"CONTENTdm"@en . "http://resolve.library.ubc.ca/cgi-bin/catsearch?bid=1211252"@en . "University Publications"@en . "2015-08-27"@en . "1972-02-01"@en . "Misprinted volume, should be LIV."@en . ""@en . "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/Ubysseynews/items/1.0127280/source.json"@en . "application/pdf"@en . " Miners laid off as Trudeau lays it on\nSUDBURY (CUP) -\nInternational Nickel Company,\nthe principal employer here, has\nannounced that it is laying off\n1,965 workers in the next three\nmonths.\nInco's announcement follows a\nspeech by prime minister Pierre\nTrudeau last week to Italian\nworkers in Toronto in which he\nsaid: \"There are jobs in the mines,\nthere are jobs on the farms out\nwest where some farmers\nCandidates\nwoo votes\nof masses\ncomplain they can't get help and\nin Ontario they have to import\nmigrant workers from the West\nIndies to work on fruit farms\nbecause they can't'find workers\nhere.\"\nAs if to belie Trudeau's glib\nassertion of the existence of all\nthose jobs, Inco said it is laying\noff 725 mine workers within the\nnext few days. During the next\nthree months 1,240 more workers\nwill lose their jobs.\nUnemployed workers across\nthe country must be wondering\nwhere all those jobs Trudeau is\ntalking about are. Inco's other\nmain operation at Thompson,\nManitoba is also cutting back\noperations due to the depressed\nBy LESLEY KRUEGER\nPast Alma Mater Society\npresidents have used the\npresidency to jockey themselves\ninto prominent positions in\nsociety, AMS presidential\ncandidate Fred Ferdman said\nMonday.\nFerdman, grad studies 9, told\nabout 125 persons in the SUB\nballroom that Byron Hender, who\nas AMS president in 1965-66 was\nresponsible for the passing of the\nSUB referendum, was rewarded\nwith a position in the university\nadministration placing him in\ncharge of the bookstore.\nFerdman was speaking at the\nall-candidates meeting held the\nusual two days before the\nelection. Polls will open\nWednesday morning at advertised\nlocations.\nHe said SUB has worked out to\nbe a money-making proposition\nf o r ' 'Walter Gage's\nadministration\".\n\"On top of that, it will gain\ncontrol of SUB when our lease\nruns out in 40 years,\" Ferdman\nsaid.\nThe only way to circumvent\nthe take over would be for\nstudents to gain control of the\nboard of governors, he said. This\nwould also permit students to\nimplement his main platform \u00E2\u0080\u0094 a\nfight against U.S. imperialism.\nStudents Coalition presidential\ncandidate Doug Aldridge, applied\nscience 4, said rather than using\ndemands or pressure to force the\nadministration to do what the\nAMS wants they should cooperate\nto get their way.\nHe said his slate would try to\nbuy out the administration food\nservices and place them in\nstudents' hands.\nAmid cries of \"bullshit\" from\nHuman Government caucus\nmembers in the audience,\nAldridge told the crowd the\nHuman Government tried to get a\n$200,000 loan and failed because\n\"capitalists consider them poor\nsecurity risks\".\n\"The Students Coalition has\nguarantees for loans of up to\n$1,000,000,\" he said.\nAlso running on the SC slate is\nTeri Ball, agriculture 2, for\nexternal affairs.\nShe said she would like to see a\nrapid transit system implemented\nand an increase in the conference\nbudget.\nStudent Coalition secretarial\ncandidate Sally Clark, arts 1, said\nthe role of secretary had\npreviously been a confining one.\n\"I would like to see tickertape\nthe\nthe\nmachines installed for\nelections so we could find\nresults faster.\"\nAlso running on the Student\nCoalition slate is Lynne Phillips,\narts 2, for internal affairs.\n\"There should be more space\nfor the alternate food services,\nAMS bookstore and crafts store,\"\nHuman Government presidential\ncandidate Svend Robinson said.\nHe said they should also work\ntoward* determining the extent of\nthe tenure problem and work\nTHE\nVol. LIU, No. 44 VANCOU\ntogether for Canadianization of\nthe university.\n\"We want to give students an\nalternative to all past governments\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 including the past Human\nGovernment regime. They made\nmany mistakes but initially they\nwere a good thing,\" Human\nGovernment external affairs\ncandidate Penny Newman said.\nOther Human Government\ncandidates are Garth Sundeen,\nagriculture 3, for secretary, and\nKeith Richardson, arts 3, for\ninternal affairs.\nMembers of the ineligible\nYoung Socialist slate were also at\nthe meeting.\nThe elections committee\ndeclared them ineligible because\nconstitutionally no member of a\npolitical party registered with the\nuniversity clubs committee may\nrun in any elections outside the\nclub itself with the advertised\nsupport of that party.\n\"This whole election is both\nineligible and ridiculous with the\nnon-choice between the Human\nGovernment hopefuls and the\nStudents Coalition tickertape\ncandidates,\" YS presidential\ncandidate Joan Campana said.\n\"We will be conducting a\nwrite-in campaign,\" she said.\nstate of the economy and the\nconsequent slump in sales.\nThis cutback has already cost\nmany workers their jobs and more\nlayoffs are forecast for the future\nthroughout the mining industry.\nWorkers at the Sudbury Inco\nsite will lose some hospitalization\nbenefits on the first day of the\nlayoff and insurance benefits\nwithin 30 days.\n\"It's almost like putting them\nup against the wall and shooting\nthem,\" said Mickey Maguire,\npresident of Local 6500 of the\nUnited Steel Workers of America.\n\"In every big city you find\npages of job offerings in the\nnewspapers\", millionaire Trudeau\nwent on.\n\"Often people are unemployed\nbecause they want a job at $3 an\nhour instead of $2 or because\nthey don't want to move. There is\nwork available in Canada but\nsometimes you have to move to\nget it and accept something above\nthe minimum wage and not buy a\nhouse in the first year.\"\nThe 1,965 who are losing their\njobs at Sudbury may find it hard\nto agree with Trudeau as they\ntake their place with the 6.2 per\ncent of the Canadian work force\nunemployed this month.\nAnd whether the prime\nminister realizes it or not, January\nis a bad month to try and find a\njob on a fruit farm.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094daryl tan photo\nFORESTRY CAR, named Omar, receives last respects from Gilbert Medicek and Stole Schneider after\nengineers made modifications in vehicle's design on weekend.\n*> <*S^. ^ vk. / * *> '^iC\nS ^V~V^ v\nPolls open Wednesday\nYeah, that's right Mildred, it's annual Alma\nMater Society executive time Wednesday for\npresident, secretary and external and internal affairs\nofficers.\nAs an extra enticement students are being\nasked to vote on a proposed expansion of SUB and\nthe principle of purchasing the administration food\nservice in SUB.\nAdvance polls are open from 11:30 a.m. to 4\np.m. today in SUB, the education building, the old\nauditorium cafeteria and the War Memorial gym.\nAdvance polls are also open from 5 to 7 p.m.\nin Fort Camp, Place Vanier and Totem Park.\nPolls will be open from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.\nWednesday in Angus, Buchanan, civil engineering,\nlaw, MacMillan, main library, Sedgewick library,\nSUB and Woodward library. Page 2\nTHE UBYSSEY\nTuesday, February 1, 1972\nBehind the psych dispute\nBy BERTON WOODWARD\nThe current hiring dispute in the psychology\ndepartment has .three sides. Monday The Ubyssey\ntalked to spokesmen for two of them.\nEdro Signori is the acting head of the\ndepartment, one who has shown an unwillingness to\nlisten to at least some of the students in his\ndepartment.\nA group of graduate psychology students has\nsent several letters, which Signori has refused to\nanswer, protesting the non-renewal of the contracts\nof Carol Marx and Michael Humphries.\nHumphries, a PhD graduate of Stanford\nUniversity, had his first two-year contract renewed\nin 1970 but was denied a third contract.\nSignori consistently refuses to answer any\nquestions about the two cases.\nA meeting was held Monday between 29\npsychology graduate students and Signori and the\nother members of the senior advisory committee \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nwhich decides department policy including contract\nrenewals.\nThe third side should be presented when those\nstudents meet Wednesday to release a brief on their\nposition in the dispute.\nOn the subject of the letters written by\nstudents in the department, Signori said: \"I refuse\nto answer letters on specific confidential matters of\npolicy.