Fight for your right to copy. page 9 What a lake was
Transcription
Fight for your right to copy. page 9 What a lake was
2008/01/ 31 17 The university of Winnipeg student weekly I SSUE VOLUME 62 Fight for your right to copy. page 9 What a lake was, what a lake will be. Not-so-subtle reminders of our exploited resources at Ace Art. page 12 January 31, 2008 02 The Uniter contact: uniter @ uniter.ca NEWS UNITER STAFF Managing Editor Jo Snyder editor@uniter.ca » Business Manager » managing@uniter.ca James D. Patterson News Photo Editor Colin Vandenberg Copy & Style Editor Jacquie Nicholson » style@uniter.ca NEWS ASSIGNMENT EDITOR Stacy Cardigan Smith » news@uniter.ca News Production Editor Ksenia Prints newsprod@uniter.ca » COMMENTS EDITOR Ben Wood comments@uniter.ca » Arts & Culture Editor Whitney Light arts@uniter.ca » Listings Coordinator Kristine Askholm listings@uniter.ca » Sports Editor Kalen Qually » sports@uniter.ca Beat Reporter Jenette Martens » jenette@uniter.ca Cameron MacLean Beat Reporter Dan Huyghebaert » cameron@uniter.ca » dan@uniter.ca Beat Reporter James Janzen » james@uniter.ca t h i s w e e k ’ s c o n t r i bu to r s Vivian Belik, Aaron Epp, Matt Prepost, Kenton Smith, Andrew McMonagle, Conrad Sweatman, Dan Phelps, Kathleen Gallagher, Cory Falvo, Trevor Hagan, Natasha Peterson, Ben Wickstrom, Denis Vrignon-Tessier, Scott Christiansen, Jo Villaverde, Chantal DeGagne, Brooke Dmtriw, Kevin Chaves, Josh Boulding The Uniter is the official student newspaper of the University of Winnipeg and is published by Mouseland Press Inc. Mouseland Press Inc. is a membership based organization in which students and community members are invited to participate. For more information on how to become a member go to www.uniter. ca, or call the office at 786-9790. The Uniter is a member of the Canadian University Press and Campus Plus Media Services. SUBMISSION OF ARTICLES, LETTERS, GRAPHICS AND PHOTOS ARE WELCOME. Articles must be submitted in text (.rtf) or Microsoft Word (.doc) format to editor@uniter.ca, or the relevant section editor. Deadline for submissions is 6:00 p.m. Thursday, one week before publication. Deadline for advertisements is noon Friday, six days prior to publication. The Uniter reserves the right to refuse to print submitted material. The Uniter will not print submissions that are homophobic, misogynistic, racist, or libellous. We also reserve the right to edit for length and/or style. Beat reporter P lans to extradite Canada’s self-proclaimed “Prince of Pot” to the United States have been delayed in order to allow negotiations toward a possible plea deal to continue. Controversial marijuana activist Marc Emery, who is the leader of the B.C. Marijuana Party and founder of Cannabis Culture magazine, is charged with selling marijuana seeds over the Internet to customers in the United States, where he faces a possible sentence of 10 years to life in prison. But while Emery waits to learn his fate, members of the antiprohibitionist movement are denouncing the proceedings as an affront to —Blair Longley, leader of the justice and an assault on Marijuana Party of Canada Canadian sovereignty. “First of all, the question, in my mind, has to be “Perhaps [Justice Minister ‘What is he guilty of?’” said Mat- Rob] Nicholson is reluctant bethew McCally, a former Seattle pro- cause his government is very much bation officer and member of Law a friend of the Bush administration Enforcement Against Prohibition. and he does not want them embarAlthough selling cannabis rassed by a refusal on his part to seeds is technically illegal in Can- extradite someone who has been ada, the laws against it are rarely ordered extradited,” said Paradis. enforced, with the normal penalty A spokesman for Nicholson usually a small fine. said the minister would not comMcCally views the charges ment on an ongoing case. against Emery as politically motiEmery’s lawyers arranged a vated and driven by the American tentative deal with his American “War on Drugs.” prosecutors that would allow him Jerry Paradis, a retired Van- to serve five years in a Canadian couver provincial court judge and prison without the chance for early fellow member of LEAP, agrees. release, on the condition that all “[The Americans are] finding charges against his co-accused Mi- “For the DEA it will end up being a victory if Emery ends up going to jail,” » LOCATION Room ORM14 University of Winnipeg 515 Portage Avenue Winnipeg, Manitoba R3B 2E9 Mouseland Press Board of Directors: Mary Agnes Welch, Rob Nay, Nick Tanchuk, Dean Dias, Brian Gagnon, Devin King, Meg McGimpsey, Ben Zorn For inquiries email: board@uniter.ca Cover Image From Walls Deep now showing at the Label Gallery chelle Rainey and Greg Williams are dropped. Although he admits this deal is better than the alternatives, Blair Longley, leader of the Marijuana Party of Canada, views even this concession as a loss. “For the DEA (U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration) it will end up being a victory if Emery ends up going to jail,” he said. “It’s their draconian laws being able to go across the border and use their drug war policies to make everything worse and worse up here as well as down there.” Longley said that Emery’s extradition will simply further entrench both sides of the marijuana prohibition debate and prevent any real development. “Everything is based on social polarization,” he said. ‘Pegging the Vote ‘08 A weekly roundup of all that matters electorally, south-of-the-border » CONTACT US General Inquiries: 204.786.9790 Advertising: 204.786.9790 Editors: 204.786.9497 Fax: 204.783.7080 Email: uniter@uniter.ca Web: www.uniter.ca themselves more on the defensive about the existing drug war, and it is an enterprise that involves, employs and serves as a foundation for a significant number of American citizens,” he said. According to Saul Simmonds, a Manitoba defence lawyer, there are a number of possible “escape valves” which might allow Emery to avoid extradition. “It could be health reasons, it could be public policy reasons, it could be public outcry,” he said. There is also the option for the federal minister of justice to intervene to prevent the extradition of a Canadian citizen. This latter option seems particularly unlikely. COLIN VANDENBERG Beat Reporter Cameron MacLean » designer@uniter.ca » photo@uniter.ca News Editor: Ksenia Prints E-mail: newsprod@uniter.ca Pot community rallies around its “prince” PRODUCTION MANAGER Melody Morrissette News Editor: Stacy Cardigan Smith E-mail: news@uniter.ca James Janzen Beat Reporter H alf a million dollars an hour. That’s how much Obama’s website was receiving in donations after his blowout win in South Carolina last weekend. After complaining that he was essentially fighting two candidates in the form of Hillary and Bill Clinton, Obama seemed to have capitalized on old Bill’s off-the-cuff remarks that left a Clinton vote an increasingly polarizing prospect in the southern state. With a large black population, Obama was the expected winner in South Carolina but by much narrower margins. He took the primary by storm with 55 per cent of the vote while Clinton hightailed it out of state before the results came in and finished second with 27 per cent. Edwards, who was born in the South Carolina and won the state against John Kerry in the 2000 primary, limped in a dismal third with 18 per cent, a showing that has all but ended his campaign. Obama’s got the momentum running into next week’s Super Tuesday electoral blood bath with yet another high caliber endorsement, this time from Ted Kennedy, the last of the Jack Kennedy-generation brothers. Clinton, however, is still favored in several of the 24 Tuesday primaries, including delegate-rich California and her home state of New York. The two candidates were seen giving each other the cold shoulder earlier this week at President Bush’s final State of the Union address. On the Republican side, Florida was the state to watch this week. Final results were unavailable before deadline but Tuesday morning polls showed Romney and McCain in a dead heat for first with Huckabee and Guiliani vying for third place. Pundits everywhere were still scratching their heads over what Guiliani was thinking, having not campaigned in any primary before Florida. Next week will bring either the solidification of candidates as frontrunners or complete indecision for both the Democrats and the Republicans. An indecisive conclusion to Super Tuesday for either party would leave them at a disadvantage and open up the possibility for new candidates to throw their hats in the ring; particularly former presidential candidate and greenman Al Gore and current billionaire mayor of New York Mike Bloomberg on an independent ticket. With no current candidate sporting enough financial or managerial clout to launch the nationwide media campaign that is needed for next week’s coast to coast primary madness, an unprecedented amount of voters will be basing their votes on news spots and best hunch opinions. This is where the election sweats get serious and a candidate’s ability to feign sanity while not sleeping for weeks on end becomes paramount. Crack out the wall charts, pie graphs and Red Bull. Super Tuesday here we come. For more election commentary, check out the Uniter blogs at www.uniter.ca/blogs. contact: uniter @ uniter.ca The Uniter January 31, 2008 NEWS Health Canada raises red flag on birth control patch UWO Gazette (University of Western Ontario) L ONDON (CUP) - The Evra birth control patch may be more convenient than the pill for many Canadian women, but while new evidence suggests it may also be more dangerous, doctors are urging calm. The January issue of Health Canada’s Canadian Adverse Reaction Newsletter documented 16 cases of blood clots and one heart attack in Evra patch users since the birth control technology arrived on the Canadian market in 2004. Two of the 17 patients reported to Health Canada died as a result of the complications. One of the deaths was a 16-year-old. Most of the adverse reactions Health Canada received, totaling 93, were from women in their teens, 20s or early 30s. The Evra patch, manufactured by JanssenOrtho Inc., is a prescription-only contraception patch that adheres to the skin, delivering hormones into a woman’s body to prevent pregnancy. According to IMS Health Canada, a market research company, between January and Nov. 2007, 274,617 Evra prescriptions were dispensed from retail pharmacies. So far, there is no conclusive evidence link- ing the patch with increased health risks compared to other contraception methods. In a statement, Janssen-Ortho defended Evra stating that all forms of birth control pose increased risks of serious conditions like blood clots. “The risk of serious adverse events is small in healthy women, but increases significantly if associated with the presence of other risk factors such as obesity or cigarette smoking,” it said. It added that Evra is safe and effective when used according to approved prescribing information. New labeling requirements were issued by Health Canada in 2006, warning women of the product’s higher risk of blood clots when compared with other contraceptive methods such as the pill. Dr. Michael Kovacs, an expert on blood clots at Ontario’s Schulich School of Medicine and Dentistry, explained that complications can happen at any age and it was likely related to the fact that there are simply more young woman on birth control than older women which skewed the results. “Young women have a very high chance of being on birth control ... [health problems are] attributed because of that,” Kovacs said. Dr. Kovacs said for persons of university International News Briefs Compiled by Brooke Dmytriw Melody Morrissette Lauren Pelley age, the background risk per year of blood clots is one in 10,000. With oral contraceptives, this risk may increase to 3 in 10,000 — still a relatively small number. “If the Evra patch has an increased risk ... which no one knows for sure, the absolute risk would be, at most, 5 in 10,000 per year,” Dr. Kovacs said. Some women, though, are concerned by Health Canada’s red flags about the Evra patch. “I don’t think I’d feel comfortable taking that,” Stephanie Shewchuk, a third-year Western kinesiology student said. “You know [pills] are more reliable.” Dr. Barbara Lent, associate professor in the department of family medicine at Schulich, said hormonal contraception in its various forms is a safe and effective option for the majority of young women. “We all need to pay attention to these concerning cases, but not overreact until we have better information,” Dr. Lent said. Dr. Kovacs agreed, “Women should discuss with their family doctor or gynecologist about the best method of birth control.” Blue box shortage troubles Spence residents Beat reporter A fter the relocation of Canadian Tire from the neighbourhood left Spence residents with no venue to purchase recycling blue boxes, the Spence Neighborhood Association is taking steps to get more of them for the community. “Since the Canadian Tire has shut down, people that don’t have vehicles can’t easily get to a location that sells the blue boxes, and the Canadian Tire is the only place where the city of Winnipeg subsidizes the blue boxes,” said Kathryn MacKenzie, image and greening coordinator for the SNA. The city subsidy allows Canadian Tire to charge only $5.00 for a blue box, almost $4.00 less than at Wal-Mart. The boxes are also available for the subsidized price on the main floor of City Hall. According to MacKenzie, many of the community members do not have vehicles and blue boxes are bulky and inconvenient to bring home on the bus. Also, the boxes are sometimes stolen as they sit in the back alley and are not being watched. Some community members have tried to prevent this theft by attaching chains to their blue boxes. Apartment buildings are given one free recycling bin from the city but they have to replace it from their own funds if it is broken. MacKenzie said that some area landlords will not replace the bin when broken, resulting in diminished access to recycling for many Jenette Martens Jenette Martens people in apartment buildings. The SNA started the first inner-city recycling depot at 430 Langside, but its staff understands it is no replacement for individual blue boxes. “Most of the time people do want to recycle, but it has to be convenient,” MacKenzie said. To address the problem, the SNA image and greening committee will be requesting blue box donations for the neighborhood from Canadian Tire and Wal-Mart. “Hopefully, these places will donate up to 200 blue boxes and we can distro them throughout the community,” MacKenzie said. This is not the first time the SNA has tried to promote recycling by providing blue boxes. For the past three years the boxes were given away at the neighbourhood’s annual spring cleanup, something community members have been enthusiastic about. However, each year the association only has about 10 blue boxes, not enough to cover the need in the community. “People want to recycle. They know that it’s a better way to get rid of garbage,” said MacKenzie. “That’s why we want to try to make it easier for people to access that service from the city.” Steve Koepnick, a resident in the Spence community, thinks that the community needs to be taught to recycle. He stated that environmentally conscious people influence those who are not as conscious. “Once a person makes it (recycling) a habit, it will become a custom,” Koepnick said. Koepnick thinks more action is necessary to promote recycling in the community beyond just making “Most of the time people do want to recycle, but it has to be convenient,” —Kathryn MacKenzie, image and greening coordinator for the SNA Kathryn MacKenzie believes the SNA-operated neighbourhood recycling depot does not cover the area’s recycling needs. blue boxes readily available. He believes that Manitoba needs to start rewarding people for recycling by giving cash back on things like pop cans or bottles. The importance of recycling also needs to be promoted vigorously in the schools. If the youth were given the blue boxes in their school classrooms and taught about recycling and its importance, said Koepnick, then they could go home and encourage their parents to recycle. “Inform the younger genera- 03 tion first and [then] try to educate the older generation,” he said. Recycling is not the only initiative Spence neighborhood is advancing to improve the environment. The image and greening committee has been very busy finding empty lots for green space, organizing community gardens, and creating a green map of the area (to be unveiled Feb. 7). Blue boxes easily available would be just another step towards helping the community do its part to protect the environment. Indigenous language disappears from Alaska ANCHORAGE, Alaska: Marie Smith Jones, who was the last native speaker of the Eyak language, died at the age of 89. Smith Jones helped establish an Eyak dictionary for the University of Alaska and was an advocate for indigenous rights. According to BBC News, Eyak is the first language to disappear from the Alaskan natives. Another 20 languages risk extinction in the state as well. The Eyak territory occupies 500 km of the Gulf of Alaska. Turkmen allowed back into the opera AHSGABAT, Turkmenistan: Turkmenistan’s new president, Kurbanguly Berdymukhamedov, will lift the national ban on opera, ballet and the circus, reported Reuters. The country’s former president, Saparmurat Niyazov, had imposed a ban on such spectacles, claiming they were alien to the Turkmen culture. Niyazov died in 2006 of a heart attack. He ruled the country for over two decades, establishing a personality cult prevalent in Soviet regimes. Berdymukhamedov has been reversing many of Turkmenistan’s isolationist policies. He is attempting to attract more foreign investment into the oil and natural gas-rich nation. Hundreds of parrots stopped at Belarus border MINSK, Belarus: Border guards at the Dubki frontier crossing prevented a smuggler from bringing 277 parrots into the country on a bicycle. The smuggler abandoned his bicycle and the birds at the border and fled to the Ukraine. The birds had been stuffed into six cages, with approximately 40-50 parrots per cage. According to Reuters, two birds died and the others were kept for observation at the border post. They were handed over to veterinary inspectors for distribution and future sale in the country. Last year Belarusian guards apprehended a Russian man who was trying to dig his way to Poland using a coffee mug. DRC to benefit from tentative peace agreement KINSHASA, Democratic Republic of Congo: The government and various armed factions signed a tentative peace agreement to end a decade of civil war in the east of the DRC. Details on the agreement had not been released at press time but the arrangement came after a two week long negotiation between the two sides. According to CNN, a recent International Rescue Committee report found civil conflict and humanitarian crises have claimed the lives of 5.4 million people since war broke out in the DRC in 1998. Currently, 45,000 people die every month in the Congo. The death rate after a decade is the equivalent of Denmark’s population. The peace treaty hopes to have the government of the DRC take control of security issues in the turbulent east, potentially improving human security conditions. January 31, 2008 04 The Uniter contact: uniter @ uniter.ca NEWS Local Fighting for freedom of speech Compiled by James Janzen, Ksenia Prints, Stacy Cardigan Smith Magazine publisher takes on Alberta Human Rights Commission News Briefs Winnipeg Democrats to vote in Super Tuesday primary Don’t expect to see Obama signs in Winnipeg snow banks, but Americans living in the city will get a chance to cast their votes, along with fellow expats in 33 other countries, in the first-ever Democratic global primary. Polling stations will be available in eight Canadian cities coinciding with the Super Tuesday primary madness south of the border. Twenty-two Democratic delegates are at stake in the global primary and US citizens in Canada are expected to form a significant portion of the vote. American citizens in Winnipeg can cast their vote on February 5th at the First Unitarian Universalist Church, 603 