"CONTENTdm"@en . "http://resolve.library.ubc.ca/cgi-bin/catsearch?bid=1211252"@en . "University Publications"@en . "2016-01-18"@en . "1981-03-03"@en . "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/Ubysseynews/items/1.0127716/source.json"@en . "application/pdf"@en . " Protestors fight murder in El Salvador\nBy DEBBIE WILSON\nSpecial to The Ubyssey\nSpeakers and spectators carrying\nplacards saying \"Bonzo stay home?' and\n\"While Reagan parties, thousands die?'\ncondemned U.S. support of the junta's\nuse of force against Salvadorean civilians\nin a Saturday protest at Robson Square.\nSome of the 750 were costumed Sandin-\nista-style with bandanas over their heads\nand faces. One woman wore a skull mask\nbehind a placard saying \"U.S. foreign\npolicy: If it moves, kill it.\"\nAnother demonstrator with a painted\nHitler face wore a bloody laboratory\njacket stencilled \"No aid to military butchers.\"\nThey cheered and chanted in a demonstration full of energy and outrage. After\nlistening to speaker after speaker condemn U.S. involvement in the Latin American country, the protestors marched\nalong Granville St. to the Pacific Press\nbuilding.\nThe protest concentrated on the Canadian government's passive non-resistance\nto American military aid to El Salvador's\njunta. It criticized the media's role in obscuring the Reagan administration's maintenance of violent military control despite\nbroad opposition.\nA letter to Vancouver Sun and Province\neditors gathered 200 signatures. It levelled\nprotest at the sketchy coverage of Salvadorean guerrillas' final offensive against\nthe government in a bitter civil war, and\ncriticized the unquestioning acceptance of\nReagan's claims of Cuban and Soviet intervention in the conflict. The letter was\nstill unprinted Monday.\nNDP MP Pauline Jewett said U.S. government claims that opposition to the junta was externally motivated were fabrications. \"Our documentation shows that\nthey were in El Salvador long before any\nother help came. They sparked the other\nhelp.\"\nJewett said the murders of more than\n13,000 civilians in the past year, U.S. aid\nto the junta and widespread popularity of\nthe Democratic Revolutionary Front, the\ncoalition recognized as the Salvadoreans'\nrepresentatives by 50 countries, were the\nfacts in the continuing war.\n\"We must not allow ourselves to be\npropagandized by another set of so-called\nfacts,\" she said.\nJewett said El Salvador is \"a kind of litmus test\" for international support of\nU.S. military policy. And she said the Car\nnadian government has agreed to give that\nsupport.\nExternal affairs minister Mark MacGui-\ngan promised Canadian \"quiescence\" to\nU.S. aid to El Salvador last week.\nRachel Epstein, a Woman Against Imperialism spokesperson, said, \"When the\nU.S. talks about sending military advisors\nto El Salvador they really mean highly\ntrained specialists in genocide and\ntorture. . . We want to make it clear we\nwon't stand for any more genocide in our\nname.\"\nOne protestor debunked the impression\ngiven by U.S. secretary of state Alexander\nHaig that Soviet intervention is behind the\njunta's civilian opposition. \"They want to\nsay it's their fight \u00E2\u0080\u0094 it's not their fight,\"\nhe said.\n\"The Soviet Union is not increasing\ntheir sphere of influence,\" said another.\n\"The U.S. just wants to maintain their\nsphere of influence in Latin America,\nCentral America and the Caribbean.\"\nA woman in the crowd, \"outraged\" by\nAmerican intervention, attended the demonstration \"because I have to have some\noutlet for my anger.\"\n\"To some extent the government does\nlook at our response,\" she said. \"Though\nthey do listen to the U.S., if we are very\nvociferous about how we feel there's a\nchance they might listen.\"\nGears want\ncheaper beer\nBy CRAIG BROOKS\nStudents have given student\ncouncil an ultimatum to immediately lower Pit beer prices or take the\nissue to referendum.\nBut Alma Mater Society president Marlea Haugen opposes the\nmove, saying Friday, \"It would be\na mistake for students of this campus to bother themselves with the\nbusiness affairs of the society.\"\nA petition, signed by 500\nengineers, requests a decrease in\nbeer prices from the current $1.15\nto $1 because of Pit profit. It has\nbeen delivered to AMS vice president Peter Mitchell.\nSocial centre manager Graham\nSmythe revealed Friday the net profit for Pit operations as of Jan. 31,\nsince May 1, 1980, is $25,000.\nOnly 500 signatures are needed to\nforce student council to hold a\nreferendum. But Mitchell said Friday \"The way (the petition) reads it\ndoesn't ask for a referendum, it's\njust a bitch.\"\nMitchell said he will present the\npetition to the next council meeting\nbecause it expresses a concern of a\nlarge number of students.\nEngineering undergraduate society president Don Ehrenholz said\nFriday the petition drive started in\nearly February and was aimed at informing council of student\ndissatisfaction with current beer\nprices.\nCouncil's failure to act on the request could result in further action\nfrom the engineers, Ehrenholz said.\n\"If there are enough people upset\n(about beer prices), a referendum\npetition could result. There are\nenough serious people who want to\ngo to referendum with the price at\n$1.15.\"\nMitchell said the AMS executive\nwould have to check into the profit\nmargin at the Pit and see if a price\nchange would mean beer drinkers\nwould be subsidized.\nIn September, the price of local\nbottled beer was raised from $1 to\n$1.15, while the price of draft\nstayed the same. Imported beer and\nhard liquor decreased slightly.\nBeer leapt from 85 cents to $1 in\nSeptember, 1979.\nDue to time constraints involved,\nit is unlikely that the issue could be\ntaken to referendum this school\nyear, Mitchell said.\nGSA motion fair\nBy MIKE BRAND\nThe Graduate Students' Association has denied charges that their\nrepresentatives \"railroaded\" a motion through student council at its\nmeeting Wednesday.\nTwo Alma Mater Society executives accused the GSA of deliberately proposing the motion near the\nend of the meeting, when a vote\nwould not \"represent the council's\ntrue feelings.\"\nGSA acting representative Robert\nCameron said Monday the motion,\nwhich called for a referendum to\neither drop or retain the SUB building fee of $15, was not intentionally\nintroduced late in the meeting.\n\"The only reason the motion\ndidn't come up until late was that\nthe motion was under new business,\" he said.\nCameron also rejected the claim\nmade by AMS vice-president Peter\nMitchell and finance director Jane\nLoftus that the council members\nwho were present at the time of the\nGSA motion did not represent the\ncouncil's true feelings.\n\"I believe there were 20 council\nmembers present at the time of our\nmotion. It seems to me that if you\nhave 14 yes and four no votes,\nwhich the motion did, it is quite\nrepresentative,\" he said.\n\"That's over half by a long shot.\nAnd council never had all 31 members at the meeting,\" he added.\nCameron said GSA representative Sean Boyle decided to introduce the motion shortly after student board of governors representative Chris Niwinski withdrew his\nown referendum proposal.\n\"Sean spoke to several people,\nincluding Chris Niwinski, between 8\nand 9 p.m.\" Niwinski gave the GSA\nmotion his moral support, he added.\nBut Mitchell maintained his belief that the vote was possibly suspect.\n\"I don't know if any deliberate\nmanipulation was involved on the\npart of the GSA, but I think it's\n.possible that it could be interpreted\nthat way,\" he said.\nMitchell said he overheard Boyle\ntelling Niwinski that a referendum\nshould be held on the SUB fee.\n\"I'm not sure of the exact time of\nthe conversation, but even 9 p.m. is\nlate in the meeting, which started at\n6:30 p.m.,\" he said.\nCouncil eventually decided to\nhold the referendum between\nMarch 16 and 20, on the same\nballot as the PIRG vote.\nTHE UBYSSEY\nVol. LXIII, No. 68\nVancouver, B.C. Tuesday, March 3,1981\n228-2301\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 gord wlab. photo\nHELLISH HELICOPTER revs rotors and roars over rocks of Wrack Beach in practice run to ready roguish crew\nfor rash attack on first robin of spring. Evil mad scientist who wishes to warp world's weather by wasting well-\nknown seasonal signs directs action from secret headquarters in barge. Swing low, fleet chariot of the clods, he\nsings as he accidently presses self-destruct button which brought whole fiendish plot to premature end.\nMarch referenda fever hits UBC\nStudents could be faced with referendum ballots containing eight\nseparate issues if a petition drive\nconducted by engineering students\nis successful.\nStudent council has already\nscheduled a March 16 to 20 referendum on funding a Public Interest\nResearch Group at UBC and the\nchance for students to cancel the\n$15 SUB fee levy.\nNow petitions on five other issues\nare being circulated in engineering\nclasses, Alma Mater Society vice-\npresident Peter Mitchell said Monday. And there's yet another as\nwell.\nThe petitions circulating among\nengineering students call for referenda on:\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 a $2 fee levy per year for establishing an off-campus housjng\nregistry,\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 a $2 fee toward an autonomous Ubyssey,\ne a $2 fee toward CITR campus\nradio,\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 a $5 fee to fund a Concerned\nResearch And Planning (CRAP)\ngroup on campus, and\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 SUB renovations. A referendum to renovate the SUB plaza and\ncourtyard failed already in February.