THE UPYSSEY - UBC Library · PDF fileamusement park complete with rides, games and exhibits....

16
Jericho may turn into Vancouver's own Coney Islan d By SANDY KASS The Vancouver Parks Board has ambitious plans fo r peaceful Jericho Beach . Contrary to their attempts at pacifying residents o f the area, city developers have already began large scal e plans for development of the site . Such plans include the much talked about six-lan e Jericho Road, an offshore island to be used as a wildlif e sanctuary and recreation area, tennis courts, an ice arena , cultural centre, additional picnic grounds and an amusement park complete with rides, games and exhibits . Information on proposed developments was supplie d by Ted and Betty Delmonico, two area residents who fea r losing their home to future city expropriations . The proposed six-lane road would cut away from th e beach just west of Tolmie street, run through the middl e of the only grocery store in the neighborhood, throug h Locarno Park where children skate in the winter and fis h in the summer and connect with Fourth Avenue east o f the old Jericho army barracks . "This whole proposal is a plan by city developers to build a much unwanted freeway under the dim disguise o f a scenic drive," Delmonico said . The old army barracks, recently condemned by cit y officials, provide a site for amusement park, ice arena , tennis courts and a portion of the parkland at Marine an d Tolmie is expected to be rezoned for commercial use . However, no plans for the park have yet bee n submitted for city council approval . Houses along th e 4400 block Marine Drive would be torn down, affording a site for a man-made park, bordering along the presen t natural one . "It all seems so utterly incredible, " Delmonico said . Residents of that block have banded together as th e Spanish Banks Property Owners' Association in hopes o f at least forestalling, expropriation Alderman Harry Rankin said yesterday he is certai n area residents will be allowed to submit their briefs, bu t feels there is little objection to the proposed developments . Residents have expressed great concern over th e safety of their children having to cross a six-lane roadway , and the loss of their natural neighborhood parks t o commercially developed community ones . To thses concerns, Rankin said they will present littl e real problem. "It is impossible to think of trifles when a multi-million dollar scheme is in the offing," he said . He said that he did not favor any type of "Cone y Island" developing such as an amusement park, and woul d favor a 65-acre park on the old army barracks site instead . He added he felt a four-lane roadway would b e sufficient, as opposed to the six-lane proposal, and adde d that the most important issue of the decade is th e "absolute prohibition of freeways in Vancouver . " However, Mrs. Delmonico suspects there is more t o the development than that . to page 9 : see PARK banning, o r proceedings. SBPOA members have sent innumberable letters o f protest to city council and the parks board, and awai t word from council to present their briefs fo r consideration . Decision will be made at today's council meetin g whether or not the briefs are heard. SURVEY STAKES GO IN at Jericho as close-mouthed surveyor s say "don't ask any questions" . The area is slated for massive ne w development complete with freeway, as always, in the name o f progress. By DICK BETTS Vancouver's first provisional city governmen t was declared Monday at a demonstration o f unemployed and poor people at city hall . The demonstration was part of a national da y of protest by the poor in Canada, which originate d at the Poor Peoples' Conference held in Ottawa two weeks ago . The demonstration attracted about 200 o f Vancouver ' s unemployed and working poor . They turned the area outside the mayor's offic e on the third floor of city hall into the counci l chambers and proceeded to conduct the business o f the provisional government . "Despite the criticisms of government policie s on welfare and assistance, these policies continue, " said Alex Bonde, the meeting ' s chairman. . "We are here to make certain points and do no t claim to represent everybody," Bonde pointed out . The points to be made were embodied in a ten-point program for the provisional government . Among those read out by Bonde were : a full-time council for Vancouver which would work SUB closed b y SUB was closed for four and a half hours Saturda y while a bomb demolition expert drove in from Chilliwac k to open an empty box . Anatomy prof Vladimir Palaty received an anonymou s phone call at 2 :45 p .m . telling him there was a bomb i n SUB . He relayed the information to campus RCMP wh o cleared the building and began a search for the mysteriou s bomb . The search turned up only an empty orange box in th e Ubyssey office . The box was taped shut and lined insid e with brown paper. Ubyssey managing editor Bruce Curtis explained tha t the box had been in the office at various times sinc e Wednesday and has been used by organizers of last week' s Quebec conference to collect donations . Curtis told police the box had contained someone's ba g lunch the last time he had seen it . Despite Curtis' explanation, police decided to take no chances with the volatile orange crate and called in a bom b demolition expert . Unfortunately, the nearest bomb demolition squad i s at the Canadian Forces base in Chilliwack, so the buildin g had to remain closed until the army man arrived. When he did, he gingerly opened the box to fin d I absolutely nothing and SUB was re-opened at 7 :30 p.m. orange crat e Ubyssey editor Nate Smith said he first learned of th e bomb scare at 3 :30 p .m., when he was phoned at his hom e by deputy Alma Mater Society vice-president Dave Manzer . "Manzer demanded to know the names of all peopl e who had been in the Ubyssey office Saturday," Smith said . "I told him I hadn't been to the office Saturday and didn ' t know who had been there . "Manzer replied : `Look Nate, this is serious I have to know who was in the office .' " Smith said he replied, "Look you asshole, I just tol d you I haven't been there so how should I know who was . " Smith said Curtis then picked up the phone to explai n what was going on, but Manzer refused to get off th e extension during their conversation .. "I guess Manzer thought Curtis and I were going t o exchange information about the time the bomb was se t for," Smith said . "When I got to campus I spoke to RCMP corpora l Helmar Hansen, who explained the situation saying he doubted there was any bomb but didn't want to take a chance . "Manzer to solve the problems of those who are poor ; decentralized civic control with a 25 membe r council elected by districts ; and pollution and ren t control. Alderman Harry Rankin, who was present a t the meeting, told The Ubyssey " This is an excellen t start on practical proposals and action on thes e proposals. "Some of the ideas may need variation but ca n be implemented . " Some of the proposals which came from th e provisional government were low-cost housing, cas h assistance on welfare and an end to foreig n domination of the economy . In speaking to the assembly Bonde pointed out , "It is costing the government more for hostels, foo d vouchers and the like than cash assistance woul d cost . "The reason it sticks to the former metho d rather than give cash assistance is because the government feels those on welfare are lazy bum s and it wants to make it hard for us . " A member of the provisional council the n proposed that the United Nations Charter on huma n rights be adopted by the city as part of a centennial project . "We have no charter on human rights and th e right to a decent living, " said the woman wh o proposed it. Ray Chouinard from Cool-Aid pointed out tha t the meeting was only an initial step in a people' s government for the city . to page 6 : see RANKIN Quebecois marc h QUEBEC CITY (CUP) — Wearing the red, whit e and green colors of the 1837 Quebec Rebellion , over 200 of the 467 Quebecois arrested under th e War Measures Act marched in front of a well-guarded Quebec national,assembly Sunday . They were demanding bail for those still i n prison and a rescinding of the one-year contempt o f court sentence handed to labor leader Miche l Chartrand . The demonstrators also wanted a meeting wit h Premier Robert Bourassa who lives in the assembly buildings, but he was not there at the time . The demonstrators sang the Internationale an d carried placards denouncing the judicial procedure s coming out of the Front de Liberation du Quebe c kidnappings . Some of the demonstrators carried signs around their necks with the names of thos e still in prison under the Public Order Act . interjected, in his most ominous tone o f voice, that the suspected box had been used to collec t money for Quebec week speakers, including the wife o f jailed union leader Michel Chartrand . Hansen appeare d singularly unimpressed with that bit of intelligence. " THE UPYSSE Y Vol . LII, No . 26 VANCOUVER, B .C ., TUESDAY, JANUARY 26, 1971 228-2305 Alternate . counci l formed by poor

Transcript of THE UPYSSEY - UBC Library · PDF fileamusement park complete with rides, games and exhibits....

Jericho may turn into Vancouver's own Coney Islan dBy SANDY KASS

The Vancouver Parks Board has ambitious plans forpeaceful Jericho Beach .

Contrary to their attempts at pacifying residents o fthe area, city developers have already began large scal eplans for development of the site .

Such plans include the much talked about six-lan eJericho Road, an offshore island to be used as a wildlifesanctuary and recreation area, tennis courts, an ice arena,cultural centre, additional picnic grounds and anamusement park complete with rides, games and exhibits.

Information on proposed developments was supplie dby Ted and Betty Delmonico, two area residents who fea rlosing their home to future city expropriations.

The proposed six-lane road would cut away from th ebeach just west of Tolmie street, run through the middleof the only grocery store in the neighborhood, throug hLocarno Park where children skate in the winter and fishin the summer and connect with Fourth Avenue east ofthe old Jericho army barracks .

"This whole proposal is a plan by city developers to

build a much unwanted freeway under the dim disguise o fa scenic drive," Delmonico said .

The old army barracks, recently condemned by cit yofficials, provide a site for amusement park, ice arena ,tennis courts and a portion of the parkland at Marine an dTolmie is expected to be rezoned for commercial use .

However, no plans for the park have yet bee nsubmitted for city council approval . Houses along th e4400 block Marine Drive would be torn down, affording asite for a man-made park, bordering along the presen tnatural one .

"It all seems so utterly incredible, " Delmonico said.Residents of that block have banded together as th e

Spanish Banks Property Owners' Association in hopes ofat least forestalling, expropriation

Alderman Harry Rankin said yesterday he is certainarea residents will be allowed to submit their briefs, bu tfeels there is little objection to the proposeddevelopments .

Residents have expressed great concern over th esafety of their children having to cross a six-lane roadway ,and the loss of their natural neighborhood parks t ocommercially developed community ones .

To thses concerns, Rankin said they will present littlereal problem.

"It is impossible to think of trifles when amulti-million dollar scheme is in the offing," he said .

He said that he did not favor any type of "Cone yIsland" developing such as an amusement park, and woul dfavor a 65-acre park on the old army barracks site instead.

He added he felt a four-lane roadway would b esufficient, as opposed to the six-lane proposal, and adde dthat the most important issue of the decade is th e"absolute prohibition of freeways in Vancouver ."

However, Mrs. Delmonico suspects there is more t othe development than that .

to page 9 : see PARK

banning, orproceedings.

SBPOA members have sent innumberable letters ofprotest to city council and the parks board, and awaitword from council to present their briefs fo r

consideration .Decision will be made at today's council meeting

whether or not the briefs are heard.

SURVEY STAKES GO IN at Jericho as close-mouthed surveyor ssay "don't ask any questions" . The area is slated for massive newdevelopment complete with freeway, as always, in the name ofprogress.

By DICK BETTSVancouver's first provisional city governmen t

was declared Monday at a demonstration o funemployed and poor people at city hall .

The demonstration was part of a national da yof protest by the poor in Canada, which originate dat the Poor Peoples' Conference held in Ottawa twoweeks ago .

The demonstration attracted about 200 o fVancouver's unemployed and working poor .

They turned the area outside the mayor's offic eon the third floor of city hall into the counci lchambers and proceeded to conduct the business o fthe provisional government .

"Despite the criticisms of government policie son welfare and assistance, these policies continue, "said Alex Bonde, the meeting 's chairman.

. "We are here to make certain points and do no tclaim to represent everybody," Bonde pointed out .

The points to be made were embodied in aten-point program for the provisional government .

Among those read out by Bonde were : afull-time council for Vancouver which would work

SUB closed bySUB was closed for four and a half hours Saturda y

while a bomb demolition expert drove in from Chilliwac kto open an empty box.

Anatomy prof Vladimir Palaty received an anonymousphone call at 2 :45 p .m. telling him there was a bomb inSUB .

He relayed the information to campus RCMP whocleared the building and began a search for the mysteriou sbomb.

The search turned up only an empty orange box in theUbyssey office . The box was taped shut and lined insid ewith brown paper.

Ubyssey managing editor Bruce Curtis explained tha tthe box had been in the office at various times sinceWednesday and has been used by organizers of last week' sQuebec conference to collect donations.

Curtis told police the box had contained someone's ba glunch the last time he had seen it.

Despite Curtis' explanation, police decided to take nochances with the volatile orange crate and called in a bom bdemolition expert.

Unfortunately, the nearest bomb demolition squad i sat the Canadian Forces base in Chilliwack, so the buildinghad to remain closed until the army man arrived.

When he did, he gingerly opened the box to fin d

I absolutely nothing and SUB was re-opened at 7 :30 p.m.

orange crateUbyssey editor Nate Smith said he first learned of th e

bomb scare at 3 :30 p .m., when he was phoned at his hom eby deputy Alma Mater Society vice-president Dave Manzer .

"Manzer demanded to know the names of all peopl ewho had been in the Ubyssey office Saturday," Smith said ."I told him I hadn't been to the office Saturday and didn ' tknow who had been there .

"Manzer replied : `Look Nate, this is serious I have toknow who was in the office .' "

Smith said he replied, "Look you asshole, I just toldyou I haven't been there so how should I know who was ."

Smith said Curtis then picked up the phone to explainwhat was going on, but Manzer refused to get off th eextension during their conversation . .

"I guess Manzer thought Curtis and I were going t oexchange information about the time the bomb was se tfor," Smith said .

"When I got to campus I spoke to RCMP corpora lHelmar Hansen, who explained the situation saying hedoubted there was any bomb but didn't want to take achance .

"Manzer

to solve the problems of those who are poor ;decentralized civic control with a 25 membe rcouncil elected by districts ; and pollution and ren tcontrol.

Alderman Harry Rankin, who was present a tthe meeting, told The Ubyssey "This is an excellen tstart on practical proposals and action on thes eproposals.

"Some of the ideas may need variation but canbe implemented . "

Some of the proposals which came from th eprovisional government were low-cost housing, cashassistance on welfare and an end to foreigndomination of the economy .

In speaking to the assembly Bonde pointed out ,"It is costing the government more for hostels, foo dvouchers and the like than cash assistance wouldcost .

"The reason it sticks to the former metho drather than give cash assistance is because thegovernment feels those on welfare are lazy bum sand it wants to make it hard for us. "

A member of the provisional council the nproposed that the United Nations Charter on huma nrights be adopted by the city as part of a centennialproject .

"We have no charter on human rights and th eright to a decent living, " said the woman whoproposed it.

Ray Chouinard from Cool-Aid pointed out thatthe meeting was only an initial step in a people' sgovernment for the city .

to page 6 : see RANKIN

Quebecois marchQUEBEC CITY (CUP) — Wearing the red, whit e

and green colors of the 1837 Quebec Rebellion ,over 200 of the 467 Quebecois arrested under th eWar Measures Act marched in front of awell-guarded Quebec national,assembly Sunday .

They were demanding bail for those still inprison and a rescinding of the one-year contempt o fcourt sentence handed to labor leader Miche lChartrand.

The demonstrators also wanted a meeting wit hPremier Robert Bourassa who lives in the assemblybuildings, but he was not there at the time .

