"CONTENTdm"@en . "http://resolve.library.ubc.ca/cgi-bin/catsearch?bid=1211252"@en . "University Publications"@en . "2015-09-11"@en . "1982-10-08"@en . "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/Ubysseynews/items/1.0128397/source.json"@en . "application/pdf"@en . " THE UBYSSEY\nVol. LXV, No. 8\nVancouver, B.C. Friday, October8, 1982 ^f^,^\n228-2301\nwcc\nSeparatists\ncome of age\nBy CRAIG BROOKS\nand SHAFFIN SHARIFF\nThe sign outside Richmond's Delta River\nInn read, \"Happy Birthday, Canada.\"\nIt was a rainy 1982 Canada Day weekend,\nand inside the hotel 300 members of a new\npolitical party committed to Western\nseparatism were discussing ways of pulling\nB.C. out of confederation.\nBut members of the Western Canada Concept party seemed not to care about the\nirony. They had important matters to\ndiscuss, including a new constitution for the\nWestern Canada Concept party B.C., leadership and future political action.\nThe three-day convention made it clear the\nWestern separatist movement has grown into\nmore than merely a fringe group capitalizing\non Western alienation. No longer is it composed of different factions hostile to one\nanother.\nSeparate\nschooling\nBy CRAIG BROOKS\nB.C. university students may be paying\nthe full cost of their education if the\nWestern Canada Concept party gains\npower in B.C.\nTenure and sabbatical leave for professors may be abolished, standard attire\nfor teachers required, and teacher union\nmembership made voluntary.\nAt the party's June convention in Richmond, numerous proposals regarding the\nfuture of B.C.'s education system were\nformulated.\nWCC's education policy committee\nspokesperson Lila Stanford outlined the\ncommittee's policies to the conference.\nThey include:\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 abolishment of tenure;\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 prayer in schools;\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 increased trade-school training;\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 voluntary union membership\nfor teachers;\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 regulated dress of teachers and\nstudents, if possible;\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 stop teaching metrification;\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 more emphasis on the private education system.\nAfter her presentation was overwhelmingly accepted by the convention\ndelegates, Stanford, a B.C. elementary\nschool teacher, gave more details about\nWCC's policies.\nIncompetence and wastage in B.C.\nschools leads to inflated education costs,\nStanford said. If waste was eliminated,\nuniversity students would be able to afford to pay the full cost of their education, she said.\n\"Students should pay their own way.\nYou could pay less if it was efficiently\nrun.\"\nSee page 12: MARXISM\nThe convention also made it clear WCC intends to be another major political party in\nWestern Canadian politics.\nAs party members gathered June 25 for\nregistration and morning prayer they talked\nabout healing rifts created by the initially\ncontentious merger between the original\nWestern Canada Concept party and the\nAlberta-based West-Fed Association.\nFormer West-Fed president Elmer\nKnutsen, a guest speaker at the convention,\nattributed the party's strength and increased\nmembership to prime minister Pierre\nTrudeau. \"It was the 1980 election and the\nthought of four or five years of Trudeau rule\nand his ideas of Canada that made us drag\nout plans (of Western separatism),\" he had\nsaid on another occasion.\nThe anti-Trudeau and anti-Central Canada\nsentiment is significant in WCC philosophy.\nA woman who identified herself only as\nDoreen called WCC \"the last hope for us in\nthe West. We have to cut the ropes and float.\nWe don't want to sink with a sinking ship.\"\nShe said she had just been to England and\nliked what Margaret Thatcher was doing.\nThere was no attempt to deal with\nwomen's rights or minority rights other than\na general call to abolish the human rights\ncommission.\n\"We don't want to be told what to say,\nwhat to call people,\" she said.\n\"The socialists are destroying our way of\nlife,\" she said, referring to WCC's views on\nthe public education system (accompanying\narticle) and the 1972 provincial NDP government.\nPlaying the Favorite.\nDoreen's vision, and WCC's, involves a\n\"mini-Canada,\" that would unite the four\nWestern provinces. Each would have its own\nlegislature and senate, and the national\ngovernment would be decentralized.\nThe road to a new Canadian state involves\nconquering each Western province individually, said WCC founder Doug Christie.\nA lawyer for 12 years, Christie was elected\npresident of WCC-B.C. during the July\nweekend convention.\nChristie says he would like to see, in the\nfirst province to elect a WCC government, a\nreferendum dealing with independance. The\nfirst province to do so would probably be\nAlberta, he said. Alberta, with 8,000\nmembers, has the largest WCC membership\nof any province, while B.C. has 4,000\nmembers, according to Christie's estimates.\nGiven WCC's B.C. platform and general\nviews, how likely is it that the party will\nbecome a viable force, as it has in Alberta?\nInternally, WCC still suffers from peoples\nof different moral, social?and economic concerns who have joined together merely to advocate less government intervention in their\nlives. Almost every member at the convention expressed some horror story about\ngovernment encroachment. One hotel lodge\nowner said the NDP government in 1975 raised fishing licences in his area, thereby driving\naway the main source of his income\u00E2\u0080\u0094the\nAmerican tourists from Washington state.\nAnd although not every member agrees\nwith WCC's fundamentalist aspects, the party's policy statement about a \"majority\"\nbelieving in a divine God is esentially correct.\nWCC is acting as one outlet for people\nfrustrated with governments, both federal\nand provincial. For example, Doug Christie's\ncampaign poster stated: \"If Bill Bennet were\ndoing his job, . . .\"\nGordon Kesler was elected MLA in a spring 1982 by-election held in Alberta's Olds-\nDidsbury riding. WCC's future in Alberta\nmay depend on how the party does in the\nNov. 2 provincial election.\nWhile Christie does not think WCC will\nform the government in the next B.C. election, he said his party may hold the balance\nof power because WCC appeals to people of\nall political persuasions.\nWCC's participation in the next election\nmight take votes away from Social Credit\ncandidates and help the NDP gain power in\nB.C., said Chritie.\n\"We take from the NDP. We are stealing\ntheir secretaries, campaign workers, and\n(Barrett's) scared,\" added WCC member\nBob Alair.\nBut Christie's comments are disputed by\nUBC political science lecturer Gerry\nKristensen. \"They are Tories and Socreds.\"\nBoth party president David Bannister and\nsecretary Florence-Marie Rice are former\nSocred activitists.\nSocial Credit party president Bernie Smith\nsaid while WCC is a \"political force,\" he\nthinks it won't have any real impact on provincial politics.\n\"I can't imagine anyone associating with\nseparatist movements.\"\nThe Socreds will have a better awarness of\nWCC's strength after the Nov. 2 provincial\nelections in Alberta, says Smith.\nNDP provincial secretary Joe Denofreo\nsays WCC's experience in Saskatchewan\u00E2\u0080\u0094the party received a mere three percent of the vote in the 1982 provincial elec\ntion\u00E2\u0080\u0094indicates that \"WCC can ride high until election day, but the vote will not\nmaterialize.\"\n\"When it comes down to voting, people\nwill have to decide whether they want a\nseparatist state, and whether WCC is the\nalternative.\"\nBut \"the party of the people,\" as Christie\ndescribes it, still faces credibility problems\ndespite gains made in Alberta and to a lesser\nextent in B.C.\nDespite claims from party members and\nexecutives that WCC is a party for all people,\nit is dominated by the right-wing, over-40,\npredominantly white members.\nThe fundamentalist nature of WCC is connected with its political beliefs, and is expounded in a party policy statement. It reads:\n\"The majority of Western Concept\nmembers believe in a divinely created\nmankind. Thus rights are divinely derived,\nand may not be questioned or tampered with\nby any man or group of men.\n\"The fundamental rights of each individual are: the right to life, the right to\nliberty, the right to property, and the right to\ndefence.\"\nHence WCC's anti-abortion stance and its\nrejection of gun control laws.\nVancouver resident Laurie Ludlow, who\nmounted a vigorous but losing battle for\nWCC-B.C.'s leadership, was greeted with\nheckling and jeers after he said he did not advocate prayer in school.\nDuring a question period for leadership\ncandidates, one member asked about their\npersonal lives, alluding that she disapproved\nof Trudeau's arrangement with his estranged\nwife Margaret. \"1 think we need a leader who\nhas high moral standards, and leads a clean\nan proper life,\" she said. Ludlow is legally\nseparated.\nLudlow got 10 votes for leader.\nAs the convention progressed, party\nmembers assembled in ad-hoc committees to\ndiscuss major issues, including constitutional\nchanges, legal reforms, economic policies,\nthe environment, labour relations and education.\nOn the final day of the conference, WCC's\nstand on certain issues was decided. Committees advocated and members accepted as party policy recommendations for:\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 abolition of the human rights commission, deemed an \"unecessary\" government\nagency;\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 contentious issues, including capital\npunishment, to be decided by referendums;\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 one official language\u00E2\u0080\u0094English;\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 maximum 10 percent income tax;\nSee page 12: WCC Page 2\nTHE UBYSSEY\nFriday, October 8, 1982\nusions broken\ntry were doing what we should, the\nReagan administration would show\nsome response.\"\nBy JANE BARTLETT\nThe public holds several illusions\nabout nuclear war and its survivability, a UBC pharmacology\nprofessor said Monday.\nNo medical care would be\navailable to treat serious burns\nbecause most hospitals would be\ncompletely destroyed in a nuclear\nexplosion, Dr. Thomas Perry told\n15 people in Computer Science 200.\nIn addition, the majority of doctors\nand nurses would be killed \"just\nlike everyone else,\" he said.\nFallout shelters won't provide\nprotection, he added.\nAnyone in a fallout shelter within\nthree miles of the targeted area\nwould be crushed or killed due to a\nlack of oxygen, Perry said. Within\nfive miles of the blast, people in\nbomb shelters would suffocate, die\nfrom carbon monixide poisoning,\nor be cooked alive, Perry said.\nPerry said thee is a shelter near\nOttawa which may be safe. Only\nhigh-ranking political officials,\nhowever, would have access to protection but there would not be a\ncountry left to govern anyway, he\nsaid.\nIf a one megaton nuclear bomb,\nthe equivalent of one million tons\nof TNT, were dropped above Vancouver's city hall, 400,000 people\nwould be killed outright. Perry\nsaid, while another 300,000 would\nbe severely injured and would die\nwithin four weeks.\nRadioactive fallout would cause\nfatal illnesses up to 35 years later,\nPerry said. Among the more serious\ndiseases that would result are liver,\nbreast, lung and thyroid cancer.\nNuclear war could not be limited\nto one specific geographical area,\nsaid Perry. The effects of a nuclear\nholocaust would be felt everywhere.\nEven if the third world were not hit\nby bombs, millions would die\nanyway because of starvation.\nUnderdeveloped countries would\nno longer be able to depend on\nwheat-exporting countries for their\nprimary food staple, he added.\nAnother illusion is that, as prime\nminister Pierre Trudeau says, \"we\nmust arm ourselves to the teeth\" in\norder to catch up with the Soviets,\nsaid Perry. \"It is simply a lie that\nthe U.S.S.R. is way ahead of us,\"\nhe said.\n\"Canada should be the one to\nmake the first move towards disarmament,\" said Perry, \"if ourcoun-\nOops!\nThe Ubyssey mistakenly reported\nTuesday that student senator Lisa\nHebert said as many as 6,000\nstudents will have to drop out of\nuniversity if the provincial government doesn't approve grants soon.\nHebert only said there had been\n6,000 applicants.\nLive Music \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Live Music \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Live Music\nARTS 4fr\nBEAR\nGARDEN\nToday\nOctober 8\n4:00 - 7:00\nBuchanan Lounge\nFeaturing guitarist and singer Jack Smith\nm\nTUE., OCT 12.1982\nSTARTING AT 9'30rw.\nfor the U.B.C. 3 CALGARY football game:\nCov\E OUT AMD SHOa/THeTeaM YOUR SPIRIT !\nWa will be having the\nfollowing inter-faculty\nCompetitions :\ndba Egg Eating contest\nSa Chicken Drumstick\nEating contest\n\u00C2\u00A7<* Best Chicken\nCostume Contest\nSPECIAL GUeST\nQ6T OUT\n' AND SUPPORT\n[ YOUR F/-CULTY5'\nTe\u00C2\u00AB*A!!\n-APPtARlNG-\nAT THfc\nTHUND6RBIR0 STADIUM\nOCT. 15, 1962\nAll team entrants recieve free. PiT parses\nvalid urttill Dec 31,1982.\n** BEST CHICKCN\nC0STUM6- %>\nTHE STATE OF THE\nECONOMY: IMPLICATIONS\nFOR WOMEN STUDENTS\nA talk, followed by discussion, with\nWENDY DOBSON, PhD.\nExecutive Director of the CD. Howe Institute\nTUESDAY, OCTOBER 12\n12:30-1:30, Buchanan A 205\nSponsored by the\nWOMEN STUDENTS' OFFICE\nwith the support of the Leon &\nThea Koerner Foundation\n.^ ,*\u00E2\u0080\u00A2'\u00E2\u0096\u00A0-*- \"... \u00E2\u0096\u00A0-\u00E2\u0096\u00A0^.s-'-^-^m '..*-\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0'.\u00C2\u00A5*\u00E2\u0096\u00A0-4 ->' -.'-\"V '\u00E2\u0080\u00A2'\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0---' \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 ;:;.;^'*'':?\i*- - ---**\u00C2\u00A3-\"\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 ;?%& \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nI\nI\nrentacar\nFROM\nVANCOUVER\n450 W. Georgia Street\n855 Kingsway\n610 Marine Drive\n99 West Pender\n1712 Powell Street\nNORTH VANCOUVER\n1700 Marine Drive\nPLUS Km and GAS\n24 HOURS\nAt all participating\nBritish Columbia locations\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 :{TTi[T\n685-0536\n879-9331\n324-5122\n683-5666\n254-7271\n980-2674\nrentacar *\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nBURNABY\n4080 Lougheed Highway\nRICHMOND\n3231 No. 3 Road\nNEW WESTMINSTER\n101 - 12th Street\n\u00C2\u00BBW* {.. ft\n294-3794\n273-5508\n522-4614\nSURREY\n10305 King George Highway\nCOQUITLAM\n323 North Road\nPORT COQUITLAM\n2055 Lougheed Highway\n588-0261\n939-4407\n941-5458 Friday, October 8, 1982\nTHE UBYSSEY\nPage 3\nVander Zalm eludes grant queries\nBy ARNOLD HESTROM\nEducation minister Bill Vander\nZalm dodged questions in the\nlegislature on delays in student\ngrant funds again Thursday.\nVander Zalm said increased\nnumbers of applicants created\ndelays and have strained funds.\nBut NDP education critic Gary\nLauk charged the Social Credit\ngovernment with crass political\nmanouvering which could jeopardize the education of students who\ncan't otherwise afford to go to\nuniversity.