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Arts students blast Kenn y By PAT KANOPSK I Arts dean Doug Kenny came in for further criticism from the arts l undergraduate society Monday for his handling of student represen- tation on faculty committees . Numerous speakers at a meeting held to discuss AUS strategy i n further dealings with Kenny and faculty members over the matter YSSEY' . questioned Kenny's conduct on the issue . Wednesday night at senate Kenny proposed students only be allowe d 4 .89 per cent representation on faculty committees, just below th e minimum five per cent set down in senate guidelines . Kenny also asked senate to allow the registrar rather than the AU S to handle voting procedure and t o exclude first and second yea r students from serving on th e committees . The motion was referred to a future senate meeting becaus e midnight adjournment interrupte d discussion on the matter . Said AUS president Bill Moen : "Our primary objection is the registrar's handling of the election . It would result in a mail ballo t where the department would mai l out the list of majors and honor s students for nomination to ever y student in the department . "Nominees with the most sup- port would then appear on th e ballot," he said . "However the result of thi s system is that student represen- tatives from each departmen t would not be aware of students ' desires or feelings and therefor e have no responsibility to them, " said Moen . VANCOUVER, B.C ., TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1973 af~IOD 4a 228-230 1 SOMEONE UPSTAIRS DECIDED to spell it out . In case anyon e didn't notice it snowed today, or so says that intrepid angel, tha t finger from above, the billowy, fluffy being, that informer of all ; —manse Bavaria phot o Snow White . Yes folks it was her all right . Yes, she decided to white n and brighten us all with her fluffy flakey petals Of snow . The bitch . Profs ignore Kenny mem o "Irresponsibility is what Dea n Kenny wants," charged an- thropology union president Bar- bara Heayman : "In this wa y Kenny avoids strong voca l representation from politically - aware members of the depart- ment . Since the AUS is noted fo r this and it is excluded from bein g represented nobody will rock th e boat . " Both Heayman and Moen sai d they wanted to see Kenny' s proposal referred back to th e faculty for more study an d hopefully reconsideration . "The AUS proposals are not radical, all follow "senat e guidelines and have been accepte d by other faculties," Heayman said . "It is ' important faculty an d students work together as in othe r faculties instead of opposing eac h other," she said . "According to Kenny it shouldn' t do any good to have the repor t referred back to the faculty since i t was the decision of the faculty . Bu t this isn't true," said Heayman . "I'd like a lot of students gettin g involved because disinterest i s what Kenny is counting on to pus h his reactionary forms through . " Moen charged Kenny ha d stacked the arts faculty com- mittee, chaired by history professor Margaret Prang, with See page 2 : REPORT Arts dean Doug Kenny ha s recently issued a memorandu m asking department heads not t o schedule essays instead of exam s or in-class exams with a due dat e during the beginning of December . However some professors ar e not complying with this suggestion . Assistant arts dean Donal d Soule said Monday the request ' was made because many student s are finding they have a grea t number of exams and essays due i n the last two weeks before th e regular exam period . It is unfair to give them this much work when they should b e studying for the regular exams, h e told The Ubyssey . Soule said he could not releas e the memo because it was ad- dressed only to department head s but said it specifically asks profs not to require assignments instea d of exams just before the exa m period . Some courses in the arts facult y have assignments of this kin d required during the beginning o f December . In fine arts 125, a take-hom e exam is due Dec . 6 . Frances Robinson, who teaches the cours e said a later due date would creat e problems for exam markers . "I haven't heard about th e memorandum," she said . "But i t would be difficult with a class th e size of this one to mark all th e assays if we get them in later tha n Dec . 6 . " She said a class the size of fin e arts 125 created problems an d there was no other alternative . Several students, though, ar e annoyed at the work load imposed on them and expressed doubts as t o whether they would be able to turn the essay in by Dec . 6 . "How can I ever write this darn thing in time?" said one student . "People with a full work load lik e me do appreciate the validity o f Kenny's memorandum . Ther e seems to be a discrepancy in fin e arts . Another student also said he would find it difficult to do th e assignment . "You see, I write for The Ubyssey," he said . "It's difficult to write. news stories such as this an d write essays at the same time . " A third student said she foun d assignments due in the beginnin g of December unfair, though , having to do the work durin g .exams would be equally hard . There are other courses wher e in-class and take-home exams ar e required at this time . Asian Studies professor Ren e Goldman has assigned an exam t o be written Dec . 4 . "It's only a brief identificatio n test," he said . "I wouldn't reall y call it an exam . I'll ask my classes tomorrow if they want to write it i n January, perhaps as a mid-term ." Bus t About 10 members and sup - porters of the Chilean solidarit y committee were arrested Monda y at the Canada immigration offic e after refusing to leave at 4 :30 p.m . closing time . Those arrested were charge d with common assault and ar e scheduled to appear in provincia l court Wednesday . The group occupied the office fo r the second time in as many week s protesting the federal govern- ment's inaction in acceptin g refugees escaping the militar y junta in Chile . By LINDA HOSSI E Women have more concern for huma n values and their growing influence in th e world will make it a more human world , Canada's only woman university presiden t said Monday . Sister Catherine Wallace has been characterized as a representative of the ne w wave of the Roman Catholic church but sh e calls herself "this thing which I am and whic h I have been becoming all my life . " As well as being Canada's only woma n university president she is the first woma n director on the Board of the Association o f Universities and Colleges of Canada, an administrator on numerous boards an d commissions dealing with the status o f women and education, holder of fou r honorary degrees and the Order of Canada' s Medal of Service . "Because women have a different lif e pattern what we bring is a differen t prespective," she said . "The dilemma I've had is that most of the things I participate in are a man's world an d it means coming in as a woman . And I think what's going to happen is women will par- ticipate on their own terms . sm . It's a man's world Wallac e "I wonder how a married woman coul d have the career I have had if she has famil y obligations," Wallace said at the pres s conferemce . "I think we have to have another suf- fragette movement . "We needn't call it that . It's all going to b e based on the equality in marriage that make s it possible for (women to participate i n society) . "The whole thing about equality i n marriage is that parents are responsible for children, not the mother," she said . Wallace belongs to a congregation bu t receives no orders from them and so is free t o do her own work . She said she doesn't feel protected by th e church . "I don't like to use the word protection . I think protection prevents risk and risk no t being present prevents a large degree o f creativity . "Becoming a (university) president mean s being at the call of the university an d society," she said . Mount Saint Vincent was originally a Catholic women's college and although no t officially co-educational, since Wallace too k :ea over the presidency male applicants have been accepted, she said. The students who go to St . Vincent live in a real world, not a Catholic ghetto, Wallac e said . "If I were in the United States right now I' d want to teach in the public schools," she said , adding that if she taught in a separate school she would want to be sure it was integrate d into society . "I think Canada's lucky because Canad a hasn't grown up yet," Wallace said . "I think it is of great value for us to have th e U .S . beside us because they are ahead of u s and they make th mistakes and then we don' t do those things unless we're fools . " Recently Wallace took part in a Canadia n bishops' commission on the role of women i n the church . The commission dealt with women in th e hierarchy of the church as well as in everyda y life, she said . "It's not very different from looking a t women in society . The same kinds of at- titudes, the same kinds of prejudices ar e present, but with a different bias . " See page 2 : WOME N 4,

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Arts students blast KennyBy PAT KANOPSK I

Arts dean Doug Kenny came in for further criticism from the arts lundergraduate society Monday for his handling of student represen-tation on faculty committees .

Numerous speakers at a meeting held to discuss AUS strategy i nfurther dealings with Kenny and faculty members over the matter

YSSEY'.questioned Kenny's conduct on the issue .Wednesday night at senate Kenny proposed students only be allowe d

4 .89 per cent representation on faculty committees, just below th eminimum five per cent set down in senate guidelines .

Kenny also asked senate to allow the registrar rather than the AU Sto handle voting procedure and toexclude first and second yearstudents from serving on thecommittees .

The motion was referred to afuture senate meeting becaus emidnight adjournment interrupteddiscussion on the matter .

Said AUS president Bill Moen :"Our primary objection is theregistrar's handling of the election .It would result in a mail ballotwhere the department would mai lout the list of majors and honorsstudents for nomination to everystudent in the department .

"Nominees with the most sup-port would then appear on theballot," he said .

"However the result of thissystem is that student represen-tatives from each departmentwould not be aware of students 'desires or feelings and therefor ehave no responsibility to them, "said Moen .

VANCOUVER, B.C., TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1973 af~IOD4a 228-2301

SOMEONE UPSTAIRS DECIDED to spell it out . In case anyon edidn't notice it snowed today, or so says that intrepid angel, tha tfinger from above, the billowy, fluffy being, that informer of all ;

—manse Bavaria photo

Snow White . Yes folks it was her all right . Yes, she decided to white nand brighten us all with her fluffy flakey petals Of snow . The bitch .

