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The Gertrudes – Dawn Time Riot

By Peter De Vries

 

The Gertrudes have come all the way from Kingston, Ontario to tell us one thing: Hoedown!

One listen to “Freight Train,” an excellent track off their debut album Dawn Time Riot, should be all it takes to make you want to start you own personal barn dance and dog fight, as singer Amanda Balsys belts out tales of a drifter paying his dues in her countrified drawl over a musical steamroller of banjo, fiddle, guitars and seemingly countless other instruments.

Actually, that’s only one aspect of this exciting new band. Sonically, they come off like a unique blend of many like-minded folk artists. Imagining the folk sensibilities of bands like Fleet Foxes or The Decemberists combined with the occasional epic sweep of Bruce Peninsula might offer a vague idea, but The Gertrudes really are their own unique beast.

On the first half of the album, The Gertrudes show not only an impressive natural chemistry, but also an affinity for a wide range of different song structures and musical eclecticism. The album opens with the steady, stompy beats and melody “Wind from the South” before effortless morphing into the gorgeous acoustic number “Blackbird and the Cedar.” From there, momentum gathers on the fantastic duet “Slot Machines,” and climaxes with the album’s glorious sprawling anthem centrepiece, the aforementioned “Sailor.”

It’s in the second half that *Dawn Time Riot* begins to stumble a little. The Gertrudes attempt to carry the epic feel of “Sailor” onwards with the more languid, slow-burning “You Don’t Mind,” but the track doesn’t quite come together because of uncharacteristically off-key harmonies and reverb that drones on aimlessly towards the seven-minute mark.

A bigger problem is the gratingly precious penultimate track “The Gertrudes” that the band seems to have named after itself. Not only is this an obnoxious self-absorbed idea on its own, but the children’s vocals really make the urge to kill rise. Thankfully, the soaring “Ronnie Hawkins” makes this stumble less noticeable, and closing track “Catfish John” recaptures much of the mid-album’s nautically inspired epic feel.

Dawn Time Riot is well worth the time of anyone pining for a new seafaring folk-inspired set of songs, but let’s hope The Gertrudes leave the kids at home next time.

The Gertrudes play the Foggy Goggle on Friday, Oct. 22 as part of the Halifax Pop Explosion.

Men’s Tigers fall to 10-man Capers

Arfa Ayub, Staff Contributor

The Dalhousie Tiger’s men’s soccer team lost their third game of the season to the Cape Breton Capers, last year’s AUS champions.

“We expected them to be a great team, it didn’t matter that they went 0-2 last weekend. They won the league last year and they had a bunch of returning players and we knew it was going to be a great game,” said Ross Hagen.

This was a matchup of two teams who are predicted to finish near the top of the AUS standings. The powerful Capers, though, had struggled on their first weekend, having lost both their home game, which means they sat near the bottom of AUS standings, and were in need of a win.

A bizarre event occurred in the first half. Cape Breton goalkeeper Chris Tournidis came way out of his net and handled the ball outside the box and was sent off for denying a goal-scoring opportunity. Dfender Shayne Hollis was swapped out for a replacement keeper, Jonah Gardikiotis, and play resumed.

The first half of the game was an even half for both teams. The Tigers nearly scored twice, with one of those chances coming from Hagen, who has been having a stellar season and who nearly scored his fifth goal of the season in three games.

Despite the chances for both teams by the end of the first half the score remained 0-0.

The lone goal of the game came in the 56th minute scored by the Capers. Kerry Weymann conceded a penalty and Silvano Rajkovic beat keeper Ben Ur to make it 1-0. After scoring the goal the Capers started to take control of the game and fired shot after shot at Ur.

In the last few minutes of the game the Tigers made a few desperate attempts to tie the game but had nothing to show for it.

The Tigers have struggled this season to score goals. After beating Acadia 2-0, they have been held by both Moncton and Cape Breton.

“Both teams had some good chances, we just didn’t finish ours today and we will have to work on that for the future,” said Hagen.

Dal football club wins opener against AFL champs

Henry Whitfield, Sports Contributor

The wait is finally over.

The Dalhousie Tigers Football team played their first game in 34 years, defeating the Atlantic Football league champion UNB Redbombers, in a thrilling 22-19 victory that had those in attendance on the edge of their seat throughout the game.

Trick plays, punt return touchdowns, big defensive plays and interceptions; this game had it all.

Despite playing their first game in more than three decades, the Tigers showed no nerves and their defensive line settled in early, shutting down the Redbombers and putting their offense on the field.

