2005/05May/12
Transcription
2005/05May/12
The Gazette theGazette www.gazette.uwo.ca Western’s Student Newspaper Western’sDaily Daily Student Newspaper • Est.1906 • Est.1906 Low 5C High 9C A&E Ludacris Crashes onto big-screen... /p. 5 VOLUME 99, ISSUE 01 • THURSDAY, MAY 12, 2005 ~ The Long and Winding Road ~ Security issues raised over Morgentaler By Mark Polishuk Gazette Staff W estern’s honorary degree to Dr. Henry Morgentaler poses an undue security risk and will “do irreparable harm to the reputation of the university,” said Western Board of Governors chairperson Don McDougall. In an open letter to the university community, McDougall states that he is “very disappointed” with the decision to honour Morgentaler. “We have generally avoided highly charged political and moral issues and certainly have never used our Honorary Degree program to position our university on an issue of such divisiveness with the public,” McDougall claimed. “Both the University Police and London police consider this to be a low-risk event” Jen Boucher/Gazette IT ONLY LOOKS LIKE THEY’RE HOLDING HANDS. Western students Alex McRae and Nicole Litmola enjoyed a walk on Tuesday afternoon. They were probably walking because their bus passes expired April 30. But that’s a different story. See it on pg. 3. Ivey speakers criticize corporations By Mitch Tucker Gazette Staff T he inaugural Ivey Builds conference, entitled “What is Corporate Social Responsibility?” brought many students and professionals to The Richard Ivey School of Business last April 22. The conference, organized by a group of Ivey students, featured such notable figures as consumer advocate Ralph Nader, Canadian diplomat Stephen Lewis, and renowned home designer Avi Friedman. Nader opened his address by criticizing the current state of corporate practice. “I’ve seen the dark side of the marketplace,” Nader said. “Prosecutors can’t keep up with the crimes committed by corporations.” Nader cited the corrupt practices of Enron as an example of the inadequacy of safeguards created to prevent corporate corruption. According to Nader, more government intervention is needed to combat the unjustifiably high levels of corporate corruption. “ I f there are not boundaries, bad businesses will drive out good businesses,” Nader said, noting that corporations are given the same legal rights as individuals. “One person cannot concentrate the wealth that an organization can. If corporations are not human beings, why are they given the same rights?” Nader added that federally-enforced boundaries would lead to more responsible environmental practices, better health and safety for workers, and more effective child labour laws. Friedman spoke passionately about his “life cycle house,” which offers home owners greater flexibility and comfort in low-cost housing. According to Friedman, the small and efficient homes were extremely popular in downtown Montreal, and sold for roughly $76,000 each. “Responsibility and profit don’t have to be opposing concepts,” Friedman said, stating the “life cycle house” makes high-quality homes more accessible, helps the environment by being more energy efficient than larger homes, and can improve the overall quality of life within a neighbourhood. Lewis, the current United Nations Special Envoy for HIV/AIDS in Africa, delivered a combination of personal anecdotes and alarming statistics to illustrate the effects that irresponsible corporate practice can have on developing countries. According to Lewis, drug costs on the continent were “artificially high,” and the major pharmaceutical companies only lowered costs when a competing Indian company provided Africa with cheaper AIDS treatment. “The world has gone mad,” Lewis said. “People are dying for no other reason than the irresponsibility of others.” Lewis also stressed corporate social responsibility goes beyond the occasional act of charity from a corporation, though he is appreciative for “these spasms of philanthropy.” — with files by Nancy Gray Paul Davenport McDougall questioned the protocol involved in the Selection Committee’s decision, saying that honorees are usually confirmed by consensus, but Morgentaler was confirmed with only a majority vote. “It is my contention therefore that the process was corrupted,” he wrote. Western president Paul Davenport denies any untoward behaviour took place to confirm Morgentaler. “During my time at Western, we have given over 100 honorary degrees and had divided Committee votes and taken decisions that were not unanimous.” McDougall also expressed concern about the “small army of security personnel” on campus for Morgentaler’s Convocation ceremony. McDougall advocates a Special Convocation for Morgentaler at a smaller venue, where security can be more closely monitored. “The big advantage is that it does not disrupt the convocation day itself,” McDougall explained to The Gazette. “That day is about the students, not about the speaker. The special convocation guarantees security for everyone involved.” Davenport said all precautions are being taken by the University Police Department. “Both the university police and London police consider this to be a lowrisk event,” Davenport said. David Estok, associate vice-president of Western’s department of communications and public affairs, says security for Morgentaler is no different than any other prominent guest of the university. The only significant difference, Estok said, is that the 518 graduating students at the Morgentaler Convocation are limited to two tickets for family and friends. Guests will be required to show tickets and photo ID when entering Alumni Hall at the ceremony. Five hundred extra spectators will be able to watch a concurrent live broadcast in the South Valley Building. Estok stressed that students are being personally contacted about the ticket limit and thus far, “there has been only one complaint that we know of.” CSR: Easy to define, hard to accomplish Dave Picard/Gazette LET’S GET RESPONSIBLE IN HERE. Outspoken Canadian diplomat Stephen Lewis spoke on corporate social responsibilty at the Ivey Builds conference on April 22. Shades of Gray Nancy Gray News Editor The idea of corporate social responsibility (CSR) sounds good in theory, but is it really being put into practice? The Ivey Builds conference tried to define what CSR means and hopefully influence business leaders and aspiring CEOs to incorporate the idea into the real world.../P.2 P2 ➤ news theGazette • THURSDAY, MAY 12, 2005 Consumers have the power CONTINUED FROM P1 The critical focus