- The Cambridge Student
Transcription
- The Cambridge Student
The Cambridge Student january 18 2007 Volume 9 Issue 1 TCS talks drugs and Cambridge... Thomas Willis Tragic Discovery of Missing Graduate Peter Wood THE SEARCH for missing Cambridge graduate Daniel Bolger has come to a tragic conclusion with the discovery of his body. The 21 year old was discovered at Jesus Lock by a group of rowers on the 7th of December. Following this, the area of river between Victoria Street and Jesus Lock was immediately cordoned off and Police rescue teams called in, where they confirmed finding the body of a young man. The deceased was later transferred to Aldenbrookes Hospital,where Post-mortem found the cause of death to be “acute cardiac failure consistent with sudden immersion in cold water”. The death has not been treated as suspicious. Mr Bolger,a graduate of Christ’s College, had been missing for 14 days and was formally identified by his parents the next day, saying: “We are absolutely heartbroken. We would like to thank Cambridgeshire Police, for their care and compassion during this incredibly difficult time. We would also like to thank Spartan Rescue,the people of Cambridge and Daniel’s friends -their support has been amazing.” Daniel was last seen saying goodbye to friends early on Sunday the 26th November, after a Formal Hall at Magdalene College. Soon after his disappearance there were fears that he may have fallen into the Cam and drowned. His bike was found on a cycle rack in Sidney Street, whilst his mobile telephone and bank account remained unused. Daniel had been working at the University library before hoping to start a masters degree this year. Detective Inspector Chris Mead, leading the investigation, said: “I would like to say how sorry I am that this was the final outcome to this case and on behalf of all of the staff involved in the investigation would like to offer our sincere condolences to Daniel’s family and friends.” “I would also like to extend my sincere thanks to all those involved in the search for Daniel, including members of the media who, through their coverage, generated additional information and sightings.” His parents, Paul and Pavlina Bolger described him as “the most wonderful son” they could wish for. The search for Daniel Bolger had previously been interrupted by the crazed antics of a Cambridge drunk. 33 year old Michael Nicell climbed onto a bridge and threw punches at the specialist rescue team before jumping into the freezing water. A friend of Nicell, who did not wish to be named, told the Cambridge Evening News that: “It is a regular stunt of his. He always jumps off the bridge when it is hot. It wasn’t a suicide attempt, I think he was probably just showing off. I have even seen him jump in the river from the same bridge in November before, although he does normally save it as his kind of party trick.” Nicell, who is of no fixed abode, had to be pulled from the water by the specialist search team to stop him drowning in the icy river. The team searching the Cam was standing on the riverbank when the man jumped, and rushed to save him as he floundered,head bobbing beneath the icy water. Two members jumped into a boat and dragged him to shore under a hail of insults. Mark Burnett, supervisor of the search team, said to Cambridge Evening News: “It is the first time in any of our careers that something like this has happened and to watch it unfold in front of you is not what any of us expect. “He even wanted to fight with us in the water and we talked to him to calm him down and got him out of there as quickly as we could. The water is about four degrees and he would not have been able to last long. But first and foremost in our minds has to be our own health and safety. I’m just pleased that the team were around to rescue him and hopefully he will make a full recovery.” The man, who told police he had recently been released from prison, appeared to be drunk and was taken by ambulance to Addenbrooke’s Hospital to be treated for suspected hypothermia. Det Insp Chris Mead, branded the stunt “stupid and idiotic.” A memorial serrvice for Daniel Bolger will be held in Christ’s Collge Chapel at 3pm on the 27th January. Daniel Bolger’s body was found in the Cam in December Major changes to degree classification system proposed Amy Blackburn INCREASING NUMBERS of first and upper-second class degrees are prompting calls for the end of the current degree classification system. The Higher Education Statistics Agency’s figures for 2005-6 show that, for the first time, 60% of degrees awarded gained a first or upper second classification. The proportion of first class degrees also rose to 12%, from 11.6% in 2004-5. Of the 316,000 students completing first degree courses, 34,800 received a first class degree, and 137,200 achieved an upper second. This is in comparison to the 94,000 students who received a lower second classification, as well as the 22,800 third class degrees and the 26,800 students who obtained an “unclassified” result. The concern over “grade inflation” stems from the increase in the number of top degrees over the past ten years. In 1995-6, only 48% of students scored within the top two classifications, with less than 7% of degrees receiving first class honours. These increases have led to cries that the degree classification system is no longer relevant, as it does not provide accurate information about a student’s actual achievement. Peter Williams, chief executive of the Quality Assurance Agency, is one such detractor. “These new figures continue to raise questions about the meaning of degree classifications”, Williams said. “They provide more ammunition for those who believe the system is in need of reform.” He added that the reason for the rise is “not clear”. A government-backed group led by Bob Burgess, vice-chancellor of Leicester University, are currently reviewing the classifications system. Burgess has concluded that the current system ins not “fit for purpose”, and the group wishes to provide students with a simple pass or fail classification, as well as a more detailed transcript of their achievements.An additional proposal, to introduce a separate classi- fication to distinguish between the large numbers receiving upper second class degrees, has been halted. This idea has also met with criticism. Alan Smithers, head of the centre for Education and Employment Research at Buckingham University, is opposed to the reforms, as transcripts “just confuse by providing too much information”. He continued, “It is too much to hope that universities will go back to applying the present classification sensibly. We probably need a seven-point scale with suitable labels overseen by a qualifications body.” The Burgess Group is expected to reinforce the proposals in its final report, which is due shortly. The Cambridge Student January 18, 2007 2 News In Brief Stem cell discovery by Cambridge scientists Scientists at Cambridge University, led by Professor Magdelena Zernicka-Goetz, have discovered the stage at which some fertilised cells are destined to develop into stem cells. The study revealed that cells start to differ earlier than previously thought, overturning the long-held theory that all cells are the same until the fourth division of the embryo. Record graduate starting salaries The average graduate starting salary has risen by £1,700 over the pat year. A study by High Fliers Research has discovered that the average starting salary provided by the 100 leading employers has increased to £25,000. Law firms and investment banks are among the largest payers, often offering a starting salary of over £30,000. The indisustrial and engineering sectors were found to pay far below the average. Safer Nuclear Waste Storage Scientists have laid the foundations for a safer way to contain radioactive waste. A team from Cambridge University and the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory intend to measure the effectiveness of storing nuclear waste in different crystal forms. This would potentially prevent any leakage for millions of years. Protest student arrested at Faslane Two Cambridge students were arrested over Christmas after protesting outside the Faslane installation. The submarine base is home to the trident fleet and Britain’s nuclear arsenal. The two were arrested for ‘breach of the peace’ and ‘resisting arrest’ and spent a night in Scottish cells before eventually being released the next day. Bus fares still 50p The successful trial of the discounted “Citi” bus routes 1 to 7 are remaining at 50p untill the end of January. The University hopes to make the deal with Stagecoach permanent. Communications training for academic Rising Stars Amy Blackburn CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY has introduced a new programme aimed at creating the next generation of academic “ambassadors”. The University’s Office of Community Affairs is introducing the Rising Stars programme, which will offer training in communication skills to a select group of exemplary individuals within the University, from undergraduates to early-career academics. The aim of the programme is to produce academic personalities, who are able to communicate their enthusiasm for their subject to the general public. The Rising Stars programme comes as a new influx of Cambridge academics, such as Carenza Lewis, Chris Smith, Lisa Jardine-Wright, Richard Miles and Nigel Spivey are not only promoting their respective subjects, but also the benefits of lifelong learning. Penny Wilson, the Head of Community Affairs, outlined further the role of the programme. “Underlying the scheme is the real need to create dialogue between the University and the wider community, and communicate what goes on at the University and its contribution to society”, Wilson says. “We see Ris- ing Stars fostering young talent within the University by tapping into the huge energy and enthusiasm that exists among staff and students for sharing their subject interest.” Wilson also highlighted the importance of the programme for ensuring the future of outstanding academia. “It is young academics who make the best ambassadors for the University for many audiences, and it’s they who will become the more established names of the future – and, in their turn, role models for the next generation.” The first Rising Stars programme will take place on a series of Wednesdays between February 7th and April 25th. Participants, who can come from any academic discipline, in will be required to deliver a talk or demonstration to the public, followed by feedback from their peers. The programme is funded by HEFCE, and is free for participants. The Office of Community Affairs co-ordinates the annual Cambridge Science Festival, which frequently attracts more than 25,000 visitors to the University. For more information about the Rising Stars programme, email [email protected] Universities impose sanctions on evangelical Christian Unions Catherine Watts THE ARCHBISHOP of Canterbury, Dr Rowan Williams, has criticised the suppression of Christian unions in universities across the country in an article entitled, ‘It is not a crime to hold traditional values’. The article was written in reaction to growing concerns raised by the actions of some universities’ student guilds towards their Christian unions. The CU of Exeter University was suspended from their student guild, because by asking members to sign a form asserting their belief in Christ, it was believed the union breached equal opportunities. Similarly, the University of Birmingham’s guild authorities have frozen their Christian union’s bank accounts. Difficulties have arisen there over the guild’s desire to change the constitution of their CU and introduce a guild leader onto the union’s executive. The National Union of Students has defended such action, claiming that local unions were simply trying to curb the exclusivity of Christian societies. Dr Williams commented on the danger in the Times Educational supplement, saying that issuing sanctions against a group whose views are not necessarily shared, ‘looks like a fear of open argument’, and going on to suggest that silencing disagreement to prevent offence ‘is not good for the intellectual life’. He also laments the belief that traditional Christian views, such as attitudes to homosexuality, are ‘an expression of hate’, declaring that ‘it is impossible for a conservative Christian, Catholic or Protestant or, for that matter, an orthodox Muslim to state the traditional position of their faith without being accused of something akin to holocaust denial or racial bigotry’. Whilst recognising that some of the views asserted by evangelical groups may indeed be deeply and personally offensive and unwelcome, he denies that they are a matter for legislative action. Ciccu has not been contacted by CUSU in relation to the activities at other universities, but they told TCS that all speakers and members of its Committee sign a publicized statement of belief. Speaking on the sanctions in place elsewhere: “There are a number of reasons why such restrictions cannot be justified. To put it bluntly, claiming to promote equal opportunities is a guise for something much more sinister. While this vague virtue is being pursued Student Unions are in fact trampling on fundamental rights protected by law at both a European and United Kingdom level.” “For a student group such as a Christian Union, with a clear purpose and aim, it is nonsen- sical to speak about everyone having an ‘equal opportunity’ to speak at our meetings or lead our society. How could an atheist teach us the bible? ” However, Dr Williams encouraged evangelical groups to ‘undertake a little hard self-examination’ and invited them to consider whether ‘their language is vulnerable to proper challenge’. He suggests that they may need to be clearer and more credible with regards to asserting their disapproval of a group’s behaviour, so as not to pass judgement on ‘a whole category of persons’. Ciccu replied that they do not “have ‘one voice’ with which it speaks on all matters. It is safe to say however that the majority of Christians who are involved in CICCU are committed to the bible’s teaching that the practice of homosexuality is a sin (1 Corinthians 6:9). However, it must be clearly stated, it is not a worse sin than any other.” Responding to the Archbishop’s article, Gemma Tumelty, president of the National Union of Students, agreed that silencing disagreement was bad for intellectual life, but defended the action of student unions. She pointed out that Dr Williams overlooks that some Christian unions exclude opinion by limiting access to others, whilst students’ unions seek to allow free flow of opinion. She added that the student movement had a proud record of supporting interfaith dialogue and faith groups as well as ensuring the happy existence of equal opportunities structures. Cambridge to appoint “Professor of Risk” Tom Hensby The University is seeking applicants for a new post: Professor of Risk. The successful applicant for the new post, created with a £3.3 million donation from the Winton Charitable Foundation, will start in September 2007. However, the application form makes no mention of previous stunt experience: they are seeking someone with an ‘international reputation’, but in mathematics rather than snake-hunting. Ray Mears need not apply. ‘The Winton Professorship of the Public Understanding of Risk’ is it’s full title, and Prof. Geoffrey Grimmett, Head of the Department of Pure Maths and Mathematical Statistics, can explain its meaning: “‘Public’ might mean ministers, health specialists, lawyers, investors, industrialists, or the public at large,” Prof. Grimmett says. “‘Risk’ is shorthand for ‘events subject to uncertainty.’” So, if a person has visited the same London restaurant as Russian ex-spy Alexander Litvinenko, what are the chances that they will contract radiation poisoning? Or if a 29 year old man decides to marry his girlfriend of three years, what are the chances that he will meet a more suitable partner later on? For Prof. Grimmett, who suggested the above problems, there is only one way of finding the answers: “The way to confront risk is via mathematics and statistics.” And the stress on public understanding is what makes this post different from similar ones at different universities: “This is not a a Chair in Risk Assessments,” said Professor Grimmett. David Harding, Trustee of the Fund, and Managing Director of Winton Capital management, said that he had been inspired by his time at Cambridge studying Natural Sciences: “[It] showed me the importance of accuracy in empirical information,” he stated. Finally, TCS asked Prof. Grimmett the question that must be on everybody’s mind: If a student was to find himself in a poker game with the new Professor of Risk, what is the risk that he loses? “Half-half of course. A student, being younger, may be less risk-averse and have a better memory. The Professor may have more disposable capital, and be prepared to sustain greater losses before throwing in his hand.” January 18, 2007 The Cambridge Student 3 News Cavendish firm Cambridge Don made Dame Two Cambridge revolultionises reading Drug Ben Sillis Amy Blackburn PLASTIC LOGIC, which originated as part of Cambridge University’s Cavendish Laboratory, has announced that it will be the first large-scale manufacturer of Plastic Electronics, a development set to revolutionise the future of reading. Plastic Electronics will provide the reader with a portable and flexible electronic reading product, aimed at making books for more accessible at any time the reader desires. Plastic Logic’s Active-Matrix displays are thin and strong enough to provide a reading experience closer to paper than any other material. The firm’s plans to commercially manufacture Plastic Electronics have led them to raise £100 million to build a new plant, located in the “Silicon Saxony” region of eastern Germany. The plant will produce display modules for portable electronic reader devices, with an initial capacity of over one million units per year. John Mills, Chief Operating Officer at Plastic Logic, explained the product further. “Our displays will enable electronic reading products that are as comfortable and natural to use as paper, whether you’re on a beach, in a train or relaxing on the sofa at home,” Mills said. “Wireless connectivity will allow you to purchase and download a book or pick up the latest edition of your newspaper wherever you are and whenever you need it. The battery will last for thousands of pages so you can leave your charger at home.” Plastic Logic has funded the operation with the help of investors such as Amadeus, which has been involved with Plastic Logic since its creation, Intel Capital and the Bank of America. Hermann Hauser, Director of Amadeus, said “I am delighted that the first full commercialisation of plastic electronics is now firmly in our sights. With this investment we are not only scaling up a great company, we are also creating a new electronics industry.” As well as being revolutionary from an industrial perspective, Plastic Electronics also adheres to the modern concerns of convenience and concern for the environment. “We still carry around enormous amounts of paper”, said Simon Jones, Vice President of Product Development at Plastic Logic. “However, people are making less room in their lives for the weight and bulk of paper and are becoming more sensitive to the environmental impact of printing to read. We believe there is a substantial unfulfilled need that Plastic Logic can meet by making digital reading a comfortable and pleasurable experience.” CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY academics and staff have been recognised in the Queen’s New Year’s Honours List. Professor Ann Dowling of Sidney Sussex College and the Department of Engineering has been made a Dame for services to Science, whilst computer scientists Professor Andrew Hopper of Corpus Christi College has been made a Commander of the British Empire (CBE) for services to the computer industry. Dowling, who is Professor of Mechanical Engineering, directs the Gas Turbine Partnership with Rolls-Royce and heads the aeronautics and energy division at the University. She said: “I am absolutely thrilled but was very surprised when I received the letter. It is great news.” Her work focuses on the fields of combustion, acoustics and vibration, aimed at technological developments in lowemission combustion and quiet vehicles. Recently she has lead the Silent Aircraft Initiative in the UK who, collaborating with researchers at MIT, have recently released the conceptual design of an ultra-low noise and fuel efficient aircraft, SAX40. She currently serves on numerous industry and government advisory committees, including the Engineering and Physical Scott letters on display Peter Wood THE LAST letters of Captain Robert Scott have gone on display in Cambridge. The series of letters chart “Scott of the Antarctic’s” ill fated expedition to the South Pole, and the bitter struggle of the British Explorers against bitter Antarctic elements. The letters give a deeply personal insight into the last days of the famous explorer and intensely loving relationship with his wife. Ominously addressed ‘To my widow’, his final letter show mounting fears that his team would not make it back to their base camp, yet leave a steadfast portrayal of a man who was determined to survive. The stoic letter reads that: “We have got to within 11 Miles of our depot with one hot meal and two days cold food and we should have got through but have been held for four days by a frightful storm. I think our best chance has gone. We have decided not to kill ourselves but to fight it to the last for that depot but in the fighting there is a painless end so don’t worry.” Heather Lane, librarian of the institute, said that whilst Scott is normally seen as a controlled and introverted leader, the feelings shown here for his wife and his men should lead to a major reassessment of one of Britain’s greatest explorers. She said: “These are national treasures and it’s really quite extraordinary stuff. His letters are incredibly tender. The biographies have tended to focus only on his achievements, but here we can see a completely different side, a family man and a young man completely in love.” The letters move between both family life and the expedition’s progress. At one point Scott asks Kathleen to encourage their son in Natural History, saying: “It is better than games.” The boy, who later became Sir Peter Scott, was one of the UK’s most celebrated naturalists and ornithologists. At the time, and only three years old, Peter shows slightly different interests writing: “Dear Daddy I am going to be a drummer.” Whilst another adds: “I love you”. It was Sir Peter’s widow, Lady Philippa Scott, that had given the letters to the institute, and the collection of over 300 letters and will secure the safekeeping of the heirlooms at the centre, alongside much of the equipment from the expedition. The letters were unveiled on January 17th and will be on show for three months. Professor Ann Dowling Sciences Research Council’s (EPSRC) Technical Opportunities Panel. Dowling has been honoured previously: as well as being a Fellow of the Royal Society and the Royal Academy of Engineering, she was appointed CBE for services to Mechanical Engineering in 2002. Professor Andrew Hopper, Professor of Computer Technology and Head of Department in The Computer Laboratory at the University, has co-founded 12 computer companies during his career. He said he was proud that his CBE honoured his work outside of the University also. “I have had a dual career in academia and industry and so I am particularly pleased that my award recognises my services to the computer industry.” Hopper is world expert in computer network design and mobile computing, and is renowned for his use of large industry-based research groups to develop new concepts and their commercial exploitation simultaneously. He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society last May and is a Fellow of the Royal Academy of Engineering. Also honoured were Former Senior Bursar at Trinity College Dr John Bradfield and university zoologist Peter Barlow. Bradfield, who spearheaded the foundation of the Cambridge Science Park and was its director in the 1970s, is to receive a knighthood for services to science, business and the community in Cambridge. Barlow has been made an MBE for his services to higher education, after 46 years’ service to the Department of Zoology. When he retired last year, Professor Malcolm Burrows, head of the department, said: “Peter’s sense of duty and loyalty to the department are unsurpassed. His huge knowledge of, and commitment to, the department will be very much missed.” Professor Andrew Hooper Richard staying at Cambridge Peter Wood ALISON RICHARD, the administrative head of Cambridge University, has been identified by Harvard University’s presidential search committee as one of their four top candidates for the position. However, Professor Richard has stated that she will serve her full term in office, which expires in 2010, saying that she “remains deeply committed to Cambridge and does not consider herself a candidate for the Presidency of Harvard.” Following further speculation she again issued a statement that “reaffirms her deep and unequivocal commitment” to the University of Cambridge. Friends and colleagues from her previous position at Yale University have also suggested that she is not looking to swap Cambridge, UK, for its Massachusetts counterpart any time soon. Richard holds the position ofVice-Chancellor, the high- est administrative post in the University. However, the full chancellor of Cambridge remains the Duke of Edinburgh, who acts only as a titular head. Soon after taking the position she found that the newfound celebrity of such a position has decidedly unexpected benefits. After cycling into a cow whilst commuting to work, she was apparently surprised to discover that the collision had made national news in “The Times”. Since being appointed the first female Vice-chancellor for in Cambridge’s 800 year history to be given the full 7 year term, she has cited diversity as a priority. This continued the mission she took on at Yale after being raised up in the traditionally male-dominated administration. Others in the running for the Harvard presidential post include John Etchemendy, the provost of Stanford University. Convictions Ben Henriques TWO MEN convicted of drug dealing in Cambridge have escaped prison sentences. The two men, Wesley Stevenson (19) and Sean Burton (22) were arrested in separate incidents in the city during 2006. Sean Burton was found in the Fez Club with 34 ecstasy tablets. In court Burton’s lawyer argued that his developmental disorder made him vulnerable to peer pressure and that friends had persuaded him to buy drugs for them. Burton pleaded guilty and claimed he sold the drugs on a not-forprofit basis. He was given a year’s suspended sentence. The Judge added, “If I thought for a moment that you were dealing in Class A drugs for your own profit you would be going to prison today.” Stevenson was arrested by police after being found carrying 85 Ecstacy tablets. 