\n\"If students want change they should be\nworking with the rules, not breaking them.\n\"Grad students are on the committees that\naffect their education. There is no rule or policy\nabout students being on the advisory committee.\nThey should go to the board or senate about that.\"\nSignori was asked if he thought the students\nwere satisfied with the meeting.\n\"Probably not,\" he said. \"1 did answer them to\nthe extent that is permissible with regard to the\nneeds of confidential information that is deliberated\nby the advisory committee.\n\"I think our advisory committee met them with\nthe idea of being perfectly frank but some of the\nstudents were clearly not interested. I think the\nlarge majority learned something and that's what we\nwere trying to promote.\nInternational\nfood not selling\nApparently UBC students are not ready for\nanother alternate food service.\nThe international food fair, sponsored by the\nAlma Mater Society, is serving meals at noon in SUB\n207-209 daily. However, very few people are\ninterested.\n\"So far, we've been averaging only 80 to 90\nstudents per day,\" said Sandy Chow, owner of the\nHong Kong Kitchen.\nThe Hong Kong serves Chinese food every\nMonday. Tuesdays, Simpatico Restaurant serves\nItalian food, Wednesday it's the Curry House,\nThursday, the Acropol Restaurant, and Friday,\nGod's Kitchen. All meals cost a maximum of 90\ncents.\n\"Out of the 90 cents we have to give IS cents\nto the AMS, and plates and forks cost us five cents.\nThat leaves us only 70 cents and we barely break\neven on that,\" Chow said.\n\"My wife and I both cook. If I had to hire extra\nhelp, I couldn't do it with only 100 servings. I\nwould like to see at least 200,\" he said.\n\"It's not making me any money. I'm just doing\nit to advertise my restaurant.\"\nPRESCRIPTION SERVICE\nYOU CAN'T BEAT\nALMA\nPHARMACY\n224-4341\n10TH & ALMA\nBeautiful\nclothes. . .\nfor\neautiful\npeople\nLE CHATEAU\n\"a step ahead\"\n776 Granville 687-2701\n\"There is always a minority using a situation\nfor other purposes.\n\"I don't want to play politics with any of this. I\ndon't know if students are doing this to gain some\nkind of political favor.\n\"I find them unwilling to listen to fact.\n\"I think they were clearly going through the\ndrill today - reading something already written.\n\"There's discrepancies between the facts and\nthe way the facts are manipulated (by these\nstudents).\n\"Frankly I don't give a damn about them (the\n'minority').\"\nSignori said the advisory committee gets\nstudent assessment on all candidates up for contract\nrenewal.\n\"We attach considerable importance to it.\nTeaching is a very important part of what a\nprofessor does but on the other hand we have to\ntake into account a much broader pattern as well.\n\"You must keep in mind that in recent times -\nthe last two years - there has been a significant\nshift (in hiring practice) simply because people\ndon't want to lead staff into believing they would\nhave long term prospects when there is an ample\nsupply of staff.\n\"It is important they make a decision as soon as\npossible. This is made in terms of long term\nperspective.\"\nSignori related those long-term trends to the\ndecision-making process.\n\"I think staff who have been around are better\nable to see trends in psychology. You can't deny\nthat members of the (advisory) committee have\nmore experience.\"\nHumphries won't deny that but he sees easy\nabuses in a system that won't tell professors why\nthey've been fired.\n\"The senior staff is pretty autonomous,\" he\nsays. \"They say 'we're experienced, we'll judge'\nSomebody's got to override that, oversee that. Some\nkind of open appeal.\n\"I think they're hiding behind the secrecy\naspect. Secrecy can help the staff member or it can\nreally hinder the process.\n\"There are some judgments one individual\nmakes on another that are confidential but when\nsecrecy permits them to provide only vague or\nmisleading answers it lets them hide behind it.\"\nHumphries said the reasons given for the\nnon-renewal of his contract last year were \"quite\nvague\".\n\"The letter from (arts dean Doug) Kenny and\nthe senior staff said something like I'm 'not\nperforming at a level appropriate to the position'.\"\nHe said the only specific statements about why\nhis performance came from individual committee\nmembers in private.\n\"The decision must be able to be defended in\nfront of some other body. The faculty association is\nuseless.\n\"What I'm getting now is hearing about some\nfaculty members talking to Signori about issues that\nI never got to answer in person.\n\"Someone in the senior staff can make\nstatements about me that I can't respond.,to.\n\"I think there should be written documents \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nright now I have to correlate all these things I hear\nthat people have been saying about me and I hear it\nsecond or third hand.\n\"I have a lot of support of junior staff. To deny\nthem a voice is legal but whether the senior people\ncan defend that position much longer is\nquestionable.\n\"I think the junior faculty have the potential of\nbecoming a militant union.\"\n HELD OVER \"~\nTHE\nBIRTHDAY\nPARTY\nby Harold Pinter\nJanuary 31-February 4\nTICKETS AVAILABLE FOR\nFRIDAY, FEB. 4,8:00 P.M.\nBox Office Room 207, Frederic Wood Theatre\n HELD OVER\t\nComplete facilities\nfor\nBANQUETS\nAND\nRECEPTIONS\nTELEPHONE: 738-7231\n738-1110\n(The\nMmtse\nOPEN HOUSE OPEN HOUSE\nFeb. 12,24 p.m. Refreshments Served!\n2723 West 4th Avenue (AtMacdonald)\nPHOENIX 72 presents\nA Night at the Ponderosa\nOnly Advance Tickets\n50c in SUB Concourse\nWed. Feb. 2\n8:00-1:00\nREFRESHMENTS-3/$1\nThere's Something for Everyone\nAll Star Entertainment \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Games \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Films\nAnd More\nPHOENIX 72\npresenfs\nPARADE OF SPEAKERS\nAid. Art Phillips\nAt 12:30 Tues., Feb. 1 in the SUB Art Gallery for a\ndiscussion of local relevant issues.\nCanadian Poet Bill Bissett\nAt 12:30 Wed., Feb. 2 SUB Art Gallery. Readings from his\nworks.\nPsychiatrist Dr. Bennett Wong\n12:30 Thurs., Feb. 3 SUB Aud. Speaking on the\ndehumanizing effects of our present society \u00E2\u0080\u0094 with slides.\nGeorgia Straight Editor\nDan McLeod\n12:30 (tentatively) Friday, Feb. 4 SUB Art Gallery.\nDiscussing some of the current hassles facing the\nStraight.\nAuthor LaVerne Barnes\nTime to be announced. Speaking on her controversial\nbook The Plastic Orgasm. Tuesday, February 1, 1972\nTHE UBYSSEY\nPage 3\nINELIGIBLE BUT INDOMITABLE, Young Socialist AMS presidential candidate Joan\nCampana holds forth at Monday all-candidates' meeting in SUB ballroom. YS candidates,\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094warren mayes photo\nruled out on technicality, are conducting write-in campaign. Above at far right are Human\nGovernment candidates Penny Newman and Svend Robinson.\nReforms planned for education\nBy SANDY KASS\nSweeping curriculum reforms are being planned in the\nfaculty of education.\nPlans calling for a complete revision of the\nelementary and secondary programs are in the final stages\nof faculty approval, education dean Neville Scarfe said\nMonday.\nHe said, if approved, the plans would result in\ncompletely different programming for students entering\nthe first two years of the faculty next September.\nThe plans, known as the Bentley Report, named for\neducation professor Roy Bentley who chaired the joint\ncommittee on undergraduate programs which compiled\nthe report, call for longer student teaching periods in the\npublic schools, development of more flexible programs for\neducation students and an integration of the secondary\nand elementary programs.\nIt also recommends an extension of the four-year\nelementary degree program to five years.\nUnder the Bentley plan, students would enter the\neducation faculty in third year, completing their first two\nyears in the faculty of arts or of science.\nThird year, or education I under the new plan, would\nbe an introduction to the philosophies and disciplines of\neducation.\nFourth and fifth years, or education II and III, would\ninvolve a highly concentrated professional program with\neight to 10 weeks of practice teaching.\nThe Bentley Report comes at a time of criticisms of\nthe UBC faculty, which appeared in a January survey of\nVancouver principals and teachers by the Vancouver\nschool board's personnel and services committee.