\nIn response to accusations by\ndeputy universities minister Walter\nStewart made Tuesday, that the\nfederal government is holding up\ngrant disbursements, Lauk said\nB.C. is the only province yet to pay\ngrant portions of the financial aid\nprogram.\n\"Thousands of B.C.'s students at\nuniversities are suffering hardship\nbecause this government has decided to welch on its commitment,\"\nsaid Lauk.\n\"Only in B.C. and only under\nSocial Credit government is this acceptable public policy,\" said Lauk.\nThe federal government supports\nstudent aid in B.C. with $39 million\nin loan money. The B.C. government allocated $16.9 million in\ngrants but Stewart told students\nand faculty at UBC that the program is $5 million short because of\nincreased applicants.\nIn the legislature, Vander Zalm\nsaid funds would not be released\nuntil the total number of applicants\ncan be determined and all information collected.\nA $5 million shortfall in grant\nfunds means that unless more\nmoney is added to the program\nstudents will face on average a 25\nper cent reduction on their student\ngrant.\nAt UBC one in four students is\naffected by the delay in grant funds.\nAt a. carefully staged meeting\nsponsored by the chemistry department Tuesday, Stewart defended\nuniversity and education ministry\ninaction by saying the decision will\nbe made by the cabinet on the advice of the finance ministry.\nBut student senator Lisa Hebert,\nthrough repeated interruptions\nfrom meeting chair Mel Comisaro,\nurged that the decision on grants\nnot be made in isolation from\nstudents.\nHebert requested a meeting with\nuniversities minister Pat McGeer.\nBut Stewart said, \"it is not up to\nhim (McGeer) to determine (the\nDiscovery Parks are private\nresearch facilities located near\nuniversities so faculty and facilities\ncan be shared for applied research.\nSome faculty also attacked\nStewart for funding applied\nresearch over basic research in the\npure sciences.\nStewart said the funding for basic\nresearch is a federal responsibility\nnot provincial. He said federal\nfunds for basic research were adequate to support provincially funded applied research.\nThe province has only limited\nfunds said Stewart.\nStewart, in a letter to the universities Council of B.C. last year\noutlined how university priorities\nwould have to change to ac\ncommodate technology and professional programs at the expense of\nliberal arts programs.\nStewart told the predominately\nscience audience, universities don't\nhave any thing to do with education. The function of a university is\nlearning for faculty and students.\"\nStewart said a science policy in\nB.C. should reflect the economic\npriorities of the province. But he\nadded the traditional resource based economy would have to expand\nto accommodate a steady two per\ncent increase in B.C.'s population.\nThe only other way to deal with\npopulation increase is to make the\nliving environment intolerable, he\nsaid.\nNew physical plant uses funding\nBy CHRIS WONG\nConstruction will begin on a new\n$6.5 million physical plant building\nif the funds are approved, UBC information officer Jim Banham said\nThursday.\nThe board of governors received\nat their Tuesday meeting design\nplans for the new building, Banham\nsaid.\nBut Alma Mater Society vice-\npresident Cliff Stewart criticized the\nboard for proceeding with plans for\nthe building. \"The whole thing is\nreally screwy, I don't know why\nthey're doing it,\" said Stewart.\n\"I think in light of the cutback\non capital funds, it is a strange\npriority for the board to set.\"\nStewart said construction of a\nnew building should not be the first\nstep towards solving physical\nplant's space problems. \"Perhaps\nthey (physical plant) should try to\nclean up the department before they\nput in new buildings.\"\nBanham said a new building is\nnecessary. \"The physical plant is\nworking in very marginal quarters\nat present. This is a badly needed\ndevelopment.\"\nPermission to proceed with planning for the building came last year\nfrom the Universities Council of\nB.C., said Banham. \"We can't get\napproval for the money until we get\nthe architectural drawings,\" he added.\nBut Stewart said funding has\nalready been approved for the project. \"My understanding is the provincial treasury board approved\nfunding for this last year,\" he said.\nIn other board business, the B-lot\nbarn might be saved, said Banham.\n\"If it can get through a referendum, the university is prepared to\nenter into an arrangement on\nmaintenance.\" He said discussion\non how the $7.2 million budget cuts\nwill be handled will not take place\n.until salary settlements are resolved.\ndecision). The ministry has no\nsource of funds. The program is\nshort $5 million, it is a difficult problem.\"\nMcGeer was originally scheduled\nto speak at the chemistry speaker\nseries on B.C. science policy.\nStewart filled in for McGeer who\nhad a previous commitment according to Comisaro.\nBaby formula kills\nROBERT BEYNON\nBottle-fed babies in Canada are\nmore likely to be sick than breastfed\nbabies, the founder of Infact, a\ngroup concerned with infant formula marketing, said Tuesday.\n\"Six to eight times as many\nchildren who are bottle-fed go to\nhospital in Canada,\" Robert\nMac Rae told 35 people at a\nGraduate Student Centre forum.\nMacRae said respiratory diseases\nare higher among bottle-fed infants.\n\"Many native children suffer\nacutely (due to the abuse of infant\nformula),\" he said.\n\"There are also problems in\ndepressed areas of the south (of\nCanada), including this city.\"\nThe infant formula debate gained\nprominence a year ago when the\nWorld Health Organization called\nfor a boycott of Nestle products.\nThe infant formula controversy\nshows the effect of First World\nboard rooms on the Third World,\nMacRae said. He charged the infant\nformula industry with marketing\npolicies responsible for thousands\nof infant deaths in the Third World.\nCompany nurses meet new\nmothers, give them free formula\nand convince them to use formula,\nMacRae said. But the mothers are\nunable to follow the instructions\nproperly, due to unsanitary conditions, and cannot afford an adequate quantity of formula.\nMacRae was part of a five\nmember panel.\nPanelist Godwin Eni, a health\ncare consultant, said infant formula\nshould be prescribed by a doctor to\nguard against abuse.\n\"It is groups outside the country\n(Nigeria) which will provide the\ncatalyst (for infant formula\nmarketing reforms),\" Eni said.\nNestle has been boycotted by Infact, church groups and others since\n1977. Ten per cent of the population know of the boycott and three\nto five per cent of the population\nsupport it, MacRae said.\n\"If Nestle says we will stop\nadvertising it is not sufficient unless\nbreast-feeding is advertised,\" said\nEni.\nInfact does not oppose production of infant formula but pushes\nfor advertising reforms MacRae\nsaid.\nThe Ubyssey does not accept\nadvertising from Nestle.\nStudents boo Bennett\nAWESOME, JUST AWESOME carnage all over the world, with blood pouring from humanity's tired veins until\nArmageddon, but never shall we learn to control violent tendencies is not the message at the Red Cross blood\nclinic in upper level SUB this week, as students flock \u00E2\u0080\u0094 or is it bleed \u00E2\u0080\u0094 to circulate precious fluid before blood\ndonor week ends today. Give generously.\nlose unions, improve economy'\nBy ARNOLD HEDSTROM\nThe labor climate in B.C. causes\nhigh technology industry to avoid\ndevelopment in Discovery parks,\nthe deputy universities minister\ncharged Tuesday.\n\"The private sector companies\nrun away and hide when they figure\nout the labor climate in B.C.,\"\nWalter Stewart told 100 students\nand faculty in Chemistry 250.\nBut when asked if labor participation on the predominately\nbusiness and academic Discovery\nPark board of directors would improve the climate, Stewart said the\nhigh tec sector all over the world is\nnon-union.\nStewart said the high tec sector is\ntoo competitive to guarantee the\njob security which most unions demand.\nBy BRIAN JONES\nIt could have been called Sod of\nSocred \u00E2\u0080\u0094 a nice speech but no dirt.\nB.C. Socred premier Elill Bennett\nwas the keynote speaker Wednesday at the sod turning ceremony for\nLangara College's new student\nunion building. But he received a\nchilly reception from the 300\nstudents who huddled for shelter\nalong the edges of Langara's\nconcrete-bound Main Quadragle.\nAs the ceremonial party arrived\nat the stage, it was greeted by loud\nboos and heckling from the\nstudents. The heckling was repeated\nwhen Bennett took his turn at the\nspeaker's podium.\nAbout 25 students actively voiced\ntheir dissent at the ceremony, bearing picket signs with slogans such as\nShame on You, Cutback College,\nCutback Knowledge, and What Are\nYour Priorities, Mr. Bennet?\nSaid Bennett: \"I know by your\nsigns that many of you out there are\nconcerned about the number of\ndollars that are going to education\nin :hese difficult times.\" But B.C.\ncolleges have received $277 million\nfrom the provincial government this\nyear, compared to $247 million last\nyear, Bennett claimed.\nBennett appealed to the students\nto understand that the depressed\neconomy was mainly to blame for\nthe state of education. \"Obviously,\nfor some there is never enough, but\nit's time to work together to find\nr\nsolutions,\" said Bennett.\nBut students who protested\nagainst Bennett and his government's policies weren't satisfied.\n\"It's weird. I don't understand\nwhat he's here for in the first place.*\nIt's kind of out of place,\" said Dan\nCross, an ex Langara student council vice-president. \"He doesn't talk\nto anybody \u00E2\u0080\u0094 he just leaves,\"\nCross said of Bennett's short stay at\nthe post-ceremony reception.\n\"He's got a lot of nerve, showing\nup where nobody likes him,\" said\none student protestor.\nBut not all the students were opposed to Bennett. As the premier\nleft the stage, one student shook his\nhand and told him he was doing a\n\"great job.\"\n\"They're doing the best they can.\nIt's bad everywhere,\" said first-year\nnursing student Donna Selva. \"I\nthink he's doing a good job.\"\nSeveral Langara student council\nmembers pointed out the irony of\nBennett's invitation to campus,\ngiven his government's record on\neducation issues.\nBennett was invited by a three\nperson council over the summer,\n\"which doesn't represent the student body,\" said student council\nmember Corrine Hunt. \"I don't\nthink it was up to the student society. It wasn't up to us,\" she said.\nCabinet ministers Peter Hyndman and Bill Vander Zalm were\nalso invited to the ceremony, but\ndid not show up.\nV\n(RNR/CUP)\u00E2\u0080\u0094The growing nuclear freeze movement apparently\nhas flopped with one group: American business.\nA survey of 845 business leaders reveals a unilateral halt to the\narms race is opposed by an overwhelming majority\u00E2\u0080\u0094from 50 to 80\nl>ercent\u00E2\u0080\u0094depending on the size of the business.\nThe bigger the company, the more likely its chief executive is to\nfavour nuclear arms. Most executives said a U.S. ban on nuclear\nweapons production would invite Soviet aggression, which they see\nas the biggest threat to peace.\nThree-quarters of those surveyed say they decided the issue in their\nown minds long ago and the freeze movement hasn't changed their\nopinions. In fact, most viewed the freeze movement with contempt.\n\"I'm satisfied 1 know my opinions,\" said one executive. \"These\npeople are stupid.\" Page 4\nTHE UBYSSEY\nFriday, October 8,1982\nLarkin to\nleave grads\nGraduate studies dean Peter\nLarkin has submitted his resignation effective June 30, 1983.\nThe board of governors accepted\nLarkin's resignation at its Tuesday\nmeeting. Larkin, who has been\ngraduate studies dean since 1975,\nresigned to spend more time in his\nrole as associate vice president for\nresearch.\nLarkin said the duties of the\nassociate vice president have increased greatly during the past few\nyears. \"There has been an explosion in the amount of research on\ncampus,\" he said.\nWhile the government has cut\nback funds in many areas, it has increased grants for research by 30\npercent per year, Larkin said. UBC\nreceived $45 million per year for\nresearch\u00E2\u0080\u0094twice as much as five\nyears ago, he said.\nAn additional $20 million is\nallocated to Triumf, a UBC-based\nnuclear research facility.\nLarkin says Canada must keep up\nresearch to remain a developed\ncountry, or it will end up importing\ntechnological materials. Even now,\nless than one percent of the gross\nnational product is in research, he\nsaid. Larkin said the government is\naiming for one and a half percent,\nbut still less on research than the\nU.S.A. or Germany.\nThe university administration is\ncurrently setting up an advisory\ncommittee to search for candidates\nto replace Larkin.\nUSED COMPUTER\nBuy-Sell-Trade-Consignment\nCall 738-3541\nKEY COMPUTER\nSale and Service Ltd.\n2391 Burrard St.\n&$&.\nJ$^ll^4\nINTRAMURALS\nINNER-TUBE\nWATER POLO\nMonday Nights\nStarting Oct. 18-Nov. 29\n8-11 p.m.\nSign Up Now WMG 203\n$20 for a Team\nCORKY'S\n^YLI^\nAPPOINTMENT SERVICE\n731-4191\n3644 West 4th Avenue\nAt Alma\nTRANSCENDENTAL\nMEDITATION PROGRAMME\nas taught by Maharishi Mahesh Yogi\nSCIENTIFICALLY VERIFIED TO\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Improve Academic Performance\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Increase Intelligence Growth Rate\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Increase Mental Clarity\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Reduce Stress\nIntroductory Lecture\nEvery Monday\nSUB Room 211\nPhone 263-2655\nOPEN TO EVERYONE\n\u00C2\u00A3sso\nCLOSING DATE FOR APPLICATIONS TO\nEsso Resources / Imperial Oil Limited\nis: OCTOBER 14\nat U.B.C. Campus Placement Office\nUBC SHITO-RYU\nKARATE\nASIAN CENTRE AUDITORIUM\nClasses:\nMon. \u00E2\u0080\u0094 5:30-7:30 p.m.\nTues. - 5:30-7:30 p.m.\nThurs. \u00E2\u0080\u0094 5:30-7:30 p.m.\nWOMEN'S SELF DEFENCE:\nTues. \u00E2\u0080\u0094 7:00-8:00 p.m.\nInstructor Yas Yamamoto\n1981/82 B.C. Wintergame\nKata Champion\nCONTACT: WALLY224-5537\n& \u00C2\u00BB*%*>i.y \u00C2\u00A3\u00C2\u00B0, \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 , &;\nTHEUofBLUE\nEVERYTHING YOU EVER WANTED TO KNOW ABOUT BEER\nLesson #4 \"The pour\"\nThere are many theories regarding this particular facet\nof the beer mystique. The one we favour builds a beer\nhead from the bottom. Start by keeping the glass\nupright and pouring down the middle until a head\nbegins to form. Stop, let the foam build, then tilt the\nglass to a forty-five degree angle and continue to pour\ndown the side. As the glass fills, bring it back to the\nupright position leaving a head about two fingers tall.\nThe beer pour is nearly always followed by the ever\npopular beer \"unpour\", an exercise in which many of\nyou are already well-versed.\nLesson #4 from the College of Beer Knowledge Friday, October 8,1982\nTHE UBYSSEY\nPage 5\nNew student service head 'a listener'\n-\\nBy CRAIG BROOKS\nHe believes tenure is an outdated concept, he thinks tuition fees are at a\nreasonable level, and he intends to \"listen\"\nto students as much as possible. That's the\ntheory.\nNeil Risbrough becomes UBC first vice-\nprovost of student affairs on January 1.\nCurrently on sabbatical leave, Rishbrough a\nmetalurgical professor, was \"found\" for\nthe job after a year long university search.