barefacts1090 - University of Surrey Students` Union
Transcription
barefacts1090 - University of Surrey Students` Union
Monday 19 September 2005 Published by the USSU Communications Office. Issue number 1090 Free The University of Surrey Students’ Newspaper Konsumer Revolt! barefacts own team of scientific Guinea Pigs. This edition they’re trying out supermarket own brand soft drinks... Do they live to tell the tale? | Page 11 OR Room 101: Barefacts is going to banish select annoyances to the depths of this infamous room. What tortures of the modern age are going to be reloacted? | Page 5 In This Fortnight’s Paper Comment | Does Patriotism = Racism? | Page 4 Arts Section |Reviews of all and sundry |Page 11 Puzzles| So, barefacts has a Su Doku now? | Page 22 New Year, New Management By Chris Ward This summer USSU and UniS said farewell to former-Vice Chancellor Professor Patrick Dowling CBE, DL, FREng, FRS; and welcomed Professor Christopher Snowden FREng, CEng, FIEE, FIEEE to his new post. Professor Snowden began his academic career at the University of Leeds, where he graduated in 1977. He later completed his PhD on the design of microwave oscillators for Radar applications. As well as having a new Vice Chancellor, USSU waved goodbye to the former sabbaticals and welcomed the new team of Flo (President), Ellen (VP Education & Welfare), Piers (VP Societies & Culture), Bex (VP Postgraduate Affairs), Paintbrush (VP Sports), and Tree (VP Communications). The sabbs were elected in Spring this year, and have been working hard all summer in preparation for both returning student and for the freshers who will be beginning in week 3. Professor Snowden started his job as the new Vice Chancellor in July, and will be officially installed in a ceremony at barefacts Cares We at barefacts appreciate that whilst perusing our excellent literary masterpiece during lunch at Chancellors, the paper may take up far too much table space. We understand that the juggling of reading our prestigious newspaper whilst holding a pint can be quite taxing both physically and mentally. To show we care, we have reserved a space below for you to place your pint. This space would cost other companies around £100. We don’t want your money though, just send articles, lots of them... barefacts@ussu.co.uk PLACE DRINK HERE the Guildford Cathedral at the end of this month. In response to his appointment back in July 2004, Professor Snowden said, “I am honoured and delighted to be appointed and look forward to leading the University forward, gaining further recognition as a world-class institution in research, teaching, learning and enterprise. I am particularly keen to promote the drive for quality and success in all the University’s endeavours, whilst fostering an environment that fully values its staff and students.” Patrick Dowling, the former Vice Chancellor, leaves UniS to take up his new role as Chair of the BA Council for the British Association for the Advancement of Science. In response to the appointment, he said, “I am delighted to be taking up this important appointment as Chair of the BA. It is absolutely fundamental to the future health of the nation’s economy and quality of life that the role of science be fully understood, appreciated and supported by all. I am looking forward to the opportunities and challenges of this position.” Knife Wielder Apprehended by Security A drunken drug addict who was apprehended by security after breaking into student halls masquerading as a student was sentenced a few weeks ago. Terry Gosthling, 20, was sentenced at Guildford Crown Court after admitting eight charges including burglary, theft, affray, deception, and possessing a knife; the Surrey Advertiser reports. The prosecution stated that Gosthling stole a student’s wallet, using a bank card to obtain money and alcohol, burgled a student’s room, and threatened campus security with a knife when they approached him. This is not the first time that Gosthling has terrorised the campus. Last year, CCTV caught him going backstage at the Union last October, stealing a hooded top containing a wallet and cash. He similarly used the stolen card later that evening, and a doorman caught him trying to enter the Union using the stolen NUS card. Three members of security staff apprehended Mr Gosthling, after a student noticed him and two other people he did not recognise in a campus kitchen. According to the prosecution, security found Gosthling “very drunk” and attempting to get into a student’s room, which he claimed was his girlfriend’s. He then picked up a knife and threatened to stab the security staff if they did not let him get away. Security disarmed him, and he was arrested later when the police arrived. These incidents come as Surrey loses its “Safest County in the UK” accolade, coming second to Wiltshire. The Union applauds the bravery of the University of Surrey security department in ensuring the safety of our students in such dangerous circumstances. Although Surrey is no longer the safest county, the Union would like to stress to all students that Guildford is still one of the safest places to study in the country. The University has recently introduced UniS Watch, which is a service that will allow students to report information about something that has happened on campus that the Chief Security Officer should be aware of, without the student having to to become directly involved. Barry Jakeman, the Chief Security Officer at UniS, has stressed that the UniS Watch service will allow students to “report information both safely and anonymously”. In regards to crime on campus, Mr Jakeman emphasises that UniS is “one of the safest places in Surrey in which to work, study and visit”. He adds to this that the campus benefits from a very low crime rate. UniS Watch can be accessed from the UniSlife intranet page: www.surrey.ac.uk/unislife/ None of them knew they were robots... NEWS 2 19 September 2005 Like a very unusual day in the fifties at the BBC, there’s no news. Well, aside from the news on the frontpage. That’s not say nothing’s gone on in the world - much has. It’s just there’s no more news for barefacts this edition... Fancy ‘running’ barefacts? This edition of barefacts was compiled and lovingly crafted without a proper editor. On the xxth of September barefacts will be having an AGM to elect in a new editor, and a new selection of sub-editors. There are also design positions available - Did you think this edition looked bland & unappealing? Think you can do better. Well, I’d love you to have a go at redesigning this paper into a brand shiny new look. The AGM will be at 6pm on Friday 23rd of September in LTE Dearest Reader, We were supposed to have an interview with the new Vice Chancellor here... but the deadline came (and went). Anyway - This big area of white space (sort of filled with text) helps to highlight something - Barefacts doesn’t write itself (If the technology exists for it to write itself someone’s keeping it a secret... damn them). In the past everyone’s been used to barefacts coming out come rain or shine... this reliability was a super-human feet (especially weekly) and lead to implosion of the paper last year. Now we’re going fortnightly in an attempt to sustain ourselves (the dream is to be weekly) and we’re going to grovel twice as hard for submissions (You’ve probably read at least two pleas for articles by now) So read, enjoy & return the favour - Write something for everyone else to read & enjoy. Yours lovingly, barefacts (Best not to ask how a publication can sign it’s name) Absolutely any one can stand for these positions, no experience necessary. Very few people come to university (especially Surrey) with experience of working on a news paper so helping out with barefacts is a rare opportunity for people interested in printed media and even if you just want to contribute to the paper there’s something truely satisfying about seeing your work in print. If you’ve still got questions you can come in and speak to me, Neil (VP Communications), in my office in the media centre (Which is found in the Students’ Union Activity Centre. Rather than shamelessly thieve a news story off a news website for the sake of having news I have decided instead to include a picture of a barber shop quartet. An attempted list of Contributers: If you’re name has been missed off this list, humblest apologies... Neil “Tree” Boulton - Editor-in-Chief, Lay-up Monkey, Secret lemonade drinker... Chris Ward - Liberal Democrat, Lay-up Monkey Phil Howard - Journalist Lia Parker - Features Editor, provider of many features David Hynds - Keeper of Room 101 Flo Oyeleye - Students’ Union President, no less. Tracey Abegg - Girl Guide FCS - Mystery Author Emma Clarke - Wise in the ways of cookery (Thong, Bertie, Susan, 3/3 & Special - Fizzy Drink Test Pilots) Beth Heale & Nicole Heel - Both Arts editors, both arts reviewers Ollie Ghaney - Arts reviewer Sam Carney - Arts reviewer Lisa Ahmed - Postgraduate Editor, theatre critic The Alumni Society Dr. Russ & The Careers Office Matthew Gardiner - Storyteller The Afro-Caribbean Society - A society Colin - Everett - Webmaster & Puzzlelord Peter Wigfield - Ultimate Player Tom Wallis - Hockey Player ...but as you will probably read, many times, in this paper - We always need new contributers, so pick up a pen (or more realistically, get to a keyboard) and empty the contents of your brain into letters so we can all read it. Go on, it’s very cathartic. “ Woo! It’s Barefacts!” Back & Better Than Ever! barefacts is an editorially independant newspaper and is published by The University of Surrey Students’ Union Communications Office. The views expressed within the paper are those of the individual authors and do not necessarily represent the views of the Editor, the University of Surrey Students’ Union or the University of Surrey. barefacts reserves the right to edit submissions barefacts@ussu.co.uk www.ussu.co.uk Copyright USSU Communications Office 2005 Normally there would be a letters page in this publication, much like any other newspaper. But it’s the first edition of the 2005/2006 academic year. And, well... to be honest, no one’s sent us any. Too busy haveing a good time over the Summer to complain... or something similar. You can take the time to write and post in if you want... but most people e-mail. barefacts Union House University of Surrey Students’ Union Guildford Surrey GU2 7XH 19 September 2005 NEITHER HERE NOR THERE 3 The return of a legend, on the brink of change Phil Howard. The air is stale, and the room dim. But there is noise. An over-caffeinated student of questionable facial hair coverage cranks a handle furiously, and stops. Adjusting the paper in front of him, he begins again. Ink stains form tribal lines down his cheeks. Across the room, there is furious typing. Another late submission, another furrowed line on a forehead writ large with concentration. Typing mistakes cause her momentarily to raise an eyebrow – such that by counting these flickers of discontent, you could measure the spelling accuracy of tomorrow’s product. Some time later, after the sun has slid slowly over the rooftops of Stag Hill and its crowning cathedral, a key rattles in the lock. Over-insulated and under-slept, the morning crew bundles into the expectant stillness, ready for the task ahead. Shepherding and manhandling bundles of badly printed page into bags and boxes, they head back out, down the stairs, and out of the students’ union – third floor, Senate House. In 1968, this was how the words from the writers mouths became the printed organ known as barefacts. Not to add too much austerity to the thing. As a paper, it grew from the division caused when Battersea College of Technology moved to Guildford to become the University of Surrey. Changing with the times, the technology, the writers and the students in its audience, it became a weekly twenty-four page paper, somewhere between free local papers and a tabloid in style, content and design. But, as with most student papers, with broadsheet pretentions. After the absence of this format for a semester (with a brief stint of six issues as a bi-weekly magazine in Autumn 04), the organ returned with a new drive, now as a society, and with more official union support. And this Autumn it has returned with full force. Produced in the realm of computers, professional printing, and in some part full-colour, the paper retains a few things in common with its ancestor; written by students, read by students. Thirty-seven years ago, the institution was split between Battersea and Guildford as it graduated from its College to University, it stands at the start of another road, from one campus to two. Manor Farm is perhaps closer (being under a mile away), and has been part of the plan for the university since its inception, but it remains no less unknown. Most students at Surrey never see the whole campus – as a music student you may never venture into the realms of the academic blocks, and as a nurse you may never explore the reaches of Surrey court. So many barely discover more than the areas they live, work and pass en route to Tesco, let alone another campus. What then of students on Manor Farm? No commonality of experience as far as the unforgiving laundrette, or negotiating underpasses with pained fingers? Barefacts is many things to many people. Some ignore the news as out of date and shallow; others rely