\nAt the Jan. 24 Vancouver school board meeting,\nschool trustee Peter Bullen told the board Vancouver\nprincipals and teachers are not happy with UBC education\ngraduates.\nBullen said they are not happy with \"the period of\ntime given for practice teaching and the inadequacy of\ntraining for open area and team teaching situations.\"\nScarfe said these criticisms stem from a quantitative\njudgment of student teaching and not a qualitative one.\n\"At Simon Fraser University which Vancouver school\nofficials seem to prefer, education students are given seven\nweeks of practice teaching per year. But during those\nseven weeks students are expected to learn all the teaching\nmethods which we spend a whole year on.\n\"We teach students methods and then give them an\nopportunity to apply those methods in a school situation.\n\"Also, we bring children into UBC for our students to\nwork with,\" he said.\nScarfe said public school teachers sponsoring SFU\nstudents are paid by that university to teach them the\nclassroom methods they use, as well as giving them classes\nto practise on.\n\"This is fine if students can be guaranteed of getting\ngood sponsor teachers all the time, but that is just\nunfeasible.\"\nHe said the criticisms on the lack of training for open\narea and team teaching situations are \"just untrue\".\nHe said Queen Elizabeth elementary school in\nVancouver has one of the finest team teaching and open\narea programs in the Lower Mainland and \"the people\nrunning this program are graduates of UBC\".\nEducation students' association president Kerry\nBysouth said the education council has approved the\nreport in principle.\nAlthough the report currently lacks elementary\ndivision approval, Scarfe said he is confident it will have\nthe necessary approval for its implementation in\nSeptember.\nThe elementary division will meet Feb. 16 to approve\nor reject the report. It was approved Thursday by the\nsecondary division.\nRhododendrons to improve\nUBC has received two federal government local\ninitiative grants worth $39,575 to develop botanical\ngarden facilities on campus.\nUBC PReports editor Jim Banham said Monday that\none of the grants, worth $26,325 (with UBC adding\nanother $4,500), will be used to install drainage facilities\nin the new botanical garden nursery at the south campus\nresearch area.\n\"The money will improve UBC's collection of\nrhododendrons, Canada's largest, and will also prepare\ninstallation of a public display of the plants on Marine\nDrive,\" he said.\nBanham said the other grant, worth $13,250, will\nprovide for centralization and cataloguing of plants of\nB.C. and of other areas in a new herbarium in the\nbiological sciences building.\nHe said no definite date has been set for the work to\nstart on the botanical gardens because of a lack of funds.\nExposure; a consumer column\nProbably one out of every three\nUbyssey staff meals consists of pizza, so\nwhat better food to turn one's stomach\n(to) than pizza.\nThe materials used in making a pizza\n(flour, water, cheese, tomato and spices)\nbarely account for 10% of the purchase\nprice. The bulk of the cost is labor and\nupkeep of the ovens. The profit margin is\nextremely high.\nRestaurant pizzas usually come in three\nsizes \u00E2\u0080\u0094 small, medium, and large \u00E2\u0080\u0094 and\ncontrary to any preconceived notions, in\ngeneral it is the small size which is actually\nthe most economical.\nFor our consumer test we purchased\none small, one medium and one large\nmushroom pizza from Boston Pizza (our\nfavorite place). Their weights and sizes are\nindicated in the attached table.\nIS A LARGE PIZZA CHEAPER THAN SEVERAL SMALL ONES?\nAdvertised\nMeasured Weight\nCost Cost/oz.\nCost/sq. in.\nType\nSize .\nSize ( oz. )\n(4) (4)\n(4)\nSmall\n10 inch\n9 inch 15.3\n150 9.8\n2.4\nMedium\n12 inch\n12 inch 21.1\n260 12.3\n2.3\nLarge\n14 inch\n14 inch 30.2\n360 12.0\n2.3\nThe outer crust on all was quite small\nand the mushrooms were evenly spread\nover the entire surface of each pizza.\nFrom the table it can be seen that you\nget over 20% more pizza for your money if\nyou order a small than if you order a large.\nA medium sized pizza is the worst buy of\nall.\nNote also that our so-called 10-inch\npizza was really only 9 inches in diameter.\nOver the summer about 10 small pizzas\nfrom Boston Pizza were measured. They\naveraged 9V*inches in diameter.\nOne can only suppose that if the small\npizza was actually its advertised 10-inch\ndiameter it would be an even better buy.\nThis is because the surface area would be\nsignificantly greater and the amount of\ncheese, et cetera would cost 1.9 cents per\nsquare inch making it the best buy in terms\nof area.\nThe point of all this is not that Boston\nPizza is particularly a rip-off joint. Several\nother pizzas places such as the higher-priced\nJon's have similar pricing inconsistencies.\nThis is perhaps an example of people\nbeing fooled into thinking that quantity\npurchases lead to lower unit prices.\nOn a broader scale the principle is that\nmany consumer goods in Canada are\nneither unit-priced nor unit-packaged.\nLarge boxes of soap are often more\nexpensive per ounce than small ones;\ncanned fruits can often be cheaper in small\ntins than in large ones; food services' large\nsoft drinks are still slightly more expensive\nper ounce than small ones.\nUntil the NDP has its way, forcing\nlarge supermarkets through appropriate\nlegislation to unit price their goods, we will\nstill have to be very discerning consumers.\nIn the meantime us pizza eaters had\nbetter stick to small pizzas \u00E2\u0080\u0094 they're\ncheaper. Page 4\nTHE UBYSSEY\nTuesday, February 1, 1972\nInco et al\nJust in case anyone is wondering why we're\nrunning a front-page story on mining layoffs, we'd like\nto say a few more words on the subject.\nTo people who care about what's happening to\nCanadian workers, the general importance of the story is\nobvious. But it does have a specific application to the\nstudent condition, because students can increasingly\nlook forward to becoming workers rather than\nmanagerial personnel.\nAs always, this didn't just happen in some magical\nway.\nA University of Toronto Communist Club\npublication, Campus Politics \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Class Politics, gives this\nexplanation:\n\". . . economies based on raw material extraction\ncharacteristically require far fewer trained personnel\nthan do economies in which manufacturing and\nprocessing industries play the dominant role. To put it\nbluntly, you don't need college degrees to be hewers of\nwood and drawers of water.\"\nHence, we are now finding that Canadian\nuniversities are experiencing a net drop in enrolment as\nthe message at long last comes home that, courtesy of\nU.S. imperialism, a university degree in Canada ain't\nwhat it's cracked up to be.\nTwo points emerge:\nFirst, Canadian students must begin to look\nrealistically at their altered class interests.\nAnd second, as future workers we must recognize\nthat as long as our country's economy is based on\nextracting resources for the U.S., the Canadian workers\nwill always be the first to be hit when the crunch comes\nin North America.\nVote Wednesday\nLetters\nObsolete\nThe power-plays in the\ndepartments, and between deans\nand students, as they come to\nlight, make those of us, seemingly\nuninvolved with campus politics,\nrealize that it is just this\npoliticking that makes school so\nrotten this year.\nTeachers are either rebelling,\nand being made to feel sick into\nthe bargain, or they are being\nyes-men and yes-women afraid to\nrock the boat. In the process we,\nthe students, are the losers. If we\ndid not pay the dues, if we did\nnot enrol, you would have to rely\non your publications, on your\nCanada Council grants, and all the\npoliticking in the world could not\nsave you from becoming obsolete.\nI think students as a body\ndeserve respect, just as we\nstudents would like to be able to\nrespect you. We come to this\ninstitution with high expectations,\nwilling to listen, to read, to work,\nto discuss; and we are sickened by\nyour cynism, your protectionist\nattitudes.\nWe are not revolutionaries,\nsome of us are not even very\nyoung, but we have expectations\nof teachers and these expectations\nare not met.\nPersonality Theory (psych\ndepartment) is a case in point. I\nFEBRUARY 1, 1972\nPublished Tuesdays, Thursdays and Fridays throughout the university year\nby the Alma Mater Society of the University of B.C. Editorial opinions are\nthose of the writer and not of the AMS or the university administration.