"CONTENTdm"@en . "http://resolve.library.ubc.ca/cgi-bin/catsearch?bid=1211252"@en . "University Publications"@en . "2015-08-28"@en . "1971-01-29"@en . "Misprinted volume, should be LIII."@en . ""@en . "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/Ubysseynews/items/1.0127671/source.json"@en . "application/pdf"@en . " I^MO\nThe B.C. parkland grab - p. 16\npage 3:%AMS$t\u00C2\u00ABMdk$^h<^^sy\u00C2\u00ABtem\npage 3: Q&k^s&m^^\niW.;:,^\nH, M* 27 VAKCQOVBl, fcC; !$\u00C2\u00AB)*\u00C2\u00A5, ^MtlARY 29, 1971\nOperating\nengineers\nmay strike\nA strike by engineers operating UBC's heating system threatens to\nstrangle the campus by as early as next weekend.\nDon Ankersen, business representative for local 882 of the\nInternational Union of Operating Engineers, told The Ubyssey on\nThursday that strike notice has been served by the union against the\nuniversity.\nThe university and the union have been negotiating since May 14\non a contract to replace one that expired July 1,1970, he said.\n\"We haven't made much progress,\" Ankersen said. \"A mediator\nwas appointed by the B.C. Mediation Commission some time ago, but\nall he can do is make recommendations.\n\"The mediator's term expires on Thursday and we strike anytime\nafter 72 hours after that.\"\nThe strike, which could begin on the weekend of Feb. 6, would\nbe the result of many months of hard negotiations which the union says\nhave been stumped by failure to agree on what the engineers should get\nduring the first year of the new contract.\nThe union is asking for a 18-month contract with a nine per cent\nboost in the first year.\nUBC is offering a 30 month contract with a seven per cent\nincrease in the first twelve months.\nAnkersen said this would mean the lowest paid of the 18 men\nrunning UBC's central boiler room \u00E2\u0080\u0094 which heats most campus buldings\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 would go from $637 to $694 if the union demand was met.\nUnder the university's offer, the man would get $687.\nAfter this, comparisons between demands and offers become\nimpossible without careful study of the numerous offers and demands.\n\"We have not ruled out the possibility of picketing all campus\nbuildings,\" Ankersen said.\nThis would mean that union affiliated office workers, cafeteria\nemployees and other persons would not be allowed to enter buildings\non campus\nUBC administration information officer Arnie Myers refused to\nspeculate on the consequences that might arise from the strike.\nAt press time, Myers \u00E2\u0080\u0094 who is speaking for university personel\nhead John McLean, university negotiator \u00E2\u0080\u0094 said the university had not\nyet received the union's strike notice.\nThe union struck the university several years ago but picketed the\nboiler room only.\nJericho highway\n'has to be built*\nVHMWA^I\n,*\u00C2\u00BB\nfljmjtflpf\npage1& Sfeid*nl^iketMN^*^un}wre%<'^^^%\n#8\ni-;px&\nBy SANDY KASS\nThe wheel of pressure is\ngrinding along Jericho Road.\nCity council now awaits a soon\nto be released report by the city\nengineering department advising\nthem on the structure the road\nshould take.\nMeanwhile the city planning\ndepartment has sent letters to\nresidents of the 4400 block\nMarine Drive advising them to\ncontact city hall regarding\npurchase of their homes by the\ncity.\nThe road in question is a\nproposed six-lane divided highway\nwhich would cut away from\nMarine Drive at Tolmie Street,\nthrough the only grocery store in\nthe neighborhood, and through\nLocarno neighborhood park, to\njoin with Fourth Avenue east of\nthe old national defense site.\nThe road scheme was passed in\nprinciple at a council meeting\nDecember 22, while Vancouver\nmayor Tom Campbell was on\nvacation.\nCampbell was unavailable for\ncomment at press time but\nalderman Ernie Broome, a staunch\nsupporter of the scheme, said the\nroad development was outlined in\nthe purchase of the federal lands\nby the city and \"has to be built.\"\nto page 16: see TOWNHOUSES\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094david bowerman photo\nSOME PEOPLE will do anything for a little attention from the press and the public, including AMS\nOmbudsman Hamish Earle. Earle was honeyed and feathered at the Wednesday AMS general meeting\nthat wasn't. Hoping for a capacity crowd, the otherwise shy Earle hired a gang of engineers to put him in\na cage. He escaped during the meeting in the War Memorial Gym, and flaunted his body to a crowd of\n1,000 in a lightning, underwear-clad sprint across the gym floor.\nAMS non-meeting lacks quorum\nBy RICHARD T. BETTS\nOver 21,000 students were conspicuous by\ntheir absence at Wednesday's AMS general meeting.\nThe attendance fell more than 1,000 short of\nthe required quorum of 2,300.\nThere were conflicting views among the\nexecutive as to what the lack of a quorum signified.\n'This is in no way a vote of confidence on the part\nof the students towards the AMS,\" said treasurer\nStuart Bruce\n\"It is a vote of no confidence in the executive,\"\nsaid external affairs officer-in-exile Peter Hlookoff.\nHlookoff has been censured by students council\non the urging of the executive for his alleged \"lack\nof action and cooperation with the rest of the\nexecutive.\" He had intended to make his points in a\nspeech but was drowned out by the chaos of the\nbreak-up of the meeting.\nAMS president Tony Hodge appeared to have\nevery indication of proceeding with the meeting but\nthe quorum was challenged and the meeting\nadjourned.\nThe non-meeting was punctuated by the usual\nstunts of the engineers and forestry students.\nThe engineers had kidnapped ombudsman\nHamish Earle and covered him with honey and\nfeathers prior to the meeting. Earle made his escape\nduring the forester's stunt and ran from the War\nMemorial Gym. When asked about what had\nhappened Earle replied \"Ba-rack cluck, cluck,\ncluck.\"\nSeveral observers were later said to have found\na large egg by the exit where Earle left.\nSpeaking of eggs, a member of The Ubyssey\nterrorist squad, Ann Arky Cell, professionally\nlobbed two eggs into the engineer's little red car,\nmaking a mess in the back seat.\nSaid Hodge of the meeting: 'This has set the\nprocess of constitutional revisions back a year.\"\nto page 6: see MOTION Page 2\nTHE UBYSSEY\nFriday, January 29, 1971\n'Non-political breathers\nunite in eco revolution'\nBy JOSEPHINE MARGOLIS\nThe environmental collapse is caused by\ncontemporary use of 19th century logic, Bob\nHunter said Wednesday.\n\"Our society has adopted a 19th century mode\nof cognition and perception called operationalism,\"\nsaid Sun columnist Hunter.\nHe defined operationalism as a mode of thought\nwhich sees only those things which can be measured\nand related to a set of operations as real.\n\"It allows us to see or grapple with only those\nthings that can be measured and ignore things those\nthat can't be - like crucial environmental factors,\"\nHunter said.\n\"My children can say: look at all the shit\ncoming out of the smoke stacks! But a specialist\ncannot appraise the total situation because he can't\nmeasure it,\" Hunter told 400 people in Hebb\nTheatre.\nHe posed a wholistic approach as an alternative\nphilosophy.\n'This means that you no longer look at the\ntrees and then the forest; your head is no longer\nstuck in one particular groove; you no longer\nquestion just yourself but the society in \"which you\nlive,\" he said.\nHunter outlined the influence of this new\nphilosophy on self, and environmental consciousness.\n\"If I am trying to establish an integral\nrelationship with myself it is within these larger\ncontexts, the broadest of all being the\nenvironment,\" said he.\nHunter compared the society-environment\nrelationship to that of the foetus and womb.\n\"If I started to litter my mother's womb with\nbeer bottle caps and more babies it would collapse\nand I would rot,\" said Hunter.\nThroughout the talk, sponsored by E.C.O.\n(Environmental Crisis Operation), the audience\nresponded to Hunter's insight and relevance with\nenthusiasm.\nHunter differentiated this revolution in\nconsciousness from many of those happening and\nemerging. I\n\"This is the real revolution, it is not political or\ndoctinaire and it is all-inclusive.\"\nThe common slogan is: \"Breathers of the World\nUnite!\"\nThe ecological revolution is similar to other\nrevolutions because it is vulnerable to what Herbert\nMarcuse, (author of One Dimensional Man) calls\n\"repressive desublimation.\"\n\"Repressive desublimation is when the people\nwho are guilty of environmental crimes - like oil\nslicks \u00E2\u0080\u0094 set up Environmental Departments and\npollution investigators to undermine the sincere\nefforts of others,\" said Hunter.\nIn some ways it is different than other\nrevolutions.\n\"Mass media can replace weaponry. Nobody\nhas to kill the czars, just get them out pf office\nbefore they wreck the sandbox. And unlike other\nrevolutions, this movement does not attempt to\nchange people only to improve their environment,\"\nhe said.\nAsked about his optimism, he answered: 'The\nthing is the earth is on our side; the majority of the\npeople are reacting to the mounting pressure from\nthe environment itself.\"\nHunter finally left the meeting after repeated\nattacks from a member of the audience who accused\nhim of perpetrating Nazi propaganda to detract\nfrom the real revolution of the people.\nNo \"Time Out\" at\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 We Hurry\nHILLTOP GULF SERVICE\nDiscount for Labor\n(UBC Students Only)\nBIG SAVINGS-20%\n4305 W. 10th\nPhone 224-7212\nSummer jobs rare again\nThe summer job situation will\nbe just as bad this year as it was\nlast year, UBC placement officer\nCam Craik said Thursday.\n\"Students should register early\nfor summer jobs and keep\nchecking in periodically,\" he said.\nThere are over 100 jobs in\nvarious federal government\nagencies right now. The\ngovernment has also allotted\n$45,000 for additional jobs with\nfederal agencies in B.C.\n\"However, jobs in industry will\ncontinue to be scarce this year,\"\nCraik said.\n\"The provincial government\nhas said it is going to open many\njobs this year, but these are\nmainly career jobs and will not\nhelp summer job seekers,\" he said.\nThe placement office has\nprinted a guide to students\nseeking summer employment\nwhich is available in its office. The\nguide stresses that students should\nnot be content to simply register\nwith the placement office and\nwith Canada Manpower, but\nshould make as many direct\napproaches as possible.\nMost jobs, which do not\nrequire special skills or are\ngenerally hard to fill will not be\nmatched with students but are\nlisted on the bulletin board in the\noffice. Students should check in\nperiodically to see what jobs are\navailable.\nStudents can start registering\nfor the jobs available now at the\nPlacement Office, which is located\nin the office of student services\non West Mall opposite the armory.\nOFFICIAL NOTICE\nAlma Mater Society\nA.M.S. EXECUTIVE ELECTIONS\nAre you one of the people who has been complaining all year about your\nstudent government? Well that's what we call all words and no action. Now\nis the time to really do something to help the students on campus.\nNominations are now open for the first half of the AMS Executive\nElections. This includes the following:\n1ST SLATE\nPresident\nCoordinator of Activities\nSecretary\nOmbudsman\nNomination period runs from Wednesday, January 27 th to NOON\nThursday, Feb. 4, and the election is to be held WEDNESDAY, Feb. 10th.\n*Anyone running for President should submit their\nnomination forms as soon as possible, as candidates for this\nposition are able to begin campaigning upon posting of\ntheir nomination form.\nAll other candidates may begin campaigning after the nomination period,\nFeb. 4, 12:30 p.m.\nNomination forms may be picked up in the AMS General Office, AMS\nExecutive Office or from AMS Secretary, Anne Clarkson, SUB 248.\nMore information on the 2nd slate will be given in Tuesday's Ubyssey. The\npositions here will be:\n2ND SLATE\nVice-President\nTreasurer\nExternal Affairs Officer\nInternal Affairs Officer\nEnjoy an exciting colourful career in the AMS! Make your mother proud\nof you! Run for AMS!\n1\nEAT IN .TAKEOUT* DELIVERY\n3261 W. Broadway 736-7788\nWeekdays to 1 a.m.\nFri. & Sat. 3 a.m.\nHONG KONG\nCHINESE FOODS\nJust One Block from Campus\nin the Village\nWE SfeRVE AUTHENTIC\nCHINESE FOOD\nAT REASONABLE PRICES\nEat In - Take Out\nOpen Every Day\n4:30-11:00 p.m.\n5732 University Blvd. 224-6121\nIn the Village\n^^\u00E2\u0080\u00A2-.\u00E2\u0080\u00A2-\u00E2\u0080\u00A2-\u00E2\u0080\u00A2-\u00E2\u0080\u00A2-\u00E2\u0080\u00A2-\u00E2\u0080\u00A2-\u00E2\u0080\u00A2-\u00E2\u0080\u00A2-\u00E2\u0080\u00A2-\u00E2\u0080\u00A2-\"-\u00E2\u0080\u00A2-\u00E2\u0080\u00A2-\u00E2\u0080\u00A2-\u00E2\u0080\u00A2.\u00E2\u0080\u00A2.\u00E2\u0080\u00A2.\nGRAND OPENING!\nA&B SOUND OPENS A NEW STORE AT 556 SEYMOUR\nJust looh at these fantastic stereo record specials!\nm\nI\n8$\n9\n1\nf\ni\nTHR JMOOnV\nIXM Van Mi.rriMin \u00E2\u0080\u0094 HI, hand mid JMJ \"1IKS TAVI/IR _ S\u00C2\u00BBwl \u00C2\u00AB\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00AB I)KS _ 18017\t\n1ll<> MrePl Choir. $*V7\u00C2\u00BB \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2=>\"\"\u00E2\u0080\u00A2*\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 JO\" ' \niKS OF \u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00AB>-7* \"LIES.\nMan. Subb. List *5.'!9 \u00C2\u00A3. 'Ian. Siit\u00C2\u00A3. J,l\u00C2\u00AB| f.V!9 \u00C2\u00A3. 1HECAMOS mm\ MM. Sll\u00C2\u00AB. IW *\u00C2\u00AB\u00E2\u0080\u00A2!\u00C2\u00BB \u00C2\u00AB\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nRD 6360 - Stand Up - Jethro Tull - SD 8229-Crosby Stills & Nash - SD 8236-Led Zeppelin II - RS6392 - Sit Down Young Stranger - Gordon Lightfoot\n- LSP 4445 - That's The Way It Is - Elvis Presley - LSP 4459-The Worst of The Jefferson Airplane - LSP 4448-Blows Against The Empire - Paul Kantner\n- LSP 4359-Share The Land-Guess Who - D's 50090 Steppenwolf 7 - DG 518029-SSH! Ten Years After - DG 518025-On the , nnlnr tO70\nThreshold of a Dream-Moody Blues - DG 5 18038-Cricklewood Green - Ten Years After - DG 18012-Days of Future QIIR PRICE 2\nPassed-Moody Blues - 5.29 MAN. SUGG. LIST\nMAIL ORDERS\nPROMPTLY FILLED\nJust tick off the records\nyou want; enclose your\nlist with remittance,\nplus 5% tax and\npostage, and we'll- get\nyour o rder away\npromptly.\nFirst Record 35c \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nEach Additional\nRecord 20c Postage and\nHandling Charges\nsound\n556 SEYMOUR STREET 682-6144\nOPEN\nTHURSDAY\n& FRIDAY\nUNTIL\n9 P.M. Friday, January 29, 1971\nTHE UBYSSEY\nPage 3\nAS USUAL, UBC PReports missed the key area of UBC heart research in its\n\"historic\" Thursday heart edition. After 25 years of painstaking research, however.\nThe Ubyssey discovered the secret nerve centre of work on open heart surgery as\nperformed by highly-skilled members of the UBC forestry faculty. Following many\nmonths of negotiations the foresters agreed to reveal their controversial new surgical\ntechnique. This confidential photo should explode the administration press myth that\nonly doctors and researchers are capable of solving the problems of heart disease and\ncure. The future of heart research now clearly lies in the hands of the students.\n'UBC haven for the wealthy'\nBy MIKE SASGES\nAn Alma Mater Society brief\nreleased Thursday contends that\nthe provincial government is\nfailing to end the \"closed-shop\"\nstatus of post-secondary\neducation.