"CONTENTdm"@en . "http://resolve.library.ubc.ca/cgi-bin/catsearch?bid=1211252"@en . "University Publications"@en . "2015-08-27"@en . "1972-01-20"@en . "Misprinted volume, should be LIV."@en . ""@en . "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/Ubysseynews/items/1.0127155/source.json"@en . "application/pdf"@en . " Council to ask students for $5 fee raise\nBy BERTON WOODWARD\nUBC students will face three\nreferendums \u00E2\u0080\u0094 including a fee\nincrease proposal \u00E2\u0080\u0094 when they go\nto the polls at the beginning of\nnext month.\nAlma Mater Society council\ndecided unanimously Wednesday\nto ask students Feb. 9 for a\n$5-per-student increase in AMS\nfees to expand the student\nactivity operating fund. That fee,\ncurrently $9, combined with the\nnon-discretionary $ 15 building fee\nand the $5 athletic fee form the\nyearly AMS fee.\nAnother SUB expansion\nreferendum was also approved at\nthe meeting. The development of\narea 18-D, defeated in a\nreferendum in October, with area\n18-F in the basement, as well as\nthe development of rooms 30, 130\nand the present lounge and music\nareas is to be decided on Feb. 2.\nIn the same referendum,\nstudents will vote on a finance\nplan for the $350,000 expansion.\nThe proposal would extend the\nterm of financing to 21 years\nfrom 18, \"it being Understood\nthat such extension of tej;m will\nresult in no increase- in .the\namount of the current $15\nbuilding fee portion of the AMS\nfee.\"\nThe third referendum, not yet\ndrafted, will ask whether students\nare in favor of the AMS taking\nover SUB food services. It will\nalso be held Feb. 2.\nTHE UBYSSEY\nVol. UH, No. 39 VANCOUVER, B.C., THURSDAY, JANUARY 20, 1972\nThe fee referendum provoked\ncouncil discussion as to whether\nstudents would accept a full $5\nincrease.\nAMS president Grant Burnyeat\nproposed that there be two\nquestions on the ballot: one\nproposing a $3 raise and a second\nproposing an extra $2 raise.\nThe first would be to maintain\nthe existing operation, the second\nto finance special projects.\nCouncil finally decided to give\nstudent generosity the benefit of\nthe doubt and voted unanimously\nfor the single $5 increase\nreferendum.\nSTANDING TOGETHER, Georgia Straight staffers express solidarity in front of Powell\nStreet office after taking over operation of paper from editor Dan McLeod. Editorial and\nproduction staff took the step after repeated refusal of McLeod to allow co-operative\nstaff structure. Two Straights will probably appear on streets today.\nWorkers liberate Straight\nBy SANDY KASS\nRevolution has hit the Georgia Straight.\nStaff members of the Vancouver alternate weekly\nWednesday morning occupied the paper's publishing\noffice at 56-A Powell Street in an attempt to give the\nStraight legal status as a co-operative.\nThe occupation, which began at 6:30 a.m., is\nexpected to last indefinitely.\nWhile occupying the office, Straight staffers are\npublishing an alternate Georgia Straight, due to hit the\nstreets this morning.\nIt will be sold by staffers themselves, with the normal\ndistribution set-up still controlled by the paper's owner,\nDan McLeod.\nMcLeod will be publishing his paper as the Georgia\nStraight to be sold by the regular distributors, also this\nmorning.\nWhen Straight staffer Jeff Marvin tried Wednesday to\nhave the alternate paper printed, during regular Straight\npress time at College Printers, College owner Dave Nelson\nsaid he could not allow this to be done for fear of a\nlawsuit.\n\"McLeod still is the legal owner of the Georgia\nStraight and I cannot allow any paper to be published\nwith that name without his authorization,\" Nelson told\nMarvin.\nAs a result, the alternate Straight is being published at\nHorizon Printers.\nStraight business manager and former Alma Mater\nSociety treasurer David Mole said Wednesday the move is\nthe staffs first blow against the ruling class at the paper.\nMole described the Straight's ruling class as \"the\npaper's legal owner, Dan McLeod.\"\nMcLeod, who has been legal owner of the paper since\nits beginning in 1967, was unavailable for comment\nWednesday.\nSaid Mole: \"McLeod has had the ultimate power over\nthe inclusion or exclusion of anything for the paper.\n\"But the paper is really run by all people who work\non it, and the staff has wanted it to be a co-operative for\nquite some time.\"\nMole said the definite decision to change the paper to\na co-operative status was made at a staff meeting early in\nDecember.\nNominations open\nThe nomination period for the first slate of the AMS\nexecutive elections for 1972-73 opened Wednesday and\nwill continue until 12:30 p.m. Thursday, Jan. 27.\nThe first slate includes the offices of AMS president,\nsecretary, internal - and external - affairs officers.\nNominations and eligibility forms may be obtained\nfrom the AMS general office or from the AMS secretary in\nSUB 248.\nA negotiating committee was set up following that\nmeeting to discuss the matter with McLeod but \"McLeod\nrefused to negotiate,\" Mole said.\n\"He told us Monday that he never intended to give up\nlegal ownership of the paper,\" he said.\n\"The staff wants the paper to be a collective, with no\nperson having power over anyone else.\"\nSupporting McLeod in his statements are Straight\nstaffers Mitzi Gibbs and Bob Cummings.\nStraight co-ordinator Ken Lester said Wednesday the\nstaff has always thought of McLeod as \"a benevolent\ndictator,\" but added that things \"have just gone too far.\n\"McLeod has an excellent alternate view of things,\nbut he cannot deal with things unless they really are\nradical,\" LesteT said.\nHe said staff members discussed putting out an issue\ndevoted strictly to women, but added it was vetoed by\nMcLeod who said the subject \"did not relate to\nanything.\"\nLester said he thinks the paper will become more\nsensitive operating as a collective.\n\"We will have the same staff as before, and even\nthough we aren't ideologically together, this is good\nbecause well get some differences of opinion in the\nStraight,\" he said.\n\"We want the paper to take new directions, with\nbetter presentation and quality of articles and a broader\nbase from which to work.\"\nSee page 2: STRAIGHT Page 2\nTHE UBYSSEY\nPositive mood grips council\nSUB will be open round the clock\nstarting next week and the Alma Mater\nSociety wants to join the UBC Daycare\ncouncil.\nFurthermore, AMS executive secretary\nCarol Buzas will keep her job.\nCouncil was in a positive mood\nWednesday night. It even saw fit to donate\n$100 to Liberal MP David Anderson's\ncampaign to challenge the American right\nto send deep-sea oil-tankers from Alaska to\nWashington state via the open sea west of\nthe B.C. coast.\nA delegation of three from the daycare\ncouncil began important business by\nasking, through a motion from internal\naffairs officer Michael Robinson, that the\nStraight\ngets new\nowners\nThursday, January 20, 1972\nAMS guarantee a loan of $60,000 to the\ncouncil. The loan will pay for construction\nof a permanent daycare centre in Acadia\nCamp.\nCorinne McAdam, a UBC secretary,\ntold council that the four daycare centres\ncurrently in operation at UBC are all in\ntemporary buildings, three of those in old\narmy huts.\nShe said the huts do not provide the\nkind of environment children need and\ncited the steam pipes and radiators in the\nhuts and the lack of outdoor play areas as\ndetrimental conditions for young children.\nThe new centre, she.said, would not be\na place just for research and observation\nbut would provide a needed service for\nparent and child.\nAlthough she advocated installation of\ntwo-way mirrors in the new centre, she\ndefended them as a means of keeping\nadults visiting the centre infrequently out\nof sight of the children.\nThe campus daycare centres are\ncurrently financed by provincial day-to-day\nsubsidization and by a fee scale which\nslides downward from $80 per month.