"CONTENTdm"@en . "http://resolve.library.ubc.ca/cgi-bin/catsearch?bid=1211252"@en . "University Publications"@en . "2015-08-28"@en . "1970-01-20"@en . "Misprinted volume, should be LII."@en . ""@en . "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/Ubysseynews/items/1.0127979/source.json"@en . "application/pdf"@en . " Page 2: A special birth control questionnaire.\nPage 4: Some groovy little Vietnam horror\nstories.\nPage 8: Computer burnings are just part of\nthe Canadian way of life.\n7\nVol. LI, No. 26 VANCOUVER, B.C., TUESDAY, JANUARY 20, 1970\n228-2305\n\"It is not the purpose of the university to serve the community\"\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094UBC senate, Jan. 14, 1970\nlawyer\nFouks versus Sun\nUUUULA* IVICII, BKUWN\nlawyer\ndirector, Crown Life Insurance\nlessee of Fouks-Bonner penthouse\nlawyer\nInsurance Bureau of Canada\n1\nAPARTMENT\npartnership between Bonner and Fouks\nARTHUR FOUKS\nlawyer\nUBC Board of Governors\n*\ndirector\nB.C. Brewers' Institute\nlawyer\nInsurance Agents of B.C.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nA\n\u00E2\u0096\u00BC\nROBERT BONNER\nformer\nattornev-aeneral\n\u00E2\u0096\u00BC\nadministrator\nB.C. liquor laws\nadministrator\nB.C. insurance laws\nThe above diagram illustrates some of the connections that exist between UBC board of governors\nmember Arthur Fouks, former attorney general Robert Bonner and lawyer Douglas McK. Brown.\nBonner and Fouks have long been friends and associates ever since the days years ago when they\nteamed up to win the debating championship for UBC. But we question their wisdom in entering into\na partnership in a business enterprise when Fouks was intimately connected to the liquor and insurance\nindustries and Bonner was administrator of the laws concerning both.\nMcK. Brown is icing on the cake, as director of one insurance company and counsel for the Insurance\nBureau of Canada, while at the same time being a tenant in the Bonner-Fouks apartment. It is not\nsurprising, therefore, to see McK. Brown acting as counsel for Fouks in his libel against The Sun Publishing Company and Sun columnist Al Fotheringham.\nNeither is it surprising to discover a relationship such as the one outlined here. Such things are quite\ncommon in corporate societies where company directorships, club affiliations and political preferences\nmingle and merge.\nWe see no place for such activities at UBC. Board chairman Walter Koerner continually refers to\nthe university in terms of a business, a factory, a \"plant\". If this is the way business operates, we'd\nrather declare bankruptcy. Page 2\nTHE UBYSSEY\nBirth Control Questionnaire\nIt's a fact that while men students can obtain contraceptives on campus by merely dropping into the\nmen's room in SUB, there are no similar facilities for\nwomen.\nOfficially, according to student health service director Dr. A. M. Johnson, the decision of the service\nwhether or not to distribute contraceptives to women is\nentirely up to the individual service doctor.\nIn an effort to discover the opinion of students on\ncampus on this situation the women's liberation group\nat UBC has prepared the following questionnaire.\nDo you feel that Health Services should provide\na contraceptive clinic? (i.e. give information and\nadvice on and prescriptions for contraceptives).\nYes No \t\nIf such a service was available, would you use\nit? Yes No\nIf no, why not?\n(a) already practicing contraception ...\n(b) do not want contraception\t\nIf such a service had been available at the time\nyou first obtained contraception, would you have\nusedit? Yes No\nHave you ever approached Student Health Services to obtain contraception?\nYes No\nIf yes, did you obtain contraception?\nYes No\nAre you married ? Are you under 21 ?\nYes No Yes No\nYour sex:\nfemale\nmale\nWhat to do with it\nBoxes will be set up in Wesbrook Building, in the Buchanan\nlobby, in the Old Auditorum cafe, in the Education Building lobby, in front of the bookstore, and main floor SUB,\nto hold your completed questionnaire. Those who complete\nthe forms after today can turn them in at the SUB information booth.\nOPPORTUNITY\nIncorporated Group of\nSenior Students engaged in\ndiversified revenue projects\nhas an opening for ambitious student. Shareholding\ninvestment required. Send\ninquiries to Box No. 6343,\nPostal Station 'G', Van. 8,\nB.C.\nCONTEMPLATION, MEDITATION,\nRELAXATION\nWORRY BEADS\nFor details see January 23 Ubyssey\nTuesday, January 20, 1970\nMAX DEXALL\nOFFERS\n10% Discount\nto UBC Students\n2609 Granville at 10th\nA complete stock of all the popular makes\nof shoes for the college student, as well as\nHosiery, Handbags, Boots \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nboth Men's & Women's\nWhatever your need in footwear you'll find it at\nDexall's. Pay them a visit \u00E2\u0080\u0094 see the exciting new\nstyles \u00E2\u0080\u0094 and ask for the 10% discount.\nBetter Shoes for less\nDEXALL'S - GRANVILLE BETWEEN 10th & 11th - 738-9833\nVisit Our New Varsity Branch\n4517 W. 10th Ave.-(1 blk. from UBC Gates)\nffrbanki\n10% Special UBC Discount-Students & Faculty\nAPPLICATION\nFOR GRADUATION\n\"Application for Graduation\" cards are now being mailed to all students in Fourth Year Arts, Music, Science,\nCommerce and Fourth Year Elementary and Fifth Year\nSecondary Education, anc will be available in departmental offices for students in the graduating years of\nall other faculties. All Students who expect to graduate\nthis spring are requested to complete and return both\ncards to the Registrar's Office (Mrs. Kent) as soon as possible, but not later than February 16, 1970.\n\"Application for Graduation\" cards are available in the Registrar's Office and students in\nthese graduating years who do not receive\ncards in the mail should check their addresses\nin the Registrar's Office.\nPLEASE NOTE: It is the responsibility of the student to\nMAKE APPLICATION FOR HIS DEGREE. If the student\ndoes not make application, his name will not be put forward\nfor approval by his Faculty and by Senate.\nNO APPLICATION - NO DEGREE Tuesday, January 20, 1970\nTHE UBYSSEY\nPage 3\n^~C*\u00C2\u00A3&U\u00C2\u00AB&w>s&i&s-C*\u00C2\u00AB * <&$\u00C2\u00A3\nUBC, Eastern profs ask pay increases\nSUB comes\ntumbling\ndown . . .\nSUB is crumbling.\nLittle more than a year\nold, the student union\nbuilding is already showing\ncracks in the plaster and\nbrick of its walls and\nceilings.\nThe damage is most\napparent on the second\nstorey of the building.\nThere are fissures of varying\nwidth in the newsroom and\ndarkroom of The Ubyssey\nand the Photo Society\ndarkroom has bricks loose\nenough to allow an\nappreciable amount of light\ninto the room.\nDave Grahame, AMS\nco-ordinator, offered a\npartial explanation for the\ndecay. He said that the\nouter walls of SUB are the\nonly ones embedded in the\nfoundations, and therefore\nare more susceptible to\nsettling.\nSUB building manager\nGraeme Vance was in\nconference at press time.\nProfessors at the University of\nToronto, York University, and the\nUniversity of Western Ontario\nhave begun jockeying for sizeable\npay increases for the 1970-71\nacademic year.\nU of T professors are\ndemanding a 22 per cent pay\nraise, York faculty wants an 18\nper cent increase while UWO\nprofessors are asking for an 17 per\ncent raise. If successful the UWO\nprofs will have boosted their\nwages by 30 per cent over two\nyears.\nU of T and York also hope to\nabolish their right to strike, both\nfaculty associations want formal\nmachinery set up to negotiate\nsalaries, with the right to strike\nreplaced by arbitration.\nIf granted, the pay boost\nwould raise the average salary for\nall ranks of faculty at Toronto to\n$19,520 from $16,000; average\nsalaries at York would rise to\n$15,930.\nCohn-Bendit\nin Canada\nfor a visit\nMONTREAL (CUP) - Daniel\nCohn-Bendit, student non-leader\nin the French revolt of May-June,\n1968, arrived in Montreal Friday\nfor a Canadian visit of unknown\nlength.\nCohn-Bendit's visit was\narranged by the Canadian\ntelevision network (CTV), to film\na program for their\n\" Face-To-Face\" series.\nCohn-Bendit is expected to travel\nto Toronto today to take part in\nthe program.\nAlthough the 25-year-old\nstudent activist is still persona non\ngrata in France \u00E2\u0080\u0094 during a\none-hour stop-over is Paris on his\nFrankfurst-to-Montreal flight, he\nwas not allowed to step off the\nplane \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Cohn-Bendit whisked\nthrough Canadian customs and\nimmigration in 15 minutes.\nHe was met at the airport by\nformer McGill political science\nlecturer Stanley Gray and\nimmediately retired into seclusion\nuntil his scheduled Toronto\nappearance.\nCohn-Bendit, formerly a\nsociology student at the\nUniversity of Nanterre, is also the\nco-author with his brother Gabriel\nof the book \"Obsolete\nCommunism - A Left Wing\nAlternative.\" A description of the\ntique of Leninist party structure.\nHe is also rumoured to be\nmaking a cowboy movie with\nFrench film-maker Jean Luc\nGoddard.\nOVer his own protestations,\nCohn-Bendit was elevated to the\nstatus of \"Leader\" of the May\nrebellion by the French and\ninternational press.\nThe current wage scale at\nWestern is: Full professors,\n$21,688; associate profs, $15,823;\nassistant profs, $12,495.\nUBC faculty, who have the\nsixth highest wage scale is also\nnegotiating with its board of\ngovernors.\nThe UWO wage demand breaks\ndown to five per cent to meet\ninflation costs; seven per cent to\n\"raise UWO faculty to the level of\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094maurtMn gam photo\nSLOW RESPONSE was order of the day at aggie-sponsored\npancake and sausage luncheon outside bookstore Monday. Carol\nMorrow was one of those who shelled out 50 cents a plate. Lunch\ncontinues today from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Proceeds to House\nof Hope farm for retarded children in Ladner.\nGrape meeting asked\nGrape boycott organizers have asked Canada Safeway Ltd. to\ndiscuss Safeway's policy of selling California table grapes with them.\n\"A delegation of public figures and myself request a meeting\nwith you any time between January 26 and 30,\" said Pamela Smith,\nB.C.'s United Farm Workers' representative in a telegram to Safeway's\nregional director Mr. W. J. Kraft.\"\nThe delegation will include Vancouver alderman Harry Rankin,\nB.C. Federation of Labor representative Ray Haynes, Burnaby MLA\nIrene Bailey, and evangelical church minister Bob Christie. Various\npriests and rabbis will also be included.\nNew Democratic Party leader Dave Barrett and Rankin will also\naddress an information-picket line outside the safeway store at\nKingsway and Joyce Road Saturday, Jan. 24 at 2 p.m.\nother professional educators;\" and\nfive per cent \"merit pay.\"\nAccording to a UWO faculty\nassociation spokesman, the merit\npay provision is only an average,\nwith money being paid to faculty\non a scale \"determined strictly by\nthe merit of the work or research\nin which he was involved.\"\nWestern student council\npresident Ian Brooks termed the\nwage demand \"extremely\nunreasonable\", and suggested that\nif the increase is approved, \"either\nthere should be a 17 per cent\ndecrease in tuition fees to offset\ninflation and provide merit pay\nfor students, of there should be a\n17 per cent increase in marks for\nthe same reasons.\"\nBring it in line\nWayne Sumner, chairman of\nthe salary committee for the U of\nT faculty association, said\nThursday the pay hike is\nnecessary to \"bring the university\nsalary structure in line with other\nteaching salaries.\nA salary committee report\npresented last month to the U of\nT budget committee claimed that\nteachers at Ontario colleges of\napplied arts and technology are\n\"better off financially over both\nthe short and medium run\" than\nteachers at U of T.\nSumner also said the decision\nto ask for formal bargaining\nprocedures is a \"compromise\nbetween hard-line unionism and\nthe old tradition of having tea\nwith the president and handing\nhim a brief on salaries while\ndiscussing other things.\"\nUBC situation\nUBC faculty association\npresident Dr. W. D. Finn said a\nbrief is being prepared for\npresentation to the board of\ngovernors which will contain\n1970-71 salary demands.\n\"We don't release the figures\nwe ask for,\" he said, \"but we we\nare certainly aware that the\nOntario faculties are asking for 20\nper cent increases.\"\n\"There is often quite a\ndisparity between our demands\nand what we get.\"\nFull profs at UBC receive\napproximately $19,000; associate\nprofs get $14,200; and assistant\nprofs are paid $11,300.\nWhen asked to comment on\nthe decision at U of T and York\nto give up the right to strike Finn\nsaid the UBC faculty has never\nconsidered striking.\n\"Striking is not even covered in\nthe faculty handbook.\"\nOnly two candidates still in running for LSA pres\nBy SANDY KASS\nThe Law Student Association held its\nmonthly free-for-all Monday noon.\nThe role of the LSA, scheduled to be\nthe main topic of discussion, was passed\nover in favor of campaign speeches for\nthe executive election held today.\nThe positions of external\nvice-president, internal vice-president,\ntreasurer, and secretary have been filled\nrespectively by A. B. Gibson, law 1, Dave\nDonohue, law 2, Sean Hogan, and\nMargaret Fairweather, law 2 (by\nacclamation).