The demonstrators sang the Internationale andcarried placards denouncing the judicial procedure scoming out of the Front de Liberation du Quebe ckidnappings . Some of the demonstrators carriedsigns around their necks with the names of thosestill in prison under the Public Order Act.

interjected, in his most ominous tone o fvoice, that the suspected box had been used to collec tmoney for Quebec week speakers, including the wife o fjailed union leader Michel Chartrand. Hansen appearedsingularly unimpressed with that bit of intelligence."

THE UPYSSEYVol. LII, No. 26

VANCOUVER, B .C., TUESDAY, JANUARY 26, 1971

228-2305

Alternate . counci lformed by poor

Page 2

THE

UBYSSEY

Tuesday, January 26, 197 1

'Apoplectic B & B reportbelies Canadian reality '

By JOSEPHINE MARGOLIS

We must overcome the tendency to focu stotally on the explosion of the 70's — the death o fLaporte, historian Stanley Ryerson said Friday .

"We must not be distracted from the basi cquestion — the relationship between what the B & B(Biculturalism and Bilingualism) report calls th e`two societies in Canada'," said Ryerson, author ofUnequal Union and The Founding of Canada.

He said the new set of beliefs about Canad aimplicit in the B & B report had the kind o freasoning that led to the logical consequences of th eevents in Quebec.

"The B & B commission is an apoplecti capproach to understanding the gravest crisis thi scountry has ever known," Ryerson told some 50 0people in the SUB ballr000m .

The idea that to understand Canada it must beseen as a duality, led to the colonization of FrenchCanada under an imperial metropolis as the centra lgovernment, he said .

"This engendered a state which has had buil tinto it a character of ambiguity and equivocation, "said Ryerson .

Ryerson referred to a statement made by Joh nA. Macdonald, the first Canadian prime minister :"British lower Canada, you can never forget tha tyou were once supreme . You struggle not fo requality but for ascendency ; but you have not thehonesty to admit it. "

"If we had followed Macdonald's advice : `treatthem as a nation and they will act as a free peoplegenerally do — generously,' we may not have beenconfronted with our present situation," sai dRyerson.

"The storm signals of the October crisis were anightmare that couldn't be ignored by those wh oare committed to the status quo, not to the BNA(British North American Act), " said Ryerson .

He said the apprehension of this comingtogether of the nationalists as an insurrection was afiction .

"In the same way the image of Trudeau as th eSt . George who rose to slay the dragon in the street sof Montreal was a fiction."

This "escape from reality" allowed the leader sof our country to ignore questions like th edetrimental effect of American economic expansionon the Quebecois, he said.

"In the face of American economic expansion ,some may say we must defend the status quo, but i nreality the status quo has allowed a colossaltakeover by America," said Ryerson .

"This escape from reality is the only way th egovernment can accept the study of French socia land economic inferiority and the shock at th erecognition of colonialism and oppression in ou rcountry," he said .

Ryerson enumerated the economic and socia lreasons for the coming into awareness of a majorityin Quebec who are not content with the built-instructural inequality .

VICTORIA (Staff) — Elaine Olszewski ,vice-president of the Victoria Low Income Grou phas charged that Ray Haynes, secretary of the B .C .Federation of Labor, destroyed the unity of theunemployed peoples' demonstration in front of theB.C. legislature Thursday.

Olszewski condemned what she calle d"strong-arm tactics" on the part of Haynes outsidethe Crystal Gardens where the demonstrators wer emarshalling for the march to the parliamentbuildings.

"Haynes pulled a power play to give laborcomplete control of the demonstration," she said .

"When we were lining up for the march, Haynesgrabbed me by the arm and said, `you and you rgroup get back in there with your signs. Weorganized this thing and you're not going to disruptit'," Olszewski said .

Olszewski was upset by this, because the lowincome group had planned to demonstrate since las tNovember.

"Time is something that bleeds. Thediscontented are no longer just the separatists (1 3per cent of Quebec's population) but thenationalists, the trade unionists, the majority," sai dRyerson .

The B & B commission, in Volume III of thei rreport on the French Canadian workers showed tha tsince 1931 the advantaged position has doubled, h esaid.

"This is what happens in Quebec! — la belleprovince! " said Ryerson.

Also in the B & B report, in a list of 14 ethnicin thelabou rFrench

Stanley Ryerson — 'time bleeds 'there is six times the chance of an infant dying if hecommits the error of being born French, instead o fEnglish .

He concluded his talk with a quote : "no natio ncan be expected to obey another for the very simplereason that no nation could command anothernation . "

Asked about the quality of Montreal publishe rClaude Ryan's prediction that the Parti Quebecoi swould secure a majority in the next 10 to 30 years ,Ryerson said the unpredictability of politics is likethat of horse-racing but said he would approximat e15 years.

He said "I don't think speculation on th etimetable is as fruitful as reflection on those thing sthat will affect the timetable . "

When asked about the confusing convictions o fthose being tried under the War Measures Act an dthe Criminal Code he answered, "it is just thatconfusion which is part of the success of Operatio nOttawa . "

In answer to questions about the reality of theinsurrection he referred to the statements of Loui sLaberge, head of the Quebec Federation of Labor .

"Laberge said if there was going to be arevolution you would see all the plants closed andworkers on the street. It is a total fiction, complet ewith identity cards and finger prints, all with adevastating political aim."

The low income group had a right to march a tthe front of the line, she said, because they ha ddone as much planning as any one else . In fact, i twas the low income group which asked the B .C . Fedto participate in the demonstration.

Federation members attempted to push the lo wincome group to the back of the line but onlysucceeded in hiding some of the placards withFederation banners.

At the rally in front of the Legislaturebuildings, the low income group was denied theright to speak, along with the Unemployed Citizen sImprovement Council representatives.

The low income group's participation was par tof a nation-wide demonstration against povert yplanned by the National Conference of Poor Peopl ein Toronto last December.

Observers say there has been a great amount ofanimosity created as a result of Haynes' power play shere .

The low income group intends to make aformal protest to the B .C . Fed.

$20 .00

RE A RDfor the most daring,

original, conclusiv e

PROOF OF THE PIZZAPROBLEM :Which pizza shop within the radius of or tangential to the U .B .C .Campus provides most pizza per penny for two or more people?Or even one hungry person? Give ample proofs . Also, clearl yrelate

your

answer

to

the

Humanities

(like optimum tasteappeal) . Establish this with proofs, too .

GIVEN :~ .The diameter of all pizza pies designed for two or more person savailable on or near campus :

Medium

Large"Second Best" Pizza Place 12" 14 "jon's 14" 16"

(Remember :

Area

equals

Pie-R-Squared)

Note : The are adifference between the two large sizes almost makes a "Secon dBest" medium pie !

2.Costs of same pies — all with cheese and tomato sauce toppin gfor exact comparisions .

14" 16 "12" Large Jon's

"Second Best" Pizza PlaceMediu m

2 .00Jon's Mediu m

3 .00Large(N .A . )

~onsMq 2.40 3 .50

3 .COST OF EXTRA TOPPINGS . Here lies the real challenge of th eproof . Most places give prices for complete pizzas only . Jo nmaintains a flat rate per topping : 40c in the 14" diameters, 50 cfor Jon's unique 16" pizzas .

(Notice particularly the huge difference in the cost of meattoppings :"Second Best" Large (14") pizza with salami, pepperoni andbacon is $5 .00.Same pizza at jon'm would be $2 .40 (basic) plus 3x40c, or$3.6 0

4 .COMBINATIONS

AND

PERMUTATIONS

OF TOPPINGS .Perhaps because of their pricing policy, most pizza places onl yoffer about 30 kinds of pies. But the flat rate per topping a tonsMo gives you a choice of 2730 different pizzas .

~ F,

zoAO

5 .DELIVERY TIMES ON CAMPUS .40 minutes. ions

U .B .C .anywhere on campus within 20factors with heat, taste and impatien t

Submit your proof to jjonsParkway no later than April 25,

"Secon dpizzaram a

minutes.

U .B .C .

locatio n

1971 .

foot-tapping . )

Best" time i sguarantees deliver y

(You may equat e

2136 Wester nAll proofs becom e

at least

these

th eproperty of Jon's Pizzarama Restaurant sannounce the winner of the Proof of the

and Jon's will pic kPizza on May 10,

and1971 .

The $20.00 will also be awarded that day .

A 2'h HOUR, COLORE DFILM from CHIN A

THE EASTIS RE D

English Subtitle s* A song and dance epic of th e

Chinese Revolutio n* A unique display of modern

Chinese arts and culture* An inspiring performanc e

involving more than 3,000 artists

TIME :Jan. 28 (Thur.) 1 :00 p.m .

Jan. 29 (Fri.) 7 :30 p.m.PLACE :OLD AUDITORIUM, UBC

Admission :Students—$1 .00 Others—$1 .25

origin sQuebecforce ,Canadians weresecond from thebottom, he said .

He said thatin 1967 them i n i m u mnational incom ewas $5,000 and73 per cent o fQuebec familie swere earningless tha n$4,000 ; tha tthere is 40 pe rcent unemploy-ment amongFrench Cana-dians; and that

Low income moved to the rea r

in unemployment demonstration

iEsi 11)li'

10SPECIA L

STUDENT SHOWSFebruary 3—8:30 P .M .February 8—7:30 P .M .February 9 & 10—8 :30 P .M .February 11—12 :30 P .M .

UBC AUDITORIU MTICKETS $1 .0 0

AMS BUSINESS OFFIC E228-4300 — 228-307 3

Tuesday, January 26, 1971

THE

UBYSSEY

Page 3

U of T students vote on strikin gTORONTO (CUP) — University of Toronto arts and

science students jammed the polling stations Monday inthe first day of a two-day strike referendum .

The students are deciding whether or not to back u pdemands for student parity with teaching staff in thegoverning faculty council.

A record turnout is expected in the vote in whichmore than 13,000 students are eligible . In November areferendum on the principle of parity was supported b y88 .5 per cent of the approximately 6,000 students wh ovoted.

A "yes" vote in the referendum would mean a three

day strike including a voluntary boycott of classes byboth students and teaching staff. The strike would then bere-assessed at a mass meeting Friday.

Almost one hundred sympathetic faculty member shave signed a petition supporting the boycott of classes .Following a faculty meeting last Friday history profMichael Cross, who is also dean of men at VictoriaCollege, reported the group's support for student actio n"whatever that action might be."

"We did not feel it was our place to tell or advise . yo u(students) on what action to take . We will support you onindividual conscience ."

U of T administration president Claude Bissell hasstill refused to commit himself to any interference in whathe calls an internal matter of the faculty of arts andscience .

Sid' Smith Hall, which was converted into a studen tcentre last week, continues to be the focus for strikeactivity, with an educational festival continuing day an dnight. A rock group appeared Friday night and a dancewas held on Saturday . Speeches, music, posters an drapping go on round the clock in this liberated area .

—keith dunbar photo

DEADPAN COMEDIAN PAT PAULSEN took time out from Friday evening's performance to take aquick glance at the slovenly, degenerate Ubyssey . Fortunately, he recovered in time to make it to th ewashroom and later returned to captivate his audience with a more humorous form of propaganda .

Women prisoners in Montrea lwon't testify in FLQ trial s

MONTREAL (CUP) — Seven inmates o fMontreal's women's prison have announced the ywill refuse to testify in the "fabricated" trials arisingfrom the kidnapping and death of Pierre Laporte .

The women also mandated jailed lawyer Rober tLemieux to represent them.

In a statement addressed "to whom it mayconcern" the seven women — Lise Balcer, FrancineBelisle, Denise and Helene Quesnel, Lise Rose ,Louise Verrault and Colette Therrien — said :

"We the undersigned political prisonersformally mandate Robert Lemieux as our one an donly lawyer in our cause .

"We also take this occasion to denounce th ehypocritical attitude of the bar for refusing to takea position with regard to this problem.

"He is to us as we to him."We will conquer ."

The women who mandated Lemieux say thei rgesture carries a double political signficance. Theyare not refusing to testify because they are worrie dabout incriminating themselves, but want t ounderline their refusals to collaborate wit h"injustice ." They also want to let their action serveas an example for other political prisoners .

Lemieux has been in prison since Oct. 16. Todate the courts have refused him bail, making i tdifficult if not impossible to act on his clients'behalf.

There has also been a move on the part of somelawyers to have Lemieux de-barred . The excuse the yare using is a remark Lemieux made last fall whenhe was leaving the court where he was defendingFront de Liberation du Quebec members. At thattime he made a reference to the trial being a farce .

Williston considersf rat row hotel pla n

By MIKE SASGE S

Any high, rise development on frat row would have to providespace for UBC hospital out-patients, says provincial lands and forest sminister Ray Williston.

In a letter to the Vancouver Park Board, Williston said the Socre dgovernment has been considering a developer's proposal for a hotel an dconvention centre on land now occupied by three UBC fraternities .

"Any proposed high-rise development on lands owned byfraternities would be encouraged only on the basis that livin gaccommodation would be made available for out-patients requiring th eservice of the university hospital, " the letter read.

Williston rejected the board's request for a meeting to discuss th eproposal . The park board is concerned that enough open space will b eprovided in the future development of the University Endowmen tLands .

The board was not satisfied with the letter and voted Monday t oagain request a meeting with Williston to discuss the development .

"If the government is considering spot zoning of the Endowmen tLands without an overall plan they're foolish and I think we should b ein on it," said park commissioner George Puil .

Meanwhile, a representative of the developers said Thursday tha tbad publicity on campus may have delayed plans for the constructio nof the hotel .

"We're worried about the bad publicity," said James Smith of J .E . Smith Realty, Ltd.

Smith said he has not been able to get in touch with thefraternities' alumni because they are also worried about the ba dpublicity.

"Money is available anytime we want to go ahead. The project isnot dead. "

George Peter of Phi Delta Theta's alumni said Monday, "We'v ehad no problems of communications .

"Our d irectors expressed a willingness last October to sell th efrathouse," he said .

Beta Theta Pi alumni spokesman Keith Liddle said, "We haven ' tseen Smith for several months."

Liddle said the fraternity alumni have been approached b yanother developer.

"I couldn't given you his name without his approval . It mightscare him off."

Administration president Walter Gage's office has been exploringthe possibility of incorporating the Endowment Lands .

Gage has established a president 's ad hoc committee on thedevelopment of university Endowment Lands .

"This committee is the result of a conversation between Dea nGage and Ray Williston, provincial Minister of Lands, Forests an dRecreation, " said commerce dean Philip White, chairman of thecommittee .

"We weren't set up to look into the question of the hote ldevelopment on frat row," White said.N

Gov't looks abroa dThe Immigration Department is advertising extensively in

England and Europe for skilled people to come to Canada .S. R. Purdy, Canada Manpower's Vancouver manager said ,

"Our policy is based on job requirement predictions for si xmonths to a year in advance ."

They are presently seeking graduates in the professionalfields, notably engineering, draughting and architecture .

"We give the Immigration Department job forecasts on amonthly basis based on current information . It is up to themwhat they do with this information, " Purdy said.