\nThe vice-provost position was created\nafter Eric Vogt, then vice-president of student and faculty affairs, announced his\nresignation in December 1980.\nIn a January 1981 administrative shuffle,\nwhich student council criticized, the faculty\naffairs portfolio was given to academic vice\npresident Michael Shaw and a new postion\nto deal with student affairs, subordinate to\nShaw, was created.\nRisbrough does not think the new structure is detrimental to student concerns. The\n1981 AMS council had argued that placing\nthe person in charge of UBC student services one administrative level lower, would\nmean a loss of student influence with the\nuniversity president and board of governors.\nRisbrough doesn't think the new position\nwill mean lost influence. \"I fully expect to\ntalk directly to the president,\" he said Sept.\n25.\nRisbrough says the structure is probably\n\"just formal for budget reasons.\" He said\nthe university president would want to talk\ndirectly to the vice-provost in order to\ngauge student opinion on issues.\nRisbrough accepted the postion after five\nyears as director of the engineering\nundergraduate core program. \"I see it as a\nnew challenge.\"\nRisbrough said he initially did not want\nto accept the posuion, since he was planning to take a year's leave. After the university said it was willing to wait the year, he accepted the job.\nRisbrough said he will be spending most\nof his time \"listening.\" Informal meetings\nrather than structured committees will be\nused to gauge student opinion for the administration. \"There is no harm in listening\nat any time. Listening is by far the most important (part of the job).\"\nTuition fees are \"not excessive, under\nmost circumstances,\" Risbrough says.\nBut what really concerns Risbrough \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 is\nsocial and economic barriers preventing\nstudents from attending university, particularly those from B.C.'s interior. In ad\ndition, many high schools over or under inflate their marks for students in comparison\nwith provincial average.\nThe universities major day care building\nis scheduled to close at the end of\nDecember, due to fire regulations. Because\nof the large number of mature students, the\nuniversity should make day care a prority,\nRisbrough said. \"You must have a place to\npark the car and a place to park the kid.\"\nRisbrough would like to see more student\ninput on university decisions that only in\ndirectly affected students. \"No (university)\ncommittee should be making decisions\nunless they know the opinion of students.\"\nThe student representative system is not\nalways the best, says Risbrough. \"You need\nto go beyond, on a broader scale.\"\nRepresentatives rend to act as individuals, rather than echoing the concerns\nof their constituents, he said. \"Even board\n(of Governors) and senate representatives\nact as individuals.\"\n\"I don't think there is anything wrong\nwith student representation on any university committee. In general, student input\nhas been above average.\"\nUBC students have always been excluded\nfrom tenure committees, but this doesn't\nworry Risbrough, since he says tenure has\noutlived its usefulness. \"I don't agree with\nthe concept of tenure,\" said Risbrough. \"I\nthink it is outmoded.\"\nRibrough said the original reason for\ntenure, that of professors not having to\nworry about being fired for putting forward\ncontroversial ideas, does not apply\nanymore. \"1 don't think that situation exists anymore.\"\nRISBROUGH. . .intends to \"listen\"\nTrek gets bucks\n'Vote for me\nBy CRAIG BROOKS\nCouncil approved an additional\n$1,500 to Great Trek week activities\nWednesday.\nThe money will pay the planned\ndeficit of the Oct. 18-23 week of activities, which culminates Saturday\nin a downtown march.\nThe events celebrate the sixtieth\nanniversary of the Great Trek,\nwhich saw 1,000 students march\nfrom UBC's former Fairview campus, located near Vancouver\nGeneral Hospital, to the Point Grey\ncampus to protest government\ndelays in building the new campus.\nThe week of activities include a\n'20s film night, '20s theme dance,\nArts '20 relay race, and the trek\nreenactment.\nGreat Trek committee chair Cliff\nStewart told council \"The Great\nTrek (plan) is progressing well.\"\nCouncil had previously allocated\n$500 to the committee.\n\"No one knows what's going\non,\" is a favorite comment of AMS\npresident Dave Frank.\nHe used the phrase twice\nWednesday night, once to describe\na newly formed B.C. promotional\ngroup called Team B.C., and to\ndescribe the current state of provincial student assistance grants.\nFrank said the provincial government is short $5 million in student\nCouncil Briefs\ngrant money. The cabinet will have\nto either tie money to academic\nstanding, find the extra money, or\ncut every student grant across the\nboard.\nThe delay is leaving many\nstudents with an uncertain future,\nFrank said. \"No one knows what's\ngoing on.\"\nCouncil voted to spend 30 cents\nto mail a letter to universities\nminister Pat McGeer, urging a\nquick decision on the grants.\nThe AMS will send Kelley Jo\nBurke to a Team B.C. workshop on\nOctober 15. Burke's a Ubyssey staff\nmember, will be sent to \"find out\nwhat the hell UBC donated $20,000\nto, since no one seems to know\nwhat's going on.\"\nTeam B.C. is an ad-hoc group of\nbusiness people interested in \"Getting B.C. moving again.\" It has\ncome under attack for being a\nSocial Credit front group.\n* * \u00C2\u00BB\nCouncil received architectural\ndrawings for renovations to a white\nwooden barn in the middle of B-lot.\nThe proposal, which is part of a\n$20 package to go to a November\nreferendum, will cost $200,000 to\nimplement, AMS president Dave\nFrank said.\nIt includes a coffee shop, a two\ncar mechanics garage, a second\nfloor party room, and a\nmetal/woodworking shop.\nThe AMS presented the plans to\nthe board of governors, who considered tearing down the old horse-\nbarn this summer for financial\nreasons. \"(The presentation) blew\naway the board,\" said Frank.\nThe Ubyssey, already crippled by\na $ 11,000 summer newspaper deficit\nand a 40 per cent drop in advertising revenue due to the current recession, had up to an additional $3,000\nworth of advertising removed\nWednesday.\nCouncil voted to accept a budget\ncommittee recommendation to\nallow AMS business areas to advertise in Fred, UBC's 'alternative\nnewspaper.'\nUbyssey staff member Brian\nJones said council's mandate to the\nbudget committee two weeks ago to\ninvestigate the question included\nsoliciting opinion from all parties\naffected, including The Ubyssey.\nJones said the paper was not invited, although Sue Haering, a\nFred's student council reporter,\ncouncil nursing representative and\nbudget committee member, was\npresent and voted.\nAMS president Dave Frank\nagreed with Jones. \"It's tempting\nto send it back (to budget committee). The Ubyssey should have been\nconsulted.\" Council defeated, by\none vote, a motion to table the motion until budget committee could\nsolicit other opinion.\nGUESS WHO\ncandidate\nOnly Ontario\nto foi low 6-5\nOttawa CUP) \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Most provinces\nappear unresponsive to former\nSecretary of State Gerald Regan's\nrequest that they hold tuition fee increases to the 6-5 federal restraint\nformula.\nThe Alberta and Nova Scotia\ngovernments answered that it is up\nto the post-secondary institutions to\nset tuition fees. Manitoba and\nQuebec have already frozen fees,\nthough the Manitoba government\nhas not said if the freeze will be extended beyond 1982-83. The Yukon\nsaid in its response that it has no\ntuition fees because it has no post-\nsecondary institutions.\nNo other province responded to\nRegan's telex. But Ontario announced Sept. 21 that it would limit\ntuition fee increases to five per cent\nin 1983-84 under its public sector\nwage and price restraint program.\nBy STEPHEN WISENTHAL\nLike Tweedle Dum and Tweedle\nDee, candidates in the Alma Mater\nSociety director of administration\nby-election gave their platforms at a\npublic forum in the SUB conversation pit Thursday.\nBut a third candidate, the Mad\nHatter, didn't show up for the tea\nparty.\nCandidates Scott Ando and Alan\nPinkney, running in a byelection\nmade necessary by Terry Cox's\nresignation during the summer,\nboth want to increase student\nawareness of the services provided\nby the AMS. Both also say the\ndirector of administration should\nbe non-political, as should the upcoming Great Trek parade.\nA third candidate, Chris Fulker,\nwas not at the public forum, He was\nplaying chess in SUB 205 with the\nchess club, for which he is running\nfor the position of treasurer.\nPinkney said in reference to cuts\nin education funding that students\nhave to recognize outside economic\nconditions, and that as secretary of\nthe student administrative commission he has participated in AMS\nplans to protest the cuts. He also\nsaid \"the great trek is\nnon-political,\" and shouldn't be used to protest the cuts.\nAndo said that as DoA one has\nto be a non-political administrator\nas well as being a political council\nmember. Through council's good\nrelations with government bodies\nthey can effectively protest the cuts,\nhe said.\n\"We have to increase the public's\nawareness of UBC and the great\ntrek is a great way to do it,\" said\nAndo.\nPinkney said about the upcoming\nbuildings referendum \"I just can't\nHealth students wait for grants\nBy BEV OLDS\nNothing has been announced yet\non whether more than 40 health\nscience students who qualified for\nbursaries from the ministry of\nhealth will receive money.\n\"We've had nothing in writing\nfrom the health ministry but they\ntold the ministry of education, who\nthen told us, that there was no more\nmoney,\" UBC assistant awards\ndirector Dan Worsley said Monday.\nThe health ministry funds the\nprogram, but the education\nministry assesses need and runs the\nprogram.\nWorsley said 50 people have\nalready received the bursary money\nbut over 40 others have \"been put\non hold and don't really know.\"\nMost of the students affected are\nin nursing and rehabilitative\nmedicine, with a small number in\nspeech science and audiology,\nhealth science planning, and clinical\nand community psychology.\n\"There have been students in\nrehab affected by the bursary cut\nback but I can't say how many or\nby how much yet,\" said\nrehabilitative medicine assistant\nprofessor Joanne Stan.\nNursing school director Marilyn\nWillman said \"no one has said\nanything to me about the cut\nbacks.\"\nWorsley said there was definitely\na high level of anxiety among the\nstudents who might not get their\nbursaries.\n\"We (the awards office) are not\nin a position to replace this money\nand we can help only to a small extent.\"\n\"the sooner we hear the better,\nbut right now we just have to wait\non their (the ministry's) decisions,\"\nsaid Worsley.\nhelp but support the referendum\"\nand mentioned the area under the\nSub plaza as one of the important\nuses for the money. Ando said the\nsame, mentioning the AMS ski\ncabin, the courtyard on the second\nfloor of SUB and a sprinkler system\nfor SUB as areas needing the\nmoney.\nOn SAC's role, Ando said more\nstudent awareness of the services\nprovided by SAC is needed and that\nservices of the AMS have been\nANDO\nget SAC involved\ndeteriorating in recent years and\nneed improving. Pinkney added an\nincreased AMS fee would allow for\nan increase in AMS services.\nAndo said \"1 feel that Fred is a\nvery good idea\" about the 'alternate' student paper. The Ubyssey\ncan coexist comfortably and both\nshould get AMS support.\nAndo, former vice president of\nthe first-year students committee\nand former SAC elections commissioner, said he wants to make SAC\nPINKNEY . . . Support vote\nmore involved with other groups on\ncampus such as undergrad societies.\nChris Fulker, a student senator,\nwasn't at the forum and was\nunavailable for comment.\nPolling stations will be open at\nnumerous sites on campus Thursday Oct. 14 and Friday Oct. 15.. Page 6\nTHE UBYSSEY\nFriday, October 8,1982\nFazed on\ngrants\nWhere are we at with student grants?\nThe severity of the situation is being totally masked by the confusion\ncoming out of government offices and the legislature.\nThe confusion at times seems like so many lies because one arm of the\ngovernment says the exact opposite of the other.\nSomeone must be lying.\nTuesday in Vancouver deputy universities minister Walter Stewart told\nstudents and faculty the federal government was holding up disbursement\nof funds.\nThursday education minister Bill Vander Zalm said they were waiting for\nmore applicants.\nWhere are we at with student grants?\nWe students know where we are at. In eight days the deadline to get\ngrant forms processed and cheques sent out in time for January will pass.\nAt UBC 6,000 students have applied for grants. That's about one in four.\nMany of them will be forced to get emergency funds and deferrals for\nhousing to survive. Some will have to drop out.\nThe severity of this situation barely eclipses the fact that nobody can\nadequately plan their finances for the year.\nEvery day the government waits, uncertainty and anxiety grows. The\ngovernment should either bite the bullet and announce the 25 per cent cuts\nnecessary to make up $5 million or they should add more money for funds.\nGrant forms should be printed and mailed to students immediately.\n\u00C2\u00A9Kti -m 0BYS56V.\nIsrael policing, but Egypt will not be bullied\nBy KAMAL ABDEL\u00E2\u0080\u0094MALEK\nTahseen Basher, Egypt's Ambassador to Canada, came to visit\nVancouver, Friday Sept. 17th.\nUpon an invitation from a group of\nprofessors at UBC he gave a public\nlecture on Egyptian foreign policy\nat present. Then he attended a dinner party given by the Nile-Fraser\nEgyptian Canadian Society of B.C.\nin which he met with Canadians of\nEgyptian origin.\nA graduate of Harvard in International Political Economy, Mr.\nBasheer held various diplomatic\nposts: Egypt's ambassador to the\n\"Arab League, a member of Egypt's\ndelegation to UN, an official\nspokesman for foreign affairs under\nPres. Nasser, then Sadat's\nspokesman for a number of years.\n\"Lovely city.\", he says of Vancouver, 'Is it always sunny?\", i say\nno and we then change the subject\nfrom the meteorological conditions\nof Vancouver to the hot political\nclimate of the Mideast. \"The region\nhas become a quagmire of international anarchy,\" he says of the\nperspectives\nMiddle East. \"Israel is acting as\nthough it were the policeman of the\narea whistling this side to move, the\nother to stop. Egypt refuses to be\nbullied by anybody. We reject\nBegin-Sharon policy. The policy of\nBegin and Sharon is to stay in\nLebanon until that country signs a\npeace treaty with Israel. This is not\npeace, it is dictation and we call on\nthe U.S. to speak out as a full partner to the peace process.\"\nBasheer is careful to make a\ndistinction between criticizing\nBegin's government and the Israeli\npeople. The majority of Israelis\nnow support peace and compromise, he says. The last polls,\ntaken just two weeks ago, show that\n51% of Israelis voted for vacating\nthe West Bank and Gaza in return\nfor genuine peace.\n\"We are sorry and chagrined by\nwhat is happening now in Lebanon.\nBut sorrow is not enough. Talk is\nnot enough. We ask for a collective\neffort by government and people to\nexpand the constituency of peace in\nIsrael and in the Arab world.\"\nWhat are the prospects now of\nEgypt's return to the Arab fold?