\nMcAdam said the administration has\nrefused to provide capital funding for the\nnew centre but has given it an as yet\nundetermined amount of land in Acadia\nCamp.\nCouncil voted unanimously to\nguarantee the centre's loan but asked that\nit be given two seats on the eight-member\ndaycare council.\nAMS membership on the council is.\nsubject to approval by that council.\nAfter a council decision to rescind a\nmotion of Dec. 6 to open SUB 24 hours a\nday and to authorize a trial opening period\nof two weeks, treasurer David Dick said the\nnew policy would be effected \"fairly\nquickly, certainly next week.\"\nHe said all that is required is the hiring\nof a night shift guard, probably from either\nthe campus police force or the physical\nplant.\nAsked by science rep Svend Robinson\nabout the status of Carol Buzas, Dick said\nhe has received a confidential report from\nAMS general manager Brian Robinson\nwhich in effect affirmed her competence.\nHe said the letter took note of the\nUbyssey report Jan. 13 of the in-camera\ncouncil meeting that discussed Buzas'\nstatus as secretary, stressing in view of that\narticle it should be kept secret.\n-|jfe>.J^$^\nFrom page 1\nHe said the Straight will\ntemporarily drop the personal\nclassified page to afford more\nroom for articles.\nThe paper's staff this week\nopened a Georgia Straight\ncollective bank account into\nwhich all monies owing the\nStraight are being paid.\n\"Also, we've placed a lock on\nour cash register so no one but the\nco-operative staff can get at our\nmoney,\" Lester said.\nHe said McLeod is the only\nperson with official signing\nauthority for monies in the\npaper's regular account, \"so the\nstaff has no access to them.\n\"McLeod could do something\ndrastic like declaring bankruptcy,\nbut we've had offers of up to\n$25,000 for the paper, so I don't\nthink he will.\"\nHe said the Straight's mail has\nbeen cut off from the post office\nand added that \"McLeod may\nhave had something to do with\nthat.\"\nThe Straight's phones were cut\noff shortly after noon Wednesday,\nbut Mole said he was in touch\nwith B.C. Tel and expected them\nto be reconnected by Wednesday\nnight with a new number.\n\"McLeod could cut off our\nelectricity too, but we feel at the\nmoment he's more interested in\ngetting his own paper out,\" he\nsaid.\nLester said the staff-published\nStraight is not expected to lose\nmoney because \"our readership\nshould go up due to the better\nquality of paper we'll be putting\nout.\"\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094kini mcdonald photo\nAGGIE PRESIDENT Niels Holbek gets painted green and well hung Wednesday, as forestry comrades string him from goal posts on playing\nfield behind SUB. Holbek was not immediately available for comment.\nGrad class elects 1972 executive\nMike Tratch, applied science 4, was elected\npresident of the 1972 graduating class at a\nmeeting in the SUB auditorium Wednesday.\nA quorum of 10 per cent of the 3,235\nmember class was not reached at the meeting\nbut Alma Mater Society president Grant\nBurnyeat declared the meeting legal\nregardless.\nAbout 225 students attended.\nAfter Tratch's election Burnyeat stepped\ndown as chairman of the meeting and Tratch\npresided at the election of the other officials.\nFollowing what Tratch called a \"ladies\nfirst\" order in the nominating speeches Gai\nHughes, recreation 4 was elected\nvice-president of the class.\n\"I can't give you another leg show but I\nhope you'll vote for me anyway,\" Hughes said\nthe audience which was composed largely of\nengineers.\nShe won by a 35-vote margin over\ncandidate Doug Ford, applied science 4.\nMarian Chapman, microbiology 4, was\nelected secretary in a close race over the\nengineers' candidate, Ron Royal, applied\nscience 4.\nThe new treasurer is Bob Bird, applied\nscience 4, and Bill McKenzie, applied science\n4, was acclaimed social convener. The public\nrelations officer is Phil Poirier, applied science\n4, who defeated C. Fox, applied science 4.\nTratch closed the meeting after the\nelections saying the new executive had to have\ntime to meet to draw up recommendations\nabout allocating the $22,645 grad class\nbudget.\nThe money was raised last September when\neach member of the graduating class was\nassessed $7 for the fund.\nNURSING U. S. - FEE LEVY\nHeld Mon. Jan. 17/72\n30% voted and of those 96% voted\nin favor of a $2.00 fee levy.\nSCHOOL OF LIBRARIANSHIP\nU.S.\nFEE LEVY\n61% of eligible voters voted 86% in\nfavor of a $5.00 Undergraduate Fee\nLevy for the-72-73 session.\nParis Boutique\nExclusive agents\nDOROTHY PERKINS\nQuality English Ladles Wear\n2105 W. 16th\nTues. \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Sat.\nBeautiful\nclothes. .\nfor\nbeautiful\npeople\nLE CHATEAU\n\"a step ahead\"\n776 Granville 687-2701\nHONG KONG CHINESE FOODS\nJust One Block from Campus in the Village\nWE SER VEAU THEN TIC CHINESE FOOD\nAT REASONABLE PRICES\nEAT IN - TAKE OUT\nWe have enlarged our dining room\nto offer you better service.\nOpen Every Day from 4:30 p.m. to 11 p.m.\n5732 University Blvd.\nPhone 224-6121\nSUB FILMSOC presents ...\nCATCH 22\nwith Alan Arkin\nTHURSDAY \u00E2\u0080\u0094 7:00 50*\nFRI. & SAT. \u00E2\u0080\u0094 7:00 & 9:30 SUB\nSUNDAY \u00E2\u0080\u0094 7:00 THEATRE Thursday, January 20, 1972\nTHE UBYSSEY\nPqge 3\nStudents set up parallel courses\nSHERBROOKE, QUE. (CUPI) - More\nthan 200 social work students at the\nUniversity of Sherbrooke have organized\nan alternate department in defiance of\nfaculty attempts to restrict student\nparticipation in course determination and\ngrading.\nThe students believe the entire\ndepartment, not just the professor, must\ndecide the goals of the teaching process.\nThey decided to create a parallel\ndepartment rather than organize sit-ins or\ndemonstrations because they believe this\nwill show they are capable of responsible\naction.\n\"The record confirms that students are\ncapable of assuming their responsibilities\nand not simply of saying so or of claiming\nthem,\" a student bulletin reads.\nSince the creation of the social work\ndepartment in 1967, students and\nprofessors had been unofficially\nco-operating in planning the curriculum\nand in grading.\nAfter closed conferences last summer,\nhowever, the professors decided they had\n4he sole right to grade students.\nThe students issued a statement at a\nNov. 2 general meeting claiming equal\nrights with professors and declaring any\nother situation was unacceptable.\nThe professors rejected student\ndemands for participation in grading by a\nvote 17-1 at a closed meeting Nov. 5.\nAt another general meeting on\nNovember 10 the students decided to set\nup a parallel department and to open\nformal .negotiations with faculty and\nadministration.\nThey named a five-person negotiating\nteam and a twelve-member committee to\noperate the department.\nImmediate and overwhelming\ncommunity support have helped to make\nthe parallel department a success. Some 88\nresource persons from across Quebec\nconsented to lecture free of charge and 35\nappeared before Christmas.\nBut negotiations have made little\nprogress. Department head Jules Perron\nattempted to divide the students by\nthreatening to fail those who did not\nsubmit their term work, due in December.\nOnly thirty students met the deadline.\nFailing grades were recorded for 72\nother students and the department's refusal\nto expunge these grades is one of the major\nremaining obstacles to a settlement.\nA student assembly on January 12\ndecided to publicize the struggle across\nQuebec. Five hundred information packets\nwere prepared but just as they were about\nto be mailed a group of professors\nincluding Perron requested new meetings\nwith the students.\nSome progress has since been made\ntoward a compromise on the issue of\ngrading procedures but the two parties are\nstill some distance apart.