"CONTENTdm"@en . "http://resolve.library.ubc.ca/cgi-bin/catsearch?bid=1211252"@en . "University Publications"@en . "2015-08-28"@en . "1977-09-20"@en . "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/Ubysseynews/items/1.0127485/source.json"@en . "application/pdf"@en . " WHEN THE RAIN COMES down everyone comes inside for exercise. These physical\nfitness buffs stretch muscles in SUB ballroom during the long winter, waiting for\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094doug field photo\nanother summer of wonderful sunshine. Exercise is good for you, some people say.\nTHE UBYSSEY\nVol. LX, No. 4 VANCOUVER, B.C., TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 1977\nspan's 8\n228-2301\nSfudents, faculty attack bill\nStudent loan\nceiling rises\nBy MICHAEL MacLEOD\nFaculty and students at B.C.\ncommunity colleges are up in arms\nover the new B.C. Colleges and\nProvincial Institutions Act.\nTTie legislation, known also as\nBill 82, will take away from\nstudents and faculty at 14 community colleges and the B.C. Institute of Technology the right to\nhave representatives on the board\nof governors.\nThe new act, given third reading\nin the legislature Wednesday\ndespite vociferous opposition by\nrepresentatives of B.C. faculty\nassociations and organized labor,\neffectively removes power from all\ncommunity college boards in favor\nof three provincal councils to be\nappointed by the education\nminister Pat McGeer.\nTTie new act will kill public input\ninto leocal colleges and take away\nfrom the idea of colleges designed\nfor and responding to their communities, said UBC professor and\nchairman of education John\nDennison who was asked by the\nprovincial government to assess\nthe legislation before it was introduced.\n\"B.C. colleges were very much\nresponsive to local needs,\" Dennison said. \"After this Act, they\nwon't be.\n\"What I see missing is any sign\nof long term goals. Unfortunately,\nthis act was not accompanied by a\nstatement of what sort of colleges\nthey want to see in the future.\n\"And, its rather significant to\nme that in an act dealing with\ncommunity colleges the word\n\"community\" does not appear\nanywhere. If I were in the community colleges I would be pretty\nconcerned,\" Dennison said.\nThe act, which was introduced in\nthe legislature six weeks ago, has\nprovoked unrest in labor and\nfaculty organizations because of its\nrequirement that all instructors'\nunions apply for re-certification\nwith the B.C. Labor Relations\nBoard within sixty days of\nproclamation of the new act.\nHowever, in discussion held at\nthe weekend, McGeer made it\nclear that the recertified\norganizations will fall under the\njurisdiction of the B.C. Colleges\nand Provincial Institutes Act. In\nthe event of dispute, the act\nsupercedes the B.C. labor relations\nact. McGeer said.\nAccording 'to Dennison, this\nraises the possibility of college\nfaculties, which now have the right\nto strike, losing that right. They\nwould be put in the unusual\nposition of having a collective\nagreement under the B.C. Labor\nRelations Act and yet deriving\nprotection from that act, he explained.\nAlso, under the provisions of the\nact, the decision on who belongs\nwithin a bargaining union and who\nbelongs outside is left to the\nminister of education. This leaves\nroom for serious interference by\nthe minister, said Wanda Tilley, a\nCapilano College faculty member.\nShe is spokeswomen for the\ncolleges and institutes legislation\ncommittee, which was formed last\nweek jointly by the B.C.\nFederation of Labor, \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 the B.C.\nGovernment Employees Union, the\nAssociation of University and\nCollege Employees, the BCIT Staff\nSociety and , Vocational Instructors' Association in their fight\nagainst the hew colleges act.\nReaction to the act has been\nparticularly vocal at BCIT, where\nstaff see no provision in the\nlegislation for the sort of\nspecialized, technological\neducation BCIT offers. And\nCapilano College faculty\nassociation president Gary Kilgore\nsaid, \"My faculty thinks it stinks.\nThe community is taken out of the\ncollege even more than before. Its\na bad act.\"\nTAs complain about\nworking conditions\nUBC teaching assistants who\ncomplain about poor working\nconditions and wages are being\nharassed by their departments, a\nTA spokesman said Monday.\nDave Smith, president of the\nAssociation of Teaching\nAssistants, said TAs have put up\nwith poor working conditions\nbecause they feared reprisals from\ntheir departments if they complained.\n\"TAs are in constant fear of\nreprisals,\" Smith said. \"We are in\na precarious position. TAs have no\nvoice in how much they get paid.\"\nSmith said TAs in some faculties\nare not receiving the seven per\ncent across-the-board increase\ngranted them by the board of\ngovernors last May.\n\"This (wage problem) is just a\nsymptom of what's going on,\"\nSmith said. \"Last year some individuals noticed they weren't\ngetting the eight per cent increase\npassed by the BoG in June.\n\"Some departments gave their\nTAs no increases at all. Some\ndepartments straightened out the\nraise but there was a lot of intimidation and harassment.\"\nThe same harassment is going on\nthis year, he said. \"A lot of innocent people are involved.\"\nSmith said that in at least two\nscience departments, department\nheads have harassed innocent TAs\nafter fellow graduate students\ncomplained about not receiving the\nfuD seven per cent raise. Part of\nthe problem. he said, is the lack of\na proper contract.\nAll TAs get an appointment\nnotice after they are hired. But the\nonly people who are bound by the\nagreement and who can negotiate\nthe terms are the people whose\nsignatures appear on the notice.\nTAs cannot sign the notice.\nAt the bottom of the appointment\nnotice is a note which says, among\nother things, \"This appointment is\na term appointment and is not\nsubject to employee benefits of any\nkind (except Canada Pension Plan\nand Unemployment Insurance on\nsalary amounts). . .\"\nATA communications coordinator Don Meakins said this\nstipulation is ridiculous.\n'\"The wording makes it sound\nSee page 3: TAS\nThe provincial government has\nraised the student loan ceiling this\nyear without informing students,\nPaul Sandhu, Alma Mater Society\nexternal affairs officer said\nMonday.\nTTie maximum amount allowable\nfor a student loan has been raised\nunofficially from $3,300 to $3,500 he\nsaid.\n\"The loan application booklet is\nmisleading and because of this\nstudents often do not apply for a\nsum that reflects their true\nfinancial situation,\" said Sandhu.\nStudents ask for the maximum\namount allowable according to the\nguidelines in the book even when\nthe actual costs are higher, he said.\n\"They're (provincial government) not disclosing all the information. They wouldn't want a\nwhole bunch of students taking\nadvantage of that extra $200.\"\nStudents have no way of\nknowing, he said, that in some\nfaculties they can apply for more\nmoney. For example education\nstudents can apply for $100 for\ntheir practicum.\nStudents can also lose money if\nthey own a car that the ministry\ndecides is worth more than $2,500.\nEvery dollar up to $500 over the\n$2,500 is deducted from the loan. So\nif his car is worth $3,000, the\nstudent loses $500 from his loan.