"CONTENTdm"@en . "http://resolve.library.ubc.ca/cgi-bin/catsearch?bid=1211252"@en . "University Publications"@en . "2015-08-28"@en . "1974-10-17"@en . "Misprinted volume, should be LVII."@en . ""@en . "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/Ubysseynews/items/1.0127731/source.json"@en . "application/pdf"@en . " ACT COVERS DORMS\nBy JAKE van der KAMP\nUBC residences are now\ncovered by the Landlord\nand Tenant Act, provincial\nrentalsman Barrie Clark\nannounced Wednesday.\nClark told The Ubyssey\nhe will disregard a section\nin the Landlord and\nTenant Act which exempts\nfrom the act accommodation considered\nlicensed under common\nlaw.\nResidences fall in this category\nbecause there are rules restricting\nstudents accepted for accommodation, he said.\nClark said he decided to claim\njurisdiction over all rental accommodation in B.C. after consultation with his lawyers.\nHe said his decision will be\nchanged only if it is challenged and\noverruled in court.\nThe decision followed protests\nfrom tenants of downtown hotels\nwhere rents were raised above the\neight per cent rental increase limit\nafter landlords decided they were\nexempted from the act under the\nlicensed accommodation section.\nBruce Eriksen of the Downtown\nEast Side Residents Association\ncharged Oct. 10 that rents in some\neast side hotels were being raised\nby as much as 130 per cent.\nPickets also appeared Saturday\nin front of Clark's office at 525\nSeymour charging that he was\nseeking a substantial increase in\nthe eight per cent limit.\nHousing director Leslie\nRohringer refused to comment on\nClark's decision.\nHe said he will wait for an announcement from Clark and said\nany comment would be useless\n\"because you people (The\nUbyssey) put in whatever you want\nanyways.\"\nAlma Mater Society president\nGordon Blankstein said he would\nhave favored direct negotiation as\na means of working out an\nagreement with the administration\non rules in residence.\nBlankstein said he does not\noppose any provisions of the act\nbut said he fears the administration may now take a hardline \"landlord\" attitude towards\nstudents in residence.\n\"I hope it doesn't happen but it\ncould,\" he said.\nStudent housing committee\nchairman Stefan Mochnacki said\nClark's decision \"opens new opportunities for students to shape\ntheir own lives in residence.\"\nMochnacki said the committee\nTHE UBYSSEY\nVol. LVI, No. 16 VANCOUVER, B.C., THURSDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1974\n48 228-2301\nINDIAN SUMMER isn't supposed to last long enough to interfere\nwith mid-term exams and essays. But this year's belated summer has\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094marise savaria photo\nmeant that very little studying is being done during the day while\nstudents congregate on SUB grass for lunch or just to idle the time.\nAppointees to become students\nBy MARK BUCKSHON\nMost of the newly appointed\nmembers of the B.C. Universities\nCouncil said Wednesday they are\neager to learn about the new job\nand bring their own expertise to\ncouncil business.\nThe members were chosen at a\ncabinet meeting last Thursday\nafter nominations were solicited by\neducation minister Eileen Dailly\nfrom the UBC Alumni Association;\nthe Canadian Labor Congress and\nother interested groups.\nMost appointees contacted by\nThe Ubyssey Wednesday said they\nare unsure of their new duties and\ndon't want to express ideas until\nthe first council meeting held is\nheld in two or three weeks.\nThe council, set up under the new\nUniversities Act proclaimed by\nthe government last summer,\ncoordinates university develop\nment in B.C. and acts as an intermediary between the provincial\ngovernment and the three public\nuniversities.\nAppointees were chosen to\nrepresent different geographical\nareas and occupational groups.\nBob Schlosser, secretary-\ntreasurer of the IWA Western\nCanada regional council said:\n\"Labor should have some involvement in education.\n\"I think everyone should improve education and get the best\neducation they can. The door\nshould be open to lower income\npeople,\" he said.\nSchlosser said he won't express\nconcrete ideas until on the job and\nuntil he knows more about the\ncouncil and the act. \"This is\nsomething that's going to be\neducational for me,\" he said.\nAlex Hart, senior vice-president\nof the Canadian National Railway,\nsaid he will bring useful business\nskills and experiences to the\ncouncil.\n\"What I bring to this matter is\nbusiness judgment and knowledge\nof cost-effectiveness,\" he said.\nThe council is responsible for\napproving and recommending\nuniversity budgets to the\nprovincial government.\nHart said he doesn't know much\nabout universities, the job or the\npeople he will work with.\n\"My knowledge of universities is\nthat I've gone to university,\" he\nsaid.\nRita MacDonald, a member of\nthe provincial royal commission on\nfamily and childrens law, said she\nwants to bring a woman's\nviewpoint to the council.\n\"The Status of Women Council\nmight have some interesting things\nto say about universities,\" she\nsaid.\nShe said she wants to talk to\ncommunity and university representatives in the weeks ahead. \"I\nwant to meet with people who are\nmore familiar with university\nstructures and methods than\nmyself.\"\nBernard Gilley said in Victoria\nhe was probably chosen because of\nhis experience as superintendent of\neducation for the Northwest\nTerritories. Hesaidhe couldn't say\nmuch about his attitudes to B.C.\neducation because he has been\n\"out of touch\" in the north for\nabout 10 years.\nFrank Walden, a former\npresident of UBC Alumni\nAssociation, said he thinks the\ncouncil's long range planning\nSee page 8: DROP\nwill continue discussions on\nresidence rules with students\nliving in residence and will report\nback to AMS council in compliance\nwith directives given by council\nOct. 3.\nHe said students in residence will\nbe asked what kind of residence\nmanagement agreement they\nfavor.\nThe Landlord and Tenant Act\nwill not restrict negotiation with\nthe university on this issue, he\nsaid.\nStudents council acted to seek\nimplementation of the act in\nresidences after five students were\nevicted from their rooms in Gage\nTowers Sept. 13 after guests at\ntheir party allegedly threw beer\nbottles over a balcony.\nThe students charged they had\ndone their best to control the\nbehavior of their guests and said\nthey were evicted after an improper hearing.\nAn agreement between\nRohringer and Blankstein on rules\nfor evicting students in residence\nwas rejected by council Oct. 3 after\ncouncil members decided approval\nmight compromise their attempts\nto implement the Landlord and\nTenant Act in residence.\nThe agreement called for 30 days\nSee page 2: ACT\nBudget\npasses\nquickly\nAlma Mater Society council\nWednesday blasted through its\nbudget in nothing short of record\ntime with budget approval coming\nafter only 1-1/2 hours of debate.\nCouncil passed the $175,020\ndiscretionary budget with no\nimportant amendments.\nBudget highlights include:\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Grants to undergraduate\nsocieties totalling $10,725, with a\nbasic $300 grant to each society and\n30 cents each for the first 1,000\nstudents and 15 cents each for\nevery student thereafter.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 $73,450 in administration costs.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 and a $36,662 grant allowing\nThe Ubyssey to publish three times\nweekly.\nCouncil also voted to censure\nAMS president Gordie Blankstein\nduring the meeting.\nThe motion, from arts undergraduate society rep Gerald\ndeMontigny, censured Blankstein\nfor allocating $200 in AMS funds for\nuse in administering the Careers\n'74 plan.\nThe government-sponsored plan\npaid students for work at the\n. university during the summer.\nBlankstein had earlier assured\ncouncil the program was not\nconnected to the AMS.\nGrad rep Stefan Mocknachi said\nthat is the grant had nothing to do\nwith the AMS then council should\nnot be expected to ratify $200 in\nexpenditures for the grant.\n. Council agreed and voted to take\nthe $200 away from Careers '74 and\ngiving it to conference grants.\nDuring the evening council also\nratified four students court\nmembers.\nThe three reps nominated by the\nlaw students association were Rob\nMcDermid, law 3, Ian Aikenhead,\nlaw 3, and Hermen Skidmann, law\n3. All were ratified by council.\nGrad rep Dave Fuller,\nnominated by council was also\nelected.\nBlankstein said after\nthe meeting he does not like the\nchoice but can do nothing about it\nsince council had chosen Fuller.\nAMS vice-president Rob Smith\nsaid also he is concerned about a\nconflict of interest in Fuller's case.\nCourt will meet to consider the\nproposed pool referendum. And\nSee page 2: POOL Page 2\nTHE UBYSSEY\nThursday, October 17, 1974\nIn silencing radicals\nS. uses 'show trials'\nWINNIPEG (CUP) \u00E2\u0080\u0094 The power\nstructure of America which is\nintent on maintaining the U.S.\nstatus quo has gone to extremes in\nits attempts to muffle dissent.