"CONTENTdm"@en . "http://resolve.library.ubc.ca/cgi-bin/catsearch?bid=1211252"@en . "University Publications"@en . "2016-01-18"@en . "1986-11-28"@en . "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/Ubysseynews/items/1.0125994/source.json"@en . "application/pdf"@en . " fczcnv\n:/es Sexi^.\nTHE UBYSSEY\n.Vol. LXIX, No. JO 2\nVancouver, B.C. Friday, November 28,1986\n228-230V\nHetero week motives questioned\nBy SCOT MacDONALD\nInsecure heterosexuals rejoice,\nnext week's Heterosexuality Week\nis for you. Organizers say the week\nis just a joke and not meant to offend anyone.\nPatrick Kirkwood, a Sigma Chi\nfraternity member, said \"we're just\npromoting heterosexuality but we\nhave nothing against gays and lesbians.\" He went on to say he hoped\nby having a week to \"help\nheterosexuals who may not be confident with their sexual beliefs\" it\nwould help decrease the tension\ncreated by Gays and Lesbians'\nPride week.\nThe week, organized by members\nof Sigma Chi, was originally set up\nfor \"parody affect\" with a format\n\"indentical to the Gays and Lesbian's Pride week\" explained\nKirkwood. He said that he\n\"desperately wants to avoid bad\nfeelings between\" heterosexuals\nand homosexuals. Doug Bryson,\nassistant co-ordinator of the week,\nsaid the week was set up to\n\"celebrate heterosexuality\".\nThe week will start off with Born\nto Breed buttons sold in SUB on\nMonday, December 1, jeans day on\nWednesday, and a dance on Friday\nnight in the SUB ballroom.\nScott Beveridge, vice-president of\nthe Gays and Lesbians of UBC, said\n\"originally I thought it was\nfunny.\" He supported a week to\n\"bring up topics and feelings that\nheterosexuals feel are important.\"\nBeveridge said he is \"afraid of a\nsmall percentage of the population\nwho will take it the wrong way and\nwill use it to foster anti-gay\nfeelings.\"\nBeveridge said \"we (Gays and\nLesbians) are a minority\" and he\nwanted to avoid any conflict\nbecause \"we'll get the heat.\"\nBrent Lymer, Inter-Fraternity\npresident, said \"at first I thought it\nwas funny but it has gotten out of\nhand.\" Although the week seemed\nto be backed by Sigma Chi Fraternity, he said it is \"not an official\nfunction of Sigma Chi.\"\nAlthough Lymer represents 10\nfraternaties and over 1,300 people,\nKirkwood said that Lymer is an\n\"individual\" and has \"no input\"\ninto the H week program. He stressed that although Sigma Chi may be\nassociated with the week, \"it is\nmeant to represent and encompass\nthe whole campus\" and all\nheterosexuals.\nKirkwood said his fraternity\nSigma Chi, does not use sexual\norientation as an issue to determine\nacceptance of members. \"We don't\ndiscriminate and we don't choose\nby it,\" he said.\nThe promoters of H week also\nappear to be behind the Fight back\nTHESE MEN ARE heterosexual \u00E2\u0080\u0094 straight UBC women can breathe a sigh of relief.\nJennifer lyall photo\nWilfred Laurier faculty divest\nBy The Canadian University Press\nand The Ubyssey Staff\nMore than $880,000 of the\nWilfrid Laurier University faculty\nassociation's pension fund is invested in with holdings in the apartheid nation of South Africa, faculty recently learned.\nThe response was swift. They immediately voted to divest at a Nov.\n12 meeting.\nThe motion called on trustees to\ndivest of $252,000 in Seagram's\nCompany Ltd., $188,000 in\nRothmans, $183,000 in Cominco\nLtd., and $157,000 in General Electric.\nIn addition, faculty passed a motion to initiate discussion with the\nstudent union with a view to jointly\nparticipating in more \"concrete action\", said association president\nPaul Albright.\nStudent union president Brian\nThompson said he would welcome\nany initiative from faculty.\nPolitical Science professor John\nRedekop suggests funding scholarships for black South African\nstudents, tenable at Laurier.\nAlbright said faculty were led to\nadvocate divestment by their consciences.\n\"Whether this will speed the process of dismantling apartheid is\nwhere honest men can differ,\" he\nsaid.\nLast year, UBC's Board of\nGovernors indicated it had $1\nmillion from its $90 million endowment fund in six companies that\nhave ties with South Africa. It also\nreported it had $717,000 from its\n$90 million staff pension fund in\nthree companies with interests in\nPretoria.\nThe Board voted in October to\nsell its shares in two of the companies but left the door open for\nfuture investments. The university's\nAnti-apartheid group has labelled\nthe board's measures as \"token\ndivestment,\" and says it will not be\nsatisfied with anything short of\ntotal divestment.\nWilfred Laurier sociology and\nAnthropology professor Andrew\nLyons said there is a \"lack of\nawareness here and in North\nAmerica about South Africa.\"\nLyons, who is active in the anti-\napartheid movement, noted Laurier\noffers only one course on Africa.\n\"It's only offered (every) couple\nof years, and until recently had very\nlow enrollment,\" Lyons said.\nAlbright stressed discussion of\nthe issue focused on what more the\nassociation could do other than a\n\"showy display for the public eye.\"\nLyons said he was pleased by the\ndivestiture, but added it is only part\nof \"a vast public process\".\nAlbright cautioned however that\nthe resolution may not be necessarily binding on the trustees who administer the fund.\nDorothy posters which appeared\nlast week in SUB. These refer to the\nGays and Lesbians' \"Surrender\nDorothy\" dance held on Nov. 22.\nBeveridge said the posters were \"a\ngood response to a good publicity\ncampaign\" on the Gays and Lesbian's part.\nSome members of the Gays and\nLesbians Club liked the idea of H\nweek but feared it would get out\nof hand. Roger Mostad, a club\nmember said H week is \"alright but\nI'm afraid of what's gonna\nhappen.\" He added it would be\n\"great if it doesn't get out of hand\"\nbut that the Gays and Lesbians\nwould have \"more fun\" during\ntheir week.\nBoth the backers of H week,\nsome of whom are Sigma Chi men,\nand the Gays and Lesbians, said\nthey want to avoid conflict.\nStudents gyped\nBy PATTI FLATHER\nThousands of UBC students may\n(have participated in several illegal\npyramid schemes that began in\nSeptember, with investments ranging from a case of beer to $500 and\nthe lure being an 800 per cent profit\nto help pay tuition and living costs.\nThe RCMP and some students\nwho have refused to participate\nwarn that seven of every eight people lose in such schemes, and that\nanyone who enters now is almost\ncertain to lose.\n\"Students by and large don't\nhave a lot of money,\" said University RCMP Sgt. Don Schlecker. \"It\nhits the students where they're most\nvulnerable.\"\nStudents said the schemes are\nspread by word of mouth through\nfriends and a student residence\nrepresentative said cash has been\nexchanged in meetings at Sedgewick\nLibrary and Gage Towers among\nother places.\nGage Community Council president Duane Mackie said he knows\nmany students involved in\npyramids, and was approached by\nsomeone in his own faculty, commerce, to attend a meeting.\nMackie said he knows at least six\nstudents who. entered the schemes\nearly, when the turnover was only\nfive or six days, and made large profits.\nBut, he said, as more students\nhave become involved in the\nschemes, which expand exponentially as each new investor tries to\nbring eight others in, the schemes\nare starting to fall apart because the\nfield of students has been saturated.\nOne history student who paid\n$500 into a pyramid, with the promise of a $4,000 profit, said he is\nMarzari wins recount\nAlthough it will not be official until Friday at 4:30 p.m., NDP candidate Darlene Marzari has once again been found the winner of the\nsecond Point Grey seat.\nThe recount was filed by the Social Credit Party on November 13'\nafter Marzari defeated incumbent Pat McGeer by just 40 votes. After\nthe recount, completed yesterday, the margin of victory was 55\nvotes.\nWhen contacted by phone on Thursday Marzari said she wanted\n\"To thank th* UBC students for finding the poll and for waiting in\nthe horrendous iine-ups. I knew it was the university poll and section 80 ballots that put me where I am,\" she said.\nThe riding was previously heW for\"24 year? by Pat McGeer.\nWhen asked if he he would consider running in three years time Pat\nMcGeer said, \"Who knows what the future holds?\"\nThe Social Credit Party can appeal to the Supreme Court for\nanother recount no later than 4:30 p.m. Friday.\nstill waiting for the money he\nthought would help finance his tuition and living costs. The student,\nwho asked not to be identified, said\nhe knows of at least one other $500\npyramid and several $100 ones.\nAnother part-time student who\nentered a $500 pyramid off-campus\nin the first week of school said she\nwas living from month to month\nworrying about paying bills and being able to buy clothes for her\nlover's children.\nThe woman, who also requested\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2her name not be used, said she\nthought the scheme would be fun\nand could not fail.\nShe said she attended meetings\nevery other evening with as many as\n70 people, all \"totally hyped.\" Her\nschool work began to suffer.\n\"I couldn't get to sleep I was so\nexcited,\" she said.\nBut when things started to go\nwrong, \"people started getting really furious with each other. Money\ndoes funny things to people.\"\nWhen her pyramid collapsed, the\nstudent was lucky \u00E2\u0080\u0094 her money was\nreturned. She said most people in\nher pyramid really needed the\nmoney, for tuition or a mortgage.\n\"The people who are interested\nin pyramid schemes are the same\npeople who buy lottery tickets, the\npeople who have no hope of getting\na little money,\" she said in an interview.\nDavid DeRosa, science 2, said he\nand roommate John Landis, president of UBC's Social Credit club,\nhave had phone calls in the last\nthree weeks from friends they\nhaven't heard from in a long time\nasking them to join pyramids.\n\"It's a good way to lose friendships,\" said DeRosa, who was contacted by students at Langara College and BCIT as well as at UBC.\nDeRosa said one friend in a beer\npyramid put in one case of beer and\nended up with 16 cases, adding that\nthe liquor pyramids do not bother\nhim as much.\nThe University RCMP have\nreceived only one complaint about\nUBC pyramids, which has been\npassed on to the Vancouver police's\ncommercial crime section, said Sgt.\nSchlecker. The schemes, illegal\nunder section 19 of the Criminal\nCode, are difficult to prosecute, he\nsaid, because victims are embarrassed and reluctant to go to police, and\nbecause of the sheer numbers of\npeople involved in tracking pyramid\norganizers. Page 2\nTHE UBYSSEY\nFriday, November 28,1986\nCutbacks will hurt handicapped\nBy ALLISON FELKER\nThe B.C. Coalition ofthe Disabled, an advocacy support group for\ndisabled people, has launched a\nmuch-needed fundraising campaign\nto combat cutbacks.\n\"There has been a turndown of\nsupport services\", said Margaret\nBirrell, executive director of the\nVancouver-based coalition.\n\"Premier Bill Vander Zalm has said\nhe does not believe in funding,\ndirect lobbying, or advocacy\ngroups. He doesn't realize we're\nlobbying for issues, not against parties,\" she said.\nSome of the issues the coalition is\ncurrently lobbying for are improved\naccessibility, affordable housing,\nand better transportation for the\ndisabled. The coalition is also concerned about the federal government's new drug patent policy and\nits effect on disabled people who\nneed medicine.\nStarted in 1977, the coalition\nThe Ubyssey\nNEEDS\nphotographers\nTRUE CHROME AT THIS PRICE!\nLarry's Not Kidding!!\nEXTRA 10% OFF\nWIWAMSdCARDl\nCASE OF 10\n*25\n2053 WEST 41st AVE.