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Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the list of Internet Media Types [MIME]."}],"FullText":[{"label":"FullText","value":" Page 2: More on the AMS and academic\nactivities committee\nPage 3: Crisis at Montreal's Loyola University\nPage 6; Chicago Panthers: murder and its\nconsequences\nTHE UBYSSEY\nVol. LI, No. 24\nVANCOUVER, B.C., TUESDAY, JANUARY 13, 1970\n228-2305\nNew PSA investigation begins\nat SFU\nBy CHRISTINE KRAWCZYK\nThe American Anthropological Association will send\ntwo representatives to Simon Fraser Univerisity this week\nto investigate the administration's handling of political\nscience, sociology and anthropology department strike.\nThe investigating team is made up of Dr. Peter\n$600 hole ripped in math building Friday night.\n\u2014dave enns photo\nBomb shatters math building windows\nCampus RCMP are still investigating the\nmysterious explosion that caused an estimated $600\ndamage to the math building Friday night.\nThe explosion broke windows, burst a radiator\nand scattered plaster in a vestibule at the south end of\nthe building.\n\"I'm not even saying it was a bomb that\nexploded,\" said RCMP Sergeant George Strathde.\n\"All I can say is that there was an explosion.\"\nEarly reports attributed the explosion to an\n\"unsophisticated man-made device\".\n\"The RCMP took a pile of debris from the\nexplosion site, but I have no idea what they did with\nit,\" said administration information officer, Jim\nBanham.\n\"In the final analysis, I can only hope this is an\nisolated incident.\n\"I am assuming we won't be invaded by a mass\nof people who want to set off bombs at the\nuniversity.\"\nCarstens of the University of Toronto and Dr. Laura\nNader of the University of California at Berkeley. They\nwill arrive in Vancouver Friday.\nThey are particularly interested in the university's\nconduct' towards Kathleen Aberle, a suspended faculty\nmember.\nThe team will be looking into the procedure followed\nby SFU administration in its dealings with Aberle.\nThey are interested in finding out whether the\nuniversity deals with appointments, reappointments,\npromotion to tenure, suspension and dismissal in the\nstandard way.\nThe move by the association comes in response to an\nappeal sent by the eight suspended PSA faculty members.\nThe appeal asked that the association send a note of\nprotest to the SFU administration for its harassment of\nthe PSA department to the point where the faculty was\nforced to go on strike.\nIf the eight faculty members should actually be\ndismissed, the association is asked to censure president\nKen Strand and the SFU administration.\nThe association is also asked to tell its members not\nto accept positions at the university until the university\nallows social scientists of varying political opinions\nfreedom to teach.\n\"I hope it will bring the Canadian Association of\nUniversity teachers back into the picture, ending with a\npositive result for all concerned,\" said Aberle.\nThe Canadian Sociology and Anthropology\nAssociation was sent a similar appeal. It responded by\nasking its members to contribute to a legal aid fund for\nthe eight suspended faculty members.\nSo far $3,000 has been contributed to the fund by\nfaculty and students from all parts of North America.\nIn the meantime dismissal procedings against the\nsuspended faculty have been held back, pending the result\nof a law suit against SFU launched by Prudence\nWheeldon, one of the suspended faculty.\nWheeldon is questioning the legality of the clause\ndealing with academic freedom in connection with tenure.\nAt the dismissal hearings, the lawyer for the dismissed\nfaculty argued that the clause was not explicit as to the\ndegree to which it was binding.\n\"We don't know whether it is law or simply\nsomething left to our discretion and that of the board,\"\nAberle said.\n\"Our lawyer tried to show that Strand's behavior\ntoward us was not in accordance with that clause.\n\"The board refused to comment on this during the\nhearings or after it.\"\nThe question of whether or not the clause dealing\nwith academic freedom is binding must be resolved before\nthe dismissal hearings can continue.\nUofT campus cops\nsupervise hirings\nTORONTO (CUP) - Campus police at the University\nof Toronto have expanded their job definitions.\nBesides ticketing cars, the police now preside in the\ninterviews of striking employees who wish to be rehired\nby campus food service organizations, and single out\nstrike leaders for management.\nFour cafeteria workers at U of T's New College have\nalready fallen afoul ofthe new arrangement.\nThe four were among 42 cafeteria workers who\nstruck December 17 after their employer, Commercial\nCatering Co., lost its contract for food services at New\nCollege.\nThe non-unionized workers demanded that\nadministrative services food director M. A. Malcolm\nguarantee the reinstatement of the workers under the new\ncontractor, Beaver Caterers. Malcolm refused.\nDecember 18, Malcolm said the strikers would be\nre-hired if they agreed to individual interviews. Campus\npolice presided over the procedure.\n38 of the 42 workers were rehired.\nThe other four said that during the intervie'-\ncampus police pointed them out to officials from Be*\nCatering as leaders of the strike, and said they -\nsingled out for their actions in organizing the protest Page 2\nTHE UBYSSEY\nTuesday, January 13, 1970\nYou can speak easy at new centre\nSpeak-Easies are back.\nSpeak-Easy, a talk and information\ncentre has been created by social work\nstudents to help fill gaps left by other\nstudent counselling services available on\ncampus and in the city.\n\"Because we're students, we anticipate\ngetting a lot of questions that other\nservices wouldn't get \u2014 like on abortion,\"\nsaid Joyce Marvin, social work 2.\n\"If you want information on where to\nget the pill, for example, you will be told\nwhere to go or where not to go without\nhaving to sit through a lecture on\nmorality.\nby Ginny Gait\n\"We plan'to conduct Speak-Easy in a\nvery informal manner.\"\nAll the problems will be kept\nconfidential. Any records will be minimal\nand will be available to the student\ninvolved.\n\"In essence, we don't have any files\nper se, only enough to give us some sort\nof record about the type of problems we\nreceive,\" said Marvin.\n\"We will try to cope with all issues\nthat arise. We're not being specific about\nwhat we will and won't accept.\"\n\"One of the biggest problems students\nface on campus is the whole issue of\nalienation. They come and stick with\ntheir own small groups of friends. They\ndon't even know what's going on, what\nclubs are available, so we're trying to\nestablish contacts in all the clubs to, refer\npeople to as well.\"\nSpeak-Easy will operate from SUB 218\nevery Monday, Wednesday and Friday\nfrom noon to 6 p.m. and from 7 to 10\np.m.\nAnyone not wishing to appear in\nperson can phone 228-3706.\nAMS council ousts\nchairman of AAC\nBy JIM DAVIES\nThe Academic Activities Committee is without a chairman.