\nMember, Canadian University Press. The Ubyssey publishes Page Friday, a\nweekly commentary and review. The Ubyssey's editorial offices are located\nin room 241K of the Student Union Building.\nEditorial departments, 228-2301, 228-2307;\n228-2305; advertising, 228-3977.\nEditor: Leslie Plommer\nPage Friday, Sports,\nThree, count 'em, three throbbed Lesley Krueger as she handed over\nNate Smith and Mike Finlay to the attentions of Kini McDonald and Oaryl\nTan who, clapping lenses on the ankles of Gord Gibson ran yelling his Joly\nJim off to Sandy Kass who was crass and Randy Frith who was miffed\nabout Sandy Shreve's dandy crawl to Paul Knox. And thus it came about\nthat David Schmidt happened across Michael Sasges in a compromising\nposition with a paper clip and Kathy Carney's desk, which made it all the\nmore interesting when Jan O'Brien and Irving Fetish ran over Kent Spencer\nmincing words with Leslie Plommer and Garry Gruenke mincing minces\nwith Berton Woodward to the croon of the latest Fred Cawsey album, and\nall in all, it was all.\nam told it has been taught in the\nsame way for 10 years. This\nattitude by a head of department\ntowards his own institution,\ntowards the privileged position of\nbeing a teacher, but last and not\nleast towards the students, is\ndespicable.\nTeachers should be required to\nlisten to a tape of their lectures, at\nleast once a year. We are not\ninterested in WWII reminiscences,\nnor in sermonizing about the bad\nyouth of today. We want to hear\nsomething new, we want to\ndiscuss some real worthwhile\nideas, and we object to having to\nregurgitate 'the notes' at exam\ntime. I do not want to single him\nout as the only poor teacher, but\nit seems obvious that this attitude\nof non-respect and \"my way is\nright\" spills over into his relations\nwith his department.\nThe trend around the Lower\nMainland towards alternative\nNew art\nI was dumbfounded Monday\nmorning at the truly high quality\nand taste of the new art readily\nvisible around the campus.\nI sincerely trust, in the\ninterests of the cultural\nadvancement of the human race,\nthat the superb intelligence of\nthose responsible for the TP-ing of\nassorted UBC trees and bushes\nwill be promptly recognized by a\nswift promotion to grade one.\nGail Jackson,\nScience 1\neducation, now that degrees begin\nto mean less and less, should make\nthe powers that be at UBC realize\nthat they too could become\nobsolete before too long.\nIn my four years at this\ninstitution I have had only four\ngood teachers.\nName Withheld,\nArts 4\nSculpture\nIt is gratifying to see that the\noft-maligned men of Buildings and\nGrounds have at last come up\nwith a meaningful contribution to\nthe campus.\nI refer to their free-form ice\nsculpture in front of the library.\nWho but B&G would have had the\nimagination to create such an\never-changing masterpiece just by\nleaving the library fountain turned\non in below-freezing\ntemperatures.\nAs an added attraction, the\nsubsequent overflow of the pool\nhas produced a sheet of ice\nsuitable for skating or perhaps\ncurling. I am disappointed that no\ninnovators have taken advantage\nof this.\nAlso, the flowing water ensures\nan open area in the pond suitable\nfor that favorite pastime of\ncertain groups on campus. They\nmay now throw people into the\npond regardless of the weather. I\nsay hats off to B&G for its\nforesight and imagination.\nJon Nightingale,\nScience 4\nReport\nThe paper's reporting gets\nshittier week by week.\nAn article in The Ubyssey of\nJan. 24 stated that 100 people\nattended a Progressive\nConservative Student Federation\nmeeting in the SUB art gallery to\nhear provincial PC leader Derril\nWarren.\nWhy you would send a reporter\nboth deaf and blind confounds\nme.\nTo set the record straight: The\nmeeting was held in the SUB\nparty room, not the art gallery;\nthere were at least 140 people in\nattendance; Warren never said\n\"the NDP doesn't know what it\nstands for,\" and all remaining\nquotes were pulled out of\ncontext.\nThis reporting can only be\ncompared with that of the\nVancouver Sun. This is a great\nexample of either poor or slanted\nreporting \u00E2\u0080\u0094 which the university\ncan well do without.\nGordon Sim,\nArts 2\nYou're right - we did goof by\nsaying the meeting was in the art\ngallery.\nBut as for what Derril Warren\nactually said, we think our\nreporter did an adequate job of\nsetting down the essence of\nWarren's comments within the\nlimitations of newspaper space.\nYou might be interested to\nknow that we contacted Warren\nand he didn't have any\ncomplaints. yBtJi^*\ni\n1111111111111111111\nPIT\n-a bigger, more comfortable pit area,\n-draft beer facilities built in for future\nlicense,\n-carpeted, intimate area for lounging\nwhen not in use as a pit.\n-raised area for stage for noon hour\nevents and concerts.\n111 111 111111111 1111111\n2\n22222222222222\nCOFFEE SHOP\nCM\nCM\nCM\nCM\nCM\nCM\nCM\nCM\nCM\nCM\nCM\nCM\nCM\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 kitchen facility to serve fast food and\nlight meals to both pit and coffee shop.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 coffee shop to be open at all times\nbuilding is open.\nIO\nIO\nIO\nIO\nIO\nIO\nIO\nIO\nIO\nIO\nro\nio\nio\nio\nio\nio\nio\n222222222222222222\n3\n33333333333333\nBOOKSTORE\nCO\nCO\nCO\nCO\nCO\nCO\nCO\nCO\nCO\nCO\nCO\nCO\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 a permanent home for the Co-op\nBookstore.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 better facilities area for the outdoor\nclubs.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 service-revenue area.\nCO\nCO\nCO\nCO\nCO\nCO\nCO\nCO\nCO\nCO\nCO\nCO\nCO\nCO\nCO\nCO\nCO\n4\n44444444444444\nLOUNGE\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 better, more comfortable lounge area.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 less traffic through conversation pit\narea.\nai en.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 better setup and increased seating for\nthe listening lounge.\n3333 3333 33 33 33 33 33\n444 444444444 444444\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2Pt\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2pt\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0P\u00C2\u00BB\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0F*\n-P*\n\u00C2\u00A3>\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0Ft\n5\n555 555555 555 555 555 555 555 555 555555555\nOTHERS\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 reading room facilities.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 expanded cafeteria if students take over food services.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 late night space.\ncn\nen\ncn\ncn\ncn\ncn\n555 555 555 555 555 555 555 555555 555 555 555 555\nWM W@)M@)MM<&W\nAdvertisement VOTE\nPRIORITIES\nSUB PIT\nLOUNGE SPACE\nFOOD SERVICE\nIMIGHT USE SPACE\nLISTENING ROOM\nREADING ROOMS\nOUT DOOR CLUBS\nOFFICES\nSERVICE REVENUE\nNO CHANCE STILL $15.00\nAdvertisement REFERENDUM\nTOMORROW\nAdvertisement o^\nAdvertisement Tuesday, February 1, 1972\nTHE UBYSSEY\nPage 5\nCandidates7 statements\nflEfcMM^CsSaffl^^MfeaBl mn> write \"Young Socialist\" \"Come and join the Nazi Party.\" IbaA^PAMIHSb^mI\nWrW wSPIVICrHT across the ballot. Let's defend free As secretary, I should like to M WW9W HOI\nAffairs\nDoug\nAldridge\nYou are being asked to make a\nchoice on Wednesday. A choice\nbetween a slate which uses a\n\"demand-pressure\" approach to\ncampus problems, and a slate\nwhich wishes to replace the\n\"demand\" by \"request\" and the\n\"pressure\" by \"co-operation.\"\nI will continue to work to\nimprove the quality of student\nservices on campus. The\ngroundwork has already been laid\nfor improving SUB and the food\nservices in SUB. The next target is\nthe bookstore, which can only be\nimproved with the help of the\nadministration.\nI will try to ensure that the\nfirst priority for funding AMS\nprograms will be the number of\nstudents involved in those\nprograms, not the political\npreference of the executive.\nIn short, we can't change the\nworld in one year but I believe we\ncan make substantial\nimprovements on our campus.\nJoan\nCampana\nThe key issue in this election is\nthe banning of the Young\nSocialist slate.\nThe use of a totally\nundemocratic constitutional\nclause to bar us is scandalous, on\npar with the administration's\narbitrary moves against\nnon-tenured faculty. Other\ncandidates, both Human\nGovernment and Student\nCoalition, have agreed the clause\nis undemocratic. They want to\neliminate it. Yet their people in\nthe eligibility committee have\nupheld it. Our names will not be\non the ballot. These students are\nnot fit to represent us.