\nAmbassador Basheer explains that\nEgypt's signing of a peace treaty\nwith Israel came as an emotional\nshock to the Arabs. They were\nangry with the big brother breaking\nranks with the rest of the family.\nThen they tried to bribe Egypt with\n$5 billion. Well, Egypt refused.\nThen recently there have been many\ncontacts between Egypt and with\nthe Arab government. Foreign\nministers start visiting Egypt\nespecially from Morocco and Jordan. But we are not pushing this\nprocess of reconciliation. We want\nthe Arab world to mature to peace\nat its own pace.\nWhat about the Arab summit at\nFez? What does official Egypt think\nof it? \"Well, we think that the Arab\nconsensus at Fez is a palpable progress. But when it comes to the\nnitty-gritty, Reagan's initiative,\nhowever limited, is a better starter,\na step in the right direction.\"\nA personal friend of, and a\nspokesman for late President Sadat,\nambassador Basheer tells of how he\nused to advise his late boss on how\nto address Western media. Soon\nSadat developed his own personal\nstyle, adds the Ambassador. But the\ncourse of his relations with the late\nPresident did not all the time run\nsmoothly.\n\"Sometimes we disagree and\nhave real fights but there was never\ndisrespect between us. I liked him.\"\nAlmost a year ago president\nSadat was gunned by a group of army men who belonged to an extremist Muslim organization called\nRepentance and Flight from Sin.\nSadat was accused of being a deviant from the true Islamic paths\nand of being a puppet to an infidel\nWest which pressured him to sign a\npeace agreement with the Jews,\nenemies of Allah. How could Sadat\npossibly be accused of all these\ncharges when he was constantly\nportrayed in Egypt as the devout\n\"faithful president?\"\nAmbassador Basheer explains\nthat Sadat used religious groups to\ncombat the influence of Communist\nelements especially in Egyptian\nuniversities. But then such groups\ngrew more influential than expected. They took their religion\nseriously. They were not aware they\nwere being used for a political purpose. Then all of sudden they were\narrested (Sept. 1981) and their\nleaders were put in jail. Sadat\nunleashed his anger on all and hurt\nthe religious sensibilities of some\nwhen he once said of a shiekh\n(Muslim priest) \"I've put the dog in\njail.\"\nAnd the opposition now in\nEgypt, how big and effective is it.\nAmbassador Basheer says that\nthe present opposition in Egypt\nwhich rejects Camp David agreement does not reject peace as such.\nIt rejects Camp David agreement\nbecuase it does not give the concrete\nanswer to the homelessness of the\nPalestinian people. The opposition\nwants self-determination to the\nPalestinian right away. Camp\nDavid Agreement delays it five\nyears. President Mubarak has been\nconducting a dialogue with all\nelements of the opposition on matters of foreign policy. There will\nalways be a dialogue, there will\nalways be differences, he says.\nUpon his request, I took the Am\nbassador to a Middle East\nrestaurant on Broadway. The\nLebanese cook recognized the ambassador and shook hands with\nhim. The ambassador said that he\nwas sorry for what Lebanon was\ngoing through. \"Allah is greater\nthan all of them, Mr.\nAmbassador,\" the Lebanese cook\nsays in a resigned tone. Later, the\nAmbassador told me that he was\ngreatly moved by what the\nLebanese cook said. After all in our\nplagued Middle East it is the simple\nand little man who bears the brunt,\nhe said.\nKamal Abdel-Malek is a creative\nwriting graduate student at\nUBC. He has written for Newsday\nand Middle East Focus. Perspectives is an opinion column open to\nall UBC students & faculty.\nFarmworkers win\nThanks to the Canadian Farmworkers Union, the 1982 season has\nbrought major victories for B.C.\nfarmworkers.\nIn the spring, the Workers' Com-\n-pensation Board announced that\nfarmworkers will be given compulsory coverage in time for the\n1983 season. It is certainly good\nnews that workers in Canada's third\nmost dangerous industry will soon\nbe compensated for work-related\naccidents and diseases, and that\npreventative measures will be taken\nto promote occupational health.\nThe Board is currently developing new industrial health and safety\nregulations which will address the\nspecial working conditions of farmworkers such as their concentrated\nexposure to highly toxic pesticides.\nThe bad news is the year long wait\nbetween the announcement and the\nactual coverage. The media has\nreported several serious cases of\npesticide poisonings this past summer, some of which required extensive hospitalization. As well, accidents have continued to occur\nbecause vans used to transport\nfarmworkers to the fields were badly overcrowded and not equipped\nwith seat belts. The vast majority of\naccidents remain unreported and,\nuntil 1983, injuries arising from\nthem will not be compensated by\nthe Workers' Compensation Board.\nAn important victory in the campaign to organize farmworkers was\nwon this summer when the union\nwas granted access to resident farmworkers at seven farms by the\nlabour relations board. Nearly nine\nmonths after an application by the\nunion, fought tooth and nail by the\ngrowers, the labour relations board\nissued the order permitting union\nrepresentatives to enter the farmers'\nprivate property and inform the\nworkers of their right to join the\nunion.\nDuring the summer, teams of two\norganizers visited each of the seven\nfarms on a regular basis. Despite\nthreats from the farmers, over the\nCourse of the summer workers\nspoke more and more candidly to\nthe organizers, the employers were\nso determined to keep the union off\ntheir farms that they tried to\nobstruct the visits in every conceivable way. They invented\nreasons to overhear conversations\n(such as fixing nonexistent\nrefrigerators); they accused\norganizers of visiting the farms\nlooking for wild sex; they attempted\nphysical intimidation and threatened organizers who persisted.\nA third success for the farm\nworkers is a change in unemployment income commission regulations. In the past, farmworkers\nhave had to work 25 consecutive\nworking days for the same\nemployer in order for the period of\nemployment to count for UIC purposes. The regulation was\nspecifically aimed against farmworkers and had the effect of\nbolstering the corrupt farm labour\ncontractor system. Under the old\nsystem, the only way a farmworker\ncould be assured of the 25 days was\nto work for a contractor.\nYou are invited to see the film\ndepicting the story of the Canadian\nFarmworkers' Union Tuesday,\nOctober 12, at 12:30 in the SUB\ntheatre. Titled A Time To Rise, the\nfilm has received international acclaim. Judy Mossof\nFarmworker's Support Committee\nTHE UBYSSEY\nOctober 8. 1982\nThe Ubyssey is published every Tuesday and Friday\nthrough the university year by the Alma Mater Society\nof the University of B.C. Editorial opinions are those of\nthe staff and are not necessarily those of the AMS or the\nuniversity administration. Member. Canadian University\nPress, The Ubyssey's editorial office is in SUB 241k, with\nthe advertising office next door. Editorial department\n228-2301; Advertising, 228-3977.\nShaffin and Craig sat drinking Tequila Sunrises at the Mulocka bar while Sarah, Diana\nand Alan tanned by the Seine. Jennifer, Lisa and Arnold went shopping on the Champs\nElysees and bought croissants for the crowd by the Seine. When they got there they had no\nbutter so Rick went to buy it but it was bitter butter so they persueded Charles to buy some\nbetter butter. The other Rick went to buy various kinds of jam. Peter, Stephen and Kelley Jo\njoined the crowd at the Mulocka, had a few too many T.S?s and they all started singing\nrounds of Frere Jacques. Brian, Jane, Robert and Victor were all disgusted and took the slow\ntrain to Marseiles; this was unfortunate as they missed the midnight skinny-dip in the Seine.\nAnd we all missed our last names. Friday, October 8,1982\nTHE UBYSSEY\nPage 7\nr\nL\nNotice\nYou know that nice noticeboard\nthe athletics department have at the\nintersection of Wesbrook and\nUnivesity boulevards?\nYou know the one, it says 'Exciting coming Thunderbird events.'\nWell something's been perturbing\nThe Ubyssey sports desk this last\nweek.\nNo, not the total lack of sensitivity for the English language, hell we\nall expect that from the athletics\ndepartment. It's what they've put\non the bottom half that's odd. It\nsays that the next exciting event is\nthe San Diego Chicken match on\nOctober 15th.\nSo what happened we want to\nknow, to the exciting soccer match\nagainst Calgary on Oct. 9. And\nwhat about the season opening\nalumni hockey match Oct. 15.\nAren't they exciting? And it's not as\nif there isn't the space on that huge\nsign to list two events anyways.\nIce Hockey\nWater Polo\nThe UBC ice hockey and water\npolo teams will both miss\nThanksgiving this weekend. Both\nopen their seasons with away games\nin the USA, who celebrate turkeys\nin November, both at the dinner\ntable and ballot box.\nThe hockey team plays games in\nGrand Forks, North Dakota on Friday night, Saturday afternoon and\nif necessary, on Sunday afternoon\ntoo. The games are 'friendless.'\nThe water polo team, competing\nin a tournament in Eugene, Oregon,\nplays its matches on Friday evening,\nSaturday morning and afternoon\nEARN\n512,000\nPER MONTH\nIN YOUR SPARE\nTIME\nThen come and\nspend a little of it at\nFELLINI'S\nGREAT\nSANDWICHES,\nFABULOUS\nCHEESECAKES,\nCAPPUCCINOS,\nESPRESSOS,\nNANAIMO BARS\nLocated at the back of the Village\non Campus\n687-5566 684-2944\n1136 W.Georgia St.\n(OUTLAWS)\nIs Rock and Roll\nAppearing\nTo Oct. 9\u00E2\u0080\u0094Billboard Heroes\nOpen Thanksgiving Monday\nOct. 11-Oct. 16\n3-D\nOct. 14\u00E2\u0080\u00948-10 p.m.\nFall Fashion Fantasy\nMonday\u00E2\u0080\u0094Battle of the Sexes\nTues.\u00E2\u0080\u0094T & A Night\nWed.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Ladies Night\n(Male Strippers)\nLadies admitted free\nMon.-Thurs.\nOpen 8:00 p.m. to 2:00 a.m.\nMon.-Sat.\nNightly from 8 p.m.-lO p.m.\nM.T.V. live from N.Y. on\nCanada's largest 25 ft. Screen\nBird watch\nand on Sunday morning.\nThere the similarities end.\nBecause when the hockey players\nrise in their Grand Forks hotel\nrooms and contemplate the\nprevious afternoon flight down,\nthe water polo players will be\nassembling at the UBC aquatic centre, throwing their sleeping bags into the backs of cars scrounged off\ndad for the weekend and contemplating the damage their share\nin a thousand miles worth of gas\nwill do to their pocket books.\nThe ice hockey team plays CIAU\nand receives a large grant from the\nFederal Government. The match in\nGrand Forks is not a CIAU fixture.\nBut the team has a lot of money left\nover.\nAs for water polo, well that's\nhow the other half lives.\nSoccer\nThis Saturday afternoon at\nWolfson field at 2:00 p.m. UBC\nand Calgary meet in a match neither\ncan afford to lose.\n1\n-J\nUBC are 1-1-1 after three games\nand Calgary 1-1-0 after two. Even\nat this early stage neither can lose\nagain and hope to catch the Victoria\nteam which is 3-0-0 and top rated in\nCanada.\nThe two teams played last Friday\nin Calgary when the hosts won\nfour-zero. But this time UBC will\nbe at full strength and have home\nadvantage.\nRugby\nThe UBC men's rugby fifteen\ntravel to Abbotsford to compete in\nthe sixth annual Thanksgiving Gobbler tournament there this weekend.\nThe UBC team has won four of\nthe previous five tournaments and\nin times of such hardship for poor\nstudents who would bet against\nthem winning again and taking\nhome the 40 pound turkey first\nprize. Any rumors that they intend\nto run it in the coming election instead of eating it are of course quite\nridiculous. Who could seriously\nbelieve that the good people of\nPoint Grey would send a turkey to\nthe provincial parliament.\nFootball\nThe Thunderbirds are going for\ntheir thirteenth consecutive WIFL\nregular season win in Winnipeg this\nSaturday.\nIf the five and zero Thunderbirds\nbeat the three and one Manitoba\nBisons this weekend they clinch first\nplace in the WIFL which would\nbestow valuable home advantage in\nthe divisional playoff for which\nManitoba looks the likely opponents.\nField Hockey\nThe UBC Women's hockey team\ntravels to Victoria this weekend for\nthe second of three Canada west\ntournaments.\nUBC four-zero in CIAU games\nand rated number two in Canada as\na whole and beat the University of\nVictoria on the way to winning the\nUBC Early Bird Invitational tournament last weekend.\nSquash\nThe UBC squash teams met with\nmixed success in the Vancouver city\nsquash league on October 7th.\nThe first team, playing in the\nthird division, beat Arbutus four\nmatches to two. In the fourth division the second team beat Blue\nMountain by the same score.\nAlso in the fourth division, the\nthird team crashed to a five love\ndefeat against a court house team.\nII\nA TIME TO RISE\"\n1981 award winner Leipzig Film Festival\nB.C. Farmworks' Fight For Justice\nTuesday, Oct. 12, 12:30 p.m.\nSUB Auditorium\nAdmission Free\nY4LL4BI.K\nThe success of Canadian\nbusiness depends on the\nskilled workers of- this\ncountry. But with the new\ntechnologies and changes in\nthe Canadian economy, the\nskills that are in demand are\nchanging.\nPeople being trained in the\nnew skills and developing\ntrades are too few right now.\nThat's why Canada has a new\nNational Training Act. To\nhelp more Canadians learn\nthe skills of tomorrow,\nstarting today.\nWe're encouraging more\nemployers to do more on-the-\njob training. Improved wage\nreimbursements for some\nemployees and less paper-\nburden will make it easier for\nindustry to train more\nCanadians.\nFunding to the provinces for\ncommunity and technical\ncolleges will help them build\ntraining facilities with the\nmost modern equipment to\ntrain Canadians in the\nTHIS MAN HAS A\nSKILL. HE'S A\nVALUABLE\nCANADIAN\nRESOURCE. WE\nARE GOING TO\nNEED A LOT\nMORE LIKE HIM.\nimportant new skills.\nAnd for workers who need to\nretrain because of technological\nchanges on the job \u00E2\u0080\u0094 special\nallowances may be available if\nthey will learn one of the skills\nin short supply in Canada.\nHelping people who need\nretraining is a federal\ngovernment priority.\nWhat's the best way to handle\nthe workplace of the 1980s?\nWith a lot of skill.\n:!::: *:::\u00C2\u00A3:'\n\"''HH: ii\n!Sm! iSSSS\nTHE NEW NATIONAL TRAINING ACT\nFor more information about Skills\nand the new National Training Act.\nwritetousat:SKILLS OTTAWA.K1A0J9\n1 +\nEmployment and\nImmigration Canada\nLloyd Axworthy, Minister\nEmploi et\nImmigration Canada\nLloyd Axworthy, Ministre\nCanada -\u00E2\u0080\u00A2age 8\nTHE UBYSSEY\nFriday, Oc\nIi\nStudio 58's Jitters less\nshaky than Vagabond's\nBy RICHARD THOMAS\nDavid French's play Jitters has\nthe potential to survive even the\nworst of productions and still come\nthrough a winner.\nJitters follows the humorous\nfollies of a play's cast from their\nrehearsals, through the hectic\nhysteria of opening night where\neverything that could go wrong\ndoes, to the more dramatic third act\nwhere actors finally reveal their sensitivity and fragility.\nJitters\nBy David French\nAt Studio 58 until Oct. 23\nAt Vagabond playhouse\nuntil Oct. 24\nJitters opened this week at both\nStudio 58 and the Vagabond\nplayhouse. But where Jon Bryden's\nversion at Studio 58 proved to be a\nfantastic exercise in hysterical comedy, Brian Brown's direction at the\nVagabond failed to make the most\nof what could be deemed \"sure-fire\nentertainment.