Wellington Crescent, from 11 a.m. to1 p.m. and from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. Voters must be residents of Canada and members of Democrats Abroad. More information is available at www. votefromabroad.org CUP Western Bureau Chief V ICTORIA (CUP) -- Two years later, and even though his magazine barely exists anymore, Ezra Levant is facing the Alberta Human Rights Commission over the infamous Danish cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed. Levant, the former publisher of the now-defunct Western Standard, a conservative Alberta-based magazine, was summoned before the Alberta Human Rights Commission on Jan. 11. Calgary imam Syed Sohardwardy launched the human rights complaint in response to the Western Standard’s reprinting of cartoons depicting the profit Mohammed that were originally printed in the Danish publication JyllandsPosten. The commission will interrogate Levant to determine if the case wrong way to think?” Levant worries that the human rights tribunal could affect everyone from student papers to the mainstream media. Like the Western Standard, the University of Prince Edward Island’s student newspaper, the Cadre, printed the Danish cartoons. “Imagine if your university president were to summon you to his office, under pain of expulsion if you didn’t go, and ask you not just about what you did print, but what your thinking was behind that to see if it met his approval,” Levant said. “That would be outrageous.” Levant and his lawyer insisted on videotaping the hearings, which have been lighting up YouTube. Combined, his nine videos have received more than 350,000 hits since they were posted. Still, the Canadian media hasn’t picked up on the issue, something Levant finds surprising. “The National Post is the only [Canadian] newspaper to have writ- ILLUSTRATION BY DAN PHELPS Train rails suggestion brought back from the dead In another characteristic outburst of opinion, Winnipeg-Centre NDP MP Pat Martin dusts off the cobwebs from a three-decade old idea to relocate a section of Winnipeg’s train yards. The removal of the Canadian Pacific Railway Winnipeg yards, which would be moved to a yet unknown location, would free up space in the expanding city for new houses, green space and commercial areas, Martin was reported as saying on Jan. 15. The train yards in question stretch across the North End’s border with Downtown, seperating the two areas. In an interview with the Winnipeg Free Press Martin said the tracks’ division “ghettoized” the city, setting a trend for future developments. Martin estimated the relocation would cost hundreds of millions. The proposed idea was abandoned twice in the 70s and the 90s, and is currently criticized for drawing attention away from rapid transit plans and as pre-election talk. David Karp will proceed to a tribunal or if it will be dismissed. If a tribunal sides with Sohardwardy, Levant could face fines or be forced to apologize. For Levant, the issue remains about freedom of expression. “It’s not about Islam or the Danish cartoons,” Levant said. “The story is about can a government bureaucrat summon a publisher — or anyone else for that matter — to a 90-minute interrogation about their personal political beliefs.” At one point during the interrogation, Levant was asked to describe his intent when deciding to publish the cartoons, something Levant said infringes on his freedom of thought. Levant replied that he published the cartoons because it’s his “bloody right to do so.” “I said, ‘Why is that relevant?’ And she said, ‘That’s one of the many factors we take into account to see if you’re guilty here,’ ” Levant recalled. “Hang on a second — so there’s a right way to think and a ten a report about it, and that’s confusing to me,” said Levant. “I can’t explain it … I’ve probably seen 500 blogs that have talked about this from the whole political spectrum — from far left to far right. And I’d say most of them are supportive.” South of the border, however, the story is making news. Levant’s interrogation was covered by the Washington Post, Washington Times and Arizona Republic, and Levant is appearing on numerous American radio shows next week. “Maybe the Canadian media elite just don’t care that much anymore, and they’ve lost their deep idealistic belief in the freedom of the press,” he said. Levant said he expects to learn in the next month or two if his case will proceed to a tribunal. He’s hoping more people will take notice of his case, and said he will fight for his freedom of speech all the way to the Supreme Court of Canada, if he has to. “Instead of going quietly, we’re going to use the forum to demonstrate that human rights commissions are no longer about human rights,” said Levant. “In fact, they’re shrinking human rights.” Help for aboriginal homebuyers A new program is making it easier for First Nations people living in Manitoba’s urban centres to purchase their own homes. According to a provincial press release, the Manitoba Tipi Mitawa Program will help low to moderate income aboriginal people transition into homeownership “by converting rental subsidies into mortgage subsidies and providing Homebuyer Down Payment Assistance to potential homeowners.” The province has promised $150,000 for down payment assistance and $250,000 in mortgage assistance. The program is part of Een Dah Aung (My Home), which is a $42-million fund for Aboriginal people under HOMEWorks! Locally, the program is supported by the Manitoba Real Estate Association (MREA) and the Assembly of Manitoba Chiefs. BY JAMES JANZEN Classy dining for cheap Winnipeggers Looking to experience new Winnipeg cuisine at a (somewhat) student-friendly price? Dine About Winnipeg, featuring fixed menu prices, is back for its fifth year. From Feb. 4 to 13, over 30 local restaurants will offer three course meals at a fixed price of $25 or $35 per plate. Many meals feature locally-grown produce and Manitoba-raised meats, states a press release from Ciao! magazine, which organizes the event. A $25 dinner tab will get you a meal at Buccacino’s, Cafe Carlo, The Current, Noir Wine Bar + Eatery, Tryst Eatery and Vesuvio, to name just a few. For $35, you can dine at Amici, Blaze Bistro, fusion grill and Tavern in the Park, amongst others. Last year, over 10,000 people took part in the event. Diners are encouraged to make reservations. Log onto www.ciaowinnipeg.com for more info. Would you be interested in a transit pass included in your tuition fee? Why or why not, and how much would you be willing to pay? Leanna Chartrand 1st year It is a good idea but a lot of people drive and I have a ride. It shouldn’t be mandatory; people should be able to choose. Trevor Friesen 2nd year English/Anthropology I walk everywhere so I wouldn’t be willing to pay anything. Camille Vaughan 2nd year Biology I’d be interested. I do take the bus every day to school. I think $200 would be reasonable. I’d support that. Sunnie Yu 3rd year Education Yeah, because it’s really annoying to buy the pass every month. It should be a little bit cheaper than the monthly rate. Kome Mofedamijo 3rd year Business Admin Definitely not. What about the people who drive themselves? What about the people who live on the street? That’s no good. Kevin Schachter 4th year International Development Studies I think it would be a good idea for the university to set a precedent with sustainable transportation. Also, it would be a good idea to have the option to opt out. contact: uniter @ uniter.ca The Uniter January 31, 2008 NEWS 05 Greening the map: Prairies host first sustainable campuses conference Ksenia Prints News production editor O ver 100 environmentally-concerned students from across the Prairies gathered at the University of Saskatchewan for the region’s first Sustainable Campuses Conference, shining light on how students can influence climate change. Organized by the Sierra Youth Coalition, the conference took place Jan. 18-20 and hosted youth from Alberta, Saskatchewan and Manitoba. Delegates participated in sustainability and non-oppression trainings, shared experiences of campus sustainability efforts and listened to keynote speakers talk of the Alberta tar sands and socially-just climate change. The conference’s main goal was to create a network of support and communication between the environmental groups and activists on the Prairies. “It is a forum to empower community members,” said Jeh Custer, Prairies coordinator for SYC. “The conference is all about facilitating a discussion to educate folks and students about the sustainability challenges that we face… help students and campus community members understand how to be more effective activists.” The conference raised questions about the role of students in promoting sustainability and environmental change. “[students are] the key stakeholders on campus,” said Custer. “The university is a place for that innovation, we have the luxury of being able to follow our values and principles, do what’s right and not what’s profitable,” said Kate Dykman, coordinator for the University of Winnipeg’s SUNSET and a conference participant. SUNSET—Sustainable University Now, Sustainable Earth Together—was awarded the region’s Most Successful Success Story in sustainability at the conference. SUNSET, which used to be a student group, changed direction this academic year “Students have been at the vanguard of most social movements throughout most of history, now is the time to take it to the next level,” —Rosa Kouri, Canadian Youth Climate Coalition and began offering the Experiential Learning Program. This multifaceted academic stream connects interested students with faculty members and provides the opportunity to engage in sustainability research and practice. “We want to see students doing practical research that’s going to benefit our campus,” said Dykman. According to Custer, students have a unique position in universities and colleges due to their influential role in the governing structure and the high availability of resources, brainpower and potential recruits on campus. “Universities and colleges are optimally positioned to push the stakes of society,” Custer said. “Campuses are a good testing ground for new ways of running things,” said Mike Hudema, tar sands campaigner for Greenpeace Canada and a keynote speaker at the conference. The idea of student responsibility was prevalent throughout the conference, reflected in anti-oppression training and a keynote session about the link between climate change and social justice. Rosa Kouri, communications coordinator for the Canadian Youth Climate Coalition, was one the speakers at the panel. Kouri had just returned from a stint as an official observer for the United Nations conference on climate change in Bali and shared her experiences with the conference participants. “Fundamentally, we have to look at climate change as a human rights issue,” Kouri said. “The communities that will be most affected by it are the ones that have done the least to cause it… and have the least resources to deal with it.” “Students have been at the vanguard of most social movements throughout most of history,” said Kouri. “Now is the time to take it to the next level.” The largest barriers standing in the way of campus sustainability and students’ work on issues around climate change are often university and college administrations and all levels of government. “I think some admins are more out of touch,” said Custer. “They (universities) should be people’s institutions, democratic institutions.” “It’s really immoral for a government like Canada and Canadian citizens to continue as business as usual while other people are losing their lives,” said Kouri. Kouri believes motivated youth have a variety of ways to get involved with sustainability initiatives on campuses, in the cities and across regional and national networks. Personal action to reduce one’s own ecological footprint is always advisable. “Not everyone can go to an international conference or march in Ottawa, just getting involved at the campus level… you’re already a step ahead of the federal government,” she said. Others argue that desperate times call for desperate measures. “The Earth needs a voice, and sometimes we need to put our bodies on the line for that,” said Hudema. Sustainable Campuses Conferences have been taking place throughout Canada for nine years in both national and regional capacity as part of SYC’s Sustainable Campuses Project. Despite their wide popularity, this was the first year the conference took place in the Prairies. “The Prairies was a bit of a slower region… because it is so vast,” said Custer. “Sometimes the Prairies are lagging behind and seem reluctant to adopt certain practices,” said Dykman. Hudema is critical of this slow progression. “The Prairies should be one of the firsts— Alberta is one of the biggest industrious polluters in the world,” he said. “Our population may not be so big, but I think you’ll be seeing one of the biggest activism efforts coming out of here,” said Hudema. The Sierra Youth Coalition is a 10year-old grassroots organization that seeks to encourage youth ages 14-26 to become involved in environmental sustainability efforts. January 31, 2008 06 The Uniter contact: uniter @ uniter.ca CAMPUS NEWS Campus News Briefs Complied by Stacy Cardigan Smith Canada, North America need computer science grads Want a guaranteed job after graduation? Get your tape and thick-rimmed glasses ready: the latest Canadian industry to cry for more professionals is computer science. According to the Globe and Mail, enrolment in the University of Toronto’s computer science department is down about 50 per cent from its peak in 2002. Similar stats can be seen all across Canada, as well as in the United States. Enrolment in computer science programs has declined since the end of the high-tech boom in 2001. But while enrolment declines, demand increases. According to a Conference Board study highlighting the need for more IT professionals and projects, the industry could see “as many as 58,000 new jobs” next year. Aboriginal tax break suggestion met with opposition A suggestion that the feds give aboriginals a tax break following high school graduation is receiving flak from groups representing aboriginals. The Canadian School Boards’ Association suggested the federal government consider limiting or removing taxes for aboriginal people for a set period of time following high school graduation, in turn increasing Canada’s overall education level, the StarPhoenix recently reported. CSBA made the recommendation about two months ago. Such an action would help to counter the high dropout rate of aboriginal people, which sits at nearly 50 per cent, and in turn potentially help with Canada’s labour shortage, the CSBA suggested. However, groups representing aboriginal people said the suggestion only superficially addresses the problem, which instead stems from “illiteracy, poverty, lack of role models, and a revolving door of teachers on Canada’s reserves,” as quoted in the StarPhoenix. A similar program in place in Saskatchewan “offers tax savings of up to $5,500 for all high-school and post-secondary graduates as an incentive to keep them in the province.” According to treaty rights, aboriginals don’t pay taxes if they live and work on reserves, but 700,000 of Canada’s 1.2 million aboriginals live off-reserve, states Statistics Canada. SOMA opens After some delay, the UWSA’s SOMA café finally opened its doors Wed., Jan. 23. Although only serving drinks for the first few days, many who stopped in for a coffee beverage were treated to free samples of what they could later expect on the menu: soups, sandwiches, ethnic foods and sweet treats. The full menu was available by Monday. The café was originally scheduled to open in September, but the date was pushed back while the Duckworth fitness centre was completed. Featuring a few café tables, the cozy café is 600 sq. ft—twice the size of the originally proposed space. SOMA café is located in the newlyexpanded Duckworth Centre. Hours are 8:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. Monday to Thursday and 8:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Fridays. Campus News News Editor: Ksenia Prints E-mail: newsprod@uniter.ca Phone: 786-9497 Fax: 783-7080 U-Pass returns to UWSA agenda Focus on green living fits U of W’s green goals, but will students shell out? Stacy Cardigan Smith News assignment editor T he U-Pass - a universal bus pass for all students - is once again on the UWSA agenda, but acceptance of the program will largely depend on students’ willingness to put the planet before their pocketbooks. The U-Pass program proposes a levy implemented for all students in exchange for complete bus access during the school months. The program has been voted down before, largely because students were unwilling to pay the levy - which at the time was estimated at $250 annually. The most recent estimate put the cost at $271 per student annually. This would allow unlimited access during the fall and winter terms. “Essentially, you’re making a contribution to the greening of the campus, the greening of the planet… [It’s] altruistic,” Mark Burch, director of the University of Winnipeg’s Campus Sustainability Office, told a recent UWSA board meeting. Such a program fits nicely with the U of W’s green mandate and its goal of becoming Kyoto-compliant by 2012. Burch, along with University of Winnipeg representatives, will meet with Winnipeg Transit Feb. 6. In the past, Transit’s willingness to offer a U-Pass program has been dependant on another Winnipeg post-secondary institution signing on as well; the estimated $271 levy may only fly if the University of Manitoba or Red River College also come on board. “That amount ($271 annually) was provided to the student unions at that time. The decision was made not to proceed with the pass,” said Winnipeg Transit communication officerKen Allen. Traditionally, U of W has had a higher bus ridership than Winnipeg’s other post-secondary institutions - a low ball estimate puts U of W’s ridership at about 50 per cent, Burch said. “If we were to go with it here [only at the University of Winnipeg], they [Winnipeg Transit] might not make as much money,” said Kisti Thomas, student member of U of W’s Sustainability Council. The UWSA is working on scheduling a meeting with the University of Manitoba Students’ Union (UMSU) this week, Thomas said. UMSU could not be reached for comment before publication. If the other institutions don’t sign on and Winnipeg Transit won’t lower the price, it’s likely a “dead issue,” Burch said. Allen was unaware of the Feb. 6 meeting, but said the decision to trudge ahead with the program is up to students. “The ball’s kind of in student council’s court,” he said. An additional $271 levy per year might seem high, but students who currently purchase monthly post secondary passes would see large savings. A monthly post secondary pass currently costs $57 a month or $456 for the eight months that comprise two semesters, meaning those that bus would see a savings of roughly 40 per cent. Students who drive to school daily and pay to park would also likely see a big savings from their current costs if they switched to the U-Pass, and public transit. The environmental benefits of higher transit use amongst students, faculty and staff are also great. The amount of green house gasses U of W patrons emit driving to and from school in one year is roughly equal to those made by the entire university annually, about 4.5 kilotons, Burch said. “The transportation choices you make are under your control… It’s an option; it’s something you can do to express a commitment to sustainability,” he said. Many other major universities in the country have similar programs, Burch pointed out. Most other universities, however, also pay lower rates. UBC, for example, pays $22 per month, or $176 annually, while McMaster students pay $107.25 annually. Administration “would be fully supportive of students” implementing the U-Pass program, said vice president of human resources audit and sustainability Laurel Repski. Unfortunately, the high cost of implementation - approximately $2.5 million annually for all U of W students assuming a cost of $271 per student - means administration can’t financially support it. “It’s something we