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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":" Police end N.B. student occupation\nFREDERICTON (CUP) -\nFive hundred chanting New\nBrunswick students confronted 50\nlocal police outside the provincial\ngovernment administrative'\nbuilding here Monday after\npolice ejected them Sunday.\nThe students, who have been\noccupying the building here were\nevicted after the local police chief\nread the riot act.\nThe students had been occupying the building since Jan. 28\nto press their student aid\ndemands. They had voted the\nprevious Friday to reject a\ngovernment offer and stay until\ntheir demands were met.\nThe government had offered to\nstrike a committee to investigate\nand recommend changes to the\naid system, but gave no\nguarantees that any changes\nwould be made.\nYouth minister J. P. Ouellette\nconfronted the students in the\nlobby of the building 3:30 Sunday\nafternoon and told them they had\n15minutes to vacate the building.\nThe students tried to phone their\nlegal counsel, but all lines in the\nbuilding were suddenly shut\ndown.\nThe students then refused to\nleave.\nFifteen minutes later the riot\nact was read. Fifty Fredericton\npolice then entered the building\nand began to carry the students\nfrom the building.\nThe government had rented 15\nto 20 school buses to carry the\nstudents back to Moncton and\nother points in the province from\nwhich they came.\nThe students refused to board\nthe buses and instead accepted\nthe invitation of a local Catholic\nchurch to spend the night in the\nchurch basement.\nAt latest report, there were\nmore than 500 students ringing\nthe government building singing\nand chanting, with 50 local police\nlined up in front of the doors to\nthe building.\nThe students are adamant that\nthey will continue their protest\nand are urging still more\nstudents from N.B. schools to join\nthem.\nFrom all reports the government buildings are totally\ninaccessible and the whole administrative operation of tthe\ngovernment has halted.\nSome of the students will spend\nthe night at the Catholic church,\nothers at a local family centre,\nand others in rooms on the\nUniversity of New Brunswick\ncampus. The number of students\nhas increased since the eviction,\nlargely because almost a third of\nthem had left the scene of the\noccupation on Friday to go back\nto their schools and organize\nmore students to join the occupation.\nDEEP IN SHIT ALREADY following antics of engineering week, gears are now up to their soles in paint,\napplied Friday by unknown vandals to three floors of civils building. Floors and walls were covered with\npainted slogans alluding to aggies' alleged greatness and gears' lowliness. Aggies denied knowledge of caper.\nGears may pay for paper mess\nBy RALPH MAURER\nThe Engineering Undergraduate Society may have\nto pay the cost of cleaning up the mess caused by\ngears draping toilet paper over trees Feb. 1.\nAdministration president Doug Kenny said Monday\nthis alternative was being considered as one way of\ncombatting vandalism at UBC.\nCost of cleaning the toilet paper off the trees is\nunknown.\nMeanwhile, in apparent open defiance of a\nstatement by Kenny Thursday denouncing vandalism\nin the guise of pranks, unidentified individuals Friday\nnight painted slogans on three floors of the civil\nengineering building with latex paint.\nThursday, Kenny had lashed out at \"damage done\nto public and private property . . . (and) physical\nassaults on faculty members\" and what he called\n''criminal hooliganism.\"\nIn his statement Kenny said he has \"begun a\nsystematic exploration of possible measures to deal\nwith the problem.\"\nBut he emphasized Monday that most of these\nmeasures would be long-term.\nHe said groups or individuals would only be forced\nto bear the cost of any damage if their guilt could be\nfirmly established.\nKenny said he doesn't necessarily approve of\npunitive action, but hoped a solution te the problem\ncould be found by educating people.\n\"I would hope new traditions would be developed\nthat are acceptable to all, not just myself,\" he said.\nKenny had taken particular offense at two\nengineering week traditions of long-standing the\nLady Godiva ride and the Red Rag, which he called\n\"an offensive and demeaning attack on women.\"\n\"There is a long educational task ahead of us,\" he\nsaid Monday. \"The emphasis is on the education of all\ninstead of trying to control human behavior by\npunitive measures.\"\nWhat is the educational task referred to?\nSee page 2: KENNY\nB.C. student unions\nbehind strike call\nStudent unions across B.C. .are\njoining to support a province-wide\nboycott of classes to protest car\ninsurance rate increases.\nAt least three B.C. post-\nsecondary institutions have joined\nthe UBC Alma Mater Society in\ncalling for a one-day strike and\nothers are holding emergency\nmeetings to decide whether to\nfollow the AMS's lead.\nAnd the student union at Simon\nFraser University is urging SFU\nstudents to join a UBC demonstration Thursday at the Henry\nAngus building where Pat McGeer,\nminister responsible for the Insurance Corporation of B.C., will\nbe opening building additions.\nUBC survey\nPage 3\nLindy Severy, acting president of\nSFU's student union, said Monday\nthe student union is spending\nmoney to publicize the demonstration sponsored by the UBC\nAlma Mater Society.\nMcGeer is scheduled to arrive at\nthe Angus building at 3:30 p.m.\nBut McGeer's executive\nassistant Jim Bennett, when\ncontacted by The Ubyssey Monday, did not rule out the possibility\nMcGeer would cancel his UBC visit\nbecause of the demonstration.\nBennett said McGeer has not yet\ndecided whether he will attend the\nceremony at the Angus building\nhow that he has heard of the\ndemonstration plan.\nAMS president Jake van der\nKamp said Monday: \"The last\nword is still that McGeer is\ncoming. If he doesn't show up it\nreally shows him up as a chicken.\"\n\"With the NDP government,\nevery single minister would go\nonto the steps of the legislature and\ntalk to protesters and face the\nmusic. It is a good question\nwhether the Socreds will do the\nsame thing.\"\nVan der Kamp said the committee for a democratic university,\nled by himself, political science\nprof Phil Resnick and Ian\nMackenzie, president of the\nAssociation of University and\nCollege Employees, local 1, has 20-\n25 people organizing the demonstration.\nThe AMS voted Wednesday to\nask all UBC students to stay away\nfrom classes this Friday, the day\nbefore the mid-term break, to\nprotest the ICBC premium increases, which are highest for\nmale drivers under 25 years of age.\nStudent unions at SFU, Capilano\nCollege and Douglas College have\nall -voted to ask students to support\nFriday's boycott.\nAnd four community colleges \u2014\nFraser Valley, Northern Lights,\nNorth West and New Caledonia \u2014\nare holding emergency meetings\nbefore Friday. A total of 11 B.C.\nstudent unions represented at a\nB.C. Student Federation meeting\nSaturday and Sunday voted to call\na province-wide boycott of classes.\nThe strike is planned to coincide\nwith a B.C. Federation of Labor\nrally at the legislature in Victoria\nFriday and the BCSF is urging\nstudents to attend.\nBCSF staffer Lorna Philipzig\nsaid Monday she expects at least\n2,000 students to attend Friday's\nrally.\nLinda Severy, acting president of\nSFU's-student union, said Monday,\nabout 500 SFU students will travel\nto the rally against ICBC rate\nincreases. \"We want to get across\nto the government that we won't sit\nstill any more,\" she said.\nSevery said the SFU student\ncouncil sent a memo to the\nuniversity's department heads\nThursday asking them to cancel\nclasses Friday so students can go\nto the Victoria rally.\nBut she said the boycott of\nclasses will go ahead whether the\ndepartment heads give students a\nday off or not.\nGordon Wright, a member of the\nUniversity of Victoria's ICBC\nprotest committee, said Monday at\nleast 800 students from UVic will\nattend the B.C. Fed rally.\nBut Wright, also a staffer for the\nMartelet student newspaper, said\nit would be pointless to call a strike\nFriday because UVic students only\nneed one or two hours of the day to\ntravel to the rally.\nVan der Kamp said he will try to\nget McGeer to speak to demonstrators at UBC Thursday. But he\nadded the purpose of the demonstration is not to disrupt the\nceremony that will be going outside the Angus building.\nWhy is this man smiling? He\nprobably couldn't think of\nanything else to do. See Page 3. Kenny hit unpunished\nFrom page 1\n\"You build kinds of traditions we\ncan all be proud of, that are in\nkeeping with the goals of the\nuniversity. It's as simple and\ncomplex as that.\"\nAs an example of a good\ntradition to build up, Kenny cited\nan engineers' stunt of several\nyears ago when they assembled a\nnumber of statues and placed these\naround the campus.\nA few weeks later, during\nengineering week, the engineers\nsystematically destroyed all their\nstatues, much to the shock and\ndismay of those who thought the\nstatues had come from anonymous\ndonors and were works of art.