1B chit UPEL STUDEMT NEWSPAPER E-in-C thomas LLOYD production manager rebecca SHORTEN copy editor will PATE culture editor brad DEIGHAN news editor nick STEWART sports editor steve MCMANUS reporters jon SMITH robert MacPHERSON Vacant advertising manager matt O'HALLORAN contributers Ryan Gallant Sjors Reijers Ruth Mathiang Joel Meggs Chris Power Andriana Lopez Mack Cameron Sean Brady Belinda Johnson The Cadre is the official newspaper of the UPET Student Union. 2,000 copies of The Cadre are print- ed 10 times per semester. There are meetings open to anyone Mondays @ 4:15 and on Fridays @ 1:30 in room 213 in the W.A.Murphy Student Centre. The deadline for submissions is Thursday at midnight. The opinions expressed within The Cadre do not necessarily represent the views of UPEI or the UPEI Student Union Inc. The Cadre is a 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 UPEI 550 University Ave. Charlottetown PE CIA 4P3 Tel: 566-0629 Fax: 566-0979 Ads: upeinewspaper@yahoo.ca Contact the editor & Letters: Email: cadread@yahoo.com Room 213 SUB Editorial 9: Nothing shocking or Editorial 8: If you’re keeping count. But this really is Editorial 9: There were actually two Editorial 7’s In this issue I wrote a review of Bar Wars, and it recounts the events of my Friday night. I had fun, yet I'm not too sure how journalistic my arti- cle is. Take it with grain of salt, it's in the style of how I've always reviewed Bar Wars. Bar Wars is one of the high- lights of my year, and the only pub crawl I go on. I'm not sure of the exact numbers, but I know that approxi- mately 250 people went on it, and maybe more. Having close to 10% of the student body go out together on one night has always amazed me. Kudos to the organizers. Bar Wars always makes UPEI's presence in Charlottetown felt. For one night there are dozens of groups of pub crawlers on every street corner, in every bar, and in every Chinese food restaurant. I remember when Bar Wars would go to the Sportsman, and we would literally take over the place. Bar Wars must resemble an annual outbreak to some; it is not some normal pub crawl with 50 or 100 people on it, but a full-out drunken outburst of student com- radery. That said, every year I go, it feels less like a ‘Faculty of Science' pub crawl, and more like a ‘Faculty of Science & well-wishers, sympathizers, and compatriots" pub crawl. I can only hope that one day I will be sitting in a Charlottetown pub, and be stormed by hundreds of drunk univer- sity students wearing shirts that say "Bar Wars XII" or something like that. During the last hours that the t-shirts were on sale I was peer-pres- - suring as many people as I could to go. I was telling people that at least 350 people would go, and that it's amazing how for one night 10% of UPEI takes over a few bars in town. One person replied to me "What, 10%? What if I want to be part of the 90% that doesn't go?" I didn't have a reply, except for a witty retort of "party-pooper!" or something clever like that. But if you didn't go, and like pub crawls, then you did miss out on some first-rate group-mentality fun. And don't take my recollection of the night as the truth, because I'm sure that there are very few clear memories of the night between the 200 and so who took part. Heck, for all I know, I could have sat in a Honda Civic from 8:00 until 11:30, and my only adven- ture was to go to Ken's Corner for smokes, at which point I hightailed it back to the Honda Civic to spend the rest of the night in relative security. Yet I'm sure my article makes much better reading than that, and I did go to all the bars on the list, and I did get thrown out of the Sportspage. Earlier in the day I wasn't even planning to go on Bar Wars, because I simply did not feel like get- ting stupidly drunk. I was feeling like crap, and I had a lot of work to do for school and the Cadre. On Fridays we have our weekly meeting, and recently (for over publicized reasons) there have been few in attendance. Yet while it looked like there was going to be about five people in attendance, I still ordered a ton of pizza. As one o'clock rolled around, more and more people started showing up, and there were a lot of new faces in the office. For the first time in weeks our meet- ing looked normal, and The Cadre had an actually functional meeting. Some old faces even showed up, and a cer- tain energy that has been lacking from the office returned. It made my day, and put me in the mood for Bar Wars. So The Cadre is slowly turn- ing to less of a junior high paper, which I realize it has been lately. This is the last normal issue of the year, and our next issue will be mostly cre- ative writing. We all have exams to study for, and the last thing others or myself want to do is spend a lot of time working on the Cadre. And all are welcome to submit a piece. And then The Cadre will be back in January. This is The Cadre's ninth issue, and there's eleven to go. Hopefully there will be new writers, and more of what students want. Don't forget, there are a lot of filled out sur- veys from last week that have to be sorted through, but not until this issue is out and all the surveys are in. And | realize that there was no set location for the ballot boxes. There is and will be one in the Student Centre, and there was one in Kelly. I'm not sure where it is now, but it's around. Also we forgot that our winner may not be of drinking age. But someone will win the prize. What was it? A Cadre shirt and a bunch of booze? That's classy, but some lucky person will be loving it. Maybe I'll make a new friend. Ahh, another excuse to go drinking. -Thomas Lloyd, Editor-in-Chief he Cadre is now accepting submissions for our annual ‘Creative Writing tssue UPEI Cadre November 24 2003 page 2