can certainly look at in the future,” Repski said. Similar programs at universities across the country do receive some financial support from administration, but those campuses are likely in a better financial situation than the U of W, Repski added. Before the U-Pass can be implemented, students would have to approve the program in a referendum. News Editor: Stacy Cardigan Smith E-mail: news@uniter.ca Phone: 786-9497 Fax: 783-7080 contact: uniter @ uniter.ca The Uniter January 31, 2008 CAMPUS NEWS 07 New literacy program brings inner-city families closer Colin Vandenberg dent of 15 years and one of the parents in the program, thinks this is a good opportunity for his nine-year-old daughter, Mary. “It will just help her learning and thinking about telling a story properly… [and it’s] something to be proud for when she gets older,” McKeigan said. McKeigan heard about the program through Mary’s school, Sister important to me,” Wasyluk said. Wasyluk thinks that the program provides children with a “wonderful sense of accomplishment.” She loves the fact that they will able to look back later in life and see the book they helped create. A program similar to this was run 10 years ago by U of W education professor Herb Katz. SNA hopes to get funding to re- ”It’s something to be proud for when she gets older,” —David McKeigan, one of the parents in Three Stars and a Wish The program connects students like nine year-old Mary McKeigan (facing the camera) with oral traditions, their family history, and U of W mentors like Education student Angela Wasyluk. Jenette Martens Beat reporter A new literacy program connects U of W students with Spence neighborhood families, encouraging parents to become involved in their child’s education through storytelling and transcribing. The program, called Three Stars and a Wish, is operated by the Spence Neighbourhood Association and opened last week. During the duration of the program, parents share personal stories that are seen as valuable for the child. Each child then transcribes the stories with the help of an education student from the U of W. “The connection between children’s education and parents can sometimes be kind of distant, so it’s a way to bridge that… and it’s also a time when parents and kids can spend time just together,” said Tana Hendren, the program’s coordinator. The program will run for six weeks, after which the stories will be compiled into a book, which will be printed and given to the people involved in the program. David McKeigan, a Spence resi- MacNamara. His story involves his adventures making maple syrup as a Grade 8 student in Newfoundland. The McKeigans are one of 10 families who participate in the program. Angela Wasyluk is the education student assigned to mentor the McKeigans. She is in her fourth year at the U of W, and hopes to teach either elementary or middle schoolaged children after her graduation next year. Three Stars and a Wish will provide her with volunteer hours for her practicum. “I did it mostly because I thought it was a really beautiful idea... it also helped my teaching experience as well, working one on one with the child, developing a really personal relationship, those are things that are really peat the program again next year. “This is an opportunity for them (the kids) to get excited about writing and maybe that will snowball into something bigger,” said Hendren. She also thinks the program is important because it involves oral traditions, which is something many of the parents have grown up with. “In a lot of cases parents grew up doing that story-telling and learning through story-telling, and if that’s not happening through the education system it’s nice to have other projects that can bring that in just so parents can feel a little more comfortable,” Hendren said. “If that’s a comfortable way and a good way for them to teach their children, then great, let’s embrace it.” January November31,1,2008 2007 08 The Uniter contact: uniter @ uniter.ca LETTERS SECTION Letters Aboriginal Scholar Excluded Once Again from Participating at the University of Winnipeg It’s a funny thing walking into the class I teach “Indigenous Peoples and the Industrial State” and finding a poster beside my door stating that there will be a symposium on Aboriginal governance and globalization held at the University of Winnipeg this week and not be invited to present; especially, since the course I teach deals exactly with that particular subject matter. I am coming to find that the exclusion of Aboriginal scholars who have some expertise in Aboriginal issues is becoming typical at the University of Winnipeg during special forums, conferences, symposiums, and even in the hiring of positions that require specialized knowledge such as Aboriginal Research Chairs. The “Aboriginal Governance and Globalization Symposium” does include some Aboriginal scholars from outside the university, but mostly non-Aboriginal scholars from within the University of Winnipeg. This in particular rankles even more in that I teach many of the globalization and Aboriginal Peoples courses at the University of Winnipeg; Indigenous Peoples and the Industrial State; Conflict and Development Issues in Aboriginal Communities; and Globalization and Aboriginal Education. Besides teaching courses such as these at the University of Winnipeg, this past year alone, I taught a course on “Aboriginal Peoples and Globalization” to tribal students who were refugees from Burma at Chiang Mai University in Thailand. I also presented in the West Bank in Palestine at the conference “Forty Years of Education during Occupation” and am now writing an article with a noted Palestinian educator and author. My doctoral studies allowed me to study under Mayan elders in Mexico and Hawaii, along with having residencies in Thailand and Senegal Africa where I defended my dissertation at a conference of traditional healers. I have also presented in Ireland at a World Forum on Indig- Dear Editor: The debate as to “why the NCAA will be a threat to the CIS” (The Uniter, Jan.24) may have a silver lining. This can happen if university presidents, the sports media and the missing fans gain an appreciation of CIS athletics as a result of the spectre of CIS teams heading south. Managing Editor : Jo Snyder E-mail: editor@uniter.ca enous Peoples and traveled in the Amazon basin with Indigenous community leaders educating their communities on treaty rights and land claims in Canada. My own dissertation is a political history of the Rotinonshonni based solely on the oral traditions of my people which resulted in me walking some 700 miles while following the formation of the governing structures of my people, the Mohawk, which resulted in me facilitating journeys back to my homeland with representatives from various Rotinonshonni communities some who are now in negotiations at Caledonia. It is interesting that they invited a Mohawk scholar from outside the University to present and not one from within. This isn’t the first time this has happened at the University of Winnipeg. At a recent forum on Aboriginal education, I can’t remember if I even received an invite to attend it. I certainly wasn’t asked to participate at the forum in-spite of writing all of the Aboriginal histories for the National Museum of Canada for their children’s website. I also teach courses on Aboriginal history, culture, Indigenous global education and an introduction to Aboriginal Education for our Department of Education. Besides my own course load I am teaching a course on Aboriginal Spirituality for the Religious Studies Department along with my course “Indigenous Peoples and the Industrial State” .This allows students who aren’t training to become teachers to take some of my courses. My conclusion is that I find some scholars and departments at the University of Winnipeg to be very territorial and not wanting what are perceived to be insiders who are themselves Aboriginal disrupting their own Aboriginal agendas. If this keeps up, the University of Winnipeg won’t have any Aboriginal scholars wanting to work here. It might be better to be hired at another institution in order to be invited to present at a conference at the University of Winnipeg that pertains to Aboriginal issues. Dr. Brian Rice Department of Education The mythology surrounding the NCAA is that the athletes are better and full scholarships are common. The former is questionable depending on the sport and the latter is just wrong. Our southern neighbours do excel, though, at selling sizzle. When Canadian schools do a better job of recruiting and filling the stands most perceptions that the NCAA is better will melt away. In the meantime it would be nice if CIS athletes were not out-of-pocket for the privilege of wearing a Canadian university’s colours. After all, a suit with a briefcase is not nearly as visible an ambassador as is a sports team. Our cavalier attitude toward CIS athletes must change or the admonition about not knowing what we lost until it is gone will come true. Yours sincerely, C. Hugh Arklie Environmental Studies Canadian Blood Services Open Letter to Students Re: The CO2 Craze is Hijacking the Environmental Movement Recently, you may have heard about Canadian Blood Services’ policy regarding the deferral of men who have had sex with other men (MSM) even once since 1977 being debated in the media and at your university/college. Canadian Blood Services understands that this is a complex and sensitive issue and we would like to provide you with some information to better understand this safety policy. Why do we have the MSM deferral policy if we test all donated blood? Because our stateof-the-art test for HIV has a limitation. In the early stages of infection, known as the ‘window period’, the virus is undetectable. What this means is that without a screening process, there is the potential for an infected unit to get through the system and be transfused into a patient. And recently released reports from the Public Health Agency of Canada indicate that MSM continues to account for the highest rate of HIV infection. The MSM policy, as with most of our policies, renders anyone whose blood could pose an increased risk to patients ineligible to donate — regardless of their sexual orientation. In fact, there are many well intended individuals who are ineligible to donate blood for many different reasons, such as persons who have lived in the United Kingdom during a specified time frame, or those who were born or lived in Africa since 1977, or individuals with a history of malaria – to name a few. No matter what action we take or what policy is in place, it is with the safety of patients as the overriding principle. Having said this, Canadian Blood Services continually reviews its policies to ensure they remain in the best interest of patients. As a result of a recent review of this policy, we have begun an active research agenda to inform our decision-making on this issue. Is there a better way to screen for risk of HIV? It is quite possible that there is, but we won’t know that until we complete the research. As we conduct this research we will continue to work with groups such as the Canadian Federation of Students and Egale Canada, as well as keep the public informed on our progress. Ultimately, it is not up to us to make a final decision as that responsibility lies with our regulator, Health Canada. In closing, I would like to address the issue of banning or interfering with campus clinics. Maintaining an adequate supply is an ongoing challenge for us, because, on average, every minute of every day someone in Canada needs blood or blood products. Students and faculty are among some of our most dedicated donors and, in fact, campus clinics contribute approximately 40,000 units of blood that help a potential 120,000 patients every year. No matter what your point of view is regarding the MSM policy, while we undertake the research to inform our decision-making on this issue, please remember that patients rely on your support to save and improve their lives. Thank you for taking the time to carefully consider patient needs in making your decision to be a blood donor! Sepher Cadiz’s global warming denial article “The C02 Craze is Hijacking the Environmental Movement” would have been more appropriately titled “Global Warming is not caused by Greenhouse Gases”, because that was his main point. Understand that when I refer to Sepher as engaging in “global warming denial” I mean he denies that human activity is causing our current global warming. It’s important to note that Sepher engages in something very dishonest and disingenuous, which is typical of the denial community. He makes Al Gore the target and proceeds to call him names and question his credibility. Listening to the denial community one gets the impression that Al Gore is alone in his belief that human activity is causing global warming. They talk like it’s “Gore’s theory” or “Gore’s premise” and then they proceed, as Sepher did, to deride, insult and make jokes about Al Gore. The truth is that EVERY scientific academy and society in all industrialized nations are in agreement that human activity is causing our current rapid global warming. These are not Al Gore fan clubs, these are organizations that bring together all of the worlds leading scientists. If readers Google “joint climate change statement” they will find a joint statement on climate change signed in 2005 by all of the G8 nations, as well as India, China, and Brazil. Makes you wonder why people still don’t accept the truth. The American Geophysical Union (AGU)--a 45,000 member society of earth, atmospheric and ocean scientists worldwide---has issued a very strong statement affirming that global warming is happening and that human emissions are the cause. They warn that a 2°C average global temperature increase beyond 19th century levels will result in reduced global agricultural productivity, widespread loss of biodiversity, and (if the temperature increase persists) the eventual melting of Greenland causing a sea level rise of several meters. They state that if this 2°C temperature increase is to be avoided then the globe must cut net annual C02 emissions by more than 50 per cent within this century. If readers go online to www.agu.org they can click on the AGU’s latest position statement of the human impact on climate. Sepher chooses to ignore this unprecedented agreement among the world’s scientists. We don’t require a carbon tax, he argues, because C02 is not causing global warming. He has no use for their science and their warnings for humanity. He thinks they’re all engaged in Al Gore worship, presumably. Sepher’s writing has a comedic bent to it, on purpose. He’s a funny guy, expounding on his “Hip hip-hooray!” moment of realizing his personal climate truths after weeks of agoraphobia-induced basement dwelling. Lol. Unfortunately, our climate situation is too critical to be treated in such a glib and dishonest fashion. I hope he can look beyond Al Gore insults and denial and embrace the difficult truth we face. He can use his comedy for good, not evil. We all need to paddle in the same direction now if we hope to avoid the worst. Come on Sepher, pick up a paddle and help us. Ian Mumford, Chief Operating Officer Read something you don’t agree with? Sean Ledwich Have something to say? Write a letter to the editor! email: editor@uniter.ca contact: uniter @ uniter.ca The Uniter November January 31, 1, 2008 2007 EDITORIALS SECTION Editorials 09 Managing Editor : Jo Snyder E-mail: editor@uniter.ca Fair Copyright for Canada is going to be a fight What do you know about the DMCA? Jo Snyder Managing Editor I mpending changes to Canadian Copyright Law seem grossly out of touch with the way contemporary Canadians make use of digital media. But what’s worse is that the new laws symbolize a relationship with the United States that crosses the boundaries of what many Canadians see as a meaningful and necessary level of sovereignty. The Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) is a law promised by Industry Minister Jim Prentice, to change the way Canadians can use digital media. Some of the main concerns, according to Michael Geist, the Canada Research Chair of Internet and E-commerce Law at the University of Ottawa, are that this law will have a profoundly negative impact on Canadian innovation, privacy, education, and research. There is an equally big concern, from those who oppose this law that very little has been done to consult the public on what would be a massive error in judgment by the Canadian government. Instead it is the result of increasing pressure from the United States to conform to their existing, and restrictive laws. Basically, the law will make file sharing incredibly difficult in a way that is counterproductive to Canadian innovation, and has nothing to do with musician’s rights or Canadian culture, and everything to do with law suits and funneling money to major companies in the United States. A point made by musician Steven Page highlights that indeed, if such a law was inter- ested in those who justly earn for what they create, then wouldn’t artists of all kinds be consulted about what such a law means to them. Let’s speak about music, because it’s what I care about most, and it’s something we can all easily understand the implications of. In an era of digital music, record companies are absolutely crapping their diapers at the prospect of lost profits due to file sharing and Internet downloads. An apt episode of South Park titled Christian Rock Hard where the boys are arrested for downloading music from the Internet reminds us that often monies reclaimed from American lawsuits for file shar- ing don’t go to the artists that need them the most (insert joke about Britney Spears not having a remote control for the DVD player in her privet jet here). In fact, as Steven Page, a vocal advocate against DMCA, pointed out for many emerging artists file sharing can launch successful careers that may not have been noticed without a major label record company fifteen years ago. The law in the simplest sense, he says, punishes music fans—the very same people who can make or break a band in the first place. In the United States there have been over 20 000 successful lawsuits due to overly strict copyright laws. The implication of increased law suits in Canada for file sharing is that money will be funneled out to the four largest record companies, all of which are in the US. (It’s worth noting that some labels, such as Nettwerk, do not support the proposed DMCA). Cory Doctorow on Boing Boing called the Canadian version of DMCA “one of the worst copyright laws in the developed world.” In simple terms, you will not be able to develop or use tools that open locked digital files, even if you own them. Another crucial point by Doctorow is that the Canadian tech industry becomes completely vulnerable to the US industry. We would be unable, he says, “to innovate or start new businesses that interact with the existing pool of devices and media without getting a license from the states.” Think about it like the US penetrating all of our digital gadgets: cell phones, iPods, cameras, and computer software. So what does personal property mean? Who benefits? There is an emerging panic amongst Canadians who favour fair copyright laws. To learn more about who they are and why they are worried check out: www.michaelgeist.ca and www.musiccreators.ca/ ILLUSTRATION BY MELODY MORRISSETTE January 31, 2008 10 The Uniter contact: uniter @ uniter.ca COMMENTS Comments Comments Editor : Ben Wood E-mail: comments@uniter.ca Day of no action Ben Wickström Melody Morrissette T his year the Day of Action has not been scheduled. Although I was not party to the decision, I can guess why this has happened. Attendance at the day of action has been in a steady decline for several years. At the past few it’s been abysmal. The student movement should consider why. To most observers, and many participants, the singular focus of the student movement has been on tuition. Maintenance of the freeze on tuition and advocacy of a further lowering of that rate have been the twin calls of student politicians. The effect, at least at the University of Winnipeg, has been less and less interest in the Day of Action. It has become clear