"CONTENTdm"@en . "http://resolve.library.ubc.ca/cgi-bin/catsearch?bid=1211252"@en . "University Publications"@en . "2015-09-17"@en . "1971-01-12"@en . "Misprinted volume, should be LIII."@en . ""@en . "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/Ubysseynews/items/1.0128684/source.json"@en . "application/pdf"@en . " .*\u00E2\u0080\u00A2*%*\niT?isti3a^v\nr<\n^-?m\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094dirk visser photo\nSNOW .. . CONCRETE . . . WIND ... AND PEOPLE. The elements descended on journeyed to the citadel of education and in the end they were rewarded. With a cup\nUBC and the SUB stone fortress Monday. But the students' unquenchable thirst for of piping lukewarm SUB coffee,\nknowledge won out. Through snow, traffic accidents and freezing weather, they\n14 profs purged at U of Vic\nVICTORIA (Staff) - Fourteen faculty members at\nthe University of Victoria are involved in a\ntenure-promotion dispute that threatens to purge the\nuniversity of some of its finest teachers.\nThe dispute arose last month when nine professors\nwere denied tenure, promotion, or re-appointment after\nreceiving the support of their departments.\nThe' decisions of the English, philosophy, French and\nHispanic Italian studies departments and of the school of\nstudio visual arts were reversed either by arts and science\ndean John Climenhaga or administration president Bruce\nPartridge.\nIn five other cases, profs who were popular with the\nstudents have been denied support from their departments\nfor tenure, promotion, or re-appointment.\nIn one case, that of chemistry prof Tikam Jain,\nstudents feel the denial of tenure resulted from clashes\nwithin the department.\nIn the past two years, the chemistry department has\nhad three heads and two acting heads. Students believe\nthat such turmoil has resulted in hard feelings among the\nfaculty and that Jain's denial of tenure has been one of\nthe results.\nIn two other cases, students will press for the\nre-appointment of Robert Sward and Derk Wynand. Both\nwere denied re-appointment by the English department.\nInformed sources say both men are poets of high\ncalibre in the creative writing division but they will \"be\ngiven the axe due to conflicts with the department head.\nPart of the difficulty in the present purge is\nPartridge's refusal to appoint four lecturers to the rank of\nsenior lecturer except under new terms of reference\ndefined by himself.\nUnder the terms of the present tenure document,\nadopted by the faculty association in 1968, a person may\nremain at the rank of lecturer for a period of four years\nafter which he or she must be considered for promotion\nto the rank of senior lecturer or assistant professor. If at\nthat time promotion is not granted, a one year terminal\ncontract is offered.\nPrevious practice was to appoint lecturers to the rank\nof senior lecturer in order to give them additional time to\ngain the necessary academic qualifications for promotion\nto assistant professor.\nPartridge has re-defined the terms of appointment to\nsenior lecturer status without consulting the faculty\nassociation and has since had them approved by the board\nof governors.\nUnder the new terms, a- senior lecturer will teach a\none and one half course load (15 hours) instead of the\nprevious one course load (9 hours), and waives the right to\nsabbitical leave.\nWhen the faculty association refused to accept the\nnew terms, Partridge decided not to appoint faculty to\nsenior lectureships until the \"dispute\" was settled.\n\"There is no dispute as far as the faculty association\nis concerned,\" said association president Donald Harvey.\nHarvey said the association is trying to reach a new\nagreement concerning the position and the executive has\nbeen mandated to \"state a position by Jan. 31 for\nconsideration\" by the members.\nThe Representative Assembly (student council) at the\nuniversity met Sunday night to decide on student action\nto counter the purge.\nDemands for concrete action flew around the\nassembly chambers as student representatives were given\nthe background information surrounding the purge by\nBob Higinbotham, editor of the Martlet, the student\nnewspaper here, and Alma Mater Society president Robert\nMcDougal.\nHiginbotham has called for a general student meeting\nat noon today so students can be brought up to date on\nthe current dispute.\nThree motions will be introduced at the meeting.\nThe primary motion will demand the immediate\nre-appointment, promotion, or granting of tenure to the\nnine profs who previously had departmental support.\nSubsequent motions will demand the immediate\nre-appointment of Sward and Wynard on the basis of their\nteaching ability and the quality of their creative writing.\nThe third motion will call for the granting of tenure\nto Jain on the basis of his teaching ability.\n(Two other profs, Illtyd Perkins of the English\ndepartment and Richard Martin of the philosophy\ndepartment, will not be included in the demands because\nthey have decided not to pursue the issue.)\nThe motions will be sent to the board of governors,\nwhich will meet Jan. 18, with a demand for action before\nthe following morning.\nA second general meeting will be held January 19 to\nplan militant action if the board fails to act favorably on\nthe student demands.\nStudent unions in the departments involved have\nbegun circulating petitions to be sent to the board and the\nCanadian Association of University Teachers, which is\ncurrently investigating the cases of six of the professors.\nCAUT hearings were held in secrecy at the Empress\nHotel Sunday and on the campus Monday. Any\nrecommendations will be sent to the national executive\nbefore action is taken.\nAlthough the members of the CAUT tribunal were to\nleave late Monday afternoon, informed sources said the\ncommittee members will remain in Victoria until this\nafternoon to speak to Partridge, who was expected to\nreturn from a cruise on his yacht immediately after the\ndeparture of the tribunal.\nStudent leaders generally are preparing for a long\nmilitant action to guarantee the security of good teaching\nat UVic.\nAbolition of prof rank seen\nBy JOHN ANDERSEN\nElitist ranks for professors will be abolished at UBC if\npolitical science head Walter Young has his way.\nHe is proposing that the simple title of professor be\nsubstituted for the three ranks of assistant professor,\nassociate professor and professor.\n\"Rank is irrelevant,\" he said Monday. \"It has no role\nor function.\"\nThe title of professor is simply a job designation, like\nthat of \"lawyer\", he said.\n\"Lawyers don't have ranks, why should professors?\"\nhe asked.\nAbolishing the ranks will have no effect on salary or\ntenure, he said.\nIts major effect will be to save time for department\nheads and deans forced to go through the process of\nevaluating profs for promotion, said Young.\nAlso, eliminating grading will remove a potential\nsource of \"ill-will\" between academics, he said.\nYoung said he had no idea why the rank stystem was\ninstituted at UBC in the first place.\n\"Presumably because it was done everywhere else,\"\nhe said.\nYoung will bring his proposal to the faculty\nassociation at its next meeting, which is still to be\nscheduled. Page 2\nTHE U B Y S S E Y\nTuesday, January 12, 1971\n'Abortion punishes mother'\nBy MIKE SASGES\nAbortion is one aspect of this\nage of moral uncertainty we are\nliving in said a leading\nanti-abortion spokesman Monday.\nDr. Norman St. John-Stevas, a\nBritish Conservative MP told 150\nstudents in the SUB ballroom that\nabortion was a threat to the\nessence of civilization, the respect\nfor life.\n\"Abortion is a question of two\nsets of rights \u00E2\u0080\u0094 the woman's and\nthe fetus',\" he said.\n\"You can recognize a human\nbeing in the fetus. It is a life,\"\nHe then asked, \"What is the\ndifference between a fetus at the\ntime of conception and a fetus at\nthe age of 70?\"\n\"The only difference is\nsociety's callous attitude to this\nnew life.\n\"The fetus is treated as a\nproblem \u00E2\u0080\u0094 a threat to society and\nabortion is society's shortcut in\ntreating this problem,\" he said.\n\"Society pressures the mother\nto rid herself of an unwanted\nchild.\"\n\"In effect abortion punishes\nthe mother because it deprives the\nmother of the pleasure of raising\nher child.\"\nHe said that an abortion cost\n150 pounds or $450 in London.\nST. JOHN-STEVAS . ..\nfetus is problem\nSome doctors are making absolute\nfortunes.\n\"There is a revolt in the\nnursing profession in Great\nBritain. They are idealistic young\nladies \u00E2\u0080\u0094 not butcher's assistants.\n\"They really don't enjoy\ncleaning up after an abortion and\nseeing remains of human limbs,\"\nhe said.\nSt. John-Stevas would place\nthe emphasis on family planning\nrather than abortion.\nWhen asked at what point does\nAPPLICATION FOR\nGRADUATION\n\"Application for Graduation\" cards are now being mailed to\nall students in Fourth Year Arts, Music, Science, Commerce\nand Fourth Year Elementary and Fifth Year Secondary\nEducation, and will be available in departmental offices for\nstudents in the graduating years of all other faculties. All\nStudents who expect to graduate this spring are requested to\ncomplete and return both cards to the Registrar's Office (Mrs.