was on large multinational corporations with enough money to wield power over the government. It is hard to disagree that unethical behaviour exists within some corporations, or that CSR is a bad thing, but the unanswered question is how responsible are corporations to their communities opposed to their stakeholders? The community has a right to a clean environment and safe products. The conference suggested that businesses can be profitable in the long-run by practising social responsibility. Is CSR just another way for companies to increase their profits in the long-run, whether or not they actually care about the community? What about philanthropy for the sake of giving? I personally don’t think LSAT MCAT GMAT GRE Preparation Seminars Complete 30-Hour Seminars Proven Test-Taking Strategies Personalized Professional Instruction Comprehensive Study Materials Simulated Practice Exams Free Repeat Policy Personal Tutoring Available Thousands of Satisfied Students Oxford Seminars 1-800-269-6719 416-924-3240 www.oxfordseminars.com it really matters what a company’s motives are as long as the outcome provides a positive benefit for the community. That is not to say that every company is purely motivated by selfish reasons. Profit and CSR can coexist; businesses can function as profit maximizers, while the community can receive the benefits of their actions. Avi Friedman’s business idea found harmony between providing affordable housing and profiting from his unique housing design. Ralph Nader and Stephen Lewis emphasized the government’s role in creating legislation to ensure large corporations behave responsibly. While the government would be beneficial in imposing boundaries, the public’s role has been left out. Consumers are allowed to choose which businesses they wish to endorse, to create pressure groups, and to raise awareness of unethical corporate behaviour. Considering the monetary influence that large multinationals have over the government, there is little doubt that new legislation would be contested with some serious lobbying. To put CSR into practice, business leaders and communities must demand safer products and business practices. While CSR sounds relatively easy to implement, many factors make it problematic. Hopefully, conferences like Ivey Builds will increase awareness and help turn corporate social responsibility into a reality rather than an idealistic dream. Spanish for Health Saturday May 28 9am-3pm University Hospital Room 3CA13 Basic Medical Terminology In Spanish A first in a specialized series of workshops for Physcians and Health Care Providers - Fee: $130.00 - For more information or to register please contact: Mayasol Spanish School (519) 472-3149 • mayasol_school@hotmail.com Make An Offer! Property Right Behind the Ceeps newly renovated FREE high speed internet, cable, phone & long distance, right on the bus routes Don’t miss this one! 05.04.13.C Call Now: 851-7653 News Briefs Western receives major research investment Science and Engineering Research Canada (NSERC) awarded close to $16.7 million to Western’s Faculties of Engineering and Science, Robarts Research Institute and the Lawson Health Research Institute. Citizenship and Immigration Minister Joe Volpe announced the grants last Friday at Somerville House. The funding is part of the federal government’s $510-million investment in research spending. Physics and Astronomy professor Martin Houde said awards like the NSERC Discovery Grants are “essential” to his research in magnetic fields and star formation. “[These awards] allow me to do some testing with some instruments that would not have been possible without that extra source of funding,” he said. — Mark Polishuk USC pranksters hit incoming Stiffly Stiffersons The new University Students’ Council board members’ first taste of their new digs was filled with mockery. Upon arriving at work on May 2, each freshfaced board member was greeted with varying degrees of entertainingly evil pranks executed by the outgoing board members. VP-campus issues Kelly Wilson found an office filled with sardines, tomato sauce, mustard and shaving cream by former VP-CI Eric Johanssen. “At first I thought it was just the stench left behind from Eric having been in the office for a year, but then I noticed it was sardines,” said USC communications officer Jonathan Tan. “The real kicker is that he also left her a nice bouquet of lilies, so I don’t think she knew what to feel.” VP-student affairs Chris Crighton was burned by former VP-SA Gio Paola. “When I arrived I was told to put my ear to the door. You could hear some commotion,” Crighton said. “Inside I found three birds feeding on about 20 kilograms of birdseed that was strewn about my desk. I also found remnants of the digestive process on my chair.” — Aron Yeomanson Martin shooting for budget vote OTTAWA (CP) — Prime Minister Paul Martin offered the opposition an opportunity to topple his government on the budget May 19th — an offer immediately rejected by angry opposition leaders. Martin’s announcement Wednesday that he will bring his budget implementation bill to a vote next week brought scorn from Stephen Harper, who accused Martin of using a pending royal visit as a campaign backdrop to extend his tenuous grip on power. “We’re not going to wait another week so the prime minister can use the Queen as a prop,” the Conservative leader said, referring to the monarch’s visit next week to Alberta and Saskatchewan. Then Harper went further. “We’re not going to play another week so that he can hope the health of some members of Parliament deteriorates.” He was referring to two Tory MPs and one Independent who are undergoing treatment for cancer. The comment outraged Liberal House leader Tony Valeri. “I don’t wish illness on anyone, especially members of Parliament who are suffering from cancer and going through treatment,” Valeri said. “That’s about as low as you can get.” The seat count in the House is so close that every single vote counts. The Tories and Bloc Quebecois have co-operated in efforts to bring down the Martin government in past weeks. Martin and the Liberals ignored a procedural motion passed Tuesday in the Commons that called on the Liberals to resign. The motion was not a confidence vote. Martin insisted Wednesday that he’s respecting parliamentary tradition, and he called on Harper and Bloc Leader Gilles Duceppe to do the same “by insuring this House is able to function between now and the day of the vote.” Should the government be defeated May 19, the earliest date for an