Monday, May 23, 2011

Fingo preschool appeals for help


Sixty-three children are squeezed in the tiny Luzuko Preschool building in Fingo Village.
The school is popular and has more than doubled its size since last year. But money is scarce. Some parents cannot pay their monthly school fees and the school receives almost no other support. Although the school has done a lot to raise its own funds, it still desperately needs help (See sidebar).
Earlier in the year, the municipality built two small flush toilets for the children. Pamela Sandi, the school’s supervisor, said the children were so excited to have proper flushing toilets that they sometimes went to the toilet, even when they didn’t need it, just to see them and sit on them.
The teachers, however, still use the bucket toilets, as they are afraid of breaking the little loos.
Sandi, who is trying desperately to take the school from strength to strength, cannot do it without the help of the community.
“My dream is for everyone to be excited to come to school, because of an incentive and a love of the school,” says Sandi.

Here is a list of things that the school needs:
• Donations for the school to buy T-shirts for a local nursery schools’ sports day on 20 May. Sandi has raised R1200 already, but still needs R1 800.
• Monthly donation of vegetables or other food to feed the children.
• The school needs mattresses for the children to rest on during the day. Winter is coming and the mat that the children have to lie on is cold and hard.
• A water tank has been donated to the school, but they do not have gutters for the rain water to run through and into the tank.
• At least one adult-size flush toilet is needed. More children-size toilets are also needed.
• Toys and educational toys.
• The ceiling inside the school is in a very bad condition. It has recently started to leak and the staff are worried that it will collapse and possibly injure the children.
Contact Pamela Sandi at 073 313 0847 if you can help the school in any way, or email Gabi Falanga at g08f0072@campus.ru.ac.za

Giving Makana's citizens a sporting chance

Just over a month ago a disgruntled woman walked into the Grocott’s Mail office wanting to speak to a journalist.
Rose Norkie, the manager of Sun City Nursery School, had been looking forward to their annual sports day, but when the school arrived at Lavender Valley Sports field, it was covered in litter and there were no toilets.
Norkie had booked and paid for the field through the caretaker of the Extension Six Indoor Sports Centre, Lindile Habana.
When she spoke to him, she specifically requested that lines should be painted on to the sports track and that portable toilets should be provided, as there are no ablution facilities at the venue.
“I feel that when you pay for the field, you must see to it that the place is clean and that there are toilets. I don’t think it should be necessary to ask for toilets. They should know that. When people gather, they need toilets!” said an exasperated Norkie.
Before the children could use the field, Norkie and a few others had to clean up the rubbish. They filled more than five black bin bags.
It has taken more than a month investigate this story. For three weeks I tried to get hold of Habana to hear his side of the story.
But, the phone line to the caretaker’s office has been faulty for three months.
Next step, the municipal spokesperson, Thandy Matebese.
Matebese was not sure why the field was dirty and toilets weren’t provided, and wanted to know why Norkie had not reported the issue to Kevin Bates of the Parks Department.
I was shocked when he asked why Norkie was so lazy that she could report the issue to Grocott’s and not walk across the road to lay a complaint at the municipality. How can a municipal official be so condescending and rude?
I wouldn’t want to report anything if that was the attitude that I knew I’d be faced with.
When I asked Norkie why she came to Grocott’s instead of the municipality, she said, “I haven’t got much faith in the municipality. I don’t think they take much notice of one.”

Published in Grocott's Mail on 13 May 2011.

Taking us home

Terri-Lee Adendorff puts her hand on her hip, gives a seductive smile and sings, “I’ll take you home. Ah, ah, Ooo, I’ll take you home!” When the song is finished she says, “We’ll take you all home,” and is met by shrieks and clapping from the audience packed in on Slipstream's dance floor.
On Friday night, two-piece band, Life of Riley, launched their debut album, The Golden Age of Us. Lead vocalist and song writer Adendorff and guitarist and composer, Nich Mulgrew commanded the audience’s attention from the start with their short, catchy folk pop tunes. They looked the part – preppy-looking Mulgrew with his school boy pants and almost-but-not-quite emo side-brushed fringe. Adendorff wearing a sexy, flowing top, kitten heels, long, sleek black hair and sophisticated rectangular D&G spectacles.
The band started off in Grahamstown in 2008, when Adendorff and Mulgrew were in first year. As the band progressed, their fan base grew and in 2010 they won Grahamstown’s Acoustic Battle of the Bands. Despite Mulgrew living in Cape Town this year to do honours, the band have managed to keep together. They played at Splashy Fen music festival last weekend and have finished recording and packaging their album this year. Although the distance has made things tricky, the band will continue.
During the show, Adendorff’s distinct voice ranged from high and lively, to soothing, raunchy, low and sweet. Mulgrew kept his head down as he strummed away at the guitar. The pair kept the audience on their toes as they moved between cheeky, sing-and-clap-along tunes to an angry song and then to a slower, sad song.
“This is a sad song, so weep if you must,” said Adendorff.
“With joy,” Nick chips in.
The band members’ sense of humour peppered throughout the show keeps the audience laughing. After performing a cover of Florence and the Machine song “Kiss with a Fist”, an audience member says, “They were flipping good hey!” The comments overheard after the show were all in the same vein.
The band is selling CD’s for R60 including postage. To get one, email Mulgrew on nichmulgrew@gmail.com.

Published in Grocott's Mail on 3 May 2011.

