"CONTENTdm"@en . "http://resolve.library.ubc.ca/cgi-bin/catsearch?bid=1211252"@en . "University Publications"@en . "2015-08-13"@en . "1986-11-04"@en . "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/Ubysseynews/items/1.0125941/source.json"@en . "application/pdf"@en . " ym Archives Serial\nTHE UBYSSEY\nVol. LXIX, No. 17\nVancouver, B.C. Tuesday, November 4,1986\n.r*69*\n228-2301\nCampbell calls for cooperation\nBy RICK HIEBERT\nGordon Campbell, the Nonpartisan Association mayoral candidate in the November 15 Vancouver municipal election, called\nfor private sector job creation, a\nward system and a positive,\ncooperative attitude to lead Vancouver into the future during a campaign visit to UBC Friday.\nCampbell told about 50 students\nin SUB auditorium that a\npolitician's job is to serve the\npublic. \"Our job (in government) is\nto act as a servant for you,\" said\nCampbell. \"It used to be called\npublic service when you got involved in politics. We have to get back\nto that traditional idea, that politicians are there to serve the public.\"\nCampbell, an NPA alderman\nsince 1984, said Vancouver's\nunemployment problem can only be\nsolved \"one job at a time.\"\n\"1 am tired of the mega-project\nmentality,\" he said.\nCampbell added the civic government should concen:rate on helping\nsmall businesses which, according\nto Campbell, account for ninety-\nfive per cent of the new job opportunities in Vancouver.\nCampbell attacked the present\ncivic government's policies on parking regulations and the store closure\nbylaw that have hurt small\nbusinesses.\nHelping small business grow,\nproviding services to the Pacific\nRim, and developing tourism will\nhelp provide jobs for Vancouver's\nunemployed, he said. Campbell\nsaid he is frustrated that his main\nopponent, Committee of Progressive Electors' candidate Harry\nRankin, does not understand the\nimportance of tourism to the local\neconomy.\n\"In July, he (Rankin) went to a\nChinese Rotary Club lunch and\nsaid, tourism, well, it's okay, but it\ndoesn't create real jobs \u00E2\u0080\u0094 what we\nhave to do is create manufacturing\njobs and get some smelters going.\nThat's nonsense,\" said Campbell.\nCampbell supports a ward system\nin Vancouver. He argued the adoption of a system where members of\ncity council represent specific\nneighborhoods instead ofthe city at\nlarge would lead to a more responsive and representative civic government.\n\"1 believe you get that (kind of\ngovernment) when people understand what they're voting for, who\nthey're voting for and what they\nstand for,\" said Campbell. It is virtually impossible to do that in a\nsystem where you have 27 people\nlined up and you pick the best ten. 1\nthink it's easier for people to look\nat four or five people and say 'I\nunderstand all of them'.\"\nVandals strike hall\nGhosts and goblins weren't the\nonly unwelcome visitors to Carey\nHall this Hallowe'en.\nVandals fouled the dining hall of\nthe Baptist residence early\nHallowe'en morning, smearing\nsugar, syrup, feathers, soap and fire\nextinguisher exhaust on the floors\nand windows.\nDoug Johnson, dean of Carey\nHall residence, described the vandalism as a \"prank that just got out\nof control.\"\nJohnson said a fire extinguisher\nhad been emptied on the carpets\nand tables, and soap smeared on the\nwindows. The words \"Hi Baptists\"\nwere scrawled on one window.\nJohnson said when he and the\nRCMP were called in to investigate\nthe crime, both thought the vandalism may have been a cult activity, because eight years ago someone\nburned the name of the dean into\nthe lawn beside the residence.\nJohnson said he changed his\nmind, however, when he received a\n\"rumour\" as to the identity of the\nculprits from a student at Carey\nHall.\nJohnson refused to give details of\nthe rumour, saying the RCMP told\nhim it would hamper the investigation.\nJohnson did say evidence suggests the vandalism was planned\nmore than a week ago.\n\"They came through an open\nwindow,\" he said. \"It took two or\nthree people 10-15 minutes to do it\n...It's incredible we didn't hear\nthem.\"\nThe RCMP constable in charge\nof the case refused to give details,\nbut was confident the case would be\nresolved by Wednesday.\nDespite calling the crime a prank,\nJohnson thought it was necessary to\ngo to the police.\n\"Pranks shouldn't go this far.\nThere should be some penalty,\nespecially if the damage is great,\"\nhe said.\nIf the carpet has to be replaced,\nJohnson estimated the damages will\ncost $3,400.\nBallots challenged\nTHE ONLY RELIABLE time machine reaches upward from the humble grounds of UBC disguised as the Clock\nTower. The immense amounts of energy envolved in time transitions is evident from the fog that is omitted from the\npinicle of the tower as a result of the vaporization of the very web of time and space.\nBy JENNIFER LYALL\nMany students are in danger of\nbeing disenfranchised when the Section 80 votes cast in the provincial\nelection are counted today, said\nNDP campaign organizer John\nPollard.\n\"The system is designed to easily\ndisenfranchise people who move a\nlot, young people and especially\nstudents,\" said Pollard.\nIn order to be eligible to vote in a\nriding you must be a permanent\nresident of the area and must have\nlived there for at least eight months.\nPeople who were temporarily away\nfrom their home ridings on election\nAmateur radio society's equipment \"abysmal\nn\nBRAD NEWCOMBE\nIf an earthquake hit Vancouver\ntomorrow and phone lines were\ndown, UBC ham radio operators\nwould be hard pressed to handle\nlocal communications because some\nequipment is in \"abysmal shape\",\nsaid the president of UBC's\nAmateur Radio Society.\nVHF transceivers and antennae\nare needed to handle local ham\nradio communications. Last year\nHamSoc purchased a new high frequency short wave antenna which\ncan literally \"reach the world\", but\nvery high frequency equipment is in\ndire need of replacement, said Sid\nKemp, HamSoc president.\nHamSoc emergency co\nordinator, Greg Franklin agrees.\n\"We fill a gap that no other\nemergency service provides.\n\"We're like the fire station - you\ndon't need it until you really need\nit, then everyone expects you to be\nthere.\"\nHamSoc's new high frequency\nantenna enabled HamSoc to be in\ncontact with people in El Salvador\nfollowing the earthquake in October. All other lines of communication were down and ham\nradio operators in El Salvador were\nable to transmit messages from El\nSalvador to HamSoc members who\nthen contacted concerned relatives\nand friends in Vancouver.\nMembers of UBC's HamSoc are\nready at all times to volunteer services in the event of an emergency.\nThe club, however, was unsuccessful in its application last year to\nbe recognized as a service organization club by AMS.\nJamie Collins, AMS director of\nfinance, said he is not interested in\ndiscussing \"what might happen\",\nsuch as a natural disaster scenario,\nwhen considering wtiether HamSoc\nis a service organization, although\nhe recognizes that ham radio\noperators provide a valuable service.\nThe HF antenna was purchased\nwith assistance from the AMS and\nthe Walter Gage Memorial and\nAlumni Funds. Collins said \"while\nI'm not sure HamSoc should look\nto the AMS a second time for funding, I'm always open to\nproposals.\"\nFranklin wants the AMS and the\nuniversity community to recognize\nthe benefits ham radio operators bring to society as a whole.\n\"We'll never withhold services\"\nsaid Franklin. \"Equipment will\nsimply break down.\"\nAlumni keep their membership in\nHamSoc and professionals are on\nhand to provide assistance. Ham\nradio emergency services were used\nextensively during the 1979 evacuation of Mississauga when a train\ncarrying deadly chlorine gas derailed.\nday could cast absentee ballots.\nLawyers representing each party\nwill be present today when ballots\nare counted to challenge any Section 80 ballots they think may be illegitimate. Temporary residents,\nmany of whom are students, are\namong those who may be considered ineligible to vote.\nBut the time to verify residential\nstatus is when voters are registered,\nnot when ballots are being counted,\nsaid Pollard. \"If a deputy returning\nofficer on election day accepted the\nidentification presented as proof of\nresidence, then that decision cannot\nbe overturned,\" he said.\n\"I wouldn't be surprised if Social\nCredit lawyers try to challenge\n(ballots cast by temporary\nresidents),\" said Pollard, adding,\n\"It's our position that the only way\na Section 80 ballot can be challenged is if someone voted twice or is\nnot on the voter's list.