262 tablets were later found at his home. Stevenson insisted he was a “changed man” at a hearing in Ipswich Crown Court and given a one year suspended sentence. Police are particularly concerned over the tablets Burton was carrying, as they are believed to have already caused one death. Darran Baker (22) of Hythe Close, Burwell, died after taking ecstasy on a night clubbing in Newmarket last July. It is believed that pills he had taken were also pink and marked with a kangaroo motif. The two separate cases have already triggered accusations that Courts are going soft on drug dealers. In 2001 Aaron Strange was convicted of dealing ecstasy and was sent to a young offenders institution for 18 months. Like Burton, Strange insisted he sold the doublestrength pills on a not-for-profit basis and only to friends. Tragically, Lorna Spinks, a student at Anglia Polytechnic University, died after taking two of Strange’s pills. The sentences have since provoked debate, Jim Paice, MP declaring that : “These latest sentences sound very minor for what is a serious crime.”, whilst Harry Shapiro, from drugs awareness charity DrugScope warned caution; “It is important judges retain the opportunity to exercise discretion and treat each individual case according to its merits.” January 18, 2007 The Cambridge Student 37 Sport Town Hold Gown Academics floored by more than equations Neil Grimster At the end of last term, CUABC travelled into the middle of the Fens to take part in the Cambridge town club’s Invitation Show. To the backdrop of the historic Chilford Hall, four of Cambridge’s most experience boxers took on a variety of opponents. First into the ring was Simon Lenhis, against Richard Watkins of the Cambridge Iceni club. The fight saw Lenhis work well behind his jab, using quick footwork to land a variety of scoring punches against Watkins. In the dying seconds of the final round, Lenhis was backed up into a corner and caught with a right hook, which floored him. Expecting to receive the obligatory standing eight count, Lenhis rose to his feet but was, to his obvious dismay, counted out. Next into the ring was vice-captain Rich Spandl, against the RAFs Sam Torme, in a light-middleweight contest. Spandl covered up well and used smart footwork to protect himself from Torme’s attacks. As the contest continued, Spandl mounted his own burst of stinging attacks, in volleys of twos and threes. At the final bell, the judges awarded the Cambridge man a well-deserved victory. The third Cambridge man in the ring was Artem Kora- lev, against Andy Smith of the RAF. During the early exchanges the larger Smith attempted to bludgeon Koralev into submission but as Smith tired towards the end, Koralev fought back. This allowed the RAF boxer to catch the Cambridge man with an accurate combination and force a standing eight count. Nevertheless, this tight bout was awarded to Koralev by a majority. The final contest of the evening saw blues veteran Tom Bennett-Britton matched against Danny May of the Norwich Lads Club in a lightwelter weight competition. Bennett-Britton, drew on his experience, patiently waited for May to make his move and thus both boxers circled each other for long periods of time. Bennett-Britton seemed to be cruising to victory. The judges, however, had a different view of events, awarding May a majority decision - a verdict greeted with boos from the crowd. Captain Ed Andrews and head Coach Dave Byrne were pleased with the night’s performance, but Andrews was quick to remind the boxers of the need for increased effort over the coming months. At this stage the technical assurance of the core of the team bodes well for Varsity in March. Rich Spandl celebrates victory over RAF man Sam Torme Varsity Runners Best 2nds - 4ths Complete Cambridge Rout For 23 Years Leika Gooneratne Owain Bristow Two years of bitter defeat made a victory over Oxford in 2006 all the more satisfying for the Cross Country Light Blues. Dedicated club captain, Claire Day, led two of the most powerful and promising teams ever into the 116th Varsity Match. She was expecting results and the university’s runners delivered. First to step up were the Ladies for their four mile event. After a steady start, Day and Polly Keen took up the running as the water splash approached. The rest of the field bunched tightly behind them. Past the windmill, Keen opened up a slight gap as Oxford’s Emily Crowley passed Day to put pressure on the leader. Keen responded superbly over the finishing stages to come home strongly in 24:59, with a five second winning margin. This was the first time in a decade that a fresher has won a Blues race. Only twelve seconds separated positions three to nine. It was the Cambridge runners that found an extra gear, however. Day dug deep to regain her third place, within touching distance of the funnel, from Varsity 5000m runner-up Charlotte Forbes. Harriet Owles finished sixth place, sweeping past several tiring Dark Blues in the process. All four ladies were awarded full Blues. With the individual win and all four scorers in the first six, victory was assured. Cambridge celebrated their first triumph in three years, with Day gaining her reward for months of hard work. Cambridge’s men went into their 7.5 mile race with confidence. After two years of disappointment, Paolo Natali and Will George were hungrier than ever. They shared the pace at the front, breaking down the strength of Oxonian Jon Blackledge, last year’s winner. With the latter struggling for form after early-season injury, Natali and George were able to get away and Natali’s ferocious surge at the halfway mark proved to be decisive. He won by thirty seconds in 38:39, the first Cambridge man to do so since 1998. George hung onto second, up three places on last year. Former Harvard runner James Kelly was the next light blue home, in fifth, some thirty seconds back. Excellent packing from Owain Bristow, Matt Armstrong and Matt Grant, a further twenty seconds behind in 8th, 9th and 10th, sealed the team win and earned them their blues. These were the first team victories since 2003 and, with the individual titles in the bag, it represented Cambridge’s finest Varsity Match perform- Cambridge came away victorious from the II-IVs cross-country Varsity Match, despite a slow start. The home university lost the women’s IIs and only Tricia Peters broke into the top five. The women’s IIIs levelled the ground, with some strong run- ning from fresher Liz Howse and Sabrina Verjee in the top two positions. A pack of nine Cambridge runners claimed every place between tenth and eighteenth, giving Cambridge a handsome 136-173 victory. With the scores tied, it was now the men’s turn to prove themselves. Ulrich Paquet displayed some experienced running, and along with CUH&H Hon. Secretary Lee Harper and fresher John Redshaw, led the II team to a Cambridge victory. In the men’s IIIs race, Ali Connell was first runner home for Cambridge. Andy Bell, who had just scraped through into the IIIs team in Cuppers trials, surprised CUH&H Ladies at the starting line (Phil Scard) The victorious Cambridge Cross-Country 1st team (Chris Morris) everyone by finishing as the second Cambridge runner. James Gill had an unforgettable sprint finish against ex-Oxford captain Paddy Wallace, but was unlucky to lose out. Chris Morris - according to Captain Claire Day, “probably the keenest IVs captain ever” - was the inspiring force behind the IVs mob. The race was one of the closest ever with Oxford finally winning 543-547. Yet, the first three places had Cambridge’s name on them. Ed Dickins relied on a late burst to win the race. After taking much of the head wind, Alex Gaastra and Charlie Pitt-Ford had to settle with second and third places respectively. With a final score of 3-2 to Cambridge, the scene was set for an exciting Blues match and inescapable Light Blue victory the following week at Wimbledon Common. The Cambridge Student January 18, 2007 38 Snow Luck For Varsity Skiers Rachel Nordby Oxford and Cambridge Men’s Ski Teams This year, the Oxford/Cambridge Varsity Trip found itself in the not-so-snowy French resort Les Deux Alpes. The 100 year-old clash between Oxford and Cambridge is the oldest organised team ski race in the world. Recently more competitions have been added to the traditional lineup of the two Downhill Ski races; namely Big Air and Slopestyle competitions and a debut ‘Combi’ race this year. This much needed broadening of the field allows snowboarders and freestylers recognition and a chance to compete and show off their skills alongside the speed hungry racers. For aspiring ski racers, the Varsity Trip offers a chance to hone one’s technique and gives vital training to those less familiar with gates. Most hopefuls met our coaches every morning at the bracing hour of 10am on the top of the glacier for training, although some found this start-time more challenging than others. This year we were in competent hands, with experienced coaches who have skied all over the world and with many finer teams than ours. Smiles, surprise back-flips and critique flowed throughout the mornings, despite some less than ideal weather. The racers were put through alternating days of Giant Slalom and Slalom training with video analysis and group meetings at the end of the day. The fiercer competitors among us began, from early on, to scope out potential talent and opponents, with rivalries developing across the sexes and among teammates. Each team has six people, and there are three teams, so places are limited and usually hotly contested among the eighty-odd who have a go at the time trials. Unfortunately, the Light Blues were missing some key male members this year, while their darker counterparts seemed only to have gained in strength. The female contest looked to be more evenly balanced and proved to be a real battle of wills. Although soundly beaten, the men fought valiantly and can hold their heads high despite losing to very strong opponents, some of whom flew in especially for the occasion. Lomax Ward, Vice President of the VT and Cambridge boy, came second overall in the Men’s Slalom with a time of 1.25.28, a total of 8.78 seconds behind champion Freddie Clough, of Oxford. Men’s Giant Slalom had similar results with Clough once again leading with an impressive 6.35seconds to the next Cambridge man, Evan Scouros was placed fourth. The ladies competition was, as predicted, a much closer affair, with Cambridge losing in the Slalom by only 0.29 of a second. Rachael Nordby came first with a time of 1.25.71, 4.53 seconds ahead of the next girl - Kate Butler of Oxford. Giant Slalom was more disappointing, ending with a total loss of 18.43 seconds. However, the two female cups remain at Cambridge in the hands of Rachael Nordby, for overall Slalom and Giant Slalom Champion. The second and third team competitions witnessed the Dark Blues’ depth of skill, while Light Blues demonstrated a fantastic team effort. However, Oxford managed another clean sweep, thus sealing overall victory. The new ‘Combi’ Race, held the morning after the downhill races, was a combination of Giant Slalom and Skier Cross, testing a range of capabilities. The two Men’s Ski Team captains fought for first and second place, with Lomax Ward of Cambridge emerging triumphant over Ben Van Zwanenberg. Cambridge Women’s Team Captain, Lucy Greaves, won soundly and was fol- lowed by Emma Henderson of Oxford. Some ‘sick’ tricks were pulled by both boarders and skiers for the Big Air and Slopestyle Competitions held in the world-class terrain park. Men’s Snowboard Big Air and Slopestyle was won by David Brown of Oxford, while Maria Opanova from Cambridge came first in the ladies’ Big Air. Oxford’s Emma Robinson was girls’ Slopestyle champ. Among the skiers, Simon Lerner of Oxford took home gold in both the Big Air and Slopestyle competitions. On top of all this, there were, of course, the memorable Cuppers Races, in which teams race head on in knock-out rounds. Spirits were high, the sun was gradually setting, and the lifts were closing, but after persuading them to stay open for just one final battle, Downing College Cambridge emerged triumphant. So despite the two-weekers being greeted by green mountains and warm rain, snow did eventually fall and the VT was once again a tremendous success. A few fashion trends were re-started (MoonBoots), a wee bit of alcohol consumed (one bar offered 300 litres of beer one night), and some great competition was had. Seriously Sudoku Very Hard Easy 2 8 3 5 2 7 5 7 8 1 6 4 3 3 1 6 6 2 9 7 5 6 4 5 9 1 4 8 7 9 5 8 2 6 4 7 1 3 1 6 7 9 4 9 1 6 2 3 4 8 9 2 7 5 5 4 8 8 7 Men’s Slalom: Lomax Ward: 1:25.3 Evan Scouros: 1:30.3 Andrew Chetwood: 1:33.3 John Hooley: 1:33.6 Women’s Slalom: Rachel Nordby: 1:25.7 Lucy Greaves: 1:30.8 Camilla Barnes: 1:36.2 Maeve Ryan: 1:38.7 Men’s Giant Slalom: Evan Scouros: 1:26.1 Lomax Ward: 1:29.5 Henry Hamilton Stubber: 1:33.4 John Hooley: 1:36.9 Women’s Giant Slalom: Rachel Nordby: 1:27.5 Lucy Greaves: 1:34.9 Camilla Barnes: 1:41.9 Cat Taroni: 1:45.4 TIC/TAC Last week’s challenge: TIC offers: Newcastle Falcons vs. Leicester Tigers (7th Jan) Bet: TAC bet £4 on Newcastle at 7/2 Result: New 31 – Lei 29: TAC wins £14 TIC offers: Tony Romo (Dallas) to throw for over 200 yards (Dallas Cowboys vs. Seattle Seahawks; 7th Jan; Seattle) Bet: TAC bet £10 on over 200 yds at 2/1 Result: 189 yds: TAC loses £10 TIC offers: West Lothian vs. Elgin (Scottish Men’s National Bowls Championship Finals; 6th Jan) Bet: TAC bet £1 on Elgin at 4/1 Result – West Lothian: TAC loses £1 TAC wins £7 - TIC loses £3 This week’s challenge: TAC offers: CURUFC vs. Durham University Rugby Club (20th Jan; Grange Rd) Odds: Durham win: 4/1 ; Cambridge win: 1/5 ; Draw: 20/1 TIC bets: £10 on Cambridge TAC offers: Number of Man Utd goals vs. Arsenal (21st Jan; Emirates Stadium) Odds: Over 1.5 goals: 4/1 ; Under 1.5 goals: 1/2 TIC bets: £3 on over 1.5 goals TAC offers: a non-Chinese player to win the Croatian Table Tennis Open (16th-20th Jan; Zagreb) Odds: For: 20/1 ; Against: 1/2 TIC bets: £1 on a non-Chinese player to win The Cambridge Student January 18, 2007 4 News Toxic Cambridge, Part 1: Drugs Amy Blackburn investigates Cambridge’s drug culture, or lack thereof... UNIVERSITY LIFE can pave the way for many different experiences. For most students, it provides the opportunity for a new-found independence, away from parents and those they have known at home. However, it is inevitable that some students will use this opportunity to become involved in a variety of irresponsible and dangerous activities, one of the most obvious of which is taking recreational drugs. With this in mind, The Cambridge Student decided to investigate the scale of drug-taking amongst students at Cambridge. In 2003/4, the Cambridgeshire Constabulary made 108 arrests for supply of a Class A drug, as well as 216 arrests for drug possession. A survey of crime and personal safety among Cambridge University students conducted in 2004 found that 10% of the 295 respondents said that it was “very easy” to acquire cannabis, and a further 14% claimed that it was “easy”. Prices for most drugs in Cambridgeshire are also lower than in most areas of the country; in December 2003, Cambridgeshire Constabulary estimated that the average local price of cannabis resin was £50 per ounce, compared to a national street average of £66 per ounce. In light of these figures, it is impossible to deny that at every moment someone, somewhere is “It would seem that any major narcotics problem at Cambridge has been stemmed by the watchful eyes of the colleges. ” using drugs in Cambridge. However, this provides very little insight into whether a drug culture actually exists at Cambridge University. For much of the population, university life in general is characterized by hedonism. In this case, drug taking can form part of larger lifestyle of constant recreation at the expense of work and study. On the other hand, the image of Cambridge University in the eyes of the general public is very different. Does the reputation of the typical Cambridge student as bookish and cautious mask a booming student drug culture? On the surface, it would appear that this is not the case. In the 2004 survey, 56% of the students consulted claimed that they had no idea where to purchase cannabis in Cambridge, and presumably no interest in doing so. As would be expected, the University itself condemns drugtaking very firmly, claiming that the use of any kind of illegal drug is incompatible with collegemembership. “Every college has an explicit policy in relation to drugs which is known to both staff and students”, a spokesperson for the Senior Tutors’ Committee said. “These policies all start from the basis that having and using substances of this kind is illegal, unacceptable and incompatible with being a member of a college. There is close liaison with the police, and anyone with any knowledge of illegal activity should report it to the police.” Hence, it would seem that any major narcotics problem existing at Cambridge has been stemmed by the watchful eyes of the colleges. It is this point that makes any investigation of the drug culture in Cambridge difficult. As the use of recreational drugs has clearly not coloured the public perception of Cambridge University, any existing drug culture must be furtive and underground. However, one way of discovering the extent to which recreational drugs are used by students at Cambridge is to examine the numbers of students with drug problems who are attempting to seek help. On the surface, this seems to verify the perception that drug use in Cambridge is minimal. A representative from the Cambridge Universit y Counselling Service told The Cambridge Student that “rather few students” seek counselling purely as a result of a drug problem; during the 2005-6 academic year, fewer than twenty students did so. On the subject of ‘hard’ drugs, such as heroin and cocaine, the representative told TCS that “we rarely hear of the use of hard drugs, and our impression is that these are not very widely used in Cambridge”. Nevertheless, the fact that some Cambridge students are using the counselling service to address problems with illegal drugs indicates that narcotics abuse does exist amongst students in the University. “Although we discourage the use of illegal drugs, the fact is that some people are likely to use drugs at university whatever they are told”, CUSU Welfare Officer Sam Rose told TCS. Rose went on to detail the measures CUSU takes in attempting to prevent the use of illegal drugs by students in Cambridge. “If students do [take drugs], it is important that they do so relatively safely. The CUSU Cambridge Guide, given to all Freshers, and CUSU website therefore have information on the dangers of drugs, the trouble people can get into with the police “The fact is that some people are likely to use drugs at University whatever ” they are told. and college authorities for doing drugs, but also how to be safe if they make the choice to use drugs, including caffeine, alcohol and nicotine.” The Cambridge University Counselling Service also provides a leaf let warning students of the dangers of using recreational drugs. Therefore, the University is clearly prepared for the question of drug-taking amongst its students to arise; however, this is more likely to be a result of a duty to the welfare of its students as opposed to a reaction to a threatening narcotics problem. So far, it appears that the common perception of the Cambridge student in relation to illegal drugs is largely accurate. However, the representative from the University Counselling Service went on to detail several other problems that are related to the use of recreational drugs. “We worry that students, like the general population, are rather ignorant about the possible links between prolonged use of cannabis and ecstasy and the incidence of fairly serious depression, of a form which tends not to respond to anti-depressant medication or other treatment”, the representative told TCS. “We are also somewhat bemused that people who are ultra-cautious about using prescribed medication because of worries about potential side-effects sometimes seem to happily use illicit drugs which have no formal testing.” These concerns are, like the work of CUSU in this area, highly focussed on the welfare of the student in question. Carolyn Hylton The one constant that emerges from this insight into the use of illegal drugs in Cambridge is the role of the student themselves. With the increased independence of student life comes increased freedom of personal choice. Even though the University goes to great lengths to prevent a recognisable drug scene in Cambridge, with visible success, halting drug taking on an individual basis would be impossible. In the absence of an obvious drug culture, those who do take illegal narcotics would be likely to do so regardless of any welfare-based efforts by the University. Perhaps what would be more useful is further emphasis on responsible drinking… The Cambridge University Student Counselling Service can be reached by calling 01223 332865 or emailing [email protected]. They provide a leaflet about the dangers of drug ue at www.counselling.cam.ac.uk/drugs.html. January 18, 2007, The Cambridge Student 5 Focus Bush’s last gamble; Iraq’s last chance GeekPhilosopher.com Andy Gawthorpe analyses the arrival of over 20,000 new troops into Iraq C itizens of Israel,” announced Prime Minister Ehud Olmert last summer, “there are moments in the life of a nation, when it is compelled to look directly into the face of reality and say: no more!” The lacklustre results achieved in the ensuing war against Hezbollah were just one of the low points of a year in which he and President Bush seemed to be losing the war on terror. Last week, Bush expressed a similar sentiment before the American people. Unlike Olmert’s almost unnoticed remarks, Bush’s set off ripples around the world. The reasons are obvious. This is surely the last chance for the U.S. to achieve success in Iraq by stemming the flow of blood and allowing the flow of the political process to regain the initiative. We are far beyond the stage where it is adequate merely to express distaste for the war and to wish to be shot of it as soon as possible. We have come so far that the consequences of failure for the region and the entire Western world would be dire. As Henry Kissinger has been advising the Bush administration, the only acceptable exit strategy is victory. To understand Iraq’s future, we must understand three things. The first is why victory is so important. The second is what the new plan for victory is. Finally, and most importantly of all, will it work? For the U.S. to walk away from Iraq now, or to continue on its current moribund course, would be a moral and strategic catastrophe of the greatest proportions. The past terror of Saddam’s dictatorship does not in any way ameliorate the conditions that Baghdadis now find themselves in. Morally, America owns the problem of Iraq’s future. As Colin Powell advised Bush in the run up to the war, “you break it, you own it”. Right now, this translates into the moral imperative to stop the violence in Baghdad. In the long term, it means establishing a political system which will bring about national reconciliation. The consequences of failure for the region and our interests therein would also be severe. It would decisively strengthen Iran, which seeks both a nuclear weapon and a client state in at least “For the U.S. to walk away from Iraq now ... would be a moral and strategic catastrophe of the ” greatest proportions part of Iraq. It is the stated goal of a large part of the Iraqi insurgency to establish a theocratic state which would serve as a base for future terrorism against the West, Israel and Iraq’s neighbours. The chaos and fragmentation which ensued would invite the interference of all of the nearby countries, leading to a proxy war between Iranian elements and those of the Sunni Arab powers. Finally, America’s will to intervene to ameliorate any of the problems facing this vital region would be broken. Things would get worse and worse until we were left with no choice except to go back; but we would do so under circumstances vastly more dire than those confronting us now. It is hence vital that this outcome be avoided. The new plan calls for the introduction of over 20,000 new combat troops into Baghdad and Iraq’s most dangerous province, Anbar, to carry out what the military call “clear-and-hold” opera- tions. Essentially, these operations entail establishing a long-term presence in regions of the capital to root out all enemy activity and to stay there until reconstruction has progressed to a point which, it is hoped, will prevent the armed groups from ever returning. The troops to be introduced still leave U.S. forces under-manned relative to the size of Baghdad’s population; however, if applied appropriately, they can succeed. At the moment, armed groups in Baghdad vie to gain advantages over one another which can be exploited when coalition forces withdraw, as they eventually must – one way or another. While the political process is moribund and security is uncertain, armed groups seek these advantages by force. They reason that whoever controls the most of Baghdad when full sovereignty is restored will control the destiny of Iraq; and they conclude correctly. In concrete terms, this would mean the brutal expulsion of the capital’s Sunni population to the west of the country, from where they would proceed to make war against Shia Baghdad. The only way to forestall such an eventuality is to re-establish security in the capital so that no armed group is able to operate. Once each community no longer has to fear the militia of the other, the moderate residents of the capital can be persuaded to abandon the way of the gun and embrace a political solution to their differences. Violence has only reached its current proportions in the last year, proving that it is not an insoluble problem. Those that have been forced to turn to the extremists for their protection will happily abandon them once security is provided by another source. The Iraqi government must, with the help of an influx of American forces, become this source. In the wake of security, economic reconstruction will come and draw more people away from the extremists with the vastly more appealing call of a peaceful life. Outside of the capital, the new plan calls for a more aggressive approach to stopping the flow of weapons and money from Syria and Iran to Iraqi insurgent groups. This will contribute to victory. Both of these countries have their own agendas in Iraq which involve strengthening their preferred sectarian group and inciting it to violence against the other. However, the solution to Iraq’s problems does not lie in Damascus or Tehran. With the exception of Al-Qaeda in Iraq, the Iraqi insurgency is capable of funding and arming itself and is ultimately driven by agendas that are its own, not foreign. Finally, after nearly four years of failed attempts to bring peace and stability to Iraq, we must wonder if this new approach will succeed. President Bush certainly thinks it will. Responsibility for mistakes so far, he said, “rests with me”. By unveiling this plan himself and personally appointing the generals who will carry it out, he has accepted full ownership of the new way forward. This is an act of personal courage commensurate with the stakes involved. There is much to suggest that the plan, if executed correctly, can achieve success. We know from past experience that when U.S. forces have been deployed to hold an area of Iraq, violence there has dropped dramatically. It is the premature withdrawal of these troops that leads to resurgence in the violence, often including the brutal murder of those who co-operated with U.S. forces. This time, they must stay there for as long as it takes. So long as enough Iraqis believe this enough to give coalition forces the help they need, real progress can be made on the streets of Baghdad. This means that any hint of wavering on the part of U.S. forces would be fatal to the mission. The biggest unknown is how capable and willing the Iraqi government and its armed forces will prove to be when it comes to implementing the new plan. It is vital that there be an Iraqi face on the new security efforts so that Iraqi civilians can become used to looking to their own government for protection, not armed militia. But these very armed forces are part of the problem as well as part of the solution, as they themselves are responsible for much of the violence in the capital. The new surge in American forces will provide crucial oversight of their activities. But more importantly, it must be demonstrably clear that the Iraqi government is not taking sides in the sectarian conflict. Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, a Shia, has promised that no illegal armed group, including Shia ones, will be exempt from the security crackdown in the capital. If he doesn’t mean it, the plan will fail. If he does mean it, the resultant backlash against the government from all of the capital’s armed groups might prove overwhelming. What this plan needs most of all to succeed is a return to tolerance and moderation on the part of Baghdad’s population. Ultimately the decision to turn against the extremists and thugs in their midst rests with them. The U.S. is taking a gamble that the forces of moderation and reconciliation will win out in the peaceful environment that this new plan will hopefully provide. If they do not, there will be little more that can be done. Iraqis must denounce those responsible for the violence that has so recently overwhelmed them. If Iraqis do not confront their past as a nation, together, they are destined to confront the future apart, and at war. The Cambridge Student January 18, 2007 6 Focus Legalise the poppy fields Ben White and Pete Inglesby look at Afghanistan’s opium industry that in Turkey thirty-five years ago. To be sure, Turkish politics was fractured and unstable, but the country had a modern state capable of strict regulation and control of its agriculture, industry and exports. The Afghan government’s writ barely runs beyond Kabul. Narco-corruption is endemic and reaches the highest levels of government, and it would be all but impossible to prevent the channelling of legal cultivation into illegal processing and trade. The UN and the Afghan government have come out against the Senlis Council’s idea, as has the INCB itself, proclaiming in an annual report that “the idea that legalizing opium poppy cultivation would somehow enable the Government to obtain control over the drug trade and exclude the involvement of criminal organizations is simplistic and does not take into account the complex situation in the country.”