"CONTENTdm"@en . "http://resolve.library.ubc.ca/cgi-bin/catsearch?bid=1210082"@en . "University Publications"@en . "2015-07-17"@en . "1981-02-18"@en . "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/ubcreports/items/1.0118565/source.json"@en . "application/pdf"@en . " February 18, 1981\nVolume 27, Number 4\nRehab pioneer among\nfive to be honored\nEdmund J. \"Ed\" Desjardins, a\nquadriplegic who pioneered the\ndevelopment of rehabilitation services\nfor the physically handicapped in\nWestern Canada, will be one of five\npersons receiving honorary degrees at\nUBC's spring Congregation ceremonies\nMay 27, 28 and 29.\nDesjardins, who retired recently as\nexecutive director of the G.F. Strong\nRehabilitation Centre in Vancouver,\nwill be honored on May 29 with Bora\nLaskin, chief justice of Canada's\nSupreme Court, who was prevented by\nillness from receiving an honorary\ndegree in 1980.\nOthers who will be honored at the\nthree-day ceremony are:\nFilly Ameling of the Netherlands, a\nrenowned soprano who has been\ninternationally acclaimed as a concert\nand opera singer and as a recording\nartist;\nT.C. \"Tommy\" Douglas, a\nCanadian political figure for more\nthan four decades and leader of the\nNew Democratic Party from 1961 to\n1971; and\nHarold M. Wright of Vancouver, a\nUBC graduate and chairman of\nWright Engineers Ltd., a leading\nCanadian mining and engineering\nfirm.\nEd Desjardins has been honored and\ncited by numerous health and\nrehabilitation organizations for\ndedicated and distinguished leadership\nin the development of rehabilitation\nservices for the handicapped.\nHe has been confined to a\nwheelchair since 1944 as the result of a\nHockey women\nreach target\nUBC's women's field hockey team\nwas all smiles last week when they\nlearned that President Douglas Kenny\nhad agreed to provide $5,000 from\nUniversity funds to enable them to\nreach a fund-raising goal of $25,000\nfor an overseas trip this spring.\nThe team, which won the Canadian\nuniversity championship in Toronto in\nNovember, has been invited to take\npart in an international university\ntournament in Glasgow on Easter\nweekend April 17-19.\nThe team will tour Scotland,\nEngland and Wales following the\ntournament. A total of 16 players and\ncoach Gail Wilson will make the trip.\nThe team raised $20,000 through\ncar washes, bottle drives, raffles and\ndonations from business firms.\nChairman of the tour-organizing\ncommittee is team captain Anne\nCrofts, a third-year Physical Education\nstudent.\nmilitary training accident in England\nwhile a member of the First Canadian\nParachute Battalion. He became\nmanager of the G.F. Strong\nRehabilitation Centre in 1948 after\nserving as office manager for the\nrehabilitation division of the\nDepartment of Veterans' Affairs.\nBora Laskin was a noted legal\neducator before being appointed to\nthe bench as a judge of the Court of\nAppeal of the Supreme Court of\nOntario in 1965.\nMr. Laskin was appointed to the\nSupreme Court of Canada in 1970 and\nthree years later was named Canada's\nchief justice.\nElly Ameling has been\ninternationally acclaimed for the\npurity, warmth and passion of her\nvoice as a singer of songs and oratorio\nby classical and modern composers\nand for her natural grace and dignity\nas an opera singer.\nBorn in Rotterdam, she had won\ntwo major European awards in voice\ncompetition by the age of 20. During\nher career as a concert artist, she has\nsung with orchestras on all five\ncontinents and recorded lieder,\noratorio and cantatas by composers\nranging from Bach to Bruckner and\nMahler.\nTommy Douglas was educated at\nBrandon College, McMaster\nUniversity, where he received the\ndegrees of Bachelor and Master of\nArts, and the University of Chicago\nbefore entering the Baptist ministry.\nHe was first elected to the federal\nHouse of Commons in 1935 and\nresigned as an MP in 1944 to lead the\nCCF party in Saskatchewan. He was\npremier of that province until 1961,\nwhen he was elected national leader of\nthe NDP, a post he held until 1971.\nFrom 1962 until his retirement from\npolitics in May, 1979, he represented\nthe B.C. constituencies of Burnaby -\nCoquitlam and Nanaimo-Cowichan-\nThe Islands in the federal house.\nHarold Wright, who heads one of\nCanada's best-known mining\nengineering firms, has been honored\non numerous occasions for his\nprofessional activities and for his\ninvolvement in amateur sport in\nCanada.\nThird-year Arts student Gitta Tobjinski couldn't resist pausing for a moment\nduring a recent sunny spell to have a close look at blossoming cherry trees beside\nUBC's Civil and Mechanical Engineering Building.\nClyne back as chancellor\nJohn Valentine Clyne, a former\nmember of the Supreme Court of B.C.\nand retired chairman and chief\nexecutive officer of MacMillan\nBloedel, will serve a second three-year\nterm as chancellor of the University.\nHe was an easy winner over college\nteacher Stan Persky in a mail ballot of\nUBC's Convocation (graduates, faculty\nand Senate).\nClyne received 9,022 or 69 per cent\nof the 13,084 votes. Persky tallied\n4,062 votes, 31 per cent. Only 18 per\ncent of the eligible voters cast ballots.\nThe same men contested the\nchancellorship three years ago, Clyne\nRoom vacant? help the hospital\nWould you like to help people from\nall over the province?\nRent your spare accommodation to\nrelatives of patients at the new acute\ncare unit of UBC.\nSome of the patients at the 240-bed\nunit are referred by their doctors from\nout of town, and are sometimes\naccompanied by relatives who need\ntemporary accommodation near the\nUniversity.\nAnyone interested in helping with\ntemporary accommodation should\nphone Ms. Anna Ruth McMaster,\nsocial worker, acute care unit, at\n228-7063.