"CONTENTdm"@en . "http://resolve.library.ubc.ca/cgi-bin/catsearch?bid=1211252"@en . "University Publications"@en . "2015-08-13"@en . "1977-11-25"@en . "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/Ubysseynews/items/1.0125998/source.json"@en . "application/pdf"@en . " 'UBC on fiscal banana peel'\nBy TOM HAWTHORN\nUBC administration president\nDoug Kenny renewed attacks on\nthe provincial government\nThursday for its education cutbacks policy.\n\"I do not think for one moment\nthat any of the cutbacks were\njustified,\" saidKenny. \"They were\nforced upon us.\"\nThe cuts had to be made quickly\nand without full regard for the\nfuture needs of the university,\nKenny told 150 students at a cutbacks debate in SUB.\n\"This university has reached the\nbottom line, academically and\nfiscally,\" he said.\n\"Our nation and all the people in\nthis province will be the biggest\nlosers if our university continues to\nslip on the fiscal banana peel,\"\nsaid Kenny. \"We could become a\nmediocre university for we are on\na slippery peel.\"\nStudent board of governors representative and debate panelist\nMoe Sihota also attacked the\ngovernment and called for a united\nanti-cutbacks effort from the UBC\ncommunity.\n\"The government is the source of\nthe trouble,\" said Sihota. \"No\ninstitution in this country should\nhave to put up with the cutbacks.\"\nBut Sihota said that while Kenny\nis ready to speak about education\ncutbacks, he has not done anything\nelse about them.\nSihota said the fact that Kenny\nhas prepared a report which deals\nwith operating the university\nunder a long period of education\ncutbacks means that he is not\nready to actively oppose the\nprovincial government's funding\ndecisions.\nSihota called for a concentrated\nuniversity effort to combat the\ncutbacks.\n\"The students need the solid\nsupport of the administration and\nthe faculty,\" he said. \"The entire\nuniversity community has to come\ntogether.\"\nBoth Kenny and Sihota said it is\ntime the cutbacks issue was\nbrought to the attention of the\npublic.\n\"We must alert the sympathetic\nand sceptical public to the real\ndangers facing UBC,\" said\nKenny. \"Our cutbacks are not a\nmirage. They are real. They do\nthreaten the entire academic\nenterprise.\"\nKenny invited the university\ncommunity to join in an effort to\nconvince the public that UBC's\nacademic standing is not slipping.\n\"Somebody has to be the\nacademic alarm clock that will\nwake up the public to what is\nhappening at the university,\" he\nsaid.\nSihota called for strong\nuniversity action.\n\"We've got to start to address\n\\nTHE UBYSSEY\nVol. LX, No. JX 31 VANCOUVER, B.C., FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 1977 =\u00C2\u00ABS;g5\u00C2\u00BB's 228-2301\nthe source of our problems,\" he\nsaid.\n\"We'vegot to let the public know\nabout the minister of education,\nPat McGeer. He is scared to talk to\nthe press and he would not meet\nwith the board. The minister has\nthe heart of a chicken.\n\"It (the cutbacks debate) will\nhave to be taken to the public,\"\nsaid Sihota.\nOf the $3.1 million UBC has had\nto cut from its budget in the last\ntwo years, only $64,684 was\nremoved from non-salary items,\nKenny said.\nThe budget for salaried positions\nwas decreased by about $3 million,\nbecause 85 per cent of the total\noperating expenditures of the\nuniversity are tied up in salaries\nand wages.\nKenny said the five faculties\nhardest hit by cutbacks were:\napplied science ($464,297), arts\n($557,988), education ($338,548),\nand science ($331,312). The faculty\nSee page 3: KENNY\nStudent gets\nticket to ride\nA Gage towers student committee\nhas evicted a Gage resident on 48-\nhours' notice for his involvement in\na beer bottle-throwing incident, a\nhousing coordinator said Thursday.\nGage area coordinator John\nMate said the residence standards\ncommittee evicted the student\nafter four of his off-campus guests\nwere seen throwing beer bottles\nout of middle-floor windows in\nGage Nov. 5\nThe standards committee, made\nup of five Gage residents appointed\nby the Gage student council,\ndeliberated for three hours Nov. 7\nbefore deciding to evict the student\non 48 hours' notice, pending an\nappeal, Mate said.\nThe decision was reached after\nthe committee spoke to members\nof the quad where the incident\noccurred. One member of the\nstandards committee . had also\nwitnessed the event, Mate said.\nMate would not identify the\nstudent involved or the tower or\nfbors where the incident took\nplace.\n\"No one likes to see a human\nbeing leave in 48 hours, but it's for\nthe protection of the (residence)\ncommunity,\" he said.\nMate said the committee set the\n48-hour time limit and that they\ncould have ordered his immediate\neviction, because residences do not\nfall under Landlord and Tenant Act\nregulations restricting evictions to\na 30-day notice.\nThe standards committee found\nthat the student did not take\n\"adequate provisions for his\nguests' behavior,\" Mate said. No\none was injured in the incident and\nno charges were laid.\nAfter receiving his ticket to ride,\nthe evie ted resident took his case to\nan appeal board composed of the\nVanier and Totem residence park\narea coordinators and standards\ncommittee chairpersons.\nTheir Nov. 16 decision was in\nagreement with the standards\ncommittee, who felt no responsible\npreventive action was taken by the\nresidence student.\nThe student left Gage voluntarily\nand is living off campus, Mate\nsaid.\nThis incident is an isolated case,\nsaid Mate.\n\"These incidents are so few\ncompared to any other town with\n1,200 people living together,\" he\nsaid.\nGage president Sharon Taylor\nrefused to comment on the incident, referring to it as \"confidential material.\"\n\"It's something I'd rather not\ndiscuss,\" she said.\nTwo years ago a similar incident\noccurred at Gage in which four\nresidents from one quad were\nevicted from residence when\nguests were caught throwing beer\nbottles out of tower windows at a\nparty.\nThe evicted students appealed\nto a residence appeal committee,\nwhich upheld the original housing\nadministration decision.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094geof wheelwright photo\nMAKING COMEBACK as reunified group are Beatles (from left to right) Paul, George, Ringo and John,\nperched atop Empire Pool diving board for tea with the Queen. Beatles made surprise appearance at UBC\nThursday when they heard Page Friday was planning cover story and quiz in today's issue (see PF 2 and 3).\nI'm a loser,' says SUB bank manager\nBy KATHY FORD\nThe manager of the Bank of\nMontreal SUB branch said\nThursday he is disappointed at the\ndecision of the Alma Mater Society\nto withdraw its money from the\nbank.\n\"I'm very disappointed that they\nwouldconsider that action,\" Stuart\nClark said.\n\"The Bank of Montreal on this\ncampus has been the students'\nbank for many years. Our relation\nship with the AMS has been very\ngood over the years.\"\nAt its regular meeting Wednesday, the student representative\nassembly voted almost\nunanimously to transfer \"as much\nof its liquid assets and its liabilities\nas possible to financial institutions\nwhich do not loan money to South\nAfrica.\"\nThe assembly made the decision\nas a r esult of campaigns by several\ncampus groups urging students to\nwithdraw their money from banks\nwhich have economic ties with\nSouth Africa because of that\ncountry's racist policies.\nBut Clark defended the bank,\nsaying it has to take a consistent\nstand. He said it would be\nhypocritical to denounce South\nAfrica without also criticizing\nother regimes such as the dictatorship in Chile.\nAnd, he said, the bank obeys all\nlaws regarding international\n'You can't do that,' students told\nProfessors in a UBC geophysics and\nastronomy course are telling their students to\nsign a form swearing they have not\nplagiarized their essays.\nProfessor William Slawson said Thursday\nplagiarism has been a problem in the course\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 geophysics-astronomy 310 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 in previous\nyears and this year it was decided something\nshould be done about it.\n\"This is something that has happened\nbefore and this paper will draw the awareness\nof the student that there is a concern about the\nproblem,\" Slawson said.\nGeophysics-astronomy 310 is offered by the\nfaculty of science to students outside science.\nIt can be taken as a science requirement for\nother faculties.\nSlawson would not reveal the names of the\nstudents who had committed plagiarism in\nprevious years and would not say what actions had been taken when they were\ndiscovered.\n\"These students were not from the faculty\nof science and their cases were reported back\nto their home faculty,\" he said.\nThe form the students are required to sign\nstates that UBC, because of the amount of\nplagiarism discovered in past years, is\nreiterating its stand on plagiarism, found in\nthe UBC calendar, Slawson said.\n\"Plagiarism is a form of academic\ndishonesty in which an individual submits or\npresents the work of another person as his or\nher own,\" the calendar says.\nWhen students are caught plagiarizing\nthere is no set method of discipline and each\ncase is handled according to the discretion of\nthe dean of the faculty the student is\nregistered in, associate arts dean Peter\nRemnant said Thursday.\n\"Every case is different,\" he said. \"The\nstudent can be expelled but we don't cut off\nfingers or hands.\"\nbanking set out by Canada and the\ncountries the bank deals with.\nClarke said the bank does not\ndeal with Rhodesia because the\nfederal government asked it not to.\nIf the government asked the\nbank to also stop dealing with\nSouth Africa the bank would\ncomply.\nClark said the bank follows the\nwishes of the Canadian people\nthrough their elected representatives.\n\"We obey the law,\" he said.\nAMS president John DeMarco\nsaid Thursday the society has not\ndecided where to move its money.\nHe said the student administrative\ncommission will discuss this\ndecision at its regular meeting\nTuesday.\nDeMarco said the AMS might\nonly close its medium- and long-\nterm accounts, remaining with the\nbank for day-to-day dealings and\ncurrent account business.