\nThe student financial assistance\nbrief looks at accessibility,\nprovincial government\nscholarships, bursaries, and\nCanada Student Loans.\n\"It is our contention that the\nscheme (student financing) is\nfailing in its prime function - to\nensure that higher education is\nnot a closed shop, restricted in the\nmain to those of present\neconomic wealth,\" the report\nsaid.\n'The primary recommendation\nis that the bulk of financial\nassistance should be provided on\nthe basis of need,\" AMS president\nTony Hodge said Tuesday.\n\"A study last year showed\nclearly that lower-income groups\nare under-represented at UBC,\"\nHodge said.\nHodge said that the\ngovernment can remove the\npresent economic barriers to\nhigher education if it wishes.\n\"It's obvious, however, that\nnothing has been done,\" Hodge\nsaid.\nThe report said that the\nprovincial government scholarship\nscheme grants awards to the top\n17 percent of post-secondary\nstudents, provided that a\nminimum of 70 percent academic\naverage is achieved.\nHodge said that the AMS\nrecommends that the government\nmake the bulk of its funds\navailable on the basis of student\nneed, not on the basis of high\nacademic standings.\n'There's enough money in\nprivately funded money\nscholarship money for the bright\none,\" he said.\nHodge said that the provincial\nbursary scheme is defeating itself.\n\"Why is there an academic\nrequirement of 65 percent for\nbursaries?\" asked Hodge.\n\"Why should the government\ntell a person he can't have a\nbursary if his marks are good\nenough for entrance?\"\nHodge also said that the\namount of money available for\nbursaries is too little.\n\"B.C. is third in Canada in the\nnumber of bursaries presented,\"\nhe said.\n'The amount of money for\neach bursary, however, is the\nlowest in Canada - $173.\"\n\"It's not enough for the\nlow-income student,\" he said.\n\"We also want to get rid of the\nparental contribution and summer\nemployment requirements of the\nCanada Student Loans,\" said\nHodge\n\"We're trying to make it easier\nfor people to get in to\npost-secondary education.\"\n\"At the same time, we want\npeople to think about the\ndrawbacks of going here. That's\nthe purpose of our community\nvisitations,\" he said.\nHodge said that the brief may\nbecome very irrelevant in the\nfuture if the federal government\ndecides to step in and look after\nstudent financing.\n\"The provincial education\nministers of Canada have already\naccepted, in principle the idea of a\nEducational Opportunity Bank,\"\nhe said.\nHodge said that the federal\ngovernment would make an\noutright loan to the student to\ncover his stay at university.\n\"When you graduate, however,\nyou would have one hell of a loan\nto pay back.\"\n\"The university would become\nthe domain of the higher-income\nstudent.\"\n\"What student with a\nlow-income background would\nwant a $15,000 loan hanging over\nhis head?\" he asked.\nHodge would like to know the\nSocred Feeling on the EOB.\n\"I'm somewhat optimistic on\ntheir manner of receiving our\nrecommendations,\" he said.\n\"The final say depends on the\nman with the money \u00E2\u0080\u0094Finance\nMinister W. A. C. Bennett.\"\nCitizens' ad hoc committee\nset up in UVic tenure dispute\nLaw on strike\nSASKATOON (CUP) - Law students at the Saskatoon\ncampus of the University of Saskatchewan voted Wednesday by a\nlarge majority to strike over the issue of Christmas exam results.\nNo students attended classes in the law faculty Thursday\nafter a 144-19 vote in favor of strike action.\nDissatisfaction with the college was brought about by\nstudents' marks in Christmas exams, which resulted in massive\nfailure rates.\nIn one class, student papers were given a bonus of 30 marks\nand the class average was still only 59 per cent.\nA 60 per cent average is required for students to remain in\nthe college.\nThe strike, with no time limit, was made effective\nimmediately. A strike committee was set up and another general\nmeeting set for Feb. 1 to assess faculty response and determine\nfurther action.\nVICTORIA (Staff) - The\ncitizens of Victoria are getting\ninvolved in the current\ntenure-promotion dispute at the\nUniversity of Victoria.\nEugene Kaellis, 41, a former\nassistant professor at the\nUniversity of Saskatchewan\n(Regina), has taken the initiative\nto form an ad hoc citizens'\ncommittee.\nThe committee held its first\nmeeting last Thursday, and\ngathered the support of 12\ninterested citizens.\n\"I would say we represent a lot\nmore than 12 people,\" Kaellis\nexplained. \"I got a lot of calls\nfrom people who wanted to come\nbut couldn't because of the short\nnotice or the snow.\"\nThe committee's primary\nfunction is to attempt to make\nsure that the opinion of the\ncommunity is considered in the\nfinal decision at UVic.\nKaellis said he had written two\nletters to administration president\nBruce Partridge but that he had\nreceived no reply as yet. The\ncommittee just wants to meet\nwith the representatives of the\nadministration, he said.\n\"Kaellis has aiso> written to\nUVic chancellor Roderick\nHaig-Brown.\n\"He is backing the\nadministration completely on\nthis,\" Kaellis said. \"I think that is\na reasonable interpretaton of the\ncontent of his letters.\"\nWhen asked what his\nexpectations are in resolving the\ndispute fairly, he said: \"We can\njust try.\"\nBill Goede, one of the profs\ninvolved in the dispute was also\nnot very optimistic.\n\"There doesn't seem to have\nbeen anything done so far,\" he\nsaid. \"It looks like we just had a\nminor earthquake.\"\nNels Granewall, recent\nadministration appointment in\ncharge of rumour central, the\ninformation arm of the\nadministration's Ministry of Truth,\nsaid it is not part of his duties to\ncomment on the citizens'\ncommittee.\nGranewall also said that he was\nnot responsible for detailing the\ninformation surrounding\nPartridge's exposition as consultant\nto the Peruvian government. He\ndid, however, confirm the\npresident's consultant status with\nthat foreign government. Page 4\nTHE UBYSSEY\nFriday, January 29, 1971\nTHf U8YSSEY\nPublished Tuesdays and Fridays throughout the university\nyear by the Alma Mater Society of the University of B.C.\nEditorial opinions are those of the writer ind not of the AMS or\nthe University administration. Member, Canadian University Press.\nFounding member. Pacific Student Press. The Ubyssey publishes\nPage Friday, a weekly commentary and review. The Ubyssey's\neditorial offices are located in room 241K of the Student Union\nBuilding. Editor, 228-2301; city editor, 228-2305; news editor,\n228-2307; Page Friday, 228-2309; sports, 228-2308; advertising,\n228-3977.\nJANUARY 29, 1970\nUltimate failure\nIt had to happen sooner or later.\nWith its abortive attempt at a general meeting\nWednesday, the AMS reached the ultimate in failure.\nNo, we don't mean the fact that more than 95 per\ncent of the students on campus found something better\nto do than going to the general meeting \u00E2\u0080\u0094 almost\neveryone knew there wouldn't be a quorum.\nWe're not even referring to the fact that the\nengineering army that has always dominated such events\nwas only a shadow of its former self.\nThe general meeting was such a failure that even\nJim Banham didn't bother showing up.\nJim Banham is one of the administration's public\nrelations men and editor of UBC Reports.\nHe and his ever present tape recorder are fixtures\nat any campus event of even the most marginal interest.\nIn fact, Banham often shows up at some of the most,\ninsignificant events, just to show off his tape recorder (a\nUher4000 Report-L).\nYet, Wednesday was the first time in anyone's\nmemory that Banham was nowhere to be found at a\ngeneral meeting.\nIt's nothing new for the large majority of the\nstudents not to give a damn about the AMS, particularly\nthe AMS constitution.\nBut the administration has always given its usually\ncompliant puppet more attention than it has ever\ndeserved. When the administration stops caring, the\nAMS is really in trouble.\nOne would think that even the AMS could learn\nsomething from a failure of such magnitude.\nBut no, president Tony Hodge says his prized\nconstitutional revisions will be presented again at the\nMarch general meeting. Hodge seems to have adopted\nthe philosophy of UBC football coach Frank Gnup:\n\"keep running that play until you get it right.\" (Hodge\nalso seems destined to wait just as long for success.)\nMaybe, just maybe, at some point in the hazy\nfuture, the truth will penetrate the skull of someone on\nthe AMS executive.\nPerhaps during a discussion about which rock band\nto hire to draw a quorum, someone will realize that no\none cares about their constitution.\nIt may dawn on them (and we're talking about\nlong odds here) that students at UBC just might have\nmore important things than the structure of student\ncouncil to worry about.\nWhen that happens, the AMS may begin to\nseriously confront issues like housing, employment and\nthe nature of the university itself.\nBut don't bet next year's tuition on it.\nEditor: Nate Smith\nNews Maurice Bridge\nCity Glnny Gait'\nJan O'Brien\nWire John Andersen\nManaging Bruce Curtis-\nSports Keith Dunbar\nAss't News Jennifer Jordan\nLeslie Plommer\nPhoto David Enns\nDavid Bowerman\nPage Friday Tim Wilson\nAfter two years, Mike Finlay, local\npoet, bookpeddlar and fishmonger, was\n?iven another chance on city desk. His\nirst attempt, which came in the first\nmonth of the year of the Birnie, ended\nafter two weeks.\nRemembering why he quit the first\ntime, Finlay stalked off the wilds of\nthe pit without leaving the names of\nthose who worked.\nFollowing is the emergency, reserve\nmasthead commissioned following the\nrejection of John Andersen's first\nexcursion into the field of literature.\n(Seems his mother once told him that\nall great authors \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Harold Robbins,\nJacqueline Susanne, Harvey Nussbaum.\nall the biggies \u00E2\u0080\u0094 began their careers\nwith three-inch short stories in\nnewspaper mastheads and be's been\nwanting to try it ever since.)\nHowever, reactionary forces in the\npublishing industry insidiously\nsuppressed the document, which must\nnow await discovery by generations\nyet unborn.\nOn a more pedestrian literary level.\nDick Betts, David Schmidt, Nettie\nWild, Sandy Kass and Josephine\nMargolis gave the news to the eager\nmasses.\nKen lassessen, Mike Sasges and Jim\nDavies did nothing in particular, while\nJenny Ladner and Nathalie Apouchtine\n(gesundheit) helped on news desk.\nShane McCune and John Kula never\nshowed up.\nDavid Enns, David Bowerman and\nMaureeen Gans took it into the\ndarkroom but just couldn't get off on\nit. Meanwhile, jocks Steve Millard and\nTony Gallagher tried to analyze it but\ndidn't.\nAnd after it was all through, nobody\nknew where it was at.\n-\nf / V rLGO<\"> 1 \\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0sWm^W >\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0'\"'V \u00E2\u0096\u00A0. \u00E2\u0096\u00A0'\nTlrlvieCa\n// jgSCr\n^*C^t\u00C2\u00A3sfflsTr^i^y^k2\u00C2\u00BB>\u00C2\u00A3w^5L\"\"\"\\n^l\nrUt. -\u00E2\u0080\u0094'f\nSS0^3M\npj/ ^\n9 rNH\nigsl^S!^*ig&\njfirV^-\nTJ\u00C2\u00ABfilsrloltt>'W-\u00C2\u00BB-\n-tVSW-\n^4\nBUfvK\nat least they give you\na fighting chance\n\t\nDAVIES' RAVIES\nBY JIM DAVIES\nFrom ashes to ashes?\nAccording to Greek mythology, the Phoenix\nwas a huge bird-god that was reborn, rising from its\nown ashes.\nAccording to the Arizona road map, Phoenix is\na big blob.\nThe fraternities of UBC combined both of these\nfactors into their Wednesday night fiasco, also\nknown as Phoenix. Like the city of the same name,\nPhoenix was crowded and rather dry, but unlike the\nbird-god, Phoenix only served to enable its\nparticipants to make ashes of themselves.\nThe question of the hour is why did the frats\nchange the name of their annual debauchery from\nMardis Gras to Phoenix?\nI really don't think it could be that these\nupper-crust young gentlemen might be trying to\nforget some of their memorable Mardis Gras\n\"happenings\" of the past.\nI know I'll always remember how those\nwonderful wacky fellas utilized the \"Down the\nMississippi\" theme a couple of years back. It was\nneat to see that great bunch of zany guys pretending\nto lynch blacks, joke about John Kennedy getting\nshot and all those kind of fun things.\n\"We're different now,\" I was told by an irate\nfrat man.\n\"Just look at us,\" he continued. \"We don't\nbother with all that conforming nonsense any more.\n\"See. I have long hair and a moustache. I don't\nconform to the establishment and neither do all the\nrest of the fellas in my frat.\"\nHe was right. All the members of the glorious\nfraternal brotherhood had long hair and a\nmoustache \u00E2\u0080\u0094 non-conformists to the last man.\nHe had me convinced. I was now ready to\ndefend the brotherhood against any and all comers.\nAgainst women's lib, I was ready to defend\ntheir M.C., who to the gleeful shouts of those\npresent, said it was \"too bad we couldn't have this\nchick as first prize.\"\nAgainst the S.P.C.A., I was ready to defend the\nfraternity whose booth featured two white mice\nscampering about on a whirling board.\nAgainst the administration, I was ready to\ndefend the wholesale gambling at the event.\nAgainst Amy Vanderbilt, those fun guys who\nwere jumping up and down on the tables, flinging\nbeer bottles around.\nAnd, against the janitorial staff, the poor, sick\nlad who threw up all over the washroom.\nI will not put up with anyone who makes an\neffort to depreciate the performances of these,\nsociety's future leaders. They, after all, are the elite\nof the university's social corps.\nThere's only one thing I can't figure out -\nWhat will they call Phoenix next year?\nLETTERS\nCorrections\nEditor, The Ubyssey, Sir:\nPlease correct the statements in\nyour Tuesday article about\nInternational Week.\nCorrection 1. I did not say,\n\"The general feeling of the\ncommittee is that International\nHouse has failed to make itself\ntruly representative of\ninternational ideas and problems.\"\nI said that if International\nHouse has failed to make itself \"a\ntruer representative of\ninternational ideas and problems\"\n(quotation from Steve McField's\narticle in last Friday's Ubyssey), it\nwould be because it has failed to\nimpress the general student body\nthat action belongs to the people.\nThe International Student\nProgram Committee does feel that\nI.H. is truly representative of\ninternational ideas and problems.\nInternational Week will feature\ndiverse events such as slides on the\nPeruvian earthquake, inimigration,\ncultural shock, and problems\nfaced by the Spanish community\nin Vancouver and the Angola\ncrisis, just to name a few.\nIt was hoped that through the\nco-operation of The Ubyssey in\nhelping to promote International\nWeek, more people would become\nactively involved with the\ninternational scene ... especially\nthose who always self-righteously\ncomplain but never have the guts\nto back their mental exertions\nwith practical involvement.\nCorrection 2. International\nWeek is not being held\nMonday-Friday next week. It will\nbe held M onday-Saturday\nFebruary 8-13.\nHow could you possibly garble\nall the information when I showed\nthe reporter a written statement\nin regards to dates, etc?\nJUDY YOUNG\nInternational Student Program\nCommittee Chairman\nWhat's this?\nEditor, The Ubyssey, Sir:\nIt has been with keen interest\nand pleasure that I have read the\neditorials in this year's Ubyssey.\nThey, like many of the articles,\nhave displayed a depth of thought\nand a degree of uncompromising\ncriticism of the status quo which\nis refreshing in light of the general\npolitical indolence and myopia\nwhich seems to grip this campus\nand its student government. I can\nonly hope that The Ubyssey will\nremain a thorn in the side of the\nestablishment.