that the cost of tuition is not something that is motivating students to get involved and behind the student movement. A wider focus is necessary for students to feel something useful, important and meaningful is going on in student politics. It might actually be a more effective and helpful strategy for students too. The student movement needs to put other issues front and centre. Student leaders will tell you that the Canadian Federation of Students has a wide array of policy that speaks to the many concerns of students. I can assure you that this is absolutely the case. The problem is these other concerns are never the ones that the student movement gives the most attention to. This comes at the same time that a worrying number of students believe that they should be paying more for their education. The student movement’s strategy for the Day of Action also fails to address the roots of the problem. In recent years these events have taken the form of rallies on campus and at the Manitoba Legislature. I think students, my former student self included, miss the connection. The University and the province have in their own ways been onside with students. You will not find any university administrators who will disagree that we need more money for education. And you will not find a government, provincial or federal, anywhere else in Canada that is more committed to access. This isn’t to say that there aren’t problems with the policies used by these institutions. The University, at least in my estimation, has an increasingly large administrative bureaucracy, which is not entirely necessary. The province, I think, could be doing more to address the non-tuition costs of going to school. But both share the concerns of the student movement. If political rallies are, however, what the student movement believes is the most effective and appropriate use of the Day of Action than these rallies should be aimed where the problem lies. The federal cuts to the Health and Social Transfers during the 1990’s are at the heart of the funding problem for universities. Our federal representatives are the ones that need to hear the political message. Particularly those who are members of the governing party. Members of Parliament have constituency offices located within the city. When the CFS undertook the Restore the 4 message a few years back, the protest was strangely at the UofM campus. But the question of the efficacy of the often shrill and histrionic Day of Action rallies should also be considered. Media attention seems to be the major product of the rallies. And in recent years it would be more effective if the media would just use file footage from 5 years ago instead of new footage when covering the rallies. Discussion and debate do not occur on the Day of Action. Very little persuasion happens. As far as the student movement is concerned action means shouting and marching. But maybe action could mean something else. Action could mean discussion and debate. An event that functioned as a public hearing or town hall meeting might be a more effective kind of action. Students could present to a panel of the student association’s board of directors their ideas about the postsecondary education system. Presentations could come not only from students, but from various groups and individuals who have a stake in the university. This forum could run for several hours during the day. Political science professors might take the day as an opportunity to have students observe the political process in the way that they sometimes take their students to the legislature to observe the political process there. A transcript of the proceedings might be sent to governments and to the university. It might be a useful piece of information for the Canadian Federation of Students as well. The end result would be a much more democratic and participatory kind of action. With some effort the UWSA could create wide interest in this kind of approach. Action needs take place off campus as well. Students might be organized to make presentations to high school students and to parentteacher councils, to highlight the issues facing post secondary education. These are people on whom post-secondary education policy is about to have a very serious impact. This kind of public information campaign seems to me to be more effective then a three-and-a-half minute spot on the six o’clock news. If the student movement wants to be a movement it’s going to need to convince more than the people on their campuses that there are serious issues facing students. The premeditated findings of the Manley Report Ben Wood Comments editor T he Manley Report, an independent study of Canada’s involvement in Afghanistan, is nothing more than a reiteration of the Conservatives’ intentions for the military mission in a nation that ranked 174th out of 178 countries on the United Nations Development Programme’s Human Development Index. It begins with two crucial assumptions, which prepare the report to find exactly what Prime Minister Harper wants—and that is an extension beyond the proposed withdrawal date of February 2009, so long as NATO provides a minimum of 1,000 more battle troops and the government increases military spending to secure better equipment. The first assumption is that this is, primarily, a military mission, and nothing else. The report dismissed any peacekeeping efforts, arguing, “there is no peace to keep,” which acts as further justification for a prolonged military presence. This also assumes that peace is not slowly built or continuously fostered, but rather, achieved through military strength. This stubborn military focus prevents the report from ever properly addressing the high level of poverty, the spread of disease, or the food shortages that prevail in Afghanistan. It has the expectation that a successful military mission will bring about the stability and security that is needed before these problems can be addressed. The report preemptively counters criticism of this position by arguing that “the limited capacity of Afghan institutions to absorb the aid available” is what is preventing fruitful aid efforts. According to this logic, institutional stability is prior to individual human rights. This does not sound like a strategy that is primarily concerned with individual lives of Afghani people or with Afghanistan as a nation, but more with upholding Western reputation and pride. The second assumption the report begins with is that Canada should be in Afghanistan and that we should, as a nation, feel compelled to spread our values abroad—not necessarily in an attempt to better the lives of individual Afghans but more so that Canada can reassert its validity and legitimacy on the international stage. This is not to deny the quality of life that I personally enjoy in this country and the national values that may contribute towards that. But, to assume Canadian values are universal is to ignore the culture and social context of Afghanistan. I am not arguing for a cultural relativism but I am suggesting that if Canada is truly interested in helping Afghanistan establish a stable and just government then there needs to be less of a blind implementation of Canadian values and more of a dialogue between all parties involved in the reconstruction effort in Afghanistan. The report provides a list of the “diverse” selection of people who the panel consulted to provide insight, historical perspectives, and recommendations on the future of Afghanistan—or rather, Canada’s future in Afghanistan. The list includes Canadian scholars, activists, government officials, military officers and UN diplomats and senior public servants. It gives the impression that they would speak with anyone before speaking with people who live in Afghanistan. So although the report conclusively claims “the aim of the Canadian government is to leave Afghanistan to Afghans,” the panel felt they could get a better impression of what kind of country is desired by local Afghan people by speaking with those who might only know the country in the form of policy documents or mission briefings. This report does not outline a mission that is primarily meant to benefit the people of Afghanistan by improving living conditions or addressing the spread of disease, but rather it outlines a self-righteous mission that is nothing more than an attempt to prove that Canada will not, in the words of the man who brought a Canadian military presence there in the first place, “cut and run.” Denis Vrignon-Tessier contact: uniter @ uniter.ca The Uniter January 31, 2008 ARTS & CULTURE Arts & Culture Ode to the Albert Mandy Malazdrewich Aaron Epp Volunteer staff W hen word spread last year that the Royal Albert was changing ownership, local music fans wondered what would happen to the famed venue. Would it be turned into a health spa? Or would it continue to be a haven for punk and rock bands? Julia Ryckman, bassist and singer for local rock trio The Gorgon, is happy it wasn’t the former. She’s even written a song titled “Royal Albert,” which appears on the band’s debut CD, Corpse Whale. Appropriately, the band is releasing the new disc this Saturday at the Exchange District bar. Ryckman said she based the song on a year in her life following a difficult breakup. While dealing with the emotional aftermath, she took solace in going to rock shows at the Albert on weekends. Musically, the song is representative of The Gorgon’s sound: primitive, low-fi garage rock that sounds exactly like something you’d hear at… well, the Albert. “Rock ‘n’ roll, baby it saved my soul” is the refrain Ryckman repeats throughout, until, in the end, it becomes “Rock ‘n’ roll, baby it stained my soul.” The turn of phrase shows how rock ‘n’ roll has become something she no longer just watches and listens to, but rather, something she actively participates in. “It’s 11 Arts & Culture Editor: Whitney Light E-mail: arts@uniter.ca The Gorgon pay tribute to a Winnipeg institution on Corpse Whale under my skin,” the 26-year-old said by phone last week. “I’m completely addicted to this thing that happens in dirty bars.” The Gorgon formed two years ago after Ryckman met guitarist Jennifer Alexander at—you guessed it—the Albert. The addition of Alana Mercer on drums rounded out the duo’s vision for an all-girl band. Corpse Whale was recorded last February. Like most things The Gorgon does, it wasn’t calculated; Alexander said the band recorded it “at the spur of the moment” in Ryckman’s basement. When recording engineer Craig Boychuck finished mixing the CD in the fall, they sent an advance copy to Art MacIntyre of Winnipeg’s Transistor 66 record label, home to Scott Nolan, Hot Live Guys and a host of others. “They write great songs and are very passionate about what they do,” said MacIntyre, who liked the CD and signed the band shortly after hearing it. “[I] believe their sound is certainly unique, but combining that sound with their penchant for elaborate stage theatrics certainly sets them apart.” In the past, the band has played shows with themes ranging from “tropical island” to “sex cowgirls from outer space,” and they’ve dressed accordingly. “We’re loopy,” said Mercer. “We don’t take anything seriously.” This extends from their costumes to why they picked their name. While searching on the Internet for things that come in threes, Ryckman and Mercer came across the Greek myth of the Gorgon sisters, Stheno, Euryale and Medusa—vicious female monsters with sharp fangs and hair of living, venomous snakes. Some say the word “gorgon” is synonymous with “terrible,” “loudroaring” or “anything very ugly or horrid.” Anyone wanting to find out if those same words can be used to describe the band will have to make a trip to the Exchange District Saturday night. “I’m really happy that we’re doing the CD release at the Albert,” said Ryckman. “When I’m old and not playing in bands anymore, I’ll always have really fond memories of putting on my dress and shoes and makeup in the Royal Albert bathroom.” See The Gorgon at the Royal Albert Arms on Feb. 2 with Wife, The Untrained Eyes and The Girl with X-Ray Eyes. Visit www.myspace.com/thegggorgon. Tamara Lewis-James The Gorgon play the Royal Albert Arms Feb. 2. January 31, 2008 12 The Uniter contact: uniter @ uniter.ca ARTS & CULTURE Artists explore Manitoba’s “vanishing” lake For love of water Vivian Belik Volunteer Staff U sing only faded memories and satellite images from Google Earth, artists Colleen Ludwig and Jarod Charzewski recreate the awe and grandeur of Lake Winnipeg in an exhibit now showing at AceArt. Vanishing Point marks the fifth collaboration between Ludwig and Charzewski, who met in art school about five years ago. Similar to their previous installations, Vanishing Point uses large-scale imagery to evoke strong emotional responses in the viewer. “With my work I try to bring out a sense of wonder and excitement, which I feel in our culture is now lacking,” said Ludwig, who fuses sculpture, moving images and performance into her art. Entering the main gallery, you are visually overwhelmed by an elongated constellation of blue shapes angled from the ceiling towards the door, creating a vivid representation of Lake Winnipeg and Lake Winnipegosis. At the back of the room stands a large white map upon which the southern portion of Manitoba is lightly stenciled. A motorized pump streams water down the front of the map, slowly sloughing away the penciled boundary lines and divisions of our province. In the background, you hear the recorded sounds of wind and rushing water. Altogether it is a powerful experience, one that overcomes Colleen Ludwig and Jarod Charzewski address the health of Lake Winnipeg in Vanishing Point. the viewer and ultimately highlights the dominance of nature over man. Even the tag line for the exhibit ominously states, “Goodbye world as we know it. If it wasn’t clear before it is now. The world climate is changing rapidly, and no one knows what’s going to happen or how to plan for it.” “As much as we try to simulate and manipulate nature, it inevitably never ends how we want it,” said Charzewski, who often visits environmental themes in his work. With Charzewski’s familiarity with the Lake Winnipeg area and Ludwig’s fascination with landscapes and water, the two set out in Vanishing Point to question the state of the environmental health of southern Manitoba. “You don’t need to believe in global warming to know that the Lake Winnipeg area has become a sensitive region,” said Charzewski, who explains that the title, Vanishing Point, comes from a real fear that not only the health of the lake is in danger but also all the lives that are intimately connected to it. The artists caution, however, against interpreting the work in an overtly political manner. “I have a strong message in my work, but it’s more about getting across a particular emotion than displaying a bunch of information,” said Ludwig. “The idea is that hopefully the viewer will be piqued to find out more on their own.” Vanishing Point runs until Feb. 23 at AceArt, 2-290 McDermot Ave. Arts & Culture Editor: Whitney Light E-mail: arts@uniter.ca contact: uniter @ uniter.ca The Uniter November 1, 2008 2007 January 31, SECTION ARTS & CULTURE 013 13 Music for modern times The New Music Festival features new Canadian works, a film by Guy Maddin, and more Conrad Sweatman Volunteer Staff T his year’s New Music Festival opens Feb. 2 at the Centennial Concert Hall with “R. Murray Shafer’s 75th Birthday,” a celebration of senior Canadian composer Shafer that will include a world-premiere of Canadian composer Glenn Buhr’s Symphony No. 3. The festival will continue for the following six nights and conclude with “Canadian Legends” featuring a work by Shafer and Eckhardt-Grammaté is a little bit of a younger country, but is there a Canadian sound? Is there a Canadian voice, a musical voice? From there we started researching, and listening to everything there was.” Mickelthwate said he is excited about all the works being performed at this year’s festival, mentioning in particular Murray Shafer’s Cortège, “a theatrical piece where all the player’s wear white masks”; Glenn Buhr’s Symphony No. 3; and the screening of Winnipeg filmmaker Guy Maddin’s silent film Brand upon the Brain. Maddin shares Mickelthwate’s enthusiasm for the festival and reflects upon what it should mean to Winnipeggers: “I’m really proud of it. It really does make Winnipeg world class for that week. And there are very few things that make Winnipeg world class.” While it seems quite probable that the legendary filmmaker’s work will draw in a relatively high number of attendees, one might question what significance a film has to a festival of new music. The answer seems to lie in the fact that the film is silent. While musical scores often play a role in films for conveying emotional undertones, this is especially so in silent films where the musical score generally is played with- Clockwise from left: Trevor Grahl, Veda Hille, Rachel Moody, Jesse Zubot, and Talia Pura. among others. This year’s festival should be one of a kind, as it is perhaps the most focused attempt by any festival in recent years to promote and perform Canadian new works. One hopes it will spark Manitobans’ curiosity about our new classical music scene. Alexander Mickelthwate, the city’s new Winnipeg Symphony Orchestra conductor, speaks about how the Canadian theme of this year’s festival was developed: “I met our composer-in-residence [Vincent Ho] in August for the first time, and my first question was, What is Canadian music? And we came to the discussion to try and find out what makes a Canadian sound. Coming from America, you have an American sound from Bernstein, Copland, and a lot [of other] contemporary composers…Well, Canada out interruption. “I wanted [the film] to be prominently music driven,”said Maddin. “I mean, music of all the art forms takes the shortest route to the heart, you just feel it, you don’t have to understand it, you just feel it, and it feels great. Everyone thinks they know how images work, but once you weld those two things together and the images start taking the same shortcut to the heart that music does, things start getting pretty occult and amazing.” The main tie-in between Brand and the New Music Festival is that the score, composed by Jason Staczek (who also composed for Maddin’s My Winnipeg), will be performed live by the Winnipeg Symphony Orchestra upon its screening. The event features two other live performance elements: three Foley (sound-effect) artists, who according to Maddin will perform around 600 sound effect cues during the course of the movie, and narrative accompaniment delivered by Italian actor, director, and writer Isabella Rossellini. This is not the first time Rossellini has been involved with Maddin’s work, having previously acted in his Saddest Music in the World. Halfway through editing Brand, Maddin decided to add narration over the film and asked Rossellini to do the honours, feeling her voice had just the right touch of musicality. “The movie is pure melodrama, and it requires someone, perhaps an Italian with an opera-soaked lineage, to really make the operatic gestures with her voice and with her body, her arms and her hands to really put this thing over properly. She is not just a musical instrument, but one imported from La Scala. She’s the right instrument.” Brand upon the Brain will be screened during the festival on at the Centennial Concert Hall and seems likely to be a hit. But there are a wide range of other events at the festival that should prove to be as exciting. Michael Colgrass’s Urban Requiem, to be performed Feb. 6, is a wild and very engaging work of new music that should impress its audiences. Winnipeggers interested in new Canadian music should also attend “You Call That Music?!,” Feb. 4 at the Centennial Concert Hall, for a discussion by music critics and composers on the Canadian musical style, followed by a solo performance by percussionist Ben Reimer and finally an after-party featuring DJ Hunnicutt. Single student tickets are $10, and full-week student passes are $39! For more information on the festival visit http://www.wso.mb.ca/admin/documents/nmf/ November31,1,2008 January 2007 014 14 The Uniter contact: uniter @ uniter.ca SECTION ARTS & CULTURE ARTS BriefS