; . ~‘. ‘ ‘ I r WHAT’S THE KEY'I'OAGREA‘I' om? BECOME ‘A GRECO KEY STOMER! HERE’S HOW: Buy a pizza at your local Greco Restaurant starting September 2 and we’ll give you a key chain' that . 7 \ makes you a Greco Key Customer. Then it" 1 g ) flash us your key chain EVERY TIME . - 1 . you make a food purchase worth over I 4 $5.00 and you‘ll get a large [602. size sewing of ggkg on the house! ' > -JI§A . . ,. K‘5» . ’ g ‘. ‘1 r a \ I. .5 64;: x Offer expires 15:?"5 "‘ December 3|, l983. \‘M‘ t’ Offer not valid on l5cm. \‘I pizza or delivery orders. Movies Monday & Tuesday 8:00 - I0330 1/2 PRICE Wednesday LADIES 10 FOOT SCREEN Bands on Video 892-3075 9 NIGHT .Start at |I3O on vii-MART PLAZA. ‘ crfl-porrnowu 1 (RNR/CUP) —' That lovable alien, E.T., has been thrown into battle with a flesh-eating monster from outer space. ‘ At issue: a British video cassette called “E.T.N. — the Extra Terrestrial Nastie”. E.T.’s creators claim the tape, a rehashed ’605 horror film, is a ripoff, and have gone to court to stop it. For their part, the E.T.N. people say they’re only trying get status By Carolyn Ryan T‘wo grOUps applied for sub- organization status in the UPEI Student Union at a Council meeting Sunday, October 30. A presentation was made by the UPEI Psychology Club, which has about 50-60 members. The club intends to provide information on gra- duate studies and careers in the field of psychology, to foster communication be- tween psychology students and faculty, to promote social activities, and to pro- vide other services deemed necessary by its membership. The club is to be comprised of faculty, staff, and students in the Psychology Department. Council was unsure as to whether a UPEI Psychology Club had already been granted sub-organization status, since some related . records were lost in a fire at the Barn in 1982, but voted to grant status regard- less. An application made by the students career oriented projects association was also granted. SCOPA was formed in order to give students experience in areas related to their career goals by or- ganizing volunteer work pro- grams with Island organiza- tions and businesses. It is not limited to business students or seniors, but accepts proj- ject suggestions from all students. ‘ / E.T.Phone your solicitor momentarily, then went back togthe conference. a to fostera “more responsible them in the cupboard, attitude”towards aliensfrom whereas our film indicates space. ‘ ' they may notbenice and that Said on promoter, “E.T. ~children should report them encourages children to be to their mothers or the friendly to aliens and hide police.” Tonesten students about leadership - By Rick Janson Atlantic Bureau Chief Canadian University Press FREDERICTON -— Win Hackett is trying to come to terms with what student leadership is all about. He opens his speech with the Webster’s dictionary definition of “student”, “leadership”, and “university”. It is an ironic scene — a true blue tory hack years removed from university life trying to offer some insight on student leadership to today’s student leaders. “The “Student leaders” came to the University of New Brunswick from around the Maritime provinces Oct. 21 to answer the “why, what and how of student leadership today.” Hackett — a former executive assistant to New Brunswick premier Richard Hatfield — gives a Reader’s Digest history of the student movement. He talks about the riots of the sixties, talks disdainfully about Abbie Hoffman, talks about Viet Nam — it soon becomes clear that he is talking about the American student movement and not the Canadian one. After the speech he explains his American references by quoting Marshall McLuhan. “We are after all living in a global village,” Hackett says. Students took a seconday role at this conference as speakers like right-wing columnist Dalton Camp told-them the ’80s “should be a period where you digest all that change” from the 60’s. » Camp tells them not to worry about student apathy. . “Apathy is an expression of confidence,” he says. “Students do have a right not to care.” “You are student leaders — I think that is a lot of fun”, he says. . Camp tells them that student leadership is a wonderful resume item. Mary Abraham, UNB’s valedictorian this year, says “it is time to return to old values. That’s what innovation in the ’80s is all about — a blend of radicalism and small ‘c’ conservatism.” r The conference itself is a collection of sessions on the abstracts of student leadership. Conspicuously absent are sessions on student aid, cutbacks in funding and sexual harrassment on campus. 7 Sessions dealt with “how to run a meeting effectively”, “student apathy — is communications the key?”, “student leadership — what is our mandate?”, or “student leaders as innovators.” _ Participants tried to grasp the politics of student leadership without discussing issues. At one point panelist Lawson Hunter — a former UNB student union president — exploded at the sleepy gathering. “This unemployment issue is an amazing one,” he said. “You don’t bloody well know if, you’re going to have a job when you get out of this place. Are you so frightened to raise your voice now that you’re traumatized by the system? “You are traumatized — you are scared to death about finding a job. You have retrenched into your own little hole.” The students then listened to Camp tell them they “didn’t need a revolution in the universities to insist there be jobs.” When the students were finally given the chance to discuss “student leadership” the conference became animated. One student approached the microphone and called on student leaders “to take students and make them see that these four years are more than just getting a degree. ” Abraham summed up the reaction of students to the con-. ference’s official speakers. 7 “I got the feeling the panelists were all but assassinated,” she said. > . By the afternoon of the second day of the conference some? student leaders were showing their frustration. ' -‘ Mike MacLean, student union president at - Mount St. Vincent University, said “you want to know how I feel about this conference — shitty, fucking shitty. ” The students wearing the three'piece suits glanced over W3