\nOn top of that, the engineering\nundergraduate society says unless\ncouncil decides to lower Pit beer\nprices it will force a referendum on\nthe issue.\nCouncil must hold a referendum\nany time it is presented with a petition signed by more than 500 students.\nThe Alma Mater Society executive is unsure how to respond to the\nreferendum demands because some\nappear to be serious while others\nare obviously jokes, according to\nAMS vice-president Peter Mitchell,\nhimself an engineer.\nAnd some campus organizations\nare surprised and angered by the petitions. All groups involved in the\nissues say they have not been contacted for any opinions or informa\ntion about the referendum demands.\nOrganizers of the B.C. Public Interest Research Group are concerned the CRAP petition, which parodies BCPIRG, contains many false\nconceptions about what the group is\nabout.\nThe petition, in part, is worded,\n\"Whereas 4,300 (students) have\nexpressed an irrational desire to\nblindly throw away $5 towards a\ncommittee/society/God knows\nwhat (?) that has no constitution,\nno bylaws, no rules or regulations,\nand whereas they (PIRG) may do\nanything they like with the\nmoney. . .\"\nCarol Riviere, PIRG spokesperson, said Monday \"we were specific\nin our pamphlet that we would be a\nsociety, with all the controls a society has.\"\nShe said the complaint about the\nlack of a constitution was, to some\nextent, valid but added a\nframework of the bylaws will be\nSee page 2: BYLAWS Page 2\nTHE U BYSSEY\nTuesday, March 3,1981\nBylaws\nabused\nFrom page 1\nready by the time the referendum\nfor PIRG takes place.\nShe added the petition is \"an\nabuse of the process that we are\nprovided with under the AMS bylaws.\"\nShe questioned the engineers'\nmotives for starting the petition,\nsaying they might be insecure that\nPIRG would attract more attention\nthan engineering pranks.\nThe seriousness of the re-referendum for SUB renovations was\nquestioned by AMS executives. Administration director Bill Maslechko said the wording was extremely vague.\nBut he said the petitions for the\nhousing registry funding and CITR\nwere serious.\nCITR president Hilary Stout said\nshe had not heard of the petition\nuntil informed by The Ubyssey, but\nwas \"totally in favor of it.\"\n\"I am so stunned I don't know\nwhat to say,\" she added. She said\nshe wished the engineers had contacted CITR before starting the petition, but \"I love the fact that people out there support us.\"\nOff-campus housing manager\nDave Johnson said Monday the\nhousing office had not been consulted about the petition for a housing registry.\nThe petition calls for the registry\nto be based on the computerized\nsystem established at the University\nof Alberta. Johnson said, \"A lot of\nwhat they do can't be adapted to\nour situation as our housing shortage is much more severe.\"\nEarlier this year student council\nsupported the idea to establish such\na registry, but housing director\nMike Davis did not act upon the request.\nEUS president Don Erenholz denied knowledge of the petitions except that the petition drive started\nFriday in conjunction with EUS executive elections. He was unsure\nhow many signatures have been collected so far.\nMitchell said if the petitions do\ncollect 500 signatures, an emergency council meeting to deal with\nthe matter can be called with 24\nhours' notice.\nBuzz on thru 10th\nAve. gate V4 way\nalong University\nBlvd.\nHONEY\n3 FLAVOURS Er HONEYCOMB\nOne Per 1.51b. $1.99\nCustomer 6 lb. $7.99\n$2 X on 50 lb. 12 lb. $15.60\nSavingXPurchase 367 lb 1.26/lb\nGRADUATING?\nA good resume\nis a MUSTI\nonly $24.95\n.INTERVIEW-PREPARED-\nTYPED\n\"All By Telephone\"\nCall 271 5711\n9:30 a.m. to 7:00 p.m.\nMon. to Sat.\n1\nj THE DINER,\nI Serving U.B.C. and West Point Ony .\nfor the last 23 yean. I\n| We put our Sole In your |\n| FISH & CHIPS |\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 English Style Home Cooked Meals I\nJ at Reasonable Prices \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Including J\n| Roast Beef and Yorkshire Pudding |\nI Open Monday to Saturday j\nJ 7:30 a.m. to 8:30 p.m. '\nI Clofd Sunday* B-Public HoUday* I\n\4SS6 W. 10th Ave. - 224-1912 |\nI Ws accept Chargex a\nSUMMER EMPLOYMENT\nSecond or Third Year\nAccounting Students\nA client is seeking a summer student to assist the\ncomptroller in compiling statistical information,\ncontrolling inventories and other accounting\nduties.\nLocation: Victoria\nSalary: $1,100.00 per month\nPlease forward resume, before MARCH\n20, 1981, indicating experience and\nacademic background to:\nTHORNE RIDDELL\n3rd Floor, 707 Fort St.,\nVictoria, B.C.\nV8W3G3\nAttention: Mr. H. A. Gordon\nKoerner Foundation\nSPECIAL LECTURE\nJudge Nancy Morrison\nwill speak on\n\"THE IMPACT OF THE WOMEN'S\nMOVEMENT ON CONTEMPORARY\nCULTURE\"\nTUESDAY, MARCH 3,1961\n12:30-1:30 p.m. Buchanan Penthouse\nSponsored by the Womens Students' Office\nWith the support of\nthe Leon and Thea\nKoerner Foundation\necause we want to tell you students goii\nabout Our Bank's Profes- Medicine, E\nA sional Graduate Loan Plan. Optometry,\nIt's a special Commerce loan to Chartered A\nhelp you get your career started. We Medicine, ai\nknow how important it is to you professions,\nto have a sound group of financial So stof\nservices to meet your professional We'll welco\nand personal needs. There's a j\nCommerce Professional\nGraduate Loan Plan _\nfor graduating n \u00E2\u0080\u009E?*?*^A\"LJJ|J?f,f \"lLAJr\nBANK OF COMMERCE\nstudents going into the practice of\nMedicine, Dentistry, Chiropractic,\nOptometry, Law, Architecture,\nChartered Accountancy, Veterinary\nMedicine, and many other\nprofessions.\nSo stop in to Our Bank soon.\nWe'll welcome you at more\n( branches than any other bank\nin Canada. And we can\n help vou finance\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0?\u00E2\u0084\u00A2R\u00E2\u0084\u00A2~.- your future. Tuesday, March 3,1961\nTHE U BYSSEY\nPage 3\nStudents struggle to save Cap\nBy NANCY CAMPBELL\nThey're not trying to save whales, they're\ntrying to save a college.\nAnd the Anti-Cutbacks Team at Capilano\nCollege is very serious about their mission: to\nsave the North Vancouver college from\n\"withering away\" from the effects of drastic\ncuts slated for next year.\nFormed Wednesday, the coalition of student, faculty and staff representatives\nalready has an alternative list of plans geared\ntowards promoting March as \"Save Capilano\nCollege\" month.\n\"We've just really got started,\" says ACT\nchair Karl Koblansky, who is also faculty\nassociation president. The formation of the\nteam followed closely upon the recent increase in tuition fees and an announced\n$700,000 cut in funding for next year.\nACT intends to make the community and\nmedia fully aware of the problems faced by\nthe college. Plans include benefit beer\ngardens, benefit performances, public soup\nkitchens, petitions, information booths, and\nthe distribution of 400 donation cans at\nNorth Shore businesses to seek contributions\ntowards the huge shortfall.\n\"ACT is optimistic about our plans,\"\nKoblansky said Monday. \"We don't know\nhow the community will react yet, though.\"\nSupport staff member Bill Little said the\ncommunity plans are similar to the actions\nundertaken over 10 years ago to establish the\ncollege.\n\"Getting the community on our side is\nvery important if we want to successfully\npressure the government to increase the college's funding,\" agreed Steve Howard, ACT\nmember and student society executive\nmember.\nKoblansky said the intent of \"Save\nCapilano College\" month is to save the college from witheftngiaway.\n\"It's not going to die, of course, but it will\nwither from the funding cuts,\" he said. \"We\ndon't want it to become less responsive to\ncommunity needs on the North Shore.\n\"We're pretty worried. We just won't be\nable to supply the same amount of community resources as we've been doing right now,\nwhich is already pretty bare bonesy.\"\nKoblansky said the $700,000 cut, which is\n10 per cent of the college's budget, will result\nin Manpower, academic and career courses\nbeing cut, as well as instructor and staff layoffs. \"Maybe whole areas will disappear, like\nthe learning assistance centre,\" he added.\nMembers of the 15 person team appeared\nbefore the three North Shore municipal\ncouncils Monday night, asking for an official\nproclamation of \"Save Capilano College\"'\nmonth.\nIt was a \"somewhat abortive\" attempt\nKoblansky said. The West Van council decided the request was a purely educational issue,\nand referred it to the school board, while the\nNorth Vancouver city and district councils\ndecided to table the request until their\nmeetings next week.\n\"At least all of the city councils have been\ninformed, even though West Van sloughed\nthe decision off to the school\nboard,\"Koblansky said. College campuses in\nSechelt, Squamish and Pemberton will also\napproach their municipal councils with the\nsame request, he added.\nThe Capilano College board was asked to\njoin ACT, but it refused, saying it is taking\naction in a different direction. The board\nsaid it is approaching the three provincial college funding bodies to secure more\nfunding, Koblansky said.