on campus as
well as provide the students wtth the ability to
handle an-aggressive offence.
What la your beat and worst quality?
1 would have to say that my best quality ts
that J respect myself and others, also I am
confident in my abWty to make sowid dectstons. I don't squander my resources and I
treat others as equals. My worst quality 1s that
sometimes I expect too much of myself. When
J believe in something, and I am committed to
It, I sometimes push myself to the breaking
point to get tt done.

Due to new information the Argus would like
to tssue a correction. In the article L. U. NURSING STUDENI'S'PRESENT AT McGILL (February 28 1991, vol.27 no.19) important names
were mentioned bl..\t others (too numerous to
note) were omitted by mistake. Not only were
Professor M. Boone (Director of Nursing) and Dr
R Rosehart· omitted but unfortunately, as a
result o(editortal error. other people and groups,
numerous ari&lt;i untitled, were also omitted. The
article did not portray a correct representation
of the collective and cooperative nature of the
nursing and university communities.In a fairer
representation of the story, the efforts of all parties involved should have been adequately ex:plalned and recognized to the fullest extent. The
Argus regrets·any inconvenience caused by the
publication of mislea~g tnfonnatlo_n .

Letters cont'd

LAKEHEAD UNIVERSITY STUDENT UNION
EXECUTIVE ELE:CTIONSMARCH 12 &amp; 13

·.,

MAIN CAFETERIA POLLS OPEN FROM 10AM TO 7PM
MARCH 12 ONLY
CORNWALL SCHOOL
POLLS OPEN 11 AM TO 3PM
FIELDHOUSE
EDUCATION BUILDING
.:

DO NOT MISS THE CANDIDATES -FORU~
MARCH 11 AT ll:30
IN THE STUDY

a.·s. T.

-

Dear Editor: Let us start out
by saying how upset we were at
the article 'LU Nursing Students
Present at McGill'. 1n the Feb.
28 edition of the Argus. It fs our
stncerebeliefthat the true magnitude of the endeavour, on the
part of the university commun1ty was not fully portrayed.
Numerous people and groups
not mentioned 1n the article also
gave up countless hours of th~lr
valuable lline. This fact was
stressed 1n the interview wtth
the Argus. but failed to come
across after editing. We would
like to thank everyone who assisted 1n enabling us to attend
the conference 1n Montreal. As
a result of their efforts we were
able to represent Lakehea.d University. in what we hope, was a
very professional manner. We
can never fully express OUT
gratitude to those people and
groups who helped us with the
presentation of our paper at the
National CUNSA . conference.
Therese
Ltm,-Eltzabeth
Boryckt.

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�- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - T h e Argus Page 9 March 7, 1991

S;eoRTS

SEASON -NOT A TOTAL
LOSS FOR HAPLESS
LEAFS

-

by Ian Fero

Ladies 8-Ball: What Happened?
by Tony Hewitt
In the semi-final game
in Toronto on Feb 27, the
Lady NorWesters basketball team ended their season wtth a loss to the
Toronto Varsity Blues. At
the half the L. U. squad was
tratling by 37-32, and up
until then the game was a
tight match. The final score
was Toronto 77. Lakehead
63.
Both Pam Leitch
and Barb Hill were questionable starters before last.
wednesday's game, both
were sick with the flu. The
team not at a hundred
percent. the players were
fighting an uphill battle
from the outset. Coach
Stu Julius said stmply that
his .team just ran ~&gt;Ut of
gas after the half. Strong:
play by Kathy Harrison
~ept the team in close con-

tention.
Harrison was
named an all-star and sunk
24
points
for
the
NorWesters.
Jodie Radosevtch also played·~ strong
game shooting for a·points.
Coach Julius had a lot of
good things to say abo1,1t
this years teain. After -losing so many expeqenced
players from last years first
place west divtsion team,
Julius had to add five first
year players to his twelve
person roster. These new
players helped contrtbute to
the team's third place west
division finish.
This years assistant
coach, Cheiyl Kryluk, will
not be returnmg next year
as she has completed her
academtc studies here at L.U.
The team and its outstanding players will be
honoured at the upcoming
L. U. Athletic Banquet on
March the 22i,.d. Tickets to
the event are available at
the athletic office, an.d a bus
service will be provided from
the C.J. Sanders F.leldhouse.

It just hasn't been a very good season for the Toronto Maple Leafs. But all things the
same the year hasn't been a total waste. Granted. coming into the season there were big
hopes for the Leafs to Improve on their 38-38-4, 80 point season oflast. However it was
a campaign where the Leafs finished above .500 for the first time in a while, and all
expectations may have been premature. The reason for the succuss of the 1989-90 Leafs
was due to their high powered offence, which saw.career seasons from Gaty Leeman(51
goals) and Vincent Damphousse(94 points). DefencemanAl ~ t e looked to be accelerating into the upper echelon of NHL defencemen and the goaltending was in the hands of
a respectable trio of Mark La.Forest, J\l Bester and Jeff Reese. So what happened this year?
The only contest for the mfghty Leafs may be for the "Llndros Bowr. which they can not
even win due to the fact that they dealt their first round draft pick to New Jersey for since
traded Tom "suitcase" Kmvers. But as the TorontonianS have learned from experience,
things can't get any·werse.
They all-star break came and saw the Leafs in second last place tn the NHL with a record
of 12-31-4(28 points). They were Uurd last 1n·goal scoring, 2.87 / game, second last 1n goals
against at 4.17 /game and were second last 1n goal dtfferentlal at a brutal -66. They have
gone 5-9-1 since the break and their only chance to make the playoffs is. to catch
Minnesota who ts 12 points up and ts 8-4-3 stnce the break, a chance which is slim at best.
Both teams have 16 games rematning.
All tn all the Leafs have not been the losers their record implies. It can not be denied
that GM Floyd Smith has not made an over abundance of trades, dealing Mark Osbourne,
Scott Pearson, John McIntyre and more importantly Ed Olczyk and Al Iafrate. However
these trades have brought 1:}le Leafs a lot of talent which, in the long run, may help the
team.
It would be hard to pinpoint the problem of the Leafs
but the .botom line leads to
the lack of production. Down
the list you ffnd that nobody is on the pace they
by Theodore Walter
were last season. Leeman
has only 8 goals, Daniel
Mildred, wake up! The Fl boys are back. And they have:
new toys.
•
. - Marois ts struggling, Wen- derCtarlc'lias·not generated
Make no mistake. last year was the most exciting racin~
much o(fence. ·Only Damgrand pnx fans hav.e seen in some time. This year's ractnE
season is expected to be exceptionally exciting. •
phousse is close to his pace
No true racing fan can ever forget the utter shock of Ntge:
of last year and even he is
Mansell's ·sudden notice of retirement at the British Grand
well off the mark.
Prix last year. Several months later the same fans wen:
The Leafs felt they needed
pinching themselves as Mansell had somehow been wooed
a small, talented center, so
back into racing by WllHarns Engineering. Nigel has rethey acquired·Brtan Bradley
turned to Williams not just for the money but also for the:
from Vancouver, he has yet
opportunity to wtn the world title.
to score for the team. They
also got Mike Krushelnyski,
One other notable driver change has been Jean Alesi
Mike FolJgno and Peter Ze7.el
signing for Ferrari. The prancing horse stable paid nilllions
to bolster the front line and
of dollars to have the yo1:ll1g french sensation pilot theiI
these players have shown
blood-red projectiles on the international circuits for thiE
promise which has made
season. Ferrari expects a fair return for their investment.
Many believe they will get it.
each a bona fide NHL player.
this coming Sunday will be the first grand prix race of the
The blueline was strength•
season. It will be run in Phoenix, Arizona on a street circuit.
ened by acquJring Dave Ellet.
Brakes will be the first to go on such a tight. demanding
. Michel Petit and Bob Rouse.
This all may prove that the
course. Driver fatigue may
Leafs have got the better of
be another prominent facmost of their many deals.
tor in the outcome ·of thts
. Rookie Peter Ing· has
race.
shown stgns of great-~People to watch this
to-come th1s year in goal.
Sunday include Ayrton
He has been steady despite
Senna. who is the 1990 Fl
being shelled night in and
• World Champion, his teamnight out. His 3.91 goals
mate Gerhard Berger. Jean
against average ts respectAlesi from Ferrari and Nigel
able for a Leaf netminder.
Mansell in the FW14 Wiland Ing should get a couple
liams.
nods for rookie of the year.
Overall for the season and
Draft pick Rob Pearson is
title most expect a close
second in the OHL 1n scorcontest among four differ·1ng and netminder Felix
..... ,..... _..,
ent
manufacturers.
·Potvin was the backup for
liiiiiliiiiii
. , .-:-.....-.... if;l -···.".'·:'
McLaren-Honda with Aiyton
the National Junior chamSenna and Gerhard Berger,
pions. Also, 1990 first rowid pick Drake Berehowsky has shown significant improvement Ferrari with Alaiii Prost and
and should add strength to the defence corps next year.
Jean Alest. Williams-Renault
The Leafs have a new coach in Tom Watt. They have a solid core of veterans. an exciting with Nigel Mansell and Riccrop of rookies, a couple of outstanding players, but it just seems that the team can not lift cardo Patrese, and Benetthe cloud of negativity. something they did Iast year. It seems the team has the fans saying ton-Ford with Nelson Piquet
"wait 'til next year", the trouble iS they expected to be laughing now all the way to the and Roberto Moreno. Three
playoffs, instead they may ·have to wait until next year to see how the new group can dark horses are Brabhamfunctiort collectively, for a whole season. Alas. I hear Floyd Smith is thinking of making a Yamaha. Tyrell-Ford and
couple more trades before the deadline, maybe they're doomed to Unger.an the Norris cellar Jordan-Ford.
for eternity. Watt witll next year, things can't get any worse, or can they.
See you at the races!
1

When ·Varsity
Sports end Prematurely,
There is a/ways...
GRAND PRIX 1991

�The Argus Page 10 March 7, 1991

HEAT.TH

Ask
Analys't
Annie
self. By doing a little work
everyday instead of all at
once the work won't be so
intimidating to handle. Good
luck!

Dear Annie,

I have a problem. I always hand in everything
late. Even though I'm
penalized it doesn't seem
to matt~r, nothing is
handedinontime. Whenever an assignment is
gtven, I think, 0kay, this
time its gotng to be handed
in on the due date. But
then I leave it late and
don't have enough time to
finish the assignment by
the due date. How can I
meet deadlines?
Signed There's Always
Tomorrow
P.S. I wrote this letter
. last year but just managed to send it to you now.

Dear Annie,

I've almost completed my
second year of university in
the psy_c h program. My
m,a rks •are okay apd my
friends at L.U. are great but
I'm sick of school. My parents are really proud that
I'm in university and I don't
want to disappoint them but
I'd really like to quit. School
is a drag, I'd like to work and
go on a couple of trips. I
know I'm lucky to be getting
an education but I'm sick of
school! Should I stay or
should I go?
Signed Runaway

Dear Tomorrow,

You are a procrastinator. A lot of people procras~te but if this problem is affecting your marks
then you should think of
seeking help. Time management courses are offered at the Learning Assistance Centre on the
fourth fl(?or of the Jtbrary.
Also. set up a time schedule. Arrange the schedule
for a week and try your
best to stic~ to it. If you
accomplish managtng tlme
for one day reward your-

Dear Runaway,

Evaluate your options.
Take a piece of paper and
"':'f1te down the pros and cons
Qf staying in school. This
will force you to thJnk clearly
about the decision you make ..
Taking time out of school is
your own decision, not your
parents. Unless your parents are paying, then when
you retUill, expect the money
to come out of your own
pocket. Also, make a time

frame of the things you want
to accomplish when leavtng
school--you may not want
to return after a period of
time. Remember to think long
term as well. Whatever decision you make, don't regret
it later in life. The decision
you make will be the right
one for you.
l&gt;earAnnle,

My girlfriend is extremely
attractive, wonderful and a
great person to be around.
Lately, whenever I ask her to
do something she's too busy
or says she's already made·
plans with her fiiends. When
we do go out she seems to be
distracted-and makes pointed
remarks and hints that she
wants to go home. We used
to have a great time together.
I don't know how to make
- our relationship the. same
way it used to be. I don't
know what has happened.
Signed A Potential John

Dear Potential, •
It seems like your gtrlfriend
1s treating you .b~dly. Per-

haps you should take the
tnitlatlve and ask 1f she wants
some time to herself or 1f she
wants end the relationship.
Tell her how you feel and ask
. her to be truthful with you.
There is no point in being
with someone who doesn't
treat you with r~spect.
Dear Annie,

;;:)

My roommate has this
habit which drives me crazy.
He watches T.V. and bites
his natls. Which I don't mind.
But then. he spits the bitten, disgusting piece of tissue out into the air. This
then lands on the floor.
Sometimes pieces hit other
parts offurniture and suck
there. I've placed ashtrays
around so he can place the
nail particles in them but he
doesn't use them. How can I
get him to stopf
Signed Nailed Roommate

·

·, Had an acctdcmt?t Want a t,q- abop
• tbat'a ~ an a llbJdent'a _budget?

• ~~~7.J.: ~· .

dlacouJJt OD all
upon pmnda11oD of a

and bodY wadi:.
valid atudent"a catd.

IBI&amp;lLW-'\D'.&amp;l'f I M ~

lNOJMKO)IEt&amp;lI., £ft..

®00)

~~

81, 1891
!
••

•

..,

•

•

r

•

•

~

•

•

•

r

•

Dear Nailed,

Collect the nail pieces (wtth
or without a glove) and put
them in a bag. One night put
the pteces 1n your roor...lillate's •
bed and see how l).e likes
. nails on things he sits on: If
' that doesn't work buy him a
nail clipper and· make him
stay in the bathroom until
he's fJri:tshed cutting them . .

�-------.. . . . -----...,._------------------------The Argus Page

11 March 7, 1991

\ ACROSS CAMPUS
LUPA

LUC_
F

The Lakehead {)ntversity
Well, tt's been a great year.
Philosophy Ass ociation
If you haven't come out to
(LUPA) now has its very own
any Lakehead University•
cosy office. Hence, our exts- • Christian Fellowship meettence is now verified. Yipeel
tngs yet it's not too late. We
You can contact us at ext.
meet every Thursday eve.8800 or drop by to UC-00'20A
ning at 7:30pm in White ,
in a remote . comer of the
River •#2 (the residence
games room. As a result of townhouses). This Toursour recently verified extsday we11 be havtng a rocktence we now frequently hold
1ng tlme..of singing, ~usevents. Yipee! Thanks to all
ston, and a Bible study in
of you who have attended
the epistle of James. Everyour recent paper readings
body who's an anybody will
and the screening of _ibe • ' be there, so that means you'll
Last Temptatlon of Christ".
want t~ be there, too.
But that's not all folks.
We're als_o really excited
1
On Thursday, March 14th
to announce a spectal preswe are presenting (someentatton on Saturday, Mareh.
where . on campus - see
9th (that's this-Saturday) at .
posters for details) areal life
7:00pm in the Lower Leeconflict as Ken LewiS takes
on our very own Dr. J.D.

ture Theatre. Mr Harris

GichuhioftheKenyanHigh
Rabb in, ..TIIE GREAT DECommission will be speakBA'IE. Lewts will be attempttng to us. Everybody's intng to blow Rabb's book iJQbn. vited. You won't want to miss
Locke on Reflection light out this. We're looking foiward
ofthewater. Rabb, however,
to a great turn out, and a
will attempt to .l?ring this
powerfulpresentatlon. Stay
arrogant young upstart back tuned to the Argus for more
to the hard reality of extsLUCF events. There's still
tence as an undergraduate.
lots happening before the
If this tsn't enough to fill
year's over.
your intellectual appetite,
And whatever you do,
free coffee ~d donuts .will
don't forget that the Bible
be available. Again, look for
says that "Better a poor man
posters regarding the Ume
whose walk ts blameless
and place of this event or
thanartchmanwhoseways
call .us .at the..number given_ • are pe!Ve~e." Proverbs 28:6
above.

CUNSA

LUSKI
It's back to the grJnd again
- Reading W~ek ls history
and everyone's tans are
starttng to fade. Don't wony,
though, because spring
skiing ts just around the
comer - get out for a couple
of days and you can have
people believing you just got
back from Flortda (or Whistler ... )
Upcoming event s:
YEAR-END SKI BASH

SAT. MARCH 9TH
HALF-PRICE TICKETS
FREE BUSES FROM
AGORA AT 6:30PM
SKI 7-10, PARIY 10-1

WARREN MILLER AND
TI-IE DUMMY DOWNHILL
SUNDAY. MARCH 31ST
FREE BUS FROM AGORA
AT9:00AM

Well, it's almost over but
there are st1ll a couple of
't hings happening!
NOW is your last chance
to get your RN pendants.
Check ·out the latest BARGAIN: only$25!1Thosewho
have already submitted
money will be reimbursed
$5. You will not find a better
deal anywhere - not everlt
See your class reps TODAY?!
. Also, ALL NURSING
STUDJ;l;N'l'S should attend
JOSEPHINE FLAHERIYS
presentation on Ethics. She
is known for her dynamic
speaking style and her electrtc pe:r:somllity. Be in room
204 7 of the Ryan Building
at 5:30 and attend the fol• lowtng receptlon in the lab
where you will receive fte.e
coffee and donuts!! And meet
Josephine Flaherty!! See you
all there!

LUCARP •
(LU~ makes no reference to the fish!)
(Lakehead- University
Campus Associatlon of tl!e
Reform Party
The Reform Party will be
holding a general meeUng
on Monday, March 11th 1n
the counctl chambers
(UC2020 by LUSU offices)
starting at 7:30pm. , The
meeUng w1ll serve as a recruitment rugl}t to sign up
new members and to appoint interested members to
execuUve positions. Toe
positions available are: Vice
President, Sec~ta.Iy, Treasurer, Committee Chairperson, and various Directors
to be announced that rught.
Guest speakers include Glen
Rossenburger {Thunder
Bay/Attlkokan president)
and Colleen Gibbons (Northern regional co-ordinator).
If you have any questlons or
are interested in applying
for a positlon please call
Derek at: 344-5170

SERVICES

CRIIIIIAL RECORD? DON'T N.J..OW A
PAST COtMCTION TO THREATEN F1J.
TI.IRE SOOCESS. A PARDON PERIIANENl'LY SEALS THE PAST. CONFIDENTIAL STUDENT RATES. CALL ONTARIO
PARALEGAL 345-0987

-

ESS
Good Day Engtp.eers (and
other lower forms of life).
Oh, come on - take a Joke.
anyway, just a short note
to let y ou lmow that elections will be held Within the
next couple ofweeks. Check
the ESS office for further
info. Why don't you become
active in next year's executive? YOU can be the one to
brtng back engineering
spirit; somehow it got lost
along the way.
COUNIDOWN to TERMINATOR - March 28th!
Bettjler can't watt!

ps.
old-

Location- ·intercity Mall Food Court
Locally Owned &amp; Operated 622;-8802
• NOT VAi.JD WITH OlliER OFFERS

SKIWEAR

EXP. 1;ia, 03 9

SPRING
CLEAROUT SALE!!!

Brand names · such as:
.SUN . ICE

--KEMPER
POD

Powell

1:J

POW!lL atpPMPNl' UMIIID.
6201BeaveJlball.P1ace
1hunder_Biw ON, Cenada P7C 515
Jlt- M Fl (807} 475-7599 ElaD '79-0l97

Jackets, Pants, Suits and T-Shirts in stock
ALL AT · COST!!!,!
•EVERYfHING- MUST. GO'!!!!!
Call 345-8494 and · ask for Moe!!

I

�THE E·N VIRO.N MENTAL.-Y OUTH
CORPS

~~•,., .

EARN MONEY

I

WHILE YOU GIVE

AND GAIN

THE ENVIRONMENT

WORK EXPERIENCE

A.HAND
I

1'

1

·'

Information on the Environmental Youth Corps is available
at your school placement office or career centre, and your

The EYC is sponsored by the Ontario
Ministries of Agriculture and Food, Environment,

:~:;t

~

.,,~:A ~

local Canada Employment Centre for Students, or by

:•

►

Natural Resources, Northern Development and Mines,

calling. the Youth Hotline at 1-800-387-0777.

.

and Tourism and Recreation.

.

'

•• Youth a~d community-based organizations working together for 'Ontario's e~v;;onment.

®
Ontario

Cette information est egalement disponible en francais.

37 S. Cumbertand St.
Thunder Bav. Ont.
P78 2T4

I

:

@ :? ~·

: L: ~ h.~ID)D
I
I

I_ _

_

d FRIDAY March 8/?l
Between

(J.D~~--..;u~~·

I

_

_

_

_

_

_

_

_

$2

_

·-= _(fl_

_ _ _ -~ _ _ _ _ _

_l O_P- -

D.J. Music
STAUB
9 pm-1 am
Draft Beer in Pitchers
Sun. -Thurs.
Good Prices!!
Club Steak
·a ood Tiffies!!
·Prime Rib
Watch for pool tournament March 16.
• Registration: 5-6 pm.
. Jllay begins at 6pm.

-Prime Rib Steak

Specials
$9.95

EACH

*Includes All-You-Can-Eat soup &amp; salad _bar,
veg. and choice of potato.

'

lt'
. &lt;&gt;·· •

Thurs t'. s: Alternative .Music
.,

.

".'-'-.

----

$2

- - - - - - -- -- - --------37 s. Cumberland St.
.-

Thunder Bav, Ont.
P7B 2T4

ATURDAY March 9/91
Between &amp; _.... .•... .10.

27 S. Cumberland St.
One block east of Hocks Landing
Serve Daily 5-9 ·pm.

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                    <text>THE
?OF THE
-WEEK
2
.EDITORIAL

3

NEWS

4 .
ENTERTAINMENT
7 .
SPORTS
11
l

1 CLASSIFIED
I
:::,

15

! ._____ ____,

----EN
LL
9
IT OPEN •
.

.

�.The .AJgt.ls Page 2 September 19. 1991

LETTERS
Do you know who the Editor-in-Chief of the Argus is?

PhotosbyC.P.WalshandSueKemp

Brent. Bio/Geoll:

Dacyll, Biology I:

Is tt still Faisal Ali?

Nope, but I want to

lmowt
Ronald, General Sc. Oast year):
I lmow it's a guy.

Michelle, Sociology N:

Sarah, English I:

Faisal ...... . I don't lmow

No but I ~ want

his last name.

to know:
Tabatha, History Il: It's not Brad, is it? No

Mosaic Computers

IN THE NEW STUDENT CENTRE!
■

KING
APPARATUS
They love In varty, 1hey love to rock

DA/\CE
DA~CE
DANCE
DANCE
DA:'tCE
DA~CE
DANCE

GRO$S

CANAi&gt;~

LOUD SKA PARTY

-roUR ,,.,2.

THIS IS THE IN PLACE TO BE:

MUSic .... COMEDY....... FUNf

•

DANCE
DANCE
DANCE
DANCE
DANCE

D~CE DANCE
DANCE DANCE
DANCE DANCE
DANCE DANCE
DANCE DANCE

DANCE
DANCE
DANCE
DANCE
DANCE

UVE

mthe
NEW S'IUDENr CENTRE :
FrJdav Sept. 20
Saturday

sept. ·21

SATURDAY SEPT. 28

�•

I

EDITO RIAL

The AJgus Page 3 September 19, 1991

THE ENVIRONMENTAL · MOVEMENT IS D~.--=The Environment is supposed to be the number one ttem on
every person and corporation's agenda in the nineties. But in
spite of this renewed earth consciousness, the number of
people interested in greening the earth are outnumbered by
those who Just don't gtve a damn ..
WhilepollsindlcatethatahugemajorityofNorthAmericans
are "concerned with the environment" a quick look around
proves that somebody's lying to Dectma.
I'll grant that things like blue box recycling programs are
springing up tn cities across the country except Thunder Bay
of course (Mayor Jack Masters can be reached at 625-2213
N.B. It's an election year.) But take the simplest environmental
problem there ls -- Utter. Based on the amount of garbage that
never makes 1t to the trash can in our country, I'd say that the
environmental movement is not the monolithic power that it is
portrayed as.
Tilis past summer I worked at a local grocery store. One of
the morning responsiblllties we had was to pick up as much
garbage as we could on our parking lots. Unfortunately for me,
I was stuck with this Job on more than one occasion.
The first day I went out I filled an entire garbage bag With
various scraps of paper, plastic, foil, and glass. I didn't bother
With cigarette butts, but if I had a nickel for every one ... The
point ls, there was a lot of Utter.
At first. I blamed this on the fact that whoever did the job
yesterday didn't try to do a very good job. But the next day I was
assigned the Job again.
My first thought was, "What did I do wrong?"
My second thought was, "This should be easy. I had this
parking lot spotless yesterday, well at least rmtfl that lady in
the red Trans Am threw a bag out her Window".
Much to my surprise and chagrin! I filled yet another bag of
garbage.
One day. One bag. One store. 365 days in a year.
Before this summer I believed that the environment was the
number one thing on people's minds. What a Jokel What a Uel
We haven't even been able to stop ourselves from littering.
Does anyone remember the pollution solution in the 70s?

Remember that stupid owl on 1V singing "Give a hoot, don't
pollute"?
This is 1991 ! Litter is supposed to be a solved problem. How
can we blue box, blue bag, reduce. reuse, recycle, if we can't
even walk an extra fifty metres with our McWaste to the trash
can? .
.
On another front. bleached paper towel, bathroom and facial
tissue outsell their unbleached counterparts (equivalently
priced or cheaper) by approximately a 10: 1 ratio! What's the
problem here? Does brown tollet paper not flt your bathroom
decor? Should you care if it doesn't? I'm sure that our collective
asses can really tell the difference between designer and
unbleached paper.
It's discouraging, but don't let it get to you. Be apart of a
visible minority by;
*Recycling your plastic bags (there are depots at local
grocezy stores) or better yet, reuse them.
•~ycle your pop cans. There are blue barrels on campus.
*Blue bag your newspapers. Show City Council we're ready
for blue boxing.
*Buy paper and paper products made from unbleached
recycled paper even tf it does cost a few extra bucks. The more
you buy, the lower the price will eventually be.
*Don't litter. You'll feel better.
*Remind your friends when they forget. We're all human and
they'll have a chance later to return the favour. Nobody loses
and the environment wins.
What are our chances? I honestly don't know. But don't be
afraid to make a difference at the individual level. TGB

STUDENT PERSPECTIVE : HELP CAP Nl
11

1

11

In these troubled times of ours, wouldn't 1t be great to have
someone at the helm whom we could count on to get us out of •
thJs messJ The only person that I could really_ trust with any
of Canada's problems ls James T. Kirk, captain of the starship,
Enterprise. Whenever something happened durtngTuose Star
Trek episodes, you just knew that Kirk would be able to save
the day.
•
Now let's teleport our minds to a time and place far away ...
and see how Captain Kirk deals with one of Thunder Bay's
biggest problems, outshopping to Duluth.
As we begin this Star Trek episode, the starship Enterprise
ts hovering over the city of Thunder Bay.
Kirk: "Chekov."
Chekov: "Ches, Captain Kirk?"
Kirk: "Where are we? What is this place?"
Chekov: "Wunder Bay."
Kirk: "Wunder Bay? I've never heard of it."
Spock: "No, Captain. It's Thunder Bay, a city with approximately 114,691 humanoid inhabitants. It's the home town .of
the F1yers, the Thunderhawks and Paul Schaeffer, David
Letterman's sidekick."
Kirk: "Oh yeah, I've heard of this place. But, what are we
doing h ere? What ts our mission?'

Spock: "It seems that the Thunder Bayttes are travelling
halfway across the galaxy to do their shopping in an alien land
with steep hills. 1bis land ts called Duluth, and its major
shopping centre, the Miller H1ll Mall acts like a magnet,
dra~g Thunder Bay shoppers."
Kirk: "Big.deal Spock. I stlll don't see what the problem ls."
Spock: "It is really quite logical Captain. This situation ts
hurting businesses in Thunder Bay that sezve local cttlzens
since the Thunder Bayttes are spending thousands of dollars
tn Duluth instead of In Thunder Bay."
Kirk: "All right Spock. I've heard enough. Red Alert! I repeat.
Red Alert! Man the photon torpedoes. Chekov. when I give the
signal. wipe the Mtller Hill Mall and the city of Duluth off the
planet."
Chekov: "Ches, Captain."
Spock: "Captain, I feel that you are acting quite tllogtcally.
You are attacking the symptoms of the problem, not the
source."
Kirk: "Jeez Spock. This is the first time that we've had a
chance to use the photon torpedoes 1n a long time."
Stay tuned untlll next week's episode to find out whether
Kirk listens to Spock or annihilates Duluth and the Mtller Hill
Mall. (See page 8 for the concluding episode)Todd LaHaye

THE NATIONAL SAMPLE

handling of Africans.
•Also last year. the dean of Yale was reproached for publicly
encouraging students to leaxn about the histozy of western
civilization. Critics charged he was supporting the perpetuation of a society oppressive to women and people of colour. His
speech. however. argued that western democracy helped foster
a culturally diverse society foreign to other nations.
As a result of these and sfmilar incidents on Canadian and
U.S. campuses, many people no longer feel completely free to
voice their academic optntons on touchy issues without the fear
of being branded a misogynist. racist or homophobe.
So, they've been taking precautions. Accordtngto Maclean's,
some male professors at the University of Waterloo. will now
only meet with female students and professors if accompanied
by another person. Other professors have expressed concern
that they may be condemned as racists if they were to gtve a
visible minortty student a low grade.
Of course, an important dlstlnctton must be made between
remarks that deliberately propagate hatred and those that
don't. Statements that are meant to vilify gender or cultural
groups have no place 1n our classrooms. But a sexist or racist
comment need not necessarily be motivated by hatred. And the
anthropologist's exhibition and the Yale dean's speech were
n ot. Similarly. Shakespeare's literary treatment of women increasingly under fire for being oppressive - doesn't mean he
disliked women. His plays just.ceflected the social conditions
of his time.

CORRECTING POLITICS. The Charlatan. May 30, 1991.
by Sandra L. Sperounres, Carleton University

Politlcal correctness. You may not know about it, but you're
exposed to it almost every time you set foot on campus. It
sounds like some kind of afllictlon. and tn a way it ts. More and
more people are getting caught up 1n tts web -- and it shows no
sign of breaking. •
What exactly is political correctness? Most of us better know
it as the attempt to rid campuses of discrimination on the basis
of sex. race. and sexual orientation in terms of hiring pollcies,
course curriculum.
It exists tn society too, but universities are where the most
progressive (and militant) elements are.
But for all the awareness this movement ls producing,
political correctness ts also having some scary effects on the
freedom of expression and the learning process. Maclean'&amp;
magazine calls tt "a wave of repression .. .sweeping through the
universities."
Take the following examples cited in the May 27 issue of
Maclean's:

*Last year, a University of Toronto anthropologist was
labelled by blacks as a racist for an exhibit she curated for the

Royal Ontario Museum. She was harassed continually and
viciously by students and activists to the point ofhavtng to take
a medical leave of absence from the university. Oddly enough,
the exhibit was supposed to chastise white col"oni~~ -~ d the~r
~ &lt;"y* ~ ♦ - -'!,4 • .+,•t­
. .,...... ' :" .... .,. -~

�The·Argus Page 4 September 19. 1991

NEWS

CHEMICAL SPILLAGE DISCOVERED AT LAKEHEAD
chemical disposal methods
in chemistry labs, Mrs.
Muldoon said there was "no
excuse" for draining the
chemicals and hopes it was
just an isolated event. Although for a long time there
was no policy, Muldoon
says, the Municipal Industrial Strategy for Abatement
(MISA) was expected to affect the practice of pouring
dangerous chemicals into
university sinks: chemicals
which ultimately enter the
city's water supply.
The city of Thunder Bay's
Public Works Department
says that a Sewer Use Bylaw
which was updated in 1990
to control what goes into the
city's sewer system. "The
Sewer Use Control Program
is in place to enforce this
bylaw", they said, but as of
yet there are no practices to
monitor sewage coming from
the University.
The Primary Sewage
Treatment Plant operates on
the sedimentation of waste
and removes only phosphorus and solids from the incoming material. With over
80 Million litres per day of
treated waste being handled,
additional chemicals are
said to be "diluted".
When contacted about
their policy on industrial
waste from Universities, the
organization Greenpeace
claimed to have no standing
policy in this instance as
there wasn't yet enough information on the quantity

by FC DeGagne
Flags were raised early
this semester as the Argus
was informed about improper chemical handling
procedures on campus. Both
the Chemistry and Biology
departments in the Centennial Building , of Lakehead
University are involved. Students concerned about
negative environmental and
individual health effects explained that draining acid
into the university sewer
system was common practice following lab classes.
Lax supeIVision, student
carelessness and a lack of
effective laboratory procedure have all been blamed
in the reported draining of
acetic acid, sulphuric acid,
hydrochloric acid and acetone cleaner down lab
drains. Two students who
desire anonymity tell of students who at the end of lab
drain these commonly used
and dangerous chemicals
into sinks. Besides being
used to wash hands. the
sinks also drain by a roundabout route to the city's sewer
system.
Presently there is policy
for the storage and disposal
of waste chemicals, noted
Mrs. Marton Muldoon of the
university's Occupational
Health and Safety office.
Mrs. Muldoon also explained
the strict Mlnistry of Environment regulations to control disposal.
When informed of the lax

VITAL STUDENT
ISSUES
By Noel W,ard

As you walk into
Cassandra Koenen's office
you are greeted by a cheerful woman who seems eager
to listen and talk to you.
But when you begin to talk
business, the new VP Student Issues becomes a serious professional person.
"This is the type of office
where you can do a lot of
work or you can do a little ...
I hope that I can do a good
job _for everybody."
In apparent contradiction, Koenen's first proposed
policy during her term on
the Board of Directors,
which would have wrested
editorial control away from
the Argus staff and left a
precedent for the possible
inter(erence of the autonomy of all LU clubs, was
defeated:
What exactly does a VP
Student Issues do? "Basically I cover all aspects of
student life on campus."
This deals with social life
• like Orientation and Winter
Carnival. Koenen runs campaigns for social causes, like
l\ID.S or alcohol.awareness.
,•

~

.-• ..,. t

~

•

I

• ,.,,. • • -

,,.- • .,..,...-, 1

&gt;

•'I • 4 •

• • ...-

•

Photo by C.P. Walsh

V.P. Student Issues Cass Koenen

She is also part of the Senate add its committees, the
Senate being Lakehead's
academic governing body.
"If they ever have any problems with any professor...
they hunt me down and we
try to solve it."
/
Koenen, in dealing with
recent social aspects of her
job. felt that she and
Christine
Fisher.
Resisdence Programmer,
organized a successful Orientation for this year's freshmen.
One of the aspects of Orientation was the Mentor
Program. Many first years
Continued on Page 6. See
"Koenen·
•

•

or toxicity of the chemicals.
Though declining to comment, one representative
alluded to the fact that dilution of chemical does not
mean absence of chemical.
The president of the campus environmental group
ECHO stated that he was
"appalled" when he heard
the news.
As to the MOE's responsibility to water quality
monitoring, the Public
Works Office replied that it
has "yet to see anything revised by the ministry" since
the incorporation of the
Sewer Use Bylaw. Monitoring could harm the city 1ri
some respects if the results
were poor. Economically. a
monitoring process in itself
may discourage industrial
development if the waste
from such a plant would not
measure up to constant
scrutiny.
One of the city's water
filter retailers reported that
Thunder Bay's water ts one
of the worst for its concentrations of byproduct from
the treatment of chlorine it
receives to remove bacteria.
Industry, along with
laundromats and photo
labs, also introduce chemi-

cals into the sewage treatment plant which must then
dilute it into the city's water. "I would not take a bath
in it", indicated the concerned businessman, referring to unfiltered city water.
The University's maintenance department gave details of safety measures in
place to exacerbate the presence ofchemicals in the Centennial Building's plumbing.
Special drain pipes which
resist corrosion from acids
connect all the labs. and a

dilution tank containing
water collects all fluid and
mixes it before it is released
to the city sewer system.
"I believe that th!s tank
promotes the abuse ofproper
disposal policy". commented
one of the concerned students when informed of its
presence, "and besides,
whether it gets diluted or
not, chemicals still get into
the water."
The Ministry of the Environment could not be
reached for details.

PRESIDENT MIDDLETON
SOUNDS OFF
By Noel Ward

For his second'and last time, Ian Middleton is the
President of LUSU. And for his second and last
time, he is looking forward to battles with both the
Provincial governments and University administration.
This time last year, LUSU was in conflict }Vith the
Canadian Federation of Student-Services, or CFSS, as well as most of the other universities in
Canada over two proposed policies that left the
students of Canada without a voice in its operattons. This year, these problems are solved, yet
Middleton can still foresee problems.
"There's always problems... there's always structural things," he said, yet there are attempted
improvements in the system that are beginning
this year which have yet to pass or fail a practical
test.
Being in his second term, Middleton has the benefit of being able to look back into the past and see
what mistakes were made and hopefully avoid or
correct those mistakes.
Middleton was not pleased with the way Orientatton or the Spring Break ran last year, and there
was a crisis with the impeachment of Dwayne
Hunking.
Yet these events lie in the past and Middleton can
now move on.
Both this year and last year there was an anomaly
in the administration of the Student Union becauseofalltheworkgoingintotheStudentCentre.
This year, the opening of the Student Centre and
the new Radio Station are taking up time. Yet
lookingbacktherew~_reafewthingsthatMiddleton
would like to change with the timing and the
operation of the Student Centre.
Part of the problem lies in the University however.
"Campus Development... really dragged their feet
on a lot of things," said Middleton when commenttng on the Univer~ity bureaucracy.
"The University bureaucracy is absolutely unbelievable. It's incredible. You have to go through- to
get anytb,ing a..c;:cornplished it b.as to go. Uu;ougµ so

....,________________.
LUSU President Ian Middleton Photo by C.P. Walsh

many different people and so many
different levels," said Middleton.
He added that it can be frustrating at
times to try to accomplish anything as
the University has so many regulationstofollowtogetevensimplethings
done that time is wasted. It would be
faster and easier just to directly hire
someone-to do something_as simple as
painting a wall, yet the way the bureaucracy is set up, this task could
take three weeks to begin. "Is there any
rhyme or reason to it? I don't think so,"
he said.
However. Middleton said that Dr. Bob
RosehG-·rt and other heads of the University are generally understanding
and wish to help. Middleton commented that Dr. Roseh art was prostudent and enjoyed taking part in
student activities. Because of Dr.
Roseh art's assistance, programs like
Security SeIVices for the students are
in place and functioning properly.
Some of Middleton's problems ortginate from a lack of funding for the
University. Currently, Lakehead Unist0 ry Continued on Page 6. See
"Middleton"

�TheArgus Page 5 September 19, 1991

NEWS

Blue Bags in LEBLANC CONDEMNS
By,.I.bJ!Pder Bay BOARD OF DI.R ECTORS
■

For those ofyou who are not
from Thunder Bay and have
onlyrecently arrtved back from
summerholidays"backhome",
you may or may not be aware
that Thunder Bay has now
begun a recycling program.
Well, sort of.
ThroughoutthehallsofL.U.
and some streets in The Giant
Heart, the words "blue bag"
have been uttered excitedly
from the mouths of the envtronmentally friendly.
However, many recent arrivals to Thunder Bay have no
idea what exactly a "blue bag"
was, and in probably have yet
to see one. That ts until an
interview was conducted with
DougMuncaster, theSupervtsor for Waste Management for
Thunder Bay.
The blue bag program works
thusly:
For homes with up to four
separate untts, kits have been
(or should have been) deltvered to doorsteps by a private
distributor hired by the city
contatntngtwocomplimentaxy
blue bags, a schedule for both
garbage and blue bag collection days, and a coupon for
$0.35 off your next purchase
of Glad blue bags.
Curbside pick-up for blue
bag.s should operate evecy second,,week, and those that blue
bag should consult their schedules to ensure that they have
the bags out by 7:00am the
morning of pick-up. Also, it ts
important to remember to put
only newspapers, magazines
and flyers in their bag, as other
materials will contaminate any
the recycled product.
Unfortunately, blue bag recycling ts not yet available to
apartments with more than
four separate units, although
Mr. Muncaster is hoping to
service apartments within the
next month. This program,
however, ts at the discretion of
the superintendents of each
individual building.
The federal government has
enforced a law that demands
all towns of over 5,000 people
to have a recycling program in
effect by June of 1992. The
frustrating dilemma at hand ts
that the federal government
gives only ltm1ted funding to
support its demands. With the
blue bag program now partially in effect, Thunder Bay
has begun to take the first step
towards total recycling.
Muncaster stated that once an
economical and efficient system can be found, it will be
implemented as soon as possible. Factors to consider are the
price ofvehicles, a storage site,
buildings and where the funding will come from. Because
companies are now required
by law to use a mtntmum percentage of recycled goods in
approprtateproducts, theposstble sale of recyclable material may generate funding for
programs.

The following are depots
where other goods can be
dropped off:
- 410 Mountdale Ave. off
Arthur St. (paper only)
- New Vickers St. (paper
only)
- Eagan St. Public Works
Yard [Front St. past Hydro blue metalbox] (paper only)
- RR#5 Arthur St. [Al 011
Services] (waste oil and
petroleumbased waste)
- 399 Moony St. by Greyhound(brushandwoodwaste
to be used inlandscaping)
- 182 Algoma St. [Ftreweed)
(cardboard. packingmatertalbubblewrap and styrofoam
chips, egg cartons)
• on the last Saturday of
every month (except December), Environment North has a
depot at the Petro Canada on
Memorial (across from Intercity Mall) for food and beverage cans from 10:00am 4:00pm

• The Canadian National
Institute for the Blind accepts
used eye glasses to be sent to
developing countrtP.s

By Noel Ward

Tony LeBlanc ts returning for a second term in
office as VP Finance.
LeBlanc ts the man who
ensuresthatallourmoney
ts spent by the Student
Union for the students.
LeBlanc ts also responsible for clubs, the Main
-Events Hall in the new Student's Centre, and for the
notoriously late Student
Handbook.
The interview started off
on a bad note when
LeBlanc informed us ofthe
poor sales of the Orientation Kits. Two-hundred
and thirty kits out of one
thousand.have been sold,
resulting in a financial loss
for LUSU. LeBlanc complained that the LUSU executive were too busy to
spend all theirtime selling
the kits. Placing the blame
on the shoulders of the
Board of Directors for their
lack of participation while
claiming that they were

budget. It's almost a co:µiplete, separate corporation
on its own, so, infact, if the
Student Centre goes bankrupt it doesn't drag us in."
LeBlanc believes that the
students will find that the
prices for food and beer are
cheaper than most other
places of a similar nature
in Thunder Bay. Because
of the larger size of the Student
Centre and the
Photo by C.P. Walsh
cheaper
prices, LeBlanc
V.P. Finance Tony Leblanc
hopes that business will
boom.
.
devoted.
All
profits
will
be
put
"I don't mind slandering
back
into
the
Student
Centhem. About 200/4 ofthe Board
Members are very good. But tre and not go to LUSU,
80%, they just come up and thus in the long run, food
ask· for their Orientation and alcohol prices may go
Street Dance ticket and we down. LeBlanc hopes to
spend $10,000 on1ts opennever see them agatn."
ing.
This year, LeBlanc drew
The grand opening meup two budgets. The first
dia
event will take place on
budget was for LUSU and the
October
18. Then, the name
second was for the Student's
of
the
pub
and a major act
Centre. The two budgets are
will
be
revealed.
not related. "... The Student
Continued on Page 6.
Centre budget is not tied in
See
"Leblanc Condemns"
any way with the LUSU

Scotiabank chalks up a uniQl!e
no-fee banking package for students.
Establishing a good credit rating
will help in your financial ·qealings
after graduation. Why not start now?
If you 're a full-time college1 or
university student, you're eligible for
the Scotia Banking Advantage. The
package includes an automated

banking machine card, a daily interest
chequing account, a Classic VISA
Card*~ and for qualified graduating
students, an auto loan**. Drop by your
nearest Scotiabank branch and ask us
for details. We'll be happy to show you
all the ways we can help.

..,

Scotiabank
• The Bank of Nova Scotia registered user of mark.
•• Subject to credit approval.
1 Community College, Technical Institute or Cegep.

e".t.l.

·-p
~

�The Argus Page 6 September 19. 1991

NEWS
LEBLANC CONDEMNS
(Cont'd from Page 5)
"We want to splash our
name all over Northwestern
Ontario. We plan to lose
money on the grand opening because we figure this
building to last."
There are various reasons
for the delay in the opening
of the Student Centre. First,
the kitchen wanted more
time to train their staff.
Sound problems also contributed to the opening.
"It would have been redundant to open a large bar
like that without sound,"
said LeBlanc. Yet this delay
has given the staffmore time
so that now, things should

run quite smoothly.
"Reguardless of sound
though, we are opening
Wedensday... at least during the day," said LeBlanc.
He continued saying that
even ifthere are sound problems, the bar will be open
and food will be seived. If
the sound is not working by
night, then there will be no
amplified music. "I think the
wait will be worth it in the
end."
In anticipation for possible vandalism, extra staff
such as bouncers and doormen have been hired. The
Security Office is also just
down the hall from the Stu-

MIDDLETON
versity is running with a
$400,000 deficit. and Bob
Rae is not helping the average student to solve these
problems.
"Bob Rae is my most favourite person in the entire world!
And I say that cynically. I'm
livid," commented Middleton
on the subject of the provincial government.
Thursday. September 19,
the heads of the Student
Unions are to meet Rae in
Toronto. Toe provincial government has already met
with the presidents of the
universities and the faculty
associations. The Student
Union beads expect to hear
the Minister of Education
announce a $30 million cut
in education expenditure
and no inflationary increases. If the universities
want more money. then they
must accept a wage cut or a
raJse in tuition.
Wage cuts can mean strikes
by university administrations. resulttnginalostyear.
Tuition increases, and there
is a document somewhere
looking at the idea of a 30%
tuition increase. can mean

dent Centre. and they can
easily see the hall of glass at
the front of the Centre. Fortunately. the glass is insured.
It was said that some
clubs would be placed in the
basement of the Student
Centre. yet this is not so.
LUSU encountered some financial difficulty. so the
administrationagreedtobuy
part of the basement for
$300,000.
Many clubs at Lakehead
have suffered problems with
spacing and poor condition
of their offices. This falls under LeBlanc's jurisdiction.
Several clubs have become

(Cont'dfrornPage4)

that many students may
have to take much time off
school to by and find a job
so they can pay for their
future education. "We're just
going to have to tell the minister 'No."'
The provincial government
is making_ the upcoming
meeting in Toronto difficult
for the Student Unions already. Notices of the meeting arrived on September 9,
the day classes began. This
left Middleton and the LUSU
administration scrambling
to make arrangements to
travel to and stay in Toronto
for the meeting. Just last
Monday, the 16th of September, the agenda was received by LUSU. The Student Unions are not even
being told what the 'lreaswy Board has planned. Th.is
information is to be announcedatthemeettng. This
gives Middleton and other
Student Union heads 'no
time to formulate a response
or a defence.
Middleton commented also
on the problem of vandalism. He felt that last year's
rash of vandalism was due

to the added stress of the
Gulf Conflict, and the problems in the pub may have
been due to its claustrophobic type environment. Yet
this prol;&gt;lemcosts LUSU and

the students money and

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Also as part ofthe budget,
$20,000 has been set aside
for the twenty-five clubs on
campus. Because of problems in the pastwhereclubs
have asked for more money
after the budget had been
passed, a $5,000 contingency fund has been created. "My prime motive is to
have them spend their
money," said LeBlanc.

KOENEN
met some more senior students. Koenen feels that this
contact is important and that
these people may stay in
contact for a long time.
Koenen, when dealing
with the social issues that
herjob faces, said that when
an awareness campaign
takes place she will do more
than just hand out pamphlets. Movies. speakers,
other presentations and activities will take place so that
the message really gets

across to the students. "I
think that would show the

students that the Job is here
seIVices.
for a reason and that someLibrary books, photocopyone is taking it seriously
ing seIVices, and other conand getting theJob done and
not wasting their money."
veniences that LUSU proOne of Koenen's new revides may have to be cut
back if the problem gets out
sponsibilities, is to the new
Gender Issues Centre, coof hand. Middleton cannot
ordinated by Valerie Lellava.
understand why students
Koenen and Board Member
continue to destroy or damage the. property that they • George Pardalis came up
with the plan for this centre.
must live and work in, and
This
is an education centre
hopes that this year, vanfor
the
students, educating
dalism will not be a probboth sexes on gender issues.
lem.
It is open to both men and
Middleton also stated that
women. Volunteers are
this would be his last year
needed for the Centre, as
as LUSU President. It is posMs. Lellava is working only
sible he may return next
part time, and Koenen hopes
year to complete his studthat both men and women
ies. yet he will not take an
will volunteer to keep the
active part in student govCentre open during the day.
ernment. He has gathered
This Centre is equipped
quite a knowledge of how
with a library of books and
the system operates and how
magazines concerning gento get things done, and
der issues and this resource
therefore has commented
library is open to all stuthatifthefutureWSU presidents.
dent should ever need adThe first planned camvice or help. he may oblige.
paign for this centre is on
the problem of date rape.

Mac To School Promotion
Classic 2140 &amp; StyleWrlter

defunct, so these offices
have been allocated to other
surviving clubs. However, it
• is necessary for clubs to
share space in some cases.
For those offices, LUSU
has budgeted $10,000 to
renovate these offices
through a paint Job, new
furniture, and improved ventilation.

(Cont'dfromPage4)

Plans for this year also
include an alcohol awareness program. "I drink... but
what we're bytng to promote is that drinking in excess to the point where
you're throwing up or become violent (is not right.)"
October 21 to 25 is Alcohol
Awareness week, and that
week a Don't Drink.and Drive
program and the Don't Leave
Dick for Dead program will
be promoted, as well as responsible drinking. Some

hit-home videos will be
brought in which she hopes
people will watch and take
seriously. She .also hopes
students will follow the Under-age Policy of the new
pub.
This new VP Student Issues, when she began her
Job, was surprised by some
of her actual responsibilities. "I really didn't quite
realise howmuch work there
is to do." The Radio Station
is new, as is the Gender
Issues Centre. She is also a
part of several committees
that she didn't realize were
part of the Job, yet her colleagues are all helpful. "Dr
Roseh art's a wonderful
man toworkwith... he's very
understanding and veryprostudent." She also singled
out Dr. Dianne Common and
Grant Walsh as being "great
to work with."
Koenen has taken on the
position of VP Student Issues for this term, and she
decidedly wants to impress
all at-Lakehead and show
her dedication and enthusiasm for her Job.

Editorial Continued from Page 3
As such, we shouldn't discredit or persecute authors,
philosophers, historians who are long dead. We can't change
their views - but we can change our own. The only way we can
do this is through rational and open discussion of AIL ideas.
That means sitting down and debating questions of race,
sexism and homophobia in an intelligent manner- not through
intimidation or insults.
Universities are supposed to be institutions where ideas are
fostered - no matter how popular or unpopular they may be.
While it's wonderful we're flnally beginning to recognize the
importance of women's and racial studies, we can't start
ignoring traditional thought Just because it no longer meshes
with our mind frames. No matter how disagreeable it may be,
it is a fundamental part of our history. And what happened in
the past can't be rewritten.
We can count ourselves lucky at Carleton - we may have felt
the vibrations of political correctness, but we have yet to feel
truly restricted. Then again, we haven't had a Philip Rushton
to test our tolerance.

�TheArgus Page 7 September 19. 1991

ENTERTAINMENT

JEFF HEAL_EY ROCKS LU!
Street Dance A Tarnished Success

by Sharon Docherty
This years Street Dance
with headliners Aldo Nova
and Jeff Healey was for the
most part a success. The
three thousand plus crowd
was surprised and pleased
at the two headliners.
Both bands reacted positively to the crowd giving
good performances. Aldo
Nova (though I am not personally a fan) gave the impression they were happy to
be here, performtng a wide
selection of songs which
span the bands long career.
See Brian B. for interview.
The Jeff Healey Band,
coming on a half hour later
than scheduled did give a
good quality performance.
Healey seemed pleased with
the turnout, speaking directly to the audience
throughout the show.
The band performed a
wide selection of their music
from the past couple ofyears,
coming back out for a two

song encore.
However, the event was
not without its share of problems. There were promotional problems, a lack of
advance ticket sales and
some security problems at
the actual event.
Despite an excellent fan
response at the actual event.
The Street Dance had been
plagued with promotional
problems right from the get
go.
Usually when a band goes
on tour, they will promote
their own show in conjunction with the promoter. In
this case, the Jeff Healey
Band, there was very little
communication or cooperation with the promoter
(LUSU Events Programmer
Jeff Dockery).
Apparently the band had
refused press to the Cronicle
Journal and several other
papers during the last few
weeks.
Dockery, in his position

photo by; Mark Achtenberg

as promoter, pulled some
strings in order to get a
promise of a telephone interview with Healey
for the Cronicle Journal.
The interview never took
place.
In addition the Argus
was not granted and interview and a scheduled meet
and greet session between
the band and the radio station was scrapped.
The band left LU ten
minutes after leaving the
stage.
Dockery expressed his
frustraion at the whole incident stating that "it
presents for a very difficult
circumstance for me because I'm trying to promote
the show as best I can and
if I don't have support
well ... that sucks." Dockery
cited lack of communication between the band and
its management as an explanation.
All these problems may
lead one to wonder why get
the Jeff Healey band in the
first place. Well the organizers of the Street Dance
were stuck for a good headliner. The Jeff Healey Band
hadn't been here for a year
and a half: in addition
Dockery had had no previous problems in dealing
with Jeff Healey and the
Band.
This time, though the
problems were not all directly experienced by
Dockery, but by the people
he worked with. Dockery's
feelings on this issue are
"when you create problems
for my people the you create problems for me."

B's HOUSE
byBrfanB.

Can you believe it! I mean, can you really
believe it? I got an interview with Aldo Nova!
By now you are probably wondering why
the hell some shmuck who's totally into
dance and house would bother asking a
rock n' roll star anything. Well, Aldo had
some pretty interesting things to say:
B: How are you feeling about the demise
of vinyl?
AN: Well, I think it's a shame. Vinyl's a
great medium ...
B: Do you think that by not using vinyl
that your sales were diminished?
AN: No, because CD and tapes are popular formats, and just about everyone has a
CD or a cassette deck. It's too bad, though,
because vinyl is great for cover art.
B: Did you use digital technology while
recording, as in DAT or MIDI? (Digital Audio Tape: Musical Instrument Digital Interface)
AN: Yes, we mastered to DAT, but everything we recorded I played myself. (In other
words, they put the master recording on
Digital Audio Tape, but none of the music
was digital in origin.)

B:Howdoyoufeelaboutsamplinginrap
and other music?
AN: Sampling's great. Ithinkit'sa unique
way of expression. To a certain extent,
though. It gets to be a problem when a
sampler doesn't get permission to do what
he does.
B: Okay. One far-out, off-track question.
Would you ever consider, or have you
thought about, some sort of collaboration
with a rap artist like Anthrax and Public
Enemy did?
AN: Yeah, I'd love to do something with
Ice-Tor LL Cool J. That's basically what
Blood on The Bricks is about: drugs, gangs,
street violence. It's the same message, just
put to rock music. It's all the same stuff,
whether rap or rock or something else.
Music is music, no matter what it sounds
like.
And that's B's throwdown for this week.
Stay tuned in for more hype news about the
Student Centre and some neat info about
your favourite dance artists. Till thenPeace Out!
PS: Vinyl's not dead!

photo by; Mark Achtenberg
According to Dockery
what all these problems display is that the "record company obviously does not give
two shits" and he concluded
by stating "I refuse to do
business that band again."
Another problem with
the Street Dance this year
was the student apathy regarding advance ticket
sales. To be blunt they were
not great. The maj ortty of
the three thousand plus
tickets were sold in the last
twenty four hours: after the
weather report for Friday
night was released. Dockery
expressed his displeasure
at this by stating that the
increase in doorprtce($5. 50)
is put there to encourage
advance ticket purchases.
The Street Dance is an expensive event to put on with
performer. groundskeeping
and security costs to con-

sider.
The students of LU are
going to have to make a
definate commitment to this
event in order to have it
continue.
Finally there were some
fights both in the Cafe,
where the Beer Garden was,
and outside. And there were
some minor incidents when
it was decided to close down
the pub two hours early.
The decision to close the
pub was made by the Pub
Management after consulting the Thunder Bay Police.
JeffDockerv stated that "we
felt it would be better if we
lost the last two hours of
operation, which is no big
deal." Dockery further commented that "alcohol really
does not belong at a show
like this, simply because the
masses create too many
problems."

�The Argus Page 8 September 19. 1991

ENTERTAINMENT
LAXDAL AT THE MOVIES
by Brian ~dal
This summer Hollywood
released few memorable pictures. The most memory
worthy feature of this summer at the movies was the
constant stream of terrible
"dogs" that were released in
hopes of parting the masses
from their hard earned cash.
Among the bombs were
Problem Child 2. Drop Dead
Fred, Don't Tell Mom the
Babysitter is Dead, Body
Parts. and Bill and Teds
Bogus Journey {what can
you say about a movie where
Death steals the show).
However the five worst
films of the summer make
those titles above look like
Gems. Discussed below are
the top five summer duds in
order of increasing contempt.
Double Impact, Jean
Claude Van Damme's first
big budget film~ The movie
was to damme dumb and to

damme boring. It was bad
enough that the plot was
moronic, but even the action scenes lacked any danger or energy. ThJs movie
turned out to be a double
dose ofdebllitatlng dullness.
Return to the Blue Lagoon, 1f you saw the pathetic ortginal you may wonder why anyone would want
to make a sequel. much less
see it. Tilis picture can be
Ideally described as a soft
core romp In the wilderness
with absolutely no point.
Another You, Richard
Prlor and Gene Wilder are
reunited once again, for one
main reason, to make
money. Unfortunately they
are given no script, and are
forced to create a film on the
spot. The result is an unendtng strtng ofmisftres that
tarnish this once outstanding comedy team.
Bingo, ls a movte about a
dog that was not man's best
friend. It barked it's way to

the theatre, but whined it's
way out. If you have never
heard of this movie count
yourself lucky.
Delfrlous. John Candy
can usually save a picture
with his humorous· shtick.
But there ts just no hope for
Delirious, the worst picture
of the summer. As I sat In
the silent, slowly emptying
theatre I had to keep remtndtngmys_elfthat this was
a comedy. A satire on Soap
Operas this is not, but rather
a slow tedious exhibition In
torture techniques guaranteed to give you the courage
to ask for your money back.
Thank God its Fall!

CAPTAIN KIRK SAVES CANADA II
by Argus Sindedicated
Columnist Todd LaHaye
In our last episode, Captatn Kirk was about to solve
the outshopptngproblem by
shooting photon torpedoes
at Miller Hill Mall and the
city of Duluth.
Kirk: "Okay Spock. You
have exactly one minute to
explatn the source of the
outshopptng problem. If I
am not satisfied with your
explanation. I will gtve the
order to fire the photon torpedoes."
Spock: "Vecy well Captain. The source of this problem is the source of all Canada's problems. namely the
Prime Minister, Brian
Mulroney. Mr. Mulroney is
an evil dictator whose sole
mission In life is to destroy
Canada."

Kirk: "Spock, I find this
qwte hard to believe."
Spock: "Well, it is true
Captatn. Meech Lake, free
trade, the Gsr, cross-border shopping and the greenhouse effect are all Instruments that this man has
usect to hurt Canada."
Kirk: "But .. . it doesn't
make sense that a Canadian would want to destroy
his own country."_
Spock: But Captain. he
is not a Canadian. He is a
Klingon with and Irish
name."
Chekov: "Wilthy Klingon!
Captain, let us wuse our
wasers to destwoy him."
Kirk: "Settle down
Chekov. My God Spock, how
did this happen?"
Spock: "Well Captain.
you know those Klingons.

An information session for the

McMaster University
Undergraduate Medical
Programme
will be held on

Tuesday, September 24, 1991 at
2:00pm

Lakehead University
in the

Health Sciences Resource
Centre
(Balrnoral St. entrance)

Room HS-1002 .
For further information contact:
Lakehead University, Scheduling &amp;
Examination Office 343-8495
Northwestern Ontario Medical Programme

They pop up all over the
place.·
Kirk: "Is Mulroney the
only threat to the country?"
Spock: "No Captatn. He
has an accomplice -- the
former Minister of Finance.
Michae1Wtlson.1broughhls
government's monetary
policy, Mr. Wilson managed
to plunge Canada into a terrible recession. You know
what that means, don't
you?"
Kirk: "Yes Spock. Mr.
Wilson must be a Romulan
since recessions are
Romulans' favourite weapons.•
Chekov:
"Wilthy
Womulanl"
Spock: "Now that you
know the major sources of
Canada's problems, what
are you going to do to save
this nation?"
Kirk: 'Tm not sure Spock.
How about mtxing some
matter and anti-matter?
That worked in last month's
episode."
Spock: "No Captatn. You
must do something with
Mulroney and Wilson."
Kirk: "Of course. Scotty."
Scotty: "Aye Captatn."
Kirk: "Okay Scotty. Now."
Now that the two aliens'
molecules are scattered
throughout the galaxy.
Canada is safe. But how long
will it be before another
Klingon and Romulan take
over?
ARTIIUR'S USED

FURNITURE

191 N. Cumberland St.
(Basement of Cumberland
Wash&amp; Dry)

Buy and Sell
345-9592
Tues - Sat. 11 -5

�\

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - TheArgus Page 9 Septeniberl9.1991

ENTERTAINMENT
LUSU STUDENT CENTER AND THE STUDY
Included here in is a "simple" list of the specific requirements that must be met in order for a student of Lakehead University to
gain admitance to the New Student Center Events Hall, and the redecorated Study Lounge. The Student Center is scheduled to
open on Wednesday (but don't bet your tuition on it!). This page is a public service anouncement brought to you by the Argus
Entertainment Editor; dedicated to making sure you have a good time!