Compiled by Kathleen Gallagher and Jo Snyder Cell phone novels are big business In 2007, five of the top 10 best-selling novels in Japan were cell phone novels, the New York Times reported. Cell phone novels are composed via text messaging, and then uploaded onto a website. The stories consist of short sentences (mostly shorthand characteristics), contain little plot or character development, and the author is usually known only by one name. The author turns a profit only if the story is printed and then sold as a book. Although the cell phone novel was created by a website called Maho no i-rando in 2000, it did not start to boom until two or three years ago. Phone companies started to offer text messaging at a flat rate, which made it more affordable to write these stories. High school history project brings attention to a forgotten heroine Three young women from a rural town in Kansas recently brought attention to an overlooked war heroine. The Christian Science Monitor reported that Megan Felt, Sabrina Murphy and Elizabeth Cambers Hutton came across Irena Sendler in a magazine clipping in 1999. Sendler, a Polish Catholic, was responsible for rescuing 2,500 children from a Warsaw ghetto by taking them from their families and smuggling them out. She placed the children with other Catholic families, convents or orphanages. For every child she took, Sendler wrote down their name and a brief description of their family history and then stuffed the paper into a milk jar, hoping that the children would be able to piece together their family tree after the war. The milk jars were buried in her neighbour’s yard. The three young women from Kansas, who were high school students at the time, researched Sendler’s story and wrote a play about it for their history class. The play is called Life in a Jar and has now been performed across the U.S., Canada and Poland. Sendler was not well-known in her home country until Felt, Murphy and Hutton brought this attention to her story. Last year, Sendler was nominated for a Noble Peace Prize and the three girls from Kansas were nicknamed the “Rescuers of the Rescuer.” Prison’s Entry into a Dance Festival Rejected The Cebu Provincial Detention and Rehabilitation Center in the Philippines, best known for its famous performance of Michael Jackson’s “Thriller” on YouTube, tried to enter a famous dance competition and was rejected. The International Herald Tribune reported that Byron Garcia, a security consultant, entered a troupe of 100 inmates into the Sinulog Festival, a street dancing festival that is celebrated in honour of Jesus. The troupe practices for four hours a day and knows over 200 dances. Mayor Tomas Osmeña rejected the entry due to security concerns. Most of the inmates have been convicted of serious crimes such as rape and murder. Plug In to Berlin After a successful showing at the Plug In ICA, and an astounding premiere at the 2007 Biennale de Montréal, Noam Gonick and Luis Jacob’s Wildflowers of Manitoba will be heading to Berlin, the 58th international Berlin Film festival to be exact. It is one of the most prestigious festivals of its kind, and Winnipeg will be well represented. Guy Maddin’s My Winnipeg will be featured alongside the exhibit, among some 400 films from around the globe. After Berlin, Gonick and Jacob will bring their work back to Canada, where it will show in Alberta and B.C. cd REviews Damien Rice VARIOUS ARTISTS Live At Union Chapel Music from the Motion Picture Juno Vector Fox Music / Rhino Vagabond Records & Tapes Live at Union Chapel is Rice’s eighth album since he broke into the Irish folk music scene with his incredibly successful debut album, O, in 2003. The tracks performed at Union Chapel were chosen from his previous albums, O and 9. Aided by singer Lisa Hannigan, Rice puts on an incredible show for his fans. The majority of the tracks performed here are slow, mellow and somewhat melancholy as well as beautiful and emotionally stirring. The third track, “Volcano,” really grabbed my attention. It’s a faster song and has a great beat underneath lyrics that flow with seemingly no effort at all. “Baby Sister” also grabbed my attention, but in a different way. The song, which is about abuse, is mournful and haunting. Overall, Live at Union Chapel is a solid album that’s a little bit out of the ordinary but definitely worth checking out. Troy Buschman It’s easy to name great music moments in film history—“In Your Eyes” by Peter Gabriel in Say Anything is one that comes to mind—but it’s difficult to name great film soundtracks. Usually, there are little more than one or two really good songs with a bunch of filler in between. Like Garden State, however, the CD accompanying the critically acclaimed Jason Reitman film Juno is one of those rare soundtracks one can listen to front to back without skipping any tracks. The 19-song disc is an eclectic mix, featuring, among others, Sonic Youth, Mott the Hoople, Belle and Sebastian, The Kinks, Cat Power, and six songs by singer-songwriter Kimya Dawson. The soundtrack’s secret weapon, however, is “Anyone Else but You,” by Dawson’s former band, The Moldy Peaches. While critics have written the band off in the past as little more than an indie novelty, the laid back antifolk of “Anyone Else but You” is clumsy, ironic and full of heart—just like the characters in the film. Aaron Epp An early ‘90s hip-hop sensation, Arrested Development hasn’t released an album of new material in 12 years, a point of trivia that the title track here doesn’t fail to drive home. If the album were an underwhelming rehash of the past, the self-referencing might have come across as cause for a good chuckle. Happily, this is not the case. The group deliver feel-good tracks that hit home especially because they’re sounds that have been heard before, comfortable and nostalgia-inducing like Kraft Dinner is tasty. But that’s not to say they lack variety: “Sunshine,” as the title suggests, is a sunny, hand-clapping tune that rolls smoothly along with keyboard chording and a honeysweet chorus. “Inner City” is dance ‘til you’re out of breath fast and ornamented with horns and hand drums while showing that the group is still interested in tackling social issues. After visiting a recent concert of theirs on YouTube, however, it’s hard to say whether there’s still the same catchy quality that made hits like “Mr. Wendal.” In any case they’ve certainly still got the energy and sheer joy to keep going, and as far as accessible hip-hop goes these days, Since the Last Time is more positive and enjoyable than most. Whitney Light 95.9 FM CKUW Campus/Community Radio Top 10 CD – Albums January 23 - 29, 2008 ! = Local content * = Canadian Content RE=Re Entry NE = New Entry LWTW Artist Recording Label 1 1 Gaudi + Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan Dub Qawwali Six Degrees 2 2 *Evaporators 5 3 *Stars 15 4 Jeffery Lewis 12 5 Cat Power 3 6 18 7 Fiery Furnaces 4 8 8 9 Sigur Ros Hvarf/Heim 9 10 *Bella Gassy Jack Mint In Our Bedroom Arts & Crafts 12 Crass Songs Rough Trade Juke Box No One Will Know *Cuff the Duke Matador Mint Window City Thrilljockey Sidelines of the City Hardwood XL Recordings !Weakerthans Reunion Tour Anti/Epitaph Arrested Development Since the Last Time Arts & Culture Editor: Whitney Light E-mail: arts@uniter.ca contact: uniter @ uniter.ca The Uniter January 31, November 1, 2008 2007 ARTS & CULTURE SECTION 15 Following talent to a dark place Terror’s Advocate Directed by Barbet Schroeder Cinematheque Feb. 1 at 9:00 p.m., Feb. 2-7 at 7:00 p.m. Rob McGregor Volunteer M ost dramatizations about the trials and tribulations of lawyers portray them as one of two archetypes. On the one hand, there’s the crusading everyman who just wants to see the truth come out and justice be served. On the other, there’s the greedy win-at-anycost scoundrel. Jacques Vergès, the titular Terror’s Advocate, doesn’t fit easily into either category. He is a char- Jacques Verges speaks about defending some of the 20th century’s biggest criminals in Terror’s Advocate. ismatic and mysterious figure who, in the hands of a competent director, could be an excellent subject for a fascinating documentary film. Instead, Barbet Schroeder (director of Single White Female) has created a painfully tedious political history. Vergès is a French trial attorney famous for his willingness to defend the indefensible. At various points in his career he advocated on behalf of Algerian terrorists (one of whom he later married), Nazi war criminal Klaus “Butcher of Lyon” Barbie, and leftist revolutionary and mercenary “Carlos the Jackal,” among others. Vergès is such a skilled lawyer that he has almost always succeeded in securing reduced sentences for his clients, even though most were unrepentant murderers. While he is interviewed Vergès reclines behind his oversized desk, surrounded by opulent knick-knacks, puffing a large cigar. Although he speaks a great deal, the viewer is given no real insight into his persona. It’s difficult to even figure out whether he completely sympathizes with his former clients. Before the film begins, the following disclaimer is displayed: “This film represents the director’s personal point of view on Jacques Vergès.” If we can take the director at his word, I suppose this means that Schroeder’s opinion of Vergès is simply neutral. And though neutrality in documentary filmmaking is often viewed as a virtue—in that it allows the viewer to decide for themselves—in this instance it is a major flaw. Because the film is so exceedingly even-handed and because it only examines the events and actors superficially, the viewer is not given enough information to deem Vergès a sinner or a saint. Perhaps Schroeder wants us to see Vergès as just a man doing his job, an insignificant cog in a massive machine of violent political intrigue. Perhaps the aggregate “ma- chine” would have been a more compelling subject? If you have an in-depth knowledge of terrorism and geopolitics over the past 30 years, however, then you might be able to wring an ounce or two of enjoyment from Terror’s Advocate. Otherwise, the film’s dozen or so talking heads will seem to ramble endlessly about names, places, dates and acronyms without context or coherence. The only interesting parts of the film, for most viewers, are when Vergès’ courtroom techniques are discussed. He uses the “rupture defence” technique, which means he contradicts everything the prosecution says, or threatens that if his clients are not exonerated then their supporters will only increase their violence. If the film’s bloated two-hour run time had been edited down to those 10 minutes it may have been worth watching. It would have been just as incoherent, but at least less monotonous. Unos! Dos! Tres! Catorce! Matt Preprost Volunteer Staff Check. Participate in global aid efforts Bono and U2 have yet to do these days is put in their application for total world domination. Sarcasm aside, U2 has quite possibly ventured into the revolution of the live concert video. Compiled from footage primarily of the South American leg of U2’s Vertigo Tour in 2006, U2 3D is a solid 90-minute concert comprising 14 hits C. Taylor Crothers Best seat in the house. U2 3D at Imax. C. Taylor Crothers E nsure that a minimum of two members in the band have cool, mysterious nicknames. and peace activism. Check. Produce nine best-selling albums worldwide. Check. Win a Grammy Award. Check. (Twenty-two wins, actually, if we’re keeping score.) Secure induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. Check. It seems like the only thing that from the band’s extensive repertoire. The tracks performed range from old hits like “Sunday Bloody Sunday” and “With or Without You,” to their more recent material, including “Vertigo,” “Beautiful Day,” and “Sometimes You Can’t Make It on Your Own.” As the title suggests, the entire production was filmed in 3D, making it the “first ever live-action 3D digital film.” And it’s quite the accomplishment. There really is nothing else like it out there as of yet, especially if you’re a fan of Bono and the boys (er, men). In fact, you don’t even have to be a U2 fan to enjoy the concert—I’m not one, although I will admit that I enjoy their music—because it’s not the music that sticks out the most when you leave the theater. It’s the 3D experience. With glasses that seem to be inspired by Bono’s trademark shades, U2 3D could cause some serious vertigo in the unsuspecting viewer. It’s a total thrill ride CLASSIFIEDS WINNIPEG SUN SPOKES MODEL (Part- As part of our expansion program, our information, Contact Michael J Sloan, Time Position) company is looking for part time Work Email: mjsloan01@aol.com The Winnipeg Sun is seeking individuals from home account managers and sales with strong customer service skills, representatives, it pays a minimum of who have experience in sales and are $2000 a month plus benefits and takes comfortable speaking in public to assume only little of your time. Please contact us the role of spokes model at Winnipeg for more details. Requirements - Should Sun sponsored events. Submit resume to: be a computer Literate. 2-3 hours access Marivic Tuazon, Marketing Coordinator, to the internet weekly. Must be honest Winnipeg Sun, 1700 Church Ave, Wpg, MB and loyal. Must be efficient and dedicated. R2X 3A2 or email: mtuazon@wpgsun.com If you are interested and need more Wanted: Respite Worker Seeking respite worker (19 year old male, Cerebral Palsy). Requires assistance with all physical needs; some help with academics (grade 12). For info on shifts/ duties email: matthewferguson99@yahoo. ca. U2 3D gives you vertigo and may make you dizzy depending on your tolerance for bright lights— and sweeping camera action. The most remarkable thing about U2 3D is that it raises the bar for future live concert videos. Coming home after viewing this electrifying performance, U2 3D makes your straightto-DVD concert videos look stale and boring. It is both an innovation and a revolution, provided that other bands believe in the experience and start to capitalize on it. Simply put, U2 3D is the best concert you’ll never go to. I mean, realistically, how great are the chances of U2 actually coming to Winnipeg anytime soon? If you’re holding your breath and hopes alive, definitely check out the IMAX in the interim and you won’t be disappointed. Besides, at a real U2 concert (or any other concert for that matter) you will never get as up close and personal as you will with this. January 31, 2008 16 The Uniter contact: uniter @ uniter.ca ARTS & CULTURE Business is business Andrew McMonagle Volunteer Staff D The Uniter Fashion Streeter is an ongoing documentation of creative fashion in Winnipeg inspired by the Helsinki fashion blog www.hel-looks.com. Each week will feature a new look from our city’s streets and bars in an attempt to encourage individual expression and celebrate that you are really, really good looking. Want to show off your style? Contact arts@ uniter.ca CHANTAL DEGAGNE Dana “I like to dress up in my grandma’s church clothes. Big sunnies and funny hats help me do grandma justice.” Bruce Monk avid Mamet may have been describing the foundations of his characters in Glengarry Glen Ross when he said, “People may or may not say what they mean… but they always say something designed to get what they want.” This jaded view of humanity could be attributed to the several months Mamet reputedly spent as a salesman—apparently more than enough time for someone of his acumen to form dark opinions about people. Written and set in the early 1980s, GGR is an unflinching look at American business as represented by a group of real estate salesmen who are forced into a competition where the winners get prizes and the losers are fired. This is a stark world, where the colours are drab, business is fierce and everybody but the policeman drinks. The entire first act of GGR is set in a Chinese restaurant with the characters taking turns having paired dialogues, always with a strongspeaking character seated with a meeker one. Downtrodden Shelly Levene (Harry Nelken) dominates his conversation with office manager John Williamson (Graham Ashmore); Dave Moss (Mike Bell) tries to fast-talk George Aaronow (Steven Ratzlaff) into a plan to rob the office that neither of them wants to act out; and Ricky Roma (Omar Khan) soliloquizes a clever hard sell to transfixed potential customer James Lingk (Robert Glen Thompson). Dave Moss laments, “If the place gets robbed, they’re going to come look for me.” “Why?” “Because I probably did it!” Sure enough, in between acts the office is robbed. Act two is set in the ransacked office with a policeman named Baylen (Carson Nattrass) interviewing everybody about the crime. Two facts about GGR: it won the Pulitzer Prize in 1983 for drama and is dedicated to Harold Pinter, the notorious playwright/poet whom Mamet sent the script to for comments. Were GGR written today, a Pulitzer would be a pretty high expectation. Today’s audiences are accustomed to the searing insight into business that GGR portrays, perhaps partly due to the play’s past influence. I can only imagine how audiences reacted to the profanity when the play opened, but today it is accepted, mostly with a chuckle. The swearing provides mild shock value, but is emphasized by the fact that most of the characters are mildly to profoundly racist. Most of the racist comments fell flat, such as one about females of a certain ethnicity looking “like they just got fucked with a dead cat.” Perhaps the audience was too embarrassed to laugh out loud at this, but more than one wide grin was elicited. The colourful personalities of the characters are sharply contrasted with the sets. The Chinese restaurant is decorated in a tight range of reds and browns, while the office barrages viewers with an array of beige, grey, tan and brown. All of the men wear suits of a similarly drab tone with not one primary colour to be seen. Save for the manipulated customer James Lingk, these men are not likable. Even though downtrodden Shelly Levene is trying to raise money to help his sick daugh- And only the tough survive in Mamet’s Glengarry Glen Ross In photo (left to right): Harry Nelken and Graham Ashmore. ter, his brash sales techniques and racial opinions drop him way down on the list for Humanitarian of the Year. We might be grateful to have such dislikable characters for the endless entertainment they provide. It’s easy to feel good about ourselves, as we’re all reflected in them. Arts & Culture Editor: Whitney Light E-mail: arts@uniter.ca contact: uniter @ uniter.ca The Uniter January 31, 2008 ARTS & CULTURE 17 The Breakfast Classic — Chapter #12 Vivian Belik Volunteer Staff I Black Sheep is just a hop, skip and a jump from the U of W. Have breakfast anytime and enjoy the made in Manitoba ambiance. ’m not going to lie; I’m a breakfast snob. Ever since I had the good sense to learn how to cook my own breakfast I have snubbed my nose at runny eggs, spat upon burnt toast, and looked the other way from greasy meat. Breakfast is a meal to be championed; it’s a comforting friend after a restless night of sleep, an undemanding date, and a loving nurse after a long night of partying. And so I have decided, along with freelance photographer Natasha Peterson, to look off the eaten track for the best in Winnipeg’s downtown diner scene. tions to accompany two pieces of toast and an unlimited supply of dark, organic, fair trade coffee. And if I still remembered my permutations and combinations from high school I could tell you that that’s a heck of a lot of different breakfast combinations. The service is relaxed, and that’s not a bad thing so long as the restaurant isn’t too busy. The servers stop and chat with the guests while taking their order or they take a moment from serving to put a new record on the record player. That’s right, I said record player. On the table are cow-shaped cream holders that pour cream by way of a tiny hole in the cow’s mouth. I was immediately enamored by the kitschy-ness of the cream holder (although if the milk Natasha Peterson Nestled at the corner of Langside and Ellice, The Black Sheep is downtown’s newest breakfast spot. When I heard word of the Black Sheep Diner back in November I could hardly wait for the opening. Apparently I wasn’t the only one, as people managed