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094atuart davla photo\nMEDITATING MUMMY recently found in War Memorial gym excited anthropolgy department, which said find\nconfirmed theories of physical fitness plans for Egyptian nobles to be carried out in tomb after death. Mummy,\nfrom Sithup dynasty, was found in fetal position on angled board facing bas-relief of god of participaction\nCharlatan Fatless. Worship of god demanded firm thighs and flat stomach.\n'Art is political'\u00E2\u0080\u0094Morgan\nArt without politics is a\nmisconception of terms, says well-\nknown American writer and\nfeminist Robin Morgan.\n\"Real art has never been\napolitical, including (the works of)\nDante and Shakespeare to name\ntwo of the big boys,\" Morgan told\nabout 300 people in the Woodward\nbuilding on Friday.\nWomen's art has historically\nbeen labelled \"crafts,\" because it\nhas appeared in useful forms.\n\"Another thing we already know\nOntario profs on exodus\nOTTAWA (CUP) \u00E2\u0080\u0094 The Ontario government's consistent underfun-\nding of education is driving quality professors out of the province, says the\nOntario Confederation of University Faculty Associations.\nSarah Shorten, OCUFA president and a professor at the University of\nWestern Ontario, said salaries at Ontario universities have fallen drastically\nbehind other groups.\n\"This constitutes a serious threat to the human resources of the Ontario\nuniversity system,\" she charged.\n\"The teachers in our universities represent a large and vital public investment but if professors continue to suffer erosion of salaries exacerbated by\nreductions in research support and funds for professional expenses, we risk\na major and alarming loss of scientists and scholars to other parts of the\ncountry.\"\nAccording to OCUFA, during the past eight years there has been a loss\nof 17 per cent in real terms in salaries. The cost of living has increased 95\nper cent while professors' salaries have only risen 65 per cent.\nCompare this, says Shorten, to an increase of 90 per cent in the salaries\nof community colleges teachers, 106 per cent in high school teachers'\nsalaries and 94 per cent for professional engineers.\nAssistant professors in Ontario earn an average of $19,000 a year. A professor with about 16 years experience earns between $33,000 and $40,000 a\nyear.\nShorten said the general public is convinced professors have huge incomes.\n\"I meet people who confidently believe that professors earn $45,000 a\nyear to start,\" she said.\nOCUFA has been lobbying the government concerning the underfunding\nand has's*t\u00E2\u0082\u00ACp\"p\"ecrlip* tK&6 HroHsMuTMg'WTJr&Wdar elecfiflrr fcSmpaigh.\nis that what men have done is\nknown as art, and what women\nhave done is crafts. Once it's of use,\nyuck on it.\"\nAs feminist art and the womens'\nmovement evolved they had to\nredefine \"everything, from the skin\nin, and the skin,\" Morgan said. At\nfirst women were faced with\npatriarchical standards for their art\nand had \"to learn the difference\nbetween catharsis and art,\" she added.\nShe added.that in recent years\nwomen artists in the U.S. have\nmade contact with the art produced\nby many minority groups.\n\"There was such an exciting interchange. In so many cultures art is\nnot an individual thing but a collective experience.\"\nOne question feminists must still\ngrapple with is whether there is a\nwomens' art and womens' culture,\nshe said.\n\"I look forward to the day when\nthere isn't. I would like to see that\ndifferent consciousness suffuse the\nculture so that it would no longer be\nwomens' art.\"\nArt, said Morgan, is like a\nreligious experience. \"I think\n\"basically art, when I make a poem,\nis like a prayer. I don't know how\nelse to describe it.\"\nShe added that art is very\ndefinitely a political expression. \"It\nhas ethics to it that I struggle with a\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0^.^.\u00E2\u0080\u00A2.\u00E2\u0080\u00A2.\u00E2\u0096\u00A0..\u00E2\u0080\u00A2.\u00E2\u0096\u00A0.Vm.v,-.,'.,.-.-,-.-..--.-..\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 -.-.,-.-,-,-.\nHuge fee hikes\nhit foreigners\nMONTREAL (CUP) \u00E2\u0080\u0094 The\nspeculation is over. International\nstudents studying in Quebec will be\npaying an extra $4,128 in tuition\nfees next year.\nThe increase was confirmed\nMonday by Michaele Brunet, director of services at the ministry of\neducation.\nThe announcement also included\na $1,000 fee increase for international students already studying in\nQuebec.\nUniversity officials and students\nwere highly critical of tht: move.\n\"I think this is an excessively\nlarge increase,\" charged Concordia\nUniversity rector John O'Brian.\n\"For students presently here especially it is a very big increase and an\nunexpected one.\"\nBut Brunet denied the charge.\n\"It's not that we're against foreign students, we just want foreign\nstudents to take a greater part of the\ncost,\" he said.\nThe increase will not affect all international students because of\nQuebec government deals with 11\ncountries exempting those students\nfrom differential fees, Brunet added.\nBut O'Brian did not think the\nnew policy compensates for the increase. He said the exempted students are largely from francophone\ncountries and for the most part attend Quebec's seven francophone\nuniversities.\nMcGill University principal\nDavid Johnston agreed with\nO'Elrian, saying the exemption policy was consistent with the government's \"desire to have certain types\nof foreign students studying here in\nQuebec.\"\nBeth Morey, international student advisor at Concordia, said the\nnew policy could be an election ploy\nto get votes from people who resent\nthe presence of foreign students in\nthe country.\n\"(The new policy) means a lot of\nforeign students may have to go\nhome,\" she said. \"It will be disastrous.\n\"To take out the increases on students coming from other countries\nis unfair. It seems to be part of a\nmove to increase fees everywhere.\"\nThe McGill senate and board of\ngovernors passed resolutions last\nweek protesting the then-projected\nincrease in differential fees.\nJohnston also suggested a letter-\nwriting campaign to the ministry of\neducation and provincial government, which set the fees, but was\nuncertain about how effective the\naction would be.\nQuebec student organizations\nhave also spoken out against the increase.\nThe Regroutement des association etudiantes du Quebec is against\nthe principle of differential fees,\nsaid the group's secretary-general.\n\"There should be other ways of\ndealing with international\nstudents,\" said Jose Roy. He felt\nprejudice against foreign students\nwas not a factor, and supported a\nplan of securing places for foreign\nstudents through agreemenys with\nother countries.\nBut a spokesperson for l'Associa-\ntion nationale des etudiants du Quebec felt prejudice existed and affected the policy.\n\"We have to sensitize to Quebec\nstudents who have prejudices\nagainst international students,\"\nsaid Jacques Beaudoin. He said his\ngroup is against the increase, but is\nnot optimistic about the results of\nany concentrated campaign.\n\"A lot of pressure will be needed\nto overturn the decision,\" he said.\nThe average international student\nnow pays up to $7,000 annually to\nstudy in Quebec.\nNader slams McGill\nMONTREAL (CUP) \u00E2\u0080\u0094 The McGill University student society has\njoined General Motors and IT&T\non Ralph Nader's hit list.\nNader, a prominent American\nconsumer advocate, is accusing the\ncouncil of \"strait-jacketing\" students by refusing to allow the McGill Public Interest Research Group\nto seek a refundable fee through a\ncampus referendum.\nThe fee of $2.50 would be used\nby the PIRG to create and maintain\na resource centre, and to fund research activities.\n\"This is a problern that has plagued many universities in Canada,\"\nNader said. \"You don't have to\nwony about your trusiees, but\nabout your own student representatives.\"\nCouncillors argued that McPIRG, established only two months\nago, was untried, making an autonomous levy premature.\n\"It's a big risk for a group that's\nonly been around for a while to get\nan $80,000 budget,\" student society\npresident Todd Ducharme said.\n\"And they submitted a flawed constitution. If you're going to give\nstudents a choice on something you\nhave to ensure it's a workable\nchoice.\"\nSaid Nader: \"Let's be candid \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nanytime there is a strong student\ngovernment they see a PIRG effort\nas overshadowing them \"^ Page 4\nTHE U BYSSEY\nTuesday, March 3,1961\nI \i*jr\u00C2\u00B0fc aGl^6 TO (ht Q\nLOOK\u00C2\u00A3\u00C2\u00A3>\nW\S-/ R\nIT\nTHE UBYSSEY\nMarch 3, 1981\nPublished Tuesdeys, Thursdays and Fridays throughout the university year by the\nAlma Mater Society of the University of B.C. Editorial opinions are those of the staff\nand not of the AMS or the university administration. Member, Canadian University\nPress. The Ubyssey's editorial office is in room 241K of the Student Union Building.\nEditorial departments, 228-2301; Advertising, 228-3977.