\nCandidates for president were heard\nfirst, but only two of them are staying in\nthe election.\n\"I am withdrawing my application for\npresident because two distinct groups\nhave formed in this faculty,\" said Peter\nBrock, law 1.\n\"There are the people in here for the\nmoney, and those that are just political\nreformers. It is tragic that this should\nhappen to the legal profession,\" he said.\nPresidential candidate Ian Meiklem law,\n2, said: \"It's time we started to gather\nideas of what the role of the LSA should\nbe. We have to do more than think \u00E2\u0080\u0094 we\nhave to get to work on it.\"\nCandidate John Parks, law 2, said the\nrole of LSA president should be one of\nco-ordinator and initiator, rather than\nthat of instigator.\nCandidate for ombudsman Mark\nKrotter, law 2, said the main qualification\nfor the job is to be \"a real bastard.\"\n\"My friends, I feel that I am\nqualified,\" he said.\nHe than presented the Carey Linde\npublic relations award (a jar of vaseline)\nto LSA president Carey Linde.\nA motion to postpone discussion on\nthe LSA until the new executive have\ntaken office was withdrawn.\nSpokesman for the anti-LSAers, John\nSchmitz, law 2, asked of the LSA: \"Do\nwe need it? We have the LSA, but do we\nwant to keep it? Where does it lead us?\"\nHe proposed establishment of a one\ncommunity set-up, where faculty, staff\nand students meet together to discuss\nmatters of concern to all.\n\"We have tried representative\ndemocracy, but it doesn't work. It is time\nwe realized this,\" he said.\nAsked one student: \"If we cannot\nexamine a small institution like the LSA,\nwhat are we going to do when we get out\nof here?\" Page 4\nTHE UBYSSEY\nTuesday, January 20, 1970\nEAT IN .TAKEOUT*. DELIVERY-\n3261 W. Broadway 736-7788\nWeekda-jrs to 1 a.m.\nFri. & Sat. 3 a.m.\nNEW YORK\nCOSTUME SALON\nRENTALS\nWHITE DINNER JACKETS\nTUXEDOS, DARK SUITS, TAILS\nCOLORED JACKETS\nSPECIAL STUDENT RATES\n224-0034 4397 W. 10th\nWhy Do You\nHave A Poor\nMemory ?\nA noted publisher in Chicago reports there is a simple technique\nfor acquiring a powerful memory\nwhich can pay you real dividends\nin both business and social advancement and works like magic to give\nyou added poise, necessary self-\nconfidence and greater popularity.\nAccording to this publisher, many\npeople do not realize how much\nthey could influence others simply\nby remembering accurately everything they see, hear, or read.\nWhether in business, at social functions or even in casual conversations\nwith new acquaintances, there are\nways in which you can dominate\neach situation by your ability to\nremember.\nTo acquaint the readers of this\npaper with the easy-to-follow rules\nfor developing skill in remembering\nanything you choose to remember,\nthe publishers have printed full details of their self-training method\nin a new booklet, \"Adventures in\nMemory,\" which will be mailed free\nto anyone who requests it. No obligation. Send your name and address\nMEMORY STUDIES\n835 Diversey Pkwy.,\nChicago, III. 60614.\nA postcard will do\nUBC FILM SOCIETY\nwhich in 1967 brought\nyou the un-cut \"High\"\nnow presents:\nLARRY KENT'S\nFACADE\nFridays: 23, 30\nSaturdays: 24,31\n7:00 & 9:00\nSundays: Jan. 25,\nFeb. T\n7:00\n$1\nSpecial admission\nfor this presentation only\nSUB AUDITORIUM\nMO A0MITTANCI TO MRSONS UNDM It\nWarning: VERY FRANK TREATMENT OF SEX\nR. W. McDonald, B.C. Censor\n\"Son, I know he's a VC\nby the nine bullet holes\nin his chest.\"\nJournalist Orville Schell writes about his experiences during four trips to Vietnam, and discusses\nthe vagaries of the comercial press war correspondence. From the New Republic.\nEarly in September 1967, I returned to Saigon on an AID\nhelicopter from Quang Ngai Province, just below the DMZ in I\nCorp area, a province that has come to prominence because Mylai\nis there. I had spent several weeks flying with the FACs (the\nForward Air Control), and investigating on the ground the\n\"pacification camps\" for \"refugees\": men, women, and children\nwhose villages had been bombed, shelled and burned in the huge\nfree-fire zones.\nThe whole of Chiang Ngai and Quang Tin provinces was\ndevastated except far.a narrow cordon on either side of coastal\nrout No. 1, and small areas around the provincial and country\ncapitals. The rice-growing region on the coast looked like the moon\n- pockmarked by millions of craters, napalm burns, splintered\ntrees and destroyed houses. In two counties, Due Pho and Mo Due,\nthe local U.S. battalion commander estimated (conservatively) that\nmore than half of th-j^opulace was displaced. The all-too-few\ncivilian hospitals we^ygrei3ltow&^ with patients \"generated\" by\nthe war. The pacific|ti^pt!^|i|*'ere so full that food, shelter, and\nin some instances eWn po^^fe-i*1yvater, were not available. The\nsituation was so sever|^ma\u00C2\u00A3'oi|ipr6ops in the;field were ordered to\ncease \"generating refugees' so-as to take pressure off. Search and\ndestroy operations continued! howevfer, as did the ceaseless air\nstrikes and shelling of the land by artillery and by the Navy off the\ncoast. The province chief, Lt. Col. Maang Dinh Tho, when asked\nwhat plans he had for civilians who were yet to be displaced by\nmilitary operations, said: \"No refugees this time, unless they ask to\ncome.\"\nBy day, I flew over these provinces observing the endless air\nstrikes, sometimes \"put in\" simply because an aircraft had \"some\nstuff on it and wanted to land. There was a rule that no aircraft\ncould land with any unexploded ordinance. Churches, thatched\nhuts, bomb shelters and bunkers, rice fields, any sign of life\nwhatsoever, were cause enough for an airstrike. A man plowing a\nrice field in a free-fire zone was a target for strafing. I remember\nflying with a FAC when we guided in an F-4 strike, dropping four\n750-pound bombs simply because the pilot had seen a small basket\nof vegetables drying in the sun in a completely destroyed village.\n\"When you see something like that,\" he explained to me, \"you\nknow they're down there.\" He did not say, perhaps he did not\nknow, that many people had found the overcrowded pacification\ncamps unbearable and gone back to their villages in the free-fire\nzones, where they lived in holes.\nOn the ground.at night, talking to enlisted men, some of\nwhom had reservations about our conduct in the war, one heard\nstories of \"squirrel hunting\": a man would put a small calibre\nmachine gun on a door stanchion of a \"bubble chopper\" and go\nout over the fields for sport to \"pop me some Dinks\". Stories of\ntorture to make suspects talk were so commonplace they attracted\nno attention, except from an outsider unfamiliar with the ways of\nwar in this area. Any dead \"Gook\" was said to be a VC. One\ncaptain, when asked how he knew that the man he had just shot\nrunning out of a hut was a VC, said \"Son, I know he's a VC by the\nnine bullet holes in his chest.\"\nOn our massive base, at Chu Lai, GIs lounged in the officers\nclub over gin and tonics, watched stateside movies, or surfed on air\nmattresses in the beautiful blue ocean. The piecemeal destruction\nof the Vietnamese and their villages had become so much an\naccepted fact that not one person I encountered in the military had\nthe slightest compunction about showing me, a journalist, whatever\nI wanted to see.\nThat September afternoon, unshaven and covered with mud, I\nwalked with my brother into JUSPAO in Saigon to catch the end\nof the \"Five O'clock Follies,\" the daily military briefing to the\npress. Some 40 corrspondents were present. Ambassador Robert\nKomer, highest ranking American official in the pacification\nprogram, was just finishing talking. A Japanese correspondent\nasked him what areas could be rated successes for the pacification\neffort. He mentioned Binh Dinh Province, and then went on to say,\n\"Another place where clear-and-hold has been proceeding\nremarkably well is Quang Ngai. I think Quang Ngai is going to turn\nout to be one of the success stories of 1967.\" Not one\ncorrespondent challenged him. He concluded by saying his remarks\nwere \"off the record\".\nThat was 1967. By now it is fairly clear that atrocities, on a\npreviously unimaginable scale, have been committed for years by\nU.S. forces against the Vietnamese people \u00E2\u0080\u0094 who to American\ntroops are not distinguishable from the enemy. When I was in\nVietnam, there were almost 550 correspondents registered and\ncleared with the American military. How was it that so few saw\nwhat was happening, or, if they saw, failed to report it? One would\nlike to think that the destruction of Mylai was \"wholly\nunrepresentative,\" as Army Secretary Resor says, and something\nwhich might have escaped the attention of correspondents. One is\nforced to conclude otherwise. For during the short time I was in\nVietnam in 1967, I personally witnessed the destruction of villages\nand their people from the air.\nOne rarely found a soldier who felt (or allowed himself to feel)\nthe horror of what weat on - what was happening to others as\ndistinguished from v^nat was happening to himself. If asked what\nhe thinks about killing and destruction, a soldier usually only says,\n\"I don't bother with that. I'm just here to do my job.\" The terms\nof his job, of course, are set outside and above him. Accept them\nor reject them, he must continue to operate, and above all, to\nsurvive.\nFor many members of the working press in Vietnam, the\nsituation was similar. Few American correspondents I know and\ntalked to seemed to question the basic assumptions of the war.\n(This was not true of the foreign press.) There was much written\nabout strategy, body count, the success or failure of an operation,\nprogress in Revoluttonaiy Development, or the stabilizing of the\ncurrent Saigon regime, But few seemed to be asking, in 1967, if the\nwhole notion of pacification was desirable or tenable, whether\nWestmoreland was in touch with the realities of the war, whether\nAmericans should be in Vietnam to begin with. Many\ncorrespondents had opinions, complaints, and criticisms, and in\nprivate would talk about them. But they would seldom write about\nthem. Like the soldiers, they too, needed to stay in favor, keep\nofficial sources open, and avoid antagonisms between themselves\nand the military, who were at once their guides and protectors in\nthe field.\nEverything had a number or a slang nomenclature.\nVietnamese were \"Gooks\", \"Slopes\", \"Dinks\"; the napalm\ncannisters were \"napes\"; a gun ship helicopter was \"Puff the magic\ndragon\"; Vietnam was \"Nam\"; 20mm aircraft cannon were \"mike\nmikes\". One masters this languate, or is an outsider; just as one\nmasters control of himself as he watches men and women strafed\nfrom the air, peasants swept from their villages and left in a hot Tuesday, January 20, 1970\nTHE UBYSSEY\nPage 5\nJ *>*-\u00C2\u00A3\n-.\u00C2\u00AB*;\u00C2\u00ABr\nRANt\n:.f-\n:c\n:^x\n$\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\n*\n\u00C2\u00AB\"Xs\nr'*2***\nX\n:*-\\nK*\nxjt\n:\u00E2\u0096\u00A0* XJX\n>?\"*M\na.\nVancouver photographer Kenneth McAllister's interpretation of U.S. Vietnam policy.\nfield for two days with sand bags over their heads, their hands tied\nbehind them while waiting for helicopter evacuation to a\n\"collection point\". If one does not master the lingo and those\nfeelings of revulsion, one does not last long in the field. One learns\nto view what is happening from an immediately acceptable\nperspective or risks being totally at odds with a dangerous\nenvironment. It is difficult to describe one's feelings, having just\nflown in from Hong Kong three days before, sitting in a FAC\nCessna 02 which is shooting phosphorous rockets into a defenseless\nvillage, as markers for an airstrike, even when one knows that there\nis Vietcong in the area. I wanted nothing more in the world than to\nstop what was happening or somehow purge myself of any critical\njudgment. Unfortunately, I could do neither.\nBack in Saigon, one is protected, though you could hear and\nsee bombs and flares on the city's outskirts. Here there are many\nother journalists with whom to drink and gripe. One can very\nquickly get wrapped up in local affairs. There is either the threat of\na palace coup to cover, or a pseudo election overseen by a troop of\npresidential observers who stand conspicuously but dumbly beside\na ballot box and have their pictures taken. There is the Five\nO'clock Follies in a neat air-conditioned auditorium. There are new\noperations going out, and myriad press releases from hundreds of\ngovernmental agencies, which are distributed from a huge rack at\nthe press office. There are giant new computer schemes to tell us if\nwe are winning the hearts and minds of the people.\nThere are black market scandals, corruption in the Vietnamese\ngovernment, apathy in the ARVN forces, to be reported. There are\nstudents in jail, Buddhists protesting, human interest stories about\nprostitutes and shoeshine boys adopted by kindly GIs. Most\ncorrespondents must file a story of some kind every day. The folks\nat home want progress reports. If a reporter dug too deeply into\nofficial assumptions, the chances were (and probably still are) that\nhis story would be cut or dropped and that he would get nothing\nbut the bitter ainimosity of the Vietnam military apparatus, upon\nwhich he was dependent for future stories, travel, and all the other\nassistance he needed to keep on top of the news.