\nHe said the AMS has only one\noutstanding loan at the bank \u00E2\u0080\u0094\ninvolving about $375,000 for the\nAquatic Centre. It was earlier\nreported that the loan was for the\nreconstruction of SUB, but\nSee page 3: WILL Page 2\nTHE\nUBYSSEY\nFriday, November 25, 1977\nFOR THE AUDIO\nPERFECTIONIST\nTechnics\nby Panasonic\nProfessional Series\nST-9030\nFM Stereo Tuner\nThe Ultimate in FM Performance, Featuring Fully Automatic IF\nBand Selection for Optimum Reception Condition.\nFrequency Response 20 Hz-18kHz (+0.1dB,-0.5dB) Alternate\nchannel selectivity 90dB (narrow band)\nSensitivity 1.2uV (75 ohms) and T.H.D. 0.08% (stereo, wide band)\nSuperb FM Tuner for Superb FM Reception\nThe ST-9030 tuner, designed exclusively for high\nquality FM reception, achieves an incredibly high\nlevel of performance which would have been\nconsidered almost impossible only a few years\nago. This welcome situation has been brought\nabout by a profusion of very significant\nelectronic and technological advances. When it\ncomes to high quality reception of FM programs,\nthe ST-9030 is the right kind of FM tuner where\nonly the best will do.\nTechnical Specifications\nFrequency range 88 \u00E2\u0080\u0094108 MHz\nAntenna terminal 75 ohms (unblanced)\nSensitivity 12.8dBf\n1.2 uV (75 ohms)\n50 dB quieting sensitivity\nMONO 18.1 dBf\n2.2 uV (75 ohms)\nSTEREO 38.1 dBf\n22 uV (75 ohms)\nTotal harmonic distortion\nwide\n0.08% (1 kHz)\n0.08% (1 kHz)\nMONO\nSTEREO^-\nnarrow\nMONO\nSTEREO\n0.15% (1 kHz)\n0.3% (1kHz)\nSE-9060\nStereo Mono DC Power Amplifier\nAM Stage DC Coupling in a Professional Grade\nEngineered for Top Operational Stability. Capable\nDouble-Power Mono Amplification.\nTotal Harmonic Distortion 0.02% at rated power\noutput, and 0.0015% at half power (1kHz) S/N\nRatio 120dB\nThe SE-9060 Solid State DC Power Amplifier\nConquers New Limits\nPower Amp\nof Stereo or\nEvery now and again, a spate of new electronic\nand technoligical 'developments results in some\nstartling improvements in performance. The\nSE-9060 solid state DC power amplifier is a\nprime example. The T.H.D. of 0.0015% at half\nrated power (and 0.02% at full rated power of\n70W + 70W RMS across the complete audio\nfrequency spectrum 20Hz\u00E2\u0080\u009420kHz), and the S/N\nratio of 120dB are direct results of Technics\ninsistence upon the uncompromising standards\nrequired for ultra-clean pure sound reproduction.\nTechnical Specifications\nRated minimum sine wave\nRMS power output\nStereo operation\n20Hz-20kHz\nboth channels driven\n0.02% total harmonic distortion\n70W per channel (8 ohms)\n90W per channel (4 ohms)\nMonaural operation\n20Hz-20kHz\n0.02% total harmonic distortion\n180W (8 ohms)\nSH-9010\nStereo Universal Frequency Equalizer\nThe SH-9010 Permits Delicate Frequency Response Control\nTotally Unattainable with Conventional Tone Controls or\nGraphic Equalizer\nAn essential part of any serious audiophile's\nstereo system is some means of adjusting the\nfrequency response of the programs to be played\nor recorded. The tone controls on a preamplifier\nor integrated amplifier, and the graphic equalizer\nwhich has been available for some years as a\nseparate unit, are designed to provide such\ncontrol of frequency response. The Stereo\nUniversal Frequency opens up completely new\ncontrol capabilities.\nTechnical Specifications\nOutput voltage/Impedance\nrated 1 V/300 ohms (1 kHz)\nmax. 5 V/300 ohms (1kHz)\nTotal harmonic distortion 0.02%\nInput sensitivity/\nimpedance 1 V/47 kilohms (1 kHz)\nFrequency response\n10Hz-20kHz\n+0, -0.2dB\n10Hz-70kHz\n+0, -3dB\nGain 0+1 dB\nSignal-to-noise ratio\n(IHF :A) 90dB\nBand level\ncontrol +12dB-12dB\n(5 elements x2)\nSH-9020\nPeak/Average Meter Unit\nThe Laboratory Grade Meter Unit with Astounding Capabilities\nSuch As OdB Response to a Single 10kHz Wave.\nPeak/Average Meter Unit With Three Mode Function Capability:\nPeak, Peak Hold, and Average.\nTechnics developed the SH-9020 Peak/Average\nMeter Unit to give you the signal and output\ninformation you need to make absolutely sure\nyour components are delivering the high fidelity\nperformance that you demand. The SH-9020\nfunctions in three modes: Peak, with an unheard\nof attack time of 100usec, Peak Hold, and\nAverage at a level of performance way above VU\nmeter industry standards. With this capability,\nyou can expect to realize a degree of high fidelity\nsound reproduction that until now existed\nmostly in theory.\nTechnical Specifications\nInput sensitivity/\nimpedance source 1,2 20 dBm (7.75V)/\n47 kilohms (sens. OdB)\nOdBm (0.775V)/\n47 kilohms (sens.+20dB)\nsource 3 100W (8 ohms, 6 ohms,\n4 ohms)/10 kilohms\n(sens. OdB)\n1W (8 ohms,\n6 ohms, 4 ohms)/\n10 kilohms (sens.\n+20 dB)\nSensitivity selector\nOdB, +20dB\nFrequency\nresponse 10Hz-20kHz +1.5dB\n( + 10dB 40dB)\n10Hz-10kHz+3dB\n(less than -40dB)\nST-8080\nFM/AM Stereo Tuner\nWith the remarkable advance in audio\ntechnology achieved within recent\nyears, and the ceaseless striving of an\nelite team of engineers devoted to the\ntask of producing perfect sound\nreproduction equipment, Technics has succeeded in achieving very high standards in its\naudio equipment, as can be seen in the case of the ST-8080 stereo tuner.\nCheck these outstanding technical specifications:\nTechnical Specifications\nFM TUNER SECTION\nFrequency range 88-108MHz\nAntenna terminals 300 ohms (balanced)\n75 ohms (unbalanced)\nSensitivity 10.8dBf,\n1.9uV (IHF '58)\n50dB quieting sensitivity\nMONO 13.6dBf,\n2.6uV (IHF '58)\nSTEREO 34.3dBf,\n28.4uV (IHF '58)\nTotal harmonic distortion\nMONO 0.15%\nSTEREO 0.3%\nSU-8080\nStereo Integrated DC Amplifier\nDesigned to the same high standards\nas the ST-8080, the SU-8080 serves\nas the perfect mate for this tuner,\nfeaturing a wide range of very\nadvanced electronic systems, and a\ncapacity for very diversified\napplications in any high grade stereo\ncomponent system.\nNew Integrated DC Amplifier for Maximum Waveform Fidelity\nThe power amplifier of the SU-8080 is a newly-designed DC amplifier to ensure the\nmaximum in Waveform Fidelity. It features a first stage differential amplifier, a purely\nresistive loaded voltage amplifier, an emitter follower and a two-stage\nDarlington-connected fully complementary output stage. For complete low frequency\nreproduction all the way down to 0Hz, all coupling capacitors have been totally\neliminated from the SU-8080 circuits.\nTechnical Specifications\nPOWER AMPLIFIER SECTION 20Hz-20kHz both channels driven\nRated minimum sine wave RMS Power 0.02% total harmonic distortion\noutput 72W per channel (8 ohms)\nCH\R(.F\\n733-3822\n2665\nBANK w. BROADWAY\nFINANCING\n\"HIGH-FIDELITY \u00E2\u0080\u0094LOW PRICES''\nStanford\nSound Friday, November 25, 1977\nTHE UBYSSEY\nPage 3\nLayoffs by INCO linked to Chile\nBy STEVE HOWARD\nand MERRILEE ROBSON\nThe layoff of workers at the\nInternational Nickel Co.'s Sudbury\nplant is directly related to the\npolitical situation in Chile, the\nformer minister of the economy in\nthe Allende government said\nWednesday.\nRecently, multinational corporations such as Noranda Mines Ltd.\nand INCO have increased their\ninvestments in third world countries, Pedro Vuskovic told 100\npeople in SUB 207.\nLast month INCO announced it\nwas laying off 3,500 workers in\nKenny rings\nalarm clock\nFrom page 1\nof medicine was cut back by\n$186,097 despite a government\nrequest for increased student\nenrolment.\nThe two debaters also responded\nto a number of questions posed by\nstudents regarding faculty\nsalaries, the university's apolitical\nstance, and McGeer's campus\nbeautification plans.\n\"Some of UBC's buildings do\nresemble slums, but the university's backlog of academic needs\nhas to be dealt with first,\" said\nKenny in reference to the\nbeautification plan.\nMcGeer sent Kenny a letter last\nweek accompanied with\nphotographs outlining areas which\nthe education minister believed\nneeded beautification.\n\"If we had the money, the slums\nwould be cleaned up,\" Kenny said.\n\"McGeer can determine which\nmonies are to be allocated for\nspecific buildings. He has a\npowerful impact on priorities,\nwhich is unfortunate.\"\nSihota said McGeer's proposals\nwere frustrating, since he was\nmore willing to fix buildings than\nprevent cutbacks.\nIn response to a question\nregarding the university's\napolitical stance, Kenny said a\nuniversity would lose its independence if it ever identified\nwith a political party.\n\"I'm not going to be opposing a\nspecific government or party, I'm\nopposing a public policy decision\nmade by a government,\" he said.\nKenny and Sihota agreed that\nfaculty salaries were not affecting\nthe cutbacks related to academic\nneeds.\n\"If faculty salaries are not\ncompetitive, then we will lose a\nnumber of our professors,\" Kenny\nsaid. \"The administration\nbargains hard with the faculty. The\nuniversity must retain and recruit\nfaculty, and competitive salaries,\ndetermined by collective\nbargaining, will achieve this.\"\nKenny's salary of $64,000 is set\nby the board of governors and is\nnot based on collective bargaining.\nSihota said the faculty are underpaid.\n\"They deserve a little more than\nthey get,\" he said. \"However,\nthere should be a review of the\ntenure system and an examination\nof teaching toads.\"\nUBC researcher\ncollapses, dies\nFuneral services will be held in\nCalifornia Monday for Dixon\nJones, a research associate in\nanimal resource ecology at UBC,\nwho died Tuesday.\nA friend of the family said Jones,\n34, was running when he collapsed\nat the comer of 16th and East Mall.\nJones came to UBC from the\nUniversity of California as a postdoctoral fellow in 1971. He worked\nwith UBC professor C. S. \"Buzz\"\nHoning.\nSudbury, while increasing investment in Guatemala, because of\nhigh wage costs in Canada.\nNoranda operates large copper\nmines in Chile.\nVuskovic said large companies\nseek out countries with cheap\nlabor, and often bring in industries\nthat cause pollution, such as\nautomobile, chemical,\nmetallurgical and other heavy\nindustries. He said this has both\neconomic and political consequences.\nTTie multinational corporations\nwant guarantees that their investments are safe, Vuskovic said.\n\"Decisions are made by a general\ncommand group made up of\nleaders of the transnationals. For\nthis reason they need the\n(Augusto) Pinochets of Chile.\"\nVuskovic said runaway inflation\nhas continued in Chile, at rates of\nup to 500 per cent, under the\nmilitary government of Pinochet,\nand that real wages have fallen 50\nper cent in four years.