election would be June 27. Duceppe said Wednesday his party won’t wait for May 19. “I’m telling him he would have the co-operation of the Bloc Quebecois if he would have the vote today. Otherwise no collaboration — but no collaboration at all.” Weekend forecast Friday Saturday Sunday Cloudy with showers Low 6C High 22C Cloudy with showers Low 10C High 21C Isolated showers Low 4C High 13C Weather news ➤ P3 theGazette • THURSDAY, MAY 12, 2005 USC/LTC bus pass irks students By Lori Mastronardi long pass, but at the time the USC rejected the offer. “We’ve told the student council it is available to them if they want, but that we weren’t going to do any more research for it. If they want to pursue it, they can approach us,” said Ford. The reason for Fanshawe’s longer pass, Gilmour explained, is that Fanshawe has a higher percentage of summer students than Western, and thus it is more feasible for the college to extend service. For the 2005-2006 school year, Fanshawe students will pay $136.65 for a year long pass. Are Western students willing to pay the extra $23.25 to extend the bus pass? Third-year biology student Alexis Carere would: “I live half an hour away. I normally take the bus during the year, but now I have to walk.” “I think people would be really angry if they were charged for the Gazette Staff After relying on the University Students’ Council/London Transit Commission bus pass for eight months, summer students have been lining up at InfoSource to purchase tickets since the pass expired on April 30. Ryan Gilmour, USC VP-finance, explained that extending the pass to cover the summer would involve increasing the current bus fee for every Western student whether they required the summer pass or not. Students will pay $113.40 for the 2005-2006 fall/winter term, and a $23.25 increase would be required to include the summer. “Every year the same question is brought up,” Gilmour said. “For us to even have a contract at all it needs to be universal.” John Ford, director of transportation and planning for the LTC, agreed that the system only works because of its universality, which is why students can’t optout of the regular bus pass. “It’s a very good deal for those who use it frequently, so if it was only for those who use it frequently it wouldn’t be economically viable for us,” Ford said. The lack of a summer bus pass has irked many Western students, especially since students at Fanshawe College hold a pass that lasts throughout the calendar year. According to Ford, the LTC receives requests from Western students to extend the pass every year. Western and Fanshawe were originally offered the same year- summer and didn’t need the pass,” said fourth-year biology student Leslie Stephens. Western students currently pay $2.50 per ride, $8.25 for a strip of eight tickets, or $64 per month in the summer. Students must initially visit an LTC location to acquire a photo ID for the monthly pass, but these can be renewed at InfoSource. “In my eight days on the job there have been two to three inquiries, but nothing serious,” said USC communications officer Jonathan Tan. “After giving an explanation, most students seem to understand.” Your Best, Cost Effective Alternative In Hair Removal!! 99.001.C.02 isissugar@rogers.com Student Discounts 171 Queens Ave. Hours Tue-Wed 10-6 Thu-Fri 10-8 Sat 10-4 CALL FOR PROPOSALS for Women’s Safety Funding The Ministry of Training, Universities and Colleges provides grants to colleges and universities to support initiatives relating to the safety of women students, staff and faculty on campus. In order to continue promoting the safety of women at the University of Western Ontario the President’s Committee for the Safety of Women on Campus is calling for proposals for initiatives. “Are You Ready for The Beach?” 100% Natural Permanent Hair Removal Rachel Cartwright/Gazette I HOPE YOU’VE GOT THE BLING FOR THAT RIDE. For Western students, riding the bus has become an expensive endeavour since bus passes expired on April 30. Application forms can be found at: http://www.uwo.ca/humanresources/facultystaff/ h_and_2/my_h_s_w/WS_application_form.pdf Information on previous proposals and how to submit a proposal can be obtained by contacting Human Resources at 6612111 ext. 85558. The deadline for applications is Friday, June 10th, 2005. Please note that funding is contingent upon receipt of the grant. at Richmond 457-9767 It starts with you. UBS welcomes some of Western Ontario’s best and brightest who've decided to join our winning team. You and us. Wealth Management © 2005 UBS. All rights reserved. I Global Asset Management I Investment Bank Full Time Hires Amy Katchen Calvin Ngai Summer Interns Ashish Bagai Logan Middleton Shamez Virani You & Us P4 ➤ opinions theGazette • THURSDAY, MAY 12, 2005 theGazette Volume 99, Issue 1 “A graduation ceremony is an event where the commencement speaker tells thousands of students dressed in identical caps and gowns that ‘individuality’ is the key to success.” — ROBERT PURVIS Mark Polishuk Lori Mastronardi Aron Yeomanson Editor-In-Chief Deputy Editor Managing Editor Editor - gazette.editor@uwo.ca Deputy - gazette.deputy.editor@uwo.ca Managing - gazette.managing.editor@uwo.ca website at www.gazette.uwo.ca University Community Centre Rm. 263 The University of Western Ontario London, Ontario, CANADA. N6A 3K7 Advertising Dept.: (519) 661-3579, Fax: (519) 661-3960 Editorial Offices: (519) 661-3580, Fax: (519) 661-3825 The Gazette is owned and published by the University Students’ Council. Don’t hate, convocate I n the hurricane of controversy surrounding Western’s decision to award an honorary degree to Dr. Henry Morgentaler, the student population seems to be caught in the middle. In the midst of the chaos, however, the eye of the storm is the most peaceful place to be. It is important to remember that Morgentaler is only one of 519 people receiving degrees at the June 16 morning Convocation ceremony. While Morgentaler’s presence is doubtlessly a matter of great interest (be it positive or negative) to some of these grads, it is also likely that many students will regard the honorary degree recipient as just another part of the ceremony. For students, a Western degree is its own reward; Convocation is more like the reward for parents and administration. Students get to walk across stage and pose for their parents’ flashbulbs, while university administrators get to wear their ceremonial robes and make a few speeches extolling Western’s virtues. Graduates can be excused for feeling like the novelty has worn off