"CONTENTdm"@en . "http://resolve.library.ubc.ca/cgi-bin/catsearch?bid=1211252"@en . "University Publications"@en . "2015-08-13"@en . "1985-03-19"@en . "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/Ubysseynews/items/1.0125931/source.json"@en . "application/pdf"@en . " University funding still mystery\nNo one knows much about the\nnew $14.9 million 'program adjustment' funds included in the new\nprovincial universities budget.\nGeorge Morfitt, Universities\nCouncil of B.C. chair, said Monday\nhe's not even sure if UCBC will be\nresponsible for dividing up the\nmoney, part of the zero per cent increase allotted to universities March\n14.\n\"We're at the disposition of the\n(universities) minister to tell us how\nhe wants it divided up,\" he said.\nMorfitt said the fund will be used\nto help fund early retirements and\nseverance pay, salary increases for\nselected faculty, and to facilitate\nenrolment shifts within and among\nthe universities.\nUCBC secretary Lee Southern\nsaid the council is still waiting for a\nletter from the university ministry\ntelling the council of the exact funds\nTHE UBYSSEY\nVol. LXVII, No. 45\nVancouver, B.C. Tuesday, March 19, 1985\n228 2301\navailable before the council proceeds with exact budgets for each\nuniversity. \"We can only go as fast\nas the government gives us information,\" he said.\nUBC vice president finance Bruce\nGellatly said UBC will be in \"deep\ntrouble\" if it does not get its share\nof the special funds. Excluding the\nfund, UBC's budget is five per cent\nless than last year.\nFormer UBC president George\nPedersen said in his resignation\nspeech March 7: \"If we get hit with\na five per cent cut when that budget\nspeech comes down, I do not\nhonestly believe this university can\nrespond to that.\"\nGellatly said a zero per cent increase leaves a $7.5 million deficit\nfo- 1985-86 while a five per cent cut\nmakes the deficit $16 million. The\nuniversity has no idea what it has to\ndo to get money from the fund, he\nsaid.\nJack Finnbogason, College-\nInstitute Educators Association of\nB.C. president, said he doesn't\nthink the fund will make up the\nmissing five per cent. The fund will\nbe used for severance pay and early\nretirement funds set up for dismissed faculty when programs are cut,\nhe said.\nUBC has already paid out more\nthan $4 million for about 50 early\nretirements over the last two years.\nNOTORIOUS CUTE KID enjoys hearty meal before heading off to anthropology class. Digital digester knows\nthat thumbs come complete with 19 special herbs and spices and provide 93 per cent of recommended daily nutritional allowance. Also, cute kids on cover always increase pickup rate.\nColleges lose more in NDP ridings\nVANCOUVER (CUP) \u00E2\u0080\u0094 The\nB.C. Social Credit government is\ncalling for an average six per cent\ncut in college funding but at least\none professor fears that colleges in\nNDP ridings will receive even less\nmoney.\nJim Howard, faculty association\npresident at Selkirk College in the\nB.C. interior, said schools in ridings\nthat snub the Social Credit party\nwill have to absorb a disproportionate amount of the cutbacks in\nfunding.\nSelkirk, the interior's oldest college, is a good example.\nHoward said the school is being\n\"diluted to pieces\" and is bracing\nfor a whopping 10.4 per cent funding cut. The cut will force the college to fire 15 per cent of its faculty\nand eliminate its second year\nuniversity transfer program.\nThe college program allows\nfinancially-strapped students in the\ninterior to study for two years at a\nlocal institution, before moving on\nto a university on the B.C. coast.\nThree other institutions are in the\nsame position as Selkirk. They are:\nCapilano College, the Pacific Vocational Institute and the B.C. In-\nMcGeer mad over letter\nBy ROBERT BEYNON\nUniversities minister Pat McGeer\nmay sue the Confederation of\nFaculty Associations of B.C. president and a Victoria magazine over a\nletter the magazine published.\nUniversities ministry spokesperson\nJane Burnes said Monday McGeer\nis seeking a legal opinion. \"He\nhasn't yet decided\" whether to sue,\nBurnes said.\nShe added McGeer could confirm\n\"neither the substance or spirit\" of\nthe letter, adding that although\nMonday magazine \u00E2\u0080\u0094 the letter's\npublisher \u00E2\u0080\u0094 contacted him regarding the letter McGeer had not yet\nofficially received a copy.\nMonday Magazine editor Peter\nLadner said he carefully studied\nthe letter before publishing it and\n\"my impression is it's a pretty accurate reflection\" of McGeer's\nthoughts.\nLadner said he grilled both\nacademics who were present for the\nconversation the letter refers to,\nand their statements corroborated\neach other's.\nThe letter, written by Simon\nFraser University professor Ehor\nBoyanowsky, says McGeer told\nhim in a meeting that:\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 it's dreaming to think that\nEstablished Programs Financing\ngiven by the federal government for\npost-secondary education must be\nspent on education;\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 there are too many students,\nfaculty and universities in this province;\nSee page 5: COLLEAGUES\nstitute of Technology. All of B.C.'s\ncolleges, however, including\nOkanagan, Kwantlen, Douglas,\nLangara, and Malaspina are suffering from prolonged underfunding.\nHoward said the Kootenays\nregion, where Selkirk is located,\nwas dealt a \"crushing blow\" last\nyear with the closure of the David\nThompson University Centre in\nNelson. He said the move was\npolitically motivated.\nA coalition of educators has\nbegun to protest the government's\npolicies and staged a demonstration\nat the opening of the B.C.\nlegislature recently.\n\"What we'd like to hear from\n(education minister Jack) Heinrich\nis why the government wants fewer\nSee page 2: THERE'S\nFinnbogason said the fund makes\nthe public mistakenly think government money will be used for new in-\nnovative programs. \"It's\ndeliberately part of a device to\nmislead the public,\" he said.\nActing UBC president Robert\nSmith said everyone is very anxious\nabout the fund and its implications\nfor university autonomy.\n\"University autonomy is\nsomething we prize very highly and\nwe must recognize and protect it.\nWe must see to it that we do not\ncompromise it,\" he said.\nPrograms will still be cut because\nof the deficit, Smith added. But\nUBC does not have to prepare a\nbudget by April 1 when its next\nfiscal year starts, he said.\n\"It's not as if we all turn into\npumpkins if we don't have a\nbudget,\" he said.\nEven university ministry\nspokesperson Jane Burnes said she\ndid not know what the fund will be\nused for. But she said she didn't\nthink the $14.9 million will only be\nfor severance pay and retirement\nfunds.\nBurnes denied the fund threatens\nuniversity autonomy, saying the\nprogram changes will be left up to\nthe universities. \"It's all up to the\nuniversities, they're autonomous\nand we won't be telling them what\nto do,\" she said.\nFaculty criticize UBC\nboard's McLean\nBy CHARLIE FIDELMAN\nUBC's board of governors chair withdrew his offending comments concerning UBC faculty in a letter to the faculty association in UBC Reports\nrecently, but some faculty are still angry.\nDavid McLean's letter said he had \"been totally misquoted\" in an article\nin the March 9 issue of The Sun which reads: \"The resignation (of UBC\npresident George Pedersen) could be 'the thing the university needed,'\nMcLean said because faculty may 'take their responsibilities more seriously.'\"\nLaw professor Dennis Pavlich said he does not see the connection between Pedersen's resignation and the faculty's responsibilities. \"Did\nPedersen encourage people not to work? If McLean said so it is a foolish\ncomment,\" said Pavlich.\nMcLean added his remarks about the need for a \"different type of president\" in The Sun article were also taken out of context.\nPavlich said he is running for election as faculty representative for the\ncommittee to select a new UBC president because he wants to prevent the\nselection of a president who will be a rubber stamp for the provincial\ngovernment.\nUBC needs a president sensitive to every segment of the university, as\nwell as the community and government, said Pavlich, \"not someone who\nwill toe the line of the government-appointed board of governors\".\nCommittee of Concerned Academics member Philip Resnick said\nMcLean's comments imply the faculty has done little more than \"sit on\ntheir fannies tweedling their thumbs for the last five years\". Resnick, a\npolitical science professor, said more faculty will quit, adding those leaving\nwill not be slouchers.\n' 'It would be a very good thing if McLean resigned and took universities\nminister Pat McGeer with him,\" said Resnick. He said the provincially appointed board members, who make up the majority of the board, are not\nsufficiently independent of the government which has appointed them.