"CONTENTdm"@en . "http://resolve.library.ubc.ca/cgi-bin/catsearch?bid=1211252"@en . "University Publications"@en . "2015-08-12"@en . "1973-02-06"@en . "Misprinted volume, should be LV."@en . ""@en . "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/Ubysseynews/items/1.0125914/source.json"@en . "application/pdf"@en . " Loners challenge slates\nBy GARY COULL\nThree independent\ncandidates are running for\nAlma Mater Society president\nWednesday; one serious, one\nsatirical and one plain\nconfusing.\nStarting on a positive note,\nTony Formby calls himself a\nconcerned student who cares\nmore. He says he believes slate\ncampaigning is a deceitful\nmethod of electing people who\nwould not otherwise be elected.\nHe said he is making no\nspecial promises because they\ncan't be guaranteed. Money\nmatters must pass the student\ncouncil, not the executive, he\nsaid.\nHe cited student\nrepresentation as a major\nFOSTER ... confusing\nissue which is \"necessary at\nevery level of the university.\"\nAs for slate promises\nconcerning budgetary matters,\nFormby said UBC will likely\nhave fewer students and less\nrevenue next year so it will be\nimpossible to guarantee who\ngets cut-back and who does\nnot. He called the no-cut back\nplatforms a \"bribe\" and asked\nhow sincere the Democratic\nStudents Caucus was in issuing\nit.\nHe noted the Students\nCoalition was running for a\nsecond term and added: \"I\nhope they are not running on\nthe merits of their first term.\"\nFormsby said the balanced\napproach platform of the\nStudents Coalition came and\ndied in B.C. already and was\ntoo conservative even for UBC.\nFORMBY . . . slates 'deceitful'\n\"Long live the Tory torch and\nall that, but we can handle only\none Bob Stanfield,\" he said.\nFormby said apathy on\ncampus was not the fault of the\nstudent. \"The lack of student\ninput is related to the lack of\nAMS executive output\" he\nclaimed.\n\"Contrary to general belief\nthe executive does not have\nspecial powers \u00E2\u0080\u0094 only duties\"\nhe said.\nThe candidate who is\nsomewhat confusing is Stuart\nFoster, applied science 3. In an\ninterview Monday, he would\nonly say he stood in\nconventional spotlights on\nconventional issues. He cited\nthose issues as being the same\nas the Democratic Students\nCaucus; student involvement,\nSee page 2: FOSTER\nWE UBYSSEY\nan mai, uui wc isaii iidiiuie uniy occ page z: rusiiSK\nBoard agrees to\ndiscuss opening\nmeets to public\nCHINESE FOOD returned to old auditorium cafeteria Monday. The\nkitchen, which was burnt out in a Dec. 7 fire, is back in operation,\nserving huge delicious helpings of hung mung, octopus soup, chop\nsuey, chow mein and tea. -mark hamiiton photo\nFour residences now face increase\nBy KEN DODD\nThere will be a 9.75-per-cent rent\nincrease in all four UBC residences\nbeginning in September, The Ubyssey\nlearned Monday.\nPreviously it was reported this\nincrease applied only to the Acadia\nCamp and Park graduate residence.\nThe increase means Place Vanier and\nTotem Park residents face an $85 full\nsessional increase to $857 from $772. The\nrent increase in the Walter Gage Towers\nwill be $45. rising to. $588 from $543.\nNeither housing director Les\nRohringer or his direct subordinate,\nhousing business manager Keith Davis\nwere available for comment Monday.\nHowever Place Vanier co-ordinator,\nDan Gardner said Monday the increases\nare basically due to increased operating\ncosts in each area.\n\"Labor costs are up and they account\nfor 25-26 per cent of the budget. Food\nprices are up as well,\" Gardner said.\nGardner said the other reason for the\nincreases is this past summer was a bad\none for conventions at UBC. Payments\nfrom convention groups constitute the\nmain source of income other than\nstudent fees.\nGardner said the decision was made at\na board of governor meeting two weeks\nago on a recommendation from housing\nwho need the increase in order to break\neven on expenses.\nHousing representatives, including\nRohringer have met with student\nrepresentatives from Totem Park, Place\nVanier and Gage residences within the\nlast week to discuss the increases.\nStudent reaction has been sympathetic\nbut unfavorable.\n\"A lot of people won't be coming back\nto residence next year because of this,\"\nPlace Vanier residence association\ntreasurer, Charlie Hamilton said\nMonday.\n\"They had a bad year for conventions\nlast summer and they're taking out on us\nnow,\" said Hamilton.\nHe said a large part of the increase is\nto subsidize the construction and\nmortgage costs of the Gage Towers.\n\"We've been having trouble getting\nmoney from them all year because of\nthis,\" he said.\nHamilton said he is aware of the\nincreased operating costs the housing\ndepartment is facing but noted there\nhave been smaller increases in Totem\nPark and Place Vanier each of the last\nthree years. \"However if the rents\nremain stable for the next five years\nthen perhaps they're justified,\" he said.\nBy LEN JOHNSON\nMembers of the UBC board\nof governors have agreed to\ndiscuss opening board\nmeetings to the public.\nAdministration president\nWalter Gage said while it was\npossible the discussion was\ninstigated because the board\nhas been seen in an\nunfavourable light \"the main\nproblem is students don't\nunderstand the board's\nfunction.\"\nGage said he favors\ndiscussion of open meetings\nbut refused to comment on the\npossible outcome \"because\ndifferent members would have\ndifferent opinions.\"\n\"This topic has been\ndiscussed in years previous.\nThis time it was instigated by\nAlma Mater Society president\nDoug Aldridge,\" Gage said.\nAldridge said the board will\nconsider opening meetings\nwhich do not include discussion\nof such things as senior staff\nappointments and building\ncontracts.\n\"The opening of the\nmeetings should put an end to\nthe suspicion that surrounds\nthe board of governors,\" he\nsaid.\nAldridge said he was\ninterested in the student body\n\"getting away from the idea\nthat the board of governors has\na great effect on the academic\nlife of the university, which\njust isn't true.\"\nHe said most of the duties of\nthe board of governors\nconsisted of being a rubber\nstamp for senate and acting as\na financial advisory board to\nthe various faculties.\nStudent senator Stan Persky\nsaid the announcement is \"a\njoke\". He said it is an attempt\nby the board of governors to\nplacate the student body and\nmake it believe the board is a\nliberal body when it is really a\nrepresentative of big business.\nPersky said the move is \"the\nlast gasp of a dying dinosaur\"\nbecause the NDP has promised\nto alter the composition of the\nboard to make it more\nrepresentative of the student\nbody and the community,\nwhich would mean the\ninclusion of students and\ncommunity members.\nBoG member Paul Plant\nsaid he had agreed to discuss\nopen meetings but did not wish\nSee page 2: BOG Page 2\nTHE UBYSSEY\nTuesday, February 6, 1973\nStrike leads to teach-in\nMONTREAL (CUPI) \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nStudents from Montreal\nuniversities came together at\nMcGill Saturday to hold a\nteach-in on the current\nstruggle of Quebec students\nagainst the provincial\ngovernment's new fee ruling.\nThe teach-in occurred as the\nstudent strike keeping the\nUniversity of Quebec here\nclosed, entered its second\nweek.\nThe fee ruling states that\nstudents must pay all past\ndebts to the university\nincluding second term tuition\nby Feb. 15 or they will be\nexpelled permanently. (\nA student from the\nUniversity of Quebec here\nexpressed the necessity for\nsolidarity among students\nfrom all universities who, if not\nnow, will later face similar\neconomic blackmail.\nAt UQAM 3,000 out of an\n11,000-student population and\nat Universite de Montreal\n(UDEM) 1,000 out of 15,000\nstudents will be eligible for\nexpulsion by the university\nbecause of the ruling.\nWith the opening of\ncommunity colleges and the\nUniversity of Quebec the\nQuebec student population has\ngreatly increased.\nHowever, due to today's\neconomic crisis and the\nresulting rising\nunemployment, the\ngovernment is attempting to\ncut back on the already too\ngreat number of university\ngraduates.\nThe students most affected\nby this ruling are those from\nthe working class who must\nrely on part-time jobs and\ngovernment loans and\nbursaries to pay their tuition.\nAlthough 3,000 students at\nUQAM receive government\naid, only 300 of these do not\nhave to repay the province.\nThe students have\ndenounced \"economic\nmeasures that become\nselective measures\". They\nwant up to three years after\ngraduation in which to pay\nFoster matches\nDSC issues\nFrom page 1\nparity with honor, and\nwomen's rights.\nFoster said the campaign\nwas intolerably too dull but\nrefused to comment further.\nFinally, the satirical\ncandidate is Doug Tuck, arts 4.\nThere is no doubt he will win\nthe AMS presidency on\nWednesday \u00E2\u0080\u0094 at least\naccording to his description.\nTuck is the apathy candidate\nin this election and by his\ncalculations he will get 14,000\nvotes. His rationale is that\nabstentions and votes against\nhim are\u00C2\u00BB actually votes for him\nbecause students are\ndisplaying their apathy and he\nis the apathy candidate. A vote\nfor him is a spoiled ballot but\nthey are not likely to interfere\nin his victory.\nA crowd of 200 gathered in\nthe SUB ballroom Monday\nnoon for an all-candidates\nmeeting. The candidates\noutlined their platforms again\nbefore an audience made up of\nclose supporters of both slates.\nThe Students Coalition was\nquestioned on their perception\nof students as being consumers\nbecause of the SC's apparent\npreoccupation with services.\nSC presidential candidate\nBob Angus replied it was only\none part of their platform.\nHowever, he conceded the\npresent AMS government was\nfairly service oriented.\nJoanne Lindsay, DSC coordinator candidate, called for\nthe art gallery in SUB to be\nopened for student artists and\nthat students be allowed to eat\nlunch there when no show was\non.\nAfter Lindsay had sat down,\nSC co-ordinator candiate John\nKeating rose and called her\n\"my naive opponent\", saying\nLindsay was not even aware of\nwhat the job entails.\nA spectator then asked if\nKeating was sure about that\nandhereplied: \"I'm positive.\"\nStuart Foster asked students\nduring his introductory\naddress how they liked the dull\ncampus politics. He pointed to\nAngus and said \".an interesting\nfellow but none the less dull.\"\nThe unity of the S.C. slate\nwas questioned when Angus\nsaid they only met once a year\nto elect a slate. He said he\nassumed the Democratic\nStudents Caucus worked\ntogether all year round.\nThe two secretarial\ncandidates Pemmie Muir,\nnursing 2, and grad studies\nsenator Stan Persky both\nwanted to expand the role of\nsecretary.\nMuir said she would like to\nwork with both the internal and\nexternal affairs officers in\ncreating an acedemic council\nto press for implementation of\nstudent representation on\nfaculty committees at all\nlevels.\nPersky said he was very\nserious about real\ninvestigation and proper\norganization of next year's\nAMS elections.\nPersky said he has\nextensive office practice, can\ntake minutes and has a good\nknowledge of parliamentary\nprocedure to qualify him for\nthe job as secretary.\nThe candidates were\nconfronted by Coreen Douglas\nof the Young Socialists about\nthe ban on political groups to\nrun under their party banner.\nFormsby said students get\nenough political activity from\noutside UBC and he associated\nparty politics with giant\ncorporations. He said he\nwanted to reverse the trend\nand bring politics back to the\nstudent level.\nPersky, speaking for the\nDSC, said they believe the\nclause prohibiting students\nfrom running under party\naffiliation should be struck\nfrom the constitution of the\nAMS.\nAngus said he had no\nobjection to the Young\nSocialists running under their\npolitical banner. He said he\nwas more afraid about the\nLiberals or the Conservatives\nrunning with professional\nstaffs for the entire election.\nAngus said he would like to\nsee the elections committee\nmake specific rulings on the\nquestion. \"I would put the\nreferendum again next year if\nstudents wanted it,\" he said.