\nKent) as soon as possible, but no later than February 15,\n1971.\n\"Application for Graduation\" cards are available in the\nRegistrar's Office and students in these graduating years who\ndo not receive cards in the mail should check their addresses in\nthe Registrar's Office.\nPLEASE NOTE: It is the responsibility of the student to make\napplication for his degree. If the student does not make\napplication, his name will not be put forward to his Faculty or\nthe Senate for approval.\nNo Application - No Degree\nThe Engineer\nand PHOTOGRAPHY\n- Introduction to Creative Engineering\nINSTRUCTOR: Mr. DENES DEVENYI, P.Eng., Special Lecturer\nin Creative Photography, Assistant Director Department of\nPhysical Plant and Planning, Simon Fraser University.\nTIME: Commencing Saturday, January 16, 1971, 9:30-11:30\na.m., 10 sessions.\nPLACE: Room 308, Civil Engineering, The University of British\nColumbia.\nFEE: $40.00.\nCOURSE OUTLINE: The course is designed to help graduate\nengineers and engineering students to improve their power to\ncommunicate through the visual media. It will explore areas that\nare normally beyond the engineering education and experience.\nBy doing this it will lead engineers to a more creative approach to\ntheir profession as well as to teach a greater awareness of the\nworld around them.\nLectures, picture analysis and group discussions are part of the\nprogram including a number of picture-taking assignments.\nREGISTRATION: As enrolment is limited to 25 persons, advance\nregistration is advised. To register, please complete the\nregistration form and mail, together with your remittance.\nENGINEERING PROGRAMS\nCentre for Continuing Education U.B.C.\n228-2181\na human life begin, he said, \"It's\nan arbitrary, difficult question to\nanswer. I fix it at the time of\nfertilization.\"\n\"The state since Roman times\nhas protected the helpless fetus\nfrom society. I cannot sanction\nany restriction on the fetus' life.\n\"That fetus has the right to\nlive. Its whole potential has not\nbeen realized, but it is there.\"\n\"The rights of the fetus and\nthe mother will always clash.\nAbortion is a selfish right. Look at\nwoman's liberation \u00E2\u0080\u0094 abortion is\nthe culmination of their\nmovement,\" he said.\nSharon Boylan, a member of\nUBC's Women's Liberation\nMovement said, \"Abortion is a\npart of the movement. We insist\non free abortion on demand. It is\nnot out of selfishness, but rather,\nit's an attempt to make the child's\nmother's life happier.\n\"Saying that there is human\npotential in the fetus is like saying\nthere is human potential in sperm\nand ova,\" she added.,\nNo accidents yet\nDespite the heavy snowfall and icy roads there have been\nno significant accidents or traffic tie-ups on campus, said the\nRCMP Monday.\nBy 9 a.m. most of the sidewalks on campus were cleared\nand seven vehicles from physical plant will continue to work\nagainst the constant downfall of snow said a physical plant\nspokesman.\nThe Vancouver weather office predicts that the snow will\ncontinue for several days.\n66\n99\nTHE ORCHESTRA\nby Jean Anouilh\nand\n\"THE GWADIGES\nFRAZJEEIN\" by Tennessee Williams\nDirected By Irene Prothroe\nJanuary 13-16 - 8:30 p.m.\nStudent Tickets $1.00\nSpecial Student Performance\nThurs., Jan. 14 - 12:30 p.m.\nReservations: Room 207 Frederic Wood Theatre\nUBC SOMERSET STUDIO\nFOR PREFERRED RISKS ONLY\nIt Pays to Shop for Car Insurance\nYOU CAN SAVE MONEY ON CAR INSURANCE AT WESTCO\nINSURANCE COMPANY\nHEAD OFFICE: 1927 WEST BROADWAY. VANCOUVER 9, BRITISH COLUMBIA\nFAST CLAIM SERVICE\nFill in and return this coupQn or phone today. No obligation. No salesman wil\nI call.\nMAIL THIS COUPON FOR OUR LOW RATES ON YOUR AUTOMOBILE I\nResidence\nAddress ...\nCity .\n(Please Print)\nPhone: Home Office .\nOccupation \t\nAge Married \u00E2\u0096\u00A1\nSingle \u00E2\u0096\u00A1\nMale i;\nFemale n\nDate first licensed to drive\t\nGive number and dates of all accidents in last 5 years,\n(circle dates of those accidents which were not your\nfault).\nIn the last five years has your\nlicence been suspended? \t\nAre you now insured ? \t\nDate current policy expires \t\nThis coupon is designed solely to enable non-policy\nholders to obtain an application and rates for their cars.\nCar No. 1\nCar No. 2\nNo. of cylinders\nModel\nDays per week driven to\nwork, train or bus depot,\nDays\nDavs\nMiles\nMiles\nIs car used in business\n(except to and from work)?\nYes \u00E2\u0096\u00A1 No o\nYes n No o\nGive number and dates\nof traffic convictions\nin last five years\nLIST INFORMATION ON ALL ADDITIONAL DRIVERS\nAge\nMaleor\nFemale\nRelation\nto you\nYears\nLicensed\nMarried\norSingt*\n% of use\nCar#1\nCar #2\n%\n%\n%\n%\n%\n%\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 FPRUBC23 _m Tuesday, January 12, 1971\nTHE UBYSSEY\nPage 3\nSkagit: time runs low, B.C. stalls\nBy SANDY KASS\nSlowly but surely Seattle City Light Company is\nmoving closer to the development of the Skagit Valley.\nThe hydro development, which would raise the level\nof Ross Dam 122 feet, and extend the head of the present\nreservoir 10 miles into Canada has been given the go-ahead\nby Washington state ecology department.\nDepartment spokesman Howard Big said the proposal\nis still in process of examination, but declined to\ncomment on any further action.\n\"A development permit has been issued to Seattle,\nand until our examination findings are released, there is\nnothing I can say,\" Big said.\nFederal fisheries minister Jack Davis will be in\nWashington D.C. next week to investigate the situation at\nan international environmental conference.\nA spokesmen for his office indicated Monday Davis\nwould do everything in his power to stop the development\nshould the findings prove the site ecologically detrimental\nto the area.\nB.C.'s agreement to develop the site, signed in 1967\nby lands and forests minster Ray Williston, could be\nnullified by provincial repudiation of the agreement, but\npremier W. A. C. Bennett recently indicated he feels the\nmatter should be in Ottawa's hands.\nHe was unavailable for comment at press time.\nA spokesman for Seattle mayor Wes Uhlman said the\nmayor hopes Canada will reap as much benefit as possible\nfrom the site.\nHowever, Uhlman has declined to authorize a Seattle\nLight application for a Canadian River Improvement\npermit.\n\"We're not certain that a Canadian permit is needed,\"\nthe spokesman said.\nSociety for Pollution and Environmental Control\nsecretary Sue Vanlaar said the power development must\nbe halted immediately for more then ecological reasons.\n\"The project can only meet Seattle's needs for at\nmost 18 months,\" she said.\n\"Exploitation of Canadian land to keep Seattle's\nhydro rates down for less than two years when they are\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094dave enns photo\nI KNOW I left that VW around here somewhere. Damn, I didn't drive through miles of ice and traffic accidents to lose\nthe bloody car. And then my classes were cancelled and I have a hole in my new Christmas gumboots. Why am I here?\nWhat is reality anyway? And where's my car?\n'Students don't give a damn'\nMcDiarmid said, \"The report will probably be shelved\nby the AMS and forgotten. I don't think it's very\nimportant.\"\nThe chairman of a new AMS committee examining\nUBC tenure practices seems to agree that everything is\nrosy in the tenure field and students don't know enough\nto say much about it anyway.\nThe committee, chaired by Rob McDiarmid, arts 3,\nhas sent a questionnaire to all department heads asking\ntheir opinions on the present tenure methods and on ways\nto improve them.\n\"Most of the persons have been non critical,\"\nMcDiarmid said. \"Department heads do not seem to feel\nthat there is much wrong with present tenure practices.\"\n\"I don't think it's a question of their being scared,\"\nMcDiarmid said. \"They simply don't think it's that\nimportant, they're satisfied.\"\n\"We are going to be talking to some of the professors\npersonally, both tenured and non-tenured.\n\"We don't expect to talk to the T.A.s, because most\nof them won't be employed here after they graduate.\"\nThe five or six students on the committee will present\nthe only student opinions.\n\"Students don't care about tenure. Besides, they\ncan't judge good teaching, they aren't aware of a prof's\noverall knowledge,\" McDiarmid said.\nThe report should be ready to present to the AMS\nnear the end of February, he said.\n\"We hope to present any recommendations made to\nsenate, possibly through the student senators,\"\nMcDiarmid said.\n\"However, we don't expect too many or that they\nwill be very radical.\n\"Basically tenure seems to be handled very well. The\nrecent crises have been minor exceptions, rather than the\nrule.\"\nRiot cop threatens\nAMS arts rep Sproule\nRiot police have long memories.\nStudent council arts rep Brian Sproule discovered this\nwhen he was stopped and questioned by a policeman\nThursday.