Communique Quotidien, le mardi 13 septembre 1994 LE SOLEIL se montrera demain -- malgre le separatisme, malgre la greve de base-ball, malgre les queues a la librairie. Le Canada est quand meme Canada, et le plat principal aux cafeterias a un air bilingue: grilled pork chops bonne femme. De plus . . . Wait a minute. Try that again. Daily Bulletin, Tuesday, September 13, 1994 SUN'LL COME OUT tomorrow, bet your devalued dollar -- in spite of separatism, in spite of the baseball strike, in spite of bookstore lineups. Canada is still Canada, and the lunchtime entree in the Modern Languages and Festival Room cafeterias has a suspiciously bilingual name: "grilled pork chops bonne femme". Also, Wendel Clark, late of the Maple Leafs, scored a goal for the Quebec Nordiques last night. Overnight results of the Quebec election: Parti Quebecois 77, Liberals 47, Action Democratique 1. NOTES TODAY: If you still don't have your photo ID card, you can get it from the registrar's office in Needles Hall. If yours has been lost or stolen, you go to the same place for a new one, but in that case it'll cost you twenty bucks. Something else you may need is a locker in the Physical Activities Complex, and today's the day to get it. Line up in the "Red South" area of the PAC any time between 8:30 and 2:30. The price: $10 for one term, $16 for two terms, $22 for three terms. GRADUATE students are invited to the Grad House for beginning-of-term barbecues all this week. You get a free burger at lunchtime on the day assigned to your faculty. Engineering was yesterday (sorry); arts "except psychology" is today; environmental studies and AHS, Wednesday; mathematics, Thursday; science and psychology (they're into deferred gratification), Friday. The Grad House is also running a darts tournament, tonight at 7. AMBLYOPIA, popularly called "lazy eye", is the topic of the sixth annual Clair Bobier Lecture in Vision, being given tonight at the school of optometry (7:30, Optometry room 347). The speaker is Robert F. Hess of the department of ophthalmology at Montreal's McGill University. Chris Redmond Information and Public Affairs, University of Waterloo 888-4567 ext. 3004 credmond@watserv1.uwaterloo.ca