Profs ignore Kenny mem o

"Irresponsibility is what DeanKenny wants," charged an-thropology union president Bar-bara Heayman: "In this wayKenny avoids strong vocalrepresentation from politically -aware members of the depart-ment . Since the AUS is noted forthis and it is excluded from bein grepresented nobody will rock theboat . "

Both Heayman and Moen sai dthey wanted to see Kenny' sproposal referred back to thefaculty for more study andhopefully reconsideration .

"The AUS proposals are notradical, all follow "senateguidelines and have been accepte dby other faculties," Heayman said .

"It is ' important faculty andstudents work together as in otherfaculties instead of opposing eachother," she said .

"According to Kenny it shouldn' tdo any good to have the repor treferred back to the faculty since i twas the decision of the faculty . Bu tthis isn't true," said Heayman ."I'd like a lot of students gettin ginvolved because disinterest iswhat Kenny is counting on to pushhis reactionary forms through . "

Moen charged Kenny hadstacked the arts faculty com-mittee, chaired by historyprofessor Margaret Prang, with

See page 2 : REPORT

Arts dean Doug Kenny hasrecently issued a memorandumasking department heads not toschedule essays instead of examsor in-class exams with a due dateduring the beginning of December .

However some professors arenot complying with this suggestion .

Assistant arts dean Donal dSoule said Monday the request 'was made because many studentsare finding they have a grea tnumber of exams and essays due i nthe last two weeks before theregular exam period .

It is unfair to give them this

much work when they should b estudying for the regular exams, hetold The Ubyssey .

Soule said he could not releas ethe memo because it was ad-dressed only to department headsbut said it specifically asks profsnot to require assignments insteadof exams just before the exa mperiod .

Some courses in the arts facultyhave assignments of this kindrequired during the beginning ofDecember .

In fine arts 125, a take-hom eexam is due Dec . 6. Frances

Robinson, who teaches the coursesaid a later due date would createproblems for exam markers .

"I haven't heard about thememorandum," she said . "But i twould be difficult with a class thesize of this one to mark all theassays if we get them in later thanDec . 6 . "

She said a class the size of finearts 125 created problems andthere was no other alternative .

Several students, though, areannoyed at the work load imposedon them and expressed doubts as towhether they would be able to turn

the essay in by Dec . 6 ."How can I ever write this darn

thing in time?" said one student ."People with a full work load likeme do appreciate the validity ofKenny's memorandum. Thereseems to be a discrepancy in finearts .

Another student also said hewould find it difficult to do theassignment.

"You see, I write for TheUbyssey," he said . "It's difficult towrite. news stories such as this andwrite essays at the same time . "

A third student said she foundassignments due in the beginningof December unfair, though ,having to do the work during.exams would be equally hard .

There are other courses wherein-class and take-home exams arerequired at this time .

Asian Studies professor ReneGoldman has assigned an exam tobe written Dec . 4 .

"It's only a brief identificationtest," he said. "I wouldn't reallycall it an exam . I'll ask my classestomorrow if they want to write it inJanuary, perhaps as a mid-term ."

BustAbout 10 members and sup -

porters of the Chilean solidaritycommittee were arrested Mondayat the Canada immigration offic eafter refusing to leave at 4 :30 p.m .closing time.

Those arrested were chargedwith common assault and arescheduled to appear in provincia lcourt Wednesday .

The group occupied the office forthe second time in as many week sprotesting the federal govern-ment's inaction in acceptingrefugees escaping the militaryjunta in Chile .

By LINDA HOSSI EWomen have more concern for huma n

values and their growing influence in th eworld will make it a more human world ,Canada's only woman university presiden tsaid Monday .

Sister Catherine Wallace has beencharacterized as a representative of the newwave of the Roman Catholic church but shecalls herself "this thing which I am and whic hI have been becoming all my life . "

As well as being Canada's only womanuniversity president she is the first woma ndirector on the Board of the Association o fUniversities and Colleges of Canada, anadministrator on numerous boards andcommissions dealing with the status o fwomen and education, holder of fourhonorary degrees and the Order of Canada' sMedal of Service .

"Because women have a different lif epattern what we bring is a differen tprespective," she said .

"The dilemma I've had is that most of thethings I participate in are a man's world andit means coming in as a woman . And I thinkwhat's going to happen is women will par-ticipate on their own terms .

sm.

It's a man's world Wallace"I wonder how a married woman could

have the career I have had if she has familyobligations," Wallace said at the pressconferemce .

"I think we have to have another suf-fragette movement.

"We needn't call it that . It's all going to b ebased on the equality in marriage that make sit possible for (women to participate insociety) .

"The whole thing about equality i nmarriage is that parents are responsible forchildren, not the mother," she said .

Wallace belongs to a congregation butreceives no orders from them and so is free todo her own work .

She said she doesn't feel protected by thechurch .

"I don't like to use the word protection . Ithink protection prevents risk and risk no tbeing present prevents a large degree o fcreativity .

"Becoming a (university) president meansbeing at the call of the university an dsociety," she said .

Mount Saint Vincent was originally aCatholic women's college and although no tofficially co-educational, since Wallace too k

:ea

over the presidency male applicants havebeen accepted, she said.

The students who go to St . Vincent live in areal world, not a Catholic ghetto, Wallacesaid .

"If I were in the United States right now I' dwant to teach in the public schools," she said ,adding that if she taught in a separate schoolshe would want to be sure it was integrate dinto society .

"I think Canada's lucky because Canad ahasn't grown up yet," Wallace said .

"I think it is of great value for us to have th eU .S . beside us because they are ahead of usand they make th mistakes and then we don' tdo those things unless we're fools . "

Recently Wallace took part in a Canadianbishops' commission on the role of women i nthe church .

The commission dealt with women in th ehierarchy of the church as well as in everydaylife, she said .

"It's not very different from looking a twomen in society . The same kinds of at-titudes, the same kinds of prejudices arepresent, but with a different bias . "

See page 2 : WOME N

4,

Page 2

THE UBYSSEY

Tuesday, November 20, 197 3

Women actualizeFrom page 1

In the meetings the women aretrying to actualize the ideals of thechurch which professes not todiscriminate on the basis of sex ,Wallace said .

They want to establish th eparticular dilemmas of Catholi cwomen in a secular society, she 'said .

"We make no statements ofproblems. We make an effort toestablish some sort of grass rootsmeeting to discuss what is a valu eto women and what is a dilemma . "

The purpose of the meetings is toallow women to come to terms withthemselves and rather than giveanswers the women are content tolet people ask their own questions ,Wallace said .

"It's just the teaching method ,really," she said .

From page 1people opposed to studen trepresentation .

Kenny's proposals to senatewere based on the recom-mendations of the Prang report .

"Kenny is instrumental in the 'report because he appointed peopleto the Prang committee who wereopposed to student represen-tation — in effect he stacked thecommittee in his favor since no-onevocally in favor of studen trepresentation was on the com-mittee," he said .

During Monday's meetingvarious forms of strategy weresuggested . Boycotting the elec-tions, petitions, discussion withfaculty members and the use ofclass time to discuss the Pran greport with the students weresuggested.

"I'd like to see in-clas sdiscussion regarding the report ,said Moen. "It ' would put som epressure on the faculty and thei rstand on the report .

"However, pressuring th efaculty doesn't mean that thereport will be referred back to thefaculty," said Moen . "Thereforesome pressure will have to be put

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Wallace said two bishops werepresent at the commission meetingbut didn't interfere with th ewomen .

"I found them so-o-o real and soin touch . And they were nevershocked .

"I would say we were veryhonest. I was tired when I wentthere and when you're tired andpeople give you a drink of gin youtend to say more of what you think .

"I found (the meeting) a thing o fvalue . A human thing of value . "

Wallace also praised the federalstatus of women report .

"It's a very impressive report, "she said . "It's wisdom . It's not justpragmatic, legal kind of thinking ."

Wallace mentioned as two of theimportant things in the report, theequality in marriage (tha tresponsibility and freedom belon g

on the senate. This is where thepetition would come in .

"Holding discussions outsideKenny's office is a rea lpossibility," said Moen . "A publicdemonstration may appeal tomembers of the senate . "

A meeting of all interested artsstudents will be held noon Wed-nesday in Buch. 106 to furtherdiscuss strategy .

idealsto men and women) and tha tsociety realize its responsibility forthe family .

"Governments must get rid ofthe illusion that day care centresare for the poor and the needy an dwomen . Day care centres are for, ,families," she said .