\n\"We should be doubly careful the choice is not a rubber stamp for people like McLean and McGeer\" he added.\nAssociate civil engineering professor Richard Spencer, also vying for a\nfaculty position on the presidential committee, said he does not want a\npresident who is a rubber stamp for the government.\nMcLean said his comments about UBC's faculty were quoted out of context. \"My view is that the faculty are working their butts off, they do take\ntheir responsibilities seriously,\" said McLean.\nHe said his remarks about the new kind of president were also quoted\nout of context. \"I meant I am amazed at some of the people who are expressing an interest\" in the position of president, he said.\nI.S. right wing women now force\nBy SUE McILROY\nThe right wing movement in the U.S. is having increasing success organizing women into a strong\npolitical force, a leading U.S. feminist, writer and activist said Friday.\nAndrea Dworkin told 600 people in Woodward IRC\nthe right seems to be offering women many benefits\nsuch as economic security, a certain amount of respect,\nand a place inside society.\nShe said in a society \"permeated with sadism and an\nincredible increase in random violence\" the right offers women a limited security and the promise of law\nand order.\n\"Right now there's this war and it's a war against\nwomen and if we're going to fight back there must be a\ncertain ruthlessness in women that doesn't exist now.\"\nDworkin's speech on \"Right Wing Women\", the title\nof her newest book, was organized by the Alma Mater\nSociety women's centre, and co-sponsored by the UBC\nlaw faculty and the Simon Fraser University women's\nstudies department;\nRight wing women are consistent, said Dworkin,\nciting the fact their stand on abortion never changes,\nand Dworkin sees this as strength.\n\"The right is about power and force and fear\",\nSee page 2: FEMINISTS\ngassagwSSH*^ Page 2\nTHE UBYSSEY\nTuesday, March 19,1985\nFeminists must confront\nFrom page 1\nDworkin said. \"And the right is\nprepared to use police and military\nstrength against anyone who upsets\ntheir power, she said.\nFeminists must be prepared to confront this power with the knowledge\nthat \"if you take power from people, you must be ready to watch\nthem be hurt at losing it\". She said\nright wing women want power \"and\nthey don't say thank you\".\nDworkin was critical of feminists\nand the women's movement for\nhaving created social and political\nconflict and not following it up.\n\"We said that we wanted economic,\nracial and sexual equality and they\n(the right) thought we meant it\",\nDworkin said. Consequently\nfeminists must take some responsibility, she said, for the rise of the\nright.\nDworkin said it is very difficult\nbeing a woman in a society that\nhates women.\n\"The stigma of being a woman is\nused to humiliate you all the time\",\nDworkin said.\n'There's no reason\"\nFrom page 1\nB.C. citizens to have an opportunity for an education. Since Ottawa\npays 75 per cent of all post-\nsecondary funding, surely there's\nno sound financial reason for cutting back,\" said Jack Finnbogasan,\npresident of the College-Institute\neducators association.\nEagle Spirit\nFly with You\nN.I.S.U.\nNative Indian\nStudent Union\nUniversity of British Columbia\nCULTURAL AWARENESS DAYS\nYou are invited to join the Native Students on campus in the following\nevents:\nCultural Awareness Days Opening\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094March 20, Noon, Scarfe Lounge\nSpeaker Series\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094March 20, 21, 22 (12:30) Scarfe Bldg.\nIndian Organizations Information Booths\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094March 20 & 21 (10:30-4:00) Scarfe Lounge &\nSUB Lounge\nJ Food Tasting\u00E2\u0080\u0094Sample B.C. Native Foods\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094March 21 (12:00-2:00) Scarfe Lounge\n~ Film Presentation\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094March 20 & 22 (2:30-4:30) Scarfe Lounge\nU Drama and Dancers\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094March 20, 21, 22 (12:00-2:30) Scarfe and\nSUB Lounge\nSPEAKER SERIES\nMarch 20\u00E2\u0080\u0094Scarfe 100 (12:30) Linden Pi nay. Counsellor, Native Education\nCenter. Native Education: New Solutions for Old Problems.\nMarch 21\u00E2\u0080\u0094Scarfe 100 (12:30): Don Moses, Edonomist, Chairman, Native\nEconomic Development Fund. An Update on Economic Development.\nMarch 22\u00E2\u0080\u0094Scarfe 100 (12:30): Susan Tatoosh, President, Aboriginal\nWomen's Business Development Corporation; Director, Native Economic\nDevelopment Fund. The Changing Roles of Native Women.\nYOU CAN TAKE IT WITH\nYOU!\nWE HAVE A SHIPMENT GOING TO YOUR\nCOUNTRY. CALL NOW!\nTippet-Richardson Limited\n''the friendly movers''\n324-5015\n120\u00E2\u0080\u0094455 East Kent Street, Vane.\nOTTAWA \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 TRENTON \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 PETAWAWA \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 NORTH BAY\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 HAMILTON \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 KITCHENER \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 STRATFORD \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 LONDON \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 M1SSISSAUGA \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 EDMONTON \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 CALGARY \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nVANCOUVER\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 SAN JOSE\nTHE UNIVERSITY OF BRITISH COLUMBIA\nTHE CECIL H. AND IDA GREEN\nVISITING PROFESSORSHIPS\n1985 SPRING LECTURES\nDAVID HUBEL\nDr. David Hubel received the 1981 Nobel Prize in Medicine or Physiology for his\npioneering work on the neurophysiology of vision. A graduate of McGill University,\nDr. Hubel was associated with the Montreal Neurological Institute and Johns Hopkins\nHospital and University Medical School before joining the Harvard Medical School in\n1959. Dr. Hubel's contributions to the understanding of vision are legendary and he is\nan entertaining speaker who can express his ideas well to both specialists and a general\naudience.\nCOLOUR MECHANISMS IN THE VISUAL CORTEX OF PRIMATES\nWednesday, March 20 In Lecture Hall 6, Woodward Instructional Resources\nCentre, at 12:30 PM\nALL LECTURES ARE FREE\u00E2\u0080\u0094PLEASE POST AND ANNOUNCE\nOccasionally unadvertised seminars are presented\nBYTE COMPUTERS THROWS DOWN THE GAUNTLET\nByte Computers can not only\nmatch any price on the Apple\nMacintosh Personal Computer\noffered by any retailer including the UBC bookstore.\nByte can sell for less! You can\nget all of Byte Computers'\nlegendary expertise and service and save money. Ask\naround. You can't do better.\nHERE ARE THE GROUND\nRULES. You must be a full\ntime student or faculty at UBC.\nWe will sell to groups of three\nor more; since we will organize\nthe group for you if you need\nus to, this is no problem. Cash\nor certified cheque only. Price\nstructure allows for groups of\nthree, six, and ten students.\nOne person acts as co\nordinator and treasurer. This\noffer may be withdrawn\nwithout notice. SO GET A\nCOUPLE OF FRIENDS together\nand give us a call. Or, if you\nwould rather, call us and tell us\nto put you on our\nMACINTOSH CAR POOL list.\nAs soon as we have two more\nlike minded buyers (a couple\nhours-a day), we will call you.\nAnd just like that an Apple\nMacintosh is yours.\n\"1\n-FIRST MICRO STORE IN CANADA\n-LARGEST INDEPENDENT DEALER\n-FULL SERVICE/TRAINING STAFF\n-BEST PRICES ANYWHERE\n-BEST SOFTWARE SELECTION\n'Meet your prints charming \"\nMACINTOSH 128K\nIMAGEWRITER\nMouse,\nMacpaint,\nMacwrite\nDOWNTOWN RETAIL PRICE $4245\nBOOKSTORE PRICE $2965\nBYTE COMPUTERS PRICE AOOOC\n* AS LOW AS $Z895\nArtf^r\nTM\nTHE BEST PRICE ON THE APPLE MACINTOSH\nPERSONAL COMPUTER\nFOR UBC STUDENTS AND FACULTY\n\"Macintosh for the disc contented\"\nMACINTOSH 128K\nIMAGEWRITER\nSECOND DISK DRIVE\nMouse, Macpaint\nMacwrite\nDOWNTOWN RETAIL PRICE $4495\nBOOKSTORE PRICE $3150\nBYTE COMPUTERS PRICE AOrtQC\n* AS LOW AS $3095\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2Group of Ten Price \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nSee GROUND RULES above.\n\"Just the Macintosh, ma'am\"\nMACINTOSH\nPERSONAL COMPUTER\n128K bytes of memory\nMouse, Macpaint, Macwrite\nDOWNTOWN RETAIL PRICE $3295\nBOOKSTORE PRICE $2300\nBYTE COMPUTERS PRICE\n* AS LOW AS $2190\nBYTE COMPUTERS\n2151 BURRARD ST.\nVANCOUVER, B.C.