\nOne correspondent for a Washington paper, with whom I\ntalked upon returning from Quan Ngai, claimed that he knew all\nabout what was happening up there. Yet he wrote little which\nspelled out the significance of the fact that the U.S. had destroyed\ntwo provinces without anyone's noticing it. The correspondent\nhimself seemed unmoved by what he had heard and claimed to\nknow. Perhaps he had seen so much of the same kind of\ndestruction in other areas that it hardly seemed newsworthy.\nBut even if a correspondent had been horrified by what he had\nseen and learned of the war, there were few newspapers or\nmagazines that seemed disposed to print such unsettling reports.\nOne Newsweek correspondent told me on returning from Quang\nNgai that he was shocked by what was going on in the countryside.\nHaving had experience in Europe during World War II, he said that\nwhat he had seen was \"much worse than what the Nazis had done\nto Europe\". Had he written about it in those terms? No.\nThe press has, of course, on many occasions bravely ferreted\nout news, despite official resistance. Newsmen have reported\nexamples of ghastly U.S. errors and of cruelty for which\nVietnamese civilians paid. But more often than not, incidents of a\n* city destroyed to save it, or a village accidentally bombed, or of\ntorture in government prisons, are portrayed as exceptions to the\nrule, rather than the rule itself. They are duly regretted, those\ninvolved are instructed to be more cautious, and the American\npublic rests assured that they will not be repeated. That, at least,\nhas been the case up to now.\nw d e d y, /I\ne n s as *-^\na multi-cultural series\njan.21\nmusic\njan.28\ndance\nfeb.U\npoetry\nfeb.ll\nfashion\ninternational house\nWednesdays at 7:30 pm\nHONG KONG\nCHINESE FOODS\nJust One Block from Campus\nIn The Village\n(Next to U.B.C. Barber Shop)\nWE SERVE GOOD CHINESE FOOD\nAT REASONABLE PRICES\nFor Take-Out Service\nPh. 224-6121\nOpen Every Day\n4:30 p.m. to 11:30 p.m.\nReligion\nfor the Coming Age\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Universal Peace must\nhave direct action to be\na reality.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Life is not based on\nfutility alone.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Spiritual qualities that\nadvocate individual\nthought and responsibility.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 A way of life that de-'\nspite malignment, distortion, misinterpretation and misunderstanding has stood the\ntest of time for over\n3500 years.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 A way of life that deals\neffectively with the\nsometime painful act\nof Intermarriage.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Write us for information on a way to a\nsaner world.\nSend $2.00 for\n\"JEWISH\nINFORMATION\"\nJewish Information Society\nof America \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Oept. C,\n72 East 11th, Chicago, 60605\nUBC FILM SOCIETY\nwhich in 1967 brought\nyou the un-cut \"High\"\nnow presents:\nLARRY KENT'S\nFACADE\nFridays: 23, 30\nSaturdays: 24,31\n7:00 & 9:00\nSundays: Jan. 25,\nFeb. 1\n7:00\n$1\nSpecial admission\nfor this presentation only\nSUB AUDITORIUM\nMO ADMITTANCE TO MRSONS UNDM It\nWarning: VERY FRANK TREATMENT OF SEX\nR. W. McDonald, B.C. Censor Page 6\nPublished Tuesdays and Fridays throughout the university year\nby the Alma Mater Society of the University of B.C. Editorial\nopinions are those of the writer and not of the AMS or the\nuniversity administration. Member/ Canadian University Press.\nThe Ubyssey subscribes to the press services of Pacific Student\nPress, of which it is a founding member. Ubyssey News Service\nsupports one foreign correspondent in Pango-Pango. The Ubyssey\npublishes Page Friday, a weekly commentary and review. City\neditor, 228-2305; editor, 228-2301; Page Friday, 228-2309;\nsports, 228-2308; advertising, 228-3977.\nJANUARY 20, 1970\nBoG gets its man\nAs we all know by now, Walter Gage has been\nnamed to serve as UBC administration president for the\nnext three to five years.\nThis represents the crowning glory for the kindly\ngrandfather figure who has been patting students on the\nhead for as long as anyone can remember. Right?\nPerhaps, but it also represents the crowning glory\nfor the board of governors' long career of backroom\npower plays.\nThe whole charade, began last February, when the\nboard established a presidential search committee to\nfind a successor to Ken Hare.\nThe committee was about as democratic and as\nrepresentative of the university community as the board\nitself. It consisted of three members of the board, three\nmembers of the alumni association (who play in the\nsame big business league as the board members) four\n\"members of the faculty\", three members of the senate\n(more faculty), three deans (still more faculty), one\nmember of the administration bureaucracy and, in ^the\ntrue tokenist spirit of our time, four students appointed\nby the AMS.\nThe committee, which was supposed to\nrecommend criteria and a list of candidates, met once\n(that's right, once) and recommended good old Wally\nfor the job.\nThe understanding at the time was that Gage\nwould be a caretaker president until this spring, when he\nreaches the \"compulsory retirement\" age of 65. The\ncommittee was to continue searching for a more\npermanent president.\nThe committee wasn't heard from again until late\nNovember when its chairman, Chancellor Allan\nMcGavin, said he would fill some vacancies and call a\nmeeting \"in the near future.\"\nA month later, the committee was disolved and the\nboard suddenly announced that Gage would remain as\npresident on a year-to-year basis for as long as five\nyears.\nIt suddenly became all too obvious that Gage was\nthe man the board wanted from the start. The only\nreason he was not appointed immediately after Hare's\nresignation was to give the impression that a search was\nmade and Gage was found to be the best man available.\nGage was the man the board could count on not to\nrock the boat. They knew that Gage, the man students\nregarded as \"a good guy\", would convince the students\nnot to cause trouble and perhaps even to return to being\nunquestioning servants of the university.\nThe fact that Gage is scheduled for retirement\nseems to bother no one. After all, rules are only hard\nand fast when applied to students and aren't meant to\ncramp the board's or the administration's style.\nFew people dislike Gage personally, but he\nrepresents the kind of paternalistic administrator we all\nhoped had disappeared with pep rallies and panty raids.\nAny hopes some people may still have had for\nmaking this place into something other than an\nacademic production line have been smashed.\nIt's business as usual for the next five years. ,N.S.\nTHE UBYSSEY\nTuesday, January 20, 1970\nEditor: Michael Finlay\nNews Paul Knox\nCity Nate Smith\nManaging Bruce Curtis\nPhoto Bruce Stout\nWire Irene Wasilewski\nSports Jim Maddin\nSenior - John Twigg\nAss't News Maurice Bridge\nAss't City John Andersen\nPage Friday \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Fred Cawsey\nNorbert Ruebsaat\nGanglia of the political nervous\nsystem forced Jim Davies to stay away\nfrom nubiles Jan O'Brien, Lesley\nMinot, Wanda Lust, and Ginny Gait.\nSandy Kass heard Christine Krawczyk\nfinally say \"no\" to Tim Wilson and\nShane McCune. Bev Gelfond refused to\nbelieve it. So did Brian McWatters\n(who knows). Maureen Gans ran Into\nthe darkroom followed by jocks Dij\nBuddin and Tony Callagher. Jennifer\nJordan, Robin Burgess, and Fran\nMcGrath threw a \"liberated\" hen party\nfor newcomer Charlotte Crane.\nFRESH\nFBOATHE\nj-AttBA&E\nSickness\nbags...5*\n\u00C2\u00B0l\n| BLACK |WHITe |SRE\nI BLACK | WHITE BSBg\nsugar*. 1 sua-AR 1 -sua.\ni\nz.\n5\nQ\nz:\nz\nz:\n[ the. UAvssejJ\nLETTERS TO THE EDITOR\nBiafra\nEditor, The Ubyssey, Sir:\nThe picture on the last\nedition's Page Friday title page\nwas both very meaningful and\nvery beautiful. Unfortunately the\nheadline and the caption which\nfollowed were detractions and\ndidn't come close to what the\nchild was saying. His eyes alone\nsaid it all.\nThe sarcasm of the headline\nwas passe and inappropriate. It\nwas, however, the attached\ncaption which was most abusive.\nIndeed, the association of such a\ncaption to that picture was, to say\nthe least pitiful.\nDoes anyone really believe that\nall that the Biafran child wanted\nwas \"a little freedom to govern its\nown affairs\"? Was there ever such\na thing as a \"last post of freedom\"\nfor any of Biafra's children? Who\nTiad those \"dreams\" that Cawsey\nwas talking about? The child, or\nOjukwu, or maybe himself? Not\nthe child.\nCawsey is critical of politics in\nthe caption yet it is enveloped in\nthem. Cawsey, and those who\nagree with him, have misplaced\n\"shame\" and \"disgust\" when they\nrefer it to Nixon, a Canada sitting\non its ass, Russia, or Nigeria. The\nchild wasn't thinking about any of\nthese. He was thinking about the\nwhole world \u00E2\u0080\u0094 and of us, and he\nwas wondering why.\nCALVIN WHITE\nMore AAC\nEditor, The Ubyssey, Sir:\nI am writing with regard to the\nAAC issue. In a discussion on\nWednesday, during which the\nparticipating AAC member was\nb^ing occasionally questioned (as\nmust happen for a fruitful\ndiscussion) on the genetic theories\nwhich he was spouting \u00E2\u0080\u0094\napparently endlessly \u00E2\u0080\u0094 he became\nenraged at his opponent and\nthreatened to \"punch hin in the\nnose if he interrupted again!\" This\nhe claimed was for his opponent's\n\"own good,\" as he was \"sick.\"\n(His sickness being blatantly\nevident in the opposing of a\nCommunist doctrine, of course).\nTo pile it higher and deeper, he\nthan proceeded to call his\nopponent, among other things, a\nfascist! This I found to be a\nludicrous situation \u00E2\u0080\u0094 as was\nobvious to all but the AAC.\nMy experience with the AAC,\nthough limited, but supported by\nhearsay of other events,\n(specifically the science\nsymposium) indicated this event\nto be typical of them.\nI find them to be extremely\ndogmatic, and in the advent of\nany rational opposition, they\nreply by shouting down,\ninterrupting, slandering or\nignoring their opponents. They\nseem to have no concept of\ndiscussion other than a loudly\nvoiced monologue delivered by\nthemselves.\nThus, I have come to the\nconclusion that I must support\nHodge's action in this dispute, as I\ncannot make them out to be any\nmore than a political front.\nROSS HEDLEY\narts 2\nLibrary\nEditor, The Ubyssey, Sir:\nI recently picked up and read a\ncopy of your primary competitor,\nUBC Reports. On the front page\nof its latest issue was an article\n\"Library outlook dark\". The\narticle read: \"UBC's present book\ncollection just over 1,000,000\ncatalogued volumes ... will have a\n2,000,000 volume book collection\nby 1975-76.\"\nI found this number to be\nenormous. At that point I asked\nmyself why, with so many books,\nthe library is considered to be\ninadequate for a university this\nsize.\nAgain my mind whirred into\naction as I recalled a discussion I\nonce had with a prof. \"When\nmaking up your bibliography,\ntake books no older than 1955\nunless they are primary sources,\"\nhe said. \"If there are two books\non the same theme, take the most\nrecent as it will have most likely\nincorporated the former.\"\nIt seems to me that the quality\nof information kept in a library\nshould be a greater consideration\nthan the quanity of books it\nholds. It does not take an expert\nin a field to know that certain\nbooks are overlapping or out of\ndate.\nThe library has on its staff a\nlarge group of people who run\naround from desk to desk and\nwhose primary purpose seems to\nbe to make noise. Maybe if these\npeople were given the job of\nevaluating the quality of\ninformation in the library in\nconsultation with departmental\ncommittees, the problem of\nhaving an inadequate overcrowded\nlibrary could be solved.\nGERRY CANNON\narts 4\nAAC holes\nHis Highness,\nLord Editor-in-Chief, Sir:\nMy initial reaction to the\nAcademic Activities Committee\nwas similar to that of most\nstudents in that I was angered and\ndusgusted. But perhaps this value\njudgement was too hasty and\ncolored by prejudice. At any rate,\nmy attitude now is one of\nagreement with their actions,\nwhich I whole-heartedly endorse.\nAfter all, assholes are assholes,\nand will continue to act as\nassholes even if they spell it\nAAChole. Thus, my faith in the\nfirst law of personality has been\nreaffirmed.\nSecondly, what would happen\nif assholes weren't all segregated\ninto the AAC? They would\nprobably be wandering the\ncampus at night, causing\nimaginable trouble. Isn't it better\nto have them isolated, rather than\ndispersed? Surely an organization\nas useless as the AAC can be\nsacrificed for the total betterment\nof the students at large. An\nAAChole by any other name\nwould smell as shitty.\nThe Hairy Planaria\nFan club\nEditor, The Ubyssey, Sir:\nAs much as I have enjoyed\nyour paper in past years, I find\nmyself increasingly disturbed by\nthe addition to your staff of one\nJames Davies.\nIt was bad enough when he was\nprattling about graffitti groupies\nand assorted forgotten trivia of\nthe decade past. But the\ncollection of inane blatherings\nwhich has bejnjn to appear under\nthe name of Davies' Ravies is just\ntoo much.