\nwinning then 10,359 votes to 4,275.\nClyne, who graduated from UBC in\n1923, served three terms on the UBC\nSenate from 1951 to 1960. Persky was\na student at UBC from 1966 to 1973\nand holds two UBC degrees.\nAs chancellor, Clyne also will serve\non the Senate and Board of Governors\nof the University, and will preside at\nceremonial occasions.\nThe chancellor is eligible to hold\noffice for a maximum of six years and\nreceives no salary or any other fee or\nhonorarium for services to the\nUniversity.\nAlso elected by Convocation on the\nchancellorship ballot were 11 members\nof Senate, who will serve three-year\nterms.\nElected from a field of 15 nominees\nwere (an asterisk indicates re-election):\nWilliam H. Birmingham*, Mary F.\nBishop*, Grant D. Burnyeat, Patricia\nM. Fulton*, William M. Keenleyside*,\nAnne E. Macdonald, Elaine\nMcAndrew*. James F. Mc Williams*,\nRuth E. Robinson, Charlotte L.V.\nWarren* and G. Vernon Wellburn. I ' . t I \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 I . ' > I ', 1 I i it.\nUBC Reports January 21, 1981\n\u00E2\u0080\u009E Can computers think?\nBetty Chan of UBC's Department of Finance received an award of merit from\nLower Mainland United Way for service above and beyond the call of duty\nduring the 1980 fund-raising campaign. On hand for presentation by United\nWay campaign co-ordinator Patrick Oswald, second right, were (left to right)\nvice-president Jim Kennedy, assistant accountant Norm Housten, and\naccounting and insurance supervisor John Lomax, who chaired UBC United\nWay campaign. Faculty, staff and students donated a record $102,172, $2,172\nover target and 18 per cent above 1979 total.\nArtificial intelligence, one of the\nmost exciting topics in computer\nscience but one of potential concern,\nwill be examined thoroughly in a\nweek-long international conference at\nUBC in August.\nThe 1981 International Joint\nConference on Artificial Intelligence\n(IJCAI-81) will bring together leading\ncomputer science researchers from\nBritain, France, the Soviet Union,\nItaly, Japan, Germany, Canada and\nthe United States.\nA research and development exhibit\nprogram being held in conjunction\nwith the conference, Aug. 24-28, will\nGraduation cards;\nthis is the week\nIf you're expecting to graduate this\nyear and haven't yet filed an\n\"Application for Graduation\" card with\nthe Registrar's Office, you'd better do\nsomething about it this week.\nUnless you submit a card, your\nname won't appear on the list of\ndegree candidates that goes to Senate\nfor approval in May.\nIf you haven't received a card in the\nmail, you can get one at the\nRegistrar's Office in The General\nServices Administration Building. If\nyou're a graduate student ask your\ngraduate advisor for one.\nRemember \u00E2\u0080\u0094 no application, no\ndegree.\nUDC\nfeature some of the latest international\ndevelopments in artificial intelligence\nhardware and software. A one-day\ntutorial program, Aug. 24, will\nexplore the most significant\ncontemporary elements of artificial\nintelligence.\nDeadline for submitting papers for\nthe conference is March 1. If you are\ninterested, contact Richard Rosenberg\nin Computer Science, 228-3065.\nYEP says yes\nto student jobs\nThe provincial government's Youth\nEmployment Program will be\noperating again in the summer of 1981\nand project applications should be\navailable in faculty offices this week.\nThe program, which pays students\nto carry out projects that further their\ncareer goals, pays first and second-year\nstudents $650 a month, third, fourth\nand fifth-year students $700 a month\nand graduate students $775 a month\nduring the period of May 1 to Aug.\n31.\nYEP administrator Dick Shirran,\ndirector of UBC's Student Counselling\nand Resource Centre, said that all\nprojects must carry the signature of a\nUniversity faculty member or senior\nadministrator who is prepared to act\nas a project supervisor during the term\nof the project.\nCalcndaR\n8 students submit\nConstitution brief\nEight members of a UBC history\nclass have submitted a 14-page brief\non the Canadian Constitution to the\nJoint Committee of Parliament on the\nConstitution, in which they claim that\nunilateral action by the federal\ngovernment will be at the expense of\nlong-range interests of Canadians.\n\"The federal government is\nattempting to take a symbolic step to\nnationhood and yet it is breaching a\nconstitutional convention developed in\nCanada regarding provincial\nconsent . . .,\" the brief states.\nThe students, all members of Prof.\nMurray Greenwood's History 420 class,\npropose the following formula for the\npatriation and creation of a new\nconstitution:\n1. Simple patriation of the British\nNorth America Act, with renunciation\nby the British Parliament of all\nlegislative power over Canadian\naffairs;\n2. A national referendum to choose\neither a federally-proposed amending\nformula, a provincially-proposed\namending formula, or a national\nreferendum with regional majorities;\n3. An elected constituent assembly.\n\"The only federal action would be\npatriation which has already received\nprovincial consent,\" the brief says.\n\"The actual amendment of the\nconstitution would be carried out\nunder a new and popularly-decided\namending procedure.