Student Centre &lt;Events Hall}
Expected to open:
Wednesday, September 18 (subject to change)(limited hours only)
Hours of operation: 9 a.m. - 1 a.m. (Mon to Fri)12 p.m. - 1 a.m. (Saturday) closed (Sunday)
Operates as: full service bar and restaurant
Includes:
live concerts; special promotions; biggest dance floor in
Thunder Bay; satellite TV; roadhouse menu with great prices;
licensed by L.L.B.O.; smoking is permitted
Open to:
LU students, Alumni, staff and faculty (of all ages) and guests ONLY
Accommodates:
up to 650 patrons
Required to admittance:
valid LU student card (alumni, staff or faculty card where applicable) ANQ one of the following:
a)
valid drivers licence and picture; b)
valid age of majority card;
c)
valid passport;
d)
valid military I.D. with picture;
e)
valid native status card
These are the ONLY pieces of I.D. that will be accepted and .llllW be presented by patron as proof of age.

NO I,D, - NO ENTRY - NO EXCEPTIONS
FALSIFYING I.D. IS A CRIMINAL OFFENSE
Guests over 19:
must present proof of age (as above) and must be signed in by LU student (that student therefore assumes
responsibility for the action of their guest(s)).
Minors:
*must be an LU student or their guest to be admitted under the age of 19.
Required for admittance:
valid LU student card and proper I.D. (as above) must remit LU student card to Student Centre staff
upon entry (to be returned according to Rules, Regulations and Rights brochure)
Guests under 19:
must present proof of age (as above) and must be signed in by ·L u student (that student therefore assumes
responsibility) must also remit proof of age I.D. to Student Centre staff (to be returned upon exiting,
according to Rules, Regulations and Rights brochure)
, ***PLEASE NOTE: all underage patrons subject to Student Centre policies as outlined in the Rules, Regulations and
Rights brochure ie: bracelets and stickers.
ALL POLICIES ARE STRICTLY ENFORCED
The STUDY
Regular Hours of Operation: as of Wednesday, September 18: 10·a.m. - lOp.m. Monday to Saturday*; closed Sunday;* unless
reserved for special events
Special Events Hours of Operation:
10 a.m. - 6 p.m. (Monday to Saturday) for regular operation; 8 p.m. - 1 a.m. (Mon
day to Saturday) for special events; closed Sunday * advance notice to be given
Operates as: quiet lounge, games room, special events venue
Includes:
study area; four (4) pool tables; video games; pinball machines;
vending machines
NOTE:*non-smoking; *no alcohol served (except for special events as specified)
Open to:
LU students, alumni, staff and faculty of all ages (guests permitted to attend special events as requested)
Accommodates:
up to 300 patrons
Required for admittance:
regular operation - LU student card; special events (please see acceptable I.D. requirements for
Student Centre for students and guests "of age and older" a,ru1 minors)

NO I,D, - NO ENTRY - NO EXCEPTIONS
FALSIFYING I.D. IS A CRIMINAL OFFENSE

PARKING FEES
INCREASE
Questions or concerns should be
directed to Fred C. Anderson, Manag·er, Security Services at 8131 or
at the office UC1014. The following
rate changes apply to students,
faculty, staff and visitors.
Annual Rate - $93.00 plus GST for
a total of $99.51
Per Term Rate - $31.00 plus GST
for a total of $33.17
Motorcycle,Scooter, Etc.-$46.50
Dally Rate - $1.25
Reduced Rates for full-time staff:
Effective January 1, 1992 - $62.00
Effective May 1, 1992 - $31.00
Intercession (Spring) and Summer
Terms:
May 1, 1992 to August 31, 1992 $31.00
Intercession (Spring) Term Only:
May 1, 1992 to J4ne 30, 1992 $15.50
Summer Term Only:
July 1, 1992 to August 31, 1992 $15.50

'

•

SEMINARS ON FORMATTING AND DOCUMENTING (REFERENCING)
OTHER MAJOR PAPERS

ESSAYS AND

Learn how to format and document the essays and other major papers
according to your professor's directions.
The Learning Assistance Centre is offering seminars to supplement
the Workshops on Writing Essays. Choose:
Wednesday, September 25, 1991

12:30 p.m. - 2:00 p.rn.

Friday, October 4 ·, 1991

9:30 a.m. - 11:00 a.rn.

Register at the Learning Assistance Centre, currently located on
the fourth floor of the Library, Room 4016. Seminar location will
be given to you when you register.

'

•

�VISIT OUR NEW

lOCAITD DOWN M CODOR
FROM L.U.S.U. (SC 0020)

·STUDENT CENTRE
MAIN EVENTS HALL

FILL IN THE BALLOTS AVAILABLE
IN THE NEW STUDENT CENTRE
BAR TODAY II ENTRYS ARE OPEN
UNTIL OCTOBER 1 AT 4:30 PM

PRIZE: AN ALL EVENTS
rrs JAMMED PACKED WITH lH[ PASS FOR ENTIRE
MOST UP TO DATE VIDEO GAMES YEAR, PLUS, A BEQUE
IN TOWN!!!!
F R $200.
Attention Students!
Positions available in LUSU:
Chairperson - LUSU Board of Directors
External Committee - interested students
Arts &amp; Science Council - 5 undergrads
Student Senate position - 1 student
LUSU Events Committee - 2 students
Ombudsperson Advisory Committee - 2 students from Residence
and 2 students at large
SUDS (Alcohol Awareness) Committee - 2 students
Senate Committee on Academic Regulations - 1 undergrad
Senate Academic Committee - 1 undergrad
Senate Committee on Computing - 2 undergrads
Senate Continuing Education Committee - 2 part-time students
(1 on campus; 1 off-campus)
Senate Library Committee - 2 undergrads
Senate Committee on Teaching &amp; Learning - 1 undergrad
Senate Undergrad Studies Committee - 2 undergrads
Elections Committee - 3 students
LUSU Judicial Committee - 3 students
Disabled Students Action Committee - interested students
Human Rights Committee - 5 students
Please contact. LUSU office for further
details and application forms
.

�The Argus Page 11 September 19. 1991

SPORTS
THUNDERHAWKSANDJETSREACHAGREEMENT
Courtesy of Thunderhawks

Andy Morrow, President ·
of the Thunder Bay Thunder Hawks o( the Colonial
Hockey League announced
th1s morning the aftlltation
of the Thunder Hawks with
the Winnipeg Jets of ·the
National Hockey League for
the 1991 / 1992 hockey season.
The agreement was finalized on Monday, September
16. 1991 between Morrow

and Michael A Smith. Vice
President and General Manager of.the Jets.
Details of the agreement
include Winnipeg sending
future pro prospects from
their system to playtn Thunder Bay which would enable
them to gain experience at
the minor-pro level.
"After several meetings in
Winnipeg, we are extremely
pleased to have the agreement with a class organiza-

tion lik,e the Jets. The relationship will benefit both
organizations", said President Morrow Monday.
Thunder Bay•s 60 game
schedule begins here on
October 15whentheTounder Hawks host the
Brantford Smoke at the Gardens. Other teams include
one from St. Thomas as well
as Flint and Fraser Michi..
gan. Season tickets are now
on sale at the Gardens.

• •
•

.

N.H.L. 1991: The Smythe Division
by John Aegard
CALGARY FLAMES:

Strengths...
The Flames are loaded with talent. Snipers such as Joe Niewendyk. Doug Gilmour. and
Theron Flemy complement tough guys Ron Stern, Tim Hunter, and checking ace Joel Otto.
Better yet, there is a wealth of y.oung talent with immense potential just begtnnning to
mature in Robert Reichel, Paul Ranheim, and Stephane Matteau. Toe offensive thrust from
the point is unmatched in the NHL, with Al Macinnis and Gary Suter giver opposition
goaltenders fits. Weaknesses ....
There has been an intangible lack ofcharacter on th1s club sinceJimPeplinski and Lanny
Macdonald retired, making for fine regular seasons and disappointing playoffs. Aside from
~ and a need for a little more toughness on the blueline.
Players to Watch....
Theo Flemy and Paul Ranheim. Flemy will most likely slip from his stellar 51-goal
campaign. Ranheim is an exciting player whose due for a breakthrough year.
The Flames are cooked if....
Mike Vernon lets the crowd get under his skin.
Projection....
The Flames are deeper in all areas than the Kings, except for possibly goaltending. That
should cany them to a Smythe Division title.
The L.A. KINGS:

Strengths....
.
L.A will have the most feared line in the league with the reunited duo of Wayne Gretzky
and Jart Kurrt. Swede Tomas Sandstrom will move to the left side to accomodate Kurrt. In
addition tyo that fearsome threesome, the Kings have top-scoring LW Luc Robitaille to
anchor the second line. In goal, Kelly Hrudey is a proven talent and Daniel Berthiaume is
a solid counterpart.
Weaknesses....
The Kings don't have much scoring depth beyond the abovementioned players. They
expect Bob Kudelski, a converted LW with 23 goals last year, to centre Robitaille. Unless
Rob Blake regains last season's early form, the Kings will be without a power-play
quarterback.
Players to Watch....
Berthiaume and Sandstrom. Will the reappearance of Kurrt cost Sandstrom? And will
Berthiaume continue his strong perlotmance or was his late-season slump the sign of
things to come?
The Kings are cooked if....
Gretzky gets hurt. Unlike the Penguins, the Kings aren't deep enough to weather a loss
of this magnitude.
Projection....
That Kurrt and Gretzky will be overwhelming is a certainty. If coach Tom Webster can
co~tinue to keep the Kings playing top-notch defensively, they will challenge for top spot
in the Smythe.

0

GROUP OF SEVEN
TO VISIT L. U.
by W Campus Rec.

rate and masters. Toe masters division is new to this
No, the leaders of the
year's edition with eligibilWorld's seven most indusity limited to those teams
trialized nations are not
whose combined ages are
coming to Thunder Bay
277 or greater. If athletic
and ...
prowess doesn't bring your
No, A.Y. Jackson and
team a prize perhaps an
company will not be showimaginative team name or
ing their art in the Agora
uniform will. Fail~ this, a
but ...
number of wild card teams
Yes, the 3rd annualLakewill pick up draw prizes.
head Group of Seven Relay
Entry forms can be
Race will be run in and
picked up at the L.U. Intraaround the L.U. campus on
mural office, Fresh Air ExSaturday, October 19th at
perience, Confederation
10:00am.
College
Fitness Centre,
Any group of seven athCanada
Games Complex
letes or non-athletes are
and
the
C.J. Sanders
welcome to toe the line. Each
team will run a cumulative · Fieldhouse. Registration
begins at 8:30am at C.J.
distance of 10.7 Ian while
Sanders Fieldhouse with
the individual legs range
the first seven teams to regfrom . 7 to 2. 7lan. Following
ister receiving free "polo"
the race a free lunch of pizza
shirts.
and
pop
will
be
served
with
,
For further information
awards
being
presented
to
1
I
contact the intramural ofthe top 3 teams in 6 categofice at343-8808 orthe race
ries. Toe six categories are
convener.
Dr.
Ian
open male. open female,
Newhouse at 343-8074.
CoEd, high school, corpo-----------------------'

RUGBY COACH
APPOINTED

THE VANCOUVER CANUCKS:
Strengths....
.
Troy Gamble and Kirk McLean bring immense potential between the Canucks' pipes.
Trevor Linden has overcome his sophomore woes to become a dominant player at light wing.
Geoff Courtnall and Greg Adams bring good scoring talents to a loaded left wing that also
includes hot and cold Sergio Momesso.

Continued on Page 12. See "NHL"
.. .. Miles Holden

Lakehead University
Rugby Football Club has
appointed Miles Holden
their· coach for the 91/92
season. Miles, who comes
from England, has played
Representative Rugby for his
County Chesire, and the
North of England . . Since
coming to Canada Miles has
played representative for
Saskatchewan, and was a
Canadian International
player with the under 21
~~ad ..

�Th.eArgus Page 12 September 19, 1991

1

SPORTS
\

·NHL

, THE EDMONTON

·ceont:JnuedFromPage 11)
Weaknesses ....
The defense has a decent
mtx of skill and toughness,
but ts unproven as a unit.
There ts a sorry lack of talent on right wing after
Linden. Igor Lartonov 1S at
the end of the llne, leaving
no decent second-line centre to take the pressure off
ClifI Ronning.
Players to watch....
Ronning showed considerable offensive ability after
last year's trade brought hJm
out ofAdam Oates' shadow.
However, tt will be interesting to see if he can stand up
to a full 80 games as a
number one centre.
The Canucks are cooked
:If....

The goaltending doesn't
hold up to its promise.
Projection....
This, like many others
-before. ts a promising season for the Canucks. They
could impress this year, led
by Linden, but will not challenge Calgaiy or L.A. Third
place.
THE WINNIPEG JETS:

Strengths .. ..
The Jets are strong between the pipes with thirdyear man Bob Essensa.
Essensa had good numbers
(3. 15 GM) for one of the
worst clubs in the league
last year. The defense has
an offensive gem in Phil
Housley, and leadership

from RandyCarlyle. Number
one centre Thomas Steen ts
a fine two-way talentand.he
and Pat Elynuik form a decent top line.
Weaknesses ....
Both wings are notoriously weak. Only RW Pat
Elynuik with 31 goals surpassed the 20-goal mark
from the flank. Pre-season
plans call for -Ed Olczyk to
be shifted to the left with
newcomer and former Chicago teammate Troy Murray
centring, in order to balance
the scoring somewhat. The
Jets desperately hope that
rookies Russ Romaniuk,Stu
Barnes and second-year RW
Danton Cole are ready to
supply some offense.
Players to Watch. ...
Essensa should continue
to shine in goal. Finish
rookie Selanne has been
compared to Jart Kurrt and
could go a long way to solving the Jets' scoring woes if
he arrives in time.
The Jets are cooked if....
Any one of thetrfew scoring threats ts injured for
awhile.
Pro_1ectlon....
The Jets' pattern is to
impress for their first year
coach and get him fired in
his second. This 1s supposed
to be an "on" year if that
holds true. NewcomerJohn
Paddock could inspire the
Jets past Vancouver into
third but th1s seems unlikely. Fourth place.

C~F . THUNDER

pn,

ERS:
\
Strengths....
The Oilers have the best
pair of goaltenders 1n the
NHL. Grant Fuhr and Bill
Ranford are tremendous.
There ts some skill up front
with agitatlngEsa Tikkanen
and streaky Petr Klima. The
defense is dependable and
unspectacular though.
Weaknesses....
Neithei:FubrnorRanford
will settle for splitting the
workload evenly. Mark
Messier ts clearly unhappy
and wants out. It was even
rumoured thatMessterwent '
into the tank during the
playoffs after a heated contract dJspute with GM Glen
Sather. Without Messier at
his best to set him up, Craig
Simpson will flounder.
Players to Watch....
Petr Klima had a career
40-goal season last year and
will be under the gun all
year to repeat on an offensestarved club.
The Oilers are cooked if....
They fail to resolve their
contract differences wtll
Tikkanen. The wily Finn ts
the closest thing to a
franchaise player the Oilers
have left.
Projection....
Only a stellar deal can
save the Oilers now. Messier
anEl most likely Fuhr are
trade bait. Even so, the Edmonton club is in a state of
disarray that will lead to a
Continued on Page 13.
See "NHL"

BAY REGIONAL CANCER CENTRE
RESEARCH ASSISTANT
(FULL-TIME)

The Department of Psychosocial Services, .Thunder Bay Regional Cancer
Centre, is looking for a capable and enthusiastic Research Assistant who will
report to the Department's Director and be a key member of the Supportive
Cancer Care Re.search UniL The Research Unit is linked to McMaster
University, the Hamilton Regional Cancer Centre, and tbe Canadian Cancer
Society. Money is presently in place for a five-year term.
The incumbent will be required to collect and transfer data from a number
of sources, create and maintain a large data base, analyze and interpret data
sets, prepare data summaries and reports, maintain project progress on agreed
timetable, and ensure integrity of the data base.
S/he must have demonstrated skills in the use of computers with respect to
the organization and maintenance of a data base, statistical analysis, word
processing and validity testing. S/he must have demonstrated report writing
skills, be well organized, able to work independently and possess good
communication skills. A degree in one of the health sciences and one to two
years experience in a research position would be desirable, as would some
general training in research methodology.
Salary and benefits are very competitive.

A LEITER OF APPLICATION AND RESUME
1\-IAY BE SUBMTTIED TO:

Department of Psychosocial Services
Supportive Cancer Care Research Unit
THUNDER BAY REGIONAL CANCER CENTRE
•
290 Munro Street
Thunder Bay, ON P7A 7Tl
ATfENTION: Scott M. Sellick, Ph.D., C.Psych.

DEADLJNE FOR APPLICATIONS: SEPTEMBER 27, 1991

CP'S SPORTS
EATING TIP
While watching a comercJal during the final game
of the Canada Cup, I thought: go over to La Bar and ask
La Bartender if you can have La H2O rather than La
Beer ·cause La H2O would obviously hydrate you
wheras La Beer would make you go to La Pisser and
miss part of the game.

�The Argus Page 13 September 19,' 1991

SPORTS
1991-92 CAMPUS RECREATION
by Anthony Hewitt

The 1991-92 Campus
Recreation Program begins
this week at L. U. Sign-up
deadlines are posted on the
Intramural Bulletin Board
near the securtty office. Bill
Keeler ts the Recreation Coordinator and has drawn

NHL
(Continued From Page 12)
finishoutoftheplayoffs.
They finish fifth.
SAN JOSE SHARKS:

Strengths ....
Goal tending
and
defense. Brtan Hayward ts
a solid starter and Jeff
Hackett has a great future.
The defense will not amaze
anyone with its skating or
playmaldng, but should be
decent in its own end with
former Chicago stalwart
Bob McGill and ex-North
Stars Rob Zettler and Neil
Wilkinson.
Weaknesses ....
The Sharks have little
proven scoring. Ex-Rangers Kelly Kisto and Brian
Mullen ail;d Thunder Bay
product Tony Hrkac, obtatned.. from Qucbee,- 111."e

up events to suit all students, everything from golf
to volleyball to cribbage
and euchre tournaments.
Keeler wants to see all students taking advantage of
Campus Sports and Recreation.Athletes and couch
the only front-line players
known for any klp.d ofscoring touch. Another Thunder Bay prospect, minorleaguer David Bruce,
brings promise based on
his 64-goal season 1n the
IHL. Second overall pick
Pat Falloon could make a
successful Jump to the
NHL but will not be rushed.
Players to Watch....
Hrkac may blossom but
that's unlikely without
quality wingers. Bruce
could also develop into a
good scorer.
The Sharks are cooked

·:·:·:·:~;:::··;/::~ ····~·-::••'•.·.·,,,·,,.:,.,,.,.,,'',.:,:,i?.. ....'. ...: .. }

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potatoes alike.
Only one sport is not coed this year, men's hockey,
but hockey is also offered
as a co-eel tourney, so everyone has a chance to play.
Sign-ups for teams are
at the Campus Recreation
Office. Phone 343-8808.
• Sign-up for aerobics,
badminton, and volleyball
have already passed the
deadline. Titls week, golf
sign-up deadline is Sep;tember 18th, squash is
September 25th, beach
volleyball September 26th,
touch football September
22nd.

,, THUNDER~
MADNESS

tf....

The scoring doesn't
come, as lt likely won't.
Projection....
The Sharks wUl sink.this
season based on their lack
of offence. The only prize
for which they will con.tend is the number one

THURSDAY
SEPTEMBER 26, 1991
7:00 PM

INTHE

THUNDERDOME
(CJ SANDERS

FIELDHOUSE)

ON SATIJRDAY, SEPTEMBER 21,
AND SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 22,

COME MEET TIIE
1991 VARSITY
ATiiLETES

ANDPARIYt

J

celebrate

our Birthday.

entry·drtrl't pltk'next year.

Northern Telecom
and Bell-Northern Research
(BNR) are leaden in a global industry
on the cutting edge of opportunity. As we
compete successfully in the current tele•
communications revolution, we fUUy recognize the
need to recruit lalented people.
To demonstrate our conunltment to ensuring a successful
beginning to your career, we're offering new graduates a
three-year employment contract. We also offer outstanding
prognuns for continuing education, a creative and challenging
environment, and the opportunity to work with people,
technology, and systems that are world class. In turn, we
expect new grads to be totally committed to helping us
make our dream of global leadership a reality.
Together we can shape a very exciting tomorrow. Talk
with your placement office today about career
opportunities with Northent Telecom and BNR.

\\'c&gt; are C/11 DJIUII Opf&gt;&lt;1/11111ily

Emf&gt;l&lt;~1t•r .

This Saturday, Sept. 21, and Sunday,
Sept. 22, between 11 am and 8 pm
get a free sub of your choice when
you buy another sub of equal or
greater price!
#10 S. Cumberland St

�\
TheArgus Page 14 September 19. 1991 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

LIFESTYLES

FOOD LABELS
How to Read Them

What Is Food Labeling?

Checking for Calories

U.S. government regulations require
that all enriched or fortified foods or
foods that make a nutnaonal claim,
include nutrition information on the
back of the product. Generally, these
are divided into two catgeories:
"Nutritional Information per Serving''
and "Percentage of the U.S. Recommended Daily Allowances". If
nutrition information is given, the
amounts of seven vitamins and
minerals must be included, as well as
the percentage of protein of the U.S.
RDA, and the weight in grams. As
many as twelve additional vitamins
and minerals may be listed if the
manufacturer chooses to.
The U.S. RDA are the amounts of
protein, vitamins and -minerals used
as standards in nutrition (food)
labeling. Special U.S. RDP:s for
infants and young children are used
for babv food and junior-type foods.

Calories per serving must be listed
on food labels. These depend on the
amount of fat, protein and carbohydrates in the food. Fat, which has
the most calories, supplies nine

'

Keep an-Eye on Cholesterol

Different Kinds of Fat

If you're on a fat-controlled diet, the
amount of cholesterol per food serving can be an important factor in food
choices. While it is not mandatory for
cholesterol to be listed, manufacturers may chose to do so. It is
customarily shown as "milligrams
(mg.) of cholesterol per serving" and
as "milligrams per 100 grams of
food".

Only two kinds of fat, polyw1saturated and saturated fats, are
required in nutritional labeling. Look
at the total fat content on a food
label. Remembering that all kinds of
fats have nine calories per gram, a
food product that has 10 grams of fat
per serving offers 90 calories in that
serving.

( ·::--

:1t.,

I

■

:······ ·/····

=~~~:

1992

BELL CANADA

ENGINEERING &amp;COMPUTER
SCIENCE

-=·:~t.

;~~:::...

~::
:- ;.:'

,:
~:r,~;.::

~
,.❖, •,•

Bell canada offers up to
30 scholarships to engineering
or computer science
undergraduates.

11r::::-·&lt;::rr-···

it
THE"AWARD

ELIGIBILITY

Winners receive full tuition for the
following academic year plus an
·offer of summer or work-term
employment at Bell.

The awards program Is open to
engineering or computer science students
In their next-to-last undergraduate year
who rank in the top half of their class and
have made a significant contribution to
university or community life.

DEADLINE FOR APPLICATIONS •
OCTOBER 18, 1991

I

I

;❖-:~:--:,,

I

II
· ·,·:,.:),.)1

FOR APPLICATION FORMS AND MORE INFORMATION,
PLEASE CONTACT THE ENGINEERING OR
COMPUTER SCIENCE OFFICE.

Bell

.,,,(i'.{t~~~:t:~1::t~;: :.
- ...
#

.. , ,

'

•

•

•

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~•

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;~
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�The Argus Page 15 September 19, 1991

CLU8 NEWS
ORSS

USA

USA (Unemployed Students Association)
There are openings for
home :support workers with
the Avenue II program. Experience in residential programs with persons having
developmental disability is
desired. Home support
workers earn $1000.00 a
month plus paid rent. If you
are interested contact Administrative Co-ordinator
Beth Downey at 345 - 9933.

IEEE
IEEE is the Institute of
Electrical &amp; Electronic Engineers. The IEEE 'club' is
an academic club that may
be of interest to students of
Electrical Engineering,
Computer Science, and
Physics. Til1s is a worldwide
organization and LU has one
of the branches.
The benefits of being a
member are discounted or
free tickets for events
(ususally speeches given by
experts in the field of electrical engineeiing), free subscription to the monthly
magazine "Spectrum" and
the bimonthly "Potentials".
A discount for tools required
for the electrical program ls
also included.
In addition to these events
there is a possible trip to
Minnesota and a "Meet Your
Prof N1ght". this being used
to make electrical engineering students familiar With
the areas of expertise of the
various profs, the Uriiversity, and a chance to drink
beer and eat pizza with fellow students and the professors.
IEEE memberships are
$25.00, and may be purchased on Wednesday @
10:30 1n CB3049.
Executive members ofthe
IEEE are:
Chairperson:
Scott
Ritchie
Vice Chairperson: Crissy
Kukula-Jorgensen
Treasurer: Joan Gatien
Secretruy. Doug Plumb
Notices regarding events
will be 1n CB1034.
Be all you can be, Join the
IEEE.

ESS

Be Stimulated, very
stimulated. One week down
eleven to go! It is nice to see
you fresh articulate people
walldng down the hallways.
I suspect 1n two or three
weeksmostofus(Englneers)
willbewalkingaroundattnlessly down dark hallways
wondeling where the hell
we are and when the hell is
thJs going to be all over.
Summer transition students,howdoesttfeeltobe
in a classroom thi:at rln,,c---i't
(" "'::f~dM ,1K'9u Sj!t:&gt;./,fJP~J~

have that unmistakable
odour of Engineers and how
does it feel to talk to people
with interests other than
Taylor Series Expansion?
Frosh is coming up, this
year it will be held on Friday
September 20th. Second
years be prepared, please
were clothes that are
stainable, non-flammable,
rip offable, colorable, and
eatable for this event.
Stimulator, which is a party
with Nurses already there to
pick you up when you are
drunk. This ts happening
Friday September 20, guaranteed to be a most excellent time.
Closing with the Joke of
theweekfromJudd McCleod
• a 5th year civil. What ts the
difference between a catfish
and a lawyer? One is a scum
sucking bottom feeder and
one is a fish. Judd pick up
your two Stimulator tickets
and free t-shirt before Friday's bash. Later

EC HO

Hello, fellow concerned indivtdualsl Welcome to Echo,
Lak.ehead's fun, radical, environmental action chm. 1
... Ourminds br1mmingwithl1ght bulbs, hope. and maybe
a Utile tofu we shall struggle valiantly to right some wrong.s,
promote awareness, change some attitudes, and tackle
ADMINISIRATIONI (Yes, even that ponderous situation) ...
This year Echo)) wants to be active within the school: the
community, and beyond. We need you!
Fresh ideas, fresh minds, enthusiasm, spirit, energy. and
dedication. This year Lakehead University must be
GREENEDII
Upcoming events shall include can sorting (fun), letter
writing campaigns, speakers, moVies and our first general
meeting Mon. Sept. 23th in the Agora. Bring food, warmth.
an open mind, and a willingness tq make friends.
If you don't like our ideas and/or ideals suggest some of
your own! They who hold the Conch shall be listened to ...
Looking forward to meeting evei:yone Wednesday night,
see you there!

THE ARGUS: Nominations close for the position of
Ne"!S Editor tomorrow Friday, Sept. 20th at 1:00 PM. Toe
vote will be held at the Executive Meeting at 2:30. All
Interested in the meeting are welcome to attend~
.. .

~,~

• ,,.

· ....:-.\,

S T U D E N T $ _ -,.:,_-~
..

·_·... ·.:·

Work as a
Part time Marketing
Field Representative.

., ~~·;;_;

~
\!!!!!!!1·e·:

► EARNV6515./HR. OR MORE
lnterostad •ppRcanto
p(eaM lend re.sume-s or
WOik hl=ry lo:

2!'.

.._ ...,,

~ - " - llac::rufVNnt
tlO\fe,wt~fA..,..
To,o~no. ON
M.a.Q4f_t

c.n our tolf free numbet

1 ·800-363-8955

Mazda RX7.1983 Mint
Condition. Loaded: air,
cruise, aluminum wheels,
new tires, bra. $6300. Call
767-6856 evemnas.
For Sale. Golf Clubs. 11
piece set with bag. All
Wilson Brand Name.
Woods hardly used.A steal
at $200. Call 767-5254/
767-7585.
Travel company wants
student reps. Organize a
trtp and travel for free to
Quebec, Daytona, Mexico,
Jamaica, Bahamas.' Call •
l -800-263-5604.
__________
Classified Ads: $2.25
(GSI' included). 25 words
and5centsforeachaddittonal word. Submit ads
to LUSU 1n the tunnel.
~ :;
?(\- ··•- .. -~---, -~--d-•
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'.. --= ( __, · 1

::ooo--

..,

Hey there all you
rec'rs, how're ya doing??!
This here weekly info-session will hopefully be just
one of the ways ORSS (Pronounced oar-suss. acronym
for Qutdoor Becreation,Student's Society) lets you know
what is going on in the
School ofRecreation, Parks,
and Tourism. Keep a look
out for the Quinzhee Quarterly, our vei:y own departmental newsletter, as well
as signs. posters. and other
assorted bulletins.
Bythetlmeyouread
this, we will all have chosen
our class reps, our Quinzee
Quarterly crew members,
and the social volunteers.
Toe First Years' Initiation
will be this Friday. so the
Second Years will be approaching all you first-time
rec'rs soon. A reminder to
all involved that some oeo-

ple don't appreciate all of the traditions contained In our
Rec'rs Hymn, so DON'T SING mr
Questions?? Contact ORSS through Annette's offlee.

,-;:.:['JJ
. . ...::-

~ .r

Room for rent: Non
smoking female shared
bathroom with other student. Blockandahalffrom
bus route. Light cooking
facil1t1es $300/month.
May phone and leave message on machine 6236123.
1978 Chevy Nova. Runrung condltlon. 4 Door.
$200.00. 767-2960.

LSAT, GMAT, GREPreparation Courses. A unique
approach used successfully by thousands of students since 1979. Call 1800-387-5519.

Male: Horny, Hot and
Handsome and looking for
romancing!! Replythrough
lclasstfieds to ensure conlfldence.

FREE TRAVEL, CASH,
. EXCELLENT BUSIE
S
S
EXPERIENCEl!Ope-n tngs
ava11able for individuals or
tudent organizations to
romote the country's
ost successful SPRING
• REAK tours. Call InterCampus Programs l-800327-6013.

DON'T BE SHY1

Axe there ~ mature
sensitive intelligent men
out there? Hetroscxual
female with a sense of humour Is Just curious. Reply through the classffleds.

Overstressed, overFor sale: 14' colourT.V.,
worked.
overbored, and
excellent condltJon: pair of
over
20
ex
''RAG" editor,
vuarnet shades, no
seeks mature, responsiscratches. Call 577-5289
after 5 &amp; askforChucky'.
ble, fun-loving female in__________
~tractive, Bisexual male
dividuals for wbatevertl
Apply through classifieds
Single Axle Snowmobile
seeks same for fun times.
Trailer - holds two maDiscretion assured and
chines. Good condition.
~ected. Respond to: P.O.
$300. 344-0860.
B~ 1463 Station F P7C
, ',.
5W3.
~ ---.- . -;'·AA-_,.•A~f'1~"'D
A.l-::3AI ~ A~J../, r-u ~I~/ ...,U-AJ~IIJJ
~I/_"'' '-"1::7'- ✓ -1..:::T/ r ..:&gt;q rrv'/ :&gt;IT -.;;,,,-,
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·-(.__,__; =ISOh'=&gt;CJJ:i.LO/f OHM EISON..L .dO .%0/J'
/ l l i N / 3~/7' S_L 7nS3~ 31i.L-

�ec
od Ope

Representatives from:

PACKARD BELL

IBM

ZENITH
.data systems
will be available Be showing their latest products

IBM PS/2 Model 55SX
386SX/20 60MB HDD ..... $3715

Packard Bell Notebook
386SX 40Meg HDD...... $2800

50 Free 3.5" DSD~ diskettes with every computer purchase!
Zenith minisPORT
8088 20Meg HDD .... $999

Campus Tech 286/12
80286/12 40Meg HDD ...$1095

Check out our Grand opening specials and Contest giveaways!
Open 10am to 6pm, Monday to Friday, Phone 343-8770

The Argus wishes to apologize for the printing of the wrong phone number on last
weeks ad. The correct number is 343-8770

�</text>
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�The Argus Page 2 November 21, 1991

NEWS
CANADIAN COUNCIL ART STOLEN
by Argus Stq[f
'\

Two pieces of art were stolen from the bottom level of
the Student Centre prtor to
loday·s scheduled tour and
reception.
Lakehead University first
signed a contract with the
Canadian Council Art Bank
4 years ago. Prior to this

arrangement Lakehead was
filled with "lots of blank,
dreary walls" says Joy
Lawson, director of Student
Services.
During this first contract,
one piece of artwork was
stolen. but eventually retrteved and only a few were
accidentally damaged .

lawson stated that she was
pleased with Lakehead students for appreciating and
respecting the artwork.
The works were replaced
for the first time this past
August with 80 new acquisitions, gtving Lakehead one
of the largest collections of
any Canadian university.
The Art Banlc realizes that
there is not often opportunity to show Canadian works
in NorthWestern Ontario.
Therefore the Bank was gen-

erous enough to donate
some pieces and offer discounts on others.
Lawson is frustrated by
thiS latesl theft at Lakehead.
'ibere is a lot of work involved for the consultant to
come here." The consultant
must review all the space.
and co-ordinate the works
in certain areas to provide
an aesthetically pleasing
atmosphere.
All of the art outlined in
the previous contract had to
be taken down. catalogued.
crated and shipped back to
the Art Bank. In turn. the

VIOLENCE AGAINST
WOMEN:
A MALE ISSUE
by Argus Stqff

MASTERS AND PhD
PROGRAMMES IN
ENVIRONMENTAL
STUDIES
The FACULTY OF ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES offers a
unique opportunity for those interested in graduate work, at both the
Masters and PhD le\'el, to pursue their own interest!&gt;, build on F.ast
exrerienc~, and explor~ ideas from~ broad spectrum of natura,
social, built and organizational ennronment perspectives.
Interdisciplinary, individualized and flexible programmes are offered
in a wide range of areas including:
•
•
•
•
•
•

urban planning
social policy·
organizational change
international de,·elopment
impact asses5ml!nt
regional planning and
development
• women and environments
• environmental plaMing
and design
• en,·ironmental thought
• housing
• , resource management
• 'communication, advocacy
and social change
• en\'ironmental education

• human sen·ices and health
• Nath·e / Canadian
relations
• quality of working life
• environmental politics
and economics
• environmental policy
• tropical environments
• biological conservation
• northern studies
• action learning
• environment and behaviour
• organizational
environments
• cooperati\•e management

On Thursday. November 14lh Ken Hancock held 2 seminars on
the topic of "Men Agatnsl Male Violence·. Hancock, an ex-NHL
player for the Chicago ~lackhawks. does not physically look like
a "typical" advocate for women's rights. It was, however, during his
time as a hockey player that Hancock began to feel ashamed of the
Violence he and his fellow team -mates were causing. He came to
the realization that no person has the rtghl to touch another in a
violent manner.
Hancock opened the discussion by describing the work of Men
Against Male Violence. Groups of men Will partktpate in 6 walks
across On lario begi.nntng in the Spring of 1992.-They are hoping
to raise pubUc awareness as well as encourage men across the
province to speak out agatnst violence.
Mr. Hancock then shifled the foeus of lhe seminar. He stated
that male culture worships war. and feels that the maiming and
killing of Iraqi women and children was seen ~ a Victory. .
.
Hancock failed , however, to stale his group's views -on 'tema.le .•
parUd paUon tn the Gulf War, a step which some women' teel l.s a
forward move in the issue of women's rights. When 'questioned
about this la ter, Hancock slated that war is still a male-dominated
phenomenon and that women were merely exercjsingthei,r rights,
nol sensationalizing the aclual war itself.
On lhe homefront the violen(,'e is more personal. After T.V.
football games, the phones at rape/assault crisis centres across
the nation light up as men vent their anger not on the losing team.
but on their wives/girlfriends/chUdren.
Hancock also said a male walking away from a sexist comment/
Joke or a women In physical or sexual distress.is no dUTerent from
the man that turned and left the room as 14 women were
murdered in Montreal. Apathy, of course. was not an tssue ln this
case. One male student who was forced out by gunpoint by the
murderer romm.ltted suicide one year after the massacre.
Hancock feels that some men don't find it worth It lo fight for
women's equality with respect to Mminor" incidents such as sexist
Jokes and harassing behavtour.
He also noted that men tend to "talk away life". A NATO base in
the north was oompletely shut down by Inuit women protesting on
the runway against missile testing: they were tired ofwattlng for
men to slop talking and begin laking actlon.
Hancock finished th~ seminar by gtvlng some alarming facts.
Women are the poorest people in society. Some men consider
Violence against women, children and minorities as profound
power. Canada led the world in arms supplies to the United States
during Vietnam, including the making of napalm in Toronto. Some
crisis shelters are bullt like fortresses to protect the women and
children Inside. Crtsls centre workers are constantly confronted
With shotguns by men looking for their Wives or gtrlfrtends.
Hancock has been JaUed 60 times due lo his support of causes
ranging from endJng the Vietnam war to Native rights. It was
during these stays in Jail where Hancock found most of his
courage from women.
Hancock dosed his speech by saying that this Violence is not a
women's issue: men are the cause of this Violence. it's their i.s sue.
The crowd was left With lhls last thought: "'The final role call Is
the role call of justice."

Applications for September 1992 should be received by March 1,1992.
The Facultv a~so off~rs an undergra~uate degree programme leading
to a Bachefor m En\'lronmental Studies (BES). Information for all
programmes can be obtained from:
Coordinator of External Liaison
Faculty of Environmental Studies
York University
4700 Kee Ie Street
North York, Ontario, Canada
M3J 1P3
Tel. (416) 736-5252

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new works had •to be installed, catalogued and secured to the walls, a process which takes a week.
A $500 deductible fee ts
placed on each piece. meaning $1000 must be paid to
the Art Bank if the paintings
are not recovered. This
money could be used instead, as Lawson pointed
out, for new furniture
around the school, or art
that the university could
keep.
The pieces were attached
to the wall with locking devices, indicating that the
thefts were deliberate and
planned. The hallways
where the two paintings
were hung have no camera
suiveillance as ofyet, which
raises the question of safety
for students .fil!.d university
property.
'"(We're) trying to put artwork somewhere the students could appreciate and
view them", she said.
Lawso11 is hoping that
students having information
about these thefts will report it, as was the case in
the last incident. "I hope
that students have a sense
of prtde about our university and would like to see
these sorts of displays remain."

She also urges that studeQts. report ~ incidents
of t:J;teft or.vandalism on campus: •

THIS
WEEK
FROM

LUSU
• LUSU execuUve elections will be held early this
year to accommodate Spiing
Break and the education
student work terms. Watch
for the candidates and this
year's major issues.
• Tentative planning ts
underway for townhouse
residences to be built behind the Bora Laskin Building in sprtng. This potential
site has been chosen due to
sewer system access. an
aspect that will cost thousands of dollars less in building fees. Studies are ·being
done to determine if this site
would be beneficial for marrted student housing.
• Read next week for the
issues discussed and/or
resolved at the Ottawa Canadian Federation of Students conference.
AR1HUR'S USED
FURNITURE
191 N. Cumberland SL

[Basement of Cumberland
Wash and Dry)

Buy and Sell
345-9592
11 am - fi om.

Ttl("S.-5at.

�The Argus Page 3

November 21, 1991

NEWS
Special Feature: ._•

·COMPUTER CONCERNS
ATLAKEHEAD
It's time for another information column. This one is for all the students who
use the computing facilities available at
LU and for those who don't but may be
interested in doing so.
Should you have any problems/concerns/suggestions that cannot be addressed by Computing Services, contact
your LUSU representatives on the LU
Senate Computing Committee. This year's
reps are Past Pinta (Math) and Darron
Smylie (School of Business).
Pasi is a fourth year computer
sctem.-e student and has worked as a
student advisor in the Computer Centre
for a number of years. He is working as a
Faculty Advisor at the Computer Centre,
and may be reached in the Braun Building BB 1059 Monday through Friday from
8:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. If Pasi cannot be
reached at the office, leave him a note
regarding your concerns, or e-mail
ppinta@thunder if you have access to
electronic mail.
Darron Smylie is in his final year of
Business Administration (Systems Major)
and is working for Tunnel Tech this year
(the new computer store at Lakehead).
Darron works on Tuesdays, Wednesdays.
and Fridays at Tunnel Tech. Leave a message for him there if you are unable to
contact him. Darron has also worked for

several years as an adviser and was last
year's LUSU rep on both the Senate
Computing Committee and the University Computing Committee.
Both Pasi and Darron are concerned
With the state of computing services
available to all of LU's students. Currently, they are working on improving
student access to laser printing, software availability for the Macintoshes
and IBM PCs, student modem access,
and morel
But they need your input on items
you would like to see improved. Your
INPUT Will help all the students at Lakehead University get more OUTPUT from
our computer resources! Once again, it
ts time for the students at Lakehead to
contribute for their own benefit The
technology involved With computing
costs real money and the only way to get
funding for it is to demonstrate the need
for il Let us know what you need and
what you would like to see. Comments
and suggestions can be directed to either of the representatives in person or
left at the LUSU offiL'e marked attention
Senate Computing representatives.
Next time: A rundown of computing resources currently available to
LU students.

1992-93
UNDERGRADUATE
SCHOLARSHIP/AWARD NEWS ·
TERRY FOX HUMANITARIAN AWARD PROGRAM
($4000/year x 4 years)
The Terry Fox Humanitarian Award Program is intended to
encourage Canadian Youth to seek the high ideals represented
by Terry Fox.
Selection criteria for recipients will be based on demonstration of
the highest ideals and qualities of citizenship and humanitarian
services while in pursuit of excellence in their academi_c, amateur
sport, fitness, health, community service and related
endeavours, particularly in the face of obstacles. "Obstacles"
may be with reference to physical disability, personal problems,
social setting, or any factors wich call for courage, unselfishness
and fortitude.
For more information and applications contact: Student Services
... Financial Aid Office (SC-0017). Application deadline: January

15, 1992.

••••••
QUEEN ELIZABETH SILVER JUBILEE AWARDS
(6 x $5,000 plus transportation)
ROBERT AND MARY STANFIELD BILINGUAL
EXCHANGE SCHOLARSHIPS
(2 x $5,000 plus $1000 discretionary allowance)
Scholarships are awarded to undergraduate students to allow
them to pursue their studies for one year in a milieu in which their
second official language predominates.
The Queen Elizabeth Silver Jubilee Awards are unrestricted with
respect to field of studies, whereas the Robert and Mary
Stanfield Bilingual Exchange Scholarships are awarded only to
students working in some areas of Canadian Studies, broadly
defined. Under each program, Lakehead University may
nominate only ONE candidate.

I.

For more information and applications contact: Student Services
... Financial Aid Office (SC-0017). Application deadline: februa,y

3, 1992.

LAKEHEAD

UNIVERSITY

BREAKING THE SILENCE
Name Withheld by Request
"Childhood sexual abuse is such an overwhelming. damaging, and
humiliating assault on a child"s mind. soul, and body that he or she cannot
escape emotional damage".
•
The Badgley report of 1984 "estimated that one in two females and one
in three·males have been victims of unwanted sexual acts. and that 80% of
those assaults occurred during childhood". A survey conducted by ~
An~les Times approximated nearly 30 million adults were sexually abused
as children. Statistics from a 1991 article indicate 2. 5 million or one quarter
of all Canadian wbmen have been sexually abused as children.
the numbers are astounding and they are real. as real as your memories
ifyou happen to be one of those so unfortunate. itis time to break the silence.
You had your innocence stripped away when you were too young to
understand what was happening. You may say: "I am an adult now it does
not matter anymore··. denial Will not erase the impact of what occurred. The
damage resulting -from childhood sexual abuse will escalate with time
invading every facet of your existence. The abuse Will continue to affect:
"self-esteem, relationships with others. sexuality. one's ability to be in
relationships with others, sexuality. one·s ability to be successful. one·s
ability to trust others. and physical health". until you remember and release
both pain and anger.
A vicious cycle has emerged through generations obscuring the truth
about childhood sexual abuse. The ~rpetrators lie and deceive, silent
partners an·d family members ignore it, and Victims repress it. keeping the
victims imprisoned by their symptoms. The fact is that children are
completely dependent upon adults, and a majority will vocalize what they
sense the adults want to hear in order to remain under their dubious and
faulty protection. The irony is those abused will grow into adults waiting for
the next generation ·to project their insecurities and fears upon, thus
continuing the cycle of abuse. The victimization must stop. do you not
agree?
The abuse was in no way your fault and you do not deserve to silffer the
burden of silence. Each of you have been coping with the affects of your
abuse far too long. it is ·ume t'o find a path lo recovery. The key to initiating
the recovery process is to disclose what happened, this will deplete the
abuse of its potency. Some of you may appreciate or desire the support of
group therapy. others of you may prefer the privacy of individual therapy.
After living in silence for so many years simply thinking about vocalizing
what happened may petrify you, highly understandable. You have lo be
strong. you have survived the most devastating part . now it is time to heal.
You may not be ready to seek external aid. that is most understandable and
acceptable. Do. however. read The Right to Innocence: Hea1Jng the Trauma
of Childhood Sexual Abuse, by Beverly Engel. M.F.C.C .. a therapist and
victim of childhood sexual abuse. Over the past decade the seven step
programme outlined ih Engel's book has helped hundreqs of people
recover from the damage of childhood sexual abuse. This book has been
a significant asset for myself as I progress on a path of recovery.

"THE DRAGON WITHIN"
Looking back it is like a bad dream
maybe if you tum over you will forget
and sleep will return.
Too much is happening however
no longer can I sleep
the memories of my past haunt me day and night
draining my energy and
depleting my will to struggle on.
This morning I arose to a new day
crispy as it was
I skirted along the shoreline with a brisk west wind
at my back
drawn to seek the rays of sun
on the east facing shore .
The sun just cresting the tree tops
provided little wannth
yet I felt a shimmer of hope.
Gazing out across the lakes' smface
sparkling in the morning light
I dipped my cloth into the icy water. .
If only this simple task -of washing
could also wipe away
some of the pain and plaguing memories.
I realize now
admitting that it truly happened
and facing the dragon within
can be the only way to recovery.
No longer must I permit it
to subside
, as a never ending nightmare.

�The Argus Page 4 November 21, 1991

LEITERS
RESPONSE TO A STUDENT PERSPECTIVE
Tots letter Is a response to the
editorial enutled "Student PerspecUvc- Why I'm not a Fcmtntst", unfortunalcly published In the Argus
on October I0thofthlsyear. Inllght
of recent accomplishments of the
female students and faculty of this
university within the past several
years, such as the eslablishment of
courses In Womens Studies. the
Gender Issues Centre and the many
contrtbutlnns of the National
Womens Committee. It both astounds and appals us that a supposedly educated female associate
even considered submitting such
an unlearned edlt.orial for publication at this university or any other
unlven,lty.
We are In agreement with Ms.
Doherty that feminism as a discipline Is Indeed diverse, and that It
encompasses many variations In
opinion and perspective. however,
it should be noted that It I!'&gt; In this
diversity that feminism drnws Its
strength.
Ms. Doherty claims her editorial Is not lnh•ndc-cl to be "preachy",
however, whether or not deliberate,
her lettt--r Implies that women who
art' active ambassadors of the
"Womens Movement" are radical,
1mdestrabledevlants. Whydoesshe
think women who try to create equality for themselves, therefore equality for men, are ·menhaters"?
The "radicals" as she refers to
them, as a group aredtvcrse In their
areas ofstudy as well as perspective
and do not solely focus on the topic
of motherhood. as Ms. Doherty Implies. She focuses on the perspective of a select group of feminist

theorists and generallzes these ideas
to all feminists. We would suggest

that she and all those who share
with her this sad misconception
take the time to browse the shelves
of our new "Gender Issues Centre·
and take the opportunl ty to become
enlightened. If the purpose of Ms.
Doherty's edllorlal was to express
a concern or perhaps her opinion In
rc:gard to the Issue ofdehumanizing
motherhood, she should have clearly
expressed such Intentions.

It Is not the Intention of feminists, radical or otherwise to suggest In any sense that women who
choose to stay at horn!" are less
human, but rather to raise our
consciousness as people ~to make
us all, females and males aware of
the pt"rvaslve sexist, classlst, racist
attitudes- apparent and hidden In
our society. Women are active members of their own destiny-feminists
would like them to be aware of their
options as Individuals so they can
be controllers of their own fate. Ms.
Doherty suggests that these "radicals" scare people away, perhaps It
Is not these groups that scare people, but rather centuries of
soctalization to accept oppressive
conditions wtthoutquestiontngwhy.
Toe October I 0th article Is filled

with assumptions and assertatlons
that are blatantly dangerous and
false. Ms. Doherty and others like
her arc deluding themselves If they
think they are where they are because of their own efforts. Ms.
Doherty do you really think you got
where you are all by yourself?Thlnk
again. The past weighs heavily In
every step you take. Tolerance Indeed of other views whether radical
or others should be exercised. One
should not take one book, one point
of view and generalize about all
women, this Is not fair. One does
not hide behind smug opinions and
distorted assumptions, the real lssue Is equality for all, females and
males, to live lives of dignity and not
as slaves of a system which Increasingly dehumanp:es all our lives.
Feminists as a group would not
deny any human being, male or
female, the pursuit of happiness,
but rather would like to see women
expand their horizons and to make
the best choices regarding their
Individual self. In conclusion, we
believe that Ms. Doherty's editorial is not representative of the attitudes of the female students at
Lakehead University. Fortunately
there are views that are similar to
our own which would like to learn a
little more, to understand and become awareof the tnequalittes which
surround us and a9dress these tssues, but rather thanJust talkabout
It or try to hide away do something
about It, and this begins with the
individual.
Suzanne Sutherland

Ellaabeth Servello

OUTPOST??

The Gage Canadian Dictionary
defines OUTPOST as ·a settlement
or village In an outlying place: an
outpost In the North, a distant oulpostofclvlllzatlon. • Su basically, an
outpost ls the last place one sees
before stt-pptng off the end of the
world.
When we set' the tern ·outpost",
we expect a wooden shack decorated with furs and snowshoes,
dimly lit with oil lanterns and carrying the fragrance of cedar boughs
which are sea ttercd across the floor.
We do not expect to see a huge, high
tech, steel and concrete structure.
It seems high time we lay to rest
the idea of Thunder Oay being so
Isolated and remote. True enough,
we are the centre of Northwestern
Ontario, but the constant overuse
of the ·outpost" theme ls.becoming
tedious. It seems that by building a
bar that would not be out of place In
downtown Toronto we are trying to
get away from this mindset. Unfortunately, there are enough students
at LU to klll this revolution.
Now. seriously, Is this a Joke?
Are we going to wake up from this
nightmare with a real name? Who
voted for "Outpost" and why? The
many students that we have talked
to feel the same way.
If It wasn't too late, we would
make a pica for a re-vote. The original vote was apparently a secret to
all those who don't spend all their
time In the bar, and now that we
have seen the consequences of poor
voting wtth a re-vote sure there
would be a more sensible outcome.
D.C.M. and J.R.E.S.

HUNGRY?

Oxfam Canada will be sponsorIng Its annual "Hungry for Change"
Fast on campus outside the main
cafeteria on November 15th. Students, staff and faculty are Invited
to participate In a variety of ways.
Anyone on campus can forgo
lunch and donate the equivalent to
Oxfam. A table will be set up outside
the Main Cafeteria door. Information on the world food situation and
some Bridgehead products will also
be on display.
For those who arc unable to
skip lunch but still want to contribute, donations will also be taken at
the table. Contributions can also be
mailed In for those off-campus.
Students living ln residence also
have the choice of skipping the
supper meal on November 15th,
donating their meal plan equivalent
to Oxfam through Versa Food Services. Those In residence wishing to
participate should contact their
House President for more Information.
The focus of this fast Is both to
promote solidarity with those across
our planet who do not have adequate food and to raise funds for
projects that help-address the situation. We recognize that giving up
one meal Is In no way equivalent to
what many people face on an ongoing basis without choice. However,
fasting as an act of protest and
solidarity has been a powerful tool
for Mahatma Ghandl, anti-war activists and students In China. Native students used fasting to protest
education cutbacks.
In a world of plenty, It Is Important that we stop to understand
why the numbers of hungry and
malnourished arc growing. Issues
ofland ownership, export crops, the
Third World debt, and for distrlbu. tlon need to be addressed. We In
Canada have an Important role to
play both as a wealthy country anq
a country that has a commitment to
protection of human rights. Individually and collectively we can make
a difference.
Campus Contact
Paul Charrette
School of Forestry
Office: BBl 001B
ext. 8502
8502
Home: 767-5900

GOOD CAUSE
Are you looking for a volunteer
opportunity on &lt;'..ampus which will
expose you to global issues and link
you to an International development organization? If so, consider
working for PLENIY CANADA I
PLENTY CANADA has been
working In Latin America, Asia,
Africa and here In North America
for fifteen years now. 9ur work Is
primarily with Indigenous peoples
In rural communities and centres
on projects shaped by the defined
needs of the community. Wf""re Introd uclng soy processing technologies for nutrition and economic
growth in Sri Lanka. Lesotho and
Guatemala. We're working with
indigenous Miskito Indians In Nlcaragua as they return to rebuild
their lives battered by war and
natural disaster (Suzuki picked up
on this). Here at home. we're working with Indigenous women of the
Great Lakes Basin as they Investigate the effects of high pollution
levels on the next generation. Agricultural practices, reforestation,
sustainable cultural and environmental concerns encompass all
members of a community and can
Include you tool
There Is much to be done: organizing, participating In events.
learning and talklngaboutdevelopment. hosting speakers. Please join
us. For more Information, contact:
Plenty Canada
c/o Heather Phaneuf, Public
Education Officer
R.R.#3
Lanark, ON
K0G IK0
(613) 278-2215
278-2416 FAX

�E D J T O R J A i e A r g u s Page 5 November21 , 1991

The Student Newspaper of
Lakehead University
Volume #28-lssue # 11 November 21. 1991
Room UC0019
Lakehead University
Th under Bay Ontario,
P7B 5El
Telephone: (807) 343-8110
(ext. 8803) (8:30 am - 4:30 pm}
(807) 344-6911 (Anytime}
Fax: (807) 343-8598
ATTN:ARGUS
Circulation - 4000 copies
dlslrtbuted weekly
Editor-in-Chief

Travis Belrose
Production Manager

Ron Murphy
News Editor

Paula Van Veen
Entertainment Editor

Greg Oppedisano
Sports Editor

Ian Thomas Fero
Co Photo Managers-

Douglas Steary
CP (New #) Walsh
Graphics

Michel Dumont
Office Manager

Bruce Houstotm
Ad Manager

Karl Clement

SUN SHINE(S) ON SEXISM "AT LAKEHEAD
So what's happening around campus.these days?
.
November 4th the new Gender Issues Centre presented a
Seminar For Women On Date Rape.
Last night (November 20th), The Outpost was "proud to
present The Ottawa Grey Cup Jazz Train '91 featuring The
Ottawa Sun Sunshine Girls".
Looking ahead, on Sunday, December 1st a memorial for
the fourteen women killed in the Montreal Massacre last
year will be held at 7:30 PM in RB1042.
One of these things is not like the others/
One of these things Just doesn't belong/
One of these things is not like the others/
Can you tell which one?

Like it or not, a campus event featuring women who are
pin up girls used by tabloids to sell extra copies of their
papers sounds odd in context with the other two events.
What we're talking about here are women portrayed as
sex objects being welcomed in the student owned Outpost.
You could argue that it is their choice to prance around in
spandex tank tops and spandex tights and that it is your
light to look, but considering that the Outpost is owned by
the students of Lakehead -past, present, and future- of
which many are disapproving women (and men incidentally) we should show more discretion in this matter. A lot
of students plan their social lives around the Outpost and
would feel excluded by an event of this nature. As one female
student pointed out, 'What if the Chippendales were invited
to perform on campus? How many males would feel comfortable in 'their' Student Centre?"
The university as an institution and the students as a
collective are responsible for changing the negative aspects
of society, not condoning and welcoming them.

Thanks to our Contributors

Connie Gordon, Sue
. Kemp, Tanya McIntyre,
Lieann Poulin , Frank
DeGagne, FaisaJ Ali,
J.F., Brian Ludal, Lar~
Mazursld, Simon Cox,
Noel Ward, Darron
Smylie.

The Argus Is produced weeklJ
over the fall and winter sesslom
by students at Lake head Unlver
slty. The Argus Is a non-prufl,
organization published by th1
Lakehead University Sluden
Union and ls funded through th1
student actMty fee. The Argu:
remains cdltortally lndependen
- edltortal policy Is set by ar
elected representatlvr as provtdec
for In the Art,•us Constitution
Anycommentaryoredltor1al mes
sages are those of the authon
and are not necessarily those o
LUSU or Lakehead University
and may not reflecl the views o
the entire Argus membership
Membershtp Is open to any stu
dentatLakehead University. Th,
executive of the Argus Is made UJ
of elected representatives as pro
vldedfortnourpollcy. TheArgm
welcomes slgrn-d letters to lht
Editor-In-Chief, however the pa
per reserves the right to reject 01
edit any submission.. The Arguf
Is also a member In good stand
Ing of the Canadian Unlverslt•
Press(CUP) .. ForNationalAdver
Using, the Argus Is serviced b,
Campus Plus Canadian Unlver
slty Press Media Services Ltd
124 Merton St., (416) 481-7283
The Argus follows the Canadla1
University Press statement o
principles, and guidelines set bJ
the Canadian Advertising Foun
da tlon and will therefore not prtn
offensive articles or advertising
This Newspaper Is copyrlghtec
(c) 1991 underFcderallawguJdc
lines and nothing may be repro
duced from It without the ex
press permission of the Editor
In-Chief. All Rights Reserved.

The Nobility of your
soul has proved your ruin.
-Euripides

Cover Art

There's no excuse for this event being held on campus.
"Something for everybody" is unacceptable. This use of
women as attractions to an 'event', which many people
believe is a reflection of women's second class standing in
society, undermines and counteracts the purpose of Date
Rape Seminars and examinations into the repercussions
following Lepine's misogynistic motivated slaughter.
Promoting the treatment of women as impersonal objects
of lust leads to male perpetuated violence against women.
On t he surface, the Grey Cup Jazz Train has just brought
along a few -pretty faces to lead the cheers in Winnipeg.
Underneath are currents that not only involve men looking
down on women, but women looking down on themselves.
This takes the form of-punishing diets. plastic surgery. and
money spent in pursuit of some supposed ideal physical
specimen that she reaches for in vain.
Ex hockey player and feminist Ken Hancock mentioned
that the switchboards at Rape Crisis Centres light up
following professional sporting events. This startling correlation casts an even darker shadow on an event featuring
pi:r:i up girls linked to a sporting event. Nothing against the
CFL, they put a pretty good product on the field, but if your
team loses a stressful game. don't take your frustration out
on women. or anybody for that matter. It wasjust a game and
there will always be next year. For a battered wife, or a
slapped child, there will be a lifetime of emotional scars that
cannot be undone.
•
If I seem off topic, it's only because I was trying to show
how this 'innocent' event fits into a larger picture. I am
positive that a sociologist could do a better job of this, but
I hope my effort at raising awareness does not fall on deaf,
indifferent, or trivializing ears. TGB

STUDENT PERSPECTIVE:
WHAT MOTIVATES YOU?

Like it or not. our motivation to perform any task or
. Cara Mazurski lends her
engage
in any activity comes as a direct result of expedience
high powered perception
:f6 i.hif"w'etts""cover.• Cara. r-:"'fbas&amp;r•011_orgiifdetl'-by s~lf'tntetest}~'fhe onily refison we d0
somelliing is because our aclions will bling benefits to
is a BA student taking
ourselves.
printing, when asked for
This concept can be easily proven. We are friends because
an analysis for the print,
friendship brings personal rewards. We are lovers because
she responded with the follove brings personal rewards. Doctors don't help people just
lowing. The print is entifor the sake of helping. they help because personal satisfactled "Experimental Woman
tion is found in their work. Missionaries didn't "enlighten"
of the Night". it deals with
people because they cared about the people. they too found
the isolation of a woman
personal pleasure (or a spot in heaven) for their work.
by her surrounding sociIf you objectively look at this idea it is easily recognizable
ety. The piece is a linothat all humans are self centred. Nobody genuinely puts
leum print, layers of lino
others before themselves.
are cut out to produce the
It may not be a pleasant thing to admit, but before
white space.
humans act we subconsciously ask "What's in it for me?"
MAD
I strongly challenge anybody to rationally argue this idea.
J.F.

