"CONTENTdm"@en . "http://resolve.library.ubc.ca/cgi-bin/catsearch?bid=1211252"@en . "University Publications"@en . "2015-08-27"@en . "1977-11-22"@en . "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/Ubysseynews/items/1.0126515/source.json"@en . "application/pdf"@en . " UBC planning summer jobs for women\nBy LLO YANNE HURD\nUBC is planning a summer job\nplacement program for women\nscience students who intend to\nenter the male-dominated fields of\nfoestry and engineering.\nAssociate forestry dean Antal\nKozak said Monday the university\nhas been discussing the\npossibilities of organized employment for students in forestry\nand engineering for a long lime.\nHe said one of the concerns of the\nfaculties of applied science and\nforestry is that students who want\nto enter these departments cannot\nfind summer employment that\nrelates to these fields and as a\nresult cannot assess their\neducational goals adequately.\nAssociate applied sciences dean\nAxel Meison, dean of women\nMargaret Fulton and Kozak have\nworked out a pilot program\ndesigned to operate for three\nyears.\nThe program, designed for\nwomen, will also include men if at\ntheend of three years it has proven\nto be effective.\n\"We wanted to know how to get\nthe summer employment program\nstarted and this is a good way,\"\nKozak said.\nCheryl Bond, chairwoman of the\nco-operative education coordinating committee, said Monday\nthe program is badly needed.\n\"Women need these opportunities and encouragement but\nwe really want to avoid reverse\ndiscrimination,\" she said.\n\"Co-operative education is a\nprogram offered throughout\nCanada but ours is the only one in\nCanada designated for women.\"\nIn an effort to insure the\nprogram would not be seen as\ndiscriminating against men,\nFulton sought the approval of the\nHuman Rights Branch.\nKathleen Ruff, director of the\nhuman rights branch, said in a\nletter to Fulton: \"as the proposed\nprogram will promote the welfare\nof a previously disadvantaged\ngroup, the human rights commission grants exemption under\nI Vol. LX, No. 29 VANCOUVER, B.C., TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1977\n228-2301 J\nsection 11(5) of the Human Rights\nCode.\"\nSection 11(5) of the Human\nRights Code states: \"The commission may approve programs of\ngovernment, private\norganizations, or persons designed\nto promote the welfare of any class\nof individuals and any approved\nprogram shall be deemed not to be\nin contravention of any of the\nprovisions of this Act.\"\nStudents are eligible for the\nprogram if they meet the academic\nrequirements for the departments\nof forestry and engineering, said\nBond.\nAll women in science will be\nreceiving a letter specifying the\nrequirements for the program so\nthey can apply this year or assess\nSee page 8: WOMEN\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0. -. ... * i^^^^^fe^^'i>\u00C2\u00AB's1i*-^5iU\nW\nV*\nPedro Vuskovic\nspeaks in SUB\nAided by the CIA and multinational corporation, the military\noverthrew Chile's democratically\nelected government of Salvador\nAllende and established a fascist\ndictatorship. Now investment is\nflowing back in.\nPedro Vuskovic, Chile's finance\nminister under Allende, and a\nfamous economist, will speak in\nHot flashes\nSUB 207-209 Thursday at noon\nabout third world economics and\nmultinational investment in Chile.\nVuskovic is sponsored by the\nVancouver Chilean Association.\nKenny to blab\nUBC is again facing the threat\nof financial cutbacks from the\nSocred regime in Victoria.\nThe Alma Mater Society is\nsponsoring a series of meetings to\ndiscuss the issue.\nAdministration president Doug\nKenny will be speaking on cutbacks this Thursday at noon in\nthe SUB conversation pit.\nIH Films\nInternational House is sponsoring a noon hour film series on\npopulation and urban planning\nWednesdays and Fridays for the\nnext two weeks.\nWednesday the film Habitat\nRevisited will be shown in the\nInternational House upper lounge.\n-i\u00C2\u00BB>'<:--' ,\u00E2\u0096\u00A0*,\u00C2\u00AB ^ \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 -f't >-\nTween classes\nTODAY\nCHINESE CHRISTIAN\nFELLOWSHIP\nBible study, noon, SUB 213.\nCHARISMATIC CHRISTIAN\nFELLOWSHIP\nWeekly student fellowship, noon,\nSUB 205.\nNURSING UNDERGRADUATE\nSOCIETY\nSpeech by Hugette LaBelle from\nIndian and Northern Affairs department on Political Roles at National\nand Community Levels, 2:30 to\n4:30 p.m., IRC 2.\nGAY PEOPLE\nHarry's birthday extravaganza,\nnoon, SUB 212.\nCHRISTIAN SCIENCE\nORGANIZATION\nTestimony meeting, noon, SUB\n212A.\nNEWMAN CLUB\nGeneral meeting, noon, SUB 211.\nWEDNESDAY\nVARSITY OUTDOOR CLUB\nGeneral meeting and slide show,\nnoon, Chem 250.\nSAILING CLUB\nVolleyball team practice, 8 p.m.,\nGYm A. General meeting, noon,\nSUB party room.\nPSYCHOLOGY STUDENTS'\nASSOCIATION\nBzzr night, 6 to 10 p.m., SUB 212.\nINTERNATIONAL HOUSE\nNoon hour film series Habitat\nRevisited, noon, International\nHouse upper lounge.\nTHURSDAY\nAMS CUTBACKS COMMITTEE\nOrganizational meeting, noon, SUB\n230.\nCHINESE CHRISTIAN\nFELLOWSHIP\nJenny Wong gives speech entitled\nSix Weeks in L'abrl, noon, SUB\n205.\nBUCK & LEE\nTUX SHOP\nNOW AT\nIT 10 SEYMOUR ST.\n688-2481\nCHARISMATIC CHRISTIAN\nFELLOWSHIP\nMeeting, 7:30 p.m., Lutheran Campus Centre lounge.\nHOMOSOC\nHomophlle drop-In, noon, SUB 211.\nPRE-DENTAL SOCIETY\nTour of UBC dental school, meet at\nreception area near south entrance,\nnoon, MacDonald Building.\nUBC LIBERALS\nGeneral meeting, noon, SUB 212A.\nISLAMIC YOUTH SOCIETY\nGeneral meeting, noon, SUB 117.\nTYNEHEAD CLUB\nFilm and meeting to plan field trip,\nnoon, Bio 2361.\nNOTICE OF ELECTION\nStudent Representatives to serve on the Board of\nGovernors and the Senate.\nThis notice is a call for nominations for full-time students to run\nfor election for the following positions:\nBOARD OF GOVERNORS - TWO students\nSENATE - SEVENTEEN students (five\nat-large and one from each faculty)\nNomination forms giving full details of the requirements of\nnomination are available in the Registrar's Office, the A.M.S.\nOffice (Room 266 S.U.B.) and in the offices of the Student\nUndergraduate Societies and the Graduate Student Association.\nNominations must be in the hands of the Registrar no later than\n4:00 p.m. on Tuesday, December 20, 1977.\nLOST AND\nFOUND SALE\nTHURSDAY\nNOVEMBER 24th\nSUB 21C\nUpstairs\n11:00 a.m. - 2:00 p.m.\nJEWISH ROOTS\nWHAT ARE THEY?\nWHAT DO THEY\nMEAN TO ME?\nAN OPPORTUNITY TO DISCUSS AND DELVE INTO THIS AND\nOTHER TOPICS AT A\nWEEKEND RETREAT\nIN A BEAUTIFUL AND NATURAL SETTING OF CAMP\nSOLOMON SHECHTER. ON NOVEMBER 25-26-27. FOR MORE\nINFORMATION CALL 324-2400. ASK FOR CHANNA OR\nYAKQV.\nTHE UNIVERSITY OF BRITISH COLUMBIA\n1977 FALL LECTURES\nBY VISITING PROFESSORS\nRobert Rosenblum\nRobert Rosenblum is one of the foremost art historians in North America and widely\nrespected for,his work on art of the modern period. He is currently professor of fine art at\nthe Institute of Fine Arts, New York University, and is the author of several standard art\ntexts. He will present a series of lectures on Picasso.\nLES DEMOISELLES D'AVIGNON\nWednesday, November 23\nCUBISM AS POP ART\nThursday, November 24\nPICASSO'S GUERNICA\nGIRL BEFORE A MIRROR\nFriday, November 25\nIn Room 106, Buchanan Building, at 12:30 p.m.\nALL LECTURES ARE FREE\nsponsored by\nThe Cecil Hand Ida Green Visiting Professorship Fund\nti HONG KONG CHINESE FOOD t\n^;ft-\u00C2\u00BB 5732 UNIVERSITY BLVD. \u00C2\u00AB*\nf OPEN FOR LUNCH $.