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Events are taking place throughout the SUB, and include a\ncandlelight vigil and memorial, and workshops. Free\nTHURSDAY \/ 20\n%!\u00bb&$<'<\n#\u2022.#\np^iuj h, \u00b0\u00absaj8J5j) |gvB\nWINTERFEST\n5:30 - 8:00 P.M. @ KOERNER PLAZA\nWinterfest at UBC is continuing with this evening event. Enjoy more crafts,\nmusic from the Blank Vinyl Project, Luke Wallace and beatboxers, and food\nfrom Sprouts and Agora Eats. Free\nFRIDAY ' 21\n0>'\npsychic\n\u00a9 Llipz'@\n\u20221HES1LEND\/IR\nmdi=z\n^m    \u00abn\nrs F^Biii!\nDIGITAL ZOO DANCE PARTY\n9:00 P.M. -2:00 A.M. @ HARBOUR EVENT CENTRE\nIn whatThe Calendar claims is going to be their biggest dance party ever,\nthere will be no shortage of colourful costumes and great music by DJs like\nPsychic Type and Moiez. Tickets $15 pre-sale; 19+\nON\nTHE\nCOVER\nWe brought out the backdrop and\nplayed around with four flashes\nbefore we managed to get this\nshot. Photo -Cherihan Hassun\nWant to see your events listed here?\nEmail your events listings to\nourcampus@ubyssey.ca.\n4^\n^^*f^  \u00a5 \u25a0 < -v t  \u25a0  \u00ab\nUBYSSE\n\\JTHE\nY\n\u25a0*-                                 NOVEMBER20.2014 | VOLUMEXCVI | ISSUEXXIV\nEDITORIAL\nSTAFF\nBUSINESS\nCONTACT\nCoordinating Editor\nCopy Editor\nMatalie Scadden. a Pentland,\nBusiness Manager\nEditorial Office: SUB 24\nWill McDonald\nCiaran Dougherty\nFerniePereira\n604.822.2301\ncoord i n ati n g @ u byss ey.cs\nDesign Editor\n:opy@ubyssey.cs\nDistribution Coordinator\nSoren Elsay, Olamide Olaniyan,\n_awrenceNeal Garcia,Taric\nVira, Kelley Lin, Jenny Tang,\n_eoSoh, Mateo Ospina, Ll\nfpereira@ubyssey.es\nAd Sales\nBusiness Office: SUB 23\nADVERTISING 604.822.1654\nNick Adams\nLily Cai\nGeoff Lister\nnquiries604.S22.66S1\npri nted i tor@ ubys sey.cs\ncai@ubyssey.cs\nZhang, Brock Newman, Koby\nMichaels, Jasmine Cheng,\n3dvertising@ubyssey.es\nStudent Union Building\nWeb Developer\nIllustrator\nVliguel Santa Maris\nAccounts\n613S SUB Boulevard\nPeter Siemens\nJulian Yu\nThea Simpson\nVancouver, BCV6T1Z1\nweb@ubyssey.cs\njulianyu@ubyssey.cs\n3ccounts@ubyssey.es\nOnline: ubyssey.ca\nNews Editors\nTwitter: \u00a9ubyssey\nJovanaVranic +\nVeronika Bondarenko\nLEGAL\nnews@ubyssey.cs\nThe Ubyssey is the officia\ncannot te reproduced without\nand clarity. All letters must te\nstudent newspaper of theUniver-\nthe expressed, written permls\n\u2022ecei ved by 12 neon the day be\nCulture Editor\nsity of British Columbia. It Is pub-\nsion of The Ubyssey Publica\nfore Intended publication. Let\nJenica Montgomery\nished every Morday and Thurs\ntions Society\nters received after this point\nculture@ubyssey.cs\nday by The U by ssey Publications\nThe Ubyssey Isa founding\nwill te published In the follow\nSociety. We aie an autonomous.\nmember of Canadian Universi\ning Issueunlesstherelsan ur\nSports* Rec Editor\nderrcciatlcallyrun student crga-\nty Press(CUP)andadherestc\ngent time restriction or other\nJackHauen\nnlzation.andallstudentsaieen-\nCUPs guiding principles\nmatter deemed relevant by\nsports@ubyssey.es\nodu raged to part lei pate\n_etters to the editor must\nthe Ubyssey staff.\nEditorials are chosen anc\nDe under 300 words. Please\nt Isagreed byall persons\nVideo Producer\nMitten by theUb\/sse\/ staff They\nnclude your phone number.\nDlaclng display or classified ad\nTimHoggan\nare the expressed opinbn ofthe\nstudent number and signa\nvertising that If theUbyssey Pub-\nvideo@ubyssey.cs\nstaff,and do not necessarily re\nture (not for publication) as\nI cat ions Scclety falls to publish\nflect the views of The Ubyssey\nvvell as your year and faculty\nanadvertlsementcrifanerrorln\nPhoto Editor\nPublications Scclety or the Uni\nwith all submissions. ID will te\nthe ad cccurs the liability ofthe\nCherihan Hassun\nversity of British Columbia. AI\nchecked when submissions are\nJPS wil not tegreater than the\nphoto\u00ae ubyssey.c;\nEditorial content appearing Ir\ndrepped effatt heed Iter el cfflce\nDrlce paid for the ad. The UPS\nThe Ubyssey Is the property of\nof The Ubyssey other wise ver-\nshall rot te responsible for dlght\nOpinions + Blog Editor\nThe U by ssey Ru b cation sSccety\nflcation will te done by phone\nchanges or ty peg ra phlca I er rors\nStories, opinions, photographs\nThe Ubyssey reservesthe right\nthat do not lessen the value or\nand artwork contained herein\nto edit submissions for length\nthe Impact of the ad.\n:@ubyssey.ca\nOUR CAMPUS \/\/\nONEONONE1\nOPLE AND BUILDINGSTHAT MAKE UBC\n=HOTO CHERIHAN HASSUN\/THE UBYSSEY\nAs director of campus security, Barry Eccleton strives to ensure that everyone feels safe at UBC.\nBarry Eccleton is the man in charge of keeping campus safe\nKari Lindberg\nContributor\nSecurity is a significant part\nof life at UBC. Students learn\nabout it, in various forms \u2014\nfrom political science students\nstudying international security\nto civil engineers learning how\nto build safe structures. For its\npart, the UBC campus, from\nresidence to lecture halls, has\nits security maintained by its\nown dedicated team.\nDirector of Campus Security\nBarry Eccleton describes the\nrole of UBC security staff as\n\"providing security services\nto the campus community, but\n\u2014 equally important \u2014 we see\nourselves as being ambassadors\nto the community and helping\npeople out.\"\nEccleton is involved with\nvarious endeavours outside of\nhis job at UBC \u2014 such as the\nSpecial Olympics, in which his\nson Jeff is an athlete.\nOur top priority is\nthat we want people\nto feel safe on campus.\nWe very much want\nto be visible to the\ncommunity the\nstudents, staff and\nemployees.\"\nBarry Eccleton\nDirector of UBC Campus Security\nEccleton served in various\nmanagement positions prior to\ncoming to UBC, and feels that\nhis experience has transferred\nover quite well to directing the\n100-person organization that is\nUBC Campus Security.\nCampus Security's main job\nis to make sure that people feel\nsafe at UBC. Patrolling in 12\nhours shifts, there are some\nplaces that are have permanent\npatrols, and others that are patrolled on a rotating basis.\n\"We do lots of different\nthings. Lots of time is spent\nresponding to alarms and also\nto provide access to people\nwho have forgotten or locked\nthemselves out of their rooms.\nWe provide support to the Safe\nWalk program, which runs from\n7:00 p.m. to 1:00 a.m.. Our guys\nwill provide transport [vehicles],\" said Eccleton. \"If there is\noverflow of Safe Walk callers,\nthen we'll help take over. We\nprovide important services to\nthe community, such as jump-\nstarting people's cars, and we\nalso have a 24 hour hotline service that anyone can call if they\nhave concerns or questions.\"\nIt was kind of baptism\nby fire.... I had been\nin the position a very\nshort time and had to\ndeal with it \u2014 but it\nwas okay We got very\ngood support.\"\nBarry Eccleton\nTheir main modes of transportation are bikes, vehicles and\nwalking, though emphasis is\nbeing increasingly shifted to the\nuse of bikes \u2014 partially due to the\nvisibility and accessibility of staff\ncompared to other transportation\nmethods.\n\"Our top priority is that we want\npeople to feel safe on campus. We\nvery much want to be visible to\nthe community, the students, staff\nand employees. That's why a huge\nemphasis for us now [is] community outreach and that's what we're\ndoing through crime prevention\nweek,\" Eccleton said.\nEccleton started in his role\nat UBC two years ago, and the\nstring of sexual assaults in 2013\ncame relatively early in his career at the university.\n\"It was kind of baptism by\nfire.... I had been in the position\na very short time and had to\ndeal with it \u2014 but it was okay.\nWe got very good support. The\nmedia took a great interest in\nit as well.... As much as these\nincidents were awful, there was\na silver lining in that it forced us\nas an institution to take a long\nhard look at how we deal with\nsecurity and safety,\" Eccleton\nsaid.\nEccleton highlighted the need\nfor the public to understand that\nwith a campus of UBC's size, it\nis hard for Campus Security to\nsee everything.\n\"I encourage that if anyone\nsees anything suspicious or sees\na crime occurring to call 911 immediately. We are a non-emergency service \u2014 a very important distinction to make. The\npolice have a detachment two\nminutes away and if anything\nhappens we call them.\"\nEccleton stressed that basic\nmeasures and precautions\ncan go a long way in regard to\npersonal safety.\n\"Simple things, like don't\nwalk alone late at night with ear\nbuds,\" Eccleton said.\nAs for the recent coyote sightings on campus, Eccleton's main\nwarning was to not feed any\nwild animals.\n\"Unless any community\nmembers have been threatened\nor bitten, [animal control organizations] tend not to act on these\ntype of cases.