. Senlis are also wrong in their diagnosis of the global “pain crisis”. The INCB reports that for the foreseeable future, such is the “high level of stocks of raw materials held in producer countries, the total supply of opiate raw materials (production and stocks) will be sufficient to cover the expected demand”. Inadequate access to opiate-based pain relief in developing countries is primarily due to the basic nature of their health care systems. The world’s pain would not be eased by a sudden new source of licit morphine, and in any case it is far from clear how Senlis propose to establish the pharmaceutical industry needed to produce the “‘Fair Trade’ Brand of Afghan Morphine” they envisage. But if the Senlis Council’s scheme is currently impractical, it should not be dismissed out of hand. Licensed opium production could at some point in the future form an important facet of the legal Afghan economy and should not be ruled out. It needs to be recognised that the West’s home-grown problems and prejudices, feeding into the opinions of bodies such as the UN or the INCB, clouds its handling of the Afghan situation. To condemn poppy cultivation for the production of pain relieving drugs on the basis that doing so would fuel the trade in illicit opiates is to prioritise Western concerns with drug crime over the economic development of Afghanistan. It would be wrong to argue that Afghan farmers should not be allowed to cultivate poppies simply because the profits accrued might be diverted to fund terrorists and criminals, for to do so would rule out any economically productive activity, clearly ludicrous if Afghanistan is to find its feet as a unif ied and stable country. Fetishising prohibition can perhaps be U.S. Department of Defense THE INTERNATIONAL community should allow Afghanistan to legally grow and export opium. Or at least so says the Senlis Council, a European think tank with field offices across the central Asian country. Illicit p o p p y cultivation already dominates the A f g h a n economy, and American-led counter-narcotics strategies are only exacerbating Afghanistan’s development crisis. Meanwhile, across the world many of the poorest go without effective pain-relief for want of opiate-based medicines. Licence opium production, argue the policywonks at Senlis, and allow Afghan farmers a livelihood easing the world’s pain. The argument is seductive in its simplicity, and an array of facts can be marshalled to back it up. According to a report of November last year by the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime, “the opium sector remains Afghanistan’s largest source of export earnings and a major source of incomes in the rural areas”. Afghanistan’s “Opium GDP” amounted to $2.7 billion in 2005/6, equivalent to 27% of the country’s total (drug-inclusive) GDP and 36% of licit GDP. A successful eradication campaign would by 2010 shrink the economy by 8.7%. Yet why eradicate the Afghan poppy when it can be put to legal use? The International Narcotics Control Board estimates that developing nations - four fifths of the world’s population - account for just 6% of global morphine consumption. “If the availability of drugs in developing countries is not improved”, argues the INCB’s President, Professor Hamid Ghodse, “lack of access to opioid analgesics will cause massive amounts of unnecessary pain and suffering”. Sadly, legalising and licensing the Afghan opium trade isn’t the panacea Senlis claims it is. The benchmark transition from illegal to licensed poppy cultivation occurred in Turkey in the 1970s. With American backing, Turkey went from a major source of heroin, feeding 80% of the US market, to one of the largest suppliers of medical opiates. But the situation in Afghanistan today is simply incomparable to Pinochet: the good guy? Chris Mead argues in defence of the Chilean dictator THAT PINOCHET is demonised ought not come as a surprise, as few would lionise a violent dictator, let alone a corrupt one. Especially when those exiled under his regime had some 30 years to shape our views to their own, hardly apolitical, perspectives. The charges levelled involve human rights abuses, corruption and despotism. Accusations that Allende, whom Pinochet excised from office in 1973, can hardly be considered a stranger from. Nor can he be considered a stranger to policies that have now been largely discredited by serious economists. Hyperinflation, the theft of assets (nationalisation) and bankrupt economic policy resulted in a decimated Chilean economy. Upon supplanting Allende, Pinochet, rather than relying upon economic policy formulated in the previous century, decided to engage with serious modern economists and implemented liberal monetarist policies that prefigured Thatcherism by some years. Under their direction the Chilean economy’s growth outstripped that of its Latin American contemporaries by a clear margin, with all the attendant benefits to its people. The most trenchant criticisms of Pinochet are those of his so-called “human rights” record. Before going any further we should remember that “human rights” are a mere invention, a fabrication. Moreover they are informed by a modern Western morality whose application elsewhere is dubious. Would Pinochet’s critics castigate the Chile of 300 years ago as “brutal”, “savage” or autocratic? The squeamishness of his critics belies a wider Western malaise: the loss of constitution for the sweep of history. Accepted estimates place the “disappeared” at numbering 3,000 or so, which is less than a tenth of 1% of the population as a whole. Were those dissidents fascists, not socialists, few would now complain. Socialism is as pernicious as fascism, and those beneath its banner have caused more suffering, cultural destruction and so called ‘human rights abuses’ than any group I can think of. In fighting such a force aren’t any and all means legitimate? As unpalatable as torture and ‘disappearance’ are, I assert that Pinochet acted legitimately within the culture of the day. We should remember that the excesses of Che Guevara, a man who murdered personally, are widely ignored; at least Pinochet had the decency to delegate. Those who venerate Guevara happily overlook this, asserting he fought for an idea. Pinochet had an idea and a rather more realistic one at that; contrast contemporary Chile’s governance and economy with that of Cuba for a stark illustration of this. Pinochet will remain a controversial figure. That the families of “the disappeared” still suffer serves as the largest impediment to a reasoned appreciation of his actions. Pinochet fought socialism, and the families of those sacrificed for that vision are to be sympathised with, yet we must not allow that to colour our interpretation. Their suffering ought be a regrettable footnote to the wider debate, instead it is a cause célèbre. Is it too much to ask that the debate moves on? compared to US policies on HIV/AIDS, or to some of the knee-jerk pronouncements by those on the anti-capitalist ecological left about climate change. Automatic reactions based on blinkered ideological prejudices are never the way to decide policy or to win an argument. The proposal of the Senlis Council to regulate a legal Afghan opium industry is perhaps an idea whose time has not yet come, but concepts which challenge the cosy consensus of the international community and champion development are surely the best hope of future prosperity that Afghanistan has. January 18, 2007 The Cambridge Student 7 Focus Prohibition is not the answer Mary Jane Hulandi suggests there may be another way to win the war on drugs NOTHING IS MORE destructive of respect for the government and the law of the land,” wrote Albert Einstein upon surveying alcohol prohibition in the U.S. in 1921, “than passing laws which cannot be enforced.” Whatever the merits of drug prohibition in theory, there is mounting evidence that it has been a colossal failure in practice. This fact alone may require a rethink of the way our society deals with drugs. The Home Office says it spends £1.5 billion a year dealing with illegal drugs, whereas a confidential report from Number 10 estimated the total economic cost of drug-related crime at £19 billion a year. Yet despite the billions pumped into fighting the scourge of illegal drugs, usage in this country is at an all-time high. Home Office surveys report that millions of people are using illegal drugs every month, and the total size of the drug market is now, according to the same source, worth somewhere in the region of £4 billion. Drugs are cheaper and more widely available than ever before. Drug usage is destructive of individuals and communities in ways that may not be immediately apparent to the casual student user. The fact that there are many relatively affluent users whose only crime is to purchase an illegal substance with their deserved earnings should not be allowed to obscure the vast ills caused by illegal drugs. Speak to any police officer in an urban area, and they will tell you that drugs are by far the largest cause of acquisitive crime. Drugs destroy families, lock addicted individuals into a cycle of self-destruction, and fund other criminal activity, not the least of which is terrorism. Because of the linkage between drugs and crime, an end to prohibition seems to many a horrific idea: is it not merely to licence criminal and destructive behaviour? However, some, but not all, of these ills can be tackled through an end to prohibition. Our current policy seems unlikely to make significant inroads into reducing any of these problems, which have only grown worse under its watch. A new approach is clearly needed, and it is time we faced up to this reality. What this new approach would consist of is controversial. Change will and should be gradual. Over the coming decades, society’s opinions about drugs are bound to change as their increased prevalence becomes an irreversible fact. There are already more users of illegal drugs than our prisons can hold, and if current trends continue the situation will soon be even graver. To contain the pernicious impact of drug use on society, the state needs to move from a paradigm of prohibition to one of regulation. Legalisation would help to break the link between illegal drugs and other types of crime. The profits earned by drug-dealers amount to a vast pool of resources at the command of the criminal underworld, to be redirected into whatever activity they so wish. If the market was regulated, this money could be monitored and taxed, at once reducing the resources available to criminals and terrorists worldwide and increasing those available to the state. The state could use these newly-acquired resources to launch educational campaigns against drugs, tackle what was left of the illegal market, and provide rehabilitation facilities. As with alcohol and tobacco, there would still have to be significant restrictions on usage and sale. These would have to be even tougher than those on the aforementioned substances. There would be no obligation on the part of employers to hire people whose drug usage interferes with their ability to function, in the same way that alcoholics do not have their behaviour licensed merely because alcohol is legal. A significant social stigma would still be attached to the use of hard drugs, and rightly so. The idea is not to encourage drug usage, but to accept that our battle against it is a losing one and that other approaches are needed to ameliorate its ill effects. Legalisation may lead to increased usage, but the growth in the numbers taking illegal drugs is already high enough to make a nonsense out of attempts to staunch the tide. Either we condemn a growing segment of the population to criminality and allow the power of the dealers to grow, or we undercut them by radically adjusting the terms of the drug market to make it safer for individuals and less of a drain on society as a whole. Whatever course is taken, one thing is clear: prohibition is failing, and the sooner we face up to this reality, the sooner we can come up with a new way to tackle the scourge of drugs. The Focus section this term has been remodelled to deliver comment and analysis on a broad range of local, national and international issues. Each week we will also have a forum for your views on a topical issue. Next week’s issue is “Should the United States have done anything to stop the executions of Saddam Hussein and his co-defendants? ” Replies of no more than 100 words please Email your contributions and comments to [email protected] Interested in teaching? The STUDENT ASSOCIATES SCHEME is an opportunity to learn more about teaching. We are looking in particular for prospective teachers of Maths, Science, Modern Languages, ICT, RE, Music, Design and Technology, and Food Technology, in Secondary schools. This flexible scheme is designed to complement your existing study commitments. A bursary is paid on completion of the placement. The Cambridge programme includes: A fifteen day placement in a local school with the opportunity to • undertake valuable work experience • further develop transferable skills • consider teaching as a potential career • raise levels of attainment and aspiration of young people in schools A programme of induction and training focused on • the role and accountabilities of the teacher • the process of teaching and learning • experience of the standards for qualified teacher status To find out more or register your interest contact: Jo McGuire Tel: 01603 591434 E-mail: [email protected] Funded by the Training and Development Agency for Schools www.tda.gov.uk/studentassociates School of Education and Lifelong Learning www.uea.ac.uk/edu/studentassociates January 18, 2007 The Cambridge Student 8 Science Sex, drugs and the profit margin Beth Ashbridge searches the moral conscience of the big players in the drug T he pharmaceutical company is making a positive improvement to people’s lives. It has a noble purpose. It develops medicines and vaccines that save lives and make people feel better,” Sir Christopher Gent, Chairman of GlaxoSmithKline (GSK). GSK is the UK’s largest pharmaceutical company, with a turnover of £21.7 billion in 2005, 150 projects in the pipeline and a “global quest to improve the quality of human life.” Pfizer is the world’s largest pharmaceutical company and dedicates itself “to humanity’s quest for longer, healthier, happier lives through innovation in pharmaceutical, consumer, and animal health products.” They boasted a turnover of £26.5 billion in 2005, and among the 235 projects in development, Pfizer is responsible for the world’s best-selling drug, Lipitor (worth £6 billion per year), which reduces cholesterol, and Viagra (worth £800 million per year). But do these companies really achieve what they claim to? Are they truly “dedicated to humanity’s quest for longer, healthier, happier lives”, or is it simply the longer, healthier and happier lives of their shareholders? It is no longer a death sentence in the West to suffer from HIV/AIDS. The disease is a now classed as a chronic illness because it is managed by antiretroviral drugs (ARVs), which are continually being developed by companies like GSK and Pfizer. However, ARVs are very expensive and this puts them out of reach of many countries where the virus is most rampant. In Sub-Saharan Africa, an estimated 25.3 million people suffer from AIDS. Many campaigners believe that pharmaceutical companies are not doing enough to combat the onslaught of this terrible disease in less-developed nations. It is not in their commercial interests to invest in ARVs against HIV due to the nature of the virus. As strains of the virus become resistant, new drugs constantly need to be developed, requiring more and more money. It can take 10-15 years to develop a drug and millions of pounds, resulting in drugs that would be given away or sold at no-profit prices to poorer nations, making no money for the shareholders. In December 2006, 3-year talks ended between the International Federation of Chemical Energy, Mine and General Worker’s Union (ICEM) and some of the largest pharmaceutical companies, including GSK and Pfizer. The plans aimed to provide “high quality HIV/AIDS medicines and related products for impoverished people in SubSaharan Africa and other less-developed countries at no-profit prices”. GSK and Pfizer, as well as many other well-established drug companies, failed to sign up to this proposal. The fear is that if the pharmaceutical companies Dossiers Sexologique Clare Oliver on the psychology of addiction Mico Tatalovic flirts with genetic randiness. We differ in the extent of sexual arousal and lust we feel. Most people experience intermediate levels of the need for sex, so we might find it an unremarkable statement that there are individual differences when it comes to randiness. On the one end of the spectrum, people are asexuals; on the other, sexual addicts. I came across asexuality in a college friend who found neither guys nor girls sexually appealing. Being biologically-minded, I hypothesized that she might be asexual. Although this didn’t seem plausible at the time, one must be creative when it comes to making hypotheses to explain natural phenomena. The next thing to do was to look for evidence to support my hypothesis. A few minutes with Google resulted in a plethora of websites explaining yet another sexual denomination: asexuality. Apparently around 1% of the population never feels the need for sex. Sex addicts I found by pure accident. I was Carolyn Hylton sex we need depends on which type of this gene we have. ” Although the ultimate, evolutionary reason for having sex is to reproduce, on a proximate, motivational level, pleasure is the main factor we should be looking at when studying human sexual behaviour. Similar to the way in which genes controlling the pleasure associated with eating sweet food kept us alive throughout our evolutionary history, genes associated with the pleasurable feeling during sex kept us reproducing. Moving on from socially induced stigmas about sexual behaviour will allow us to better understand this important aspect of being a human. community of people who need to have sex pretty much all the time. ” searching for South African Airways by typing SAA into the search engine. Lo and behold, Sexual Addicts Anonymous popped up as one of the results. There is a large community of people who need to have sex pretty much all the time. Some have recognized this problem to be more than just promiscuity, coining the term sex addict. There must be a fair amount of lust that can be attributed to social effects- nurture, so to speak. However, I believe that as in the majority of other behaviours, nature must play a crucial role. We can understand the origins and initial functions of such behaviours, and the differences between individuals, much bet- in genes”. It finds that, other things being equal, differences in alleles (types) of a single gene (D4 dopamine receptor) expressed in our brains are significantly correlated with the selfreported levels of sexual desire and arousal. So the amount of sex we need depends on which type of this gene we have. The gene is involved in perception of pleasure, and some researchers believe that pleasure is the main reason people have sex. “So the amount of “There is a large ter if we apply evolutionary thought to them. Behaviour can be influenced by natural selection in a similar way to other traits, such as height or hair colour. Nevertheless, behaviours are usually complex enough for the underlying genetic and physiological basis upon which natural selection has acted to be difficult to unravel. A paper published in the journal Molecular Psychiatry in 2006 revealed for the first time that a single gene may have a large effect on how lustful we feel. This research was reported in media under titles such as “randiness is all Catch Mico’s science show on CUR1350, Thursdays at 6pm. This week he’ll be talking “Science in film” with a guest speaker from Oxford University. allow free access to HIV treatments, they can end up (illegally) in other markets, so that millions of pounds and 10-15 years of development would be lost to fraud. They also claim that making no profit from their products would be detrimental to research and development in their other projects. Many argue that investment in combating fraud is the key. If controls could be put in place to ensure that intellectual property was safe in the hands of the drug manufacturers in Africa, the desired drugs could be produced more cheaply while boosting educational programmes. This was the aim of the failed ICEM talks that ended last year. The chairman of GSK claims his “pharmaceutical company is making a positive improvement to people’s lives. It has a noble purpose.” Now it’s only a matter of turning this statement into a reality on a global scale. Drug addiction is a well-known and researched problem. The common definition would be “a dependence on a particular” or such-like, and although this is a sensible answer, it’s not considered true any more. Increasingly, addiction researchers are no longer seeing it as physical dependence on a substance (not least of all because addicts don’t have to be addicted to a substance; sex addiction for example). Instead, it’s being defined as compulsive drug-seeking with loss of control, unlimited intake and, without assistance, consistent relapse. One of the main differences between dependence and compulsive drug-seeking is that the former definition implies that an addict who doesn’t get his fix will go into withdrawal. However, it is questionable whether all addictive substances do cause some form of withdrawal. Qat is used as a drug in several countries, and is said to cause no withdrawal symptoms like shivering, sweating and diarrhoea. This revelation helped shape the new definition. It wouldn’t come as a big shock to hear that one theory attempting to explain why addiction occurs suggests that withdrawal is such a painful, horrific experience that it propels people to continue to take drugs in order to avoid it. This theory may be correct in some certain circumstances, but if drugs can exist without withdrawal symptoms, then there must be other reasons for addiction. Conditioning is a possible cause of addiction. It has been shown that addicts are more likely to feel cravings if they are in a room that they normally take drugs in. It’s argued that through repeated drug taking in that room, it has become associated with the pleasurable feeling of being high, and the expectation of being high leads to them wanting drugs. This isn’t the only suggested theory of addiction that doesn’t involve dependence; theories based on the formation of habits have also been suggested. These kinds of theories can explain why addicts who have taken a drug so many times that the presence of the drug compels them to take it, or being in a situation in which they would normally take drugs compels them to seek the drug, in spite of the value of the drug diminishing. This explains why it is people continue to take drugs even though it has destroyed their life. One curious aspect of addiction is relapse. If a recovering addict has managed to function without the drug for years, even decades, then why go back to it? Unsurprisingly, stress plays a major factor both in the development of addiction and in relapse (areas with higher levels of unemployment have higher rates of alcoholism). Specifically, stress in the person’s home life puts them at greater risk of relapse than stress in their work life or in the community. Sadly, little work has been done in this important area of addiction, as most research focuses on what makes some people vulnerable to addiction and how it is maintained once it has begun. 9 January 18, 2007 The Cambridge Student Science Of particles and people... Charlotte Phillips guides us through the latest breakthroughs Energy crisis - Energy from mirrors: A potential answer to the age-old hunt for a nearlimitless energy source was recently proposed by Silgagadze (Novosibirsk State University), looking into an as yet unobserved quantity called “mirror How to make a “mirror twin” perpetual energy machine: •�Place an amount of mirror material in a box filled with a normal material. •�The mirror matter absorbs a small amount of heat from its surroundings (i.e. from the normal matter around it). •�The mirror matter then gives off this heat as “mirror photons” before interacting with the normal material again. •�This causes the box to rapidly cool. •�Place another box of normal material next to the box, at the same temperature. •�Heat then flows from one box to the other in an almost perpetual process. •�Extract the energy given off by this fluctuating temperature difference and use it. patented version. This could mark the dawn of an accessible cure for millions of suffers, living predominantly in the developing world. matter”. He developed his theories based on the idea of every particle having a “mirror” twin, which would barely interact with it. His ideas have been met with great interest in the scientific community, despite verging on science fiction. The next hurdle facing his team is to find some mirror matter, and work out how to use it. This could take some time. Nanoparticle clots to kill tumours: Health - Cheaper drug to cure hepatitis C: An inexpensive Hepatitis C cure with the potential to save millions world-wide has recently emerged, made possible by dodging a patent held by a large pharmaceutical company. A drug was originally developed and patented by Hoffman-La Roche and Schering Plough which, as opposed to reducing the amount of the virus in the patient’s blood, suppresses the virus indefinitely. Coated with a complex molecule (called PEG) that increases the lifetime of the drug in the body, it is effective but expensive - £7000 per year per patient. As the idea to add PEG to the surface was part of the patent, no cheaper adaptations of Hepatitis: not this cuddly in real life. the method could be used. This all changed when researchers of Imperial College London and the London School of Pharmacy anchored PEG just inside the drug, using bridging bonds to hold the molecule in place, by-passing the patent in the process. When used in trials on mice, it performed as well as the Nanoparticles released into the body could soon be used to kill cancerous tumours, by surrounding them and cutting off their blood supply. Previously used in research to target the blood vessels around tumours, nanoparticles achieved limited success because only a few of the particles attached themselves to the correct place at the base vessels leading into a tumour. The key to this study’s success has been to encode a self-amplifying mechanism into the particles in order to get them to attract other particles and blood proteins, cumulating in a clot that blocks vessels and starves tumour cells. These trials, conducted by Ruoslahti at the Burnham Institute for Medical Research, have produced results three times better than previous nanoparticles designed to cure cancer. BE IT. HAVE YOU EVER WONDERED WHAT IT MUST BE LIKE TO WORK IN A WORLD-CLASS INVESTMENT BANK? HAVE YOU EVER DREAMT OF BEING A PLAYER IN GLOBAL FINANCE – A MOVER, SHAKER, A MAKER OF MARKETS? CAN YOU IMAGINE WORKING SHOULDER-TO-SHOULDER WITH PEOPLE WHO ARE EXPERTS IN THEIR FIELD, YET HAPPY TO SHARE THEIR KNOWLEDGE WITH YOU? OUR INTERNSHIPS ARE DESIGNED TO GIVE YOU AN AUTHENTIC TASTE OF OUR WORLD, AND TO HELP YOU DECIDE WHETHER YOU WOULD ENJOY WORKING WITH JPMORGAN. MANY OF THE PEOPLE WHO JOIN US COME THROUGH THIS ROUTE. TO PUT IT ANOTHER WAY, MOST OF THE PEOPLE WHO DO AN INTERNSHIP WITH US, DECIDE THEY WANT TO BUILD A CAREER HERE TOO. SO OUR ADVICE IS SIMPLE. DON’T DREAM IT. BE IT. INTERNSHIP APPLICATION DEADLINE: JANUARY 21, 2007. jpmorgan.com/careers THIS IS WHERE YOU NEED TO BE. JPMorgan is a marketing name of JPMorgan Chase & Co. and its subsidiaries worldwide. ©2007 JPMorgan Chase & Co. All rights reserved. JPMorgan is an equal opportunities employer. The Cambridge Student January 18, 2007 10 Travel Religion and culture in Indian cities Rachel Cherry travels through a changing and contradictory India I ndia is changing rapidly. Factories, call centres, air conditioned cars, American style coffee chains and mobile phone a d v e r t s spring up amongst the whirl of bu i ld i ng work and traffic that characterises nearly all of India’s already overcrowded cities. This modern, technological, westernised face of India, juxtaposes the poverty and agriculture that remains at the core of many people’s lives. Even in the densely packed urban spaces, new jeeps jostle for space on the road with cycle rickshaws, oxen pulled carts, cows and beggars sleeping on the streets. In the small strips of land between the urban commuter railway lines and the swarming roads of Mumbai, mothers squat outside tiny iron shacks lighting fires to prepare the evening meal, as they watch over their children playing amongst the rubbish, dirty puddles, fumes and noise at the edge of the road. The simplicity of life in the slums sits side by side with the luxury life style of Bollywood stars. This juxtaposition of wealth and poverty which is so explicit and visible in India’s cities, together with the sheer number of people, makes the cities hard to comprehend. There are 12 million squatters in Mumbai, living on 10% of the land. Despite the perceived chaos, contrasts and contradictions to European eyes, the cities are economically booming. The slums full of single room factories and thousands of entrepreneurs. Rural ways of life, of herding goats, mud floors and open sanitation, form part of urban life and thus cities in India challenge our understandings of the urban. They are buzzing centres of life and as can be seen after the July 2006 Mumbai bombings, full of resilience, resourcefulness, compassion and a will to succeed. As we visited the cities of Mumbai, Pune, Bhopal, Varanasi, Lucknow, Chandigarh, Delhi and Chennai, as beggars touched our feet and we were Bollywood extras for a day, we experienced “beggars touched our feet and we were Bollywood extras for a day ” the raw edge of this changing, contradictory India. Religion in India cannot be separated from the rest of life, it is not only diffused through everyday life, but it forms the very basis of life itself. The richness and diversity of religion in India struck me as something which defines the nation itself. Everywhere we went, religion, ritual and tradition were visible from the flashing lights of Ganesh shrines fixed to the dashboards of taxis to the early evening incense puja performed in internet cafes. Religion seeps into every corner of daily life, the colour of sarees, the sound of temple bells, calls to prayer and flowers sold on street corners. In the world’s biggest democracy, there is no move towards secularisation, nor any embarrassment that religion pervades and influences so much of life. We saw the ancient Buddhist, Hindu and Jain cave temples of Ellora, 5th century Buddhist paintings of Ajanta, drank water from the source of the holy river Godavari, visited some of the 2000 temples of the town of Nashik, stood in awe in the blistering midday sun at the carving of the temples of Khajuraho, laughed and chatted with boys outside the third largest mosque, watched seven brahmins complete an elaborate puja in a rain storm on the banks of the holy river Ganges, sat on the floor with hundreds of other pilgrims to eat the food provided at the Sikh Golden Temple in Amristar, played Frisbee with boys at a Christian orphanage in Kariakal before they prepared for their daily mass and stood, in silence, watching the relentless waves buffeting the