Student rep cuts in works THE UBYSSEY Vol. LXII.No.23 Vancouver, B.C. Friday, November 2,1979 ■afi^yig^ 228-2301 UBC student politicians are considering a plan that would slash representation on the student representative assembly, introduce at large elections for SRA executives and all but eliminate senate representation on the SRA. Student board of governors member Bruce Armstrong is recommending SRA representation be reduced from 52 to 35 members to increase government efficiency. He said" the number of student senators on SRA would be reduced from 17 to two. Two representatives from larger faculties would be eliminated under a new constituency level formula, requiring the remainder to represent 2,000 students instead of the current 1,500. Armstrong claims the reduction in student representation will serve only to "streamline" the Alma Mater Society, not centralize and concentrate political power in the hands of few. He said many students who currently run for senate positions abuse the position by spending more time on SRA issues and ignoring senate. Student board member Glenn Wong charged the new constitution would overload SRA members and create further opportunities for abuse of student government. "It's just centralizing the power, that power can be abused," he said. "He (Armstrong) is nuts. He's condensing (responsibilities) to the same people who have no time." Arts representative Bob Staley ' said there is no need for a new constitution, although some amendments are needed. "It works out under his formula that science, education, commerce and arts would lose a rep. Armstrong is building a paper monument to himself." But Armstrong said the changes in faculty representation are insignificant compared to his plans for at-large elections for an AMS president, vice-president, director of finance, external affairs coordinator and director of administration. He said election of the president and executive by students at large would make student government more democratic. (AMS executives are currently elected by SRA representatives at a spring meeting.) Armstrong denies he is proposing the constitution for his own political benefit. "It's certainly not my constitution," he said. He said he is confident students will approve the proposal. "The only way it wouldn't have a chance is if people are biased and are not thinking of what is best for the society." The SRA considered three constitutional proposals last year and none were adopted. RED IS THE COLOR and back-stabbing is the game, a song well displayed by engineering undergraduate society president Russ Kinghorn as he practises favorite pastime of student politicos outside SUB Wednesday. Mounting fellow student to ride off in all directions, Kinghorn shows —jim duggan photo enthusiasm in celebrating home economics week on campus. Student was later served with creamed otatoes, sour cream and a summons to demonstrate unnatural act before SRA. RCMP lied, say freed SFU defendants By CHRIS MOONEY Two of 18 people facing criminal charges resulting from a strike at Si- mon Fraser University were set free Wednesday. Anne Russell was cleared of a charge of obstructing a police officer and Ted Irwin was granted a stay of proceedings on that charge and a further charge of blocking a highway. Both are students at SFU. Russell's charge was dropped after prosecuting attorney Jack Grant admitted that BCTV video evidence obtained by the defence counsel clearly contradicted the RCMP charges. Irwin's trial lasted only a few minutes before the crown announced it was staying both charges against him. After her trial Russell said the RCMP had used illegal tactics and "intimidation" in bringing the SFU 18 to trial. "The RCMP should be charged with attacking a legal picket line and lying in court," she said. Judy Cavanaugh, spokeswoman for the SFU 18 Defence Committee, said Wednesday the outcome of the two trials could lead to negotiations with the crown for those still awaiting trial. "There will be negotiations, or rather the crown will review its case and we anticipate that the other charges will be dropped or stayed," she said. Cavanaugh, whose own trial is Nov. 19, said the trials of Russell and Irwin were a "semi-victory." But "they weren't good enough." "The stays (of proceedings) should be dropped altogether," she said. "They are undermining politically for they make it impossible to tell our story in court. It's just another form of harassment." The charges against the 18 stem from an incident on an access road to SFU March 22 when police broke up a picket line erected by the Association of University and College Employees. Members of AUCE local 2 and their supporters, including students from SFU, set up a picket line after the university locked out clerical workers March 7. Cavanaugh said the SFU 18 defence committee has gained support from the B.C. Federation of Labor, former SFU administration president Pauline Jewett and numerous trade union leaders. Harassment of gays plagues Bishop's Omar needs his recks off The fortunes of Omar the car have hit rock bottom. Five weeks after being stoned to death, Omar still lies resting outside the Main library and no one seems to have any concrete idea what will become of him. After the neighborhood bullies assaulted him, Omar has been abandoned by his once-proud family. "We don't plan to do anything with Omar," said Cam Milne, president of the forestry undergraduate society. "The engineers took it and wrecked it so it's their responsibility." Omar, a Pontiac Strato Chief of early 1960s vintage, was the official car of the FUS. On the night of Sept. 23 he was stolen, filled with cement and left beside the Ladner clock tower. Anchored in the cement was a pyramid with a red E, the usual calling card of the engineering undergraduate society. "We're going to leave it there as a monument," said Milne. "It's our contribution to the campus." But EUS president Russ Kinghorn said that his group has plans for Omar. "We'll do something about it within the next couple of weeks," said Kinghorn. "We're not litterbugs." He said Omar has "fairly good asthetic value" but gas consuming cars are "a thing of the past." "We'll have to change, maybe to nuclear cars,'" he said. The traffic and security office has ignored Omar for the past five weeks. He has not received a ticket or been towed away, even though he is parked in a pedestrian area and obviously does not belong to a board of governors member. Whatever happens, Omar is not likely to rust away. He has received paint jobs from the commerce undergraduate society, the nursing undergraduate society, the home economics undergraduate society and the EUS during his stay in front of the library. LENNOXVILLE, Que. (CUP) — A student at Bishop's University has been physically and verbally harassed for attempting to form a gay alliance on campus. In mid-October Daron Westman published a notice in the campus bulletins of Bishop's and Champ- lain (the two schools share a campus) expressing his interest in establishing a gay students' alliance. Shortly afterwards, two