Silent protest photos

All photos by photographer, Caeri Dunnell. To see more of her work visit Caesium Photography.

The 1 in 9 protest participants pose for a group photo in front of Rhodes University's clock tower. More than 1550 people took part in the protest, making it the largest 1 in 9 protest that has ever taken place in South Africa and the biggest protest that has ever occured at Rhodes.
Photo by Caeri Dunnell.
Most of the protesters had their mouths taped in solidarity with women who are raped or sexually abused. Only 1 in 9 rapes get reported in South Africa and only in 4% of the reported cases does the perpetrator get prosecuted.
Photo by Caeri Dunnell.
1 in 9 protest participants march in silence from the Great Hall, where they were taped up to the Rhodes University clock tower for a group photo. Silence speaks louder than words.
Photo by Caeri Dunnell.
Rhodes University's Dean of Students, Dr Vivian de Klerk, supported the protest.
Photo by Caeri Dunnell.
I'm in the middle flanked by my best friends Lisa and Caeri (the photographer).
Photo by Caeri Dunnell.
Protestors marching to the clock tower.
Photo by Caeri Dunnell.
Silent protestors could get their mouths retaped during the day.
Photo by Caeri Dunnell.
Silent protestors were not allowed to remove their tape during the day to eat or speak. Here a protestor writes notes to her friend.
Photo by Caeri Dunnell.
Silent in solitude.
Photo by Caeri Dunnell.
The 1  in 9 protestors took part in a die-in in the Rhodes University library quad. This symbolised the women who have been silenced and even murdered through sexual abuse.
Photo by Caeri Dunnell.
The die-in - A chance to reflect on why we were taking part in the protest.
Photo by Caeri Dunnell.
Die-in.
Photo by Caeri Dunnell.
Lisa Bluett making a point about what rape does to women.
Photo by Caeri Dunnell.
Men could participate in the protest too, but did not have their mouths taped.
Photo by Caeri Dunnell.
Here you can see the T-shirts that the silent protestors wore on the day.
Photo by Caeri Dunnell.
The protestors march to the Cathedral to be untaped.
Photo by Caeri Dunnell.
Protestors marching to the Cathedral.
Photo by Caeri Dunnell.
Entering the Cathedral.
Photo by Caeri Dunnell.
Here I am hungry and emotionally drained, but relieved to finally be untaped. After we were untaped, we marched from the Cathedral back to the Great Hall for a concert.
Photo by Caeri Dunnell.
All photos by photographer, Caeri Dunnell. To see more of her work visit Caesium Photography.

I am angry


My mouth was taped for the 1 in 9 silent protest, in solidarity with those who have been silenced by rape and sexual abuse.
Photo by Caeri Dunnell
 The Silent Protest hadn’t even begun yet when I saw a res friend sitting on the Great Hall floor donning a ‘Rape Survivor’ T-shirt. She was crying and her friends sat with their arms around her. I had no idea.
Two weeks ago I spent a day with my mouth taped shut as part of the 1 in 9 silent protest. By the time the morning was over, I had seen classmates, res friends, acquaintances, a friend’s mother and many strangers all bravely wearing the same "Rape Survivor" T-shirt.
Seeing friends wearing that shirt made me angry. Very, very angry. The statistics became a reality – rape was something that could happen to me.
Our taped mouths, misinterpreted by many, symbolised the millions of women who have not told anyone that they’ve been raped, or, have told someone only to be horribly let down by a system which fails to prosecute rapists. This makes me angry.
At lunch time, all the protesters lay down in the library quad for an hour-and-a-half-long "die-in". Upon asking my long-term boyfriend to say hi to me at the die-in and to walk into town with me, his SMS reply was: “I’m not gonna come meet you, I’m really sorry but I would just feel really uncomfortable…”
I was furious! Uncomfortable with what? My silence? After being together for a year and a half did he really feel that talking to each other ALL the time was necessary? Did he think I was going to be sombre in light of the protest and wouldn’t be fun to be around?
This made me angry.
When I eventually brought myself to talk to my boyfriend, the reality of his discomfort was quite different. Contrary to what I thought, he was not uncomfortable with me, but after reading the message on the protesters T-shirts, he felt that the protest was against men and was not comfortable with the thought of being surrounded by more than a thousand male-bashing protesters.
He also felt that the T-shirts implied that all men are rapists and wanted to know why no emphasis was placed on men who get raped.
Yes, we were bashing men – bashing the men who think it is their right to rape women. Women were angry and still are.
I am angry that a man can tell a woman wearing a rape survivor T-shirt that “it would have been better if your mouth was taped shut”.
I am angry that I live in a country where gender equality is part of the constitution, but violence against women is largely the norm.
I am angry that our justice system is just-a-system. I am angry that our leaders are not taking this problem seriously and that some are unprosecuted perpetrators.
I am angry that according to statistics, by the time I am 50 years old I will have been raped at least once.
I am angry that one day my daughter will probably be raped. And so will yours. I am angry at a comment made about my taped mouth, “Dis nou hoe ‘n vrou moet lyk” (That is how a woman should look).
I am angry at the stories I heard during the day: a young woman raped by her uncle when she was between the age of four and six; a 15-year-old girl raped by her cousin, in her room, her safe space; a woman who’d watched her father rape her mother; a young girl trying to deal with the secret of her best friend’s rape; a woman who was too ashamed to wear the ‘Rape Survivor’ T-shirt.
We were waging war on patriarchy. And yet, my boyfriend is a man who will not violate women and we desperately need the support of men to fight sexual violence. So instead of excluding men, why don’t we allow them to be taped up for the day?
Taped women are meant to symbolise raped women. But, if men were taped they might be able to identify with the powerlessness and vulnerability that women experience.
Many students, mainly non-participants, do not realise the significance and symbolism involved in the silent protest. I think that the campaign fails to properly inform the wider Grahamstown community about why exactly it is done and it does not use the opportunity to interrogate other gender issues.
Even though I felt that I hadn’t been supported by my boyfriend, in hindsight, I know that is not strictly true.
I was touched by the support I received from some unlikely places - Facebook messages, SMSes and phone calls from friends I have not seen or spoken to in years, thanking me for what I was doing on behalf of women and applauding my braveness.
I did not sign up for the protest to get a pat on my back, but it felt good to know that my actions were having far-reaching effects.
I am still angry, but I was also empowered by the protest. I was part of the biggest 1 in 9 protest to date. I stood up and fought the war on women’s bodies. I still am fighting it.
I was part of an event where rape survivors were able to open up and confide their horrific ordeals, surrounded by empathy and love, allowing the healing process to start for them.
It was a highly emotional day and an experience that participants – myself included – are unlikely to ever forget. It has changed me and it will hopefully contribute to change in our country.
I want to stop being angry.

