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This could be a full linked open date URI or an internal identifier"}],"FileFormat":[{"label":"File Format","value":"application\/pdf","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dc:format"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource.; Examples of dimensions include size and duration. Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the list of Internet Media Types [MIME]."}],"FullText":[{"label":"Full Text","value":" &   pn\nVol. tVI, No. 15\nVANCOUVER, B.C.,\nFRIDAY,\nOCTOBER 11, 1974\n228-2301\nCALM BEFORE STORM, red jacketed gears loom and leer over\nThursday's council meeting prior to reducing it to level of class of\n'58 stunt. One engineer forced Ubyssey photographer Marise Savaria\n^XHaaaaaaaaaF <*\n\u2014marise savaria photo\nagainst wall covering her camera with a jacket \"for protection.\"\nGears target Mochnacki sits second from right awaiting brush with\nbrawlers who erupted shortly after picture was taken.\nCourt gets anti-pool vote,\nexec censured for delay\nBy REED CLARKE\nA special Alma Mater Society\ncouncil meeting held Thursday to\ndiscuss the pool referendum ended\nin a fist-swinging, hair-pulling,\nbiting, scratching, kicking scuffle.\nAbout 100 red-jacketed engineers\nattempted to finish the meeting,\nheld at noon in SUB council\nchambers,   by   giving   a   free\nswimming lesson to graduate\nstudent representative Stefan\nMochanacki, a founding member\nof an ad-hoc committee which\ndrew up the referendum.\nBefore the melee, councillors\nvoted 10-9 to postpone voting on the\nreferendum until student court\nrules on the wording of the\nreferendum.\nBag food services\nand bring a lunch\nThe Ubyssey, always known for\nits interest in alternatives, thought\nit was about time to present an\noption to cafeteria food on campus.\nOne obvious answer sprang to\nmind: the bag lunch.\nHome economics students Marg\nMcEwen and Joan Morton\nprepared this handy-dandy guide\nto the basic bag lunch.\nGourmets' recipes will follow.\nSuggestions and submissions\nwould be appreciated.\nIf you pack a bag lunch every\nday, consider the fact that you'll be\npreparing at least 102 more before\nthe end of the university year.\nChances are, you're already into\nthe peanut butter  rut  and  are\nlooking for some new ideas.\nA nutritionally-balanced lunch\ncan be built around Canada's food\nguide.\nThis guide recommends the daily\nconsumption of foods selected from\nfive different food groups: milk,\nfruit, vegetables, breads and\ncereals, and meat and fish.\nAlternate choices within the milk\ngfoup include cheese, cottage\ncheese, yogurt, ice cream or milk\npuddings. Some economical meat\nalternatives are peanut butter,\neggs, dried peas or beans and\npoultry.\nThe following is representative\nSee page 2: LOW\nWhen the meeting was adjourned, a slightly tipsy engineer\nannounced Mochnacki would be\ngoing for a swim and he was\ngrabbed from behind as he stood in\nfront of his chair at the oval council\ntable.\nAs Mochnacki was lifted onto the\nshoulders of waiting engineers, a\nnumber of councillors ran or\nhopped over the table to his\nassistance.\nThe crowd, a maze of red jackets\nfighting women and pushing men,\nwas forced out into the hall as\nleather-jacketed Gerald de\nMontigny of the arts undergraduate society jumped onto\nthe crowd from the council table\nand an unidentified man cleared\nengineers through the door.\nThe brawling quickly turned to\nshouting in the hall when a number\nof engineers decided their stunt\nhad failed.\nThe same engineer who make\nthe original announcement than\nmounted the stairs to the SUB\ncourtyard and said: \"People have\nnever fought back before. They've\ntaken it in good spirits.\"\nWith that and a few shouts, the\nengineers walked off.\nThey appeared in council\nchambers just as current society\npresident Gordie Blankstein called\nthe meeting to order.\nThey lined the walls of the room,\ncheering and clapping, in favor of\npostponing the referendum and\nharassing, booing and hissing\nthose opposed.\nIn the main event Blankstein\nsucceeded in postponing the pool\nreferendum scheduled for this\nweek until student court decides\nwhether the referendum wording is\nambiguous.\nThe meeting ended with council\nvoting to censure the executive for\nnot  following   the   constitution\nregulation requiring referendums\nSee page 13: COURT\n'LG radio\nkeeps four\njocks out\nBy JAN O'BRIEN\nVancouver rock radio station\nCKLG has reneged on an\nagreement to reinstate four employees who were dismissed during\nthe Canadian Union of Public\nEmployees' campaign to organize\nthe station, CUPE organizer\nRichard Hughes said  Thursday:\nThe CUPE broadcast division\nhad filed 23 unfair labor practices\nSeepage 11: TELEGRAM\n-M &f&: ~ A:\\i^iS^3'&\u00a31\u00abA&*fi  <? .\nEngineers scrap bus for slow bike\nThe engineers have halted work\non their bus project.\nBut don't worry.\nThey've turned to a more\nchallenging project \u2014 the\ndevelopment of an electric\nmotorcycle.\nWhich, right now, as a prototype,\nweighs 2,000 pounds.\nAnd top ends at 15 m.p.h.\nBut the president of the\nengineering undergraduate society\nsaid Thursday he's sure the\nstudents can work the kinks out of\ntheir motorcycle.\nIn fact, Don Byrnildsen said in\nan interview, the first problem to\nbe tackled is the weight of the\nbatteries \u2014 they're overweight.\n\"It is hoped the engine can be\ndeveloped to the point of powering\na small car,\" said Byrnildsen.\nThe engineers have already\nspent at least $10,000 on the bus\nproject, but the EUS president\ndenied criticism that the money\nwas ill-spent.\n\"It was not very exciting for the\nstudents. It was basically working\nwith someone else's design and this\nisn't too interesting for the\nstudents.\n\"They lost interest in the\nproject.\"\nBut Byrnildsen added that when\nB.C. Hydro, which was providing\nthe main financial backing, cut off\nfunds the project was doomed.\n\"We got as far as a full-scale\nmockup. So far it hasn't been\nfinished. We had to quit because\nprivate industry cut off our funds.\"\nThe project also received a $4,500\ndonation    from    last    year's\ngraduating class and $5,400 from\nthe UBC transportation centre.\nFive students were paid to work\non the bus project during the\nsummer, but the movers and\nshakers behind the plan didn't\nreturn to UBC this fall, said\nByrnildsen.\n\"It got to point where only four\nguys were working on it this year.\"\nBut these four were able to\nproduce a 200-page report for B.C.\nHydro, which also donated a 1946\ntrolley bus.\nHe said one of the main changes\nin the bus was moving the door to\nthe back so old, crippled people\ncould better enter and leave.\n(Engineers have long been\nconcerned with the welfare of\ncripples, aiding numerous\ncharities over the years.)\nBut the forlorn mockup wasn't\nthe final design as the students\naltered the bus to suit several\ndesigns.\n\"They tore the old trolley apart\nand worked on individual sections\nso the mockup did not look like the\nfinal bus would,\" said Byrnildsen.\nHe said the group hoped to have\nthe bus on the road by last summer\nat a cost of $10,000.\nAnd although hope and reality\nare often apart, Byrnildsen said he\nconsiders the project a success.\n\"I think the guys were happy\nwith it. I would say it was a success.\"\nTinged with regret, perhaps?\n\"It was not a very fulfilling\nproject.\" Page 2\nTHE      UBYSSEY\nFriday, October 11,1974\nLow cost munchies\nFrom page 1\nof an  appetizing  and  nutritious\nnoon meal:\nSliced ham and cheese on whole\nwheat bread (Cost, 24 cents)\nCelery carrot or green pepper\nsticks (Cost, one to two cents)\nFruit, preferably fresh (Cost, 10\nto 15 cents)\nMilk, eight ounces in a thermos\n(Cost, eight to 10 cents)\nTwo oatmeal cookies (Cost, 12\ncents)\nThanks,\nlibraries\nThis totals between 55 and 63 cents\nfor a complete, filling and\nnutritionally balanced meal.\nEqually suitable substitutes for\nthe traditional sandwich are\ncheese and crackers, quickbreads\n(muffins) or soups and chowders.\nPlastic storage containers and\nthermos bottles add variety by\nmaking possible the addition of hot\nor cold foods ^\nAvoidance of nutrient-poor, high\ncalorie foods such as chocolate\nbars and soft drinks helps ensure\nthat daily nutrient requirements\nare met.\nSome inexpensive, easy to\nprepare sandwich ideas are:\nCheddar cheese and shredded\ncarrot on cracked wheat (Cost,\n18 to 25 cents)\nChicken spread and sprouts on\nwhole wheat (Cost, 25 cents)\nCream cheese and chipped black\nolives on rye (Cost, 21 cents)\nThe Ubyssey staff decided\nFriday to take an early mid-term\nbreak Monday. The university\nadministration responded by\nclosing the campus down.\nTherefore, the Ubyssey will not\nappear Tuesday.\nclosed\nAll    UBC    libraries    excep^r-*\nSedgewick and Woodward will be\nclosed Thanksgiving Monday.\nSedgewick will be open 9 a.m. to\n11:45p.m. while Woodward will be\nopen 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. All libraries\nwill be open Saturday and Sunday\nduring regular hours. Brock Hall\nstudy areas will remain open 8\na.m. to midnight, Saturday\nthrough Monday.\n~s>\"\nLINDA SANTOS\n(Community organizer amongst the poor)\n; SPEAKING ON\nIMPLICATIONS ON MARTIAL\nLAW IN THE PHILIPPINES\nOCTOBER 17 -12:30 -SUB 212\nOCTOBER 18 -12:30 - Lutheran Campus Centre\nCO-SPONSORS SPEAKERS CCCM & CUSO\nNotice to Graduating Students in\nARTS\nA meeting will be held in Room 104, Buchanan Building\nTUESDAY, OCTOBER 15 at 12:30 p.m.\nto hear a representative from the Placement Office\n(Office of Student Services)\non the subject\nGraduate Employment\nECKANKAR\nThe Path of\nTotal Awareness\nECKANKAR is not a religion,\nphilosophy or mystery school, but\na science whose goal, GOD\nREALIZATION, is obtained\nthrough the practise of a set of\nspiritual exercises.\nIntroductory Lecture\nTuesday, Oct. 15\n12:30 in S.U.B. 213\nWork Overseas-\nAjj rieu It u ra I i si s\n('('SO today has W0 Canadians\nteai Imii! or working al their skills\nand trades in >(> ilcvclopin\\i conn\ntries ul Africa, Asia. I aim America,\nthe Caribbean, and the South Pacific More Canadians are needed to\nshare then expertise i>ierseas m\nanswer to i oiiliiining requests from\nthose anas.\nJusl  sour' ol   Ihe requests are  lor:\nAgriculturalists      foresters\nagronomists        animal  scientists      reforestation personel-\nIc       farm managers -  fishermen farm   mechanics\ncooperative managers     farmers     fish & game biologists\nextension   personnel        Agri\ncultural research - animal &\npoultry scientists \u2014 food\ntechnologists \u2014 home economists - technicians \u2014 Agricultural & forestry instructors.\nQualifications: Appropriate degrees, diplomas or extensive practical experience. If you're required to\ninstruct in your skill rather than\nwork at it. teaching or training\nexperience would be an asset, but\nit's not necessary.\nConditions: You'll be directly\nresponsible to the overseas nation\nhiring you and you'll be paid by\nthem at their prevailing local rates.\nCUSO will give you a short course\nIo prepare >ou for lite overseas and\nina> include a how-to-instruct\ncourse il yon need il. I anguage\ntraining mav be added, there's no\nage limit, but vou must he in good\nhealth. And CUSO will pa\\ transportation costs and provide medical, dental and lite insurance.\nCouples can usualb be placed it\nsuitable positions can be for both,\nfamilies with school age children\ncan sometimes be accepted too.\nFor full details, contact:\nCUSO\n311-119 W.Pender St.\nVancouver\nPh. No. 681-9031\nInformation Night at U.B.C. Oct.\n16 International House Rm. 402 &\n404.\nGeorge & Berny's\nVOLKSWAGEN\nREPAIRS\nCOMPLETE SERVICE BY\nFACTORY-TRAINED\nMECHANICS\nFULLY GUARANTEED\nAT REASONABLE RATES\n731-8644\n2125 W. 10th at Arbutus\nBefore You Invest\nInvestigate ...\nIf you are in the market for sound equipment\n\u2014   packages  or   individual   components   investigate\nRHODES\nOur knowledgeable and mature staff will demonstrate\nto you the finest selection of stereo systems in\nWestern Canada. We feature: PIONEER - KENWOOD - PANASONIC - THORENS -\nGOODMANS - SONY - AR - LEAK - TEAC -\nDUAL - WHARFEDALE - RECTILINEAR -\nTECHNICS - PHASE LINEAR and many more.\n3 Sound Areas for undisturbed listening.\nAT\nThe Finest For Less\n2665 W. BROADWAY\n733-5914\nCHARGEX\nMASTER CHARGE\nUBC Alumni\nChronicle\nCreative Writing\nCompetition\nA COMPETITION TO PROVIDE RECOGNITION OF\nCREATIVE WRITING BY UBC STUDENTS\nThe Prizes . . .\nhave been donated by the UBC Alumni Fund and are\n* a first prize of S250\n* with tour recognition awards of S25 book tokens\nThe Rules . . .\n* open to full-time and part-time registered students ut the University of\nBritish Columbia\n* entries are to be short stories to a maximum of 3.000 words, and be\npreviously unpublished\n* entries are to be typed, double spaced on white paper and two copies\nare to be provided (the original and a clear carbon or duplicate)\n* only one entry per student allowed\nThe Deadline . . .\n* entries must be received at the Alumni Office, Cecil Green Park, UBC.\nby January 31. 1975.  Judging, by a panel of writers and critics, will be\nin February and the announcement of winners in April.\n* entries are to be clearly identified with the author's name, student number\nand address where contact may be made in April.   It is suggested that a\nduplicate be-retained by the author as the Alumni Association assumes no\nresponsibility for submitted manuscripts, but will endeavour to return ail\nthose accompanied by a self-addressed enveloped\nA Bonus...\nThe winning entries will be considered for publication in the Alumni CHROSK'LE\nFor Further Information . . .\ncontact the Alumni Office. Cecil Green Park, 228-3313\nJkM.%. Special Events proudly preientf\nTHE!.. NOV. fill\nUBC WAD MEMORIAL OWN\nKING\nin CONCERT\n>fkfcete\n'tfoiiudenta\nIMwA.M.f.Offfkc:\nLimited number\nof tickets\navailable\u2014 Friday, October  11,  1974\nTHE      UBYSSEY\nPage 3\nTeds disregarding women\non abortion issue7\nBy LINDA HOSSIE\n\"The federal government is showing a\ncallous disregard for women in favor of\npolitical considerations.\n\"It is important that public opinion assert\nitself \u2014 that (the public) demonstrate that\nthe abortion laws should be repealed.\n\"Women should have access to a legal,\nsafe medical procedure when they want it.\nThe state should not interfere with that\ndecision.\"\nOn Nov. 30, 1973 Montreal doctor Henry\nMorgentaler was acquitted by a jury of his\npeers of the charge of performing an illegal\nabortion.