\nGEORGE KERSCHBAUM\nMuch as we tend to agree with\nyour analysis, we are consistently\nfaced with the problem of Davies\ncrying, screaming and threatening\nto hold his breath until he turns\nblue whenever we decide not to\nrun something he writes\u00E2\u0080\u0094Ed. Tuesday, January 20, 1970\nTHE UBYSSEY\nPage 7\nEVENT: (see title above) The End of the Life of a Sovereign.\nCREATOR: Playwright Eugene Ionesco of France.\nTIME: Evenings (8:30) January 16 to 24.\nPLACE: The Fredercik Wood Theatre (UBC)\nINITIATOR: Klaus Strassmann of UBC.\nWhen a man dies, his world - presumably - dies also.\nAs far as he is able to perceive, his world comes into existance\non the moment of his birth, and receeeds out of existance at the\nmoment of his death. And the order which he imposes (projects)\nupon this world - to secure his own equilibrium - crumbles in\ndirect proportion to his approaching death.\nAnd so when a king dies, his kingdom dies with him.\nAnd all of this obviously applies in the same way when a\nplaywright - in this case Eugene Ionesco - deposits an imaginary\ncharacter in an imaginary world. The King exists (dies) when the\nplay is over.\n\"You will die in one hour and thirty-five minutes, at the end of\nthis piece,\" his queen informs him.\nThe traditional model for this, one of the latest plays of\nIonesco, is the medieval morality play of Everyman, the sombre tale\nof the man facing death totally unprepared for it.\nBut Ionesco merely says it: he does not pity, he does not\nmelodramatize. It is fact: the world, your \"kingdom\", and any\nover-riding system of order you have managed to erect, all die when\nyou die. There is no before, there is no hereafter. When the play is\nover it is over forever.\nKlaus Strassmann's production has many high points. Eric\nHouse's performance is one. William Louis' objectifying narrative -\nto us, the watchers - is another. And many others: A total, cosmic\ntheatre-filling heartbeat as we watch the king die; a dissolution of\nthe stage at the king dies. And many more.\nGo see, watch it happen.\n-NR\npage tuesday\nPacks\nPunch\nBOFORS GUN\nSeven men have as their \"raison d'etre\" the guarding of the\nBofors gun. If any of the six gunners guarding the gun shirk their\nduties, they are liable for five years in prison. If there are any lapses\nin the guarding, the lance-bombardier in charge of the operation will\nhave his military career ruined.\nThe Bofors Gun has been obsolete for twenty years.\nEvents While Guarding The Bofors Gun, a play by John\nMcGrath, had its North American premiere at the Playhouse on\nFriday, Jan. 16. The action takes place in a British army camp in\nNorth Germany during the winter. It is not what one expects in a\nmilitary play. There is no confrontation with the enemy. There no\npitched battles with the omnipresent explosions one so often\nassociates with military plays. And, above all, there is no flag waving.\nHowever, this is not to say the play is simply a moralistic\ntreatment of the evils of war. The truth is that it is concerned not\nwith soldiers, but rather with people \u00E2\u0080\u0094 who just happen to be\nsoldiers.\nAlthough the play's cast has no weak links, two of the actors'\nperformances can be singled out as particularly brilliant.\nWilfred Downing, as the lance-bombardier in charge of the\noperation portrays the human frailty of weakness as if it were a\n, virtue.\nIn directly contrasting him is Alan Scarfe, who as gunner\nO'Rourke, is as overbearing and comically vulgar as is possible for\nman. It is O'Rourke, seemingly with the fullest life of the men\nguarding the gun, who tragically realized the utter meaninglessness\nof his existence. His tragic realization of this futility creates a\nchaotic situation, disrupting the guarding, making that winter night\nhis last.\nEvents While Guarding The Bofors Gun is an excellent play.\nThe acting is brilliant, and the message is provoking.\nSee it if you can. .- JAMES DAVIES\nSan Francisco\nWeekend for\nYOU & A FRIEND\nFor details-See Jan. 23 Ubyssey I* IC EEi\nPf Records\nIt's always interesting to see . . . hmmm,.\n.. well, yes. Actually whenever a reviewer begins\nwith a phrase like that, one gets the feeling that\nhe is being asked to appreciate a record which is\nonly a historical interest or which is otherwise\nunenjoyable on its own merits. You know, some\ncollection of junk that some weird reviewer likes\nfor some weird reason but which is really just\nplain av/ful. Not so in this case. The Johnny\nWinter Story, (London NAS 13516) gives us a\nlook at not only early Johnny winter but also a\nlook at the blues and rock of the Old (1959)\nSouth.\nThe fourteen cuts on the record are reprints\nof 45's which Winter made about ten years ago\non small Texas labels. Sure, there's a lot of what\n(what seems) slushy early rock, but don't let the\nteen-age voice trip fool you. The power that\nWinter displays today is only barely hidden here\nand on occasion you would think you're listening\nto 1969 and not 1959. Winter's guitar work is\nnot as polished and the timing not as intricate as\nit is today, but he has a few riffs that will still\nexcite you. Songs like \"Crying in My Heart\" and\n*'Oh My Darling\" are examlples of slow, lyrical\n(the motion, not the words) rock that will still\ngive anyone a lift.\nThe Johnny Winter Story is not great blues\nor great rock but it's Good Something. I guess if\nyou can still dig Buddy Holly you'll love this\none. -JIM MITCHELL\nA potentially ambitious musical treat awaits\nthose of you mobbing the Stereo Marts for\nBangor Flying Circus, an esoteric trio -\nremember, there are only three of them \u00E2\u0080\u0094 heard\non Dunhill S 50069.\nHowever, may I stress the word \"potential.\"\nIt's not that the Circus is not as good as a\nthousand other average rock groups \u00E2\u0080\u0094 they could\nbe a shade better. The complaint lies in howthey\ndo their trip musically, not whatthey do.\nRecent FM and AM smash sounds such as\nvocals initating traffic, guitar riffs reminiscenr of\nThe One way Street, blues wails in the style of\nFred Glichstein of The Flock, organ-bass jams a\nla Blood, Sweat and Tears, and Mose Allison\nmusical hog-calling abound throughout the\nalbum, all of which is musically bearable,\ntolerant, and not impotent.\n-\"HENDRIX\" PAKASAAR\nB.C.'s NEW LOW-COST\nCAR INSURANCE\nIs your auto insurance priced too high?\nShop for a better rate.\nDEAL DIRECTLY WITH WESTCO AND SAVE $20, $30,\n$40, $50 OR MORE THIS YEAR ON CAR INSURANCE.\nA phone call may save you hundreds of dollars\nover the years on auto insurance. Compared to\nthe rates of most other insurance companies, you\ncan expect a saving of $20. $30, $40, $50 or\nmore ... for the same protection you have now!\nThis is not so-called \"good driver\" insurance. You\nneed not be accident free or over 25 years of age\nto qualify. Even if you are currently on a preferred\nrisk type of insurance, WESTCO may still save\nyou a substantial amount of money\nHOW CAN WESTCO OFFER\nLOWER RATES?\nUnder the new car insurance legislation just\nproclaimed and soon to be implemented by the\nB.C. government, all motorists in this province\nmust carry auto insurance. The driver who fails to\ndo so will face a fine of not less than $250 or\nimprisonment of not less than three months or\nboth fine and imprisonment. On January 1, 1970,\ncar insurance will be compulsory in B.C. \u00E2\u0080\u0094 it no\nlonger needs to be sold.\nSo, WESTCO is a direct sales company with head\noffice in B.C. and without salesmen or agents.\nIn this way, WESTCO does not have to pay sales\ncommissions, one of the most expensive operating costs of typical insurance companies. This\nsaving is passed directly to you in the form of\nlower rates.\nThese lower rates are available to you now.\nWHAT ABOUT CLAIM SERVICE?\nShould you be involved in an accident, again you\navoid the middle man. You don't contact a sales\nperson, you speak directly to a specially trained\nWESTCO claims adjuster\nWESTCO has reorganized the entire claim\nservice system, including their own Claim\nAdjuster Training Program, to eliminate delays\nand excessive paperwork which are the major\ncauses of the increasing costs of claim\nadjustments which in turn cause higher insurance\nrates.\nWESTCO's approach is to settle claims quickly,\nfairly, without red tape You'll appreciate the\nservice as well as the savings\nCAN YOU QUALIFY FOR\nWESTCO S LOW RATES?\nIf you are presently without auto insurance, if\nyou need additional insurance to meet the new\ngovernment requirements just proclaimed,\nor if you plan to change or renew your present\ncoverage in the next few months, phone\nWESTCO today and find out how much you can\nsave.\nThere is no obligation and, of course, no\nsalesmen will call because WESTCO doesn't\nhave any.\nACT NOW!\nMAIL THE COUPON OR PHONE TODAY.\nNO SALESMEN WILL CALL.\nMAIL THIS COUPON FOR OUR LOW RATES ON YOUR AUTOMOBILE\nCOMPLETE AND RETURN TODAY FOR WESTCO RATES.\nNo obligation\u00E2\u0080\u0094No salesman will call.\nName\t\nResidence\nAddress \t\n(Please Print)\nYear ol automobile \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nMake of automobile .\nNo. of cylinders \t\nCity\nProv._\nOccupations _ _\nPhone: Home-\nAge\u00E2\u0080\u0094\n. Office-\nModel (Impala, Dart, etc.)\t\n2/4 dr-Sdn. s/w, h/t, conv. \t\nDays pet week driven to wotk, train\nor bus depot, or fringe parking area\nOne way driving distance\t\nMarried \u00E2\u0096\u00A1 Single \u00E2\u0096\u00A1\nMale \u00E2\u0096\u00A1 Female \u00E2\u0096\u00A1\nNumber of years licensed to drive\t\nGive number and dates of accidents in last 5 years,\n(circle dates of those accidents which were not your fault).\nIn the last live years\nHas your license been suspended?\t\nAre you now insured? Date it expires\t\nIs car used in business (except to\nand from work)?\t\nCar No 1\nCar No 2\nYes \u00E2\u0096\u00A1 No \u00E2\u0096\u00A1\nYes D No Q\nGive number and dates of traffic convictions in last 5 years.\nThis coupon is designed solely to enable non-policy-holders to obtain\nan application and rates for their cars.\nLIST ALL ADDITIONAL DRIVERS\nAge\nMale or\nFemale\nRelation\nYears\nLicensed\nMarried\nor Single\n% of Use\n#1 <-2\n%\n%\n%\n%\n%\n%\nINSURANCE COMPANY\nHEAD OFFICE: 1927 WEST BROADWAY, VANCOUVER, BRITISH COLUMBIA\nBCLC 3\nm Page 8\nTHE UBYSSEY\nTuesday, January 20, 1970\nComputer smashings and other\nviolent protest actions shouldn't\nsurprise anyone, says Leo\nJohnson. Here he tells why\n.eo Johnson is a University of Waterloo history professor,\nrom Canadian University Press.\nWHEN Canadian historians compare Canada to the\nUnited States, they unanimously agree that one\nfundamental difference between the two peoples is\nthe non-violent nature of Canadians in contrast to the\ncrime-ridden, six-gun-toting, negro-lynching Americans.\nThus when a computer was smashed and a building\ndamaged during anti-racism protests at Sir George\nWilliams University, Canadian leaders, such as John\nDiefenbaker, react in shock and anger to this\n\"un-Canadian\" resort to \"mob rule\".\n\"Because. Canadians are a non-violent people,\" they\nconcluded, \"such violence must have been inspired and\ncarried out by communists, marxists or paid agitators.\"\nYet further investigation by police has demonstrated\nthat no such \"foreign\" (except for the presence of a\nnumber of black, foreign-born students) inspiration was\npresent.\nWhy then did the press and authorities claim that\n\"communists\" and \"foreigners\" were responsible? A\nfurther examination of Canadian history is necessary\nbefore any answer can be given.\nIs Canada a \"non-violent\" country? Every labor\nunion member who has faced police protecting\nstrike-breakers, every Canadian Indian who has to break\nthrough the barriers of legal discrimination, every French\nCanadian who has attempted to exercise his inherited\nlanguage and cultural rights, knows that violence and\nrepression exist in Canada.\nBut the authorities who claimed that the result of the\nprotest at Sir George Williams was \"un-Canadian\" were\nright in one respect at least \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Canadian workers and\nCanadian minorities (including students) have seldom\nprotested against discrimination and oppression in a\nviolent manner. It has been the \"authorities\" \u00E2\u0080\u0094\ngovernment, business and civic leaders \u00E2\u0080\u0094 who are most\noften responsible for violence when it occurs.\nMoreover, when these authorities declare that\nextra-parliamentary protests (that is; demonstrations,\nmarches and strikes) are unconstitutional or un-Canadian\ntheir leaders cynically neglect to point out that the chief\noffender against the ideals of the British constitution in\nCanada has been the government itself.,\nThis is not to say that such authority-directed\nviolence is necessarily illegal. If anything the opposite is\ntrue in Canada. As John Porter pointed out in his book,\nThe Vertical Mosaic, a strong stable elite controls the\nCanadian government, civil service and judicial sytem.\nThe key to this control, of course, is money.,\nSince both the Liberal and Progressive Conservative\nparties are dependent on big business for funds to get into\noffice and remain there, these parties must pass laws\nsatisfactory to their financial backers or be removed from\npower.