\nEditor: Verne McDoneld\n\"The editor is dsad. If you see it, kin HI\" chanted Nancy Campbell, June Wheelwright and Glen Sanford. Mike Brand stomped hia feat while Craig Brooke banged tha gong. Tom Hawthorn didn't do much except smile, but Stuart Davis and Gord Wiebe marched about SUB spreading the joyful news. Jo-Anna Felkiner\nand Eric Eggerteon jumped up and down and atutterad with glee, and another unmentionable wimp waa left speechless. Too bad. Meanwhile, Arnold Hed-\nstrom drew knee on paper and drooled. Debbie Wilson gaeped, amead, left the room and spread tha news afar, which wasn't vary far because she's got such a\nlow voice. Verne McDonald just looked up and sighed. \"One more month,\" he thought, snd returned to his woric.\nWithdraw\nThere are ways in which the Alma Mater Society constitution\nshows some of the more libertarian tendencies of those who\ndrafted it.\nOn few other campuses is so small a portion of the students\ngiven the right to initiate referendums; the AMS requires only 500\nsignatures out of the student population of 23,000 to force a\nreferendum.\nBut the ease with which a referendum can be called within the\nAMS is in danger of destroying the very liberty the provision for\npetition was meant to protect: the right of the students to make an\ninformed decision as a whole. Instead we are confronted with a\nvery small group of people trying to force poor and uninformed decisions.\nThe students circulating the current series of referendum petitions, a confusing stew of serious issues, parodies, old ideas and\nnew ideas, are doing a great disservice to all members of the AMS.\nThey are mocking and abusing a very important power of the students.\nThat some of the ideas may have merit is entirely beside the\npoint. If anything, this could only have happened by accident anyway, since no one who will be affected by the referenda, such as\nCITR, the housing office, SUB building committee or ourselves,\nwere ever consulted or warned.\nWhat is to the point is that a small group of people are trying to\nlegislate for all. Nor are they giving any time for the students to\nhear any informed opinions on the petition topics. And they are accomplishing this travesty by misusing a vital tool of democracy\nwhich should only be invoked as a last resort.\nThey have had their joke and made whatever statements they\nwished to make. The petitions should be withdrawn and the groups\nthey refer to allowed to work on their own problems. All of the\nstudents have more important business than to deal with spurious\nreferenda.\n:?\u00C2\u00A7i\nWMHHjfigN\n\":%fiSI^\nBMaaBssaiaeaaaasslaiii\nWomen's speaker weakened women's cause\nAlthough women's week at UBC\nwas generally successful in terms of\nstimulating awareness of women's\nissues in a number of diverse ways,\nwe feel that the week's conclusion\nwas a disappointment rather than a\nfitting celebration of women's\ncauses.\nWe are referring to a lecture\ngiven by writer Robin Morgan and\nsponsored by the women's committee. The lecture was entitled\nFeminism in Art and Literature; accordingly, we assumed this was the\nground to be covered.\nWhat unfolded, however, were\nthe incomprehensible musings of a\nmanipulative stage personality who,\nin the name of feminism, devoted\nthe 'lecture' to reading exerpts from\nher prose and poetry. The result\nwas tantamount to a form of self-\nadvertising more suitably called The\nRobin Morgan Hour.\nExpecting to hear at least a summary account of the historical in\nvolvement of women in art and\nliterature, we were given only scant\nhistorical material which was\nneither logically presented nor\nclearly explained.\nThe lack of historical evidence\nwould have been pardonable if, in\nher writing, Morgan had been able\nto offer some unique personal insights regarding feminism \u00E2\u0080\u0094 or\nanything else. Despite her self-\nproclaimed status as an 'artist of\nthe world, her ideas were platitudes,\nand the phrases used to express\nthem unsuccessfully masked\ncliches.\nWe believe she should be charged\nwith first-degree murder of the\nEnglish tongue: using a medley of\nhybrid words, convoluted\nsentences, and pseudo-profundities\non tawdry adaptations of Zen\nphilosophy, her prose contorted the\nlanguage beyond all recognition.\nMoreover her poems, of the\nmarshmallows-of-my-mind variety,\noffered little in the way of\nsubstance or originality.\nGiven that Morgan chose not to\nestablish a historical framework for\nher lecture, at least she could have\naddressed feminist concerns in contemporary art and literature. Doing\nso, she might have.discussed definitions of feminist art/literature, why\nthere currently exists a need for\nart/literature which is specifically\n'feminist', and the complex relationship that exists between artistic\nexpression and political causes.\nThat she failed to address these or\nany other concrete issues is evidenced by the lack of discussion during\nthe ensuing question period.\nPerhaps it would be more accurate to describe Friday night's\nspeech as a sermon rather than a\nlecture. Reciting the litanies of her\nown extremist sect, Morgan preached an emotionally-based revolutionary stance, one which implied\nreplacing the current unequal\ndistribution of power with another\nequally unfair arrangement, in the\nform of a matriarchy.\nInstead of appealing to those present to broaden community support\nfor women's rights, Morgan advocated the position that feminism\nremains the concern of women only, arguing against enlisting aid\nfrom men, even the groups of gays\nand artists commonly believed to be\nmore sympathetic. In fact, by directing her comments to women only,\nMorgan chose to ignore the men in\nthe audience.\nIndeed, Morgan could only reinforce the sort of prejudice which\nmakes the term 'feminism' sound\nslightly suspect to many, conjuring\nup images of irrational, almost bitchy haters of men. The evening\nreflects the same harmful attitude\nfound earlier this year in a women's\nstudies class where the professor\nconfided her happiness that there\nwere no male students in the room;\nand in the same shortsightedness of\nother women's committee events\nwhich fail to stimulate support of\nthe movement outside the numbers\nof the already-converted.\nEve Wigod\narts 2\nJames Young\narts 4\nA letter from the president\nAn open letter to Jon Gates:\nIt warms my heart to hear from students who\nreally care about what happens on this campus. It\nimpresses me when those concerned students have\namazing credentials like \"10 years . . . in several of\nthe largest democratically run organizations in\nB.C.\"\nI appreciate learning about \"square one\" from\nsuch an individual, especially when that individual\nis so well-informed. But before we go on to square\ntwo, perhaps I should teach you about square zero.\nIn your letter you state that \"several years ago\nthe students on this campus voted by referendum to\nlevy a building fee.\" Incorrect.\nSeveral years ago (1964 to be exact), the students\npassed a referendum to raise the general AMS fee\nby $5. This $5 was applied to SUB. Note though\nthat this was part of the general fee which was diverted for use on SUB. A second $5 was currently\nin our general fees and was diverted also. The final\n$5 was then collected as caution money. This fund\nwas used for any projects (usually building projects) the students wanted to pursue. It was also applied to SUB.\nGet the picture?\nI will explain in extremely simple terms. The fee\nmandate has not ended. It has not expired. It is\nalive.\nYour point, however, is well taken. If we no\nlonger have a specific project to apply these fees to,\nwhy should we continue to collect these fees?\nI can and will answer that question and at that\ntime I will do my best to show the rest of the students on this campus why I feel the fees should continue. But that is the subject of a lengthy and involved Perspectives which I will soon be composing.\nUntil that time, I would like you and all other\nstudents to consider that question, because on\nMarch 16 to 20, you will be asked to vote on whether you wish those fees to continue. It is a referendum that I firmly support because I do believe that\nthe students should be allowed to determine the\ndestiny of their AMS. That, Mr. Gates, is democracy.\nIncidentally, Jon, let you think me a simpering,\nweak-willed wimp, I extend an invitation to you\nand all others to join the SUB users committee.\nThis committee will decide what students want to\nsee incorporated in the courtyard and plaza mall\nprojects, and will recommend to council whether\nthose projects should be pursued and brought to\nreferendum again.\nThe time has come for you to pull your foot out\nof your mouth, take the knot out of your shorts\nand dive head long into the activities with the rest of\nus. We'd love to have you.\nMarlea Haugen\nAMS president\nBoycott Blarney Stone\nWe are writing to you to protest the treatment we received at a popular\nGastown pub, The Blarney Stone, on Saturday, Feb. 21.\nWe arrived early in the evening, paying a cover charge of $3 each. A\ngroup of friends joined us shortly, and sat at an adjacent table.\nService was surly to say the least, perhaps partly because checks were\ngenerally paid individually. The waitress frequently rolled her eyes or stalked off in exasperation if she didn't receive a prompt response. Although we\nput up with being treated like unruly children, we were made to feel uncomfortable and this couldn't help but put a damper on the evening.