Quarterback Brendan Festeryga wrote history his first play on the field, connecting with receiver Darko Stasevic on his first throw. Stasevic quickly took over and stormed his way into the end zone, sending his team and fans into celebration with the team’s first touchdown.

Bryce Wade, former high school all-star, picked off three interceptions and converted a sneaky two-point conversion. Dalhousie Tiger Football President Jeff Pond was full of praise for the player, “He’s fantastic. Not only did he pick up three interceptions, but he kicked a couple of converts. Bryce is one of our defensive captains and he definitely showed his leadership on the field.”

However, it was Greg Pelly and his 104-yard kickoff return that had fans and players on both sides talking. With just six minutes remaining and his team facing a 19-15 deficit, Pelly took off down the field and weaved his way through a sea of players to put his team in the lead for good.

“The team was full of energy and the game was highly entertaining,” said Pond, “It was great to see all the effort put in since the winter was coming through.

“Seeing the team run onto the field was amazing; it was spectacular moment for all of us who have been working on this project since the beginning.”

The Dalhousie Tigers Football team heads to PEI next weekend to face Holland College, the AFL’s other expansion team, before coming home to play them in their home opener at Wickwire field on Oct. 2.

 Disclosure: The Gazette Editor in Chief, Joel Tichinoff, is a member of the Dalhousie Football club team.

Dalhousie Spirit?

This past weekend was the varsity season opener at Dalhousie. On a cold Saturday, half of Wickwire field was filled with fans who watched their soccer teams defeat Acadia. Aside from a a scattering of residence students and friends, the stands were pretty quiet.

We know Dal isn’t a sports school. But this weekend, a Dal football team begins its season. Football and university spirit are often synonymous. So will the Dalhousie students come out and support the team? Is school spirit about to change?

This week, Gazette Sports Editor Dylan Matthias sat down with Dal Football president Jeff Pond and talked about Dalhousie school pride.

 

Jeff Pond: I’ve been to universities in the United States and there seems to be this overwhelming affinity felt by students for their school. You wonder what it is. There is this tangible pride—people bleed the colours of their school. The central force behind all that seems to be sports, with the dominant teams people rally around generally being the basketball team or the football team. Take Texas A&M: they have “shouting practice” the night before a football game. They don’t have cheerleaders; they have yell-leaders organizing a stadium packed with students with hand signals. It’s the focal point of campus life. That’s just the night before the game.

Being at Dal, I did my undergraduate here and now grad school at Dalhousie as well, and comparing what I’ve seen elsewhere with the lack of enthusiasm for the school here made me wonder ‘why?’

Canadian universities are different in terms of the student mentality and affinity for their school, yet you look at Queen’s homecoming and there’s an example of a whole community coming together around pride for their school. You don’t see any of that at Dal, and that’s something that I think Dal needs. That sense of affinity towards the University, that desire to make it a better place and to have something within the Dal community dedicated towards everyone really enjoying their time here that bridged all the divisions you get at a University. Halifax is a great city to go to school in, and Dal is a great school but you want the quality of student experience at the University to mirror the academic experience.

Dylan Matthias: Not to throw the million-dollar question out too early, but how do you go about creating that affinity?

JP: A lot of people would love to know the answer to that question. You really don’t know but you can try. You need to create events that bring the community together. You can fit thousands of people into a stadium at a football game. There’s one common purpose for everyone to come together: you’re cheering for your team, your school and you want to see your side succeed. That’s what ties people together. It’s not just the game, it’s the event built around the shared bond to the school. That’s one of the ways to enhance the Dalhousian experience.

DM: Do varsity games—and when I say ‘varsity’ I include the competitive clubs because the difference is minimal—have that ‘event’ feel right now?

 

JP: Well, there are serious attempts to (create sports centered events), but you just don’t see the large numbers of students consistently coming out to those events. The ‘event’ atmosphere relies on the number of people who care about and come out to the games more than the games themselves. Some Dal games, yes, but you really need that fan energy more than anything else and for the most part it’s not there. I’ve been to hockey games here, in the days when Dal was the number 3 hockey team in Canada. and Memorial Arena was booming every single home game. You can get that energy and event atmosphere at Dal.

DM: There have been times when the arena is booming, but for the most part, if Dal’s playing St. FX at home, for example, Dal will be out-cheered by opposing fans in their own arena. What makes the difference between a packed arena and an empty one?

