NEWS photo Cindy Bellamy MARY SWENARCHUK disnlays a copy of School Treasures, on album ske designed to organize information collected while children attend school. The book works as a tool to store information , including medical and school records as well as personal keepsakes. Business students available MANY VANCOUVER businesses are unaware that in the Lower Mainland they have access to thousands of students from over 64 countries around the world. Any one‘of these students can come and work for Vancouver companies and bring their unique skills and experiences. The source is AIESEC, the International Association for Students in Economics and Commerce. AJESEC ~is ‘the largest non- profit, apolitical student organiza- tion in the world, involving over 50,000 students at 532 universities. The goals of AFESEC are to pro- mote international understanding and cooperation and to develop the business leaders of the future. In order to obtain these objectives, AIESEC sponsors the Interna- tional Job Exchange Program. Over the past few years, through this program, students have come from Austria, Hong Kong, Italy, Norway, Thailand, and Australia to work in the Lower Mainland. As well, Vancouver students have had: the opportunity to work in You can own a tax shelter with 1987/88 it's too late, tax deductions to $64,000, an immediate $7,000' tax credit, and 5 weeks of personal use in the Caribbean or British Columbia. And you get to choose from 30, 35, 38 or 41 foot C&C's. Vancouver V6H 3W7. West Ger- Norway, Singapore, many, Ghana, New Zealand and- Turkey. In Vancouver, local AIESEC members actively visit companies and provide informa- tion on traineeships, hoping an ac- tive exchange results. The cost of hiring an AIESEC student is no more than hiring a Canadian stu-. dent. As well, when a !ocal com- - pany agrees to a traineeship a Ca- nadian student has the opportunity to work in another country, and gain a unique perspective of the world. In the Lower Mainland, AIESEC is established at the Uni- versity of British Columbia and Simon Fraser University. Some local supporters include Xerox, Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce, Teck Corporation, and IBM Canada Ltd. Businesses benefit from AIESEC’s resources of highly motivated young interna- tional managerial! talent. AIESEC members will gladly give information on their. program. For more information contact Sandra Kim or Randy Sangha at 228-6256. . Call us before (604)669-3361, or send us your business card for a brochure. 1811 Maritime Mews, NORTH ; VANCOUVER 27 - Sunday, November 22, 1987 —~ Nosth Shore News A NORTH Vancouver entrepreneur i..s developed a ra- tional organizing’ system for preserving and displaying a child’s health and school records. Most parents rely on filing away school pictures, certificates, report cards, immunization records and other similar items in old shoe boxes or envelopes. More often than not, things are lost or dam- aged over the years and a piece of personal childhood history falls by the wayside. Mary Swenarchuk of Marlajon Productions is taking the School Treasures album to the public three years after putting together the first mock-up of the product. At $49.95 each, the system con- sists of an I1xl4inch large-ring binder with a computer graphic art cover, labelled and reinforced pages and heavy plastic storage pouches. The book contains enough sec- tions to cover the pre-school years through to Grade 12. “There just wasn’t anything like this on the market. Scrap books don’t work, file folders don't work. Things get lost and every parent has the same problem,” said Swenarchuk. ‘‘The book also works as an inspiration for children to do well and have some- thing to show to their children.’’ She’s currently working on distributing the product through North Shore schools as a fund- raising item. For more information about the product call 987-0419: retake CALLIGRAPHY MEETS com- puter at Writings in Park Royal north. Dexterous penmanship has been duplicated with a computer-driven ink and nib contraption named InScribe and the local store has the first unit in Western Canada. The $16,000 calligraphy machine was invented in Boston two years ago. Writings is using it to do up customer orders such as invita- tions, announcements, name tags and place cards. “We're able to give a complete service and the response from cus- tomers has been quite good. We've got the machine set up in the win- dow and it’s creating quite a lot of interest,’ said ‘Writings owner Marianne Thomson. (i) | ail ili 4 q The inachine can put to paper seven calligraphy styles in 30 colors of ink. The results !ook hand- made. For more information call 925- 1745. Hotel in Vancouver. Founder of the National In- stitute of Hypnotism, Goldsmith practises, teaches and researches hypnotherapy. The seminars are designed to untap an individual’s true poten- tial. ‘‘Most people have very high stress levels which reduce their ability to function and be produc- tive. We all have the built-in ability to achieve a healthy state of relax- ation, a time for rejuvenating and business briefcase by Michael Becker STRESS SPECIALIST Murray Goldsmith presents the first even- ing of a series of seminars on Us- ing Your Imagination, Wednesday, Nov. 25 at the Sheraton Landmark rebuilding. Our most powerful tool in getting to that state is our imag- ination,’’ Goldsmith said. 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