FOR YOU
Next tu the Lettt:rs
p;1~f'.

the Cditori:11

p:it.(t·

oilers a weeklv

op port 1mity for
L1keheacl St 11de111 s to
write i1 l"Ollllllt'llldlV in
the STUDE.NT
PEI6PECTJVE'.

This is your chance to
.~1vc st11dents on
ca111p11s a piece of your
1ni11cl. Don ·t be afraid to
speak out. S11bmit :-'011r
500 word max. editorial
lo the Ar,Q us (UC00l~l).
and we will Cine! a place
for your opinion.

THE NATIONAL SAMPLE : GUN CONTROL
The Bricklayer. Red Deer College. October 25, 1991.
Did you ever wonder what and AK-4 7 is for? Some might
argue that this Russian assault rifle is a nice little collection,
while others say that it's something to use while hunting.
Some even say that tqey use it just for the fun of target
practice. But why hunt with something capable of unloading 50 bullets in I 5 seconds? There will be nothing left
anyways.
It's not that there should be a ban on hunting rifles,
especially in this neck of the woods. where many families
survive on the meat that they hunt every fall. The issue is,
do we need a gun collection in every home? Do we need
people walking around with a weapon that was created only
to spray bullets at multiple targets? Do we need semiautomatic hand guns that hold extended clips of I 7 or more
bullets? No. we don't.
It isn't a question of basic human rights, after all, it's
illegal to own a bazooka or a flamethrower. You might say
that these weapons are in separate categories, but they
aren't. Both are weapons developed and used by the militruy. It makes one sick ~o see how some guy in Texas gets
mad at the world and. in one incident, along with two clips
of ammo. kills over 20 people, none of whom he's ever met.
You might take the stance that it's a free country and we
are allowed to bear arms. Well, folks, it seems that the
Russians aren't coming anymore, so who do we need
protection from? The only reason we might consider buying
such a gtin is to' protect ourselves from our neighbors! ·

Television heroes. such as -rerminator" and "Rambo"
glmnorize large guns that blow away hundreds of soldiers.
To those that prescribe to the idea that guns are cool. ..just
pull your head out ofyour ass. It's time to realize that stricter
legislation has to be brought in, to protect us and our
children. We teach them that such weapons are okay, and
we encourage their use through toy models.
Imagine you ·ve just come home from college and your so
called "gun collection" has been broken into by a local.
desperate burglar. who you have also caught be surprise. If
you had a .22 you're probably going to be shot. wounded, or
even killed. If you had an automatic pistol or Iifle, not only
are you dead, but this freak could easily°'kill you family and
even your neighbors for that matter. All with one clip! If you
have youngsters around. with the preconceived notion that
blowing away anything in sight is fun, you could find out
how harmless it is to have those guns lying around.
If you don't use them for hunting every fall, get rid of that ·
gun collection. Pressure your local MP to propose stricter
gun control. It only takes one incident close to home to turn
peoples· heads and git their attention. Why not plan a little
ahead and do away with such weapons of war? With so many
loose cannons running around, history is bound to repeat
itself. We don't all have to learn things the hard way. Think
about what happened in Texas - maybe next time it could be
you.
.
.. ........
......
Until next time - peace. ·
RossBeli

�The Argus Page 6 November 21. 1991

•

SPORTS

Poise Saves Season
For Volleyball Squad
by Ian T. Fero
The ladies volleyball team travelled to Guelph this past weekend and began the road
trip with a less lhan expected effort. The lady Gryphons shocked the NorWesters on Frtday
taking the match 3-0. The women came out flat dropping the first set 15-5. The team
looked to be rallying in the second set, but lost 14-16. The third set was a washout 154.
'The ladies hit a wall." says coach Claude Lapre, commending the strong play of the
opponents. It was a rough night as the Guelph defence blocked their way to victory over
an out of control LU squad. Lapre went on to say the ladies didn't seem to be focused or
pumped on Friday.

Ii!!f:,::::,,:,:,1~,t,v/::,;;::::,,:~~m,~,:,:,:~t,:,:,:,,t,::i',;:j;\\:

CAMPUS
•RECREATION
REPORT
Intramural Curling
by Lianna DeCorso

Well folks. the campus recreation/intramural curling
league is rocking. In first place is the undefeated team. the
"Happy Campers~ with Uz Tod. last year's champion.
playing vice on the team. Tied at second place are the
"Lockbankers- and the MRingers ~. Curling continues until
the last Friday in November, and starts up again in
January. Spectators are welcome to come out and watch
LU curlers melt the Ice. All games are played at Thunder
Bay Curling Club on Ftidays at 4:45. The best of the
season to all curlers and see you in the New Year!

\{:

Euchre Tourney
There will be a euchre tourney in U1e Study November
30 from 1pm to 5pm. The cost is $1 and the deadline for
sign.ups i s November 28 at 4:30 . Grab a partner and get
ready for a strategic game of euchre.

Badminton
Derek Hatfield (corwenerJ

Last week of badminton for this semester is on November 28th. All members are invited to come because this
will be U1e last chance to place on the Singles Ladder and
receive prizes.
But playing on the road showed it's advantage to our team. It is because we have to
play two matches in a row on weekends (other southern Ontario teams play one during
the week and bus home for the evening) that we rebounded the following night.
"On the road there is no place to hide ... the girls are all together, they can not avoid the
loss." said Lapre of this unlikely advantage. The team had a series of meetings Saturday
and had the opportunity lo change the game plan for the later match. The changes seemed
lo reao the benefits.
On Saturday the ladies regained their trademark steady poise and took the Guelph
squad 3 sets to 1. The scores were 15-12, 8 -15. 17-15 and 15-11. The third set was by far
the most crucial of the weekend. After dropping the second set the ladies regained their
focus and held on lo the victory.
The difference between the matches is clearly evident in the statistics. On Friday the
team did not register a block in the three sets of play. On Saturday middle blocker
Geraldine Bergmans had eight of her own. Power hilter KeJly Breuttgam, who paces the
offence night after night had a sub-par evening on Friday with 13 kills, an effort which
Lapre called "a night off'. Breuttgam shined on Saturday posting a magnificent -34 kills
and 19 digs, a record this year for the team. The bench play of Kim Rubbra, Jenny Spence
and Alyson Nichol was a key to the Saturday victory. as all the players showed character
and poise for a young squad.
This sudden shake-up came like a slap-in-the-face to the squad, and it came at a good
time, and may possibly have salvaged their season. Coach Lapre wanted to remain
unbeaten before the team had to play McMaster (Nov. 29-30). The Mac squad is strong and
Lapre,views them as the team to beat. With a pair of losses versus Guelph it would have
but immense pressure on the team to beat Mac twice. With the victory on Saturday it gives
the team a little leaning space as far as Mac is concerned, but they still have to win most
their matches lo gain top spot. Lapre and his coaching staff, as well as the team, and
captain -Andie Aitken must be commended for their fine regrouping shall we say. this
weekend. It will certainly be an exciting season for the ladies.

Premarital Six Takes The Tit.le Again!
by Cathy Boyle
A successful season of Intramural co-eel volleyball

came to a close last week, with the top four teams from
each pool making the playoffs. The A pool finalists included 911 (9A). Up and Over(5A). Second Ed: (12A). and
Balls In the Air (3A). The much stronger B pool had
Premarital Six (7B). Over the Hill Club (3B). Educators
(13H) and Individuals (148) as the top four teams.
The playoffs ran three days and involved a doubleelimination tournament. Although 911 was ranked flrstJn
their pool. they lost to the fourth ranked -indMdual team
from Pool B in the 0rst round. l\ony Lavoie's good
sportsmanship, after the first week. helped his team get
to the finals. They were up against the tough Premarital
Six learn who was headed by Mike Krassey. This team had
enjoyed each night they came out and brought the fun into
intramurals. until the FINALS! Things got pretty serious
when the two teams battled It out for first place. The scores
were very close with PremaritalSixwtnning 15-11 and 1512 to attain the title for the second year in a row.
CongratulaUons go out lo: Mike Krassey. Nicole
Medwechuk. Toby Munro, Tania Mash, Dan Armstrong,
Unda Ptttarelli, Chris Bulley and Tracey Sainsbury.
Jennifer Smith and Cathy Boyle would like to thank
all participants (especially the forestry team) for making
this year so successful: and hey. thanks to the referees for
doing such a fine Jobi!!

Early Registration
Starts November 18, 1991 in the Campus Recreation
Office. There ls a limited number of teams in some sports
and events, so beat the rush. come down to our office.
Hours are 10:30 to 4:30 Monday to Friday!

SUPPORT BXCELLBNCB IN 'l'BACHIHG
Reward good teaching at Lakehead University
by recognizing the efforts of our best

professors
The senate Committee on Teaching and Learning
is
seeking student nominations for .a.ix
Contribution to Teaching Awards.
Only students can nominate faculty for these
awards.
If you believe one of your professors
deserves
recognition for good teaching,
submit a nomination form (available in the
LUSU office )
before January 31, 1992.

SPRING BREAK '92

iJ;a

~1~:;:i;r~;i:
. . . ::

competition

x no pr~~ing poHcy
us

B'·SED

P!['

-

.,
Please send completed nominations to:
Dr. A. Osburn-Seyffert
Senate Committee on Teaching and Learning
c/o School of Education
T .;,lroho.::.rl

TTniversitv

IS THERE REALLY A CHOICE ?
DON'T RISK IDUR VACATION, BOOK Wffll THE BF.sT STS I

CAU ADAM OR BRAD AT 346-9045
IODl MIi! NOV. II II DIii :n.ollmil TllllP G1lVIMfAY

Interested
In Playing
Competitive
.Indoor
Soccer?
LO Club Teams
(Mens and
Womens)
Are Ha.v ing
Tryouts
lat Tryout Date

is Nov.23
9am-12 Noon
For More Info
call 345-3164

�The Argus Page 7 November 21. 1991

Ask ·Analy$.t An n1e
■

Dear Analyst Annie:
Maybe you c:an help us. We
are worrted about our frtend Dave-which may ur may nut be his rc-al
name. Our problem ts that ·oave'
ts very Insecure about his girlfriend 'Bon' which may or may
not be her real name. Anyways,
when all of us go uut together.
Dave- gets very uptight and docs not ad ltke himself. This ts made
wori-t: by the fact that whenever
Dave and Bon arc together. she
seems to Ignore him, and he ~ets
worse. We have trtl'd to talk to
Daw about this. but he Is deaf to
our please -- Any suggestions?
signed,
Worried friends of Dave
Dear 'friends of Dave·
From the Information you've
given us In your letter, Jt doesn't
sound ltke the relationship between 'Dave· and 'Bon' ts very
satisfying or healthy. However,
there really Is nuthtngyuu can do
about it, even though you care
about your friend Dave. The best
thing you can du ts be there for
Dave lfhe needs you and support
him. He ls already aware of your
concerns so you need plea with
him no longer. Sometimes we
Just have to step back and Jet our
friends live their own ltves, even
If we perceive It. as harmful.
Annie.
Dear Analyst Annie:
A problem. I am an engineerIng student and have an unexplainable sexual quirk. You sec, I
have this desire tu Involve peanut
, butter with my love making sessions. whil'h I do not see as a real
turn-off. I have my lover spread

the peanut butter all over my privates and tht&gt;n have him proceed to
have fun with It, since he likes the
taste of pmnut butler. The problem
ts that. when I suggest It to some of
my lovers. tt creates an argument
which results In the break-up of our
relationship. I cannot see the problem with my quirk since most people have similar fetishes with other
succulent sub~tances, such as
honey for example.
'
At this point In my life there ts
a new man and though we have only
IX'en seeing each other for a few
months now. we have had most of
our sexual urges pleased by each
other. The major problem that I
have Is that I want to fulfil my deslrt'
of lovtng making with peanut. butter. but I am scared that I will lose
my boyfriend again If I bring this
desire to his attention. What am Ito
do?
signed,
Aphrodisiac

people met&gt;t their spouse at university. I was sent off with endlt-ss
.Jokes of marrtagt· and not to mention. wished luck In tht· search of a
man. I fell ltke I was being wished
wdl on a hunting trip.
Well. I haw been here two and
a half months and I have 11&lt;1t men
anyont'. I arrived to Thunder Hay
alone and nut knuwtnganyone. Now.
I still don't know anyone. I am quite
shy and I spend most. &lt;1f my time
studytng--at least my grndes are
good.
I am not complaining but when
I saw the engineer's dilemma I could
relate to this. I too find myself wantIng to go out and meet pt·opk but. I
am too shy. so I stay home . t\lso, a
night out alone Is not too pleasant.
At ka.-.t Chrlstmaslssuonapproarhtng and I wlll be able to go out at
home.
OHi In response towomrn ostracizing the engineers. I think 1101. I
personally have talked tr, an engineering student while In the library. I think thry could makt'
small talk while walling li&gt;r thr
elt-vator or pholrn;opter.
This may be the nineties. but
there are still some womc..·n who are
shy and ~ot asuut-gotngoraggrrsslve as others. It duesn'I mean wr
an: deliberately Ignoring you.
signed,
having an UDSuccessful man-

Dear Aphrodisiac:
It Is Important that a relationship be mutually satlsfytng. You
should never be afratd to be honest
with your partner concerning any
matter. I suggest that you let your
lover know of this desire. but In
such a way that he doesn't feel
pressured Into It. Discuss It. tfhe ts
uncomfortable with this, see tfyou
can come up with a mutually satisfying alternative.
Annie

hunt.
Dear Unsuccessful:
Thank-you very much for your
letter. I am sure the hearlbrokcncngtn&lt;'ns wlll be glad to h,·ar that
they an-: notalrnw. Don't gtvt' up on
your 'huntJng trip.'
Annie.

Dear Analyst Annie:
This Is in response to the heartbroken Engineers.
I can add some humour to this.
Before I left home In Sept&lt;&gt;mber
eVt'ryone Joked that I was &lt;1ff to the
marriage markel. Meaning many

My problem Is one thal is a
little cc ,nfuslng. I ha\'e a boyfrtend
ba,:k honw. that I love very mueh
and would nevt&gt;r want to lose. but
home Is hours away and our only
contact over months is a telephone
Jim·. My problem Is I'm lacking In
malt• companionship. I have many
male friends al home but I can't
seem to do the same h&lt;"re. I'm
afraid mos l guys will get the wrong
Idea . I'm nut looking for another
relaUonshtp . .Just a male to be
frlf•ndswHh. thispmbablysounds
greedy on my part. but It Is a
genuine feeling. I don't know another way to deal with these feelings. Do you have any suggestions.
Signed,
Loved but Lonely
Dear Loved but Lonely:
Yourlcellngsare perfectly normal. It's okay to want and need
mal,e companionship wltho11l
wantlnga ·Jove· rdattonshtp. This
applies equally to males. Unless
you're giving off misleading signals. I St:e nu reason why your
Interactions would be taken the
wrong way. If they arc misunderstood. Just clarity the situation.

ANY LETTERS TO
ANALYST ANNIE CAN
BE DROPPED OFF
AT THE ARGUS OFFICE, UC00 19, ALL
LETTERS ARE COMPLETELY
CONF
IDENTIAL.

Dear Analyst Annie:

-IBM &amp; MAC Shareware 4 for $14. Package of 50
DSDD 3.5• diskettes for $32 &amp; 50 DSHD for $49.
Desk &amp; walknount monitor movers $75. Logitech
First Mouse $46. [)ysan formatted diskettes - 12
for the price of 10. Multi-Media Disk cases $7 .50.
• Many other red-light specials I

t,c

-94

•~ - '%·

~~ ~~

Free paper, stand, and cable with every printer purchased I

Packard 8~11 386SX/16 package - $1625
Zenith MastersPORT 386SX notebook $2900

.

IBM Model 55SX (limited quantities)

$2025

Campus Technology 486fJ3 EISA package $3850
Packard Bell 486SX/33 package $2900

Tunne Tee

As part of the Bookstore's Midnight Madness Sale, Tunnel Tech will be open from:

7pm~9pm
.,

. . ...... .
, . ,f;

...

Thurs., Nov. 28

($)4

6)"'0t

0

�Friday November 22nd
United Way Pub-Nite
* voluntary cover *
Please help achieve
the student goal ~
Tuesday Nov. 26
Open Stage .
&gt; come out and show your stuff &lt;
Nov. 28th
,, Gi)··. •·..
~ - · 'Toys for Tots ·,: ~ ~ -i
db ··'-' ···
11

11

-

11

11

•'•

Management and Staff
·would like to Thank-You •
for vour continued ·
support and patronage.
.

.

,

• . • • . • . • •.• .•• ·.•.· ..

I

�The Argus Page 9 November 21, 1991 •

SPORTS

Cheap Seats :
Notes From The NHL
bySimonCox
- It's amazing that while some things change, others will ALWAYS remain the same.
What I am referring to here is the playing records from N.H.L.hockey, both old and new
teams over the last. ten or fifteen years. Take for example, a perennially lousy team
(hmm ... off the top of my head) the Toronto Maple Leafs. The days of Danyl Sutler, Bolje
Sahning, the Happy Wanderer. and the great Moustached One (Mike Palmateer and
Lanny MacDonald respectively) are distant memones. Let's face 1t. the team wasn't that
hot then either. but at least fans had guys to cheer for. Season after season goes by, each
beginning with promise, subsequently ending in heartache and headache. After sitting
in the Norris Division basement, with a 5- 14-3 record, visions of a Stanley Ctip for Wendel
and the Boys has vanished. Perhaps management does not realize that the 1992 entry
draft does not include Elie Lindros.
On the other
hand, a perennially good team.
(this one's easy).
the Montreal Canadians. have had
only one sub .500
season in 22
years. On the
archway going
into the dressing
room there reads
a sign 'To you with
flailing hand we
throw the torch:
be yours to hold it
high." And this
magical torch of
success has definitely been passed
to capable hands.
From Richard to
Beliveau
to
Lafleur
to

Robinson to Roy, the Canadiens have masterfully executed a change from powerful
offense to rock-solid defense without missing a beat. In the late l 970's they consistently
had the best offence in the league, and spelled defense D-R-Y-D-E-N. In the 1980's they
have not finished worse than third in goals allowed. and are backstopped now by the
world's best all-around goaltender. Patrick Roy. The Habs possess the best goals-against
and are overall point leader in the league so far, playing more games than most teams.
while allowing 13 less goals.
So what am I t.Iying lo say here? Well. lhese things will always be the same. The Leafs
traded MacDonald and SitUer and continue to trade their future away. with guys like
Vince
Damphousse and Peter Ing playing elsewhere, and its not Harold Ballard's fault
anymore. So what can be done to fix it? Who knows. Start by keeping key young players.
Paying them a UtUe better would hurt either.
And the Canadiens will remain the same also. By maintaining a tradition of
excellence, and passing the Lorch to future stars John LeClair, Eric Desjardins and
Mathieu Schneider, Les Habitants have many of Lord Stanley's cups in the near future.

Nor , ·westers
Run and Gun
With a Pair of
Canada's Finest
by Ian T. Fero

The LU men's basketball squad travelled to Winnipeg
this past weekend and received a pair of losses, but a
boatload of confidence. Facing off against both the University of Manitoba and Winnipeg University saw our squad
playing a pair of teams which may have a legitimate shot
at a national uttle. Coach Lou Pero claims that Manitoba
will be ranked amongst the Lop four. nationally. and
Winnipeg in the top eight when lhe polls are' released.
_ On Friday the NorWeslers took to the floor against the
Manitoba Bisons. The game was rather close with the
team within 5 and six points at on time. The game slipped
away as Pero utilized his bench. and the final saw the LU
squad lose 88-66. Les Rag,guette had his finest performance of the year shutting down the Bison's all-Canadian
player to 21 points. eight at the free-throw line ..Offensively
Ragguelle hit for 31 points. Mike Lalonde also added 13
points to the Nor'wester cause.

On Saturday the game with the University of Winnipeg
was a lot closer. The team was within 5 points with under
a minute left but unfortunately could not capitalise on
their late bombs, while Winnipeg hit on all of their late foul
• shots. Coach Pero says that the second half of this game
was the team's finest of the young season. Pero also adds
that the team has Jelled together very well. five players
reached double digit scoring on Saturday. the frrst time
since Pero began coaching that the feat has been done.
The Winnipeg squad featured a seven-footer and a 6'8"
player who starred for the Canadian junior team. The
NorWesters shut down the big men on the Winnipeg
. squad and fought their way to a stingy 94-83 defeat. Top
scorers Saturday were Ragguette with 16 points. Lalonde
with 21. David Pineau with 15, Chris Grace with 16, and
Ray Foster had 11.

FOURTH
WRESTLERS
AT BROCK
The Lakehead Universitywrestling team won two
and lost two dual meets the
past weekend at the Brock
University Invitational
wrestling tournament and
placed fourth as a team.
The
matmen
started the tournament with
a win over McMaster winning seven matches and
losing only three. The semifinal match saw LU take on
Western. Unfortunatelyour
squad wasn't up to task.
losing to the Mustangs 8
matches lo 2. With the loss
the NorWesters were relegated to the consolation
semi-final versus Queen's.
The Golden Gaels provided

little competition for our
squad as they avenged their
drubbing by Western taking
9 of 10 matches. The
NorWesters thus advanced
to theconsolatlonflnalagatnst
McMaster. In a close match
the LU squad lost by a final of
6 matches to 4. As a result the
NorWesters claimed fourth
spot overall.
The Western Mustangs defeated the University
of Guelph in the final to take
top honours. Guelph was second. Mac third. LU fourth.
Brock fifth. Queen's sixth. and
RMC 7th.
Pacing the LU attack
throughout the tournament

was rookie Kevin Wallen who
'¥OD all four matches and
sophrnore Mike "The Heat"
Kitchen who won three of
four.

CP'S SPORTS
EATING TIP
It became very apparent that if i didn't return
Victoria's "five bucks" which i borrowed for a
delicious buffet, i would never again eat the
puck in my own end again. The game would go
on indefinitely.

�The Argus Page 10 November 21. 1991

ENTERTAINMENT

MAGNUS
GETS MAD

by Sue Kemp

Magnus Theatre's third
play of the season, "The
Anger in Ernest and
Ernestine" opened on Friday night, and judging by
the audience's reaction it
is sure to be a rousing success. This bittersweet comedy by the writing team of
Leah Cherniak,Robert
Morgan, and Martha Ross
centres around a naive
newlywed couple. As the
play progresses we see the
problems they encounter
resulting from their lack of
communication.and their
differem;e in daily habits.
The first act is very light
and comic in tone and I
was convinced this was
going to be a rather silly,
although enjoyable play.
Ernest and Ernestine are
blissfully happy, almost
sickeningly happy, as they
begin their new life together. After they move in
together we see them try to
deal with each other's differences in lifestyle. Ernest
is a fastidious neat-freak
who is always incredibly
organized, while Ernestine
is a sloppy.spontaneous

person who is always
late for work in the
morning. They begin to
irritate each other terribly but don't discuss
their problems or communicate their feelings,
so by the end of the act
both are ready to explode as·a result of their
bottled-up emotions.
The second act becomes very dramatic
and gripping as we are
shown the darker side
of the human psyche.
In their monologues,
Ernest and Ernestine
tell how they have begun to hate each other,
and we can see how
their lack of communication has hurt them both.
Ernest is disgusted by
Ernestine's sloppy habits,
and Ernestine complains
that he looks down on her
and is always judging her.
This results in an intense
scene in which the couple
yell at each other and throw
things around the apartment. I could really feel the
hurt and confusion behind
their words. This outburst
seems to do them both good,

and by the end of the play
they have reached a reconciliation.
Siobahn McCormick is
perfectly cast in the role of
the flamboyant Ernestine,
although Michael Simpson,
in the role of Ernest, tends
to stand out more because
he has the more humorous
lines. His dance to Bruce
Sprin~steen's song "No Surrender" is absolutely hilarious!! Glenn Davidson's set
is very interesting and ef-

fective. The main stage is
Ernest and Ernestine's
basement apartment, and
there are places on either
side of the stage where they
deliver the monologues that
present their feelings.
I would say that "The
Anger in Ernest and
Ernestine" is one of the best
plays I have seen at Magnus.
It appeals on both a light
humorous level, and also
on a deeper philosophical
level. It presents us with the

difficulties and hard truths
facing women and men in
romantic relationships, and
..also points out that communication and trust are
essential if a relationship is
to succeed. I think "The
Anger in Ernest and
Ernestine" -is a play that
everyone can identify with,
and will find extremely entertaining. It runs at
Magnus until November 30,
so make sure you go and
see it!!!!

LAXDAL ON PROCRASTINATION
by Brian Laxdal

Well it is getting close to
exam .time again and what
does every hard working
student do best at exam
time? Procrastinate. Students prqcrastinate so well
that any distraction proves
more imp·o rtant than
studying. So here are a few
absolutly terrible movies
that no one would normally
waste their time with, but
gain remarkable value as a
time wasting tool while procrastinating'.
Consider yourself a good

procrastinator if you find
yourself watching the
whole two hours of the
diaster known as "Bonfire
of the Vanities" without
once wondering why you
feel noxious.
Then you can move up
to master procrastiqator
status by skipping studying and watching "Dark
Star" guaranteed to almost
drive you to study, but hold
your ground.
Next move to procrastlnatorextraordinaire by sitting through "Henry and

.
5
Top

June" the first movie to
receive an NC-1 7 rating for
dull, dumb and dreary.
If you can pass all these
levels and still are procrastinating you are 011 your
way to the final plateau.
Grab some pop com out of
your roommates hand and
prepare to become the king
of procrastination. This
can be done by avoiding
your responsibilities and

sitting through "Jaws III :
the Revenge" which has a
angry shark following his
prey to the Bahamas and
ending up eating a helicopter. Now that' the ultimate in procrastination!
Having achieved this
level of procrastination
their is one final recommendation to all the kings
of procrastination at L. U.
Should you wish to con-

Unue to hone your craft,
but are feeling the pull of
studying to avoid failure,
leave the house. You can
waste more of your lime by
heading to the theatres to
see any of the drivel that
has engulfed the city and
feel satisfied that even
though the movies suck
you have fulfilled your destiny as the king of procrastination ...

·;=! &amp;,
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�The Argus Page 11 November 21, 1991

ENTERTAINMENT

THE LA'S
--

Just Another British Band·'.
/ .···
'.
"I l's the Beatles, no,
Travis Belrose

~

. . . .,.:-: i ....•••-❖

•

••

•

❖•

il l!l:t .......

'
Gerry and the Pacekers rtght?"
' --1"1••
"No. it's the La's."
"The La's? As in the
urfs, La, la, la la la
.?"
"Yeah, kind of."
"Who are the La's? I
't remember hearing
m on CKPR classic
rock."
"The reason the La's
aren't played on classic
radio stations is that
they were still in diapers when Gerry was
taking a ferry across the
Mersey. Your confusion
ts
understandable
,
though, given the fact
that they are from Liverpool, they play music
Out of the twelve offerMersey" we get "Liberty
in the tradition of the tngs. only two border on Ship" about a man who
Merseybeat. and it the forgettable . The retells us 'I am the toiler the
sounds good."
mainingfive lie somewhere old-ship slave·. Consider
This Liverpool trio in between, including the the cynicism in "Way Out"
mixes acoustic and elec- "Day In The Life" type opus 'Give me the hammer to
tric guitars effectively to of "Lookin' Glass" that is shatler the dream to get
achieve a melodious verygoodinmanyrespects, awayouloft.his'. Ypumight
sound tempered by a but also exposes the prob- say they have a realistic
rough edge that echoes lems that the La's have perspective on life.
the cynicism and world with long songs and workThe songs are short, exweariness of the lyrtcs. able arrangements with cept for "Lookin' Glass",
Their sound is sixties, songs more than three min- and arranged in original
but the themes are nine- utes long.
methods that invite repeat
ties. I found it refreshAt times the rhyming is
listening. I s_u spect that the
ing to hear a band go simplistic, and some of the audience for a band like
back to rootsy music melodies seem too deriva- the La's would be limited
without selling out as Uve, but these flaws of the but enthusiastic. Sympasentimental or hope- J,a's are plausable, not thy for music that came
lessly nostalgic.
criminal.
. out durtng the British InThe press release
Thestrengthoftheband vasion of the early Sixties
claims, "Liverpool's lat- is in their bouncy, at times is a plus. Interest in lyrtcs
est. The La's, release a brightmusic, thatisincon- that avoid and oppose fluffy
self-tilled debut of Jan- stant contrast with lead topics is a prerequisite.
gling, three minute clas- vocalist Lee Maver's rough
The La's have the talent
sics.,. I hate to say it. voice and his pessimistic to record a complete albut that statement, ob- lyrics.
bum, but this interesting
viously made in the
The mix works well and debut doesn't quite cut it.
company's self interest, contributes to making this If I was a music prof., I'd
judiciously sums up this a listenable album. Rather give it a B+.
record.
than the "Ferry Across The
Their debut album is ~ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - self-titled and the cover
features a photo of a
woman's eye. The album
has a spontaneous, no
overdub, live feel which is surprising considering it took the group over
two tears to record the
album that they finally
released.
The best songs on the
record are the breezy
"Son Of A Gun", the energetic "I Can't Sleep",
the bright (popish)
"There She Goes". the
cool "Doledrum", and
the rockin' "Failure".
Some of the titles are
cliches. but the treatment of the songs are
Original.

�The Argus Page 12 November 21, 1991

2nd Annual

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Assorted prints $1Z.95 each

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8-9 All general &amp; trade books 25% off
9-10 Stuffed toys and gift items (including Christmas) 20% ·off
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Other in store specials available in store.

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Bookstore will be closed from Noon to 6:00pm
All products will be available at the B~kstore 'Not the INTERSECTION"

�- --

-- -

-

-

The Argus Page 13 November 21, 1991

ENTERTAINMENT

NIRVANA: HEAVEN
SUB POP_
by Greg Oppedisano

"Nirvana?! it sounds like it could be a 'Cultist' type imitation album"
spewed forth the irrepressible Sports editor. Nirvana's release "Nevermind"
is a phenomenal album but don't be fooled by the Cultesque, native desert
Buddhist heaven hype type imagery supported by their name, the
reference is only passing and they certainly stand apart and alone from
any Cult association.
Nirvana's punk influences are self evident throughout _the .album.
Three players pounding out somewhat surprisingly melodious pseudo
thrash. The lyrics fit implicitly within the music, following and flowing like
a brashly harmonious river of noise. The music maintains it's edge while
at the same time being studio clean cut.
Listen for the first track on the album "Smells Like Teen Spirit" I've
heard it somewhere before and it ages well with the rest of the album.
Dark and ambiguous, the lyrics pound the brain searching for explanation. For instance 'with the lights out it's less dangerous, here we are now
entertain us, I feel stupid and contagious, here we are now entertain us, a
mulatto, a albino, a mosquito, my libido, yay. yay, a denial, I'm worse at
what I do best andfor this gift I feel blessed, I found it hard, it was hard
tofmd, oh well, whatever, n.evermind'. (make of it what you will, this was
but a taste).
Look for speed on tracks like "Territorial Pissings", and "Stay away"
bass innovation on "Breed", and some expression of musical ability on
"Polly", "Drain You" and "Lithium". If you like unabated 'a nimalistic
banging and crashing combined with some ground breaking talent and
distinctiveness .... check it out.

CORNWALLCONCERTNUMBER36
.
by Paul Acree

Featuring Victor Schultz
on violin and Erica Schultz
on piano.
I must admit two bias of
mine immediately: first,
violin is, Without question
my favourite instrument;
second, anyone who includes Beethoven in the
program automatically
goes into my good book.
Having thus qualified this
report, I shall attempt to
remain as objective as possible.
Well! Beethoven, right

off the bat! Oh Joy (Ahem)
seriously though, Victor
Schultz reading of the
Maestro's Sonata for Piano and Violin No. 5 Op.
24 ("Spring"), was both
beautiful-and astounding:
his mastery of the violin is
phenomenal. I especially
liked the second movem en t, "Adagio molto
expressivo", but then I am
a sucker for the slow sad
bits anyway. I was Quite
impressed by Victor's bowing, which was both efficient and dashing.

L.U. Radio is now accepting
volunteer applications for Radio
Disc Jockeys
No experience is required
we provide full training!
All we ask is a sincere desire to
work hard to help your school
radio station prosper!

The violin has a histocy
of colourful virtuosos and
Victor is in that tradition,
as much fun to watch as to
hear. His Legate is charming, as well. One thing I did
notice, and was not overly
fond of was his tone. Victor
has an especially bright
colour in his sound while
I'm 'partial to a darker. more
"salt of the earth" tone.
His violin is probably
french or, more likely Italian in origin, though I personally prefer Hungarian
violins for producing the
type of sounds I'm talking
about. Still, victor plays so
wonderfully that his tone
is entirely forgivable as a
matter of personal taste in
any case.
Canadian composer
Bruce Shaver's Exposition
Folksong and Finale is a
piece which demands the
highest calibre of violinist

and Schultz measures up
admirably. The Exposition
in particular is a wonderful platform for a violinist
to display his technique
and Schultz did just that:
left hand plucking, harmonics, and double stops
are only some of the skills
which Victor displayed with
such fiersome accomplishment that I feared the violin might burst into flame!
Truly breath taking.
Erica Schultz rejoined
Victor for the last three
pieces of the program:
Legande Op. 17 by
Wieniawaski;
Suite
Populaire Espagimole by
Falla; and lastly the Carmen Fantasy Op. 25 by
Sarasata.
The Suite is a collection
of Spanish Folk Songs,
originally scored for the
voice with piano accomplishment, arranged by

Anyone interested can fill
out an application available
in the L.u.s.u. office

The Lakehead University Radio Station
is now in the process of setting
up the
L.U. Radio Station Advisory Committee
which will commence in the second term

All applications
MUST be submitted before
November 30th

Positions available:

All cunent L.U. Radio Disc Jockeys
must re-apply

Interviews will be held during the
first two weeks of January
For More Information call:
Derek Serianni: 346-9106

3 radio station employees
2 L.u.s.u. members
2 Faculty
2 Students
1 Member at Large
Interested applicants should contact
Derek Serianni at 346-9106
by November 30th

Kor.hanski for violin and
piano. As one might expect, the violin lines were
for the most part quite
vocalesque. Due to the subject matter of these songs,
which dealt with love lost,
Schultz sang a bittersweet
air, heartfelt and tender.
One hates to abuse the
word "beautiful" yet I can
think of no word more appropriate.
•
Closing-the set with the
Carmen Fantasy was perfect: as the opera Carmen
is familiar to many. the
themes Schultz played are
like old friends, welcome
and well met. Choosing
such material for a finale
is standard practice for
good reason. it works.
Next week a review of
The Gents concert. Don's
forget Vaughan William's
Riders To The Sea and
Puccini's Gianni Schich,
two one act operas which
are being performed in the
University Centre Theatre
on November 29th and
30th. tickets are only $8. 00
for students and are available at the Community
Auditorium Box Office and •
also at the secretaries .office at the Cornwall School.
Hope to see you there! Until
next time.

:.z
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Raised and offset prilrlbrg

ESSAYS, 11IESES, TERM PAPERS,
CHAKI'S, GRAPHS, GRAPHICS

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�The Argus Page 14

C-LOUOS OVER SUNSHINE STATE
Li,. Melvin is not harpy with Fnmt Row Tours and she is going to ,lo something about it. Started in London, the company provided Brock students with excursions lo Florida during
Rending Weck.
The third ycnr Communications student has begun a petition complaining of services received from Front Row Tours cand has contacted the media on whal she considers to be a serious
~~ -

-

Complaints sh_e has compiled concerning Front Row trips to Oaytona and Fort Lauderdale include: excessively long_ bus trips; late release of discount cards to be used al local businesses in
Flori,la; inconsistent prices; and travellers nol being notified of change of hotel accommodations until travellers were on the buses.
Representatives of Frunt Row Tours say they have rccciv&lt;..-J no complaints from Brock students about their trips. Fnmt Row admits some problems did exist, but argue this is only natural.
IJc,pilc problem,, Sales Manager Jeff Johnson stated. "Our people were accommodated."
Johnson and company owner Scoll Smith describe Melvin ·s complaints against Front Row Tours as a 'personal vengeance• against themselves. The three went lo high school together, but
neither Smith or Johnson q,uld.cxplain why Miss Melvin would be personally allacking them.
Mr. Jolinsnn is concerned Melvin is contacting the media about her complaints concerning Front Row without discussing her concerns with the Company itself.
Mr. Smith stated Front Row were given the hotel room number of company representatives in Florida. If travellers. did not know where to find their representatives, he argues, they could
have gone tu the front lobhy of their hotel and asked li.,r the master list to sec where their company reprcsentativ~ was.
Mr. Smith daimed it was an 'outright lie " that he gave special deals lo certain individuals. He did, however, charge reduced fare for his friends . Eric Halls, for example, a student at
Western University and a personal fricnJ of Mr. Smith received a twenty dollar discount on his room. He explained he had no qualms about this. Sales Manager, Jeff Johnson argues such
'deals arc commonplace in business operations. "It only makes sense lo me", he explained.
Smith believed it was 1101 proper for Melvin to complain about reduced prices for some people, when she herself contacted Johnson asking for a price break. Miss Melvin's claim that
Western f,x,thall players paid only $11XI for their trip is 'false·. slates Johnson.
He docs nut sec Melvin's approach to the situation as being of bcnclit lo those who travelled with Front Row. As far as he is concerned. the company ha.&lt; been left in the dark concerning
her displeasure. They have as yet. he explained. received a copy of the petition Melvin is circulating among Western and Brock students. He is 'not sure what her intentions arc'.
ReceipL&lt; issued by the company have their toll free number which students can use if they have any problem with the com11any's service. He told the Press, you know more than I do about
the situation.

I

from: Rrock Press
l&gt;y: Rri,111 Kelly
0107
STUOENTS ANG!&lt;'\ WITII LOCAL TRAVEL AGENCY
Sumc Wc,1an students &lt;.bim they we«· l&gt;Jrne&lt;I over Sla&lt;.k Weck hy ,, lo.. al ltMvcl agency.
fnm stlllknts ,,,id &lt;;1,•,lcnt Travel Scn·i&lt;.e&lt;. nf 64,1 l&lt;idunond St. in London, broke verbal promises regarding accommodation and transportation on trips. One student who went to Jamaica
with STS said she plans lo take her complaints to the Clntarin Gnwrnm,·nt. Other students said they were disappointed with a trip to Uaytomc Rc.,ch.
··we were p111111iscd a l&gt;&lt;:ad1-sidc hotel (i11 Uuyto11,1 Beach) and we ended a gc&gt;&lt;lll 20 minute walk away. ir. a re.11 dive," l&gt;crck Rawlistone said. "One of the guys I was with got Ix,at up
walkini: ba&lt;.·k frc,m the hcach. That wouldn"t :t;tv&lt;. h;,ppcned ifwc were in the right hotel."
Rawlst1 111c ahn daimcd his !!fllUp wa, promised transportatina In the airport by STS's Florida representative Tom Howard. Rut four Western students said when they were ready lo leave
f,,r th&lt;. airport llrn•a"I told them he was n,~ th,·ir taxi driver.
lfow,11&lt;.I ,aid yesterday th.it tr:111s1»rtation was 111•1 part of the package.
Scott Smith. l'ce,idcnt of S'fS in Lnndun. said he Cl'Uld not account for changes in Policy regarding transportation from the hotel ur ahoul rcpresenlalh!es' behaviour.
.. I &lt;11111·1 kn.,w how 111 answer •1111::-tion, like that. S11111&lt;: folks ,11ay haw legitimate .:oncern,. but is it really our fault if the hotel doesn't deliver the right amount of rooms?" he said, "I
Jon ·1 thi11k i1 ·:,. foir lo Mm11c u~ fn; cvcry

111111~

lhal went wrong.".

H, i:111 Reve: i&lt;lg&lt;·. wh11 also travelled In !Jaytona Reach with STS, '"id he paid $~45 for a bus trip'lind a kitchcnellc. 111c day hcfnre departure. he received a call from an STS agent who
suiJ lhc trip w.1s f..·ani.cllcJ .
.. I (l.•tcr} had 1., ,,r:;ue wilh the !!UY (Smitl,) f.,rewr. ancl lhen I had lo ray wnc mon&lt;·y lo gctun a flight." BcvcriJgc said, "When I got lhcrc, I got a ruum with no kitchcnclle . I don't think
I'd ever tra\'cl "ilh Sl'S :1::.cia:·
O:cria Lysy. wh" flew t;, Jamaica with S
pl:,'1:; lo c, ,,, plain 111 thr Ontariu Govermm·nt. LYSY claims Howard promised her a beach-front h;,tcl and a flight out of Detroit. She received
neither.
•
..STS ne,cr kucw .-1,at was going on, .. Ly,y said. " We &lt;..crtaialy di.In": ttel our mc•ncy's worth."
In rcspnn&lt;e. Howard said. "We promi,., c~rlain r..,ms based 1111 availability. If people don·1 get the room. they gel a refund."
Beveridge. Rawst&lt;'ne and Lysy say th,·y hav..: not yet received a rdund.
Al Murray. consumer sc, vice rcpres, ntalivc f11r the I )nlari,, Ministry,. f Consumer and Corporate Affairs, said those who did not get what they were promised by a travel agent "should be
~cttinJ: lo us i11n1clli111dy ...
Student Trnwl Scrvi,~s i, " licc:ised operation. and "c don ·1 need ti.i ,; type of crntl from a licensed operation." Murray said, "If an)' of this is true, people should give us their complaint in
wrilini,: aml we"II i:o afl&lt;.-r them."
Mu11,1y ,aid the :nini,try has the p&lt;w,,·1· lo suspend : ,n a:_:ent"s license or to prosecute fur breach of contract.
From the Western G,11.cllc

rs.

11)&lt;)0 OJ-I~)

ar11dc hy : Scutt lk, d,uk

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DAYTONA BEACH

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�The Argus Page 15 November 21, 1991

CLUB .NEWS
THE VEN

LUSKI

AFCASA

Greetings Groovies and
Hipsters! We'd like to thank
all of you who came to our
first POETRY IMPROV. The
night was a great success. If
you happened to be there.
look for your poetry in our
next issue - if you weren't
able to make it, be sure and
come to the next one: it's
tenatively scheduled for the
first week of Feb. 1992!
We still need submissions. so if you have any
creative art to contribute
we'd love to have it. Our
deadline: Nov. 29 Drop off
depots are LUSU and the
VEN office. We are also looking for people to help gel our
materials on computer file,
so if you'd like to help out,
please submit your materials on disk: or, stop be the
office and use our computer.
Until Next Time -The
2Eds.

Well skiers, we almost
had it, but it looks like the
green grass will be here once
again! Keep your fingers
crossed for more white stuffi
I hope that all of you have
now picked up your ski club
memberships -you can't get
through a winter in Thun-.
der Bay without one! The
membership includes super
discounts and great parties
... speaking of which, this
Friday. yes TOMORROW
NIGHT, the Ski Club will be
hosting the first annual
SUDS N' SNOW SKI SHOW
in the Outpost! Come on
out, meet some great people, check ou l Lhe newest in
ski equipment, and watch
some ski movies - GET
GEARED UP FOR A SUPER
SEASON! Hope to see all of
you there!
In the meantime, cheers,
and lets hope for lots of
SNOW!!

Hey AFCASA rµembers!
As the Christmas season
draws near, we wish to remind you of the Christmas
formal dinner being held in
the Study on November
23rd.
•
Tickets are $3 and are
available from any of the
AFCASA execu lives. If you
have any questions or you
would like more information concerning the dinner
there will be a general meeting this coming Saturday at
3:00 pm.
MERRY CHRISTMAS!!

ESS
Don't procrastinate ... TERMINATE! They're only available until they're gone, then it'll be too late. $12 member
tickets are available at the ESS office only, $14 dismember
tickets and $18 un-student tickets are available at the
LUSU office. "THE TERMINATOR" promises to be a most
excellent time, with Honeymoon Suite joining us in the
wildest bash of the year. It's on the night of the last day of
classes, that's Nov. 29. What a peifect time to unleash some
pre-exam stress. It's at the CLE coliseum. What a peifect
place to fit 1000+ people.

THE ARGUS
A General Membership
meeting will be held Friday,
November 22 at 2:30 PM. All
executive, members, and
students interested in the
direction that the paper is
goiniy to Lake in 1992 are
encouraged to attend.
We value vour innut!
The Kidney Foundation
Northwestern Chapter, is sell,ing Calendar Lottery Tickets
lfor 1992. Tickets are $20.00
each and you can win cash
draws of$20.00 every day for
1992. A total of $15,000 will
be won and only .a.QQQ tickets
~ill be sold. Tickets can be
purchased by calling the office at 623-5437.