to find their way into the diner even before it had officially opened its doors at the beginning of January. It’s been open hardly a month and the restaurant is already filled to capacity on most days. The atmosphere here is simple but quaint and definitely welcoming. Owned by a warm young woman named Angela, the diner is a hangout where you will likely find students, activists, and community members congregating over strong cups of greattasting coffee. On the wall is local art—or at least I assume that it is local; the large picture of a buffalo being one major tip-off, though it is also the focus on locally-grown food that brings me to this conclusion. Here the kitchen serves up ingredients from nearby farms as often as it can. The breakfast menu is one of the most liberating I have come across, mostly because it offers a ‘choose your own breakfast adventure’ option. For those of us who grew up on Choose Your Own Adventure books, it is like discovering childhood independence all over again. Sick of hash browns with your eggs? Then get some garlicky greens with your meal instead. If you’re a vegetarian who is tired of paying the same price as your carnivorous breakfast mate without being offered a substitute, you can find solace in The Black Sheep’s delicious cider-baked beans. For $6.75 you have a choice from about seven different op- Natasha Peterson The Black Sheep Diner — 540 Ellice Ave. could have somehow poured out of the little cow’s udders I would have been beside myself with excitement). The pouring action is perfect, says my breakfast date, for imitating the way you feel after a night of drinking. Yes, I guess that’s one way of looking at it. The diner is still a bit of a work in progress and, to be fair, I probably should have held off for at least a month before I decided to review it so the restaurant could have ironed out those last details—but I just couldn’t contain myself. When I see a good breakfast on the horizon, I have to close in. November31,1,2008 January 2007 contact: uniter @ uniter.ca SECTION LISTINGS »ON CAMPUS OPPORTUNITIES EVENTS 2008 UNIVERSITY OF MANITOBA POLITICAL STUDIES STUDENT CONFERENCE Arctic Security: Challenges and Options. Jan 30-Feb 1 at the Great Hall, University College, University of Manitoba. This year’s conference will bring together eighteen speakers on six panels to explore some of the more salient contemporary challenges facing Canada’s Arctic security and defence. For more information, call 275-0179, email umranas@ cc.umanitoba.ca, or visit www.umpssc.ca. ABORIGINAL GOVERNANCE & GLOBALIZATION SYMPOSIUM Jan 31Feb 2. Keynote speakers: Mr. Herb George (Satsan), President, National Centre for First Nations Governance; and Dr. Ronni Alexander, Professor, Kobe University, Graduate School of International Cooperation Studies. Everyone is welcome to attend at no charge. As space is limited, you are asked to register (as an individual, group or school) online in advance. Admission will be determined on a first come, first served basis. https:// www.uwinnipeg.ca/index/conf-aggsymposium-registration THE LEGACY AND FUTURE OF THE CHURCH IN THE UNIVERSITY Distinguished Lecture Series. Panel Guests: The Very Rev. Dr. Lois Wilson, The Hon. William Blaikie, Dr. Alan Mills. Moderator: Dr. Nolan Reilly. Jan 31, 7 p.m. Convocation Hall - Second floor Wesley Hall. Everyone Welcome! SCREENING OF WHEN SILENCE IS GOLDEN Produced and Directed by Human Rights Journalist Alexandra Sicotte-Levesque. The film follows the director in her quest to lift the silence on the gold mining activities of a Canadian mining company near a small town in Western Ghana. Mon, Feb 4, 6:30 p.m. Room 1L12. SING YOUR HEART OUT! (A KARAOKE FUNDRAISER) All proceeds in support of the Canadian Red Cross International Disaster Relief Fund. Wed, Feb 6, 11:30 a.m.-2:30 p.m. U of W Centennial Hall, 3rd Floor Escalators. Email the University of Winnipeg Filipino Students’ Association at uw_fsa@yahoo.ca for more information. WHITE RIBBON CAMPAIGN “Our future has no violence against women” Seminar Thurs, Feb 7, 3-4 p.m. Rm 1L08. Guest: Tuval Dinner, Youth Program Manager for the White Ribbon Campaign. Tuval will introduce the Education and Action: A resource that combines classroom exercises and suggestions for school wide activities to raise the level of awareness of violence against women. QUEERING NATIONS: NATIONAL SECURITY AS SEXUAL REGULATION A public lecture by Dr. Gary Kinsman, Department of Sociology Laurentian University. Thurs, Feb 7, 6:30 p.m. Eckhardt-Grammaté Hall. For more info contact 786-9364. Hosted by the UW Sociology department and co-presented by the Department of Women’s and Gender Studies and the Institute for Women’s and Gender Studies/Global College. QUEER TALK AND MEMORY: THE SOCIAL ORGANIZATION OF FORGETTING AND THE RESISTANCE OF REMEMBERING A discussion with Gary Kinsman. Fri, Feb 8, 12:30-1:30 p.m. C-FIR Boardroom, U of W. Venue is wheelchair accessible. For more info contact 786-9364. GALLERY 1C03 (Re)Visiting the Collection: Selections of Manitoba Art from The University of Winnipeg. An exhibition in honour of The U of W’s 40th anniversary. Opening reception: Thurs, Feb 7, 4 - 6 p.m. Public talk “Recollections - Gallery 1C03 and the Permanent Collection, 1986-2001” by Dr. Sarah McKinnon: Fri, Feb 8 at 12:30 p.m. Public talk “The Beginnings of the U of W Collection: Artists’ Commitment and Ongoing Support” by Patricia E. Bovey, FRSA: Mon, Feb 11 at 12:30 p.m. Closing reception and publication launch: Thurs, Mar 20, 4 - 6 p.m. YOUNG COMMUNIST LEAGUE UW CAMPUS CLUB Meets every 1st and 4th Wed at 5:30 p.m., U of W Buffeteria (4th floor top of escalators). Next meetings are Feb 6 and Feb 27. E-mail us at ycl_manitobaycl.ljc. ca for more info. STUDY ABROAD OPPORTUNITIES An information session will be held on Wed, Feb 13 from 12:30- 1:20 p.m. in Room 1L08 on the U of W Exchange Programs and other study abroad opportunities. For more information contact the International Office at 786-9469, international. office@uwinnipeg.ca or visit us in 1Y04. CKUW FUNDRIVE 2008 SHOWS FOR THE WEEKEND TOP TENS @ TIMES Fri, Feb 8 Featuring: Papa Mambo, Jon Plett (of the Details), Doug McLean (of the Paperbacks), Matt Klachefsky (of Boats!!), JC Campbell and Tracy Bone, Nathan. Doors at 9 p.m. @ Times Change(d) High and Lonesome Club - 243 Main St. 1. The New Music Festival starts Feb. 2. at Centennial concert hall. Feb 5th is the night to watch with Guy Maddin’s Brand Upon the Brain with a live ensemble! 2. Edward Burtynsky: In the Pursuit of Progress, large scale photographs at the WAG for the environmentally and socially engaged artist. 3.Metalstorm: the Scandinavian Metal Wars. This black metal documentary surveys the Scandinavian scene through the events of the band Mayhem. Not to be missed by metal fans. 4. Gorgon CD release party at the Albert Feb. 2. Prediction: Costumes. 5. DJ Rob Vilar at the Lo Pub on Feb. 2. Check out where the movers and shakers are moving and shaking. CLASH OF THE TITANS IV Sat, Feb 9 Featuring: The Co-op/Fin-S Takeover, Dougie B & Twentytwenty, JFK Renegade, Soundsystem, Team Housed (Alphagroove & Oxide). Doors at 9 p.m. @ the Pyramid Cabaret - 176 Fort St. ALL AGER RAGER Sun, Feb 10 Featuring: Under Pressure, Dead Dogs. Doors at 7 p.m. @ the Rudolf Rocker Cultural Centre - 3rd floor, 91 Albert St. MUSIC STORE MADNESS Mon, Feb 11 Featuring: Poor Tree 12 p.m. @ Into the Music - 245 McDermot Ave * Aaron Burnett 1 p.m. @ Candor - 390 Provencher Blvd. * Ian LaRue 6 p.m. @ Music Trader - 97 Osborne St. * W.E. 8 p.m. @ War on Music - 333 Garry St. In-store events are Free. COMEDY NIGHT Tues, Feb 12 Featuring: Shitz & Gigglez, Flatland Comedy, Crumbs, Comedy Loser. Doors at 8 p.m. @ the Kings Head Pub - 120 Fort St. HUMP DAY! Wed, Feb13 Featuring: Indie Rock Karaoke Night Hosted by Bob Sommers. Doors at 9 p.m. @ LO Pub - 330 Kennedy St. VALENTINE’S DAY Thurs, Feb14 Featuring: Novillero, Telepathic Butterflies, Old Folks Home. Doors at 9 p.m. @ LO Pub - 330 Kennedy St. WRAP PARTY Fri, Feb 15 Featuring: Dance Party w/ DJ Rob Vilar, DJ Ted Turner at 5 p.m. @ Platform Gallery. * Film Screening: “The Fall” at 9 p.m. @ Cinemateque - Main floor, 100 Arthur St. Fri, Feb 8 at the Pyramid Cabaret, 176 Fort St. Doors at 8, show at 9. Featuring performances by Patrick Alexander and the F-Holes, Universe, Perse, the U of M Engineer’s Jazz Band, and Malcolm’s X. All proceeds go to the Spence Neighborhood Association Kid’s Community Garden. Tickets $6 in advance, available at the UWSA Infobooth, Music Trader, Organic Planet, and Mondragon Bookstore and Coffee House. $8 at the door. Call 786-9189 for more info. THE RIPPERZ with The Furr and Codename: The Sharks! Fri, Feb 8 at The Cavern 112 Osborne. Doors 10 p.m. $3. LA RIOTS w/ The Nutty Klub DJs. Feb 8 at The Royal Albert Arms Hotel, 48 Albert St. $10 at www.ticketworkshop.com FILM Metalstorm: The Scandinavian Metal Wars Feb 2 & 3 at Cinematheque MOVIE NIGHT FUNDRAISER FOR THE BIKE DUMP PRESENTS Tues, Feb 5 at The Rocker - 3rd floor, 91 Albert St. $6, Doors open @ 7 p.m. Movies start @ 7:45. Featuring bike theme reels, door prize, silent auction, refreshments. AN EVENING WITH MARTYN JOSEPH Thurs, Jan 31 at the West End Cultural Centre. Doors 7:15 p.m. Show 8 p.m. Tickets $17 in advance @ the WECC & Ticketmaster BLUE SKY ADDICTS with the Liptonians, The Furr and Codename: The Sharks! Fri, Feb 1 at The Church Basement, 230 Provencher Blvd. Doors 7, show 7:30. Tickets $8 at door. All-Ages. DOWN TOWN COFFEE GROUND COMMUNITY COFFEE HOUSE Feb 4 at the Red Road Lodge, 631 Main St. (back entrance). Headliner Paegan Sunflowers with special guests Ryelee. Opening act TBA. Doors 6:45 p.m. Show 7:30. Open mic from 8 to 9. $6 suggested donation. For info visit www.mysweetspotproductions.com or call 480-8565. ECOECLECTICA! The U of W EcoMAFIA’s annual fundraising concert. theatre & dance MAMETFEST Until Feb 10. Explore the world of American playwright David Mamet through stage plays, film screenings, readings and the MametFest lecture series. For a complete list of festival offerings, please visit www.mametfest.com. To buy a MametPass or to obtain a free program, please call the MTC Box Office at 942-6537. comedy I LOVE ME (ON THE INSIDE) Two evenings of mature romantic fundraising comedy. Thurs, Feb 14 & Fri, Feb 15 at 8 p.m. Gas Station Theatre - 445 River Ave. Featuring Stephen Eric McIntyre’s Improv Experience, Sketch comedy by the Rep Company, live music with Sunny & Bunny. Tickets $8 available in advance or at the door. Box office & bar open at 7 p.m. Reservations suggested & accepted at 284-9477. CONCERTS Jan 31 at the WECC KAPATID IN-SCHOOL MENTORSHIP PROGRAM Partnering university students with Filipino new comer high school students as in-school mentors. Weekly Mon-Thurs from 4-5 p.m. Learn how to become eligible for the UWFSA Bursary. To volunteer email the University of Winnipeg Filipino Students’ Association at uw_fsa@yahoo.ca for more information. UNITER’S TOP 5 »AROUND TOWN Martyn Joseph MAKE YOURSELF HEARD AT THE PEER SUPPORT COFFEE HOUSE! Peer Support is teaming up with Soma Café to host a coffee house in support of the University of Winnipeg food bank. We are looking for volunteer acts of all kinds, such as band performances, poetry readings, skits and stand up comedy. This is a great opportunity to make yourself heard by your fellow students. For more information, drop by our office, ORM13. You can also contact us at 786-9867 and uofwpeersupport@ gmail.com For ticket info, visit www.ckuw.ca. 18 The Uniter ACROSS THE BOARD: AN NFB FILM SERIES Feb 6: Aboriginal NFB, presented by Kathleen Buddle-Crowe at the Carol Shields Auditorium in the Millennium Library. Feb 13: Francophone NFB, presented by Micheline Marseau at the St Boniface Library, 100-131 boul. Provencher. Films begin at 7 p.m. Admission is free and no registration is required. CAMERA-FREE FILM AND VIDEO Presented by Video Pool Media Arts Centre. Wed, Feb 13 at The Cinematheque Theatre, 100 Arthur St. Admission is free. This one-night only screening begins at 7:30 p.m. and will be followed by a Q&A session, and reception at Platform Gallery. CINEMATHEQUE 100 Arthur St. 925-3457 Glengarry Glenross (presented with Mametfest) showing Feb 1 at 7 p.m. & Feb 2 at 2 p.m. * Feb 2-7: Terror’s Advocate, 7 p.m. (& Feb 1 at 9:30 p.m.) * Feb 2-3: Metalstorm: The Scandinavian Metal Wars, 9:30 p.m. * Feb 4-7: Metric Live at Metropolis, 9 p.m. GLOBE CINEMA Portage Place Now playing: Juno, The Kite Runner, There Will Be Blood. Call 69-GLOBE for details. PARK THEATRE 698 Osborne St. 478-7275 Feb 3: Superbowl XLII FROM RASCALS WITH LOVE An evening of clean improvisational comedy presented by the Crosseyed Rascals. Fri, Feb 15, 7:30 p.m. at PTE’s Colin Jackson Studio (3rd floor, Portage Place). Tickets are $10, or $8 in advance Advance tickets are available at: Hull’s Family Bookstore (372 Graham Ave) - 947-1365, or by contacting rascaltickets@gmail.com. For more information about the show or the troupe call 226-4446 or visit www.crosseyed.ca. SOAP SCUM PRODUCTIONS presents Space Quest, an improvised space comedy on Mondays at the Park Theater 698 Osborne St. at 8 p.m. Tickets are $5 and available at the door. literary PRAIRIE FIRE PRESS Celebrates Canadian writing with a Winter Wordfest. Wed, Feb 6 that includes readings by visiting writers Mark Abley and Kari Strutt who are joined by local writer Andrea von Wichert. Event will take place at McNally Robinson Booksellers’ Grant Park location (travel alcove). Reading starts at 7:00 p.m. and is free to the public. MCNALLY ROBINSON GRANT PARK Jan 31: Lois C. Walters, launching Crevasses of the Mind, 7 p.m. and Jeanne Randolph discussion & signing Ethics of Luxury, 7:30 p.m. * Feb 2: Doreen Millichamp, reading & signing Picking Worms, 10:30 a.m. * Feb 4: Dracc Dreque, launching Iliarjuk; An Inuit Memoir, 8 p.m. * Feb 5: Launching The 2008 Prairie Garden Featuring Roses with The Prairie Garden Committee and editor Richard Denesiuk, 8 p.m. * Feb 6: Prairie Fire Winter Wordfest with Mark Abley, Andrea von Wichert & Kari Strutt, 7 p.m. MONDRAGON BOOKSTORE & COFFEEHOUSE 91a Albert St. Gary Kins- » CONTINUED Listings Coordinator: Kristine Askholm E-mail: Listings@uniter.ca Phone: 786-9497 Fax: 783-7080 »AROUND TOWN (CON’T) man speaking on the title Queer Liberation! From Revolution to Assimilation? Or How to get Back to our Radical Roots. Fri, Feb 8 at 7 p.m. AUTHOR H. NIGEL THOMAS will be touring across Canada for his acclaimed new novel Return to Arcadia, making two stops in Winnipeg. Mon, Feb 11, 8 p.m. at McNally Robinson Grant Park, 1120 Grant Ave - Feature reading and discussion. And Tues, Feb 12, 6 p.m. at the Caribbean Council of Manitoba, 1100 Fife St - Meet the author celebration evening; all welcome. ENTER THE ANNUAL CV2 2-DAY POEM CONTEST Test your poetic prowess! Now in its sixth year, Contemporary Verse 2: The Canadian Journal of Poetry and Critical Writing is proud to offer the international 2-Day Poem Contest. Registration is $10 and takes place online at www. contemporaryverse2.ca. Deadline is March 28. For more information contact Clarise Foster 949-1365 or contestsatCV2@mts.net. CANDOR SHOP 390-K Provencher Blvd. Feb 5: Speaking Crow - Open Mic Poetry Series Featuring Rosanna Deerchild. 8 p.m. Free Admission. * Fri, Feb 8: Flying Fox and the Hunter Gatherers with guest, 8 p.m. Admission: $5 THE EDGE ARTIST VILLAGE & GALLERY 611 Main St. 947-2992. Community-driven non-profit organization for the arts. GRAFFITI GALLERY 109 Higgins 667-9960. Not-for-profit community youth art centre. CAVERN 112 Osborne St. Downstairs Jan 31: Route 59 * Every Wednesday: Big Dave Mclean LO PUB 330 Kennedy St. Feb 2: The Jogging Club feat. ex-Good Form DJs Rob Vilar and Leigh Alfred MCNALLY ROBINSON GRANT PARK Feb 1: Keely Xavier & Terry Youmans * Feb 2: Cruithne. Shows at 8 p.m. REGAL BEAGLE 331 Smith St. Feb 1 & 2: Kathy Kennedy * Every Wed at 9 p.m.: The Marlborough Men. * Every Thurs at 9 p.m.: Shandra and Jason SHANNON’S IRISH PUB 175 Carlton St. Jan 31: Jodie Borle WEST END CULTURAL CENTRE 586 Ellice Ave Feb 2: Lovechild Monarchy w/ guests * Feb 8: Sonata Arctica w/ Visions of Atlantis OUTWORKS GALLERY 290 McDermot Ave 949-0274 Aphrodesia: a night of art-action and belly dance featuring Shifra Soria Tobiasch and the Shanti Belly Dance Troupe. Feb 8, 7:30 p.m. A 2$ donation per person is requested for the dancers. Art on exhibition remains open to the public Feb 9 to 23. Hours: Thurs-Sat 12 – 4 p.m. THE ZOO Osborne Village Inn 160 Osborne St. Jan 31: The Papsmears, Ash Koley, with guests * Feb 1: Lucid, Chaos Forge, Suiciety, Wear Your Wounds * Feb 2: “The Best of Band Quest” Featuring Jarhead, Dry Run, Odin’s Templar, Menopause URBAN SHAMAN 203-290 McDermot Ave 94-2674 Until March 1: Christi Belcourt - Off The Map: Perspective of Land, Water and Metis People * Jason Baerg - The Plain Truth. Hours: Tues-Fri 11-5, Sat 12-5. WINNIPEG ART GALLERY 300 Memorial Blvd. 789-1760 Edward Burtynsky: In the Pursuit of Progress. Internationally acclaimed photographer Edward Burtynsky documents the toll our “want it all” society is taking on the environment. * Until Feb 10: PostSecret by Frank Warren. * Until Mar 2: 18 Illuminations: Contemporary Art and Light. * Until Mar 9: Inuit Games and Into the Collection: Tony Tascona. bars, cafes & venues ACADEMY FOOR DRINKS MUSIC 437 Stradbrook Jan 31: The Ruffigans and Pure Karma Crossword #17 THE INTERNATIONAL CENTRE NEEDS VOLUNTEERS To work with newcomer children and youth in the following programs: 1. Sports Club - Tuesdays from 6-8 pm @ Sacre-Coeur; 2. After School Education (ESL) – Wednesdays from 5-7pm @ 511 Ellice Ave; 3. Youth Empowerment (cooking/art classes) – Fridays from 5-7:30pm @ Int. Centre; 4. Youth Leadership Training (games, volunteer/job skills) – Saturdays (Jan 19-Feb 23) from 1-5pm @ U of W. For more info, contact Si il: siilp@ international-centre.ca or 943-9158 ext. 285. To apply contact Marsha: marshap@internal-centre.ca or 943-9158 ext. 260. The International Centre is located at 406 Edmonton St. NEEDS CENTRE FOR WAR AFFECTED FAMILIES is looking for volunteers to work with immigrant and refugee children and youth. The Needs Centre provides accessible services and programs to children/ youth from the ages 5-18. Programming includes arts, crafts, music, computer skills, employment, educational and EAL activities. For more information, contact Jodi Alderson, Volunteer Coordinator at 940-1265 or email volunteers@needsinc.ca. community events BE A VOLUNTEER LITERACY TUTOR WITH FRONTIER COLLEGE! Work with children, youth and adults in schools and community centres around the University of Winnipeg. The commitment is one hour per week through the school year. Call 253-7993 or email cgartside@ frontiercollege.ca for more information. Literacy is an essential skill in today’s world. At Frontier College, we believe it’s a fundamental right. 42% of adult Canadians have trouble with everyday tasks that involve reading. Through a network of thousands of volunteers, Frontier College is helping people to realize their potential and seize the opportunities that come their way. See www.frontiercollege.ca. DINE ABOUT WINNIPEG Feb 3-14. Showcasing around 30 restaurants throughout the city, with each location having a set, three-course menu at a fixed price of $15, $25, or $35. The head chef will create an exquisite menu for the evening, which will feature an appetizer, entrée and dessert. Many restaurants feature Manitoba products. Full list of participating restaurants and menus, as well as reservations at www. ciaowinnipeg.com. CNIB EYE ON THE ARTS BENEFIT AUCTION 2008 Thurs, Mar 20 at the Winnipeg Convention Centre. Tickets $25, dinner included. Proceeds support CNIB’s programs and services for Manitobans with vision loss. For tickets, to preview the art, or for more information about the Auction, please visit www.cnib.ca/eyeonthearts Crossword puzzles provided by www.BestCrosswords.com. Used with permission. 14- Mea ___ 15- Cart for heavy loads 16- Old 17- Defense covering 18- Dreadful 19- Hindu music SEE HOW FAR YOU CAN GO WITH TEAM DIABETES CANADA Experience an Irish Adventure with the Dublin City Marathon or Enjoy the 36th Aloha Marathon (42K and 10K) in Scenic Honolulu! Come and join a free information session to learn more about Team Diabetes Canada. Sessions will be held on Tues, Feb 19 and Tues, Mar 18 at 6 p.m. at 200-310 Broadway. Please R.S.V.P. by contacting Donna Paterson at 925-3800, ext. 236 or email donna.paterson@diabetes.ca. ROYAL ALBERT 48 Albert St. Feb 1: Nutty Klub * Feb 2: The Gorgon CD Release GALLERY LACOSSE 169 Lilac St. 284-0726. New work by gallery artists. Hours: Tues-Fri 11-6, Sat 10-5. 