\n2-year orientation plan\nstalled again by senate\nBy VAUGHN PALMER\nUBC's senate used a stalling tactic to\nblock a two-year arts-science orientation\ncollege proposal Wednesday night, thus\nsquashing the possibility that the plan\nmight be implemented next year.\nA proposal that such a college be\nestablished was returned to a joint\ncommittee of the arts and science faculties\nby a meeting of the UBC senate Wednesday\nnight.\nIt was originally referred to the\ncommittee by a senate meeting of March\n18, 1970.\nThe proposal was one of the\nrecommendations in a report made two\nyears ago to the senate by\nanthropology-sociology head Cyril\nBelshaw's committee on long range\nobjectives.\nThe joint committee's recommendation\nto the senate stated that even though\nimprovement of counselling facilities at\nUBC is desirable, a college is not the\nstructure for such a program, and therefore\nthe proposal of the Belshaw committee\nshould be rejected.\nSpeaking in defence of the Belshaw\ncommittee recommendation, Asian studies\nprofessor Bill Willmott said: \"If the senate\nrejects this proposal it will once again have\npetered out on its fundamental\nresponsibility of providing more avenues of\nchoice for first and second-year programs.\n\"The present structure of courses,\nencouraged by the faculties and\ndepartments, puts students in specialized\nlittle boxes very early in their academic\nlife, while an orientation college, such as is\nproposed would remove those boxes,\"\nWillmott said.\nBelshaw said that apparently the joint\nfaculty committee was confused, as his\ncommittee's original proposal had nothing\nto do with a counseling service.\n\"An orientation college would provide a\ngroup of general courses, combining\nvarious aspects of various departments, to\ngive first and second-year students a chance\nto discover just what academic programs lie\nopen to them,\" Belshaw said.\nThe proposal that an orientation college\nbe formed was returned to the joint faculty\ncommittee with conditions that the\ncommittee be broadened to include\nmembers from other faculties.\nThe enlarged group will then hear\nadditional explanations on the matter for\nBelshaw and others.\nCourt reserved\n,\u00C2\u00AB*\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00C2\u00AB/\nSMASHING SERVE by women's volleyball team member Barb Dalton was caught against\nbackdrop net by photographer Kini McDonald at last weekend's invitational volleyball\ntournament. Story, page 7.\nStudent court Tuesday reserved decision\non the validity of the Nov. 24 Alma Mater\nSociety elections to Friday noon.\nThat was the result of more than five\nhours of indecision as to how the court\nshould be conducted.\nThe majority of the session was devoted\nto debates between council and court over\nwhether non-existent documents could be\nentered as evidence and how much time\ncouncil could have to question witnesses.\nThe non-existent documents were\ncopies of several elections committee\nminutes which Ed Safarik, lawyer for\ndefeated secretarial candidate Tom\nMackinnon, who is contesting the election,\nclaimed \"are somewhere but can't be\nproduced because I can't find them.\"\nThe court decided to hear testimony\nrelating to those minutes and said it would\nconsider later whether it is admissible.\nFrequent recesses, ranging from 30\nseconds to 20 minutes, were incurred to\nallow the court time to rule on the\nprocedures.\nNew witnesses called by Safarik and\nAMS lawyer Hein Poulous reiterated the\nevidence already presented at Thursday's\nhearing.\nJudge Steve Nathanson indicated the\ncourt was bored when he told Safarik to\n\"please be a little more dramatic so as to\nretain the attention of the court to the\ncase.\" Page 4\nTHE UBYSSEY\nThursday, January 20, 1972\nTHS UBYSSEY\nJANUARY 20, 1972\nPublished Tuesdays, Thursdays and Fridays\nthroughout the university year by the Alma Mater\nSociety of the University of B.C. Editorial opinions\nare those of the writer and not of'the AMS or the\nuniversity administration. Member, Canadian\nUniversity Press. The Ubyssey publishes Page Friday, a\nweekly commentary and review. The Ubyssey's\neditorial offices are located in room 241K of the\nStudent Union Building.\nEditorial departments, 228-2301, 228-2307;\nFriday, Sports, 228-2305; advertising, 228-3977.\nEditor: Leslie Plommer\nPage\nSports types first today, as an abbreviated masthead\ntakes shape. It was Gord Gibson from Kent Spencer and\nMike Gidora, as photographers Kini McDonald, Garry\nGruenke and Warren Mayes flashed bulbously. In the\nstands, Sandy Kass screamed Yay Gord while Sandi\nShreve and Lesley Krueger guzzled orange crush. Berton\nWoodward got his hot dog confused with John Twigg,\nand it was standing room only for Paul Knox, Vaughn\nPalmer, Tricia Moore, Kathy Carney and Jim Joly. Staff\nmeeting at noon today.\nTake from the poor . \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nWe are asked by the writer of the first letter\non this page to clarify The Ubyssey's position on\nthe UBC bookstore's scuttling of the five per cent\nrebate policy.\nOur position is, of course, the same as that\ntaken by the writer of the letter, Gerry\nArmstrong.\nAs he correctly points out, those of us who\nnever bothered to save our bookstore receipts and\nthus take advantage of the rebate, are not\nparticularly affected by the new policy.\nHowever, students who did take advantage of\nthe five per cent saving on books have suffered a\nreal loss under the new policy.\nAnd, as Armstrong observes, these were\nprecisely the students who demonstrated their\nneed for the saving by using the rebate system.\nWe're digging in\nCurrent actions by social work students\nat the University of Sherbrooke \u00E2\u0080\u0094 as\nreported on page 3 of today's Ubyssey \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nform a real landmark in the recent history of\nCanadian student struggles for university\nreform.\nBriefly stated, the specific problem at\nthe Sherbrooke social work school is that\nuntil last summer students considered it a\nright to participate in their own grading and\ncurriculum planning.\nIn summer meetings, however, faculty\nmembers made it clear that they considered\nthis process merely a student privilege, and\nthey used their power to try to put the\nstudents back in their traditional places.\nThe student response was simple: 'If\nyou don't acknowledge our rights, we won't\nattend your university.'\nAnd they didn't.\nIn one of the most politically\nsophisticated and serious moves in years of\nuniversity struggles, the Sherbrooke social\nwork students set up their own parallel\ndepartment and continued their education,\nmaking use of invited lecturers.\nIn the meantime, they continued to\nsend polite and firm letters to the\nadministration stating their position, and\nthey continued negotiations.\nParticularly encouraging is the fact that\nthe number of social work students involved\nin the parallel department has not dwindled\nover the 21/2-month period of struggle.\nOn the contrary, solidarity and numbers\nhave increased markedly, so that now a large\nmajority of the students are participating in\nthe parallel department.\nThe situation at Sherbrooke \u00E2\u0080\u0094 and the\ntactics employed by the students there \u00E2\u0080\u0094\ndeserve the attention and thought of\neveryone at UBC who is seriously concerned\nabout student rights and university reform.\nThey are an indication that although the\nhey-day (and the usefulness) of student\nsit-ins and demonstrations is far from over,\nwe have arrived at a time when the\nspectacular in student political action is\nbeing partially replaced by more long-term\nefforts.\nIn short, students across the country are\ndigging in.