****lPO§~lr~ON OlPlEN**,*
IJBlUIY ~ijl~

oom ,

Rlt maJ1M ~D oo Grnm

am~

~~~~ AV~lM~ I~ W~ (Jfla •
OOJll~~ 5NOV.1~ 1!1

LUSU ELECTIONS COMMITTEE
LUSU NEEDS YOU
ELECTIONS COMMITIE
3POSITIONS AVAILABLE
APPLY IN PERSON AT LUSU OFFICE

· AI-ESEC
Hey LAKEHEAD!
Yes, the word on the street is true ... we are selling
Christmas Wreaths this year! These are environmentally
friendly wreaths from New Brunswick. The set price includes the cost of sending it to any lucky people of your
choice in North America. The cost is only $32. 70 for
Canadian destinations and $35. 70 for American, plus GSf.
Another bustling activity is fruit baskets·! Yes, our
elves are receiving many many orders from Lhe parents of
students on residence. So for those of you on residence;...
Make sure you tell your parents that you want one, so you
won't be left out. You can also get them to buy you a
porcelain personalized mug with the Lakehead insignia to
go with your basket. (Your basket will be filled with lots of
goodies to get you through your exams!)
Finally, elections for Local Committee President, VP
Marketing, and Local Committee Exchange Controller will
be held Thurs. Nov. 28 /91 (7-9pm) in the Aesthetics
Lounge. Members, don't forget to come and vote! This
should be an exciting meeting, so ifyou 're even just thinking
of joining, this is a not to be missed event(This is Dean's
word!) IT-4-NOW, Dammit J.

MSSA
Hai there! Congratulations to the club and to all
participants for a successful conduct of the Malaysian &amp;
Singaporean Dinner and Cultural Night. The event. which
was held on the second of November, was different from the
same event held in the past. This year we were able to
introduce a, mixture of cultures, not only from Malaysia, but
also from Japan, Bangladesh: India. Pakistan and Africa.
Japanese dance was great:"&amp;&gt; did the "Bhangra" dance from
India and Pakistan. Not to mention the "Tartan lilin" and
"Endang" from Malaysia. Of course the Fashion Show which
was attractive and informative. They were all great shows.
Thank you for all members and non-members who helped
making the event a successful one. Don't forget, we have a
free movie for members this_Saturday at BB 1021. The show
will start at 8.00 pm. The tittle .. ? Check it out. It's sure a
good one.

lUSU USED BOOK SAlE
SECOND TERM BOOKS ONlY
BOOKS BEING ACCEPTED IN DECEMBER
BOOK SALE STARTS JAN, 61992
COMING SOON:
LUSU EXECUTIVE ELECTIONS
NOMINATIONS OPEN JAN. 20 1992
NOMINATIONS CLOSE JAN. 24 1992
FOR: PRESIDENT
VP STUDENT ISSUES
VP FINANCE
THINK ABOUT IT OVER THE
HOLIDAYS

�TheArgus Page 16 November21 , 1991

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CORY GENTF.S

GREG BRIGGS MIDS
NICK 8L\ZEVIC

==OIARD
ANNE L'IIEUREUX
CARRI SM1I11
CHRIS IIUNl'ER
OF.RUBE

SHARON CAIUlOL

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MARK DE PROPHETIS
LEN DUNKLEY

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DEREK

51'. AMAND

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JIM DFMUCHIERS

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MICHF.AL DEIA CRUZ

CAN BE PICKED lJP AT LUSU

NOW THAT'S.REFRESHING

----,

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----

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                    <text>THE
The S~uden~ l!\Teu,spaper,,.of Lakehead. 'CJniversi~y
VoZu,n,e 28, J.Vo. 1.7 Februa..ry 6, 1.991.

LUSU Elections Make History ,
by Noel Ward
The count is in. For the first
tlme in LUSU history- an all
femaleexecuttvehas been voted
into office. Cass Koenen narrowly defeated Paul Moniz by a
122 vote margin. Christine
Fisher and Tanya Tougas defeated their opponents in landslide victories. Current WSU
president Ian Middleton said
that he had •the utmost oonfldence in the people (who won
the election). They have a lot of
experience and understanding
of how the university system
works and they will be effective... • The new executive takes
over on April 1.
Tots election also saw a record

number of voters. Approximately
1636 students voted
In this election, putting the per-

centage of voter turn out above

3 ~ s Koenen, this year's
Vice-President for Student Issues, polled a total of679votes,
defeating Paul Moniz by 122
votes. Cass Koenen is the

fourth female LUSU president. Koenen said that it was
a •dtrty fight, but I overcame it
all. And I'm very- glad it's over.•
Koenen, who takes over on April
Fool's day, said thatsheoouldn't
watt for April to come, and that
she 1s •extremely excited to be
part of an all female executive.•
Moniz, who is graduattngthis
year and will not be back next
year, thanked eveiyone "that
voted for me and believed in
me.• Moniz was working at the
Outpost last night as the election results were tallied. He
wished the new executive the
best of luck, yet commented
•1et's hope they keep this place
(the Outpost) afloat.•
Koenen's victoiy may not be
without incident. Peter George,
who came 1n third with a total of
145 votes, indicated that he
may oontest the election on the
grounds that some ofKoenen's
friends worked as poll clerks,
with the insinuation that they
may have told voters to support

-

Koenen. When asked fora oommentabouthis placing, George
said "'lhe truth will come out.
I'm very disappointed with the
selection of the polling clerks.•
WSU election policy states that
polling clerk selection ls made
at random, and LUSU employees are not permitted to endorse any candidate at any
tlme.
Tanya Tougas won the
seat of Vice-president
Finance by a landslide victory-. Tougas polled a total of
808votes,whileheropponents
polled a total of 771 votes.
Tougas did not arrive at the
university until about
11 :30pm. She went out to see a
movie to relieve herself of the
stress of the election night.
Upon hearing of the results,
Tougas said she was •proud of
the student population because
they voted, they made a good,
sound judgement.· She felt ·all
the candidates had potential,•
and said she was worried.

In response to Tougas' vic-

tory-, Tun ·Fiooo· Dawdy said

·she kicked our f---tngasses. •
Tougas said there ~ be a
lot of work. I want to be accountable for next year's
budget.•
Mike Hergott, the Finance
•Ha.tr" candidate, said •1 think
that voter turnout was the
whole purpose we campaigned, and 1 think we
achieved our purpose.· While
holding up a glass of beer, he
ooncluded by toasting the winners.
Randy Yozlpovic, VP Finance for the 1988/89 term
got two votes. Yozlpovic, who
has since graduated, ls considered by some to be the godfather of the Student Centre.
This election's most stunning victory came for
Christine Fisher, the
new Vice-President for
Student Issues. Fisher
polled a total of 967 votes.
Cratg •ao· Grice, who came in

... AND TH£. 'IIINIJERS AKE;

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second, polled 240. Grice commented that he •got washed
ashore by a giant tidal wave by
the Fisher Queen: I basically
drowned.·
Fisher stayed in the LUSU
offices as the votes were
counted. When asked how she
felt. Fisher - her face red and
the hands over her mouth,
quietly said ·rm fine.·
Fisher congratulated the
winners and thanked her opponents for a fair race and a
good contest She said she had
a lot of fun and it was a great
learning experience.
Fisher hoped that her opponents will help her next year,
as the four candidates "obviously had the same goals in
mind.•

Colin (cp) Walsh thanked
the 194 who shared his goal of
•subverting the dominant
paradigm• and seemed pleased
to be fulftlllng his ninth cpprlnclple (unbeknowst during
the race) of returning to his
"Cal,!aiy pavilion• in .April.

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�The Algus Page 2 Februmy 6. 1992

-Academic Planning on
Campus
answers some important
questions.Somecomments

CK.LU Seeking Expansion
Bu Alan Vandenoater
Studentradioatlakehead
is nearly an academic year
old and already talking of expansion.
At the beglnnfng of the
school year, students heard
that soon they would get their
own radio station. Today, the
L. U. radio station is functional and broadcasts within
theuniversity. Due to the stations limited equipment and
continuing ftght for permission, the facilitation of cityWide broadcasting can not
accuratelybeforcasted. Those
involved With the radio stationhopethat this will change
in the near future.
The station currently airs
intheAgoraandonotherT.V.
monitors around campus.
However, program director
Derek Serianni is hoping to
expand the station soon. eventually including The Study,
the cafeterias and the Outpost. Another scenart9 would
be the operation of LU radio

through the Maclean-Hunter
network.
Serianni also outlined a
three year plan for establishing a station operating outside of L. U. The ftrst step is to
build up the selection of music, set up formal training for
radio personnel, and improve
on the equipment. Phase two
would be the installment of a
Maclean Hunter feed. Ultimately, the station's goal is to
broadcast on the FM frequency.
The FM frequency is less
expensive, and also has a betterftdelity, making it is easier
to transmit. The problem is,
the only tower in Thunder
Bay is privately owned. The
Canadian Radio Television
Commission (CRrC), is currentlyrevisingits policies With
a revision due in Februaey.
Under present guidelines, a
campus station should be a
non-profit organization, and
should provide for an alternative music format to the

to

Bu FC DeGGQne

existing stations. Serianni
assures "We won't be there
strtctlytobeajukebox."The
station would provide campus news, ads, as well as talk
shows.
What the station does need
issupport.Thestudentbody
should consider making the
stationafuturegoal.Notonly
can the station provide a service for the students, it could
also add to the identity ofL. U.
Anyone Wishing to contact
the radio station can call 3438881 for more information.

Unive·rsity Restructuring, Reshaping
and Reconstruction?
Bu Ian Middleton
On Wednesday, Februaey
5, Dr. RlchardAllen, Minister
of Colleges and Universities
met with members of the
Lakehead University community to discuss the ramiftcations of the recent govemmentfunding~ouncement.
Bob Rae, in his State of Ontario address, informed the
Provincethatincreasestothe
Municipalities, Universities,
Schools and Hospitals
(MUSH) will be 1\2\2% over
the next three years respectively.
ARTHUR'S USED
FURNITURE
191 N. Cumberland St.
(Basement of Cumberland
• Wash and Dry)

Buy and Sell
345-9592
Tues.-Sat. 11 am - 5 nm

Dr. Allen outlined the difficulties that Ontario is facing
- decreased revenues and the
need not to allow the deficit to
become unmanageable. He
admitted the University System has been underfunded
for 12 to 15 years and it will
be 'a number of years' before
funding returns to reasonable levels. As part of the
funding announcement, MCU
is going to be looking for Universities to discuss 'restructuring, reshaping and reconstruction' as well as internal
ftnancing, professor education and the manner of teaching. Allen emphasised the
need for increased co-operation between Colleges and
Universities and that innovative programmes like distance
education would be looked
upon favourably by MCU'. In

SUMMER JOBS
Applications are now being accepted for BUmmer jobs on
cruieeabips, airlines and resorts. No experience necessary. For
more information send $2. and a self-addressed stamped envelope
to:

World Wide Travel Club
5384 Yonge Street
Suite 1407
Toronto, Ontario
M2N6M2

ADOPTION
ARE IDU PREGNANT?
THINKING ABOUT ADOPTION FOR YOUR CHILD?
We ~ like to tall:. to you. We want to be parents, and would like to
~ a nc:w-bom or toddler. We an: a unncnit}'-edw:ated ~ with
.,.ptal,1
.......-iabed
...... profeaional careen, and are able to ~ a goocl home
and much love.If you call, we'll tell you more about w, and can
refer you to our adoption worker, who can _l&gt;!O'ide counscJ!ing.
We have completed our bome-study, and are willing to meet with you.

PLEASE CAIL US( MICHAEL or LUCJT.J,E )
COLLECT IN TORONIO AT
416462-0804
BETWEEN 8 AND 10 pm
any Monday through Thursday evening

the short term, there 1s $160
millionavaflablefortheMUSH
sector to bid on for 'transitional' projects. Any proposal
for the money must meet two
conditions. First, that there
beaconsultativeprocess, and
second any proposal must facilitate the transfer to lower
levels offunding and is not for
new projects.
In the question period that
followed, the Minister was
asked to elaborate on a
numberofthetssuesheraised
inhisopentngremarks. While
artfully dancing around questions, some important facets
of government poltcy did
emerge. MCU is not going to
play a leading role in the 'restructuring' debate. Instead,
universities are going to have
to reach some sort of consensus on their own. Given that
universities are autonomous
corporations, it seems unlikely that any kind of system
wide restructuring Will emanate from these discussions.
When asked about the reinstatement of programmes or
faculties that might have to
be terminated because of the
cuts, Allen refused to say that
MCU would ensure that they
would be reinstated.
When questioned on the
OSAP review process and
when the task will be completed, Allen stated that OSAP
is now intertwtned With the
system Wide re-evaluation
taking place and that mid
year was the earliest possible
date for the release of the
report. Therefore, any
changes to OSAPwjJJ not be
ready until 93/94 academic
year. Some minor changes
will be announced With the
release of the report, but the
Minister refused to elaborate
on the nature of these

changes.

Working groups for Lakehead's Academic Planning
met on Tuesday January 29
to discuss their respective
goals and Issues. The Issues paper states the next
five years 1s critical for not
only Lakehead's future but
the future of universities in
general. °'The challenges facing Canadian universities
are extremely complicated",
it reads. stressinginputfrom
the entire university community to achieve the goals
of the prospective working
groups.
Working group chairs of
Academic Planning. Teaching and Leaming. Research
and Scholarship, lnterruµ
Environment and Resources, External Environment and Community Relations, and Governance presented a report oftheir mandate and Issues. Each worktnggroup consists of faculty
members or staff. Ian
Middleton. President of
LUSU. sits on the Teaching
and Learning working
group. Comments and questions were taken from a forum of faculty and staff. including Lakehead's President Bob Rosehart.
The interaction between
the faculty was mediated by
Vice President Dr. John
Whitfield, who also provided

from the forum consisted of
•1ntemal reviews are fodder
for the planning process",
•academic decisions are
made for non-academic reasons". and "internal confidence 1s important for enforctngthe image ofthe university". Also discussed was
the question of children of
faculty who attend universities other than Lakehead
and the implications associated with it. There also
was interest to formulate a
consistent university mission statement.
Some concern for students was the predictions of
financial turmoil which may
come as a result from govenunent influence on universities. The present government was said to have
had the most negative influence, or promises to have, to
affect out educational system. We can expect changes
due to these financial difficulties. "Some things may
have to go" was a prediction.
Another was that study toward PhDs would have to be
eliminated. Questions of research versus teaching abilities were raised.
An Issue not raised was
t;he _quesfjo:g _QfJ~_w.:e__and
the evaluation of teaching
ability. The report 1s due by
the end of-February.

At the Pollsl
Koenen ....679
Moniz........ 557
George .... 145
Torry.......... 144
Matthews... 85

Spolled ....... 15
Declined ..... 11

�The Argus Page 3 February 6, 1992

EDITORIAL
Student Perspective: AN ELECTION OPINION

The election is over. The results are in. It's good to see that voter
turnout was over 30%. Last year ft was only 18%. A lot of the credit goes
to the large number of candidates who ran. Hopefully the upward trend
will continue in the future.
"You shutup, asshole.·
_
I admire all of the candidates who ran. I think that a person.has to
A ltne from a popular Arnold Schwartzenegger movie? Not quite. A
be gutsy to put th~mselves in the hands of the voters knowing th~t they
child's retort to taunting on the playground? Closer. Its how one member
might not win, Hopefully, the ten candidates who did not win will run
of Lakehead University Student's Union (LUSU) Board of Directors
for the Board of Directors and gtve voters an opportunity to select them
(BOD) reacted to another member's laughter at the meeting of January
as representatives.
23, 1992. Greg Beckford has been alledged to be the member who said
Some people raised ethical questions with me regarding the projected
"You shutup, asshole.• to fellow board member Tim f1eguel.
election results that I ran last week. They_ were not personal endorseIt was not included in the minutes but evidently some members did
ments on my part. They were only projections based on the pseudo
not hear the remark--others did.
objective opinion of myself and three other people monitoring the
The laughter that preceded the remark was shared by many board
election (Regardless ofour personal choices). It was hardly Dectma, but
members. That is why some present did not hear it, or understand the
ft was accurate. With the exception of one race (where the second and
exchange that followed.
third candidates finished a vote apart from each other) the projections
f1eguel challenged Beckford to repeat, saying •1 beg your pardon?
- were accurate. If someone claims that my editorial influenced tliese
... Pleaser There was no response from anyone.
results I would contend that the influence of the media is being
An Argus reporter spoke to Fleguel a few days later, curious as to why
overrated. Stlll, the point is well taken and pseudo polls may not be
he did not rise to his feet demanding instant satisfaction with a "point
printed next year.
of personal privilege• as is done in parliament, or legislative assembly.
The new LUSU executive -Koenen, Tougas, Fisher- take office April
F1egeul replied that this is his first year of service, and did not feel
1. I hope they'll have a good year. Keep an eye on LUSU. The Board
familiar with the procedures of the board. There were however, many
administers $160.00 of yours each year, it's worth paying attention.
BOD members, present at that meeting, are serving their second or third
term. Some present are executives, and former executives ofLUSU.
F1eguel said, "It sounds a bit corny, but I am not that at ease there.
TGB
(the BOD) I find it unnatural for me to speak in front of many people and
Well, the campaigns are over and the votes have been cast. By the time
I felt myselfon the spot... I was a little upset that no one else spoke up.•
you read this, I.akehead University will have a new executive.
We all should be.
It seems that this year the election campaign tactics have been more
Fleguel indicated he had originally become involved in LUSUbecause
exciting than the actual results will be.
it was perceived as honourable and important to represent their faculty
As a former executive of the Argus, I'm still a regular fixture on the
of students - in this case, Professional Schools.
Argus
couches. Thus I have been a witness to the sudden interest certain
f1eguel said, "If LUSU board meetings become name-calling affairs,
candidates have taken in the student newspaper. Three weeks ago, you
then it's not a place for somebody like me.•
couldn't mi a LUSU executive or BOD member into the Argus. These
At the meeting, after the brief exchange, the chair, unaware of the
candidates surely must realize that the votes of the Argus executive and
situation, moved the meeting forward and "debate• continued as though
members represent only a fraction of a percent of the student populanothing had happened Within sixty seconds Fleguel had vacated his
1ion. And the very idea that we might show favouritism to one particular
seat announcing, "My apologies to the board• and left the meeting .
candidate is ludicrous at best.
The stoiy doesn't end there. The following week, at the next LUSU
One individual has had to resort to hate literature to slant a
board meeting (Januaiy 30, 1992) a point of privilege was brought up
campaign.
I'm speaking of some posters that went up over the past
against Greg Beckford. The motion required that 8eckford would have
weekend slamming Cass Koenen. They were entitled •VPStudentlssues
to offer an apology to Fleguel and remain silent for the rest ofthe meeting.
- A Year in Reflection•. The poster went on to say things like -Gender
The motion was defeated by the LUSU board in a secret ballot vote of
Issues
Centre ... $17,500 and serviced 16 peoplet• and "Winter
5- 12 - 1 (abstain).
Camival...What Winter Carntval?•
What kind of climate does this create on the BOD? Who would want
The individual who des~ed this particular hate literature had
to seJVe on a board when they can be called an •asshole• and not have
access to LUSU's executive minutes and job descriptions, as well as
the perpetrator discipltned.?
computer programs nm offered to the general student population in the
Greg Beckford, if you are reading this, consider apologizing. ApoloBraun Building. An inside Job? Well, perhaps. It's not that important.
gize to Fleguel. Apologize to Professional Schools students. And please
For those students who read this eye-catching piece of art, I hope you
apologize to "1e Arts students who you represent. It ts the very least that
had the intelligence to, tf not ignore the poster altogether, at least take
you could do.
tt with a bag of Sifto salt. Right in the middle of the poster is a sentence

ONFOULRQD LANGUAGE

SP: POOR TACTICS

SP:LET'S JOIN CIS

Yeltsin is going to be visiting Canada in the near future to try once
again to convince us to invest in the new Russia. But considering the
circumstances, I find tt hard to believe that he'll receive much more than
our best wishes and a few dozen complimentaiy shipments offood. It's
clear that Canada is having its own share of problems, economically
and constitutionally, and any investment in the Common wealth of
Independent States is like tossing pennies into a black hole.
But ft is my prediction that if we continue along the rather
unimaginative and lackadaisical path that we've been on so long, we'll
slowly emerge from our recession only to be cut short when Quebec
loses interest in us and files for divorce, leaving Canada fragmented and
weak. And meanwhile, the reforms in the Commonwealth will fail
dramaticallywith massive food riots, and political and economic chaos,
resulting inevitably in a new repressive militaiy regime, the CIS having
already been primed for rampant nationalism, isolationism and fascism.

My predictions are all rather morbid, so rather than dwelling on the
negative I've gotten to dreaming in my own naive and simplistic manner
for ways around our problems.
I have been struck that all of the difficulties and barriers to be
overcome around the world, looked at in a positive light. transform into
wonderful and fantastic opportunities for us all. Wouldn't it be something. I thought. for Canada to abandon it's role as the most boring
nation on earth, to take a leap into the uncertain, and begin a spedal
relationship with Russia and the other Commonwealth states. And
what better way might there be to get acquainted than by becoming a
leading member in the Commonwealth of Independent States.
With our economy as it is, I can't imagine a better "make-work
project" with which to energize and unite our nation. Though our
workforce is minuscule compared to our would-be partners, we have a
great number of experienced business executive/management
types,(many of whom are presently unemployed) to offer the Commonwealth. I imagine the complete restructuring of industry and agriculture in the CIS might be led by Canadian experts. And though the CIS
would have little money or incentive for thousands of Canadians, if the
Soviet bureaucracy were completely stripped to it's bares skeletal
structure, our people might be offered the benefits once granted to the
upper echelon nf the communist party.
This is not a dream of an outsider wanting to build thousands of
McDonalds' across the Commonwealth (sucking the blood from the
corpse), but rather one of revttaltzationandcooperation within a union.
So one might ask, where is the big pay-back?
Besides preparing a partnership in the largest potential market in
the world. our action might stave-off the bad dreams that I fear most.
- Starvation and Civil War in the-CIS - the emergence of fascism and a
new Cold War - as well as the disintegration of an aimless Canada, too
bored with ttselfto care.
So for now, I'll just sit back 1n my chair thtnktng"Wouldn't it be nice
ifonly-•, conscious nevertheless that my dreams ofworld peace and the
betterment of mankind are more often shared with beauty ~ t
contestants than with our leaders, the politicians. John Rliod.es

that reads "Be Informed Before You Vote•. What I want to be informed
about is "Who the hell wrote this trashr
I'm not endorsing Cass by any means. The posters don't invoke any
pity for her in me. I just want to be able to vote using my own judgement
and choice when I step into the booth.
As an aside, here are some comments I overheard while working at
the polling stations:
"Which one is Grice? Is that the blonde guy?•
"Hey, guys! Let's vote HAIR. They'll screw everything up and we won't
be here. Ha. Ha.•
"Let's vote for Tanya. She's cute.•
•1 don't know. I'll vote if you vote.•
I'll pray tonight that these people don't vote in Erovindal politics.
You will be mtssed Middleton.
Paula Vanveen

LELLAVA RESPONDS

to Argus article Jan 30, 1992

As former Coordinator of the Gender Issues Centre, I would like to
offer some comments andclariftcaUonwith respect to Sharon Docherty's
article entitled, •Gender Centre an Issue•, published tn theJanuaiy 30,
1992 edition of The Argus.
Let me acquaint you with the facts, which were either misleadingly
presented and/or totally omitted in the aforementioned article. I am
leaving my position at the Gender Issues Centre because I have been
offered a wonderful job opportunity elsewhere. Although, as I informed
Ms. Docherty, I have thoroughly enjoyed my experience at the Centre,
I have received an offer that I cannot refuse. My decision to accept the
new opportunity has not been based on the "problems• around which
Ms. Docherty'&amp; article focussed With respect to student frustration
regarding the inaccessibility of the Centre during student hours, I would
like to say that we were unable to get the voluntaiy coverage we needed
to keep the Centre open for five full days per week. Perhaps concerned
students who wish to see the Centre open on a full-time basis would
consider donating some of their lunch hours to this worthy cause.
Concerning the article's coverage ofthe present volunteer situation, I did
tell Ms. Docherty that we have realized the need for closer supervision,
however, I did not say that the volunteers were ·not really clear on what
they had to do", which was not the case. With respect to the three weeks
of"vacatfon• time which I took Just before and after Christmas, I would
like to point out that these weeks were, in fact, "lieu• time for the extra
hours I had worked in the fall. There is a world of difference between the
two terms.
F1nally, I do not recall stating that one of the major problems at the
Centre was •a lack of" collaboration between Cass and myself. I do,
however, remember saying that Cass and I had discussed the need for
more of a partnership between the two of us with respect to the success
of the Centre. In any case, ft was never my intent to cast a shadow on
Cass' effectiveness as a student executive.
NO'IE: Sharon Docherty dropped by to Inform me that positive
statements regarding the Centre and my departure were cut from the
article without her knowledge. Valerie Lellava
(fh1s was due to space requirements.)

�The Argus Page 4 Febrwuy 6, 19~2

LE1112RS
A Good
Cord Story
This letter ts in response to
those in the Argus last week compla1n1ng about how dishonest
people are and the thefts that
have taken place.
My faith in people's honesty
was restored last week when my
microcassette recorder (value
$75.00) was returned to me. I had
left it behind in a class the week
before, not realizing it unUI several hours later. Frequent checks
at Secw1ty for the rest of the week
proved futile, and I had glvenit up
for lost. I was preparing to purchase a replacement when I saw a
sign in the tunnel which said
·Found - 1 m1n1 cassette recorder"
and had a phone number to call.
Needless to say, I was delighted
and surprised to discover that it.
was indeed my recorder when I
called; it was waiting for me at
Secw1ty later that afternoon.
I thanked my fellow student
over the phone, but I felt then as
Ifeelnowthatthtswasnotenough.
My main purpose in writing this
letter is to thank Don publicly for
being so honest and restoring my
faith in humanity and my fellow
students. Thanks again Don!
AnclreaEfte

APOLOGY
Ow1ng my cam~ this past
week I have attended many classes
and spoken to hundreds of students on various issues in order
to obtain their support in this
past election. In trying to appeal
to as many people as possible I
have trled to usegenerally acceptable terms and phrases to get my
point across effectively. so that
there could be no grey area in my
position. In doing so, it has been
brought to attention that I may
have offended a group ofstudents
with these terms of phrases used.

For this I deeply apologi7.e for any
offence of unsettling that I may
havecausedanyoneindividual or
group. I assure you all that I intended no malice towards anyone
and I have realized others positions, taking their concerns to
heart. I request that we all learn to
be more considerate and tolerant
to the views of others that we may
not necessarily agree with and
work on better diplomacy and
character in our attitudes expressed in conversation.
Craig "Bo" Grice

"Healthy
Alcoholism?

First of all I would like to say
that this ts not your typical bitch
and moan letter. I am writing this
purely out of intellectual curiosity,
•
The other day I was reading
the Argus (pg. 3, Jan. 23 /92) and
I came across Noel Ward's article
about restricting college students
from our pub. This ts not the issue
I'm concerned with. What I would
like to know is what does LUSU
Rep. for Arts, Greg Beckford, mean
when he says that his idea would
•decrease tension the CUJTe11t situation creates and promote healthy
alcoholism·.
After spending four years here
at L. U. in the social work program
and doing two placements at the
Lakehead Psychiatric Hospital, I
ha-v1: yet to come ilCl"OII tho tenn
"healthy alcoholism·.
My question is this: Is there
really such as thing as healthy
alcoholism and if so, is it something we want to promote here at
L.U.? l mean, correct me ff I am
wrong but doesn't this sound like
a contradiction of the term?
Thomas Grant

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ARGUS
THANKED
I am writing this letter on
Monday, February 3rd, therefore,
I do not know the outcome of the
coming election in which I am a
candidate.
In last week's Argus, two articles were accidentally switched.
My article was placed under Craig
Grlce's name and Craig's article
was placed under my name. This
was a very unfortunate mistake
and needless to say I was a little
more than angry. The Argus staff
wastmmedJately apologetic to the
sttuaUon. AssoonasTonyLeBlanc
and myself went to the office the
staff hnmedJately began making
corrections (signs and retracting
all issues to put correction inserts
into the papers.
Although this was a rather
large mistake for such an important issue, I appreciate the quick
reaction of the staff and the hard
work put into the correction.
Chrletlne Fisher

FED UP WITH
LUSU ...

Dear Editor,
I am not wrlUng to ask for
advice but I need to get some
important problems concerning
the campus off my chest. last
year LUSU started channelling
part ofmy tuition·towards a new
student centre. The new stu~ent
centre tumedout to be a few class
rooms.a few offices.but for the
most part. a very profitable bar. I
attend bars regularly but I do not
think part of my tuition should
have been used to support a place

that will be in the black soon. I feel
the extra tuition could have been
spent more appropriately elsewhere. An example ofbetteruse of
funds is to upgrade the library
and \or sports facllfties. Everyone
knows the library needs a facelift
and expansion. The equipment in
the weight room fs in sad need of
upgrading. As the exercise room
stands, there is now only one
operational exercise bike.
Lookatwhat the•outpost" does
for our campus. It does generate a
lot of money for LUSU. We all
know about the huge line-ups
thatoccureveryweekend. We also
know about the vandalism generated after a good drunk in the bar.
Oh yes, there is nothing more fun
than demolishing your campus
after a good night in the pub. One
thing I do not know is what is
happening with all the money
being made by the new pub ?
Before X-mas some intellectual mfdget(s) smashed our school
sign. I had to look at the results
every day for a month. Eveiy time
l drove by the remains l felt as ifl
was attending a junior high school
for juvenile delinquents.I have
respect for the institution that l
am attending for my post secondary education. It really bums my
ass that the jerk off losers that
broke the school sign might actually graduate from Lakehead Unfversity. Think ofwhat will happen
totheschool'scredibilftyfiveyears
from now when these people are
representing our university in the
real world.
last weekend a buddy living
on campus had his red sports car
vandalized in the residents parking lot. The damage to the car was

of his (:al" a product of jealousy ?
or was it because of his oriental
ancestry ? I don't know the answer to these questions, but I do
know that the vandalism was a
direct attack on my friend , on
myself and on many others on
campus. Getting hammered at the
school bar does not constitute
destruction of private or campus
property.
last week I read that Greg
Beckford proposed an idea to attempt to curb the Outpost line
ups and destruction of school
property. This plan was opposed
by some in the students Union
executive because it might lower
profits. I think Greg is on the right
track. Visiting drunks are probably causing some of the damage
on campus. I also think that the
people who opposed the proposed
plan on the Students Union
should care more about the quality of life for the students than
losing some customers that don·t
belong in the campus bar anyway.
I am fed up with the way LUSU
operates and how 1t has adversely
affected the image of this campus.
Thenewbarhasgeneratedb!gbucks
and bfg trouble on campus.Where
arc the profits going ? No money
seems to get channelled where ft is
needed. I cannot blame LUSU for
the vandalism but I really think
they should look at putting somethlngback tnto the qualftyofeducatton on the campus. For the people
who have been messing with the
quality oflffe on campus I offer some
advice:• What comes around goes
around".

sincerely,
Callam. Buchan,

LIKES THE CLIMBING
WALL
CIJMBING WALLS - DO PROMO'IE nm ·guAIJ1Y OF LIFE"
In the opinion of many new
andretumfngstudents, Lakehead
University, is becoming an excellent place to pursue more diverse
and stimulating forms of higher
education:
The addition of the new facilities to Lakehead is concurrent to
the physical growth ofthe student
population. Quite simply, with
morestudentsenrollingeachyear,
more space is needed to
accomodate them. This is a simple unquestionable fact.
In the LUSU survival guide,
Dr. BobRosehartstates that•eoncurrent to the physical growth,
students and staff of the University are always working together
to improve the quality of life at
Lakehead. • nie •quality of life• at
Lakehead is a questionable fact.
How does a student at Lakehead
improve his/her quality of life'?
What ls the University doing to
enhance this proposed •quality of
life• expected by new and returning students?
The construction of a new student centre was a good start. This
long overdue facility has already
proven to be a popular meeting
place for students and staff alike.
However, it is stfll questionable as
to whether this alone is enough to
enhance the quality ofstudent life
oncampus. Onecanconsiderwhat
is actually being promoted at a
campus bar. Undoubtedly, this is
a form of leisure, but let's consider the outcome- - excessive
drinking, with excessive drinking
comes vandalism, as has sometimes been proven.
So the question is, what has
Lak.ehead done in recent years to
upgrade and construct newfadlities (other than the new campus
pubandmoreclassrooms)toseivice this proposed improvement in

sfgnfftcant. The damage to him
was greater. Was the destruction

the •quality of life" for its diverse
population of students?
The recreation opportunities
available on this campus are by
current Unfversity standards,
bordering on obsolete. The simple
.fact is, there has been no addition
to the existing infrastructure of
the recreation community. The
traditional •old boys club• sports
are not as popular as they were in
the past. Students interests
change and evolve, and with this
there is a need for more diverse
forms of recreational pursuits. As
with academic material, recreation opportunities must be continuously updated if the university ls to remain competitive
amongst it's southern counterparts.
To date, Lakeheadhas not kept
up with the current facilities in
the field of recreation. one of the
more popularnewwsports sweeping the nation ls tha~ of indoor
rock climbing on artifldal surfaces. This sport has gained so
much popularity in such a short
time that, it will be a demonstration sport in the 1994 Commonwealth Games in Victoria B.C..
Western canadian universittesare
already implementing climbing
walls, fortunately they have the
foresight to plan for the future.
There are a number of key reasons why a climbing wall at Lakehead would be a lucritive and
worthwhile addition to the infrastructure of the University;
1) Active &amp; diverse recreational
pursuits have a positive effect on
the personality and the physical
well being of the individual.
2) •Recreatfonexperiences provide an excellent opportunity for
the handicapped to associate informally with society as a
whote•(Margalfs, 1979) In 1991, a
climber with i:io legs scaled the
face of El Capitan. His training
consisted mainly of indoor rock

Civil Engineering, Year 5.

wall workouts.
3) Lakehead's location in one
ofthemostdiverseclfmbingareas
in the country. Eventually the
area willharbourameccaofclimbing enthusiasts. The rock wall
would provide off season training
- a much needed facflfty considering our winters.
4) Enhance the attractiveness
of Lakehead University to prospective students, as being one of
the only universities in Ontario to
boast an indoor climbing facility.
Basically, the better the wall the
more prestige for the University.
5) Provide economic benefits
to the student union by renting or
contractingoutthefacilftytovarious organizations in and around
Thunder Bay. Hosting climbing
competitions is also a very profitable venture these days.
In summary, leisure actMties
such as a rock climbing, offer
individuals the opportunity to
learn to control negative felfngs
·and emotions and to express a
positiveoutlook. (With the rash of
disturbances on campus lately
this facility would be overused!)
The four hundred students who
signed the petition, supporting
the climbing wall, deftnftely feel a
facllfty of this nature would truly
enhance the NQualfty of life" on
campus.
It would add a new dimension
to the university as a whole and
would provide the Physical Education department and the Outdoor Recreation department with
a state of the art teaching/instructional facility.
So, when LUSU candidates
are on the podium, ask them about
the climbing wall, and why your
75 dollars ls going into bailing out
that •oh so" appropriately named
bar the ·outhouse· -- I mean the
Outpost(sony). They may Just
have to go ·in camera·.
Brendan Waye
2ndyrHBOR

-

�The Argus Page 5 Februaiy 6. 1992

ENTERTAINMENT
Theater

SINCERELY,
A REVIEW
by Sue Kemp
The powerful poetry of
Leonard Cohen was brought to
life before my eyes on Friday
night In Magnus Theatre's latest production •stncerely A
Friend•. The show features a
fantastic band called The Jazz
Police and five talented
singers.who perform twentyfour of Cohen's works. There Is
no dialogue and the show has
no plot but through the music
and the lyrics, the singers set a
distinct mood and tone.
Cohen has sometimes been
criticized for being·too morbid
and pesslmlstlc,but to me his
poetly Is representative of real
human emotion. We cannot
ignore those darker emotions
that stir within us,and I think
•stncerely A Friend• accurately
conveys this. The singers are
dressed up to look like street-

people.and through the songs
they reveal their troubled pasts.
They sing of thwarted
loves, lonellnes s, and
despair.and I was impressed
by their emotional and moving
Interpretations of Cohen's lyrics. Mostoftheshowis characterized by a
certain
melancholy.but there are some
moments of black humour In
songs like •rm Your Man· and
•0on'tGoHomeWith YourHan:l
0n·.
The singers all gave extremely strong performances,
and I was particularly impressed by Cliff Le Jeune, the
Artistic Director of Newfoundland's Stephenville Festival
where the show originated. His
sensual playfulness and emotional Intensity were very powerful. The band was excellent
also. Their combination ofelec-

tronlc sounds, and acoustic
instruments like the guitar and
the cello made for unique music. My only criticism Is that I
found some of the numbers
were a little too •Jazzed
up• .compared to Cohen's orlgl-

A visually stimulating stage photo
nals.
·stncerely A Friend· probably,lsn't everyone's taste.but
if you enjoy a show with deep
meaning and powerful emotion I would detlnitely recommend It. Even if you are not

famtllar with Cohen's work.I
think you wtll still be able to
relate to his lyrics. The show
runs at Magnus until Febnwy
8,and you can get tickets by
call1ng the Box Office at 6231321.

Humour

LAKEHEAD UNIVERSITY'S WILD KINGDOM
began each conversation by
saying something like, ·okay
Jim. That gigantic bull elephant
Is isolated from the rest of the
herd now. He's all yours.•
•But Marlin, I don't have
any tranquilizer darts.•
•gu1t your whining you
weenie! All you have to do ts
wrestle hJm to the ground and
after you get hJm pinned, we'll
come down and help you collar
and taghJm.•
·okay Marlin. Sounds
good.·
Like most kids, I had a
number of heroes when I was
growing up. There was Batman and Robin, Captain Kirk
and Mr. Spock, and M11ll and
Vanilll. But. my favourtte heroes were, without a doubt,
Marlin and. Jim.
You remember Marlin and
Jim, don't you? They were the
stars of that perennial megabit
1V show, Mutual of Omaha's,

lYils1

+

Kln4dom. During each show,
this dynamic duo would capture such horrendous beasts
as elephants, rhinos, and wooly
pandas.
The key to the show's success was the excellent working
relationship between Marlin
and Jim. Marlin was the brains
of the operation and coordinated things from the air In his
helicopter, mllesawayfromany
real danger.Jim was the brawn.
always poised for action In his
Jeep which he shared with the
timid, yet cannibalistic native
guides.
Marlin and Jim communicated by walkie-talkie. Marlin

Although Marlin and Jim
only captured wild animals on
their show, I feel that a 'Marlin
and Jim' team could work wonders here on campus. One of
the problems they could solve
Is vandallam. They could stake
out trouble spots and when
something Is vandali7.ed, Jim
could Ore a dart Into the vandal's butt After the criminal
staggered away and collapsed,
Marlin and Jim could place a
radtotransmittlng collar
around the culprit's neck. tag
his ear, weigh hJm and examine his teeth to determine his
age. They could put this lnfor-

matlon Into a vandalism data
bank and then release the
scoundrel. After letting hJm go,
his mtgratoiy vandallzlng patterns could be tracked by radar.
Another problem a Marlin
andJimteam
could solve Is
the overcrowd.Ing
that occurs
outside The
Outpost. As
stated In last
week's
Argus, huge
lineups often
occuroutslde
the pub on
certain
nights. Marlin and Jim
could rectify
this situation
by shooting
tranquilizer
darts at certain peopl~
standing in
ltne.
The
tranquilized
patrons
could
be ·
loaded into
vans, driven
across town

t

would rather be darted than
have to wait In line for hours
and hours.
Without a Marlin and Jim
team, the vandalism and overcrowding problems here at LU
wtll not go away. So if you are a

CEREBELLA

'Marlin' or 'Jim' type, please
contact LU Securtty to volunteer your services. If you are
lucky enough to qualify, you
might Just get your own rifle
and tranquilizer darts. Good
luck and happy hunting!

by Ryon Feeley

LIPS AND
ASSHOLES

J.

ME.TALCAN ..... 1

0

uncrowded
pubs and released. Many
students
probably feel
that
this
treatment Is
inhumane,
but I'm sure
most people

$ 50

ON ABUN .....
FIZlYSlAGA~
WATER. IN A
s oo

FRANK MARKEflNG

�The Argus Page 6 Februaiy 6, 1992

ENTERTAINMENT_

Movies
Laxdal at the Movies
by Brian ~dal
Sometimes formula pictures
work and sometime they don't.
This Is the guiding principal Hollywood banks on. In the two pictures I look at this week this rule
applies. In "The Rand That
Rocka the Cradle" the formula
works in "Shlnn1ng Through·,
nothing seems to work.
In both these pictures the television ads are deceiving. "Tiie
Hand that Rocks the Cradle· is
advertised as a hack-and, slash
type movie but what we are really
given isa predictable phycological
thriller, that comes through. It
can briefly be described as a nice
American family that meets the
babysitter from hell, who believes
in the adage -What comes around
goes around·.
The performances were solid
with the exception of the wimpy
father (Matt McCoy) who does
nothing in this film excepted fall
down the stairs. Ernie Hudson
gives a first rate performance as a
mentally disabled handyman. He
can see through the babysitter's
plan when no one else can. The
plot Is standard but this film Is a
tjlaracterdrivenstorythatstands

up well. You believe that the
babysitter is dangerous and are
kept tense throughout the show.
An enjoyable movie that asks
theageoldquestlon-Who'swatching my baby?
"SbintngThroag'b" Is a poorly
written, falsely advertised movie.
It would seem that this picture
was a world war II drama or action
flick. Instead it is a prolonged love
story that never gets going. Add to
this the fact that the major star
Michael Douglas is only in about

a half an hour, while the studio
would have you believe he plays a
staring role.
Everything in this film is predictable, the are no saving graces.
This movie was scheduled for release in September but was held
back for 8ve months by the studio
and I can see why. The movie
begins with a now tired devise,
Melanie Grlfflth is an old lady
looking back at her past This
device is destroyed by the fact that
Grlfflth uses the sameyoungvoice
in her old state as in her flashbacks. You know that irritating
squeaky voice that just grated on
your mind all though the movie.
Add to her irritating voice her
wooden acting and you get a bad
movie. Even the villain in this film
is dull so that you never feel the
Germans are dangerous. Nor do
you ever experience any sense of
adventure. The key nazi Is played
by Liam Neeson (better known as
Darkman) who worked with what
he was given in the script which is
nothing and comes off lookinglike a stereotypical dunce nazi.
This villain is so bad that when he
goes for his gun in his bed room
drawer he is so slow that the
heroine can get back to her room
get the secret micro film and escape the house before he gets
down the stairs.
The love story is cliche and the
spy thriller so unthrilling that I
can see why Micheal Douglas was
in so little of the movie. When
Douglas Is in the film his presents
Is so over powering you forget
Grlfflth is in the scene with him.
However even Doµglas' presentation can not save the few minutes
of action that comes at the end of

NIG

Enjoy a full order of your favourite pasta fettucini, lasagna, linguini, rotini,
tortellini or spaghetti. Crown it with one
of our four fabulous sauces: alfredo,
meat, seafood or marinara.
Or try one of our baked pasta delights.
Only $4.25 each.
Tuesdays are Teriific..at Boston Pizza.

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wg,;-e fl()/jtlslpizza anymore.

217 AllTHUlt ff W 505 MEMORIAL AV

This still shot is about as exciting as it gets
the picture in which the heroic
soldier saving the dying heroine
whflecarrylngherpastdumbnazls
and taking bullets to key parts of
his anatomy. The absurdity is
continued as equally heroic and
Swiss boarder guards shoot
germen guards on the German
side of the boarder, a historical
fallacy which ignores the fact that

the Swiss would not have provoked German reprisals. Throw
in a plot to destroy the german VI missiles which despite this picture's history were used by the
germane in World War II and you
have a story that changes history
without even mentioning it. Sure

this ls a movie that can skip reality but how can you Justify using

a historical setting and then
changing history. For a long dull
trip through an alternate reality
Melanie Griffith is not my tour
guide of choice (breast enlargement or not).
IIANDTHEROCKSTHECRADLE: $8.SO OtJT OF $8.00

lllllffilNGTIIROVGHr$1,71S
OtJT OF $8.00

Music

John

ellancam

11g Mark Achtenberg
It has been over three years
since John Mellencamp released
"Big Daddy". His first release of
the nineteen nineties ts titled
"WheneverWe Wanted•. There was
rumour that Mellencamp had
thrown in his rock and roll towel
for good. Fortunately, he has come
backwlthanexcellentalbumthat
bursts with youthful and rejuvenated energy!
During the "Lonesome Jubilee• period Mellencamp became
very disillusioned about the music business and was experiencing a lot of personal problems. He
came back with the sombre album "Big Daddy" where he sang
•never wanted to be a pop singer,
neverwanted to write a pop song".
It seemed that after "Big Daddy•.

Mellencamp called it quits for
music. Durlnghisabsence he took
up painting (many appear in the
albums inside cover).

He has flnally come back to
grace us with one hell of a great
rock and roll album. The album
starts off with "Love and Happiness•, a song that reflects the
state of society and the reversal of
values. It is explosive and bombastic, not mentioning a powerful
trumpet solo that Jumps at you
with incredible force.
John Mellencamp has
stripped all the "folk" instrumentation of previous albums and
has gone for the throat with the
basic guitar, bass, drums approach. The music is simple and
direct, but at the same time com~ding. The lyrics have been
stripped down also. Heis no longer
writing about political issues (although it seems a little slips into
a few songs), rather more personal and sometimes just fun lyrics. He Is more interested in people than in the government.
"Get A Leg up• and "I Ain't
Ever Satisfied• are straight rock
and roll fun. •Last Chance• and
"SoTough"arealittlemoregloomy
but still hit hard. Another bonus
1s that the album does not have

continued opposite...

�~ -

----=--===~

-

The Argus Page 7 February 6. 1992

ENTERTAINMENT
A DEFENSE.

• •

by Jim Garrison
The last issue of the ARGUS
was plagued by "errors,• many of
which seemed to be simple mistakes. Yet the timing and the very
nature of these "eJTOrs• seems
most curious. LUSU elections are
taking place and it appears varlousindMdualswillsufferbecause
of these "mistakes.•
But can one blame those at the
ARGUS? Could these humble and
hard working folk bound by their
code of ethics be responsible for
the chaos?
Consider this:
The major error occuJTed in
the VP-Student Issues Page.
Christine Fisher and CraigGrice's
platforms were switched. Yet
working for the ARGUS is one of
the VP-Studentissuescandidates,
Colin (cp) Walsh. And Mr. Walsh
has already stated that Fisher and
Grice are his major opponents in
this election.

John~
Mellancamp
continued ...
any of the cliched sentimental
love ballads. Mellencamp keeps
his integrity and leaves the money
making love songs to the "pop
singers·,
Mellencamp has furnished us
with an album that is meant to be
played loud, The guitars are superior and Kenny Aronoff drums
up a storm. The rhythm section ts
solid and the guitars are hoU
"WheneverWeWanted•isdeflnetly
one of Mellencamps greatest accomplishments and is an album
that puts him on the top of the hill
once again!
John Mellencamp has delivered a diverse and wonderfully
pleasing album that will not disappoint!

Consider this:
The ex-editor-in-chiefwas seen
around the ARGUS office the night
of January 29, the night issue
#16 was produced. His activities
remain a mystery.
Consider this:
LUSU President Ian Middleton
was in the ARGUS office that same
night. apparently helping out with
the Election Issue. Who is to say
what actions he engaged in while
at the ARGUS office? And please
note that there have been complaints of misquoting and mtsinfonnationorlgtnatlngfroman-unreliable• source.
Consider this:

Travis Belrose dismissed the
"eJTOr" as being a production mistake, probable due to a power
surge. In order for a simple power
surge to cause so much damage it
would have to jump into the computerfrom thepowersource,jump
three chips, pick up the Fisher
platform, tum completely around,
jump a chip, plop the Fisher platform on the Grice story (while
suocessfully clearing that story)
move to the disk through a series
of spectacular jumps and dives,
pick up the Grice platform, complete a U-tum, go back to the
memoryofthecomputer,andplop
down the Grice platform in Fisher's place, then leave completely
undetected. And while all this is
going on. it would have to mysteriously edit two other completely
different stories.
Consider this:
Fasial Alt, Colin Walsh, Ian
Middleton, Travis Belrose (the
cummt ARGUS editor-in-chief),
and Dave O'Bome (the manager
ofWeb Press, Thunder Bay) were
all seen together eating dinner at
William's Restaurant.
A simple mistake, or a twisted
conspiracy? You decide.

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�The Argus Page 8 February 6, 1992

SPORTS
Basketball Teams E:qjoy
Success Versus Brock
Men

by Anthony Hewitt

The NorWesters men's basketball team
played a two game series at Brock University
against the #4 ranked Badgers this past weekend. LU's record stood at 3 wins and 3 losses
after being swept at home the preceding weekend by McMaster.
Fridaynfght's game was very close. Leading 37-29 at the midway mark LU faced a determined Brock team in the second half being
outscored 38-31. The NorWesters however prevailed by a single point, 68-67.
Mike Lalonde was the big shooter in the
first game netting 25 points and grabbing 9
rebounds. Also scoring high was Les Ragguette
with 18 points and 14 rebounds, Ray Foster
getting 14 points and Anthony Randall adding

6.
Saturday proved to be an equally tight
game with the Brock squad taking the vfctoiy
76-74. Brock led 46-37 at the half but were held
to only 30 points in the second with LU again
netting 37 points.
Fouls hurt the LU team on Saturday
nfght, the team being called for 22 fouls to
Brock's 14. Brockcapitalizedontheirfreethrows
sinking 21 of 31.
Leading the NorWesters team on Saturday were Les Ragguette with a 25 point performance, followed by Ray Foster and CraJg Law,
eachshootingfor 12points. MikeLalondehitfor
9 points and Anthony Randall putting in 8 for
LU.
The team now has a 4-4 recordgotnginto
a two game home series against last years national champions, Western Mustangs. With only
six games remaining in the NorWester's season
these games are must wins ff they hope to qualify
for post season play. The basketball team hopes
for a packed house on Friday and Saturday to
help them rally p~t the UWO Mustang squad.

Women

The lady NorWesters basketball team enjoyed a two game
sweep of the host Brock Badgers
this past weekend upping their
record to 7 wins, 1 loss. The LU
team took the Badgers 62-49 on
Friday and 67-51 on Saturday
nfght.
Game one saw the
NorWesters leading 35-25 at the
half and outscoring Brock 27-24
in the remainder ofthe game. Kathy
Harrison led the scoring by shooting in 16 points and grabbing 4
rebounds. Jenny Burgess netted
13 points and Pam Leitch 10. Despite the win though the LU team
was a little shaky on the free throw
line, hitting only 7 for 15.
Saturdaynfghtwasanother
strong game forthe Lakehead team
outscoring the opposition in both
halves 34-27 and 33-24. The team
improved their shooting, especially
on the free throw line sinking 20 of
23 shots.
Donna Forman led all the
LU players sinking 17 points and
getting 7 rebounds. Kelly Fit7.gerald
gave a strong performance scoring
10pointsandgrabbtng6rebounds.
Other top scorers were Pam Leitch
sinking 9 points, and Jenny Burgess adding 8.
.
Facing the Western team
this upcoming weekend will be an
importanttestfortheteam.Asweep
would give them a 9-1 record and
a good chance to finish in the top
of the OWIAA West division.

Volleyhall Stplad S"1eeps:
Looking For Best Flnlsll Ever
by Ian T. Fero
: The LU womens
varsity volleyball squad
swept the visiting Brock
Badgers at the fteldhouse
this past weekend. The Lady
Badgers came to the
Thunderdome needing at
least a win to have a realistic shot at playoff action,
but the Lady NorWesters
squashed their. chances
winning both nights by the
identical 3-1 set score.
The Badgers came
out flying taking the first
set 17-15. In that set the
Nor"wesfers were actually
down by a score of 11-3
before coming back only to
J drop the opener. The team
came back strong taking
the next three sets 15-9,
15-10 and 17-15. There
were some excellent rallies
·a nd defensive work with the
home team recording 94 •
digs in the four sets. Kelly
Breutigam led the way with
35 k1lls, 4 aces and 21 digs
for LU. Teamates Andie
Aitken (23 digs). Kim
Rubbra (22 digs), Geraldine
Bergmans (8 blocks) and
Jo-Anne Hood (10 digs 46
assists) also made hefty
contributions.
Saturday started

out much the same with the
NorWestersdropptngthefirst
set again, this time by the
score of 15-8. "'We just came
out flat." remar~ed LU head
coach Claude Lapre. "'WeJust
weren't as intense as they
were, they thought coming in
that they could win twice and
after losing Friday they knew
they had to win Saturday to
have a chance at the playoffs."
coach Lapre added.
Lakehead displayed
excellent composure in the
following set. Trailing 13-6
• theNorWesterschtppedaway
at the lead and continued to
side-out well before drawing
close, only to win the set 1613. The third set saw much of
the same, another comeback
this time by Brock. With LU
leading 9-1 the Lady Badgers
stormed back to bring the
score to 13-12beforethel..ady
NorWesters put them away.
The fourth set saw the home
team jump out to a 4-0 lead
and kept a four point lead for
most of the match until Brock
made ,it 14-13 only to have
the LU pull out the set 15-13.
Breuttgam had 39
k111s, 4 aces and 19 digs to
pacethewinnerswithRubbra •
adding 9 kills and 15 digs,
Hood·51 assists, 3 aces and:

13 digs and Aitken with 14
big digs. Panda Edwards and
Alyson Nicol also made some
quality digs to pump the team
when down in the second set.
Coach
Lapre
commended the Brock effort
by admitting that the visitors
were the only team yet capable of matching the conditioning ofhis team. Lapre went
on to say that the slow and
relaxed style of Brock was
different to the normally fastpaced LU squad; "they suck
the energy right out of you"
remarked coach Ian Cull.
As of Nov.3 LU has
the lead in the conference
with a 10-2 record. McMaster
is second with a 9-1. It will
take a lot ofhelp for Lakehead
to claim first with Mac needing to lose 2 of their last four
matches and LU needing to
win Its last two. Lakehead will
play at Western (1-9) . this
weekend. Apafr Qfwtnswould
gtve theNorWesters their best
everconferencerecord. Coach
Lapre is very positive about a
sweep and hopes to give all
his players some action as a
playoff tune-up. With this

playoffberth r.u become=s the

only team in the conference
to make the playoffs the last
three years in a row. .

CAMPUS RECREATION
REPORT
The Squash Ladder
by Michael Dela Cruz
Tony Elwell defeated Angela Cybulaski with
three straight games. Tony moves further up the ladder
bydefeatingJames Boileau also in three straight games.
Tony is now in second place with James in fourth. Sean
Appleton wins over Angela Cybulaski by three games to
two, putting Sean in fifth place and Angela in sixth. Dave
Bartchello attempted to move up the ladder by challenging Ted Garver, but lost three games to two. Dave
remains in eleventh while Ted retains ninth place.

Intramural Broomhall Standings
1. Kalahari Bushmen (3-0-0, 7 goals, 1 against)
2. Res Rebels (2-1-0, 8 goals, 1 against)
3. Stompers (2-1-0, 6 goals, 2 against)
4. Silver Flying Whales (1-2-0, 7 goals, 9 against)
5. Slugomatics (0-2-1, 3 goals, 9 against)
6. Rink Rats (0-2-1, 1 goal, 5 against)

Duluth Trip
The Duluth Trip is not far away. Sign up while
the seats are available! The date is Fri. Feb. 21st. The
bus will leave at 7am and return 8pm. The fee is $22 per
individual. Huriy and get your seat while you can.

Pool Tournament
The pool tournament is taking place in The
Study on Sat. Feb. 8th from 1pm to 5pm. Fee is only $3
per individual.

Badminton Tournament
Remember, the badminton tournament is under
a month away. The tournament will take place on Sat.
Feb. 29th. from 2pm till 8:30pm. Both doubles and
singles will be taking place. Fee is only$3 per individual.

Squash Tournament
The squash tournament will take place on Sun.
Feb. 9th. Fee is $3 per individual.

Broomhall
Convenors: Shelia Doney &amp; Jen .Egan
The first week of broomball has Just begun and
here are the results for this week:
Kalahari Bushmen defeated Stompers 1-0
Rink Rats &amp; Slugomatics tied 0-0
Res Rebels defeated Silver Flying Whales 3-2

Women's Basketball
Another week of basketball has passed and so
here again are the results. The Bullsters lost to The Has
Beens with a score of 13 to 53. The Phys' Ed'ers
overcame The Dunkers with a score of 40 to 2. In the
final game, it was close with the Locals edging over the
Individuals with a final score of 43 to 40.

Bowllng Tournament
The date for the tournament is Feb. 26th at
Mario's Bowl. For only $5, you get 3 games. Deadline for
sign-yup is Tuesday Feb. 25th at 4:30.

l'or any Information on any event come and see us
In our new office upstairs where UJSU used to be, UC
2014A (lust past the employment office).

"More Than Just Sports"

�The Argus Page 9 Februaiy 6. 1992

SPORTSILIFES1YLES
CP'S SPORTS
EATING TIP
i met someone the other day
who offered me some carrots.
She did not, however, offer me
a tip. T.D. Smith. Although we
did not discuss sports i appreciated the discourse. Try it.

Ask
Analyst
Annie
Dear Analyst Annle

I have a friend, "Brigitte", who seems to be trying
too hard to land herself a boyfriend. Although she denies
it she continues to relax with "the boys" everyday in the
cafeteria. Afewweeks ago she enroled in a Kung Fu class
knowing that she would be the only female student
enroled. To top it all off "Brigitte" is taking lessons on

playing pool so she can defeat and amaze her prey daily
in The Study. What's heartbreaking is what she exclaimed the other day: "I'm always surrounded by guys,
yet I can't find a boyfriend!". What can I tell her religiouslike pursuit.
Signed: "'Beaten at pool too many

times"
Dear "'Beaten at pool too many times"

Ifyou thinkyou need to saysomethJngto "Brigitte",
you might suggest that she stop focusing so much on
finding a boyfriend and instead focus on activities she
enjoys, without a hidden motivation. People can usually
sense you are trying too hard. Remember, as the saying
goes "It always happens when you least expect it!"
Annle
Dear Analyst Annle
I have this friend "Rob" who always beats me in

pool (he won 4 of 7 games). Because I am new to the game
I feel he should be more supportive, rather than cons..tantly gloating about winning. Ifhe was a true friend he
would not cause me such mental anguish. Since pool is
the only thing that "Rob" is good at, I don't really want to
take away the bright spot of his Ufe. Annie what should
Ido?
Signed:"Anguish In the
Study"
Dear ..Anguish In the Study"

Not everyone has the same perception of good
sportsmanship. Rob ts probably not intentionally trying
to hurt your feelings. If it is causing you that much
anguish, I would say something of stop playing Rob.
Annle
Dear Analyst Annle:

I've got a friend whose name 1s "Dwayne", He's a
really nice guy but he's got a small flaw in his character.
Dwayne is always forcing himself on females. Its too hard
to come Iight out and tell him that he's too forward, but
he doesn't notice any ofmy subtle hints. Should I let him
find out for himself the hard way?
Slgned:"Stuck between Dwayne and a

Where Have The Beal Olyinples Gone?
by Chris Grosciki
Where did the real Olympics go? Mr. Herschel
Walker 1s a proud member of
the USAolymplc bobsled team.
Yes, that Herschei Walker. We
all lmowthat Herschel has had
a rough time 1n Minnesota the
pastfewseasons, underachieving on a team of underachievers, the Vikings. So we can all
understand that he 1s representing his country In the
upcoming olympics. Herschel
needs to recover some of his
lost pride right? And in a sport
he's poured a lot of swear and
blood Into right? Poor Will1e
Gault ofda Raiders. He tried to
get 1n on the fun too, but he
didn't push the sled hard
enough to qualify for the bobsled team.
Once upon a time the
spirit of the Olympic games
prevented professional athletes
from taking part. Medals were
repossessed from the likes of·

Jim Thorpe, a native Amertcan
representing the USA for the
simple offence of playing semipro football. It dldn·t matter
how great the athlete was, if
they had been paid for the ath-

ketball situation. In case you

didn't hear the lMng legends
of the NBA are on the Amerlcan team, including recent
retiree Magic Johnson. There
doesn't seem to be a point 1n
letlc services rendered, they
proceeding With a basketball
were ruled lnellglble to comtournament 1n Barcelona, expete. Amateur athletes toiled
cept of course to decide the
for years to reach their goal-to
silver and broll7.C medall1sts.
compete 1n the Olympics. And the fruits of their labour, Gold,
The gold medals can be dellvSilver and Broll7.C were someered by the UPS to the USA. let
the pro's sleep in, after all,
thlngtheycouldsavour. Today
they deseIVe It. Don't get me
things are somewhat confused.
Today tennis players at the 01_
wrong I would love to see all of
the great stars on the same
ymplcs include professionals.
court, but rm going to watch
Who won the grand slam 1n
the all- 5 lar game this week1988 and the Olympic gold?
end to get a thrill.
Steffi Graf, who at the time
represented West Germany.
It must have felt good for
Steffi to Win against a field of
pro's and non-pro's. Or
maybe It seemed like another
2 IOR. 1
day's work. Something Steffi
did every weekend that year
for a paycheque. And don't
aataaual or
Wlll,aFREE.
'fHE -.,NOL.ASS SHACK
get me started With the bas( In The Slclhmm )
623-1749
126N BRODIE ST.

~~

~~==~
~

let thent whlle they la1t I
LIMITED EDITION

WINTER CARNIVAL
TOQUES

For the LOW LOW
Prlee ol

hard place"

Dear "Stuck between Dwayne and a hard place"
If you truly find your friend's behaviour to be
obnoxious and rude, perhaps you should tell him more
directly. If the point does still not get across, you might
just have to let him learn the hard way. Eventually some
female will most likely put him in his place.
Annle

UIMe~'U$'U ~
I

I

�The Argus Page 10 February 6. 1992

•

'"
...... ,-1-,.,,,,

Bob Lambert
hits the stage
J&gt;
. Dwd a ~~

J&gt; _,_ at oou.

cdl@@lr

• I

i
I

I

i

'

Feb. 26 / 92- LUSU ·
presents...

Sarah Mclachlan
,

-

. In the TBCA
llckets avallable
In the LUSlt Office
$1 O-student
$15 non

�The Argus Page 11 February 6, 1992

CLUB NEWS
ORSS

AFCASA

lUACT ·

ESS

MSSA

E WEEK is now over so·it's back
To begin our celebration of
Hil members and other
Ladies and Gentlemen!
ORSS has auffcrcd a
tothetrenches.
TheEWEEKevents
international students. As we menblack histoiy month we would
The Cabaret o' Fromage ls off
lapse of leadership for the laat
were almost all successful, The
tion before, we are going to have an
like to paraphrase from A.C.
and running. The prellminaiy
week or so With our esteemed
BrewCiyTourandTheMysteryTour
exhibition
scheduled on the Feb.
Robbins
"Legacy
to
Buxton·
an
auditions have been held and
President being quite ill. If
were both a spewing good time,
10,
1992.
All international stuelegant passage in which she
were a tremendous success.
you'd like, aend her a get well
Northern B~eries are sorry they
dents are invited to participate.
writes:
Before
we
tell
the
stoiy
offered free beer after 30 of us each
We are holding a second audicard c/o Mel Dingwell, 'cause
Please contact Mohammad at 767hied to swill our body weight in
tion on February 9th, from 1
she needs a smile or two to be . of blacks, we must share the
5685 or Hasnah Hashim at 345brew in the allotted 2 hours, and
tale of our African forebearers
pm to 4 pm. It Will be held in
sent her way.
7736 or Ms. Hedi at the internaThe Stanley Tavern hasn't seen a
With all the brown people of the
tional students office for more inthe Ryan Theatre (RB1042) for
Next week on Wednescrowd like that since the war ended.
world. Our grandparents did
fonnation. You can exhibit anythosewhocouldn'tmakeitout.
day, Feb. 12th, there Will be a
The Mechan1cal Engineering eggthing that tells people about your •
not suddenly appear on this
All acts are welcome (sing,
ORSS general meeting and
drop contest was won by our own
countty. In fact, you can partidearth as slaves on plantations
dance, act, Juggle, tell
Sarah Wing will be speaking
ESS president Dan Hebert{5thyear
pate in tenns of cultural perfontiof this south anymore than the
Jokes...etc.) Please contact usto
elect11cal), second went to a civil
and showing slides about her
ance
aswe have performance in the
North American Indians apandthirdtoachemical Nomechies
tell us you are coming.
upcoming adventure in Guyagenda. We are going to have the
in
the
top
4,
how
embanassingl
peared
on
the
Reservations.
Also, the date for the Cabaana With Youth Challenge Inthings set up on Sunday, Feb. 09,
ESS election nominations will beThey came from the vast mysret o' Fromage has been moved
ternational. Come out &amp; see
1992at2.00pmin theagora. Please
gin Feb. 24(full details will be in
teries richly endowed but still
up a week to compensate for
bring all the exhibition stuffs with
what it's all about. 1lme and
next weeks' article), so keep an open
unexplored as yet unexploited
you. Message for other students!
Sarah Mclaughllnappeartngin
place to follow...
mind. Jokeoftheweek: Howdoyou
Come out to the agora on Monday
land
lying
astride
the
equator
Thunder Bay on our previous
During the Febn.uuy
prevent a professor from drowning?
with allyourfriends. See you there.
between the two oceans of the
Break, check out the 1st An_.
date. Now, the
Take your foot off his head.
Byel
known world.
nual ORSS Winter Snowblastlc
Cabaret will be
In
this
land
they
had
been
Games.. .! This year's events
held
on
free to come and go as they
include The World's MostLuxuWednesday,
pleased, to love and care for
rious / Funky Five-Person
March 4th In
their families, to collect knowlQuinzheeCompetttJon, theTenthe Outpost. If
edge while worshipping the
Person-Team Capture-Theinterested congods of their ancestor, for the
Flag Championship, and the
tact
Scott
home of our race was in Africa.
Solo Frtzbee-Snow-Golf TourMacDonald at
VALENT/ffE "BALLOON BOUQUET" SPECIAL
Come celebrate with us on Febney. The final wrap-up event
344-3300.
ruary 28, 1992 at 6 p.m.
will take place in the Party
0eaveamessage
Sauna at Kangas! These events
and we'll get
-send that someone special the gift of balloons _
are open to all students, and
back to you.)
-we have assorted valentine balloon bouquets
registration information Will be
Hey
AIESECI
Hey
what?!
Yep,
we
still
-free curteous delivery
posted in the Rec Hall all next
have more events lined up. This time we're workweek. Most events Will have a
-custom
made bouquets
ing on final exam crisis kits ... these Will be kind of
$1 per person entry fee, With
-for choice selection, order early!!
similar to our popular Christmas fruit baskets. So
all the cash being returned as
those
of
you
on
residence,
make
sure
your
parents
prizes.
send in their forms as soon as they get them.
Other exciting Break·,,,
~,-.
On another note our marketing team ls
Weekactivittes include a Standnow
all
geared
up
to
raise
some
serious
ard First Aid course on the first
traineeships. This is because for each Job raised
weekend of the holiday, as well
here (for an AIESECer from one of our 71 particias skiing clinics and perhaps a
pating countries), we are able to send one of our
$5.00 VALID11LLFEBRUARYJ4, 1992 I
day trip to Lutsen... STAY
lucky AIESECers to another country that they get
TIJNEDII ..... Bye .....
matched to.
- -lt?s never too late to
Join. We are an organimtlon
The l.akehead University •that began in 1948 and have
38 locals like this one in
Philosophy Association (LUPA),
Canada. This makes for about
as you may or may not have
171 locals globally. So lfyou
heard, has been quite active
Join
you'll be instantly become
this 1991-1992 school year.
aftlliated to about 60,000 other
On Saturday, Februstudents around the world. For
ary 8th, at 7:30 p.m. we will be
info. drop by our offlcehosttnga "paperreadtng•, i.e. a
UC2018A or call 343-8817.
social evening at which essays
are read. If you think that phiDARN GOOD EATEN' lDAN]I})Y JPR][CE
losophizing over a glass (or
bucket) of your favourite bevRisky Business Bash IV is
erage, pleaseJoin us. This event
coming this Friday 7th at 8:00
will occur at H.M.C.S. Griffon,
at the Outpost. Tickets are be(the Naval ReseIVe Base) 125
ing sold in the Outpost this
North Algoma Street, in the
week, $3 advance and $5 at
Junior Rank's Mess. Griffon is
the door... prtzes include a
located two blocks north ofRed
school ring and a ski weekend
River Road. You can get there
for two at the Norwester. Rocky
quickly on the Crosstown-WaHorror Picture Show $2 at the
ter bus. PleaseJoin us! We need
door at the Cafeteria on Sunfresh input.
day 9th ...brtng toilet paper,
Watch Club News, for furrice, water gun, toast and newsther announcements. We have
papers. Shows start at 7:00
been discussing running a
and 9:00 p.m.
"Pythonathon•, viz. an evening
of Monty Python classic movies. Keep your eyes open for
Short meeting on Friday,
posters. We hope to meet you
2:30. Let's talk about those
soon.

__________ _

FUN-N-FROLJ

AIESEC

~.;.

-_
PHONE 473-0730
___________________
-..

--~~-~
• ~- .,

1CUT AND SAVE

•---------------------------•

LUPA -

ACE

PIZZA
COUXTY

13" Pizza
16" .Pizza

•

•

$ 8.45
$12.65

J\11 our toppings are

ARGUS

covers.

MUCHMUSIC SPRING BREAK
1992. DAYfONABEACHFLORIDA;
Feb 15th to 29th. Be part of the
biggest SPRING BREAK SHOW
EVERIII FREE
UVE CONCERI'S by Canada's
top bands, pool parties, daily conevents,
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MUCHMUSIC'S
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VJ'S...ONLY available from HAPPENING HOLIDAYS. BAKE on the
beach' don't be left out in the
Snow. Book today, limited space.
Final paymentsdueJan. 30th. For
info: TAKI 475-5810

WantlngToAdopt Warm loving
Professional couple looking to
adopt new born or toddler. We
already have our home study and
legal papers completed. Please call
Susan collect(reverse the charges
we will pay); 416-731-3858 in Toronto. We can come to 1lfUNDER
Bay to meet you.

Cllll!SiftedAds: $2.25 (GSrincludcd).
25wordsand 5 cents foreach addiUonal
word. Submit ads toLUSU In the tunnel.

Lost: La.dies engagement ring
Diamond in a round setting.
REWARD 344-5138.

A24 yrold woman withdisabiltty seeks attendant for overseas •
exchange in Developing Countty.
4 mon. Depart in May. more info
(807)-767-0 l 02.

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Toppings: pepperoni, mushroom. ham. bacon. onion.
green pepper 6 pineapple (double toppings 80 cents extra)

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For FD[[ delivery or pick-up CALL:

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_J

�Toe Argus Page 12 February'6, 1992

1992 GOAD&lt;:,

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You've worked hard for your education. And now Chrysler wants to start you on your
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Whatever your taste, from the dynamic, affordable Colt to the adventurous
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Make the best deal you can at any Dodge-Plymouth or Jeep/Eagle dealership,
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And there's more good news. You can defer your payments for three months on
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PLUS NO PAYMENTS FOR 3 MONTHS
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Chrysler Credit Canada Lid. approwl requln!d. Offer applies 10 ff!llil pwdwes for personal use only. Other au,.ler spedal lfduttd flnmce
nu,prognmsanoo1becombloedwflhlhbdeltrnloffer.Pun:lweaodlllredd1Yer)'~anyellglblefthldeoolalerlhaoDecember31, 1992
from a parlldpallng dealer. See daler for delails.

Visit your Dodge-Plymouth or Jeep/Eagle dealer today for a test-drive.
Experience the Chrysler difference for yourself.

Buy with Confidence
With Chrysler's Owner '.f Choice Protection Plan, you can choose between
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Laser/'Ialon models only, the 3/60 Basic Warranty choice includes a 5-year/
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December 31, 1992. Vehicles may not be exactly as shown.

Please complete:
Name: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
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Bring this certlftcate to the Dodge-Plymouth or Jeep/Eagle dealer of your choice to
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~

LU Women and Men's Teams Split with Western-p6

- . .,
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�·-

'Ibe Argus Page 2 Febnwy 13. 1992

NEWS
Afac~nzie '£

et£ition Sin/&lt;in

Student Votes 3 Tim.es:
A-Criminal Offense
by: Rick Cox

IJu: 'J'an)ICI .RlntouJ and
Douglas StearJI

tumedoutforthellrstpre-tratntng
Peace River Alberta. From the
sessions on January 17 and
$450,000 the ·stay 1n School·
Funding deadltnes pass and
January- 24 In the Agora.
1nlt1attve Is most positive wtth
the Mackenzie Expedtuon
On Febnuuy 3 a notice was
$200,000 support on the basis
capsizes under the weight of the
posted that sliced through all the
that the expedition raises the other
recession,
dreams, stating clearly that the
$250,000.
The Alexander Mackenzie
aelecUon process ls cancelled due
It Is this $250,000 that has
Canada Sea-to-Sea Bicentennial
to lack of funding.
struck the expedition hardest. 150
Expedition la a ftve phase project
Dr.Jfm Smithers, expedition
letters and numerous follow-up
recreating S ir Alexander
leader and planner said that the
calls could not punctgre the
MacKenzies 1789 Journey to the
notice had to be put up now to
barrier surrounding
the
Padflc by way of the Northwest
avoid greater disappointment
recession, and consequently the
passage.
later. •u Is unfair to get students
deadline passed.
Owing 1991, 41 participants
Involved, training, turning down
Dr.Smlthere said that the
(32 LU students) paddlecf36 foot
summerJobs when we an:W1Sure•
expedition may go ahead wtth a
canoes over 3,400 kilometres.
he said.
·aman group (15) of oldttmem
Over the four months travelling
Dr.Smlthe111 also added that
(veterans) aa acheapaltemattve.•
between Montreal and Winnipeg,
-no one thinks (that theexpedlUon Thia smaller expedition would
on the Voyageur fur trade route,
Is a) stupid Idea·. yet no one wt1I
cover the distance necessary but
the expedition performed In 60
0rmly commit to funds. ·we
would be Without fl1lls such as
communities.
haven't got any money from
the •stay In school" program,
The performances were a
anybody. times are tough • be • songs, dances and other
method of communfcaUng the
stated not expecting any further
community wd.tatlon programs.
expeditions three objectives: to , ftnanctal response.
Thia amallerexpedltfon would
create an Interest In Canadian
$450~000 is the total required
be against the orlgtnal Intent of
history, to promote Stay ln school
revenue necessary tor phase four
the expedition Dr.Smithers
and to reinforce national unity.
to take place In the s\Unmer of
repllecl.
Over 50 hopeful candidates
1992 from Winnipeg. Manitoba to
The ortglnal purpose was that
of tcachtng and to have each
expedition a unique learnlng
experience, each trips would
Computers
Involve new students, however
wtth Ume pressures no new
~ "! .:i s . AJr....~ 1 ~ ~t't"t r. Touaix: 1l.1), 0m ...•x-. C.l!.lid:; P7R x:,amJ.4S-:,(,f, t
people will be incorporated. lbls
s1,"ft h..•rs.~ T1,-:,,,j _y • s ... i W'~.,,..
111:n(• iU11 • s:.J.:.• r:-u
year.
Non.hem Mosaic INTtl. 386 32 bit CPU. 25 ~
The economic situation of
t Mes ltAM. ~ to 8 M[(i
·the expedition Is perhaps &amp;fmllar
5.2.S' 1.2Mb floppy Drive
fast 43Mb, 28rN. Hard DIM=
to the challenges Alexander
I 024 JC 768 .Z8m Super VG&gt;. Colour Monltar _
MacKenzie faced In 1793. The
1024 JC 768 SIZK S'4)e" VG,-\ video card
Z Se!MI, I Pwalld Mid 1 GlmP ~
sum.mere outcome wtll be the
200 Watt CSA Cen14ad . , _ SUpp!y
true test of perseve,rance.
101 tnlwlced Kcyborad (&lt;;:IQOf ~

Cross-checkofthevot.er"alpha
hsr reveals a student voted three
times, a criminal offence.
The annual LUSU Executive
ElecUons l8 earned out under a
format designed to facilitate
maximum voter turn out.
Maximlztng tum out Is Important
to the candidates for obvious
reasons, but It Is also Important
that the elected lndtvlduals have
as clear a mandate as possible: a
5% voter tum out does not
guarantee that the winners of the
election actually are the clear
cholceofmostofthe student body.
For that matter, neither does the
better than 25% tum out we had
last week. but the confidence level
Is much ~er that the results
reflect the maJortty of students·
opinions.
The system cummtly In place
to regulate against people voting
more than once depends to an
extent on the honesty of the
lndMdualstudentStudentcards
~ marked by the polling clerks,
and names are crossed off of the
alpha list at the booth where the
tndtvldual votes, but for those of
us who have more than one LU
student card tt would not be
difflcult to push the syatem. That
ts why the Deputy Retum1ng
,Offlcercross-checks thealphabsts
to see If anyone hae wted more
than once.
This past election, one

Individual voted three separate
times at three separate polllng
stations. Multiple voting Is a
crlminaloffence under the Ontario
El.ecttonsAct. the leglslat.ton which

regulatea any clecUon held by
LUSU. The Elections Act
stipulates a fine of up to $1000.00
or a 6-month jail term or both as
penalties for an ellglble voter who
votes more than once. WSU
Elections, however are not
Provincial Government elections,
which is what the Elections Act
was designed for, so tt Is
Inappropriate for further actlon to
be taken against the individual
who voted three times In our
relattvely inslgnlflcant elecUon.
Because the election results
were not close, the 2 extra votes
had no effect on the outcome of
the voting, so Jt Is difflcult to see
, what the lndtvldual concerned
hoped to accompbsh. SlmJlarly,
because the elecUon results were
not close, the fact that someo.ne
voted more than once does not
put the outcome Into question. It
does however, put the reputation
of the indtvldual concerned Into
question.
As this ls betng written, the
cross-checldng of the alpha IJsts
continues. Ifyou voted more than
once, the cross-check w1II detect
It, and during the next electlona,
your name wtll be part1cularly
scru.Uruzed. Be aware that vottng
more than once In the same
election•~ a a;trnlJ}a] otrence.

Mosaic
1

386-25

Qg

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)'11111 pmts

.rid labour -,.:-rty
T~•

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$l55t.OO

8et the■ whlle they last I
LIMITED EDITION

WINTER CARNIVAL
TOQUES

FOr the LOW LOW

•.~

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~·····
" · de ~'USU.. (/)/pee

late Nigtt Ballot·eountif!g

phol&gt; br, Douglas S19Ely

WITCH FIi.............

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--- ·-

1

�The Argus Page 3 February 13. 1992

ACROSS. CANADA

...

LU Student Selected For Youth
Challenge International
by:Argus News Stqff
Second year Outdoor
Recreation student. Sarah
Wing has been selected to
participate ina three month
Youth Challenge project
This summer. 80 Canadians will join forces with 40
•1nternational Challengers..
from Guyana. Costa Rica
and Australia for Youth
Challenge•s projects 1n Guyana and Costa Rica. Sarah
will be heading to Guyana
inAugust.
A fairly new Canadianbased initiative. Youth Challenge :Is a non-profit organization cosponsored by the
Canadian International Development Agency (CIDA)
and the private sector. Youth
Challenge works with scienttftc institutes. universities. government agencies
and service groups. focusing expertise upon a spectrum ofrecognJzed problems
1n developing regions.
Applicants like Sarah are

J

shortl:lsted from a comprehensive written application
and must participate 1n a
r:tgorous outdoor selection
weekend. Here. their resourcefulness and determination are evaluated by a
panel ofjudges in a series of
initiative tests. Finalists are
pushed tothekphysicaland
mental limits to determine
their suitability for prOjects
which combine community
service. medical work and
environmental research.
Some Challengers have
ass:lsted eye surgeons with
sight-restoring cataract operations in Equatorial Jun-

BC Wants . Pot Legal

gles. Others have found
themselves constructing
bridges to link Isolated villages. or improving school
facilities or drinking water
in remote communities.
Some have worked with scientists to study wildlife or
collect h:nportant environmental data in areas as diverse as the Canadian tundra. the South American
rainforest. or the Soviet High
Arctic.
•1 am very interested in

international development
as well as youth development.· says Sarah. "I hope
this experience will help provide me a direction careerwfse. I look forward to the
challenge."
Youth Challenge relies
on the ongoing partnership
of business. governments.
service organizations and
local communities. Sarah
must ra:lse the necessary
$3000 in community support for their participation.

TORONTO (CUP) - Toronto abortion clinics are
still under attack. fouryears
after the Supreme Court of
Canadastruckdownthefederal law on abortion.
An entranceway to the
Morgentaler clinic was set
onftre by a gasoline bomb at
2 a.m. Jan. 24. causing
$5.000 worth of damage.
Three days later. a woman
posing as a patient set off a
stink bomb in a clinic bath-.
room. Neither incident shut
the clinic down.
And earlier th:ls month.
Campaign Life - an antiabortion group - estab1:lshed a storefront office next
door to the Cabbagetown
Women's clinic. which performs abortions. Workers at
the clinic say members of
Campaign Life have been
harassing women as they
enter the clinic.
Henry Morgentaler said
he believes the violence :Is
commgfrom a group of people who are frustrated.
"They are acts of people
whose cause :Is lost.,. he said.
-rhey are crazy. This is
speculation. but perhaps
they want to commemorate
'the Jan. 28 (1988) Supreme
Court decision on abortion.,.
The court struck down the
federal law on abortion. saying it violated a woman's
right to privacy.
Carolyn Egan. spokesperson for the Ontario Coalition for .t\.bortion .GIµµc~ . ..

agreed with Morgentaler.
·1t shows the frustration
of anti-choice individuals
because they are losing their
battle. They are now trying
to intimidate staff and patients through violent
means.'"
The Morgentaler clinic
has a court injunction prohibiting anti-abortion
protestorsfrom demonstrating within 500 metres of the
clinic. The clinic. open since
1983. had been the focus of
many protests in which
demonstrators attempted to
block access to the clinfc.
- Jim Hughes. national
president of Campaign Life.
said although he was aware
• of the attacks on the
Morgentaler clinic. the everyday business of the clinic
Is far worse.
"Whatever happened :Is
nowhere near the violence
employed
in
the
abortuaries,,. he said.
Hughes said h:ls organization was not responsible
for the incidents.
"No pro-lifer person a~sociated with Campaign Life
would have done that,,. he
said. "At Campaign Life we
are non-violent." •
Barbara MacFarlane. a
nurse at the Cabbagetown
Women's Clinic. said having a Campaign Life office
next door makes clients and
staff nervous.
The renewed focus on
abortion inay l;&gt;e due to the
attention the issue ~ getting .in, the United States.

us

T ff EAT R E

ABORTION: TORONTO CLINICS
UNDER ATTACK
(Source: The Varsitg)

Source: SFU PEAK
tion of the question was
BURNABY. B.C. (CUP) ·1typocrttical...
Legalized dope :Is the latest
North Island delegate Dan
addition to a British Colum- .Anfteld agreed. ,
bia student lobby group's
..Let's smoke a Joint and
list of demands.
think about it.· he said.
In addition to calling for
The federation also
free tuition and improved adopted a policy calling for
financial aid for students.
"free access to drug rehathe B.C. wing of the Cana- bilitation.,.
dian Federation of Students
CFS-BC chair Brad
adopted a policy advocating Lavigne doesn't think the
the decriminalization of policy Is out of ord~r.
mar:guanaatitsannualgen•1 don't think it (the moeral meeting Jan. 26.
tion) will hurt the credibility
Langara College's stu- of the CFS.• he said.
dentcouncil led the charge. ~ - - - - - - - - - - - ,
citing "uncounted revenue"
I\•A
lostbytheillicttsaleofmariIV 1aon· ·
Juana which could be used
V~ •
to fund colleges and universities.
639 McLaughlin St.
Only the North Island's
student association opposed
the policy.
The CFS-BC policy review committee examined
w(,~
the proposal. and recommended referring it to the
provincial executive rather
than debating it on the plenary floor. The committee
said it "did not want to risk
being de-legitimized by the
IA @[}{]@~1J' ~1J'@!IBY!
mediafortakfnga stance on
the decrtmfnalization of a
Feb. 13 - Feb. 29
currently-illicit drug."
Do you believe
But Langara delegate
Paul Keet said referring the
in Ghosts?
proposal in order to sidestep an immediate resoluTickets on Sale
at
the Box Office
ARTHUR'S USED

Tk

,~

she said.
The U.S. Supreme Court
is hearing cases which may
erode women's right to an
abortion guaranteed by the
1973 Roe v. Wade dec:lsion.
A number of states are attempting to legiSlate parental conserit laws. or outlaw
abortion except in cases of
rape or incest.
Abortion rights also garnered international media
attentionlastsummerwhen
anti-abortion demonstrators flooded Wichita. Kansas in attempt to shut down
area clinics.
Hughes said Campaign
Life Is working with politicians at a grassroots level to
create new Canadian legts-

EW

#303-The Chapple Building
101 N. Syndicate Ave.
or Call 623-1321

FURNITURE
191 N. Cumberland St.
(Basement of Cumberland

Wash and Dry)

Canadh1n

Buy and Sell
345-9592
Tues.-Sat 11 am - 5 nm

lattononabortlon. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~==~===~7'
::rso~==
for
pregnant
women and attempts to talk
them out of abortion. he said.
"We help

=:~~s::al~=f~

them to stop from
killing their babies.,. he said.
Police said they
have not caught
the arsonist who
set the fire at the
M or gen
t ·a 1six
er
clinic.
but say

youths were seen
running from the
scene.

ff~V'
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MCA

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--~•T~'l!!!!!!'B!!!!!!ii~:THUND!l!!l!!!!!!~~ER~BA~Y~C!IO!!!!MMUNITY~!!l!!!l!!!~A~UD!!!IT~O!RIUM!!!!!!II-

WEDNESDAY., FEBRUARY 26 - 8:00 P.M.
or more information visit the Auditorium Box Office,
Ticket Express in Keskus, LUSU Events or call

343-2300

7icket E

ress: 346-9495

�TheArgus Page 4 Februaiy 13. 1992

LE11ERS
Upset With Beckford Comment

rm wrtttng this letter in response to the article ·student
Perspective: On Foul B.O.D. Language" (The Argus, page
three, Februaiy 6. 1992).
As a regular Argus reader, I am aware that the entire
story did not appear in just this particular issue. The
previous issue had an article about the longest B.O.D.
meetJng in L. U. 's history. As I recall, the main reason for the
duration of the meetlng was that Mr. Fleguel and Mr.
Squires were opposed to a motion brought forth by Mr.
Beckford. Could this possibly be the reason that .Mr.
Beckford called Mr. Fleguel an "asshole" during the next
meeting? If so, then I can certainly understand why Mr.
Beckford was so upset. Mr. Fleguel must certainly be an
asshole of the highest calibre if he had the gall to disagree
with one of Mr. Beckford's motions. Isn't it understood that
the Board of Directors exists only for the purpose of passing
those motions which Mr. Beckford agrees with?
Unfortunately Greg (may I call you Greg?), this university is populated by people who have opinions and ideas of
their own which may or may not agree with yours. Your
motion was passed ina democratic and orderly fashion and
you can be proud of the fact that other opinions were
considered by the BOARD of Directors before the vote was
taken. However. I think that your actions during the next
meetJngwere petty and childish and that you have smeared
the honour and integrity of our llttle comer of democracy.
At the very least. you owe an apology to~. Fleguel and the
B.O.D. Should you consider yourselftoo proud (stubborn?)
to apologize then I think that you should seriously reconsider your position on the B.O.D. until'you learn to play by
the rules of an adult rather than as a spoiled child.
Michel ll'lgeat
•
Mech. Eng. II

UR

HEAD MUST

BIG

TO

ENTER_!

Hair ya doing?
Letter to the Editor:
We. the Hair Party, would like to thank all those who were
Involved. voted and participated in the LUSU elections. We
would like to express our gratitude to everyone who supported our ideas. Congratulations to the new LUSU executive and best wishes in the upcoming year.
Thank-you.

.

Cluu IDlmmhlto
lllkeBeqott
BrlaDTony

!his space Is dedicated ro all of those
who tore down 1he
Pink Triangle Day

posters

�The Argus Page 5 Februmy 13, 1992

frtiEARGUSI
The Student Newspaper of
Lakchead Untvcrsity
Volume #28 Issue #18
Febn.uuy 13, 1992
RoomUC0019
Lakchead Untvcl"Bity
Thunder Bay Ontario,
P7B5El
Telephone: (807) 343-8110
(ext. 8803) {8:30 am - 4:30 pm)
(807) 344-6911 (Anytime}
Fax: (807) 343-8598
ATl'N:AROUS
C1rculatton - 4000 copfes
diatribut.ed wmdy
Edltor-ln-Chllf

Travts Belrose
Proclucllon lllnlger

RonMwphy
Interim NIWI Editor

Douglas Steary
Enterlmmtnl Ecltor

Greg Oppedtsarw
Sportl Editor

IanT.Fero
CoPlloto ........

Douglas Steary
cp (H.S.G.J Walsh
Graplllol

Michel Dumont
Office llanlgtr

Bruce Hou.stowt
.Adlluaager

Karl Clement
TbaDb to ourCoatrlbutonl

CoDDie Gordon &amp; Co
(Jenn Vandersc)Jaaf
Christa Sadler), Noe
Ward, Sue Kemp, Pa
VanVeen,
Coll
McKbmon.
BrlanLudal
1
TanyaMclDtyre, BrlaDB.
Wes Malo, Andie Burk
TanyaRlntoul, Rlck Coz
Cover photo of Lesli
Raguette by Ian Fero.
The Argus Is produced weekly
over the fall and winter sessions
by students at Lakehead University. The Argus is a non-profit
organization published by the
' Lakehead University Student
Union and Is funded through the
student activity fee. The: Argus
remains editorially Independent
- editortal policy Is set by an
elected representative as provided
for In the Argus Constitution.
Arrycommentaryoreditortalmessages are those of the authors
and are not necessarily those of
LUSU or Lakehead University,
and may not reflect the views of
the entire Argus membership.
Membership Is open to any studentatLakehead University. The
executive ofthe Argus ls made up
of elected representatives as provided for in our policy. The Argus
welcomes signed letters to the
Editor-In-Chief; however the paper reserves the right to reject or
edit any submission.. The Argus
Is also a member In good standIng of the Canadian University
Press (CUP) .. ForNattonalAdverttsing, the Argus Is serviced by
Campus Plus Canadian University Press Media Services Ltd,
124 Merton St, (416) 481-7283.
The Argus follows the Canadian
University Press code of ethtca,
and guidelines set by the CanadianAdvertlstngFoundatfonand
will therefore not print offensive
articles or advertising.
This Ncwspapertscopyrfgbtt:d
(c) 1991 underFederallawguidcllnes and nothing may be reproduced from It without the express permfssion of the F.dltortn-Chief: All Rights~-

Sometlmea you're the
wlndahelld
Sometlmea you're the bq.
·llukKM

,.,

EDITORIAL
•
Facism··1n Fashion
Pink Triangle Day

l--iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.iiij;j-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~~~~~~~--iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-iiiiiiiii..=--iiiiiiiiiiiiiii

Have you seen the Pink Triangle Day posters? Probably not.
Febrwuy 14th is a day designated by the Canadian
Ari
informal anti poster campaign has defaced and/or tom
Fede~tion of Students as "Pink Triangle Day·. Ifs ptµl)ose
down
the hundred posters down so quickly that anyone who
is to promote awareness and inspire a -rise against
was interested enough to find out what Pink Triangle Day~
homophobia on campuses across Canada. Hopes are to end
all about would be stymied. Whoever did this made a mis~e.
discrimination and the threat of violence against students'
Now rm going to restate the message that was on those posters
sexual cho~es.
in 4000 newspapers that could be read by as many as 8000
It is important that students, as well as the surrounding people. The power of mass media...
community, make this an issue. Hostile, uncomfortable
The pink trtangle first surfaced in Adolph Hitler's Germany.
homophobic barriers must be eliminated, so that lesbians,
He did much more than single out and persecute the J~.
gays and bisexuals may access their nght to an open
Hitler extended his persecution to homosexuals who could be
education. This is an issue which concerns and affects all
easily identifled by the inverted pink isosceles triangle stiched
students and is one in which all campus leaders must be
on their shoulders.
Once a symbol of Horror, it has become a symbol of Pride.
vocal.
Toe CFS (Canadian Federation of Students) poster states,'
On our campus, B-G.L.L. U. posters have been vandalized
'Today, to commemorate those victims of Nazi hatred and as
with comments such as "fags should die•. Obviously, bia reminder that they are still targets for bigoby, Gays, Lesbians
sexuals, gays, and lesbians are made to feel uncomfortable.
and Bisexuals have defiantly reclaimed the Pink Triangle as a
Heterosexual behaviour, includingjokescondemntnggays,
symbol of plide. •
are present all over campus-even during our events. They
Let's be honest, many people are still uncomfortable with
have become so prevalent that people are begtnntng to
·
homosexuals
and feel that they cannot understand their
ignore them.
lifestyle.
I
don't
know what to say to that, but I do know that as
AsL. U.'sLesbtan, Gay, and Btsexualgroup, we would like
a group and as individuals, they have a light to not be
to see w9rk done to rid the campus of
persecuted. They also have a light to freedom of speech that is
homophobic\heterosexist attitudes and behaviour. We
currently restricted when the posters are removed from camwould like L. U.S. U. to make "Pink Triangle Day• a reality
pus walls.
here. Hopefully, with the student body's co-operation,
It ts this right to freedom of speech that ts most n:oublesome
events will increase both awareness and open-mindedness.
concerning this poster destruction campaign. It's ~ot hate
B.G.L.L.U. hopes that L.U.S.U. will use the Canadian
literature, we m:c in Canada: these posters should neyer have
Federation of Students urging to utilize this campaign to
been tom down. The very laws that glve us the tight t9.speak
free our campus of discrJmination.
freely and express our opinions are threatened when these
"LOVEBE'IWEENWOMEN. LOVEBE'IWEENMEN. LOY.posters disappear.
ING EITI-IERWOMENORMEN. WHATEVERYOURKIND OF
It would have been the smallest gesture that a person &lt;;ould
make in support of the liberal society that we are products of
LOVE....8E GI.AD!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! 11!!! 11.
if more of the posters would have remained. It is diflict.Jlt to
B-0.L.L.U.
accept that in a university environment we cannot even extend
this much tolerance to an educational poster campaign.
Long live facisml communism! totalitarianism! All silencers
wry observations from the wes- side be commended! TGB
• I wish to be known as a Finntsh-Scottlsh-lrish-GuyLivtng-With-His- Parents-In-A-Nice-Neighbourhood-AndHa~-Short-Hair-Canadi;µi. furthermore, fr I. am not addre~~~-f!#s B.er(ect 9~~bless_: I WfllJ ~lk.e".~exy·person\
who doesn't'use fti1s refrain at least twice.when addressing
me, to the hJghest court in Canada. I will no longer tolerate
being part .of such a repressiVe society which does not
recognize my greatness. The constitution must be changed
so that, I as an individual, am satisfied to the fullest. My
every whfm should be satisfied by all people living in
Canada. as they are merely the puppets to with as I wish. I
do not have a need to concede to any of the norms of Canada
as my rights as an individual come before the lights of all
others around me in society. I shall speak, read, and wrtte
~EltUAL Off£NOC~
in my Greatness tongue which will entail the translation of
? ='15'
all speeches and documents into Greatness, including all
'1"00
studies done -on the topic of navel hair removal. All signs
10:00
11'20
displayed within on hundred kilometres of my person shall
11'30
12' 30
F3o
be erected in the tongue of Greatness. Once again, failure to
WOl&lt;IN ... l&lt;J£ •~ R&gt;&lt;',._.,.
tEt•"Nt). Vou . •_·
do so will result in the persecution in the hJghest courts, so
don't screw with me you racist piece of filth. I know your
ideas of keeping me down. I know your plan. You will be
stopped and forced to embrace my way for your sins in court.

Wes - E - World

•' t,ou•,-

Can't happen you say. What a racist bastard His Perfect
Greatness is, others chime in. Maybe. Not really. Doubtful.
No. I am protected by Greatness.
I want all to join me in my cause of stopping those that
do not heed my message. Complain to all politicians, the
police, Greatness groups, to whoever will listen to your point
and flog it to death in public. We need to divide this country
into bits so that Greatness will rule. All will become Greatness and Greatness will become all, forcing this weak and
pathetic country to its knees. No longer will national unity
even be thought of as practical, as Greatness of all groups
will allow for unity under Greatness.
Remember the one thing that will bring about Greatness.
Repeat it often and loud and others will follow you to the
Greatness. Repeat "I am better that you. You are oppressing
me. I shall show you your true place. The government is on
my side. You will be shown to be the lesser. I will take my
rightful place. I am better than you.· With these few statements you will come into Greatness for yourself. And for me.
I, as His Perfect Greatness, decide that the name of this
country, Canada, IS offenstve to me. From now on it shall be
called Wes-E-World in tribute to my greatness.
Wes&amp;Jfalo
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On "Healthy Alcoholism"

This is in response to a letter by Mr. Grant that appeared
last issue in _the ARGUS concerning Beckford's "healthy
alcoholism" comment made at the Januacy 16 LUSU Board
meeting (See ARGUS, Jan 23, "EPIC LUSU MEETING").
Grant wanted to know what was meant by the term
"healthy alcoholism."
That particular LUSU meeting was the longest on record,
lasting six and a half hours. Many Important issues were
debated at that meeting. The "Pub Policy" debate, the one
where Beckford made the comment, was the last one.
Beckford used the term at about midrught, as the argument was coming to an end. He was defending the motion
from much cliticism, and a combination of this and six
hours of previous business had made hfm, and indeed the
entire board, a little tired.
Beckford was repeating his argument concerning the
unrest that sometimes occurs in the long lines for the Pub
He said that by decreasing the size and wait ofthe lines, then
-one could decrease the tension and "try and promote
healthy alcoholism.•
To1S last line was an amusing slip of the tongue which
broke the tension ofthe debate for a moment. Beckford was
tiying to promote •healthy aJcohol consumption,• not aJcoho~ 1'ee.t1Vanl .. ::.· . --:·.· ·_ ~·-•_:···. ·. ·: ~~·:···.: :--:.::'"',, ~·._,:.~,
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�1be Algus Page 6 Februmy 13, 1992

SPORTS

Men•s Baske-tball
Ea1•■1s
SpDt With Western
by Ian T. Fero

PBTBRBROWN

RAYFOSTBR

The LU mens basketball squad put fn a fine
weekend against the defending national champions, the
University of Western OntarloMustangs, splittlngthe
two game series at the
Thunderdome. Riding a
wave of recent success (after beating national #4
Brock the previous weekend) the NorWester men
came fn to the game knowingthat they could playwtth
the Mustangs, and as Friday's outcome showed they
did indeed.
-We played very well
Friday.• exclaimed head
coach Lou Pero on the team's
80-77 victory Friday. The
game was exciting from the
get go. With the womens
team squeaking out a narrow and excitingvtctoryjust
minutes before, the capacity crowd was treated to another thriller. It was a quick
game, lots of transition, lots
of shots and powerful rebounding. It was a game
dominated by the fast break
finishers and LU ran With
UWO for •the whole game.
The only real fault was the
perimeter defence of the
NorWesters, as Western
seemed to live and die With
clutch three pofnters.
The key for the

Enjoy a full order of your favourite pasta fettucini, lasagna, linguini, rotini,
tortellini or spaghetti. Crown it with one
of our four fabulous sauces: alfredo,
meat, seafood or marinara.
Or try one of our baked pasta delights.
Only $4.25 each.
Tuesdays are Terrific at.Boston Pizza.

.B(NOf)~
Wen1 notjustpizza anymore.

21'1 AKl'HUlt ff W 505 MEMORIAL AV

Nor'Westers was the play of
their quick guards,
sophmore Peter Brown controlled the game, easily
outdriblinghis defender and
often finding the lane fo ran
easy penetration or dish.
Brown ended the nfght with
a magruflcent 23 pofnts and
5 assiSts, while managtngto
haul down 4 rebounds, reasserting his February athlete-of-the-monthacknowledgement. Les Ragguette
found his grove and was fnstrumental on both ends of
the court, hitting clutch
baskets down the stretch.
Ray Foster was the
hottrfggermanforthe home
team dropping 16keypofnts
and hauling down 8 rebounds. Foster held his own
devenstvely (as usual) and
showed presence, both on
the boards and from trt-fecta
land.
Guard
Glen
Eastland had 23 points for
Western. Their offence was
limited to the outside with
LU's four big men Grace,
Lalonde, Randall and· Law
outplayfng their Mustang
counterparts. UWO tree
John Verneeren was held to
only 8 pofnts on Friday and
4 on Saturday and provided
no real help to the Western
post game.
With all the success
on Saturday night, and the
excitement and anticipation .
building for the •rematch,
any fan may have been
thinking "sweep" as the
teams hit the court on Saturday. However LU ran into
a fast rut courtesy of a hot
rookie
guard,
Brad
Campbell.
Western raced out to
build a 16 pofnt bulge and
the NorWestersfound themselves playing catch-up for
the rest of the game.
"He just had one of
those games." said Pero on
Campbell, who achieved 36
points on 69% field goal
shooting and 90% from the '
lfne. "He showed signs of a
hot hand late on Friday so
we focused fn on him a bit in
the pre-game speech" added
Pero.
With Campbell playing well, Eastland found
himself open for a few easy
buckets en route to another
23 pofnt performance. Once
again the NorWester big
men did theirpart, but again
the pertmeter,.gaine paced

the Mustangs.
The
Mustangs
staked a 90-79 victory fn a
gamewhfchneversaw Lakehead get withfn 5 points, a
mark they achieved at the
haJf. "We were a little late
defensively• added Pero, it
showed at times, but there
isn't much you can do when
you run fnto a hot shooter.
The split left the
NorWesters with a 5-5 conference record and the Mustangs with a 6-4 mark. The
next test for LU will be the 19 Launer Golden Hawks. "If
we play well we should win
two.· remarked Pero modestly. "Les [Ragguette] is
starting to play well, (Ray]
Foster is getting steady, and
(Dave] Pineau is playfngvery
well... we're getting better
with every game• he added.
Right now the NorWesters
are in 6th place in the
confernce and have not lost
hope of gaining a home
playoffgame, a dream which
may become reality if the
team sweeps Laurter this
weekend and hopefully
gains a split with 1st place,
and national runner-up,
Guelph at home Feb 21-22.
"Right now• exc~ Pero
"we're just taking one game
at a ttme: If the team accepts this philosophy there
can only be better things to
come. ·

Rankings
Basketball
OUAAWEST
(Men)
l)Guelph (8-2)
2)Brock (7-3)
3)McMaster (7-3)
4)Waterloo (6-4)
5)Westem (6-4)
6)Lakehead (5-5)
7)Laurier (1-9)
8)Windsor (0-10)
OWIAAWEST
(Women)
!)Western (9-1)
2)Lakehead (8-2)
3)Brock (6-4)
4)Guelph (6-4)
5)McMaster (5-5)
6)Waterloo (5-5)
7)Laurier (2-6)
8)Windsor ( 1-7)

�1be Aigus Page 7 February 13. 1992

SPORTS
CAMPUS RECREATION
REPORT
By Derek BatJield

Pool Tournament Results
Th.is past weekend in the Study a brilliant
display of pool skills were demonstrated by all of the
participants in the tournament. Dean White walked
away with top honours by defeating all comers. Rob
Strudeski finished second. Robin Johnston and Rick
Lee receive honourable mentlonforfini$1ng third an1
fourth respectively. Beware of these pool sharks!

Women's"'Basketball Results
In the past week the Individuals defeated the
Bullsters with a score of29 to 18. In other gamos. The
Has Beens overcame the Phys. Ed'erswithaclose score
of 35 to 31. In the final game the Locals blew away the
Dunksters at a score of 56 to 2.

The Duluth Trip is just around the corner. If
you would like to go you better sign up soon. The date
is Fri. Feb. 21st. The bus will leave at 7am and return
8pm. The fee is $22 per individual.

B11-dmtoton Tournament
The badminton tournament is not far away.
You can sign up for doubles and sfngles,just specify
when you sign up. If you want to play doubles, specify
your partner or you will be set up with one. The
tournament will take place on Sat. Feb. 29th, from 2pm
till 8:30pm. Fee 1s only $3 per indMdual.

Bowling Tournament
The date for the tournament 1s Feb. 26th at
Mario's Bowl. For only $5, you get 3 games. Deadline
for sign-up is Tuesday Feb. 25th at 4:30.

Cross Coun~ Sid Cllnlc
There will be a ski clinic on Sat. Feb. 29th from
9:3b to 12:30. Please meet in the Fieldhoqse at room
SB 1016. Fee is only $5 per individual.

_

Bring out your pegs! On Sat. March 7, there will
be a cribbage, tournament. It will take place in the
Study from 1 to 5pm. The fee is a mere buck! Prices
can't get any lower.

•Ball Hockey Tournament
By Jamf.e Oltsher

On Sat. March 7th, a ball hockey tournament
will be held in the fteldhouse to determine who will
represent L.U. in a ball hockey challenge against
Confederation College. Due to limited gym time, only
6 teams will be allowed to enter. So sign up quickly at
the Campus Recreation Office.

Sno-Golf Tournament
Is your swing a little frosty? Come out and join
L.U. at the Thunder Bay Golf Country Club on Sat.
March 28th. Fee is only $12 for a 9 hole round, BBQ
dilµler plus prizes! Th.is is a 4-man scramble tournament.

Couch Potato Trlathalon
The infamous couch potato triathalon will take
place on Sat. March 7th. Fee for a two person team is
$4. The triathalon will take place from 1 to 5pm in the
Study.

For any Information on any event come ancl see
us ID our new office upstairs, where LUSU used to
be, UC 2014A, or phone us at eztenslon 8808 (3438808).
•
·

"More Than Just Sports"
CD'S SPORTSfATINGTIP
1

-- The Lakehead varsicy
wrestling-team will be travelUng to McMaster Universicy to
compete at the 1992 OUAA
wrestling championships.
Each Universicyls only allowed
on wrestler per weJgbt class at
the championships. The tour• nament format ls a one pool .
system with double el1mlnaUon. The top 3 wrestlers in
- each weJgbt will advance to .
this. CIAU championships held
at St. C&amp;therlnes Feb. 28 and
29.
Lakehead will be filling 9 of 10 weJght classUlca- ••
Uons only blanking 52 kg. The
final team selection was made
Jast week with Uie exception of
82 kg. The Lakehead line-up
will be:

Duluth Trip

Cribbage Tournament

Wresd.ersOffToOUAA·C bampionships

read about the Canadiens' loss whilst

munching on a pe~ut butter chocolate chip
cookie, .1.wasq. tt all down With apple.Juice.

•

•57 kg Sheldon Muir, 61 kg
QulntonMaechtel, 65kgEddie
Zmger, 72 Kevin Wallen. 76 kg
Simon Lampi, 82 Brock Lambert or John Burke, 90 kg Lee
Pine, and HWT. Scott Pepper.
At82kgJohnBurkels
presently on the sidelines with
a knee injwy if he ls able there
will be a wrestle off' later this
week between Burke and Lambert to decide who will represent LU at the championships.
Going to the championships:
57 kg- Sheldon Muir:
In bis freshmen year, a graduate from Lakeview high school
in Thunder.Bay where he was
coached by Reno Nebnl. Going
Into the 1992 championships
Sheldon has a win-loss 14 and
9, and tournament placings in
the RMC (silver), Garvie memortal (bronze) and Manitoba (silver) meets. Sheldon was also
named wrestler-of-the-month
for January.
81 kt· Quinton
llaechtel: Afreshman. graduate from Barrie Central,
- coached by Brad Chestnut.
'Going into the championship
Quinton has won 12 matches
and tournament placings in Mt.
Allison (silver), Garvie Memortal (bronze), Manitoba Open
(silverj.

as kg- Ed.die Zinger:
a senior. 1b1s Is Zlnger's 3rd
visit to the OUAA. Ed Is coming
off'a first term shoulder injwy.
Going into this years championships Ed's career record is
30 wins and 20 losses. This
year he place 2nd at the Manitoba Open.
88 Jrg- Mike Kitchen:
a eophmore, this ls Mike's second trip the the OUAA's, last
year he place 5th. Going into
this years championships Mike
had an impressive 17 and 7
won-loss record with tournament placings in RMC (gold),
Mt.Allleon (bronze), Manitoba
Open (bronze), Garvie Memortal (sllverj, and Huskle Open
(bronze). Mike was the wrestler-of-the-month for October.
72 kl· Kevin Wallen:

a freshman out of Westwood
secondaly, Toronto, where he
was coached by Johnathan
Graham. Going into his first
OUAAchampionshipKevlnhas
,a9win, 9lossrecordand tournament placings In, RMC
(bronze), and the Garvie Memortal (bronze).
76 q- Simon Lampl:
The eophmore placed 3rd at
last years OUAA championships. Going Into this years

-

.

meet Simon has had llm1ted
action due to some nagging
injurtes. He Is healthy and ls
looking to improve on lastyears
performance.
_ 821qf-BrockLambert:
eophmorewho place 5th at last
years OUAA championships.
Going Into the championships
Brockhas tournament placings
at Garvie Memortal (bronze),
and Manitoba Open (bronze).
or...
...John Burke:

Garvie Memortal (silverj.
Freshman, graduate of
Smithfalls Collegiate a&gt;ached
by Steve Needam. Scott also
plays for the Thunder Bay Giants football team. Going into
the championships Seott
placed second at theRMp open.
The Lakehead wrestlers that will not make it to this
seasons championships are
CraJg Hardy, last years OUAA
silver medallist and OUAA allstar. Craig dislocated his shoulder earlier this season. Chris
Robertson. a freshman from
Churchill high, coached by
Norm Sakamoto, had a good
season tlnishing up with a
bronze at the Manitoba Open.
Lance Hill and Richard Noob,
both freshmen suffering from
shoulder and elbow injurtes.
Ron Wilson Is redshirtlng this
season and plans to compete
next year with the team. Good
luck to the team members.

freshman from SamJa. John's
win-loss record Is 12 and 9
with tournament placings at
RMC (silver), Mt. All1son (silver), and Manitoba open (3rd).
John was wrestler-of-themonth for November.
90 kt- Lee Pine:
Freshman, graduate of
Bewatttng high In Sault Ste.
Marie and coached byTed Fiya.
OotngintohisflrstOUAAchamplonshipwith a win-loss record
of 10 and 8 and tournament
placing in RMC (gold), and
-----------------------.

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�The Argus Page 8 Februaiy 13. 1992

~
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PreSents: Listen and Win for...
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So listen up until tbe Day of tbe shows!
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�TheArgus Page 9 February 13. 1992

ENTERTAINMENT

Music

••,,,

•

•

by Travis Belrose
Contrary to uninformed opinion, King
Apparatus ts not the new
ska ·band being fronted
by the vocalist of Doug
and the Slugs. The
-King's singer/songwrtter, Chrts Murray,
may sound a little bit
like Doug, but that's
where the stmtlartty
ends.
What ts· ska?. Quick
definition: Reggae on
speed. (Actually, reggae
ts ska slowed down, but
1n the end, what's the
difference?)
Who plays ska? King
Apparatus: An independent five man band
from Toronto. The album says five, the press
release says six. I don't
know what to think.
The band has recentlyreleased their first
full length album on the Raw
Energy Records label. The album ts also called.King Apparatus. They collaborate on this
Indie effort with other bands
on the Toronto scene, most
notably One, an T.O. reggae
group.
King Apparatus ts a hard
working band that has visited
Thunder Bay often at Crocks

Y&amp;bbead Un1varsit,'s D&amp;noe lluslo k.

The cover of King Apparatus' latest album
and Rolls and at our Outpost
Into a studio release?
(before it was named). Anyone
Basically, the answer ts yes.
who has seen them play knows
It's a fun, eqloyablealbum, but
that they put on an en~ettc you have to be Ina hyper mood
show that can even get the
tofullyenjoyit. Ifyou~tn the
most lead footed people on the
mood for it. makesurethatyou
planet dancing (i.e. myself, MC
are standing 1n an open space,
HammerJr).
breakables secured, preferably
The bwntngquestion... Can
with the blinds shut tfyou don't
they translate their live energy
want your neighbours thinkIng that you're going Into convulsions or offertng sacrtftces
to some nameless, bloodthirsty
god.
But If you're not tn that
•partying" mood, this album
will not sound like a classic to
you. The songs are good, but
not very substantive. It's not
that the lyrics are banal; the
album Just lacks the thematic
unity and consistency found
on a Grapes Of Wrath album
for example.
Enough band bashing. This
album is a must for anyone
who has seen the band and
liked them. The production
values are a quantum leap beyond thetrlastE.P. Loud.Party.
You'Drecognfzealotofthesongs
you heard when you saw them
last. And Just think. next time
they come through you will be
able to stng along ltke a True
Fan.
King Apparatus ts the perfect summer party album. A
Cult E1ectrlc with the power
chords replaced bystrummtng
on the offbeat.
Songs Include the bouncy
•MadeFor-rv-, the honest •auy
Our Stuff", and a song almost all LU- students can relate to
•Non-Stop Dr1nktng". "Wasteland• ts a likable tune, With
lyrics slightly more decipherable than T.S. Eltot's ortgtnal
effort. The song •Ktng Apparatus• (not the band, or the album, Just the song) is a mellow
reggae effort that works.
\1@E QWJQ ~
•Hang1n' on· ts one of the finest
~~
songs on the album.
Asltls,tfyoultkeska,Jump~ (W 001@ ~ ~
tng, or Infectious music, then
buy this disc. Make them rtch.
Allyourfrtends will think you're
really cool. Now.
N.B. The only place that I've
®00
[]3rnfil][lill]3
1 seen the album so far is at St.
James Stereo, across the street
mJDJmnnILffl~ l]lij_) ®[]3 ~~
I
fromKeskus on Red River Road.

lllVi!iil1

lllffilffi

1

I

$3 II

ffilM

HOUSE

[Hfil□®[ID)

·- ----------- ---~

Okay... tt's under control. .. no filler crap for the party
people this week, Just pure grade A dope... B's back and 1n
full effect. money! Hype fresh news for ya on the dan~
music tlp ...Ce Ce Peniston. Twenty-one years old, from
Phoenix, Arizona, former Miss Galaxy... shall I go on? Sure,
why not Her current hit single •Ftnally" ts hanging on tight
at number 4 on the Streetsound charts... ·1t·s overwhelmtng· she said. •1 knew that, through my perseverance and
wanting to succeed, one day I would have something that
would make me very happy, such as a hit record. I Just
never knew tt would happen this quicklyr
Discovered and produced by hip hop / dance producer
Felipe Delgado (D.J. Wax Dawg), Ce Ce has held singing 1n
her heart as a goal since she was a little gtrl. She did the
school concert thing for a few years, did the acting·thing
through hlghschool, and then 1n 1989 she won the Miss
Black Arizona contest. and continued on 1n the pageant
mode to be crowned Miss Galaxy tn 1990. Then. D.J. Wax
Dawg invited her to do some background work With female
.rapper Overweight Pooch, and scouts atA&amp;M Records were
so Impressed With hervocals that they offered her a deal and
writing assistance from Steve •silk· Hurley and David
Morales...and there you have tt
•Flnally" was wrttten by Ce Ce herself, and her new
album ts due out fairly soon, agatn With help 'from the two
remtxer/producers Silk and Morales. Look for her new
single •It's A Love Thang" to hit the charts on the freak tip.
Flnally, (or lastly, since I've already talked about Finally,) C&amp;C Music Factory producers Robert C ~ and
David Cole have released a new cover version ofU2's 1984
hit •Pride (In The Name OfLove)9. Remixed on the traditional
C&amp;C house-techno-acld-funk-rockn'roll tip, mymalnsource
Chrts tells me that It's doing real well on the dance floor tn
bigger urban areas ... namely Toronto...Thunder Bay probably won't discover tt for another couple of months!
Also notable on the 02 remix tip is the Pet Shop Boys
cover of-where The Streets Have No Name•, even though It's
been out for a long time. Nonetheless, I'm sure not to many
folks up here heard tt. so there. Hey Athelntckulous - why
doncha rccord'em on a cassette tape and send 'em on up
here... maybe someone will get confused and put the wrong
tape 1n the deck and ooops - It's some fresh new vibes to
clear the dancefloorwithl Ha ha...yeah boycc...peace out on
the B tip!

The Purple
Haze Daze

A Hendrix bio of sorts
by Colin Mckinnon

He seemed larger than life.
Hts command of the electric
guitar, his onstage antics, and
the instant recognition of any
of his songs made Jame•
Manball Benclrlz a legend,
and his stature as the premiere guitartst of the rock era
remains unchallenged.
While starttng to play guitar when he was 12, Hendrtx
tmttated other guitartsts and
tried to pick up their pieces
and licks, usually playing lefthanded, butoccasionallyplaytngrtght-handed as well. Years
later, after his early discharge
from the army 1n 1962 for a
reputedfakedtnJuryonaparachuteJump, hebecamea •guitar for hire,• tourtng on the
R&amp;B Circuit With the likes of
Uttle Richard, Jackie Wilson,
James Brown, Wtlson Pickett,
B. B. King, the Isley Brothers,
and many others. Eventually
1n 1965, formed his own band
called the Blue Flames, callIng himself by the new name of
Jimmy James. After a failed
career as a televangelist,

Hendrix reunited the group 1n
1966, playingtn Greenwtch Village, pop msuic's headquarters for artists tn that day. He
made a bigger name for himself than the other respected
guttartsts of the day, ltke Mike
Bloomfield
and
John
Hammand.
His big break occurred during a visit by the former bass
player of the Brtttsh band the
Antmals, Chas Chandler, who
put Hendrtx on a plane to England With a promise of meeting
the rtstng Ertc Clapton. Chandler also reverted Hendrix's
name to its ortgtnal state from
Jimmy James yet altered the
spelling of the first to read
·J1m1.·
The stage has now set for
Hendrtx to explode upon the
unsuspecting Brttish music
scene, which was more and
more demanding a heavier
sound. Upon being linked with
drummer, Mitch Mitchell and

continued
over page-. ..

�TheAigus Page 10 Februmy 13. 1992

E"NTERTAINMENT
Movies &amp; Theater

LAXDAL AT THE MOVIES
by Brian Laxdal •
. Is any movie worth $7.50
anymore? It seems that the
onlywayyoucangetyourmoney's worth Is to see movies on
the dreaded •cheapydays. •This
sums up my feelings about two
of the three movies I saw this
weekend.
In Medicine Man Sean
Connery plays a divorced scientist that has discovered a
cure for Cancer in the Brazilian
rain forests. When a new assistant (Lorraine Bracco) arrives the two must stop the
government from destroying
the forest before they can redevelop the cure. Connery gtves a
good performance as a reclusive scientist while Bracco
seems to whine her way
through in a non-Oatterlng female role. Wh1le the scenery Is
incredible the novelty of shooting in a rain forest wears off
before the movie ends. We then
are left to discover an overused
plot and dull dialogue. Even
the fire works at the end only
Inspire us to wonder Ifburning
the rain forest to make the picture was needed in a plot to
save them.
This movies needs medical
help.
(out of $8.00 this movie

rates $4.50)

•

l'lnal Analysis ts a movie
that tries to tap the adult mystery thriller but fa11s•to deliver
much suspense. Kim Basinger
gl.ves a good performance as a
disturbed women that w1ll use
anyone to getherway and cleverly tricks Richard Gere 1n to
helpingherecommltamurder.
Gere Is rather dull here and
Uma ~upnan who Is credited

The women from the movie Fried Green Tomatos.
in a starring role barely shows
up 1n the ftlm. If this movie Is
analy7.ed there are a few good
moments but not enough to
Justify a $7.50 price tag. Ifyour
in the mood for a thriller go~
The Hand That Rocks the Cradle instead.
(this movies rates $4.75
out of $8.00)
The real winner this week Is
Fried Green Tomatoes. It
stars Oscar winners Cathy
Bates and Jessica Tandy who
play middle aged women going
through mtd-llfe crtsts'. However the real story ts about a

TJte Purl!J!J!'t~

continued from
page 9...

lead guitarist, turned bassist Noel Redding, the Jlml
Hendrix Experience released
•Hey Joe• and "Purple Hau"
which became Instant hits.
His ballad "The wind Cries
Mary• (a ballad as only he
could perform) also broke
Into the UK Top 10, yet North
American success has still
not been attained. Unleashing the Experience at the
Monterey Pop Festival In
Callfornla, Hendrix left the
aqdtence slack-Jawel with his
performance, no one had lit•erally lit their guitar on fire
before, not even the Who,
notorious for end-of-concert
destruction.
· The next look America
hadwas perhaps through the
wrong eyes, as teenagers
waiting to see the Monkees
(Hey, Hey, We're the...) saw
theappametlyout-of-control
Hendrix perform. The tour
combination did not work,
and the Experience was
dropped off this tour package, with a fabricated exc..tse
that the Daughters of the

banned. Nonetheless, Hendrix
had ~ded and Intended to
stay.
The Experience returned to
England, where their populartty was still high, and toured
until the memory of the
Monkees farce had passed. At
the passage, his continued expertmentation with various effects, such as distortion, Fuzz
Face, and the wah-wah pedal,
all devices which 1n the past
had been shunned for their
unpredictability, led to even
more Innovation on his new
album ..EJectrlc Lad:,land" 1n
1968. His cover of Dylan's •AU

AlongtheWatchtower•featured

many changes from the orlglnal, and Robbie Robertson,
playing in Dylan's backup band
at the time, Incorporated some
of the licks Into Dylan's set.
•vookdoo Chile• and • 1983 (A
Mennan I S1wuld Tum to Ber

stillremalnussomeofhtsmore
viable tracks today.
.
However successful The
Expepence was, the pressure
o( success weighed heavily on
Hendrlx,andledtothebreakup
of the band 1n mtd-1969, yet
Hendrix contlued to perform,
recording the unmemorable

past murder and Oashbacks to
the events. Mary stuart
Masterson and Maiy-Loutse
Parker steal the movie as two
women that share a love for
each other. This movie has
much to offer. It has some nice
humour scenes that help carry
a well told story along to the
end. This movie ts a triumph
for Mary stuart Masterson an
often forgotten talent who
should not be Ignored. So do
not let the title turn you off
Fried Green Tomatoes really
tastes great.
(Out of $8.00 tbla movie
rates &amp;7.00)

The woman from the
Woman in Black

by Sue Kemp

Magnus Theatre's latest
play "lbe Woman 1n Black.
opens on Friday evening. It ts a
story of suspense and mystery, set 1n Victorian England.
I had the pleasure of speakIng with Sheryl Gardner, the
actress who plays the Woman
1n Black. Shetsvtvactousyoung
~oman who _Is very excited
about her work. Sheryl started
out 1n the Performing Arts as a
ballet~ancer, and actually had
not done any acting until her
firstyearofuntverstty. Shewas
working on a degree In Music
Education and decided to take
a first year acting course to
broaden her horizons. As luck
would have It. she ended up
with •a great prof who really
sparked [her) Interest 1n acting•. Ironically, Sheryl has Just
flnlshed her acting and directing degree at the University of
Saskatchewan, but still has a
year left until the completion of
her Music degree.
A native of Saskatchewan,
Sheryl has not been to this part
ofOntario before. She has been
1n shows in the past that toured
within Saskatchewan, but this
Is her first show that has travelled to other provinces. Her

Sweat It Out
In Finland,
Chill Out
In Morocco

Q'!:!-u.c&amp;OOm

with new muslca.ns. Hts performance at Woodstock led to
new-found critical acclaim,
despite his rendering of the
Amertcal national anthem (now
considered classic), and he returned to Europe 1n 1970 to
tour after setting up his own
New York studio. On September 18 of that year, while still In
England, Jlml accidently overdosed on sleeping pills. The
tablets he took, German 1n
make, were supposed to be
broken Into quarters before
ingesting, yet. obviously unfam1liar with the process took
two and went to bed. '
Although some whispered
thatsulcidemayhavebeenthe
motive, most conclude Hendrix
was more exited about life than
e\".er, as a new era outside The
Experience's shadow was beglnnlng to develop. However
successful he might have been
1n this era, his death"left these
questions unanswered, as
pasthumansalbumshavebeen
letdowns. Hts death marked a
pause 1n the Innovation of the
guitar, and to this day, an tnnovator has not been found to
take up the reins as rock's
greatest guitarist.

role 1n "1be Woman 1n Black• ts
not a large one but she enjoys
It, and sees It as good experience. •My role Is a non-speaktngone. The Woman In Black ts
an apparition that appears
throughout the play". The actors she works with are both
qutteexpertenced, and she feels
she Is gaining knowledge and
skill from working with them.
Sheryl says her most challenglngrole to date was as Beth
in Sam Sheppard's •AUeofthe
Mind•. Beth Is a woman who
has been beaten by her husband, and as a result Is braindead. Sheryl had to do a lot of
research, bothspeakingtopsychologtsts and reading In journals, to prepare herself for the
part.
Sheryl still has a year left at
schooL and afterthatshehopes
to continue with her acting career. Although her second degreewlll be 1n Music Education
she really has nodestreto teach
1n the pubftc school system.as
shedoesn'tltkethetdeaoC-havlng to adhere to a curriculum•.
She would like to work with
children but 1n an atmosphere
that Is more relaxed, where
there Is more room for Interaction and spontaneity.

Turn up the heat in our open doors to over 6,000
traditional Finnish sauna, hostels around the world
then travel south to cool including castles chalets
off in the shade of a and beach houses' at pri~
Moroccan courtyard. The you can afford. Find out
experience of these more by calling our toll
refreshingly different free number or writing:
environments can ~ e
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�The Argus Page 12 February 13. 1992 •

-

Seeing that coin Is getting
a lffHe low tor everyone, we're
proud to present .....

'9
•

.... _, I- j,,, . . I
Mon. Feb. 24 - WELCOME BACK BEACH BASH
Yllth • • The West End Glrla •
( $2 / $4 )
cash prizes for the ·b eat tan, loudest shorts
1/2 price fOOc:I nerna.

Feb. 25th n,e •Return of 1he lncredlble
• Mike Mandel •
absolutely free

Feb. 26 / 92 LUSU and
MCA Cone a rte . praeant

Sar h Mclachlan

MIKE MANDEL

In the TICA t10
plus·

llud■nt

/ t11 non

stand~up mentalist

• 1he Freakers Ball •
Open Stage Nie ) , at 1he Outpost
Feb. 27th , TOGA TOGA TOGA PARr(
cash prizes tor best Toga and the
movie Anlmal House. show , starts at 7:00pm
• Feb. 28th KAREOKE NIGHT
cash tor best performance
.-.-• .~ prizes tor every performance ---==~~
Feb. 29111 , Dance - A - 1hon
check out the Pub tor detalll

••. II
I

I
I

!
I

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Lakehead University's Student Newspaper
Volumn 41 Issue 13

Monday January 10, 2005

Waves of destruction followed by waves of support
Efforts and emotions at Lakeh~ad echo those of the global community
Asia will continue to need help as LUSU will match the donations Afex Stuart points out that there
reconstruction_efforts begin. Paul that are collected in the Outpost are students at Lakehead from
he death toll is Martin
says
the
countries
r,'Pllll!fll affected
by
approaching 150, that Canada's
000 in the wake pledge of $80
the
tsunami.
of the phenomenal tsunami that million
will
- The efforts are
hit South Asia on December 261h, be
increased
demonstrating
2004 . A dozen countries suffered this
week.
support
for
casualties. The worst damage
While
them as well as
spans Indonesia, Sri Lanka, the
massive
those
directly
India and Thailand. A staggering outpouring
affected.
number of people are in need of of aid from
T h e
aid: clean water and food, shelter governments
majority of the
and healthcare. Aid agencies face a is impressive,
members
of
geographical challenge in that they it is no more
the
Lakehead
must deliver aid to people spread impressive than
University
over so many areas, all at the same the generosity
Tamil Students
time. The United Nations has being displayed
Association are
called for an unprecedented relief by
smaller
from Sri Lanka
effort from the world community. groups
and
and many have
The World Health Organization individuals
relatives living
has warned that unless clean around
the
there. It is one
Here
drinking water is delivered soon, world.
of the countries
Lakehead
the number of dead could double at
hardest hit by the
aid
due to Q_utbreaks of disease. several
tsunami. Nesan
At
an
international catnt)ai1ms are
·"
conference in Jakarta last week, underway, and
LUTSA. e says
over $3 billion (U.S.) was pledged more are being
e Multicultural centre bas set up a tabl~with info~tfo~_regatding_ tb¢ that the disaster•
to the UN coordinated relief 'planned. The
relief effort following the tragic tsunami m Asia
is emotionally
effort.
The participants~ also Multicultural L_.......:.......:_:_=.:~-------=--------------" draining
for
decided to create a tsunami early Center has set
and this money will go to the Red those with connections to the
warning system in the Indian up a table, adorned with flow~rs Cross. The federal government affected areas. It is hard to deal
Ocean. The global pledges show and
displaying
information will match donations made by with because "it's your home."
remarkable generosity, but there about the relief effort, where Canadians to Canadian Non- When asked about their reactions
are concerns that in the long run those passing by can make Governmental
Organizations to the disaster, some members
countries will not deliver on their donations to the Red Cross. responding to the disaster. LUSU of the association respond that
Others have placed a Vice President Student Issues, their relatives are sa1e,
" but the
promises. Although the "1ocus
now is on immediate aid, South collection box in the Outpost.
Amy Hadley

T

Helping Hungry Students

disaster has dealt a hard blow
to a country already grappling
with two decades ,of civil war.
One student tries to express how
he felt when he learned of the
damage. Searching for the words
he shakes his head and looks
down. The effect of the news
on Piratheepan Pooranampillai
was such that he considered
missing the first week of school.
Members
of
the
Association worry that a'id is being
distributed unevenly in Sri Lanka.
They are concerned that Tamil
areas have not been receiving
enough attention because the
government is concentrating
relief efforts in governmentcontrolled areas. Some members
have been involved in relief
efforts in the greater Toronto
area over the holidays, working
with the Tamil Rehabilitation
Organization. This organization

~hrbb·~ee\\w'~~ was
raising for the Sri Lankan victims
of the tsunami. He emphasizes
that the University community
should work together to help
all of the South Asian victims,
and to raise awareness of the
disaster, adding that people will
continue to require long-term
relief. He hopes to hold a prayer
meeting in the Agora next week.

ssue

LUSU Food Bank holds successful raffle
and a television and DVD player.
Dallalbashi said that the
Food Bank will be looking into
On Tuesday, November
buying gift certificates for groce~es
30'\ just one day before students
to give to students in need, allowmg
finished their classes and began to
students to select
depart for home to
their own food. The
enjoy their holiday
Food Bank •will, of
break, the Lakehead
course, continue to
University
provide, and accept,
Alumni Bookstore •
non-perishable food
was host to an
items for students.
amazing
display
Dallalbashi
of generosity. The
thanked all those that
bookstore was filled
participated, either by
with hopeful people
donating the prizes,
as the annual LUSU
or by buying tickets.
~~~~
lli~~~held. Over $5000
important saying "It is
was raised which
important to improve
will go towards
this love between all
providing food for
students. It shows
students in need
how civilized we
through out the year.
are, that we can
,
00
A m O n g L.......:;;,..._ _ _ _ __!!!::.±~~~=-=~--------' care so much about
those in attendance
Prizes included Lakehead each other and be so generous."
were the LUSU executive and clothing, gift certificates from
All those in attendance had
University President Fred Gilbert. various businesses around town, to agree that this was definitely a
Grant Walsh, Executive Director an ·mp3 player, a digital camera great way to start the festive season.
of University Services and Zafer