\n'I* Phone 224-6121 Eat in & Take out lb\naj\"\na\nn Candia Taverna\nSPECIALIZING IN\n228-9512 TpET\" 228-9513\na\no\na\na\nI\n^^r^r~jT^i^.-ir=ir=ir=ir=i\\nI\nSISSSISISSSISISISISJSlSS^BISISISSSI'JSISJSISISJSI\nUBC Sailing Club Broombaii Game\nWINTER SPORTS CENTER\nFriday Nov. 25\nGame 8:00 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 10:15\nParty 6:30 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 9:00\nCURLING CLUB LOUNGE\nMEMBERS AND GUESTS WELCOME\nADMISSION FREE\nesistance in Chile\nSpeaking and Fund Raising Tour\nAcross Canada fay A Representative\nof the PEOPLE'S FRON^ OF CHILE\nNovember 23, 12:30 p.m. November 26, 8:00 p.m.\nRoom 205, Student Onion Building Ironworkers' Hall\nOniversity of B.C. Eighth and Columbia\nTHE CLASSIFIEDS\nRATES: Campus - 3 lines, 1 day $1.50; additional lines 35c.\nCommercial - 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 Office, Room 241, S.U.B., UBC, Van., B.C. V6T UV5\n5 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Coming Events\n65 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Scandals\nJOIN AN ACTION ORIENTED environ-\nmental club. Earthforce campus memberships available daily in SUB,\nground floor.\nPREPARE YOURSELF for the Arts\nChristmas Soiree extraordinaire on\nDec. 2 SUB Ballroom. Max. capacity\nonly 400, so get your tickets early\nfrom AUS. Cheap. Sorry/ no pizza\nthis time.\n10 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 For Sale \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Commercial\n11 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 For Sale \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Private\nCOMBINATION BELL AND HOWELL\nportable cassette tape recorder and\nrecord player. Ideal for music or\nelementary education. $85.00. Negotiable. 733-0152.\nORGANICALLY GROWN unsprayed\nOkanagan fruit in season. 25c per\npound by the case. 738-8828 or 733-\n1677 eves.\nA BLAST FROM YOUR PAST! Subfilms\npresents a Special Double Bill!\n\"Woodstock and ''Jimi Hendrix\".\nGIRLS! The man of your dreams is\nGoodtime Eddy \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Forestry IV. Can\nbe recognized by shifty expression\nand lecherous grin.\n80 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Tutoring\n85 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Typing\nAMBASSADOR '47. One owner, 51,350\nmiles, V8, P.S., P.B., 2-Door. Good\ncondition. Snows on rims. Any reasonable offer accepted. 261-7831.\nFAST, EFFICIENT TYPING near 41\u00C2\u00BBt\nand Marine. 266-5053.\nEXCELLENT TYPING. Reasonable\nrates. Call 731-1807, 12 noon to 9 p.m.\nFOR ACCURATE TYPING on an IBM\nSelectric, caU 986-2577. Rush work\naccepted. Vancouver pick-up. Reasonable.\nEXPERT TYPIST \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Essays, Seminar\nPapers and Thesis $.75 per page.\n274-3010.\nKING SIZE maroon bedspread and\nelectric blanket. 732-7101 evenings.\n20 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Housing\nROOM AVAILABLE immed. in co-op\nhouse Arbutus and 13th. $96 plus\nutilities. 732-0567.\n25 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Instruction\nSPANISH CLASSES. Beginners and\nadvanced. Contact Bertha 738-3895.\nPIANO LESSONS by experienced teacher. Graduate of Juilliard School of\nMusic. Both beginners and advanced\nstudents welcome. 731-0601.\nFAST ACCURATE TYPIST will do typing at home. Standard rate. Please\nphone after 3:00 p.m. 263-0286.\n90 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Wanted\n99 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Miscellaneous\nSKI WHISTLER\nRent cabin day/week. 732-0174 eves.\n35 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Lost\nGOLD HEART near library pond on\nNov. 17. Please phone Marlene\n224-0403.\n50 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Rentals\nARTS UNDERGRAD SOCIETY RENTS!\n5 year T-shirt leases, only $2.00, optional renewal. New model, 'Think\nArts' $4.00. Compact, Intermediate\nand Fullsizes available. Slip into an\nArts T-shirt! Buchanan Lunch times.\nWHITLATHE WALRUS. New poems bj\nlocal author at U.B.C. Bookstore.\nUSE\nUBYSSEY\nCLASSIFIED\nTO SELL - BUY\nINFORM\n^r=Jr=^r=^r=Jr=Jr=Jr==Jr=Jr. Tuesday, November 22, 1977\nTHE UBYSSEY\nPage 3\n'Press misunderstands China7\nBy KATHY FORD\nThe Western press has misinterpreted the current attempt by\nChinese Communist party leaders\nto speed up industrialization in the\nPeople's Republic, author Han\nSuyin said Sunday.\nHan, speaking to a near-capacity\ncrowd of 2,500 at the Orpheum\nTheatre, said western journalists\nare condemning the increasing industrialization of China as\n\"deMaoification.\"\n\"I am perturbed and surprised\nthat these things that were being\ndone (in China since chairman\nMae Tse-tung's death) are being\nlooked on as introduced by prag-\nmatist leaders .. . and as a\nsymptom of deMaoification,\" Han\nsaid.\n\"Mao advocated an industrialized, socialist, strong,\nmodern, prosperous China.\n\"I am amazed what the western\nnewspapers write today. It is as if\nthere was contradiction, as if the\nrevolution was made to stop productivity. As if socialism should\ncause poverty.\"\nHan said that only people who\nhavenot read Mao's writings could\nsay increasing productivity in\nChina is against the chairman's\nphilosophies.\n\"He wrote it (socialism) should\nliberate productivity,\" she said.\n\"There is a great coherence (in\nMao's teachings) . . . throughout\nthese years.\"\nShe said some people think the\nonly way to have progress and development is the capitalist way.\n\"Is that true? That is not true. It\nis not true.\"\nShe said people falsely argue\nthat increasing a Chinese worker's\nsalary is capitalistic.\n\"There is nothing wrong with it.\nMao said the standard of living\nshould increase year by year. Is it\nsocialism's aim to create poverty?\n\"Not at all. It's the exact opposite.\"\nShe said one of the aims of the\nrevolution is to stimulate the\neconomy and to create \"wealth in\nabundance.\"\n\"Communism can only come\nonce there is an abundance and\nsurplus of material goods.\"\nShe said the drive toward this\ngoal in China is not capitalist,\nrevisionist, or \"deMaoificating,\"\ndespite what the press may say.\n\"China is in a new phase in which\nsocialism will be consolidated.\"\nHan disagrees with journalists\nwho say the cultural revolution is\nbeing abandoned.\n\"Once they (the press) get ahold\nof \"the wrong ideas they are\nreported and reported until they\nbecome like the Bible,\" she said.\n\"It was only possible to get rid of\nthe Gang of Four because of the\ncultural revolution. It (the\nrevolution) had its good and bad\nsides.\n\"The Chinese revolution is not a\nnice little tea party. It has not been\neasy.\"\nKin spoke at length about the\nhistory of the revolution and about\nthe doings of the Gang of Four. She\nsaid most of the bad things that\ntook place as a result of the\ncultural revolution were caused by\nthe gang.\nShe said power corrupted the\ngang, which included Mao's wife\nChiang Ching, to the point where\nthe cultural revolution was no\nlonger a way for them to serve the\nChinese people but a way to take\npower \"and they quickly became\nrotten.\"\nAlthough Chiang denounced\nviolence in her public speeches,\nHan said, she secretly fueled it.\n\"This went against what Mao\nsaid,\" Han said, adding that Mao\nadvocated revolution through\ndebate, not violence.