\nThis control, however, does not end with an ability to\npour money into election campaigns. Since the elite owns\nthe newspapers and controls the radio and television\nstations it can and does distort the news to serve its own\nselfish ends.\nThe importance of this control of the government\nand news media cannot be too strongly stressed. Since the\nnews media shape public opinion, and since they are our\nsource of information, by concentrated propaganda, the\npublic can be persuaded to demand laws which work\nagainst its best interest, and destroy its rights and liberties.\nTwo such instances, the passing of Section 98 of the\ncriminal code in 1919 and Quebec's Padlock laws, show\nhow fragile our civil rights are, and how the facts are\nmanipulated to allow their destruction.\nIn 1919 Canada was experiencing a severe post-war\ndepression. Farm and labor unrest was widespread because\nof the profiteering and corruption which had occurred\nduring World War I. When government and business\nleaders refused to recognize the desperate condition of the\nlaborers, farmers and returning soldiers, they decided to\nforce concessions by means of a general strike, which was\ntouched off in Winnipeg on May 1, 1919, and quickly\nspread to other major cities.\nIn all some 54 unions including police, firemen, and\ncivic employees voted to strike, although the police,\nfiremen, waterworks employees and bread and milk\ndeliverymen remained on the job with the approval of\nother strikers.\nAlthough a Manitoba Royal Commission to\ninvestigate the strike later concluded that the causes of\nthe strike were unemployment, low wages, bad working\nconditions and the rejection of basic union rights by\nemployers, the Winnipeg newspapers mounted a vicious\npropaganda campaing declaring that the strike had been\ncaused by communist agents paid with \"Moscow gold\".\nAfter several weeks of this propaganda, the federal\ngovernment, responding to the demands of the\nmanufacturers and the brainwashed public, passed the\nnotorious section 98 of the Criminal Code.\nSection 98, passed by these devious means,\ncompletely reversed the most ancient of British legal\ntraditions \u00E2\u0080\u0094 the rights of an arrested person to be\nconsidered innocent until proven guilty. Thus, until 1937\nwhen section 98 was repealed, the accused person was\nconsidered guilty until he could prove himself innocent.\nThis, of course, was not easy to do when you were locked\nin jail waiting your trial.\nIn addition to Section 98, the government amended\nthe Immigration Act so the the immigration department\ncould deport anyone, who belonged to a \"subversive\norganization\", without trial by jury. By these laws the\ngovernment could accuse a striker of belonging to a\n\"subversive organization\" and if he failed to prove that he\nJR.S&\nTHE DAIL3\ndid not, then they would deport him.\nBetween 1919 and 1935, more than 10,000 men and\nwomen were deported under these immoral laws - laws\nwhich could only have been passed and maintained\nbecause of the communist scare propaganda of 1919.\nA similar use of newspaper propaganda was made by\nMaurice Duplessis in 1938. Duplessis wanted to destroy\nopposition to his corrupt control of the Quebec\ngovernment, and to do this it was necessary to close the\nfew small newspapers who dared to expose him.\nHis answer - like that of the government in 1919 -\nwas to claim that the opposition was communist.\nAFTER a lengthy campaign which repeated, over andl\nover, that communists killed nuns and priests, and:\nthat Quebec \"Bolsheviks\" were out to destroy the;\nCatholic Church, the state and public morality, Duplessis;\nconvinced the Quebec electorate that an anti-Communist;\n\"anti-subversive\" law was needed.\nThe Padlock law gave the Quebec government the\nright to close buildings, jail editors and confiscated the\nfiles of any organization which the Quebec\nattorney-general declared to be subversive or\n\"communistic\" \u00E2\u0080\u0094 no proof would be required other than\nhis statement. Not only did Duplessis silence his\nwith the Padlock law, he used it to harass such groups as\nlabor unions, Jehovah's Witnesses, and the Liberal party.\nThe similarities between the methods used to pass\nsection 98 and the Padlock Law, however, are not the\nonly common aspects of the behavoir of the two\ngobernments. In both cases, having passed the laws to\nsilence the opposition, the governments resorted to a\nprogram of calculated terrorism to subdue their critics.\nBusinessmen and strikebreakers, who were sworn in as\nspecial constables, armed, and led by regular police,\nsmashed any protest which was raised against these\n[dictatorial methods, nor is \"smashed\" too strong a word.\nIn Winnipeg on \"Bloody Saturday\", police attacked a\npeaceful demonstration, and killed a man and a boy. '\"'\nOver the years, these episodes have been repeated\nagain and again \u00E2\u0080\u0094 in Stratford in 1933, in Oshawa in\n1937, in Asbestos in 1949, and in Murdockville in 1957. Tuesday, January 20, 1970\nTHE UBYSSEY\nPage 9\npart of the Canadian way of life\nIn each case the tame press justified the use of the police\nor army to crush protest against exploitation by greedy\nowners by raising the communist bogeyman.\nNor are the workers the only groups against whom\nviolence is used.\nEveryone knows that European settlers destroyed the\nIndian civilization, but few people know that this\noppression continues today.\nNot satisfied with having stolen a continent from the\nIndian, now the RCMP and government officials are\nattempting to steal the few remaining acres left to the\nIndians and to repudiate the rights they were promised in\nexchange for their freedoms. In Brantford in 1952 and in\nBuffalo Narrows, Saskatchewan, today, the Indian's battle\nstill goes on.\nThe 1952 Brantford Reserve \"rising\" illustrates the\npresent-day use of the RCMP to crush resistance to the\nIndian Affairs Department's dictatorial rule.\nThe Iroquois Indians, having been England's allies in\nthe American Revolutionary War, had been forced to\ncome to Canada in 1784 when England lost the war. They\ncame, however, not as a subject people, but as a free and\nindependent nation which had been granted lands in\nexchange for those which had been lost in England's\ncause.\nWith them they brough their own religion and form\nof government, a hereditary council, which they\nmaintained into this century. The hereditary council,\nhowever, resisted Canadian attempts to reduce their status\nquo from that of a free and independent people to that of\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2nere dependencies \u00E2\u0080\u0094 just another band of Indians to be|\nsullied and dominated by the Indian affairs department.\nIn 1923 the Indian affairs department decided to|\nDreak the ancient treaties and enforce their domination.\nTo do so, the officials pursuaded parliament to passl\negislation which would allow Indian bands to substitue an\nsleeted council for their traditional councils, if they sol\nlesired. This act was passed, but the Brantford Six\n-.'ations people still decided to keep their old government)\nmd laws.\nNot at all nonplussed by the fact that the new law!\nillowed the Indians to decide if they wanted an elected\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2.ouncil, the Indian affairs department now imposed a\ntame elected council on them. For almost thirty years the\nSix Nations people did their best to return to their own\nform of government, but to no avail.\nIn 1952, with hope of justice gone, the Indians\ndecided that a symbolic act was necessary. Late one night\nthe hereditary chiefs and their supporters occupied the\ncouncil house in hopes that the ensuing publicity would\nbring them public support. Unfortunately they\nunderestimated both the willingness of the RCMP to use\nviolence to disposses them, and the honesty of the press.\nThe next day the RCMP moved in with riot guns and\ntear gas and made mass arrests. The press, in its usual\nfashion talked, not of the frustrating years of seeking\njustice, but of the \"irresponsible Indian lawbreakers\".\nToday the Mohawk Workers, as the traditionalists call\nthemselves, still are a majority on the reservation and still\ndream of a day when justice and freedom will return to\nthem.\nDESPITE the power that control of parliament, the\npress and the police give the elite, still this is not\nenough. Their manipulations and control reach into\neven the so-called courts of justice. Trade unionists are\nvery familiar with two situations in which the courts are\nabused: the political use of the conspiracy charge, and the\nex parte injunction.\nThe charge of conspiracy is one which is seldom laid.\nFirst of all, it is difficult to prove. Secondly, it is more\njust to charge a criminal with his crime, than it is with his\nconspiracy to commit that offence. There is, however, one\naspect of the conspiracy charge which lends itself to abuse\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 as strange as it may seem, the penalty for conspiracy if\noften more severe than that for the offence.\nSince any planning which results in so minor an\noffense as spitting on the sidewalk can be called a\nconspiracy \u00E2\u0080\u0094 punishable with heavy jail sentences \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nunionists manning picket lines can find themselves\ncharged, not merely with obstruction (a handy catch-all\nwhich generally results in a small fine), but with\nconspiracy to obstruct, and therefore, are liable to long\nyears in jail. Since it is the crown attorney, a political\nappointee of the elite interests, who decides which charge\nto lay, it's not hard to understand why it is used\npolitically against the elite's enemies.\nAs students have recently discovered, the conspiracy\ncharge can be levelled against them, as well. Students at\nSir George Williams University are now standing trial on\nsuch charges, and as students at the University of\nWaterloo recently discovered, authorities here are anxious\nto use such charges to remove those who are criticizing\nmismanagement.\nFour weeks ago when radical students held a one-day\nstudy-in at the university library to draw attention to its\ninadequate budget and facilities, administration president\nHoward Petch, although he was informed otherwise,\nclaimed publicly that the intent of the students was to\ntake over the administration building and disrupt the\nuniversity.\nThe most serious aspect of these charges was\npresident Petch claimed that the Radical Student\nMovement met secretly to make its decisions - a\nnecessary precondition to the laying the conspiracy\ncharges.\nEqually significantly, professor W. K. Thomas in the\nMarch 31 Kitchener-Waterloo Record is reported to have\ncharged that students at the University of Waterloo were\npart of an international communist conspiracy under the\n\"guidance of Chairman Mao and the spirit of Che\nGuevara.\"\nSuch McCarthyite red-baiting could be lightly\ndismissed were it not for the fact that is has been just such\ncrude propaganda that has preceded the end of civil\nliberties in the past. Indeed, president Petch has already\nforecast just such an end to liberty with his demands for a\n\"code of conduct\" at the university.\nThe ex parte injunction is perhaps the best known of\nlegal abuses in labor affairs. The essence of the ex parte\ninjunction is that the judge is asked to make decisions\nand issue court orders after having heard only one side \u00E2\u0080\u0094\ninvariably the owner's side \u00E2\u0080\u0094 in labor disputes.\nAll the owner has to do is satisfy the judge that\nviolence is likely to occur if strikers continue, to picket his\npremises. The fact that the reason that violence occurs is\nthat the owner is bringing in strikbreakers to take the\nworkers' jobs, and that these scabs are assisted by the\nlocal police in breaking the picket line, has no bearing on\nthe decision. The justice or injustice of such a decision is\nnot the question that matters. Indeed, we do not have\ncourts of justice, we have courts of law - law that is\npolitically made and, too often, politically administered.\nThese few examples of the way violence and\noppression operate in our society could be extended\nalmost without end \u00E2\u0080\u0094 from Alan McNab's rampage\nthrough Ontario's Norfolk County in 1837 to the\nexpulsion of the Japanese from B.C. in World War II.\nBut why then, if violence has been so common in\nCanada's past, do its leaders continue to propagate the\nimage of Canadians as a non-violent people? What would\nyou do if you were in their position?\nIf Canadian press, radio and TV told the truth, if\nCanadians realized how law is used to oppress them, and\nviolence used to uphold those unjust laws, Canadians\nwould rise up and demand an accounting.\nBut so long as Canadians can be fooled, and so long as\nthe lying press can convince them that it is \"un-Canadian\"\nto throw off their yokes and demand such an accounting,\nCanadians \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Canadian workers and Canadian students \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nwill never be free. Page 10\nTHE UBYSSEY\nOperation Doorstep gives\nfree campus chest x-rays\nTuesday, January 20, 1\n970\nOperation Doorstep is here\nagain.\nThe free chest X-ray and TB\ntest clinic is at UBC for the\nsecond year in a row, and is\navailable to everyone over 6\nmonths old.