\nThe ministry can assess a car by\nlooking up the year and the make\nof the automobile in a reference\nbook but this may not reflect the\ntrue value of the automobile,\nSandhu said.\nStudents at UBC do not receive\nloans and grants that cover their\nfull 33-week term, he said, because\nthey can only claim 32 weeks, of\ntheir school term.\nStudents should always\ndocument anything they are not\nsure of, Sandhu said. Students who\napplied for jobs but did not obtain\nemployment should ask all\npotential employers to sign a paper\nproving that they did apply for\nwork because the loans office will\nask for this proof.\nNot all loan appeals are heard by\nthe independent appeals committee, he said.\nThe provincial appeals committee, composed of two financial\naid officers, one student, and two\ngovernment representatives,\nreceives less than 20 appeals a\nmonth. Other appeals are either\ngranted or refused at the ministry\nlevel.\nStudents should request on their\nappeal forms that their appeal be\nreviewed by the independent\nprovincial appeal committee, and\nhe said, If their application is\nrefused again they should ask who\nrefused it.\n'The provincial appeals committee does not have the fina 1 say,\"\nhe said. \"They can. only make\nrecommendations to the B.C.\nprovincial grant committee.\nSandhu said that he does not like\nthe criteria used for loan applications.\n\"The criteria doesn't reflect the\nstudents situation. The parental\ncontribution table does not reflect\nthe financial situation of parents in\nall regions. The cost of living is\ndifferent in different regions.\"\nCriteria covering student employment should be changed every\nyear because student employment\nconditions change, he said.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094matt king photo\nIT'S ALWAYS NICE to give friend lift when it rains, but owner of car was probably not impressed by\ngenerosity of towing company. Tow trucks haul away all vehicles without proper parking stickers to UBC\ntraffic.office and hold for king's ransom. If lucky, missing car will haye only been stolen, not towed away. Page 2\nTHE U BYSSEY\nTuesday, September 20, 1977\nBotanical buys\navailable soon\nDoes your residence need a few\nplants to cheer you up, and feed a\nlittle oxygen into the otherwise\ndreary atmosphere?\nThere will be a sale of plants\nfor students on Thursday, Friday\nand Saturday from 11 a.m. to 4\np.m., in the Botanical Garden\nOffice - 6501 Northwest Marine\n(across from the Nitobe Garden).\nExpert advice will be available\non the care and maintenance of all\nHot flashes\nplants bought. The event is\nsponsored by the Friends of UBC\nBotanical Garden.\nTours offered\nIf finding your way around the\nlibrary is like hunting through the\nAmazon jungle, then look into\nthis.\nMain and Sedgewick libraries\nwill be giving guided tours every\nday this week at 10:30 a.m. and\n12:30 p.m. so you can get some\ninside info on how the library\nworks.\nThere will also be a six minute\naudio-visual show \"Welcome to\nthe Library\" shown at 11:20 a.m.\nand, 1:20 p.m. in the Sedgewick\norientation room. Come to the\nfilm even if you can't make the\ntours.\nMP speaks\nLen Marchand, federal junior\nenvironment minister, will speak\ntoday in SUB 212, at noon.\nMarchand, MP for\nCaribou-Kamloops, was minister\nof small business until the federal\ncabinet shuffle last week.\n'tween classes\nTODAY\nKARATE CLUB\nDemonstration, 7:30 p.m., winter\nsports centre gym E.\nCHARISMATIC\nCHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP\nWeekly student fellowship meeting,\nnoon, SUB 205.\nUBC LIBERALS\nMP Len Marchand speaks, noon,\nSUB 212.\nINTERVARSITY\nCHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP\nSmall group sign-up, noon, SUB\n213.\nUBC LIBRARY\nAudio-visual library Introduction,\n11:20 a.m. and 1:20 p.m.,\nSedgewick orientation room.\nTours of Sedgewick and\nMain\nlibrary, every weekday at 10:30\na.m., and noon, library entrances.\nSCIENCE FICTION CLUB\nOrganization meeting, noon, SUB\n216E.\nCHINESE STUDENTS'\nASSOCIATION\nChoir practice, 7:15 p.m.,\nInternational House.\nWEDNESDAY\nSAILING CLUB\nGeneral meeting, noon, SUB party\nroom.\nSTUDENTS' INTERNATIONAL\nMEDITATION SOCIETY (SIMS)\nIntroductory lecture on\ntranscendental meditation, noon Bu.\n316.\nNEWMAN CLUB\nLuncheon meeting, noon, SUB 211.\nCCCM\nDinner discussion, 5:30 p.m.,\nLutheran Campus Centre.\nCPSE\nBeer night and social evening, 8\np.m., graduate student centre garden\n- room.\nTHURSDAY\nSquare dancing and round dancing,\n7:30 p.m., SUB 207-209.\nNDP\nExecutive election and\nconstitutional changes, noon, SUB\n215.\nGAY PEOPLE\nOrganizational meeting, noon, SUB\n211.\nHELP YOURSELF\nFREE SELF-HELP\nWORKSHOPS TO INCREASE YOUR SKILLS\nWORKSHOP 1 - Effective Study Habits\nFour one hour sessions on developing\nmore efficient methods of study.\nWORKSHOP 2 - Vocational Exploration\nFour one hour sessions to aid you in\nexamining career choices.\nWORKSHOP 3 - Personal Growth\nA small group workshop to help define personal goals,\nset plans to reach them and to practice new behaviours\nwith the support of other interested persons.\nThese free programs are designed to help students develop skills. All workshops\ncommence the week of September 26th. Sign up NOW since enrollment is limited.\nTHE OFFICE OF STUDENT SERVICES PONDEROSA ANNEX (F)\nTHE UNIVERSITY OF BRITISH COLUMBIA\"\n1977 FALL LECTURES\nBY VISITING PROFESSORS\nGeorge Porter\nAwarded the Nobel Prize for Chemistry in 1967, Sir George combines his academic\nachievements with an ability to explain science to the layman through his BBC television\nand film series. Honored for his work by more than a dozen universities throughout the\nworld. Sir George is now Director of the Royal Institution of Great Britain.\nSCIENCE AND THE HUMAN PURPOSE\nWednesday, September 21\u00E2\u0080\u0094In Lecture Hall 2, Woodward Instructional Resources Centre,\nat 12:30 p.m.\nJohn Dunn\nA young historian who has already made a significant impact in the area of political\nphilosophy. Professor Dunn teaches at King's College, Cambridge. He is a noted Locke\nscholar and his recent studies on revolution and political change have been internationally\nacclaimed. He will give a series of lectures while at UBC on the theme \"Western Political\nTheory in Face of the Future.\"\nDEMOCRATIC THEORY\nTuesday, September 20\nLIBERALISM\nThursday, September 22\n1\nIn Room 106, Buchanan\nBuilding, at 12:30 p.m.\nALL LECTURES ARE FREE\nsponsored by\nThe Cecil H. and Ida Green Visiting Professorship Fund\nAll Women Welcome\nto the first\nWOMEN'S COMMITTEE\nMEETING\nThursday, September 22 5:00 p.m.\nWomen's Office-Room 130-S.U.B.\nECKANKAR\n1. GENERAL MEETING\nAll new comers welcome\nWednesday, September 21,\nS.U.B. 213 12:30\n2. INTRODUCTORY LECTURE\nThursday, September 22\nS.U.B. 213 12:30\nMeet the Charismatic Christian Club\nATA\nDESSERT PARTY\nTHUR., SEPT. 22, 7:30 p.m.\nLUTHERAN CAMPUS CENTRE\nSpeaker: BERNICE GERARD\n(Alderman, CJOR Open-Liner)\nInformation: 437-1834, 266,9275\nTHE CLASSIFIEDS\nRATES: Campus - 3 lines, 1 day $1.50; additional lines 35c.\nCommercial - 3 lines, 1 day $2.50; additional lines\n50c. Additional days $2.25 and 45c.\nClassified ads are not accepted by telephone and are payable in\nadvance. Deadline is 17:30 a.m., the day before publication.