\nPHONE 738-2181\nBuy the bushel\"\nMACINTOSH\n512K\nIMAGEWRITER\nMouse, Macpaint\nMacwrite\nDOWNTOWN RETAIL PRICE $5045\nBOOKSTORE PRICE $3560\nBYTE COMPUTERS PRICE AOJIftC\n* AS LOW AS $3495\nFor the Serious driver\"\nMACINTOSH 512K\nIMAGEWRITER\nSECOND\nDISK\nDRIVE\nMouse, Macpaint, Macwrite\nDOWNTOWN RETAIL PRICE $5395\nBOOKSTORE PRICE $3800\nBYTE COMPUTERS PRICE\n* AS LOW AS $3690\nBYTE COMPUTERS\n% #\n1 ** Sxc&etfteHt\n\"THANKS FOR THE MEMORIES\"\nSTORE-WIDE SPECTACULAR APRIL 13\nCELEBRATING OUR 8TH ANNIVERSARY\nMORE DETAILS NEXT WEEK\n- 20\nAuthorized Dealer Tuesday, March 19,1985\nTHE UBYSSEY\nPage 3\nFederal report critiques Socreds\nBy STEPHEN WISENTHAL\nThe B.C. government is making a\nprofit on post-secondary education\nfunding, according to a newly\nreleased federal study.\nB.C.'s grant from the federal\ngovernment for universities and colleges will be $20 million more than\nthe $462 million B.C. will spend on\nthem this year, according to a\nfederal study on post-secondary\nfunding in all provinces released\nThursday by federal secretary of\nstate Walter McLean.\nThe report by former CBC president Al Johnson calls for pressure\non provincial governments to increase their spending on colleges\nand universities. It suggests tying\nfunding increases to increases in\nprovinical spending.\nThe 1977 agreement which\nremoved any ties between federal\nand provincial increases has \"gone\nwrong,\" the report states. The\nreport suggests either abandoning\nany pretense of federal control or\nmoving to exert more control.\nFour provinces \u00E2\u0080\u0094 B.C.,\nManitoba, Newfoundland, and Ontario \u00E2\u0080\u0094 have shown especially\nsteep falls in the provincial share of\nfunding since 1977, the report\nstates. Federal post-secondary\ntransfers, totalling $4.2 billion this\nyear, will represent 80 per cent of\nfunding this year, compared with 69\nper cent in 1977.\nB.C.'s share has been cut 25 per\ncent over the period according to\nthe report.\nActing UBC president Robert\nSmith said he approves of the\nreport's demand for a new federal-\nprovincial agreement.\n\"1 agree its time that the federal\nand provincial governments harmonized their attitude,\" he said.\n\"Somehow there's got to be a\nmeeting of the minds.\"\nUniversities ministry spokesperson Jane Burnes said the transfer\npayments for health, which got a\n$200 million increase in last Thursday's provincial budget, and\nuniversities and colleges, come in\none sum and the province has no\nobligation to pass a set amount to\npost-secondary education.\nUniversities and colleges received\nbetween a zero and a five per cent\nfunding cut.\n\"All of the money sent to us is\npassed on in the appropriate manner to British Columbians,\" she\nsaid, adding that \"Johnson and the\nfederal government have their own\nway of adding up figures.\"\nUBC vice-president finance\nBruce Gellatly said he hopes the\nreport will have some influence in\ngetting federal increases passed on\nto universities and colleges.\n\"1 think there's got to be some\nway of earmarking those (federal)\nfunds so they find a way to post-\nsecondary education,\" he said.\nNew SUB open at last\nBy DAVE FERMAN\nDespite going over budget the\nAlma Mater Society SUB expansion\nproject enjoyed a successful opening Monday, as managing to meet\nits third completion deadline.\nThe project was $800,000 over\nthe initial announced cost but\n$100,000 of that was spent on\nrepairs that AMS finance director\nJamie Collins said \"would have had\nto be done anyway.\" The project\nwas funded through student fees\npassed in a 1982 referendum which\ncreated the Capital Projects Aquisi-\ntions Committee.\nStudents who viewed the project,\nand the 30 students hired to work in\nthe expansion, had positive reactions to the project.\nLike all new malls the SUB expansion is light, bright and clean. A\nsecond year theatre student said:\n\"Wow, it's just like being in a huge\nplastic fridge.\"\nThe first addition that catches\none's eye is the checkerboard design\nof the orange julius-type counter\nserving a variety of orange drinks\nand red hotdogs. At 1 p.m. business\nwas brisk. A new salesperson said\nbusiness was better than expected.\nThe other room now in operation\nis the pasta restaurant. The centrepiece of the expansion is a stylish\nroom with 25 small tables and a\nplush couch seat running along the\nwalls.\nThe restaurant sells a host of\npastas, salads and soups. The prices\nare modest, with regular linguini\nand white clam sauce listed at\n$2.95. The restaurant was busy.\nOutside there are outdoor tables\nequipped with Perrier parasols.\nThere is also office space in the\nexpansion available for five clubs\nand the new intramurals office. A\nword processing centre will be\navailable to all students for a price.\nThere are also two bookable\nrooms featuring windowed fronts\nand wooden floors that can be used\nfor dance and exercise classes.\nENGINEERING WEEK HAS come and gone but this\nphotograph remains. It shows model of flood control mechan\nThames River, England.\neggertson photo\nstimulating\nism used in\nReferendum misunderstood\nUVic defeats free press\nUniversity of Victoria students\nvoted against a $2 per term fee increase that would have given financial independence to their student\npaper.\nStudents also rejected a proposal\nthat steps be taken to stock cyanide\npills on campus to be taken in the\nevent of nuclear war. A similar idea\nat UBC never made it to the voting\nstage.\nMike O'Brien, co-editor of the\nMartlet student newspaper, said 882\nstudents supported a directly\nstudent-funded Martlet while 1,064\nvoted against the idea. A 1979\nreferendum failed by 179 votes.\nThe proposal's defeat means the\nMartlet must print 16 pages per\nweek instead of 24, and cannot pay\nfor two full-time editors. A no campaign surfaced among residence\nstudents who wanted more on-\ncampus coverage said O'Brien.\nBut he said all types of coverage\nhad to be reduced this year when\nthe student society reduced the\npaper's budget, adding the\nresidence campaign was misinformed.\nThe referendum also proposed a\nnewspaper board with several stu\ndent representatives instead of having student, council controlling\npurse strings.\n\"Students had a chance of administering their own paper. They\nblew it.\" O'Brien said funding is\nnow subject to the whims of student\ncouncil.\nIn the last three years student\nnewspaper autonomy referendums\nhave been consistently losing across\nCanada. The Ubyssey lost a bid for\nfinancial autonomy from the Alma\nMater Society in 1981.\n\"I think because of the hard\ntimes students are deciding freedom\nof the press is not worth two or\nthree dollars,\" said O'Brien, adding the official comment of the\nMartlet staff is \"Life sucks.\"\nSome students are confused\nabout the nature of the Alma Mater\nSociety's referendum March 27, 28\nand 29, according to the AMS\ndirector of administration.\n\"Some people have the perception that it is a fee referendum,\"\nsaid Simon Seshadri Monday.\n\"It's a referendum to create an\nathletic council to spend athletic-\nfees,\" he said. The AMS wants the\nadministration to organize a council\nwith 50 per cent student representation to allocate athletic funds to\nvarsity teams, intramurals and\nrecreation.\nSeshadri blamed the misconception on letters such as one in the\nMar. 15 Ubyssey headlined \"Vote\nagainst athletic fees.\" \"I think a lot\nof students are unclear about that.\nThey think that by voting no they're\ngoing to actually prevent it (the fee)\nfrom occurring,\" said Seshadri.\nThe board of governors imposed\na $32 athletic fee to make the total\nathletic fee $43.50 Mar. 7 despite an\nagreement in 1968 that athletic fees\nwould not be imposed without student referenda.\nSeshadri said the AMS would only go to court against the board if\nthe referendum did not pass. \"We\nwould rather try to reach a solution\nby working together with the administration than by taking a confrontational approach that may\ncost students a lot of money,\" he\nsaid.\nWHERE YOU FIND A\nPERFECTLY ACCEPTABLE\nFAST-FOOD MEAL\nTAKE ADVANTAGE OF THE\nDAILY SPECIALS. SAVE LOTS\nOF MONEY ON YOUR FOOD\nBILLS\nIN SUB LOWER LEVEL\nOpen daily 7:30 a.m.-5:30 p.m.\nr\nIN A HURRY?\nSee us for fast\nhigh quality copies\nkinkcs copies\n15706 University Blvd\nVancouver, B.C.\nV6T1K6\n1^^604)^222^688^\nTRAVELCUTS Going YourWay!\nSTUDENT WORK ABROAD PROGRAMME\nMAKE YOUR HOLIDAY WORK!\ni bemard labrosse hair studio inc.!\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 Student Discount J\nCFS has a way to help you\ncut travel costs and earn\nvaluable work experience in\nBritain, Ireland, Belgium or\nNew Zealand. You owe it to\nyourself to find out about:\nSWAP\n1-800-972-4004\nName\nAddress\nMall completed coupon to:\nTRAVEL CUTS VANCOUVER\nStudent Union Building\nUniversity ot British Columbia\n604 224-2344\nTRAVEL CUTS VANCOUVER\nGranville Island 1516 Duranleau St.\n604 687-6033\nThe travel company of CFS\n20%\nANY SERVICE\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 With Presentation of Ad\u00E2\u0080\u0094Expires April 30th j\n| 5784 University Blvd. (UBC Village) Ph 224-1922 |\nAMS SPEAKERS presents\nDR. HENRY\nMORGANTALER\nfrom Toronto\nFri., April 12, 7 p.m.