\nA motion removing Elaine Wismer as chairman of the AAC was\npassed by the Alma Mater Society council Monday night.\nThe discussion which preceeded the motion, involving members\nof the AMS council, AAC members and students, was extremely\nheated.\nStan Persky, student senator and chairman of the Education\nCommittee under which the activities formerly co-ordinated by the\nAAC had been placed, spoke out against the actions of council.\n\"The Education Committee does not want to do those things\nwhich were previously under the jurisdiction of the AAC,\" he said.\n\"It is clear that councillors have taken political action against\nthe AAC. It is my opinion that if you wish to take political action\nagainst this group, you should be prepared to come right out and\ndiscuss the reasons for the abolition ofthe committee.\"\nCommittee retained\nThe council then moved to reconsider an earlier motion\nabolishing the AAC after Persky said that such a reconsideration was\nnecessary.\nAfter this motion was passed, a discussion largely based upon\nthe competence of the chairman of the AAC, Elaine Wismer,\nfollowed.\nAfter an exchange of name-calling, AMS vice-president Tony\nHodge said: \"If we continue to treat this as a matter oflife and death\nand continue to call each other names like fascist pig and fucking\nasshole, we will never accomplish anything.\n\"This organization is pushing one strong ideological line. I\ncannot help but wonder if it is in the best interests of students.\"\nMembers of the AAC spoke out strongly against Hodge's\npremise.\n'No discrimination'\n\"Look at the history of the AAC. It is true that the most active\nmembers are communists, however, there are no discriminatory\npractices against non-communists,\" said Bob Cruise, a member ofthe\nCanadian Student Movement.\n\"Look at the speakers we have had. Many of them are not only\nnon-communists, but anti-communists.\n\"A vote to remove the chairman of the committee without\ngiving any concrete reasons other than some vague charges involving\nonly their opinions is non-democratic, authoritarian, and totally\nincorrect.\"\nApparently councillors did not agree with Cruise's statements as\nthey voted to remove Wismer from her position as chairman.\n\"The reason for the action is simply so that we can get someone\nwho will better serve a greater number of students,\" said AMS\npresident Fraser Hodge.\nMembers of the AAC said they had been \"victimized by petty\nAMS bureaucracy.\"\nAs councillors left the chambers, AMS co-oordinator Dave\nGrahame leaned over to AMS treasurer Chuck Campbell and\nremarked, \"You will change the lock on the AAC office door won't\nyou?\"\nA decision as to who will be the new AAC chairman will be\nmade at the next council meeting.\nSan Francisco\nWeekend for\nYOU & A FRIEND\ncor details-See Jan. 23 Ubyssey\nFREE!\nK\nAB*\/\n>Wento^\/zecl\nPAYMENT OF FEES\nSecond Installment Now Due\nPayment should be made at Department of Finance,\nGeneral Services Administration Bldg. on or before\nThursday, Jan. 15, 1970\nInformation\nCcnfrt\nVrcb in or\niiVe us a cal\nMon. Vltd> fem\nus a chance to let our hair down, too.\nWe're not as square as you think! Behind our a water-colour effect with unusual depth and\nseemingly straight-laced image, there throb some\npretty way-out projects. And people.\nAlcan is involved in many unexpected areas.\nBecause we do a lot more than just produce\naluminum. We and others try to find new uses\nfor it.\nFor example, one new use that came to our attention was developed in Belgium and refined by a\nMontreal artist. Through a process called\nAluchromie, he \"paints\" on specially prepared\naluminum panels. The resulting work of art has\nperspective, and endless applications in art and\narchitecture.\nAnd that's just one of the exciting new developments in aluminum.\nAlcan researchers and scientists are continually\nsearching for better ways to do things with\naluminum. And it's not always easy. Often they\ntiave to struggle for years to find ways of making\ntheir ideas come to life.\nSo you see, they aren't the only ones who have\nto cope with hairy problems.\nALUMINUM COMPANY OF CANADA. LTD\n'ai r*\nALCAN\nV Tuesday, January 13, 1970\nTHE UBYSSEY\nPage 3\nJESUITS CLOSE CAMPUS\nMontreal cops sweep building clean\nMONTREAL (CUP) -\nApproximately 100 members of\nMontreal's riot squad appeared\nsuddenly on the vacated campus\nof Loyola College Monday\nevening and cleared 400 resisting\nstudents and faculty protestors\nfrom three floors of the\nadministration building.\nThe abrupt move came one day\nafter the all-Jesuit board of\ngovernors at Loyola closed down\nthe campus for a week to\n\"facilitate a freer and more\nprofitable exchange of views of all\nconcerned\" over the current crisis\nsparked by the administration\nfiring of 27 Loyola professors.\nThe police were called to the\ncampus by acting administration\npresident Aloysius Graham.\nPresident Patrick Malone and his\ntwo vice-presidents were in\nQuebec City conferring with\nProvincial Deputy Minister of\nEducation Yves Martin over the\nestablishment of a government\ncommission of inquiry into\nLoyola's affairs. Graham is Dean\nof Science.\nShortly before the riot squad\nwas summoned, Loyola board\nchairman Gerald McGuigan issued\na flat refusal to the protestors'\ndemand that letters of\nnon-renewal of contract, issued to\nthe dismissed faculty just before\nChristmas, be revoked.\nThe protestors, who began a\npeaceful sit-in in front of\nadministration president Malone's\noffice Wednesday had made\nrevocation of the letters the sole\ncondition for the end of their\nprotests.\nShortly after the police arrived\nGraham, accompanied by Dean of\nStudents Roderick Shearer and 98\npolice, visited the demonstrators\nand demanded that they leave the\nbuilding.\nGraham said that he was legally\nin charge of the campus and that\nthe Board of Governors had\nofficially closed the college.\nGraham did not respond when\nthe students and faculty asked for\n15 minutes to discuss the\nultimatum.\nThe demonstrators then lined\nup by twos and marched out the\nfront door singing \"We Shall\nOvercome\", on their way out.\nThe protestors passed an\nadditional group of police\nguarding approaches to the\ncampus computer centre.\nAn emergency meeting of\nLoyola faculty was called for later\nMonday night at a nearby church\n\u2014 students planned a meeting on\ncampus for today'but may be\nunable to hold it because the\nbuildings are locked to faculty,\nstudents and visitors.\nGraham has reportedly been in\ntouch by telephone with president\nMalone and his subordinates.\nBoth Malone and deputy\nminister Martin were expected to\nmake press statements later\nMonday night.\nIt is not known how the\nforcible eviction will effect the\ngovernment inquiry commission,\nif and when it is called.\nMartin is reportedly interested\nin investigating more than just the\ncurrent crisis \u2014 he favors\namalgamation of the college with\nnearby Sir George Williams\nUniversity to cut budget costs.\nThere is a possibility the\ncommission will not even discuss\nthe cases of the dismissed\nprofessors, who students and\nfaculty say were purged for their\nsupport of student efforts to gain\na binding arbitration agreement in\nthe case of muclear physicist S. A.