students approached Westman while he was walking home at night and ripped his jacket in a scuffle. Although Westman was uninjured, the two men shouted insults and threatened to break his legs if he continued in his efforts. Bishop's student newspaper The Campus, has also been dragged into battle. Following the incident, the editor wrote an editorial denouncing the "strong streak of bigotry hidden beneath licentiousness" at Bishop's and supported the right of such a group to exist. Since then, anti-gay letters and phone calls have barraged the paper. The Campus received a letter signed the disciples of Anita Bryant, which "deplored the paper's editorial policy and the giving of space and publicity to perverts." Westman went before Bishop's student council Tuesday night and council gave the group official recognition and financial backing. Westman says many sympathetic people are moving in the right direction at Bishop's but there is a "strong minority who are determined to be heard." He said campus gays who have contacted him about the group are afraid to admit their homosexuality. "There are varying degrees of terror," he said. Some are also afraid of not getting jobs if they are' gay, he said. Former Bishop's students who left the school because of anti-gay feeling have emerged to support Westman. "Some have thought of coming back to support me but no one on campus will come out," he said. The Campus editor, Susan Milner, said students who are against formation of a gay group represent the sentiment of many students. In her editorial she stated: "Homosexuality is a topic very much taboo here." Page 2 THE UBYSSEY Friday, November 2, 1979 Technics SA 200 STEREO RECEIVER 25 watts per channel minimum continuous "RMS" into 8 ohms, both channels driven, from 20-20,000 Hz, with no more than 0.04% total harmonic distortion. CLEAN POWER leasured in compliance with FTC standards, the SA-200 puts out 25 yvatts per channel, continuous "RMS" power into 8 ohms, from 20-20,000 Hz, with no more than 0.04% total harmonic distortion. At less than full power, and throughout most of the audible frequence bandwith, this THD figure is even lower. 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OTHER FEATURES Include a viscous-damped cueing lever for precise manual control of the tonearm; built-in audio insulators to stop acoustic feedback; and a hinged detachable dust cover. Complete with cartridge. RHODES PACKAGE PRICE ONLY (1,1) PIONEER CT-F500 STERE0 CASSETTE TAPE DECK with Dolby Extremely Dependable Circuitry/Mechanisms & Superior Performance Stability, featuring — • Independent Drive for Low 0.05% Wow/Flutter • All-Mode Shut-Off and New DC Motor • 3-Mode Tape Selector, Dolby, New Permalloy Head Friday, November 2, 1979 THE UBYSSEY Page 3 'Lax laws plague our east side' Poverty in Vancouver's east side could be eliminated if the government would enforce the law, an east side activist said Thursday. Jean Swanson, a downtown east side residents' association member, said the government should correct downtown east side problems such as lax liquor distribution and poor housing. During her presentation, she played a tape recording of some area residents complaining about the drinking problem. "Many people come to this area to drink. A lot of people make money pushing booze," said one east side resident. DERA recommended the closure of a liquor store on Hastings Street which sells alcohol to drunk people, but the liquor store is a profit-mak ing enterprise and the government is reluctant to close it down, said Swanson. Swanson, chair of the NDP human resources committee, said many people wrongly believe that the area houses only elderly drunks. "The average age of the people in this area is 57. Only 200 to 300 are hard-core alcoholics. This is the — jim duggan photo PASSING DRAPIER correctly identifies political football from rotten odor and strange slant. Such items are favorite playthings among UBC student and faculty bigwigs, who tend to ignore real issues like ball on right because they can't tell one end from the other. New firm in research park hopes to develop world with same slant as ball on left but will probably succeed only in causing students to keel over. Petition seeks to oust SRA reps required for a legitimate referendum and a 10 per cent quorum for a special meeting. At least 75 per cent of the student population will need to support the motion for it to pass. "I'd put it as a possibility, but I wouldn't put it as realistic," Armstrong said. When Brooks heard about the petition, he said: "I'm shocked. I don't know what else I can say. "Have any of them ever approached me about any problems of this sort? No. I'd like to meet them face to face." By GLEN SANFORD A petition calling for the resignation of at least two student politicians is being circulated at UBC, a fourth-year science student said Thursday. Ted Longstaffe said the petition calls for the removal of representatives Bob Staley (arts) and Craig Brooks (science) from the student representative assembly. It also calls for the removal of other unspecified student politicians, he said. Longstaffe said he and other students were approached with the petition Thursday morning in the computer science building, but he doesn't know who is responsible for it. "There were about nine or 10 signatures on the petition when I saw it," he said. Longstaffe said he did not sign the petition because he doubted that it was constitutional. But he and five other students did write a letter to The Ubyssey condemning Staley and Brooks for their bickering and hampering SRA. Longstaffe said he agreed to sign the petition when SRA member Bruce Armstrong proved it constitutional. Armstrong said if the petition draws 500 signatures and is presented to the AMS, a referendum/or a special general meeting of the student population will be held. A 15 per cent quorum would be Hacks prepare tor yet another concerns week Following the unrivalled success of its recent AMS week and student concerns day, the Alma Mater Society is again attempting to stir up student concern. Next week is National Students' Week at UBC and this time the AMS is concentrating all its efforts on one activity — an anti-cutbacks letter-writing campaign. Students will be asked to sign letters of protest addressed to their respective MLAs, AMS external affairs officer Valgeet Johl said yesterday. "The letters discuss the erosion of the quality of education at this campus and the tuition fee issue," she said. "It's our major campaign of the week. We hope to get letters from all different sections of the student population." The University of Victoria and Simon Fraser University will also be holding campaigns, she said. Johl said the letters will be available at 12 polling stations on campus and will also be published in The Ubyssey beginning today. The letter will discuss issues common to all students, such as tuition fees and education spending cutbacks, and will also leave space for student comment on personal gripes. "If people want to add their comments, they're more than welcome