\"\nApproximately 5,000 Section 80\nballots were cast in Point Grey by\nvoters who registered on election\nday and Pollard predicted a majority of them will be for the NDP.\n\"I think it will be close and the\nresult of the election may well be\noverturned,\" he said. NDP candidate Darlene Marzari finished\nabout 650 votes behind Social\nCredit MLA Pat McGeer on October 22.\nSocial Credit information officer\nBernie Smith would not comment\non his party's opinion concerning\ntemporary residents. Page 2\nTHE UBYSSEY\nTuesday, November 4, 1986\nCondoms spark controversy\nMONTREAL (CUP) \u00E2\u0080\u0094 An entrepreneur's dream of installing\ncondom vending machines in\nQuebec Junior College washrooms\nmay never come true, if opposition\nto the plan continues to mount.\nJocelyn Morin, a former X-ray\ntechnician, has been approaching\nCEGEPS throughout Quebec and is\nreported to have an exclusive contract with an American condom\nmanufacturer, National Sanitary\nLab.\nBut education minister Claude\nRyan said the plan is absurd and\nshould be abandoned.\n\"As I understand it, there are\nplaces where these things can be\nprocured by people who want them\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 there are pharmacies,\" he said.\n\"I'm not too familiar with this, but\nI can't see these things being installed in colleges. It would be too\nridiculous.\"\nItidal Sadek, director of Dawson\nCollege's Selby campus, doubts\ncondoms will be available there.\n\"We don't sell anything in\ndispensers, not even sanitary\nnapkins.\n\"It's basically a fear of vandalism and although (condoms\nwould) be good for educational\npurposes, they're not needed for\nemergencies. I just haven't heard\nany convincing arguments.\"\nTom Nowers, head of student\nservices at Marianopolis College,\nsays the potential for vandalism is\ntoo great.\n\"The minute you put money into\na machine, you've got a problem,\"\nhe said. \"I can understand both\nsides of the argument, though, of\nhaving birth control versus the implied tactic approval of sexual activity.\"\nOooooops\nThe Ubyssey made a ghoulish error in the last Hallowe'en issue\nwhen it announced Jeff Shyluk as\nlast year's graphic winner. In fact\nShyluk was last year's ghost story\nwinner. The winner of the 1985\ngraphic contest was Philip Rosco.\n > > r> > > > > > > > >\" >\n>>>>>>>>>>>\n> > > > > >>>>>>>\nr> > > > >>>>>>>>\n?>>>>> > > > > > >^\nA season filled with excitement & festivities.\n/I Throughout the month of November, we\nJ. JL have organized a few special events that will\ninterest everyone. We have scheduled author visits,\nproduct days, annual November Book Sale, Artists\nin Action Week, Christmas Promotions and much\nmore! Look for our ads here in the Ubyssey paper\nor pick up a calendar of events at the Bookstore.\nOur Christmas decorations, cards and\naccessories will be on the sales floor\nby the first week of November. Keep\nus in mind in the month of November.\nCome on over and enjov the events!\nmMbookstore\n228-4741 Tuesday, November 4,1986\nTHE UBYSSEY\nPage 3\nCampus needs womens programs\nCanadian University Press\nand The Ubyssey Staff\nAs one group of women is attempting for the third time to\nestablish a women's studies program at the University of Regina, a\nprofessor there is accusing the\nuniversity of institutionalizing sexual discrimination.\nPamela Anderson, a representative of the Saskatchewan Action\nCommittee on the Status of\nWomen, says two failed attempts in\nthe last 10 years to establish a U of\nR women's studies program is a\nresult of gender bias.\n\"The men on our senate do not\nempathize with women's issues and\nthey can not understand the\nrelevance of women's studies,\" said\nAnderson, a senator herself.\nAnderson said because men\ndominate the university's senate,\ndecisions are rarely made in favour\nof women.\nAccording to Sally Shrofel, a\nprofessor leading a group fighting\nfor women's rights on campus, the\nmale to female imbalance on senate\nis symptomatic of a larger problem.\nOf the 355 professors and lecturers at the university, only 55 are\nwomen, said Shrofel. Last year, only three of 116 full professors were\nwomen.\n\"The problem is built directly into the system,\" said Shrofel, adding\nmen have often used weak excuses\nto brush off the problem.\nShrofel said \"it's time the U of R\ncaught up\" with other universities\nin implementing schemes to rectify\nthe imbalance. She said salary equity and affirmative action programs\nwould ensure more women are\nhired, and that their salaries would\nbe equal to those of male counterparts.\nReid Robinson, U of R associate\nvice-president, said the university is\nalready considering an affirmative\naction program, and that it adjusted its pay scale following a 1975\nstudy which showed women at U of\nR were paid $2,000 less than men\nwith the same degr:e.\nWomen comprise only 19 per\ncent of UBC's faculty. Out of 72\ndepartment heads, only two are\nwomen.\nNadine Wilson, a UBC professor\nand former president of the\nAcademic Woman's Association,\nsaid there is a real need for affirmative action programs at UBC to\nincrease the number of women\nteaching in higher ranks. But she\nsaid a lot of women are hesitant to\ntake a job earmarked for women.\n\"I'm outspoken but a lot of\nwomen are scared to be active,\" she\nsaid.\nShrofel said watchdog commit\ntees should be formed to investigate\nsuspect cases of discrimination in\nhiring and pay.\nAnderson said a women's studies\nprogram is an excellent way to\neliminate gender bias. \"Women\nneed to have the tools if they are to\nactively promote these social\nchanges,\" she said.\nAnderson said faculty in the\ndepartments of Education, English,\nHuman Justice, Social Work and\nSociology are supporting a\nwomen's studies program, and\nsome are already teaching women's\nstudies courses.\nDrug test unfair\nBy JAMES YOUNG\nCanadian students would benefit\nif Brian Mulroney's support for\nmandatory drug testing disappeared\nin a puff of smoke, says a Simon\nFraser University psychology professor.\n\"Mandatory drug testing is a\nhopeless idea \u00E2\u0080\u0094 it creates humiliation and indignation and cannot\nsolve the problem of drug\ndependence as it is supposed to,\"\nsaid Bruce Alexander.\nOn a trip to Vancouver in\nSeptember, the prime minister said\nthe government was examining the\nlegality of mandatory testing under\nthe Charter of Rights and\nFreedoms, and agreed he would implement such tests if possible.\nWhile Mulroney later denied the\nstatements, which were recorded\nduring a press conference, the Vancouver Sun stood behind its original\nreport.\nPsychologist Alexander, who has\nresearched drug problems for 15\nyears, says there are many reasons\nto oppose drug testing legislation.\n\"I have met quite a lot of people\nwho lost their jobs in the U.S.\nbecause of testing,\" he said.\n\"There are a lot of cases before the\ncourts right now \u00E2\u0080\u0094 people are arguing that the test results are wrong\nand it is unfair to dismiss them.\"\nAlexander said the tests have a\nfalse positive rate of about five per\ncent, with one man fired for opium\nuse after eating bread covered with\npoppy seeds.\nFor the past several years,\nmillions of people have been forced\nto undergo testing in the U.S., including employees of one-third of\nthe 500 largest companies, the armed forces, and departments within\nthe federal government, said Alexander.\nAnother argument against testing\nis its effect on employee relations.\n\"You go to work and have to pee in\na jar \u00E2\u0080\u0094 how many people want to\nwork in that kind of atmosphere?\"\nAlexander asked.\nEven the premise for testing rests\non very shaky foundations.\n\"It is predicted on the idea of\nrampant drug use in Canada and\nthat's not true \u00E2\u0080\u0094 90 per cent of the\npeople who use cocaine and marijuana, for example, do not have a\nserious problem, but are using\ndrugs recreationally and not harming anyone.\"\n\"If you fire people for using\nmarijuana at a party two weeks\nago, you are only harming them,\" ,\nhe said.\nAlexander said that many politicians who succumb to anti-drug\nhysteria are simply naive, while\nothers, like U.S. President Ronald\nReagan, use it to distract from\nother domestic issues and as an instrument of foreign policy.\n\"It serves all of us to have a\nscapegoat to blame for high taxes\nand unemployment \u00E2\u0080\u0094 politicians\nare caught up in the same mentality\nas every one else,\" he said.\nIt is something of a trap, like the\nway people in the middle ages burned witches.