\ntheir fees so that no one will be\ndenied an education through\nlack of money.\nThey pointed out that the $15\nmillion owed by them to the\nuniversity is nothing compared\nto the $55 million the\nadministration sees fit to spend\non building a new UQAM\ncampus.\nThe UQAM administration\ncontinues to insist that the\nuniversity is open despite the\nfact that picketing has shut\ndown the university since the\nstrike began. Students went on\nstrike Jan. 25.\nBoG makes\nbusiness\ndecisions\nFrom page 1\nto speculate on the outcome of\nthe proposals and would to wait\nuntil he had heard all the\nproposals before he made up\nhis mind.\nPlant said the function of the\nboard of governors is to make\nbusiness decisions. When you\nneed an academic decision you\nask an academic, when you\nneed a business decision you\nask a businessman,\" he said.\nHe denied the proposal had\nbeen made because of the\nthreat to change the\ncomposition of the board of\ngovernors. \"Everything has to\nchange sometime, you can't\nstop that. Most people don't\nrealize we are all volunteers.\"\nDeputy president William\nArmstrong said the idea had\npreviously been brought up by\nmembers of the board on other\noccasions but probably would\nnot be discussed until March,\ndue to a work backlog.\nMmkt\u00C2\u00AE\nSpecialised Service\n'/* S>.. \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\n^\u00E2\u0096\u00A0* s \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 * '\ni^1\n.a.**-\n9? Ye**'\nSales and-Seruice.\n8914 Oak St. 263-8121\nWESTERN CANADA'S FIRST SEX BOUTIQUE\nBOOKS\nA WIDE SELECTION OF NON-FICTION BOOKS\nPERTAINING TO ALL ASPECTS OF SEX & LOVE.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 LINGERIE \u00C2\u00BBWATERBEDS\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 POSTERS \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 ADULT GAMES & PUZZLES\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 SENSUAL LIGHTING \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 MASSAGE CREAMS\nEuropean sexual aids to enhance a couple's most intimate\nrelationship.\nHOURS OF BUSINESS: Mon.-Sat. 10 a.m.-10 p.m.\nSUB FILMSOC PRESENTS\nParanwunt Pictures Presents\nI A Sagittarius Production A BO VWOeRBERG RLM\n\"foe Hill\"\nThurs. 7:00\nFri. 7:00 & 9:30\nSat. 7:00 & 9:30\nSun. 7:00\nSUB\nAUD\n50\u00C2\u00B0\nFeb.\n8-11\n\"SPLENDID\nBEYOND REALITY!\nThommy Berggren\nis mythically\nfiandsome,\ntou\u00C2\u00A3hingly mortal\nx %d radiant\n!tji3&h humor!\"\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094Pauf^itpierman, Newsweek\nGET OUT\nAND\nVOTE\nThere will be an election for the following positions today,\nFebruary 6 and Wednesday, February 7,1973.\nPRESIDENT COORDINATOR\nSECRETARY INTERNAL AFFAIRS\nPolls will be open as follows:\nWednesday. February 7,1973\n10:00 a.m.-4:00 p.m.\nBuchanan\nAngus\nCivil\nMacMillan\nMain Library\nSedgwick Library\nSub North\nSub South\nWoodward Library\nAdvance Polls will be open as follows:\nToday, February 6.1973\n11:00 a.m.-3:00 p.m.\nSUB LAW WAR MEMORIAL GYM\nEDUCATION MEDICINE\nand from 5:00 p.m. to 7:00 p.m.\nPLACE VANIER - TOTEM PARK - GAGE\nBring Your AMS Card - Take an Interest\nYOUR VOTE COULD BE VITAL Tuesday, February 6, 1973\nTHE UBYSSEY\nPage 3\nChildcare sit-in: 'You\nt\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094kini mcdonald photo\nDAYCARE MOTHERS, workers and the kids themselves begin sixth day of Daycare Information Centre\nsit-in. Workers say they will continue to sit until demands are met and a meeting with NDP cabinet\nministers Levi, Cocke and Dailly is agreed upon.\nNDP easy on capitalism\nSocial democratic parties such as the New\nDemocratic Party are severely limited in their\nability to change capitalist society, economist\nand Manitoba NDP MLA Cy Gonick said\nMonday.\nGonick, a member of Canadian Dimension's\neditorial board: \"Social democrats aim at the\nsymptoms and alleviate the worst abuses of the\ncapitalist system rather than the root causes of\ninequality.\n\"The party organization has to be the key\nfor change but it (the Manitoba NDP) is now an\nelevatoral machine not in contact on a day-today basis with the community,\" he said.\nGonick cited the public auto insurance\nlegislation in Manitoba, saying the NDP ran\ninto considerable trouble because members of\nthe legislature were not in contact with the\nparty rank and file over planning and\nimplementing the scheme.\nHe said another problem the social\ndemocratic parties have is their reliance on old\nbureaucrats who don't care one way or another\nabout the government's programs.\nAs well as dealing with the realities of social\ndemocratic governments Gonick outlined their\nlimitations in the areas of equality, liberation,\nindependence and ecological balance.\n\"There is not talk of changing the capitalist\nsystem. The profit motive remains intact as the\nmajor means of finding food, shelter and\nclothing.\n\"Social democratic parties aim not at\nequality of human condition but at equal\nopportunity to compete in the market place.\n\"Equal pay for equal work for men and\nwomen can be achieved but equal access to\nresponsible high paying jobs is not as easy\nbecause sexist behaviour is at the root of the\ncapitalist system.\ncome to us'\nBy FORREST NELSON\nThe sit-in at the provincial child-care information centre\nbegan its sixth day with both sides still saying: \"You come to\nus.\"\nAbout 20 protestors continue to eat and sleep in the newly\nopened information centre waiting for their demands to be met.\nThe three daycare centres of Pooh Corner in the West End,'\nSouth Hill at 47th and Fraser, and Grandview Terrace from the\nEast End account for most of the sit-downers and all of the\norganization.\nThe occupation of the building has shut down the centre's\nbusiness. The workers at the information centre were asked to\nleave if they could not agree to the demands. B.C. files were\nprevented from being removed by the protestors.\nRehabilitation minister Norman Levi Monday phoned the\nprotestors and offered to meet them within 48 hours after they\nvacated the building.\nHe also offered to fly them all to Victoria for the meeting\nafter they explained that they could not afford the trip.\nThe offer was rejected. The sitdowners want to meet Levi,\nhealth minister Dennis Cocke, and education minister Eileen\nDaily at the centre face to face.\nMargret Sigurgeirson, a spokesman for the sitdowners said:\n\"It will continue until we get some serious committment \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nwhich doesn't mean Norman Levi's word.\"\nThe four major grievances of the daycare protestors are :\n* Licencing is hard to come by;\n* Money is delayed for month after month;\n* There is am acute shortage of care and no 24-hour\nservice;\n* Under three's are not open to care except in special cases.\n\"It's places like UBC, Simon Fraser, Langara and 12th and\nOak which care for under three year olds. The intellectual\ncentres are all cared for. There's no such care in a worker's\nneighborhood,\" said Sigurgeirson.\nLast Friday the sitdowners had a conference with Gladys\nMaycock and Peggy Conway, workers in the new information\ncentre. The sitdowners showed the demands to the employees\none by one.\nWhen Maycock and Conway disagreed with the demands,\nthey were asked to leave. Betsy Wood of the sitdowner's said:\n\"Mrs Conway didn't agree with the demand that nutritional\nlunches be prepared for the children \u00E2\u0080\u0094 she thought that it would\ncost too much.\"\nWood said: \"There were two policemen the first night, but\nthey were quite friendly.\n\"Several people have arrived at the request of Don\nBingham's office. One ostensively to check on child neglect in\nthe building. One stayed the night to 'protect the building'.''\nWood continued: \"Levi said there was only one 24-hour\ndaycare in North America \u00E2\u0080\u0094 and that is in Atlanta, Geo. Since\nwhen did B.C. follow Georgia.\n\"Women who get the lowest salaries often work evenings,\nso how do they take care of their kids.\" '\nFuture trouble may come from Richmond Realty Ltd., the\nbuilding's owners. They may ask for an eviction if they think the\nsitdowners are troublesome.\nSouth Hill one of the daycare groups protesting, is open 7\na.m. to 11:30 p.m. and has a waiting list three times its\nenrolment.\nThe sitdowners included Cocke in their demand for a face-\nto-face meeting because daycare for under three year olds\ninvolves health regulations.\nDaily is included because the staff for new centres would be\ncontolled through her department.\nSigurgierson said she would guess the sitdown will be\ncontinuing until at least the weekend.\nDailly speaks\nProvincial education minister Eileen Dailly will be on\ncampus to discuss problems in education, noon Thursday in the\nSUB ballroom.\nExposure\nBy ART SMOLENSKY\nThe arrival of Western publisher Mel Hurtig last\nweek on behalf of the Committee for an Independent\nCanada was a badly neede shot in the arm for the\nVancouver CIC chapter whose spirits have been\ndeclining since the national convention last fall.\nHurtig, an unsuccessful Liberal candidate in last\nOctober's election, has de facto become the chief\nspokesman of the CIC since his defeat, gradually\nreplacing Toronto publisher Jack McClelland in that\nrole.\nOne of the reasons for the local chapter's\ndepression is the large debt run up by the Toronto\noffice and which chapters all across the country are\nbeing asked to pay for.\nAnother, is with the election of the new NDP\ngovernment a host of \"national-minded\" policies\nhave been served up from Victoria. One example of\nthis is Alex Macdonald's (a member of the CIC) new\nbill making it mandatory that a majority of the\ndirectors of all 70,000 B.C. companies be Canadians,\nresident in Canada.\nWith this type of government policy it is naturally\nunderstandable that much of what the CIC has stood\nfor is rapidly becoming a part of the fundamental\nthinking of the society at large. As such, the role of\nthe organization as a 'cause celebre' is much\ndiminished.\n* * *\nThe net effect of the provincial government's\nadditional 1,000 civil service jobs is a good chunk of\nthem will go to university graduates including a\nlarge number of people with MA's and Ph.D's.\nIncluded among these positions will be a number\nof economists.\nAs you might well expect, the labor department\nwill get the largest proportion of the new recruits\nbut, it's this reporter's guess that the education\ndepartment will get a substantial portion too.\nSurely due for replacement is the four-man subsection for post-secondary education whose staff\nunder the Socred government were purposely never\ninvolved in the university sector. By comparison,\nOntario's post-secondary department contains well\nover 2,000 individuals.\nOne very interesting thing that happened over the\nweekend at the Harrison Hot Springs B.C. Bar\nmeeting was the discussion of a \"Legalcare\" system\nwhereby individuals will pay a monthly premium in\nreturn for legal coverage.\nUnlike the provincial medicare scheme it will be\nprivately run and will probably be here within a\nyear.\nPrime users of the service are expected to be union\nmembers who will get the benefits as part of a union\nnegotiated contract (a number of which are going to\ncome up for renewal in B.C. this summer).\nThe major question being asked is: Why\nwon't the government take the initiative in such a\nscheme?\nAccording to Sholto Hebenton, downtown lawyer\nand chairman of the committee setting-up the prepaid legal care program, there is no way the\ngovernment is going for the practice of corporate\nlaw. As such, most of B.C.'s 2,300 Bar members will\nnot be involved in it.\nBut he does see it is a progressive step and, in the\nwords of law professor Dave Huberman, it means\nlawyers will be, \"going from primarily servicing the\nmoney classes to helping other people in society.\" Page 4\nTHE UBYSSEY\nTuesday, February 6, 1973\nElections\nWell, it's whoop-de-doo and let's hear it for good ol'\ndemocracy time again. Another Alma Mater Society\nelection is upon us.\nMussoc marked the occasion by opening a musical\ncalled Promises, Promises.\nTwenty thousand students noted the event by\nyawning in unison.\nAnd The Ubyssey decided once again to write its\nannual who-to-vote-for-in-the AMS-elections editorial.