UPET STUDERT NEWSPAPER editor-in-chief advertising manager news editor sports editor ake editor reporters production manager sean BRADY man-sum YAU matt OHALLORAN | nick STEWART liam McKENNA alee O'HANLEY ‘matt CAMPBELL ryan GALLANT - jamie McGUIGAN jon SMITH” steve SIMPSON - contributors mark CAMERON kimberley JOHNSTON - chelsey Mac ELLAN maureen O'CONNOR andrew BRADY ryan McDERMOTT janice McKENDRICK dan McNEILL sean MOLLOY. trevor MILLER The Cadre is the official newspaper of the UPEL Student . Union ine. Opinions expressed in colurans or letters are those. of the authors and not necessarily that of The Cadre, its staif, or the UPEL Student Union Inc.. All materials contained here- in. exvept advertising or where indicated otherwise, are Copyright 2004 by The Cadre and protected under Canadian Copyright laws. Materials herein may not he reprinted without the expressed written permission of fiw Cadre, There are meetings upen to anyone Mondays @ 4:30 and on Fridays @ 4:39 in room 213 in the W.A-Murphy Student Centre, The deadline for submissions is Thursday at midnight, The Cadre is « full member of Canadian University Press (CUP). The Cadre is represented by Campus Plus for multi: market advertising. Campus Plus can be reached at 1-800-. 265-5372. — The Cadre UPE] Charlottetown PE C1A 4P3 Tel: 566-0629 Fax: 566-0979 Ads: upeinewspaper@yahoo.ca Contact the editor & send | : upeicadre@gmail.com Room 213 SUB Next Deadline is 4:30 pm, Nov 5, 2004. For our complete printing schedule, go to http://cadre.upei.ca/schedule. ae: 550 University Ave. Cable TV & High Speed Internet: A townie’s life - Editorial hy Sean Brady, Eic Well, it happened. After much musing mixed with bouts of procrastination and reasoning, I have become townie. (Gasp) Rather, I'm in the process of becoming one as I apply fingers to keys on this, our fifth edition - Nola is somewhere between Blooming Point and Hillsborough Street, shuttling loads of furniture, clothes, food, electronics, pets, etc. God bless her. To heck with giving credit to those of us ambitions with campus commitments and responsibilities; give it to those who support us in one way to another. Anyhow, back to the matter at hand. The move. I feel like a kid at Christmas. Much like the wish- ful souls with visions of sugar plums dancing, I've had thoughts of conveniences swirling around my mind since we made the decision - late-night burg- er/pizza/anything, walking distance to so many dif- ferent locations, and less wear and tear on the car. andrew Brady And one can't forget to mention cable TV and high- speed internet - extravagancies unavailable in the middle of boon-hick nowhere, aka the vacationer's paradise with the Island's not-so-secret yet strange- ly- mythical nude beach where I have resided for the past 3 years. No longer will I be forced to shell out 4/5 the cost of high-speed internet for 1/10th (at best) the speed! No more fried 56k modem, the cause of which, according to the phone centre ‘tech’, was straining my connection until the modem just bit it (a little comp-sci humour there). Cable TV on the other hand I view with a mixed mind. Having learned to survive without some- where between 60 and 500 channels, settling for our local affiliates via the t.f.c. the rabbit ears pulled in (as long as no moons were out of align- ment, and it wasn't raining), showed me how much time I used to waste in front of the TV. And I'm not being humble - I have been getting a regular dose of tube time even with only 3 channels. It's mostly all.syndication anyhow. I've just saved in the truly useless stuff I used to almost ‘snap-to' staring at, having badly zoned out into oblivion. My sleeping UPEI Cadre October 26, 2004 page 2 habits are all the better for it too. Better to have had to wake up in the middle of the night to shut off the whine of the test pattern, something even I the heaviest of sleepers get woken up by, than have been being subliminally sold something by a cable station that runs infomercials in the wee hours. So long story short, I've switched to an ‘apartment’ that's more just the bottom floor of a huge house, with more than twice the square footage than the cottage I'm coming from (By cubic footage there's no comparison - the new apartment has 10' ceilings while the cottage had one I regularly bounced my head off of on the second floor), and I no longer have to drive to work/school, organize travel schedules, or milk the expensive hoses at the gas bar quite as often as I used to. And with the neigh- borhood I'm in, there's no real loss of quiet, priva- cy, or anonymity over what I had. See? I'm listing off how good it is, close to how it's better than living in the country. I'm a townie already. Have some thoughts or ideas you'd like to express? Drop us a line at upeicadre@gmail.com, or make a post to the Cadre topic line at Weblogs@upei.