\nPublications Office, Room 241, S.U.B., UBC, Van., B.C. V6T 1W5\n5 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Coming Events\nGAGE MINIVERSITY EVENING RECREATIONAL COURSES open to Vanier/ Totem and Gage residents.\n1. Bridge 2. Karate 3. Backgammon\n4. Macrame (Beginners) 5. Photography 7. Taxation 7. Weaving 8. Improvisation Dance 9. Self-Defence for\nWomen 10. Iyengar Yoga 11. Belly\nDancing 12. Shiatsu Acupressure\n(Acupressure Massage). Enroll at\nGage Main Desk (Sept. 19 to Sept.\n28). Courses start Oct. 3\u00E2\u0080\u0094$8.00 or less\nper course.\nFRIDAY HAPPY HOUR, YAC, at Cecil\nGreen Park, beginning Sept. 23, 4 to\n6 p.m.\n11 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 For Sale \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Private\nORGANICALLY GROWN unsprayed\nOkanagan fruit in season. .25c per\npound by the case. Free delivery.\n738-8828 or 733-1677 eves.\n'49 GTO CONVERT. Excellent condition.\nP.S., P.D., radials, snows. $2000. Days\n687-0555, eves. 922-8148.\n'75 SUZUKI GT 750. Excellent cond.\n$1400 or best offer. Phone 980-0249.\n15^ Found\n20 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Housing\nFURNISHED SLEEPING ROOM. Non-\nsmoker male student preferred. Near\nall facilities. Telephone 224-9319 after\n6:00 p.m.\n25 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Instruction\nCLASSICAL GUITAR INSTRUCTION.\nBeginner to advanced level. 733-4634.\nPIANO LESSONS by ..experienced\nteacher. Graduate of Juilliard School\nof Music. Both beginners and advanced students welcome. 731-0601.\n30-Jobs\n30 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Jobs (Continued)\nCHOOSE OWN HOURS. Phone sales in\nyour home for chimney sweep firm.\n325-7691, 738-3355.\n35 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Lost\n65 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Scandals\nSUBFILMS SEARCHINGLY PRESENTS\n\"Sherlock Holmes' Smarter Brother.\"\nFind one of the five tickets we've\nhidden in S.U.B. and get in free!!\n80 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Tutoring\n85 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Typing\nEXCELLENT TYPING. Reasonable\nrates. Call 731-1807, 12 noon to 9 p.m.\nFAST, ACCURATE TYPIST wishes typing to do at home, standard price.\nCall after 3:00 p.m. 263-0286.\n90 - Wanted\nSPEAKEASY, campus crisis and information centre, needs VOLUNTEERS\n2-3 hours per week; training Sept.\n24-25. Applications, until Sept. 21\nSUB 100B. \t\n99 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Miscellaneous\nSTUDENTS: IF YOU NEED INSIDE\ninformation on the library, take a\nguided tour of M'ain and Sedgewick\nlibraries any day this week at 10:30\na.m. or 12:30 p.m. Meet in the Main\nlibrary entrance.\n=Jt=lr=if=Jr=Jr=ir=ir=3?\nii\nASSISTANT MANAGER, Young Alumni\nClub to work bar/door, Thurs. and\nand Friday eves. 228-3313.\nUSE\nUBYSSEY\nCLASSIFIED\nTO SELL - BUY\nINFORM\n|r=JP='t='n=ir=ir=i[=J[=ir=in=ir=l Tuesday, September 20, 1977\nTHE U BYSSEY\nPage 3\nHacks ready cutback battle\nBy RALPH MAURER\nStudents got it in the neck this\nyear. Next year, the arts faculty is\nthe most likely victim of the Social\nCredit government's hostility\ntoward universities, say four\nstudent leaders who on the\nweekend worked out an anti-\ncutbacks strategy.\nWe'll know for sure after this\nafternoon's meeting between the\nUBC board of governors and the\nUniversities Council of B.C.\nThere, the UCBC is expected to\ntell the board that the same\ncombination of increasing\nuniversity costs and upwardly-\ncreeping government allocations\nthat increased tuition fees 30 per\ncent this year, will prevail again\nnext year.\nThe four leaders think the\nuniversity administration will\nresist harder than last year Victoria's reluctance to spend money.\nThen the administration was able\nto shunt rising costs off onto\nstudents, who the administration\nclearly thought were about due for\na fee increase.\nThe success of the anti-inflation\nincrease battle depended upon the\nsupport of the administration, says\nArnold Hedstrom, the Alma Mater\nSociety's secretary treasurer. But\nthat support never came;\npresident Doug Kenny and company meekly acquiesced to the\nfinancial beating the Socreds gave\nthem.\n\"It seems to me the easy solution\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094doug field photo\nIS PICTURE UPSIDE-DOWM or merely taken by inverted\nphotographer? Actually art-nouveau photograph is entitled \"Sun on\nsewer., and will undoubtedly win many fine awards. Phenomenon\noccurs under ramp to stage Old Auditorium on sunny days.\nlast year was to raise fees,\"\nHedstrom said.\nIt was Hedstrom, AMS president\nJohn DeMarco, Paul Sandhu, AMS\nexternal affairs officer and arts\nsenator, and board of governors\nmember Moe Sihota, who sat down\non Sunday to mull over the failures\nof last year's unsuccessful battle\nagainst the tuition increases and\nplan strategy for fighting cutbacks\nthis year.\nThe main aim of the strategy is\nto prevent the provincial government from playing off one element\nof the university community\nagainst another, a tactic they used\nwith phenomenal success last\nyear. So this year, the student\nieaders will try to unite with the\nadministration and faculty against\nVictoria.\n\"We're not ready to play ourselves off against the faculty,\"\nHedstrom says. \"They should get\ntheir cost of living increases too.\nBvt the overall budget has been\nsqueezed enough and it can't take\nany more without something\ngiving.\n\"We definitely don't want to\ncreate the impression that we're\nagainst the faculty. There's a\nmuch more common enemy, and\nthat is the UCBC or the government, or whatever you want to call\nthem.\nBut Hedstrom and company feel\nthat the faculty, who received six\nand 6.24 per cent salary increases\nthe last two years, will probably\nask for more during current\nnegotiations (faculty association\npresident Dick Roydhouse won't\nsay what they're seeking) and this\nyear they can't be denied substantial increases.\nStudents won't stand for another\ntuition increase, leaving only one\nsector of the budget that can be\ncut: academic spending, he says.\n\"The minister (McGeer) has\nstated that education in this\nprovince will become more\noriented towards skilled jobs, and\nat the same time he says that until\nB.C.'s economic picture improves,\nth'jre won't be any more money \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nwell, something has to give,\"\nHedstrom says.\nNow, there's nothing dearer to\nKenny's heart, than the arts\nfaculty. A former arts dean\nhimself, it is Kenny's avowed\nambition to put UBC on the map of\nuniversities, not only in\ntechnological fields, where it\nalready merits a modest dot if not\na star, but also in the field of arts,\nwhere it is in the little leagues.\nThat's why Hedstrom and company figure the administration will\nbe an ally this year.\n\"There should be a good balance\nbetween professional education\nTAs want contract, clearer status\nFrom page 1\nlike they're doing us a favor by not\nsubjecting us to employees\nbenefits,\" he said.\nAnd Meakins and Smith agree\nthat the lack of contract makes it\neasy for a department not to renew\na TAship, adding another area\nwhere an outspoken TA can fear.\nAnother problem is they don't\noutline our duties for us,\" Smith\nsaid. \"You might think you have to\nconduct a seminar and mark\npapers and then you find out\nhalfway through the term that you\nhave to invigilate Christmas\nexams.