\nSo here goes.\nThe people now in power belong to the Students'\nCoalition. What they coalesced from (perhaps coagulate\nwould be a better word) hasn't been determined but\nthey're still around and apparently want a second term.\nThen there is the Democratic Students' Caucus,\notherwise known as Sons and Daughters of the Grand\nImperial Order of Human Government.\nLast and in some cases least are the three independent\ncandidates, all of whom for some reason want to be AMS\npresident.\nNow we know who's running, let's look at the\nplatforms.\nThe SC and DSC platforms appear to pose good\nservices and good politics against good politics and good\nservices. The result is one of the greatest balancing acts\nsince the Vancouver Canucks tried on skates.\nIndependent presidential candidate Tony Formby\nwants increased student representation and an end to slate\nvoting.\nIndependent candidate Stu Foster wants a new\nreligion.\nIndependent candidate Doug Tuck seems interested\nin apathy.\nNow that the platforms are disposed of, let's look at\nhow much experience the candidates have.\nThe three independent candidates seem to have little\nif any experience with student government. This basically\nmeans you have to judge them on their platforms.\nBoth the SC and DSC slates include candidates with\nprevious experience in student government. We refer in\nparticular to SC candidate Bob Angus and DSC candidates\nStan Persky and Brian Loomes.\nNow let's look at the records of the two slates, both\nof which have been contending forces of sorts for the past\nyear.\nThe services aspect of the SC you should judge for\nyourselves as they have been in power for the past year.\nWe're not particularly impressed but then services are not\nthe sort of thing we get jumping-up-and-down excited\nabout.\nThe SC claim to be for increased student\nrepresentation. It is this aspect of their program we are\nextremely dubious about. Members of the SC have not\nbeen noted for their leadership during the recent and\ncontinuing negotiations for greater student representation.\nThey seem to have added the trendy catchphrase \"student\nrepresentation\" as an afterthought in order to get votes. If\nthese people were really interested in getting greater\nstudent representation they would have showed it before\nelection time.\nThe DSC have promised good services. Although only\na promise, this is an improvement over previous years in\nwhich the left couldn't be bothered noticing that students\nlike to drink beer and eat in comfortable surroundings.\nThe DSC candidates have also been active in the\nstruggle for student representation and it is in large part\ndue to their efforts that people are becoming aware of the\nneed for student reps.\nBecause the DSC has shown a greater tendency to get\ninvolved with progressive student activities, The Ubyssey\nstaff urges you to vote for them.\nTHE WYSSEY\nFEBRUARY 6, 1973\nPublished Tuesdays and Fridays throughout the university year by\nthe Alma Mater Society of the University of B.C. Editorial\nopinions are those of the writer and not of the AMS or the\nuniversity administration. Member, Canadian University Press. The\nUbyssey publishes Page Friday, a weekly commentary and review.\nThe Ubyssey's editorial offices are located in room 241K of the\nStudent Union Building.\nEditorial departments, 228-2307; Sports, 228-2305; advertising,\n228-3977.\nCo-editors: Jan O'Brien, John Andersen\nRoger McNeill, Richard Kranabetter, Mark Hamilton, Mike Sasges,\nKen Dodd, Simon Truelove, John Andersen, Lesley Krueger, Gary Coull,\nSteve Morris, Vaughn Palmer, Forrest Nelson, Len Johnson, Kini\nMcDonald, Art Smolensky, Jan O'Brien, Kent Spencer. Sorry but the\nmasthead editoreloped with the Slider.\nDebauch\nRe: the letter from \"Greg\" in\nthe Jan. 23 Ubyssey.\nYour reference to \"...\npornographic showmanship as a\n'release' from ... 'heavy' course\nloads\" by science faculty students\n(wrongly including those in medicine) completely baffles me. I\nmust be naive, or walking around\nwith my eyes closed or something.\nAs far as I know, in medicine the\nonly \"pornographic showmanship\" is the annual beer and skits\nnight, which, to Greg's mind, we\nprobably await with eager anticipation for our Annual Night Off\nto Get Release in Wild Sexist\nDebauchery. And then, when it's\nover, we must spend another hard\nyear studying to be technicians\nuntil the next beer and skits night.\nThe truth is, many science,\nmedical and other students do\nacquire something besides technical knowledge while at university, including social concern, the\ndesire to work for change, and the\nwisdom not to make stupid\ngeneralizations about groups of\npeople.\nBruce McNeely\nmedicine 3\nGodiva\nIn reaction to Lawrence\nMilne's flippant letter in the Jan.\n30 Ubyssey regarding what I\nwould consider the rightful indignation raised by Ms. Penny\nNewman in reaction to her being\npropositioned by the engineering\nundergraduate society to participate in the Lady Godiva ride, I\nwould like to ask some questions.\nFirst of all, Mr. Milne, in your\nletter you called the women's\nliberation movement a sorority. I\ntake your use of the term sorority\nto signify that you do not regard\nthe movement as having any\nserious basis to it or that its\ncomplaints are not legitimate.\nCertainly on occasion a complaint\nlodged by them may seen to be\nmerely nit-picking but what movement (including the EUS) or\nindividual has not in his/her day\ndone the same? We are not\ninfallible. Would you regard the\ncivil rights movement, the Panthers or the Red Power movement\nLetters\nas simple fraternities? Perhaps one\nmay use the term fraternity in\ndescribing them but most definitely not in the context to which\nyou have applied the term sorority.\nYou also ask what is wrong\nwith a woman earning $50 to\n$100 an hour riding nude on a\nhorse? First of all this implies that\nfor performance of such acts and\nother acts of prostitution (which I\nconsider the Lady Godiva farce to\nbe) enormous amounts of money\nare paid. I think that your pay\nscale is unrealistic to begin with.\nThe important question involved\nhere is: if the person (male or\nfemale) does not find this opportunity of employment (which you\nseem to regard it as) decent or if\npeople at large are supposed to see\nnothing degrading in it may I ask\nwhy in hell the pay is so\nexhorbitant anyway? Is it really\nnothing more than a bribe? If the\nwoman on the horse must earn\nmoney by nurturing your fantasies and cannot earn a decent\nWage in some other more rewarding or fulfilling job, I suggest that\nshe is not free as you suggest. The\npeople (women are not alone)\nwho condemn this travesty of\nhuman dignity are not unendowed, jealous malcontents but\npeople who care for one another's\nfeelings.\nAs Roberta Flack once said in\nher song Go Up Moses in its\nintroduction at a concert; if you\nsell heroin to the kids in the\nghetto so that you can get enough\nmoney to free yourself from the\nghetto, are you really free? Your\nadmiration for the well-endowed\n(it seems the popular phrase)\nwoman is no better than the EUS\nRed Rag and its glorification of\nthe male as stud as the admirable\nquality for manhood.\nRalph Christie\narts 4\nWAG\nWith reference to the meeting\ncalled between the engineering\nundergraduate society and the\nwomen's action group, we would\nlike to make clear that, like any\nother organization on the campus,\nwe will respond to invitations to\nparticipate in meetings. However,\nwe would like also to make clear\nthat we respond at our discretion.\nThe meeting mentioned above was\ncalled, advertised and scheduled\nwithout informing us. We can see\nno reason, in any case, why a\ndiscussion of \"sexism\" at UBC\ncould not have taken place among\nthose who were present and who\nwere interested in calling the\nmeeting.\nwomen's action group\nBias\nI was impressed by Gary\nCoull's coverage of the political\nplatforms of the two candidates\nfor president of the Alma Mater\nSociety. It's nice to see the\nstudent newspaper present a fair\nand unbiased view of both sides of\nthe executive coin. It does strike\nme as odd, however, that the\nthree other presidential candidates\nhave not yet received their front\npage coverage, snapshot included.\nI feel that The Ubyssey is abusing\ncompulsory patronage of the\nstudents. Such partisanship on\nbehalf of the paper demonstrates\nthe lack of responsibility of The\nUbyssey staff in representing the\nstudents as a whole. I feel, and I\nhope others agree with me, that\nsuch biases should remain on the\neditorial page.\nJay Munsie\nstudent senator\narts 4\nDouglas MacKay\nombudsman\nWe decided last press day to\ndivide coverage between the\nslate candidates and the\nindependents. This is why\nthere is little mention of the\nslate candidates in today's\nissue.\nAs far as any lack of\nresponsibility on our part in\n\"representing students as a\nwhole,\" we have never\naccepted any such\nresponsibility. The Ubyssey\nexists to represent the people\nwho work on it \u00E2\u0080\u0094 i.e. anyone\nwho bothers to show up in the\noffice on a press day.\nRed\nThe letters of two nameless\nengineers, both headlined Disgusted, have very interesting\nSee page 6 Tuesday, February 6, 1973\nTHE UBYSSEY\nPage 5\nCandidate's statements\nBob Angus\n(president)\nThe duties of the president of the\nAlma Mater Socity include\ncommunication between students, the\nuniversity administration, other\nuniversities, and sometimes\ngovernment. The tactics I favour are\nthose of sound, reasoned argument and\nnegotiation, not those of confrontation\nand sloganism.\nThis year, as SUB co-ordinator, I\nbelieve I have been successful in\nhaving achieved administration\nsupport for the SUB liquor license, the\nSUB maintenance agreement, total cooperation in investigation of SUB food\nservices, and a commitment for $1\nmillion for the swimming pool to\nmention only a few major items. Next\nyear, implementation of student\nrepresentation, public board of\ngovernors meetings, and continuation\nof present programs will all be\npriorities.\nCommunication only begins in the\nabove areas. The most important\nfunction of the Alma Mater Society\nshould be discovering what students\nexpect from it and making sure that\nstudents know what the AMS is and\nwhat it can do for them. Surveys,\npublic discussion of issues, video-taped\ncouncil meetings could be a start in this\ndirection.\nRegardless of who you vote for,\nplease get out and vote. The AMS can\nWe've decided to put our individual\n150-word statements together into one\nhopefully coherent platform.\nThe Democratic Students' Caucus is\nrunning because:\n0 We believe in democratizing the\nuniversity through student\nrepresentation. Only when students\nhave a real say will the university\nchange. We promise to meet with every\ngroup on campus to take steps in this\ndirection.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 We want to implement the\nrecommendations of the UBC Status of\nWomen report. It has now been\ndocumented that women students,\nworkers and teachers are\ndiscriminated against. That\ndiscrimination must end.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 We will carry out a program to\nimprove understanding of the\n\"relationship between the university\nand society. Through speakers and\ncultural events, by investigating the\nincreasingly desperate job situation for\nstudents, and by participation in the\nstruggles of the majority of people in\nour society, an understanding of the\nnature of the university will emerge.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 We can provide good politics and\ngood administration. There will be no\nfinancial cutbacks on sports, clubs, or\nundergraduate societies. We recognize\nand fully accept the responsibility for\nefficient and economic management of\nonly be as strong as those who get out\nand support it.\nJohn Keating\n(co-ordinator )\nDuring the 1972-73 session, my\ninvolvement in student affairs as\nchairman of open house and president\nof aqua soc has enabled me to critically\nassess the programs advocated by the\nStudents' Coalition and our 'worthy'\nopposition. Frankly, the DSC has\nneglected services to the students in\nSUB \u00E2\u0080\u0094 the prime area of concern for\nthe Co-ordinator.