\nRather than dispatching an\nassassin to kill radical leaders,\nthey have, through illegitimate use\nof the courts, sought to eliminate\nradical movements.\nThese charges were part of a\nsometimes scathing presentation\nby radical American lawyer\nWilliam Kunstler speaking\nrecently at the University of\nManitoba.\nKunstler has defended such\nfigures as black activist Angela\nDavis, the Chicago Seven, Daniel\nBerrigan and most recently the\nparticipants of the occupation of\nWounded Knee.\nKunstler perceives the purpose\nof these \"show trials\" to be\nthreefold: to imprison leaders, to\nterrorize followers and to solidify\npublic opinion behind power\nstructures by legitimizing them\nthrough the courts. '\nDrawing a parallel between\nmodern day activists and Jesus\nAct rights outlined\nFrom page 1\nnotice to tenants except on second\noffense in which case a 24-hour\nnotice could be given.\nIt stipulated that evicted\nstudents could appeal to students\ncourt and that only committees of\nstudents in residence could\nrecommend eviction.\nThe Landlord and Tenant Act\nproclaimed Oct. 1, provides that:\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 the landlord must post a copy\nof the act or a summary which he\nhas written and is approved by the\nrentalsman in the premises for the\nuse of all tenants;\nc the landlord may not\ndiscontinue services which he\nnormally provides;\ne the rentalsman may order\ntenants out,on short notice if they\nare disturbing other tenants or\ncausing extraordinary damage;\ne rent may not be increased\nduring the first year or tenancy\nand three months notice of an\nincrease is required after the year\nhas expired;\ne services which are provided by\nlandlords are paid for through rent\nand discontinuing of such a service\nis a rent increase:\nd the landlord may increase rent\nif the premises rented are occupied\nby more people than was agreed on\nat the time of renting.\no the landlord is responsible for\nmaintaining the premises in good\nrepair and decoration;\no the rentalsman may order\ntenants to pay rent to him to be\nused for payment of services if the\nlandlord has failed to provide the\nservices.\nLONDON (CUPI) \u00E2\u0080\u0094 An over-\nwhelming 71 per cent of Britons do\nnot believe in God.\nA poll of 1,093 persons was\nconducted by the opinion research\ncentre for a religious program\naired by the British Broadcasting\nCorporation.\nIt was described as the first\nmajor survey of religious beliefs of\nBritons since 1963 and shows the\nnumbers of disbelievers has risen\nby nine per cent in the 11 year\nperiod.\nChrist, Kunstler suggested there\nhas been little change in the legal\nsystem in 20 centuries. Courts are\nstill using trumped-up charges,\nfalse evidence and perjuring\nwitnesses, he said.\nDeceit and perjury are the\nmodus operandi of a corrupt and\ndecadent power structure, he said,\nciting presidential examples from\nEisenhower through Gerald Ford.\nKunstler suggested his most\nrecent clients, the American Indian Movement (AIM), faced court\ncharges because they challenged\nthe status quo.\nTheir acquittal was due to the\nprosecution's false case. The\nprosecution had tampered with\nwitnesses and refused to allow the\njury to define the case, Kunstler\nsaid. This would have forced\nanother trial tying up the defendents even longer without convicting them of anything.\nKunstler said he was deeply\nmoved by his association with\nAIM. He saw a nation robbed of its\npride and the spiritualism of its\nancestors rise up at Wounded Knee\n\"with a willingness to die for a\nprinciple.\nThe lawyer then referred\nhis audience to the words of a\nSioux holy man, Black Elk, who\nhad witnessed the massacre at\nWounded Knee in 1890. These\nwords, he said, are still the rule for\nthe Indian and possibly all men.\nThe court victory, Kunstler\nthinks, has produced a glimmer of\nhope for AIM and all people of\nprinciple. This victory is still the\nexception, according to Kunstler.\n\"I did not know how much was\nended. When I look back from the\nhill of my old age I can still see\nbutchered women and children\nlying heaped and scattered all\nalong the crooked gulch as plain as\nwhen I saw them with eyes still\nyoung. And I can see something\nelse died there in the bloody mud\nand was buried in the blizzard. A\npeople's dream died there. It was a\nbeautiful dream . . . the nations\nhope is broken and scattered.\nThere is no centre any longer and\nthe sacred tree is dead.\"\nHELP YOURSELF\nTO HIGHER GRADES\nyLARGEST SELECTION IN B.C. OF\n* COLES NOTES\n100 Titles\n* MONARCH NOTES\n300 Titles\n*SCHAUMS OUTLINES\n60 Titles\n*PLAID-PROGRAMMED\nLEARNING AIDS\n50 titles\nAll available from\n(BETTER BUY]\nIvancouver. B.C.\nPool conflict seen\nFrom page 1\nSmith said Fuller's avowed support for the referendum violated\nthe requirement of neutrality\nneeded to be a court member and\nstand judgement on the issue.\nDuring the budget debate,\ncouncil tabled discussion on the\n$500 special events allocation.\nCouncil decided to postpone\nfurther consideration until special\nevents head James Conrad makes\na detailed budget presentation to\ncouncil.\nCouncil members also moved to\nStudents find spy bug in lab\nWATERLOO (CUP) \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Students\nin the optometry school at the\nUniversity of Waterloo have found\nthat one of their lab rooms was\nbeing bugged.\nThey discovered a microphone\nand transmitter in the guise of a\nphotographic flashgun hidden in a\npiece of machinery.\nOne student talked into the\nmicrophone saying \"this is a pretty\ndirty thing to do, we should take\nthem home.\"\nA few moments later a graduate\nteaching assistant arrived and\nremoved the bug. When confronted\nby the students he told them he\nwanted \"unbiased comments\".\nStudents have also heard\nbroadcast voices of their\nclassmates coming from the\nteaching assistant's office. The\nsame teaching assistant was later\nseen removing a second\nmicrophone from another lab\nroom.\nHugh McDonald, the^ teaching\nassistant involved, said he had\nbuilt and installed the microphone\nhimself. He said he was just testing\nthem out and that he and another\nassistant would occasionally turn\non the combined tape recorder-\nreceiver to hear how students were\ndoing.\nDr. Edward Fisher, optometry\nschool director said, \"we are\ntrying everything we can to help\nthe students.\"\n. \"The demonstrator probably\nplaced the microphone there so\nthat if a problem came up in a lab,\nhe could get there as soon as\npossible. I've received no complaints from students about this.\nThey are free to come and talk to\nme about anything.\n\"We have a good relationship\nwith our students,\" he said.\ntable discussion on campus intramurals.\nSeveral members expressed\nconcern that womans' participation in the intramural\nprogram is not increasing but\nbudgetary allocations instead\ncontinue to favor men.\nNEW CLASSES\nSTART\nNOVEMBER 1ST\nat the\nYOGA\nFITNESS INSTITUTE\nDirector:\nDr. Bina Sobhadas Nelson\nTo register call:\n731-6320\n3630 W. BROADWAY\n\"ONE OF THE\nFIVE BEST\nPICTURES OF\nTHE YEAR! TATUM\nO'NEAL HAS AN\nEXPRESSIVE FACE\nAND A NATURAL\nACTING TALENT\nTHAT COULD\nEARN HER AN\nACADEMY\nAWARD!\"\n-Vernon Seott, U.P.I.\nwuMmimikm-\nAPHTU\n7 ~J 71 r\n75c I\n| Oct. 17-20\nThurs. and Sun. 7:00 p.m.\nFri.-Sat. 7 and 9:30 p.m.\nSUB THEATRE -\nPlease show AMS card.\nA subfilmsoc presentation\nArts Elections For\nA.M.S. Reps Postponed\nTo Monday, Oct. 21\n10 a.m. \u00E2\u0080\u0094 4 p.m.\nINTERNATIONAL WOMEN'S\nYEAR. 1975.\nNOTICE TO ALL (j> STUDENTS,\nFACULTY AND STAFF!\nA representative from the women's\noffice.is being sent to Ottawa for an\nexchange of information between\nwomen's groups of Canada.\nThe women's office rep would like\nto hear from the women of UBC as\nto what ideas and resources they\nhave for International Women's\nYear on this campus.\nA meeting is being held on Thursday, 17th Oct at 4:00 p.m. in the\nwomen's office, SUB 230. Please\nbring your ideas.\nAll welcome. TODAY.\nhear BERNICE GERARD on\n\"A CHARISMATIC APPROACH\nTO SOCIAL ACTION.\"\n7:30 P.M., THURS., OCT. 17\nLUTHERAN CAMPUS CENTRE\nBernice is an aldermanic candidate in\nthe upcoming civic election\nSponsor: Charismatic Christian Fellowship\nLINDA SANTOS\n(Community organizer amongst the poor)\nSPEAKING ON\nIMPLICATIONS ON MARTIAL\nLAW IN THE PHILIPPINES\nOCTOBER 17 -12:30 -SUB 212\nOCTOBER 18 -12:30 - Lutheran Campus Centre\nCO-SPONSORS SPEAKERS CCCM & CUSO\nJANS GREAT GIVEAWAY\nOnly 2 days to go\nThis year as a special offering to U.B.C. enrolled students only, we are going to GIVE AWAY\n$500.00 RETAIL VALUE OF COMPONENTS. Every customer with proof of enrollment at\nU.B.C, gets entered in a draw which will take place OCTOBER 19 at the BROADWAY\nSTORE. The winner will be able to choose from the vast selection of STEREO WEST'S\nSTOCK, exactly what he or she desires for $500.00.