\"\n\"Many TAs aren't from Vancouver and often have booked\ncharter flights to go home for\nChristmas. This kind of thing can\nreally screw things up.\"\nHe said there are a few departments, for example mathematics,\nthat do outline the TAs' duties, but\nthey are too few. \"We're not\nreally treated as employees of the\nuniversity,\" meakins said. \"They\ntreat us as students when it's to\ntheir advantage and as employees\nwhen it's to their advantage.\n\"This would never happen in a\nunionized situation.\"\nSmith said education cutbacks\nhave affected TAs working conditions.\n\"There are 14 departments\nwhere TA allotments have dropped. So the people who are TAs in\nthe department obviously have to\ndo extra work.\"\nThe faculty of graduate studies\nsays that if a graduate student\nworks more than 12 hours a week\nat a job he or she loses full-time\ngraduate status.\n\"Some people are working 15\nhours a week this year so they are\nendangering their full-time status.\n\"And people who have to work\n'longer hours as TAs are not going\nto give their best efforts.\"\nGraduate student senator John\nRussell said he and his fellow TAs\nwould like to be considered\nuniversity employees.\n\"Foreign grad students are\nregarded as employees by Canada\nManpower,\" Russell said.\n\"They have to have work visas.\nBut whenever we ask the ad\nministration about our status they\ntell us that if we are classified as\nemployees we will jeopardize\nforeign students. It doesn't make\nsense.\"\nHe said TAs have a dual role of\nteaching and research just as\nfaculty members do.\nAll TAs want is to know where\nthey stand, Smith said\nThey would like contracts and\nclearly defined hiring criteria, the\nsame as any other worker.\nBut Erich Vogt, vice president on\ncharge of faculty and student affairs said Monday that he is not\nsure a contract between a TA and\nthe university would solve any\nproblems.\n\"It's a term which could have\nmany advantages and disadvantages,\" he said. \"I'm not sure\nwhat problems it would solve.\n\"Turning it around, if there was\na contract with professors we\nwould get far less work out of them\nand they would enjoy it less.\n\"Contracts do tend to induce\nuniformity. But that doesn't mean\nthat a contract isn't a good idea.\"\nand academic education,\" Hedstrom says.\n\"Even though somebody won't\nbe getting a job related to his or her\neducation in the arts, they are\ngetting a valuable education as far\nas society is concerned. This is a\nview the administration agrees\nwith.\"\n\"The underlying reason for\nwanting that balance is the idea\nthat education is good, whether it\nbe professional or not. The\nuniversity is supposed to have\nexpanding horizons, in terms of\neducational opportunities.\"\nThe student campaign will also\ncontinue to focus attention to the\nfact that higher tuition fees makes\nUBC even more an institution for\nthe well-off than it is now.\n\"It can't be shown directly that\nhigher fees have affected accessibility,\" Hedstrom says.\n\"Enrolment is about the same as\nit was last year. All that shows is\nthat those who are here have been\nable to come back; but the ones\nwho haven't been able to come out\nhere are another step bdck. The\nhigher fees are a disincentive to\ncoming here.\"\nFinally, the students plan to\nattract as much publicity as\npossible to the issues raised, and\nHedstrom says they hope the\nadministration will be a little more\namenable to publicity than it has\nbeen in recent years.\n\"The board and the administration should become much\nmore public, or political, or\nwhatever you want to call it. They\nshould use the media to show that\nthings aren't so good at UBC.\n\"The reason we think the administration will become much\nmore public this year is because it\njust can't continue to say: 'This\nyear we raised fees or this year\nsalary increases will be low.'\nWe've used up all the options.\"\nHedstrom admits there isn't\nmuch chance of rolling back tuition\nfees.\n\"The official policy (of higher\nfees) is already stated. Until there\nis a change in that policy there is\nno hope of a rollback. The major\nemphasis is on attacking the logic\nbehind that policy. The argument\nwe think the public will accept,\" he\nsays.\nThe publicity they have planned\ngets under way noon today, with a\nforum on the cutbacks issue, in the\nSUB conversation pit. Speakers\nwill include Sihota, who will come\nfresh from the meeting at which\nthe board will discuss what it will\nsay to the UCBC later in the afternoon.\nUBC admission\nstandards up\nBy KATHY FORD\nStudent politicians are satisfied\nwith UBC's revised admission\nrequirements but are unhappy that\nFrench II is not compulsory for\nadmission\nArts senator Paul Sandhu said\nMonday that he is \"slightly\ndisappointed\" by the defeat of an\namendment to make the course\nmandatory because he said\nCanada is supposedly a bilingual\ncountry.\nBut Sandhu hopes the\nrequirements will enable the\nuniversity to cut down on the\nnumber of grade 11 level courses\ncurrently offered.\n\"It wil] give profs a chance 'to\nexpand into other areas when they\ndon't have to teach grade 11 level\ncourses,\" Sandhu said. \"I think\nthat's what the university was\nhoping for when they changed the\nrequirements.\"\nUBC's senate voted to accept the\nnew requirements, outlined in a\nproposal from the senate admissions committee, at a meeting\nWednesday.\nThe plan will be implemented in\nstages starting next September\nwhen IT3C applicants' averages\nwill be calculated using the 10 best\ngrade 11 and 12 academic subjects.\nUntil this change was proposed,\naverages were calculated using a\nminimum of 12 subjects.\nUBC registrar Jack Parnall said\nthe number of courses used for the\ncalculation was reduced because\nhigh school principals complained\nto UBC that students were\ndiscouraged from taking more\nchallenging courses by the\nprospect of getting low grades that\nwould pull down their averages.\nAlso included in the first stage is\nthe requirement that students\nentering ITBC for the first time\nmust have completed English 11\nand 12 and social studies 11. These\ncourses are currently required for\nhigh school graduation in B.C.\nThe second stage will be implemented by September, 1979, if\nall goes according to the schedule.\nStudents entering UBC for the first\ntime at this time must also have\npassed three academic electives at\nthe grade 12 level.\nParnall said that until the\nrequirements were passed\nstudents could include subjects\nsuch as community recreation 12\nand power mechanics 12 for their\ngrade 12 requirements.\n\"We want to let people know\nwhat the university will expect of\nthem,\" he said. \"Most of our freshmen come in with a good\nbackground but some come in with\nunrealistic courses.\"\nThe final stage will be implemented in September, 1981. This\ndate was chosen so students\ncurrently in grade 9 will have\nenough time to prepare for courses\nlater on in high school, Parnall\nsaid.\nStudents entering UBC in 1981\nmust have completed algebra 11,\nFrench, or any other foreign\nlanguage, to the grade 11 level and\na grade 11 science.\nThe proposal also stipulated that\nstudents entering UBC must have a\nminimum C-plus average.