" \>rh Vol. LXVI, No. Vancouver, B.C. Friday, September 16,1983 228-2301 Wasted youth Living off breadlines without hope WAITING...for a decent meal photo neil lucente By DEB WILSON FROM THE KITCHEN door at the Franciscan Sisters of the Atonement convent, the bread line grows one by one until by noon it stretches down East Cordova Street, around the corner, down Dunlevy Street and up the alley. Almost 1,000 of them. They huddle by the convent railing against a grey and damp Vancouver day, waiting for the biggest meal of the month on the city's skid road soup circuit. Some of them stagger here for meals year in and year out. They're the ones with the empty eyes, sticky hair, flaccid skin, the bloated features of alcoholics or the gaunt faces of addicts. Some of them remember the 1930s — when the lines first grew long — but more and more of them these days are 17-year- olds, 18-year-olds, who have never had a real job. Many are recent arrivals from clear across the country, here because they looked for work along the road and found none. Because Calgary just gives them a few hostel and meal tickets and sends them on, and because there aren't any missions at the end of the ferry ride to Vancouver Island. Because the Vancouver skids are where they land, the last station. As far as they can get. This is the end of the line. At one o'clock, the first hundred turn in their tickets. A volunteer waves them into the basement hall. Another ushers them briskly to four long tables with a hundred place settings. Coffee, dinner and dessert are all cooling there, with paper plates and plastic forks. They are small meals, but clean, and the food doesn't taste bad. The coffee flows strong into bottomless cups. One pale and silent man barfs — on himself, on the floor, in a box Brother Tim passes under him. A couple of guys try to get rough but it's no use; Brother Tim's a big bruiser who worked Rykers Island prison in New York city until his superiors began to worry when he started to walk, talk and look like the cons. He's playing bouncer for this event. When the door opens and they file in, the air collects the smell of boozy sweat. Sometimes, leaning over a thin man to take a plate or fill a cup, there's that odd, acrid smell of the rooming houses, of piss-stained linoleum and empty wine bottles in musty hallways. The afternoon wears on and hands begin to shake. It's a Sunday with two weeks to go until the next welfare cheque. No money, no booze. Those few who've managed to procure something to dull the day teeter to chairs. Later, outside again, they walk on the backs of their heels as though the ground might suddenly shift and send them reeling. A small army of parishioners from the suburbs are assembled to serve. They sweep the debris into green bags as each diner leaves, wipe the table and reset another hundred places. The men and women file in again, eat and leave. The whole act takes about a half hour. Reset file in eat and leave. The teenagers and matrons and clean-faced men are dressed and powdered and pressed against the contagion of poverty like they might bundle against the cold. Among the brown and grey of the diners locked in feeding frenzy and the suburbanites and trays and ladles in the aisles and the scullery, the seven Sisters of the Atonement move, grey hair tucked under brown habits, dispensing instructions, coffee and assistance. But no prayers. That's their policy. It's the first meal in a long time for many of the diners, and they eat as if they would swallow the plate whole. For the sisters, it's another day. Tomorrow there will be sandwiches at four and another line at the door. The line doesn't shrink with the evening business pages' announcements of renewed investor confidence. It grows as steadily as the numbers of declarations by government leaders and corporate analysts that economic recovery is just around the corner. And then there are these kids. In each hundred-seat setting there are about fifteen of them, 18 to 25 years old. They don't stagger, and they don't puke under the tables. Few of their hands shake when they hold out their cups for a refill. And they look away from the sisters and the volunteers, unaccustomed to their charity. The kids are different than the others. They might find a warm spot to sleep in a cheap hotel or near a heating duct outside, and they might find food in soup lines and industrial trash bins. But they just don't fit in. ED MAKSYLEWICZ .AND Dwayne Rockwell peer from under their umbrella against the hedge, looking like a couple of heavy metal fans in a concert ticket lineup. They've got no use for the kind of people who settle into a life on welfare. They've got plans and they hang on to them with the determined grip of a couple of Ozzy Oz- borne animal victims. They're not asking for much: a grade twelve diploma, steady work, maybe even a trade and a union card. They know times are hard — who wouldn't, standing in a sandwich line 600 long in the February rain. "The way things are now it's probably gonna take five years before it's better," says Ed. But somehow they feel that doesn't have very much to do with them personally. Ed is 18. Dwayne is 19. They blew into Vancouver from Edmonton last October. Life was going nowhere there. Stagnation and winter were creeping up fast. "I thought maybe Vancouver would show me something," says Dwayne. Within a couple of days their money ran out. "So I decided to try my hand at shoplifting. I went to the Safeway and they caught me with about nine dollars worth of steaks. They gave me four months." Vancouver showed Dwayne the inside of Pine Ridge prison camp. ("It was boring. Everybody hypes it up so much and says it's violent but it's not that so much. It's just boring.") He was paroled after two and a half months of work at three dollars a day in the prison sawmill. Meanwhile Ed did another kind of time in the rooming houses and on the streets of the grubby east side of downtown Vancouver. "I was in bad shape, on skid road, for two months," he says now. "But I pulled myself out of it. "And I came here with a shirt, pants and a jacket. Now I have a stereo. A T.V. I'm clean all the time." MARCEL PATRIN, 20, is also clean, so clean he would take the award, if there were any in a life in missions and under bridges, for best-disguised down-and -outer. In a fuzzy grey sweatshirt and a jacket with the designer's name stamped on the arm, he looks like he got lost on the way to a university lecture, and in a soft Quebecois accent he explains: "I try to look like to show that I'm not a bum. I used $130 of my first welfare cheque here to buy myself a winter jacket and a shirt. "I didn't know that I didn't get any more for rent." His appearance hides a street-smart steadiness he's learned in two years on the road. When a stranger approaches him in the line, he keeps his eyes straight ahead and returns a cautious "hello" only after a considered pause. Later, in a greasy spoon by the convent, he talks wearily about hitting the road after finishing three months military training and hitching around Canada and the states. "I'm used to sleeping under a bridge or something like that. There's missions everywhere but a lot of the missions are full. I try the most to keep away from people who take drugs and drink." He almost settled down in one Oregon town, where he worked for nine months as a cook in a mission, but despite more than ISO sponsors he couldn't get his working papers from the government. There just aren't enough jobs for Americans, as it is, he was told. So he was off again. And now he waits; for work, for welfare- sponsored job training, for the next cheque (they last about two weeks into the month, he complains), for word from the army on the application to re-enlist he made two weeks earlier. "I should never have left the army," he says. "It's a career, you know." Sure. No life like it. And no life like the downtown east side, where Marcel pays $240 a month from a welfare cheque that provides a $200 rent allowance (leaving him $135 a month for food and clothes), in a rooming house where the girl next door regularly flips out, screams and chucks furniture out the window. "When I get up in the morning I go to Manpower. Then I go back to my room. There's nothing else to do. I don't want to hang around in the streets or anything. I don't know anybody at the hotel — don't want to know anybody. When I called his hotel a few weeks later, Marcel was gone. The local recuiting office can't find him either. Maybe he's become another working stiff at last. More likely, he's moved on to another filthy rooming house or another heartless town. The kids reel off the names and descriptions of their seedy hotels like they're a colossal joke: the Pender Hotel ("the Pender Hole"), the new Brazil ("$170, cockroaches, lice and all"), the Lone Star ("you get a room as big as a finger"). And it would be a joke, if they weren't the butt of it all. Most of the 85-odd cheap hotels and lodging houses in the city, where drifters and pensioners and people without money, contacts or family turn up, are cramped, dirty and often dangerous. Many of the rents are set to squeeze at least a few dollars more than the rent allowance from a tenant's welfare cheque if See page 4: SKID *&" »aE&»uaE Page 2 THE U BYS S EY Friday, September 16,1983 MB 3ms V M STUDENT UNION BUILDING UNIVERSITY OF BRITISH COLUMBIA 6138 S.U.B. BOULEVARD LOWER CONCOURSE .iiHiiiiiiiiiimmgiaaa ams concerts presents WEEKEND SV8MIK00M UBC friday 16 AH AGES saturdav17 french letters 7/Jfi3 ru^^>er biscu^ guests . 4 guests a advance at ams. box office AMS ANNUAL BBQ PRESENTS TACKY TOURIST TAILGATE PARTY 4 p.m., September 16th Thunderbird Stadium Plaza Roasted Pig Dinner $3.50 advanced AMS box office $5.00 at door if available Featuring: President Pederson - over the coals Sgt. Lucko — top cop Entertainment by: Out Riggers Polynesian Dancers Refreshments Available Followed by UBC WIFL Football UBC vs U of Calgary Contest for Tackiest Tourist / with special guests ASIYAH monday SEPTEMBER 26™ 8:00PM • S.U.B. Ballroom • U.B.C. Campus ADVANCE TICKETS ON SALE $7.00 A.M.S. Cardholders $8.00 General Public Tickets are available at al VTC/CBO outlets, Woodwards, Eaton Stores, A.M.S. Box Office In SUB. Building U.B.C. and Zulu Records: Ticket Info - 687-1818Charge - 687-4444 Presented By /HfTO and Mm^M% UBC Radio Produced By A.M.S «*. Friday, September 16, 1983 THE UBYSSEY Page 3 Prince Bennett introduces brave new order By BILL TIELEMAN There is nothing more difficult to take in hand, more perilous to conduct, or more uncertain in its success, than to take the lead in the introduction of a new order of things. — Machiavelli We're not doing something off the back of an old envelope. What we're doing is trying to get some management plan.... 1 think that's what the people want. They expect reasoned, planned leadership and that's what we're giving them. — Bennett Outside the legislature in Victoria they came together from all corners of the city, an angry crowd of civil servants, unionists, the disabled in wheelchairs, women's groups, human rights activists, ethnic groups, tenants, seniors, just ordinary citizens, to confront a government gone mad. Inside the high walls of the legislature, behind locked, heavily guarded doors, government officials peered out the windows at the gathering below while in the legislative chambers Social Credit members continued creating their Frankenstein monster — an awesome collection of ghoulish bills that put fundamental democratic rights into a shallow grave. The demonstrators, among them many fired government workers, gathered to create the largest protest ever seen in Victoria, bringing in more people than had shown up for the Queen's visit earlier this year. Even the organizers were shocked by the more than 25,000 people who filled the legislature grounds and spilled into adjoining streets. • Attacks on the provicial labour, human rights and medicare legislation by federal Liberal cabinet ministers, raising the possibility of federal disallowance of Socred bills. e An open letter from leading Canadian church leaders condemning the Bennett plan and calling his government "dishonest" for not campaigning in the recent election with a clear indication of government actions to come. • Civil servant picketing of a number of government offices as workers are dismissed immediately from their jobs. • Calls from several national and international human rights bodies to rescind the planned elimination of the Human Rights Commission and radical changes to human rights legislation. • A request from the powerful Employer's Council of B.C. to "review" the bills affecting labour relations. The Bennett attack on workers, tenants, minorities, civil servants, the disabled, seniors, students, teachers, women, regional governments, school boards, and others represents the most fundamental shift in policy ever attempted in the province, even during the days of W.A.C. "Wacky" Bennett, and his 20 year rule from 1952 to 1972. Bennett the younger is attempting to roll back the odometer in the sleaziest fashion of B.C.'s notorious used car dealers, many of whom populate the Socred ranks. In response the legislative coup has brought together the most impressive array of groups ever joined in one fight in the province. Under the banner of Operation Solidarity are every conceivable union, church, women's, community, minority, special interest, student, and other groups in It was a fitting end to possibly the most tumultuous month ever seen in B.C. politics, sparked by the July 7 provincial budget and its 26 companion bills introduced at the same time. Among the more significant events as a mass protest movement spang up were: e A huge march and rally in Vancouver July 23 that drew more than 25,000 people out to the streets bearing T-shirts and placards equating the Socred policies to those of Nazi Germany and military-run Poland, e The lengthy occupation by government workers of a centre for the mentally handicapped in Kamloops that