\nAnd he said the leaders of the\nmultinationals coordinate a huge\npolice network throughout Latin\nAmerica.\n\"The values of democracy are no\nlonger synonymous with the\nsystem of capitalism.\"\nBecause of the international\nforces controlling the government,\nit will be difficult to change the\nmilitary governments, he said.\nThe number of people who have\nbeen forced to flee their countries\nillustrates the magnitude of the\nproblem. He said that 800,000 out of\na population of less than 4 million\nhave been expelled from Uruguay.\nVuskovic said the INCO decision\nexhibits how Canadians are harmed by the policies of the multinationals. And he said Canada is\nbecoming a leading investor in\nChile.\n\"I don't see the possibility of a\nsignificant change until popular\nforces overthrow the (Chilean)\nregime,\" he said.\n\"I don't think the (human rights)\npolicies of President Carter will\nbring about any significant\nchange.\n\" It will not be an easy struggle or\nshort.\"\nHe said the Latin American\npolitical situation may not be\ngetting better and could become\nanother Vietnam.\n\"But.if there is another Vietnam\nit will involve us all, not just Latin\nAmerica, but Canada and even the\nUnited States.\"\nFRIENDLY RECEPTIONIST, glares at passers-by in Place Vanier\nconcourse, wishing he worked in Totem Park where students, and\nmaybe res clerks, have more fun. Carr applied for immediate transfer\nwhen he heard about\nsupervision,\" he snorted.\nTotem tuck-in\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094geof wheelwright photo\ncraze. \"These kids need\nBCTCU takes over village credit union\nThe University Community\nCredit Union in the UBC village\nhas been taken over by the B.C.\nTeachers Credit Union.\nFormer UCCU manager David\nKnight said pressures on the credit\nunion caused by rapid growth\nforced them to sell out to the BCTCU.\n\"The University Community\nCredit Union was growing faster\nthan resources would allow so in\nSeptember the board of directors\nentered into a purchase and sell\nagreement with BCTCU,\" said\nKnight.\nThe union's finances increased\nfrom $100,000 to $1 million between\nJanuary 1976 and October 1977.\nThe credit union was in a Catch-\n22 situation, Knight said. To get\nmore staff we needed more\ndeposits so we could lend more\nmoney, he said, but then we would\nneed more staff to handle the\nloans.\nKnight said a further problem\nwas lack of participation by the\ncredit union's members.\n\"Members did not want to\nvolunteer for the board of directors. We didn't have sufficient\ndirectors.\"\nThe new manager of the credit\nunion, Marv Neufeld, said students\nwill still be allowed to do business\nin spite of the takeover.\nNormally members of a credit\nunion must have a \"common\nbond.\" For example, they must all\nbe in the same profession, com\nmunity or have some other common affiliation.\nThe inspector of credit unions\nmade an exception in this case as\npart of the takeover agreement.\nBut students will not be able to\nnegotiate student loans with the\ncredit union.\nNeufeld said credit unions\ncannot administer any government\nloan because they fall under\nprovincial jurisdiction and do not\nhave a federal charter.\n\"We don't want, one either\n(federal charter) because we\nwould then fall under the Bank Act\nand we would have to maintain\ndeposits with the Bank of Canada,\"\nhe said.\n\"BCTCU didn't actually take\nover UCCU. One credit union\nThe word is nukes \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Shrum\nBy CHRIS BOCKING\nNo country can get along without nuclear power,\nthe former chairman of B.C. Hydro said Thursday.\n\"This is the only commodity (nuclear power) that\ncan assure us of maintaining our present standard of\nliving,\" said Gordon Shrum.\nThe possibility of terrorist groups making nuclear\nweapons is not a significant danger, Shrum told 75\nstudents in a noon speech in Law 101.\n\"While it may be possible for certain groups to\nmake nuclear weapons, it is not much more terrifying\nthan placing a (non-nuclear) bomb on a plane with\n400 or 500 people,\" said Shrum.\n\"Disposing of nuclear wastes is not a very big\nproblem because there is not much of it. We could\nstore it in solid glass blocks inside salt mines or in\nmausoleums in the deserts.\nAny technology that can put a man on the moon\nshould be able to solve any problems of nuclear\npower, he said.\n\"Geologists used to think we had an unlimited\nsupply of oil, but now we know we have only 25 years\nof oil left, if we are to keep our present standard of\nliving. Fortunately, Providence locked all the power\nwe'll ever need in the nucleus of the atom.\"\nShrum said society must keep developing\ntechnology.\n\"There are people who say we ought to get back to\nmuscular power. That would have a disastrous effect\non our standard of living.\n\"There is no argument, the issue is already settled.\nThere are 58 countries with 469 reactors operative.\nThere has not been a single fatality so far,\" claimed\nShrum.\nSolar power cannot be considered as an alternative\nenergy source because it produces an insignificant\namount of energy, he said.\ncannot take over another because\nall members have rights over their\nshares. UCCU needed the\nresources of a larger credit union,\"\nhe said.\nUCCU members voted over 90\nper cent in favor of the takeover.\nWill AMS money\nbe transferred\nto credit union?\nFrom page 1\nDeMarco said the AMS has repaid\nthe money it owed the bank.\nThe Aquatic Centre loan is being\nrepaid by the students at the rate of\n$5 per-student per year. It could\ntake three or four years before the\nban is repaid.\nClark said that if there is a\nprinciple involved in the society'^\ndecision he does not understand\nwhy the society is withdrawing\nonly part of the money.\n\"If it's principle at stake and\nprinciple only then you'd think\nthey'd (the AMS) adhere to it,\" he\nsaid.\nBut DeMarco said the AMS has\nnot entirely ruled out the\npossibility of total withdrawal\nfrom the bank.\nIf the credit union located in the\nUBC village has no dealings,\ndirectly or indirectly, with South\nAfrica the AMS might move all its\nfinancial dealings there.\nQ-edit unions are restricted from\ninvesting outside the province. Page 4\nTHE BEATLES\nFriday, November 25, 1977\nGetting better\nThe student representative assembly's decision Wednesday\nto remove its money from the Bank of Montreal because of\nits investments in South Africa is without a doubt one of the\nmost important and most praiseworthy decisions to come out\nof that body in years.\nNow the fun begins. The Alma Mater Society can yank\n$200,000 from its various B of M accounts. But that stupid\ndeal the AMS made with the UBC administration which will\nsee SUB falling into the hands of the admin about 40 years\nhence has come to haunt us prematurely.\nThe AMS has a loan deal with the B of M and the UBC\nadministration through which students pay the cost of SUB.\nWith this unfortunate deal, the bank can make implementation of the SRA motion very difficult.\nTomorrow never knows what the bank will do. If the B of\nM treats the AMS the way they do businessmen who cross\none of its board members (most of whom hold interlocking\ndirectorships) life for the AMS could become very difficult.\nThe SRA's decision has great symbolic significance. But\nbanks don't care about symbolism, they care about money.\nThe determination with which the AMS bureaucrats carries\nout the SRA's wish will be a gauge of the importance placed\non the decision. The SRA should make sure its vote is\nconverted into action.\nThe decision of the SRA and its counterparts at the\nUniversities of Toronto and Manitoba will cost banks\ninvesting in South Africa hundreds of thousands of dollars. If\nother student groups and students join in, the cost will rocket\ninto the millions.\nThe major members of the United Nations who belong to\nits Security Council voted recently to impose an arms\nembargo on the South African racists, but refused to impose\nan economic boycott because of potential damage to their\neconomies.\nIn other words, they were pressured by multinational\ncorporations not to threaten their lucrative investments in\nSouth Africa. They are lucrative because of the cheap labor\nof oppressed blacks. Banks such as the B of M, Royal Bank,\nCanadian Imperial Bank of Commerce and Toronto Dominion hover nearby like vultures, nourishing these obscene\ninvestments in racism.\nThus it is up to us to launch our own economic boycott.\nThe SRA's action, we hope, is just the beginning of many\nsimilar decisions.\nNEWS ITEM: Due to popularity of Totem Tuck-ln service other services have sprung up to give lonely\nCo-eds that feeling of \"home'.'\t\nDRUNK FATHER\nSERVICE\n\"DftUE HANCOCK .ifcYfcef\nLE\nTHE UBYSSEY\nNOVEMBER 25,* 1977\nPublished eight days a week throughout the university year by the Alma Mater Society of the University\nof B.C. The things we said today are the opinions of the staff and not the AMS or the university\nadministration. Member, Canadian University Press. The Ubyssey publishes Page Friday, a weekly\ncommentary and review. The Ubyssey's paperback writers are in Room 241K of the Student Union\nBuilding. Editorial departments, 228-2301, Advertising, 228-3977.\nEditor: Chris Gainor\n\"How can you laugh,\" said Chris Gainor, \"when you know I'm down?\" \"Ask me why,\" chortled Bill Tieleman. \"Do you\nwant to know a secret?\", Heather Conn winked. \"I should have known better,\" said Marcus Gee to Geof Wheelwright.\n\"It's getting better, though,\" sighed Will Wheeler and Marta Marton. Kathy Ford started to say, \"If I needed\nsomeone. . . \" when David Morton Interrupted with an enthusiastic \"Anytime at all!\" Reynald MIchaud had to get back\neast, and Lloyanne Hurd handed Verne McDonald a ticket to ride. Fool on the' hill Mike Bocking wondered If there's a\nplace where he can go. Maureen Curtis suggested Penny Lane. Nicholas Read was worried about some yellow matter\ncustard, but Maureen Curtis told him to let It be. Larry Green got lost In Blue Jay Way while following Chris Bocking\nback to the USSR. Daytrlpper Tom Hawthorne went in a glass onion. \"All you need Is love,\" said Paisley Woodward to\nBruce Baugh, as they went on a magical mystery tour to Strawberry Fields. Staff meeting noon today, not yesterday.