\nSanthanam, fired without stated\ncause by the Loyola trustees at\nthe beginning of the fall term.\nSPECTACULAR DISPLAY seen in the SUB lost and found counter beside the information desk. Photographer Dave Enns lensed the\nlenses, along with pipes, watches and assorted other valuables that sloppy UBC students leave all over the place. Lost and found is open\nevery noon.\nQuebec govt, may intervene in Loyola shutdown\nMONTREAL (CUP) - The Quebec government may\ndecide to intervene in the current crisis at Loyola college,\nbut government officials would make no definite\nannouncement until they had consulted with the Loyola\nadministration.\nThe possibility of provincial intervention \u2014 probably\nthrough a government commission of inquiry \u2014 arose\nFriday from a private meeting between Yves Martin,\nProvincial Deputy Minister of Education, and four Loyola\nprofessors.\nFollowing the meeting, Martin said that Quebec's\ndepartment of education considers \"The issue at Loyola a\nserious one that deserves our attention.\"\nThe meeting with Martin was arranged by the\nassociation of Loyola professors, formed in the wake of\nadministration firings of 27 faculty on the grounds of\n\"upgrading academic standards\" and preparing for an\nanticipated decrease in Loyola's enrollment next year.\nBut Loyola students and faculty charge that the\nadministration purged the professors for their support of\nstudent efforts to secure binding arbitration by the\nCanadian Association of University Teachers in the case of\nnuclear physics professor S. A. Santhanam, fired without\nstated cause by the administration at the beginning of the\nfall term.\nThe CAUT is expected to release a report of its\nfindings in the Santhanam case sometime during the week.\nIt is not known if the possibility of a government\ninquiry will affect the findings of the CAUT report.\nKwok-Wing Lai during his testimony in council meeting.\n\u2014dirk visser photo\nStudent protester\ngiven AMS support\nStudent council voted Monday to support the rights of foreign\nstudents suffering alleged harassment by the immigration department\nfor political action in Canada.\nThe action resulted from an appeal by Kwok-Wing Lai, a\nUniversity of Manitoba student from Hong Kong, who was arrested\nfor participating in the Dec. 30 demonstration at Canron Ltd. in\nVancouver.\nKwok was convicted of creating a disturbance and was given a\nsuspended sentence.\nHowever, the immigration has since called an inquiry aimed at\ndeciding whether or not Kwok should be deported.\nCouncil agreed with Kwok and others speaking for him that a\nforeign student ought not be tried twice for the same offence and that\nhe should suffer no more than is allowed by the criminal code.\nSaid commerce president Brent Bitz: \"This is supposed to be a\ncountry with freedom of speech - for Canadians and foreigners\nalike.\" Page 4\nTHE UBYSSEY\nTuesday, January 13, 1970\nTHE UBYSSEY\nPublished Tuesdays and Fridays throughout the university year\nby the Alma Mater Society of the University of B.C. Editorial\nopinions are those of the writer and not of the AMS or the\nuniversity administration. Member, Canadian University Press.\nThe Ubyssey subscribes to the press services of Pacific Student\nPress, of which it is a founding member. Ubyssey News Service\nsupports one foreign correspondent in Pango-Pango. The Ubyssey\npublishes Page Friday, a weekly commentary and review. City\neditor, 228-2305; editor, 228-2301; Page Friday, 228-2309;\nsports, 228-2308; advertising, 228-3977.\nJANUARY 13, 1970\nBleah news\nPollution.\nWomen's liberation.\nViet Nam.\nIndian rights.\nImperialism.\nPSA.\nBoard of governors.\nReligion.\nSocial Credit.\nSpace flights.\nCLAM.\nMaoists.\nThe bourgeois press.\nGrafitti.\nStan Persky.\nBelshaw report.\nHeart transplants.\nApathy.\nPeople opposed to apathy.\nVancouver Student Movement.\nBursar William White.\nEcologists.\nBennett.\nRevolutionary communists.\nUdo Erasmus (by request).\nBlack Mountain poetry.\nDDT.\nAcademic activities committee.\nCypress Bowl.\nWalter Hardwick (by request).\nArbutus development.\nThe AMS.\nJorge Luis Borges.\nGeneration gap ravers.\nOver-crowding.\nBureaucrats.\nUbyssey critics.\nPhotographers.\nChauvinism.\nStudent hacks.\nMail thieves.\nThe worker-student alliance.\nObjectivity.\nFalse Creek.\nBill Willmott.\nMarijuana.\nBarbara Streisand.\nRobert Creeley.\nBiafra.\nAfro-Americans.\nQuebec.\nNietzsche.\nSilent majority.\nTrudeau.\nTroop withdrawals.\nGrape strike.\nMontreal Canadiens.\nThese are things, words, people, organizations,\nideologies and all round topics of general discussion and\ncontroversy of which we are sick of hearing.\nNo news is good news. That's quotable.\nEditor: Michael Finlay\nNews Paul Knox\nCity Nate Smith\nPhoto Bruce Stout\nWire Irene Wasilewski\nSports Jim Maddir\nSenior John Twigg\nAss't News Maurice Bridge\nAss't City John Andersen\nManaging Bruce Curtis\nPage Friday Fred Cawsey\nNorbert Ruebsaat\nJim Davies went into paroxysms of\nself-flagelation after being forced to\nadmit there was something he couldn't\ndo. (Three guesses.). Meanwhile, Brian\nMcWatters was forced to terminate his\nsearch for a mistress when Robin\nBurgess, Ginny Gait and Linda Hossie\ngreeted him with an overwhelming\nround of indifference. The only\napplication he got was from Bernard\nBischoff.\nPeter Ladner and Tim Wilson made\ntheir presence felt, much to the dismay\nof their victims Christine Krawczyk\nand Sandy Kass. Jennifer Jordan and\nJan O'Brien also worked, need more be\nsaid?\nDavies Ravies (No. 1)\nMan, so there you are with this far out chick\nthat you really want to make it with and you don't\nknow what to say.\nMan, you had better know what to say or she\nwill think you are on the unhip\u2014like square, man\nand there will be absolutely no way she is going to\ndig you.\nSo man, whadya say?\nMan, I mean there you are grooving to a wild\naxeman who is really doing some hot licks at a gig\nand the set is finished \u2014 this groupie queen, man\nlike she's a plastercaster, comes up to you and gives\nyou that \"lay it on me, baby\" look.\nLike uh, whadya say?\nCan ya dig this scene \u2014 you are on a far out\ntrip, like, you have just dropped five caps of acid,\nsmoked twelveteen joints of wild grass (this is no\nweed, man, it's Acapulco gold), pentopped some\ngreat tokes of hash, had the greatest roach\nsandwich since the peanut-butter kid, and this\nlove-child comes up to you and wants to rap for\nawhile . . .\nHey cats, whadya say?\nLike, there you are listening to boss radio and\nthey're playing all the toughest sounds, I mean like\nthe cats are really starting to jam. You have on your\nguru meditation outfit complete with psychedelic\nbeans, imported sandals, and beard and you are in\nyour guru pad with its op-art posters and freaky\nstrobe and black light show and this groovy chick\ncomes up to you and groans for you to blow her\nmind . . .\nAaaarrrgghhh! Whadya say?