"The education of the child fro mthe beginning is the responsibilityof society .

"We are very short sighted whenwe say let's give loans to student sto go to university . It's too late,"Wallace said, adding she didn' tmean to disparage the loan syste mbut simply to indicate that a dif-ferent approach is needed beforethe university level .

Wallace said she agrees withrecent suggestions that when aman and a woman of equalqualifications apply for a job, thejob should to go the woman untilthe number of men and women i nall kinds of jobs equals out .

"I think we should do the samething in electing people," she said .

"Women should find women whoare competent to run .

"I don't think our universitie sand governments will be huma nplaces until (women) have equalparticipation and it's not jus ttokenism," she said .

Wallace will be talking o nwomen and the numbers game12 :30 Tuesday in the ol dauditorium and on women and thejust society 8 :15 p .m. Wednesdayin the common block of Tote mPark residences .

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Tuesday, November 20, 1973

THE UBYSSEY

Page 3

Zionism overshadows imperialis mBy RYON GUEDE S

The international Zionist con-spiracy has replaced U.S. im-perialism as a favorite theme inSoviet propaganda, UBC politica lscience professor Paul Marantzsaid in- the SUB clubs loungeMonday .

In a brief talk entitled The Sovie tUnion and the Middle East :Prospects for Peace, Marantz saidimprovement of relations betweenthe Soviet Union and the UnitedStates has caused official Sovietforeign policy to be directe dagainst Israeli aggression instea dof its previous stress on U .S . im-perialism.

"In the closed, somewhat op-pressive society of the Sovie tUnion, it is useful to have some sor tof external threat," Marantz said ."Now it is the international Zionistthreat . "

Marantz said the threat wasexpressed by the Soviet press i nwhat he called unclear, "nebulou sterms worse than in previou syears .," and basically links im-

perialists and billionaires togetherin a centralized conspiracy .

Tracing the Soviet Union's in-volvement in the middle east fro mits arms deal with Egypt in 1955 toits severing diplomatic relation swith Israel during the 1967 crisis ,Marantz noted Soviet influenceincreasing in the Middle East wit hthe decline of western influence .What occurred then, he said, wa san eventual concentration onrelations with the west .

"When the Soviets broke offrelations with Israel, they forcedall the eastern European satellites ,except Rumania, to follow suit," hesaid . "These included those smallcountries who likened Israel' sposition to their own, such a sCzechoslovakia . "

"What the Soviet press says in it sarticles and political cartoons i snot too different from Nazi anti-semitism," Marantz said . "Butalthough the papers attack thezionists, they have never ad-vocated the destruction of the

Pizzas replace hai rin SUB shop switc h

The smell of pizza will wend its way through the SUB basement nex tmonth following an Alma Mater Society council decision Wednesda ynight to give the barbershop currently occupying space their one monthnotice .

The 642 square foot floor space will now be rented to a pizza shop .Councillors felt the barbershop was not providing sufficent service fo rstudents .

"A food service would serve students better than a barbershop, "AMS co-ordinator Joanne Lindsay told The Ubyssey .

The barbershop currently pays to the AMS 13 per cent of its gros searnings, which amounts to about $135 a month .

Lindsay said the SUB management committee had received offer sfrom several firms for the space and the highest bid was made b yMilano Industria Col.ciara Ltd., the same firm which has been sellin gpizzas in the Pit.

Council instructed the building manager to negotiate a lease wit hthis firm. It will pay $7 per square foot per year, more than twice a smuch as the barbershop now pays .

In other business council received a report by nursing representativePemme Muir, on the results of a conference of the Association o fUniversities and Colleges in Canada held two weeks ago in Ottawa .

Muir said an organization called the Western Student Alliance ha dbeen planned at this meeting . It will serve to co-ordinate information o nthe various services which schools in western Canada provide . In-formation on services will be put into a computer bank and made ac-cessible to other universities, she said .

"We'll have quick expedient contact this way," she said . "I see it asa good way to get communication established . "

Muir said there will be a January conference in Saskatoon to set upthe organization .

Council also voted to receive a presentation by education rep Roge rGosselin to hold the spring AMS election earlier, since many educationstudents are away doing their February practicum in schools when th eelections are held .

It was decided since many council members were absent to wait fordicsussion of this topic till next week .

Gosselin said in his report education students involved in practicumdo not have the opportunity of running for offices and do not have achance to hear candidates . They cannot appear at classes to discus sissues and cannot be present at all-candidates meetings .

The report said there are 3,000 education students and if the AMS i sto be relevant it cannot isolate one of its major political functions of theyear from its members .

Mamooks re-opensMamooks, the student poster-making club has re-started its service

thanks to an $800 grant in the recently-approved Alma Mater Societybudget .

SUB building manager Graeme Vance said Monday the decision toclose the organization down last year was made because the AMS woul dhave needed to hire someone to police the organization . ,

The student-run organization makes posters and signs to publicizecampus events for university societies . These posters have been paidfor by the societies .

AMS treasurer John Wilson said Monday the $800 would be used t ohire a part-time employee to aid students get the organization back i noperation .

The employee would also serve to administer the supplies to th estudents working in :Mamooks . Part of the money would also cover cos tof materials, Wilson said .

Vance said he believes the organizattion can become self-sufficien tand thus the AMS could provide an expensive facility so students will b eable to earn some rnoney working part-time .

Currently, Vance said, students don't appear interested in workin gfor Mamooks . Also, he said he is finding it difficult to hire the part-tim eemployee . However, he said he expects the organization will be func -tioning by the beginning of the new year .

over relations with the west, President Richard Nixon on hisMarantz mentioned their ! visit to the Soviet Union in Maywillingness to receive U.S . 1972, just after the mining of

Haiphong harbor ."They also allowed from 2500 to

4000 Jews to emigrate to Israel pe rmonth," Marantz said . "To theextent that the Arab nations werecritical of them for allowing theemigration to continu e

"The Soviet Union would not tryto jeopardize their alliance withthe Arab states by imposing uponthem a treaty they do not want, "Marantz said . "And they have leftthe diplomatic initiative to theU.S ., while remaining closelywedded to the Arab cause .

"But the balance of power in theMiddle East is liable to cause theSoviets to block a settlement . "

Raising the question on whethe rthe Soviet Union would take theinitiative to impose a settlement ofno significant advantage to eithe rside, Marantz said such an im-position if successful would in -crease the Soviet Union' sbargaining power . He also said th eSoviets' fear of harming relationswith the west had a restrainingeffect on them .

"Every time the Soviets put theirposition on the line when there is aconflict, they suffer a setback inrelations with the west," he said .He also discussed the great cost o fsupporting the Arab statesmilitarily and economically, and .the reduced likelihood of theSoviets gaining any Ara bsatellites .

"As with their failure to secur eIndonesia, Nigeria and Ghana assatellites, so the Soviets have notbeen able to exert any great in-fluence upon the Sudan, Libya, andEgypt," Marantz said . "Oil politicsis also an important factor," hesaid. "The Soviet Union is th eworld's second greatest oi lproducer, producing half as muchas it needs, and it both imports oi lfrom the middle east and exportsits own oil .

Although not dependent on the oi lfrom the Middle East, the SovietUnion does importit because it i smuch more accessible than themail oil source in Siberia .

"If Israel gets to the point whereit has nuclear weapons, the Arabstates will put pressure on theSoviet Union to furnish them withnuclear weapons as well . TheSoviet Union does not want them t ohave these weapons," he said .

Court positions to be fille dthe AMS to advance the cause of higher learning i nthe province of B .C . "

The brief further states "the section of the AM Sbylaws which was used by AMS to justify its action i sunconstitutional ." The bylaw is dispute is AMS bylawnumber 12, section three which states no member o fthe AMS shall "sell or dispose of any publications oradvertisements on the campus" without first gettingpermission of the co-ordinator of activities .

The Ubyssey interviewed Robson after noticingthe AMS constitution section six subsection Estates :" No judgment of the court . . . shall be enforceable against any person or Alma Mater Societ yorganization adjudged guilty until it is ratified by amajority vote of students' council . "

Robson said : "We don't care very much if thestudent court decides against us ."

"We're really asking for a declaration one way oranother, he said . But if we win, we hope that studentcouncil won't pull a Nixon on us . "

Robson said his group had tried to get AMS tobring this jurisdictional matter to the student courtrather than the BCCLA but said they wouldn't .

When approached by The Ubyssey for their lega lopinions, a number of students and faculty in law fel tit was a complicated constitutional question whichthe student court might not be able to untangle .

It's possibly beyond the jurisdiction of the cour tand the Board of Governors or even the provincia lcourts will have to be called in to decide, said one la wstudent .