to do that, because not all students are affected by student aid or unemployment," she said. Johl said the letters will either be sent to individual MLAs or will all be dumped at once in education minister Pat McGeer's Vancouver office. A similar letter campaign two years ago obtained 6,000 protest letters which were sent to McGeer, she said. Johl said she hopes to improve on that record to increase student input into the post-secondary system. She said the UBC board of governors has set up a committee to study tuition increases and added she would like to see mass student input to the board on the issue. "And so far no board member has said they are in favor of the (further) tuition fee increases," she added. As for the charges of bickering with Staley, Brooks said: "We many have our differences, but Bob and I get along fine. Staley said he agreed with Brooks' statements. "We constantly exchange quips, but all in jest. Craig and I do not engage in petty bickering," he said. He pointed out that he and Brooks have successfully worked together on several AMS student housing projects. same ratio as in other areas of town. "Many people have the wrong idea about downtown residents. Changes will finally come when people understand the east end," said Swanson. East side problems could be relieved if people treated the area like any other Vancouver neighborhood, she said. The association is working toward enforcing bylaws, getting federal money for rehabilitation programs and construction of new houses, she said. "The real answer to improving the neighborhood in the long run is new housing. Most of the people who live there are people who have worked in resource industries." Many of these people have been injured on the job and are unemployed so they end up on welfare, she said. Most residents live on $200 a month, half of which is used for rent. Thirty-four per cent live below the poverty line, said one resident. "If you're old, disabled or live in a rundown area, there is no chance SWANSON . . . housing needed to work even though that's what most of us would like," said another resident on Swanson's tape. The renled rooms are about 10 feet square, with cockroaches and mice. Residents eat a lot of bologna and bread, food is stored outside on window ledges and they share a washroom with as many as 10 people, a third resident said. Residents wil I pay now and live later By JOAN MARKLUND Although all UBC residents aren't complaining, their student representatives are trying to change the date of their second installment payment. It is an inconvenience to students to have to make their payments two weeks earlier, Alma Mater Society president Brian Short said yesterday. Student representative assembly member Craig Brooks said the housing department and finance department didn't go through the right channels to change the date of payment from Nov. 30 to Nov. 15. Brooks said the departments should have approached Erich Vogt, vice-president of faculty and student affairs, who would then have taken the question to the senate and the board of governors. But William White, administration vice-president and board of governors secretary, said he thought the issue was handled correctly. White said that Vogt dealt with it and the date change came up during discussion at a board of governors meeting. Glenn Wong, student board of governors representative, agreed that the two departments acted within their jurisdiction. But Short said he is trying to get the payment date changed back. He said students will lose two more weeks of interest money and some students will be inconvenienced if their student loans don't come through on time. Brooks said UBC housing director Mike Davis might accept a plea of ignorance from students unaware of the date change. Deferment of fees could be implemented if necessary, he added. Gage resident Chris Strachan said he didn't see the date change causing a lot of hardships for a lot of people. But he added: "It is not fair that we are paying so far in advance because we are losing interest." Two other residents who declined to be identified said: "It is only 15 days difference and most people have the money in the bank anyway." The 15 day change was implemented so housing department can find out as soon as possible who will return second term. "The deadline of Nov. 30 was not giving us enough time," housing business manager Susanne Nikle^said Thursday. She said that students would forget to pay because it was so close to exams. "This gives us more time to chase them." Student housing will now be able to inform people on the waiting list much sooner about whether they have a chance at moving into residence, she said. Wembless Grits seek rebirth By GEOF WHEELWRIGHT It was a quiet dignified service, held in the basement of the UBC faculty club last night. The mourners blamed themselves for the death of Liberal support in B.C., despite a stirring speech on political reincarnation by defeated federal Liberal candidate Gordon Gibson. Gibson, a former administrative rose in opposition leader Pierre Trudeau's lapel, told a crowd of 60 assorted party faithfuls that the party had made serious mistakes in its last election campaign, but can still rebuild "starting at the grass roots level." "It (the Liberal party) has been too much a party of personalities. I think the people wanted to hear about policies and not personalities. "I think it was a mistake to run the campaign on the basis of 'this is the strongest leader and this is the guy you've got to have'." He told the casually dressed crowd the Liberal defeat was probably also due to a lack of action in policy areas such as freedom of information. "It embarrasses me that it is a Conservative government that is bringing in a freedom of information act," he said. Some Liberals in the crowd expressed frustration that they had few firm policies to discuss with voters during the election. B.C. Liberal party president Shirley McLoughlin said the party will have to listen to all its factions and develop new policy from diversity of opinion. "Any political party is people. We want to call this the year of the people for the Liberal party in B.C.," she said. But Gibson said the Grits will stick to an overall philosophy of "democratic capitalism." He explained that his party was different from the NDP because it would not "penalize the rich" without also considering tax incentives. Defeated Vancouver mayoral candidate May Brown, a long time Liberal, said the party has to rebuild provincially if it is to survive in B.C. "I think people who join the party should join it federally and provincially, otherwise you'll destroy the provincial party." THE UBYSSEY Friday, November 2,1979 Getting sticky with the unsanitary end Welcome to UBC's favorite game show. Emperor for a Day. Yes, you too can have this lovely addition to your resume. And all you have to do is pretend you're a grown-up student politician. Casual campus observers probably would not notice that their favorite bunch of fun lovin' hacks are in the middle of a constitutional