\nHomecoming disturbs city\nKINGSTON (CUP) \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Police\nover-reacted when they arrested\nmore than 100 Queen's University\nstudents during recent Homecoming celebrations, sty the organizers\nof the university's annual weekend-\nlong festivities.\nPolice made 36 alcohol-related\narrests Oct. 24, and 73 the next day\nat and near the annual street party,\nwhich for the first time was approved and legalized b\ city council.\nCouncillor Helen Cooper said\ncouncil would probably \"not give\nthem another chance\" if students\nasked to have the event sanctioned\nagain.\nU of Calgary drug testing unfair\nCALGARY (CUP) \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Caught up\nin the Olympic spirit, the University\nof Calgary has decided to test all intercollegiate athletes for drugs banned by the International Olympic\nCommittee.\nThe U of C General Faculties\nCouncil (GFC) approved a policy\nOct. 24 that would allow the university to test 330 U of C athletes participating in Canadian Intercollegiate Athletes Union sports.\nUnder the new policy, athletes\nwho refuse to submit to the mandatory test will be ineligible for\ntraining or competition.\nThe universality of the test was\nmade possible courtesy of the\nCalgary Olympic Committee, which\nis organizing the 1988 Winter Olympics.\nRobert Corran, director of\nuniversity sport programs, said if\nthe committee was not paying for a\nnew drug testing lab at the Foothills\nHospital, \"it would have been extremely difficult, if not impossible\nto test on the level we want.\"\nThe university had planned to\ntest fewer athletes until the\nFoothills lab indicated it wanted to\npractice drug testing procedures for\nthe Olympics.\nThe only other Canadian lab\nwhich conducts the tests is in Montreal. Athletic directors at other\nuniversities say the $200-$300 per\nstudent per test price is too expensive.\nCorran said once the testing discount at the Foothills ends, the\nuniversity will test 50 to 60 athletes\na year, either randomly or only\nnewcomers to university athletic\nprograms.\nBut one of a handful of GFC\nrepresentatives who oppose mandatory drug testing said he was\n\"troubled\" by the policy.\n\"It's rather as if we randomly\nsearched students going into exams\nto make sure they weren't\ncheating,\" said Michael McMordie\nof the faculty of Environmental\nDesign.\nThe policy says the university's\nathletics program \"does not intend\nto usurp the role of civil and\ncriminal authorities with respect to\nthe non-medical use of drugs that\ndo not appear on the list of international (sports) federations of the\nIOC.\"\nThe major categories of drugs used to enhance performance and\nbanned by the IOC include\nstimulants, beta-bloken. (used to\nslow body functions, including\npulse rates), narcotic analgesics\n(such as codeine, u.'ecl to stop swelling), anabolic steroids and\ndiruretics (used b, athletes who\nwish to compete in another weight\nclass).\n\"We are not interested in recreational drugs per se,\" said Corran.\n\"There is a tremendous difference\nin terms of intrusion into student\nlife.\"\nA convenience store was vandalized, and the owner reportedly\nstood in front of the store's entrance with a metal pipe trying to\nreclaim shoplifted merchandise.\nStudents were allegedly clearing\nshelves and urinating on the floor.\nQueen's students also vandalized a\ndowntown pub.\nA member of the university marching band sustained a serious leg\ninjury in a collision with a police officer who was tackling a fan at the\nannual Homecoming football\nmatch with a Carleton University\nsquad.\nThree hundred tickets were also\nissued for alcohol-related violations. Local hospital emergency\nwards were swamped by injured\nstudents. Other patients complained rowdy students in and near the\nhospital were keeping them awake.\nDespite these charges, Queen's\nUniversity student union president\nJim Hughes said that this year's\nHomecoming was \"low-key\" and\nthat the legal street party, organized\nby the student union, succeeded in\nkeeping other, illegal parties under\ncontrol.\n\"It was pretty casual,\" said\nHughes, adding he had \"reservations\" about how arrests were made\nat the street party.\n\"I guess they (police) got pumped\nup for this event too,\" said Hughes.\n\"They had a very confrontational\nattitude. They were telling (student\nand alumni) constables what to do,\nand were very tough and aggressive\nin their ticketing.\"\nDeputy police officer William\nHackett said the sanctioned event\nwas the cause in the increase of arrests, which he said numbered\nabout 80 per cent more than last\nyear's Homecoming. He said the\npolice force will urge the university\nto cancel further celebrations.\nBut Queen's representative Dick\nBowman said the university has no\nintention of cancelling Homecoming. \"Queen's has been proud of\nthis event for 10 years . . . the most\nspirited universities have the most\nspirited Homecomings,\" he said.\nA university statement praised\npolice for showing \"patience and\nrestraint\" in dealing with incidents.\nHackett said the most common\nticketted offence was display and\nconsumption of alcohol, while the\nmost common arrest charges were\nfor public intoxication. Many\nassault charges were also laid.\nA fire cracker was thrown in one\nofficer's face, said Hackett.\nStudents propose to abolish tuition\nMONTREAL (CUP) \u00E2\u0080\u0094 A proposal that would abolish tuition\nfees in favour of a special 'education tax' has been presented to the\nQuebec government by the Concordia University student council.\nUnder the Post Obligatory\nEducation Tax (POET), brainchild\nof Concordia student Pete\nWheeland, students would defer\npayment of fees until they had\ngraduated.\n\"I see it an alternative to the current system which requires students\nto go into debt in order to study,\"\nsaid Wheeland. \"Ii is also a solution to the problem of increasing\neducational funds without raising\ntuition.\"\nWheeland said graduates would\npay up to two per cent of their\nsalaries one year after finding their\nfirst job. The tax would be collected\nfor three years for every year a student spent in CEGEP or university.\nA graduate earning below the\nPOET 'floor' of $20,000 would not\nbe taxed.\nAlthough POET was last year\nadopted as official policy of Concordia's student council, the idea\nhas long been around in one form\nor another, says former council\nvice-president Francois Desrosier,\nwho presented the brief to government.\n\"The tax would (be) much more\naccessible, and would recognize the\nresponsibility of students to society\nin assuming part of the financial\nburden,\" he said. \"It would also\nshift the emphasis from the\nstudent's ability to pay to the student's ability to learn.\"\nGovernment would be responsible for implementation of the tax,\nand verification of payment.\nThe youth wing of the Parti\nQuebecois recently adopted a\nsimilar proposal, which calls for\nabolition of tuition fees with a 1.5\nper cent tax to be paid 10 years after\ngraduation. Page 4\nTHE UBYSSEY\nTuesday, November 4, 1986\nTake it off\nTonight, on campus, a crowd of beer drinking, leering students will\nsalivate as the object of their lust parades naked before them.\nNo, the engineers are not sponsoring another drool-fest, but you might\nrecall that last year, as a result of their hiring a stripper to perform in Hebb\nTheatre, the engineers were prohibited from holding events in buildings\nadministered by the university.\nTonight, our own Alma Mater Society will host a similar event: The\nSeventh Annual Ladies' Night at the Pit.\nThe ad reads \"girls only\", but we assume women, not children, will\ncomprise the majority of the childish, sexually-exploitive clientele.\nThe engineers were criticized extensively for their Godiva ride. It was\nwidely held that their annual event was degrading to women because it\nprotrayed them as sexual objects. The parade of naked, or nearly naked\n\"bachelors\" at the Pit tonight is open to the same criticism.\nThe audience, responding as a group, finds it acceptable to applaud and\nwhistle as the objects strut before them, because the audience does not\nperceive the performers as real human beings, as people with thoughts and\nemotions. The audience derives its pleasure by dehumanizing the performer, denying him his depth of character, staring at his body.\nThe Godiva ride, and Ladies' Night, portray and foster sexism. Both\nevents are demeaning to all of us.\nBy its public silence, it would appear the Coalition Against Sexism on\nCampus, so vocal in condemning the Godiva ride, supports Ladies Night.