By Monday evening only six applications for thepositions on the court had been received . They are :Rob McDiarmid, law ; Brian Starr, law ; Don Millerd,law ; Svend Robinson, law ; Amarjeet Rattan, arts ;and Lid Strand, arts .

Jewish race nor failed to recognizeIsrael as a nation. "

Discussing the Soviets' concern

—tarry manulak photoPAUL MARANTZ and about a dozen listeners discussed Sovie tposition in the Midd l e East, Monday in SUB clubs lounge . Marantz is apolitical science professor at UBC .

By GORD MULLI N

The four positions currently unfilled on the Alm aMater Society student court will be filled from ap-plications to be reviewed at the AMS council meetin gWednesday .

The court is being convened to rule on the Georgi aStraight dispute .

The court now has three law students and fourmore students from any faculty still must be ap-pointed . The student council selection committee willmeet Wednesday to make recommendations tostudent council AMS president Brian Loomes sai dMonday .

The student court is scheduled to meet Thursda yto hear arguments on the confiscation of the Straightby the AMS Oct . 4 . Third year law students RickBallantyne and Randy Zien will argue the case for th eStraight and the B .C . Civil Liberties Association ,which is backing the Vancouver undergroun dnewspaper.

In a press release Monday BCCLA president RegRobson said : "Our association is not taking sides i nthe circulation battle between The Ubyssey and theStraight but we are concerned about whether aprivate organization can take unto itself the authorityto summarily deny the right of a competingnewspaper to be distributed in a public place . "

The B .C .C .L .A . case will be based on two grounds :Firstly that "the AMS has no authority to regulate theactivities of non-students on campus ." Only theBoard of Governors has this power, claims the BC-CLA brief.

Secondly, "the action in prohibiting the freedistribution of the Straight conflicts with the object o f

.i'

Page 4

THE UBYSSEY

Tuesday, November 20, 197 3

FettersTIlE! UPYSU YNOVEMBER 20, 197 3

Published Tuesdays, Thursdays and Fridays throughout th euniversity year by the Alma Mater Society of the University o fB .C. Editorial opinions are those of the writer and not of the AMSor the university administration . Member, Canadian Universit yPress . The Ubyssey publishes Page Friday, a weekly commentar yand review . The Ubyssey's editorial offices are located in roo m241K of the Student Union Building .Editorial departments, 228-2301 ; Sports, 228-2305; advertising ,228-3977 .

Co-editors : Vaughn Palmer, Michael $asge sThese worked : Gary Coull, Ryon Guedes, Ken Dodd, Jake van der Kamp ,Mike Sasges, Vaughn Palmer, Marise Savaria, Lesley Krueger, Tom Barnes ,Larry Manulak, Boyd McConnell, Pat Kanopski, Rick Lymer, Peter Leibik ,Alan Doree, Mark Buckshon, Gordon (Mr . Christine Krawczyk) Mullin ,Linda Hossie, Peter Cummings, Prudence Ramsbottom, Ralph Maurer andRobin Burgess .

J

Let it beOn Wednesday all UBC students, faculty, staff,

administration hacks and general hangers on get to vote o nhow the University Endowment Lands should be used .

It is a perfect opportunity for the people out here t osee if the New Democratic Party is serious in its frequentcalls for feedback from the people .

More importantly it might help nip in the bud thegovernment's obvious plans to build low-cost housing on th elands .

We think voters should indicate they would prefer th elands developed for park and recreational purposes, alon gthe lines of Stanley Park, which would benefit all the peopl eof Vancouver .

We urge this, while granting the existence of aVancouver-wide housing crisis of enormous proportions . Wejust don't think plowing up the endowment lands fo rhousing is anything but a temporary piece-meal solutio nwhich will irreparably damage one of the few remainin gparklands in the Greater Vancouver area .

At best Nicholson's scheme, if it works — and that i sdubious — will create one year's respite before the nex thousing crisis hits us .

At worst it will create a typical alienating publi chousing development, more nefariously known as " aproject", which will please no one including those poo rsouls who have to live in it for lack of a better place .

At the same time any housing project would increas eproblems in the already over-crowded West PointGrey-Dunbar area while gobbling up a large. chunk of greenspace .

Nicolson is wrong to have cast around for the mos timmediately obvious solution — take the land from theacademics — to a very difficult problem . He will have t oadmit that there are no easy solutions .

The real problem (you ready) is that Vancouver ha sonly so much land and its facilities are already strapped byover population .

If the NDP is serious about doing something to solv ethat problem, then it should introduce a radical no-growt hprogram to decentralize Vancouver .

Let's see them spend the money on the UEL housin gproposal in Tofino or Grand Forks. Let's see them buildtheir snazzy government buildings or insurance headquartersin Kamloops or Prince Rupert . Let's see them pour moneyinto creating jobs in Fort St . John or Chilliwack .

There is no excuse for centralization . It is time thi sgovernment realized centralization is unhealthy ; mentally ,socially, economically, and physically, for any one,regardless of good intentions, to participate in the grea tcampaign to cram as many people as possible into th ealready bursting-at-the seams city of Vancouver .

LiesWe'd like to reply to the shoddy

collection of lies (errors!?) con-tained in Gluska's letter (Th eUbyssey, Nov. 15) in order to dispe lthe confusion he may have created .

First of all, we've never evenheard of this Gluska, so we're notsure where he got his ideas, but hisstatements about how often w ewere in our offices are simply lies .The co-ordinator was only hired a sa part-time employee of the AlmaMater society . The president wasnot feeding reindeer during th esummer ('though he is now, for 1 -1/2-hours a day) .

Council, under By-Law 4(8) (e) ,does have the power to pay asalary or honoria to the president ,not to sit in his office, but to doeverything the job entails . The co -ordinator's work was more specificas was the treasurer's and vice-president's . All of us submittedreports to council of our summe rwork .

We do, however, reject hi ssuggestion that we should sit in ouroffices eight hours a day doin gpaperwork .

AMS council has hired high-salaried administrators to doprecisely that ; administer . I twould be untrue to suggest wedon't do it .

A large portion of our time i sspent in committee meetings ,negotiations with the Universityadministration, finding rooms fo rstudent meetings, trying to dea lwith problems in SUB etc . etc ., i nfact, we think, too much time .

It is our position that the AMS"being almost entirely an ad-ministrative body and executivemembers behaving like junio rbusinessmen is precisely what' swrong.

This gives rise to nothing o fimportance for students . It takestheir money and counts it, provide ssome entertainment and escape sfrom reality (i .e . Beach Boysnostalgia and the Pit) andcollaborates with the universityadministration to rip off studentsprecisely as it's done since 1925/26when it (the AMS) was in-corporated in order to float a bondissue (at students' expense) t obuild a university gymnasium .

But, it doesn't give rise to anyorganizing to change educationand the University as a whole . W ethink the most important workwe've done is characterized by las tweek's program in SUB on th epolitical economy and stage ofrevolution in Canada . It's theclarification of political questionswhich will have the most fa rreaching effects for students .

As for the $1,400 mistake in thebudget, Gluska still doesn't havehis fact right . The budget was no tbalanced by taking money fro mintramurals as he suggests . In-stead, Council made up the moneyby not approving the proposed newbusiness machine for the office .

It's certainly true that th eamount of money left over afte radministrative costs for undergra dsocieties doesn't amount to much ,but that's not, strictly speaking, aresult of AMS hierarchy blunders .

It's a consequence of the overal lAMS structure and functions aspointed out in recent Ubysseyeditorials . Which all goes back to1925/26 as we've mentioned .

In and around the AMS there ar eboth people who have entrenchedthemselves in various areas andpeople who are serious aboutserving the students .

But, our own relatively briefexperience in the AMS plus whatwe've learned from looking intovarious problems, i .e . bookstore ,Recreation UBC, residence rent -hikes and student representationhave led us to see that the AMS hasnever solved students' problemsbut has added to them if anything .At best, it provides diversions .

We are more convinced thanever of the necessity for discussionby students of political questionslike education, work, and politicsin Canada and the development ofa strategy for change.

Brian LoomesAMS president

Joanne LindsayAMS coordinator

HillelWe are sorry that Ron Campbel l

(The Ubyssey, Nov . 16) finds thereference of the ad ambiguouswhich we ran last week — the ma pof the Middle East with the captio n"A good name is better tha nprecious oil : ask the Dutch" .

We are also sorry that he did notcome to us with his question whe nthe ad appeared .

We felt that it was an obviou sreference not to any lack of mora lstance on the part of th eNetherlands but, on the contrary, acompliment. The courageous stan dof the Netherlands' people an dgovernment against the Arab oi lboycott of Europe, in an attempt toforce submission to their policies ,is well-known . The Dutch resiste dNazi aggression in World War I Iand the enforced deportation of it sJewish population . They againhave showed their moral couragein resisting a different, but no les spernicious, aggression .