\nDROP DOWN AND GET INVOLVED\nJAN'S STEREO WEST\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0WE'RE OUR ONL Y COMPETITOR\"\n2839 W. BROADWAY. VANCOUVER\n4237 E. HASTINGS, BURNABY 1114 DAVIE ST., VANCOUVER\n611 COLUMBIA ST., NEW WESTMINSTER 10581 KING GEORGE HWY., SURREY Thursday, October 17, 1974\nTHE UBYSSEY\nPage 3\nAcclamations cancel elections\nDemocracy puts three in AMS\nByelections for three Alma\nMater Society executive positions\nwon't be held Oct. 23 as planned \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nwhen nominations closed Thursday\nthe three positions had been filled\nby acclamation.\nThe new treasurer is Dave\nThiessen, commerce 3; new vice-\npresident is Robbie Smith, civil\nengineering 4; and Ron Dumont,\narts 3; is the new coordinator.\nBoth Smith and Dumont have\nbeen filling in for positions vacated\nearlier when their predecessors\nresigned.\nThiessen takes over from acting\ntreasurer Pemme Muir Cunliffe\nwho had been in office since late\nsummer when treasurer George\nMapson quit his post for a job at\nMalaspina College.\nThiessen said Wednesday he\ndecided to run for the position after\nbeing asked to by Cunliffe, even\nthough he said he wished she had\nstayed on.\n\"Considering she only had two\nweeks to work on the budget and\nconsidering she didn't get a\nsummer salary like Mapson did,\nshe did a bang up job,\" Thiessen\nsaid.\nThiessen said the only major\nplans he has for his stay in office\nare to try to clean up the financial\nmess overbudgeting clubs and\nundergraduate societies have left\nbehind them in past years.\nHe said he will stipulate that\neach club-must present a financial\nstatement of its assets and debts\nwhen it reconstitutes next year.\nLegal advice\nfor students\nnow in SUB\nDo you have troubles with the\npolice, your landlord, a neighbor,\nthe bookstore, or anyone else\ntrying to drag you into court?\nIf so the new Vancouver Community Legal Assistance Society\noffice in SUB 234 could help you.\nTwo law students will be in the\noffice noon to 2:30 p.m. Tuesdays,\nto give legal advice.\nThird-year law student Susan\nDaniells, one of the volunteers,\nsaid Wednesday the size of the staff\nwould increase or decrease according to demand.\nDaniells said the clinic's main\npurpose is to steer people through\nhassles plaguing those unfamiliar\nwith the legal system.\nEverything from complicated\nbureaucratic paper work to that\nhaircut necessary for court appearance is handled by the clinic,\nshe said.\nDaniells said the clinic staff is\nunable to appear in court on behalf\nof the client. If anyone does need a\nfree lawyer either B.C. Legal Aid\nor one of the four Vancouver\nCommunity Legal Assistance\nSociety lawyers will handle the\ncourt procedures, she said.\nAlthough the clinic is good experience for the law students who\nrun it, Daniells said they are also\ngenuinely interested in helping\npeople.\nShe said they want to demystify\nthe legal system for the clients and\nremove some of the remoteness of\nthe process for those involved.\nDaniells said examples of cases\nhandled include divorces, small\nclaims, dope charges, unemployment insurance appeals and\ntest cases on the Landlord and\nTenants Act.\nAll of the advice given by the\nclinic staff is checked by lawyers,\nshe said.\nDaniells said the clinic is open to\nanyone. She said there are already\n12 other Vancouver Community\nLegal clinics around Vancouver.\n. Smith replaces Doug Brock who\nresigned Sept. 17 because\" he said\nhe wanted to pass some courses\ninstead of \"hanging around\" the\nAMS executive.\nSmith said Wednesday his main\nobjective as vice-president will be\nto make the AMS less \"top heavy\"\nand try to build a foundation of\nstudent input into the society.\n\"Most of the action seems to be\ninitiated from the top and go\ndown,\" Smith said. \"It should be\nfrom the students.\"\nWhen asked how he will go about\nenlisting student input, Smith said\nhe wasn't too sure but said he\nhoped the AMS ad hoc restructuring committee will be a good\nbeginning.\nScheduled to meet today noon in\ncouncil chambers,\nSmith said the committee will\nformulate plans to make the AMS\nmore relevant to students and\npresent them to council.\nDumont said Wednesday he\nplans to work for a completely new\nSUB management policy.\nHe said he hopes to put a few\nmore students on the management\ncommittee to \"solicit student\nopinions on what they think is\nwrong with the building (SUB) and\nwhat we can do to improve it.\"\nDumont, who replaced former\ncoordinator Lynn Orstad who quit\nbecause she didn't obtain enough\ncredits last year, said he will work\nfor policy change this year and\nleave implementation of new\npolicy up to next year's coordinator.\nCunliffe had said earlier she\nwouldn't remain as treasurer\nbecause she considers the AMS\ncouncil \"unimportant.\"\nInstead she said she will continue\nher nursing courses this year and\n\"find out what it's like to be a\nstudent.\"\nHer last act as treasurer was in\npiloting the budget through council\nWednesday in one of the shortest\ndebates recorded recently.\nAfter the debate council\nunanimously passed a motion\nthanking her for her work in\nAugust and September in drawing\nup the budget.\nCouncil also agreed to pay her\nfor two weeks work done during the\nsummer following the resignation\nof former treasurer George\nMapson.\nMapson, elected last year to\nserve for this academic year,\nworked for most of the summer on\nAMS business before leaving to\ntake a $17,000-a-year student affairs coordinator position- at\nMalaspina College in Nanaimo.\nMapson was paid $2,000 for his\nsummer AMS work. But council\nreassigned about $350 of the money\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 representing two weeks' salary\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 to Cunliffe for her work on the\nbudget.\nTOYS FOR BIG LITTLE BOYS are available for fun in physics\nbuilding as research associates Tim Higgs, left, and Marko Valic can\nattest. They are playing with nuclear magnetic resonance pulse\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094marise savaria photo\nspectrometer which is currently on sale in Bay toy department for\n$150,000 plus tax. Gizmos are recommended for children over 25 with\na physics Phd. and a high intelligence quotient.\nPeak publishes today, future unknown\nSimon Fraser University's\nstudent newspaper, the Peak, will\npublish a 12-page paper today but\nPeak editor Ian Caddell still\ndoesn't know if the paper will\ncontinue to publish on a regular\nbasis.\nSFU students council voted\nTuesday to give the paper $500\nwhich together with $300 in advertising revenue permitted\npublication this week.\nHowever, council still hasn't\nsettled the controversy created\nwhen it declared invalid an\nagreement reached during the\nsummer between the paper's staff,\nSFU administration and the\nsummer students council.\nThat agreement allowed a\n$23,000 debt incurred by the Peak\nover the last few years to be\nhandled by the SFU administration\nand the Bank of Nova Scotia. In\nreturn, the Peak must publish an\nadministration public relations\ninsertonce a month.\nCouncil was also upset because\nthe paper has not presented a\nfinancial statement since early\nApril and does not currently have a\nboard of directors.\nCaddell said Wednesday both\nproblems will probably be rectified\nthis week. \"We've presented this\nweek. \"We've presented council\nwith a financial statement from\nour auditor,\" he said.\nHowever, the $300 audit is not a\nlegal audit. \"But council has\nagreed that if a legal audit is\nrequired, it will pay the necessary\n$700 in fees,\" Caddell said.\nSince the Peak has now\npublished two consecutive issues,\nCaddell said the legal\nrequirements for advertising\nboard of director's elections has\nnow been met. The board will be\nelected Friday, he said.\nCaddell said most council\nmembers appear to be happy with\nthe arrangement. \"Hopefully they\nwill reconsider their decision to\ndiscontinue the Peak.\"\nCaddell also said the paper has\nmanaged to hire two regular part\ntime student typesetters to work in\nthe Peak's typesetting shop.\nCaddell said he hopes the Peak\nwill have \"some solvency, some\nconsistency\" following next\nTuesday's council meeting and will\nbe able to attract more full time\nstaffers.\n\"Who wants to put out a paper\nthat may not be around next\nweek,\" he said.\n\"We'll just have to keep putting\nout a paper until we run out of\nmoney.\"\nArts bull flings today\nThe arts undergraduate society\nwill hold an all-candidates meeting\nat noon today in Buch. 104 to introduce students running for Alma\nMater Society arts reps.\nThe six arts students running for\nthe two available positions will be\non hand to answer questions and to\ngive their opinions on what the\nAUS should be doing.\nStudents seeking the posts are\nNancy Carter, arts 4; Stew Savard,\narts 2; Vaughn Palmer, arts 4;\nBruce Wilson, arts 3; Bill Brody,\narts 3; and Dean Neumann, arts 1.\nThe election will be held on\nMonday between 10 a.m. and 4\np.m.\nStudents should note the\npreferential ballot system will be\nused.\nBallots should have three choices\nmarked in order of preference.\nBallots with only one choice will be\nacceptable but ones with only two\ncrosses will be invalidated. Page 4\nTHE UBYSSEY\nThursday, October 17, 1974\nKangaroos out of luck\nProvincial rentalsman Barrie Clark\nhas changed his mind and decided to\nclaim jurisdiction over UBC's\nresidences.