United Way cont. handicapped youngsters and adults, and operates six residences. Some North Shore residents will call the CRISIS CENTRE VANCOUVER this year—they get 26,000 calls a year and their services include the 24-hour telephone line, suicide prevention and emergency aid. NORTH SHORE FAMILY SERVICES provides family and marriage counselling, and help with the problems of divorce and single parenting to 10,000 North Shore residents each year. Among the other services used by North Shore residents are the Canadian Mental Health Association, the Vancouver Neurological Centre, B.C. Parents in Crisis, the Arthritis Society, MOSAIC, the Big Brothers, the Boy Scouts, and many others. Second album released Vancouver Sun classical music reviewer Murray MacMillan recently had nice things to say about Stephen Boswell's new album. Boswell, who teaches guitar in both the Music Transfer and Music Therapy programs, has just recorded an album through the Selwyn Pullan Studio in North Van, which contains J.S. Bach's Fugue BWV 100, Partita No. 2 in D minor, and S.L. Weiss, Partita No. 7 for lute in D minor. To quote the Sun reviewer, ''Partitas, in their loose definition, are suites, primarily dance or dancelike material—allemandes, gavottes, sarabandes, gigues—that lend themselves to light, refined delicacy, while still making substantial demands on the performer's dexterity and expressive capabilities.'' This is Boswell's second album. ATTENTION: Music Fans The Bachelor of Music Transfer program is holding another free recital on Wednesday, October 16 at 12:10 pm. The guest artists will be ''Musique a deux'', Rhonda Guild on flute, and John Mathews on violin. They will be playing in room H113. Forum Africa is coming Capilano is one of the 15 B.C. colleges that will be part of "Forum Africa’, a countrywide electronic forum on African famine that will be stressing community participation. The forum will start in Vancouver on October 18 and 19, and then move across the country over a period of | months, ending in Ottawa in January. Forum Africa is a series of public meetings combined with TV broadcasts designed to air and share the views, ideas, and hopes of ordinary Canadians to do with the drought and famine stricken countries of Africa. On Oct. 18 there will be a show televised on Channel 10, and on Oct. 19 the community will be invited to come to Cap and participate inaspecial discussion group. The Informer will be running a more detailed article on this next issue—in the meantime if you have any questions, contact John Bannister at 258/259. COLOPHON The Informer is published sporadically, but with high hopes of weekliness, by Information Services, A118 or local 323 and 324. Submissions are more than welcome. Photos are generally the work of Dave Sharrock and Edna Sakata in MPC, printing is done by Linda Givens and Dave Callow in the Print Shop, and the distribution is handled by the denizens of the Switchboard and Typing Pool. We reserve the right to deny absolutely everything unless it's tax deductible. By GARY LARSON French mammoth THE FAR SIDE © 1985 Unwersat Press Syndicate