This is the point the ad wished tomake. They have chosen mora lstand above immediate persona lgratification. We wish othernations would follow their lead .

We expressed our thanks to thevice consul of the Netherlands herein Vancouver . We have in the offic ea letter from him, thanking us fo rour gratitude to his country . Mr .Campbell is welcome to come i nand see us and the letter any day o fthe school week after 10 a .m .

Jean Gerbe rprogram coordinato r

hillel house

Harrumph 2I am writing in support of L.J .

Street (The Ubyssey, Nov . 16) i nhis vehement protest against yourfront page article proudl yproclaiming the consummation o fthe royal wedding .

Such mudslinging tactics a sthose employed by your reporterserve only as a means for th edefecation of a perverted mind anddo little to enhance your credibilityas a newspaper .

Surely there are sufficientcrucial issues facing the universityenvironment and deserving ofrecognition on the hallowed pagesof The Ubyssey, to prevent th eappearance of such manifestationsof a corrupt mind .

God save the queen and you rreaders from the likes of PrudenceRamsbottom .

Margaret Steelecommerce 4

UELI wish to vigorously protest th e

recent proposal to take over theundeveloped areas of th eUniversity Endowment Lands atPoint Grey for a housing project nomatter what the proposed qualityof housing will be . I think that thisland should be left as it is, apleasant undeveloped woode dpark .

While I am aware of the con-tinually increasing high cost ofhousing in the Greater Vancouverarea, I can see no logic in thesuggestion that building houses o nthis land will in any way decreasethe costs of housing any more thanmore freeways permanently solvetraffic problems . This proposal toindiscriminantly make morehouses available to the point o fsaturation, will inevitably lead to acity completely covered wit hbuildings and completely lackin gin much or any open or woode dparklands so necessary fo rrecreational purposes .

As fewer and fewer open tract sof land are left in the city, it seem slogical that a halt will be calle dnow to this conversion in land use ,rather than when the city is en-vironmentally ruined by trying tomeet an inevitably insatiabl edemand for housing .

If you have ever had the op-portunity to walk along the man ytrails in these woods, you will fin dthat they offer a very pleasant an dnecessary temporary escape fromcity life and sounds, and that man ypeople make use of them .

Over a period of years severalopen tracts of land in this city havebeen all or partially lost to housin gprojects, with the politician ssuggesting that this new tax sourcewill provide necessary additiona lrevenues for running the city .

If, as I have assumed, thes emunicipal taxes are assessed t omeet the costs of providing ser-vices and amenities, it seems thatundeveloped land requiring littl eor no maintenance costs probabl yare preferrable to developed lan dwith sustained and escalatin gmaintenance costs .

The geography of the city ofVancouver does provide accessdifficulties for the people of the cityto get to Stanley Park, which is a speninsula on a peninsula . PointGrey is much more accessible andcan provide the features of anundeveloped wooded area . Peopleuse it regularly and I for one wantit to remain as it is .

All successful machines, device sand organizations are a skilfu lcompromise that have an optimu msize . This applies to a city also, an dI think that there is plenty ofevidence in North America an d

See page 9 : LETTERS

The new Pit was officially openedMonday night.

Absolutely everybody who was anybodywas there.

From now on, they won't be. It will belongto the students .

Page 6

ADVERTISEMENT

THE UBYSSEY

ADVERTISEMENT

Tuesday, November 20, 1973

Pit to be Ovatehole for cam p

H4Most of the ruling .,ec

university turned up fo ropening of the new Pit Mon

It was a grand affair, wit )drinking B .C. champagneeating hors d'oeuvres .

Those attending included :administration president A NAllan McGavin, board o:

chairman ;chancellor Nathan N.;

justice of the B .C. supreme

Photos byPeter. Cummi i

STACKS OF BEER . . .waiting for drinkers

on the opening of the ne w

" PIT"

Halse-Martin Constructio nGENERAL CONTRACTORS

1898 West 1st 733-418 1

/

Congratulationson your

opening fro m

San Vito Tile Co .Ceramic Tile Work

6642 Main St .

321-011 4

We wish you much successwith your new "PIT "

Turner Bros.PLASTERING

CONTRACTOR S3795 East 2nd

Burnaby291-9438

his

_

~ $ EsER ,, ~r ,

Think hockey's tough today? Not on your slapshot! You shoul dhave seen it way-back-when . A real man's game. And it calle dfor a real man's beer . Old Style . Slow-brewed and naturally age dfor big beer flavour. It's the one thing that doesn't change. Ol dStyle's still a winner, year after year after year . Try it . You'll b ea fan, too .

Old Sitle SLOW-BREWED AND NATURALLY AGED.

Tuesday, November 20, 1973

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THE UBYSSEY

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Page 7

euertated

a tie ANS.on the opening of you r

NEW "PIT"McGregor & Thompson Hardwar e

Ltd.1217 E . Georgia 253-8252

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ARCHITECT,

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THE PIT . . . nobody can miss it in SUB's southwest corner .

SEATING SPACE . . . plenty of it with room to rest a sore elbow .

:ivies attend debutat= theofiiallight .rybodyer and

Gage;ernors

. i,hief

board member Beverley Lecky ;deputy president William Armstrong ;and many lesser lights, including :former Alma Mater Society president s

Doug Aldridge, Grant Burnyeat, Shau nSullivan and Roger MacAfee ;

former AMS treasurer David Dick andcurrent treasurer John Wilson ;

curly-haired AMS president BrianLoomes ; various representatives of theunderground societies ;

and of course, The Ubyssey staff .

Building manager Graeme Vance di dthe introduction of Wilson, who in turnintroduced the various heavies .

AMS vice-president Gordo nBlankstein, who architect Don Towerssaid helped greatly in the work, officiallyopened the place.

A great time was had by all — even i fthe heavies had to leave early .

Canadian Cutting & Coring(VCR) Ltd.

Concrete Sawing — Coring — Structural Bonding

1 120 E . Georgia

254-7284

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o a z~'e o/+exim9 adyaws mew 'PIT'

Page 8

ADVERTISEMENT

THE

UBYSSEY

ADVERTISEMENT

Tuesday, November 20, 197 3

Long wait for beer overas new Pit opens in SUB

Beer !('old. beer !Cold, bubbly beer !UBC students have waited years

for a decent place to quaff a fe wcold ones — now they have it .

The new Pit, officially openedMonday night by numerous big -wigs, former Alma Mater Societyhacks and the Ubyssey staff, bega non AMS planning boards as a"senior student lounge" way bac kwhen the AMS was still centred i nBrock Hall .

In September, 1971, the Huma nGovernment executive announce dthe Pit could be opened i nDecember of that year along wit han alternative food service .

But the plan needed studen tapproval .

Students, normally sqeamis habout churning out their money fo rprojects fuzzy-minded AMS em-pire builders have thought . up ,voted overwhelmingly for th eproject .

Of course, as every campus beerdrinker knows, students had tocontinue using the games room i nSUB up to last week .

Congratulations !

DAMAR GLAS SCo . Ltd .

106 Charles StreetNorth Vancouver

929-5404

Work on the new Pit finallystarted last April . The place wassupposed to be opened for Sep-tember, but labor problem sdelayed the delivery of furnishingsand other materials and the in-stallation of air conditionin gequipment, which, incidentallyclears the air every four minutes .This ain't the Cecil !

The more than $200,000 in fund sfor the Pit came from the SU Breserve fund, an AMS fun dspecifically designated for buildin gexpansion .

In terms of constructio nrequirements, money was neede dfor the demolition of a block wall i nthe SUB basement behind theThunderbird Shop, installation o fnew concrete stairs and well ,concrete slabs for mechanicalequipment, cutting and patchin gand new exits .

A new air conditioning an dexhaust system, independent o fSUB, had to be installed. Newplumbing was put in . New elec-trical appliances were installed —all in what was an empty, darkspace .• The watering hole is smartly

furnished with a real wooden-floored pit in the middle . A longbar, backed by a huge walk-i ncooler with everybody's favoritebrand, lines two walls . The ven-tilation shafts, constructed to looklike pillars, are covered withwallpaper designed from oldUbysseys .

Part of the delay was causedwhen carpets for the benche swhich line most of the walls, tabletops, vinyl wall covering, chairsand part of the sound system didn' tshow up on time because of th enational rail strike .

The chairs, built in Montreal ,were due to arrive Aug . 17 .

Building manager GraemeVance, who has lived with theproject since its conception, sai dthe only equipment which could b ebought locally was cast-iron basesfor the tables .

A strike by the pipefitters uniondelayed the installation of $45,000worth of ventilation controls .

