Daily Bulletin, Thursday, February 23, 1995

MUSICIANS mark Handel's birthday today, so please read this short Daily 
Bulletin in largo.  Also birthdaying today is UW's art gallery curator, 
Joe Wyatt.

CO-OP STUDENTS wind up the regular job interview season today.  Job 
ranking forms will be available in the co-op department tomorrow morning
at 10 (passers-by can expect some congestion on the first floor of Needles
Hall), and students have six hours to agonize over tough choices before
returning their forms to a 4 p.m. deadline.  The spring work term begins
on May Day.

ACTUARIAL SCIENCE students will be voting on March 22 on imposing a fee
($2.50 a term) to fund the Actuarial Science Club and, through it, the
Actuarial Students' National Association.  An organizational meeting is
set for today; people interested in taking part in the referendum campaign,
or just wanting more information, can attend, at 4:30 p.m. in Math and
Computer room 4061.

LECTURE TONIGHT:  The first annual Edna Staebler Lecture, to be given at
7;30 tonight, is presented by Hildi Froese Tiessen of Conrad Grebel
College and her husband, Paul Tiessen of Wilfrid Laurier University.
They'll be taking about the letters of Ephraim Weber to Leslie Staebler,
written from 1902 to 1955 -- a treasure trove of information about the
history and culture of prominent local Mennonite families.  The lecture
will be given at the Joseph Schneider Haus in downtown Kitchener.

GAMES TONIGHT:  The hockey and volleyball Warriors are both facing
crucial out-of-town action tonight.  The hockey team plays at Western,
in the first game of a best-of-three series for the division championship.
The volleyball team is competing for the OUAA championship against the
University of Toronto.

VISIT ENGINEERING:  Students (in grades 5 through 8) and their parents are
being invited to Explorations '95, hosted by UW's faculty of engineering
on Saturday, March 11.  The day offers one-hour tours giving a glimpse of
engineering projects, including buildings sinking in quicksand, fire
temperatures being measured with lasers, the destruction of pollutants
with light, solar-powered robots, wind tunnels, and the famous student-built
solar car and concrete toboggan.  Information and sign-ups: ext. 3553.

Chris Redmond
Information and Public Affairs, University of Waterloo
888-4567 ext. 3004      credmond@watserv1.uwaterloo.ca