\nI mean, like there you are at a big nude-in\nwearing only your peace medallion and your Lennon\nglasses and everyone is stoned - I mean, like they're\nblasted. You're doing your thing hoping that the\nfascist pigs won't show up and give all the groovy\nheads a bum trip.Men, like everyone's getting\ntogether when this naked nymphlet comes up to\nyou and you just know she wants you to lay a heavy\non her...\nYaaahhhh! Whadya say?\nLike man, can you dig it \u2014 there you are at the\nbiggest pimping protest since Chicago, 1968 and\nyou have your very own \"Smash the Capitalist State\nand its Copper Fascist Pig Lackeys\" sign and you\nare grooving along with everybody singing all the\nheavies from the protest bag when suddenly this\nbuckskinned, headbanded maiden comes up and\nlays the peace sign on you . . .\nAlright cats, I'll tell you what to say so that\nyou won't lay a bummer on the chick.\nYou simply hitch up your blue jeans, scratch\nyour nose with your roach-holder, and say:\n\"Hubba-hubba - Man, I go ape over freckles -\nSay, aren't you Doc Finster's daughter -\nHotcha-hotcha \u2014 Twenty-three skidoo, Amscray\nSkeezix, Soooeee pig-pig-pig - Come with me to my\nblue heaven, sugar-lump, honey-pie, baby-doll.\nHip talk is really where it's at; dig me, man?\nHeavy!\nLETTERS TO THE EDITOR\nNum-nums\nEditor, The Ubyssey, Sir:\nMr. Davies says that advertising\nflavored douche concentrates is\nbad taste. I disagree: speaking as a\nEuropean I must say that les\ncanadiennes et les americaines\nhave rather soured my palate. Not\nonly bad taste but bad tasting.\nUntil bidets become part of your\nculture, be thankful for Cupid's\nQuiver. Bon apetit.\nHONORET DE SPANNS\nMore nums\nEditor, The Ubyssey, Sir:\nFor a while, I had become\nresigned to the garbage slopped\nout by the university food\nservices, and at times it even took\non a certain air of palatability.\nThen along came Black Cross,\nand I saw the folly of my ways\nand repented.\nOf course, I was also preparing\nfor the day when the combine\nwould take umbrage and force the\nBlacK Cross to cease and desist.\nAs expected, the\nassholes-for-minds society (AMS)\nhas championed the cause of the\nover-dog and its related bitches;\nalas, all to soon I will have to\nreturn to eating sewage.\nAnd I wouldn't be at all\nsurprised to see the prices go even\nhigher after the monopoly has\nbeen restored. Who knows, maybe\nthe university food services have\nfound the cure for\npollution . . . feed it to university\nstudents.\nTHE HAIRY PLANARIA\nHacks\nEditor, The Ubyssey, Sir:\nI feel that Jim Davies' story\nabout the academic activities\ncommittee (Ubyssey, Jan. 9) was\nunfair to me. While he succeeded\nin reporting slanderous remarks\nmade about me, he didn't tell\nwhat I said at the public meeting.\nI reported the following:\n1. that I opposed the student\ncouncil motion to transfer AAC\nto the education committee,\n2. that I viewed it as a political\nattack by the AMS disguised as an\nadministrative manoeuver,\n3. that, immediately upon\nbeing informed of the motion I\nphoned the AAC chairman and\ntold her I would oppose this\nmotion at the next council\nmeeting,\n4. that the education\ncommittee met, and despite a\nrepresentation from Art\nSmolensky, the mover of the\nmotion, voted unanimously to say\nour committee was opposed to\nthis motion, judged the situation\nto be immoral, and wanted the\nstudent council to reconsider its\naction.\nMy account of the actions and\nposition of the education\ncommittee was not challenged at\nthis public meeting by the\nVancouver Student Movement\n(VSM) or other students present.\nThus, the only one who is a\n\"hack\" (who does the job\nperfunctorily, without care) is the\nreporter (witness) who doesn't tell\nwhat's said, who can only see\ninterest in the possibility of\nsensationalism.\nSTAN PERSKY\neducation committee\nPoverty, ecch!\nEditor, The Ubyssey, Sir:\nRe: \"The editor's stomach\nmakes a complaint.\" Ubyssey,\nFriday, Jan. 9, 1970. Tuesday, January 13, 1970\nTHE UBYSSEY\nPage 5\nMORE LETTERS\nAfter reading your article,\nespecially the line: \"I cannot help\nbut think that our treatment\nmight have been better had we\ndressed differently . .. \"\u2014I cannot\nhelp but think that if you dress\nlike a bum you can expect bum\nservice.\nANN SAUNDER\npharmacy 1\nP.S. Whatdaya say to that?!\nSo bums, people down on their\nluck and unable to afford the\nnice, neat, Sweet Sixteen clothes\nthat you probably wear are not\nentitled to the same service given\nhigh society debutantes such as\nyourself? Oh, miss, you are in big\ntrouble. Perhaps the soggy mass\nthat appeared on my plate more\nclosely resembled your mushy\nbrains.\u2014Ed.\nPure\nEditor, The Ubyssey, Sir:\nIn the last issue of UBC\nReports, the administration had\nopenly admitted that war research\nis being carried out at UBC.\nIf it were not for the\nunderlying tragedy of the\nsituation, one might be amused by\nthe tawdry rationalizations with\nwhich the officials are trying to\ndecorate facts. Their most often\nrepeated excuse that the\npentagon-financed research is\n\"pure science with no direct\nmilitary application\" is a piece of\nphraseology unfit to stand up to\nanalysis.\nWhat reasons does the military\nhave to support a particular\nresearch project? One must\nremember that the military,\nunlike a private corporation,\ncannot make large charitable\ncontributions even as a public\nrelations gesture. In fact the\nfundamental difference in this\nrespect between the Pentagon and\na private corporation is that the\nPentagon is not financially\nautonomous. In asking the U.S.\nCongress for a point-by-point\napproval of its budget, it must\nmake a detailed account of how\nits expenditures are related to\nmilitary objectives. These\nexpenditures are their subjected\nto extensive examination and\ndebate; especially since\ninflationary pressures have forced\nthe U.S. government to reduce its\nmilitary budget and scrap a\nnumber of \"non-essential\"\nmilitary projects. Thus the only\nreason that the Pentagon could\nhave for financing a research\nproject is that the project\npromotes, directly or indirectly,\nsome military objective.\nOne must conclude that the\nartificial distinction between\n\"pure\" and \"applied\" science is\nsimply a verbal subterfuge for\nevading moral responsibility.\nMaking napalm undoubtedly\ninvolved investigating principles of\n\"pure\" chemical science. It is a\ncharacteristic of contemporary\nresearch projects that they involve\na complex network of people\nworking at different levels of\nabstraction, and the more abstract\naspects of the project are\ndesignated \"pure\". But THAT is\nmerely a logistical distinction with\nno relevance to the ethical\nramifications supporting them.\nOr are we to conclude that\neveryone is a pure scientist except\nthe man who pulls the trigger?\nPETER KORNYA\nscience 6\nEditor, The Ubyssey, Sir:\nI see by your first issue of the\nnew decade that The Ubyssey gets\nbetter and better as time passes.\nThe calibre of the stories, whether\nthey be news stories, sports stories\nor feature stories, are of a quality\nmuch higher than the standard\nmaintained by the downtown\ndailies and even by the\nunderground paper.