\nMore disturbing is the support afforded the event by the AMS. We\nmight have thought our student government, sensitive to the university\npopulation's outrage at the Godiva ride, might have reflected their constituents' concern by cancelling Ladies' Night.\nIt is dangerous for us not to recognize that the Godiva ride and Ladies'\nNight are the same thing, for a condemnation of the Godiva ride and\nsilence on Ladies' Night amounts to hypocrisy, and the Godiva argument\nloses its credibility.\nThe women who attend tonight, the men who perform, CASC, and the\nAMS are promoting another ride as they participate in this degradation of\nmen.\nf a. OMS ON \}(K%y.\nCampus misinformed about need for club\nOver the past few weeks we have\nexperienced numerous cases of vandalism at our office. For the most\npart the incidences have been\nminor.\nBut they display more than just\nthe ignorance of a select few\nhomophobic people on campus. It\nis a lesson to us that the majority of\npeople on this campus may be\npotentially misinformed about the\nreason and the need for a Gay and\nLesbian organization on this campus.\nGays and Lesbians of UBC\n(GLUBC) has been a high-profile\nand recognized member of UBC for\n17 years, and is the largest gay and\nlesbian student group in Canada.\nWe not only provide social outlets\nfor young gays and lesbians and the\ncampus community as a whole, but\nas a service organization offer\ncounselling, information and\nphone-line services from our office\nin the Student Union Building.\nThere are probably at least a few\nthousand people on this campus\n(and this is a conservative estimate)\nwho have had at least one homosexual experience, be it a gay or lesbians experience. This experience\nmay play a major role in the\nperson's life, or a minor role, but\nmore importantly is an orientation\nand lifestyle that deserves as much\nrespect from people as a purely\nheterosexual lifestyle. The prejudice\nand hatred of homosexuals, or even\nthe indifference towards homosex\nual issues by a large part of society\nis totally uncalled for, and is based\non illogical fear and hysteria.\nNo one should be condemned for\nthe way they choose to express their\nlove to other people. The ability to\nbe able to love who we want, when\nwe want, is one of our basic human\nrights as people.\nWe are not blind to censorship.\nWe fully realize the position we are\nin, and we do not label these misinformed people under any specific\ncategory. The freedom to choose is\na personal right and should be seen\nas a personal right.\nThe recent hype around the\nAIDS epidemic has not been helpful\nin our search for equality, and has\ngiven opponents of the homosexual\nmovement a fuel they have used to\nunjustifiably spread ideas of hatred\ntowards us. Unfortunately, the person who plastered 'AIDS kills fags\ndead' on our door one day is misinformed. AIDS can kill anybody\ndead. It is a disease that our entire\npopulation should be addressing,\nbecause it does not stop to check\nyour sexual identity. You will not\ncatch AIDS from breathing the\nsame air that a homosexual\nbreathes, or from hugging her or\nhim. You may, however, find that\nhugging a homosexual can be an enjoyable experience. There is nothing\nto be afraid of.\nWe do not mean to address this\nproblem to only the heterosexual\npopulation on campus. There are\nmany gays and lesbians who refuse\nto get involved with our organization, claiming apathy, or that we\nnever tackle as many issues as we\nshould. We have an enormous\namount of work to do every week\nwith the varied services we offer.\nWe say to those people, of which\nthere are many, \u00E2\u0080\u0094 if you want\nthings to get done, why don't you\ngive a bit of your time to get them\ndone? Every homosexual or bisexual on campus should actively participate at one time or another in\nthe activities of the organization,\nand every heterosexual should feel\ncomfortable enough to be able to\nask for information and/or to attend one of our social functions.\nWe do not want to be exclusive. We\nwant to educate.\nIt is because young gays and les\nbians experience prejudice every\nday of their lives that we exist.\nThere is no heterosexual organization on campus because there is no\nneed for one. We are an invisible\nminority and there may be more of\nus than you think.\nWe are not perverts. Gay men are\nnot necessarily effeminate. Lesbians are not necessarily masculine.\nThe point is that we have the right\nto be what we want to be. We are\nmed students and law students, artists and anthropologists, engineers\nand theology students. We are a\nlegitimate grouping of people\nwithin a larger community, and we\nshould be ideally be fighting\ntogether to make our community a\nhealthier, friendlier one.\nThe vandals and haters on this\ncampus will do nothing to stifle our\nfight for equality, and I would be\nsurprised if they thought they\ncould.\nIf you are heterosexual, find out\nabout us. If you are a gay or a lesbian, come out to our functions!!\nStop procrastinating and participate. Maybe, then, our campus\ncommunity can become a better\nplace to be educated in.\nScott Beveridge,\nvice-president,\ngays and lesbians of UBC\nStyle signals fresh start\nEnglish misinterpreted\nH. Michel feels slighted by\nhis/her geography lecturer's \"racist\nslur\" (Lecturer slights native Indians - Oct. 28). Apparently this\nperson was hapless enough to refer\nTHE UBYSSEY\nNovember 4, 1986\nThe Ubyssey is published Tuesday and Friday\nthroughout the academic year by the Alma Mater Society of the University of British Columbia. Editorial opinions are those of the staff and are not necessarily those\nof the administration or the AMS. Member Canadian\nUniversity Press. The Ubyssey's editorial office is SUB\n241k. Editorial department. 228-2301/2305. Advertising\n228-3977/3978.\nBack at the Fenwichiean Embassy, intelligence officer Brad Newcombe was in a state. He knew\nvery well what would happen to diplomatic ties if the documents which 008 had acquired from the\nWestern connection, Michael Groberman, were to be discoverd by NATO officials. He could not bear\nthe possible consequences for Corinne Bjorge and Steve Chan whowere still in the field, and could not\nbe contacted without the somewhat unreliable service of Malcolm Pearson who alway had his own interests at heart. Embassador Evelyn Jacob could not be told for this would compromise her safety. Instead, a scrambled TELEX was sent to David Ferman, head of national defence. The message,\nhowever, was lost somewhere between Kevin Adams and Kristi Blocker in the process of information\ndegodeling.\nMeanwhile, Janice Irving, Neil Lucente, Jennifer Lyall, Steve Neufeld, Svetozar Kontic, Peter\nBerlin, and Rick Hiebert were in the infirmary being tested for illicit drug use.\nSam Micner arrived late and missed the whole kafuffle.\nto them as \"pagans\".\nHopefully, he/she is enduring no\nmore abuse over this than one letter\nto the Ubyssey. Michel believes that\nthe word \"pagan\" means\n\"something less than human ... a\nperson who has no concept of God\nor a creator.\"\nBecause I have considered myself\na pagan for a long time, and\nbecause I hate to see the English\nlanguage twisted for political purposes, I'd like to clear this one up.\nThe word \"pagan\" can mean\n\"an irreligious or hedonistic person\" (not \"something less than\nhuman\"). This is due to its misuse\nas an insult. However, Webster's\nfirst definition, and what this lecturer probably meant, is \"a\nfollower of a polytheistic religion\"\n(Polytheism: belief in or worship of\nmore than one god). In other\nwords, Michel's lecturer was being\naccurate, not derogatory.\nCarol Pedlar\nEnglish 3\nDespite all the mud throwing by\nthe NDP leader before the election\nand despite how heavily the Socreds\nwere criticized by the Ubyssey, such\nas when Mr. Victor Wong nearly\ncame right out in telling people to\nvote NDP (in the article 'Zalmbo'),\nthe people of B.C. knew better and\nvoted for Mr. Vander Zalm instead.\nDuring the campaign the Socred\nleader maintained his style even\nduring unfriendly situations. He did\nnot participate in any mud throwing\nor name calling games.\nBasically the NDP's party mandate has something to do with the\ndefeat. The party leaned too much\nto the side of the labour and conflicted with the interest of the\nbusiness people. The last time NDP\nwere in government they only proved to be big spenders. The NDP had\nalso encouraged the power of the\ntrade unions to grow out of proportion over the years. Today, aside\nfrom the original purpose of helping workers, the unions also interfere with management's policies\nand hiring decisions.