after spending three hours in those dark robes in the increasingly stuffy Alumni Hall. It is for this reason that all of the furor over Morgentaler’s degree may ultimately be remembered as a molehill that temporarily became as big as UC Hill. If graduation day is all about the students, then it is their opinions that should count the most, and it seems that for many in the student population, Morgentaler’s presence at Convocation is little more than an irritation. According to administration, almost all of the grads thus far contacted about the Morgentaler convocation have expressed an interest in attending as per usual. Likewise, the majority of the letters received and published in The Gazette supporting Morgentaler have been written by students. The majority of letters condemning the honorary degree’s symbolic value have been written by alumni, faculty members and even people from across North America who likely have never set foot on campus. Most grads don’t see their graduation day as a storybook ending to their Western career, but just as a pleasant bit of pomp and circumstance. It is not as if a tenminute speech from an honorary graduate (the icing on the Convocation cake) will somehow negate all of the other great experiences and memories that come with attending university. Some might call this “let it all blow over” attitude an oversimplification, given the deep-seated feelings that have already been expressed by many in the Western community concerning the Morgentaler degree. The symbolic weight of Morgentaler’s degree may be of tantamount importance to those concerned with the “big picture” of Western’s reputation, but as long as the graduating students have a safe, secure and pleasantly-dullas-usual Convocation, then administration will have done its job. After all they’ve done, why vote Liberal? Yazed + Confused Jonathan Yazer Opinions Editor The Liberal Era in Canada has lasted over a dozen years. Looking back, I ponder why anyone would consider endorsing an extension of this political period. Start with the first Liberal Era Prime Minister, Jean Chrétien. Some people like to think he deserves a ‘yea’ vote in the history books because he led the ‘nay’ effort in Québec in 1995. He saved the country from fracturing, they say, by taking painful but necessary steps during turbulent times. But it was the brave advocates of federalism on the ground in Québec and the thousands of letters that poured into the province from the rest of the country that really saved Canada in 1995. In fact, Chrétien only stoked separatist flames. Even Jack Layton has recently stated an NDP government would repeal the Clar- The Lone Star Dallas Curow Web Editor Neighbours. When you’re a student, they can be your new best friends or the bane of your existence. If you’re lucky, they will be the kind of people you want to invite to all your parties — the kind souls who let you store valuables at their place, or fire up the BBQ and let your guests go nuts with hot dogs and marshmallow roasting. Good neighbours should be treasured when you find them. Bad neighbours are a different story, and they Section Editors 2005-2006 Letters: Must include the contributor’s name, identification (ie. Economics II, Dean of Arts) and a telephone number, and be typed double-spaced, submitted on disk in Macintosh or IBM word-processing format, or be emailed to gazette.editor@uwo.ca. Letters more than 300 words or judged by the Editor-In-Chief to be libellous, sexist or racist will not be published. The Gazette reserves the right to edit letters and submissions and makes no guarantees that a letter will be published. Sports James Hayes Matt Larkin Ian Van Den Hurk • Please recycle this newspaper • Martin has also performed dismally in foreign affairs, which is supposedly his strong suit. He had split the Department of Foreign Affairs and International Trade against the will of Parliament. Now there is a plan to reunite them, though they will operate independently for the time being. His Canada Corps initiative is a sly organizational idea, but it will not accomplish anything new without a large influx of cash in overseas assistance. While the United Kingdom is following the lead of other European countries by raising its foreign aid contributions to 0.7 per cent of gross domestic product, Martin said he will not commit to the internationally recognized benchmark. Canada currently contributes well under half that amount. Indeed, the Liberal Era is defined by shortcomings and an unwillingness to act on any higher principle. From the gun registry fiasco, to the aimless plan to meet the targets of the Kyoto Protocol, to the inept handling of helicopter contracts, the Liberal Party has failed Canadians. So, if an election is forthcoming, why would anyone vote for these guys? Won’t you be my (good) neighbour? Editorials appearing under the ‘opinions’ heading are decided upon by a majority of the editorial board and are written by a member of the editorial board but are not necessarily the expressed opinion of each editorial board member. All other opinions are strictly those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of the USC, The Gazette, its editors or staff. News Ravi Amarnath Ian Denomme Nancy Gray Mitch Tucker Campus Life Allison Buchan-Terrell Tina Taus Graphics Brice Hall ity Act — which Chrétien considers to be his crown accomplishment — because it has contributed to divisiveness. The Clarity Act itself is anything but clear. Only once a “clear” majority of voters responds to a “clear” question in favor of sovereignty can negotiations on secession legally proceed. The sponsorship program might have helped bolster federalism. But it wasn’t a program — it was a scam, and now it’s a scandal. Unsurprisingly, a survey conducted last month by Léger Marketing has revealed that support for separatism in Québec is at its highest since 1998. That is Jean Chrétien’s legacy. Also unsurprisingly, the survey showed 76 per cent of voters felt betrayed by Chrétien and the Liberals since 1995. Now take the second Liberal Era Prime Minister, Paul Martin. While he created the Gomery inquiry, he also applauded Chrétien’s smug and childish testimony before it, at the very least indirectly oversaw the sponsorship program as finance minister, and has been unable to stem the tide of separatist forces in Québec. Arts & Entertainment Anna Coutts Chad Nevett Dave Picard Opinions Jonathan Yazer come in many forms. From cable stealers to peeping toms, a bad neighbour’s close proximity to your life can quickly