\nA day in the life\nof Vanier tribe\nBy GEOF WHEELWRIGHT\nWhen Plato wrote The Republic or Marx\nbegan Das Kapital or even when Mao\npainted his little book red, none of them\ncould ever have imagined the society that\nwas to spring up on a western part of a well-\nknown North American university.\nThe society inhabiting the area known as\nPlace Vanier is a strange mixture of\nideologies and cultures. General attitudes\nare complex and require a great deal of\nstudy to begin to understand. Attitudes on\nfood and sex are quite different, inhabitants\nvary and constantly change their sleeping\nhabits, while their eating habits remain\nquite static (unless interfered with by their\nsleeping habits).\nAs you can see, Vanier life is a complicated study, so to understand it, we must\nbegin at the beginning; sex. Like healthy\nyoung adults in most societies, residents\nenjoy sex as often as possible.\nThe difference between Vanier and other\nsocieties is the way in which the Vanier\npopulace demonstrate their intial sexual\nurges. One ritual observed by patient anthropologist Maggie Brew, is the Vanier\nfood ritual.\nThe ritual begins in the eating area, as the\nmale members of the society begin to\nsalivate as they eat their dinner. Sexual\nurges are aroused quickly in the males, who,\nrealizing they cannot perform perverse\nsexual acts in the dining area, begin to\nfondle their plates, then becoming very\nexcited, the males hurl their food in the\ndirection of the females in an almost\norgasmic release of sexual tension and\nfrustration.\nThe females respond with the obligatory\nAn anthropological look at residence life\nby Ubyssey Vanier bureau chief, Geof\nWheelwright. The Ubyssey welcomes letters\nfrom shocked anthropologists.\n\"yechh!\" This is called the Vanier food\nfight.\nThis ritual displays the residents' almost\ndiametrically opposed attitudes toward sex\nand food. While residents want to get as\nmuch as possible of both sex and food, they\nsavor sex and throw away their food.\nLike other societies, Vanier has other\nrituals than the mating rituals. There is the\nwater ritual, the birthday ritual and the de-\nrooming ceremony. The most interesting of\nthese is the de-rooming ceremony, because\nthe victim of the ceremony is not there when\nit occurs.\nThe motivation for the ceremony is either\na case of severe boredom, a follow-up to the\nwater ritual, or in some cases a way of\nsublimating deep emotional hostilities.\nThe ceremony begins when someone\nobtains entry to the cubicle of its victim,\nwhile the victim is absent. The participants\nin the ceremony then begin to cleanse the\nvictim's cubicle of all the tensions it has built\nup from leading an organized life. The\ncubicle is left in a new free and creative\nstate of disorder, so the victim may come\nhome and begin a new, creative and disordered life.\nThis is a ceremony to bring in the new and\nthrow out the old; a life-renewing ritual;\nthis is called a room job, to use a colloquial\nVanier term.\nAnthropologist Maggie Brew notes in her\nlatest book, Place Vanier, Camel Dung and\nthe Evolution of Slugs, that Vanier residents\nform themselves into tribes every year, who\ngo off and live in their tribe's area. This kind\nof tribe formation exhibits a territorial\ninstinct in the Vanier people.\nlliis territoriality changes year by year\nand with each year an individual is a\nmember of the society he/she becomes less\nterritorial to the point that by their fourth or\nfifth year of membership he/she leaves the\nsociety.\nDespite the interesting ceremonies and\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094geof wheelwright photo\nVANIER CAFETERIA . . . Your mother should know what they serve.\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 rituals practised by Vanier people, their life\nis generally quite regimented. Feeding\ntimes are controlled by the wardens of the\nsociety. They are one and one-half to two-\nhour periods placed at strategic points\nthroughout the day. These times are fixed\nand are never changed, therefore this part\nof the residents' life is very uniform.\nResidents are quite isolated from other\nsocieties than their own. They eat in\nseparate places, their doors are locked at 11\np.m. and their parties tend to be exclusive\nand incestuous. This is becoming increasingly more true as the wardens of the\nsociety have introduced a new concept in\nresidence living: the co-ed tribe.\nThis concept may be varied in the coming\nyear. As it stands, the co-ed tribe is a house\nwith floors of alternating sexual\ninhabitance. The new proposal is that now\nthe rooms would be of alternating sexual\ninhabitance, with both sexes sharing the\nlavatorial facilities.\nIf this introversion continues, then the\nculture of Vanier will become a pure anthropological fact and residents will soon\nwant to stay more than their allotted time.\nWith any luck this amazing culture will\nburgeon and grow to a state of permanence.\nLiving in residence is just a matter of\ngetting by with a little help from your\nfriends. Friday, November 25, 1977\nTHE UBYSSEY\nPage 5\nLetters\nHello goodbye drivers foul up UEL environment\nI wish to comment on the letter\nentitled Traffic office hurts prof\nand on the article by Robert Staley,\nboth of which appeared in The\nUbyssey of Nov. 1. The main point\nthat the 'junior prof made was\nthat \"the traffic office is very\neffectively cutting down on the\namount of work that I can do for\nmy students.\"\nRobert Staley's article was\nwritten with tongue in cheek but\nnonetheless gave the impression\nthat automobile drivers should\nhave access to any part of campus\nthey may wish to travel. Also,\nStaley's article was based on\nblatant overgeneralization and\nnasty snipings at campus police.\nI sincerely hope that the\nanonymous junior professor is not\nsuggesting that because he or she\nexperiences some difficulty in\ntravelling by automobile on parts\nof the UBC campus that all the\ncampus should be opened up. As I\nindicate below, automobile traffic\nis already heavy on campus and\npedestrian traffic (particularly\nthat in areas which are supposedly\nrestricted to pedestrians and\nemergency and university delivery\ntraffic) is being adversely affected.\nThe majority of motorists park\ntheir cars in the parking lots or in\nareas surrounding the campus and\nthen walk to work or to classes. A\nminority, however, insist on the\nright to drive through areas which\nare officially designated as ones of\nrestricted access.\nA favorite route for illegal traffic\nis by the MacMillan building on to\nthe Main Mall and from there ot\nother areas of restricted access,\nfor example behind the Astronomy\nand Space Science Institute and the\neducation building.\nThis traffic could be stopped or\nat least drastically reduced if the\nCampus Patrol tried harder to\nenforce the regulations. The\nautomobile traffic on the Main\nMall is at times very heavy.\nThere is at least one motorcyclist\nReviewer needs some help\nIt is difficult for me to remain silent after having read Merriiee Rob-\nson's critique of Much Ado About Nothing in the Nov. 10 Ubyssey. Her\ncomment seems riddled with inconsistencies and small ignorances about\nthe natures of theatre and its criticism.\nI don't profess to be an authority, nor do I mean to assert that her article did not contain a few valid points regarding the production in\nquestion. However, I think she has fallen into the trap that too many so-\ncalled critics have in the past \u00E2\u0080\u0094 that of believing that criticism must\nindeed be critical (i.e. negative) and that it is more interesting to the\nreader if one exaggerates the bad elements,- sensationalizing the\nweaknesses rather than provide an honest and realistic analysis of the\nproduction for what it is.\nIt seems presumptuous indeed to label therset \"idealized, improbable,\"\nwhen it was fashioned, according to the style of the time and location of\nthe play, by a designer who no doubt researched the period in order to\nprovide an accurate, practical and esthetically pleasing set that worked\nfor the play.\nTo state that this set, coupled with the elaborate costumes (also faithful\nrepresentatives of their time) is a \"visual assault,\" merely \"acceptable\"\nis a gross understatement.\nOn more than one evening the audience has found this so \"acceptable\"\nthat they have been moved to applause as the curtain rises. Obviously the\nvisual effects should never be allowed to upstage the play itself but I\nmaintain that there was, in general, a high-quality level of acting in this\nperformance that was enhanced by the set, not overshadowed by it.\nRobson recognizes at least the accomplishments of leads Allan Gray\nand Lally Cadeau (although their known reputations and the program's\nmention of their professional standing may have influenced her small\npraise) but the two of them hardly have to \"drag the rest of the production along behind them\" as I'm sure they would be the first to admit.\nMatt Walker and Alan Hannam turn in solid supportive performances\nas well. And I wonder at the critic's observation that Stephen Wood-\nhouse's Claudio was \"uninspired\" and \"wooden,\" because she later\nmentions his \"voice chokes with tears\" \u00E2\u0080\u0094 hardly an indication of the\ncoldness she suggests.\nTo label Dogberry's scene \"tedious\" is to value her own sense of humor\nat such a price as to completely disregard the theatre full of chuckled\nenjoyments around her and causes me to wonder if she wasn't confronted\nby the word \"tedious\" as Dogberry was himself!\nIn criticism of the \"slapstick aspects of this scene\" which \"are not in\nthe script\" Robson is perhaps forgetting t h a t in Shakespeare's plays\nvery little is \"in the script\" except the words themselves. Therefore any\nreasonable interpretation that accurately follows the text is as valid as\nthe next one.\nTo say that Michael Puttonen, as Dogberry, \"drew a lot of laughter and\napplause from the audience\" and in the next breath criticize him for\n\"badly overacting\" is to reduce the audience to a pack of fools and as\nmuch as claim thatout of the entire group, she, Robson, was the only\none with an intelligent sense of comedy.\nThis rather patronizing attitude of hers is also evident when she claims\nthat Frederic Wood Theatre's \"captive audience\" is made up of theatre\nstudents (who should maybe know something about the art?) and gullible\nalumni.