\nParnall said this is not a new\nlevel but under existing academic\nstandards some students with\nlower averages are let into UBC\nbecause their courses are\nacademically-oriented. He said\nsome students with higher\naverages were rejected because\ntheir courses were too technically-\noriented.\n\"These proposals are really a\nreturn to the standards of five or\nseven years ago,\" Parnall said.\n\"We relaxed our requirements at\nthat time because we thought\nschools were steering students into\nthe right programs.\"\nHe said the proposals are more a\nclearing up of loose ends than a\ntoughening up of admissions\nrequirements.\n\"We're just trying to get\nstudents to be aware of what we're\ngoing to demand from them.\"\nParnall said individual faculties\nand schools at UBC have been\nasked to look at their requirements\nto see if they should be changed.\n\"Thereis a chance, for example,\nthat the science faculty might\nmake it compulsory for students\nentering as freshmen to have\ntaken the new geometry 12 course.\n\"And home economics might\ndecide that students might need,\nsay, more chemistry courses.\n\"We're asking faculties and\nschools to look at the high school\ncurriculum and see what's appropriate.\" Page 4\nTHE UBYSSEY\nTuesday, September 20, 1977\nNew Colleges Act \u00E2\u0080\u0094 eeceh\nWhen education emperor Pat McGeer called the New\nColleges and Provincial Institutes Act the \"education bill\nof the decade,\" he wasn't kidding.\nMind you, we wouldn't add all the positive\nconnotations to that statement McGeer is trying to tack on.\nWhy?\nBill 82 removes student and faculty representatives\nfrom the boards of B.C.'s community colleges. This means\nthat McGeer's appointees will call the shots, and under\nanother provision of the act, McGeer must approve all\ncollege bylaws passed by these puppets.\nSounds like Genghis Khan's definition of democracy,\ndoesn't it?\nAnd McGeer is setting up three shiny new committees\nto allocate money, along with the Universities Council\nof B.C. The council has proved to be an effective\nscreen for the deflection of cutbacks criticism. McGeer,\nyou sly old bastard!\nSo McGeer will have removed faculty and student\nvoices from the bodies running the colleges. That is very\nunfortunate, but even more unfortunate considering the\nother provisions of this undemocratic piece of hogwash.\nFor with these other provisions, student and faculty power\nwill be needed more than ever. It is disgraceful that\nMcGeer has pulled out the rug in so many ways.\nUnder Bill 82, school boards will no longer have to\npay for half the cost of the local college, plus the bother of\nfilling half of the college's board. Takes a burden off the\ntaxpayers. Great, huh?\nUnder the current formula , it was not possible to\nraise college students' tuition fees. If you think the\nSocreds aren't going to sock part of this extra cost to\nstudents, look at the new UBC tuition bills.\nAnd the bill removes colleges from the jurisdiction of\nthe B.C. Labor Code. Another union busting bill.\nThe word that comes to mind when thinking of Bill\n82? Errrggggggggh.\nAnswers, pis\nSo what does this flap about the $15,000 allocated to\nWalter Hardwick, the on-leave UBC prof and deputy\nminister of education mean?\nIt was pretty well established from the start that\nHardwick received not a cent of the money. After our\nThursday story, UBC officials, including administration\npresident Doug Kenny, said the allocations were part of\nthe geography department' s budget.\nAfter two tough days of trying to get information\nfrom admin types which would have clarified the question\nof the money allocated in the budget beside Hardwick's\nname, we finally got a statement from Kenny. To get\nfurther clarification, we had to rouse people at home.\nKenny would only say the allocations \"are part of the\ngeography department's operating funds. The department\nand the dean's office determine how the money is used, if\nit is used at all.\"\nThat is all we know. Was the money used at all, and if\nit was, what for?\nThis was the question asked by our stories. Another\none needs to asked: why was the budget drawn up in such\na loose manner?\nr\nTHE UBYSSEY\nSEPTEMBER 20,1977\nPublished Tuesdays, Thursdays and Fridays throughout the\nuniversity year by the Alma Mater Society of the University of\nB.C. Editorial opinions are those of the staff and not of the AMS\nor the university administration. Member, Canadian University\nPress. The Ubyssey publishes Page Friday, a weekly commentary\nand review. The Ubyssey's editorial office is in room 241K of the\nStudent Union Building. Editorial departments, 228-2301;\nAdvertising, 228-3977.\nEditor: Chris Gainor\n\"The Kremlin's on the line for you, announced Mike Bocking to Ralph\nMaurer. \"Tell them I'll call back. I'm playing tlddlywlnks,\" said the\ndiminutive games fiend. \"Why should I waste my time waiting for them?\"\n\"Because they've been getting fucked around,\" said Kathy Ford. \"Watch\nyour fucking language,\" snarled Tom Barnes and Bill Tieleman. \"You're\nlucky to talk to anyone,\" said Colleen Eros and Vickl Booth. Meanwhile,\nVerne McDonald tried to Indoctrinate Innocents Chris Bocking, Heather\nConn and Ken Whiteside Into the art of rope smoking. \"That's no rope,\nthat's Ted Davis' hair,\" shrieked Lloyanne Hurd, Jan Nicol and Larry HIM as\nChris Gainor Interrupted everyone and tied up the phone again. Steve\nHoward sighed wearily as Geof Wheelwright and Matt King wrote sports\nstories. Mario Lowther pondered the significance of Mike McLeod, Paul\nWilson and boring mastheads. Mike Jones got on with the job and Gray\nKyles pretended to be a sports writer.\nLetters\nSatisfied\nreader\nThank you for the bountiful\nissue of 16th September. For\npedagogical use, I collect bad\nwriting, especially sentences that\ncontain major errors in syntax or\nstructure, and The Ubyssey proves\na fruitful source every year.\nEven a hasty reading yields\ngreat riches; for example, the\nrequest for letters produced three\nglorious errors in only eight sentences. Every teacher of remedial\nwriting can be grateful for your\nhelp.\nRuby Nemser\ndepartment of English.\nPF logo\nI am tptally flabbergasted and\ndisgusted with the new Page\nFriday logo. This art nouveau,\navant garde. California-culture\ntype of crap has got to be nipped in\nthe bud. I could see it coming last\nyear when The Ubyssey's logo was\nchanged to its current state. What\nsort of mamby-pamby, puking,\nbelching, wimpy losers came up\nwith those two abortions?\nI mean let's get serious. This new\nPage Friday logo belongs on the\nTransylvanian journal with blood\ndripping off it across the cover.\nThe only other time this Gothiclike type has been used is as the\nlogo\" for movies such as The\nExorcist and The Omen, hardly a\ngood qualification for Page Friday.\nHenceforth I will refuse to look at\nthese classless logos. Thank you.\nSpruce Bough\nobscurity 4\nTremendous\nWith the academic year only a\nweek old, the executive of the\nrevitalized science undergraduate\nsociety is pleased to see tremendous enthusiasm and support for\nits planned activities. Almost a\nthousand students have already\nbeen to our office to have their\nmembership cards validated, and\nsee what their society is all about.\nQuite a few have become ac\ntively involved. We look forward to\nmeeting the rest.