\nIf a government has no incentive\nin encouraging a healthy business\natmosphere, then it is also hard to\nmaintain a good management-\nlabour relationship.\nToday many young people in the\nwork force do not want to be involved with unions anymore.\nEspecially after understanding\nabout fair wages and that many\njobs are actually overpaying. For\nexample $12 per hr for letter sorters\nand near $25 per hr for\nlongshoremen. Many of these jobs\ncan be done by lowering the wage\nand hiring more. This way people\nwho are unemployed and want to\nwork can go back to work.\nThe people have faith in the\nSocred government that long term\nbenefit to the overall province can\nbe achieved. Not just benefit to\nsmall groups and special interest\ngroups as the NDP would offer. By\nelecting Vander Zalm we are given\nthe chance of a Fresh Start because\nwe look forward to it.\nLaurence Ho\nscience 4\nNo snails please\nI have all the respect for slow\ndrivers even though they have this\ninnate urge to cruise down 41st\nhighway at 70 km/h. However, it\ncauses distress to my mental health\nwhen these four-wheel snails prefer\nto impede traffic in the fast lane. Of\ncourse, this results in the typical\nspontaneous formation of the 41st\nCentipede, which is a string of 20\ncars ridiculously crawling behind a\nhalf-dead piece of metal. (Well, at\nleast everyone will be late together.)\nAnyhow, my message is simple: if\nyou can't beat me, please don't join\nme!\nPolly Chan\nBio 3 Tuesday, November 4,1986\nTHE UBYSSEY\nPage 5\nLadies' Night promotes sexist stereotyping\nThere are some people who like\nlooking at naked men. They see it as\na healthy, natural consequence of\ntheir sexuality. I would neither try\nto deny that nor try to always prevent them from looking at naked\nmen.\nBut in contrast to sexuality, the\nnatural expression of our sexual\ndesires, is sexism, the discrimination of people on the basis of sexual\nstereotypes in matters having\nnothing to do with sex. And in-\nbetween sexuality and sexism is a\nbroad grey area which is very difficult to talk about.\nThe belief that something is sexist\nis mostly an emotional gut feeling.\nTo put it into words often makes it\nsound intellectual, dry, sterile.\nNevertheless, I will try to analyze\nwhat it is about the Pit's upcoming\n\"Ladies' Night\" which makes me\nthink of it not as just a bunch of\nheterosexual women deciding to go\nout to look at naked men, but as a\nsexist expression of how men are\nevaluated in our society. If you\ndon't see my point, don't blame\nme; it's the nature of the beast.\nWhat happens on Ladies' Night?\nSome UBC men get up on stage in\nthe Pit and do a striptease to music\nfor the all-female audience. At the\nend, the women vote on who is the\n\"most eligible bachelor\" amongst\nthem. Do you think they're going to\nvote for the one who is the most\nThe Write Stuff\nLedes, bullets and\ndirty copy \u00E2\u0080\u0094 learn\nabout it all Friday in\nSUB 241 Kat 3:30 when\nreporter extraordinaire,\nPatti Flather stoops to\nspeak on news writing.\nMs. Flather, a onetime\nUbyssey editor, has\nwritten for The Vancouver Sun and has\nfreelanced for\nnumerous esteemed\npublications in North\nAmerica and Asia. Ms.\nFlather will bring a fresf\nstart to a hackneyec\nsubject. The Ubyssey:\nget in on the action.\nBe there!\ncompassionate, the mos; interesting\nto be around, the most committed\nto equal partnership \u00E2\u0080\u0094 the kinds of\nthings some men have been trying\nto get people to value them for in\nthe last few years?\nFat chance. They're going to vote\nfor the one who is the tallest, most\nmuscular, or best able to strut and\npose in that way that is so familiar\nto us from everything from jeans\nposters to Miami Vice. But this contest is not advertised as a \"bachelor\nwho is closest to the classic male\nstereotype\" contest, it is advertised\nas a \"most eligible bachelor\" contest. The implication is that the man\nwho is most \"fuckable\", most marriageable, most desirable to have as\na boyfriend or lovi:r or husband, is\nthe man who can strip in the most\nstereotypically masculine way. In\nother words, discrimination is being\nmade on the basis of sexual\nstereotypes, even in aspects of a\nmale-female relationship which\nhas nothing to do with sex. In\nFOR DELICIOUS\nSANDWICHES\nwith Daily Specials\nAlso\nSOUP\nSALADS\nPIES 8- PASTRIES\nIN SUB LOWER LEVEL\nOpen daily 7:30 a.m. 5:30 p.m.\nCommunity Sports\noffers a 10 /O discount off\nregular prices of all merchandise\nto all UBC students, staff & faculty\nWhen you need copies\nquickly and hassle-free, see\nus at Kinko's. Our self-\nservice copiers are very easy\nto use and give you the great\nquality, inexpensive copies\nyou expect.\nkinkes\nGREAT COPIES GREAT PEOPLE\n5706 University Blvd.\n222-1688\nM-TH 8-9 F 8-6 Sat 10-6 Sun 11-6\nThe new home of the Copy Centre is\n\.\nWITH\nDOWNSTAIRS\nMORE Coin Operated Machines\nMORE Full Service Machines\nMORE Services \u00E2\u0080\u0094Binding, Reductions\nMORE Card Readers\nMORE Operating Hours\nBUT Same Great Prices\nSTUDENT UNION BUILDING\nLOWER LEVEL\nVISA AND MASTERCHARGE ACCEPTED\n228-4388\nother words, the Ladies' Night is\nsexist.\nMy conclusion from all this is\nthat the Pit should discontinue the\nLadies' Night, or at least put it in\nsome other setting than the \"Most\nEligible Bachelor Contest\". But\nyou don't have to agree with this\nconclusion even if you agree it is\nsexist.\nWell, there, I've said my peace. I\nprobably don't speak for the\nwomen who are planning to go, or\nfor the men who are going to be\nstripping. But I think I speak for\nthe many men on this campus who\nare tired of being devalued as men\nor as people, simply because they\ndon't look, talk, move, or act like\nRambo or Sonny Crockett.\nNow, I could follow this up with\nan analysis of the Godiva Ride . . .\nbut if it really is well and truly\nburied, I hope I won't have to. To\nuse a Rambo turn of phrase, I've\nbeen fighting that battle too long.\nJamie Andrews\nScience 7\nLOOK\nBRAND NAME SOFT CONTACT LF.NSES\nDaily Wear\nTinted Lenses\n$79.95\n$120.00\nAll Prices Include Starrer hit. Fallow-up \'isiis\nCAMBIE OPTICAL\n3302 Cambie (at 17th) 879-9494\nIn\nt\n^ i\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094\u00E2\u0080\u0094\n* \\n\u00E2\u0080\u00947\nJSL^.\nxs\nRABBI DANIEL SIEGEL\nAND THE STAFF AT HILLEL\nINVITE\nYOU\nTO A\nPARTY\n\\nN\nOUR 40th YEAR BEGINS!\nLIVE ENTERTAINMENT\nCATERED SUPPER\nStudents: $3.00\nWed., Nov. 5, 6-8 p.m. at\nHILLEL HOUSE\n^\n^x:\nTTF\n.X.\nT7\n\\nCROSS PENS\nPROMO DAY\n30% OFF\nALL CROSS PENS\nONE DAY ONLY\nFRIDAY, NOV. 7\nThe famous Cross Pens are available in 10K and 14K Gold Plate.\nLustrous Chrome and Classic Satin Black Finish. Pens and\nPencils, sold individually and in sets. Each individually gift-\nboxed. Don't miss this great opportunity to purchase a quality\nitem at a very special price.\nBOOKSTORE\n228-4741 Page 6\nTHE UBYSSEY\nTuesday, November 4, 1986\ntween dosses\nTODAY\nJEWISH STUDENTS ASSOCIATION\nLunch, 12-2 p.m., Hillel House.\nENTREPRENUERS CLUB\nSpeaker George Ninkovich, noon, Angus 425.\nUBC PERSONAL COMPUTING CLUB\nGeneral meeting, noon, Hebb 12.\nLUTHERAN STUDENT MOVEMENT\nCo-op supper, 6 p.m., Lutheran campus centre.\nUNITED CHURCH CAMPUS MINISTRY\nInformal worehip, noon, Lutheran Campus Centre.\nEAST INDIAN STUDENTS ASSOCIATION\nImportant executive meeting, noon, Sedgewick\nfoyer Tools For Peace Nicaragua Week, speaker\nand slide show David Chadnovsky, noon, Scarfe\n204\nWEDNESDAY\nMARANATHA CHRISTIAN CLUB\nBible Study and fellowship, 7 p.m., 1868 Knox Rd.\nINSTITUTE OF ASIAN RESEARCH\nExhibit of Canadian watercolour and Chinese\ncalligraphy, 11 a.m.-7 p.m., Asian Centre\nAuditorium.\nCHINESE STUDENTS' ASSOCIATION\nBeginners Madarin classes, noon, Buchanan\nB325\nSCHOOL OF MUSIC (UBC)\nConcert Alan Rinehart, guitar, Jame Martin,\nflute, noon, UBC School of Music Recital Hall.\nSIERRA CLUB\nIrving Fox on the proposed C-Site Dam, 8 p.m.,\nRobson Square Media Centre.\nUBC MARXIST-LENINISTS\nLiterature table, 11:30 a.m.-1:30 p.m. Buchanan\nA Block Entrance.\nJEWISH STUDENTS' ASSOCIATION\nHillel's 40th anniversary dinner party, 6 p.m.-8\np.m., Hillel House.\nUBC PERSONAL COMPUTING CLUB\nAtari users meeting, 4:30 p.m. SUB 212A,\nAmiga users meeing, 12:30 Buchanan B319.\nUBC PERSONAL COMPUTING CLUB\nWeekly group meeting, meet the new leader\nWilliam Chow, noon, Buchanan B319.\nPOLITICAL SCIENCE STUDENTS ASSOC.\nGeneral meeting, noon, Buchanan D205.\nCINEMA 16\nFilm Marianne and Juliane directed by\nMargarethe Von Trotta, 7 p.m. and 9:30 p.m.,\nSUB Auditorium.\nUBC CHAPLAINS & FINN EST INSTITUTE\nSeminar Liberation and the Canadian Church,\nnoon, Buchanan Penthouse.