\nWe feel it is every student's\nright to contest the election. We\noppose it going ahead with any\nviewpoint excluded. We urge all\nstudents to sign the petition to\neliminate the clause, and, in\nprotest against the exclusion,\nwrite the words \"Young Socialist\"\nacross your ballot. If you agree\nwith any part of our program, this\nis your chance to indicate it. If\nyou don't agree with our program,\nbut feel we should be allowed to\nrun, write \"Young Socialist\"\nacross the ballot. Let's defend free\nand open elections on our\ncampus!\nFred\nFerdman\nCanada is dominated\neconomically, politically and\nculturally by U.S. imperialism.\nBennett sells out one resource\nof this province after another. So\nno fundamental problem can be\nsolved without first solving the\nquestion of U.S. domination. The\nAMS must take a stand against the\nU.S. domination of Canada!\nThe National Petition for a\nPeople's Canada gives concrete\nsteps to oppose U.S. domination\nand should be supported!\nDefend the democratic and\npolitical rights of Canadian and\nforeign students! Arbitrary rules\nand regulations have been used\nagainst the students. For example,\nI was arrested and arbitrarily\nlabelled a \"trespasser\" for\ndistributing Student Front at\nTotem Park residence. I was\nconvicted and now face political\ndeportation.\nReinstate and support the\nAcademic Activities Committee!\nOppose the mercenary\nbureaucrats! These hacks are only\ninterested in building their careers\nby using the students as stepping\nstones. They inevitably serve the\ninterests of the administration and\nthe large U.S. corporations that\ndominate Canada. Therefore: no\nfee increase; break the SUB\ncontract; voluntary AMS.\nVote for Fred Ferdman \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nfighter for the people.\nSally\nClark\nI am pleased to be running for\nsecretary on the Student Coalition\nslate.\nI should like to outline some of\nour policies.\nFirstly, there should be more\ncommunication between the\nstudents and the student council.\nIt is important for students to\nknow exactly who are the authors\nof such classic phrases as: \"Don't\nbe stupid, be a smarty,\" and\nPROBATION\nOFFICER\nhas a tough, challenging but rewarding career. He works\nwith the courts, with the offender and with the community\nto help solve one of society's major social problems \u00E2\u0080\u0094\ncrime.\nIf you think you could measure up for training with the\nB.C. CORRECTIONS SERVICE\nsee your Student Placement Office\non campus for more details.\n\"Come and join the Nazi Party.\"\nAs secretary, I should like to\nwrite a weekly column describing\nthe entertaining aspects. I will try\nto make it as unbiased as possible\nand not a propaganda column of\nthe Raging Rightists versus the\nPinko Commie Paper Tigers. I\nshould also like to rotate the\ncouncil meetings, visiting a faculty\nor residence once every two\nweeks.\nElections are in need of\nreform. At present there are three\npeople manning a poll and ballots\ncan be easily lost. We propose to\nuse tickertape machines requiring\nonly one person to control the\npoll.\nA voter need only press Yes or\nNo. And for those of you who\nlike to spoil your ballots, why, we\nmight even have a Spoils button.\nIt is only through working\ntogether that we can achieve our\naims. We trust you'll use your\nvoting power to its fullest extent.\nVote Student Coalition.\nAndrew\nPavey\nThe Young Socialist slate\noffers UBC an alternative to the.\ngutless and demoralizing\nvacillations of previous student\ngovernments.\nArmed with a program\nrevolving around key issues, we\nenvisage a strong student\nmovement capable not only of\nsolving on-campus disputes, but of\nexploding the myth that the\nuniversity is an ivory tower cut\noff from the larger problems of\nsociety. One of these, too often\nignored, is Canada's tie to the war\neconomy, especially through the\nVietnam war. We suffer from it! -\nfrom the inflation and the\nincredible drain of capital (one\nmillion dollars daily) into the U.S.\nwar machine.\nThis capital could alleviate the\neconomic crisis felt by our\nuniversities \u00E2\u0080\u0094 good teachers could\nbe hired, new courses instigated,\nwar research turned to saner\npriorities, etc.\nThe Amchitka upsurge was just\na beginning of students\nresponding to these issues. Young\nSocialists will not substitute for\nyour actions. We all must tackle\nthe causes of our problems on\ncampus, not their symptoms.\nWrite in Young Socialist!\nElizabeth\nDavies\nEven if a woman makes it into\nuniversity after 18 years of social\nconditioning, her chances of\ngetting a decent job are appalling.\nOnly one-third of .Canadian\nwomen receive university\neducation; only 20 per cent of\nthese go on to graduate studies.\nWomen everywhere are faced with\nthe insufferable problem of a\nsecondary role in the existing\nsociety. We, the Young Socialists,\nfeel it is imperative to change the\nnegative attitudes of society\ntowards women. We are becoming\nmore aware of our rights and are\nbeginning to seize them.\nThe women's studies group is a\nbeginning, but we must go farther.\nWe need repeal of the existing\nabortion laws especially \u00E2\u0080\u0094 control\nTo page 8: AMS\nA very special offer!\nGRADUATION\nPORTRAITS\nin\nNATURAL\nCOLOR!\nSelect from a series of 8 poses\ntaken in natural colour. We\nwill finish:\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 One 8\" x 10\" portrait in\nnatural color (one person)\n$21.95\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 One 8\" x 10\" portrait in\nnatural color (group)\n$24.95\nAsk about our special\nreduced prices on additional\nportraits ordered at the same\ntime.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Complete selection of Caps\nand Gowns available.\n\u00C2\u00AB?\ncampbell\nstudios\n2580 BURRARD STREET,\nVANCOUVER 9, B.C.*\n736-0261\n HELD OVER\t\nTHE\nBIRTHDAY\nPARTY\nby Harold Pinter\nJanuary 31-February 4\nTICKETS AVAILABLE FOR\nFRIDAY, FEB. 4,8:00 P.M.\nBox Office Room 207, Frederic Wood Theatre\n HELD OVER\t\nREGULAR WEEKLY PROGRAMS AT I.H.\nINTERNATIONAL FOLK DANCING\nEvery Wednesday at I.H.\n8 p.m. in Lower Lounge\nINTERNATIONAL HOUSE DANCE\nThin Red Line band\n$2.00 ($1.75 for members of I.H.)\nFriday, Feb. 4th\u00E2\u0080\u00949 p.m.-1 a.m.\nI.S.P.C. MEETING\nEvery Tuesday at 12:30 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Rm. 400\n*v/ \ _\nlnternatlonal=Between Nations\nREIFEL BIRD SANCTUARY TRIP February 6th (Weather permitting)\nMID-TERM BREAK TRIPS\nSKI TRIP TO HOLLYBURN MOUNTAIN\nWEEKEND IN VICTORIA\nSIGN UP NOW FOR THESE TRIPS!\nTRY OUR HOME-MADE SOUP AND SANDWICH BAR\nDO SOMETHING\nFOR SOMEONE\nUBC BLOOD DRIVE - BROCK HALL\nTODAY - to FRI., FEB. 4\n9:30 - 4:30 p.m. Continuous Page 6\nTHE UBYSSEY\nTuesday, February 1, 1972\nHot flashes\nAUCM talk\non Jesus\nVince Goring, who has spent\nnine years working with student\ngroups ;n Japan, will speak on the\nradicalism of jesus at 7 p.m.,\nWednesday, :n the Lutheran\nCampus Centre.\nHe will speaK on student\nmovements in Japan Thursday\nnoon m the SuB student council\nchamDers.\nThe UBC Anglican-United\ncampus ministrv s sponsoring the\ntalks.\nWomen on tape\nA tape documentary on the\nhistory ot B.C jvomen in politics\nsince ihe 1920 s /vill be presented\nFriday noon in SUB 205.\nCBC freelancer Vera\nRosenbluth says the documentary\nwas put together through\ninterviews with the women and\nthrougn newspaper clippings.\nThe women s studies program\nis sponsoring the event.\nBrock bleed\nThe Red Cross is sponsoring a\nblood donor clinic this week in\nthe Brock Hall lounge.\nThe clinic will be open from\n9:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Monday to\nFriday.\nThird crossing federal coffee\nrhe first of two discussions on\nthe oroposed Burrard Inlet third\ncrossing will be held at Thursday\nnoon ,n Angus 110.\nAlma Mater Society special\nevents committee and the\nEnvironmental Crisis Operation\nare the sponsors of the meeting\nwnich will feature a talk between\nFrank Leighton, planning\nvice-president for Swan-Wooster\nLtd. and ' Norman Pearson,\nassistant director of the Lower\nMainland Regional Planning\nBoard.\nSwan-Wooster originated the\nproposal being considered by\nVancouver city council.\nA second meeting, the date to\nbe announced later, will feature a\ndiscussion of the politics of the\ncrossing.