Published in Grocott's Mail on 29 April 2011.

Meri Kenaz brings her heart to Grahamstown

Photo by Gabi Falanga
Meri Kenaz’s performance is a whole-body experience. As she sings, her hips sway gently from side to side, her eyes close and she lifts her chin slightly as she delicately plucks out a tune on her guitar. Her music envelops the small, cosy group in the Rhodes Student Union on Monday night. 
For a person with such a small body, Kenaz has a surprisingly deep and powerful voice. Her music is difficult to place in any one genre - a mixture of acoustic soul, South African folk, with an undertone of blues.
Her guitar work is intricate and, to add even more interest to her performance, she sings a song in Afrikaans and does some beautiful, warbling whistling in another.
Kenaz is down to earth and radiates wholesomeness. With her pretty blonde dreadlocks, natural beauty, and open, honest face, she connects with her audience in a very intimate way. She does not seem to be put off by lack of numbers, and throws herself into her performance, just as she would no doubt do if it were a much larger crowd.
Kenaz has been writing music from a young age. She played a song about young love, written when she was 14. Her stop in Grahamstown is part of her Meri Kenaz Splashy Fen Tour, but she will be back in Grahamstown for the National Arts Festival in July.
Kenaz has just finished recording her latest album, Deeper, with Peace of Eden Studios. True to Kenaz’s style, her CD is not in the usual CD box, but wrapped in a piece of fabric, with pages of beautiful drawings inside.

Published in Grocott's Mail on 21 April 2011.

Wind farm geology debate: Stuck between a rock and a hard place

The recent authorisation by the National Department of Environmental Affairs of the proposal to build a wind farm on the outskirts of Grahamstown has added fuel to a number of debates. One of these is whether or not the geology in the area is stable enough to support these enormous structures.
A geo-technical survey has yet to be done, before construction begins. meanwhile, the debate rages on.
The underlying geology in Grahamstown consists of quartzite, shale and clays of the Cape Supergroup. According to Dr Nick Stavrakis, who specialises in applied geology, the possible presence of clay in the underlying geology could lead to the wind turbines being unstable.
When clay is placed under pressure, especially directed pressure, “the clay liquefies... and starts to flow. There’s no support once it starts to liquefy and basically you have collapse. So wherever the stress is in that foundation, there’ll be movement,” he says.
Stavrakis is not opposed to green power; however, he believes that there are better locations for the eight proposed turbines than the Waainek Road, namely, the flat peneplain area near the substation. This area, according to Stavrakis, has a thick, hard silcrete crust and is fairly barren, making it unsuitable for agriculture.
He also says, “I believe it’s owned by the community. It’s the closest point to an Eskom substation, so you wouldn’t have power losses along the way.”
Palaeontologist, Dr Billy de Klerk, points out that clay deposits, covered by a layer of silcrete, occur mostly on the flat areas above Grahamstown. Underlying the high ground is the Witteberg group of rocks, which consists predominantly of quartzites.
“The high ground here is ideal... they [the Witteberg rocks] are as hard as hell and they’re on the high ground where you want your turbines to be in the first place. The higher your turbine, the more air flow it’s going to pick up,” says de Klerk.
“I think that Grahamstown has actually sited their turbines correctly on the high ground, and that minimises the amount of clay material below any turbine's position. The high ground is resilient, that’s why it’s high, so any of the softer weathered material has been washed away already.”
Stavrakis says, however, that the Witteberg quartzites are structurally disturbed by faults and therefore have weaknesses. He says that, in addition, interbedded with the quartzite are thick layers of soft clay-filled shale.
Even though hard rock would be more suited to the placement of wind turbines, de Klerk, who has done consulting for other wind farm proposals, believes this is not necessarily always the case.
“The foundations have to be 20 by 20 metres, and about five metres down. Then they sink cables into boreholes in various directions, which are then anchored in that concrete block,” he says.
Both Stavrakis and de Klerk point out that a comprehensive geo-technical survey of the area needs to be done before there is certainty about the suitability of the geology to support the turbines.
“It’s complex, because we don’t really know the underlying geology in great detail and apparently no geological or geo-technical study has been done,” says Stavrakis.
De Klerk says, “They haven’t completed their geo-technical survey, so they may not go and put them exactly at those points because of the considerations of what the substrate is going to be. Is it shale or is it quartzite? If it’s shale, they would think twice about the positioning. If it’s quartzite it’s competent and not a problem.”