\nThe gang increased its activities\nin 1973, she said. Mao began to\nhave attacks of sclerosis of the\narteries of the brain in that year\nand his premier, Chou En-lai, was\nalso ill.\nHan said that of the 19 members\nof the politburo, the governing\nbody of the Communist Party in\nChina, only two could resist the\ngang. Six members were from the\nprovinces and thus were not in\nPeking often enough to see what\nwas going on.\nFive of the remaining 13\nmembers were sick or old, the\ngang acted as a bloc and two of the\nremaining four were afraid of the\ngang.\n\"Now was the time (for the\ngang) to take power,\" Han said.\nThe gang began denouncing\npeople who made the slightest\nmistakes. Han said it reached the\npoint where they were calling all\npeopleover the ageof 45 capitalists\nbecause they were alive before the\nrevolution.\n\"This was with the exception of\nthe Gang of Four, although they\nwere well over 45,\" she said.\nWhat concerned her, Han said,\nwas the fact the gang was\ncorrupting the youth. She said\ncentres were set up where young\npeople were turned into what she\ncalled hooligans.\n\"Is that revolution? Is that the\nway to make revolution? Is that\nwhat is admirable?\n\"How can anyone call that kind\nof thing building a socialist\ncountry?\"\nShe accused the gang of taking\nover the railway system at the\ntime of the earthquake in China in\nJuly, 1976. She said it caused\nshortages everywhere except in\nShanghai.\nHan also accused it of stopping\nwork in the factories.\nAlthough the gang is now\npowerless, Han said she is still\nconcerned about the young people\nwho were influenced by its\nphilosophies of revolution.\n\"Now there is reconstruction,\"\nshe said.\nStudent groups\ncome together\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094matt king photo\nTAKING BREAK between classes, member of Me generation relaxes\nwith copy of Us magazine, schlocky rag devoted to personality cult.\nStudent perches on edge of giant tree pots above Sedgewick library.\nGov't may reduce tax info rules\nBy CHRIS BOCKING\nThe Association of Student\nCouncils has finally become affiliated with the National Union of\nStudents, ending a seven-year\ndivision between the two\norganizations.\nAlina Mater Society president\nJohn DeMarco said one advantage\nof the affiliation is that the two\norganizations could help each\nother financially.\n\"Since AOSC and NUS have\ndifferent cash flow problems,\nmerging the two would allow them\nto help each other during the\nyear,\" he said.\nAnother benefit of the merger\nwould be the improvement in\nvisibility of both NUS and the\nOTTAWA (CUP) \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Responding to student opposition to aid regulations requiring release of personal income tax information, finance minister Jean\nChretien has said a less sweeping tax waiver may be\ninstituted in 1978-79.\nChretien said in a Nov. 15 letter to the National\nUnionof Students: \"we are hopeful that for 1978-79 a\nwaiver less broad than the current one will be incorporated.\n'\"Ihe current wording is broad because, at present,\nit is not administratively possible for the department\nof national revenue to provide selective data.\n\"We are continuing discussions with that department with a view to establishing a system under\nwhich only selected information will be provided to\nprovincial authorities.\"\nChretien's letter follows a Nov. 8 letter to NUS from\nrevenue minister Joseph Guay, in which Guay said he\nagreed with NUS that the general access waiver now\nused \"merits very serious consideration regarding\nthe potential for disclosure of irrelevant information.\"\nGuay had also said he would forward his letter to\nChretien to stress his view that maintaining the\nconfidentiality of income tax data is critical.\nNUS executive-secretary Dan O'Connor said\nChretien's letter indicates the federal government is\nbacking down on the controversial waiver question\nwhile trying to save face.\nNUS and the federal NDP have urged students not\nto sign the tax waivers, which they have labelled a\n\"massive invasion of tax privacy.\"\nStudents in six provinces are required to submit\nincome tax forms or sign a waiver which allows aid\nofficials to examine their tax returns and those of\ntheir parents.\nThe system was introduced after some provincial\neducation ministers and the representative of the\nfederal student loan program claimed the loan\nsystem was being abused.\nProponents of the waiver system have said\npreviously thereis no alternative to the broad waiver.\nBut Nova Scotia and Alberta have said they can be\navoided by requesting notarized statements or\nsubmitting financial data to the department of\nnational revenue for verification.\nAOSC to students, said DeMarco.\n\"As a result of this affiliation\nAOSC would be able to take advantage of the NUS's better\ncommunication channels.\"\nThe AOSC and NUS were formed\nafter the breakup of the Canadian\nUnion of Students in 1970.\nThe AOSC was formed to provide\nservices such as its travel service\nto university students.\nNUS is a more political\norganization aimed at unifying\npost-secondary students into a\nsingle body.\nTo become a member of NUS an\ninstitution must pass a referendum\napproving a $1 fee levy for each\nstudent.\nThe proposal to merge the two\norganizations was first proposed at\nthe NUS conference last May.\nNUS was reluctant to join at first\nbecause AOSC operated at a deficit\nfor two years. But when it was\nlearned that AOSC would have a\nprofit of $30,000 for 1977-78, opposition to the merger faded.\nDeMarco said a disadvantage of\nthe plan is that if an institution\nwants to join AOSC it must also\njoin NUS which charges a fee of $1\nper student.\nBut he said this is not a serious\nproblem.\n\"Most institutions in Canada who\nwould want to join either\norganization have already done\nso.\"\nThere are currently 24 student\norganizations which are members\nof both the AOSC and NUS.\nAOSC has 50 member institutions\nbut NUS has only 35.\n\"The benefits of merging AOSC\nand NUS far outweight the disadvantages,\" DeMarco said.\nHAN . . . criticizes press\nKenny says\nUBC is on\n'knife edge'\nFrom page 1\nby two recent scandals involving\nfaculty members.\n\"I base that on people I talk to in\nthe community. One or two\nblemishes don't cause most\nthinking people to generalize,\"\nabout faculty members, he said.\nIn September applied sciences\ndean Liam Finn resigned after\ndrawing criticism when it was\nreported that he made large\namounts of money from off-\ncampus jobs while being paid for\nfull-time work by UBC.\nThe administration suspended\nanimal resource ecology professor\nJulius Kane for three months this\nsummer following allegations that\nhe used university computers to\nkeep track of his real estate\nbusiness and to store a novel he\nwas writing.\nKenny denied charges that the\nadministration moved too slowly in\ndealing with the incidents. The\nFinn case was detailed in the press\nin February but Finn did not resign\nuntil September.\n\"Due process has to be shown in\nan institution. Then you proceed\nwith due haste and due caution,\"\nKenny said.\nCautious hacks\nsneaking after\nboard positions\nFrom page 1\nso that we have a mandate to show\nMcGeer,\" Peters said.\n\"It is also important that the\nstudents elected are responsible,\"\nhe added.\nYoung Socialist spokeswoman\nJoanne Clifton said as many\ncandidates as possible will be\nfielded from their group.\nArts undergraduate society\npresident Fran Watters, a\nmember of the women's committee, said the committee will\nfield a female candidate for the\nboard election.