debate. Yep, it's true. Bruce Armstrong, the man who has given the students at UBC plenty to think and certainly wonder about, is preparing to introduce a constitution designed to centralize Alma Mater Society power. His scheme is to eliminate any form of proportional reresentation based on faculty size and to slash the number of senators on the student representative assembly from 17 to 2. Add a dash of name changing for house cleaning purposes, -reduce the total number of representatives from the current 52 to about 36, and we've got a complete scenario of silliness. Only two years after it was a fad, Armstrong has discovered the joys of "government restraint." It's efficient. It's fun. It's also undemocratic. Student representatives, some supposedly spokespersons for more than 1,000 students, already complain bitterly about the enormous load they face in handling all their constituents' demands. Sure it makes sense. Take 23,000 students. Give them 52 representatives. Hear everyone cry that no one listens to their complaints. Then solve the problem by dropping the number to 35. Isn't democracy wonderful? But the constitutional proposal causing the greatest stir is the call for a rein- troduction of at-large elections for AMS executive positions. Consider, for just a moment, the thought of dozens of resume-hunting and job-hungry student politicians fighting their petty political battles over executive positions. It's kinda scary. And a very real possibility. And when the games are all over and the awards have been given to the most voracious hacks, there's little doubt who'll come up with the unsanitary end of the stick. And it sure as hell won't be the person with the snazzy resume. Bb»-i Jero(^/o^s^j 7? ', "Citizen Kane" *" 224-3730 Sunday at 2 p.m. 4375 W. 10th onlV C&da \^l (Diabolo ^"^ Menthe) (French with Subtitles) two members of the Duggan family, Noel and Padraig, who played mandola and guitar. The guitar is hardly a traditional Irish instrument, but Clannad's use of it indicates their ability to adapt old musical forms to the present. Ciaran Brennan's use of the upright bass was effective and recalled that other great folk group from the British Isles, Pentangles, in which jazz and folk were blended artfully. Sometimes it seemed as if Clannad were restricted by the form of the traditional pieces which form their repertoire. The last song they played showed their capacity to improvise on a familiar air and they were inspired to the point where they resembled a manic Irish version of Jethro Tull. Their youth and commitment to making traditional music live forever will undoubtedly ensure their success. .v -. ■^>:\ Brewed for extra flavour, extra smoothness and extra taste satisfaction, John Labatt's Extra Stock is our newest premium quality product. You'll find it smooth and mellow going down. Founded by John Labatt in 1828, and still owned by Canadians, Labatt's is proud to introduce John Labatt's Extra Stock. It commemorates our 150 years of brewing fine, quality beer in Canada. It's truly something extra... for our friends. Friday, November 2, 1979 THE UBYSSEY Page Friday 7 Bob Segarini From PF 3 Ubu and similar bands come to mind. S: They had this thing called "the Woodstock of the new wave" in Minnesota recently, 26 hours of straight rrftisic, bands from all over the world. Devo showed up disguised as a band called The Dove, a California religious band. And they all had salmon-colored leisure suits on . . . the midwest is kind of a strange place. If you saw Akron you would understand Devo. It's a pretty hopeless place. Not many ways out of it. The reason good rock 'n roll's always come out of England is because they have the frustration: you either become a soccer player or a musician to get out of those rows of dingy little houses which is the only thing your parents have in the world. PF: So you can't have good music on the west coast? It's too mellow? S: Yeah, it's basically true. . . Of course you can have good music. Frustration doesn't mean poverty, frustration is angst. To vent angst a lot of people on the west coast get up on bell towers with rifles instead of on guitar. People back east or in the midwest, the frustration is pretty visual, you know, old decaying brick buildings and crud, nowhere to go and you can't walk the streets at night. You don't have those problems here. PF: Have you heard any of the new stuff coming out locally? S: Chuck Biscuits should have been the replacement for Keith Moon. Seriously. Just think about that for a minute. Perfect drummer. PF: It seems as if all the old pat- Our Town From PF 2 The second act concerns the love and marriage of George Gibbs and - Emily Webb. The families are neighbours and friends so it seems proper and inevitable that the children will marry. All is as it should be, but towards the end of the act undercurrents of dissatisfaction begin to emerge. Mrs. Webb makes a speech lamenting that she was unable to tell Emily about sex. And in a fleeting perception of the futility of her life she cries out, "the whole world is wrong." The third act moves from Grovers Corners to a windy hilltop cemetery nine years later. Some of the main characters are dead, and seated in rows on the stage. They watch as a funeral procession approaches; Emily has come to join them. For the remainder of the play the dead reflect upon the insignificance and futility of living; they are happy to be free of life. Only Emily, who has just joined them, wants to go back. The entire play is an extended metaphor of the living as actors playing out empty and meaningless roles: birth, growth, reproduction, and death. Under the direction of Charles Siegel, the Freddy Wood Theatre's production gives subtle and convincing emphasis. Some of the characters have difficulty maintaining consistency of movement, and some exaggerate almost to the point of burlesque. This detracts only slightly from the whole effect, and is more than adequately compensated by the excellent performances of Charles Werner Moore as the Stage Manager and Robin Mossely as George Gibbs. Our Town is not an uplifting play. Few people want to think of their lives as empty and futile. And perhaps, as Wilder suggests, few people want to think of their lives at all. You may not agree, but the point is made well. terns are re-emerging in the new music regardless of what the bands proclaim. The Clash pulled a fast one on D.O.A. the other night when they stipulated that D.O.A.'s volume level be kept down when they were the opening act at the Gardens. Now that's pretty shoddy. S: Yeah, it is. The Clash don't trust anybody. They're also not confident. As much as everybody hates them, I opened for the Bee Gees and they were the nicest bunch of people — the road crew, everybody. They let us use anything we wanted, lights, sound equipment. Not one problem. Their whole attitude is that they want to have a great show. People like the Clash, they don't think they're that good. They either think they're not that good or they're afraid they're going to be blown off the stage. Dumb concept, but