\nSome proposals the students would\nlike to see embodied in the\nconstitution:\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 The right of the deaf to a\ntranslator in any court proceeding;\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 Guarantee of protection against\nunreasonable search and seizure;\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 Limiting of Emergency Power;\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 The right of presumption of\ninnocence;\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 Protection against retroactive\ntribunals and guilt by association;\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 Protection of native language\nrights;\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 Protection against discrimination\nbased on marital status, sexual\npreference, and physical and mental\nhandicaps. This should extend to\nprivate and public sectors of the\neconomy, particularly accommodation,\nLibrary worker dies\nFuneral services were held Feb. 6 for\nMr. John Uzaraga, a UBC library\nemployee who died Feb. 1 at the age\nof 47.\nMr. Uzaraga, a Burnaby resident,\njoined UBC as a stack attendent in\nSedgewick Library in 1971 and\nbecame stack supervisor in Woodward\nLibrary the following year.\nHe is survived by his wife, Juliana,\nand three children.\nservices, and employment.\nThe students stated in their brief\nthat there were many issues on which\nthey were unable to reach agreement.\nThese included abortion and capital\npunishment, and criminal conviction\nand pregnancy as bases of\ndiscrimination.\nThe brief was prepared and\nsubmitted by students Douglas Archer,\nColin Beairsto, Richard Gee, Ann\nHayward, Mark Keelan, Sandra\nLeonard, Peter Seidl and Murray\nWolf.\nNew student\nleaders take\noffice today\nOutgoing and incoming members of\nthe Alma Mater Society executive will\nmeet today at 12:30 p.m. in the\nconversation pit of the Student Union\nBuilding for an annual general\nmeeting. Students, staff and faculty\nare invited.\nThe new AMS council will be led by\npresident Marlea Haugen, who served\nas vice-president of the outgoing\ncouncil.\nOther members are Peter Mitchell,\nvice-president; Bill Maslechko, director\nof administration; Jane Loftus, finance\ndirector and James Hollis, director of\nexternal affairs.\nMs. Haugen said the council's first\npriority will be to reorganize the\nstructure of the AMS.\n\"The organization has grown so\nmuch that changes are needed in the\npresent system in order for it to work,\"\nshe said. \"Our first concern will be\nimplementing these changes.\"\nTAs, University\nreach agreement\nA memorandum of agreement has\nbeen signed by University negotiators\nand representatives of Local 2278 of\nthe Canadian Union of Public\nEmployees (the new union of teaching\nassistants).\nThe contract runs from Sept. 1,\n1980, to Aug. 31, 1981, and covers\nwages and working conditions for\nmore than 1,000 teaching assistants\nand markers at UBC.\nWages run from $6.15 an hour for\nmarkers to $13.30 an hour for\ngraduate teaching assistants who hold\na master's degree.\nMeanwhile, Local 2278 has applied\nto the Labor Relations Board for\ncertification to represent the 12 preschool teachers and assistants at the\nBerwick Centre.\nThe Vancouver Institute.\nSaturday, Feb. 21\nUrban Revolutions: Past\nand Present. Prof.\nChristopher R.\nFriedrichs, History,\nUBC.\nSaturday, Feb. 28\nThe Threat of Overpopulation. Dr. Richard\nJ. Blandau, Biological\nStructure, University of\nWashington.\nBoth lectures are in Lecture Hall 2, Woodward\nInstructional Resources Centre at 8:15 p.m.\nUBC Calendar Deadlines\nFor events in the weeks of March 8 and March\n15, material must be submitted not later than\n4 p.m. on Feb. 26.\nSend notices to Information Services, 6328\nMemorial Rd\u00C2\u00BB (Old Administration Building).\nFor further information, call 228-3131.\nSUNDAY, FEB. 22\nB.C. Gardens.\nSixth in a series of CBC television programs\nfeaturing the UBC Botanical Gardens as an anchor point for a province-wide look at horticulture. Hosts: David Tarrant, Botanical Garden educational coordinator, and CBC personality Bob Switzer. Today's program looks at\nBradner Daffodils. CBC, Channel 3. 1:00 p.m.\nCentre for Continuing Education\nLecture.\nA Day with Peter Caddy: The Findhorn Community and Beyond \u00E2\u0080\u0094 New Phases. Peter\nCaddy, co-founder of the Findhorn Community\nin northern Scotland. Admission is $20; $15 for\nstudents. For more information, call 228-2181,\nlocal 261. Lecture Hall 2, Woodward Instructional Resources Centre. 2:00 p.m.\nMONDAY, FEB. 23\nCancer Research Seminar.\nA Mathematical Model of Drug Resistance.\nAndrew J. Coldman, statistician, Epidemiology,\nCancer Control Agency of B.C. Lecture\nTheatre, B.C. Cancer Research Centre, 601 W.\n10th Ave. 12:00 noon.\nComputing Centre/Classics Lecture.\nComputers and the Study of Greek Statuary. Dr.\nEleanor Guralnick, Archaeological Institute of\nAmerica. Room 104, Lasserre Building.\n12:30 p.m.\nHispanic and Italian Studies Slide\nLecture.\nMachu Picchu e Italica: el motivo arqueologico\nen la poesia epico-dialectica de Neruda. Prof.\nJesus Lopez-Pacheco, University of Western Ontario. Room 202, Buchanan Building.\n12:30 p.m.\nContinued on page 7 UBC Reports February 18, 1981\nUDC\nCalcndaR\nContinued from page 2\nWorld University Services of Canada.\nSelf-Reliance, a film about China's heritage\nfrom pre-revolutionary industrial development.\nRoom 205, Buchanan Building. 12:30 p.m.\nPlanetary Economics Series.\nThe Grains of Conflict. Room 308, Library Processing Building. 12:30 p.m.\nApplied Mathematics Seminar.\nDiffraction of Low Frequency Elastic Waves.\nProf. V.T. Buchwald, dean of Science, University of New South Wales, Sidney, Australia.\nRoom 203, Mathematics Building. 3:45 p.m.\nBiochemical Discussion Group.\nExpression of Agrobacterium tumefaciens\nT-DNA in Crown Gall Tumors. Dr. Joan\nMcPherson, Biochemistry, University of\nWashington, Seattle. Lecture Hall 3, Woodward\nInstructional Resources Centre. 4:00 p.m.\nAstronomy Seminar.\nGiant Molecular Clouds: Tracers of Galactic\nRotation. Dr. W.L.H. Shuter, Physics, UBC.\nRoom 318, Hennings Building. 4:00 p.m.\nInternational House.\nEnglish Language Evening. Gate 4. 