\nMICHEAL THOMAS,\narts IV Friday, January 29, 1971\nTHE UBYSSEY\nPage 5\nPrices and Incomes\ncomes to the people\nIn 1969 the Trudeau\ngovernment set up a prices and\nincomes commission to study the\ncauses- of inflation and to find a\nremedy to a growing economic\ncrisis.\nThe same year, John Young\nresigned as dean of arts at UBC\nand went to Ottawa. His new job\nunder the federal government was\nto chair the commission.\nThe purpose of the commission\nas defined by the federal\ngovernment was to \"discover the\nfacts, analyse the causes, processes\nand consequences of inflation and\nto inform both the public and the\ngovernment on how price stability\nmay be achieved.\"\nThe magic formula to end\ninflation was the control of prices\nand incomes.\nThese statements by Young\ngive the commission's direction in\nits attack on inflation:\n\"Higher profits leading to\nstepped-up wage and salary\ndemands. Price increases to cover\nthe resulting pay increases. Higher\ntaxes, rents and interests leading\nto more price increases. Still\nhigher wage and salary demands.\nYet more price increases...\"\nThe blame\neventually falls on the\nworker who tries for a\nsalary increase. Yet\nwhat about corporate\nprofit itself? From\n1961 to 1967 the total\nprofits of corporations\nin Canada after taxes\nincreased 56.3 per cent.\nIn a few individual\ncases the profit was\nmuch higher. The\nreported profits for\nFalconbridge Mines\nincreased 86 per cent in\n1969. Overseas trade by\ncorporations increased\nsome $500 million\nfrom 1969 to 1970.\nIn line with its war\nagainst labor the\nCommission proposed a\nsix per cent wage\nguideline in 1970. Up\nto this point there were\n28 per cent. That of workers has\nrisen 14.8 per cent. In terms of\nsalary after deductions this means\n$142,000 plus dividends for Clyne\nBy John Andersen\nand Dick Betts\nper year and $4,000 for a worker.\nIn addition to expecting\nworking . people to pay for\ninflation the commission and the\nfederal government have had a\npronounced e f f e c t on\nunemployment throughout\nCanada.\nThrough a decrease in\ngovernment spending plus\ncorporations' policies of lay-offs\nto cut down on wages,\nunemployment has risen to its\nhighest proportions since the\ndepression of the '30's.\nAt present, over 500,000\npeople are unemployed in Canada.\nAnd those are the usually\nconservative official figures. They\ndon't include people who don't\nbother registering at manpower\nbecause they have given up.\nParticularly hard hit are the\nbeen no real decrease in the\nunemployment rate?\nThe pattern of rising profits\nand expanding trade on the one\nhand and lower wages and\ncontinuing unemployment on the\nother, point to the obvious bias\nof the prices and incomes\ncommision. We are told now that\nthe commission has been\nabandoned and inflation has been\nlicked.\nYet unemployment is still as\nhigh as it was three months ago\nand higher than the summer when\nTHE RECORD OF CONSUMER\nPRICE INCREASES\nAnnual Percentage Increase\nKOREA\nJ...lllll.llll\n I '\t\nthousands of students failed to\nfind jobs.\nDiverse sources, from\nuniversity economists to trade\nunion research bureaus, agree that\nthe United States' spending on the\nVietnam war is the major cause of\ninflation. Each year this spending\nis in excess of 30 billion dollars.\nrfrW&KEKf PERPETUAL\nireoSPERrty MACH/NE\nzmz:\ngyj.v.qy,vi\nTHE MORE YOU WORK THE LESS YOU GET!\nTied as we are to the\nU.S. war machine we\ncan have no hope of\nsolving the present\ncrisis of capitalism\n(caused by international expansion, or\nimperialism) until the\nwar is ended and until\nwe have the means of\ndirecting our own\neconomy.\nThe liberal\ngovernment's frame of\nreference is consent to\nU.S. imperialism in\nCanada and throughout\nthe world. Capitalism in\nCanada means further\ntakeover by the U.S.\nand further economic\nand political difficulty\ndue to U.S. foreign\npolicy.\nonly recommendations of profit\nand price controls. The cost of\nliving continued to spiral. Young,\nwho proposed the wage guideline,\nsaid nothing about profit control.\nThe discrepancy between the\nwages of workers and the\nmanagement share of profits grew\nduring the life of the prices and\n. incomes commission. J. V. Clyne\nof MacMillan-Bloedel makes 33\ntimes that of a worker in the same\ncompany. Clyne's salary increase\nover the last eight years has risen\nyoung.\nStudents without summer jobs\nthis year can place most of the\nblame on the federal government's\nanti-inflation \"policies\".\nThe government has reacted to\nthis with band-aid solutions such\nas building youth hostels and\nadding the paltry sum of\n$45,000 to its youth job program\nfor this year.\nIf the anti-inflation policies are\nworking, as the federal\ngovernment claims, why has there\nWages, Production and Productivity,\nAll Manufacturing, 1949 to 1968\n(Indexes, 1949 = 100)\n.-#e\nOUTPUT KR MANH0UR, ANNUAL AVERAW ^ *\n.*'\n:**\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u0094>\n19S2 ' 1963\nCHARTERS 71\nIf You are Travelling on a\nCharter to Britain or Europe\nPlease Remember to Reserve\nNOW for\nU-DRIVE \u00E2\u0080\u0094 HOTEL\nACCOMMODATION\nDISCOUNTED RAIL TICKETS\nand\nCall for your Passport\nApplication Forms if you\ndo not have a Passport\nNO EXTRA CHARGE\nFor COMPLETE Travel\nInformation\nand Brochures - Call\n5700 University Boulevard\nON CAMPUS 224-4391\nB.C.'s Leading Travel Organization\ns\"\u00C2\u00BBrV\/WI\u00C2\u00AB\\u00C2\u00ABWSrt/WSrts^WV^VVVW%s%rVVV\s\"tTVVV\rts,WW\fW\nThe prices and incomes\ncommisssion and John Young\nignored this aspect and tried to\nmake Canadian working people\npay for an unjust foreign war.\nThe future of this policy and\nothers like it depends on the\nability of the federal government\nto fool the people most hurt by it,\nCanadian working people and\nprospective workers, students.\nJohn Young is going to be\nspeaking on campus in Buch. 106\nat 8:00 p.m. on Saturday. In the\ninterests of the Liberal\ngovernment's desire for\n\"dialogue\" come and tell Young\nwhat you think.\nMaterials and graphics\nfor this article were taken\nfrom the files of the B.C.\nFederation of Labor\nResearch Bureau.\nAdditional material was\ntaken from the Reports of\nthe Prices and Incomes\nCommission and from the\nCanadian Union of Public\nEmployees Research\nFacilities.\nADULT ENTERTAINMENT\nMETRO-GOU3WYN-MAYER presents'BREWSTER MCCLOUD\"\nstarring BUD CORT \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 SALLY KELLERMAN \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 MICHAEL MURPHY\nCo-starring WILLIAM WINDOM and RENE AUBERJONOIS Written by\nDORAN WILLIAM CANNON Directed by ROBERT ALTMAN Produced by LOU ADLER\nFilmed in PANAVISION\u00C2\u00AEand METROCOLOR mgm^\n\"WARNING\u00E2\u0080\u0094Swearing and Coarse Language\"\n-R. W. McDonald, B.C. Director\nCAPITOL 12:00,2:00,4:00,\n683-2634 6:00, 8:00, 10:00\nLOUGHEEO Ibriue-Jn 298-7848\nBROADWAY EAST OF BOUNDARY\nOPEN-Fri., Sat., Sunday Only\nGates 7:00-Show at 7:30\n1SS7 ' 1SS8\nWU^m*h^W^r^\u00C2\u00B1^^-^^+mVm^V*mmWnrVVmm+m**Mi^MniV Page 6\nMotion\nhas no\nrelevance\nfrom page One\nSaid Irving Fetish, arts 4: 'The\nAMS has already set this\nuniversity back about a century.\"\nGraduate student council\nrepresentative Evert Hoogers\nsummed up the political\nsignificance of the failure to pass\nthe revisions.\n\"Irrelevant motions get\ninsignificant response,\" he said.\n\"The whole executive should\nhave forgotten about\nconstitutional revisions and the\nother bureaucratic shit they revel\nin and started to address the\nserious issues students at this\nuniversity are faced with.\n\"These include jobs and\nuniversity democratization,\"\nHoogers explained.\n\"These is a group of students\non campus which is going to take\nthe initiative on the vital issue of\nsummer jobs and jobs after\ngraduation,\" said Hoogers.\n\"Obviously the AMS is not\ninterested in this problem.\"\nSecretary Ann Clarkson\nexplained that the vice-president\nwas to look after the problem of\nemployment.\n\"You cannot leave that issue to\none person,\" replied Hoogers. \"It\nmust be an AMS priority or\nnothing will happen.\"\nRegis Debray, agriculture 3,\ninterjected that a coup d'etat\nwould probably work even better.\nIT'S THE\nREAL THING\nBLOOD\nIS\nWHEN IN DOUBT\nDO ... .\ndo give a pint\nof your life-stuff\nTHE LUTHERAN CAMPUS\nCENTRE at UBC is crediting its pints\nto Dr. \"Jack\" Gower, Geology Dept.\nJoin us.\nuid\u00C2\u00BBr /\nSUPER SALE\nJANUARY CLEARANCE OF STEREO AND ELECTRONIC EQUIPMENT\nipse\nKJ ELECTRONICS\nELECTRONICS LTD.\n* ALL STORES \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 10 DAYS ONLY\n* SAVINGS UP TO 75%\n-* PLEASE SAVE THIS AD FOR QUICK REFERENCE |\n| TAPE AND CASSETTE RECORDERS\n1 QUANTITY\nDESCRIPTION\nPREV.\nMARKED\nSUPER\nSALE\nSTORE\n'\nPanasonic Stereo Cassette Dock,\nshop soiled \t\n129.95\n80.00\n1005\n* STEREO RECEIVERS\n1\nPhilips 401 stereo tape recorder,\nslightly used, hurry for these\t\n300.00\n125.00\n901, 100\n1\nSony TC-357 -4-3 Speed 4 Track .\n139.50\n75.00\n01 QUANTITY\nDESCRIPTION\nPKEV.\nMARKED\nSUPER\nSALE\nSTORE\n1005\n1\n4010 S Teac Super Deluxe Reversomatie\n4 Track Stereo, demo\t\n499.50\n266.00\n\u00C2\u00AB 1\n>\nScett stereo receiver, model 382B,\nAM-FM, field effect circuit, unbelievable\n574.95\n250.00\n1005\n1005\n1\nUher 724 4 Track Stereo, super buy\n299.00\n135.00\n1005\nw\nSherwood S 7600 all silicone solid state\n584.75\n275.00\n1005\n5 i\n1\nDokorder Super Deluxe Stereo Deck\n4 Track, 3 motors, reversomatie,\nwalnut enclosure domaged, hurry ...\n384.50\n200.00\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0*\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nKenwood TK 66, solid state. This is a\nfantastic buy, hurry\t\n329.50\n188.00\n1005\n1005\n19\nSony TC-225 Stereo Deck, juper buy . .\n229.50\n148.88\n| |\nHarman-Kardon model 210, beautiful\n495.00\n240.00\n1005\nAH Stores\n1\nPhilips Cassette Home Unit complete\nwith Deluxe Philips Speaker, used ....\n139.50\n58.00\n574.95\n220.00\n1005\n1005\n2\n1\nGrundig Super Deluxe Stereo 4 Track,\n549.00\n300.00\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0*\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nPioneer.\nSX 1500T. 170 watts I.C. circuit\t\n579.50\n299.00\n1005\n3\n1\n199.00\n95.00\n901\nB* 1\n01 '\nSherwood S-8800. 140 watt F.E.T\t\n619.00\n299.00\n1005\n1\nDual Tape Deck Stereo, used, hurry . .\n45.00\n901\nIn 1\nPioneer SX 1000 TD. 130 watt\n449.50\n235.00\n1005\n1\nPanasonic Portable Tape Rec. AC/DC .\n79.50\n45.00\nA\n901\nH\nScott model 384. The Staraomastar .\n740.00\n350.00\n1005\n8\nElectra Cassette Tape Recorder AC/DC,\nAutomatic Recording Control,\nRemote Control\t\n59.95\n36.00\n| 4\nQuad systems. The famous 303-33\n525.00\n398.00\n1005. 901\nAll Store.\n14.\nMini Pocket Tape Recorder, 80 minutes\nplay, professional quality. Capstan\ndrive 15/16 IPS. Complete with\ndynamic microphone \t\n69.50\n20.00\nS 5\nSansui model 600 L, superb recoiver\n499.00\n300.00\nAll Stares\nAll Storee\nH 7\nSansui model 5OO0A. The ultimata In\nstereo. 180 watts. Every conceivable\n599.95\n400.00\nAll Stor.i\n5\nTobisonic Miniature Cassette tape rec.\nI.C. circuit ultra sensitive\t\n99.50\n60.00\nAll Stores\nH\n12\nSuper Deluxe 4 Speed 4 Track Stereo,\nAC or battery, 4 speokers, one of the\n299.50\n200.00\nB 4\nDokordar modal 800A. Deluxe 180 watt\nstereo receiver, discontinued modal, hurry\n549.50\n200.00\n1005, 901\n138 Hair.\nh 9\nSansui model 200, superb compact\n269.00\n160.00\n1005, 901\n1\nScott Stereo Receiver, Model 384 ....\n599.95\n288.00\n901\n\u00C2\u00A9\nreceiver ....\nx 8\nShelbcrn el, model 100 compact stereo\n119.50\n68.00\nAll Stores\nMISCELLANEOUS ELECTRONIC SUPER BUYS\nS '\nPanasonic compact stereo system.\n270.00\n150.00\n1005\nQUANTITY\nDESCRIPTION\nPREV\nMARKED\nSUPER\nSALE\nSTORE\nB i\nGrundig stereo receiver. 30 watts.\n269.50\n88.00\n1005 .\n37\nPolice VHP monitor and AM radio \u00E2\u0080\u0094\n30-50 MHZ can be tuned to C.B. radio.\nOne to a customer only\t\n54.95\n20.00\n\u00E2\u0080\u009E 9\nElectro 40-wart stereo model 700. Latest F.E.T. circuit. Complete with walnut\n260.00\n166.00\nAll Store!\nAll Stores\n-K\n86\n12-watt cor stereo\u00E2\u0080\u00948 track super\n89.95\n56.00\nKenwood stereo receiver,\nmodel TK 140X\t\n559.00\n300.00\n901\n* 1\n56\nDynamic microphone to fit all cassette\nand real to reel tape recorders. Remote\n7.95\n2.88\n. i\nHarman-Kardon stereo receiver,\nmodel 200\t\n399.50\n180.00\n901\nAll Stores\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0or '\n* TUNERS - AMPLIFIERS - SPEAKERS\n34\nSuper deluxe dynamic microphone, for\nstage or recordings, hi-impedance, re-\nmovable windscreen, 20-ft. cable\t\n24.95\n15.00\nAll Stores\n.v QUANTITY\nDESCRIPTION\nPREV.\nMARKED\nSUPER\nSALE\nSTORE\n42\n8 track cartridge stereo player, horn*\n99.50\n50.00\nAll Stores\n* '\nSherwood Stereo Tuner Modal S-2300 .\n319.95\n155.00\n901\n42\n20-foot stereo head phone extension\n4.95\n2.50\nAll Stores\nV '\nMonarch Stereo Amplifier 40 worts . . .\n119.95\n60.00\n901\n60\nTape head demagnetixer, protect your\ntape recorder with this important acces.\n7.95\n3.50\n1\nKenwood 60 watt Stereo Amplifier ....\n219.00\n140.00\n' 1005\nAll Stores\n1\n* 4\nSound Stereo Amplifiers 60 watts . . .\n139.95\n98.00\n901, 1005\nH.2\nTelephone pick up coil for tape\n2.95\n.88\nAll Start*\n6 7\nFabulous Sansui Modal TU777, the\nmost sensitive stereo tuner in the\n249.95\n170.00\nAll Store.\n17\nPlastic extension speaker fee radios or\n5.95\n2.88\nAll Stores\nH\n20\nBulk tope ereser far all tapes, some\n9.95\n4.88\na 2\nSansui AU777 Stereo Professional\nAmplifier. The best instrument in\n369.95\n240.00\n901, 1005\nAll Stores\ne\n170\nBASF best quality cassette topes, C-60.\n2.95\n1.69\nM 8\nMagnificent Danish Hi-Fi Stereo.\nModel 65 speaker, superb sound, 25\n79.95\n58.00\nAll Store.\nAll Store.\n62\n5.95\n3.48\nS .2\nLovely speaker systems, 20 watt, M.6X.\nQuality craftsmanship, daluxa walnut . .\n39.95\n22.00\nAll Stores\n16\nSolid state pre-amplifier, for all\n16.50\n7.88\nU 2\n3-Way Deluxe Speaker System, 35 watts\nslightly market cabinet. Each\t\n79.95\n35.00\n1005\n10\nUnique sound transducer\u00E2\u0080\u0094speaker, can\nbe used outside, only small spaca required\u00E2\u0080\u0094amazing sound reproduction . .\n24.95\n15.00\n2 14\nm\n25-16,000 CPS 8'\" Coaxial Speaker . .\n24.95\n14.88\nAll Store.\n1005\na 2\nSE\t\nUnique Circular 3-Way Speaker\nSystem, 20-22,000 CPS\n139.95\n85.00\n1005\n4\nLloyds 9 wave bonds including police\n149.50\n98.00\nAll Stores\ni8\nSuper Buy! The world's best Elae-\nMiracord Model 50H\u00E2\u0080\u0094Automatic or\nmanual record turntable, complete with\nhighest quality magnetic cartridge.\n219.95\n145.00\nAll Stores\n28\nVery special stereo headphones'\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nindividual controls. Soft ear pads\t\n19.95\n9.00\nAll Stores\nH\n35\nSuper deluxe model 3000 stereo headphones for a new experience in listening\npleasure. Latest sliding volume controls,\nabsolutely magnificent sound \t\n36.95\n22.00\n* MISCELLANEOUS ELECTRONIC SUPER BUYS\nAll Stores\nk QUANTITY\nDESCRIPTION\nPREV.\nMARKED\nSUPER\nSALE\nSTORE\n7\nPopular quality stereo headphones.