\nSproule had noticed the policeman smiling and\nclutching his riot stick during the eviction of transients\nfrom the Jericho Hostel in October.\nHe told the policeman he looked like he was\nmasturbating with the stick.\nThe cop remembered and recognized Sproule while\nhe was hitch-hiking Thursday.\nAfter running through the \"what's your name? where\ndo you live?\" routine, the cop told Sproule: The only\nreason you're not in jail now is that I couldn't leave the\nformation.\"\n\"If we ever see you at anything again, you'll be\narrested,\" he said.\nWhen questioned about the incident, a spokesman for\ntactical force (riot squad), head instructor Victor Lake\nsaid it appeared to be a \"normal routine check on those\nkind of people.\"\nAsked about the threat, he said: \"I don't think that's\nnecessarily a threat, it's more like a fair warning of what\nmight happen if he gets involved again.\"\nalready less than half of ours, is just unthinkable,\" she\nsaid.\nAt present, Seattle citizens pay $8.15 per 1000\nkilowatt hours.\nVancouver residents pay $16.50.\n\"Before they would even get this site completed, they\nwould have to start looking for another site,\" Vanlaar\nsaid.\nUnder the present agreement, Seattle Light would\npay 15 dollars per acre per month renumeration to B.C.\nSeattle Light information officer Joe DeLeon said the\n' company is considering several other sites for future\ndevelopment, but feels the Skagit development will not be\noutdated in 18 months.\n\"A power site of this magnitude would provide an\ninfinite source of power to this community,\" he said.\nHe said the company plans to develop any type of\nrecreational facilities B.C. officials want at the north end\nof Ross Lake, even though he feels such a move is not\nnecessary.\n\"So few tourists visited this area before, I don't see\nany reason for an increase once the power project goes\nthrough,\" he said.\nHe added that he feels it will be at least two years\nbefore the project can get under way.\nThe University of Washington is presently doing\nresearch into ecological effects the project woud have on\nthe American sector of the site, but has not been\nauthorized to examine the Canadian side.\nTo call attention to the potentialities of the area, arts\n4 student Dick Betts hopes to hold a free rock festival at\nthe site in late spring.\nStudents interested in helping with the festival are\nasked to call him at 873-2153.\nAlma Mater Society president Tony Hodge said any\nstudent action would have to come through the office of\nexternal affairs, but he has not seen officer Peter Hlookoff\nin over a month.\n\"To my knowledge, nothing has been planned,\"\nHodge said.\nU.S. campuses\ncensored\nNEW YORK (CUP-CPS) - Twenty-five campus\nnewspapers and two campus radio stations have been\neither censored or shut down in the United States since\nSeptember, the U.S. Student Press Association reports.\nThe repression being faced by the college papers has\ntaken the form of editors being fired, evictions or\nlock-outs from offices, freezing of funds, suppression of\nindividual articles and prohibition of publication.\nThe USSPA survey of its membership said 40 per cent\nof the papers replying report they have been censored or\nharassed because they express radical politics.\nThe student governments of Dillard University in\nSouth Carolina and Norfolk State College in Virginia have\nboth had their presses shut down by the respective\nadministrations.\nDillard's newspaper staff refused to submit copy to\nan advisor for censorship while Norfold's paper supported\nstudent actions against the invasion of Cambodia last\nspring.\nWhen a \"God Is Dead\" editorial appeared in The\nReflector of Mississippi State University the state\ngovernment set up censors for. all campus papers and\nyearbooks.\nThe staffs of the Purdue Exponent in Indiana and the\nUniversity of Illinois campus in Chicago have been locked\nout of their offices because they didn't adhere to\nconservative guidelines for publication.\nAnd at the University of Southern Colorado in\nPueblo the managing editor of The Arrow was fired when\nshe refused to change an editorial about student parking.\nAds for abortion referrals and articles about the myth\nof the vaginal orgasm have been banned by school\nadmininistrations and state governments at Concordia\nCollege in Minnesota, Metropolitan State College in\nPueblo, Colorado, the state university of New York at\nBuffalo, University of Connecticut and colleges in\nMassachusetts, Ohio, South Dakota and Georgia.\nGrand Moot this Saturday\nThe Grand Moot, an annual mock court program, will\nbe held at 2 p.m. Saturday Jan. 30 at the UBC Law\nSchool.\nTwo outstanding law students are chosen from this\nprogram to argue a case of current interest before three\nB.C. court judges, in addition to this they will share the\nAllan S. Gregory Memorial Prize of $200. Page 4\nTHE UBYSSEY\nTuesday, January 12, 1971\nTH( UBYSSEY\nPublished Tuesdays and Fridays throughout the university\nyear by the Alma Mater Society of the University of B.C.\nEditorial opinions are those of the writer and not of the AMS or\nthe university administration. Member, Canadian University Press.\nFounding member. Pacific Student Press. The Ubyssey publishes\nPage Friday, a weekly commentary and review. The Ubyssey's\neditorial offices are located in room 241K of the Student Union\nBuilding. Editor, 228-2301; city editor, 228-2305; news editor,\n228-2307; Page Friday, 228-2309; sports, 228-2308; advertising,\n228-3977.\nJANUARY 12, 1971\nAnother purge\nThe ever-popular game of \"purge the faculty\" has\nspread to another B.C. university.\nWith the Simon Fraser University political science,\nsociology and anthropology department hassle still\nunresolved, the University of Victoria has decided to\nfire no less than 14 faculty members.\nThe official reasons for the firings remain a\nmystery, but there is little doubt the real reason is the\nfact that all the profs involved are in some way radical\nor non-conformist.\nThe fact that all 14 are considered by students to\nbe excellent teachers has no bearing on the situation \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nthe profs simply didn't fit into the standard,\ngovernment-approved mold.\nOne could be charitable toward the UVic\nadministration and suggest that people there are running\nscared from a provincial government that has made its\nintention to step on dissenting teachers all too clear.\nBut it is more likely that the UVic administrators\nare performing the hatchet job quite happily and of\ntheir own free will.\nAs the purge at SFU and a number of lesser events\nat UBC have shown, those who run this province's\nuniversities do so only as servants of the corporate elite.\nThey view their job as turning out capable (read\n\"unquestioning\") managers and good (read \"silent\")\ncitizens.\nStudents are not to be encouraged to think for\nthemselves beyond the established guidelines. Any prof\nwho violates that commandment is a menace and must\nbe removed as quickly as possible. That was the sin of\neight profs at SFU last year and, apparently, is the sin of\nMat UVic now.\nAt UVic the issue is even more clear-cut. The\nadministration is acting arbitrarily, in total opposition\nto the expressed wishes of the students and the majority\nof the faculty.\nNext week, the UVic board of governors will\nrubber stamp the decisions of administration president\nBruce Partridge and the students will take concrete\naction.\nThe whole scene has been played at SFU, it's\nhappening now at UVic and guess who's next.\nAnother fraud\nWhile we're on the subject of arrogant\nadministrations, the UBC crew is putting on its own\nshow over a somewhat more trivial matter.\nThey have decided to charge ahead with\npresentation of the master teacher award although the\nstudents, who the award is supposed to benefit, have\nsaid they want no part of it.\nSo a bunch of senior faculty members who\nprobably haven't seen the inside of a classroom since\nWalter Gage was sitting in the front row will now sit\naround a conference table and decide which of their\ncolleagues should be honored for his teaching ability.\nThe announcement will be made far and wide and\nthe public will once again be given the impression that\nUBC really cares about good teaching.\nOh well, it certainly won't be the first fraud this\nuniversity has perpetrated on the people of B.C.\n\".. . And the winner of the master teacher award is ,\nMcCUNE'S MUSINGS\nBy SHANE McCUNE\nSplendor in the snow\nThe Winter Wonderland has arrived. As the\nmyriad flakes enshroud the landscape in a downy\nblanket of pristine pulchritude, the world takes on\nthe semblance of a subdued study in silk and satin.\nSweeping silence stills the scene. In short, it's\nsnowing out.\nI went out to Horseshoe Bay to visit\nOglethorpe, whom I found in his back yard making\na snowcreep. I asked him why.\n\"I got tired of making snow-women,\" he\nreplied.\nI asked him what a snowcreep was supposed to\ndo.\n\"I've got it trained. At my command, it'll\nsnowball the snow-women. Sometimes, anyway. It\ndoesn't always work. A lot of snow-women are\nfrigid.