1- Sudden convulsion 6- Assistant, particularly to heads of state 10- Ruin WANTED: EDITORS FOR UNDERGRADUATE RESEARCH JOURNAL IN THE ARTS To help launch new and upcoming undergraduate research journal. Responsibilities: drafting the journal’s mandate, establishing the duties of editorial and advisory boards, and applying for funding. Positions are unpaid, but successful applicants will gain experience in establishing and running a professional, peer-reviewed academic journal, as well as developing writing skills and presenting funding proposals. Students considering applying to graduate or professional schools are encouraged to apply. Requirements: at least 60 credit hours towards a degree in Arts; interpersonal skills, self-motivation, ability to meet strict deadlines considered assets. Submit CVs to John Kennett at jkennett@ iam.uwinnipeg.ca by Feb 21. MCNALLY ROBINSON PORTAGE PLACE Feb 1: Those 2 Guys, 6:30 p.m. KEEPSAKES GALLERY 264 McDermot Ave 257-0374 Non-profit art gallery. Handmade art, pottery, candles, cards, paintings, photography. 20- Rouse to action 22- Nonmetallic element 24- Spread out for drying 26- Alarms 27- Confession of sin 31- Negative vote Sudoku #17 19 volunteer opportunities KING’S HEAD PUB 100 King St. Every Sunday: All the Kings Men TIMES CHANGED HIGH AND LONESOME CLUB 234 Main St. Jan 31: Michael Peters, Vanessa Kuzina, Alison Degroot, Kerri Woelke * Feb 1 & 2: The Wind-ups, English Mocassins * Jam hosted by Big Dave Mclean every Sunday night. January 31, 2008 FREE INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS CLASS An opportunity to meet with other students and Canadian friends while learning English and the Bible. Elim Chapel 546 Portage Ave at Spence St. (enter from rear parking lot) Sundays noon-1:30 p.m. For information call Val & Veda Chacko 257-1670. PYRAMID CABARET 176 Fort St. Feb 4: Jaegermeister Unplugged with Silverstein, Protest the Hero and Ill Scarlett ACEARTINC 2nd floor, 290 McDermot Ave 944-9763. Vanishing Point, Jarod Charzewski & Colleen Ludwig. Until Feb 23. Gallery hours: TuesSat 12-5. The Uniter LISTINGS @ uniter.ca OZZY’S 160 Osborne Downstairs Feb 2: Tinnitus, Double Trouble, Devoid, Domenica * Feb 7: Winter Dance Party! Presented by ReadyMix, featuring DJ Co-op & DJ Hunnicutt galleries ACROSS contact: uniter @ uniter.ca Want to submit your listing to Uniter Listings? Email your listings to listings@uniter.ca Deadline for submissions is Wednesday, eight days before the issue you’d like your listing to first appear in. The Uniter publishes on Thursdays, 25 times a year. Last Issue Puzzle Solutions on Page 20 Sudoku provided by www.krazydad.com. Used with permission. 32- Perfect, something to aspire to 33- Quotes 36- Understand 39- Canvas shelter used on camping trips 40- Spanish Mister 41- The closest one to us is the sun 42- Hill insect 43- Hindu social class 44- Lion sounds 45- Norse goddess 46- Trickle 48- Grownups 51- Yelp 52- Grifter 54- Flower parts 59- Dutch name of The Hague 60- Mid-month times 62- Pertaining to birth 63- Sea-going eagle 64- Walking stick 65- Engage in histrionics 66- Letter opener 67- Gnarl 68- Like some stadiums; DOWN 1- Strike breaker 2- Free from contamination 3- Donations to the poor 4- Small blemish 5- Pertaining to marriage 6- Make another point 7- Coloured part of the eye 8- Ventures 9- Cosmetic applied to the eyelids 10- Fred Flintstone’s best friend 11- Once more 12- Old Ethiopian emperor 13- Dutch cheese, wrapped in red wax 21- Gun, as an engine 23- Historical chapters 25- Gambler 27- Middle Eastern bread 28- Biblical garden 29- Small change 30- Jazzman 34- Tavern 35- Sycophant 36- Thrust with a knife 37- British nobleman 38- Scottish Gaelic 40- Block of salt 41- Weep 43- South African grassland 44- Matured 45- Desire for food 47- Dr. Dre’s genre 48- Alert 49- Roman goddess of the moon 50- Four-door 52- Storage shelter 53- “All The Way To ___”, song by REM 55- ___ -shanter (Scottish cap) 56- Molecular component 57- Overdue 58- Dog-powered snow vehicle 61- Become firm; January 31, 2008 20 The Uniter contact: uniter @ uniter.ca LISTINGS @ uniter.ca AWARDS & FINANCIAL AID UNIVERSITY OF WINNIPEG INTERNAL AWARDS: UNIVERSITY OF WINNIPEG GENERAL BURSARY APPLICATIONS General Bursary Application Forms are now in the Awards office located in Graham Hall or at Student Central in Centennial Hall. Bursaries are small, supplementary financial assistance awards, normally $300 - $750 in value. In order to be considered, you must prove financial need and you must be making satisfactory academic progress (i.e. maintaining a “C” average). Because funds are limited, not everyone who qualifies will receive a bursary. These University of Winnipeg bursaries are available to our students in any year of their program. Deadline date: January 31, 2008. UNIVERSITY OF WINNIPEG GRADUATE & PROFESSIONAL STUDIES APPLICATION EXPENSES BURSARY This bursary assists students with respect to the high costs associated with applying to Graduate and Professional Schools. Applicants must meet the following criteria: Have a minimum GPA of 3.55 in the previous academic year. • Be registered in the final year of an honours or four-year degree program in Arts or Science, or in the final year of the Integrated B.Ed program. • Have documented financial need: a Canada Student Loan/Provincial Loan or a Student line of credit at a banking institution. • Full-time and part-time students may apply. Applications are available in the Awards office located in Student Services and will be accepted beginning November 15, 2007. Students may apply any time during the Fall/ Winter academic year, providing that funding is available for this bursary. Applications will be evaluated on a first come, first serve basis. EXTERNAL AWARDS: AUCC AWARDS The Association of Universities and Colleges of Canada provides 150 scholarship programs on behalf of the Federal Government, domestic and foreign agencies, and private sector companies. Check out website www. aucc.ca Look under the heading Scholarships open to the public. Deadlines: various. THE DATATEL SCHOLARS FOUNDATION SCHOLARSHIPS The University of Winnipeg is a new Datatel client institution and as such, Datatel is offering unique scholarships ranging in value from $1,000 to $2,500 to students from our institution. Last Issue Puzzle Solutions: Want to submit your listing to Uniter Listings? Email your listings to listings@uniter.ca Deadline for submissions is Wednesday, eight days before the issue you’d like your listing to first appear in. The Uniter publishes on Thursdays, 25 times a year. The Awards and Financial Aid staff of the University of Winnipeg provides our student body with current information on award opportunities. This information is updated weekly. Datatel Scholars Foundation Scholarships for outstanding students currently attending eligible Datatel client institutions. Returning Student scholarships - for outstanding students currently attending eligible Datatel client institutions, who have returned to higher education after an absence of five years or more. Nancy Goodhue Lynch scholarships - for outstanding undergraduate students majoring in Information Technology related curriculum programs at eligible Datatel client institutions. Apply online at www.datatel.com. Deadline: January 31, 2008. TOM LONGBOAT AWARDS Tom Longboat was one of the most celebrated and accomplished athletes in Canadian history. A member of the Onondaga Nation who resided in Six nations of the Grand River, Tom Longboat was one of the most gifted long distance runners of his time. The Aboriginal Sports Circle annually recognizes the achievements of gifted Aboriginal athletes. Every year, the top male and female Aboriginal athletes from each province/ territory are selected for the Tom Longboat Regional Awards. The regional recipients automatically advance as nominees for the prestigious National Award that is presented to the most outstanding male and female Aboriginal Athlete in Canada. Nominations are invited from all levels of sport. To be eligible athletes must meet the following criteria: • Must be of Aboriginal descent • Must have amateur status in the sport which they are nominated • Must be for athletic achievements within the calendar year • Must submit a completed nomination form online or by mail before the annual deadline (to the appropriate Provincial/Territorial Aboriginal Sport Body or Aboriginal Sport Circle). For more information go online at: http:// www.aboriginalsportcircle.ca/main/tomlongboatawards.html Deadline: January 31, 2008 CANADIAN HARD OF HEARING ASSOCIATION The purpose of these awards are to offer financial assistance and recognition to hard of hearing and deafened students registered in a full time program at a recognized Canadian college or university, in any area of study, with the ultimate goal of obtaining a diploma or degree. Applicants are requested to read the criteria for eligibility and to provide all the information required to complete the application. Applications are available either in the U of W Awards Office located in Graham Hall, or on-line at http://www.chha. ca/chha/scholarships-index.php Deadline: January 31, 2008. CANADIAN NORTHERN STUDIES TRUST AWARDS Awards are available to undergraduate students who are interested in pursuing studies in the northern regions of Canada including NWT, Nunavut, Yukon and the Provincial North. Awards are also available for those students pursuing masters or doctoral degrees in northern studies. Application information can be found on-line at http://www.acuns. ca/ Deadline: January 31, 2008. The Killam Fellowship Program The Killam Fellowship Program is a scholarship program that allows undergraduate students from accredited degree granting colleges and universities to participate in a bi-national residential exchange program between Canada and the United States of America. Scholarship recipients spend either one semester or a full academic year as an exchange student in the other country. The benefits of this award include: US $10,000 for the full academic year, or US $5,000 for one semester, $500 in the host country’s denomination for Health Insurance Allowance, and $1,000 in host country’s denomination for in-country travel allowance. To be eligible you must be a full-time undergraduate student in good standing, in any field of study, have citizenship in the home country, have superior academic achievement, be proficient in English, and have permission from your home university. For more information or to apply online go to http://www.killamfellowships.com/ Deadline: Extended to February 29, 2008 (for awards to be taken up during the 2008-2009 academic year). MARITIME DAIRY INDUSTRY SCHOLARSHIP Students who have completed at least two years of post-secondary education and are currently enrolled in a program that has application to the dairy industry are eligible to make application for this scholarship. Two scholarships of $2,000 will be awarded. For more information email mroy@dfc-plc.ca Applications are available on-line at http:// www.dairygoodness.ca/ Deadline: January 31, 2008. RBC ABORIGINAL STUDENT AWARDS PROGRAM Each year, eight students will receive $4,000 annually for their education expenses, to a maximum of four years at university or two years at college, in disciplines related (but not restricted) to the financial services industry. If you are a Status Indian, Non-status Indian, Inuit or Metis, you may apply for this award provided you meet the following qualifications: you are a permanent residence/ citizen of Canada, can provide proof of acceptance to an accredited post-secondary institution, in a discipline relevant to the banking industry (e.g. business, economics, computer science) or other industry not relevant to banking, a full-time student, and are in need of financial assistance. Applications are available either in the U of W Awards Office located in Graham Hall, or on-line at http://www.rbc.com/uniquecareers/campus/ aboriginal-student-awards.html Deadline: January 31, 2008. SOROPTIMIST FOUNDATION OF CANADA Are offering its Grants for Women Awards for women enrolled in a graduate program of studies at Canadian universities. The aim is to assist women in financial-need to complete their studies for careers in a field that will improve the quality of women’s lives. Application forms for 2008 are available on-line at http://www.soroptimistfoundation.ca/ Deadline: January 31, 2008. KIN CANADA BURSARIES Awards are available to Canadian citizens or landed immigrants who plan to register as a full-time student in September of the upcoming school year at a recognized university, community college, technical institute or other post-secondary institution for advanced learning. $1,000 scholarships will be awarded to students who demonstrate high ideals and qualities of citizenship. Applications should be submitted to a Kinsmen, Kinette or Kin Club nearest your permanent residence by February 1st. Applications are available either in the U of W Awards Office located in Graham Hall, or on-line at http:// www.bursary.ca/ Deadline: February 1, 2008. MACKENZIE KING SCHOLARSHIP PROGRAM prizes, and forty prizes of $500. For more information go to http://www.operationdialogue.com/e/tac/s.html The next Talk About Canada! Scholarship Quiz will be online 10:00 EST January 14, 2008 to 10:00 EST February 25, 2008. EXPORT DEVELOPMENT CANADA (EDC) EDC is a Crown corporation with a mandate to develop Canada’s capacity to engage in international trade. Through our Education and Youth Employment Strategy, EDC helps build the capacity of the next generation of business leaders by awarding scholarships to students with a demonstrated interest in international business. The award includes: a $3,000 scholarship awarded in the spring 2008, as well as the possibility of a four-month work term with mentoring from leading experts at EDC, worth approximately $10,000. Work terms will be available for summer 2008. To be eligible you must be: • A Canadian Citizen or Permanent Resident of Canada • Currently enrolled in full-time studies at a Canadian university • In second or third year of an undergraduate program • Enrolled in studies in international business, economics, or combined business with sustainable management or environmental studies • Returning to full-time undergraduate studies in the 2008-2009 academic year; and have an excellent academic record. Apply on-line at http://www.edc.ca/english/ student_scholarships.htm?cid=red1528 Deadline: February 4th, 2008. THE MANITOBA LEGISLATIVE ASSEMBLY INTERNSHIP PROGRAM Established in 1985 by the Manitoba Legislative Assembly, the internship program is intended to serve three broad purposes. The program provides graduates of Manitoba’s universities or graduates of other universities who are permanent residents of Manitoba with an opportunity to experience firsthand the legislative process within the Manitoba Legislature. In addition to being directly involved with the legislative process, the Interns participate in a series of seminars dealing with all aspects of the governmental process. The program includes a 10-month internship from September through June, a bi-weekly salary of $1,050.43, study tours to Ottawa and Minnesota to meet political leaders, as well as opportunities to participate in seminars with Manitoba political, business and cultural leaders. You will also have an opportunity to produce a public academic paper and a graduate level course credit is possible. Applicants should: • Have a university degree with academic excellence in any discipline by the time of the start of the internship year, • Have facility in written and oral communication in English; knowledge of written and spoken French will be considered a strong asset, • Show ability to conduct independent research and write reports. Applicants invited for interview will be asked to do a short written assignment following the interview, • Demonstrate evidence of involvement in extracurricular activities. The Open Scholarship is available to graduates of Canadian universities who pursue graduate study in any discipline, in Canada or elsewhere. One Open Scholarship is awarded each year. The value has recently been about $10,000 but it is subject to change. Applications are available either in the U of W Awards Office located in Graham Hall, or on-line at http://www.manitoba.ca/legislature/ info/internship The Traveling Scholarship is available to graduates of Canadian universities who pursue graduate study in the United States or the United Kingdom in the areas of international relations or industrial relations. Recently four scholarships of $11,000 each have been awarded annually, but the number and the amount are subject to change. UNIVERSITY OF MANITOBA GRADUATE FELLOWSHIPS Applications are available either in the U of W Awards Office located in Graham Hall, or on-line at www.mkingscholarships.ca Deadline: February 1, 2008. THE TALK ABOUT CANADA SCHOLARSHIP QUIZ The Talk About Canada! Scholarship Quiz is a national contest for students who are citizens or permanent residents of Canada who wish to earn scholarship money for tuition. The quiz has fifty-one multiple-choice questions on Canadian subjects. Any student who answers fifty questions correctly will be included in the draw for scholarships. There will be one $5,000 prize, twenty $1,000 Deadline: February 14, 2008. The faculty of Graduate Studies offers $2.2M in new and continuing University of Manitoba Graduate Fellowships (UMFG) each year to meritorious students for full-time and/ or research (which includes works that are considered creative endeavors) leading to a graduate degree. The value for a 12-month period will be $16,000 for a Ph.D. and $12,000 toward a Masters. Awards are made on the basis of academic excellence (a minimum GPA of 3.75 in the last two years of full-time study at a recognized university); and are open to students who will be registered as full-time graduate students (Masters or Ph.D.) at the University of Manitoba regardless of nationality or discipline during tenure of the award. Canadian citizens and permanent residents are encouraged to apply to CIHR, NSERC and SSHRC scholarships, if they are eligible for funding from these research councils. Applications are available either in the U of W Awards Office located in Graham Hall, or on-line at http://umanitoba.ca/faculties/ graduate_studies/funding/112.htm Deadline: February 22, 2008 MANITOBA CITIZEN’S BURSARY FUND FOR NATIVE PEOPLES Provided by the Kiwanis Club of Winnipeg Foundation Inc., the bursary is open to students currently enrolled at the Universities of Winnipeg, Brandon, or Manitoba. The bursary fund was designed to help offset the costs of financial problems that may arise after entering University and offer awards ranging from $175 and $450. Preference is given to Native students (Indian, Metis and Inuit) who demonstrate financial need and maintain satisfactory grades to retain their eligibility. Points will also be given to students participating in extra-curricular activities. Applications are available at the U of W Awards Office located in Graham Hall Deadline: February 29, 2008 LEO J. KRYSA FAMILY UNDERGRADUATE SCHOLARSHIP The Krysa Undergraduate scholarship (up to $3,500), non-renewable, is awarded annually to a student in the faculty of Arts or Education about to enter the final year of study in pursuit of an undergraduate degree. The applicant’s programs must emphasize Ukrainian and/or Ukrainian-Canadian studies, through a combination of Ukrainian and East European or Canadian courses in one of the above areas. The scholarship is for an eight-month period of study at any Canadian university. Candidates must be Canadian citizens or permanent residents of Canada at the time of application. Applications are available either in the U of W Awards Office located in Graham Hall, or on-line at http:// www.cius.ca/ Deadline: March 1, 2008 MANITOBA STUDENT AID PROGRAM (MSAP) DID YOU KNOW... You can still apply