\n\"About 3,000 people came to\nus last year, and we hope to do at\nleast that well this year,\" said\nsurvey, organizer Ed McLachlan.\n\"Response at UBC is generally\nvery good. It's usually hard to get\nyoung people to respond to such\nmedical services,\" he said.\nThe clinic can detect other\nEpp resigns Pit job\nSUB Pit manager, Erwin Epp\nannounced his resignation\nMonday.\n\"I quit because I got another\nVietnam film\nThe Vietnam Action\nCommittee will sponsor Emile de\nAntonio's film \"In the Year of the\nPig\" Thursday at the Olympic\nTheatre, 2381 East Hastings, at\n7:15 and 9:30 p.m.\nAdmission will be $1 for adults\nand 50 cents for high school\nstudents.\njob,\" said Epp. He is now the\nexecutive secretary of the British\nColumbia Union of Students.\nAlma Mater Society president\nFraser Hodge said he doesn't\nknow who will succeed Epp as Pit\nManager.\n'The decision on this will be\nup to the Pit mamagement\ncommittee,\" he said.\nThose who wish to continue\ndrinking beer under Epp should\nsign the \"Erwin come back\npetition\" at the SUB information\ndesk.\nWorry Beads:\nHOME CALLS THEM\nAnti-Up-Tight Baubles!\nFor details see January 23 Ubyssey !\nTHE MANY FACES OF FOLK VOL. I\nB'NAI BRITH HILLEL FOUNDATION\nAND\nSPECIAL EVENTS\npresents\nTiff FANTASTIC\nSINGING RABBI\nShlomo Carlebach\nDon't miss the man who turned on U.B.C. students for\nthe last two years \u00E2\u0080\u0094 it started out as a 1-hour Folksong Concert and turned it into a 2'/2-hour happening.\nWed., Jan. 21, 12:30 p.m.\nSUB Ballroom admission 50c\nEDMONTON PUBLIC SCHOOLS\nATTENTION\nIndustrial Arts and\nVocational Teachers\nDue to expansion the Edmonton Public School Board will\nrequire a number of qualified Industrial Arts teachers in\nthe multi-phase program at the Junior and Senior High\nSchool level.\nVocational teachers in Beauty Culture, Food Preparation\n& Services, Graphic Arts-Lithography, Commercial Art,\nMerchandising, Institutional Services, and Horticulture\nwill also be needed.\nFor application forms and employment information contact:\nPLACEMENT OFFICE\nUNIVERSITY OF BRITISH COLUMBIA\nVANCOUVER, B.C.\nailments besides TB.\n\"Often cases of lung cancer\nand heart ailments are discovered.\nWe've even found people with\nstomachs upside-down,\" said\nMcLachlan.\nThe clinic is serviced by\nWomen's Hospital Auxiliary\nVolunteers.\nThe clinic will be located in\nfront of SUB Monday, Tuesday,\nWednesday and Friday for the\nnext two weeks. On Thursday it\nwill be parked in front of Acadia\nCamp, and on Jan. 29, it will be\nlocated at the corner of Dalhousie\nand Allison Road.\nTest results are available in\nSUB 130, 48 hours after the test\nis taken.\nYOU ARE INVITED TO ATTEND\nA PREVIEW MEETING\nof the\nDALE CARNEGIE COURSE\nWED., JAN. 21st - 8 P.M.\nHOLIDAY INN - 1110 HOWE ST.\nPresented by\nLEADERSHIP TRAINING INSTITUTE\nT. W. \"Thorfie\" Thorfirmson\n535 W. Georgia St. Phone 688-8277 (24 hrs.)\nAQUA SOCIETY\nS.C.U.B.A. COURSE\nN.A.U.I. Certification\nStarts Now\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094First Paid First In\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094Sign in Club's Lounge, S.U.B.\n3261 W. Broadway 736-7.788,\nWeekdays to 1 a.m.\nFri. & Sat, 3 a.m.\nTHE PIT\nOpen TUESDAY, THURSDAY\nand FRIDAY\n4:30 p.m. - 11:30 p.m.\nTHURSDAY NIGHT\nfolknight with the RAIBLE BROTHERS\nFRIDAY NIGHT\ndance to a LIVE BAND\na\nGETTING INTO THE\n\u00C2\u00BB\n(appearing Sat. Jan.24 at the Coliseum)\nmm\nALSO AVAILABLE IN 8 TRACK AND\nCASSETTE STEREO TAPES\nALSO AVAILABLE IN 8 TKACK\nIS GETTING INTO A\nTOTAL EXPERIENCE\nON RC/I Tuesday, January 20, 1970\nTHE UBYSSEY\nPage 11\nAmerican ad minis trators\nconfident they're winning\nHOUSTON, Tex. (CUPI) - A feeling that \"the\nworst is over\" for campus administrators prevailed\nat the annual convention of the Association of\nAmerican Colleges, which ended here Jan. 13.\n\"My own view is that we have reached the crest\nin student disputes,\" said Edward Bloustein,\nadministration president of Bennington College. \"At\nthis meeting last year, you saw the most frightened\ngroup of men you've ever seen. They were asking\neveryone for advice, including the bootblack outside\nthe hotel.\n\"But we do not see that today - we are\nbeginning to meet the problems.\" he said.\nAmong factors cited as contributing to the\nnew-felt confidence were:\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 a feeling of \"expertise in handling student\ndisorders;\"\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 an apparent shift in student activism toward\nWjhat administrators considered \"more constructive\"\nprotests, especially over environmental problems;\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 greater administration preoccupation with\nmoney in the face of a squeeze in government and\nprivate funds for education.\nAt least one conference delegate was\ndisappointed by the apparent decrease in\nanti-administration activity on campus: George\nWald, Nobel prize-winning biologist from Harvard,\nargued that students are justified in their attacks on\na \"corrupted\" older generation.\n\"When it gets warm, I kind of feel the students\nwill go into the streets again,\" he said.\nProf predicts Bay area end\nSAN FRANCISCO (CUP-CPS) - A Stanford\nprofessor has predicted that the Bay area \"will die\nsoon.\n\"Ecological catastrophe is here now and we\nonly need to open our eyes to see it,\" Dr. Robert\nDreisbach, a professor at Stanford's medical school\nclaimed.\nHe called for legislation to control population\ngrowth in the San .Francisco area, reusing present\npost-resource fuel sources rather than consuming\nmore natural resources, banning individual\nautomobiles, and taxing combustible engines 50\ncents per mile.\nTwo Panthers surrender\nafter escaping raid\nOTTAWA (CUP) - Two Black Panthers who escaped an Ottawa\npolice raid last September surrendered to Chicago police January 14.\nRobert Bruce, 23, chairman of the west suburban Chicago\nbranch of the Panthers, and Nathaniel Junior, 24, Panther Field\nSecretary, were the objects of an Ottawa search in September, along\nwith Panther Captain of Defence Merill Harvey, 23.\nPolice claimed to find weapons and explosives in their Ottawa\ndwelling.\nAmerican officials had charged Bruce with jumping bail,\nkidnapping and assault with intent to commit murder. Junior was\ncharged with bond default for failure to appear in court in connection\nwith an alleged attempt to purchase machine guns.\nNo clues about bomb\nThe bomb explosion in the math building remains a mystery.\nThe bombing Jan. 9, caused an estimated $600 damage to the\nbuilding.\n\"We are still continuing with an investigation, but have found\nnothing we can make public at this time,\" said RCMP Sgt. George\nStrathde.\n\"Our report will only be made public when our findings are\nfinalized and charges can be laid,\" he added.\nWE'RE FLYING HIGH\n(FINALLY)\nThursday, 12:30, SUB 211\n\"Flying CF-104's and\nother light aircraft\"\nU.B.C. FLYING CLUB\nSWING IN\nPSYCHEDELIC\nSOPHISTICATION\nBack Ely Popular Demand\nThe Fabulous\nGood Fortune\nWed. to Fri.\n8:30 p.m. to 2 a.m.\nSat. - 8 p.m. to 1 am.\n5th Ave. at Fir - 736-4304\nTHIS COUPON GOOD FOR\n$1.00\nOFF REGULAR ADMISSION\nWITH STUDENT CARD\nMONDAY THRU THURSDAY\nZOOLOGICAL LOVERS:\nFEEDING HOURS AT THE SAN FRANCISCO ZOO\n(Sloat Blvd. & Ocean Beach):\nLions 2 p.m. except Mondays\nLeopards & Small Cats 2:35 p.m.\nElephants 3:30 p.m. daily\nCould send you there FREE.'\nFor details see January 23 Ubyssey\nTHE MANY FACES OF FOLK VOL. II\nSPECIAL EVENTS\npresents\nRuss\nThornberry\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094Formerly of the Pozo Seco Singers and New Christy Minstrels\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094Already with an Album released, he is a favorite in Eastern\nCanada\nTues., Jan. 27, 12:30 p.m.\nSUB BALLROOM admission soc\nNOTICE\nRe-Late Payment of Fees\nA late payment fee of $20 additional to all other fees will\nbe assessed after JANUARY 15, 1970, this fee will be increased to $30 after January 30, 1970. Refund of this fee\nwill be considered only on the basis of a medical certificate\ncovering illness or on evidence of domestic affliction. Students who are unable to pay their fees on time owing to\nnew Canada Loan or Bursary arrangements not having\nbeen finalized should see the Finance Department prior to\nJanuary 15, 1970. Appeals must be made by February 15.\nIf fees are not paid in full by February 16, 1970, the registration of students concerned will be cancelled and they\nwill be excluded from classes.\nIf a student whose registration has been cancelled for\nnon-payment of fees applies for reinstatement and his\napplication is approved by the Registrar, he will be\nrequired to pay a reinstatement fee of $10, the late\nfee of $30, and all other outstanding fees before he\nis permitted to resume classes.\nOFFICIAL NOTICES\nAlma Mater Society\nElections for A.M.S. Executive will be held as\nfollows:\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nFIRST SLATE:\nPresident, Secretary, Ombudsman, Co-ordinator of\nActivities\nNominations Open - Jan. 28\nNominations Close - 12:00 Noon Feb. 5\nElection - Feb. 11\nSECOND SLATE:\nVice-President, Treasurer, Internal Affairs Officer,\nExternal Affairs Officer\nNominations Open - Feb. 4\nNominations Close - 12:00 Noon Feb. 12\nElection - Feb. 18\nADVANCED LEARNING PROGRAMS\n^VCATIONS\nTRAIN YOUR MIND TO STUDY\n685-7929\n(FOR FREE INFORMATION) Page 12\nTHE UBYSSEY\nTuesday, January 20, 1970\nTHIS WEEK IS\n1EM\nSIX DAYS DEVOTED BY\nAGRICULTURE TO FUN AND\nCHARITABLE CAUSES,\nENDING ON SATURDAY\nWITH THE GREATEST\nDANCE OF THE YEAR:-\nTICKETS FROM AMS BUSINESS\nOFFICE OR ANY AGGIE. Tuesday, January 20, 1970\nTHE UBYSSEY\n.Page 13\nEVENTS THIS WEEK:\ntoday:\nBOOKSTORE\n-CHUCKWAGON PANCAKE\nSALE IN FRONT OF\nBOOKSTORE. ALL PROCEEDS\nTO HOUSE OF HOPE\n-12:30, FREE FILMS IN SUB.\nCAMPUS\nWednesday: -APPLE DAY ON CAMPUS.\nB PROFITS FROM THE SALE OF\nLUSH B.C. APPLES GO TO THE\nCRIPPLED CHILDREN'S\nHOSPITAL. BY DONATION.\nLIBRARY\nthursday: -SEE THE DEATH OF A\nQUASI-AGRICULTURALIST-\nAND HIS BURIAL. IN FRONT\nOF LIBRARY AT NOON.\nfriday:\nSaturday:\nLIBRARY\n-INTER-FACULTY BOAT RACE\nAND BALE RACE. AT THE\nPOND IN FRONT OF THE\nLIBRARY AT NOON.\nSUB\n-THE FARMER'S FROLIC-OUR\nGIFT TO THE UNIVERSITY.\nLIMITED NUMBER OF TICKETS\nAVAILABLE. Page 14\nTHE UBYSSEY\nTuesday, January 20, 1970\nTUESDAY\nUBC FLYING CLUB\nGround school lectures, 7:30 p.m., Wei-\nson Air Service, Old Airport.\nIWW\nAlex Ferguson will speak, noon, SUB\n211.\nGEOGRAPHY CLUB\nDiscussion, noon, Geo.-Geol. 300.\nPROGRESSIVE CONSERVATIVES\nMeeting, noon, Council Chambers, Rm.\naoe.\nGERMAN CLUB\nMeeting, noon, IH.\nBILL WILLMOTT'S LECTURE\nSERIES ON VIETNAM\nLecture, noon, Ang. 104. ,\nINTERNATIONAL HOUSE\nHot meals daily for 85 cents.\nDAY CARE CO-OP\nUrgent meeting, noon, SUB 213.\nCIASP\nMexican summer training meeting 7:30\nP.m., 4630 W. 5th.\nSCIENCE FICTION\nMeeting, noon, SUB 105A.\nWEDNESDAY\nECO\nBob Hunter speaks, noon, Bi -Sc\n2000.\nREHABILITATION MEDICINE\nRehab, med. vs. B.C. Paraplegic Basketball Team, 9 p.m., Kitsilano Community Center, 12th and Larch.\nTHUNDERBIRD MOTORCYCLE CLUB\nMeeting, noon, SUB 211.\nIWW *\nMordecai Briemberg, noon, SUB Party\nRoom.\nEXPERIMENTAL COLLEGE CLUB\nOF UBC\nSeminar, noon, SUB 125.\nSPEAK EASY\nMon., Wed., and Fri., 12-9 p.m. SUB\n218.\nLEGAL AID\nCampus legal aid panels, every Mon.,\nWed, and Fri., noon, SUB 237-237a'\nCUSO\nFilm, noon, SUB 211.\nNEWMAN CENTER\nMeeting, noon, SUB 1051*0\n'tween\nclasses\nTHURSDAY\nUBC FLYING CLUB\nCapt. Horn speaks, noon, SUB 111.\nPRE-SOCIAL WORK CLUB\nOrientation tour at school of social\nwork, noon, School of Social Work.\nALLIANCE FRANCAISE\nFrench film, noon and 7:30, Bu. 100.\nTHUNDERBIRD WARGAMERS\nMeeting, noon, Rm. 130.\nSTUDENTS INTERNATIONAL\nMEDITATION SOCIETY\nInformation, every Thurs. and Fri.,\nSUB main floor.\nCAMPUS CRUSADE FOR CHRIST\nTeach-in, noon, Ed. 202.\nCAMPUS CAVALIERS\nSquare dancing, noon, SUB 207-209.\nVIETNAM MOBILIZATION COMMITTEE\nFilm, noon, SUB Aud.\nIWW\nPanel on Women's Liberation, noon,\nSUB 211.\nUBC FLYING CLUB\nLecture-meeting, noon, SUB 211.\nINTERNATIONAL HOUSE\nDiscussion on DDT in Africa, noon.\nIH.\nVARSITY ROD AND GUN\nMeeting, SUB 117.\nPOLITICAL SCIENCE UNION\nMeeting, noon, Political Science Common Room, Angus.\nFRIDAY\nIWW\nFilms, noon, SUB Aud.\nALLIANCE FRANCAISE\nMeeting, noon, I.H.\nWEDNESDAY\nUBC SAILING CLUB\nFilm and meeting, noon, Bu. 217.\nGALLIMAUFRY THEATRE\nTheatre, Wed., Thurs., and Fri., noon,\nSUB ballroom.\nSUZUKI\nMOTORCYCLE\nCENTRE\nWorld Champion Lightweights\nSALES - SERVICE\nPARTS - ACCESSORIES\nFor Complete Service Call\n2185 W. Broadway 731-7510\nAQUA SOCIETY\nS.C.U.B.A. COURSE\nN.A.U.I. Certification\nStarts Now\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094First Paid First In\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094Sign in Club's Lounge, S.U.B.\nE & B RESTAURANT\nDeluxe\nWestern Cuisine\n4423 W. 10th\nCOLLEGE LIFE\nTONIGHT 9:00 P.M.\nPlace Vanier Common Block Lounge\nDOOR PRIZE & REFRESHMENTS\nCome Sing & Share with us\nSPONSORSHIP: CAMPUS CRUSADE FOR CHRIST\n.>\u00C2\u00AB.\ni ENGINEERS and\nI CABLE CAR BUFFS\nI You could tour the San Francisco\n| Cable Car Power House ^^^.\nI and Car Barn courtesy of HOME\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0HM\nj For details see January 23 Ubyssey\nCLASSIFIED\nRates: Students, Faculty & Club-3 lines, 1 day 750, 3 days $2.00\nCommercial\u00E2\u0080\u00943 lines, 1 day $1.00; additional lines 250;\n4 days price of 3.