\nFor their able assistance in the\nAugust mail blitz, our thanks go to\nthe following, as well as to those\nwho unfortunately got away before\nwe could get their names.\nGillian and Val Chee\nChristine Gardner\nRon Krause\nMarcella Lockhart\nRon (Madman) Mundy\nKurt Raynor\nLianne Riskie\nDannette Tidball\nTbanks!\nErnie Kenward\npublic relations officer,\nscience undergraduate society\nThe Ubyssey welcomes letters\nfrom all readers.\nLetters should be signed and\ntyped. Pen names will be used\nwhen the writer's real name is also\nincluded for our information in the\nletter and when valid reasons for\nanonymity are given.\nLetters should be addressed to\nthe paper care of campus mail or\ndropped off at The Ubyssey office,\nSUB 241K. Tuesday, September 20, 1977\nTHE U BYSSEY\nPage 5\nChasing the big salaries\nBy GEORGE HERMANSON\nThis piece, submitted as a letter to the\nstaff, raises further questions about salary\nincreases granted administration president\nDoug Kenny and his four vice-presidents.\nGeorge Hermanson is a member of the UBC\nboard of governors and is Anglican chaplain\nof UBC.\nOne hates to dump on The Ubyssey\nbecause it is one of the last voices of the\nstudents that, from time to time depending\non the issue, attempts a radical issue of UBC\nadministration salaries further and has\nmade some connections about the values of\nsociety and how these values shape the\nattitude of students and the university.\nAs it it, your editorial (Sept. 15,1977) helps\nmaintain the fiction that it is only the high\nsalaries in public institutions (or government agencies) that taxpayers directly\nsupport and thus, cost us money.\nFurther, it fans the fiction, which unions\nhave been attacking over the years, that\nsalaries are the cause of inflation. In other\nwords, your editorial seems to accept the\nvalue system of capitalism.\nAs the Ubyssey rightly points out on one\nhand, the matter of high salaries raises the\nquestion of equality and the wide gap in our\neconomic distribution. It is true from one\nethical stance that high salaries can never\nbe justified.\nBut, on the other hand, there is the bias of\nour society that it is all right to attack public\nfigures and yet never apply that same\ncriticism to the high salaries in private\nbusiness, law, medicine, and so on.\nIn fact, society's bias is that the area of\nthe private sphere is only the concern of the\nprivate sphere. The question is now to\nmaintain the ethical stance without giving\ncomfort to present society.\nYes, the question is how do we achieve a\njust System of each according to their need\nrather than the present system of getting as\nmuch as one can? That is, how do we change\nthe inequality we now experience?\nIn my comments to the press I was trying\nto analyse only the context of this particular\nissue so that these very questions could be\naddressed. I was engaged in describing and\npreparing a foundation for my argument,\nwhic h is an old academic tradition. Thinking\nthat this could be done or heard was a\nmistake on my part.\nI was just making the point about how all\nof us are shaped by the values of our\ncapitalist system and how it ultimately\nmisserves and depowers us. From there\npeople can make an ethical analysis.\nPart of this analysis that we do live in a\nsalaries in the private sector are just as\nmuchof a question as in the public. In fact, it\nis more of an issue.\nOne way to make this clear is to say that if\nsociety can justify high salaries for the\npresident of MacMillan Bloedel, then one\nmust also accept high salaries in public\ninstitutions. Or, to put it the other way, any\nattackon salaries in public institutions must\ninclude a rejection of our present system.\nOne could go further and show the in-\nhost at UBC a vow of poverty would mean\nliving on less that $900 a month. Horrifying\nin other ways is that it takes that much to\nlive in our society, and more horrifying still,\nis the fact that there are far too many in our\nsociety who make less than that.\nSo until that radical society comes, or\nuntil we have more saints, it seems we are\nstuck with the ambiquity of people getting\nhigh salaries.\nWhat can we do? We can work for that\nDO TttO wvsie?\nW\u00E2\u0082\u00ACU- Sift ,XV\ frUO^QO P&EA\nscience Pfcofr&f^/vgo\nP>WSlCS. xNjc\nTA*C\u00E2\u0082\u00ACrtTW*0E\n-xewte or\n6uT AftE ^ft \u00C2\u00AB4\nr%4!\n-n-\n'%fi\u00C2\u00BBW'\nBecause our condoms are designed to do more thai just\nprevent you from contributing to the population explosion.\nThey're designed to add to your enjoyment While all Searle\nCondoms are dry-lubricated for greater sensitivity and have a\nreservoir tip, each has its own special difference.\nSTIMULA\u00C2\u00AE have multiple ribbing on the shaft. .a feature\ndesigned for a man...with a woman in mind. Adds to the\npleasure for both partners.\nPRIME\u00C2\u00AEcombine traditional shape with economy.\nCONTURE\u00C2\u00AEare shaped. To fit you. Which means they feel\nbetter and stay put\nWhichever you choose, we believe they're\ngoing to change the way you think\nabout contraception.\nToday's Condom.\nAvailable on display in drugstores or ask for\nthem by name. In packs of 3 s. 12 s and the new 36s.\nWho knows more about contraception than Searle\nSearle Pharmaceuticals\n400 Iroquois Shore Road\nOakville. Ontario L6H1M5\nSEARLE Tuesday, September 20, 1977\nTHE UBYSSEY\nPage 9\nInadequate planning by government\nresponsible for high unemployment\nBy CHRIS JULL\nCanadian University Press\nInadequate long-term planning by\ngovernments in Canada is at the root of high\nunemployment here. New Democratic\nParty leader Ed Broadbent says.\n\"It is incredible, at this late date after the\nGreat Depression after the Second World\nWar' that Canada has not declared full\nemployment a national objective,..\nBroadbent said.\n\"Most governments in Western society\nhave learned their lesson, but Canada and\nthe United States stand out as the exceptions\nwhen most European countries and Japan\ntreat full employment as a serious national\ncommitment.\"\nBroadbent said in an interview the current\nhigh student and graduate unemployment\ncould have been predicted and planned for.\nTwenty-year-old demographic statistics\nindicate we would be experiencing the'\ncurrent bulge in university-age population.\nHe said young people of all educational\nbackgrounds are the hardest hit by high\nunemployment.\nHe said with proper planning the government could realize two benefits from student\nemployment. The government could provide\nstudents income to prevent financial hardship and employment programs to integrate\nstudents into the community at large.\nHe proposed a system of federal and\nprovincial subsidies to municipalities,\nwhich would allow them to hire a certain\nnumber of students every year during the\nmonths they are not in school.\nBroadbent said this would be of double\nvalue, because it would allow students to do\nsomething useful in their communities. A\nsimilar plan has been accepted as policy by\nthe National Union of Students.\nThetimeis past, Broadbent said, when the\nuniversity graduate can expect to assume\nan elite economic position in society.\n' 'For the first time, we have working class\nkids graduating from universities and they\nare going to identify with the poor working\noooWeu., \ F**AL1 WD (T - AHER flX* W5\nclass across Canada, like the woman\npacking fish in Newfoundland.