\"\nWith passion, dedication and\nadvocacy for campus safety,\nUBC Campus Security does its\nbest to always have the community's back. Xi\n\u2014 '\"\u2014Cd \/\/ News\nEDITORS JOVANAVRANIC +VERONIKA BONDARENKO\n.NOVEMBER 20, 20\nNEWS BRIEFS\nInvestigation into alleged UBC\nDenistry fraud continues\nAn additional RCMP unit is now involved in the investigation for fraud\nat the UBC Faculty of Dentistry.\nThe Federal Serious and Organized Crime unit ofthe RCMP has\njoined the regular UBC RCMP unit\nin order look into an alleged case\nof over $5 million in fraud in the\nfaculty's General Practice Residency program. The RCMP began\nthe investigation in February 2014\nafter they were first notified of\nthe matter.\nSpecific details surrounding the\nallegations and the investigation\nhave not yet been revealed.\nPonderosa residence block the\nsite of frequent flooding\nThree floors ofthe Arbutus house of\nthe Pondarosa residence were flooded on the evening of November 18.\nThe residence, nicknamed Pond\nby students, experienced a major\nflood caused by plumbing failure\nlast year. Since then, smaller issues,\nsuch as ceiling leaks, have been\nreported by residents frequently.\nAccordingto Student Housing\nand Hospitality Services Director\nAndrew Parr, residence life and\nbuilding services staff were called\nwithin five minutes of Tuesday's\nflood.\nThey cleaned up and replaced\nthe broken hot water faucet that\ncaused the flood by 11:30 p.m. Two\nResidence Life Managers were on\nsite following up with impacted\nstudents, said Parr.\nTemporary relocation was offered, but residents opted to stay in\ntheir units or with friends.\nSHHS is working with their\nsuppliers to investigate the causes\nof Ponderosa's plumbing issues and\nprevent any future incidents. Xi\nRESEARCH\u00bb\nPot and PTSD: studying the benefits of medical marijuana\nUBC professor Zach Walsh is researching marijuana as a treatment for PTSD\nKarolina Kapusta\nContributor\nAside from being a common recreational drug, marijuana may be\nable to help with the side affects of\nanxiety and fear that are common\nwith Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD).\nZach Walsh, who is an associate\nprofessor of psychology at UBC\nOkanagan, studies the roles of substance use and the impact of drugs\non behavior. Walsh first started\nresearching the impact of cannabis\nsix years ago, as he was interested in finding out more about\nthe world's most widely-used\nillegal substance.\nWalsh believes that cannabis\nhas great remedial potential that\nhasn't been examined because\nof \"the stigma around marijuana\nand the prohibitions against\nresearch related to it.\"\nWalsh is also interested in\nstudying how and why people use\nmarijuana. As part of his latest\nproject, Walsh hopes to look into\nthe ways that marijuana may help\nwith the symptoms of PTSD.\n\"People who suffer from PTSD,\nveterans in particular, report anec-\ndotally that cannabis is helpful\nwith their symptoms,\" said Walsh.\nAccordingto Walsh, a couple\nof states in the US already have\ncannabis medical laws that include\nPTSD as one ofthe conditions for\nwhich it can be prescribed.\nWalsh also said that there are\nbrain imagery studies that show\nreduced levels of naturally occurring cannabis-like chemicals and\nhigher numbers of endocannabin-\noid receptors in the brains of people\nwho have PTSD. There are also\nseveral animal studies that show\nAccordingto UBC prof Zach Walsh, marijuana can help treat anxiety and fear in PTSD patients.\n=HOTO STEVEN DURFEEffHE UBYSSEY\nthat the endocannabinoid system is\nimportant for the maintenance of\nfear-related memories which play a\nbig role in PTSD in humans.\nWalsh's study, which would\nconduct clinical trials that look into\nthe effects of smoking marijuana for\npeople with PTSD, still needs the\ngo-ahead from a UBC ethics committee and Health Canada in order\nto proceed.\nIf the study is approved, Walsh\nand his team of researchers expect\nto have the results ofthe clinical\ntrial by late 2016. By aiming to back\nup the links between cannabis and\nPTSD with research, Walsh hopes\nto eventually help it be recognized\nas a prescription medication for\nPTSD in Canada.\n\"There is a lot of therapeutic\npotential and we just need more research to figure out the parameters\nof what that might be,\" said Walsh. Xi\nMEDICINE \u00bb\nUBC medical researchers receive $2.3 million grant\ng*4C      *hL \u00ab*v j\nr> \u2666TitL^ \u25a0'\nfS\u00a3fff\u00bb-\u00ab95i\n=HOTO CHRISTIAN GUTHIER\/FFICKR\nPhil Hieter and his research team study the genetic mutations that cause rare diseases.\nVeronika Bondarenko\nNews Editor\nUBC will be creating a network\nfor the study of rare genetic\ndiseases with the help of a $2.3\nmillion grant.\nThe grant, which has been\nawarded by the Canadian\nInstitutes for Health Research\n(CIHR), will help link biologists\nwho are studying diseases that\naffect fewer than one in 2,000\npeople with a community of\nother scientists.\nPhil Hieter, a UBC medical\ngenetics professor and head of\nthe Canadian Rare Diseases\nModels and Mechanisms Network (RDMM), said that bringing\ntogether researchers and clinicians will help shed some light\non the causes behind rare diseases that may not have received\nas much attention otherwise.\n\"[There is] something like\n5,000 rare diseases that have a\ngenetic basis, but no one ever\nknew what the gene was because\nthey populate in small numbers\nfor each disease,\" said Hieter.\nHis team's research focuses\non matching genetic diseases\nwith the gene mutations that\ncaused them.\nHieter also said that while\nthe number of people who have\none of these specific diseases is\nvery low, together they end up\naffecting approximately three\nper cent ofthe population. Since\nthe causes and treatment options\nfor these diseases are largely\nunknown, they can also have\ndevastating effects on the people\nwho have them.\n\"[These diseases] cause so\nmuch pain and suffering and so\nit's a very exciting event when\nthe discovery ofthe gene is\nfound,\" said Hieter. \"Now [the\npatients] have a clear diagnostic,\nthey know their disease is the\nsame as other people's diseases\nand it has same mutation.\"\nThe network would help match\nresearchers who, through gene\nsequencing technology, have\nidentified the gene that causes a\nrare disease with other scientists. Once a gene is matched\nwith a specific disease, researchers can then proceed to determine why the mutation occurs\nwithin the individual.\n\"It's a great thing for scientists\nbecause there's a much greater\nawareness ofthe importance of\nbasic research [as] each gene, as\nit's found, requires follow-up and\nmuch of that is going to happen\nin basic science labs,\" said Hieter.\nAccordingto Hieter, a system\nwhere scientists can collaborate\nand share knowledge of these\nrare diseases is an essential\nstep in developing cures and\nmanagement options.\n\"The next step is 'what are we\ngoing to do?',\" said Hieter. \"We\nknow we have the gene, but what\ncan we do to try to benefit the\npatient by understanding what\ngoes wrong so that we manage\nthe disease?\" tJ\nALUMNI\u00bb\nFounding Google investor donates\n$7.5 million to UBC computer science\nJovana Vranic\nNews Editor\nDavid Cheriton, a Stanford University professor, has donated $7.5\nmillion to expand UBC's computer\nscience department.\nHis contribution came from his\nwish for computational thinking to\nbecome as commonplace a skill as\nreading and writing.\nCheriton graduated from UBC\nwith a bachelor's degree in mathematics in 1973 and went on to\ncomplete his Master's and PhD degrees at the University of Waterloo.\nIn 1998, he was one ofthe founding\ninvestors of Google.\nIn 2010, Cheriton first invested in\nUBC undergraduate education with\na $2 million donation to the multi-\nyear Science Education Initiative,\nheaded by Nobel Laureate Carl\nWieman. His recent investment was\naimed at strengthening UBC's computer science department, as well as\nmaking it more accessible and useful\nfor students across all faculties.\n\"I am delighted that David\nCheriton has provided this support \u2014 computational thinking will\nenrich the ways that UBC students\ncan create, collaborate, learn and\nunderstand our world,\" said Anne\nCondon, head ofthe department of\ncomputer science.\nAccordingto a media release, $7\nmillion of Cheriton's donation is\ngoing towards creating the David R.\nCheriton Chair in computer science,\nwhich will allow the department\nto hire a senior researcher. The\nremaining $535,800 will fund the\nimplementation of a new first-year\ncourse in computational thinking to\nbe offered in the Faculty of Science.\nThe course will be offered starting in the 2016 winter term and will\nfocus on using computer science\ntechniques for problem-solving.\n\"The new chair will hopefully\nextend the already recognized\nstrength ofthe department,\" said\nCheriton. \"[And] the new course\nshould make computational thinking accessible to students outside\nof computer science, a thinking\ndiscipline I regard as key to a 21st\ncentury education.