\nShe said the committee will\nactively support candidates who\nhave women's rights as part of\ntheir platforms.\nSihota said his chances of winning the election for chancellor\nagainst J. V. Clyne are not good.\n\"This is a tongue-in-cheek\nsituation because my chances of\nwinning are a billion to one,\"\nSihota said.\nSihota said he will run on the\nplatform of stressing a strong\nhumanities program at UBC,\npromoting new facilities for\nrehabilitation medicine students\nand improved government funding.\nHe said his experience on the\nboard, familiarity with the\nuniversity and frequent dealings\nwith the government are his\nassets. Page 4\nTHE U BYSSEY\nTuesday, November 22, 1977\nSPRFAu THE\n\s\nh^G\nUHA.T t*\u00C2\u00BB VW TH '/\n. hiS Kowoo*. *\n^ M AZottCD\n^W\nTime to finish\nS. Africa stake\nThe other day we blasted the student representative\nassembly for being unable to take a stand on anything. Today\nwe give the SRA an opportunity to end this year's dismal\nrecord.\nThe Alma Mater Society, like other student groups across\nCanada, is being challenged to pull their money out of banks\nthat invest in South Africa, such as the Bank of Montreal,\nand put the money into credit unions or banks which don't\nhave a stake in apartheid, such as the Bank of Nova Scotia or\nthe Bank of B.C.\nThe National Union of Students recently passed a motion\ncalling for its members to pull their money out of the B of M,\nthe Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce, the Royal Rank\nand the Toronto Dominion Bank. The University of\nManitoba student union is currently considering such an\naction.\nAfter an earlier editorial, Stuart Clark of the R of M's SUB\nbranch tried to rationalize the South African investments on\nthe grounds that exploitation occurs everywhere. Replies in\nlast week's letter's pages showed that the B of M's arguments\ndon't stand up.\nIt may be a bit awkward, but the closure of large accounts\nlike the AMS's would force the B of M and its cohorts to\nreconsider its stake in poverty, bloodshed, death and\ndictatorship in South Africa.\nIt's poster time\nWe noticed that the UBC Progressive Conservatives are\nheavily advertising the upcoming visit of their federal leader,\nJoe Clark. At the same time, the UBC Liberals are advertising\ntheir upcoming presentation of movies by Monty Python's\nFlying Circus.\nWe couldn't sum up today's political situation better if we\ntried.\nTHE UBYSSEY\nNOVEMBER 22, 1977\nPublished Tuesdays, Thursdays and Fridays throughout the\nuniversity year by the Alma Mater Society of the University of\nB.C. Editorial opinions are those of the staff and not of the AMS\nor the university administration. Member, Canadian University\nPress. The Ubyssey publishes Page Friday, a weekly commentary\nand review. The Ubyssey's editorial office is in room 241K of the\nStudent Union Building. Editorial departments, 228-2301;\nAdvertising, 228-3977.\nEditor: Chris Gainor\nCarl Vesterback entered the office, not realizing he was forced there by a\nmood-alterlnc drug In his graham sandwich. Richard Schrelner, heavily\ndependent on a powerful depressant hidden In his coffee cream, was In the\nsame boat. So much for the lucky ones. Brad Felton and Tom Barnes were\nsent there by transmitters planted deep In their skulls, and Jan Nicol, Chris\nBocking and Mike Jones, who thought they were only fleshing out Mike\nBooking's story list, were unaware that post-hypnotic suggestion made them\nfeel so warm and toasty. Steve Howard and Lloyanne Hurd were test-tube\nproducts, while Kathy Ford and Gray Kyles were exposed to near-fatal\nradiation doses during reimplantation of their fetuses. The father of Heather\nConn and Craij Heaie was a Manhattan sperm bank and BUI Tieleman and\nMarcus Gee were unpredictable because of the extra chromosome. Geoff\nWheelwright, Matt King, Dave Morton and Chris Gainor all had red dye\npoisoning and, consequently, no balance. What a bad dream. I always eat too\nmany pills on Monday nights. . . .\nLetters\nCSA answers Taiwan charges\nRe: Stop the fence-sitting letter on Friday.\"The\npolitical ambivalence toward China and Taiwan of\nChinese students \u00E2\u0080\u0094 particularly those from Hong\nKong \u00E2\u0080\u0094 often hidden behind claims of 'ethnic,\nhistorical and cultural times' reflects a materialist\ninsecurity.\"\nThis sta tement by Anne Yee reflects a growing lack\nof understanding and misconceived dissatisfaction\namong many people.\nThe flaw in this generalization can perhaps be\nillustrated in thefollowing parallelism: \"the culinary\npreference to rice of the Chinese students \u00E2\u0080\u0094 particularly those from Hong Kong \u00E2\u0080\u0094 often hidden\nbehind claims of 'ethnical, historical and cultural\ntimes' reflects a materialistic insecurity towards\nsteaks, escargots, etc.\"\nThe flaw in my paraUelism is apparent: many\npeople in this world prefer rice to steaks (such as\nMoslems) and escargots (such as anybody who\ndoesn't enjoy French cuisine), but not because they\nare \"Chinese students \u00E2\u0080\u0094 particularly those from\nHong Kong.\"\nTo bring back the point: many people are\nmaterialistically insecure, but Hong Kong students\nare definitely not the only culprits. Most students who\nare self-supporting are somewhat materialistically\ninsecure; to extend this point further, the average\nCanadian can also feel the pinch of materialistic\ninsecurity.\nThe truth is, Hong Kong students feel insecure\nbecause they are new in Canada. Similarly, immigrants from other countries and immigrants from\nother provinces would also feel insecure.\nIn short, new immigrants are materialistically\ninsecure not because of where they are from, but\nbecause of where they are at.\n\"Chinese students are unwilling to accept the\nreality of China.\" Another sweeping generalization,\nand it just happens to be untrue.\nThe executive of the Chinese Students Association\nis fully aware of the reality of China (by the way, the\nterm \"third-world\" is, I think, downgrading).\nNevertheless, we are also fully aware of the reality of\nTaiwan, with its millions of people of Chinese origin,\ngoverned by a political party that claims to be the\nrightful government of China.\nThe fact: there has been and are two major\npolitical parties in China, the Communist Party and\nthe Kuomintang; they formed their own respective\ngovernments. One is active in the geographical China\nusing the name \"People's Republic of China;\" the\nother chose the name \"Republic of China.\"\nBoth consider Taiwan as a province; both accept\nonly one China. For us to ignore either Taiwan or\nChina is a mistake of narrow-minded arrogance. If a\nstudent wants to find out more of the reality, and\nperhaps choose a linkage reflecting his own personal\nideal, he should examine this conflict objectively\nthrough information directly from the sources of\nconflict (which is what CSA is trying to provide) and\nthrough personal observations (which is what the\nindividual would do for oneself).\nCSA does not and cannot choose political\ncomradeships for the individual.\n\"Student funds should not subsidize Taiwanese\nfilms.\" This is a totally false accusation.\nThe executive committee of CSA has never used\nstudent funds to subsidize Taiwanese films. In fact,\nwhat the movie patrons have paid for goes toward the\nrental fee of the projection booth in the auditorium\nand the service charges of the projectionist. We have\nnever paid any monies toward films originating from\neither Taiwan or China.