7:00 p.m.\nArcheology Lecture.\nGreece and Egypt in the Seventh and Sixth Centuries B.C. Dr. Eleanor Guralnick, Archaeological Institute of America. Theatre,\nMuseum of Anthropology. 8:00 p.m.\nImmunology Seminar.\nActivation of Latent Herpes Simplex Virus in\nthe Central Nervous System of Mice Following\nImmunosuppression. Dr. Lome Kastrukoff,\nMedicine, UBC. Salons B and C, Faculty Club.\n8:00 p.m.\nTUESDAY, FEB. 24\nIsrael Week.\nJerusalem: City of Peace. Prof. Michael Turner,\nBzalel Jerusalem Arts Academy, Israel. Admission is free. Rooms 207/209, Student Union\nBuilding. 12:30 p.m.\nKoerner Foundation Lecture.\nThe Populist Contribution to Democratic\nTheory. Prof. Lawrence Goodwyn, History,\nDuke University, Durham, N.C. Room 100,\nBuchanan Building. 12:30 p.m.\nFrench Lecture.\nTo Begin with a Question: Beckett's L'innom-\nmable. Prof. Brian T. Fitch, University of\nToronto. Room 102, Buchanan Building.\n12:30 p.m.\nBotany Seminar.\nTopic Vegetation Mapping. Prof, emeritus\nA.W. Kuchler, Geography, University of Kansas. Room 3219, Biological Sciences Building.\n12:30 p.m.\nAsian Research Noon-Hour Series.\nHinduism: The God of Song and How Death\nCame to Earth. Two films. Room 106,\nBuchanan Building. 12:30 p.m.\nWeekly Weather Briefing.\nWeekly lunch hour weather map discussions are\nheld every Tuesday. All interested students,\nfaculty and staff are invited to attend. Room\n215, Geography Building. 12:30 p.m.\nThe Doctor and the Others Series.\nDisease, Diagnosis and Treatment: The Example\nof Syphilis. Dr. John Norris. Lecture Hall 4,\nWoodward Instructional Resources Centre.\n12:30 p.m.\nPolitical Science Lecture.\nThe Conservative Experiment in Britain. Prof.\nJack Hayward, Politics, University of Hull,\nEngland. Room 205, Buchanan Building.\n12:30 p.m.\nSlavonic Studies Lecture.\nThe Unification of Russian Literature: Emigre\nand Soviet. Prof. Carl Proffer, University of\nMichigan. Room 204, Buchanan Building.\n12:30 p.m.\nModern Chemical Science Seminar.\nSolvated Electrons. Dr. D.C. Walker, Chemistry,\nUBC. Room 225, Chemistry Building. 1:30 p.m.\nElectrical Engineering Seminar.\nMicrotel Pacific Research \u00E2\u0080\u0094 A New Presence in\nBritish Columbia. Dr. John Madden, president,\nMicrotel Pacific Research Ltd., Burnaby, B.C.\nRoom 402, Electrical Engineering Building.\n1:30 p.m.\nOceanography Seminar.\nOcean Turbulence. Dr. T.R. Osborn,\nOceanography, UBC. Room 1465, Biological\nSciences Building. 3:30 p.m.\nKoerner Foundation Seminar.\nThe Populists: Were They Right? An Assessment\nof the Populist Critique of the Gilded Age. Prof.\nLawrence Goodwyn, History, Duke University,\nDurham, N.C. Room 1210, Buchanan Building.\n3:30 p.m.\nManagement Science Seminar.\nOptimal Control of Diffusion Processes: An Introduction and an Example. Prof. R. Vickson,\nManagement Science, University of Waterloo.\nRoom 312, Angus Building. 3:30 p.m.\nSlavonic Studies Lecture.\nVillage Life in West Ukraine After the Second\nWorld War. David Marples. Room 219,\nBuchanan Building. 3:30 p.m.\nBiomembrane Discussion Group\nSeminar.\nProton Translocating ATPase of E. coli. Dr.\nP.D. Bragg, Biochemistry, UBC. Lecture Hall\n1, Woodward Instructional Resources Centre.\n4:00 p.m.\nChemistry Research Conference\nSeries.\nStudies in Plant-Tissue Cultures: Potential\nSources of Clinically Important Anti-Tumor\nAgents. Dr. J.P. Kutney, Chemistry, UBC.\nRoom 250, Chemistry Building. 4:30 p.m.\nPhysiology Seminar.\nImmunological Studies in Multiple Sclerosis. Dr.\nD. Paty, Neurology, UBC. Room 2605, Block\nA, Medical Sciences Building. 4:30 p.m.\nInternational House.\nSpanish Language Evening. Gate 4. 7:00 p.m.\nUBC Public Affairs.\nThe Constitutional Debate: The British Connection. Dr. Murray Greenwood, History, UBC,\nwith host Gerald Savory. Cable 10, Vancouver\nCablevision. (Program will be repeated on Feb.\n25 at 3:00 p.m.) 9:00 p.m.\nWEDNESDAY, FEB. 25\nScience and the Citizen.\nSolving Diseases of the Brain. Dr. Patrick L.\nMcGeer, Neurological Sciences, UBC, and\nMinister of Universities, Science, and Communications. Auditorium, Robson Square Media\nCentre. 12.00 noon.\nSimulation and Modelling in\nScience.\nModelling Materials According to Their Internal\nSymmetries. Prof. H.J. Weinitschke, Mathematics, University of Erlangen. Room 105,\nMathematics Building. 12:30 p.m.\nIsrael Week.\nIsraeli dancing and falafel lunch. Instruction\nfrom Karen Kay. Party Room, Student Union\nBuilding. 12:30 p.m.\nFaculty Association Meeting.\nThe Agreement on Conditions of Appointment\nfor members in the Faculty of Arts. Dr. Richard\nSpencer, Civil Engineering, UBC. Room 204,\nBuchanan Building. 12:30 p.m.\nWednesday Noon-Hour Concert.\nMusic of Dvorak and Vivaldi. UBC Chamber\nStrings, with John Loban, leader. Recital Hall,\nMusic Building. 12:30 p.m.\nPharmacology Seminar.\nHypercystinemia and Psychosis: Further Clues to\nBiochemical Causes of Mental Illness. Rooms\nG41-42, Woodward Instructional Resources Centre. 12:30 p.m.\nThe Doctor and the Others Series.\nPreventive and Occupational Medicine in the\nScientific Era. Dr. John Norris. Lecture Hall 1,\nWoodward Instructional Resources Centre.\n12:30 p.m.\nInternational House.\nRumpelstilschen, a German marionette theatre\nperformance. Admission is free. Ballroom, International House. 12:30 p.m.\nWomen's Week.\nWomen in Western Art, a slide show presented\nby Avis Lang Rosenberg. Room 104, Lasserre\nBuilding. 12:30 p.m.\nAscent of Man Series.\nThe Drive for Power. Room 308, Library Processing Building. 12:30 p.m.\nSlavonic Studies Lecture.\nThe Double World of Vladimir Nabokov. Prof.\nCarl Proffer, University of Michigan. Room 102,\nBuchanan Building. 12:30 p.m.\nSlavonic Studies Lecture.\nNadezhda Mandelstam and the Widows of\nRussia. Prof. Carl Proffer. Room 2224,\nBuchanan Building. 