\nClassified ads are not accepted by telephone and\nare payable in advance.\nClosing Deadline is 11)30 a.m. the day before publication.\nPublications Office, STUDENT UNION BLDG., Univ. of B.C.,\n Vancouver 8, B.C.\nANNOUNCEMENTS\nDances\n11\nDOUBLE DANCE AT PLACE\nVanier with the Crosstown Bus\nand Tomorrow's Eyes. Fri., Jan.\n23. 9-1. Non-res. $1.50, Res. $1.25.\nTRADITIONAL, POLKA PARTY,\nFriday, Jan. 23, 9-1, live band, refreshments. Great fun. $1.25 each.\nInternational House.\nGreetings\n12\nGOT A QUESTION?\nGOT A HANG-UP?\nSPEAK EASY, SUB Rm. 218, 228-\n3706. Mon., Wed., Fri., 12-9 P.m.\nJ ARTS\nCONTEMPORARY\n 1970\n-A* watch Campus posters each week\n* for new Festival announcements.\n* TODAY: 111. lecture in LAS. 104,\n12:30, by British artist Bernard\nCohen: \"Art and the Structure\nand Function of Creative Learning\".\n+ this Thurs., 4:30 in Lasserre lobby: \"Sound Sculpture*'.\nir this Friday: 12:30 in Music Recital Hall: \"Random Tape Performances\".\n-A* next week Gallimaufry! (Beckett\n& Pinter).\nWanted Information\n13\nHELP FIND MY DOUBLE-WOULD\nthe guy who completely mistook\nme for someone else he knew on\nThurs. 15 in SUB. Please leave\nthe double's name etc. with D.\nJeffery, 403 Robson PI., Van. or\ncall 224-9720.\nLost & Found\n14\nLOST: \"HELLO DOLLY\" POST-\ners left in VW convertible. Wed.\nafternoon by boy, girl hitchhiker.\nLeave at MUSSOC office, SUB,\nor call 228-9203.\nRides & Car Pools\n15\nSpecial Notices\n16\nHAVE A SPACE ODYSSEY WITH\nGuided Meditation.\nA highly creative way\u00E2\u0080\u0094two step by\nstep Instructions on a 12\" LP record\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 16.60, by a Western Yogini:\nSwami Sivananda Radha\nsharing ancient techniques studied\nin India under Swaml Sivananda in\nthe Himalayas.\nAshram Records, Box S,\nKootenay Bay, B.C.\nOUT IN THE COLD?\nDATES + SKI\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nPhone P.Y.C. - 434-2636\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nFREE Ski Membership Girls 18-23\nBeginners Welcome!\nSAVE ON BLANK TAPE PHILIPS\nC-90 Cassette $3.15. Call or see\nPeter Jim 320 Okanagan House.\nPhone 224-7876 or 224-9062.\t\nTHEATRE\n10 filles, 5 Hommes, Requis.\nLinda, 277-7193, De 6 p.m. A 9 p.m.\nWHY PAY HIGH AUTO INSUR-\nance rate if you are 20 years or\nover and have good driving record you may qualify. Phone Ted\nElliott. 299-9422.\t\nAQUA SOC BEER NIGHT THIS\nmonth is Jan. 22. 4-8 p.m. Slides\nshown too. Hut M-27.\t\nAQUA SOC GENERAL MEETING\nThurs., Jan. 29, Brock room 303.\nDiscussion of election.\t\nBOB HUNTER SUN COLUMNIST\nspeaks about Sociological Implications of Pollution. Wed., 12:30,\nBio-Science 2000. \t\nANGLICAN-UNITED CHURCH\nCHAPLAINCY\nAH interested students and faculty\nare invited to an afternoon of discussion on the future of chaplaincies on campus. Saturday, January\n24, at 1:30 in the Lutheran Student\nCentre, 58SS University Boulevard.\nSpecial Notices (Copt.) 16\nWHISTLER MOUNTAIN YOUTH\nHOSTEL OPENS\nSpecial weekend packages available\nfor ONLY $8.00 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Includes two\nnights accommodation and a 1 1\nmeals. Open 7 days a week, beautiful location on Alta Lake \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nskiing, snow shoeing, ice skating,\nfishing, etc.\nReservations and further information can be obtained at the Canadian Youth Hostels Association,\n1406 West Broadway, Vancouver\n9. 738-3128.\t\nWE ARE ALIVE AND WELL IN\nSUB 211, Thurs., 12:30. UBC Fly-\ning Club Office 216G.\t\n- Double' Dance -\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nTOMORROW'S EYES\n&\nCROSSTOWN BUS\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nFri., Jan. 23 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 9-1\nPLACE VANIER\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nNon-Residents $1.5*0\nResidents $1.25\nTravel Opportunities\n17\nYOU COULD FLY FREE FOR A\nFree weekend in San Francisco.\nThere will be six available. De-\ntails Jan. 23.\t\nTRAVELLING OVERSEAS ON A\nBUDGET?\nThen visit your Youth Hostels information desk which is open every\nWednesday from 12:30-1:30 p.m. opposite the information desk in the\nStudents Union Building.\nCanadian Youth Hostels Association\n1406 West Broadway\nVancouver 9, B.C. Tel. 738-3128\nWanted\u00E2\u0080\u0094Miscellaneous\n18\nAUTOMOTIVE\nAutomobile For Sale\n21\n'62 V.W. DE LUXE. GOOD CONDI-\ntion. $450. Contact George 435-\n5733, 6-8 p.m.\t\n1960 VAUXHALL, 42,000 MILES.\nExcellent condition. 325-0488 between 4 and 10 p.m., radio 4 dr.\n$490 cash.\t\n1963 NSU PRINZ. RUNS CHEAP.\n45 ml./gal. Best offer. Phone John\nRoom 434, 224-5214.\t\n'62 CHEVY II, EXCELLENT\nmechanical condiion. $450.00 phone\n224-9045 ask for Rm. 470 after 7:00\np.m.\t\n*58 PONTIAC. RELIABLE RUN-\nning condt'n. Only $120. Call 224-\n9662, Philip.\nMotorcycles\n25\n1965 HONDA S90, HELMET. MUST\nsacrifice to pay fees. First offer\n$125 takes. John 224-4146.\nBUSINESS SERVICES\nDance Bands\n31\nMiscellaneous\n33\nARTIVORK POSTERS DRAUGHT-\ning and photographic darkroom\nwork done very cheap. John Kula,\n224-4146.\nPhotography\n34\nTHE VIEW OF SAN FRANCISCO\nat night from Telegraph Hill is\nspectacular! You could see it\nFREE! Details Jan. 23.\nRentals\u00E2\u0080\u0094Miscellaneous\n36\nScandals\n37\nVERONICA LAKE: WOULD YOU\nspend a weekend with me in San\nFrancisco if I win one of the SIX\nFREE trips from Home?\nR. H. McL.\n. 400-505 Burrard St\nWITNESSES OF ACCIDENT AT\nWesbrook and Agronomy Thursday a.m. January 15. Please contact Kathie at Black Cross Table\nor 731-T540.\t\nDON'T SIT AT HOME AND SULK\ntonight. Come to Place Vanier\nand dance to Tomorrow's Eyes\nand the Crosstown Bus. 9-1. Non-\nres. $1.50. Res. $1.25.\nSewing & Alterations\n38\nTyping\n40\nFAST ACCURATE TYPING\u00E2\u0080\u0094MRS.\nTreacy, 738-8794 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 35c page, 5c\ncopy.\n\"COMPETENT TYPING (Documents, theses, essays, general) my\nhome. Sr. Legal Secretary-Bookkeeper, excellent references. 946-\n4722.\t\nEXPERT IBM SELECTRIC TYPIST.\nExperienced essay and thesis\ntypist. Reasonable rates. 321-3838.\nForestry Term Papers.\t\nTYPIST \u00E2\u0080\u0094 ELECTRIC .\nPlease call 224-6129\nESSAY TYPING, 35\nAve. 733-5922.\nWest 19th\nEFFICIENT TYPING \u00E2\u0080\u0094 MY HOME\n20\" carriage desk model typewriter. Phone Ruth \u00E2\u0080\u0094 731-8578.\n\"EXPERIENCED ELECTRIC\nhome typing. Essays, theses, etc.\nNeat accurate work, reasonable\nrates. Phone 321-2102.\t\nACCURATE EXP. TYPING FROM\nlegible work; reas. rates; 728-6829\nafter nine a.m. to nine p.m.\t\nTHESES TYPED. EXPERIENCED\ntypist IBM-machine. Call Jenifer\nTomlin, days 668-8572, eves. 682-\n5380.\t\nTYPING, PHONE 731-7511 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 9:00-\n5:00, after 6:00 phone 266- 6662.\nEMPLOYMENT\nHelp Wanted\u00E2\u0080\u0094Female\n51\nPART-TIME SALES HELP, WEEK\ndays and weekends. Aggressive,\nfashion minded sales gals for\nyoung groovy boutique shops. Previous sales experience preferred.\nApply In writing to 1178 Hamilton,\nVancouver 3.\t\nPART-TIME TELLERS WANTED\nby Bank of Montreal, S.U.B. Mondays and Fridays. Prev. exp. is\nrequired. Phone Mr. Fisher 228-\n9021 or call at the office.\nHelp Wanted\u00E2\u0080\u0094Male\n52\nMale or Female\n53\nPART TIME HELP WANTED. NO\nsoliciting. Please phone Al Tarbet\n521-7731.\t\nDO YOU HAVE A CAR? CAN YOU\nuse an extra $100.00? Can you\nspare 5 hours a week? Phone\n522-3011 betweeen 3 p.m. and 5\np.m. for interview.\nWork Wanted\n54\nGRAPHS AND CHARTS EX-\npertly done for theses, publications, etc. Call Vana 298-6805 eve.\nINSTRUCTION\nLanguage Instruction\n61A\nSPANISH 200 STUDENT WOULD\nlike to practice Sp. conversation\nwith anyone interested. Ph. Judy\n435-9604.\nMusic\n62\nTutoring\n64\nWANTED THIRD OR FOURTH\nyear Eng. major; Geog. major to\ntutor second year student, 942-\n4281.\t\nEXP. TUTOR IN 1ST AND 2ND\nyear Math & Chemistry by gradu-\nate. Phone 738-5603.\t\nTUTORING IN MATH - PHYS. -\nStat by instructor (Ph.D.) $5 per\nhour. Ph. 733-6037. Eve.\t\nPSYCH 206 TUTOR NEEDED.\nPrefer grad student. Phone 261-\n5290 aft. 6.\nMISCELLANEOUS\nFOR SALE\n71\nTypewriters & Repairs\n39\nBIRD CALLS\nYour Student Telephone\nDirectory\nSTILL AVAILABLE \u00E2\u0080\u0094 $1.00\nal the Bookstore,\nAMS Publications Office\nand Thunderbird Shop\n100% DOWN SKI JACKETS AND\nimported track suits still available Memorial Gym 305, Mondays\nand Thursdays, 12:30-2:00 or phone\n683-3442. Ask for Hank lowest\nprices.\nMisc. For Sale (Cont.)\n71\nNEAR NEW STEREO. HALF\nprice. Great condition and sound.\nPhone 738-7447 between 6 p.m.\nand 7 p.m.\t\nLANGE BOOTS, HEAD 360's,\npoles, canvas cover, all one season old. Phone 261-0394 after 6:00\np.m.\t\nLADIES AFGHAN SHEEPSKIN\ncoat. Size 14. $80. 321-6954 (before\n9:30 p.m.)\t\nBLUEPOINT MALE SIAMESE\nkitten 3 months, ^ery good natur-\ned. $20.00. Call 321-6954 before\n9:30 p.m.\t\nHEAD COMPETITION GS SKIS 210\nCM and Lange boots, size 10 M.\nPhone Ralph 224-9016.\t\n1 PAIR 215 CM KNEISSL RED\nStars, never used. What offers?\n$179.00 new. 263-4390.\t\nFRENCH MADE BLACK MAXI\ncoat, hardly worn $65. Call 733-\n1531.\t\nNEW PR. DYNA SPEAKERS\n(never used), 2 Wharfedale speakers (3 mo. old), 2 pr. RSC speak-\ners in walnut cabinets. 224-5194.\nFRIDGE, GOOD CONDITION, $20.\n228-3471, Diana.\nRENTALS & REAL ESTATE\nRooms\n81\n2 LARGE BEDSITTING ROOMS,\nkitchen privileges, use of phone.\n$50.00 month. Call 733-9762.\t\nON CAMPUS ROOMS, STUDY\nlamps, mirrors, towel hangers,\nw/w carpets, shoe cupboards,\nlarge bunks. Sigma Chi House,\n5725 Agronomy, 224-9620.\t\nROOMS, STUDENT HOUSE USE\nof house facilities. $35.00 month.\nPh. 873-1117.\t\nLHK ROOMS, MALE STUDENT,\nprivate entrance, kitchen privileges, near bus. Phone after 5\np.m. 733-5255.\t\nLARGE FURNISHED ROOM FOR 1\nstudent. $34 month rent. Share\nkitchen, T.V., etc. Immed. occu-\npancy. 733-7358 eves. *\nON CAMPTTS ACCOMMODATION\nfor 2 students. Light housekeep-\nIng, available Feb. 1st. 224-6397.\nRoom & Board\n82\nSIGMA CHI HOUSE \u00E2\u0080\u0094 LARGEST\nrooms on campus; two lounges\nand dining hall. Free room cleaning service, laundry, color TV,\ngood food. Come out and see us.\n5725 Agronomy, 224-9620, 224-6374.\nROOM A-ND BOARD PLUS Remuneration offered in exchange for\nbaby sitting, cooking and light\nhousekeeping. For six months. Urgent. Office: 228-2225. Home: 266-\n9544.\t\nROOM, BOARD $75. FEMALE STU-\ndent. Neat Mcdonald bus. 261-0804.\nON CAMPUS BOARD & ROOM.\nAvailable immediately at Union\nCollege. Free parking. Home\ncooking. Apply matron, 224-3266.\nTIRED OF COMMUTING; TRY\nbeing a boarder at Phi Gamma\nDelta. Good food and rooms; ten\nminutes from any . building on\ncampus. $90 a month. 224-9769 ask\nfor Dave or Bob.\t\nMALE - STUDENT. CLOSE TO\nU.B.C. Tennis - table, 3 meals\ndaily. Good food. Tel. 738-2305.\nSPACE FOR ONE MALE STUD-\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2ent in St. Anderw's Hall. Apply\nto Dean\u00E2\u0080\u0094phone 224-7720. \t\nFREE ROOM AND BOARD Exchange for light housekeeping &\nsupervising 2 boys after school, 5\nblocks University grates* Call Lynn\ndays 736-7391, everui.=., 224-5738.\nFurn. Houses & Apts.\n83\nGIRL STUDENT TO SHARE FUR-\nnished modern apt. in West End.\nCall MU 1-7707.\t\nWANTED \u00E2\u0080\u0094 GIRL 30 TO 40 TO\nshare 2 bedroom furnished penthouse apartment with same. Kitsilano District $85.00 per month\nplus telephone and hydro. Tele-\nphone 731-3639.\t\n1 BDRM. FURN. APT. TO SUBLET\nKerrisdale area, couple pref. Ph.\n263-9057.\t\nBSMT. STE. TO SHARE WITH\ngirl, 19th & Dunbar, $45/mo.,\nwasher, dryer. Phone 738-0219\nafter 6:00. Tuesday, January 20, 1970\nUBYSSEY\n.Page 15\nXgrf\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094dick button photo\nUBC GOALTENDER RICK BARDAL came out on the right side of a lucky break on this shot by\nManitoba Bisons forward Dan Topolinski as the puck slid under his pad but wide of the goal.\nUnfortunately, for Bardal, nine others found the mark as Manitoba trounced the Birds. Things went a\nlittle better. Saturday night as Bardal held Winnipeg to three goals and the Birds picked up a 7-3 win.\nBirds beat prophets\nlose to prairie boys\nBy DICK BUTTON\nContrary to popular predictions, the UBC\nThunderbirds did not trounce the opposition from\nthe Universities of Manitoba and Winnipeg this\nweekend.\nIn fact, the Birds came out on the short end\nof a rather bad trouncing themselves as Herb\nPinder, formerly of the Canadian National team,\nand a few other players comprising the University\nof Manitoba Bisons scored a rather convincing 9-1\nvictory Friday night.\nPinder himself tallied five of the goals, plus\nadded a couple of assists. Of course, he also made\nsome good defensive plays to maintain a balanced\ngame.\nSaturday night the Birds looked a little better\nas they defeated the University of Winnipeg\nWesmen 7-3 in a rather lackadaisical game.\nPlay was good in some spots, but overall was\nnot up the standard the Birds have shown before.\nThe Birds started slowly Friday night, picked\nup a penalty at 1:32 for too many men on the ice,\nthen less than a minute later found out that\nManitoba has a fairly potent power play.\nThe Birds had difficulty staying out of the\npenalty box, and Manitoba scored again in the first\n10 minutes.\nHalfway through the period, the Birds settled\n. down and took control of the game.