\"\nOglethorpe is like that. I met him about five\nyears ago in a thunderstorm. He was talking to it.\nIn fact, he was drowning out the thunder. He\ncan belch louder than anyone I know. Every year he\nsings Christmas carols while belching. He gets jobs as\na starting gun at track meets, You just can't find\nanother man of Oglethorpe's calibre.\nI once asked him why he belched so much.\n\"Because it's a gas,\" he said, quite seriously.\nIt's not easy to talk to Oglethorpe, much less\nargue with him, but I wasn't going to let him off the\nhook this time.\nI asked him how he could tell whether a\nsnow-woman was frigid or not. I wanted to trap him\ninto a logical answer, like \"because they're made of\nsnow.\" No such luck.\n\"When they're frigid, they won't give the\nsnowmen a snowjob,\" he said.\nObscenity, grossness and boorishness are alien\nto Oglethorpe's moral code, if not to his nature. I\ndecided to broach the subject from a different tack.\nI pointed out to him that snow is traditionally\nassociated with purity, as witness phrases like\n\"virgin snow\", hence his imposition of sexual\nqualities upon the snow was unjustified from a\nmythical viewpoint as well as the logical.\n\"Bullshit,\" said Oglethorpe, \"I've seen the snow\nget ploughed often enough.\"\n\"That'll be the frosty Friday,\" I said, before I\ncould catch myself. I was beginning to crack.\n\"You see?\" said Oglethorpe, \"Once you've\nstarted the ball rolling, there's no stopping it.\"\nHe could keep a straight face no longer. He\nstarted cackling loudly, and his snowcreep joined in.\nI lost my temper completely. I kicked the\nsnowcreep in the icicle, told Oglethorpe to flake off,\nand gumbooted home.\nLETTERS\nPollution\nEditor, The Ubyssey, Sir:\nHere's a chance for action.\nTexada Mines (on Texada\nIsland) have an application in the\npollution control board requesting\npermission to dump tens of\nmillions of gallons of effluent into\nthe Georgia Strait each day. The\npollution control board hasn't\ngiven the go ahead on the\ndumping yet, but it likely will\nunless it starts receiving more\nnegative feedback from the\npublic.\nThis issue is really a cause for\nconcern! Are you prepared to\nmake a small trip outside\nVancouver, say to Qualicum on\nVancouver Island, and find the\nocean there just as dead, just as\npoisoned and poisoning as it is\nhere in Vancouver - our\ndelightful metropolitan cesspool?\nDon't take the typical moron\ntrack and start clamoring after the\ndamage has already been done.\nHave a little foresight and social\nconscience and write right now!\nAll letters received by the\npollution control board are given\ndue consideration; \"all properly\nregistered objections are brought\nto the attention of the director\nwhen an application is being\nreceived.\" (Quoted from the reply\nI received from the board last\nmonth.)\nJust write two lines stating the\nissue and your concern over it.\nAddress this to director of\npollution control, Parliament\nBuildings, Victoria, B.C. It's a\nlittle bit of effort which could\nresult in a giant step forward for\npollution control.\nALISON INGLIS\nScience I\nEditor: Nate Smith\nNews Maurice Bridge\nCity Ginny Gait\nJan O'Brien\nWire John Andersen\nManaging Bruce Curtis\nSports Keith Dunbar\nAss't News Jennifer Jordan\nLeslie Plommer\nPhoto David Enns\nDavid Bowerman\nPage Friday Tim Wilson\nThat white stuff couldn't stop us.\nResplendent in red surplices, Thorn\nWescott, Judy McCloud, Shane\nCulture\nEditor, The Ubyssey, Sir:\nWhat has happened to culture\nat UBC? There used to be all sorts\nof concerts, plays, poetry,\nreadings and sundry presentations\nat UBC \u00E2\u0080\u0094 where have they gone?\nIt doesn't matter whether\nthey're professional entertainers\nlike Gordon Lightfoot or student\namateurs. A little art, or fun or\nboth is always welcome around\nthis campus.\nThe best things we've had this\nyear were free: Subspace and a\nconcert by Sundance. But they\nwere poorly publicized.\nCARL LaFONG\nArts 4\nMcCune, Jinny Ladner and John\nGibbs sung various sequences of\nheavenly Gregorian Chants. Beating its\nrhythm on their typewriters were Ken\nLassesen, Phil Barkworth, and Chris\nKrawczyk. Jim Davies beat his own\nTantum Ergo. John Kula and Wayne\nBurns were busy all day creating saints,\ngoats and what not on the stain glass.\nBruce Curtis and Nettie Wild were\ngood the whole time. Sandy Kass\ncouldn't join us goyim. The jocks,\nKeith Dunbar, Bill Ruby and Steve\nMillard offered up their day for the\nlosing TBirds. David Enns, Maureen\nGans and Dirk Visser prayed for the\nrepose of the soul of David Bowerman. Tuesday, January 12, 1971\nTHE UBYSSEY\nPage 5\nPage Tuesday\nOthello at the Playhouse\nBy NETTIE WILD\nThe play Othello is alive and well and living\nin the Queen Elizabeth Playhouse Theatre.\nAs theatre goers will attest this is not\nalways the case in many productions of Othello\nbut happily it was a truism of Friday's opening\nnight performance.\nDirector David Gardner's casting choice for\nOthello paid off although his search for the\nright man sent him across the continent to New\nYork to find him. Arthur Burghardt provided\nthe physical impressiveness of the Moor which\nadded the needed air of plausibility to make the\nstory of the enraged warrior/lover come\ntogether.\nAnnie Scarfe effectively offset Burghardt\nin her petiteness, a point Gardiner used to full\nadvantage which added a lighter air to the play.\nHowever Miss Scarfe failed to be fully\nconvincing in her part leaving the impression\nthat actress and character were fighting one\nanother instead of working as one.\nAlan Scarfe on the other hand stole the\nshow with his larger than life Iago. Vancouver\naudiences have been enjoying Scarfe's acting\nability a great deal this season as a lead in\nRosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead, as Sir\nToby in Twelfth Night at the Freddy Wood and\nnow in Othello. He seems to thoroughly enjoy\nhis character and plays Iago to the hilt, almost\nto the point of being a ham, delighting the\naudiences with his rich full portrayal of the\nvillain. Anne Butler supported Alan Scarfe well\nas Iago's wife who equalled her husband in his\nworldly manners and speech.\nBetween the two they carried the majority\nof what little humour there is in the play, by\nway of their constant bantering. Miss Butler\naccentuates her love for her husband in her\nwarm portrayal thus making the discovery of\nhis crimes all the more tragic.\nGardner interjected an unusual touch by\nadding a new interpretation of the role of\nOthello's manservant taken from the James\nEarl Jones (of Great White Hope fame)\nproduction in the east.\nAs the Ethiopian, Edward Lawson, though\nwithout any lines throughout, becomes a focal\npoint in the play. Costumed in a simple flowing\nrobe along with his strange long African hair, he\nrepresents a world far apart from that of the\nlavish court into which he has been interjected.\nBecause of the mysterious feeling enveloping\nthe character, the members of the court visibly\nshow their fear of him in their lack of\nwillingness to confront him.\nBetween the Ethiopian and Othello there is\na deep understanding which tends to include\nOthello as part of this dark world from which\nhis servant came. The Ethiopian announces the\nMoor's presence in a high eerie birdlike call\nwhich accentuates their foreign heritage even\nmore.\nThe bond between the two is exemplified\nwhen the Ethiopian sensing Othello's dilemma,\nappears out of nowhere to produce the dagger\nwith which Othello kills himself.\nOthello thus becomes a play not only of\nthe jealousies and the maliciousness betwen\nfellow men but the problems that are created\nwhen two different worlds meet.\nMaybe this would all be news to\nShakespeare but it makes for good theatre and\nthat's what it is all about after all, isn't it?\nKEEP SUB.\n(remember the $15 you paid)\nMORE TO COME\nThe Galleries\nSFU Opens With Eskimo Art Exhibition\nSFU opens its new gallery with an inaugural exhibition of 125\nprints and drawings by Eskimo artists from Cape Dorset,\nPovungnituk, Port Harrison, Repulse Bay, Eskimo Point, Baker\nLake and Belcher Island. The exhibition started yesterday and\nruns through to February 12.\nToys for Girls and Boys in UBC Gallery\n\"Toys\", an exhibition of friendly toys made by northern\nCalifornia artists will be shown in the UBC Gallery located under\nthe main library. Also in this exhibition is a display of posters by\nWalter Diethelm, a Swiss graphic designer. The show starts\nThursday, January 13, through to the 30.\nAn Eskimo oruBelcher Island.\nUBCMUSSOC presents\nLive on stage\nFebruary 3-8:30 P.M.\nFebruary 8 - 7:30 P.M.\nFebruary 9 & 10 - 8:30 P.M.\nFebruary 11 - 12:30 P.M.\nONLY $1.00\nUBC AUDITORIUM\nTICKETS $1.00 - AMS BUSINESS OFFICE\n228-4300 - 228-3073\nMM\n\u00C2\u00AB*\nmmmem/mmmmmmf\nWMMMIMM\nCHRISTMAS RESULTS DISAPPOINTING ?\nNEED HELP WITH A COURSE ?\nCome to the:\nUBC TUTORING CENTRE\nWe have qualified\ntutors in over 50 subjects\nSUB 100 B (main foyer)\n12-2 p.m. daily\nor call 228-4583\nAlumni Association Project in Cooperation with the A.M.S. Page 6\nTHE UBYSSEY\nTuesday, January 12, 1971\nLibrary closes early Mon.