\"\nJitters opens with characters\nmoving around, convincingly\ndelivering their lines. Suddenly a\nman stands up in the audience and\nbellows \"cut!\"\nIt turns out that he is merely an\nactor playing director of the play we\nhave been watching. Or should I say\nthe play within the play we are watching.\nThe plot may sound confusing,\nbut French presents it clearly. Jitters is a play written specifically for\nthe small stage. The audience, a\nsound booth, and fire exit are all\nwritten and utilized in the play.\nFrom a pleasantly surprising\nbeginning, Bryden's rendition\nmoves with a fast but certain pace.\nGrant West and Maggie Nagle play\nthe roles of leading man and lady in\ntheir play within the play with conviction and accuracy. But Vagabond's Ivo Cervicek and Frankie\nTaylor, inject feelings of uncertainty in their depictions of these\ncharacters. Taylor, in the role of\nJessica Logan, carries herself more\nas a housewife than the former\nBroadway star Jessica is supposed\nto be. Any trait of glamour and\nstardom in the character is not evident at all.\nVAIRO, NAGLE\nin a brilliant Jitters production\nWith a few small exceptions,\nStudio's David Thomson gives a\nconvicing, entertaining portrayal of\nthe unfortunate director, always\ncaught in the middle of his actors'\npersonal and professional battles.\nIn the Vagabond production,\nDale Kelly in the same role\ndominates powerfully over his stage\ncast. His heavy-handedness\ndissolves all subtlety and concern\nthat his character is supposed to\npossess.\nJitters gives us another glimpse of\nthe stereotypes we already hold of\nshow business people. The actors\nare conceited, the director\nfrustrated and the writer insecure\nand quite conservative. While much\nof this is captured in the Studio 58\nproduction, Vagabond missed the\ntarget miserably. For example,\nPatrick Cassidy as the playwright\nRobert Ross dresses more like Elton\nJohn than Chris Heyerdahl's portrayal of the writer who dons an\nelbow-patched tweed jacket.\nBut Thomas Hunt as the young\nactor, Norma Matheson as the stage\nmanager, Julia Denholm and Kim\nForkin as stage hands all added\nquality to Studio 58's production.\nVagabond's four minor\ncharacters plod through their evening's performance as if they were\nunimportant to the play. Many of\ntheir deliveries are weak and\nunaudible. When not in\nforeground, they appear bored,\nconsistantly slipping out of role.\nBut by far, the best performance\nof both productions is given by\nMichael Vairo as the outlandish\ngrovelling actor, Phil Mastroakis.\nVairo bleeds the script for every\nlaugh it contains. Without upstaging anyone, Vairo steals the show.\nHis interpretation and performance\nare enough on their own to make\nStudio 58's production worthwhile.\nVagabond's Harv DeRoo,\nformer teacher of Medieval and\nRenaissance English literature at\nSimon Fraser University adapts the\nrole of Phil in a different manner.\nDe Roo plays Phil as a meek, slight\nactor. While his rendition does not\nfail completely, the audience misses\nmany of his better lines due to poor\ntiming and a relatively restrained\nperformance.\nStudio 58 offers three hours of\nhigh energy entertainment that is\nfunny and satisfying. Actors,\ncostumes and set all mix together in\na professional and entertaining\nway.\nVagabond's performance is\nshorter \u00E2\u0080\u0094 only two and a half hours\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 but seems to drag on much\nlonger. The cast does not make the\nmost of the humour that French offers as subtext.\nTempest: Mazursky's\nslow swirl in teapot\nBy SHAFFIN SHARIFF\n\"This is not Shakespeare,\" director Paul Mazursky has cautioned\nabout comparing his film Tempest\nwith the Bard's last, great play. Audiences contemplating seeing\nTempest are well advised to heed\nMazursky's warning because if\nTempest is \"not Shakespeare,\" it\nisn't much else either.\nTempest\nDirected by Paul Mazursky\nPlaying at Odeon\nMazursky's Tempest has\nShakespeare's Tempest outline.\nProspero is now called Phillip,\n(John Cassavetes); Ariel has\nbecome Aretha, (Susan Sarandon);\nand Caliban is now Calibanos,\n(Raul Julia). Miranda and\nFrederick, Shakespeare's young\nlovers, have escaped without name\nchanges. Though stripped of their\nunearthly powers, characters in\nTempest still fulfill the same functions as the Bard's characters.\nThe only character who still has a\nhint of supernatural powers is\nPhilip, an architect who leaves New-\nYork for Greece. The movie opens\nwith Philip on an unnamed Greek\nIsland, and the movie then slips into\na flashback that recollects why\nPhillip left his job and wife, and\nwhy he took his daughter Miranda\nwith him to Greece.\nMazursky has written the\ncharacter of Phillip as an architect\nbecause the director thinks \"architects are really the new magicians. They decide our lives.\" But\nthere is nothing truly magical about\nTempest's Phillip. Although Phillip\nis not a magician, like\nShakespeare's Prospero, he is given\nthe magical power of creating\nTempest. He can't do much else ex\ncept tell other people how they are\nruining his life, and retaliates by\ncreating storms.\nOne is hard-pressed to accept,\nmuch less like, Tempest on any\nterms, including its own fanciful,\nflippant ones. Mazursky has handled stories involving characters\nundergoing a mid-life crisis before,\nnotably in Blume in Love (1973)\nand An Unmarried Woman (1978).\nBut Tempest is probably the most\ngratuitous and unnecessary Mazursky film since Willie and Phil \u00E2\u0080\u0094 his\nattempt to remake Francois Truffaut's Jules and Jim.\nMazursky not only managed to\nbotch Truffaut (which isn't surprising), he has also shortchanged\nShakespeare. Mazursky's Tempest\nhas nowhere near the grace and\nwit of another recent movie inspired by a Shakespeare play,\nWoody Allen's A Midsummer\nNight's Sex Comedy. Even in\nAllen's most unwelcome films \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nincluding Stardust Memories \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nthere is a semblance of coherent\nstructure and a purpose of construction. Watching Tempest, you\nthink the movie was put together by\nan editor who didn't want to leave\nanything in, but would have had no\nmovie if he had acted on his best instincts.\nShakespeare's Prospero was an\nintelligent, aging man coming to\nterms with his magical vocation.\nMazursky's Phillip, played by a\nbrooding John Cassevetes, is\ntempermental young boy trapped in\nthe body of a middle-aged man who\nends up apologizing for everything\nat the end as if his complaints had\nno validity at all. In fact, all the\ncharacters apologize to each other.\nSomeone should tell Mazursky that\nthe apologies should be addressed\ndirectly to the audience.\nMOLLY RINGWALD. . .with Sarandon, but where's the magic? Dber8, 1982\nTHE UBYSSEY\nPage 9\nI\nBy ROBERT BEYNON\nThe play Dylan Bach depicts a\nfamous modern poet as an ineffectual man doomed to purgatory. The\nwriter is depicted as a masturbating\npoet who writes jumbled words, not\npoetry.\nThe Welsh poet Dylan Thomas is\nthe subject of the play. Thomas is\nthe only character in the play,\nwhich is set in purgatory after his\ndeath in 1953.\nDylan Bach\nWritten and performed by Leon\nPownall\nat City Stage until Oct. 9\nThe play is an introspective\ndialogue by the character to the audience. He speaks of his life, his\nhopes and his pain.\nThomas, as a character on stage,\ntells how he dressed to look like an\nauthor, and tells how he thinks\nShakespeare looked like an author\nwithout dressing the part. The\nclothing is a symbol: Thomas thinks\nShakespeare is a poet, but thinks he\nhimself just looks the part.\nThomas says Shakespeare captured all of human experience in his\nliterature but he can only reiterate\nShakespeare's words.\nHe recounts his childhood as a\nmagical time of hope, when heaven\nand immortality felt real. But in\nreality, he says, life was a crude,\ntarnished affair.\nActor Leon Pownall's evocation\nof the difference between Thomas'\nhopes and his life occupies much of\nthe play. He reads a letter that\nThomas actually wrote at 19 in\nwhich the poet says he is not a poet\nbut a trickster with words.\nThe play ends with Thomas\nspeaking of masturbation as a fitting symbol of his life. He wanted\nto hear the poetic Muse and write to\nher. When he could not hear her, he\nwrote without inspiration.\nPownall, who plays Thomas, is a\nclever actor. With few props, effects, and no gimmickry, he keeps\nthe audience entertained for an\nhour and a half. Pownall also wrote\nDylan Bach.\nBut the play is extremely wordy,\nand is full of many readings of\nThomas' poetry and prose.\nHowever, Pownall breaks the\nmonotony of merely reading these\nworks on stage by cleverly contrasting them with vulgar\nstatements and emotional delivery.\nDylan Bach has no plot. The\nrecollections of Thomas' life form a\npicture of Thomas' personality.\nThe play is a sordid account of an\nineffectual man. But even if the acting is brilliant, a standing ovation\nwould be inappropriate.\n'Stage plays most exciting of air\nBy ALAN MILLER\nWell-known British writer Fay\nWeldon discussed her career before\nan audience of 50 people on Tuesday afternoon in Buchanan D224.\nThe author of nine novels, four\nfull-length stage plays \"and\nnumerous television plays, Weldon\nwas in Vancouver during the first\nweek of October to see the local\nproduction of her play Love\nAmong The Women, which recently completed a 10 week run at City\nStage.\nWeldon describes herself as a\nprofessional writer, \"one who,\nthanks to practice, craft, and talent,\nfinishes things and sends them\noff.\" She says the novel allows the\nwriter more or less total control to\ncreate and manipulate her own\nuniverse, although that control is\ntempered by a greater responsibility\nto language than is the case in either\nTV or theatre.\nWhereas the novel reaches only a\nlimited readership, television allows\naccess to a mass audience, but\ndiminishes the writer's role by emphasizing the visual aspect and requiring the participation of directors, editors and actors, Weldon\nsays.\nWeldon describes stage plays as\nthe most dangerous and exciting\nform of writing, largely due to the\nrisks involved and the power of the\naudience. The theatre formalizes\nlife, she says, giving it a shape and\npurpose it does not possess in reality.\nTake notebooks, calculators,\ntranslators, and enjoy Bolero\nBy VICTOR WONG\nClaude Lelouche's Bolero is one\nfilm during which one must remain\nalert throughout the entire picture\nto fully comprehend the story. The\nconstant jumping from one\nstoryline to another, combined with\njumps in setting and location, may\nconfuse the average filmgoer if she\nor he is not careful.\nBolero\nDirected by Claude Lelouche\nPlaying at Vancouver\nCentre Cinema\nThe locations and characters are\nimmensely diverse; the characters\ninclude a ballerina in russia, a German pianist, members of a Paris\nfollies show, and an American big\nband leader. The time span ranges\nfrom 1935 to the present, and the\nfilm follows the saga of all the\ncharacters and their families from\nWW II right up to a 1980 Red Cross\nbenefit concert which includes a\nmember from each family.\nOf the cast, only two members\nare immediately recognizable to the\nNorth American public: James\nCaan as big band leader Jack Glenn\nand Geraldine Chaplin as his wife;\nChaplin reappears later as Caan's\ndaughter. Lelouche is very fond of\ndouble casting actors as their\ncharacters' children; the multiple\nroles work in some cases, but you\ncould wind up confused if you try\nto identify a character with one\nfamily.\nTechnically, the film is almost\nflawless. The best thing about\nBolero is its soundtrack \u00E2\u0080\u0094 with\nmusic ranging from classical\n(Ravel's Bolero, performed during\nthe Red Cross concert) to rock\n(Francis Lai's Les uns et des autres,\na French song heralding the '80s).\nAlso, the Dolby Stereo recording\nworks wonders in this film.\nIt is a lot harder to judge the plot.\nAll the actors handle themselves\nwell, and Lelouche does a generally\ngood job of directing, but the way\nthe story is handled leaves one to\nChosen's ordeals merely\ntwiddle twaddle for few\nBy SHAFFIN SHARIFF\nOn screen, conflict between two\ncharacters who represent different\nworld views is eventually resolved.\nThe characters \u00E2\u0080\u0094 neatly divided into two camps \u00E2\u0080\u0094 learn to understand one another and have a good\ncry. Meanwhile, music \u00E2\u0080\u0094 full violin\npieces, no less \u00E2\u0080\u0094 overpowers the\nsoundtrack, trying to add poignancy to a situation where none needs\nto exist. As the fountains of tears\noverflow, the child of ten knows\nthat the drama is coming to a tidy\nend.\nThe drama hasn't taxed his or her\nintelligence, and has at least kept\nhim occupied for a half-hour; indeed, it can only be taken in doses\nof half-hour; indeed, it can only be\ntaken in doses of half-hour periods.\nOur imaginary little child was\nlucky, for he was merely watching\nanother ABC After School special.\nUnfortunately, audiences who go\nto see a screen version of what\nshould be another afterschool\nspecial will not be able to leave after\na half-hour. The ordeal is two\nhours, and no doubt some will suffer immeasurably.\nThe Chosen\nStarring Maximilian Schell and\nRod Steiger\nDirected by Jeremy Paul Kagan\nOpening today at the Bay\nThat is not to say that The\nChosen doesn't have a serious, intense subject matter at hand. Two\nyoung Jewish men clash because of\ntheir fathers' beliefs. Danny\nSaunder's father is a Hasidic Jew\nwho rejects contemporary morals\nand opposes the creation of a new\nJewish state in the 1940s. Reuven\nMalter (Barry Miller) is the son of a\nsecular writer (Maximilian Schell)\nwho advocates Zionism and actively\nsupports the creation of Israel. The\nChosen is about the two men's attempts to balance their friendship\nwith demands each's father makes.\nBut like any after school special,\nthe conflict isn't presented in\nanything close to dynamic, much\nless believable, terms. Edwin Gordon's screenplay, based on the\nnovel by Chaim Potok, and Jeremy\nPaul Kagan's lacklustre direction\ndoesn't take the characters\nanywhere in particular.\nThe movie is unacceptable from\nthe beginning because it has a\nseriously flawed structure \u00E2\u0080\u0094 a first-\nperson narrative that isn't anything\nclose to being a first-person narrative. The film begins with a voice-\nover, and you're led to believe that\nthe story is one person's recollection of his past. But the voice you\nhear is of Barry Miller as Reuven \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nthe young man, not an older version\nof the same character. When the\nsame voice-over occurs intermittently during the movie, it jars you\nbecause it seems to occur without\nany rhyme or reason.\nThe father and son speeches are\nshot in unforgivably extreme\ncloseups. Anyone who thinks he or\nshe is beyond feeling claustrophobic\nshould try watching Rod Steiger's\nheavily bearded face for 10\nminutes. When Steiger mumbles\nthrough his performance, you ache\nto see something in the frame\nbesides white hair; but the film\ndoesn't let you because there is\nnothing to look at except Steiger's\nSanta Claus face which takes up 50\npercent of the screen.