on it to connect them with the world outside. Hardened puzzle addicts ignore the music reviews, and the shiny new Vice Chancellor is unlikely to dedicate time to the sport. Yet its charm is its constancy, its universality. We all read it. We all notice when it’s missing for a week, or when the colours on the front page are miles off. Hopefully enough notice when there is proper investigative journalism, or crucial news and events. Barefacts was brought about in 1968 to unite two campuses, two groups of students, two worlds. We face another era when this is also necessary. Yet this time instead of a temporary divide, we have a permanent one. The room is no longer musty, Senate House will be far from harbouring it, and the questionable facial hair may be less prevalent. But barefacts lives on, a legend on the brink of change. “Barefacts is many things to many people” A Phoenix, mythical fire-based bird that raises itself from it’s own ashes (artists interpretation) Agony Niece Q. I don’t know why but I keep bumping uglies with my ex. I know its only sex for him, as he once slept with three different women in one week, me being one of them. But I really like him and can’t let go. Q. I moved into halls earlier than most people and already I feel really lonely. It’s the first time I’ve lived away from home, and it’s even harder when I have no one to talk to. I see people walking around campus, talking and laughing with other people like they’ve known each other for ages. I’m scared I’m going to be left out. A. What a lovely term – “bumping uglies”. It is a very ugly thing to be sleeping with your ex. If you are hoping to win him back by sleeping with him, I’d give up as I don’t think that’s on his mind if he’s sleeping with other women. Remember the two of you broke up. Make a new year’s semester’s resolution not to see him. If you miss male attention, go to the Union and pull some random drunk. There’s more dignity in that! A. Those people you saw could have been second or final year students, so they probably do know the people they were walking with. They were freshers once and they came to the university with no friends. Remember that all first year students are in the same position as you right now. When more people have moved into your accommodation, leave your room door open so you can say hi to people. As you’re already moved in, you could help the others unpack. The only way you or any first year student is going to get to know each other is if you talk to one another. Q. My girlfriend is obsessed with shoes. I didn’t realise how many pairs she had until we moved in together this month. She never has any money and expects me to pay for things when we go out. Now I know why! I’m worried that she’s going to get into serious debt because she can’t go past a shoe shop without trying a pair or two on. A. Personally I don’t understand some girls’ obsessions with shoes. I suggest you use an evil girly trick- make her feel guilty. When she’s trying on shoes, work out what else she could buy with the money, like “wow, you could buy 25 pints with that”. A less evil trick is trying to get your girlfriend to compromise. If she wants a new pair of shoes, then she’ll have to give up something else for a while. She may dislike for trying to stop her splurging, but she’ll thank you in the long run. Q. When I got drunk I accidentally kissed my friend’s ex boyfriend. It’s not like I was interested in him, it was just for a laugh. Now he won’t leave me alone. He keeps saying that he knows I want him, but I won’t do anything because of my friend. He won’t take no for an answer. He has asked if I will go to his one evening so we can talk over dinner. Should I go to try and sort things out? A. No no no no NO! For starters you would be giving out mixed signals, and he might think he’s going to get lucky. If he cannot accept you are not interested in him, then you should avoid him as much as possible. Any time you spend with him, in his mind, means that you like him. The less you see of him, the less likely he’ll turn stalker on you. 4 COMMENT 19 September 2005 Patriotism = Racism? After the London bombings, the country is beginning to ask what caused our own people to turn against us. Chris Ward proposes that maybe our attitude to British patriotism is anything but constructive in building a safer and more united country. In the aftermath of 7/7, the country seems to be inevitably moving towards the “How do we stop this happening ever again?” stage. Charles Clarke is likely to force everybody to carry around bits of plastic with biometric data that will probably be sold as consumer data to the corporations in a few years time. Tony Blair is likely to use it to heighten his War On Stupid and invade Iran. And Bush? Well, let’s just say he’s going to spend a lot of time over the next couple of years wishing he’d listened to our cries warning him about climate change. So, at some point, it’s likely that the can of worms labelled ‘bombing other countries’ may soon be opened again by Dubya in a feeble attempt to climb back up the approval polls. Until then, we’re having a few problems of our own at home regarding the possibility of so-called “home-grown” suicide bombers. I must confess, I found myself the other day on the tube avoiding walking onto any carriage with somebody holding a rucsac (regardless of their ethnicity, I’d like to add). Although the atmosphere in London at the moment is still one of unity, these socalled “home-grown” bombers have put a cloud even in the minds of the government. If suicide bombers are from Afghanistan, Blair goes and bombs Afghanistan. If they’re from Iraq, Blair goes and bombs Iraq. This time the government didn’t have an external scapegoat, and they can’t exactly bomb Leeds now can they? So the war on terror turns into a war on multiculturalism. David Davis blames the fact that many sub-societies are living amongst one another in isolation, and argues that they can never live together in harmony. He insists that they should become more “British”, obviously in the hope that if they turned into beer-swilling pissheads waiting in the kebab queue, they’ll be less likely to strap explosives to their chest in the name of their people and their religion. Is it at all likely that these suicide bombers are being nurtured by a sub-culture conflicting with our own? Or are the Conservatives simply using this as an extension of their “It’s not racist...” campaign - a proxy by which they can express their distaste for foreigners without suffering from the official label of “racist”? Of course, if anybody is to suggest to either Mr Davis or Mr Blair that this whole incident came about as a result of the Iraq War, they get shouted down as being unpatriotic and are accused of treading on the bodies of the tube tragedy victims. So, in a democratic society, one that we are trying to install in other countries I might add, the government now has a right to restrict our freedom of speech. Is blaming Iraq an unfair comment to make? around twenty-five thousand innocent civilians were killed out there, surely we’d have pissed somebody off? Surely if a member of your family is savagely killed because another country didn’t like your government, you’d want revenge? To get shouted down for suggesting that there was a motive behind such bombings is reminiscent of what the republicans did after 9/11 to try and counter the fact that the Bush government had screwed up. What the government fail to realise however, is that by using the deaths of innocent people as justification to kill more innocent people, they are committing the ultimate atrocity. Whilst they accuse the opposition of treading over the dead, they fail to acknowledge that the dead came around because of their actions. What about Jean Charles de Menezes? It would be rather dangerous to postulate as to whether or not the facts have been hidden from the public in regards to that matter, so we’ll avoid the rather contentious issue of who is to blame. My point is not directly related to that part of the incident, but more to the fact that after the shooting, the government revealed the seemingly irrelevant fact that de Menezes’ visa had expired. It would have at least been respectable if the government had simply apologised for the death and shown a sincere level of regret that such an incident had occurred. Instead, they seemed desperate to wash their hands of any innocent blood - he had to be guilty of something. Surely this attempt by the government to undermine the fact that this man was a victim of miscalculation and neglect is beyond the lowest level of disrespect? So what about us? There are many of us that believe a human life is a human life. Who cares if that human life is from Iraq, Afghanistan, Britain, etc.? During the two- minute silence for those who lost their lives on 7/7, my thoughts were with the many innocent people that have suffered as a result of the last few years, and I prayed that their families would be given the strength to cope with the terrible loss they have been burdened with. In this sense, perhaps it is racist to be “patriotic”? If somebody believes that the death of a foreigner is preferable to the death of a British citizen, surely the purest and most sickening form of racism must be ripe in the mind of that person? How can nationality make the death of an innocent person more or less wrong? We can’t continue tearing at each other, looking for something to blame rather than trying to find a constructive way forward for a country united not against terrorism, but against everything that anybody could ever throw at it. A united country is not one that looks at itself and sees “multiculturalism” - it is one that recognises diversity, but does not make our differences significant, whether those differences be on the grounds of race, gender, sexuality, or any other insignificant factor. To that end, the terrorists have succeeded. They wanted division, they wanted bloodshed and death, but most importantly they wanted to spread fear. Blair and Bush have delivered that fear-filled society - one where we are afraid to question; one where our right to free speech is presented at the end of a long contract, riddled with plenty of conditional fine-print. Taking our right to protest outside of parliament was a huge step backwards for the future of democracy. Whatever your opinion on the Iraq War, and whatever your opinion on 7/7, please do not allow any government to restrict you from making that opinion known. I may not agree with the pro-war group, but I would never condone the gagging of their opinions. If we reach a time where people are scared to speak their minds, then the terrorists have truly won. “How can nationality make the death of an innocent person more or less wrong?” FEATURES 19 September 2005 ROOM 101 5 I’m fairly sure every single one of us likes complaining, it’s like a natural instinct or something. David Hynds is going to help us vent our spleens at the bits of existence that really bug us, using the Room 101 concept from George Orwell’s 1984 (Or the Room 101 from the BBC TV Show if you haven’t/can’t read 1984). For a moment he was alone, then the door opened and O’Brien came in. A line from the infamous novel by George Orwell; 1984. Not only is it the year that I was born (along with a good few others here at Surrey), but it is one of those classics that I have yet to read – maybe in the course of this year I will. Anyway, I digress. Room 101, a fantastical place in which one could place what that individual deemed; ‘the worst thing in the world’ – in this case, Winston’s scenario was rats. I can imagine a lot of things worse than rats, as can a great number of other people – therefore, this slot in your fortnightly Barefacts has been devoted to airing some of your Room 101 choices. ‘You asked me once,’ said O’Brien, ‘what was in Room 101. I told you that you knew the answer already. Everyone knows it. The thing that is in Room 101 is the worst thing in the world.’ Firstly, a few of my choices, to give you some ideas and to spur you on, after which details are listed so you can get your pet hates aired, and hopefully, banished to Room 101. Think of me as a younger, more attractive Paul Merton (but perhaps not as funny), who will discuss your choices, and ultimately decide whether I agree or not. Quote from 1984 On with the list… 1. Hypocritisicm I know it’s not a word as such, but it works just as well as it covers a number of things under the same banner. It irritates me so much when people go against their own principles – a case of ‘one rule for one, one rule for another’ (not to be confused with one ring to rule them all…). Now, I must clarify. It is not the people themselves I wish to be put into this chasm, just the act of being hypocritical – it’s an ugly thing. Think of the benefits: People would be able to trust in what is said (unless lies are told), and with trust in the world, life would generally be better – where it not for the next things on my list. 2. Classical Chillout Albums, and Specialist Classical Albums Things such as ‘Mozart for Babies’ Yes, I know that Mozart is supposed to be a good aid to brains and intelligence, but it hasn’t done me any good. I’m a music student, and as such, I relish the fact that most classical music is infallible, without the need for a Barber’s Adagio for Strings Club remix – it’s unnecessary. Basically, classical music out of context shouldn’t be permitted. You lose a whole chunk of the intelligent understanding when you have just an extract of the piece. An interesting definition of classical music is thus: The other 30 minutes of music from that car advert. This is sadly true, people generally name classical music from the advert; O Fortuna, from Orff’s Carmina Burana, becomes ‘The Gillette advert music’; The Flower Duet becomes, the British Airways theme – Basically, it’s a travesty. 