\nAlthough the Criminal Code of Canada\nprovides that a woman can have an abortion\nfor therapeutic reasons only if it is approved\nby a committee of doctors and if it is performed in a hospital, an older Canadian law\ndictates that if a doctor relieves a patient's\nsuffering by performing a surgical\noperation with reasonable skill and care, he\nis not a criminal.\nThe French speaking jury, consisting of\n11 men and one woman, favored the older\nlaw.\nThe Quebec Court of Appeal overtuned the\nacquittal Friday, April 23,1973 and ordered\nthat Morgentaler be sentenced by his\noriginal trial judge, Mr. Justice James\nHugessen of the Court of Queen's Bench.\nOn July 25, 1974, Morgentaler was sentenced to 18 months in jail and a three-year\nprobation period.        '\nHe is currently appealing that decision to\nthe Supreme Court of Canada.\n\"Social change does not come fast,\" he\nsaid in a speech Thursday in SUB ballroom.\n\"It does not come without sacrifice. We\nhave to be willing to fight and to sacrifice\nour freedom so that this change can\nprevail.\"\nStanding at the podium at the front of the\nballroom, Morgentaler was backed by paper\nbanners bearing the slogans of the Committee to Defend Dr. Morgentaler: The Law\nIs Criminal, Free Dr. Morgentaler; Drop\nThe Charges, No More Victims, Repeal The\nAnti-Abortion Law.\nMorgentaler has publicly admitted doing\nas many as 7,000 abortions in his Montreal\nclinic and on Mothers' Day, May 13,1974, he\nperformed an abortion, using the\nvacuum suction technique, televised by\nCTV's nationwide program, W5.\n\"All the myths about abortion being a\ntraumatic, dangerous experience were\nexploded,\" Morgentaler said.\n\"As a result, those people (who oppose\nabortion) got so angry and so militant they\nhave organized and convinced (members\nof) parliament (not to support abortion on\ndemand).\n\"There are whole areas of Canada where\nwomen are not able to receive safe abortions.\"\nMorgentaler pioneered the vacuum\nsuction technique in Canada. The method is\neasy and safe, requiring only local\nanesthetic and no hospitalization of the\npatient.\nMorgentaler said he offered to teach his\nmethod to doctors and nurses but the federal\ngovernment told him such a program would\nbe a provincial matter and the Quebec\ngovernment told him it was a federal concern.\n\"It's not necessary that abortions be done\nin hospitals,\" Morgentaler said. \"It is quite\npossible to do abortions in outpatient\nfacilities without hospitalizing the women.\n\"The medical profession is a conservative\nprofession and it takes doctors a long time to\nlearn new techniques and get the equipment.\n\"Those women who do receive legal\nabortions in a hospital often go over the 12\nweek safety limit and after that limit\nabortions are four times more dangerous to\nthe life and health of the woman.\n\"The delay in obtaining legal abortions is\ndue to red tape and limited access to\nhospitals.\n\"If women had access to safe abortions\nthey would have it in the first few weeks of\npregnancy,\"\nMorgentaler said organizations opposing\nabortion on demand are \"95 per cent\nCatholic \u2014 fanatically Catholic \u2014 more\nCatholic that the pope.\"\n\"I don't think we can possibly match the\nmoney these people have and the power they\nhave,\" he said. \"We have to rely on the\npower of public opinion.\"\nMorgentaler said Gallup polls have shown\nthat the majority of Canadians favor\nabortion on demand and added that 75 per\ncent of the women who obtained abortions in\nhis clinic were Catholic.\nIn naming Morgentaler humanist of the\nyear for 1974, The Humanist, published\nquarterly in Victoria, carried this\nstatement:\n\"It is well known that the problems of\nabortion in Canada would not exist were it\nnot for the fact that the Roman Catholic\nChurch, on ostensibly religious grounds, is\nopposed to all abortions and birth control;\nand that the Liberal government of Canada\nwould be out of office but for the support of\nCatholic members from the province of\nQuebec.\nMorgentaler said the arguments against\nabortion put forth by the Catholic Church\nare \"the same propaganda they used 50\nyears ago against birth control.\"\nHe also said the argument that abortion is\nmurder is \"so unscientific and so absurd\nthat it's really hard to rebut.\n\"Potentially, every women can have 25\nchildren. Are you going to say that those\nwomen who have only two children are\ndepriving 23 children of life?\"\nMorgentaler said that for the first several\nmonths of gestation, a human foetus is a\nsystem of cells rather than a functioning\nhuman being. He said he considers a foetus\na human being when it can live independent\nof its mother's womb, a state which normally occurs about the twenty-fourth week\nof pregnancy.\nIt is essential that a distinction be made\nbetween potential life and a live baby, he\nsaid.\nEvery sperm cell ejaculated by a man is a\npotential life, he said, \"so every man\nmasterbating or having sex is committing\ngenocide.\"\nMorgentaler faces 13 counts of performing\nan illegal abortion, all of which (with the\nexception of the one currently before the\ncourts, for which a sentence has been set)\ncarrying a maximum sentence of life imprisonment.\nHaving spent the war in Auschwitz and\nDachau, Morgentaler is naturally not\nhungry for further imprisonment.\nHe said he decided to perform abortions in\nhis clinic after \"months of anxiety and internal struggle\" and being made aware of\ndeaths resulting from self-induced or badly\nperformed abortions.\"\n\"Of course it was not easy for a usually\nlawabiding citizen to practice civil\ndisobedience,\" he said.\n\"But these women faced with unwanted\npregnancies cannot wait for parliament to\nchange the law. They need help now. They\nare in danger now.\"\nHe said he established two principles for\nthe operation of his clinic: that the method\nused had to be the best and safest method\navailable at the time and that no women\nwould ever be refused an abortion in his\nclinic because of inability to pay.\nThe second principle has given him more\ntrouble than he expected.\nTaxation officials of the province of\nQuebec, after hearing at Morgentaler's trial\nthat he has performed 7,000 abortions,\nmultiplied that number by the $200 they\nassumed was a standard fee, and announced\nthat he owed them $354,799.14 in back taxes.\nHowever, Morgentaler often charged less\nthan $200 and performed about one-third of\nthe operations free of any charge.\n\"The government is trying to ruin me not\nonly symbolically but financially as well,\"\nMorgentaler said. Morgentalers legal fees\nhave amounted to over $100,000.\n\"I'm telling the people that if they want\nthe law changed they should inform\nparliament.\n\"It's not enough to have right and reason\non our side. We have to put pressure on\nparliament so they know we are the\nmajority in Canada.\n\"Women are obliged to go to the U.S. \u2014\nobliged to travel 500 to 1,000 miles to obtain a\nmedical service that should be available in\nCanada.\n\"Women are still dying, are being\nmutilated as a result of this law.\n\"It is not the problem of one man alone.\nChanges in legislation come about when\nthere is a majority decision. And we are, in\nfact, representing the majority point of view\nthat these laws should be removed from the\ncriminal code.\"\nphotos by peter cummings\nMorgentaler's speech before about 300\nstudents is part of his cross Canada\nspeaking-tour in support of his current court\ncase.\nAlthough legal fees for his defence are in\nthe six-figure bracket, observers have\nestimated the Quebec government has spent\nmore than $3 million in its attempt to put\nhim behind bars.\nHe will also be speaking at the Unitarian\nChurch, 49th and Oak, Vancouver Community College and Simon Fraser\nUniversity while in Vancouver.\nEvery sperm\ncell ejaculated by a man is a\npotential life, he said, \"so\nevery man masturbating or\nhaving sex is committing\ngenocide.\" Page 4\nTHE       UBYSSEY\nFriday, October 11, 1974\nJust like the big bad guys\nThe Alma Mater Society executive\nsaw their goal of the pool\nconstruction a bit nearer Thursday.\nOh  yeah? say some. So what?\nThe \"what\" in this case doesn't\nhappen to be the objective the\nexecutive is striving for. It's the\nway they're going about it.\nIt's a long story, involving\ncovert delaying tactics and massive\nuse of behind-the-scenes power on\ntop against people who are also\nthe elected representatives of\nstudents on this campus.\nStep by step, the moves went\nlike this:\nStudent councillors forming an\nad-hoc committee drew up a\npetition and got 500 signatures\ndemanding the pool be stopped\nthrough a three-pronged\nreferendum.\nThe petition was brought before\ncouncil Oct. 3 and the\nconstitutional clause requiring the\nrequested referendum to be put\nbefore students 10 days from the\ntime the petition was presented\nwent into force.\nAt that meeting, the\nreferendum was set for Oct. 10\nand 11 \u2014 Thursday and today.\nThen the executive made its\nfirst move.\nAlma Mater Society secretary\nDuncan Thomson contacted the\nsociety's lawyers about the legality\nof the wording on the referendum\nballot \u2014 in itself, a perfectly\nlogical thing to do.\nBut at the same time, he was\nsomewhat lax in contacting the\nprinting firm usually responsible\nfor printing AMS election ballots.\nwhen the ballots could be\nprepared, and Thomson announced\nthey couldn't be ready in time for\nthe referendum dates.\nThen came a pause as\ncounsellors waited for the\nWednesday council meeting,\npresumably where further business\ndealing with the pool would be\ndiscussed.\nThen, surprise, surprise.\nAMS president Gordie\nBlankstein announced there would\nbe no council meeting Wednesday,\nbecause there was no business on\nthe agenda  \u2014  itself untrue.\nThe stall tactic became more\napparent Thursday. That was the\nday set by the executive for a\nspeical council meeting to consider\nthe pool.\nWhy not earlier? Thomson said\nthe executive was awaiting legal\nadvice. Yet the letter from the\nlawyers presented to council\nThursday was dated \"Oct. 8\" \u2014\nTuesday. If the letter was ready\nTuesday, Thomson just needed to\ngo to the lawyers to get it for a\nWednesday meeting. But he didn't.\nStall number three.\nStall number four came during\nThursday's meeting. The wording\non the ballot was referred to\nstudent court. When could the\ncourt meet?\nOh, said law rep Parker\nMcCarthy \u2014 there is no student\ncourt. Some court members\nhaven't been appointed. I've had a\nlist of names since September of\npeople wanting the positions, but\ngee folks I haven't got it with me.\nGuess it'll have to come up at the\nAs   a   result,   the   time   passed       council   meeting  next Wednesday\nBlazing lunch bucket\nBrock burgers. Hot dogs. Runny\nrelish and gloomed-up mustard.\nCold soup. Warm milk. Stale\ndonuts. Chili con carne.\nYuch.\nPeople have commented before\non the utter lack of quality of\nfood services glop.\nAs a public service. The\nUbyssey is now publishing a series\nof menus for bag lunches.\nThey're cheaper, they're better.\nAnd they mean you can play\ntradesies in the caf at lunch time.\nTake a lunch bucket to school.\nIt'll make you feel good.\nSomehow the executive didn't\nlook too suprised.\nSo the referendum has\neffectively been put off until court\nmeets \u2014 and god knows when that\nis.\nThe executive did look rather\nsmug. And why not? They've\nstalled the referendum so they will\nbe able to go out and get support\nfrom the phys ed faculty, badly in\nneed of a covered pool, and of\nother easily organized groups.\nThe whole executive action was\na power-tripping affair where they\ndid    what    coincided    with   their\nbeliefs while trampling all over the\nrights of others.\nIt wasn't overt, like the actions\nof the engineers in heckling\ncounsellors during the noon-hour\nmeeting, but it was most effective.\nBut both the overt and covert\nactions demand total contempt.\nWho should be running the\nsociety anyway? A few executive\nmembers on a self-appointed\nmission to further their future\ncareers or council as a whole?\nIs there any doubt?\nVOU   KWOU;; OLD    OEP^rTTMEfVr   HE4DS\nNEVER   DIE, THEY JUST JURhJ iK>T0 $T\/1TJ\u00a3S.\nLetters\nHa ha ha\nhaw-haw\nTo those engineers who were\npresent at Thursday's council\nmeeting;\nWe would like to thank Dick\nLongtoh and the boys for another\nindecent exposure of their limited\nmentality.\nHowever, it is gratifying to know\nthat the boys can suffer defeat at\nthe hands of a few measly student\ncouncillors.\nIn closing, we hope we shall not\nhave to be subjected to their exposures again.\nAn applied science\nstudent\nA science student\nNames withheld\nZounds\nThe Editor, Sir:\nWhile casually perusing the\npages of your peripatetic young\nrag, I chanced upon an item that\nlooked oddly familiar.\nZounds, I said, who is that\nhandsome young bard gripping his\nforearm with a strength no doubt,\ngarnered from hours of toil on a\ntypewriter? Who is that fellow,\neyes steeled from long evenings\nspent peering from under the\nshade of a green journalistic cap?\nWho is that chap anyhow?\nThe premier byline seemed to\noffer no clue. It read, obscurely,\n\"You know who.\"\nNo, I had to admit, I didn't know\nwho. Could the article offer a\nfurther clue?\nAha \u2014 there in the lede, as those\nscions of the journalistic profession\nlike to call the first paragraph. Al\nFotheringham, it said. Ubyssey\ncolumnist.\nHmmm. Glancing around my\nsurroundings I perceived a house\nthat could neatly be classified as\nnouveau Shaughnessy rather than\nflea-bag student, as the one\nmentioned in the article could be\nsaid to inhabit.\nThat definitely proved one thing.\nThe Fotheringham sitting here\nwriting this letter couldn't be the\nsame one mentioned in the article.\nFirst, the age was wrong. Second,\nthe life style differed.\nSo another question presented\nitself in my mind.\nPerhaps    there    is    another\ncolumnist resident at UBC at the\npresent time, writing a column\nentitled Campus Chaff and using\nthe name Al Fotheringham.\nThinking that, I slipped back\nfurther into my comfortably-\nstuffed armchair, my own arms\nover my head in that crossed\nposition made famous by so many\nbillboards littering the town.\nThere is someone committing a\nrather flagrant act of plagiarism\nout there. I could sue of course I\nthought, but being a rather well-\nmeaning chap I discarded this idea\nright off. How nasty. How uncalled\nfor! How gauche to sue a college\nnewspaper.