3:30 p.m.\nBiochemical Discussion Group\nSeminar.\nRecent Work on Gene Transfer Using DNA. Dr.\nLou Simonovich, Hospital for Sick Children,\nToronto. Lecture Hall 5, Woodward Instructional Resources Centre. 4:00 p.m.\nAnimal Resource Ecology Seminar.\nHide-and-Seek or Equilibrium? A Recent Look\nat Prickly Pear and Cactoblastis in Australia.\nRoom 32, Hut B-2. 4:00 p.m.\nWomen's Week.\nBeer Garden. Room 125, Student Union\nBuilding. For more information, call 228-2163.\n5:00 p.m.\nUBC Aqua Society Marine Biology\nPresentation.\nMarine Life in B.C. Waters. Rick Harbo,\nmarine biologist and underwater photographer,\nVancouver. Lecture Hall 1, Woodward Instructional Resources Centre. 7:30 p.m.\nCinemawest.\nRepulsion. Admission is $1 with AMS card.\nAuditorium, Student Union Building. 8:00 p.m.\nMackay Lecture Series.\nNorthern Pipelines: A Decade's Perspective.\nJohn G. Fyles, deputy director-general, The\nGeological Survey of Canada. Room 100,\nGeography Building. 8:00 p.m.\nTHURSDAY, FEB. 26\nMedical Grand Rounds.\nCoccidiomycosis \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Recent Cases at VGH, An\nUpdate on Diagnosis and Management. Dr.\nA.W. Chow, Dr. W.R. Bowie and Dr. M.J.\nGribble. B Lecture Hall, Vancouver General\nHospital. 9:00 a.m.\nBlood Donor Clinic.\nA blood donor clinic, co-sponsored by the\nForestry Undergraduate Society, will take place\nin the conversation pit of the Student Union\nBuilding from 10:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.\nSUB Special Luncheon.\nUBC Dietetics 4 presents \"A Taste of Paris\" with\nquiche Lorraine, salad, french onion soup and\nle gateau sans nom. Snack Bar, Student Union\nBuilding. 11:30 a.m. to 1:00 p.m.\nChemistry Seminar.\nCyclic Photochemistry \u00E2\u0080\u0094 The Odyssey of an\nYlide. Prof. Anthony M. Trozzolo, Science,\nUniversity of Notre Dame, Ind. Room 124,\nChemistry Building. 11:30 a.m.\nChanging Retirement Policies\nSeminar.\nSheryl Bond, Employee Relations/Retirement\nconsultant will speak on issues facing managers\nand executives who design and implement\npolicies on human resources or company\nbenefits. Fee is $48 (includes luncheon). For\nmore information, call 228-2181. Chateau\nGranville. 12:00 noon to 5:00 p.m.\nCentre for Human Settlements\nSpecial Presentation.\nSplendor Undiminished. Room 308, Library\nProcessing Building. 12:30 p.m.\nPolitical Science Lecture.\nHow United the Kingdom? Britain in the 1980s.\nProf. Jack Hayward, Politics, University of Hull,\nEngland. Room 204, Buchanan Building.\n12:30 p.m.\nFaculty Association Information\nSession.\nVenturesome Investing. Room 157, Law\nBuilding. 12:30 p.m.\nIsrael Week.\nZionism \u00E2\u0080\u0094 What is it? Sincha Jacobovici. Room\n203, Buchanan Building. 12:30 p.m.\nFrench Lecture.\nL'Etranger de Camus. Prof. Brian T. Fitch,\nUniversity of Toronto. Room 202, Buchanan\nBuilding. 12:30.p.m.\nFine Arts Faculty Lecture.\nSacrifice for the Advance of Gothic Art: The\nReturn of the Son of St. Germer. Marc Pessin.\nRoom 104, Lasserre Building. 12:30 p.m.\nThe Doctor and the Others Series.\nPreventive and Occupational Medicine in the\nScientific Era. Dr. John Norris. Lecture Hall 1,\nWoodward Instructional Resources Centre.\n12:30 p.m.\nSoutheast Asia Seminar.\nThe Thais of Thailand: Origins and Homeland.\nJim Placzek, Linguistics, UBC. Penthouse,\nBuchanan Building. 12:30 p.m.\nCinemawest.\nRepulsion. Admission is $1 with AMS card.\nAuditorium, Student Union Building.\n12:30 p.m.\nPanel Discussion.\nWomen in Business Administration. Sponsored\nby the Women Students' Office. Speakers: L.\nBinkert, J. Claxton, J. De Roo, J. Kaufman and\nG. Sharp. Room 102, Buchanan Building.\n12:30 p.m.\nEconomics Lecture.\nOntario: Between Alberta and the Deep Blue\nSea. Prof. D. Purvis, Queen's University. Room\n100, Buchanan Building. 12:30 p.m.\nAsian Centre Inaugural Year\nActivities.\nA performance of classical dance of India.\nMenaka Thakkar, Toronto. Upper Lounge,\nInternational House. 12:30 p.m.\nPharmaceutical Sciences Seminar.\nCardiovascular Effects of Adriamycin Toxicity.\nDr. S. Rabkin, Medicine/Cardiology,\nShaughnessy Hospital. Lecture Hall 3,\nWoodward Instructional Resources Centre.\n12:30 p.m.\nResource Management Science/\nSoil Science Lecture.\nWater Resource Management \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Lake Titicaca,\nPeru. Dr. T. Northcote. Room 154, MacMillan\nBuilding. 12:30 p.m.\nPhysics Condensed Matter Seminar.\nHeat Mirrors. Robert Parsons, UBC. Room 318,\nHennings Building. 2:30 p.m.\nSlavonic Studies Lecture.\nThe Immediate Past and Future of Russian\nLiterature. Prof. Carl Proffer, University of\nMichigan. Room 2224, Buchanan Building.\n3:30 p.m.\nFrench Lecture.\nNarcisse interprete: La Chute comme modele\nhermeneutique. Prof. Brian T. Fitch, University\nof Toronto. Penthouse, Buchanan Building.\n3:30 p.m.\nPhysics Colloquium.\nSurface Physics Applied to Immunology. Dr. I.\nGiaever, Research and Development Centre,\nGeneral Electric Co., Schenectady, N.Y. Room\n201, Hennings Building. 4:00 p.m.\nBiochemical Discussion Group\nSeminar.\nGenes and Junk Sequencing in Human Genomic\nDNA. Dr. Susumu Ohno, City of Hope National\nMedical Center, Duarte, Calif. Lecture Hall 5,\nWoodward Instructional Resources Centre.\n4:00 p.m.\nZoology Seminar.\nDiets in the Deep Sea: Abyssal Autotrophy by\nHydrothermal Vent Animals. Dr. George\nSomero, Scripps Institute of Oceanography, La\nJolla, Calif. Room 2000, Biological Sciences\nBuilding. 4:30 p.m.\nAsian Research China Seminar.\nChina's Southern Maritime Claims \u00E2\u0080\u0094 The\nDispute Over Paracel and Spratley Islands. Dr.\nMarwyn Samuels, Geography, UBC. Penthouse,\nBuchanan Building. 4:30 p.m.\nInternational House.