\nVANCOUVER\n263-0878\nGRADUATION\nPORTRAITS\nby\nAmngrapli\nPhone now tor your\nCOMPLIMENTARY SITTING\nChoose Irom 18 previews Iprools)\n732-7446\n3343 WEST BROADWAY\nResume photos as low as\n75c in colour.\nrfrocfanL 5VjJ\nRENTALS\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Party Systems\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Disco Systems\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 New Equipment\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Lighting Effects\n873-3841\nMention this ad and\nreceive 10% off rental\n271 East 2nd Ave. Vancouver\nreceives core funding for its four\npaid staff members from federal\ngovernment grants, and from the\nCity of Vancouver. The campaign\ngoal is $15,000.\n\"The organisation is very costly\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 we need the extra money for\npublicity and for educational activities,\" Birrell said. The coalition\nalso acts as an information and\nreferral centre, and this service suffers without adequate funding.\nThe campaign for funding is an\nexperiment in telemarketing. This\nincludes sending letters throughout\nB.C. to increase awareness of the\ncoalition and asking for funding,\nBirrell said.\nPeter Carver, chairperson of the\ncoalition board said, \"restraint has\ndefinitely hit us hard. We are not\nfavored with provincial government\nfunding.\"\nCarver, who is confined to a\nwheel chair because of arthritis, added that restraint has hurt \"the in\ndependent living\" of the disabled.\nCarver uses homemaking services,\nand said that some people can no\nlonger afford such help.\nAnother problem for the disabled\nis the attitude of some non-disabled\npeople.\n\"There is a degree of frustration\nin meeting these barriers, especially\nin obtaining employment. People\ndon't realize that a physical disability has nothing to do with working\nability,\" Carver said.\n/pirns\nCHRISTMAS\nFAIR\nNovember 24 -\nDecember 19, 1986\nSUB Main Concourse\nDisplay Area\nBHB' ENGLISH COMPOSITION\nTEST SEMINAR\nii\nHOW TO PASS\"\nSUB BALLROOM\nGuest Speaker:\nMs. Nancy Horsman\nWF.DNKSDAY, DKCKMBKR 3\n12:30\nPlease be seated early. No one will be turned away.\nFREE\n\"The student i\nbody marches\non the\n2 for one\nmeal deal.\"\nBring this ad. show \our\n1 valid student I.D. and lake\nadvantage of our 2 tor one\nmeal deal.\nOrder any item, we mean\nany food item, and get another\none absolutely tree. The 2 for\nthe price of one meal deal runs\nSunday to Thursday until Dec.\n8th. This otter is not valid\nwith other promotions and has\nno cash value. If the 2 items\nordered are different prices the\nower-priced item is free.\nIs this a great deal or what?\nBring a friend or your mother\nor a total stranger.\nSee you soon at P.J.'s.\n2966 West 4th Avenue.\ni\ni\ni\ni\ni\ni\ni\ni\nNAPOLEON BONAPARTE\n^\ne<\nC lip & Save PageS\ncommittee photo\nUBC'S MIKE BELLEFONTAINE missed this pass late in the game but the 'Birds won the Vanier Cup a few short seconds later on a Rob Ros touchdown catch, 25-23.\nBishop's University stops funding\nLENNOXVILLE (CUP) \u00E2\u0080\u0094 The\nstudent council at Bishop's University has set precedent in Quebec by\ndeciding to fund a political club on\ncampus.\nJohn Ryan, president of the\nYoung Liberals Club, successfully\npresented a request for funding at a\nrecent council meeting even though\nall club budgets were approved last\nspring.\nThe funding will come from the\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 vanier cup committee photo\n. . . while tears flowed from the eyes of Western Mustang players\non the bench \u00E2\u0080\u0094 they came so close to winning it all.\ncontingency funds of the council's\nbudget. The motion was to approve\n$50 immediately and another $25 in\nJanuary.\n\"(The funding) broke the long\nheld precedent of the student council which said that political clubs\nwould not be given student\nfunding,\" said Mark Taylor, a\ncouncil representative. \"Both the\nNDP and Conservative clubs were\nturned down before . . . The student council acted in haste without\nproper judgement.\"\nBut Ryan argued that although a\nprecedent has been set, the\ncouncil's constitution does not\nspecifically state that political clubs\ncannot be funded.\nCouncil president Chris LeClair\nsaid funding a political club should\nnot be confused with funding a\npolitical party. None of the money\nthe Liberal club receives will go to\nthe Liberal party or be used to support candidates in election.\n\"We're funding political involvement, not an entity with a strict\nideology,\" he said.\nNo other university in Quebec\nfund political clubs on campus, according to the largest student\norganization, l'Association Na-\ntionale des Edudiantes du Quebec.\nMcGill and Concordia universities\nin Montreal both recognize political\nclubs, but do not fund them or provide office space.\n\"There are so many political and\nreligious groups, we couldn't afford\nto fund them all,\" said McGill\ncouncil vice-president Lindsay\nGlassco. \"It's setting dangerous\nprecedent at Bishop's. They'll have\nto set limits or they could be approached by anybody in the\nfuture.\"\nConcordia council co-president\nScott White said funding a club is\nthe same as funding the actual party.\n\"If it happened here, it would\ndamage our credibility by favouring\none party over another. We weren't\nelected to be spokespeople for any\npolitical party,\" he said.\nRacism gets boot\nThe B.C. Federation of Labour\nhas launched an anti-racism campaign with the assistance of the\nfederal government.\nFederation leader Art Kube said\nthat every time there is an economic\ndownturn, considerable fear is\naroused by racists and bigots,\nresulting in attacks on visible\nminorities. \"We are trying to build\na bulward within the trade union\nmovement to oppose and eradicate\nracism,\" said Kube.\nThe federation's plan is to\ndevelop human rights committees\nand labour councils to plug into the\nhuman rights network, said Kube.\n\"Adjustment committees would\nimplement hiring policies designed\nto overcome systemic discrimination\", said Kube.\nThe campaign will be conducted\nwithin the trade union movement\nand in homes, said Kube.\n\"Racism is anti-worker and it\ndestroys the solidarity of workers\"\nsaid Kube. The campaign will be\nconcerned with raising worker\nawareness to the damage racism\ndoes, said Kube.\nHe said the campaign is necessary\nfor many reasons, but, in particular\nbecause of the elimination of the\nhuman rights commission and the\nhuman rights branch. \"We are filling a vacuum that is largely the\nresponsibility of the provincial\ngovernment\", said Kube.\nThe federal government is\nassisting the campaign financially,\nadded Kube.\nWatson defies accusations\nBy ROSS McLAREN\nPapers and files are scattered\nacross the posh Kitsilano apartment, home to the Sea Shepherd\norganization. On the walls hang oil\npaintings of Sea Shepherd, her rainbow striped funnel and hull becons\nagainst the greyness of the canvas.\nOutside it is raining, a typical Vancouver day.\nInside Paul Watson sits dry in a\ncanvas deck chair, calm and composed, ready to spread his gospel.\nImmediately, the conversation\nturns to Iceland \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Reykjavik, and\nthe sinking of the whaling ships.\nWatson says that what happened\nat Reykjavik was not a protest action but a policing action, in accordance with international law.\nIcelanders, Watson says, kill whales\ndespite the International Whaling\nCommissions' moratorium on all\nhunting of whales. Iceland,\nhowever, continues to kill over 200\nwhales a year, ostensibly for\nresearch purposes.\nCalling Sea Shepherd \"the un-\nnofficial policing body of the\nIWC,\" Watson says the destruction\nof private property will continue if\nwhaling nations continue to\ndisregard international law.\nAt Reykjavik in November, two\nenvironmental activists, in an\noperation coordinated by Watson,\nscuttled two of Iceland's four whaling ships and destroyed computers\nand machinery in a whaling processing station.\nThese destructive acts have gained Watson the label of terrorist, a\nname that does not bother him.\nWatson says the former U.S. Am\nbassador to the United Nations,\nJeanne Kirkpatrick, defines terrorism as someone who deliberately\nsets out to maim or to kill another\nperson; since Sea Shepherd did not\nset out to harm life, he says we cannot be labelled terrorists.\nSea Shepherd, Watson says, does\neverything possible to insure that\ntheir operations will not injure any\npeople. Watson says, \"no weapons\nand no explosives can be taken on\nthese operations; as well, these activists cannot resist arrest and must\nbe prepared to accept responsibility\nfor their actions.\"\nThese precautions, however,\nhave not prevented Sea Shepherd\nfrom incuring the wrath of the civil\nauthorities. B.C. Attorney-General\nBrian Smith has asked a Vancouver\nlaw firm to examine whether or not\nSee page 8: Watson Page 4\nTHE UBYSSEY\nFriday, November 28,1986\nOut of hand\nComic relief is always welcome, especially this close to exam\ntime.\nIt is frequently amusing to watch people profess their sexual\npreferences in public. Humour may also come as a parody. These\nare some justifications given for H week, or Heterosexual week,\norganized by some members of Sigma-Chi.\nOn the other hand, groups at whom humour appears to be\ndirected at may feel threatened. What some people feel is light and\namusing, others find hard and threatening.\nH week seems to parody the gays and lesbians week that is held\nto educate and show pride, because homosexuals are frequently\noppressed and attacked in our society.\nThe organizers have said the week is to help heterosexuals be\n\"confident with their sexual beliefs\". This is ridiculous, even funny.\nThey also say the event is to help \"decrease the tensions created\nby Gays and Lesbians Pride Week\". This explanation is unfortunately much closer to the truth. It is hard not to conclude\nhomophobia plays a part in this event.\nH week may have been organized with good intentions as well;\nhowever, these things always have a way of \"getting out of hand\".\nThe Gays and Lesbians Club has suffered vandalism and had their\nmail destroyed. The original fun H week now has some overly enthused Heteros calling for a Heterosexual club, presumably some\nfeel a need to be confident of a homosexual-free club.\nH week has, perhaps inadvertently, given credibility to the.\nhomophobic voice. It is a bad idea.\n^H.nl\n\"It's my parents. Quick, help me think of something heterosexual to say.'\nH and Gay weeks aim to educate\nBazaar in SUB sickens\nThe shopping mall status of the\nSUB makes me sick. The student\nbody has elected AMS representatives who had promised to rid us\nof this problem. The SUB is supported by student fees and should\nbe used for the benefit of students,\nnot of outside profiteers.\nThere are two main problems\ncaused by the use of SUB space by\nbusiness. The mOst obvious of these\nis their assault on the student's right\nto the exchange of ideas and information through the various clubs\nTake a stance\nTo elaborate on Devinder\nPannu's courageous statement\nmade at the Indo-Canadian function last week (Ubyssey Fri. 21), I\nthink her main point is that you can\nhave the best of both worlds \u00E2\u0080\u0094 the\nEastern traditional as well as the\nWestern modern one. You can retain the rich cultural heritage of the\nIndian community \u00E2\u0080\u0094 the art, music\nand language, but reassess (if not\ndispose of) the oppressive traditions\nsuch as blind submission to authority and marriage involving coercion.