\nThus it is the money of needy students which\nhas been redistributed (i.e., given back to the\nbookstore) \u00E2\u0080\u0094 an interesting commentary on the\nbookstore's degree of concern about students.\nIndeed, we have not even seen the\nbookstore's new-found wealth reflected in a small\nreduction in the cost of the high-priced volumes\nthat currently line its shelves.\nAt least under those circumstances the store\ncould have argued that all of us were benefiting\nby the withdrawal of the rebate system.\nEven this, however, is a less preferable\nalternative to that of maintaining the rebate\nsystem for the people who need it, especially\nsince \u00E2\u0080\u0094 rebates or no rebates \u00E2\u0080\u0094 the price of books\non this campus is outrageous and must be\nlowered.\nheh, heh\nLetters\nRebate\nIt is just possible that I've been\nvery unobservant, but I have yet\nto notice any significant amount\nof concern over the actions being\ntaken by the UBC bookstore to, in\neffect, raise the price of all books\na flat five per cent.\nI refer to the abolition of the\nrebate policy.\nI understand little of the\noperations of the bookstore, but\nit has been pointed out on\nnumerous occasions that the\nprices charged by that institution\nseem to reflect its notion that it is\ndealing with a captive market.\nThe Ubyssey has, in the past,\nbeen critical of bookstore policy\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 where are you now?\nMost odious about this whole\naffair is the fact that while the\nnominal price increase is five per\ncent to all students, the only\nstudents who will suffer under the\nincrease are those who have been\nin habit of saving their receipts\nand cashing them in for a rebate.\nI think a fairly good case can\nbe made to the effect that these\nstudents are the ones who can\nleast afford the cost increase.\nThe new policy, then, involves\na redistribution of income from\nthose students who once took\nadvantage of the rebate policy\n(and by doing so presumably\ndemonstrated their need) to the\nbookstore which, if the opinions\nexpressed in The Ubyssey are at\nall valid, is a grossly inefficient\noperation.\nPlease clarify The Ubyssey's\nposition on this matter.\nGerry Armstrong,\nArts 4.\nLevy\nThis will serve as official notice\nthat the UBC law students have\napproved a 1972-73 fee levy of\n$3.50.\nThe approval was given on Jan.\n18 by a vote of 121 to 57.\nBob Bellows,\nLaw 3,\nLSA External V-P.\nJ\nFish\nThose colorfully-sweatered\nbands of slide-rule freaks in\nengineering, agriculture and\nforestry have inspired yet another\nletter to The Ubyssey's\npseudo-entertainment column.\nAlthough not an ardent letter\nwriter I was so overcome by the\nhigh calibre of their last festive\nevent (I believe it was a prelude to\nthe forthcoming 162nd gala\nanniversary celebration of Sir\nSydney Fudd's first attempt to\nbarn-train milk cows) that I felt\ncompelled to take the time to\nenlighten the unfortunate readers\nwho, by some misfortune, missed\nin witnessing or taking part in\nUBC's social event of the year.\nThe first event that struck my\neye as I emerged from SUB with\nKaiser roll in hand, was that\nperennial event of the pythagorian\njet-set, that scintillating statement\nof our halogenic intelligentsia \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nthe boat race. After this\npre-dinner cocktail, the\nparticipants and the audience\nwere ready for the afternoon's\n\"tour de force\".\nThe main course of live\ngoldfish \"a la cue\" was being\nprepared by a famous Etrurian\nchef that the agriculture students\nhad engaged especially for the\noccasion. I began to feel a sudden\nrevolting sensation in the pit of\nmy stomach as I turned away and\ntried to finish off my now-bland\nKaiser roll.\nI suppose contestants in the\nthree faculties concerned must\ncontinually strive in their\nundertakings for the title of\n\"asshole of the year\" as events\nsuch as these are probably the\nonly things which keep us\nstudents from experimenting with\ndrugs, however, I would almost be\nwilling to take the chance than see\npoor goldfish and/or any other\nliving things be treated in this\nmanner.\nGary Davis,\nArts 3\nTeachers\nIt seems to be the regular thing\nfor students to complain when\nfaculty members get canned.\nTo most readers this bitching\nmust seem to come from a small\ngroup of people who grind out the\nsame words each time: excellent\nteacher. .. gets wonderful class\nresponse .. . arouses a great deal\nof interest in the course \u00E2\u0080\u0094 you've\nheard it all a dozen times.\nBut when, like me, you have\nonly two professors out of six\nwho can teach, and both of them\nget canned in the same year, it's a\nbit too much.\nWhile the students' fees don't\neven amount to enough to pay the\nsalaries of the faculty and staff, I\ndo believe that the prime reason\nfor the university being here is to\nprovide a place for learning to\noccur. If that is the case then\nshouldn't we have teachers at the\nfront of the rooms instead of\nfrantic researchers or tenured\nzombies who \"made it\"?\nThe English department nailed\nSeymour Levitan because he\ndidn't publish enough and doesn't\nwear the same color tie as the\ndepartment head. Initiative in\nteaching and non-conformity are\ndiscouraged it seems, and the\ntenure system \u00E2\u0080\u0094 which was\ndesigned to preserve freedom \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nnow excludes the new\nintelligentsia from the club.\nIn the psychology department\nan even more ridiculous situation\nexists. Carol Marx had a two-year\ncontract which will not be\nrenewed.\nThe department must have had\nsome respect for her because she\nis teaching Psych 401 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 the only\nclinical psychology course offered\nat UBC - as well as Psych 206, an\nintroductory course for\nnon-majors.\nThe department, however,\nchose a totally asinine excuse for\ncanning her, and that makes the\nsituation more untenable. Since\nher husband lives in Bellingham\nand teaches university in the state\nof Washington, it was concluded\nthat Carol would be unable to\nmake a lasting teaching\ncommitment.\nA women's liberation\ndiscussion on this point would be\nfutile since it is obvious that this Thursday, January 20, 1972\nTHE UBYSSEY\nPage 5\nMore letters\ncannot be the real reason for\ndismissal. Carol is an educator,\nnot an instructor or lecturer. She\ninitiates throught and interest on\nthe part of her students, and this\ncombined with her personality\nand intelligence provides her\nstudents with an excellent prof.\nStudents in the department of\npsychology find few good profs \u00E2\u0080\u0094\non the whole we are presented\nwith a bunch of rejects with little\nor no teaching ability. It almost\nseems like a conspiracy, and it\ntakes little effort to see a\nrelationship between the\nbusinessmen who never hire\nanyone smarter then themselves,\nand the acting department head\nwho never quite made it.\nPerhaps problems like this exist\nin other faculties as well.\nThe only remedy I can see is a\nnew composition for tenure\ncommittees, and more powers, as\nit appears that neither the\ndepartment heads nor the dean\nare capable of handling the power\nthey presently have.\nName withheld,\nPsych major\nMore\nPschology prof Carol Marx has\nbeen fired from the UBC faculty.\nHer two-year contract has not\nbeen renewed and she has been\ngiven no adequate reason for her\ndismissal. (She was given some\nhorse-shit story about her being a\nfemale with a married life ahead\nof her \u00E2\u0080\u0094 she should now become a\nhousewife?)\nWhat is department head Edro\nSignori trying to hide? Do females\nnot belong in the psych\ndepartment? Can his personal\nview of what Carol should do with\nher life control Carol's position?\nLet's hear the real reason.\nSignori \u00E2\u0080\u0094 of course, only if Carol\nwants it made public, but she has\nnothing to hide.