\nThere is an unintentional joke at\nthe end when Danny (Robby Benson in another earnest but\nunbelievable performance) comes\nto see Reuven for the last time; he is\nclean-shaven, clean-cut, and dons a\nsuit with a blue vest. It might be the\nonly time the color blue appears.\nBut even then you feel like laughing\nbecause Kagan's low-angle camera\ncaptures him as if he were a mafioso\ncharacter from the '40s and not a\nyoung man out to discover the\nworld. It is the only pleasurable moment in the whole film as you\nrealize what a major miscalculation\nKagan has made.\nThe Chosen may do for violins\nwhat Chariots of Fire did for synthesizers \u00E2\u0080\u0094 give them a bad reputation. Very little in both films is genuinely human or memorable.\nThere are pretentious affirmations\nof principles floating about, as nice\nguys pile up and no one gets hurt. A\nchosen few must be forgiven if they\nsee nothing in The Chosen but twiddle twaddle for the potato knish set.\nwonder just what the hell all those\ncharacters have in common, other\nthan being performers in the arts.\nAnd the machinery by which the\ncharacters are intertwined is so implausible that it is almost laughable.\nOne simply cannot believe such\nlinks are possible.\nThat's not to say it's a bad\nmovie; it's certainly better than\nmost of the current escapist fare.\nBut if you go to see Bolero, you'd\nbe well advised to take along a\nnotebook to keep track of all the\ncharacters.\nRaven's show\n'embarassing'\nBy DIANA LIVINGSTONE\nThere's only one word that can\ndescribe the David Raven and the\nEscorts concert Oct. 1. Embarrassing. Not only for the audience, but\nprobably for the band as well.\nLess than 150 people attended the\nconcert in SUB ballroom, the\npoor turnout tended to make you\nfeel as if you were at a poorly attended high school dance.\nDavid Raven and the Escorts\nhave talent, but they lack the\ncharisma and originality that's\nnecessary to draw a large crowd and\nestablish them as anything more\nthan a club band.\nRaven's career began in Vancouver where he toured clubs with a\nband called Python. He then spent\nsome time in Britain touring with\nvarious bands. Later he returned to\nVancouver, initially touring as a\nsolo act, but later with his back-up\nband the Escorts.\nDavid Raven and the Escorts'\nmusic is fun and the band is capable\nof getting people to dance.\nHowever on Friday night the band\nlacked the enthusiasm and vitality\nneeded to get the ballroom rocking.\nRaven's music is reminiscent of\nBuddy Holly or Chuck Berry, but\nreally can't be stringently categorized. Most of what they play is\nRaven's original material. These\nsongs are harmless. One can judge\nby the titles \u00E2\u0080\u0094 including Scrub a\nDub Dub and Hot Love \u00E2\u0080\u0094 just how\nboring the lyrics are.\nThe opening bands were the Bing\nJensen Band and Spent Youth. One\nsong by the Bing Jensen Band called\nVideo Children featured the lead\nsinger walking around the stage\nwith his lips sucked in over his teeth\nimitating Pac-man. Spent Youth\nwas a good dance band that played\na lot of '50s tunes.\nPerhaps the saddest thing about\nthe whole evening was that Romeo\nVoid was originally scheduled to\nplay in SUB Oct. 1. This up and\ncoming San Francisco band played\nearlier in September at the Commodore. Romeo Void's concert was\ncancelled by AMS concert\" promotions because it was felt the band\nwouldn't draw a big enough crowd.\nVancouverites and UBC students\nhave more taste than we're given\ncredit for. Page 10\nTHE UBYSSEY\nFriday, October 8, 1982\nVSO concert without personality\nBy KERRY REGIER\nSunday the Vancouver Symphony Orchestra played the tone-\npoem Vysehrad by Smetana, the\nDvorak Violin Concerto with\nKyung-Wha Chung, and Stravinsky's Rag-time and his ballet music\nJeu de Cartes. Chung played aggressively and with passion, but the\nrest of the concert was like every\nother excellent performance of\nthese works. There were no\ndistinguishing features, no mark of\npersonality.\nIt is not that the VSO played badly; no, quite the contrary. The\nmusic was reasonably lively, there\nwere very few wrong notes, and the\nphrasing and dynamics were surprisingly good, especially in the\nSmetana piece.\nBut only 50 years ago every single\nperforming musician worked hard\nWANTED\nSomeone with football experience to put me through my\ndrills. 4 a.m. to 7 a.m. Must have\ncar. Call Audie Murphy, Home 7\np.m. 294-4380; Work 7:30-4 p.m.\n438-6757.\nWhite; Lights dry.\nRed: Rich and\nrobust.\nto achieve their own individual\nvoice, their own unique style. Consequently, any listener could in a\nmoment distinguish between playing of, say, violinists like Heifetz,\nMilstein, and Elman; the different\npianistic approaches of Lhevinne,\nPaderewski, and Schnabel were obvious; and most people felt very\nstrongly the differences in conducting styles between Mengelberg,\nToscanini, and Furtwangler.\nBut art over the last half-century\nor so has become increasingly standardized. Walter Benjamin, in his\n1936 essay on The Work of Art in\nthe Age of Mechanical Reproduction, was among the first to notice\nthis. Essentially Benjamin observed\nthe cheapening of the unique work\nof art through its degradation by\nubiquity, and we have seen exactly\nthis process happening with the\nwidespread dissemination of\nphonograph recordings.\nHow many people now listen to\nmusic as mere background, and\nhow many now easily recognize the\nplaying of pianists like Pollini,\nBrendel, and Barenboim? And even\nif you can, it took you years to\nlearn, and it's still hard. But the differences between Sergei\nRachmanioff and Mischa Levitzki\nwere always immediately striking\neven to relatively naive listeners.\nThe differences between musical\nperformers have all but vanished cis\nthey strove \u00E2\u0080\u0094 and are striving \u00E2\u0080\u0094 to\nachieve a technical perfection\nunknown before the age of recordings. Paganini's technical ability,\nfor example, astonished his audiences, who believed that gifted\n19th century violinist to be absolutely unique. Now almost every\nSKYSAVER\nmm inc.\nAiMOCiAim\nTravel And Save $$$\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094Xmas Special Fare to Toronto from Vancouver\n(R.T.) $389\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094Vancouver-Toronto(R.T.) $249-$299\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094Special Low Fare to London from Vancouver\n(R.T.) $688\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094Standby Fare from Seattle to London\nOne Way, $U.S.339-$450\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094Vancouver to Dublin (R.T.) $952\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094Vancouver to Tokyo (R.T.) $960\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094Vancouver to Hong Kong (R.T.) $1050\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094Special Low Fare to Asia:\nHong Kong, Taipei, Singapore, Manila,\nPenang, Bangkok, Jakarta, Columbo\ne.g.: Vancouver-Kuaia Lumpur (R.T.) $1260\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094Vancouver to San Francisco (R.T.) $149 to $208\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094Vancouver to Tokyo (Air, sea, ferry, rail,\nincludes 7 nights hotel) $1350\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094Special Group Fare to Many Oriental Cities for\nEducation Programme\n1719 Davie Street Phone\nVancouver, B.C. (604)682-7212\nPeter's Place\nSTEAK - SEAFOOD - PIZZA\nNEW MENU\nNEW LOW PRICES\nPETER BENIAS\n* Lunch Special Each Day\n* Lunch Menu from $2.95\n* Dinner from $5.25\nSpaghetti, baked lasagna, barbecued chicken,\ncaesar salad\nSPECIAL EACH EVENING\nCharbroiled Steak, Baked Potato,\nGarlic Bread & Salad\n10 oz. $8.95 - 8 oz. $6.95\nHome Made Pizzas\u00E2\u0080\u0094Free Delivery from 4 p.m.\n\"LICENSED LOUNGE\"\nOpen Monday-Thurs 11 a.m.-12 midnite\nFriday 11 a.m.-1 a.m. \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Sat. 12 noon-1 a.m.\nSundays Er Holidays 4 p.m.-10 p.m.\nDrop in and see Peter at\n4450 W. 10th AVE.\n(Just 5 min. from centre of campus)\n224-3434 - 224-6336\nAmerican\nExpress\nstudent in every conservatory plays\nPaganini's difficult works as a matter of course.\nThe conductor Arturo Toscanini\nshaped much of the other force in\nthis great homogenization. He\nbelieved that the composer's word\non the printed page was absolute,\nand that no performer should do\nanything whatever that was not expressly desired by the composer.\nDecades later, this currently\nunspoken, unchallenged assumption that the only \"correct\" performance is one that exactly replicates\nthe printed score, clearly displays\nToscanini's strangling influence on\nmodern performances. Imagination, individuality, courage,\nhumanity \u00E2\u0080\u0094 none of these count.\nWhat does count now is the ability to paly dexerously, without any\n\"marring\" idiosyncasies, and to get\nthe notes right, precisely and accurately and in the proper order,\nwithout fail. In this respect the Vancouver Symphony makes the Berlin\nor Vienna orchestras of the 1930s\nsound like student orchestras; those\nold concerts were full of wrong\nnotes and false starts. Such glaring\nerrors rarely crop up in VSO concerts these days, so rarely in fact\nthat when they do they become subjects for long discussion.\nSo I cannot say that last Sunday's\nconcert by the VSO was particularly\nbad. To be sure, it was a fine concert; so fine that I would have to\nwork very hard to explain the difference between Akiyama's VSO\nand, say, The London Philharmonia. Yes, a very fine concert indeed, and we have the promise of\neven better playing in the future.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2vSTSTit ANOTHER\nGREAT TREK\n'fyfrfF EVENT\nHORSEBACK RIDING\nfor immediate & advanced riders\nSat., Oct. 16 - $36.00\nat the\nALPINE RIDING ACADEMY\nRegister WMG Room 203\nOrganizational Meeting\nThurs., Oct. 14, 12:30 WMG Rm 211 Friday, October 8,1982\nTHE UBYSSEY\nPage 11\nBy KELLEY JO BURKE\nEven in polite circles, it is now\ngiven that women are raped,\nbeaten, harassed, and discriminated\nagainst in our society. The causes\nand solutions are a constant and\npossibly unending source of debate.\nThe fact remains that it happens.\nAnd it happens on this campus.\nBut what avenues of redress are\navailable when it happens between\nstudent and professor?\nThe simple answer is none. There\nis no formal procedure for dealing\nwith cases of academic sexual harrassment at this university, according to the Alma Mater Society ombudsperson.\nFurther, for the past two years\nthere has been no legal representation available to students in any appeal case.\nLegal Aid can not participate in\nany academic action, because such\ncases are civil proceedings. And, as\nof 1980, law students cannot repre\nsent other students in academic\ncases, because the dean of law\ndecided such activity constituted a\nconflict of interest for the potential\nlawyers.\nSo any student who does not\nhave the personal funds to hire a\nlawyer must face the administration\nalone. The administration maintains a full-time lawyer who can\ncouncil or represent the administration in any academic case.\nThere are quiet advocates for\nsuch students. In the case of sexual\nharrassment, the ombudsperson\nwill generally refer the case to the\nwomen students' office.\n\"We can act in any way that will\nassure the rights of women\nstudents,\" said women students'\noffice director June Lythgoe, \"But\nwe are not in an adversarial role\nwith the administration. If anybody\nin the university got angry, our efficiency could be limited.\"\nLythgoe speaks carefully. The\n\u00E2\u0082\u00ACltE %mt fldirataks\nTaking on the administration is difficult for any student In cases of sexual\nharrassment, the difficulties facing female students may seem\ninsurmountable. In the women students' office, there are resources\navailable to such individuals. Often they seem intangible, but the intangibles\noffered by the supportive women that work there, can make the difference.\nWSO is a student service, and in\nhard times, student services are\noften perceived as an emminently\ncutable frill by university administrations. While the WSO is in\nno immediate danger, theirs is a\ntenuous position.\nIt is also a new one. Until 1978,\nthe WSO existed as the dean of\nwomen's office. Established in the\n1920's, it is the oldest student service on the UBC campus.\nWith the departure of flamboyant and outspoken dean of\nwomen Margaret Fulton in 1978, a\npresidential committee reviewing\nstudent services decided the dean's\noffice should be converted to a\ncounselling service for women.\nIn a minority report submitted to\nthe committee at that time, Myrne\nNevison, of the faculty of education, objected to the move on the\ngrounds the dean of women's office\nwas much more than a counselling\nservice, that \"The encouragement\nprovided throughout the years to\nwomen was successful primarily\nbecause the head of that office\ncould speak to the special concerns\nof women from a position of\nrecognized authority, and directly\nto top administrators.\"\nThe dean of women reported to\nthe president, or after the commencement of Douglas Kenny's\npresidency, one of his vice-\npresidents. She attended meetings\nof the deans and non-academic\nheads, the senate, and represented\nthe male student population at\nuniversity functions and\nceremonies. Lythgoe currently\nreports to the vice-provost of student affairs.\nThe WSO can still be a valuable\nresource to women, says WSO\ncounsellor Nancy Horsman. In the\ncase of harrassment, they can act as\na \"support person\" and can aid in\nall the special difficulties facing\nwomen on campus.\nIn cases of violence of any form,\n\"this is the best place to go,\"\nHorsman said. They deal with rape,\nbattering, and child abuse, as well\nas the day to day counselling of\nwhat Horsman called \"relationship\nrelated problems.\"\n\"I have worked in counselling for\na long time, and I've never met a\nbetter group of counsellors,\" says\nLythgoe.\nEqually important, in Lythgoe's\neyes, is the role the WSO can play in\nkeeping women's concerns alive\nand in the minds of people on this\ncampus. \"So much change depends\non grains of sand. People seem to\nthink change can happen quickly.\nMary Wollstoncroft died three hundred years ago. We're only going to\nbe able to affect change bit by bit.\"\nWSO continues its diplomatic activities. These include panel discussions of women's role in society, aid\nand assistance to mature returning\nfemale students, essay-writing and\nstress management workshops, and\ninformation programs on many\nwomen's concerns.\n\"There are older people who are\nin fact more sensitive than some of\nthe younger people \u00E2\u0080\u0094 these young\nwomen come into school rather\ndefensive about (women's unequal\nposition in society). I guess in order\nto survive they have to block out a\ncertain amount of external con\nsciousness,\" Lythgoe says. \"I\nunderstand that. I guess they prefer\nnot to be to bothered by the situation out in the real world.\"\nBut the real world tends to encroach. Horsman, after ten years of\ncounselling, says, \"That is why offices like ours have to exist.\"\nThe black sheep of Canadian liquors.\nSoft-spoken and smooth,\nits northern flavour\nsimmers just below the\nsurface, waiting to be\ndiscovered. Straight, on the\nrocks, or mixed, \ukon Jack\nis a breed apart; unlike any\nliqueur you've ever tasted.