\n\"CSA's claims that it tries to promote a 'Chinese-\nCanadian culture' are hollow indeed.\" This point is a\nmatter of opinion of some individuals.\nIf they consider only those people who are born in\nCanada as the rightful owners of the title Chinese\nCanadians, then they are frightfully hollow indeed;\nthe culture that accounts for the backgrounds of the\nnew Chinese Canadians is as valid as any other integral parts of the Chinese Canadian culture.\nNevertheless, we are aware of the need to know\nmore about the past and present of the Chinese in\nCanada. Consequently, in our Chinese festival '77, we\npresented China's influence on Chinese Canadians\nand stereotyping: misunderstanding China, a talk by\nBing Thom. Also, we intend to further promote all\nfacets of Chinese Canadian culture.\nThe lecture series we ran last year will be repeated\nin the spring term. We also welcome ideas and topics;\nmost of all, we welcome people with ideas to come\nforth and devote his/her time toward the community\nof Chinese Canadians on campus. Our Chinese\nFestival '77 should prove ourself not to be an instrument of any governments.\nWhy should there be any cloak-and-dagger interactions between Chinese Canadians that are born\nhere, there or anywhere?\nAllan Li\npresident, CSA\nWilliams changes pro-gay stance\nThe article on the front page of\nthe Nov. 4 Ubyssey entitled God\nloves homosexuals, too, was a\nfairly accurate account of the\ngreater part of Don Williams'\nlecture in Hebb Theatre the\nprevious day. It would appear,\nhowever, that the reporter was\nunable sit through the entire lecture and the question period\nfollowing, for if she had, or attended the Friday night lecture as I\nhad also done, she would have left\nwith an entirely different picture of\nthe reverend's attitude.\nIn an abrupt change of tone from\nthe earlier part of the lecture,\nWilliams baldly asserted, to the\nshock of many, that homosexuals\ncan and should be cured. He\nconfidently assured us that\nhomosexuality finds its origins in\nwhat is less than desirable and that\nit was not part of God's plan. Once\na homosexual had accepted Christ\nand beenborn again, he should also\nstrive to become a heterosexual.\nWilliams attempted to refute the\nprevalent opinions of the gay\ncommunity and the psychiatric\nand psychological professions that\nhomosexuality is not an illness,\nand that in most cases working for\na change of sexual orientation is\nless practical and desirable than\nhelping the homosexual accept his\nsexual orientation.\nAs his proof that homosexuality\nis curable, Williams cited an unpublished study he said he was told\nof personally by Masters of\nMasters and Johnson who claimed\nan 80 per cent rate of change after\njust two weeks of therapy.\nAll the participants were\nmarried homosexuals with the\nsupport of their partners and,\naccording to Williams had \"a deep\ndesire and commitment to\nchange.\" Obviously such unverified therapy, conducted on a\nlimited group of individuals as\nconfused and under pressure\nregarding their sexual orientation\nas these \"married homosexuals\"\nwere is of dubious value.\nHoweffective and permanent the\n\"cure\" was, and how happy those\n\"cured\" are, is also open to\nquestion. As it now stands there is\nabsolutely no evidence that there is\na sure-fire \"cure\" for\nhomosexuality, any more than\nthere is a \"cure\" for\nheterosexuality, or that such\n\"cures\" are desirable.\nDon Williams' message to the\nhomosexuals was that \"you don't\nhave to spend the rest of your life\ntrapped and frustrated.\"\nMy answer to you, Don Williams,\nis that I am a very happy and\nsatisfied gay Christian and feel\npity for you that you view me as\nsuch a threat and feel so uncomfortable with your\nhomophobia.\nWilliams would have us believe\nthat the whole merry issue of\nhomosexuality had been forced on\nthe church by the strident voices of\ngay liberation and militant gay\nChristians. The truth is, it is not\ngays who are making the issue, but\nself-righteous straight Christians\nwho refuse to acknowledge that\n\"God is no respecter of persons,\nbut in every nation he that feareth\nhim, and worketh righteousness, is\naccepted with him.\"\nIn dealing with the church's\nresponse to homosexuals, Williams\ndeclared that the church should not\ntolerate homosexuality and\nrecognize that the work of the Holy\nSpirit and the believing community\nis the greatest agent of change (of\nhomosexual orientation).\nIn revealing a narrow-minded,\nself-righteous attitude at the end of\nhis lecture he denied the sincerity\nof his earlier, liberal-sounding\nassertions that God loves\nhomosexuals as much as he does\nheterosexuals and \"homosexuals\nwere made in the image of God;\nJesus Christ came for\nhomosexuals, etc.'^\nAs one gay in Friday's audience\ntold Williams, he did not feel any\nlove for him in what Williams said\nand felt only alienation. I agree.\nThe sympathy and support\nWilliams is touting is not true\nChristian love and brotherliness\nwhen it has the underlying ulterior\nmotive of pressing for a change in\nsexual orientation and cannot\naccept an individual as he is and\nseeGod'smancreatedinhis image\nand likeness.\nWilliam's attitudes, if generally\nadopted by the Christian community, will only deepen the\ngrowing rift between gays and\ntheir churches \u00E2\u0080\u0094 a separation that\nwill be a bitter loss for both sides.\nI hope and pray to God that Don\nWilliams and others who hold his\nviews may be healed of the\nhomophobia he admonishes other\nChristians to repent of.\nRob Hughes\nDeja\nvu\nJust a note of acknowledgment\nfor your front-page coverage of our\ncosmic representative in your Nov.\n10 issue. Captain Zeron sends you\nhis compliments.\nFor my part I was rather intrigued by your observation that\nCITR actually has two regular\nlisteners. This admission is quite a\nleap forward in negotiations\nbetween our station and your\npublication. Two years ago The\nUbyssey would not have admitted\nthat we had any listeners at all.\nI was further interested to find\nthat one of our listeners according\nto your sources is a deaf residence\nattendent. Truly, if CITR is\ncapable of actually reaching the\nears of the deaf this is a milestone\nin communication, especially since\nthere is no record so far of a blind\nperson being able to read The\nUbyssey.\nRoger Ward\npresident, CITR Tuesday, November 22, 1977\nTHE UBYSSEY\nPage 5\nResistance to Chile junta grows\nBy DAVID FULLER\nSince the fascist coup in Chile in\n1973, we have heard quite a lot\nabout the political prisoners,\ntortures, and steadily worsening\nconditions of the Chilean people\nunder the brutal Pinochet regime\nestablished by the U.S. imperialists.\nHowever, very little has been\nsaid in the Canadian media about\nthe steadily growing, organized\nresistance to the fascist regime by\nthe Chilean people.\nThere are many examples of the\nresistance of the Chilean people,\nboth spontaneous, and more and\nmore, organized by the People's\nFront of Chile. The spontaneous\nstruggles have always had very\ndefinite objectives or reforms\nbehind them \u00E2\u0080\u0094 for instance\nstruggles for more water in\nvarious districts, refusal to pay\nelectrical bills, etc.