\nWhat can be done for the students\nwith the right government?\n* Pit Development: Almost ready\nfor construction, the only facts lacking\nmmmmm\nwm-\nToni| Formby\n(president)\nIn recent years \"slate campaigns\"\nhave been common in AMS elections;\nso common that no one analyzes their\nfaults. Slates have become deceitful\nmethods of electing a group of people\nwho would otherwise stand a poor\nchance of being elected on their own.\nThese groups mislead the student body\ninto thinking that the executive group\nhas special powers. It does not. Any\npromises the slates make they cannot\nguarantee.\nI feel very strongly that student\nrepresentation is necessary at all\nlevels of the university. This has been\nachieved in many faculties already but\nthere are some, such as the faculty of\narts, which seem to have problems in\nthis respect. The Democratic Students'\nCaucus has emerged from a particular\nand not an overall concern for the\nwhole university.\nThe Students' Coalition is seeking its\nsecond term in office, hopefully not on\n* SUB Revenue: Without infringing\non student events, it is possible to\ndevelop revenue in other areas. Let's\nlook into this.\nPemme Muir\n(secretary)\nDuring my three years on this\ncampus, I have become aware of many\nissues which concern me, especially in\nthe academic area. As internal affairs\nofficer, I would set up an academic\ncouncil to increase communication\nbetween the different undergraduate\nsocieties. I believe that student\nprogress towards representation on the\ndifferent committees can only be truly\neffective at the individual department\nlevels. Student participation and co-\nStudents9 Coalition\nare student opinion regarding decor;\nscheduled for use in September 1973.\n* SUB Food Service Purchase:\nConsultants report has been received\nand purchase could, if approved, be\nmade in June 1973.\n* Student Grocery Store: Already\nstudied and could provide students with\nconvenience and cheaper food costs.\n* Campus Ticket Centre: For all\nVancouver functions; easier for\nstudents who can't get downtown.\n* Expand Crafts Room: To include\nnot only pottery and ceramics but also\nmetal and woodwork.\nstudent funds, and will carry out\nprojects students have indicated their\nsupport for, such as building the pool\nand a new pub.\nEach of us is serious about the office\nwe're running for, and capable of\ncarrying out its tasks:\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Brian Loomes (for president) has\nhad successful experience as arts\nundergraduate society president and\nwill take up the responsibility of\nproviding leadership and direction for\nthe AMS.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Diane Latta (for internal affairs)\nis active in the women's movement at\nUBC. She will work directly with\nundergraduate societies to implement\nstudent representation as well as coordinate AMS-sponsored cultural\nactivities and develop educational\npolicies.\noperation are vitally important for the\nsuccess of academic reform in all\nareas; we have to work together.\nAfter three years of living in\ndifferent residences, I realize some of\nthe problems that students encounter\nin finding adequate housing both on and\noff campus. If elected, I will work\nclosely with the external affairs officer\nin order to promote the interests of the\nstudents in this area.\nApathy has existed too long on this\ncampus. Please vote on February 6 and\n7.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Joanne Lindsay (for co-ordinator)\nhas worked both with women's groups\nand the AUS. She will make sure that\nSUB is available to all student groups,\nthat it becomes a more human place to\nbe in, and that services and\nrecreational facilities are extended to\nmeet student demand.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Stan Persky (for secretary) has\nbeen a student senator and active\namong graduate students. As secretary\nhe has all the required skills; extensive\nexperience in office organization, the\nability to take minutes, compose\nbusiness letters, prepare reports, type,\noperate office equipment, and\nknowledge of parliamentary\nprocedure.\nFinally we ought to say something\nabout our opponents and their slogan \u00E2\u0080\u0094\n'balanced approach'. Our criticism of\nDemocratic Students9 Caucus\nBrian Loomes\n(president)\nJoanne Lindsay\n(co-ordinator )\nthe merits of its first term. They do not\noffer anything new; only another uneventful year.\nAn AMS presidential candidate can\nguarantee little. I offer sound\nleadership, awareness, honesty and\npromise to inform the student body of\nevents occurring \"upstairs\" in a biweekly, open letter in The Ubyssey,\nfrom myself to the student body. I urge\nyou to Break the Slates and elect a\nrealistic president. Tony Formby.\nStan Per shy\n(secretary)\nDiane Latta\n(internal affairs\nI am particularly fond of morons of\nall makes, models and descriptions,\nblackguards of every grade and hue,\nPhilistines, thieves, liars, fools,\nimposters, and offensive people in\ngeneral.\nI am fond of Brian Loomes.\nI am fond of the thunderous kicks\nwhich set him up.\nI am fond of Stan Persky's\nHungarian climbing boots with the\nsteel toes.\nIndependent\nStuart Foster\n(president)\nSeated in his den, in the chill gloom of\nwinter, comforting his lungs with a\nbudgy cigar, presidential candidate\nStuart Foster entertains thoughts as\nfollows:\nTo smoke cigars on a beautiful\nwinter's afternoon is to confess that one\nhas very little taste.\nIf every hypocrite at UBC were to\nbreak his leg at noon today, the\nuniversity might be successfully\ninvaded, at one o'clock, by the war-like\nhypocrites of SFU.\nIt is hard to discuss a man who is dull\nto the point of death.\nIt is hard to discuss Bob Angus.\nExcept to say that he gives Stan\nPersky's DSC some credibility.\nThere are two things to be avoided;\nthe deadly upas trees and soft drinks.\nThe latter makes you puffy and poddy.\nDebbie Rota\n(internal affairs)\nAfter observing the Alma Mater\nSociety office of secretary closely\nduring the past year, I feel that there is\nmuch potential for expansion. I do not\nfeel that only the mundane jobs of\ntaking minutes, sending/receiving\nletters and running elections, etc.\nshould constitute the position.\nSome areas of expansion I would like\nto institute as secretary are:\n. * acting as a liaison between the\ndecentralized undergraduate societies\nand clubs and the centralized AMS\nincluding going out to the different\nsocieties when they don't come to us. I\nfeel that in this way, the AMS can be\nmore effective as the co-ordinating\nbody;\n* a resource centre to find out about\ngeneral campus activities \u00E2\u0080\u0094 helping\nthe students working on projects find\nother people who have previously done\nwork in this field and channelling the\ninformation, in this way preventing\nduplication of work.\nWorking closely with the internal\naffairs office I would like to set up an\nacademic council which, working as a\nunit, could effectively press for\nreasonable implementation of student\nrepresentation on faculty committees\nat all levels. I would like to urge all\nstudents to go out on February 6 and 7\nand vote for the candidate of your\nchoice, but please VOTE!\nthem is not intended as a personal attack; they're students like ourselves.\nHowever, concerning on-campus\nquestions like representation, rights of\nwomen, and the nature of the\nuniversity, they have failed. They've\nneither given these problems serious\nthought nor have they taken action.\nThe student victory in the senate (Jan.\n17) was the result of intelligent political\nwork. It occurred, partially, because of\nthe hard workwe had previously done\nin the faculty of arts. These gains will\nbe lost if the work doesn't continue.\nDuring the three-month struggle,\nStudent Coalition was almost totally\nsilent. The S.C.-dominated council had\nto be pushed and cajoled into providing\neven minimal financial support for the\nwork being done to end discrimination\nagainst women at UBC. Thus, their\n'balanced approach' slogan is both\nmisleading and disturbing. It covers up\ntheir past record over the last year and\na half which hasn't been balanced but\ndeficient. As a promise, it only means\n'don't rock the boat', and indicates that\nthey will continue to meekly accept the\ndictates of the present administration.\nThe AMS must be positive, not a\nneutral element in student affairs.\nWe ask you to give us the chance to\ncommunicate our ideas and carry out a\nprogram to improve the student\nconditions at UBC.\n% a \"f>m& >* S.-V ,\"*?\u00C2\u00AB -Xk: .->? -\nI enjoy a person who finds a heartless\noppressor in the predatory oyster.\nAnthony Formby is an enjoyable\nperson even if he doesn't exist.\nIt was never intended that men\nshould be saints in heaven until they\nare dead and good for little else. On\nearth they are mostly fools.\nI, presidential candidate Foster,\nhave arranged these primal truths in\nthe order of their importance, in the\nhope that some patient investigator\nmay amplify and codify them into a\ncoherent body of doctrine, and so\nestablish a new religion.\nDoug Tuch\n(president)\nI am surprised to be the only\nrepresentative of apathy on a campus\nfamous for its lack of interest in voting,\nnon-attendance at general meetings,\nand disinterest with involvement. I feel\n,that my personal indifference and\nSee page 6: CANDIDATES Page 6\nTHE UBYSSEY\nTuesday, February 6, 1973\nLetters\nfrom page 4\nsimilarities and differences. One\nenjoys the material but finds it\nembarrassing to admit being an\nengineer. The other is proud of\nbeing an engineer but dislikes his\nred connoting \"asshole.\" Both are\ntoo gutless to have their names\nattached to their beliefs.\nWhat sort of retaliation do you\nexpect from your comrades upon\npublication of your letter? .. .\nDISSENTER DISMEMBERED\nBY ENGINEERS- EUS PRES.\nLOOKS ON!\nWho are the engineers? They\nare not a massive red blotch. They\nare people who think like you!\nHow widely is your dissension\nsupported? About six and a half\nfeet. What kind of force can this\nsize of support administer? About\n150 kips. And that, baby, is a\nlotta weight! Those students you\nneurotically assumed would condemn your \"radical\" ideas probably subscribe to a similar\nphilosophy.\nMuch of the poor reputation of\nthe engineer is a result of the\ninability of faculty, staff and\nstudents to laugh at themselves. I\nrefer to the modern sculpture\ncaper of a few years back. Legal\naction was threatened against the\nengineering undergraduate society\nfor destroying a masterpiece of\nmodern sculpture during a campus\ndisplay. Red was quite prominent\naround campus, especially in fine\narts when they discovered the\nengineers had sculpted this mas-\nterwork.\nI refer also to last year's beard\nshaving commando. Engineers\nmarched into the SUB cafeteria\nand, claiming an abhorrence for\nfacial hair, shaved some violent\nyoung men. I dare you to find one\nthat was truly dissatisfied with his\nshave - or taken by surprise. In\norder to bring us the best in\nfrivolity, The Ubyssey published\nletters which said, in essence, \"If\nthe guys that were shaven were\ninnocent, the engineers are, without a doubt, assholes. If the\nshavees were planted ... well...\nthe engineers are assholes anyway.\"\nBut where does that put you?\nThat leaves you in engineering,\nwith all its problems and pitfalls.\nAssuming you are not one of the\nmany apathetic cut-throats, of\nwhich applied science has its\nshare, I ask you ... \"and as he\nexited from the men's washroom,\nshe asked him 'What kind of\nshortening does your lover use'?\n\"... yes, I ask you, what have\nyou done to improve matters? I\nsuggest you have been ostracizing\nyourselves since your first engineering class.\nI've been trying, as much as my\ntime and ability will allow, to get\nthings going Tn a new direction \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nand I'll tell you, it's a lot of;\nfucking work! But minds and\nideas are changing. Take, for\nexample, the attempt by the\nclique members of the EUS to\nobtain more of a cross-sectional\nviewpoint by setting aside a\nsection in the weekly Neusletter\nsolely for student opinion. Have\nyou written to the Box? Or the\nconsideration of the senate to\ngiving the engineering undergraduate more credits to show for his\n90 hours of weekly labours. As\nyou (should) know, their decision\nis awaiting feed-back from the\nstudents. Have you written to the\nBox, yet?