\n\"That kind of prank is enjoyable\nand joyful and has an intellectual\nmessage,\" Kenny said. \"It asked:\nwhat is art? What is not?\"\nKenny said the EUS would\nreceive a bill for the toilet paper\ncleanup only if it could be\nestablished that they were\nresponsible.\nBut he said he wished to avoid\n\"blanket guilt\" if the people in the\norganization were not totally\nresponsible.\nHe also said no measures\nwhatsoever are being taken\nagainst two engineering students\nwho recently attacked him with\nshaving cream pies and doing so\ncaused some property damage in\nNew housing minister\nstarts off on right foot\nB.C.'s new housing minister says\nhe \"recognizes the need\" for\nimproved student housing at UBC\nbut he doesn't yet know how he will\ntackle the problem.\nHugh Curtis, who was given the\ndual portfolio of municipal affairs\nand housing after the December\nelection, also said he hasn't been\nable to find any records of actions\nby the former NDP government\nabout student housing.\nIn a telephone interview Friday,\nCurtis said policies to increase\nstudent housing will \"come out in\nthe normal course of legislation,\"\nbut he added legislation may not be\nforthcoming in the upcoming\nsession.\n\"I recognize the need (for\nstudent housing) at two campuses\nat least,\" he said. He said the\nuniversities with housing problems\nare UBC and the University of\nVictoria.\nCurtis said he doesn't know of\nplans by former housing minister\nLome Nicolson for \"a total integrated housing development\nnear the (UBC) campus,\" which\nNicolson expressed in an October\nletter to The Ubyssey.\n(Nicolson's vague proposal was\nreiterated in November by former\nNDP resources minister Bob\nWilliams,   who   told   a   tenants'\nCORKY'S\nAPPOINTMENT SERVICE\n731-4191\n3644 West 4th Avenue\nAt Alma\nTake a\nThen  SEE IT ALL\nin the\nSUB THEATRE - 12:30 - 1:30\nTODAY & FRIDAY!\nmeeting in the University Endowment Lands that he envisaged\nsome UBC campus lands being\nused in the future for housing.\nWilliams did not provide specific\ndetails of the proposal.)\nCurtis said Nicolson may have\ntaken files relating to the proposed\nproject with him when he left office.\n\"I've had some very significant\nbriefings from officials in the\ndepartments of housing and\nmunicipal affairs,\" he said. \"That\n(student housing) hasn't come\nup.\"\nCurtis was asked if the Socreds\nlack a policy about student\nhousing.\n\"If I say no \u2014 it's not a question\nof no policy, we're reviewing all\npolicies,\" he said.\nlelltfat\n*       dfcecial <to*Hea*te\nAi    tfat ytuc\nhis office in the old administration\nbuilding.\nIt is not known who the vandals\nwere who attacked the civil\nengineering building late Friday\nnight and painted slogans and\nobscenities all over lockers, walls,\nwindows and floors.\nThe incident occurred while\nengineers were celebrating their\nannual ball at the Pacific National\nExhibition grounds.\nThe slogans, in blue and white \u2014\nagriculture undergraduate society\ncolours \u2014 included Aggies Rule the\nWorld, Aggies Rule UBC, Plant\nSciences, pre-vet rules.\nThe vandals had even painted\nAggies 78 on the outer wall of the\noffice of applied sciences dean of\nLiam Finn.\nMost of the slogans were anti-\nengineer: Gears drink piss,\nengineers fuck camels and gears\nblow dead yaks were three\nprominent examples.\nPhilip Johnson, Aggie rep on\nAlma Mater Society council,\nMonday denied that the aggies had\nany hand in the attack.\nFor terrific\nhair time\nafter time\nafter time\n- -. \/\nRight on campus first floor behind Bank of Commerce\n2154 WESTERN PARKWAY 224-7514\nPath of Total Awareness\n\"The sun that never sets is visible to\nthe   naked  soul   and   my  music is\naudible to the spiritual ears only.\"\nPaul Twitchell,\nThe Tiger's Fang\nINTRODUCTORY LECTURE\n12:30 Tues. \u2014 Feb. 10\nS.U.B. 215\nSCIENCE STUDENTS\nThis is to notify all Science students of a fee levy\nreferendum and the Science Undergraduate Society\nelections to be held tomorrow, Wednesday February 11,\n1976 at Woodward Library. The poll will be open from\n10 a.m. until 4 p.m.\nListed below are samples of the referendum and election\nballots.\nFEE LEVY REFERENDUM\nALL SCIENCE STUDENTS, PART TIME AND FULL\nTIME, SHOULD BE LEVIED A FEE OF $1.00 (ONE\nDOLLAR) PER PERSON, TO BE REVIEWED\nANNUALLY.\nYES\n(Mark with an \"X\")\nNO_\nSCIENCE\nUNDERGRADUATE SOCIETY\nAM.S. REPRESENTATIVES\nVote for not more than FOUR\n(Mark with an \"X\")\n.BERRINGER, Ross 4.\nFLEMING, Blake 5,\nHALLIN, Aksel 6..\nKATRICHAK, Anne\nTYNAN, Brent\nZOEHNER, Kerry R.\nPERMANENT JOB\nOPPORTUNITIES\nARE AVAILABLE FOR:\nB. of Com. \u2014 Accounting, Marketing\nB.Sc. \u2014 Computer Science, Math, Physics\nB.A. \u2014 Economics\nThe position is MARKETING REPRESENTATIVE in\nthe field of Information Processing, with a top\nCOMPUTER company.\nBURROUGHS will train you completely to be a\nsuccessful Salesman within one year. Continued\ntraining is offered for personal growth leading to\nManagement and executive positions.\nFor more information see BURROUGHS literature in\nthe Reading Room, Placement Office on your\ncampus, or phone our office in Vancouver \u2014\n688-2431 \u2014 and ask for Branch Manager.\nWe will visit your campus on February 24-25, 1976.\nPlease make an appointment on or after February\n13th at the Campus Placement Office.\nWe will be pleased to tell you all you want to know\nabout us.\nBURROUGHS BUSINESS\nMACHINES LTD.\n1255 Burrard Street, Vancouver\n(604) 688-2431 Tuesday, February 10, 1976\nTHE      UBYSSEY\nPage 3\nTrudeau admits his ignorance\nBy CHRIS GAINOR\nPrime minister Pierre Trudeau\nofficially opened the TRIUMF\ncyclotron Monday despite the fact\nhe did not know what it is.\nAnd the fact that the Tri\nUniversity Meson Facility has\nbeen in operation for a year didn't\nseem to bother Trudeau either.\nHe and a group of 10 cabinet\nministers took part in a quickie\npromotional tour of B.C. in an\nattempt to revive interest in the\nmuch-neglected western federal\nLiberal party.\nWhen Jrudeau arrived at the\nceremonies on the western edge of\nthe UBC campus, a group of 50\npacked a huge Trident monster,\nprotesting construction of a\nnuclear base in Bangor, Wash.,\njust south of the Canada-U.S.\nborder.\nTrudeau unveiled a plaque\nopening the $36 million nuclear\nresearch centre after a light-\nhearted speech that included\nseveral pauses while he appeared\nto be at a loss about what to say\nnext.\n\"I'm excited that Canada has\none of. . . uh . . . these things,\" he\ntold a crowd of 700 at the opening\nceremonies.\n\"I'm not sure if I could understand this even if we spent some\ntime inspecting it,\" Trudeau said\nas the crowd laughed.\nAfter the ceremony, Trudeau\nwent on an hour-long tour of the\nfacility. When asked by a Ubyssey\nreporter after his tour if he understood how TRIUMF works, he\nreplied: \"Perfectly. I'm going to\nwork here after I'm no longer\nprime minister.\"\nTrudeau made frequent\nreferences in his speech to difficulties with his economic policies\nand to what he was \"supposed to\nsay\" at the ceremony.\nReferring to a speech by administration vice-president Erich\nVogt, Trudeau said the scientists at\nTRIUMF are exploring new\nworlds.\n\"From where I come from, new\nworlds and new societies are not\npopular,\" he said.\nHe added that he would like to\ntake the cyclotron to Ottawa so he\ncould \"inject new ideas into the\nkind of society I'm running.\"\nReading from a prepared text,\nTrudeau said federal government\npolicy is to fund high-priority\nscientific projects during times of\neconomic difficulty and to fund\nprojects which have the \"greatest\nvalue.\"\nHe announced the federal\ngovernment will grant additional\nfunds to TRIUMF to allow \"full-\nbeam power operation\" of the\ncyclotron, but admitted the\namount of funding is less than what\nTRIUMF officials had requested.\nTrudeau congratulated the four\nparticipating universities for\njoining together to produce one\nfacility of high excellence.\nAlso present at the ceremony\nwere justice minister Ron Basford,\nBud Drury, secretary of state for\nscience and technology, trade\nminister Allistair Gillespie and\nLiberal senate leader Ray\nPerrault.\nAttorney-general Garde Gardom\n(a former Liberal B.C. MLA) represented the provincial government, and administration officials\nfrom the four participating\nuniversities also attended.\nTRIUMF's associate director\nBrian Pate said TRIUMF, which\nbegan construction in 1968, has\nbeen operating for a full year.\nSocreds to continue\nsummer job program\nThe provincial government's\nsummer job program for students\nwill be continued at the same scale\nas last year, the B.C. labor\ndepartment announced Friday.\nAnd Lake Sagaris, chairwoman\nof the B.C. Students Federation,\nwhich opposed any cut in the\nprogram, claimed the decision by\nlabor minister Allan Williams is a\ndirect result of pressure put on the\ngovernment by students and the\npress.