\nIhe article's critical comments about the way the theatre itself is\noperated I can, in part, understand and agree with. However, I feel\nRobson goes too far in asserting that \"they haven't put on a theatrically\ninteresting production (for) . . . two years.\"\nIf this was so, how would the theatre manage to sell out just about all its\nshows andhold over many of them due to popular demand? Obviously the\nshows are interesting to someone. And, having seen last year's series\nmyself I must object.\nWhen You Coming Back, Red Ryder? was definitely an entertaining as\nwell as dramatically valuable show, to theatre students and non-theatre\npersons alike.\nThe implications Robson makes that productions such as A Collier's\nFriday Night showed no thought about acting, or consideration of\ntechnique is a blatant display of ignorance.\nI have to believe that every rehearsed presentation of an artistically-\nrecognized play (and I feel safe assuming that Shakespeare's works fall\ninto this category) is a learning experience for both actors and audience\nif they alio w themselves to be at all receptive.\nTherefore, the fact that Robson wonders \"what valuable information\ntheatre students gained from Much Ado About Nothing causes me to\nwonder what background she has, if any, in theatre to write such a\nreview.\nSharon Westley,\ntheatre 2\nwho regularly travels down this\nMall at high speeds. The unfortunate point is that such people\ncare little for the rights of others,\nparticularly the regular\npedestrians. The former will\ncontinue to take shortcuts unless\nthe so-called restricted access\nareas are better patrolled.\nSome of the persons who drive\nthrough restricted areas\n(sometimes, as noted above at high\nspeeds \u00E2\u0080\u0094 the speed limit on\ncampus is supposedly 30 km/h or\n20 mph, unless otherwise posted)\napparently do so to make\ndeliveries of small articles to\nvarious buildings.\nAgain, they often insist on the\nright to park next to the building in\nwhich they want to deposit their\narticle(s). To achieve this, they\nregularly travel through restricted\nareas by nudging through the\npedestrians.\nPerhaps, it is not surprising that\nmany people are reluctant to park\ntheir vehicles in the nearest\nparking lot and walk (or bicycle,\nperhaps the junior prof before he\nor she gets much older or stiffens\nup too much could consider using a\nbicycle on some occasions).\nHowever, traffic to and from the\nUBC campus regularly affects\npeople living in the communities\nthrough which it passes. The social\nand environmental effects of this\ntraffic are borne by people living in\ncommunities such as the one in the\nUniversity Endowment Lands.\nQuite apart from the high\nprobability of increased lead levels\n(from automobile exhausts) occurring within at least 40 metres of\nroadways with heavy automobile\ntraffic, a more direct hazard is\nposed to children at play and as\nthey go to and from school. In the\npast several years, several\nchildren have been knocked down\non or near Toronto Road.\nOther costs to this community\ninclude high noise levels at certain\ntimes of the day and night. This, I\nthink, is relevant in any discussion\nof traffic on the UEL and on\ncampus.\nUnfortunately, the above\nproblems are likely to increase.\nThe traffic will probably increase\nbecause of the present and planned\ndevelopments on campus: for\nexample, the Extended and Acute\nCare units, the Woodward Extension etc. Thus, it is critical that\naction be taken now and that\n(contrary to the sentiments expressed in the Nov. 1 issue of The\nUbyssey) traffic on campus,\nparticularly in restricted areas, be\ndecreased.\nAlan Carter\nsoil science dept.\nFixing a hole\nI would like to correct an impression left in the article entitled\nAMS passes budget after three\nmonths in Thursday's Ubyssey. I\nwas quoted assaying that the Alma\nMater Society is spending several\nthousand dollars per year on administration. Such could not be\nfurther from the case.\nWhat I did say was that the AMS\nis spending several hundred\nthousand dollars per year on administration. The importance of\nthe distinction is obvious.\nSheila Lidwill\nSRA arts rep\nBritish Columbia has a flavour\nyou won'f find anywhere else. Page 6\nTHE UBYSSEY\nNishga arfisf\ncarves pole\nYou can see totem poles here,\nthere and everywhere at UBC but\nhave you ever actually seen one\nbeing carved?\nNishga Indian Norman Tait is\ncarving a 16-foot cedar pole into a\nhouse post at UBC's Museum of\nAnthropology. His regular carving\nhours are 2 to 4 p.m. on Tuesdays\nand Thursdays and 1 to 3 p.m. on\nSaturdays and Sundays.\nPicasso buffs\nEvery little thing that Pablo\nPicasso ever did in his lifetime is\nnow worth a fortune. On\nHot flashes\nSaturday night Robert Rosenblum\nfrom New York will speak about\nthe artist and his work in a talk,\nPicasso \u00E2\u0080\u0094 and the Guernica of\n1937, in IRC 2 at 8:15 p.m.\nThe talk is sponsored by the\nVancouver Institute and\nadmittance is free.\nArtisis speak\nIndians in B.C. have begun to\nget back to their cultural roots\nduring the past decade, after a\nlong period that saw their rich\nculture decline and almost\ndisappear.\nUBC's Museum of\nAnthropology exhibits both new\nand old Indian art and this\nSunday two Indian artists, Jerry\nSmith and Beau Dick, will be\nthere to discuss their art with the\npublic. The discussion will take\nplace at 3 p.m. at the museum at\n6393 Marine Drive.\nBleary-eyed?\nIf those last-minute essays have\nleft you bleary-eyed and\nnumb-brained perhaps a little\nclassical music would help.\nHans-Karl Piltz and John\nSawyer will direct The Music of\nthe Rennaisance in a collegium\nmusicum Sunday at 8 p.m. The\nperformance will take place in the\nrecital hall of the Music Building.\nTween classes\ndiner en com-\nMalson Inter-\nTODAY\nLE CLUB FRANCAIS\nInformation sur le\nmune, noon. La\nnationale.\nBAHA'I CLUB\nInformal discussion in the Baha'I\nfaith, noon, SUB 113.\nSKYDIVING CLUB\nGeneral meeting, noon, SUB 212.\nSAILING CLUB\nBroomball game and party, 6:30 to\n10:15 p.m., Winter Sports Centre\ncurling club lounge.\nHANG GLIDING CLUB\nGeneral meeting, prospective members welcome, noon, SUB 215.\nINTERNATIONAL HOUSE\nFilms on population and urban\nplanning and self-help housing,\nnoon, International House upper\nlounge.\nPACIFIC LIFE COMMUNITY\nFilm on nuclear power, entitled\nLovejoy, noon, Scarfe 210.\nCHINESE STUDENTS'\nASSOCIATION\nMandarin night, 7 p.m., SUB 207.\nSATURDAY\nCHINESE STUDENTS'\nASSOCIATION\nChinese chess tournament, 1:30\np.m., SUB 207.\nIce skating party, 7:15 to 9:30\np.m., Winter Sports Centre main\nrink.\nTUESDAY\nGAY PEOPLE\nGay drop-in, noon, SUB 212.\nCHARISMATIC CHRISTIAN\nFELLOWSHIP\nGeneral meeting, 7:30 p.m., Lutheran Campus Centre lounge.\nLIBERALS CLUB\nGeneral meeting, noon, SUB 215.\nSGT. PEPPER'S\nLONELY HEARTS CLUB\nBand practice, noon, Penny Lane.\nLIBERTARIAN SOCIETY\nGeneral meeting, noon, SUB 224.\nWEDNESDAY\nINTERCHURCH WORKING\nGROUP ON CHILE\nThe movie Boycott and discussion\nof Noranda and UBC Involvement,\nnoon, SUB 207.\nTHURSDAY\nCHARISMATIC CHRISTIAN\nFELLOWSHIP\nGeneral meeting, 7:30 p.m.,\nLutheran Campus Centre lounge.\nTD Bank\nrecruiting on\ncampus\nNov. 29th &30th\nCONSIDER A FUTURE WITH US:\nYou'll be well trained. We're\nready to invest time and money in\nturning you into a skilled banker.\n(TD's innovatjve training programs\nare pace-setters in the financial\nindustry).\nYou'll have ample room for\npromotion. The banking business\nis healthy and growing and TD\nneeds fresh talent for future\nmanagement positions.\nYou'll have career choices on\nthe way up. Although opportunities are most plentiful in branch\nmanagement, administration and\ncredit, your banking career can\ninclude rewarding assignments in\na variety of support areas such as\nfinancial planning, marketing,\npersonnel and internal audit.\nYou'll be part of an organization that understands the graduate.\n(Our track record speaks for itself\n- graduates of recent years are\nfound all through our\nmanagement structure).\nCome talk to us. See your\nPlacement Office for interview\ndetails.\nToronto Dom in ion\nthe bank where people make the difference\nICONSIDER A FUTURE WITH US I\nrjfcHH Reasonable\nj W| Rates\nBig or Small Jobs\nALSO GARAGES\nBASEMENTS\n& YARDS\n732-9898\nCLEAN-UP\nFriday, November 25, 1977\nBLACK & LEE\nTUX SHOP\nNOW AT\nIT 10 SEYMOUR ST.\n688-2481\nr\nBLENHEIM\nIMPORTS\nSERVICE\nVOLKSWAGEN\nSPECIALISTS\nREASONABLE RATES\nFACTORY TRAINED\nMECHANICS\n3299 W. 4th Ave., Van.\n738-0910\nTHE CLASSIFIEDS\nRATES: Campus - 3 lines, 1 day $1.50; additional lines 35c.\nCommercial \u00E2\u0080\u0094 3 lines, 1 day $2.50; additional lines\n50c Additional days $2.25 and 45c.\nClassified ads are not accepted by telephone and are payable in\nadvance. Deadline is 11:30 a.m., the day before publication.\nPublications Off ice. Room 241, S.U.B., UBC, Van., B.C. V6T 1W5\n5 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Coming Events\n50 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Rentals\nINTERNATIONAL Students Disco, Friday, Nov. 25th, 8:0O. International\nHouse. SI.00 admission, 50c for members.\nFREE VANCOUVER INSTITUTE LECTURE. Prof. Robert Rosenblum, one\nof the world's leanding art historians\nfrom New York University, speaks on\nPicasso and the Guernica of 1937 in\nLecture Hall No. 2 of the Woodward\nBuilding, Saturday (Nov. 26) at 8:15\np.m.\nA NEW WAY OF THINKING ... Dr.\nMichael Ovenden speaks on 'Signposts\nFor A New Science,\" Wed., Nov. 30th,\n12:30, Hennings 201. S.U.S. Speakers\nProgram.\nEDUCATION DANCE \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Roscoe's Disco,\nFriday, Nov. 25th, 8-12:30, Education\nLounge, Education Building.\n10 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 For Sale \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Commercial\nNOVEMBER SPECIALS. Bauer Black\nPanther skates $53.50; Down Ski\njackets $31.95 up; Ladies Figure\nSkates $27.96; Dunlop Maxply squash\nracquet frames $22.50; Converse hi-\ncut runners $19.95; Cotton and nylon\njogging suits $16.95. Visit Community\nSports, 3616 West 4th Ave. 733-1612.\nARTS UNDERGRAD SOCIETY RENTS!\n5 year T-shirt leases, only $2.00, optional renewal. New model, 'Think\nArts' $4.00. Compact, Intermediate\nand Full sizes available. Slip into an\nArts T-shirt! Buchanan lunch times.