the Socreds intend to eliminate completely by next year. The workers were demanding the centre's operations be continued. • A public information meeting on the Socred legislation that drew more than 6,000 people, startling its organizers and turning the meeting into an angry protest. • A rally of 40,000 Aug. 10 in Empire Stadium. the province affected by legislation that is being openly called "totalitarian" and "neo- fascistic" daily in the media. Within the labour movement Bennett has managed to bring together some of the bitterest of enemies. Canadian nationalist unions of the Confederation of Canadian Unions are sitting down with international unions, the B.C. Federation of Labour and the B.C. and Yukon Building and Construction Trades Council are working together, as are other significant non-affiliates of the Fed such as the Hospital Employees Union. Even the politically aloof Teamsters were represented at protest marches. The legislation has also revitalized a badly demoralized New Democratic Party, with outgoing leader Dave Barrett showing that his third consecutive electorial defeat has not stemmed his ability to verbally destroy the Socreds inside and outside the House. Even the most mild-mannered of NDP MLAs have SOCRED GOVERNMENT - sarah albany photo drawing all kinds of comparisons denounced the pending bills as reminescent of Hitler's Germany, Pinochet's Chile and Jaruzelski's Poland. And Barrett warned that the Socreds' moves could bring people to take violent direct action against the government. "When you put human beings in a corner, when you force them to have no recourse to law that they've been used to in our democratic society, when you put people up agains the wall...it is inviting and asking for that kind of violence and they know it," Barrett warned. Although no violence has occurred in the province, many people have begun taking their own forms of personal protest against the government. One unemployed man rented a full Nazi uniform and paraded in front of the constituency office of Human Resources Minister Grace McCarthy with a sign reading "This is the B.C. Spirit." Vancouver's renowned graffiti artists are making heavy investments in spray paint and numerous groups and individuals are running the poster presses overtime, cranking out anti-government literature. Even small scale free enterprise has been given a boost, with leftists producing a wide variety of buttons, bumper stickers and T-shirts calling for a general strike and caricaturing Bennett in Hitler garb. What effect the enormous protest activity will have on the Bennett government remains unclear. Although Bennett is putting up a solid front, playing tennis in his Kelowna stronghold while protestors mass, it is certain that the Socreds underestimated both the size and the ferocity of protests against their legislation. So far, cabinet ministers have attempted to blame the protests on self- interested unionists and B.C.'s left wing but such lame excuses hardly counter the images nightly on television of wheelchair protestors, mentally handicapped people losing their work in shelters, tearful workers leaving their jobs forever, national church leaders attacking the government and seniors thrown out of their recreation centres. Increasingly, people talk about the amazing depth of the coalition forming and predict it will only end with the defeat of Social Credit. The sickly provincial Liberal party sees new life ahead as "10 second Socreds," those who become Socreds for the 10 seconds necessary to vote, become disgusted and look for a non-NDP alternative, potentially creating a split right wing vote in the next election. The other important development is the realization that it will take serious non- electoral politics to stop the Socred legislative juggernaut. There is no illusion about waiting four years or giving up because no electoral avenues are open. The struggle to come will focus on labour action — strikes, work to rule, occupations, secondary picketing and possibly general strikes — and on direct action, including civil disobedience and various forms of public protest. Inherent in the battle is the inevitable politicalization of large numbers of people previously uninterested and uninvolved in B.C. politics. Already veteran protesters are aware of the huge numbers of neophyte demonstrators attending rallies and joining in action groups in their workplace and community. The potential for mass action against the only viable free enterprise party in the province, as well as the likelihood of disruptive labour relations across B.C., clearly motivated the Employers' Council to become involved. Council president Bill Hamilton gave the Socreds a carefully worded but un- mistakeably clear warning even before the two huge rallies, when he addressed an employers' dinner at which Bennett was a guest. See page 6: CONCERN Page 4 THE UBYSSEY Friday, September 16, 1983 From page 1 they need the place badly enough. Nearly everyone does down here. It's hard to escape the desperate, derelict, sometimes deadly elements of skid road society. Morning and night, intoxicated men and women stumble and sprawl on the streets, overserved by area bars, then thrown out to risk robbery or beatings — especially on welfare payday. Patrons are robbed right inside some bars. A lot of people are armed, with knives mostly, and argument often breaks out when someone cuts ahead in the food line. A couple of years ago, in from the prairies and down on luck at 21, I found a room in the dingy Fraser Hotel after someone noticed that the old man who used Skid row desperate to look out his second floor window above Gastown's Carrall Street all day wasn't looking anymore. By then the body had smelled up the place quite a bit and left a good-sized reddish brown stain at the head end of the bed. In the meantime another room came vacant and I took it, relieved of a nightmare or two. The place always stank. The drafty windows faced more drafty windows facing an alley where a police paddy wagon always parked and pestered pedestrians. The walls were thin, the plumbing unreliable and a red streak ran up the staircase along the velvet-textured bordello-style wallpaper. Night and day a huge orange W, a garish neon sun, hovers in Vancouver's skid road sky, a thousand festive lights shimmying on and off up and down the standard that hoists it above the Woodward's store. It spins and spins stupidly outside the windows of a thousand one room hell holes, while late into the night the bars and the nightclubs churn a clash of pub schlock and jazz into the streets and the lonely rooms above. There are no visitors after 11 p.m. IT'S A KIND of hopeless marathon 19 year old George Smith has run, all the way from home on the east side of Newfoundland — The Rock — to rock bottom on the seamy end of Granville Street. There he rooms, with the friend he hitched here with six weeks ago, in the Yale Hotel down near where you can buy dope from a stranger if you don't look too straight and where women work the sidewalk by the parking lots, the dirty bookstores and the strip joints. Three hundred and twenty bucks for two beds and a shower and a T.V. ("and even that doesn't work") and a chance to get mugged when he goes out at night. Forty five hundred miles and no work. But still George puts on his boots when he gets out of bed each day, to be ready for the work he hopes to find. See page 13: PEOPLE - r «^ a^"" „ecA^°'.onsh ore. ,V%e <*• ,^e-^ a,es*\;d^" ^so^wtf* e*L^\,\c^°' ^eatv. ^lart^e sva*1 ao° ,dai Ltd sVs1 ^.e1 r>aW< a' deft1 c0^s^>te6 ,tes- ***-**>%>** ^r^r***- .Sv6' ^^^/^asv- ids- o^* ^^ S^V.o *K& ,T^S fS- .T^J^""1 K*} sv*<" ,tV" ,«.«* V**1 .»•»•* Vancouver North Shore 2912 West Broadway 736-3461 1615 Lonsdale 986-3471 Burnaby/Coq. - 9600 Cameron Street (Lougheed Plaza) 421-4434 Friday, September 16,1983 THE UBYSSEY Page 5 UBC shortfall pegged at $4 million By SARAH COX The provincal freeze in university funding which now leaves UBC with a shortfall of about $4 million is a "panic response" to the province's economic problems, says administration president George Pedersen. Taking funds away from educations will hurt the province in the long run because' fewer people will have access to a university education, said Pedersen. "From my perspective, education is not receiving the sort of priority it should from the provincial government, he said. Universities minister Patrick McGeer said the freeze in funding did not indicate a lack of concern for education. "It's always been a very high priority and will continue to be," he said. Once people understand that the government has to deal with a $1.6 billion deficit, they will support the freeze in university funding, said McGeer. "All people have to see is the overall good of the province as the first responsibility," he said. B.C. is the only province to impose a freeze in university funding despite an eight per cent increase in federal funding for post-secondary education this year. Pedersen said the government has indicated it will freeze university funding for the next three to five years. It is even considering a five per cent decrease in funding for next year, he added. "The magnitude of that is so great it hasn't even started to sink in." In a Sept. 9 memo to all department heads, the administration announced a one-month freeze on all new faculty appointments. The new freeze will affect teaching assistants, non-academic staff and student service appointments as well as potential replacements for departing professors. Retiring professors have not bee replaced since last February, when UBC faced a $700,000 budget shortfall. The freeze could easily be extended beyond October, said Pedersen. "It can and it may well have to," he said. "We sort of have to limp through the next seven months." UBC departments are already being crippled by the cuts. Chemical engineering head R.G. Campanella said the hiring freeze is a serious problem for his department. The recent death of one professor and the impending retirement of another leave the department short-staffed, he said. "The faculty loads are larger and professors have less time to talk to students." Political science head Kal Holsti said the department would normally have asked for at least two more teaching assistants this year to cope with an enrolment increase of 17 per cent. "Now we're in the position of having to cut our discussion groups," he said. The retirement of two international scholars from the department later this year will have "disasterous effects" if the freeze has not been lifted, said Holsti. Limiting enrolment in faculties such as arts, science and education are measures UBC will also have to take, said Pedersen. "We will undoubtedly have a reduction in the overall size (of the university)," he said. "We cannot continue to provide a quality service with a shrinking budget." The possibility of UBC running a deficit, which would require the permission of McGeer and finance minister Hugh Curtis, is not a solution Pedersen favors. "Running a deficit would only make the situation worse," he said. Work programs slashed to bits BY CHRIS WONG & CHARLIE FIDELMAN Student employment received yet another setback as the provincial contribution for the work study programs at several B.C. institutions was cut back severely this year. According to a survey of major B.C. institutions, colleges are hardest hit. Rick Inrig, BCIT work study coordinator, said BCIT was cut $40,950 from last year's total of $110,700. The new allocation levels eliminate about twenty positions, he said. "It's ridiculous," Inrig said. Julie Steele, Douglas College awards officer, said her program was reduced to $6,750 this year from $18,000 last year. "It's just been decimated." Steele said the ministry's rationale was across the board cuts were taking place, equalling two- thirds of the work study budgets. But Kwantlen awards officer Jim Anderson said the funding for his college's program went up $2,000 from last year's amount of $16,000. Rick McCandless, education ministry director of institutional support services, said some institutions are receiving less funding this year as a measure to equalize the overall funding levels between colleges and universities. He said equity will be put back into the system over a two year period. "There was a disproportionate amount of money sitting in the colleges versus the universities." McCandless added the institutions who had surpluses remaining from last year's work study budget were cut back this year. All three university's work study budgets have increased this year, he said. But Lisa Hebert, UBC Alma Mater Society external affairs coordinator, said UBC's allocation is cut $21,000 from last year's total of $181,000. UBC awards officer Byron Hender said it is not actually cut because $21,000 was added to the allocation last year from surplus funds. Sheila Summers said 1,200 applications have been sent to eligible students. Only 300 have been returned, she added. "We will continue to hand out applications till the budgeted positions are filled." - n.J.d. photo DANCING FAERIES CELEBRATE season of fall harvest and time of plenty coming before thin shivery winter. Faeries romp through enchanted forest (use your imagination — what are you at university for anyway?) and spin magic spells and webs of recycled nuclear waste to fuddle new students. Magic dust will soon settle and grim reality shortly wipe the Stardust out of dewey eyes. Student referendum overlooked By CHRIS WONG The capital projects acquisition committee is acting "undemo- cratically" by ignoring the priorities students voted for last November's $20 fee referendum, a committee member charged Wednesday. CPAC recommended to council at its Sept. 6 meeting that the land under the Whistler ski cabin be purchased immediately, a project students gave seventh priority to on a list of eight. Sheila Howick, student council rehabilitation medicine representative and a CPAC member, said council should be following the priorities students set