University of Waterloo Archives Digital Library Collections
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- Arts Lion was a newspaper published by members of the Arts Student Union between 1981 and 1985. Holdings and information regarding this publication are incomplete. Please contact Special Collections & Archives to provide additional information about this publication or to donate back issues.
- B. S., short for Bi-Weekly Science, was a bi-weekly engineering paper initially published under the title Newsweakly. The intent and print run of the paper is unknown. Holdings and information regarding this publication are incomplete. Please contact Special Collections & Archives to provide additional information about this publication or to donate back issues.
- Bullseye was published by the Federation of Students between 1976 and 1977 as an interim publication during the closure of The Chevron to provide information to the campus community. It was edited by Don Orth, David Daunt and Douglas Thompson. Bullseye (v.01, n.02) is available online as part of the The Imprint Archive. Holdings and information regarding this publication are incomplete. Please contact Special Collections & Archives to provide additional information about this publication or to donate back issues.
- Holdings and information regarding this publication are incomplete. Please contact Special Collections & Archives to provide additional information about this publication or to donate back issues.
- For Your Information was an occasional newsletter published by the University of Waterloo Library to communicate new development, future plans and events of general interest pertaining to the Library. Edited by a rotating series of Library staff, with assistance from Esther Millar, the first newsletter was released in 1990. The majority of the issues that followed were published between 1994 and 2000.
- First published in 1977, From the Library Office was a newsletter issued by University of Waterloo Library (Library) administrators to share information with staff. Generally published once every other week, content ranged from staffing and service updates to social and campus event announcements relevant to Library employees. The title of the publication was changed to For the Library Staff mid-way through 1994 and continued under that name until the publication of the newsletter halted in November 1996 when editor, Mary Stanley, went on parental leave. See For the Library Staff (1994-1996) for later editions of the newsletter.
- GLOW News was a newsletter produced by Gay Liberation of Waterloo (GLOW), which acted as an educational resource on homosexuality as well as a support and social group for the gay community. Edited by GLOW membership the newsletter consisted of ten issues released between December 1982 and September 1983. Today GLOW operates as the Glow Center for Sexual and Gender Diversity and is the longest running queer and trans student organization in Canada. See the Glow Centre for Sexual and Gender Diversity fonds finding aid for more information about The Glow Centre.
- Math Medium was first published in 1968 by the Math Society as a newsletter intended to "be a happy blend of humour, serious news reports, slander, and general trivia." Operating under the slogan "A newspaper of its time," Math Medium was initially published every two weeks except in December, April, May, June, July and August before changing to sporadic publication in 1969. Math Medium was followed by Math News, which launched in 1973. Holdings and information regarding this publication are incomplete. Please contact Special Collections & Archives to provide additional information about this publication or to donate back issues.
- Radio Waterloo CKMS-FM launched at the University of Waterloo in the summer of 1977 at 94.5 MHz. Broadcasting via a 50W signal, the station became the third campus FM station in Ontario and operated under the name Radio Waterloo. In 1977 the station began publishing FM Guide, a series of program guides, featuring music listings and news items about local events, social justice issues and pop culture. The following year the publication name was changed to FM Times. It remained in production until October 1983 when the station discontinued production due to budgetary constraints. The station moved off-campus in the late 2000s after becoming fully independent following the loss of student funding in a 2008 referendum. Radio Waterloo continues to broadcast today at frequency 102.7 MHz from its offices on Duke Street in Kitchener, Ontario. Visit the CKMS history page for more information about the station's founding and development.