\nJAPAN EXCHANGE CLUB\nGeneral meeting, noon, SUB 205.\nUNITED CHURCH CAMPUS MINISTRY\nDinner (potluck) and discussion, 6 p.m.,\nLutheran Campus Centre.\nWORLD UNIVERSITY SERVICE OF CANADA\nFree film South America Footholds, noon,\nBuchanan A202.\nISMALI STUDENTS ASSOCIATION\nTutorials, 5:30-6:30 p.m., Brock House.\nTHURSDAY\nUNIVERSITY CHRISTIAN MINISTRIES\nSpecial speaker: Paul Woerhle on human sexuality, 12:30 p.m., Scarfe 210.\nLE CLUB FRANCAIS\nGeneral meeting, noon. International House.\nCANADIAN PROFESSORS FOR PEACE\nIN THE MIDDLE EAST\nLecture: Israeli Politics at the Crossroads, 11:30\np.m., Buch B318.\nBALLET UBC JAZZ\nJazz l/ll from 8:30 a.m.-10 a.m., Dancercise\nTHE DINER\nfrom 12:30 p.m.-1:30 p.m.. Tap from 1:30 p.m.-3\np.m., now offering 5 class tickets for $20. All\nclasses SUB Plaza South, Jazz l/ll, SUB Partyroom.\nINSTITUTE OF ASIAN RESEARCH\nSpecial seminar, part of the \"Micro and Macro:\nInteractions of scale in Asian Rural Society\"\nseminar series. Lecture conducted by Dr. James\nScott \"Everyday forms of peasant resistance in\nrural Malaysia,\" 5 p.m. Free admission, Asian\ncentre, seminar room 604.\nCHINESE STUDENTS' ASSOCIATION\nBeginners Cantonese Class, 12:30 p.m., Buch\nB325.\nPREMEDICAL SOCIETY\n\"Field trip\" to Children's Hospital, 12:30-2:20\np.m., Woodward G30.\nCO-OPERATIVE EDUCATION PROGRAMS\nInformation meeting \u00E2\u0080\u0094 for 1st year Engineering\nstudents/2nd year Electrical Engineering, noon.\nComputer Science room 200.\nSCHOOL OF MUSIC\nUniversity Chamber Singes, Corland Hultberg,\ndirector, 8 p.m., UBC School of Music recital\nHall.\nSCHOOL OF MUSIC\nStudent Composers Concert, noon, UBC School\nof Music Recital Hall.\nSUB FILM, PART OF UBC FILM SOCIETY\nThe Colour Purple, 12:40 p.m., SUB Auditorium.\nUBC STOP THE WARSHIPS CLUB\nMeeting \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Speakers from Vancouver Peace\nFlotilla Coalition, 12:30 p.m. SUB 111, enter\nthrough cafeteria.\nPHILOSOPHY STUDENTS ASSOCIATION\nInformal conversations, 7-10 p.m., Upstairs\nlounge, International House.\nAMS INTEGRITY IN ACTION CLUB\nA talk given by Richard Heinberg entitled, \"The\nWorld Beyond Belief,\" 12:30-1:20 p.m., Buch\nB225.\nAMS WOMEN'S CENTRE\nGeneral meeting, noon, SUB room 130.\nAIESEC\nJob Interview Workshop, noon, Angus 426.\nUBC PERSONAL COMPUTING CLUB\nMeeting for \"Commodore\" people, 12:30-2:30\np.m., Buch B319.\nPRE-DENTAL CLUB\nPreparation for D.A.T., Chalk carving practise,\nnoon, Wood 5.\nWOMEN STUDENTS' OFFICE\nSeminar, noon, Brock 223.\nUNITED CHURCH CAMPUS MINISTRY\nStudy and discussion group, all welcome, noon,\nLutheran Campus Centre.\nUBC HANGGLIDING CLUB\nTheory lesson and level I exam, 6 p.m., SUB\n205.\nISMAELI STUDENTS' ASSOCIATION\nFloor Hockey, 4:30-5:30 p.m., Osborne Gym F.\nISMEILI STUDENTS' ASSOCIATION\nCommittee meeting, 5:30 p.m., SUB 213.\nCAMPUS CRUSADE FOR CHRIST\nDr. Neil Yorkstonon \"Our Identity in Christ\", noon,\nWoodward 4.\nEAST INDIAN STUDENTS' ASSOCIATION\nClub photos and general meeting. Important, all\nmembers please attend. Refreshments served,\n12:30 p.m., Scarfe 208.\nFRIDAY\nLE CLUB FRANCAIS\nGeneral meeting, noon. International House.\nServing U. B. C. and West Point Grey for\nthe fast 28 years\nWe put our Sole into your\nFISH & CHIPS j\nEnglish Style Home Cooked Meals\nat Reasonable Price \u00E2\u0080\u0094 including\nRoast Beef and Yorkshire Pudding\nOpen Monday to Saturday\n8:00 a.m. to 8:30 p.m.\nand Sundays\n1:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m.\n4556 W. 10th Ave. - 224-1912\nWe accept Chargex\nUBC's First\nNeighbourhood\nPub\nFriendly place to get together\nand relax.\nLocated in Fairview Crescent\n(Behind the 'Frat\" Houses)\nOpen 5 p.m. to Midnight\nPresent this ad and receive\n2 Hot Dogs for the\nprice of one.\nOffer good until Nov. 15th\nPRE MEDIACAL SOCIETY\nFootball Challenge, 4:30-6 p.m.. Grass field\nbehind Osborn Gym\nSCHOOL OF MUSIC\nKuhlau Bicentennial Concert, 8 p.m., UBC\nSchool of Music, Recital Hall.\nSCHOOL OF MUSIC\nUniversity Chamber Singers, Cortland Hultberg\nDirector, Repeat of Nov. 6 concert, noon, UBC\nSchool of Music Recital Hall.\nPACIFIC RIM CLUB\nBzzr Garden, 4-9 p.m., SUB Room 206.\nSUB FILMS, PART OF UBC FILM SOCIETY\nThe Colour Purple, 6:30 and 9:30 p.m., SUB\nAuditorium.\nUBC PERSONAL COMPUTING CLUB\nSecond Sports Nite featuring volleyball and badminton. Members and friends welcome, $1 admission, 8-9:30 p.m., Osborne Gymnasium.\nUBC CHAPLAINS\nSeminar: Mark Thompson \"Morality and the\nMarketplace,\" noon, St. Marks College.\nUBC CHAPLAINS\nAudio visual and discussion: Bryan Teixeira and\n'DO\ncafe\nForeign\nNostalgia\nFine Cinema\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nmovie rentals &\nespresso bar\nVCR&\nTwo\nMovies\nWith Valid Student Card\n\f\u00C2\u00B0\n734-2233\n3420 West Broadway\n\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00BB*\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00BB**\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00BB\n\"Give the Lasting Gift from the\nGreat Masters of Art\"\n18\"x24\"\nSpecially\nPriced at\n\u00C2\u00BBQQ95\n39\nBeautiful direct lithographic reproductions from original master-\nworks printed on specially manufactured paper by renowned\nartists Renoir, Picasso, Van Gogh, Velmon, Brueghel and many\nothers. Each lithographic print is elegantly hand mounted and\nframed to match the period ofthe artist. Your selection is\nready to hang and will add grace to any decor. These prints are\navailable on a limited selection onlv and prices start at an\nincredibly low $39.95 for a gift that will last for many years\nto come.\nReg. Price start at $69.95\nWhile quantities last\nBOOKSTORE\n228-4741\nBrad Newcombe \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Is the Free Market Setting\nCanda Free?, noon, Buch Penthouse.\nLA CHALLA (SPANISH CONVERSATION CLUB)\nInvites those interested in some vino, tapas, and\nguitarra to the International House, Gate 4 at 8\np.m.\nSTUDENTS FOR PEACE\nAND MUTUAL DISARMAMENT\nFilm \"Arms Bazaar\", a disturbing look at how\nthe defence industry markets its products to the\nPentagon, noon, SUB 205.\nFIRST YEAR STUDENTS' COMMITTEE\nDance IPost-Bzzr Garden Bash), 7 p.m., SUB\nPartyroom and patio\nEAST INDIAN STUDENTS' ASSOCIATION\nPost Expo tack tourist night, 6 p.m., Gage\nresidence lounge.\nTHE UBYSSEY\nNewswriting seminar, 3:30 p.m., SUB 241 K.\nTOOLS FOR PEACE\nNicaragua Week, slide show and discussion,\nnoon. Graduate Student Centre.\nLSAT/GMAT/CRE\nEXAM TRAINING\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Taught by Professionals and Educators\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Application Essay Assistance\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Local Offices & Staff\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Lecture Format \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Practice Tests\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Tape Library \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Low Tuition\nWeekend Courses I Fri. evening, all Sat. Et Sun.)\nB.C. & Yukon\n(604) 684-4411\nALBERTA\n(403) 278-6070\n(Sexton\nEducational Centers\n414-1200 Burrard, Vancouver\nTHE CLASSIFIEDS\n| RATES: AMS Card Holders-3 lines, 1 day $2.75; additional]\nlines, 60c. Commercial \u00E2\u0080\u0094 3 lines, 1 day $4.75, additional lines, .70c. Additional days, $4.25. and .65c.\n| Classified ads are payable in advance. Deadline is 10:30 a.m. the day \\nbefore publication.\nPublications Room 266, S.U.B., UBC, Van., B.C. V6T2A5\nCharge Phone Orders over $10.00. Call 228-39 f7.\n5 - COMING EVENTS\n40 - MESSAGES\nCOLLEGE PRO\nPAINTERS\nManager Recruitment\nPresentation\nTODAY\nTues., Nov. 4\n12:30-2:30 p.m.\nHENRY ANGUS BLDG.\nRoom 213\nNEW! EXCLUSIVE, Spring/Summer '87\n\"TRAVEL COMPANIONS CONNECTION!\"\nDirectory of 1000's seeking travel companions throughout North America, RUSH\n$8.75 total cost for listing in/receiving\ndirectory & receive complete details with\npersonal data from Now! TCC, P.O. Box\n39356, St. Louis, MO, 63139, USA.\n70 - SERVICES\nPREGNANT? 731-1122\nFree Tests \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Confidential Help\n75 - WANTED\nBUD THE SPUD. Jack & his beanstalk, and\nthe Friendly Giant are members! How about\nyou? Join AGORA FOOD CO-OP, Dunbar\n& 17th.\nSKI & PARTY this New Years!! Join 1500\nskiers Dec. 28-Jan. 2, 1987. 5 days & 5\nnites, only $249. 25 buses!! Ski Big White &\nTod Mtn. Call Dan today at 736-6166.\n11 - FOR SALE - Private\n1969 VW VAN, partly camperized, rebuilt\n1986. $1650 OBO. 984-6423 evenings,\nweekends.