\nWilliams ordered a halt to the\nprogram Jan. 21 while the new\nSocial Credit government assessed\nthe value of the program.\nUnder the NDP the program,\nthen known as Careers 75, paid for\npart or all of the wages of 11,500\nuniversity, college and high school\nstudents.\nA press release from William's\noffice said the program, known this\nyear as Work in Government, or\nWIG, program, will pay for part of\nthe summer wages of 7,800\nstudents working in WIG jobs for\nsmall businesses, farms,\nmunicipalities, regional districts\nand universities.\nThe   program   will   also   pay\ncomplete summer wages for any\nstudents employed for the summer\nby the various government\ndepartments.\nThe number of government jobs\nwill be determined when government departments submit their\nbudget estimates to the cabinet,\nRobert Exell, executive assistant\nto Williams, said Monday.\nHe said these government jobs\nwill be carefully examined because\none of the aims of the progf am is to\neliminate what the release called\n\"make-work\" jobs and make sure\nall students are employed in\n\"worthwhile\" jobs.\n\"In previous years certain\ndepartments were asked to provide\njobs,\" Exell said. \"They would\ncontrive projects to hire students\nwhether or not these projects\nwould be needed.\"\nThis year, he said, the departments are simply being asked how\nmany jobs they need filled and the\nlabor department, through the\nWIG program, will hire that many\nstudents.\nBut Exell said the program will\nhire \"at least as many (students)\nas last summer.\"\n\"Now we're ready to step up the\naction and this is the right minute\nin the life of the project for the\nprime minister to dedicate it,\" he\nsaid.\nDrury added: \"The government\nis very much aware of the\nproblems (of inflation) and is\nconcerned to find ways to help\nscientists survive these difficult\ntimes-.\"\nTrudeau entered the building\nmid-way through the ceremony,\ntripping on the stairs as he\nmounted the platform.\nBefore entering the building,\nTrudeau's motorcade passed\nbetween rows of 50 demonstrators\nprotesting the Trident submarine\nbase being built in Bangor, Wash.\nThe demonstrators, carried the\n550-foot long Trident monster,\nwhich represents the length of the\nsubmarine, and chanted \"stop\nTrident now\" cis the motorcade\npassed.\nTrudeau did not speak with the\ndemonstrators but was given a\nletter of protest when he arrived in\nVancouver Monday morning.\nThe Trudeau government has\nrefused to make any statement\nopposing construction of the base.\nTRIUMF is a joint project of\nUBC, the University of Victoria,\nSimon Fraser University and the\nUniversity of Alberta. The latter\njoined after the project had\nstarted, but the convenient\nacronym was not changed.\nThe four universities have\nprovided $6 million to TRIUMF\nand the federal government\ncontributed $30 million over six\nyears.\nThe facility, one of three in the\nworld, will be able to produce\nsubatomic particles called mesons,\nthought to be the particles\nresponsible for holding the\nnuclei of atoms together.\nThey are produced by the\ncollision of a high energy particle\nwith the nucleus of another atom.\nThe problem, however, is how to\nget a high energy particle.\nThis is done by accelerating a\nnegative hydrogen ion in a\ncyclotron, the major structure at\nTRIUMF. The ion, introduced into\nthe cyclotron,  is forced  into  a\ncircular orbit by an intense\nmagnetic field.\nThe speed of the hydrogen ion is\nthen increased by accelerating the\nion in an arrangement of electric\nfields, producing an atom particle\nhigh in energy.\nThe high energy hydrogen ion is\nthen removed from the cyclotron\nand smashed against the nucleus of\nanother atom, producing a meson,\nwhich is unstable and exists only\nbriefly.\nExperimental equipment then\nuses the mesons to probe the\nstructure of atoms and also their\nproperties for various applications. TRIUMF will also be\nused for cancer research.\nSixteen-foot thick concrete\nshields protect the scientists from\nradiation during experiments.\nThe plant was turned off during\nMonday's ceremony to protect\nthose attending the opening from\nradiation.\nThe facility will be used by\nscientists from around the world\nfor analysis of various materials\nfor industrial and scientific applications.\n\u2014doug field photo\n\"AND UP HERE, PIERRE, we have the ceiling. It's quite a neat invention, dreamed up some time in the\nMiddle Ages, I believe. It keeps the rain out and the heat in during the winter, when it can get quite\nchilly . . .\" \"Yeah, I've heard of them. By the way, what are all these plastic sheets held up with masking tape\ndoing in a multi-million dollar nuclear research project?\"\nStudents will boycott to ski\u2014poll\nBy WARD WEBBER\nand AL PETERSON\nIf you decide to skip classes\nFriday you won't be alone.\nA random sample of students\npolled by The Ubyssey Monday\nshowed that most students won't\nattend class and agree in principle\nwith the Alma Mater Society\nboycott of classes to protest the\nInsurance Corporation of B.C. rate\nhikes.\nBut they'll be taking a five-day\nweekend holiday instead of joining\na protest rally in Victoria or\npicketing ICBC claim centres, as\nthe.AMS intended when it called\nthe strike. -\n\"I'm going to strike \u2014 my insurance is sky-high,\" said John\nBCSF reps meet feds, but little accomplished\nBy SUSAN ALEXANDER\nRepresentatives of the B.C.\nStudents' Federation met with four\nfederal cabinet ministers Monday\nto discuss a number of student\nproblems but according to one\nrepresentative, little was accomplished.\nThe cabinet ministers were\njustice minister Ron Basford,\nurban affairs minister Barney\nDanson, fisheries minister Romeo\nLeBlanc, and Bud Drury, minister\nof science and technology.\nThe BCSF presentation outlined\nseveral student problems and\nsuggested how the federal\ngovernment could find solutions to\nthese problems, said delegate Stew\nSavard. It was met Monday with a\nvague statement by the ministers\nsaying that they would take the\nproposals into consideration, but\nfelt most were out of their\njurisdiction, he said.\nAnother issue presented was the\nfederal cutback on student summer employment. Because the\nfederal government has chopped\nits employment programs the\nBCSF delegates suggested it help\nfund the provincial government\nemployment program.\n\"We're pushing for meaningful\nworking relations among feds,\nprovincial     government     and\nstudents,\" said Savard.\nFinancial aid and the Canada\nstudent loan plan were other issues\npresented. BCSF delegates said\nthe cutback on summer employment would hurt students,\napplying for loans since one of the\nloan requirements is summer\nemployment.\n\"We asked for representation on\nthe Council of Education\nMinisters,\" said Savard. This\nwould give students a chance to\nexpress there views on the council\nwhich has control of the student\nloans, he said.\nThe CME is made up of the 10\nprovincial education ministers.\nThe BCSF said in their\npresentation that the\" federal\ngovernment should look into ICBC\nrates and their effect on students.\nThe delegation said federal wage\nand price controls should be applied to the ICBC rate increases.\nOther issues brought forward by\nthe BCSF were student\nrepresentation in dealing with the\nFiscal Arrangements Act and\nhousing problems. They also\nsuggested the federal government\nlook into Canada Manpower\ntraining programs and establish\nstudent representation on appeals\nboards.\nPearson, arts 1, in a fairly typical\nresponse.\nPam Sherwood, arts 3, said:\n\"It's a good idea, but it won't help\nthe ICBC situation \u2014 minister\nresponsible for ICBC Pat McGeer\nreally has made up his mind.\"\n\"I don't think it (the strike) will\nhave any great effect. From what I\nhave seen McGeer has made up his\nmind and will not soften the blow.\nThe main value it could have is to\nmaintain pressure on McGeer,\"\nshe said.\n\"No, I am taking a week off to go\nskiing. I don't care because I don't\nhave a car, but I feel sorry for\nthose who do,\" said Sue Alexander,\narts 1.\nOpinion was divided about the\ndemonstration against ICBC\ndirector McGeer, to be held during\nhis visit here Thursday.\nThe remark that \"McGeer\nshould be lynched,\" by Susan\nBorys, arts 1, summed up one point\nof view, but other students\ndisagreed.\nBarbara Powis, arts 3, said \"he\nshould be given a fair hearing\" and\nnot drowned out by abuse. Page 4\nTHE      UBYSSEY\nTuesday,   February   10,   1976\nHonesty,\nat last!\nThere's something to be said about honest politicians.\nNot much mind you, but something.\nThe case at hand was Monday's appearance at UBC of\nthe Liberal mission to the West.\nA casually dressed Pierre Trudeau led several top cabinet\nministers to the opening of impressively complicated\nTRIUMF building on the south end of campus.\nIt has been running for sometime now, moving tiny\nlittle particles at great speeds for practical and applied\nresearch purposes. The areas being studied by the\nwhite-coated types who run the cyclotron range from nuclear\nscience to cancer therapy.