\nVancouver talk\nVancouver's Re-development -\nOn Whose Terms? will be the\ntopic of discussion at 8 p.m.\nWednesday, in the Vancouver\nmain library auditorium, Burrard\nand Robson.\nSpeakers will be Aid. Hugh\nBird, W. E. Graham, city planning\ndepartment director, and UBC\nprofessor Robert Collier at the\ndiscussion, sponsored by the\nCitizen's Council for Civic\nDevelopment.\nA Vancouver coffee house has\nbeen set up with the help of a\nfederal government grant.\nThe coffee house, called Pulse,\nis located at 525 East Forty-ninth\nAvenue, and is open every day\nexcept Monday from 3:30 p.m. to\n11:30 p.m.\nIt will feature local nightly\nentertainment.\nIncluded with the coffee house\nis a program of creative arts which\nis free to the participants who\nmust supply the materials.\nMore information is available\nfrom project co-ordinator Dave\nHull at 324-2513.\nTroupe tirst\nTroupe, a theatrical company\nsubsidized by the Canada Winter\nWorks program, will present its\nfirst production at 8:30 p.m.\nThursday in the Intermedia Hall,\nFirst and Semlin.\nThe play, titled Easter Mike\nand His Wife, Agiluk, by\nVancouver playwright Herschel\nHardin, will run nightly until Feb.\n13.\nFor further information,\ncontact Robert Graham, at\n733-8983.\n'Tween classes\nTODAY\nSPECIAL EVENTS\nSallye Davis \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Angela's mother\nspeaks in ner behalf in SUB\nauditorium at noon.\nPRE-MED SOCIETY\nFilm on Pain and its Alleviation in\nWesbrook 201 at noon.\nMEN'S ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION\nMeeting in SUB council chambers at\nnoon.\nNEWMAN CLUB\nSinging practice at noon in St.\nMark's music room.\nEXPERIMENTAL COLLEGE\nWhat is Wrong with our Student\nGovernments, in SUB 111 at noon.\nHILLEL\nBet Cate, hot lunches 12 p.m. to 2\np.m. at Hillel House.\nWEDNESDAY\nGAY PEOPLES ALLIANCE\nGeneral meeting at noon in SUB\n224.\nZOOLOGY\nSeventh presentation of Noon Hour\nTravels with Zoologists in\nBio-science 2000 at noon;\nMountains, Maorles and Manapouri\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 Whither New Zealand?\nVOC\nGeneral meeting at noon in Ang.\n104.\nUBC TAEKWON-OO CLUB\n- Practice and new members class\nbegins 4:30 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 6 p.m. in Place Vanier\nballroom.\nITALIAN CLUB\nMeeting at noon in IH stage.\nSPECIAL EVENTS\nCanadian poet Bill Bissett reads in\nSUB art gallery at noon.\nANGLICAN-UNITED\nCAMPUS MINISTRY\nVince Goring on Radicalism of\nJesus at 7 p.m. in the Lutheran\ncampus centre.\nONTOLOGY\nSex \u00E2\u0080\u0094 the one law at noon in Buch.\n216.\nABORTION ACTION COMMITTEE\nPenny Ziegler will speak in the SUB\nclubs lounge at noon on the recent\nNew York injunction preventing\nwomen from getting abortions.\nHILLEL\nZoology prof H. E. Kasinsky will\nspeak on Science and Its Social\nImpact at noon in Hillel House.\nTHURSDAY\nUBC WARGAMERS\nThree game extravaganza every\nThursday at noon in SUB 119.\nVARSITY DEMOLAY\nMeeting at 8 p.m. in Kingston\nHotel.\nUBC BICYCLE CLUB\nMeeting about trip to Gulf Islands\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 at noon in SUB 215.\nCCF\nMeaning of Life in University by Dr.\nRennie at noon in SUB ballroom.\nSPECIAL EVENTS\nDiscussion of third crossing with\nFrank Leighton of Swan Wooster\nEngineering and Norman Pearson,\nplanning consultant at noon in Ang.\n110.\nNDP CLUB\nProject meeting at noon in SUB\n130.\nLIBERALS\nGeneral meeting at noon in SUB\n115.\nANTI-WAR CLUB\nBarry Weisberg will speak on\nNixon's at 2:30 p.m. in the SUB\nauditorium.\nANGLICAN UNITED\nCAMPUS MINISTRY\nStudent movements in Japan at\nnoon in SUB council chambers.\nGAY PEOPLE'S ALLIANCE\nCoffee in the orange room of New\nArts I bldg. from 7:30 - 9:30 p.m.\nSATURDAY\ncvc\nDance with Ram, full facilities, 8:30\np.m. - 1 a.m. in SUB ballroom.\nUNIVERSITY OF TORONTO\nSUMMER COURSES\nin NICE, FRANCE\nIn addition to the regular Summer Session, the University of Toronto is\noffering Degree Courses in Nice, July 6-August 18. Credit courses in\nEnglish, Fine Art, French, History and Political Economy will be given\nby professors from the Universities of Toronto and Nice. Classes will be\nheld each weekday at the Faculte des Lettres and the Ecole\ninternationale d'Art de Nice.\nAccommodation will be provided in university residences, private\nhomes, and pensions.\nCost? Approximately $750.00 (includes round trip, tuition for one\ncourse, room and board).\nFurther information:\nTORONTO-NICE SUMMER PROGRAMME\nDivision of University Extension\n119 St. George Street, Toronto 181, Ontario\nTYPEWRITER RENTALS\nDisco Office Equipment\nPick Up & Delivery\n253-2513\n1928 Commercial Dr.\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\nParking at Rear\nBLACK & LEE\nFormal Wear Rentals\n631 Howe 688-2481\nTHIN\nRED\nLINE\nFRI. FEB. 4\nAT\nINTERNATIONAL HOUSE\n9 p.m. to 1 a.m.\nCLASSIFIED\nRate*: Campus \u00E2\u0080\u0094 3 Utmt, 1 day $1.00; 3 days $2.50\nC\u00C2\u00ABtnm\u00C2\u00ABrckii - 3 lines, 1 day $1.25; additional\nBiro 30cj 4 days pries of 3.\nClassified ads are not accepted by telephone and are payable\nin advance. Deadline in 11:30 m.m., the day before publication.\nPublications OSiee, Room 241 S.V.B., UBC, Van. 8, B.C.\nANNOUNCEMENTS\nDan c*t\n11\nDANCE TO CARIB 71. SAT.. FEB.\n5, 9-1, Grad Student Centre.\nTickets $1.00 each at the centre\noffice, everyone welcome!\t\nHAVE PUN WITH THE OPPOSITE\nsex! DANCE with SPIRIT! RAM\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094IN SUB ballroom, Feb. 5th.\nGreetings\n12\nRICK: IF YOU STAND ME UP\none more time, you can forget\neverything! Sally B.\nLost & Found\n13\nLOST THURSDAY NOON IN BTJ-\nchanan. One brown leather shoulder strap purse, phone Eileen 261-\n5226, reward offered.\t\nPERSON WHO RIPPED OFF\nbrown bag, B-lot, Jan. 24th, please\nreturn even just notes, reward,\n277-4284.\t\nFOUND: 35 mm. CAMERA ON MA-\nrine Drive, claim by identification,\n266-9846.\nSpecial Notices\n15\nBIG BLOCK SUDS NITE MON.\nJan. 31st 8 p.m., in SUB. Varsity\n& Big Block. Members welcome.\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.\n SKI WHISTLER!\t\nRent furnished condominium op-\nposite Gondola, 224-0657 eves.\nINTERNATIONAL HOUSE SKI\ntrip, Feb. 12-15. $30 includes ac-\ncomm., food & tows. Sign up at\nI.H.\t\nAN EXPERIENCE IN LIFE AND\ngrowth, Gestalt Awareness Groups.\n$12 month. Contact Allan Cohen,\n224-5445 or John Mate, 922-4481.\nTravel Opportunities\n16\nSPRING QUARTER, SUMMER\nSession, or Junior Year in Mexico?\nWrite Dr. H. B. Benedict PNW\nRep University of the Americas\n3253 Robertson, Bellinghajn, Wash.\nFLY TO EUROPE FROM $170.00\nround trip, student vacations and\ntours, employment services etc.\nAir mail for full details. Campus\nAgents also required. A.A.S.A.\nLimited, 15 High St, Ventor\nT.W., England.\t\nTRAVELLING OVERSEAS ON A\nbudget? Then visit your youth\nhostels information desk which is\nopen every Wednesday from 12:30-\n1:30 p.m. opposite the concession\nstand in the Student Union Building. Canadian Youth Hostels Association, 1406 West Broadway,\nVancouver 9, B.C., Phone 738-3128.\nAUTOMOTIVE\nAutos For Sale\n21\n'62 FORD ECONOLINE WINDOW\nvan. Has rebuilt motor, new\nbrakes, good rubber. Phone Ron,\n522-5527.\t\n'60 RAMBLER AMER. STAND. 6,\n4 dr. Good cond. 1 owner, reg.\ngas gives good mil. Good rubber,\nsnows, city tested. '73. Conv. to\nbed, extras $400. 266-2446.\t\n1959 PONTIAC PARISIENNE V-8\nP.B., P.S., radio, etc., $225,00 or\noffers, all accessories, phone Jack\n732-8536. \t\nAutomobiles\u00E2\u0080\u0094Parts\n23\nWRECKING 1954 MORRIS MINOR\n1000. Take any part you need,\nvery cheap price, Jack 732-8536.\nAuto Repairs\n24\nBUSINESS SERVICES\nDuplicating 8c Copying\n33\nBOYS' CLUB WOULD LIKE INFO\nabout young or starting band,\nwhich would be willing to play for\nsmall remuneration, leave No. at\n228-4557.\nPhotography\nSB\ntile Hen* anb gutter\n^i,i, j Cameras\n3010 W. BDWY. 736-7833\nalto at Denman Place\n\"At last we are able\nto recommend a moderately priced zoom lens\nin this range which has passed\nour optical test with flying corrected colors . . . Certainly\namong the medium priced zoom\nlenses the LENTAR must be\nclassed as a best, buy.\"\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094February Modern Photography\nLENTAR ZOOM LENS r SIM).95\n80-200 mm f3.5 103\nScandals\n37\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\nSanctum 6610 Main (at 50th)\n11 a.m. - 7 p.m.