Purdy repeated immigration minister Otto Lang ' s statemen tthat "by bringing in skilled people we are creating more job sbecause these people will need houses built and food to eat . "

When asked if the immigrants are taking jobs fro mCanadians, Purdy said, "We are doing all we can for our owngraduates .

"When there is a job available we refer both immigrants andour own graduates to the company and they usually pick the on ewith the highest qualifications."

When the immigrants arrive in Canada, they are give nassistance by Manpower and the Immigration Department untilthey can find a job .

"Our own graduates can get the same help from the cit ywelfare department, " Purdy said .

Page 4

THE

UBYSSEY

Tuesday, January 26, 197 1

"Who gave you the right to come to Victoria and spoil OUR party? "

LETTER S

THE (WHEYPublished Tuesdays and Fridays throughout the university

year by the Alma Mater Society of the University of B .C .Editorial opinions are those of the writer 3nd not of the AMS o rthe university administration . Member, Canadian University Press .Founding member, Pacific Student Press . The Ubyssey publishesPage Friday, a weekly commentary and review . The Ubyssey' seditorial offices are located in room 241K of the Student Unio nBuilding . Editor, 228-2301 ; city editor, 228-2305 ; news editor ,228-2307 ; Page Friday, 228-2309 ; sports, 228-2308 ; advertising ,228-3977 .

JANUARY 26, 197 1

The invasionThe province of B .C. has a new incident to keep

political mouths churning and fill space around the adsin the commercial press for many weeks to come .

We refer to the invasion of the legislature Thursda yby some members of the B.C. Federation of Labor' sunemployment demonstration .

Obviously, those who go to Victoria to represen tthe people of B .C. can't cope with a number of sai dpeople entering their hallowed domain.

What did the demonstrators interrupt when the yburst in during the throne speech? They interrupted aman dressed like something out of a Gilbert and Sulliva nmusical reading a collection of Socred platitudes to a naudience of MLAs and some of the province's morewealthy and powerful citizens .

The top hats, the pageantry and the 21-gun salute swere all there, but no one in the legislature mentione dthe rising unemployment, widespread poverty,overcrowded schools,, inadequate health care andinsufficient housing in the province they are suppose dto be governing .

The people of the province, of course, were no tallowed inside for the throne speech because the publi cgallery was full of corporation presidents and assorte dother power-brokers .

The throne speech marked-the opening of anothe rlegislative session full of parliamentary games andSocred disregard for the problems of B .C .

The demonstrators invaded the hallowed halls oflegislature and gave the inmates a brief introduction t oreality. But, as we all know, there is a time and place fo rreality - and a provincial legislative session is not it.

The people don't belong -in the legislature . That'sMr. Bennett's gilded playpen .

The bomb scareThe only time we begin to think kind thoughts

about AMS executives is when we are forced to dea lwith some of the committee members, executiveassistants, flunkies and groupies who surround thoseAMS executives.

For some reason, one such individual was th emajor AMS presence during Saturday's comic-operabomb scare .

During his brief moment in the sun,he managed t oshatter most existing AMS records for arrogance ,belligerence and general lack of common sense.

Such behavior is intolerable enough in people wh oknow what's going on, but it becomes totally absurd i nsomeone who plainly doesn't have the faintest idea whathe's doing .

If AMS executives insist on surrounding themselve swith entourages of such bum-boys, perhaps a les stroublesome outlet could be found for theirfrustrations .

We're sure the AMS budget could afford a fe wteddy bears and soothers.

approved with some rather gamesomegiggles. Kathy Stewart fought hard an dlong with Dick Betts to be the first tocongratulate the young lad . As JinnyLadner sung her praises, not unlike avesper virgin, Ken Lassassen howled i nthe true rabbit style . David . Schmid trefrained from joining him.

Photogwise, David Bowerman wa sbusy all day untangling Dave Enn sfrom a long obscene roll of midnightfilm.

"Who was the chief ball carrier i nthe CFL last season," wagged hea d

Deo gratius . It's happened. Masterful Jock, Keith Dunbar. Tony Gallaghe rMike Sasges has finally come around to commented on the ancient aspects o nappreciating the essential truths lying the joke. Bill Ruby declined fro mwithing beauteous Sandy Kass and answering . Steve Millard, however was aNathalie Apouchtine. No help was better sport : "It was Jacques Strap, "needed from Shane McCune, Bruce he said. Kingsley Artifact howled .Curtis or Diamond Jim Davies, who For the women staffers there's awere rummed up, so to speak . Judy super special bull session o nMcLeod and Josephine Margolis Wednesday at noon .

InternationalsEditor, The Ubyssey, Sir :

This is in reply to the criticismsreleased by Mr. Steve McField i nhis article "International House ,Colonial Relic" . (Friday, Jan. 22) .

Mr. McField says "thedirections that InternationalHouse has followed are an insultto the needs of the internationa lcommunity" . International Houseis not and should not be regarde das the big white God, baby sitte ror protector for the oversea sstudent on campus . Who or whatcomprises International House bu tthe overseas student (MrMcField included) and hi sCanadian counterparts and th eprogrammes they implement . I tappears then that it is Mr . McFieldwho has not lost his colonialmentality in wanting I .H. toprogram his life .

We must also commend him o nhis cute awareness of thehappenings at I .H. He talks of theprogram and service committee .There is no such committee . Thecommittee to which he is referringis The International StudentsProgram committee comprisingof, and open to all student s(Overseas and Canadian) . Thiscommittee is responsible fo rprograms at 1 .11 . In addition, th eindividual overseas club sindependently present anyactivity that interests them . Yes,there is going to be anInternational Ball and pub-ins ar ebeing held . In that respect, may weextend our greetings to the othe r"colonials" on campus . It isequally true hat academicall ysome of the overseas students giveseminars and participate i nacademic discussions concerningtheir various countries . The inpu tfrom here would seem to be mor ecurrent than textbooks . The

Editor, The Ubyssey, Sir :The un-named (what is he

afraid of?) author of "Love in theOR part II" (Friday Jan. 22)refers to his readers as "sic kperverts" in asking them to fill i na blank.

We do not wish to be referre dto as sick perverts, thank-you verymuch . This expression should be

The Editor, The Ubyssey, Sir :

reserved for persons such as th eAs one of the supposedly author of this unmitigated smut.

reluctant overseas students who is We cannot think of "Love i n

"afraid of recrimination" and the OR" as anything other thanwouldn't "say anything for revolting smut for the sake o f

publication", I must reluctantly nothing other than revolting smut .

join in the controversy over your It serves no purpose whatsoever ,

coverage or the lack of it of the other than, perhaps, to vent th e

so-called third world problem. If author's own sexual perversion s

your coverage of the Biafra and frustrations . The Ubyssey i s

moratorium movement is typical NOT the proper forum for th e

of your treatment of the third venting of the inadequacies o f

world problem as you implied, no such pathetic creatures .

wonder overseas students are

We are quite disgusted with ,

reluctant to contribute to your and thoroughly disappointed i n

publication .

The Ubyssey for allowing itself t o

Your lack of interest and/or be degraded to such an extent .

objectivity and the fact that most WILLIAM STEWART CLARKE ,

UBC students are only interested

arts 1

in the "petty mundanities of

ALAN MILLEN ,

living" as we thought all along, arts I

make it impossible for me and I -am sure most of my friends t osubject ourselves to the indignit yof allowing you to sit i njudgement of the suitability ofanything we may care to write .

Editor: Nate Smit hNews Maurice Bridg eCity inny Gai t

Jan O'Brie nWire John AndersenManaging Bruce Curti sSports Keith Dunba rAss't News Jennifer Jorda n

Leslie Plomme rPhoto David Enn s

David Bowerma nPage riday Tim Wilson

theme for this year's Internationa lWeek Feb. 8-13 is Internationa lScene Development and Change .The purpose of this week i sobvious. We hope that Mr.McField will be participating inthe International Week program.

The views presented by Mr.McField are not new to I .H. Mr.McField excels in finding fault bu tnot in taking action . He know snevertheless that he is welcome tojoin the International Student sProgram Committee and by sodoing implement constructiveideas into positive action ,thereby putting into practice hi sown feelings that "onlymeaningful action can be looke dupon with respect."

10 SIGNATURE S

And more

We did once and wished wehadn't

Finally, wouldn't it be morecorrect to suggest that someoverseas students are afraid o frecrimination from the CanadianInternational Developmen tAgency (CIDA), the people wh obrought them here, rather thantheir national governments?

TUNDE YUSUFgrad studies

Perversion

Letters to the editor must besigned and, if possible, typed.

The Ubyssey reserves the rightto edit letters for reasons ofbrevity, legality, grammar or. taste .

Tuesday, January 26, 1971

THE

UBYSSEY

Page 5

What aboutBy PAUL KNO X

George Volkoff, the head of UBC's physic sdepartment, was extremely distressed the other da ywhen the UBC senate was asked to approve aCanadian-content in-courses resolution.

If passed (of course senate tabled it) th eresolution would have "encouraged faculty t oinclude significant Canadian content where it i sappropriate to fulfill the objective of the course . "

A laudable if limited step it would have been ,too, in a university where too often the Canadia nsituation is de-emphasized and texts using onl yAmerican examples are used. But George wa sdistressed.

What troubled George was the university ' simage . "We don't," he intoned, "want th eimplication that we are starting something w ehaven't done before . "

In other words, if we pass this resolution it'l llook like we haven't been telling our student sanything about what for most of them is thei rnative country. And that, in this time of RobinMathews and Mel Watkins, would be very ba dindeed.

George's 'logic is fascinating . Extendin gVolkoff's Law of Public Relations to other areas o fendeavor at UBC, we can visualize some of th efollowing situations :

The university will not embark this year on it sannual fund-rainsing campaign among B .C.businessmen . To do so would imply that theuniversity isn't getting the money it needs from th eprovincial government, and therefore isn't giving u sa very good education . A monstrous thought.

The entire athletic program at UBC will becancelled. How dare anyone, by continuing toprovide facilities such as tracks and swimming pools ,suggest that students are not in peak condition ?

You can keep your bobsled races, skydivin gcontests, Grey Cup games and AMS elections . Fo rme, there's nothing so exciting as a centennial (o rcentenary, or whatever. )

Who can say precisely which aspect o fcentennials is the most enthralling? Is it the simplepleasure of one-upsmanship over all those peopl ewho aren't part of something that has been aroun dfor a hundred years? It is the thrill of playin g"let's-waste-our money"? Or is it just th eexuberance of making an ass of oneself and havingan "official" excuse for it? The answer, of course, i sthat it's all these and more .

Personally, I feel it is the planning of project swhich offers the greatest enjoyment to most people .A partial list of B .C . centennial projects will attes tto this :

Spuzzupm

rumor has itother one .

The Primrose Conservative League is going t osurround the Parliament Buildings in Victoria wit hprimroses — the best that money can buy . Theceremony will be officiated by top cabinet minister s— the best that money can buy .

The Big Cheese is going to learn to count t o100 .

The AMS is going to try for 10 (by two 's).The real Walter Gage will stand up. (And sit

down again.)

our image?The physics department — and all other

departments for that matter —will hire no morefaculty as long as the university is in existence. Wecan't have the public thinking their kids have bee ngoing to an understaffed university .

No more buildings will be constructed at UBC ,because this would imply that we don 't haveenough space as it is. Food services will stopproclaiming its intentions to improve the quality offood, the bookstore will order no more books an dthe library will stop expanding. Any other course ofaction would give the impression that all is not wel lwith these services.

Of course, Volkoff s Law has its brighter sidetoo :

Rumors that Leon Ladner plans to donate a100-foot statue of Walter Gage to complement hi sbell tower can be squelched once and for all .Building such a monument would imply that a nee dexisted for it which had gone unfilled for 50 years —a disgraceful case of neglect.

Exams will be abolished, because they give theuneasy feeling that the university is an impersonalinstitution where professors can' t judge student' sprogress on the basis of personal knowledge .

The board of governors will be abolishe dbecause its existence leads to unhealthy speculatio rthat the university is controlled by the province sbusiness elite .

And, naturally, UBC public Relations man Ji mBanham and his coven of sidemen will be forced toearn their keep elsewhere, because we can't makeout like the univeristy needs to improve its image .

We would look forward with drooling lips tothe belated adoption of Volkoff's Law as th eguiding principle of decision-making in the senate .Trouble, is, this is impossible .

It'd look like senate had been dragging its fee tagain .

Robin Harger will plant 100 shrubs — and ge tbusted .

Davies will put 100 feet in his mouth.Tom Campbell is going to send 100 postcard s

from Hawaii.The police department is going to buy 10 0

psychedelic riot sticks.The Engineering Undergraduate Society is goin g

to aim for an average IQ of room temperature.(Well, they're getting warm . )

Food Services is going to try for a new low o f100 cases of ptomaine poisoning .

The UBC Thunderbirds are going to try for a100 per cent win-loss record .

One hundred students are going to get lost an ddie of starvation in the library stacks.

Head librarian Basil Stuart-Stubbs is going totry to join them.

The B.C . Ferry Authority is going to take apar tand put together 100 ferries .

One hundred fairies are going to take apart andput together Horseshoe Bay . (Nobody will notice. )

AMS external affairs officer JohnScott-Mitchell will model 100 new fashions. Andthe girls will buy them all .

The AMS will revise the constitution 100 times.And nobody will buy it .

The entire Ubyssey staff will be drunk and/o rstoned 100 times . (We're cutting down. )

One hundred people will read my column . Orthey won't get paid .

H I L L E L presents

"A WAY TO THE SELF BEYOND THE EGO"

Dr. Ian Kent, Honor Research Associate at U.B .C. andProfessor William Nicholls, Head, Department of Religiou sStudies at U.B .C. will discuss their new book ; "I AMness"presently being published by the Bobbs-Merrill Company in Ne wYork at Hillel, Friday, January 29th at 12 :30 p.m .

Dr. Ian Kent, Existential Psychiatrist, received his M .D .from Guy 's Hospital in London and his specialty in psychiatryfrom McGill University where he also taught for some time . Hestudied under Martin Buber before the war in Jerusalem.

Dr. Kent went to India in 1960, and this trip reinforced hisinterest in existential psychiatry . He was born in Austria and i snow a Canadian citizen .

Professor Nicholls was born in England and received hi sB .A. from Cambridge University . He won the Major Scholar i nClassics award at St . John's College, Cambridge and the Norrisia nPrize in Divinity, Cambridge University, 1950. He served in th eArmed Forces overseas in the Middle East and Italy, 1942-45 an dwas released with the rank of Captain in the Rifle Brigade i n1945 . He is a member of the Canadian Society for the Study o fReligion and the American Academy of Religion, and has writte nseveral books, essays and articles .

All students are welcome to attend .