\nSo instead I'm writing to pass on\nmy condolences to that poor\ncolumnist fellow who found himself\nstripped rather bare of some\npossessions and most faculties in\nthe not-too-congenial climate of\nHorseshoe Bay. Having once\nsuffered a similar fate, I realize\nthe unpleasant nature of that type\nof experience.\nAnd one final word to young Al,\nwhoever he might really be. I\nnotice you took one Miss Pat Arnold to that clambake (funny, I\nseem to remember a similar involvement at a clambake myself).\nNow I was once seen to escort a\nyoung gal with that name during\nmy free and unfettered days. Be\nwarned young Al: she turned into a\nsow.\nThank you,\nAl Fotheringham\nUbyssey columnist\nTHE UBYSSEY\nOCTOBER 11,1974\nPublished Tuesdays, Thursdays and Fridays throughout the\nuniversity year by the Alma Mater Society of the University of\nB.C. Editorial opinions are those of the writer and not of the\nAMS or the university administration. Member, Canadian\nUniversity Press. The Ubyssey publishes Page Friday, a weekly\ncommentary and review. The Ubyssey's editorial offices are\nlocated in room 241K of the Student Union Building.\nEditorial departments, 228-2301; Sports, 228-2305; advertising,\n228-3977.\nEditor: Lesley Krueger\n\"Every pizza must have oregano and green peppers,\" chairman Ralph\nMaoser intoned. Anchovies are revisionist,\" pouted Lesley Krueger\nscheming to rearrange an \"educational\" holiday planned by ringmaster\nGary Coull Kool while his au pair Doug \"The Thug\" Rushton joined\nas ever by Sue Vohanka enlisted Jake van der Kamp, Mark Buckshon,\nJoyce Jackman, Dan Miller, Reed Clarke, Mike Sasges, Marise Savaria\nPeter Cummings, Ian Metherell, Pat McKitrick, Cedric Tetzel, Rick\nLymer, kscherous Tom Barnes, Linda Hossie, Marg McEwan. Joan\nNorton, Boyd McConnell, Bernie Bischoff, Geoff Hancock, Grace Eng\nRob Harvey, Eric Ivan Berg, Alan Doree, Joanne Gilbert, Ron Binns,\nGreg Osadchuk in the storming of the Bastille. Ken Dodd then joined\nSue Vohanka and Jan O'Brien in the multi-cultural revolution N S   Mai i      .m.2 iw*a\n_5   H^Lt,   |38 g.\nCORDOVA\n\"row the\n-*viowna\nE: 1 pm\nH*tL7iS9T^2v\u00bb\u00ab\n^\n_.^^UB   ?l$^\nr* A\n\u2022#\u2022\n\u2022%\n4%\nP\na\ng\ne\nF\nr\nd\na\ni   y fi\nI\n\u2122yes -Th y\u00bbre all the same!   I\n\u2122\u00b0J^ntfidate of the I\n-* ^^clayMarxIst-Lenlnlst) I\n*n \"Kfrqagan by-election. I\nAnd the words of the prophets are\nwritten on the subway walls . . . ubccollectionsubccollectionsubccollectionsubccollectionsubcollec\nBob9 Beatles, baby, where are you?\nBy GEOFF HANCOCK\nEver wondered why Bob Dylan,\nthe Beatles or Led Zeppelin are not\nincluded in the Wilson recording\nlibrary collection?\nAccording to Wilson library head\nDoug   Kaye   the   policy   of   the\nlibrary, located in Sedgewick-\nlibrary, is to buy serious music and\nspoken   materials   instead   of\n\"emphemera\".\n\"The guidelines were set some\nyears ago. We try to buy serious\nmusic and spoken materials \u2014 art\nOne of a kind show\nBy GRACE ENG\nIf you are at all interested in seeing what has been\ndone with your student money, zip down to the SUB\nArt Gallery and have a look at the Brock Hall permanent collection now on display.\nIt is the only student collection of art of its kind in\nCanada, and is more impressive than might appear\nat first sight.\nThe paintings, which are a part of a perpetually\ngrowing collection started in 1956, by the Alma Mater\nSociety art committee represent some outstanding\nworks by distinguished Canadian artists.\nThey are not all of one style, theme or discipline but\ndocument a wide cross section of trends in Canada of\nthe  past   three  decades.   Artists   Claude   Breeze,\nLawren Harris, A. Y. Jackson, Roy Kiyooka, John\nKorner, Toni Onley, Jack Shadbolt and Takao Tanabe\nare only a small sample of the hefty roster. Their\nworks range from abstract to realist, geometric to\nfreeform, esoteric to commonplace.\nEach individual piece is a frozen moment of the\ncreator's inspiration, caught at the peak of the swing.\nThey overflow with rich material for nothing less\nthan the mind, the imagination, and the senses.\nLooking at the passion of Strange Fruit, the electric\ndrive of Fission, the energy of Passiflora, and the\npacifying familiarity of The Island, their presence is\nundeniable, your participation is unavoidable.\nAlthough the exhibition is not shown in its entirety,\nthere are plenty of goodies to dine on.\nThe exhibition began Monday and runs until Oct.\n18.\nTry It\nYou'll Like It\nAt\nLINDY'S\n3211 W.BROADWAY\n738-2010\nPRICE AND QUALITY\nAt the Sound Room our prices are as competitive as\nany. We keep our overheads low. For example, we\ndon't advertise as much as our competitors. But, price\nis not all that we offer. When you deal with us you\ndeal with knowledgeable people who can match your\nsystem properly. Good after sales service is provided,\nwe have our own service department staffed by a\nBritish trained technician.\nShouldn't you give us a try? Most of your friends\nhave. We carry such lines as: ESS, INFINITY,\nPIONEER, LUX, BGW, DAYTON WRIGHT and\nmany more . . . See you soon at:\nThe Sound Room\nCorner of Broadway & MacDonald\n2803 W. Broadway 736-7771\nmusic as opposed to non-serious\nmusic,\" he said.\nNobody expects a university\nmusic library to carry popular\nmusic any more than they expect a\nuniversity library to carry popular\nfiction, he added.\nThe Wilson collection has 25,000\nalbums with a circulation of\n247,000, up 80,000 over previous\nyears.\nKaye attributed this circulation\nfigure to the 1972 move from the\nbasement of the main library to the\nSedgewick location. Kaye has been\nhead since 1958.\nHow are records chosen for the\ncollection?\n\"The records are chosen by a\ncommittee of one,\" Kaye said.\nThough Kaye says he will consider student requests as well as\nfaculty and music department\nrequests, he is responsible for the\ncollection's acquisitions.\nReviews in leading periodicals\nare a prime source of information\nand in the case of replacing albums\nKaye purchases the performer who\n.is currently lauded.\nHe admitted he has run into\nproblems for not buying pop music,\nespecially from students using the\nrecord library for the first time.\nBut Kaye added that head\nlibrarian Basil Stuart-Stubbs has\napproved the acquisition policies.\nKaye said jazz and blues records\nare becoming popular and quoting\nfrom a statement in Gramophone\nmagazine he said: \"There is a long\nenough history behind us in the\nfield of jazz for it to be apparent\nthat this form too has its standard\nworks.\"\nAs well as historical pieces from\nthe '30s and '40s recent jazz\nacquisitions include Herbie\nHancock, Freddie Hubbard, The\nMahavishnu Orchestra and avant-\ngarde European jazz men, Manfred Schoof and Gunter Hampel.\nThe Wilson library has an annual\nbudget of $8-10,000 which competes\nwith book funds.\nEach year Kaye buys about 2,000\nalbums \u2014 both new and\nreplacement discs. Space is clearly\na problem, Kaye said. The present\nlocation will hold about 30-35,000\nalbums, although he hopes stack\nshelving of bulky materials such as\nShakespeare's plays and duplicate\nalbums will create some extra\nspace.\nAs for common complaints that\nrecords are scratched or soiled and\ndusty, Kaye admitted this was a\nproblem.\n\"At least one half the records we\nhave are out of print,\" Kaye said.\n\"Often it's a choice of circulating\na worn copy or none at all.\"\nKaye said cleaning records\nwould extend their life considerably but the Wilson\nlibrary does not have the staff to\nclean records, especially on busy\ndays when up to 1,600 records are\nshelved.\nHe said he has no plans to extend\nthe collection to include tapes or\ncassettes citing as reasons higher\ncosts and increased copyright\nproblems.\nHe argued that trying to\nmaintain a varied selection to\nplease everyone always creates\nproblems.\n\"It's only logical. The Wilson\nlibrary tries to appeal to people\nopening doors for the first time as\nwell as the more sophisticated\nlistener who is looking for exotic\nthings.\"\n\"Standard works such as\nBeethoven we buy by the armload,\" Kaye said.\nStudent membership in the\nWilson library is $5 per year, which\nlets a student check out four\nrecords for two weeks. As well, the\nWilson library has carrells with\nheadphones and turntables for\nmid-afternoon breaks.\"\nPANGO PANGO (UNS) \u2014 Communist terrorists disrupted a\nsitting of the puce blorg parliament\nThursday in an unsuccessful attempt to kidnap puce blorg\nminister of the inferior Vilhjalmer\nMocknazi.\nInsurgents surrounded Blank\nhall where parliament was\ndebating the question of whether to\ncontinue, funding for the proposed\ncovered roof, which would offer\nsanctuary to the island's roof-\ndwelling colony of lesser crested\ngrebes at the cost of less than 360\ndays of work per peasant per year.\nSuddenly, at a command from\ntheir leader, described to be as\nblonde as Hitler, as tall as Goeb-\nbels and as slim as Goering, they\nsee pf4\nPublic Service     Fonction publique\nCanada Canada\nCareers in the\nFedera! Public Service\nThis year the Annual University\nRecruiting written examinations for the\nPublic Service will be held on October 22nd\nand 23rd, 1974 at 7:00 p.m. in Buchanan\nBuilding, Room 106. Candidates interested in\nthe Foreign Service must appear both nights.\nThe pre-registration deadline is Oct. 17, 1974.\nRegistration kits and further information are\navailable at your Student Placement Centre or\nthe Public Service Commission office. Phone\n666-1574\nThis competition is open to both men and\nwomen.\nPage Friday, 2\nTHE       UBYSSEY\nFriday, October 11, 1974 pornopornopornopornopornopornopornopornopornopornopornc\nCans express inner feeling\nBy BOYD McCONNELL\nOne of the most curious and bizarre\nphenomenon that overcomes people is their\npropensity to decorate vacant walls with\nbon mots, protesting profundities, and\npictures of usually lewd objects.\nAnd what is even stranger people decorate\nlavatory walls more than any other walls.\nThe reasons for this are vague. Possibly\nthey use the time in lavatories to express\ntheir inner feelings while occupied with a\nmuch more fundamental duty no one can\nescape.\nOn the brighter side, if you believe graffiti\nisn't esthetically displeasing, the\nscatological scribes can make a stay in the\nbiffy more entertaining than usual. For if\nyou have neglected to supply your own\nreading material, there is always a plethora\nof scribbled inanities right before your eyes.\nBesides entertainment value \u2014 which is\ndubious \u2014 graffiti can afford the astute\nreader a perceptive insight into current\ntrends of thinking. Here, Of course, it would\nbe what students are thinking:\nSince graffitists are anonymous, they\nusually expound candid opinions. Naturally,\nthis anonymity lets the more frustrated of us\nunleash large, scrawling lines of profanity,\nlewdness and debased humor. Which, in\nturn, comments on those people.\nBrock Hall's bathrooms are notorious for\na three-fronted graffiti war among arts,\nengineering and science students. This has\nbeen going on for such a long time it is more\nthan a tradition, it's an institution.\nThis war, however, can never really have\na winner. That is if the attacks and rebuttals\nare any evidence of the talent which is put\ninto the war.\nFor instance, this attack on arts students\n\u2014 whether it was a united or singular effort\nremains to be seen \u2014 \"ARTSMEN: My only\nadvice to you is plain and simple: fuck off.\"\nThen the reply written below: \"Fuck off\nwhoever wrote this.\" It's not hard to figure\nout where their heads are at.\nThe graffiti around campus runs, the\ngamut of decency \u2014 and, I guess, goes far\nbeyond, into the depths of indecency.\nSome persons likened Biblical figures to\nfinanciers: \"Jesus saves but Moses invests.\" Someone else added: \"And the Devil\nowns General Motors.\"\nI believe this further metamorphoses of\n___ _.... \u2022 \/\/ '^.J4 >n ]\n^(}lfi-;;;:.\nCV\\\nBiblical characters stems from a bumper\nsticker popular in Boston: \"Jesus saves and\nEsposito scores on the rebound.\"\nPolitical figures, as should be expected,\nare   subject   to   graffitists'   felt   pens:\n\"Castrate Trudeau! Or he'll fuck the whole\ncountry.\"\nAlso in the realm of politics is one observation by some student, \"Why is\neveryone studying so hard? Where is the\nradical student movement?\"\nA music student must have written this,\n\"Donald McKorkle (sic) hates you.\"\nSomone defeating their cause, \"Wipe out\ngraffiti.\"\nSome guy trying to be funny and artful at\nthe same time, \"Muff is a hairy experience.\"\nA pragmatist declares,\nbummer.\"\n'Anal sex is a\nSomeone who hasn't read their Pope very\nwell, and will make T. Bowdler turn in his\ngrave, \"The penis is mightier than . the\nsword.\"\nPhilosophers seem to abound in the\nbathrooms. \"Suicide is the highest form of\nfreedom.\" I swear I heard a flush just\nbefore I read that one.\nSome person thought so much of Chinese\nC\\ y^\n(pSob\nphilosophy that he wrote down some of\nConfucius' truths: \"Baseball silly game.\nMan who have four balls can't walk.\"\n\"Man who go to bed with sex problem\nwake up with solution in hand.\" (Uh, maybe\nFreud might have liked that one.)\nSome genius tried to wrestle with the\nproblem of evil. He thought he could find the\nroot of all evil using some derivative of the\nPythagorean theorem \"V evil\".\nA struggling English student attempted to\nversify a lewd tale. Note the alliteration:\nTiny Tim tickled tall Tilly's tits,\n'til Tilly's twat twitched\nTowards Tim's towering tool.\nNeedless to say, I hope he flunks English\n100.\nThe most relaxed place on campus is\nprobably the library. So, it wasn't by accident that we found a simple but rational\none-liner that made us feel stupid for being\nin a bathroom copying down what others\nhad written on the walls: \"Cease thy windy\nargument and let the matter drop.\"\nCritic decries El Topo blood\nBy JOANNE GILBERT\nA rampaging general gets his cock cut off\n\u2014 then snoots himself in the head. A bandito\nhas both his knees shot off from under him.\nA child is impaled on a stake. A monk is shot\nin the brain. A man has his throat slit. And\nhundreds of others are shot, stabbed and\ntortured.\nThis is the movie El Topo, directed by\nAlexandro Jodorwsky, which has just\nfinished a stand at the Varsity Theatre. A\nconstant bombardment of horrific images \u2014\nand all in the vain name of intellectualism\nand artistic creativity. Had Sam Peckinpah\nmade this monster the critics would have\nbeen up in arms crying, \"Unnecessary\nViolence!    Blood bloody blood!