\nWhat that means is that students\nliving in residence finally have a\ncomplete written document of their\nrights and obligations.\nIt means that no director of\nhousing or kangaroo court can order\nstudents evicted on 24 hours' notice\nunless they bring their case before\nClark.\nAnd most important of all it\nmeans that the power housing\ndirector Leslie Rohringer currently\nyields will be limited.\nBut implementation of the act is\nstill only one step on the* road to\neffective student control of the\nresidences.\nThe act stipulates what the\nrelations between landlord and\ntenants are to be but has nothing to\nsay on what functions of the\nlandlord students can take on.\nResidence committees demanding\ngreater student say in evictions, in\nrental increases and in rules of\nconduct can still do their work.\nIt may be an uphill battle but it\nwill be worth it. Residences are not\nsubsidized through administration\nfunds. Students who live in them,\nand conventions held during the\nsummer, pay the entire cost of the\nbuildings and their operation.\nTch, tch, tch\nAbout the only item Alma\nMater Society president \"Gordie\nBlankstein didn't list on his summer\nactivities report to council was how\nmany times he kissed his Mommy\ngood bye.\nTo put it briefly, Gordie handed\nthe council a list of fluff, which\nessentially said he taJked to a lot of\nSo why should an administration\nwhich isn't kicking in the bucks\ndictate how those bucks will be\nmanaged.\nWhat it's going to take is pressure.\nIt took pressure from tenants in\ndowntown hotels to make Barrie\nClark change his mind and pressure\npeople but didn't accomplish one\nhell of a lot. Otherwise he would\nhave been able to answer councillors'\nquestions intelligently rather than\nsaying, \"Well, gee, I can't quite\nremember the name.\"\nTch, tch Gordie. Nasty, nasty.\nMust be a better boy or gett'ums\nimpeached.\nfrom students will make the\nadministration change its mind.\nBut at least the Landlord and\nTenant Act is finally going to be\nenforced and the process toward\nstudent control is on its way.\nThanks Barrie, you're a real pal.\nAnd this time we mean it.\nLetters\nEngineers\nOn Thursday noon, following the\nspecial Alma Mater Society\ncouncil meeting, several\nengineers, including myself, made\na mistake.\nThroughout our engineering,\ntanking has become commonplace,\nand is taken as a source of general\namusement. Our mistake was in\nnot realizing others do not see\ntanking in the same way.\nWe attempted to tank Stefan\nMochnacki because of his actions\nagainst the pool. We believed it\nmight be humorous \"that he might\nnot be able to swim, thus not\nwanting the pool.\nStefan and about five of his\nfriends preferred fighting to the\npoint of bloodshed rather than\ngetting him wet. It must be\nstressed on our part it was all in\nfun.\nI personally regret the mistake.\nRick Longton\nmetallurgy 3\nGears\nIn last week's Friday issue of\nThe Ubyssey there was a slur\nagainst the engineering faculty\nmade by an applied science\nstudent. Let the point be made that\napplied science does not refer to\nengineers alone but also nursing\nand architecture.\nThere is no breakaway group in\nengineering trying to undermine\nthe society. Any engineer making\nan accusation would have the guts\nto sign as an engineer and not as an\napplied science student.\nDon Brynildsen\nengineer\nCnange?\nOnce upon a time I was an undergraduate engineer (B. Eng.\nMcGill, 1968). In those days the\nNew Left was on the rise, the\nuniversity was becoming more\npolitically aware, and students in\ngeneral were starting to ask\nquestions about why things were\nthe way they were.\nHowever, opposed to these quite\nobviously inane developments on\ncampus, we had a group of\nengineers for the preservation of\nthe faith.\nThis group, of which I hate to\nadmit I was a member, was af\nfectionately referred to as 'The\nJock-Strap Brigade', and we used\nto jump up and down and shout and\nscream whenever someone from\nthe New Left tried to speak.\nAnd, of course, we always had\nanswers for what they had to say,\nwe simply called them (expletive\ndeleted) assholes and left it at that.\nHowever, unless you are or have\nbeen an undergraduate engineer,\nyou probably have no idea of how\nhard they have to study and what a\nbummer it is to live in such a\ncloistered, monastic world so\nisolated from the rest of the\ncampus.\nIt is a tough way to go through\nyour years at university when boy\nmeets girl and all sorts of other\n'neat things' happen.\nSo there is a hell of an identity\ncrisis associated with being an\nundergraduate engineer that has\nclassically been solved with a\nMacho, non-thinking, self-assured,\nself-confident stereotype, who is\nthe keeper of the faith and\npreserver of the good.\nIt is sad that this has to happen at\nall and sadder that it is still happening today.\nWhen I heard that the engineers\non campus has reacted to someone\nwho was proposing something they\ndidn't like, my first reaction was to\nwrite a scathing, condemning\nletter.\nBut as I wrote I remembered\nthose good old days in the 'Jock-\nStrap Brigade' and what a bummer it was coming to grips with\nlife, living and the pursuit of\nhappiness as an undergraduate\nengineer.\nDon Guadagni\nmed 2\nMorgentaler\nAfter reading the article on Dr.\nHenry Morgentaler's talk, I was\nleft wondering how anyone with\nsuch a simplistic view could be\ntaken as a reputable speaker.\nThe question of whether abortion\nshould be legalized is nothing\ncompared to the problems in\ndrafting the laws for its\nlegalization. I will give three of the\nmost obvious problems.\nFirst, you must determine the\nlatest time in the pregnancy at\nwhich an abortion can be granted.\nIn later stages the fetus may be\nable to develop in an incubator. To\n\"dispose\" of it is obviously murder, but to leave it living is to risk\nproducing a deformed individual\nbecause it has not had the opportunity to develop naturally.\nSecondly, it must be decided how\nmuch say the father has in the\nabortion.\nOf course our more fanatic\nliberationists will tell us they have\nno say whatsover, but take this\ncase: A couple have been married\nfor several years without being\nable to produce children. Finally,\nthe woman becomes pregnant, but\ndecides she doesn't want the child\nwhile the man does. What do they\ndo? The child belongs to both of\nthem.\nThirdly, there is the question of\nthe grounds for abortion. If it can\nbe shown that the unborn child is\nmongoloid, the mother should be\nable to get an abortion. What\nhappens in a couple of years when\nthe sex of the fetus can be determined?\nIf Jones wants a boy but she gets\na girl, should she be able to get an\nabortion on these grounds and start\nall over?\nI'm sorry I can only ask these\nquestions and not answer them, for\nmyself, let alone for our whole\ncountry, but at least it shows the\ndepth and complexity of the\nproblem.\nMost thinking people agree that\na single woman, six-weeks\npregnant, who can't raise a child\nshould be able to get an abortion.\nBut I don't think that even the most\nfanatic women's liberationist\nwould want abortion on demand in\nlight of the complexities of the\nproblem.\nBruce Woodburn\nFor\nThe Ubyssey blows it again.\nIt was only a couple of weeks ago\nthat The Ubyssey did a scandalous\njob on reporting on Mordecai-\nRichler's speech by flagrantly\nmisquoting and misconstruing\neverything he said. Courageously\nundaunted, The Ubyssey, in the\nlast issue, carried on to give Dr.\nHenry Morgentaler the same ill-\nfated treatment.\nAlthough the text of Morgentaler's speech was portrayed more\naccurately, it all went out the\nwindow when your reporter, in the\nname of sheer sensationism, chose\nto bold type: \" 'Every sperm cell\nejaculated by a man is a\npotential life,' he said, 'so every\nmany masturbating or having sex\nis committing genocide.' \"\nSensational as it was, it happened\nto be the opposite to what he\nmeant. The quote was not part of\nhis speech, but rather in answer to\na question. Morgentaler was attempting to illustrate the\nirrationality of the question by\nextending it to its irrational consequence.\nAnyone missing Morgentaler\nand turning to your apper for an\naccurate report (naive?) would\nneed only get as far as your bold\ntype quote to get a complete\nmisunderstanding-. Having read\nthe bold type first, as most do, the\nwhole article (if anyone chose to\nread further) takes a debased\nform.\nWith such shoddy reporting\nseeming to be the rule, I do not see\nhow The Ubyssey can be expected\nto be read with any credence.\nKen Webber\narts 2\nAgainst\nThis letter concerns the full page\ncoverage devoted to Dr. Henry\nMorgentaler on Friday.\nThe federal government is\ninadvertently allowing it's abortion laws to be corrupted by some\nof the medical profession, which, in\nfact, results in abortion on\ndemand.\n\"Moneytaller\" states that\nRoman Catholics are his greatest\nopponents. Yet, at the same time,\nhe states that 75 per cent of his\npatients were Catholics. It is also\ninteresting to note that the\nmajority of the Pierre Trudeau\ncabinet is Catholic and that it was\nthey who enacted legislation to\npermit legal abortion, but under\nstrict medical criteria.