\nCongratulations on what appears\nto be a very enlightening spring\nsemester.\nSEYMOUR JACOBSEN\narts 3\nSan Francisco\nWeekend for\nYOU & A FRIEND\nFor details-See Jan. 23 Ubyssey\nU.B.C. GATE BARBERS\nit INTERNATIONALLY TRAINED HAIRSTYLISTS\nit UP-TO-DATE TECHNIQUES WITH CRAFTSMANSHIP\nit ARNOLD EPP-CORRECTIONAL HAIR CUTTING\nit ZAIDA MERIO-LADY BARBER AND STYLISTS\nSpecial Prices for Students and Faculty\n4605 West 10th Avenue 228-9354\n*\u00b0>\n,**\n\\&>\nWORRY BEADS\nFor details-See Jan. 23 Ubyssey\nIMC FILM SOCIETY which in 1967 brought you the uncut \"HIGH\" now presents\nLARRY\nKENT'S\nFACADE\nMO AOMITTANCt TO MASONS UNDfft )\u2022\nWarning: VERY FRANK TREATMENT OF SEX\nR. W. McDonald, B.C. Censor\nFRIDAYS\nSATURDAYS\n: 16, 23, 30 1 7:\nAYS: 17, 24, 31 J 9:\n00\n&\n00\nSUB AUDITORIUM Sundays: 18,25, 1 7.00\nv Ji Special admission price tor this presentation only *\u25a0* 1\nB.C.'s NEW LOW-COST\nCAR INSURANCE\nfs your auto insurance priced too high?\nShop for a better rate.\nDEAL DIRECTLY WITH WESTCO AND SAVE $20, $30,\n$40, $50 OR MORE THIS YEAR ON CAR INSURANCE.\nA phone call may save you hundreds of dollars\nover the years on auto insurance. Compared to\nthe rates of most other insurance companies, you\ncan expect a saving of $20. $30, $40, $50 or\nmore... tor the same protection you have now!\nThis is not so-called \"good driver\" insurance. You\nneed not be accident free or over 25 years of age\nto qualify. Even if you are currently on a preferred\nrisk type of insurance, WESTCO may still save\nyou a substantial amount of money\nHOW CAN WESTCO OFFER\nLOWER RATES?\nUnder the new car insurance legislation just\nproclaimed and soon to be implemented by the\nB.C. government, all motorists in this province\nmust carry auto insurance. The driver who fails to\ndo so will face a fine of not less than $250 or\nimprisonment of not less than three months or\nboth fine and imprisonment. On January 1, 1970,\ncar insurance will be compulsory in B.C. \u2014 it no\nlonger needs to be sold.\nSo, WESTCO is a direct sales company with head\noffice in B.C. and without salesmen or agents\nIn this way, WESTCO does not have to pay sales\ncommissions, one of the most expensive operating costs of typical insurance companies. This\nsaving is passed directly to you in the form of\nlower rates.\nThese lower rates are available to you now\nWHAT ABOUT CLAIM SERVICE?\nShould you be involved in an accident, again you\navoid the middle man. You don't contact a sales\nperson, ?ou speak directly to a specially trained\nWESTCO claims adjuster.\nWESTCO has reorganized the entire claim\nservice system, including their own Claim\nAdjuster Training Program, to eliminate delays\nand excessive paperwork which are the major\ncauses of the increasing costs of claim\nadjustments which in turn cause higher insurance\nrates.\nWESTCO's approach is to settle claims quickly,\nfairly, without red tape. You'll appreciate the\nservice as well as the savings.\nCAN YOU QUALIFY FOR\nWESTCO S LOW RATES?\nIf you are presently without auto insurance, if\nyou need additional insurance to meet the new\ngovernment requirements just proclaimed,\nor if you plan to change or renew your present\ncoverage in the next few months, phone\nWESTCO today and find out how much you can\nsave.\nThere is no obligation and, of course, no\nsalesmen will call because WESTCO doesn't\nhave any\nACT NOW!\nMAIL THE COUPON OR PHONE TODAY.\nNO SALESMEN WILL CALL.\nMAIL THIS COUPON FOR OUR LOW RATES ON YOUR AUTOMOBILE\nCOMPLETE AND RETURN TODAY FOR WESTCO RATES.\nNo obligation-No salesman will call.\nName\t\nResidence\nAddress \u2014\n(Please Print)\nYear of automobile \u2014\nMake of automobile.\nNo. of cylinders \t\nCity\t\n. Prov.,\nOccupations ___\nPhone: Home\nAge\t\n. Office-\nModel (Impala, Dart, etc.)\t\n2\/4 dr-Sdn, s\/w. h\/t, conv.\t\nDays per week driven to work, train\nor bus depot, or fringe parking area\nOne way driving distance\t\nMarried n Single \u25a1\nMale \u25a1 Female Q\nNumber of years licensed to drive\t\nGive number and dates of accidents in last 5 years,\n(circle dates of those accidents which were not your fault).\nIn the last five years\nHas your license been suspended?\t\nAre you now insured? Date it expires..\nIs car used in business (except to\nand from work)?\t\nCar No 1\nCar No 2\nres D No \u25a1\nYes G No D\nGive number and dates of traffic convictions in last 6 years.\nThis coupon is designed solely to enable non-policy-holders to obtain\nan application and rates for their cars.\nLIST ALL ADDITIONAL DRIVERS\nAge\nMale or\nFemale\nRelation\nYears\nLicensed\nMarried\nor Single\n% of Use\n%\n%\n%\n%\n%\n%\n._l\nm^mm\nINSURANCE COMPANY\nHEAD OFFICE: 1927 WEST BROADWAY, VANCOUVER, BRITISH COLUMBIA\nBCLC 2 Page 6\nTHE UBYSSEY\nTuesday, January 13, 1970\nSUZUKI\n[MOTORCYCLE\nCENTRE\nWorld Champion Lightweights\nSALES - SERVICE\nPARTS - ACCESSORIES\nFor Complete Service Call\n2185 W. Broadway 731-7510\nNEW YORK\nCOSTUME SALON\nRENTALS\nWHITE DINNER JACKETS\nTUXEDOS, DARK SUITS, TAILS\nCOLORED JACKETS\nSPECIAL STUDENT RATES\n224-0034 4397 W. 10th\nSwing in\nPsychedelic\nSophistication\nFeaturing\nThe Great Sounds\nOF\nCARL GRAVES\nAND\nTHE SOUL UNLIMITED\nMon. thru Fri.\n8:30 P.M. to 2 A.M.\nSAT. 8 PJVl. to 1 A.M.\n5th Ave. atFir-736-4304!\nTHIS COUPON GOOD OR $1.00 [\nOFF REGULAR ADMISSION |\nWITH STUDENT CARD [\nMONDAY THRU THURSDAY I\n8 hearty men wanted\nto lead expansion of\nrenowned boys' school\nYou may have read about St. John's\nin WEEKEND, or seen CBC's penetrating documentary on this unique\nWinnipeg school, where encouragement to think comes first; where\nstudents (and teachers) learn to\nsnowshoe up to 50 miles or paddle\ncanoes up to 16 hours a day, retracing routes of the early explorers;\nwhere building men of character is\nthe motivating challenge of a hearty\nstaff.\nNow a second St. John's has been\nestablished in Edmonton, and others\nwill be opened across Canada to\nmeet continent-wide applications for\nadmission. To do this we need men\nof immense vision and courage.\nThey should have at least one year\nof university, and be prepared to\ncomplete their degrees under Company direction; they should be prepared to work up to 80 a week,\nsometimes more, for a salary of 31\na day plus food, clothing, shelter\nand necessities for themselves and\ntheir families; they should like\npeople, be able to think logically,\nuse the English language effectively,\nlaugh easily. They need not be\nAnglicans, but should be prepared\nto examine the Christian faith and\nreach honest conclusions. Interviews Jan . 15-21. Write: Company\nof the* Cross, c\/o Anglican Church\nof Canada, (37 W. Hastings St.,\nVancouver.\nChicago Seed writer Marshal Rosenthal writes\nabout the recent murder of Black Panther leaders Fred\nHampton and Mark Clark, and outlines its implication\nfor various segments of the city.\nY\nACT I - A BROTHER FALLS\nOU can kill the revolutionary but you can't kill\nthe revolution. You can jail the liberator but you\ncan't jail liberation. You can run the freedom\nfighter all over the country but you can't stop people\nfrom fighting for freedom.