ruins of a temple destroyed by the tsunami. The plurality and syncretism of religion in India can baffle visitors. Christian, Muslim and Hindu shrines are all decorated with the same strings of flowers, coloured flags, tikka powder and incense, linking all forms of worship together within the traditions of India. In Hinduism the gods worshipped and particular festivals vary within the country and this highlights how diversity, plurality, syncretism and unity all interact together to make India so rich and colourful. My whole trip to India enriched my understanding of the world’s largest democracy on many different levels, but there is a lot more left to discover in this chaotic, multi-ethnic, multi-lingual, and multi-cultural, beautiful country. I will definitely return. Get there: fly from London to Mumbai (£320) Stay there: accommodation in India is cheap A woman selling flowers for puja (worship) “A Country of nonsense” Harry Hewlett visits McLeod Ganj, the site of the Tibetan government-in-exile Despite being a country whose population numbers over a billion, including many a persistent tout, there is only one person in India that you cannot completely avoid – Mahatma Gandhi. His face covers every bank note, and one of his sayings concludes most arguments. Tibetan prayer flags behind cow This great father figure famously called India “a country of nonsense” and no where else can this confusion be seen than in the small hill station McLeod Ganj. On a map this small town, named after two British administrators David McLeod and Forsyth Ganj, looks tiny and rather insignificant. It has a small population and the only access is via one windy road from nearby Daramsala. However, as with much of the rest of India, no assumptions should be made. Getting off the bus you are greeted by a hustle of Buddhist monks going about their daily lives. Monks are everywhere, praying, drinking chai and doing a spot of retail therapy. Since Indians are largely Hindu, McLeod Ganj feels as if it is has been transported from another country and simply plunked down on this leafy hill side. And that is pretty much what happened. In 1960, India’s first Prime Minister Nehru offered McLeod Ganj to the Dalai Lama as the site of his government-in-exile. It has since become the home of thousands of Tibetans, who have fled their homeland, making McLeod Ganj a vibrant, bustling and rather unique town to visit. The small streets – packed with all the usual Indian accessories of cows, carts and stalls – are given extra colour by orange and red robed men. There is an abundance of unusual activities to satisfy travellers who like to things that are a little bit different. If you are looking for anything from Tibetan cooking lessons to a bit of hard core meditation, McLeod Ganj has the answer (unlike one of its slightly too mysterious “Monks are everywhere, praying, drinking chai and doing a spot of retail therapy ” fortune tellers). Positioned in its wonderful setting almost at the top of a steep and forested hill, McLeod Ganj is fantastic place to be a visitor. The trouble with McLeod Ganj though is that for all the wonder and uniqueness of the place it is infused with the depressing feeling of having to make do with not being elsewhere. The main religious site, the central cathedral (Tsuglag Khang), feels much more like a 1960s school than the fantastic Jokhang for which it is meant to temporarily substitute. All around there are notices and pamphlets describing how the Tibetans are being kicked out of their home land and their culture destroyed by the Chinese Government. McLeod Ganj is a delight for the tourist but a place that most of the inhabitants do not see as home. It is a common enough prediction that India and China are set to become the super powers of this century. McLeod Ganj arguably highlights the major difference between them. One sees the famously non-violent and peaceful Tibetans as a threat to the authority of its state. The other allows a different nation to set up a government within its own borders. India’s diversity may mean at times that it appears to be “a country of nonsense” but such nonsense is an asset – it can only be hoped that its rival realises this soon. Get there: fly from London to New Delhi (£350), 12 hour bus from New Delhi to McLeod Ganj (deluxe bus, £8) Stay there: The Green Hotel (private room with bath, £5-6 per night) January 18, 2007 The Cambridge Student 11 Travel Indian silk politics Philippa Williams explores the interwoven faiths in Varanasi’s silk industry V aranasi is undoubtedly something special. Think of the colourful, chaotic, crowded and corrupt images of India; this city broadcasts them in digital plasma clarity, with Dolby surround sound! Varanasi is as Indian as India gets. It’s ancient; located on the banks of the River Ganga it is considered to be Hinduism’s most sacred city, devout Hindus believe that to die in Varanasi will release them from the cycle of rebirth. This unique city has proved to be an enigma for countless visitors over the centuries. Pilgrims, tourists, backpackers, musicians, artists, yoga enthusiasts and researchers continue to be delighted, frustrated and intrigued by Varanasi, so when I had the opportunity to “In Varanasi, whole neighbourhoods are devoted to the sari business ” conduct geography fieldwork here for a year, I just couldn’t resist. I first came to the city with a friend two years ago; we headed straight to the river Ganges for an early morning boat ride. As we set off from one of the southerly ghats, a “film-set” emerged through the morning mist. We sat mesmerised by the scene. At the river’s edge crowds of bathers – men and women – were taking a dip or offering worship, kids were splashing around, some learning to swim with the help of rubber tyres, others diving off high steps. Away from the bathers washer men vigorously beat grime out of clothes on smooth stone slabs and Hindu holy men dressed entirely in orange sat meditatively at various vantage points. Further upstream smoke spiralled from the pyres at Harish Chandra and Manikarnika cremation ghats. All this was set in a backdrop of elaborately decorated Hindu temples and tumble down summer palaces now colonised by garishly decorated guest houses and restaurants symbolised the muddle of old and new. Given this initial glimpse of the city it is immediately obvious that interwoven into the city’s social, cultural, economic and architectural fabric is a significant Muslim contribution. Hindu and Muslim relations in India tend to attract attention only when the communities conflict, suggesting to many that they are destined to clash. Yet if you speak to people in the chai shops in Varanasi, the idea of brotherhood dominates discussion about Hindu-Muslim relations in their city. This brotherhood is most tangibly rooted in the city’s oldest and largest handicraft industry, the silk trade. Varanasi (or Banaras as used more commonly by locals) is renowned for its magnificent Banarasi Brocade saris which form an essential component of any Indian wedding. Distinctive for their elaborate zari (gold thread) work and vibrant colours these saris have traditionally been produced by a predominantly Muslim workforce, while the traders have typically come from the Hindu community. In reality the picture is slightly more complex as both Hindus and Muslims occupy a myriad of different roles from supplying silk thread, dying saris, attaching the silk warp to the handloom and weaving, to buying, working as commission agents and exporting the finished saris. Aspects of the silk industry fill the city’s streets; whole neighbourhoods are devoted to the sari business. Travel on the main thoroughfare from Assi in the south to the main market area of Godaulia in the middle of the city and you pass through the neighbourhood of Madanpura. Here the street is edged with sari shop after sari shop; the atmosphere is distinctly Muslim as men in skull caps and smart white kurta pyjama spill out of the chai stalls and women wearing burqa mount bicycle rickshaws. During Ramadan (the Islamic month of fasting) this is where to find a delicious Madanpura speciality bukka khani, a cardamom flavoured sponge patty served covered in syrup and prepared in roadside stone ovens just in time to break the day’s fast at sunset. Dive into one of the narrow alleyways (or Banarasi gallies) on either side or the main road and the clamour of traffic is replaced by the repetitive clacketing of handlooms. It is easy to get lost (I frequently have) in the gallies as they twist and turn in the shade of four and five storey houses and towering minarets of ornate mosques. Peering through one of the huge open windows brings the masters of the clacketyclack, clackety-clack into focus. These are the weavers of Varanasi. One of them is Abdulla, at just 18 he has already been weaving for 10 years! He and his brother weave 10 hours a day 7 days a week to support their family of 10. As Abdulla continues his work stopping intermittently to fill the bobbins; he tells me how his family’s poverty stricken position forced him to leave school at 8 years old. “I only know how to sign my name, but I’ve forgotten how to read and write” he says regretfully. He’s determined that his younger brother should stay in school, but even the relatively low school fees challenge the family budget, a pressure compounded by the loss of his brother’s potential wages as a weaver’s assistant. “At just 18, Abdulla has already been weaving for 10 years ” Abdulla and his contemporaries are acutely aware of the need for education. In an industry under threat from the upshots of economic liberalisation policies and changing fashion trends, work in the traditional Banarasi saris is increasingly hard to find and many handlooms lie deserted. In another part of the city on the roof top of a five floor building on rent from a Hindu landlord I met Mohammed Ansail Ansari. He along with his three brothers and part-time help of their father runs a sari dying business, Mohammed used to weave but changed to dying silk five years ago when his weaving work ceased. Despite the fantastic skyline perspective from their “factory”, the work is arduous and poorly rewarded; like the weavers Mohammad’s concern is just to earn enough to feed his fam- 18-year-old Abdulla at work at his handloom ily. Once the saris are finished weavers like Abdulla will try their luck at Varanasi’s oldest sari market, Kunj gali, hidden in the labyrinth alleyways of the old town. Here the gallies are lined with small open fronted shops, each one decorated in a soft pink, the floors lined with white sheeted cushioning upon which sari traders sit cross legged eagerly anticipating their next buyer or weaver. The market comes alive in the evening when the main arteries of the bazaar bulge with weavers carrying their bundles of fresh saris to waiting traders. Porters transport boxes stacked precariously high above their heads and shop boys deliver orders of steaming chai and hot buttered toast intended to sweeten the shop’s latest customers. I’ve spent hours here, watching ladies spend whole afternoons selecting the perfect saris for a wedding. At this time it occurs to me how rather ironic it is, that the silk often prepared in the open spaces of Muslim cemeteries and more often produced by Muslim men, women and children should be presented to the Hindu Gods and constitute such a symbolic element of Hindu weddings. But silly me, this is India, no, rather this is Varanasi and irony and contradiction together with the unusual and the unexpected are everyday qualities which can only be embraced. It can be exhausting though, and even sometimes frustrating getting to grips with this extraordinary city. Thinking about his relationship with Varanasi, one American backpacker remarked to me that, “you either love it, or hate it”. This is certainly true, but I can’t help but think those that hate it clearly don’t hang about long enough to love it, so stay a little while longer. Get there: fly from London to New Delhi (£350), overnight train from New Delhi to Varanasi (third class sleeper, £10) Stay there: The Sahi Riverview Guesthouse (double room £5 per night) or Ganga View Guest House (air conditoined double £29 per night) The Cambridge Student January 18, 2007 12 Theatre. The man behind the costume Lisa Hagan goes behind the scenes at the ADC... An Interview with Andrew Jackson T he ADC’s touring theatre served as Andrew Jackson’s big break onto the Cambridge drama scene and he proves to be a promising new talent. Having always been a “big Shakespeare fan,” a passion instilled from his school days, it was a dream come true to take on the role of Ross in one of Shakespeare’s darker plays, Macbeth. Although a first appearance in Cambridge, Andrew has taken part in drama for a considerable number of years, including tackling Macbeth previously whilst he was in the sixth form with his school drama group. What had just began as an audition which he thought he would attend “ just for the experience.” in fact turned out to be an opportunity to turn his dream into reality. “It was a case of teamwork making the dream work. It was a big project but everyone worked hard on their individual projects and so the whole thing came together.” What was involved in your particular role as Ross? “At the beginning of the rehearsal period it was a real challenge to get into the character of Ross. He’s been serving the King for a while as a Thane, (a noble man and land owner on behalf of the King) which apart from the fact that this system simply does not exist now, the whole warrior thing is quite different from who I am. However, with the training and rehearsals, and specific improvisations I soon got into it, and began to get understand the character.” It seems that all the male actors had to learn basic fighting skills, including the art of karate from Tom Johnson and Paddy Oldham to learn all the basics in order to learn how to fight realistically for the stage. They practiced skills with the boys all bringing staffs, which I am sure you can imagine, made fighting more realistic to learn but meant it was often difficult transporting them to and from training…! When asked what was expected of them, if there was any difference between theatres and touring theatre it was revealed that it was a much longer process…and a tiring one. “It’s like one minute you’re in one country doing the show, and with the host family, and then the next minute you’re in another country doing it all over again.” Whilst a long and evidently exhausting task it seemed as though it was an enjoyable experience for all those who were a part of it; including trips to the Eiffel Tower, late night ice-skating, sledging in Belgium, Christmas market shopping, not to mention all the acting involved. It seems that the tour wasn’t even just all about the acting though, it involved teaching too. As well as putting on shows in four different countries the cast also took the time out to run workshops on the themes in Macbeth, working with and teaching young people about Shakespeare. A worthwhile project! The European Theatre Group experience is an opportunity for any keen actor or actress to travel the continent doing what they love, and whilst the task may prove a long, trying one, with you at times wondering what on earth you are doing; the benefits make up for it tenfold. Image by Patrick Oldham “After three weeks with the same people you either laugh or cry, we laughed... ” which was the best part of the tour! Macbeth - Just a lot of blood? Lisa Hagan tells us more... T he auditorium was buzzing with anticipation as we awaited the familiar scene of the witches chanting on the moor, a deathly hush fell upon the audience as the words were spoken – the actors only visible with the occasional beam of torchlight intensifying the mood that set in. A skilful use of lighting and sound enabled this atmosphere to perpetuate throughout the entire production establishing the grim tone of Shakespeare’s shortest tragedy and on that is amongst the most famous. The cast held the audience within their grasp, manipulating the staging to include us within their searches, as though we were there on the moor also. The complex character of Lady Macbeth was mastered by Helen Duff, faultlessly executing the artful manipulation that the role demanded. Evident magnetism and connection between Macbeth and his Lady was displayed throughout, showing a genuine talent in the actor Max Bennett, beautifully complimented by Helen Duff. They carved their roles out and moulded themselves as necessary, making his downfall believable. However, we must not forget to consider the supporting cast who amongst them showed an array of theatrical talent and command of the stage; from the physicality of Dan Martin’s movements as the cowering servant of Macbeth to the stomach-churning, bloody Patrick Oldham as Banquo’s ghost. Each member showed individuality in their characterisations which brought Shakespeare’s drama to life. This show saw the debut on the Cambridge drama scene for both Andrew Jackson as the character of Ross and Lucy Evans as one of the weird sisters; both indi- viduals prove to be promising new members of the ADC cast, I personally look forward to seeing them in subsequent productions at the theatre. One aspect which can not escape the notice of any member of the audience was the interesting characterisation and representation that the director chose for the three witches. Each actress was well chosen for the part and handled the role with ease and considerable talent. These scenes were assisted by the innovative set design, to which Megan Prosser was responsible. The use of angular shapes whilst appearing simple proved versatile in its ability to shape the backdrop for each of the scenes. Moments of relief provoked by the amusing characterisation on the part of Thomas Yarrow were not enough to completely alleviate the tangible tension in the auditorium. The fight sequences and murders, instead of detracting from an established atmosphere by amateur blundering of swords, they were in fact played out as both shocking and brutal; with a particularly commendable performance from Laura Bates as Lady MacDuff whose performance quite literally sent a chill of shock and horror running through the audience. This action culminated in the final fight between Macbeth and MacDuff which was for all intents and purposes was flawless. Rob Heaps certainly did not prove to be the lesser man as Shakespeare critics would have us believe at times that the character MacDuff is. His final words “the time is free” implicate that relief is supposed to set upon the audience; instead we were left quite literally breathless and spellbound; in awe of such inspiring talent. It was a phenomenal performance which had not lowered in enthusiasm Image by John Linford and passion since its return from tour; I encourage anyone to take the opportunity to see it. ‘Macbeth’ is supposed to upset people. It shows life at its most brutal and cynical, in order to ask life’s toughest. This performance was no exception in dealing with these dark issues without apology. Showing until Saturday 20th January at the ADC Tuesday-Thursday and Saturday matinee: £7/£5 Friday and Saturday: £8/6 January 18, 2007 The Cambridge Student 14 Editorial THE CAMBRIDGE STUDENT January 18, 2007 Volume 9 Issue 1 Welcome Back: Drugs Are Bad. OK?- Good. improved and looking for exciting political writing. Also – our new and shiny website is about to go live (see next week’s issue for details), which, frankly, you should all be obscenely excited about. But enough about us… So this week, we’ve been mainly thinking about drugs. Drugs and Cambridge. Drugs and the media. Drugs and pretty much anything. We drew some conclusions. We thought you might be interested. Because, obviously, as we write in a student paper our opinions are naturally of interest. To everyone. First – what do we mean when we say ‘drugs’? Are we talking about penicillin? Because if you have any kind of problem with penicillin then you are officially weird. Are we talking about any physiologically altering substance – including stuff like caffeine and alcohol that are entirely socially acceptable? Or are we talking about what most people mean when they talk about drugs – illegal Chess Challenge White to play The game is still in its opening phase, but Black has been dawdling with his development so much that his opponent already has a powerful attack; how does White continue? The CU Chess Club meets during Term time every Saturday 4-6pm, Trinity Junior Parlour http://www.srcf.ucam.org/chess/ substances that make you look pale and unhealthy. We’re actually talking about all those meanings because the plurality of meanings is interesting. The words themselves are so fucking evocative. Drug Overdose. LifeSaving Drugs. Drug Cocktail. Drug Addict. Drug Abuse. Drug Problem. You end up trapping yourself in stereotypes and it becomes difficult to talk about what’s actually going on, because the associations we have with the words are so strong and it’s so difficult to see past them at all. The way drugs are represented in the media is incongruous and contradictory at best. On the one hand, endless government advertising and predictable soap plots tell us that drugs are a thing of great evil and that we should JUST SAY NO. On the other hand there is this sordid fascination which so often slips into glamorisation of drugs and drug addicts. So suddenly to ‘just say no’ becomes just a little bit ‘uncool’. And, Anagrams Book: Trails under sea Singer: A rich girl ate in USA Film: OC is only area Author: Too ol’ style Book: Drive, this beer is dead Answers: Treasure Island, Christina Aguilera, Casino Royale, Leo Tolstoy, Brideshead Revisited Welcome back to Cambridge folks. I hope your Christmas holidays were awesome, mainly because awesome is unofficially TCS’ ‘word of the week’ and it feels quite appropriate (average use in the office – once every thirty seconds). We in the editorial team spent the whole of the vacation cloistered in a tiny hot room staring at software with great levels of stress slowly realising exactly what we’d let ourselves in for. It was a whole epiphany of pain, but we’re over that now and working our fingers right down to the to the bone to bring you the best in student journalism. Because that’s what you want most in the world even if you don’t know it right now. We are awesome. We have a stonking new Science section and have radically changed some others. We hope you like it. We did it for your benefit. The new ‘Impact’ pull out section (check it out on the facing page…) is the big change and the ‘Focus’ section is new, of course, being told incessantly not to do something often makes it all the more attractive. Being ‘naughty’ is, it must be admitted, quite fun. Which is, I reckon, part of the reason why so many people still smoke. We’re told not to in pretty much every advert break and really there isn’t actually a better advertisement than that – which is a shame really because smoking absolutely does mess you up and give you all kinds of painful and embarrassing diseases. I hope me saying that doesn’t encourage anyone to smoke. It’s a ‘lose-lose’ situation really. If you don’t say anything, people will smoke and not know how it’s killing them, if you do say something you may well just encourage people. Unfortunate. People are kinda stupid. At the same time – everyone is stupid so I guess no-one really has the right to call anyone else stupid. We should all be stupid together. Maybe that’s my conclusion. About everything. Next Week in The Cambridge Student we catch up with how you’ve been getting on with your New Year’s Resolutions... Emma Blackburn, CUSU Welfare Awareness officer, talks drugs: When we see the word ‘drugs’, we automatically think of hardcore cocaine use and ecstasy pills making the rounds at the local clubs. While these drugs certainly have a place in the Cambridge social circuit, the use of them is far less common than the use (and abuse) of alcohol – the substance that seems to constantly evade student recognition as a highly potent and very addictive drug. Cocaine, crack cocaine, heroin, ecstasy, amphetamines and cannabis are all known to be used by Cambridge students, and there has been a 30% increase in detection of drug use. Yet the number of students taking these drugs is miniscule when compared to the huge number of students who consume alcohol. In moderation, alcohol itself wouldn’t present a problem, but problems do occur as people fail to recognise their limit and keep drinking. Letters to The Cambridge Student Who wants to be the killjoy that lectures everybody on responsible drinking? Not me particularly, and I’m pretty sure most of CUSU feel the same. Most people I know enjoy a drink as part of a normal social life, including me, and I’d be the last person to preach complete abstinence. Having said that, there’s a world of difference between enjoying a couple down in the bar and getting slaughtered to the point where you are at risk because you no [email protected] longer have the necessary awareness to get yourself home safely. Drinking to excess leaves you more vulnerable to the very real dangers that do exist within Cambridge. Alcohol is the drug that the police, Addenbrookes and the colleges are most concerned about, as it is the one most commonly abused. We’re all adults and we all have our choices to make – just make sure you’re thinking about yours. [email protected] Post us a letter, and we might just post back a prize... Editor-in-Chief Elly Shepherd [email protected] Deputy Editor Jack Sommers [email protected] Photo Editors Jimmy Appleton, Carolyn Hylton [email protected] Features Editor Rich Saunders [email protected] Associate Features Victoria Brudenell, Andrew Daynes Interviews Editor Cally Squires [email protected] News Editors Amy Blackburn, Peter Wood news@tcs. cam.ac.uk Focus Editors Andy Gawthorpe, Preet Majithia [email protected] Food and Drink Editor Stewart Petty [email protected] Culture Editor Sam Brett [email protected] Film Editor Nina Chang fi[email protected] Theatre Editor Amy Barnes [email protected] Deputy Theatre Editor Lisa Hagan Music Editors Jack Dentith, Luke W. Roberts [email protected] Deputy Music Editor James Garner Fashion Editor Hannah Nakano Stewart [email protected] Science Editor Lianne Warr [email protected] Sports Editor Tom Richardson [email protected] Deputy Sports Chris Lillycrop Puzzles Leah Holroyd Production Harriet Bradshaw, Wil Mossop, Ivan Zhao Travel Editor Ilana Raburn [email protected] Listings Lisa Hagan [email protected] Business Manager (CUSU) Lily Stock [email protected] Services officer (CUSU) Ashley Aarons [email protected] Board of Directors Alice Palmer Elly Shepherd Lily Stock, Ashley Aarons, Amina Al-Yassin, Rob Palmer IMPACT The Cambridge Student On Drugs Relevant and Irreverent IMPACT PAGE 2 THE CAMBRIDGE STUDENT Culinary salvation Stewart Petty encounters some tantalizing tapas in Spain’s wild, wild (north) west I n m i d December 2006, I set my sights on the seaside city of San Sebastian in North W e s t Spain. Admittedly my primary attraction was the wild, winter surf pounding the dramatic Basque coastline. However, after having stopped off in the charming city during the Morocco Hitch, I fully understood the quality and pride behind Basque cuisine. Besides, what could be better to satisfy an insatiable appetite driven by a day of strenuous surfing? Arriving at 11.30pm, two hours later than scheduled, my fellow CUSA (CamOne of the many examples of the Basque approach to ‘surf ‘n’ turf ’. Stewart Petty bridge University Surfing Association) comrades and I were decidedly ravenous. I tuary to reach the Parte Vieja bar offering some tired tapas, confront the dramatic winter had expected to be kicking (Old Quarter), nine-foot which proved to be a shadow barrels. I nibbled at a perfectly back in cosy backstreet tasca waves ominously opposed of the fresh former glory it light and flaky croissant and by now, making friends with the current and swelled under could have offered us earlier watched the gnarling waves a hearty platter of pintxos the bridge. Adrenaline lev- in the day. However, it is al- as their frothy saliva gushed (Basque tapas). However, my els rose whilst we pondered ways rather dubious to come onto the shore. (Being so what a monster across a pintxo bar in the close to the French border, not-so-helpful amthe beach break prestigious Parte Vieja serv- many culinary influences are igo at the San Sewould be the ing at such a late hour, with exchanged: Roquefort, piment There is bastian Tourist office had misjudged an unflinchingly following day. It such a wide array of food still d’espelette - a piquant pepper the coach journey honest link be- was past twelve available. It was probably the - and croissants frequently on a weekday, worst pintxos I ate all week. feature in the Basque diet). from Santander. so we seemed to The following morning Feeling tired from merely tween the surf, We ventured out have lost the key began optimistically with looking at the relentless nine into the icy night the turf and to culinary heavrazor blades of sunlight to twelve-foot swell, I crossed as Jack Frost whis- what ends up on en for that night. gouging through the narrow the road to find a pintxo bar pered to us with his We did eventustreets. We apprehensively facing Zurriola beach. This your plate. Atlantic breath. As ally discover a approached the promenade to was one of the many tastewe crossed the es- ‘‘ ’’ fully discreet joints which presented itself with a deceivingly mediocre and bland facade. On entering, you stumble upon a foodie treasure-trove. I quickly snapped up a delicate snack consisting of a piece of toasted bread doused in olive oil as the base, a wafer-thin slice of jamon, finely shredded lettuce and rocket followed by slices of gently boiled egg, bathed in a piquant mayonnaise and topped with a sweet and succulent shrimp. That’s a long description, you cry! I know it is. However, the metic- ulous care that has been dedicated to preparing this food warrants a meticulous description. What is so resounding is that all Basque pintxos strictly adhere to seasonality, and only use produce which is fresh and local. This is why San Sebastian is one of the top ten food destinations in the world. Our supermarkets wantonly neglect these fundamental principles. The Bretxa market flanking the Parte Vieja is a true testament to the vital role that food plays in Basque society. Warming up on La playa de la Zurriola. Stewart Petty THE CAMBRIDGE STUDENT in San Sebastian As you descend by escalator, you enter a subterranean realm of culinary magic. A plethora of butchers, bakers, fishmongers, fruit and vegetable grocers and cheese sellers proudly tend to their stalls, convivially chatting to regular customers. It is not hard to understand why the best chefs in Spain are among these zealous shoppers. Five different butchers offer fresh kills, some even displaying their not-yet skinned rabbits. Subsequently, the frenzy of fishmongers exhibit their deep-sea aliens - apparently a form of sea urchin - dredged from the Atlantic abyss. There is an unflinchingly honest link between the surf, the turf and what ends up on your plate. This is real food. The pintxo bars of Donostia – the Basque name for San Sebastian - are not a seasonal tourist fad. The reason why there are so many watering holes is because nearly all of the locals seem to be dedicated regulars. What I find so attractive about the way of life here is that the Basques eat whenever they are peckish. Light snacking is part of their daily routine. Furthermore, people take their time over food, naturally complementing it with a small beer or glass of hearty Rioja at any time of the day. It is quite normal to wake up to a chilled shot of Pacharan, a local tipple produced from sloe berries. The viscous aperitif has a medicinal nose of aniseed to compliment a bold and fresh bouquet of coffee and vanilla. There may be competition between bars, but there is a plentiful de- IMPACT mand for them. With a hedonistic culture geared so much towards the enjoyment of cuisine, it may seem strange for you to hear that not once did I witness a rotund local roaming the windswept streets. And yes, I am sure that the fatties do not hibernate. One clue to explain this oddity is the number of runners we saw pacing the promenade and beaches. Furthermore, although we did not have to fight for waves in the line-up, the surfing and kayaking contingent was healthy on la Playa de la Zurriola. In fact, whilst we kitted ourselves out in the surf hire shop, ready to hit the waves, a local was changing out of his wetsuit and booties into more appropriate suited and booted fashion; ready for the office. His compartmentalized and bulky briefcase – half for documents and half for a soggy wetsuit – epitomizes the healthy work-hard, play-hard ethic of the fiery Basques. What the Basques manage to achieve with their pintxo bars is healthy fast food of the highest quality. These terms may seem oxymoronic in a world where the USA is a super-power and the film ‘Super-Size Me’ keeps knocking on the door of our conscience. However, through the consumption of fresh, organic and seasonal produce combined with a regular regime of exercise, the Basque idea of a ‘quick and easy’ snack really can be a healthy option. For more information on future surfing excursions, contact Stewart Petty - [email protected] PAGE 3 Statue of Jesus overlooking the Concha and Zurriola beaches. Stewart Petty Season with salt and pepper and simmer for 15-20 minutes. Serve with black beans and white rice, surrounded on two sides with the fried plantains. Ingredients for the arepa (wraps): 2 cups of pre-cooked cornmeal. 