\nConcocted with fine Canadian Whisky. Page 12\nTHE UBYSSEY\nFriday, October 8,1982\nWCCpolicyfp\ntells story\nFrom page 1\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \"all out\" war on patronage\nand political favouritism;\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 crown corporations to make a\nprofit and eventually be turned over\nto the private sector;\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 no government advocacy\nadvertising;\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 free trade;\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 elimination of compulsory\nmetrification;\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 guarantees of personal and\nproperty rights;\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 constitutional limitations on\npowers of government to tax and\nborrow as a set percentage of the\ngross national product, except in\ntime of war;\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 cancellation of all intergovernmental financial and\neconomic arrangements detrimental\nto B.C.'s best economic interests;\nand\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 complete provincial control\nof natural resources.\nOn native rights, WCC's official\npolicy statements declare: \"We\nacknowledge (native) rights to self-\ngovernment as we acknowledge our\nown, and grant that they have\nlegitimate claims.\"\nMarxism goes\nFrom page 1\nTenured professors and \"professional students\" are just part of the\ninefficiencies Stanford said. \"You\ncan get grants to stay (at university)\nforever.\"\nShe wants to see a more \"old\nfashioned\" education system.\n\"You don't learn in university.\"\nIrene Anderson, secretary of\nWCC's Delta constituency, echoes\nStanford's beliefs.\n\"(We have to) weed out people\nwho become professional\nstudents,\" she said.\nMarxist and communist teachings\nand the use of books by Marx and\nLenin in university also concern\nStanford. She sees such teachings as\nthe start of state communism and\nwould like to see them banned.\n\"The free enterprise system is opposed to communism.\"\nStanford says communist and\nMarxist control of a society is\nachieved in three ways.\n\"First you get control of the\nschool, then the media and then\nfinances,\" she said. \"Marxist\nteachings in school is the first step,\nand NDP attempt at forming\ngovernment is part of the financial\ncontrol.\"\nBut metrification in universities\nshould stay, she said. \"Let it stay\nmetric.\" Stanford says there should\nbe \"freedom of choice,\" on\nmetrification. \"It will respond to\nthe market.\"\nStanford would like to see the\nfederal government get out of post-\nsecondary education funding.\nBecause the federal government\ngives transfer payments to provincial governments under the\nestablished programs financing\nplan, they can \"call the shots,\"\nStanford said.\nEducation should be strictly\nfinanced provincially, according to\nStanford.\nThe \"once-proud\" education\nsystem in B.C. has degenerated, according to a WCC policy statement.\n\"The fact that the University of\nBritish Columbia has been forced to\nintroduce literacy tests for incoming\nstudents is proof enough of the\ndecline,\" the statement said.\nWhile education is \"our most\nsacred duty,\" it is the responsibility\nof parents and not the government\nto ensure it is done adequately says\nthe policy. The WCC will therefore\n\"encourage private school, and\nreintroduce sound education principles into government-run\nschools.\"\nTrudeau . . . WCC graphic\nBut actions on the convention\nfloor told a different story. There\nwas no native representation on any\nWCC committee and no representation from any native group or tribe.\nWCC organizers did, however,\npresent \"Jamie\", who told party\nmembers: \"From your point of\nview, Indian people don't work for\nthe economy. I agree. That's\nsomething we have to work out.\"\nJamie also expressed interest in\n\"forming my own tribe.\"\n\"Freedoms for all peoples native\nto this land\" must be sought, he\nsaid.\nUBC target\nof WCC\nclub\nThe Western Canada Concept\nparty is coming to UBC.\nWith literature reminiscent of the\nparty's June convention rhetoric,\nthe party recruited members to\nform a UBC club during the recent\nclub days in SUB.\nAn Alma Mater Society\nspokesperson says the club has not\nyet completed the simple requirements to form an AMS club,\nalthough the group has obtained the\nrequired forms.\nStudent senator Chris Fulker,\ncurrently a candidate in the AMS\nadministration director by-election,\nis one of the founding organizers.\nFulker was also a member of the\nWest-Fed association before it\nmerged with the WCC.\nUBC clubs currently include all\nfour major political parties, plus\nvarious left-wing fringe groups.\n''*> rather push jprag\n* **/S THING A MilE^^ ^^|;\nTHAN BUY FROM ftno-oifM^f\n1J.IIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII1IIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIII1IIIIIIIIIIIIJI\n| IT TAKES TWO TO TANGO |\n1 YOU AND 1\n| THE U.B.C. DANCE CLUB \u00C2\u00A7\n| SIGN UP NOW! |\n| SUB PARTYROOM AT NOON |\n| CATCH THE BEAT I\n111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111^\nPeat, Marwick, Mitchell&Co.\nThe Vancouver and Richmond offices of our Firm\nare seeking self-motivated 1983 graduates who are\ninterested in pursuing a challenging career as a\nChartered Accountant.\nWe are a major international firm of Chartered\nAccountants with offices maintained in 21 cities\nthroughout Canada. The scope of our professional\nservices covers auditing, taxation, insolvency,\nprivate business, business valuation, and consulting.\nInterested applicants should leave a copy of their\nU.C.P.A. form and most recent transcript at the\nCanada Employment Centre, Room 214, Brock\nHall, by October 4, 1982.\nNOMINATIONS OPEN\nfor\nSTUDENTS' COURT\nApply Room 238, SUB\nClosing date,\nTuesday, Oct. 12/82\n4:30 p.m.\n>x<*>***** *****%* *************\n;************************\nDCTDBER6\ncrjmpuTER marrm\nat the\nMall Book Bazaar\nand we've taken a\neZBVTE\nout of the price of all our\nCnmPUTER BOOKS\nOVER 500 DIFFERENT\nCOmPUTER TTTLES\navailable from such publishers as:\nVAN NOSTRAND REINHOLD\nHAYDEN\nDIUTHIUM\nOSBORNE/McGRAW HILL\nPRENTICE HALL\nSYBEX\nCOMPUTE\nADDISON-WESLEY\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0*\n5:\n* _\nn\n**\n*\u00C2\u00BB*\n*#\n**\n***\n**\n*\u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0080\u00A2*\n**\ni\n'*********T**************\nMall Book Bazaar\n850 Granville 687-2213\nOPEN EVERYDAY TILL MMMMQHT\n[*****. 4** 4 j*.*}*************\n:*\u00C2\u00BB***\u00C2\u00BB **\u00C2\u00BB*\u00C2\u00BB* *\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00C2\u00BB**\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00C2\u00BB** *\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00BB*\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00C2\u00BB\n*-\n*#\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2*\u00E2\u0096\u00A0*\n**\nK\n#*\n*\u00C2\u00AB\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\n-**\n**\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00C2\u00BB-\u00C2\u00BB\n**\n**\u00C2\u00BB\n*f>\n**\n* +\n**\u00E2\u0096\u00A0*\n*\u00E2\u0096\u00A0#\n-\u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0096\u00A0*\n\u00C2\u00A5*\n*\u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0080\u00A2*\n**\n**\n-\u00C2\u00BB'*\n**\n*#\n**\n**\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00C2\u00BB.*\n\u00E2\u0099\u00A6 *\n**#\n\u00C2\u00BB-\u00C2\u00BB\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00C2\u00BB#\n** Friday, October 8, 1982\nTHE UBYSSEY\nPage 13\nTotem raises spirits\nHow much time does it take to carve a totem pole? Jim Hart\nsaid it took him a year to carve the pole raised at the museum of\nanthropology Saturday. A Haida chief who spoke to honour the\nevent said it took much more than that. Jim Hart, he said,\nbrought a lifetime of experience and preparation to the task.\nIn fact he brought an ancient highly stylized artistic tradition to\nhis carving. It's a heritage that anthropologist Claude Levi-\nStrauss compared to that of ancient Greece.\nThe ceremony confirmed that Indian culture did not die when\nEuropeans arrived here a little more than a century ago- The\nhope of a culture was celebrated on Saturday, not merely the\nproduction of another anthropological curiosity.\nPhotos from top left: Haida couple, Claude Davidson after\nconducting the pole raising, two year old Derek Stephenson,\nHaida dancer. Bottom row: Volunteers place the pole. Bottom\nright: Jim Hart performs the carvers ritual dance before the\nraising. Below: The pole is raised by traditional methods.\ncharies campbell photos Page 14\nTHE UBYSSEY\nFriday, October 8,1982\nUBG Gantpas\n*Sc* Pizza\nSteak & Pizza - Lasagna\nSpare Ribs Ravioli\nChicken Greek Salads\nSouvlaki\nFast Free Local Delivery\n224 4218 - 224-0529\nHours Mon. Thurs. 11:30 a.m. - 2:00 a.m.\nFti 1130a.m - 3:00a.m\nSat. 4:00 p.m - 3:00 a.m.\nSun 4:00pm - 1:00a.m.\n2136 Western Parkway\naugust\nPub\nBillie Joan Queen\nft Co.\nTwo Shows Nightly\n9:30 & 12:30\nThe Dufferin Hotel\n900 Seymour \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 683-4718\nCITR & THE PIT\nannounce\nTHE RETURN OF\nTHE\nHOT\nAIR\nSHOW\nThe Cheapest Free\nEntertainment in\nTown featuring\nEGGHEAD\n&\nSpecial Guests\nMon.. Oct. 11, 1982\n9:30 p.m.-NO COVER\na\nfmioa\nHONG KONG\nCHINESE\nFOODS\nMon.-Fri 11:30 am - 2:00 pm\n4:00 pm - 10:00 pm\nSat & Sun 4:00 pm - 10:00 pm\n'% EAT IN\n1* OR\n% TAKE OUT\nLUNCH\nSPECIALS\n$2.90\n5732 University Boulevard\nTEL. 224-1313\nVancouver\nafter Classes.\nTraditional\nGreco-Roman Cuisine\n7 Days a Week: 5 p.m.-1 a.m.\nFri. and Sat.: 5 p.m. to 2 a.m.\n|j FREE fast delivery!\n228-9513\n\u00C2\u00AB 4510 West 10th Ave.\nQ:\n1\n1\n:OLt\nLiVE RQ^J'ROLL\nTilt Saturday\nDIK REGRET & THE RAYGUNS\nNext Week\nCITY-SCAPE\nOpen Mon. \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Sat. 7 p.ai. -\n932 Granville Mall 687-6418\nfl&feS *&*\u00E2\u0096\u00A0*'\nCtfNDt-\n.ifloOMeaPiflpl^/ce-creaf*\ni.ooo fea&s\n^^ % 3 SMILE\nSSDOO /ts: !\n3124 W. BROADWAY\nRED LEAF\nRESTAURANT\nLuncheon Smorgasbord\nAuthentic Chinese Cuisine\n228 9114\n10% DISCOUNT ON\nPICK UP ORDERS\nLICENSED PREMISES\nMon Fri 11 30 9 00 p.m.\n^^^ CLOSED SATURDAYS ,\n^\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0li Sundays and Holidays A\n?-!eir \u00E2\u0080\u00A2, 4 \u00C2\u00B0\u00C2\u00B0 P m 9 \u00C2\u00B00 P m\n2142 Western Parkway '\ni UBC Village\nJ [0|]|)iis.t... Climctin St;tli.;iil \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nVancouver's #1\nNew Wave Club\n1275 Seymour St.\n1\nDOLLAR\nOFF\nYOUR LUNCHEON\nOR DINNER BILL\nAT THE\nSTEER & STEIN\nOne coupon per person per visit\nEXPIRES NOV. 30/82\nL--__--_____\ntheEXCELSmjgft\n. . a restaurant of distinction\n' hiouLlltf jmft^\u00C2\u00A3.nh:\n3ej>t. 2J\nliLltuluut: mhdciuL -Aiuhf \u00E2\u0080\u0094 ' 'zi:u\n4544 < w. ioth mh-t - 'Jut iiXtiuL tk ^iuUi of hcbc\nUPSTAIRS:\nBOWSER MOON\nTHIS WEEK:\nTIGHT SQUEEZE\nNEXT WEEK*\nINNOCENT BYSTANDER\nMondays \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Bo Derrick Wet 10, excellent cash prizes.\nTuesdays \u00E2\u0080\u0094 So You Think You're\nFunny Contest (open to all amateur comedians). Win a trip to\nHollywood's \"Comedy Shop.\"\nWednesdays - Discover Ladies Nite\nMale Dancers from 8-10 p.m.\nThursdays \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Ladies Nite, Mini\nskirted ladies free\nFri. & Sat. - First 50 ladies free\n(FREE Parking at Kingsgate)\n315 E BROADWAY\n879-4651\nmm\nfor a task of the\n^Middle Bast\nGourmets of the World Unite at\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2Portnovk\nRESTAURANT\nWe're Celebrating Our Annual Anniversary\nWe would like to treat you to a complimentary desert of your\nchoice with any purchase of one of our complete dinners.\nDreamily spiced creations\nfrom Turkey, Lebanon,\nIsrael \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Totally\nvegetarian.\nExotic\nIranian\ndishes.\nOne of Vancouver's\nMost Revisited Restaurants\nMon.-Sat. 11:30 a.m.-10:30 p.m.\nSun. 5 p.m.-10:30 p.m.\n1190 Robson St.\n688-1725\n\"Licensed\" Friday, October 8,1982\nTH\nPage 15\nYiutic\nSarmis Isvinis/Gratchen Perk/Far-\nmllo/Paquette: avante-garde, Unit/Pitt\nGallery, 163 W. Pender.\nStiletto: rock, Gators, to Oct. 9.\nPacheena: rock, Gators, Oct. 11-16.\nAl Foreman: blues, Town Pump, Oct. 9.\nDavid Raven and The Escorts: rock,\nTown Pump, Oct. 14-16.\nArmy: rock. Backstage, to Oct. 9.\nStiletto: rock. Backstage, Oct. 11-16.\nMasterpiece Music: classical, 2:30 and 8\np.m., Oct. 10, Vancouver East Cultural centre.\nLos Popularos: new wave, Oct. 11, John\nBarley's, 23 W. Cordova.\nThe Motels/French Letters: power pop,\nOct. 12, The Commodore. VTC/CBO.\nDave Holland: jazz, 9 p.m., Oct. 12, Soft\nRock Cafe. Tickets $7 at Soft Rock or Black\nSwan.\nMartin Hacklemen/Robert Holliston:\nclassical, noon, Oct. 13, recital hall.\nHans-Karl Piltz/Ailsa Zaenker: classical,\nnoon, Oct. 14, recital hall.\nAlan Reinhart/Andre Thibauilt: Spanish,\nOct. 13, Soft Rock Cafe.\nBetty Chaba/Billy Cowslll: folk, Oct. 14,\nSoft Rock Cafe.\nBrandon Wolf: rock, Oct. 15, Soft Rock\nCafe.\nVancouver Chamber Choir: classical,\nOct. 15, Orpheum, VTC.\nFrench, 8 p.m.. Studio 58, Langara Campus,\n100 W. 49th.\nJoey: everything you ever wanted to know\nabout Joey Smallwood, 8:30 p.m., Vancouver East Cultural Centre.\nCrimes of The Heart: Pulitzer Prize winning comedy. Arts Club Granville Island.\nTalking Dirty: saucy sexual satire by Sherman Snukal, Arts Club Seymour.\nOne-Woman Show: painting, engraving,\nand drawings by Catherine Lombard, to\nNovember 12. Centre Culturel Colombien, 795\nW. 16th.\nRetrospective Art: exhibition of works by\nEdward Ruscha, Vancouver Art Gallery, 1145\nW. Georgia.\nContemporary Art: drawings by contemporary sculptors, to Oct. 1. Surrey Arts Centre, 13750\u00E2\u0080\u009488th Ave., Surrey.\nPaula Ross Dance Company: New\nWorks and Coming Together, 8 p.m , Oct.\n13-16. Performances at 3488 W. Broadway.\nTwyla Tharp Dance Foundation, 8 p.m.,\nOct. 14-16, Queen Elizabeth Theatre.\nVTC/CBO.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 andreas eschler photo\nTREES . . . regular contributors to this paper\nHcvits \"Jcom&*&?\nPacific Cinematheque: screenings at National Film Board theatre, 1151 W. Georgia,\nAnimation From The FDR, 7 and 9:30 p.m.,\nOct. 13.\nRidge Theatre: (16th and Arbutus,\n738-6311): Oct. 8-10: If with Malcom\nMcDowell, 7:30 p.m.; O Lucky Man, 9:35\np.m. Oct. 11-12: Reds, Warren Beatty's epic\non the Russian Revolution, 7:30 p.m. Oct.\n13-14: Word Is Out. 7:30 p.m.; Making\nLove. 10 p.m.\nVancouver East Cinema: (7th and Commercial, 253-5455): Oct. 8-10: Casablanca\nwith Humphrey Bogart, 7:30 p.m.; Play It\nAgain Sam. 9:30 p.m. Oct. 11-12: La Cage\nAux Folles, 7:30 p.m.; La Cage Aux Folles\nTwo, 9:15 p.m.\nThe Savoy: (2321 Main at 8th, 872-2124):\nOct. 8-17: Revenge of The Shogun\nWomen, martial arts adventure in 3-D, 7:30\nand 9:15 p.m.\nThe Black Bonspiel of Wullie MacCrimmon: featuring Eric House and Ted Fellows, 8\np.m. to Oct. 23. Queen Elizabeth Playhouse.\nVTC/CBO.\nJitters: a backstage comedy by David\nTODAY\nLE CLUB FRANCAIS\nGeneral meeting to practise speaking French,\nnoon. International house, main lounge\nCHRISTIAN SCIENCE ORGANIZATION\nPrayer meeting and bible study, noon, SUB\n212A.\nIRANIAN STUDENTS CLUB\nOrganizational meeting, 2:3G p.m., SUB 205.