\nAt about 11 p.m., however, the manager approached us and stated that\nthere were people outside waiting to get in who would undoubtedly buy\nmore drinks than we did. She reprimanded us further by adding that we\nhadn't had a drink for a half hour and had \"missed two rounds!' We\ncould either buy more drinks in short or leave.\nNeedless to say, we were both offended and surprised by such treatment.\nWhen we pursued the matter we were told that \"it's simply good business\npractice\" and that \"you don't understand.\" She implied that it was really\nthe adjacent table that she wanted to get rid of (which she succeeded in doing) and that \"they knew who they were.\" Admittedly, our friends had\nbeen enjoying themselves rather conspicuously, but this was entirely in\nkeeping with the spirit of the place. The band openly encouraged patrons to\n\"get well oiled\" and to \"bang your glasses on the table\" etc.\nWe made it clear on Saturday night, and we maintain it now, that if\npatrons of the Blarney Stone are expected to drink up or leave, they should\nbe told so-when they buy their tickets. It is not adequate to muscle\ncustomers into leaving after they have occupied their seats for a couple of\nhours. The fact that we were required to pay a cover charge should ordinarily entitle us to an evening of ice water if we so choose. It is beside the\npoint to maintain that \"this is a business.\" Any business which offers services to its customers at a price should make the terms of the agreement\nclear at the outset.\nWe urge readers not to patronize the Blarney Stone in light of their\nheavy-handed treatment of its patrons. Any pub which alienates its\ncustomers in this manner clearly needs a lesson in the meaning of the term\n\"good business.\"\nMary Macdonald\nhistory 4\nReid Lester\neconomics 4 Tuesday, March 3,1981\nTHE U BYSSEY\nPage 5\nNishgas fight for common good\nBy DON JOHNSON\nAmax Corporation of the World is developing a\nmolybdenum mine at Kitsault, British Columbia. In\n1979, under special Order in Council of the federal\ncabinet, they were granted permission to dump tailings\ninto the ocean at Alice Arm.\nThis will involve dumping lead, zinc, nickel, cadmium and radium 226 directly into the waters of Alice\nArm over a period of the next 26 years. This exceeds by\n8,000 times the amount permitted under federal law.\nPermission for this dumping was granted without reference to parliament and without reference to public\nhearings.\nOn Jan. 12, 1979 the provincial cabinet granted a\npollution control permit to Amax for the same operation. This permission was also granted without\nreference to the legislature and without public inquiry.\nNeither the parliaments nor the public have anything\nto say about this matter. Amax through its own studies\nclaims that by dumping the tailings into the deepest\npart of the channel that they will come to rest and not\naffect marine life in the channel. It remains difficult to\nassess the evidence in that they have not released their\nstudy to anyone.\nMany people throughout Canada have been calling\non both governments to rescind their orders and to call\na public inquiry prior to the opening of the mine.\nNeither government has yet responded to the call. The\nNishga has invited Amax to join them in a call for a\npublic inquiry. Amax responded by saying that the\ndumping of the toxic tailing into Alice Arm was\nperfectly safe.\nFor the Nishga the implications of this dumping\ncould be drastic on their lives. Much of their income\ncomes from fishing. Much of their diet is fish. They\nfear the possibility of poisoning as these toxic metals\nmove along the food chain. They fear the loss of\nresource which has sustained them for their whole\nhistory. They fear the loss of culture and life.\nThe same questions are not only being raised by the\nNishga but also by many other people in B.C. Are we\nto allow the possibility of the loss of an important\nsource of food to take place in this province because a\nmining corporation has assured us that all they do will\nbe safe and we have nothing to fear?\nThe record of Amax in environmental issues appears\nto be dubious. At the present time they face a number\nof court cases in the United States over the issue of environmental damage. Are we to blindly accept that\ntheir studies are sufficient for the people of this province?\nThis case also says something about the country in\nwhich we live. Most of us would agree that we would\nhope that in environmental issues that affect the life\nand health of all that it would be a matter of course\nthat a public inquiry would be held.\nWhy is it still possible in this country that legislation\nstill exists which permits a few to make decisions for us\nall without our knowledge and without our input? We\nremain victims of secrecy and private interest groups\nwho can go beyond the law with a secret government\norder. Will private interest groups, multi-national corporations continue to force their plans onto the rest of\nus with careless abandonment for our welfare and the\nwelfare of people like the Nishga?\nWhat is to be done? In the short run it would appear\nthat we must join with the Nishga and call both the\nfederal and the provincial governments to rescind the\nOrders in Council and to create a public inquiry. In\nthis inquiry people must be called as witnesses and\nmust be permitted to bring in testimony regarding the\nsafety of this venture.\nThere is considerable evidence that Amax is wrong\nand all of this evidence must be called for. Labor\ngroups, churches, environmental groups are already\ninvolved in this process. Pressure must be brought to\nbear on the Houses of Ottawa and Victoria.\nNot far from the Amax mines on Alice Arm is\nanother body of ore which is located in the Alaska\npanhandle and which has enormous deposits. This\nmine is owned by Rio Tinto and it is proposed that the\ntailing from this mine also be dumped into the ocean.\nAs a chaplain on this campus I belong to a group\ncalled \"Project North\". This association supported by\nnational churches has for the past few years sought to\nsupport Native groups in the north. The churches have\nseen that the Gospel calls us to stand with the poor and\nthe powerless.\nThe peoples of the north have always insisted that\nwe have common concerns and that we must stand\ntogether in solidarity. We have had to struggle to know\nwhat this means. Too often churches have been paternalistic. This issue of a threatened environment calls us\nto stand together with the Nishga.\nTheir lives are threatened by this mine. We discover\nthat our lives are threatened as well. We can stand in\nsolidarity over this issue. I call on students and faculty\nto respond in all ways possible to insure a public inquiry.\nDon Johnson is a chaplain from the Lutheran Campus Ministry. Perspectives is heavily backlogged column not for long open to members of the university\ncommunity. Only 11 issues left.\nCAMPUS\nBICYCLES\n* Same day service on small repairs\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 in by 10 out by 6.\n* 24 hour service on most other repairs.\nIN U.B.C. VILLAGE\n6706 University Blvd.\nQUALITY\nBICYCLES &\nACCESSORIES\n224-0611\nTHIS WEEK AT HILLEL HOUSE\nTUES., MARCH 3rd:\nShefa Vegetarian Lunch\nVl:30a.m.-2:00p.m.\nWED., MARCH 4th:\nFREE SALAMI LUNCH\nSponsored by B'nai B'rith Women. 11:30 a.m.-2:00 p.m.\nSpeaker: Stan Urman, Assistant National Director of Canadian Jewish Congress\nTHURS., MARCH Sth:\nShefa Vegetarian Lunch\n11:30 a.m.-2:00 p.m.\nFRI., MARCH 6th:\nISRAEL DANCING\n12:30 p.m.\nFREDERIC WOOD THEATRE\nTHE RIVALS\nA Comedy\nby Richard Brinsley Sheridan\nDirected By John Brockington\nMARCH 6-14\n(Previews \u00E2\u0080\u0094 March 4 8-5)\n8:00 p.m.\nMatinee \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Thursday, March 12 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 12:30\nStudent Tickets: $3.50\nBox Office * Frederic Wood Theatre * Room 207\nSupport Your Campus Theatre\nATTENTION ALL\nINTRAMURAL REFEREES!!\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 Play-off schedules have now been\nposted\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 Please sign-up as soon as possible in\nWMG Rm. 203.\nFIRST COME! FIRST SERVE!\nNOTICE OF ANNUAL\nGENERAL MEETING\nThea Koerner House\nGRADUATE STUDENT\nCENTRE\nThursday, March 19,1981\nat 12:30 in the Ballroom at the Centre\nNOMINATIONS\nNOMINATIONS are now being accepted for thraa positions\non tha Board of Directors of tha Graduate Student Centre.\nTWO ordinary members shall be elected for a term of one year\nand ONE for a term of two years.\nNomination FORMS are available at the Centre office, until\nTuesday. March 17, 1981 at 4:30 p.m.\nASH WEDHESDAY\nWEDNESDAY, MARCH 4th\n12:30 p.m.\nSUB 207-209\nSERVICE OF SOLIDARITY\nAND REFLECTION\nSpeaker:\nARCHBISHOP TED SCOTT\nCHAPLAINS U.B.C. Page 6\nTHE U BYSS EY\nTuesday, March 3,1981\n'Tween classes\nTODAY\nSTUDENT LIBERALS\nGanaral maating, noon, SUB 213.\nLSM\nShrove Tuesday, with packs snd repentance, 6\np.m., followed by discussion, 7 p.m.. Lutheran\nCampus Centra.\nAMNESTY UBC\nInformation booth on tha German Democratic\nRepublic snd Dsnylo Shumuk, form letters available to sign, sH week, noon. SUB concourse.\nHILLEL HOUSE\nShefa lunch, 11 a.m. to 2 p.m.. Hisel House, behind Brock HsH.\nCCCM\nEucharist with Rev. Gaofge Hermanson, noon,\nLutheran Campus Centre.\nwso\nKoerner Foundation special lectures: Judge Nancy Morrison spaaks on the impact of the\nwomen's movement on contemporary culture,\nnoon, Buch. penthouse.