\nI am a student in Dr. Marx's,\n206 class, and I certainly back up\nstatements made in Tuesday's\nUbyssey by Dave Patterson.\nCarol's classes are excellent. It\ncertainly can't be her teaching\nability that is at fault, but at UBC\nteaching ability seems to be of\nonly tertiary importance, ranking\nbehind such all-important criteria\nas department politics and often\nmeaningless research.\nIt is my opinion that teaching\nability should be a primary factor\nin hiring and firing profs. If it was,\nCarol Marx would not be released\nlike this.\nName withheld,\nPsych 206\nMildred\nHi there, all you 'mature\nstudents', wandering across the\nsloshy, cheerless campus, wearied\nby the post-Christmas blues.\nYou are not alone \u00E2\u0080\u0094 there are\nhundreds of us here, fulfilling\nsome unexplained ambition and\nurge to fulfil ourselves, to prove\nthat we can do 'it', that we are\nbright and energetic enough to be\ngood at being mate, mother,\nhousekeeper (and often\nbreadwinner too) as well as a good\nstudents, all at the same time.\nSometimes we wonder whether\nit's all worth it \u00E2\u0080\u0094 whether we are\ngoing to make it \u00E2\u0080\u0094 whether\nsomething is going to give \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nsomewhere.\nWhat 'gives' is that we often\nfeel so pressured by duties and\ncommitments, that we leave out\nprecious moments of being, of\nsharing - the very things which\nwould help to renew us, enliven\nus, give us the much needed\nenergy and courage to carry on.\nAs a result, we often feel\nlonely, left out, misunderstood,\nand everything becomes a chore.\nRemember, we came out here for\npositive reasons, hoping for\npositive experiences and results,\nnot added chores.\nIf you are at all like me, and I\nseem to be speaking about myself,\nand those of you I have shared my\nthoughts with lately, you begin to\ndoubt yourself and your purpose\nabout this time.\nAgriculture Undergraduate\nSociety\nJan. 14, 1972\nActivity Fee Levy\n50% of the eligible voters voted\n85% in favor of levying a $3.00\nUndergrad Soceity activity fee for\n1972-73 ______\nCapital Fund Levy\n50% of the eligible voters voted\n88% in favor of levying a $2.00/yr.\ncapital fund levy for the next five\nyears to be contributed to the\nAgriculture Sciences fund.\nTRIUMF\nCUPE\nWILL YOU?\nThe Canadian Union of Public Employees\nDon't despair \u00E2\u0080\u0094 there's always\nthe quiet Mildred Brock Lounge,\nopen all day, every day, where\nyou can relax, study, and meet\nand chat with kindred souls, to\ngripe about courses and exams\nand to share your concerns.\nOccasionally we have a\nprogram, such as today at noon,\nMildred Brock Lounge, when\nGeorge Hermanson, our young\nUBC chaplain, will discuss with us\nthe significance of his work in the\n70s. We are one of his concerns.\nBring your lunch, coffee will\nbe available. See you there.\nAnne Bryant,\nSociology 4.\nThe Ubyssey welcomes letters\nfrom all readers.\nLetters should be signed and, if\npossible typed.\nThough an effort is made to\nprint all letters received, The\nUbyssey reserves the right to edit\nfor clarity, legality, brevity and\ntaste.\nAPPLICATION\nFOR GRADUATION\n\"Application for Graduation\" cards are now being mailed to\nstudents in Fourth Year Arts, Fine Arts, Music, Commerce,\nScience, Elementary Education and Fifth Year Secondary\nEducation. Applications are available in the Faculty Offices\nfor all other Faculties. For students in Graduate Studies\nProgrammes the Graduate advisor will have application cards.\nAll students who expect to graduate this Spring are requested\nto complete and return both cards to the Registrar's Office.\n(Mrs. Kent) as soon as possible, but no later than February 15\n1972.\n\"Application for Graduation\" cards are also available in\nthe Office of the Registrar and students in the above\ngraduating years who do not receive cards in the mail\nshould check their addresses in the Registrar's Office.\nPLEASE NOTE: It is the responsibility of the\nstudent to MAKE APPLICATION for HIS\nDEGREE. The list of candidates for graduation to\nbe presented to the Faculty and the Senate for\napproval is compiled from these application cards.\nNO APPLICATION - NO DEGREE\nChild of the Week\nDo you remember seeing Rob's\npicture in the autumn? We are\nstill looking for a family for him\nto grow up in.\nRob is a lively, appealing\neight-year-old with red hair and\nfreckles who desperately needs\nparents.\nRob is now living in a treatment\ncentre and is learning to cope\nwith emotional problems\nprecipitated by foster home\nbreakdowns, neglect and\nabandonment by his own\nparents. Without parents, Rob's\nfuture looks pretty bleak to him.\nHe needs to meet and get to\nknow his \"new parents\" over a\nperiod of time before he can go\n\"home\" with them.\nIf your family can work with\nRob with continued special help\nfrom us, please phone Lois\nBonnell, Catholic Family and\nChildren's Service, 683-0281.\nROB\nBRUCE ALLAN\nTALENT PROMOTIONS LTD.\npresents\nTHE FINEST IN ROCK ACTS\nWe exclusively represent the following acts in all fields\nCROSSTOWN BUS\nMCA Records\nTHIN RED LINE\nTOM NORTHCOTT\nUNI Records\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 STREET NOISE\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 WEATHER\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 SWEET BEAVER\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 UNCLE SLUG\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 SUNSHYNE\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 EVERYDAY PEOPLE\nGRT Records\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 UPROAR\nThe above groups cannot be obtained through any other agent or agency.\nWe also represent:\n* SEEDS OF TIME\n* SPRING\n* STALLION THUMROCK\n* FLASH PAN\n* THE BURNER BOYS * SUNDANCE\n* MOCK DUCK *IMITE-TRAIIN\n* RAM * lAcniu nr>n\n* NORTHWEST COMPANY * AT THE ZOO\n* HIGH FLYING BIRD\nSHY LOCK\n* NITE-TRAINS\n* JASON HOOVER\n* WICKED ORANGE\n* MOTHERHOOD\n688-7274\nNo. 117 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 845 HORNBY ST., VANCOUVER, B.C.\nASK FOR BRUCE ALLEN or SAM FELDMAN Page 6\nTHE UBYSSEY\nThursday, January 20, 1972\nHot flashes\nTreaty under\ncffSCUSSIOft\nAs part of a continuing series\non American influence in\nCanadian affairs, the UBC\nacademic activities committee\n(not affiliated with the Alma\nMater Society) will hold a\ndiscussion today entitled The\nColumbia River Treaty - What\nHappened?\nCivil engineering prof S.\nRussell, formerly with consulting\nengineers on the Columbia River\nTreaty Project will take part in\nthe discussion in the SUB clubs\nlounge at 12:30.\nFollowing last year's successful\ncompletion of the West Coast\nTrail, the UBC West Coast Trail\nclub has announced a second hike\nto begin immediately after April\nexams.\nStudents and others are invited\nto join the expedition on the\n50-mile trail between Port\nRenfrew and Bamfield on the\nsouth-west coast of Vancouver\nIsland by contacting John Twigg\nin the Ubyssey office or by\nphoning 732-6829.\nLast April four men and one\nwoman completed the trail in five\nand a half days \u00E2\u0080\u0094 which was the\nonly mistake they made. This\nyear's trip should take about eight\nor nine days.\nMinimum equipment is a pair\nof good boots, one tent for every\ntwo people, a pack capable of\ncarrying about 40 pounds and a\nlot of good vibes.\nIf enough people sign up the\ngroup could look into chartering a\nbus to Port Renfrew, Twigg said.\nTeachers\nA Vancouver free high school\nneeds volunteer teachers.\n\"We need people who are\nmainly interested in teaching\nsomething to people who are\ninterested in learning,\" said Phil\nKaniger, one of the teachers at the\n65-student school called Total\nEducation.\nKaniger said Monday the\nstudents, who are 15 to 19 in age,\ndance, Spanfsh, pottery,\neconomics, general science,\nGerman and medicine.