last year. But Dave Frank, another committee member, said the priorities do not have to be strictly adhered to. "They weren't written in stone — that was made very clear at the time of the referendum." Just before the November referendum, Frank, the mastermind of the $20 student fee hike, said it would be "politically unwise" for .council to ignore the priorities. When reminded of his statement, he said "maybe it's politically unwise, but that's the recommendation that came up." The land must be purchased now or it will be lost, said Frank. Whistler is the cheapest project because only two per cent of CPAC UBC enrolment unbalanced The overall UBC enrolment increase of 6 per cent may be deceiving because some departments such as computer science and political science have seen incredible increases. Enrolment in political science and international relations courses has increased 17 per cent over last year but only two additional sections are offered. AMS pre* moonlighted One member of the Alma Mater Society had two jobs this summer, both funded by students' money. Mitch Hetman, while working 40 hours a week as AMS president, also worked on several construction jobs in SUB, including the games room expansion and the copy centre improvements. "You have to hire the president," said AMS vice-president Renee Comessotti, who was also hired this summer. "There's no question about it." Hetman, who was paid about $8 and hour for the work, said he saw no conflict between his position working on AMS initiated projects. "I worked evenings and weekends," said Hetman. One of Het- man's co-workers, who wished to remain unidentified, said "Mitch spent half of the summer in the Pit." Hetman said he was "meeting with people" when he was not in his office, where he had a free video game installed during the summer. In computer science, one-third of all applicants were rejected. At least one-third and possibly one-half of fourth year students were turned away, said computer science head P. Gilmore. "If we had accepted everybody who was eligible we would have been swamped," Gilmore said, "if anybody quit we'd be absolutely sunk." Students applying from other departments were denied admission. "A lot of students were upset," said Gilmore. In the next few months, UBC will be examining ways to limit enrolment, particularly in the arts, sciences, and education facilities. English department head Ian Ross said restricting enrolment was one possible solution to UBC's shortfall of $4 million. "We can't cope with this year after year," he said, "We'll have to put some controls on entry." Other faculties with restricted enrolment noted increases in applicants. Applied sciences applications have increased but fewer students are being admitted. The medicine faculty did not suffer a significant increase in applica- tions but there were 20 more B.C. applicants this year, an increase of five per cent, said medicine associate dean Alexander Boggie. Medicine currently accepts 130 applicants a year, but has accredited 30 additional students yet to be accepted this year. But with no funding increases, the future of the 30 applicants is uncertain. Enrolment at other Lower Mainland institutions has also increased. At SFU, course enrolment is up about 4 per cent and the total number of course sections has decreased, said Analytical Studies professor Walter Wattemanikik. "Had there been no constraints on the size of classes, I think the (enrolment increase) percentage would have been much higher," he said. Enrolment increased 26 per cent in computer science and 11 per cent in sciences at SFU. At Douglas College, enrolment has increased between 17 and 19 per cent. At Capilano College, the increase is at least 4 per cent. funds are needed to finance the purchase, he added. "It's such a small chunk of what's going on. It's quite an insignificant amount, really." Howick said she is also against the Whistler land purchase because few students will benefit from the project. "Obviously students didn't want to put their money into the land because the cabin's not ever used by a large number of students," she said. The Whistler Cabin management committee will pay back the money to CPAC funds over a ten year period, said Howick. But a previous loan from council funds of about $85,000 still has not been paid back, she added. "If they don't pay it back this time there's no precedent for them to pay it back." Ski club membership fees will be raised and the cabin will be rented out in the summer to generate money, said Howick. Howick is responsible for the daycare project, which was second on the priority list. Information on daycare operations will be obtained from a survey sent to other universities, she said. A presidential advisory committee on daycare may also be set up, she added. Frank said an expansion of on- campus housing, student's first priority is underlay. A new Gage low-rise will go before the board of governors in October for approval and construction could begin by February, he said. Proposals for athletic facilties and SUB renovations will be presented to students for their input, he said. CPAC was set up in council soon after students voted overwhelmingly in favour of increasing Alma Mater Society fees by $20 last November. The committee is responsible for overseeing allocation of funds and ensuring plans are going ahead for each project. Page 6 THE UBYSSEY Friday, September 16, 1983 Concern everyone's From page 3 "Every one of us in this room must be aware of the concern initiated by the recent legislative measures which accompany the budget. The very extent of those concerns must affect us all," he said. "Labour-management relations are not conducted in neat little black boxes which are unrelated to one another." Both employers and their private sector unionized workers are anxiously awaiting promised "reform" of the provincial labour code, which the Socreds are expected to deliver soon. During the May election campaign Bennett stated that the provisions regarding the decertification of unions would be made more "democratic" and other Socred candidates claimed that a decertification vote could be held if as few as 20 per cent of the workers in a bargaining unit petitioned for it. Other changes discussed included provisions that would force a vote of employees on employers' "last" contract offer before allowing any form of job action. Many labour observers believe that even more radical surgery will be performed, including the introduction of "right to work" legislation banning closed union shops. The fear of pending legislation is in no small measure prompting private sector unions and workers to fight hard on behalf of public sector workers now, in order to frighten the Socreds away from their most radical proposals. Although Bennett has attempted to claim he is only putting public sector employees into a position similar to their private sector counterparts, where they are subject to layoff due to economic difficulties, people are clearly seeing that the arbitrary and unfair provi sions of the legislation go far beyond any economic restraint plan. The battle for B.C. is being seen more and more as a major test for the introduction of new right Reaganism into Canada. The Bennett government, a gang of legislative bumblers that once eliminated the business charter of a major insurance firm by mistake, has come under the influence of the extreme right wing Fraser Institute, a think tank headed by economist Michael Walker. An avid follower of Reagan and Milton Friedman, Walker's heavy hand is evident throughout the legislative program, which he was involved in as an official advisor. The message contained in the budget and bills is unmistakeably clear: big business is to have a free hand to do as it pleases in British Columbia and those who dissent will no longer have any avenues of complaint. In many ways it's an attempt to return the province to the good old days of Kelowna in the 1950s, when white business men ruled the roost and everyone else — tenants, women, workers, students, minorities, etc. — kept in their place. Those fighting the Socred coup are well aware of the importance of the battle as an indicator for Canada and of the consequences of losing. Pierre Samson, president of the Public Service Alliance of Canada, summed up the feelings — and the determination — of many as he addressed the Victoria crowd: "This fight is just beginning. It's going to get a lot more serious, its going to get a lot more vicious...it's going to be rough." (This article was written for Canadian Dimension and The Ubyssey. Bill Tieleman is a UBC political science student.) BACK TO SCHOOL SALE at NEW METRO RUNNERS & SPORTS INC. BROADWAY PLAZA, #18-601 W. BROADWAY, VANCOUVER (Next to London Drugs) PHONE: 8732723 Friday, Saturday & Sunday Sept. 16, 17,18-10:30-6 p.m. ALL Merchandise (Nike, Nisus, Adidas, Patrick, Osaga, Puma, Wilson, Converse, New Balance, Tiger, etc) from 15% and up OFF. STAN L SMrTH $35.99 ROD LAVER $37.99 NB8B0£rW6B0 $62.99 566 &W 556 $58.99 460 &W 490 $53.99 42D&W42D $47.99 BROOKS M/L CHARIOT $7Z9B M/L YANKEE $3B.9B X-CAUBRE GT $74^9 LO ATTACK $49.99 CONVERSE PRO STAR $73^9 WORLD CUP WINNER $59.99 SUPER CUP $6459 All designer Shirts, e.g. POLO by Ralph Lauren $27.99 20% OFF Cahrin Klein $19.99 ALL SOCCER BALLS AT LEAST 25% OFF #4 GENUINE LEATHER $15.00 ALL CONVERSE BROOKS RUNNERS 15% ALL PATRICK, ADIDAS, NIKE SOCCER SHOES AT LEAST 15% OFF INCREDIBLE SAVINGS AEROBIC FITNESS CLASSES U. B. C. 's Oldest and Most Popular Fitness Workout! S.U.B. Ballroom, - Mon.-Thurs. 3:45 and 4:45 Starting September 19 $1.25/Class or Less 596-TRIM "the fitness professionals" YUKON JACK ATTACK! The Snake Bite. Release 2 fluid ounces of Yukon Jack, a dash of juice from an unsuspecting lime, tumble them | over ice and you'll have WE skinned the Snake Bite. Inspired in the wild, midst ; the damnably cold, this, the black sheep of Canadian liquors, is Yukon Jack. Yikon m Jack ,c Black Sheep of Canadian Liquors. Concocted with fine Canadian Whisky. For more Yukon Jack recipes write: MORE YUKON JACK RECIPES, Box 2710, Postal Station "U," Toronto, Ontario M8Z 5P1. FOR THEATRE INFORMATION CALL 687-1515 AT 2:15. 4:40. 7:16.9:40 vogue 918 GRANVILLE 685-5434 RETURN OF THE J E DI 70IVIIV1 SIX TRACK.fotxm srtnToJ (MATURE^ Warning: Some violence. B.C. Dir. NIGHTMARES ( 14 YEARS j AT 2:15. 4:00, 6:00. 8:00. 10:00 odeon 881 GRANVILLE 682-7468 ™ fftHv Warning: Not suitable for those under 14. Occasional gory violence. B.C. Dir. rPUSSY AT 2:00. 3:56. 8:00. 10:00 (mature) coronet 851 GRANVILLE Warning: Frequent brutal violence, some nudity, suggestive scenes. No j 685-6828 one under 18 w/o responsible adult.] I B.C. Dir.,, DOCTOR' ,ZHi\AGO 701VHVI SlbREO, AT 2:16. 4:36. 7:15. 9:46 Warning: Some violence, occasional 151 GRANVILLE suggestive language. B.C. Dir. .685-6828 AT 8:00 and Sunday 2:00 "( 14 YEARS y i.m.ieo adm'la'x.e < Not suitable for those under 14. Some violence and very coarse language. B.C. Dir. CAMBIE AT 18th 876-2747 varsity 4375 WEST 10th 224 3730. MERRY CHRISTMAS, MR. LAWRENCE AT 7:30. 9:46 I /*n*ff^KB^a» Warning: Some nudity and sex. B.C. Dir. broadway 707 w. broadwax A FILM BY JOHN SAYLESj 874-1927 AT 7:15. 9:15 Sophies Choice at 7:oo.»:» Meryl Streep broadway fCEED 707 w BROADWAY Warning: Some very coarse language and suggestive I scenes. B.C. Dir. | ~~~~"* 874 lv27 GANDHI iV~,EJMJLE BEST PICTURE dunbar (MATURE) DUNBAR AT 30th AT 8:00 224-7252 day the 16th at 8:00 A >" D • T II iC~iiirrsTrirs TCMBERENGER MICHAEL FftRE • 81 GRANVILLE Warning: Occasional coarse 682-7468 language. B.C. Dir. Friday, September 16,1983 THE U BYSS EY Page 7 Nazi Ml retires year early By MURIEL DRAAISMA For 20 years, convicted war criminal Jacob Luitjens taught botany at UBC. On Sept. 1, the 64 year old professor quietly retired. Luitjens was convicted in absentia by the Dutch government in 1948 for collaborating with the Nazi's during the German occupation of the Netherlands in the Second World War. He allegedly killed a German army deserter and a member of the Dutch resistance movement. UBC administration president George Pedersen claims the administration did not pressure the botany professor to retire early. Luitjens elected to do so himself and enquired in the spring about receiving his pension benefits, Pedersen said. Botany department head Robert Scagel refused to answer any questions about Luitjens' decision to retire one year early. "I have no comment to make at all. Everything that needs to be said has been said," he said. But Scagel's administrative assistant Winston Hunter was less tight-lipped about his former colleague. "I think Luitjens has been thinking about retiring for a while," he said. "Sure, (his past) is shocking, but the Jacob Luitjens we know is the man who worked in the department for 20 years," Hunter added. In 1981 the Dutch government requested Luitjens' extradition from Canada to serve a 20 year sentence on charges of using a firearm and assisting German occupation forces in rounding up Dutch resistance fighters. But the Canadian government refused the request because his offence is not covered under the extradition treaty between the Netherlands and Canada signed in 1899. Rabbi Abraham Cooper, associate dean of the Simon Wiesenthal Centre in Los Angeles, said in a telephone interview Thursday that UBC has evaded its moral and ethical responsibilities by not encouraging Luitjens to face up to his "crimes against humanity." The administration has "stonewalled" any attempts to remove Luitjens from UBC, he said. In July, the Centre sent UBC a telegram urging Luitjens' dismissal but the administr- tion refused, citing "serious legal obstacles." One obstacle was the binding agreement between the university and the faculty association on conditions of appointment, Pedersen wrote in his reply to the telegram. And the other was B.C.'s human rights code, which says a reasonable cause must exist for dismissal. It states conviction of a criminal charge is not a reasonable cause unless the charge