 
A wide band of soft carbonaceous shale (the dark layer above Stavrakis' head in picture) interbedded in quartzites of Witteberg Group. This structurally-weak zone is on the approximate stratigraphic horizon as the proposed Waainek Wind Farm area and specifically the beds underlying the three turbines closest to the Umaria Umama Monastery. A layer such as this would be hugely problematic for the placement of a heavy wind turbine.
Photo by Kerry Holmes

Faulting with clearly-visible subsidence in Witteberg Group rocks in road cutting to the south of Grahamstown. The main fault traces are shown with broken white lines on the photograph. According to Stavrakis, such a position would constitute an unsuitable site for a large wind turbine.
Photo by Kodak Express

Well-known palaeontologist, Dr Billy de Klerk, feels the proposed location for the wind farm is probably suitable, as it is on resilient, high ground.
Photo by Mike Davies-Coleman
Published in Grocott's Mail on 15 April 2011.

Ritalin: Concentration catalyst versus kiddy-cocaine

Ritalin is traditionally used by people who have concentration problems. For these people, the drug does a lot of good. But Ritalin is being bought off-label by non-prescription users to aid in study and as a party drug. few of these users know about its side effects and contra-indications.


Ritalin is prescribed to ADD and ADHD sufferers. It has become prevalent among students to buy the drug illegally and use it to assist in studying. Some even snort the contents of the capsule to make them more sociable when going out. Photo by Gabi Falanga
ADHD/ADD users
A child sits in a room, one wall covered in 10 television screens. But the child doesn’t know which screen to concentrate on and doesn’t absorb anything.
On Ritalin, however, the child is able to focus on one screen at a time, ignoring other distractions.
This is how one doctor describes the effects of Ritalin on a person with AD(H)D.
Ritalin is a central nervous system stimulant originally prescribed to children who had been diagnosed with Attention Deficit (Hyperactivity) Disorder (AD(H)D). The symptoms: Difficulty concentrating, lack of attentiveness, fidgetiness, impulsiveness and sometimes hyperactivity.
Today, concentration problems are recognised in adults, too, and are better accepted than they were 20-odd years ago. As a result, Ritalin is being prescribed to adults to help them concentrate.
Third-year Rhodes student, Michael Glover, has been on Ritalin since he was a child.
“Without it I’m distracted in the extreme and can’t assign my concentration to one particular thing for a sufficient length of time.
"Background noises and other distractions no longer compete so tenaciously for my attention. Generally, the medication placates me, in the sense that I feel composed, rather than restive and volatile.
"Without Ritalin, I would have to work twice as hard and still wouldn’t achieve the marks I now produce.”
Michael’s not the only one. Third-year student, Audrey*, says she has a love-hate relationship with the drug, but that ultimately she can’t survive without it: “I take it to help me concentrate. I find it difficult to start work, and get easily distracted afterwards.
"Ritalin helps me to focus on one thing.”
Aubrey took Ritalin every day while she was at school and experienced unpleasant side-effects, as well as changes in her behaviour.
“I hardly ate. I had a massive loss of appetite - food no longer was appealing. It became almost gross -looking.
"I would forget about time, days and people. I’m sure I could go a whole week without saying more than 10 words.”
Aubrey now uses Ritalin less frequently, as well as taking a decreased dosage.
Ritalin has had a big impact on Dave Morrison, who is doing his Master’s in Biochemistry. He has been using Ritalin since his second year.
“When I started using Ritalin, all my marks improved by 20% and I suddenly had the ability to do maths and accounts. I never had the ability to do that before,” he says.
Ritalin consists of Methylphenidate and is a central nervous stimulant, which acts on dopamine, the "happy" neurotransmitter in the brain.
This affects the reward response section of the brain, which gives a person positive feedback in what they’re doing, which in turn increases concentration in the task. It also promotes long-term memory formation.

Master's student, Dave Morrison started using Ritalin in his second year to help him concentrate. Since then he has started using Concerta, similar to Ritalin, but with a slower release mechanism.
Photo by Desiree Schirlinger

The sellers and the buyers
Some students have taken to buying and selling Ritalin. Jonathan* is a second-year student who has ADD.
“I sell about half of my Ritalin each month, and then I use about a quarter for going out and a quarter for work,” says Jonathan. “I sell it to make a bit of extra money, but I mainly just sell to people I know and I often give some away, because I know people enjoy it.”
James*, a third-year student, buys Ritalin to help him work and study. Sometimes friends share their pills with him and other times he buys from people with prescriptions.
“It is quite prevalent. Sometimes it’s very hard to get hold of. But there’s a surprising number of students who take Ritalin at Rhodes.
"A lot of people refuse to sell it, though.”
Audrey has ADD and has been using Ritalin since she was a child. When she was first approached by a friend to give her some, she refused. Since then, she has sold some of her prescription, but uses most of it herself: “At the time, my family were going through some troubles and the extra money helped me a bit,” she says.
Selling prescription medication without a license is illegal, however.
“It’s essentially the same thing as drug-dealing,” said local doctor, Dario Berenisco. “You can’t sell medication without being a pharmacist,” he said.
Both Dr Berensico and another Grahamstown doctor, Dr X (who preferred not to be named) admit that it is very easy to trick doctors into giving out Ritalin prescriptions, because there is no test to determine whether or not a person has AD(H)D.
The doctor has to make a decision, based on what a patient tells him.
Berenisco says psychological testing, alongside a doctor’s consultation, would be advisable, but that this is out of reach of most people, in terms of costs and waiting time.