JP: I wish I knew the answer to that. It extends beyond hockey and it extends beyond winning. With volleyball, a team which has several undefeated seasons, there are games when there are 30 people out. It’s hard to understand what it really is. St. FX has a very strong alumni support group; they have that affinity. They wear their X-rings with pride; they really do. It could be the small school and the isolation of the campus and town that is conducive to that attachment. But then you have places like the University of Michigan, 40 000 students just outside of Detroit, that has an arena dedicated to volleyball which sells out, women’s and men’s, every game. The biggest thing seems to be that sense of pride people have in their school. If people don’t have that attachment and enthusiasm to come out for their school, those events won’t happens.

DM: Where does that pride come from?

JP: If you take the football club as an example, a large number of our supporters are alumni. The team is driven by students but we received our start-up capital from alumni. It’s collaboration and and making a conscious decision to care about and go the extra mile for their school.You have decades of former football players, people for whom football was an integral part of their time at Dal, who have had a 34 year void, during which they’ve had little reason to give back to the school and now that football’s back they have a renewed sense of attachment.

DM: What did you tell the alumni that have come forward to support the football team that the Athletics department couldn’t tell them about volleyball or basketball or hockey or any other sport?

JP: I’ve always been a football fan and always wondered ‘why the hell isn’t there a football team at Dal?’ My corporate residency happened to be with a Dal alumnus, Jim Wilson, who is a member of the Dal Board of Governors and who chairs the student experience committee. He has a strong affiliation to the University; he bleeds Black and Gold and so do I. We began talking about why there isn’t a team and what football can do for a University; there’s something about football that creates that atmosphere—that community-focused energy—around campus. Then there was an opportunity: a league for a Dal football team to play in that is not at the CIS level. Ever since the program was dropped in the 70s there have been numerous attempts to bring football back at the varsity level that had failed. We started with the idea of a football team, then, there was a league for a team to play in. Five Dal students came together to form a ratified society and in March we gained membership in the AFL. Once that became official, we had something in place, something conceivable, to take to alumni to begin raising the capital. For the first time since 1976, football at Dal was a reality. We were a ratified student society that had gained access to a football league. People wanted to give to us. The alumni support is where a lot of our funding comes from; the players have to pay a fee, we have to go after sponsorship but it was Dalhousian alumni who love their school who gave us the final piece we needed.

DM: Why don’t the alumni come forward in the same way for the other sports?

JP: The football team doesn’t have any other money. The varsity teams are supported by alumni but they also receive funding from the school. With football the difference was the alumni had to come up big for us or we could never have made this happen—and they did that because they wanted this for Dalhousie. It’s been 34 years; school pride at Dal has been flagging for years. This was something new, something exciting; something’s changing at Dal. This word ‘football’ is being said more and more and the momentum keeps growing. People took notice and said ‘wait a minute, football is coming back to Dal?’ It’s now a reality that people never thought would happen.

DM: What are these alumni remembering when they hear ‘football is back at Dal’ and getting excited about?

JP: There was a lot of camaraderie and spirit around that team [that was disbanded in 1976]. Two of our current coaches played together at Dal. They’re still friends today, and now they’re coaching their old team. People remember what it was like and they want that again. At the same time it’s certainly a work in progress and this is very new in many ways but it’s happening because there are so many people from the Dal community giving in order to make it a reality. Every coach is a volunteer; one of our coaches is a Law MBA alumni, another is a Dentistry alumni, another coach’s children go here. People just keep coming forward who want to help this happen and to make this as great as it can be.

DM: Opening day, how many people do you expect?

JP: Expect or hope for?

DM: Let’s start with what you hope.

JP: That question I can’t actually answer right now. There are still issues of seating capacity that we’re trying to resolve. We want to fill Wickwire. The logistics of game day are still being sorted out but we hope to put a couple thousand people in the stands based off of potential capacity.

DM: Generally, the feeling around campus is the Dal football team is changing the way things are done around here. It’s no coincidence that we’re seeing a revival of homecoming this fall as well. Why don’t we see all teams having this much momentum behind them?

JP: This is a startup year. The goal this year is to create a sustainable program. We want to see this program succeed in the long term. We want to be at capacity every single game, rain or shine, because the community is what this team is all about. That energy that a football team brings to a school has been gone for so long. Everyone involved wants to see this team succeed.

DM: How do you keep it going after this year?