\nInstead, Western values that encourage autonomy, as Devinder\npoints out can help young Indo-\nCanadians make their own decisions affecting their lives. And after\nall, isn't that what university is for?\nTo teach us how to think freely and\nevaluate society's values constantly? Isn't it time for young Indo-\nCanadians to take a stance?\nShelina INeallani\nlaw 1\non campus that are prevented from\nsetting up literature tables for lack\nof room.\nThe second is the assault on the\nstudent's right to a place of re-creation and conversation free from the\nnoise and distraction of the\nmarketplace. Students don't need\nOakridge Centre re-created in their\nlivingroom. Students don't want\nthis, as evidenced by last years AMS\nelections. Then why does it continue?\nThe AMS representatives should\nhold to their election promises and\nremove the bazaar. I challenge our\nvice-president to keep to her proclamation still visible on the few remaining campaign posters. We\nhaven't forgotten why we elected\nyou.\nGreg Beatch\ngraduate studies\nIt has come to our attention that\nmore and more people on campus\nare taking \"H\" week in the wrong\nspirit. As representatives of both\ngroups in question, we feel it is important to make clear our views and\nour mutual support for two original\nideas, namely 'Lesbian/Gay Pride\nWeek' and 'Heterosexual Week'.\nThe purpose behind Lesbian/Gay\nPride Week is to bring to the public\neye issues of human rights\nregardless of sexual orientation and\nthe denial of those rights, to foster\nunderstanding of homosexual\nlifestyles in the community, and to\ngenerally make aware that\nhomosexual men and women are\nproud of their sexual outlook.\nAs a minority that, at present, is\nnot guaranteed basic human rights\nin the Charter of Rights, homosexuals feel the need to keep publicizing and educating people about\nviolence and prejudice feelings\ndirected towards them.\nEveryone has problems to deal\nwith, and that includes heterosexuals in general as well. Nothing is\nmore critical in society than the sexual issues we all face. These conflicts and problems often are left\nalone until they grow to immense\nproportions and disrupt personal\nlives and those of other people.\nHeterosexual week is designed as a\nforum to bring these problems to\nthe forefront of the campus community. By providing this week,\nheterosexuals are given a positive\natmosphere to address any underlying feelings, frustrations and sexual\ninsecurities. Heterosexual Week is\nJesus not Lord\nWe completely agree with the\ncomment made by the Jewish\nStudents' Federation in that\nwhoever posted the sign \"Jesus is\nLord over UBC\" had no right to\nspeak on the behalf of the entire\nUBC student population. However,\nwe disagree that an analogy can be\ndrawn between the phrases \"Jesus\nis Lord Over You\" and \"Allah is\nGod Over You\". Allah is not a\n\"God of the Muslims\" to the exclusion of all others \u00E2\u0080\u0094 rather,\n\"Allah\" is the name given to God\nin Arabic. In English, it's God. Is\nanything lost or changed?\nDevinder Pannu Shelina Neallani\ngraduate studies law 1\nOpposing principles fuel cold war\nWhen considering the issue of\npeace or war, armament or disarmament, one must first consider the\nessence of the opposing forces. The\nSoviet Union is a totalitarian country, in theory and in practice. Its\ngovernment holds total control over\nthe lives of its people and those in\nthe countries it takes over; it\ndisposes of these lives as it sees fit.\nThe United States is based, at least,\non its principles, on its Constitution, which upholds certain inalienable individual rights because\nof fundamental human nature.\nThose rights protect the individual\nTHE UBYSSEY\nNovember 28, 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.\n\"It's so easy. . \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \" crooned Svetozar Kontic to Evelyn Jacob. But Rick Hiebert and Tony Roberts\ndisagreed. \"Yeah, if it's really so easy how come only David Ferman is successful?\" Peter Berlin asked\nNancy Rempel. Brad Newcombe felt obliged to mention hearing rumours about Ronald Stewart. \"But\nthat's all of them,\" said Cassandra Freeman. \"Yup, the rest of us are frustrated and obsessed with it,\"\nobserved Jennifer Lyall. \"It's actually quite sad.\" So when Michael Groberman suggested an orgy was\nin order, Allison Felker and Victor Wong were happy to jump on the bandwagon, dragging with them\nScot Macdonald and Anya Waite, respectively. Ross McLaren wouldn't come because he was in love\nh'ith himself, and Patti Flather preferred to go home early; but fellow sufferers Steve Chan and\nmalcolm Pearson pnte-ed in enthusiastically.\nfrom oppression by other individuals or by the government.\nThe American and Soviet principles are fundamental enemies of\neach other; Individualism and Collectivism are at war, with no peace\npossible.\nOnce this fundamental war has\nbeen recognized, the next issue concerns how one should defend one's\nprinciples of freedom and therefore\nlife against a system that is devoted\nto their abrogation. Should you try\nto eliminate your own most powerful weapon, for whatever reason,\nhope that your enemy will do as\nmuch, and then seek brotherhood?\nNo. No brotherhood is possible\namong fundamental enemies. Letting down one's guard against a\ndevout, incompatible enemy is\nsuicide. One must first try to\neliminate those fundamental principles and practices which threaten\none's life, and then let down one's\nguard if one wishes.\nIf you value your life, but are not\ncommitted to any principle by\nwhich to live it, I urge you to consider that surrendering to the principles on which the Soviet Union is\nbased is surrendering your life. In\nany struggle between two opposing\nforces, the one which is fanatically\ncommitted to oppression is going to\nwin over an equally powerful enemy\nwhich is halfheartedly committed to\nfreedom.\nIf your standard is your life and\nyour freedom, and your enemy is\nequipped with a weapon of any\nkind, whether a nuclear bomb, a\ncannon, a gun, or a knife, then your\ntotal security of preserving those\nvalues is impossible. But every additional bit of defensive and offensive\nguard can only add to that security.\nFor those pragmatists who can\nonly see two countries and a lot of\nbig guns on each side, I offer a\nmore pragmatic truth: there exists\nthe principles of the United States\nand the principles and practices of\nthe Soviet Union.\nStephan Weaver\napplied science\nnot designed to put down or slander\nthe homosexuals at UBC, or\nanywhere else; it is promoting\nHeterosexuality.\nWe both feel that humour is a\nvital outlet to get these points\nacross, and it is important that we\nsupport each other and laugh with\neach other. The Blue Jeans Day is a\nperfect example. The point of the\nday is not to try and distinguish\nwho's heterosexual or homosexual\non campus, but to remind ourselves\nthat we actually cannot tell, and\nthat it really doesn't matter.\nHowever, there exists a small\npercentage of people who will use\neither or both campaigns to justify\nviolence and hatred. We have felt it\non both sides, in the forms of\nnegative feelings directed towards\nthe \"H\" week organizers, and the\nincreased hostility directed against\nGays/Lesbians of UBC and Gay\nPride Week. Violence is something\nneither of us wish to see come about\nfrom either campaign. We wish to\nbe aware of the difference and let\neach other speak with a strong, fair\nvoice, with each other's support.\nAs long as we both take it as that,\nwe do not wish to see Heterosexual\nWeek become a cynical backlash\nagainst homosexuals on campus.\nAll events during the week are nonviolent and promoted in a positive\nmanner. We condemn any violence\naimed at Gays and Lesbians, and\nthe Gay and Lesbian service\norganization at UBC.\nPlease enjoy the week, but keep it\nin the right perspective. Gays and\nLesbians are the minority in this\nissue, and it is important that their\nposition be taken seriously. But also\nthe freedom to speak as a member\nof the minority or the majority\nmust be taken seriously. Let's just\nlet both be, and support each other\ndecently.\nPatrick Kirkwood\nOrganizer of Heterosexual Week\nScott Beveridge\nVice president. Gays and Lesbians\nof UBC\nProgram aids disabled\nStudents and faculty members\nshould be aware of a new program\nwhich has recently been initiated by\nUBC's Student Counselling and\nResources Centre. The program is\ncalled \"Students Helping Students\"\nand it aims to help meet the needs\nof the physically disabled student\non campus. Paid student assistants\nare available, up to ten hours per\nweek, to assist the disabled student\nin some capacity that would help\nhim/her through the academic year.\nThese paid positions are not expected to include work presently be\ning done by volunteers.\nThe disabled students at UBC\nwill gain maximum benefit from\nthis service only if they are aware of\nits existence. If you know any\nphysically disabled students with\n\"special needs\" would you please\nask them to contact me as soon as\npossible. I can be reached on\nTuesdays 9:30-12:30 and Thursdays\n9:30-2:30 in the Student Counselling and Resources Centre, Brock\nHall. 228-4840.\nCharlene Hawthorne\nCoord., Students Helping Students Friday, November 28,1986\nTHE UBYSSEY\nPage 5\nHeterosexuals silly\nBy RONALD STEWART\nWhat will those wacky fraternities think up next?\nSigma Chi fraternity has organized Heterosexual Week, in response\nto the Pride Week and the \"Surrender Dorothy\" Dance by Gays\nand Lesbians UBC. A parody, in\nother words. Very funny. Funny,\nthat is, until you realize the real\nreasons behind this little escapade.\nGLUBC holds their week to call\nattention to a minority group which\nhas been persecuted, slandered, and\nhated by the majority for some\ntime.\nThe men of Sigma Chi feel that\nHeterosexuals have their rights as\nwell, which of course they do.\nHeterosexuals constitute the majority, and always will; thus their\nrights are insured. Gays and Lesbians, a minority, have no such\nguarantee; like Orientals and Jews,\nthey must constantly watch for and\nfight against abuses of their rights.\nBut the heterosexual organizers\nof this event feel threatened. Why?\nBecause some homosexuals stand\nup for their rights once a year?\nThey feel that homosexuals are\npromoting their lifestyle. They are.\nUnless homosexuality becomes accepted as a viable alternative, gays\nand lesbians will always be\npersecuted.\nHowever, promoting a lifestyle\ndoes not mean one is trying to win\nnew converts. When other\nminorities hold a heritage festival,\nthey do not want other people to\njoin their culture, merely to appreciate and understand it.\nThe Heterosexual Week\norganizers obviously feel their sexuality is threatened. Deep down,\nthey think homosexuals want\neveryone to be like them, and they\ndon't want to be that way. They\nmay even disapprove of homosexuality.\nIf these people feel threatened by\nhomosexuals, then they're obviously afraid of them. Fear and\nmisunderstanding, its cause, breed\nhatred, which can only lead to the\ntension the men of Sigma Chi claim\nthey want to avoid.\nHeterosexuality Week is a cute\nidea. It would be funny if Gay Pride\nWeek was not needed, if homosexuals had their rights guaranteed by\nlaw. But homosexuals are still a\nhated, underprivileged group in our\nsociety. They face a long, uphill\nbattle to earn the rights and respect\nthey deserve. Tasteless jokes like\nHeterosexuality Week do nothing\nbut hinder their cause.\nRonald Stewart is a Ubyssey staffer\nwho believes sex is a subjective experience and claims to have\nremarkably varying tastes.\nLECTURE SERIES\nMONDAY, DEC. 1\nJewish mysticism \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Is it for me?