\n(Door 6 p.m.)\nSUB BALLROOM\nAdvance Tickets $5.00 at\nAMS Box Office only\nTo Learn Shortcuts in Math,\nTo Promote Thinking in Math,\nTo Improve Your Grades in Math,\nAttend:\nREVIEW/PROBLEM SESSION IN\nCALCULUS (DIFFERENTIAL &\nINTEGRAL)\nand ALGEBRA\nand TRIGONOMETRY\nBy experienced instructors\nFor details call\nAlpha College\n254-6221 Page 4\nTHE UBYSSEY\nTuesday, March 19,1985\nResign\nIt is increasingly clear that universities, science and technology\nminister Patrick Lucey McGeer must resign.\nHe never has done much good for anyone, but his recent conduct makes his continued control over universities \u00E2\u0080\u0094 and representation of the riding including UBC \u00E2\u0080\u0094 a complete travesty.\nOne might think universities, especially UBC, would benefit from\nhaving a UBC faculty member as minister. But McGeer resorts to\ncooing about the wonders of Princeton while saying B.C. can't\nhave any good universities.\nIf Dr. McGeer had worked for, instead of against, our universities then perhaps UBC would be one of the top universities in\nCanada. Not long ago people said UBC might become the best\nuniversity in Canada, but look at the shambles it is in now.\nA man who should be defending the interests of B.C.'s universities is their worst enemy.\nWhy does this man, who is a professor, stay in Canada when he\nfeels our universities are \"Mickey Mouse?\"\nAt a time when morale is down at all our universities, a few\nreassuring words and some concrete action by the minister responsible might do some good. But does our Dr. McGeer offer anything\nbut jeers?\nHe doesn't even have influence in his own cabinet where he is\nmistrusted as an educated person.\nHe doesn't have any influence at UBC, except what he gets solely by virtue of his position, and is more than mistrusted as a man\nwho has done worse than nothing for universities.\nMcGeer serves no useful function as minister or MLA and\nshould, if he has any decency at all, resign.\n'Thank you all'\nI am writing this letter to publicly\nexpress my thanks and appreciation\nto two UBC students and the\nRCMP at the university detachment.\nOn the night of 13 March, 1985 I\nwas assaulted by a man who was\nhiding in the bushes on sixteenth\nAvenue, close to Westbrook mall.\nThis was a premeditated attack (he\nMan commits series of assaults in UBC area\nNo longer am 1 willing to live in\nfear and paranoia of the next time 1\nmight be attacked. Nor am I willing\nto remain silent on a series of incidents which threaten to continue\nand affect a large portion of the\nuniversity community: in particular\nwomen.\nRape and assault are going on\nbefore our very eyes and yet most of\nus remain ignorant or distanced\nfrom this fact. I did not become ful-\nScience holds\nevaluation\nEven if your courses are all as\neasy as Dr. McGeer says they are,\nthe Science Undergraduate Society\nneeds its members' opinions on\ntheir courses and professors.\nThe SUS is resurrecting the\n(in)famous Black and Blue Review.\nThis week all science students\nshould receive in the mail, an\nevaluation form for their professors\nand courses.\nCareful, honest and prompt completion of this evaluation will permit the SUS to provide, in July, a\nbooklet to each Science student\nwhich will assist you in prfessors\nand course selection for next year\n(assuming any courses and professors still remain next year).\nEvaluations may be dropped in\nboxes provided at the following\nlocations:\n1) Sedgewick\n2) Wesbrook 100\n3) Chemistry 250\n4) Hennings 200\n5) Hebb theatre\n6) SUS office (CPAX 2)\nGreg O'Neill\nSUS representative.\nly aware of this until I was assaulted\nin January while in the residential\narea near the tenth avenue gates.\nUntil now I have refrained from\npublicizing this story so as not to\njeopardize Vancouver police investigations.\nHowever, the recent rape of an\neleven year old girl at eleventh and\nSasamat, by a man using the same\nmethods, and of a women at eighth\nand Trimble prohibit me from remaining silent any longer.\nThis man, who is terrorizing\nwomen in the West Point Grey area\nand other parts of the city, must be\ncaught. At the same time, women\nmust be made aware.\nTo quote a letter which appeared\nin the Western News and corresponds with my experience: \"The .\nattacker would hide behind a tree or\nbush until the victim was at the\nright distance, then he would spring\nand cover the girl (woman) with a\nblanket or something similar to\nthat.\"\nIn my case he sprang from the\nlane behind me, threw a sheet over\nmy head and me to the ground. He\nunquestionably knew what he was\ndoing.\nSomehow 1 managed to escape:\nothers haven't been so lucky. Since\nthis incident I have been terrified,\nconstantly watching over my\nshoulder at the slightest noise or\nsign of motion.\nMore than once I have jumped,\nstartled by what proved to be an innocent jogger coming from behind.\n1 and others who have fallen victim to this man's activities, will not\nfeel secure until he is caught. Even\nthen, we will be continually plagued\nby the fear of being victimized by\nothers like him.\nThose who have remained ig\nnorant, all but the close circles of\nthose directly affected, continue to\nwalk about unsuspectingly. These\npeople must be told: until now, they\nhave not been \u00E2\u0080\u0094 not by the police\nand not by the press.\nUntil this man and others like\nhim are stopped, we must act as the\nhunted. Only if we ourselves exercise vigilance can we protect\nourselves. If you are victimized or if\nyou see or hear anything suspicious,\ndon't hesitate to call the police.\nIn my case they were more than\nhelpful and obviously concerned.\nIt's not worth risking silence; his\nnext victim may be close by and\nunaware. And, she may not be so\nlucky as to escape his degrading,\nhostile and painful intentions.\nname withheld\nby request\nwas wearing a mask) and I think I\nam lucky to be alive.\nI don't know what made this very\nsick person stop hitting me, but he\ndid stop. When I ran to the road for\nhelp, Mark and Kathleen (you\nknow who you are; I didn't know if\nI should print your last names)\nstopped to take me to the RCMP\noffice close-by.\nThank you both \u00E2\u0080\u0094 I am forever\ngrateful for your concern and quick\nresponse. My thanks also to the\nRCMP, in particular officer Desjar-\ndins for his support.\nFinally, 1 guess I would just like\nto say that as long as this letter\nhelps to inform others about where\nthese crimes are occuring, and how\noften, ultimately serving to prevent\nother violent attacks from happening to women, then it has been\nworth sharing the most terrifying\nnight of my life with the readers of\nThe Ubyssey.\nname withheld\nby request\nAthletic referendum on council, not fees\nThe Alma Mater Society is asking\nthe student body to vote yes to an\nAthletic Fee Referendum that\nwould see the athletic fee charged to\nall full time students raised from\n$11.50 to $43.50.\nThis fee increase has already been\napproved by the board of governors\nand will come into being one way or\nanother.\nThe board of governors has encroached on the AMS's authority to\nlevy athletic fees as was previously\nagreed to between AMS and UBC.\nBecause of this action, the AMS has\nbeen basically placed in a no-win\nsituation.\nTHE UBYSSEY\nMarch 19. 1985\nThe'Ubyssey is published Tuesday and Fridays throughout the\nacademic year by the Alma Mater Society of the University of British\nColumbia. Editorial opinions are those of the staff and are not\nnecessarily those of the university administration or the AMS.\nMember Canadian University Press. The Ubyssey's editorial office is\nSUB 241k. Editorial department, 228-2301/2305. Advertising\n228-3977/3978.\nWell, begum and begorrah, it's March 19 alraady and we're glad the blarney's a-passing us by \u00E2\u0080\u0094 at\nleast the gala-blarney, the hyper-blarney and the mega-blarney we've been a-having lately. Tis fair\nenough to turn the likes of wee Dave O'Ferman, wee Stephen O'Wisenthal and wee Jamie O'Yuung\ngreen to the gills, ready to toss thair Irish biscuits all over the bloomin' flarr. How is it that-thair\nRegressive-Conservativ guvermint cuts the bleedin' CBC by two hundrid millyun dollars and the next\nthing you know Mr. Brian nd the Gipper be-getting a reel speshul television show, all mutheriiuid and\napple pie, mark you. That doesn't pass by our crew of investigative journalists out hair at the\nYoubeesee dus it my friend? I be-talking about the keen eyes of Sarah O'Millin, the sniff-it-out nose of\nMonte O'Stewart, the ears to the ground methods of Robert O'Beynon. And who'd be those two,\na-lookin like feminist agents of social change: none other than Sue O'Mcllroy and Renate O'Boerner.\nAnd another point, raised by the yet to-be-fooled Victor O'Wong: why does Maurren Forrester sing\nsuch pretty airs when the Canada Council be-getting cut a-this way and a-that. Oh, the yoosual feelin\nof edgicatin the pooblic were enough to make Patti O'Flather break into tap-tap dancin\nThe AMS will be forced to sue\nthe university for breach of an\nagreement which will be very costly\nto the AMS and therefore the\nstudents themselves.