JP: I’ve got emails from high school students from around the country who have somehow heard that there’s a football team starting up Dal and that they want to come here to play football and they’re not even at the school yet. We’ve got between 40 and 50 guys on the team, and we’re still looking for big guys to fill our O- and D-lines. So far it coming together and we’ve got a ton of talented people behind the program and all this buzz starting  This is a lot of fun. If there’s one way I can describe this entire football process it’s been a lot of fun. Maybe a lot of work but it’s well worth it in the end. What’s going to keep this sustainable is the same thing that brought it back in the first place: you’ve got to have people who want to have football at Dalhousie. You’ve got to have the guys who want to play and we’ll find a way to make it succeed.

DM: Are we a sports school? Are we a football school?

JP: We haven’t been for 34 years. It’s tough to say.

DM: What do you think?

JP: We are days away from our first football game since 1976, I might answer that differently in a few weeks. I want to make this a fun school and I see opportunity for every sport to benefit. You start by getting the community out to support the teams. You see the school succeeding and people wanting to come be a part of the events. Becoming a football school? That’s hard to foresee. A school where people want to come out and support their sports teams? Regardless of what sport it is, it comes down to people coming out and wearing the black and gold with pride. I don’t know what’s going to happen this season. Whatever happens, we’re trying something new.

DM: Will we see a CIS football team at Dal down the road?

JP: We just want to have a football team. We just have a football team. I know that people mention it, of course people are going to talk about that. The last team we had here was a CIS football team. We have a team, with guys on the field. We have lines on the field. Everybody asks me that question in the end and the truth is that’s not part of the plans.

Jeff Pond graduated from Dalhousie in 2008 with a degree in Sociology. He is currently in the 2nd year of the Dal MBA program. A 3rd- generation Dalhousian, Jeff Pond is president of the Dal Football Club and president of the Dal MBA society. Jeff can be contacted at jsjpond@dal.ca

Bitches is a blast

Rebecca Spence, Arts & Culture Editor

Give Cheryl Hann a long, blonde wig and she will transform into a total bitch.

The 24-year-old Dalhousie student wrapped up her final performance of *Bitches*, her one-woman show, last week at the Plutonium Playhouse. The 40-minute show, which was part of the Atlantic Fringe Festival, featured a flock of frightening females. From a psychopathic, tap-dancing weight loss instructor to a macho man eating stand-up comedian named Shelly Dupont, Hann makes each of her characters more loathsome than the last.

The ultimate bitch proved to be Hann’s impersonation of pop star Ke$ha, in which she donned a voluminous, champagne-coloured wig, aviator sunglasses, and a furry white vest. As soon as she started spewing asinine musings on relationships, friends, and culture, the audience was in a tearful fit of laughter.

My Date With Ke$ha came on and she started saying crazy things. So I started writing them down, and now it’s a sketch.

“It’s so easy to get into character when you have something so elaborate on like a huge blonde wig,” says Hann. “You kind of get lost in it.”

But perhaps the most shocking thing about Hann’s impression was that each word was actually taken straight from the real Ke$ha’s mouth.

“I was sick and lying on the couch watching MuchMusic when *My Date With Ke$ha* came on and she started saying crazy things,” explains Hann. “So I started writing them down, and now it’s a sketch.”

Hann spent a mere two days at the end of August writing the script for *Bitches*, despite the fact that her roommate Tara Thorne came up with the idea to write something for the Atlantic Fringe Festival almost three months ago. Hann, a proud procrastinator, took only one day to memorize her material before she opened the show on Sept. 2.

“I feel like I work best under pressure, which is part of why I put off writing this show until the last minute,” says Hann.

“I had a professor last year who said that all academic types are procrastinators who put everything off until the eleventh hour. You almost want to put things off to the last minute just to prove to yourself that you can do something that should take two weeks in two days.”

Although Hann is confident in her abilities to work under pressure, she still finds the experience of performing onstage by herself to be somewhat stressful. As a member of Picnicface, a Halifax-based comedy troupe, she is used to working with seven other people who can take the attention away from her at any given moment.

“When it’s just me, it’s different,” says Hann.

Since Hann did not have a group of actors onstage to work off of in *Bitches*, she could only work off of the crowd’s energy. For that reason, she decided to begin the show by riding the back of fellow Picnicface member Evany Rosen, who dressed in a fat suit, across the stage.

“Basically I just berated one of my closest friends for 15 minutes,” says Hann. “But that gives the audience an immediate reaction, which then gives me a boost of energy to keep going.”

When considering the intimacy of the stage, where the front row was about two feet away from Hann, one must wonder how it is possible that she can resist cracking a smile as she lashes out at her silent subordinate.

“Sometimes I do,” she admits. “It’s hard not to break character.”