3. People’s dependency on computers I know that they’re a technological marvel, and that they have done great things in advance humankind, but you’d be in a bit of a pickle if things crashed. There was nothing wrong with the old system, except people’s pure laziness. I must say, I’m using a computer at the moment to type this, but only because I couldn’t carry my typewriter to Uni, and that I’ve forgotten how to use a pen – such is the depravity of the situation. 4. Political Correctness overkill It’s ridiculous now. It’s got to the point where the only people that can be ridiculed without consequence (and lawsuits) are white, English males – and they’re not that funny in the first place. I’m not saying that racism, sexism and all those otherisms are OK; it’s just gone a bit far. Somebody please save us... 5. The fact that people don’t appreciate me making up words I know that some of my made-up words are sometimes silly; but if they do what they are supposed to do, then why not? I mean, new words are being made up all the time. CHAV, for example, comes from the Romany word, chav or child, but has become used to mean the lower class; uneducated and ignorant people. Robot wasn’t a word until someone made it up, as were a great number of words. I am careful not to use them in assessed coursework, so I won’t lose out on degree marks – but I feel it is my duty to expand the already vast English Language. Anyway, I hope you’ve enjoyed my ramblings. Next edition, it’s over to you… If you want to contribute to Room 101, then send an email to; mu21dh@surrey. ac.uk, with ‘Room 101’ in the subject line. Don’t forget to write a little about yourself, and ensure that your choices are explained fully. It is the columnist’s right to edit entries as he deems fit, so it would be most useful if explanations are lengthy, and in detail. Barefacts and the columnist will ensure that the majority of your contributions are used, however; if suggestions are in any way derogatory, then they shall be omitted (Note from editor-in-chief: He’s right you know...) Remember, keep it clean. David Hynds 6 UNION UPDATE 19 September 2005 It’s been 3 months since many of you last stepped inside or even thought about the Students’ Union Flo is here to tell you about some of the things that everyone’s been getting up to unionwise over the Summer break. Flo s a y s... For those who are freshers or were on placement or didn’t pay any attention to the student elections that were held in April, my name is Flo and I am your students’ union president. I am one of 6 student officers (Bex, Ella, Paintbrush, Piers & Tree) that run the students union on a day to day basis, representing all students of Surrey to improve all areas of student life. This years sabbatical team (student officers) is not only one with individuals with great ideas to make your student experience better but also a team that wants to efficiently represent. To do that we need to be very aware of all student issues and that’s were you all come in. It’s up to you to be very open with the student officers and when you see them tell them about the issues that matter to you as a student. We intend to do our best for students and our work started months ago during the summer. I will now begin to tell you about what projects the students’ union has been part of and then what the student’s officers have been doing over the summer. The students’ union has been very busy over the summer. The great weather made it so hard to stay indoors, we decided to extend Chancellors patio so there is more fun in the sun for all at Surrey. The refurbished laundrette (reopened June 05) has evolved over the summer from a room with new laundry facilities to an all singing and dancing laundry chill out area (unlucky guys, the seats are not very Feng Shui). We have been working closely with a variety of external organisations such as Guildford Borough Council, Barclays Bank, South East Area NUS etc on all aspects of the students’ union in order to develop our services (oh yes, we do try). Local discounts were negotiated with a few local shops and the promo stuff will be with us for freshers fayre. The union has taken its time this year to develop DAVE (skill development scheme for students) and FUSE (enterprise scheme for student) further this year. These two schemes have not just got new training material and workshops but also have new sponsors. The students union are constantly looking at ways to improve the service we offer and one of the big internal changes is within finance provision for clubs and societies so that our clubs and societies committee member have better access to their finances. part of the decision committee for the architect for the manor park sports facilities, moved forwards with re-defining colours ball for the future as a way of gaining better recognition for the sports teams, sat on the BUSA phase 2 strategic review committee guiding the future of student sport for years to come, recruited Zoe Riding as Sports and Activities administrators and is working on more professionalism in coaching of clubs and working more closely with UniSport for a better student sport experience. Yeah, he has been busy. This year marks the beginning of an era for postgraduates with Bex (VP Postgraduate affairs) organising the first union postgraduate freshers’ week for the new postgraduates (Oct 4). Piers (VP Societies and Culture) has been working hard ‘hob nobbing’ with uni staff preparing for freshers’ fayre and societies. Ella (VP Education & Welfare) has been working on improving the programme representatives system within our university & deciding on and preparing my campaigns for the year (there are 4 priority campaigns). Neil a.k.a Tree (VP Communications) has by far been the busiest member of the sabb gang, redesigning all of the union leaflets and marketing material. He still had time on the side to design the freshers’ material too (show off!). And last but not the least sport. There hasn’t been much going on in that area over summer, just that Paintbrush (VP Sports) has been So what about now, I hear you ask. Well this week is the busiest in the university calendar with the freshers arriving. I urge all the oldies (returning students) to be nice to the newbies and advice them wisely. They are likely to get lost in our maze of a campus so help them get around (boys, it not only about FAF). Rubix has a great fest of event this week. The union shop (which sells your ‘University of Surrey’ merchandise, Rubix advance tickets and more) had a grand opening on Sunday 18th. The student officers will continue to represent all students on various university committees and remind them to KISS (Keep it simple Sir!) for students. So till the next edition, enjoy freshers week. Flo says…..Oh! Do not forget the students’ union AGM on Tuesday 20th September at 03MS01 6pm. For one lucky attendee there will be a big surprise… For any comments please email me: ussu.president@surrey.ac.uk. 19 September 2005 UNION UPDATE The First Union Council of 2005/05 4th October Seasons Restaurant at 6pm It is where descisions are made It’s where you can make your feelings known on virtually any issue. All students are allowed, and encouraged, to attend council So if you want to ask your student officers any questions or hear about where the union is headed strategically, come along. Simple as that. The USSU Annual General Meeting (see poster) What’s that then? This happens once a year, it’s when the union presents it;’s annual report of the previous year to it’s stakeholders. That’s you by the way (If you hadn’t guessed). It’s not a very long affair. Ever want to have a position of responsibility within the Students’ Union? Well now you can. It’s the part-time student officer elections! There are various positions you can stand for, you could be organising events (Culture & Events Officer), running campaigns (Campaigns Officer) or telling the President what to do (Union Chair). There are over 10 positions available for motivated students (There are even perks involved too). You could even represent the University of Surrey Students’ Union at the yearly NUS conference by becoming a conference delegate. To find out even more about the part-time elctions go to the website or similarly go straight to Flo (He’s the President) in his office in the Students’ Union Activity Centre to get a nomination form. You can do it! ussu.co.uk/elections 7 8 FEATURES 19 September 2005 Surprise yourself with GirlGuiding UK Campfires, knot-tying, and cookie-selling? Not quite. Tracy Abegg expels the stereotypical preconceptions of the GirlGuiding UK movement. Everyone has heard of Girl Guides, but how much do you actually know about it? Have you ever been put off of becoming a member because you thought it was all about camping in the Great Outdoors and tying knots? Well I’m here to tell you what it’s really all about and how you can get involved. Girlguiding UK is the new name for the Guide Association, an organisation for girls and women aged from 5 to 65. It started in the early 20th century when an army general named Robert Baden-Powell developed a training scheme for boys which became known as Scouting. He noticed a demand for a similar scheme for girls who were inviting themselves to the boys meetings and less than five years later he created Girl Guides. There were mixed reactions to this, many people believing it wasn’t appropriate for girls to be running around and mucking in with the boys, but today there are more than ten million members worldwide, proof that Girl Power is still a very big thing. So as a university student, what opportunities are open to you in Guiding? The average age of university students is 18 to 23 making you the perfect age to join the Senior Section. This is for girls and young women aged 14 to 26 and you can do practically anything that takes your fancy. If you were a Brownie or Guide and enjoyed it or simply want to meet new people and have a laugh, you could join a Ranger unit and challenge yourself with the Look Wider scheme. This is a scheme in which you pick and choose activities from a range of topics including Creativity, Out of Doors and Fit for Life in order to challenge yourself. If you are thinking about taking part in the Duke of Edinburgh’s Award scheme, then doing it through Guid- ing could provide you with more resources and it can be linked easily with the Queen’s Guide Award, the highest award in Guiding. Scheme’s like this are brilliant for trying new things, things you may never have thought of before or have been to scared to try. You could become a Young Leader and help out at the local Rainbow, Brownie or Guide unit or you could take it step further and gain your Leadership qualification to become a fully fledged Leader. This is brilliant if you enjoy working with young people and is great for developing organisational skills and leadership qualities. Many teachers are Brownie or Guide Leaders so if you’ve been thinking of a career in teaching then becoming a Leader could be good experience for the future. If you are interested in a career in youth work then you could even become an In4mer for 4, Girlguiding’s Peer Education scheme. This involves basic training and can lead to travelling to different areas to raise the aware- ness of topics such as teenage pregnancy or drug abuse amongst young people in Guiding. What ever you are interested in Girlguiding UK is for you. It looks great on your CV, especially if you get involved with units and trainings and you get the opportunity to travel and meet new people all the time. Girlguiding UK has a vision, a vision to have enough volunteers to enable every girl and young women to have the opportunity to join Girlguiding UK. You could be a part of that. To get more information please go to www. girlguiding.org.uk and surprise yourself! If you are already involved in Guiding and wish to continue while at university then there are options for you to. Local units are always looking for extra help and there is a Ranger unit very close to the university. The Guide and Scouting Society is currently dormant at Surrey, but it wouldn’t take much to start it again so if anyone is interested then feel free to contact me on tracy_abegg@hotmail.com What is a Student? by F.S.C. According to the UniS website, there are over 12’000 students (postgrad and undergrad) registered with the university on award-bearing programmes. Twelve thousand? Well with so many of them about, we must all know what a student is. So what is a student? One common image conjured up when thinking of students is alcohol. All students like getting drunk as much as possible…. don’t they? I can safely say they don’t. For starters I don’t drink alcohol and I’m sure I’m not the only one. At least I hope I’m not! Let’s go for a more obvious answer. A student is someone who studies. Well we all know people who turn up to every lecture, spend hours in