\t\nSALLY B. GIVE ME ONE MORE\nchance! Next time I'll be sure\nyou get my note, I'll leave it in\nthe Drop-a-note next to the black-\nboard in SUB. Love Rick.\t\nSTART YOUR OWN SCANDAL,\nhave a ball. Ram in ballroom, Feb.\n5.\nTyping\n40\nFAST ACCURATE TYPING OF\nessays and thesis. Reasonable\nterms. Call Mrs. Akau, days 688-\n5235 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 evenings 263-4023.\t\nEFFICIENT ELECTRIC TYPING\nMy Home. Essays, Theses, etc.\nNeat, Accurate Work. Reasonable Rates. Phone 263-5317.\nYR. ROUND ACC. TYPING FROM\nlegible drafts. Phone 738-6829 from\n10:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. Quick ser-\nvice on short essays.\t\nHOME TYPING, EXPERT WORK.\nAll theses, reports, essays. Quick\nservice, call Dari, 738-6498.\nEMPLOYMENT\nHelp Wanted\n41\nSUMMER EMPLOYMENT \u00E2\u0080\u0094 \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nAgricultural Field \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Niagara\nChemicals \u00E2\u0080\u0094 For interviews call\nPeter Waterman collect 763-2904\nbefore Feb. 14.\nPART TIME TYPIST FOR W.\nBdwy. Law Office. Must be accurate. Evenings & weekends,\nCall Kathy 9-10 a.m. at 738-6345.\n\"GUARANTEED SUMMER JOBS\nin Europe for students. Program\nfee, including reception and orientation $99.00. Jobs in several\ncategories all over Europe. Openings now. Send $1.00 for application forms and details to Dr.\nF.V. Tonge, French Dept., Queen's\nUniversity, Kingston, Ont.\"\nINSTRUCTION 8t SCHOOLS\nMusic Instruction\n81\nSpecial Classes\n62\nTutoring Service\n63\nWORRIED ABOUT A COURSE?\nThe U.B.C. Tutoring Centre reopens Monday, Jan. 31, SUB 228,\n12:30-2:30 Tutoring available in\nalmost every subject.\nTutors\u00E2\u0080\u0094Wanted 64\nMXPHRIENCiD, CHINESE-\nspeaking lady to teach couple beginner's English, Mon.-Fri. 8:00-\n10:00 p.m. Good hourly pay. Tel.\n688-3312.\nMISCELLANEOUS\nFOR SALE\nTI\nMUST SELL \u00E2\u0080\u0094 190 CM OLYMPIC\nskiis \u00E2\u0080\u0094 brand new, $30. Call 596-\n0680.\nROSIGNOL STRATO 190 CM MAR-\nker rotomat bindings $75. Hes-\nehung boots ($185 new, used twice)\nsize 6 narrow $145. Joan 926-4789.\nROBERTS STEREO CASSETTE\nrecorder system, one year old,\ngood condition with speakers,\nmikes, $135. Phone 224-9065 ask\nfor G. Ratzlaff.\nRENTALS fc REAL ESTATE\nRooms\nSI\nMEN ONLY. BSMT. ROOM, QUIET,\ncomfortable. Private entr., neear\ngates\u00E2\u0080\u0094ready now\u00E2\u0080\u0094no cooking.\n224-7623.\nBED-SITTING ROOM ON CAMPUS\nfurnihed, frig., hot plate, sep. entrance. Share bath, $60 mo. Call\n224-3440. . \t\nQUIET PRIVATE ROOM IN UP-\nstairs of home. House privileges.\nDunbar. Phone 224-6129.\nRoom fc Board\n82\nIT'S NEW\u00E2\u0080\u0094STAY AT THE D.K.E.\nHouse. Large spacious rooms,\nsemi-private washrooms, color TV,\ncomplete laundry facilities and excellent food. 5765 Agronomy Rd.,\n224-9691.\nFEMALE STUDENT WANTED TO\nshare house with five others. 20th\nand Arbutus. 738-3815, $75 month.\nFurnished Apts.\n83\nCOMFORTABLE BASEMENT\nsuite, 2 bedrooms, newly constructed. Near university. Very reasonable. 263-8441\nUnfurnished Apts.\n84\nDUPLEX FURNISHED 10th &\nAlma. 2 bedrooms, living room,\nkitchen. Fridge, stove, heat included. 2-3 students or couple. Tel.\n732-6449 evenings. $170/month.\nHalls For Rent\n85\nFOR YOUR CATERING NEEDS\nphone THE NORMANDY\n738-7231 or 738-1110\nHouses\u00E2\u0080\u0094Furn. & Unfurn. 86 Tuesday, February 1, 1972\nTHE UBYSSEY\nPage 7\nVolleyball\nwomen win\nThe Thunderette volleyball\nteam has regained the sports\nspotlight at UBC as they returned\nvictoriously from the Western\nCanadian Intercollegiate\ntournament in Edmonton.\nPlaying 21 games in one day as\nthe result of their late arrival due\nto the airline strike, the\nThunderettes proved they will be\nthe team to beat when they host\nthe second round of tournament\nFAYE HUDSON\n. .. playing or praying?\nhere at UBC on Feb. 18 and 19.\nThe women defeated the\nUniversities of Alberta, Victoria\nand Lethbridge and lost to\nCalgary in round robin play\nadvancing to the finals against\nCalgary.\nThe best three-out-of-five final\nwent to five full games to decide\nthe winner. UBC won the first\ngame 15-12, lost the next two,\n11-15 and 6-15, but came back\nCATHY TUPPER\n. . . will she reach it?\nand took the last two 15-8 and\n15-12.\nWith Calgary, Edmonton and\nUBC battling for top honours, the\nFebruary tournament should\nprovide good women's collegiate\nvolleyball action. The top two\nteams in overall standing will then\nproceed to the WCIAA finals\nagainst the top teams from the\nSaskatchewan and Manitoba\nleague.\nSoccer 'Birds upset\nAfter a winter's layoff of two\nmonths the UBC Thunderbird\nsoccer team met Pauls of the\nPacific Coast Soccer League on\nthe astro-turf of Empire Stadium\nSunday.\nThe game was scoreless for the\nfirst 70 minutes, UBC goalkeeper\nGreg Webber managing to keep\nthe ball out of the net. The 'Bird\ndefence was sloppy clearing the\nball from in front of their net and\nit was only a matter of time\nbefore the inevitable happened.\nTwo goals scored by Harold\nHansen and Ronnie MacDonald in\nthe last 20 minutes gave Pauls the\nwin.\nThe next 'Bird game will be on\nSunday at 2 p.m. at Empire\nStadium.\nNEW YORK\nFORMAL WEAR\nAll the latest styles in Tuxedos\nPHOENIX 72\npresents\nThe First Student\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 Dinner Jackets \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nSuits inc. Edwardian style\nDinner Jackets in all styles and a\nlarge variety of colors. Flair Pants,\nLace Dickeys, etc.\nSPECIAL STUDENT RATES\nRent The Best For Less\nART SHOW\nIN\nTHE SUB GALLERY\nFeb. 1 to 4th\n4397 W. 10th 224-0034\n11:30 to 5:30 Daily\nPHOENIX 72 presents\nA Night at the Ponderosa\nOnly Advance Tickets Wed. Feb. 2\n50c in SUB Concourse 8-00-1 -00\nREFRESHMENTS-3/$1\nThere's Something for Everyone\nAll Star Entertainment \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Games \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Films\nAnd More\nHoop 'Birds\nbarely win\nThe UBC Thunderbird\nbasketball team underestimated\nthe University of Victoria Vikings\nSaturday night and narrowly\nsqueaked out a 71-70 victory.\nThe 'Birds had managed a\nrelatively easy victory (75-63)\nFriday night over the Vikings in\ntheir first game in 12 days.\nSaturday, it was a different\nstory.\nVictoria outgunned the 'Birds\nto a 35-29 half-time lead and\nlooked forward to their first win\nover the slumping UBC team.\nThe 'Birds rallied, with Jack\nHoy dropping two foul shots in\nthe last minute to put the 'Birds\nout front 71-68. Victoria scored\nwith six seconds remaining to pull\nwithin one point' but UBC hung\non for the win.\nThunderettes\nsuffer loss\nThe UBC women's basketball\nteam has lost their first collegiate\nleague game of the season.\nSaturday the University of\nVictoria launched a strong second\nhalf attack and held on to beat\nUBC 56-50.\nUBC led 34-30 at the half, but\nwere unable to contain the\nVictoria team. This came in\ncontrast to Friday's game, which\nsaw the Thunderettes lead 21-17\nat the half, and 54^12 at the end.\nIn that game, Terri McGovern\nand Debbie Phelan of UBC lead\nthe team with 12 points each.\nVictoria's Lorna McHattie topped\nall scorers with 16 points.\nVictoria clinched second place\nin the Western division of the\nCollegiate League, with a 9-3\nrecord, which UBC still leads with\na 7-1 record.\nSunday the Thunderettes\nreturned to City League play and\nstomped Seattle's Sandpipers\n48-42 behind the 14 point\nperformance of McGovern. They\nare now 11 and 1 in City League\nplay.\nIntramurals\nUNIT MANAGERS: Don't\nforget the important meeting\ntonight at 7 p.m. in the SUB\ncouncil chambers. Discussion will\ninvolve the elections and the\nAwards Banquet.\nGRADS!\nFREE\n4X5 Color Portrait\nMoke your appointment now\nand avoid the big rush\nCANDID STUDIOS\n3343 West Broadway \u00E2\u0080\u0094 732-7446\nATTENTION\nALL\nSTUDENTS\nGET OUT AND VOTE!\nThere will be elections for the following positions\ntomorrow, Feb. 2, 1972.\nAMS PRESIDENT\nSECRETARY\nEXTERNAL AFFAIRS OFFICER\nINTERNAL AFFAIRS OFFICER\nAt the same time, students will be asked to vote on two\nreferendums, one on S.U.B. Expansion and one on Food\nServices.\nPolls will be open as follows:\nTomorrow 10:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.\nAngus MacMillan SUB South\nBuchanan Main Library SUB North\nCivil Sedgewick Library Woodward Library\nLaw\nAdvance Polls Are Open Today\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nJ 1:30-3:30 p.m.