\nMONDAY, DEC. 8\nIs orthodox Judaism relevant or obsolete?\n(part 2)\nAll lectures begin at 7:30 at\nBayview Community School\n2251 Collingwood\nin the library\nNo charge \u00E2\u0080\u0094 For more information cal\n266-1313\nSponsored by Lubavitch\nAll\nitems on\nour menu\n0^JJ^2for1\n(Buy one\nget one\nf\n<*4 pf^ UNBELIEVABLE\n#%***% *\u00C2\u00BB#\u00C2\u00BB**.4 TRY US!!\n266-3221\u00E2\u0080\u0094\t\n7970 GRANVILLE ST. VANCOUVER\nOPEN 7 DAYS FROM 4.0Op.m.\nMON.-SAT. to4a.m. Sun.&Holidays to 2a.m.\nHello,\nMister\nPremier?\nYou too will talk to important and exciting people when you write news\nfor the Ubyssey. Visit us\ntoday in SUB 241k.\nEurope\n& BRITAIN FOR 18-35's\no\nREDUCTIONS OF UP\nTO $260.00 9\nWITH CONTIKI AND AIR CANADA\nBOOK AND PA Y IN FULL\nBY FEB. 1, 1987 AND YOU\nWILL RECEIVE GREAT SAVINGS!\nOur new 48 page 1986/87 Europe & Britain Concept and\nHotel Brochures are now available. With over 20 holidays\nto choose from, they offer the most extensive\nproduct line ever.\nFrom $43 a day including accommodation, breakfast and\ndinner daily, transportation, sightseeing and a great range\nof extras.\nSEE YOUR TRAVEL AGENT AND\nWATCH FOR FLYERS AROUND CAMPUS\nRESERVE NOW!\n,^^k>\nfisouTmraiNG\nBBS NDFUCE HEBE.\nlukon Jack never said much but,\nwhen he did, he had something\nto say. He was, in his way, very\nparticular on matters of taste.\n\"Southern things have their place\"\nhe would say \"and that place is\nnot here!'\nI guess what he meant was that\nlight and airy and sweet things are fine\nand good, if that's what you like,\nbut that here in the North a thing must\nbe more substantial. Finely crafted,\nsmooth and sturdy. It must be something you can put your hands around.\nYukon Jack did not believe in\ncomfort for comfort's sake, he saw no\npoint to it. But he did appreciate the\nfiner things. Another paradox.\n- 2fc.\nsheep of cmmrauons.\nfor Yukon Jack recipes write YUKON JACK RECIPES. Box 2710. Postal Station \"IT Toronto. Ontario M8Z 5P1 Page 6\nTHE UBYSSEY\nFriday, Nove\nThomas unlike anybody else\nBy PETER BERLIN\nAll the rock-show conventions\nwere gently turned upside-down\nand then given a quizzical shake at\nthe Town Pump on Saturday night\nas one of the pop world's great eccentrics ran through his bag of\ntricks.\nHe mixed his dreamy singing with\noccasional spoken monologues as\nhe encouraged the audience to imagine that they were following him\ninto English Bay and then under\nwater to look at the fish. Then,\nafter five engrossing, entertaining\nminutes, Thomas began to tease the\naudience with a discussion of the\nproblems of ending a rock song\nwithout slipping into melodramatic\nand insincere emotional rock\ncliches.\nAlthough he imbues everything\nmusic\nDave Thomas\nThe Town Pump\nNovember 22\nFor a start there are few rock\nbands that consist of just a bassist\nand an accordion-playing vocalist.\nAnd Dave Thomas doesn't look\nmuch like your average superstar\npinup. He's more like Dylan\nThomas with puppy fat. He\ndescribed himself in his bizarre\nopening song as a \"Fat pink blob\"\nand later on as a Ralph Cramden\nlookalike, though he plays his role\naltogether more benignly than\nJackie Gleason did.\nMost importantly Thomas writes\nsongs completely unlike anybody\nelse does, and then performs them\nin a highly idiosyncratic style. Fat\nPink Blob at the Bottom of the Sea\nset the tone for the evening. With\nTerry Mulligan supplying a\nmuscular, bass riff Thomas went on\na stream-of-consciousness, dreamlike discussion of what it would be\nto be a fat pink blob at the bottom\nof the sea.\nDAVE THOMAS . . . fat. pink, blob\nDANCING FREE\nBy CASSANDRA FREEMAN\nIf you expect a happy ending, or\nan ending at all, or if you expect to\nfind a clear purpose behind dance\nworks you would have been disappointed by the Judith Marcuse\nRepetory Dance Company's performance Saturday night. Because this\ncompany refuses to give easy\nanswers. Its artists are much too\nfree and sophisticated for that.\nFreedom and complexity wove\ntheir way through all of the pieces\nchosen by Artistic Director Judith\nMarcuse in different ways. In Big\nShouders by Lar Lubavitch, each of\nthe nine dancers becomes one part\nof several different pieces of\nmachinery.\ndance\nJudith Marcuse Repertory\nDance Company\nQueen Elizabeth Theatre\nNovember 21, 22\nTheir bodies move in original and\nunexpected ways as they push, pull\nand lift each other into a series of\ngeometric patterns.\nThis work is free from\nwith his own distinctive style there\nare echoes of others. His whining,\nyet tuneful vocals call to mind Captain Beefheart, the unstructured, insistent songs sound like those of\nBerthold Brecht and Kurt Weill.\nBut his choice of subject matter is\nall his own.\nThomas rounded off the set with\na protest song on behalf of\ndinosaurs, which he insisted have\nbeen the victims of cruel stereotyping by the media. The song contained a couplet of which Thomas was\njustly proud: \"Has the short end of\nthe sticks been given\narcheopteryx?\" he asked.\nFor an encore Thomas performed\na brutal cover version of Sloop\nJohn B. The song was made famous\nby the Beach Boys who turned it into a cheery singalong number, but\nThomas brought out the\nunpleasantness of the lyrics which\ntell a tale of childhood terror in the\nface of drunkeness, violence and\nthe cops. When Thomas sang \"This\nis the worst trip I've ever been on,\"\nit was clear he meant it and felt it.\nmale/female stereotypes as the\nwomen do their share of lifting and\nshifting men into precise and often\nprecarious links and balances.\nIn And the Angels Sing,\nchoreographer Ginette Laurin\nallows her dancers, in bare feet\nsuits and cocktail dresses, moments\nof humour and playfulness. But\njust when you think a romance is\nabout to begin the mood is interrupted by awkward or disturbing\nactions. The women are swung\naround by the neck in helicopter\nspins, tossed callously from one\nman to the other. In one situation,\none man is actually pushed off the\nstage by the other three.\nDanny Grossman's choreography\nin Tryptich is as profound as it is\nfree from convention. Throughout\nthe piece, Betsy Carson, Eric\nRochin and Aaron Shields barely\nbudge from their initial' positions\ncenterstage, expressing their plight\nthrough endless patterns of jerky\ncontorted movements.\nThey cringe and cower to the\nsounds of a nightmarish symphony\nscore until the end of the piece\nwhen they struggle but fail to free\nthemselves of their oversized dark\nbrown suits which symbolically im-\nprosion their individuality. It is a\npowerful portrayal of personal oppression.\nMany times during Judith Mar-\ncuse's works, Cortege and Time\nOut, there are a series of steps that\npersonify the word freedom. Time\nOut is a playful piece where the\neight dancers shed their winter\nclothes and inhibitions, warming up\nto Senegalese tribal and reggae\nrhythms.\nThere are sharp, quick jumps and\nbounces mixed in with free flowing\nmovements all performed with\nenergy and style, but it is Andrea\nLougheed who captures the\nmischievous spirit Carefree as she\nskips, hops and bounces through\nher solo with non-stop energy and\njoyful defiance.\nMarcuse's dancers took each\npiece of choreography and made it\ntheir own, and it was their effortless\nand natural looking interpretations\nthat ultimately made the evening a\nsuccess.\nDOW\nrood cycle.\nKeaton comments\nB> RICK HUBERT\nSilent film comic Buster Keaton\nlived in a strange universe of his\nown making and the Vancouver\nEast Cinema has been offering\nguided tours of it during its Buster\nKeaton film festival this month.\nKeaton, one of the most popular\nfilm comedians of the 20's, doesn't\ntelegraph his humour as so many\ncomedians do today. Nothing\nworks properly in his world yet\nKeaton takes it in his stride, his\nstony face a mute comment on the\ninsane world around him.\nthe hilarious results of this problem, there are other fine touches,\nsuch as the church full of brides,\nbrought there by an ad Keaton's\nfriends put in the newspaper, who\nchase Keaton through Los Angeles,\na football game, a corn field and a\nbeekeeper's yard \u00E2\u0080\u0094 wiping out\neverything in their path. There is\nalso the classic sequence where\nKeaton dodges an avalance of falling rocks. Needless to say, Keaton\ngets married just in the nick of time.\nfilm\nTwo b\nBuster Keaton Festival\nVancouver East Cinema\nNovember 17, 18, 24, 25\nThe Vancouver East Cinema\npresents some of Keatons best films\nin a manner befitting their style. A\nbouncy, nickleodeon style soundtrack has been added to the films\nand film archivist Raymond\nRohauer, who now owns the rights\nto Keaton's films, has done an excellent job of preserving them so\nthat they look good even today.\nThe film Go West, although not\none of Keaton's best, is still bizarre\nand quite funny. Keaton appears as\nFriendless, a man wholly out of\nsynch with the world around him,\nwho goes to the West to seek his\nfortune. There, he poses as the\ncomplete cowboy, walking bowleg-\nged when around his fellow ran-\nchhands and packing a deadly cap\npistol.\nKeaton has an unusual love interest in this film, the cow Brown\nEyes, and they spend the film looking out for each other. After many\nmisadventures, including Keaton\nstampeding a herd of cattle through\nthe streets of Los Angeles to the\nslaughter house, the owner of the\nranch, grateful to Keaton, promises\nhim anything he wants. Keaton\npoints behind him towards his\ndaughter and says \"I want her,\"\nsurprising both the owner and the\naudience when he leads Brown Eyes\nout from behind the daughter.\nTogether again for good, Keaton\nand Brown Eyes ride off into the\nsunset in the back seat of the\nowner's Model T.\nSeven Changes, a 1925 feature,\nwas my favorite film of the night.\nKeaton, in order to inherit $7\nmillion, must get married by 7\no'clock that evening. Thinking that\nthe women he loves has rejected\nhim, Keaton starts proposing to\neverything wearing a skirt, including a Scottsman. Aside from\nBy TONY ROBERTS\nOn August 2, 1979, Sid Vicious,\nformer Bass player for the Sex\nPistols was found dead in his New\nYork apartment, the victim of a\nmassive heroin overdose. Sid was\nawaiting trial for the stabbing death\nof his girlfriend Nancy Spungen,\nkilled two months earlier.\nfilm\nSid and Nancy\nDirected by Alex Cox\nThe Bay Theatre\nFor those of you who thought Sid\nVicious was a real neat guy, think\nagain. Sid was neither a spokesman\nfor a nihilistic generation or a\nWEBB, OLDEN \u00E2\u0096\u00A0nber28, 1986\nTHE UBYSSEY\nPage 7\nBypass your brain\nBy MICHAEL GROBERMAN\nThere will be another living\nplaywright on the Frederic Wood\nstage, and blood and guts at the\nmouth of hell down in the basement, next week in the theatre\ndepartment. And they're free.\nThe Death of Pilate is in the\nDorothy Somerset Studio, at the\nback of the theatre building, next\nWednesday, Thursday, and Friday\nat noon, for free.\nMasters directing student, and\nveteran actor of over 100 Frederic\nWood productions (including the\nspear in Lear five years ago), Bruce\nDow offers direction to the\n> medieval one-act, The Death of\n[ Pilate, in the Dorothy Somerset\n[ Studio. Performances are next\ni Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday\n\ at noon.\nDow, explaining the obvious, indicates that Pilate is one of the last\nplays in the Cornish Rood Cycle.\nExplaining his choice of play, Dow\nsays, \"I was attracted by the contradictions in the script; of seeing\nblood-lust manifesting itself as an\ninstitutionalized worship.\" Blood?\n\"It's quite bloody . . . hopefully to\nsome purpose.\"\nDow, now 23, completed his acting degree two years ago, feeling\ndisillusioned. \"My interests went\nbeyond just my part.