This building is my SU BI shall keep it clea n

It maketh me down to li ein the red Conversation Pi t(or in the green Art Gallery )

It leadeth me to still musicin the Listening Lounge

It leadeth me down the corridor of cleanlines sfor my own health's sake

Even as I sit through the hubbubof Food Service sI fear much contaminatio n

For the garbage can art near meThe lunch bags and leftover tray sthey discomfort m e

It prepareth a pool table before mein the presence of my cronie s

"PEOPLE"Applications are now being accepted from students for th eposition of DIRECTOR of the programme "PEOPLE A NEXPERIENCE IN HUMAN RELATIONS AND HUMANSEXUALITY", '71-'72 . These should be directed to Sea nMcHugh, Office of Interprofessional Education, Woodwar dLibrary, Rm . 324 .

Letters should include all material that the applicantconsiders relevant to the position .

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CALL LYNN, 228-308 3

McCUNE 'S MUSINGS

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BY SHANE McCUN E

The hundred year itc h

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Please write me your feelings about SUB"Give your contribution to the Candy Maid at the SUBInformation Centre.

:•

Page 6

THE

UBYSSEY

Tuesday, January 26, 197 1

Bennett fiddles as B .C. chokesVICTORIA (Staff) — Premier W . A. C . Bennett read a

newspaper Monday afternoon as opposition leader Dav eBarrett opened the throne speech debate by centering o nthe exploitation of B .C. by the major primary resourcecorporations .

With the assistance of visual aids in the form of aposter-size map of B.C . with a series of plastic overlays ,Barrett proceeded to outline in detail every major area ofexploitation and descration in the province .

Rankin rejectedfrom page On e

"Our power grows as people in the streets see we areserious and want to help them. "

Bruce Elphinstone of the International Woodworker sof America, who introduced himself as aldermanElphinstone said, "The federal government wants to star treforestation programs to provide jobs at $10 a day."Companies should hire people at union wages to do th ejob ."

Rankin later told the provisional government of theexisting controls on rent and eviction proceedings . He wa scontradicted by some present who claimed that thecontrols sometimes meant nothing .

"Landlords must justify rent increases," said Rankin ."When they want to increase the rent they can jus t

kick you out," a member shouted back .When it was moved that Rankin be appointe d

honorary major of the provisional government, a membe robjected saying, "Rankin is a member of the council w eare opposing.

"We need our own council ."

Major emphasis was given to the Kaiser CoalCompany .

Barrett charged the government had made an appea lto the federal government to allow the shipment of B .C .coal to Japan through American railway systems, thu scutting off a large number of jobs presently taken byCanadian railway workers .

Barrett also attacked Socred Policies on pollution ."I challenge the minister of recreation to go on a

daily diet of Buttle Lake water," he said, in response t oKen Kiernan's claim that he would drink a glass of wate rfrom the surface of Buttle Lake any day.

He continued to list lake after lake that, like Buttle ,had been a victim of industrial pollution, sanctioned b ythe Pollution Control Board.

" Unless this government gets British Columbi amoving again we may be faced with the same proble mthey have in the United States," he said .

"What's the use of all this development if the people' shealth is being endangered," he demanded.

"We intend to lay before this house alternative waysof developing this province . "

Liberal leader Pat McGeer attacked the pollutio nissue right off :

"Everybody talks about pollution these days, eventhe government . But that's all they're doing, just talking. "

He outlined the major centers of pollution in theprovince but said he was dismayed to inform thelegislature of the problem of pollution in municipal watersupplies .

Even these are being polluted, he said .McGeer outlined the pollution of the Naramata wate r

systems in graphic detail, by circulating around the house

pictures of cattle preparing to de€emite into the Naramatawater systems .

Naramata is a small town near Penticton ."Our values are so warped and twisted that we woul d

rather destroy a water supply with cattle feces, rathe rthan upset the production of some beef which turn smoney back to the provincial treasury" he said .

McGeer went on to object to the pre-release of th ethrone speech to the press .

"I'm not blaming the members of the fourth estat e(that's us). It is their job to go out and get as much asthey can from those who are willing to talk . "

McGeer was upset that before the throne speech wa sdelivered by Lieutenant-Governor Nicholson, theVancouver Sun carried both a story and an interpretationof the speech .

McGeer urged that in future the throne speech not bereleased until it is delivered by the lieutenant-governor inorder to "guarantee a dignified presentation . "

McGeer said he was pleased to see mention o felectoral reform in the throne speech.

"My vote (in the legislature) can be cancelled by aman who received one-quarter as many votes as I did, " h esaid in support of his demands for redistribution andother reforms.

He also said he wanted to see the return of th epreferential ballot, whereby each elected memberrepresents at least fifty per cent of his electorate .

(Presently, a member can theoretically be elected t othe house with less than 30 per cent of the popular vote . )

He said the preferential ballot was thrown out byBennett in 1952 because it was "too complicated . "

"It wasn't too complicated to elect him, but it wa stoo compicated to keep him," he said.

in theclassroom In Ec 200 time is money

By LESLIE PLOMME R

One Economics 200 class Monday learned th eunsurprising maxim that time is money.

"The major cost of going to university is that you'reforegoing the wages you'd have in a job," visitinginstructor Michael Lazur told 45 people in Angus 407.

"The cost of going to university is not mainly room ,board and tuition," he said .

Seen in this light, the cost of attending UBC is less i ntimes when jobs are scarce .

Lazur was discussing "implicit costs" which he sai dcould be measured by "opportunity costs." To guage theopportunity costs of attending UBC, the student shoul dconsider how much money he or she is, in effect, losin gby not working at an alternative occupation .

If a student thinks attending UBC is more pleasan tthan working, then the "psychic pain" of enduring a jo bcan also be taken into account when measuring th eopportunity cost of going to university, Lazur said.

AGRIC. U .S.— FE E

REFERENDUMRESULTS

ON JAN . 21/71 — From10:30 a . m. to 3:30 p.m.

31.4% of the student svoted and 80 .3% of thos evoting approved the $3 feelevy.

The same sort of reasoning applies when a perso nkeeps money in a mattress rather than putting it in a ban kand gaining interest, he said .

While a couple of young entrepreneurs at the back o fthe room discussed trading used skiis, Lazur talked abou timplicit costs that should be considered when buying o rinvesting in a business .

The students then learned about some of the basi cconsiderations when buying a factory .

Lazur used the example of a factory which is owne dand managed by the same person . He said that i nconsidering the costs of the factory, and how much of areturn the buyer expects on his money, implicit cost smust be taken into account, such as the salary of themanager.

This person ' s salary would probably not hav eappeared on the books while the manager was also owner ,Lazur said, so an estimated salary would have to bededucted from the established net profit before the buyer

would have an accurante picture of how much money h ecould expect to make .

"The economist's definition of cost differs from tha tof the businessman and accountant because it include simplicit costs," Lazur said.

Implicit costs don't represent market transactions andare therefore measured by opportunity costs, he said .

Lazur also touched briefly on consumers' an dproducers' surpluses, and taxes in the lecture .

He spoke clearly, and explained his points well . If th electure was not an exciting experience it is more due tothe nature of Economics 200 than to any shortcoming o nLazur's part .

Two students raised questions during the class, an dLazur asked once if people had any queries on the lecturecontent .

On the whole, lecture approach was casual, and heseemed receptive to questions .

The class takes place Monday, Wednesday andThursday at 2 :30 in Buchanan 407 .

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Tuesday, January 26, 1971

T H E

U B Y S S E Y

Constitution RevisionsWhat they mean . . .

PROPOSED ORGANIZATION

BE THERE.Wednesday -Jan. 27

MEMORIAL GYM - 12:30 NOON

HISTORYIn the summer of 1969 an opinion survey wa s

undertaken by the Alma Mater Society in order todefine or redefine the purpose and direction of th eAlma Mater Society. In analysis, a number ofproblems were identified, which affect the AMS 'ability to achieve results . These include :

1, A bureaucratic structure which does no tappear to be useful in creating action.

2 A lack of rapport with the student . body .

The existing organization is such as to justify th estudents complaints of an ill-defined reportingrelationship, a lack of definition of responsibility an dgeneral overall ineffectiveness. Along similar lines, th eadministrative organization is not set up toimplement policies.

The Constitution Revisions are presented as par tof the solution to these problems. (The total solutio ninvolves people, ideas, projects as well as structuralchanges. )

CHANGESMAJOR CHANGES1. The Executive

The Executive is established as a legal entity wit hcertain functions which coincide with the priorities ofinterest of students at UB C

Composition :

President —to co-ordinate efforts of the whole counci lFour Vice-Presidents — responsible fo rAcademics Service sCommunity Affairs Finance s

— each heading a commission to look after the abov eareas of interest

Ombudsman — position to remain unchanged, a tthis time ,

Ex-Officio members Secretary andCommunications Officer — non-elected, non-votingmembers of the Executive

The new Executive are named as Managin gDirectors. Their functions are defined, but withflexibility to the changing trends .2. The Students' Counci l

Council will retain its ultimate authority ove ractivities of the society . Rather than simply meet

once a week and disappear, council members will b erequired to participate in one of the commissions(each headed by a vice-president) . The result will b emore informed and more. rapid decision-making .

Composition :That the composition of council remain as i tpresently is, ie, the duly elected representative sfrom all degree granting faculties, colleges, andschools .

3. EligibilityIt is proposed that there be no eligibility o r

residency requirements for councillors .

MINOR CHANGE S1. Meetings

Two general meetings a year are proposed so tha tprograms can be presented for evaluation by students .2. Elections

To co-ordinate with the changes to the Executivethe election clause is to be amended .3. Renumbering, Deletions

To put the constitution into organized fashion anumber of minor changes (bureaucratic details) arenecessary .

PRESIDENT GENERA LMANAGER

STAF F

Ombudsma n

V.P .

V .P .Academics

CommunityAffairs

SECRETAR YCOMMUNICATIONS

V.P .

V .P .

OFFICE RServices

Finance

/

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C O U N C,

O R

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Wy

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QZ 0u. O

u-0 O u- 0U < U

STUDENT

BODY

THE

UBYSSEY

Tuesday, January 26, 197 1

General Meetin gWednesday, January 2 7

War Memorial Gy m

AGENDA

1. Executive Revision s

2. Council Revision s

3. Elegibility Revision s

4. Miscellaneous Revisions

good standing of the Society. Al lnominations shall be delivered to th eSecretary of the Society within the timeaforesaid, and shall forthwith be postedby that officer on the Students' Counci lbulletin board .

(e) No student shall sign the nominationpapers for more than one candidate foreach office .

(f) Active members only shall have theprivilege of voting at these elections .

(g) Voting shall be by secret ballot and themethod shall be as follows:If there are two candidates the vote rshall indicate his choice upon the ballo topposite the number of the candidat efor whom he wishes to vote . If thenumber of candidates nominated forany office exceed one, then the name sof all candidates shall be placed on theballot paper in alphabetical order. Eachvoter shall write the number `1' upo nthe ballot opposite the name of th ecandidate for whom he desires to vote ,and the number `2' opposite th ecandidate of his second choice an dprogressively until all the candidate swhose names appear on the list areallotted choices. Notwithstanding th epreceding no ballot shall be deeme dspoiled where the voter has clearl yindicated at least one choice. Eachcandidate shall be credited with thenumber of first choices marked oppositehis name. The candidate who receivesmore than 50 percent of the tota lnumber of first choices shall be declare delected. If no candidate receives morethan 50 percent of the total number offirst choices then the candidate with theleast number of first choices shall bestruck off the list and the secon dchoices marked on his ballots shall thenbe distributed among the remainingcandidates on the list in the manneraforesaid until :

(1) A candidate receives more than 5 0percent of the votes cast o r

(2) Until two candidates remain on thelist in which case the one with thelargest number of votes shall bedeclared elected.Where a candidate whose namehas been struck off the listaforesaid is the next choice on theballot, then such ballot shall b ecounted in favor of the candidat enext subsequent in choice to th ecandidate whose name has bee nstruck off.Where by reason of choices ofvoters and by distribution of vote sas aforesaid a tie results betweentwo or more candidates then th eElections Committee shalldetermine in such manner as itdeems fit which of, and in whatorder, such candidates shall bestruck off the list .

(h) After the ballots have bee ncounted, the Returning Officershall place them in a package,which package shall be sealed in th epresence of the scrutineers andpreserved by the Returning Officeruntil after the Annual GeneralMeeting of the Society.

(1) Polling booths shall be open from10 :00 a.m. to 4 :00 p .m. on electionday with the exception of those atthe residences which shall be ope nfrom 5 :00 p .m. to 7 :00 p .m. only,on the day preceding election day.

(j) All elections shall be in charge o f

A. Minor Changes

1 . AMEND By-Law 2 (Meetings) to read a sfollows :

BY-LAW 2 — MEETING SThe Society shall hold at least two General

Meetings each year, to be known as the Fall and th eAnnual General Meetings, which shall be held duringOctober and March at dates which the Students 'Council shall set.

(1) One week's clear notice of each Genera lMeeting specifying the date, place and hou rof the meeting shall be given by posting te n(10) notices of such throughout the campus ;and one week's notice shall also be given inThe Ubyssey, such notices to be signed b ythe Secretary .

(2) At the Fall General Meeting theVice-President, Finance, shall present fo rdiscussion the proposed budget for th eforthcoming year ; at the Annual GeneralMeeting the Vice-President, Finance, shallmake a financial report as of the 28th o fFebruary of the calendar year in which th emeeting is held ; the Auditors shall beappointed at the Annual General Meeting .

(3) At the Annual General Meeting the outgoingPresident and Vice-Presidents shall brieflyreport on the results of their programme sand the incoming President andVice-Presidents shall present brief reports ontheir proposed programmes for the followin gyear. At the Fall General Meeting progres sreports shall be given by the President an dthe Vice-Presidents.

(4) The Annual General Meeting held in Marc hshall be deemed to be the meetin gcontemplated by the Societies Act .

(5) The President shall call a Special Genera lMeeting :(a) Upon resolution of either the Executiv e

or the Students' Council.(b) Upon written request duly signed b y

500 active members of the Society .(6) Active members only shall be entitled t o

vote at a meeting of the Society and eac hactive member in good standing shall beentitled to vote . Honorary members ma ytake part in discussion, but shall not b eentitled to vote . Voting by proxy at an ymeeting of the Society shall not be allowed .

(7) Ten percent (10%) of the active members o fthe current session shall constitute a quorumat any meeting of the Society:

(8) Not less than three (3) days' notice of aspecial general meeting specifying the place ,the day, and the hour of the meeting and th egeneral nature of the business to betransacted at the meeting shall be given b ypublishing same in The Ubyssey ; providedalways that the Students' Council may b yresolution provide, from time to time, suchother manner of giving notice as it ma ydeem good and sufficient ; such notices shal lbe signed by the Secretary.

(9) Extraordinary resolution means a resolutio npassed by a two-thirds majority of suc hmembers entitled to vote as are present i nperson at a general meeting .

(10)The meetings of the Society shall b econducted according to the procedure se tdown in Robert's Rules of Order, lates tedition .