\nS.F. SOCIETY\nCritically important organizational meeting for all\nmembers, please attend; it has just Dean discovered the executives are alien beings, noon, SUB\n111.\nHUMAN SETTLEMENTS VIEWING CENTRE\nThe Shock of the New: a PBS-TV documentary\nwhich explores pop art, noon. Library Processing\n308.\nH.E.. P.E. and F.S.\nNutrition information displays snd fitness testing, 11 a.m. to 2 p.m., SUB concourse.\nSUB ART GALLERY COMMITTEE\nBachelor of Fine Arts srt show, open week days\nuntil March 13, 11 a.m. to 4 p.m., SUB art\ngallery.\nWEDNESDAY\nAQUASOC\nMarine identifcation seminar, free slide show and\ntalk by marine biologist Rick Hsrbo everyone\nwelcome 7 30 p m Law 201\nH.E.. P.E. and F.S.\nNutrition information displays and fitness testing, 11 a.m. to 2 p.m., SUB concourse.\nAction B.C. computer nutrtion sssassment, 5 to\n8 p.m., Gage reaidence.\nJoyce MacKay speaks on nutrition and fitness,\nnoon, IRC 1.\nHUMAN SETTLEMENTS VIEWING CENTRE\nAscent of Man series: The ladder of creation,\nabout Darwin and Wallace and the theory of\nevolution, noon, Library Processing 308.\nQAY PEOPLE OF UBC\nDrop-in, 2:30 to 4:30 p.m., SUB 215.\nNDP CLUB\nGeneral meeting, noon, SUB 211.\nHILLEL HOUSE\nFree salami lunch sponsored by B'nai B'rrth\nwoman, also special gueat Stan Urman from\nMontreal, assistant national director, Canadian\nJewish Congress, noon, Hillel Houae, behind\nBrock Hall.\nCCCM\nCommunity feast, 5:30 p.m., Lutheran Campus\nCentre.\nINTERNATIONAL HOUSE\nFrench conversational evening, 7:30 p.m.. International House, st gete 4.\nINTRAMURALS\nRegistration deadline for sailing regatta, War\nMemorial Gym 203. Event occurs Saturday at\nJericho Beach, instruction available.\nTHURSDAY\nPRE DENTAL SOCIETY\nDr. Swanson speaks on oral surgery, all members please attend noon, IRC 4.\nAQUASOC\nMarine identificetion seminer, with free slide\nshow and talk by marine biologist Rick Harbo.\nEveryone welcome, 7:30 p.m.. Law 201.\nGAY PEOPLE OF UBC\nCedar Dolby of the Weaver's Institute speaks\nabout what to do t'l1 your p\"\"ce a\"'ves noo\"\nSUB 212\nWUSC\nMarvey MacKinnon from Oxfam speaks on the\nsituation in El Salvador, noon, Buch. 206.\nLE CLUB FRANCAIS\nGeneral meeting, noon, SUB 230.\nLATIN AMERICAN SOLIDARITY COMMITTEE\nVideotape showing current reality of Chile, 11\ns.m. to 2 p.m., SUB concourse.\nHILLEL HOUSE\nShefa lunch, 11 s.m. to 2 p.m., Hillel Houss behind Brock Had.\nCASV\nLecture, 8 p.m., Vancouver Art Gallery.\nIVCF\nThe world win end at 7 p.m., 7:30 in Newfoundland, whh speaker George MeUone, noon,\nChem. 250.\nINTERNATIONAL HOUSE\nMorie: the sacred world of the Mayas, noon. International Houaa 400.\nCHRISTIAN SCIENCE ORGANIZATION\nPublic meeting, noon, SUB 117. Office is in SUB\n230a.\nFRIDAY\nGAY PEOPLE OF UBC\nPlanning meeting, noon, SUB 115.\nUBC PROGRESSIVE CONSERVATIVE CLUB\nImportant elections for executive for 1981-82\nseason, noon, SUB 206.\nLE CLUB FRANCAIS\nGeneral meeting, noon, International House\nlounge.\nLASC\nBenefit Nicaragua reconstruction: music, bar,\nfood, $3 donation to help build a rural radio station, 8 p.m.. International House.\nDANGEROUS RADICALS\nDEPROGRAMMING SOCIETY\nSpeech on normalcy, all members must attend.\nLibrary Processing building 206.\nTHE UBYSSEY\nNe*juspap8*r design g\u00C2\u00ABminar 3 p.m. Ubvssev office in SUB 241k\nFitness and\nnutrition\nNothing funny here. Just some\nreal sensical information on\nWednesday from those kind folks in\nhome economics, phys ed and food\nservices.\nStarting at 11 a.m., there will be\nnutrition information displays and\nfitness testing in SUB. At noon in\nIRC room 1, Joyce MacKay will\nspeak on nutrition and fitness. And\nat 5 p.m. till 8 peeyem in Gage\nTowers, these same kind folks will\nprovide a computer nutrition\nassessment. (Dammit, I wrote a\nwhole hot flash without coming up\nwith a funny way to alter 'you are\nwhat you eat.' Shit.)\nGarbage\nCivic workers on strike? You\nmean that you didn't notice the\npiles of garbage around the city?\nOh, you thought that the garbage\nwas a new art form put out by drug-\ncrazed weirdos. Well anyways,\nthere is a rally at Vancouver city hall\ntoday at noon to support the strikers. So if you are so inclined drop\nby and show you can fight city hall\nand win.\nVroo Mhumvk\nAmnesty for Danylo Shumuk.\nWhatl You don't know who Danylo\nShumuk is, and you got into UBC?\nTo satisfy your obviously over-\n\"EXTRAORDINARY!\"\nMS\nGeneS**}* I\nNBC IV\nW/Richard Grere\n\u00C2\u00A3r Brooke Adams\nI Wed., Mar. 4\u00E2\u0080\u00948 p.m.\nThurs., Mar. 5\n12:30 noon\n1*1.00 SUB Aud I\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00C2\u00AB\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nhair studio inc.\nMake an appointment today\nand give your head a rest.\n224-1922\n\u00E2\u0084\u00A2 224-9116 W\nHot flashes\nwhelming curiosity (after all, you\nare still reading this), drop by the\nAmnesty International booth in the\nSUB concourse some time this\nweek.\nPeople there will tell you about\nthe prisoner of consciousness program, and give you information on\nthe German Democratic Republic.\nYou can also sign form letters, supporting Shumuk.\nSo drop by their booth. Because,\nyou know, not everybody can be\nfree like you and I.\nLay down\nThe plans have been all laid out.\nIt's designed by fate that if you wish\nto learn the newspaper skill of layout and design, you should show\nup in The Ubyssey office at 3 p.m.\nFriday.\nTom Hawthorn, the B.C. bureau\nCINEMAWEST\nPresents\nchief for Canadian University Press,\nwill limber up his phlegm ruler and\nbe there to give a seminar on that\nvery topic.\nThe Ubyssey office can be found\nin SUB 241k, the northwest corner\nof the building. The seminar is open\nto ali.\nIn fact, students who don't show\nup and complain later will have their\nfaces laid out on the ground.\nSUBFILMS Presents\nThe Best of the\nN.Y. Erotic Film Festival\nMARCH 5-8\nThurs., Sun. 7:00; Fri., Sat. 7:00 Er 9:00\n$1.00 w/AMS Card SUB Auditorium\n1981\nIntramural\nBanquet\nFRIDAY, MARCH 20, 1981\nFaculty Club\n6:00 p.m.-1:a.m. \u00E2\u0080\u0094 $12/person\nRESERVED TABLES of 10 at $120.00\nReception: 6:00-7:00 p.m.\n(a) Unit Manager Presentation\n(b) Sport Champion Photographs\n7:00-8:00 p.m. - Dinner\n8:00-9:00 p.m. \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Honour Awards\n9:00-9:30 p.m. \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Entertainment Feature\n9:30-1:00 a.m. - Dance\nTickets Available Starting\nMONDA Y, MARCH 9th\nat IntraMural Office: WMG 203\nALL INTRAMURAL PARTICIPANTS\nAND GUESTS ARE WELCOME\nTHE CLASSIFIEDS\n**Tf:S:CBmp\u00C2\u00BBa~3tinaa,\n*iUm*,Xic.\nC\u00C2\u00ABmm\u00C2\u00ABrcW-3fInw,1d\u00C2\u00ABy\u00C2\u00AB.\u00C2\u00BB;addttton^\n&6*\u00C2\u00BBr\u00C2\u00A3ir*f\u00C2\u00AB^\n. , / aaadBmisti;ma.m.mdayWt^ '\"' \u00E2\u0096\u00A0- .X.\nPublications Office, Room24f, S.U.B, UBC, Van, B.C. V6T2A5.\n5 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Coming Events\nAMNESTY UBC 1961-82 executive nominations are now open. Election meeting to be\nheld in Rm. 224 on Thursday, March 12,\n1961.\nUBC SAIUNQ CLUB BZZR GARDEN Wed.\nMarch 4 Room 206 SUB 8:00 p.m.\n10 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 For Sale \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Commercial\nFRUIT LEATHER. Delicious Dried Fruit\nTreat from Okanagan Valley. Write now for\nmail order catalogue and free sample. Edible dried goods. Box 843, Penticton, B.C.\n11 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 For Sale \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Private\nFOR SALE 1976 Grey Mazda 808. New Tires,\nRadio, Thirty-Six Thousand Miles. Phone\n731-9332.\nFULL AND PART TIME shippers wanted\nby local stereo store. Opportunity to learn\nto mount cartridges and deal with\ncustomers. Drivers licence an asset. Reply\nin writing to Box 100, The Ubyssey, Room\n241, SUB.\nSTUDENT (Mala preferred) to walk around\ncampus for approx. 2 days (4-5 hrs. per\nday) and conduct survey. Call Steve\nCrumpton 985-9594.\n36 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Lost\nGOLD CHAIN with 1 gram gold pendant.\nGold bracelet engraved \"Kathryn\" at\nAquatic Center or Wesbrook Parking Lot\nFeb. 11th. Phone 261-2489. Reward.\nLOST MY WALLET. Keep money but please\nturn wallet and contents to Brock Hall\nLost/Found or phone 224-6910. D.\nMcDevitt.\n60 - Rides\n66 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Scandals\n80 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Tutoring\nTUTORING in English offered by fully\nqualified and experienced British teacher.\nTel 224-1103.\nHAVE MANY QUESTIONS about business\nstatistics. Surely someone wants to help by\nteaching me. Its ubiquitous nowadays.\n86 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Typing\n40 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Messages\n15 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Found\n50 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Rentals\n20 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Housing\nARE YOU TIRED of commuting to U.B.C.\nevery morning? If so, the Student Housing\nOffice may be able to help. We now have\nvacancies for women in Totem Park\nResidence. There are only seven double\nrooms left \u00E2\u0080\u0094 so act quickly. Come to the\nStudent Housing Office during regular office hours (8:30 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.) and let\nus help you solve your housing problem.