\nDespite rain, sleet, and snow\nthe hallowed halls of learning of\nUBC will remain open for classes.\nUBC information officer Jim\nBanham said Monday all\nuniversity facilities except the\nlibrary will remain open until\nregular closing time.\nHead librarian Basil\nStuart-Stubbs said the library\nclosed at five p.m. rather than 10\np.m. Monday. This was because\nthe taxi companies would not\nguarantee service for employees\nworking on late shifts.\nDecisions to close the library\nwill be made on a day to day\nbasis, according to the weather he\nsaid.\nHe said students should check\nfor announcements on UBC radio\nfor the closing times.\nSUB cafeteria also closed at 6\np.m. Monday night to enable\nemployees to get an early start\nhome.\nPIMPLES\nUgly skin blemishes on face or body,\nEczema, Pimples, Red Scaly Itching\nSkin and Athlete's Foot are quickly\nrelieved by NIXODERM. Antiseptic\naction heals, helps make skin softer,\nsmoother, clearer. Ask your druggist\nfor NIXODERM ointment and soap.\nHelp clean, clear and revitalize your\nskin. Look better fast.\nPATIO.\nEAT IN .TAKEOUT- DELIVERY\n3261 W. Broadway 736-7788\nWeekdays to 1 a.m.\nFri. & Sat. 3 a.m.\nChange constitution-make AMS efficient\nThere will be an Alma Mater\nSociety general meeting Jan. 27 to\ndiscuss a new constitution.\nAMS president Tony Hodge\nsaid the most controversial items\nwill be the decrease in the size of\nthe students' council and the\nexecutive and a change in council\nelegibility requirements.\n\"We are proposing to make\nboth the executive and the\ncouncil smaller in the hope that\ncouncil will become more\nefficient,\" said Hodge.\nUnder the new constitution\neach executive member would\nhave a specific area of\nresponsibility.\nThe new executive would\nconsist of a vice-president of\nacademics, a vice-president of\nservices, a vice-president of\ncommunity affairs, a\nvice-president of finance and a\npresident.\nKEEP SUB\nCLEAN\n(for heaven's and YOUR own sake)\nMORfE TO COME\n\"The executive changes are\nbased on a student survey\nconducted by the AMS last year,\nsaid Hodge.\nThe new council would consist\nof 12 people to be elected by\nconstituencies.\nEligibility will be changed to\nallow anyone who has completed\none year at UBC to hold an\nexecutive position.\nqOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOq\n,|/f\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00BBHII\u00C2\u00ABWl\ns@\u00C2\u00A3 an\nTfaufk.M/ater'Beid\n7Z08 Byrrarct\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0free, dour/mind\nyour ufc on /metal\nsprmot j'cotton\nStuffvrw-?\n7ry our 3t^*&*0*^ Page 8\nTHE UBYSSEY\nTuesday, January 12, 1971\nQuebec teachers criticize\nprovincial investigation\nQUEBEC (CUP) - The Quebec\nTeachers Corporation criticized\nthe provincial education\ndepartment Friday for its\nhandling of an investigation into\nalleged political indoctrination in\nclassrooms.\nA statement by the\n70,000-members teachers' union\ncalled the issue a \"leaking political\nfootball,\" and said: \"an\nadministration which is not even\ncapable of dealing with a few\ncomplaints in an organization of\n100,000 teachers without\nresorting to publicity tricks is\nobviously in an alarming\nsituation.\"\nQuebec education minister\nGuy St. Pierre was quoted\nThursday, as saying 50 teachers\nNew York\nCOSTUME SALON\nRENTALS\nSingle and Double-Breasted\nTiixedos and Dinner Jackets\nBlack and Colored\nFlare 01 Straight Pants\nUp-to-Date Accessories\nSPECIAL STUDENT RATES\n224-0034 4397 W. 10th\nwould be brought before a special\ncommittee investigating the\npolitical activity of teachers in\nclassrooms.\nThe education department said\nFriday only about ten complaints\nof teachers allegedly using the\nclassroom as a forum for political\nindoctrination would be\ninvestigated further by the\ncommittee.\nThe department said the figure\nof 50 teachers was a rough one\nbased on a misunderstanding.\nThe QTC is demanding that\nteachers involved be fully\ninformed about the complaints,\nthat they be allowed recourse to\nthe civil courts and that they be\naccompanied by a person of their\nown choice in any interview with\nthe investigating committee.\nYOU ARE EXTREMELY SATISFIED\nWITH YOUR HAIRSTYLE!!!\n OR ARE YOU ? ? ?\nGERMAN AND FRENCH MASTER STYLISTS\nUPPER TENTH BARBER\n4574 West 10th Avenue\nPhone 224-6622\nHELP WANTED\nCanada Centennial Celebrations\nNEEDS YOU\nThe Alma Mater Society is presently forming a committee to consider worthwhile proposals\nfor a University of British Columbia project commemorating the British Columbia Centennial.\nThe B.C. Centennial Committee has agreed to match funds raised by the Alma Mater Society\nWE NEED YOUR IDEAS!\nThis University should be recognized in these centennial celebrations. We\nare certain that with your assistance many ideas will be forthcoming from\nstudents, faculty, and staff. All proposals will be carefully considered, the\nmost suitable forewarded to Victoria.\nTIME IS OF THE ESSENCE!\nPlease submit your ideas on this form or a reasonable facsimile and submit NO LATER THAN\nMONDAY, JANUARY 18th, 1971.\nNAME PHONE\nI\nI\nADDRESS CONTACT TIME J\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 CLIP OUT AND RETURN TO:\nB.C. CENTENNIAL CELEBRATIONS\nc/o John Scott Mitchell\nVice-president (Academics), Alma Mater Society\nBox 152, SUB, U.B.C. (Campus Mall)\nOr, bring to ROOM 258, 2nd floor Student Union Building\nBritish Columbia Centennial Celebrations Tuesday, January 12, 1971\nTHE UBYSSEY\nPage 9\n'ME AND MY keep-fit New Year's resolutions\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094dirk visser photo\nPoor finger cold politicos\nTORONTO (CUP) - Charging\nJhat the federal government has\ncreated unemployment and\npoverty in a \"cold and heartless\nmanner\", 500 delegates to the\nNational Poor People's\nConference held here have made\nplans for a country-wide\ndemonstration Jan. 25.\nWelfare recipients and working\n\"poor people will demonstrate\nagainst \"the total failure of the\nfederal and provincial\ngovernments to deal with the real\ncause of unemployment and\npoverty - the totally unjust\ndistribution of Canada's wealth\nand power.\"\nJob action\n\" Action is needed if students\nexpect to work this summer.\n\"Unemployment was high last\nsummer and students were the\nfirst ones to feel it,\" Sharon\nBoylan, a member of the UBC\nLeft Caucus, said Monday.\nWith this in mind the caucus is\nholding a meeting Friday noon to\nget things going. The place of the\nmeeting will be announced in\n'Tween Classes in Friday's\nUbyssey.\nThe federal government's\ngrants to the provinces are not\nenough to improve the situation,\"\nsaid Boylan.\n\"Although B.C. with Quebec\nwas given the highest grant, we\nneed to pressure the provincial\n\u00E2\u0080\u009E government into constructive\naction.\"\nPart of the preamble to the\nresolution approved by the\nconference delegates said:\n\"The people of this rich nation\nmust never allow government to\ndeliberately create unemployment\nand poverty in the cold and\nheartless manner of Trudeau and\nBenson.\"\nThe delegates will seek the\nsupport of .organized labour for\nthe protest.\n\"We're not talking about the\ntrade union bureaucrats, but the\nmasses of people who are being\nlaid off their jobs all across this\nCome to the experts and\nspecialists at Henneken Auto \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nBecause we specialize (we don't\nhave to stock parts for all makes\nof cars) and when you repair\nonly a few cars you can repair\nthem faster, hence we can save\nyou money on VW,\nMercedes, Porsche\nand Volvo car repairs.\nNo repair too big or\nsmall. All work fully\nguaranteed.\ncountry,\" a conference\nspokesman said.\n\"Meanwhile, the real causes of\ninflation - exorbitant profits\nand rents - remain untouched,\"\nthe resolution said.\n\"Foreign corporations,\nparticularly American-owned, are\nallowed to continue to exploit the\nresources of this country, serving\nforeign rather than Canadian\ninterests.\nDelegates also agreed to\nestablish a national co-ordinating\ncommittee of poor people's\ngroups and to start a national\nnewspaper to link poor people's\ngroups.\n\"TRANSCENDENTAL\nMEDITATION has been\nreported to have practical\ntherapeutic value in\nrelieving mental and\nphysical tension.\"\n(Science\u00E2\u0080\u0094Mar. 27th, 1970)\nTranscendental\nMeditation\nNot a philosophy, but a\nsystematic technique for\nexpansion of CONSCIOUSNESS.\nIntroductory Talk\nPAMELA REEVE &\nRAY HARRIS,\ntwo of several thousand teachers\nof Transcendental Meditation\nwill speak:\n12:30\nThurs., Jan.\n14th\nBu. 204\nFurther Info. 266-0862\nKEEP SUB CLEAN\nFROM CRAP\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 remember the $15 you paid?\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 for your own sake!\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 well, revolutions have never been\nsuccessful without cleanliness\nNO MORE \u00E2\u0080\u0094 NO MORE MESS\nFORESTRY U.S.\nFEE REFERENDUM\nJANUARY 8, 1971\nResults: 61% of\nEligible Voters Voted\n87% of those Voting\nApproved a $4.00\nUndergraduate Society Fee\nEAT IN .TAKEOUT* DELIVERY\n3261 W. Broadway 736-7788\nWeekdays to 1 a.m.