\nIn addition, the fee increase will\ngo ahead with or without the consent of the AMS, thus leaving the\nstudent council with no control over\nthe distribution of funds obtained\nby the fee increase.\nThe only alternative is to return\nto the university the power to levy\nathletic fees under the condition\nthat a university athletic council be\ncreated with 50 per cent student\nrepresentation by the AMS.\nThis council would enable\nstudents to have an influence over\nhow their money is spent.\nWe ask you to support the\nreferendum with a yes vote to\nenable students to determine the\nbudget of all athletic programs \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nintramurals, recreation and inter-'\ncollege.\nWithout the yes vote, students\nwill be completely excluded from all\ndecisions regarding athletics at\nUBC.\nBarbara Gobis\npharmacy 3 Tuesday, March 19,1985\nTHE UBYSSEY\nPage 5\nColleagues more appropriate\nFrom page 1\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 universities need to raise entrance requirements to weed out\npeople in universities for \"social\nreasons\";\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Maritimes universities are\n\"Mickey Mouse\";\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 it is cheaper and more efficient\nto import \"management and\nresearch\" people than to train them\nin B.C.\nBoyankowsky, the Confederation of Faculty Association of B.C.\npresident, told the Vancouver Sun\nthe statements in the letter were en-\nStudents for UBC\nplan shining light\nStudents for UBC will be a shining light in the darkness Wednesday.\nThey plan to line the key entrance\nways to the Law building, holding\nlights in a flashlight vigil starting at\n7 p.m.\nThe UBC senate convenes at 8:00\np.m. in the building reached by east\nmall or Crescent road near gate 3.\nIn the meeting Students for UBC\nwill present the senate with a petition signed by more than 9,000 people protesting the cutting of one-of-\na-kind programs at UBC and calling for \"an open and equitable\ndiscussion by the university community as to how cutbacks are to be\nimplemented.\"\nPrograms that have been asked to\njustify their existence include architecture, rehabilitation medicine,\nlandscape architecture, community\nand regional planning, speech\nscience, audiology, religious studies\nand oceanography.\nActing UBC president Robert\nSmith sent letters in February to all\n12 faculties pinpointing 35 programs to justify why they should\nnot be trimmed or eliminated.\nSmith denies any final decisions\nhave been made but some members\nof the university community feel\nthere is a lack of open discussion on\nhow cuts will be made.\ntirely true and he was shocked\nMcGeer made them.\nWhen told McGeer might sue him\nBoyankowsky said: \"That's interesting. It would be interesting to\nknow on what basis, since all I did\nwas quote him.\"\nHe said McGeer made the comments at a meeting between him and\nUniversity of Victoria professor\nGordon Shrimpton. Shrimpton told\nThe Sun the letter was \"absolutely\nfair and accurate.\"\nAt the letter's end Boyanowksy\nwrites: \"Perhaps a number of your\n(cabinet) colleagues would be more\nappropriate for the universities\nposition,\" and adds, \"I would\nargue that your attributes can be\nbest used exclusively in the sciences\nand technology area\" of your portfolio.\nPIITISI\nNOMINATIONS NOW\nOPEN\nFOR\nSTUDENT REPRESENTATIVES ON THE\nFOLLOWING PRESIDENTIAL\nADVISORY COMMITTEES\nConcerns of the Handicapped\nFood Services\nInternational House Board\nof Directors\nLand Use Committee\nMen's Athletics\nSherwood Lett Memorial\nStudent Union Building\nThunderbird Winter Sports\nCentre\nTraffic & Parking\nWar Memorial Gym Fund\nWomen's Athletics\nYouth Employment Program\nNominations Close\n4 p.m., Wednesday\nMarch 20\n1 position\n4 positions\n1 position\n1 position\n1 position\n1 position\n1 position\n1 position\nCommunity Rep\n4 positions\n3 positions\n1 position\n1 position\nForms Available\nSUB 238\nAwaka at 3 \u00C2\u00ABjn. *e unKMna MtoatftgiMMi #***, \u00C2\u00BBpmtni&fai#imMmiwmrw<*iitol&i*\nthe tttfitt pJwet. Qtmusamo*\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00ABwt\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00AB\u00C2\u00AB\u00C2\u00AB\u00C2\u00AB\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00AB*^\nd [in mill a'UL-w.ibk- K-\nim/M..liiM.\"..\|iiil In l'i\nran\nRh T UNION\nHELPING GOOD IDEAS GROW\nOAKRJIX.E BRANCH\n42-4-66SS\n1)1 NBAR BRANCH\n224-2 Vvl\nBIRNABY BRANCH\n29-t-SKKi\nSl'RREY BRANCH\n5H1-')K2K\nVICTORIA BRANCH\nS9S-S1S1\nI BC CAM PIS BRANCH\n22-1-1 tTT\nTEACHERS CREDIT I NION\nNOTICE OF REFERENDUM\nWHEREAS the students of the University of British Columbia (UBC) voted by referenda to have\nlevied against them a $7.00 Student Athletic Fee and a $4.50 Intramural Fee, and\nWHEREAS it is desirable to create a broader management structure to run Athletic programs, including Intercollegiate and Intramural Athletics, and Recreation U.B.C:\nBE IT RESOL VED THA T\n\"The Alma Mater Society of UBC (AMS) return to the University the power to levy Athletic fees subject to an agreement between the AMS and UBC which will include the following provisions:\n(a) creation of a University Athletic Council possessing the following characteristics:\n1. 50% of the representatives to be appointed by the AMS,\n2. control over Intercollegiate and Intramural Athletics and Recreation U.B.C. program budgets,\n3. power to recommend the use and development of present and future athletic and recreation facilities,\nand\n4. power to recommend to the UBC Board of Governors changes in athletic fees.\n(b) a commitment from the University to fund the indirect cost of running athletic and recreational\nfacilities and a portion of the University Athletic Council Budget.\"\nYES \u00E2\u0096\u00A1\nNO \u00E2\u0096\u00A1\nDay Polls: Wednesday, March 27 to Friday, March 29 as follows:\n10 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.\nAngus Scarfe\nBuchanan Sedgewick Library\nCEME SUB\nComputer Science Woodward Library\nLaw Hebb\nMacMillan War Memorial Gym\n(Poll time and location subject to availability of Poll Clerks)\nBRING YOUR A.M.S. CARD Page 6\nTHE UBYSSEY\nTuesday, March 19,1985\n\"%/A\nW60?i\nTODAY\nCHRISTIAN SCIENCE ORGANIZATION\nWeekly testimony meeting and bible readings,\nnoon, SUB 211.\nPRE MEDICAL SOCIETY\nLecture: Cardiovascular and thoracic surgery,\nwith Dr. Jamieson, noon. Wood 1.\nBASKETBALL FINAL HOUR\nDivision one men's semi-finals 8:30 p.m.. Arts vs\nGrads Studies, 9:30 p.m.. War Memorial gym.\nPSYCHOLOGY STUDENTS' ASSOCIATION\nSelling grad dinner and dance tickets, taking\norders for sweatshirts, 11:30a.m., Buchanan by\nthe Arts advisor's office.\nMUSSOC\nBanquet tickets on sale, noon, club office.\nINTERNATIONAL RELATIONS\nSTUDENTS' ASSOCIATION\nLecture: \"Origins of the Cold War in Comparative Perspective: Canada, U.S., U.K. Relations,\" noon, Buch B221.\nWEDNESDAY\nGAYS AND LESBIANS OF UBC\nGallery night, newcomers meet in 237A, 4:30\np.m., Gallery lounge.\nTHE UBYSSEY SCHOOL or JOURNALISM\nScreenings for sub-editors and staff meeting,\nnoon, SUB 241K.\nINTRAMURALS\nBasketball finals, div. 2 6-7 p.m., div. 1 7-8:30\np.m., super league 8:30-10 p.m,, awards to be\ngiven out. War Memorial gym.\nWORLD UNIVERSITY SERVICE AND\nHISTORY DEPARTMENT\nLecture: Historians on the Holocaust, prof. L. E.\nHill and J. S. Conway, noon, Angus 110.\nPSYCHOLOGY STUDENTS' ASSOCIATION\nSelling tickets for grad dinner and dance as well\nas taking orders for sweatshirts, 11:30 a.m.-1:30\np.m., Buchanan near the arts advisors office.\nNDP CLUB\nAnnual general meeting, noon, SUB 119.\nUBC ENTREPRENEURS\nImportant meeting and elections, noon, Angus\n226,\nMUSSOC\nBanquet tickets on sale, noon, club office,\nUBC DEBATING CLUB\nDr. Allen Beasly discusses AIDS in the third\nworld, noon, debating club office.\nJEWISH STUDENTS ASSOCIATION/HILLEL\nChaplains lunch, hot lunch available, guest\nspeaker: Robert Smith, noon, Hillel House\n(behind Brock Hall),\nVANCOUVER ADVENTURE AND\nTRAVEL CLUB UBC\nSlide presentation on cycling, noon, SUB 213.\nINSTITUTE OF ASIAN RESEARCH\nLecture on Asian painting by Letta Shea,\nhonorary research association, 3:30 p.m., Asian\nCentre seminar room 604.\nAMNESTY INTERNATIONAL UBC\nGeneral meeting, people and plans for '857'86,\nnoon, SUB 211.\nTHURSDAY\nCHINESE VARSITY CLUB\nVoting for second slate, noon, SUB 216A.\nUBC ANARCHIST CLUB\nSpeakers and film - Dreams of a Free Country:\nA Message from Nicaragua, noon, Buch A100.\nPSYCHOLOGY STUDENTS' ASSOCIATION\nSelling grad dinner and dance tickets and taking\norders for sweatshirts, 11:30 a.m., Buchanan\nnear the arts advisor's office.