the library or sat in front of the computer. We also all know people who rarely get out of bed for lectures, don’t do any extra reading, but still manage to pass exams. I hardly think that can be classed as studying. What about student cuisine? Beans on toast and Pot Noodles. If that is all you eat, then you certainly haven’t been reading the Barefacts food page. Last year I lived with people that cooked fancy meals like lobster in white wine sauce. And I bet you all think I’m exaggerating. I’m not. So is there anything that links all students together? Dress sense? Music? Celebrity most fantasised about? Brand of toothpaste that gets your teeth whiter than white with a minty freshness? I think it’s safe to say that even if you can think of a trend amongst students, there’ll always be someone that breaks the mould. They say that variety is the spice of life. I haven’t lived a full life yet so I don’t know about that, but variety is the spice of students. It’s brilliant that we have such a diverse group of people all bunched together under the label of “students”. Just think, if we all left university dressed the same, with the same interests and the same goals in life, how would people tell us apart? You might think that person in your lectures is a bit weird because they dress funny or belong to some obscure society, but if you talk to them you may just find you have something in common. If you don’t have something in common, even better! That way you can get the chance to experience how someone else lives their life. Perhaps being open minded towards others is what makes you a student. Not actualy students... but trained actors... Not a student either FEATURES 19 September 2005 9 Flash... aaaarrrghhhh! For those with a lot of time on their hands and a tendency to do things that have very little point. Lia Parker introduces us to the concept of Flash Mobbing. in. Of course, when you have a good idea, people take it and try to make it better. There are different versions of Flash Mobbing. Two of the most common are Pillow Fight Club and Mobile Clubbing. • The first rule of Pillow Fight Club is - you will tell everyone about Pillow Fight Club. • The second rule of Pillow Fight Club is - you TELL EVERYONE about Pillow Fight Club. • Third rule of Pillow Fight Club, someone yells “Stop!”, goes limp, taps out, their fight is over. • Fourth rule, only 100 people to a fight. • Fifth rule, one hundred fights at a time. • Sixth rule, shirts, shoes. • Seventh rule, fights will go on as long as they have to. And the eighth and final rule, if this is your first time at Pillow Fight Club, you have to fight. You get the idea. Pillow Fight Club in action “The first rule of Pillow Fight Club is - you will tell everyone about Pillow Fight Club.The second rule of Pillow Fight Club is - you TELL EVERYONE about Pillow Fight Club.” Ever felt like doing something pointless yet wonderful at the same time? Something silly yet something well organised? Why not take part in a Flash Mob? This craze involves hordes of people turning up in the same place at the same time. They do something daft for a few minutes then disperse as quickly as they arrived. The reason behind it? There is no reason! Flash Mobbing started in New York in June 2003, when over a hundred people massed on Macy’s department store. At 7.27pm the crowd assembled in the rug department and congregated around one rug. If a member of the Mob was approached by a sales clerk, they simply said that they all lived together in a warehouse, and wanted a love rug to play on. The idea has caught on all over the world. In Japan, people took over the streets dressed as Agent Smith from The Matrix. London experienced its first Flash Mob in August 2003. A sofa shop in central London was bombarded by 250 people at exactly 6.31pm, and Mobbers were instructed to speak (in English) but not to use the letter “o”, and commend the shop owner on the quality of his goods. After 7 minutes, and a loud applause, the Mob disappeared. Flash Mobbing is made easier by the internet. People can sign up to various groups, and will receive e-mails, telling them the date and destination of the next Flash Mob. They are usually asked to text or e-mail anyone they know that might be interested in joining in. Some people have tried to use Flash Mobbing to advertise their products, but it doesn’t really work. The idea behind Flash Mobbing is that all the people mass unexplainably and randomly. Some have suggested that Flash Mobbing could be used by politicians or today’s youth to make their voices heard. But it shouldn’t be like that. Flash Mobbing is meant to be harmless fun that anyone can participate Sofa UK gets flash-mobbed by some weary patrons Mobile Clubbing is similar Flash Mobbing, but most commonly take place in train or underground stations. Instead of doing something random at one precise time, everyone starts dancing to music on their personal music systems. These gatherings come highly recommended. As Mobile Clubber, Jared Schiller said, “You get to listen to all your favourite tunes, cause a bit of commotion and have great fun at the same time... And, as an added bonus, you give weary commuters something to smile about on their way home from work.” So there you have it; another silly craze that’s taken the world by storm. But why should we have to go all the way to London to partake in a Flash Mob. How about starting our own in Guildford? Send your articles/letters/ personals to: barefacts@ussu.co.uk When Mobile Clubbing there’s always someone who looks cooler than you... 10 FOOD 19 September 2005 Many people ethink that dialing up the take-away is easier than cooking. And to be honest it is, but it costs a fortune. Do you use the reason you can’t cook as an excuse? Well, not anymore Emma Clarke is going to show us some of the basics to mysterious art of cookery. Back to basics: After a funky summer break, it’s now back to university and amongst the aches and pains of starting dissertations and re-learning how to use your brain, the biggest stress hits us: how do we cook again?! Oh the joys of student life! How to cook Pasta: Boil water in pan with pinch of salt and olive oil. Add 100g pasta. Simmer for 10 minutes. Drain and rinse with hot water. If your pocket can’t handle endless takeaways and trips to Chancellors for brekkie before lectures, never fear! Barefacts, aka the new Jamie Oliver, will be providing you with yummy recipes and tips for student cooking. How to cook Potatoes: So if you’re one of the following: on a budget/ wanting to get healthy/need cooking ideas to impress the chick you have your eye on/ or simply determined to prove to your mum that you do know what a chopping board is, then read on! Baked Potatoes: Pierce skin with knife and microwave on full power for 8 minutes until hot in middle; OR bake in oven for 25 minutes at 180 degrees c. Next week: Meals on a budget: Quick Pan Pizza; Flapjacks Basic Mince Recipe (Serves 4) Prep time 5 mins Cooking time 20 mins Ingredients: 350g minced (ground) lamb or beef 1 medium onion 2 cloves garlic 1 can of plum or chopped tomatoes Mixed Herbs Salt and Pepper 1 oxo cube Tablespoon olive oil Tablespoon of soy sauce Tablespoon tomato ketchup 75ml red wine (or water) Method: Chop onion and garlic finely and fry in pan with olive oil. Once onion and garlic are soft, add minced lamb and cook on medium heat until browned (approx 5 minutes). Chop plum tomatoes and add to pan, stirring frequently for 5 minutes. Add a teaspoon of herbs, tomato ketchup, soy sauce and salt and pepper. Make stock by breaking up oxo cube and stirring into wine. Add stock to pan, bring to the boil, simmer, then reduce for 10 minutes. Serve with spaghetti and parmesan cheese; or baked potatoes and vegetables. Tips: 1) Any un-used mince can be frozen for future meals (simply defrost and microwave on full power for 10minutes). 2) Use this recipe for Chilli Con Carne, by adding a can of drained kidney beans and chilli powder, then serve with rice.’ Boiled Potatoes: Wash, peel, chop into shapes and boil in pan of water (with pinch of salt) for 15 minutes, until soft throughout, drain and serve with melted margarine. Mashed Potatoes: As for boiled potatoes, then drain and place in bowl with 20g margarine, 2 tablespoons of milk, and pepper, then mash until light and fluffy. I hope each and everyone of you readin this realises the amazing comical value of having an advery for a takeaway on the same page as an article encouraging students to cook... I do. William Shatner: Iron Chef KONSUMER TESTING 19 September 2005 11 barefacts very own attempt at a consumer testing section. We were aiming for interesting and informative... by Neil Boulton The world is a dazzling place, and there is no place more dazzling than the supermarket. They’re magnificent caves of commerce, a sensory overload of signs and offers. The Konsumer Revolt aims to help you steer yourself through this dazzling maze and guide you to some of, in our opinion, the best products to be found. Our first target for the Konsumer Revolt is soft drinks. Carbonated beverages of the lemonade & cola varieties – but none of those major brand names, oh no - As students we can’t afford luxury brand name beverages, we must drink the cheap & the cheerful. We must drink the supermarket own brand fizzy drinks! Six lemonades and four colas were located for this rigorous taste testing. All were from supermarkets within walking distance of campus here at Surrey. Each drink was tested in two ways: Way the 1st, as a regular soft drink & Way the 2nd, as a mixer to some very cheap alcohol. Way the 1st will give us a valuable incite on how drinkable the drink is normally and Way the 2nd will show us how well each drink covers up the flavour of cheap, bad tasting, alcoholic substances (We perceive this as one of the main uses of supermarket own brand fizzy drinks...) Round One: The Colas on their own... The marking for each of the soft drinks was to be a very simple process, each of the 6 testers could either ‘Yay’ or ‘Nay’ each of the drinks presented before them. Obviously a ‘Yay’ indicates that the fizzy drink in question was a fine beverage they wouldn’t mind drinking again and a ‘Nay’ vote indicated that they didn’t enjoy the drink, and that they perhaps loathed it. So each drink could score a maximum of 12 points – a maximum of 6 for the stand alone taste test, and a maximum of 6 for the ‘with vodka’ tasting. Rather than a formal break down of results (save that for coursework) we’re providing our table of results along with some of the comments made by our six test monkeys over the course the experiment. A Yellow Smiley face incides a happy ‘Yay’ vote, a green ill-looking face means a ‘Nay’ vote, and that the subject may be in need of medical assitance. You may also notice the names of the 6 test monkeys seem rather bizarre, unfortunately we couldn’t help that... Round Two: The Lemonades on their own... A Selection of Quotes, Comments & Opinions Sainsbury’s Classic Cola: “Nice” “My teeth feel weird” Sainsbury’s Basics Cola: “Tasted like Cherryade...” “That was genuinely awful. It had taste, it was just awful” Tesco Original Cola: “It had a nice flavour, wasn’t too sweet” “I didn’t not like it” Tesco Value Cola: “Tastes like cola flavour Freeze Pops” “Doesn’t taste like cola, but I like it!” Co-op Lemonade: “That was actually really nice. And I actually liked it being bubbly” Co-op Everyday Lemonade: “Has someone spiked this with washing up liquid?” “I second all that about its taste and cleaning power.” (as a mixer): “It looks like he’s trying to fold his face in on itself” Final Standings: Sainsbury’s Lemonade: “Someone poured sugar into a co-op everyday! And called it Sainsbury’s lemonade” “I thought it tasted alright. It was sweet, but not too sweet.” Sainsbury’s Basics Lemonade: “It tastes like recently cleaned bathroom!” “Not kidding - My mum does use this to water our plants.” (as a mixer): “AW MAN THAT IS AWFUL. ARGH THAT AFTERTASTE...” “Somewhat like sucking stamps” “That was abit horrific” Tesco Sparkling Lemonade: “At last, a lemonade that doesn’t make me think of domestic cleaners” “This is the best one. You can actually smell flavour before you try it.” Tesco Value Lemonade: “Yep, We’re back to the carbonated water again, aren’t we!” “Someone added Jif lemon to Bicarb of soda and mixes it with water! Then the bastard made me drink it!” (as a mixer): “The wateryness just lets you taste more vodka.” Score out of 12 Price (pence) Tesco Sparkling Lemonade Sainsbury’s Classic Cola Tesco Original Cola Co-op Lemonade Tesco value Cola Sainsbury’s Basics Cola Sainsbury’s Lemonade Tesco Value Lemonade Sainsbury’s Basics Lemonade Co-op Everyday Lemonade 11 11 9 9 5 4 4 2 1 0 25 69 44 69 18 18 35 17 17 49 The final result: The supreme champion soft drink was found to be Tesco’s Sparkling Lemonade receiving an impressive 11/12 by our testing team beating it’s nearest competition Sainsbury’s Classic Cola (which also had 11/12) by Tesco’s Sparkling Lemonade’s price coming in at a wallet friendly 25p. There was also half an idea to try and use the loser of the soft drinks to unblock our downstairs toilet. But we have learned another important lesson through all this, if it looks cheap & nasty, it most likely is cheap & nasty... Round Three: The Colas as a mixer... Round Four: The Lemonades as a mixer... IT’S THE ENTS PLANNER! 