\nWhat are you doing for the\ncongress of Canadian engineering\nstudents, which is being held for\nthe first time in the west? What\nwill be discussed at the congress?\nSocial responsibility. Unionism.\nEducation. Now questions. What's\nthat? You want us to put a word\nin for you, too?\nIf I could look back at my five\nuniversity years and have no\nmemories except academic toil, I\nwould be a failure. I urge you to\ntake the initiative of doing what\nmust be done. Engineering students realize that many problems\nare facing mankind for the first\ntime. Mass and dimension become\none. What's more, they realize\nthat these problems are the\nproblems of the engineer.\nMore responsible representation in the EUS is the basic step.\nThe beginning of a gigantic force.\nA force that can only work up,\nbecause the one that it's working\nagainst is going down. Are you\ngoing to oblivion with it?\nGord Low\napplied science 2\nEUS social co-ordinator\nIn the past month or so I have\nbeen somewhat disappointed in\nthe style of reporting shown by\nThe Ubyssey in your ongoing feud\nwith the engineering undergraduate society.\nI agree with some of the\nstatements made in recent papers,\nspecifically, I do side with the\nwomen (and men) who opposed\nthe Lady Godiva ride. However,\nthe purpose of my letter is not to\nput down or justify the EUS\nactivities, but to ask a few simple\nquestions of the editors of The\nUbyssey.\nSensationalism has always been\na sure road to recognition in\nmedia, because society buys sensationalism. It doesn't ask at\nwhose expense; who will be hurt.\nAren't we supposedly in a 'liberal'\nera, in which class discrimination\nand stereotyping are looked upon\nwith distain? Does your opinion\nthat the EUS promotes socially\nundesirable events and actions\nrequire you to act as counter-\nbigots? The university calendar\nquotes an undergraduate enrolment in engineering of over 1,000.\nstudents, but you talk of \"gears\"\nas if all were identical. I refer to\n\"engineers and people\", \"gears\nand silly grins\", and some of your\nartwork and articles. It's easy for\nThe Ubyssey to criticize the EUS,\nand it would be equally easy to\nrecognize some of their other\nactivities, such as selling of poppies prior to Remembrance Day,\nbut I guess that's not too exciting.\nIn my opinion, a campus\nnewspaper has some responsibility\nto the students of the university;\nto cover events, to print letters\nand to express ideas editorially. I\ndon't think that the childish petty\nwarfare seen on the pages of The\nUbyssey over the last month\ncould legitimately be called the\nwork of responsible editing.\nThere are a lot of people at\nUBC, and a lot of engineering\nstudents; all Ubyssey readers\ndeserve better.\nBob Russel\nWe realize there are a number\nof enlightened engineers who look\nwith distaste upon the activities of\ntheir fellows. We have attempted\nto recognize this in our editorials\nby referring to the neanderthal\nelement as \"a group of engineers\"\nor \"some engineers\" rather than\njust \"the engineers.\" But as far as\nheadlines and cartoons and whatnot are concerned, it's too much\ntrouble to make the distinction.\nHopefully, engineers will themselves solve the problem by\nremoving the gang that presently\ncontrols the engineering undergraduate society.\nThe Ubyssey welcomes letters\nfrom all readers.\nLetters should be addressed to:\nLetters, The Ubyssey, Room\n241K, Student Union Building,\nUBC.\nDr. Eric H. N. Chen is pleased to\nannounce his association with\nDr. J. W. James\nfor the practice of general dentistry\nat 2288 Elgin St., Port Coquitlam,\nTelephone 941-2211,\nHours 8:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.\nUNIVERSITY OF OSLO\nINTERNATIONAL SUMMER SCHOOL\nJune 25 to August 4,1973\nUNDERGRADUATE AND GRADUATE COURSES IN:\nArt, History, International Relations, Norwegian, and others.\nGRADUATE COURSES IN:\nPeace Research, Norwegian Educational System, Urban and Regional\nPlanning, Physical Education in Scandinavia, Medical System of Norway.\nFor information write: Two years college required.\nOSLO SUMMER SCHOOL ADMISSIONS\ne/o St. Olaf College Northfield, Minnesota 55057\nPeople come from many nations!\nCRIME\nis one of society's major social problems\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 are you one of those who can accept\nthe challenge of trying to solve it?\nTHE B.C. CORRECTIONS SERVICE\nis looking for graduates, both men and women,\nwith a background in the social sciences\nto train as\nPROBATION OFFICERS\nsee your Student Placement Office\non campus for further details.\nUBC's Musical Theatre Society Mussoc\npresents\nPROMISES,\nPROMISES\nNOW PLAYING- To Feb. IOHi\nCURTAIN: 8:30 p.m.\nUBC OLD AUDITORIUM\nSTUDENT PERFORMANCES TONIGHT at 8:30\nand FEB. 8 at 12:30 p.m.\nTICKETS 1.00/1.50 - THUNDERBIRD SHOP (SUB)\nCandidates9 statements\nFrom page 5\nunwillingness to do anything is well enough understood, and\ninstead I wish to express my appreciation to The Ubyssey for\ncontinually furthering my cause.\nBeing apolitical is not easy for a paper, but The Ubyssey\nshows a definite lack of concern with campus politics. The list of\ncandidates for tomorrow's election appears for the first time\ntoday, and though I was interviewed last week, my name did not\nappear in this paper. The Ubyssey understands apathy.\nThe Ubyssey is humorless, and condescends to print wit\nonly when necesssry, in the letters to the editor. It is decidedly\nagainst humor and tries to make it obsolete by destroying\nnaturally humorous situations. This assures non-readership and\na mass disinterest.\nI Your statement continued with a lot of boring stuff saying how\nboring The Ubyssey is. We decided to cut it, not wanting to\nmake the paper any more boring than you say it already is. This\nis not necessarily meant to be taken as a gesture of editorial\nsupport, just a way of letting you know your statement was far\ntoo long (and boring). Eds.]\nI could continue heaping laurels on this paper, but imposed\nlimits must be met. In closing, I urge you to forget me, Doug\nTuck, and not waste your time voting. Better scrap paper than\ndirty paper.\nMAKES A COLD\nEASIER TO LIVE WITH\nCONTACC\n12\nHOUR REUEF\n10\nCAPSULES\nEach capsule gives 12 hours of relief from the symptoms of a cold. Tuesday, February 6, 1973\nTHE UBYSSEY\nPage 7\nI OFFICE\nS INTRY\n3 MECHANICAL RM.\na BAR\nB FOOD\nS COOLER\n7 STAFF LAV.\nB MINI LAV.\nB WOMENS LAV.\nThe New \"PIT\"\nPLAN- STUDENT PLACE\nThe floorplan above is the plan for the new \"PIT\". It represents input over the past year\nfrom the Alma Mater Society Executive and Council, the S.U.B. Management Committee\nand the general student body. Details of the plans are now nearing completion.\nPreliminary plans of the interior design are indicated in the two photographs above. These are photos of the architect's model. They represent the\nspacial relationships but not the furnishings and finishings in their final form. What is needed at this time is an indication of how you or your group\nwill use the \"PIT\" to guide us in selection of interior appointments.\nConstruction of the \"PIT\" will commence within two months and it will be completed by September. We need your ideas now. Comment from\nsocial coordinators of clubs and undergraduate societies particularly appreciated. If you have comments, suggestions or ideas on what the \"PIT\"\nshould look like or what atmosphere to create, please let us know.\nCOME TO A\nGENERAL MEETING; Thurs., Feb. 8\n12:30 SUB PARTYROOM\nor contact\nAAAS CO-ORDINATOR, BOB ANGUS\nRm. 262 SUB, Anytime\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 ADVERTISEMENT Page 8\nTHE UBYSSEY\nTuesday, February 6, 1973\nUWO enrolment drop chops 82 profs\nLONDON (CUP) \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Eighty-\ntwo faculty members will be\nleaving the University of\nWestern Ontario at the end of\nthis academic year and most of\nthe positions will remain\nvacant, university president D.\nC. Williams announced\nWednesday.\nThis is the first time since\nWilliams became president in\n1967 that the total complement\nof faculty will decrease.\nThere are roughly 1,200\nfaculty members at Western.\nOf the 82, 61 have not been\noffered contracts for next year\nafter having served a short-\nterm or probationary contract.\nThe rest of those leaving are\neither retiring or resigning.\nThe announcement was\nmade at a hastily-assembled\npress conference in the\npresident's office Wednesday\nafternoon, following a London\nFree Press story on dismissals\nin the sociology department\nWednesday morning.\n\"Most of these people didn't\nexpect renewals,\" Williams\nsaid, referring to the 61 without\ncontracts.\nHe emphasized that only six\npositions were cut due to the\nenrolment shortfall and\nresulting budget cuts.\nWilliams and university\nvice-president R. J. Rossiter,\nwere careful not to say that all\nof these faculty members are\nbeing released because of the\nshortfall in enrolment.\nHowever, Williams did\nadmit that of the 82 vacancies\nthat have occurred, few will be\nfilled. He was not able to give\nBINGO\nEVERY TUESDAY\nat 7:45 p.m.\nPrizes in Excess of $2300.\nAt 10th Ave. & Camosun\nStudy in\nGuadalajara, Mexico\nFully accredited, 20-y\u00C2\u00ABar UNIVERSITY OF ARIZONA Guadalajara\nSummer School offers July 2-August\n11, anthropology, art, education,\nfolklore, geography, history, government, language and literature.\nTuition $165; board and room $211.\nWrite: International Programs, University of Arizona, Tucson 85721.\nTODAY-1230\nSUB Auditorium\n\"Status of Minorities\nin Israel\"\nZiedan Atashi, Druze\nABORTION\nKILLS BABIES\nIF YOU ARE AGAINST\nABORTION, COME FEB. 7\nTO SUB 105B WED. 12:30\nJOIN THE\nRIGHT TO LIFE\nACTION COMMITTEE\nStan Kazun - 266-8676\nBernice Gerard - 266-9275\nan accurate figure but did\nadmit that a \"large number\nwill certainly not be replaced.\"\nWilliams explained the\nnecessity of cutbacks in faculty\nby saying: \"We engaged\nfaculty for an enrolment we do\nnot have.\"\nActual student enrolment at\nWestern this year was roughly\n1,000 less than predicted.\nThe teacher/student ratio,\nhowever, is projected to stay\nbelow the provincial average.\nWilliams quoted the weighted\naverage as Western as one\nfaculty member for every 22\nstudents, the provincial\naverage as 1 to 24.\nWilliams refused to\nhypothesize on future steps\nthat may have to be taken as a\nresult of this year's contract\nnegotiations with faculty.\n\"Most of the faculty have\nrecognized that the heyday is\nover,\" Williams said, and may\nnot make high salary\ndemands.\n\"The government has set its\npriorities on other things. It\nlooks like we're in for a\nprolonged period of belt-\ntightening.\"\nRossiter had stated in Jan.\n26's senate meeting that no\nfaculty members would be\ndismissed due to budget\ncutbacks.\nHe did however, warn that,\nas occurs every year, some\nmembers of faculty on limited\nterm appointments or on\nprobation may not be offered\nteaching positions.\nAsked whether the granting\nof tenure will be affected,\nWilliams replied: \"We are still\ngranting tenure but the hurdle\nis a little higher.\nMany of the contracts not\nrenewed were for graduate\nstudents maintaining\nthemselves by teaching.\nWilliams conceded that by\nreducing the number of these\npositions, graduate students\nwould go elsewhere, possibly to\nthe United States, where\ngraduate teaching positions\nwere easier to obtain, and\nwould possibly stay there.\nAsked whether the decrease\nin these opportunities wouldn't\nthen contribute to a decrease in\nnew Canadian faculty,\nWilliams replied: \"Well, you\ncan't.milk the cow at both\nends.\"\nSOMETHING for EVERYBODY\nRECORDS \"classical\" - -popular- RECORDS\nPRICES IN THE DIRECTION OF DOWN!