The performance enhancers
Many students have become wise to the fact that Ritalin aids concentration and buy it from friends and other Ritalin “dealers” to increase their focus while working on assignments and studying.
“You have a lot of energy and it allows you to focus very well,” says third-year student, James*. James first tried Ritalin in first year, when a friend suggested that he try some before one of his exams. He’s been using it since then, but only to do assignments and while studying for exams.
Rhodes University’s Dean of Students, Dr Vivian de Klerk, is aware of and concerned about this use of Ritalin.
“I believe that students who do not take any performance enhancers get a realistic sense of their own competencies, and they learn coping skills which will stand them in good stead later in life.
"They can be confident that they will be able to maintain these levels when they join the workplace and face a range of new and demanding stresses,” de Klerk says.
But asked if he thought Ritalin provided him with an unfair advantage over other students, James said, “In my case, I really struggle to focus and get work done, whereas other people find it very easy. I don’t think it’s for me to say whether it provides an unfair advantage or not.”
Although James feels he really needs something to help him concentrate, he has built up a significant tolerance and is worried that he is developing a dependency on the drug.
“For what I used to be able to do using 40mg, I now need 90mg. I struggle to work without it these days, because I’ve become so accustomed to using it to work.
"It worries me, because I want to take my studies further. I don’t want to be doing my Master’s thesis, having to sniff Ritalin.”
Grahamstown doctor, Dr X (who preferred not to be named) pointed out that people with addictive personalities could let their use of Ritalin get out of control.
Dr X said seven percent of women and nine percent of men suffered from concentration problems. If a person found that Ritalin helped them, then they were probably in this statistical bracket, he said.
Berenisco is adamant that Ritalin should be prescribed and monitored by a doctor, no matter how safe or unsafe it is.
“There are certain people in whom it can be very unsafe. Epileptics, for example, people with high blood pressure, people who’re using other medications. For them, it is a potential problem,” said Berenisco.

Dr Berenisco says he checks his prescription records regularly to ensure patients aren't buying Ritalin too frequently. He says Ritalin should not be used without a prescription, as it needs to be monitored by a doctor.
Photo by Gabi Falanga

Recreational users
Ritalin’s use as a party drug is increasing. Samuel is a third-year student who has only ever used Ritalin recreationally.
“Usually I’ll use Ritalin when I’m with friends and we feel like a bit of a pick-me-up before going out.
"I could have had a long and exhausting day and still go out that night, full of energy and willing to talk with anyone,” he says.
Most recreational users of the drug open the capsules and crush up the little balls into a fine powder, which they snort in the same way that cocaine is snorted.
“Snorting it allows the effects to kick in right away, and they are also considerably stronger than if you were to swallow the pill. It produces quite a high; a euphoric feeling and a desire to socialise.
"When you swallow the pill, you don’t get quite the same rush,” says Samuel.
Snorting of the drug, however, isn’t the only similarity Ritalin has to cocaine. Both are amphetamines and release certain stimulating neurotransmitters from the brain.
It’s known by some as “kiddy-cocaine”, or as “cocaine with a PG rating,” a phrase popularised by the series, House.
Samuel has tried cocaine, and he comments on the similarities and differences between the two: “It was pretty similar to Ritalin, albeit a hell of a lot more expensive.
"I think cocaine has more of the euphoria that only large amounts of Ritalin can induce. They both make you more focused and energetic. However, cocaine is quite a lot more intense.”
Berenisco was surprised to hear about the recreational abuse of Ritalin, although he pointed out that there was a huge amount of potential for abuse in any medication used incorrectly.
“It does have stimulant effects, as does coffee, as do caffeine tablets that you buy over the counter. So, I think it’s a bit of a con, just because it’s Ritalin,” he says.
De Klerk said she had no information regarding the recreational use of Ritalin.
“We cannot police the minutiae of the daily lives of all our students. They are adults, and must make their own decisions.
"This means they must also live with the consequences of any bad decisions which they may make.”
De Klerk says that the university talks to students about the dangers of drugs and alcohol during Orientation Week, but that they are not planning to design a campaign specifically around the use of Ritalin.
“If the university makes too much fuss about the issue, it may well plant a seed in the minds of some of our students who had not previously contemplated trying the drug out,” she says.
It’s not all fun and games, however. As with other drugs, there is a come-down as the drug starts wearing off.
“You slowly start to feel uncomfortable and less sociable,” says Samuel. “In addition to that, you start to feel tired and worn out.”
The drug also leaves users unable to sleep for a long period of time after taking it, and users have reported feeling shaky, moody, agitated and they get headaches.
“It’s a horrible feeling,” says Samuel, “almost like you’ve just realised something terrible has happened, that same sinking feeling.”
Dr X says, “The dangers are that it is a mind-altering drug. It’s a stimulant. It’s combined with other stimulants like the Red Bull and the caffeine. It’s compounded by the alcohol.” Both Dr X and Berenisco point out that selling Ritalin and using it without a prescription is illegal.
De Klerk also commented on the illegality of buying and selling the drug: “If the University becomes aware of whom the culprits are, they will be charged or handed over to the police for investigation,” she says.
*Names changed to protect identities