become a major nuisance. I’ve experienced both ends of the spectrum. Some neighbours have brought over banana bread and flowers and asked me in for tea; others have burst through the front door to scream delightful phrases such as “Stop using your f****** toilet, you’re f****** up our water pressure!” As I recently discovered while staying with some of my parents’ friends, feuds and fights with neigbours will not disappear after our exodus from the student ghetto. In fact, it seems some neighbours get meaner, more spiteful and increasingly nosy with age. So, if you are stuck with a truly bad neighbour, you might as well have a little fun with it. Take a hint from the Grumpy Old Men films and play harmless tricks on your neighbours — Jack Lemmon and Walter Matthau employed such tactics as hiding fish in the back of the other’s car. I’m not advising you to do anything illegal or creepy, but the odd practical joke never hurt. On the other hand, you never know when you might need a favour, so ensure you’re not the instigator of a ruthless battle. You could also try the opposite approach and bombard your neighbour with kindness. If his or her cruelty persists after many kind visits and wellmeaning smiles, you really have no choice but to give ’em a pie in the face ... or maybe consider moving. Gazette Staff 2005-2006 News - gazette.news@uwo.ca Gabriella Barillari, Marshall Bellamy, Andrew Cionga, Chris Clarke, Jessica Collins, Sports - gazette.sports@uwo.ca Leah Crane, Kate Daley, Armando D’Andrea, Dan Dedic, Mike Dewar, Deanna A&E - gazette.entertainment@uwo.ca Campus Life - gazette.campus@uwo.ca Opinions - gazette.opinions@uwo.ca DiMenna, Ljubica Durlovska, Tim Fish, Colin J. Fleming, Lorraine Forster, Adam Gibson, Darren Glowacki, Dominika L. Grzelak, Jesse Halperin, Cory Hare, Holleh Javidan, Sarvenaz Kermanshahi, Laura Kobetz, Travis Kruger, David Lee, Aaron Lynett, Photo Jen Boucher Rachel Cartwright Cole Yates Gazette Composing Kyle Malashewski, Ben Mann, Claire Neary, Megan O’Toole, Karen Otto, Wahid Ian Greaves, Manager Cheryl Forster, Maja Anjoli Pabani, Sarah Prickett, Joel Saucier, Chris Scott, Chris Sinal, Shaleen Somji, Leah Web Dallas Curow Hisham El-Chazli Gazette Advertising Stevenson-Hastings, Antonio Tan, Arthur Thuot, Erica Timmerman, Tim Toplak, Sean Alex McKay, Manager Doug Warrick, Mark Ritchie, Sandra Rule G. Turnbull, Tie Um, Joyce Wang, Dave Ward, Jennie Wilhelm, Jonathan Wizowski, Zack Wolske, Maggie Wrobel, Brad Yandon STAY TUNED: Kick and Scream all you want, but you’ll have to wait a week for more Gazette goodness ArtsEntertainment P5 THURSDAY, MAY 12, 2005 London filmmaker Haggis’s Crash a total smash By Mark Polishuk Gazette Staff Crash Starring: Don Cheadle, Thandie Newton, Ryan Phillippe, Matt Dillon Directed by: Paul Haggis I f nothing else, London native Paul Haggis can take solace in the fact that when it comes to Canadian-directed films called Crash, his is far better than the unrelated 1996 film by David Cronenberg. Then again, Cronenberg’s movie was about people who became sexually aroused by car crashes, so it wasn’t exactly a tall mountain for Haggis to climb. Haggis’s Crash deals with the far more serious topic of racism in modern society. The film is a series of interconnected stories about Los Angeles residents whose lives are impacted by either their own racism or the prejudice shown by others. It would be easy to make a movie about a bunch of generic bigots with the moral being “Racism is bad,” but Crash instead presents the audience with characters whose prejudice is far more complicated than blind hatred. Crash doesn’t ask viewers to sympathize with all of the characters, but at least to empathize with them; the film reminds viewers that racism can only be fought by first understanding the root causes. Some of the stories are stronger than others in making their point, but the film’s tone is never lost. There isn’t a true lead character in Crash, but rather an ensemble of people who possess love-hate Gazette File Photo ON TIME OUT FOR... TEN MINUTES! Michael Pena stares off into the wild blue yonder in Paul Haggis’s Crash. relationships with their ethnicities. Race always seems to be at the centre of the film’s various conflicts; a Persian shopkeeper (Shaun Toub) cannot speak English well enough to communicate with his Latino locksmith (Michael Pena). A black director (Terrence Howard) is told by his star (Tony Danza) that the African-American characters in the film aren’t “sounding black” enough. Peter (Larenz Tate) and Anthony (Ludacris), a pair of black youths, are annoyed when Jean (Sandra Bullock) instinctively crosses the street to avoid them. Haggis’s play with stereotypes is particularly interesting; the two youths respond to Jean’s snub by stealing her car. However, the more we learn about Jean, Peter, and Anthony, the more complicated the film becomes. The characters become defined by personality, rather than race, and questions of who was right and who deserved it become difficult to answer. The film’s large cast features many well-known faces, and the acting is uniformly outstanding. You expect a great actor like Don Cheadle — playing a burnt-out detective — to deliver great work, but the most sterling efforts come from the lesser-known names. Tate, Ludacris, Howard, and Thandie Newton each bring a touch of realism to the film that ensures its overlapping story struc- ture seems plausible. Bullock and Ryan Phillippe (playing a cop uncomfortable with his racist partner) give career-high performances as well. Haggis has shown his talent with his award-winning script for Million Dollar Baby, but Crash reveals him as a gifted director as well. If Crash is a sign of things to come, Frederick Banting might get some competition in the “London’s most famous resident” competition. Ex-con Zdarsky gets intimate at Comicon By Chad Nevett Gazette Staff Gazette File Photo “NO MEANS NO!” Vampirella meets the Monster Cops in Vampirella Magazine #7 by Chip Zdarsky. “Swing by my table and we can sneak off for an intimate chat,” reads the e-mail from Chip Zdarsky, and quite frankly I am a little nervous. Zdarsky, the cartoonist most famed for his comic Prison Funnies, has a bit of a strange reputation. His bio says he began drawing comics after a brief prison sentence for accosting a woman, and it includes pictures of him attending a showing of the film Elektra dressed as the title character. Now he wanted to “sneak off for an intimate chat.” The Zdarsky you meet in real life doesn’t quite life up to his reputation. At