\nSome of these have taken on a\nmore direct political character \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nsuch as the fight for the liberation\nof political prisoners, \"missing\"\nprisoners, instances where 300 to\n400 youths signed a declaration\ndemanding liberty and democracy.\nWomen have played a prominent\nrole in such struggles, in a hunger\nstrike to liberate political\nprisoners, demonstrations in the\nchurches, in the courts and in the\nstreets.\nThe more organized resistance\nstruggles include strikes of the coal\nworkers and of the steel workers,\nfor example.\nBut it is organization which is the\nweakness in Chile \u00E2\u0080\u0094 and it is this\nquestion which the people's front is\nslowly resolving. The orientation of\nthe people's front is to gradually\nenhance the level of combativeness\nof the people in order to finally\narrive at the people's armed\nstruggle.\nFor example, when the junta\ntried to sell a plant which had been\nnationalized by the Popular Unity\ngovernment, but could find no\nbuyers because it was in such bad\nshape, the junta tried to sell it to\nthe plant's workers. The military\neven enlisted the president of the\nunion, a sellout, in this manoeuvre.\nSo a group of workers belonging\nto the people's front analyzed this\nsituation and decided to denounce\nthis farce and to prevent it. They\nprinted a leaflet explaining the\nissue and denouncing the sellout\nand thetraitors. The military junta\ndid not succeed in getting the\nworkers to fall into their trap.\nOther struggles organized by the\npeople's front are in the univer-\nsities, against the tuition fees\nDave Fuller is a graduate\nstudent who is helping organize the\ntour of people's front member\nCamilo Maturana, who appears in\nSUB 205 at noon Wednesday. See\nHot Flashes for another speaker on\nChile coming to UBC this week.\n(formerly there were none) and for\na good training, for example.\nThe people's front was born at a\ntime when there was a diffusion of\nthe general mass movement; at a\ntime when there was a great\ndispersion of force among all the\nmember parties and all the leaders\nthat had been outspoken during the\nPopular Unity government of\nPresident Salvador Allende, and\nwho subsequently went into exile.\nIn April 1974, the Revolutionary\nCommunist Party (RCP) of Chile\norganizations among the\nprofessors. In addition there is the\nFront of Anti-Fascist Artists; and\namong the working class, which is\nthe most important sector, there\nare the workers' committees.\nThese committees are clandestine,\nworking as well within the illegal\nunions. There are moreover, a\nlarge number of unions, legal and\nillegal, which adhere to the politics\nof the people's front.\nThere is also the Nucleus for\nUniversity Resistance, which has\nperspectives\nlaunched a call to the Chilean\npeople for the formation of another\npeople's front. Various\norganizations are presently\nmembers of the people's front.\nAmong the most important are the\nvarious resistance committees at\nthe base (existing either at local or\ncity level) which organize\npropaganda and support, and\nencourage all the forms of struggle\nagainst the dictatorship.\nThen there are the anti-fascist\ncommittees of the professors\nwhich constitute the only united\nled the recent struggles of the\nuniversity students, and the\npeasant committees which have\nled struggles in Colchagua. There\nare the committees of the people's\nfront itself, which constitute the\ndirect organization of the people's\nfront. The people's front is not a\npolitical party, nor a screen to hide\nany party.\nThe people's front works with\nanyone who is against the junta\nand who has never supported the\njunta. Currently, there is a\nmanoeuvre by the U.S. and some\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.\nformer open supporters of the\njunta, headed by Christian\nDemocratic Party leader Frei, to\nremove the Pinochet government\nand replace it with a supposedly\n\"democratic\" government headed\nby Frei.\nIhe people's front is opposed to\nthis fraud, and for good reasons.\nFrei spent six years in government\noffice during which time several\nmassacres in 1966, 1967 and 1969\nwere carried out against workers\nand students in Santiago and other\nmining cities. This same Frei was\nat the head of the entire reactionary and fascist offensive\nduring the Allende government\nand is the same person who right\nafter the coup gave his most\nresolute assistance to Pinochet.\nThe tragic experience of the\nChilean people has a universal\nlesson: reformist politics, such as\nthe Allende regime's, is completely\nbankrupt, and fascism is the\nnatural conclusion of the political\nline of the' 'parliamentary road\" to\nsocialism.\nAnyone friendly to the resistance\nin Chile is invited to a meeting in\nSUB 205 at 12:30 p.m. on Wednesday. A representative of the\nPeople's Front of Chile, Camilo\nMaturana, will discuss the current\nstate of the resistance.\n(Get out off bank\nA statement from&vs Co-operative Christian Campus Ministry by its\nchairperson, Bev Currie.\nThroughout the past year our group has engaged in a process of self-\neducation around the issue of South Africa and Canadian banks. After\nconsulting with groups and persons inside South Africa and groups\nwho have done research on the interconnection of Canadian Bank\nloans and the maintenance of the structure of oppressive rule there,\nwe have decided to remove our funds from the banks which engage in\nlending money to South Africa.\nWe therefore invite the Alma Mater Society, other student groups\nand the university community at large to remove their funds from\nbanks that support South African apartheid, and to inform the bank as\nto why.\nWe do this because it is clear to us, after much discussion and\nresearch, that the South African government is a unique and particularly clear example of racial injustice and inhumanity. By\neconomic support the banks help maintain that structure that denies\nfull human rights to the majority of South Africa.\nTherefore we call upon the university community to join with us and\nother student groups across Canada. We suggest the AMS consider\nand act upon the following motion:\nWhereas: Certain Canadian banks are known to lend and invest\nmoney-into the economy of South Africa, and, whereas: The implication of this is to support the current government in South Africa\nand its apartheid policies, therefore be it resolved that the AMS and its\nmember groups transfer as much of its liquid assets as possible to\nfinancial institutions which do not lend money to South Africa.\nHILLEL HOUSE WEEKEND GUEST\nRABBI ARTHUR GREEN\nProfessor of Judaic Studies\nUniversity of Pennsylvania\n\"Is There a New Jewish Mysticism\"\nOPENING SESSION\nThursday, November 24, 12:30\n\"Mysticism and the Modern Jew\"\nat Hillel House\nLunch free to members\n50c to non-members\nWeekend Schedule available at Hillel House\nor by calling 224-4748 or 270-3790\nAUDITIONS\nfor the Theatre Department's Production of\nPURPLE DUST\nby Sean O'Casey\nto be presented March 1-11\nDirected by Klaus Strassmann\nwill be held on\nAAONDAY, November 21 (12:30-2:30 p.m.)\nTHURSDAY, November 24 (12:30-2:30 p.m.)\nin Room 112 of the Frederic Wood Theatre Building\nAUDITIONS OPEN TO ALL UBC STUDENTS, FACULTY AND STAFF Page 6\nTHE UBYSSEY\nTuesday, November 22, 1977\nWhyte sinks Rowers in rugby\nBy TOM BARNES\nAfter trailing for much of the\ngame the Thunderbird rugby\nteam, spurred on by wing David\nWhyte's 20 second-half points, took\ncharge late in the game to turn\nback the Vancouver Rowing Club\n30-14 in Vancouver Rugby Union\nfirst division play Saturday afternoon at UBC's Wolfson Field.