The Pit can currently only sel lbottled beer_ Patrons can buy fivetokens for $2 .

Imported beer costs 80 cents abottle ; cider 50 cents .

The Pit will operate Tuesdays ,Wednesdays, Thursdays an dFridays from 4 p .m. to 11 :30 p .m .

It will also be open Saturdaynights with live entertainment fo rwhich a cover charge will belevied . Dancing space, althoughnot great, is about the same as an ysmall club downtown .

All you need is your AMS cardand a token, so enjoy — it's ours .

We are pleased to have do nhe electrical installation f o

the new "Pit "

The

J . H . McRa eCompany Limited

590 W . 8th

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Mechanical - Electrical - Civi l1690 W. Broadway

731-4921

Wine(48 fl . oz. pack, really .)

Nostalgicall yscenic 4-pack .

Light, whit ewine with alemon-liketaste .

Te dunscrewin gthe top fro ma bottle o fHigh Country ,as Alice put sthe chicke nsala dsandwiche son the table .

The vintne rwith a vision .

CASTLE WINES LTD ., VICTORIA, B .C ., CANADA

0

{

Tuesday, November 20, 1973

THE UBYSSEY

Page 9

LettersEurope to show that above acertain population level, a cit ybecomes unmanageable .

In my opinion to forever mee tthis demand for more housing willlead to human problems fargreater than just a lack ofrecreational park land .

R.J . Sanders

BremerI am reviewing the Working

Paper on University Governancein British Columbia excreted b ythe Bremer - Commission. As wa sreported, it certainly has apeculiar aroma to it — that o farchaic shit.

Paragraphs 8 and 12 of Specifi cPreliminary Proposals : The Boar dof Governors speak of the logic o fthe trustor-trustee relationship .Since few copies of this pamphle thave been circulated, allow me toquote them at length :

"8. The function of boards ofgovernors, strictly interpreted, i sto act as public trustees on behalfof the crown — the trustor, and toserve the university — th ebeneficiary of the trust . This is anecessary function if universitiesare to have the benefit of publi cfunds. The logic of the trustor-trustee relationship requires thattrustees have no interest in thetrust beyond serving both trustorand beneficiary . It also follows thatbeneficiaries cannot be trustees .

"12 . To those who would at thispoint protest that by excludingfaculty and students from th eboard, the committee is denyingthe possibility of real democracyon the campus, it should be pointedout that the true nature ofdemocracy lies not in who sitswhere but in the relationship of theparts to each other and to thewhole. It is pointless to argue tha tdemocracy demands the electio nof a monarch if in fact tha tmonarch is absolute ; far better tokeep the crown hereditary an dinvigorate the assembly .Trusteeship is the principl eresponsibility of the Board . "

Once we penetrate the jargon weat once see the validity of thi sposition . . . but only if we aretalking about conditions tha texisted before the industria lrevolution, or still more valid ,before the Magna Carta. It i sevident that the efficacy of theboard is no more than that of theconcept of a king .

Surely a republic is the society ofrational men. O .K., so we live in aplace called British Columbia thisshould not and does not mean w eare so provincial or parochial inour thinking as to assume som esort of obsolete power structure i sof any use to us in organizing ourcollective conscious energies ef-fectively .

We all are our own trustees andtrustors — we beneficiaries all paytaxes . The dichotomies mad ebetween public and private ar euseful, but fundamentally thes edifferentiations are fatuous . Trustis an omniphenomenum . To saythat the entire society must b echanged is precisely the point .

"It was the Duff-Derdah lcommission that in 1966 pointed ou tfor those who had eyes to see thatthe real locus of power on th ecampus was the -Senate ." Ourcommittee on university gover-nance recommends "each senat ewould consist of 25 per cent ad -ministration, 25 per cent studentsand 50 per cent faculty members . "

Underlying this statement is th ehorrendous assumption that th epersons whom we label faculty'oradministration are not students . Ifthis is true, then these people hav estopped learning, and hence shouldnot even be at a university for thisis a place of advanced learning .

Those people, if it were true theyhad stopped learning, would beincapable of making flexibleresponses to new situations — andin a world which has recentl yelucidated the DNA code and thenature of atomic energy, suchrigidity would soon prove fatal . I ffuture shock has become ahackneyed phrase, this only goes toprove the truth of the meaning o fthe words . We all are, as long as weare alive that is, students ; and wemust be to stay alive . A democrac yof the intellect really has no viablealternative at this stage of huma nevolution .

The unicameral senate, withancillary bodies, must be made u p100 per cent of students, with theproviso that we realize the facult yand administration are student salso .

After all, the entire general staffthat man this institution, as abeacon or conning tower, has a stheir first responsibility to makesure that our society can survivefor the maximum period of time .

Blair T . Longle ybiology 3

Harrumph 3With reference to your articl e

entitled Royal wedding con -summated, ( the Ubyssey, Nov . 15) ,I would like to state that I found thearticle pathetic .

Maureen Lyon ssocial work 1

WitnessAnyone witnessing an acciden t

between a late model stationwagon and a cyclist at TenthAvenue and Health Sciences Roa d(across from Winter Sports Cen-ter) at 6:45 p .m. Nov. 10 pleasecontact me at 224-9803 .

W . Art Huneyh272-2525 West Mall

campus

UELAs future parents we often

shudder at the way decisions tha twill affect our children's world ar ebeing made . The proposed En-dowment Lands housing project i sa good example of this .

In order to lower the cost o fhousing, the mayor and ne wminister of housing wish to openthe lands to development . (Despitewarnings by local realtors that this

will not appreciably affect theVancouver market . )

These lands have remained anon-suburban area (mostly byluck) for 50 years . Their value topresent, and especially future ,citizens is incalculable .

Have Art Phillips, Lorn eNicolson or their staff taken timeto think of the future importance o fthe lands or are they merelyconcerned with "solving" theimmediate housing problem in a

somewhat doubtful and short -sighted manner ?

Russ and Star Fuoco2456 West Firs t

Vancouve r

RacoonThoughts on leaving dear ol d

UBC : Please say goodbye to all m yfriends here — the racoons willappreciate it .

Wesley Schnede r

isn't the only bicycle we sell . . .but it is one bicycle we ENJOY selling !

10-year frame guarantee — stand and lock included . 2-months free service .$135 .00 . Have a Crescent Christmas .

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Page 10

THE

UBYSSEY

Tuesday, November 20, 197 3

Hot flashes'/'B9/.:0s .S4 r2trfS81Str;

THE CLASSIFIED!RATES: Campus - 3 lines, 1 day $1 .00; additional lines, 25c;

Commercial - 3 lines, 1 day $1 .50; additional lines, 35c;additional days $1 .25 & 30c.

Classified ads are not accepted by telephone and are payable i nadvance . Deadline is 11 :30 am., the day before publication:

Publications Office, Room 241 5. U.B,, USc, Van. 8, B.C.

Sisterhooddiscusse d

Sister Catherine Wallace, presi-dent of Mount St . Vincent Univer-sity in Halifax and an outspokenadvocate of women's rights will b espeaking on campus today an dWednesday .

Today's talk will be on womenand the numbers game in the ol dauditorium at noon . Wednesda yshe will talk on women and thejust society in the Totem Parkcommon block at 8 :15 p .m .

Form

ReformThree inmates, a guard and th e

program director at Matsqui med-ium security penitentiary will takepart in a panel discussion on pena l

....... .... .........

TODAYUBC TAI CHI CHUAN CLU B

Practice, 11 :30 a .m ., SUB 125 .GRAD CLASS COUNCI L

Election of grad class executive ,noon, student council chambers .

GERMAN CLU BLecture by hist . prof. John Conway ,on the cross and the swastika, noon ,International House 402 .

PRO-LIF EMeeting, noon, SUB 215 .

PRE-MED SO CDr . D . Graham speaks to a genera lmeeting, noon, IRC 2 .

DAL GRAUER LECTURE SSister Catherine Wallace on Wome nand the Numbers Game, noon, ol dauditorium .

UBC KCCInfo, about "oom-pah-pah . . get to-gether, noon, SUB 205 .

WEDNESDA YDAL GRAUER LECTURE S

Sister Catherine Wallace on Womenand the just society, 8 :15 p .m . ,Totem Park residence commonblock .

SAILING CLU BFilm - Australian 18-footers, noon .SUB 205 .

NEWMAN CLU BMeeting, noon, SUB 105B .

PRE-SOCIAL WOR KMeeting with Jack McDonald fro mschool of social work . Bring idea sfor next terms activities, noon, SU B113 .

CU EBetty Belshaw of the English de-partment on poetry, noon, Mildre dBrock room .

reform and conditions inside Can-ada's penitentiaries in SUB 21 2Thursday at noon .