relates directly to the person's employment. Pedersen also suggested that in the eyes of the Canadian courts the Dutch government's conviction of Luitjens is absentia might not constitute a reasonable cause, considering it took place 35 years ago and that Luitjens was a "satisfactory employee" of UBC for 20 years. But Pedersen admitted at the time he was "concerned" a convicted war criminal was teaching at the university. "The university did a good job of standing up for Luitjens' legal rights, but it did a dismal job of taking into account the rights of his victims," said Cooper. "It's a sad commentary that no attempt was made by UBC to deal with the moral and ethical issues surrounding Luitjens," he added. PANGALACTIC TIME WARP exposes startling evidence that former Ubyssey staffer Erica Leiren, centre, is immortal being found everywhere in fabric of space-time. Entropy duct from 1952 revealed holograph of dance band called The Debutantes projected outside SUB Thursday, leading to speculation that radiation leakage from TRIUMF accelerator will cause past to return and have disastrous effect on women's fashions. Loan appeals expected to rise A drastic increase is expected in the number of students making loan appeals this year because the provincial government has completely transformed the student aid program, said Lisa Hebert, Alma Mater Society External Affairs Coordinator of UBC. To cope with the increase, Victoria's Student Services Branch has decided to set up a new appeals committee. However, students who currently wish to appeal their loans should first approach their local financial awards office, said Hebert. "If the local office turns the appeal down, then appeal to the provincial committee. There's a very good chance of getting the appeal through if you appeal provincially, because there are three students as well as three awards officers who sit on the provincial committee." About one thousand loan applications are still waiting to be processed, according to UBC Financial Aid Officer Byron Hender. He attributes the delay to the increase in the number of applications this year, and to the large number of forms that have been sent back because they weren't filled out correctly. Hender estimated that about 30 per cent of the applications his office received were filled out wrong. "We need to hire more people (to clean up the backlog)," said Hender, "but there's a freeze on hiring, so that doesn't help. However, the majority of students have been very understanding." At Simon Fraser University, the loan application backlog is slowly being taken care of, said David Crawford, Assistant Financial Aid Director. "Normally we're three weeks behind, but we're now working on applications from July 20 or so. We're about a month behind." Crawford said reasons for the delay include an upsurge in applications received during the early part of the summer. In July, the number of applications increased by 60 per cent over July of 1983. In August, the increase leveled to about 30 per cent. Crawford said the provincial government's delay in announcing loan policies also added to the delay in processing the forms. "We're trying to cope with the situation, and we do have an emergency fund which we're using quite heavily." Kwantlen College is trying to cope with about a 54 per cent increase in applications over last year, according to Student Council President Tami Roberts. The college's backlog extends to the beginning of July. Roberts is waiting for word on her own application. A single parent, Roberts was only able to find part-time work this summer and the money is sorely needed. UBC hospital audited UBC Hospital's president denied Wednesday that the provincial government's audit of his hospital is due to "mismanagement." "This partial audit was a health ministry decision we agreed to," Robert McDermit said. "I don't think there is a question of mismanagement.'' McDermit said the provincial government wants to determine if the hospital's two closed wards should be re-opened. He added that the audit "is really a review of the management systems and resource requirements of the hospital." The continued closure of two acute care wards denied health sciences students the experience required to complete their courses, McDermit said. McDermit also said he believes the auditing firm of Extended Care Canada Ltd. will recommend an increase in the hospital's funding. Similar audits at the Royal Columbian and Royal Jubilee hospitals resulted in increased funding for those institutions, he added. Hospital administrators have requested a 24 per cent increase for the hospital McDermit said. He refused to say what the budget is. Extra funding is needed because the hospital has encountered a 300 per cent increase in demand for emergency care, McDermh said. Julius bocomos citizen Kane UBC finally dropped the other shoe in May and fired Julius Kane. The tenured animal resource ecology and zoology professor is the first to be dismissed in UBC's 73-year history. His firing May 12 was attributed to his making "defamatory" statement about the university, according to the board of governors. The board unanimously agreed with then administration president Doug Kenny that Kane had committed gross misconduct. The firing followed a.second attempt by Kenny to dislodge Kane from his tenured position. The first came in 1980 after Kane was convicted of diverting National Research Council research funds for his own purposes. Kane has used part of a $9,000 research grant to hire student assistants in the summer of 1976, assigning them to secretarial tasks which had nothing to do with the research. Among their jobs was editing and typing material for a novel Kane was writing. After Kane was fined $5,000 for two counts of theft, Kenny initiated proceedings to have him dismissed but a faculty committee ruled that penalty to be too severe and recommended an 18-month suspension without pay. The suspension came in March 1982. By that time Kane had been drawing his $75,000 a year for three years while conducting no classes and submitting no papers. In September 1982 Kenny tried to fire Kane, again, this time basing the dismissal proceedings on a press release Kane distributed in 1981 while the faculty committee was reviewing his case. The release attacked the university, and eventually the board of governors decided it contained statements "defamatory and beyond the limits of academic freedom." The firing came almost seven years after initial allegations led to seven separate charges against Kane of fraud and theft. One charge was dismissed and he was found not guilty on four others. College strike ends By Canadian University Press — An 11 day strike by support staff at Kwantlen college that cancelled the first four days of classes and delayed registration ended Sept. 8. Administration president Tony Wilkinson agreed to sign a letter stating the college would not use the B.C. government's controversial Public Sector Restraint Act — Bill 3 — to break the collective agreement. The new contract, ratified by the college's 90 support staff, who are members of the B.C. Government Employees Union, also gives workers a five percent wage increase effective October 1982, and an additional three per cent this year. "We were willing to compromise on the wages," said union negotiator Mary Knotts. "We were not willing to compromise on the letter." The strike at Kwantlen was the first union challenge to Bill 3 which the Social Credit government introduced with its fiscal restraint budget July 7. The Bill has yet to be passed through the legislature but if enacted, would allow any government employer to fire staff for fiscal or managerial reasons. Wilkinson said the agreement is consistent with the mandate set by the college board before negotiations started. But even though classes are under way at the college's three campuses, the situation is not back to normal. Kwantlen's 4,100 students face i overcrowded classrooms and textbook shortages. The administration charge the college deliberately overfilled classes by using the strike as a cover to "increase productivity." Jeff Dean, Kwantlen faculty association vice president said some classes are booked by as much as 30 per cent over the official limit. The college only ordered materials and text books for the maximum allowed, he said. The college administration said overcrowding from college attempts to enroll students who were registered unofficially off campus by union and faculty during the strike. "The onus is on the administration to clean up the mess," said student association president Tami Roberts. She warned the association will consider ways to pressure administrators to alleviate the problems. Throughout the strike, most of the college's 200 faculty respected union picket lines. Only about 20 professors, mostly from the criminology department, and college administrators held classes. Faculty resumed talks on their contract with the college Sept. 8. The faculty also wants guarantees the college will respect their agreement. The faculty had been without a contract since October, 1982. Page 8 THE UBYSSEY Friday, September 16,1983 Stylized murder and brutal cold sex By PETER BERLIN At first glance 'The Draughtsman's Contract' seems to be a very straighforward and traditional film. But the message of Peter Greenaway's film is that appearances can be deceptive. At The Ridge The Draughtsman's Contract Directed by Peter Greenway Sept. 23 - Oct. 6 The film is set in late seventeenth century England. It tells the tale of a draughtsman, played by Anthony Higgins, who makes a living producing drawings of country houses for the gentry. While at a party he is asked by a Mrs. Herbert (Janet Suzman) to make a dozen drawings of her house for her husband. At first he refuses, but Mrs. Herbert and her daughter, Mrs. Talmann (Anne Louise Lambert) persist and in the end he gives in after extracting a very high price. The contract stipulates that as part of his fee he will be able to have the use of Mrs. Herbert's body on each of the twelve days on which he works. The rest of the film is set in the lush green surroundings of the Neville's large house. The draughtsman is seen drawing the house and indulging in brutally cold sex with Mrs. Herbert and later, her daughter. Gradually the audience realizes two things. First the drawings begin to reveal behind the scenes oc- curances. Secondly, although Mrs. Herbert appears to be exploited in the contract, she is in some way the manipulator. Articles of clothing begin to appear in the garden and the field of the drawings, the origin of which the draughtsman cannot explain. It becomes increasingly clear that they SIZVIB Mas. &U\kesr47ri.Am/i4E Akoat licOBkiirOge Ux/, Ridmcnd. INTERNSHIPS PROVIDE SENIOR STUDENTS IN THE FACULTY OF ARTS WITH WORK EXPERIENCE BEFORE GRADUATION IF INTERESTED IN NON-PAID, STUDY RELATED WORK-PLACEMENTS IN VANCOUVER SEPTEMBER - APRIL COME TO THE OFFICE OF INTERNSHIP PROGRAMS ROOM 213, BROCK HALL TELEPHONE 3022 are clues to a murder and that he has become a witness. The film suggests it is an error to imagine we have seen all there is to see. The viewers, both the audience and the draughtsman, never see the key event in the film — the murder. We can only speculate. Likewise, we never see what goes on between the ears of protaganists, par ser d«nnar • • ticularly Mrs. Herbert and her daughter, who each enter into a sexual contract with apparently clear motives, only to reveal several levels of thinking later. Greenway, the director, uses his camera to draw our attention to the disparity between what we see and what actually is. The camera never moves during a shot. It doesn't pan, or zoom — we see only what is framed, similar to a slowly moving painting. This impression is enhanced by the opening sequence at the party in which we see a series of conversations, the heads illuminated only by the yellow glow of candles against a deep brown background, each shot a self- conscious evocation of Rembrandt paintings. The rest of the movie luxuriates in the fertile English countryside — not only visually but verbally as well. The characters constantly discuss the techniques of gardening which allow trees to be trained into certain shapes and certain natural types of countryside to be created by skillfull landscape gardening. The interior shots are always filled with the fussy detail so favoured by artists of that era. The dialogue too is very reminiscent of the time's theatre. The era was, so it is said, the golden age of the art of converstation and the script has the sort of polished air of a Congeve play. It is full of ferocious cut and thrust and sexual and classical allusions. The film is slow, a little stately and deliberately static. All the same it is a rich delight. The camera work is always as satisfying as the script. The acting is highly stylised, as is appropriate, and of the highest order. For those with a little patience this is a fine film. Friday, September 16,1983 THE UBYSSEY Page 9 Block long lines visit inn kstore Students are standing in record line-ups at the new UBC bookstore and rushing to scan bulletin boards as they scramble to get hold of required texts. Bookstore director John Hedgecock dealt with the crowds by allowing between fifty and a hundred students to enter at a time. He said people only waited for ten to fifteen minutes. Line-ups will always occur as long as the university enrolls all 25,000 students simultaneously," said Hedgecock. But answers from a random Ubyssey survey reveal that students have had to wait up to one and a half hours inside and one hour outside the boodstore. One bookstore clerk estimated students have had to wait an average of half an hour outside and 45 minutes inside. Hedgecock said business is much smoother this year because shopping is more centralized and books can be found more easily. He said crowds will get thinner from now on and for the time beiog advises people to shop between five and six p.m. The survey indicated that most people like