The all o igrm ""©13,405 Saturn ION Classified Viewpoint Letters Mel Brown brings the deep south to the true north. Tour down the Grand River offers learning experience. Saturn of Kitchener Waterioo 663 Victonia St. N. 744â€"5811 City of Waterloo Busker *Selected l‘)/l'trlbuï¬on WHAT‘S INSIDE WATERLOQ CHRONICLE jcash porchase . ptes rvight Page 16 Page 10 24 19 on 48 months with $2300 down Annual percentage lease rate is 3.9%. MSRP $22.080 20,000 km per year limit, S0 12 per axtra km Freight $900 Licence. admin & taxes exira OAC. See Satum of Kitchener: Waterioo for details neceeooonnemrnesennen B O L s n e m m en S Lynn Weiss, who owns a plot in the Queen‘s Greens community garden at the corner of Queen and Mill Streets in Kitchener, gives some of her flowers a drink Saturday during the Region of Waterloo‘s Communi ty Garden Tour WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 13, 2003 «+ WATERLOO, ONTARIO 2.2L 143 hp Ecotech engine Freight extra s5â€"speed manual transmission * Dent & rust resistant AM/FM stereo CD 6 speaker system * Foldâ€"down rear and f Air conditioning * Privacy rear quarter 1 16" all season radial tires * Cabin air filter + and Saturn Saab Isuzu of Kitchenerâ€"Waterioo 663 Victoria St. N. 744â€"5811 Saturn VUE ©20,980 1.9% .. ‘257 Serving your community since 1856 NATENE®3 PPoLC CUSRARY Green thumb Cash Purchase Finance up to 48 mon‘ Freight extra $900 60 months Lease * Dent & rust resistant side panels * Foldâ€"down rear and front passenger seats ASSK1 ggoA;:)ruuTnL * Privacy rear quarter & back windows GRADUATE Progk * Cabin air filter *« and much more $1 INCLUDING GST AND®EA RAXEY reOTO 11 ‘ti "If it ends sooner than 1 a.m., stuâ€" dents will travel from the campuses to the pubs then back to the resiâ€" dences," she explained. Satisfied with the acting CAO‘s assurance, council approved the Durst said allowing the parties to run until 1 and 2 a.m. will keep the students on campus. "On special occasions an exempâ€" tion to midnight would be acceptâ€" able; but not until 1 or 2 a.m." Russell Muncaster, a resident of Albert Street, believes allowing stuâ€" dents to party into the wee hours of the morning is unfair to the rest of the community. "When the ‘music‘ stops, it takes at least another hour for the students to make their noisy way back to their place of residence," he wrote. "That means that those of us who live near the universities do not get to sleep until 2:30 or 3 a.m. Her assurance came after one citiâ€" zen wrote city council, asking the group to deny requests from the uniâ€" versities for noise exemptions from 9 p.m. to 2 a.m. Sept. 6â€"7 for the Uniâ€" versity of Waterloo‘s annual toga party, and from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. Sept. 2â€"3 for WLU‘s annual orientation celâ€" ebration. She also said Wilfrid Laurier Uniâ€" versity has offered its own security officers to keep a close watch for disâ€" ruptive activity. University bashes to see beefedâ€" up police presence Kathy Durst, the City of Waterloo‘s acting chief administrative officer, said the Waterloo regional police have committed more officers to patrol the streets around the univerâ€" sities on the nights special events are It‘s different in a Saturn. n added police presence will be felt around Waterloo‘s two universities during Orientation By Anparea Banuey Continued on page 4