\n\"So said Fred Hampton and so say we.\" With\nthose words spoken by Mrs. Meeker White \u2014 whose slave\nname belies her \u2014 Fred Hampton's bullet-ridden body\nwas buried in the Bethel Cemetery outside of Haynes-\nville, Louisiana.\nUp North in Chicago, meanwhile, * the long-run\nTheater of the Macabre played on, adding new dimensions to entertainment.\nThe Chicago production of \"Hair\" was viewed by a\ngroup of psychologists who then analyzed the play in a\npost-production onstage discussion. Michael Butler, producer of \"Hair,\" was so moved by their presentation that\nhe distributed a videotape of it to all \"Hair\" companies\nso that the actors \"will know what they are doing.\"\nState's Attorney Edward Hanrahan was an actor in\nthe Murder of Fred and he knew what he was doing without the help, thank you, of effete psychologists. He understood his role so well that after the play he took it\nupon himself to write the first review: \"We wholeheartedly commend the police officers for their bravery, their\nremarkable restraint and their discipline in the face of\nthis Black Panther attack, as should every decent citizen\nin our community.\"\nThere was a difference between the critical reactions to Butler's and Hanrahan's productions, however.\nWhereas the underground press stood almost alone in deploring the exploitation of their culture by the \"Hair\"\npeople, the black community, from the NAACP to\nBreadbasket to Rayner to the thousands who passed\nthrough the bloody stage at 2337 West Monroe, felt as\none in knowing the filthy lie perpetrated by producer,\ndirector and stage manager Hanrahan. For the first time\nsince the murder of Martin Luther King. Jr. the black\ncommunity along with the heretofore rhetorical members\nof the white radical community saw in deathly colors\nthe reality of a pig (i.e., non-human) pbwer (i.e., anti-\nevolutionary) structure (i.e., non-responsive).\nFred Hampton and Mark Clark were murdered on\nDecember 4th. Four other members of the Black Panther Party were wounded in the same raid after a \"legal\"\nsearch warrant was issued by the Circuit Court. (To better understand the word \"legal,\" we recommend \"The\nConspiracy Trial\" now in its 12th week at the Federal\nBuilding, or read a small portion of the scenario printed\non page four for your edification.)\nTwelve hours after Fred Hampton and Mark Clark\nwere killed, the apartment of Bobby Rush, Black Panther\ndeputy minister of defense was raided. Bobby Rush was\nnot at home, but an unregistered derringer and a small\namount of pot were alleged to have been found. Because\nhe wasn't at home with his wife and children, Bobby\nRush is alive today. A warrant was issued for his arrest\nand he turned himself in to black policeman in front of\n3,000 people at an Operation Breadbasket meeting so\nthat \"they wouldn't kill me.\"\nFour days after the two Illinois Panther party\nmembers were murdered, 300 cops attacked the Los An-\nI\ngeles offices of the Black Panther party at which they\nwere held off for close to five hours by 13 Panthers. On\nDecember 10th, fifty helmeted. club-swinging police\nattacked 250 people demonstrating support for the Panthers in front of their bullet-riddled office. Thirty people\nwere injured in the attack, including California state senator Mervyn Dymally and UCLA Communist philosophy\nprofessor Angela Davis. Both are black.\nWithin the past six months, more than 40 Panther\nleaders and about 125 members have been arrested, and\nmany are facing charges which could lead to life imprisonment. In the few years the Party has been in existence,\nthirty-eight Black Panthers have been murdered. David\nHilliard, the Panther Party's national Chief of Staff was\narrested on December 3rd in downtown San Francisco\nfor saying \"We will kill Richard Nixon\" at a November\nfifteenth antiwar rally in Golden Gate Park. (Hanrahan's\npolice did kill Hampton and Clark, \"Hair\" kills the audience every night, Hilliard spoke the word \"kill.\")\nACT II - HOLD THE PRESSES!\nT is only the hard-core fearfuls who are accepting\nHanrahan's vicious vaudeville. Only the Chicago\nTribune and the readers they represent would\naccept, without investigating, photos which purport to\nshow bullet holes in the woodwork next to the back\ndoor which \"proved\" that the Panthers fired back at the\n\"restrained and disciplined\" officers. Every other\nmetropolitan paper in Chicago sent a reporter back to\nthe apartment to check out the Tribune's \"Exlusive.\"\nThe bullet holes turned out to be old nails in the\nwoodwork.\nAnd a picture which Hanrahan claimed to be of a\nbathroom door turned out to be a picture of a bedroom\ndoor. There are no bullet holes in the bathroom door.\nThe third photo in the Tribune-Hanrahan story showed a\n\"bullet hole\" in the apartment's front door. Mike\nRoyko, writing in the December 12th Chicago Daily\nNews, observed\u2014\"This hole was supposed to be evidence\nthat somebody in the living room fired a slug through\nthe door with a 12-gauge shotgun. Yet, there are no\nholes in the wall a few feet beyond the door. Somehow\na big slug that could tear a big hole in a thin door\nwouldn't have the momentum to travel a few feet more\nand dent a plaster wall.\n\"This final point, however, appears to be irrelevant\nat this moment, because Hanrahan's men have since gone\non TV and changed their version of how the battle began. They had told the Tribune the battle began with\nthat big bullet coming through the closed front door,\nA8006 B*o\\j6AR. cCfUtJ^\nBfxc^rr IS\nCL\nU-\n6UW>\nBUt-LtTtJOLd\nBATH\nBucter \/iot*s\nDiagram of Chicago Panther apartment, showing ravages of police attack.\nafter they hs<\nshot was fired\nOn Frid.\nhis Monroe s\nHe hired the\n28-minute un\npleasant undi\n\"[Hanrahanl\ning to persoi\nports Daily r*\nfore air time,\nmeet his requ\nSo muc\nWBBM-TV.\nNow we\nvestigations.\"\nTHE foil\nfor or a\nAssocial\ncoroner's jur\\\ndivision of th\nthe Eagle's,\npressure fell\nall-black groi\nDivision (IIC\n(remember th\nDemocratic a\nwould not pri\nmurder, but\ndone so \u2014 ve\nliberal cot\ninvestigations\nwhich arise i\nsystem.\"\nIf we a\nhave learned\nThey hold h\u00ab\nwas a Warrer\nRight Comm\nsions and hoi\nanalyzed, fill\nthem, people\neffectual thee\nUJIUDOV\n$tAfS Tuesday, January 13, 1970\nTHE UBYSSEY\nPage 7\niecked. But on TV they said the first\niem after they got into the apartment.\"\nrse 12th of December, Hanrahan moved\n: destruction-production to television,\ns department of WBBM-TV to film a\nupted by commercials (\"Wipe out un-\ni odors\"?) re-enactment of the raid,\nat the station Thursday night attempt-\noversee the editing of the film,\" re-\nTV critic Norman Mark, \"but left be-\nng been asssured the air version would\nmts.