\nMovement to Sound. Open to all. Upper\nLounge, International House. 6:00 p.m.\nSubfilms.\nThe Black Stallion. Continues until Sunday,\nMarch 1. Showings are 7:00 and 9:30 p.m. on\nFriday and Saturday, and 7:00 p.m. on Sunday.\nAdmission is $1 with AMS card. Auditorium,\nStudent Union Building. 7:00 p.m.\nCUSO South Africa Night.\nGenerations of Resistance. Admission is $1. You\ncan pre-register by calling 228-4886. Upper\nLounge, International House. 7:30 p.m.\nFRIDAY, FEB. 27\nFrench Lecture.\nReflexions sur l'enseignement en France, en\nAngleterre, aux Etats-Unis et au Canada. Prof.\nBrian T. Fitch, University of Toronto. Penthouse, Buchanan Building. 10:30 a.m.\nIsrael Week.\nExperiencing the Holy Land. Rami Raz. Admission is free. Hillel House. 12:30 p.m.\nCollegium Musicum Ensemble.\nMusic of the French Baroque. Margaret Kuhl,\nsoprano; James Fankhauser, tenor; John Sawyer,\nviolin; Doreen Oke, harpsichord; and Nan\nMackie, viola da gamba. Recital Hall, Music\nBuilding. 12:30 p.m.\nDevelopmental Medicine Seminar.\nInteractions Between Vascular Smooth Muscle\nand Autonomic Nerve Terminals. Dr. Mary\nTodd, Anatomy, UBC. First Floor Seminar\nRoom, Willow Pavilion, VGH. 12:30 p.m.\nSigma Xi Club Lecture.\nIn vitro Fertilization and the Test Tube Baby.\nProf. Richard J. Blandau, Biological Structure,\nUniversity of Washington. Lecture Hall 6,\nWoodward Instructional Resources Centre.\n12:30 p.m.\nMedical Genetics Seminar.\nCongenital Heart Disease in the Adult Noonan's\nSyndrome. Dr. V. Huckle. Fourth Floor Conference Room, Health Centre for Children.\n1:00 p.m.\nLinguistics Colloquium.\nSome Properties of Natural Languages That\nWould Follow From the Theory of Phrase Structure. Prof. Geoffrey Pujlum, University College,\nLondon. Room 2225, Buchanan Building.\n3:30 p.m.\nPolitical Science Lecture.\nPressure Groups in Great Britain: Unions in Britain. Prof. Jack Hayward, Politics, University of\nHull, England. Penthouse, Buchanan Building.\n3:30 p.m.\nInternational House.\nFolk Night. Gate 4. 7:30 p.m.\nInternational House.\nSlides and discussion on Nepal. Admission is\n50c. Everyone welcome. Upper Lounge, International House. 8:00 p.m.\nWomen's Week. %:.\nFeminist Art and Literature. Robin Morgan.\nFollowed by a wine and cheese reception in the\nWomen Student's Lounge. Tickets are $3.00;\n$2.50 for students. For more information, call\n228-2163. Lecture Hall 2, Woodward Instructional Resources Centre. 8:00 p.m. ,\nV\nContinued on page 8 UBC Reports February 18, 1981\nUDC\nCalcndaR\ncontinued .\nGraduation Recital.\nMusic by Sherilyn Fritz. Chamber orchestra,\nChamber singers, percussion, voice, solo flute\nand actor, electronic tape and dancer. Recital\nHall, Music Building. 8:00 p.m.\nIce Hockey.\nUniversity of Alberta Golden Bears are in town\nfor. a two-game series in the Thunderbird\nWinter Sports Centre. 8:00 p.m.\nMen's Basketball.\nThe UBC Thunderbirds and the University of\nLethbridge meet in the first of two weekend\ngames in the War Memorial Gymnasium.\n8:50 p.m.\nSATURDAY, FEB. 28\nIce Hockey.\nThe second of two weekend games between the\nUBC Thunderbirds and the University of\nAlberta Golden Bears. Thunderbird Winter\nSports Centre. 8:00 p.m.\nMen's Basketball.\nThe UBC Thunderbirds meet the University of\nLethbridge in the second of two weekend\nmatches. War Memorial Gymnasium. 8:30 p.m.\nSUNDAY, MARCH 1\nB.C. Gardens.\nSeventh in a series of CBC television\nprograms featuring the UBC Botanical Garden\nas an anchor point for a province-wide look\nat horticulture. Hosts: David Tarrant,\nBotanical Garden educational co-ordinator,\nand CBC personality Bob Switzer. Today's\nprogram looks at Kelowna Gardens and\nHorticulture. CBC, Channel 3. 11:30 a.m.\nGuest Pianist.\nMusic of Beethoven, Schumann, Franck and\nChopin. Guest artist, Ivan Moravec, piano. For\nfurther information, call 228-3113. Recital\nHall, Music Building. 8:00 p.m.\nMONDAY, MARCH 2\nRetirement Planning Workshop.\nThe Centre for Continuing Education is\nsponsoring a two-day workshop to train\nretirement planning instructors. Fee is $135\n(includes cost of lunches and materials).\nContinues on Tuesday, March 3. For more\ninformation, call 228-2181. Pre-registration\nrequired. Conference Room, Centre for\nContinuing Education. 9:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.\nboth days.\nAsian Studies Lecture.\nThe Ramayana as a Source of Legitimization.\nProf. Romila Thapar, Jawaharlal Nehru\nUniversity, New Delhi. Room 304, Brock Hall.\n9:30 a.m.\nHispanic and Italian Studies\nLecture.\nWoman, Cinema and Language. Prof. Teresa\nde Lauretis, University of Wisconsin. Room 202,\nBuchanan Building. 12:30 p.m.\nWorld University Services of Canada.\nRevolution or Death, a film about the rise of\nrevolutionary movements in Central America\nand El Salvador. Room 205, Buchanan\nBuilding. 12:30 p.m.\nPlanetary Economics Series.\nHarbour. Room 308, Library Processing\nBuilding. 12:30 p.m.\nComputing Centre Lecture.\nBasic FMT. The first in a series of six lectures\non the text processing language FMT, by Ms. V.\nLyon-Lamb of the UBC Computing Centre. You\ncan pre-register by calling 228-6611. Room 447,\nComputer Sciences Building. 2:30 p.m.\nApplied Mathematics Seminar.\nHow Can We Tell if a Given Nonlinear P.D.E.\nis Equivalent to a Linear P.D.E.? Sukeyuki\nKumei, Mathematics, UBC. Room 203,\nMathematics Building. 3:45 p.m.\nAstronomy Seminar.\nFormation of Galaxy Clusters. Dr. R.H. Miller,\nAstronomy and Astrophysics, University of\nChicago. Room 318, Hennings Building.\n4:00 p.m.\nZoology \"Physiology Group\"\nSeminar.\nBioluminescence in Two Members of the Marine\nMacroplankton, Hippopodius and Pyrosoma,\nEmphasizing Physiological Control Mechanisms\nand the Integration of Light Emission with\nOther Behavioral Acts. Dr. G.O. Mackie,\nBiology, UVic. Room 2449, Biological Sciences\nBuilding. 