people actually feel that, the ego, you know. Real ego problems. And they step on the young bands. HAIRWORLD 2620 SASAMAT (W Oh AVE & SASAMAT 224-4912 224-1862 "I used to think banks robbed employees of their mdMdiiality and gave it back when they retired? "When it came to picking a career, banking was the last thing on my mind. The reason was. I pictured myself disappearing into the woodwork and surfacing 40 years later with a gold watch, a slap on the back and one of those 'good old boy' retirement parties. "Brother, was 1 wrong. "After graduating from UBC, I talked with one of Toronto Dominion's recruiters. He stressed the personality of the bank and its people. Plus the fact that I wouldn't get lost in the shuffle-and I could make my own opportunities if I worked hard at it. "He talked a lot about TD's management opportunities, too. He explained that they were into everything from market research to international banking. "I was impressed. And so I decided to giveTD a chance. "I started in their BanklabTraining Course and it gave me some important insights into management. Then I did some work as an Administration Officer at two different branches. Now I'm a Marketing Officer-agood job with a lot of responsibility. "Today, I'm pretty optimistic. The future looks bright and prosperous. And Bob Dean is getting ahead in the world." The bank where people make the difference Look iforTD recruiters on your campus soon. Page Friday 8 THE UBYSSEY Friday, November 2, 1979 The Knack, a pop-rock music group whose debut album has been topping the North American record sales charts will be appearing at the Pacific Coliseum Thursday, Nov. 8 at 8 p.m. Tickets can be purchased at CBO, Grennan's and all Woodward's stores. A Perryscope Production. Two new openings for theatre buffs. Our Town, directed by Stanley Weese, is running at the Freddy Wood Theatre until Nov. 3. Written by Thornton Wilder it is an unusual treatment of the daily pattern of living in a small American town. At Studio 58 on the Langara campus Arsenic and Old Lace is playing until Nov. 17. A winning tale of passion, pulchritude and poison. Pacific Cinematheque is sponsoring a series of films entitled Masterworks which is to be shown at the Varsity Theatre Sunday afternoons this fall. The first is Orson Welles' Citizen Kane to be shown at 2 p.m. on Nov. 4. At the Vancouver East Cultural Centre Masterpiece Music will showcase Philippe Etter, viola, Wilmer Fawcett, double-bass, Ian Hampton, cello, Norman Nelson, violin, and Linda Lee Thomas, piano, playing pieces from the works of Rossini, Dvorak and Schubert. This is the forth in the series and there are two performances Sunday, Nov. 4, one at 2:30 p.m. and the other at 8 p.m. For tickets phone 254-9578. Diamantose, a folk trio from Quebec will be playing at the Soft Rock Cafe Friday, Saturday and Sunday evenings this weekend. Thomas Ehrlich, a pianist- composer from Mexico will be playing at 9:00 p.m. on Friday, Nov. 2 at the Western Front, 303 East 8th Ave. At the UBC Recital Hall Gordon Cherry on trombone and Joyce Cherry on piano will perform sonata by Christel Bochard and the music of Serocki on Wednesday, Nov. 7 at 12:30 p.m. IIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIHIIIIMIIIIIIIIIMIHIIIIIII »•»»«■■»«»»•■■■■»»»«■■»»«««■»■»■»«« RED LEAF ^ RESTAURANT Luncheon Smorgasbord Authentic Chinese Cuisine I 228-9114 , FREE DELIVERY from 4:30 p.m. [ 10% Discount on ail cash pick up orders 2142 Western Parkway E.L. Vancouver, B.C. HONG KONG CHINESE FOOD (Self Serve Restaurant) 5732 -. UNIVERSITY BLVD.^ f*T Eat In and Take Out j£ •«* OPEN EVERY DAY ^ „ 4:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. **- ^ PHONE: 224-6121 & & 231>4 W. 4*» AVE. 733-37I3 'An eating experience not to be under estimated as one of the best mexican restaurants north of California.' Thats what it is all about! OPEN TUES.-SUN. TAKE OUT ORDERS WELCOME! LICENSED WHITE TOWER PIZZA & SPAGHETTI HOUSE LTD. KITS - DUNBAR >• PT. GREY A variety of great dishes including Moussaka, Kaiamariari Souvlakia, and Greek salads. Mon- Thurs 4 pm-2:30 am Fri & Sat 4 pm-3:30 am( Sunday 4 pm-12 pm, 738-9520 or 738-1113 | DOWNTOWN ■ 1359 Robson 688-5491 3611 West Broadway PARKING AT REAR Otning Louiw Full Facilities - Take Out or Home Otliv«ry Late delivery call lu hour before closing. {/MBrtHwC Live Belly Dancing on Friday & Saturday Nights LUNCH 11:30-3:00 Mon. - Sat. DINNER 5:00- 1:00 Mon. - Sat. 5:00 -11:00 Sunday 417Jw.I0th.Av*. Q,5ll=]rJ^i7=]rdrdrfBiJd^lcJrdrfddr=lrJclnJrf I \l\ SPECIALIZING IN GREEK CUISINE & PIZZA FREE FAST DELIVERY 228-9513 4510 W. 10th Ave. n q-oiu vj. min «ve. ts |ki=Mi=lrdtnaidldrdidi4Midi;^f=ld,=lr-l,-i,-j UBG GaiRpas Pizza Steak & Pizza — Lasagna Spare Ribs — Ravioli Chicken — Greek Salads Souvlaki Fast Free Local Delivery 224-4218 - 224-0529 Hours: Mon.-Thurs. 11:30 a.m.-2:00 p.m.; Fri. 11:30 a.m. 3:00 p.m.; Sat. 4:00 p.m. 3:00 a.m.; Sun. 4:00 p.m.-1:00 a.m. 2136 Western Parkway Salad Bar * Caesar Salad Charbroiled Steaks * Seafood Licensed Lounge PIZZA Free Delivery Open Daily from 11 a.m. SUNDAY from 4 p.m. 4450 W. 10th Ave. 224-3434 224-6336 JD. iZ^ This Week PERCY and the TEARDROPS FRASER ARMS 1450 S.W. Marine Dr. THE "SUPER" CURRY IN TOWN XUHEtV" HGUSe 1754 WEST 4TH 732-5313 Open 7 Days A Week Open 5 P.M. Every Day CHARGEX MASTtRCHARGE AMEX DINNERS CLUB f^ for the ultimate in fine coffee and pastries come to v_X espresso bar w espresso bar Daily 8-midnight Weekends 11-midnight 2134 Western Parkway "In the Village" Another Lindy's SPECIAL FULL COURSE MEALS From $3.95 BEEF STROGANOFF SALMON CASSEROLE POT ROAST OF BEEF HALVE OF A ROAST DUCKLING BREAKFAST SPECIAL BACON, HAM OR SAUSAGES AND EGGS HASH BROWNS, TOAST COFFEE $1.95 8:00 AM - 11:00 AM SOmA 3211 W. BROADWAY 738-2010 Careers A Professional Opening to the World of Business Discover Deloitte Haskins & Sells. One of the largest accounting firms..in Canada and throughout the world...with a diversity of clients and services the equal of any. A people place. Unsurpassed in technical leadership. A place where professional development and personal achievement are the ways of our life. Arrange to talk with us when we visit your campus by submitting UCPA form to the Canada Manpower Employment Centre or by forwarding your resume directly to J. F. (Jim) Gordon, Personnel Director, P.O. Box 11114, Royal Centre, 1055 West Georgia Street, Vancouver, British Columbia V6E 3P8. Please feel free to call us at 682-8781. Deloitte Haskins Sells Chartered Accountants Halifax Moncton Montreal Ottawa Oshawa North York Toronto Mississauga Hamilton Brantford Kitchener Windsor Winnipeg Saskatoon Regina Edmonion Calgary Prince George Langley Vancouver THE ROYAL BANK will be on campus November 28th and 29th, 1979 interviewing students for our Branch Administration Officer and Consumer Loans Officer Training Programs. Applications should be submitted to the Canada Manpower Centre on Campus when arrangements can be made to attend an interview. Interested students are also invited to attend a Career Presentation on November 7th at 12:30 p.m. THE