\" Now he's into sets, lights, line-coaching, and\nstage positioning of actors: \"It's\none thing to put people on stage in a\nkitchen, but if you adjust that so\nwhere they stand goes beyond\nwhere they stand, that's when you\nget art.\"\nThere are no kitchen scenes in the\nDeath of Pilate.\nA former directing student\nherself, Catherine Caines, now a\nprof, is putting up a show on the\nmain stage next Wednesday to\nSaturday at 8 p.m. She says she was\n\"approached\" by a keener group of\nbored, but talented, fourth year\ntheatre students. She couldn't\nresist, \"They're doing Michel\nTremblay,\" she explains.\nThe one-act play, Forever Yours,\nMarie Lou, is by Quebec playwright\nMichel Tremblay. Caines loves\nTremblay. \"If I could write,\" she\nsays, \"I would write what this man\nwrites. He bypasses my brain and I\nrespond with my guts.\"\nForever Yours, Marie Lou is on\nthe Freddy Wood stage next\nWednesday through Saturday at 8\np.m., for free.\nCaines describes the play as\n\"very funny. Tremblay makes you\nlaugh, then he kicks you in the belly\nwhile you're laughing.\"\nShe is excited at directing a play\nthat she feels will move people, \"I\nthink theatre is meant to reach out\nand touch people. I want the audience to go away knowing more,\nfeeling more, and not talk about so\nand so's performance, or the set.\"\nTANJA, JESSICA, MICHAEL . . . the Forever cast minus Kathleen, who refuses to be photographed.\nrn losers face oblivion\nsocially aware anarchist. He was\nnot even a musician. Sid Vicious\nwas an ignorant, violent clod\nmanipulated by personalities which\nhe followed blindly.\nSid and Nancy, Alex (Repo Man)\nCox's latest film, is a brutally\nrealistic portrayal of two stupid\npeople doomed to face the consequences of their own destructive\nvices in a world beyond their\nunderstanding. Against the\nbackdrop of the London punk explosion of 1977, the Sex Pistols' imminent decay parallels the beginning of Nancy and Sid's slide into\noblivion.\nSid was chosen as the Sex Pistols'\nbassist by Malcolm McLaren, the\nband's manager, because he\nrepresented the ugly, destructive\no born losers.\nside of punk, an element McLaren\nknew was a guaranteed money\nmaker. John Lydon, the band's\nsinger, also known as Johnny Rotten, saw Sid as the perfect replacement because he could be easily\nmanipulated to wreak havoc and\ndisorder. Yet Sid's complete\nmusical incompetence and increasingly destructive acts soon became a\nsource of irritation for the band and\nMcLaren.\nIt's a disturbing film. Nancy, a\nscreaming schitzoid heroin addict,\nmeets Sid shortly after his joining\nthe Sex Pistols. A few days later,\nNancy injects Sid with his first dose\nof smack. That evening is a vomit\ndrenched view of drugged sex, and\na premonition of the self abuse that\nis to follow. Heroin becomes the\ncommon tie that binds them.\nSid and Nancy protrays two born\nlosers indulging in their own world\nof easy drugs and suicidal tendencies. It is a realationship that decays\ntowards inevitable death. In one\npathetically funny scene, Sid storms\nout on Nancy, who pleads\npathologically: \"What about the\nfarewell drugs?\"\nThe acting is absolutely first rate.\nGary Oldman (Sid) and Chloe\nWebb (Nancy), are at once gritty\nand exhaustingly repulsive as the\ndoomed couple. David Hayman is\nhilariously exploitive as manager\nMcLaren, the self-styled swindler\n(\"Sid's more than just a bass\nplayer, he's a fabulous disaster!\").\nYet it's Andrew Schofield's performance as John Lydon that justifies\nthe price of admission. Combining\njust the right elements of arrogance,\nhumour, and cynical snide,\nSchofield is splendid as Johnny\nRotten.\nThere is a problem with Sid and\nNancy however, that exists despite\nthe superb performances of\nOldman and Webb. Nancy is so\nself-destructive and parasitical, and\nSid so stupid and easily led, that it's\nvirtually impossible to sympathize\nwith either character.\nBut maybe that is the point. In\ntheir lack of self-respect, they revile\nour sympathies.\nIt may be a slight personal bias,\nbut the most interesting and worthwhile aspect of the film is the rise\nand fall of the Sex Pistols\nthemselves. Whether or not you\nhate 'em, it's an undeniable fact\nthat the Sex Pistols liberated an\nenormous amount of creative\nenergy and pointed music in a completely new direction.\nPerhaps this can be seen as the\nbest anti-drug film of the year.\nBecause \"This,\" as John Lydon\nwould say, \"IS NOT A LOVE\nSONG.\"\nSHATNER, SPOCK ... in 1986.\nWhale search\nBy VICTOR WONG\nTwenty years ago, North\nAmerica first saw the United\nFederation Starship Enterprise,\nboldly going \"where no man has\ngone before.\" Now, on the 20th anniversary of Star Trek, Harve Bennett and Leonard Nimoy have\nbrought the crew of the Enterprise\nfull circle.\nfilm\nStar Trek IV: The Voyage Home\nDirected by Leonard Nimoy\nat the Stanley\nIf you remember the last Trek\nmovie. The Search for Spock, the\nStar Trek universe appeared to be\nthrown into chaos. Admiral Kirk\n(William Shatner) and his crew were\nnow renegades, the Enterprise was\ndestroyed, and Mr. Spock (Leonard\nNimoy), who had just been resurrected from the dead, still didn't\nquite have all his marbles in place.\nTo fix things up \u00E2\u0080\u0094 that is, to\nrestore the plotline to the status quo\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 Bennett and Nimoy decided to\nsend a cigarette to menace Earth \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nor at least, that's what the big ship\ndraining power from passing star-\nships looks like. The ship is sending\nmessages to humpback whales currently in residence on earth and the\ntransmissions are wrecking Earth's\natmosphere. The problem is, humpback whales became extinct, 200\nyears before.\nSince Kirk and crew are enroute\nto Earth to face charges stemming\nfrom the third movie, they're the\nonly ones in a position to save the\nplanet. And the crew arrives at a\nsolution: use the Klingon Bird of\nPrey (the ship on which they are\ntravelling) to fire themselves back\nto 1986, grab two humpback\nwhales, come back, and have the\nwhales tell the enemy ship, via\nwhale-song to shut up (Greenpeace\nis going to love this movie). Simple,\nright?\nWell, there are complications.\nScotty (James Doohan) has to build\na whale tank, so he goes to a San\nFrancisco plastics shop and has\ntrouble with the shop's computer (it\ndoesn't talk). Chekov (Walter\nKoenig) has to borrow some radiation from a nuclear powered carrier\n(ironically, the real U.S.S. Enterprise) to stablize the Bird of Prey's\nengines. Dr. McCoy (DeForrest\nKelley) has to go to a hospital (he\ncalls the surgeon a barbarian in the\noperating room). Kirk and Spock\nhave to ride a bus to a nearby institute to get the whales (Spock\ndoesn't know what \"exact change\"\nmeans). And the marine biologist\nwho has the whales (Catherine\nHicks) won't let them go.\nIt looks like the film cast and\ncrew had a lot of fun shooting in\nmodern-day San Francisco, and it\nshows. According to Time\nmagazine, no one in the city proper\nrecognized the cast in costume; apparently they regarded the garb as\nnormal for San Francisco. The\nsense of \"family\" among the cast is\nvery strong. There is a touch of\nhumour in the main characters' performances, suggesting that Nimoy\nand Bennett must have had considerable input from cast members\nwho, after all, do know what their\ncharacters are like.\nLike the third Trek film, this is\nobviously a movie meant for the\ndie-hard Trek fan; unlike the third\nTrek film, non-fans can get in on\nthe fun.\nI do have some complaints. The\nmusic (by Leonard Roseman)\nstruck me as being much too serious\nfor the overall tone of this film;\nmuch of it is unmemorable. The ending sequence, emotionally, is a letdown. And the introduction of a\nnew Starship Enterprise (yes, it's\nback, the hull number is NCC-\n1701A) is irrelevant to the story.\nBut what the hell. This is, for the\nmost part, a fun movie to watch.\nAnd you're supposed to have fun\non an anniversary.\nGutsy jazz duo sparks\nBy ANYA WAITE\nPendulum, a jazz duo of piano\nand vibraphone, piled rhythm and\nstyle into a potpourri of gutsy,\nhumorous playing. As soon as Ted\nPiltzecker and Jim Hodgkinson\ncame grinning on stage, it was obvious that their personalities, not\njust their music, would run the\nshow.\nmusic\nPendulum, jazz duo\nVancouver Playhouse\nNovember 23\nThey jumped right into their first\nnumber, a swinging piece by Chick\nCorea called Armando's Rhumba.\nPiltzecker hammered away at the\nvibraphone with indulgent pizzaz,\nthrowing out enigmatic little smiles\nas he danced and sang along with\nthe vibraphone, a beautiful instrument with a soft, ringing tone.\nHodgkinson had an interesting\ncombination of lovely classical\ntechnique and a relaxed jazz flair; a\nquieter, almost serious image beside\nTed Piltzecker bounding around\nbehind his own flailing mallets. But\nthere was a spark of crazy humour\nbetween them that seemed to draw\nthem together.\nThese two most expressive of per-\ncussion instruments blended\nbeautifully, in finely-tuned performances of everything from Fats'\nWaller to the Beatles. They turned\nout Ain't Misbehavin' in a great\nsyncopated flow of traditional jazz,\na super sense of style, and relaxed,\nlaughing rhythm. Great rhythm.\nYet when they tackled Debussy's\nFirst Arabesque, they managed its\ngreat calm well, and Round Midnight, a soft blues piece played as a\nsolo by Hodgkinson, came off as\nalmost a virtuoso performance.\nThey spiced the evening with\nhumorous anecdotes and people's\ncomments during their extensive\ntravels as a duo: \"I've never seen a\nstyrofoam before t\" But despite\ntheir casual verve, they were absolutely precise, and carved every\nnuance of the music with\nmeticulous care. And with soul.\nThey let the tones of piano and\nvibraphone ring long, for instance,\nhanging and blending in the air long\nafter a piece was over.\nTheir own compositions were\nperhaps the most intriguing.\nHodgkinson's melodious, swinging\nballads, were great /contrast to\nPJItzecfcer's peppery rhythms and\nwild gesticulation.\nThey were hilarious. And they\nplayed great jazz. This Pendulum\nswings to one amazing beat. Page 8\nTHE UBYSSEY\nFriday, November 28,1986\nWatson defends sinkings\nFrom page 3\ncharges should be laid against Watson.\nWatson, though, is unconcerned.\n\"In Canada, they can only\ncharge me with conspiring to commit a crime in another country. But\nthat cannot be proven as there was\nno telephone or mail correspondence in Canada, or from\nCanada, with the activists who went\nto Iceland,\" he says.\nWatson also thinks Smith had\npersonal reasons for wanting to\ncharge Watson. Smith, Watson\nbelieves, was embarassed by Watson during the last wolf kill campaign in B.C.\nLegal problems are not new to\nWatson. In 1981, Sea Shepherd invaded Russian territory to film illegal Russian whaling activities.\nAfter being pursued and then\nthreatened by Soviet navy vessels,\nSea Shepherd escaped and\npresented it's information to a\ngrateful IWC organization.\nWatson also struck earlier in\n1979. Sea Shepherd rammed, not\nonce but twice, the pirate whaler\nSierra. After being repaired in\nLisbon harbour, the Sierra was\nsunk in April 1980 by Sea Shepherd\nactivists without injury. The Sea\nShepherd was responsible that year\nfor the sinking of the Spanish\nwhalers Isba I and Isba II, also\nwithout injury.\nCloser to home, Watson has been\ncriticized by Greenpeace for\ndestroying years of environmental\nsuccess in the whaling field with his\nradical actions.\nWatson shrugs off the attacks\nand in turn accuses Greenpeace of\n\"bureaucratic conservatism\".