\n9.95\n4.00\n901, 1003\n* 67\n1 watt super power 2-channel\n99.50\n66.00\nAll Stores\n^_m_w^_nm ^__.._,_\n* 25\nElectronic Multi-Meter-20,000 OHMS\n24.95\n15.00\nAll Stores\njjoiise *g\u00C2\u00B1\n* '72\nElectronic lab kits\u00E2\u0080\u009450 interesting <\nprojects, plus valuable electronic\n24.95\n15.00\nAll Stores\nof of pin l|B\n* 21\n20 Watt Stereo Cassette Recorder with\ntwo full range deluxe speakers . -\n219.00\n150.00\nAll Stores\nKJ ELECTRONICS LTD. ^L^\n901 GRANVILLE ST. 685-5611 685-8637\n1005 GRANVILLE ST. 683-6311 683-6120\n* l6\nLatest car stereo 4 track Cassette\n?layer plus two track recorder, superb\n12 watts of power, complete with hi-fi\nspeokers, easy to install in any car,\nbonus microphone included, hurry . .\n139.00\n115.00\nAll Stores\n+ 4\nGrundig Cassette Tape Recorders with\n229.00\n120.00\n1005\n138 W. HASTINGS ST. (opp. Woodwards) 682-1111\n739 COLUMBIA ST., New Westminster 521-0055\n2827 SHAUGHNESSY, Port Coquitlom 942-5015\n135 COMMERCIAL ST., Nanaimo 754-5033\n1015 GRANVILLE ST. (Mail Order Div.) 688-6037\n2\n*\nSony TC-110 Cassette Tape Recorder,\nbuilt in ultra sensitive microphone phis\ndaluxa extension mike, demos\t\n149.00\n98.00\n1005\n* l5\nRP1000 8 Track Deluxe Stereo Cart-\nridge recorder, .professional quality.\n199.50\n140.00\nAll Stores Synch\n/\n\v >V\nf\n;*\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 i'i'\nThis issue of Synch is devoted almost solely\nto the art of translation. It is a Very\nimportant aspect of Uterature and one\nwhich is often overlooked, bat without it,\nthe English-reading world would have to do\nwithout the masterpieces of Albert Camus,\nFranz Kafka, Gunter Grass and Jorge Luis\nBorges, to name a few. Those who do not\nread French, German, Spanish or whatever,\nhave to rely on that special breed of writers\nwho translate the works of others. Some\ntranslations are presented herein, as well\nas information about the translation program\nat UBC and the publication of translations.\nAlso in this issue, a review of a very special\nfirst novel by a recent M.A. graduate at\nUBC's Creative Writing Program. JOB HUNTING?\nWrite, telephone or stop in for\nyour copy of our Resume Form.\nWe prepare professional\nemployment resumes.\nDunhill Resumes\nNo. 220\u00E2\u0080\u00941155 W. Georgia St.\nVancouver 5, B.C.\n685-0261\nTUXEDO\nRENTAL & SALES\nNOW?\n* D.B. Tuxedos\n* Notched S.B. Tuxedos\n* Shawl Tuxedos\n* D.B. Blazers\nParking at Rear\nBLACK & LEE\nFormal Wear Rentals\n631 Howe 688\n2481\nSPAGHETTI HOUSE LTD.\nHot Delicious Tasty Pizzas\n- 22 DIFFERENT FLAVORS-\nFREE DELIVERY - Right to Your Door\nPhone 224-1720 - 224-6336\nHOURS: 4 p.m. to 3 a.m. \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Weekends 4 p.m. to 4 a.m.\n4450 West 10th Ave. -Just outside the Gates\nFOR GUYS & GALS\nFOR JEANS\nNo. 2 Water Street Gastown\nLS CHATEAU\nLe Chateau\nIS JUMPING WITH\nEND OF SEASON SPECIALS\nVIVE L'AMOUR\nVetements Pour Les Deux Sexes\nOPEN TILL 9 P.M. THURS. & FRI.\n- 776 GRANVILLE\nSAVE UP TO 50%\noil' over 1000 New and Used\nStandard Portable and Electric\nTYPEWRITERS\nAdders, Calculators, etc. at the\nWorld's 1st Office\nEquipment Supermarket\nAbsolutely the largest selection\nand lowest prices in Canada\nExpert Repairs\nTrades Welcome\nSTUDENT RENTALS\nLOW RATES\nWE DELIVER & PICK-UP\nPOLSON TYPEWRITERS\n458 W Broadway - 879-0631\nOpen Daily inc. Saturday\u00E2\u0080\u00949-6\nFriday 9-9\nLots of Free Parking\n\"The only\nexercise I get\nIs walking\nto the library\"\nDo you think Tampax\ntampons are only for\n\"Outdoor Girls\"?\nThen you've missed the\npoint.\nPoint being that Tampax\ntampons give you such complete protection that you can\nclimb mountains or swim\noceans or play tennis if you\nwant to.\nBut you certainly don't\nhave to be active to want the\nextra freedom and protection\nTampax tampons give\nyou. Protection from I\nstaining and odor. Free-1\ndom from bulky pads and uncomfortable belts.\nTampax tampons are worn\ninternally. So they can't slip,\nslide, chafe, show. And that's\nthat. They're discreet, easy to\nuse, easy to dispose of.\nIf you haven't yet tried\nTampax tampons, you really\nshould. Because they're everything you could want\nthem to be.\nMillions of women in 118\ncountries have found this to\nbe true.\necuuu\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nDEVELOPED BV * DOCTOR\nNOV USED BY MILLIONS OF WOMEN\nTAMPAX TAMPONS ARE MADE ONLY BY\nCANADIAN TAMPAX CORPORATION LTD..\nBARRIE, ONTARIO\nAn important outlet for shorter works of literature has\nalways been the little magazine, which has the task of\nproviding a continuum in which writers can publish without\nputting out a whole volume at once. One of the best of these\ncan be found at UBC.\nPrism international magazine is published by the\nDepartment of Creative Writing, and has as its editor-in-chief,\nJake Zilber. It was founded at a time when the eye could scan\nCanada's literary landscape from Vancouver Island to Ontario\nwithout detecting a single little magazine, and has since grown\nto an important journal of international prominence.\nIn 1959 the first issue of Prism appeared. Independent,\nand financed by donations, subscriptions, sales and ads, it was\nedited by Jan de Bruyn, with help from Elliott Gose, Jake\nZilber and Heather Spears.\nThe magazine committed itself at the beginning to \"all\npossible range of forms, techniques, themes, and styles:\nrecognition of talented youjp**wfrB5|s; and above all, 'we\nintend to make Prism lit^^ar^^r^ in Joyce's phrase\nchalkful of master-plasters.' TT A * <.\u00C2\u00BB |\nHenry Kreisel's storyf \"The jFra^elling Nude,\" later\nreceived theUniversity of w|s|grn Ontario's President's Medal\nas the best Canadian storyl3| the*year. \"Other contributors\nwere two relatively unknown^te^S'-H-.Alden Nowlan and\nMargaret Laurence - both of jsiO^iSfpuld become winners of\nthe Governor General's Jlwarl. Earle Birney, Dorothy\nLivesay and Raymond iSouster were the best-known\ncontributors.\nUnder de Bruyn's ed#\u00C2\u00A7>rsf\u00C2\u00ABp, Prism published a number\nof writers for the first rirAe . .v George Bowering, Lionel\nKearns, Tom Grainger, Jc%n Newlove, among others. And\naward-winning material by other authors.\nIn 1964 the magazine was brought under the\nsponsorship of the Creative Writing Department with a more\nexplicit policy of literary intejfnationalism.\nPrism thus expired, an|f was immediately reborn as Prism\ninternational. Earle Bimerf editor-in-chief; (liose Rimanelli\nand Zilber associate edijpr; Shuji Kato of !|sian Studies,\nforeign editor; de Bruyn,pdvisory editor. SajLjtirney, \"We do\nnot believe, in the world o^^M^^kSh^t^fan;\nmade for thinking that jnterlfationalism\nconsideration. We warn all leaders aid intern\n1st of ou:\nf authors,\n[d be an\ni will co\nfexcellen\nm by Bii\nj writers\n|d Cesan\nlation, h\nthat this may well be the :\noutnumber non-Canadiar\npossible that our next cojj\nbasis of our editjinil choi\nof the contribuailiiit tfi\nSince\nby sucfj\nValery\n:ed to trani\nions need to be\na paramount\ncontributors\n'hich Canadians\nit is equally\nmber. For the\nlot the address\nsends us.\"\n:ernational has\nge LuiiBorges, Georg\nse, an\u00C2\u00AB although not\nie muchtbr that art in\nssues in\n|nd y\nCanada\ntie to b\nfwhat\nJrism i:\npublished\nBrittling, Pa\ntotally dev\nthis countr\nLatxJL Acorn, jiacEwen,f PuJjy, Gusfcfson, Nichol,\nLowry \u00E2\u0080\u0094 ithese werejra few off the Eanadiarl whose work\nappeared Bong with* growinglnumler of fifreign authors;\nSaba, StaHprd, Lirid#ren, Attila, 1m rmre.\nPrism mteriuponal is one orVl0BUiterd|y magazines\nchosen bm-the KifcgJBfiDrmt Corporation\i\u00C2\u00A3..I|ew York as\nmaking a signirfcant c\u00C2\u00BBr7trimiuoTT%!nf?Mlern hterature, and so\ndeserving of being made available to libraries and collectors in\nreprint form. It is also available on microfilm through\nUniversity Microfilms, Ann Arbor, Michigan, and appears\ninternationally in book and magazine exhibitions. It has\nreaders in most countries of the world. Its editors read\napproximately 17,000 submitted items annually, out of which\nless than 1% are published. With its book arm, Prism\ninternational press, which has brought out a poetry volume by\nWalter Bauer, a novel by Bill T. O'Brien and a collection of\nwritings by Charlie Leeds, it has established itself as one of the\nbest-known literary magazines in Canada, and earned itself a\ngrowing reputation abroad.\nIn 1966, Jake Zilber succeeded Birney as editor-in-chief,\nwith Bob Harlow and Dorothy Livesay as associate editors.\nThe policy established by de Bruyn and Birney has continued\nunder his editorship, and with the help of associate editors\nHarlow, Doug Bankson, Mike Yates, Mike Bullock and George\nMcWhirter, and editorial assistants who are in the graduate\nprogram of the Creative Writing Department.\nSynch 2\nTHE UBYSSEY\nFriday, January 29, 1971 Poems by\nPierre Reve\nrdy\n(France)\nTranslated front the French by\nR. W Stedingh\nPIERRE REVERDY (1889-1960), a\nFrench poet of international importance, was\nborn in IMarbonne. He first arrived in Paris in\n1910 and was befriended by Juan Gris,\nPicasso, Braque, Apollinaire and other\npainters and poets. He was a founder of the\nParis literary magazine IMORD-SUD and was\nknown variously as the poet of Cubism,\nSurrealism, Realism, and Mysticism. All four\nDark\nStarlit Sky\nclassifications are at once misleading and\nappropriate. Although a contemporary of the\nA long needle-pierces the distance\nA tree directed toward the sky\nSurrealists, he remained independent of the\nA tree\nThis dark procession\ngroup, and his theory of the poetic image.\nA finger\nIt lights up the world with candles\nquoted by Breton in the First Manifesto,\nThe blind moon\nAll wait too long and in the shadow\nbecame part of the Surrealist credo: \"The\nA window looking through us\nThe noise of footsteps clouds the night\nimage is a pure creation of the spirit. It\nMoney cast among trees\nYour face is a block of marble\nSlowly the wall crumbles\nAnd its darkness spreads a stain\ncannot spring from a comparison but only\nfrom the juxtaposition of two realities more\nAll the birds have flown past\nThe night\nOver the sinking earth\nor less different.\"\nNoise\nBy the river where one hears\nSomeone makes a sign to fall silent\nThe crystal laughter of stones\nYou walk down the lane of a small cemstery\nA white ray hangs above\nNight sways a moment\nSomething falls into the water\nA hail of stars\nFixed Hours Of Death\nThe sun whirls past\nThe cobweb tears\nThe wind passes under the wing\nAs it goes down\nA whisper in the air\nThe tree is in a better position to see\nWithin hearing\nThe spider walks on the sky\nThe day falls flat on the earth\nAnd at night you see all the dead planets\nCaught in the web\nThe stars\nAnd the moon that lulls them to sleep\nAll Shores\nSpace white and swarming props up the sky\nWater trembles at the slightest sound\nMatinee\nThe bird on the path\nThe cage in the room\nAnd the hand that writes\nThe shadow leans further to the right\nBehind the curtain\nUnder gleaming gold\nA face\nIn a sky that falls into a thousand folds\nAnd the shadow of a cloud\nBlue air\nIn the middle of the meadow\nAn unreal fabric\nThe land stretches to the limit of the trees\nPerhaps another weave\nThe crossing\nAt the window\nAnd the river\nWhich blinks like an eyelid\nWhere it drains\nIn the wind\nAir\nThe Name Of Wings\nSunlight\nSummer\nThe same bird that built its nest\nThe features of the season are nearly erased.\nBetween ladder and tree\nThe echoing bell tower\nThe voices that remained caught between\ntwo windows\nWith watches hanging from gold chains\nstriking noon\nAnd the gurgle of gutters rising to the roof-tops\nBetween two sidewalks\nTo the car headlights\nDust trembling\nAnd already the evening air\nHe is the one stopping in front of the sign\nasking where he is going\nBeyond the town\nTo the tranquil\nOr eastward\nThe clouds' door turns and covers the sky\nDarkness we have never glimpsed behind the stars\nAnd the shining name that remained unknown\nA boat under sail\nFriday, January 29, 1971\nTHE ,U,B Y,S S E Y\nS>i><-h? Poems\nby\nH. C Artmann\nTranslated from the German by Reinhard\nH. C. Artmann, the father of the\nVIENNESE GROUP, is today probably the\nmost important lyricist writing in the German\nlanguage. His poems are usually created\nspontaneously and yet they are of the highest\nformal artistry. Artmann's lyrical alterego is\nhidden in hundreds of disguises. He has\nwritten over a dozen books of poetry, a book\nof drama, and two volumes of short prose. He\nnow lives in Berlin. He was born in 1927.\nReinhard is an illegimate gypsy, a poet.\ntranslator and sometime artist who loves\nin my garden\ntravelling and women.\nout of geometric fountains\nthe brain is round\nthe thrushes of insanity\nplays night and day\nbleed to death\nwith dark instruments\nthe thrushes of insanity\nnaked belly\nin my garden bleed to death\ntally-ho\nout of geometric fountains\nthe brain is bullet round\nout of geometric fountains\nthe mouth a verseorgan\nthe thrushes of insanity\nand mice\nbleed to death in my garden\nalready nibble\nin my garden fountains of insanity\nat the tongue\nbleed to death\ntally-ho\nout of geometric thrushes\nwith their\nthe geometric thrushes\nsharp mice teeth\nin my garden bleed to death\nOne thing is still a calm oscillation\nhullo\nout of fountains of insanity\nbetween the summer's breasts\nand who\nout of geometric insanity\nis asparagus pulled out of the earth\ncan't pay the toll\nin my garden your thrushes\nand extravagant vegetation\nwith a good pound\nbleed into fountains\nhovering bird-like in space\nof sulphur\na vacuum turned ripe-green\ntally-ho\nlife- prey of sterile ducks\npays it with\ncarried from tree to tree\nthe open door\nas if no one would rise any more\nhullo\nto the constant supervision of time.\nyes with the open door\nthe flight may pass away carefree:\nhowever something always disappears\nout of hollowed hands.\ni fly before the rain,\nwater and lightmingled,\nredthroated, tiny,\na bird like a grain of wheat,\neach drop could kill me,\nnot one touches me ...\non the brows of barns,\ni search the skulls\nof slaughtered cattle and stags:\ni fly in through one eye,\nand through the other i fly out;\nthis way i save hours,\nthis way i gain days,\nthis way the rain can't go on ...\nthe feathers in which i fly\nhave the colour of the meadow-saffron\nonly the throat is like blood.\nbehind me is fall,\nbaptizer and slayer of flowers,\nhe hounds me ...\nso against my will i bring\ncloud and snow,\ni am the feathered y\nof the end of time.\nthe voice of cannons\nis governed by a god.\nthe approach to broom\nbridge and stream\nthe drowning\nspin of the rain\ndisintegrates in the colour\nof dusty weeks.\nthe night is just\nthrough sleeping\nby the river.\nthe king mute\nin the evening's combat\nand brave.\nmeanwhile\nin the peacockgarden of tents\nthe past struts\na glittering navel\non the moon\nthat occasionally\nfreshens\nthe tulips of blois...\nSynch 4\nTHE UBYSSEY\nFriday, January 29, 1971 Poems by Sandor Weores\n(Hungary)\nTranslated from the Hungarian by\nGyorgy Porkolab\nSandor Weores (pronounce: Voe-roesh)\nwas born in 1913 in Szombathely, Hungary.\nHe studied at Pecs University and received\nthere a doctor's degree for his literary-\npsychological work The Birth of the Poem.\nBetween 1941 and 1950 he worked as a\nlibrarian first at Pecs, later at Budapest. Since\n1951 he has made his living by writing. His\nfirst book of poetry Hideg van was published\nin 1934. For his poetic achievement he was\ntwice awarded the Baumgarten Prize, Hungary's highest literary award before 1948.\nWeores is an excellent translator; his collected\nverse translations were published in a separate\nvolume in 1958. Weores has travelled widely;\nsince 1956 he has visited China, England and\nthe United States. Only a few of his poems\nhave been translated into English; now Penguin is preparing a selection of his poetry in\nthe translation of Peter Redgrave and Edwin\nMorgan.