ROYAL BANK OF CANADA Career Choices A Workshop for Women Students Six Weekly Sessions Will Help You: 1) Assess where you are now in life 2) Clarify your values and interests 3) Identify your work skills 4) Apply this knowledge in defining a career direction 5) Develop resume writing and exploratory interview skills SESSION I: DATES: November 6 • December 4 (Tuesdays) SESSION II: DATES:November 7 - December 5 (Wednesdays) TIME: 12:30 - 1:30 p.m. PLACE: 301 Brock Hall REGISTER AT THE FIRST SESSION. JUST COME! ENQUIRIES 228-2415. Sponsored by the Women Students' Office. Friday, November 2,1979 THE UBYSSEY Page Friday 9 Shepard plays on meaning of life By MARK TIMMIS The notion that life is meaningless is by no means peculiar to Sam Shepard nor contemporary thought. But in a century that more than any other has been characterised by brutality, optimistic participation in the ideal of life has done much to hide the pessimism and despair. In Buried Child this evasive ideal is conveyed with a cold sanity that verges on madness. Buried Child and Other Plays By Sam Shepard Talon Books, Vancouver Dodge and Halie live on a farm with their two sons Tilden and Bradley, who are in their forties. Tilden, the older of the two, has been quietly regressing ever since he had what Halie says was the brains to get himself thrown in jail. Bradley possesses a cruel anger which, aggravated by his ill-fitting false leg, often drives him to shave Dodge's head as he lays helplessly drunk on the couch. A third son Ansen was a war hero, but he was murdered in a motel room by what Halie claims was the Devil incarnate, his Roman Catholic bride. The failure of Halie's three sons casts a shadow over the family that gradually intervenes to isolate the present. With their eyes instinctively shut, each failure is evaded as they fall back with greater intensity upon their illusions. The worlds the characters come to inhabit are elaborate stories. The drama of the play lies entirely in the realm of idea, allowing Shepard to jump freely from life to the meaning human habit attaches to it. Tilden's son Vince, arriving home after several years absence, finds himself struggling to convince Dodge that he is who he says he is. But it is through the stolid realism of Shelly, Vince's girlfriend, that PANGO PANGO (UNS) - Riots erupted in this tiny island kingdom when it was announced a petition was circulating calling for the recall of blorg representatives Blob Staidly and Crag Flukes. "Thrown them out? Throw those representatives of the people out? No way," said bored of flummery representative Spruce Salmon. "We're going to give them a worse screwing than that." Salmon announced soon after his plan for centralizing the power of Pango Pango in a few small hands. "My hands are the smallest of all, barring those times I dig into the treasury," he said. "I guess I must be perfect for the job." The riots continue. OPTIC ZONE Student Discounts ARBUTUS VILLAGE 733-1722 KORRES ** MOVING AND TE J3 TRANSFER LTD.J— •STORAGE Big or Small Jobs* Reasonable Rates 2060 W. 10th, Vancouver 734-5535 Eve. and Holidays 732-9898 Also Garages. Basements. Yards CLEAN-UPS any sensible foundation is established at all. It is also Shelly's presence that bridges the gap between the family's idealized lives and the physical reality of existence. The origin of their eccentricity comes to light until finally we are led to question whether Buried Child is just a simple metaphor for the desire to escape the past. Seduced, the second of the three plays, pursues man beyond his desire to escape to his desire to escape death. Hackamore, a Howard Hughes-like recluse, has been hiding out on the top floor of a hotel for fifteen years. The curtains have remained closed, the windows shut and his activity limited to lying in bed, receiving intravenous and explaining to his servant Raul not to wait for instructions but to intuit them. The only objects in the room are two palm trees and a couch which Raul can't quite intuit how to arrange. Hackamore's antics are amusing and become all the more so when, convinced that he can extend his authority beyond Raul and a couple of plants, he invites two Las Vegas bombshells up for a visit. As might be expected, the two showgirls, Luna and Miami, are not impressed by Hackamore's emaciated body and curled nails; nor Hackamore for that matter, with their intelligence. But Miami's ample body seductively stretched out across the couch is more than the aging recluse can bear and within moments he is on top of her clenching his failing heart. Beneath Hackamore's banter there is a feeling of weakness. The world he inhabits, like those in Buried Child, has lost its very humanness. As Hackamore concedes, "What difference does it make? It's a good story. One story's as good as another. It's all in the way you tell it. That's what counts. That's what makes the difference." The story Hackamore created between the outside and his imagination simply became a triumph of illusion over reality. By escaping life, Hackamore had hoped to escape death. Hackamore's attempt to raise himself above life is picked up again in Suicide in B in the form of a musician named Niles. The play opens with two detectives, Pablo and Louis, examining the chalk figure of a murder victim. Although the face has been blown off we soon gather that tyie fingerprints are those of Niles. As members of Niles' band begin to trickle on stage it becomes clear that the death is a hoax and the body that of someone else. Pablo is baffled. Louis, having awkwardly gathered himself within the perimeters of the chalk figure, is full of ideas. Niles, he ventures, was nearing the height of his popularity. With a new concept of music that couldn't be heard and instruments he made in the bathtub, Niles was sure to herald in a new age. Meanwhile, Louis continues, the members of his band had begun to feed off his creativity. By planning a false suicide, Niles had intended to lay low till the band dispersed. The explanation Louis offers is accurate. But what it does not take into account is the body. As in Buried Child and Seduced, personal identity is arbitrary and therefore easily interchangeable. Niles, likewise, in refusing to acknowledge his physical existence loses touch with reality because he himself was reality. "A man in a disguise. But then you see him signaling to you from the street. He's pointing to his head, to his own head, then pointing back to you. Then you see him more clearly than before. You see for sure that he is you. He yells up to you in a voice you can't mistake. 