\nAll told Whyte accounted for 26\npoints for the 'Birds.\nThe win boosted UBC's record to\nfour wins in five starts in first\ndivision play and gives them the\ninside track as the race for the\nTisdale Cup turns down the home\nstretch.\n\"I was happy to see the way we\ncame back in the second half,\"\nsaid Thunderbird coach Donn\nSpence. \"Our passing wasn't very\ngood, especially in the first half.\nWe had the opportunities and the\noverlaps but bad passes were\nstopping our rushing.\"\nThe UBC forwards were beaten\nbadly in the first half and on set\nscrums they were pushed around.\nThe Rowers played tight and\ndisrupted any attempts at\ncohesiveness the 'Birds could\nmuster.\nBut it was a miscue in the UBC\nbackfield that led to the first\nRowing Club try as a string of\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094richard schreiner photo\nCONCERN RISES over genetic research as four-legged specimen grapples with self on floor of War Memorial\ngym Saturday. Actually, photo captures wrestlers at invitational meet won by Athletes in Action from U.S.\nUBC came fourth.\nhospital passes, with Whyte the\nfinal victim, gave the Rowers\npossession inside UBC's 22-metre\nline for an uncontested run for a try\nwhich was converted.\nWhyte brought the 'Birds back\ninto a tie with two penalty kicks.\nShortly before the half the Rowers\ntook a brief lead when a fine 50-\nmetre four-man rush netted an unconverted try. But UBC prop Ian\nBusfield took the kickoff the length\nof the field before yielding the ball\nto flanker Bill Collins, who got the\ntry as the half ended.\nShortly into the second half\nWhyte put the 'Birds in front 13-10\nwith a penalty kick. The rowers\nbattled back and were rewarded\nwith a try on a cross-field kick off a\nfive-metre scrum. From that point,\nthe Rowers dominated for more\nthan 15 minutes, keeping the ball in\nthe vicinity of the UBC 22-metre\nline.\nWhyte then scored his first try,\nintercepting a pass ne/tr the\nsidelines and winning an 80-metre\ndash to score. If that didn't turn the\ngame around a missed Rowing\nClub penalty goal from directly in\nfront of the posts a minute later\ndid.\nTen minutes later the Thunderbirds scored again as prop Dennis\nCarson got the ball from a lineout\nand threw a screen pass across the\nfield to centre Andrew Bibby to\nstart a backfield movement which\nWhyte capped off for his second\ntry. Before time ran out Whyte\nadded another try, this time set up\nby number eight Robin Russel, and\na penalty kick and a convert.\nIn the latter part of the half the\n'Birds' dominance was built on the\nvastly improved play of the pack.\nThe fitness and growing cohesion\nof the forwards produced a complete reversal of the first half. In\nthe scrums the Rowers were\npushed back and UBC took most of\nthe loose ball.\n\"I think the biggest difference\nwas that we were diving over the\nloose ball on the ground. We\nweren't doing that in the first half\nand it cost us possession,\" said\nSpence.\nThe 'Birds find themselves in\nsecond place following Saturday's\ngames. The Capilanos are in first\nwith nine points, one ahead of UBC,\nbut the Thunderbirds hold two\ngames in hand.\nIn other games over the\nweekend, the Ex-Brits beat the\nMeralomas 20-6, Kats beat the Old\nBoys 13-12 and the Capilanos\ndefeated the Trojans 20-9.\nUBC will play its next game\nSaturday afternoon at Thunderbird\nStadium when they host the cellar-\ndwelling Trojans at 2:30 p.m.\nSTANDINGS\nG W\n7 4\nCapilanos\nUBC\nEx-Brits\nMeralomas\nUBC O. Boys\nRow. Club\nKats\nTrojans\nPts.\n9\n8\n8\n8\n7\n6\n4\n0\n/valuable coupon\nWORTH $1.00\nOFF ANY PURCHASE\nOF SHAMPOO OR\nHAIRSTYLE!\nI Maximum one per person. Appointment\nGood only on presentation Only\n\u00C2\u00BB of this coupon. 224-1922\n| Exoircs Nov. 30th. 1977. 224-9116\nExpires Nov. 30th, 1977\nI\nI\n>ro&se\n5784 Hair Studio Inc.\nUniversity Blvd. unisex Hair Styles\ni\ni\ni\ni\ni\ni\nWHEN YOU LOOK GOOD\nSO DO WE . . .\nPRESCRIPTION\nOPTICAL\nTDBank\nrecruiting on\ncampus\nNov. 2% &30\nth\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 innovative 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 Dominion\nthe bank where people make the difference\nICONSIDER A FUTURE WITH US! Tuesday, November 22, 1977\nTHE UBYSSEY\nPage 7\nPuck 'Birds\nsweep pair\nA hardhitting UBC Thunderbird\nhockey team, lifted by a quick-\nchange defence, evened its record\nat 3-3 with a double win over the\nUniversity of Saskatchewan on the\nweekend.\nUBC scored at will in a 9-1 rout\nFriday night at the Winter Sports\nCentre. The 'Birds won 2-1\nSaturday in a contest in which\nHuskies goalie Brian Hepp kept the\nvisitors in the game, stopping 45\nshots.\nOn goals by Tom Blaney and Rob\nJones, the 'Birds took a two-goal\nleadafter two and one-half minutes\nof Friday's game. The first-period\nblitz continued as Sean Boyd\nscored and Jones scored his second\nof a three-goal performance. Greg\nWiebe replied with the Huskies\nonly goal.\n\"We are using three defensive\npairings,\" said UBC coach Bert\nHalliwell.\nThe 'Birds went with three\nforward and three defensive lines\nin both games, instead of the four\nand two system they have been\nusing.\n\"Ihis is the first time we played\nthe whole game with consistency,\"\nsaid Halliwell.\nHalliwell said UBC was using a\nnew forechecking system, which\nhe refused to divulge.\n\"I am not going to tell you what it\nis because the other teams might\nfind out,\" he said.\nThe Huskies must have partly\ncaught on to the secret formula in\nthe second, bdcause the 'Birds only\nnetted two goals off the sticks of\nDick Jellina and Derek Williams.\nBut UBC continued to check\nhard, littering the ice with green-\nclad gladiators turned black and\nblue. Tempers wore thin, and after\nJones completed his hat trick at\n3:04 of the third period, Blaney and'\nSaskatchewan's Murray Benson\nwere sent off for fighting.\nBut in the penalty box the fight\nresumed, triggering a melee which\nheld up the game for 20 minutes.\nWhen the smoke cleared, five\nplayers from each club were\nthrown out, including Blaney,\nJones, Williams, Ross Cory and\nTed Fostey from UBC.\nBlaney, who appeared to be the\ninstigator, saw it differently. \"It\nwasn't my start,\" the left winger\nexplained, after his right hand was\ndecorated with eight stitches.\n\"They were trying to intimidate\nme. They were giving me cheap\nshots. They tried to sucker me.\"\nUBC received98 penalty minutes\nduring the game, while the Huskies\nwere assessed 100 minutes.\nUBC goaltender Dave Fischer\nplayed a strong game, turning\naway 20shots. Brian Hepp made 33\nsaves for the losers.\nSaturday's game was more\nsubdued as the 'Birds outskated\nSaskatchewan, bombarding Hepp\nwith 46 shots.\n\"The score doesn't indicate the\nplay,\" said Halliwell. \"Their\ngoalie had a hot hand. He was the\ndifference.\"\nThe only two pucks which eluded\nHepp were shot by Peter Moyls and\nSandy Bain.\nGreg Ing beat UBC goalie Ron\nPatterson for the Huskies' only\nmarker.\nThe 'Birds go to Edmonton this\nweekend, where they will try to\navenge two season-opening losses\nto Ihe University of Alberta Golden\nBears.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094craig heale photo\nARCHETYPAL HOCKEY 'BIRD controls puck as UBC tastes 2-1 victory over University of Saskatchewan in\nSaturday night clash at Winter Sports Centre. 'Birds let up pressure on victims after romping to fight-filled\n9-1 win Friday night.