\nOrganizations like Greenpeace,\nWatson says, have a vested interest\nin the continuation of whaling.\nWithout the money generated by\nanti-whaling campaigns ($50\nmillion in the U.S. last year), these\npeople would be out of work.\nTherefore, says Watson, these\ngroups, specifically Greenpeace, do\nnot vigorously oppose whaling.\nWatson adds, \"not one single\nGreenpeace campaign has ever saved a whale\".\nThe need for effective environmental protection, Watson\nsays, is greater now than in the past.\nCiting the Global 2000 report, a\nreport on world conditions in the\nyear 2000, Watson says one quarter\nof all plant and animal life will be\nextinct by the year 2000. We are losing valuable serial crops and\nmedicines before they have been\ndiscovered, he says. The radicals,\nhe charges, are those who are\ndestroying the planet for nothing\nbut profit.\nIt is because Watson sees the\nworld in such simple terms that he is\ncomplacent about the destruction\nof private property. Life, he says, is\nmore important than proterty.\nSea shepherd, Watson says,\nbreaks civil law only in the face of a\nhigher, universal law, that is the\nright to life.\nHistory, Watson says, will vindicate him and his cause.\nREID'S ART MATERIALS LTD.\nEverything for the Artist\nVideo\nAqua-Tec\nGrumbacher\nBellini Bocour\nHyplar Acrylics\nWinsor & Newton\nWalter Foster Books\nW. Alexander Magic Art Supplies\nART SUPPLIES\n&\nPICTURE FRAMING\n5847 Victoria Drive\nVancouver, B.C. V5P 3W5\nTel: 321-9615\nEasels\nLucas\nTalens\nReeves\nRowney\nLiquitex\nCrescent Mat Board\nIllustration Board\n'My Book on Oil Painting\" by Dave Reid\n10% DISCOUNT FOR STUDENTS\nMaster of\nIndustrial Relations\nQueen's University\nA one-year, multi-disciplinary program for students\nwishing to pursue careers in the broad field of industrial\nrelations and human resource management.\nAdmission Requirements: A four-year bachelor's degree\nwith upper second-class standing or the equivalent, and\nsuccessful completion of a university-level course in both\nmicro- and macro-economics. Students from all academic\nfields are invited to apply.\nInformation/Applications:\nSchool of Industrial Relations\nQueen's University, Kingston, Ontario K7L 3N6\nTelephone (613) 545-2193\nCYPRESS BOWL\nSKI PASS\nNA\n^\n'Be apart ofthe best skiing on the North Shore!\"\nMidweek Day/Night\nStudent Season Pass\nMl\nUnlimited weekday skiing from\nJanuary 5 to season's end\nMl\nWeeknight skiing to 11:00 pm\nMl\nFully licensed lounge and sundeck,\nlodge and cafeteria\nBuy your pass by November 28 lo be\neligible for a fantastic Grand Prize\nPasses available at:\nThe UBC Intramural Sports Office\nRoom 66 Lower SUB Concourse\nPhone 228-6688\nOtuC d\u00C2\u00A3uhf.u-ta\u00C2\u00A3 ... M d sports' (vSfiJr^\nEankWtien >i)u Like-\nDaycrNfeht...\n. . . Our Personal Touch Banking\nmachines are available 24 hours a day!\nBank during YOUR hours anytime, day or\nnight at any conveniently placed machine.\nIf your hectic classroom schedule keeps you\nfrom doing your banking during regular hours,\nsee us about a Royal Bank Client Card. With\nit you can make deposits, withdrawals, transfers and payments - after you choose your\nown Personal Security Code! Cards without credit entitlement are available to all\nages!\nThere are over 80 Personal Touch Banking\nlocations in the Lower Mainland. And your\nClient Card also gives you withdrawal\nprivileges through any banking machine in\nCanada and the U.S. displaying one of these\nsymbols: Jj^ ^\n^Plus !h\n^ System *_\nROYAL BANK Friday, November 28,1986\nTHE UBYSSEY\nPage 9\nvista\nVancouver has a free Arts Hotline where a\nliving human being, not a recording, answers\nall your questions about entertainment. Call\n10 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday to Saturday:\n734-ARTS.\nstage\nMany theatre tickets can be purchased for\nhalf-price on the day of the performance at\nFront Row Centre (1025 Robson, 683-2017).\nIt's Snowing on Saltspring, the play\nNicola Cavendish wrote, about a magical\nChristmas on Saltspring where Cavendish, a\nremarkable actress and playwright who also\ngraduated from UBC and is going to Broadway in Janaury plays four different roles, and\nit's at the Arts Club Seymour Street (1181\nSeymour, 687-1644), December 4 - January 3,\nMonday to Friday at 8:30 p.m., Saturdays at\n6:30 p.m. and 9:30 p.m., 2 for 1 matinees\nWednesdays at 5:30 p.m., with special holiday schedule.\nDon Messer's Jubilee, the newest play by\nfamous Canadian musical writer John Gray\n(who wrote Bitly Bishop), and who hopes this\nmusical tribute to this legendary Canadian\nentertainer will make everyone forget his\nChristmas play of a few years back (Better\nwatch out . . .), at the Arts Club Granville\nIsland (687-1644), November, until\nwhenever, Monday to Friday at 8:30 p.m.,\nSaturdays at 6:30 p.m. and 9:30 p.m.,\nWednesdays, 2 for 1 at 5:30 p.m.\nAin't Misbahavin', the longest running\nmusical ever in the history of the free world, at\nthe Arts Club Revue Theatre (Granville\nIsland, 687-1644), same times as above,\nuntil the end of time.\nBabel Rap, the famous one-act by local\nplaywright John Lazarus, who is related to\nBonnie, at Studio 58 (Langara campus, W.\n49th, 324-5227), at 12:30 p.m., December 1-5.\nForever Yours Marie Lou, a one-act by\nMichel Tremblay and directed by Catherine\nCaines and on the Freddy Wood Stage\n(UBC, 228-2678), December 3-6 at 8 p.m.,\nFREE.\nRED LEAF\nRestaurant\nLuncheon Smorgasbord\nAuthentic Chinese Cuisine\n10% DISCOUNT ON\nPICK UP ORDERS\nLICENSED PREMISES\nMon -Fn. 1130-9:00 p.m\n-- CLOSED SATURDAYS\nSundavs and Holidays '\n4:00 p m 9 p.m\nUBC Village\nOpposite Chevron Station\nFOLLOW\nYOUR NO'S.\nNo High Prices, No Hassles,\nNo Appointments,\nNo Inconveniences,\nNo Waiting,\nNo Fooling.\nkinkcs\nGREAT COPIES GREAT PEOPLE\n5706 University Blvd.\n222-1688\nM-TH 8-9 F 8-6 Sat 10-6 Sun 11-6\nThe Death of Pilate, a very bloody\nmedieval piece about poor Pilate's demise,\nand directed by Bruce Dow (who was in Lear\nfive years ago), in the Dorothy Somerset\nStudio (around the back of the Freddy Wood\nBuilding) November 2-4 at 12:30 p.m., FREE.\nThe Madwoman of Chaillot, by the\nnever-heard-from-before Theatre program at\nCapilano College (Theatre R Building Studio\n105, 986-1911 for directions) December 3-6\nand 10-12 at 8 p.m.\nPrivate Lives, Amanda and Elyot, once\nmarried to each other, meet again by chance\nwhile honeymooning with new spouses on\nthe Riviera in this mad foray to the fringes of\ntheatrical experience, offered up by the ever-\ntesting Vancouver Playhouse (Hamilton at\nDunsmuir, 873-3311), December 6 to\nsometime in January, cheaper preview night\nis December 5.\nCharley's Aunt, the amusing story of an\nOxford undergraduate who dresses as a\nwoman for reasons typical of Oxford\nundergraduates, and the entire play, including\nthe rather complicated denouement, is explained entirely in the press release, at\nPresentation House (333 Chesterfield, N.\nVan., 986-1351 for directions), December\n3-20, Tuesday to Friday at 8 p.m., Wednesday\nat 5 p.m. (2 for 1), Saturdays at 6 p.m. and 9\np.m., Sundays at 2:30 p.m.\nPinocchio, Carousel's stupendous new\nChristmas production that will soon be\nreviewed by big, bad, Jimmy Nelmes, at the\nWaterfront Theatre (Granville Island,\n685-6217), Fridays at 8 p.m., Saturdays at 2\nand 8 p.m., until December 24,\nEveryman in the '80s, a lively update of\nthe medieval classic by a brand new profes\nsional theatre company called Theatre at Lrge,\nwhose artistic directors both went to UBC, at\nHeritage Hall, (Main and 15th, 683-2257),\nNovember 22-December 5.\nMain Street Players, a brand new professional theatre company will present five new\nworks, with an emphasis on B.C. playwrights,\nat Vancouver Little Theatre (in the basement of Heritage Hall, Main and 15th,\n876-4165) at 8 p.m. November 13-15, 20-22\nand 27-29.\n18 Wheels, a musical by John Gray (who\nwrote Billy Bishop), in a production by one of\nthe best theatres in Vancouver, Studio 58\n(Langara Campus, 100 W. 49th, 324-5227),\nwhere their last production, Dreaming and\nDuelling, was the best production in this city\nin October, November 14-December 7, Tuesday to Saturday at 8 p.m., Sundays at 2:30\nand 8 p.m., previews November 12, 13 at 8\np.m., are half price. Tickets are $6.\nTheatresports, improvisational theatre\nthat provides jobs for many UBC graduates\nand is often good and occasionally tasteless,\nat City Stage (751 Thurlow, 683-2017), Friday\nand Saturday at 8 p.m. and 11 p.m.\nScared Scriptless, improvisational theatre\nat the Arts Club Revue Theatre (Granville\nIsland, where Ain't Misbehavin' lives), Fridays\nat 11:30 p.m.\nmusic\nThe Vancouver Cantata Singers, singing\nShakespeare set to music, with dramatic\nreadings by Malcolm Armstrong, the Richmond Gateway Theatre (6500 Gilbert Road,\n270-1812), November 29 at 8 p.m., and at the\nArts Club Granville Island (687-1644),\nNovember 30 at 8 p.m.\nThe Rhythm Pigs, a three-piece San Fran-\nTheTW-1100\nElectronic Typewriter\nCommunicate your ideas!\nThe TW 1 100 electronic typewriter puts your ideas on paper - quickly\n;ind clearly' This full featured typewriter, with its adjustable pitch and\nline spacing, allows you to select the look and character of your text to\nsuit your needs. --..-\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0080\u0094-. -^=._^_=\nThe TW 1 100 makes a strong impression - strong enough to produce\nan excellent original to present for your assignments crisp clean\n- professional Capable of 10 tab settings on one line and with a deci\nmat tab for aligning columns, you can lay out a precise, easily read page\nwith a minimum of effort And, the automatic one touch correction tab\nallows you to make mistakes without paying the price1\nSpecial Student Offer\n$595.\nFEATURES\nOne touch rorret :\n20 characters iw//i\nUPC\n' Oj'S/ IV/w'\n\" Repeat Key\n' AjtO underline pr\u00E2\u0080\u009E\n' AuUi Indent\nSupC Mid Siii)S< r,;.\ncharacters.\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 Oct \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0na! TjO\nE.tsi. v rhanye\nEasily\nTransportable\nGestetner Inc. <604)87* mi\n155 Wpst 3rd Avf\ncisco punk band, The Town Pump (66 Water\nStreet, 683-6695), December 1 at 8 p.m.\nShriekback. a dynamic British band, at the\nCommodore Ballroom (870 Granville,\n681-7838), December 4, 5.\nSaxon, a real living, breathing, roaring,\nrock and roll band, at the New York Theatre\n(639 Commercial Dr., 254-5934), December 2.\nParachute Club, smart, tough, and passionate, according to the L.A. Times, at the\ncontinued on page 11\nUNIVERSITY\nATHLETIC\nCOUNCIL\nThe Alma Mater Society is now accepting applications for three (3) student positions on the University Athletic Council (U.A.C.)\nThe U.A.C. is responsible for all areas governing\nathletics on campus, including finance and long\nrange planning.\nApplications can be picked up in SUB Room 238 &\nreturned with brief resume by December 5th, 4:00\np.m.\nBUY ONE\nGET ONE\nV'\nDairii\nQueen\nTake a break from studying.\nTreat yourself after an exam.\nBring a friend, better yet,\nbring a professor. Whatever\nyou do, breeze into Dairy\nQueen and get caught up in a\nBlizzard.\u00C2\u00AE It's\nupsidedownright delicious!\nBUY ONE GET ONE FREE\nTHE INCREDIBLE BLIZZARD\u00C2\u00AE\n2601 W. BROADWAY\n(at Trafalgar)\n(this location only)\nOne coupon per visit\nSmall size only.\nExpires Dec. 20/86\nDairy\nQueen\nWE TREAT YOU RIGHT\nTwenty elves just booked the office\nChristmas Party for S. Claus Inc.\na c^ $14.95\nper elf\n(tip included) min. 10 elves\nFairview Fogg\nBroadway & Cambie\n872-3377\nSIDE DOOR\n2291 West Broadway\nCome Sundays, Mondays, Tuesdays...