\"\nHis donation is a contribution\nto start an evolution, a fundraising\nand alumni engagement campaign\nlaunched in September 2011 that\naims to collect $1.5 billion by 2015\nfor student programs, research and\ncommunity engagement.\n\"I am excited to invest again in\nUBC to expand the department\nof computer science and help\nthem meet demands at this time\nof rapid growth in this field,\"\nsaid Cheriton. Xi\nWrite\nShoot\nEdit\nCode\nDrin\nCOME BY THE UBYSSEY OFFICE\nSUB 24, FOLLOW THE SIGNS NEWS    I   THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 2014\nELECTIONS \u00bb\nProfessors weigh in on Gregor Robertson's re-election\nMax Cameron and Kathryn Harrison analyze voter priorities and Vision policies\nKelley Lin\nSenior Staff Writer\nIn this year's municipal elections,\nthe Vancouver public voted Vision\nparty candidate Gregor Robertson\ninto his third term as mayor.\n\"Transportation and homelessness, climate change and\nopposition to Kinder Morgan,\"\nare some of Vision's priorities,\naccording to professor Max Cameron, who believes Vancouver\nvoters generally agree with these\nmain policies, but have issues\nwith the party's lack of dialogue\nwith the public.\nAccordingto Cameron, the\nNon-Partisan Association (NPA)\nwas able to tap into this flaw\nduring the campaign, but despite\nthis, voters did not abandon Vision. He suggests that City Hall\ncommunicate with citizens more\nclearly when proposing new\npolicies and projects to not come\nacross as dismissive.\n\"[Vision] will need to be more\nconsultative,\" said Cameron.\n\"It'll need to be more careful not\nto appear to be ramming things\ndown people's throats.\"\nFellow department member,\nprofessor Kathryn Harrison,\nbelieves that homelessness and\naffordable housing are two of\nthe biggest issues voters are\nconcerned with.\nBecause ofthe daunting price\ntags of both projects, the city\nwill need to collaborate with the\nprovincial and federal governments for funding, said Harrison.\nRobertson touched on this\nconcern in his victory speech,\nsaying \"here at home, as the\nweather gets colder and colder,\nwe need a new partnership ... on\nhomelessness, mental health and\naddictions.\"\nHowever, Cameron expressed\napprehension about the higher government levels' support of Vision\nVancouver's progressive policies.\n\"Unfortunately, [Vancouver has]\nfaced steadfast opposition from\nthe federal Tories,\" he said. \"Part\nofthe problem with municipal\npolitics is that, even though we\nidentify civic governments with\nlocal issues ... the reality is that our\ncities have limited resources and\nlimited powers.\"\nHarrison shares the same\nconcerns, rooted in the knowledge\nof tensions between the current\nfederal government and the city.\nShe says disagreements on how\nto solve drug addiction by having\nonly a law enforcement-oriented\napproach instead ofthe city's proposed harm reduction framework,\nfor example, have caused strains.\n\"No single city is going to solve\n[issues of homelessness,] and\ncertainly not on their own,\" said\nHarrison. \"But that shouldn't\nmean we won't try... voters have\ngiven the mayor a mandate to keep\ntrying.\"\nAnother obvious source of\ntension between the different\nlevels of government is the issue\nof the Kinder Morgan pipeline,\nwhich Vision campaigns against.\nAccording to both Harrison and\nCameron, opposition to the pipeline project is a voter priority.\n\"It was certainly one ofthe\nareas that Vision works very hard\nto establish as a clear difference\nbetween [NPA and Vision,]\"\nsaid Harrison.\nShe said voters gave Mayor\nRobertson another chance because they liked Vision's policies,\ndespite tension at a higher level.\n\"This wasn't just a personality\ncontest,\" said Harrison. tJ\nMayoral Race\nResults\nGregor Robertson 83,529\nKirkLaPointe 73,443\nMeenaWong 16,791\nBobKasting 1,682\nMike Hansen 714\nJeff Hill 611\nTim Ly.\t\nMeynard Aubichon\t\nCherryse Kaur Kaiser\t\n 556\n 508\n 492\nColin Shandler 459\nPHOTO KRIS KRUG\/FFICKR\nGregor Robertson has been voted into his third term as Vancouver mayor.\nTHAN READY\nEARN A DIPLOMA IN ONE YEAR\nIf you have previous post-secondary education, you may be able to earn\na BCIT diploma in one year. Check out our business diploma programs\nand fast-track your career today.\nBroadcast\n> Broadcast Radio\n> Broadcast and Online Journalism\nManagement\n> International Business\nManagement\n> Business Information\nTechnology Management\n> Business Operations Management\n> Business Management\n> Business Administration,\nPost-Diploma\n> Human Resource Management,\nPost-Diploma\nMarketing Management\n> Professional Real Estate\n> Entrepreneurship\n> Marketing Communications\n> Professional Sales\n> Tourism Management\nFinance, Accounting and Insurance\n> Accounting\n> Taxation\n> Finance\n> Financial Planning\n> General Insurance and\nRisk Management\nFor more information, visit\nbcit.ca\/business\nBCIT\n50\nSCHOOL OF BUSINESS JENICA MONTGOMERY\nII Culture I\nDRAMA\u00bb\nSpec Theatre makes drama about collaboration again\nLECTURE \u00bb\nfiW?.:\n\u00a7?3\u00a9\nW:\n?H!rtl\n\u25a0\u25a0I\nt-:\u00ab\n\u2022D..\ntheatre\n=HOTO COURTESY SPECTHEATRE\nSpec Theatre was founded by UBC alum Ira Cooper and presented its first show Nov. 4-8.\nOlivia Law\nSenior Staff Writer\nSid, the character in Spec Theatre's first show Sid: the Handsome Bum, gets his catharsis\nfrom watching porn. Ira Cooper,\nfounder and writer ofthe five\nmonth-old Vancouver-based\ntheatre company, however, gets his\nfrom the theatre.\n\"'Small' theatre companies is an\nunfair term,\" said Cooper on the\ndiscrepancies between the large establishments, and the huge number\nof smaller, local syndicates around\nthe area. \"They all produce some\namazing shows, which can compete\nwith anything that's up there. I\nthink the playing field is becoming\nquite even for what makes a good\nshow \u2014 you have to come up with\nsuch new ideas with what makes\nyou different.\"\nAnd different Spec Theatre\ncertainly is. Their first show,\nwritten by Cooper himself, Sid: The\nHandsome Bum was performed just\nfive months after the conception\nofthe group. Originally envisioned\nas a male lead, Cooper, seeking to\nproduce his show completely out\nofthe 'traditional' box, approached\nsome of his former classmates,\nKayla Deorksen, Joanna Rannelli\nand Hilary Suzanne, to take on the\nacting, production, directing and\nmanagement roles.\n\"We were just all wanting to\nbuild our own kind of theatre, we\ndidn't want to wear the traditional\nhats and titles, so we just all did\neverything \u2014 just filling in for each\nother,\" said Cooper. Theatre is traditionally a collaborative art form and\nSpec Theatre definitely embraces\nthis to the full.\nThe process of forming the company certainly seems to live up to\nthe slightly crazed, quirky theatre\nstereotype. \"The idea for Spec\nTheatre came together at a bar, as\nmost good ideas do,\" said Cooper.\nAfter traveling for almost seven\nyears, living in China and cycling through the Netherlands, he\nrealized that the possibilities were\nendless. \"Rather than auditioning\nand waiting for opportunities to\ncome to me, I realized that I could\njust create them.\"\nCertainly not one to sit on the\nsidelines, Cooper graduated from\nUBC's BFA Theatre program in\n2007. Beginning as part of a class\nof 12 undergraduates, Cooper\nfinished his degree as one of five\n\"survivors.\" \"They threw so much\nat us, it was great.... And after I\ngraduated I was given the amazing\nopportunity to travel to the Czech\nRepublic, as part ofthe first North\nAmerican company to perform in\ntheir International Theatre Festival in the 14 years of its operation.\"\nAlthough Cooper has produced\nfilms and done plenty of play readings in his time, Sid: the Handsome\nBum was his first live show to be\nproduced for the public \u2014 and it\ndoesn't stop there. Written three\nyears previously, the rehearsal process for the show involved several\nmonths of collaborative rewriting,\n\"throwing it back and forth, and\nfirming it up\" before performance.\nThe collaboration extends beyond\nthe confines ofthe Spec Theatre\nfamily. \"We're all about theatre for\nnon-theatre people, the process of\nproduct and local written shows,\"\nsaid Cooper. \"We want to attract\npeople who have all sorts of other\ninterests, as the \"theatre people\" are\nsuch a small collective.\"\nPart of Spec Theatre's ethos is\nto offer accessible theatre which\nappeals to all. Their next show,\nAllergy Boys is an interesting conceptualization on the 'bubble wrap\ngeneration,' with a larger focus on\nthe nature versus nurture debate.\nCooper also wrote Allergy Boys, and\nhe hopes that everything produced\nby the young theatre company will\nbe written in house.\n\"You really have to have the full\npackage to work in this environment,\" said Cooper, full of compliments to his team. \"I think that's\nour schtick. We're small and always\nworking on the process of trying to\nfigure out new ways of displaying\ntheatre.