\nBIOCHEMISTRY STUDENTS ASSOCIATION\nExecutive meeting, noon, IRC G53.\nUBC CANOE CLUB\nGenera! meeting, noon, SUB 12A {in the cages\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 leave your monkeys at home).\nCHINESE VARSITY CLUB\nGym nite, 8:30 - 11:30 p.m., Osborne Gym A.\nSCIENCE FICTION SOCIETY\nMeeting, noon, SUB 224.\nINTRAMURALS\nRegistration for Sutherland tennis Grand Prix,\nround 1 for men and women $5 each. Check In\ntramural office, SUB 203, for time. Games at the\nArmoury.\nTHEATRE STUDENTS' ASSOCIATION\nStudent, staff party \u00E2\u0080\u0094 have fun and meet the\nfaculty and join the TSA, everyone welcome, 6\np.m., Dorothy Somerset Studio downstairs in\nFreddy Wood.\nENGLISH STUDENTS PUBLICATION CLUB\nGeneral meeting, noon, Buchanan tower 597.\nINTRAMURALS\nRunning, turkey trot (3,5 km), noon, SUB plaza.\nUBC MOTORCYCLE CLUB\nBzzr garden open to all, draw for helmet for all\nnew members, 5-9 p.m., SUB 212.\nPHYSICS SOCIETY\nVine and cheese party, 4-6:45 p.m., Hennings\n318.\nCHINESE STUDENTS' ASSOCIATION\nSquash night, 8-10 p.m., Winter sports centre.\nENGINEERING UNDERGRADUATE SOCIETY\nOktoberfeust, 8 p.m. tonight and tomorrow\nnight, SUB ballroom.\nUBC SKI CLUB\nGeneral meeting, noon, SUB 211.\nSATURDAY\nUNIVERSITY ATHLETICS\nCanada West league game vs. Calgary\nDinosaurs, 2 p.m., Wolfson field.\nCHINESE STUDENTS' ASSOCIATION\nTennis night, bring your racquets, 7:30-9:30\np.m., Armory.\nCar rally, 6:30 p.m., SUB loop.\nCHINESE STUDENTS ASSOCIATION\nCSA basketball team practice, 10:30 - noon,\nOsborne Gym A.\nCSA volleyball team tryouts, 1:30 - 3:30 p.m.,\nOsborne Gym A.\nSUNDAY\nUNDERWATER HOCKEY\nIntroductory clinic and game, all interested parties welcome. (Even Horacio can come this\ntime), 10 p.m., UBC Aquatic centre.\nAFRICAN STUDENTS ASSOCIATION\nMeeting, 2 p.m., SUB 212.\nUBC CYCLING CLUB\nTouring ride, everyone welcome, 9 a.m., meet in\nbetween SUB and the Aquatic centre.\nISMAILI STUDENTS' ASSOCIATION\nParty, 8 p.m.. Holiday Inn, West Broadway.\nMONDAY\nINTERNATIONAL HOUSE\nEnglish language evening, licensed, 7:30 p.m..\nGate 4 International House.\nUBC\nHoliday declared in order to save some of the\n$7.2 million we just got cut. Classes might\nresume Tuesday if ww don't get cut again.\nTUESDAY\nWORLD UNIVERSITY SERVICES OF CANADA\nSpeaker: a recent Canada Crossroads participant\non Grenada, noon, Buchanon A204.\nWOMEN STUDENTS' OFFICE\nLecture and discussion on the state of the\neconomy: implications for women studies, Wendy Dobson, executive director of C. D. Howe Institute, noon, Buchanon 205.\nSTUDENT PUGWASH ASSOCIATION\nLecture by UBC professor Robert Franson, faculty of law: how environmental standards are set\nand enforced, noon, IRC 3.\nLAW STUDENTS LEGAL ADVICE PROGRAM\nLaw students wilt provide free legal advice or\nreferrals for anyone needing help, noon to 2\np.m., SUB 111.\nINTERNATIONAL HOUSE\nFilm series, 7:30 p.m., International house.\nPHYSICAL EDUCATION\nUNDERGRAD SOCIETY\nP.E. week, dunk tank with AMS executive, 3\nballs twenty-five cents, noon -1:30 p.m., outside\nSUB between pool.\nFARMWORKERS SUPPORT COMMITTEE\nFilm showing of A Time To Rise, noon, SUB\nauditorium.\nPRE-MED SOCIETY\nSpeech on surgery by Dr. Allardyce, UBC faculty\nof medicine, noon, IRC 1.\nAGRICULTURE UNDERGRADUATE SOCIETY\nSpeaker: Iona Campagnolo on Food on The\nThird World, noon 1:30 p.m., MacMillan 166.\nWESTERN CANADA CONCEPT\nMeeting to discuss the separation of UBC from\nVancouver, noon, SUB 239.\nCANADIAN FARMWORKERS\nSUPPORT GROUP\nA time to rise, movie, noon, SUB auditorium,\nUBYSSEY\nPress dav for Wednesday paper, noon, SUB\n241k.\nUBC STUDENT LIBERALS\nGeneral meeting, very important, noon, SUB\n207.\nWEDNESDAY\nVARSITY OUTDOOR CLUB\nGeneral meeting, noon. Chemistry 150.\nFIRST YEAR STUDENTS COMMITTEE\nMeeting, 4:30 p.m., SUB 205.\nINTRNATIONAL HOUSE\nRomance languages, 7:30 p.m., licensed, International house.\nBHAKTI YOGA CLUB\nOrganizational meeting, noon, SUB 212.\nPHYSICAL EDUCATION\nUNDERGRAD SOCIETY\nNutrition booth, Nike runners booth, free suit\nraffle, noon - 1:30 p.m., SUB concourse.\nUBYSSEY\nWednesday paper because of holiday Monday.\nAH over campus.\nTHURSDAY\nINTER-VARSITY CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP\nGeneral meeting, Paul Stevens: Who Do You\nThink You Are Charlie Brown? A Christian view\nof self-image, noon. Chemistry 250.\nINTERNATIONAL HOUSE\nStammtisch, 7:30 p.m., licensed, International\nhouse.\nPAULA ROSS DANCE COMPANY\nSelections performed from their full repetoire,\nfree admission, noon, SUB ballroom.\nUBC NEW DEMOCRATIC PARTY CLUB\nSemi-Annual general meeting, election of 7 executive positions, 5 members at large, 2 vice-\npresidents, noon, SUB 205.\nMUSSOC\nCommittee and organizational meeting for Guys\nand Dolls, noon and 1:30 p.m., clubroom, Old\nAuditorium basement.\nEDUCATORS FOR NUCLEAR DISARMAMENT\nDr. Hannah Newcombe, president of world\nFederalists of Canada:\nAlternative international security systems, noon\nComputer Science 200.\nPHYSICAL EDUCATION\nUNDERGRAD SOCIETY\nRunners symposium. Dr. Lloyd-Smith, SUB\nballroom. Fitness testing and counselling,\nAdidas runners booth, SUB concourse,\nnoon-1:30.\nNOON CLUB\nMeeting to change noon at UBC to noon, not\n12:30, 12:15, SUB 256.\nTROTSKYIST LEAGUE\nLiterature table, come by and visit for Marxist\nliterature and discussion, 11:30 a.m. - 1:30 p.m.,\nSUB plaza.\nUBC CYCLING CLUB\nGeneral meeting, scheduling of training program\nfdr racers, noon, Biological Science 2449.\nFM 102, Cable 100\nNews and Sports\nEvery weekday . . .\n8:00 a.m. Wake-Up Report\n9:00 a.m. Breakfast Report.\n1:00 p.m. Lunch Report.\n3:30 p.m. News Break.\n4:00 p.m. Inside U.B.C.\n4:30 p.m. Sports Break.\n6:00 p.m. Dinner Report.\n6:10 p.m. After Dinner Portion.\nMon.: Birds' Eye View.\nTues. to Thurs.: Insight.\nFri.: This Week At UBC.\nSpecial Sunday 12:30 p.m. Playlist\nShow \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Noel Baker counts down\nCITR's Top 40 albums, including\nthe newest from Iggy Pop, Simple\nMinds, Scritti Politti, The Gun\nClub, James White & The Blacks,\nJohn Cale, Robert Gordon, The\nComsat Angels, & Captain\nBeefheart.\nMonday 9:30 p.m. the Hot Air\nShow \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Spend Thanksgiving with\nEgghead and another great band as\nthey battle in the Pit's infamous\ntalent contest.\n\u00C2\u00BB_ \u00E2\u0080\u0094m\nMoney! Excessive amounts of\nthis precious commodity can be yours.\nHow can you obtain it you ask. Not by\ntaking out a Bank of Montreal loan, but\nby entering the B.C. Open chess tournament which takes place in SUB\n207/209, Oct. 9-11. Enter before 10\na.m., Oct. 9 is $30, $20 for jr./sr., and\n$17 for UBC. First prize is a hefty $400.\nContact the UBC Chess club for more\ninformation.\nThe Ubyssey will publish twice\nnext week. Because of the holiday\nMonday, the normal Tuesday edition will be nuked, in favor of a\nWednesday paper.\nConsequently, the deadline for\nTweens and so on is also moved up\none day.\nThe Ubyssey also wishes to remind people that letters to the\npaper must be delivered in person,\nand identification shown to a staff\nmember.\nThe Ubyssey wishes to take this\nopportunity to wish you all a very\nnice weekend. For those of you going to Edmonton for the long\nweekend, you won't be getting\naway from The Ubyssey. Five staff\nwill be spending the weekend in\nLougheed land, attending the fall\nregional conference of Canadian\nUniversity Press.\niffC l,L/\b5>irlb.US>\nRATES: AMS Card Holders - 3 tines, 1 day $2.50: additional\nlines. 60o. Commercial \u00E2\u0080\u0094 3 Unas, 1 day $4.20; additional fines, 63c. Additional days. $3.80 and 58c.\nClassified ads are not accepted by telephone and are payable in\nadvance. Deadline is 10:30 a.m. the day before publication.\nPublications Office, Room 241, S.U.B., UBC, Van., B.C. V6T2AS\nComing Events\nTHE VANCOUVER\nINSTITUTE\nFree Public Lecture\nProf. Melvin Calvin\nChemistry\nUniversity of California,\nBerkeley\nEnergy: Growing and\nEngineering Hydrocarbons.\nProf. Calvin has received a\nNobel Prize for his Contributions\nto the field of chemistry.\nLecture Hall 2, Woodward Bldg.,\nSaturday. Oct. 9 at 8:15 p.m.\nQUIET\nSTABLE\nGAY has\nnicely fur-\nnished 2 bedrm.\napt\nin W.\nEnd to share\nw. n.\nsmoker. 20 min.\nto UBC\nBy AM Expr.\nBus.\nCall after 9\na.m\n689-4457.\nPOINT GREY RD. - $255. 2 Br. Apt.\nw/huge kitchen, carpets, yard, gardens.\nSteps to beach & buses. To share w. N.S.\n731-7955.\n25 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Instruction\nCAN. INSTITUTE OF Tai Chi Chuan class\nis starting this fall. Call Steve, 731-3021,\n731-8036.\n65 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Room & Board\nBAHA'I FAITH \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Informal discussion.\nThis week's topic: \"Life of Abdu'l-Baha\".\nThis Friday, 8 p.m. 5529 Univ. Blvd. Tel.\n224-3596. All welcome. Refreshments.\n11 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 For Sale \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Private\nSLIGHTLY USED SNOW TIRES. 13s, 55.\nnew chains, 65. Ski boots, 55. 266-0173\neves.\nWHO/CLASH tickets, October 20. Phone\n274-7791.\nVW STN. WG.. 4 spd., 1973, tape deck,\nlady driver, excellent condition. 224-9269.\nVAN. HANOVER via London, Oct. 22nd,\none way fare, $325. Phone 224-0506.\nFULL SIZE 'CIRO' violin, condition as\nnew. Excellent for students lessons. Ph.\n921-7388.\nWHO TICKETS\n685-7636 eves.\nBRUNING DRAFTING machine, model\n2699, 1 set 12\" blades, 1 18\" blade, $95\nobo 682-1527.\nWHO TICKETS? 733-1382.\nCOLOR TV. Zenith 20\" with remote. $250\nobo, table lamp and desk lamp, $25 each.\n733-1382.\nINGL.IS WASHER & DRYER, 6 yrs. old.\n$350 for pair. 986-6389 eve.\n$350 for pair. 986-6389 eve.\nROOM-MATE A SLOB? Food horrible?\nCommuting a pain? We have room and\nboard, $300/month. Call Bob/Mark\n224-9866.\n70 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Services\nMODE COLLEGE of Barbering and Hairstyl-\ning. Students $6.50 with I.D. Body wave,\n$17 and up. 601 W. Broadway, 874-0633.\n80 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Tutoring\nWANT TO LEARN FRENCHEr I want to help\nyou. Conversation Francaise et grammaire.\nAfter 6 p.m. 738-4639. $7.50/h.\n85 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Typing\n20 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Housing\nCOMFORTABLE CHINESE home can ac\ncommodate Taiwan, Hong Kong,\nSingapore students. Furnished, convenient, Mandarin/Cantonese only. Please\nphone 324-1477 evenings or 255-6001 mornings.\nEXPERT TYPING essays, term papers, fac-\ntums, letters, manuscripts, resumes, theses.\nIBM Selectric II. Reasonable rates. Rose,\n731-9857.\n\"WORD PROCESSING specialists for\ntheses, term papers, resumes, reports, correspondence, days, evenings, weekends.\n736-1208.\nMICOM WORD PROCESSING. Thesis,\nterm papers, etc. $10 hr. Jeeva 876-5333.\nTYPING. Special student rates. Fitness &\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nCameron, public stenographers. 5760 Yew\n(Kerrisdale!. Ph. 266-6814.\nTYPEWRITING, minimal notice required,\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 phone 732-0529 mornings to noon or eves\ntill 10. Reasonable rates, Kits location.\nCHEAP, FAST \u00E2\u0080\u0094 turnaround typing for\nsmall-to-medium papers. $1.50/page initial,\n50c subsequent drafts. Auto spelling check\nfree. Call 736-5127.\nFRANCINE'S TYPING SERVICES, papers,\nthesis, etc. W/electronic typewriter. Rate:\n$1.25/dble-spaced page. 732-3647.\n99 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Miscellaneous\nRETREAT FACILITIES with gym available\non Lake Hatzic, B.C. Phone for reservations, 826-7062 or 325-1102. Page 16\nTHE UBYSSEY\nFriday, October 8, 1982\nTHE COMPETITION SAYS\nWE'RE CRAZY...\nThat Our Prices are Too Low . . . Our Selection Too Great . . . Our Back-up Service Too Extensive\nOur Trade-in Policy Too Generous!\nWe're Crazy ... DO YOU!!\nTEAC\nV30\nM9995\nAn economical cassette deck that offers remarkable sound reproduction. A\nhighly stable tape transport system ensures perfect tape speed at all times.\nFeatures include: Dolby NR, LED meters & switchable bias/EQ.\nV40 Soft touch controls, Dolby NR $299.95\nV5RX 3-motor, built-in dbx $429.95\nHundreds of Thousands of Satisfied Customers Don't Think\nPIONEER\nSX3500\nSPECIAL\nVOLUME PURCHASE!\npiONeeR\nSK300\n*%*Jfcj4tUUUht.*\n'tiiWzM\nCS505\nM1995\nGet Hi-Fi luxury at an affordable price. The\nSX3500?s 40 watts total power output is\nplenty of power to give you full-bodied\nstereo sound in an average-sized listening\nroom. Other features of this smart looking\nAM/FM receiver include less than 0.05%\nTHD and Fluroscan bargraph power meter.\n219*\nA CHC\nThe SK300 AM/FM portable cassette has\nextra large speakers in a 2-way system to\ngive rich fult-fidelity sound. Othe features\ninclude Music Search, Auto-stop, one\ntouch recording, Automatic Level Control\n& Balance Control.\n199\nThe semi-automatic CS505 features Dual's exclusive ULM ultra low mass\ntonearm which has less than half the effective mass of conventional high quality tonearms. (cartridge not included)\nCS508 Comes with Ortofon cartridge $189.95\nCS607 Direct drive, c/w Ortofon cartridge $249.95\nCS627Q Direct drive, Quartz, c/w Ortofon cartridge $299.95\nProsonic pe*-*9\nCorrect acoustical imbalance in your listening environment and adjust the music to suit\nyour taste with an ADC Sound Shaper.\nSS110 IC band equalizer $199.95\nSSII 12 band equalizer,\nLED read-out $329.95\nSSII) 12 band Paragraphic\nequalizer $449.95\nPIOIMC-ER\nSX 3700\nYAMAHA\nR300 - P350 - NS60\nYES, THIS UNIT WILL RECORD. This\nAM/FM portable cassette player comes complete whh ultra-light headphones. Take your\nfavourite music with you wherever you go . . .\non the bus, cycling, jogging or to lectures. Not\naxactly at illustrated.\n129\nGet a famous Yamaha Natural Sound System for only $499.95. The\nR300 AM/FM receiver delivers 60 watts RMS total. The P350\nsemi-automatic turntable is complete with a magnetic cartridge.\nAnd pulling it ali together are NS60 2-way speakers.\nGet Pioneer quality at an unbelievable price. The SX-3700 AM/FM\nreceiver features digital tuning, Quartz Servo-locked tuning, DC\npower amp and 90 watts RMS total.\n195\nCOMPLETE PACKAGE\n499\nCf commodore VIC - 20 Computer\nWHY BUY JUST A VIDEO GAME....Get a Computer/Game Machine\nfor About the Same Price.\nBONUS\nSAVE\n$120\nSpecial limited free offer\nincluding Datasette\n399\n95\nReceive the Datasette at no extra charge\nwith the purchase of a VIC-20 Computer.\n\u00E2\u0099\u00A6.\nGet a competitive edge on the Future with the Wonder Computer of the 1980's. \"The VIC-20 is\na superb game machine, a fine home computer\u00E2\u0080\u0094all attainable at an extremely reasonable\nprice.\"\n-ELECTRONIC GAMES, Aug/82\nHUNDREDS OF MORE UNADYERTISED SPECIALS . . . CHECK THEM OUT\nMARANTZ, JBL, KEF, ALPINE, SAE, BOSE, SANYO, AIWA, FISHER, CRAIG, AND MANY MORE"@en . "Newspapers"@en . "Vancouver (B.C.)"@en . "LH3.B7 U4"@en . "LH3_B7_U4_1982_10_08"@en . "10.14288/1.0128397"@en . "English"@en . "Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library"@en . "Vancouver : Alma Mater Society of the University of B.C."@en . "Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy, or otherwise use these images must be obtained from The Ubyssey: http://ubyssey.ca/"@en . "Original Format: University of British Columbia. Archives"@en . "University of British Columbia"@en . "The Ubyssey"@en . "Text"@en . ""@en .