Rob Romboutsl Argus

I

I

Dallalbashi, LUSU Food Bank
Coordinator, presided over the event,
and both individuals expressed their
thanks to all those that attended and
all those that purchased tickets.

News: Television Stolen •
from ATAC
Pg. 2
Feature: Dangerous Plane
Pg. 8-9
&amp;E: 2004 'concert ~eview
Pg.11

Sports: Canada's Juni~rs
ake Gold
Pg. 13

�2

January

News

10, 2005

Lakehead kicks off its 40th Anniversary!
Heather Ives/ Alumni
Relations

Welcome back and
Happy New Year! Did you
know that 2005 marks the
40 th anniversary of Lakehead
University? It was a beautiful
summer day back in 1965
when the Lakehead University
Act was given Royal Assent
UNIVERSITY
by the Lieutenant Governor
of Ontario and Lakehead
University w.as established. ""'ra""
:_IIIJ!,'!l!e""b=ead=-i=U=,nr=
-.=¥=ers=
_ "'"ity•-- ""is•ce""
- =eb""
. -~=its==4'!!
_i)lh!""'I
_
1- =m•tin•
The
Alumni
anJriversacy bl !OOS; Melp kick off the
Association, along with the festivities jn the A:gPlQ.,.,On laiiuary 17th at
campus community, invites
n9QP
you to join the celebratory
th
festivities throughout the
the 40 Anniversary Campus
year. Make sure to take part in Kick-off on Wednesday, January

Lakehea

12th , 2005, at noon in the
Agora.
This awesome
celebration
will
feature
free cake and refreshments.
And you just never know
what else you might win by
showing up! To find out more
about the 40th Anniversary
celebrations
check
out
www.lakeheadualumni.ca/
40years

Take your de~ to a
whole new level of SUCCNS.
All« .lilll l,ro l'tllll!\1ffl, wu'I bt ..iblr k • ~rca•
kb.1«bft;lt:, dill• .ud ffialt . . .'d la• l'1 itl!!' l!ioabtaii

----~rn.
Hunihtr, .. f"",lPlf(' ~ fuf r ,t't11corul ~nJIIOOf
I&lt;.\
ro&lt;111 t,- tb,c, Eh1man flc;ttmm J',l"(•kNtoo4'
~l.J1f.m.ii0aatitt1Hkl~caM J1\. fitSM}..!,a.1.Ll/$f

P ,f wfto.r~rlr

All 40th Anniversary inquiries
can be directed to
Heather Ives
Office of Alumni Relations
Tel 346-7784
40years@lakeheadu.ca

it.-0!'..'.ii.hii!'!lllt' -

t i ' • ~

..,,

.i,m,Jrr,tl Aetmo,~~~-lll

•"""Mn l'A~

Seating is UmftecH~

a

.HUMBER
llle llu8lneD Sd'-IOOI
"'"'~;9a

-ATAC building brazenly robbed
Tom Peotto/Argus

At 4:45 pm on December
3, 2004, a plasma flatscreen
television was stolen from
the ATAC, validating the idle
comments of many regarding the
ease of thieving the building's
many electronic endowments.
Security camera footage
shows a tall Caucasian male
in a black jacket circling and
inspecting the television for
several minutes on December 1st .
A shorter Caucasian male in a blue
jacket and wearing a red-and-white
(or brown-and-white) trucker cap
circles and inspects the television
on December 2nd . The next'day,
December 3'\ video footage shows
he returns, wearing the same
clothes, dismantles the television
from its attachments, wraps it
in a black or green garbage bag,
and leaves the room with it under
his arm. Footage from another
camera, in the hallway shows
him leaving the building with
the television still under his arm.
The theft was discovered
the following Monday, and
copies of the footage have been
given to tne Thunder Bay Police

you

:ve any-m orm on regar,

g e e o a
~

Department. When asked if the
footage would be made more
readily available, head of security
Jerry Murray said, "That's been a
recommendation, and I understand

• . p asnm;~en om - - ~

it's possible that it will be made
available to everyone online."
"In my opinion," he continued,
"the video is sufficient that people
who know those involved would

Construction site fire nothing serious
Manager for the NOSM job, and caught fire. "Unfortunately
elaborated. "It's a lunch trailer," this time of year the heaters are
At approximately 8: he said over the phone, "which running continuously.
Luckily
20 pm on Tuesday, January 4'\ had an office on one side - the we were notified of it in time."
2005, smoke was sighted from Electrical Subcontractor's - which
When asked if the brief
a trailer at , the - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - -..... blaze would pose any
51
construction site
·s hindrance to the project,
C)
for the Northern
he replied, "It doesn't
Ontario School of
c affect the job at all. The
f'.1edicine. Security
Superintendent
was
responded rapidly
looking at [trailer] rental
and called the fire
places
this
morning
department,putting
for a new one. This
ouf the fire before
one was bought, but is
major
damage
salvageable. Hopefully
•could occur to the
it can be repaired."
site, said Security
Mr. Moulson 's
Services Manager
statements put an end to
Jerry
Murray.
office speculations about
However,
the possible cause of the
he added that the
~ .._
_......,.,,,_ fire . Forestry student Matt
inside of the trai ler,
Merkins was vindicated
recent fire on campus will not affect the completion date fo
which was owned
the Northern Ontario School of Medicine
in his prediction, "It was
by Tom Jones
a cold night, and I bet the
Construction, had
fortunately wasn't affected." In
heaters probably caught
been "extensively damaged." the fire at the trailer's other end, fire.
That's my professional
Security was not considering the however, tools and hard hats opinion."
Fellow
forestry
incident suspicious, but "we have ("nothing major") were lost in student Dave Guise was left in
yet to determine the exact cause." the flames. It was Mr. Moulson 's the dust for his unsubstantiated
Dave Moulson, Tom suspicion that, while unattended, suggestion of someone "smoking
Jones' Chief Estimator and Project something fell on the heater the reefer" causing the fire.
Tom Peottol Argus

!

1----------------- --------~

• ·_ •-

o you

- ·~,these \_WQJllen?
be able to recognize them."
With that in mind, he
adds that a $500 reward will
be offered for information
leading to the recovery and/or

arrest/conviction of the culprits.
To the question of
whether there are any case leads
apart from the video, Mr. Murray
replied, "No. Nothing has been
provided to me by the police.
It's their investigation because
of the amount of the theft." The
television was valued at around
$5,000 and if caught, the suspects
could be charged with grand
theft. As to whether security
would be making any changes,
particularly regarding security in
the ATAC building, he responded,
"There are no changes we plan
to make to security. That's up
to someone higher than me."
Good news for amateur
actors, though: Mr. Murray said
the possibility existed of the case
being put on Crimestoppers, a local
news .segment where crimes are
re-enacted through dramatization.
Anybody
with
information regarding the theft
can contact Crimestoppers at
623-8477, the Thunder Bay
Police Department at 6841200, or LU Security at 3438569.
Callers are under no
obligation to identify themselves
and will remain anonymous.