\n15 - FOUND\nMEN'S SEIKO WATCH found at Woodward\nLibrary Fri., Oct, 31. Please call 922-5075\nevenings.\n20 - HOUSING\nWANTED: A graduate student in psychology\ncapable of assessing a 6-yr.-old who probably has perceptual problems. Call Al\nFahrig 266-8779.\n80 - TUTORING\nFRENCH OR SPANISH courses with PhD\nFranco-Argentine student. High school,\ncontinuing education, Univ. help experience. Translations. Call Oscar 738-4102.\n85 - TYPING\nSTUDENT\nHOUSING\nAvailable in Fairview Crescent, U.B.C.'s\nnewest single student residence. Occupancy from November 1st. Situated\njust behind the University Village, all 4-,\n5-, and 6-bedroom townhouses are completely furnished and rent includes all\nutilities. Amenities include dishwashers,\ndeluxe furnishing and satellite television\nreception capability. Prices start as low as\n$250 per month and applicants must be at\nleast 21 years of age by December 31st,\n1986 in order to qualify. Please apply at\nthe Student Housing Office, 2071 West\nMall (weekdays 8:30 a.m.-4:00 p.m.) or\ncall 228-2811.\nGAGE. TOTEM PARK, PLACE VANIER &\nFAIRVIEW CRESCENT: room and board,\nand room only: Available for men & women\nin the student residences. For information,\napply at the student housing office, 2071\nWest Mall, Ponderosa Bldg., or call\n228-2811, Weekdays: 8:30 a.m.-4:00 p.m.\n35 - LOST \t\nLOST HP41 Calculator, late Thurs., Oct. 9.\nReward, leave message at EUS Cheese Factory, 228-3818.\n40 - MESSAGES\nA.B. BABY \u00E2\u0080\u0094 In deepest sympathy from\nMr. T., Monghong, Dr. Bruce, Crit\nchenmeir and Casper.\nMINIMUM NOTICE REQUIRED-Essays,\nterm papers, resumes, theses, reports,\nUBC location (Village) 224-2662.\nADINA WORD PROCESSING for resumes,\nessays, theses. Discount for students. 10th\n& Discovery. Phone 222-2122.\nJUDITH FILTNESS. quality typist. 3206 West\n38th Ave. 263-0351.\nWORD PROCESSING SPECIALIST. U\nwrite, we type theses, resumes, letters,\nessays. Days, evenings, wknds., 736-1208.\nPROFESSIONAL TYPIST. 30 yrs exp.\nWordprocessor & IBM typewriter. Student\nrates. Dorothy Martinson, 228-8346.\nWORDWEAVERS \u00E2\u0080\u0094 word processing\n(multi-lingual). Stud, rates. Fast turnaround. 5670 Yew St. at 41st. Kerrisdale.\n266-6814.\nACADEMIC and BUSINESS WORD\nPROCESSING/TYPING. Quality work,\nvery reas. rates. Days/evenings. 263-4862.\nUNIVERSITY TYPING - Word processing.\nPapers, theses, resumes, letters, P-U &del.\n9 a.m.-10 p.m. 7 days/wk. 734-TYPE.\nWORD PROCESSING, EDITING, writing:\nresumes, theses, papers, letters. Pick-up &\ndelivery avail. 324-9924.\nK.E.R. WORD PROCESSING. 1633 E. 12th\nAve. Using IBC-XT with Word Perfect. Call\nKerry Rigby at 879-2895.\nYEAR-ROUND. Expert essay, theses, typing\nfrom legible work; spelling/grammar corrected. 738-6829, 10 a.m.-9 p.m., King Ed.\nbus route.\nTYPING. Fast and accurate. $1.50/pg.\nRachel, 224-0866 or 228-3881. Satisfaction\nguaranteed.\nTYPING? YOU BET! Theses, papers,\nessays, whatever. Experienced, reasonable.\nShort notice. Kits area. June 738-1378.\n24 hrs. Tuesday, November 4, 1986\nTHE UBfSSEY\nPage 7\n&*\u00C2\u00A3*$:.:\u00C2\u00BB\nMedical\nscience .111\n,-\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 -\ \u00E2\u0096\u00A0';\u00E2\u0096\u00A0>*?:\u00E2\u0096\u00A0+\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0: d\?*$\nneeds /^6$\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2'\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0.\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2':\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0:. \u00E2\u0096\u00A0'\u00E2\u0096\u00A0' \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0.-.\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 :,-:.i :\u00E2\u0096\u00A0'*,\u00E2\u0096\u00A0*;)\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nyourlips^\nv*%'\n'*\nMWmy^\u00C2\u00BB$'\"\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 If you are occasionally bothered by cold sores or fever blisters (chapped lips\nand cracked mouth corners don't count)...\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 If these sores feel tingly or itchy and then pop up at the edge of your lip...\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 If they look blistery...\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 If you are healthy, over 16, and unquestionably not pregnant...\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 If you wish to participate in a study of a new cream treatment called\nundecylenic acid...\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 If you don't mind that the study is \"Placebo-controlled\" (Yz of the entrants\nget a \"fake\" cream with no active drug)...\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 If you would accept a $50 honorarium after completion of 6 to 8 study visits\nto the UBC Herpes Clinic...\nplease clip this\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00C2\u00AB>:-'?:^vfeSV^ij(j^\nWHEN YOU GET A RECURRENCE NEXT\nTIME CONTACT US IMMEDIATELY!\nIF . . .\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 You awoke with a warning or a sore or\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 You just developed one during the day\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 It is between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. (7 days) and\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 You are interested in finding out about participation\nin a drug study and\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 You are planning to be in the vicinity for the next 14 days\nTHEN follow these instructions as soon as possible. Do not wait for\nblisters or sores to form. CALL 687-7711 NOW and ask the operator\nto page beeper 2887 (give your name and a phone no. you will be\navailable at for the next 10-15 min.). If it is after 5 p.m., it is too late\nto do the study this recurrence, so hold on to the paper and call next\ntime if before 5 p.m.\nNOTE: These instructions are for informtion only. A decision about\nentry into a study will occur only after the research assistant has talked to you further and you have decided you wish to participate. Page 8\nTHE UBYSSEY\nTuesday, November 4, 1986\n'Birds smash lethargic Huskies\nBy SVETOZAR KONTIC\nThe Saskatchewan Huskies wish\nthey could have hidden in the thick\nSaturday night fog after taking a\nbrutal 45 to 17 beating from the\nUBC football squad at Thunderbird\nstadium.\nThe 'Birds, using nearly every\nplayer on their roster, coasted to an\neasy victory over a Saskatchewan\nteam that put on a post-halloween\nperformance which would have sent\nchills up the spine of any coach. lead at 3:52\nThe victory left the UBC team when quarti\nwith a perfect eight and zero record fired a 34 ya\nfor the Western Intercollegiate Foot- to receiver I\nball League season, and makes them bled the bal\nheavy favourites to win the Vanier on for the to\nCup later this month in Toronto. originally be\n\"We played really well. A lot of play a circu\nour younger players got the oppor- stadium's pc\ntunity to play and did well,\" said Gagner tl\nUBC coach Frank Smith. down the s;\nUBC opened up a seven point Vlasic who\nof the second quarter\nrback Jordan Gagner\nrd pass over the middle\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2avid Groves who bob-\nbut managed to hold\nuchdown. The ball had\n:n deflected, giving the\ni-like effect under the\nor lighting.\nrew an 18 yard pass\nde to tight end Tom\nscooted into the end-\nUBC GUARD PAUL JOHANSSON gets ready to score against helpless opposition. Johansson attributes his\ngreat success to having written a story for The Ubyssey. He totally admits that it chanced his life forever.\nHoopsters court success in opener\nBy CHEW WONG\nThe UBC Basket-'Birds opened\nthe season in high style with victories over Brock University and\nLakehead University in Vancouver\nthis weekend.\nOn Friday night at War\nMemorial Gym the young Thunderbird team played like a veteran\nsquad downing Lakehead 78-54.\n\"I was really happy with the\ngame \u00E2\u0080\u0094 especially with the\ndefence,\" said head coach Bruce\nEnns about the Thunderbird victory.\nUBC co-captain Paul Johansson\nled all scorers with 17 points. Dave\nBarkwell netted 12 points for the\nvisiting team from Thunder Bay\nOntario.\nUBC easily handled the\nLakehead defensive press and controlled the game from start to\nfinish.\n\"Kevin Hanson and Paul\nJohansson anchored our defense\nUBC rvgger men victors\nA solid effort From the offence enabled UBC's Rugby squad to\ndefeat Capilano J5-9 this past weekend.\nThe low score was indicative of the \"spoiling style\" of defensive\ngame Capilano is notorious for.