\nFri. & Sat. 3 a.m.\nNOTICE\nRe-Late Payment of Fees\nA late payment fee of $25 additional to all other fees will be\nassessed after JANUARY 15, 1971. Refund of this fee will be\nconsidered only on the basis of a medical certificate covering\nillness or on evidence of domestic affliction. Students who are\nunable to pay their fees on time owing to new Canada Loan or\nBursary arrangements not having been finalized should see the\nFinance Department prior to January 15,1971.\nIf a student whose registration has been cancelled for\nnon-payment of fees applies for reinstatement and his application\nis approved by the Registrar, he will be required to pay a\nreinstatement fee of $25, the late fee of $25, and all other\noutstanding fees before he is permitted to resume classes.\nMani Singh Family and\nAshok Fokir presents\nENTERTAINMENT -\n71\nDO NOT MISS\nMUSIC\nOF\nINDIA\nExotic Sitar, Drums, Songs, Dances\nQUEEN ELIZABETH PLAYHOUSE\nON JANUARY 17, SUNDAY at 8 P.M.\nCAST: Jaswant Kaur, Mani Singh, Satwant Singh, Sukdev Luddu, Ashok\nFokir, Sarabjit, Babli\nTICKETS: $2.00, $3.00 at Vancouver Ticket Center & all EATON'S\nSTORES and all other outlets including INDIA EMPORIUM at 2202 Main\nand 6th East.\n12 HOURS\nOF RELIEF IS\nNOTHING TO\nSNEEZE AT.\n1CONTACC1\n12\nHOUR RELIEF\nContac-C cold capsules Page 10\nTHE UBYSSEY\nTuesday, January 12, 1971\nTUESDAY\nSAILING CLUB\nMeeting and film in Buch. 104 at 12:30\np.m. New members welcome.\nSCIENCE FICTION SOCIETY\nMeeting to elect executive and to discuss financial and location problems\nin SUB 211 at noon.\nPRE-MED SOC\nDean McCreary speaks in Wesbrook\n201 at 12:30 p.m.\n'tween\nclasses\nNEWMAN CLUB\nMeeting in SUB 213 at 12:30 p.m.\nYOUNG SOCIALISTS\nMeeting of Women's Lib Alliance at\n1776 Alberni St., 7:30 p.m.\nPSYCHOLOGY CLUB '71\nLaurel Willows speaks about reaching emotionally disturbed children in\nAngus 24 at 12:30 p.m.\nUBC NDP CLUB\nW.W. II propaganda film \"Nazi Strike\"\nin Buch. 106 at noon. $.25 admission.\nConquer\" in Buch. 106 at noon. $.25\nadmission.\nARCHEOLOGY SOC\nGeneral meeting in SUB 213 at 12:30\np.m.\nONTOLOGICAL SOC\n'Coming to Know Yourself in Buch.\n232 at 12:30.\nHILLEL\nRabbi Marvin Hier speaks on \"Relation of Origin to Cause\" in Hillel\nHouse at 12:30 p.m.\nEDUCATION STAGE BAND\nMeeting in Ed. 1317 at 12:30 p.m. New\nmembers needed. Any instrument,\nany experience.\nTHURSDAY\nWEDNESDAY\nUBC NDP CLUB\nW.W. II propaganda film\n'Divide and\nUBC NDP CLUB\nW.W. n propaganda film \"Battle of\nRussia\" in Buch. 106 at noon. $.25\nadmission.\nSIMS\nIntroductory talk on transcendental\nmeditation in Buch. 204 at 12:30 p.m.\nANGLICAN UNITED CAMPUS\nMINISTRY\nSupper discussion \"Communities\" at\nLutheran Campus Centre, 5:30 p.m.\nPRE-MED SOC\nField trip to Pathology. Meet in front\nof Wesbrook 100, 12:30 p.m.\nCAMPUS CAVALIERS\nMeeting SUB 207-209 from 12:30-2:30\np.m.\nTHUNDERBIRD WARGAMERS\nMeeting in SUB 119, 12:30 p.m.\nYOUNG SOCIALISTS\nWomen's Lib Alliance abortion campaign work night. 1776 Alberni St.:\n8 p.m.\nUBC LIBERAL CLUB\nMeet in SUB clubs lounge at noon.\nPAYMENT OF FEES\nSecond Installment Mow Pwe\nPayment should be made at Department of Finance,\nGeneral Services Administration Bldg. on or before\nFriday, Jan. 15, 1971\nPr\u00C2\u00ABenMn9 fjN CAMPUS\nPAT\nP\nA\nU\nL\nS\nO\nN\nU.S. Presidential\nCandidate, 1968\ny\nHear this noted sex enthusiast give his lecture\n\"PAT PAULSEN LOOKS AT\nTHE 70's\"\nFriday, January 22 at 7:30 p.m.\nSUB BALLROOM\nTickets $2.00 at AMS Busines Office & SUB Information Desk\nSPECIAL EVENTS WILL ALSO PRESENT:\nPHILLIP OE FREMERY\nClassical Guitarist\nFriday, Jan. 15-12:30\nSUB AUDITOR I UM-25c\nMIGUEL ANGEL ESTRELLA\nArgentine Classical Pianist\nThursday, Jan. 21-12:30\nSUB AUDITORIUM-25c\nFRIDAY\nWOMEN'S INTRAMURALS\nP.E. and university manager's meeting in SUB 213 at 12:30.\nCRAFTS CLUB\nGeneral meeting in SUB 251 at 12:30\np.m.\nLEFT CAUCUS\nMeeting to organize students about\nsummer unemployment in Buch. 202\nat 12:30.\nVCF\nFilm and discussion in SUB 207-209\nat 12:30. Hand in application for ski\nweekend.\nUBC NDP CLUB\nW.W. II propaganda film \"Battle of\nBritain\" in Buch. 106 at 12:30 p.m.\n$.25 admission.\nPRE-SOCIAL WORK CLUB\nGeneral meeting for all members in\nSUB 105B at 12:3 p.m.\nMISCELLANEOUS\nLEGAL AID\nEvery Mon., Wed. and Fri.\n228 and 232 at 12:30 p.m.\nIn SUB\nSPAGHETTI HOUSE LTD.\nHot Delicious Tasty Pizzas\n- 22 DIFFERENT FLAVORS -\nFREE DELIVERY - Right to Your Door\nL\nPhone 224-1720 - 224-63361\nHOURS: 4 p.m. to 3 a.m. - Weekends 4 p.m. to 4 a.m.\n4450 West 10th Ave. - Just outside the Gates\nCLASSIFIED\nRota*; Students, Faculty & Club-3 lines, 1 day $1.00; 2 days $1.75.\nCommercial\u00E2\u0080\u00943 lines, 1 day $1.25; additional lines 30c; 4 days price of 3.\nClassified ads are not accepted by telephone and ate payable in advance.\nPublications OHiee, STUDENT UNION BLDCL, Unto, ot B.C., Vancouver 8, B.C\nClomg Deadline u tl:30, the day baton publication.\nANNOUNCEMENTS\nDances\n11\nGreetings\n12\nLost & Found\n13\nLOST KEYS IN BLACK KEY\ncase initialed J'AB on Campus.\nKeward. Phone 684-8984.\nRides & Car Pools\n14\nSTUDENT AND KID DESPER-\nately need ride to campus: 10:00\n(9:00 Wed.) from 7th and Larch.\nRemuneration. Phone 738 - 3917\neves, if you could help even one\nmorning.\nSpecial Notices\n15\nTHE TAURUS SPA, 1233 HORNBY\nSt. 687-1915. Guys only. Special\nstudent rates. Best facilities.\nTAXI LICENCE FOR SALE.\nNorth Shore Business expanding.\n$10,500. Accept. 1/3 down. Mr. Day\n874-8667 or 926-3223.\nDON'T MISS THE PUN. EVERY-\none's going to the AMS General\nMeeting. Wed. Jan. 27. Memorial\nGym, 12:30.\nIP YOU GET A LAUGH OUT OF\nPolitics Pat Paulsen is Your Bag.\nFriday, Jan. 22 at 7:30. SUB Ballroom. Tickets $2.00 at Information\nDesk.\n\"MARAT / SADE\", AN ENGLISH\nDepartment Course Film featuring\ntha Royal Shakepspeare Company\ndirected by Peter Brook Thursday 14th in the Old Auditorium,\n12:30 & 7:00. 50c.\n\"MIDNIGHT COWBOY\". DON'T\nmiss this award - winning film\nstarring Dustin Hoffman and Jon\nVoight. SUB Auditorium. Friday\nand Saturday, 7:00 & 9:30. Sunday, 7:00. AMS card-holders 50c.\n16\nTravel Opportunities\nCHARTERS U.K., CONTINENT,\nAfrica, other destinations, 1-ways'.\nMick, 687-2856 or 224-0087. 106-709\nDunsmuir St. Mon. - Sat., 9-\u00C2\u00BB.\nEUROPE FROM $185 ROUND TRIP.\nEmployment opportunities (U.K.)\nDiscounts, travel service, low car\nhire rentals for members. Anglo\nAmerica Assn. 60A Pyle St., Newport, I.W., England.\n\"MIDNIGHT COWBOY\". TRAVEL-\nogue from New York to Florida,\nstarring Dustin Hoffman and Jon\nVoight. SUB Auditorium. Friday\nand Saturday, 7:00 & 9:30. Sunday,\n7:00. AMS card-holders 50c.\nWanted\u00E2\u0080\u0094Information\n17\nAutomobiles\u00E2\u0080\u0094Parts\n23\n1967 - 71 HARD - TOP FOR A MG\nMidget or Sprite. $100. Call Al,\n731-8036.\nBUSINESS SERVICES\nDay Care & Baby Sitting 32A\nPhotography\n34\nNIKKORMAT FTN F/1.4, CHROME\nbody, never used. Case and warranty. $220 Firm. 733-8976 even-\nings, Larry.\nINSTRUCTION & SCHOOLS\nMusic Instruction\n62\nSpecial Classes\n63\nScandali\n37\nTHE PANTS FROM LAST YEAR\nare still around so if you lose\nyours at Farmers Frolic we have\na spare, sizes 45 & 48.\nPOTTERY CLASSES at\nTHE POTTER'S CENTRE\n12 Week Course Starting Jan. 11\nClasses for\nBeginners, Intermediates,\nAdvanced Workshop\" Facilities\nOne Wheel Per Person\nPhone: Gabriele Alfred, 261-4764\nTutoring\n64\nHOMOSEXUAL COUNSELLING\nservice: Intended for persons who\nare unsure about themselves,\nwant to know the facts, want to\nsave years of deprivation, Free,\nnon-medical, confidential, no obligation. Send details to grad student, 23, Box 6572, Station G, Vancouver 8, B.C.\nPAT PAULSEN LOOKS AT THE\n70's Friday, Jan. 22, 7:30 SUB\nto the ways of the world. Tickets\nBallroom. Let him open your eyes\n$2.00 at Information Desk.\nAQUA SOC SCUBA SCHOOL:\nStarts 7:30 p.m. Jan. 14, Room 211.\nWar Memorial Gym. Heated Indoor Pool. All equipment provided.\nSign up in Outdoors Club Lounge\nany noon hour.\nCAN YOU IMAGINE THOUSANDS\nof excited bodies all in one room?\nDon't miss the AMS General\nMeeting. Wed. Jan. 27. Memorial\nGym, 12.30.\n\"PERSECUTION AND ASSASSIN-\nation of Jean - Paul Marat as performed by the inmates of the\nCharenton Prison under the direction of the Marquis de Sade\" Film\n50c Thurs. 14. Old Aud. 12:30 &\n7:00.\nTyping\n40\nFAST ACCURATE TYPING. EDEC-\ntric typewriter. Shorthand. Phone\n325-2934.\nFAST ACCURATE ELECTRIC\ntyping. Theses, essays, etc. 350\n, per page. Mrs. Duncan, 228-9597.\nEFFICIENT ELECTRIC TYPING,\nmy home, essays, thesis, etc. Neat,\naccurate work. Reasonable rates.\nPh. 263-5317.\nIBM SEDECTRIC TYPING SERVICE. Theses, essays, etc. Near\naccurate work, reasonable rates.\nMrs. Troche, 437-1355.\nWanted\u00E2\u0080\u0094Miscellaneous 18\nAUTOMOTIVE\nAutomobiles For Sale 21\n'62 ALFA ROMEO, NEW ENGINE,\nnew clutch, Michelin X, $850. Ph.\n224-0486 after 6 p.m.\n'59 VOLVjO; REBUILT ENGINE-\nreliable. $200 firm. 731-7101 anytime.\nBARGAIN \u00E2\u0080\u0094 1966 V.W. RADIO,\nLow mileage, needs some body\nwork, offers!