the new store and are able to find things more quickly. The bookstore served a record number of 5,500 customers during the twelve hours it was open on Tuesday. Judging from sales to date, Hedgecock expects last year's total PREPARATIONS FOR NEW school year at UBC always incomplete without mandatory acid rain gear. Students new to Vancouver area learn quickly that unprotected heads easily subject to deterioration, especially - nail lucanta photo in university atmosphere. Possible victims explode after waiting in line to load up on supplies for monsoon season ahead at shiny new nicknack store. Collective surviving despite funding cuts Vancouver's self-help collective for women is still in operation despite the government's withdrawal of funds. The seven staff members at the Vancouver Women's Health Collective have received their last pay cheques but continue to volunteer their services at the West Broadway clinic, a health collective spokes person said. The government cancelled funding in its July 7 budget because health ministry officials claim the service offered at the clinic is available through family physicians. Last year the collective received $119,000 to provide counselling, self-help workshops, fitting of cervical caps and diaphragms, and pregnancy tests. Although these services are available from doctors, the women's health collective say they provide faster and more personalized help. The collective is determined to continue the clinic, said collective member Lorna Zabeck. "The important work that we do and have done for years will not appear and disappear with government funding," she said. The collective is investigating alternative forms of funding and operation, said Zabeck. Health ministry information officer Terry Moran said the government's priority is to give direct treatment through conventional health delivery systems instead of self-help counselling. Many physicians refer women to the collective because of specialized treatment available, the collective said. The collective also has a self-help resource library on issues related to women's physical and emotional health. Desperate need homes Chilean fasts for rights HALIFAX (CUP) — Human rights violations in Chile were the target of an eight-day hunger strike mid-August, led by a Chilean exile who attends Dalhousie University. Elias Letelier-Ruz and two compatriots, Serge Gomez and Ulises Nitor, started the strike just days before peaceful demonstrations in Chile led to reprisals by the military regime. The strikers, joined by Mount Saint Vincent student, Mike Emerick, called on the Chilean government to cut off all aid to Chile, denounce human rights violations there and demand the reinstatement of democracy through free elections. The strike, located in St. Patrick's Roman Catholic Church, created controversy within the congregation. Some said the Church should not be involved in affairs of state while others, including the Archbishop of Halifax, stood behind the symbolic action. Ruz ended the strike on August 25, fatigued but pleased with the amount of media attention that his concerns received. Female students are having no difficulty finding on-campus housing. Totem Park and Vanier have openings for women and the waiting list for Gage Tower has decreased to 158 from the 600 reported Tuesday. However, the news is not as good for male students. While the male waiting list for Totem and Vanier has significantly decreased 495 men were still waiting for accomodation as of Wednesday, and there are still 489 men waiting for rooms at Gage Towers. "There's still quite a few men who are desparate for housing," said student housing director Mary Flores. According to Flores, the off- campus housing situation is better than last year. There is a 3 per cent vacancy rate and a small increasejn the average rents. The average bachelor suite costs $356 this year, compared with $349 last year. Married students with children have the most problems .finding off- campus housing, Flores said. number of 35,000 books sold to increase this year. The new bookstore is a "bigger, more comprehensive store covering, a much wider range of buyers," said Hedgecock. It attracts off- campus clients seeking non- textbooks and academic books, including Health Sciences reference material which is difficult to obtain. B.C. prison program reinstated VICTORIA (CUP) — Post- secondary education courses will continue to be offered at four B.C.— prisons, at least until December, a correctional services official confirmed recently. Solicitor-General Robert Kaplan reinstated the programs, cut in January as a result of government restraint, because "of the numbers involved," CSC education chief Doug Griffin said. Of 254 prisoners enrolled in B.C., Quebec, Manitoba, and Ontario programs, 157 took University of Victoria courses. A report this fall by a CSC committee to the solicitor-general will determine the program's fate, Griffin said. But if the 10-year-old program is continued, inmates may have to pay fees which would "kill any education system," UVic program director, Douglas Ayers said. A management consultant's report ordered by the CSC, showed 70 per cent of inmates are willing to pay fees, Ayers said. Ayers charged however, the consultant's survey did not ask how much inmates would be willing to pay or if they would have entered the program if user fees were required. "If a fee structure had been in place when I started, I probably wouldn't have taken courses," said Alan Sauve, a former William Head prison student. "If an inmate were put in solitary confinement for disciplinary reasons, he may fail due to a no- show, but still have to pay for the course, and be indebted without benefit," Sauve said. Ayers estimated the program costs B.C. taxpayers $450,000 annually. The program has two purposes said Ayers — to rehabilitate and to upgrade skills. About 55 per cent of those released from prison eventually return but the rate is only 14 per cent for those who take university courses. This fall 156 have enrolled across B.C. compared to 53 last year. Feet against cruising SOMEWHERE IN ONTARIO (CUP) — Patrick Chamberlain is a peace crusader who puts his feet where his mouth is. The 27-year-old philosophy student from the University of Victoria has spent the last four months walking to Ottawa to protest the testing of the cruise missile. He left Victoria in early May and has walked about 40 kilometres a day. He has met with peace groups along the way, and plans to take their concerns to the Canadian government and the Soviet Embassy when he reaches Ottawa around September 20. "There's a long tradition in liberal democracies of people walking to their capital cities to talk to leaders about what they believe," says Chamberlain. Although complaining of a sore hip and hellish black flies, Chamberlain is committed to finishing his almost cross country walk for peace. "Disarmament groups I met told me my action is a boost to their morale. If a personal statement acts to increase the committment of others, then it is worthwhile," he said. Chamberlain left Sudbury September 6 and plans to continue his routine of walking and meeting peace groups by day, and sleeping beside the road at night. University of British Columbia FREDERIC WOOD THEATRE presents WAITING FOR GODOT by Samuel Beckett SEPTEMBER 23 - October 3 (Previews Sept. 21 & 22) Curtain: 8:00 p.m. Thursday Matinee/September 29 — 12:30 p.m. [STUDENT SEASON TICKETS - 4 Plays for $12] 1983/84 Season 3 WAITING FOR GODOT (Beckett) LOVE'S LABOR'S LOST (Shakespeare) THE IMPORTANCE OF BEING EARNEST (Wilde) THE SUICIDE (Erdman) * FREDERIC WOOD THEATRE * ROOM 207 Support Your Campus Theatre Sept. 21-Oct Nov. 9-19 Jan. 11-21 March 7-17 BOX OFFICE Page 10 THE UBYSSEY Friday, September 16, 1983 Asbestos still in SUB walls "Warning! Area containing asbestos. For clean up of loose or damaged asbestos insulation contact... " on a door in SUB. Posters instead of action is physical plant's short term answer to potentially harmful asbestos insulation in several areas of SUB. A year ago the Worker's Com pensation Board pressed the university to remove the insulation from its buildings. But physical plant director Neville Smith says UBC must weigh inconvenience against WCB demands to complete the job quickly. Smith says the asbestos is not a health hazard as long as the fibres remain in the insulation. Carleton student in jai OTTAWA (CUP) — Students and faculty at Carleton University are working to free a Phd student who is being held prisoner in Pakistan. Tariq Ahsan, a doctoral student in political science, returned to his native Pakistan for health reasons in 1979, and was arrested in 1981, in connection with "seditious" —material traced to his home. The material included a pamphlet calling for return to democracy in Pakistan. He was not charged until February, 1983 and was not tried until April. He is still awaiting a verdict, which under Pakistan's martial law, could mean execution. The Carleton University Students' Association recently voted unanimously to send a petition to Pakistan's president Zia-ul- Haq expressing the Association's "collective concern" over Tariq's case. CUSA also plans to raise part of the money for Ahsan's airfare to Canada should he be released. The Political Science department has made a teaching assistantship available to Ahsan and a scholarship to cover his tuition fees. Glen Williams, a Carleton professor who hopes to get people across Canada involved with the case, said he hopes such concrete moves will show Pakistani officials that people here want Ahsan to return. H.lEO| ■ INNOV AT ION Sal Hi-Tech Innovations has one of Vancouver's largest selections of software. and hardware: OS21, OS22, VICTOR 9000. We have software for VICTOR 9000, COMMODORE, APPLE, ATARI. IBM 10% Discount with AMS Card on entertainment software. 642 W. BROADWAY 604-873-3766 INTERESTED IN CA EMPLOYMENT? ARTHUR ANDERSEN & CO. is seeking 1983 graduates for Vancouver and all other offices of the Firm. Submit your resume to the Canada Employment Centre on Campus (Forms are available from the Centre) by October 5, 1983. All resumes will be acknowledged. You will be contacted on or about October 14th regarding campus interviews which take place during the weeks of October 17 and 24th. Additional information is available at the U.B.C. Canada Employment Centre and the Accounting Club. 1st N x Meeting IM Referee Club Thurs., Sept. 22 - 12:30 W.M. Gym, Rm. 211-213 Compulsory Clinics: Monday, Sept. 26 — Soccer Tuesday, Sept. 27 — Hockey Wednesday, Sept. 28 - Volleyball Thursday, Sept. 29 — Basketball Room 211-213 — 7:00 p.m. W.M. Gym For information contact referee ^Ut directors W.M. Gym, 203A. To be ^ certified, you MUST attend meeting and clinics! BIG BUCK$$$ Inhaled asbestos is recognized by scientists as a potential carcenogen said energy consultant Jay Lewis of the Society to Promote Environmental Conservation. "There is no cause for alarm, but good cause for action," Lewis said. "Whoever removes the insulation should leave no trace of asbestos behind. It takes only one fibre to lodge itself in someone's lungs before it can prove harmful." Smith said a $400,000 project to remove the insulation has started and will continue over the year. But he said work will be left for next summer if it is disruptive to the university community. No decision has been made on when SUB will be closed for asbestos removal, said Smith. SUBFILMS PRESENTS AN OFFICER AND A GENTLEMAN SEPT. 15-18 SUB AUD 7:00 Thurs., Sun. 7:00 & 9:30 Fri., Sat. (Formerly the Rent-A-Record Centre) GRAND OPINING 3296 Kingsway & Joyce, Van. 438-RENT 1102 W. Broadway & Spruce, Van. 738-7170 1463 Marine Dr. & Phillips, N. Van. 986-1393 MAXELL UDXL11 C90 $47.99/case of 12 $4.29 each TDK SA90 $42.99/case of 10 $4.59 each Rental Policy Single Members $1.25 Non-Members $2.50 Memberships Double LP Monthly $10.00 $2.00 Yearly $25.00 $4.00 Lifetime $50.00 Rent 4 or less (Keep them for 1 Day) Rent 5 or More (Keep them for 3 Days) Select from Rock to Classical! IN COOPERATION WITH PARAMOUNT PICTURES AND FAMOUS PLAYERS, The Ubyssey welcomes voi to UBC with a free, by-iivitatioi-oily screeiiif of oie of tie year's lost coitroversial fills. Oi Ties. Sept. 21 at the Vaicoiver Ceatre ciiema. From the director of Dog Day Afteriooi, Network aid He Verdict. SIDNEY LUMET FILM OF A NOVEL BY E. L. DOCTOROW The power of a blind faith, a passion for dissent. Get jib* free doille pass fir the special Ties. Sept. 21 screeiiig at Rum 2411, SMnt UiiM Baling, today. Passes aiailaMe nly while they last. Friday, September 16,1983 THE UBYSSEY Page 11 University sports ride Edmonton wave By PETER BERLIN and CANADIAN UNIVERSITY PRESS International sporting attention was focussed on Edmonton this summer for the World University Games. But what will happen now the athletes have gone home, the television crews have moved on and the arenas have been shut down? Will universities in Canada be able to maintain some measure of the public's interest, or will they slip back into semi-obscurity? Members of the Canadian International Athletic Union are betting that the Universiade will have a spill-over effect. They feel they can ride the game's coat-tails and retain the interest of the public and the news media. At stake is the potential for much-needed revenue to fund athletic programs, and the opportunity to provide Canadian athletes with a chance to achieve excellence at Canadian schools. "The Universiade will do for Canadian university sports what the 1976 Olympics in Montreal did for sports in general in this country," says Ernie Miller, publicity director for the games. "It will certainly help the profile of intercollegiate sports." Ironically, universities in Canada once occupied the top of the Canadian athletics heap. Paul Carson, sports information officer at the University of Toronto, says as late as 1965, a Queen's-Toronto football game at Varsity Stadium drew a larger crowd than that of the Toronto Argonauts on the same day. But later in the decade, faced with more competition for the entertainment dollar, a lack of campus spirit induced by the radicalism of the 1960s, and of course, television, which ate into live gates, university teams were suddenly playing to near-empty houses. Aside from the excitement generated by a full house, the universities want large crowds for one reason: money. At Toronto, for example, Carson says the university could generate close to $250,000 — enough to more than pay for their football, hockey and basketball programs — if they could attract full houses of 21,000 for every football game. And if revenue from sellouts at basketball and hockey games, not to mention money made off concessions, were added to the ideal football totals, the money would almost make the athletic department self- sufficient. Bob Hindmarch, UBC athletics department director, said since UBC students are admitted to Thunderbird events free, an increase in attendance would not necessarily lead to an increase in revenue. But any periferral income from non-students is useful RADICAL qao} -joitttfenpod v/joix* op jnpi 2%6 Iri&r4n. Avehhe Akcat liooeiinbna^e toy, Richrrcnd. SPORTS ^ONTO/y,^ Universiade '83 t *• World University Games UNIVERSIADE . . . good for university sports especially in financial crunch times, he said. If this happened, the money currently budgeted to the major sports could go to funding programs such as fencing or gymnastics, sports which tend to be ignored at budget time. The universities feel if they could pump more money into so-called minor sports, and provide better coaching and facilities for the major sports, they could help keep Canadian athletes in Canada, and in turn, help the country improve its profile in world sports. CIAU president John Mc- Conachie said Canadian schools can still capture some of the old glory, but "it's up to us now to use the momentum of the games to our advantage." Hindmarch said University sports in Canada have not had such a high profile in a long time. This is partly HONG KONG CHINESE FOODS Mon Sat. -Fri. 11:30 a.m.