1/2 tsp salt 3 cups of boiling water Method: In a large bowl, mix the cornmeal with the salt. Pour in 2 1/2 cups of the boiling water and mix with a spoon. Cover with a towel or plastic wrap and let rest for 5-10 minutes. Preheat oven to 200ºC. With wet hands, form balls of dough from about 1/4 cup of dough and press to form a cake about 3” wide and Bar Aralar, located in the heart of the San Sebastian’s Parte Vieja. Stewart Petty Pabellón Criollo Fiona Mellish, our South American correspondant serves up a tasty, national treasure The hearty and colourful Pabellón Criollo is the Venezuelan answer to our traditional Sunday Roast. The basic form of the dish involves a melange of rice, shredded beef and stewed black beans. Frequent additions include Tajadas (slices of fried plantain) or a fried egg. Ingredients: 1/4 cup vegetable oil 2lbs beef (Sirloin/Flank) 1 chopped onion/person Enough water to cover 2 tsps salt 1 red bell pepper chopped finely/person 3-4 cloves minced garlic 2-3 cups tomatoes peeled, seeded, chopped Salt and pepper to taste 1 handful cooked black beans/person 4 cups cooked white rice Method: Heat the oil in in a skillet over medium-high flame. Sear the meat on both sides to brown, about 4-5 minutes per side. Remove from heat and place meat in a large pan with the onion, salt and pepper and enough water to cover. Bring to the boil, then reduce the heat to low, cover and simmer 1 to 1 1/2 hours until meat is very tender. Remove the meat and set aside to cool, reserving the broth. When cool, shred the meat with your hands. Reheat the skillet, adding more oil if necessary. Sauté the onion, peppers and garlic until onions are translucent. Stir in the meat and chopped tomatoes. Add a little of the reserved broth to moisten if necessary. 3/4” thick. If the dough cracks at the edges, mix in a little more water and then form the cakes. Heat a skillet over a medium-high heat and pour in a thin layer of oil. Sauté the patties a few at a time to lightly brown and form a crust on one side.(5-6 minutes). Flip and saute on the other side. When all of the patties have been browned, transfer to a baking sheet and bake in the oven for 15-20 minutes until they sound lightly hollow when tapped. Serve immediately. Note: Occasionally, the meat from the Pabellón is used for the filling of the ‘arepa’. However, the arepa is commonly eaten for breakfast with a variety of PAGE 4 IMPACT FEAR AND LOATHING IN CAMBRIDGE URSULA K. ANDERSON GOES GONZO AND GETS HIGH. OR TRIES TO. VERY MUCH NOT EDITORIALLY RECOMMENDED... Let me set the scene for you. An esteemed student colleague and myself were in possession of a not inconsiderable amount of MDMA. Pure ecstasy, for those of you who just pronounced it ‘um-dee-um-ah’ in your head. In the interests of journalism – obviously, I had absolutely no other motivation, although I cannot speak for my friend – I made the decision to partake of said substance and report in a coherent and scientific manner for this esteemed and respected newspaper. I shrugged aside the issue of illegality with a simple yet effective belief in journalistic ethics over the concerns of the law. In retrospect, this was a massive mistake. Like when Saddam Hussein invaded Kuwait only on a slightly more collegiate level. But what’s the point in regrets? Tish and Fippsy, frankly. Obviously, I cannot reveal my supplier. That would be stupid. I saw in Pulp Fiction what happens to kids who mess with drug dealers and frankly I want to keep my burger – or indeed any fast food I may be having for breakfast. Suffice to say I made a fool out of myself by not getting ‘down with the terminology’ in the style of a middle-aged person at a hip hop gig. No – I didn’t know what a ‘bomb’ was. I kind of thought it was something you shouldn’t say in airports. “In retrospect, this was a massive mistake. Like when Saddam Hussein invaded Kuwait only on a slightly more collegiate level.” For the record, in this context, it’s the practice of wrapping a dose of MDMA in a cigarette paper for the purpose of swallowing it. I was learning already, and beginning to feel a little bit ‘down with the kids’. Needless to say, this feeling didn’t last. As I’m writing this under a pseudonym, I can reveal to you that I did feel more than slightly naughty when swallowing the illicit substance. In words, this feeling translated roughly as ‘ohmigod I just took drugs like everyone told me not to – I’m like well naughty and not at all a swot like everyone said I was at school’. I did feel a certain perverted pride in confounding expectations. It’s just a shame no-one who called me a swot at school was around, really. Immediately after I swallowed the substance (I didn’t take much – probably about an eighth of a gram) I expected something. Either some kind of amazing high or a heart attack. I waited. Nothing happened. I waited some more. Went for a pee. Waited a bit longer. Tried to work out whether or not my heart was beating any faster and then decided that it wasn’t. Waited. Then I started to become really aware of the gap between my brain and my skull, which was a bit odd. This was probably about twenty minutes after taking the bomb – (this still sounds suspicious to me. I’m sorry). I also felt disconnected from some parts of my body – like I was observing the sensations in them, not feeling them directly. This was something I’d been aware of – but differently – when I’d been stoned off my face. I thought maybe it was more to do with me then drugs. Maybe that’s just what my mind does when I take any altering substance. I tried to get up and walk over to the other side of the room, where a couple of my entirely sober friends were sitting. I found the sensation of lifting my legs and putting one foot in front of another just slightly too hilarious. It felt like my legs were made of a very light material, but that I was wearing gravity boots. Maybe that makes sense to you, maybe it doesn’t. Who knows. I began giggling and felt – for want of a better phrase – tingly. Ants of happiness were crawling over my body in curly lines. My head was all – floaty. I felt pretty nice. Because I wasn’t doing any exercise, having taken the drug in my friend’s room as opposed to in a ‘banging mash-up’ (I believe this is the correct terminology?) of a rave, the rushing in every part of my body (like headrush, but, like, everywhere) was making me feel lethargic – but my mind was very awake and moving quickly. I got pretty cuddly. I’m always quite a cuddly person but this feature was very much exaggerated. I quite alarmed one particular friend of mine – let’s call him Gabriel Le Faye Golgotha – by being so pleased to see him I cried. Tears were really not what the situation required. I had seen him a few hours earlier at the buttery. It wasn’t like I thought he’d died. Things have been somewhat strained between us since. I also told everyone I met, in great detail, how much I loved them. In retrospect, this was possibly quite disconcerting. Especially for those people I’d never met before. Eventually – after partially succeeding in organising an impromptu rave in a bedroom the size of a cupboard – I got to the ‘thinking’ bit. By partially succeeding, incidentally, I THE CAMBRIDGE STUDENT mean that I was dancing around the room to music that only existed in my head and three people were watching me with incredulous expressions. A mixed success. Thinking is odd when you’re high. It feels like you’re having all these profound revelations that will change the course of your life and possibly the universe, when in fact what you’re thinking is actually ‘Dude – you can, like, see out of taxis’ or ‘imagine if pizza was made from hob-goblins’. Clearly, this is a useful intellectual pursuit and worth spending the money that I get from the government to go to university on. Economic hero, me. Unfortunately, I didn’t have the luxury of being able to think about the relative transparency of any kind of vehicle as I ended up watching a deeply philosophical film concerning the nature of existence. To put it mildly, this fucked with my head. My comedown consisted of me wandering through the streets of Cambridge muttering ‘How am I not myself?’ at about 6am. I then slept for about 26 hours and woke up with a headache that was like an angry badger eating a mole in my head. In terms of any drug related experience any one has ever had – excluding cannabis – this was mild. Nobody died, nothing got broken, I didn’t take that much and, comparatively, wasn’t that high. I didn’t even vomit or develop an unhealthy yet fashionable pallor, which was a minor disappointment. I’m still the same naïve middle class kid who keeps the majority – or at least a good half – of her essay deadlines and gets pleasure from Beethoven (the music, not the St. Bernard, to set the record straight). However the real reason I took the drugs – although the whole naughtiness thing made me feel almost cool enough to wear skinny jeans– was because I was curious. I wanted to know what it felt like. I wanted to make my mind up for myself. So what do I think? Well – not all drugs are the same. I think first of all I reject how every illegal substance is lumped together as if it was all CONTINUED ON PAGE 5 IMPACT CONTINUED FROM PAGE 2 it was all part of the same issue. It’s not. Cannabis is different from MDMA is different from acid is different from heroin etc. Every person’s reaction to the same drug is also different. I have friends who sit still and watch their hands while on MDMA and I have friends who can’t stop moving. I’d like people to think about that more – that every situation involving drugs is a different situation, and, to be honest, although I’m going to have to whisper this: it’s not always 100% a bad thing. Mostly, yes, but not always. And despite what the law says, I do actually think there is some extent to which people have the right to make up their own mind, and I certainly think that it is a mistake to rush into judging people for doing something you only have second-hand knowledge of. So I’d like to keep my little conclusion to those drugs I do know a bit about. Namely, MDMA, cannabis and alcohol. Of course, there are reasons why MDMA is illegal. It’s very dangerous. I can’t actually believe my own stupidity at risking what I risked taking it, but at the same time I actually risk a lot more when I drink too much or drive in a car without a seatbelt. Cannabis too really isn’t the ‘friendly drug’ that so many make it out to be. I have personally experienced extreme paranoia (That dog is looking at me. Seriously. He may be a poodle but he’s got beady eyes and I don’t trust him…) and the memory loss just gets silly – I have one friend I can have the same conversation with four times before he notices. These aren’t healthy substances and they do your body a great deal of damage. But that didn’t actually impact on what I think – or at least how I feel. I know that it should, but somehow the health aspect is too distant and I find it hard to give it the weight it deserves when it comes to thinking about MDMA. This is a weakness common in young people and I’d like PAGE 4 you to remember I’m talking about my own thought processes here, and not advocating this way of thinking – just being honest about it. However, I didn’t make a positive conclusion. What entirely made-up my mind was a conversation I had with a very close friend the next day. She said that although she enjoyed my loved-up-ness and found the whole experience superficially amusing, she’d also been terrified, because the person in her room walking around looking like me wasn’t me anymore. Because there was something else there that she didn’t recognise, that wasn’t anything to do with me. I went quiet when she told me this. I knew she was right. The way I behaved so lovingly towards everyone takes something away from the people I actually love. The substance took me away from myself. This I can imagine, and understand where I can’t imagine the health risks. So I don’t think I’ll be taking MDMA again. FAIRTRADE COCAINE? VICTORIA NEWTON DISCUSSES THE ETHICS OF DRUGS Cocaine is the preferred illegal substance of a certain postcode of party goers. And Britain is the largest user in Europe. If you don’t do it, I bet you know somebody who does. And why shouldn’t they? Just say no to Drugs. We’ve all heard it before. I’ve even read campaigns offering ‘cool’ ways to say no; “Sorry I can’t, it’d break my parole…” There is a line of argument, however, not to snort at. ‘Fairtrade Cocaine?’ is a group campaigning for the acknowledgement that our consumption of this drug has more than the personal consequences of the legal, the medical, the aesthetic. The question mark is crucial. How can you have a fair trade when you are dealing with an illegal substance? A lot of plants, especially coca, are farmed intensively and non-sustainably, and in places where fragile ecosystems get damaged. In Columbia, cocaine essentially sustains civil war. The supposedly Marxist FARC (Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia) have been fighting the government for decades, attempting to control the territory to grow coca. In addition, there are heavily armed right wing par- Children at a ‘Fairtrade Cocaine?’ workshop How can you have a fair trade when you are dealing with an illegal substance? amilitary groups that fight the FARC; they are illegal, but often act with the support of the government. The FARC, the paramilitaries, and many government politicians are sustained entirely by profits from cocaine trafficking. Needless to say, it’s the peasant farmers in the cocagrowing regions (who are often coerced into growing coca) who suffer. In Brazil, there isn’t a recognised “war” and yet many children live in something akin to a war zone. From 1987 - 2001, whilst 467 children were killed in the Israel-Palestine conflict, 3973 children were killed by small arms fire in the municipality of Rio de Janeiro alone. In the favelas of big cities (especially Rio) heavily armed drug factions fight turf wars to control cocaine distribution networks. They mostly employ children as lookouts, dealers and ‘soldiers’. In fact, for every tonne of cocaine exported into Britain, four people have lost their lives. If one line doesn’t kill you, it might still make you a murderer. CONTINUED ON PAGE 6 Chris Kennedy THE CAMBRIDGE STUDENT VICTORIA BRUDENELL THE ASHES Why did they do it to us? Why did they even bother to win the Ashes back if they were only going to collapse a mere 15 months later? From five nail-bitingly tense tests to the frankly dull humiliation of last month, England have done it again. They built up false hopes and then dashed them without even managing a defence of any kind against the awesome Aussies. I stood proudly in Trafalgar Square cheering on the heroes of 2005, never expecting that just over a year later the country would be faced with a performance so abysmal that even I felt that I could do better than them. A girl who has only ever played cricket on a beach. Fine, they can offer excuses; Vaughan was injured, Trescothick is wrestling his inner demons, but surely the inventors of the truly beautiful game (none of this football nonsense) should be able to field a competent side? Admittedly, Duncan Fletcher didn’t help by refusing to put Monty Panesar in the team for the first two tests, but there is no way that a statistic offered by the Guardian can be acceptable in international cricket: out of all of our batsmen, only Kevin Pietersen had a higher batting average than Shane Warne. A bowler. Even my 83 year-old grandmother had an opinion on the problems- something along the lines of ‘we didn’t win the war by resting, so what the hell is Fletcher doing saying that the team would rest on the Monday after losing a test in 4 days?’. She has a point: remember those pictures of the Aussies on an endurance weekend in the outback that got ridiculed before the Ashes? They may have had the skills of Warne and the rest of the wonderteam, but they were also fitter and better prepared. Look at how much time college boaties devote to their hobby: in comparison, surely international sportsmen should spend almost their entire waking hours training for their profession? I’m off to find a sport that isn’t quite as damaging to my nerves… maybe curling? ANYTHING YOU WANT TO GET OFF YOUR CHEST? EMAIL US: [email protected] IMPACT PAGE 6 “Some international students among us at Cambridge have seen at first hand the social effects of our cocaine habit.” Chris Kennedy Does that mean, (the facetious argue) that from an ‘ethical’ perspective, taking drugs is fine if grown here? Are you arguing for legalisation? Does the drug trade not ever help developing countries economically? What is the alternative for children who are employed in it? Are there not other, deeper, underlying factors to the social problems of these countries? ‘Fairtrade Cocaine?’ are not denying the existence of these other issues, they are simply saying it is not a case of either/or. The proportion of the economy that benefits from the drug trade remains illicit. Many officials have argued for legalisation, (including Iain Duncan Smith!). For now, it is important to consider the short term impact, as well as tackling long term causes. And it remains that some international students among us at Cambridge have seen at first hand the social effects of our cocaine habit. The campaign in Cambridge aims at raising awareness through education. So far, workshops have been held at Hills Road and Parkside schools. With broadening support from sixth form and university students they hope to expand and become sustainable, with plans for more school visits, and the creation of a library of resources… interested? Contact [email protected] THE CAMBRIDGE STUDENT 15 MINUTES WITH... SIR RUPERT JACKSON CALLY SQUIRES TALKS TO THE HIGH COURT JUDGE AND EX-CAMBRIDGE STUDENT . Mr. Justice Jackson practised as a barrister and QC for 25 years. During his career he ruled on the Mary Archer case and currently, in his capacity as a High Court judge, deals primarily with technology and construction disputes. Collaborating with a friend from Cambridge he has written a book on professional negligence, the earliest edition of which was first published in 1982. Besides your law degree how did your time at Cambridge help prepare you for the work you are doing now? Debating at the Union and being President of the Union gave me experience in public speaking. Do you have any regrets about your time here? I wish I had been better at rowing, I was useless. I rowed in the Jesus 8th boat for one term and we were bumped every day. You were called to the Bar in 1972. What drew you to this path instead of becoming a solicitor? In retrospect would you make the same decision again? I thought that being a solicitor would be boring. I wanted the cut and thrust of being a barrister in court. I would make the same decision again. What was the most publicised case you took as a barrister? Representing about 1,000 haemophiliacs who were infected with the HIV virus. We sued the Department of Health in about 1990. Do you see the legalisation or downgrading of certain classes of drugs as a positive or negative step for society? This question is probably a reference to cannabis, it should not be downgraded. Are recent constitutional reforms either necessary or effective? No. Do you predict an expansion in the number of solicitor-advocates in England in the future? If so, then why? A slight expansion only. Most young lawyers who want to be advocates will continue to come to the Bar. What would your advice be to anyone wanting a legal career? Be totally committed and be prepared to work long hours. What path would you have taken had you not followed the law? University teaching or researching, possibly in classics. I read classics for two years and did Part 1 of the classics tripos. I think I would have enjoyed being a classics don. Where do you see yourself in 10 years time? Still judging. What has been the most challenging moment of your career? In 1973 when a magistrate, to whom I had been making what I thought was an excellent speech, said “those are the most absurd submissions I have ever heard”. What has been the most rewarding moment of your career? Winning the Haemophiliac Litigation If you have much spare time how do you spend it? Unfortunately not much spare time. Playing bridge, chess and (very badly) golf. Gardening, reading and walking. What do you know now which you wish you had known when you were younger? How to manage time. What’s happening in CUSU? Representation Services Support Campaigns - Your Union What we did last term....... Societies Fair, 8 publications, visited 20+ colleges, ran regular meetings with jcr/mcr officers, sat on over 30 university committees, dealt with a wide variety of casework, self-defence classes, 34 clubnights, anti-racism play, chlamydia screening, breast cancer awareness week And what we’ll do this term......... Shadowing Scheme, Open Days and Target Visits, college rents database, societies publication, more local discounts on your CUSU card, online voting, training for societies, mental health awareness week, international women’s events, moving into a new building and much more.. For more information go to www.cusu.cam.ac.uk CUSU Council Lent 1 - 31st January, 7.15pm Fitzpatrick Hall, Queens Including your chance to represent Cambridge at NUS Regional Conference Coming soon: Shadowing Scheme Holocaust Memorial Day THE CAMBRIDGE STUDENT IMPACT PAGE 7 WHAT HAPPENS WHEN SEVERAL TONNES OF COCAINE WASH UP ON A BEACH? ILANA RABURN INVESTIGATES THE DRUGS TRADE IN CENTRAL AMERICA I t makes sense that the people who produce drugs, the people they sell the drugs to, and the people who use the drugs could all be affected by drug trafficking. And then, it makes sense that there would be a few other people who might be affected, like maybe the children of the drug dealers or the friends of the drug users. However, people rarely think about the affect that suddenly finding vast quantities of cocaine might have on a remote community. And this has recently become a serious issue in the Caribbean. The Caribbean coasts of Central American countries tend to be isolated from the rest of the countries – both physically and culturally. Major road networks don’t reach them and there are few officials and policemen positioned in the regions. The inhabitants are African in descent – rather than European and Amerindian – and most have retained their Caribbean heritage in music, food and language. This seclusion has combined with the extreme poverty in the regions to make them susceptible to the drugs trade and it is difficult for anyone to be caught. But, unusually, they never tried or expected to enter the drug trafficking industry. In many cases, drugs entered people’s lives as if from nowhere. About twelve years ago, waterproof packages of cocaine started washing up onto the beaches of the Atlantic coast of Nicaragua. It washes up like driftwood and kilos of cocaine can often be found or fished for in the sea. Columbian drug merchants on their way to the USA pass through Nicaraguan waters and will often throw their goods overboard rather than be caught by highspeed police boats chasing them. Other packages enter the sea when boats capsize (traffickers tend to use small and unstable ships to avoid being caught). And because of the ocean currents, the packages of cocaine tend to wash up in certain coastal villages. No one knew what the white powder was when it first washed up; some thought that it might be bicarbonate of soda Apparently no one knew what the white powder was when it first washed up; some thought that it might be bicarbonate of soda. So the local fishermen divided up the cocaine and took it home to investigate. This is an area where fishermen have struggled to catch a living for many generations and most people believe that anything found in the sea is a godsend. For them, what they discovered to be cocaine was a natural resource that belonged to them in exactly the same way as the fish and lobster in the sea. The local fishermen soon began to sell the packets of cocaine – either back to the Colombian smugglers Many fishermen have started if they returned, or on to fishing only for what has become drug users in Nicaragua. known as “white lobster”. And from this, the small communities were able to from overdoses and it is almost impossible raise a lot of money. to control the problem since the drug is The returns from selling drugs proved so accessible. In some communities, it far greater than they could have got from is estimated that up to 70% of the popufishing or from growing beans and corn. lation (men, women and children) are Money made from it was used to build drug-users. clinics, schools and community centres. While Nicaragua has been hit the most, Some church authorities even labelled it cocaine has also entered the lives of those “God’s blessing” and promoted using the on the coasts of Guatemala, Honduras, drugs money – so long as members of Costa Rica, and Panama. Some peothe congregation didn’t actually take the ple find cocaine, and others are paid in drugs. Indeed, the only way that a lot of cocaine for gasoline by Colombian dealers people have been able to put food on the when their speedboats need to refuel. table has been from their involvement Nicaragua and Guatemala were both in with the cocaine. Many fishermen have civil war until comparatively recently and started fishing only for what has become the countries still have plenty of guns; known as “white lobster”. many locals are approached by ColumbiOf course, while it’s true that some ans wanting to swap drugs for arms. communities have gained schools and Drug trafficking is illegal everywhere hospitals, others have been all but de– whether or not it is used for community stroyed from the effects of drugs. When development and even if it is endorsed by it is recovered off the beaches, some inevi- the local churches. tably makes it into the communities. And But because of the isolation of the so long as cocaine is cheaper than beer, Caribbean coasts, few people