\" tJ\nPOETRY\u00bb\nOily wood questions the role of poetry in environmentalism\nOilywood is a poetry chapbook that has been shortlisted for the bpNichol chapbook award.\nPHOTO COURTESYOIFYWOOC\nJamey Gilchrist\nContributor\nCan poetry help to teach and\nencourage people to take action\nagainst major industries accelerating climate change? Christine\nLeclerc, UBC alumna, author and\nactivist, challenges such local environmental issues in her thought\nprovoking poetry book called\nOilywood.\nOilywood has been shortlisted for\nthe bpNichol Chapbook Award, an\naward that recognizes excellence in\nCanadian poetry in chapbook form.\nThe eye-catching title was thought\nof while Leclerc and colleagues\nwere brainstorming a way to hang a\nbanner of an orca, which had a message of saving the coast on it, from\nthe Lions Gate Bridge.\n\"One ofthe idea's was to put a\ngiant 'Oilywood' sign on the North\nShore mountains as that image\nwould act as a mirror to the Hollywood hills sign and its associations\nwith a pro-development and a\npro-oil stance that we are seeing in\nWestern Canada and around the\nworld,\" said Leclerc.\nLeclerc found inspiration for\nher poetry when she spent a summer around different regions of\nthe Burrard Inlet. During her time\nthere she went around the beaches, collecting interviews, pictures\nand water recordings. She noticed\nhow many people spent their time\nthere and if they knew about the\nproposal to expand the pipeline\nsignificantly. This curiosity led\nto community workshops where\n\"people were asked to write down\nsome memories and knowledge\nabout the inlet on a rough map.\nThese sorts of community inputfs]\nwere used to create the chapbook,\nin addition to Kinder Morgan news\nreleases,\" said Leclerc.\nKinder Morgan is the largest\nmidstream and the third largest\nenergy company in North America. Their pipelines transport\nnatural gas, refined petroleum\nproducts, crude oil, carbon dioxide\nand more. The Burnaby pipeline is\njust one of many in the northern\nhemisphere.\n\"I took an environmental\npolicy course in the philosophy\ndepartment at UBC that really\nopened my eyes to some ofthe\nissues that our generation is\nfacing, and what many generations to come will face, regarding climate change and some of\nthe other major contributors to\nclimate change, aside from fossil\nfuels consumption like deforestation,\" said Leclerc.\nMost ofthe poems are autobiographical, some from the community workshops, interviews,\nand others based upon Kinder\nMorgan's news releases. After\nhaving read the book, Leclerc\nsaid she hopes it gets people talking about the Burrard inlet.\n\"Those are some conversations\nthat I think are very important\nto be having especially in terms\nof the threats that can be posed\nby the Tar Sands pipeline as well\nas the tankers going through the\ninlet and what we'll see much\nmore of if Kinder Morgan is allowed to expand their pipeline,\"\nsaid Leclerc.\nIf poetry such as this can start\npeople talking about environmental issues, it can inspire more\naction against the oil companies\nand other major contributors to\nclimate change in our society. Xi\nUCLA prof\nlectured\non Egyptian\nKing\nHatshepsut\nand gender\ninequality\nAdam Waitzer\nContributor\nOn Tuesday night, Buchanan\nA203 was transformed into a\nhive of activity. People of all ages\nstreamed through the doors,\nsome with chairs in tow, frantically searching for a place to sit\nor stand.\nKara Cooney is an associate\nprofessor at UCLA's department\nof near Eastern languages and\ncultures and was invited to speak\nas part of a series of lectures by\nthe Archaeological Institute of\nAmerica (AIA).\nThe lecture opened with a\ncomposite image of Michelle\nObama, Hillary Clinton, Angela\nMerkel and Margaret Thatcher.\n\"How does this make you feel?\"\nCooney asked the audience. A\nvisceral murmur ran through the\ncrowd. She then flipped to a slide\nof male leaders, eliciting little to\nno reaction.\n\"Are you looking at jewelry?\nAre you looking at hair? Are you\nlooking at some ofthe clothes?\nPantsuits? What are you distracted\nby? Do they seem angry to you?\nAre you threatened in some way?\nSo this is the crux of it all... why\nwe are still so hostile to women in\npower.\"\nClassifying power as ideological, economic, military or\npolitical, Cooney put forward\nsobering statistics of modern\ngender inequality in all four\ncategories \u2014 particularly in the\nbusiness world.\n\"The situation is brutal. When\nhuman beings are given the\nchoice of giving women power\nover money they all go 'Let's\nnot do that'. Women, money and\npower: these things do not go\nalong,\" Cooney said during her\nlecture.\nCooney then examined several\nfamous women who held power\nthroughout history. An overarching trend emerged: all these\nwell-known female figures had\nactually failed to successfully\ngovern their respective nations.\nCleopatra's reign saw the Roman\nconquest of Egypt; Jezebel was\nmurdered at the hands of her\nretinue and is remembered by her\npenchant for cosmetics.\nHatshepsut, a highly able\nEgyptian ruler, was \u2014 by contrast \u2014 largely forgotten. Rising\nto power as a \"stopgap\" during\na time of dynastic crisis. Cooney\nsaid Hatshepsut \"pushed the\nenvelope within the acceptable\nsocial context.\" Commanding religious authority, military might\nand strict economic control,\nHatshepsut brought prosperity to\nancient Egypt.\n\"And in some ways, that success was her ultimate undoing,\"\nCooney remarked. Hatshepsut's\nsuccessors rushed to claim her\nadmirable legacy.\nIn our modern society, there\nis no shortage of discourse on\nbridging gender-based gaps in\npower. Yet how can we deconstruct stigma associated with\nfemale leadership? Hatshepsut's\nparable offers some insight in\nthis regard. tJ 6    |    CULTURE    |    THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 20,2014\nReiki\nion\nrermaix\nWhen the Dalai Lama came\nto UBC in October, he attracted thousands of students and\nVancouver residents to the Chan\nCentre and Thunderbird Stadium.\nNo matter their faith or their degree of religiosity, a large number\nof students flocked to hear the\nhead of Tibetan Buddhism lecture.\nTickets to attend his appearance\ninside the vast amphitheatre were\nsnapped up in just a few minutes.\nThe curiosity and enthusiasm\nexpressed by students, regardless\nofthe status ofthe Dalai Lama,\nechoed both the freedom and discretion of religion on campus.\nThe drive towards\nopen multiculturalism\nMore than many countries,\nCanada has experienced\nthe secular tide ofthe second half\nofthe 20th century, and Vancouver seems to further enhance\nthis march towards secularism.\nStereotypes ofthe city depict a society where meditation, yoga and\npraying are a way for people to\nfeel more healthy and\nconnected to themselves. Reversing the\nidiom \"a sound mind\nin a sound body,\" Vancouver culture raises\nthe exercise ofthe body onto a\npedestal, while soul-searching is\nbecoming more ancillary.\nDespite this idea, the UBC\ncampus is home to several dozen\nreligious groups, clubs and\nchurches. Forming a vivid and\nactive network, they perpetuate\nthe tradition of a multi-cultural\nlandscape, where attachment to\nthe structure that religion provides is as valid as the attachment\nto any other cultural trait. Rabbi\nPhilip Bregman, the executive\ndirector of Hillel House on campus, describes the evolution that\nhe has witnessed in the Jewish\ncommunity over the years. It has\nvastly evolved since the early 20th\ncentury, when quotas prevented\nLook\nplace\nJews from freely applying to the\nmajor universities, to become the\nmulticultural Canada that people\nnow know.\n\"There are many more opportunities for Jews to interact...\nwith the surrounding communities in which [they] are living,\"\nsaid Bregman. \"And with that\ncomes something called assimilation, in which one loses one's\nidentity specifically and morphs\ninto something different.\"\nUBC strictly applies Canadians'\nrespect of religion and welcomes\nall faith traditions on campus,\nabundantly mixing dozens\nof denominations.\n\"Now we live in a world with\nuniversities filled with different\ncultures and different religions ...\na world that I think focuses more\non, I would not say sameness, but\ninteracting with one another,\"\nsaid Jordana Shani, managing\ndirector at Hillel. This multicultural perspective benefits from a\npositive consensus in the student\npopulation, but also opens new\ndiscussions on identity among\nreligious groups.\ning for home and a\no\nto belong\no\nGreater interaction can mean\na unique opportunity for\ndialogue and enrichment. Some\nfollowers of diverse faith traditions say they've participated in\npositive collaborations with other\nchurches on campus. \"So far it has\nbeen really good talking to other\n[members of different churches]\nabout their religion and how they\ninteract on campus,\" said Sivar\nRajab Khan, a member ofthe Muslim Students' Association. \"It has\nbeen fruitful, I would say, so far.