12 19 September 2005 Behold, barefacts own reproduction of the ‘Ents Planner’. Ents is short for Entainment in case you were wondering. If you don’t can’t wait ‘till barefacts comes out to get a hold of it you can subscribe to it digitally (woooo!) by going to ussu.co.uk/events and subscribing to grapevine - As you can clearly see it’s a busy couple of weeks ahead. September 19th - September 25th Monday 19th Cyclone in the HRB Tuesday 20th Wednesday 21st featuring: Adam Bloom, Stuart Goldsmith & Guests FRESHERS’ FAYRE NATWEST FIELD 1PM BLING Hanif The Honeyz Presha in the HRB Thursday 22nd Friday 23rd Hypnotist Tony Lee in Rubix doors 7:30pm with Pat Sharp £2 Advance, £3 before 10:30pm £4 afterwards No-wave in the HRB Saturday 24th Asian Society Presents: Freshers Masti, Punjabi Hit Squad, with Resident DJs Sunday 25th Stella Screen Free Film in the HRB 8pm 19 September 2005 OH YEAH! THE ENTS PLANNER 13 September 26th - September 25th Monday 26th Tuesday 27th Chancellor’s Coktail Night Ski Club Party HRB ll ll Chance or’s Cha enge: Tree & Piers attempt to run a quiz! in Chancellor’s no less! 8pm - £1 per person in a team All entry money goes towards the Quiz Cash Prize! t to e g r ’t Fo en... n o P D gA n i r B Wednesday 28th Thursday 29th Friday 30th Saturday 1st Sunday 2nd Open Mic Night in Chance l l or’s Traffic Light Party in the HRB with Jo O’Meara £2 Advance, £3 before 10:30pm £4 afterwards Vinyl Soc (Funk, Soul) in the HRB TEASE featuring 4tune & more Hyper Live www.djhyper.com (feat. Leeroy Thornhill, ex-The Prodigy) 7:30pm Rubix 14 MUSIC 19 September 2005 It’s theĐ that follow it are the remit of Elizabeth Heale & Nicole Heel - And if you feel like getting involved with any of these ‘art’ sections get in touch with them at: bf.arts@gmail.com - No idea when the new cd handouts are going to take place... STEPHEN MALKMUS Face The Truth Domino It’s quite hard to figure out what Stephen Malkmus is trying to achieve in this his third studio album. He seems stylistically unsure throughout the whole album like some sort of sexually confused teenager which in the end is just plain annoying. This gets confusing very easily and unfortunately is quite hard to get into as it’s just plain weird in places. After a while I found myself asking this question - Does a new generation of music lovers really need a third solo album from Malkmus which includes songs that house guitar wig-outs and last up to eight minutes? Not really is the answer I came up with. It sounds sort of like the rants of a deluded songwriter who has hit his head one too many times. Although it is musically acceptable it doesn’t really go anywhere and fails to cause any form of inspiration as the album lacks a unifying thread, either sonically or thematically. It’s too stylistically diverse, willfully weird and lyrically cryptic to be anything more than shall we say an ‘acquired’ taste. This record could be described as a big leap although I’m not too sure if it’s in the right direction as I’m sure Malkmus’ “genre” isn’t going to be the next big thing that NME rave over (thank god). The album title is actually quite ironic as I think it’s about time that songwriters like Malkmus ‘face the truth’ that weird isn’t always good – if you want to do that go be some wack 20th century composer. 2/5 Ollie Ghaney Editors The Back Room Kitchenware Records Ltd Released on 25th July this year, ‘The Back Room’ is the debut effort from Birmingham based foursome, Editors. To be honest, at first I wasn’t too sure, the first track, ‘Lights’ is a little, well, boring. However the second, ’Munich’, which was also their second single, packs a lot more passion into the dark. That is how this band sounds: dark and a little bit distant. Their sounds likens to Interpol, and delving slightly further back, Echo & The Bunnymen and Joy Division. At least to a certain extent. Editors work is much less epic and urgent than Interpol, but it’s probably more suited to the current climate of ‘cool’ NME bands. I can’t completely repress my first thought that they sound quite a bit like Franz Ferdinand, just with less camp catchiness and more intelligent lyrics. (Although in that area FF aren’t really much to compete with now are they?) The sixth song ‘Camera’ displays some of the bands quirky ability to experiment within their own sound, mixing some synth and electro sounds into shadowy, brummie concoction. Nothing else really stood out, this is a band who likes their style and tries not to vary it too much, but I believe that the album did relatively well in the charts (top 20) so they must be doing something right….I have heard Editors described as “80’s Goth combined with early Coldplay”, which isn’t entirely inaccurate, so I’ll conclude with this: Buy ‘The Dark Room’ if you are a fan of Interpol, Echo or Joy Division and want to explore another direction, if you like Franz Ferdinand but are slightly embarrassed by them, or if (heavens forbid) you liked Coldplay before the charts found them. 4/5 SUFJAN STEVENS (Come on feel the) Illinoise Rough Trade You might not know it but allegedly Sufjan Stevens has been around for a while, spawning five albums since 2000, not counting the two albums he made with folk group, Marzuki. This album is the second of fifty albums Stevens is setting out to make, and he declares he will dedicate each one to a State in America. With Michigan down in his 2003 release, Greetings from Michigan: The Great Lakes State, he moves on to Illinois. The whole concept album is a bit lost on anyone not from the USA; the themes and issues it covers are, not surprisingly about Illinois. But it has a musical charm and an intellect about it that listeners from around the world can appreciate. It has a folky feel, with lots of juicy banjo playing and unconventional uses of orchestral instruments. Some bits also sound like he’s been let loose with a sequencer so the songs become a bit more epic than you might think they should be (just listen to THE BLACK HAWK WAR* and you’ll see what I’m talking about) but that’s the album’s appeal. He smacks of The Flaming Lips and perhaps some Badly Drawn Boy, and has a sort of poetic wistfulness about him. I’m sure to anyone from Illinois his lyrics, as well as the quirkily named track titles mean a lot. For us mere mortals, it’s something you can put on in the background and suddenly think, “What the hell was that?!” 3/5 Nicole Heel *Full title: THE BLACK HAWK WAR, or, How to Demolish an Entire Civilisation and Still Feel Good About Yourself in the Morning, or, We Apologize for the Inconvenience but You’re Going to Have to Leave Now, or, “I have fought the Big Knives and will continue to fight them until they are off our lands!” 19 September 2005 MUSIC/THEATRE 15 TONY YAYO Thoughts of a Predicate Felon Interscope To be honest I wasn’t expecting a lot from this album. Mr Yayo’s straight outta G-unit, in my opinion the most overrated rap collective of all time. I wasn’t disappointed, it’s just another attempt to prolong the lifecycle of the G-unit brand. This album is just like the other G-unit releases, same beats, same lyrics, same motives, same look, same record label, same guest stars, yadda yadda. If this cut and paste way of doing things continues for much longer I may have to beat my radio with a metal baseball bat every time a G-unit production invades the space between my ears. The guest appearances are disappointing such as ‘Drama Setter’ where Eminem (Yayo’s most/only credible ally) features but he doesn’t even spit a verse, he just sings the hook. The track ‘I’m so high’ suggests that a certain leaf can give you some sort of rude boy status. This is ridiculous, they should meet some of my mates. The 50 Cent production is all too familiar and it just doesn’t stand out. Not trying to sound too much of a cynic, but G-unit style is something to dance to, not just a guide to a fulfilling life. My message to Tony would be to express himself, not be a sheep to the Fiddy clan. I suggest that this CD be purchased by G-unit loving B-boys willing to spend their hard earned monies on supporting their idol. Fans of “real” hip hop stay well clear! 2/5 Sam Carney Download of the Week http://www.amateurtransplants.com/ Ok so it’s not technically a download but if you go here and buy the Amateur Transplant’s album (they’re the people that created that jaded masterpiece ‘London Underground’) they’ll donate some cash to Macmillan Cancer Relief. Go on, do a good deed… THEATRE: (Sing-a-Long-a) Rocky Horror Richmond Theatre, Surrey Richmond Theatre is normally a quiet slightly posh venue which hosts various plays throughout the year, but this year they opened up their doors to a vast amount of Rocky Horror addicts and the whole place was transformed into a cross-dressers dream come true. In traditional Rocky Horror fashion everyone was handed a ‘goodie bag’ as they took their seats which consisted of all the props that you need to get the real Rocky Horror experience. Before the actual performance started they did the whole fancy dress competition in which all the people who have spent the time / been sad enough to dress up parade across the stage for everyone else’s amusement. After the winner had been decided the emcee (clad in Frank N. Furter costume) gave everyone instructions on how to get maximum pleasure out of their goodie bag. So, with everyone ready to go the whole thing started. A lot of singing and dancing around ensued as well as people shouting the words ‘sl*t’ and ‘a**hole’ at least 100 times which must have been quite surreal for the folk of Richmond theatre. There was a much needed break half way through so we could all get more drinks to continue the festivities in a more merry fashion. At the end of it all I think we were all suitable tired and transexualed out for the evening so we all went home to bed – hopefully nobody else forgot to take their drag makeup off the next day… 5/5 Ollie Ghaney Not actually photos from the Richmond Theatre show, but Frank N. Furter’s iconic enough... Marrying The Mistress By Joanna Trollope Adapted and Directed by David Taylor Cast Includes: Polly Adams, Daisy Beaumont, Jacqueline Clarke, Jeremy Clyde, Damien Goodwin, Caroline Langrishe, Adrian Lukis, Mat Ruttle The first ever stage adaptation of one of Joanna Trollope’s best-selling novels. The curtains open to show two kitchens, one modern and functional and the other a quintessential English country kitchen complete with prerequisite Aga. If you haven’t heard of Joanna Trollope before the Aga is a big clue to her novels. Marrying the Mistress was great example of an “Aga-Saga” adapted for the stage. An esteemed English judge announces that he is leaving his wife after 40 years of marriage to marry his young mistress. Not surprisingly this decision sends shock waves throughout his family, disrupting not only his life, but the lives of his children, partners, and grandchildren to varying and surprising ends. The play cleverly opens with a series of phone calls between various characters explaining the situation. The dynamics between the family members was fabulously portrayed, energetically acted out with some robust dialogue in a series of short scenes. I am not sure how appealing it would be to an audience under the age of thirty, as most of the amusing lines were targeted to more mature age group. I was impressed by the stage design, which basically did not change, but with the use of skilful lighting and the ingenious use of a variety of chairs and tables, one really got the sense of different locations. What let it down was the 80’s style tinkley piano music that punctuated each scene. Marrying the Mistress was a nice and unchallenging way to spend a couple of hours and this delicate subject was well illustrated and the production was to a high 16 FILM 19 September 2005 More of a retrospective than a look to the future this (every other) week for the film section. These films are either out already or were out over the Summer. Charlie and the Chocolate Factory Director: Tim Burton Starring: Johnny Depp, Freddie Highmore, David Kelly, Helena Bonham Carter, Noah Taylor, Christopher Lee Charlie and the Chocolate Factory was one of THE films to see this summer. Whether you’re a Roald Dahl fan or not, the promise of a film containing chocolate and sweets galore probably enticed you anyway. For those of you who went to see it, you may have come away from it thinking, “Huh?” or “Weird…” or “Squirrels!” I know I did. The sets are stunning, Charlie’s family is eccentric yet loveable, and Freddie Highmore gives an excellent performance as Charlie Bucket himself. Yet there is an uneasiness we get from Johnny Depp’s eerily flawless smile, and his Michael Jackson-esque portrayal of Willy Wonka. There’s something not quite right, and it’s not just in the mystery of his factory. We learn why he is the way he is at the end of the film, yet the reason seems somewhat disturbing and relevant, rather than “children’s book ghoulish”. But Depp’s presence in the film definitely gives it the edge the original version didn’t have. The score is great, the songs are…questionable. Don’t know what composer Danny Elfman was thinking there, but I’m sure if you listened to them enough you’d find them strangely catchy. Apart from the welcome song. I liked that. However, Tim Burton has proved once again that although his films are slightly off-the-wall, they bring with them an array of fantasy that can’t be duplicated by anyone else. I don’t know what else to say. Make your own mind up about it! 4/5 Nicole Heel (Note from the Editor in Chief - I loved the song in Charlie and the Chocolate Factory. Especial Mike Teavee’s...) The Island Director: Michael Bay BayStarring: Ewan McGregor, Scarlett Johansson, Djimon Hounsou, Sean Bean,Steve Buscemi, Michael Clarke Duncan As the Island opens, the year is 2019. We are deep inside a post-apocalyptic, hi-tech facility where the strangely perfect, slightly bored looking inhabitants go about dreaming of winning a lottery. The ones who win are sent to an island of paradise, the only place left uncontaminated, hence the title. One of the more inquisitive residents, Lincoln Six Echo (McGregor), begins to wonder if all is as it seems and when his friend Jordan Two Delta (Johansson) is picked to be sent to the Island he decides they should escape. It is at this point when all hell breaks loose and Michael Bay’s penchant for fast chases and loud explosions is fully recognised.