in Central drug abuse is bound to happen. Dozens America have actually been imprisoned of children at the local school have died for their part in the drugs trade and cor- Image by Ilana Raburn ruption is rife. They say that someone is more likely to be imprisoned for stealing a chicken than trading a tonne of cocaine. The drug dealers all have money and are able to bribe officials not to imprison them. Ethically it all seems to be a bit muddled. If people find something that could be used to build a school or a health clinic, shouldn’t they use it to do so? But then should they really sell the drugs on to young addicts? In which case, what could they do with the drugs that have washed up of their own accord? The “correct” thing to do if someone finds kilos of cocaine floating on the Cam would presumably be to hand it in to the police. But these Caribbean communities can hardly do that when there is no police force and even less when the police force is such a corrupt one. It is not at all clear how they can get out of the cycle and in the mean time most people have forgotten about other ways in which they might make money. [email protected] PAGE 8 IMPACT THE CAMBRIDGE STUDENT CUSU WOMEN’S OFFICER HARRIET BOULDING EXPLORES ANTHROPOLOGY, AMBITION AND THE NEW YEAR FROM A WOMEN’S PERSPECTIVE Traditionally, this is the time of year for self improvement. We try to be, as Daft Punk would say, harder, better, faster, stronger versions of ourselves. This is fine until you realise that, as a Cambridge student, you are already the cat’s pyjamas, the improved model, the product of superior genes and impeccable breeding. As those who are just now receiving apologetic letters of rejection from college admissions offices are discovering, even the average Cambridge student is quite extraordinary. Life as an Arch and Anth applicant is particularly bad: who cares if you read Argonauts of the Western Pacific at age 9? There will be some nauseating little know it all who spent their childhood summers gallivanting round the Trobriand Islands in a kula canoe. And that’s just the boys. Surveying the anthropological landscape of Cambridge, the women sometimes appear to me as ontological clothes horses (bear with me here). Much more than the straightforwardly brilliant men, women are the transient walls on which the various different perceptions of greatness in Cambridge are displayed. Just as in the shady pages of popular culture in which women are often merely the means to show off a handbag to best effect, Cambridge women are the ultimate medium via which the multiple values of academic excellence, social distinction and effervescent rhetoric may be displayed. In photo: Kate Moss wears a Prada Parka with special edition crocodile skin Marc Jacobs Stam Handbag with brass detail. In Cambridge: Miss Smith-Jones of Caius College, 2nd year, wears a 2:1 in history, a lead role in several theatrical events (ranging from panto to opera), and will row for her college first boat for a limited time before next season when the academic vogue comes to the fore. This notion could of course be taken more literally when one considers the various ‘stash’ that students collect from the activities that embellish their CVs (you know, the hoodies proclaiming ‘ADC theatre production 2004, Maid played by Sally ‘totally mental’ Brown’ and such like). The irony is that, although women wear the beanie hat of academic potential, the necklace of shining wit and the shoes of crush-you confidence, underneath the adornments many continue to be chronically undervalued, most of all, by themselves. Just once, I would like to see a Cambridge woman who, at the start of the year, proclaims that things are pretty damn sweet. Not rolling in it, the hills are alive, guaranteed 1st sweet, but fairly cushy in the grand scheme of things. However, unfortunately the pressure felt by women everywhere to better themselves at New Year is apparently relative, meaning that many women in Cambridge give themselves the frankly eye-watering task of improving on practically perfect in every way. Regardless of the fact that academically they are firmly in the top 1% of students in the country, the library time must be upped to a minimum 6 hours a day. A glittering social life is clearly meaningless without a new image and an extra groomed appearance. Plus, just like most other women their age they are resolving to eat more healthily/ lose weight/ drink less and quit smoking (although I do know of one individual who has resolved to smoke more, and would not wish her to go unrepresented). It seems unlikely that any one of these additional pressures will actually do a girl any good. Further, I am particularly concerned that Cambridge women might falter under the weight of the additional expectations that they display. When making resolutions and setting new targets, remember: happiness helps you achieve goals, not the other way round. THE CAMBRIDGE STUDENT IMPACT PAGE 11 Under the Influence: Drugs and Literature ...Sam Brett explores the history of literary drug use Jimmy Appleton Drugs have, for a long time, been associated with arty types living lives of beautifully debauched Bohemianism. What is rarely recognised, however, is the actual impact of drugs on Western literature. From de Quincey to Self, drugs have been a ‘popular’ undercurrent in literature and have often served as a thematic launch pad leading authors to make valuable contributions in other areas. So sit comfortably, have your Rizlas at the ready (for cigarettes of course...), and prepare for a hedonistic, hallucinogenic, and hopefully informative tour through the seedy world of drugs and literature... The first major appearance of drugs in modern Western literature comes in the form of Thomas de Quincey. Controversial at the time of writing, his book ‘Confessions of an English Opium Eater’ continues to be a succés de scandale and still holds a degree of notoriety. This book, however, is more than just an account of hedonism and drug abuse. It set the tone for the treatment of drugs in literature for decades to come. Readers expecting an orgy of opium and sordid details will be disappointed: the book is a free and frank account of drug addiction, beginning with an extended explanation of how the author came to use opium, and then a relation of his experiences with the drug. This style of writing, with few punches pulled and the author retreating to allow his readers to form their own conclusions from his experiences, would become a standard for future generations of Jimmy Appleton writers. De Quincey openly related hideous visions experienced whilst under the influence, and it is hard to imagine a sensible reader coming away from the ‘Confessions’ with a positive view of opium use. A more mainstream writer, indeed one of the most famous names in English literature, not only for his use of drugs for inspiration, is Samuel Taylor Coleridge. As most readers will know, his influence as a poet cannot be underestimated, and his use of drugs is equally famous. The magisterial visions of ‘Kubla Khan’ were, according to its author, experienced during an opium induced reverie, and it was only an untimely visit from his next door neighbour which caused him to forget the end of the poem (so he said, “a bizarrely dressed and bloodshot-eyed Hunter Thompson made waves with his new style of ‘gonzo’ reporting ” it is more likely that he simply forgot it or didn’t himself understand what he had written down so far!). Nonetheless, the results are one of the most remarkably pieces of English verse, and, whether due to drugs or not, one of the most complex and highly interpretable. Coleridge is an example of an author who used drugs as inspiration, incorporating them into the image of the poet, but who did not give them a prominent role in his work or treat them as a subject in themselves. Continuing this vein of poets and drugs, our trip now takes us over the Channel to France. Most readers will have heard of the legendary French poet Arthur Rimbaud. Again famous for his use of hashish and absinth, it would again be wrong to say that his art took narcotics as their centrepiece. Rimbaud’s philosophy saw the poet as ‘voyant’, a seer or vision- ary, undergoing a ‘massive, reasoned and complete disordering of the senses’. The main aspects of this were a re-working of contemporary religious and political principles, as well as an attack on the standard verse forms of the day, framed by a mode of viewing the world which was almost virginal in its innocence. Drugs were, in fact, only a small part of Rimbaud’s attempts to alter his world view, and although they do often appear in his poems, they generally do so only in the context of a lead-in to a religious or philosophical discourse. As we can see from the example of Rimbaud, drugs were becoming a part of the poet’s arsenal, a part of his image, ‘lying in the gutter, gazing up at the stars’, and, dare I say it, were later controlled and utilised by authors such as Poe and Verlaine. The next major author to deal with drugs is perhaps more famous as a social commentator and psychologist. As well as ‘Brave New World’, Aldous Huxley wrote numerous pieces dealing with human perception, psychology, and political philosophy. As well as numerous experiments with LSD (not really the main subject area of this article), Huxley used drugs as a launch pad from which to mount an attack on contemporary society. Huxley believed that humans must ‘cleanse the doors of perception’, to use Blake’s terms, and in this way could change politics and society for the better. He proposed the use of drugs to help do this. However, it must be noted that in ‘Brave New World’ Huxley shows how drugs can, instead of sharpening the senses, dull them; the image of hordes of people on constant soma holidays stands completely opposed to the poets vision of freedom. After the Second World War, the thread of drugs was picked up by the Beat writers and, foremost among them, William Burroughs. His first major book, ‘Junky’, stands in the tradition of writing started by de Quincey, and, with its down and dirty, no-stains-hidden approach to its subject, is widely cited as one of the most influential books of the post-was period. Without a doubt, it was his life as a heroin addict which led Burroughs to create a novel which stood opposed to the glossy patriotism of mainstream post-war American writers, and, in the process, greatly influenced modern authors such as Philip K Dick and Stewart O’Nan. More important than ‘Junky’, and more fulfilling a work of art, is Burroughs’ piece de resistance, ‘Naked Lunch’. Almost unique among literature old or new, ‘Naked Lunch’ removes drugs from the central position they held in ‘Junky’ and turns them into a filter through which to view wider issues. In this way, we can say that Burroughs moved from being an author in the de Quincey vein to being a Huxley or Rimbaudesque writer. Drugs, for Burroughs, provided a point of departure for a critique of modern media, consumerism, and the medical drug industry. On a superficial reading, ‘Naked Lunch’ may appear to be the orgy of debauchery which readers sought in de Quincey, but closer and more insightful examination will reveal that it is in fact a far more valuable work. Burroughs uses an underworld consisting of battered addicts, diabolical dealers, and run-down squats and shooting galleries as an allegory to the reduction of consumers, by corporations and the media, to the level of addicts dependant upon their daily fix of brands and capitalism. His character Dr Benway, as well being one the most striking characters in modern literature, is an example of the equally twisted medical drug industry, with its vested interests and internal corruption. Throughout the 1960s, narcotics were never far from the minds of a generation of precocious writers. In the journalism world, a bizarrely dressed and bloodshot-eyed Hunter Thompson made waves with his new style of ‘gonzo’ reporting, although drugs can’t be given direct credit for this. While Alan Ginsberg breathed new life into poetry and inspired a new epoch in literature, writers such as Ken Kesey and Abbie Hoffman rattled establishment cages, using drugs as a framework for social and legal critique. In modern times, a whole generation of authors have found inspiration in the works of Burroughs. In their front rank stands Will Self, often cited, along with Martin Amis and Ian McEwan, as one of the “Readers expecting an orgy of opium and sordid details will be disappointed ” most talented contemporary authors. Irvin Welsh, in books such as ‘Trainspotting’, has also kept up the literary trend begun by de Quincey, with stomach turning images of heroin abuse. Self ’s work is, in many ways, a synthesis of the trends begun by ‘Junky’ and Huxley. On the one hand, his essays on drugs (published in the insightful volume ‘Junk Mail’) should be required reading for politicians formulating drugs policies. On the other hand, his fiction, such as ‘The Quantitiy Theory of Insanity’, and ‘Cock and Bull’ obviously owe a lot to the visceral world of chemical dependence, without dealing with drugs directly. Other drug obsessed authors in modern times include J G Ballard, whose books such as ‘The Atrocity Exhibition’ and ‘Cocaine Nights’ give twisted testaments to the grotesquery of modern capitalism, again using drugs as a common theme. Phew. As we can clearly see, needles and pens have often sat together on the same desk, sometimes producing the most striking effects. We should not draw the conclusion that the above authors would not have been talented writers and articulate thinkers if not for narcotics, that would be to miss the point entirely. Rather, drugs added to their inspiration, and opened new avenues for them to explore, as well as changing the style in which they wrote, often with far reaching results. However, far from appearing pro-drugs, the frank accounts given of lives ruined by drug use, especially in Burroughs and de Quincey, serve to counterbalance any perceived positive aspects to their use. Please, dear reader, when you leave this article, be inspired to pick up a book you may not have read before, not a needle and spoon. The Cambridge Student Impact Page 12 The Morning After This week, TCS fashion suggests that it’s a good idea to get fucked n’ bombed, gently mocking the fashion wankery that was ‘heroin chic’. Get yourself a Resolve and join the fun... I n the beginning there was the word. And the word was smack. Or probably even horse. It was the mid-1990s, a veritable era of gobshite, Zack Morris and Ronan Keating. Amidst all of this came a fashion phenomenon that came to be labelled ‘heroin chic’, where Kate Moss learnt not to do facial expressions, a skill for life. The idea being that models were waifs, skinny and looking a wee bit dead all the time, the infamy of the trend fully pissed off Bill Clinton, who’s insight extended to ‘It’s not beautiful. It is ugly’. Heroin chic: 1. A fashion trend begun in the late 1990s revolving around models who bore characteristics of heroin addicts. That’s Wiktionary’s biting critique. It may even be grammatically incorrect. Of course, the media coverage of last year’s size 00 scandal liked to bandy about the phrase ‘heroin chic’ liberally, being as it referred to using models who were A Bit Skinny and looked A Bit Dead. It’s an easy comparison to make, but it helps to draw the distinctions between the two. The point is that in many ways, the cult of heroin chic wasn’t the glamorisation of drugs, overlooking the processes of highs, lows and comedowns. The acid trip of the 1960s was nowhere to be seen, because what the likes of Calvin Klein were doing, whether they saw it as so or not, was glamorising death. It’s little surprise, therefore, that Klein and chums went searching for new ideas (and still waiting, Calvin…) after the death by overdose of photographer Davide Sorrenti. The problem with heroin chic lies less with the actual phenomenon itself than the hangover from it. It’s hardly a secret that fashion designers are continuing to use models that are a bit on the thin side, but where this managed to fit in with the aesthetic of heroin chic, the danger is now that it seems to have become the norm. It’s easier to make clothes look good on waifs, since they seem to hang off all the right bones. It just seems interesting that the standard claim of many a designer is to celebrate the female form, without ever dressing a woman that looks Above: Tux jacket = Horne Brothers/ Bow Tie = Moss Bros Opposite (top): Denim jacket = Rokit/ Dress =Primark/ Shoes = Primark Opposite (below): Braces = H&M/ Top = H&M/ Waistcoat = Topshop/ Necklace = Topshop/ Jeans = Monsoon/ Shoes = Salvatore Ferragamo like she’s beyond puberty. You know, the ones with tits and arse and stuff. Heroin chic was a look, one of the ridiculous dreams of fashion that perhaps went a little too far, where Size 00 is a fashion pandemic. The relationship between drugs and the world of fashion is one that extends far beyond Flaunted and Sexualised by Lianne and Patrick sneaky cameraphone shots of Kate Moss with a line of coke, and it’ll be there for as long as it Models robbed of all dignity by Hannah takes for DKNY to ever get it right. Precisely. But as for heroin chic, the Kate Moss 1997 Eyes and skin made sore by MAC Cosmetics shoot for Vogue taking pride of place in ‘Face of Fashion’ at the NPG is testament to its lasting impact. But it belonged to a time of Kurt & Courtney and it, like fashion generally, should always be treated with a tongue-in-cheek attitudes that reflects just how bloody silly the whole thing really is. Page 13 Impact The Cambridge Student “And this is not about art. It’s about life and death.” - Bill Clinton Photos by Hannah Nakano 26 The Cambridge Student January 18, 2007 What’s On MUSIC THEATRE AND DANCE West Road Concert Hall King’s College Chapel West Road Concert Hall Cambridge Arts Theatre Corn Exchange Friday 19th January brings the Academy of Ancient Music Fundraising concert. Ticket prices vary Starts at 7.30pm with a preconcert talk from Richard Egarr at 6.30pm CU Chamber Choir on Saturday 20th January brings “one of the most sublime and best-loved choral works” Bach’s Mass in B Minor 8pm, Tickets at corn exchange office Monday 22nd January brings a concert with included pieces by Schumann and Thurlow. Matthew Schellborn piano concert 8pm, Pre-concert talk, by Thurlow at 7.15pm Claire Martin brings her smoky, rock and roll jazz to Cambridge Solid Air Tour: John Martyn ADC ADC The ETG tour comes to Cambridge with Shakespeare’s Macbeth Tuesday 18th-Saturday 20th January 7.45pm Brecht’s classic and controversial text is brought to you this term The Resistible Rise of Arturo Ui Wed 24th-Sat 20th January. 11pm “Best British jazz singer for a generation” “Scottish song-writing genius” Don’t miss out on this rare opportunity! Saturday 20th January 7.45pm Tickets vary from £10 to £20 Sunday 21st January Doors open at 6.45pm £24.50 Cambridge CCArts Theatre Cambridge Arts Theatre Henri Oguike Dance Company “Oguike’s musicality, wit and intelligence are just blinding” Tuesday 23rd and Wednesday 24th January 7.45pm Tickets vary between £10 and £20 Thursday 18th January CLUBS AND GIGS Wychweed, Crypt and The Latahs at the Kambar, 9pm £3 on door, £2 with flyer Battle of the Bands at the Junction, 7pm, £5 WORKSHOPS AND ART CU Contemporary Dance ADC Elemental…Cambridge Dancing at its best! From 23rd-27th January 7.45pm £7/£5: Tues-Thu £8/£6: Fri-Sat Club 22 Kinki at Ballare Urbanite now comes to Club 22, Tuesday 23rd January Thursday 18th January with Tim Pirates and the Chance of some Westwood treasure! Sunday 21st January, Bare What You Dare! Arts Picturehouse An Introduction to Understanding Film Every Tuesday from 16th January, 6pm-8pm Do you enjoy watching movies? Would you like to learn more about film? Corn Exchange FEZ CLUB Jimmy Carr returns with a brand new stand up show: Gag Reflex “Comfy sofas, good drinks and music. But beware of that mirror!” Tuesday 23rd January Contact the box office directly to obtain tickets Monday-Thursday: 9pm-2am Friday-Saturday: 9pm-3am Sunday: 8.30-12.30pm KETTLE’S YARD Castle Street This year is celebrating its 50th anniversary and so from the Saturday 20th January it will host an exhibition of GaudierBrzeska and the birth of modern sculpture. Including artists like Matisse and Picasso COMING SOON... HILARIOUS AND MAD-CAP ENTERTAINMENT FOR THE WHOLE FAMILY! WINNERS OF THE CFA AWARD FOR BEST COMEDY ACT IN 2006 If you’re looking to amuse and amaze the family on Sunday 4th February, take them along to the Broadway Theatre, Peterborough for the fun-filled and unmissable show, Circus Hilarious - The 2007 Tour Ticket prices from £8 Box Office: 01733 316100 January 18 2007 The Cambridge Student 27 We have moved Urbanite to Club Twenty Two so that we can continue to offer you the best in Urban Sounds, Bigger DJs, and better value! Every Thursday 10pm - 2am Q Jump: email [email protected] Upcoming Dates: 18th Jan - Tim Westwood 25th Jan - Manny Norte (Kiss FM) 1st Feb - Shortee Blitz (Kiss FM) Students never pay more than £4 for our big name guests!!! **Accept no Imitations** The Cambridge Student January 18, 2007 28 Theatre. Everyone has a story to tell... All you have to do is listen... can included those with disabilities, criminal offenders, or those for whom mainstream education is not working. The arts, in essence, So…what’s all this community theatre malar- are a vehicle to help a multitude of people to key about? Those were my exact words in “re-engage with their local communities and December 2003 when I undertook some work in turn develop new skills and self esteem”. experience with Interplay Theatre Company, From the ‘Lyrical Quest’ literary competition, based in Leeds. I enjoyed theatre, heck, I loved poetry performance, or pod-casting competibeing on the stage, I revelled in others that had tions, there is always lots going on. the necessary talent to make an audience gasp, Tools of the Trade is a programme run by and doggedly followed the famous practition- Interplay that takes young people out of school ers that toured up and down the country. Still for one day a week and encourages their talents do, in fact. So what was this community thea- in music, theatre or film. “Programmes are tre jobby, and, if it wasn’t set up to promote tailored to their needs and participants quickly fame and glory for those that had the WOW realise the success or failure of the project is in factor in showbiz, then what place did it have their hands,” Madeleine Irwin, the programme in my life? co-ordinator, states, “They are responsible for Well – so I was young, and relatively naive. their behaviour and commitment.” And at the When you are 17, have an ounce of talent and forefront of all this, is Interplay Theatre’s resithe blissfully ignorant idea that you can be dent artistic director Steve Byrne. anything you want to be, there doesn’t appear Steve is one of those guys who one canto be any reason why you would acquaint not help liking instantly. I met him at the yourself with those less capable or lucky as door of the ‘theatre’ – a community centre you. And here in Cambridge, with multitudes with two large rooms upstairs for acting and of opportunities at our very fingertips to get dance workshops and 3 soundproof basement involved in all aspects of studios that housed decktheatre, and with the brains, ing, mixing and recordand for some of us, wealth, ing equipment, as well as In the space of to get where we want to instruments of all shapes be, it’s easy to forget about and sizes. “Some Theatre” those in the UK that have I silently huffed as I took one week I met more health problems, fewer Steve’s hand. He gave it opportunities, and little a squeeze, sized me up with more quietly encouragement from famand led me through to the ily or school to pursue their ‘office’. talented people... hobbies or nurture their “Here, we’re more of talents. And that’s where than I think I ever will a hands-on organisation. Tools of the Trade comes None of this admin rubin. Affiliated with Interplay bish! ” I remember him again in my life Theatre Company, this saying, as I noted piles of organization helps “young paper, stuffed into filing people who experience economic, social and cabinets, strewn over tables and desks, the sensory barriers to realise their potential by phones ringing non-stop and only just being creating and experiencing the arts”. answered. Hands-on indeed! What was the Interplay works across all art forms – as well meaning of all this drama and disorder in the as theatre, it teaches through the medium of office, this glorified church hall posing as a film, music, visual arts, radio and literature, theatre, and Steve Byrne with his infectious in order to engage children, young people smile? and adults who feel excluded. These people I was soon to find out. Over a period of one Amy Barnes “ ” trouble on the streets or watching their dreams slowly go down the pan. This is what community theatre is about. At the end of my week I was swallowing my words with red-faced shame. Having been lucky enough to watch an Interplay Theatre production of Shakespeare’s A Winters Tale, one that truly inspired – and not just because it was accomplished by less fortunate or able bodied persons than we see on the ADC stage today – it encouraged me to consider branching out in my own acting style. Seeing what a disabled person can do with their body, or how a young person failing in the mainstream school system can emotionally connect with an audience and make them believe he is who he attempts to portray, is simply magical, and should push each and every actor – and every director too – to broaden their vision of what is possible to achieve, and push them to extend their comfort zone in art. I know it did for me. And Steve Byrne was right. Stuff the paper work, the hesitating, the dawdling, the political correctness. Bring on instead the hands-on attitude that creates confidence, joy and art appreciation for the most unlikely candidates. week I met with more quietly talented people, There is community theatre being produced all more passion and enthusiasm, more genres and around – theatre that has no place for the snobtechniques of art appreciation then I think bery or the prejudice emitted from the thespy I ever will again in my life. Young offend- world of today. There are no limits in art, and there certainly isn’t any limit to ers were spinning vinyl my personal admiration of those drink ing coca-cola, involved in community theatre. whereas other w ise This theatre has no It’s time to get interested, get they may have been sat researching, and more imporidly on a wall outside drinking cheap vodka. place for the snobbery tantly of all - get involved! If you would like to find W heelchair bound singers began belt- or prejudice emitted out more information about Interplay Theatre Company, ing out their extraorvisit their website at http:// dinary talent into a from the thespy w w w. i n t e r p l a y t h e a t r e . o r g / microphone, whereas about_us.htm. otherwise they might world of today Fen & Roots, a juxtaposition have been sat at home of Caryl Churchill’s Fen and in front of the telly. ADHD suffers, blind children, juvenile delin- Arnold Wesker’s Roots, is piece of community quents and the deaf were all meeting together theatre by The Young Actors Company Ltd to work out their frustration and energy on is being shown at the junction, shed 2, from the stage to ultimately produce a fantastically Monday 22nd January – Wednesday 24th engaging piece of theatre as opposed to causing January. “ ” January 18, 2007 The Cambridge Student 29 Theatre. Violent Acts kicks off... The ADC showcases a wealth of talent in new writing David Walter Hall and James Topham explore how people live together and fall apart in Violent Acts, a striking piece of new writing presented by Close Knit Productions at the ADC Theatre from Tuesday, 30 January to Saturday, 3 February. In the 24 hours surrounding a university graduation, eight people are faced with the physical and emotional consequences of the violence both around and within them. As relationships reach breaking point, the only constant will be the clock on stage keeping the audience oriented to the complex chronology of the play. Violent Acts is the product of the Close Knit Writer’s Project 2006 focused on bringing new writing to Cambridge. Eight actors, two writers, and a director experimented with im- provisation, undertook character analysis exercises, and worked in different mediums to produce this unique and powerful piece. The polished script resulting from this extraordinary collaboration is a powerful response to events in the public and private world. Violent Acts’ high artistic standard and uncommon method of conception have created a performance filled with nuance and richness and the realistic non-linear storytelling will give the audience a sense of picking up the pieces of the lives which shatter before them onstage. This thought-provoking production demonstrates how violence lurks even in the most civilized places. Former students of the University of Images courtesy of Close Knit Productions Cambridge, David and James return to the ADC with their latest work afer achieving previous success in both London and New York. Violent Acts is showing at the Using a series of their own experiences as ADC from 30 January — a base for this play, this show promises to be 3 February at 7.45 pm both thought-proviking and entertaining. A Thursday - Friday £7/£5 must for all those thinking of trying out their Friday - Saturday £8/£6 own hand at new writing, this show is full of Free online booking at inspirational ideas... www.adctheatre.com Box office: 01223 300085 Le Cabaret du “ ” Néant Engaging quirkiness A night of desperate satire, sensuous whimsy and bitter irony in songs, chansons, lieder and schläger by S atie, S