\"\nr Hanrahan, the Chicago Tribune, and\n;t get ready for the third act-\"ln-\nACT III - INVESTIGATIONS\nI groups and individuals have called\niating investigations: the Chicago Bar\nhas asked for a \"blue-ribbon\"\nis Leonard, head of the civil rights\ntice Department who resigned from\n;st organization, only after public\nhim: the Cook County Bar Assn., an\nlawyers; the Internal Inspections\nthe Chicago police department\n:ellent work in the aftermath of the\nion?); the daily papers (one of which*\nnti-Hanrahan story on the eve of the\nfeeling out the city's attitude, has\nterately); and our old friends in the\nity who continually call for\nder to expunge their guilt-feelings\naving chosen to \"work within the\narn anything from history we should\n\/ that Investigations only investigate,\nand write reports. That's all. There\ntission, a Kerner Commission, a Civil\nThere have been hunger commis-\nimmissions. They've been televised,\nd filed. Doctoral candidates read\nthem. Commissions are boring, in-\nWe know Fred Hampton and Mark Clark are dead,\nand we know they were murdered at Hanrahan's direction. Nobody, not even the Chicago Tribune or WBBM-\nTV, is disputing that. A commission is not needed to\nmake a six month investigation in order to conclude that\nHampton and Clark were shot and killed by the state's\nattorney's police. What we have to do is to move, by\nevery means necessary, to get on to the important business.\nEPILOGUE\nTHE murder of Fred Hampton and Mark Clark\nbrought us at the Seed closer together than we had\never been. We saw the blood in the apartment and\nsaw that it was ours. We responded in a way we knew\nbest \u2014 putting together and distributing 35,000 copies\nof a two-page Seed Extra headlined \"When One of Us\nFalls, 1,000 Will Take His Place,\" we worked closely\nwith the Black Panther Party helping to produce a\nBulletin from their headquarters to the black\ncommunity; in the past two weeks we have given\nspeeches in the white middle-class communities from\nwhich we came in order to raise money for the Fred\nHampton Scholarship Fund, the Breakfast for Children\nprogram, and the People's Free Health Clinic, We are the\nsame blood in the same struggle ...\nclass communities from which we came in order to raise\nmoney for the Fred Hampton Scholarship Fund, the\nBreakfast for Children program, and the People's Free\nHealth Clinic. We are the same blood in the same\nstruggle...\nExcept\u2014our community is not occupied by a\npolice army in the same way that the black community\nis; our community does not have the same high rate of\nunemployment as the black community has; our community does not have the same degree of exploitation by\nmerchants and landlords as the black community has;\nour community does not have the same infant mortality\nrate as the black community has; and cur community\nhas not seen their brothers killed in their beds like the\nblack community has.\nOur community resides high on the slope, above\nthe valley. We can afford dope and records and concerts\nand books. But we're not going to be free until our\nbrothers and sisters in the black community are free.\nWe're not going to be free to get on with the important\nwork of solving ecological and environmental problems\nuntil we're all free. And this isn't going to happen until\nthe twin monstors, Fear and Racism are slain - through\nevery means necessary.\nWe are no longer living in a make-believe theater.\nrevolution\nUP\n, TIGHT?\nj Anti-Up-Tight Baubles\nj For details-See Jan. 23 Ubyssey\nWHAT'S A LIFE WORTH?\nToday's complex world finds many in conflict with law and\norder. Learn how you can assist in keeping lawbreakers out of\nprison and help them to function in the community.\nPROBATION -A CHALLENGING CAREER OPPORTUNITY\nFilm \"Price of A Life\", depicting a probation\nofficer at work, will be shown at\nRm. 106, Buchanan Building \u2014 12:30 p.m.\non January 19, 1970\nMake Appointments Now For\nCampus Interviews \u2014 January 22 & 23\nStudent Placement Building\nVisit Our New Varsity Branch\n4517 W. 10th Ave. (1 blk. from UBC Gates)\nffrbank'i\nDowntown Brentwood Park Royal\n10% Special UBC Discount-Students & Faculty\nNOTICE\nRe-Late Payment of Fees\nA late payment fee of $20 additional to all other fees will\nbe assessed after JANUARY 15, 1970, this fee will be increased to $30 after January 30, 1970. Refund of this fee\nwill be considered only on the basis of a medical certificate\ncovering illness or on evidence of domestic affliction. Students who are unable to pay their fees on time owing to\nnew Canada Loan or Bursary arrangements not having\nbeen finalized should see the Finance Department prior to\nJanuary 15, 1970. Appeals must be made by February 15.\nIf fees are not paid in full by February 16, 1970, the registration of students concerned will be cancelled and they\nwill be excluded from classes.\nIf a student whose registration has been cancelled for\nnon-payment of fees applies for reinstatement and his\napplication is approved by the Registrar, he will be\nrequired to pay a reinstatement fee of $10, the late\nfee of $30, and all other outstanding fees before he\nis permitted to resume classes. Page 8\nTHE UBYSSEY\nTuesday, January 13, 1970\nMajor power influence\nprolonging Mid East war\nBy LINDA HOSSIE\nInterference of the major powers is keeping the Middle East from\npeace, the vice president of the Canadian Jewish Congress said\nMonday.\n\"If the Russians hadn't supported the Arabs and if the British and\nFrench hadn't entered into it, I'm sure there would have been a peace\nby now,\" Allan Rose told 150 students in Buchanan 205.\nRose said a stop to the Middle East power play is not likely.\nHe said the Soviet Union is playing an imperial role in the middle\neast and is using the Arabs to achieve its geographic goals.\nRose cited the early Soviet support of the Jewish nationalism,\nagainst British imperialism as an example of \"Soviet insincerity.\"\n\"The real tragedy of this war is that it is a war between right and\nright,\" said Rose. He said the war is not between the Arabs and the\nIsraelis, but between Arab and Jewish liberation movements.\nRose criticized El Fateh, the Palestine National Liberation Front.\n\"The whole thrust of El Fateh is a war of terrorization against\ncivilians,\" he said.\n\"In the short term there may be new -wars between Israel and the\nUnited Arab Republic, but in the long run there may be possibilities.\"\nRose said he based his optimism on the coexistence that once\nexisted between Arabs and Israelis and on the changes that are\noccurring in the U.A.R.\nHe said the young people of the more advanced Arab states, such\nas Egypt, see the hopes for Arab socialism and the abolishment of\nfeudalism destroyed by the present conflict.\nIt is this feeling that will help pull the two countries together, Rose\nsaid.\n\"Israel would give up the Sinai Peninsula if the Arabs would\n. negotiate a peace,\" Rose said. He said there is a possibility of setting\nup a situation under which Palestine would decide its own fate.\n\"1 believe that a commonwealth for Jews and Arabs is probable,\"\nlie s;iid.\nWillmott speaks\nAnthropology and Asian\nStudies prof Bill Willmott\ncontinues his lecture series on the\nU.S.-Vietnam war today at noon\nin Angus 104.\nWillmott's topic today is \"The\nchanging face of war\".\nPATIO\n\u2022EAT IN 'TAKEOUT. DELIVERY'\n,3261 W. Broadway 736-778E\nWeekdays to 1 a.m.\nFri. & Sat. 3 a.m.\n'm. At&ppinq* out\"\nSAT., JANUARY 24\nWHY NOT JOIN ME?