Overall, Hann says that the found her first show in the Fringe Festival to be a “really liberating experience.” She recommends it to anyone who wants to prove themselves in the industry and break into theatre. She acknowledges that having money in their pocket is a great reward as well.

Now that *Bitches* has been put to rest, Hann is focused on an array of new projects. She began shooting Picnicface’s movie Roller Town this week; is gearing up for the release of the group’s new comedy book; and is in the process of trying to get a TV show on the Comedy Network. On top of that, Hann is working towards an honours degree in philosophy and English. She recently won the H.L. Stewart Memorial Scholarship for having the highest G.P.A in the philosophy program.

Is there anything that this prodigious performer can’t do?

“I can’t say ‘no’ to things,” she says. “I try everything.”

*Believe it or not, Hann and Picnicface still perform at Joker’s Comedy Club on Sundays at 8 p.m. Cover is $5.*

Tigers win tight home opener

Arfa Ayub, Sports Contributor 

The crowd of around 300 people watched as the Dalhousie Tigers 2010/2011 women’s soccer team opened the new season with a 2-0 victory over the Acadia Axewomen. The first half of the game was physical one.

“As physical games go it was in the middle of the pack, we don’t mind that,” said Jack Hutchison, the Tigers head coach. The game overall was a close one but the Tigers held a little bit of an edge.

“I think it was a good start to the season. It’s always good to have a win first off, but we still have a long way to go and no goals against was great” said co-captain Jeanette Huck.

Huck had one of the goals in the 2-0 victory, scoring in the fifteenth minute. Acadia goalkeeper Leisha Doyle came out of her net to make herself bigger, but Huck shot the ball, with a strong finish, before the Acadian keeper had any chance of saving. When asked what was on her mind when she scored the first goal of the season Huck laughed and replied “I don’t know, I was happy” Huck would later be named the player of the game.

Both of the goals scored by the Tigers came in the first half of the game. The second goal was by Emma Landry, five minutes after Huck’s goal. Landry took advantage of a mistake made by the Acadia goalkeeper, as Doyle meant to pass the ball to one of her teammates but instead passed the ball to Landry. Landry shot the ball before she had a chance to recover, and all of a sudden it was 2-0 for the Tigers.

The only bad news for the Tigers came in the first half when Reika Santilli, another co-captain, went down with a leg injury. “She will end up going for X-rays. It’s not an ankle: it is the shin. If it was bone on bone, there will be a little bit of pain. We just have to wait now to see what the X-Rays say and hope it’s not broken,” Hutchison said after the game.

“Reika is a great player. She is one of the three captains on the team so it’s horrible to see someone with such a big influence on the team go down. It did affect us, but we had other players step up and hopefully she’ll come back and be fine,” said Huck.

The second half of the game was slower paced.

“Good start. Really, really pleased we didn’t allow any goals. Very good first half, but mentally I thought we lost a little bit in the second. In the second half we allowed them to play a little bit too much, didn’t keep the pressure the way we wanted to,” said Hutchison.

The constant weather change from rain to sun to rain back to sun again was not a problem for the Tigers. “A little wind is always difficult because it’s hard to get the ball where you want it to go but it wasn’t that bad and we have played through much worse so it was all right,” said Huck.

 

Match Stats

Dalhousie-Goals-Cards

McKenna-0
Santilli-0
Henry-0
Crewe-0
Hardy-0
Mitchell-0
O’Reilly-0
Wallace-0
MacDonald-0
Landry-1
Huck-1
Richard (Landry 21’)-0
McKilligan (Santilli 40’)-0
Blodgett (MacDonald)-0

Acadia-Goals-Cards

Doyle-0
Hache-0
Fry-0
Reid (Fry)-0
Rayner (Fry)-0
Matheson (Hache)-0

Unofficial Match Stats

Shots: DAL-4; ACA-1
Attempts: DAL-5; ACA-4
Fouls: DAL-7; ACA-3
Cautions: DAL-0; ACA-0
Ejections: DAL-0; ACA-0
Offsides: DAL-4; ACA-0
Corners: DAL-0; ACA-3

Tigers open with a win

Armaan Ahluwalia, Sports Contributor

The Dal Tigers beat the Acadia Axemen 2-0 at Wickwire Field on Saturday , Sept. 11, a day with rain and sunshine which saw the Tigers emerged victorious.

Dal seemed to control the game throughout, and this advantage helped them in the end.  The team jumped out to a fast pace, taking an early lead after midfielder Ross Hagen scored in the sixth minute.  The Tigers were starting to push up and caused Acadia some problems. They managed to win a corner after a nice shot was taken just outside the 18-yard box. The ball eventually ended up on the head of Hagen for the goal.

