UPEI STUDENT NEWSPAPER JANUARY 23, 2002 editor-in-chief Matthew DORRELL copy editor Joel MEGGS production manager Jeff COLL news editor Erin FAGAN entertainment editor Stephan MACLEOD sports editor Adam GAUTHIER photographer / style editor Jonah CAMPBELL reporter VACANT advertising manager Kim TRAN distribution manager Andrea STEELE cover / graphic design Bill MATTHEWS contributors Brad DEIGHAN Mike LECKY Thomas LLOYD Mare MACDONALD Mariéve MACGREGOR The Cadre is the official newspaper of the UPEI Student Union. 2,000 copies of The Cadre are printed 10 times per semester. There are meetings open to anyone Mondays at 5:00 in Main 06. The deadline for submissions is Friday at 5:00 PM. The opinions expressed within The Cadre do not necessarily represent the views of UPEI or the UPEI Student Union Inc. Letters to the editor: mdorrell@upei.ca [2] Editorial 13: Snow News SNOW The snow is falling straight down, flakes the size of sheets of legal paper. I’m out in the weather, walking across town in the middle of it. My head is down to keep the snow out of my face, but I can see there are a surprising number of us, walking hunched through the snow tonight. We’re all sneaking glances at each other, surprised at the presence of any motion other than the falling snow, wondering what anyone else is doing out tonight - in the middle of this. Me, I own the second car in a one parking-spot apartment, and I am walking back home after stashing my car elsewhere. “Hey.” The voice startles me, and I look up at a man of indiscernible age and appearance, bundled tightly into a winter jacket. “There’s nature all around,” he says, holding his arms up to indi- cate his surroundings. “Falling on the ground too,” he says, smiling. “Sure,” I reply. “Yeah.” And I put my head down and keep walking. In the morning, my roommate Steve and I are being chased about town by snowploughs that fill the entire street. “J have trouble controlling the climate in this car,” he says, indicat- ing his open driver’s side window. A grey Cadillac, in a hurry to be some- where else, spins its tires as it passes. Slush leaps from the street in a long arc, finds its way through the partially open window, and smacks Steve in the side of the head. He says something uncharita- ble about the Cadillac’s driver, rolls his window up, and we keep driving. NEws The Cadre has been a little light on news this New Year. There The Next Cadre Meeting is on Wednesday, January 30th at 5:00 has been no shortage of quality con- tent in this fine publication — for example, recall, if you will, Stephan -MacLeod’s feature on racism in the first issue of 2002, Tom Lloyd’s reve- lations on smuggling in the second issue, Jonah Campbell’s dissertation on hardcore fashion and its relation- ship with the mainstream which began last issue, and concludes in the very issue you’re holding now. I’ll admit, my attention might have slipped, may have wandered just slightly. A newspaper, I am finding, must be watched ever so closely. Like a small child. You look away for a moment, and off it goes, tearing through the hallways with scissors in its hands, digging through the cup- boards searching for solvents to ingest, climbing up onto the stovetop to dip its extremities into boiling water. Perhaps not exactly like that. In any case, fear not, the news is returning, but we need your help. Currently The Cadre has what is essentially a one-person news depart- ment. True, our A&E Editor writes news stories, as does out Copy Editor, as do our small squad of dedicated volunteers, but our News Editor, the mighty Erin Fagan, is our lone dedi- cated news writer. The situation is this: the more people we have writing news stories, the more news we can print in The Cadre. This sounds obvious I know, hardly worth mentioning perhaps, but you might be surprised at how many people overlook this simple truth. We do receive some fine story sugges- tions from students, but what we real- ly need are the written stories them- selves. Small student newspapers live and die by their volunteers. The Cadre is no exception. Matthew Dorrell, Editor-in-Chief