\nBarry Wilcox and Wayne Schaab missed a few\ngood chances as the puck bounced the wrong way\nfor them, then UBC picked up their only counter\nof the evening on a close in shot.\nA record crowd of nearly a thousand watched\nUBC come out flying in the second period, then\ndie.\nTwo minutes into the period, they took a\nmajor penalty for butt-ending and Pinder and\ncompany went to work.\nThree goals and five minutes later, the Birds\nwere back at full strength and behind 5-1. They\nnever recovered and gave up three more goals\nbefore the second period finished.\nThe defense was notably absent on a number\nof the goals.\nSaturday, the Birds approached the game with\na healthier attitude and slightly better play.\nAgain it was a night of frustration for many of\nthe Birds, especially Roy Sakaki who picked up\ntwo goals and was robbed of a hat trick by\nWinnipeg goaltender Grant Clay who played\nstrongly for two periods before he left the game.\nDoug Buchanan had two good breakaways,\nbut Clay made better plays and Buchanan went\nscoreless.\nLarry Watts picked up a nice goal on a UBC\npower play with a hard shot from 10 feet out after\ntwo similar shots had been stopped.\nMike Darnborough slapped in a hard drive\nfrom 30 feet out, and Barry Wilcox and Tom\nWilliamson slipped shots past the unsuspecting\nClay to round out the UBC scoring.\nBirds were without the services of Laurie\nVanzella who was sidelined with an elbow injury\nand a bad bruise on his leg. Hopefully, he will be\nready for next weekend when UBC tackles the\nUniversity of Alberta Golden Bears and University\nof Calgary Dinosaurs here.\nT Birds advance\ntowards ball title\nThe continuing march of the UBC basketball Thunderbirds to the\nWCIAA championship took its seventh and eighth steps on the weekend\nas the club topped both of its Manitoba opponents on the weekend ...\nFriday evening the victims were second place University of\nManitoba Bisons as they fell 72-65 to the Birds.\nThe battle was won on the boards as the rebounds were 46-28 in\nfavor of the winners, 16 of them by 6'7\" centre Terry MacKay.\nUBC got off to an excellent start as they were able to use their full\ncourt press effectively and this, combined with their rebound edge,\ndecisively limited the number of Bison shots.\n\"We didn't get enough shots to win,\" said Manitoba coach Jack\nLewis after the loss. With rebounders like that MacKay and Sankey it's\ndifficult to get possession to take the shots.\"\nUnfortunately for the Bisons the loss could conceivably prove\nmore costly than simply the league title.\nThe Bird victory means that Manitoba or any other club\ncompeting against UBC in the playoffs will have to play all the games at\nWar Memorial Gym; the place Peter Mullins had in mind.\nSaturday night UBC unexpectedly had their hands full. The\nUniversity of Winnipeg Wesmen put up a spirited struggle in the first\nhalf and led 34-30 at the break.\nEarly in the second half the Birds stormed ahead by 10 points and\nwith the help of rookie guards Rod Matheson and Joe Kainer held off a\nfinal Wesmen surge in the last two minutes.\nThe result came in the form of 78-71 victory, caused mainly by\nthe fine play of Bob Molinski who had 20 points, Derek Sankey who\nadded 17 and Ron Thorsen who finished with 15.\nApart from the obvious success in that the team picked up two\nvictories, there was other good news for Mullins. The lack of depth\nwhich was evident on the American road trip seems to have cured itself.\nFriday night Jack Hoy was able to come off the bench to relieve\nSankey and hit two outside shots to maintain the UBC momentum. On\nSaturday Matheson and Kainer did the job.\nHence it might be reasonably assumed that the Birds have more\nthan five players; an excellent asset especially when plagued by chronic\nfoul trouble.\nThe Thunderbirds continue their prairie jaunts as they play the\nUniversities of Calgary, Alberta and Lethbridge next weekend.'\nIntramurals\nINTRAMURALS\nSCHEDULE\nHOCKEY\u00E2\u0080\u0094Jan. 20, Rink I, \u00C2\u00AB:20: PE vs.\nDeke; 7:35: Eng U vs. Beta; 8:50: Sigma\nChi vs. Phi Delta. Jan. 21, Rink II, 4:40:\nFor vs. St. Andrews; 7:55: Union vs.\nGrad *B'; \u00C2\u00BB:10 Ed vs. Comm \"A*. Jan. 22,\nRink I, 6:20: Eng I vs. Psi U; 7:35: Grad\n'A' vs. Figi; 6:50: DU vs. Kappa Sigma.\nBASKETBALL \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Jan. 21, 7:00: St.\nMarks vs. Law; PE III vs. Aggies; 8:00:\nVCF vs. Union m; Eng HI vs. Ed IU;\n9:00: Phi Delta vs. For HI; Carey Hall\nvs. Eng VI; PV V vs. Union IV; 10:00:\nPV IV vs. Eng VII; Dekes vs. SAM 'D*;\nFigi vs. SAM *C; 12:30: Beta vs. Sigma\nChi. Jan. 23, 12:30: Pharm II vs. Eng II;\nMed II vs. Grad St; Eng V vs. Swim\nTeam.\nRESULTS\nBASKETBALI Jan. 14: Eng VI (27),\nPV VI (26); PV IV (29), PV V (26); PE II\n(33), Union IU (30); Carey Hall (46), Phi\nFelta II (25); Ed HI (46), VCF (26); PV\nIII (44), Law II (29); St. Marks (43), Aggies (24); Totem II (41), Eng III (20);\nPV I (37), Figi I (20). Jan. 16: For H\n(23), Arts English (28); Swim Team and\nEng V win by default.\n21 =\nHOCKEY \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Jan. 15: Arch (2),\nSigma (2); DU (6), Ed (2); Figi\nU (5).\nPOINT STANDINC \u00E2\u0080\u0094 JAN.\n1. Engineers 1379 + 127\n2. Beta Theta Pi 1192 + 52\n3. Union College 934 -f- 85\n4. Forestry 727 +\n5. Kappa Sigma 740\n6. Phi Gamma Delta 520\n7. Agriculture 470 -f 1\n8. Arts 416 + 1\n8. Physical Ed. 203 -f 214\n9. Sigma Alpha Mu 314 + 1\n10. Delta Kappa Ep. 268 + 21\n11. Commerce\n12. Delta Upsilon\n13. Phi Delta Theta\n14. Dentistry\n15. Law\n16. Sigma Chi\n17. Education\n18. St. Marks\n19. Grad Studies\n20. Alpha Tau Omega\n21. Pharmacy\n22. Alpha Delta Phi\n23. Zeta Beta Tau\n24. Carey Hall\n26. PI. Vanier Res.\n26. Medicine\n3 =\n+ 54 =\nKappa\n(8), Psi\n1970\n=*= 1506\n= 1244\n1019\n748\n740\n520\n4/70\n417\n417\n315\n289\n281\n253\n250\n200\n191\n180\n176\n165\n145\n128\n120\n93\n90\n65\n54\n33\nUBC FILM SOCIETY which in 1967 brought you the uncut \"HIGH7'now presents\nLARRY\nKENT'S\nFACADE\nHO ADMITTANCE TO NKSONS UNDrt )|\nWarning: VERY FRANK TREATMENT OF SEX\nR, W. McDonald, B.C. Censor\nSUB AUDITORIUM\nFRIDAY: 23, 30\nSATURDAYS: 24, 31\nSUNDAYS: 25, 1\n7:00\n&\n9:00\n7:00\n' JI Special admission price tor this presentation only ^ J Page 16\nTHE UBYSSEY\nTuesday, January 20, 1970\nSecurity guards'\neyes on Loyola\nMONTREAL (CUP) - After a one-week ban on all campus\nactivity, the doors of Loyola College opened again Monday with an\nunauthorized faculty-student rally, and the announcement of new,\nrestrictive hours of business for the campus.\nApproximately 900 students and faculty filled the Loyola\nauditorium during the early afternoon, and agreed to ask students\nwho have not paid their second-term tuition fees to withhold the\nmoney in protest against the Loyola administration's firing of 27\nprofessors.\nImmediately following the rally, approximately 75 students\nfiled over to the Loyola bursar's office, to demand a $25 refund on\ntheir fees \u00E2\u0080\u0094 their approximation of the portion of tuition lost during\nthe administration's one-week ban on classes.\nThe students arrived at the office to discover the door was\nbarred and guarded by a security guard.\nThe one-week ban was announced to \"facilitate a freer and\nmore profitable exchange of views of all concerned\" with the current\nLoyola crisis. Jan. 12, 150 riot police entered the campus to evict\nstudents and faculty sitting-in at the Loyola administration building.\nIn a press release Monday administration president Patrick\nMalone declared that current security regulations on the campus were\ninadequate, and announced new, early closing times for all campus\nbuildings \"in the best interests of the college community.\"\nHenceforth, the college will close at 10:30 p.m. weekdays, 1\np.m. Saturdays, and all day Sunday.\nSecurity guards have been stationed in most campus buildings.\nClassroom strategy\nplanned at McGill\nMONTREAL (CUP) - McGill sociology students Friday decided\nto shift their emphasis on reform from the committee to the\nclassroom, while negotiating a new form of government in their\ndepartment.\nApproximately 150 students attended a mass meeting which\nmade that decision, while agreeing to return student representatives to\na joint student-faculty caucus which previously ruled the department\nby consensus.\nStudents withdrew from the caucus last Monday, after faculty\nunilaterally dissolved the body and then attempted to reconstitute it\nwithout consulting the students.\nNeither side is in favor of the current consensus procedure, but\nmany faculty would like to see the caucus, originally formed on a\nparity basis, replaced by a formal structure in which students would\nhave only one-third representation.\nIn the meantime, David Abbey, chairman of the sociology\nstudent union, said the student group would sponsor a series of\nmeetings, seminars, and teach-ins to discuss a \"radical approach\" to\nsociology.\nEventually, students will be trained to debate professors in the\nclassroom on the political significance of course material, he said.\nCampus day care centre\nstill looking for home\nThe UBC Parents' Nursery Co-op, conceived three months ago,\nis still looking for accomodation on campus.\n\"We've applied for everything that became vacant in the last few\nmonths but there's always an excuse why we can't have it,\" said\nSibylle Klein, an organizer of the day-care centre.\nThose involved in the plans for the centre see the parents co-op\nas a nursery where parents will take turns supervising the children\nunder the direction of a full-time kindergarten teacher. Programs and\ninstruction will be organized for the children while they are at the\ncentre.\nA spokesman for the community care facilities at the\ndepartment of social welfare has given her full support to plans for the\nco-op.\nYet according to UBC administration there is no space available\non campus to set up a centre such as this.\nThere will be an important meeting Wednesday noon in SUB\n224 for parents and parties interested in plans for the parents' nursery\nco-op.\n\u00E2\u0080\u009E 1\nBagdad - by - the Bay\nSan Francisco\nhome Could send you there\n^\"\" For a FREE Weekend!\n(There are Six)\nFor details see January 23 Ubyssey\nCAMPUS LAUDR0MAT\n1968\nCoin-Op Wash & Dry Cleaning\nCozy Lounge\nInviting Atmosphere\nAttendant Service\n\"Clean As A'New Pin\"\n4354 W. 10th 224-9809\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2EAT IN \u00C2\u00BBTAKE0UT\u00C2\u00AB DELIVERY-\n3261 W.Broadway 736-7788\nWeekdays to 1 a.m.\nFri. & Sat. 3 a.m.\n\"Susan said\nthat Jane said\nthat you said\nthat I should try Tampax tampons.\n\"Why should I?\n\"Yes, I know they're worn\ninternally, but I'd never thought\nof the 'no show' idea. Why,\nthat means l could wear\nanything 1 own without worrying.\nEven a bathing suit.\n\"You say I can actually go\nswimming, too? And that story\nabout not washing your hair\nis just an old wives'tale, huh?\n\"A doctor developed them? Well,\nhe ought to know. Getting rid\nof those bulky pads sure sounds\ngood to me. I'm going to\ntry Tampax tampon's next time.\n\"Thanks a lot, Ann, for telling\nit like it is.\"\nThe Village printwrights\n2109 ALLISON RD. AT UNIVERSITY BLVD., VANCOUVER 8, B.C.\nPhone 224-1015\nCOMPLETE PRINTING, BINDING AND MAILING SERVICE\nA DIVISION OF BENWELL-ATKINS, Vancouver Printers For Over 40 Years\n\\\nn\nPHYSICS SOC. PRESENTS\nTWO FOR THE\nROAD\nTHURS., JAN. 22 - HEBB TH.\n12:30\nAdmission: 50c\nStaring . . .\nALBERT FINNEY\nAUDREY HEPBURN\nColor and Cinemascope\nContemporary Theatre in the Round\nGALLIMAUFRY\nTHEATRE\nPinter's Dwarfs &\nBecket's Krapp's Last Tape\nSUB Ballroom- 12:30 - 1:30\nWed. - Fri., Jan. 28 - 30\nADMISSION 50c\nSpecial Events Contemporary Arts\nDEVELOPED BY A DOCTOR\nNOW USED BY MILLIONS OF WOMEN\nTAMPAX TAMPONS ARE MADE ONLY BY\nCANADIAN TAMPAX CORPORATION LTD..\nBARRIE. ONTARIO\nGRAD PORTRAITS\nCandid Portrait Studios are honoured to have been chosen\nto continue this year's Grad portraits. Your portraits will\nnow be taken & proofed in color. B&W can be ordered.\nRe-takes at no extra cost including those wanting re-takes\nfrom the Extension Department.\nOne 5 x 7 in a folder, choice of 5-6 proofs inclusive. Sitting is paid for\nthrough your gradfee. Extra copies in folders are: 4x5 size in B & W\n$1.50, in Color $2.95, 5 x 7 B & W $2.00. Color $3.95, 8 x 10 B & W $4.00.\nColor $4.95. But best of all will be our package rates on which we're\nstill working.\nSince there is no immediate deadline, we will be taking as much care\nand time as possible and take your Grad Portraits at our studios starting\nFeb. 2/70. We're located at 3343 West Broadway and have lots of free,\neasy and unrestricted parking. Bus stop is practically outside our door.\nLeave bus at Waterloo going East or Blenheim going West.\nWe'll be taking sittings Evenings and Sundays too. Come well\ngroomed. Gown and Tie, etc. covers all your other clothing.\nFor appointments phone 731-4845, our special UBC Gradline.\nCandid Photography & Portrait Studios\n731-4845\n3343 W. BROADWAY\n\"Our Own Ektacolor Lab Makes the Difference, it's the Best!\"\n(You'll find us in \"Birdcalls\" & B.C. Tel's Yellow Pages)"@en . "Newspapers"@en . "Vancouver (B.C.)"@en . "LH3.B7 U4"@en . "LH3_B7_U4_1970_01_20"@en . "10.14288/1.0127979"@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 .