\nMoneytaller committed a crime;\nhe broke the law of this land, and it\nis justice that he be prosecuted and\nsuffer the consequences.\nIt is also interesting to note that\nDr. Heather Morris, who is of the\nsame ethnic background as\nMoneytaller, considers abortion to\nbe murder and she is a qualified\ngynecologist certified by the Royal\nCollege of Physicians and\nSurgeons of Canada.\nAs Linda Hossie mentioned in\nher report, Moneytaller spent the\nwar in Auschwitz and Dachau.\nSurely Moneytaller witnessed the\nmost abominable racial extermination in the history of\nmankind. For a man who personally observed mass extermination of the Jewish people, it\nseems somewhat incongruous that\n75 per cent of his illegal abortions\nwere performed on Catholics. The\nlogical question surrounding this\nentire issue is how and why\nMoneytaller evaded genocide in\nNazi Germany; and it is well\nestablished that Nazi Germany\nSee page 5\nwe nrsser\nOCTOBER 17,1974\nPublished Tuesdays, Thursdays and Fridays throughout the\nuniversity year by the Alma Mater Society of the University of\nB.C. Editorial opinions are those of the writer and not of the\nAMS or the university administration. Member, Canadian\nUniversity Press. The Ubyssey publishes Page Friday, a weekly\ncommentary and review. The Ubyssey's editorial offices are\nlocated in room 241K of the Student Union Building.\nEditorial departments, 228-2301; Sports, 228-2305; advertising,\n228-3977.\nEditor: Lesley Krueger\n\"Why don't you just write about turkeys,\" said Jan O'Brien to Jake van\nder Kamp, \"turkeys like: Berton Woodward and Kini Mcdonald and Ralph\nMaurer and Tom Barnes and Reed Clarke and chickens like Denise Chong\nand Pat McKitrick and Boyd McConnell and Stuart Lyster and Ken Dodd\nand Cedric Tetzel. But of course don't forget that rooster Mark Buckshon\nand that peacock Doug Rushton and that pigeon Terry Donaldson and\nthat shithawk Gary Coull and that ostrich Lesley Krueger\" and finally, need\nmore be said, Marise Savaria. Thus spake she. Thursday, October 17, 1974\nTHE UBYSSEY\nPage 5\nLetters\nFrom page 4\nwas a great protagonist of selective abortion.\nTherefore, not only must\nMoneytaller be prosecuted under\nthe law of this land but his\ncitizenship should be rescinded and\nhe should be deported to the United\nArab Republic for his extermination of Catholics.\nPerhaps he will meet up with\nBorman in the Middle-East; and if\nhe is really lucky, he may find\nAdolph and they can reminisce\nabout racial extermination,\nabortion, and how Moneytaller\nevaded the gas ovens of Dachau\nand Auschwitz.\nPatricia Fleming\npre-med 2\nFroth\nThis is a second fake letter,\nfollowing hard on the heels of a\nletter I didn't write you folks last\nweek.\nIn that fake letter, which you\npeople wrote so accommodatingly\nwhen I didn't come through, like\nthis one, you or I referred to a Miss\nPat Arnold as a \"sow.\"\nIn fact, she isn't a sow but a very\nlovely woman, and I would like to\nwithdraw the allegation, which you\nhave to admit I didn't make in the\nfirst place.\nI would also like to apologize to\nthe famile nee Arnold, whatever\ntheir married name might be.\nAllan Fotheringham\nUbyssey columnist\nBeggars!\nTo Joanne Gilbert, re review of\nfilm, El Tope in Page Friday.\nYour \"critique\" was no more\nthan an outburst of emotion. In\nattempting to expose Jadorowski,\nthe director, as an indulgent artist\nyou degenerated into showing-off\nyour own perversions. Why do you\nsay Jadorowski was \"identifying\nwith his shit?\"\nJadorowski himself was the\nactor who played El Topo (The\nMole), a man who has been to the\npit of despair and corruption but\nwas able to raise himself to see a\nbit of the light on the surface. El\nTopo was the hope amidst the\ndarkness in the film, showing that\nthere was a way to live a more\ntruthful life.\nYou claimed to miss any\nparallels to Biblical passages but\nthere were definite connections.\nPossibly the most important\nbeing the progression from the\nbeginning of the film where El\nTopo claiming he is God, and\ncastrates the General through the.\nmiddle section in which he must\ndestroy all his gods (the Masters);\nto the last section where he lives\nsimply and decently as nothing but\na man.\nJadorowski chose to emphasize\nfrom Genesis the desire man had to\nbe like God; from the prophets, he\nemphasized their denunciation of\nidol worship and from the New\nTestament he emphasized man's\nhumaness: that is, that man is\nman and not God and that only be\nbeing truly human can man\nbecome closer to God.\nThe film was complex and much\nmore so that I attempt to explain,\nbut it is not obscure; if you admit\nthat you don't understand the film,\nyou should have seen it three or\nfour times and if you still can't\nmake sense of it, don't review it!\nEl Topo wasn't disgusting, but\nyour review was because it\nwas blind. Incompetent reviews\nonly pave the way for incompetent\nand superficial films.\nDouglas Todd\narts 2\nBuggers\nEntomologists might be interested in knowing that I have just\ndiscovered a previously unstudied\nmember of a very rare species,\nand it exists right here on campus.\nI'm not sure of the name of this\ncreature, but I've run across its\ntype before.\nCharacteristically they display\nthe brain of a retarded dew worm,\nthe personality of a slick cockroach\nand the attitude of a starving\nturkey buzzard; in this case the\nturkey buzzard is feeding\nvoraciously on the misfortune of\nstudents who bought the wrong\nbooks for certain courses more\nthan 10 days ago.\nHave you guessed who the absolute little insect is yet? If you still\ndon't see who I mean let me give a\nfurther hint. It assumes the form of\na (choke) human being every day\nand squirms around the bookstore\nlooking for poor unfortunate\nstudents to shaft.\nI think he is a member of the\ngenus manager maggot, and don't\nask him for any special consideration, for \u00E2\u0080\u0094 as he will repeat\nwith that sour breath in your face,\nover and over, \"a rule is a rule\".\nHow did I become aware of his\nactual insecthood? Well, he got me\nso angry he wouldn't even let me\napply the actual price of the book I\ndidn't need ($1.95) toward the book\nI did need ($3.95) that I ripped off\nhis necktie knowing how good he\nwould look to certain students if he\nwas hanging by his balls above that\nbig old desk of his.\nI got as far as yanking off his\ntweeds and his little panties, and\nthat's when I made my discovery.\nThere, before my very eyes, all\nfurry legged and shivering in\nabsolute fear, stood a creature not\nhung like any normal man, no\nsirree \u00E2\u0080\u0094 but he sported the hugest\nset of cockroach genitalia that I\nhave ever laid eyes on. Naturally I\ndropped everything and went\ndirectly to Duthie's, where I got the\nbook I needed and 10 cases of\n\"Raid for crawling insects\".\nNot only that, but the bookstore\nlost a possible $2 in the till.\nHowever, I'm sure the students\nwill make up all such losses in the\nlong run.\nKarlDeibert,\narts 2\nThe Ubyssey welcomes letters\nfrom all readers.\nThough an effort is made to\nprint all letters received, The\nUbyssey reserves the right to edit\nfor clarity, legality, brevity and\ntaste.\nBig Macs at Ohio U\nMcDONALDLAND (CUP-ENS)\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 Ronald McDonald's plans to\ntake over the world are moving\nahead at full steam.\nMcDonald's recently opened\ntheir largest new facility in the\nstudent union building at Ohio\nState University.\nIf the students there desert the\ncollege cafeteria and dormitory\nmeals for a steady diet of Big\nMacs, the \"experiment\" will expand to other universities and\npublic and private edifices.\nMcDonald's director of\noperations, Clift Gamache, says\nthe company has also opened ~3\nfacility at one other school, the\nUniversity of Cincinnati.\nThey've also experimented with\ntemporary facilities at the civic\nzoo in Toronto, a portable tent at\nthe Ohio State Fair and even on\nregularly scheduled flights of\ncommercial airlines \u00E2\u0080\u0094 coffee, tea,\nor a Big Mac?\nThe Ohio State McDonald's is the\ncompany's largest, seating up to\n600hamburger addicts at one time.\nThe Fairweather Canadian.\nsfe\nMOLSOti\nCAMAP/AN\nfyk&eet\nSMMS\n^.\nMolson Canadian.\nBrewed right here in B.C. Page 6\nTHE UBYSSEY\nThursday, October 17, 1974\nHot flashes\nGroup meets\nto change AMS\nBesides sidestepping important\nissues like the poo) referendum\nand the possible censure of\ncurrent Alma Mater Society\npresident Gordon Blankstein, last\nThursday's fucked-up council\nmeeting also forced1 cancellation\nof the AMS ad-hoc restructuring\ncommittee.\nAlthough some student's\nnotion of AMS restructuring may\nbe to give certain council\nmembers a one-way ticket to East\nButtock, Nfld. and rent their\noffices out to the UBC toe jam\nclub, any opinions on the matter,\nincluding the above, are relevant.\nThe committee masts today at\nnoon in the council chambers.