\"\nBut, because this is a \"message\" film,\nallowances must be made. I mean, after all,\nmy dear, the movie is a biblical allegory\nwith definite surrealistic overtones \u2014 not\nsome cheap thriller. However, I was not\nimpressed.\nThe director, Jodorwsky, is a convincing\nintellectual judging on a recent interview\nwith him by Oui magazine.\n\"We need a new religion for the present.\nWe are tired of all the fucking Masters who\nare coming to save the world; we are really\ntired of the mysticism of the fucking Master.,\nThe only meaning is, I am happy. I am\nhappy, but without idiocy. Really, I am the\ncomplete man. A normal man.\"\nAnd he appears to be so enlightened.\n\"The moon is pregnant, no? What is the\nmoon? The moon is the mind. OK. You have\nto lose. To lose, you must make empty. Your\nwork and your mind become empty. Then\nyou reflect the sun and you have the baby.\nWhat is the baby? It. is yourself. Your are\nreborn; everything is new for you; your\nstart to know the true nature of everything .\nYet his film El Topo is about as spiritual\nas a fuck in the ass. I went out feeling sick\nwhich is a far cry from self awareness.\nHowever, Jodorwsky would probably\nmaintain that a fuck in the ass is spiritual.\n\"It is nothing for you to make love with the\ndog. I am sure Christ can be fucked by the\ndog very easily. He takes drugs, he gets\nfucked by the dog, he has all the experiences\nof the human. This is what I think.\"\nI obviously missed that particular\npassage in the bible and judging from the\nrest of his movie \u2014 a number of others. The\nfilm is just too obscure. For, in spite of much\nbrain racking I simply could not understand\nthe intended parallel between the bible and\nhis plot. However, the final scene in the\npicture illustrated to me what a futile effort\nit all was anyway.\nThis last segment is about a Buddhist\nmonk (supposedly Christ) who sees his\nmutilated flock (lepers) shot down by the\ntownspeople. Enraged, he takes a gun and\nshoots them all. When everyone is finally\ndead he sets fire to himself in a protest\nagainst violence. The image, somehow, did\nnot have much effect upon me. In fact, I was\nrather glad to see him go.\nIn El Topo Jodorwsky attempts to expose\nhumanity's shit but ends up Wallowing in it\ninstead. And how much crap should\naudiences have to wallow in? Wasn't Ausch-\nwitiz enough to prove just how horrific\npeople can be? Do we have to see day after\nday in movie after movie examples of the\n101 ways to make a human being suffer?\nMust we grovel in the sludge?\nDoesn't each and every one of us know our\nown limitless capacity for hatred and\ncrudity? Must we then go and watch\nanother's? Can we not stop feeding our\nminds \u2014 Just Once! Is it not about time we\nreinforced our souls? Our poor neglected\n\"selfs\".\nBut why bother? Shit can be so much fun!\nLike with the Exorcist. I mean what the hell.\nI have had this morbid fear of showers ever\nsince Psycho. And spiders leave me cold and\nparalized. Why not add another fear to my\nlist? The fear of possession. Ooooooooooooo!\nI just love the way I break out into a clammy\nsweat. It makes me feel so alive, you know.\nBut then, I am forgetting all those far out\nAmerican films. Like Dirty Harry. Oh wow!\nTurns me on, you know. Yeah. Don't you\njust love the way those narrow little bullets\nplunge into all that pink flesh, spurting and\nsquirting blood. Jesus! It's like making a\nman come. Oooooooooo!\n\"But what a big gun you have, Harry.\"\n\"Of course, you're not just a cock to me.\nBut honey you know I can't come unless you\ndo it with your gun \u2014 just take the bullets\nout first, huh?\n\"Would you shoot him again, baby. Just\nfor me.\"\nOh yeah. Remember? But wait! How\nabout all those pornies. Don't you dig them?\n\"But I just love that tattoo by your\nasshole. You're such a person, you know\nthat.\"\n\"Have you ever done it with a turtle?\"\n\"Oh wow, you've shaved your pubic hair\ninto an image of Burt Reynolds. Far out.\nYou're such a free spirit. No really, Really. I\nmean it. . . .\"\nDamn them. And damn you Jodorwsky.\nYes, I can match all your sick phantasies\nand then some. My mind, like all minds, has\na vast, never ending supply of perversions.\nMurder? I have a store of them. Heard the\none where you smother a little...Sexual?\nWell you line up five dozen naked men and..\nMasochistic? I picked up the knife and cut\noff . . . Sadistic? Slowly the mother took the\nrazor blade and ... Oh I even bet I could\nsurprise you with a few. But I choose not to!\nI choose not to feed my mind. I choose not to\nidentify with my shit.\nAnd I certainly choose not to identify with\nyours. My mind is too powerful already. And\nyou choose to feed it all the sick phantasies it\ncan possibly thrive upon. Never again.\nNever again will I sit through such crap,\nreview or no review. For, I'm a junkie who\ndoesn't want the fix. Christ! I have enough\ntrouble keeping on top of my own insanities\nlet alone keeping on top of yours. Yes, I have\nmy own shit, thank you. And it does not need\nreinforcing. So fuck off!!!!\nFriday, October  11,  1974\nTHE      UBYSSEY\nPage Friday, 3 moviesmoviesmoviesmoviesmoviesmovi\nToo good to be true\nBy ERIC IVAN BERG\nMartin Scorsese may be just too good to be an\nAmerican director; he must be a prodigious young\nEuropean talent masquerading as the next knight\nerrant of the Yankee screen.\nFor Mean Streets, his latest film, is a beautifully\ngrotesque realization of the violently fast-paced inner\ncity underworld of New York. Avant garde\naggrandisement aside, it is a first rate film.\nIt is fully realized personal film making at its nadir.\nMean Streets flows in a gutter atmosphere of rarif ied\nviolence and quick hit passions so unexpectedly total\nthat the sum rhythmically edited and tonic effect is to\nMean Streets\nDirected by Martin Scorsese\nScreenplay by Scorsese and Mardik Martin\nPlaying at the Varsity Theatre\nleave the audience gasping at the gripping reality. It\nleaves one mercilessly, almost masochistically,\nwilling to accept whatever Scorsese wants to shoot at\nyou next. Scorsese's moving camera dives its deep\nfocus lenses into the black milieu of Gotham's grotto\nlife and death \u2014 into the lives of its inmates, already\ncaged in the cliche of its asphalt jungle.\nAnd the junior mafioso inmates of Scorsese's;\nsub-Italian ghetto come shockingly to life at close-up\ncamera range. First there is Charlie (Harvey Keitel)\na deeply Catholic candidate for sainthood- and petty\ncrook. But there can be no saints nor neon halos\nglowing in this nasty red-filter gasbar recollection\nthat Charlie wanders through as the devil's advocate.\nFor Charlie seeks to do God's will and score big on the\nside.\nBut it is Robert De Niro's flamboyantly extroverted\nportrayal of Johnny Boy, the film's manic depressive\nloose screw, that really steals most scenes. Johnny\nBoy is the violent and scatologically inane nit of the\npix. He drinks, whores, runs numbers, gambles too\nmuch, bombs postal boxes, takes homicidal pot shots\nwith his .38 revolver, and blurts obscenities on the\nScorsese's outstanding cast of no-name actors\nperform well in the sidewalk limelight of several\nlesser roles. Among them is a passionate Teresa\nigf^[g(gBl3[3B[3l3[q[qIglal?l?[^(gt3l3lg[g[q[gIq{al3[g[E\nIE] i-l\nIII THE |\nI ISLES OF GREECE BI\nBD ^ S\nis\nj\u00a7j CANADA'S FIRST\nIS\nIS\n1SI\nUD\nIS\nIS\njg PLEASANT SURROUNDINGS\n13 SUPERB CUISINE\nIS\nIS\nIS\nIS\nig SPECIAL PARTIES-ANNIVERSARIES\nIS\nkd For reservations call 224-3711\nIS\nI <n~YOF ATHfN<> R\u00abTaURANTS H\n4444 West 10th Avenue, Vancouver B]\n01\nCYPRIOT TAVERNA\nNIGHTLY ENTERTAINMENT\nBI\nBI\nBI\nBI\nBI\nBI\nBI\nBI\nBI\nBI\nBI\nEl\nBI\nBI\nBI\nBI\nBI\nBI\nBI\nIS\nIS\nin\nigggggrgggE]gggr|]ggggggggggggggE]E\nfrom pf2\nexposed their weapons and seized\nMocknazi.\nHowever, the Reds were beat off\nsuccessfully by a valiant group of\nparliamentarians led by minister\nof the interior decorators, Ned\nLePoopee and minister of the\nulterior Soup Salade.\nA TANTALIZING\nTHRILLER\n...WITH A NECK-SNAPPING CLIMAX!\nThe Canadian film industry's most sophisticated English language olfering to date.\n-TIME MAGAZINE sept.24\/73\n(Amy Robinson), Johnny Boy's epileptic sister and\nCharlie's illicit Italian lover. Robert Romanus' suave\nand coldly convincing performance as Michael, the\nnumbers baron, and Johnny Boy's knife-sharp\nnemesis, is outstanding. Scorsese's hand held Bolex\ncaptures the raw sleeze and red light sweatshop\natmosphere of Tony's (David Provel) backstreet bar\nand honkytonk perfectly. Provel's raunchy and\nalmost amicably poetic realization of bar owner\nTony, lover of tigers, cars and William Blake's poetry\nis quite touching.\nMean Streets, being a Godfather-fare original, had\nto have one to lord over the heavy Mafia sense of\nfamily and web of circumstance that the picture\nplays up to. So, the film's \"Don\" is Uncle Giovanni\n(Cesare Denova) who paternally watches his nephew\nCharlie slowly rise from the lower ranks of nice-guy\nneophyte to become mob politician and legit entrepreneur. Charlie wants to take over and manage a\nlarge \"class\" hotel, with his uncle's mob money of\ncourse.\nMean Streets is a fast paced modern passion play\nwith Charlie playing a scapegoat's Everyman to the\nunderworld milieu that swirls around him. But all too\noften the film's gutter jingo simply falls back on\n\"fuck\". The actors seem to ad lib lapse at times into\nextravagant fuck you phraseology and the lower\nshitkicking permissives of language simply to plug\nthe reality of the visual poetry. This may be a grave\nturn-off to many filmgoers, just as some of the sloppy\nmotivation inherent in the script is another nit\npicking thing you may find annoying.\nThe flashy photography of Kent Wakeford and the\nrhythmic editing techniques are truly pro. Scorsese\nscores again and again with an unusually vivid hardhitting reality throughout the film. He runs the\ngrotto's gauntlet of themes and images from the\nCatholic baptismal home movie that opens the film,\nto drug addiction, homosexuality, blatant racial\nbigotry, the Mafia ghetto \"government\", and even\nthe Vietnam war. It is a significant film of the early\n'70s \u2014 real to the point of overpowering in its visual,\nsocial, moral and violently criminal expose of our\ntroubled times.\nDR. BUNDOLO\nS.U.B.\n12:30 P.M.\nFREE\nLIVE RADIO COMEDY\na CBC production\nOCT. 15th\nCBU 690\nBroadcast:\nFriday - 7:30 P.M. - CBC-AM 690 KC\nSaturday - 11:30 A.M. - CBC-FM 105.7 MC\n+ continuation   of\nour Action Packed Serial\nIPLEASE SHOW AMS CARD1\nTHE CHARLES BOGLE\nPHONOGRAPH DISPENSARY\nnew & used records\n4430 W.10 th      224 0232\nFREE PASS FOR TWO . . . FREE PASS FOR TWO .\nThe TAP Has Been Turned On At\nJACK'S HANGING TREE\nFor the thirsty \u2014 it's ice cold \u2014\nit's bubbly \u2014 it's frothy \u2014 it's light amber colored and at regular\nprices. Served in plimsol glasses or jugs.\nWhy not visit Jack's Hanging Tree Cabaret, be our guests, just bring\nin this ad, good for two admissions.\nNIGHTLY ENTERTAINMENT FEATURING:\nLEE MORIN BLUE'S GAZOOS\n\"GUITARIST\" 5 PIECE ROCK\nMon.-Thurs.-9:30-1:30 & ROLL BAND\nFriday & Saturday\nJACK'S HANGING TREE \"ON THE MALL\" - 900 Block Granville\nFREE PASS FOR TWO . . . FREE PASS FOR TWO .\nPage Friday, 4\nTHE       UBYSSEY\nFriday, October 11, 1974 'Death5 notes ironic climax\nBy RON BINNS\nThe American poet Anne Sexton died last\nFriday at the age of 45, apparently from\nsuicide. From the evidence of her verse she\nhad been, to quote the title of an earlier\nAnne Sexton, The Death Notebooks.\n[Houghton Mifflin Co, Boston\npoem, \"wanting to die\" for a long time, and\nthe almost pathological obsession with\ndeath comes through even stronger in this,\nher final volume.\nSince the death of her friend Sylvia Plath;\nwho gassed herself in 1963, Anne Sexton\nseems to have been writing in the shadow of\nher by-now legendary contemporary. So\nmuch so, in fact, that two years ago a writer\nin The Critical Quarterly rounded on her for\nimitating Plath, for being \"on the suicide\nbandwagon\" and writing merely \"cheap\"\nand \"coy\" pastiches of her dead friend's\nwork.\nThe epigraph from Hemingway, another\nsuicide,  perhaps  provides   her  wounded\nanswer to such criticism: \"Look, you con\nman, make a living out of your death.\" By\nending her life, Sexton obtains a context of\nauthenticity for her poetry, but whether The\nDeath Notebooks provide a satisfying\nclimax to her writing career is more\nquestionable.\nHer admission in the poem The Fury of\nRain Storms that \"depression is boring\" is\nsadly all too true in the case of this book. The\nbulk of the poetry is monotonously stifling in\nits endless re-working of the same tired\nsuicidal themes, flaunted with a failed\nhumor:\nwhen it comes to my death let it be slow, let\nit be pantomime, this last peep show.\nNothing in this volume seems to equal her\nearlier rendition of the sense of failure and\nexhausted indifference which motivates a\nsuicide:\nleaving the page of the book carelessly open,\nsomething unsaid, the phone off the hook\nand the love, whatever it was, an infection. .\nInstead all we are offered is an endless\nreiteration of the rhythms and rhetoric of\nSylvia Plath.\nIronically Plath once claimed Sexton as\nan influence on her style, which the latter\npointed out in her memoir The Barfly Ought\nto Sing in Charles Newman's anthology The\nArt of Sylvia Plath. This may have been true\nin the fifties, but as Sexton's memoir\ndemonstrates her ideas of poetic form were\nfar too hazy ever to raise her to the level of\ncompetence so brilliantly displayed in\nPlath's later work.\nInstead The Death Notebooks merely\npresents us with self-indulgent, almost self-\ncontemptuous, free verse outpourings.\nOnly in the last section of the book does\nAnne Sexton finally organise her anguish in\na coherent, disciplined manner by aban\ndoning free verse and adopting the sentence\nstructures and metre of that extraordinary\npoem Jubilate Agno, written by the English\npoet Christopher Smart while incarcerated\nin a lunatic asylum in 1759.\nIn these final nine psalms, collectively\nentitled 0 Ye Tongues, Anne Sexton finally\nachieves that element of distance from\nherself which evokes pathos rather than\nself-pity.\nImprisoned within her death obsession she\nholds a dialogue with herself through the\npersonae of Anne and Christopher:\nFor Anne and Christopher were born in my\nhead as I\nhowled at the grave of the ros3s...\nFor I was in a boundary of wool and painted\nboards.\nWhere are we Christopher? Jail, he said.