\nSo the scene was set, beautifully orchestrated by\nceremonies director Malcolm McGregor to include every\nnuance of protocol.\nEnter Pierre Trudeau, prime minister of eastern Canada\nand definitely making an effort to capture the West.\nNow most politicians would, as many did, make up\nsome profound comment about nuclear research, the great\nachievements made by the universities involved. In short,\nthey'd try to fake it.\nBut not Pierre.\n\"I'm excited that Canada has one of. . . uh . . . these\nthings,\" he told the bemused crowd of academics and\nTRIUMF supporters.\nThe PM continued. \"I'm not sure if I could understand\nthis even if we spend some time inspecting it.\"\nAmazing candor. Not your average every day politician\nwho would fake it.\nNow if only he would stop kidding us about his\ninflation program, the economy generally and his plans for a\nso-called \"new\" society.\nKenny\nhit\nSo administration president\nDoug Kenny wants the Alma Mater\nSociety to take disclipinary action\nagainst the engineers. His intentions, at least on the surface,\nare admirable; for the engineer's\nGodiva Ride and Red Rag are\nanachronistic as well as\ndegrading.\nHowever, up until Friday, Kenny\nhad shown next to no concern with\nsexism and discrimination against\nwomen on campus (e.g.:\ndiscriminatory wage\nclassifications in AUCE contract).\nIt seems that a pie in the face and\nthe removal of the door to his inner\noffice has rendered him socially\nconscious after all these years.\nCould it be that the dear man has\nan ulterior motive? Could it be that\nhe is trying to have the two\norganizations most opposed to his\npolicies, the engineers and the\nAMS, at each other's throats; to\ndivide and conquer?\nEvery student leader on this\ncampus must realize that, should\nKenny's actions succeed, it will\nonly be a matter of time until their\nown programs will be subjected to\nthe same. It won't be hard to drum\nup some applie pie issue to\neliminate any and all social\nprotests.\nBUI Broddy\narts senator-elect\nnot the number of people\nprotesting that seems to impress\nthem, but rather from which\neconomical bracket they are\nprotesting from. In contrast, when\na few bosses of private industries\nscream about \"insufficient profits,\nthis government is sure to listen\nbecause these bosses have the\npower to threaten with the \"consequences.\"\nWhy can private enterprises be\nsubsidized in one form or another,\nbut public car insurance not?\nFinally, it is our tax money that is\nbeing redistributed so that the\nexisting inequalities of income can\nbe balanced to some extent.\nIt is time for the students to\nrecognize their rights and interests, to organize, and to stand\nup and fight for them. Pat McGeer\nwill be on campus on Thursday and\nwe will be heard.\nIf he still attempts to ignore us,\nsome of us hopefully will be\nprovoked to take more serious\naction. Then we will have to protest\nnot only the ICBC rate increases,\nbut the general attitude which is\ndemonstrated by our elected representatives of the Socred Party.\nFritz Smith\nscience 1\n, Uwe Fischer\nartsl\nA wipe\nIT'S IMP0SSr8l\u00a3   PORT   a\n^iMfiiL^^aV  UNDfJR \u00a3S*     TO\nC*E~T INSURANCE\" THESE: DAYS..\n...OF= COURSE\" TMAT\" TAKfjS\n&(ZE&T INTEZl-\\(qEHCE; AMD\niMSlGjHT^..   TAKrr    HF\nf=OG:    EEXAMPLET\t\n... UNLESS   O^cZOltfZSET\nYOU  \u00a3AN CHAT-SMART\" I.C.B.C.\nAND CM6H(q!E YOUR   BASIC\nCLASSIFICATION \u2022\u2022 \u2022\nI    MAKT^lETD   My qi^LFT^EMU\nuH\u00ab:uftsste^\u2014'\nLetters\nRed Rag\nThe Red Rag published Wednesday by the UBC engineers\nundergraduate society is an act of\nviolence second to nothing I have\nseen on a university campus in the\nlast 20 years.\nAre the engineers on this campus\nso locked into stereotyped thinking\nthat there is no hope of ever\n\"breaking the mould?\"\n1975 was a year designed to raise\nconsciousness about the \"second\nsex.\" Women the world over are\nstruggling to achieve respect as\npersons in their own right. It is\ntherefore incredible that in the last\nquarter of the 20th century,\nuniversity students should perpetrate this kind of sexual assault.\nClearly what is needed is not\nwomen's liberation, but men's\nliberation. Perhaps it is time the\nengineers used their energies in\nmore creative activities than\nstrewing the campus with toilet\npaper \u2014 an act which, in itself,\nseems symbolic of their level of\nawareness.\nPerhaps it is time they engaged\nin some discussions to determine\nwhere the human race is at. Why\nnot a series of seminars which\nwould challenge those limited\neither\/or concepts?\nWomen are not either sisters,\nwives, mothers, or sluts,\nprostitutes, sex objects. They are\nneither saints or seductresses.\nThey are whole persons.\nPeople committed to the\nwomen's movement, which is\nultimately a process designed to\nhelp the whole human race and\nmature, very well know that\nembedded in sexism is racism,\nageism, violence, war, competition, aggression, environmental destruction, economic\nexploitation, and ecological\ndisaster. Until sexism is uprooted\nin our society, there is no hope of\nachieving the goals of International Women's Year \u2014\ndevelopment, equality and peace.\nE. Margaret Fulton\ndean of women\nPooh!\nMale drivers under 25 are getting\nhit harder than anyone else, and\nnow they're complaining fer-\nverently. Do these people not know\nthat statistics prove the majority\nof vehicle accidents are caused by\ndrunk male drivers, under the age\nof 25?\nICBC\nWe are very glad to acknowledge\nthe support the Alma Mater\nSociety and The Ubyssey is giving\nto the ICBC protest movement. We\nmust let the students here at UBC\nknow the facts which show that\nthey are getting ripped off by the\nbourgeois Socred bunch.\nTo this government of ours it is\nAs I strolled to work across\ncampus this Monday morning, I\nnoticed thousands of feet of toilet\npaper strewn in many places: up in\ntrees, around statues, etc.\n\"Wasteful,\" I thought, \"but\nbiodegradable, I suppose. Unsightly, nevertheless.\" Purpose for\nputting it there? Who knows.\nWhoever did it, however, must\neither be or have the largest\ncollective group of assholes on\ncampus in order to have that much\nbum wad to spread around so\nfreely.\nRob Jordan,\nmusic library\nTHE UBYSSEY\nTUESDAY, FEBRUARY 10,1976\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 staff and not of the AMS\nor the university administration. Member, Canadian University\nPress. The Ubyssey publishes Page Friday, a weekly commentary\nand review. The Ubyssey's editorial offices are located in room\n241K of the Student Union Building. Editorial departments,\n228-2301; Sports, 228-2305; Advertising, 228-3977.\nEditor: Gary Coull\nThe Gary Coull and Chris Gainor duo with the horrific slug: GxCxG.\nMarcus Gee (not again!). Susan Alexander who, as far as Sue Vohanka is\nconcerned, has the decency not to be known as Sue. Doug Field, who, as\nfar as Doug Rushton is concerned, is most inconsiderate in choice of\nmoniker. New kids Ward Weber (well, we're weaning him now) and Al\nPeterson Dave \"Chuckles\" Wilkinson. Hardened pros Heather Walker and\nGregg Thompson. Matt King and Deryl Mogg got lumped together in the\nmasthead again. Mark Lepitre, Avtar Bains and Bob Rayfield gave notice\nthey would complain about being lumped together in the Masthead again.\nAnne Wallace lent moral support; Carl Vesterback lent immoral support.\nRalph Maurer lent both kinds of support, but at prohibitive interest rates.\nI see them every night, out on my\nstreet, cases of beer in the back\nseat, driving fast and wreckless,\nthinking they're having a hell of a\ngood time. But they're the killers.\nAnd that's a fact. Not a supposition, or an acusation, but a\nfact. I am ashamed to be a female\nof the same age bracket, to be in\nany way associated with such\nmental midgets.\nAnd while I'm in the mood, I also\nwant to say my laundromat no\nlonger has a telephone. The owner\nwon't have another one in the\nplace.\nAnd we all know why, don't we?\nUBC male residence occupants rip\nthe phones right off the walls, so\nthey too can have their own\ntelephone beside their cribs in\nresidence.\nDana Vogel\nphysical plant\nDisgusted\nThe Women's Office would like to\nmake its annual protest against\nLady Godiva's ride and the\npublication of the Red Rag. Our\ncensure is not against the women\nwho is forced by pecuniary\nnecessity to participate in this\nevent but rather those students of\nthe engineering faculty who\nsupport and encourage this type of\nblatant sexism.\nThe Women's Office is voicing\nthe reactions of many women on\ncampus who are not prepared to\ntake the 'humor' of either Lady\nGodiva's ride.not the Red Rag in\n'the spirit in which it is offered.'\nTo accept this spirit is to denigrate and demean ourselves.\nWomen make up an integral part of\nthe university system, despite this\nand other more subtle forms of\ndiscouragement.