\nCar rally\nThe UBC sports car club is\nsponsoring the annual Totem rally\nSunday. The one-day event is part\nof the Fraser Valley championship\nseries.\nIt is the last event of the 1974\nseries and will be an even test of\nTween\nclasses\nTODAY\nCCCM\nPhil Thatcher speaks, noon, SUB\n212A.\nECKANKAR\nDiscussion group, noon, SUB 213.\nCHINESE CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP\nCombination meeting with VCF,\nnoon, SUB 207-209.\nUBC ARCHAEOLOGY CLUB\nGeneral meeting, noon, geog. 101.\nPRE-OENTAL SOC\nDr. D. J. Yeo to discuss faculty\n.admissions, noon IRC 3.\nSPEAKERS\nSomebody speaks on the\nPhilippines, noon, SUB 212.\nANARCHIST DISCUSSION GROUP\nWeekly meeting, discussion of\nterrorism, noon, Buch. 1210.\nSQUARE DANCE CLUB\nMeeting to discuss hayride plans,\nnoon, SUB ballroom or party room.\nUBC KARATE CLUB\nPractice, 7:30 p.m., gym E winter\nsports centre.\nSHITO-RYU KARATE\nPractice, 7 p.m., SUB 207.\nVARSITY CHRISTIAN\nFELLOWSHIP\nCombination meeting with Chinese\nChristian fellowship, noon, SUB\n207-209.\nCHARISMATIC CHRISTIAN\nFELLOWSHIP\nBernice Gerard speaks on social\naction, 7:30 p.m., Lutheran campus\ncentre.\nHILLEL\nBenni Aflalow on the Maalot\nproject, noon, Hillel House.\nFRIDAY\nALLIANCE FRANCAISE\nPoetry readings by Jean Pierre\nTeboul, noon, 0-t lounoe.\nCIVIL ENGINEERS\nBum's ball dance for gears and\nguests, 8:'30 p.m., SUB ballroom.\nMUSIC\nHans-Karl Piltz viola recital, noon,\nmusic building, 113.\nSTUDENT WOODWORKING\nSHOP\nOrganizational meeting for persons\ninterested in forming club, noon,\nSUB 211.\nSATURDAY\nPRE-OENTAL SOC\nClub party, 8 p.m., SUB clubs\nlounge.\nUBC KARATE CLUB\nPractice, 10:30 a.m., sym E, winter\nsports centre.\nTHE PIT\nSunshyne plays in the Pit again but\nthis time you gotta pay, tickets\nfrom AMS office in SUB.\nnovice crews driving anc.\nnavigational abilities over 180\nmiles of smooth Fraser Valley\nroads.\nPre-registration closed Oct. 11\nbut you may still register late\nSunday at 7:30 a.m. at the\nWoodward's gas bar in Guildford\ncentre, Surrey.\nThe first car will be off the line\nat 9:01 a.m. with the first car due\nto finish at 4 p.m.\nFor more information, contact\nrally master Ken Bergen at\n876-7053.\nInfo swap\nThe women's office is sending\na representative to Ottawa for an\nexchange of information amongst\nCanadian women's groups.\nExchanging information is no\nfun at all if there isn't any info to\npass around. Accordingly, the\nwomen's office is asking UBC\nwomen to come to the office and\nbe listened to.\nThe office is especially\ninterested in hearing any ideas\nwomen may have on what they\ncan do for international women's\nyear at UBC.\nSHITO-RYU KARATE\nPractice, 10:30 a.m., SUB 207.\nSUNDAY\nCHINESE VARSITY CLUB\nAnnual rice bowl game with CSA,\np.m., Eric Hamber high school.\nEars will be waiting for you at\n4 p.m. today at the women's\noffice, SUB 230.\nHeavies here\nTwo of the highest and most\nrespected living teachers of\nBuddhism visit Vancouver this\nmonth beginning today with the\nGyalwa Karmapa.\nKarmapa, whose position and\ninfluence among Buddhists are\ncomparable only to the Dalai\nLama, will be in Vancouver until\nOct. 24.\nHighlight of the visit will be\nthe famous ceremony of the Vajra\nCorwn of the Black Hat.\nKarmapa holds a tradition of\nwisdom and spiritual development\n2,500 years old. He is claimed to\nbe in his 16th incarnation.\nAlso in Vancouver this months\nis the venerable Kalu Rinpoche.\nRinpoche visited Vancouver in\n1972 when he established the\nTibetan Dharma centre. He will be\nteaching at the centre during his\nvisit.\nThe centre is located at 725\nWest 14th.\nLUTHERAN CAMPUS\nMINISTRIES\nWorship service, 10:30 a.m.,\nLutheran campus centre; also film,\nSexuality and Communication, 7:30\np.m. at the centre.\nys*5\ni***2?*.\n5*\u00C2\u00AB?.\n22S\nHAIR IS BEAUTIFUL\nand it has a lot to do with\nprojecting a man's personality.\nLET US LOOK AT YOUR HAIR AND BONE STRUCTURE\nAND BRING THE BEST OUT OF YOU\nAsk us about our protein body waves and any information on how to take care of your hair and skin. We also\nretail the very best products on the market for the needs of your skin and hair.\nWe are located on the U.B.C. Campus. Come and see us. By appointment only \u00E2\u0080\u0094\ncall 224-5540.\n2144 WESTERN PARKWAY, UNIVERSITY SQ. (The Village)\nNous Parlons Franqais\nmiws\n*&\n1\nSTEREO\nSALE?\nThat's Right-\nNo Gimmicks-\nWe're going to sell you a high\ncalibre Pioneer Excel Magnetic\nCartridge for one cent. All you\nneed to do is buy one of our\n\"On Special\" stereo systems or\ncomponents and get this popular $35.00 cartridge for one\ncent. We feature \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Pioneer \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nPanasonic \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Technics \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Goodmans \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Dual \u00E2\u0080\u0094 and many\nothers \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Come and look.\nCARR'S\nLTD.\n1037 Granville\n685-7425\nHave we\ngot some\ncheese\nfor you . . .\nBree, Edam,\nEmmenthal,\nHavarti Smoked,\nSwiss, Cheddars,\nand many\nmore . . .\nCome on down arid\ntry some at . . .\n|Special Discounts for U.B.C. students)\nWALLPAPER & CARPETS\n63 books of\nwall coverings\nto choose from,\n10% off list.\nCOLOR TREND\nDECORATING CENTRE\n9'x12'\nSaxony Plush\nONLY\n$79-95\nReg. $110.00\n4429 WEST 10th\n224-6331\nTHE CLASSIFIEDS\nRATES: Campus - 3 lines, 1 day $1.00; additional fines 25c.\nCommercial \u00E2\u0080\u0094 3 lines, 1 day $1.80; additional fines\n40c. Additional days $1.50 & 35c.\nClassified ads are not accepted by telephone and are payable in\nadvance. Deadline is 11:30 a.m., the day before publication.\nPublications Office, Room 241, S.U.B., UBC, Van. 8, B.C.\n5 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Coming Events\nA KINDLY tongue Is the lodestone ol\nthe hearts of men \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Baha'u'llah\nBaha'i Fireside Thurs.. 8:0O p.m.\n3981 W. 21st Ave. (Bsmt. Ste.) Tel\n228-8445.\n10 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 For Sale \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Commercial\nIT\u00E2\u0080\u0094 For Sale \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Private\nTEXAS INSTRUMENTS SR 11 calcula-\ntor. Nine months old. With case and\nadapter-charger. Phone Mfike, 266-9971\nafter 6.\n1966 AMBASSADOR sedan, auto., just\ntested Leaving country, must sell.\n$550, inquire Rm. 222A Geophysics.\n2 GEORGE HARRISON tickets for Nov.\n2nd concert. Call Steve, 2244979 aftei\n5 p.m.\n1973 YAMAHA 650, 10,000 miles, good\ncondition, 9 months old. Phone Dave\n224-9826, room 485.\n24' x 26' MODULAR KINDERGARTEN\nUNIT completely furnished, licensed\nfor 24 children. Call 685-4176.\nFOR SALE 1971 PINTO 2000cc, $1550.\nPhone Mark, 738-6533.\n15 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Found\n20 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Housing\n25 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Instruction\nFIGURE SKATING, Mon.. Wed., Fri.\nmornings. Call Sandi 946-2331, Marian\n261-0886, Ken 874-6364 for info.\n30 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Jobs\nDOWNTOWN restaurant under construction looking for art student or\nteacher who would like parttime Job\ncreating signs, logo and special art\nwork. Call Garry, 681-5201 days.\n35 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Lost\n50 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Rentals\nCOSTUMES \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Reserve your Halloween\ncostume now & avoid the last minute\nrush. Dunbar Costumes, 5648 Dunbar.\n263-9011.\n65 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Scandals\nVANCOUVER NITE-LIFERS \u00E2\u0080\u0094 S20O in\ndiscounts. Restaurants, nite-clubs, pizzas, etc. Reg. 6.95, now 1.50! ! ! Hurry!\nLimited offer. Co-op Bookstore, SUB\nBsmt., 8:30-4:30.\n85 - Typing\nEFFICIENT electric typing, my home.\nEssays, thesis, etc. Neat accurate\nwork. Reasonable rates. 263-5317.\nFAST ACCURATE TYPING. Reasonable\nrates Kits area. 736-5816.\n90 - Wanted\nEARN UP TO $1200 a school year hanging posters on campus in spare time-\nSend name, address, phone and\nschool to: Coordinator of Campus\nRepresentatives, P.O. Box 1384, Ann\nArbor, MI 48106.\nRELIABLE person to babysit a 16\nmonth old child, Wednesday and\nThursday mornings, my home. Phone\n738-7794.\nHOUSEKEEPING suite or room urgently needed by female graduate student\nand 8 year-old son. 263-7259 or 228-\n4054. Thursday, October 17, 1974\nTHE UBYSSEY\nPage 7\nThunderbirds narrow the gap\nBySTUARTLYSTER\nIf you had never seen a UBC\nThunderbird football game before\nyou might have called last\nSaturday's loss to the University of\nSaskatchewan a bad game.\nBut considering the 'Birds lost\n63-0 to the same team only five\nweeks earlier, the final score of 22-\n11 is a good indication of how much\nthe team has improved.