2 . RENAME old By-Law 7 as Elections ,RENUMBER as By-Law 6 and AMEND to readas follows :

BY-LAW 6 — ELECTION S(1) The election of the Executive shall be con-

ducted as follows :(a) The order of elections shall b e

announced by the Elections Committe enot later than January 15th.

(b) The first election shall be held on th efirst or second Wednesday in February .Provided that if the University is not i nsession on the day elections should beheld, the particular election shall beheld on the next day on which theUniversity is in session.

(c) Nominations for all positions shall b ereceived by the Secretary of the Societ yfrom 9:00 a .m. on the Wednesday tw oweeks preceding the election day unti l12 :00 noon on the Thursday directlypreceding election day . The electiondates and nomination closing dates fo rall offices shall be published in at leas ttwo editions of the student newspape rpreceding the nomination period.

(d) Nominations shall be signed by not les sthan twenty-five active members in

the Elections Committee, and th eelections shall be conducted t ocomply with the aforesaid section sand such further regulations as th esaid committee shall make fro mtime to time, and which are notinconsistent with the By-Laws o fthe Society.

(2) No student shall hold more than one votingoffice on the Students' Council during anyone session .

(3) The newly elected President andVice-President, Finance, shall be required t oattend all regular meetings of the outgoingStudents' Council and shall be entitled t oparticipate in their deliberation, but shal lnot be entitled to vote . The remainin gofficers following their election shall b erequired to familiarize themselves with thei rnew offices with the guidance and advice o fthe current office-holders, and to attend a tleast half of the regular meetings of th eoutgoing Students' Council, and shall b eentitled to participate in their deliberations ,but shall not be entitled to vote . The twoCouncil meetings previous to the Annua lGeneral Meeting shall be of a joint nature t oinclude the incoming CounciL

3. RENUMBER By—Law 5 as By-Law 9 (Code) .4. DELETE old By—Law 6 (Executive) .5. DELETE old By-Law 8 (Election of Councillor s

Other than Executive) .6. RENUMBER old By—law 9 as By-Law 1 0

(Borrowing Powers) .7. RENUMBER old By-Law 10 as By-Law 1 1

(Fees) .8. RENUMBER old By-Law 11 as By-Law 1 2

(Funds) .9. RENUMBER old By-Law 12 as By-Law 1 3

(Discipline) .10. RENUMBER old By-Law 13 as By-Law 2 4

(Social Functions) .11. RENUMBER old By-Law 24 as By-Law 2 3

(Liability) .12. RENUMBER old By-Law 25 as By-Law 8

(Recall) .

B . Major Changes1 . RENAME old By-Law 4 as Executive and

AMEND to read as follows :BY-LAW 4 — EXECUTIVE

(1) The Executive shall be the ManagingDirectors of the Society.

(2) The members of the Executive shall be :(a) The President .(b) The Vice-President, Academics.(c) The Vice-President, Community Affairs .(d) The Vice-President, Finance.(e) The Vice-President, Services.

(3) The duties of the members of the Executiv eshall be :(a) The President or his designate shal l

preside at all meetings of the Society ,Executive and of the Students' Council.He shall be an ex-officio member of al lcommittees of the Society and shal lundertake all such other duties a susually fall to the office of President o fa Society .(i) The President shall appoint

members of the Executive orStudents' Council to act asrepresentatives of the Alma Mate rSociety on such committees as mayfrom time to time be created .

(ii) The President shall appoint, afte rconsultation with the Executive, amember of the Society to act a sSecretary of the Society .

(iii) The President shall appoint,subject to the approval of th eExecutive, a General Manager o fthe Society, one of whos eresponsibilites shall be the hiringand supervision of all other staffemployed from time to time by theSociety . Annually, and before June1st, the President shall review withthe General Manager the function ,responsibility and authority of allthe paid employees of the Society .

(iv) The President shall co-ordinate an dassist the Vice-Presidents in th eexecution of the programme of theSociety during his term of office.

(b) The' Vice-President, Academics, shall :(i) Act as Chairman of the Academi c

Commission which shall consist o fthe following :

(a) The Vice-President, Academics .(b) Two members of the Students '

Council appointed by the President ,in consultation with members ofthe Executive.

(c) Three members-at-large appointedby the Vice-President, Academics ,in consultation with the two

Tuesday, January 26, 1971

THE

UBYSSE Y

Constitutional ChangesThese revisions cannot go into effect unless there is a quorum at the General Meeting (approx . 2300 people )

and they must be passed by a 2/3 majority vote .

Students' Council members and th eExecutive.

(d) One representative of the FinanceCommission appointed by theFinance Commission subject to theapproval of the Vice-President ,Academics.

(e) Such non-voting members as theChairman feels desirable .

(ii) Communicate to the Academi cCommission the goals, priorities an dpolicies of the Society as determined b ythe Executive .

(iii) Communicate to the Executive and th eStudents' Council the views of th eCommission concerning programme an dbudget in the general area of Academics.

(iv) Undertake such other duties as ar eassigned by the President or Executive.

(c) The Vice-President, Community Affair sshall :(i) Act as Chairman of the Communit y

Affairs Commission which shal lconsist of the following :(a) The

Vice-President ,Community Affairs .

(b) Two members of the Students'Council appointed by thePresident, in consultation wit hmembers of the Executive .

(c) Three members-at-largeappointed by th eVice-President, CommunityAffairs, in consultation withthe two Students' Counci lmembers and the Executive .

(d) One representative of theFinance Commission appointe dby the Finance Commissio nsubject to the approval of th eVice-President, Communit yAffairs.

(e) Such non-voting members a sthe Chairman feels desirable.

(ii) Communicate to the Communit yAffairs Commission the goals,priorities and policies of th eSociety as determined by th eExecutive .

(iii) Communicate to the Executive andthe Students' Council the views o fthe Commission concerningprogramme and budget in thegeneral area of Community Affairs .

(iv) Undertake such other duties as aredesigned by the President o rExecutive.

of theUniversity Clubs Committee ;Such non-voting members a sthe Commission may fee ldesirable.

Communicate to the FinanceCommission the goals,priorities and policies of theSociety as determined by theExecutive .Communicat eExecutive an dCouncil theCommission concerningprogrammes and budget .

(iv) Prepare the budget of theSociety from the estimates o fthe proposed expenditures b ythe Commission Chairmen ,the Undergraduate Societies ,the University Club sCommittee and the Manage rof Publications.

(v) Prepare the budget of the

Society for administration ,other Alma Mater Societysubsidiary organizations, andestimate and advise onexpenditures for any otherpurpose authorized by th eExecutive or Students'Council .

(vi) Authorize the Bursar of th eUniversity of BritishColumbia that any portion o fAlma Mater Society Fee sreceivable by the Bursar fro mtime to time and designatedby resolution of the Societ yfor any specific fund, be paiddirectly by the Bursar intosuch fund and not to theSociety .Provide for an overalloperating margin of at leastfive percent (5%) .

(viii) Immediately upon receipt ,deposit all funds wit hchartered banks selected bythe Students' CounciL

(ix) Disburse no funds except i npayment of expenses o rinvestments authorized b yStudents' Council.

(x) Keep careful account of, an dbe responsible for, all monie sreceived and disbursed b yhim, and shall file all bills,receipts and vouchers.

(xi) Be responsible for approvingvouchers, requisitions, pett ycash payments and purchas eorders.

(xii) Approve control reportssubmitted by any subsidiar yorganization of the Societ ywishing to hold a functio nrequiring any funds from th eSociety.

(xiii) Obtain a financial report foreach activity and function o fthe Society or any of it ssubsidiaries.

(xiv) Before authorizing an yallowance for travellin gexpenses, insist on receiving astatement of propose dexpenses, and within on eweek after the return of th eperson or persons to whomallowances were made, shal lobtain a detailed account o factual expenditures, and shal lmake any necessar yadjustments.

(xv) Purchase a fidelity bond t ocover the society for the sumof $5,000 .00 .

(xvi) Remain in office until th e31st of May, at which timethe incoming Vice-President ,Finance, shall assume office .The outgoing Vice-President ,Finance, shall be responsibl efor the closing of the fiscalbooks of the Society . Theincoming Vice-President ,Finance, shall have the vot eat the joint meetings andevery meeting subsequent t othe Annual General Meeting .

(xvii) Render prior to February 1s ta Statement of Income andExpenditure and charge sagainst the margin for theperiod June 1st throughDecember 31st of the yea rpreceding plus an estimate o fthe charges that appear likelyto be made against the marginprior to the end of thecurrent fiscal year. TheVice-President, Finance, shallrender a similar group ofstatements within threeweeks of a written request fo rsuch from the Students'Council .

(xviii)Present to the Students'C o u n c i l a n yrecommendations from theAuditors and shall report to

Students' Council by the endof the year what the result swere of any action.

(xix) Be required to present to theFinance Commission allcontracts of a sum involving$100 .00 or more for approvalprior to signature by th esigning officers .

(xx) Be the Chairman of th eAccident Benefit Fun dCommittee or shall appoin this designate from theFinance Commission to chairthe Committee .

(xxi) In consultation with theincoming Vice-PresidentFinance, and GeneralManager, present within th efirst two weeks of March o feach year a report explainingthe current policies andpractices with respect to :(a) Budgeting procedures ;(b) Operational funds :(c) Reserves : an d(d) Short term investments.

(e)

The

Vice-President, Services ,shall :

(i)

Act as Chairman of theServices Commission which ,shall

consist

of thefollowing :(a) The Vice-President ,

Services . -(b) Two members of the

Students' Counci lappointed by thePresident i nconsultation with theExecutive.

(c) Three members-at-largeappointed by theVice-President ,Services, i nconsultation with thetwo Students' Councilmembers of th eCommission .

(d) One representative o fthe Financ eCommission appointe dby the FinanceCommission subject t othe approval of th eVice-President ,Services.

(e) Such non-votingmembers as theCommission shall fee ldesirable.

(ii) Communicate to the Service sCommission the goals,priorities and policies of theSociety as determined by theExecutive.

(iii) Communicate to th eExecutive and Students'Council the views of th eCommission concerningprogramme and budgeting i nthe area of Services.

(iv) Recommend, through asub-committee on StudentUnion Building Policy, to th eExecutive by August 1st an yproposed changes in th eStudent Union BuildingPolicy for the forthcomingyear and shall also undertak eto review Student UnionBuilding policies on a regularbasis. This sub-committe eshall be composed of :(a) The Vice-President ,

Services.(b) The Vice-President ,

Finance.(c) Three members of the

Services Commissionappointed by theServices Commission.

(d) The Building Manager,ex-officio an dnon-voting.

(v) Appoint a member of theSociety as Cultura lProgramme Co-ordinator who

BY-LAW 4 (3) (d) — EXECUTIVE(3) (d) The Vice-President, Finance, shall :

(i) Act as Chairman of the FinanceCommission which shall consist o fthe following :(a) The Vice-President Finance ;(b) Two members of the Students '

Council appointed by thePresident in consultation wit hthe Vice-President, Finance ;Four members-at-larg eappointed by th eVice-President, Finance, i nconsultation with the twoStudents ' Council members o fthe Commission ;Thee Treasure r

(c )

(d)

(e)

to theStudents'

views of

i

THE

UBYSSEY

Tuesday, January 26, 197 1

Constitutional Change sshall co-ordinate the activitie sof the culturally oriente dgroups on campus and assis tin developing acomprehensive cultura lprogramme of activitie sencompassing the whol e

Society .(b) Be the only recognized medium

between the Society and :(i) The University authorities .(ii) The general public.

(c)

Have full control of all activitie sunder the Society subject t othe provisions in theConstitution and By-Law sand any rule made orresolution passed by it inconnection with any suchactivity shall be considered a sfinal and binding, unles srescinded or repealed b yresolution of the Students'

Council or by resolution of th eSociety passed by referendum o r

at a General Meeting .(d) Meet regularly each week durin g

winter session and shall holdspecial meetings as may b erequired .

(e) Have power to engage and paysuch assistants as it may require o rdeem necessary for the efficientcarrying out of the work of th eSociety .

(f) Have power to designate at anytime which minute or minutes o fany Commission or subsidiar yorganization shall be reviewed bythe Executive, and shall havepower to review or rescind oramend such minutes.

(g) Assume office at .the Annua lGeneral Meeting.

(h) Have power to appoint committee sto assist, regulate, organize o rcontrol student activities or fo rany other purpose .

(i) Be responsible for establishing an dclearly setting out the goals andpriorities of the Society during it sterm of office by nd later than th e15th day of August .

(j) Appoint a person to be responsibl efor communicating those goals an dpriorities as well as the ongoin gactivities of the Society to th eUniversity community and genera lpublic. That person shall be calledthe Communications Officer .

(k) Decide which of the members ormember of the Executive shal lreplace the President in hisabsence, or in case of hisincapacity .

(5) The signing officers of the Society shall beany two of the Executive provided that noone person may sign in two differen tcapacities.

2 .

ADD new By-Law 5 (Students' Council)as follows :

BY-LAW 5 — STUDENTS' COUNCI L

(1) The Directors of the Society shall be th eStudents' Council .

(2) Honorary members of the Students 'Council may be appointed from time t otime by the Students' Council .

(3) The Students ' Council shall be compose dof :(a) The Executive .(b) The A.M .S. representatives of

degree granting Faculties, College sand Schools duly elected inaccordance with the constitution o ftheir undergraduate societies an delected within two weeks of the las tExecutive election .

(c) The Ombudsman, elected in th esame manner as the Executive o fthe Students' Council (ex-officio).

(d) The Editor-in-Chief of the Ubysse yEditorial Board appointed by a vot eof the incoming Students' Counci lbefore the end of the spring termon the recommendation of th eEditorial Board (ex-officio) .

(e) The Secretary (ex-officio) .(f) The Communications Officer

(ex-officio) .

(Continued )

constituency shall be responsiblefor relating the activities of th eStudents' Council to the variou sparts of his constituency an drelating the views and activities ofhis constituency back to theStudents' Council .Each Councillor shall sit on at leaston Commission .One Councillor, appointed b yresolution of Students' Council,shall be responsible for organizin gthe selection of personnel for an ycommittees . of the Alma Mate rSociety unless such selection i sotherwise specified in the By-Law sor Code. He shall also see tha tStudents' Council is kept informe dof the activities of the committee sand that any pertinent policy of th eStudents ' Council is relayed to theappropriate committee.

(d) One Councillor, appointed byresolution of Students' Council ,shall act as Chairman of theConstitution Revisions Committee .That committee shall review notonly these By-Laws but also upo nrequest shall review the By-Law sof any subsidiary organization andbring these By-Laws to Students 'Council for ratification .

(e) The Ombudsman shall :(i) Be responsible fo r

investigating any complain tof any member in goo dstanding of the Alma Mate rSociety vis-a-vis the Alm aMater Society, its subsidiaryorganizations, the Universit yAdministration or any of it sancillary services .

(ii) Be responsible for th ealleviation of any complain twhere possible .