\nINSTITUTE OF ASIAN RESEARCH\nLecture: Managing Foreign Trade by Marwyn\nSamuels, associate prof in Geography, 3:30\np.m., Asian Centre, Music studio 105.\nLE CLUB FRANCAIS\nElection of new executive, 1:30 p.m., 7th floor\nlounge Buchanan Tower.\nMUSSOC\nBanquet tickets on sale, noon, club office.\nLAW STUDENTS\nLecture on wife battery, noon, Law 169.\nCHINESE CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP\nVideo on \"Rock and Roll Music,\" noon, Scarfe\n206.\nENVIRONMENTAL GROUP\nTwo speakers on international environmental\nissues, noon, Geography room 212.\nCHINESE STUDENTS' ASSOCIATION\nDeadline for submissions for nomination forms\nfor 85-86 CSA executives, 1 p.m., SUB 235.\nJEWISH STUDENTS' ASSOCIATION/HILLEL\nGuest speaker rabbi Baruch Kaplan, lunch\navailable, noon, Hillel House.\nAIESEC\nGeneral meeting, noon, Angus 223.\nFRIDAY\nSTUDENTS FOR PEACE AND\nMUTUAL DISARMAMENT\nLecture: Economic Costs of an Independent\nDefence Policy for Canada, by Gideon\nRosenbluth, noon, SUB 206.\nUBC ENTREPRENEURS CLUB\nVideo: Business Plans, noon, Angus 226.\nSpecial\nOffer\n20\u00C2\u00B0/c\nO Off\nAny Hair Service\nWith Student\nAMS Card\n1071 Denman St.\n688-7808\n2178 W. Broadway\n731-4138\nCHINESE VARSITY CLUB\nVoting for second slate, noon, SUB 216A.\nDEPARTMENT OF HISPANIC AND\nITALIAN STUDIES\nFree public lecture, noon, Buch A102, Symposium, $5 for faculty, $4 for students, 3 p.m.,\nBuch B314.\nPSYCHOLOGY STUOENTS' ASSOCIATION\nLast chance for ordering sweatshirts, also sale of\ntickets for grad. Dinner and dance, 11:30 a.m.,\nBuchanan near the arts advisors' office.\nNOP CLUB\nIan Waddell, M.P. for Vancouver Kingsway\nspeaks on \"Mulroney: Reagan's Yes-man?\",\nnoon, Buch D121.\nMUSSOC\nBanquet tickets on sale, noon, club office.\nLE CLUB FRANCAIS\nElection of new executive, noon, 7th floor\nlounge Buchanan Tower.\nCHINESE VARSITY CLUB\nElection for second slate, noon, SUB 216A.\n>>\n1RAVELCUIS Going Your Way!\nPLAN YOUR EUROPEAN TRIP NOW\n AND SAVE $$\n1\nWATCH FOR OUR \"SPRING SPECIALS'\nLONDON: At rock bottom prices! PARIS: Le mieux prix!\nAMSTERDAM: At great student rates!\nDepartures from Halifax, Montreal, Ottawa, Toronto, Winnipeg,\nSaskatoon, Calgary, Edmonton and Vancouver.\nDONT FORGET TO ASK ABOUT OUR MANY EXCITING YOUTH\nADVENTURE TOURS THROUGHOUT EUROPE\nThe travel company ot CFS\nTRAVEL CUTS VANCOUVER TRAVEL CUTS VANCOUVER\nStudent Union Building Granville Island\nUBC Vancouver BC V6T 1W5 du toli-lree 1516 Duranleau St Van BC V6H 3S-)\n 604-224-2344 i boo 97? 4004 604-687-6033\nVIDEOmAllEV\n. . Means Movies\n:Ui\u00C2\u00A3\n-VHS\nThe Largest Video\nlibrary serving Vancouver's\nWestside. Over 4,000\nmovies in stock\nVancouver's Stereo Hi-Fi Video Center\nYOUR A.M.S. CARD IS WORTH\n$25.00*\nNEW RELEASES\nCrimes of Passion\nAll of Me\nAdventures of\nBuckaroo Bonzai\nRent a VCR & 2 movies\nfor Only $9.50 (Mon. Thurs. 24 hrs.)\nWeekends slightly higher\n\"Club membership Privileges\n\u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2<\nGAMES AND TV RENTALS\nAVAILABLE\nRent A Compact Disc Machine and *4 Discs\nfor only $15.00\n(Mon.-Thurs 24 hrs.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Weekends Slightly Higher)\n*3 Disks only $5.00\nCOMPACT DISK SALES & RENTALS 41st AVE. STORE ONLY\n*\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u0094\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u0094\n3560 W. 41st Ave. and Dunbar\n(across from Safeway)\n266-6276\ni Arbutus St.\n(across from Greek church)\n266-3306\nATTENTION\nAMS CLUBS\nThe following is a list of AMS Clubs which will be\ndeconstituted and have their club accounts frozen\nEFFECTIVE MARCH 29, 1985, for failing to adhere to\nAMS Clubs regulations. The Clubs listed below have\nnot submitted either a 1985/86 budget and/or a\nmembership list and/or a constitution. Please see the\nAdministrative Assistant in SUB Room 238 for more\ndetails.\nAikido Karate Club\nAmateur Radio Society\nAmnesty International\nApathy Club\nAqua Society\nAstronomy & Aerospace Club\nBallet UBC Jazz\nBaltic Association\nBio-resource Engineering Club\nBrotherhood of Benevolent\nScientists\nCampus Cavaliers\nCampus Pro-Life\nCharismatic Christian\nFellowship\nChristian Publications\nCurling Club\nDebating Society\nEight O'Clock Swim Club\nGeophysics Society\nSlavonic Circle\nSocial Credit Party Club\nSpeech Hearing Club\nStudent Christian Movement\nStudent Council for\nExceptional Children\nStudent Pugwash Association\nStudents for Peace &\nMutual Disarmament\nTheatre Students Association\nUkranian Student Club\nInformed Students\nAssociation\nInternational Cooking Club\nKarate Club\nLaw Soccer Club\nLicentiate In Accounting Club\nMetallurgical Engineering\nMineral Engineering Club\nModel Parliament Club\nMusic Students Association\nMy Jong Kung Fu Club\nNavigators\nNewman Catholic Club\nPalestine Education\nCommittee\nPhra teres\nPhysics Students Society\nPolitical Science Students\nSociety\nPsuedo-lntellectuai Students\nSociety\nPublic Interest Research\nGroup\nRecreation Undergraduate\nSociety\nRockers co-op\nSky Diving Club\nUnderwater Hockey Club\nVancouver Adventure & Travel\nClub\nVarsity Christian Fellowship\nVisually Impaired Students\nAssociation\nWildlife Club\nWindsurfing Club\nWing Chun Kung Fu Club\nWomen's Engineering Club\nWu Shu Club\n'S \"^ \"\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 / o-v.'/\"\n-THE CLASSIFIEDS-*\nRATES: AMS Card Holders - 3 lines, 1 day $2.50; additional\nlines, 60c. Commercial \u00E2\u0080\u0094 3 lines, 1 day $4.50 additional lines, ,70c. Additional days, $4.00 and ,65c.\nCl.issifu-tl ,iils art- payabl \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 in advani r Deadliiw is 10:30 a. m. Ihe\n(lav baton- puhln at/on\nPublications Room 26% SUB., UBC, Van., B.C. V6T 2A5\nCharge Phone Orders over $10.00. Call 228-3977.\n11 - FOR SALE - Private\nCANOE FOR SALE: 16 ft. fibreglass, incl.\n2 paddles, $135 OBO, 688-4842.\n15 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Found\nFOUND: Tennis racquet in front of Regent\nCollege. Phone Lori, 224-7295.\n25 - INSTRUCTION\n30 - JOBS\nWORK ABROAD. Permanent or working\nholidays. Unique newsletter listing openings overseas, $3.00. Bulletin & Jobsearch\nKit, $1.00. Work Abroad, 1755 Robson,\nBox205-UB, Vancouver, B.C. V6G 1C9.\nNORTH SHORE INTERIOR\nCollege Pro Painters. Applications available at\nCEC in Brock Hall (Rm 214)\nFREE HAIRCUTS for models. Call Gordon\nat 263-4719, Sachi's.\nMODELS-MODELS-MODELS\nFemale photographers models required for\npart-time work. No exp. necessary. For audition send photo & write to: SPECTRUM, P.O.\nBox 311, 1215 Davie St.. Van., B.C. V6E1N4.\nCREATE YOUR OWN CAREER\nINVESTOR SEEKING\nBUSINESS TALENTS\nInvestor provides capital to students with\nbusiness ideas for creation of long-term\nbusinesses. We take the risk. Submit proposal and resume to P.O. Box 46, Thor-\nnhill, Ontario, L3T3N1.\n35 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Lost\n$100 REWARD for information leading to the\nreturn of yellow &\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 white tent last seen near\nSUB Plaza Mar. 4. Contact 228-3818 or\n922-4026.\nEARRING, SILVER HOOP, lost Feb. 19,\nA-block Buch. Immense sentimental value.\nPhone Pat 224-4514.\n40\nMessages\nWITNESSES to an accident at 4th & Alma\non Fri., Mar. 1 at 9 a.m. between a white\nRabbit & red Datsun, please call\n668-4284/224 0902.\nWANTED: MCAT course prep, kit, will pay\na reasonable price. Call 224-4762 or\n594-1359. Ask for Amir. Leave mess.\nSPROUT thanks everyone for a great\ndeadlock on the flipside.\nFIND A TUTOR\nBE A TUTOR\nRegister at\nSPEAKEASY\nMon.-Fri.\n9:30 a.m.-9:30 p.m.\nSUB Concourse\n(Phone 228-3777)\n70 - SERVICES\nTHE WRITER ... the typist. Term papers.\nAssignments. Research. Reports. Prof.\nResumes. Ghost Writing. Memoirs.\nSpeeches. Business Proposals. 733-1383.\nYOUR DEADLINE approaches but draft\nNo. 47 is still not quite right? Don't despair)\nExperienced editor will polish term papers,\ntheses, etc. Other services also available.\nContact Footnotes Information & Research\nService, 430-5751.\nARE YOU TIRED of dieting with no success?\nWould you like to lose 10-30 lbs. in a\nmonth? Then phone 736-1904.\n80 - TUTORING\nEXP. TUTOR - Math., physics, call Alexis,\n734-2116 before 10 a.m. or after 10 p.m.\n85 - TYPING\nDOTS WORD PROCESSING offers reasonable rates for students for term papers,\nessays & masters. 273-6008 eves.\nLSAT, GMAT, MCAT preparation. Call\nNational Testing 738-4618. Please leave\nmessage on tape if manager is counselling.\nLET US PREPARE YOU FOR THE\nOCTOBER 5, 1985 LSAT\non September 13, 14. 15/1985.\nFor information call free\nLSAT/GMAT Preparation Courses,\n112 800-387 3742.\nUNIVERSITY TYPING-Word processing.\nPapers, theses, resumes, letters. P-U & del.\n9 a.m.-11 p.m. 7 days/wk. 251-2064.\nWORD PROCESSING (MICOIVI). Student\nrates $14'hr. Equation typing avail. Fast\nprofessional service. Jeeva, 876-5333.