\nThe school, at 557 West\nTwelfth, is financed by the\nVancouver School Board.\nIts number is 879-6626.\n'Tween classes\nTODAY\nCRAFT CO-OP\nTalk about pottery glazing and glaze\nrecipes, today noon, SUB 251.\nSPECIAL EVENTS\nNFB film City of Gold shown noon,\ntoday and Friday in Lasserre 102.\nPierre Berton narrator.\nN.V.C.\nGeneral meeting today noon, SUB\n205.\nSTUDENT LIBERALS\nDiscuss economic nationalism today\nnoon, SUB 213.\nACADEMIC ACTIVITIES\nCivil eng. prof Sam Russell will\nspeak on \"The Columbia River\nTreaty; What happened?\" today\nnoon, SUB club's lounge.\nUBC SKYDIVERS\nGeneral meet, first jump course\ntoday noon, SUB 119.\nVCF\nHubert Butcher on Prayer, today\nnoon SUB 125.\nALLIANCE FRANCAISE\nFilm postponed, meet today noon,\nBu. 100.\nBAHA'I CLUB\nOpen Invite to hear about\nBaha'u'llah today noon, Bu. 23230.\nINTERNATIONAL HOUSE\nThree free films, I.H. upper lounge\ntoday noon: \"Hymn\",\n\"Pardonnez-mol M. Karsh\", \"Quo\nVadis Mrs. Lumb\".\nT'WARGAMERS\nAlcibiades vs. Trojan planning for\nancient Greek-Roman campaign,\ntoday 7:30 p.m., SUB 111.\nNEWMAN CLUB\nGeneral meet St. Mark's music room\ntoday noon.\nBICYCLE CLUB\nRadsoc presents Ann Mortifee\ntoday noon in SUB auditorium,\nadmission 50 cents.\nCCF\nDiscussion today noon, SUB 215.\nFRIDAY\nYOUNG SOCIALIST\nTarig 'Ali, Internationally-known\nPakistani revolutionary, speaks on\nthe liberation of Bangladesh, Friday\nnoon, SUB auditorium. Donation\n25 cents.\nPRE-SOCIAL WORK\nSpeaker from Crisis Centre, Friday\nnoon, SUB 105B.\nEXPERIMENTAL COLLEGE\nDr. Richardson on Hinduism \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nBuddhism, Friday noon, SUB 111.\nMONDAY\nCONSERVATIVE CLUB\nDerrll Warren, leader of B.C. Tories,\nspeaks Monday noon, SUB party\nroom.\nELCIRCULO\nSpanish meal served Monday noon,\nI.H. 402.\nWhere's your HAIR at?\nCAMPUS STYLING\nAND\nBARBER SHOP\nCan Get it Together\nSUB Lower Floor - 2244636 - 9 a.m.-5:30 Mon.-Fri.\nTUXEDO\nRENTAL & SALES\n+ D.B. & S.B. Tuxedos\n+ D.B. & S.B. White Coats\n+ D.B. & S.B. Suits\n+ COLORED SHIRTS\nParkins at Rear\nBLACK & LEE\nFormal Wear Rentals\n631 Howe 688-2481\nWESTERN PROMOTIONS PROUDLY PRESENTS\nmCONCERT\nB. B. KING\nTHURSDAY, JANUARY 27\nQ.E. THEATRE 8:30pM.\n$4.00, $5.00, $6.00\nTickets: concert Box Office, 680 Robson \u00E2\u0080\u0094 687-2801\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 Outlets: Rohan's, Thunderbird Shop, Grennan's,\nTotem Music (Lougheed Mall)\nSUB FILMSOC presents\nCATCH 22\nwith Alan Arkin\nTHURSDAY \u00E2\u0080\u0094 7:00 50'\nFRI. ft SAT. \u00E2\u0080\u0094 7:00 ft 9:30 SUB\nSUNDAY \u00E2\u0080\u0094 7:00 THEATRE\nStarring\nJANE FONDA\nMICHAEL SARRAZIN\nSUSANNAH YORK\nGIG YOUNG\nBONNIE BEDELIA&\nRED BUTTONS\nHEBB\nTHEATRE\nUBC 7:30 & 9:30 p.m.\nFRI., JAN. 21\nSAT., JAN. 22\nadmission 75c\nCLASSIFIED\n*\u00C2\u00AB*\u00E2\u0080\u00A2$: Campus - 3 Haas, 1 day $1.00; 3 days $2.50\nCammarciaf \u00E2\u0080\u0094' 3 lines, 1 day $1.25; additional\nline* 30c; 4 days price of 3.\nClassified ads tire not accepted by telephone and are payable\nm advance. Deadline ia 11:30 a.m., the day before publication,\nPubficatiom Oltce, Room 241 S.O.B., VBC, Van. 8, B.C\nANNOUNCEMENTS\nDance*\n11\nGreeting!\n12\nSUZANNE CHERIE\nJe T'aime \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\n TOMA \t\nLost tt Found\n13\nLOST LAST THURS. SCARF, BLUE\ngreen and purple near Educ.\nPlease phone Florence. 253-2159.\nSILVER COIN BRACELET IS\nlost. Reward If you find it. Please\ncall 224-3698.\nRides & Car Pools\n14\nSpecial Notices\n15\nI NEED SENIOR POLI SCI. STU-\ndents for exciting (non-profit)\nproject on civic affairs. 732-3470.\n 3 FOR $1.00 ???? \t\nWhy pay this much for your prophylactics?\nWe will mail you 24 assorted brand\nname prophylactics for only $2.00 in\na plain sealed envelope by return\nmail.\nClip and enclose this ad. for additional bonus of 3 prophylactics to:\nPOSTTRADING\nBox 4002 Vancouver, B.C.\nDISCOUNT \u00E2\u0080\u0094 STEREO AM-FM\nFM - Stereo Tuner - Amplifier,\nTurntable, base, cartridge, plexl-\nglas cover, two speakers, 2-year\nguarantee. List $200.00, your cost\n$125.00 Call 732-6769 for savings.\nAlso carry Sony, Dual, Akai and\nSansui.\t\nAN EXPERIENCE IN LIFE AND\ngrowth, Gestalt Awareness Groups.\n$12 month. Contact Allan Cohen,\n224-5445 or John Mate, 922-4481.\nANN MORTIFEE IN CONCERT\u00E2\u0080\u0094\n12:30. Jan. 20th S.U.B, Auditorium\nAdmission 50c.\t\nZAZEN-BUDDHIST MEDITATION\nZen Centre, 139 Water St. T. Th.\n7:30 p.m. Sat, morning 8:00 a.m.\nANT MALE CURLERS INTEREST-\ned in playdowns for WCIAA finals\nplease contact Alex Coffey at 738-\n9605 between 6 and 7, before Jan.\n20.\nTravel Opportunities\n16\nFLY TO EUROPE FROM $170.00\nround trip, student vacations and\ntours, employment servicese etc.\nAir mail for full details. Campus\nAgents also required. A.A.S.A.\nLimited, 15 High St., Ventnor\nI.W., England.\t\nWanted\u00E2\u0080\u0094Information\n17\nWANTED TO RENT \u00E2\u0080\u0094 CABIN AT\nWhistler, midterm, eight (8)\npeople. Marian, 922-6334 after\n7 p.m. \t\nWanted\u00E2\u0080\u0094Miscellaneous\n18\nWANTED TO BUT OR BORROW\nany or all issues of: The Modern\nUtopian, January 1970 to January\n1972. Phone 874-8849.\nAUTOMOTIVE\nAuto* For Sale\n21\n1954 CHEV 2 DR. SEDAN GOOD\nmechanical and body $195'. 224-\n1976: 228-4301. \t\nAuto Repairs\n24\nWANTED \u00E2\u0080\u0094 CHEAP BODT WORK\nfor '62 Renault, for cash or new\nRaleigh 10 speed. Harvey 261-5652\nBUSINESS SERVICES\nBabysitting & Day Care\n32\nDuplicating & Copying\n33\nPhotography\n35\nScandab\n37\nA.G.S. C-90 CASSETTES GUARAN-\nteed against all defects. Quantity\nprice $1.50 each. Minimum purchase 6. Can: arrange for delivery\nor pick-up on campus. Call 732-\n6769 for savings.\nRECORDS \u00E2\u0080\u0094 WE HAVE THE\nlatest releases in rock, folk &\nblues only. Trade-ins accepted.\nWe also have leathercrafts. Drop\nin and listen to the music or play\na game of scrabble. Joy Music\nSanctuary 6610 Main (at 50th)\n11 a.m. - 7 p.m.\t\nLONGHATRS!! TRUCK ON DOWN\nto lower floor SUB. Let CAMPUS\nSTYLISTS & BARBER SHOP do\nit to your head.\nTyping;\nTYPING. 40c a page. Petra, days\n685-9388; nights 327-1037. Professional.\t\nEXPERT IBM SELECTRIC TYPIST\nExperienced essay and thesis typist. Reasonable Rates \u00E2\u0080\u0094 321-3838,\nMrs. Ellis.\nTEDIOUS TASKS \u00E2\u0080\u0094 PROFESSION-\nal typing. IBM Selectric \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Days,\nEvenings, Weekends., Phone Sharl\nat 738^745\u00E2\u0080\u0094Reasonable Rates.\nTyping\u00E2\u0080\u0094Conx.\n40\nIBM SELECTRIC TYPING SER-\nvice. Theses, Manuscripts, Term\nPapers, etc. Mrs. Troche, Phone\n437-1355.\nEFFICIENT ELECTRIC TYPING\nMy Home. Essays, Theses, etc.\nNeat, Accurate Work. Reasonable Rates. Phone 263-5317.\nEMPLOYMENT\nHelp Wanted\n51\nFEMALE OR MALE person for\nweek-end deliveries. One dollar\nper delivery. Apply in person, 2850\nGrandview Hwy., Vancouver. Car\nnecessary.\t\nFULL ROOM AND BOARD PLUS\nremuneration for 2 or 3 days\nweekly assistance incl. driving\nparaplegic working woman. Dun-\nbar. 733-2819 (Eves.)\nEARN WHILE IN SCHOOL\n$300-$500 per mo.\nCampus representative for\nresume forwarding service.\nFlexible hours. For full information write National\nResume Services. P.O. Box\n1445, Peoria. 111. 61601.\nSUMMER 1972\nCAREER - ORIENTED\nSUMMER EMPLOYMENT\nPROGRAM\nIN THE FIELDS OF: Administration, Biological, Chemical. Life\nand Physical Sciences. Engineering and Applied Sciences, Economics, Social Sciences.\nELIGIBILITY: All full-time university students in the above\nfields who intend to return to\nuniversity in 1972-73. Canadian\ncitizens have statutory preference\nfor appointment.\nTO APPLY: Submit a UCPA application form (available from\nyour University PJacement Office)\nand a list of courses taken, to\nthe Public Service Commission of\nCanada Regional Office, 203-535\nThurlow St., Vancouver 5, B.C.