\"\nYet other students feel the need\nto reconnect with like-minded\npeople, people who share their\nbeliefs, culture and perception\nofthe world. \"I guess one ofthe\nreasons why students would join\n... is because they are looking for\na sense of home and belonging,\"\nsaid Rajab Khan.\nThe desire for like-minded\nfriends is exemplified in faith\ntraditions that are seldom represented in secular Canada. Accord\ning to Rajab Khan, international\nstudents form the bulk ofthe\nMuslim community on campus\nand they can \"feel displaced\" and\n\"not really have a community.\"\nFor them, as for others, religion is an essential bond with a\ncommunity that can be difficult\nto grasp on such a large campus.\n\"The university is really big, and\nso it is hard to find people who\nshare the same beliefs. Having\na club is super useful, because\nit is right there and people can\njust show up and meet other\n[like-minded] people,\" said Na-\nthania Ho, a member\nofthe Intervarsity\nChristian Fellowship.\nThe continued\ndesire for connection\namong students with\nreligious backgrounds is served by a\ncohort of 17 chaplains\nfrom a wide array of\nbackgrounds. From\nTheravada Buddhism\nto Roman Catholicism, these community-appointed representatives of faith\ntry to keep in contact\nwith the different\nstudent groups as\nwell as lead religious\ncelebrations. These\ncommunity representatives of faith\nmake a point of being\navailable on campus\nas much as possible.\n\"They are not\nhiding. They are very,\nvery present,\" said\nBregman. \"Be it on Imagine Day,\nClubs Day or directly contacting\nthem, the clergy try to keep in touch\nwith the students. We are not selling\nanything... we are just saying we are\navailable to talk and share.\"\nNow we live in a world\nwith universities filled\nwith different cultures\nand different religions\no\n... a world that I think\nfocuses more on, I would\nnot say sameness, but\ninteracting with one\nanother.\"\nJordana Shani\nManaging. Director at Hillel THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 20,2014    |    CULTURE    |   7\nLeaders of religious groups try\nto keep a casual and approachable\ntone to their presence on campus.\n\"Because [Bregman] is in jeans\nand sweater, it makes it a lot more\nacceptable,\" said Shani. An attitude that is shared by many chaplains on campus, who also favour\ninformal talk on neutral grounds.\nUninterested\nundergraduate\nstudents\nDespite the efforts of religious\ncommunities on campus,\nmany students \u2014 especially among\nthe undergraduates \u2014 do not seem\nto have a desire to engage with the\nmembers ofthe different churches.\nThis seems to reverse as years go\nby, as students mature and reconnect with their faith tradition or\nfurther interact with others of\ndifferent traditions.\nBregman paralleled the\ngraduate orientation day with the\nundergraduate one. He noted that\nwith graduate students, \"there\nwas not a moment where we were\nnot engaged in some conversation with graduate students who\nstopped to talk.\" Undergraduate\nstudents, however, seemed uninterested. \"On Imagine Day, we\ncould have 10 or 15 or 20 minutes\nof nobody stopping, with a hundred times as many students going by,\" said Bregman.\nMembers ofthe religious community raise\nthe fact that religion,\nalongside philosophy\nor even politics, is\nminimized by students\nso as to keep their\nfocus on school. \"You are finally\non your own ... you are trying to\nfigure out how to manage your\nclasses and papers, and there is\nthe whole social aspect in terms\nof making sure you have a life outside as well. [Religion] might be\nsomething that you do not want to\nthink of,\" said Shani.\nSeen as too serious, time-consuming or simply irrelevant,\nthe practice of religion has been\ndismissed by many students on\ncampus, Bregman said. \"[The\nstudents] are concerned about\nschools, grades, now there is the\nissue of tuition... where does\nreligion fit into all of this? I think\nit has taken a back seat in this\nuniversity.\"\nAnother source of this first-\nyear reluctance appears to be a\nfear of being but put in a religious\ncategory. \"As soon as you say 'I\nam a Christian, I am a Muslim,'\npeople have a bias. They auto-\nThe university is really\nbig, and so it is hard to\nfind people who share\ne same beliefs. Having\no\na club is super useful,\nPHOTO KOSTA PRODANOVIC\nJordana Shani and Rabbi Philip Bregman are prominent figures in the Jewish community on campus.\nmatically think 'Oh, then you\nmust do that and you must think\nthis,'\" said Christian Vela, a third-\nyear economics student, who is\ncurrently putting the finishing\ntouches to the foundation of an\nOrthodox Christian club.\nEven Canada's tradition of\nrespect for many faiths does not\nprevent the fear \u2014 rational or not\n\u2014 of being reduced to an identity\nsolely revolving around religion.\nThere is a latent feeling of regret\namong some religious observers that they have shied from\nengaging in what plays such an\nimportant role in their lives, for\nfear of being stereotyped.\n\"Clearly [religion] means a\nlot to people, and it is a big part\nof how they see the world,\" said\nVela. Rajab Khan mentioned the\nharmony, peace and the sense of\ndirection that Islam brings her.\ntrend of new wave soul-searching\nappeared in Vancouver during\nTowards a new wave\nof spirituality without\nreligion?\no\nA the 1960s, and has continued\nto grow since. A quest for\nspirituality \u2014 the expansion ofthe\nmind beyond the limits of tangible\nreality \u2014 seems to have overtaken\nthe quest for religion.\n\"The new word on the street\nover the past 15 or 20 years has\nbeen 'I am not religious, I am\nspiritual,' which would mean 'I\ndo feel a certain connectedness\nbeyond just science or what I\ncan see or hear, I do believe that\nthere is a soulfulness to life, but\nI am not sure that it needs to be\nmanifest in this specific fashion,\non this day, at this time, in this\nway,'\" said Bregman.\nSecular meditation and belief\nin flows of energy as part of\na body-mind consortium are\npicking up speed. Chandima\nGangodawila was appointed\ncampus chaplain for Theravada\nBuddhism in 2012, and has been\nhelping students develop their\nmeditation abilities ever since.\nHe has seen an increase in the\nnumber of students who take\ninterest in Samatha, the secular\nbranch of Buddhist meditation\nthat seeks to develop appeasing\nbreathing techniques.\n\"Mostly these are liberal\nseekers of meditation. Some of\nthem come from the background,\nbut most of them want to know\nabout meditation in general,\"\nsaid Gangodawila.\nThe liberal practice of religion\nhas never been a problem for\nhim. \"I do not think it is mandatory for one to embrace a\nreligion to be a good person,\"\nGangodawila said, summarizing his perception that formal\nreligion is an acceptable omission\nin one's life.\nBeyond this commonly accepted idea, some religious practitioners remain critical ofthe\ninformal practice of soul-searching activities. \"It almost feels like\na very new-age, feel-good sort\nof thing that does not\nreally have a particular aim, a particular\nstructure and that\nends up being an 'it\nis up to you, whatever you want to be,'\"\nsaid Vela.\nFor Vela, as for\nRajab Khan, spirituality cannot\npossibly be separated from the\nstructure of religion.\n\"I guess people are ... thinking\nthat it is just the spiritual aspect\nof a religion that gives you that\nsense of purpose, but really there\nneeds to be a balance,\" said Rajab\nKhan.\n\"If there are boundaries in a\nreligion, [they are] there for a\nreason. Maybe we do not see it\nnow, but that is to make us more\nspiritual.\"\nThose boundaries, no matter\nwhat their purpose, seem to put\noff many students who just got\ntheir independence from home\nand the family sphere.\nIt appears that few students\nseek to infuse their lives with\nreligion at UBC. In a land where\nmountains, snow and sea are a\nholy trinity on its own, a look\npast UBC's Rose Garden or a sunset on Wreck Beach are uplifting\nenough for many of them.\nYet Bregman is convinced\n\"there is a hunger for something.\" Something beyond the\nbeauty of nature.\nStudents who seek are likely\nto find a helping hand among the\narchipelago of religious groups\nand churches on campus. tJ\nbecause it is right\no\nthere and people can just\nshow up and meet other\n[like-minded] people.\"\nNathania Ho\nMember ofthe Intervarsity\nChristian Fellowship\n\"They are not hiding.\nThey are very very\npresent.... The clergy try\nto keep in touch with the\nstudents. We are not sell\ning anything ... we are just\nsaying we are available to\ntalk and share.