\nmmmgmm\n-*\\nCAS450-YOUDO SOMETHING TO ME \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Mario\nLanza\nCAS 623\u00E2\u0080\u0094STRAUSS WALT-\nZES \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Fjeldstod, Oslo\nPhilharmonic\nCAS 686\u00E2\u0080\u0094COUNTRY SIDE OF\nJIM REEVES \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Jim\nReeves\nCAS 784-GOOD 'N' COUNTRY \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Jim Reeves\nCAS 823\u00E2\u0080\u0094THE MAX ERIC\nTRIO \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Wunderbar\nCAS 825\u00E2\u0080\u0094YAKIN' SAX MAN\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 B. Randolph\nCAS 842\u00E2\u0080\u0094HAVE I TOLD YOU\nLATELY THAT I LOVE\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 Jim Reeves\nCAS 917-22 ALL-TIME\nORGAN FAVORITES \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nBob Ralston\nCAS 2133\u00E2\u0080\u0094MUSIC FROM DR.\nZHIVAGO AND OTHERS \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Living Strings\nCAS 2237-BAVARIAN BEER\nGARDEN \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Die Munch-\nner*Bierbuben\nCAS 2257-MY NOVA SCOTIA\nHOME \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Honk Snow\nCAS 2267\u00E2\u0080\u0094ONE AND ONLY\nGLENN MILLER\u00E2\u0080\u0094Glenn\nMiller\nCAS 2286\u00E2\u0080\u0094THE BEST OF WILF\nCARTER \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Wilf Carter\nCAS 2287\u00E2\u0080\u0094THE BEST OF NED\nLANDRY-Ned Land y\nCAS2291-EBB TIDE AND\nOTHER FAVORITES \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nLiving Strings\nCAS 2303\u00E2\u0080\u0094PLAY BERT KEMP-\nBERTHITS \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Living\nStrings plus Trumpet\nCAS 2304\u00E2\u0080\u0094 SINGS FLAMING\nSTAR \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Elvis Presley\nCAS 2373-HAWAIIAN\nMEMORIES \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Living\nStrings\nSugg. List\n$1.98\ng> sound\nSALE PRICE\nPSR RECORD $1.4\u00C2\u00BB\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0LP's'\nfor\n.99)\nCAS 2398-SWITCHED-ON-\nCOUNTRY \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Rick Powell at the Moog\nCAS 2400\u00E2\u0080\u0094RAINDROPS KEEP\nFALLING ON MY HEAD\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Living Marimbas\nCAS 2408-LET'S BE FREINDS\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 Elvis Presley\nCAS 2425-LET IT BE AND\nOTHER HITS \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Living\nGuitar\nCAS 2427\u00E2\u0080\u0094IS ANYBODY\nGOING TO SAN ANTON E \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Living Strings\nCAS 2440\u00E2\u0080\u0094ALMOST IN LOVE\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 Elvis Presley\nCAS2477-THEME FROM\nLOVE STORY \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Living\nStrings plus Two Pianos\nCAS 2483-THE BEST OF THE\nCARLTON SHOWBAND\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 The Carlton Show-\nband\nCAS 2484\u00E2\u0080\u0094THE BEST OF THE\nL. BRASS AND L. MARIMBA MEXICO \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nLiving Brass-Living\nMarimbas\nCAS 2485-THE BEST OF THE\nL. BRASS-L. MARIMBA\nMEXICO LIVING BRASS\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 Living Morimbas\nCAS 2504\u00E2\u0080\u0094AMAZING GRACE\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 The Blackwood Brs.\nCAS 2506-HAWAII'S GREAT-\nEST HITS \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Leo Addeo.\nand His orch.\nCAS 2513\u00E2\u0080\u0094LONESOME WHISTLE \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Hank Snow\nCAS 2532\u00E2\u0080\u0094YOUNG AND\nCOUNTRY \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Jim\nReeves\nISC 32M-THE WORLD'S FAVORITE\nGRAND OPERA\nLSC 32\u00C2\u00BB5\u00E2\u0080\u0094THE WORLD'S FAVORITE\nSYMPHONIES BEETHOVEN,\nSCHUBERT\nLSC 32*4\u00E2\u0080\u0094THE WORLD'S FAVORITE\nSYMPHONIES TCHAIKOVSKY'S\n\"PATHETIQUE\"\nLSC 3297\u00E2\u0080\u0094THE WORLD'S FAVORITE\nRHAPSODIES\nLSC 329B-THE WORLD'S FAVORITE j\nMARCHES\nLSC 3299-THE WORLD'S FAVORITE |\nREVERIES\nLSC 3300-THE WORLD'S FAVORITE\nDANCES\nLSC 3301\u00E2\u0080\u0094THE WORLDS FAVORITE\nTCHAIKOVSKY\nLSC 3302\u00E2\u0080\u0094THE WORLD'S FAVORITE\nSHOWPIECES \u00E2\u0080\u0094 FMandia, Tht\nMoldou\nLSC 3303\u00E2\u0080\u0094THE WORLD'S FAVORITE\nSHOWPIECES \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Grand Canyon\nSuitt\nSugg. List\n$6.29\nsoun<\nSALE PRICE\n.49\nLSC 3304\u00E2\u0080\u0094THE WORLD'S FAVORITE\nCONCERTOS \u00E2\u0080\u0094Htirctz\nLSC 3305\u00E2\u0080\u0094THE WORLD'S FAVORITE\nCONCERTOS - Rubin.lein\nLSC 3307-THE WORLD'S FAVORITE\nBEETHOVEN SONATAS\nLSC 330S\u00E2\u0080\u0094THE WORLD'S FAVORITE\nBALLETS\nLSC 3309\u00E2\u0080\u0094THE WORLD'S FAVORITE\nWALTZES\nLSC 3310\u00E2\u0080\u0094THE WORLD'S FAVORITE\nOVERTURES\nLSC 3311\u00E2\u0080\u0094THE WORLD'S FAVORITE\nFILM THEMES\nLSC 3319\u00E2\u0080\u0094THE WORLD'S FAVORITE\nGERSHWIN\nLSC 3320-THE WORLD'S FAVORITE\nBALLETS - Suite, from Tht\nNutcracker and Swan Lake\nLSC 3321\u00E2\u0080\u0094THE WORLD'S FAVORITE\nCHORUSES\nLSC 3322\u00E2\u0080\u0094THE WORLD'S FAVORITE\nCHOPIN\nLSC 3323\u00E2\u0080\u0094 THE WORLD'S FAVORITE\nPIANO MUSIC\nsound\n32 16 0023\u00E2\u0080\u0094MOZART - SYMPH. 41 JUPITER/SYMPH. 38\nPRAGUE - Beecham/Royol Phil.\n32 16 0026-MAHLER - SYMPH., 4/ WALTER - N.Y. Phil.\n32 16 0027\u00E2\u0080\u0094SCHUMAN-CONC. A MINOR FOR CELLO - Casols\n32 16 0029\u00E2\u0080\u0094BEETHOVEN-Conc. 5 FOR PIANO \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Gieseking\n32 16 0058\u00E2\u0080\u0094CHOPIN WALTZES \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Dinu Lapotti\n32 16 0141-GRIEG/SCHUMANN PIANO CONCERTOS \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Dinu\nLapotti\n32 16 0145\u00E2\u0080\u0094WAGNER/TRISTAN & ISOLDE HIGHLIGHTS \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nTroubel/Melchier\n32 16 0171\u00E2\u0080\u0094AN EVENING OF ELIZABETH VERSE & IT'S MUSIC\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094New York Pro Musica\n32 16 006 \u00E2\u0080\u0094SYMPH, OF HAYDN VOL 1 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Geberman/Vienna\nState\n32 16 0010\u00E2\u0080\u0094SCHUBERT-SYMPH. 8 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Gobermon/Vienna New\nSymph.\n3216 0012-VIVALDI - Cone, for Woodwinds & Orch.\n32 16 0034-SYMPH. OF HAYDN VOL. 2 - GOBERMAN \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Vienno\nState\n32 16 0052-SYMPH. of HAYDN vol. 3 - Gobermon/Vienna State I\n32 16 0056\u00E2\u0080\u0094BEETHOVEN \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Cone. 1 & 4 for Piano Cosadesus '\n32 16 0138\u00E2\u0080\u0094VIVALDI - FIVE CONC. - Goberman\n3216 0304\u00E2\u0080\u0094BERLIOZ-SYMPH. FANTASTIQUE\u00E2\u0080\u0094Mitropoulos\nN;Y. Phil.\n32160216-TCHAIKOVSKY-PATHETIQUESYMPH-Mitropou-\nlos/N.Y. Phil.\n32 16 0270-A LILY PONS GALA \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Lily Pons\n32 16 0314-BEETHOVEN-APASSIONATA/WALDSTEIN SONATAS \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Gieseking\n3216 0322\u00E2\u0080\u0094BEETHOVEN-SYMPH. 9-Walter/N.Y. Phil.\n32 16 0335-MOZART-OPERATIC ARIAS - Eiio Pinza\n32 16 0377\u00E2\u0080\u0094VILLA-LOBOS/BACHIANAS BRASILEIRAS\nSayao\nY30042\u00E2\u0080\u0094BEETHOVEN-CONC. IN D MAJOR FOR VIOLIN - Fron-\ncescatti\nY30043\u00E2\u0080\u0094MAHLER-DAS LIED VON DER ERDE \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Miller/Bruno.\nWalter\nY30044\u00E2\u0080\u0094TCHAIKOVSKY-CAPRICCIO ITAUEN \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Siell/Cteve-\nland Orch.\nY30048\u00E2\u0080\u0094MOZART - Eine Kleine Nachtmusik-Walter\nY30053-BLUE DANUBE \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Sxell/Cleveland Orch.\nY30311 -BRAHMS - SYMPH, I - Bruno Walter\nY30667-BRUNO WALTER'S WAGNER\nY30669-SCHUBERT-SYMPH. 9 - Siell/Cleveland Orch.\nY30851-BRUNO WALTERS BRAHM'S\nY31149\u00E2\u0080\u0094VERDI HEROINES \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Eleanor Steber\nY31150\u00E2\u0080\u0094ROSA PONSELLE SINGS VERDI\nY31735-OPERA ARIAS - Helen Traubel\nY31739-OPERA ARIAS - Eileen Farrell\nPLUS MANY TOO NUMEROUS TO MENTION\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Bidu\nSugg. List\n$3.98\nsound\nSALE PRICE\n99,\n[Mail Orderi Promptly Filled: Just tick off the records you woni; enclose your list I\nwith remittance, plus 5% tax ond postage, ond we'll get your order away promptly. I\nFirst record 50c eoch, additional record 25c postage ar>d handling charge. I\n556 Seymour St. 682-6144\nOPEN THURS. and FRI. UNTIL 9 P.M. Tuesday, February 6, 1973\nTHE UBYSSEY\nFOUR SEASONS\nGeneral Manager TERRY KELLY SAYS:\nEVERYTHING\nsttcu$it>m&!\nfWiCEsZ\nPage 9\nMm\nSKI BAGS\n(SnURRYMCiOkSIS)\nSKfMWN\nfynolio.\nSTEP-IN BINDINGS\nDelon 900/2000\nReg. 49 JO SKM-THON\n$38M\nKbit iy\u00C2\u00AB 90/100\nhj, 37.50 SH-A-WON\n$2g88\nSan GIORGIO\nMADE IN ITALY\nPLASTIC 5-BUCKLE\nSUPER HIGH SHELL BOOT\nWITH SELF MOLDING LINING\nManufacturer's Sugg. List\n$175.00\nSKIATHOM\nHUBER\nSKI POLES\nlist $10.00 910^(1\nSKMrTMN\nSKI\nGOGGLES\nNLS\u00C2\u00ABL\u00C2\u00BB\nSKMTMN\nMADE IN AUSTRIA\nPANZL Fierglass Ski\nMagic 1500 si^T\nVIP STARRS 250.00 219.881\nRACING TEAM RS 225.00 199.88\nWHITE STAR C 215.00 189.88\nWHITE STARRS 215$ 189.88\nREDSTARRS 185.00 159.88\nCUPSTARRS 150.00 128.881\n1973 jfczr*-\nReg. value SKI-A-THON I\nI KINGS ROOK 130.00 \"\"\nPAWN 150.00 11188\nI KNIGHT 200.00 154.88\niCOMPETN. 240.00 179.881\nNO DOWN PAYMENT\nCHARGEX\nNO INTEREST LAYAWAY\nKOFLACH\nCLUB RED FOAM MODEL\nREG. $110.00\nSKMTMN\n.11\nAUSTRIAN MADE\nRACING SKI-PANTS\n2 wqr SMdl tabic. TSfft\neirl kmrtmi ilm, Mart t\nUtn-.KU.\u00C2\u00AB$4M0\nSKMTMN\nAUSTRIAN MADE\nFLARE\nSKI-PANTS\n2 wiy slran MnL AuiftM\nUmlUlmt.llm.lMmM\n\u00C2\u00ABux\u00C2\u00BB$sioo\nSKMTMN\nLADIES'\nNANCY GREENE\nSKI JACKETS\nlb. 17020m. Mar ahn.HU4.\n46100\nSUPER SAVINGS ON SKI CLOTHING!\nGUY PERILLAT MODEL\nMANUFACTURER'S SUGG.\nLIST TO $125.00\nSKMrTMN\nSKI JACKET\nSALE\n2000 to select from.\nAll styles & sizes |\nSKIATHOM '\npriced from\n100% WOOL\nSKI SWEATERS\nWide assortment of\ncolours & styles.\nSKIATHoM\npriced from\nOPEN 9-9 WEEKDAYS and SATURDAYS 9-6\nFOUR SEASONS LEISURE WORLD\n1503 KINGSWAY, VANCOUVER \"DEAL WITH US AND BANK THE DIFFERENCE\" 8 73-2481 Page 10\nTHE UBYSSEY\nTuesday, February 6, 1973\nHot flashes\nPoppy\ndelayed\nDue to an injury to Terry Jacks\nthe Poppy Family concert scheduled for Friday has been postponed until Feb. 28, 8:30 p.m., in\nthe War Memorial gym.\nAll tickets already sold will be\nhonored at the door.\nJock reporf\nThe president's athletic committee report will be the subject\nof discussion in SUB 111 noon\ntoday.\nThe report took two years to\ncompile and recommends all\nathletic activities be consolidated\nunder a single committee.\nThe committee's chairman\nByron Hender will outline and\ndefend the report. Critics will be\nled by The Ubyssey's own Kent\nSpencer.\nOCT muzak\nJean-Pierre Rampal and Robert\nVeyron-Lacroix will be performing at the Queen Elizabeth\nTheatre at 8:30 p.m. Thursday.\nMusic for the harpsichord and\nflute of the 18th century will be\nfeatured, with selections from\nBach, Couperin and Mozart. This\ninternational duo has won international acclaim, and accolades\nand kudos reign supreme.\nEnergy\nJack Sexton, consultant to\nMontreal Engineering Corp.,\nwill discuss potential energy\nresources to the year 1990, 3 p.m.\nFriday, in Woodward centre\nlecture hall 1.\nMontreal Engineering was contracted to do the energy study in\n1970.\nAdmission to the lecture, the\nninth in the Westwater water\nresources series, is free.\nw; <5~J V?\"!. 5\n'Tween classes\nTODAY\nCHARISMATIC\nStudy on late great planet earth,\nnoon, SUB 115,\nGERMAN CLUB\nPolka party, noon, I.H. 404.\nCANOE, KAYAK CLUB\nMeet, noon, SUB 125.\nWOMEN'S STUDIES\nPanel discussion: Strategy and\ntactics of women's liberation, 7:30\np.m., SUB ballroom.\nCAMPUS MINISTRY\nEucharist, noon, Lutheran centre.\nPRE-MED SOCIETY\nMovie: The elusive enemy, noon,\nIRC 1.\nWEDNESDAY\nRIGHT TO LIFE\nFuture action, noon, SUB 105B.\nONTOLOGY\nRon Polack on true and false values,\nnoon, Buch. 216.\nTHURSDAY\nVCF\nWard Gask on the reliability of the\nnew testament, noon. Gage towers\nlounge.\nCAMPUS CRUSADE\nMeeting, 7:30 p.m., 1962 Acadia\nRd.\nCHARISMATIC\nFree film, Nicky Cruz film, refreshments, 7:30 p.m., Lutheran centre.\nCAMPUS CAVALIERS\nSquare dancing, noon-2:30 p.m.,\nSUB club's lounge.