\nUBC had allowed a try before the game was two minutes old due\nto loose play. Enter Adam Kendall and his scoring touch, the UBC\nveteran booted two penalty goals drawing the Blue and Gold to\nwithin three points of their opponents at the half.\nThe 'Birds doninated the Caps in the second half winning the majority of rucks and shutting their opposition out. Kendal added nine\nmore points on two penalty kicks and a well executed drop kick.\nCoach Barry Legh said the 'Birds high level of fitness compensated\nfor the size advantage the Caps enjoyed.\n\"If we cut down on ball handling errors we will be much more effective on offence,\" he said.\nCoupled with a sound trouncing of highly respected U of Vic. the\nteam's 6-3 season record looks impressive in the national rankings.\nEven though 1/3 of the roster is stacked with rookies, UBC's\ntTugby future looks bright.\nand showec. the newcomers the\nway,\" said F.nns.\nUBC wot a hard fought 84-76\novertime game against the Brock\nUniversity Badgers the following\nnight in SFU's West Gym.\nJohannson again led the 'Birds\nwith 23 points while Kevin Moore\nreplied with 24 points for Brock.\n\"I though: Kevin Hanson played\na great game tonight \u00E2\u0080\u0094 he set the\ntone defensively for us,\" said F.nns.\nUBC controllec. the game throughout regulation time and led by\nas many as nine points. A late surge\nput the Badgers on top 67-66 with\n12 seconds remaining in the game.\nWith three seconds left Johansson\nwas fouled and converted one of\ntwo free throws to send the game into overtime, tied at 67.\nIn the overtime period UBC was\nled by rook.es Alan Lalonde and\nJohn Carlson who controlled the\nboards at both ends of the floor.\nLalonde converted four free throw\nattempts to power the 'Birds past\ntheir St. Catherines Ontario opponents.\n\"The overtime victory showed\nthat we have a lot of heart and spirit\non this team,\" said co-captain\nKevin Han;on. \"The rookies,\nespecially Jchn Carlson, played a\nbig part in tl e win.\"\nzone, leaving the 'Birds with a 20-10\nlead at the half, following a Saskatchewan field goal.\nCraig Keller was on the receiving\nend of another Gagner pass, for a\n36 yard touchdown, at 3:39 of the\nthird quarter. Keller caught the ball\namidst a throng of Huskie\ndefenders, broke several tackles,\nand made a spectacular spinorama\nmove before he finally stumbled into the end-zone to give UBC a commanding 28 to 10 lead over the\nhapless Saskatchewan squad.\nGagner left the game in favour of\nbackup quarterback Eric Putoto\nwho had started the game. Gagner\ncompleted eight of 13 passes for 116\nyards and three touchdowns.\n\"We threw for a total of 321\nyards today and our passing game\nhas constantly improved\nthroughout the year,\" said Smith.\nPutoto took over just where\nGagner left off, hitting receiver\nMike Bellefontaine over the middle\nagain for a 41 yard touchdown with\nzero seconds left on the clock in the\nthird quarter.\nThe UBC festival of scoring ended early in the fourth quarter when\nPutoto combined with Tom Munro\non a 14 yard pass completion play\nthai made the score 45 to 10.\nPutoto finished the evening having completed nine of 14 attempts\nfor 205 yards and two touchdowns.\nThe backup quarterback scored\nanother touchdown on a one yard\nplunge through the offensive line\nearly in the second quarter.\nUBC now gears up for the WIFL\nchampionship game next week\nagainst Calgary at T-'Bird stadium.\nIt will be the third meeting between\nthe two teams this season.\nUBC defeated Calgary 18 to three\nearlier in the year at home, and 25\nto 19 on the road. The Dinosaurs\nare the defending Vanier Cup\nchampions and will be difficult to\nbeat three times in a row.\n\"Its going to be a very tough\ngame. Calgary has a lot of experienced players and a well-\nbalanced offence which we have to\ncontain. Their defence has improved considerably,\" said Smith.\nThe winner of the game goes on\nto meet the winner of the Ontario-\nQuebec conference in the Canadian\nIntercollegiate Athletic Union national semi-final.\nUBC's outstanding defensive\nback Mark Norman caught one interception Saturday night, and\nfinishes the season with a league\nleading twelve.\nKoreanstootough\nBy KR1STI BLOCKER\nLIBC held its first international\nmen's volleyball tournament called\nTHUNDERBALL at War\nMemorial Gym this past Saturday\nand Sunday.\nWhen the smoke cleared, UBC's\nSister University from Korea, Sung\nKyun Kwan University, had captured the gold medal.\nBesides the hosts, UBC and the\nKoreans, THUNDERBALL\nfeatured the Stanford University\nCardinals from California and\nCanada West contender, University\nof Alberta Golden Bears.\nOn Saturday in the semi-finals,\nthe S.K.K. team (Korea) flexed\ntheir muscles by routing the Cardinals of Stanford in straight games\n(15-3, 15-9, 15-7). The Koreans\nwere led by ace attackers Dong\nChcon Kim and Sung Goo Cheon\nwith 15 and 16 kills respectively.\nThe S.K.K. setter from the\nKorean National Team, Sang Sun\nNam, constantly confused the Stanford as he directed their fast attack\ncombination system. Stanford was\nled by Ail-Americans Scott Fortune\nand Steve Blue who made 13 and 12\nkills respectively.\nIn the other semi-final the host\nThunderbirds beat Canada West\nrival Alberta in four games (9-15,\n18-16, 15-7, 15-8).\nIn the first game, UBC rushed to\na 6-1 lead only to have the Bears\nroar back to a decisive 15-9 win.\nGame two was the pivotal game of\nthe match with both teams having\nmany chances to win but the 'Birds\npulled it out 18-16.\nThe Birds' ace attacker, Greg\nWilliscroft put on the best hitting\ndisplay of the tournament as he\npounded out a THUNDERBALL\nhigh of 32 kills to lead the Birds\npast the dispirited Bears.\nVeteran Walter Janzen came off\nthe bench in game two to spark the\nT-'Bird win finishing with 18 kills.\nThunderbird Coach Dale Ohman\nsaid, \"it was nice to see our guys\ncome from behind to win. The\nmatch was on the line in game two\nand we toughed out the victory.\"\nOn Sunday the bronze medal\nmatch brought the most excitement\nof THUNDERBALL with Alberta\nedging Stanford at deuce in the fifth\ngame (7-15, 15-8, 11-15, 15-8,\n15-13).\nEach team's ace attacker, Stanford's Scott Fortune and Alberta's\nDean Weiler, took turns hammering bullet spikes into the floor in the\ncritical fifth game. At match's end\nWellers 28 kills spelled the difference as fortune finished with 20.\nUnfortunately the T-'Birds fortunes changed in the gold medal\nmatch as they faced the formidable\nKoreans from S.K.K.U. The Birds\nseemed a little intimidated and\nplayed tentatively throughout the\nKorean three game sweep (15-7,\n15-4, 15-8).\nKorean national team player and\nS.K.K. Captain, Jin Soo No, led the\nway with nineteen kills and Kwang\nChung Cho chipped in with 11 kills.\nThe Birds were led again by\nWilliscroft who banged out twenty-\ntwo kills.\nOhman said, \"our preparation\nfor our November 14 Canada West\nhome opener is right on schedule.\nWe were most pleased with the\nstrong play of middle blocker Kevin\nHooge this weekend. His improved\ndefence and front row play is giving\nus good depth at this position.\"\nThe Thunderbirds travel this\nweekend to the prestigious University of Manitoba tourney where\nthey will open against the 1986\nNCAA champion Pepperdine\nWaves on Thursday night.\nTOURNAMENT RESULTS:\nGold \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Sung Kyun Kwan University. Silver - U.B.C. Thunderbirds.\nBronze \u00E2\u0080\u0094 University of Alberta.\nFourth \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Stanford University.\nMost outstanding player: Jin\nSoo No, S.K.K.\nWater-'Birds plunge\nThe UBC men's water polo team\ntakes the plunge this Saturday when\nthey open their season with a home\nmatch against the University of\nWashington.\nUBC played to a tie with the\nHuskies in their opening match last\nyear.\nThe two teams have built up an\nintense rivalry over the last few\nyears.\nThe match is at five p.m. at the\nUBC aquatic centre and will act as a\nwarm-up for the start of UBC's\ncampaign in the lower mainland\nsenior water polo league which will\nstart this month and run through\nthe spring.\nThe water polo team is still eager\nto recruit new players. You do\nnot need to have played before, if\nyou can swim and are looking for a\nfun way to keep in shape then just\ngo along to one of the club's practise sessions at the aquatic centre on\nWednesdays at 10 p.m."@en . "Newspapers"@en . "Vancouver (B.C.)"@en . "LH3.B7 U4"@en . "LH3_B7_U4_1986_11_04"@en . "10.14288/1.0125941"@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 .