\"\nPHOTO COUI F      CI )IM        IGODAWIFFA\nRabbi Phillip Bregman\nExecutive Director\nofHillel House\nChandim Gangodawilla was named chaplain of Theravada Buddhism on campus. \/\/ Opinions\nEDITORIAL \u00bb\nStudents in rez should be treated like adults\nPETER SIEMENS\nWEB DEVELOPER\nEditorial\nLast Thursday I was cooking breakfast in my boxers when I looked over\nand saw two strangers standing in\nmy kitchen.\nDressed in uniform, the intruders\nwere UBC Student Housing and\nHospitality Services employees,\n&LEEP TIGHT,\nCAMPER&!\nwho informed me with smiling faces\nthat they were there to perform a\ncleanliness inspection.\nI live in a shared apartment in\nMarine Drive, where \u2014 like all UBC\nresidences \u2014 semesterly inspections\nare mandatory.\nAlthough I didn't feel threatened\nby the inspectors (they were likely\nmore offended by my lack of clothing), I was upset when they didn't\nhave the decency to knock before\nentering my, for lack of a better\nword, home.\nWhile this rude invasion wasn't a\nbig deal, it represents a larger issue.\nFor somebody who pays upwards of\n$800 a month in rent, I expect many\nbasic needs to be met, one of them\nbeing my right to privacy. I know\nprivacy in residence is hard to come\nby and, while I tolerated the lack\nthereof while living in a dorm room,\nI expected more when I moved into\nan upper-year apartment. At the\nvery least, I didn't expect to have\nany unannounced visitors.\nThis is why I have a hard time\ncalling Marine Drive my home.\nThe truth is that living in residence\nalmost feels like summer camp.\nUBC creates the illusion that we\nare being trusted, but in reality we\nare still being treated like children.\nI can't have a group of friends and\nalcohol in the same room without\nrisking eviction. I might have to pay\na fine if I'm caught without spotless\ncountertops. Quite frankly, I'm surprised my residence advisor doesn't\nput me to bed every night.\nIf you're going to charge us like\nadults, treat us like adults. The lack\nof trust is both disappointing and\ninsulting, and doesn't help us grow\nas young adults. Although I may be\nyoung, I'm living and studying away\nfrom home in an expensive city,\nall while balancing a full-time job\nto help make it affordable. I work\nlong hours and spend many nights\nstudying \u2014 things that can only be\ndone by somebody who has reached\na certain level of maturity. My point\nis that $800 is by no means a small\nsum; it's a monthly payment that\nwould be expected from a mature\nadult. That's right, an adult.\nLast month a friend ordered a\npackage online and had it delivered\nto my residence. A mistake was\nmade and the shipment arrived\nunder his name. I explained the\nmixup to a man at the front desk, but\nhe refused to help me track down\nthe package, grumbling under his\nbreath that he didn't have time for\nit. I went back every few days to\ntry again, but it wasn't until two\nweeks later that somebody finally\nlooked behind the counter (where\nthe package had been sitting). This\nis the second time UBC has lost my\nmail \u2014 last year they misplaced a\nnew license plate for my car, forcing\nme to re-register my vehicle. Occurrences like these force me to ask the\nsame question: why am I paying for\nsomething that doesn't meet such\nbasic needs?\nIf UBC follows through with\ntheir plan to increase residence\nfees next year, I hope they take\ntime to address some ofthe needs\nthat aren't being met. There are\nmany ways in which residence\nlife could be improved, but some\nare more important than others\n\u2014 things that are illegal under\nthe B.C. Residential Tenancy Act\n(which UBC doesn't need to abide\nby). Things like students being\nforced to sleep in floor lounges.\nThings like poor living conditions.\nBut at the very least, UBC needs\nto do abetter job of respecting the\nprivacy of its tenants. I shouldn't\nhave to tell them the same thing I\ntold my dad when I was 16: can you\nplease knock next time? tl\nLAST WORDS\/\/\nELECTORAL AREA AISN'T\nA PERMANENT SOLUTION\nWhile residents of Vancouver voted\nfor a mayor, UBC students voted\nfor a candidate who will be one of\n38 directors on a Metro Vancouver\nboard to represent their interests\nat a municipal level. In addition to\nrepresenting campus residents, the\ndirector or Electoral Area A is also\nresponsible for the booming metropolis of Barnston Island, among\nother rural areas.\nUBC has been a part of Electoral\nArea A since Bill 20 split it from\nMetro Vancouver in May 2010. This\nwas supposed to be a temporary\nsolution until creation of a better\ngovernance model to represent the\nover 20,000 students, faculty, staff\nand other residents who live west\nof Blanca. Except that temporary\nsolution seems to be becoming more\nand more permanent.\nThe majority of UBC's municipal-type decisions are made by\nthe Board of Governors, of which\n11 of 21 members are appointed by\nthe province. Though the Board's\ndecisions on land use are supposed\nto comply with a plan approved by\nthe province, the university is pretty\nmuch the judge, jury and executioner when it comes to building\nnew academic buildings, condos or\nstudent residence on campus.\nTake the Tall Wood Residence\nas an example. The plans for the\n18-storey building would make it\nmuch taller than building codes\nallow. UBC would have to apply\nfor a variance to build something\nthat height, which keeps them in\ncheck, right? Though the process is\nunclear (surprise, surprise), it seems\nthe university themselves would be\nresponsible for approving breaking\nthe rules.\nWhile the director of Electoral\nArea A represents campus residents\non things like sewage services and\nhas a seat at the table on Transit discussions, she has little power when\nit comes to the day to day decisions\nthat affect students and non-student\ncampus residents alike.\nThe University Neighbourhoods\nAssociation has been acting more\nand more like a municipal government for campus residents, which\nis concerning, given that they\nrepresent the interests of campus\nresidents who are by and large much\nolder, wealthier and opposed to\nnoise and concerts than your average first year in Totem Park.\nSeparating from Metro Vancouver arguably helps the university,\nthough Bill 20 was supposed to be\na temporary solution. But over four\nyears later, there don't seem to be\nany signs of progress. As we've seen\nwith the housing and tuition fee\nincreases, the university has the\npower to do pretty much whatever\nthey want. UBC's current governance structure only enforces that\ninflated power.\nMORE GREGOR: TIME TO\nTALK ABOUT BROADWAY\nThe people of Vancouver have\nspoken, and we have another four\nyears of Gregor Robertson. Our\neditorial board has disparate political leanings, but none of us really\nfelt strongly in favour of any of the\ncandidates in this election \u2014 a few\nof us even ended up spoiling our\nballots out of dissatisfaction with\nthe options. It's safe to say that many\nstudents support Robertson's vision\n\u2014 a green city with a platform for\nending homelessness. We've just be\ncome a bit skeptical about whether\nor not anything is actually going to\nbe done.\nThe Broadway Subway line\nis probably the issue that most\nsignificantly affects students. It's\na good campaign issue, and one\nthat probably drew a lot of support\nfrom students (and anyone else\nwho has a Broadway commute).\nVery few would disagree with the\nnotion that a rapid transit line in\nsome form would be a good idea\nfor Broadway \u2014 it's the obvious\nnext step for such a high-traffic\ncorridor. But pursuing a project\nwith so high a cost as a subway\nline \u2014 particularly in the face of\nbudget tightening \u2014 is questionable at best. Maybe it really is the\ncase that a subway line is the most\n(or possibly only) feasible option\n\u2014 but when prominent critics like\nBurnaby mayor and former B.C.\nTransit chair Derek Corrigan have\nspoken openly against the idea,\noften in favour of light-rail and\nother alternatives, more consultation and community discussion\nseems necessary.\nIt's a fine line that the public\nand the government has to walk,\nbetween due process and consideration and actually getting something\ndone that this generation of students\nwill live to see.\nGUPTA ON UBC SPORTS\nWe recently interviewed President Gupta to talk about the\nfuture of athletics on campus.\nNaturally, we were excited to\nspeak to the highest-ranking\nUBC official about his plans. The\nproblem is: he didn't really tell us\nanything.\nWe recognize that he's just\nstarting out in this job, and won't\nhave a full idea ofthe future that\nhe sees UBC Athletics taking until\nhe finishes speaking to those who\nhave been involved in the community for a long time \u2014 donors,\nalumni and staff. He mentioned\nthat he didn't begin the job with\na pre-set agenda and is learning\nabout UBC sports as he goes.