his table at the recent Paradise Comics Toronto Comicon, he’s drawing a sketch of the Wolfman from his all-ages comic “Monster Cops” — a comic about Dracula, Frankenstein and the Wolfman as cops — for a little girl who is attending the Comicon with her father. But that doesn’t mean he’s not weird. “I didn’t draw much when I was a kid, but when I went to prison, an officer taught me to tap into my pain and express it through comics,” Zdarsky says. In 1996, he spent thirty days in a Barrie prison after “a bit of a misunderstanding with my girlfriend. She said she wasn’t my girlfriend, and the judge agreed with her.” In 2000, Zdarsky enrolled in the University of Toronto’s one-year General Arts course and began doing his “Prison Funnies” comic strip for the campus paper, The Independent Weekly. The U of T strips were collected, along with a full comic and other material in The Collected Prison Funnies, and have so far been followed up with two issues of the comic book. “” “[There was] a bit of a misunderstanding with my girlfriend. She said she wasn’t my girlfriend, and the judge agreed with her.” Zdarsky also gained fans with “Monster Cops,” which he did for the anthology Rumble Royale. “I did it for the anthology as an all-ages thing,” Zdarsky says. “Something I could show my younger relatives.” Even Zdarsky has been surprised by the comic’s popularity. “I’ve done, like, three ‘Monster Cops’ things, but at conventions, all people ask for are sketches of the ‘Monster Cops,’” he explains. This popularity led to the comic’s crossover with Vampirella in a recent issue of Vampirella Magazine. “It was sort of my first work-for-hire comic work,” Zdarsky notes. He also completed a two-page “Prison Funnies Meets Monster Cops” comic for Comic Festival, a free comic anthology spotlighting Canadian cartoonists for the upcoming Toronto Comic Arts Festival. The experience with the Vampirella crossover taught Zdarsky that he isn’t really cut out for work-for-hire jobs. “The Vampirella thing was a lot of pressure on me,” he explains. “Not just on me, but there was pressure on the character. Like, there’s a message board full of her fans!” On occasion, Zdarsky reviews comicrelated films for The Movie Network’s @ The Movies program, including his review of Elektra where he arrived dressed as the female assassin. “I told them I was going to do it, they didn’t believe me, I showed up dressed as her, and they told me they didn’t want cross-dressers doing movie reviews,” he explains. He did the review in his regular clothes, but pictures found their way online soon after. While our chat wasn’t quite as intimate as I feared, Zdarsky ends by saying “I love you,” and I walk away a little faster than usual. AQUARIUS (Jan. 21 - Feb. 19) Aquarius, your sign is fifty years ahead of its time and that means today you will be early for everything. Meetings, dinners, movies, and, for men, even sex. But don’t worry; it’s quite common and happens to a lot of guys. Your partner will understand — or at least claim to. Besides, it will give you more time to cuddle. As for Aquarius women, you’ll be early for your monthly visitor. But, as we all know, in this case it’s better early than late. P6 ➤ arts&entertainment theGazette • THURSDAY, MAY 12, 2005 Music for the month of May By Chad Nevett Daddy, Eyes Like Knives, Bad Flirt, The Hexes & OHS $5 door, show starts at 10 p.m. Gazette Staff Now that exams are over, you finally have time to hit the town and enjoy some live music. London is hosting several shows this month, so to make things a little easier on you, here is a listing of some notable upcoming concerts. Thursday May 12 Call The Office — Mommy & Teach English Overseas ESL Teacher Training Courses Intensive 60-Hour Program Classroom Management Techniques Detailed Lesson Planning Comprehensive Teaching Materials Internationally Recognized Certificate Job Guarantee Included Thousands of Satisfied Students Oxford Seminars 1-800-269-6719 / 416-924-3240 www.oxfordseminars.com The Embassy — Wheels on the Bus, One Shot Left, Farewell to Freeway, Chasing Mercury $6 door, doors open at 9 p.m. Friday May 13 Centennial Hall — “A Symphonic Rocker’s Dream” with Orchestra London Tickets $34-$49, Children 12 and under $12 (when accompanied by an adult), Student Rush Tickets $10 at the door with Student ID; available at Orchestra London Box Office (679-8778). The show starts at 8 p.m. Call The Office — The Matadors with special guests Big Jeezus Truck, and The 357’s $6 door, show starts at 10 p.m. Saturday May 14 Call The Office — Anti-Hero “Unpretty” Video Shoot 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. — must be available for the full three hours. All ages, free admission. Call The Office — Stutter CD release party with special guests HITCH Rated PG MISS CONGENIALITY 2 7:00 Nightly 9:25 Nightly Rated PG 124 Minutes Sunday May 15 John Labatt Centre — Sarah McLachlan Tickets $50.75 -$70.75 available via Ticketmaster Show starts at 7:30 p.m., doors open at 6:30 p.m. — Dave Picard Thursday May 19 Call The Office — The Independents with special guests The Dangerfields, and Pantychrist $5 door, show starts at 9 p.m. Friday May 20 The Embassy — Misery Index, Pure Blank, Excrutiating Thoughts, and Eschatus Door $8, doors open at 9 p.m. Call The Office — Grinder and the Chickens, and local opener to be determined $10 door, show starts at 9 p.m. Saturday May 21 Call The Office — The Illuminati with special guests From Fiction; rest of lineup to be determined $5 door, show starts at 10 p.m. $4.25 second floor UCC Tuesdays $3.00 Kids always $3.00 S IMON G RADUATE S CHO OL OF for movie listings 661-3616 www.westernfilm.ca FREE Parking call or see website for details 30¢ WINGS Mon & Tues (after 6pm) w/ beverage purchase 98.87.C.03 regular admission 99.001.C.04 127 minutes props from Mos Def, the Chemical Brothers, and DJ Danger Mouse, it’s safe to bet PlantLife won’t be a mono-hit marvel. It’s not totally clear where Jack Splash was or what he was doing while he was gone, but Hipsters in their ’72 Volkswagens, clubbers breaking it down in their soupedup Civics and Escalade-pimpin’ wannabe thugs can definitely get into The Return of Jack Splash. Go, Sherry, and Valeze $5 door, show starts at 10 p.m. Tuesday May 24 Call The Office — Jeremy Fisher with special guest Nathan Wiley, and local opener to be determined $10 advance, show starts at 10 p.m. May 13-19 ON DISC 1205 Dundas St. (w. of Highbury) B USINESS • U NIVERSITY 659-0222 OF ROCHESTER The Simon Graduate School of Business is offering $30,000 