\nThe Speaking Spring\nthe ineffable begins to speak\nbut cannot express itself\nthe handless acts\nbut only with your hands\nthe legless starts out\nbut only with your legs\nthe senseless comes to consciousness\nbut only with your brain\nthe flowerless flowers\nbut only with your flowers\nthe fruitless bears fruit\nbut only with your fruit\nthe ungiveable gives\nbut only with your giving\nthe merciless has mercy\nbut only with your mercy\nthe prayerless prays\nbut only with your prayer\nthe lightless lights up\nbut only with your light\nthe ineffable begins to speak\nbut only in your heart\nThe Face\nIt is easy to lock up your face\nwith a smile, or with a beard,\nlike a living little coffin.\nIt is painful to leave it open,\nif there is no power yet in your awkward\nyouthful lines\nto forge a lock.\nIt is best to open wide\nyour weather beaten rusty face,\nlike an open baby mouth,\nlet anyone laugh;\n\" and the void, the unknown,\nwho has no form,\nlet it come and go through it\nand all the more lift you\non your beautifully spread wings.\nLute Passages\ni.\nEvery life's and death's channel is mutual.\nIf you goggle your eyes on pace,\nwhat is the layered torrent of incessant surge:\nyou see foam-swirl, not life or death.\nThe weather is foggy, cannot see across above the crevasse,\nwhere the lovers' tears spiral on the smooth mirror.\nBut when night comes, the space clears\nand the eye fathoms the field's black-crystal mass.\nII.\nIt is good to tear away from the body\nroaming across alien lights\nand every bend and drift of the earth's landscape\nlike a dead song of past ages\nfloods from memory\nbut oh a hunch guards itself.\nIII.\nDarlings, sleep,\ndawn will not wake for you,\nonly the clock-skulled prince\nthinks of you,\nwho runs his head the full night,\nbut does not advertise, that my morning\nhow many milleniums pass.\nWarriors Of Old\nNot to sleep, not to eat, only to drink ...\nIn our flasks the rum is low already.\nLime water drips from the cliff fissure\nconstantly, like the ticking of a clock.\nOnly a watch, hugging the rifle ...\nA hundred strong around the mountains stand.\nIn the silence, which is a city with a population of a thousand,\nthere are four of us living men.\nA shot: roof. Bread, bed.\nDoes my lover see this way from the house?\nIf you came out, perhaps I'd show you\nyour fiance's splashed brain.\nI did not kill him in revenge. It was an order:\neither we die or the traitor.\nHis brain is a tawny painting on the rock\nand the lime plashing splits it.\nThe board-thin corpse covered.\nBehind his face no skull.\nHe is twenty like L I could like him:\nhis angel white happy smile.\nAlbeit I could be a guest at his wedding\nand my finger on the weapon's trigger:\nlet the two siskin fly! I would not shoot him,\nlet him rob my grapes, surely he's a bird!\nBut for a traitor there is no consideration.\nYou will step out of the house, my lover.\nA swig of rum yet! Then my bible\nwill knit into your caressed skin.\nFriday, January 29, 1971\nTHE UBYSSEY\nSynch 5 VARSITY GRILL\nSPECIALIZING IN\nChinese & Western Cuisine\nFREE DELIVERY\nON ORDERS 2.50 & UP\nPhone 224-1822 - 224-3944\n4381 W. 10th next to Varsity Theatre\nORIENT\nJET CHARTERS\nmsl\nS.F.-TOKYO $349\nS.F.-TAIPEI $365\nS.F.-HONG KONG $399\nRound Trip\nCONNECTING FLIGHTS TO\nSINGAPORE,\nMANILA, BANGKOK,\nSEOUL AND CALCUTTA.\nMany\nFlights\nTo\nChoose\nFrom\nFor information\ncall or write:\nFlight Committee\nP.O. Box 2549\nStanford, Calif. 94305\nTel. (415) 968-2571\nBLOOD DRIVE\nSUB - 9:30-4:30\nRoom 205\n2 Weeks - Jan. 25-Feb. 5\nGIVE LIFE \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nGIVE BLOOD\nNAME \t\nADRESS \t\nOne Way Flights are Available\nLORNE ATKINSON'S\nACE CYCLE SHOP\nStudent Discounts\n10% OFF on Accessories\n5% OFF on Bicycles\n(With Student Card)\n31SS W. Broadway 738-9818\nNEW and USED\nBOOKS\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 University Text Books \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Quality Paper Backs\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Pocket Books *\" Magazines\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Largest Selection of Review Notes in Vancouver\nBETTER BUY BOOKS\n4393 W. 10 Ave.\n224-4144 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 open 11-8 p.m.\nYOUR PRESCRIPTION . . .\n. . . For Glasses\nfor that smart look in glasses ...\nlook to\nPlesctibtioH Optical\nStudent Discount Given\nWE HAVE AN OFFICE NEAR YOU\n\"PEOPLE\"\nApplications are now being accepted from students for the\nposition of DIRECTOR of the programme \"PEOPLE - AN\nEXPERIENCE IN HUMAN RELATIONS AND HUMAN\nSEXUALITY\", '71-72. These should be directed to Sean\nMcHugh, Office of Interprofessional Education, Woodward\nLibrary, Rm. 324.\nLetters should include all material that the applicant\nconsiders relevant to the position.\nFOR FURTHER INFORMATION CALL LYNN, 228-3083\nWE ARE\nSPECIALISTS..\nin VW# Mercedes,\nVolvo, Porsche . . .\nOur speciality is major repair\nwork, transmission repairs,\nmotor overhaul \u00E2\u0080\u0094 we guarantee\nthe best quality workmanship\npossible. Factory trained\nmechanics and we also\nguarantee to save your money.\nUBC MUSSOC PRESENTS.\nLive On Stage\nSPECIAL\nSTUDENT SHOWS\nFebruary 3-8:30 P.M.\nFebruary 8-7:30 P.M.\nFebruary 9 & 10-8:30 P.M.\nFebruary 11-12:30 P.M.\nUBC AUDITORIUM\nTICKETS $1.00\nAMS BUSINESS OFFICE\n228-4300 - 228-3073\nUNIVERSITY\nSHELL SERVICE\nPETER LISSACK\nCvowo)\nFIAT\nRepairs and Service\nSpecialists\nSpecializing in\nElectronic Tune-Ups\nDisc Brakes \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Exhaust Control\n/ / Years in This Location\n4314 W. 10 Ave. 224-0828\nReview\nthe ufterpeople, a patheticon, by george payerle\nHouse of AnansiPress. 1970 Toronto. Softcover $2.50\nGeorge Payerle will play solitaire with anybody; sitting in the\ngutter, on the bus, or before fornicatioa Throughout the\nentire book no character is fixed into one definite easy role;\nthey change and merge; become part of each other, always\nmanifesting a mystery but never forcing unnecessary solutions\non the reader. This isn't meant to confuse or con, but to take\npeople into realms they may not get to on their own; or allow\nfollowers at their own indin.iti\u00C2\u00ABlmThr\"fhjrnr>r t- frcr the form\nis free; there is plenf. \"l traffic and a pi'pii %w un... ibr\ncontinuity and keys; \u00C2\u00ABlicltocr cops stalk a d.j. oi U i- '->isy\ncutting himself up inio little boxes to escape rm luuu.il ihe\nsex is clean and the narrative looks good in its metaphysical\nstrides which dissolve in the iojn. \i> \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0ne thing is central \"\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 ;he\nbook; each person, incident iwim i- initial t\" 'ivlf and each\nother, related by varij.'ioti iiul uui-nuhlcd In rf\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 newsparvis\nand seminars.\nThe action takes plac\nbetween here and thei\nboth ways all the tint\ntarantula will open.\nv imewhere between B ( 11 id Australia,\n;. On a bridge where 11 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 make friends, but can't take the\nheavy pressure of old Indian ladies and extinct rabbits.\nSergeant Duclos is brought in, Skinner is brought in, and R.\nleaves. ffone of these people share the same payroll, but all in\ntheir o^ffcftway touch oil the nerves of interesting and obscure\nderails tftadf deepen (he colors of the fiction. N. is a rabbit\nhunter who tides a Rolls Roycefnot the sacred Black Rolls of\nIronlem's people). He.grow*rabbits in Australia and ships\nthemte Canada: hence ihe birth of the P.&D.\nThe author and his friends spend a lot of time on the horizon\nwatching ships and clouds. \"I went that day to see the ships.\nMany people had gathered. It was an unprecedented event for\nour port. None I think had anticipated what they saw;\neffortless montage of bulk, a brief white synapse in thirty\nthousand minds.\" Close by, selling ear-plugs to the sea, Zonk,\nor Lethargio, or Jock, rape any sensible females. He finds a\nblue bowler hat growing in the dunes, dyes his balls and waits\nfor the next cloud. And again Duclos is alerted and he finds\nwork in the sand. \"R. and I often go to the sea now, diving for\nsharks.\"\nIronstem, that frustrated geologist, divides his time between\nthe reservation and the city, burning hospitals and selling his\ndreams to drive-in movies. He's old, red and a liaison for\nSkinner who thinks he's John Wayne's son. He also shares the\nscreen with Jock, who when he changes underwear, changes\nhimself, and with Shamble, an architect. Ironstem almost\nstuffed Groin down a semaphore. \"Ironstem's psyche,\nhowever, is not to be taken lightly.\"\nThis is the first book by George Payerle, Vancouver born and\nraised writer. Not a novel, a collection of short stories, or\npoetry; it's a book, a geography of the author's head, his\nfriends, his neighbors and the unders of his insides. There are\nseveral different pieces introduced by their own titles and\nseparated by blank pages, as there are on each page several\nsections, sometimes contradictory, sometimes deflationary,\nsometimes neither. The work is whole; but not the solid dead\ntype where everything is eternally glued together and all the\nreader has to do is open his eyes and say aahh. All the parts are\nthere but you may have to muzzle your clock if you want to\nfollow this unpredictable trip.\n\"Once, walking down a snowy road, I wondered at the will to\nlive. This in fact had nothing to do with the snow. Or very\nlittle. There was snow.\"\nby Avron Hoffman\nCont 'd on next page\nSynch 6\n* * I V ' u \ 11\nTHE UBYSSEY\nFriday, January 29, 1971 cont'd\nGeorge Payerle was born in 1945 in Vancouver to\nHungarian parents. He has a BA and MA from the UBC\nCreative Writing Department and The Afterpeople is his first\npublished noveL\nPayerle says the book came out of about the last 10\nyears of his life here plus travels to Montreal and S. Dakota.\nOne of things he says about the book is that he gets the feeling\nit is a prototype; it will probably take about 10 years to work\nout the possibilities it presents in other books.\n\"The Afterpeople, written during the winter 1968-69\npresents multiple realities of identity, event, dream, cognition,\nmemory and understanding, wherein all points are relative to\none another and the only absolute remains the T of whatever\nnarrator is speaking, whether character or 'author.' The time is\npresent, the geography internal, the spirit surreal, the purpose\nepistemological, the structure episodic, the function intuitive,\nthe method filmic.\"... is also what Payerle has said about\nthe book.\nHe is currently working on his second novel which has\nthe working title Fane.\nTranslation\nThere is a Translation Program for students proficient in\nforeign languages and writing* Started in 1969 with the arrival\nof Michael Bullock \u00E2\u0080\u0094 an eminent translator of more than 100\nbooks and plays \u00E2\u0080\u0094 the Translation Program now offers two\nworkshops. One is a final year undergraduate workshop and\nthe other is for MA students. Students can also take advanced\ntutorials from Bullock solely within the CW department or in\nconjunction with the Comparative Literature Department\nBullock says more students now are doing all their graduate\nwork in translation and more and more demand is being made\nfor it as a separate program.\nThe languages being translated in the program are\nextremely varied, says Bullock, the students working in it are\neither working in languages Bullock is familiar with -German,\nFrench or Italian \u00E2\u0080\u0094 or are working in their mother tongue.\nThe object of the program is to train translators to bring\nin work from foreign countries. As Bullock says, any country\nneeds to read books from abroad simply to enrich its own\ncultural life. He adds that translation is extremely good\nexercise for those who want to write their own work as well,\nas the training they get in working in detail will obviously help\ntheir own writing.\nYEAR-END\nCLEARANCE\nSUZUKI CENTRE\n10% Off on 1970 Models\n2185 W. Broadway 731-7510\nPREGNANCY\nLAB. TEST\nPORTE'S\nUPTOWN PHARMACY\nGranville at 14th Tel.: 738-3107\nGeorge & Berny's\nVOLKSWAGEN\nREPAIRS\nCOMPLETE SERVICE BY\nFACTORY-TRAINED\nMECHANICS\nFULLY GUARANTEED\nAT REASONABLE RATES\n731-8644\n2125 W. 10th at Arbutus\nmatch\n( ooeooLYUj Jxinqs in\n14k Qold\nYou've found the right man, and now you\nneed the right ring. We'll be glad to help you\nchoose your wedding ring from our large\nselection.\nSETS PRICED FROM 75.00\nLIMITED\nREGISTERED JEWELLER, AMERICAN GEM SOCIETY\nGranville at Pender Since 1904\nRENTALS\nSPECIAL STUDENT RATES \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nI.B.M. Electric TYPEWRITERS - Manual Typewriters\nAdding Machines - Calculators\nKEITH WATTS TYPEWRITERS LTD.\nMon. - Fri. 837 E. Hastings - Vancouver\n9 a.m. - 5 p.m. VVE DELIVER \u00E2\u0080\u0094 254-4767\nFOR PREFERRED RISKS ONLY\nIt P^ys to Shop for Car Insurance\nYOU CAN SAVE MONEY ON CAR INSURANCE AT WESTCO\nINSURANCE COMPANY\nHEAD OFFICE: 1927 WEST BROADWAY. VANCOUVER 9, BRITISH COLUMBIA\nFAST CLAIM SERVICE\nFill in and return this coupon or phone today. No obligation. No salesman wil\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 MAIL THIS COUPON FOR OUR LOW RATES ON YOUR AUTOMOBILE\nResidence\nAddress...\n(Please Print)\nCity\t\nPhone: Home Office .\nOccupation .,\t\nAge Married o\nSingled\nDate first licensed to drive ....\t\nMalen\nFemale \u00E2\u0096\u00A1\nGive number and dates of all accidents in last 5 years,\n(drck dates of those accidents which were not your\nfault).\nIn the last five years has your\nlicence been suspended? .....\nAre you now insured ? .. v\t\nDate current policy expires \t\nThis coupon is designed solely to enable non-policy\nholders to obtain an application and rates for their cars.\nYear of automobile\t\nMake of automobile\t\nNo. of cylinders \t\nHorsepower\t\nModel (Impala, Dart, etc.).\n2/4dr-sdn,s/w, h/t,conv..\nDays per week driven to\nwork, train or bus depot,\nor fringe parking area\t\nOne way driving distance\nIs car used in business\n(except to and from work)?\nCar No. 1\nDays\nMiles\nYes D No o\nCar No. 2\nDavs\nMiles\nYes n No \u00E2\u0096\u00A1\nGive number and dates\nof traffic convictions\nin last five years\nLIST INFORMATION ON ALL ADDITIONAL DRIVERS\nAge\nMale or\nFemale\nRelation\nto you\nYears\nLicensed\nMarried\nor Single\n% of use\nCar#1\nCar #2\nFPR UBC 27\nI call.\nT\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nJ\nFriday, January 29, 1971\nTHE UBYSSEY\nSynch 7 CLIT\nContemporary Literature in Translation is the only\nall-language magazine solely devoted to translation in Canada,\nand since its beginning in 1968 has been responsible for much\nof the fast-growing interest in translation in this country.\nThe magazine comes out three times a year, and, like\nPrism international comes under the wing of the Creative\nWriting Department.\nC.L.I.T. has run translations from the Spanish, Polish,\nGerman, French, Japanese, Arabian, Chinese, Bengali,\nPortuguese, Greek, Russion, Czech and Kamba (African)\nlanguages, featuring work by such writers as Garcia Lorca, G.\nApollinaire, J. L. Borges, Jehuda Amichai, Pablo Neruda and\nYevtushenko.\nIt has also featured such translators as Willis Barntone,\nTheo Savory, Harold Enrico, Henry Beissel, George Jonas,\nRainer Schulte, A. P. Schroeder and Michael Bullock.