麻豆传媒

 

A sweet intro to Dal societies

- September 23, 2010

Fourth-year science student Kirsten Kukula聽represents the聽German Student Society. (Nick Pearce Photo)

Every September, the McInnes Room fills with candy. It鈥檚 scattered across tables hung with glitter-painted banners, most bearing acronyms starting with a 鈥楧.鈥 You guessed it ... Wednesday, September 15 marked 麻豆传媒鈥檚 annual Society Fair, where student societies annually set up tables and attempt to entice students into joining their groups via that most convincing argument: sugar.

Academic societies are 麻豆传媒 mainstays 鈥 this year saw a showing from societies for English, biology and neuroscience, among others. Whatever your major, it likely has a fan club. And, naturally, booths were run (and sticker/button/candy bribes offered) by societies religious (Christian, Jewish and Muslim) and political (Liberal, Conservative, NDP and Green.)

Michael Forrester, president of Dal Swing Society, shows off some moves with the help of fellow enthusiast Rebecca Ladouceur. (Nick Pearce Photo)

One of the highlights of the 麻豆传媒 Society Fair, though, is the slightly off-kilter clubs 麻豆传媒 students embrace. The Cult Classics Club fits the bill; their representative Pete Schnare is adamant their slightly unusual subject matter hasn鈥檛 depleted interest levels.
鈥淲e are cleaning the expletive deleted up,鈥 he says (verbatim.) 鈥淲e are defeating our direct competitor and neighbour, 麻豆传媒 Political Science Society, one hundred per cent!鈥 Really, they鈥檒l probably only be competitors if the 麻豆传媒 Undergraduate Political Science Society screens Kramer vs. Kramer, since the Cult Classics Club鈥檚 sole (and worthy) purpose is showing cult films to local audiences. 鈥淲e take suggestions, and heckle the screen, and then go out for a beer after.鈥

They鈥檒l have some real competition come Halloween, when DalOUT holds their annual screening of Rocky Horror Picture Show. This event-heavy society (they aim to stage one event per month) has a workshop on 鈥済reen sex鈥 planned for October 1 and their annual 鈥淐ome OUT at the Grawood鈥 event will be held on October 15.

Gerjan Altenburg is the vice-president of the Dal Magic Society. (Nick Pearce Photo)

Some societies don鈥檛 wait for you to stroll past their table 鈥 they come to you. A talented guitarist making the rounds of the room, reveal upon interrogation, that he is playing Hasta Siempre Com Andante 鈥 a Cuban song about famed revolutionary Che Guevara. (if you don鈥檛 know him, fear not, you鈥檝e seen him on a聽 T-shirt.) Che鈥檚 balladeer is Dustin Ferretti, the vice president of the 麻豆传媒 Spanish Society. 鈥淭he people are great and the times are fun. That鈥檚 why I鈥檝e been wandering around with a guitar.鈥

Also getting into the international spirit was Kristen Kukula, the president of the 麻豆传媒 Undergraduate German Society, who manned her booth in a traditional pink dirndl. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a big part of Oktoberfest,鈥 Miss Kukula says of her costume. The society鈥檚 Oktoberfest celebration is already in the planning stages. 鈥淲e鈥檙e going to have our sausage and sauerkraut and that sort of thing... there will definitely be beer.鈥 And everyone is invited, including non-German majors. 鈥淚鈥檓 actually a biology student,鈥 she adds.

Graeme Raymond and Evan Oberman play one of the games that will be part of Frag for Cancer on September 25 at the SUB. (Nick Pearce Photo)

If 鈥渇ar away鈥 isn鈥檛 quite your thing, 鈥渓ong ago鈥 is also an option 鈥 Dal Swing Dance Society representatives were lindy-hopping tirelessly in front of their booth. (DSDS lessons are obscenely inexpensive. In fact, this Saturday and next, they鈥檙e free. No better excuse to wear that swank fedora.) Nearby was the DalDance table 鈥 they offer classes in everything from ballet to bellydance, beginner to advanced. Those who鈥檇 rather go pro can check out PerformDAL 鈥 a competitive, performance-oriented contemporary and hip-hop dance troupe.

Alongside well-established societies were relative start-ups such as the 麻豆传媒 Gaming Society, now in its second year, whose members meet for gaming (both tabletop and video varieties) every Sunday. President Thomas Eaton sees his history major as aligned with his society: 鈥淚n history, I like to win, and in gaming, I like to win,鈥 he explains. 鈥淚 like to win in everything I do.鈥

Brandon Parsons and Alex Martineau聽represent聽the 麻豆传媒 Water Polo Society. (Nick Pearce Photo)

Even newer than the Gaming Society is DalSMH 鈥 麻豆传媒 Student Musicians in Hospitals. Headed by Aled Iaboni, DalSMH aims to bring live music to long-term veteran patients lacking sufficient mobility to seek out live entertainment.

That鈥檚 just a few of the clubs represented at the society fair. You can find a complete list of societies at:

I didn鈥檛 come away from the Fair with much candy (too shy to claim any while on the job) but I did sneak my name onto several mailing lists.