Around the 15 minute mark the Tigers seemed to slack off a bit after scoring the goal, and the Axemen took advantage. The play started to shift in favour of Acadia.

There was a bit of rough play that took place in the 23rd minute as the ref showed two yellow cards, one to the Tiger’s Zach Fisher and the other to Devlin Gilmour-Ford.

Around the 35th minute the rain came down for a solid 10 minutes and in that period, the Axemen managed to take back some possession and create two scoring attempt for Jonathan Hammond.  Both of those chances came by getting around Zach Fisher, who had a bit of trouble in the first half as he pushed up quite a bit and had trouble dealing with Erik Merchant.

The second half was not as fast paced as the first as both sides seemed to slow down the pace of attack and pick and choose their opportunities.

The ref delivered 3 more yellow cards in the second half, to Tyler Lewars and Zachary Shaffelburg, who seemed to be getting a little frustrated along the sidelines as he was dealing with Jordan Mannix. Nathan Rogers was also shown a card in the 81st minute for a tough tackle in Dal’s end.

After  65 minutes the Tigers offence seemed to disappear.  Dal made a substitution in the 70th which turned out to be a good call on head coach Pat Nearing’s part.  He subbed in Andrew Hutchison for Lewars and within 7 minutes, the team had created some good chances. Soon, Hutchison, working down the right side of the Acadia defence, managed to cross the ball as the keeper was out of position leaving it for Hagen to tap in, giving Dal a 2-0 lead.

In the 87th minute Ben Ur made a great save on an Acadia free kick to keep a clean sheet.

The match ball goes out to the captain Ross Hagen, who not only scored both goals, but controlled the midfield as well.

 

 

Match Stats

 

Dalhousie-Goals-Card

Ur-0

Fisher-0-Y

Rogers-0-Y

Weymann-0

Mannix-0

Hawley-0

Hagen-6’, 76-’

Haughn-0

Hart-0

Perrotta-0

Lewars-0-Y

Ezurike (Hart 27’)-0

Hutchison (Lewars 69’)-0

Stoddard (Ezurike 83’)-0

Kovacevic (Hagen 85’)-0

Dalziel (Fisher 87’)-0

 

 

Acadia-Goals-Card

 

Ross-0

Tetlow-0

McGill-0

Gilmour-Ford-0-Y

Merchant-0

Hammond-0

Shaffelburg-0-Y

Thakrar-0

Dutton (Tetlow 61’)-0

Hislop (Gilmour-Ford 74’)-0

Ezekiel (McGill 78’)-0

 

 

Unofficial Match Stats

 

Shots: DAL-7; ACA-3

Total Attempts: DAL-15; ACA-9

Fouls: DAL-14; ACA-3

Cautions: DAL-3; ACA-2

Ejections: DAL-0; ACA-0

Offsides:  DAL-1; ACA-1

Corners:  DAL-9; ACA-7

This weekend: Battle of the titans?

Dylan Matthias, Sports Editor

September 17 is a day many varsity soccer fans will have circled on their calendar. It is a match that, in both men’s and women’s soccer, might decide the final league standings. Cape Breton visit Dalhousie—a meeting of teams predicted to finish in the top of the league.

The story, however, has taken a twist. The powerful Capers lost three of four games at home last weekend, meaning they sit in the bottom half of the AUS already.

For the women, the match-up just refocuses. Dalhousie dropped two points in a winnable game against Moncton, drawing 0-0. Cape Breton lost to a tricky UPEI side that could very easily trouble the Tigers when they meet two weeks from now. The two teams have started slowly, and can still battle it out.

For the men, the gap is larger. While Dal drew Moncton (and probably should have lost, but for a late penalty kick goal) the CIS-competitive Capers, led by PDL star Andrew Rigby, lost to both UPEI and Memorial 3-2.

Now the Capers will go on the road. It might be just what a struggling team needs. But if Dal come away with wins, it could send the CBU women to 1-2 and the men to 0-3. Those aren’t records that are easy to turn around if the aim is a first place seeding.

Both Tigers teams are struggling to score. If the CBU men can mark Ross Hagen out of the game (not an easy task) then Dal will have to rely on the highly promising but still adapting rookie Tyler Lewars and journeyman Andrew Hutchison.

The Dalhousie women are struggling with long-term injuries to Alannah MacLean and Reika Santilli, which has limited the team’s versatility. Dalhousie’s makeshift back four will have to work better together in order to deal with Erika Lannon and Alyssa Budhoo.