\nThough posterity will undoubtedly rate\nher lower than Plath for her accomplishments, these final psalms seem\nvery important in evaluating her success as\na writer. They transcend the empty\nemotionalism of what has gone before and\nput a brake on the decline of her career.\nAnne Sexton's death perhaps signals the\nend of the confessional school of writing in\nour time. The raggedness of The Death\nNotebooks evokes the exhausted narcissistic\nquality of suicide as a theme, and if her\npersonal tragedy insinuates the lethal\ndangers of a romantic posture where\nlanguage and theme finally seem to require\ndeath as the final validation it perhaps also\nraises a useful barrier against any other\nwriters trespassing on this territory. After\nthe poetry and the suicides of Sylvia Plath,\nJohn Berryman and Anne Sexton enough is\nfinally enough.\t\nEd. note \u2014 A medical examiner has now\nconfirmed that Sexton's death was suicide.\nCleo Laine soars high\nwith husky timbre\nPETRUCCHIO, MICHAEL BALL \u25a0 \u2022 begins taming the shrew Katherine, Denise Fergusson\nShrew small V surrealism\nBy making the action of the play emphatically artificial, Newton is able to\njustify an excursion into the world of fantasy. He also reminds us not to take Kate's\nclosing eulogy on the virtues of wifely\nobedience too seriously \u2014 its validity rests\nonly within the context of the play.\nBy ROB HARVEY\nProducing a Shakespearean play always\ninvolves an artistic tug-of-war between\ntradition and experiment \u2014 is a \"classic\" to\nbe enacted faithfully from the text or is it to\nbe adapted to embody contemporary insights and values?\nExperiment holds uncontested sway over\nthe Playhouse Theatre's current production\nof The Taming of the Shrew.\nThe Taming of the Shrew\nby William Shakespeare\ndirected by Christopher Newton\nat the Playhouse Theatre through October\n26\nPlayhouse director Christopher Newton's\ndecision to wrench Shakespeare's much-\nperformed comedy from the Renaissance to\na gas-lit platform on a nineteenth century\nrailway station is amusingly appropriate. A\nrailway station, after all, is a place for infinite departures.\nNewton's interpretation emphasizes the\ncomedy's play-within-a-play structure.\nIn Shakespeare's text a troupe of players\nperform the story of Katharina and\nPetrucchio for a drunken tinker named\nChristopher Sly, who appears in the induction. He does not appear at the end of the\nplay in Shakespeare's First Folio.\nIn the Playhouse production, Christopher\nSly is a railway stationmaster who is entertained by an actors troupe stranded\nbetween trains. After the play is over, he is\nleft on stage alone to close down the lights\none by one.\nIn setting the Playhouse stage Newton\nmakes use of several bizarre props, including a silver plaster cast of B.C. Lions\nfootballer Jim Young's leg upturned on a\npiano. At the piano Curtis, a minor\ncharacter in the play, fills in. set changes\nwith lively ragtime renditions of tunes like\nI've Got Rhythm.\nThese directorial sleights of hand create\nan enjoyably incongruous effect, yet they\nnever quite achieve a satisfactory existence\nin the play. This is surrealism with a small\n\"s\", a decorative pastiche of arbitrarily-\nchosen symbols which add very little to the\nplay.\nOther things, however, contribute a great\ndeal. The Playhouse actors bring real\nenergy and talent to a long and elaborate\nscript. Michael Ball is a wonderfully robust\nPetrucchio to Denise Fergusson's spirited\nKatharina. Bernard Hopkins plays an endearingly naughty and nimble Grumio.\nCameron Porteous has created a minor\nmasterpiece in Petrucchio's outrageous\nwedding suit.\nThe Playhouse Theatre's sensitively\nconceived production of The Taming of the\nShrew is worth experiencing.\nBy GEOFF HANCOCK\nCleo Laine's remarkable voice can suddenly sneak up on a person and hold him or\nher spellbound. Her voice is rich in tone and\nperfectly controlled \u2014 moving effortlessly\nfrom her naturally rich husky timbre to a\nsoaring high tone. A sell out audience gave\nher a standing ovation Friday evening at the\nQueen Elizabeth theatre.\nLaine \u2014 a ccompanied by a small quartet\nled by husband-musical arranger John\nDankworth \u2014 chose numbers from a\nrepertoire that included amusing interpretations of e. e. cummings, Noel\nCoward's and Spike Milligan's poetry and a\nmoving rendition of Shakespeare's sonnet\nShall I compare thee to a summer's day?\nHer esoteric and varied selections also included Gershwin, Stevie Wonder, Leonard\nFeather, Sir John Betjamin and Gilbert and\nSullivan compositions.\nLaine is supposed to be the best singer in\nthe world according to some overly enthusiastic critics. Although this is unfair to a\ngreat many equally talented singers, there\nis no denying Laine's stage presence. She\nhas the ability to project her personality so\nthat she seems to be singing to you alone.\nHer songs live partly because of her\ndramatic accents \u2014 an outstretched arm, a\nfacial expression, a tip of the head \u2014 and\npartly because of the extensive range of her\nvoice and her comic timing.\nDankworth unfortunately played only one\nsmall solo on clarinet which brought a\ntremendous round of whistles and applause.\nThe rest of the time Dankworth directed the\nquartet's piano, bass and drums, played fine\naccompaniment on alto sax and leaned\nagainst the piano beaming happily at his\ntalented wife.\nHighlights included Dankworth's song\nwithout words, Laine scatting nonsense\nlyrics with a fluid and lusty voice and\nLaine's duets with Dankworth.\nWhen Laine's warm voice melted into\nDankworth's alto sax the program transcended its comfortably slick variety music\nhall entertainment and got closer to all-out\njazz.\nAn appreciative neat and tidy upper\nmiddle class audience gave her standing\novations throughout her performance.\nLaine is difficult to categorize. Is she a\njazz singer or a popular singer? Jazz fans\ncould complain her program tied down by\nbanal lyries and laugh-getting esoterica\nnever quite took off. Popular music fans, on\nthe other hand, could demand more\nshowpieces, more of that Burt Bacharach\nfellow. But whatever side of the fence she is\nstraddling, Laine's three encores prove her\na versatile and stunning talent.\nLAINE ... rich husky timbre\nFriday, October  11,  1974\nTHE      UBYSSEY\nPage Friday, 5 recordscrecordsrecordsrecordsrecordsrecordsrecordsrecordsrecoi\nMoog synthesizer musicians thrive\nBy ALAN DOREE\nHas Glenn Gould changed his mind?\nIf not, Emerson, Lake and Palmer might\nchange it for him.\nNo, Keith Emerson, Greg Lake and Carl\nPalmer are not hit men from Chicago. They\nare threeEnglish musicians who have done\nmore for the Moog synthesizer than anyone\nsince Walter Carlos, whose popular album\nof a few years ago, Switched-on Bach, was\nattacked   by   classical   pianist Gould.\nThe aDtlv titled album \u2014 a three record\nset \u2014 is the group's sixth release and is\ncomposed of material from the previous five\nWelcome back, my friends, to the show\nthat never ends \u2014 ladies and gentlemen,\nEmerson, Lake and Palmer. Manticore\nlabel, distributed by Atlantic Records.\nas performed live during their 1973-74 world\ntour which included a stop in Vancouver.\nEmerson, Lake and Palmer's music\nseems an incongruous blend of contemporary instrumentation and the\ntraditional highly structured forms of\nclassical styles. A fine example on The Show\nThat' Never Ends is Toccata, by Ginastera,\nwhich is difficult to imagine as a piano\nconcerto unless one has heard the original.\nThe piece, changed only slightly from the\nstudio version of their previous album Brian\nSalad Surgery, shows how well rock rhythms can fit into a classical framework. This\nis shown to even better advantage in the\nlonger selections Tarkus and Karn Evil 9.\nDivided into several movements each,\nthey occupy more than three full sides of the\nrecordset and are an excellent showcase for\nthe trio's polyrhythmic approach which is\noften driven at incredible speed by Carl\nPalmer's frenetic drumming.\nThe tense energy exuded by Emerson,\nLake and Palmer has been a trademark of\nthe group's work since their first album,\nappropriately entitled Emerson, Lake and\nPalmer, was released in 1971, and their style\nhasn't changed much in the intervening\nthree years. It is the absence of this pulse\nthat makes the album sound a little empty\nuntil Tarkus starts the second side.\nThis would appear to be due to poor\nrecording as the group has a very full sound\nin concert and their only other live album,\nPictures At An Exhibition, is indistinguishable in sound quality from their\nstudio work.\nTarkus, from the album of the same name,\nhas, as Emerson said when they played the\nColiseum in February, \"... changed a bit\nsince we were here last.\" Most notably the\nconclusion, Aquatarkus, has expanded form\na four minute restatement of the Tarkus\ntheme in a march-like tempo to a full-blown\nsynthesizer solo filling half of one side and\nundergoing several time signature changes.\nThis leads into what is probably the\nalbum's finest cut, a lengthened version of\none of their earlier popular compositions\nTake A Pebble, with several other things\npacked in the middle. Emerson adds a nice\ntouch by plucking the strings inside the\npiano before building to a superb piano solo\nthen guitarist Greg Lake, formerly with\nKing Crimson, does an acoustic rendition of\nLucky Man, another hit from their first\nalbum and once again displays the finest\nvoice in rock today with the exception of\nJack Bruce.\nAll six sides of the album move at a hectic\npace that is typical of the group and even the\nquiet selections ripple and flow as though\nchafing at the restriction. Many of the cuts\nare played considerably faster than the\noriginal studio versions which causes a few\nproblems. Lake doesn't have time in places\nto fit in an entire line and starts with the\nsecond or third word. Emerson runs away\nfrom Lake and Palmer at the outset of Take\nA Pebble's first piano solo then halves the\ntime so they can fit in, but the transition is\naccomplished smoothly.\nThe speed and complexity of Emerson,\nLake and Palmer's music has preserved\nthem from imitators. Their symphonic rock,\nas some have described it, is far more\nsuccessful than earlier dismal attempts by\ngroups like Ekseption and The Moody Blues,\nwho tried to fit classical music into a rock\nDeat instead of the other way around.\nEmerson, while with another English band\nThe Nice, once said the two forms had to\nbuild bridges together if they didn't wish to\nremain apart from music as a whole.\nIf that's the case, maybe I should send\nGlenn Gould a copy of this album.\nLook . . .\na delicatessen on\ncampus . . . with cheeses,\ncold meats, pastries,\npizzas and specially\nprepared sandwiches to\ngo . . .\nat\n4560 W. 10th.\n919 Robson St.\n1050 W. Pender\n670 Seymour\ndb\nduthie\nBOOKS\nCBC FLASH \/\nExpose Yourself to CBC Radio\nDr. Bundolo's Pandemonium\nMedicine Show\nFridays on \"As it Happens,\" 7:30 p.m.\nThe Royal Canadian Air Farce\nSundays on \"The Entertainers\", 1:00 p.m.\n(starting Oct. 20)\nInside from the Outside\nSaturday, 11:30 a.m. (starting Oct. 12)\nThere are more laughs on CBC RADIO than news,\nweather, and sports. There's humour and satire\nabout Canadians, for Canadians, by Canadians.\nCheck your local schedule for the proper pronunci\nation of \"schedule.\" And remember. . .\nthe only difference between a flasher and a streaker\nis a university education.\n(CBU690)\nI VANCOUVER J\nPage Friday, 6\nTHE      UBYSSEY\nFridpy, October 11, 1974 Friday, October  11,  1974\nTHE      UBYSSEY\nPage 11\nIn salary talks\nWorkers screwed\nUBC clerical workers belonging\nto the Canadian Union of Public\nEmployees are being treated\nunfairly by the university administration, local president JCen\nAndrews said Thursday.\nAndrews said six clerical\nworkers doing the same jobs as\nAssociation of University and\nCollege Employees members have\nbeen offered less during current\nsalary negotiations than a recent\nAUCE settlement.\n\"The university has shown it was\nwilling to pay clerical workers a\ncertain amount under pressure\nfrom some quarters,\" he said.\n\"They should pay their other\nworkers the same amount.\"\nThe six women affiliated with\nCUPE during the summer and are\ncurrently negotiating salaries\nthrough CUPE.\nOne of the women, Josephine\nPrice of the traffic office, said she\nis currently making $556 per month\nand would receive an additional $98\nunder the first offer from the\nuniversity.\nThis would place her salary at\n$654 per month at the end of the\ncontract period, compared to the\n$706 per -month she would be\nmaking under the AUCE\nagreement.\nAndrews said a further offer has\nbeen received from the university,\ndetails of which could not be\ndisclosed, but it is still below\nAUCE rates.\nPrice said she finds the situation\n\"completely unsatisfactory\" and\nwould like to see an increase\ncommensurate with the AUCE\nincrease.\n\"We've been the underdogs all\nthese years, working here. We\nneed to get more money and if the\nuniversity gives more money to the\nAUCE people, then why won't it\ngive it to us?\"\nPrice said she and the three\nother women working in the traffic\noffice have discussed decertifying\nCUPE as their bargaining agent\nand joining AUCE.\n\"We just feel we should get more\nmoney and this looks like the best\nway to do it.\"\nAndrews refused to comment on\nthe possible decertification move,\nsaying only \"a union is as good as\nits members make it.\"\n\"Of course we wouldn't like to\nsee them go, but I think Miss Price\nhas a justification in her complaint\n\u2014 against the university.\"\nAn AUCE spokesman said she\ndidn't want to get involved in internal CUPE matters but sympathized in their complaint against\nthe university.\nAn administration spokesman\nsaid the university preferred not to\ncomment on matters under\nnegotiation.\nTelegram sent cancelling accord\nFrom page 1\ncomplaints against CKLG\nmanagement for the dismissal of\nCKLG-CUPE local 686 president\nEd Mitchell, FM disc jockeys Cam\nScott and Tim Burge and 'LG\nnewsman Lari Freeman. The\nremaining complaints were laid as\na result of alleged interference in\nthe formation of the local union,\nintimidation and discrimination\nagainst the union members.\nHughes said it was decided to\nnegotiate an out-of-court settlement during the second\nbargaining session between CKLG\nmanagement and CUPE local 686\nbargaining committee.\nA 14.point agreement was\nreached Oct. 3 and signed and\nagreed upon by both CUPE and\nCKLG, he said.