\nYou'll be Glad you Did! Page 10\nTHE UBYSSEY\nFriday, November 28, 1986\ntween dosses\nTODAY\nSTUDENTS FOR PEACE AND MUTUAL DISARMAMENT\nSpeech, \"Soviet Perception of the Reykjavik\nSummit,\" by Thomas Perry, noon, SUB 206.\nLE CLUB FRANCAIS\nConversational meeting, everyone welcome,\nnoon. International House.\nUBC SCHOOL OF MUSIC\nAn Evening of opera, French Tickner director \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nscenes from works of Mozart, Verdi. Massenet,\nand Stravinsky, 8:00 p.m., Old Auditorium. Free\nadmission.\nAlso, Guest Artist Performance: Dennis Simons,\nviolin from London, England, 3:35 p.m.. Recital\nHall.\nUBC r-n (EX-CE-L-L-E-N-T) -. T\nTh e eat e r Y\n1 FREE BUB6ER\nTHE GOOD DEAL IS YOUR LEAST EXPENSIVE BURGER IS FREE WHEN\nTWO ARE ORDERED. THIS APPLIES TO BEEF ft TOFU BURGERS ONLY,\nAND ISNT VALID FOR TAKE-OUT OH ANY OTHER COUPON.\nENJOY YOUR BURG AND HAVE A NICE DAY!\n3431 WEST BROADWAY\n738-5298\nGREY HP\nSEE IT LIVE IN THE\nSUNDAY, NOV. 30\nat 1:30 p.m.\nGREAT FOOD & REFRESHMENTS\nFEATURING FOR THE FIRST TIME\nTWO GREAT SPECIALS EACH FOR\n$1.99\nTHE THUNDERBIRD WINTER SPORTS CENTRE\n6066 THUNDERBIRD BLVD. 228-6121\nEVERYONE WELCOME. . .\nGREAT GOLF! BEAUTIFUL CLUBHOUSE! FABULOUS FOOD!\nTHE ALL NEW PUBLIC\nUNIVERSITY GOLF CLUB\nAn Outstanding Public Course and Clubhouse\nz:u(J p.m.\n224-7513\nLIVE ENTERTAINMENT\nMARTY GILLAN\nFri.-Sat., Nov. 28-29-8 p.m.-12:00 a.m.\nWe can honestly say we have the best prices in town!\nUniversity Golf Club\n5185 UNIVERSITY BLVD., VANCOUVER, B.C.\nBanquet & Office Phone: 224-7513\nPro Shop Phone: 224-1818\nAlso, Collegium Musicum Ensembles: John\nSawyer, Ray Nurse and Moma Russell, directors, (repeat of Nov. 27 concert), noon, UBC\nSchool of Music Recital Hall.\nCHINESE VARSITY CLUB\nPub nite, 7:30 p.m. - 12:00 a.m., SUB 212.\nPSYCHOLOGY STUDENTS' ASSOCIATION\nXmaa party for all fourth year psychology\nstudents, noon -12:30 a.m., Kenny Building, 1st\nfloor-Atrium.\nCHINESE STUDENTS' ASSOCIATION\nGymn nite - bedminton and volleyball, 8:00\n-11:00 p.m., Osborne Gymn.\nUBC NEW DEMOCRATS\nBeer garden, 4:00-8:00 p.m., SUB 215.\nSUNDAY\nLUTHERAN STUDENT MOVEMENT\nCommunion Service, 10:00 a.m., Lutheran Campus Centre.\nMARANATHA CHRISTIAN CLUB\nSunday worship service, 12:00 p.m., 2490 W.\n2nd Ave.\nMONDAY\nFILM SOCIETY (SUBFILMS)\n.Film: Paul Newman in \"Exodus,\" 7:00 p.m. only,\nSUB auditorium.\nAMS ART GALLERY\nArt show, 10:00 a.m. - 4:00 p.m., AMS Art\nGallery.\nGRADUATE STUDENT SOCIETY\nVideo Night \u00E2\u0080\u0094 On the Waterfront, Casa Bianca,\n7:30 p.m., Grad Centre Lounge.\nSTUDENTS FOR A FREE SOUTHERN AFRICA\nGeneral meeting, everyone welcome, noon,\nGrad student Centre.\nUNITED CHURCH CAMPUS MINISTRY\nStudy and discussion group, all welcome, noon,\nLutheran Campus Centre.\nUBC PERSONAL COMPUTER CLUB\nIBM group I meeting. All members pick up\nnewsletters and obtain party tickets, noon, Hebb\n12.\nCHINESE VARSITY CLUB\nAerobics, 5:00 - 6:00 p.m., SUB ballroom.\nJOIN! J0,N!\nJOIN!\nJOIN! JOIN!\nHey!!! are you a prospective young writer?\nWant a good start? Pierre\nBerton & Allan Fother-\ningham did it at the\nUbyssey so why don't you\ncome on in to SUB 241 k?\nWe need news writers,\nphotographers & sports\nwriters.\nTHE CLASSIFIEDS\nRATES: AMS Card Holders \u00E2\u0080\u0094 3 lines, 1 day $2.75; Additional lines. 60c. Commercial \u00E2\u0080\u0094\n1 day $4.75; Additional lines, 70c. Additional days. $4.25 and 65c.\nClassified ads are payable in advance. Deadline is 10:30 a.m. the day before publication\n-_^_\u00C2\u00B1, Publications, Room266, S.U.B., UBC, Van,, B.C. V6T2A5\n^p^P Charge Phone Orders Over $10.00 - Call 228-3977\n5 - COMING EVENTS\nTHE VANCOUVER INSTITUTE\nFree Public Lecture\nSaturday, Nov. 29\nCURES IN\nCANCER\nDr. John Goldman\nUniversity of London &\nHammersmith Hospital,\nEngland\nLecture Hall 2, UBC Woodward\n Building at 8:15 p.m.\n11 - FOR SALE - Private\nIBM SELECTRIC 3 Typewriter. Complete\nwith correcting tape. $450 OBO. 734-4777.\nPORTABLE TYPEWRITER. Sharp PA-1000.\nDisplay correction, memory system as weli\nas 5 ribbon cassettes & thermal paper.\n$250. 732-9806.\n1979 PONTIAC CATALINA, V8, 305, 4 dr.,\nP. brakes, P. steering, air cond., stereo, excellent condition. Ph. 943-0429.\n1981 LADA 1500S. one owner, 100,000 kms,\ngood cond., runs well, many extras included, $1500 obo. 731-2495 anytime.\n20 - HOUSING\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.\nROOM FOR RENT in shared house with\nSpanish-speaking family. Female student\nN/S. Richmond. 277-1453.\n16th & HIGHBURY. $250. Female to share 2\nBR home. 266-2636.\nKERRISDALE. Spacious, furn. bachelor\nsuite. Gd. level. Firepl. $375/mo. incl. util.\nJeanette day: 261-7276; hm: 263-9204.\n30 - JOBS\n30 - JOBS\nARE YOU FREE ON Tues. (11:15 a.m. -\n5:15 p.m.) & Thurs. (8:30 a.m. - 5:X p.m.)?\nWe require a mature, respon., N/S person\nto care for our 2 children (3 & 6) in our\nhome, vicinity 16th & Arbutus. Transportation an asset. Start Jan. 1987. Ph. 734-3720\nbet. 9 & 4, M-F or 738-9937 after 7 p.m.\n35 - LOST\nLOST\u00E2\u0080\u0094Gold/silver men's Seiko Lassale\nwatch, bathroom (M) Buch B211, Fri., Nov.\n21. Reward if found. Ph. Lyndon 253-9478.\nKEY RING includes Toyota, UBC, round\nbike, color coded. Lost between Education\nand Acadia housing. Phone 228-1761.\nReward.\n70 - SERVICES\nPREGNANT?\nFree Tests \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\n731-1122\nConfidential Help\nCRISIS PREGNANCY! Birthright offers\nalternatives to abortion. Call 687-7223 (free\npregnancy tests).\nTHE ANGLICAN STUDENT\nMOVEMENT AT UBC\npresents\nCHORAL EVENSONG\n7:30 p.m. Alternate Sundays\nSUNDAY, NOV. 30th\nfollowing the service.\nDr. John Conway\nwill lead a forum\non \"The Jewishness\nof Christianity\"\nEveryone is We/come\nST. ANSELM'S CHURCH\nUniversity Blvd.\nOPPORTUNITY TO EARN money on a\ncommission basis selling used cars as well\nas lots of time to study. Approx. 4 hrs. /day.\nCall Hank, 736-0855 between 5:30-6:30\np.m.\nBABYSITTER needed. My home, near UBC,\nfor 2 children. Mondays, 9:30 a.m.-4:30\np.m. starting Jan. '87. $5/hr. 228-8339.\nPART-TIME WORK selling designer earrings\nstraight from artist. Deborah 224-7144.\nBARTENDERS, WAITERS, WAITRESSES\nFull & part time. Must be fully experienced\nin all aspects of high volume bar procedures. Bubbly personality & pride in the\nposition is essential. Willingness to promote in-house functions would be an asset.\nNeatness & cleanliness a must. Please send\nresume with covering letter to: Mark\nMcDougall, UBC Thunderbird Sports Centre, 6066 Thunderbird Blvd., Vancouver,\nB.C. V6T 1W5.\nCOOKS. Full & part time. Requires a person\nwith a knowledge of operations &\nmaintenance for a new kitchen facility. Experience in food costing, menus Et stock\ncontrol is a must. Friendly personality, high\nenergy levels & a positive outlook is essential. Please send resume with covering letter\nto: Mark McDougall, UBC Thunderbird\nWinter Sports Centre, 6066 Thunderbird\nBlvd., Vancouver, B.C. V6T 1W5.\nUNIVERSITY HILL UNITED\nAND PRESBYTERIAN\nCONGREGATIONS\ninvite you to join us in worship\nSunday mornings at 10:20 a.m.\nin the Epiphany Chapel.\nVancouver School of Theology\nYoung Adult Groups Sunday\nor Monday evenings.\nPHONE 224-6377\n6050 Chancellor Boulevard\nRESEARCH PAPERS\n16,278 to choose from\u00E2\u0080\u0094all subjects\nSave Time and Improve Your Grades!\nOrder Catalog Today with Visa/MC or COD\n213-477-8226\nExt\n49\nnr jsh $2 00 lo Research Assistance\n11322 Idaho Ave. 206 SIM, Los Angeles, CA 9002S\nCustom research also available\u00E2\u0080\u0094all levels\n75 - WANTED\nUNIVERSITY STUDENT in Australia study\ning for B.A. in Humanities looking for a\n\"pen pal\" in Vancouver to learn about\nlifestyle, etc. in Canada. Write Michaela\nDedek, 28, Delicia Rd., Mapleton, 4560,\nQueensland, Australia.\n85 - TYPING\nWILL DO TYPING in my Kits apartment.\nUndergrad. degree and, small\nbusiness/executive-clerical experience.\nReas. rates. Prof'l appearance. Don\n734-1715.\n85 - TYPING\nMINIMUM NOTICE REQUIRED-Essays,\nterm papers, resumas, 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 - word processing\n(multi-linguai). Stud, rates. Fast turnaround. 5670 Yew St. at 41st. Kerrisdale.\n266-6814.\nTYPING. Quality work at reasonable rates.\nFraser-Kingsway area. Paula, 873-2227 24\nhrs.\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.\nTYPING? YOU BET! Theses, papers,\nessays, whatever. Experienced, reasonable.\nShort notice. Kits area. June 738-1378.\nTHE GOOD WORD PROCESSING CO.\nSpelling, grammar expertise. Days, eves,\nwknds. Stud, rates. Call Nancy 266-1768.\nWORDPOWER-Editing, proofing & word\nprocessing professionals. Xerox copies.\nStud, rates. 3737 W 10th at Alma\n222-2661.\nSTUDENT/FACULTY RATES: $1 50/pg.\ndble spaced text. Equations & tables:\n$14/hr. Resumes: $5/pg. 50 personalized\nform tetters only $35. Cerlox Binding &\nphotocopying. Fast professional Service.\nJeeva's Word Processing, 201-636 West\nBroadway. 876-5333. M/C & VISA accepted.\nON-LINE TYPING SERVICES Fall special\nFast, professional results @ $1.10/dble-\nspaced pg. In-town or Richmond drop-off\nor pick up. Glenna 277-0410 (24 hrs.)\nWORD PROCESSING - Experienced,\nreasonable. UBC location. Heather,\n228-5528 or 261-7652 after 5 p.m.\nPROFESSIONAL TYPING - essays, theses\nResumes, etc. UBC Village, behind Kinko's\nCopies, 224-0763. Student rates.\nTYPING & WORDPROCESSING: Fast &\naccurate. Student rates OR rent your own\nstation/hr. on our U-Type plan. 734-1612.\nACCENT WORD PROCESSING - 278-0764.\nFrancais - English - Italian. Delivery on campus - letter quality.\nW/P TYPING: Term papers, theses, mscpts,\nessays, tech. equations, letters, resumes.\nBilingual. Clemy 266-6641.\nNO FANCY TYPESETS-Just a correctly\ntyped and correctly proofread paper for\n$1.10/pg. (tables extra). Experienced. Campus pick-up, drop-off. 736-9031.\nSUPPORT THE\nUBYSSEY! Friday, November 28,1986\nTHE UBYSSEY\nPage 11\nvista\nmusic\nFrom page 9\nQueen Elizabeth Theatre (Hamilton at\nGeorgia, 280-4444), December 3.\nThe Golub-Kaplan-Carr Trio, playing an\nall Beethoven programme with the Vancouver\nSymphony at the Orpheum (Smithe at\nSeymour, 280-4444), December 6 at 8:30 p.m.\nand December 8 at 7:30 p.m.\nVancouver Symphony Orchestra, with\nsoloists Jon Kimura Parker and Steven Dann,\nat the Orpheum (Smithe at Seymour,\n280-4444), November 30 at 2:30 p.m.,\nDecember 1 at 8:30 p.m., and December 2 at\n7:30 p.m.\nTerrance Simien and the Mallet\nPlayboys, Cajun music, brewed in bayous of\nLouisiana and simmering in the nightspots of\nNew Orleans, at the Town Pump (66 Water\nSt., 683-6695), December 2-6.\nDavid Lee Roth, from Van Halen, now he\nre-records Beach Boys songs, at the Pacific\nColiseum (P.N.E. grounds, 280-4444),\nDecember 7.\nDrum Heat, a three-day festival of percussion with dancers and singers, at the Vancouver East Cultural Centre (1895\nVenables, 254-9578), November 27-29 at 8:30\np.m.\nThe Twinkle Brothers, a solid reggae\ngroup known for their infectious roots dance\nsound, they were here in June 1985, at the\nCommodore Ballroom (870 Granville,\n681-7838), December 6 at 8 p.m.\nBilly Bragg, reluctant folk hero who draws\ntogether rock, folk and punk, whose new\nalbum is entitled Talking to the Taxman about\nPoetry, at 86 Street (B.C. Place, 280-4444),\nDecember 5 at 8:30 p.m.\nThe Unicorn, the Gorgon and the Man-\nticore, Gian Carlo Menotti's satirical fairy\ntale, a series of twelve madrigals which tell the\nstory of a poet and his three \"children\", at the\nOrpheum (Smithe at Seymour, 738-6822),\nDecember 5 at 8 p.m.\ndonee\nFive Moving Pieces, new dance works by\nSFU faculty and students, kind of like Fame,\nwht Kay Huang, at Simon Fraser (on top of\nthat mountain, 29J-3514), November 27-29 at\n8 p.m., November 28 at 12:30 p.m.