\n65 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Scandals\nGIRLS! The man of your dreams is\nGoodtime Eddy \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Forestry IV. Can\nbe recognized by shifty expression\nand lecherous grin.\nENCORE! ENCORE! Subfilms take* you\nback with a special double bill \u00E2\u0080\u0094\n\"Woodstock\" and \"Jimi Hendrix.\"\nBOOKCASES \u00E2\u0080\u0094 sturdy and attractive \u00E2\u0080\u0094\n3 ft. high x 4 ft. long x 10 or 12 inches\ndeep \u00E2\u0080\u0094 3 shelf. Ideal for paperbacks,\ntext books and reference books. $20.00\nunfinished ,'$25 finished. 524-8808.\n11 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 For Sale \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Private\nAMBASSADOR '67. One owner, 51,350\nmiles, V8, P.S., P.B., 2-Door. Good\ncondition. Snows on rims. Any reasonable offer accepted. 261-7831.\n70-\n- Services\n65-\n- Scandals\nBIBLIOPHAGES, Logophi|es,\ners, Belletrists, Bibliophiles,\nacs, Philonoists, Bibliotaphs\nmathists, Epistemophiliacs:\nies' Tenth, the Bibliopole.\nBardolat-\nInsomni-\nChresto-\ntry Duth-\nMONTY PYTHON Liberally Presented\nDouble Feature Tues., Wed., Nov. 29,\n30. Sub Aud. 7:00 p.m. $1.00.\n70-\n- Services\n\t\n80-\n- Tutoring\n85 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Typing\nORGANICALLY GROWN unsprayed Okanagan fruit in season, 25c per pound j\nby the case. 738-8828 or 733-1677 eves. !\nFAST, EFFICIENT TYPING near 41st\nand Marine. 266-5053.\n20 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Housing\nROOM AVAILABLE immed. in co-op\nhouse Arbutus and 13th. $96 plus\nutilities. 732-0567.\nEXCELLENT TYPING. Reasonable\nrates. Call 731-1807, 12 noon to 9 p.m.\nEXPERT TYPIST \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Essays, Seminar\nPapers and Thesis $.75 per page.\n274-3010.\n90-Wanted\nHOUSING AVAILABLE for spring term. I\nLimited space left. Great alternative '\nto residence. Meals included. 2270\nWesbrooke, 224-9866.\nLARGE light housekeeping room. Point\nGrey, shared facil., $128. Woman preferred. Call 224-7983. j\n25 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Instruction\nSPANISH CLASSES. Beginners and j\nadvanced. Contact Bertha 738-3895. ;\nPIANO LESSONS by experienced teach-\ner. Graduate of Juilliard School of\nMusic. Both beginners and advanced\nstudents welcome. 731-0601.\n99 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Miscellaneous\nSKI WHISTLER\nRent cabin day/week. 732-0174 eves.\nCOLD FEET? If Dr. Bundolo cant cure\ntry the \"Westside Feetwarmers\"!\nHottest Jazz band west of Burrard.\nWill play Arts Jazz Dance, Dec. 2\n(that's a Friday), Sub Ballroom. Be\nthere!\nTEACHER OF PIANO and theory. Excellent tuition for all grades and ages.\nPrep, for Royal Cons, exams and\nfestivals. 682-7991.\nPOTTERY INSTRUCTION in my studio.\nIndividual attention. All levels of\nability. $6.00 3 hr. session. Call 874-\n8758.\n30 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Jobs\nWAITERS/WAITRESSES\nNEEDED\nOLD SPAGHETTI FACTORY\nGASTOWN\nAPPLY IN PERSON\nAsk for KEVIN\nUBC Through the Lens\nAlumni Chronicle\nphotography contest for\nUBC Students\n$300 IN PRIZES\nFull details at Speakeasy,\nSUB, or call the\nAlumni Office,\n228-3313\n35 - Lost\nLADIES GOLD UBC RING. Nov. 22.\nReward. Education Building. Lorna\nM\nana in interesting for their con-\nsnt.\nHighlights include a 1962 per-\n>rmance at the Cavern club in\niverpool, the 1964 Ed Sullivan\nppearance, the Shea Stadium\nsrformance of 1965, their farewell\njncert in Tokyo in 1966, the\nlusical numbers from Magical\nIystery Tour and the films of the\nsrformance of Hey Jude and\nevolution on the David Frost\nhow in 1968.\nPhil Alexander, Ronnie James\nnd Gary Stern put the film\n)gether over a three-year period,\nsleeting from over seven hours of\nIm.\nPhil Alexander, in town to\nromote the film, said that the idea\nriginated when he found there\n'as good response to the Beatle\nlms he showed in between art\nlms in Santa Barbara. He and his\nohorts then gathered together\nlaterial bit by bit, by writing to\n.pple Corps in New York and\n,ondon, to EMI records, the BBC,\n'athe Newsreels, and to Beatle\nins and organizations from Paris\n> Tokyo.\nAlexander feels that the film is\n3e of the best as an illustration of\nie Beatles' musical talents.\n\"Ringo is a phenomenal drum\nplayer. He has his own style. To\nlook at the band as musicians, the\nfilm is ahighpoint in rock movies,\"\nAlexander said. \"There are a lot of\ngood film-makers, but when it\ncomes to filming rock musicians\nthey show head shots and the\nguitars, but you can't see the\nfingers. The people who filmed\nthis, their heads are together\npretty well.\"\nBesides the performances, there\nare many other interesting\nmoments. For example, there is\nthe weird and surrealistic film\nJohn directed as a promotion for\nStrawberry Fields Forever. The\nfilm was shown on American\nBandstand, and when Dick Clark\naskedthe kids on the show for their\nreaction, one of them commented,\n\"I think they went out with the\ntwist.\"\nAlso included in the film is the\nproduction of All You Need is Love\nwhich was broadcast worldwide\nvia satellite, and which was\nwritten by Lennon especially for\nthe broadcast.\nFor Beatle fans old and new, the\npromoters of the film promise, \"a\nsplendid time is guaranteed for\nall.\"\n10.) What does the chorus chant\nin the background of Girl?\n11.) What song is on the flip side\nof the single version of Let It Be?\nOn the flip side of Lady Madonna?\n12.) What is the first song George\nHarrison wrote for the Beatles?\n13.) Which group did Ringo leave\nto join the Beatles?\n14.) The Beatles appeared on\nplayedat the end of All You Need is\nLove?\n21.) John, in the Royal Command\nperformance, told the people in the\ncheap seats to clap their hands,\nand the rest to do what?\n22.) How did John come to write\nBeing for the Benefit of Mr. Kite?\n23.) Who is the oldest Beatle?\n24.) What is the river that flows\nthrough Liverpool that came to be\nstage with two other British rock\nbands in Hamburg. Name them.\n15.) John Lennon was sued for\nplagiarism for two lines in what\nsong?\n16.) When did the Beatles first try\nacid?\n17.) To whom does the song Hello,\nGoodbye refer?\n18.) John Lennon appeared in\nwhat movie by himself?\n19.) What was the first movie\nRingo appeared in without the\nother Beatles?\n20.) Which Big Band song is\nFriday, November 25, 1977\nTHE BEATLES\nidentified with the British sound in\nthe early sixties?\n25.) What American label did\nthe Beatles records appear on?\n26.) Who was the Beatles\nproducer for many years?\n27.) Name five Beatles movies.\n28.) What American television\nshow virtually introduced the\nBeatles to the continent?\n29.) What is the name of the last\nBeatles album ever to appear?\n30.) Name 10 Beatles songs with\nwomen's names in them.\n31.) Who was the original bass\nplayer for the Beatles?\n32.) Name two of the nightclubs\nthe Beatles played in Hamburg?\n33.) How many songs did Ringo\nwrite for the Beatles and what\nwere they?\n34.) Who is Angelo Mysterioso?\n35.) Who was the Walrus?\n36.) How did Paul meet Linda?\n37.) Which of the Beatles put\ntogether Revolution #9?\n38.) Where did George Harrison\nwrite Here Comes the Sun?\n39.) What is Strawberry Fields?\n40.) What was the original title of\nSexy Sadie?\n41.) What does Lucy in the Sky\nwith Diamonds refer to?\n42.) At the end of Strawberry\nFields it is claimed that Lennon\nsays, \"I bury Paul.\" Lennon says\ndifferently. What did he really\nsay?\n43.) At the end of I am the\nWalrus, voices speak lines from\nwhich Shakespeare play?\n44.) Which two Beatles songs\ndoes Paul introduce with \"One,\ntwo, three, four!\" or \"One, two,\nthree, fuck!\" (depending on who\nyou believe)?\n45.) Name 10 clues of Paul's\ndeath.\n46.) When you hold the cover of\nMagical Mystery Tour to a mirror\nwhat phone number appears and\nwhat is its purpose?\n47.) Who plays lefthanded guitar?\n48.) Which Lennon song did the\nBeatles refuse to record?\n49.) Who plays lead guitar on\nWhile my Guitar Gently Weeps?\n50.) The Cast Iron Shore is a\nLiverpool landmark referred to in\nwhich John Lennon song?\n51.) Name two connections to\nEdgar Allen Poe in the works of the\nBeatles.\n52.) Pete Best was sacked\nbecause:\na) He wouldn't change his\nhair style.\nb) He was the most popular\nmember of the group. c) He\nwas too dependent on his mother.\nd) He was a surly\negomaniacal asshole.\ne) All of the above.\n53.) Which Olympic swimmer\nappears on the cover of Sgt.\nPepper's Lonely Hearts Club\nBand?\n54.) In I am the Walrus, the line,\n\"Waitingforthevantocome,\" was\noriginally what?\nAnswers will be published\nnext week.\nPage Friday, 3\njfr poetry\n&5*fc\nLalonde fixing a hole in our ideas\nBy MICHELE LALONDE\nSpeak white\nit is so lovely to listen to you\nspeaking of Paradise Lost\nor the anonymous, graceful profile trembling in the\nsonnets of Shakespeare\nWe are a rude and stammering people\nbut we are not deaf to the genius of a language\nspeak with the accent of Milton and Byron and Shelley and Keats\nspeak white\nand please excuse us if in return\nwe've only our rough ancestral songs\nand the chagrin of Nelligan\nspeak white\nspeak of places, this and that\nspeak to us of the Magna Carta\nof the Lincoln Monument\nof the cloudy charm of the Thames\nor blossom-time on the Potomac\nspeak to us of your traditions\nWe are a people who are none too bright\nbut we are quick to sense\nthe great significance of crumpets\nor the Boston Tea Party\nBut when you really speak white\nwhen you get down to brass tacks\nto speak of Better Homes and Gardens\nand the high standard of living\nand the Great Society\na little louder than speak white\nraise your foremen's voices\nwe are a little hard of hearing\nwe live too close to the machines\nand only hear our heavy breathing over the tools\nspeak white and loud\nso we can hear you clearly\nfrom Saint Henri to Santo Domingo\nyes, what a marvellous language\nfor hiring and firing\nfor giving the orders\nfor fixing the hour to be worked to death\nand that pause that refreshes\nand bucks up the dollar\nspeak white\ntell us that God is a great big shot\nand that we're paid to trust him\nspeak white\nspeak to us of production, profits and percentages\nspeak white\nit's a rich language\nfor buying\nbut for selling oneself\nbut for selling one's soul\nbut for selling oneself\nAh\nspeak white\nbig deal\nbut for telling about\nthe eternity of a day on strike\nfor telling the whole\nlife-story of a nation of caretakers\nfor coming back home in the evening\nat the hour when the sun's gone bust in the alleys\nfor telling you yes the sun does set yes\nevery day of our lives to the east of your empires\nNothing's as good as a language of oaths\nour mode of expression none too clean\ndirtied with oil and with axle grease\nspeak white\nfeel at home with your words\nwe are a bitter people\nbut we'd never reproach a soul\nfor having a monopoly\non how to improve one's speech\nMichele Lalonde was born in Montreal in\n1937. Her published works include poetry:\nGeoles (Prisons) and Songe de La fiancee\ndetruite, Terre des Hommes, a narration of\na symphonic fresco written in collaboration\nwith composer Andre Prevost and performed at the Place des Arts in 1967 and\nSpeak White, a poem-announcement.