The women kick off on Sept. 18 at 5:00 p.m. on Wickwire Field. The men’s game starts at 7:15 p.m.. The games will be webcast on SSN Canada. (ssncanada.ca)

The Tigers also play next Wednesday at Husky Stadium against Saint Mary’s, at 5:00 p.m. and 7:15 p.m.. The games will be webcast on Haligonia.ca.

In club sport action, the lacrosse team play their season opener on Sept. 17 at 7:00 p.m. against SMU at Husky Stadium and play again on Saturday (1:00 p.m.) at Wickwire Field against Acadia.

Kings’ soccer will play in Burnside on Sept 18, with the women against St. Thomas at 6:00 p.m. and the men at 8:00 p.m.. The Blue Devils will return to Wickwire Field on Sunday to play UNB Saint John. The women are at 11:00 a.m., the men at 1:00.

Two other Halifax schools will be in action on the weekend, with Mount Saint Vincent hosting UNB Saint John and St. Thomas at Mainland Commons in ACAA soccer on Saturday and Sunday respectively. The women are at 2:00 p.m. Saturday and the men are at 4:00. The Sunday games are noon for the women and 2:00 p.m. for the men.

SMU football will play a much-anticipated QSSF cross-over against Laval tomorrow at 2:00. It’s homecoming weekend at SMU, so if you can’t get a seat at Husky stadium, you can watch on Eastlink TV. The Huskies are coming off a shock loss to the Acadia Axemen and will have a tough test against the Rouge et Or.

Around the league, a meeting of up and coming men’s soccer programs awaits as SMU travel to UPEI to tangle with last year’s AUS runners-up on Saturday.

Did we forget anything? Let us know at sports@dalgazette.com

Raise your GPA (that is: your Green Particip-Action)

Rachel Deloughery and Emma Kiley, Sustainability columnists

You have been at Dalhousie for about a week now and are probably starting to wonder what kind of wicked, awesome sustainability stuff goes on at Dal, and how you can get involved. Or maybe you’re secretly wondering what this sustainability business is all about (and what the heck “sustainability” even means). As your new ‘Sustainability Columnists’, we’re going to take a shot at answering some of those questions each week, and hopefully by reading along you’ll discover some part of sustainability that matters to you!

To find out about what the upcoming year holds, sustainability-wise, we talked to some of the people responsible for making 2010/11 Dal’s greenest year yet.

Rochelle Owen is the Director of the University’s Office of Sustainability, which was formed in 2008. From its position within the administration, the Office is responsible for implementing the “walk” that matches Dal’s “talk” when it comes to sustainability. Their Facebook page has tons of info, including upcoming events.

“The critical mass is reaching a tipping point … the growing energy of students is going to make Dal greener than most.”

Sue Gass and Shannon Sterling are faculty in the Environmental Science Program. The list of ENVS courses is always expanding, and with majors, double majors, minors, and honours programs, there are plenty of ways to incorporate a little, or a lot, of Environmental Science into your undergrad.

Emily Rideout works as the Policy and Communications Officer in the Dalhousie Student Union Sustainability Office. Funded by student levies, DSUSO bridges the gap between the Student Union and the student body when it comes to sustainability-related info and initiatives. Drop by DSUSO’s digs on the third floor of the SUB during weekday office hours to chat up the staff, or check them out online (on Facebook, or at dsuso.ca).

We met with each of them to ask what kind of ‘eco-citement’ is in store for the upcoming year, and here is some of what came up:

The Mona Campbell Building (the real name for the “new academic building”) incorporates tons of environmental features and technologies; a self-guided tour is going to be available, if you want to check them out for yourself. And although students new to Dal might be oblivious, anyone familiar with the Life Sciences Centre of old (reminiscent of a concrete bunker) is grateful for the changes made as part of the $27 million retrofit project currently underway. From new coats of paint to low-flow toilets, the project is designed to reduce the water, electricity, and energy usage of the building.

In other energy news Dal’s central heating plant (which keeps most buildings on campus warm) will start burning natural gas, instead of Bunker C fuel oil, starting this fall. The switch will lower the school’s greenhouse gas emissions by 20,000 tonnes.

For DSUSO, moving the Fourth Annual Green Week from spring to fall means their biggest event kicks the year off right. Taking place from Sept. 27 to Oct. 1, Emily Rideout describes it as a “series of events that are designed to be educational, inspirational, and get students engaged in issues surrounding sustainability, particularly on campus, but also in their own lives.” With this year’s theme of food, it’ll be hard to resist the deliciously tempting keynote speaker, workshops, and finale dance party featuring Two Hours Traffic!