(iii) Recommend any course o faction to any other Executiv emember, the Students'Council of the Alma MaterSociety, or any of it ssubsidiary organization swhere such action isnecessitated .

(iv) Be allowed to attend al lmeetings of the Alma Mate rSociety Executive and any o fits subsidiary organizations o rcommittees .

(v) Be allowed to send arepresentative to all meeting sof the Alma Mater Societ yExecutive and any of itssubsidiary organizations orcommittees as long as he (th eOmbudsman) informs th echairman of the meeting byletter beforehand .

(f) The Editor-in-Chief of the Ubysse yshall be responsible to the Students 'Council for the activities of th eEditorial Board .

(g) The Secretary shall take th eminutes of all meetings of th eStudents' Council, Executive and ofthe Society .In addition the Secretary shall :(i) Be responsible for copies of

all letters written an dreceived by the Society or bythe Secretary which relate tothe affairs of the Society ;

(ii) Be responsible for the minut ebooks and secretarial record sof the Society, and may readthe annual reports of thesubsidiary organizations a tthe Annual Meeting of theSociety .

(iii) Sit as Students ' Counci lliaison on the Women'sAthletic Committee .

(iv) Be responsible for keepingthe Society Constitution an dBy-Laws in good standin gwith the Registrar o fCompanies ;

(v) In addition to the abov eduties, have such furtherduties as may from time t otime be prescribed by th ePresident .

(5) The Students' Council shall :(a) Act as the Board of Directors of th e

Society .

(b) Assume office at the Annua lGeneral Meeting .

(c) Meet at least twice a month to :(i) Review the activities of th e

Commissions .(ii) Review the activities an d

decisions of the Executive, Lwhich shall stand unles srescinded, repealed oramended by resolution of th eStudents' Council.

(iii) Make such committe eappointments as areestablished as th eresponsibility of Students 'Council in the Alma Mate rSociety Code or theseBy-Laws .

(6) At any official meeting of the Students'Council each Students' Councillor shal lhave one vote with the exception of theex-officio members who shall b enon-voting .

(7) A special Students' Council Meeting shallbe called by the President on the reques tof any four of the voting Students 'Council members .

3 . RENUMBER old By-Law 23 as By-Law 7(Eligibility) and AMEND to read a sfollows :

BY-LAW 7 — ELIGIBILITY FOR OFFICE HOLDIN G

(1) A student, to be a candidate for an yelected or appointed office in the Alm aMater Society must be an active memberof the Alma Mater Society as defined i nBy-Law 1 and must also be eligible in oneof the following categories :(a) He must have passed the number o f

units required by the Registrar forthe attainment of credit at hi simmediately previous sessional (andsupplemental) examinations andhave attained a 60% average for 1 5units or more, 65% for less than 1 5units.

(b) If he is not eligible as to hi simmediately previous sessiona lexaminations he may demonstrat eeligibility by presenting a lette rfrom the professor of each of hiscourses to show that he is passingthe equivalent number of unit srequired by the Registrar for th eattainment of credit at sessionalexaminations and a 65% average.

(2) To remain in office he must pass at th esessional examinations immediatel yfollowing his election or appointment ,the minimal requirements for creditstipulated by the Registrar for th eFaculty or course in which he is the nregistered.

(3) (a) A student entering the Universityof British Columbia on transferfrom another institution must b eon clear standing with the Registrarand have passed his previou ssessional examinations an dobtained a 60% average to be acandidate for an Alma MaterSociety office .

(b) The status of any student carryin gan irregular course shall bedetermined by a separate minute o fthe Eligibility Committee o nconsultation with the Registrar.

(4) The Eligibility Committee .(a) The Alma Mater Society Eligibilit y

Committee shall be composed of aStudents' Councillor as Chairman ,one other Students' Councillor, andone other Alma Mater Societymember, all of whom shall b eappointed by the Alma Mate rSociety President, and the Presiden tof the University Clubs Committee .

(b) The Committee shall hold at leas tone meeting per term, the first tobe not later than three weeks afterthe commencement of the Fal lterm and another ; not later tha ntwo weeks after th ecommencement of the Spring term.

(c) Powers : The Eligibility Committeeshall have the power, subject to th eapproval of Students' Council, todeclare any student ineligible for al lhis offices if he fails to comply wit hthe requirements of By-Law 7 (1) ,(2) or (3) . The Committee shall alsohave the power, subject t oratification by Students' Council ,to exempt any student or student sfrom eligibility .

(5) Eligibility rules for Executive positions :(a) The President shall not previously

have held the position of Presiden tof the Society .

(4) Duties of members of the Students 'Council :(a)

Each Councillor elected b y

university community.(vi)

Undertake

such

additiona lduties as may be assigned b ythe President or Executive . (b )

(4)

The Executive shall :(a)

Act as the Managing Directors of the (c)

Tuesday, January 26, 1971

THE

UBYSSEY

Page 7

Black boycott of Polaroidstops sales in S . Africa

CAMBRIDGE, Mass .(CUP-CPS) — Polaroi dCorporation, one of severa lhundred American corporation soperating in the Union of SouthAfrica, announced on Jan . 12cessation of sales to thegovernment of South Africa.

The move was apparently i nresponse to pressure from a neconomic boycott first initiatedby the Polaroid RevolutionaryWorkers Movement, a group o fblack employees of the company.

The Polaroid Corporation alsoannounced last week that it won' tsell its identification car dmachines to the Quebecgovernment without first

Students have voicein Ed . elections

Students can now nominatefaculty members for the positionof director of secondary

. education said an Educatio nUndergrad Society spokesma nMonday.

"This is the first time student shave had this opportunity," saidGarry Gomley, EdUS presidentaladvisor .

"They should nominate a

Drug education wee kto begin on Monday

use of drugs will be held nex tweek.

Drug Education Week ,sponsored by the EducationUndergrad Society, will be held inEd. 100 from noon-2 :30 p .m .

Monday and Tuesday thephysical and psychological effect sof drugs will be discussed by UBC

Recycling project at UB CFor the past four months, there has been a group of people on

campus carrying out a recycling project.The work is being done under the auspices of the University

Endowment Lands Recycling Project.Recycling is the reusing of suitable used materials. For example ,

newspapers can be pulped down and used again as newspaper o rconstruction paper .

Lynn Vickson, one of the founding members of this project, said ,"Recycling has three aims : to reduce the area used for garbage dumps ,to save natural resources, and to cut down on the pollution from th emanufacturing plants."

The recycling group will be taken over by a group called Joshua ,which is a bigger and more comprehensive one, said Vickson .

At present, there are deposit centres for used newspapers, glassobjects and rags at Acadia Apartments for married students, in thebasement of Union College, and in various other places on campus .

At designated times, members of the recycling group rent a truc kand take the newspapers to Excelsion Paper Stock Company, which sel lthem to a recycling company to be pulped .

The group hopes to set up deposit receptacles in the compute rcentres of the different faculties at UBC as wel L

"The recycling project can become really effective when we ca nuse the vast amount of paper from the computer centres, " sai d

• Vickson ."Recycling is a long-range project, which should be taught to th e

upcoming generation, just as it was to the generations of the 1930 sDepression . The need for recycling is becoming stronger now, with th eworsening pollution problem," she said.

Tonight at 7 :30 on Channel 10, there will be a program onrecycling called, UBC Now, put out by the UBC informatio n

service

▪ There will be also be tours of the Belkins Recycling BoardCompany from now until August.

For any information on recycling, phone Lynn Vickson, a224-7109, or Janie Fouthey at 224-5767 .

example to the nearly 300 othe rAmerican firms that sell good sworth almost $600 million pe ryear in the country.

"South Africa is a police state .The only way America can affec tit is by withdrawal, " Hunter said.

Polaroid vice-president, TomWyman, said the corporationwouldn't enter into an agreemen twith the Quebec governmentwithout first discussing objection sthat .Trudeau has put forward tothe ID card plan .

Polaroid's ID-2 unit, themachine used in South Africa,incorporates computerize dindentification processes that canreproduce photographs, fingerprints and an identifying numbe rin two minutes .

South Africa's 16 millio nblacks, ' who comprise 80 per cen tof the population, are required b ylaw to carry the identificatio npassports at all times or face a fin eor imprisonment .

HONG KONGCHINESE FOOD SJust One Block from Campu s

in the Village

WE SERVE AUTHENTI CCHINESE FOO D

AT REASONABLE PRICE SEat In — Take Ou t

Open Every Day4 :30-11 :00 p .m .

5732 University Blvd .

224-612 1In the Village

U .S. sees book firstOTTAWA (CUP) — An English translation of Pierr e

Vallieres' book White Niggers of America will be on sale in theUnited States about 10 weeks before it is published in Canada .

The book, a lengthy autobiography and analysis of th eposition of the Quebecois oppression, has formed the basis o fgovernment criminal charges that have kept Vallieres' in jail thepast three years.

A spokesman for Monthly Review in New York, a Marxis tpublishing house, said the American edition of the book wil lappear at the end of January or the first week in February.

Monthly Review sold Canadian publishing rights t oMcClelland and Stewart of Toronto because, the spokesman said :"It is the usual custom to license a book in countries where wehave no distribution apparatus."

A McClelland and Stewart public relations spokesman saidWednesday that a tentative publishing date has been set for theCanadian edition in April .

John Newlove will be the Canadian editor .

Monthly Review has held publishing rights for the Englishtranslation for over two years and their spokesman said the dela yin publishing was caused by the difficulty of translating thelengthy book.

Editions of the book in its original French that have bee nallowed in Canada, have been severely censored .

Perhaps it is not coincidence that the route taken b yVallieres' book describes once again the relationship of Canada tothe U.S . — a colony — and that of Quebec to Canada — a colonywithin a colony.

OFFICIAL NOTIC EAlma Mater Society

A.M .S . ELECTIONS FOR 1971-72Elections for the AMS Executive will be held in 2 slates, the

first on Wednesday, February 10th and the second o nWednesday, February 17th. Depending on the outcome of theconstitutional changes to be voted on at the General Meeting ,Wednesday, January 27th, one of the 2 following alternatives willbe chosen .

I If present by-laws remain :FIRST SLATE

SECOND SLAT EPresident

Vice-PresidentSecretary

TreasurerCo-ordinator of Activities

External AffairsOmbudsman

Internal Affair s

II If proposed by-law re-Visions are accepted :FIRST SLATE

SECOND SLAT EPresident

Vice PresidentsOmbudsman

—Academic s—Service s—Community Affair s—Financ e

Nomination periods for the 2 slates run through the followin gdate s

FIRST SLATE — 9:00 a .m. Wednesday, Jan . 27th to 12:00Thursday, Feb. 4 .

SECOND SLATE — 9:00 a.m. Wednesday Feb . 3rd to 12 :00Thursday, Feb. 11 .

All & any students curious, apathetic or otherwiseinterested in these elections should pick up a nomination &eligibility form at the AMS General Office or from Ann eClarkson, AMS Secretary, in SUB 248 .

DO /T NOW!

discussing the deal with PrimeMinister Trudeau. The samemachines were used by th egovernment in South Africa.

Trudeau's representative inQuebec, Robert Bourassa is no wconsidering the best way toestablish an identification car dsystem for all residents of Quebe cas an anti-terrorist measure. If theplan goes ahead, Polaroid willprobably supply the machines.

In the U.S . PRWM organizer sCaroline Hunter and Ken William sannounced an expansion of th eboycott. They said the boycot twould continue until Polaroidpulls out of South Africa as an

faculty member of their choice, asthe director will be the dean' sright hand man and will makepolicy decisions on secondaryeducation courses, " he said .

Nominations close Wednesdayand must have the consent of thenominee. They should beforwarded to Garry Gomley,EdUS, rm. 1, Education building.

A ten-hour crash course on the psychiatrist Conrad Schwarz andKent Pearson of the Narcoti cAddiction Foundation .

This will be followed by drug sand the law, on Wednesday, talksby Cool-Aid and Now Bus peopl eon Thursday and drugs and schoolon Friday .

Admission is free and th ecourse is open to everyone .

PHOENIX '71 PRESENTS

SALOON NIGHTWed., Jan . 27 - Tomorrow

7 p.m. - 1 a.m . - SUB BALLROO M

Continuous Entertainment - Gambling

Adm . 50c

Refreshments 3/$1 .00

Page 8

THE

UBYSSEY

Tuesday, January 26, 197 1

Puddles and pot hole sThe series of mud puddles and pot holes tha t

the Highways Department calls the SixteenthAvenue extension is not due for any improvement .

"Any improvement wouldn't be until latespring, at least," district highways engineer W. M. A .Baker said Monday .

"We've been looking around for some grave land if we can find some, we'll bring it over there, "he said.

Many students have been using the road toavoid congestion on University Boulevard andChancellor Boulevard and it has become the scen eof many small accidents .

TORONTO (CUP) — Canadia ndrug users will give thegovernment six months to a yea rto act on recommendations in th eLedain Commission's final report .

According to Torontopsychiatrist Lionel Solursh, "wewill have a revolution" if action i snot taken within that time limit .

Solursh, speaking at a churchforum on marijuana, said youngpeople will increase pressure o nthe government for action whenLedain enters his final report .There will be more violen tindividual confrontations with the

PollutionWASHINGTON (CUP!) — The

U .S. Environmental ProtectionAgency has reported that abou t41 million fish were killed in U .S .waters by pollution in 1969 —a nincrease of almost 300 per cent i na year.

fixin' to

dieBy THOM WESCOT T

PART TWEL VEI had been in Viet Nam for about one month

when I suddenly became the battalion's intelligenc eassistant .

The old assistant was going home in two week sand they decided it was time to get a new one an dbreak him in to the work. I had just taken out acorrespondence course in intelligence for somethingto do and so they picked me .

I had just come off a three day watch on top o fthe hill and hadn't shaved or polished my boots inthe last week, but they sent me up to see thesergeant-major just the way I was.

Needless to say, the sergeant-major was a littleupset at the way I looked, but I explained that I hadjust come off the hill, and besides, his approval wasnothing more than a formality, so all he could d owas say he hoped I would like the job and to shav eand polish my boots as soon as I got back to m ytent .

My main job as intelligence assistance, for th efirst while at least, was to stand watch in the COC ,the Combat Operations Center . This didn't meanmuch more than answering the phone and typin gentries into the log book.

The COC was a fun place to be . It was sort o flike watching an old war movie where they show thewar room and people are moving little boats an dplanes around on a big map, but the Viet Nam wa rmovie hardly ever made any sense .

They had picked two others to share watche swith me, Bush and Seeley . Bush was a woodsma nfrom Oregon and Seeley was a professional studen tfrom Baltimore who had finally been caught by thedraft. Seeley's hobby was collecting butterflies, an dhe was constantly catching them and sending themhome in little coffins .

"We don't know what the university will loo klike in five or ten years so we don't want to spen dmoney on something that might be unnecessary, "Baker said.

The Sixteenth Avenue extension was built whil eclearing the bush and does not follow engineerin gplans.