- 254-2258. Must Sell.\nAutomobiles\u00E2\u0080\u0094Wanted\n22\nBUS OR VAN WITH SLEEPING\nfacilities for cross-country travel.\nPhone 263-7274.\nHOME TYPING, ELECTRIC. Experienced. Reas. rates. 738-7881.\nTEDIOUS TASKS, PROFESSIONAL\ntyping service. IBM Selectric \u00E2\u0080\u0094\ndays, evenings, weekends. Phone\n228-9304. 30c per page.\nTYPING DONE AT MY HOME.\nNeat and careful work. Essays,\nThesis. Reasonable rates. North\nVan. 985-0154.\nESSAY & THESIS TYPING. IBM\nelectric. 35c page. Call after noon:\n733-4708.\nEMPLOYMENT\nHelp Wanted\n51\nUBC TUTORING CENTRE NEEDS\ntutors: Specifically in Economics,\nOrganic Chemistry, and Computer\nScience. Register at SUB 100B.\n$3 an hour.\nWILL TUTOR MATH 100 & 101,\nday, evening, or Sat. Reasonable\nrates. Phone 733-3(44\u00E2\u0080\u009410 a.m. to\n3 p.m.\nMISCELLANEOUS\nFOR SALE\n71\nBIRD CALLS\nYour Student Telephone Directory\nNOW HALF PRICE - 50c\nat the Bookstore, Thunderbird Shop\nand AMS Publications Office\nRIEKER GIRLS' SKI BOOTS. SIZE\nsix. Five buckle, like new. $45.\nPhone 266-4656, Terry.\nGOOD DEALS \u00E2\u0080\u0094 FUR COATS,\njackets, capes, etc., $5 and up.\nPappas Bros. Sell, 459 Hamilton\nStreet at Victory Square. 681-6840.\nNote: We are open only Friday\nnights 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. and Saturdays 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.\nQUALITY TRIO STEREO EQUIP-\nmcnt. Powerful 80 watt amplifier\nand AM/FM tuner. $125.00. Phone\n228-9871.\nRENTALS & REAL ESTATE\nRooms\n81\nSLEEPING ROOM. GIRL. PRIV-\nate entrance and bath. Near gates\nand beach. $45.00 month. 224-4165.\nROOM FOR RENT, MALE, PRIV.\nent., priv. bath, 1% blocks from\ncampus. Prefer third or fourth\nyear. $40.00. 224-6389.\n4th YEAR ENGINEERING STU-\ndent requires roommate to share\napartment on 2500 Block W. 4th.\n$55 mo. 732-6965 after 6.\nROOM FOR 1 MALE STUDENT,\nsharing kitchen privileges. $40.\n5529 University Blvd. 224-1772.\nRoom & Board\n82\nLARGE CLEAN ROOMS \u00E2\u0080\u0094 BEST\nfood on campus. Deke House, 5765\nAgronomy, 224-9691.\nMEN ONLY. LARGE CARPETED\nrooms. Good food. Color TV. Large\nsocial areas. 5725 Agronomy Rd.\nManager, 224-9620.\nFurnished Apts.\n83\nUnfurnished Apts.\n84\nHalls For Rent\n85\nHouses\u00E2\u0080\u0094Furn. & Unfurn.\n86\nFURNISHED HOUSE TILL APRIL\n$175 per month; 10 minutes from\nUBC. Phone 263-7274. Tuesday, January 12, 1971\nTHE UBYSSEY\nPage 11\nBurr and Bisons\nend Birds' streak\nBy BILL RUBY\nAngus Burr and the Manitoba Bisons came to War Memorial Gym\nSaturday night with something to prove. The Bisons were playing a\nteam with a 32 game winning streak, with a few of those wins at the\nexpense of Manitoba. The streak ended Saturday night in overtime with\nthe favored UBC Thunderbirds losing 78-76.\nThe defeat was due mainly through the efforts of Burr, who\nscored 36 points, passed well, effectively broke the man to man press,\nand who provided the leadership, confidence, and poise necessary to\nwin the close games. Asked about Burr, UBC coach Peter Mullins said,\n\"He played over his head but he played a hell of a ball game, and you\ncan't take that away from him.\"\nBut Burr didn't do it all. The physically strong Bisons controlled\nthe boards, especially on defence, thanks to the help of a successful\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 2-1-2 zone.\nAccording to his coach, Manitoba's Ross Wedlake, the game's\nhigh rebounder with 18, \"did a very good job considering he had four\nfouls since the eight minute mark of the second half.\" When coach Jack\nLewis was also asked why the Bisons kept switching from a man to man\ndefence to a zone defence in the first half, he said,\"The zone was there\nmainly to stop Thorsen, while the switching to man to man was done to\nkeep the Birds off balance.\" Half-time score was 33-32 for Manitoba.\nThe win by Manitoba can also be attributed to the Thunderbirds\ninability or desire to 'play their game'. The Birds didn't rebound, fast\nbreak, hit the open man, make the easy shot, or, play good defense. As\nMullins said after the game, \"We haven't been playing well all year and\nit finally caught up with us.\" He also made specific reference to the\nBirds refusal to run, and the fact that four consecutive lay ups were\nmissed by four different Birds.\nGood defence couldn't have prevented Burr from having a good\nnight, but it might have stopped him from scoring some of his 28 points\n_.in regulation time plus all the Bisons' eight overtime points.\nBright spots for the Birds were Thorsen with 28 points and\nMacKay with 17 points. Sankey, who scored 14 points, led the Birds in\nrebounds and assists with four. Defensively, Bob Dickson looked the\nbest of those who tried to check Burr.\nFriday night the superior Birds defeated the weak University of\nWinnipeg Wesman 97-62. Half-time score of 49-32 was accomplished by\na good man to man press causing numerous turn overs, and a good\n. running game which saw, at times, the Birds fast break as only the Birds\ncan do.\nRon Thorsen, noted more for his offensive ability, did a good job\ndefensing Barry King, whom Mullins thinks \"is as good a guard as there\nis in this league\". Bob Allan scored 17 points for the Wesmen, with\nKing getting 14 points, mainly on long jumpers.\nAll the Birds played well with Thorsen gaining 25 points and\nMacKay 14. If the Wesman had any thoughts of coming back in the\n-second half, it was throttled by Stan Callegari, who got 10 of his 14\npoints early in the second half, mainly on long jump shots. Stan also led\nthe team in assists with five. Mullins was pleased with all his ball\nplayers, but picked out Darryl Gjernes, who started off the game really\nwell, and Peter Herd, whom Mullins said \"played quite well.\"\nOne observation. Where is the fan support when the cheerleaders\ndo their thing? Only once during the Manitoba game did the fans\nrespond. Maybe if we support them the 'Cartwheel' might come back.\n... and in Victoria Monday\nYesterday afternoon the Thunderbirds left a snowclad campus for\nVancouver Island and were never behind in an evening game as they\ntrounced the University of Victoria 92-72.\nHigh scorer for the Birds was forward Jack Hoy with 24 points\nfollowed by Thorsen with 19, MacKay with 15, and Sankey with 14.\nA complete contrast to Saturday night's game is provided in the\nshooting percentages. The Thunderbirds shot 48% from the floor last\nnight compared to 40% against Manitoba. But it was on the free throw\nline that the measure becomes greatest. Against the Bisons, the Birds\nshot only 48% while last night they scored 85% of their free throws.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094keith dunbar photo\n\"I JUST CAN'T BEAR TO LOOK\" says UBC's Ron Thorsen (23)\nas he drives for the hoop in Saturday night's basketball game\nagainst the Manitoba Bisons. Attempting to stop Thorsen are\nRoss Wedlake (24) and Bob Town (31) of the Bisons while UBC's\nDarryl Gjernes (11) does look on.\nPlease help us out\nThe sports department definitely needs writers, so if your sport is\nbeing neglected or you would like to do some sports reporting features\netc.\u00E2\u0080\u009E come on in and see Keith Dunbar any noon at 12:30. If he is not\nthere, please leave your name and a phone number where you can be\ncontacted. Anyone who applied last term and heard no more noise is\nialso very welcome.\nIntramurals\nCO-REC. VOLLEYBALL\nThis starts on Tuesday at 12:30 p.m.\nin War Memorial Gym. Everyone is\nwelcome. The volleyball nets will be\nset up.\nBASKETBALL\nMonday night basketball games have\nbeen cancelled. Check with the Intramural office regarding rescheduling.\n%\nCURLING BONSPIEL RESULTS\nA Division B Division Consolation\n1 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Forestry I Dekes Totem I\n2 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Aggies II P.E. MBA\n3 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Union II Dentistry Aggies I\n4 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Fort Camp Dentistry\nOTHERS\nIf you are interested in participating\nin Bowling, Snooker, and Skiing, come\nto the Intramural office to sign up before January 14th.\nLive action!!\nSee your great AMS Council in person\n-Tell them what you think of what\nthey're doing!\nSub Conversation\nPit\nThurs., Jan. 14\n12:30\nTopic: CONSTITUTION\nCHANGES\nAMS Special Meeting\nFencers jab\nThirty-two of the best fencers\nin B.C. met over the weekend to\ndetermine who would be on the\nfencing team that will represent\nB.C. in the Canadian Winter\nGames next month.\nThe UBC team, consisting of\nsix contestants in the men's foil\ntournament and one contestant in\nthe women's, fared relatively well,\nalthough none made it on the B.C.\nteam. Linton Von Beroldingen\nand Norm Price made it to the\nsemi-finals and Chris Joy placed\nfifth in the finals.\nChris and Norm also fenced\nwith epee on Sunday. Chris\nadvanced to the finals and\nfinished eighth.\nSusan Joeck, a UBC grad\nstudent and member of the\nVancouver Blades, won first place\nin the women's competition.