\nThe magazine is currently under the editorship of\nAndreas Schroeder and J. Michael Yates and has as its guiding\ncredo the following statement of purpose which it publishes\nevery issue:\nAbout the translator's view of the relations of his\n\"translation\" or \"imitation\" to an orignal in another language,\nCONTEMPORARY LITERATURE IN TRANSLATION'S\npolicy is that it hasn't one. Or C.L.I.T. ignores whether a\ntranslation is as literal as R. K. Gordon's translations from\nAnglo-Saxon, as liberal as Robert Lowell's \"imitations.\"\nSuch matters, holds this periodical, are the responsibility\nand prerogative of the translator.\nWhat CONTEMPORARY LITERATURE IN TRANSLATION does trade in is literature\u00E2\u0080\u0094poems, short fiction, parts\nof novels, drama, essays, (whole or excerpts) in poetics, etc. -\nin literature, literary (in the broad, best sense of that term)\nEnglish.\nm\nvmm\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 EAT IN \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 TAKE OUT* DELIVERY\n3261 W. Broadway 736-7788\nWeekdays to 1 a.m.\nFri. & Sat. 3 a.m.\nNOW.\nchoose\nCONTACT\nLENSES\nin 27 colors\nA better choice than ever\n... 3 shades of blue or green\neven intriguing new lavender\ner also cat's eye brown, blue,\nazure, grey or pink.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 PRECISION MADE\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 EXPERTLY FITTED\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 27 COLORS\na SUB Film Soc\npresentation \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nRosemary's\nBaby\nwith\nMia Farrow\nJohn Cassavetes\ndirected by\nRoman Polanski\nTONIGHT\n& SATURDAY\n7:00 & 9:30\nSUN. 31 - 7:00 P.M.\nSUB\nAUDITORIUM\nAMS Students - 50c\nGeneral Public \u00E2\u0080\u0094 75c\nSynch 8\nTHE UBYSSEY\nFriday, January 29, 1971 Friday, January 29, 1971\nTHE UBYSSEY\nPage 15\nU of T strike plans dim,\nother steps contemplated\nTORONTO (CUP) - The strike movement at\nthe University of Toronto appears to be fizzling\nfollowing the narrow defeat of a strike referendum\nTuesday,\nThe record 66.5 per cent of 13,000 eligible\nstudents who voted turned down by a 54 vote\nmargin a strike to back student demands for\nstudent-faculty parity on decision making bodies at\nthe university.\nStudents are now looking for new ways to put\npressure on administrators.\nThe issue of student-faculty parity is a concept\nsupported by the Commission on University\nGovernment in a report published a year and a half\nago. The report has since been buried in the U of T's\nbureaucratic quagmire and by faculty opposition.\nAn arts and sciences student referendum last\nfall saw 88.5 per cent of those voting in favor of\nparity. However, a faculty meeting this month\nrejected parity by 285-192.\nAn educational festival in Sidney Smith Hall,\nthe major arts and science building, is going on full\nblast despite the vote with live jazz and rock as well\nas sessions on student unemployment, the\neducational opportunity bank and policies of the\nuniversity.\nThe strike committee, which has been calling\nfor a three day symbolic strike action on the\nstrength of more than 4,000 yes votes in the\nreferendum, called off a sit-in at the main\nadministrative offices in Sid Smith Wednesday\nnight.\nStudents closed down the offices early\nWednesday morning, by occupying the corridors in\nfront of them. Employees arriving for work were\nsent home by the administrators to avoid a\nconfrontation.\nCommenting on the sit-in Wednesday arts dean\nG. A. B. Watson said: \"They look radical but act\njovial,\" and added there was little to fear from the\nstudents.\nHardliners in the administration had their way\nhowever, and following a closed meeting of the\npresident's co-advisory council, there were reports\nthat U of T was prepared to seek injunctions to have\nstudents obstructing the offices Thursday morning\nejected and arrested.\nHeated discussions have been going on in\nclassrooms where students have turned up. Even on\nnormal days, hundreds of students stay away from\nclasses anyway.\nSympathetic faculty converted their classes into\npolitical discussions or cancelled them. Pro strike\nstudents attended some classes in order to challenge\nthe profs and their fellow students to discuss the\nissues.\nMost classes continued as usual, however.\nAdministration president Claude Bissell may\nstill be forced to intervene in the dispute if students\ncan show that busines cannot continue as usual in\narts and science unless he does something.\nA general committee meeting of the faculty\ncouncil is set for Monday and chances are it will be\nsignificantly disrupted.\nOther possibilities being explored include:\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Continual recalling of the faculty council\ninto session. To call a meeting of the 1,300 member\nbody requires a petition of only 15 names.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 A call for a convocation of the entire\nuniversity. This is an assembly which would include\nnot only all faculty and administrators but also all\nliving alumni of the university, some 150,000 in all.\nSuch a convocation can be called by 25\nalumni. The convocation has no supreme powers\nbut it can m ake recommendations to the board of\ngovernors and the senate. It would cost the\nadministration at least $50,000 to organize such an\nevent.\nThe student council has appealed to the board,\nwhich met Thursday to hold a two-day moratorium\non classes and elect a new university-wide body to\nconsider implementation of the CUG report.\nThere is no word yet on what action the board\ndecided on in its closed meeting.\nAnd townhouses too ...\nfrom page One\nThe road will be financed\njointly by federal and municipal\nfunds and is expected to cost\n$308,000.\nA department of national\ndefense spokesman said recently\nthat townhouses will be\nconstructed on a portion of the\nland still in federal jurisdiction,\njust south of Fourth Avenue.\n\"To make such developments\naccessible to the public a new\nroad will have to built, as we\nalready agreed to,\" said Broome.\nBroome said rezoning of the\narea had already been approved,\nbut a spokesman for the city\nzoning department denied that\nany applications had been made\nto rezone the area in question.\nBroome called residents'\nprotests \"neither here nor there\"\nand cited the only delay as the\npurchase of the few still privately\nowned homes along Marine Drive,\nneeded for construction of the\nroad.\nClarke and Clarke Reai Estate,\nsuspected developers of another\ntownhouse complex at the present\nsite of Haddon Park, is working\nunder the name of Vancouver\nManagement and has already\npurchased property in the area, at\n1775 Trimble Street.\nWhile VM spokesman James\nClarke said his company \"strives\nto deal in a position of trust\",\narea resident Betty Delmonico\nsuspects they are pushing the road\nproposal for their own financial\ngains.\n\"VM put a lot of money into\nthe purchase of this land, which\nthey are now paying interest on.\nThe longer they have to pay the\ninterest with no remuneration,\nthe more money they stand to\nlose \" she said.\nClarke denied any future\ndevelopments are in the offing.\nHaddon Park was donated\nby Captain Jack Haddon to the\nmunicipality of Point Grey 40\nyears ago to be used as a public\npark only.\nParks board member Art Cowie\nis reviewing the board's previous\nproposal to develop land\nsurrounding the proposed road\nand feels changes in the present\nideas are inevitable.\n\"We plan to put an appeal in to\nthe city engineers, if the present\nproposal is accepted,\" Cowie said.\n\"I do not feel the present road\nlocation is a sound one, and unless\nchanges are made soon, there is\ngoing to be the biggest citizens'\nupheaval this city has ever seen,\"\nhe added.\n\"We want to preserve the\nnatural parks and beaches and are\nbitterly opposed to any kind of\n'Coney Island' developing.\"\nHe admitted a proposal for a\npublic marina is still undergoing\nserious consideration.\nTO OUR FAVORITE VAMP\nHAPPY\nBIRTHDAY\nPat Duggan\nChinese Junk\nYours Trulv\nPeanut\nThe D. P.\nContrary\nEire\nRx\nCinderella\nFamiliar\nAnne\nDing Dong\nStiff\nJailbird\nStory\nPartidge\nBLOOD DRIVE\nSUB - 9:30-4:30\nRoom 205\n2 Weeks - Jan. 25-Feb. 5\nGIVE LIFE -\nGIVE BLOOD\nAlways on Sunday . . .\nWORSHIP\nt\nLUTHERAN CAMPUS CENTRE\nSUN DAY-10:30 a.m Study - 9:30 a.m.\nWHERE ALL\nTHE ACTION IS\n3\nSensational\nClubs in\n1\nHARRY'S\nENTERTAINMENT\nCOMPLEX\nOIL CAN'S\nDANCE to the sounds of\nNIGHT TRAIN\nTHE BACK ROOM\nThe atmosphere of the\nRoaring 20's\nFrom Los Angeles\nMAC TRUQUE\nDIRTY SAL'S\nListen to the unique voices\nof JUDY & JIM GINN\nOPEN\t\nMON. THRU SAT.\n752 THURLOW ST. 683-7306\nJANUARY SALE of\nSMALL CARS\nTOYOTA\nDEMOS T \"500\nCROWN'S MKII'S - COROLLAS - LANDCRUISERS\n70 Toyota Mkll Wgn\n69 Viva-Automatic\n66 Sunbeam Minx\n65 Morris Oxford\n65 Austin 1800\noo :\n2788\n158800 *\n78800\n88800\n78800\n64 Volks '1500\"\n64 Morris Oxford\n64 Acadia Auto\n62 Austin A55\n58 Vauxhall Velox\n58800\n78800\n78800\n28800\n18800\nKERRISDALE TOYOTA\n39th & W. Boulevard - 266-2367\nOpposite Kerrisdale Arena\n&^ODEON\nVogue\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 IS-S434\nPETER SELLERS GOLDIEHAWN\n4th\nWeek\nSHOW TIMES: 12:45, 2:50, 4:55\n7:00, 9:05.\n-WARNING: SOME SWEARING AND COARSE\nI ANGUA^F \u00E2\u0080\u0094-B.C. DIRECTOR\nsuimess n/^flfomipell\nCoronet\nIS1 GRANVIUi\n4tS-6tai\n6 th\nw\nWeek\nSHOW TIMES: 12:20,\n3:15, 6:40, 9:10.\n6th WEEK\nOdeon\nISI GRANVIUI\n6(2-7441\nBa^ Strain* Tit Owl\nGeonjeSegal uittv\nFusycat\nSHOWTIMES: 12:00, 1:35\n3:35, 5:35, 7:35, 9:35.\nWARNING: Much Swearing\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094B.C. niRECTOR\nPark\ntAMIIl *t 19th\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A276-2747\nLanguage DONALD SUTHERLAND ELLIOnGOULO\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094B.C. DIRECTOR SHOW TIMES: 7:30 9:30\nFrequent\n_ Swearing\n\"\"\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 and Coarse\nVarsity\nC?W^ \"QUACKSER FORTUNE\n-3730* JSSS^k HASACOUMNINTHE\n437iW.,Q,K ^g^JRECTOR 7:30< 9:3\u00C2\u00B0 BRONX\"\nShakespeare Test* va|\nVarsity\n224-3730 V\n224-3730\n4375 W. 10th\nSUNDAY-2 P.M.\nJan. 31 \"OTHELLO\" Color\nLaurence Olivier\nPart II \"FESTIVAL OF CANNES\" AWARD WINNERS\nSunday Matinee\u00E2\u0080\u00942 P.M.\nJan. 31 - Chukrai's\nBALLAD OF A SOLDIER\nUSSR 1960 Critics Prize\nDOLPHIN THEATRE-Hastings at Willingdon-299-7303\nI ! * : # # . Page 16\nTHE UBYSSEY\nFriday, January 29, 1971\nThe mt^nat Triangle:\nBRUCE CURTIS examines\nthe Socred manoeuvring in\nVictoria over an 87-square-\n-mile piece of proposed\nparkland on Vancouver\nIsland.\nVICTORIA (Staff) - The Nitinat\nTriangle is causing the B.C. forest industry\nconcern.\nThe triangle is an 87-square-mile tract of\nland which the Sierra Club and the federal\ngovernment feel should he included in Phase\nThree of the West Coast National Park.\nThe park was created in April, 1970, and\nwas to be developed in three phases.\nThe first phase, Long Beach, is already a\nwell-used section of beach lands, known for\nits high Pacific surf.\nPhase Two of the project involved the\nclosure of the Effingham Islands group north\nof Bamfield in Barkley Sound for a wildlife\npreserve for indiginous fauana as well as\nmigratory marine birds.\nLarge herds of sea lions and seals also\ngather on the islands.\nThere are one or two good harbors on the\nislands which may be developed in the future\nas marine park harbors. Plans are not as yet\ndeveloped for the area.\nM. he third phase of the national parks\nproject is the preservation of what is known\nas the Shipwreck Trail or the Lifeboat Trail.\nThis trail is a half-mile-wide strip of land\nextending 35 miles ffrom Bamfield to Port\nRenfrew. It was built by the provincial\ngovernment in 1920 to facilitate the\nevacuation of shipwreck victims along the\ncoast.\nBut it is the Nitinat Triangle that is\ncausing the concern amongst the forest\nindustry officials.\nThe area involved, which includes\nNitinat Hobiton and Tsusiat Lakes, is\ngenerally held to be of major importance as a\nsockeye salmon spawning area. It is presently\nunder 'sustained yield forest mangement' by\nB.C. Forest Products and MacMillan Bloedel\nLtd.\nAccording to a Council of Forest\nIndustries press release last Wednesday, \"the\nforest land in the Nitinat Triangle is some of\nthe most productive forest land in B.C.\nB.C. Forest Products holds tree farm\nlicence No. 27, which was issued twelve years\nago and 90 per cent of it lies within the\nproposed triangle.\nThe licence was issued in 1958 by then\nminister of lands and forests Robert\nSommers. Later that same year, Sommers was\nconvicted in B.C. Supreme Court on four\ncounts of accepting a bribe and one count of\nconspiracy.\nR hat trial, which caused a scandal that\nrocked the six-year-old Socred government,\nwas the longest and most expensive (almost\n$250,000) trial in B.C.'s history.\nIn the same trial, B.C. Forest Products,\nEvergreen Lumber, and other forestry\ncompanies were convicted of offering up to\n$12,000 each in bribes in order to ensure the\ngranting of tree farm licence concessions.\nMacMillan Bloedel also has some tree\nfarm licence land in the triangle but it is a\nsmall portion of the licence.\nIn response to demands for the single-use\nnational park, the forest industry is\nresponding with what it calls an alternative\nproposal.\nThe CFI proposal is that the area shoud\nremain under the control of the two\ncompanies and that they would designate the\nland as multiple use forest areas.\nThe multiple-use concept provides for the\ncontinued logging of an area but with the\naddition of special recreational services.\nSuch an arrangement would allow for the\ngeneral public access to the area as well as\nproviding camping and picnicking facilities.\nThe problem with this arrangement is\nthat the access to the area is restricted by the\nindustry except during non-working and\nnon-hazard hours.\nIndustry spokesman, opposing the park\nplan at the press conference Wednesday, said\nB.C. Forest Products currently plans for the\nrecreational development of the Nitinat\nTriangle as a multiple use forest area.\nPlans released Wednesday provide for an\naccess road from Lake Cowichan to the head\nof Nitinat Lake.\nThe future continuation of that road\nwould complete access to the Hobiton River\nsockeye salmon run.\nIn addition, CFP is planning to provide\nfree picknicking and camping facilities, boat\nlaunching ramps, and nature trails.\nThe company also said it would leave a\nnatural forest belt around all waterfront\nproperty to preserve the esthetic value of the\nland.\n\"The industry has built 10,000 miles of\nroads,\" said Gordon Draeseke, president of\nCFI, \"and gives access where otherwise there\nwould be none.\n\"In 1970, CFI member companies\napproved a common road access policy with\nthe restriction applied only for the safety of\nthe visitor or the protection of the forests.\"\nR^.FI opposed\ngrounds as well.\nthe plans on economic\nDraeseke argued that the removal of the\ntriangle from productive forest management\nwould \"result in a direct loss of about 250\njobs in the Cowichan Lake, Alberni, and\nVictoria areas.\" Friday, January 29, 1971\nTHE UBYSSEY\nPage 17\nDoes the land belong to the people\nor to the lumber barons of B.C.?\n'raeseke went on to say that each\nindustry job supports two jobs outside the\nindustry in service and related areas.\nHoward English, a director of the B.C.\nWildlife Federation, had another view:\n\"If you take all the environmental\nadvantages and say that we're going to lose\njobs, all we're going to have is jobs and no\nenvironment to live in.\"\n\"You're going to destroy the\nenvironment,\" he said. \"We won't sacrifice a\nfew dollars profit in order to safeguard our\nenvironment.