"If we decide to build the road up, we will firsthave to decide whether to use the present road o rchange it to fit the engineers' plans," Baker said.

"We just maintain roads, we don't build them,"he said. "It's up to Victoria to make the decisions."

It all adds up to : drive at your own ris k

hearings . Its interim report issue dlast June recommended themarijuana laws be removed fro mthe Narcotics Control Act to theFood and Drug Act .

He further recommended fines ,not jail terms for possession o fgrass, be enforced .

Lunar foodThe Year of the Pig, 4669, o n

the Chinese lunar new year begin sWednesday .

To celebrate, the price of th eChinese "combo" plate in th eauditorium snack bar will b ereduced to 75 cents Wednesday ,Thursday and Friday, saiddietitian Shirley Louie.

Customers will receiv ecomplimentary Chinese tea and afortune cookie .

All the Chinese food i sprepared by Chinese chefs in th eauditorium.

Three weeks after I started working i nintelligence the battalion went out on OperationOklahoma Hills. The plan was that the lieutenan tand we three clerks go out on the operation and th egunnery sergeant stay back at the base and keep th ework straight.

Four days before we were to leave the sergean twas walking back from the Officers' Club blin ddrunk and fell off the steps of his house . He brokeboth wrists and the next day he was on a plane toJapan where he spent the rest of his overseas tour .

We needed a new intelligence chief . I wa selected .

Being an intel chief was even more fun thanworking in the COC . I had my own office and myown telephone and regular nine to five hours. Theonly problem was I didn't know what to do withthem.

The day after I started working on my own Ihad a sergeant come to me with a problem .

He was supposed to be going home in threedays. The problem was that he was going to beguarding embassies after he finished his leave and heneeded a security clearance . In fact, he needed thepaperwork for the clearance done before he couldgo home . I didn't know what a clearance was, le talone how to do the paperwork for one .

There were four different forms to b ecompleted, one in duplicate, two in triplicate an dthe other required four copies . There was also twosets of fingerprints to be filed. The prints were th eeasiest part, all we did was call up for my jeep anddrive down to division police headquarters and havehis prints done by the Criminal Investigatio nDepartment .

The other forms were something else . Theworst was the personal history one which took metwo days to get right . This was the one that require dfour copies, or the original and three carbons. Theform is printed on both sides of a piece of pape rthat is about two feet long . It only took me fivetries to get the original on both sides and the carbo npaper in right . After that I discovered that I ha danswered half the questions wrong . I finally got allthe papers done and in the mail five hours befor ethe plane left.

Being an intel chief was fun, but it was alsoconfusing .

Whatever Your Concern Is ;

Academic - Birth Control ,

Landlord Troubles

SEE US in Room 234, SUB from 10 :30 a .m. to7 :30 p.m. every weekday.

CALL US at 228-3700or WRITE US at Box 115, SUB, Campus Mal l

SPEAKEASY SPEAKEASY '

"MAGIC MUSICAL MESSIAH "Uncle Vinty has to be seen to be believed

SEE HIM! 5 DAYS ONLYTUES., JAN. 26 to SAT ., JAN. 30

SHOW TIMES 9 :30, 11 :00Cover Charge 1 .50 Tues., Wed., Thurs.

2.00 Fri. & Sat .

DON'T MISSTHE FUN !AMS General Meeting. If you think the AMS is a

waste of time come to the meeting andlet them know it (bringtomatoes or snowballs)

• If you think the AMS isterrible now but wouldlike to see it BETTER . . . come to the meeting an d

help to make it mor eworkable

. If you think the AMS i sthe greatest thing oncampus (next to yourvery own self) DON'T COME TO TH E

MEETING (Yo uprobably belong in adifferent kind ofinstitution than UBC)

Wed., l a n 27-Gym -12:30

Federal time running out fastfor institution of drug reform s

establishment over inaction, h epredicts.

The Ledain Commission i scontinuing its cross-country

The worldA meeting for those with idea s

for international week will be heldtoday at noon in the upper loung eof International House .

Judy Young, arts 3, chairma nof the International Studen tProgram Committee said Monday ,"The general feeling of th ecommittee is that Internationa lHouse has failed to make itsel ftruly representative o finternational ideas and problems .We hope that this internationa lweek may help to solve thisproblem.

International week is bein gheld at International House from12 :30 to 5 p.m. Monday toFriday next week .

SPEAKEASY SPEAKEASY

Tuesday, January 26, 1971

THE

UBYSSEY

Page 9

Park secretly slatedor town house plans

from page On e

"City planners are now lookinginto the future of rapid transit, "

• she said."When it comes time to build

such transit schemes, the city i sgoing to need entrance ways t owhich the federal governmen trefuses to finance.

"I firmly suspect that th efederal government has given thecity an ultimatum to get theseentranceways before anyfinancing will be allotted . "

She added that such a road a tJericho would easily facilitate awestern entrance and exit for a

-' new first narrows crossing .She said the road could

facilitate expansion of UBC, bu tadded it would do so, "at theexpense of the peace and quiet o fthe area's residents . "

She said SBPOA has offered acounter-proposal to the presen troad scheme, which she said hasnot even been considered byanyone .

This proposal would extendMarine Drive through the oldarmy site connecting to Fourt hAvenue, maintaining the scenicbeauty of the drive, and cuttingthe development cos timmeasurably .

-

Cost of the city's road proposalis estimated at $308 million .

—sandy kass photoLocarno Beach . . . from sand to townhouses

KE1ULI SMLE CAMERA S

HOURS : 4 p .m. to 3 a .m. — Weekends 4 p .m. to 4 a .m .4450 West 10th Ave. — Just outside the Gates

Phone 224-1720 2246336

SPAGHETTI HOUSE LTD :

Hot Delicious Tasty Pizza s— 22 DIFFERENT FLAVORS —

FREE DELIVERY - Right to Your Door

"THE STORE WHERE THE ACT/ON IS "

• City Pays $15 millionThe city originally planned to

purchase the federally ownedarmy site for one dollar, bu trecently purchased the area for$15 million, to which four millio ndollars more has to be added for

• land clearing before anydevelopment can begin .

"It's like city engineers havejust gone mad, " she said .

Delmonico added the cityfurther plans to develop the beacharea between Locarno andSpanish Banks as a public marineand invetigate Wreck Beach as apossible ferry terminal.

"Horseshoe Bay and Tswassenare just becoming too crowded

- and it's only a matter of year sbefore anothe ferry terminal wil lbe needed," he said .

SBPOA met with the parksboard Monday night to discuss the

• development, the results of thatmeeting were unavailable at presstime .

At present, there are 415 acre sof parkland in the Point Greyarea, the most of any area ofVancouver .

"We cling to every inch fordear life. "

She said the federalgovernment is unaware of theirobjections to the scheme, asresidents have been waiting fo rcivic plans to be finalized before

-voicing their concerns to Ottawa .She added Grant Denkman ,

Liberal MLA for the area, will b econtacted as soon as possible .

"A lot of homeowners aroundhere are just awaiting a letter t otell them to move out and wedon' t want that," she said .

"We don't care what the city_does, as long as there is' logica lreasoning behind it," he said .

However, he and most are aresidents fail to see the logica lreasoning behind these proposeddevelopments.

He said many "almost fatalaccidents" have occurred alongMarine Drive as it now exists, andrecommmended a one-wayshoreline road as an alternat eproposal.

Vancouver Real Estate Boardhead and area resident GeorgeMuir said he would never giveapproval to rezoning of the areafor commercial purposes, andcalled the present development"totally unthinkable ."

A further plan which has bee nkept in the "top secret " files ofClarke and Clarke Real EstateCompany is their plan toexpropriate the south end o fLocarno Park for a town houseapartment complex .

"This would bring a first classliving complex to an area which isnow inhabited by simple workingpeople who have no need forcomplex town houses, " said Mrs.Delmonico .

Clarke and Clarke quietl ypurchased the land several year sago for such a development andhas been awaiting rezoning for thearea before development canbegin.

The complex would borde ralong the proposed Jericho Road .

"These guys are pushing theroad, quietly and unobtrusivelyjust so the road can be built firs tand they can save money onunderground wiring of thei rtownhousee," Delmonico said.

Lawyer against freewayConsultant lawyer Lawrence

Beadle, who is working with Alm aMater Society president Ton yHodge on further alternat eproposals cited his prime concer nas being against a beach freeway ,and a proposed Royal VancouverYacht Club parking lot .

The parking lot was previouslydefeated by city council afte rmuch protest from are ahomeowners, but Beadle feels i tcould now be "pushed through inconjunction with the city' sproposals."

Despite denials from the cityand Clarke and Clarke officials ,work has already begun on theproject .

Monday afternoon, a surveyin gcrew was out in full force ,calulating "road grades an delevation of the area."

The surveyors refused to beidentified and said they wereemployed by the city at onepoint, and a private developer at _another .

'Don't want publicity '"We're just doing a job . Don' t

ask us any questions," they said.

"We can get an injunction t ostop the development, but wedon' t want to go that far, " saidDelmonico.

"We don't want publicity, wejust want to live . "

SBPOA is hold a meetingWednesday night for theirmembers, and all citizens oppose dto civic development of the area.

It will be held at the Schoolboard offices at 1101 WestBroadway, at 8 p .m .

LEICA CAMERA CLINICKerrisdale Cameras invites you to bring you r

Leica and Leicaflex equipment to the 41st Ave. Store on

FRIDAY — JAN. 29-1971 — 4 :00 p.m.-9:00 p.m.SATURDAY — JAN. 30.1971 — 9 :30 a .m. - 5:00 p.m.

Mr. WERNER SEINSCH, LEITZ FACTORY SERVICETECHNICIAN, will inspect your equipment and perfor mminor adjustments at no .charge. Discuss the LEICA systemof photography with factory representative Mr . STUARTSPAN I

KE1ULISDALE CAMERAS"Largest Stock/Qualified Personnel"

WEST VAN .

KERRISDALE

NORTH VAN .2170 WEST 41st

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985-959 0Open Thurs. &

Open Fri .Fri . till 9 p .m.

till 9 p .m.

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Open Fri . till 9 p .m.

FOR PREFERRED RISKS ONLYIt Pays to Shop for Car InsuranceYOU CAN SAVE MONEY ON CAR INSURANCE AT WESTC O

HEAD OFFICE : 1927 WEST BROADWAY, VANCOUVER 9, BRITISH COLUMBI A

FAST CLAIM SERVICEFill in and return this coupon or phone today . No obligation . No salesman will call .

INN N EN El III-E--MAIL THIS COUPON FOR OUR LOW RATES ON YOUR AUTOMOBIL E

Name(Please Print )

Residenc eAddress

City Prov

Phone : Home Office

Occupation

Age Married 0Single 0

Date first licensed to drive

Give number and dates of all accidents in last 5 years ,. (circle dates of those accidents which were not you r

fault) .

In the last five years has you rlicence been suspended?

Are you now insured ?

Date current policy expires

This coupon is designed solely to enable non-polic yholders to obtain an application and rates for their cars .

IN NO

Car No . 1 Car No. 2

Year of automobileMake of automobileNo . of cylinders : . .HorsepowerModel (Impala, Dart . etc.) . . .

Days per week driven towork, train or bus depot ,or fringe parking area

2/4 dr-sdn, s/w, hit, cony

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Dav e. . . . . . . . . . . . .One way driving distance

Is car used in busines s(except to and from work)?

Miles

Yes 0 No O

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Give number and date sof traffic conviction sin last five year s

LIST INFORMATION ON ALL ADDITIONAL DRIVER S

Age MaleFemal

e or Relatio nto you

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Page 10

THE

UBYSSEY

Tuesday, January 26, 197 1

Internationally

Renowne d

SHLOMO CARLBACH ,the singing Rabb i

in concert, at the Jewish Community CentreAuditorium, 950 W. 41st Ave. ,

Wed., Feb. 3, 1971, 8 :30 p.m.

Admission at Door - Students tO OAdults 1 .50

S

TUESDA YINTERNATIONAL HOUS E

IJBC president's committee on CUSOwill hold discussion on the WhitePaper on external aid in I .H. 402 a t7:30 p.m.

NEWMAN CLU BGeneral meeting in SUB 115 at noon .New members welcome .

UBC THEOLOGY CLU BBiblical discussion in SUB 111 at noon .

PRE-MED SOCSpeaker from cancer research in Was-brook 201 at noon.

SIALING CLU BMeeting in Bu. 104 at noon .

QRSERRLIMRML=MiIMQKIWRMMSRQRROI

'fweenclasses

LEFT CAUCU SMeeting to organize action on studentunemployment in Bu . 202 at noon .

SCIENCE FICTION SOCChallenges all clubs as to who ca ncontribute the most blood . Bring yourclub's total to SUB 216E.

WEDNESDA Y

ONTOLOGICAL SOC"Oneness in Being" in Bu . 232 a tnoon.

CHRISTIAN SCIENCE ORGANIZATIO NMeting Bu. 3201 at noon .

UBC GOLF TEAMAnyone interested in playing golfcome to meeting in Bu . 104 at noon .

EDUCATION STAGE BAN DEveryone welcome to join in Ed, 131 7at-noon.

COMMERCE U SUrban land option . Find out what i tis in Ang. 407 at noon.

IL CAF E'70 soccer cup championship high -lights from Mexico City in I.H . 400 a tnoon.

THURSDAY

CAMPUS CAVALIERSMeeting SUB 215 at noon .

UNIVERSITY CLUBS COMMITTE EGeneral meeting in clubs loung e, SUB212 at noon.

AQUASOCGeneral meeting SUB 206 at noon.

ALLIANCE FRANCAIS EFilm "Les Jeux Sent Faits" in Bu.104 at 12 :30 p .m. and 7 :30 p .m . 25admission .

VCFWorkshop with Cal Chambers in SUB125 at noon .

NV CFilm night with Japanese doubl efeature from 7 p .m . to 10:30 p .m . inSUB ballroom . $1 donation .

N V CGeneral meeting 9.'UB 111 at noon .

CYVR RAD SOCGeneral meeting Bu . 217 at noon .

FINE ARTS STUDENT SHappy Hour—with films, music, cof-fee, cookies, paint-in from 2 :30.4 :30p .m . in main floor lobby of Lassere .

ANGLICAN UNITED CAMPU SMINISTR Y

Supper and workshop with Creatio nTwo at 5:45 p .m. in Lutheran Campu sCentre .

COMMERCE U SOrganizational behavioral and indus-trial relations options information dayin Ang. 407 at noon .

SIMSTalk on transcendental meditation inSUB 130 at noon .

PRE-DENTAL SOCTour of the faculty of dentistry. Mee tin dental bldg . lounge at noon .

MARKETING CLU ESpeaker Mike Rohan in Aug . 207 atnoon .

PRE-MED SO CField trip to cancer research . Meetin from of Wesbrook 100 at noon .

T-BIRO WARGAMER SMeeting in SUB 119 at noon.