\nApply before January 31, 1972.\nINSTRUCTION 8c SCHOOLS\nMusic Instruction\n81\nSpecial Classes\n62\nTutoring Service\n63\nTutors\u00E2\u0080\u0094Wanted\n64\nMISCELLANEOUS\nFOR SALE\n71\nBARGAIN SALE FROM TURKEY!\nLambskin embroidered suede\ncoats, sheepskin Iinins and Angora trim. Selling fast in SUB'S\nAMS Co-op Store.\t\nPAIR NORESCO AIR SUSPENSION\nspeakers 10\", woofer $130. List\n$220. Phone 926-3905 or see Fred\nat Hut 6, Rm. 10, Ft. Camp. Also\npair size 12 buckle ski boots.\t\nFOR SALE \u00E2\u0080\u0094 ROSSIGNOLS\nStratos 200. Good condition; 1972\nLange competitions, size 8%m.\nPhone) Joy 732-9160.\n215 METAL'S WITH BINDINGS,\n$45. Antique pump organ, offers.\nPhone Barrett, 731-9753.\nRENTALS at REAL ESTATE\nRooms\n81\nMEN ONLY. BSMT. ROOM. QUIET,\nprivate entr. Near gate \u00E2\u0080\u0094 now\nready \u00E2\u0080\u0094 no cooking. 224-7623.\nCOMFORTABLE ROOM SEPA-\nrate entrance and bathroom; hotplate, linen provided. Dunbar area.\nPhone 733-5772.\t\nCAMPUS ROOMS WITH KITCHEN\nprivileges $60/month, co-ed. phone\n224-9549. 5745 Agronomy Road, behind village.\nRoom & Board\n82\nIT'S NEW \u00E2\u0080\u0094 STAY AT THE DKE\nHouse. Large spacious rooms;\nsemi-private washrooms, color TV,\ncomplete laundry facilities and\nexcellent food. 5765 Agronomy Rd.\n224-9691.\t\nON CAMPUS ACCOMMODATION\nSt. Andrew's Hall, 224-7720.\nFurnished Apts.\n83\nUnfurnished Apt*.\n84\nSUITE FOR RENT (AVAILABLE\nimmediately) on campus (5760\nToronto Road). Three rooms &\nwashroom, private entrance. $90.00\na month. Also large lounge (fireplace). Ideal for serious students.\nCommunal Houses\n85\nHouses\u00E2\u0080\u0094Furn. & Unfurn.\n86\n4TH GIRL TO SHARE 4 BDRM.\nhouse Feb. 1, $60. 224-3166. Dunbar\nat 29th. Thursday, January 20, 1972\nTHE UBYSSEY\nPage 7\nSPORTS\nUBC stars do get bread\nBy KENT SPENCER\nAthletic scholarships at UBC?\nImpossible, you say, the\nadministration is too cheap.\nScholarship athletes are at SFU,\notherwise known as Dingaling U.,\naren't they?\nNo. Last summer the federal\ngovernment, under the\nDepartment of Health and\nWelfare, alloted $1,100,000 for\nyoung athletes who \"wished to\ncombine both their educational\nand competitive careers.\"\nA selection committee chaired\nby Bob Hindmarch (the hockey\ncoach at UBC) and Pierre\nCharbonneau of Montreal met in\nOttawa last June to award the\nmoney. The ten man group\nanalyzed sports data on hundreds\nof applications from across the\ncountry.\nFinancial need, character,\nmarks, placement on the Pan Am\ngames team, the report of the\nsports governing body on the\nplayer, and the rating of the\nplayer on an 'ability' list prepared\nby the governing body were\ncriteria of consideration during\nthe hectic three day period.\nThe result was 392 grants to\nstudent-athletes across the\ncountry, including 69 in B.C.\nSome of the UBC athletes who\nreceived the bread money were\nTerri McGovern, Derek Sankey,\nRalph Hutton, Karl Jonker,\nBrenda Eisler, Debbie Brill,\nSandra Kolb, Joanne Sargent,\nRick Cuttell, and Norm Trerise.\nThe list includes swimmers,\nIt's time for the big game.\nIt's a vitally important game\nthat you will have to win to stay\non top of the league. You have to\nwin it - at all costs.\nGo out onto the ice and keep\nan eye on your check. If he goes\nnear the puck, line him up for a\nshot against the boards. Make sure\nthe ref doesn't see you slip the\nbutt of your stick into his groin.\nGive him a good shot. Punish him.\nYou've got to hate him to win.\nOnto the basketball court.\nWhen the ref isn't looking, see If\nyou can wrench your opponents\nknee and maybe tear a few of the\nligaments. Don't worry about the\nhoop, it's not important. To win\nthe game, you've got to be mean.\nMake the game into an awe-\ninspiring spectacle for the fans.\nShow them that you're powerful\nenough to rub your opponent\nthrough the crap. This makes for\ngood entertainment and a fun\ntime.\nEUS FEE LEVY\n47% of eligible voters voted 92.3%\nin favor of $3.00 Undergraduate\nFee Levy for 1972-73 session.\n\"\"\"St*-\"\nRun the score up, rub it in\nsome more. Dirty opponent!\nYou're going to sweat for this\none.\nBack on the ice again. You\ntake your check into the boards\nand grind your stick across his\nhead. You take a penalty.\nYou're being unnecessarily\nrough, says the ref. What, me, you\nsay. How was I supposed to know\nthat his head would get in the way\nof my stick? I'm innocent.\nGo to the penalty box and sit\nit out. Luckily your team is ahead\nso this isn't an important penalty.\nNow the game is over and\nyou've won it. Go and shake your\nopponent's hand, and tell him you\nenjoyed playing against him.\nWhat's this? He won't shake\nyour hand. Oh, well, he's just a\npoor sport.\nGet off the ice and into the\ndressing room.\nThen try to become a human\nagain.\nOPTOMETRIST\nJ.D. MacKENZIE\n732-0311\nA REFERENDUM\nwas held at the Law School, Jan.\n18, 1972 asking whether students\nare in favour of a $3.50 fee levy to\nfund the activities of the Law\nStudents' Association for the\n1972-73 term.\nRESULTS:\n174 votes cast\nIn favor of the $3.50 levy 121\nAgainst 52\nSpoils 1\nIan MacKinnon, L.S.A. Secretary\nUBC CAMPUS\nMINISTRIES\nOffice SUB 234\nPhone 228-3701\nOPEN\nMon. 10-12; Tues. 10-4;\nWed. 10-4; Thurs. 10-12\nFri. 10-4.\nDROP IN\nCome to the experts and\nspecialists at Henneken Auto \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nBecause we specialize (we don't\nhave to stock parts for all makes\nof cars) and when you repair\nonly a few cars you can repair\nthem faster, hence we can save\nyou money on VW,\nMercedes, Porsche\nand Volvo car repairs.\nNo repair too big or\nsmall. All work fully\nguaranteed.\nrowers, a football player, high\njumpers, badminton players, and\ntrack stars'. Almost every sport\nwas included.\nHockey players received\nscholarships and bursaries under a\nseparate programme funded by\nHockey Canada. Bob McAneeley\nand Ian Wilkie of the\nThunderbirds got $2,000 each,\nwhile Steve Fera, Laurie Yaworski\nand Laurie Vanzella got bursaries\nof $700 each. .\nThe other awards were of\nthree categories: $2,000 a year for\nfour years renewable, $1,000 a\nyear for one year renewable, and\ngrants of $500, $1,000, or\n$1,500.\nThe programme will ,be\ncontinued this year in full.\nApplicants should see their coach\nfor additional details.\nUiunderettes\nplace third\nThe UBC Thunderettes\nvolleyball team made it to the\nsemi-finals but not to the finals of\ntheir own Thunderette\nInvitational Tournament held on\nthe weekend.\nUBC finished tournament play\nwith a 7-3 record and won the\nquarter-finals against Kay Jays\nwith wins of 15-7 and 15-10,\nadvancing to the semi-finals\nagainst Premier Cals of Calgary.\nThe Calgary team beat the\nThunderettes 15-13 and 15-7 to\nadvance to the finals against the\nVancouver Calonas, the defending\nCanadian Champions. Vancouver\nemerged as tournament\nchampions by scores of 15-9 and\n15-3.\nIn the B division of the\ntournament, the Junior Varsity\nteam defeated Victoria Y 18-16\nand 15-10 in the final match to\ntake the B championship.\nRECORDING ARTISTS\nMARTY GILLAN\nand\nKAREN O'BRAY\nAppearing Nightly\nfrom 9 p.m. Mon.-Sat.\nwith THE\nTOWN PUMPERS\nDescribed by Leisure Magazine as\nTHE BAND OF THE YEAR\nTheir new Stereo L.P.\n\"WE DID IT OUR WAY\"\nNOW AVAILABLE AT LOCAL\nRECORD STORES\nTHE\nTOWN\n1 PUMP\nTwo overtime puck wins\nFor the second night in a row,\nthe Thunderbird hockey team\nwon the game in overtime.\nTom Williamson flipped the\npuck past University of\nSaskatchewan goalie, Lauren\nSchmyr, at 7:40 of the overtime\nperiod to win the game 3-2. Alex\nDick did most of the work on the\nplay, out-hustling a Huskie\ndefenceman to the puck to\nprevent an icing call. Dick shot on\ngoal and the rebound went to\nWilliamson.\nFriday night, Bill Cartwright\nscored the winning goal just two\nminutes into the overtime period\nto give the 'Birds a 6-5 win over\nthe University of Winnipeg\nWesmen.