\nMitchell said in a press release\nThursday that a joint telegram was\nto the Canada Labor Relation\nBoard dispatched Oct. 3 by CKLG\nand CUPE lawyers stating that an\nagreement had been reached and\nthe hearings scheduled for Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday to\ndeal with the complaints should be\ncancelled.\nHughes said management\nnegotiators Frank Callaghan and\nAl Anaka announced during\nThursday morning's negotiations\nthat the management of CKLG\nwould not honor the agreement\nsigned last week.\nCKLG general manager Don\nHamilton said Thursday that in the\nfinal draft there was one clause\nfundamentally different from the\nagreement reached at the\nnegotiating table.\nHamilton said the clause in\nquestion was one to arbitrate the\nreinstatement of Mitchell and\n. Burge.\nHe said the company agreed to\ntake the two employees back with\nfull back pay if the arbitration was\ndecided in the union's favor but\nwould be able to dismiss them if it\nwas decided in the company's\nfavor.\n\"It came out reading that if the\ncompany is wrong they would be\nreinstated with back pay and if the\ncompany is right then we would not\nhave the right to dismiss the two\nemployees,\" Hamilton said.\nThe other two employees,\nFreeman and Scott, have been\nunconditionally reinstated.\nUnion organizer Hughes said the\ncompany's excuse that the union\nhad snuck some clause in they did\nnot know of was unfounded.\n\"We're fighting mad now. We're\ngoing to have a collective\nagreement and have these people\nreinstated,\" he said.\n\"CUPE is going to do whatever\nhas to be done through the courts,\njob action \"\u2014- whatever is\nnecessary. We signed an\nagreement with them and it will be\nenforced come hell or high water,\"\nHughes said.\nThe CUPE local received\nnational support when national\nsecretary Grace Hartman charged\nthe Canadian Association of\nBroadcasters with attempting to\ninstitute an industry wide campaign to deny employees their\nlegal rights to organize.\nHartman said in a press release\nthat the CAB is using CKLG as a\nspearhead in a move to stamp out\nunionization of private radio\nstations in Canada.\n\"The agreement to drop the\ncharges was signed by both the\nunion and the lawyer for Moffatt\nCommunications Ltd., owners of\nCKLG,\" she said. \"And now in one\nof the most despicable attempts at\nunion busting I have ever seen the\nemployer has in effect refused to\nrecognize the agreement.\"\nMitchell said the union acted in\ngood faith by withdrawing the 23\nunfair labor complaints as was\nagreed upon. He said he was\npersonally shocked that CKLG\nmanagement would choose to shirk\ntheir responsibilities and live up to\ntheir end of the bargain.\nMitchell said the union\nnegotiating committee was still\nprepared to continue collectively\nbargaining with management to\nreach CKLG's first union contract.\nGeneral manager Hamilton also\nsaid he hoped a solution would be\nfound at the negotiating table.\nMitchell was fired Sept. 5, five\ndays after the union was certified\nto bargain for CKLG employees;\nBurge has been out since mid-\nMay; Scott was dismissed in mid-\nApril and Frieman was let go in the\nthird week of August.\nJOIN THE NUCLEAR TEAM\nATOMIC ENERGY OF CANADA LIMITED is responsible for research into and\ndevelopment of peaceful uses of atomic energy. AECL pursues a wide range\nof activities ranging from basic science to wholly commercial operations.\nThe quality of AECL's facilities and the competence of its scientists and\nengineers are internationally known and respected.\nAECL, in close cooperation with industry and the utilities, has brought to\nmaturity one of the world's most successful nuclear power systems. It is a\nleader in the production of radioactive isotopes and related equipment for\nthe treatment of disease and other uses. It is responsible for the commissioning and operation of heavy water plants.\nTHINK ABOUT JOINING THE TEAM. Consult your Placement Officer for\nmore information on the jobs available to  new graduates in  1975.\nApplication forms should be forwarded before October 21st if you wish to be\nconsidered for an interview. AECL representatives will visit your Campus on \u2014\nThursday November 21 and Friday November 22.\nA:\n.#    Atomic Energy\nof Canada Limited\nL'Energie Atomique\ndu Canada, Limitee\nROSEMMTZ AND GlILDENSTEM ARE DEAD\nby Tom Stoppard\nAn M.A. Thesis Production\nDirected by Gordon McCall\nOCTOBER 16-19\n8:00 p.m.\nTickets: $2.50\nStudents: $1.50\nTickets: Room 207 - Frederic Wood Theatre\nUBC DOROTHY SOMERSET STUDIO\nMATURE\nVogue\n911 GRANVILLE\n615.3434\nMien\/tcomesto Beauty Queens-\nitsCanyOriand Bust!\nCARRY OH\nGIRLS\nSHOWS AT:\n1, 3, 5:05,\n7, 9:10\nSUNDAY 3, 5:05,\n7.9:10\nRICHARD HARRIS OMAR SHARIF\nWARREN OATES-isela vega \u201e\n\"BRING ME THE HEAD OF ALFREDO GARCIA\"\nA SAM PECKINFAH FILM\nCoronet\n\u2022 SI   GRANVILLE\n685  6828\nViolence and some coarse language.\n\u2014R. McDonald,B.C. Director\n12,2,4,6,8,10\n\"Its a credit to Gerard Oury that so much of\nThe Mad Adventures of Rabbi Jacob' is so funny X||E\nso much of the time.\"-wn\u00ab\u00ab c\u2122t>y,\u00ab y. r\u2122es     _ \u2014 - ~!V\nIlLTd'aaaaaa!     French with English\nSub Titles\nr.MBit    \u25a0 ...\u25a0\u25a0      Shows at 7:30 - 9:30\n6^76  2747 GENERAL\n'Ml\nShows 7:30, 9:30\na National Him Board leature production\nH^fY Vi\u00b0CK THE ^\u00b04r?\nVarsitu\n224-3730***\n4375 W   10th\nDirected by JOHN HO*E\nStarring STUART GILLARD   TIIU LEEK    KEN JAMES\nScreenplay by WILLIAM WEINTRAUB bavd on his noel\nMature\u2014Occasional coarse and suggestive dialogue.\n\u2014R. McDonald. B.C. Director\nGENERAL\nSHOWS: 7:30, 9:30\nDunbar\nDUNBAR al ]Oth\nEGGS.\nHundreds of New Books\nat\nOLD FASHIONED PRICES!\nTHE SOCIAL ANIMAL\nE. Aronson. Lively introduction to the world of social psychology. Pub.\nat $7.95. Only $2.50\nTHE COMING OF AGE\nSimone de Beauvoir. Definitive study of the problem of growing old. 585\npp. Pub. at $10.00. Only $4.95\nVERLAINE\nJ. Richardson. Full-scale critical biography. Pub. at $10.00.   Only $4.95.\nSCULPTURE\/INUIT\nEskimo Art. Softbound. Pub. at $7.50. Only $2.98\nOTTO WAGNER. 1841-1918\nGeretsegger 8t Peintner. Introduction by Richard Neutra. Reassessment\nof this pioneer in functional architecture.\n294 I llus. Pub. $25.00. Only $11.95\nTHE EDWARDIANS\nJ. B. Priestly. Richly illustrated panoeama of the Edwardian era.\nPub. at. $15.00. Only $7.98\nPOWER AND INNOCENCE\nRollo May. Psychological study of what is necessary to control tendencies\nto violence. Pub. at $735. Only $2.95\nSIEGFRIED'S CURSE:\nThe German Journey from Nietzsche to Hesse. By W. Andrews. As seen\nby Hauptmann, Kessler, Kafka, Rilke, Mann, et al.\nPub. at $10.95. Only $3.50\nRAP ON RACE:\nMargaret Mead & James Baldwin. Mead and Baldwin in a candid dialogue\non race and society. Pub. at $6.95. Only $1.50\nA JAMAICAN PLANTATION\nMichael Craton & James Walvin. The history of Worthy Park 1670 -\n1970. U. of T. Press. Pub. at $10.00. Only $2.50\nLAND TENURE AND POLICY IN TANZANIA\nR.W. James. Softbound. Special 75c\nLIN PIAD:\nLife and writings Special $1.00\nSURREALISM AND THE NOVEL\nJ. H. Matthews. U. of Mich. Press. Pub at $5.95. Only $1.95\nLIMITED QUANTITIES OF MOST TITLES\nALL HARDBACK UNLESS OTHERWISE STATED.\nDiscount Book Store\n3297 Dunbar at 17th\n224-4211 Page 12\nTHE      UBYSSEY\nFriday, October 11, 1974\na\nl r\\ecorci^ale\naddica\nm^Jhe fr\/odt eJji&tmaufohed (StaAdicatcJLJabet mJrom mJri\nSTU 70031\nWorks for Organ Vol 11, J.S. Boch;\nSonatas, Chorals, Marie-Claire Alain\nSTU 70121\nThe Sonatas for Flute, Vol I, J.S. Bach;\nRampal, Veyron-LaCroix\nSTU 70122\nThe Sonatas for Flute, Vol II, Rampal,\nVeyron-LaCroix\nSTU 70150\nThe Five Suites for Orchestra, J.S. Bach, Vol\nI, Jean-Francois Paillard\nSTU 70151\nThe Five Suites for Orchestra, J.S. Bach, Vol\nII, Jean-Francois Paillard\nSTU 70184\nFour Italian Flute Concertos, Vivaldi,\nTartini, etc. Jean-Pierre Rampal; Karl\nRistenpart\nSTU 70192\nTwo Concertos for Harp and Orchestra;\nBoieldieu, Krumpholz; Lily Laskine,\nJean-Francois Paillard\nSTU 70209\nSonatas for Flute and Harpsichord; Handel\nJean-Pierre Rampal, Veyron-LaCroix\nSTU 70241\nFour Concertos for Flute and Orchestra, J.S.\nBach; Telemann-Rampal, Ristenpart\nSTU 70356\nThree Concertos of Vivaldi and Biscolgi,\nAndre, Pierlot, Rampal, Laskine, Alain,\nVeyron-LaCroix, Paillard\nSTU 70467\n\"II Pastor Fido\" \u2014 Six Sonatas for Flute and\nHarpsichord. Vivaldi; Rampal,\nVeyron-LaCroix\nSTU 70468\nThe Pachelbel Canon, and Two Suites for\nStrings. Fasch; Trumpet Concertos; Andre,\nPaillard\nSTU 70594\nTrumpet and Organ; Corelli, Albinoni,\nHandel; Maurice Andre, Marie-Claire Alain\nSTU 70628\nFour Concertos for Oboe, Pierlot, Scimone,\nI Solisti Veniti Cimarosa, Bellini, etc.\nSTU 70645\nRAVEL-Jeux d'Eau, Pavane, Sonatine, etc.\nMonique Haas, Piano\nSTU 70649\nFlute and Organ; Marcello, Blavet, etc;\nAlain, Rampal\nonce\nSTU 70700\nMandolin Concerto and other Pieces;\nHummel; Jean-Francois Paillard and\nSoloists\nSTU 70739\nFour Trumpet Concertos; Mozart, Haydn,\netc.; Maurice Andre, Jean Francois Paillard\nSTU 70770\nThe Three Violin Concertos; Joseph Haydn;\nGerard Jarry, Jean-Francois Paillard\nSTU 70773\nThe Water Music, Complete; Handel;\nMaurice Andre, Jaques Chambon,\nJean-Francois Paillard\nSTU 70795\nPULCINELLA, Ballet Suite, APOLLON\nMUSAGUETE; Stravinsky English Chamber\nOrchestra, Charles Dutoit\nSTU 70828\nTwo Sinfonias; Boccherini; I Solisti Veniti;\nClaudio Scimone\nSTU 70862\nADAGIOS CELEBRES-Albinoni, Vivaldi,.\nBach, Handel, Tartini; Scimone, Paillard\nSTU 70871\nMAURICE ANDRE; NEVILLE MARRINER;\nFive Trumpet Concertos; Pureed Albinoni,\nTelemann, etc.\n\/n.L.^\u00a5.j  Special\\ymportA  Lj.^.^At.\nLSC 3220\nII Tabarro; Puccini, Complete\nOpera; Price, Domingo, Millnes\nLeinsdorf, New Philharmonia\nOrchestra\nLSC 3266\nHEIFETZ PLAYS BACH;\nConcerto for Two Violins,\nConcertos Nos. 1 and 2; Malcom\nSargeant, New Symphony Orchestra of\nLondon\nLSC 3337\nLEONTYNE PRICE: PUCCINI HEROINES;\nNew Philharmonia Orchestra Edward\nDownes, Conductor\nLSC 2898\nLEONTYNE PRICE: PRIMA DONNA; Great\nSoprano Arias from Pureed to Barber,\nMolinari-Pradelli, Conductor\nARL1-0049\nJULIAN BREAM 70's; Works for Guitar,\nChamber Ensemble, etc.\nLSC 2309\nSamson and Delilah, Abridged, Saint-Saens;\nSteven, Del Monaco\nLSC 2377\nKreutzer and Spring Sonatas; Beethoven.\nRubenstein, Szeryng\nLSC 2730\nJULIAN BREAM; Rodrigo-Concierto de\nAranjuez, Vivaldi Concerto for Lute and\nStrings, etc.\nLM2784\nJussi Bjoerling In Concert, Carnegie Hall,\netc.\nLSC 2995\nMONTSERRAT CABALLE-Verdi Rarities;\nRCA Italian Opera Orchestra and Chorus\nLSC 3015\nMONTSERRAT CABALLE-Rossini Rarities;\nRCA Italiana Opera Orchestra and Chorus\nLSC 3055\nCHOPIN; Concerto No. 2 in F Minor; Arthur\nRubenstein, The Philadelphia Orchestra,\nEugene Ormandy\nLSC 3131\nELIZABETHAN LUTE SONGS; Dowland,\nMorley, etc. Julian Bream, Peter Pears\nLSC 3164\nMontserrot Caballe; Donizetti Rarities;\nLondon Symphony Orchestra; Carlo Felice\n2 Record Set LSC 7048\nLA RONDINE; Puccini; Complete;\nMoffo, Barioni, Sereni RCA Italiana\nOpera Orchestra and Chorous,\nMolinari-Pradelli\n3 Record Set ARM3-0260\nTHE COMPLETE RACHMANINOFF, His\nRecorded Performances in Five Volumes;\nVol. 1, The Acoustic Recordings\n3 Record Set ARM3-0261\nTHE COMPLETE RACHMANINOFF, Vol II\nWorks for Solo Piano by Rachmaninoff,\nBach, Beethoven, etc.\n3 Record Set ARM3-0294\nTHE COMPLETE RACHMANINOFF: Vol.\nIll, WORKS FOR SOLO PIANO by Chopin,\nMendelssohn, Liszt, Schubert, etc.\n3 Record Set ARM3-0295\nTHE COMPLETE RACHMANINOFF; Vol.\nIV; Sonatas with Kreisler. Orchestral\nWorks, Rachmaninoff Conducting the\nPhiladelphia Orchestra\n3 Record Set ARM3-0296\nTHE COMPLETE RACHMANINOFF; The\nFour Concertos, Rhapsody on a Theme of\nPaganini; Rachmaninoff piano; Stokowski\nand Ormandy Conducting\n4 Record Set ARL 4-0370\nIVESPRI SICILIANI; Verdi; ARROYO,\nMilnes, Raimondi. New Philharmonia\nOrchestra, James Levine Friday, October 11,  1974\nTHE      UBYSSEY\nPage 13\nCourt reference sole legal stall tactic used\nFrom page 1\nto be voted on within 10 days of a\npetition requesting a referendum\nbeing presented to council.\nThe petition requesting a\nreferendum asking students\nwhether they want to continue\nstudent participation in the construction of the pool was presented\nto council Oct. 3.\nSending the referendum to\nstudent court is the only legal\nmethod which Blankstein could\nhave used to stall the vote which\nwas scheduled for Thursday and\ntoday.\nThe constitution states that any\nreferendum put to students must\npresent a clear question capable of\nbeing answered yes or no and not\nbe ambiguous.\nSome members of council have\ncharged Blankstein only brought\nthe matter of ambiguous wording\nup in order to stall for time.\nScience rep Ron Walls said he\nwas dissappointed with the\nexecutive on another point in that\nthere was no preparation of\nstudent interest for the vote.\n\"They (the executive) were\nmorally obligated to put a notice in\nThe Ubyssey and to encourage\ndiscussion on the referendum,\" he\nsaid.\nAll members of council agreed\nthat more time between the submission   of   the   petition   for   a\nMitchell\nbooks text\ncampaign\nAlma Mater Society internal\naffairs officer Joan Mitchell has\ndelayed her campaign to make\ntextbooks tax deductible for\nstudents pending a possible\nmeeting with federal finance\nminister John Turner.\nMitchell has drafted a letter to be\nsent to all B.C. MP's urging their\nsupport for tax deductions on\nschool textbooks \"as a plumber\nhas deductions on tools.\"\n\"I'm all ready with the letter,\"\nMitchell said Thursday. \"But I've\ndecided to hold off till I see if I can\ntalk to Turner,\" she said. Turner\nwill be in Vancouver next weekend,\nshe said.\nMitchell said she hopes to\narrange an interview with Turner\nas the issue is a national matter,\nconcerning all Canadian students.\n\"The problem really is to\nestablish the. importance of the\nmatter in Turner's view. It is hard\nto do as so many things have\ngreater priority for him,\" Mitchell\nsaid.\nAfter meeting with Quadra MP\nBill Clarke, Mitchell said Clarke\ntold her the public would likely\nbelieve that students, having\nbrought their poverty upon\nthemselves by enrolling at\nuniversity, could \"reap the\nbenefits\" of a degree upon\ngraduation.\nThe major obstacle is that\nstudents are already subsidized to\nquite an extent with loans and\ngrants, she said.\n\"A better thing to do would be to\nreconsider the $50 per month living\nconcession,\" she said. \"It is quite\ninadequate when the rising cost of\nliving is considered.\n\"If it were raised to $100 per\nmonth, the textbook fee would be\nabsorbed,\" she added.