\nSUB\nEducation\nCafeteria (old auditorium)\nGym (War Memorial)\n. . . and from 5:00 p.m. to 7:00 p.m.:\nFort Camp Place Vanier Totem Park\nTake an interest\nYOUR VOTE COULD BE VITAL\nSTARTING THURSDAY\nMUSSOC PRESENTS\nLive on Stage I\nTiddler\nontheRpof\nFebruary 3rd-12th\u00E2\u0080\u00948:30 p.m.\nOLD AUDITORIUM\nIf\nTickets $2.50, $3.00\nat Vancouver Ticket Centre and Outlets\nSpecial Student Rates: $1.50\nFebruary 7 & 8 and\nMatinee Thursday February 10th \u00E2\u0080\u0094 12:30\nTickets available Main Floor of S.U.B. Page 8\nTHE UBYSSEY\nTuesday, February 1, 1972\nFrom page 5\nof our bodies means the beginning\nof control of our lives. We must\nfight the present vicious attack on\nwomen's right to legal abortion,\nand go on to tackle questions of\nday care, equal pay with men, etc.\nOnly when united can we make\neffective change!\nGive yourself a chance; write in\nYoung Socialist!\nLynne\nPhillips\nThere are basically five major\nprojects which I wish to promote.\nThe proposed UBC Day Care\nCentre is an essential development\nfor this campus; it will be\nbeneficial to students, faculty and\nstaff members. I would like to\ncontinue in its organization by\nassisting in the allocation of\nmoney and general co-ordination\nof the program.\nAs they will both be under my\njurisdiction, Open House which\nhappens again next year and the\nhigh school visitations program\nare two important functions\nwhich I plan to work on.\nI feel it would be a great asset\nto the university curriculum to\nhave the current women's studies\nprogram accredited. With the fact\nin mind that the existing course\nwould necessarily be revised, it\ncould conceivably become an area\nwhere important research on the\nstatus of women could be\nundertaken.\nLastly, I would like to\nco-operate with the committee\nwhich plans to actively study\nwomen on this campus. A study\nof the kind has long been needed\nto investigate exactly what does\nhappen to women at UBC.\nSvend\nRobinson\nGarth\nSundeen\nPenny\nNewman\nKeith\nRichardson\nHuman Government candidates\nSvend, Penny, Garth and Keith\nhave decided to write a collective\nstatement on what they see as the\nissues in the upcoming election.\nSvend has been a science rep\non council for the past two years,\na member of SUB management\ncommittee, and has worked as\ndeputy co-ordinator of activities\nand assistant external affairs\nofficer. All four have energy,\nenthusiasm and willingness to\nwork their asses off if elected to\nmake the AMS more relevant to\nall students on this campus.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nRunning as Human\nGovernment is our expression of\nif !3AJ\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094kini mcdonald photo\nWHILE UBC PIGEONS and seagulls have cleanest assholes in town,\nit's clear that engineers are biggest assholes, muses student walking\nunder toilet paper-laden trees. T.P. trick marks engineering week start.\ncontinuing faith in the system of\nchange initiated last year. As a\nnew slate, aligning ourselves with\nthe old, we must critically present\nour particular potential not only\nas new individuals but also in\nopposition to the Student\nCoalition.\nWhile the latter consideration\nis of immediate concern regarding\ntomorrow's election, we can only\ndeclare the bankruptcy of their\ncollective platform and assert our\nown ideas.\nThe time has again come for\nhuman government. The time has\ncome for students to throw out\nthe worn-out Student Coalition.\nWhy Human Government? The\nreasons are many \u00E2\u0080\u0094 just look\naround the campus, in your\nclassroom, in the bookstore, in\nthe closed-door senior faculty and\nadministration meetings.\n\"You have no rights. You have\nno voice. Change is not up to\nyou,\" echoes from an academic\npedestal high in the sky. But we\ndo have rights, we do have a voice\nand we will speak loudly and\nclearly. It is up to us to bring\nabout change.\nHuman Government,\nultimately, is only as strong as the\nstudents that support it. We\nbelieve that the time has come for\nfundamental changes for a human\nuniversity and we ask for your\nsupport tomorrow.\nExternal\nAffairs\nTeri Ball\nAs well as being the\nundergrad Aggie rep to the AMS\ncouncil, I have been working with\nAdrian Belshaw, the present\nexternal affairs officer, on the\nUniversity Endowment Lands\nCommittee.\nIt is in this area that my\nprimary interest lies as a\ncandidate. Closely associated with\nthe Endowment Lands program\nare Opportunities For Youth,\nrapid transit for Vancouver, and\nthe development of a\nstudent-controlled housing\ncomplex and community on the\nUBC campus.\nThese projects would be\nbenefitted by having students sit\non all university planning\ncommittees. An increase in\nconference grants will permit the\nexchange of ideas between our\nuniversity and others in Canada.\nOther areas which I plan to\nstudy include a campus-wide\ncourse evaluation program, and\nthe acquiring of a broadcasting\nlicence for CYVR. I feel it is\nextremely important for students\nto become involved in the\nworkings of the university, and to\nrealize that a world exists beyond\nBlanca.\nDan K.\nMcLeod\nOne of our main points is\nstudent-faculty control.\nWhat does that mean?\nBasically, we do not now have any\nmeaningful control over our lives\non campus. An aging group of\n\"outside agitators\", businessmen\non the board of governors, make\nmost of the key decisions: What\nwe learn, how we learn it, who\nteaches us. This must stop.\nThe university must become a\nplace where learning is\nmeaningful, taking on social issues\nlike unemployment, pollution,\nwomen's rights, etc. Our\nalienation and apathy is enforced\nby the present structures.\nLearning must become action \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nthe university must become an\norganizing centre for social\nchange.\nAllied with junior faculty who\nnow have few rights, as the\nadministration is making clear, we\nmust take control of our lives on\ncampus. Write-in Young Socialist.\nEnd personality contest and\nplay-pen politics at UBC.\nSTUDENT\nFOOD!\nOn Wednesday, Feb. 2nd you will\nbe asked to approve in principle\nstudent control of Food Services\nin SUB.\nTHIS DOES NOT MEAN\nPURCHASE AT THIS TIME\nWhat it does do is allow Council to negotiate with the\nadministration for some form of control. If the only\nway to gain control over prices and quality is to buy the\noperation, then you will be asked later to approve the\npurchase price.\nWe Must Start Now\nIf there is to be a marked improvement in food by next year, we\nmust negotiate now!\nVote Yes\non Food Services\nATTENTION\nALL STUDENTS\nThe following referendums will be voted on in conjunction with\nthe SECOND SLATE of AMS elections, on WEDNESDAY,\nFEBRUARY 9, 1972.\n7. Fee Referendum\nWhereas the AMS fee is currently divided into a\nnon-discretionary $15.00 Building Fee and $9.00 Student\nActivity Operating Fund levy;\nand whereas the Student Council of the AMS recommends\nan increase of the Student Activity Operating Fund levy;\nARE you in favour of increasing the Operating Fund levy\nfrom $9.00 to $14.00?\n2. Constitutional Amendment\nReferendum\nWhereas the Student Council has recommended that certain\nprocedural sections of the Alma Mater Society By-Laws be\nremoved and placed into the Alma Mater Society Code:\nARE you in favour of the following sections being removed\nfrom the By-Laws and placed into the Code?\nBy-Law 4 (2), a section dealing with the appointment of\nhonorary members of Student Council;\nBy-Law 4 (4), a section dealing with the appointment of\nan Honorary President and his/her duties;\nBy-Law 10 (2) to 10 (7) and that is sections dealing\nwith the procedure for the levying of a fee upon each\nmember of an undergraduate society;\nBy-Law 11 (9) and 11 (10), that is sections dealing with\nthe procedure by which the Alma Mater Society Budget\nshall be accepted and by which the A.M.S. Treasurer\nshall deal with fees levied by Undergraduate Societies\nupon their members;\nBy-Law 12 (1) to 12 (3), that is sections dealing with\nprohibition of gambling, the drinking of intoxicating\nliquors and the approval of advertising and distribution\nof materials on campus.\nBy-Law 14, that is a By-Law setting out the procedure\nfor dealing with subsidiary clubs and organizations;\nAnd all other changes necessarily incidental to the\nforegoing amendments.\nRead and consider\nthe above referendums!"@en . "Newspapers"@en . "Vancouver (B.C.)"@en . "LH3.B7 U4"@en . "LH3_B7_U4_1972_02_01"@en . "10.14288/1.0127280"@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 .