-2:00 4:00 p.m.-10:00 &Sun. 4:00 p.m.-10:00 p.m. p.m. p.m. .4* 1* EAT IN OR TAKE OUT LUNCH SPECIALS $2.90 5732 University Boulevard TEL. 224-1313 Rent great colour for less than you think. Granada TV Rental means no-extra- charge repairs and service loaners. No large cash outlay. And fast, friendly service. It's totally worry-free TV. Granada has showrooms everywhere-one just around the corner from you! Call us now. 995 Granville Street, Vancouver 669-1221 We're open 9 AM to 9 PM, and Saturday till 6. WORRY-FREE COLOUR TV. FOR NOW OR FOREVER. GRANAM & a result of the Universiade and partly as a result of the change in the role athletics plays in peoples' lifestyles, he said. The Universiade encouraged a growing awareness of the number of high class athletes produced by universities Hindmarch said. In field hockey, ice hockey, track and field and football practically all our top performers are university products. Hindmarch said the governments realizes this now and UBC has been made the regional coaching centre for soccer and national tennis. In general, said Hindmarch, people view sports as far more important and a far higher number of people, expecially students, now participate. The increasingly positive image sports has means that excellence in any part of the community is greeted more enthusiastically. 'About 75 per cent of Canadian teams come from Canadian universities; the remainder attend schools out of the country, so I think the public will recognize that we do offer high-calibre sports in this country," said McConachie. "It should help us follow through with the promotional programs we've been trying the past few years." There has been a modest increase in attendance at university sports in the last few years. The Vanier Cup national football title game attracted crowds of close to 15,000 the last two years, up from about 5,000 for previous games. The men's hockey final in Moncton, N.B. attracted capacity crowds of 7,0013 in each of the last two years. But the universities still have a long way to go. Toronto athletics director, Gib Chapman, feels the games can elevate the profile of university sports. "The television coverage has been extensive and the newspapers have been giving it a lot of play, so I think that the public will see the high level of competition that this country's schools have to offer," Chapman said. "With the entertainment dollar getting tighter every year, people will realize that university sports are good value." Both Chapman and McConachie said they feel the games will help at- "At stake is the potential much-needed revenue..." tract fans to the larger sports. Chapman expects the gold medal of Canada's basketball team to bring about dramatic increases in basketball crowds. But they also predict some of the sports featured at the games, such as track and field and volleyball which have not traditionally drawn large crowds, will benefit from the exposure. With the Universiade over, Canadian universities will have to hurry if they hope to use its publicity to their advantage. One university administrator puts it, "This may be our last chance." QUICK! take me to e ini's 2134 WESTERN R\RKWAY at the back of the village where I can enjoy Exotic Coffees & Coolers, Great Food & Fhbulous Desserts. Licensed Premises Phone 224-5615 Page 12 THE UBYSSEY Friday, September 16, 1983 Bonkers The newly elected government of B.C. has yet to satisfactorily answer charges that many of the programs introduced in the name of restraint are only petty revenge on those who oppose them. It could be their vengeance isn't petty at all. Labor minister Bob McLelland has added fresh evidence of their revenge attitude by criticizing the federal government for supposedly funding Operation Solidarity by granting aid to unemployed workers' centres. Also known as unemployed action centres, these community self-help groups are focal points of support and hope for tens of thousands of unemployed citizens. They operate job exchanges, provide volunteer help for food banks, assist people who have difficulties with the UIC and human resources bureaucracies, and often coordinate further support from churches, unions and community organizations. The centres, by existing and by organizing the unemployed, battle the emotional enemy of people without jobs: a sense of uselessness. That such valuable resources have been assembled with so little direct help from government is testimony to the resilience and determination of humanity. The Socreds should be applauding. But the provincial government has done nothing for the unemployed. They have cut away at minimal financial assistance, undermined health and housing, security and refused to stimulate job creation. Because the unemployed rightly see the Socreds as their foe, they opposed them and joined with their working counterparts in Operation Solidarity. The Socreds consider that a crime, and they have cut off funding for groups or even fired individuals who were so naive they believed they could question: their government. McLelland is so steeped in hatred of the great unwashed that he cannot understand why the government of Canada would give a few small coins to people hard at work helping themselves and others in the second worst depression of the century. The only explanation is the Social Credit party does not support the principle of pluralistic democracy. They have made themselves the sworn enemies of everyone but themselves. Musical chairs Our legislators seem to believe there is fat to trim from the body of post-secondary education. That might have been true six years ago when they first began putting the squeeze on colleges and universities for funding. A lot of instructors and support staff have been lost and quite a few students added since then. The engineers, who a few years back removed the speaker's chair from the legislature in Victoria, might have had the right idea. Let's remove a few more chairs, so MLA's can scramble to avoid sitting on the floor. Let's have them line up for up to an hour to receive their legislative packages or have lunch. In the meantime, drop a line to your own MLA, and to universities minister Pat McGeer. There is something happening here they ought to find out about. Letters Shell necklaces not wanted On Sept. 13 you published a letter from Ms. Lerae Britain, on Honolulu, Hawaii (Necklace refusal perplexes Hawaiian visitor), in which she expressed her distress at our refusal to accept her donation of shell necklaces. I share her distress, in that one of the more difficult aspects of my job is the need occasionally to refuse gifts from generous donors. As a museum of anthropology we could collect, with justification, anything made by human hands from any time and place; all artifacts are potentially of interest. Realistically, we have to set limits to determine which of all the available material is most relevant to our interests. After long deliberation, we have established collections guidelines which determine what our priorities should be. Unfortunately, contemporary shell necklaces are outside our present collecting guidelines. The note which I received from our receptionist stated only that the shell necklaces were a potential donation to the museum, not that Ms. Britain's intention was that they might be passed on to someone else if we were not able to accept them. Museum ethics prohibit their being accepted by a member of our staff, as this could create a conflict of interest. r THE UBYSSEY The Ubyssey is published Tuesday and Fridays throughout the academic year by the Alma Mater Society of the University of British Columbia. Editorial opinions are those of the staff and are not necessarily those of the university administration or the AMS. Member, Canadian. University Press. The Ubyssey's editorial office is SUB 241k. Editorial department, 228-2301/2305. Advertising 228-3977/3978. "Hello," said Lisa Morry, lamenting the Whitecaps loss. Sarah Cox, from Toronto, was not too consolling. "Yayy Toronto," she was heard to shout, above the heckles of Arnold Hedstrom and Robert Handfield, who, both being from Calgary, were raised to hate Toronto with a passion. Brian Jones, a Ubyssey draft pick from Calgary, where he was taught the art of capitalist ad selling by sheik Peter, pointed out the Whitecaps don't advertise in the paper, so why should anybod ^are. Muriel Draaisma, who until age 18 thought Eastern Canada meant everything east of Main street sat working away while fellow three stooge members Chris Wong was boasting about his Shaughnessy mansion, Vern McDonald and Craig Brooks meanwhile ripped the first edition to shreds, secretly knowing it was better than in their years, but they weren't telling. Shaffin Shariff went back to the Sun, where he now feete at home, while Bill Tieleman and Deb Wilson looked for Francis' last name. Robby Robertson and Peter Berlin went back home, being homesick, Maria Kredensten, Sarbara Walden and Charlie meanwhile worked on the flats, while Victor Wong rounded out The staff list for Ubyssey 1983-84 number 2. Sorry if I missed anyone. Had I known that Ms. Britain wished them to be passed on to some local person as a goodwill gift, -I would have been delighted to do so, as I was very sorry to have to return a gift which was obviously offered in a spirit of generosity. Elizabeth L. Johnson curator: collections Red tape race won At 2 p.m. today, I decided to begin my registration circuit for this year. I went to get my course cards from the education grad office. I went to get my course cards from the education grad office. Then I headed over to the faculty of graduate studies in the main administration building to register. I next payed my fees upstairs in Finance and finally got my library card renewed at Sedgewick library. By 2:50 p.m. the entire affair was wrapped up. I never thought it could be done in under an hour. My thanks and congratulations to the registrar and his many agents. David Klrshner mathematics Letters. We like them because we don't have to write them. Get out your typewriter and start working. Please don't address it to Sir. Thank you. P.S. Please deliver them to SUB 241k. Thanks. Welcome distorted It is regretable that the Lutheran campus chaplain, Ray Schultz, was insulted by the welcome to the students given by the new campus paper, The Campus Herald put out by the AMS Christian Publications Club. I am grateful that Chaplain Schultz pointed out that the Christian clubs which participated are just a part of the religious community on campus. As he pointed out, unity among the Christians is an extremely important goal. It was for this very reason that the AMS Christian Publications Club and The Campus Herald began. It is to provide a forum where the Christians on cam pus could voice their opinions without having it distorted. It also is to provide another way of unifying the Christians on campus. It has been exciting to the Christians working together in many different ways: praying together bi-weekly, the new paper, and the sharing of offices. Most of the Christian community on campus would really like to welcome the students, especially those first year students to our campus and we wish you the very best at UBC. Keith Coleman advisor Maranatha Christian Club Polish prof performed All of Chris Wong's articles in The Ubyssey on Jerzy Wiatr, the most recent article appearing September 13, have failed or neglected to address the cause for which Professor Wiatr was appointed — that being to teach. Mr Wong has consistently failed to report on the content and quality of Professor Wiatr's courses, and for this reason, I believe that Mr Wong must be strongly criticized. Professor Wiatr was hired to teach, and, as a student in both of his courses, I am pleased to advise you, and 1 am confident that my fellow students would agree, that Professor Wiatr accomplished his task admirably. Professor Waitr's lectures were uniformly superb, his knowledge of the material was well demonstrated, students' examinations