\nWhen Michele Lalonde presented Speak\nWhite at La Nuit de la Poesie, in Montreal,\non March 29, 1970, she received a delirious\novation like none of the Canadien hockey\nplayers ever had.\nNever before had a poet expressed so well\nthe ideology which supports the\nrevolutionary actions of the Quebecois. That\nideology, so evident for them and so difficult\nto understand for the English speakers can\nbe summed up this way: under certain\ncircumstances, the simple and everyday use\nof specific language can be oppressive.\nInvited to set out her life story, she replied\nthus: \"I was born in Montreal and grew up\nthere. Of modest origin, my parents escaped\nthe misfortunes of the Great Depression\nwhich hit the majority of Quebecois so hard\nduring the Thirties.\n\"I believe in Quebec literature with a\nsmall 1, integrated into the day-to-day\nstruggle for national liberation and rendered more widely accessible by way of the\nspoken word. I also believe in the necessity\nof inventing in our province new genre of\nliterature adapted to the Quebecois culture\nand to the struggle for identity.\nIn the sweet tongue of Shakespeare\nwith the accent of Longfellow\nspeak a French purely and atrociously white\nas in Viet Nam, in the Congo\nspeak impeccable German\na yellow star between your teeth\nspeak Russian speak of the right to rule speak of repression\nspeak white\nit's a universal language\nwe were born to understand it\nwith its tear-gas phrases\nwith its billy-club words\nSpeak white\ntell us again about freedom and democracy\nWe know that liberty is a Black word\nas misery is Black\nas blood is muddied with the dust of Algiers or of Little Rock\nSpeak white\nfrom Westminster to Washington take turns\nspeak white as on Wall Street\nwhite as in Watts\nBe civilized\nand understand our conventional answer\nwhen you ask us politely\nhow do you do\nand we mean to reply\nwe're doing all right\nwe're doing fine\nGood Buy\nboutique ltd.\nSubstandard\nJEANS\n(Regular $25.00)\nThe place in Vancouver\nfor recycled, substandard and\nother good stuff in\nwomen's clothing.\nMonday - Saturday 10.00 - 5:30\nFriday 'till 7:00\n3372 Cambie Cat 18th)\nPhone 874-3613 I\nwe\nare not alone\nWe know now\nthat we are not alone.\n(the writing is on the wall)\n.\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nOlBt\n% Candia Taverns\n\u00C2\u00AB SPECIALIZING IN\n228-9512 \"TpEST 228-9513\nFAST FREE DELIVERY - 4510 \"7. 10th Ave.\nHONG kll\l, CHINESE FOOD\n5732 UNIVERSITY BLVD.\nOPEN FOR LUNCH \u00C2\u00A3\n\ Phone 224-6121 Eat in & Take out 16\n\u00C2\u00ABt\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 *\nA HISTORY\nOF THE BEATLES\nfrom Liverpool to Bangladesh\nTHE COMPLETE\nBEATLE MANIA RETROSPECTIVE\nMONDAY NOV. 28\nTHROUGH SUNDAY DEC. 4\nHOLLYWOOD THEATRE\nShowtimes: Daily 7:30 p.m. & 9:30 p.m.\nMatinees: Saturday & Sunday 2:00 p.m.\nADVANCE DISCOUNT TICKETS:\n$3.50 AT WOODWARD'S CONCERT BOX OFFICES,\nGRENNAN'S RECORDS & THUNDERBIRD SHOP, UBC\n... A SPLENDID TIME IS GUARANTEED FOR ALL!! ...\nSUBfilms trippingly presents\nA SPECIAL DOUBLE BILL!\nuieocl/tock\na film about\nJIMI '\nHENDRIX\nFeaturing six previously unseen live performances from 1966 (o 1970\nI including the Monterey. Isle ol Wight, and Woodstock festivals\nThurs., Fri., Sat., Sun. - 7:00 ONE SHOW.\nAdmission - $1.50.\nShow will begin with Woodstock.\nCarl Yasgur will be\nadmitted free.\nfollows, heat last releases his own\nfeelings, weeping in the wind that\nlashes the town and landscape.\nFine as the effects in Bound For\nGlory were, this is the most\nbeautiful prairie storm since The\nWizard of Oz. For a while the\nmovie appears to be about\nsomething. Unfortunately, the\nrapport released in these\nsequences serves to show how little\nthe rest of it means.\nThe boys, one in town (Painchaud) and the one in the country\n(Doug Junor) come across with an\nattractive strength. The rest of the\nchildren, though one-dimensional,\nlook perfect \u00E2\u0080\u0094 right out of an Our\nGang short.\nPinsent is more natural than\nanyone, and neither his son nor the\naudience profits from his early\ndeparture in the film. Jose Ferrer\nis the other star in Wind, and he is\nalso natural and expressive as the\nbootlegger father of the delinquent\nJunor.\nYet one always hopes that a\nCanadian hit would be as well\nmade in every way, and as\nhonestly judged, as a memorable\nfilm from anywhere else. In this\ninstance, the scale begins at nine\nand ends at 10.\nBOGART\nFESTIVAL\n\u00C2\u00BBi\nV.\nNOV. 25 - 26\n\"THE BIG\nSLEEP\"\nDirected by Howard Hawks\nAlso starring Lauren Bacall\nSHOWS AT: 7:30-9:30\nNOV. 27-28\n\"ANGELS WITH DIRTY FACES\"\nAlso starring James Cagney, Pat O'Brien\nSHOWS AT: 7:30-9:20\nNOV. 29 - 30\n\"HIGH SIERRA\"\nAlso starring Arthur Kennedy\nCornel Wilde \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Ida Lupino\nSHOWS AT: 7:30-9:20\nDEC. 1-2-3\n\"TO HAVE AND\nHAVE NOT\"\nDirected by Howard Hawks\nAlso starring Lauren Bacall\nHoagy Carmichael\nSHOWS AT: 7:30-9:20\nbnoAdwAy 2\n70 7 W. BROADWAY\n874-1927\n\"The movie everyone is talking about\n'Starwars' \" \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Les Wedman, Sun\nStarring Mark Ha mill, Harrison Ford,\nCarrie Fisher, Peter Cushing and Alec.\nGuinness. '\nSHOWTIMES\n12:15, 2:35, 4:55, 7:15, 9:35.\nSunday 2:35, 4:55, 7:15, 9:35\nVOGUE\n918 GRANVILLE\n685-5434\n^THE NUMBER ONE SONG IN THE GREAT NEW\nYOU LIGHT UP MY LIFE\" MOVIE\n^P\nODEON Shows at\n12:20,2,4,6,8,10\nCAMBIE at 18th\nPARK Shows at 7:30 - 9:30 876-2747\npARli\nodEON\n881 GRANVILLE\n682-7468\nHFNKY SA( [Y\nWINKLER FIELD\nHEROIC\nI CORONET shows at 12:20, 2:50, 5:05,\n\ 7:20,9:30 \t\nOccasional violence \u00E2\u0080\u0094 B.C. Director\nCORONET 1\n851 GRANVILLE\n685-6828\nI\niiilLih\nV\nV\n \u00E2\u0084\u00A2 CRAIG RUSSELL, HOLLIS McLAREN\n^TTKTT3 Warning: Occasional suggestive scenes\n''\"\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\" \"'^ & dialogue. B.C. Dir.\nShowtimes: 12:00, 2:05, 3:50, 5:55, 7:45,\n-9:55. Sunday from 2:05..\nCORONET 2\n851 GRANVILLE\n685-6828\n\"SWEET MOVIE\"\nSHOWS AT: 7:30 - 9:\nFRENCH DIALOGUE\nENGLISH SUB-TITLES\n{JE.\nWarning \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Very suggestive\ndisgusting scenes.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094B.C. Director\nVARSITY\n224-3730\n4375 W. 10th\nANN - MARGARET\nThe story of a young English\nfootman who served the Lady\nBooby but loved the Little Fanny\n\"JOSEPH ANDREWS\" ^ritJ\nWarning \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Some nude and\nsuggestive scenes\u00E2\u0080\u0094B.C. Dir.\nVS\ndtNbAR\nDUNBAR at 30th\n224-7252\nrriday, November 25, 1977\nTHE UBYSSEY\nPage Friday, 7 art\n**?\nt-'i:\nNova show the latest and the greatest of them all\nBy DAVID MORTON\nHow is it possible to remain\nstraight-faced while trying to write\nabout polaroid snapshots of penises\narranged symmetrically to form a\nUnion Jack?\nA Toronto-based art group called\nGeneral Idea makes this an impossible feat with their Sex and\nResponsability show at the Nova\nGallery.\nSure enough, the little peckers\nfashion out the crosses of St.\nGeorge, St. Andrew and St. Patrick\nwith all the royal array and pomp\nthat is the British Empire. The\nvery idea of such a thing could only\nhave come from the mind of some\nshit-kicking Punk Rocker. But is it\nart?\nGeneral Idea, which consists of\nA. A. Bronson, Felix Partz and\nJorge Zontal, is perhaps the best\nknown of the Dada influenced\ngroups in Canada. Their counterparts in Vancouver are the\nWestern Front and Pumps. The\nVancouver groups have become\nknown here for such exploits as the\nMr. Peanut mayoralty campaign\nof 1974, and the outlines of dead\nbodies on the city's streets.\nBy parodying art and society's\nattitudes to art, Dada could be said\nto have stopped art from falling\nover the edge into irrelevance.\nThe Sex and Responsability show\nat the Nova Gallery is one of their\ninterim projects. It consists of\npolaroid snapshots showing different themes and attitudes\ntowards sex today. Each work is a\ngroup of three, six or nine snapshots arranged symmetrically on\ncardboard frames.\nThe best way to approach the\nshow is with a smile. There are\nbound to be a few thick heads who\nwill search the show for profound\nstatements on sex. Well, General\nIdea is also trying to force a re-\nevaluation of art criticism. Thus\nto all pedanucs, Bronson, Partz\nand Zontal reply, Dadadadadada.\nAside from the Union Jack of\npenises are works depicting the\ncliches of sex. One show series of\nshots of a muscle-man lifting\nbarbells with a self-indulgent look\non his face. In the centre of this\nsquare of photographs is a naked\nwoman looking confusedly at the\nviewer as she, too, tries to lift a\nbarbell. She does not belong in that\nposition.\nAnother couple poses nude\nbehind a rubber plant with\nexaggerated pictures of lascivious\ndesire painted on their faces. In\ntwo snapshots on either side of this\none, is a set of curtains ready to\nclose over the scene.\nIn several more works, men and\nwomen are seen in fisticuffs. The\nmen wear boxing gloves, the\nwomen oven mitts.\nBut describing the pictures is\nlike explaining a joke that no one\nunderstands. Go to the show and\nhear it from the horse's mouth. It\ncontinues until Dec. 3, at the Nova\nGallery, 1972 W. Fourth.\nYou can't judge a loudspeaker by its looks.\nYou've got to put it through its paces\u00E2\u0080\u0094challenge it.