\nSaskatchewan dominated the\nfirst half of the game under the\nstrength of quarterback Barrie\nFraser's 15 pass completions for\n188 yards. UBC's defence was\ngenerally porous and the offence\nhad trouble moving the ball\nagainst a tight Saskatchewan\ndefence.\nUBC opened the scoring at 9:05\nof the first quarter with a 23 yard\nfield goal by Gary Metz. Then\nFraser and co. went to work and\npiled up 22 unanswered points in\nthe second quarter with two touchdown passes, an eight yard run and\na single point.\nGoing into the dressing room at\nhalftime it looked as if the game\nwas going to be a repeat of the\nearlier 63-0 rout.\nBut in the second half UBC got\ntheir ground game going with the\nMcLeod brothers, Marsh and\nMike, providing the punch.\nThe defence played a fine second\nhalf holding the powerful\nSaskatchewan offence scoreless.\nThe defensive secondary showed a\nconsiderable improvement over\nthe first half by allowing the\nHuskies only six complete passes.\nUBC showed considerable poise\nin scoring their only touchdown. It\nstarted with a quarterback sack by\nUBC defensive end Henry Booy\nwhich jarred the ball loose. UBC\nrecovered the fumble and marched\n43 yards in seven plays for the\nscore.\nThe scoring play came with UBC\ngambling on a third down and\nseven situation and Dan Smith\nhitting Marshal McLeod on a fifteen yard pass and run play.\nDigby Leigh got the two-point\nconversion when Smith fumbled\nthe snap on the extra-point attempt\nand found Leigh alone in the end-\nzone.\nUBC lost place-kicker and wide\nreceiver Gary Metz for the season\nwith a shoulder separation and\ntackle Dean Stubbs and halfback\nBrad Craig for one game with knee\ninjuries.\nIndian field fouls\nmar UBC hockey win\nBy BOYD McCONNELL\nUBC defeated India 4-0 in first\ndivision field hockey Saturday at\nChris Spencer field. The game was\nlively but marred by poor sportsmanship on India's side.\nUBC fielded a light, fast-moving\nside against the heavier but more\nexperienced Indian team.\nHowever, UBC moved in front with\ntwo goals in the first half.\nIn second half action, the Indian\nteam became frustrated and\ntackled with swinging sticks \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nopening a nasty wound on UBC left\nwinger Kim Maltman's knee.\nUBC's forward play was excellent during the second half.\nThey continually moved the ball\nupfield on the offensive. The forwards were fed good ball by the\nhalf backs and avoided late, stick-\nswing tackles by India.\nUBC fullbacks broke up most of\nIndia's sporadic attacks. They\nwere hard pressed at times\nbecause some of the UBC forwards\nfailed to backcheck.\nUBC centre forward Glenn\nTailing scored two goals during the\ngame, one in each half. Tailing was\nfoiled by India's goalie on\nnumerous breakaways after\nbeating their defence. The other\ngoals were scored by Dave\nTwinning.\nIn the waning minutes of the\ngame, several members of India\ntook to swearing vociferously at\nUBC players \u00E2\u0080\u0094 and the referee.\nPrior to this behavior by India,\none player attacked the referee for\nejecting \u00E2\u0080\u0094an Indian player for\nslashing. The Indian started\n\"shouting at referee Glen Mc-\nCannell and then shoved his hand\nat McCannell's throat.\nAlthough the scene was charged\nwith tension and could have\nerupted in fisticuffs, McCannell\ncalmed everyone down and ejected\nthe Indian player. The player will\nbe suspended for a couple of games\nfor his conduct on the field.\nIn second division field hockey,\nUBC defeated West Van 3-0.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094peter cummings photo\nPETITE CHEERLEADERS of the type to be expected at today's Tea Cup game liven up proceedings at last\nyear's titanic struggle between nurses and home eccers. Nurses, who won 6-0 in 1973, will defend crown at\nnoon in Thunderbird Stadium.\nUBC jumpers best in world\nBy CEDRIC TETZEL\nAccording to UBC track and field\ncoach Lionel Pugh, UBC is the best\nhigh-jumping university in the\nworld.\nTo support his statement Pugh\nsaid of five Canadians to have\njumped over seven feet, four are\nfrom UBC. Two of these, Rick\nCuttell and Dean Bauck, are back\nin UBC training under the\nsupervision of Pugh.\nThese two were featured in the\nCanadian team that went on a\nEuropean tour this summer.\nThese jumpers will be the stars\nof the UBC men's track and field\nteam together with a very strong\n4x400 metres relay team. Featured\non this relay team will be 1971 Pan-\nAmerican games 1,500 metres\nsilver medallist Bill Smart,\nveteran Lee Southern, Ron Hurley\nand Frank Marlatt.\nThese men will be competing\ntogether with a women's team that\nhas never been beaten in Western\nCanada university championships.\nOn the women's team will be two\nCanadian European tour team\nsprinters, Tinker Robinson and\nAnn Mackie. They will be joined by\nyet another sprinter Jean Sparling,\nwho is also a hurdler.\nThese stars, together with over\n50 other athletes that make up the\nlarge UBC team, have already\nstarted their training even though\ntheir season will not get under way\nfor another three months.\nHowever, this does not mean that\nthe team will not be active in\ncompetition. In fact they will have\nto face a very heavy cross-country\nschedule for the next few weeks.\nThe cross-country team will be\ngoing to Seattle this weekend for\nthe Fort Casey invitational race.\nThis is closely followed by- the B.C.\nchampionships, Oct. 26. Next on\ntheir schedule will be the Canada\nWest championships Nov. 2, and\nthe winning team here will go to\nthe National Championships Nov. 9\nat Guelph, Ont. To round off their\nseason will be the Pacific Northwest championships Nov. 23.\nThe cross-country season will be\nfollowed by the indoor season\nwhich goes from December till\nMarch. The main event will be the\nCanada West university indoor\ntrack meet, Feb. 23.\nThe team will then go on to the\noutdoor season which goes well\ninto the summer. This year the\nteam is planning to go on a self-\nfinanced tour to Hawaii in March.\n' When asked to comment on the\nchances of UBC athletes qualifying\nfor the Olympic team, Pugh said,\n\"I would be very surprised if half a\ndozen or so UBC athletes don't get\non the team.\"\nRecreation U.B.C.\nCome and play Badminton in the Memorial Gym\nMONDAY, WEDNESDAY and FRIDAY\n1:30-4:30\n11 Courts \u00E2\u0080\u0094 All Equipment Provided\nAlso\nDance Instruction Offered\nDarjces of the Balkans and Near East\nMemorial Gym - Thursday 2:30 - 3:30\nRecreational Dances (Square, Folk, Round)\nMemorial Gym \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Thursday 3:30 - 4:30\nAre you tired of inferior Leather Products?\nVancouver Leather Professionals have\nopened a new store at 4427 W. 10th\n10% Discount to U.B.C. Students\nwith A.M.S. card.\nOLD SOL\nRECREATION U.B.C.\nANNUAL GENERAL MEETING\nTODAY\nSUB AUDITORIUM\nTHURSDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1974 - 12:30 NOON\nMAIN BUSINESS\nTo elect four members at large for the Recreation\nU.B.C. Steering Committee.\nALL MEMBERS WELCOME!\nA.M.S.\nPOSITION and\nCOMMITTEE\nVACANCIES\nFour Persons are required for\neach of the following committees:\na) Traffic and Parking\nb) Food Services\nc) Bookstore\nSubmit letter of application stating year, faculty, and\nqualifications by Friday, Oct. 31, 1974, to Duncan\nThomson, A.M.S. Secretary, SUB 250. Page 8\nTHE UBYSSEY\nThursday, October 17, 1974\nGood response from B.C. natives\nIndian teacher program\nBy TERRY DONALDSON\nA teacher-training program for\nnative Indians instituted by UBC\nthis fall has been received enthusiastically by B.C.'s native\nIndians, an education faculty\nspokesman said Wednesday.\nArt More, associate education\nprofessor and head of the program,\nsaid the program will meet a real\nneed in the Indian community.\n\"There is a serious shortage of\nwell-trained native Indian teachers\nin the province\" he said. \"At\npresent there is a 90 per cent dropout rate of Indian students between\ngrades one and 12.\n\"And the students that remain in\nschool are generally two or three\nyears behind.\"\nMore, who cited cultural differences an Indian faces in a white\nschool as the reason for this poor\nperformance says that the problem\nwould be reduced with more Indian\nteachers.\n\"However, because so few finish\nhigh school and because of cultural\ndifferences encountered at the\nuniversity, there are only 26 Indian\nteachers in B.C. out of a teaching\nstaff of 23,000.\"\nThe program is different from\ntraditional training programs in\nthat the students will spend the\nfirst two years of the four year\ncourse at off-campus centres.\n'Drop ivory tower'\nFrom page 1\nfunction will be more difficult than\nits annual budgeting duties.\nHo said he is concerned about\nthings like \"whether we can afford\nduplication of effort\" in the three\nuniversities. \"How many law\nschools do you need in B.C.?\" he\nasked.\nBetty McClurg said she will use\nher council appointment to work to\n\"open doors\" of the universities to\npeople, outside.\n\"I want to bring the universities\nout of their ivory tower into the\nreal world.\"\nMcClurg was NDP education\npolicy committee chairman last\nyear and earlier served on the\nSurrey school board.