and papers were consistently and equitably marked, and Professor Wiatr was most generous in the amount of time he made available for private consultations. At no time could any of his comments in class be construed as anything less than objective, in the most academic sense. I have no doubts that if Professor Wiatr was a full-time instructor at UBC, he would be deserving of a Master Teacher Award. K.M. Murphy arts 4 Friday, September 16, 1983 THE UBYSSEY Page 13 From page 4 "I mostly walk around. I try the docks and all the ships and every restaurant. I been back east of here and checked out all the ranches and farms and all that. Mostly I thumb my way around; I'm very good at it, eh? I spend most of my day looking for work. Night time, I'm usually hanging around some friends, around shopping malls, checking out some young women and just passin' away the day." He shows me the ring his girl gave him before he left home. She also gave him a choker necklace, some pictures and a watch but he left the choker and the watch in Newfoundland and someone stole them. Someone stole the pictures he brought with him, too. "She was decent," he remembers. He left The Rock with seven dollars in his pocket and had six when he got to Edmonton. Sympathetic drivers along the way would help him out with a meal and a few bucks before setting him on the highway again. He recalls one. He was hitching through Ontario — "I forget the names of all these towns" — and this big guy, a Pen- tacostalist, he learned, picked him up. George knew some Pen- tacostalists from back home in Westport and he wasn't immediately impressed. They never seemed too charitable if you weren't one of their own. But the guy asked if they 'People had dreams' had a place to stay and no, they didn't, so he took them home to the wife and kids for the night. A little later George made his way into the kitchen for something to drink and nearly stumbled on the guy, sitting at the table with his head in his hands and crying. Crying. "Oh, God, please help these kids," he was pleading. George could hardly believe it. "I felt like laughing because this guy was crying." But he couldn't forget it either. "This guy comes into my head all the time now." The interview warms after a half hour of economical question and answer when George leans closer and lowers his voice confidentially: "I think this place'd be real bad if there wasn't places like the sisters' and all that. I think there'd be a lot- ta violence." Proletarian justice? Massive redistribution of wealth? A new political order? "Not a lady'd be able to walk with a purse, and there wouldn't be a store with anything in it. I know that." THE MAN WITH the purplish web of broken blood vessels running a fine pattern over his cheeks and nose chews out the insides of his baloney sandwich and chucks the crust on the grass of Op- penheimer Park, across the street from the Sandwich Sisters. A mushy bit of white bread is pasted to his right cheek. Slowly he turns to the woman sharing the bench and HirflM§9% Hairstyling for men & women The Hairline's team of experts wants to give students a break! 10% OFF our regular prices Monday - Thursday (Student A.M.S. card required) 2529 Alma 224-2332 Mon.-Fri. 9:00-7:00 Sat. - 9:00 - 5:30 Active '<®F Components ^ftnTrn NUMBER ONE IN |f'4-- QUALITY "A''.'--ZZ~~ SERVICE \-l- AVAILABILITY i'~lt-I THE WORLD's MOST f 44^ 41 COMPLETE PROFESSIONAL Zttt~H AND HOME ELECTRONICS tlmi ENTHUSIAST INVENTORY , semjConcjucjors + Memories + * Microprocessors + Support Circuits "JtH"-J ' r" * Microcomputer Systems + Peripherals """H * Passive Electronic Components Jj H-l 1 * Hand Tools, Wire Wrapping, Th-| h- Soldering Equipment + Hardware 10% DISCOUNT Ufl OFF ALL BOOKS \ Present your student I.D. A and receive 10% OFF i>\ all purchases of books "J__Jr-f~~" from Active's Data and -"""] Reference library. -L^"^ Open Mon. to Thurs. 9:00 am - 6:00 pm Friday 9:00 am - 9:00 pm Saturday 9:00 am - 5:00 pm 3070 KINGSWAY — VANCOUVER TEL.: 438-3321 AMPLE FREE PARKING VISA AND MASTERCARD WELCOME Book Discount valid until Oct. 15.1983. in £HH starts small talk. Yeah, he mumbles into the wind, he fled the farm in Salmon Arm, B.C. for the big city in forty two. No money to be made on thrity five acres. Became a seaman. Sailed to Australia and back. Married there. Nineteen forty two. That's forty one years. Musta been just a kid. He looks like a geezer but the booze does that. I want to know if it was the same for him then as it is for the kids now joining the line up across the street. Did his generation run on the same thin mix of hopes and guts and charity? "Yeah, but there were jobs then. People had dreams but they forgot about them when they had something to do. Me, I never thought about anything but my work in the shipyards ..." A mess of pigeons on a sandwich safari wiggle in a rough line towards today's paydirt. A big white seagull swoops down and scarfs the whole thing. I head over to the convent kitchen. The old man with a torn upper lip is cleaning up around the scullery and the convent daycare. He's been around, off and on, for fifty years. He's seen the old buildings come down and these already shabby ones go up. Seen the line grow long in the Depression, longer when men started to ride the rails after the Second World War and longer still as they began to be replaced by machines in their jobs. He looks at something far away. Yes, it was different then. He always had a job too. The line starts to wind around the corner, growing by ones and twos. Old men and a few women, young men and women who have never even had a job and can't find one. No experience, little hope. And unless there are some big changes, says the scullery man, a lot of them will be standing there 40 years from now. "But I'll be long gone by then," he snorts, and he goes back to his chores. AT THE TOP OF TENTH AVE. WEST THE VIDEO STORE 4605 W. 10TH AVE. 222-1144 We are committed to providing the highest quality cinematic entertainment currently available on the video market — we believe that our tape selection reflects the very best m critically acclaimed theatre. The Video Mom wW strive towards the goal of providing visually literate, responsive and responsible video materials to the community We believe that you will find The Video More to be a very special, and unique video rental storefront. Ours is a community-oriented, community access store. Make The Video More your own. FREE MEMBERSHIP VCR + 2 FREE MOVIES I VCR + 2 FREE MOVIES (Student Ratel I . _ _ _ *?ok I M4.95 j Fri./Set./Holidays 7.95 Sun.-Thurs. VCR + 4 FREE MOVIES •27.95 For 2 Days On The Wootond S1.99 BASIC MOVIE RENTAL CATCHAMOVIE AT HOME TONIGHT! VALUABLE COUPON RENT ONE MOVIE AT THE REGULAR PRICE. GET THE SECOND ONE FOR ONLY WITH COUPON ONLY 99* Umlt One Pec Customer Offer Expires Sept. 30/83 Keep in touch with CG.A. Become an Associate Student Planning your future requires a lot of thought - and as much input as you can get from professional sources. As a college or university student thinking about a career in professional accounting, Associate Student Membership in the Certified General Accountants Association will keep you posted. For just S10.00 per year you'll receive the national CG.A. magazine, provincial newsletter and chapter newsletter as well as details about professional development seminars and chapter meetings. The Certified General Accountants Association ot British Columbia is the largest association ot professional accountants in the prownce, with 0,500 members and .students. L A i.A!s ne L'nipKncd in ukIumin, w\ u. tion, < omnicive. government and in puhlk Learn more about CG.A. Become an Associate Student. Contact the Association office for an application form and details about membership. The Director of Admissions, The Certified General Accountants Association of B.C., 1555 West 8th Avenue, Vancouver, B.C. V6J1T5 Telephone: (604) 732-1211 Certified General Accountants CGA ^y Association of British Columbia Page 14 Wfi£. Rubber Biscuit: the band following the long and honoured tradition of having a silly name, started by the Beatles, Sept. 16, Soft Rock Cafe, 1925 W. 4th, 734-2822. Sundance: ah, sing praises to his mightiness, Haile Selaisse rumoured to be making yet another guest appearance at this reggae gig, Sept. 17-18, Soft Rock. Phoenix Jazzers: dixieland, Sept. 13 and 16, Hot Jazz Club, 33 E. Broadway, 873-4131. Visible Targets: quasi-pseudo new-wave- modern-esoteric-punk, now beat that Neal Hall for an esoteric description, Sept. 15-17, Town Pump, 68 Water, 683-6695. Bob Hanson Band/Melchlzadek: a live Coop radio broadcast, Sept. 16, The Wsterfront, 686 Powell, 684-8494. Eddie "Cleanhead" Vinson: a blues legend who has played with Count Basie, Charlie Parker and others, a must, Sept. 16-17, The Ankor, 99 Powell, 669-4022. Roy Reynolds Quartet: jazz in an art gallery, what more could you ask for besides a lifetime subscription to the Ubyssey, Sept. 18, 2 p.m., Surrey Art Gallery, 13750 88th Ave., 596-7461. Ernestine Anderson: she's rumoured to be singing with Betty Carter, if thaf s true, don't miss this show, even if ifs not, go anyways she's dynamite as evidenced by her appearance at the Whister Jazz Festival, Sept. 19-Oct. 1, Plazazz Showroom, International Plaza Hotel, Showcase Weekend: a showcase for new bands, Sept. 16-18, SUB Ballroom, 228-5336. Bob Brozman: master of the national steel guitar, mandolin and ukelele, Sept. 18, 8 p.m., Vancouver East Cultural Centre, 1895 variables, 254-9578. Vancouver Chamber Choir/Vancouver Chorale: a capella magic, Sept. 18, 2:30 p.m., Westminster Abbey, 738-6822, via British Airways, just kidding, it's the abbey somewhere in the Fraser Valley. \tf\p\j\J6 Pacific Cinematheque (1155 W. Georgia, 732-6119) Sept. 16: L'age D'or/Simon of the Desert, 7:30 p.m.; Los OMdados. 9:30 p.m. Sept. 21: Anthology of the Italian Clnema-The Silent Film From 1896-1926. 7:30 p.m. Sept. 22: Toute Une Vie, 7:30 p.m. Ridge Theatre (16th and Arbutus, 738-6311) A Right of Rainbirds, Sept. 16-22, 7:30 and 9:30. Vancouver East Cinema (7th and Commercial, 253-5455) From Here to Eternity. 7:30 p.m.; Suddenly Last Summer, 9:40 p.m. Sept. 19-20: Poetry In Motion. 7:30 p.m.; Judy Chicago-The Making of the Dinner Party. 9:15 p.m. Sept. 21-22: Wiaeblood, 7:30 p.m.; The Big Red One, 9:30 p.m. Savoy Cinema (Main and Kingsway, 872-2124) Sept. 16-18: The Hunger. 7:30 p.m.; Just a Gigolo, 9:20 p.m.; The Man Who Fell To Earth. 11:15 p.m.; Sept. 19-20: Barbaraila, 7:30 p.m.; Star Crash, 9:30 p.m. Sept. 21-22: Jeilbert, 7:30 p.m.; Attack of ,the Killer Tomatoes. 9 p.m. Women In Focus (465 W. Broadway, 872-2250) Two days of continuous films and videos. Films with women, their role, the oppression against them, and their culture, Sept. 16, 2-8 p.m.; Sept. 17, 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Presentation Houee (333 Chesterfield, 986-1351) Sept. 16: If You Love This Planet, 12:10 p. m.; Our Health is Not For Sale, 1:10 p.m. SUB Films (SUB Auditorium, 228-3897) Sept. 15-18: An Officer and a Gentleman. Thurs.-Sun., 7 p.m.; Fri.-Sat., 7 and 9:30 p.m. Sept. 22-25: My Favorite Year, same times. Cinema 16. Sept. 19: What On Earth, Neighbours, Toys, If you Love This Planet, For The Next 60 Seconds, 6:30 and 8:30 p.m. The Diary of Adam and Eve: a musical and comic look into the lives of those two great hipsters whose favourite dish was barbecued spare ribs, City Stage, 751 Thurlow, Mon.-Fri., 12 noon, 688-1436. California Suite: a comedy by Neil Simon, Metro Theatre, 1370 S. W. Marine Dr., Weds.-Sat., 8:30 p.m., 266-7191, till Oct. 1. Tighten The Traces-Haul In The Rains and The Boat: a play with three names has to be good, check it out, Vancouver East Cultural Centre, 8:30 p.m., til Sept. 17, 254-9578. Waiting For Godot: ah yes, the old English 100 standby is receiving a treatment by those loveable people over in the theatre department, ifs been a long wait, don't miss it now, beware for Beynon's scorching review, Frederic Wood Theatre, Sept. 21-Oct. 3, 8 p.m., 228-2678. « £yJUl>'fc What Could Be Mora Boring Than Art: that's sure easy, this God forsaken column called VISTA which I'm typing out at 12:30 at night instead of something rarely done by Ubyssey staffoids, sleeping, hurry up, let's get this over with, oh year, this is a great show of digital paintings, with sarcasm, by Jim Carrico, Unit/Pitt Gallery, 163 West Pender, 681-6740, till Sept. 24. Victor Cicansky: clay sculpture from a Regina sculptor, he comes from the same home time as a certain VISTA writer, the home of many esoteric culturally minded people, UBC Fine Arts Gallery, 228-2759, till Oct, 1. Vancouver Illustrators: features Vancouver's best illustrators, aren't you glad I'm providing you this info, Artists Gallery, 555 Hamilton 687-1345, till Oct. 1. Contemporary Czechoslovakian Photographers: sure beats ancient Czech photogs, Presentation House, 986-1351, ti Oct. 2. FREE EXERCISE CLASS M I V. I r s s - Ml AM III {)() AM ..'.*" 11 M) PM . .' * " . .' * ' \ M> PM •* HI PM . .'.* " . -V " . .'.