\nAnd, there's a whole series of exercises you\ncan take a speaker through. But first, it's important to know what you're looking for. The quickest\nDECADE\n26\nJBL's most popular loudspeaker may be the best two-way system\ntHey make. That's what some of the best ears in the business are\nsaying. \"Almost flawless definition.\" \"Unusually fine transient\nresponse.\" Nice things like that. Natural oak cabinet. Fabric grilles in\nblue, brown and orange. Test drive a JBL Decade 26.\nRHODES PRICE\n$170.95\nI # T EACH\nway to find out is to listen to JBL.\nHere's why:\n\"Definition'.' That's a loudspeaker's knack for\ndelivering each part, every part of a whole sound\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094whether the volume's way up or way down.\nJBL has almost perfect definition.\n\"High efficiency.\" Most loudspeakers aren't.\nMost loudspeakers need a big, powerful amplifier to give you a big sound. Not JBL.\nHere are four more reasons to test drive JBL:\nCapitol, MGM, Warner Brothers and Elektra\u00E2\u0080\u0094\npeople who listen to sound for a living. They use\nJBL to record, playback, mix down and master\ntheir music.\nNow that you've got the word, come hear the\nmusic.\nCANADA'S LEADING STEREO CENTRE\n( ll\K(.IA\nBANK FINANCING\n2699 W. BROADWAY\n733-5914\nPage Friday, 8\nTHE UBYSSEY\nFriday, November 25, 1977 creative arts\nAngel Hair\nFrom PF 5\n\"I've given myself to so many,\"\nshe murmured, gazing with what\nshe hoped was a searching look\ninto his worshipful eyes. \"I was so\nlonely and bitter, I just didn't care.\nBut now . . . I've met you . . .\"\nGerry set down his needle and\ncranberries to enfold her in his\narms. \"I know it ain't easy, babe,\"\nhe comforted her. \"I mean, I'm not\nperfect myself, back home I did it\nonce with a girl who wanted to\nbecome a nun.\"\nAgainst Georgia's will his voice\nsoothed her. She had to remind\nherself that it was the ritual, and\nthe ritual only, and that nothing\nwould ever change.\nThey played unorthodox games\nwith the cranberry-and-popcorn\nstrings, and Gerry expressed\ndelight at \"this real kinky stuff\".\nThey slept, they woke, then slept\nagain \u00E2\u0080\u0094 whatever Gerry wanted.\nAfter the champagne there was\nbrandy, and after the brandy\nGeorgia found herself curling her\nbody so that she would fit comfortably against Gerry.\n\"Angel,\" she purred, resting her\nhead in the hollow of his shoulder.\n\"I know you flew down from\nheaven today.\" Then she slept. She\ndeservedsleepthat day. Unlike the\nmen in previous years, Gerry kept\nwaking her up. Georgia marvelled\nat his need of her; thai she realized\nthat she has been waking up too,\neach time, within minutes, ready\nfor him again.\nGerry was hungry late in the\nafternoon, so Georgia ordered up\ntwo Cornish game hens stuffed\nwith wild rice, and two bottles of\nwine. She could eat very little\nthough, so Gerry enjoyed another\nfeast, while she lay back against\nthe pillows, watching the winter\nsunset splash vivid colour across\nthe cold and darkening sky. Time\nwas running out. Christmas Eve\nwould soon be over. Shivering, she\nleft the bed to draw the curtains\nand move around lighting the five\ncandles that she had already\nplaced around the room.\nThere was a sixth, a pale blue\ntaper in an heirloom silver candlestick, beside the bed. Georgia lit\nit and turned, ready for the\nmoment that was the highlight of\nthe year, the moment when she\nrevealed the ritual to the poor\nstranger. Every year she would\ntell the truth, around the time of\nthe sunset. She would tell him how\nhe meant nothing to her, how\npitiful and contemptible he was,\nhow she had only wished to reduce\nhim to the kind of helpless victim\nthat she had been on that night ten\nyears ago. She would savour her\npower as she watched his face\ncrumple, his romantic kingdom\nfall. And then she would caU the\ntwo husky bellhops, who were in\nher pay, and the stranger would be\nevicted from the beautiful hotel by\nthe back exit.\nIt had to happen now. Georgia\nopened her mourn to speak. But he\nwas first. \"Back home we always\ngo to mass on Christinas Eve,\" he\nsaid, smiling. \"The candles . . .\ndarling . . . they remind me, you\nknow, kinda touch my soul.\"\nGeorgia struck a match and held\nit up, illuminating his young face,\nwatchinghow his wonderful golden\nangel hair captured every last ray\nof light in the room, realizing that\nshe couldn't do it this time. The\nburnt-down match scorched her\nfingers, and she dropped it, crying\nin pain, reaching out for Gerry,\ntelling him over and over, as he\nkissed her and stroked her hair,\nhow very dear he was and how\nmuch she loved him.\nShe lay quietly against him for\nseveral minutes. But she knew that\nhe had become the strong one. He\nwas comforting her. She trembled.\nThen, she gathered her forces,\nwrenched herself free of his arms,\nand ran to the door, calling for the\nbellhops to take Gerry away.\nChristmas Eve is always a lonely\ntime for some, and no one felt that\nmore than Georgia. Without the\nritual the day seemed to stretch\nbefore her, blank as a carpet of\nsnow. As soon as night shift was\nover she sat down in a booth near\nthe door, with coffee, toast and\nraspberry jam, spreading the\nnewspaper in front of her.\nA photograph on the entertainment page caught her eye,\nand she looked more closely at it. It\nshowed a rock band in performance, led by a pair of\ndramatically-posed lead singers,\none male, one female, in sequined\nleotards. The caption read:\n\"Vocalists who sway together\napparently stay together. 17-year-\nold Marie Severin has joined\nVancouver's sensational new band,\nAngel, sharing the singing\nspotlight with her young husband,\nGerry St. John.\"\nGeorgia was still staring at the\nphotograph when Martino came\nover to sit with her. He had certainly changed in the coarse of a\nyear, improving his English,\ndeveloping a taste for discos on his\ndays off, and buying a leather\njacket and high suede boots. He too\nsaw the picture.\n\"Hey, Angel! That new song's\nreally fantastic! They're playing\ndowntown for the next two weeks,\nyou know.\"\n\"Martino, why don't we go to see\nthem?\" Georgia asked suddenly.\nHis eyes widened in surppise. \"I\nam delighted to escort you.\" She\nlaughed and draped her arm\naround his neck. \"No, no, I'll pay\nfor the tickets. I want to show my\nsupport for Gerry St. John. He was\nonce a dear friend of mine.\"\nJOE CLARK\nLeader of the Opposition\nwill be speaking\non\nTuesday, November 29\nin the S.U.B. Ballroom\u00E2\u0080\u0094\n12:30 noon\nSponsored by: The UBC P.C's.\nMateus, the Rose wine of Portugal.\nServe snapping cold. With or without all your favorite foods.\nMATEUS. MORE POPULAR THAN EVER.\nMarketed across Canada !Jy Schcnley Wines and Spir.ls Lid\nHarvey is at it again,\nthis time he's taken to punchin' cows.\nIt's a whole new taste treat from the folks\nwho brought you the Harvey Wallbang3r.\nRound up a cow and give it a try.\nThe Harvey Cowpuncha.\nPour 6 ounces of milk over crushed ice.\nStir in Vk ounces of Galliano. Then sit back\nand relax 'till the cows come home.\nEiQuoFtE Galliano\nThe liqueur that made\nHarvey Wallbanger famous.\nFriday, November 25, 1977\nTHE\nUBYSSEY\nPage Friday, Number 9 Page 16\nTHE UBYSSEY\nFriday, November 25, 1977\nwe're the one\nNumber one in selection, quality, service and price. For the best music at better prices, A&B Sound.\nTake care of all your home entertainment needs at one store. A&B Sound, the Home of High-Fidelity.\nTEAC\nTOP-RATED\nCASSETTE DECKS\nU-J_l_.\u00C2\u00A32\u00C2\u00A33-J \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 i. v. r>\nii m m\nA-150\nHigh-end features with a low-end price.\nA-100\nA high performance value.\nA-400\nThe time-tested innovator.\nIndependent dual concentric level controls allow you to\nmix line and mic signals. Dolby noise reduction and\nseparate bias and equalization\nswitches, memory stop, and 4fetf^^^05\ncontrol facilities make the ^^P^^B^^B^^\nA-150 an outstanding value.\n299\nIntroducing the first high\ndeck that everyone can afford\nservo-controlled motor, Dolby\nindividual 2-position bias and\nequalization switches provide\ngreat sound with new tape\nformulations.\nperformance front load cassette\n- the A-100. A DC\nnoise reduction and\n249\n95\nExclusive vertical transport and twin rotary lever control\nsystem. Large VU-type averaging meters complemented\nby a peak reading LED level indicator input and output\nlevel controls, automatic stop, _ ^^ _\nand a tape stop indicator round ^Rk ^B^^^fejS\nout the uniquely designed \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0B\"'*''\nA-400.\n349\n12\" (diagonal) Portable Color\nTV Solid State \"Mini-\nMaintenance\" Chassis. Weighs\nonly 28 lbs. in-line Matrix\nPicture Tube with Additional\nPre-Focus Lens. Low energy\nuse. NOW ONLY!\nRCil\n339\n95\nSolid-state XL-100 reliability in\ndurable plastic cabinet, finished\nin wai nut-grain/Jaguar Brown\nvinyl.\n379\n95\nWe've got them all! 12\" to\n21\" including the NEW\nTWO HOUR\nBETAMAX SL8200 VIDEO\nCASSETTE RECORDER.\nSONY is one of the most\nrespected names in the\nbusiness and this week at A\n& B SOUND they're sale\npriced. Take advantage of\nour great bargains.\nSALE\nPRICED!\nPLUS! WE HAVE ALL NEW HOME VIDEOTAPE RECORDERS IN STOCK!\nUnder-Dash Cassette Player\nQuick-Mount Cassette Stereo-Matrix Player\nA compact under\ndash cassette player\nfeaturing solid\nperformance and\nreliability at a very\ntow price.\nSUPERSCOPE\n49\n95\nUltra-Compact Size \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nSlide-Out Mounting \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nSeparate Volume, Tone\nand Balance Controls \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nLocking Fast-Forward.\n79\n95\nAM/FM Stereo Cassette Deck\nFits in the dash of most\ncars for music on the go.\nThis slot loading player\nfeatures locking fast\nforward and auto-eject.\nonly\n119\n95\nthe home of high-fidelity\n556 SEYMOUR ST. DOWNTOWN THURSDAY S^RIDAY 682-6144"@en . "Newspapers"@en . "Vancouver (B.C.)"@en . "LH3.B7 U4"@en . "LH3_B7_U4_1977_11_25"@en . "10.14288/1.0125998"@en . "English"@en . "Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library"@en . "Vancouver : Alma Mater Society of the University of B.C."@en . "Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy, or otherwise use these images must be obtained from The Ubyssey: http://ubyssey.ca/"@en . "Original Format: University of British Columbia. Archives"@en . "University of British Columbia"@en . "The Ubyssey"@en . "Text"@en . ""@en .