\nWORDPOWER - Editing & word processing professionals. Thesis, term paper,\nresume &\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 form letter specialists. Student\nrates. 3737 W. 10th (at Alma). 222-2661.\nWORD PROCESSING SPECIALIST. U\nwrite, we type, theses, resumes, letters,\nessays. Oays, evgs/wkends. 736-1208.\nEXPERT TYPING. Essays, term papers,\nfactums, letters, mscpts., resumes, theses.\nIBM Selec. II. Reas. rates. Rose 731-9857.\nYOUR WORDS professionally typed - to\ngo. Judith Filtness, 3206 W. 38th Ave.,\n263-0351 (24 hrs.) Fast and reliable.\nMINIMUM NOTICE: Essays & resumes.\n224-1342 (24 hours).\nWORD WEAVERS - Word processing,\nstud, rates, fast turnaround, Bilingual.\n5670 Yew & 41st. 266-6814. y\nTYPING: Professional presentations for\nproposals, resumes, etc. Competitive rates.\n734-0650 (24 hrs).\nWORD PROCESSING SERVICES. Spell\ning, grammar expertise. Days, nights,\nweekends. Call Nancy 266-1768.\nP RO FE SSI ON A L TYPING.~25 yrs.' c xpe r -\nience. Reasonable, accurate, fast. Phone\nRichmond, 271-6755.\nLET JANE TYPE last minute essays for you.\nReas. rates. Fast, quality service. 879-3250\naft. 3 p.m. wkdays. Anytime wkends.\nTYPING & W/P: Term papers, theses,\nmscpt., essays, incl. reports, tech. equa.,\nletters, resumes. Bilingual. Clemy,\n266-6641.\nTYPING \u00E2\u0080\u0094fast, accurate. Reasonable rates.\n734-8451.\nFAST, ACCURATE TYPING service,\nediting included. Reasonable rates. Call\nRachel, 731-1970.\nTORNADO TYPING near 64th and Oak.\n50c/page. Terry, 325-3316 anytime.\nNITELINE SERVICES word processing.\nTheses typing, resumes, etc. Stud, rates.\nAvail, eves., wkends. 430-6959, 437 9262.\nGEETECH-WORD PROCESSING WITH\nA DIFFERENCE. 24 hr., 7 day, accurate,\nfast dependable. AES 7300 & AES Plus\nequip. Call Yvette, 879-2027.\nFAST, ACCURATE TYPING professionally\nfinished with daisy-wheel typewriter. Call\nGlenna, eves, or wkends at 734-8561.\nWORD PROCESSING/TYPING. Student\nrates. Ideal for students on North Shore.\nDays, eves., weekends. 985-8890.\nYEAR AROUND EXPERT essay, theses\ntyping from legible wk. Spelling/gram, corrected. 738-6829. 10-9 p.m. K. Ed bus rte.\nPROFESSIONAL TYPING\nEssays, term papers, theses\nStudent rates. 261-6102\nPDQ WORD processing. Essays, theses,\nreports, letters, resumes. Days,\neves/wknds. Quick turnaround. Stud,\nrates. 731-1252.\n90 - WANTED\nIDENTICAL\nTWINS\nRequired for Innovative\nResearch in\nBio-Psychological\nResearch\nFor information contact\nDr. H. Klonoff\nNo. 7-2255 Wesbrook Mall\nPsych Unit\n228-7301 Tuesday, March 19,1985\nTHE UBYSSEY\nPage 7\nDifferential fees up in Scotia\nHALIFAX (CUP) \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Foreign\nstudents may have to drop out of\nNova Scotia universities next year\nbecause of the latest provincial\ngovernment hike in differential\nfees, according to a student politician.\nAlex Gigeroff, Dalhousie university student council president, said\nforeign students in the province\nalready pay more than double the\ntuition fees paid by Canadian\nstudents and cannot bear the strain\nof a 29 per cent increase.\n\"This increase will make it more\ndifficult for these students to attend\nNova Scotian universities,\" said\nGigeroff.\nForeign students will pay a differential fee of $1,700 in addition to\nregular tuition fees next year, which\nare in the $1,400 range.\nGigeroff said the province ignored a provincial education board\nrecommendation to limit the increase to $60.\n\"I don't think the provincial\ngovernment realizes the harm the\nincrease will cause international\nstudents,\" said Gigeroff. \"There is\n\u00C2\u00BB\nTRAVEL CUTS Going YourWay!\nLEARN A LANGUAGE...\nLIVE A LANGUAGE...\nWith Eurocentres.\nlearn...\nFRENCH in Paris, Lausanne,\nNeuchatel and Amboise\nGERMAN in Cologne and Zurich\nSPANISH in Barcelona and Madrid\nITALIAN in Florence\nTRAVEL CUTS VANCOUVER\nStudent Union Building\nUniversity ol British Columbia\nVancouvei B C V6T tW5 c;i\n604 224-2344\nCourses offered at all levels throughout the year\nFor a tree brochure complete and mail this appli\ncation form to your TRAVEL CUTS office\n<<\nName; _\nAddress\n-600-972-4004\nTRAVEL CUTS VANCOUVER\nGranville Island\n1516 Duranleau St\nVancouver E C V6H 3S4\n604 687-6033\n* * / '. '\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\n300th Birthday\n'issMut?\njsBACH\nBACH WEEK\nMARCH 24 TO 30\nMarch 24, 10 a.m. Worship at\nLutheran Campus Centre.\nFilm at 7:30 p.m.\nMarch 26, Free movie in SUB\nAudit, at 12:30 p.m.\nMarch 27, Lecture at VST\nEpiphany Chapel, 12:30 p.m.\nMarch 28, Lecture at VST\nEpiphany Chapel, 12:30 p.m.\nMarch 29, Noon Chamber\nmusic in SUB Concourse.\nMarch 30 \"Bach-a-nal\" picnic\nat Point Roberts.\nSponsored by Lutheran Campus Ministry in co-operation\nwith: UBC Music Dept., Chaplains' Assoc, FilmSoc and the\nMurrin Foundation.\nMARCH PERM DEAL\n%WM\n5\nVALUE\nBring in this coupon for $5.00 off your next\nperm or bodywave. Reg. $34.95 (women)\n$29.95 (men).\n3621 W. 4th Ave. 733-3831\nalready a decrease in the number of\nforeign students from poorer countries.\"\nThe move also drew sharp\ncriticism from Tim Shaw, a\nDalhousie African studies professor.\nThedineiT\nServing U.B.C and West Point Grey\nfor the last 25 years.\nWe put our Sole in your\nFISH & CHIPS\nEnglish Style Home Cooked Meals\nat Reasonable Prices including\nRoast Beef and Yorkshire Pudding\nOpen Monday to Saturday\n8 00 am to 8:X p m\nClosed Sundays B Public Holidays\nFor the early ones, we start serving\nbreakfast from 8:00 am\n4556 W 10th Ave. - 224 1912\nWe accept Chargex\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094APPLICATIONS\u00E2\u0080\u0094\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094NOW AVAILABLE\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nfor the position of\nJOBLINK COORDINATOR\nRESUMES REQUIRED WITH\nAPPLICATIONS\nDeadline for Resumes\nApplications Applications\nFriday, March 22 Available from\n4:00 p.m. SUB 238\nFor You. . .A Service That Is Quite Simply, Better\nDocuments. . .\nSmall Packages\nAcross Canada to\nThe U.S.A. and\nAround The World\nNEXT DAY\nDesk to Desk Delivery,\nto 35,000 major centers\nin Canada and the U.S.A.\nu\nExpress\nAirborne\nWe deliver.\nOn time. . .\nEvery time.\nCALL NOW!!\n(604) 273-6326 Sales\n(604) 273-7418 Dispatch\nSUBS BOOKSTORE\npresents\nSPECIAL UBC Prices on Apple Computers!\nApple lie\nStarter System\n.Includes\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 128K\nCPU.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 APPLE He\nMONITOR\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 MONITOR\nSTAND\nRetail Value:\n$1,995.00\ni i i\n~> \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0' '\n\"i~i~i\nj~i\"i\"i\ni i\nApple He\nStarter System\ni i i\nApple He\n\l\nOur Price\n$\n1395\nMacintosh 128K\nIt'm >u can pnint.\nMilium\n' UM' il\ni_i i i\ni i\"iV\nI\nncludes\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 128K CPU.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 KEYBOARD\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 MONITOR\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 INTERNAL\nDISK DRIVE\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 MOUSE\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 MacPaint\n& Mac Write\nRetail Value:\nS3,295.00\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 i i i\nrri\u00E2\u0084\u00A2f\n.iiiii\nV|-|-|~\n't~t~rr\n!CCOLi\niiiii\nON NAIF IXTI1.\nMARCH 31. I9Ht\nOur Price\n*2195\nncludes\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 64K CPU.\n(Total Memory =\n128K)\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 MONITOR\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 SINGLE-\nEXTERNAL\nDISK DRIVE\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 EXTENDED\n80 Column\nText Card\nRetail Value:\n$2,150.00\nVI\nOur Price\n$\n1495\nMacintosh 512K\nBusiness Bundle\nincludes\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 512K CPU.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 MONITOR\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 KEYBOARD\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 EXTERNAL\nDISK DRIVE\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 MOUSE\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 MacPaint\n& Mac Write\"\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 10\"\nImagewriter\nPrinter\nRetail Value:\nS 5,395.00\nOX SAl.F. rXTIL .\nMARCH 31, 1983 \\nOur Price\ns\n3695\nThese prices are available\nonly to lull time UBC\nstudents, faculty and\nstall'.\n1 here arc tots ot reasons to take home an Apple ( omptiter* lor\nbusiness Home And e\crv\\hcrc in between ( onie m ami see\none todav Our professional sales stall will help uiu make the right\nchoice\nBOOKSTORE\n6.100 (Diversity lioiikv:ird\n228 i\"i 1 PageS\nTHE UBYSSEY\nTuesday, March 19,1985\nNeale has doubts about Canadian pucksters\nBy MONTE STEWART the Vancouver Canucks coach\nIf there was ever a case for col- made it last Sunday night.