for a 2007/2008 government student loan online at website www.manitobastudentaid.ca DID YOU KNOW... You can check the status of your student aid application, find out what documentation is still outstanding, and update your address information and much more on line? Go to www.manitobastudentaid.ca My SAO to log into your existing account. DID YOU KNOW… If you are a student who has had past Government Student Loans and you are currently a full-time student, please fill out a Schedule 2 document to remain in non-payment status. Please come to Student Services in Graham hall, where front counter staff can help you with this form. Missing Information. If any documentation requested by the MSAP, such as summer income verification, has not yet been submitted, electronic confirmation of your loan document will not occur and your loan funds will not be in place at the beginning of the Winter Term. Revision to your needs assessment. You should be aware that new information, such as verification of your summer income, may increase or decrease your MSAP needs assessment and the resulting loan amounts you are eligible to receive. Similarly, if your current course load is different from that on your Notice of Assistance letter, the amount of loan you are eligible to receive may change. DID YOU KNOW... Manitoba Student Aid staff is on campus on Fridays from 1 - 4p.m. To set up an appointment time, phone 786-9458 or 786-9984 The Awards and Financial Aid staff at the University of Winnipeg will continue to keep you informed of available awards, scholarships and bursary opportunities. Financial Aid Websites Canlearn Site www.canlearn.ca Manitoba Student Aid Program www. manitobastudentaid.ca Surfing for dollars? Try these two websites for more award opportunities. www.studentawards.com www.scholarshipscanada.com contact: uniter @ uniter.ca The Uniter January 31, November 1, 2008 2007 SPORTS SECTION Sports 21 Sports Editor: Kalen Qually E-mail: sports@uniter.ca Weekend matches indicative of future? Michael Collins Volunteer staff O n Friday night at the Duckworth centre, Wesmen fans got a preview of what the men’s basketball season could potentially look like next year. Winnipeg did manage to avenge their Friday night loss to the Regina Cougars, 79–67, with a commanding 79-54 win of their own on Saturday night. However, with Erfan Nasajpour leading the way (as per usual) with a 31-point effort in the win, some may start to wonder what the future holds for the Wesmen without him? After a strong start in Friday’s match-up, it looked like the Wesmen would give the Cougars a real game, if not win themselves. The first quarter ended with Winnipeg down by four, matching Regina on both the offensive and defensive fronts. How- ever, two clutch three-point shots by Regina guards left a demoralised Winnipeg team down by 10 at the half. After a tumultuous third quarter that included some calls by the referees that could generously be labelled as “questionable,” Regina had expanded their lead to 56-42. The fourth quarter was the end of the possibility of a Winnipeg victory, as you could almost see the wind flying out of the sails of players and coaches alike on the Winnipeg bench. Younger players looked to the experienced main scorers on the team— players like Erfan Nasajpour, Matt Opalko, and Dan Shynkaryk—to step up, score some points and cause some turnovers. Unfortunately that reassurance never came. The game finished with the Cougars up by 12. This match showed what next year’s season could be like for the Erfan lays up for two of his 31 points in the Wesmen’s 79-67 win over the Regina Cougars. TREVOR HAGAN Wesmen answer back after Friday night mauling in men’s basketball men’s basketball team once Opalko, Shynkaryk, and Nasajpour have left the squad. Who will step up and be a team leader next year? How will the Wesmen remain competitive? Assistant coach Steve Tackie had some theories. “There will be many more highlights to come next year, with the development of some young individuals, such as Ben Kingdon and Peter Lomoro,” he said. “These players are starting to blossom with experience, and other guys like Mike Paisley, Cam Hornby, Mike James, and James Horasko are really stepping up for the team.” In fact, when these players show up to play alongside the experience of the squad, we see a truly formidable Wesmen team. Against the powerful Victoria Vikes on Nov. 17, most of the team worked together to defeat a fearsome opponent. While it was true that Nasajpour dropped 41 points that game, it was still a seasonal highlight for the Wesmen because of the contribution of the rest of the team, and reminded all the fans that even without Nasajpour, the Wesmen are a squad filled with talented players. Even with the experience leaving the organization next year, next season should fulfill all our expectations as much as this season has. November31,1,2008 January 2007 22 The Uniter contact: uniter @ uniter.ca SECTION SPORTS Building towards the future Josh Boulding Volunteer staff A fter losing one of the best players they had seen in the last decade to eligibility, the Wesmen women’s basketball team is dealing with the struggles of rebuilding. A pair of losses to the visiting Regina Cougars on Jan. 25 and 26 has left the team barely holding on to their second place position in their division of the Canada West Conference. “Tonight definitely was not a disappointment,” said head coach Tanya McKay. “We’re gritting [the games] out and we’re learning.” Friday night’s game against the Cougars, the 17th of their regular season, showed promise early on. The Wesmen held on until the half, where they led by two hard-won points. Despite winning the defensive battle in the first half, the Wesmen could not keep up on offence in the end of the second half. The divisionleading Cougars took over possession of the game with 17 unanswered points in the third, bringing their lead to 47-31 near the end of that quarter. Regina held on despite the Wesmen’s best efforts, maintaining and extending their lead over the last quarter of play. The Wesmen dropped to 8-9 with the 50-72 loss. Saturday night was all right for the battle, at least in the first half of play. Again, a defensive decision on the court worked for both teams until the Wesmen broke into a run, scoring enough to get to 30 points over the Cougars’ 23 at the half. Unfortunately, the Wesmen peaked right after the second half with two three-point shots, leaving the Cougars to run a rampant 19 points on the board. The Wesmen were only able to muster six points in response. A final 12 minutes left the Wesmen down 55-65 as the clock ticked to zero, ending the weekend for the women’s team and slipping them to 8-10 this season, and 0-4 against Regina’s veteran team. “We’re almost there,” said McKay. “[This season] has been a learning curve.” The team has come a long way since they started the season in September. The loss of veteran point guard Catie Gooch has left the Wesmen in a difficult position. Rookie Mackenzie Prasek stepped up, starting Saturday night’s game and making two rebounds. Randie Gibson led the Wesmen with 17 points on Saturday night while Alex MacIver led on Friday with 11 points. Jessica Stromberg pulled in 11 rebounds on Friday and nine on Saturday. Amy Ogidan, starting guard for the Wesmen, has improved well over the course of the season. Ogidan is in contention for Rookie of the Year awards in both Canada West and the CIS. She contributed 21 points over the weekend and grabbed five rebounds. “We’re in the toughest conference,” said McKay. “[The team] has had to grow up very fast.” But despite having a very young team, McKay is hopeful and expectant of the future. “This is a talented young group…we expect excellence,” said McKay. “We are overachieving right now and we want to continue to overachieve.” The Wesmen have four remaining games in their regular season. Their next home game will be against the Brandon University Bobcats on Feb. 9, 2008. TREVOR HAGAN Women’s basketball team progressing ahead of schedule Dawna Wright attempts a jump shot early in the first quarter against the Cougars on Saturday night. » Super Bowl preview» Why the Patriots will win: can’t argue with an undefeated season Kalen Qually I can think of 100 reasons why the Patriots will win the Super Bowl, but there are a few that really stick out in my mind: Tom Brady is one of the greatest quarterbacks of our era and possibly the greatest quarterback of all time. Brady is 30-years old and has won three Super Bowls, two Super Bowl MVP awards, one season MVP, and holds the record for touchdown passes in a season. Brady has crushed Peyton Manning on more than one occasion, and when he dismantles the Giants, he will officially become the Manning family’s mortal enemy. Bill Belichick is an evil genius. Not an evil genius like the Riddler, Dr. Evil, or Hitler. No, Belichick is the evil genius that can’t seem to lose. The kind you can only find in sports. Belichick will make sure his team is as prepared for this game as if it were any of the other 18 Patriots’ wins this season. Have you ever heard the phrase, “Act like you’ve been there?” Well the Patriots have been. Belicheck and Brady have guided the Patriots to four Super Bowls in the past seven years, which is unprecedented in a sport dominated by “parity” and not “dynasties.” The Patriots are every bit the undefeated powerhouse they have been all season. They beat the Giants in week 17 in a game that was not as close as the 38-35 score would indicate (the Giants scored a 4th quarter touchdown in garbage time). Why the Giants will win: they’ve beaten the good, the better, and now the best Jo Villaverde I t would be far too easy to jump on the New England band wagon now if you already haven’t. How can the team making its fourth appearance at the Super Bowl in seven years possibly lose? You can just forget about the Giants’ chances in this one, right? Not so fast. Through every game in the play-offs the Giants have been heavy underdogs. No one gave them any chance to beat the Cowboys, nor the Packers, but they did it. They were able to rise way above anyone’s expectations to make it to Gridiron Gurus Super Bowl picks the sport’s biggest match-up. Tom Asselin picks: Patriots by 14 I don’t care what anyone Dan Verville picks: Giants by 3 says, if you’re in the Super Bowl, Steve Kotelniski picks: Patriots by 11 you are just as deserving as the Jo Villaverde picks: Patriots by 14 other team is to be there. EveryKalen Qually picks: Patriots by 10 one knows the Patriots belong there, but a lot of people do not think the Giants belong. They have a head coach that no one likes, a quarterback famed for inconsistency, and wait… Are we talking about the same Giants anymore? Everyone loves Tom Coughlin now as he’s finally led his team to the promised land and Eli Manning has been nothing less than spectacular as of late. Coughlin has out-coached two of the best this year in Wade Phillips and Mike McCarthy while Eli Manning has out-dueled two of the best in his category this year in Tony Romo and Brett Favre. Now they just have to do it against Bill Belichick and Tom Brady. No easy task. However, if that pass rush of Osi Umenyiora and Michael Strahan can apply that necessary pressure, maybe lightning will strike twice and they can force another three interceptions out of the Patriots offence. If this defence gives Eli Manning the chance, he will finally climb out of the shadow of some guy, Peyton, I’ve heard a little bit about. contact: uniter @ uniter.ca The Uniter January 31, 2008 SPORTS 23 Ultra Mega Take of the Week Kalen and Jo discuss the New York Giants’ chances against the New England Patriots in Super Bowl XLII: Graphic by Donavan Purdy Kalen Qually and Jo Villaverde host The Ultra Mega Sports Show every Monday at 1:30pm on CKUW 95.9 FM. You can download the show at CKUW. ca or join the Facebook group, The Ultra Mega Sports Show. Kalen: I don’t think the Gaints have that much of a chance. I’ll give this to them though; they have two things going for them. They have a lot of things going against but they have two things going for them. They’ve played the underdog better than anyone NFL this year. They’ve won ten road games this year. That’s a record. The Patriots haven’t won ten road games this year. And also, I think they’re tougher than the Patriots. Jo: Oh yeah. They had to go from the blazing hot sun in Texas. Then they go to the frozen tundra of Green Bay. These guys have fought through everything they could possibly fight through. Brock Lesnar: Hit or hype? Former WWE champ, failed NFL player to make UFC debut Kevin Chaves Volunteer staff T he newest member of the Ultimate Fighting Championship heavyweight division is Brock Lesnar. Many people know Lesnar from his years on the World Wrestling Entertainment circuit, giving men power slams and even back-flipping off the top rope--- the kind of stuff that is usually reserved for the ring and not the octagon. Lesnar’s first fight is Feb. 2 at UFC 81: “Breaking Point” in Las Vegas, and it’s against former heavyweight champion, Frank Mir. The 31-year old Lesnar is a man known for his enormous frame, walking around at 6’3” and 285290 pounds. With the maximum weight in the UFC heavyweight division 265 pounds, Lesnar has to cut 30 pounds, which makes him a monster in that weight class. A lot of people think Lesnar is biting off more than he can chew. What these critics fail to see is that he has a respectable resume and his strength may be second to none in the UFC. Lesnar proved his incredible mobility when he was an employee of the WWE. In his senior year of high school, he finished with an unbelievable 33-0 wrestling record. He is a four-time All American wrestling champion with the University of Minnesota Fighting Gophers, has come second in the 1999 NCAA National Championship and won it in 2000. After a failed attempt to become a professional football player, trying out for the Minnesota Vikings in 2005, he has decided to use his size for something else: ultimate fighting. Though he is a natural wrestler, Lesnar lacks experience in mixed martial arts (MMA), especially compared to his first UFC opponent, Frank Mir. Many UFC fighters are experts in numerous variations of fighting styles such as boxing, kickboxing, judo, tae kwon do, and wrestling, and it is hard to find a fighter who does not have a black belt in some sort of jiu-jitsu. Lesnar has had one professional MMA fight, in which he made Min Soo Kim tap out in 69 seconds via strikes to the face. Though Min Soo Kim is not a credential fighter, it was a fight that Lesnar needed for confidence purposes, and of course, to build hype. His incredible strength, wrestling skills, and ever-improving jiu-jitsu should make his opponents take him seriously. Frank Mir, on the other hand, is a jiu-jitsu black belt with 12 MMA fights (9-3), and at one time he held the UFC heavyweight championship belt. Mir is a great submission artist and is not afraid to stand up and fight anyone. No one could doubt that Lesnar has the potential to dominate in the UFC with his size, mobility and strength. There are currently two absolutely dominant heavyweight fighters in the MMA world, Randy Couture and Fedor Emelianenko. If trained properly, Lesnar has the potential to make it three. Fighters like Tim Sylvia, Cheick Congo, Antonio Rodrigo Nougeira, and Andrei Arlovski are four of many fighters that are good, but are just not in the ranks of dominating the MMA world the way Couture and Emelianenko have. Many fighters with similar expectations to Lesnar’s have failed to impress when they came to the UFC. Mirko Cro Cop and Heath Herring are two fighters who have had expectations to dominate this division but failed miserably. The advantage is that if UFC president Dana White likes a fighter, he will likely give that fighter another chance in a big fight to prove themselves. What this means is that even if Lesnar gets knocked out in the first minute, White will give Lesnar another big fight, probably in a big Pay Per View event. Fighters do get at least two chances to prove White wrong, and then you end up like Cro Cop and Herring, lost in the rankings. UFC fans have not seen such a highly anticipated heavyweight fight for awhile. This could be the most-watched heavyweight fight this year, with the exception of the Couture and Emelianenko fight that might happen this April. Lesnar brings the charismatic arrogance that a fighter needs to attract attention, but his “talk” needs to be backed up. Predicting the winner of this fight is as good as a coin flip. Come Feb. 2 at UFC 81: “Breaking Point” in Las Vegas, the world will know if Brock Lensar is a hit, or if he is just hype. COMPILED BY Kalen Qually Nuns offering Super Bowl lodging According to the sports website lioninoil. blogspot.com, fans attending the Super Bowl in Glendale, Arizona this coming weekend won’t need to spend $1,000 on a hotel or rental home during their stay. The Our Lady of Guadalupe Monastery in Phoenix is offering lodging for $250 a night during Super Bowl weekend. The monastery has even updated its facilities to include satellite TV and highspeed Internet. Possible pitch lines for the monastery: “Face it, Giants fans; you’ll need our help on Sunday,” or “God supports this gambling spectacle!” (lioninoil.blogspot.com) Let the Pasternaks play As reported in a recent news release from the Manitoba Human Rights Commission, the Manitoba Court of Queen’s Bench upheld a decision by human rights adjudicator Lynne Harrison, who found that the Manitoba High School Athletic Association’s rule barring girls from trying out for their high school boys’ hockey teams was unreasonable sex discrimination that violated The Human Rights Code. This decision stems from an appeal made by identical twins Jesse and Amy Pasternak after their school ruled them ineligible to try out for the West Kildonan Collegiate boys’ hockey team. At every level prior to high school hockey, the Pasternak twins have played hockey on boys’ hockey teams outside school. (Manitoba Human Rights Commission) NHL trade winds blowing In an age where NHL trades have become as rare as hockey moustaches (George Parros, keepin’ the dream alive), there seems to be at least a few blockbusters on the horizon. With the firing of their general manager, John Ferguson Jr., a Toronto Maple Leafs fire sale seems not only likely but inevitable. The most prominent name being mentioned is Mats Sundin, who will be a free agent at the end of the season, opening the possibility of being a “rental player” at the Feb. 26 deadline. With the Tampa Bay Lightning so far out of a playoff spot (last in the East at the All-Star break), they are expected to be sellers. Big name players likely to move before the deadline are the Lightning’s Martin St. Louis, who has been heavily scouted by the Dallas Stars, and both Dan Boyle and Vaclav Prospal, who are in their contract year. More notables to watch at the deadline are Calgary’s Alex Tanguay, Buffalo’s Brian Campbell, and Atlanta’s Marian Hossa. (thefourthperiod.com, TSN.ca) Dissension between BertuzziCrawford parties ILLUSTRATION BY CORY FALVO Are you an aspiring writer? Want to learn more about journalism and community media? Write for the Uniter. Section meetings are held every Friday at 12:30 p.m. in the Uniter office located at ORM14 in the Bulman Centre at the University of Winnipeg. Email editor@uniter.ca for any further questions or comments. The saga drags on in what has largely been known as “The Bertuzzi Incident.” The incident originated on March 8, 2004, when then-Vancouver Canucks forward Todd Bertuzzi sucker-punched the Colorado Avalanche’s Steve Moore, breaking his neck, rendering him unconscious, and ending his professional hockey career. Since then a battle has raged on in court rooms and in the media. Most recently according to CBC.ca, former Canucks coach Marc Crawford will testify that he had ordered Bertuzzi off of the ice just before Bertuzzi struck Steve Moore. This comes on the heels of a claim made by Bertuzzi during discovery testimony that Crawford pointed to Moore’s name on a blackboard between periods in the dressing room, and stated, “He must pay the price.” Crawford’s lawyer responded shortly after those comments, claiming that Bertuzzi’s statement was “scandalous.” (cbc.ca)