\nFor info 228-2811.\nGRADUATING BSMT. STE. required for\nSept. Will rent through summer if\nnecessary. Call Susan evenings 321-4013.\nROOM TO RENT on campus April 1st\nsingle or double. Call 228-9334/921-9518.\nFURNISHED APARTMENT 3 bedrooms,\nbathrooms, living and dining room, kitchen\nconventient location to sublet from May-\nSept. Faculty or reliable students preferred.\nRent negotiable. Write Apt. 5, 4643 Sherbrooke St., West, Montreal, H3Z 1G2 or\nphone 514-933-5120.\n70 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Services\n30 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Jobs\nNANNY (21-26) req'd. for 13 yr. ok) girt in\ntown near Venice, Italy for 3-4 mos. Must\nbe fluent in English. Transportation to Italy\nyour responsibility. To begin work immediately. Phone 681-1994 after 6:00 p.m.\nFUNCTIONAL FITNESS\nAPPRAISAL AVAILABLE\nThs J. M. Buchanan FKneee and Raaaareh\nCantra (located downstairs In tha UBC\nAquatic Cantra) ia administering a comprahen-\navesabie to students, faculty, staff and ths\nganaral pubic.\nA compute ssssssmsnl takss approximately\none hour and enrnmpaaass tha various finises\ntests, an interpretation of results, detailed\ncounseling and an sxerdee praecrtptjon.\nCost: Stud\u00C2\u00ABnts-*16.00\nAll Others: 420.00\nFor additional information please call\n228-3996 or inquire st REC UBC, War\nMemorial Gym, Room 203.\nTYPING \u00E2\u0080\u0094 IBM Selectric Carbon ribbon 90c\nper page. Tonnae 732-6653 anytime morning/night.\nYEAR-ROUND EXPERT typing theses and\nessays. 738-6829 from 10:00 a.m. to 9:0C\np.m.\nTERM PAPERS, resumes, reports, essays,\ncomposed, edited, typed. Published\nauthor. Have Pen Will Write: 665-9536.\nTYPING SERVICES for theses, correspondence, etc. Any field. French also available.\nI.B.M. selectric. Call 736-4042.\nTYPING IBM SELECTRIC $1.00 per page.\nFast, accurate, experienced typist. Phone:\n873-8032 (10:00 a.m.-10:00 p.m.).\nEXPERT TYPING: essays, term papers,\nfactums, letters, manuscripts, resumes,\ntheses. IBM Selectric II. Reasonable rates.\nRose 731-9867.\nESSAYS. THESES. MANUSCRIPTS, including technical, equational, reports, letters, resumes. Fast, accurate, Bilingual.\nClemy 266-6641.\n90 - Wanted\nONE BDRM. APT. needed ASAP. Cash\nreward for suitable offer. 738-0449 or\n228-5336.\n99 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Miscellaneous Tuesday, March 3,1981\nTHE UBYSSEY\nPage 7\nc\n'Bird droppings\nJ\nUBC's athletic endeavours for\nthe year are winding down, with\nmost teams either resting up for the\nnational finals or else eliminated\nfrom Canada West play.\nThe Thunderbird basketball team\nended their season this weekend by\nsplitting a pair of games with the\nUniversity of Lethbridge Pronghorns. Friday night UBC managed to easily defeat a disinterested\nPronghorn team by a score of\n92-78, while on Saturday the Pronghorns overcame a 47-36 UBC\nlead at halftime to take the game\n81-80. Both teams were already\neliminated from the Canada West\nplayoffs.\n* \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nAfter finishing the season at the\nbottom of the league, 'Birds hockey\ncoach Bert Halliwell has decided to\npack it in. Word from the athletic\noffice has it that a decision on a\nreplacement will not be announced\nTESTIMONIAL\nI used to write\ncoherently in full\nsentences, with no\ngrammatical errors,\nand I never\nmisquoted anyone.\nThen I joined\nThe Ubyssey. My life\nwill never be\nthe same.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 Bert Smegg\nUbyssey\nFashion Editor\nBILL DOCKSTEADER\nMi Mileage Maker, Bill Docksteader. says you'll\nalways find best m-town Honda deals at\nDocksteader's Kingsway Honda, 446 Kmgswayl\nCaH 879-7414 'tH 9p.m. Are you a UBC student?\nCheck out our UBC specials behwt\nT\u00C2\u00BB Honda Civic rr.tchb.ckl Gotd 4-spd!\n66 000 mitosl Show us your student card for\nUBC special \u00E2\u0080\u0094 only price of tMISJ,\n77 Honda CMc hatchback! Another golden\ndeal! 67,000 kmagel But a UBC speciol, onty\n71 Honda Civic wagon! Brown 4-spdl Only\n33,000 kml Only MMSI\n70 Volvol It's a 1421 Blue 2-dr. four-spaed!\n97,000 miles. Open to studsnt offers on asking\nprice of tllKI \t\nBring this ad with you to:\nDocksteader's\nKINGSWAY\nHONDA!\n445 Kingsway 879-7414\nSo many mora good used\ncan to chooaa from I\nDLt711\nAU UNITS SUBJECT TO PRIOR SAUI\nuntil after the national hockey\nplayoffs next month.\n* \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nThe Thunderette curling team\nmanaged a tie for second place with\nthe University of Lethbridge at the\nCanada West playoffs held in\nLethbridge last weekend. First place\nwent to the University of Saskatchewan Huskiettes, while the\nUniversity of Victoria came third.\n* \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nUBC's Cathy Bultitude was the\nonly Thunderette basketball player\nnamed to a Canada West All-Star\nteam last weekend in Victoria.\nBultitude, the sixth highest scorer in\nthe league, was named to the second\nall-star team.\n* \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 *\nThe Thunderbird rugby team\nreturned unbeaten from a four-\ngame California tour Friday after\ndecimating teams from the newly-\nformed West Coast Universities\nConference.\nUBC started off the tour by completely humiliating the previously\nundefeated Stanford squad 37-0.\nThey went on to defeat UC-Santa\nBarbara 28-3, UCLA 30-11 and\nUC-Berkeley 9-3.\nAccording to coach Donn\nSpence, \"it was our team play that\ndid it.\" Team play is regarded as\nthe key to consistently winning\nrugby and UBC has it down to a\nscience, he said.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 * \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nMorton Shnur, the world famous\ntiddlywink champion, visits UBC\nThursday to speak on thumb exercises.\nThe Scotland born twice winner\nof the grand tour tiddlywink championship will also try and establish a\nNorth American university league.\nHe concedes the sport is rather\nobscure, but is a fantastic event for\nspectators, especially university\nstudents.\nGRADS\nPhone now for your appointment for\nyour complimentary sitting\nAm0grapii\u00C2\u00AETD\n\"UBC's Official Graduation Portrait\nPhotographers since 1969\"\n(We are pleased that we have again been endorsed the Grad Class\nPhotographers by the 19B1 Grad Class Council).\n3343 WEST BROADWAY\nVANCOUVER, B.C. V6R 2B1\nPhone: (604) 732-7446\nThis Week\nJERRY DOUCETTE\nFRASER ARMS\n1450 S.W. Marine Drive\nCALLING ALL\nCYCLO-COMMUTERS!\nRIDE YEAR-\nROUND on a\nCUSTOMIZED\nBRC ROADACE\nwith\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 All Rounder Bars \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Union Combilite\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Anatomic Saddle \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Esge Fenders \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Mini Toeclips\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Kangaroo Baggs \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 BRC Rear Carrier \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Zefal HP Pump\nReg. $436.00\nPackage $400.00\nless Baggs $340.00\nSALES TAILORED TO\nYOUR NEEDS\n3771 W. 10th at Alma\n224-3536\nMake sure\nyour bright ideas\ndorftg^off track.\nA message of special interest to students*\nWe're not only happy to see a bright idea get rolling;\nwe'll even help pay the freight.\nBut it's important to get our acts together now.\nMarch 16th is the final submission date for projects under\nthe Summer Canada '81 program. So if you and your\nsponsor are already on track, don't let your project get\nstalled by a late application.\nFor projects accepted, we'll put up salary contributions equal to the provincial minimum wage. And up to\n$35 overhead, per person, per week.\nSo make sure your sponsor sends in that application\nto the Canada Employment and Immigration Commission,\nby March 16. Because we want to see your bright idea\nget a green light.\nof D\"S.it*Ki Person\n14 1981 W\nI*\nEmployment and Emploi et\nImmigration Canada Immigration Canada\nLloyd Axworthy. Minister Lloyd Axworthy. Mi rust re\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2Vnpff nter natonak?\nsO J1*1\nCanada Page 8\nTHE U BYSSEY\nTuesday, March 3,1981\nPIRG builds framework\n- gord wisba photo\nOMINOUS SHADOW of Huey gunship menaces first robin of spring as it\ngambols through sylvan sunshine. Robin told photog it didn't feel safe in\ntoday's society. \"Don't shoot?' it cried.\nIt is hoped that any bad feelings will soon be PIRG-\ned.\nThe Public Interest Research Group organizing club\nat UBC approved in principle a framework for a constitution Monday night after a gruelling four hour\nmeeting. Club officials say they hope the framework\nwill clear up any questions or anxieties students may\nhave about the group.\nPIRG spokesperson Carol Riviere said the group\nnow wants student input into the constitution before it\nis finalized. She said she expects the constitution to be\naccessible to students before a referendum to fund the\ngroup goes before students Mar. 16 to 20.\nAt the meeting the organizing club settled several\ncontroversial items, according to Riviere. Most\nnotably, a formula for how much representation\neach B.C. university would have on the board of directors was decided.