�_ f
...

Argus

News

Volunteers needed:
fundraising for Tsunami Aid
Relief
Ashliegh Gehl

The
Multicultural
Centre, located in the tunnels
between LUSU and the Gender
Issues Centre, has set a goal of
raising $5,000 for the victims
of the earthquake and tsunami
that recently devastated thirteen
countries. Lakehead has over
6,000 students; if everyone
donated a dollar this goal could
be reached. In order to make this
a reality, the Multicultural Centre
is looking for volunteers that will
help fundraise; so your thoughts,
your hands, and your passion are
needed. If you would like to help
with this project, please visit the
center anytime between Monday
and Thursday from 8:30am to 4pm.
If you do not have time
to help fundraise, there will be
donation box~s all over campus.
These boxes can be found at
LUSU, the Outpost, the Study,
Tim Horton's, and in the secretary
offices of your faculty. If you
do not feel comfortable donating
in the boxes, please visit the
international Red Cross website

(http://www.redcross.org/donate/
donation-form.asp) to donate
online. If you think that you
cannot afford to donate at this
take, take into consideration the
words of Anne Frank, "No one has
ever become poor from giving."
However, if you cannot donate
money, there are other goods that
are greatly needed; such as clothing,
shoes, and building materials.
On Wednesday, January
12th, there will be an open mic night
starting at about 8pm in the Study.
At this event, donations of any kind
are welcoine; every contribution,
whether it is educating one another
on the disaster, or donating time,
money, and needed materials,
makes a significant difference.
Sometime during the day, perhaps
during a break between classes,
visit the friendly faces at the
Multicultural Centre to lend a
hand, share your ideas, or keep
up to date on up coming events.
On that final note, here are some
words from Winston Churchill:
"We make a living by what get, but
we make a life by what we give."

January 10, 2005

3

Alpha Program coming to Lakehead
Tom Peotto/ Argus

sure if students could afford welcome each other's ideas, and
that. I'd see after the first night if talk things out." Since the content
..... The Alpha Program. students wanted to do a potluck." of the videos was tailored to be
What exactly is it? Is it alphabetTheAlphaprogrambegan compatible with the •differing
related? These and many other "in the late '70s or early '80s" in stances of various denominations,
questions will be answered later the Anglican Church with Nicky other denominations have been
this month, when Bachelor of ,----------,,,,,..--------. picking up the Alpha course
Education student Anthony
since it began. When a11ked
Pasqua begins the program here
if the discussions were
atLakeheadUniversity. Abrief
'interfaith',
Mr.
Pasqua
discussion with him was both
replied, "Anyone's welcome.
interesting and informative.
It's basically people sharing
Mr. Pasqua has taken
their ideas and opinions."
ministry classes, and plans to
On the subject of his
be a pastor, "but I don't have
own
denomination,
Mr.
an actual certificate." He had
Pasqua described himself as
planned to begin the course on
"a follower of Jesus. At home
January 4th , but cannot book
I go to a , Roman Catholic
a room until January 9th since
and a Pentecostal church."
teachers must book rooms for
The ten-week course
their winter classes before
concludes with a "holy spirit
clubs. "It's already classed
weekend", an outing "which
as a club for legality purposes;
describes His aspect in our
LUSU is just waiting for the
lives." Attending the course
teachers to book their rooms,
is free, a matter which LUCF
and this way we '11 have a room.
was relieved to clear up.
Obviously I'll need equipment Do you have questions aboutyourfaitlt? For any further questions,
and stuff to show the videos." The ~l ·ha Pr&lt;1
• ma; • be able to hel
such as the s~ date of
The course is slated
the course, those interested
to run at night, preferably after the Gumbel, an atheist lawyer turned
Anglican pastor. Each session in can contact Mr. Pasqua at
dinner hour, and will be around an the ten-week period will begin apasqua@lakeheadu.ca. For any
hour and a half on Tuesday nights.
further information on the course,
"The Alpha course has a dinner, by watching videos hosted by
Gumbel to "provoke discussion, check out www.alphacanada.org.
then discussion, but I wasn't

Update from the GIC
Shannon Cruickshank/ GIC
Coordinator

It feels great to be back
- the new term brings with• it a
renewed sense of optimism and
energy. Here are a few things in the
works at the Gender Issues Centre.
Button
Day
Last year's Coordinator
of the Gender Issues Centre,
Colleen Shaver, has left a button
maker in her wake. Buttons are
a cheap and easy way to make a
message clear and visible. Bring
your thoughts and expressions
to the Gender Issues Centre on
Friday, January 14th at noon, and
create a button or six. The 14th
also happens to be a Fearless
Friday. Fearless Fridays offer
desserts, chocolate and otherwise,
in honour of Body Image month.
Body Image month is a campaign
that encourages everyone to
celebrate their natural body sizes.
The Shirt on Your Back
Inspired by a committed
activist
wearing
a
rather

provocative shirt on Buy Nothing always provides a welcoming
Sex
Topic
Day, we have organized a DIY atmosphere.
On Monday,
Every month the GIC
(Do It Yourself) t-shirt day. We January 24th Turning Points, a film spotlights a healtby sex and
will provide as many supplies about eating disorders, will be sexuality topic. January's topic
as we can, including t-shirts and screened in The Study at 7:00pm is contraception and reproductive
you bring your positive-living followed by facilitated discussion rights. As you know, a little
beliefs and creativity. Everyone - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - , planning goes a long way when
is invited to create a t-shirt.
engaging in a sexually active
The activities will begin at 12:
lifestyle. The GIC will supply
00 noon on Friday, January
information, based on research
21 st and continue all afternoon.
and resources provided by
Desserts will be provided.
•
the Society of Obstetricians
About
Your
and Gynecologists of Canada,
Body,
and
Your
Image
about the many contraceptives
January is Body Image
available. Male and female
month. Please attend any or
condoms are the best performers
all of the following activities:
when it comes to protecting
On Monday, January 17th at 7:
yourself against most Sexually
00pm Dr. Pam Wakewich will be
Transmitted Infections and
offering a discussion group in The
HN (the exceptions are herpes

NA

! !~::;!~
0

~~:ie:~:!i~7it
CQme &lt;Wwn to tbe .@fc on·Fr-f&lt;tay~
~:!i!!P;;~vi!:: ~::d~~~~:::
14th
a free Tae Kwon Do session in hnUQ1¥
to.make your own button$ to students through the Flavour
the Fieldhouse on Wednesday,
opportunities. Don't forget that
of the Week program. Each
January 19th. at 7:00pm. Tae every Friday there will be desserts week we fill and refill a basket
Kwon Do is an exhilarating art in the Gender Issue Center. of flavoured condoms for your
form that places an emphasis on Self-defense, male discussion convenience. This week's flavour
respect, fitness, and discipline. groups, dance, and yoga dates is Mango.
Please remember
Don't be shy, Master Seung are soon to be announced. that condoms and other barrier

methods of contraception are not
guaranteed methods of preventing
unplanned oreimanc.v. hut thPv c~n
be'useoin comtnnatton to-praetteesafer sex for double protection.
Women
in
Science and
Engineering
On Saturday, January l 5th
at 7:00pm, women in mathematics,
engineering and the sciences are
invited to a stress busting evening
of cosmic bowling. The games
will take place at Mario's bowl,
carpooling will be available. So far
the Women in Math, Engineering
and Sciences Gatherings have
proven to be light-hearted and
tones of fun.
Newbies are
always welcome. See you there.
Open
Meeting
All are welcome to join
an open meeting on Thursday,
January 20th at 5:00pm. A game
plan for the winter term will be
presented for review as well as
ideas for speakers, workshops,
activities,
events
etc ...
In the meantime, welcome
back, stay warm, and have fun.

"Mayor" of Baghdad assassinated in the street
Jordanian terrorist Abu Musab
al-Zarqawi, whom the CIA claims
Ali al-Haidari, governor is linked to Al-Qaeda, claimed
of Baghdad province • and responsibility for the attacks.
• While passing through
nominal mayor of Baghdad,
was assassinated while riding Hurriyah, one of Baghdad's
in a three-vehicle convoy in poorest neighbourhoods,
althe streets of the capital on Haidari 's convoy was ambushed
Tuesday, January 4th, 2005. from several directions by
Mr. al-Haidari, father of gunmen who opened fire on their
three and a former air-conditioning bulletproof cars. Six bodyguards
repairman, had survived two were also killed.
His chief
previous attempts on his life. bodyguard stated, "The governor
In July, he escaped a drive-by was in his armoured BMW and
shooting and in September a we were i:\} two other cars. Our
roadside bombing took the lives of convoy was moving in Hurriyah
two of his bodyguards. In separate and they came from different
Internet postings the followers of • directions and opened fire at us."
Tom Peotto/Argus

Hours before, in western
Baghdad, a bomb-laden truck
drove into a police checkpoint
and was detonated in the Green
Zone, the location of the U.S.
Embassy
and the
interim
government's headquarters. This
explosion occurred right next
to the Iraqi National Guards
barracks, where the interim
government's paramilitary forces
are trained. The explosion killed
six people and wounded 40.
Attacks have intensified
in recent months as militants
attempt to undermine the
provisional government and the
upcoming elections, slated for

Sunday, January 30th • On Monday,
January 3111, insurgents caused an
explosion outside Prime Minister
Ayad Allawi's party headquarters,
killing three and injuring 25. Like
Allawi, al-Haidari was targeted
for his cooperation with American
forces.
Since last summer's
official transfer of power to interim
government by the Americans,
al-Haidari was the most senior
official to be assassinated.
Government
officials
are finally admitting that the six
central and northern provinces
with a Sunni Muslim majority (the
minority under Saddam Hussein)
have near-daily outbreaks of

violence. Speaking on conditions
of anonymity, a senior U.S.
Embassy official in Baghdad told
the press, "The war's worse, the
insurgency's worse... This is not
going to be a short fight. Nobody
should think it is." Conditions
have deteriorated to the extent
that Prime Minister Allawi, who
told Washington three months
ago that 15 of Iraq's 18 provinces
were safe to visit, now refers to
the situation as "our catastrophe."
Sources: theage.com.au,
telegraph.co.uk,
news.scotsman.com, seattletimes.
nwsource.com

�4

January

Argus
Room UC2014B
Lake head University
Thunder Bay. Ontario
P7B 5E1
Phone : (807) 344-6911
Fa x: (807) 343-8803
E-Mail : argus@lakeheadu.ca

Staff
Rob Rombouts
Editor-in-Chief
arguseditor@lakeheadu.ca

Doug Diaczuk
Production Manager

James Gallant
Sr. News Editor
argusnews@lakeheadu.ca

Tom Peotto
Jr. News Editor
Angie Valente
Ans &amp; Entenainment Editor
argusart@lakeheadu.ca

George Lister
Features Editor
argusfeatures@lakeheadu.ca

Conrad Kaczorowski
Sports Editor
argussports@lakeheadu.ca

Dave Guise
Photo/ Graphics Editor
argusphotos@lakeheadu.ca

Jennifer Cameron
Web Master

Megan Savage
Advertising Manager
argusads@lakeheadu .ca

Jenn Cudmore
Copy Editor

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Circulation Manager
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be

subm 1IIL'd via e-mail or

in pcr,011 111 thL' _;\rgus ol'ficc (preferably
on disc).

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make si.\ co111ributio11s annually.

Dead-

lines arc Thursdays at 4:30 pm.
1\rgus is a non-profit organization published lw the Lakchcad Universitv Student
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i'vlc1nlwrship i.s opc·n to ;111v

s1udc·11I al l.akl'11c•;1d UniVL·rsm.

C'11111-

1llc'nl;Irv ;111d Fd 11 &lt;111;,I I11 c·ss;Igc·.s arc· !he·
,,p111iP11 Pl.the ;1utlhn :111d do IwII1ccc·s,;I11h 1c·pI,·,,·IIt I.USU. iilllSL' ,,!'this p11hlic;1tiPll. m I ;1h·hc;1d U11i1c-r,itv. Thi, p;Ipc·I
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I ditnr i11 (il1c·i'

Argus

News

10, 2005

Opinions differ regarding accessibility to Ontario
Universities
Melissa Prout/ Argus

A recent study on the
cost of college and university
education says that despite more
than doubling of tuition fees and
tripling of student debt in the last
IO years, access to post-secondary
education has not been affected.
Released this
past
September, the study entitled
The Price of Knowledge:
Access and Student Finance in
Canada, combines existing and
original research to examine
key issues surrounding student
access to post-secondary studies.
Over the past IO
years, tuition has increased
by 76 percent with an average
student debt of $21,000. For
Canadians from low-income
backgrounds, fee increases make
it progressively more difficult to
overcome the existing obstacles
to a post-secondary education.
However, according to the report,
these rapidly rising tuition fees
and increased needs for student
loans have not had a significant
impact on students' accessibility
to Canadian universities. The
study reveals that university
enrolment has increased by
more than 20 percent in the last
five years alone, while average
annual tuition costs and debt load
have climbed. Sean Junor, one
• of the study's authors, believes
that barriers keeping students
from pursuing post-secondary
education are more than just
rising tuition fees. He cited
higher admission requirements, as
well as social and cultural costs.
Several
student
leaders and student groups
have criticized the report for
minimizing the importance of
tuition on accessibility. Joel
Duff, former Ontario chairperson
of the Canadian Federation of

Students, is concerned about
the accuracy of the study. "By
denying the negative impact
of increasing tuition fees and
soaring student debt on students
from middle and lower socioeconomic backgrounds, the
Foundation - i~ providing an

study, following up 1995 data,
resulted in an increase from
23 to 36 percent of students
who cited financial reasons
for not attending university.
The authors used two
factors to determine changes
in overall access to education:

This study, recently released by the Millennium Scholarship
Foundatio11 suggests that increased tuition costs does not affect
eost-secondar_y enrollment levels
alibi for a further deterioration
in access to higher education."
Liam Arbuckle, the
national director of the Canadian
Alliance of Student Associations,
agrees with Duff. His biggest
concern is with the antiquated
data, noting that many of the
statistics used in the report
date as far back as the 1980s,
before most of the major tuition
increases and the deregulation
of many programs. A 2000

the number of people who
are attending school and the
demographics of those people.
Overall, the study found that
greater numbers of young
people are attending university,
with the largest percentage
increase occurring in families
from the middle-income range.
Arbuckle states that
there is a misunderstanding
that "just because the number
of students attending university

is increasing does not mean
there is no problem with
students being able to afford
university."
Duff compares
paying for education with paying
for groceries. "People do not
stop eating just because they
have no money." He points out
that more and more students
are realizing that they must go
to university, despite limited
financial resources, in order to
earn a middle-class • income.
Recent
Statistics
Canada research points out
that today, 85% of all families
desire post-secondary education
for their children; however, less
than 20% of those from lower
socio-economic
backgrounds
will
attend
university.
According to Provost
Shirley Neuman, the report
underscores what univers1t1es
already know. "It is important
to note that while 90 percent
of families • expect to qualify
for government loans, in
reality only half receive them."
Student leaders have
argued that there is a much
greater need for governments to
take meaningful steps to reduce
tuition fees, create a system of
up-front needs-based grants,
an&lt;;! restore education funding.
The
• study
was
conducted by the Canada
Millennium
Scholarship
Foundation, established in I 998
by Parliament with a ten-year
mandate to improve access to
post-secondary education. Most
of the foundation's $2.5 billion
endowment is directed towards
providing approximately $289
million per year in grants to
undergraduate
students
in
Canada with financial need.
The full report can
be accessed at www.mill
enniumscholarships. com.

Work opportunities in International Development.
in El Salvador I was given
responsibility far beyond that
"What are you going
which I had hoped for, learning
to do with your life boy?" The
by doing was definitely the name
Graduate Dustin Hoffman smiles
of the game. I was responsible
nervously, praying that he won't
for managing a diagnostic project
end up working in asphalt like
for a rural women's cooperative,
the well intentioned but some
I wrote grant
what frightening buffoon
applications
to
demanding answers to that
CIDA, prepared
big question. Well, I am no
development
Mrs Robinson but I do have
plans based on
a suggestion for those of you
my own research
interested in gaining unique
and
organized
(and paid) work experience
, a
international
in International Development.
conference
on
The
Canadian
community
International
Development
commercialisation
Agency (CIDA) in partnership
to name but a
with a number of nonfew of the areas
governmental development
in which I have
organizations
provides
_.__.._ gained experience.
graduates with the opportunity
lfyou are looking for a swmnerjob, thihk:about'
I
was
to spend 6 months working
looking l,eyonn U1tto~ b0rders to assist with
also
provided
abroad as part of the Youth
·international development
with plenty of
Internship Program (YIP) . .._______________________, practical support
Laura Butler

. Th~ program encompasses a
broad spectrum of postings
from HIV educators and youth
workers through sports, to
rural
development
project
management, and an equally
varied group of infield partner

organisations;
governrnental,
trans-governrnental,
private
and
•
non-governmental.
I have just returned
from 6 months working as an
Assistant Project Manager in
El Salvador with a local non-

governmental
organization
(NGO) CORDES. My internship
was arranged by SalvAide; an
Ottawa based NGO that works
on issues of economic and social
development in El Salvador.
During my posting

from SalvAide and CORDES
during ~y internship, be it
language training or finding
an apartment to rent, I was
met with flexible and practical
assistance wherever I turned.
As well as gaining

specific work skills I benefited
enormously from the actual
experience of living in El
Salvador, working with my
colleagues in Spanish, living
alongside my Salvadorian friends,
being welcomed into the homes
of those CORDES works with in
the countryside, learning about El
Salvador from those who live it.
The
CIDA
Youth
Internship
Programme
is
open to unemployed or under
employed Canadian university
graduates under 30 years of
age.
Though Interns come
from a variety of backgrounds
and academic disciplines, all
have a demonstrated interest
in
development
issues;
applications for the next session
will be posted on the SalvAide
website
www.salvaide.net
I enjoyed my work with
SalvAide and CORDES and loved
my busy Salvadorian style social
life. Simply put, I had a great
experience both professionally
and personally, and with the
work experience I have gained,
hopefully that career in asphalt
will remain just a suggestion.

.

I

�News

Argus

January

10, 2005

5

Lakehead University welcomes politicians from all levels of govemmen~
Rob Rombouts/Argus

While many students
were studying away, or rushing
to finish those papers before the
dreadful deadlines, numerous
Lakehead students welcomed
federal New Democratic Party

new push to gain youthful support,
however, the party leader agreed
to meet with Lakehead's own NDP
club, the LUNDP, and make a
presentation for interested students.
Layton disc_ussed many
issues that were of interest to
Canadians at large, and students

Federal NIDP leader Jack,Layt&lt;&gt;n address a crowd of students in The
Stud
leader Jack Layton to The Study
on Friday, December 3rd , 2004.
Layton was in Thunder
Bay, and had just come from
delivering an address at the
Victoria Inn. As per the party's

in particular. The predominant
themes
of Layton's
short
presentation and the subsequent
question and answer period were
the relations between Canada and
the United States, the state of the

environment and the challenges
facing Canadian students. "If
enough of us make a little bit of
a difference, a big change can
happen." _ Layton touched on
student debts; and the 'brain drain'
phenomenon, citing both as proof
that the Canadian government
should invest more money
into post-secondary education.
Layton ended his address
with a message of strength for
students trying to make their
communities, their nation and
their world a better place. "The
solutions are there.
They're
exciting. You're the ones that
are going to make them happen."
On January 7'\ the
Lakehead Young Liberals held
their_first fundraising dinner, with
such guests as MP Ken Boschoff
and MPP Michael Gravelle.
While the event was not as
well attended as Young Liberal
President James Bowie had hoped,
those present were enlightened
with a number of speeches.
Nathan Hewitson, of
the Lakehead Young Liberals,
spoke of the importance of youth
being involved in politics. Fadi
Dawood, Vice President Finance
of the Lakehead Young Liberals
spoke of the glory of democracy,
reflecting on his time growing

up in Iraq, stating that one can
really understand the ·'importance
of democracy when you live
m a country without freedom.
MPP Gravelle stressed
the
importance
of
youth
involvement in politics. Gravelle
stated that through the youth •

55-Year-Old puts wolf in headlock
Tom Peotto/ Argus

A uranium-mill worker
owes his survival of a New Year's
Eve wolf attack to knowledge of
proper winter dress and application
of
wrestling
techniques.
Fred Desjarlais, 55, had
completed his shift at Cameco
Corporation's Key Lake uranium
mill, 640 km north of Saskatoon,
and was eager to prepare for New
Year's. At7pm,hehadtwooptions:
either wait for the shuttle bus, or
travel on foot to the camp three
kilometers away. He chose to jog.
Suddenly, he heard a noise behind
him and saw a wolf "limping"
towards him from a ditch.
Describing the wolf as
having "a big mouth and a big
head," he later said the wolf "was
taunting me, (walking) in a circle
around me. I looked around real
quick and thought, 'I hope he's
alone."' His attempts to scare
the beast away proved fruitless
when it lunged at his head. He
dodged that attack ("That's when
I knew he meant business,"), and
another one, but then the wolf bit
his shoulder. As he was wearing
several layers of clothing, he only
suffered severe bruises. The wolf
then bit him, as the Canadian
Press put it, "twice in the pelvis."
Man and wolf both fell

to the ground and got back up.
Luckily, Desjarlais seized an
opportunity, leaped on the wolf's
back, and put it in a headlock.
"I pulled him down the way
you would take down cattle
--------------,

Fred Desjarlais shows off his
wounds after wrestling a wolf on
New Years' Eve
(for roping) and I dropped onto
his head, pinning him there."
Fortunately it didn't tum into a test
of endurance- 30 or 40 seconds
later, the shuttle bus passed by,
and several of his co-workers
chased the wolf into the bush.

Cameco's Key Lake
Security Officer, Kimm Barker,
called Mr. Desjarlais "a remarkable
man," and said the wolf"wasn't a
very smart wolf because of all
the people it could have picked,
it chose one of the strongest."
Speaking to the press
while recuperating at home
in Saskatoon, Mr. Desjarlais
summarized his dramatic ordeal:
"I don't know what came over
me or how I did it. All I know
is I had his head and I wasn't
letting go until someone came to
help me." He felt no bitterness
towards the wolf: "He wasn't a
young, healthy one. If he was,
he wouldn't have been there. He
wouldn't have done what he did.
It was just an older wolf that was
doing what he had to do to _survive
and I just reacted, thank God,
the way I did and survived it."
Unprovoked wolf attacks
are extremely rare in North
America, with only a handful of
documented instances. In those
cases, the assailant is usually
rabid, starving, or a wolf-dog
hybrid possessing the dog's
blase attitude towards humans.
Source: Canadian Press, National
Post

Argus Online
http://argus.lakeheadu.ca

President James Bowie thanked
everyone for attending the event
and gave special thanks to those
that spoke in support of the club.
In all, these two events
gave students a chance to· learn
more about the democratic
system of Canada and highfighted

On January 7th, the Lakehead Young Liberals' held their inaugural
~pasta dinner with guests.Ken Boschoff and Mi,chael'Gravelle
associations, political parties can
learn what the priorities of the
party should be in the future and
he thanked everyone for attending
and specifically thanked all the
members of the Young Liberals.
Finally, Lakehead Young Liberals

some options that students, as
young voters, had. Further, they
provided the chance for students to
understand how they can become
involved in the political system
to change things for the better.

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www.buslness.humberc:.on.ca

�6

January

Argus

Letters

10, 2005

Dear Editor,

The Bowater of the Future?
The Bowater pulp and
paper plant here in Thunder Bay
is a major employer and major
producer of revenue for the city
and I hope Bowater continues its
business here for many, many years
and many generations to come
In 2004 Bowater employs
1,084 positions, uses about 180
megawatts of electricity, grinds
Boreal trees to make paper,
newsprint, cardboard and pulp
mostly for export to our brothers
and sisters in the United States
of
America.
At the moment Ontario and
Canada are harvesting our forests
faster than nature can re-grow them
so we have an economy based on
an unsustainable reality. With the
Kyoto Protocol becoming effective
in early 2005 the international
community is signalling that our
current energy systems are not
working. I would agree. I would
also suggest that our material
systems are not working either. All
material that surrounds us including
paper from Bowater is designed
for one use before going to the
landfill. The city of Thunder Bay

has room for about another 20 years
I would like to clarify times that people asked what our be affected by these decisions,
of garbage. What happens after whytherewereESSexecutiveand intentions were, and I can perhaps we decided to get as many ESS
that? How do we grow a culture ESS members present at the past summarise them as being simply members present as possible,
1
for our children based on 20 years? AGM. I don't think " ... to state· we d"d
not want a sma11 group so that they could decide if
Imagine the Bowater of their opinion that to [sic] much of people deciding on issues that that's what they wanted for the
the future. The actual factory itself political correctness may not be affect the entire campus. In fact, ESS as a club, and themselves.
The ESS is far too large
resembles the shape of Mt. McKay such a great idea" is accurate. it seems that's why everyone was
with giant stepped terraces with
I called upon ESS there. We also didn't want any a group for us to have a 100%
plenty of windows. The plateau members to come out and voice further controls or processes that agreement on anything. I think
roof, like Mt. McKay, is a growing themselves in the form of voting might inhibit the free operation it's important to acknowledge
Boreal forest. The factory employs on motions that were to be of the ESS, or any other club, or that within the Engineering
3000 people in continual labour considered. I did indeed have a the Outpost, or anything else for student community, there are all
using the abundant energy from list of motions that would have that matter. Given the nature of races, all genders, all ages, and
the sun. .These employees are affected us in one way or another. the AGM, where any student or of course all manner of opinions.
surrounded by clean and healthy It was important that we brought group can bring fourth a motion,
material. This material that feeds as many people to the question and in light of recent events, this Sincerely,
the factory comes from the city and as possible so that whatever was a real possibility, and as long Casey McDonald
neighbouring villages in the form of happened would be in a fair as they brought enough people to President
paper, cardboard,, building supplies, manner, truly representative of back it up, it could pass and it's Engineering Student Society
carpets and furniture.
These all Lakehead University students. binding. As the executive of the
materials, because their molecules r-___T_h_er_e__w_e_re__a__fe_w_ _
E_s_s_,_a_la_rg_e_gr_o_u_p_w_h_o_w_o_u_ld_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
are designed to infinitely come
apart and go back together, flow
from the city to the factory back After getting beamed in the but apparently Friday was her face. I should state that most
to the city in a continuous cycle of head by a 'soft' puck at the my lucky night. I got blessed people aren't ignorant and make
materials for industrial production Gardens on Friday, I've decided with a puck in the face. Those a point to go down to the lower
creating huge revenue. This is the that I don't like Chuck-a-Puck. pucks aren't that soft. Softer section to throw their puck at
technical nutrient Bowater factory I've been to several Lakehead than regulation pucks, yes, but the vehicle. There are however,
of the future. What do you think? hockey games in my day and the word 'soft' doesn't do it those people (mostly those punk
have never really been a fan justice. Maybe they're 'softER' pre-teen adolescents who have
Aaron Vallejo
of the whole Chuck-a-Puck but definitely not soft. Not my no respect for anything) who
conc_ept. Literally hundreds of point. My point is, I went to a are careless asses and think it's
---J these pucks get hurled on to
hockey game and got a bleeding funny to whip their puck in to
the ice all at once, being thrown nose. 1 didn't go to the hockey the stands or just not give a crap
from everywhere in the arena. game to get a bleeding nose. I and throw it from the top row.
Anyways,I'vehadalotof'close shouldn't have to worry about Picturing myself getting hit iri
calls' when I comes to getting getting pelted with pucks the face with the puck makes me
What a nerve, and hit with one of these flying during
INTERMISSION. laugh.
It definitely made
especially coming
from
a pucks. I've seen several people Neither should the
little my
friends
laugh ... (find
Supervisor. Since he implied that get hit with the pucks in the girl in the stands who got hit in the the re&amp;): of this letter at http:
I would not be the first one to have past and have avoided it myself, face too, knocking her glasses off / / a r g u s . 1a k e h e a d u . c a) .
gone to his supervisor complaining t-----H-----,-b...:...._____:____.;:...._.::;.________::::.__:____~::.:..:...:...::..:..:..:..:.:..:__

F#*k 'Chuck-a-Puck'

--L-.-b---.---.---....:...-____d_________
1 rar1an Clf~U1atlon esk supervi. d
·
sorneeds an attltu e adjustment
I am under the impression
that the staff members at Lakehead
University are there to serve the
students, but I guess I must be
mistaken. I am a frequent user of
the library and the services they
have to offer and in all fairness
their services have been pleasantly
delivered in the past until I met the
Supervisor of the Circulation Desk.
This particular fellow is
rude, arrogant and indifferent. I
had a particular complaint and
was referred to him being that he
is- the supervisor. He happened
to be standing right there and his
response to my concern was "that's
impossible, we are not going to do
anything about it". I was taken
aback by his rude response and
let hirh know that I will go to his
supervisor to report his attitude
and his response was "go ahead,
you won't be the first one anyway."

about him, I am wondering
if student complains just go
unheard. Hello! Does anyone care?
He
gives
Lakehead
University a really bad name and
as an employee representing the
school, something needs to be
done about his pathetic attitude.
Lakehead
University
is proving to be a really
disgraceful school after all. First
it's Maxim on campus, and now
its horrible service delivery.
,- Can
Lakehead
Administration start listening to
students and quit silencing them?
WMaguaM.

•

ow

out no to the death penalty!!

To the writer of the "Bring back
the death penalty" article (Nov.
22), I feel nothing but disgust
for the way you think. There
are an astonishing number of
innocent people ' who have been
killed for crimes they did not
commit or have been sentenced
to die only later to be discovered
innocent. There is a reason why
Canada abolished the death
penalty, you know, it is because
it's a disgrace to us. We are
looked up to by other nations
for our civil and humane way
of living, unlike the U.S whose
execution rate is higher than ever.
Saying
that
"all

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murderers should • be eligible
for the death penalty" and
rehabilitation is "sissy" is not
a good example of the values
we share as a first world, civil
country. Likewise, I'm not going
to stop whining, you may have a
right to your opinion, but I have
a right to mine too, and I'm not
going to shut up about it because
you tell me too. The death
penalty was abolished in Canada
for a reason, and if you do not like
it, I suggest you move to Texas.
I'm sure you'll love it their.
We Canadians have not built
our reputation on showing our
governments power over people

or flexing our muscles, like the
wonderful nation below us has.
We help each other, not kill each
other; because that is the kind of
society we live in. People make
mistakes; it doesn't mean they
deserve to die for it. Sure, serial
killers and dangerous offenders
should never be released from
prison, but killing them is not
the answer. This is what makes
us better than the United States.
Re-instating the death penalty
is not the answer to deter future
crime ... (find the rest of this letter
at
http://argus.lakeheadu.ca)
Chris S.

�Argus

In response to
"The GIC are
Hypocrites"
(Nov 22)
I'm sorry that you feel
discriminated against with regards
to Take Back the Night. Had you
read the poster more closely and
found out the issues surrounding the
event, you would know that men
were encouraged to participate
in Take Back the Night events,
although not the walk, as it has its
own reasons for not having men
apart of it. I hope in the future you
read more carefully and thus would
know that men are not discriminated
against at this particular event,
nor did the GIC have any
intention of doing so, I'm sure.
Richella Hyde

Lutsa 50-50
draw

Letters

Outpost Food News
Well the I st half of the year
has come and gone and we made
it! We had some great specials
and a whole lot of awesome tasting
food last term for all of our friends,
guests and customers and this term
will be no different. As a matter
of fact, we are going to be testing
out some new and exciting things
this month and you all get to be
the official taste testers for the pub.
The Management team
were sitting around and talking
about new stuff ..... what should
we do? Dave told us about these
great Caesar burgers that the
Elephant and Castle used to serve.
We then took it a step _farther and
this is what we have come up with.
The
Caesar
BurgerThe meat is spiced with Caesar
goodness and parmesan cheese
and topped with mozzarella
cheese and bacon .... mmrnmmm
The Greek Burger- Spiced
with the foods from the Gods,
topped with tomato, red onion,
romaine lettuce, greek dressing,
tzatziki sauce and feta cheese ...
.. (I have had 3 in two days .. .I
am going to get fat at this rate)
The Mexican BurgerSpiced with imported treats from the
other south side .. .its like a burrito
in a bun with cheddar, topped with
salsa and sour cream. You can't go

January 10,

7

A reality check from
immature first year residence
students

wrong when you eat at the Outpost!
This rant is in rebuttal roll them at ridiculous Maxim
These awesome burgers to the letter written by Isabelle protestors. We throw oran,ges
are on sale now and don't forget Poniatowski (Nov 22). She on the lake because it is t)in.
that they transport well so you can claims that she is in a serious We pay a ridiculous sum of
take them home and eat it later field of study here at Lakehead money for food that is far below
when you are ready for a great treat. University. Yet, her vast diction reasonable standards and we
This month Bonnie will consists of such serious words become angered with our meals
be cooking up some hot soups as crap. I seriously question so we throw fruit. I dare any
and biscuits for you. This week it her seriousness towards school "mature" upper year student
will be wild rice soup and cheese if her and her colleagues spend who lives off campus to move
and garlic biscuits. (I picked the their time seriously discussing into a residence facility with a
wrong time to quit smoking .... too the state of a "man made" Residence Assistant watching
much good food around I will lake that is seriously abused over you and a House President
need to start going to the gym) by all students. I have been who does not care about their job
The winners of the $100.00 a witness to many hamburger and who quit two days ago. You
in free food goes to ... (drum roll patty "throwings" by upper year must also eat the food provided
please) ... Thomas Murray and Jason students during barbecues this by Aramark day after day. This
Tanner. We will have one more year. I guess it is not just "loser" is our life.
Carbohydrates,
draw for $100.00 in free Outpost first years on a free ride from grease, pizza and gravy are
food and the date will be Tuesday Mommy and Daddy who throw the main staples of our diet.
Feb 1/05. To participate in the objects into Lake Tamblyn. But not to fear Aramark, has
contest all you have to do is go fo1 As a first year student who is placed a popcorn machine in
breakfast lunch or supper and spend nineteen years old and who the cafeteria for all students to
$5.00 or over and put your name throws oranges onto Lake collectively dig their dirty hands
in the tub to win win win $100.00 Tamblyn I do not fit any into ... (find the rest of this letter
in free free free Outpost food! of the descriptions of Ms. at
http://argus.lakeheadu.ca)
Well I am talking way too Poniatowski 's typical orange
much and I have to go to work, thrower. My friends and I throw Toby Simpson and the Orange
but I will be back next week to oranges for the same reasons we Bandits
tell you more great food n e w s . 1 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Next Week: BIG ASS
SANWICHES! !!!!!

Dear Sir/Madame:
Hello my name is Nesan
Tharmalingam secretary of LUTSA
(Lakehead
University
Tamil
Student Association). On Nov 25/
04 our club conducted a university
That'sitfornow
wide 50/50 draw in order to raise
Cheers
funds for Sencholai Children
Welcome to 2005, a
Heidi
Charity, based in Sri Lanka.
year that could help put Canada
Sencholai
Children
on the map to be leaders in
Charity provides children who 1---------------------------➔social Change and awareness.
have lost their parents to the civil
Those of you who either
war with food, clothing, education
were graced with a lack of exams
and shelter. I am writing this
last term, or read/listen to the
email to request that the name of
news as a form of procrastinating
the winner of this 50/50 draw Ms.
from studying for your exams
Dale Barnes (VP Administration)
may have heard that the Supreme
to be published in the next issue of
Have you heard about people will then be in front of Court of Canada passed down
the Argus paper and the Community some of the new stuff going on this a panel of real judges that will their ruling on the four questions
Calendar. The total money raised term in the Post? Food, Fun and decide who will be the next posed to them on Equal Marriage.
by LUTSA on this day was MONEY MONEY MONEY!!!!! 5 people to move on to the
To summarize for you,
$233.50, out of which Ms. Barnes
th
they
found
that 1) It is under
First off lets talk cold hard finals on the 28 of February.
is the lucky winner of $116.75. cash and how you can put some
st the
Federal
Government's
There will be one l
LUTSA would like to into your pocket. The Outpost prize winner that will walk away jurisdiction to legislate marriage.
extend congratulations and best Idol is starting on Monday January with $500.00 and the second place 2) Religious institutions will
wishes to Ms. Barnes. We would lOth/05 at 9pm-lam weekly until winner will be walking away with not be required by any means
also like to thank all the Lakehead February 28 th • Every Monday night $250.00. This is no small prize. to perform same-sex marriage
University
staff,
students, 3 people will proceed to compete at Three people are -picked weekly ~eremonies, if they do not believe
workers,
and
volunteers who the semi-finals that will be held on to move to the semi-finals and to in them. 3) That the marriages
participated and donated money February 21 st. Five people from the get closer to that $500 prize. Not that have all ready taken place in
for our fundraising endeavors. night of the 2151 will go on to the only are we giving big prizes to BC, Ontario, Quebec, Manitoba,
We thank
Lakehead finals that will be held on February the winners but we are also giving Saskatchewan, Yukon, Nova
University and the entire student body 28th • Everyone is allowed to sing at smaller gifts to the three people Scotia and Newfoundland and
for their cooperation and interest. this event, even if you do not want who place weekly, nothing too Labrador are legal and binding.
to compete and you are just out for big, maybe some food vouchers 4) They did not comment on
Regards,
marriage
fun and want to sing. Just let us for here or there, maybe an whether • denying
Nesan Tharmalingam
licenses
to
same-sex
couples
know and we will take it from there. eyebrow wax, maybe a cd from
Secretary
was
a
violation
of
the
Charter
Let me tell you how CD plus, it could be bowling at
LUTSA04-05
of
Rights
and
Freedoms.
this is going to work. For the 5 Superior ... you never know. It's
All this came out on
weeks prior to the semi-finals the all about the fun and prizes on this
December
9th after parliament
patrons and your friends will be night so come out to be entertained
the judges for the night. So this or come out to entertain. We don't had adjourned for the holidays, so
means you must bring a cheering care, just come out and have fun. this break has given our MPs an
So if you are bored on opportunity to really get to know
squad to help you get to the next
Did you see something level. Each competitor will sing 2 Mondays, have a cheering crowd, where their constituents stand on
that upset you? Do you want to songs each so choose wisely. You need $500, or just need a good this issue. Parliament reconvenes
express your opinion on an issue? will have approximately 10,000 time the Outpost is the place to be. on January 31 •t, 2005 and they
Let us know. Send your letters songs to choose from. Come and
are set to address the issue at
to
argusletters@lakeheadu.ca. practice for a week or two before Good times
the opening of the New Year.
We are a student newspaper you enter if that makes you feel Great food
This is where I ask for
and as such we are a forum any better. At the end of each night Great prizes and so much more
your support. Equal Marriage
for you to voice your opinion. all contestants will come on stage on Mondays and everyday at the
is about affording the SAME
Please send your letters and the audience (by applause Outpost!
Rights that any heterosexual
by Wednesday at 5pm. Also, in and noise that is monitored with .a Cheers
couple has wlien they have lived
order to allow as many students as decimal meter) will be the judges. Heidi McNally
together for a minimum of 3
possible an opportunity to have their
years. That includes claiming
On February 215t, 15 GM Outpost
voices heard, we ask that you limit
benefits, spousal leave, pensions
your letters to three hundred words.
etc. I ask that all concerned
Any letters over three hundred
students support their fellow
words will be continued on our
Canadians by expressing their
website at http://argus.lakheadu.ca.
support for Equal Marriage

New things in the New
Year @ the Outpost

-----H--e-y______
Readers !

2005

Equality needs your help
Equal Marriage at risk

Rights by contacting their local
MP, Ken Boshcoff (623-6001
or boshcoff.k@parl.gc.ca) if
you live in Fort William or Joe
Comuzzi (807-345-4305 or
Comuzzi.J@parl.gc.ca) ff you

live in Port Arthur or your MP in
your home riding wherever that
may be (your can find out at http:
//www.equal-marriage.ca)and let
them know where you stand on
this issue as they are supposed
to be our voice in Ottawa.
I
have
explained
it in this cold bureaucratic
fashion because that is how the
government views marriage, not
Marriage, a sacrament within a
church. As I have already stated,
the Supreme Court absolved all
responsibility of any religious
institution to perform marriage
ceremonies they do not wish to.
(This already exists; the Roman
Catholic Church does not have
to marry anyone who has been
divorced.)
I understand the
religious argument that people do
not support homosexuality based
on their religious convictions
but this is about law and rights
not about religion. I understand
that not everyone is in support of
Equal Marriage but I ask that you
look as it from an Equal Rights
standpoint and put all else aside.
If you would like to
show your support more visibly,
all next week in the Agora you
can either volunteer or find
volunteers handing out buttons,
literature and petitions in support
of Equal Marriage. Please do not
hesitate to come down to Pride
Central to learn more about Equal
Marriage and discuss any issue.
ALL are welcome regardless of
sexual orientation or opinion.
Thanks for your support and
your commitment to Equal
Rights,
Richella Hyde- Pride Central
Coordinator

�8

January

I)

Argus

Feature

10, 2005

11

George Lister/Argus

It goes without saying
that this is a dangerous world we
live in. Sometimes it even seems
like the planet itself is out to get
us, a point reinforced by the deadly
tsunami that struck Southeast
Asia in late December. In fact,
natural disasters have been greater
mass-killers than any war yet
waged or terrorist act committed.
Consider the recent tsunami
which left more than 150,000
dead so far and the number still
nsmg.
By comparison, that's
more than eight times the number
of people killed so far in the Iraq
conflict, and forty-three times
the number who died in 9/11.
Tsunamis aren't the only
natural disasters out there with the
potential to cause a massive loss of
lives. Here are a few of the threats
that come from our very own
planet (and one from beyond).

N

ll

f)

(J

Sadly it can be easily argued
If earthquakes
that virus, and crisis, is
are one of the most
already here in the form of
destructive
natural
the
HIV/AIDS
pandemic.
disasters
then
HIV/AIDS is present
volcanoes run very
in the population of virtually
close behind. Actually
every country on Earth. As of
it's more like side by
2001, there were an estimated
side. Spawned by the
forty million reported cases,
same kinds of seismic
with possibly as many as another
-;. forces,
earthquakes
twenty million left unreported.
and volcanoes often
Although in western nations the
come as one package.
rate of infection has declined, the
One key difference
reverse is true for other areas,
is
that
volcanoes
Africa in particular.
Of the
can occasionally be
top ten nations with the largest
predicted.
Active
liiilllllllll'i:il
reported numbers of HIV infected
volcanoes are also,
residents, nine of them are from
_ well, more than a little
Africa. Nigeria is particularly
noticeable. The Kilauea
hard hit with more than six percent
volcano in Hawaii is
of the total population infected.
the most active in the
HIV infection alone is expected to
world, having been
drop the average life expectancy
more or less continually
in that country by more than ._______________________________. erupting since 1983, and

twenty years.
Compounding the initial quake. Also, as we saw hundreds of thousands of lives
providing not only a
the problem for African nations in the Indian Ocean last month, in recent memory. In fact most spectacular show but more than
is that most residents, or their they can spawn other horrific of the world's population lives 200 hectares of new land to the
Disease
governments, cannot afford the natural disasters like tsunamis. within a thousand kilometers of southern shore of Kilauea island.
life-extending drug cocktails
Possibly the most famous an active fault line. Since that is The more dangerous volcanoes
Infectious diseases are that have shown to be successful fault line in world is in California. the case the need to research this are the ones which appear
the greatest naturally occurring in delaying the onset of AIDS. The San Andreas Fault runs almost type of natural disaster is acute. dormant that erupt with little to
threat to human life on this planet.
Efforts
to
find
a the length of the state and has been However, despite years of study no warning. Mount St. Helens
This has always been the case vaccine are hampered due to the responsible for the worst North there remains no proven or reliable in Washington State was just
historically as well. The threat of complexity of the virus, that it American earthquakes in recorded method for predicting earthquakes, such a volcano. Although it had
pandemics like the Black Plague attacks the immune system, and history. The most damaging of let
alone
stopping
them been showing signs of activity for
(14th century, 75 million dead) the fact that, like most viruses, these was the 1906 quake that (Hollywood movie scripts aside). several months; geologists were
- - - - - - - - . struck San Francisco.
The best way to limit the caught off guard by the speed
Between the initial shock destructive power of earthquakes and size of the 1980 eruption.
and the fires caused by it is to build structures that can Ultimately debris fell over 230 sq.
almost the entire city was withstand them.
Earthquake miles, fifty-seven lives were lost,
effectively destroyed. This resistant buildings are mandatory and one town completely buried
fault line, in the worst case )n California and incorporate by the 3.7 billion cubic yards
scenario, could effective features such aS' literally being of material either ejected from
cause much of the west able to sway with the quake (in the volcano or picked up by the
coast of the United States the case of larger structures). massive landslides that followed.
to fall into the Pacific Such an approach is unfortunately The scary thing is this was a
Ocean. An earthquake of impractical for the tens of millions comparatively small eruption.
enough magnitude to cause of people who live in poorer
The most destructive
such an event would be nations also prone to quakes, so volcano in recorded history
felt as far north as Canada, their best hope lies in finding a erupted in 1815 on the Indonesian
likely causing massive workable means of pr~dicting island of Tambora. In addition
devastation in British these disasters.
As for the to the estimated 93,000 dead
Columbia.
A massive tsunamis spawned by underwater the eruption ejected enough
i . - - - - - - t quake on this fault is almost quakes, a new effort is underway ash into the atmosphere to
African children.are the group most affected by the HIV pandemic
certain to happen again, but to make early detection possible. lower the average temperature
when is anyone's guess. Even a few minutes warning could across Europe by more than two
or the influenza outbreak from it is mutating (several strains
There are other even have saved tens of thousands degrees. Two degrees might not
1918-1920 (21 million fatalities), are now known). Finding an deadlier and more active fault of lives in Asia last month. sound like a lot, but it adversely
have been mitigated somewhat by outright cure is even harder since lines in the world. Ones in China,
affected crop growth and weather
medical advances and access to medical science has had little Turkey, and India have caused Volcanos
patterns for over a year. It could
treatment, but another, mass viral luck in combating viruses by any widespread destruction and cost
still have been worse however.
pandemic, is still all too possible. means other than vaccination.
The bright spot in all
The 2003 SARS outbreak
illustrates how our modem lives the gloom is that the research
could actually contribute to the being done into HIV/AIDS has
problem rather than making such greatly increased our knowledge
an even less likely. In previous of the human immune system
such events global travel was and viruses. The research into
hardly common. Now business anti-viral drugs in particular offers
and pleasure travelers flit across the most hope for not just those
the globe daily and each of them infected with HIV/AIDS but for
could carry an infectious disease combating all forms of viruses.
to every nation they visit. For
example, SARS was carried from Earthquakes
China, to Hong Kong, to Taiwan,
•. and to Canada primarily but cases
There have been countless
were reported in a dozen other movies, television shows, and
countries. The only thing that kept novels written that use earthquakes
it from being a truly dangerous as the central plot device. It's easy
global outbreak was that SARS to understand why. Earthquakes
was relatively hard to transmiJ are some of the most dangerous
and had a low rate of fatality. If natural events on the planet and
a new strain of influenza, or worse they aren't something that can be
an easily transmitted variant of prevented or even predicted. They
an Ebola-type virus, were to also have effects reaching far
surface near a hub of global beyond the initial shock. Aftertravel, it could precipitate the shocks can last for weeks, with
The Kilauea volcano lighting 1~ the night sk:x
greatest health crisis ever seen. some being almost as strong as

�Argus

Feature

s
&lt;fl".,_,,

P-

i.\

lobbing nuclear weapons at
the object would probably be
,,. ineffective, as would landing
a craft to strategically place
explosives (sorry Bruce).
One of the more likely
solutions actually sounds
the most far out. That plan
involves sending a spacecraft
to dock with the object and
plant a small ion rocket
engine on it to make a minor

~

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4 '
ti

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'~$110:
.
...., ~~ L'-~ - -

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111°

•

Map of Yellowstone park showing the size of the caldera
A super-volcano, slang long as a decade. More studies are
for a volcano capable of an eight being done to gauge the true level
point eruption (the highest on of threat, but ho credible scientists
the scale), could have disastrous believe there is any immediate
effects on the world at large. The cause for concern (apart from
good news is that such volcanoes internet conspiracy theorists).
are thankfully rare as they can
cause worldwide climate change as Impact from Space
well as vast local devastation. The
bad news is that there's one a lot
If you've ever seen
closer to us than you might think. the movies Deep Impact or
Yellowstone
National Armageddon you know the basic
Park in Wyoming is well known idea here. Of course in real
for it's geysers of superheated life we don't have Bruce Willis
water and pools of geo-thermally ready and waiting to save the
heated water. The phenomena day, but of all possible natural
let scientists know the area was disasters this is one we might
volcanically active, but the scale actually be able to prevent.
of the Yellowstone caldera (or
Essentially outer space is
magma basin) wasn't fully known teeming with objects like asteroids
until the 1960's. The caldera is and comets. Small ones impact the
70km long and more than 30km earth on a regular basis and, thanks
wide. This more than qualifies to our atmosphere, either bum up
it for super-volcano status. before impact or are so reduced in
Geological evidence suggests size as to cause no damage. There
that this area experienced super- are far larger objects out there
volcanos at regular intervals of however and if one of them heads
approximately 600,000 years. our way we are in a lot of trouble.
The evidence also suggests that it A near earth object, or NEO, the
has been over 650,000 years since size of a garage could destroy a
the last eruption. While that in major city. One ten times that size
and of itself shouldn't be enough would leave a crater 10 km across
to make anyone nervous, there is and change the global climate for
evidence of increasing activity in years to come. One large enough
the Yellowstone caldera. Geysers to leave a 300 km crater (the largest
are erupting more frequently, the found on earth to date) would
land itself is rising (by over a likely result in the extinction
meter in some areas), and mild of almost all life on the planet.
earthquakes are being felt in the Any sizable NEO striking one of
park. Vulcanologists are split over Earth's oceans would generate
what this means. Some believe tsunamis of unbelievable force
this is an indication that the and speed. A thousand foot high
magma is rising and an eruption wall of water moving at the speed
is relatively imminent (and by of sound is not an impossibility.
imminent they mean likely to
Astronomers have been
occur in the next 1000 years). actively scouting the skies for
Othe_rs think that the changes are NEO's for decades and in recent
the result of the magma receding years have organized and begun
and being replaced by lighter a systematic and constant search
gasses, which means the area for potential threats of this
is becoming dormant.
If the nature. It is likely that we would
Yellowstone super-volcano did have years, if not decades, of
erupt with the same force it had warning before a threatening NEO
in the past it would likely render would strike Earth. That · gives
much of the United States and us a chance to actually prevent
Canada uninhabitable and lower an impact from happening.
the average global temperature by
• What we would actually
as much as fifteen degrees for as do to prevent it is less clear. Simply

January

N
change in course. If there was
enough time this plan would work
as a course change of just fractions
of a degree would be enough to
prevent the NEO from striking us.
Give a Helping Hand

With the exception of
HIV/AIDS there's not a lot you
can do to protect yourself from
any of these potential disasters.

9

10, 2005

'I,

None of them art likely to occur to
you so there's no point worrying.
Natural disasters do happen
however, and there are people
right now suffering as the result.
~f you would like to donate money
to the relief effort in Southeast
Asia please contact the local
Red Cross or Salvation Army.
'I

�1Q
)/

Argus

Editorial/Columns

January 10, 2005

A word or two
from the Editor
.

.

Happy New Year All! So
we are back to school and back
irito the swing of things. I hope
everyQDe had a relaxing break.
I'm sure that for many
people, upon seeing their friends
for the first time after Christmas,
one of the first questions asked
was "What did you get?" A
natural question I suppose.
Now, I personally asked
for nothing for Christmas.
I
did this as a protest against the

consumerism that Christmas has
become entwined with. Failing
people not spending money on
my behalf at Christmas I asked
that the money be donated to a
worthy charity so that others could
enjoy Christmas and so that the
money could be used to make the
world a better place. Sadly, both
of these requests were ignored.
Why? Because the people buying
presents for me felt it would be
unfair ifpeople around me received
gifts and I didn't ... despite the fact
that I requested no gifts. Now, I
don't mean to sound ungrateful.
I appreciate the sentiment with
which the gifts were given but
for me, the . same sentiment
could have been achieved with
no money spent, or money spent
on people that really need it.
Now, I want you to
think back and recall how many
people may have complained
about a gift they received over

the holidays. Just think about that poor to begin with. They lacked
for a second. How many people infrastructure so there is nothing
forgot that they were with family to rebuild upon. UNICEF is
or friends and that someone cared facing difficulties in its efforts
enough to go get something for to provide adequate nutrition to
them? (Okay, I know I am getting the regions children, because
into hypocrisy and contradictory for the most part these children
statements, but hear me out). The were living on inadequate food
entire season has become about supplies even before the crisis.
getting stuff. It doesn't matter
And the tsunami is
whether you want the stuff or just the most recent of terrible
need the stuff. We show we care catastrophes. The AIDS epidemic
by giving the people around us kills hundreds of thousands of
stuff. A good chunk of the stuff people each month. Civil wars
will probably never be used. and political strife lead to needless
Now, think about the causalities. The economic disparity
terrible event that occurred just of the vast majority of the world's
days after Christmas. The tsunami population leads to staggering
in Asia killed over 100,000 rates of death due to hunger
people. Disease and the stress and inadequate health supplies.
of rebuilding will inevitably
So while we in Canada
lead to more pain and death. It are complaining that we didn't
has been suggested that part of get the right C.D. or we didn't
the reason that so many people really like that particular model of
died, and will continue to die, is digital camera, people around the
because these countries were very world are struggling to survive.

Twenty percent of the world's
population
consumes
eight
percent of the world's resources.
We are part of that twenty percent.
We are not doing enough
to help the victims of catastrophes
around the world. Sure, we are
sending money and supplies
to Asia now, but what about
in a few months when the vast
majority of the population forgets
about tsunamis?
I encourage
people to give their support to
the relief efforts now but I also
encourage people to continue
supporting change in the world.
Do your research and find out
where people are suffering in
the world. Then discover how
you can help make a difference.
Thanks for your time,
Rob Rombouts

From the President's Desk

Graham Strickert/ LUSU
President

Welcome
Back!
And
a
happy
2005
to
all.
Over
the
Hill
Lordy, Lordy, Somebody
is 40. That's right, Lakehead
University will celebrating its'
40th Anniversary throughout 2005.

The official celebration will be
taking place September 20th to
October 2nd , 2005. If you would
like to help organize activities for
the 40th Anniversary celebration
you could become a member
of the 40th Anniversary Student
Liaison Planning Committee.
Computers Sale This Week!
As many of you may have
noticed, BB 1055, LI 3004, CB
1004, RB 1030 computers labs
have been upgraded. As a result
we will be selling off the older
computers for $50. The computers
will not have software but $50
for a tower, monitor, keyboard,
and mouse is quite a deal.
New
Building
Update
The
Students' Athletics
Facility is on the critical path
to be open February l •t, 2005.
We are also planning the Grand

Opening Celebration the first
week in March, exact date to
be announced. If you would
like to help organize the grand
opening we •are still accepting
resumes for students interested
m joining the planning team. ,
Freezin' for the Fees is Back
Do you think you are paying
too much for your university
education? Well here is you
chance to voice your opm1on
through action. The freeze the
fees campaign is b"ack! That's
right we want the government to
hear our cries so we are freezing
for the fees again. If you have
never heard about freezing for the
fees, I'll give you the low down.
On January 24th - 28 th , 2005, we
will be sleeping outside on the
tennis courts, freezing to keep our
tuition fees frozen. We are in the

first year of a government promise
for a two-year "fully funded"
tuition fee freezing. For more
information please contact LUSU.
A
Call
to
Action
This year for the Canadian
Federation Students' February
3rd National Day of Action we
will be taking a group for 20-30
students to Sudbury on February
2nd &amp; 3"1, and then continuing
on to Toronto for 4th , 5th , and 6th ,
2005. The purpose of rallying in
Sudbury is to unite a Northern
Ontario v01ce that highlights
the pandemic under funding of
Northern Institutions. We will
be having a planning meeting for
the Day of Action on Thursday,
January 13 th at 10am in UC 2020.
What would you call it?
The time has come to select
a name for our New Students'

Multi-Sport Athletic Building.
That's right, you could have
a name you selected appear
on the New Building. Simply
submit a name, or visit LUSU.ca
for your opportunity to name
the new building. The top 50
names will be showcased in
next week's issue of the Argus.
Volunteers Needed
- LUNSA is looking for
volunteers to help with a
"Pow-Wow March ll th - 131\
2005. If you are interested email lunsa@lakeheadu.ca
- The LUSU Board of
Directors is still looking
for a secretary. If you are
interested please send your
resume and a letter of intent
to lusupres@lakeheadu.ca

oumns

The view from First year

s

Its never too early to make som~one
feel special
Lee Gastmeier

Every year on the
fourteenth ofFebruary the same stuff
happens. Guys and gals give each
other flowers, candy, chocblates,
special gifts... etc, go out for fancy
dinners, and profess their love for
one another... etcetera. I hope that
you .see where I am going with this.
You all know that I am talking about
the traditions of Valentine's Day.
I say this year break
wiUi, ltradition! Why let one day
rule whether you will be happy
or. unhappy based on some guy
or girl or all the happy couples
surrounding you?!
If there is
soineone special in your life, let
them know today. Don't wait for
a certain day on the calendar. Go
out and celebrate your feelings
for them this week! It's never too
early to make someone feel special
anti by doing so you make yourself
happy too, right?! There isn't a
person out there reading this article
whose day could not be brightened
by flowers or chocolate or a card or
a hug today! It lets them know that
not only do you think they are the

ne ouquet o owers to 1 any ay or or usmg some o t e ee time m your usy summer sc
e
greatest during the second week of ·n Banffto cross stitch 30 beautiful Christmas Tree Ornaments for my Christmas present. I will treasure
February but also during January
em ... and YOU.... always!
and any other day for that matter.
he E-Mail Queen of 58 Main
And don't forget, you can
choose how to react to the world lowers to all you LU students out there; it is so great to be back and to see you all! Smiles, from Lee.
around you. If you are not happy
on Valentine's Day, then maybe lower to Rebecca for returning my purse. It's nice to know that there are nice people out there.
it is because you are choosing to
reflect on what you do not have,
as oppose to what you do have.
Valentine's Day is traditionally lowers to my girls; it was a lonely week without you!
about couples and such and I know
that. You can still have a great time lowers to everyone who helped out with the Argus Rocks concert back in November. Special flowers to
hanging with your friends. Stay II the bands and to Ryan Grant and the Events Committee for helping us pay for the event.
in and rent movies or go out and
have a blast. Just laugh and have
o you have a flower or fishhead you want sent to someone? E-mail them to argusfishheads@lakeheadu.
a great time with those people in
your life who means lots to you.
Now how about that little
cute naked boy with the wings,
bow and arrow? We most certainly
cannot discuss Valentine's Day
without mentioning our good
'You could be addicted to studying ...wait, this is a kin
friend Cupid. Okay, so maybe
lass"
Cupid isn't so popular among
l~n Paterson, 2nd year Psych of Sport
many. Mainly because his presence
in your life may be, well, nonexistent? Maybe his arrow of
love and desire hath not hit you?
That's fine. You never know ...

Your
rofesaor
Said
What??I?