\nTTiese new graduates may be instrumental in a new, creative politics. They\nmay force more critical thinking about\neconomic planning,\" Broadbent told a\nseminar group on unemployment at the\nUniversity of Guelph.\nThe NDP leader said unemployment was\na significant factor in the election last\nNovember of the Parti Quebecois in Quebec.\nHe said that while it would be wrong to say\nunemployment was the only factor involved,\nevidence indicated much of the PQ's support\ncame from those disillusioned with the\nfederal system's inability to open up more\neconomic opportunity.\nHe said 50 per cent of the new unemployment in Canada in the past two years\nhas been in Quebec, and the province has 25\nper cent of the nation's population but a\nthird of the nation's unemployed.\n, Asked if he could foresee a separatist\ntrend spreading, Broadbent replied that it is\nalready common among young people \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nparticularly in regions of concentrated high\nunemployment.\nHe mentioned Cape Breton and\nNewfbundland as specfic examples.\nWhen Newfoundland joined confederation\nin 1949 the people had been told that it would\nmean considerable economic advantage, he\nsaid. So far, he added, this advantage has\nonly been realized by Newfoundlanders who\nhave moved to other parts of Canada.\nBroadbent also blamed poor planning for\nthe plight of fishermen who have seen their\ntraditional livelihood taken over by better\nequipped European and Russian fleets.\nHe said it is not too late for the federal\ngoverment to assist Newfoundlanders and\nprovide more jobs by increasing the efficiency of the fleets and developing the onshore processing and packing industries.\nDetailing remedies for the Canadian\neconomy, Broadbent suggested a sector by\nsector review of our industrial capabilities.\nHe pointed to the Japanese, who became\nrecognized world leaders in the electronics\nindustry because of their decision to\nspecialize.\nHe said that Canadians are not recognized\nas world leaders in any field not because we\nare less intelligent or less capable, but\nTHE NDP HAS ALL\nOFTWEANSWRS\nEyEN THOUGH WE\nHAVE A PROBLEM\nKKMU1AT/N&\nQUKTIONSf\n-flW'ff\na> USUAL\nbecause we have not bothered to take stock\nof our strengths and develop them.\nThe NDP, he said, favors public control in\nsome instances. He said this approach has\nbeen taken successfully by other countries\nwith the petroleum industry.\nHe said public control of natural oil nad\ngas and the related chemical industry could\nbring pricing policies in line with Canadian\ninterests.\nBroadbent said he does not favor\nnationalization in all cases. Speaking of the\nCanadian-American automobile agreement,\nhe said there is evidence Canada is not\ngetting its share of the growth of the industry.\nThere could be another 20,000 jobs for\nCanadians if growth in the parts sector of\nthe industry was shared between the two\ncountries as the agreement stipulates, he\nadded.\nOther broad measures suggested by the\nNDP leader included a greater emphasis on\nprocessing of raw materials within Canada,\nchanges in tax policy, special low interest\nrates for small business and increased\nactivity in the housing industry by\npromoting housing as a social right.\nThe First Canadian Bank\nBank of Montreal\nSTUDENT UNION BUILDING BRANCH\nYour Canada Student Loan Center on Campus\nWe have an entirely separate department with excellent trained personnel\nwho will be pleased to help you with all your Canada Student Loan needs.\nPROMPT SERVICE\nEXPERT ADVICE\nCONVENIENCE\nJUST A\nREMINDER-\nTo students who already have a Canada Student Loan, and are not\nobtaining a new loan at this time, you must provide the bank with\na Schedule 2 each Term, in order to continue your interest free\nstatus. Forms are available at the Student Union Building Branch.\nSTUDENT UNION BUILDING BRANCH \u00E2\u0080\u0094 AUDREY HENDERSON\nCANADA STUDENT LOANS MANAGER Page 10\nTHE UBYSSEY\nTuesday, September 20, 1977\n'Bird record 1-1\nafter loss to Rich.\nThe Richmond Laportes soccer\nteam took advantage of a\ndisorganized UBC Thunderbirds\nsquad and scored three goals on\npenalty shots to shut out the 'Birds\n3-0 Saturday.\nJimmy Buchanan put two shots\npast ITBC goaltender Jim Kitsul\nand Gary Wilson drove in the third\nin the B.C. Senior Soccer League\ngame at Capilano Stadium.\nRichmond played shorthanded\nfor most of the game because one\nof its players drew a misconduct.\nBut the Palortes dominated the\n'Birds, controlling midfield and\nbreaking up UBC plays.\nUBC's forward line was closely\nchecked throughout the game, and\nwas seldom able to challenge the\nRichmond goalkeeper. The 'Bird's\nplays were hampered by poor\npassing and ttk players kept the\nball too long.\n'Bird goaltender Jim Kitsul was\noutstanding, making key saves\nespecially in the first half, which\nkept UBC in the game. Kitsul has\nnn erratic style, and often lets the\nball go too early, but he manages to\ncover for his mistakes.\nThe loss evened UBC's league\nrecord at 1-1.\nIfBC opened its season with a 2-0\nwin over Wesburn in Capilano\nStadium Wednesday'. After an even\nfirst half, UBC came alive in the\nsecond, taking control of the field\nand allowing Kenny Garrett to\npump in both goals for the 'Birds.\nGarrett put the first goal past\nWesburn goalie John Parker after\nbeing set up directly in front of the\nWesburn net. Minutes later, he\nwent in alone and tucked the ball\npast a surprised Parker to complete his pair.\n'Bird coach Joe Johnson said he\nis satisfied with UBC's play, but\nhas not made a final team roster.\n\"There are still some young\nplayers on campus who think they\ncan make it onto the team and I'll\nbe looking at them in the next few\ndays,\" be said. \"But right now I\nthink the team is quite well\nbalanced, there was lots of give\nand take on the field and no real\nweak spots.\"\nKitsul earned his shut-out with a\nsave on a direct free kick in the\nfirst half and a lunging save on a\nbullet drive by Peter Nolan in the\ngame's dying moments.\nWesburn relied on its defence,\nbut allowed UBC's Caludio Morelli\ntwo scoring dances. In the first\nhalf, Parker made sliding save on\nMorelli. who had a clear break on\nthe Wesburn goal.\nParker also saved a second half\nshot by Morelli, who had slipped by\nWesburn defender Kelly Allen.\nUBC KARATE CLUB\nDEMONSTRATION\nTues. Sept. 20, 7:30 p.m. in Gym E\nThunderbird Sports Complex. Do drop in. For\nthose interested in joining, a regular practice\nfollows the demonstration, so bring your gym\ngear.\nMAKES LIFE'S GOOD THINGS BETTER!\nA Quality System Suited To Your Needs\nAnd Your Budget -\nPerformance and True Value from Sanyo\n1 AM FM Stereo Receiver\n1 Auto Return-Auto Shut-off Belt Drive Turntable\n1 2 Way Air Suspension Speakers\nAll This For Only\n$379\n95\nLimited Offer\nSTEREO AWARENESS\nYou Deserve The Difference\n2Q53W. 41st\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 263-0878\nIHAH(.I\ \u00E2\u0080\u0094 ww w w \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 w\n\--\"* Bank Financing\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094lee coulter photo\nSTREAKING FOR GOAL, Soccer player sprints around opponent for shot on goal. 'Birds lost 3-0 to\nRichmond Laportes Saturday, bringing UBC team's win-loss record to 1-1.