\"\n\"I'm all for multiple use,\" English said,\n\"but there have to be some areas. Just as we\ndon't use the logging mills and plants for\nrecreation, there has to be some single use\nareas that they don't use for logging.\"\nThe CFI also seems prepared to wield a\nbig stick on legal grounds.\n\"Under the terms of the licences, no\nmore than one per cent can be withdrawn (by\nthe government for parks purposes without\nthe consent of the licencee,\" Draeseke said.\nRecreation and Conservation Minister\nKen Kierans agreed. \"Once we go beyond that\n(the one per cent) the companies have the\nright to compensation by equal land and\nmoney.\n\"Our problem here is that this think is\ngrowing and growing and growing and every\ntime you add more acreage to the project you\ndisplace something.\n\"We are opposed to the great incursions\non productive land for single use,\" said Fred\nMoonan, vice-president of CFI.\n\"We have a legacy to live down in certain\nproblem areas,\" said Jerry Burch, of BCFP. \"I\nthink we are becoming socially motivated.\"\nB.C. Fprest Products stands to lose 90\nper cent of the tree farm licence 27 if the plan\ngoes through. The area has an able annual cut\nof 4.2 million board feet but English charged\nthat the timber in the Nitinat Triangle is not\ncommercially of any value due to the high\ncost of transportation.\nK\nten Farquharson, president of the Sierra\nClub of B.C. agreed, saying, \"We figure this\nNitinat Triangle isn't as attractive as they say\nit is, otherwise they'd have been in there years\nago.\n\"Farquharson stated that BCFP had\nbarely begun to log the area and that now was\nthe time to act to preserve it as a natural park.\n\"This is the last bit of wilderness in the\nsouth end of the island,\" he said. \"The\naddition of the triangle would bring in all\nsorts of people who won't be fit enough to\nwalk in.\"\nFarquharson was answering allegations\nmade by CFI that the area would only be\navailable to about one per cent of the\npopulation that is physically fit enough to\nmake the 55-mile walk along the coast.\n\"If you include the triangle any elderly\nperson would be able to drive to the head of\nNitinat Lake and take a day trip down the\nlake without any physical exertion,\" he said.\nHugh Murray, a Sierra Club member,\nadded that the inclusion of the triangle would\nprovide a chain of lakes that could be used for\ncanoeing similar to the Bowron Lakes chain in\nthe central interior of the province.\nFarquharson said that the Sierra Club was\nformed last year to act as a conservation\nlobby because \"the mining and forestry\nlobbies have virtually dominated for too\nlong.\"\nPresently the club is involved in the\nproduction of a booklet to inform and\neducate the governmental officials involved in\nthe decision.\n\"This area is relatively unknown by the\npeople who are being asked to make the\ndecision - mainly the politicians,\" he said.\n\"We back the federal government\nwholeheartedly on this.\"\nThe federal government has selected the\nNitinat triangle as a national park site and\npresently is involved in negotiations with the\nprovincial government and the industry\nrepresentatives.\nO\nRErfe\n'fficially, however, it is a different\nmatter. The federal government under the\nWest Coast Park Act has its hands tied.\nThe province must assemble the land and\npass over a clear title to the land before the\nfederal government can act.\nIt is just another case of Socred\nmismanagement.\nAs early as 1926 the provincial\ngovernment has had set aside the Nitinat\nTriangle as a parks preserve.\nFarquharson pointed out that even in\nthose days when governments thought the\nlands were unrestricted and the resources\nindepletable, the government thought enough\nof the area to place it under a park preserve.\nThe area's park status was removed by\nthe Socreds in 1958 when it was reclassified\nin order to turn it over to MacMillan Bloedell\nand the B.C. Forest Products companies.\nWhen questioned, Kiernans said he did\nnot know if the area was one of the tree farm\nlicences bought by B.C. Forest Products with\na bribe.\n\"I was not in charge of the recreation\ndepartment at that time,\" he said.\nElton Anderson, a member of the B.C.\nFederation of Naturalists is also in favor of\nthe preservation of some of the west coast\nnatural wildlife.\n\"The forest industry is out of line in\nproposing multiple use,\" he said. \"I think\nthey look forward to logging in all parks.\" Page 18\nTHE UBYSSEY\nFriday, January 29, 1971\nFaulty beams crack up arena\nStory and Photos\nby\nKEITH DUNBAR\nUbyssey Sports Editor\nThere is more to the Winter Sports Centre than\nwhat meets the external eye.\nInside the building events are in turmoil.\nSince its incorporation approximately one year\nago. the new sports centre addition has had it's\nshare of problems. The latest chapter of the saga\ncould be termed \"lack of support\".\nTwo weeks ago it was noticed that one of the\nstructural beams which supports the roof of the\nbuilding had a long crack running along one of the\nlaminations. This beam is part of the roof which\ncovers one of the sheets of ice in the new addition\nof the Winter Sports Center.\nThe two sheets of ice were then closed to\npublic or student use. Since this time another crack\nhas been noticed in another beam. Both beams are)\nnow supported by telephone poles as a\nprecautionary measure against the remote chance\nthat the roof may collapse.\nThe beams have reached a proper temperature\nas well as humidity content for this operation to\ntake place. So far, the business has not been\nattended to.\nTelephone poles support beams,\nwhile propane ventilator supplied heat. . .\nPropane blowers have also been installed with a\nventilating tube running to the two beams. These\nwere in operation this week drying out the the two\nbeams in possible preparation for re-glueing of the\nlaminations.\n. . . and transformer to close building . . .\nA meeting was held yesterday to plan the\nfuture of the damaged structure. The whole concept\nhas become quite complicated, explained building\nmanager Stan Floyd.\nBasically the responsibility of re-opening the\nnew addition will rest with the insurance company\nwhich works in conjunction with the university. The\nclearance to open the number one sheet of ice in the\nbuilding will come only after the insurance\ncompany will accept the risk. The number two sheet\nof ice would stay closed pending the repairs to the\nbeams.\nFloyd then explained that the whole problem is\none in which a number of fields are concerned,\nincluding \"engineering, legal, architectural, and\ninsurance.\"\nThe structural affliction of the beams is not the\nonly problem the new addition has had.\nLast October there was power trouble in the\ncomplex when a transformer failed. The building\nwas without power for a few days while a\ntemporary set-up was established in order to supply\npower to the Center.\nThe building is to be closed on Tuesday\nmorning, four months later, when the now\ncorrected faulty transformer is to be reinstalled.\nThe problems have also financially hurt the\noperation of the Winter Sports Centre. Floyd stated\nthat there has been \"about a 500 dollar per day\n. . . but curlers still throw rocks.\nrevenue loss\" during the present crisis.\nHe feels the Winter Sports Center is one of the most heavily used\nfacilities of it's kind in the city.\nIt is being run now at full capacity, but some events are suffering.\nThere is a slight possibility that the center may go on 24-hour\noperation.\nUBC students in general, however, are not really suffering to a\ngreat deal.\nHighest priority to the remaining operative space is going to the\ncompetitive teams of the university, such as the T'Bird hockey team\nand the women's figure skating team.\nSecond in line, because of its high student content, is public\nskating. AMS sponsored clubs and the Intramural program are next in\nline.\nFollowing them are such student groups as fraternities and\nsororities.\nFaculty and staff, groups making capital contributions to the\nCenter, and the general public follow in that order.\nIn short, the Winter Sports Center is a popular place on the\ncampus. Although it is well used and activities are well attended, Floyd\nstated that students are always encouraged to come to the Center to use\nthe facilities.\nCurling handball, squash, and the activities take place in the\nmain rink have been largely unaffected by the closure of the new\naddition\nIntramurals\nBowling \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Preliminary Round starts\nTuesday, Feb. 2. Check with Intramural\noffice Friday for the schedule. Teams\nare five men each. You must pay for\nyour own shoes. Report to the Intramural office and pick up a pass card\nwhich verifies that you are on a team\nand enables you to get in to bowl.\nSnooker\u00E2\u0080\u0094Starts Feb. 2 from 7 to 11\np.m. All registered players must report\nat 7 p.m. on this day. Tables are free\nbut you must pick up a pass card from\nthe intramural office room 308 War\nMemorial Gym.\nBasketball \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Snowed out games have\nbeen rescheduled and posted. It is your\nresponsibility to check the schedule.\nWrestling \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Weigh-in is Feb. 4, 12:30\nMemorial Gym. Everyones must be\nthere. The wrestling meet is Feb. 8, 9,\nand 12, in War Memorial Gym.\nSkiing \u00E2\u0080\u0094 The ski meet has been\nchanged from Sunday. Feb. 7 to Saturday, Feb. 6, but is at the same place.\nSeymour Mt. at 1 P.m.\nRugby and Two-Mile Walk \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Sign-up\ndeadlines for these activities is Feb. 4.\nVolleyball and Softball \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Registration\nfor these activities will be accepted on\nFriday.\nCo-Recreational Volleyball \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Unfortunately volleyball has been cancelled\nfor Feb. 8 only. It will continue as usual\nevery other Tuesday at noon. The nets\nwill be set up and everyones is welcome.\nWomen's Athletics\nThe UBC Figure Skating team is holding a dress rehearsal Monday, Feb. 1\nfrom 4:30 to 6:00 in preparation for the\nWestern Canadian Intercollegiate meet\nin Edmonton. There they plan to uphold\ntheir Canadian championship for the\nseventh straight year.\nThe synchronized swim team is having\nits final splash for the weekend before\ncompeting Feb. 5 and 6, also in Edmonton, in the Western Canadian meet.\nWomens speed swimming team travels\nto Seattle Saturday for a meet against\nthe University of Washington. Last\nweekend they handily defeated both\nWashington and Portland State in a\ntri-meet.\nThe Thunderettes basketball team\nFriday and Saturday are playing the\nUniversity of Alberta in the War Memorial Gym.\nThe UBC women's curling team, who\nlast weeeknd won the zone 2 curling\nchampionship for Vancouver for the\nfirst time in twelve years, are this\nweekend playing in Courtenay for the\nDistrict playdowns. They are competing\nfor a berth in the provincial playdowns\nin Duncan.\nThe UBC ski team races in the Revel-\nstoke slalom derby this weekend. High\nhopes are placed on Joy Ward, who\nhas made the B.C. team for the Canada\nGaines.\nThe Vancouver Racquet Club hosts\nthe Vancouver District tournament in\nBadminton Saturday. Competing for\nUBC are Sue Kolb, Kathy Henry and\nMarg Fallot.\nThe UBC Gymnastic teams won their\nmeet Saturday against Calgary and Edmonton. Just wait for the next one.\nASKETBALL CIRCUX\nThe Fabulous\nHARLEM\n[llTf\nSHOW\nMON., FEB. 1st\nPACIFIC COLISEUM\n7:30 P.M.\nHarlem Globetrotters\nvs. N.Y. Nationals\nPLUS A GREAT ADDED\nVARIETY PROGRAM\nTickets at Hick's Ticket Bureau, 610\nDunsmuir St., Peterson's Sporting\nGoods, 575-6th St, Richmond Mail,\nArgyle Shop, 2174 W. 41st. U.B.C.\nAthletics Office, Memorial Bldg.\n$4.50, $3.50 & $2.\n- JQM TIME ONLY!\nDifferent\nAt Scandia\nSALE\nHART\nKNEISSEL\nDYNASTAR\nKASTLE\nMARKER\nTYROLIA\nSALOMON\nALSO 15% OFF on all your CROSS-COUNTRY needs. # (VIAIMY MORE\nDrop in anytime and have your bindings checked and adjusted for 50\u00C2\u00B0\nBEST SERVICE IN TOWN & THE COFFEE IS ALWAYS HOT\nBRING IN YOUR OLD\nWOOD OR METAL SKIS IN\nANY CONDITION WITH A\nU.B.C. STUDENT CARD &\nRECEIVE A 15% OR MORE\nDISCOUNT ON NEW SKIS.\n4th ft\nBurrard\nSCANDIA SKI SHOP\n732-6426 Friday, January 29, 1971\nTHE UBYSSEY\nPage 19\nSPORTS\nPuck Birds\nhead east\nThe University of B.C. hockey\nThunderbirds are on the road for\ntwo games this weekend.\nTonight they play the Brandon\nUniversity Bobcats and Saturday\nit's the University of\nSaskatchewan Huskies in\nSaskatoon.\n'Bird coach Bob Hindmarch\ndoesn't have to worry about\ncurfew breakers on this trip. A\nFriday in Brandon and Saturday\nin Saskatoon has never been\nanybody's idea of a great\nweekend.\nBrandon should be the tough\none. For one thing the Bobcats\nare an improving team. Their\nrecord is 5-5, two games out of\nthe fourth and last playoff spot..\nIn addition their fans are\nusually worth a goal to the home\nteam. It seems collegiate hockey is\na social event of sorts in the\nWheat City. A time when friends\nmeet at the rink to scream\nobscenities and spit at the visiting\nclubs.\nIt turns into a gala affair for all\n visiting players excluded.\nWhile neither game will be\neasy, the torrid scoring of Bob\nMacAneely and Co. should be\nenough to win both games.\nThunderbirds are currently tied\nfor second spot in the Western\nCollegiate league with a 9-3 mark\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 the same as the University of\nCalgary and two games behind the\nUniversity of Manitoba.\nAGAIN THIS WEEKEND the\nUniversity of B.C. Thunderbirds\nwill call upon their top guard,\nRon Thorsen, to perform\nacrobatic feats with the\nbasketball. Here, in action against\nfirst place Manitoba, Thorsen\nsnarls his way past two Bisons\nwhile driving to the basket.\nAction takes place this weekend in\nWar Memorial Gym on Friday and\nSaturday nights at 8:00 p.m. and\nSunday afternoon at 2:00 p.m.\nFOR GOOD FOOD\nAt Prices\nYou Can Afford\nTHE DINER\n4556 West 10th\nPhone 224-1912\nspeaking\nfrank Iff\nTony BaMmgkmr\nThe University of B.C. basketball Thunderbirds have this\nproblem.\nTo a pessimist, this is the way that it might look.\nTo repeat as WCIAA champions, and eventually as CIAU champs,\nthey must first win a semi-final series, probably against the University\nof Winnipeg Wesmen, and assuming that they get by that series, defeat\nthe Manitoba Bisons in the finals. It would now appear that only a\nsmall miracle can stop the Bisons in their quest for the first spot in\nleague play.\nThe problem arises when you consider the improbability of\nwinning on the road in collegiate basketball. The visitor has at least\nthree solid factors to overcome.\nInitially they face the psychological inertia brought on by the\nknowledge that the opposition, in this theoretical case, the Bisons, have\nalready beaten them twice during the regular season.\nThen there is the officiating. Although coaches will often say that\nthe officiating is not a factor in whether they win or lose - they're\nlying. The referees are usually good for up to 10-15 points per game\npurely on the change of officiating style and interpretations of the\nrules.\nCombine this with the third factor, a capacity partisan crowd,\nyou have all the makings of \"homer jobs\" far worse than some of the\nclassics seen at War Memorial Gym.\nThen one must consider the playing surface, backboards, and\nother environmental disparities.\nAnd although these minor changes should not bother a first rate\ncollege player, they often do.