\nSoccer team\nties and loses\nThe UBC Birds, off to a slow\nstart this season, played inspired\nsoccer this weekend at Empire\nStadium. Spurred on by 15 fans\nSaturday, they settled for a 1-1 tie\nwith Firefighters. Rick Gunn,\ntripped-up on a breakaway,\nretaliated by setting up Robin\nElliott from a free kick.\nSunday, the Birds outplayed\nNew Westminster Blues but\ndropped the game 2-1. The Birds\nmissed their super star, Gary\nThompson, who was out with a\nbad ankle. John Hibberson,\nreplacing Thompson at left wing,\nscored the goal Sunday. The Birds\nwere also aided in the nets by Jim\nKitsul, who made some\nsensational saves.\nAlthough coach Joe Johnson\nwas disappointed over the missed\nopportunities in the weekend\ngames, he hopes that the team will\ncapitalize on their slim chances\nleft for the playoffs.\nESCAPE\ninto the\nUNDERWATER WORLD\nof\nScuba Diving\nGreg Kocher\u00E2\u0080\u0094Underwater Sports\nPrivate\n& Group Lessons\nPhone 733-5809\nAll Equipment Supplied\n6-Wk. Course-$40.00\nNaui & Navy Certification\nNext Course Starts:\nTues., Jan. 12th at 7:30\nSORE FEET?\nNow your ski boot miseries can be\nended. Have the boot specialist\ntransform your old plastic boots\ninto something warm and\ncomfortable with a perfect fit and\nbetter edge control.\nWe use a new patented method of\nfoaming from the originators of this\nmodern concept.\nWe stock DOLOMITE foam boots.\nCUSTOM\nFOAM FIT\n73 Alexander \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Gastown\nPhone 687-5228\nManager: Byron Gracie Page 12\nTHE U-BYSS E Y\nTuesday, January 12, 1971\nA/- Burns.\nDreaming\nabout a future\nOr, when is a transient not a transient?\nBy JOHN GREBBS\nIt's a brand new year and the grey old world of\n1970 has been obscured in a gentle blanket of soft,\nvirgin-white snow.\nBut underneath it's the same old, grey world.\nJust a little colder.\nEspecially if you happen to be a transient youth\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 that almost mythical anti-hero who tramped\nthrough the media for most of 1970 and managed to\nend up in Vancouver.\nIt's 1971 and there are still transient young\npeople in Vancouver, drifting from feed-in to crash\npad and back. Through the snow now.\nIf you're not a transient youth (and who is?),\nyou're probably sick of hearing about hungry\n15-year-olds from Nova Scotia.\nBut there are still young people in Vancouver\nwithout housing, without employment, ineligible for\nwelfare or unemployment insurance, without a\nregular source of food but fixing to stay here.\nAnd Joshua \u00E2\u0080\u0094 an ambitious young organization\nborn last fall during the Jericho residents' occupation\nof SUB \u00E2\u0080\u0094 is working towards making them citizens of\nVancouver in the more traditional sense.\nJoshua is working on a scheme that will, it hopes,\nprovide at least some of the young people with a\npermanent address, source of income, and marginal\nemployment.\nThe organization - armed with a $250 grant\nfrom Inner City Services \u00E2\u0080\u0094 will rent a house in East\nVancouver in the next two weeks for 10 young\npeople, spokesman Chris Krawczyk, arts 3, said\nMonday in an interview.\nThis will give them a permanent address and\nmake some eligible for welfare \u00E2\u0080\u0094 the legal limit is\nfour welfare recipients per address.\n\"As soon as the people are in the house they will\nbecome responsible for their own food and the rent,\"\nsaid Krawczyk.\n\"We will then get the money back from them\nover the month and we can use it to open another\nhouse.\"\nJJJM.rawczyk said small crafts workshops will be set\nup in the houses to provide the young people with a\nmeans of earning pocket money through the sale of\ncandles and simple leather work.\n\"Joshua will take them down and help them get\nwelfare, try and help them get jobs but the idea is to\nmake them self-sufficient \u00E2\u0080\u0094 if they don't mention the\nrent they'll just be evicted because we're not going to\npay any more after the first month's rent,\" Krawczyk\nsaid.\nAbout 20 young people who have heard about\nthe plan are waiting for the house to open. They are\nfrom all over the country and now they are in\nVancouver.\nAt the moment, they are living/'in and around\"\nCool Aid (which handles the feed-ins) and the Innter\nCity Service hostel (which has 50, usually occupied,\nbeds).\nKrawczyk said a similar, co-operative house is\nalready operating in Kitsilano with 12 people. It was\nestablished at the end of November with private\nfunds from the people, who Joshua brought together,\nand a $100 loan from Cool Aid, which has been\nrepaid.\nSome of the young people in the Kits house \u00E2\u0080\u0094\none of them is 35 years old \u00E2\u0080\u0094 are on welfare and\nothers \"just exist\" on the overflow.\n\"Most of them are legal,\" said Krawczyk, when\nasked how old most of them are.\nThe entire housing scheme is only semi-legal \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nwith various zoning transgressions, real and projected\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 and admittedly ambitious (maybe naively so).\nBut Krawczyk and her Joshua contemporaries\nfeel it can work.\n\"We figured it out and in a communal house of\n10 people it should take only about $40 a head per\nmonth for food and rent. Between the incomes in the\nhouse there should be enough.\"\nUnemployment is restrictively high, and rising \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nespecially among the young, unskilled \u00E2\u0080\u0094 and paying\njobs in industry will be hard to come across,\npermanent address or not.\nJ)Ci,nter phase two of the Joshua plan \u00E2\u0080\u0094 equally\nambitious. And maybe not feasible, but worth trying.\n\"Our dream for employment is to have a regular\nre-cycling collection business \u00E2\u0080\u0094 collecting old papers,\nbottles, cans and rags and selling them to the depots\nthat handle them.\n\"We figure it's feasible, once we get going, to\nmake up to $1,500 a month with a minimum of\neffort,\" said Krawczyk.\nThe plan calls for the young people working in\nteams of three, under supervision of the eight Joshua\nworkers, to do the collection and split the profits.\n\"We've already made about $200 in the past\nweek and a half with the one VW van we have. \"But\nmost of it went to repairs and we've bought a\ncardboard baler \u00E2\u0080\u0094 I don't know what it looks like,\nbut it bales cardboard and they are supposed to\ndeliver it today.\n\"And we already have routes set up in the West\nEnd. The apartment managers and some of the office\nmanagers have been very good about it.\"\nJoshua needs trucks for the operation and is\nappealing to people with such vehicles to donate,\nloan, or rent or sell cheaply.\n\"We've already had one truck donated. I haven't\nseen it yet but a guy phoned the other night and said\nwe could have it.\"\nAnd with an eye to the future \u00E2\u0080\u0094 when, hopefully\nthe schemes will be working \u00E2\u0080\u0094 some of the Joshua\nworkers are taking lessons in Gestalt therapy.\n\"Hopefully we might be able to set up groups in\nthe houses and give the kids the option of joining in.\n\"Most of them are really mixed up, dis-oriented.\nAnd Gestalt ultimately makes people aware they are\nresponsible for their own shit,\" Krawczyk said.\nJoshua at the moment is mostly a group of\npeople with plans.\nThe hard-core of eight organizers, some of them\nformer workers at the Jericho hostel, are living on\nwelfare and working full time on Joshua.\nThey are backed by a board of directors -\"there\nare about 10 of them, I think, including some really\nstraight people,\" said. Krawczyk, who is also on the\nboard \u00E2\u0080\u0094 that includes social workers, clergy, Simon\nFraser University professors and a representative of\nthe Children's Aid Society.\nThe organization has sent the appropriate papers\nto Victoria and expects to be registered under the\nSocieties Act withing the next two weeks.\nJoshua started as a feed-in and housing\ncommittee during the SUB occupation by Jericho\ntransients in October.\n\"We did that then because it had to be done. But\nwe are out of that now \u00E2\u0080\u0094 those are just band-aid\nsolutions. We want to try and solve part of the\nproblem.\n\"We got going under the realization that all three\nlevels of government were just buck-passing about the\ntransient situation and weren't serious about doing\nanything to help,\" said Krawczyk.\nShe said that Joshua is attempting to perform a\nunique function as the other local agencies dealing\nwith the same young population \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Cool Aid and the\nInner City Service \u00E2\u0080\u0094 are involved with temporary,\nstop-gap measures.\n\"But we are attempting some long term solutions\nfor getting the kids off the street.\"\nJoshua can use any help or donations they can\nget. Any donations of furniture, food, money or\nother goods will be accepted at 1952 West Fourth. Or\nphone Bill at 733-6511, or Gordie or Ted at\n876-7860."@en . "Newspapers"@en . "Vancouver (B.C.)"@en . "LH3.B7 U4"@en . "LH3_B7_U4_1971_01_12"@en . "10.14288/1.0128684"@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 .