\nSoccer game too long for UBC\nBy GRAY KYLES\nIf soccer games were only 45\nminutes long the Thunderbirds'\nsoccer team might be enjoying a\nbetter season in the B.C. Senior\nSoccer League first division.\nThe 'Birds rolled over Italian-\nColumbus in the first half of their\nJock shorts\nHie UBC women's rowing team\nwonthree races in a weekend meet\nat Green Lake near Seattle. The\nfour of stroke Nancy Stoess, Sandy\nHarper, Nikki Valentine, Sue\nBaiton and cox Jane Pavelich won\nthe junior heavyweight four and\nplaced second in the senior\nheavyweight four. Other wins\ncame in the lightweight and\nheavyweight open novice eights.\nCoach Glen Battersby was\npleased with his team's performance. Last year in the same\nevent UBC rowers failed to win any\nraces. The team is in the second\nyear of an improvement program.\n* * *\nThe UBC wrestling team trailed\nthe field in two meets over the\nweekend. In a dual meet Friday\nthe 'Bird grapplers lost 33-21 to\nAthletes in Action. Craig Delahunt\nwon his match in the 167 lb. group.\nSaturday, UBC finished last\nbehind Athletes in Action, North\nIdaho College and the University of\nWashington. The winning Athletes\nfinished with 52 points, well ahead\nof Idaho's 42. Can't beat them and\nthe Lord too. Craig Delahunt took\nthe only UBC win.\n* * *\nThe Thunderbird basketball\nteam dropped two games to the\nUniversity of Alberta Golden\nBears in Edmonton over the\nweekend, losing 92-74 and 84-58.\nCoach Peter Mullins blamed poor\nshooting for the losses.\nYou usually lose when you score\nfewer points than the other guys,\nall right. Good quote, Peter.\nFor the Thunderettes it was\nbusiness as usual, as they lost 74-46\nand 61-48 to the Pandas. Coach Gay\nCoburn agreed it could be a long\nhard season, but said the team\nplayed better than last week\nagainst Victoria.\n* * *\nThe UBC men's field hockey\nteam all but clinched first place in\nthe Vancouver Men's League with\na 3-2 win over Jokers A in first-\ndivision play Saturday. UBC leads\nIndia by four points, but the latter\nhas two games in hand. Alan Hob-\nkirk scored twice for the 'Birds.\nleague match Saturday at Thunderbird Stadium but almost conceded the game in the second.\nIt was only through the efforts of\ngoalkeeper Kelly McKnight that\nthey were able to hang onto a 1-1 tie\nand pick up their first point since\nSept. 14.\nThe 'Birds came out with an\naggressive offence for the first\ntime this year and played their\nbest soccer of the season in the first\nhalf. But they shouldn't have\nbothered returning for the second\nhalf.\nRonnie Elder, who played a\nstrong game, scored the UBC goal\nin the fifth minute from an indirect\nfree kick by Kenny Garrett after\nColumbus had fouled.\nThe 'Birds came alive after the\ngoal and forced play into the\nColumbus end. When the Italians\nwere able to move up the field the\nUBC defence covered them well.\nMcKnight was sharp throughout\nthe first half but made an unfortunate mistake in the fortieth\nminute which gave Columbus |he\nequalizer.\nAfter making a good save on a\nhard shot from the right side McKnight knocked the ball onto the\nfoot of Columbus forward Mike\nMcLeod. McLeod batted the ball\npast the 'keeper before he had a\nchance to get in position.\n\"It was an unfortunate\nmistake,\" UBC coach Joe Johnson\nsaid after the game. \"I guess he\nfelt he had to play the ball but it\nwent the wrong way. I can't fault\nKelly though, he played very well\nfor us.\"\nDuring the second half McKnight\ncame up with a series of great\nsaves which foiled the Columbus\nattack. The 'Birds' defence was too\ndisorganized to help and the offence appeared to have run itself\ninto the ground.\nThe major chore facing Johnson\nnow is to build up team stamina to\nthe point where his squad can play\ntop-notch soccer for a full 90\nminutes.\nThe 'Birds next game is against\nDover Olympics, one of the\nstrongest clubs in the league, at\nThunderbird Stadium on Dec. 3.\nBeefeater Dry Gin retains its fine taste even in mixes\nDistilled and bottled in London, England. Page &\nTHE UBYSSEY\nTuesday, November 22, 1977\nWomen will get\nsummer jobs\ns E231\nFrom page 1\ntheir programs and aims to meet\nthe program qualifications next\nyear.\nStudents will be selected according to their grade percentage,\nand motivation said Bond. Grade\npercentage will be calculated on an\nequation based on the students'\nmid-term, Christmas exams and\nhigh school marks.\nThe student's background in\neither paid or unpaid work will also\nbe taken into consideration, Bond\nsaid.\nThe program will run for a\nminimum of 13 weeks after classes\nare out and will provide the\nstudents with summer employment as well as an opportunity\nto explore their area of interest\nwithout a long-term commitment.\nOnce accepted, the student will\nhave the opportunity to continue in\nthe program for the next two\nconsecutive summers.\nEmployers participating in the\nco-operative program will\nestablish the date they want to\ninterview students on campus and\nindicate the number and type of\nstudents they require, she said.\nStudents in the program will\nattend a series of mini-workshops\nconcerning curriculum resumes\nand interview techniques.\nPANGO-PANGO (UNS) \u00E2\u0080\u0094 This\ntiny island kingdom was rocked\nMonday by revelations that\nperennial blorg representative\nBanal Bleaters, is running for reelection for the thirtieth time in his\nyawn career.\n\"I have discovered that running\nfor elective office has nothing\nwhatsoever to do with politics,\"\nBleaters explained.\nBleaters may or may not face\nopposition from arch-conservative\nArsewhole Headstrong, director of\ninconveniences Save Piles, constitutional finder Rave Blare-em,\nand second banana Pale Can-do.\nCandidates recoiled in horror\nwhen an early rumor shook this\nkingdom that press moguls Tripe\nFlogging and Shrill Spielman\nwould run on a liquor-oriented\ndereliction platform.\nBond said the candidates will\nthen be interviewed by participating employers on campus.\nThere will be no subsidy for the\nprogram by the university or the\ngovernment and the employer will\nbe paying the student according to\nthe normal work pay scale, said\nBond.\nFaculty advisors on the program\nwill visit the student at least once\nduring the summer, she said.\nThe advisors, employers and\nstudents will submit evaluation\nforms to assist the coordinators in\nprogram improvements.\nThe employer evaluations will be\nused by the students as recommendations for future jobs.\n\"This program will increase the\nnumber of qualified women in the\nfaculties of applied science and\nforestry and increase the number\nof women graduates working in\nthese fields,\" Bond said.\n\"I really want equal opportunities for men and women\nwithin this program,\" Kozak said.\n\"Women in the department of\nforestry are fairly recent; we\ndidn't have any until the 1970s, now\nthere is a total of 34 women undergraduates and eight graduates,\"\nhe said.\nK0RRE5\nP MOVING & STORAGE LTD.\n*l\nReasonable\nRates\nBig or Small Jobs\nALSO GARAGES\nBASEMENTS\n4 YARDS\n732-9898\n| CLEAN-UP\nLONESOME CHARLIE\nin\n\"THE\nMAGNIFICENT\nGeorge & Berny's\nVOLKSWAGEN\nREPAIRS\nCOMPLETE SERVICE BY\nFACTORY-TRAINED\nMECHANICS\nFULLY GUARANTEED\nAT REASONABLE RATES\n731-8644\n2125 W. 10th at Arbutus"@en . "Newspapers"@en . "Vancouver (B.C.)"@en . "LH3.B7 U4"@en . "LH3_B7_U4_1977_11_22"@en . "10.14288/1.0126515"@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 .