\nWe just expected a little more\n\u2014 a vague idea of a plan or set\nof goals that the university is\nworking toward in this turbulent\natmosphere for UBC sports. But\nthis school is facing very important issues that require big\ndecisions. The fate of athletics,\nlike all things at this school, only\ntime will tell, tl\n' The most certain way\nto succeed is always to try\njust one more time.\"\nThomas Edison: Relentless Inventiveness\nFailure is no biggie. Just ask Edison. If he stopped at failure, he would never have moved\non to invent a little thing called the light bulb. So if you've failed a class somewhere else,\nor have a scheduling conflict, come on over. You can catch up with our world-recognized\nonline courses, then move on to bigger successes.Talkabout a light bulb moment.\nopen, online, everywhere.\nLearn more @ athabascau.ca\/edison OUR AMS PRESENTS\nELD AT THE AMS SPECIAL\nGENERAL MEETING\nCALLING OUT ALL UBC TALENT!\nRecord your ta ent\nand submit it to:\npr<^vents@ams.ubc.ca\nSubmit by\nNov. 30\nAUDITION TODAY!\nMORE INFO AT ams.ubc.ca\/sgi 10    I   SPORTS   |    THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 20,2014\nADMINISTRATION \u00bb\nPresident Gupta still in \"learning\nmode\" on UBC athletics\nPHOTO MACKENZIEWAFKERFTHE UBYSSEY\nPresident Gupta did not begin the job with his own athletics agenda, and is listening to the community to become informed.\nCJ Pentland\nSenior Staff Writer\nWhen Arvind Gupta replaced\nStephen Toope as president of\nUBC back in July, he took over\nduring a time of great importance for UBC Athletics. With\nthe university's Sports Review\ncoming to a close in February,\nUBC is currently in the process\nof transitioning to a new athletics model with fewer varsity\nteams and competitive clubs \u2014\nwith a goal of fostering excellence and promoting sport across\ncampus. Throughout the process,\nstudent-athletes and alumni\nalike have been vocal with their\nthoughts on the changes.\nGupta's goal right now is to listen to those voices. The president\ndid swim and play hockey while\ngrowing up in Timmins, Ontario,\nbut admits that he's not very\nfamiliar with the inner working\nof university sports. By talking\nto a broad range of people that\nincludes students, coaches, staff\nand donors, he is learning more\nso he can soon make his own\ninformed decisions.\n\"We've done the athletic review, [and] we're implementing\nthe changes,\" said Gupta. \"Obviously there are friends ofthe\nuniversity who think we could\nbe doing a better job on some of\nthese things, so I've just taken\nthe task of listening to what\neveryone is saying, and trying\nto make up my own mind where\nthis should be going.\"\n\"We just want to make sure\nwe can maximize what our\nvarsity teams do and their\noutcomes. We don't have\nunlimited budgets, we don't\nhave unlimited bandwidths,\nso we just want to get the best\noutcomes we can.\"\nGupta understands the importance of athletics on campus,\nhaving been a strong supporter of\nthe McMaster Marauders during\nhis undergrad years. At UBC, one\nof his main goals is to use varsity\nathletics as a rallying point for\nschool sprit. Over 23,000 students are involved in intramurals\non campus, which shows him\nthat the potential is there.\n\"I see the varsity program as\nthis platform\nto promote\nexcellence, to\npromote leadership, to promote\ndevelopment of\nyoung people\nin a much more\nmulti-faceted\nway than I originally realized,\"\nsaid Gupta.\nUniversity\ndonors possessed\nsome ofthe most\nprominent voices\nduring the sports\nreview process,\nand Gupta is\ntrying to make\nsure those\nvoices are heard.\nThe president\nsaid he's been\namazed at how\nmany people he's met have come\nthrough UBC Athletics, which\nhas led him to realize how athletics provides a training ground\nfor not only sports, but also\nleadership, teamwork and other\npositive qualities. He therefore\nholds the opinions of alumni and\ndonors in high regard.\n\"I think that as alum ofthe\nAthletics program, they should\nhave a strong voice; they're not\nthe only voice, but they do have\na strong voice. And they have\na lot to contribute, and I don't\nthink anyone would deny that we\nneed to be listening carefully to\nwhat they're saying because they\nwant what's best for the program\n[and] they want what's best for\nWejustwantto\nmake sure we\ncan maximize\nwhat our varsity\nteams do and their\noutcomes. We don't\nhave unlimited\nbudgets, we don't\nhave unlimited\nbandwidths, so we\njust want to get\nthe best outcomes\nwe can.\"\nArvind Gupta\nUBC President\nthe athletes,\" said Gupta, who\ndoesn't see donors and alumni in\nseparate categories.\n\"I haven't had a donor say\nto me 'why are you changing\nthings? They used to be better in\nthe 70s.' Everything they're saying to me is about 'we really care\nabout the young men and women\nplaying on UBC teams \u2014 we want\nthem to have great outcomes.'\"\nAthletics has also recently\nhired several\nnew UBC varsity\nclub positions.\nTwo new positions include\na director of\nteam services\nand a director\nof marketing,\ncommunity\npartnership and\nsponsorship, and\na new strength\nand conditioning\ncoach. Gupta\nsees these positions as crucial\nto helping\nUBC remain\none ofthe top\nprograms in\nthe country.\nThe 13th\npresident of UBC\nsaid he didn't\ncome in with a pre-set agenda in\nregards to athletics, but stands\nbehind the decisions that Toope\nmade during his tenure and\nthinks there's no doubt that UBC\nis staying in the CIS. For the time\nbeing, he trusts the decisions that\nManaging Director of Athletics\nAshley Howard and VP Students\nLouise Cowin are making, and\nwill continue to listen.\n\"I've very purposely not tried\nto set... my own agenda, just to try\nand understand the various facets\nofthe sports, the various outcomes\nwe could be looking for. And so I'd\nsay I'm still in learning mode.\"\n\"I want to hear everyone's\nvoice, and then figure out the\nnext steps.\" Xi\nT-BIRDS 5-ON-5\nBRAINS AND BRAWN\nHockey\nROSIE\nSCHLAGINTWEIT\nVolleyball\nJONATHAN\nBROWN\nSwimming\n1. So you're good at your sport(s) and\nin school... what is something you're\nembarrassingly bad at?\n2. What is your favourite study place on\ncampus?\n3. What's your dream job?\nSkateboarding. Could\nnever get past the ollie.\nI'm not bad on a Bongo\nBoard though.\nMy desk at home. While\nstudying, I'm always\nwalking around and\neating.\nPlaying hockey is my\ndreamjob.\nI am embarrassingly\nbad at improv. Grade\nnine drama was a pretty\nstressful experience \u2014\nsafe to say I'll never have\nan acting career.\nI'm a fan of Wood\nbasement. It's close to\nfood and there's always\nfamiliarfaces.\nI have applied forLaw\nschool next year, so I\nwould love to become\na lawyer.\nI'll have to admit, I'm extremely bad at picking\nup girls... just not really\none of my strengths!\nEveryone seems to love\nstudying and sleeping at\nthe Aquatic Centre, but\nthat's where I have some\nof my darkest times...\nprefer Starbucks.\nProbably to coach\nalongside Steve Price\nand fill kids'goggles\nwith tears of pain.\nSinging. I couldn't sing\nto save my life!\nArtwork.\nDefinitely the Law library.\nIt's beautiful and seems\nto be full of good-looking, soon to be lawyers.\nAski coach.\nKoerner. No cell signal in\nthe basement so fewer\ndistractions.\nDoctor.\n4. What was the last book you read?\n5. What has the little voice inside your head\nbeen saying lately?\nMan's Search for\nMeaning by Viktor\nFrankl.\nItusuallytellsmewhen\nI'm hungry and when I\nneed to pee.\nThis is quite nerdy, but\nan LSAT prep book\ncalled Mastering Logical\nReasoning. I wrote the\nLSAT a monthago.lt\nwasn't a casual read.\nLately it's been telling me\nto just enjoy my fifth year\nand nottake things too\nseriously. Things usually\nseem to fall into place.\nActually, I just finished a\nreally great read called\nFindingAWayOnFridays\nforDummies.\nSwimming is love. Swimming is life.\nSadly, itwasa bookfor\nEnglish class. I don't\nseem to have much time\nfor reading anymore.\nWhich one?\nWhateverthe CAPS 391\ntextbook is.\nWhy haven't you graduated yet? THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 20,2014    I    SPORTS    I   11\nEXPLORE\u00bb\nPlaces to Be:\nPender Island\nThe Ubyssey's annual \"Pender Bender\" was a smashing (or smashed) success.\nUbyssey Staff\nThis Rememberance Day long\nweekend, 15 Ubyssey editors,\nvolunteers and alumni escaped to Pender Island for our\nannual retreat.\nThe ride over\nThe trip to the tree-lined heaven\nthat is Pender will take you on a\ntwo-hour ferry ride from Tsaw-\nwassen. The ferries stop at several\nofthe other islands, including Galliano and Mayne, before alighting\nat Pender.\nBesides looking through the\nsilly knickknacks in the gift shop\nand trying hard to resist the\ntemptation to run around singing The Lonely Island's \"I'm on\na Boat,\" our main activity on the\nferry was revelling in the stunning\nviews ofthe Strait of Georgia.