\n\/\/yVV\" i ^B1 \u00b0 I m ' iwf\/N\nAGGIES\n:;f ^BjST\"\nFARMER'S FROLIC\nSUB BALLROOM & PARTYROOM\nHard Times \u2014 Two Bands\nFun & Games-Only $3.50 couple\nSAVE UP TO $125\nGO PLACES 2 FOR 1\nINVITATION\nTHE STUDENT ENTERTAINMENT BOOK\nON SALE NOW SUB INFORMATION BOOK STORE\nHE & SHE CLOTHING\nNOW ONLY SI.50!\n\u2014 i\n*\u00b0*\n**\n%***\nWORRY BEADS\nFor details-See Jan. 23 Ubyssey\nWPM - WPP x No. of Pages\nTIME [Minutes]\nPeter Sol 3rd year UBC student applies this formula for pleasure and profit.\nThis formula is less complicated than the work which confronts Peter Sol each\nday as he studies at the University of British Columbia. It is the formula for\ndetermining a readers average words per minute \u2014 the number of words per\npage, times the number of pages divided by the time in minutes. In Peter Sol's\nown words \"The Evelyn Woods course teaches the individual a very confident\nmethod for reading more actively and efficiently. I have benefited in that I\nnow read technical material at about 2000 wpm with good recall. Would you\nbelieve that it only takes me an hour to read and enjoy a popular novel? I\nhighly recommend this Reading Dynamics course for anyone who wants to learn\nto read more material in far less time.\"\nDOES READING DYNAMICS REALLY WORK?\nAttend one of this week's scheduled presentations and see what you are capable\nof doing. See how you can fully expect, after the basic 8-week Reading\nDynamics course, to pick up and thoroughly enjoy reading a complete novel in\nan hours time ... or TIME Magazine in 25 minutes, cover to cover, without\nskimming or skipping.\nAt the presentation, you will witness a young man pick up a book he has never\nseen and, turning pages faster than most of us read paragraphs, absorb and later\nrecite every detail. You will receive a portfolio of information, see a film and ask\nquestions freely. Bring your friends.\nThursday, January 15th\n12:30 p.m.\nBuchanan Building \u2014 Room 202\nBe the\nGuest of\nREADING\nDYNAMICS\nat a\nShort\nPresentation\nSEE WHY HUNDREDS\nOF U.B.C. STUDENTS\nHAVE TAKEN THIS\nAMAZING READING\nIMPROVEMENT COURSE.\n\u2022 COMPREHENSION\n\u2022 RETENTION\n\u2022 STUDY TECHNIQUES\n\u2022 RECALL PATTERNS\n1900 W. BROADWAY - 732-7696 Tuesday, January 13, 1970\nTHE UBYSSEY\nPage 9\nMoratorium committee organizes 'taxpayer rallies'\nWASHINGTON, D.C. (CUP) -\nThe Vietnam Moratorium\nCommittee announced last week\nit would concentrate its efforts on\nthe organizing of nationwide\n\"taxpayer rallies\" for April 15,\nand would start a campaign\nservice to help political candidates\nto the Vietnam war.\nThe organizers said the 15th of\nJanuary, February and March\nwould be designated as \"peace\naction day\"', but said they did not\nexpect major activities o:i those\ndays.\nThe rest of the time between\nnow and April would be devoted\nto convincing Americans that U.S.\npresident Richard Nixon's\nVietnam policy will not bring an\nend to the war.\nCo-ordinator Sam Brown said\nNixon has \"a policy for\ncontinuing the war, not for ending\nit,\" and added that \"It will take a\nstrong educational effort to\nconvince people of this.\"\nThe April 15th rallies are\nscheduled to coincide with the\nlast day for filing U.S. federal\nincome tax returns;\ndemonstrations and meetings\nwould take place at local Internal\nRevenue Service offices.\nThe committee expects to have\nresources to aid 50 to 60\ncandidates for the U.S. senate\nand house of representatives.\nStudents protest against oil co.\nCALGARY (CUP) - More than 100 students\ndemonstrated outside Gulf Oil's head Alberta office\nFriday, protesting that company's role in the\nNigeria-Biafra conflict.\nThe protest followed a speech by former CBC\nbroadcaster Stanley Burke, currently touring\nwestern Canada to raise support for Biafra, urging\nstudents to put pressure on oil companies making\nmoney out of the war.\nBurke toid 600 University of Calgary students\nthe war continues because a number of oil\ncompanies, including Gulf, Shell and British\nPetroleum, have 1 billion dollars invested in the\nBiafra-Nigeria oilfields.\nFood blitz distributes\n$2,000 food vouchers\nLast month's food blitz has been termed a \"moderate success\"\nby members of the Unemployed Citizen's Welfare Improvement\nCouncil.\nThe 100 participants collected $2050 on campus and in\nsurrounding areas such as Shaughnessy, Kerrisdale,Oakridge, and Point\nGrey. The money included $1700 from individual donors, $250 from\nthe Alma Mater Society and an anonymous contribution of $100 and\nwas used to buy food vouchers for the needy.\n\"Students have to recognize the various socio-economic\nproblems that exist, and try to broaden their span of interest by\ncontributing to such projects,\" said UCWIC spokesman Jeff Marvin.\nA meeting is tentatively planned for January 22 to discuss a\npossible forming of Friends to UCWIC, which will be concerned with\nmaking people more aware of the issues related to poverty.\ntrtii&A\nEAT IN * TAKE OUT \u2022 DELIVERY-\n'3261 W.Broadway 736-7788\nWeekdays to 1 a.m.\nFri. & Sat. 3 a.m.\nrf\nLEARN MORE ABOUT CUSO\nCome to information meeting\nTuesday, Jan. 13, 8 p.m.\nINTERNATIONAL HOUSE\nfilm, talk on development, Third World\nCUSO returnees will answer questions.\nThe University of British Columbia\nFREDERIC WOOD THEATRE\n- Theatre Excitement --\nEXIT THE KING\nEugene lonesco's\nABSURD, INTRIGUING AND MOVING PLAY\nJANUARY 16-24 - 8:30 p.m.\nDirected by Klaus Strassmann\nSTUDENT TICKETS \u2014 $1.00\n(available for all performances)\nSPECIAL STUDENT PERFORMANCES\nMonday, January 19, 7:30 p.m.\nThursday, January 22, 12:30 p.m. Matinee\nTickets: The Frederic Wood - Room 207\nSUPPORT YOUR CAMPUS THEATRE\n\u2022^\ny\n\"ssku, xBq.soooq.U8d'\" \"ss^u: Adlxii' '\"\"csv^ oqq up se-Sur.qo ^q q.ssHxi\u00b0\u00b09 .\n..\"Father Fulton, do you realioe you. speko in your tcrxuo today?\" I o\n\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022sstju; ,'asu oqq qqxy oxqnojq. a .* \u2022 \u2022 \u2022 could scarce!^ beliove it.... I\n' ' \" .... . Xdi\nM * 3\ntqnojq. X.****Cou.ld scarcely beliove\n T ber:-r. to relate to the dear hipries..... .\nXq.ocooq.ue 1 oRl* ux pOApOAUX ouioosq \u00a3 ppp .<>aoh I\ny o\nA P\n-- i\u2014i\n,X-I\nc -1\n\u2022H r-\n\u25a0P '\"\"\nCB uiOAOui\n3\nid\ny <--\n<\u25a0\"\u25a0' C\no -i\n<-' y\no* \u2022\np x:\nC+* -:\nn -****'\no ?x: C 3\n,**, _. <-+ CI; o\n< \u201e, O -1* d-\nCo Vi \"-J\n^ x; *--\u2022 c; o\n-p *' s: p\nO j-t- o o\nO <*+ & 01\nv,- I I \u25a0_ S-. **\u00bb\n^ A -P\n^ J! CD\nCD +> O \u2022<< \u25a0\n3 \u2022 3 ; be\nNoon Hour-SUB 215\n*\nTUESDAY\u2014Joseph Fulton, Roman Catholic\nWEDNESDAY-Joseph Fulton, Roman Catholic\nBernard Warren, United Church\nSponsored by University Religious Council\nTHURSDAY\u2014Gerald Brown, Roman Catholic\na -\u25a0\n3\nt+ O *~\nP P.\n\u25a0-J c+\nP P\n\u20225 y.\n-5 P\nO\n3\n3 G)\nvD \u2022\nO \u2022\n*1\n-1 P\nX ^ c\nCO H* *J\n4 3 G\na, P -H\nH* . ,\n\u25a0-\u2022j d- d'\np< 3\nr)\n\u2022> . \u2022 . o -> .\nG0U9S8JJ sth qnoqc aaASOoq-eq;\/. sq.qnop ou pwq j**\n2 \u00bb\"i.\"\u00a3o 7-o to our Catholic seminary... .crisis of faith \u2022\n