Sponsored by the Alma MaterSociety speakers and educatio ncommittee the participants are al lcurrently taking part in a socia lprogram sponsored by the JohnHoward Society .

PoetessWell-known Canadian poetess

Miriam Waddington will read he rpoetry Wednesday at noon i nBuchanan 218 .

Waddington, born in Toront ohas written several collections ofher works including "Say Yes ."

Well folks, we don't want t obore you but this is another cal lfor Ubyssey staffers - photogs i nparticular .

It's not that we have any greatdearth of staff or anything, bu twe've turned the last crop ofnewies into hardened ol dUbysseyers .

You know them - they're th eone's who are continuall yswearing, drinking and doing al lmanner of noxious things bu twith a faintly incredulous look o ntheir faces, as one only newly

C

ONTOLOGY CLUBDale Maranda on Man at the Core ,noon, Buchanan 216 .

VARSITY DEMOLA YGeneral meeting, 7 :30, Sheraton ,downtown .

CHRISTIAN SCIENCERegular meeting, noon, club slounge, SUB .

THURSDAYUBC TAI CHI CHUAN CLUB

Practice, 11 :30-12 :30, SUB 125 .CCF

Douglas Young on Will Russia in-vade Palestine? noon, SUB 215 .

SPEAKEAS YGeneral meeting, 12 :30-2 :00, SU B111 .

VC FRay Bystrom on Romans Five, justi-fication by faith, noon . SUB audi-torium.

CHARISMATIC FELLOWSHI PDessert party with Bernice Gerard ,7 :30, Lutheran Campus Centre .

SPEAKERS AN DEDUCATION COMMITTEE

Panel discussion on life in a pene-tentiary with three inmates, a guard ,and the director of programs, noon ,SUB 212 .

CHINESE MODERN DRAMA CLU BMeeting 8 :00 p .m . SUB 215 . Ne wmembers welcome .

FRIDAYPaL . SCI . & SLAV STUDIE S

Leopold Labedz on the detente i nSoviet-American relations, noon ,Buchanan 102 .

UBC GAY PEOPL EDance and refreshments, arts 1 blu eroom, 8 :00 p .m . All gays welcome .General meeting, noon, SUB 105B .

entered into a state of debauchery .

Well, after having finished wit hthem, we'd like to train som emore, to keep from getting rusty .

Seriously folks (have younoticed how, two inches down i neach of these things we begin aparagraphy

with the word"seriously"?)

we'd

like

al lprospective staffers to come in ..3

So come on up to SUB 241 Knoon Monday, Wednesday orThursday .

' Iy, 110W

1 ouve1.

They haven't seen you i nmonths . And when you ste poff the train, you want the mto see the change, to se ehow poised and self -assured you are now .

So don't let your monthl yperiod make you nervous .ln .fact, don't ever. thir k

about it . Trust the protec-tion of Tampax tampons .They take you rmind off bulges an ddiscomfort an dodor because thesethings just don't exist withinternal sanitary protection .

Let Tampax tampon shelp establish you rconfident new image . An ddiscover how muc hdependable protectio ncan mean to youpsychologically as well asphysically .

The Internal protection more women trus t

MADE ONLY BYCANADIAN TAMPAX CORPORATION LTD . .

BARRIE . ONTARIO

HISTORY STUDENT'S ASSOC .buds Social Toes ., Nov . 20, 8 :3 0p .m. SUB 212 . Interested Histor ystudents :111(1 faculty welcome .

10— For Sale - Commercia l

DECORATE with prints & poster sfrom The Grin Bin, 3209 W .Broadway (Opp . Liquor Store &Super-Yalu) .

NEW, USED TIRES . Summer o rwinter . Dealer price to students .28 W. 5th Ave . 9 a.m.-8 p.m. Sat . ,9 :30 am-It p .m.

CALCULATORS ROYAL 5T—$89 .Memory model, $118 . PharmacyLounge, 12 :00 to 1 :00 daily or,325-4161 eves.

ii —For Sale - Private1966, 1300 VW, radio, no mechani-

cal defects, city tested, new tire son front, runs well, asking $150 .Phone 684-8706 after 5 :00 p .m .and before 7 :09 p.m. to makearrangements to view .

ONE PR Rossignol 530's 185c .One pr. Fischer Mu Combi I 85c .ESeellent cond . Phone 731 -511 1after 6 .

ACETONE TOP-8 electric organ ,$375 . Yamaha 100 watt ampli-fier, $225 . Been in storage fo rtwo years . Phone Bob. 732-1627 .

15— Foun d

20 - HousingWANTED - room-mate - male o r

female . $95 .00 plus light & phone .Avail . Dec . 1 . (2 bedroom apt) .Ph . 681-3646 after 4 p .m . -

ROOM FOR RENT—Bright newl yfinished . . . quiet senior mal estudent only . 731-3623 .

FOR RENT Dec . 1, complete attic ,furnished bedroom and large liv-ing area, share entrance, bath -room, kitchen . Prefer woma nprofessional or graduate stu-dent . $25 week. 4357 W. 13 .224-6318 .

25 - Instructio n

30— JobsMATURE STRONG neat p lant en-

thusiast with driver's lie, t owork min . Fri.'s & Sat .'s inbusy plant boutique. 732-991 4before Thurs., Nov. 22 .

35 - Lost

LADIES WATCH : Bucl :erer make ,silver with black round face ,Sentimental value! 733-1297 ,Colleen Johnston.

SKI WHISTLER. Rent condomi-nium opposite lifts . Day/week.732-0174 .

60— Rides

65 - ScandalsDR. BUNDOLO'S Pandemoniu m

Medecine Show returns! Tues-day, Nov . 27 at 12:30 in SU BTheatre . It's free !

70 - ServicesRESEARCH—Thousands of topics .

2 .75 per page . Send $1 .00 fo ryour up-to-date, 160-page, mail -order catalog . Research Assist-ance, Inc., 11941 Wilshire Blvd . ,Suite 2, Los Angeles, Calif. . 9002 3(213) . 477-8474 .

80— Tutorin g

Speakeasy SUB Anytime !

228-6792 - 2:30-230

TUTORIALCENTR E

For Students and Tutors

Register Now! 12 :30-2:30

EDUCATION STUDENT wanted to 'tutor grade 9 boy - Eng. &math . Ph . 224-7036 .

85 - TypingEFFICIENT Electric Typing. My

home. Essays, thesis . etc . Neataccurate work . Reasonable rates .261-5317 .

TYPING :— Fast, efficient, neat .41st & Marine Drive. 266-5053 .

EXPERT IBM Selectric typist . Ex-perienced in theses and technica ltyping . Mrs . Ellis, 321-3838 .

EXPERIENCED TYPIST will typ eessays and theses quickly andaccurately. Donna Peaker . 266-4264, Kerrisdale .

TYPING - accurate, neat andfast for most work . 2636204 .

90— Wanted

S

EXPERIMENTS IN VISIONSubjects with normal visio n(i .e . without glasseR- or contac tlenses) are needed for approx.1 hour of PAID participation.See Clare Kaplan, Room 11 ,Henry Angus (Basement) be-tween 9 :00 a .m .-1 :30 p .m. orcall 228-25 19 if interested .

99 - Miscellaneou s

US EUBYSSEY

CLASSIFIED

3

UNIPRIN TNew! - To makecolor prints fro mcolor slides .

No interneg neededJust in time for you r

Christmas Card s$11 .95 for half gal. size

tJji 1Ln anb *butterCamera

3010 W. Broadway

736-783 3

For all you artistically incline dpeople, there is a show on in SU Bgallery . There will be poetry read- ' Hi there!ings, mime performances, musi cand paintings on display .

The name of the perso nputting on the show is Charon ,who invites everybody to com eand see his show .

The multi-media presentatio nis on now and will continue unti lNov. 30 .

'Tween classes

ARTS STUDENTSattend

General Meeting

Wednesday, Nov. 21 - 12 :3 0

Buchanan 106

Discuss : Arts Council Proposa l

an d

Issue of Representatio n

All arts students should attend this meeting to prepare actions directed a tthe Senate & Faculty in regards to report on Student Representation .

NO HITSNO PIN SNO PAD SNO ODOR

5 - Coming Events 40— Messages

Tuesday, November 20, 1973

THE UBYSSEY

Page 1 1

j .-nakagawa photoJOHN BILLINGSLEY is being tackled by the Trojans in UBC's 12-6 rugby win Saturday at Thunderbir dStadium. Preston Wiley, left, and Mel Reeves, right, look on during the first division, Miller Cup play. Reeve sscored all the Birds points in the second half on penalty kicks .