scholarships to the Class of 2005 at select undergraduate schools. PlantLife The Return of Jack Splash Counterflow When hip-hop inspired social commentary meets under-the-sheets funk, PlantLife is born. Think Black Eyed Peas, only PlantLife is setting its roots a little deeper into a blues and soul-based foundation. A flora-themed title isn’t all the urbanites share with BEP. The quartet of Jack Splash, Panda One, Dena Deadly, and Rashida the Beautiful share vocal, instrumental, and DJ-ing duties. The result is The Return of Jack Splash, the group’s virgin record. The album’s tracks flow effortlessly from synth-pumping emcee rants to falsetto-carried club ammunition, all the while layered with Shaft-esque guitar work and some of the sexiest tamborining to hit speakers in ages. “The Last Song” spreads love with digital backbeats that bring spine popping and locking to a new level. “We Can Get High” mellows out with bass work and Splash’s matter-of-fact vocals in wicked blaxploitation fashion. PlantLife spreads out from beneath the mirrored ball to blast some ops on social issues as well. Addiction, terrorism, and other world politics are tackled with a cool finesse that leaves lyrics like “fuck their lies and fuck these wars” smooth and unabrasive. It’s not that they’ve spat in the face of convention; it’s more like they’ve seduced it on the dance floor, taken it home for the night, introduced it to mom and gotten her approval. Your best bet is to familiarize yourself with the band’s unique brand of groove and boost your summer stock of esoteric credit now, or hop on when everyone else hops on the bandwagon in a few months. Since the group gets Western Ontario is one of them! Scholarships Based on Exceptional: Merit, Leadership Potential, Attitude, Work Ethic Graduate Programs Include: Full-Time MBA, Marketing Master’s Program, Accounting Master’s Program, Medical Management Master’s Program www.simon.rochester.edu/scholarships • Contact us at: (585) 275-3533 NO. 23 IN U.S. NEWS & WORLD REPORT! “Meh” is the word that comes to mind when listening to End of Love by Clem Snide. It’s not that good. It’s not that bad. It’s just ... meh. The opening, title track starts strong, but halfway through loses steam. This trend continues throughout the album. Almost every song sounds really good and has the potential to be great, but eventually blends into the background. Snide mixes folk rock, pop rock and alt-country, but he hasn’t taken any upbeat aspects of the genres, just the slow, mellow ones. It’s like a dinner of white bread, celery and water. You may like all of those things, but what a bland combination. The song titles are the best part of the album. Titles like “The Sound of German Hip-Hop” and “Jews for Jesus Blues” are very cool, and it’s a shame the songs themselves can’t live up to the titles. End of Love includes some great playing and solid songwriting, but it doesn’t grab you. Definitely avoid this album if you’re planning a long drive, as you’ll find yourself asleep at the wheel before the second track is over. — Chad Nevett Welcome to ✓ Choose Simon to further invest in your professional education! Clem Snide End of Love spinART Records The Spring Gazette Marketplace The Advertising Office Room 267 University Community Centre The University of Western Ontario Phone: 661-3274 Fax: 661-3960 adoffice@uwo.ca SPRING ISSUE DATES: May 19, June 2, 9 RATES: up to 30 words $8/issue including tax DEADLINE: noon the Thursday before the run date Housing Housing 3 BEDROOM TOWNHOUSE. NW London, 2 parking, 2 baths, 4 appliances, carpet, mini blinds, A/C., clean, comfortable. Near shopping, banking, library, schools. 6 mins to UWO. Available now. $385/per. 519-317-3385. 3 FURNISHED BEDROOMS available for females in 5 bedroom, well maintained home. Sarnia/Castlegrove. 5 min bus to UWO. Laundry and parking available. $400 utilities included. Cynthia 641-0154 or Jim 1-519-586-2479. 4 BEDROOM UPPER apt. (51 Wharncliffe Rd. S.). Deck, 6 appliances, cable & internet included. $350/per person. On major bus-route. Available May 1/05, 12 month lease. Sharon 457-4663 Ext. 3, www.457home.com 4 BEDROOM, CLOSE to UWO and downtown. 3 bedrooms upstairs, 1 bedroom downstairs, 2 kitchens, 2 bathrooms, 2 car garage, newly renovated. $1200/per month. 652-1455 or 521-4979. 5 BEDROOM HOUSE- $350/bedroom. Flexible 812 month lease (immediate or September) Recently renovated with all new windows, 2 bathrooms, hardwood, ceramic tiles, dishwasher, new washer and dryer. Blake 434-1791. BACHELOR APT. NICELY decorated, laundry, full fridge & stove. $395 Inclusive. 163 Clarence St.. Year lease, available May/June. 457-4663 Ext. 3 or Sharon@457home.com BACHELOR APT., $395 Inclusive. 458 Adelaide St.. Parking, nicely decorated, year lease. 457-4663 Ext 3 or Sharon@457home.com Employment SUMMER WORK. GREAT Pay! Gain excellent resume experience. Flexible schedules. Interview now, start after finals. Customer sales/service. Call 433-6531 or www.workforstudents.com Services IMPROVE YOUR SPOKEN English skills. SDC’s English Conversation Program is now accepting registrations for Summer 2005. Practice conversational English, enhance your confidence, increase your knowledge of Canadian culture, customs and idiomatic expressions. Register now at Student Development Centre, Room 210, UCC. Space is limited. P7 THURSDAY, MAY 12, 2005 Sports ON DECK: Memorial Cup Preview... Next Thursday Keeping, Lumsden lead way in busy CIS off-season By Ian Van Den Hurk Gazette Staff T Aaron Lynett/Gazette PURSUING HIS FOOTBALL CAREER. Western tight end Jeff Keeping was drafted by the Toronto Argonauts. hough on-the-field action shut down months ago, Canadian Interuniversity Sport has been quite active during the off-season. The most prominent event was the Canadian Football League draft on April 28. The Mustangs have had at least one player selected in the draft every year since 1988, and Western continued the trend this year with the selection of Jeff Keeping. Keeping, a fourth-year tight end with the Mustangs, was selected in the second round by the Toronto Argonauts, 18th overall in the draft. His selection comes as a bit of a surprise after playing in just four games last season due to injury. In those games Keeping notched eight receptions for 102 yards and a touchdown. Throughout his career Keeping has caught 47 passes for 700 yards, and he was selected as a second team Ontario University Athletics all-star in 2003. While his receiving numbers What if? ’05 NHL season saved By Mark Polishuk Gazette Staff Just think... what