-1

�···---·-~,

Arts

Argus

&amp; Entertainment

January

Who says we never get any bands?

mysteriously found their way to
our city. R.E.M. played an AIDS
fundraiser show at the Gardens
for a steep $61.50 that had many
recipe to get the crowd riled up for reckoned with, and these smaller university students sitting in their
the mayhem that was to follow. scale artists got a taste of what is bedrooms listening to In Time:
Great Big Sea with Jimmy yet to CQme in their own careers. The Best of R.E.M. Newcomer
Rankin graced the Community They exposed the younger Charlie Mars opened the show,
Auditorium stage once again, crowd to two different styles of and although the show was a
but the price was $45
memorable one, it was
per ticket and enough to
far from sold out, and
scare a fair amount of us
the crowd had a vibe that
students out of the water.
can't really be described
The Study was
as anything but, weird.
full of people on October
It seemed like it took
20th wh9 gladly came out
lots to get this crowd
to watch a performance
riled up, unless of course
by
the
mesmenzmg
you were standing in the
band Nine Mile.
first few rows. A definite
them they brought along
concert low-light was
newcomer
and
bare
not hearing the classic
foot performer Melissa
tune 'Everybody Hurts'
Larkin who sang like a
but I'll forgive them
bird and stole the show.
since Michael Stipe and
. Pride
R.E.M. have shown
put on a fundraiser at the
the world what it really
Outpost on November
means to be a rock star.
I st and brought in sassy
Pilate
and
Ember Swift with her
Boy played Warp 9 on
bold messages set to
November 20th , and on
catchy melodies. Long
the same night the Apollo
standing musical members
hosted Matt Mays and
of
the
community
El Torpedo all the way
Outside the Lines
=~~~=~==~;;......~~;,.;..;;;.;;;;.;..;....;..;..==;.....,.J
from the East
kicked off the show.
Coast.
A
Vancouver's
magnificent
show, the guys
The Black Halos
showcased
shocked a lot of
their talents
people in attendance
and showed
at the Apollo on
the
crowd
November 6th with
what
all
the
their sneers and tight
fuss
has
been
musicianship
all
about. These
rolled up into a tight
guys
have
ball that bounced
been
gaining
around the room.
national
Stay tuned for an
:----......__....._.........-success,
interview with Black ..._......._.;;.'_- .;;....___________;a;...
including
Halos drummer Rob
the
New
Artist
of
the
Year Award
Zgaljic in a future issue. Zeke
at
last
years
East
Coast
Music
opened the show, but by the end
Awards.
The
new
album
set
for
of their set they were having a
release
this.
spring,
was
produced
yelling and swearing match with
by legendary rock producer and
a few hecklers in the crowd. On
Grammy
Award winner Don Smith.
the plus side, it made for more
Next
up for 2004 was
entertainment than their set.
our
own
Argus
fundraiser at the
Canadian hard hitters The
Outpost,
which
took immense
Tea Party played the Community
planning
and
organization.
We
Auditorium, but to their disgust,
thank
everyone
involved
and
thought there should have been
who helped out. Thanks to Doug
more people in attendance.
Gorrie, Freeground, Eryn Hull and
Openers Out of Your Mouth and
Stillen Line, Shroud, AVS and
Todd Kerns were forces not to be
Vaya for providing your talents.
The
Tragically
Hip
music and had everyone talking
returned
to
TBay,
making
this
year
in the lounge after the show.
One of the most famous a success for big shows. From
bands in the music business who the first song to the last, the Hip
have been around since the 80s, had the crowd on their feet and

A re-cap of concerts from 2004
Angie Valente/ Argus
This past year, Thunder
Bay had a selection of stellar talent
pass through town to do more then
gas up or hit a Tim Horton's for
a double-double.
There were
some amazing bands that trekked
far and wide, making their way
here from all comers of the globe
just to make us happy and play.
The fall was kicked
off with a bang, as it usually is,
with lots of rock action. We saw
homegrown heroes The Golden
Dogs come back for a visit at
the Apollo, The Illuminati with
C'mon made waves, Billy and
the Lost Boys showed us that
girls know how to rock, and
Dayglow
Abortions
proved
they're still punks at heart. Warp
9 was jumping in October, with
Planet Smashers and Staggered
Crossing both putting on amazing
shows.
Stag X demonstrated
that they remained true to their
art form by going the indie route
and starting their own music
Iabel...but the biggest show Warp
9 has ever seen was yet to come.
Billy Talent rocked th~
sox off of every sweaty kid in
the mosh pit, and you could feel
the intensity from wherever you
were standing. Working really
hard and giving it your all night
after night really does pay off.
It's a Cinderella story really, but
after paying their dues for nearly
ten years in the underground
Toronto scene, the breakout single
'Try Honesty' grabbed people's
attention, and it hasn't let go since.
Billy Talent were the winners of
Best New Artist at the 2004 Juno
Awards, forcing people to stand
up and stare. The local show took
place on Sunday, October I 0th
and unlike very few concerts by
Canadian rock bands, was sold out
a few weeks before the show. An
amazing feat in itself, two other
Canadian bands by the names of
Metric and Death From Above
I 979 were lucky enough to be the
opening acts on this tour. They
played in front of massive crowds
across Canada, and were the perfect

10, 2005

11
~

interacting with the music. Quite
the opposite from the R.E.M.
show, the vibe was one of eleGtfis ,
energy and positivity.
Many
classic Hip songs were played,
which appeased the crowd, yet new
gems were also thrown in for good
measure and variety. It was then
I remembered why the Tragically
Hip are one of Canada's best live
bands. East Coast band the Joel
Plaskett Emergency played a solid
set,.and had a line-up of eager fans
patiently waiting after the: set to
buy his album and chat with the
singer-songwriter/guitar player.
Detroit City native Royce
Da 59 kicked off Bling Blj9.g
Thursdays at Armani's with his
hip-hop edge. Having at one time
worked with Eminem and Dr.
Dre, Royce brought along MC's
June Johnson and K Vishiss for
a little help on the microphone.
Even though it was a short set,
the crowd was very supportive
and interacted well with the
rapper, who dropped a few free
styles. And th~ crowd went wild.
Last but certainly not
least, Gob played a free show at
Warp 9 on November 26th • The
show was part of an anti-smoking
campaign put on by the Ministry
of Health. We all got to hear the
Gob songs we're familiar with
and the kiddies loved it. I can't
even remember the last tim~ a
known band played a free show.
Hopefully, if there is a next
time, the place will be packed
to the brim. Kudos to Vancity
natives Gob for being part of
such a good cause and using their
popularity to create awareness.
The past year of 2004
saw many other artists perform
here in Thunder Bay, so here's
a quick re-cap: Jann Arden with
Emm Gryner, Nickelback with
Three Days Grace and The Trews,
Natalie MacMaster, Default, High
Holy Days, Ryan Malcolm with
Jacynthe, Tom Jones, The Beautiful
Girls, Tricky Woo, Ten Foot Poll,
Moneen, Rufus Wainwri~~
Constantines, GFK, Alexisonflf'e,
April Wine, Bif Naked, the
Salads, Social Code, Belvedere,
BigWig, Stabilo, Crowned King,
Matthew Good, Honeysuckle
Serontina, Finger Eleven, The
Waking Eyes, Cannibal Corpse,
A is A, White Cowbell Oklahoma,
Blue Oyster Cult, See Spot Run,
Fefe Dobson, Fuscia, Ripcordz,
Nazareth, Alice Cooper, By
Divine Right, Staggered Crossing,
Barney Bentall and more!
.,

Lakehead University Music Association
P~sents

Student Recital
The Jean McNulty Recital Hall
Music and Visual Arts Building
January 25,

2005 - 12:30 pm

�12 January 10, 2005
i

Arts &amp; Entertainment
A Midwinter Night's Dream tour to sparkle at Apollo
in total throughout Central and of hours on the highway and a campfire and then found herself
Western Canada. Do the math having nothing to do but think, performing at open mic nights
and you'll see that the artists will Kate Maki started brainstorming while at university in Halifax. She
be taking very few days off, with the creative musical adventure followed her heart and left her
just enough time to get to the next that her friends would take, in job as a grade school teacher to
gig. The tour, called "A Midwinter the same fashion as Bob Dylan's pursue a full time career in music.
Night's Dream" differs from Rolling Thunder Revue of 1975.
Nathan Lawr's other
ordinary songwriter
projects include Sea
revues because the
Snakes and being
performers will play
an
ex-member of
together as a five piece
Royal City.
His
band, backing each
latest release is called
other up with drums,
Nathan Lawr and the
bass, acoustic and
Minotaur Orchestra.
electric guitars, pedal
Lawr has given his
steel, piano, organ,
time and drumming
accordion, harmonica
talent to countless
and harmonies. The
well-known Toronto
quintet of musicians
bands, and after ten
will play two sets,
years of touring and
showcasing four or
recording experience,
five songs each. The .________...:::a.::.::~:::.:..=;.:...=w~so~l:.::&lt;&gt;:..::r~el::=eas=e~s_________, has finally stepped out
artists each have
from behind the kit.
unique writing styles yet similar
And now for some
Ruth
Minnikin
is
influences including The Band, performer information.
Kate involved
with
the
Heavy
The Beatles and The Byrds, Maki's new release is entitled Blinkers who have just returned
making for an interesting and The Sun Will Find Us and her from an extensive tour in the
entertaining evening of roots, 0ther projects include being an ex- UK. Minnikin was a founding
rock, country, folk, pop and blues. member of the John Henrys. Maki member of the now defunct band
While spending hundreds grew up in Northern Ontario, The Guthries (a band which Matt
h ca

Angie Valente/ Argus

A five piece travelling
band of singer-songwriters are
preparing to tour Canada in support
of their new solo releases. As
these troopers make the trip across
our great country during what is
known as the Canadian winter,
they are generous enough to make
the Apollo a stop on Saturday,
January 151h. Cover is only $4.
The tour will feature
Sudbury's Kate Maki, Dartmouth's
Qale Murray, Guelph's Nathan
Lawr, Sudbury's Ryan Bishops
and St. Margaret's Bay's Ruth
Minnikin. Aftertouringthecountry
last year as a duo in support of
their first solo records and playing
a show at Warp 9, Kate Maki and
Ruth Minnikin will return to the
highway with new releases and
three more singer-songwriters/
multi-instrumentalists,
including Dale Murray, Nathan
Lawr and Ryan Bishops with
new material of their own.
The • tour will last a
month, playing twenty shows

Music or Asia Concert: Earthquake
Tsunami Relief Fundraiser
" Two fundraiser concerts cater to both age
groups

Argus

Mays also used to part of.) Her
album is entitled Marooned and
Blue and she will be in charge of
set design on this magical tour.
Ryan
Bishops' new
release is Silver Spooned and
Hammered which is his first
solo effort. His other projects
include Ox, a band which saw
Bishops on the road touring for
the last year in Canada and the
UK. He also plays in one of
Northern Ontario's favourite
bands called Junction Creek, as
well as the Kate Maki Explosion.
Last but not least Dale
Murray works with Nathan Wiley,
Buck 65 and was also a founding
member of the Guthries. Murray
is also known as a staple in the
Maritime music scene. His new
release and first solo record is
called Brighter Lives, Darker Side.
Check
out
www.katemaki.com,
www.nathanlawr.com,
www. ru th mi nn ik in. ca,
www.ryanbishops.ca,
and
www.theguthries.net
for
more info on these artists.

Magneta Lane: spreading constant love
across Canada
Debut TBay show at Apollo on January 131 2005

\
services to aid the fund. If additional
information is required, call Cherie Angie Valente/ Argus
influences. "We like to focus stroll down Magneta Lane, fear
Authorized by Red Cross, from the Red Cross at 623 -3073 on the attitude of the musicians not. Valentine confirmed that,
Warp 9 will be hosting a Tsunami
Under th e age of 19 but
Most articles written rather than their sound. What "We'll be back in the studio in
nd
Relief Fu raiser on
.....~ - - - - - - - , still ,want to take pa~? about this three piece band stress ever we take from these artists, the summer to record the new
Saturday,
January
Don t fret. There will the fact that they're girls, and that we take it and make it our own. album, which should be out by
151hfeaturingL. 'Byno
be a_ seco nd _ all ages they'reyoung. Thisarticlewon't. I have an obsession with jazz September." The new album
Ryno, Danny Johnson
Music for Ast a Concert
When chatting with voices, and I don't want my voice will be produced by Death From
0th
nd
a
ers. This is a
E~Rsr;N~u:,KE
on1h Monday, Janu~ry Magneta Lane front woman Lexi to sound like anyone else, not Above 1979's Jesse Keeler,
17 at Warp 9 featunng Valentine, it seems as though the like other music out there today." "We're looking forward to the
licensed
RELIEF Fu No
. k 19+ ·11show
JANUARY 1 s••, 200
fi
and tic ets w1 be
u ~;:• s
some of the nest up musical focus is lost r---------------~=~---, experience.
We hope
$10.00 advance and
..,.........,.....
~nd c~ming local t~lent "We want people t~
it's a growth from where
at the door. They will -~_ ........... ~~ .. ••m••"~■"'"
mcludmg: The Exiled, look past that and just
we are now. We want to
be available at Red
,~.... ,... ,., .............~ .... Profundis,
Bailout say we're a band. We
make sure that everything
Cross, Pure Rawk ~"' ""'~" ....,.",.,.,, ""'"'"'
Strategy,
Faceles_s want people to listen
we do is a growth."
nd
nd
[ury, CD Plus a
•
$10 Hulk, a
Rookie to our music because
Magneta Lane has been
Warp 9. All of the i'!~:n:"!~~i~ ,_,.,s.. ., ....,...... ~.• of the Year. Tickets we feel that' focusing
receiving air play from
funds will be donated
for this show will be on our age and the
college radio, as well
to Red Cross, with the musicians, $5.00 in a~vance and at the door fact that we're girls
as from Toronto's Edge
organizers; ticket printers, and and are ava1lable at Red Cross, Pure sets boundaries and
102 during the Indie
graphic designers all donating their Rawk Fury, CD Plus and Warp 9. limits us as musicians."
Hour. "It's nice to have
11111111•~•"!"111.,.P'I~
H a v i n g
that support" chimes
formed only a year ago,
Valentine. The band also
the band rounded out by
encourages dancing at
drummer Nadia King
their shows, "Of course!
and bassist French,
I love dancing. I even
has
been working
dance on stage!" Catch
on
familiarizing
Magneta
Lane
with
themselves with the Take a stroll down Magneta Lane on Jan. 13th at the the Mark Inside at the
_. Apollo
downtown
Toronto ...__
Apollo
on Thursday,
music scene.
They
January 131h to h~ar
now have well over fifty shows
The video for the self- music that tries to capture the
under their belts and the crowds titled first single off the new balance between positive and
seem to increase at every EP will be at MuchMusic and negative and is, "vulnerable but
performance. No small feat for MuchLoud this month. It was confident and moody; not angry."
a bunch of twenty year olds, but directed by Chris Grismer and
Also,
Killswitch
don't let the number fool you. shot in an abandoned Victorian Engage with Unearth, The
Magnets Lane's. sound displayed style home called the Valhalla Exiled and Surface Rising will
on their debut EP The Constant House on a zoo property. "The be playing an all ages show at
Lover is definitely wise beyond video has us playing in different Warp 9 on Monday, January
their years.
Singer/guitarist rooms of the house, almost giving I01h:· Tickets are $20 in advance
Valentine's sultry and mature thefeelingthatwe'rehauntingit." and available at CDplus, Big
vocals are reminiscent of a
If you're worried that Ed's Pawn Shop and Pure Rawk
young Nancy Si~tra, who is the Constant Lover EP won't be Fury.
Doors open at 7pm.
cited as one of the bands musical enough to satisfy your urge for a

Angie Valente/Argus

si~
I

CO ... ,o

il M ltf•..,-lfl•Ol.fJIIH&gt;

~

P\JJS

__________________

Magnus kicks off New Year
Angie Valente

A special thanks to all the bands that helped with our
fundraising efforts

The Magnus Theatre is ringing in the
New Year with a bang. Back by popular demand,
Frankenstein 1930 will be playing from January

14th through to the J61h. Come and re-live this
classic tale as Dr. Frankenstein experiments with
electricity and life. Call 345-5552 for tickets or
email at info@magnus.on.ca

.I

�Sports

Argus

January

10, 2005

13

From the Offside Position: FIFA World Player Gala dominated by
Brazilians. Again.
.•

Conrad KoczorowskV Argus

It was a night of opera
and soccer at the 2004 World
Player Galas in Italy. As the
VIP crowd was overcome by the
emphatic orchestra, some of the
most inspirational players of the
World Game walked across the
stage, either as presenters of the
awards, or as recipients.

So all in all, there was a lot of
'samba' in the air that night.
There are a few problems
I have with the Gala. Perhaps
my biggest problem is with the
nomination of Ronaldihno to the
top-prize, over Thierry Henry.
Without going into an excessive

The

still a young player and could be
recognized in future seasons. I
think the biggest issue here is
what tak"es . more precedence,
club or international playing?
Henry did not get to show off
l}is skills for a lengthy period of
time, since France got eliminated
from Euro 2002, whereas Brazil
won the Copa de l 'America.
Ailother issue I have

Ferreira should have been in the
Top 3: he won the Champions'
League and Portuguese first
League with Porto FC and as a
member of Chelsea FC, has one
of the top defensive records in
Europe. It's hard to lose a game
when the other team cannot even

,.

,;o

~,~

they were not allowed to ~play

most prestigious awards which
is a rather general one - what
were awarded on the night were
determines if a player IS the
the FIFA Footballer of the Year
most valuable player? Why is
awards in both men's and women's
it almost always a huge player.
categories. Brazil's Ronaldhino
from a huge club? In the last six
won the award for the men, beating
years the winners have all come
out France's Thierry Henry and
from Barcelona, Real Madrid,
Ukraine's Andriy Shevchenko.
Juventus and Inter Milan. I found
He is the fourth Brazilian to be
it preposterous that Fernando
honoured with the prize, since its
., , ..
. .•
Morientes did not make the Top Germany's Brigit Prinz wins the top
creation in the early 90s - for a
Brazilian ~onrue'' ;-;a,ccepJS:jne
30 of the nomination process hont&gt;urs in the female category for
total of 6 wins. In the women's ootballer of\the Year award from th - during his loan at Monaco (a
the second consecutive year
category, Brigit Prinz of Germany
head of FIFA·, Joseph S. Blatter
tiny club) he helped them reach ...______________.
won it for the second year in a row, ...__ _ _....._____________, the Finals of the Champions'
• t·ion League, including knocking out take a shot at your goalkeeper!
beating out Brazil's Marta and argument ; Henry ' s domma
• The Match for Peace
USA's Mia Hamm. Some other at Arsena l has Iead to Arsena l his home-club Real Madrid in
•
f
th
t
•
t
•
th
was
truly an inspiring thing; the
notables of the night included bemg one o e op earns m e the semi-finals. He still would
•
h.
~
I
h'
Brazilian
national team played
the awarding of the Presidential Prerniers 1P ior severa years - 1s have technically been a Real
•
d
J
ak'
k'II
the
Haitian
national team and
Award to Haiti and the Fairplay goa1-scormg an P ayrn mg s I s Madrid player, too. And why
•
h
h
h
h
made
the
admission
free. The
Award to Brazil for the Match for are aImost wit out mate - e as is the Top 3 always made up of
match
was
an
attempt
to lift
Peace, held earlier this year. The been awarded th e Pl ayer of th e all-attacking players? I think the
th
Football Team of the Year was also Year award in the Premiership for only non-attacker to have ever spirits of e Haitian people who
•
Rona td·hn
I o
Brazil. The top Futsol and Digital three years runnmg.
entered the Top 3 of recent is have suffered through months of
•
t
Football (video game) Footballer has had an amazmg season a Germany's Oliver Kahn. If goal- •turbulence (it originally was going
• scoring did not matter, then Paulo to be a manner in which to collect
awards also went to Brazilians. Barce1ona an d Brazi·1 , but he is

Canada wins first World Junior Hockey title
since 1997
the very physical Canadian team
and left the game in the second
Fourth time's the charm!
period with a shoulder injury.
After
four
T h e
consecutive
MVP of the
appearances in
tournament was
the World Junior
awarded to a
Hockey final,
deserving Patrice
Canada at last
Bergeron, who led
came home with
the tournament
the top prize in points, with
the gold medal.
5 goals and 8
Canada
beat
assists.
Many
out its historic
NHL teams are
rivals, Russia,
probably kicking
in a deciding .___Th_e_J_um_·o_r_Wi
__
.o_rl_d_H_o_c_k_ey___ti_tl_e_is._b_a_c_k_w_h_e_re_it_be_lo_n...ag....s_-_in_C_a_n_a_da_!_ _, themselves
for
6-1 victory in
not taking him
Grand Forks, North Dakota.
into their squads at the start of
During a time of NHL-hockey
the 2003 draft. Along with this
deprivation, the Canadian
gold medal, he also contributed
victory could not have come
to Canada's win in the 2004
at a better time - providing
Men's World Championship.
the record-amount of viewers
"It was the experience of my
(3.2 million during the final;
life, because it was with people
making it the second most
my own age." Other notable
viewed program in TSN's
Canadian players were Ryan
history) with dazzling hockey,
Getzlafwith 3 goals and 9 assists
raw exuberance and youthful
and Dion Phaneuf, a workhorse
talent, as well as a reminder
on the short-staffed defense,
of what hockey truly is about
also
contributing
towards
- the sport, not salary-caps
constant offensive pressure.
and
disgruntled
owners.
The NHL lockout
The Final game
did leave its mark on the
opened with Canada starting
Patrice Bergeron - the tournaments higheSt
tournament, but it was,
the period with their guns
scorer; named MVP of the competition
ironically, a positive one. The
drawn, scoring in the first
lockout gave the opportunity
7 goals in 6 games, only three were
minute of play through Ryan
for some junior players who had
Getzlaf. The Canadian team led during even-Strength scenarios. It been drafted into the NHL a chance
is a measure of Canada's defensive
2-1 at the end of the first period,
to play. It also kept players who
str
following a goal from Danny
ength that during th e final game, might have been in the junior ranks,
starting goalie, Jess Glass, saw
Syvret. Canada would put the game
such as forwards Carter, Gezlaf,
beyond the reach of the Russians only 19 shots from the skilled Michael Richards and Stewart and
in the second, scoring four goals Russians; he had only seen 11 defenseman Phaneuf. There was
through the efforts of Jeff Carter, shots against the Czech Republic. also an increased interest in the
"I think the Canadian
Patrice Bergeron, Anthony Stewart
tournament, with record viewing
and Dion Phaneuf. The huge score people must be proud of their and record attendance - interest
team," said Russian forward
was not out sync with the rest of the
that might continue onto next year's
Alexander Ovechkin, who took
results achieved by the Canadian
tournament in Vancouver, BC.
team in the tournament, who hit after bone-shuddering hit from
Conrad KoczorowskV Argus

outscored their opponents for a total
of 41-7; perhaps what was even more
telling of their talent was that of the

private arms from the populace).
However, I believe that the most
spectacular event which took
place was the game between the
all-Muslim team and the Chelsea
Ladies, held in Dubai. The :brainchild of Jordanian Princess Haya
Bint Al-Hussein, the game was a
giant leap for Muslim women and
Arabian soccer, since until recently
in public, due to constraints on
women and the "revealing attire."
I feel that this match was truly the
display of a cultural revolution.
Which brings me to my
final (controversial) point: why is
it that Brazil dominates everything
in so~cer? I beli~ve it's partially
because people are so impressed
with the idea of Brazilian 'Samba
Futebol' that they automatically
~
look for Brazilian recipients 1or
awards - this even carries over
onto the playing :field. Often
teams are so intimidated by the
Brazilian national team that they
play a restrained,_ defensive,
sub-par game - even when they
could probably win. I am by
no means insulting Brazil, or
Brazilians, a nation of soccerplayers I love - I just wish tha(
the awards could be passed around
to other nations from -time to
time. Perhaps even a defender.

No Rest for Men's
Basketball Team
Alan Wickware/ Argus

If not for the Christmas
break, most students would not
be students. The same cannot
be said, however, about the
Lakehead Men's basketball
team, who, after finishing up
the first half of the regular
season with a series in Hamilton
at McMaster, traveled to
Winnipeg, MB to compete in the
M. T.S Mobility Wesmen Classic
played
December
28-30' h ·
Going
into
the
weekend series with the
Marauders, Lakehead needed
a strong effort before breaking .
for Christmas, in hopes of
making a run for a playoff
spot.
The Thunderwolves
started the weekend off with a
hard fought 72-67 victory, and
were led by Ottawa native Lee
Reckman, who scored 18 points
coming off tlie bench. Kiraan
Posey posted a double-double,
scoring 13 points and grabbing
IO rebounds. In what proved
to be a close game, E.L. Adams
perfect
free-throwing
was
nothing less then stellar, as he
went 8-8 from the line. After
coming off an early season
injury, Justin Dickens pulled
down 8 rebounds in the win.
The Marauders would
not let the Thunderwolves
win another the next night,
even though Lakehead was
up 18 points. McMaster took
advantage of a second quarter
defensive
breakdown
by
the Thunderwolves, only to
win by a slim 67-66 margin.
The Marauders were led by
Adam Steiner, who scored a
game-high 20 points and 8

rebounds.
Both Posey and
E.L. Adams had 18 points for
the Thunderwolves. The loss
dropped Lakehead regular
season record to 3-5, good
enough for 7th in the OUA west.
The Wolves' then
traveled west, to Manitoba,
where they challenged for
the M. T.S Mobility Wesrnan
Classic. The Thunderwolves
would start the tournament
off with a loss to an equally
matched Winnipeg Wesman.
The Wolves' would be led by
Kiraan Posey who scored 26,
only to be topped by Wesman
guard Erfan Nasajpour, who
scored 35 in the win. Lakehead
would then play Manitoba in the
consolation semi-final game.
The Thunderwolves were down
38-30 at half, but with the help
of Posey's 18 points, managed
to fight their way to a 67-61
victory. Christopher Dyck led
the Bisons with a game-high
25 points.
The consolation
final would prove to be nothing
short of a thriller, with Lakehead
coming up on the short end.
Although the Wolves' shot 54%
in the first half, their 41-35 lead
and shooting percentage would
fall drastically in the second,'
shooting · only 29% from the
floor and losing the game 7674. Kiraan Posey led Lakehead
scorers with 17 points, l trebounds and 6 assists. Scott
Steely added
14 points
and 5 rebounds in the loss.
Lakehead
continues
its second half of the season on
a road trip visiting U of T ano
Ryerson. They return home
to face York and Laurentian
on January 14th and 15th.

�[

14 January 10, 2005

Sports

.Bell Varsity Cup Championship Game: UNB
wins title for second year in a row
format used at the Bell Varsity Cup
is 4-on-4 for 90 seconds, then 3-onThe Bell Varsity Cup
3 for 90 seconds or until the next
Championship game saw the UNB
whistle; rotating mini-OT periods
Varsity Reds defend their title and
until somebody scores. After 15
mini-OT periods; it was decided to
win the tourney rematch over the
go to a shootout and Kuokkanen
No. 3 Lakehead Thunderwolves
was Lakehead's 12th
by a 5-3 score, before
shooter in the shootout.
2441 fans at the Fort
Lakehead's
other
William Gardens in
goals came from
Thunder Bay; UNB
Peter Cava, Chris
out-shot
Lakehead
45-43. Kyle Werner,
Shaffer,
Sean
named
Tournament
and
n' Stefanski,
Magill.
MVP, led the V-Reds
Murray
with two goals while
UNB 's
scoring
Rob Hennigar, Craig
came from Jean
Mahon, and Jeff Wilson
Michel
Boisvert,
rounded out the UNB
Craig Mahon, Ryan
scoring. Peter Cava,
Mockler, and Colin
Chris Shaffer, and Sean
Sinclair.
UNB
Stefanski tallied for the
out-shot Lakehead
Thunderwolves. Chris
59-49 in the game.
Whitley,
Lakehead's
The
Bell
By Rob Linke
goalie
was
added
Varsity Cup Day
to the tournament 1-------Ulk--eh-.ead-,-- - _n,....·....
Ean-&amp;1_e_ska
__- -es--,-r-·-,
.,,...-.,-UNB-_
-- - - - - f 3 night game saw
1
1
5 1850
All-Star Team, due
--e,the No. 3 Lakehead
Thunderwolves
to his outstanding
goes to 11-9-0 overall while
achievements during the tournament. Manitoba's is now at 11-10-2. skate past the No. 6 Manitoba
The third annual Bell
It took three regulation Bisons by a 4-3 score before 2370
Varsity Cup opened with a rough periods, 15 periods of mini- fans at Fort William Gardens.
and tough afternoon game between overtime, and 11 shooters in a Lakehead's scoring came from
the No. 5 Manitoba Bisons and shootout as Jouni Kuokkanen's Francis Walker, Brad Priestlay,
the UNB Varsity Reds as the V- goal gave the No. 3 Lakebead Steve Rawski, and Tobias
Reds notched a 7-4 win at Fort Thunderwolves a 5-4 win over the Whelan. Paul . Deniset, Aaron
William Gardens. UNB was led UNB Varsity Reds before 2480 very Starr, and Warren McCutcheon
by Kyle Werner with 2 goals and noisy fans in the night game of Day replied for the Bisons. Manitoba
an assist while Rob Hennigar, Jesse 2 of the Bell Varsity Cup at Fort out-shot Lakehead 46-30 on the
Ferguson Colin Sinclair, and Troy William Gardens. The overtime night. Manitoba was 1-7 on the
powerplay and Lakehead was 2-7.
Stonier had a goal and an assist each.

Mike A/ywardl LU Athletics

Kevin Saurette paced Manitoba
with two goals while singles came
from David Cameron and Reagan
Leslie. UNB out-shot Manitoba
37-31 in the game. Manitoba went
2-7 on the powerplay and UNB
was 2-8. UNB's overall record

Argus

Campus recreation update
The staff of your campus
" recreation programs would like
to welcome all the students,
faculty and staff back from the
holidays. This tenn's winter
activities begin in the next
couple of weeks. The Campus
Recreation office is open
Monday to Friday from 10am
to 4pm and is located in the CJ
Sanders Fieldhouse (SB 1023).
We encourage everyone to

pick up a copy of the programs
offered for the winter term.
Activities differ from Indoor
soccer leagues to aerobics,
yoga and social dance (formerly
"Latin
dance")
programs.
Campus
recreation
also has openings for conveoors
and referees for basketball and
indoor soccer.
Applications
can be picked up at the
Campus Recreation office.

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We want YOU to name our
new Athletic Center
\

_The Hanger

�Comics

Argus

Classifieds
There has been an opening for a lovely room on Bay
street. If you know a·nyone that is looking for a place to
stay in Thunder Bay, this house is perfect!!
Rent is only $197.50/month. Share Cable/internet
($15/month), hydro (approx. $20/month), and phone
(approx. $8/month). The house comes fully equipped
with back and private front yard, apartment size washer
and dryer, main rooms fully loaded, with a fully functioning sauna in our basement!! The house would be
shared with two females and a male. The roommates
are open minded and seek a roommate that will also
be open minded. The room is an AWESOME ROOM!!
(it is the master bedroom with door to bathroom!!), 2
large closets, built in bookshelves, and drawers. IT is
a must see!! The room will be available for the taking
in Mid- Jan. If you are interested in chatting about this
opportunity, please don't hesitate to email me or call us.
807-344-1131.

January

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�</text>
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                    <text>Lakehead University's Student Newspaper
Volumn 42 Issue 3

Monday September 19, 2005 .

The Terry Fox Run celebrates the 25 th Anniversary
of Hope
"If you've given a dollar, you are part of the Marathon
ofHope." -Terry Fox
Diana Co/etto/ Argus
This past Sunday, Canada saw hundreds
of thousands of supporters come out to
participate in the annual Terry Fox
Run. Over twelve thousand people
ran the 13 kilometre stretch over the
Confederation Bridge that connects New
Brunswick and Prince Edward Island.
The event is non competitive
and aims to raise money and
awareness for cancer. Over $360
million has been raised for cancer
research in Terry's name since 1980.
The money that has been
raised has prompted many scientific
discoveries: treatment's to save a
child's eye, research on oncolytic
viruses (now a main focus for the
Terry Fox Foundation), and many
other area~ that may have not

had the opportunity for research.
When
Terry
Fox,
at
the young age of 22, began his
. Marathon of Hope in 1980, he ran 42
kilometres daily for 143 days until
his cancer consl.nned him and he was
unable to go beyond Thunder Bay.
This year, Thunder Bay held
the activities at local high school, St.
Ignatius. The run was a successful
event and participants enjoyed running,
walking, rollerblading or bicycling
along the 5km or 10km course.
Lakehead
University's
own Residence Life supported
the event by having a shuttle bus
to and from campus in hope of
encouraging students to come out.
James Pilkington, a 3rd year
outdoor rec/natural science student,
believes the event is worth while:

"It's an amazing cause and compared
to what Terry did, it is the least we
can do." Tracy Allie, a 2nd year con
ed/ sociology student ran the 10km
course stating, "It's a good way to get
in shape and support cancer research."
The event was ran by the
Lakehead Rotary Club, and Don
Morrison (organizer), felt the event was
successful in all aspects. Even within
the first hours of the morning, 747
participants had raised over $2300 for
cancer research. Morrison already states
the numbers are "double then last year."
A great thank you goes to all
who came out to participate and donate.
As well, if you would like to make a
donation to the Terry Fox foundation,
please go to www.terryfoxrun.org
more
for
information.

What a To-Do!
NOSM declared officially open by Premier McGuinty
Amy Hadley/Argus

significance of the event Vice Dean
Dr. Dan Hunt referenced a comment
made by Bartleman: "[Bartleman]
captured what this was about - [in his
speech] he acknowledged the tensions
resulting from the majority of people
being in the South and setting policies

They had balloons, they had big
names and they had over 30 speakers,
including Premier McGuinty.
At
the Grand Opening of the Northern
Ontario School of Medicine they
pulled out all the stops,
and ran overtime for what
is being called a historic
event for Northern Ontario, L..,;;;.;:.~,~''·"-·
and Lakehead University.
Making extensive use of
technology to integrate
Northern
communities,
last Tuesday's big event
was all about connections
and
community.
The
ceremony
linked
participants
at
Laurentian
and
Lakehead Universities by
that might not be relevant to the
videoconference. Guests at Laurentian North." Dr. Hunt says that the opening
included Premier McGuinty and His of the new school signals that there
Excellency John Ralston Saul. Elijah are valuable resources in the North.
Harper and Minister of State (Public
The
opening ceremony
Health) the Honourable Dr. Carolyn lasted about two hours and afterwards
Bennett were among the guests at organizers and participants seemed
Lakehead. Minister of Health George exhausted, but proud of the
Smitherman was also scheduled to achievement that the ceremony
attend but was unable to make it symbolized. "This is the kind of
to the event. Ontario Lieutenant event that needs to be done," stated
Governor James Baitleman and Dr. Hunt, "but as a teacher I just want
Canada's Commissioner of Official to get down to business." He calls the
Languages Dr. Dyane Adam were not 56 Charter students, who have begun
at either of the campuses but joined by their studies already, "amazing."
videoconference. Also participating
Tours of the school were open
through videoconference were more to the community in the afternoon,
than ten Northern communities that where classrooms already showed
will be involved with the NOSM. signs of use. The school is equipped
When asked to reflect on the with clinics for practical study, a library

that will be open to the public, a room
designed to accommodate Aboriginal
smudging ceremonies and a student
lounge. The third floor of the West
(Lakehead) Campus is not completed
yet, but it is not behind schedule.
That floor is for offices and was not
scheduled for completion until
the end of the calendar year.
The East campus is
not completed either, but at
Laurentian they are a bit behind
schedule. Dr. Hunt explained
that while the Lakehead
building was built from the
bottom up, at Laurentian they
did the opposite, so while
the offices are completed,
the classrooms are not.
There are still some
technology problems that need
to be worked out. Faculty
are also learning to teach medical
students, and in a new environment.
After the Grand Opening, which a
committee for major events had been
planning for a year, Dr. Hunt says that
he is looking forward to a breathing
spell during which they can settle in.
The charter class began on
September 6. There are 24 students in
Thunder Bay and 32 in Sudbury. The
NOSM is intended to aid the doctor
shortage in Northern Ontario, based on
the idea that doctors who are trained
here will be likely to practice here.
McGuinty touched on this in his speech:
"the north needs you," he told the
students, "I am urging you to consider
a career right here in the North."

�2 September 19, 2005

Argus

News

LUSU's Community Garden
Ash/iegh Gehl I LUSU
Community Garden Coordinator
For most students, the end of April
means two things: tying the ends
of loose strings in Thunder Bay
and stepping out of the University
bubble only to enjoy the comforts
of a fruitful summer job.
Consequently, very few students
enjoy what Lakehead has to offer
in the spring and summer months.
One of the wonderful
programs that the Lakehead
University Student Union (LUSU)
offers is an organic community
garden. This garden has been
around for two years and has
a number of accomplishments
under its belt. As anyone knows,
accomplishments are usuall~
accompanied by set backs. One
of the many accomplishments this
year was the creation of a three bin
composting system. This project
was started in the garden's first
year and was finally completed
this year. The idea behind this
system is to generate enough
compost to maintain soil quality

but also give students a place to four legged mammal- the deer. there all day long, so feel free to
compost. Another addition to These garden thieves pirated 70% come whenever you can, any kind
the garden was the creation of a of the garden's goodies. Various of help is appreciated. One of the
pumpkin patch. This project was methods have been implemented goals established in the garden's
not as successful as expected but in order to salvage what is left of first year of existence was to
there will be pumpkins
expand the garden. At
ready
to
harvest
this building party we
when the time comes.
will be making new
garden beds, creating
Another
delicious
educational signs and
addition to the garden
putting patches on
was the numerous
tomato plants that
whatever else needs to
were donated from
be mended. If you are
Cattails
community
interested in helping
out, head down to
garden. Due to their
LUSU to sign up or ekindness, volunteers
have been enjoying
mail the coordinator at
the sensational taste
amgehl@lakeheadu.ca.
of cherry tomatoes
Keep an eye out for
for the past couple of
posters
regarding
weeks.
Aside from
future
garden
tomatoes, there are MMMM . .. carrots from your own community fundraising projects.
garden
As the gardening
a number of carrots,
season is coming to an
radishes,
squash,
lettuce, and other leafy things the garden, but these deer seem end I would like to acknowledge
sharing the garden space. to be one step ahead of the game. those who have made this
On
Saturday, gardening project flourish.
As mentioned above,
A
the garden experienced a major September 24th at l 0am, there big thank you goes out to the
set back. This year's set back will be a building party for the volunteers who helped get the
was the invasion of our beloved, garden. The coordinator will be garden started (Shar Hanson);

Pointing fingers
Bush takes some blame for
delayed relief efforts after
Katrina

Bush .comforts victims of hurricane Katrina
Dale Edmunds
In the wak~fHurricane Katrina, US
citizens are looking for someone to
blame. Drastic drops in support for
President Bush show where much
of the blame is being placed. This
is largely due to the fact that he did
not leave the vacation he was taking
on his Texas ranch for several days,
and did not visit the affected area
for nearly a 'Yeek, causiI1,g critics
to ponder the reasons why a more
decisive and effective approach
was not taken with the relief effort.
To combat this negative
image, President Bush has taken
action. The director of the Federal
Emergency Management Agency
(FEMA) was first moved out of the
region, and then resigned. This after
. it was discovered that his only prior
experience was overseeing horse
shows, and that he had no actual
experience or training with disaster
relief. President Bush has assigned
Dick Cheney to remove bureaucratic
barriers to the relief effort, as
well as to be a compassionate
and human face for the people
of New Orleans to identify with.
Finally, the president stated that he
accepts some of the responsibility;
however most of the blame "rests
on state and local authorities."
One criticism that has been
strengthened, rather than addressed

in the past days is that of President
Bush's disconnect with the
underprivileged and people of ethnic
minorities. According to a survey
conducted by CNN, 60 percent
of ethnic minorities in tne United
States believe that the slow and
ineffective response to the disaster
was racially motivated compared
to only 10 percent of Caucasians.
This gap has been
exacerbated by both critics and
supporters of the President. Michael
Moore stated that the reason for the
loss of human life was not due to
nature at all, but human error caused
by "cultural and social pre·udice."
Barbara
Bush,
the
President's mother, has been quoted
as stating: "What I'm hearing which
is sort of scary, is they all want to
stay in Texas. And so many of the
people in the area here, you know,
were underprivileged."
These
comments have served to create
a sense of unease and discontent
among the US populous, which
is being expressed through poll
numbers as low as 45 percent,
an all time low for the President.
No matter what rhetorical
orators ·· are exchanging, with
over 160 000 homes damaged
beyond repair, and thousands
dead, the polls indicate that voters
are unhappy, and that could
be reflected at the ballot box.

those who donated the vegetables
(Cattails, the Dilley's and JoAnne
Henderson), the seeds and the
organic gardening magazines.
I would like to applaud
the team that helped deliver the
new shed . . . in one piece. A
big thank you to Jeff Moore for
his teachings and patience, Dr.
Dilley and his family for lending
us supplies when we needed
them, Dr. Zaniewski for testing
our soils and last but not least,
Robert Martins and Ms. Jodi for
their continuous support, hard
labour and passion for gardening.
I would also like to
thank LUSU for having such a
wonderful program that allows
students to appreciate the finer
things life provides. There is
so much beauty in turning soil,
sowing the smallest of seeds,
watching with amazement all
that blooms, and leaving th.e
land with dirt stained hands.
Thank you.

Students set up website to sell your
used books
JakeSatten

for

marginal profit making.
The creators of the
site also took into account the
various other resources available
f'or students to trade their used

prices at the used. bookstore and
receive a large percentage of
Books, it seems, are -a hot
the sale back. Furthermore, the
commodity, especially when
used bookstore is a "visible and
they are required for specific
viable service for students and
university courses.
run by stude~
It's great, it really
The price of books,
helps students."
when compounded
Krupper
also
with the escalating
noted that the
cost of tuition is
used
bookstore
enough to make
is advantageous
student
any
to the Lakehead
consider stealing,
community as it
or
worse
yet,
creates jobs at the
taking out a loan.
school for students.
There are however,
When asked about
alternatives
to
the new online
purchasing
fullbookstore,Krupper
price books for
communicated
classes at Lakehead
no qualms. He
University.
believes the online
T h i s
bookstore is yet
year, an online
another way for
used book trading
store has been Never mind gas pumps. Are you being gauged at the students to make
their lives easier.
launched ,by three
bookstore?
"If
·someth.mg
enterprising young
can't
be sold
students, two of
books.
In regards to most
through
the
used
bookstore,
whom are from York University used book stores that exist on
and the other from Ryerson. campuses however, Hennick it's good that there's something
The store can be found at stated: "Many campus bookstores else out there for students."
Hennick also had praise
www.booksforschool.ca. • One will buy-back penny pinching
for
the
type
of used bookstore
of the creators, Lawson student's textbooks at prices far
which
LUSU
employs, and
Hennick-, - from
Yorlc~ oelow what would oecons1dered even stated willingness to work
described the venture- "It's fair. These devalued buy-back together with LUSU and other
offers tend to be less than 50%
a free Canada-wide online of the original price. Moreover, university student unions across
resource for university and these same books would then the country. "Now that we have
college students to use for the be marked up by the bookstore proved to Canada that this system
purposes of buying and selling and sold for even higher cost works, we'd like to approach local
their textbooks with one another. to buyers." Obviously Hennick student unions about partnering
with
booksforschool.ca
We have integrated social feels
booksforschool.ca
is up
networking into the textbook a much better alternative to expand their markets. We
transaction _process
which to
used
book
stores. hope to begin talking to them
allows for studeRts to not only
Lakehead, of course, sometime next year. Although,
save on textbooks, but to meet has both its own bookstore if any student union is reading
other students across Canada - which, it should be noted, this, feel free to email us
in similar academic programs funnels profits back to students through the website. We support
and build a network of tnist." in the form of scholarships and our student unions and their
While the site does burseries - and a used bookstore, commitment to lowering tuition not charge ,any commission the latter being very similar to fees and textbook costs. We'll
and is l 00% •free for students, Hennick's online option. LUSU do whatever we can to help out."
there are advertisements on the president Adam Krupper noted
site which presently account that students set their own

�' Argus

News

Septemher 19, 2005

LU Native Student Association
"Dignity, respect and equal opportunity"

Maybe the bear is interested
in life-long learning!
Numerous bear sightings on
campus

Aaron Genereux

. - - - - -- -- - - - - - - - - - - - to participate and put forth
ideas for lJpcoming social
and cultural events such
The
Lakehead
as our Annual Pow Wow
University
Native
held in March.
If you
Student
Association
(LUNSA) is a student
feel that you possess the
representation of the
leadership qualities that
Abdriginal population in
would be an asset to this
the University. Founded
team, formal nominations
many moons ago, the
for
pos1t10ns
within
organization has worked
LUNSA will be available.
hard to bring sports
We will be hosting
nights, potlucks, dinners,
an open meeting to provide
socials,
an
annual
you, the students, with more
powwow, and many other
information. This meeting
fun events to the students
will be held this Wednesday,
at Lakehead ' university
September 21 at 4pm in
for the last several years.
the Aboriginal Student
LUNSA will be
Lounge, Room SC0004B.
made up of eight council
Elections will be taking
positions which include:
place in the coming weeks;
• P re s i d e n t , _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___. this and other items will be
• Vice-President
the better good of your fellow
discussed this Wednesday.
• Secretary
students, you should seriously
If
you
want
to
• Finance Administrator
consider joining this remarkable
obtain regular updates about
team.
upcoming LUNSA events or
• Liaison Facilitator
LUNSA
is
always elections, please email us at
• Special Events
Coordinator
looking for new and fresh ideas. lunsa@lakeheadu.ca, and we
We have several new events and will add you to our email list.
• Cultural Coordinator
• Athletics Coordinator activities on the drawing board You can also drop by our LUNSA
for the 05/06 school year, but if office located at SC0004A, call
• Public Relations
Coordinator
there's something that you would 343-7713, or visit our website at
This year, LUNSA is
like to see happen at LU, there http:llbolt.lakeheadu.ca/~lunsa
calling upon all interested people
is no better method for turning /if you require more information.
within the student body to step
that idea into an accomplishment
Please
feel
free
forward and get involved. Last
than by joining either the to stop by the meeting and
year was awesome, but with
LUNSA executive committee, meet your fellow peers and
your help, this year is going to
or becoming a volunteer. future
committee
members.
b~ phenomenal. If you are a
We are looking for Good luck with the studies.
student with Aboriginal interests,
students from all national . and
have great ideas and suggestions· ethnic backgrounds, far and wide, ~
or even just the will to work for

3

Jake Satten I Argus

hope that the bear is proniptly
caught. One female student pointed
bear out that last year women did not feel
There
is
a
wreaking psychological terror safe when walking alone around
around campus, and as of campus because of a different kj.nd
print-date, he remains at large. of predator. While she was pleased
that no problems
According
regarding sexual
Lakehead
to
predators
haye
University's official
arisen
this
year,
Communication's
she maintained
report,
releas_ed
that
even now,
Monday, September
th
"the
university
12 : "A black bear
campus
seems
has been sighted
scary
at
night.
frequently
on
It
would
be
nice
campus over the
if
this
bear
was
past several days.
removed
from
This bear does not
around campus."
seem to be diSturbed ...______Mll.
0 n e
with people being
He's probably not after
engineering
around. ' It has been picnic baskets •• •but you
student was far
sighted around the
never know
less terrified of
Fieldhouse,
Lake
the
tiear, and
Tamblyn, Residence
truly
baffled
at
authorities'
inability
area, and by the Avila Centre."
to
trap
it.
Mike
Satten
stated,
"give
The bear . seems at ease
me
a
gun,
and
I'll
go
kill
tha,t
bear."
around people. Some students are
Fortunately, for animal
wondering why the bear wandered
lovers,
there
are no plans -to kill
onto campus in the first place.
the
bear.
A
bear
trap was set up on
One third-year forestry student
Tuesday,
September
l 3th , in an effort
commented that, "bears are not
hostile creatures. They don't go to catch the bear without hurting it.
It has been requested
around eating people. I'm not
that
all
bear
sightings be reported
saying that if I saw a bear, I would
to
Security
at
343-8569, or call
run up to it and ask for a bearthe
sighting
in
by using the
back ride or anything, but really,
emergency
telephones.
I'm not too worried about seeing blue
one. It would be kind of cool, Students are urged to be cautious
especially if I actually got a ride!" while traveling on campus.
Many students however,

Raindrops keep falling on my
head? Not for long.
University tunnels finally seeing repairs
Amy Hadley/ Argus

Leaky tunnels have been a
Lakehead feature for years. When asked
why the problem has been present for so
long without being fixed, Schlyter simply
stated: "There are
a lot of demands
on money for
maintenance.
Often other, more
pressing i;Ssues,
take
priority."

Granted, it is better than walking outside,
but complaining about the state of the
tunnel
system
is a Lakehead
tradition.
The
pools of water
that
collect
after a heavy
rainfall
remind
campus travelers
Repairs should
of the
much
take
between
lamented deferred
two and three
maintenance on
weeks depending
campus. But leaky
on the weather.
tunnels could be a
For the duration
thing of the past
of this period
following repairs
outdoor
that are currently It's not a toy, people: stairs between the the
stairs
between
underway.
Library and Ryan buildings are blocked
the
Library
A
n
offfor tunnel repairs
and the Ryan
area
between
the library and
building will be
the Ryan building has been blocked off closed. The tunnels will remain open, or
so that the concrete slab of the tunnel students can access the main campus area
can be replaced.
New waterproofing from the parking lot by taking the path
and insulation will go below the slab. between the ATAC and the Ryan building.
"Hopefully this will address some of the
In the mean time, the wooden
water issues," stated Kevin Schlyter, project structure blocking the area undergoing
coordinator within the university physical repairs is a conspicuous addition
plant. He adds that while they know that to the campus.
If last Thursday
the concrete overhanging is rotting due is any -indication, it will become a
to water damage, "until we open it up we popular target for pub-night antics.
don't know what we're dealing with."

�Argus
Room UC2014B
Lakehead University
Thunder Bay. Onta rio
P7B SE 1
Phone (807) 344-6911
Fa x (807) 343-8803
E-Mail argus@ lakeheadu ca

Rob Rombouts
Editor-in-Chief
argused,tor@lal&lt;eheadu ca

Doug Diaczuk
Production Manager

Amy Hadley
Sr News Editor
argusnews@lal&lt;ehendu.ca

Jake Satten
Jr News Editor
Suzanne Halet
Arts &amp; Entertamment Ec/1tor
argusa,t@lake/Jeaciu ca

Tom Peotto
Features Editor
arg1 ,sfealures@lnl&lt;eheadu.ca

Alan Wickware
Spo,1s Editor
arqusspot1s@lakeheadtr.ca

It Could be You!
Photo/Graphics Editor
argusphotos@lal&lt;eheaclu ca

Alex Brown
Web Master

Tarek Jalbout
Acfve11ismg Manager
argusacls@lokcl1eaclu en

Diana Coletta
Copy Editor

Bryce Rudland
Circulation Manager
.\niL'k:-- crn hL-

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Getting to know you
Ontario Minister of Training, Colleges and Universities
comes to call
Amy Hadley and Jake Sattenl
Argus

University Young
Liberals
(LUYL) participated in a
brief roundtable discussion
with Bentley, in which there
was opportunity for dialogue
pertaining fo the ways the
allocated money might be spent.
One participant suggested that
programs at Universities which
are specifically relevant to their
surrounding areas should receive
special attention. For instance,
the new Medical School at
Lakehead will play a vital role
in the stability of communities

Meet the Administration:

Staff

.ii ':\ ·

Argus

News

September 19, 2005

should he be visiting Lakehead.
Bentley met with Krupper and
VP Finance Chad O'Halloran.
Krupper
was
disappointed in the minister's
response to concerns that reduced
funding for tuition fees will hurt
Northern Ontario students more
than Southern students because
of lower wages in the North.
The government is. reluctant to
continue its current funding of
tuition fees. After, as Krupper put
it, they, "beat that one to death."
The meeting took a tum for the

student unions are incorporated
bodies that can be pushed
around by administrations. He
points to incidents at Ryerson
and York where student space
is being co-opted and he adds
that here at LU the Outpost
is constantly under threat of
being shut down.
Krupper
argues
that
administration
does not fully respect student
union leaders as elected
representatives. The minister
called rights for student unions
one of their top three priorities.
LUSU also
raised concerns about
northern funding and
the Orillia campus
with the minister.
The discussion was
cut short because of
the minister's tight
schedule.
Krupper
says that he will write
a follow up report
for
the
minister.

It was a series of lightning fast
visits, but the honourable Chris
Bentley managed to cover
quite a few bases while visiting
the University last Monday.
Included in his busy schedule
were Dr. Fred Gilbert, Chairs
and Presidents of Northern
Colleges, LUSU executive,
student leaders at Confederation
College, the Aboriginal Support
Center, and the Young~~~
Liberals of Lakehead
University. The MPP
from London West has
not been on the job
long; he was appointed
to
his
ministerial
position in June 2005.
As a new minister,
he came to Lakehead
to listen to concerns
about
educational
issues and funding
and to learn about
Aboriginal Issues
Lakehead and what
Addressed:
the school has to offer.
Bentley also
Director
of
initiated a meeting
Institutional Analysis
with Spencer Rowe
and
Government
and several aboriginal
Relations,
Kerriestudents
at
The
Lee Clarke, states
Aboriginal
Cultural
that the introduction
Support Services on
of Bentley to LU
campus. Rowe, the
was an opportunity
director of the centre,
to tell him a "good
seemed both surprised
news story" about the Minster Bentley poses with the Young Liberals ofLakehead during his and impressed that
visit last monday
successes and potential
Bentley "wanted to
of LU.
The visit
talk with aboriginal
was timely considering that in Northern Ontario. "There's better when LUSU expressed students," noting, "it's not
Bentley was here just two days no doubt that colleges and their disapproval of Income often politicians actually reach
before the much anticipated universities are huge economic Contingent Loan Repayment out to aboriginal centres."
agreed
Bentley, Plans. LUSU is concerned that
Grand Opening of the Northern drivers,"
Bentley asked how the
"therefore,
m
Northwestern
Ontario School of Medicine- a
students are unaware of good 'new money' might be used to
landmark event for Lakehead. Ontario we must ensure there options for loan repayment. assist aboriginals at universities.
"Politicians don't get are programs at Lakehead that Krupper stated that when One
student
suggested
here very often," she says. "This are relevant to the area." Also someone from the government improving certain curriculums at
was a chance to show that we're discussed was the need for comes to the school every year Lakehead to increase aboriginal
a strong university." She points an increased and diversified to explain how to apply for loans, awareness of · specific issues
to Lakehead's potential for Grad Program at Lakehead. they "help students get into debt, regarding
native-Canadians.
[but] at the end of the year [the
research and graduate studies:
Rowe felt that extra
government] is never there to funding to the Native Access
"we want to continue to develop The Talk in the Tunnel:
LUSU
president
help
them out of debt." Krupper Program, which reaches out to
this way, but we need funding."
Adam
Krupper
felt
that
the
says
that the minister expressed aboriginals . attending school
Over the next few years the
visit
with
the
minister
went
positive
interest in LUSU's away from remote reserves for
Ontario government will be
well.
Krupper
approached
the
suggestions,
which
would the first time, would be extremely
distributing 6.2 billion dollars for
minister's
assistant
at
a
meeting
be
very
easy
to
implement.
Ontario colleges and universities.
beneficial.
"The program
of the Ontario division of the
Next on the LUSU focuses on not only academic
Canadian Federation of Students meeting agenda was the issue aspects of school, but on Body,
Liberals at Lakehead hold
in August and requested that of legal rights for student Mind, and Spirit... to which most
Roundtable Discussion:
the
minister speaki to LUSU unions.
Krupper says that students respond very well."
The
Lakehead

tl1 ,i,L· 1.1.;1,i

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I l.._·,1il-

LU receives FedNor support

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Over $400, 000 will go to research and technology
initiatives
Amy Hadley/ Argus

u

Lakehead Uni,versity will receive
FedNor (Federal Economic
Development Initiative
for
Northwestern and rural Ontario)
support to the tune of$ 429, 655
for projects that will enhance
research
and
technology
capabilities at the school.
FedNor
provides
funding for community projects

with the aim of improving the
social and economic conditions
. in the North.
The funding
that was announced by MP
Joe Comuzzi last week will be
divided between four projects.
$150, 000 will fuel the planning
and design of a new research
building. $141, 000 will support
research into ' development of
electrodes used in the production
of metals.
Equipment to

improve LU's toxicology testing
services will be acquired using
$ II 1, 155 of the total. The
remaining $27, 500 will fund the
employment of a youth intern
for a new Materials Science and
Biotechnology research center.
President of Lakehead
University Dr. Fred Gilbert
stated that these initiatives hold
potential not only to develop
research capabilities, but to

be "both useful to regional
industry and likely to create new,
commercially valuable products
and processes as well as longterm employment." Hopes are
that the new building will help
to attract faculty. The research
could be valuable for Ontario
mining and smelting operations.

�News

Argus

Registration deadline approaching
for Celebration Weekend
Jennifer Cudmore

to be greeters, work at
the registration table and
The
weekend
of Cl~ttRATING
~' ~ 8 1
to take digital photos of
September 29th through
the weekend," says Ives.
October 2nd will see
"• .,.;, ..~
A n y O n e
the campus flooded
wishing to attend any of
with
alumni
and
the events or looking to
visitors from around
volunteer are encouraged
Thunder
Bay
and
U N I VE RS I T Y
to call Heather Ives
North America to help
at 346-7784 or email
celebrate Lakehead's ._,___
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___. 40years@lakeheadu.ca.
40th Anniversary. While
Complete event listings
there are many events occurring year and registration details can be found
round, this weekend will mark the main at
www.lakeheadualumni.ca/40years/.
celebration. Thereareeventsrangingfrom
•Alumni Golf Day, Zanatta Games, Pub Thursday, September 29th
Night, Athletics Wall of Fame Induction, Alumni Golf Day
Kick-Off BBQ, Family Breakfast and 40 Years Dinner
much more. Many events are free and Career DayNirtual Fair
all students are encouraged to attend. Campfire
"We're very excited about this
Celebration Weekend, and we hope to see Friday, September JOlh
everyone come out to the events," says Opening Ceremonies
Heather Ives, Alumni Officer and the 40th Kick-Off BBQ
Anniversary coordinator. "There truly is Faculty, Department, Student Club &amp;
something for everyone - whether it's Research Displays
taking part in some of our free events like Pub Night (must be over 19)
the campfire, canoe rides, and campus
tours, or joining in some of the larger Saturday, October l st
main events like the 40th Anniversary Family Breakfast
Celebration Dinner &amp; Dance- World Alumni Association Information Session
on a Plate. Everyone is welcome." ATAC Open House
The
registration
deadline Athletics Wall of Fame Induction
for all events has been extended to Voyageur Canoe Rides
Friday, September 23n1_ Registration Geocaching
is a must for all events, as Ives Zanatta Games
explains that it is important to register World on a Plate Dinner and Dance
for all events, so that enough staff is
on hand. A registration package is Sunday, October 2"d
handed out to all those who sign-up. Ecumenical Service
Students are- also welcomed to Farewell Brunch
volunteer as there are many positions
still open. "We are looking for people
", s •

",

Lakehead

September 19, 2005

5

Don't book that ad
Publishers attempts to place ads in
university textbooks are squashed by parent
company s corporate policy
Amanda-Marie Quintino
The Eyeopener (Ryerson
University)

TORONTO
(CUP)
McGraw-Hill
Ryerson
quietly called off plans to
place
advertisements
in
university textbooks because
of a "minor oversight"
in its company policy.
According
to
Tom
Stanton,
director
of
communications
for
McGraw-Hill
Education,
the Ryerson team in charge
of the ad initiative was
unaware of the policy conflict.
"We don't permit
advertising in textbooks,"
said Stanton. "When it was
discovered that [Ryerson]
was initiating this project,
we immediately retracted
it because it was in
opposition to McGraw-Hill's
corporate policy to include
ads in our textbooks."
McGraw - Hi 11
Ryerson is the Canadian
subsidiary of McGraw-Hill
Ltd. and is not related to
Ryerson University. Although
the
companies
publish
separate material, they share
administrative policies. Not
all employees were aware
of this when proposing
the textbook ad initiative.

When the initiative was
launched,
the
company
released a brochure in an
attempt to receive support
from potential advertisers.
"Reach a hard-to-get
target group where they spend
all their parents' money," the
brochure read. "Do you really
think 18 to 24-year-olds see
those on-campus magazine
ads? Do you really think
they coulq miss an ad that
is placed in a well-respected
textbook?" read the pamphlet.
But before advertisers had
the opportunity to show
interest,
McGraw-Hill
Ryerson pulled out the rule
book and cancelled the plans.
Patrick
Ferrier,
president of higher educatio1_1
for McGraw-Hill Ryerson,
said the initiative retraction
was made some time in midJune, shortly after it had been
made public. He was unable
to provide an exact date.
"The
reality
is
that the Ryerson team just
didn't know they were
doing anything wrong," said
Ferrier. "It still wasn't a fully
developed plan at that point,
so there was no harm done."
But according to
Gary
Ruskin,
executive
director
of Commercial
Alert, the fact that McGraw-

Hill Ryerson was • even
making considerations to
impose advertisements in
the classroom is shameful.
"Some places should be offlimits," said Ruskin, wh,o
works to rid the nation's
schools ofcorporate markJters.
"Some things are too
important to be for sale-that
includes the classroom."
Lana
Petros,
a
third-year
business
marketing student insists
that there are specific places
for advertising and the
classroom is not one of them.
"I don't need to be
exposed to commercialism in
a J?lace of learning," she said.
Business
management professor Tarun
Dewan is pleased with the
initiative's
cancellation.
"Puttin&amp;
ads
in
textbooks would cause a
dilution ofacademic integrity,"
he said. "It's very important to
keep commercial interests out
of universities as much as
possible. Textbooks should
not contain propaganda."
According to Stanton,
students
and
professors
should not be concerned.
McGraw-Hill Ryerson has
no plans to change policy
in order to accommodate
textbook
advertisements.