\nTHIS MOVIE\nIS TOTALLY\nOUT OF\nCONTROL\nC&-W*\n6694442\ngranvMe&georgia\n122)294 299,\nbroadwayE.of boundary Tuesday, September 20, 1977\nTHE UBYSSEY\nPage 11\nU of S beats 'Birds in last minute\nBy TOM BARNES\nWith 45 seconds left, the\nUniversity of Saskatchewan\nHuskies' quarterback Dave\nOsiowy hit Bill Bowd for a 51-yard\ntouchdown pass, handing the UBC\nThunderbirds their second loss in\nthree games.\nSaskatchewan's last minute\nscoring drive was almost halted\nwhen tailback Tom Chad fumbled\non first down at the UBC 39-yard\nline. But the Huskies recovered\nand won the Western Intercollegiate football game 21-15 in\nSaskatoon Saturday.\nThe defending WIFL champion\n'Birds have but one point in three\nstarts this season, from a 29-29 tie\nwith the tlniversity of Alberta\nGolden Bears in Edmonton last\nweek. UBC must win four of its last\nfive league games if it hopes to\nreach the WIFL playoff game.\nIn Saskatoon neither of UBC's\ntwo quarterbacks, Dan Smith and\nGreg Gardner, were able to\ngenerate a consistent drive as the\n'Birds offense totalled a meager\n209 yards. Smith and Lardner\ncombined for only seven completions in 20 attempts for 54 yards,\ngiving up three interceptions.\n\"I think that is the lowest offensive total since I've been here,\"\nsaid Frank Smith, now in his fourth\nyear as UBC head coach. \"Those\nprairie teams are going to have\nsome pretty big studs on the line\nand we have to rely on our skill\npeople to win for us.\"\nGlen Wallace hit the century\nmark in rushing for the second\ntime this season totalling 100 years\non 22 carries. He ran for 106 yards\nagainst the LTniversity of Manitoba\nBisons in the league opener,\nwhich UBC lost 35-25.\nFullback Gord Penn who was\nexpected to dominate UBC's\nrunning game as he did last season\nwhen he rushed for 1,050 yards and\nwas named to the WIFL all-star\nteam, failed to get untracked\nagain. Smith has to be Concerned.\n\"We just cannot count on him to\nrecover last year's form. We have\nto go with the people we have,\"\nsaid Smith Monday.\nOsiowy was good on 12 of 16\npasses for 160 yards as the Huskies\ntotalled 347 yards net offense.\nSaskatchewan took a 4-0 lead in\nthe first quarter as Osiowy kicked\na 36-yard field goal and a 46-yard\nsingle.\nIn the second quarter UBC\nrecovered a fumble on the\nSaskatchewan 10-yard line to set\nup a Smith touchdown on a one\nyard plunge,. Placekicker Gary\nMetz hit in field goals of 13 and 20\nyards as well 3s a 42-yard single\nand a convert for UBC.\nGORD PENN\n. not fully recovered\nThe Huskies' only touchdown of\nthe first half came on linebacker\nDarryl Burko's 58 yard return of an\nintercepted Smith pass. UBC led\n14-n at the half.\nPunter Al Chorney increased the\nscore to 15-11 with a 58 yard single\nin the third quarter. Osiowy opened\nthe scoring in the fourth period\nwith a 46 yard field goal.\nSmith refused to lay any blame\non his defensive secondary for the\nlast minute bomb that sunk the\n'Binds. \"We never should have\nbeen in a position where that score\nwas decisive. We recovered five\nfumbles inside the Saskatchewan\n30and all our offense could do was\nscore two field goals and a single.\n\"Last year we started out slow\nbut were able to come up with the\nbig play to win two of our first\nthree games. I think we are\nplaying better ball over all this\nyear, but the other teams are\ngetting the big play. We'll be\nalright if we can get consistent\nplay out of the people in the skill\npositions, and we haven't yet,\"\nsaid Smith.\nIn the other WIFL games\nSaturday the LTniversity of Calgary\nDinosaurs surprised the league\nleading Manitoba Bisons 20-14 in\nWinnipeg. Dino slqtback ran 61\nyards for a fourth quarter touchdown t6 narrow the Bisons' lead to\n14-13. Quarterback Darrel Moir\nGLEN WALLACE\nclears century mark for second time\nf\nGet Ready For The\nABC Pre-Season\nxc SK/ SALE\nSEPT. 22 OCT. 1\nTHIS WINTER,\nSKI IT & SEE\nIT THE NORDIC\nW/1lX... j\u00C2\u00A3\u00C2\u00A3\n*\" *& dnsS*** equipmen,'\nMt\.' ^j^tflffiteittfi instruction,\nrentals, and\nliterature.\nABC Recreational\ntfjfr Equipment\n555 RICHARDS ST. 687-7885\n1822 W. 4th AVE. 731-4018 PACIFIC CENTER N., 889- 7031\nthen settled the issue for Calgary\nwith a scoring pass to flanker\nTracey Hallam.\nHallam also scored a touchdown\nin the second quarter, on an 87 yard\n. play. Dinosaurs kicker converted\ntwo of the touchdowns.\nBud Harden connected with full\nback John Neilson in the second\nquarter for the only Manitoba\ntouchdown of the game. Les Oakes\nscored the rest of the Bisons' points\nwith two field goals, a single and a\nconvert.\nThe Calgary victory tightened up\nthe WIFL standings considerably\nas last place LTBC (0-2-1) are just\nthree points'behind front running\nManitoba (2-1-0). But the 'Birds\nwill have their work cut out for\nthem after their bye this Saturday\nwhen they face three opponents in\neight days.\nThe 'Birds came out of\nSaskatoon without any injuries and\nwill be healthy when they face the\nEastern Oregon State College\nMounties Saturday at Thunderbird\nStadium.\nThe game will be played using\nAmerican rules. Smith is still\ncomputing scouting information on\nthe Mounties but says the outcome\nwill be as important as any game\nUBC plays this season.\nWIFL standings:\nManitoba\nAlberta\nSaskatchewan\nCalgary\nUBC\nDown-filled gear, backpacks, XC skiing, snowshoes,\nquality tents & boots\nPack It!\nCarry your books or supplies for two\nweeks in the mountains in a pack\nfrom the Co-Op. Your choice from\nour complete selection of packs from\nMillet, Hine/Snowbridge, Trailwise,\nand the Co-Op.\nThe Lowe Alpine Pack (shown above)\nis a large size rucksack which will\neasily carry enough gear for overnight trips for anyone who appreciates going light. The Alpine is made\nfrom tough 11 oz. coated cordura\nnylon. Side compression straps let\nyou reduce pack volume for smaller\nloads and can be fitted with accessory pockets or used for carrying\nskis. $48 to Mountain Equipment\nCo-Op members.\nJoin the\nHikers, Skiers,\nClimbers and\nBackpackers\nWho belong to Canada's largest outdoor equipment co-operative.\nOur members enjoy the lowest prices\non quality equipment such as Camp\n7 down sleeping bags, Lowe packs,\nBrixia boots, and Edelrid climbing\nropes.\nYour purchase of one $5 share in the\nCo-Op makes you a lifetime member.\nVisit our stores in Vancouver, 2068\nW. 4th Ave., phone (604) 733-9194,\nand Calgary, 118-10th St. NW, phone\n(403) 283-9598, or write for a catalogue. We ship mail order.\nPlease send me a Co-Op catalogue and\ninformation about membership.\nNAME\t\nADDRESS\t\nCITY\t\nPROV.\n.CODE.\nM\nMOUNTAIN\nEQUIPMENT\nCO-OP\nW L TPtsF A\n21 0 4 66 55\n1 0 1 3 61 32\n1 1 0 2 31 32\n1 1 0 2 23 44\n0 2 11 6985\nOffuJURC\nLjraauation f- "Newspapers"@en . "Vancouver (B.C.)"@en . "LH3.B7 U4"@en . "LH3_B7_U4_1977_09_20"@en . "10.14288/1.0127485"@en . "English"@en . "Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library"@en . "Vancouver : Alma Mater Society of the University of B.C."@en . "Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy, or otherwise use these images must be obtained from The Ubyssey: http://ubyssey.ca/"@en . "Original Format: University of British Columbia. Archives"@en . "University of British Columbia"@en . "The Ubyssey"@en . "Text"@en . ""@en .