\nWe therefore strongly recommend that 1976 be the final year\nthat this offensive sexism be\nallowed to take place on the UBC\ncampus.\nthe women's office collective Tuesday, February 10,  1976\nTHE      UBYSSEY\nPage 5\nForm a disappearing commit fee\nA teaching evaluation primer\nBy SUE VOHANKA\nStudents on tenure committees?\nStudents having a real say \u2014 that\ncounts \u2014 in evaluating the\nteaching by their profs?\nEveryone knows it isn't true. But\nstudents aren't the only factor\nmissing from UBC's tenure\ngranting and teaching evaluation\nprocesses.\nTake the case of the missing\npresidential committee on\nteaching evaluation.\nSeveral years ago, some people\non UBC's senate thought it was\ntime for an examination of how\nteaching is and should be\nevaluated at UBC. An ad hoc\nsenate committee was struck.\nWhen the committee presented\nits report to senate in early\nDecember, 1974, it recommended\nthe president's office establish a\npermanent committee of representatives from each faculty,\nresponsible for evaluating\nteaching.\nSenate also wanted that committee to set up a series of short\ncourses, staffed by volunteer\nfaculty, which would help profs to\nimprove their teaching methods\nand skills.\nHowever, a Ubyssey reporter\nwho tried last Thursday to get the\nnames of the people on this committee was told by a woman in the\npresident's office that the committee \"hasn't been set up yet.\"\nAnd by Monday, the committee\nstill hadn't been found, if it ever\nwas actually set up.\n\"We're just in the process now of\ntracking it down,\" said Donald\nSoule, assistant to administration\npresident Doug Kenny,  Monday.\n\"If there's something that hasn't\nbeen done that should have been\ndone, we'll rectify it,\" Soule\nhastened to add.\nAsked if there are lists of\npresidential committees filed in\nthe president's office, Soule said:\n\"There are about 16 lists of committees all over the place \u2014 that's\nwhere the tracking is done.\"\nEven if the committee eventually does turn up, it's not likely to\nhave accomplished very much.\nCommittees that exist and work\nare usually known about by the\npeople in the president's office.\nThe committee might have been\nuseful in providing some sense of\ndirection of uniformity to the\nwidely differing teaching\nevaluation methods used\nthroughout UBC.\nTeaching evaluation is particularly important for profs who\nare being considered for tenure at\nUBC.\nDecisions on whether or not to\ngrant tenure, or indefinite job\nsecurity, are based on research\naccomplished by a prof, his or her\ncompetence in teaching and service to the university and community,\nSenate clerk Frances Medley\nsaid Thursday that after senate\nrecommended the new committee\nbe set up, then-administration\npresident Walter Gage sent letters\nto each faculty asking deans to\nnominate faculty members to the\ncommittee.\nShe said several nominations\nwere received, but added that she\nhad no record of the committee\nactually being formed.\nAnd Medley suggested the\ncommittee might have got lost in\nthe shuffle last summer when\nKenny became the new administration president.\nBut committees aren't always\nthe solution to problems and issues\nlike teaching evaluation anyway.\nWhen the senate committee gave\nits report to senate in 1974, the\nreport didn't seriously consider\nstudent input into evaluation of\nprofs.\nAnd now, there is still no\nguarantee that the teaching\nevaluation forms filled out by some\nstudents (they're optional in most\ndepartments) will be considered\nwhen a prof is being considered for\ntenure.\nA recent agreement between the\nfaculty association and the administration says only that student\ninput \"may\" be considered when\nteaching ability is evaluated.\nThe 1974 report didn't even seem\nto take the whole question of\nteaching evaluation very seriously.\nIt began: \"To distinguish good\nteaching from bad has been for\nmankind a long-term endeavor, an\nendeavor attended with limited\nsuccess, in spite of elaborate\ninquisitions, careful assessments\nand remedial measures that have\nincluded burning at the stake.\"\nFrom the very start, the report\nasserts that it is impossible for a\nuniversity to apply uniform\nstandards in evaluating teaching.\n\"A single frame of reference\nwithin which to judge teaching\nperformance is probably unattainable. Skills or qualities of\ncharacter useful in one field or at\none level may be valueless or even\ndetrimental somewhere else,\" the\nreport said.\nAnd the report did not seriously\nconsider that there is a place for\nstudent input into evaluation of\nprofs students have to listen to and\nhopefully learn from.\n\"What students think of a\nteacher, how well they do under his\nguidance, what his peers think of\nhim and what the administrative\nor supervisory staff think \u2014 these\nturn out to be not quite the same\nthing,\" it said.\n\"There is even lack of\nagreement between graduate and\nundergraduate students.\"\nThe report added: \"Doubts were\nat one time entertained as to the\nvalidity of student comment obtained by the questionnaire and the\nquery arose: do students evaluate\nmost highly teachers from whom\nthey by no means learn the most?\"\nMuch of the report was devoted\nto describing teaching evaluation\nprocedures used in various\nfaculties. It revealed that student\nquestionnaires were used to\nvarying degrees in different\nfaculties \u2014 they still are.\nAnd the various faculties had \u2014\nand still have \u2014 very different\nrules about who gets to see the\nresults of student questionnaires.\nThe report included some interesting comments on the nature\nof teaching evaluation in principle.\n\u2014\u2014*\\*\u20141\u00bb\u2014\nPlease crumple evaluation\nforms carefully and file\nrandomly in receptacle\nprovided below.\n-Jk\n<&\u00a3\nrmm -m\nL-rHeusvsstV-J\n-\"meueysseY\n\"In any discussion of teaching\nevaluation, time must be taken to\nrecognize a small but persistent\nvein of objection to the whole\nconcept.\n\"There are staff members who\nregard academic teaching as a\ncommunion of minds, to be judged\nby its ultimate benefits, which may\nfor the time being remain hidden.\nA brisk assessment of their visible\nprocedures and the compiling of\nimmediate tangible scores offends\ntheir sense of the innate values of\nteaching.\"\nAnd the report added that even\nwhen profs are evaluated and\nfound to be bad teachers, there are\nno guarantees teaching will improve.\n\"Alteration in teaching, as a\nresult of evaluations, is seldom an\novernight occurrence,\" the report\nsaid.\n\"In practice, departments hope\nthat the next time round will reveal\nthat improvement has taken place\nor that it has been found feasible to\ntransfer an instructor to a course\nwhere his strengths are best\ndisplayed.\"\nWhat \"evaluation\" there is\nseems to be done mostly by other\nprofs within the department or\nfaculty concerned \u2014 even though\nthose profs may not be better\nteachers than the ones being\nevaluated.\nAnd, the report said, some\ndepartments within the arts\nfaculty don't even like evaluation\nby colleagues who attend lectures.\n\"Classroom inspection is in some\ndepartments not favored, because\nof faculty hostility. There are some\nstaff members who would like\nmore frequent, open and objective\nevaluation and rating.\n\"They are, however, a minority,\nat the opposite pole from those who\ndislike formal evaluation on\nprinciple.\"\nThe single thing which becomes\nclear from a reading of the 1974\nreport is that UBC does not have\nuniform standards or procedures\nto use in evaluating teaching by\nprofs.\nYet the conclusion the report\nreached was that things are just\nfine as they are \u2014 no changes are\nneeded to the arbitrary and\nsomewhat incomprehensible\nprocess that is used now.\n\"A clear and simple conclusion\nemerges,\" the report claimed,\n\"that there is no need to alert\nfaculties and schools to their responsibilities in the matter of\nteaching evaluation, nor is there\nany possibility of imposing upon\nthem from without a common\nmethod of tackling the problem.\"\nThe report did add that \"what is\nrequired is some means of interchanging the experience and\nopinion of the various faculties and\nschools.\"\nBut there's at least one senator\n\u2014 student Ron Walls \u2014 who thinks\nan overhauling of the current\nteaching evaluation process, not\njust an interchange of opinion, is\nneeded.\nWalls has already given senate\nnotice of a motion that it strike an\nad hoc committee to examine the\nprocedures used to measure the\nteaching effectiveness of profs.\nAnd he thinks students should\nprovide, through mandatory\nquestionnaires and voting positions\non tenure committees, a\nsignificant input into evaluation of\nteaching.\nHis motion will be discussed at\nsenate's Feb. 18 meeting.\nIf such a committee is approved,\nit will hopefully make more\nprogress than the committee that\nmay have been formed through the.\npresident's office.\nFrom everything The Ubyssey\nhas been able to find out about that\ncommittee, a new one certainly\ncouldn't do any less.