\nL'ALLIANCE FRANCAISE\nFilm: Chiens perdus sans collier,\nnoon, Buch 100.\nCVC\nMeeting about open house, noon,\nSUB 224.\nCAMPUS MINISTRY\nLiberation theology, 8 p.m., Lutheran centre.\nAlan Jackson on theology, 4:30\np.m., Lutheran centre.\nPOETRY\nE. Vinaver on medieval poetry and-\nthe moderns, noon, Buch. 104.\nCCF\nPractical christian, noon, SUB 211.\nFRIDAY\nGRAD CLASS\nCouncil meeting, noon, SUB council\nchambers.\nSLM-NORML\nMeeting, 11:30 a.m.-2:30 p.m., SUB SKYDIVERS\n2ii Meeting, noon, SUB 213\nFREE\nDr. Bundolo's Pandemonium Medicine Show, free, noon, SUB movie\ntheatre.\nTODAY, NOON \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nSUB AUDITORIUM\nZiedan Atashi\nNEW YORK ISRAELI CONSUL\nSpeaks on\nTHE STATUS OF MINORITY\nGROUPS IN ISRAEL\nFREE FREE FREE\nSponsored by Speakers & Education Committee\nYou'd better hurry.\nFeb. 28th A\nlast day. v>\nThe last day\nJ to save\nonyour 1972\nincome tax.\nYou can save on income tax now\nwhile you save for your retirement.\nUp to $4,000 can be deducted from\nyour taxable income when deposited\nin any of our Registered Retirement\nSavings Plans.\nStop by and see us for complete\ninformation.\nRegistered Retirement Savings Plans.\nRoyal Trust (\u00C2\u00A7)\nOFFICES IN VANCOUVER\nRoyal Trust Tower; Bentali Centre, 555 Burrard St. Vancouver, B.C. 685-2471\nHollyburn Plaza, 1760 Marine Drive, West Vancouver, B.C. 922-3276\nOther offices in Kelowna and Victoria.\nCLASSIFIED\nRates: Campus \u00E2\u0080\u0094 3 lines, 1 day $1.00; additional lines, 25c;\nCommercial \u00E2\u0080\u0094 3 lines, 1 day $1.50; additional lines\n35c; additional days $1.25 & 30c\nClassified ads ore not accepted by telephone and are payable in .\nadvance. Deadline is 11:30 a.m., the day before publication,\nPubticatton*Office, Room241 S.U.B.. UBC, Van. 8,B.C.\nANNOUNCEMENTS\nDances\n11\nVALENTINE DANCE AT ST.\nMark's Sat. 9-1, Continental Cavalier's Band, $1.50, refreshment\nfood, fun. .\t\nPOLKA PARTY, LIVELY GERMAN\nBand, Friday, Feb. 9, Internationa]\nHouse, 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. Refreshments.\nLost & Found\n13\nLOST: AT PHOENIX, A BLUE\nduffel coat and glasses. Please\ncontact Terry at 738-0238.\nRides & Car Pools\n14\nSpecial Notices\n15\nTHE CBC RELUCTANTLY PRE-\nsents more live radio comedy. Dr.\nBundolo and his Pandemonium\nShow sneak back on campus this\nFriday, Feb. 9, in SUB Theatre at\n12:30. It's FREEH!\t\nVARSITY OUTDOOR CLUB CON-\nstitutional amendment posted in\nclub room 14.\nSKI AT WHISTLER. STAY AT\nGaribaldi, 20 minutes from lifts.\n$3.50 overnight. Call 932-5256 Andy.\nCATAIN VANCOUVER CLUB \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nTwo for the price of one books\ndistributed by Assoc. Room 100B,\nSUB.\t\nLARRY: MET YOU ON THE TRAIN\nto Jasper in Aug. 72. Please contact\u00E2\u0080\u0094Celeste\u00E2\u0080\u00946210 Curtis St., Burnaby 2, B.C.\nDISCOUNT STEREO, EXAMPLE:\nAM-FM stereo receiver, turntable,\nbase cover, cartridge, two speakers,\n2-year guarantee, list $200, your\ncost $125.00. Carry AKAI, A.G.S.,\nZenith color TVs at savings. Call\n732-6769.\nRENT WHISTLER CONDOMINIUM\nnear gondola. Day/Wk. Ph. 732-\n0174 eves, or before 8 A.M.\nSKI TODD\nMid-Term Break: Transportation,\nMotel, Three days skiing \u00E2\u0080\u0094 $53.\nPhone Deedee, 987-4807,\t\nBREAK THE CIGARETTE HABIT\ncomfortably \u00E2\u0080\u0094 No weight gain or\nnervousness. Smoke Watchers, 688-\n5821.\nSpecial Events\n15A\n$75 FOR 75c;\n40 Bonus Coupons In This\nYear's Bird Calls\nAVAILABLE NOW\nBUY YOURS TODAY!\nBookstore and SUB\nTravel Opportunities\n16\nWanted\u00E2\u0080\u0094Miscellaneous\n18\nAUTOMOTIVE\nAutos For Sale\n21\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2GOOD BUY MY '63 ACADIAN\nS/Wagon. Good condn. Autom.\nradio. Offers, 733-3315.\n1372 PEUGEOT 30T PERFECT\ncondition. Still on warranty. Front\nwheel, delight to drive. 9,000 miles.\n$2,495. 684-0749.\n'65 SPRITE 98,000 MILES, NEEDS\nsome work, $350. L. S. Gormely.\nengineering.\nRm. 227, Chemical\nMotorcycles\n25\nBUSINESS SERVICES\nPhotography\n35\nHen* anbgutter\nCamm*.\nTHANKS\nTo Your Support\nWE ARE EXTENDING -\nWE NOW HAVE A BIGGER\nFLOOR SPACE TO\nSERVE YOU BETTER!\nWatch-for our In-Store\nExpansion Specials!\n3010 W. Broadway\nNote our New Phone No.\n736-8375\nScandals\nMMl\n37\n\"IS NOTHING SACRED?\" COME\nto Doctor Bundolo's Pandemonium\nMedicine Show this Friday, Feb.\n9. 12:30, in the SUB Movie Theatre.\nIt's FREE!!!\nTyping\n40\nESSAYS TYPED \u00E2\u0080\u0094 NEAT ACCUR-\nate work. 35c per typed page. 325-\n9976, if I'm out leave your phone\nnumber.\t\nEFFICIENT ELECTRIC TYPING \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nmy home. Essays, thesis, etc. Neat,\naccurate work. Reasonable rates.\n263-5317.\t\nEXPERT IBM SELECTRIC TYPIST.\nExperienced Thesis Typist. Specialize in Formula and Math. Reason-\nable Rates. Mrs. Ellis, 321-3838.\nTYPING: ESSAYS, THESES. CALL\nDonna, 266-4929, Kerrisdale area.\nFAST ACCURATE TYPING OF Essays and thesis. Reasonable terms.\nCall Mrs. Akau, days 688-5235\nweekends and evenings 263-4023.\nEMPLOYMENT\nHelp Wanted\n51\nESTABLISHED DIAMOND IMPOR-\nting firm requires 12 senior student\nsales representatives for the UBC\nCampus. Clean, Neat Dresser.\nGood Sales Ability. 3rd or 4th Tear\nstudents with pleasant personality\nand some sales experience. Fluent\nin English. Excellent commission\nstructure. Include in your application a recent photograph of yourself. Mr. Mel Battensby, General\nDelivery, Vancouver Postal Station\nA, Hastings & Granville, Vancouver, B.C.\nSpecial Classes\n62\nTutoring Service\n63\nSpeakeasy SUB Anytime!\n228-6792 - 12:30-2:30\nTUTORIAL\nCENTRE\nFor Students and Tutors\nRegister Now! 12:30-2:30\nINSTRUCTION & SCHOOLS\nTutoring\n64\nMISCELLANEOUS\nFOR SALE\n71\nFENDER STRATOCASTER GUI-\ntar $195. Lansing D130 15\" speaker,\nDeYong cabinet, $125; pair $310.\nChris, 266-2662.\nRENTALS & REAL ESTATE\nRooms\n81\nROOM FOR MAN ONLY. BSMT.\nWarm, quiet, private entr., nea^\ngate\u00E2\u0080\u0094ready now\u00E2\u0080\u0094224-7623.\nRoom & Board\n82\nROOM AND BOARD AVAILABLE\nat Delta Kappa Epsilon fraternity\nhouse, 5765 Agronomy Rd. Reasonable rates. Colour TV, laundry\nfacilities. Ph. 224-9691 after 5:00\nfor details.\nFurnished Apts.\n83\nMATURE, INDEPENDENT FE-\nmale wants roommate, same. February-April, West End apartment.\nPartial transportation provided,\n684-3770.\nUnf. Apts.\n84\nCommunal Housing\n85\nTWO FINE ROOMS AVAILABLE\nin enormous fully equipped home.\nCall at 4446 W. 13th or leave message for Ian at 224-3814.\nUse Ubyssey Classified\nTO SELL - BUY - INFORM\nThe U.B.C. Campus\nMARKET PLACE Tuesday, February 6, 1973\nTHE UBYSSEY\nPage 11\nLosing streak out by TKO\nThe Birds kayoed a four\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0game losing streak Monday\nnight with a 77-53 win over the\nUniversity of Saskatchewan\nHuskies.\nFor the first time in several\ngames the Birds were able to\nshoot consistently on shots\nfrom inside the foul line.\nDarryl Gjernes was the top\nplayer in this regard, hitting\nScore card\nSCORE CARD\nBASKETBALL\nWeekend games\nUBC 64, Lethbridge 86\nUBC 66, Lethbridge 92\nVictoria 85, Saskatchewan 67\nVictoria 66, Saskatchewan 70\nAlberta 72, Calgary 60\nAlberta 69, Calgary 60\nCWUAA basketball standings\nup to Feb. 5\nW\n13\n12\n7\n5\n4\n3\nL\n3\n4\n7\n11\n10\n9\nAlberta\nLethbridge\nUBC\nCalgary\nVictoria\nSaskatchewan\nICE HOCKEY\nWeekend games\nUBC 12, Victoria 2\nUBC 4, Victoria 3 (over-time)\nCalgary 6, Saskatchewan 2\nAlberta 16, Saskatchewan 2\nCWUAA hockey standings\nup to Feb. 5\nGTP\n4\n4\n6\n4\n6\nAlberta\nCalgary\nUBC\nSaskatchewan\nVictoria\nINTRAMURALS\nW\n14\n13\n12\n6\n0\nL\n3\n6\n7\n10\n19\nUnit\nGTP\n7\n5\n5\n8\n5\nmanagers\nmeeting tonight 7 p.m. SUB council\nchamber.\nPacific Coast League\nsoccer standings\nP W T L GFGA PTS\nVic West 9 7\nVic Gorge 11 6\nNew West . 9 6\nNorth Shore! 8 4\nUBC 7 3\nInter Italia 112\nPauls 7 1\n23 10\n18 11\n23 12\n11 7\n12 9\n8 28\n7 20\n14\n14\n12\n9\n7\n5\n2\n>\u00C2\u00AB\u00E2\u0096\u00BA.-\n\u00C2\u00BB*\"-\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 .j\u00C2\u00BBBMi\"i|^\u00C2\u00BBir ;\nS\"\nFIRST YEAR med. student Bill\nMackie didn't do too badly\nagainst the University of Washington /\u00E2\u0096\u00A0,\nMackie\nleads UBC\nto victory\nUBC gymnasts outlasted\n.Washington State University\nSaturday at War Memorial\ngym and won 135-126.\nUBC's Bill Mackie won the\nall-around high-bar, parallel\nbars, pommel horse, and floor\nexercises.\nHe tied Bob Dickmeyer of\nWashington in the vaulting\nwhile Washington's Jim Holt\ntook the rings.\nIn previous dual meets UBC\nhad lost to Washington but had\nwins against the Universities\nof Calgary and Alberta.\nThe team will compete in the\nCanada West University\nAthletic Association\nChampionships on the weekend\nin Victoria.\nThe team goal is to better\nlast year's second place finish\nin the National Collegiates,\nwhich will be held March 3 and\n4 in Winnipeg.\nSPOR TS\nfor 21 points on lay-ups and\nclose-in jump shots. Teammate Rod Matheson netted 17\npoints also, mostly on layups.\nBut the Birds play improved\nas the game progressed and\nthe fast break clicked a few\ntimes. Shortly after the half-\ntime break the Birds had built\nthemselves a comfortable 15\npoint lead.\nSaskatchewan then started\nto close the gap with some good\noutside shooting by guard\nDean Faris.\nAt this point the Birds went\ninto their stall. They would\nThe Thunderbird basketball\nteam lost two games and yet\nanother player on the weekend.\nThe Birds were bombed\ntwice by the University of\nLethbridge, 86-64 Friday night\nand 92-66 Saturday.\nThey were plagued both\nnights by extremely poor\ninside shooting.\nFor example, John Mills shot\n5 for 17 from the field im\nFriday's game and 1 for 20\nSaturday.\nIn the meantime his check,\nbig Phil Tollestrup, was\nscoring 38 points Friday and 39\nSaturday. Tollestrup, the\nformer Brigham Young star\nwas shooting phenomenaly\nfrom the outside, hitting from\nwell outside the foul line.\nThere is little defence that\npass the ball constantly in and\nout and around the outside,\nkilling time while in the other\nteam's end.\nThe tactic was successful as\nthe Birds were able to use up as\nmuch as two minutes each\ntime they were on offense and\nthen score on an easy lay-up.\nAs a result, UBC had coasted\nto 24 point lead by the end\ngame.\nThe game was a great\ncontrast to the highly\ncompetitive series the two\nteams played in last season's\nplay-offs. This season both of\nthe teams have been\neliminated from the play-offs\nand thus took a casual attitude\ntowards the game.\nFor example Peter Herd\ncasually took a couple of\nminutes off in the second half\nto tie up his shoe lace while the\nball was being passed back and\nforth over his head.\nAt least the Birds seem to\nplay better when they are\nrelaxed as they utilized a fairly\nconsistent team effort to win\nthe game.\nThe Birds play again tonight\nat 8:30 p.m.\nUBC \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Darryl Gjernes 21, Rod\nMatheson 17, Brent Francis 14, John\nMills 13, Peter Herd 12.\nSaskatchewan \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Dean Faris 13, Paul,\nJacoby 12, Ken Traynor 10, Jim\nMerbison 6, Mark Hopkins 4, Bob\nThompson 4, Doug Forsythe 2, Mike\nHarrington 2.\nBird castle crumbling\ncan stop a tall man that can\nshoot from the outside.\nMills described his own poor\nplay as simply an inability to\n1 make the easy shots. He\ndescribed Tollestrup's defence\n(who was checking Mills) as\nonly \"adequate\".\nJack Hoy, the Bird's only\nremaining outside scoring\nthreat suffered a severely\nsprained ankle in the first haif\nof Saturday's game and will be\nout for at least two games.\nThus the Birds are left with\nthree starters, Bob Dickson,\nt Stan Callegari, and Hoy out of\nthe lineup. And, Mills has\ncertainly not played up to his\nusual standards since his\nrecent bout with the flu.\nWith no outside shooting\nCoach Peter Mullins has had\nhis team employ a strategy of\nworking the ball in deep for\nlay-ups and close jump shots.\nThis strategy was carried to\nthe extreme in the recent SFU\ngame as the Birds were\ninstructed not to take a shot\nfrom outside the foul-line. In\nthe two weekend games the\nBirds got plenty of deep shots\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094mark Hamilton photo\nFIGHTING FOR the ball are Bob\nThompson (44) and John Mills of\nUBC\nbut just couldn't put the ball in\nthe hoop.