Pubdate: Wed, 03 May 2000 Source: Calgary Sun, The (CN AB) Copyright: 2000 The Calgary Sun Contact: 2615 12 Street N.E., Calgary, Alberta T2E 7W9 Fax: (403) 250-4180 Website: http://www.canoe.ca/CalgarySun/ Forum: http://www.canoe.ca/Chat/home.html Author: Rick Bell, PLAN NOTHING TO RAVE ABOUT Say what? Say yes. This is no bad belly laugh or belated April Fool's folly. No sir. This is real. Or as real as Silly Hall ever gets. Yes, the city is hosting a party of 3,000 all-night dancing ravers of all ages on the Victoria Day long weekend at the taxpayer-owned Max Bell Centre. Raves are around-the-clock dance-a-thons where many of the dancing dynamos, some just old enough to slurp Slurpees, are fuelled by the mind-altering drug Ecstasy -- also known as E -- where you can enjoy the high, dance your face off and then dehydrate, pass out and end up at the emergency room of some hospital taking advantage of what's left of medicare. Oh yes, it will no doubt be quite the scene at the city-owned Max Bell Centre May 20, starting at ten at night, ending at eight the next morning. There's a DJ from the United Kingdom who "is known to lay carnage to all dance floors." There's another DJ who will play his "unique, funky, hardhouse progressive style" for two whole hours. There will be a trance tag-team with a style all their own. And yet another turntable terror is "a Trance burner ripping it up with silky smooth baseline charged analogues, melodic buildups, finishing off with a rippin' array that leaves the dance floor drenched to the skin." I have no idea what all this means, but maybe that's where the Ecstasy comes in. And the drug will no doubt be in good supply if the city cops are right. The cops already know well Ecstasy's hold in these parts. "Tons of people are dealing the stuff," says acting drug unit Staff Sgt. Nick Nyenhuis. "Instead of just having a bag of cocaine, they also now carry Ecstasy. "Ecstasy is a problem, a growing problem. How big is Ecstasy? It's a big concern. There's no longer a soft drug. People have died, people have gone to hospital. "Ecstasy is dangerous. It can cause serious harm. Don't make light of the fact that friends of your kid or your kid may be doing it," he says. "Just a year ago we knew of raves and Ecstasy but we didn't have information -- who's got it and where they're dealing. We weren't getting that detail. "Within the last six months, the amount of information we're getting has gone off the chart. We're just learning how to deal with it and how to target the traffickers." Last month, Calgary cops made a big Ecstasy bust and in Edmonton, where two policemen work the rave beat, eight Ecstasy-addled teens ended up in hospital. Docs in both cities see more rave-related casualties. Meanwhile, the contradictions abound. While Silly Hall hosts a rave, the paper clip counters in their licensing and legal departments meet later today to come up with ways to control raves. Maybe not holding one at a city-owned facility would be a start. Duh. No, this is not about ravers being evil or the music being bad or free expression being trampled, as when the city wrongly wouldn't allow Marilyn Manson to play Max Bell because of the alleged content of his music. Raves were underground and secretive and very insider for a reason, back in the happier times before they became big biz and mainstream. Drugs, particularly the still-illegal Ecstasy, are part of the scene. Not all of it, but part of it. When raves are attended by every Johnny-come-lately in non-raver neighbourhoods or in places owned by taxpayers, The Man eventually wakes up and takes notice. It is to be expected. Most of the time. Of course, we still await the stirring of the Rip Van Winkles of Silly Hall. The Dinger can be reached at (403) 250-4305 or by e-mail at --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D