4:30 p.m.\nPhysiology Seminar.\nNoise and Single-Channel Measurement of\nAmino Acid Induced Ionic Channels in\nVertebrate Central Neurones. Dr. D.A.\nMathers, Laboratory of Neurophysiology, NIH,\nBethesda, Maryland. Room 2605, Block A,\nMedical Sciences Building. 4:30 p.m.\nPoetry Reading.\nElizabeth Brewster. Sponsored by the\nDepartment of Creative Writing and The\nLeague of Canadian Poets with the Assistance of\nthe Canada Council. Admission free. Penthouse,\nBuchanan Building. 8:00 p.m.\ny:\nTUESDAY, MARCH 3\nComputing Centre Lecture.\nIntroduction to Using MTS: Commands, Files\nand Terminals (section 2). The first in a series\nof 12 lectures by Mr. M. Fox of the UBC\nComputing Centre. You can pre-register by\ncalling 228-6611. Room 305A, Computer\nSciences Building. 9:30 a.m.\nAsian Studies Lecture.\nIdeology and the Interpretation of Early Indian\nHistory. Prof. Romila Thapar, Jawaharlal\nNehru University, New Delhi, India. Room 102,\nLasserre Building. 12:30 p.m.\nAsian Research Noon-Hour Series.\nRural Development in China. Dr. Ben Stavis,\nMichigan State University. Room 106,\nBuchanan Building. 12:30 p.m.\nWeekly Weather Briefing.\nWeekly lunch hour weather map discussions are\nheld every Tuesday. All interested students,\nfaculty and staff are invited to attend. Room\n215, Geography Building. 12:30 p.m.\nHispanic and Italian Studies\nLecture.\nExile: Some Literary Responses. Prof. Claudio\nGuillen, Harvard University. Room 205,\nBuchanan Building. 12:30 p.m.\nThe Doctor and the Others Series.\nMedical Social Responsibility: Its Roots and\nDevelopment. Dr. John Norris. Lecture Hall 4,\nWoodward Instructional Resources Centre.\n12:30 p.m.\nKoerner Foundation Lecture.\nThe Impact of the Women's Movement on\nContemporary Culture. Judge Nancy Morrison.\nCo-sponsored by the Women Students' Office.\nFor more information, call 228-2415. Penthouse,\nBuchanan Building. 12:30 p.m.\nBotany Department Seminar.\nCarboniferous Coal-Swamp Communities:\nArborescent Lycopod Evolutionary Patterns. Dr.\nWilliam DiMichele, Botany, University of\nWashington. Room 3219, Biological Sciences\nBuilding. 12:30 p.m.\nModern Chemical Science Seminar.\nCrystal Structure Studies of Solid State\nReactions. Dr. J. Trotter. Room 225, Chemistry\nBuilding. 1:30 p.m.\nOceanography Seminar.\nRare-Earth Elements in Ferromanganese\nNodules. Dr. S.E. Calvert, Oceanography, UBC.\nRoom 1465, Biological Sciences Building.\n3:30 p.m.\nBiomembrane Discussion Group.\nFunctional Rules of Lipid in Membranes. Dr.\nP.R. Cullis, Biochemistry, UBC. Lecture Hall 1,\nWoodward Instructional Resources Centre.\n4:00 p.m.\nPhysiology Seminar.\nC.N.S. Regulation of the Endocrine Pancreas.\nDr. D. Porte, Endocrinology and Metabolism,\nVeterans Administration Hospital, Seattle.\nRoom 2605, Block A, Medical Sciences\nBuilding. 4:30 p.m.\nChemistry Research Conference\nSeminar.\nSelectivity in Organic Synthesis. Dr. B.M. Trost,\nChemistry, University of Wisconsin, Madison.\nRoom 250, Chemistry Building. 4:30 p.m.\nFaculty Women's Club.\nThe Faculty Women's Club Will Celebrate the\n25th Anniversary of the Adoption by UBC of\nSopron University in Hungary with a Special\nHungarian Dinner and Entertainment at the\nFaculty Club. For more information call,\n261-9007 or 738-6152. 7:00 p.m.\nUniversity Chamber Ensembles.\nMusic for Woodwind Ensembles with Keyboard\nand for Saxophone Quartet. Ronald de Kant,\nPaul Douglas and David Branter, directors.\nRecital Hall, Music Building. 8:00 p.m.\nWEDNESDAY, MARCH 4\nHispanic and Italian Studies\nLecture.\nLiteratura y moral en La Dorotea de Lope de\nVega. Prof. Francisco Marquez Villanueva,\nHarvard University. Room 319, Buchanan\nBuilding. 12:30 p.m.\nWednesday Noon-Hour Concert.\nMusic of Brahms. Robert Silverman, piano,\nRonald de Kant, clarinet, and Eric Wilson,\ncello. Recital Hall, Music Building. 12:30 p.m.\nSimulation and Modelling in\nScience.\nDiscriminant Analysis in Glaucoma. Dr. Michael\nSchulzer, Mathematics and Medicine, UBC.\nRoom 105, Mathematics Building. 12:30 p.m.\nAscent of Man Series.\nThe Ladder of Creation. Room 308, Library\nProcessing Building. 12:30 p.m.\nAsian Studies Lecture.\nThe Mahabharata as a Source of Legitimization.\nProf. Romila Thapar, Jawaharlal Nehru\nUniversity, New Delhi, India. Room 319,\nBuchanan Building. 1:30 p.m.\nAsian Studies Lecture.\nThe State as Empire: A Case Study of the\nMauryan State. Prof. Romila Thapar,\nJawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi, India.\nPenthouse, Buchanan Building. 3:30 p.m.\nBiomembrane Discussion Group\nSeminar.\nTransbilayer Composition of Asymmetry of\nLipids in Bilayers and Biological Membranes.\nDr. T.E. Thompson, Biochemistry, University of\nVirginia, Charlottesville. 4:00 p.m.\nFrederic Wood Theatre.\nThe Rivals by Richard Brinsley Sheridan opens\ntonight and continues until Saturday, March 14\n(except Sunday). Admission is $5.50; $3.50 for\nstudents. For ticket reservations, call 228-2678\nor drop by Room 207 of the Frederic Wood\nTheatre Building. 8:00 p.m.\nCinemawest.\nDays of Heaven. Admission is $1 with AMS\ncard. Auditorium, Student Union Building.\n8:00 p.m.\nTHURSDAY, MARCH 5\nMedical Grand Rounds.\nEarly Detection of Lung Cancer. Dr. Julia Levy,\nMicrobiology, UBC. B Lecture Hall, Vancouver\nGeneral Hospital. 9:00 a.m.\nHispanic and Italian Studies/\nComparative Literature Symposium.\nAnthologies and Ideologies. Prof. Claudio\nGuillen, Harvard University. For further\ninformation, call 228-2268. Penthouse,\nBuchanan Building. 11:30 a.m.\nFine Arts Faculty Lecture.\nMarco Boschini and Artistic Taste in\nSeventeenth Century Venice. Penelope Brownell.\nRoom 104, Lasserre Building. 12:30 p.m.