* " COST: $40 00 — Choose any of the classes listed above as many times a week as you like, any time, any location, any intensity $ 2 00 — Drop-in per class Session: First Term - Sept I 9 Dec 9 83 Second Term - Jan I 6-April 4. I 984 Registration: First Term - Sept 6-16; Second Term - )an 3-1 3 at Intramural Recreational Sports (Rm. 203 I. War Memorial Gym or late registration during first week of exercise class Sponsored by Recreation U.B.C. For Fitness Information - 738-4 I 69 • VALID UNTIL SEPT. 24/83 WTTH THIS AD. Friday, September 16, 1983 Tacky-Tourist Tailgate Party: Yup, this is what you've been waiting for, a roast pig dinner, President George Pedersen roasted (that's funny, he resembers Kermit the frog more than Porky Pig), and the Outriggers Polynesian Dancers, all before the T-Birds game against U of C, Sept. 16, 4 p.m., Thunderbird Stadium Plaza, tickets $3.50, AMS Box office. Buy-a-bargain-book-bonanza: alliteration, I love it, get books from 99 cents to $10, Waterfront Theatre, Sept. 17-18. TODAY INTEGRITY IN ACTION CLUB Meeting with George & Joelle Emery, directors of the Foundation of Universal Unity, noon, Buch A202. THUNDERBIRD FOOTBALL T-Birds vs. Calgary Dinosaurs, 7:30 p.m., Thursdays Stadium. ALMA MATER SOCIETY Pre-footbali game barbeque, 4 p.m , Thunder bird Stadium plaza. MONDAY UBC CYCLING CLUB Organizational meeting for Clubs Day, anyone interested in cycling welcome, noon, "Cages" (SUB) basement). STUDENTS FOR PEACE AND MUTUAL DISARMAMENT Film: "If You Love This Planet" and discussion of this year's activities. All welcome, noon, SUB 205. INTEGRITY IN ACTION CLUB Meet George and Joelle Emery, founding directors of the Foundation of Universal Unity, noon, Buch. A202. This is a serious announcement. CITR Live play-by-play coverage of football T-Birds against Calgary, 7:15 p.m., FM 101.9, cable 100.1. UBC DANCE CLUB Practice, noon, SUB Partyroom. Come out and brush up on your dancing. MARANATHA CHRISTIAN CLUB Film: The Hiding Place, 7:30 p.m., Angus 104. SATURDAY UBC COMMUNITY SPORTS SERVICES Tennis tournament, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m., courts behind ice rinks. Prizes, hoorayl FORESTRY Dr. T. G. Northcote, Forestry/Westwater/IARE UBC, speaks on "The Lake Titicaca Project: Exporting Canadian Fisheries expertise to the Peruvian Andes," noon, MacMillan 166. MARANATHA CHRISTIAN CLUB Film: The Cross and the Switchblade, 7:30 p.m., Angus 104. SUNDAY UNDERWATER HOCKEY Practice and beginners' clinic, 10 p.m., aquatic centre. All welcome. MONDAY BALLET UBC JAZZ Registration, noon, SUB foyer. MARANATHA CHRISTIAN CLUB Evangelist Bob Martin of the University of California (Bericley) speaks. 7:30 p.m., Angus 104. TUESDAY AMS EXTERNAL AFFAIRS C'ETTE Organizing Oct. 6th General Meeting on provincial budget and legislation. All interested students welcome. SUB 224, 12:X. GEOLOGY UBC Prof. J. J. Nagel speaks on computer data bases and museum cases, noon, GeoSci 330A. LAW STUDENTS LEGAL ADVICE PROGRAM FREE legal advice, noon to 2 p.m., SUB 111. BALLET UBC JAZZ Registration, noon, SUB 216E. WORLD UNIVERSITY SERVICE OF CANADA General meeting, noon, Buch. A202. Anyone interested may join in. CAMPUS PRO-LIFE Introductory meeting, noon, SUB 212. Ne.v members welcome; planning for clubs day. MARANATHA CHRISTIAN CLUB Evangelist Bob Martin, UC Berkley, speaks, 7:30 p.m., Angus 104. OVEREATERS ANONYMOUS General meeting, noon, Lutheran Campus Centre conference room. WEDNESDAY GAYS & LESBIANS OF UBC Continuation of third annual beer gathering, 4:30 p.m., Gallery Lounge. Come to SUB 239 for details. BALLET UBC JAZZ Registration, noon, SUB 216E. UBC MEN'S SQUASH TEAM Team tryouts, 6:30 to 8:45 p.m., Winter Sports Centre, THURSDAY GAYS Er LESBIANS OF UBC General meeting, noon, Brock 304. Important, all interested people please attend. BALLET UBC JAZZ Registratin, noon, SUB party room. Continues until 3:30 p.m. INTERNATIONAL HOUSE Immigration officers meeting students re visas, 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., International House board room. FRIDAY BALLET UBC JAZZ Registration, noon, SUB party room. Continues until 3:30 p.m. INTERNATIONAL HOUSE Sixties Revival dance, 8:30 p.m. to 1 a.m., tH Upper Lounge. Taped music, $1 admission. Dead. That's what your inhibitions and insecurities will be after you take part in The Ubyssey's newswriting seminar today at 4 p.m. in SUB 241k. Bill Tieleman, hardened news writer for the better part of a decade, will go through the basics of ledes, inverted pyramids, attributions and how to avoid being sued. Much good, you bet. Be there. y~ c/eltinis ■^i T*»2 from 3 to4 i C-W.'K COFR.7 (per per^imi M[,77/\rV('OH7/ (per person) fi lea >/ ,.».!%,' $2.50 $1.25 i r---^ ,„ulwhaik. ,l!he,Y:a , BOB MARTIN SPEAKING NIGHTLY. SEPT. 19-24 ANGUS 104. 7:30 P.M. -MARANATHA- HEALING, MIRACLES HAPPEN TODAY THE CLASSIFIEDS RATES: AMS Card Holders — 3 lines, 1 day $2.50; additional lines, 60c. Commercial — 3 lines, 1 day $4.20; additional lines, 66c. Additional days, $3.80 and 60c. Classified ads are payable in advance. Deadline is 10:30 a.m. the day before publication. Publications, Room 266, S.U.B., UBC, Van., B.C. V6T2A5 Charge Phone Orders over $5.00. Call 228-3977, 5 - COMING EVENTS THE VANCOUVER INSTITUTE Free Public Lecture THE FORGOTTEN PARTY: THE VICTIM OF CRIME The Honorable Mr. Justice Brian Dickson, Supreme Court of Canada SATURDAY, SEPT. 17 at 8:15 P.M. Lecture Hall 2, Woodward Building 10 - - FOR SALE - Commercial 11 - - FOR SALE - Private TIRED OF COMMUTING ALREADY? Come and live on campus. Vacancies available now in the student residences. Room and board for Ladies. Come to the Ponderosa Housing Office or call 228-2811. FREE ROOM AND BOARD in exchange for 15 to 20 hrs. housesitting. 25th & Arbutus, 738-8685. 25 - INSTRUCTION PIANO LESSONS by Judith Alexander. Graduate of Juilliard School of Music. 731-8323 or 261-8514. 30 - JOBS WANTED: Women to play rugby. No experience necessary. Practices Tuesday and Thursday, 5:30 p.m. at Balaclava Park (West 30th & Balaclava). Everyone welcome. 65 - SCANDALS 70 - SERVICES "MODE COLLEGE OF BARBERING AND STYLING". Students - $4.50 to $6.50. M7-601 West Broadway. 874-0633. AFRICAN BASKETS. Perfect for carrying books, groceries, etc. Retail cost, $60-$80. My cost - $20-$35. Sandy, 222-0176 between 4-9 p.m. FOR SALE: Shelving unit. Solid wood, white, 1 piece 3 level pedestal. 3'x 6'9" x V4". $65 obo. Tel. 266-4289. '79 HONDA HAWK. 15,000 mi., very good cond., Helmut & Fairing incl., $780. 321-1675, Harel. '63 MGB. With '67 Datsun engine & 5 speed. 228-8333 or 888-0879 after 6 p.m. Suitable for restoration. 15 - FOUND (no charge) FOUND: Young female cat at UBC. It has short gray hair and needs a good home. Contact 224-3752. THE KEG PRIME RIB and BOATHOUSE Have openings for students wanting to work 2-4 evenings per week. We are looking for enthusiastic, hard working individuals. No experience needed as we train our people on the job. Apply any Wednesday between 2:00-3:00 p.m. 566 Cardero St. by the Bayshore. LSAT, GMAT, MCAT preparation. Call National Testing, 738-4618. Please leave message on tape if manager is counselling. 85 - TYPING ESSAYS, term papers, theses and manuscripts professionally prepared on a word processor. Your work can be stored, revised and reprinted at any time. Special rates for students. For information, phone Maggie Edwards at 683-4613 (8:30-3:30! or 732-0948 (other times). TYPEWRITING - Essays, resumes, MINIMUM NOTICE REQUIRED. Tapes transcribed. Elite, Pica or Script. UBC Village location. 224-6518 day or night. EXPERT TYPING. Essays, term papers, fac- tums, letters, manuscripts, resumes, theses, IBM Selectric II. Reasonable rates. Rose, 731-9857. EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Essays, reports, projects. $1.00 per page min. Contact Louise. 731 0594. 40 - MESSAGES 90 - WANTED 20 - HOUSING 4-DR. EXEC. HOME. Richmond. Washer' Dryer. $350/mo. Utilities incl., non-smoker. Avail, immed. 271-7813. POTTERY CLUB All ciay and pots must be claimed, and lockers emptied by Sept. 18 or the club will confiscate. New lockers available starting the 19th. MUSICIANIS) to join ex-pro bass player to play iunk for MONEY and fun. Competence a must Mike 270-8355. DRUMMER and keyboardist for rock band of students. We have bookings in Oct. Paul 266-8392 or Zack 689-0482. Friday, September 16,1983 THE UBYSSEY Four women fast for life Page 15 Four Vancouver women fasted for three days last weekend in solidarity with eleven other people conducting a "fast for life". The women camped on the Old Courthouse steps at Robson Square from Friday until Saturday, setting up a literature table and hanging a banner proclaiming "We Hunger for Disarmament." The four women slept on the courthouse steps Friday and Saturday night accompanied by a few friends and supporters. The three day fast at Robson Square was in support of eleven people fasting in Paris, Bonn, and Oakland, California. They intended to draw government attention to the need for immediate action to halt the momentum of the arms race. The fasters, including Andre Lariviere of Quebec, began their fast to the death Aug. 6 as an analogy to the short time left for life on earth. They ended their fast Wednesday after forty days. The eleven issued a statement explaining they were ending their fast in response to people the world over who had taken up their appeal. "We live in a world that is out of balance," said Vancouver faster and music teacher Susan Elik. "Every day 40,000 children under the age of five die of malnutrition and nearly $2 billion is spent worldwide on arms." During the day the Robson Square fasters handed out leaflets to passersby, wrote letters to world leaders, made peace bracelets for the eleven fasters, and talked to downtown pedestrians about their committment to world peace and justice. "When I hear about these people and what they were doing I knew that I had to do something to support them," SFU sociology student Sue Cox said of the 11 fasters. "The media coverage of their fast has been very poor in B.C. and we wanted to bring it to the attention of as many people as possible," added Cox, one of the Robson Square fasters. "We hope that people will write letters to Trudeau or Reagan or their MPs encouraging them to make a positive offer toward disarmament." The International Conference of the Fast for Life issued an appeal calling on people, institutions and governments to take significant actions to end the nuclear arms race. The appeal did not make demands, but instead gave examples of responses the 11 fasters would consider significant. Canada's refusal to test the American Cruise missile is a response the international fasters wish for, the Robson Square fasters said. War in peace land MONTREAL (CUP) — Disagreement over the extent of the Soviet Union's role in the nuclear arms race could jeopardize turnout at two independent rallies scheduled for Oct. 22. One coalition La Grande Marche Pour la Paix (LGM), has declared a call for an end to arms in the East and West. With the support of unions and the municipal party Montreal Citizen's Movement, LGM is organizing a march and rally. Another group, the Oct. 22nd Committee consists mostly of women's groups, health professionals, and church groups. They plan to form a human chain spanning the 14 blocks separating the U.S. and Soviet consulates. This coalition protests not only the East and West arms build-up, but throws support behind the independent peace movements in Warsaw Pact countries. This emphasis on Soviet responsibility led LGM to turn down an offer to join forces. They refused to accept the Oct. 22nd Committee's declaration at a meeting last spring. MARY J. DON LEVY M.D. FAMILY PHYSICIAN is pleased to announce the opening of her practice at 201-2732 W. Broadway 731-0324 Mon. -Thurt. 8:00 am-fcQQ pm Friday B:00 am-6:00 pm Saturday 9:00 am-4:00 pm Sunday 11:00am-4:00pni 9900 £ <£ XEROX COPIES £ Mk, League Soccer, Oct. 3-Nov. 28. $20 Register Sept. 19-23 Buchanan Badminton, Saturday/Sunday Grand Prix Round 1. Oct. 1 & 2 Register Sept. 19-23 Great Trek^^^—! Cycle Tour, Sat. Sept. 24. $10 Mayne Island Ride the Rapids, Sun., Sept. 25. $55 Thompson River Register by Sept. 21 HUGE SAVINGS ON FASHIONS TOP QUALITY & EXCITING VARIETY OF NAME BRAND FASHIONS SAVE up to 70% of regular retail PLUM CLOTHING forwomen conveniently located at FOURTH and ALMA open SUNDAYS & FRIDAY NIGHTS Page 16 THE UBYSSEY Friday, September 16, 1983 Vancouver MWL Dine Out This Weekend New Er popular on the Kits-Pt. Grey scene, the Eatery is considered by a discriminating many to be the only place to eat. The Eatery has an astonishing menu containing great meals, phenomenal snacks, dessert that Grandma would be envious of, an espresso machine, and is fully licenced on top of all that. A highly recommended restaurant. Treat yourself! (P.S. Not at all to imply that our customers are hawgs. Just liked the cartoon.) 343, w Broadway (not far east of Alma) 738-5298 i Sun. only til 10 m SET A FREE TACO WITH THE PURCHASE OF A TACO 3396 West Broadway (at Waterloo) Open 11 a.m. to 11:00 p.m. 7 days a week 393 East 12th Avenue (at Kingsway) Open 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. 7 days a week 2028 W. 41st Street, Kerrisdale Open 11 a.m. to 9 p.m. 7 days a week Robson Square Food Fair (Hornby & Robson) Open 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. 6 days a week (Closed Sundays) This coupon is good for a FREE TACO with the purchase of a Taco. Coupon must be presented. One offer per person. Expires Sept. 25/83 i I J» after Classes ... (JhstxLtfLuh Pasta Shoppe & Delicatessen OUR SPECIALITIES ARE: • Fresh Pasta and Assorted Sauces (Made Daily — Herb Cream Sauce, White Clam with White Wine & Garlic, Pesto, Tomato, Meat Sauce with Red Wine, Red Clam Sauce). • Ready Made Pasta Dishes to Go. (Lasagna & Daily Specials) • Sandwiches, Quiches, Cold Meats, Salads & Cheeses • Assorted Home Made Desserts OPEN: Mon., Tues., Wed., Sat. 9:00 a.m. - 6 p.m. Thurs., Fri. until 7:00 p.m., Sun. Noon - 5.00 p.m. 3625 W. 4th Ave. 738-0122 UBC Students/Faculty/Staff 10% off on pasta FULL MEAL DEAL $3 It's the best meal deal going. Our 100% pure beef single burger with "More Burger Than Bun™". A small order of crispy, golden fries. Your favorite small drink. And, to top it all off a cool and creamy 5 02. DAiRY QUEEN* Sundae. All for only $3.39. Get a good deal on a full meal. Head for the corner of Broadway and Trafalgar. AM D Q. Corp., 1981 Dairy Queen brazier 2601 W. Broadway at Trafalgar for Itue \,<\zz cmd blues Specia1 until SfLlfit. 21±t J>lb. barloecueA .Sali/uon -^jlef- 3-50 1540 u>esf 2nd aMeAoe, near 6rwi\/i||e JsU* a^La* *•>•* *^t* *^t* *X? t»W*»aa** *lp **aa* *^L* #"*% ^T* *T* *^L^ *^^ ^f^ ^T^ ^^^^^^ ^^^^^^ Cakes whole and by the piece. Snacks, pastries. Espresso Bar. 10% off with UBC I.D. card for purchases over $2.50 Hours: 8:00 a.m.-1:00 a.m. Monday - Saturday ph. 228-9816 DUCK. 2 pveijy- V 4M cy. 4TKxp si drxs jO \maq up o0u«i iMtoos ro\ pimp #mn &U m/sr4m Avenue Akc at HCOambrtiQe *by, Rictimcnd.