\nRequired reading\nfor February 14\nThe Shoppers Drug Mart Money saver.\nCrammed with ideas to help you make your\nmark on Valentine's Day.\nSpecial gift suggestions. Special ways to\nsave. Pick up your Money saver at the\nShoppers Drug Mart store near you.\nDRUG MART\nCanada's Drugstore\n\u00ae A trademark of Koffler Stores Limited. Page 6\nTHE      UBYSSEY\nTuesday,  February   10,   1976\nHot flashes\nThey are available at the school\nof social work, Graham House\n114, and at the door on a first\ncome first serve basis.\nSpeak up\nLost? Confused? Befuddled?\nSpeakeasy exists to help you.\nFor information about events,\nphone 228-3777. If you just want\nsomeone to talk to the number is\n228-3700.\nSpeakeasy is located in the\nSUB main foyer. Feel free to drop\nLewis on\nsocial welfare\nDavid Lewis, former leader of\nthe federal NDP party, will speak\nat UBC on social welfare in\nCanada in retrospect and\nprospect.\nLewis will speak at 8 p.m.,\nFeb. 24, in lecture hall 2 of the\nInstructional Resources Centre.\nTickets are $3 for adults and\n$1 for students and are selling\nfast.\nMountains\nThe Varsity Outdoor Club is\npresenting a movie for\nmountaineers.\nJohn Amatt and his film, The\nMagnificent Mountain, will be\nshown at UBC Wednesday. The\nfilm won an award as best\nmountain and exploration film at\ntheTrento Film Festival.\nTime is 8 p.m. Wednesday in\nthe Instructional Resources\nCentre lecture hall 2. Price is $1\nfor students, $2 for others.\n'j^fe\u2122*,;\nTween classes\nTODAY\nUBC SKI CLUB\nGeneral meeting, noon, Angus 104.\nCUSO\nTwo   free   films   on   China,   noon,\nMacMillan 158.\nECKANKAR\nIntroductory    lecture,    noon,   SUB\n215.\nKAYAK AND CANOE CLUB\nGeneral meeting, noon, SUB 205.\nCHARISMATIC\nCHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP\nPrayer and sharing, noon, Lutheran\nCampus Centre conference room.\nwusc\nApplications   available   for   Guyana\nseminar        until        Thursday,\nInternational House.\nPRE-MED SOC\nDr.    Peter    Coy    of    B.C.    Cancer\nInstitute        speaks        on        cancer\ntreatment, noon, IRC 1.\nPSYCH STUDENTS\nASSOCIATION\nPsychology  social  evening,   8 p.m.,\nSUB 212.\nCOMMITTEE FOR A\nDEMOCRATIC UNIVERSITY\nGeneral   meeting   to   discuss   ICBC\nprotest, noon, Bu. 100.\nWEDNESDAY\nCLASSICS DEPARTMENT\nDavid     Campbell     on    Alcaeus    in\nparticular and in general, noon, Bu.\n202.\nCLASSICS CLUB\nDavid       Campbell       on       musical\naccompaniment  to  Greek poetry, 8\np.m., 4495 West Seventh.\nSAILING CLUB\nGeneral meeting, noon, SUB 200.\nDEAN OF WOMEN FREESEE\nFree    film,   The    Ascent    of   Man,\nnoon, SUB auditorium.\nvoc\nGeneral     meeting,    slide    show    on\nYukon    and    St.   Elias   mountains,\nnoon,   Angus   104;  film   with   John\nAmett, The Magnificent  Mountain,\n8 p.m., IRC 2.\nFEMINIST KARATE\nASSOCIATION\nPractice, 8 p.m., SUB 207-209.\nCHRISTIAN SCIENCE\nORGANIZATION\nTestimony meeting, joy, noon, SUB\n212.\nPSYCH STUDENTSASSOCIATION\nGeneral  meeting, noon, Angus 223.\nCCCM\nEucharist, 8 p.m., Lutheran Campus\nCentre chapel.\nNEWMAN CLUB\nMeeting, noon, SUB 205.\nALLIANCE FRANCAISE\nConfarence de Poesie donnee par\nPierre Nepveu, noon, International\nHouse 402.\nTHURSDAY\nCHARISMATIC\nCHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP\nWeekly fellowship meeting, all\nwelcome, 7:30 p.m., Lutheran\nCampus Centre lounge.\nCHINESE CHRISTIAN\nFELLOWSHIP\nTestimonies by members, noon,\nSUB 205.\nLUTHERAN STUDENT MOVEMENT\nJohn Stewart talks about what\nmakes a good marriage partner,\nnoon, SUB clubs lounge.\nPSYCH STUDENTS' ASSOC.\nRod Wong speaks on early\nexperience and animal behavior,\nnoon, Angus 223.\nWOMEN'S OFFICE\nEve Zaremba, editor of \" The\nPrivilege of Sex, speaks on dilemmas\nin the women's movement, 7:30\np.m., SUB 212.\nFILMSOC\nGeneral      meeting,      orgy,      noon,\nclubroom.\nIVCF\nNew   general   director   Don   Mcleod\nspeaks, noon, Chem 250.\nFRIDAY\nTHE CENTRE COFFEE HOUSE\nFine folk guitarist Fred Booker,\n8:30 p.m.-l a.m., Lutheran Campus\nCentre.\nBAHA'I CLUB\nTalk on mythology, noon, Gage\n182.\nECKANKAR\nPath of Total Awareness\nINTRODUCTORY LECTURE\n12:30 Tues. Feb. 10\nS.U.B. 215\nSOFT   LENSES\n*13950\nHARD\nCONTACTS\n$59.50\nFRAMES\nas low as\n$5-95\nGlass lenses\nstart at\nLocations\nVan.-N.West\/\nEye Examinations Arranged '\nFor Information & Appointments \"\nPUBLIC\nCONTACT LENS CENTRE\n1557 W. Broadway, Vancouver - 732-3636\n552 Columbia St.. New Westr. - 525-2818\n$y.00\nper lens\nP\nBIRD CALLS\n\"\"S\nReg. $2\"     ^QW\nONLY\n9.5\nplus tax\nL\nCLEARANCE SALE\nWEDNESDAY & Thursday\n\u2014 WHILE THEY LAST \u2014\nBuy one and get $60 worth of Coupons\nfrom Yellow Pages Advertisers\nAVAILABLE ONLY AT\nTHE BOOKSTORE AND S.U.B. FOYER\nOR PUB. OFFICE RM 241 S.U.B.\nrd\nhair studio inc..\nUNISEX HAIRSTYLES\nFOR APPOINTMENT\n224-1922\n5784 University (Next to Bank of Commerce)\nTHE CLASSIFIEDS\nRATES:   Campus - 3 lines, 1 day $1.00; additional lines 25c.\nCommercial \u2014 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\nSPECIAL    NITE-TIME   TAPING   of   Dr.\nBundolo   this   Wed.,   Feb.    11,   7:30,\nSUB Theatre. It's Free!\nFOR VALENTINE'S DAY tell that\nspecial someone that you really care.\nUse the special Ubyssey classified\nsection this Friday. Deadline Thurs.\n11:00 a.m.\n50 \u2014 Rentals\nWUSC Summer Study Seminar applications at International House, Thur.,\nFeb.   12.\n11\u2014 For Sale \u2014 Private\nDYNACO STEREO.80 power amplifier,\nperfect condition, $130. Also Sony\nTC-124 cassette stereo with speakers,\ncarrying case, $120. Call Jim, 228-\n0352.\n240Z 71 white tape $54,000 miles, very\nsharp, $2900. Camero 72 metallic\ngreen, 37,000 miles, auto, well kept,\n$3000. Own two cars, must sell one.\nBest  offer  takes.   321-0656.\nATTRACTIVE SEMINAR ROOMS to renL-\n\u2014 blackboards and screens. Free use\nof projectors. 228-5031.\n60 - Rides\nWHEELCHAIR    STUDENT   at   9th   and\nBlanca needs ride Thursday evenings.\nPhone 224-1683 before 6:00 p.m.\n65 \u2014 Scandals\n15 \u2014 Found\nSPECIAL   NITE-TIME   TAPING   of   Dr.\nBundolo this Wed., Feb. 11, 7:30,\nSUB Theatre. It's Free!\nYOU'VE   HAD   YOUR   PEEK!   Now   see\nit all. The UCLA Student Film Festival, SUB Theatre, 12:30-1:30, today,  Thurs.   &  Friday.\nSUBFILMSOC \"offers\": 'The Godfather\nPart II\". Showtimes, Thur.\/Sun., 7:00;\nFri.-Sat, 6:00 & 9:30 in SUB Aud.\nPlease bring 75c, AMS eard and two\nbottles of tranquilizers, plus Italian\naccent for your protection.\nFOUND BEFORE XMAS in Language\nLaboratory: One man's Seiko wrist-\nwatch and One man's Timex wrist-\nwatch. Contact Mr. Johnson, Bu. 112.\n20 \u2014 Housing\nFEMALE preferred, non-smoker student required to live in. $75.00 per\nmonth. Room and board plus three\nevenings babysitting for two boys\naged 7 and 11. 261-0746 after 5:00\np.m.\nROOM & BOARD Kerrisdale home.\nMature responsible student, male\npreferred, reference, $150. Available\nMarch 1. Evenings, 261-0156.\nGRADUATE STUDENT wishes to sublet apartment\/small house from mid-\nMay till mid-June. Call Alan KcKin-\nnon at 224-9720 after 7 p.m.\n25 \u2014 Instruction\nO U I T A R LESSONS: Classic Folk\nTheory. Beginner and Intermediate\nlevels. Phone Barry Cole. 731-8076.\n30-Jobs\nWANTED: Watts Costumes, 217 West\n6th Ave. helper. Male preferred,\nminimum wage to start. 876-5611.\nONE SILVER hooped pierced earring,\nwithin vicinity of Main Library and\nGrad  Centre.   Call   733-1753.\nEARN $3.00 for a Fast hour In a\nPsychology Experiment. Sign up\nTuesday, Feb. 10 at 12:30 Henry Angus Room 13 in Basement.\n35 - Lost\nLOST FRIDAY afternoon, one pair\nchildren's prescription mirrored sunglasses on campus. Reward. Ph. 228-\n1161.\n40 \u2014 Messages\nTHIS    SECTION     IS     RESERVED     for\nspecial Valentine messages, Friday,\n13th. Don't delay. Deadline 11:00\na.m. Thursday, Feb.  12.\n70 \u2014 Services\nEXPERIENCED MATH TUTOR will\ncoach 1st year. Calculus, etc. Evenings. Individual instruction on a\none-to-one basis. Phone: 733-3644. 10\na.m. to 3 p.m. daily.\nCUSTOM CABINETRY & woodworking.\nRenovations, additions, new contraction done anywhere. Guranteed work,\nfree   estimates.   689-3394.\n80 \u2014 Tutoring\nBOGGLED MINDS & WISDOM HEADS:\nCall the Tutorial Center, 228-455?\nanytime or see Ian at Speak-Easy,\n12:30-2:30 p.m. $1 to register (refund,\nable).\n85 \u2014 Typing\nEFFICIENT ELECTRIC TYPING, my\nhome. Essays, thesis, etc. Neat accurate work. Reasonable rate* \u2014\n263-9317.\n99 \u2014 Miscellaneous\nAUSTRALIAN law hopeful in yellow\nMustang: Will you return black rim\nglasses   to   Architecture   School?\n^r=^P=^r=^r=ir=ir==ir=ir=ir==ir=ii\nVALENTINE\nMESSAGES\nFor Friday Classified\nmust be in by\n11:00 a.m. Thursdav\nFeb. 12\nDON'T DELAY! Kage 7\nV'ballers capture CWUAA crown\nBy MARK LEPITRE\nThe Thunderbird volleyball team\nbecame the first UBC team to\ncapture the Canada West crown\nthis season with a win over the\nAlberta Golden Bears here this\nSaturday.