if there almost wasn’t a 2005 National Hockey League season? The owners’ lockout threatened to ruin the whole year for hockey fans, but just when things looked their worst, there was an eleventh-hour meeting between NHL commissioner Gary Bettman and Players’ Association director Bob Goodenow. What made this meeting so different than others? Bettman and Goodenow were accompanied into the boardroom by noted enforcers Marty McSorley, Tie Domi, Louie DeBrusk and Dave “The Hammer” Schultz. Thirty minutes later, an agreement was reached. “We sure are proud to be starting this new era of... cooperation,” Bettman said at the press conference, nervously looking over his shoulder at DeBrusk, who was cracking his knuckles. Whatever the motive, the NHL ‘season’ got underway. Plans were hatched for a massive Stanley Cup tournament that would involve every team in the league. Last year’s finalists (the Calgary Flames and champion Tampa Bay Lightning) received first-round byes, while the other clubs duked it out in best-of-eleven series. Play was somewhat sloppy, since many of the players hadn’t hit the ice in several months, but what it lacked in glamour it made up for in intensity. The players felt like this year’s playoffs would be gone forever, and now that the Cup was miraculously saved, it made them play all the harder. No team was more inspired than Toronto. Critics had considered the Leafs longshots, citing the advanced age of their roster and their lack of defensive talent. What they didn’t count on, how- Gazette File Photo WHAT MIGHT HAVE BEEN? If hockey had been played this season, Leafs defenceman Bryan McCabe might have had reason to celebrate — but probably not. ever, was heart; specifically, the heart of the Swedish lungfish, a delicacy brought back to North America by team captain Mats Sundin. The lungfish is more potent than mango and Viagra combined, though in this case, it added potency to the Leafs’ sticks rather than their... well... Armed with lungfish juice in their water bottles, the Maple Leafs went on a winning streak. After blowing through the Eastern Conference, Toronto found itself matched up in the Cup finals against the upstart Nashville Predators. The Preds made the finals on the strength of rookie goalie Jimmy Jack “Red Dog” Jackerson, brought in after Tomas Vokoun retired to become a bounty hunter in his native Czech Republic. Jimmy Jack was a big hit with his hometown Nashville fans, but against the mighty Leafs onslaught, Red Dog was flatter than one of his hound dog’s ears. After five games, it was 5-0 Toronto, and nothing could possibly prevent a Leafs victory... except for a drug test. Every Toronto player flunked, thus causing the NHL to declare the Leafs’ season null and void, and awarding the Cup to Nashville. As it so happened, Swedish lungfish was on the NHL’s list of banned substances due to the large amounts of denderdrudenvaten and iodine. Sundin was so humiliated he disappeared into the ruins of Casa Loma to avoid public persecution. So, unfortunately for the diehard Buds fans, 2005 continued the team’s Cup drought. But never fear! Jimmy Jack Jackerson is a free agent, and the Leafs have already sent Domi to “negotiate.” are respectable, it’s likely that if Keeping latches on with the Argos it will be as an offensive lineman. Keeping has great size at six-footsix inches, 275 pounds, and obviously has quickness from his experience at tight end. In spring camp this season Keeping worked out at guard. Western’s only CFL selection last season was receiver Christian Heffernan. Heffernan was drafted by the Ottawa Renegades but was released by the team. He returned to the Mustangs, a possibility that exists for Keeping. Of the 53 players selected 33 came from the CIS. Laval and McMaster led the way in the first two rounds with five and three players drafted, respectively. Laval defensive tackle Miguel Robede was picked first overall by the Calgary Stampeders. In his three years with the Rouge et Or, Robede was twice selected to the all-Canadian team. The six-foot-three inches, 288pound lineman amassed 14 sacks and 34 tackles for a loss in his three year career and helped Laval win two national championships. McMaster’s star running back Jesse Lumsden has commanded headlines since signing a contract with the National Football League’s Seattle Seahawks. Lumsden put up one of the greatest years in CIS history last season. The bruising, 227-pound back rushed for 1,816 yards and 21 touchdowns, eclipsing the previous league records. Lumsden also set OUA marks with 4,238 career rushing yards and 47 career touchdowns. The monster season earned Lumsden an invite to the EastWest Shrine Bowl in San Francisco, a game that showcases prospects for the NFL. Lumsden led his team in rushing with 41 yards on five carries. His performance helped him score a contract with Seattle on April 24. The Seahawks are deep at running back and his chances of making the final roster are long. Lumsden’s best chance to secure a roster spot is probably as a kick returner. If cut by the Seahawks Lumsden can fall back on the Hamilton Tiger-Cats, who selected him sixth overall in the CFL draft. Lumsden would be reunited with former McMaster coach and current Tiger-Cats boss Greg Marshall. Aside from the CFL draft, the CIS has kept busy with the BLG Awards. Adrienne Power, a sprinter from Dalhousie University, received the Jim Thompson Trophy for CIS female athlete of the year. Power was the CIS track athlete of the year and the outstanding female athlete at the CIS championship. At the university nationals Power set a new meet record in the 300-metre with a blistering 37.35 seconds, good enough for the fourth fastest time in the world this year and the 19th fastest on the alltime world list. Securing her third consecutive gold medal, Power finished her university career undefeated in the 300-metre. Power has been asked to run for Canada’s 4 x 400 relay team at this summer’s world championship, as well as be a member of the team in the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing, assuming the team qualifies. Lumsden, who already earned the Hec Creighton Award as Canada’s best football player, added to his trophy case when he accepted the BLG Award as CIS male athlete of the year. Along with the awards, Power and Lumsden will each receive $10,000 scholarships to attend a Canadian university graduate school. Make An Offer! LAST MINUTE RENTALS! Great Prices, Sizes & Locations Call NOW! 851-7653 05.04.13.C-2
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