\nEvery campus in the province which chooses by\nreferendum to join B.C. PIRG will have at least one\nelected representative on the board. Campuses with\nbetween 2,500 and 5,000 students will get two direc\ntors, and one more director will be added for every\n5,000 students on campus.\nRiviere said the framework must also be approved\nby PIRG organizers at Simon Fraser University.\nShe said the framework approved at UBC allows for\na lot of autonomy on local campuses in the area of\norganization. For instance, she said the method for\nelecting representatives to the board of directors and\nthe mechanism to refund students who do not wish to\nhelp fund the group will be decided locally.\n\"Things like that have to be done on an individual\nbasis,\" she said.\nThe PIRG organizing club at UBC has not yet decided how elections and refunds will be handled, but\nRiviere said the group is looking for student input.\nPIRGs are an idea developed by consumer advocate\nRalph Nader. They are designed to provide students\nwith a mechanism to research consumer, worker, environmental and student issues. One project of the\nlocal group is to establish a research centre for\nstudents.\nThe group is to be run on a province-wide basis by\ndemocratically elected directors.\nUbyssey fails to explain why Godiva is wrong\nFar be it from me to tell you how\nto cover engineering week. We just\nhad a mob of a hundred engineers\nstorm up to our office, bang on the\ndoor for 20 minutes, tear hundreds\nof papers up and demand their\nmoney back.\nThis violent turn against us is\ndirectly related to our engineering\nweek coverage, but that's another\nstory. As human rights coordinator, I'd like to comment on\nyours.\nI had some problems with the picture of the Godiva ride in your\nJan. 22 issue. I can see your reasons\nfor running it, that you can't ignore\nsuch a major event on campus, and\nthat you are not sympathetic to\ntheir cause is evident from the cutting cutline. And indeed, the accompanying news story presents\nboth sides fairly.\nHowever, nowhere is there an\neditorial comment or explanation as\nto why the ride is still sexist\n\"despite the fact that about 50 male\nengineers wore no trousers or\nunderwear ...\"\nSo, just in case it hasn't been explained to you, I will give you the\nreasons why I think it is sexist.\nThe woman on the horse is still\nsingled out from the crowd and is\non display for her physical beauty.\nThe 50 men marching with their\nmembers hanging out are not to be\njudged. It just makes more explicit\nthe fraternal bonding which occurs\nand in which no woman can par\nticipate on an equal basis.\nThe woman is being objectified\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 she is being looked upon as a\n'thing? not a human. This serves to\nto all women as merely trophies for\nmen.\nI could go on to explain how this\nfurthers the division of roles in our\nsociety, polarizing people according\nto sex, granting the power to men,\nwho use it to \"keep women in their\nplace,\" but I'll keep it short.\nI guess I would have liked to have\nseen an analysis of that sort along\nwith the Godiva ride to balance it\noff and provide food for thought.\nAll the picture does now is make the\nride accessible to those who missed\nit.\nOtherwise I've been really pleased with your paper in terms of sexist\nand racist content \u00E2\u0080\u0094 there is very\nlittle. I commend you on your\nfeatures concerning women's\nissues, Julie's feature on women in\nthe universities was valuable, as\nwas Lori Thicke's background on\nthe goddesses.\nAs well it's good to see a paper\nusing terms like chairperson instead\nof chairman \u00E2\u0080\u0094 many papers refuse\nto do this.\nnina miller\nWRCUP human rights\ncoordinator\nGather for tales of oppression and torture\nIt is almost a joke to talk about\nhuman rights these days, but the\njoke is a grim one. An excerpt from\nAmnesty International's latest\nbulletin tells part of the story:\n\"They (30 Chileans) were held in\nsecret detention centres for five\ndays and were reported to have\nbeen brutally tortured by being kept\nhanging by the feet for hours; by\nbeing taken outdoors and having\ntheir naked bodies hosed with jets\nof icy water (it was winter in Chile);\nRight to cross line\nYour editorial of Tuesday, Feb.\n24 stated that picket lines should be\nrespected, regardless of the issues\ninvolved or the way in which the\nprotest is carried out. I disagree.\nStrikes and pickets are not good\nby themselves, because they disrupt\npeople's lives. They are only worthwhile if they achieve something of\nvalue, or change unfair practices.\nStrikers set up pickets to register\ntheir protest.\nBut by the same token, if citizens\nfeel that the power of unions is being misused, they have a similar\nright to protest, by crossing the line.\nThe right to decide for oneself is a\nfundamental human right. We cannot forfeit our responsibility to\nthink, because a protest is approved\nby a registered union.\nUnions have achieved a lot. But I\nwonder, when the TWU strike is\nover, will anything have really\nchanged? If the union is pressing\nfor human rights for their workers,\nor for greater worker control of the\ncompany, I haven't heard of it.\nIf the employees gain more benefits or higher wages, that's fine, I'll\nThe Ubyssey welcomes letters\nfrom all readers.\nAlthough an effort is made to\npublish all letters received, The\nUbyssey reserves the right to edit\nletters for reasons of brevity, legality and taste.\nNeatness counts.\nlisten to their protest, but I shan't\nrearrange my life each time a contract negotiation breaks down.\nQuality of life is what's important, not only higher wages. When\nunions start holding out for some\nreal changes, they have my full support, but until then, I reserve the\nright to draw my own lines.\nSylvia Berryman\nby being punched and kicked. Some\nwere said to have been forced to\nswallow human excrement and\nurine.\"\nCertainly human rights are in a\npitiful state when children are tortured before their parents; when\nover 8,000 people \"disappeared\" in\nEl Salvador in the past year; when\npeople are held for months,\nsometimes years, without trial;\nwhen the Soviet authorities crack\ndown on the Helsinki monitors . . .\nThe university community should\nparticularly sympathize with what is\nhappening to students and\nacademics elsewhere in the world.\nFor instance, in Benin, Africa, at\nleast 30 students are being held\nwithout legal redress, while only\nthis month 20 faculty members of\nthe National University in El\nSalvador were taken by armed\ntroops.\nIntellectuals are not, however,\nthe only ones who suffer repression.\nTrade unionists, the present\npopulation of a country,\nhousewives \u00E2\u0080\u0094 all are potential victims, whether through torture,\ndetention, or permanent removal.\nSince 1961 Amnesty International, a world-wide organization,\nhas documented many such instances of human rights violations.\nTheir number is appalling.\nIn an effort to increase campus\nawareness of the world human\nrights situation, Amnesty UBC, one\nof the many AI groups throughout\nthe world, is holding a public\ndiscussion on human rights. We ask\nboth students and faculty members\nto come and participate.\nTwo professors teaching at UBC,\nHarold Kasinsky and Boydan\nCzaykowski, will speak on Scientists and Human Rights and Human\nRights in Eastern Europe respectively. Afterwards there will be an\ninformal discussion of whatevr\nissues are raised.\nThe forum will take place on Friday, Mar. 6, at 7:30 p.m. in\nBuchanan Lounge (down the hall\nfrom Buch. 207). Alcoholic\nrefreshments will be available.\nIn the meantime, consider that in\nmany countries today such an\nassembly would be forbidden and\nlabeled \"subersive.\"\nAlice Kim\narts 2\nJohnart Hairstyling\nWith Spring Perm Special we include\nfree conditioners.\nPERMS, BODYWAVES, HENNAS\nFor Men and Women\n738-8011\n2691 West Broadway\nYou are invited to a free, 3-night course on\nLANDLORD & TENANT LAW\nSPONSORED BY THE PEOPLE'S LAW SCHOOL\nPre-reglster by calling 734-1128\nMARCH 24, 25 and 26 - 7:30-9:30 p.m.\nLocation: KITSILANO NEIGHBOURHOOD HOUSE\n2303 West 7th near Vine\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 Wheelchair Access \u00E2\u0080\u0094\n(This ad was sponsored by The UBC Off-Campus\nHousing Office)\nHAIR\nStudent Discount with\nPresentation of this Ad\nExpires March 10th, 1981.\nBy Terry, Karen or Debbie.\nKEN HIPPERT HAIR CO. LTD. onQ\n5736 UNIVERSITY BLVD. AAO'\n(In the Village next to tha Lucky Dollar store)\n228-1471\n\u00C2\u00AE\nCUSO\nDialogues on Development\nThursday, March 5\n\"NATIVE PEOPLE IN CANADA\"\nSession 8 of a nine-part series on some of the issues of development.\nFee: $1.00 per session\nSpeakers: The Union of B.C. Indian Chiefs will give a presentation on\nthe native position with respect to the New Canadian Constitution\nINTERNATIONAL HOUSE\nUpper Lounge \u00E2\u0080\u0094 7:30 p.m."@en . "Newspapers"@en . "Vancouver (B.C.)"@en . "LH3.B7 U4"@en . "LH3_B7_U4_1981_03_03"@en . "10.14288/1.0127716"@en . "English"@en . "Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library"@en . "Vancouver : Alma Mater Society of the University of B.C."@en . "Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy, or otherwise use these images must be obtained from The Ubyssey: http://ubyssey.ca/"@en . "Original Format: University of British Columbia. Archives"@en . "University of British Columbia"@en . "The Ubyssey"@en . "Text"@en . ""@en .