\nEven if you're making the trip in\nthe dead ofthe winter, you don't\nwant to miss heading out onto\nthe deck to look at the views. You\nwill be greeted with lovely sights\nofthe islands, the water and, if\nyou're really lucky, the occasional\nwhale. If you're taking the 7:00\na.m. ferry back to Vancouver, you\ncan also catch some views ofthe\nsunrise while you're tiptoeing past\nsleeping passengers.\nHiking\nOur accommodations were lush:\na huge mansion right on the coast\nwith a hot tub on the roof. It was\ntough to leave the easy comforts of\nour luxurious abode, but one look\nout the window served as all the\ninspiration I needed.\nI made my way down the hill\nfrom the house to the edge ofthe\ndeveloped property, relishing the\nlast few minutes of dirt road before\nit gave way to the mossy terrain\nthat covers much of Pender.\nThe owner ofthe property had\nbuilt a staircase against the cliff,\nthe only way down from the sheer\ndrop that towers over it. I found\nmyself pressed against the railing\nat some points and crawling at\nothers to fit under an overarching rock that jutted over the\ncreaky steps.\nThe end of civilization was\nmarked by a thick, algae-covered rope that serves as a lifeline for anyone traversing the\n60-degree slope.\nI'd done this hike a year before\nwith a few former Ubyssey staff\nmembers, but this time I broke the\nfirst rule of hiking by going at it\nalone. Everyone else was playing\ndisc golf, and I was taking the\nferry home later that evening.\nThere was no semblance of a path\nafter the rope descent. Either the\ndeer that populate the island are\nsmart enough to avoid traversing a\nsteep cliff perched over the ocean,\nor they're more light footed than\nI am.\nI started to question my\ndecision to travel alone after my\nfirst few slips and slides on the\ndamp moss, but upon arriving at\na clearing that stood above the\nocean and revelling in the solitude\nofthe unobstructed sunset, all of\nmy apprehension melted away. I\nwas tempted to continue the hike\nwith what daylight I had left and\ntry to make it over the fallen logs\nand steep drops to the low point\nofthe cliff, where last year we'd\nspent some time chatting with\nan otter. But when I started off, I\nrealized that my view wouldn't get\nbetter than this, and that though\ncontinuing the hike and trying to\nnot fall off a cliff was an exhilarating prospect, so was staying and\nappreciating the serenity.\nI sat on the moss and took in the\nlast warmth of the sun, watching the ocean and the trees and\nlate-season wild strawberries that\ndotted the ground around me.\nWhen the sun was on the verge\nof sinking below the horizon I\nstarted back, the climb up proving\nconsiderably easier than down.\nDisc golf\nWhile one member of our group\nwas off gallivanting God-knows-\nwhere, most of us were taking\nadvantage of Pender's main attraction: a 27-hole disc golf course.\nThe course is a combination of two\nofthe most laid-back activities \u2014\nwalking through the woods and\nthrowing a Frisbee. The game is\nsimple \u2014 throw the Frisbee, walk\nto it, and throw it again until you\nget the disc into a chained basket\nor hit a metal pole. Keeping score\nis optional.\nAt the start ofthe free course\nis a small wooden clubhouse consisting of a bit of shelter, a picnic\nbench and some extra discs for\npeople who didn't bring their own.\nThe holes start off easy and\nget progressively harder. They\nrange from short 30-metre putts\nthrough an opening in the forest\nto 200-metre-plus lumberjacking\nexpeditions. The most difficult\nholes feature steep slopes that,\nwith one wrong throw, put you\n200 metres further away the basket straight down a rocky hill.\nDespite some ofthe harder\nholes, the course remains as relaxed as the rest ofthe island. It's\na good balance of walking wooded\npaths and climbing rocky slopes.\nDrinking is optional, but encour\naged on the course. The trash\nbins every few holes are actually\nrecycling bins for empties.\nThough the course is made up\nmostly of par threes we played\nthem as par fours to make up for\nour lack of skills and allow for a\nfew beers on the course. If golf is\na good walk spoiled, Pender disc\ngolf is a good hike made even better \u2014 with Frisbees and beer.\nWrapping up\nRegardless of what you choose\nto do on Pender Island, you\ncan be sure the views will be\n=HOTOWIFFMCDONAFDffHE UBYSSEY\nspectacular everywhere you go.\nWhether you're out climbing its\ncliffs, slacklining in the thick\nforest or just strolling by the\ncoast and snapping photos of the\nlandscapes, Pender will make\nyou feel like you're in another\nworld. Its serenity and unreal\nnatural beauty is the perfect\nweekend getaway with friends.\nIf you've got the means to rent\nout a seven-bedroom mansion\nwith separate meditation cabin\nand two love-shacks on the road\nbetween, The Ubyssey highly\nrecommends it. Xi\nsl:\nECDM':\nMASTER\nDIGITAL\nMEDIA\n\u25ba Industry-Focused Program\n\u25ba Startup Business Support\n\u25ba 4 Major Canadian Universities\n\u25ba Competitive Scholarship Opportunities\n|OmTHENEXTONUNEWEB,NARNOV28th\nthecdm.ca\/webmars\nNTRE FOR\nDIGITAL MEDIA\na collaboration between\nthecdm.ca 12    |    GAMES    |    THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 20,2014\nPhoto of the Day\nMinimalist photography of intricate architecture.\nISI\n)arjunhair\n1\n2\n3\n*\nS\n6\n7\n8\n\"\n-\n11\n12\n13\n14\n\"\n\"\n17\n,.\n\"\n20\n21\n25\n22\n23\n\u25a0 24\n2G\n27\n2S\n29\n30\n31\n32\n33\n\u25a0 34\n35\n36\n37\n38\n39\n40\n41\n\u25a0 42\n43\n44\n45\n46\n53\n54\n47\n51\n52\n43\n43\n55\n56\n57\nSO\n1\n1\nSS\n\"\nGO\n\"\n62\n'\n\"\n65\nEG\n\"\n6\n3\n2\n7\n2\n4\n1\n7\n5\n7\n6\n5\n6\n8\n5\n2\n1\n4\n5\n8\n3\n7\n2\n9\n4\n7\n5\n1\n6\n9\n8\n2\n3\n6\n2\n9\n8\n7\n3\n4\n5\n1\n3\n1\n8\n5\n4\n2\n7\n9\n6\n9\n5\n6\n4\n1\n7\n2\n3\n8\n2\n4\n3\n9\n8\n5\n1\n6\n7\n1\n8\n7\n2\n3\n6\n9\n4\n5\n5\n6\n4\n7\n9\n1\n3\n8\n2\n7\n9\n2\n3\n5\n8\n6\n1\n4\n8\n3\n1\n6\n2\n4\n5\n7\n9\nNOV17 ANSWERS\n's\n'c\n*A\n\"l\nV\n1\n'\u00bb\nD\n*A\n'k\n1\nA\nw\nL\ns\n0\nR\nE\nK\nc\n1\nN\nE\nE\nR\n0\nO\nN\n0\nT\nW\nI\nT\nH\ns\nT\nA | N\nD\n1\nN\nC\nS\ns\n5 If\n0\n1\nc\nE l\u00ab\nB\nA\nT\nE\nlo\nA\nF\ns 1 |e\nD\nu 1\nc\nI\nR\nC\nU\nm|n\nA\nV\n1\nC \\A\nT\nE\nD\n0\nD\nC\nY |   |[\nL\nE\nA He.\nO\nD\nE\nL\nL\nS H   F\nu\nc\nA\nR Ir.\nE\nR\nN\nS\nI\nE ll\n0\nN\nE |   Hm\nA\nL\nT\nA\nI\nN\nd r'\nS\nc\n0\nV 1*1\nR\nA\nB\nL\nE\nB\"s\nT\nA | If\nE\nR\nr|\nA\nD\n0\nR\nE Ic\nu\nE\nS\ns In\nE\nD\nD\nE\nP\nA\nR |*T\nM\nE\nN\nT\nA\nL\n1\nZ\nE\nA\nL\nA\nE\nw\nE\nL\nT\n1\n\u2022L\n1\nB\nR\nA\nY\nE\nL\nL\n0\nN\nE\ns\n\"A\ns\nS\nA\nD\nCOURTESYBESTCROSSWORDS.COM\n33- Les -Unis\nACROSS\n34-Sandwich shop\n36-Scot's refusal\n1-Antitoxins\n37-Safety device\n5-Dated\n38-Medicine\n10-Sgts.,e.g.\n39-Part of ETA\n14-Tons\n40-Mine find\n15-Son of Abraham\n41-Corrosion\n16- Grey, tea type\n42-Singer Lopez\n17-Shout in derision\n44- Rhinoplasty\n18-Capital of Japan\n47-Small valley\n19-\"Judith\" composer\n48-Tense\n20- Simulating real life\n49-Author Deighton\n22-Of little width\n50-Stem\n24- \"The Simpsons\" bartender\n53- Unpoetic characteristic\n25-Acting part\n58- even keel\n26-Apathy\n59- Great Lakes tribesmen\n29-Hug\n61-Dry watercourse\nCOURTESYKRAZYDAD.COM\n-JOV17 ANSWERS\n62- Longfellow's bell town\npublic wealth\n42-Some digits\n63-Wash lightly\n10-Closer\n43- Deserter\n64- I've Got in Kalamazoo\n11-SingerVikki\n45-Cultural\n65-It may be compact\n12- Yes ?\n46- alai\n66-Tiffs\n13-Killed\n47-Shuts\n67-Symbol of slavery\n21- \"Gentlemen Prefer Blondes\"\n50-Highway\nauthor\n51- Word that can precede war.\nDOWN\n23-Liturgical vestment\nbioticand climax\n25- Ignited again\n52- Limos, hatchbacks, and\n1-Satirist Mort\n26-Mortise insert\ncoupes\n2- \"The Time Machine\" people\n27- Alamogordo's county\n53- colada\n3-lt'soveryour head\n28-Gives a 9.8, say\n54-Breather\n4-Try\n30-For want of\t\n55-\"Othello\" villain\n5-One who feels bad\n31-Chili con __\n56-Minn. neighbour\n6- \"Dilbert\" intern\n32- Strange and mysterious\n57-Eight furlongs\n7-Japanese rice wine\n34-Distrust\n60-Tear\n8-Speak\n35- Nav. officer\n9- Pert, to the management of\n38-Pants","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Vancouver (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"LH3.B7 U4","@language":"en"},{"@value":"LH3_B7_U4_2014_11_20","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0126800","@language":"en"}],"Language":[{"@value":"English","@language":"en"}],"Provider":[{"@value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","@language":"en"}],"Publisher":[{"@value":"Vancouver : The Ubyssey Publications Society","@language":"en"}],"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\/","@language":"en"}],"SortDate":[{"@value":"2014-11-20 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"2014-11-20 AD","@language":"en"}],"Source":[{"@value":"Original Format: University of British Columbia. Archives","@language":"en"}],"Subject":[{"@value":"University of British Columbia","@language":"en"}],"Title":[{"@value":"The Ubyssey","@language":"en"}],"Type":[{"@value":"Text","@language":"en"}],"Translation":[{"@value":"","@language":"en"}],"@id":"doi:10.14288\/1.0126800"}