We were also curious about how Dal sets itself apart from other Canadian universities with respect to environmental leadership. Owen thinks our “three-pronged approach”, where environmental principles are equally integrated into student life, academic curricula, and university operations, makes us unique.

Rideout echoes the sentiment that sustainability is an important value amongst students. “I think the critical mass is reaching a tipping point … the growing energy of students is going to make Dal greener than most Canadian universities.”

Sterling concurs; she sees a large proportion of students as active participants in environmental groups, which gives them a strong voice not only within the university, but also in the broader community of Halifax. Gass identifies the academic programs offered here as a big part of what distinguishes us. Through the College of Sustainability, it is now possible for nearly any student to take their environmental passion into the classroom, “it’s empowering students from all disciplines to think sustainably,” she recognizes.

With all these initiatives, programs, and events gearing up, your job is easy: just join in!

Public lectures are really great for meeting likeminded people and staying current on sustainability happenings. The College of Sustainability (which celebrated its one year anniversary this year!) hosts the Environment, Sustainability & Society Lecture Series every Thursday at 7:00 p.m. in the Ondaatje Auditorium in the McCain Building (see ‘Upcoming Lectures’ for details). Make sure to check them out, you will not be disappointed!

Perhaps you’d rather get your intro to green in black and white? Then the 2010 Green Guide is the perfect resource, whether you’re trying to shop for toxin-free cosmetics, or grab a mug of fair trade organic coffee. Download a PDF of the Green Guide online (sustainability.dal.ca), or pick up a copy around campus.

Dalhousie is full of student societies, a number of which are sustainability related. Check out the full list in the  Green Guide, and keep an eye out for an upcoming article where we’ll highlight the perks of signing up!

As you can see sustainability is becoming part of everyday life for many Dal students. Even if you aren’t a student activist, or aspiring to campus politics, there are a huge variety of fascinating and fun ways to add a splash of green to your Dal experience. But if none of that convinces you, maybe this will: Rideout says that if you don’t integrate sustainability into your campus life, she “will put you in a headlock.” Trust us, you don’t want that.

 

Where to pick up your Green Guide

Killam Library

Sexton Library

Law Library

Office of Sustainability

College of Sustainability

Residences

Student Union Building

Students save the trees

Samie Durnford, Assistant News Editor

Halifax Regional Municipality (HRM) has been trying to develop a plan to manage and preserve its urban forests. The Halifax urban forest consists of trees on private or public property, in urban parks and on the streets. The intended purpose of the plan is to raise awareness about the importance of the urban forest, to identify the benefits and values of protecting and managing the urban forest, and to address any areas of concern.

The Municipality partnered with students from Dalhousie’s School for Resource and Environmental Studies. Justin Hack and Jen Ross, students in the program, have been helping with the development of the urban forest plan.

During the summer Hack and Ross helped the city with the project as interns. Hack says he’s been looking at all the ways the urban forest can benefit the city of Halifax.

“Basically we need a plan for the trees,” says Hack. “We want to not only increase the amount of trees within the urban forest but also protect the trees that are already here.”

Things such as construction, changing weather patterns, pests, and private landowners cutting down trees challenge the urban forests in our city. These are some of the concerns that need to be addressed.

Hack says the total number of trees in our urban forest is 57.8 million. These trees remove about 118 thousand tonnes of carbon from our air. There are also 93 thousand sites in Halifax that can have a tree that currently do not. Hack says that planting more trees will contribute to the public well-being.

Ross held focus groups this summer to see where the public wanted to take the urban forest plan, and what benefits they felt it would give them. Shade and the growth of edible fruit were both identified by the public as values of having an urban forest.

Hack says that the urban trees have a benefit to cost ratio of eight to one, meaning every dollar the city invests in our urban forest, the community “sort of receives eight dollars in return through energy savings, storm water control, property value increase, and CO2 reductions.”

Currently Dalhousie is no longer involved in the project formally; however, Hack says that he intends to remain involved. He says that there are currently about 10 Dal students looking at ways of how to contribute to the development of the urban forest. He also says that they want to remain involved to make sure the urban forest plan is well written and expresses the community’s views.

Despite the fact that his internship ended last Friday, Hack plans to remain hands-on.

“I feel really connected,” says Hack. “I put a lot of time and effort into this project.”

The official title of the management plan is HRM’s Urban Forest Master Plan (UFMP). The UFMP will aim to help manage urban forests in Halifax for the next 25 years