\n\"I would like to bring universities into everyday life as most\npeople don't relate to them. The\naverage person doesn't relate to\nUBC,\" she said.\nShe said she would like to change\nthe direction of financial appropriations to the universities but\nwouldn't comment on details until\nthe council has its first meeting.\nRon Harding said in an interview\nfrom Silverton, B.C. he was\nprobably appointed to give representation to people living near\nNotre Dame university at Nelson.\nHarding said he would oppose\nproposals to turn Notre Dame into\na community college or non-degree\naffiliate of UBC or Simon Fraser\nUniversity.\n\"I'm all in favor of keeping\nNotre Dame a degree-granting\nprovincial university in the area.\nThis is one of the things that we can\nretain,\" he said.\nOther council members appointed are:\n. Donald MacLaurin, of\nSaanich, former vice-president of\nthe University of Victoria.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Frances Forrest-Richards, a\npsychiatrist in Victoria.\na Dorothy Fraser, freelance\nwriter and lecturer at Okanagan\nCollege.\nMacLaurin, Schlosser, Forrest-\nRichards and Fraser are appointed\nfor one-year terms. Two-year\nappointments are: McClurg, Hart,\nMacDonald and Gilly. Walden and\nHarding will serve for three years.\nCouncil chairman William Armstrong said Wednesday the appointees will make a \"very\nworkable group.\"\n\"There are some good people\nthere,\" he said.\n\"It's a broadly based council. It\ngives a nice broad representation\nand good idea input,\" he said.\nUof T profs balk at\nmore student reps\nThe centres will be closer to their\nhomes, easing the problems of\ntransition. Much of this time will\nbe spent in actual classroom\nsituations with periodic breaks for\nshort intensive courses with\nuniversity or Indian resource\npersons.\nThe third year will be spent at\nUBC or at a community college\nafter which students will receive a\nstandard teaching certificate.\nThere are four of these centres \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nin Terrace, Williams Lake,\nKamloops, and North Vancouver.\nEach centre has about 15 students\nwith a team leader who has been a\nteacher and who has worked with\nIndian communities. However,\nonly one of these leaders is Indian.\nThe program is funded by a\n$150,000 grant from the provincial\ngovernment.\n\"We couldn't get anywhere with\nIRA flubs\nflight plan\nIRELAND (CUP-ENS) \u00E2\u0080\u0094 The\nIrish Republican Army flew its\nsecond-ever bombing mission\nrecently and the incident deserves\na prominent place in the history of\nair warfare.\nThe mission was flown by four\nIRA gunmen, who hijacked a small\nplane in the Republic of Ireland.\nThey ordered the pilot to fly to\nUlster, but when they became\nairborne they lost their way, first\nordering the pilot to the right, then\nto the left.\nWhen they finally found the\nborder, they tossed out a small,\nhome-made bomb from the cockpit, only to have it land on the wing\nof the plane.\nFortunately for all concerned, it\nbounced off without exploding and\nlanded in a field \u00E2\u0080\u0094 also without\nexploding. At that point the\nhijackers panicked and ordered\nthe pilot to set the plane down in a\npasture. When they'd safely landed, the gunmen beat tracks for\nthe woods, never to be seen again.\nTORONTO (CUP) - Teaching\nstaff at the University of Toronto\nare trqing to stop further student\nrepresentation on the university's\ngoverning council.\nA petition signed by 100 faculty\nmembers calls for a special\nmeeting of the arts and science\nfaculty council to vote on a motion\nto \"oppose any increase in the\npresent ratio of student faculty\nrepresentation on the governing\ncouncil.\"\nThe council consists of eight\nstudents and 12 faculty members.\nIt is currently reviewing the\nUniversity of Toronto Act and has\nreceived 26 briefs from on and off\nca nus groups, most of them\nsupt \"ting student parity on the\ncouncil.\nThe petition, initiated by\npolitical economy head Harry\nEastmen, stipulates that the\nsignees want a clear majority of\nfaculty members to student\nmembers on council.\nEastman admitted he knows of\nno other special meetings of\nfaculty council which can meet\nonly when 100 of its 1300 members\nrequest a meeting.\nHe said the council itself has met\nonly twice in the last four years.\nThe faculty council includes 50\nstudents and campaigns in the past\nto increase the representation have\nfailed.\nThe U of T alumni association\nand teaching staff in the faculty of\nsocial work support parity on the\ngoverning council.\nMENS INTRAMURAL\nCURLING BONSPIEL\nDeadline For Rink Entry -October 18\nBonspiel is on October 26 - 27\nONLY $4 PER RINK\nRight on\nCampus\nDirectly Behind Bank\nof\nCommerce\nGabriel's\nVillage Coiffures\n-Newest Cutting and\nStyl ing by\nMiss Betty and\n Miss Maija\t\nNo app't necessary!\nSpecial Student Prices\n224-7514\n2154 Western Parkway\n(in Village)\t\nthe Socreds,\" More said. \"They\nwouldn't even read our reports.\nBut the NDP have been very\nhelpful.\"\nMore emphasized that Indians\nhave been involved in all aspects of\nthe planning of the program. The\ncommittee of seven had four Indians, and the committee was\nnever split on an issue along white-\nIndian lines, he said.\nWhen asked whether the\nphilosophy of the program is to\nintegrate students into white man's\nsociety, More said he wants Indians to have \"the best of both\nworlds.\"\n\"We are trying to provide the\nstudents with skills and knowledge\nfor integration in the best sense of\nthe word,\" he said.\nMore also said that he has\nreceived requests from several\nother groups who want training\ncentres set up in their areas.\nNegative\nIons\nWILL HELP YOU\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 BREATHE BETTER\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 FEEL BETTER\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 CONCENTRATE BETTER\nFor informative literature\non the biological effects of\nnegative ions call:\n224-1540\nor mail this to:\nMONTAIR ENTERPRISES\nBox 58252 Vancouver, B.C.\nV6P-6E3\nName\t\nAddress \t\nPhone \t\nTUXEDO\nRENTALS SALES\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Browns * Blues\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Greys \u00E2\u0096\u00A0> Burgundy\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Tux-Tails * Velvets\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Double Knits \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 White\nParking at Rear\nBLACK & LEE\nFormal Wear Rentals\n631 Howe 688-2481\nASSOCIATED STORES\nMen's Room Westwood Mall 941-2541\n4639 Kingsway 435-1160\n2174 West 41st Ave. 261-2750\n1046 Austin, Coquitlam 937-3516\n1420 Lonsdale, N. Van. 988-7620\n3048 Edgemount Blvd., N.V. 987-5121\n1586 Marine, W. Van. 936-1813\n1527 Lonsdale, N. Van. 985-4312\nFraser's Surrey Place 588-7323\nWerners Lougheed Mall 936-7222\nFriesens Guildford Centre 581-8722\nKennedy McDonald, Park Royal 922-6421\nFraser's Park Royal North 926-1916\n* 10% discount to U.B.C. students\nWRITING IMPROVEMENT COURSE\nIn response to demand, three more sections will be\nadded to the Writing Improvement Course currently\noffered by the Centre for Continuing Education.\nEach section will meet one evening a week for six\nsessions, beginning next Tuesday, October 22.\nPreregistration for the course is necessary.\nThis course is intended to provide individual\nassistance with essential composition skills. For more\ninformation about the course or registration, please\ncall Education Extension, Centre for Continuing\nEducation, University of British Columbia. Telephone\n228-2181, local 220.\nFOR THE ABSOLUTE LATEST\nIN EYEWEAR\nLOOK TO . . .\nPrescription Optical\nBecause \u00E2\u0080\u0094 when you look good\nSo do we . . .\n\\nEYEWEAR WITH A FLAIR\nSTUDENT DISCOUNTS\nSchool Board Wants Ideass on English\nAll those adults and organizations with better ideas about English in the schools have their\nchance now to tell the Vancouver School Board.\nThe School Board's Task Force on English has issued an invitation for interested citizens and\norganizations to put their ideas down in writing; preferably in less than 500 words.\n\"Many have had considerable to say about the deficiencies of our students in reading and\nwriting,\" said Task Force chairman Mrs. Lannie Slade. \"Now, we want to hear of their suggestions in\nwriting or orally before the Task Force, as to what is the best program for students to meet their\nneeds in today's world.\"\nThe Board established the 20-member Task Force, with broad representation, to obtain an\nanswer to this question: \"Is the present Reading and Writing program properly preparing students for\ntoday's world.\"\nThe Task Force is to report its findings to the School Board by this coming January 31st.\nThe written submissions with observations and ideas, as well as requests to appear before the\nTask Force, should be sent to Mrs. Lannie Slade at the Vancouver School Board, 1595 West 10th\nAvenue."@en . "Newspapers"@en . "Vancouver (B.C.)"@en . "LH3.B7 U4"@en . "LH3_B7_U4_1974_10_17"@en . "10.14288/1.0127731"@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 .