\nThe 'Birds are now solidly in\nsecond place in the Rockies\nDivision of the Western Canadian\nintercollegiate hockey league with\n16 points, two behind the\nUniversity of Alberta Golden\nBears and two ahead of the\nUniversity of Calgary Dinosaurs.\nThe 'Birds will be in Victoria\nthis weekend and not Calgary as\nwas originally scheduled because\nof the Air Traffic Controllers\nstrike.\nThey will play two games\nagainst the University of Victoria\nVikings, on Saturday at 1:30 and\nSunday at 2 p.m. at Esquimalt\nArena.\nIntramurals\nBOWLING league play begins\ntonight at 7 p.m. in the SUB\nbowling lanes.\nSNOOKER tournament round\nis posted outside the intramural\noffice. Games start tonight at 7\np.m. in the SUB. Check the list to\nsee when you play.\nGROUSE MOUNTAIN\nSKI SCHOOL\nU.B.C. SKI LESSONS\nGroup Lessons start Jan. 24 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 25\n5 nights, $33.00 - 4 nights, $27.00 .\nAll tips included 4:30 p.m. - 12:00 p.m.\nSee RANDY in V.O.C. office at\nnoon-time this week in SUB\nSPAGHETTI HOUSE LTD\n4450 W. 10th Ave.\nHot Delicious Tasty Pizzas\nfamous charbroiled steaks \u00E2\u0080\u0094 spare ribs\nFREE DELIVERY - Right to Your Door\nPhone 224-1720 - 224-6336\nOPEN FOR LUNCH - SPECIAL MENU\nHOURS - MON. To THURS. 11 a.m. to 3 a.m.\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 FRI. & SAT. 11 a.m. to 4 am. - SUNDAY 4 p.m to 2 a.m..\nAlma Mater Society\nOFFICIAL\nNOTICE\nELECTIONS FOR 72/73\nElections for frie AMS.\nExecutive will be held as fo/fows\nFIRST SLATE\u00E2\u0080\u0094 Wednesday, February 2\nPRESIDENT\nSECRETARY\nINTERNAL AFFAIRS OFFICER\nEXTERNAL AFFAIRS OFFICER\nSECOND SLATE-Wednesday, February 9\nVICE PRESIDENT\nTREASURER\nCOORDINATOR\nOMBUDSPERSON\nThe Nomination periods for the 2 slates are:\nFIRST SLATE - 9:00 a.m. Wednesday, January 19th to 12:30\np.m. Thursday, January 27th.\nSECOND SLATE - 9:00 a.m. Wednesday, January 26th to 12:30\np.m. Thursday,,February 3rd.\nAll students interested in running in these elections should pick up\nnomination and eligibility forms at the A.M.S. General Office, or from the\nA.M.S. Secretary, SUB 248. Page 8\nTHE UBYSSEY\nThursday, January 20, 1972\nPLUGGED IN to Beethoven and Schoenberg, students in Wilson listening library ponder\nturntables. Playing your own psychedelic rock records is frowned on, but some still\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094billy gin photo\nsucceed in getting contraband discs past the front desk and settle in for a spaced-out hour\nor two.\nCUPE workers may strike Ryerson\nTORONTO (CUP) - The\npossibility of picket lines around\nthe Ryerson Polytechnical\nInstitute campus before the end\nof the month arose this week as\nthe strike deadline for\nmaintenance workers drew nearer.\nAbout 112 maintenance, boiler\nroom and motor pool staff,\nmembers of Local 233 of the\nCanadian Union of Public\nEmployees whose contract\nexpired last Sept. 30, can legally\nstrike Monday if no agreement is\nreached with management at a\nmeeting scheduled for Friday.\n\"If conciliation proceedings\nfail to bring about a satisfactory\nagreement,\" said CUPE\nrepresentative Jim Anderson, \"the\nunion could set up picket lines at\nall the main entrances to the\ncampus by the end of the\nmonth.\"\n\"Members voted on Jan. 6\nrejecting the latest offer of the\nadministration by 80 per cent,\"\nadded Anderson, and in addition,\n\"authorized their bargaining\ncommittee to proceed with strike\naction if it became necessary.\"\nOfficials of Local 233\nemphasized that \"it is the\nnegotiating team's desire to\ncontinue talks with the\nadministration in the hope of\navoiding a strike.\"\nSince the contract expired a\ntotal of 10 meetings have taken\nplace between union and\nmanagement.\nThe basic rate of pay for\njanitorial and other staff was\n$3 per hour. The union's\nnegotiating team is now\nbargaining for a basic rate of $3.65\nper hour. In their vote last\nThursday, the members rejected\nan offer of $3.24 as proposed by\nthe administration's negotiating\nteam.\nThey are now asking for a\none-year contract instead of a\ntwo-year contract in order to\nenable them to get an\neight-per-cent raise this year and a\nsix-per-cent increase next year.\nCUPE members at York\nUniversity recently negotiated a\ncontract for a $3.50 basic hourly\nrate. Union members at the public\nschool level had an agreement\nexpire Dec. 31 which had ensured\nthem a basic rate of $3.57 per\nhour.\nIn a recent labor dispute\nbetween the administration of\nGlendon College and a CUPE\nlocal, the union was supported by\nthe students. When it was evident\nthe CUPE local at Glendon, an\naffiliate of York University in\nToronto, would go out on strike\nto strengthen their bargaining\n.im\nposition, the students voted to\nhonor the picket lines in the event\nof a strike by the local.\nWith the support of the\nstudent body at Glendon, the\nCUPE local was able to settle their\ndispute with the administration.\n\"If Ryerson's staff did go out\non strike at the.end of the month,\nthey will be able to draw upon a\nstrike fund of $2 million,\"\ncommented Anderson.\nCUPE is the largest\nindependent union in the country\nwhich has no formal ties or head\noffices at an international level. It\nis the second largest union in\nCanada, slightly short of the\nUnited Steelworkers of America\nin total membership.\nIn the Toronto area alone,\nCUPE has 40,000 members.\nA union member commented\nthat, \"in the event of a possible\nstrike at Ryerson at the end of the\nmonth, the administration's\nsupervisory, personnel would have\na hell of a time keeping the place\nheated.\"\nFive restaurants in new food service\nBy JIM JOLY\nThe Alma Mater Society's local restaurant\nalternate food service will begin Monday in\nSUB 207-209, Adrian Belshaw, AMS external\naffairs officer said Wednesday.\nThe service is being set up to provide an\ninexpensive alternate to the food available in\nthe administration's SUB cafeteria. It will\noffer meals from five local restaurants on a\nregular basis.\nBelshaw said the meal prices will be held to\na maximum of 90 cents. The AMS will take\n16.6 per cent of this to cover SUB mortgage\nand clean-up costs.\nWanda Halpert, manager of God's Kitchen,\nsaid Wednesday that her food prices will have\nto rise above the break-even point to cover the\ncosts of the AMS percentage levy. \u00E2\u0080\u009E\n\"Our cheapest sandwiches are going to cost\n55 cents,\" she said. \"That's even more\nexpensive than food services' cafeteria prices.\"\n\"Even though our sandwiches are twice as\ngood as the administration ones, students\nmight not look at it this way and go buy\nadministration food,\" she said.\nHalpert wondered why her restaurant had\nto pay a levy and the alternate book store or\nfood service did not have to.\nBelshaw explained that all non-student run\nservices must pay for their SUB building\nspace.\nThere will not be any profit made by the\nrestaurants participating in the service.\n'The main reason we're involved is because\nwe'd like to give people a chance to have good\nfood,\" Halpert said.\nBelshaw feels the upstairs location of the\nfood services will not be convenient but said\nthere was no room available on the main floor\nof SUB.\n\"The art gallery is the only possible place\non the main floor to put it and it's used for\nother things.\"\nBelshaw said four restaurants have\ncommitted themselves to the service and\nexpects a fifth, a Greek restaurant, to do so\nsoon.\nThe restaurants will offer food as follows:\nHong Kong Kitchen: Monday.\nSimpatico Restaurant: Tuesday.\nCurry House: Wednesday.\nNo commitment for Thursday.\nGod's Kitchen: Friday."@en . "Newspapers"@en . "Vancouver (B.C.)"@en . "LH3.B7 U4"@en . "LH3_B7_U4_1972_01_20"@en . "10.14288/1.0127155"@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 .