\nMitchell made a survey during\nthe summer of colleges and\nuniversities across Canada to\ndetermine the average student\ntextbook expenditure.\nShe received a reply from four\nout of 10 institutes she contacted.\nThe average expenditure is $125\nannually, totalling $6 million.\nWhen one considers that the\nfederal government wants to increase its national budget from $22\nbillion to $26 billion, the $6 million\n\"wouldn't cost them much,\" she\nsaid.\nreferendum and the actual vote\nwould have been more desirable.\nMembers of council opposed to\nthe pool now feel the vote may not\ncome for some time.\n. The delay \u00bbin sending the-\ndocument to student court will take\nat least three weeks, council was\ntold.\n) Law rep Parker MacCarthy said\n'the delay will be longer than usual\nas students court does not have full\nmembership at this time. He said\nthe only way to fill our the required\nnumber of members is for council\nto ratify students chosen by the law\nschool.\nCouncil voted not to hold a\nspecial meeting to ratify the law\nschool choices but instead to wait\nuntil next Wednesday's regular\nmeeting.\nThis could mean another week\nand a half delay before students\ncourt even begins to look at the\nreferendum.\nAMS secretary Duncan Thomson\nsaid the executive is not wasting\ntime. He said if the referendum\nwere to pass and was then found to\nbe ambiguous by students court the\nAMS would be out a great deal of\nmoney.\nThomson said he is only looking\nafter the financial interests of the\nAMS.\nMochnacki said if there were\nobjections to the referendum they\nshould have been brought up last\nweek.\nIf the motion to place the\nreferendum before the students\ncourt had failed, Blankstein would\nhave broken the constitution by not\nholding the vote within 10 days of\nits submission to council, MacCarthy said.\nControversy over the question of\nwhether the wording of the\nreferendum is ambiguous or not\ncentered on the number of\nquestions the referendum asks and\nwhat to do with the money already\ncollected.\nAMS external affairs officer\nGary Moore said the referendum is\nambigous because it asks three\ndistinct questions which could be\nanswered differently.\nGrad rep Dave Fuller said this is\nabsolutely ridiculous because even\nthe original referendum to approve\nconstruction of the pool had four\nquestions.\nHe said the original referendum\nwas even worse. \"A student could\nhave liked the idea of a pool but not\nagreed on its location,\" Fuller\nsaid.\nIn the long run the question of the\n. money may be the most controversial.\nOne body of opinion states that\nnone of the money collected from\nstudents can be spent by the AMS\nfor anything other than the pool\nwhile another group claims\nstudents can legally claim a refund\nleaving the amount left over\ni available for council to use.\ncanned laughter\nBy ALAN DOREE\nMANYBERRIES, Alta. (Helga's Wire\nService) \u2014 The true meaning of life, cosmic\nconsciousness and the reason your nipples\nhurt in the cold were revealed in a vacant lot\nin this bustling hub of the prairie cream\ncheese industry today.\nThe wisdom was dispensed by Walsh\nConklin, a 15-year-old guru whose true\ncosmic name according to his spiritual\norder The Church Of Sweetness, Light and\nRegular Bowel Movements With the Use Of\nSynthetic Laxatives, is Fireball Conklin.\nConklin, sometimes called Shazam I or\nHarry Krishna, told an astounded child\nflecked with nasal mucous and street litter\npassing by that one must struggle through\nthe shifting meat paste of time to encounter\nthe ultimate reality \u2014 toilet paper that\ndoesn't scratch.\n\"Unfortunately, only five men have ever\ndone this \u2014 Tarzan, Germaine Greer and\nMarc Lalonde,\" he said.\n\"Even more unfortunately, they wrote\ntheir impressions on Lalonde's head and hid\nit inside a cantaloupe.\n\"We may never know what they saw if I\ncan't earn enough money with this summer\njob to fund the Church's research when I\nreturn to Idi Amin Junior High,\" Conklin\nsaid.\nConklin passed an empty 45-gallon oil\ndrum among the child and street litter for\ndonations while explaining cosmic consciousness, a difficult task at that point\nsince he was struck senseless by a flying bed\npan thrown from a passing busload of 4-H\nclub members.\n\"I have just had a revelation and\ntherefore must change my undershorts,\"\nConklin said upon recovering.\n\"lean see that in order to heal the chances\nof misfortune one must wade through an\nendless sea of Sani-flush and Ann Landers'\nadvice, distracted by a thousand reefs of\nglistening buttocks gaily decorated with\nParkay margarine, through the darkened\ntomb of Brylcreem, past the heartbreak of\npsoriasis until one reaches the -Pinesol\nfreshness of inner peace, outer harmony and\nMiddle English that is \u2014 AGRICULTURE.\nEunice Douche and Llewelyn Slough\nWineguzzle, chairthings for the\nManyberries Rapeseed Festival and Crate\nLunch's data programming division, said\nthere were no laws against what Conklin did\n\u2014 but there should be.\n\"Only last Mahattma Karma Taylor died\nfrom exposure and dog bites after maintaining the same yoga position on education\nstreet for eight months and it was very inconvenient and expensive for the town\ncouncil to clean him up,\" said Douche.\n\"They are entitled to their monumental\nignorance, whatever has been has been,\nwhatever will be will be, the future's not\nour's to see, que sera, sera,\" Conklin said.\nConklin said he hopes to achieve a oneness\nwith his father's bank account when he\ngrows up and feels this will help him in his\nquest to achieve a cosmic understanding of\nthe French Riviera.\nConklin is currently purging neo-\nnarcissistic elements from the collected\nworks of 12th century Cuban peasant\nphilosopher Ian Flemming, in order to raise\ntheir level of spiritual purity to that of\nhomogenized brown rice, quintessential life\nforce that flows in the veins of Ravi\nShankar, Timothy Leary and George\nHarrison.\nConklin plans to study business administration and its effect on the cosmos at\nHarvard. Page 14\nTHE      UBYSSEY\nFriday, October 11, 1974\nTenant act\nexplained\nThe proclamation of the new\nLandlord and Tenant Act Oct. 1\ndoesn't mean very much if you\ndon't know what it can and can't\ndo for you. But you can be\ndamn sure every landlord in the\nprovince knows it by heart by\nnow.\nSince the act was designed to\nprevent the landlord from\nscrewing the tenant, it can't help\nbut be a good idea to learn what\nit's all about.\nThe Vancouver People's Law\nSchool is offering a free course\non the new act next week.\nSubjects to be discussed include:\ndamage deposits, reasons for\neviction, rights to privacy and\nthe functions of the\nRentalsman's office.\nThe    course    takes    place\nHot flashes\nTuesday,    Wednesday    and\nThursday, 8 p.m. to  10 p.m. at\nKing   George   Secondary   school,\n755 Barclay, room 210-211.\nEven landlords are invited.\nManila talk\nA Philippine community\norganizer whose work has been\nbanned by her government will\nspeak at UBC about her expediences Thursday noon in SUB\n212.\nLinda Santos worked as an\norganizer in several of Manila's\npoor areas before she: was outlawed by martial law imposed by\nMarco's government.\nMs. Santos will also' speak\nnext Friday noon in the Lutheran Campus centre.\nSki party\nBand, bar and booze, what\nmore can you ask for?\nThe Pacific Ski Club  is hold\ning its opening party at the graduate student centre, 8:30 p.m.\nOct. 18.\nStag or together everybody is\ninvited. The dress is casual. The\ncost? A paltry $2 for members\nand $3 for others.\nThe women's office will feature a panel presentation Tuesday on sexuality \u2014 communications between gay and straight.\nThe panel consists of Morgan\nFox from the Vancouver\nwomen's health collective; Janet\nTorge from the rape crisis centre;\nPat Smith from the Vancouver\nwomen's bookstore and Jacquie\nKegler, co-owner of Vancouver\nMs., Vancouver's only club for\nwomen.\nThe presentation is at 7:30\np.m. in the SUB ballroom.\nTween classes\nTODAY\nHILLEL HOUSE\nMovie,    From    the    Ashes,    noon,\nHillel House.\nALLIANCE FRANCAISE\nGeneral   meeting,   noon,   IH   upper\nlounge.\nNEWMAN CLUB\nCoffee    house,    noon,    St.    Mark's\nCollege.\nMALAYSIAN-SINGAPOREAN\nSTUDENTS' ASSOCIATION\nMembership   drive   dance,   8   p.m.,\nIH.\nGAY PEOPLE OF UBC\nGeneral meeting, noon, SUB 105B.\nWOMEN'S BIG BLOCK CLUB\nGeneral      meeting,     noon,     War\nMemorial gym 211.\nUBC SKYDIVING CLUB\nMeeting to organize Comox\ncompetition, noon, SUB 215.\nAQUA-SOC\nMeeting for persons going on dive\nto Port Townsend, noon, the\n\"cage,\" SUB.\nSATURDAY\nUBC  KARATE CLUB\nPractice, 10 a.m., winter sports\ncentre, gym E.\nMONDAY\nHILLEL HOUSE\nHebrew conversation for beginners,\nnoon, Hillel House.\nTUESDAY\nSTUDENT LEGAL AID\nFree legal advice by UBC law\nstudents for anyone with legal\nproblems, noon, SUB 234.\nHILLEL  HOUSE\nFree lunch with a catch \u2014 you\ngotta be a member, noon, Hillel\nHouse.\nCHARISMATIC  CHRISTIAN\nFELLOWSHIP\nWeekly fellowship, noon, Lutheran\ncampus centre conference room.\nvoc\nDry cross country ski school,\nnoon, chem 150.\nHISTORY STUDENTS ASSOCIATION\nGeneral  meeting, noon, Buch. 225.\nTHE WOMENS' OFFICE\nPanel       presentation,\nsexuality-communications   between\ngay and   straight,   7:30  p.m.,  SUB\nballroom.\nGERMAN CLUB\nOral   German   practice,  7  p.m.,  IH\n406.\nECKANKAR\nIntroductory   meeting,  noon,  SUB\n213.\nWEDNESDAY\nVARSITY DEMOLAY CLUB\nPub   night,   7:30   p.m.,  Centennial\nHotel, 898 West Broadway.\nHILLEL HOUSE\nPanel    discussion,    Auschwitz,    30\nyears   later,   can   it   happen   here?\nNoon, Hillel House.\nVOC\nConstitutional     revision,     noon,\nAngus 104.\nCAMPUS CYCLISTS\nGeneral   meeting,  noon,   SUB  215.\nCCCM\nEucharist,   noon,  Lutheran  campus\ncentre.\nHAVE YOU LOOKED AT\nTHE UBYSSEY CLASSIFIEDS LATELY . .\nTo Sell - Buy - Inform\nThe U.B.C. Campus Market Place\nWrite your Ad below and mail to:\nName.\nThe Ubyssey Advertising Dept.\nStudent Union Bldg.\nU.B.C.\nAddress\nPhone\t\nPlease run my ad for days under classification\nI enclose $ in full payment.\nCLASSIFICATIONS\n5\u2014Coming Events\n10\u2014For Sale - Commercial\n11\u2014For Sale - Private\n15\u2014Found\n20\u2014Housing\n25\u2014Instruction\n30\u2014Jobs\n35\u2014Lost\n40\u2014Messages\n50\u2014Rentals\n60\u2014Rides\n65\u2014Scandals\n70\u2014Services\n80\u2014Tutoring\n85\u2014Typing\n90\u2014Wanted\n99\u2014Miscellaneous\nSTUDENT RATES\n3 lines\nAdditional I\n1\" display\n2\" display\nPer Day\n1.00\n.25\n3.50\n6.00\nCOMMERCIAL\nRATES\n1 .Day Add'l Days\n1.80 1.50\n.40 .35\n5.50 5.00\n9.75 9.00\nONE\nWORD\nIN\nEACH\nSPACE\n1\n2\n3\n4\n5\n\u2022\n6\nBICYCLE & HOCKEY\nCENTRES\nNew and Used Skates and Bicycles. Complete selection of\nbrand name Hockey Equipment, Bicycles and Accessories.\nExpert Repairs, Trades Welcome.\nStudent and Team Discounts.\n\"FREE SKATE SHARPENING\"\n4385 W. TENTH\n228-8732\n620 E. BROADWAY\n874-8611\nTHE CLASSIFIEDS\nRATES:   Campus - 3 lines, 1 day $1.00; additional lines 25c.\nCommercial - 3 lines, 1 day $1,80; additional lines\n40c. Additional days $1.50 & 35c.\nClassified ads are not accepted by telephone and are payable in\nadvance. Deadline is 11:30 a.m., the day before publication.\nPublications Office, Room 241, S.U.B., UBC, Van. 8, B.C.\n5 \u2014 Coming Events\nFORD ANNOUNCES \"no pardon for\nBundolo\". Find out why! Tuesday,\nOct. 15, 12:30 in SUB Threatre. It's\nFree!!\n10 \u2014For Sale \u2014 Commercial\n11 \u2014 For Sale \u2014 Private\nGIRL'S BIKE, good cond. $35. Baby crib\nmattress. Judo suit, size 2. Phone 731-\n7489.\n1973 YAMAHA 650, 10,000 miles, good\ncondition, 9 months old. Phone Dave\n224-9826, room 485.\n24' X 26' MODULAR KINDERGARTEN\nUNIT completely furnished, licensed\nfor 24 children. Call 685-4176.\nFOR   SALE   1971    PINTO   200OCC   $1550.\nPhone Mark,  738-6533.\n15\u2014 found\nBLACK,     BROWN     &    GREY     KITTEN,\nSUB area. Please call 876-7997.\nWATCH AND CASH in Thunderbird\nWinter Sports Centre. Phone Gord,\n261-9547.\n20 \u2014 Housing\nSECOND FLOOR of house, near campus,\nall facilities included, $150. Phone\n263-3849  or 266-7500.\nWHISTLER SKI CHALET, furn. stereo,\nmax 10. Resp. people to share. 224-\n4047  Van,  932-5734  Aita.\n25 \u2014 Instruction\nFIGURE SKATING, Mon.. Wed., Fri.\nmornings. Call Sandi 946-2331, Marian\n261-0886, Ken 874-6364 for info.\nPIANO LESSONS by grad of Juilliard\nSchool of Music. All grade levels welcome.   731-0601.\n30 \u2014 Jobs\nDOWNTOWN restaurant under construction looking for art student or\nteacher who would like parttime job\ncreating signs, logo and special art\nwork.  CaU Garry, 681-5201 days.\n35 \u2014 Lost\nGREY & WHITE TOQUE lost Oct 2\nbetween Georg. and Angus. Reward-\nCall   Jed.   224-1139,  228-6161.\nSILVER HEART shaped locket lost between A lot and Buchanan, Oct. 4.\nReward    Phone   Linda,   987-0081.\nJACKET, two-tone denim, lost in Angus\nor? Has sentimental value. Thanks,\nTom,  433-9888.\nBROWN LEATHER zippered wallet. Lost\nOctober 2. Need ID. Phone Marlene\nYork,  733-5649.\nRx GLASSES in black leather case,\npossibly in Physics Building. Please\ncall Steve 224-9620. Reward.\n50 \u2014 Rentals\nCOSTUMES \u2014 Reserve your Halloween\ncostume now & avoid the last minute\nrush. Dunbar Costumes, 5648 Dunbar.\n263-9011.\n65 \u2014 Scandals\nWOULD THE PERSON whose car damaged my blue Volkswagen in B Lot\nplease phone 922-8571.\nVANCOUVER   NITE-LIFERS \u2014  $200 in\ndiscounts. Restaurants, nite-clubs, pizzas, etc. Reg. 6.95, now 1.50! ! ! Hurry!\nLimited offer. Co-op Bookstore, SUB\nBsmt.,   8:30-4:30.\nDISCOUNT STEREO: Example: AGS.\nAM-FM stereo receiver, 2 speakers,\nbase, cover, cartridge, list $200 your\ncost $125. AM-FM digital clock-radio,\n$35. 8-digit calculator AC-DC functions ( + , \u2014, X, -f-) list $79, your cost\n$49. Also Corry, Akai. Sony. Call\n325-0366  after  6  p.m.\n85 \u2014 Typing\nEFFICIENT electric typing, my home.\nEssays, thesis, etc. Neat accurate\nwork.   Reasonable   rates.   263-5317.\nFAST ACCURATE TYPING. Reasonable\nrates. Kits area. 736-5816.\n90 - Wanted\nTEAM in men's floor hockey league\nneeds 15 players Play Saturday mornings,  Monday  evenings.   Phone   Dave,\n874-9474.\n99 \u2014 Miscellaneous\nENTERPRISING INDIVIDUAL needed\nto establish Vancouver office of (U.S.)\nnational research and marketing company; quite lucrative for part-time;\nwrite for info: Sound Research &\nMarketing Company, 5220 Roosevelt\nWay NE, Seattle, WA. 98105. Friday, October 11, 1974\nTHE      UBYSSEY\nPage 15\nSPOR TS\nUBC football boys feels negative\nBy STUART LYSTER\nThunderbird football coach\nFrank Smith is battling more than\njust the other teams in the Western\nIntercollegiate  Football  League.