choenberg, Eisler, Weill, Cage, Geoff rey Hannan, Rober t Fokkens and L aurence Crane. P ulse is expanding c abaret as a medium, providing an avenue for composers tolet their hair down and loosen their tongues on contemporar y social issues,f rom asbos to schiz ophrenia. This show explores the archaeolog y of c abaret song, f rom its beginnings in French c afes, through pre-war Germany, postwar Amer ic a, to 21st Centur y Br itain. P ulse are: S arah Dacey (Chanteuse), Rob Fokkens (Chanteur et Compère), Belinda Jones (P iano), Rosie Banks (Cello) and Catr iona S cott (Clar inet) The Times “Colourful, challenging and witty ” - Classical Source Saturday 20th January 2007 - 7.30pm The Theatre, Peterhouse, Trumpington Street, Cambridge Tickets - £8/£4 Event Box Office: [email protected] For further information contact Rob Fokkens on 07812 197843 The Cambridge Student January 18, 2007 30 Film. Pan’s Labyrinth Guillermo del Toro’s dark fairytale blends fascists and fantasy... Sophie Erskine The sun is really at its zenith for award-winning filmmaker Guillermo del Toro. As part of a dynamic generation of Mexican filmmakers – among them his good friend Alfonso Cuarón (Children of Men) - del Toro has revitalised Mexican cinema while successfully straddling the dual horses of independent cinema and fat-cat, butter-sweet blockbusterage. In this, his sixth and most ambitious film, the director yet again unleashes his creativity to the world, presenting an enchanted fairy-tale for grown-ups which is at once artistically stunning and impressively chilling. The story, set in post-civil-war Spain, is woven through the eyes of 12-year-old Ofelia (Ivana Baquero), who, having arrived in the countryside to stay with her psychopathic stepfather Vidal (a menacing Sergi López, for whom the part was specially written), discovers that he, a rebel Nationalist posted to hunt out Republican immigrants, is a heartless tyrant who only wants her mother (Ariadna Gil) to beget him an heir. In order to seek dark refuge from her new cruel life, she escapes into a richly-textured dreamworld involving a confusing fawn, a banquet of forbidden fruit and a gigantic toad; and, in this alternative universe, far from being an innocent and vulnerable child, she is a brave, forgotten princess, who must return to her prestigious position through completing various perilous tasks. Ignoring her mother’s pleas to put away her storybooks, and Vidal’s disgust at the sight of them, Ofelia sinks further and further into her imagination; and, despite the comfort of warm-hearted housekeeper Mercedes (co-producer Maribel Verdú) – who also has some secrets to hide - she is led through her magic to face a tragic reality. As she realises that the monsters in her mind are mere shadows of those wielding real guns before her, Ofelia must make critical decisions affecting her own life and those around her. This is a film about imagination: about its power, its ability to provide a haven for those in troubled times and to act as a catharsis to resolve conflict , but also its danger – its inextricable link with reality and the fact that its intensity can sometimes overflow in violent ways (warning: this film is, not undeservingly, rated R). At the same time, del Toro provides a story in which the similarity between the worlds of reality and of imagination is paramount – the audience is encouraged to notice the uncanny in the real, and the recognisable in the fantastic, and various visual clues suggest that Ofelia’s alternative universe is not all that far from the original, brutal one. With regard to this dreaminess of the film, Del Toro has widely discussed his inspiration from 16th-19th century Spanish folklore, which, like Grimm’s fairytales, are filled to the brim not only with beauty and enchantment but also with blood and violence; and it is clear that Vidal, proponent of remorseless repression and wholesale, blind violence, personifies all that is grimm in these yarns. But even if all that far-out thinking doesn’t appeal, Pan’s Labyrinth is still a treat for the eyes and a setting for a host of clearly-defined, if sometimes one-dimensional, personalities played by recently-risen international stars. Awardguzzling López, noted for his ambiguous, sociopathic roles, does not disappoint; Gil, also famed for taking difficult parts, does an alluring yet tear-jerking job; while up-and-coming screen queen Baquero is scarily adept. And if you ever saw the Emmy-nominated episode of Buffy, “Hush”, you’ll be pleased to see monster expert Doug Jones as the important fawn. Anticipated in del Toro’s The Devil’s Backbone in 2001, this is an exhilarating film – horrible, and intentionally so. And, however unlikely it may seem that a project aiming to harness formal characteristics of gothic folklore to a 20th century landscape of war and politics could earn a Golden Globe nomination, it certainly happened that way. Packed with emotion, this is a story of strength against oppression, of growing up while retaining one’s faith in magic, and of political blindness. Reality is brutal, kids, so go see ‘Pan’s Labyrinth’ if you want a worthwhile escape - it’ll leave a spell on you for sure. tension: Stallone repeatedly looks close to a cardiac arrest and you wonder if he can write himself another implausible victory before his left ventricle collapses. It all gets tied up in a satisfying conclusion which provides the finale for one of cinema’s most unashamedly entertaining franchises. JAMES GARNER Rocky Balboa “What we’ll be calling on is blunt force trauma, heavy duty punches that’ll rattle his ancestors… Let’s start building some hurtin’ bombs.” To some, a piece of clunky dialogue. To others, an irresistible invitation to rejoin Stallone’s perennial underdog in his 6th film. This time, a greater suspension of disbelief is required than ever before as a 59-year old, short, ItalianAmerican, living in squalor despite being a boxing icon and nationally loved, pulls on his gloves one last time to fight the undefeated, undisputed heavyweight champion of the world. Rocky starts the film mourning his wife and running a low rent restaurant in his hometown Philadelphia. Meanwhile his son, possibly intended as a symbol of Stallone himself, is exasperated by living in Rocky’s long shadow. It takes a wonderfully hokey plot-device to get things moving when a computerised bout between Rocky and the current champ “gets a lot of people curious.” The champ is Mason “The Line” Dixon (Antonio Tarver), the selfdoubting king of a lacklustre heavyweight division, who unlike Rocky’s previous opponents is more character than caricature. The film is obviously a vehicle for Stallone who picks up acting, writing, directing and producing credits and reminds everyone why he was one of the biggest box office draws of the 1980s. He was even Oscar-nominated for his performance in Rocky before the Academy remembered that acting involves pretending to be someone else. Truly nobody could play this character as well as its creator whose gentle wit and hangdog charm provides the heart of the piece. Rocky’s homespun philosophy is strangely endearing and Stallone brings an unexpected pathos to lines like ‘What’s crazy about standing toe to toe, saying, “I am”?’ Rocky Balboa has bucked the trend of the series by winning a warm critical reception, seemingly because Rocky having lost all his money allows it to be described as ‘gritty.’ In truth it is no more venerable than its forbears, which all do the same thing but do it well. Compared to them, it is the fight itself where this instalment is strongest - if you can overlook the disturbing sight of the musclebound ‘Balboasaurus.’ This is due to genuine January 18th 2007 The Cambridge Student 31 Film. Drugs, dealers and deception... For this week’s Drugs issue, Amy Barnes looks back on Ken Loach’s ‘Sweet Sixteen’. As the film is set in the shadow of the it acceptable to profit by actively promoting closed shipbuilding yards, the theme of the same illegal substance that has caused his unemployment and the responsibility that beloved mother to be banged up in the first stems from taking care of oneself, and others, place? Does Liam believe family ties to be seeps into the very core of the protagonists’ stronger than the addictive drug that worms its activities. As Liam and Pinball muscle their way into people’s bodies, pockets, and wallets? way into the world of drug dealing, it becomes If so – then why does he behave the way he does to his sister at the end all too easy to see how this kind (without giving too much away of ‘employment’ is much more here)? The situation presented financially profitable than any . . . p u n c h y to us is sinister, and depressing other job a fifteen year-old could in its very inevitability. The acquire. The capitalist system is mocked and spat at for callously dialogue keeps unpredictable twist that provides a conclusion to Liam’s lifestyle as abandoning its workers in times of desperate need. Director the viewers on he knows it is, if we look at the facts Loach presents to us, not Ken Loach and screenwriter toes as unpredictable at all. Paul Laverty, through the their It is a lamentable shame that activities and viewpoint of Liam, ultimately put an ironic Liam descends Ken Loach’s films rarely get released for cinema viewing. spin on the Thatcherite ethos of further into Often shunted to the sidelines as entrepreneurial self-help. being too ‘political’ or ‘difficult’, With the use of some intriguing criminal Loach’s films do not pretend cinematography, and superb this to fit into the class of ‘screen acting derived from Loach’s entertainment’. Yet whilst this commitment to improvisation underworld... may not be their primary purpose, and spontaneity on set, the Sweet Sixteen – and many others audience becomes transported into Liam’s world. There is little that stirs the – are entertaining, juxtaposing a character’s emotion more than to see a character, whom quirky sense of humour with a realistic one has come to know well through shared situation. Sometimes, it seems, the only thing experience, resorting to tactics of deceit and left to do when faced with inevitability is destruction in order to make ends meet. laugh. I certainly did, a lot. And my guess Humorous encounters with the police, acts is that you will too. I’d recommend this film of violence from desperate addicts and the to anyone that is not afraid to be shown the constant flow of punchy dialogue keeps the darker side of existence, as well as to judge viewers on their toes as Liam descends further for yourselves whether your choices in Liam’s situation would have been any different to his. into this criminal underworld. The biggest battle however is evidently one I doubt not. He is, remember, after all simply trapped within Liam’s own consciousness – is a boy of fifteen. “ ” Sweet Sixteen is powerful in the mediums of theme, language, and imagery. Released in 2002, this film follows the life of fifteenyear-old Liam (Martin Compston) as he prepares for his ex-heroin addicted mother to be released from prison. Set in Greenock, a rundown town near Glasgow, there is little other way for Liam to gain money – which he desperately needs in order to make his mother’s life more comfortable – than to enter the drug trade. I had seen Sweet Sixteen as part of my Film Studies module of my Education tripos. Quite understandably I fell in love with this harrowing tale of one boy’s struggle for success and survival in a choice-free world where everything carries its own price. Admittedly, it does not sound like pleasant or easy viewing, like so many other Ken Loach films. Yet the sparkling wit and energy that is displayed by youngsters Liam and his friend Pinball (William Ruane) carry the plot forward, and allow the audience to warm to and – dare I say it – empathise with the characters, even though their activities are not in the least moral, or legal. Remembering the unimaginable Rex Bloomstein’s astonishing Holocaust documentary, ‘KZ’ Rex Bloomstein’s KZ (2006), a powerful documentary on the former Nazi concentration camp Mauthausen in Austria, will be shown in a free screening at the Cambridge Arts Picturehouse on Friday 26th January, Holocaust Memorial Day. Radically different from other films about Nazi persecution, KZ completely does away with testimonies of survivors or iconic images of atrocities in conveying the horrors of the camp. Instead, the film portrays those who in the present day are confronted with the camp’s legacy: the tourists, who visit the site in their thousands every year, the guides who inform them about the barbarities that occurred there and not least the people who live in the camp’s immediate vicinity. The range of responses they give to Mauthausen’s unsettling past proves to be as vast as conflicting. KZ is a film about why and how we remember the Holocaust today – questions of vital importance as the generation of witnesses has almost deceased. Mauthausen is an idyllic town set on the banks of the Danube, and the nearby concentration camp memorial has long since become a tourist attraction. But why do people come here and what do they find? To answer this question, KZ places us among the tourists groups who are led through the memorial. We thereby become aware of the different ways in which the guides try to communicate the barbaric reality of camp life. One of them pictures the prisoners’ suffering as if these were about to happen to the visitors themselves; another one describes them as matters of fact – to no lesser impact. At the same time, the camera dwells on the visitors’ faces, and we inevitably try to discern the expressions of consternation, empathy and shame they show and compare them to our own feelings. KZ achieves its intensity through these precise observations of both tourists and guides. They help us to see the camp – the place that has been shown to us so many times – in a new light: as a site of public memory though human interaction. The strength of Bloomstein’s KZ lies in its impartiality. Largely refraining from any judgement, his film reveals how diverse people’s attitudes are towards the legacy of the camp and the Holocaust in general. Some come to Mauthausen to mourn their murdered family members, others see the camp as a warning against any act of discrimination, still others take their visit as an opportunity to criticise Israeli politics towards Palestine. For most inhabitants of the town of Mauthausen, life has moved on. The houses that formerly belonged to the SS camp guards are now owned by young couples who appear strangely untroubled by their homes’ history. In the “Frellerhof”, a pub in within the camp’s range of vision once frequented by SS, young and old continue to celebrate their town’s folkloric traditions. If KZ ultimately does judge, it is through these images of an apparently collective amnesia. Holocaust remembrance, this is the message of Bloomstein’s film, remains controversial and therefore continues to matter. The screening is at 9am and will be followed by a discussion with the director and Holocaust survivor Eva Clarke. Bookings are advisable and can be made in person at the cinema or by calling the box office on 08707 551 242. AXEL BANGERT The Cambridge Student January 18 2007 32 Film. The Cinecam Challenge 48-hours, no lights, one camera…… Action!...Amy Barnes gets all wrapped up in Cinecam’s 48-hour Michaelmas Challenge. Last summer holidays I began to question what it is that I want to do with my life. I was embarking on my third year, had no foreseeable application forms to fill in, and no particular direction I wanted to follow. Up for trying anything, I decided to sign up for Cinecam’s ’48-hour Michaelmas Challenge’, roping my unsuspecting friend Charlotte into the equation. I’d been on film sets before, working with OTT films in London as a runner and actress. There, I’d learnt how to act in front of a camera, how to sit for hours having make up applied to my face to cover up a multitude of blemishes, and to eat – a lot. Yet my experience with OTT did not teach me how to handle a camera, or what the words “white balancing” mean, or how to edit a series of shots to pull together a slick 5 minute film. These talents, however, were exactly what were required by Cinecam’s competition last term. It did not bother me, however. Getting involved in the Social Documentary Society (Soc Doc Soc) meant that I had a few editing workshops coming up, and got involved in practice shoots of documentaries. All very well, and helpful – but I still knew next to nothing about how to transfer the ideas in my head to an image on screen. As the 17th November loomed, the first day of the competition drew nearer, and, along with the constant nagging of Charlotte demanding to know what exactly I had dragged her into, I began to wonder very much the same thing myself. Yet the competition is definitely worth giving up 48-hours for. For although my little group of 5, unoriginally named The A-Team, knew, like me, little about camera equipment, and the starting phrase given to us by the Cinecam team was ambiguous, the whole weekend was a huge learning experience, completely surreal, and bags of fun. From 8pm on Friday evening to 8pm the following Sunday, we were handed a camera and needed to plan, shoot and edit a (relevant) 5 minute short. Piece of cake, perhaps – to some. The phrase we were to work from was a Hitchcock classic: “there is no terror in the bang – only in the anticipation of it”. Our team met in Clowns and threw ideas about, and despite Charlotte’s initial pessimism about the whole thing, she hit on a gem of an idea. Our aim was to take a Beckett-esque angle, creating a short with no dialogue (all for the sake of art, not ease, honest!) in which 3 characters were to sit outside a Will White door, waiting, anticipating, anxious – until the door finally opens at the end. Think a doctor’s waiting room, people lined up three in-a-row awaiting potentially lethal test results, or pregnancy results, and you’ll get the picture. Due to the shortage of time, it was easier to involve three members of the team as actors in the shoot, rather than pulling in outsiders. We planned to shoot on the Saturday, and edit on the Sunday. Everything seemed to be falling into place. I had a perfect location in mind, and we had coverage from the Soc Doc Soc team who were following some of the teams. Their interviews helped focus and push our ideas, and enabled us to keep thinking of the next step. Unfortunately, that ‘perfect’ location that I had in mind was not quite as perfect as I’d imagined. I forgot that there would need to almost as much space behind the camera as in front of it, for those operating the camera to move about, and find the right angle for the shot. Having traipsed about Cambridge from place to place, looking even at our various cluttered bedrooms, and faculties, we stumbled across a Soc Doc Soc member’s residence in Robinson. Hanging about in a games room, I grew bored and impatient and began exploring. Off the main lobby, there was a corridor that was eerily dark, long, cold, and clinical, with a wider section at the beginning, a door, and enough space to squeeze in three people. Apparently a converted lunatic asylum, this location was brilliant – what better way to portray fear than to be scared stiff of your own ‘set’? The filming went fairly smoothly, and took almost all day. I’d learnt the importance, both from the Soc Doc Soc workshops and the BBC website, of having interesting, varied close-ups, ones that convey meaning. Close-ups of characters’ eyes were used to show their fearful ‘anticipation’ of the door (it sounds so dumb to say it! But it worked at the time, and I guess that’s all that matters) and obviously hands wringing, or ears to emphasise sounds – even shots from the character’s perspective. It all seems quite obvious, really, when looking back - but when you’re faced with the challenge of having to invent a sequence of your own shots it becomes a lot harder to think up – and then implement – those quirky angles that you see in movies everyday. The editing process was, for me, more difficult, but so satisfying – choosing the exact frame to match another, attempting to create a ‘lifelike’ sequence of events – even though we’d shot the same action or event several times from different angles. The final edit needed sound tracks and opening and ending credits, and, with all five of us crowded round a single computer attempting to come to grips with Final Cut Pro, each with our own ideas buzzing in our heads, it was pretty stressful. But there were many laughs involved (especially at the out-takes). The Soc Doc Soc were continuously interviewing us throughout the day, and helping us to reassess what we had done. The screening for the entries took place a few weeks later. It was an incredible feeling when we were announced as the winners, simply because we were all absolute novices, and had no idea that what we had spent 48-hours making would be of worth to anybody but ourselves! It really encourages people like me to consider the idea of taking up film production for real – it’s so exciting, and yet so under-appreciated in Cambridge. Access to filmmaking doesn’t seem as easy for those wanting to act or get involved in the arts as theatre – I know from first hand experience. Yet the equipment is out there, it just needs hiring. The locations are out there, they just need to be stumbled across. The talent is definitely out there, with our thriving theatre scene, and passion for the arts – it just needs to be applied. Filmmaking is by no means easy. Production companies now need employees who have experience, usually lots of it – and what better place to gain this experience that university? I’d encourage anyone out there wanting to give filmmaking a serious bash to get in touch with Brian Lavery (bl257), Cinecam’s President, or Ellie Gurney (erg30), the Soc Doc Soc President. For as a very famous film director once said (I can’t remember exactly who, I think it may have been Ken Loach) – “So, you want to be a film director? Then show me all the films you have made”. Indeed. And being on my total count of one, I had better stop writing, and get filming. Getting involved... Rather than just watching films, why not take advantage of the opportunity to try and make your own, and learn from industry professionals about the next step… Cinecam is the Cambridge Filmmaking Society, and provides its members with equipment and training, as well as hosting talks and screenings: The Lent term programme is the most exciting of the whole Cinecam year, and the main event, the Cinecam Film Festival will be over the long weekend in week 7 (1st-4th March 2007). This year’s festival will include a screenwriting talk, a ‘working in film’ event with those in the industry, a ‘women in film’ event, and the screening and judging of the short films submitted, by people involved in the film industry: critics, teachers, directors etc. It also has some top prizes (last year : 3 weeks at Brighton Film School, a video ipod, cinema tickets, and vouchers). Deadline for film submissions: 23/2/07. Other Cinecam events this term, before the festival, include screenings and talks, but also, the new Super 8mm Film Experience, which will give members the chance to try making a short using real film rather than digital, by providing then with Super 8mm cameras, which is a first for Cinecam (registering deadline: 24/01/07 or at the squash). There are also opportunities for aspiring writers: the Script writing Competition (deadline: 31/01/07) is the search to find the screenplay for a short film that the committee will produce (fund, executive produce, and give advice). THE CINECAM SQUASH will take place on wed 24th Jan, where members and anyone else can meet the committee and other filmmakers and see the short films made during the 2nd of last term’s 48 hour film competitions. For more information: www.cinecam.co.uk BELLA WING-DAVEY January 18 2007 The Cambridge Student 33 Film. The Last King of Scotland KNOWING VERY little about Ugandan history, my expectations for The Last King of Scotland were limited, but what I did know about Idi Amin’s dictatorship told me to expect a heavy-going film. In reality the story was much more than the bleak scenario I had imagined and it benefited for it, but if you’re a stickler for factual correctness you may be uncomfortable with the portrayal of events. We are told at the beginning that the film is ‘inspired by real events’, but just how far this is true is a matter for debate. If, on the other hand, you simply want a compelling story about the corrupting force of power and a nation that suffers for it then you’ll find much to enjoy here. The plot revolves around Nick Garrigan (played by James McAvoy) a newly graduated Scottish doctor whose desire to escape the monotonous prospect of a joint practice with his father leads him by chance to a mission hospital in Uganda. Garrigan is cocky, selfconfident and revels in his newfound independence, a combination that allows him to seduce most of the women he meets and gets him noticed by the newly instated president of the country, Idi Amin (played by Forest Whitaker). Amin oozes charisma and the young doctor can’t help but be drawn to him with the result that when Garrigan is offered the job of Amin’s personal physician he naively accepts, dazzled by the prospects of wealth and power that it brings. As the affection between the two men grows so does the trust between them, and Garrigan becomes a staunch defender of Amin’s regime, even when the evidence begins to suggest that something very wrong is happening. As time goes on the once lavish parties become sordid and decadent, the admirable Amin is exposed as his vicious and paranoid true self, and Garrigan realises what he has become a part of; but by now it’s too late. The inclusion of the fictional Dr Garrigan has had a mixed reception among critics. Some have suggested that his addition allowed the writers to put ‘a white spin on black history’ and little more, but I would suggest that his character is rather better conceived than that. Seeing Uganda through his eyes, we too are sucked into the light-hearted adventure that permeates throughout the beginning of the film. In fact, this was one of the movie’s great surprises; it overflows with comic moments. The audience grow to love Amin as Garrigan does, and when Garrigan defends Amin, we too feel a sense of loyalty toward him. Because of this, when the truth finally outs and surreal happiness gives way to gritty realism, our preconceptions of the bleak scenarios that had been all but forgotten are reaffirmed with full force, and suddenly we, like the Garrigan and the Ugandan people, are shocked by the brutality of what we see before us. While McAvoy’s solid performance as Garrigan is an important aspect of this transition, Whitaker deserves the majority of praise for what is simply a gargantuan performance as Idi Amin. His depiction of a tortured mind is unflinchingly real, and as the film progresses the audience love and hate him with equal measure. The character seems to be wrestled from within Whitaker and squeezed out through his pores in an intense and sweat-soaked second half of the film, and for this performance alone will The Last King of Scotland be remembered. Without Whitaker it would be an interesting but ultimately unremarkable thriller; with him it may just become a classic. All this is not to say that the film is without its flaws. Seeing things through Garrigan’s eyes does have its disadvantages, and there are cases in which interesting characters seem to be employed as plot devices to further his story when their own could have been developed further, while at other points the plot comes of as rather contrived. However, these minor annoyances shouldn’t take away from what is a hugely enjoyable movie, and one that features a performance by Forest Whitaker that simply must win an Oscar. MATT HASLER. The Cambridge Student January 18 2007 34 Music Taking drugs to make music to take drugs Luke W. Roberts and Jack Dentith explore the history of drug taking and music making... If I was a more reckless sort of individual, this article would be an account of yours truly taking a range of pharmaceuticals and listening to some music. Unfortunately, my student loan hasn’t come through yet, I don’t know any dealers, and like I said, I’m pretty square when it comes to drugs. And yet, some of my favourite music has been made by massive drug users and many of my favourite songs are about the joys of mainlining heroin, smoking crack, and so on. I couldn’t tell you why there is such a long tradition of people listening to and creating music while high, but it occupies an incredibly prominent place in popular culture. I mean, I only realised the other day that ‘Get the Party Started’ by Pink was about taking ecstasy, and it occurred to me as I watched Shirley Bassey sing it in a Marks & Spencer’s advert. I guess it all starts with Jazz. John Phillip Sousa (who wrote ‘Stars and Stripes Forever’) called it “prostituted music” and suggested “the sooner we get rid of the stuff, the better for our boys and girls” which gives you an idea of the genre’s seedy reputation in the 1920s. While it’s no coincidence that “Jazz Cigarette” is one of the more amusing slang terms for a joint, the drug it’s most clearly associated with is Heroin. Charlie Parker, Billie Holiday, Miles Davis, Thelonious Monk and John Coltrane were all addicts at one point or another. It’s been suggested that many younger musicians seeking to emulate Parker tried the drug and subsequently destroyed their careers, but it didn’t seem to affect the master too negatively. As Miles put it: in the Sky with Diamonds and Strawberry Fields are about LSD, and they all really liked drugs, but Lou Reed dismissed their experiments as “a bore” and there’s nothing in their catalogue that could possibly compare to ‘Heroin’ by The