\nlegiate hockey players going to the \"In the Canadian colleges many\nUnited States to play, Harry Neale, of the players are a lot older,\" said\nNeale, who will almost certainly be\nretained by the Vancouver Canucks\nin some capacity nexfseason.\n\"Most of the kids that go into the\nCanadian colleges \u00E2\u0080\u0094 that are good\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 have already gone through\njunior and we've had a real good\nlook at them,\" said the coach and\ngeneral manager.\nThe Canucks, beyond the point\nof no return as far as this season is\nconcerned, have never had a Canadian collegian on their roster. Doug\nLidster, a Canadian who played at\nColorado College, is the only\nCanuck to be recruited from the\nuniversity ranks.\nAll others have either been\ndrafted from the junior ranks or\nelse they have been acquired\nthrough the free agent market.\n\"American kids (primarily Canadians playing at universities in the\nU.S.), at 18, come out of tier two\n(junior) and you haven't had a look\nat them,\" said Neale about the\nplayers that he feels will be able to\nhelp the Canucks immediately.\nNeale's statements virtually\nquash the hopes of several UBC\nThunderbirds as far as the Canucks\nare concerned. Bill Holowaty and\nRick Amann, both selected to the\nCanada West and Canadian Interuniversity Athletic Union and\nfirst all-star teams, are the two most\nlikely T-Birds ever to see action in\nthe NHL.\nHowever, Holowaty, 25, might\nbe considered too old to take a\nchance with. Amann, 24, was\ndrafted by Detroit in 1978.\nThe Canucks mentor's attitude is\nsomewhat ironic, considering that\nhe once hired Tom Watt out of the\nUniversity of Toronto as his assistant coach. Watt, who later became\nhead coach of Winnipeg Jets before\nreceiving the proverbial axe last\nseason, is rumored to be a strong\ncandidate for the soon to be vacant\nCanuck head coaching job.\nEvidentally, Neale's respect for\nthe people who run Canadian\nuniversity hockey program does not\ncoincide with his lack of respect for\nCanadian university players.\n\"I don't know whether there are\nfive guys that came out of Canadian\ncolleges. Are there?\"\nCockroft goes on; El might win\nRICK HANSEN EYES long road ahead of him.\nWheelchair athlete leaves\nUBC will bid farewell to Rick\nHansen Wednesday.\nThe UBC student embarks on\nwhat could be the most fortuitous\nendeavour of any athlete. Thursday\nhe will leave for an around the\nworld tour.\nNot the kind that you enjoy via\nsea or air. The type whereby you\nwheelchair your way through a\ncourse of 25,000 miles, roughly the\nequivalent of the circumference of\nthe globe.\nHansen was paralyzed in an auto\naccident at the age of 15. Since then\nhe has brought much prestige to the\nuniversity by means of his many\nathletic accomplishments. He\nrecently won a gold medal at the\nSeventh Annual World Wheelchair\nGames in Stoke-Manville, England.\nHansen also became the first ever\nwheelchair athlete to compete in the\nannual Vancouver Marathon. The\npurpose of his journey, which, if\neverything goes according to plan,\nshould take 17 months, is to raise\nmoney for spinal injury victims.\nHe calls the event the \"Man in\nMotion World Tour\" to emphasize\nExpo 86's theme of transportation\nand communication.\nHansen will travel down the West\nCoast to Mexico and east to the\nAtlantic before flying to the British\nIsles. The tour will cover places as\ndiverse as North Africa and the Far\nEast.\nInternational volleyball here\nbeing billed as a revenge\nIt is\nmatch.\nCanada versus the United States\nin a rematch of the Olympic semifinals in which the U.S. defeated\nCanada 3-0.\nYet the exhibition volleyball\nmatch to be played at War\nMemorial gym this Saturday is a far\ncry from its Olympic predecessor.\nNeither team has its original\ncoach. Canadian Olympic boss Ken\nMaeda has returned to Japan. Paul\nBrasson, a Romanian, is Canada's\nnew coach.\nAmerican Olympic coach Doug\nBeal has moved up to the position\nof national team director while\nTony Crabb has taken over as head\ncoach. And both teams feature\nseveral new players.\nThe British Columbia Volleyball\nAssociation is sponsoring the event\nwhich is being heavily marketed by\nan American firm. Ticket prices for\nthe supposed grudge match are not\nwhat you would normally expect to\npay.\nAll UBC students are admitted\nfree to varsity events. However,\nthis contest, not affiliated with the\nuniversity in any way (aside from\npromotional assistance), will cost\nup to $10 to attend. Students must\npay $8.\nB\ MONTE STEWART\n\"I'm going to be competing\nforever.\"\nWhile being selected as a co-\nwinner of the UBC women's athlete\nof the year was \"a great honor\" for\nhigh jumper Jeannie Cockroft, she\nsays she has much greater rewards\nin sight \u00E2\u0080\u0094 the Olympics.\n\"1 wanted to make the team last\nyear but I fell three centimetres\nshort\", said Cockroft, who has\nsince eclipsed the standard.\nThe Delta native set a Canadian\nInteruniversity Athletic Union\nrecord this season, jumping 1.84\nmetres. She jumped even higher\nthat that at a Canada-U.S. exhibition meet. That jump of 1.88m was\nthe third best in Canadin history \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nonly Brigitte Reid and Debbie Brill\nhave surpassed the mark.\nCockroft also won the Canadian\nindoor championship in February.\n\"The season was right up where 1\nexpected it to be,\" said Cockroft,\nadding that she has now set her\nsights on the upcoming outdoor\nseason.\nThe other co-winner, diver Nancy\nBonham, has looked ahead to some\nfuture goals of her own \u00E2\u0080\u0094 like finding a job.\nAfter finishing second in the\nCanada West finals, Bonham won\nthe CIAU title for both the lm and\n3m diving events. But the 22 year\nHILLEL HIGHLIGHTS\nTuesday, March 19th\n12:30 News from Israel (lunch is available)\nWed., March 20th\n12:30\u00E2\u0080\u0094Chaplains lunch with a special guest \u00E2\u0080\u0094 New UBC\nPresident Robert Smith (a hot lunch is available)\nThursday, March 21\n12:30\u00E2\u0080\u0094Guest Rabbi Baruch Kaplan will speak on Yeshivot in\nIsrael (lunch available)\nHillel House\n(Behind Brock Hall) 224-4748\nCENTRE\nFull Service\nDuplicating Available\nto all\nCoin-Operated\nCopiers still only\n5c\na copy\nStudent Union Building\n228-4288\nSHELL FOOD\nSTORE\n10th and Discovery\nOPEN 24 HOURS\nBring This Ad In For\n$2.00\nOff Gas Purchase 30 Litres Minimum\nNO CASH VALUE\nOne Coupon Per Purchase\nOffer Expires April 9, '85\n1\nold engineering student has put her\ndiving aspirations on hold as she\ncompletes her final year of studies\nand then tries to find permanent\nemployment.\nTo nobody's surprise, the\nwomen's swimming and diving\nteam was selected as UBC's\nwomen's team of the year for 1985.\nThe club had a perfect 9-0 record\nthis season, winning both the\nCanada West and CIAU competitions.\nThe national championship was\nthe first ever for UBC.\nOlympic rower Tricia Smith was\npresented with an honorary Big\nBlock award for her participation in\nthe Games. However, the university\nfailed to acknowledge the efforts of\nDiane Rakiecki. who won two\nmedals at the World Wheelchair\nGames in Stoke-Manville, England\nlast summer.\nWith the men's Big Block dinner\nlooming, El Ladha has emerged as a\nstrong candidate to win the Bobby\nGaul Trophy.\nThe fifth year defender was instrumental in the Thunderbirds'\nCanadian Interuniversity Athletic\nUnion soccer championship. He\nwas selected as player of the game\nwhen the 'Birds edged Carleton\nRavens 2-1 in the title match.\nThe award will be presented this\nThursday at the Facultv Club.\nAMS concerts\nPRESENTS\n THE LAST PARTY-\nWITH _^^S\nS*^5\nADVANCE TICKETS $5.00\nAVAILABLE AT\nAMS BOX OFFICE ONLY\nNO MINORS PLEASE\nFRIDAY, MARCH 22nd\nSUB BALLROOM-UBC\nDOORS OPEN 8:00 p.m.\ncfo\nLivonaercuts)\nCutting your cutting costs\nPut a little spring in your hair\nwith our wondercurl perm special offer!\ni\n!$5.00 OFFM.OO OFF\nWondercurl Perm\nwith this coupon\nNormal Price $25 & $30\nA Wondercut\nwith this coupon\nNormal Price $6.00\nL \u00E2\u0080\u0094\u00E2\u0080\u0094 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 ___._ \u00E2\u0080\u0094_.J____ \u00E2\u0080\u0094 ______I |\nOFFERS VALID TILL 14th APRIL\nNOT VALID WITH ANY OTHER SPECIAL\nGET SMART \u00E2\u0080\u0094 BE SMART AT\nWONDERCUT PRICES!\nAll Locations Open Sunday 10-5 P.M.\nOpen till 8 p.m. Wed., Thurs., Fri.\nKerrisdale\n5540 Dunbar\n|(Bet. 39th & 40th)\nTel. 263-3120\nSouth Granville Kitsilano\n2543 Granville 3615 W. 4th Ave.\n(Bet. Brdwy. & 10th) Bet. Alma & Dunbar]\nTel. 738-9353 Tel. 734-3841\nAlso at North Burnaby & Coquitlam"@en . "Newspapers"@en . "Vancouver (B.C.)"@en . "LH3.B7 U4"@en . "LH3_B7_U4_1985_03_19"@en . "10.14288/1.0125931"@en . "English"@en . "Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library"@en . "Vancouver : Alma Mater Society of the University of British Columbia"@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 . ""@en .