'You're in my head. You're in my head'." Shepard's protagonists in the three plays all espouse a similar view of life: life has to be given meaning because of the obvious fact that it has no meaning. Thus their lives become fabulous stories with moments of far-seeing clarity and finally lives that are sacrificed to existence. t-LLttkLL. Employment Personnel from the Ministry of Labour are on campus to accept applications for summer employment with the Provincial Government under the provincial YOUTH EMPLOYMENT PROGRAM. Interested students should plan to attend on the following dates between 8:30 and 4:30 p.m. DATE FACULTY NOV. 5 NOV. 6 NOV. 7 NOV. 7 NOV. 8 NOV. 9 NOV. 13 NOV. 14 NOV. 15 NOV. 16 UBC LOCATION: Room 214, Brock Hall Fine Arts and Library Sciences Art History Graphic Design Dance Theatre Applied Science Community & Regional Planning Engineering Computer Science Faculty of Arts Architecture Recreation History Journalism Communications Sciences Zoology Ecology Commerce and Business Economics Faculty of Education Forestry Agriculture Human and Social Therapy Psychology Social Work Law Aquatics Fisheries Commerce Oceanography Biology Public Administration Child Care Counselling Community Development Province of Ministry of British Columbia Labour EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY PROGRAMS Page Friday 6 THE UBYSSEY Friday, November 2,1979 Friday, November 2,1979 THE UBYSSEY Page 15 Some straight talk from Julius Schmid The purpose of this advertisement is to educate you about venereal diseases. If you think this subject is no concern of yours, we'd like to point out thatVD. has reached epidemic proportions in Canada. It cuts across all age, income, social and educational groups. A conservative estimate is that between 500,000 and 1 million Canadians suffer fromVD. What we're going to do in this advertisement is to tell you in plain, simple language about three of the most prevalent venereal diseases in Canada today. What the symptoms are, the various stages of the diseases and most important of all, what you can do to prevent infection. Now, if in the course of reading this advertisement, you suspect you might have some of the symptoms described, consult your physician immediately. The treatment is confidential and if caught early enough the disease can be easily treated. GONORRHEA This particular disease has become rampant due to possible changing social and sexual attitudes. Despite the most advanced treatment methods medical science has been unable to check the spread of this condition. STAGE I Symptoms generally appear from two to six days after exposure to the bacterium Neisseria gonorrhoea, however, up to 20 percent of men and as high as 80 percent of women show no symptoms at all. In the male, the usual signs are pain when urinating and a discharge of pus from the penis. Women are likely to experience burning during urination, a yellowish vaginal discharge, abnormal menstrual bleeding, and swelling or abscess of the Bartholin's glands at the mouth of the vagina. (Symptom? of oral and anal infectio.i may ;nclude. in the throat, a burning sensation, and, in the rectum, brrnin< and itching, persistent urge to defecate, and a bloody discharge). STAGE II If allowed to progress untreated, gonorrhea can produce severe inflammation of the pelvic organs;, blockage of the Fallopian tubes and sperm ducts and thus sterility; gonorrheal rheumatism or arthritis; inflammation of the heart valves; even blindness, particularly in newborn babies. Up until a few years ago, penicillin was the standard treatment method, but today, several penicillin-resistant strains of the disease have appeared and other, stronger drugs-tetracycline, spectinomysin, ampicillin, amoxicillin- must sometimes be used. Cases in which pelvic inflammatory disease has developed may also require hospitalization. SYPHILIS First of all let's make one thing clear: you can't pick up syphilis from lavatory seats or public drinking fountains. Syphilis is transmitted only through sexual intercourse. STAGE I About three weeks after sexual relations, a lesion called a chancre • (pronounced "shanker") develops at the site-usually the genitals or mouth-and nearby lymph nodes become enlarged. The chancre itself disappears within four to six weeks. STAGE n If syphilis is left untreated, more lymph nodes eventually become enlarged and a spotty red rash appears over most of the body. During this stage, fever, weight loss, general weakness, loss of appetite and headaches are typical. After several months, the rash subsides and syphilis enters a latent period lasting months or even years. STAGE III Blindness, insanity, impotence, heart disease. Children born to syphilitic mothers are also infected. The earliest sign is sniffing, after which sores appear on the skin and the mucous membranes, and the disease starts to progress as in adults. If caught early enough, syphilis can be easily treated with penicillin. Other antibiotics such as tetracycline, erythromycin, or chloramphenicol are also used. GENITAL HERPES This sexually transmitted disease was almost unknown until the late sixties. About 95 percent of all cases are due to infection with herpes simplex virus II, a virus affecting' only the genital areas; while another 5 percent result from infection of the genital area with herpes simplex I, the cold-sore vims. STAGE I In women, tiny, painful blisters resembling oral cold sores appear on the labia, cervix or anus. Symptoms in men include similar lesions on the penis or anus, accompanied by burning urination and watery penile discharge. Fever is a possibility in both sexes. Within a day or so the blisters break, then form round, grey-white patches which generally heal spontaneously within two weeks. This may "be the end of the problem, or genital herpes may reappear periodically as cold sores often do. STAGE II A possible serious complication: recent studies suggest that herpes II may play a role in the development of cervical cancer. The virus is reported to be present in 36 percent of cervical cancer patients, and parts of the herpes II virus have been extracted from cervical cancer cells. Because of this, women who've been infected should be especially careful to have regular Pap tests. No totally effective cure for herpes exists. While some gynecologists paint the infected area with gentian violet, others maintain this treatment doesn't work. However, a promising new antiherpes drug, adenine arabinoside (Ara-A) is being tested and may soon be approved for general use. AND HOW TO PREVENT CONTRACTING THEM. There are only two methods of avoiding the risk of contracting V.D. 1. Refrain from sexual relations. 2. Use a prophylactic during intercourse. Use of the prophylactic is the only method officially recognized and accepted as an aid in the prevention of transmission of venereal disease. Besides being a disease preventative, prophylactics are one of the oldest and more effective means of birth control known and the most popular form used by males. And we'd like to introduce you to six of the best brands of prophylactics that money can buy.They're all made by Julius Schmid. They're all electronically tested to assure quality and dependability. And you can only buy them in drug stores. K/\lVOfco Regular (Non- Lubricated) & Sensitol (Lubricated). A tissue thin rubber sheath of amazing strength. Smooth as silk, light as gossamer, almost imperceptible in use. Rolled, ready-to-use. FOUREX 'Non-Slip " Skins- distinctly different from rubber, these natural membranes from the lamb are specially processed to retain their fine natural texture, softness and durability. Lubricated and rolled for added convenience. *D I 11 I Ix Sensi-Shape (Lubricated) & Regular (Non-Lubricated). The popular priced, high quality reservoir-end rubber prophylactic. Rolled, ready-to-use. NuRxm Sensi-Shape r If you would like some free samples of below and we'll send you everything in Name our products, fill in the coupon a plain envelope. ~l Address - JULIUS SCHMID OF CANADA LIMITED 32 Bermondsey Road Toronto, Ontario M4B1Z6 Prov. P.C.