(He’s the guy who made Armaggedon and Bad Boys 2) Our heroes should really have died around four or five times but that would just ruin it all really now wouldn’t it? On the whole the film worked pretty well, the moral questioning of human cloning being made more blockbuster friendly with some crazy visual stunts. McGregor and Bean gave the most dramatic performances, Doctor Merrick (Bean) was subtly sinister, a deluded scientist playing at being God. Johansson’s talent was slightly wasted as the blonde, pretty side-kick, but visually she was marvellous. (For the guysskin tight white jogging suit) As long as you’re not too bothered by the odd discrepancy or plot-hole then this summer time movie with a conscience is worth catching at the end of it’s run, or at least getting on DVD. 40 Year-old Virgin Watching the trailer in the cinema made it look pretty lame. It looked to most like a feeble attempt to rise from the ashes of the America Pie trilogy – “Please! How many films about somebody losing their virginity do America have to produce?”. Pleasantly surprised, the film wasn’t that bad. The shocking political incorrectness of some of the one-liners kept the film together, and acted like a sort of “comedic nudge” whenever the storyline got too boring, which was quite often unfortunately. The film is exactly what it says on the label. 40-year-old man has never had sex. And guess what? He’s an engineer working at an electronics store, and has the fashion sense of Richard Wilson. He also collects action figures, and is the type that goes schizo when somebody even suggests taking it out of the box. Some films satirise by using stereotypes, this film just takes the piss. In Britain, if your mates find out you’re a virgin, they generally take the piss out of you and leave it at that. In true American style, his colleagues embark on a quest to get him laid. This involves women who work in Ebay stores, the scary electronics store boss who looks like she has more balls than he does, transsexual prostitutes, and some crazy woman who enjoys the alternative uses of shower-heads. Out of five, I’d give it a three-and-a-half. Although some of the outrageous jokes were absolutely hilarious, the plot-line was weak, and has been done more times than Paris Hilton. You’ll likely leave the cinema thinking the film was absolutely hilarious, but you’ll struggle to come up with any substance when trying to remember anything but the various one-liners. Definitely worth watching, but don’t expect a sophisticated script. The 40 Year-Old Virgin 19 September 2005 UniSTUFF 17 Not only students love barefacts, the University like it to! Collect on this page are some submissions from various areas of the University itself - Imaginatively we’ve called in UniSTUFF. We made the ‘Stuff’ blue & everything! Why fly when you can drive? Not content with a simple parachute jump or fun run, 3 COMPETITION: “When I were a lad………” sponsored by Chancellor’s Bar and Restaurant Do you recognise this young, trendy Surrey Civil Engineering student from 1980? He can still be found around campus! Email answers to a.buckland@surrey.ac.uk by Monday 26th September. The answer and winner will be announced in the next Barefacts. The winner will receive lunch for two at Chancellor’s! This competition is strictly for current Surrey Students. Have you seen this man? friends, all ex-Surrey graduates, Maz & Alex Towns and Martin Pitwood have decided on a much more challenging event to raise money for charity – in August this year they embarked on a gruelling expedition to drive 65,000km from the UK to New Zealand in aid of charity! Realising how fortunate they were to be able to undertake such a trip, the team felt that it would be a great opportunity to offer something back to the countries and communities that they will be travelling through. Having affiliated themselves with CARE International, a humanitarian organisation working to end world poverty, they have set themselves a very challenging target of trying to raise £25,000 for the charity. To this end they have arranged with CARE International to visit some of their projects in various countries along the route, including a water purification and sanitation project in Egypt, micro-finance projects in rural India and also visiting some of the tsunami relief projects as they pass through South East Asia. The team are apprehensive about certain parts of the trip, which will undoubtedly be very uncomfortable at times. They will be travelling through some of the poorest communities of the world, seeing people who deal with suffering and hardship on a daily basis.’ The three Surrey Graduates all met and became friends at the University of Surrey Diving Club – and have stayed in touch after leaving Surrey. To hear more about their travels keep reading Barefacts and look at http://www.overland-underwater.com/ Alex, Maz & Martin rafting the Tara river in Montenegro The Careers Service: Dr. Russ replies.... Dr Russ replies… Where is the Careers Service? I’ve just got back and I am in a panic about fitting in job-hunting with my final year studies. Got any good advice? In case you haven’t visited us before, you can find us next to the Accommodation Office in the Philip Marchant Building. We are open between 9am and 12.30pm and between 1.30pm and 5.30pm, though we close at 5pm on Fridays and during vacations. Some students like to concentrate entirely on their studies in their final year so they can get the best possible degree. Your first option is therefore to delay the whole career thing until after you graduate. There are good reasons, though, for doing some of your thinking and preparation while you’re still here. For a start, most of the things we are organising will be easier to attend now than after you’ve graduated. What’s more, if you would like a job next year with a popular graduate recruiter, you simply have to meet their deadlines, often before Christmas, to stand any chance. Early applications for other options such as teacher training are also advisable. What can the Careers Service do to help? Just to give you a few examples, our Vacancy Bulletin, which you can view on the Careers Service website at http://portal.surrey.ac.uk/careers will keep you up to date with the latest employer requirements. The annual Careers Fair on Thursday 6 October is a good opportunity for you to talk informally to employers from about 50 organisations. We also have a series of talks by careers staff and invited speakers taking place throughout the semester. You could come along to a seminar to sharpen up your interview technique or you could try a practice aptitude test. Is it OK to just to drop in? Absolutely no problem. You don’t even have to talk to anyone but we are there to help if you need us. The first thing you will see when you walk in is a series of files marked “Your degree….. What next? A browse through the one for your degree will give you ideas about what to do when you leave. If you’d like to speak to a careers adviser there is often someone available to deal with a short query. If you think you’d like a longer chat then we can easily arrange a time which is suitable for you. Russ Clark Careers Service How can I find out more? Every year we produce a Careers Service Guide offering help and advice for your future career. It will tell you what’s going on throughout the year. Every final year undergraduate and postgraduate student will have their own copy delivered to their department. If it’s not there, try your departmental office first and then the Careers Service. The information in the Guide is also available on our website. Tony Hawk - Not a normal day job LITERATURE 18 19 September 2005 In the literature section today we won’t be reviewing the latest paperbacks to hit the high street, oh no. For this edition of barefacts we’ve had some fiction handed in to us. I’d like everyone to note the key phrase in that last sentence, ‘fiction’, Matthew Gardiner’s story is fictional. M U R D E R AT T H E U N I V E R S I T Y O F S U R R E Y He always longed for the moment when he saw her again. The moment when her mouth completed the smile her eyes always held. The photo on his desk showed the object of his affection. Not that a photo was needed to remember that face – flat, tanned and slightly freckled. A sexy, cat’s face - wide mouth, glossy with lipstick. She wore heavy dark glasses – her hair an arty red. Flying regularly from Munich, Fritz Meuller tried to visit as much as he could. And she flew every two months or so to Munich - to start with. Though her trips were now almost non existent. But what worried him most was that when ever he turned up, this English kid always seemed to be there. He knew she liked this bloke. On one occasion he had really lost his temper when she had mentioned the wonderful Mike just once to often. Had her friends noticed the swollen eye? Each separate dying ember, from his study fire, cast its ghost upon the floor. He placed both hands flat on the table, closed his eyes and raised his face to the ceiling. He was not a man for bowing his head, even when addressing the Almighty. They were after all close confidents. After his pray his eyes burned with the conviction of a man who truly had no doubts. The Lord was with him in his endeavour. The Almighty understood him. And to a guilty man being understood is the same as being forgiven. 23/09/05 He had to arrange a contract. What he believed in the business they called ‘a hit’. A few evenings later the French hit man that Meuller had tracked down booked two single rooms at the Heathrow Crown Plaza Hotel for a fortnight’s time. Saying he was Henree, the second name he gave was the one in his own passport. He said he was sending a book ahead of him and asked if the hotel minded holding it till he arrived. Carrying a gun into the UK was no mean feat so he would simply have to post it to his chosen hotel for safe keeping. The Frenchmen picked up a book he had just bought on the history of London, expensive and very heavy, and set to work with a scalpel. When he had finished he sealed the book in a strong polythene envelope and sent it on its way to London. Arriving at the Crown Plaza Hotel two weeks later he explained to the receptionist that his friend Henree would not be joining him but that he would obviously settle both accounts. He then produced a letter from his absent friend authorizing permission for him to collect the book on Henree’s behalf. The receptionist quickly went out back, returned and obliviously handed over the murder weapon. If he had been caught he would have claimed to have been an innocent party doing a friend, and an absent one at that, a favour. Without any clear signs of a motive…it would have been easy. The next day he soon found a car to ‘borrow’. A Ford Mondeo – quiet common in the UK. After avoiding some annoying speed cameras on the M25 he roared up the A3 in the pouring rain. Guildford Cathedral appeared upon 3 the horizon; piercing the sky and towering moodily over its surroundings. From its commanding position on Stag Hill and seen from the A3 the cathedral was indeed an imposing landmark. The Frenchman found the Management School easily enough and waited patiently for his prey. As the sunlight on the plaza outside hardened and grew cold, Mike headed for home – followed slowly, silently. It was a summer’s night; wan, dull and glaring. The air became close and sticky, once again threatening storm and rain… Mike never new why. Seeing a man in the door way of his little room he rose to enquire as to what he wanted. He suddenly saw what the visitor held in his hand and half opened his mouth. Two slugs went into his chest and the third, as he fell to his knees plopped into his head. But he didn’t even feel that one. He never stood a chance… The two men; client and killer, met in a bar in Paris the next evening. Fritz Meuller had flown over as soon as he had received the call. He seemed nervous as he handed over the €10,000. “No problems?” he murmured. “Very simple and your little Englander is very dead” smiled the Frenchmen. “Though someone did come in and see me with the body. It must have been the rain I didn’t hear them.” The German stared in horror “who”? “A woman” replied the Frenchmen. “Tall, red head?” gasped Meuller. “Yeah. A nice looking piece too Monsieur.” Seeing the panic in his clients face the Frenchmen patted him on the shoulder. “Don’t worry Monsieur” he said comfortingly “I shot her too”. Matthew Gardiner I apologise prefusely for the shoddy editing of this poster... He was not going to let some English bastard steal her. That was for sure. He thought of how he should never have let her go to study that Management degree at Guildford. Who was he kidding, as if he ever had a choice in where she went? SOCIETIES 19 September 2005 19 USSU offers a wealth of societies for the student who wants to do that little bit more than get a piece of paper at the end of three/four years. In this section of the very prestigious barefacts, we explore a couple of them... Liberal Democrat Society Ever wondered what it’s like to mix politics and the student life? The Liberal Democrat society lives that mixture to the full. We do all the things that most student societies do, mainly involving a certain intoxicating liquid substance, but we also allow our members to make the most of being involved in a political society. This involves conferences (another chance to socialise, as well as help decide policy); campaigning (once again, socialise!); and even stand in local elections as a candidate. Our first event is freshers fair on Wednesday 21st September, followed by our AGM on Wednesday 28th September in the Union Committee Room (in the activities centre). At the AGM, you will get a chance to vote for the committee over the next year, and if you want, stand for the committee yourself. The guest speaker for the AGM is Sue Doughty, former Lib Dem MP for Guildford. One thing we want to emphasise is that it does not matter how much or how little you know about party politics. We believe in the philosophies of freedom, fairness, and equal opportunities. We keep a policy of open-mindedness. If you agree with those philosophies and would like to take your beliefs further, the Lib Dem Society may be for you. It is recommended that members join the Lib Dem Youth and Students (LDYS) organisation, although this is certainly not compulsory. It costs £3 to join (around the price of a pint in Guildford Town centre) for the year, and gives you a membership of the Lib Dems, allows you to attend all conferences, and lets you have a vote in any leadership contests that occur. The Lib Dem Society do not believe in the word ‘apathy’. We believe that it is a distasteful and inaccurate word used to describe members of the electorate that politicians haven’t managed to connect with. We believe in bringing politics to the people, not the other way around. So, if you’d like to indulge your political side that’s bursting to get out... come along to our AGM and stand/vote, or visit us at the freshers fair stall on Wednesday 21st! Liberal Democrat Society Contact society@unis-libdems.co.uk Website www.unis-libdems.co.uk Meetings TBA. Likely to be Wednesday evenings. AGM Wednesday 28th September Committee Room USSU Activities Centre 7pm. Guest Speaker: Sue Doughty, former Lib Dem MP for Guildford. The Lib Dem Society at Freshers 2004 with Sue Doughty Afro-Caribbean Society The main focus of the Afro-Caribbean Society (ACS) this year is to encourage unity amongst ourselves, and integration with fellow University of Surrey students, as well as other societies across the country. We intend to do this by educating ourselves and everyone else about our various cultures. We will be holding meetings fortnightly on Thursdays, and EVERYONE is invited! You don’t need to be African or Caribbean to join the society. The meetings will begin with a brief talk/presentation on a selected African or Caribbean country. The idea being that no matter where you’re from, you can come and learn a little about someone else’s culture. We will also be discussing any relevant issues, as and when they arise, passing on details of any up and coming events, and socialising! In terms of events, we have so much in store for you this year. The first few include the Black History month Launch/party on the 1st of October at the Stag Hill reception (tbc), Our Caribbean Film and Food night on the 6th of October (as part of Caribbean week); and our first Un- ion event ‘Unified’ in association with Da Jump Off Ent. on the 13th of October in the Main Union (it’s going to be big!), presentations on African and Caribbean culture in the Lecture Theatre foyer, and series of performances from the University Gospel Choir throughout the year. We will also be organising/taking part in sporting events, competing against other societies in friendly games, leagues, and charity matches to name a few. These games will be open to both men and women, so no one is left out. So if you share an appreciation of our music, our food, our way of life or just want to meet some new people, you’re more than welcome to come along. You could learn to sing gospel music, join one of our sporting teams, learn about our food, or just come to PARTY! If you have any questions or want details of meetings, events, or the choir, feel free to contact us via our new web-site: www.surreyACS.co.uk. barefacts@ussu.co.uk Afro-Caribbean Society Contacts committee@surreyacs.co.uk events@surreyacs.co.uk sports@surreyacs.co.uk webmaster@surreyacs.co.uk Website www.surreyACS.co.uk Upcoming events Freshers Fair: 21st September 2005, PATS field. Black History Month Launch. Stag Hill Reception. 8pm. Unified. Presented by ACS and Da Jump Off. At the Union (Rubix), 10pm. POSTGRADUATE 20 PG Tips 19 September 2005 barefacts very own postgraduate-centric area... full of things to do with postgraduates. I think that’s all the explanation that’s needed. Pages collated by: Lisa Ahmed PostGraduate Association Elections H o w To Te a r A Phone Book I n H a l f 20-October – Wates House Want to meet other postgrads from around campus? Need an excuse to go to the pub more often? Interested in planning events and stuff for postgrads? Want to make a difference at the University? If any or all of the above interest you, then you should be part of the PGA Committee! Contact the PGA for more details: president@pgasurrey.co.uk Not all postgrads are weedy geeks who never see sunlight. However if your acquaintances think you are, dispel the myth with these incredible fats of strength! (taken from “How To Perform Strong Man Stunts” , Coulter O.R Padell Books 1952 PGA Quiz Results No 1 in the Stuntman series How to Tear A Telephone Book in Half From the 18-August-05 1. Grasp the telephone book with the hands on the free page side where you leaf it open. Place the book firmly on your knee, and with the heel of each hand push the pages back so that they slant towards the edge of the book farthest away from your body. The more you slip the pages back, the easier will it become to tear the book, because you actually only tear a few pages at a time in succession. Thanks to all who attended last month’s quiz in Wates House. We had nearly 90 postgraduate students and staff crusading for the mighty case of Carlsberg. After a gruelling battle, Team Bob took the beloved green box with 62 points. Last Orders at the Bar Please came in a not-so-close second with 52.5 points, though we are all still wondering where that extra .5 came from. And, in a last minute quiz-off, Western Allies beat out Republic of Bonk in a fastest-finger tie-breaker question for third place: The largest bunch of bananas grown on the Spanish island of El Hierro on July 11th 2001 weighed 130 kg. How many individual bananas did it contain? 2. To your beholders, it looks as though you were tearing the whole book through at once. They never realize what you are doing, as the act is natural When you have slipped the pages as much as possible, begin to tear, pulling up with the right hand as you rear downward with the the left. Once the pages are broken, the rest tear easily. 3. 0f course, you will not be able to do it first time you try. Like everything else, it takes practice. One you have mastered the trick, it will be an easy stunt for you to perform. September’s quiz is scheduled for Thursday the 22nd starring Quizmaster Sin-Sin-Sinnamon at 7pm in Wates House. Put your team together and be sure not to miss out! It only costs a pound per person and a heaping plate of curry is only a pound-fifty more! Oh, and if you want to know the answer to the question… it was 473 bananas. Many are able to progress on this stunt by tearing the telephone book into quarters. (Barefacts takes no responsibility if you injure yourself trying this out when bored in the office) From Moon Landings to Incontinence Pads T h e A d v e n t u r e s o f D a g a b e r t Dagabert Willoughby, reclined in his Officemaster Mark 4. He was penned in a tiny allocation of University resource, measuring a measly 3 foot by 4 foot, in a long forgotten corner of the Lunar Landing Engineering department of the University of Newland. It took all his patience to try and ignore the overwhelming smell that only 14 engineers, crammed in a room for over 14 hours a day can produce. His thoughts were frantically preoccupied with one question– how did he come to be here? Having successfully graduated with a First in Physics from a rather nice University in Geneva, and then traversing the world, backpack in one hand, something usually very unsavoury in the other, there did not seem much for it but to go and do a PhD. After all, the alternatives had been pretty grim! His options at the time had been to either; get a job with some racy outfit in the city, flogging himself to death at the behest of the corporate grindstone, or go and work for his Father and rise though the heady ranks at Smelchit and Co (a cutting edge producer of incontinence pads for the discerning). Acceptance of the latter would have conveniently mapped his entire future for him; a nice Managing Director’s salary, Company Mondeo, Golf club membership and a safe pension scheme. The ESPR grant of £13-000 a year with additional travel bursary had looked quite fun when he perused the pages of the Guardian. How hard could it be, Dagabert had asked himself? Another three years away from the watchful eye of the Inland Revenue, better still, three more years of hard core drinking in the Student Union and frolicking with innocent undergraduates. After all the fact that he could loosely use the line that I work for the Space industry and by proxy could call himself a Rocket Scientist was more than enough to compensate for his fast receding hairline and all apparent older appearance. This was all compounded by the likelihood of high octane conferences in Thailand abusing the travel budget and himself into the bargain! Just how wrong one could be, he remarked to himself, as Bertrum a rather intense and frustrated genius of a Post Doctoral Researcher wandered past, again stirring up the W i l l o u g h b y heady aroma of sweaty feet and goodness knows what else. Betrum had never quite understood Dagabert, the crux of his problem was why would anyone want a life beyond the bounds of the Lunar Landing Department? Secretly Dagabert respected Betrum for his absolute dedication to his subject, just how could anyone be that interested in Moon landings? His fascination with anything connected with his PhD had evaporated in the first 18 months of research; things had now turned into a test of endurance, rather than born of any passion. Having last visited the Student Union six weeks ago, successfully securing the amorous advances of Stacey (a rather sweet but hopelessly gullible first year Nursing studentwho swallowed the Rocket Scientist line, hook line and sinker) he had barely been able to leave the office before 10 at night. This was due to a series of impossible requests from his supervisor, his supervisors supervisor and any other Tom, Dick or Harry that happened to fall into the department looking for a willing victim to dump apparently CV enhancing but thoroughly inappropriate tasks on. They all usually arrived with the caveat that this will be either “good experience” or “character building”! Life, 2 years, 7months and 23 days into this great idea was beginning to grate, or more exactly frustrate, try, annoy, bore and delude. Dagabert was born stubborn, he had long ago resolved that this was not going to get the better of him, come hell or high water. Failed experiments, hopeless data, writers block and a the seemingly self extending deadline for completion were not going to keep him from his ultimate prize, the ability to call himself Dr Dagabert Willoughby. He already had the change of name forms for the Bank, Credit Card and Passport in a folder at home. Three years of this ordeal would, he thought be lost in those prize moments where he could correct people (in a raised voice) that it was no longer Mr Willoughby. His overriding thoughts, as he closed down his Computer at the end of another fruitless day were bugger the science. As far as Dagabert was concerned he would never read another Journal nor do another tedious experiment, after all how much science is involved in incontinence pads? PG TIPS 19 September 2005 21 Aswell as a new year of undergraduate freshers arriving here at Surrey we have an even larger number of Postgraduate ‘Freshers’ starting soon with a number of them already here (If you are one such Postgraduate, ‘Hi’). Postgraduate Welcome Week starts Monday 3rd October. So I thought we’d give you a heads-up on the events happening that week. Date Time Fun Monday 3rd October 11am-3pm ‘Postgraduate Welcome Exhibition’ in Rubix. Come and see what USSU has to offer Postgraduate students and get involved in sports, activities and much more. Tuesday 4th October 5:30pm-late ‘Welcome Reception’ in Wates House with John Turner (Deputy Vice Chancellor). Chance to meet current and new postgraduates, and members of the international socities to have a chat about postgraduate life and anything else you like! With International Buffet & Chocolate Fountain. Wednesday 5th October 7.30pm-late Bowling at the Spectrum with the PGA - Meeting at Senate House at 7:30 (2 games of Bowling inc. Shoehire £9.20, minibus 50p) Thursday 6th October 7pm PGA Quiz & Curry night at Wates House - 7pm. Quiz £1 per person, Curry £1.50 per person (Vegetarian Available) Friday 7th October 9pm-late ‘Welcome Party’ in the University Hall - Featuring a disco, the band ‘Timshel’ and a bar. Chance to meet other postgraduates and have fun! £1 Entry Saturday 8th October 6pm-late PGA Pub Crawl - Meeting at 6pm in Chancellors Sunday 9th October Afternoon Meet up in Chancellors for recouperation after a busy week. sample the summer menu or just chill out with a drink. Christopher Walken has nothing to do with Postgraduates (as far as I know)... But this corner looked all empty without him. PUZZLES/HOROSCOPES 22 19 September 2005 Colin Everett, barefacts own puzzle lord has crafted some lovely time wasters for you to do while you’re pretending to pay attention in lectures. Rejoice! For those not rejoicing, the answers are on page 24 (that’s the back one). Clues Across: 7) What a fabulist cannot help doing. (5) 8) See 20 across. 