\nSo what could best aid the Birds in their hope of beating the\nBisons? Clearly the best thing that could happen would be the demise\nby act of god of the Manitoba Fieldhouse.\nCLOSING OUT SALE\nEVERYTHING MUST GO\nCOSTUMES FOR\nMEN & WOMEN\nFormal Wear\nGay Nineties Dress\nHats, Etc.\nCENTENNIAL FASHIONS\nINTERNATIONAL COSTUME DESIGNERS LTD\n4243 DUNBAR at 26th\n228-9112\nGET IT ON\nAT THE PNE GARDENS 6:30 &\nSUNDAY, JAN. 31 10:00 P.M.\nTirVCTQ AT THE BAY 3.50\nI H-IVt ID AT THE DOOR 4.25 ONLY\nDON'T LET YOUR FRIENDS TELL YOU\nTHAT YOU MISSED A GREAT SHOW!\nBIRD CALLS\nThe UBC Student Telephone Directory\nNOW Vi PRICE\nONLY 50*\n. (STUDENTS & FACULTY)\nBUY YOUR COPY TODAY\nAT\nTHE BOOKSTORE\nTHUNDERBIRD SHOP\nAMS PUBLICATIONS OFFICE\nBIRD CALLS\nThe Handiest Book on Campus\nPEOPLE\nAn Experience in Human Relations and\nHuman Sexuality\nMonday, February 1 - 7 p.m. Sharp\nWOMEN'S CAUCAS\nSUB BALLROOM\nPLEASE DRESS CASUALLY\nU.B.C. CENTER FOR CONTINUING EDUCATION PRESENTS\nCOURSES ON CONTEMPORARY\nSOCIAL ISSUES\nPropaganda Canada 1971\nMR. MACDONALD BURBIDGE,\nEducator/Author, 8 Tues., 7:30 p.m., beginning\nFeb. 2. Kitsilano Library Auditorium.\nAmericanization of Canada\nDR. MICHAEL E. ELIOT-HURST, Geography\nDept., SFU. 8 Mons. 8:00 p.m., beginning Feb.\n1. Room 222, Old Auditorium Annex, UBC.\nRacism and Sexism\nMRS. RENEE KASINSKY, Grad. Studies, U. of\nCalifornia. 8 Weds., 8:00 p.m., beginning Feb.\n3. Room 3252, Buchanan Bldg.\nMan and the Primates\nMRS. JOAN ABBOTT, Grad. Studies,\nAnthropology, U. of Colorado. 8 Mons., 8:00\np.m., beginning Feb. 1. Foom 414, Henry\nAngus Bldg.\nSpecial Student Rates\nFor Info. Call 228-2181 Page 20\nTHE UBYSSEY\nFriday, January 29, 1971\nSkagit flooding\nmay be illegal\nVICTORIA (Staff) - The flooding of the Skagit River Valley\nmay be illegal according to Dave Brousson, Liberal MLA for North\nVancouver-Capilano.\nDuring the throne speech debate Wednesday, Brousson said: \"It is\nmy opinion and that of my legal advisor that the agreement between\nthe B.C. government and Seattle is invalid.\"\nBrousson pointed out that the agreement signed by the two\nparties and the provisions for indemnity must be approved by an\ninternational joint commission in Ottawa.\nThe agreements between B.C. and Seattle, while having been\nreceived by the IJC, have neither been approved nor disapproved,\"\nBrousson said.\n(The original agreement was signed by the Social Credit\ngovernment in 1954 and provided for the raising of the Ross Lake dam\nby two feet.This would flood back into B.C. by about a half mile of\nB.C. territory. This was an annually renewable agreement which\nprovided five thousand dollars annual compensation.\nEach year the agreement was filed with the IJC but approval was\nnever formalized.\nThese agreements continued until 1966 when the final land lease\nwas signed which would raise the dam and back Ross Lake into B.C. by\neight miles.)\n\"I call on the attorney general as the chief law officer to review\nthe matter thoroughly,\" he said.\n'The people of B.C. can clearly expect their government to take\nimmediate action to protect the rights of the province in the Skagit\nValley.\"\n\"If the provincial government really wanted to, they could do\nsomehing,\" he said.\nStruck lettuce\nto be boycotted\nBy JUDY McLEOD\nThe United Farm Workers have changed their target from grapes\nto lettuce\nThe UFW has organized a boycott against California struck\nlettuce and is asking Vancouver citizens to avoid buying non-union\nlettuce.\n\"A boycott in Vancouver can be more effective than most people\nrealize,\" said Mike Burgess of the local headquarters Monday, \"because\nover seven percent of all California struck lettuce comes to Vancouver.\"\nThe farmers' struggle began before the last grape contracts were\nsigned in August 1970. Lettuce workers in Delano and Salinas Valley of\nCalifornia began working toward benefits that the grape unions had\nachieved and wanted to be first on the priority list of the UFW's\norganizing committee said Burgess.\nWhen lettuce growers received word that workers were planning\nto organize for fair contracts, they secretly contacted the Teamsters\nUnion, Local 890 of Salinas and asked them to come to represent the\nworkers, he said.\n'Teamsters' cards were distributed among the farm workers,\nindicating a five year recognition between the Teamsters and farm\nworkers,\" said Burgess.\nThis lead to a situation in which the farm workers had no direct\nagreement with the growers, he said.\n\"Because the Teamsters had no real comprehension of the lettuce\nworkers' situation the agreement was completely inadequate,\" said\nBurgess.\n'The two cent hourly increase offered did not keep up with the\nworkers needs or the cost of living.\"\n\"Nor did it ban child labour, or 2,4-D and other lethal\ninsecticides which cause birth defects and death,\" he said.\n\"The average life expectancy of these farm workers is 49 years,\"\nsaid Burgess.\n\"When the workers realized that the teamsters were doing\nnothing but taking fees off the top of their wages, and that they had no\nright to strike for five years, they struck illegally.\"\nA Salinas court judge then served an injunction against the UFW,\nsaying that it was a jurisdictional dispute. Strikes were again outlawed,\nand local leader Cesar Chavez was sent to jail.\n\"Vested interest could clearly be seen in this case also,\" said\nBurgess.\n\"Bud An tie, one of the growers, owns a ranch with Dow\nChemicals. It is in Dow's interest that the farm workers do not outlaw\nthe insecticides which Dow produces.\"\nThe Salinas court injunction was overruled by the California\nSupreme Court, but this still cannot force the Teamsters to get out of\nthe contract because the farm workers are not covered by labor laws, he\nsaid.\n\"The only power that the farm workers have is to set up an\ninternational boycott of lettuce not produced under fair contract,\"\nsaid Burgess.\n'There are three types of lettuce in the stores,\" said Burgess.\n\"Sixty-five percent has the Teamster stamp on it, and 10 percent\nhas no signed contract. These are the ones to avoid.\n'Twenty-five percent has been produced under fair United Farm\nWorkers' contract, and is not being boycotted,\" said Burgess.\nFRIDAY\nYOUNG SOCIALISTS\nThree speakers discuss topic \"We\nwant jobs\" at 1208 Granville St. at\n8:00 p.m. also a meeting held in SUB\nlounge with Phil Cornoyer speaking\non \"Help defend Quebec's political\nprisioners,\" at noon. Free.\nECO\nAnnual meeting at noon in Bio-Sci.\n2000. All welcome.\nLEFT CAUCUS\nUnemployment protest meeting in Bu.\n202 at noon.\nUBC NDP\n. Executive meeting in SUB 212A at\nnoon.\nUBC LIBERAL CLUB\nMeeting with speaker Gordon Gibson\nin SUB 119 at noon.\nEXPERIMENTAL COLLEGE\nMeeting to discuss \"Sense or nonsense\nof present Canadian economic policy\"\nin 125 SUB at noon.\nNEWMAN CLUB\nPractice for folk mass in music room\nat St. Mark's College at noon.\nHILLEL\n\"A way to the self beyond the ego\"\nDr. Ian Kent and Prof. William Nicholls will discuss their new book I\nAMness at Hillel House, at noon. AU\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 welcome.\nPRE-SOCIAL WORK CLUB\nPre-marital counselor to answer ques\ntions. All interested come to SUB\n10SA at noon.\nVARSITY CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP\nMeeting in SUB Party room at noon.\nSATURDAY\nYOUNG SOCIALISTS\nCelebration \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Hugo Blanco freed at\n1208 Granville St. at 8.00 p.m.\nCHINESE VARSITY CLUB\nWine and Cheese Party in Clubs\nLounge in SUB. 8-12 p.m. Come and\ncelebrate Chinese New Year.\n'tween\nclasses\nLEFT CAUCUS\nMeeting with John Young speaking in\nBu. 106 at 8 p.m.\nSUNDAY\nFIRESIDE\nHarry Rankin will lead discussion\ngroup on Vancouver political scene\nin Union College Reception Rm. at\n8 p.m.\nNEWMAN CLUH\t\nFolk Mass at St. Mark's College\nChapel at 11:30 a.m.\nMONDAY\nVARSITY DEMOLAY CLUB\nMeeting at SUB at noon.\nEL CIRCULO\nConversation and music at International House Rm. 402 at noon.\nWOMEN'S LIB ALLIANCE\nHelp win free abortion on demand.\nAttend this planning meeting to\nbuild Feb. 13-14 cross-Canada protest.\"\nSUB Rm. 117 at noon.\nTUESDAY\nPRE-DENTAL SOC.\nGuest speaker Dr. Thordarson speaks\non Periodontics in SUB 113 at noon.\nCOMMERCE U.S.\nFinance option: Find out how to win\nthe world. Angus 410 at noon.\nWEDNESDAY\nECO\n\"Vietnam \u00E2\u0080\u0094 The Ecology of War\"\nBu. 106 at noon with speaker Dr.\nOrians of University of Washington.\nTEAM CLUB\nIdentity Crises will be discussed at\nnoon in SUB III. AU welcome.\nTHURSDAY\nCOMMERCE SEMINAR COMMITTEE\nBuy your ticket to \"Green Door\"\nMonday-Thursday at noon in Angus.\nMeeting at noon today.\nSIFIED\n1 day $1.00; 2 day. $1.75.\nadditional fines 30c; 4 days pries of 3.\ntqt*phone and are payable in advance.'\nBUOQv Dfahr. at BJtX, Vmeowtr 9, JCUC.\nthm) dkxy oofora jpojwnMiBlPM>\nANNOUNCEMENTS\nDances\n11\nGreetings\n12\nLost fe Found\n13\nTHE DEVIL, GOT THE GIRL.! SO,\nwhat is \"Rosemary's Baby?\" Find\nout in the SUB Auditorium Friday and Saturday 7:00 & 9:30,\nSunday 7:00. AMS Card Holders\n50c.\nLOST GOLD CHAIN BRACELET,\nwill give reward. 736-0831.\nRides & Car Pools\n14\nSTUDENT AND KID DESPER-\nately need ride to campus from\n7th and Larch, 9:00 Wed.'s (10:00\nother morning's). Please phone\n738-3917 if you can help even one\nmorning. Remuneration.\nBLIND STUDENT WANTS RIDE\nto and from Kerrisdale area. 5338\nCypress St. $20.00 per mo. Phone\nJeannie Wright, 266-9023.\nNEED A RIDE? CONTACT MR.\nTsang after 6 p.m. 738-6959.\nSpecial Notices\n15\nTHE TAURUS SPA, 1233 HORNBY\nSt. 687-1915. Guys only. Special\nstudent rates. Best facilities.\nTAKE A SKI BREAK \u00E2\u0080\u0094 SKI\nWhistler. Stay Alpine Lodge,\ndorms or s/c cabins. Full facilities.\nAmer. plan, available. Ratesj 13.00\n& up. Ph. (112) 932-5280. Write\nApline Lodge, Garibaldi Station,\nGaribaldi, B.C.\nPhotography\n34\nScandals\n37\nTypewriters & Repairs\n39\nTyping\n40\nWANTED: INTERESTED MUSI-\ncians to form stage band to play\nJazz, Rock, etc. Phone Jamie,\n988-7216.\nFIRESIDE: ALDERMAN HARRY\nRankin will speak on Vancouver\nand its politics. Union College\nReception Room (on Campus) 8:00\np.m. Sunday January 31.\nTravel Opportunities\n16\nHONG KONG RETURN \u00E2\u0080\u0094 1345\n687-2855; 224-0087; 687-1244.\n106\u00E2\u0080\u0094709 Dunsmuir St.,\nVancouver 1, B.C.\nWanted\u00E2\u0080\u0094Information\n17\nWanted\u00E2\u0080\u0094Miscellaneous\n18\nWANTED TWO FRIDAY TICKETS\nto Endgame in exchange for Sat-\nurday's. Phone Frank at 879-1303.\nAUTOMOTIVE\nALL. TYPES OF OFFICE WORK\ncan be done by Senior Secretary\nnow housebound. 732-6081.\nTYPING OF ESSAYS, ETC., DONE\nQuickly, Neatly and Efficiently.\n30* per page. Phone 224-0385 after\n5 p.m.\nESSAYS AND THESES TYPED.\nExperienced Typist, Electric\nTypewriter. 731-8096. \t\nIBM SELECTRIC TYPING SERVICE. Theses, essays, etc. Neat\naccurate work, reasonable rates.\nMrs. Troche, 437-1355.\nEXPERT IBM SELECTRIC TYPIST\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094experienced in all types of technical thesis. Reasonable rates.\nCaU Mrs. Ellis, 321-3838.\nESSAYS AND THESIS TYPED\nneatly, accurately, 25f per page.\nCarol Tourgis, 733-3197.\nEFFICIENT, ELECTRIC TYPING,\nmy home. Essays, thesis, etc.\nNeat, accurate work. Reasonable\nrates. Phone 263-5317.\nEXPERIENCED TYPIST \u00E2\u0080\u0094ESSAYS\nand thesis. Electric typewriter.\nMrs. A. Treacy \u00E2\u0080\u0094 738-8794.\nSTUDENTS! I WILL TYPE YOUR\nterm papers. Reasonable rates.\nCaU Yvonne \u00E2\u0080\u0094 738-6874.\nESSAYS AND THESIS TYPING.\nIBM electric. 350 page. Call after\nnoon: 733-4708.\nTEDIOUS TASKS\u00E2\u0080\u0094PROFESSIONAL\nTyping Service IBM Selectric \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nDays, Evenings, Weekends. Phone:\n228-9304\u00E2\u0080\u009430* per page.\nEMPLOYMENT\nTutoring\n64\nWANTED TUTOR FOR GRADE 11\nChem. and Grade 12 Math student\nin West Vane. Phone 922-6592.\nWILL TUTOR MATH 100 * 101,\nday, evening, or Sat. Reasonable\nrates. Phone 733-3644\u00E2\u0080\u009410 a.m. to\n3 p.m.\nGERMAN TUTORING: CONVER-\nsation & grammar, by qualified\nex-university teacher \u00E2\u0080\u0094 native\nspeaker, group & quantity discounts. Eves. 731-0156.\nCHRISTMAS RESULTS Disappointing? Register at UBC tutoring centre and find some help.\nQualified tutors in over 50 subject\nareas. SUB 100B, 228-4583, 12-2\np.m. weekdays.\t\nMISCELLANEOUS\nFOR SALE\n71\nSONY TC-200 STEREO TAPE RE-\ncorder. 3\u00E2\u0080\u00941800' tapes. Very little\nuse. $200.00. Pete at 731-8625.\nGIBSON FALCON AMP AND COV-\ner. Good condition. Cost $315.00.\nI want $200.00. Pete at 731-8625.\nSONY TC860 TAPE RECORDER; 2\nyrs. old, like new condition; $100.\nPhone Peter, 732-7820.\nBIRD CALLS\nYour Student Telephone Directory\nNOW HALF PRICE - 50c\nat the Bookstore, Thunderbird Shop\nand AMS Publications Office\nRENTALS fc REAL ESTATE\nRooms\n81\nHelp Wanted\n51\nAutomobiles For Sale\n21\n>6 INT. TRAVELALL, V8, P.S.,\n4 speed, radio, rebuilt R.E. and\nbrakes. 298-1996.\n'69 V.W. WESTPHALIA CAMPER.\nSleeps family of 5. 19,500 miles.\nStill under warranty. 937-5873.\n'53 ZEPHYR. GOOD TRANSPOR-\ntation. $55.00. Phone 266-6672 or\n266-2648.\nAutomobiles\u00E2\u0080\u0094Wanted\n22\nAutomobiles\u00E2\u0080\u0094Parts\n23\nBUSINESS SERVICES\nDay Care ft Baby Sitting 32A\nWATCH \"ROSEMARY'S BABY\"!\nWith Mia Farrow and John Cassavetes in the SUB Auditorium,\nFriday and Saturday 7:00 & 9:30,\nSunday 7:00. AMS Card Holders\n50c.\nGENERAL ARTISTS SECRETARY.\nShe must know what she is doing. Must be versatile. All appreciable inquiries appreciated. Benefits $250.00 per month and travel\nto all parts of the world. Please\nsend letter with qualifications to\nP.O. Box 136, North Vancouver,\nB.C.\nLOOKS FOR A STUDENT WHO\ncan give skating lessons to a ten-\nyear-old girl. Preferably a female.\nBut male student may apply.\n$2.00 one lesson. Contact 228-9158\nBatts.\nBACK TO SCHOOL MEANS\nextra expenses. Need extra income? Investigate SARAH COVENTRY OPPORTUNITIES. Call\n946-2258.\nEIGHT ATTRACTIVE GIRLS RE-\nquired at two-day demonstration\nof professional photographic lighting equipment. Call Mr. Wood at\n228-4771 (U.B.C. Photo Dept.)\nINSTRUCTION & SCHOOLS\nInstruction Wanted\n61\nGRADE 12 GIRL AT ERIC HAM-\nber needs a tutor for Chem. 12.\nPhone (eves.) JYinet, 874-0798.\nVERY ATTRACTIVE PRIVATE\nroom. 4th and Alma. Private entrance. Share bathroom and kitchen. 228-9228 after 5:00.\nROOM FOR RENT, MALE, PRIV.\nent., priv. bath. 1% blocks from\ncampus. Prefer third or fourth\nyear. $40.00, 224-6389.\nSTUDENT TO SHARE BASEMENT\nwith same. Jt'tchen, living room,\nprivate entrance, $55 per month.\n224-6686.\nRoom & Board\n82\nQUIET, PRIVATE, FOR 1 GIRL.\nPhone 224-3693 or visit 2425 Tolmie St. (1 block to U. Gates on\n8th).\t\nMEN ONLY. LARGE CARPETED\nrooms. Good food. Color TV. Large\nsocial areas. 5725 Agronomy Rd.\nManager, 224-9620.\nGUYS! YOUNG COUPLE WITH\nlarge home. Linen, great meals.\nDays 266-6206, eves. 224-4496.\nFurnished Apts.\n83\nMALE 3rd OR 4th YEAR TO\nshare large suite with two others,\nrent $58. 3527 W. 1st.\t\nROOM - MATE REQUIRED. PREF.\nmale 4th yr. or grad student. Own\nbedroom, nr. MacDonald & 4th.\n75.00 mo. Avail, immedi. 224-0073.\nUnfurnished Apts.\n84\nHalls For Rent\n85\nMusic Instruction\n62\nSpecial Classes\n63\nHouses\u00E2\u0080\u0094Furn. & Unfurn. 86\nBECOME 4th MALE ROOMMATE\nin large house, available Immediately. Location: 57th & Oak.\nPhone 263-4990 after 6:00 p.m. ."@en . "Newspapers"@en . "Vancouver (B.C.)"@en . "LH3.B7 U4"@en . "LH3_B7_U4_1971_01_29"@en . "10.14288/1.0127671"@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 .