\nThe win, by scores of 15-3, 15-4\nand 15-13, gave the 'Birds a perfect\nrecord of eight wins and no losses\nfor the season. The UBC team will\ntravel to Winnipeg to compete in\nthe Canadian Intercollegiate\n(CIAU) on February 26, 27.\nThe 'Birds have dominated the\nCanada West league from the start\nof the season and have had little\ntrouble in defeating their competition. In. fact it took three\nmatches before the opposition had\nscored enough points on the 'Birds\nto win one game. The 'Birds won\nall eight matches three games\nstraight.\nThe 'Birds should do well in\nWinnipeg. Scouting reports indicate that some of the eastern\nteams that were strong last year,\nsuch as Sherbrooke, are weaker\nthis season.\nThe team will also be getting a\nlot of game practise before leaving\nfor Winnipeg. This Saturday the\nUBC International Tournament\nwill be on. Multnomah Athletic\nClub (Macs) are entered as well as\nVancouver Volleyball Club (VVC).\nThe Macs are ranked as one of the\nbest club teams in the U.S. and\nWC is one of Canada's best.\nThe Canadian National Women's\nis also entered and should offer\nsome strong opposition.\nThe 'Birds desperately need the\ncompetition this tournament will\noffer a n d the experience will be\nvaluable.\nThe 'Birds played two matches\nagainst the University of Southern\nCalifornia Trojans and the added\nexperience should help. The\nTrojans are a strong outside hitting\nteam, something the 'Birds had not\nseen much of this season.\nIn the first match, played in\nMission, the 'Birds' blocking was\nvery weak. Blocking is what the\n'Birds rely most heavily on for\ndefense and the Trojans took advantage of the weakness, winning\nthree games straight.\nIn the second match things\nstarted out the same way. The\nTrojans easily took the first game\n15-3 and squeaked by in the second,\nwinning 17-15.\nFinally, after losing five games\nin a row, the 'Birds decided to play\nvolleyball. The spectators at War\nMemorial Gym' were the\nbenefactors as they were rewarded\nwith some excellent volleyball\naction. The games were close but\nthe 'Birds managed to take the last\nthree games to win the match.\nScores were 15-11, 15-13, 15-12.\nThe 'Birds will have to be at their\nbest if they hope to win in Winnipeg. They have the skill and the\nexperience so all they have to do is\nget everything going at once.\nThe Thunderettes also took on\ntheir Alberta counterparts\nSaturday. The Thunderettes are in<\nfirst place and can clinch the title\nby winning both their matches next\nSaturday and Sunday against\nCalgary and Lethbridge. The\nThunderettes defeated the Alberta\nPandas in four games on Saturday.\nScores in the game were 15-7, 15-7,\n9-15, and 15-3.\nTonight the Thunderettes play\nthe Chimos, Canada's top cup\nteam, in an exhibition match.\nGame time is 7:30 in War\nMemorial Gym.\nHoop 'Birds take second\nBy AVTAR BAINS\nThe Thunderbird basketball\nteam took on the University of\nVictoria' Vikings in two crucial\ngames here Friday and Saturday\nnights.\nThe most significant outcome is\nthat the 'Birds swept both games\nthus gaining second place and\nenhancing their hopes for the final\nplayoff spot.\nUBC's Mike McKay led the\ncharge both nights as he played\ntwo solid games both in the scoring\nand rebounding departments.\nOn Friday night the 'Birds had\nthe game from the opening tipoff.\nExecuting their full court zone\npress* with great success they\nrolled to an early 15-5 lead. The\n'Birds pulled away and UVic could\nnot recover from their early\ndeficit.\nRalph Turner and David Craig\nhit for 19 and 14 points respectively\nwhile McKay collected 15 points\nand also grabbed 20 rebounds. The\n'Birds romped to an easy 84-58\nvictory.\nSaturday night was an entirely\ndifferent situation. UVic, feeling\nthe embarrassment of the previous\nnight, came out ready to avenge\ntheir loss.\nViking guard Rob Parris led the\nway breaking the zone press with\nsome nifty dribbling and passing.\nThe Vikings penetrated the 'Birds\nzone defense getting the ball into\nLee Edmunson, who seemed to be\nthe only Viking forward-able to\ncope with UBC's superior height.\nThe Vikings outhustled the\n'Birds and came away with a 32-23\nhalftime lead.\nThe turn started, as it usually\ndoes, on defense, Chris Trumpy\nplaying the middle of a 2-1-2 zone\nintercepted, knocked down and\ntipped away Viking passes inside\nto Edmunson. UBC recovered the\nball and started chipping away at\nthe UVic 9-point lead.\nThen with 6:10 remaining in the\ngame Trumpy sank an outside shot\nto send the 'Birds into the lead for\nthe first time in the game at 56-54.\nThe Viking hopes to regain the\nlead were shot down as UVic\ncentre, Lee Edmunson, fouled out\nof the game with 3:29 remaining in\nthe contest.\nAlong with Edmunson went a\nhealthy bulk of UVic's shooting and\nrebounding as he ended with 18\npoints and 11 rebounds.\nThe 'Birds ended up winning the\ngame 59-54 and shattering. the\nViking hopes for a playoff spot.\nThe 'Birds were again led by\nMcKay as he struck for 17 points\nand grabbed 10 rebounds. Jan\nBohn chipped in with 13 points.\nGAGE SOCIAL & SPORTS PRESENTS\nVALENTINE'S DANCE\nSEMI-FORMAL\nSUB BALLROOM\n8:30- 1:00\nTickets in advance Tues.\nDANCE TO \"CIRCUS\nThursday Feb. 1:2\nFULL FACILITIES\nThurs. at noon in Walter Gage foyer\nSingle        Couple\nWith Res. Card  .$2.00 $3.50\nWithout Res. Card $2.50 $4.50\nWUSC\nGUYANA SEMINAR\nApplications at\nINTERNATIONAL HOUSE\ntill Feb. 12\nYour Official\nU.B.C.\nGraduation\nPortrait\nPhotographers\nSince 1969\nt^^clicl ^tudU\u00b1\n3343 W. Broadway\n732-7446\nSPACE IN SUB\nDoes the space in SUB serve your group's needs?\nHow can it be improved?\nWritten suggestions may be submitted by Thursday,\nFeb. 12, 1976 to the Committee investigating the use of\nspace in SUB. Your recommendations are needed to\nevaluate the present use and possible future uses of the\nbuilding.\nEllen Paul chair\nSUB Space Demand CommitteeRm 250 SUB\nArts Undergraduate Society\nELECTION\nFor SRA Representatives\nTuesday, Feb. 10, 10 a.m.-4 p.m.\nPOLL BOX WILL BE LOCATED IN BUCHANAN\nOUTSIDE LOANS OFFICE\nUBC'S MERV MOSHER (one) andOlli Korhonen (6) overpower a lone\nUniversity of Southern California Trojan player as all three block at\nonce. 'Birds took on Trojans in two matches. Trojans took first three\nstraight while 'Birds took second by winning last three games.\nHILLEL HOUSE PRESENTS\nRABBI MARVIN HIER\n'EIGHT QUESTIONS PEOPLE ASK ABOUT JUDAISM\"\nWho needs organized religion or Jewish Laws\nTUESDAY, FEBRUARY 10\n12:30-1:30 P.M.\nLunch Available\nDR. BUNDOLO\nS.U.B.\nTHEATRE\nFREE\nLIVE RADIO COMEDY\na CBC production\nWEDNESDAY\nFEBRUARY 11, 1976\n7:30 P.M.\nBroadcast:\nSat., 11:30 a.m.\u2014CBU 690 Page 8\nn c\nu d t o o c I\nAf Simon Fraser University\nWomen's study launched\nAn Arts and Humanities\n|| II Bookshop\nBy HEATHER WALKER\nSimon Fraser University has\nestablished a committee to investigate the status of women at\nSFU, a committee member said\nMonday.\nLynn Rutherford said the\npresident's continuing committee\non the status of women at SFU\nplans \"to take action as well as do\nresearch.\"\nRutherford said the committee\nwants to examine wages at SFU as\nwell as \"send a letter to all women\nat every sector of the university \u2014\nthat is, staff as well as faculty \u2014\nwhich will be a personal inquiry\ninto their relationships with the\nadministration.\"\nThe committee had its first\nmeeting last week, Rutherford\nsaid, and \"discussed how they\nthought the committee should\nwork. Half of its member thought it\nshould be remedial and correct\nproblems which exist, such as\nunequal wages, and the other half\nwanted to prove that there were\ninequities.\"\nShe said the committee members would talk to \"the administrators involved (in any\ninequities) and report to the\npresident, who will try to initiate\nchanges.\"\nRutherford said the committee's\n10 members were all appointed by\nSFU administration president\nPauline Jewett and include staff,\nfaculty and two students.\nShe said she was appointed\nbecause of her involvement in\nSFU's women's office, of which she\nis a former member.\n\"I think we should be able to\naccomplish something (in improving the status of women at\nSFU) because Pauline Jewett is\nvery interested in the position of\nwomen,\" Rutherford said.\nUBC will also investigate\ndiscrimination against its women\nstaff, faculty and students through\na series of committees.\nDonald Soule, assistant to administration    president    Doug\nBLACK & LEE\nTUX SHOP\nNOW AT\n1110 Seymour St.\n6882481\nWe Have The\nBest Bar\nIn Town\nThe RK Men's\nBar\nAPPOINTMENT\nSERVICE\n731-4191\n3644 WEST\n4th AVE.\nAT ALMA\nKenny, said Monday one ad hoc\ncommittee will look into\n\"arranging pension for sessional\nworkers.\"\nSessional workers, most of whom\nare women, are hired on an eight-\nmonth basis, and are not eligible\nfor pensions even though they may\nbe re-hired for many years.