\nCinemawest.\nDays of Heaven. Admission is $1 with AMS\ncard. Auditorium, Student Union Building.\n12:30 p.m.\nFaculty Recital.\nThe Four-Hand Music of Debussy. Dale\nReubart, piano, and Robert Rogers, piano.\nRecital Hall, Music Building. 12:30 p.m.\nAsian Studies Lecture.\nDissent and Protest in the Early Indian\nTradition. Prof. Romila Thapar, Jawaharlal\nNehru University, New Delhi, India. Room 102,\nLasserre Building. 12:30 p.m.\nClinical Engineering Seminar.\nQuantitative Image Analysis: Presentation of\nSome Methods to Extract Geometrical or\nTopological Information From Images.\nChristian Lantuejoul, Centre de Morphologie\nMathematique, Fontainebleau, France. Room\n315, MacLeod Building. 1:30 p.m.\nPhysics Colloquium.\nThe Deep Earth Gas, Will It Solve the Energy\nProblem? Prof. T. Gold, Astronomy, Cornell\nUniversity. Room 201, Hennings Building.\n4:00 p.m.\nSubfilms.\nBest of the New York Erotic Film Festival.\nContinues until Sunday, Mar. 8. Showings are\n7:00 and 9:30 p.m. on Friday and Saturday,\nand 7:00 p.m. on Sunday. Admission is $1 with\nAMS card. Auditorium, Student Union\nBuilding. 7:00 p.m.\nUBC Aqua Society\u00E2\u0080\u0094Marine Biology\nPresentation.\nMarine Life in B.C. Waters. Rick Harbo,\nMarine Biologist and Underwater Photographer.\nLecture Hall 1, Woodward Instructional\nResources Centre. 7:30 p.m.\nCUSO Presentation.\nNative People in Canada. The Union of B.C.\nIndian Chiefs will give a presentation on the\nnative position with respect to the new Canadian\nConstitution. Admission is $1. You can pre-\nregister by calling 228-4886. Upper Lounge,\nInternational House. 7:30 p.m.\nWind Symphony Concert.\nMusic of Devienne, Handel and Gabrieli.\nBaroque Band, directed by Martin Berinbaum.\nRecital Hall, Music Building. 8:00 p.m.\nFRIDAY, MARCH 6\nAsian Studies Lecture.\nDeath and the Hero as Expressed in Hero-\nStones. Prof. Romila Thapar, Jawaharlal Nehru\nUniversity, New Delhi, India. Room 154,\nAuditorium Annex. 9:30 a.m.\nHispanic and Italian Studies\nComparative Literature Symposium.\nThe Beginning of Fool Literature in Spain.\nProf. Francisco Marquez Villanueva, Harvard\nUniversity. Upper Lounge, International House.\n11:45 a.m.\nWomen's Studies Lecture.\nThe Evolution of Japanese Matrimony. Dr.\nPatricia Tsurumi, History, UVic. Room 204,\nBuchanan Building. 12:30 p.m.\nPharmaceutical Sciences Seminar.\nMyosin Phosphorylation and Regulation of\nContraction. Dr. J.T. Stull, University of Texas,\nHealth Science Centre, Dallas. Lecture Hall 4,\nWoodward Instructional Resources Centre.\n12:30 p.m.\nMedical Genetics Seminar.\nA Cost Benefit Analysis of Prenatal Diagnosis.\nDr. A Sadovnick. Fourth Floor Conference\nRoom, Health Centre for Children. 1:00 p.m.\nChemical Engineering Seminar.\nAnaerobic Biofilms. P. Fryer. Room 206,\nChemical Engineering Building. 3:30 p.m.\nFood and Culture Conference.\nA two-day conference co-sponsored by UBC's\nContinuing Education in Nutrition and\nDietetics, Division of Human Nutrition and\nSchool of Home Economics will be held from\n7:00 to 9:30 p.m. today, and from 8:15 a.m. to\n5:30 p.m. on Saturday, March 7. Fee is $50.\nThe conference is worth 9 credits of B.C.D.A.\nContinuing Education. For more information,\ncall 228-2626. Pre-registration required. Lecture\nHall 2, Woodward Instructional Resources\nCentre.\nInternational House.\nNicaraguan Benefit Dance. Admission is $3,\ntickets at door. Upper Lounge, International\nHouse. 8:00 p.m.\nKoerner Foundation Lecture.\nHistorical Archaeology in Canada: A Personal\nView. Dr. David Newlands, director, Museum\nStudies Programme, Royal Ontario Museum,\nUniversity of Toronto. Auditorium, Museum of\nAnthropology. 8:15 p.m.\nSATURDAY, MARCH 7\nArchaeology Workshop.\nSponsored by the UBC Centre for Continuing\nEducation and the Vancouver Chapter of\nArchaeological Institute of America. Main\nspeaker will be Dr. David Newlands. For more\ninformation on topics and speakers, call\n228-2181, locals 212, 253. Auditorium, Museum\nof Anthropology. 9:00 a.m. - 4:30 p.m.\nUrban History of China Workshop.\nParticipants in the workshop will be Prof. Hou\nRenzhi, Beijing University; Prof. William\nSkinner, Stanford University; and Prof. Marwyn\nSamuels, Geography, UBC. Continues to\n5:00 p.m. For more information, call 228-4686.\nRoom 215, Geography Building. 9:00 a.m.\nHispanic and Italian Studies/\nComparative Literature Symposium.\nTheory, A Madness Most Discrete. Prof. Teresa\nde Lauretis, University of Wisconsin. Penthouse,\nBuchanan Building. 11:15 a.m.\nRugby.\nThe UBC Thunderbirds play Vancouver's\nMcKechnie Cup team. Thunderbird Stadium.\n2:30 p.m.\nCentre for Continuing Education\nSlide Presentation.\nThe World of Enamels. Orland Larson, head.\nJewellery Department, Alberta College of Art.\nAdmission is $5.00. Room 102, Lasserre\nBuilding. 8:00 p.m.\nI*\nCanada\nPost Canada\nPostage paid Rortpaye\nThird Troisieme\nclass classe\n2027\nVancouver, B.C\nUBC Reports is published every\nsecond Wednesday by Information\nServices, UBC, 6328 Memorial Road,\nVancouver, B.C., V6T 1VV5. Telephone\n228 3131. Al Hunter, editor. Lone\nChortyk, calendar editor. Jim Banham,\ncontributing editor. ISSN 0497-2929."@en . "Periodicals"@en . "Vancouver (B.C.)"@en . "LE3.B8K U2"@en . "LE3_B8K_U2_1981_02_18"@en . "10.14288/1.0118565"@en . "English"@en . "Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library"@en . "Vancouver: University of British Columbia Information Services"@en . "Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy, or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the University of British Columbia Public Affairs Office."@en . "Original Format: University of British Columbia. Archives."@en . "University of British Columbia"@en . "UBC Reports"@en . "Text"@en . ""@en .