Memories haunt Brandon

By RALPH MAURE RThe UBC Thunderbirds and the Richmond Ramblers looked like

they were going to have a blazing finish to their Friday night exhibitionbasketball game .

With just under two minutes to go, the Dogwood league Ramblerswere a mere six points behind and threatening . But at that point theircoach, George Alexander, gave the game away . As the play passed hisbench, Alexander said the wrong thing at the wrong decibel level andreferee George Siborne called a technical . Alexander protested bystarting a shoving match . Siborne retaliated by giving him two mor efouls and throwing him out of the game . Ralph Turner sank all threefree throws and the Birds had a nine-point lead and, for all practica lpurposes, the game . Both teams went through the motions for the fina lminute and 50 seconds and the final score was 92-80 .

It was another ragged ending to what was easily the best game th eBirds have turned in this year . Although rather loosely played, thegame was a crowd-pleaser even if it wasn't a coach pleaser. Fast break sand long passes made the game wide open and high scoring, with thelead changing possession almost as often as the ball .

The game was a battle of the big centres — 6'11" Mike MacKay an d6'5" Brent Watson, the Dogwood league's most valuable player andscoring champion last year . Watson, who scored 31 points and rippeddown 14 rebounds against his taller opponent, was by far the toughes tcheck assigned to MacKay this year. MacKay scored 30 points and had18 rebounds .

The Birds, even though outshot 92-69 from the floor, hit on 54percent of their shots, compared to only 38 percent for the Ramblers .Besides Watson and MacKay, other stars were Gary Smith with 2 4points for Richmond and Ralph Turner with 23 point for UBC .

c

Birds unbeate n

Public Service Canad a

SUMMER EMPLOYMENT 1974THIS COMPETITION IS OPEN TO BOTH MEN AND WOME N

Apply now if you are interested in Career-Oriented Summer Employmentopportunities with the Federal Government .In the summer of 1973 students from British Columbia were employed i nCareer-Oriented positions with the following government departments an dagencies :

Agriculture

Canadian Penitentiary ServiceAuditor-General

Consumer & Corporate Affair sCommunications

Energy, Mines & Resource sEnvironment

Indian & Northern Affair sFinance

Industry, Trade & CommerceInformation Canada

Manpower & Immigratio nNational Defence

Ministry of TransportNational Museum

National Health & Welfar ePost Office

National Parole BoardPublic Works

Public Service Commissio nR .C .M .P .

Public Service Staff Relation sStatistics Canada

Regional Economic Expansio nVeterans' Affairs

Secretary of StateUrban Affairs

Supply & Service sNational Revenue, Customs & Excise

Unemployment Insurance Commission* Students were placed in several locations in British Columbia and th e

Yukon and also in Ottawa .Note : Students from ALL faculties are invited to apply .ELIGIBILITY : All full-time students intending to return to university i n1974-75 . Appointments as a result of this competition are subject to th eprovisions of the Public Service Employment Act .TO APPLY : Submit a UCPA form (available at your Placement Office —Office of Student Services) and a list of courses taken, to :

Public Service Commission of Canad a203 — 535 Thurlow Stree t

Vancouver, B .C .V6E 3L4

CLOSING DATE: January 15, 1974FURTHER INFORMATION available at your placement office .

COMPETITION 74-4200

By PETER LEIBI K

and ALAN DORE E

Memories of the previous periodof lethargic hockey vanished as theThunderbirds came from behind t odefeat the Brandon Bobcats 4-3Friday night .

"Notice how we came alive whe nwe were down 3-2," said UB Ccoach Bob Hindmarch . "Ourpride took over . Until that point welacked fire . Of course ]['d prefer tosee that fire present for an entir egame, exhibition or otherwise . "

It was Rich Longpre with 1 3minutes gone in the third perio dwho scored the tying goal for theThunderbirds . Standing off to theside of Brandon's net he swatte dBob Murray's rebound pas tBrandon goalie Larry Budzinski .

"Longpre is definitely a keyplayer for us," said Hindmarch ,who at various times hasdesignated each man on theThunderbird roster as a keyplayer .

One minute remained in th e4 game when UBC's ;Bill Ennos

swooped in to can e Bob Murray' sslapshot rebound for the winninggoal .

Yoshio Hoshino opened th escoring by tapping in a perfac tBrian Debiasio pass at the seve nminute mark of the first period .Two minutes later Keiji Ohsaki, se tfree on a rink wide backhand pas sfrom Bill Ennos, made it 2-0 UBC .

"Two factors contributed to the

mid-game letdown . First, it was a nexhibition game . Second, we had atwo goal lead," said Hindmarch ."It's natural to letup in that type ofsituation . "

And let up they did as Brando ncame back with three goals beforeLongpre snapped the Birds out oftheir narcolepsy with his tyin ggoal . Brian Boyle scored twice i nthe second period for Brandon .Larry Gillis added Brandon's finalgoal early in the third set .

Perhaps the livliest event of thegame occurred in the secondperiod when UBC's Jim Lawrencetried to poke the puck from theglove of Larry Budzinski . TheBrandon goalie took offence at hi seagerness and lead the other fiveBobcat players in a mass attack o nLawrence. An unflappableLawrence held them off and tooktwo Brandon players to the penaltybox with him .

Scoring 10 goals doesn't soundlike the way to put everybody tosleep, does it ?

Well, the most exciting thingSaturday night might have bee nthe ice machine's collision with agoalpost as the Thunderbirds beatthe University of Brandon 6-4 in astrangely listless hockey contest .

Maybe it was the way the scoringwent . The Birds got three goals inas many minutes in the first periodthen added another in the second .

Everyone in the Winter SportsCentre fell asleep, assured ofvictory .

Then Brandon bunched threegoals together in the last period .

UBC right winger Ken Lemmenfinally woke up the silent aren awith a late short handed goal whichproved to be the winner .

UBC goalie Fred Masuch, wh oshared the net with Ron Lefebvre ,said, "Brandon didn't play anybetter in the third period than thefirst two, but we played like shit .Everyone just stood around andwhen you do that anybody canscore . "

Bob Murray, Bill Gaston and'Chuck Carignan gave the Bird stheir first period lead. Defencema nLen Ircandia added the fourth ,while left winger Rich Longpr etucked the last one in an empty net .

GET OFF Y OUR A SS

Participate in Intramurals

GOYA! !

What is ME L .?A Cooperative formed by people interested i n

LOWER PRICE Sin Outdoor Equipment (hiking, skiing, climbing, camping )

Join us —

Mountain Equipment Cooperativ e2068 West 4th Ave .

6 - 9 Wed ., Thurs ., Fri . (Eves . )Phone 733-0535 anytime

y

Bacardi Rum(s) Pruduced by Special authority ad Under the Supervision of Bran &'Company Limited . "Bacardi" and Bat flake are Registered Weeds d Bacardi & Cape limited . Bottled by IBM Mille Co. ltd., Canada.

What makes .cola brighter

without changingthe colour ?

White and Light-amber Bacardi rum. You can't see it._ .-_ But you sure caw taste t-h bright tas_te_-right through the

zingiest cola . That's why it's the world's most popular mixe ddrink . White and Light-Amber BACARDI rum

Page 12

THE UBYSSEY

Tuesday, November 20, 197 3

What is M .E.C.?A Cooperative formed by people interested i n

LOWER PRICE Sin Outdoor Equipment (hiking, skiing, climbing, camping )

Join us —

Mountain Equipment Cooperativ e2068 West 4th Ave .

6 - 9 Wed ., Thurs., Fri . (Eves . )Phone 733-0535 anytim e

It }Norse aiid Buggy Days

SAFETY LENSES WERE ALMOST UNKNOW N

Western Optica lCompany Ltd .

10% DISCOUNT FOR STUDENT S

1774 W . 2nd

736-805 5

CHRISTINE KRAWCZYK . . . before her marriage . Gordon Mullin not in sight .

Hacks mournedBy PRUDENCE RAMSBOTTOM

Ubyssey Society Edito r

The Ubyssey regretfully announces the passage of hack sGordon Mullin and Christine Krawczyk into the unholy state o fmatrimony . They are mourned by several long-time friends an dcolleagues at the newspaper, some of whom were heard tomurmur "My God, it sets a horrible precedent, doesn't it,"when told of the event .

Rumors had it the pair were united during . a ceremonyWednesday, attended by only a few bereaved relatives and ahuge stack of flowers, most of which wilted during th eceremony. They honeymooned on Seymour Mountain .

Additional flowers are regretfully declined, but the coupl ewill accept donations to The Ubyssey beer fund . Both informeddifferent sets of staff members privately during the week thatthey think they'll need it .

Novembe rtune u pspecia l

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Clutch jobsas low as

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