Velvet Underground. When Reed sings lines like, “Cause it makes me feel like I’m a man/When I put a spike into my vein/And I’ll tell ya, things aren’t quite the same/ When I’m rushing on my run/ And I feel just like Jesus’ son” “After Bird got high, he just played his ass off” “He would come back [from shooting up] all fucked up and shit. But after Bird got high, he just played his ass off.” Ever quotable, he’s also reported to have said that Colrane died “from taking too much LSD”, and though factually inaccurate (it was alcohol), the last recordings by Coltrane, full of atonal flights of free improvisation certainly sound like they were produced by an altered consciousness. The most famous proponents of acid were probably The Beatles. Everyone knows the stories - Lucy He sounds plain cool, and I guess at its most basic, they spend seven minutes glorifying a terrible and destructive drug. Problem is, the song itself is glorious and far better than any of the numerous songs written about the dangers of Heroin abuse. (That said, it’s worth hearing King Hannibal’s ‘The Truth Shall Set You Free’ in which he addresses the problem of addiction amongst African-Americans, and preaches “Junk is just another name for slavery”. He goes on to address “All the addicts out there” and asks “Have you tried JESUS?” in a deranged voice over some pretty badass funk.) Anyway, trying to do The Velvet Underground’s song justice in words is futile; all I can say is that it sounds like what I imagine the rush of opiates is like and effectively makes it unnecessary for anyone else to write a song on the subject (except maybe Spacemen 3, who basically forged a career out of writing gospel music about skag). So where does that leave other drugs? The holy grail of songs about Marijuana is probably the sublimely ridiculous ‘Dopesmoker’ by Sleep, and where the pace of ‘Heroin’ swells and recedes like the blood rushing to a junkie’s head, this opens with 8 minutes of slowed down Black Sabbath riffs crawling at a glacial pace like a pothead reaching for the last bag of Doritos. The singer begins chanting “Drop out of life with bong in hand/Follow the smoke to the riff-filled land” and it continues along the same vein for another 45 minutes. They must have been unbelievably high to think that it would be a good idea to include the line “Lungsmen unearth the creed of Hasheeshian Lebanon”. This kind of dense lyrical obscurity seems to be a common theme in drug music across genres. The RZA even dedicates a chapter of the Wu-Tang Manual to a decoding of their lyrics. For example, he explains that “Tical” is slang for Marijuana derived from Native American patois and that Raekwon is known as “the Chef ” not only because for his mad culinary skills, but his talent at cooking up Crack Cocaine. This leads us nicely to Ghostface Killah’s ‘Fishscale’ LP which last year, along with ‘Hell Hath No Fury’ by Clipse, practically invented the genre ‘Crack Rap’. If only one of Clipse would care to explain what “cocaine quiches” are, and I think Ghostface says “He was moving that peruvian “Spacemen 3 basi- Lou Reed: even looks cool in rhinestones. cally forged a career out of writing gospel music about skag white/ blowing coolies into hoopties , slamming cuties and ice” on ‘Kilo’, but I could be wrong, because it’s slightly obscured by layered samples of people sniffing. Presumably they had colds. So there you go. A huge amount of great music wouldn’t have been created without drugs, and this article barely even scratches the surface. With more space, you could have been treat- ” ed to an in-depth look at the effect of cough syrup on rap music in the Deep South, or at least something about Qualuudes. Even so, it’s worth remembering that drugs are responsible for some truly terrible music (happy hardcore, much reggae, Peter Doherty to name the obvious) and that the veneer of glamour around any given drug is pretty thin; for every Lou Reed there’s a Marti Pellow (he of Wet Wet Wet). If that’s not enough of a warning, take a tip from Bo Diddley: “Don’t foo’ wi’ that mess”. So Long, Alice Coltrane (1937-2007) Luke W. Roberts The first time I heard Alice Coltrane was playing piano on ‘The Olatunji Concert’, her husband John William Coltrane’s final live recording. On it, the band rips through two long pieces, one using as African folk song as a springboard to improvisation, and the other a thirty-five minute, searing rendition of ‘My Favourite Things’. This was jazz music pushed to its outer limits, reaching for and discovering new modes of expression and creativity. Unfortunately, the sound quality of that CD is notoriously bad, and Alice isn’t always audible over the shrieks of John and Pharoah Sanders’ duelling tenor saxophones and Rashied Ali’s pulsing free drumming. But when she comes through clearly in the calm, her musicianship is astonishing; great clusters of notes and textured sound, like no other pianist I can think of. On studio recordings like ‘Seraphic Light’ from ‘Stellar Regions’, the group is at once liberated and totally focused, and this pretty much sets the tone for her career after her husband’s death. Whatever instrument she played, be it piano, organ or harp, she sounds in complete control and her unique style clearly benefited from being trained in different disciplines. The harp playing in particular is the highlight of many of her records after John’s death, particularly on ‘Journey in Satchidananda’ and ‘Huntington Ashram Monastery’ (the latter named after the religious retreat she established in Los Angeles). They’re well worth investigating if you have any interest in innovative, experimental music. It’s also worth noting that she occupied a rare position, being a well-respected successful female musician within a genre dominated by males. What makes her death most poignant is her recent return to live performance; she was due to play the Barbican in London on April 1st, alongside her son, Ravi, on drums and with Charlie Haden (of the Ornette Coleman Quartet) playing bass. Additionally, her 2004 release, ‘Translinear Light’ was probably her finest new set of music in twenty or so years, returning to a more jazzorientated style after a decade of new-age cassette releases featuring Hindu and Hare Krishna devotional chants. Don’t let the mystic stylings put you off - her website may be pretty fruity, detailing the vision she had which instructed her to dress exclusively in orange but her recordings with her husband’s group in the late sixties are among the most moving and profound documents of improvised music I’ve heard. Her religious beliefs probably meant she was peaceful at the prospect of death - as the sanskrit prayer she quotes on the website says “Lead us from death to immortality”. I don’t know about the spiritual element, but the fire and focus of her music certainly remains. At a session in 1966. January 18 2007 The Cambridge Student Music. Album: The View Hats Off To The Buskers “The View, The View, The View are on fire” chant the fans of this Scottish indie outfit. In truth, they’re quite dire. It’s amusing that they like to perform a version of What Katie Did because the rest of their album is a bad Libertines cover too. Messrs Doherty and Barat seem to be their only influence even down to the group getting their band name tattooed and the drummer being arrested on charges of crack possession. Even if you knew nothing of the band before playing this record the appearance of a song called Skag Trendy would probably give the game away. On this the bassist is allowed to sing. As ever this is a terrible idea but particularly because the bassist in question decides 35 to do an impression of Pete Doherty with a Scottish accent, i.e. incoherent and irritating. As far as first impressions go the band’s debut single Wasted Little DJs which climbed to #15 in the summer isn’t the best. It’s a catchy indie song. Catchy in the sense that you feel like you’ve known it your whole life before it’s finished but probably because you have. This is the best thing on the album along with Face for the Radio on which the band managed to restrain all their instincts to ruin songs beyond burdening it with a terrible title. And while mentioning first impressions it would be irresponsible of me not to mention the lead singer’s hair. Big hair. Sadly not big hair in the “I’ve invested years of my life to get this amazing hair style” way but in the “I have more hair than I know what to do with” way. Next up in their bid for world domination came Superstar Tradesman which conveniently suggested the kind of person who would buy it in the title. It’s by-the-numbers indie rock which could do with some tinkering of its own. Current single Same Jeans is a blatant Radio 2 airplay exercise and listening to it is like Brimful of Asha never happened. As far as the rest of the album it’s more of the same. For the sake of balance and wanting to be quoted on posters I can say that The View are the best thing to come out of Dundee since George Galloway. More a criticism of Dundee than praise for the band that, I fear. 3/10 James Garner The Poetic Singles Roundup Some upcoming (and bygone) single releases. This week’s form: The Haiku. By Jack Dentith The Ordinary Boys: ‘I Luv U’ Horrible Music The pretense: no pretension This made my ears die Out 15th January Jibbs: ‘Do your chain hang low?’ A childlike singsong A grimey bassline; lyrics Spit with style, brimming with bling Out 22nd January Klaxons: ‘Golden skans’ Foot tappin drum beat. I was disappointed, though: Awkward chorus. Tame Out 22nd January The Game: ‘Let’s Ride’ The Game is ugly: Ugly face, ugly music. Dr. Dre, but shit Out 15th January ������������� ���������� ������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������ ���������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� ���������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� ������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� ���������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� �������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� ��������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� ��������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� ���������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� ������������������������ The Cambridge Student January 18 2007 36 Music. The Horrors, The Horrors James Garner meets a band... with a name... who play music... The scene of ordinariness that I am met with as I enter The Horrors backstage area seems out of kilter with their outlandish attire, psych-punk tunes and noms du bruit. Faris Rotter (vocals) and Joshua von Grimm (guitar) are engrossed by their laptops while Coffin Joe (drums) and Tomethy Furse (bass) finger through 45s for their later DJ set. Only Spider Webb who I will interview is keeping the end up by engulfing the room with the hypnotic sounds of his Vox Continental Organ. It is the band’s instinctive grasp of rock and roll iconography that has been the catalyst of their rise from nought to the cover of NME in less than year. Their cooler-thanthou image attracted Chris Cunningham and Samantha Morton to work on their debut video, Yeah Yeah Yeahs’ Nick Zinner to co-produce their album and immediate press attention. Webb will later admit that to some extent it was initially too much, too soon and the band have had to develop in the spotlight. First the band soundcheck - a process which seems to involve each member in turn asking for his instrument’s volume to be turned up until only an orgy of feedback remains. At 23, Webb is the oldest member of the band and he peppers the interview with obscure musical references. The further these are from my radar, the more vigorous the “knowing” nod I greet them with so by the time he’s checking Italian Library Music and Teenage Jesus and the Jerks I am giving the Churchill dog a fair run for his money. But while Webb’s muso influence has been felt with the release of the band’s first three singles on vinyl only, he seems to have been overruled when it comes to the band’s forthcoming debut album. When I interviewed him he said that “if it was up to me, none of the singles would be on the album” but the recently announced tracklist contains them all. Indeed, Webb’s comment that “if you’ve missed out on the limited editions you should have sought them out in the first place” always seemed a little out of step for a band who have embraced mainstream coverage. They even went out on the NME Autumn Tour of which Webb says “we weren’t really huge fans.” But come February they’re off down that road again with The Automatic and The View. Webb explains that “we wanted to do it because we felt we were offering something new and we wanted that to reach as many people as possible.” As far as the first tour is concerned Webb reserves particular censure to the perceived primadonna antics of The Fratellis: “After having whatever hit single, you just felt like: God you guys, get a grip.” Perhaps even more surprising then the words ‘Fratellis’ and ‘primadonna’ in the same sentence is Webb’s view of the autumnal Cambridge audience: “It was really great, I felt people were involved, it was happening” . Even with The Horrors’ polarising effect, I question if it is ever possible to whip up the kind of storm of the original punk era. At first Webb is bullish – “We’ve learnt in a short time that you can provoke an incredible reaction…I wouldn’t want it any other way…we think it’s great.” He then concedes that unlike the Pistols “It’s not gonna be Shock! Horror! on the front of the Daily Mirror or anything like that.” Ultimately he settles for saying that “Groups like The Killers and the Kaiser Chiefs – your mum would take it and listen to it on the way to the shops…maybe she won’t want to do that with our record.” In today’s climate it seems that Band Fails Tesco Test is as much controversy as can be generated. The Horrors have been plagued by criticisms that they fail to create new sounds due to spending longer on their hair than their hooks. On the image front Webb says: ““I don’t think making more of an effort should be seen as a negative thing… All of the bands I’ve loved have had a strong image: look at Elvis Presley and the reaction he got to the way he shook his hips and dressed.” And he makes the strong assertion that “I feel like we are doing something that’s completely original…when you look at our influences: 60s psych-garage, 70s punk, 80s garage revivalists - You couldn’t say we sound like one band.” But after swatting away these questions he leads himself up a blind alley by starting an impassioned but ill-considered speech : “Music’s a reaction and it’s always a reaction and it always has been, even blues was a reaction to its surroundings. It’s a constant movement.” out for the best because they could take the best ideas from all three without being ‘tamed’ by any one producer. The full and exciting sounds provided by the latest recordings show that the band’s endeavour is beginning to bear fruits. Their latest single ‘Count in Fives’ was their best by some distance and the latest recording of early demo Excellent Choice shows immeasurable improvement. If they fulfil Webb’s ambition to create an album that’s “as wild as possible”, the group dismissed as Southend style rats might just be able to bring the focus back onto their music. At one point Webb tempted me by saying “there’s something that’s quite exciting that’s happening but I don’t know if I’m allowed to say really.” I perked up, leant forward and after some mild cajoling broke his resolve. He then revealed that the band will proSpider Webb of the Horrors, standing next to some drapes. vide a cover song for a 30th anniversary retrospective of obscure The Horrors play the Corn Exchange on February no-wavers Suicide. And on that 18th and the album bombshell… ‘Strange House’ is released on March 5th. Q: What are you a reaction to? SW: Well… (pause) Q: Is there anything you would say you are the antithesis to? SW: (pause) No, I mean no…no, not really ����������������������� �������� “Music’s a reaction and it’s always a reaction and it always has been, even blues was a reaction to its surroundings. It’s a constant movement ” In fairness, Webb is clearly sincere and the boyish way in which he exults “I’ve never enjoyed anything as much as being in a band” is eminently likeable. And when he outlines the band’s early days it’s clear that they started for the right reasons. “We didn’t ever think about anything other than playing a few gigs…there was a eureka moment on leaving our first rehearsal…we played solidly for four hours and leaving that there was a strange feeling.” Cynics see the gothic attire and resurrection of psych-garage as little more than a marketing gimmick. But the band is clearly enrapt by these ghosts of the past. “It’s the best music that has been made since the birth of recording equipment…I believe that our interests and our musical background is timeless” Webb reveals that it’s only in the recording of their album that they’ve had the chance to begin to fulfil their musical potential. “We’re starting to explore our instruments a bit more,” he says and with that aided and abetted by a production dream team it may just pay off. Nick Zinner chose to skip his holiday to hit the studio with the band and sharing duties with him were Think Tank producer Ben Hillier and legendary drummer Jim Sclavunos, the one time member of The Cramps, Sonic Youth and currently Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds. Webb says that although it wasn’t intended to work with three producers it worked ������������������������������������������ ����������������������������������������������� ����������������������������������������� �������������������������������������������� ������������������������������������������ �������������������� �������������������������������������������������� ���� � ����������������� � ����������������������� � ��������������������������������������������� ������������������������������������������������ � ����������������������������� ������������������������������������������������ ���������������������������������������� ������������������������������������������������������������� �������������������������� ���������������������� The Cambridge Student January 18, 2007 39 Sport Oxford U21s Rain on Cambridge Chris Lillycrop The pre-game entertainment at last month’s 125th Varsity Match – the U21s game – turned out to be almost as exciting as the main event, if less of a triumph for the Light Blues. A lively set of backs propelled Oxford into the lead, and at 11-0 it seemed that the match might be one-sided. Centre Sam Humphry-Baker, an undergraduate at St Edmund Hall, was particularly impressive for the Dark Blues. But the Cambridge pack fought its way back into the game. A try from Scott Maclennan gave them hope of reversing the previous year’s defeat. As the minutes ticked by, Cambridge camped in the opposition twenty-two, desperately seeking the crucial blow. And with seconds left of normal time, they landed it. Captain and hooker Pat Crossley went over for a try. With the score at 1211, and the stadium clock reading eighty minutes, the crowd thought the match was over. But there was more drama to come. The Oxford players regrouped for the kick-off, determined to continue fighting until injury time had elapsed. They secured possession inside the Cambridge half, but when fly-half Jules Allfrey’s drop-kick struck the crossbar and dropped into defensive hands, it seemed that the Dark Blues must finally have run out of chances. Cambridge really should have put the ball out and secured victory, but the attempted touch kick fell short, and Oxford were able to attack again. Their pack, finally enjoying some success, kept the ball tight and edged towards the line. With a game winning score seemingly inevitable, the referee blew his whistle. The crowd exploded into raptures of celebration, thinking that full-time had been called. But the thrity men on the pitch knew better. Oxford had a penalty right in front of the posts, which wing Alex Sever converted coolly. Such an agonising 14-12 defeat was hard for the “ With the score at 12- 11, and the stadium clock reading eighty minutes, the crowd thought the ” match was over. Cambridge crowd to swallow, but it was a fair result. The Light Blues never looked truly convincing in attack or comfortable in defence, and were left ruing what a steal it would have been had they been able to close the game out in the dying seconds. Substitute back-rower Charlie Rees was honoured by team coach James Ashpit as ‘most muscular body’ in the squad. No doubt he will be looking to build on this potential by scoring an even more significant victory next year. Cambridge U21 captain Pat Crossley scores at the death. (J. Appleton) Akinluyi in late Varsity K.O. Cambridge Winger and returning Blue, David Akinluyi, was withdrawn from the Varsity Squad to face Oxford the night before the match. Akinluyi, 22, who scored in the previous year’s 31-16 victory, agreed a two-year professional contract with Northampton Saints last summer. Although he is still studying part-time for a PhD in Engineering, he had not trained with the Blues until the week before Varsity, and had been living in the East Midlands. This concerned the Joint Blues Committee, who intervened following an Oxford protest, and whose decision to prevent Akinluyi playing was eventually upheld by the Cambridge. This gave full-back Dan Stewart, who had been previously left out because of an injury, the chance to step up into the team. The decision to exclude Akinluyi was unprecedented and both Captain John Blaikie and CURUFC President Prof. Brian Johnson called for a review of the residency guidelines. Dawson Wins Pro Contract Jon Dawson’s Man of the Match display in the Varsity victory earned him more than just a fancy tankard. The tight-head prop, who has professional experience at Harlequins and Wasps, was awarded a one month contract with Premiership strugglers Bath. Dawson was drafted in as cover for Bath’s beleaguered front row. Bath Director of Rugby Steve Meehan said: “We are very pleased that Jon has joined us. I am confident that someone of Jon’s experience will fit in easily and am looking forward to working with him.” In a cruel twist of fate, however, Dawson only lasted fourteen minutes of his debut - in an 18-16 victory over Sale - before becoming injured himself. Varsity Ratings 1 - R. Schwikkard: 7/10 Strong up front. Made sure Oxford’s 8 had no platform at the back. 2 - J. Clark (right): 8/10 Threw in and carried with confidence. Strong in the scrum. 3 - J.Dawson: 8/10 Man of the match. Earned penalty try with a strong scrummage. 4 - J. Blaikie: 7/10 A fine leader. Physical in contact if occasionally beaten at the line-out. 5 - M. Harfoot: 7/10 Scrapped well at the line-out on Oxford ball, crucial role in final score. 6 - N. Johnson: 7/10 Aggressive and powerful ball-carrier. Intelligent around the fringe. 7 - D. O’Brien: 7/10 Turned over lots of ball with physical tackling. Inconspicuous but excellent. 8 - E. Andrews: 6/10: Solid at the back of the scrum, unlucky to be sin-binned. 9 - R. Blake: 8/10 Tackled well, gave backs good, quick ball. 10 - J. Ufton: 5/10 One moment of brilliance, otherwise poor. Carrying an injury. 11 - D. Stewart: 6/10 Did well coming in late. Tackled strongly. 12 - S.Thomas: 7/10 Formed solid defensive partnership with Ansbro. Good distribution. 13 - J. Ansbro (below): 8/10 Kept Roff quiet brilliantly. A few mini-breaks. 14 - D.Tibbott: 6/10 Good defensively, few chances to run. 15 - H. Murray: 6/10 Very nervous first half, recovered well in second forty. Blues Bulldoze Oxford Oxford Centre Joe Roff (far left) hauls Dave Tibbott into touch, denying the Cambridge winger a try. (J. Appleton) Tom Richardson T ries in each half handed Cambridge a welldeserved victory in the 125th Varsity Match, held at Twickenham in front of 41,000 fans. The crowd arrived hoping for an expansive game of rugby, with beautiful conditions in south London. Such hopes faded in the first half, which only saw one real highlight, when Cambridge won a penalty try. Oxford looked to force the game in the second forty, but were unable to contain a compact and muscular Cambridge pack, which shunted the ball over the line in the dying moments. Cambridge looked nervous in the first ten minutes. A box kick was charged down and the light blues lost line-out ball to Oxford’s locks, who were commanding in the air all afternoon. But Cambridge hooker Joe Clark settled the team by carrying with authority twice in the opening exchanges. An early fight broke out when Oxford’s Dylan Alexander appeared to elbow Nathan Johnson in a maul. Johnson took him to ground by the neck, and Cambridge Number Eight Ed Andrews was unfortunate to be identified as the villain in the resulting mêlée, joining Alexander in the sin-bin. The best and worst of Johnny Ufton turned up to Twickenham for Varsity, and both were on display in quick succession in the first half. Ufton followed up a horrible shank from an ambitious forty-five metre penalty by missing a very manageable thirty metre kick from the centre of the field. The fly-half reminded the crowd of his generous talents by picking himself up, with a wry smile, to drill Oxford’s drop-out sixty metres back into the corner. Ufton’s inch-perfect spiral led to a line-out turnover and a Cambridge scrum, five metres from the Oxford line. Cambridge tighthead Jon Dawson forced his opposite number backwards and the light blue pack inched forwards towards the line, with the ball at Johnson’s feet. Oxford blindside caught and attempted to pass infield, but the ball Abbott lost his binding and stole the ball, leaving was knocked into touch by Oxford’s Boto. referee David Rose with no choice but to award a Oxford carried well out of defence, with penalty try, which Ufton converted. number eight Jones leading the charge from his Oxford’s McMahon responded minutes later own twenty-two. Cambridge won a penalty at the with a sweetly-struck thirty metre penalty, and his breakdown, however, and had a gilt-edged opporteam-mates were delighted to see Ufton put the re- tunity to extend their lead to seven points, but Dave start straight out on the full, gifting them a scrum Tibbott pulled his effort across the face of the posts. back in the middle of the field. The final ten min- With a half hour left in the match, Roff was threatenutes of the half saw the teams trade penalty goals as ing. Oxford stepped up their ambition, looking to get unforced errors mounted up. Oxford were guilty of the ball wide at every opportunity, and twice left wing some loose attacking play, taking the ball at a stand- Tombleson found himself in acres of space round the still and going wide too often from early phases. outside. It began to seem as though Cambridge’s poor Their decoy runners cluttered up the back-line, often goal-kicking might cost them the match. finding themselves out of position. Only full-back But Oxford were guilty of dropping the ball as Mahony, impressive all afternoon, looked like break- much as they caught it, and lacked any precision ing through the gain line. when executing training-ground moves. The cruDuring this crucial period, Joe Ansbro’s class cial moment came in the seventy-fourth minute, was obvious. The form player when Roff ’s floated pass to coming into Varsity, those who Boto - Varsity one hundred Those who had had seen Ansbro playing at metre champion - left the Grange Road this season were seen Ansbro playing at wing with a clear sight of the looking forward to seeing him line. He was unable to hold light up Twickenham in attack. Grange Road this season onto the pass, however. CamBut Ansbro was a match-winbridge raided the Oxford ner in defence. Combining were looking forward twenty-two and came away intelligently with Stef Thomas with a penalty when Roff was and Dave Tibbott, Ansbro al- to seeing him light up adjudged to have deliberately ternated between blitz- and knocked the ball forward. drift-defence to devastating Twickenham in attack Cambridge kicked to the effect, as well as making sevcorner and Clark found lock eral crucial cover tackles. The Cambridge outside Harfoot, who appeared to be taken out in the air, centre even jarred the ball out of Joe Roff ’s hands from the line-out. Several phases later, Harfoot twice in quick succession, getting the better of his reclaimed the ball and burrowed for the line, but illustrious opponent in the first half. the ball was recycled for Blaikie to squeeze over. 10-6 to the good at half-time, Cambridge Referee Rose went to the Video Referee for a gifted Oxford another opportunity to get back verdict on the grounding of the ball and when into the game when the restart went beyond the the try was given, the Cambridge fans went dead ball zone from the restart. Stuttering play wild. from Oxford’s backs, however, led to a knock-on, In the final play, it was appropriate that the kicked through by Ufton, which saw Dave Tib- Cambridge forwards turned over Oxford ball at bott race to the corner. The Cambridge wing was the breakdown, as they had done all afternoon. “ The hooter sounded and Evans kicked the ball out, sending the Cambridge bench streaming onto the field to celebrate, as a broken Oxford side looked on. Cambridge’s game was compact, direct and unattractive - but it was intelligent. Huge credit Clock Watch: 9: Double Sin-Bin: Andrews and Alexander 17: Penalty Try (Converted): Cambridge 7-0 Oxford 25: McMahon Penalty: 7-3 34: McMahon Penalty: 7-6 40+2:Tibbott Penalty: 10-6 80+2: Blaikie Try: 15-6 must go to both the Cambridge coaching staff for a tactical victory, and to the players for executing the game plan so effectively. The Blues don’t owe Cambridge a great day out. Given what they put themselves through on the journey to Twickenham, they owe it to themselves to win at any cost. And they won well. ” Tempers boil over early on (J. Appleton)