\nFrom Letterman to Richmond\nTHE COMEDY\nSHOPPE\nal The Sk>line\npresents\nmmm\nJONATHAN\ntonite at 8 & 10 p.m.\nSat. & Sun. in the Skypub\nCall 278-5161\nfor showtimes, tickets\nSKYLINE AIRPORT\nHOTEL\n3031 No. 3 Road, Richmond\nJERRY'S COVE\nGREY CUP WEEKEND\nCOME JOIN\nJERRY'S COVE\n(MINIMIS\nfas Tow of Pibs\nSit., Nw. 29\n(Tickets available at the bar)\nWATCH YOUR TEAM IN\nACTION, SUN., NOV. 30\n50% OFF FOOD ALL DAY\nJERRY'S COVE\nNeigUMvhood Pib\n3881 W. 4th (Alma) 734-1205\ncampus countdown\nCITR \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 UBC\n# ARTIST\nShriekback\nBilly Bragg\nFishbone\nJohn Zorn\nThe Stranglers\nTalking Heads\nXTC\n1\n2\n3\n4\n5\n6\n7\n8\n9\nlO\nBig Audio Dynamite\nThe Chameleons\nThis Mortal Coil\nRadio \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 FM102 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 CablelOO\nALBUM\nBig Night Music\nTalking With The Taxman\nIn Your Face\nThe Big Gundown\nDreamtime\nTrue Stories\nSkylarking\nNo. 10, Upping St.\nStrange Times\nFiligree & Shadow\nHear the Countdown in The Pit every Thurs., 8:30 p.m\nfilm\nExodus, the story of the birth of Israel in\nwhich Paul Newman plays Ari Ben Canaan, in\nSUB auditorium, December 1 at 7 p.m.\nLegal Eagles, a comedy with Robert Redford in which he plays himself, for a change,\nin the SUB auditorium, December 4-7,\nThursday-Saturday at 7 p.m. and 9:30 p.m.,\nSunday at 7 p.m.\nAdam's Rib and Dance, Girl Dance, the\ncomedy about the tribulations of a district attorney, with Spencer Tracy and Katherine\nHepburn, and the film from the 1940's by\nfemale director Dorothy Arzner, in SUB\nauditorium, December 3, at 7 p.m. and 9:30\np.m.\nStalker, the journey of three men from a\ndevastated post-urban wasteland into a realm\nof ambiguously transformed nature, by exiled\nRussian film-maker Andrei Tarkovsky (1979)\nat Pacific Cinematheque (1131 Howe St.,\n688-3456), November 28-30, at 7:30 p.m.\nNostalghia, a Russian musicologist, investigating the life of a Russian composer exiled in Italy, meets an outcast and is drawn into\nher crusade to save the world, by exiled Russian film-maker Andrei Tarkovsky, Pacific\nCinematheque, (1131 Howe St., 688-3456),\nDecember 4, 6 at 7:30 p.m.\nThe 1986 International Advertising Film\nFestival, the best of television advertising\ngathered from around the world, at the Ridge\n(16th and Arbutus, 738-6311), December\n5-11, at 7:30 p.m. and 9:30 p.m.\ngalleries\nBroken Muse, the work of 15 young Vancouver artists, at the Vancouver Art Gallery\n(750 Hornby, 682-5621), until January 18.\nTen Years Later, the anniversary exhibition at the Contemporary Art Gallery (555\nHamilton, 687-1345I, until December 20.\nCircus Dreams, Adrian Ross transforms\nthe gallery into a circus of colour and whimsey\nin an exhibition of sculptural animals and\nbirds, banners and tableaus inspired by\nchildhood dreams, at the Cartwright Gallery\n(1411 Cartwright St., Granville Island,\n687-8266), December 4-28.\nThe Company She Keeps portraits of\nfamily, friends, and associates form the\nnucleus of these recent sculptures by the\nchair of Emily Carr's three-dimensional division, Sally Michener, in the UBC Fine Arts\nGallery (north end of Main Library,\n228-2759), until December 19.\nSalt-water City: the Chinese in Vancouver, 1886-1986. at the Chinese Cultural\nCentre (50 E. Pender, 687-0729), until\nDecember 21.\nThe Alien Equation, we are not alone, at the\nH.R. MacMillan Planetarium (1100\nChestnut, 736-4431), often.\nSandra L. Hall, a new painging show in the\nAMS Gallery (SUB), opens Monday, until\nNovember 28.\nhot flash\nSea Shepherd activist Paul Watson debates with Doug Collins,\nNorth Shore News joke reporter,\ntoday in SUB auditorium at noon.\nCome and see what new insults the\ningenious Mr. Collins can come up\nwith today. Watson was recently\ninvolved in an altercation with whaling ships in Iceland.\nCheers to... mike\nCRITCHLEY\nAMS#\nFogg AMS #\n13355839\n1 (C /v' Ik ^ou are *'1's wee^ s lucky\nI *tea\"'\u00E2\u0080\u0094 .. -r^ Fogg n Suds AMS Card Winner.\nI Everything UBC wants Call 73-BEERS,\n1in a Restaurant. For less. Fogg on 4th\n0\nACCEPTNO SCHNAPPSTTTUTES.\nIn the interest of\n.public awareness we bring\nyou the complete\nstory of how to\nrecognize cool,\ncrisp Hiram\nWalker Schnapps.\nHighly decorative\nHiram Walker coat\nof arms.\nAn amazing 750\nmillilitres per bottle.\n1858: The year in which\nHiram Walker, with \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nappropriate fanfare\nand general hoopla,\nproudly opened his\nfirst distillery.\nConspicuous by their\nabsence are the\ndesignations of the\nmany flavours of\nHiram Walker Schnapps\nsuch as Peach, Orange,\nPeppermint, etc.\n(not shown here).\nHiram Walker gPSons\ndenotes that the\nHiram Walker tradition of monstrously\ngood quality lives on.\nTransparent cool,\ncrisp f lavourful liquid\nideal for any sized\ncylindrical object.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 Very clever \"fc'-Z \"opening twist- off style cap.\nEconomically\n designed hand-sized\nneck for foolproof\npouring.\nExclusive \"Hiram\nWalker\" name seen\nonly on \"Hiram Walker'\nproducts.\nI he Hiram Walker\nname and coat of arms\n, boldly displayed.\n/ twice, on each and\nS ever^ bottle.\nIn this space go the\nmany illustrations\nof the many flavours\nf of Hiram Walker\n/ Schnapps.\n\"Schnapps', as in\nHiram Walker, The\n/ best selling Schnapps\n/ in Canada,\n\"Liqueur\": an unusually accurate descrip-\n\u00E2\u0080\u009E tion of the contents\nherein.\nWalkerville, Canada.\n,The birthplace of\nHiram Walker Schnapps.\nIn order to complete\nyour Schnapps education may we suggest\nwriting to us for some\nspellbinding Hiram\nWalker Schnapps\nrecipes, P.O. Box 2343,\nDepartment S,\nBrampton, Ontario\nL6T 3Y9.\nHiram Walker Schnapps.\nTaste the Difference. Page 12\nTHE UBYSSEY\nFriday, November 28,1986\nCarleton engineers apologize for insulting paper\nOTTAWA (CUP) \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Carleton\nUniversity's student engineering\nsociety escaped with little more than\na hand slap at a recent council\nmeeting, following a month-long\nreview of the society's policies, actions and structure.\nA review board was established\nto investigate charges that the society was violating the council's constitution by distributing sexist,\nracist and homophobic material on\ncampus.\nThe board in a 16-page report\nconcluded the society violated the\nconstitution by distributing its\nnewspaper The Orifice and several\nhundred copies of a banned\nLabatt's Breweries poster, both of\nwhich were deemed sexist.\nAlthough the council's constitution states de-certification or\nwithdrawal of all council funding\nand resources may occur if a society\nviolates the constitution, another\ncouncil committee chose a milder\noption of binding the society to\nfollow a set of recommendations.\nAs a result of the ruling, the\nsociety must drop all social events\nthat show a \"direct or indirect intent to harm any individual or property,\" establish an editorial board\nfor its newspaper, and take recommendations from a board of experts\" on how to achieve journalistic professionalism.\nThe review board concluded the\nsociety has been \"run\nirresponsibly,\" and called its \"control over its actions and accoun\ntability . . . severely lacking.\"\nReview board member Paul\nEdgecombe said the decision was\nnot strong enough, calling it a\n\"white-wash\" which did not match\nthe board's conclusions.\n\"The complaint (that The Orifice\nviolated council's constitution) still\nstands unacted upon. That's the\nbottom line,\" he said.\nBut review board member Amy\nHeron said the engineering society\nexecutive showed a willingness to\nco-operate.\n\"When we started out I think we\nall wanted de-certification \u00E2\u0080\u0094 every\none of us was really out for blood,\"\nshe said. \"But as the review went\non, most of us changed our\nminds.\"\nIn a letter to The Charlatan,\nCarleton's campus-wide student\nnewspaper, the society's executive\napologized to \"the gay community\nat Carleton, and in particular, to\nthe gay students in engineering,\"\nfor comments made in The Orifice.\nearl's earl's earl's\n10th ave./trimble\n#222-1342\nmexican days dec. 1-5\nfashion show dec. 7 .,\u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0080\u009E\nSun.-Thurs. 11:30 a.m.-11:00 p.m./Fri. & Sat. 11:30 a.m.-midnight\nSUMMER EMPLOYMENT\u00E2\u0080\u0094C.A. FIRM\nARTHUR ANDERSEN & CO.\nIf you are a 2nd or 3rd year accounting student with\nacademic and leadership abilities and are interested in professional employment with a C.A. firm May to August\n1987, please submit your resume (UCPA form is suitable)\nand a copy of your most recent transcript of marks by\nDecember 17, 1986 to the Canada Employment Centre on\nCampus, Brock Hall.\nAll resumes will be acknowledged. Campus interviews will\nbe held in mid-January.\nAdditional information is available at the UBC Canada\nEmployment Office.\nHighlights of Changes\nto 1987\nAutoplan\nEffective January 1,1987\nLiability Limits\nFor the majority, increases will be under\n$25. About a quarter of a million will pay\nbetween $26 and $50 more. For about 5,000\ncommercial vehicles with larger premiums\nthan private passenger cars, the increase\nwill be over $50.\nFor many motorists, an increase inThird\nParty Legal Liability premiums will be offset\nto some extent by a reduction in the cost of\nCollision coverage. Those who do not carry\nCollision will be most affected by the premium increases.\nA limit of $15 million Third Party Legal\nLiability is now available for all vehicles.\nWeekly Payments Increase\nThe weekly \"No-Fault\" payments for disability or death increase from $130 to $145\nfor victims of accidents occurring on or\nafter January 1, 1987.\nWeekly dependent survivor payments\nincrease from $30 to $35 for victims of\naccidents occurring on or after January 1,\n1987.\nEquipment of a Motor Vehicle\nRevised coverage will apply to new and\nrenewal policies issued on or after January 1,\n1987 for most private passenger and light\ncommercial vehicles. Attached equipment\nsupplied by or available from the vehicle\nmanufacturer is automatically covered with\nno dollar limit.\nCoverage for equipment not supplied\nby or available from the vehicle manufacturer has dollar limits:\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 a $500 limit applies to coverage for permanently attached sound and communication equipment;\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 a $ 1,000 limit applies to coverage for any\nother permanently attached equipment.\ne.g., special paint finish and canopies.\nWhere it is of benefit to the motorist, the\nnew additional coverage will also apply to\nexisting 1986 policies for accidents occurring on or after January 1, 1987.\nSome premium comparisons for motorists with a four year claim-free discount:\nMedium priced\nVancouver Island\nFraser Valley and\nNorthern B.C.\nvehicle\nSouth\nCentral and North\nSouthern Interior\n1985\n1986\n1987\n1985\n1986\n1987\n1985\n1986\n1987\n1985\n1986\n,1987\n1985\n1986\n1987\nPleasure use only\n$441\n$402\n$426\n$361\n$329\n$349\n$381\n$348\n$370\n$368\n$335\n[$355\n$406\n$368\n$390\nTo or From Work\nr 543\n500\n527\n445\n410\n432\n469\n433\n456\n453\n417\n439\n501\n459\n482\nBusiness use\n666\n553\n571\n546\n453\n467\n575\n479\n494\n556\n461\n475\n619 : 511\n525\n1987 AUTOPLAN\nMOTORIST KIT\nInformation at\nyour fingertips!\nPick up your copy\nfrom any Autoplan\nagent or Motor\nLicence Office.\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A1 INSURANCE\nCORPORATION\nOF BRITISH COLUMBIA"@en . "Newspapers"@en . "Vancouver (B.C.)"@en . "LH3.B7 U4"@en . "LH3_B7_U4_1986_11_28"@en . "10.14288/1.0125994"@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 .