\nSoule said two small ad hoc\ncommittees will Took at the\npossibility of offering graduate\nstudy fellowships to women who\nhave been out of school for more\nthan five years and scholarships\nfor women taking residency\ntraining in medicine.\nAnother committee, under administration vice-president Chuck\nConnaghan, will investigate\ndiscrimination against non-faculty\nwomen in the areas of wages,\npromotion and job opportunities.\nSoule said Kenny has not yet\nappointed anyone to the committee, but will do so within the\nnext two weeks.\nConnaghan said Monday he had\nnot yet made any appointments to\nhis committee.\nOne committee consisting of four\nmembers of the board of governors\nhas already been established.\nIts members are George Hermanson, Clive Lytle, Pat Chubb,\nand Sadie Boyles. Hermanson is\nthe chaplain of the Lutheran\nCampus Centre. Boyles is a retired\neducation professor, and Chubb\nand Lytle are both involved in\ntrade unions.\nHermanson said the board\ncommittee's function will be to\n\"check out things as they implicate\nthe board, which will be in\nfinancial matters.\n\"The board has power over the\nprograms which will be funded, but\nnot over academic programs,\" he\nsaid.\nHermanson said the board would\nbe involved in the committees\ninvestigating pensions, wage\ninequities, scholarships, and in\nanother proposal to provide money\nto attract top ranking women\nacademics to UBC.\nPRINTS\nSALE\nFEB.\n7-14\n138 Richards St., Vancouver.    688-7415\nWUSC Study\nSeminar to Guyana\nApplications at:\nINTERNATIONAL HOUSE\ntill Thursday, Feb. 12\nPhysical Education\nUndergraduate Society\nNOTICE OF ELECTIONS\nNominations will be accepted for Physical Education\nUndergraduate Society Executive including:\u2014\nPRESIDENT\nTREASURER\nVICE-PRESIDENT\nSECRETARY\nYEAR REPS (4)\nSOCIAL COORDINATOR\nPUBLICITY\nForms available in Room 301 War Memorial Gym and\nnominations will be closed on Feb. 20, 1976 at 1:00.\nThe election will be held on Monday, Feb. 23, 1976.\nCUT IT OUT!\nGreat Britain.\nGreat Price.\nGreat planes, too\u2014Laker Airways'\nDC-10 jumbo-jets. So besides a good\ndinner (usually steak) with wine, dessert,\nand liqueurs, you also get stereo and\nmovies at no extra cost. And an open bar.\nAnd oodles of room. Nice. Prices are\nfantastic. Compared to regular airline\nfares, you could save from $55 to $400 or\nmore! And look at the choice of flights! All\nyou have to do is book early: 30 days\nahead for May; 45 for June; 60 for all the\nrest. So when can you go?\nfVANCOUVER\n[ TO LONDON (GATWICK) DIRECT\u2014STAY FOR 2, 3, 4 MONTHS OR MORE!\nDepart\nNo. of\nReturn\nPrice\nBook    1 Depart\nBefore  Q\nNo. of\nReturn\nPrice\nBook    II Depart\nNo. of\nReturn\nPrice\nBook\nDays\nDays\nBefore  ||\nDays\nBefore\nFri. Apr. 16\n28\nMay 14\n$364\nFeb. 16\nFri. June 18\n14\nJuly   2\n$439\nMay  4\nFri. Aug.   6\n125\nDec. 9\n$489\nJune   7\nFri. Apr. 16\n49\nJune 4\n$364\nFeb. 16\nFri. June 18\n35\nJuly 23\n$439\nMay  4\nFri. Aug. 27\nFri. Aug. 27\n21\nSep 17\n$439\nJune 28\nFri. Apr. 16\n98\nJuly 23\n$389\nFeb. 16\nFri. June 18\n49\nAug. 6\n$439\nMay  4\n42\nOct.   8\n$439\nJune 28\nFri. Apr. 23\n21\nMay 14\n$364\nFeb. 23\nFri. June 18\n91\nSep. 17\n$459\nMay  4\nFri. Aug. 27\n63\nOct. 29\n$459\nJune 28\nFri. Apr. 23\n42\nJune 4\n$364\nFeb. 23\nThur. July 1\n62\nAug. 31\n$489\nApr. 30\nFri. Aug. 27\n104\nDec. 9\n$459\nJune 28\nFri. Apr. 23\n70\nJuly 2\n$389\nFeb. 23\nFri. July 2\n21\nJuly 23\n$469\nMay   3\nFri. Sep. 3\n14\nSep. 17\n$409\nJuly   5\nFri. May 21\n14\nJune 4\n$409\nApr. 21\nFri. July 2\n56\nAug. 27\n$489\nMay   3\nFri. Sep.   3\n21\nSep. 24\n$409\nJuly   5\nFri. May 21\n49\nJuly 9\n$409\nApr. 21\nFri. July 2\n66\nSep. 3\n$489\nMay  3\nFri. Sep.   3\n35\nOct. 8\n$409\nJuly  5\nFri. May 21\n77\nAug. 6\n$429\nApr. 21\nFri. July   9\n14\nJuly 23\n$469\nMay 10\nFri. Sep.   3\n104\nDec. 16\n$429\nJuly   5\nFri. May 21\n105\nSep. 3\n$429\nApr. 21\nFri. July   9\n28\nAug. 6\n$469\nMay 10\nFri. Sep. 17\n21\nOct.   8\n$409\nJuly 19\nTue. June 1\n85\nAug. 24\n$429\nApr. 16\nFri. July   9\n56\nSept. 3\n$489\nMay 10\nFri. Sep. 17\n42\nOct. 29\n$409\nJuly 19\nTue. June 1\n99\nSep. 7\n$429\nApr. 16\nFri. July   9\n70\nSep. 17\n$489\nMay 10\nFri. Sep. 17\n90\nDec. 16\n$429\nJuly 19\nFri. June 4\n14\nJune 18\n$439\nApr. 20\nFri. July 23\n35\nAug. 27\n$469\nMay 24\nFri. Oct.  8\n21\nOct. 29\n$389\nAug.   9\nFri. June 4\n28\nJuly 2\n$439\nApr. 20\nFri. July 23\n63\nSep 24\n$489\nMay 24\nFri. Oct.   8\n41\nNov. 18\n$389\nAug.   9\nFri. June 4\nFri. June 4\n35\n63\nJuly 9\nAug. 6\n$439\n$459\nApr. 20\nApr. 20\nFri. July 23\nFri. Aug. 6\n146\n21\nDec. 16\nAug. 27\n$489\n$469\nMay 24\nJune  7\nFri. Oct. 29\nFri. Oct. 29\n20\n41\nNov. 18\nDec. 9\n$389\n$389\nAug. 30\nAug. 30\nTue. June 15\n71\nAug. 24\n$459\nApr. 30\nFri. Aug.   6\n28\nSep. 3\n$469\nJune   7\nTue. June 15\n85\nSep. 7\n$459\nApr. 30\nFri. Aug.   6\n63\nOct. 8\n$489\nJune   7\nLRKER ^fllRWRYS\nSunflight ABC\nCharter Flights\nfrom Canada's Number One Holidaymaker.\nFlights above are operated under ABC regulations issued by Canadian Transport Commission, have been approved by Canadian Transport Committee, and are chartered by Suntours Limited under the name\nSunflight ABC   A minimum non-refundable deposit of 10% is payable on booking. Charter flight and tnp insurance available. Prices do not include $8 Canadian airport transportation tax.\nWhat to do now?\nBook your SUNFLIGHTS with . . .\nm\nAlso available especially for students to London\nMay 6 - Aug. 31 $389\nTRAVEL\nRoom 100P S.U.B., University of B.C.  224-0111","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. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Genre":[{"label":"Genre","value":"Newspapers","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"edm:hasType"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; This property relates a resource with the concepts it belongs to in a suitable type system such as MIME or any thesaurus that captures categories of objects in a given field. It does NOT capture aboutness"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"label":"Geographic Location ","value":"Vancouver (B.C.)","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:spatial"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Spatial characteristics of the resource."}],"Identifier":[{"label":"Identifier","value":"LH3.B7 U4","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:identifier"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context.; Recommended best practice is to identify the resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."},{"label":"Identifier","value":"LH3_B7_U4_1976_02_10","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:identifier"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context.; Recommended best practice is to identify the resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"IsShownAt":[{"label":"DOI","value":"10.14288\/1.0126507","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"edm:isShownAt"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; An unambiguous URL reference to the digital object on the provider\u2019s website in its full information context."}],"Language":[{"label":"Language","value":"English","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:language"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A language of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as RFC 4646 [RFC4646]."}],"Provider":[{"label":"Provider","value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:provider"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The name or identifier of the organization who delivers data directly to an aggregation service (e.g. Europeana)"}],"Publisher":[{"label":"Publisher","value":"Vancouver : Alma Mater Society of the University of B.C.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:publisher"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An entity responsible for making the resource available.; Examples of a Publisher include a person, an organization, or a service."}],"Rights":[{"label":"Rights","value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy, or otherwise use these images must be obtained from The Ubyssey: http:\/\/ubyssey.ca\/","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dcterms:rights"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Information about rights held in and over the resource.; Typically, rights information includes a statement about various property rights associated with the resource, including intellectual property rights."}],"SortDate":[{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1976-02-10 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."},{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1976-02-10 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","classmap":"oc:InternalResource","property":"dcterms:date"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF].; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."}],"Source":[{"label":"Source","value":"Original Format: University of British Columbia. 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":""}]}