Side effects
The following are side-effects experienced by the Ritalin users, or mentioned by the doctors in this story:
•Insomnia
•Depression
•Moodiness, agitation
•Loss of appetite
•Weight loss
•Headaches
•Difficulty reaching orgasm
•Feeling confused, muddled or socially awkward
•Heart palpitations
•Dry mouth and extreme thirst
•Lethargy
•Balding

Potential dangers
Ritalin is dangerous for people with the following conditions:
•Diabetes
•Thyroid problems
•On other medication
•Depression
•Prone to addiction
•Epilepsy
•High blood pressure
•Tics or tourettes
•Heart problems
•Liver problems
•Pregnant
•Bipolar

Published in Grocott's Mail on 1 April 2011.

Sunday, May 22, 2011

Politicians, penises and peals of laughter with Pieter-Dirk Uys

Pieter Dirk Uys prepares his make-up for Evita Bezuidenhout as part of a character sketch of his enduring character, Nowell Fine, in his show, Desperate First Ladies, at Rhodes Theatre this week.
Photo by Caeri Dunnell

Still the Krokodil. Pieter Dirk Uys as P.W Botha, in his show, Desperate First Ladies.
Photo by Caeri Dunnell

Pieter Dirk Uys as a Sarah Palin look-alike working in the White House, in his show, Desperate First Ladies.
Photo by Caeri Dunnell

Pieter Dirk Uys as Grace Mugabe.
Photo by Caeri Dunnell
Peals of laughter, embarrassed giggles and shocked chuckles filled the Rhodes theatre, as Pieter-Dirk Uys entertained the audience on Tuesday night.
Uys was in Grahamstown to perform his show, “Pieter-Dirk Uys and the Desperate First Ladies”, at the Rhodes Theatre.
Uys pulled one political joke after the other and slipped effortlessly between different costumes and personas. His first impersonation, of PW Botha, left one wondering if they were, in fact, relatives. Wearing his broederbond pakkie, an orange, white and blue sash, and with his cheeks puffed out, pressed together platypus lips and an accusatory waggling finger, some audience members were no doubt transported to the past.
“Politicians are like monkeys: The higher they climb up the pole of ambition, the more of their assholes we can see. When we look up we see POEPHOL!” shouted Uys at some point.
Mother Theresa even made an appearance, managing the phone line in heaven, while the angels were on strike. She couldn’t help reminding Muslim terrorist bombers that “If you blow yourself up in a supermarket, you’ll come to heaven in pieces!”
Before Uys’s most famous character, Evita Bezuidenhout, made an appearance, her stripper sister, Bambi Kellerman, educated the younger members of the audience on how to protect their "members" in moments of passion. The blush factor in the audience increased significantly as she whipped out two differently coloured rubber penises to do a condom demonstration.
Other politically related figures who underwent the wrath of Uys during the show were Winnie Mandela, "the mugger of the nation"; Grace Mugabe, "Darth Vader in drag" and Indira Gupta, "the Indian mafia woman".
Finally, after a two-hour build-up, Tannie Evita made her appearance, fake eyelashes and all.
“I’m so sorry I’m late,” she gushed.
It wasn’t long before she took a jab at the Eastern Province – “You’re the only province that steals its own deficit!” she said with a chuckle.
Uys left the stage with a wildly excited audience clapping, cheering and some giving a standing ovation.
Pieter Dirk Uys in the Rhodes Theatre dressing room after the show this week. He says packing away his costumes is the 'third act' of his show.
Photo by Caeri Dunnell

Published in Grocott's Mail on 1 April 2011.

Gasland: Stop fracking with our lives

In the build up to Earth Hour on Saturday night, the campus organisation SEACC SF screened the Oscar-nominated documentary, Gasland. The South East African Climate Consortium Student Forum bought the rights to the movie, which highlights the true nature of hydraulic fracturing or ‘fracking’. This technique is used to mine natural gases and the documentary uncovers the disastrous effects this process has had on the lives of American citizens living near the drilling stations.
The documentary, written and directed by Josh Fox, is shot in a poetic and experimental way and contains a montage of people whose health, water and livestock have suffered from the chemicals used in the process and the natural gas released into the air and water.
The crowd in Eden Grove Red, gasped as footage was shown of drinking water which had so much gas in it that it ignited in the presence of a flame. There are shocking revelations of the way companies are bulldozing their way into communities without being monitored by any state or environmental organisations.
The documentary is pertinent to South Africa, as a number of international oil companies are planning to prospect the Karoo for natural gas.
If they are successful, they will use the fracking process to obtain the natural gas, at great risk to the environment and the lives of people and animals.
SEACC SF sent a petition around after the screening, which they plan to present to Parliament next month. There it will be taken forward by DA shadow environmental minister, Gareth Morgan. They hope not only to gain the support of Grahamstown residents, but to raise a national opposition to hydraulic fracturing.
SEACC SF bought the rights to Gasland for $75, which converts to around R509, at current exchange rates. Anyone interested in getting involved, or making a donation, can contact Patrick Curran on g06c0565@campus.ru.ac.za or Alex Lenferna on seaccsf@gmail.com.

Published in Grocott's Mail on 1 April 2011.