- (Lubricated) & Sensi-Shape (Non-Lubricated). The "better for both" new, scientifically developed shape that provides greater sensitiyity and more feeling for both partners. Comes in "passionate pink." Rolled, ready-to-use. EXCiTfl sensi-shaped to provide "extra pleasure for both partners." Sensitol lubricated for added sensitivity. Also in "passionate pink." Rolled, ready-to-use. Gently ribbed and Fiesta _ __ Reservoir-end prophylactics in an assortment of colours. Sensitol lubricated for added sensitivity. Rolled, ready-to-use. Page 16 THE UBYSSEY Friday, November 2,1979 polyoram catalog "*t fc ^^v5' CLASSICAL ,/i«", ." " ^^u MM / MORE THAN 800 TITLES TO CHOOSE FROM f * r /fH :J RECORDS $5-79 CASSETTES $6.49 (WHERE AVAILABLE) • VIVALDI: The Four Seasons Karajan. Berlin Philharmonic. • MOZART: Piano Concertos Nos. 17 421 "Elvira Madigan" Anda. Salzburg Mozarteum Orchestra. • THE SUPER CONCERT (100 Minutes ol the World's Greatest Melodies) Boehm. Rozhdestvensky. Oistrakh Kubelik. Kemptt. • BEETHOVEN: Symphony No. 5. Karajan. Berlin Philharmonic. • THE SUPER CONCERT VOL. 2. Fischer-Dieskau Anda Kempff. Fournier. Boehm. Kleiber. • THE KARAJAN SUPER CONCERT — Bolero The Moklau. Eine kleine Nachtmusik. Blue Danube Waltz and • PACHELBEL: Canon. ALBINONI: Adagio RESPIGHI: Ancient Airs a Dances. Karajan. Berlin Philharmonic. • J. STRAUSS: The Blue Danube Waltz. Emperor Waltz. Fledermaus Overture and other favorites. Karajan. Berlin Philharmonic. •BEETHOVEN: "Moonlight",' PatheHque"& "Appassionata" Sonatas. Kempff •CHOPIN: Polonaises. Pollini. •THE SUPER CONCERT VOL 3 — Ride of the Valkyries. Waltz of the Flowers and 5 more. Karajan. Berlin Philharmonic • RAVEL: Bolero. MUSSORGSKY: Pictures at an Exhibition Karajan. Berlin Philharmonic. • MOZART: Eine kleine Nachtmusik. Divertimento No. 15. Karajan. Berth Philharmonic. • TCHAIKOVSKY: 1812 Overture Romeo « Juliet Marche slave. Don Cossacks. Berlin Philharmonic. Karajan. • BEETHOVEN: Symphony No. 6 "Pastorale". Kara)an. Berlin Philharmonic. • J.S. BACH: Toccata! Fugue in D minor and other organ works. K. Richter. • A KARAJAN SPECIAL — Music by Handel, Bach. Mozart Beethoven, Rossini. Chopin. Berlioz a others. Berlin Philharmonic. • ORFF: CamUna Burana Jochum. German Opera Chorus and Orchestra. • ROSSINI OVERTURES — William Tell. Thieving Magpie Barber of Seville and 3 more. Karajan. Berlin Philharmonic. • VIVALDI: Mandolin and Lute Concertos. Yepes. TIS Ochi. Keuntz Chamber Orchestra. • RODRIGO: Concierto de Arsnjuez. Fantasia para un gentlhombre. Yepes. Spanish Radio & TV Orchestra. Alonso • BEETHOVEN: Symphony No. 5. Kleiber. Vienna Philharmonic. • TCHAIKOVSKY: Swan Lake & Sleeping Beauty Highlights Karajan. Berlin Philharmonic. • BEETHOVEN: Symphony No. 3 "Eroica". Karajan. Berlin Philharmonic. • DEBUSSY: Piano Preludes Vol. 1. Mlchelangeli. • VIVALDI: THE FOUR SEASONS. I Musici. • SCHUBERT: "Trout" Quintet. Brendel. Cleveland Quartet • LAST NIGHT AT THE PROMS. Norman Bainbridge. BBC Symphony Orchestra. Davis. • MOZART: Concerto for Flute, Harp 6 Orchestra. Monteux/Black/Brymer, Academy of St. Martln-in-the-Fields. Marriner. • MOZART: Clarinet Concerto. Bassoon Concerto. Andante for Flute. Brymer/Chapman/Monteux. Academy of St. Martln-in-the-Fields. Marriner. • VIVALDI: CeHo Concertos. Walevska. Netherlands Chamber Orchestra. Redel. • THE MOZART CONCERT (Live Recording) Norman Brendel. Academy of St. Martm-in-the-Fields. Marriner. • RODRIGO: "Concierto de Aranjuez". Lagoya. Monte Carlo Opera Orchestra. Almeida. • SCHUBERT: 'Trout" Quintet. Rhodes. Hortnagel. Beaux Arts Trio. • VIVA LA YOGA: Virtuoso Guitar Pieces. • SUPPE OVERTURES — Light Calvary, Pique Dame, Poet 1 Peasant, and 3 mon. Marriner. London Philharmonic. • SCHUBERT: Octet. Ensemble ol Academy ol St. Martin-ln-the-Flelds. • MOZART: The Horn Concertos. CMI. Academy of St. Martln-in-the-Fields. Marriner. • FANSHAWE: African Sanctus. Ambrosian Singers. . • MOZART: Flute Concerto No. 1 Oboe Concerto. Monteux Black. Academy of St. Martln-in-the-Fields. Marriner. • HAYDN: Symphonies Nos. 22 The Philosopher" & 55 "The Schoolmaster" Marriner. Academy of St. Martln-in-the-Fields. • VIVALDI: 6 Violin Sonatas. Accardo • HANDEL: Water Music. Leppard. English Chamber Orchestra. • HAYDN: Symphonies Nos. 46 "Maria Theresa" a 85 "La Relne". Marriner. Academy of St. Martln-in-the-Fields. • BOCCHERINI: 3 String Quartets. Quartetto ItaNano • THE LAST NIGHT AT THE PROMS: Davis. BBC Symphony Orchestra. • VIVALDI: 5 Flute Concertos. Gazzelloni. I Musici. • HAYDN: Symphonies Nos. 44 "Mourning" & 49 "la Passione". Marriner. Academy of St. Martin-in-the-Fields. • MOZART: Piano Concertos Nos. 21 "Elvira Madigan" S 25. Bishop. London Symphony Orchestra. Davis. • SCHUBERT: String Quartet in G D 887 Quartetto Italiano. SPEAKERS $150.00 worth of sound EF» 100 only $9995 The EPl 100 has become the industry standard for bookshelf loudspeakers. Leading consumer and audiophile publications have consistently given the EPl 100 their top ratings. It does everything you want a loudspeaker to do, and it does it all in a compact cabinet! The EPl 100 offers EPI's celebrated Linear Sound: a pure, uncoloured, natural sound from top to bottom. With no artificial boosting of the bass to impress the innocent. And all the nuances at the treble end that, on most speakers, just fade away. The Model 100 doesn't just deliver the Linear Sound of EPl straight ahead, either. In fact, up to 15,000 H* the speaker's off-axis dispersion is down an average of only 3dt. And, unlike nearly every other speaker, you can listen for hours to the EPl 100 without suffering listening fatigue. The reason is EPI's "minimum distortion" - both harmonic and intermodulation. With its excellent dispersion and EPI's Linear Sound, we'd say the EPl 100 is clearly the finest speaker you can get for the money. WE GUARANTEE YOU'LL LOVE THIS SYSTEM! We sound bettec COMPLETE MUSIC SYSTEM ■ r » > ■ t c O 9 Q O O--" f)f FOR PRIVATE LISTENING HVI HKADPHONES The HVI Headphone is a perfect example of sparkling fidelity and wide range frequency response in a 'Hear-Through Headphone.' The best selling lightweight from KOSS! So much for so little! At the heart of this fine system .s the powerful Marantz 1530 AM FV sit reo receiver. With 30 watts RM&i/er t-hanr.ei dno super iuw distortion of oniy 08'V . me 1530 will give you .m urate, trouble tree perTormance from all sources. Tv Marantz 6025 is an easy to operate belt rin<] ;w'"'er leproduces exhilarating highs .v M.elh n- uisper >ion. Come into ALB Sound ..mm n. .k nuis much $699.95 will buy.