10) Take lend of. (6) 11) Units of energy. (8) 12) Expression of gratitude. (5, 3) 13) In mythology, the river route to the underworld. (4) 15) First book of Dante Alighieri’s Divine Comedy. (7) 17) Attack; Assail. (7) 20) and 8 and 26 across. Outrageous fictitious MP for Haltemprice. (4, 9, 6) 22) Where in vitro fertilisation may occur. (4,4) 25) In poker, five consecutive cards of mixed suits. (8) 26) See 20 across. 27) Every other. (9) 28) For example: Sheepshank, Reef, Bowline, Figure-of-eight. (4) Clues Down: 1) Percussion instrument. (9) 2) Bewitch way in. (Cryptic) (8) 3) Tomato sauce will gain ground, I hear. (Cryptic) (7) 4) People who play the cello. (8) 5) Disorder. (6) 6) Where it is inadvisable to be when you don’t have paddles. (5) 9) A sporting fixture that doesn’t occur at a teams own stadium. (4) 14) Provide further details; Fancy. (9) 16) Nine-sided figures. (8) 18) Rare naturally ocurring element, heaviest of the halogens. (8) 19) Law evicts alien from statuette. (Cryptic) (7) 21) Five sevenths of the feast for the five-thousand given by Jesus Christ. (6) 23) Boss breaks down and weeps. (Cryptic) (4) 24) Ring-shaped coral reef. (5) Binary & Regular SU DOKU Su Doku: barefacts, never being one to shy away from modern trends, has included 2 Su doku puzzles to it’s puzzle page for your enjoyment. There’s a regular 9 x 9 puzzle and, for those who haven’t got the hang of them yet, there’s an easier 2 x 2 puzzle. We like to call it ‘Binary Su Doku’ Sagittarius November 23rd - December 21st Don’t let a partner hold you back. An opportunity to make money is apparent, so be prepared to fight for what you believe will work. A sudden turn of events won’t be as daunting as you first expect. Capricorn December 22nd - January 20th Address a relationship that is undergoing some turmoil. You’ll be surprised how quickly things will change if you are attentive and understanding. A chance to work with some interesting people will achieve more than expected. Aquarius January 21st - February 19th Don’t let a personal problem stand in your way. Deception is apparent, so don’t allow yourself to be pulled into someone else’s dilemma. The timing for an idea of long ago appears to be better now. Pisces February 20th - March 20th You can rely on someone to help you develop an interesting project. Friends, business associates or new acquaintances will give you the support you need. A new partnership is likely. HOROSCOPES Now, I’m sorry about the horoscopes for 2 reasons - 1. They don’t look very pretty (They could’ve had some sumptuous pictures with them, couldn’t they...) and 2. I have to remind you that basing your life on the stars is a very silly thing to do. Read with caution Aries March 21st - April 20th This fortnight emotional issues will be difficult to handle and you can expect someone to try to take control of you. You can allow others some responsibility, but not where cash flow or financial matters are concerned. Taurus April 21st - May 21st This two weeks is all about experiencing what life has to offer. An interesting partnership may develop if you share your ideas. Get the important details about the person you are dealing with before proceeding. Gemini May 22nd - June 21st Forging ahead isn’t the way to gain ground today. Observe what everyone else is doing before you make your move. Put a little time and effort into self-improvement instead of spending on risky ventures. Cancer June 22st - July 23rd Don’t get greedy or set unreasonable goals and you will successfully move ahead. Don’t procrastinate -- if something or someone interests you, go after it. Leo July 24th - August 23rd A challenge may set you back. Be prepared for the inevitable and ready to deal with difficult people. Don’t let your insecurities lead you down the wrong path. Virgo August 24th - September 23rd Socialize even if you are feeling a little down. You will have fun and learn interesting information that will help you make a future decision. Someone will surprise you with a generous offer. Libra September 24th - October 23rd Confusion regarding a personal problem will be difficult to deal with. Don’t set yourself up for a letdown. Focus on something creative that will take your mind off emotional matters. Scorpio October 24th - November 22nd Travel and communications should be at the top of your list. You don’t have to get angry to get what you want. Speak up for the underdog in an intelligent manner and you will get the help you require. 19 September 2005 SHAMELESS ADVERTISING NOW OPEN THE ALL NEW: 23 Here’s the specifics on the new Union Shop’s ‘meal deal’... Delicious. Big Deal Sandwich, choice of soft drink, crisps OR confectionary - £2.85 Big Deal Extra Sandwich, choice of soft drink, crisps AND confectionary - £3.10 So go check out the shop and it’s fabulous new incarnation! Look out for me I contain bargains SPORT 24 19 September 2005 The Hockey Club have written an article, one of the the key focuses of the article appears to be their drinking ability. If you’d like to contest any of their claims, do get in touch: barefacts@ussu.co.uk. If on the other hand you like to write an article about your sports club or society, it’s the same address for that too... Ultimate - A Team Sport Not Called ‘Frisbee’ By Peter Wigfield The Surrey Scorpions Ultimate Team... with a flying disc... Ultimate (Frisbee) Contact ms41ds@surrey.ac.uk Website www.surreyscorpions.com Training Sunday, UniSport 12-2pm Wednesday, Nat West Field, 2-4pm Wednesday, UniSport, 6:30-7pm Saturday, Nat West Field, 12-3pm (with the Guildford Open team) Ultimate is both a competitive and fun team sport played with a flying disc (What most people would call a frisbee,.But frisbee is a brand name, thus has copyrights attached). The physical aspect of the game is borrowed from many different sports in fact if you have played any sport in the past you would probably find a similarity between it and Ultimate, the unique thing about Ultimate is the way the game is actually played. The first thing is that this sport is regularly (although not always) played as a mixed sport; men and women compete together on the same pitch. Secondly and most importantly is that it is a game without any officials, the whole game is refereed by the players on the pitch governed by a code known as the spirit of the game. Spirit of the game (SOTG) is designed to encourage fair play, but never at the expense of respect between players, adherence to the rules and the basic joy of play. This gives the ultimate community a friendly welcoming feel because at the end of the day everyone is there to enjoy themselves and all the teams will generally hit the bar for a few drinks together. ‘So how do I get involved in this slightly bizarre but strangely enticing sport?’ I hear you say. Well that is easy all you have to do is join the university’s Ultimate team: Surrey Scorpions. Last season was the first season with a new name, new kit and whole new image and we took the university ultimate world a bit by surprise by winning the Plate final at the Not the Nationals (effectively the second division). This year we hope to build on this and prove that we can challenge some of the top teams and have a really good time in the process. The main thing to emphasise is that this sport has something for everyone regardless of age, gender or athleticism. If you want to take this sport seriously or if you want to just find something fun to keep the heart ticking over, then Ultimate could be the perfect thing for you. So come and find us at Fresher’s Fayre, log on to www. surreyscorpions.com or just turn up to a training session in UniSport 12-2pm on Sunday or 2-4pm on a Wednesday on the field opposite Nat West bank; See you soon. ...A Little Something About The Hockey Club Ask any member of the Varsity Centre (that’s the Sports Centre for all you Freshers!) staff and they will tell you that the club still in the bar, drinking and having a good time, hours after the other clubs have already left is always the Hockey Club. The friendly, relaxed atmosphere of the Hockey Club (usually benefiting from the intake of alcohol) ensures a superb respite from all that hard work you’re doing, or at least your parents think you’re doing! The social aspect of the club is probably more important to most of the members than the actual hockey. The initiation ceremonies are nothing like the horror stories you have probably heard about University sports clubs, however the club does enjoy its drinking games! Sitting in the bar with the hockey team certainly increases your alcohol tolerance, especially when the Club Chairman decides that he wants to get drunk! It may seem that a lot is going on at once, especially when you don’t know the rules to the games, but once you’ve picked them up (I found it was a good idea to try and get friendly with one of the 3rd or 4th years and try and coax the rules out of them, usually through the promise of money or more drink) you have a huge amount of fun. After a few weeks once everyone has got to know each other, you really feel part of the club and the university. Come along and enjoy playing hockey, drinking games and listening to stories of past tours, matches and just general drunkenness. For instance the time Sledge (the name alone is a good story) fell through the hedge at the Old Boys Game, the time Special (again the story behind the name is worth hearing) managed to score for the first time in 5 years at the University and the numerous occasions that any number of the Club have managed to get naked! (Twenty Ones is a BAD, BAD game!) The size of the Hockey Club last year meant that we had two Men’s teams and one Women’s team, and we have entered the same number this year. Our Men’s 1st team have just been promoted to Surrey 1st’s Division One, and we are always looking for new players to help us continue to keep up the Surrey hockey tradition. We have also started up a Mixed team this year, specifically for the players who can’t make as big a commitment to the club or feel that they aren’t good enough for the league teams, which will play a number of friendlies throughout the season. The Hockey Club can take up as much or as little PUZZLE ANSWERS: READ UNDER ADVISEMENT of your time as you like, with training running twice a week and matches on both Wednesdays and Saturdays, you can find yourself completely immersed in the world of hockey, even if it is slightly hazy after the nights out. Becoming involved in the Hockey Club ensures that you make a huge number of friends very quickly and many of these friends you will keep for life, demonstrated year after year when many of the graduates come back for the Old Boys Games. The club is for anyone who has any interest in hockey and even for those who don’t. Whether you’ve represented your country or never played any sport before in your life there will be a place for you in the club, (in both cases probably by the bar) and you will find the most sociable club at Surrey more than welcoming! Training is on Sundays and Tuesdays from 6pm till 8pm, usually followed by a drink, or two, in the bar. We also have a great coach from a top local team who will help all standards of players to reach their potential. So if you’re even slightly interested, whatever your ability, come along to one of the training sessions and meet the rest of the Club! You can also check out our website at www.surrey.ac.uk/union/sports/hockey. This edition of barefacts was brought to you buy the letter ‘S’, the number ‘6’ and a selection of motivated individuals. barefacts doesn’t write itself, we need all the people we can to make this paper based communication-come-entertainment tool. You could write just about anything and we’ll gladly accept it; lovingly even. The next all highly adsorbant edition of barefacts will hit the (small) kiosks Monday 3rd October. Get those articles/reviews/ obscene phone calls in now!