The MEH Report
Jake Satten and Tom Peotto

And the award for Least Favourite Canadian ... Wait, this may give him one more thing to brag about.
Brian Mulroney has long been suspected of being the greatest asshole to ever become Prime Minister, and now a new book by former friend, Peter C. Newman is adding weight to this
argument. The Secret Mulroney Tapes is a 400-page word-for-word account of Brian Mulroney's rants, raves, and political musings that Newman has held for decades.
Newman taped Mulroney in over 100 interviews over the span of many years. Some of these interviews took place while Mulroney was in office. To hear a P.M. speak like
this is nothing less than astonishing - case in point, his advice to Kim Cambell, his successor as Prime Minister: "Keep Your Pecker up, Kim."
In the book, Mulroney also rags on Canadian political heavyweights, such as Pierre Elliot Trudeau, calling him a "coward and a weakling"; on Jean Chretien, who, according
to Mulroney is a "mean, dirty, and stupid bastard;" and ironically (and unwittingly), on himself, noting that "you'd fail as a leader if you allowed vindictiveness to enter your
judgement."
(JS)
How about that award going to Karla instead?
Karla Homolka, who by all accounts should be serving multiple life sentences, yet just finished an overly-merciful hot-tub and fling-filled 12 year sentence, is now seeking to reduce
the restrictions placed on her parole. The restrictions, which Holmolka argues violate her constitutional rights, include reporting to police regularly, giving them notice if she is to leave
Quebec, and avoiding contact with violent offenders.
Family members of Homolka's victims are expected to argue against the 'schoolgirl killer' in her upcoming court appearance. Likely,-their argument will prevail.
(JS)

I/she can't be roaming the savannah,
apparently the next best thing is the
latest in exercise equipment

Oh Maggie, how you've let your figure go! Treadmill shmeadmill, just eat Subway!
Idaho-based Conveyor Engineering has gone where no company has gone before ... and created the first treadmill for elephants.
Commissioned by the Alaska Zoo in Anchorage, AK for 4-tonne African elephant Maggie, whose last weigh-in showed her at over
400 kilograms overweight. The treadmill weighs 7,260 kg and is 6 metres long by 2.5 m wide.
Zoo director Tex Edwards is optimistic, stating that Maggie "seems to enjoy new challenges." Assistant director'"l&gt;at Lampi points
out that treadmills have been built for race horses and racing camels, "but never for an elephant."
At her August 2004 weigh-in, Maggie was about 455 kilograms overweight. Keepers have made changes to her diet and made
her feeding more strenuous; to simulate the browsing and foraging which African elephants would do on the savannah, food is now
hung from special structures in her paddock, which require her to reach and strain. Maggie has already lost about 410 kg thanks to
these changes.
Says Mr. Edwards; "We think it is possible that a lot of elephants around the world will find more regular exercise a beneficial
addition to their lives."
(TP)

If I die, you can have my face
Doctors at the Cleveland Clinic are planning to cross a medical frontier and perform the world's first face-transplant surgery.
Dr. Maria Siemienow, a 55-year-old surgeon trained at Polish medical schools and with thousands of surgeries under her belt over the past 30 years, has acquired the clinic's
approval to attempt the procedure after successful experiments with animals. The procedure involves routine microsurgery: the donor tissue (ie. the face of a cadaver) would be
connected to the transplantee with one or two pairs of veins and arteries on each side of the face, 20 nerve endings being stitched together to restore movement and feeling, and tiny
sutures to the scalp, neck, eyes, nose, and mouth.
Critics point out that infections could turn the transplanted flesh charcoal-black and require replacement by skin grafts, or a second transplant. Drugs to prevent tissuerejection by the transplantee would be necessary for the rest of their life, and raise the risk of kidney cancer. Yet the procedure would only be performed in cases of extreme
disfigurement and to prevent painful and disfiguring skin grafts, says Dr. Siemienow. "I hope nobody will be frivolous or do things just for fame. We are almost over-cautious."
(TP)

�6

Argus

Columns

September 19, 2005

Monthly Horoscopes September
Meggi Chopra

Aries (Mar.
21-Apr. 19):
Be careful of
your words
this month.
You may offend someone
close to you by making a
sarcastic remark that upsets
them deeply. If you don't
have anything nice to say,
don't say anything at all.
Relationships in general
are challenging for a brief
period.
Taurus (Apr.
20-May 20):
Like the Bull,
you are stubborn
.
m your ways.
Learn to be
open-minded. You may
come across conflict but as
long as you are willing to
listen, you will resolve the
issue in a quick and mature
fashion.

Gemini(May
21--June 21):
Your sex life
will pick up
during midmonth. Just be cautious
over matters of the heart. If
you know that you may get
emotionally attached too
soon, you might want to
think twice before making
any rash decisions.
Cancer(June
22-July 22):
Watch your
attitude. You
may be in a bad
mood for whatever reasons,
but don't take them out on
others. Doing so will create
enemies lasting the entire
school year.
Leo (July 23Aug 22):
You may bump
into someone
who has hurt

you in the past. Be strong.
Like the Lion, hold your
pride and do not show them
that they have affected you
in any way. This will tum
the tables and they will
question their role in your
life.

f1iiil Virgo (Aug.

~ 23-Sep. 22):

You and your
partner have much to gain
through communication
this month. If you find that
your relationship is on the
downfall, try writing a letter
or e-mailing your feelings
and thoughts. You will find
that your partner may feel
the same way which will
in tum, strengthen your
relationship.

have a long bubble bath or
cuddle on the couch with a
special someone. You will
find yourself refreshed and
ready to face student life
with ease.

[!]
.

Scorpio (Oct.
24-Nov. 21):
You~ sex lif: is
soanng. EnJoy
it as it will not
last long.

Sagittarius
(Nov. 22-Dec.
21):
You have
reached an
important turning point in
your life. Do not be hasty
in your decisions regarding
finances and it will be
smooth sailing for you.

Libra(Sep.23-Oct. 23):
P . . . . f" Take some
time to relax
and rejuvenate.
Curl up with a book,

Capricorn
(Dec. 22--Jan.
19):
You are a lot
more influential .

than you give yourself
credit for. People will listen
to your ideas and perhaps
follow them. Just be careful
of what you wish for.
A Ar Aquarius (Jan.
..,.,..,....._., 20-Feb. 18):
Alls~ New romances
are promising.
You find
that you connect with
your new crush on many
levels which strengthens
your relationship. Just be
yourself and enjoy this new
companionship.

Pisces (Feb. 19Mar. 20):
You are
admired and
adored by those
closest to you. Previous
disappointments in romance
are easier to accept and you
are able to move on with
dignity.

Flowers
and
Fishheads
Ramy. Elec. Eng:
rd say three. nne·s
a sclld number.

ishheads to the girls who laughed.
-Mary
lowers to the Bright Yellow Lines on the stairs in the Agora.
-Mary
lowers to Sheri Skerget for coming in on her Friday to copy edit for the

'Monique. Education:

It takes definitely three. If I

get escorted out, I"m
definitely not getting up
by the late afternoon.
Thank you. ·Tankard
Tuesdays.

ishheads to the kids who, instead of walking around the construction,
decided to climb the walls to get to the Outpost
o you want to send a flower or a fishhead? E-mail them to argusfishhea
s@lakeheadu.ca

Davin, Mech. Eng:

(Long pause) Two, if that.
Find a girl .... yeahi that
sounds good.

Keep in touch with friends and family...

Pete. O\ddoor Rec:

With the new Campus Calling feature all local and long distance
calls between Rogers Wireless customers are FREE for students!

A.a a Redr I would say ·a 1or.
becaule I'm aware of my
obligations and have a' 9:30

• Offer available to post secondary
students with valid ID (full or part-time).

TELECD

class that lets me sleep in
untll 8:30 or so. Al a Rec

CMlll'ib'96i.t~isw,,,mr.r,r dl,OO::rr.nt.ts P«1 m"CI. S!I P',.vw

student that is a very big

f't1Gt1Utit~~1.r~ l'ld~d~.al~~'MDl\¥t

sleep-in.

I •Available
on new or
renewed 2 or 3 year plans.

!lj'.)lts31"'11t!il.~il:Xn!M'.J ll~t"',911~«W!f':'\~
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Tlt~

j!,. . . . .~ ..~~

~ ~ls.d~~

601 Central Ave. • 345-2900
www.teleco.ca
Connect with the Leader!

HOURS: MON.· FRI. 8:30 • 6, SAT. 10 • 5

0ROGERSw1RHess

.t.07~0!\IHO DEA, tit

�Argus

Editorial

September 19, 2005

7

A word or two from the editor.
While
most
people don't
realize it, the
CBC, Canada's
public
broadcaster, is
in the middle
of a labour
dispute, and by
'labour dispute'
I mean that the
management
has
locked
the CBC workers out of their
work environment, effectively
making it look like they are
on strike while also taking
the power to end the labour
dispute away from the workers.
As I said, most people
probably don't realize that the

CBC is on strilce. I, however,
do, as I am a geek and like
listening to the CBC for all my
information about the world.
Most people probably don't
realize what the labour dispute
is about, or see how it connects
to numerous other disputes
that have occurred recently.
Basically,
the
CBC
workers had been working
without a contract for at least a
year before they were locked out.
While there were negotiations
going on to try and establish a
new contract, the sticking point
was the management's attempts
to threaten the survival of the
union.
Basically, the CBC
management wanted to eliminate
full-time positions and replace

them with contractual workers. workers to be drastically reduced.
This would reduce the strength of And in the end, the university
the union and save money for the won and any new worker can
corporation. Sounds great from be hired on a contractual basis.
Now, say what you
a management perspective, but
look at fflat. from the perspective will about union corruption and
of the workers. What does that lazy union workers, because I
mean? Basically, it means that know people will; but in all the
workers would be paid less and arguments about unions, there is
would have less job security. the underlying fact that unions,
Does this all sound if they are doing their job, play
familiar? Because it should. Last an important role in protecting
spring, when the housekeeping workers (or whoever their
staff went on strike, it wasn't over members may be, because let's
increased wages, it was because not forget that we are all part of
the university wanted to replace · a student union). When you are
them with contract workers, albeit entering a contract, it is a lot easier
not all at once, but over time. This to get a better deal if you have the
action would have reduced the entire weight of the workforce
effective strength of the union behind you, and it's not just one
and caused the overall wages of person negotiating with a major

corporation.
When full time
workers are replaced by contract
workers, wages are reduced and
the amount of money available
to the economy is also reduced.
When unions lose, all
workers lose. And when .workers
lose, so does the vast majority
of the population. Many people
at the university probably come
from a middle-class background,
but this does not mean they 'are
removed from union protection.
We can't forget that unions
protect the life-styles that we
have come to take for ~ted.
Thanks for your time,
Rob Rombouts

The LUSU President's Report
The Shrinking Sphere
Adam Krupperl LUSV President

Where are we going?
Good
Lord!
What a question.
Really though, where are
we going as an institution? This is
a fundamental question that needs
to be asked. If you were to look
at our campus development plan
you'd see that as an institution,
we are moving towards a lot more
roads, privatized research, more
and more parking lots, leasing part
of our campus for a golf course,
and a really big hockey rink.

This plan does not inspire
me. It does not speak of a
comprehensive plan to make this
a better university. It does not
speak to a vision of Lakehead
as a learning institution; it
does not build upon our past
strengths as a student-centered
institution; it does not create
a better learning environment.
The focus of the
university's development plan
is utilitarian. It means giving
up our campus to private forprofit interests. It means forever
destroying our green spaces,
those things (trees and alive
stuff) that make this campus so
remarkable and beautiful.
It
means moving the spotlight
from northern community-based
post-secondary
educational
programs to commercially-based
directed-study programs and
being a subsidized sports-centre.
It must be asked;

what do we want in a
campus and in a university?
Most people I talk to
really realize that a campus
is more than a collection of
buildings; they realize that those
buildings must address the
question of living the campus
experience. Buildings must serve
the greater need of education,
and its facilitation. That means
making the buildings liveable,
flexible, a place of experience
and communication on many
levels. They must foster warm
interaction and a communication
with what is beyond the walls.
Green space is more than
a few artificially planted trees and
pesticide sprayed grass. Green
space is open space; open is to
be filled with possibility. Lake
Tamblyn and everything that
surrounds it is green space. Its
uses are incredibly varied. It is
a space of excitement, of chilin',

congregation,
studying,
and
canoeing! It is also a safe place.
Our campus is remarkable because
it has enclaves of green space.
The
interaction
of
buildings and green space, how
they are put together, their design,
their relation to each other, and
everything in-betw.een is what
creates the physical atmosphere of
the campus. A clear, thoughtful,
and insightful vision of a campus
creates a place that helps its students
feel nurtured and empowered. •
I wish I could say that the
current campus plan has a healthy
vision, but I can't. It is a vision of
expansion, of opportunistic growth
that is more founded in personal
ambition than in academic merit.
It is a vision that
destroys our green space, sells our
campus to the highest bidder, and
desperately latches onto the newest
trends. It does not offer a vision of
Lakehead as a place that fosters

new possibility for new students
to create new boundaries in the
world; it is a vision ()fa university
that
compartmentalizes
'recreational' activity, learning, and
down-time. It makes Lakehead
a place of specific business and
sells off anything that does not
fit into that boxed mentality.
Why have you never seen
the campus development plan?
Why don't you know how this
place is being changed? Why has
student input been limited to one
vote at a time, in meetings that
refuse to ask a fundament question;
is this really what you want? Will
these changes make this campus
the best learning environment for
the future generations of students?
Are we creating an environment
of possibility, or decided activity?
Is this institution looking to the
future, following trends, or worse,
following personal ambitions?

.,:·.·

~ti-

.tar~·Coming U~. Par more infor~
•. ·tLTTC,TT
mati.•an vist
. .·1.iAJ«i:l
1

Clubs Days - September 27 &amp; 28
0 en Dis la in the A ora

�8

Yo ur Arg us
Tom Peotto I Argus

In 1956, American geophysicist
M. King Hubbert presented a
paper in which he predicted that
continental U.S. oil production
would peak sometime between
1965 and 1970, with world
production peaking in 1995.
U.S. oil production peaked in
l 971, and it has been calculated
that global production of
'conventional oil' peaked in
early 2004. As every schoolchild
knows, fossil fuels are finite
resources .which take millions of
years to develop. Are the Peak
Freaks right? Are we facing the
end of oil?
Regardless of whether
or not you subscribe to the Peak
Oil theory, one thing is certaingasoline has suddenly become
damned expensive. Let me
rephrase that: insanely expensive.
While millions of drivers offer
up their wallets in a manner
similar to Jacob's trussing up of
Isaac, let us examine the possible
alternatives to gasoline-powered
automobiles.
Natural gas
Not really
willing to give
up fossil fuels?
Consider a
natural-gaspowered-vehicle
(orNGV).
Throughout
North America,
the vast network
of natural gas
pipes in urban areas
make this fuel readily
abundant, and its cost is
already cheaper than gasoline
in the United States. The cleaner
burning of natural gas and the
thickness of the storage tanks in
NGVs result in less wear and tear
on the engine (which means less
tune-ups) and reduced chance of
fuel tank rupture.
But to accommodate
those thick, sturdy fuel tanks,
cargo and trunk space is
sacrificed. And their driving
range is approximately half that of
a conventional gasoline-powered
vehicle. So imagine this: you're
driving home from the Superstore,
groceries stacked up to your
eyeballs, when your car splutters
and dies. Unless you want to pull
it to a natural-gas pump which
may or may not exist in that
neighbourhood, the NGV driver is
SOL.
Not to mention that
natural gas, as well, is predicted
·to run out within the next century.
Hybrid cars
Calvin of Calvin and
I
Hobl;,es once stated, "A good
compromise leaves everybody
mad." Does this pertain to the
hybrid car? I don't know, and
frankly I don't intend to do the
research to find out. Seriously
though, a hybrid car uses both
electricity (often with batteries)
and a conventional, gas-burning
internal combustion engine.
Several other machines use
hybrid fuel, including trains, giant

Argus

Feature

Septe:mher 19, 2005

g

•

U I

d e

t

0

Car - t e r
a It erna

purely-electric car?
mining trucks, and
These are currently
buses with overhead
wires (all diesel-electric
more popular in Europe
than in North America,
vehicles). Many
as technology limits
submarines were dieseltheir ability to perform
electric models, though
the long commutes
more advanced subs
which our car culture
are nuclear-powered.
is based around. Also,
And let's not forget the
major American
lowly mo-ped.
manufacturers claim
As one of
the market for purelythe older altema-cars
electric cars is too
on the market, there
The Smart car was voted "most likely to
small to justify mass
are several models
marketing. However,
succeed" in its graduating class
of hybrid car. A
this will probably
Series design uses its
Of
course,
despite
the
change
as the cost of
internal combustion
many government incentives
gasoline becomes even more
engine to power an electrical
offered for hybrid cars in the
outrageous.
generator, which powers the
United States and Canada, they
Electric cars operate in
motor. A parallel design, the
are more complicated to maintain
a vastly different manner from
most common today, connects
than conventional cars, and still
conventional ones. The engine is
both the electrical generator and
slightly more expensive. But
replaced by an electric
the internal combustion engine
when
motor, whose
to the mechanical transmission.
electricity
Full hybrids can run on merely
1s rethe engine, batteries, or both;
assist hybrids use the •
engine for primary
power; mild

Pictured:
Hybrid car. Not
pictured: Larry Dav(d
hybrids are conventional cars
with oversized starter motors;
plug-in hybrids can run on merely
electricity. Newer models in
development incorporate fuel cells
to store auxiliary energy.

their
mileage and other factors are
considered, these are one of the
best altema-cars out there ... for
now.
Electric cars
If hybrid gas-electric
cars are all the rage, why not a

directed
from rechargeable batteries
by a controller. The
difficulty of finding a
mechanic or technician with
the skill and experience to repair
and maintain an electric car is a
major factor prohibiting their use
at present.
The Smart Car
Is the name merely a
British-Englishism for looking
sharp and stylish ("My, what a
smart-looking handkerchief')
or a blatant appeal to the urban
sophisticate who wants to appear

And you thought hydrogen was a pipe dream. Well ... you were right

as a member of an intellectual
elite? Either way, the Smart Car
is rapidly gaining in popularity.
The Smart Car is, yes,
a conventional diesel-powered
vehicle-but an incredibly
efficient one. Weighing in at a
mere 730 kilograms (as opposed
to the 1,280 kg Toyota Echo) it
also takes up a mere 2.5 metres
of parking space, and has an
advertised fuel rate of 4.2 litres
per 100 km which owners confirm
is fairly accurate. Currently,
city councilors in Vancouver are
considering parking-fee breaks to
drivers of the Smart Car.
However, the Smart
Car is not the be-all that ends
all. With a mere 41 horsepower
and two doors, it can't match
the studly off-road power of a
hulking pickup truck or the cargo
space of a minivan. Furthermore,
remember the guys who made
fun of you in high school? Those
guys all drive pickup trucks, and
they'll all probably try to run you
over.
Bio-fuel
Brilliant German
inventor Rudolf Diesel (no
relation to Vin), had predicted
that his engine would run
on vegetable oil, and at his
demonstration at Paris' 1900
World Exhibition he used
peanut oil. Henry Ford expected
his Model-T to run on comderived ethanol. Nonetheless,
supply, price and efficiency
meant that diesel engines were
eventually run on petroleum.
But within the past few
decades bio-diesel has made a
startling comeback. South of
the border, events like the 1973
OPEC crisis and the Iranian
revolution meant that serious
research into bio-diesel began
in the 1970s. Around the world,
the environmentalism movement
spurred the search for a clean,
renewable resource. And what
better source than agriculture?
Plant oils (such as
rapeseed, canola, com, soybeans,
sunflower seeds, cotton seeds,
palm, and peanuts) and animal
fats can be transformed by
chemical reactions into fuel.
They can either be used directly,
with slight modifications, or as
an additive to petroleum-derived
diesel. But it isn't all fun and
games-bio-diesel can clog older
diesel engines, produces more
smog-forming nitrogen oxides,
may decrease fuel economy and
power, and has a hefty price tag.
Hydrogen power
Leading the way in
hydrogen power, considered by
many to be the 20th century's
greatest pipe dream after
"peace in our time," is none
other than auto giant BMW.
Their experimental racer H2R
(Hydrogen Record Car) has
already set nine speed records
in its class. Instead of hydrogen
fuel cells, the H2R is powered by
liquid hydrogen fuel in an internal
combustion engine. BMW also
plans to produce the H7, a vehicle
offering ''world-class luxury

�__

,

----- - -

Argus

n at
•

IV

e

Feature

Septemher 19, 2005

•

I Ve S

modes

0

f

t r a n s p o·r t a t i o n

Fields of rapeseed, much like this one, create biodiesel

Fossil fuels don't really come from dinosaurs, but this But
was a nice picture

Laugh now, but you'll be investing in horseshoes soon
enough
and performance along with the
clean-air benefits of hydrogen
technology."

how applicable is this to you;the
driver? While liquid hydrogen
is already used in rockets and

spacecraft, and eyed (thanks to
its lightness) for use in airplanes,
the "hydrogen economy" has yet
to prove it-self practicable. Since
hydrogen does not occur naturally
in its pure state, an initial input of
energy is required to separate it
from its surroundings. For further
detail ( since this stuff makes
my eyes glaze over-which
is why I never took chemistry
in high school) check out
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hydrogen_
economy.
Public Transportation
So why bother with cars?
ou could always consider taking
• the bus, the subway, the monorail,
the bullet train, or whatever other
form of public transportation your
city has to offer. Not only are
they priced affordably, but (like
carpools) they drastically reduce
emissions of fossil fuels.
Of course, this hinges
on the phrase "whatever your city
has to offer." Not every city has
a monorail or a subway. Indeed,
many smallish cities' bus systems
are infrequent to the point where
walking saves more time (see
Walking, below). In addition,
public transportation has a stigma
which, like most stereotypes, is
based in truth. In the anonymous
atmosphere of public transit, pickpocketing, robbery, and assault
are facilitated. In 1984, New
Yorker Berhard "Bernie" Goetz,
aka "the Subway Sentinel,"
made headlines around the
world when he shot four youths
attempting to rob him with
sharpened screwdrivers. And
carrying groceries on the bus?
Fuggedaboutit!
Bicycling
What about cycling? It's
much faster than walking, you
don't have to worry about getting
shanked, and it's good exercise.
However, you run the risk of
being clothes-lined by pedestrians
if you bike on the sidewalk and
being hit by cars if you bike on
the road. Furthermore, a tethered
bike, even one secured with a bike
lock, is an invitation for theft,
or merely the theft of your front
wheel.

New Guinea Highlanders, like many, enjoy a good
walk.

Walking
The walker gets to set

his or her own pace, obtains
the benefit of exercise (and a
suntan), and ... that's about it. If
you really enjoy being outdoors
and not having
to wait for the
bus, like I do,
walking is a
treat. Of course,
not everybody
enjoys being
at the mercy of
the elements or
having to set
aside hours of
travel time a
day.

www.canada.com
auto.howstuffworks.com
en. wikipedia.org

Horses

Unless
you live in
the country,
not a good
idea. They're
extremely
expensive, need
constant care,
and get colicky
at the drop of
the hat. But
as fuel prices
skyrocket,
the option of
the Bennett
Buggy-a car
with its engine
block removed
and a horse
attached to
transform it
into a wagonbecomes evermore plausible
to me (by the
way, those
of you who
remember Grade
10 Canadian
history will
recall that the
name was a
jab at Prime
Minister
Bennett).

~

Miss the
REAL CBC?
Get in touch with
Prime Minister Paul Martin

pm@pm.gc.ca
or
613. 992.4211

Sources:
www.ctv.ca

Tell HIM that Y.OU support
public broaacasting &amp;
the employees wfio
make it work!

9

�1Q

September 19, 2005

Argus

Letters

The mind is beautiful

Response to Strike Article

Fellow Students,
is a soul, each soul wants a hello, a
Do you ever take advice from goodbye, a hug, a thank you, or just
your folks, guardian or relatives eye contact with a simple innocent
anymore? If they tell you to go smile. If we start with those basic
left, you would of course go right things, then we have truly opened
and vice versa. The right path to ourselves into the greatness of
maturity is based on that simple having a friend, a soul mate, a
observation of establishing who mentor, or being one. You must
you are and setting your own appreciate people to be appreciated,
boundaries and uniqueness in this _you have got to initiate and employ
world. It is quite simple for a wonderfulness for wonderfulness to
person to fight all advices off his come back around to your being.
soul and believe that he is selfIn
conclusion,
this
sufficient in his own boundaries. institution is labelled as "valueHowever, for a person added" for a reason. I will show
to advance and go forward in you a trick into getting started on
his set of ideological beliefs and the roads of progress and beauty.
opinions, he certainly should act Walk into any office and introduce
like the boundary of any successful yourself and chit-chat a little and
country he can think of. Do they then you have made a friend for
enclose
themselves
between years to come. This school stands
their borderlines and deciqe to out among universities in this
live alone or are they open to province because of its superior
what is beneficial and assertive faculty in delivering sound,
to what threatens their existence. bonded, assistance to its students.
I would suggest you look They strive to help us and answer
around; you might limit this campus all our questions, if we only give
as a building filled with offices and them the chance of the day. So
their cubicles in addition to huge- live the Lakehead moments,
sized classrooms. In reality, what is be significant, be positive, be
around you and me are people like creative and above all, be you.
you and I. Inside every person there

When I was reading Jake Satten's
article I had to remember if I was
reading The Argus or an NDP
newsletter. Judging by the content
in that article, I really thought the
latter. After acting like a bunch
of whiney children and thugs, do
you think these strikers deserve
to have jobs at Lakehead? I sure
don't. In fact each and every one
of them should be fired just for
their actions on the picket line.
One time when I was
coming for a review class, I simply
reminded one of the strikers that it
was my right to go to school, and
they decided to make me wait
longer. I ended up being twenty
minutes late for that review class.
Did the strikers care? Not really.
One thing about contracting out
was not simply about saving
money. I have heard stories
where it took these workers five
weeks to simply change a light
bulb. They finally acted after the
professor threatened to change
it himself. Rooms in the ATAC
building that have no working

air conditioning.
The men's
washroom on the third floor of the
library has a burned out bulb. I
wonder how long it will be before
they get that bulb changed. And
the quality of work will decrease
if contract workers are brought in?
It actually looks like the opposite.
When the replacement
workers came in, the bathrooms
looked better than they ever
have. Unions are a big reason
that Thunder Bay has trouble
attracting business, and the
socialists in this city have no real
problem with keeping business
out. In a twist of irony, Canada's
richest province (Alberta), is
also the least unionized. If the
strikers wanted support from the
students all they had to do was
simply stand at the side with
their signs as oppose to blocking
traffic. I probably would have
had sympathy for the workers that
way. But when I was coming to
the university for exams, I almost
thought I was dealing with the
same thugs that are present on

Simpson Street. And if you just
drove through the picket line, the
cops were waiting there to protect
their union buddies.
Correct
me i~ I am wrong, but that is a
conflict of interest. Let's not
forget that one worker who yelled
'shame on you' to one person
with children in the car. He
was going to his granddaughters
dance recital at the Bora Laskin
building, and just stopped to
say that he was supportive of
the workers. After that action
he quickly changed his mind.
I guess the last time the
university was on strike one of
the strikers got hit by a car and is
now paralyzed. If that person was
stupid enough to stand in front
of a car like that, they got what
they deserved. Let's not forget
that this is the same union that
was behind the Yellowknife mine
blast in 1992. Isn't it ironic that
Al-Qaeda has never committed
a terrorist act on Canadian soil;
the Canadian Auto Workers can't
say the same for themselves.

Our University Doesn't Offer Basic French?
Kendra Ezack

This is the day we thought would
never happen. Some of us prayed
for it, while a large majority did
not even realize we had two
national languages. No matter
though, because Canada is no
longer a bilingual country. Well,
this is the only logical (maybe
not) conclusion I can make given
that Lakehead is not offering
Introductory French. Imagine
my surprise when there was
an introductory French course
in the course calendar for my
first year. And oh, the dismay,
when proclaimed boldly in
black (like a tombstone on the
pauper's grave that is education),
were the 1 words COURSE
NOT OFFERED THIS YEAR.
Whether it was their
laissez-faire attitudes, the joie
•

w

w

de vivre, the certain "je ne inattentive days of high school
sais quoi" (the things people French is, "Ou est la discotheque?"
always associate with being You know what? Thunder Bay
French), something makes
me doesn't even have an authentic
want to be able to communicate discotheque, so even though I
in this language. It's the desire to learned that phrase, I'll forever
communicate with those loveable be lost, chasing the spirit of an era
scamps in the East of this country that doesn't even exist anymoreand nearer still. Imagine, being saved for the pages of outdated
disappointed in not being able school texts. I'm sorry Ananas* .. .
to take French! What a change I'm sorry I didn't care then .. .
from school days past...of the
I wanted to take the
sitting in the dreaded French class, Intermediate French course but
trying to learn as little as possible. deep down, I knew I wasn't really
Oh, I can get by in ready. I'd be lost in a haze of
French.
I can get an idea verb conjugations, made tense by
across .. .I can swear, convincingly, tenses that made no sense. I'd be
as a Quebecois might.
But talking like an oaf, holding back
where would that get me? I the class. Why was the course I
want to express myself more really needed/wanted not being
than merely discussing the • offered?
Have we stopped
weather. I want to express why! needing to know French? Is
I want to hold a conversation. French going the way of Latin, the
All I absorbed froqi the long forgotten language from

WCoriie On WAlreaay!WGIVe

Thisw w

w.

Littte Guy a Hand

1·
I
I
I

Come out and take pictures for the Argus! We are 1
1 currently seeking a photo and graphics editor for the I
1 year. If you have experience in photography or photo 1
:editing, come pick up nomination package and bring:
1 it along with a resume, cover letter, and portfolio to th~ 1
1 Argus office in Room 2014b or the LUSU office by I

-

I

a

~

___ ~ ____ _S2P.!e.r,nEel 1.6ll1._ ________ ~

my parent's high school days?
Latin is at the root of English,
peppered more often than I know
it into my own bastard language.
No, French can't
even
meet
Latin's fate as even introductory
Latin is being offered this year.
Oh French ... will you
be doomed to wasting space on
cereal boxes? I'm past cereal
boxes; I'm itching to move onto
the large type children's books
of the French world. I want to
read an operator's manual (for
anything) in French, confident that
even though I understand its use in
a different tongue, it is still mine.
I want to sit down with
someone who makes a decision
like this and ask "why?" Do
they hate the idea of using a set
of phonetic symbols that is foreign
for their communicative needs?
I'll
learn
French

somehow. Watching the French
Radio-Canada.. .it's not the "fin du
monde" as I had feared. Maybe
one day, paying thousands upon
thousands more dollars, I can be
allowed to learn what the French
mean when they say that. Until
then, I will just have that warm
fuzzy feeling that is the confusing
potion ofmoderatedisappointment,
blended with complete apathy
with a sprinkling of optimism.
Et ca, mes amis, c'est la vie!
I'm
in
Philosophy
now, so I'll just sit back and
think of why I even wanted to
know French in the first place ...
* the loveable talking, dancing
pineapple from "Telefrancais,"
a fairly standard fixture in many
elementary French classes.

Global warming or global ice
age?
Many believe that global warming
is inevitable and that climate change
promises
severe
repercussions.
However, some historians may reveal
that we should not fear global warming
as much as global cooling. As they
know, history tends to repeat itself and
words of wisdom predict an ice age is
long overdue. So how is this possible?
Well
to
begin,
let's
consider
the
environmental
fallout
of
global
warming.
Extensive land conversions
have altered the earth to be more
receptive to infrared radiation (heat
from the sun), while greenhouse
gases have created an insular layer
to contain the heat and temperatures.
This environmental phenomenon
caused the global climate to change,
parching soil and melting continental
ice sheets (among other things).
These extreme weather processes
continue to erode the earth and raise

water levels at an unprecedented rate,
eventually transforming the earth to
marginal islands of land engulfed by
a worldwide ocean. This 'waterworld'
will be the catalyst for global cooling,
changing our once incandescent
earth into an iridescent water body.
Nevertheless, some may state
the global oceans will moderate the
earth's temperature. However, this
statement is false on two pretences: the
changes will be too drastic and rapid
for the ocean lag to accommodate;
and the insular blanket of greenhouse
gases will long remain, sealing our fate
in this cold casket. Fact or fiction, I
dread the power of nature more than
any weapon of mass destruction.
Feedback Welcomed,
Devon Barnes
debarnes@lakeheadu.ca

�Arts

Argus

&amp; Entertainment

Septem1er 19, 2005

Magus Theatre season opening musical "Forever Plaid"-A Fall highlight of Thunder Bays flourishing culture
musical
director
1964, the..,. Plaids, a
notes,
"it
has
semi-professional
very
harmony
group,
With just under two weeks left become
The
are on their way to
to go before the opening night of organic."
directors
pick-up their custom
Magnus Theatre's first production actors,
of the season- "Forever Plaid", and crew put in
....
made tuxedos for
their first maior
I was given the chance to sit 8 hour days-6 .____,;z....---::11~-==c...----------------'
and last season Magnus Theatre
~
down and speak with some of days a week, every week before pulled in l0% of that number." gig at an airport-cocktail bar.
the members of the upcoming opening night to guarantee a
With amazing talent, While driving, they get slammed
musical.
Mario Crudo-Artistic perfect outcome. When speaking hard-working precision, artistic broadside by a school bus full
Director, Danny Johnson- Musical with Mario, it was made clear that dedication and venues like Magnus of eager Catholic teens that are
Director and Brent Thiessen were there is a regimented timeline in Theatre, the artistic community is on their way to see the Beatles
kind enough to give me their time creating the plays at Magnus. able to thrive in a place as small as on the Ed Sullivan show. The
to speak in depth about Magnus
When speaking about Thunder Bay. Of course, Magnus teens escape uninjured, but
Theatre, the exciting and sure-to-. Magnus Theatre, as well as all of Theatre cannot survive without the the Plaids are killed instantly.
be-a-hit musical Forever Plaid, the other local cultural highlights, people of Thunder Bay to come out
The story begins to roll
and the life behind the curtains. there was a general agreement and see the brilliant productions here, as playwright Stuart Ross
As Magnus Theatre about the success of Thunder Bay that the people at Magnus put on. writes, "Through the powers of
brings forth a wide variety of as a cultural hot-spot. We have
Magnus
Theatre
is harmony and the expanding holes
productions throughout the season, Magnus, Thunder Bay Symphony beginning their season featuring in the Ozone layer ... [the Plaids)
one could imagine this is no small Orchestra, Thunder Bay Art Forever Plaid, one of the most have been allowed to come back
task. From auditioning to opening Gallery, Definitely Superior Art "energetic" and popular musicals to perform the show they never
night, the team at Magnus has only Gallery, The Blues Fest, The Bay from the 1990 ,s. It is a cult-classic got to in life." For one night only
3 weeks to create their upcoming St. Film Festival and yet we're musical that follows the career of -in present day, 2005, the boys get
production, yet, while speaking a city of merely 110,000 people the four· young men: The Plaids, the chance to prove for all time
with the members at Magus, -- Amazing.
Mario added a who in the 1950 ,s aspire to singing that they really were as good as
there was an air of confidence and very interesting statistic: "We're careers like The Four Aces and they imagined. The Plaids take
calm-professional-collectedness. highly developed culturally, we The Four Lads. On February 9, the audience on a nostalgic ride
As Danny Johnson, have ·a population of 110,000
through the 1950's with songs
Suzanne Ha/et I Argus

Professional... Uvel

Blues fans attention! Lil' Ed is coming
to Thunder Bay!
Suzanne Ha/et/ Argus

~

In the late 1980's, Lil' Ed Williams
played his very first Canadian gigs
in Winnipeg and Thunder Bay.
But before he could, he had to
ask his boss at the Red Carpet Car
Wash if he could get the time off.
Could this be the famous
nephew of West Side slide-guitarist
and blues great, J. B. Hutto? Could
this be the same Lil Ed who went
on the Alligator Records 20th
Anniversary Tour with the likes of
Lonnie Brooks, Elvin Bishop and
Koko Taylor? Is this the guy who's
recorded four
great
albums
and whose band was called "the
world's number one house-rocking
band" by the Boston Globe?

Lil Ed &amp; The Blues
Imperials are coming to Thunder
Bay. Harbour Lights Productions

will present their intense brand of
Chicago blues Saturday, September

like Sam Cooke's "Chain Gar
Perry Como 's "Magic Momen
Tony Bennett's "Ra~ to Rich
and the Four Aces ·"Love ii
Many
Splendoured
Thin
As the play progres~
the audience sees the • Pia
transform from bumb\ing spi:
geeks to confident supersta
All in all, Forever Plaid is
inspiring play about dreai
coming true, reaching on,
potential, and filling one's desti1
Impossible to mi.
Magnus Theatre is the beauti1
building on the corner of Algor.
and Red River Rd.
Forev
Plaid runs from September 30
October 15 th • It plays Monell
to Saturday at 8 p.m., as wt
as matinees on Wednesdays l
noon and Saturdays at 2 pr.
Tickets are only $12 for studen
and range from 10$ to $32. Yo
can contact the box office ;
345-5552. Check in soon fc
my review of Forever Plaic

FR.EE RENT!

24th at Jacks, 28 South Cumberland.
Devoted
"EdHeads" should •warn newcomers to
be prepared for onstage antics as
wild and crazy as the music, as Lil
Ed does flying leaps, slides across
the stage on his knees and duckwalks his way through the audience.
It may be a long way from
the Red Carpet Car Wash to facing
100,000 screaming fans at the '99
Chicago Blues Festival; but along
the way, Lil Ed and his Blues
Imperials have learned how to rock
any venue. So, whether you're an
Ed-Head or just one in-the-making,
you'll want to know that tickets
go on sale this week ($20-advance
and $25 at the door) at Jacks (6831164), CDPLUS.COM (623-7551)

Do you have a car?
Do you need a place to
live?
Wanted: ''Live in. chauffer"
in. exchange for Free Rent!
Two rooms to choose from
For more information call
Nancy at 622-6686
or e-mail nrsulliv@lakeheadu.ca
--wireless provided
- -washer/dryer
-parking
-furnished or unfurnished
- if over 25, access to car
-if under 25, you must
provide your ovvn
car

CILU 102. 7 Top 30
For the week ending Sept 13, 2005
RANK
1
(Stony Plain)
2
3
4
5
6
America Inc.)
7
8
International)
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21

ARTIST
CORB LUND BAND*

TITLE (Label)
Hair In My Eyes Like A Highland Steer

SILVERSTEIN*
GOGOL BORDELLO
ANTI-HERO*
HORRORPOPS
KOUFAX

Discovering the Wate,front (Victory)
Gypsy Punks (SideOneDummy)
Unpretty (HER)
Bring It On! (Hellcat/Epitaph)
Hard Times Are In Fashion (Doghouse

BOYS NIGHT OUT*
MOBIUSBAND

Trainwreck (Ferret)
The loving Sounds Of Static (Ghostly

.

ACID HOUSE KINGS
Sing Along With. .. (Twenty-Seven)
THE FREE DESIGN*
Now Sound Redesigned (Light In The Attic)
PENNYWISE
The Fuse (Epitaph)
SIANSPHERIC*
RGB (Sonic Unyon)
A WILHELM SCREAM Ruiner (Nitro)
THE DANDY WARHOLS Odditorium Or Warlords Of Mars (Capitol)
CUFF THE DUKE*
Cuff The Duke (Hardwood)
GARAGE A TROIS
Outre Mer (Telarc)
GRAVYTRAIN!!!!
Are You Wigg/in? (Kill Rock Stars)
OK GO
Oh No (Capitol)
RUFIO
The Comfort Of Home (Nitro)
IMMACULATE MACHINE* Ones And Zeroes (Mint)
NEW PORNOGRAPHERS* Twin Cinema (Mint)

22
Chords)
23
(Arts &amp; Crafts)
24
25
26
27
28
29
(Saddle Creek)
30

AGAINST ME

Searching For A Former Clarity (Fat Wreck

THE MOST SERENE REPUBLIC* Underwater Cinematography
COCO ROSIE
DUNGEN
SHELBY
KITE OPERATIONS
NADASURF
CURSIVE

Noah sArc (Touch &amp; Go)
Ta Det Lungt (Kemado)
The Luxury Of Time (Independent)
Dandelion Day (K.O.A.)
The Weight Is A Gift (Barsuk)
The Difference Between Houses &amp; Homes

SILVERSUN PICKUPS

Pikul (Dangerbird)

* indicates Canadian artist. Chart ranking reflects airplay during the week ending 13-Sep2005.
CILU contributes weekly charts to CMJ, Chart Magazine and Earshot Online for
Top 30, Jazz, Hip Hop, RPM/Electronic and Loud Rock/Metal. Find out more about us at
www.luradio.ca.
Due to programming and label issues this summer, our charts are a little heavy
with international artists. If you know of an artist, or if you ARE an artist not currently
being played by CILU, feel free to contact us to have your music added to the station.
Contact the music director, Jason Wellwood by phone at 807-343-888 l or by email at
musicdirector@luradio.ca.

�1

September 19, 2005

Art

Ar us

ntertainment

Kill your idols

Sing Cool, Swing Hot
Jesse Turpin

accompaniment equally valuable.
With No Moon at All
By billing themselves as
and Makin' Whoopee, they
Toronto's Andrew Sisters, Swing
cover a couple of my favourite
Rosie doesn't really tell us much
•tracks from the Nat King Cole
- most of us weren't around
Trio days, and do a fine job of
during the Second World War
them, with the former taking a
and couldn't have
slower, laid back
known how big a
approach and the
latter incorporating
phenomenon the
Andrew
Sisters
the
verse
(introduction)
were. So, to be
part of the song
less poetic, Swing
- something that's
Rosie is a female
missing
from
vocal jazz trio with
many recordings.
tight harmonies and
Listening
smooth melodies.
to Just a Simple
T h e i r
Melody,
I
independent debut
immediately
album, Sing Cool,
think - start the
Swing Hot is a
bubble
machine
sweet
collection
- but it's really
of
traditional
not as schmaltzy
jazz, Dixie, and
as
Lawrence
swing
charts.
Welk. We could
Being a Dixieland
view these tracks
clarinetist, I'm a
mostly as novelty
sucker for the music
tunes, and their
of the era, and
act as novelty
this stuff is a treat.
Toronto~ answer to the Andrew~ Sisters?
as well, but the
Back in
treatments
are
1938, the .Andrew
Sisters made it big with Bei of jazz standards - enough serious and well-done - certainly
Mir Bist du Shoen; Swing Rosie for a full evening of lounge. a step back from modem, postIn no way does this modern or New Age jazz into
covers the song on their album
revival
reduce
the artistry of a space where a mirror ball
in the traditional style - a spare
what
Swing
Rosie
is doing rotates to the swing of the band
arrangement that highlights their
close
(but
not
Barbershop)
and the crowd can romantically
harmony. The piano, clarinet, and
is
a
difficult sweep
around· the
floor.
trumpet accompaniment lend a harmony
wonderful retro feel to the sound. business, and the clean, strong
Daniel Klein

There seems to be a
real interest in re-inventing the
classics - Jeff Healey is doing
it in his latest stuff, Michael
Buble is reviving the image
of the male jazz crooner, and .
Rod Stewart has three albums

"The Rolling Stones lasting
twenty, thirty years -- what
a stupid idea that would be."
- Lester Bangs, Creem, 1973
If the Pearl Jam show at
The Gardens showed me anything,
it showed me that Pearl Jam are
well on their way to becoming
the next Rolling Stones. Can you
imagine Pearl Jam twenty, thirty
years from now? What a stupid
idea that would be.
The last proper Pearl
Jam album, Riot Act, was offensively bad. Since that time,
they've released a double-live
acoustic album, a double greatest
hits album, and launched tours
of Australia, Japan, the US, and
recently Canada. Through three
tour stints since Riot Act, they've
played 119 tour dates and counting.
Pearl Jam fans have
always been the most loyal fans
around, and the band has tried
to return the favour in whatever
way they can. Touring places like
Thunder Bay and Kitchener is
proof that their primary concern
is to please fans. But ask yourself, would you rather Pearl Jam
play a show in Thunder Bay, in a
hockey arena with brutal acoustics,
playing a set that's clearly driven
by a 'greatest hits' mentality; or
would you rather hear the first
good Pearl Jam album released in
5 years? Judging from the crowd
response, the answer scares me.
To give a bit of back-

ground, Pearl Jam was my favourite band from the age of 10 to 15.
Including singles, bootlegs, and live
sets, I still own about 20 Pearl Jam
CD's. So this criticism isn't a blind
attack. It's simply meant as a critical review of my childhood heroes,
and to find out why I seem to be
the only one that feels this way.
It almost hurts more that
Pearl Jam came to Thunder Bay and
played the set that they did. It's like
an ex-girlfriend that you're still sort
of seeing, telling you that she's met
someone else. Pearl Jam used me
like an ashtray heart. They crushed
me while I was burning out.
I've come to the conclusion that the best thing to do when
you're spurned by your idols, isn't
to find new idols. It's to give
up the idea of idols altogether.
Why put so much effort into a
band or artist that you don't even
know?!! How can you trust this
group of musicians to evolve with
you through your own musical and
spiritual evolution as a fan? Pointing out the obvious, you can't.
For those that were at
the Gardens, it was too late for
them. They were already wrapped
around Eddie's little finger. But
it's not too late for you. Get out
while you still can. Burn the
bandwagon. Cover up your ashtray heart. But whatever you do,
when that ex-girlfriend/ex-hero
tells you they want you back,
think fondly of the good tim~s,
but put them down all the same.

Movie watch
Jennifer Cudmore

New to DVD last week:

so absurd.
Overall, an entertaining
no-brainer that will appeal to most
people.

Fever Pitch

Starring Drew Barrymore and
Jimmy Fallon
Directed by Bobby Farrelly and
Peter Farrelly
Based on the novel by Nick
Homby
This movie was a pleasant
surprise. It was based on the book
by Nick Homby (High Fidelity,
About a Boy), and fans of
his earlier work will not
be disappointed. Though
the storyline is the typical
romantic comedy; Homby,
along with screenwriter
partners Lowell Ganz and
Babaloo Mandel (Where
the Heart Is, City Slickers)
manage to infuse the boymeets-girl formula with humour
and insight about relationships
and how far someone will go
for the person they love. The
dialogue is funny and Jimmy
Fallon manages to pull off a fairly
good performance for once as the
Red Sox obsessed fan, Ben. Drew
Barrymore stays true to form as
the girl of his dreams. The two
are funny together and play off
one another well.
For the Farrelly brothers,
this is a departure from their
usual comedies such as Stuck on
You, Shallow Hal and Theres
Something About Mary. There's
still plenty of humour, but it's
slightly more intelligent and not

The Hitchhiker's Guide to the
Galaxy

Starring Martin Freeman, Mos
Def, Bill Nighy, Alan Rickman
Directed by Garth Jennings
Based on the novel by Douglas
Adams

,,,.
and is very ambitious using this as
his first project.
The cast is well chosen,
using both British and American
actors. the humour is very much
like Monty Python - witty and
intelligent (though sometimes
absurd), as opposed to slapstick
and fart jokes.
Overall not a bad
adaptation of an incredibly
complex book series.

Released Last Week:
Ill Fated (Canadian)
Empire Falls
Nobody Knows (foreign)
Rock School (documentary)
Winter Solstice,
••.::::1 Madison

Fans of the Douglas Adams series,
The Hitchhikers Guide were

giddy with glee when this movie
came out. The book series was
based on a BBC Radio 4 series
which Adams turr).ed into a book
in 1979. Since the first book
was published, the series has
had a cult following, spawning
further books, a TV miniseries, a
computer game, stage adaptations,
and bath towels. Adams was
working on the screenplay
when he died suddenly in 2001.
Followers of the Guide will know
how complex the books are, so
the undertaking of a feature film is
quite the task.
The director for the film
is Garth Jennings and this is his
film debut. Jennings is making
the crossover from music videos

TV DVD New Releases:
Lost Season 1
Ali G Show Season 2
Smallville Season 4
Las Vegas Season 1 &amp; 2
House MD.
Charmed Season 2
Nip/Tuck Season 2
Curb Your Enthusiasm Season 4
Released this Week:
The Longest Yard starring Adam
Sandler
Mindhunters starring LL Cool J
and Christian Slater
Born into Brothels (documentary)
Silent Waters (foreign)
Ethan Mao (foreign)
Desperate Housewives Season 1
Battlestar Galactica Season 1
Family Business Season 2

�Sports

Argus

Dawkins takes over Lakehead
Wrestling
Clayton ~teps aside to fulfil~
"Administrative" Role
that Mr. Clayton is still the
chief administrator of the team,
Owen Dawkins, recently hired
and is simply trying to learn
as assistant coach of Lakehead
from Clayton's vast knowledge
Wrestling, has taken over the
base: "Mr. Clayton takes
technical duties as coach of
care of the administration,
the Thunderwolves wrestling
and will still run some
program from longtime
practices, but (in general)
Lakehead and Northwestern
I will be the main guy
Ontario
wrestling
on the mat, and he will
coach, Francis Clayton.
be
mentoring
me."
The move comes
Dawkins
on the heels of a successful
describes his coaching
summer
for
Lakehead
style as 'intense', and says
wrestlers, which saw Tasha
he is always trying to push
Eady take home a bronze
his athletes to strive for
medal in the 63kg weight
bigger goals. He certainly
class at the World Junior
doesn't baby his wrestlers.
Wrestling Championships
Even during an intense
in Vilnius, Lithuania. Dave
practice, he requires all the
Rector and Chris Camarata
team members to keep a
also competed at the meet.
smile on their face to hide
Other notable wrestlers
their possible fatigue.
Lakehead University wrestling
on the Lakehead roster
Lakehead University is
coach Francis Clayton, takes
include Kaya Yasin, who
set to play host to the OUA
represented Canada at the
a step back, but still assumes
Wrestling Championships
2005 Summer Universiade
in
March,
2006.
'administrative role'
Alan Wickware/Argus

in Izmir, Turkey.
Dawkins, a former
Canadian
national
team
member, is quick to point out

Sports Shorts
Alan Wickware/Mike Alyward

season, recording 11 points
(2g, 9a), along with 28 penalty
minutes. He will presumably
be back with Lakehead for
the beginning of the season,
.which opens September 23 rd
vs. Manitoba Bison at the

the 'Hoops For Hunger' Blue
and White Intra-Squad game
in support of the Hurricane
Katrina victims on Tuesday,
September 20'\ at 9:00 pm
at the C J Sanders Fieldhouse
in Thunder Bay. The team
requests that all fans
bring
non:Perishable
food items and/or a cash
donation as admission to
the game. Katrina, which
has devastated the Gulf
Coast of the United States,
has caused billions of
dollars in damage, as well
as the displacement of
close to 1 million people.

Men's
Varsity
Hockey
Kuokkanen Signs Pro Contract
in French First Division
F o r m e r
Thunderwolves defenseman,
Jounni Kuokkanen, has
signed on - to play this
season with the Hockey
Club Les Bisons de Neuilly
Sur Mame of the French
Elite Hockey League, first
division.
The smoothskating Kuokkanen tallied
6 goals and 20 assists in 56
games for Lakehead from
2003-04 to 2004-05 playing
forward
and
defense.
Kuokkanen played his
junior hockey for Medicine
Hat and Seattle of the WHL
and the Soo Greyhounds of
the OHL, as well as playing
for the Manitoba Bisons of
the CIS. This will be the
Thunder Bay native 's second
stint in Europe as he played
in Holland for the Geleen
Smoke Eaters after playing
Former Thunderwolves
Canadian Major Junior defenseman Jouni Kuokkanen
and playing for Manitoba.
signed a pro contract with the
Kivell
Invited
to
Stay for Leafs Camp
L a k e h e a d
Thunderwolves defenseman,
Drew Kivell, was added on
the roster for the Toronto
Maple Leaf's training camp
after being invited to their
rookie camp earlier in the
month. Kivell, a 6'2', 200
pound defenseman, from
Lakeside, Ontario, played in
23 games for the Wolves' last

Athletes of the Week
Holmberg and Swan
are
Lakehead
RBC
Athletes of the Week
The first RBC
Lakehead Thunderwolves
Athletes of the Week
are Jonas Holmberg and
Sarah Swan of Lakehead
University's
Cross
Country running teams.
Both paced their teams
to strong finishes at the
'Campus Quest II' meet
French first division Club Les hosted this past weekend
Bisons de Neuilly Sur Marne
at the University of
Minnesota-Duluth.
Fort William Gardens, unless
Holmberg,
Lakehead's
he is designated to play
Swedish
import,
placed
fourth
in the Leafs farm system.
in the men's 8 km race. Swan,
Men's
Basketball a third year Mechanical
Thunderwolves
Men's Engineering student from
Basketball Stage Hurricane Nepean, Ontario, led her team
Katrina
Charity
Game to a third place finish with an
The
Lakehead impressive sixth place result
Thunderwolves
Men's in the women's 5 km race.
Basketball team will be staging

September 19, 2005

1J

Cross Country kicks off season in
Duluth
Holmberg leads Lakehead Runners to
successful weekend
Tony Pucci and Jess Sheppard

Just as school is starting and many
students are groaning as they get
back into the hard work which is
post secondary education, the student
athletes on the Lakehead Cross Country
team are throwing caution aside
and jumping into another gruelling
season. Thankfully the hard work
which they have logged throughout
the summer has seen its first major
success: a strong performance at the
University of Minnesota Duluth's
"Campus Quest 2" cross country race.
The men, led by Jonas
Holmberg, who came 4th overall, picked
upaverybig2 nd placeteamperformance.
His stellar run was followed by a
similarly great performance from
Thunder Bay's own wonder boy
Jonathan Balabuck following in
5th positio~ with a time of 27:16.
Jonas and John did well
indeed, and their initial success was
followed through by Nick Croker
running a great race with a 14th place
performance followed closely by
Dave Cybulski who came in 18 th •
A gap of only 5 seconds separated
freshman Mike Asmussen in 23'd,
from gaining the scoring 5th position
held by Antonio Redfern Pucci in 22 nd ·
Ryan Redpath also had an
amazing performance; in his first
race, coming in just behind Amussen
and Pucci for 24 th place. Nathan
Kamell kept the pace up for a great
race closely behind Redpath, while
Sean Sloan followed up in hot pursuit.
Chris Mableson showed true

determination and worked ~hrough a
painful hip injury. Neal Irvin~ finished
despite an extremely rough and painful
injury and showed great courage
which will surely help him this year.
The women finished 3rd ,' led
by Sarah Swan who finished in 6th
place over the 5km course in a time
of 20:38. Swan was in the lead pack
for most of the race and finished less
than 10 seconds behind the . silver
medalist. Brittany Hughes was the
next Lakehead runner across the finish
line, running a strong and steady race
to place 14th , in a time of21:25. Jess
Sheppard also finished in the top
20, placing 18th in a time of 21:52.
The remaining team members
all ran well in their debut race with
the Thunderwolves squad. Loriana
Costanzo crossed the line in 22:52
to place 33 rd, closely followed by
Sandra Albertson who placed 34th in
22:55.
First-year students Jessica
Ratterman and Jessica Coughlin
finished 47 th (24:06) and 52 nd (25:38)
respectively, while Francie Hannigan
rounded out the women's team with
her 60th place finish (34:55). These
women's excellent initial showing is a
testament to the team's current ability
and to its potential in seasons to come.
First year coach
Kip
Sigsworth was impressed with the
results: "This was a good starting
point for the year. Many athletes really
stepped up their training this summer
and that showed in the results today.
I look forward to seeing this team get
better over the course of the year."

STOP ON BY....

PROUD HOST OF LAST YEAR'S
XXX-TOXICATOR &amp;AROUND
1HE WORLD PARTIES
.

.

.

�Sports

14 September 19, 2005

Argus

Classic arena in need of replacement
Fort William Gardens becoming outdated
Alan Wickware/ Argus

There are not many Canadian
university hockey arenas like
the Fort William Gardens. It is
reminiscent of the old Boston
Garden, Montreal Forum or
Chicago Stadium (albeit not as
large), in terms that the fans are so
..--:11
close to the ice surface, they can
almost touch the players. It has
that vintage feeling. Over the past
60 years the Gardens has played
host to games from every level
of hockey, seen championships
won and lost, and has also hosted
a countless array of concerts,
most recently being Pearl Jam.
But The Gardens is
beginning to show its ag_e, and
the issue of a new 'large capacity
seating' arena is going to have to
be addressed in the near future. If
one were to observe the outside of
the structure, they would notice a
decaying exterior, underlined by
the chipping cement of the outside The Fort William Gardens, sitting at the corners ofMiles and Vickers St. in Fort William,
beams, and the need for much
is home of the Thunderwolves men's hockey team, but for how much longer?
more than just cleaning and paint
job. The inside of the building the concourse for movement and boxes are just some of the required project much too expensive and
is also dated. Lack of space on a lack of a press box and luxury upgrades, making the whole complicated to even bother to

Lakehead Basketball
welcomes new transfers
Morrison confident his
team has improved
Alan Wickware/ Argus

When Coach Scott Morrison
opened training camp for the
Lakehead Thunderwolves men's
basketball team earlier this month,
he was·reassured that his team had
not tak_en a step backward. He
knows this because of the new
faces that will dot the lineup.
Most notable among these is
the arriva.J of three top-rate
transfers arriving from various
schools around the continent.
After spending the better
portion of his university career
playing at NCAA junior colleges,
the latest being Vincennes
University in Indiana, Vaughn
Daley is coming home to Canada
to finish off his post secondary
career.
The '6 '4 combo' guard
is expected to crack the starting
lineup for the Thunderwolves,
adding to an already impressive
back court that will see him team
up with the other speedy guard,
Scott Seeley.
Vaughn's main
attribute is his exceptional work
ethic, something that fits in well
with this Lakehead squad. Daley
is also excited to get a chance
to play with Kiraan Posey, an
elite CIS basketball player who
won , the OUA scoring title last
season, something that Vaughn
has been looking forward to since
arriving at Lakehead. "Watching
him practice, I can see that he's
(Posey) naturally a great scorer,
so hopefully we can bring the best
out of each other this season."
Along with Daley, the
Thunderwolves received a boost

up front, welcoming 5th
year forward Ryan Marrast,
a 6'5' native of Toronto,
and, Warren Gilchrist, a
6'6' transfer from Howard
Community College in
Columbia,
Maryland.
Marrast spent four years
playing for
a strong
basketball program at Acadia
University m Wolfville,
NS, and his offensive
skills will be well used.
Gilchrist's sheer size will
most definitely intimidate
opposing players, not to
mention his uncanny ability
to knock down mid-range
jump shots; something that is
often rare in bigger forwards.
Coach
Morrison
is excited about the new
prospects he has on his roster,
hopefully ensuring that last
seasons' playoff run was no
fluke. "From a basketball
perspective, we have added
size, athleticism, and depth
to compete with the best in
the country on paper. It will
now be up to our team to put
forth the required effort and
dedication to do so each week
starting in October."
The Thunderwolves
pre-season schedule begins
October 1st with the annual
John Zanatta Alumni game,
and finishes November
3-5 with an East Coast
swing to ,. the US to play
NCAA Division 1 Loyola
in Baltimore, Division II
Virginia State University,

begin to renovate. Thus, a new
arena must be built. But where?
Lakehead
Athletic
Director, Tom Warden, says he
wants the arena to come here,
but not if the school is going to
bear the brunt of the construction:
"The university has always
been interested in discussing
plans to build a rink on campus,
but in the sense of owning or
operating it, that would have to
be done by the city of Thunder
Bay. We think of it as a good
idea, but it couldn't require the
universities (financial) resources."
Although
there
has
been no official complaint
from the school or team, the
reality is becoming clear that
the arena situation needs to be
addressed. There would be no
better location in the city than
the university campus. It would
represent a happy medium to
those living in both Fort William
and Port Arthur. It is now up to
both university officials and city
Qffici;ils to work out the details.

�Ar~us

-esHav

Student The

VIP
Specials Ill

Argus
ALWAYS FIRST WITH THE NEWS

2 --1 2" S TOPPING PIZZAS
- $1 6.99 Piua Tax
1 -1 2" 2 TOPPING, CHEESY BREAD
AND 2 POP - $16.99 Plua Tax

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- $11 .99 Plue Tax

FOR FAST DELIVERY CALL:

THUNDER BAY

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Reach more students and have a
etter chance of selling it by placing a
classified ad in the
rgus.
e-mail us at
rgus@lakeheadu.ca

11

Miss the REAL CB-C?
Get in touch with Prime Minister Paul Martin
pm@pm.gc.ca OR 613. 992.4211

Tell HIM that you support public broadcasting
&amp;the employees w~o maRe it work!

�. Wp coming ebents

�</text>
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              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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                  <text>Thunder Bay Finnish Canadian Historical Society Collection</text>
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                  <text>Photographs collected by the Thunder Bay Finnish Canadian Historical Society from a wide range of collectors, documenting Finnish immigration to and life in Thunder Bay. </text>
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                  <text>Lakehead University Library</text>
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            <name>Title</name>
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                <text>Play entitled "Carmen" </text>
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            <name>Subject</name>
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                <text>Play entitled "Carmen" performed at the Big Finn Hall, 314 Bay Street, Thunder Bay, 1920's. People in photo: Hilma Sillman (Carmen). Donor: Dora Alanen. </text>
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                <text>Still  image</text>
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            <name>Identifier</name>
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                <text>MG8_D27Bi232 </text>
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            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
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                <text>Canada - Ontario - Thunder Bay </text>
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                <text>Canada - Ontario - Port Arthur</text>
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        <name>Hilma Siilman</name>
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        <name>Labour Temple</name>
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