Power to the hour

Guitarists, Joel Pearson and Duncan Park, from the band Folklore, play music at an Earth Hour event in Botanic Gardens . Behind them, a fire poi artist paints the night air with fire.
Photo by Gabi Falanga

Joel Pearson, a guitarist in the band Folklore, picks out intricate blues-folk tunes at an Earth Hour event in Grahamstown.
Photo by Gabi Falanga

Voices of Glory choir sing “Heal the World”, apt for the occasion, which aims to raise awareness to protect our planet. Photo by Gabi Falanga

A drumsoc member paints the air with her fire poi during an Earth Hour event in Botanic Gardens on Saturday night. Photo by Gabi Falanga

The view from Settler's Monument during Earth Hour on Saturday was no different from the view on any other night. Most of Grahamstown stayed lit throughout the hour, with the exception of a handful of households.
Photo by Dianne Jordan.
Earth hour is a symbolic designated hour, during which people around the world switch off all their lights and electrical appliances to show support for climate change and making responsible environmental lifestyle choices.
A large group of people gathered in the Botanical Gardens on Saturday night to acknowledge the event, which was organised by a number of Rhodes University societies. And although it was well attended, I couldn’t help being slightly disappointed.
I was imagining a peaceful event, huddled up on blankets, listening to chilled-out live music. The huddled-up-on-blankets part was realised - but, alas, not the peaceful part.
Student band, Folklore, with their characteristic blues-folk style, was drowned out by the raucous screams and shouts of people getting hopelessly sloshed. It felt like many people attended the event as just another excuse to have a piss-up.
But maybe I should get used to the fact that drinking, darkness and live music seem to be inseparable. Added to this, it did not seem like any lights in town or on campus had been switched off – well, at least not the ones I could see through the trees.
Not long after Folklore finished playing, Voices of Glory choir took up their spot on the grassy "stage". They sang an absolutely beautiful rendition of Michael Jackson’s “Heal the World”, which struck an emotional chord with those present.
They were followed by a rather, um, interesting poet, who recited a poem that was meant to be sensual, but came across as raunchy - not quite fitting with the occasion. He did make an impression on some crowd members, though, who giggled uncontrollably (and were probably blushing), as he described how he was going to travel the contours of a woman’s body.
It would be unfair of me to make it sound like the evening was all bad. The turn-out was impressive and hopefully this means that environmental consciousness is spreading.
Student society Gaian Revolutions And Social Solutions (Grass) had put candles in brown paper bags, which had been painted by children and dotted them around the Gardens.
Between performances, Drum Soc’s rhythmic beats filled the air and their fire poi performers had the audience in awe.
My favourite part of the evening was when I saw Saturn through one of Astro Soc’s telescopes. It looked like a big, super-shiny star, with bright stripes on either side of it – its rings.
Even though I was disappointed by the event, it did have a festive atmosphere and is definitely a step in the right direction.
Here’s to incorporating sustainable decisions into our everyday lives and looking forward to a bigger and even better earth hour next year.

Published in Grocott's Mail on 29 March 2011.

Wind farm fans mixed response

Last week, a proposal by Franco-South African wind energy company, InnoWind, to build a local wind farm, was accepted by the National Department of Environmental Affairs. This decision has elicited a variety of responses from the Grahamstown community. Environmentalists are thrilled, but the locals living close to the chosen location are concerned that not all of the necessary studies have been carried out. Reporter, Gabi Falanga, found out about the good, the bad and the ugly surrounding the wind farm.

THE GOOD

The uninterrupted view of the Grahamstown Highlands from a bench at the Monastery. The three turbines which were not approved by the National Department of Environmental Affairs, would have been on this hill. These three turbines were not approved because of the visual and noise impact they would have had on the monastery.
Photo by Dianne Jordan

Dr Garth Cambray was instrumental in developing the wind farm proposal. Here he stands at a trigonometrical beacon, near the spot where one of the turbines will be built.
Photo by Leigh Raymond
No environmentally unfriendly emissions. One step further to being South Africa’s first green city. A community education trust. Countless academic opportunities. These are a few of the benefits that a wind farm will bring to Grahamstown.
The development of a wind farm will mean that Makana has an alternative source of energy available. The energy created by the turbines will be sold to Eskom and used by Grahamstown, while any excess will flow onto the electricity grid, where it can be used in other areas. Unfortunately however, this does not mean that electricity tariffs will be reduced. Electricity rates are regulated by the national regulator and locals will be billed as per usual by Eskom and the municipality. What it does mean, according to Dr Garth Cambray, who was instrumental in developing the wind farm proposal, is that it will significantly decrease the chance of load shedding for our town.
A project company will be formed to control the wind farm, in which InnoWind, will own the main share. Up to a quarter of the shares will be owned by the Makana Winds of Change Community Trust, however the exact figure is yet to be confirmed. Nikki Kohly, Rhodes University’s health, safety and environmental officer says the primary focus of the Trust will be education funding through scholarships and bursaries. Cambray is excited that some of the profits will contribute to Grahamstown’s local economy and education. “This means that when we turn a light on once the wind farm is going, we turn a light on at the end of the tunnel to a sustainable, dignified future for a young mind,” he says.
The wind farm’s proximity to Rhodes University will create new academic opportunities. Kohly says the wind farm may be one of the first commercial wind farms to operate in South
Africa and will “provide exciting research opportunities relating to wind farms, in areas such as environmental science, economics and social science”.
On top of this, the wind farm’s impact on the local ecosystem has been rated as medium to low impact and emission free. It is also a renewable form of energy and safer than alternatives, such as nuclear power.