\nIn his first year at the helm of the\nUBC football program he has found\na tremendous negative attitude\ndirected towards his team.\n\"The team has been the object of\nridicule for a long time now and the\nstudent newspaper has done its\nshare to project that image.\n\"I guess everyone is entitled to\ntheir opinion, but I get bugged\nwhen that attitude shows up on the\nplaying field.\n\"Too often we'll get behind 14\npoints and say to ourselves, 'here\nwe go again.' We're beaten before\nwe start. My aim is to instill a\npositive attitude into this team\nrather than the negative one that's\nbeen handed down from team to\nteam.\"\nWhen asked about his showing to\ndate Smith said: \"Hell, we've got\n14 rookies starting every game and\nwe're going against teams that\nhave solid nuclei from last year.\n\"Our average age is 19, while the\nrest of the teams average about 22\nyears. We aren't going to have a\nwinning season this year just\nbecause we're so inexperienced,\"\nhe said.\nThe scores of the games-look the\nsame but the way they were put on\nthe scoreboard is probably an\nindication of what's wrong this\nyear.\nIn the first game where the\n'Birds got thumped 63-0, nearly all\nof the opposition's points were\nscored against UBC's specialty\nteams.   In   their   51-10   loss   to\nAlberta, UBC gave up 31 points in\nthe final quarter. And in losing 41-\n15 against Manitoba they gave up\n14 points in the final seven minutes.\nEverything seems to point to the\ninexperience of the squad. Fortunately, this is something that will\ndisappear with time.\n\"About the only thing that could\nkill us for next year is if we don't\nhave any returnees. Then we'll be\nright back at square one. Otherwise with players like Gary\nDukelow and Marshal McLeod, to\nonly mention two, having a season\nunderneath their belts, we should\nhave a good nucleus for next year.\n\"Plus if we get quarterbacking\nlike Dan Smith is giving us now,\nwe'll stand a good chance of being\na contender.\"\nOne of the factors every UBC\nteam has had to deal with over the\npast few years is the presence of\nSFU and the football scholarship\nacross town. Teams like Alberta,\nManitoba and Saskatchewan just\ndon't have that kind of competition\nfor players.\nBut Smith doesn't seem to think\nthat it was a factor this year. \"We\nhad a surprisingly good recruiting\nsession this summer. I don't know\nwhy, but we have managed to land\na few players who could be starters\nfor SFU.\nThe 'Birds next game is against\nthe University of Saskatchewan, 2\np.m. Saturday, at Thunderbird\nStadium. In spite of the 63-0 pasting\nthe 'Birds took the first time the\nteams met, this is their best chance\nfor a win all season. If they can\nduplicate the 330-yard offensive\neffort they achieved last week and\nC OLD TURKEY TROT, UBC intramurals annual cross country race\nwas held noon Thursday in fine drizzle. Event, which goes through\nendowment  lands, was won by unidentified forester;, delta kappa\nepsilon won team title.\nFencing problems\nThe UBC fencing team starts off\nyet another season with problems.\nLast year, plagued by insufficient funds the team came\nback with better than average\nResults, producing some of the best\nfencers in B.C. and some Olympic\nand Pan-American Games\nprospects.\nThis year they lost virtually the\nentire team. Only three of last\nyear's team, Marta Leskard, Chris\nKreis and Simon Tam are still\naround. They are joined by 20\nnovices, two of whom have fenced\nbefore. They are also without a\ncoach.\nAccording  to  Leskard   their\nbiggest problem is finding women\nfencers. \"They just do not want to\ncome out,\" she said.\n\"Fencing is a very chauvinistic\nsport,\" she added. \"Women only\nfence in the foils event, while the\nmen fence foils, sabres and epees.\"\nLeskard hopes to change this and\nhopes women will join the team.\nLeskard and Kreis will be going\ndown to Seattle Saturday for their\nfirst tournament of the season.\nThe UBC Thunderbirds soccer\nteam will play North Shore\nPauls Sunday afternoon at Kinsmen stadium, North Vancouver.\nRUNNERS . . . going against tide.\nHILLEL PRESENTS\n12:30 p.m. Friday, October 11\nMovie \"FROM THE ASHES\" featuring\nEli Weisel\nFREE ADMISSION - ALL WELCOME\nFREE LUNCH FOR HILLEL MEMBERS\nTuesday, October 15\n12:30 p.m. Wednesday, October 16\nPanel Discussion\u2014\"Auschwitz, 30\nYears Later \u2014 Can It Happen Here?\"\nEvery Thursday & Friday at 12:30 p.m.\n'TALMUDIC STUDIES ON MARRIAGE\"\nClass with Rabbi M. Hier\nBET CAFE - TUESDAYS & THURSDAYS - 12:30 P.M.\n(Hillel House Located on Campus Directly Behind Brock Hall)\nkeep a tight defence it should be a\nclose game.\n\"Not one newspaper in Western\nCanada picked us to win any\ngames this year. So that's our first\ngoal, to win that first one. Then if\nwe win one, our next goal is to win\ntwo. Then watch the bad attitude\ndisappear.\"\nThe best\nyou can be\nIt's not enough for you to be\n|a good gymnast. You have to\njprove you're the best in the\n(group! So every day and every\npractice session is important.\nWhen you can't afford time\n|out, when you can't break\ntraining, you need the\n(dependable internal protection\njof Tampax tampons. They\nallow you comfortable\nfreedom of movement while\nthey expand gently in three\ndirections to fit your inner\ncontours.\nTampax tampons come in\nthree absorbency-sizes:\nRegular, Super and Junior.\nSo you can choose the right\none for your needs. Well\nprotected, you'll prove to the\nothers you're the best you\ncan be.\nPi' J^>V\n*\u00ab*\nfj\nDEVELOPED BY A DOCTOR\nNOW USED BY MILLIONS OF WOMEN\nMADE ONLY  BY\nCANADIAN  TAMPAX   CORPORATION   LTD.,\nBARRIE, ONTARIO Page 16\nTHE       UBYSSEY\nFriday, October 11,1974\nEd 5 program practical, idealistic\nBy MARK BUCKSHON\nEducatioa Five students think\nthey have it made.\nThey are enthusiastic about the\nnew program set up by the UBC\neducation faculty this September\nto prepare them for teaching jobs\nin community schools.\nThey seem to be a community\nwith power to decide their courses\nand discipline arrogant professors.\nThey have a private building,\nsimilar to the Arts One building,\nwith meeting rooms and resting\nareas.\nBut   underneath,   there   are\nfeelings things are just a bit too-\ngood.\nThe program, the first of its kind\nin Canada, prepares teachers for\nschools which function in conjunction with social services like\ncommunity centers and libraries.\nIn community schools,\nclassroom discipline is deem-\nphasized while field trips and\nspecial visitors bring teachers,\nstudents and people living near the\nschool together.\nThe UBC program appears to\nimplement the methods of outside\ncommunity schools into its own\ncourses and teaching methods.\nThe 48 students gather Thursdays in a converted fraternity\nhouse to talk. Sometimes it seems\nthey talk a bit too much. They are a\nsmall minority of fifth year\neducation students.\nBut the students enrolled in the\nprogram are enthusiastic.\n\"There's a tremendous\nsolidarity in the program. We are\nnot going to be classified into just\nlearning   how   to   teach,\"   said\nPango Pango \u2014 (UNS) \u2014 The\nlonely blorg sat at the bottom of the\nhill surrounded by the noisy and\nvexatious blorgs he doesn't like but\ncan't escape. \"I'm a blorg \u2014 a\ngood blorg \u2014 and deserve fairer\ntreatment,\" he cried. But the\nblorgs around him remained silent\nin their noisy conversation.\nAnd yet, the lonely bored blorg\nrealized, he was there for a reason.\n\"Maybe the noise around me isn't\nthat vexatious,\" he said. And he\nsmiled and laughed.\nstudent David Anderson at\nThursday's   morning   discussion.\nThursdays, the whole group gets\ntogether for large discussion\nmeetings and smaller seminars.\nOn other days, students take\npracticums at local schools and\nspend evenings in regular\neducation courses.\n\"We spend all day Thursday\ntalking about idealistic\neducation,\" said a student. \"At\nother times we learn in ordinary\nclassrooms with the teacher\ncalling us kids and lecturing to us.\"\nStudents run the show at the\nThursday discussions. And show it\nis, with a vaudeville cane ready to\npull any person who talks too much\nor tries to dominate the conversation off stage. Program\ncoordinator Garry Pennington sits\nsilently at the side. Some high\nschool and elementary teachers sit\nat the outer fringes of the crowd.\nThe arguing and laughing goes\non without restraint.\nGuest speakers are brought in to\ntalk about education indoctrination, personal and social\nspace, and ways for teachers to\ncommunicate with the \"community\" around their school.\nThe students are positive about\nthe programe. Student Christy\nChastum says: \"It's the first time\nin my university life that I've been\nable to be friends with people in the\nclassroom.\n\"I think it's (the program) a\ngood thing. In all the classes before\nthis, the thing I lacked the most\n(was) the ability to communicate\nwith people other than the\nprofessor.\nThe program's members are\nlargely isolated from the outside.\nThe students, all fifth year transfers with bacholers degrees, don't\nmingle with the other 5,000\neducation students. Practicum\ntimes and schools are set to isolate\nprogram enrollees from the mob.\nProgram students claim this\nisolation doesn't interfere with\ntheir understanding of the world\noutside.\n\"We spend so much time in the\nschools we know what's happening\nin the real world,\" said Anderson.\nIn fact, Ed Five students spend\nfive months in classroom practicums while the majority of fifth\nyear transfer students get only\nnine weeks in the schools.\nStudents appear to have much\ncontrol over the courses and\nsometimes their professors.\nThursday, a group gathered to\ndiscuss a teacher who was accused\nof lecturing to his evening class\ninstead of discussing problems and\nideas of the students attending his\nclass.\nWith help from a visiting\nteacher, the students decided to\narrange a meeting with the\nprofessor to discuss their\ngrievances.\nBetween meetings, students eat\nfruit and drink coffee and tea at\none of the tables in the building.\nThe pace is easygoing. Friends\nmingle and talk. The noise of\nlaughter and occassionally impassioned \u2014 but not serious \u2014\nargument is constant.\nA few students dominate the\nconversation. The conversation\nlevel itself is more intense than a\nnormal university discussion\ngroup. Conversations are going on\nconstantly.\nDiscipline seems to be lacking.\nAnd some students, between the\nenthusiastic gab, are asking if\nthey're really learning anything.\nOne student wrote in the course\njournal, a rarely used thick black\nbook for student observations and\nreflections:\n\"All of this philosiphizing \u2014\nwhere is the real world?\nRelevance. Last year I was doing\nthe same stimulations and\nphilosiphisings about the rights\nand wrongs. It was far too easy.\n\"I can see you doing the same as\nI. Prejuding. Sitting back and\nobserving and then judging without\nthe background knowledge.\"\nAnother student answered:\n\"Patty, you're wonderful.\"\nGuys & Dolls\nHAIR STYLING!\nCome and have your locks cut\nand blow waved by \"Misty\" of\nLondon England.\nU.B.C. Barber & Beauty Shop\n5736 UNIV. BLVD.\n228-8942\nKOH-I-NOOR\nDAY\nTHURSDAY, OCTOBER 17\nI .B.C. BOOKSTORE\nKOH-l-NOOR's    representative    will    be    at    the\nBookstore to demonstrate the Rapidograph drawing\npen.\nSPECIAL  OFFER   - 10% off regular price on all\nrapidograph   items,   bring  your present pen for a\nFREE   cleaning.\n(Offer good October 17 only)\nHillel Presents\nFREE LUNCH FOR HILLEL MEMBERS!\nTUES. OCT. 15, 1974 - 12:30\n12:30 p.m. Panel Discussion\nAUSCHWITZ, 30 YEARS LATER\nCAN IT HAPPEN HERE?\nwith Prof. L E. Hill,\nProf. P. Marantz and Rabbi M. Hier\nEVER YONE WELCOME\n(Hillel House Located on Campus Directly\nBehind Brock Hall)\nTHE OLD TRADITION. . .things have come a long way\n^^\"i'i\nWith yOUr initials and Now that you have your degree,\nOUT Capital, We Can help shingle up. But, as you know, it's\nm\u00a3lkp \\\/OI If noma   not as simple as that. First you need money\niiiarxcyuui  \\ICU\\ IC to start a practice. Which iswherethe\nRoyal Bank can help you. Because we'll loan up to $25,000 (or more) to help\nyou bridge the gap until you become established.\nYou^see, we believe in your earning power in the years to come. So we'll tailor\nyouPrepayment to fit that \u2014we'll even defer your first payment if it helps.\nTo find out more, drop into your local branch of the Royal Bank and pick up our\nbrochure \u2014 \"Money \u2014 and more \u2014 to help you start your Professional Practice\".\nOr talk to a Royal Bank manager, who's a professional too. And before you know\nit. you can have your name out front\nlike you always knew you would. xaf*r\u00bba   n-.,,,.    .-**.....,\n~      KOYALBANK\nthe helpful bank","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"oc:AnnotationContainer"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. 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Archives","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:source"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource from which the described resource is derived.; The described resource may be derived from the related resource in whole or in part. Recommended best practice is to identify the related resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"Subject":[{"label":"Subject","value":"University of British Columbia","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/subject","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:subject"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/subject","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The topic of the resource.; Typically, the subject will be represented using keywords, key phrases, or classification codes. Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary."}],"Title":[{"label":"Title ","value":"The Ubyssey","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:title"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The name given to the resource."}],"Type":[{"label":"Type","value":"Text","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:type"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The nature or genre of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the DCMI Type Vocabulary [DCMITYPE]. To describe the file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource, use the Format element."}],"Translation":[{"property":"Translation","language":"en","label":"Translation","value":""}]}