\nMullins' comment on the\ngames was \"we did everything\nokay that we were supposed to\nbut just lacked the finishing\ntouch.\"\nWith so many of the players\ninjured, many of the Birds\nhave been playing the full 60\nminutes in recent games.\nFor this reason Mullins has\nnot employed the zone press\nthat was so successful in\nearlier games. Mullins felt that\nit would take too much out of\nthe players to put on the press\nwhile playing the whole game.\nHigh scorers for the Birds\nwere Rod Matheson with 14\npoints Friday and Darryl\nGjernes with 18 points\nSaturday.\nVictoria humiliated, as usual\nBy RICHARD.\nKRANABETTER\nThe University of Victoria\nVikings humiliated themselves\nlosing 12-2 to the hockey\nThunderbirds in a lacklustre\ngame Friday night.\nThe Vikings quit playing\nwhen they got a penalty at the\n15 minute mark. The Birds\ncomplete domination during\nthe penalty seemed to\ndemoralize the Vikings.\nDespite six great chances, the\nBirds never scored during the\npenalty, but when it ended they\nstarted to pour in the goals.\nMost of the UBC goals were\nscored from in front of the net,\nas the Viking defence seemed\nunconcerned about checking\nthe man in front.\nSome of the Viking players\nwere quite annoyed when body-\nchecked. It seemed to be an\nattitude of I'm minding my\nown business, not bothering\nianyone; why hit me?\nAlex Dick and Bob Murray\npaced UBC with three goals\napiece, while Bill Cartwright\nwith two and Rich Longpre,\nBruce Brill, Jim Lawrence,\nand Brian DeBiasio added\nsingles.\nIn Victoria Sunday, Craig\nThomas scored at the five\nminute mark of the second\novertime period to allow the\nBirds a 4-3 win.\nCoach Bob Hindmarch said:\n\"They (Victoria) played well\nand we played poorly.\"\nThe Birds were behind 3-1\nafter the first period. Chuck\nCarignan, Arinie Pederson,\nJim Lawrence and Craig\nThomas scored markers for\nthe Birds.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094mark hamilton photo\nBILL GASTON protects the\nUBC goal\nIn soccer\nAn impressive loss\nUBC put on an impressive start to the soccer game at\nThunderbird Stadium Saturday in their game against the more\nexperienced New Westminster Blues, but lost 2-0.\nThe Blues Robin Davies recorded his fourth shutout of the\ncampaign, robbing the Thunderbirds on numerous breakaways.\nThe finish in front of the Blue's goal was not applied, and\nthis cost UBC the game, as both teams had equal scoring\nopportunities.\nGary Thompson netted the first of his two goals nine\nminutes into the first half. Collecting a long through ball in the\nfar outside corner, he took it toward the UBC net and a hesitant\nGreg Weber.\nHis hard shot made the score 1-0.\nLate in the game, Thompson made it 2-0 as he pushed the\nball through a knot of players for a slow motion score.\nThe weak shot barely crossed the goal line.\nThe game scheduled for February 15 against Simon Fraser\nUniversity has been postponed to mid-March, probably at\nEmpire Stadium.\nThe UBC players are looking forward to the confrontation\nas SFU presently leads the Inter-city Soccer League.\nYOU\nCAN READ\nFASTER and BETTER\nATTEND A FREE DEMONSTRATION\nAND FIND OUT HOW!\nTHURSDAY, FEBRUARY 8 - 12:45 P.M.\nS.U.B. Room 205 U.B.C.\nTHURSDAY, FEBRUARY 8 - 7:30 P.M.\nInstitute, 556 W. Broadway\nSUNDAY, FEBRUARY 11 -3:00 P.M.\nHotel Grosvenor, 840 Howe\nCLASSES STARTING FEBRUARY 15,19 & 22\nPhone 872-8201\nFor Times, Locations and Reservation of Space in the Class of\nyour choice.\n0\nEvelyn Wood Beading Dynamics\nSoonsored by Dynamic Learning Centre (B.C.)\n556 West Broadway, Vancouver, B.C. Call 872-820X Page 12\nTHE UBYSSEY\nTuesday, February 6, 1973\nNo merger with Bennett\u00E2\u0080\u0094 Warren\nTHOUSANDS OF LOGS for Vancouver mills are boomed every year,\nespecially during winter, below Musqueam cliffs off Southwest Marine\nDrive. Melancholy picture of booms under heavy overcast, backed by\nGulf Islands was caught by Mark Hamilton.\nEast End culture house opens\nBy STEVE MORRIS\nThe Vancouver East Cultural Centre,\na local initiatives project established to\npromote community culture in the east\nend will be holding open house at the old\nGrandview church which they plan to\nrenovate into a cultural centre-theatre.\nThe open house, set for Saturday at the\nchurch, 1895 Venables, is designed to\ngive the East End community an\nopportunity to air its views regarding\nthe project.\nThe VECC wants to renovate the\nchurch into a year-round centre for\ntheatre, dance and music, and to provide\nfacilities for community and educational\nmeetings.\nJoyce Ozier, spokeswoman for the\ngroup, said the church to be called the\nsoaring palace of fine art, is badly\nneeded.\n\"The centre will.be a community\nactivity in which everyone will have a\nchance to be involved,\" Ozier said.\n\"The open house on Saturday is a pre-\nrenovation meeting. The project will be\noutlined, but what we want is feedback.\nWe want to hear what the community\nreally needs.\"\nShe said the project will foster local\nVancouver cultural groups. The actors\nworkshop, the new play centre, Ann\nWyman dance troupe are only a few who\nwill now have a permanent\nestablishment from which to present\ntheir work, she said.\nOzier said renovations began Jan. 15,\nand the opening of the centre is\nprojected for mid-March. It will function\non a non-profit basis through funds from\nadmissions (which will be 50 cents or\nless), donations, rent and support from\ncity and provincial governments. The\nbuilding was provided rent free by the\nUnited Church.\n\"This project will embrace all of\nVancouver. The city needs it, and we\nneed the support of the community,\"\nOzier said.\nByKENDODD\nThere will not be any merger\nbetween the provincial\nProgressive Conservative and\nSocial Credit parties as long as\nW. A. C. Bennett remains\nleader of the Socreds,\nprovincial Conservative leader\nDerril Warren said Friday.\nSpeaking before a\npredominately male audience\nof about 35 in SUB 207-209\nWarren offered a general\nanalysis of the present and\nfuture political climate in B.C.,\nespecially as pertaining to his\nparty.\nHe said the biggest problem\nin developing the Conservative\nparty in B.C. is \"to overcome\nits historical image as the\ndefender of the status quo.\"\nHowever Warren said there\nare more small \"c\"\nconservative votes in the\nprovince than any other group.\nIt is simply a matter of picking\nup the waning Socred strength,\nhe said.\n\"Our strength is in rural\nareas and the south end of\nVancouver Island \u00E2\u0080\u0094 areas\nwhere the NDP is weak.\"\nThese have traditionally been\nareas of Social Credit electoral\nsupport, he said.\nWarren said: \"It will be\nmore difficult for the\nConservatives to dent the\nvirtual NDP monopoly in\nGreater Vancouver\".\nWarren predicted good times\nahead for the Conservatives in\nB.C. and said he foresees party\nmembership increasing from\n7,500 to 50,000. He compared\nthis support to the 4,000\nmembers of the Socreds and\n12,000 of the NDP.\nNot surprisingly he sees the\nConservatives as the most\nlikely successor to the NDP\ngovernment and said Premier\nDave Barrett has told him this\nas well. Warren did not predict\nthe date of his ascension.\nAnalyzing Barrett, he said:\n\"Mr. Barrett is very likeable,\nwitty and honest in a political\nsense but very political. He will\ndo anything to keep his party in\npower. In this way I think he is\nvery much like Mr. Bennett.\"\nHe said the NDP is very\ncohesive now but \"will\neventually break into three\nwings; a labor wing, an\naoademic socialist wing, and\nthe Alex Macdonald \u00E2\u0080\u0094 free-\nenterprise wing.\nPromises: good form, lousy content\nMussoe's spring offering. Promises, Promises, is\n\u00C2\u00ABi polished vivacious production which, for many,\nHill be an exhilarating evening of musical comedy.\nDirected by James Johnston, it is fast-paced,'lively\n.ind amusing - ]ust the thing to keep one's spirits\nwarm on a dreary February night.\nHowever, my \"enjoyment of the production was\nseriously curtailed by the content of the story itself.\nPromises, Promises is a lousy musical. It is a\ntasteless hollow comedy which is worth seeing only\nbecause ol the \igor which the cast brings to it. Tn\nother words, il is a fine production of an inferior play\nChuck >\"CC\") Baxter, the \"hem' of Promises,\nPromises, is a creep A nobody among the thousands\noi employees in the Consolidated Life Insurance Co .\n.imhitious Chuck is anxious to start his climb up the\nexecutive ladder Me is also anxious to gain the\n..ttciilinn of Mis;- Fr.in Kuhclik, a hostess in Ihe\nexecutive dining mum. hut she can't e\en remember\nhis name So Chuck concentrates on improving his\ni iii (er b\ lcmlinii out hm apartment to horn\ iniddlc-\n.iiied executive* who need a place to lay various toy\nfifiriit jflfih. Ipfllil I'imil filirl-ilrirl I iffi\n>iLl.lklUII\.l llV/llft \.l/ll.11flLUUI.1. VA LJLll. .\nII all this sounds familiar, it's because Promises.\nPromises is based on the popular Shirley MacLaine'\nJack Lemmon movie, The Apartment, which most of\nus have no doubt seen on the late show. If it also\nsounds a bit sordid, you're right It is. The story is\nalso blatantly and disgustingly sexist, but then it\nseems virtually impossible to hnd a musical comedy\nthat isn't. While I realize that this genre docs not\npurport to be great art and is to be enjoyed basically\nas entertainment and spectacle, it seems a shame\nthat the level of many of the plays is so insulting.\nTn spite oi' these drawbacks. Promises, Promises\ncomes across with considerable charm Because of\nthe enthusiasm and freshness of the cast, we can\nusually manage to ignore the content and enjoy the\nlorm This is\" no small leal for Mussoc because\nPage Tuesday\nPromises, Promises, un spite oi Hurt Racharach's\nreputation' has only two memorable songs out or 15\nI'll \ever Fall \"in Love Again\" and \"Pionuses.\nPi onuses' The music is also \cry poorly\nintem iiied into the sloiy line so that it is difficult to\nmake the songs seem a n.itm al part ol the play\nline ni;i|or reason tor this production s appeal is\n\l-irnlr Yurm in lie* lirimii. In lhi> ili-m jtiHinc} rnlfi nt\nChuck a good singing voice, limitless energy, and a\ndisarming boyishness. His talents support the play\neven during its weakest moments. Victor A. Young\nfollows his fine performance in the rock-opera\nMacbeth with a strong, if somewhat too sympathetic\nportrayal of Sheldrake. Chuck's adulterous boss. A\nhighlight ot the production was Wanda Wilkinson's\nlusty portrayal of Marge, a blow/y 'widow' who picks\nChuck up in a bar. Wilkinson gives earthiness and\ncharm to a character who might otherwise have been\njust another cliche.\nGilian Lucas, in the lead role of Fran Kubelik. was\nsomewhat hland in the opening scenes but got better\nas the play progressed. Her rendition of \"I'll Never\nKail In Love Again\" with Chuck is verv appealing\nand is one of the few musical highlights of the\nproduction Sam Mancuso is appropriately wry as\nIlr Dreyfuss. and Lynette Caler gives a forceful\nperformance ol Sheldrake's sadder but wiser\nsecretary.\nMost other aspects of the production are cntireiv\nsatisfactory The set is colorful function.il. and\nallows lor smooth seem- chances The orchestra is\nexcellent, and ihe dance iuiiiiIh-is. although lacking\nin technical polish and imagination jre spirited and\nfun to watch\nPromises. Promises, nins until S.iturday at the\nvJjU auuiiuiiuiii. liukels are $i-.>i.iiu lor student\nperformances tonight at 8:30 p m and Thursday at\nnoon. It is definitely a\" worthwhile two hours of\nentertainment.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094Adrienne Glen"@en . "Newspapers"@en . "Vancouver (B.C.)"@en . "LH3.B7 U4"@en . "LH3_B7_U4_1973_02_06"@en . "10.14288/1.0125914"@en . "English"@en . "Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library"@en . "Vancouver : Alma Mater Society of the University of B.C."@en . "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/"@en . "Original Format: University of British Columbia. Archives"@en . "University of British Columbia"@en . "The Ubyssey"@en . "Text"@en .