THE BAD AND THE UGLY

Caroline, Liam (6), Russel and Nicholas (4) Field sit in front of the hill where five of the wind turbines are to be erected. The wind turbines will be less than a kilometre away from their house and they are concerned about the impact that noise and flicker will have on their children's health. The wind turbines will also be visually intrusive, potentially chasing away their foreign clients.
Photo by Dianne Jordan

“This is my dream home. We have a great lifestyle here and it’s possibly going to be ruined,” says Caroline Field. The Field family live on Coldsprings farm, where they breed buffalo and sable. Their house faces the hill where five of the wind turbines will be erected, should the project go ahead. These turbines, which will be placed on a neighbour’s farm, is just beyond their boundary fence and less than one kilometre from their house. Although the Fields aren’t against the implementation of green power, they are worried about the health, lifestyle and economic effects that the close proximity of the wind turbines will have on them.
“Our biggest concern is for our kids, because they say the infrasound isn’t very good for you. I don’t think they’ve researched the health aspects,” says Caroline Field as she watches Liam (6) and Nicholas (4) jumping on the trampoline. However, the Environmental Impact Report, compiled by Coastal and Environmental Services (CES) states that “the impact of low frequency noise and infra sound will be negligible” and that “there is no evidence to suggest that adverse health effects will occur as the sound power levels generated in the low frequency range are not high enough to cause physiological effects”.
Russell Field isn’t convinced that the project will be a success once it is operational. He is concerned that the project will not be able to meet its financial obligations and that Eskom does not yet know how to integrate the wind power into the main electricity grid. “I think it’s going to become scrap metal on the skyline,” he says.
The Field’s main source of income is from foreign clients who visit their lodge. “They will never come here with these things,” says Caroline Field about the visual impact that the turbines will have on their farm.
The Fields will be appealing the decision. One of the grounds of their appeal will be that a geo-technical analysis of the area has not yet been done. Local geologist, Dr Nick Stavrakis, explains that the underlying geology in the proposed location is not stable enough to support the immense weight of the turbines. Principal environmental consultant at CES, Marc Hardy, says that detailed geotechnical surveys will be conducted before construction begins to ensure that the underlying geology is suitable to support the turbines.

Dr Nick Stavrakis specialises in applied geology. He feels that not enough is known about the underlying geology at the location chosen for the wind farm. Stavrakis says the ground in this area consists mainly of clay (shown in yellow on the map) and is not stable, especially when under direct pressure. Stavrakis feels the Grahamstown Peneplain area (shown in brown and white on the map) near the substation would be a better location, because that ground consists of a very thick, strong layer of silcrete rock.
Photo by Gabi Falanga

Go beyond the hour

Switch off all your lights. Huddle around a table with a candle and play scrabble, monopoly or snakes and ladders. Tell ghost stories. Make your own lanterns. Lie on a blanket in the garden and watch the stars or run around with sparklers. These are all things that you can do when you switch your lights off on Saturday night, from 8.30 to 9.30pm for Earth Hour.
Earth Hour is an international event organised by the WWF to support our planet by creating awareness about climate change. This event has been happening annually since 2007, with 128 countries participating last year. To participate, switch off all your lights and electrical appliances for the hour. This year, people are encouraged to go beyond the hour by making lifestyle changes and limiting electricity usage.
SEACC SF, GRASS and Astro Soc will feature performances by Drum Soc, BUA poetry society and Voices of Glory in the Botanical Gardens. The evening will kick off at 6pm with a screening of the documentary, 'Gasland', at Eden Grove Red, followed by a short presentation on the proposed hydraulic fracturing in the Karoo. Moving across to the Botanical Gardens, Earth Hour celebrations will continue from 8:30pm until late. Entrance is free and everyone is welcome. Bring your own drinks and a picnic.

What the fork?

Photo by Des Schirlinger

Photo by Des Schirlinger

Photo by Des Schirlinger

Photo by Des Schirlinger

Photo by Des Schirlinger
As the lights come on, a door is illuminated in the centre of the stage. From the beginning, dramatic tension is created, as an actor kneels in front of the door and talks about a childhood dream.
Door, a collaboration between Ubom! actors and Danish director, Jori Snell, of Baba Yaga Theater, was performed at the Rhodes Box Theatre on Friday and Saturday nights.
The audience kept expecting a profound revelation - but doors were closed in our faces, just as secrets were about to be shared.
The play was an adaptation of Franz Kafka’s Before the Law, and forced audience members to inscribe their own meanings into the abstract and multi-layered dimensions of the play.
The visual elements throughout the play were very striking, with four portable doors racing around the stage, actors being denied access through certain doors and allowed through others. An overhead projector was cleverly used to project textures of bubble plastic, hair and forks, among others, on to the scene.
The climax of the play was a dramatic moment of letting go.
With childlike enthusiasm, actress Ilana Cilliers started to play with forks. She started amusing herself by throwing the forks into the air, and ended with her hurling forks at the other actors. Even the director, sitting in the audience, flinched as each fork narrowly missed seriously injuring another actor.
Appealing further to the imagination were the quirky sound-effects, rich singing, humorous moments, elements of physical theatre, dances and graffiti.
For English audience members, perhaps some of the context of the play was lost with the use of isiXhosa and Afrikaans; however, the visual imagery said it all.

Published on front page of Grocott's Mail on 22 March 2011.