FRIDAY

VC FCarl Amerding and Habakkuk in SUBparty room at noon -

PHOENI XJames Fisher speaks on "Law Prac-tise : corporate or private" in Hut Gl,room 6 at noon .

COMMERCE U SMarketing option in Ang. 407 at noon .

PRE-SOCIAL WORKPre-marital counsellor to talk an danswer questions . All interested wel-come at noon in 87UB 105A .

WOMEN'S INTRAMURAL SP .E . and U. managers' meeting inSUB 213 at noon .

MISCELLANEOUSMUSSOC

Ushers needed for West Side Story .UBC old auditorium, Feb . 3-14 .

UBC CAMPUS MINISTER SCan be found in SUB 228 Mon., Wed .and Fri . from 10 a .m . to noon and2-4 p .m . ; Tues . and Thurs., 10 a .m . -4 p .m.

IL CAFF EMeetings held ever Wed . noon in I.H.400.

3261 W. Broadway 736-778 8Weekdays to 1 a .m .

Fri . & Sat . 3 a.m .

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Dances

1 1

CHINESE NEW YEAR DINNER &(lance, Sat . 30th, 7 :10 p .m .-1 :0 0am . I . House . $1 .75 - Malaysia nfood . Tickets at door & I .H . (ad-vance) .

Greetings

1 2

Lost & Found

1 3

Rides & Car Pools

1 4STUDENT AND KID DESPER -

ately need ride to campus fro m7th and Larch, 9 :00 Wed . ' s (10 :00other mornings) . Please phone778-3917 if you can help even onemorning. Remuneration .

Special Notices

1 5THE TAURUS SPA, 1231 HORNB Y

St . 687-1915 . Guys only . Specialstudent rates. Best facilities .

TAXI LICENCE FOR SALE .North Shore Business expanding .$10,500 . Accept . 1/3 down. Mr . Da y874-8667 or 926-3223 .

DON'T MISS THE FUN. EVERY -One's going to the AMS GeneralMeeting. Wed. Jan . 27 . Memoria lGym, 12 :30 .

ENJOY YOURSELF THE ENGLIS Hway . Play cricket with the Var-sity cricket team. For informationcontact Mike Gerry 224-7970 o r224-2464 or c o m e to Room 35 4chemistry .

REHABILITATION MEDICIN EOrientation. Next meeting 7 :00P .m . Wednesday 27 January, 1971 ,at the School of Rehabilitatio nMedicine.

SUPPER AND WORKSHOP WITHCreation Two, Thurs. Jan. 28, 7p.m., Lutheran Campus Centre .Phone 224-1614 for supper reserva-tion .

"THE EAST IS RED" - a h/a hou rcolour film from China . Englis hsubtitles . Old Auditorium, Jan . 28 ,1 :00- p.m. and San . 29, 7 :30 p.m .

-

TAKE A SKI BREAK - SKIWhistler. Stay Alpine Lodge ,dorms or s/c cabins . Full facilities .Amer. plan available . Rates : $1 .0 0& up. Ph. (112) 932-5280 . Writ eApline Lodge, Garibaldi Station ,Garibaldi, B .C .

MOVIES . . . DOUBLE FEATURE ."Samurai Adventure", "The BlindSwordswoman" . Blood, gore, roll-ing heads, sex! Thurs ., Jan . 28, 7p .m ., SITB ballroom .

TRIED THE GYM COFFEE LATE -ly? Avoid the crowds in SUB .Visit the renovated Gym CoffeeShop, Pool Level . -Open 8 :00-3 :45 .Free coffee this Wednesday.

PHOENIX PUB NIGHT, WED . ,Jan . 27, gambling entertainment7 :00-1 :00 . SUB Ballroom . adm . 50 .

Travel Opportunities

1 6

EUROPE FROM $185 ROUND TRIP .Employment opportunities (U .K . )Discounts, travel service, low carhire rentals for members . Angl eAmerica Assn . 60A Pyle St ., New-port, 1W., England .

HONG KONG RETURN - $345687-2855 ; 224-0087 ; 687-1244 .

106—709 Dunsmuir St . ,Vancouver 1, B .C .

TRAVELLING OVERSEAS ON ABUDGET ?

Then visit your Youth Hostels in -formation desk which is open ever yWednesday from 12 :30-1 :30 p .m . op-posite the information desk in th eStudents Union Building.Canadian Youth Hostels Association

1406 West BroadwayVancouver 9, B .C .

Tel . 738-3128

Wanted—Information

1 7

Wanted—Miscellaneous

18

AUTOMOTIV E

Automobiles For Sale

2 1

BARGAIN - 1966 V .W. RADIO ,Low mileage, needs some bod ywork, offers! 254-2258 . Must Sell .

1964 MGB WIRE WHEELS, ETC .Looking for an old V.W. for trade .Call Tony, 584-6515 .

Automobiles—Wanted

2 2

Automobiles—Parts

2 3

BUSINESS SERVICES

Day Care & Baby Sitting 32 A

Photography

34

Scandals

3 7CAN YOU IMAGINE THOUSANDS

of excited bodies all in one room ?Don't miss the AMS Genera lMeeting. Wed. Jan . 27 . Memoria lGym, 12.30 .

ENJOY YOURSELF THE ENGLIS Hway. Play cricket with the Var-sity cricket team . For informationcontact Mike Gerry 224-7970 or224-2464 or CO me to Room 35 4Chemistry.

HOMOSEXUAL COUNSELLIN GService : If you are waiting to bediscovered forget it . Like mosthomosexuals, you are indistin-guishable from the heterosexual.Gamble on your future . Write fordetails to graduate student, 23,Box 6572, Station G Vancouver 8.

DO A PHOENIX TODAY !

Typing

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tric typewriter. Shorthand . Phon e325-2934 .

IBM SELECTRIC TYPING SER-VICE. Theses, essays, etc . Neataccurate work, reasonable rates .Mrs . Troche, 437-1315 .

EXPERT IBM SELECTRIC TYPIS T—experienced in all types of tech-nical thesis . Reasonable rates .Call Mrs . Ellis, 121-3838 .

ESSAYS AND THESIS TYPEDneatly, accurately, 250 per page .Carol Tourgis, 733-3197 .

EFFICIENT, ELECTRIC TYPING ,my home . Essays, thesis, etc .Neat, accurate work . Reasonablerates. Phone 263-5117 .

EXPERIENCED TYPIST —ESSAY Sand thesis . Electric typewriter .Mrs . A . Treacy - 738-8794 .

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STUDENTS! I WILL TYPE YOURterm papers . Reasonable rates .Call Yvonne - 718-6874 .

YEAR-ROUND ACCURATE TYP -ing from legible work ; 738-682 910 am, to 9 p.m . ; reasonable rates .

ESSAYS AND THESIS TYPING .IBM electric . 35 page. Call afte rnoon : 733-4708 .

TEDIOUS TASKS—PROFESSIONA LTyping Service IBM Selectric -Days, Evenings, Weekends . Phone :228-9304—300 per page.

EMPLOYMENT

Help Wanted

5 1

GENERAL ARTISTS SECRETARY.She must know what she is do-ing. Must be versatile . All appre-ciable inquiries appreciated . Bene-fits $210.00 per month and trave lto all parts of the world. Pleas esend letter with qualifications t oP.O . Box 116, North Vancouver,B.C .

WANTED - BABY-SITTER. DUN -bar - Southlands area. Wisenthal,261-8855 or Bu . 378 .

BACK TO SCHOOL MEAN Sextra expenses . Need extra in -come? Investigate SARAH COV-ENTRY OPPORTUNITIES . Call946-2258 .

INSTRUCTION & SCHOOLS

Instruction Wanted

6 1GRADE 12 GIRL AT ERIC HAM-

ber needs a tutor for Chem. 12 ,Phone (eves .) J'anet, 874-0798 .

Music Instruction

6 2

Special Classes

53

Tutoring

64WILL TUTOR MATH 100 & 101 .

day, evening, or Sat . Reasonablerates . Phone 733-3644—10 a .m. to3 p .m .

GERMAN TUTORING : CONVER -sation & grammar, by qualifiedex-university teacher - nativ espeaker, group & quantity dis-counts . Eves . 731-0156 .

CHRISTMAS RESULTS DIS -appointing? Register at UBC tutor-ing centre and find some help .Qualified tutors in over 10 subjec tareas . SUB bOB, 228-4583, 12- 2p .m . weekdays .

MISCELLANEOU SFOR SAL E

BIRD CALLSYour Student Telephone Directory

NOW HALF PRICE - 50 cat the Bookstore, Thunderbird Sho p

and AMS Publications Office

HIERLING (SWISS) SKI BOOT—size 8—original price $90, for $30 .Phone Jim, 261-1759 .

RENTALS & REAL ESTATE

Rooms

8 1ROOM FOR RENT, MALE, PRIV .

cot ., priv . bath. 1 1/a blocks fromcampus . Prefer third or fourthyear. $40 .00, 224-6389.

STUDENT TO SHARE BASEMENTwith same. Kitchen, living room ,private entrance, $55 per month .224-6686 .

Room & Board

52

MEN ONLY. LARGE CARPETE Drooms . Good food. Color TV. Larg esocial areas . 5725 Agronomy Rd .Manager, 224-9620.

GUYS! YOUNG COUPLE WITHlarge home . Linen, great meals .Days 266-6206, eves . 224-4496 .

Furnished Apis

53

ON CAMPUS, 1-BEDROOM FUR -nished suite, lease March-April .Phone 244-9170 after 6 p .m .

MALE 3rd OR 4th YEAR TOshare large suite with two others ,rent $58 . 3427 W . 1st.

RENT —FURNISHED EASEMEN T—own cooking, fridge, linen . Quiet—no children—suit 2 gentlemen ,share or single, non-smokers pro-fererred . Sep . entrance, reasonableterms. 224-7141 .

SHARE APARTMENT WIT Hother young people. Forty dollar sa month plus utilities. Phone 732-9629 .

Unfurnished Apts.

84

Halls For Rent

85

Houses—Furn. & Unfurn. 86

BECOME 4th MALE ROOMMAT Ein large house, availabl emediately . Location : 57th & Oak . -PhonO 261-4990 after 6 :00 p .m .

New YorkCOSTUME SALON

RENTAL SSingle and Double-BreastedTuxedos and Dinner Jackets

Black and ColoredFlare or Straight Pants

Up-to-Date Accessorie sSPECIAL STUDENT RATE S

224-0034 4397 W . 10th -/

SUB Art GalleryFebruary Happening s

Day 1-5

-

The Second Declaration of Havana "

A collection of lithographs by Cuban artists illustratin gvarious themes from The Second Declaration of Havana .Slides from Cuba will also be shown .An evening of contemporary Cuban poetry will be held o nThursday, February 4, 8 :00 p .m. Roger Prentice, who ha stranslated works of several Cuban poets will read selection sof these in english and spanish .

For further information contact : Harry Kasinsky228-2960 - 224-676 7

Day 7-13 Israeli Students Exhibitio n

Photo happening of what's happening in Israel no w

For further information contact.' Sam Vesely, 873-2079 o rHillel Sanders 266-2574

Day 15-26 "O .K . - Operatio n

Kom temporary "

The Rainbos Activist Festival (formerly the festival of th econtemporary arts )

For further information contact :David Lu,, 228-3708 or Herb Gilbert 228-275 7224-7117

-

CLASS I FLE DRates Students, Faculty & Club—3 lines, 1 day $1 .00; 2 days $1 .75 .

Commercial—3 lines, 1 day $1 .25; additional lines 30c 4 days price of 3 .

Classified ads are not accepted by telephone and are payable in advance.

Publications Office, STUDENT UNION BLDG., Univ. of B.C. Vancouver 8, B.C.

Clo.ing Deadline is 11 :30, the d*y Mfo pabiication

Tuesday, January 26, 197 1

*loop Birds loserswith prairie split

Birds with 22 points and nin erebounds while forward Jack Ho ychipped in 20 points .

Saturday night the Birdsdefeated Winnipeg Wesmen 79-61 .

Improving over the previou souting, the Birds took control o fthe boards and utilized a 22 point :second half from Thorsen t omanage the win . Thorsen finishedthe game with 32 points.

MacKay was top rebounde rwith 19 while Derek Sankey ha d11 .

Little Winnipeg guard BarryKing was high scorer for theWesmen with 20 points .

The Birds now have a 10- 2won-lost record, leaving the mlittle chance to catch the Bisons,who sport a 10-1 record.

The Birds are also now numbe rtwo, and that doesn't mean thatthey try harder . It simply meansUBC doesn't currently have th etop college basketball team inCanada . They do have to ppersonnel ; MacKay, Sankey andThorsen being the mainstays o fthe Canadian National team. StanCallegari and Jack Hoy, the othe rstarters, are both good enough toplay first string on almost an yother team in Western Canada .Why, then, are they number two ?

SPORTS'Rally round cars on Frida y

Ice and snow are only part o fthe hazards entrants in the 14thannual Thunderbird sports ca rrally will face .

The rally starts Friday at 8p .m. in front of SUB and endssometime Saturday in Princeto nafter a round-about route throughKamloops.

In between the competitor sface a gruelling trip over some o fthe lesser travelled B .C . roads . Theobscure routes and the winte rconditions combine to presen tproblems galore to the rallyist.

In fact veteran rallyists agre ethat the T-Bird is the mostchallenging winter rally in NorthAmerica—for both man andmachine .

The rally is not a speed event .Instead entrants receive time andspeed instructions and even theslightest deviation from them

Phoenix '71 Presents :

SKI MOVIESMoebius Fli p

&Ski the Outer Limits

SUB AUDITORIUM

Today — 12 :30 Noon

"Do a Phoenix Today!"

THE UBYSSEY

Page 1 1

A FAMILIAR SIGHT Saturday at Thunderbird Arena was the puck behind Winnipeg goalie Terry Ross .'Bird Richard Longpre (8) has just scored his second goal as Winnipeg's Dale Demarco (9) watches .Longpre scored three times as the 'Birds pounded Winnipeg 14-3 .

Hockey Birds wait

lateBy KINGSLEY ARTIFAC T

There's no period like the third period as far asthe University of B .C. hockey Thunderbirds areconcerned

Friday the 'Birds scored three times in the fina lperiod to dump previously unbeaten University o fManitoba Bisons 5-3 . But Saturday they outdidthemselves pumping in 10 goals in the third periodto pound the University of Winnipeg Wesmen 14-3 .

The Manitoba game was the 'Birds best of theseason as "The whole team was outstanding, "according to coach Bob Hindmarch.

Sure the victory was a team effort, but centreBob MacAneely, goalie Ian Wilkie, winger Dou gBuchanan and defenceman Laurie Vanzell aperformed above and beyond the call of duty .

MacAneely scored two goals and picked up a nassist . Both goals were picture efforts and bothrallied the Thunderbirds .

His first tied the score 1-1 just when the Bison swere threatening to gain control of the game . Hissecond broke a 2-2 tie early in the third period tostart the 'Birds rally .

Wilkie, unimpressive against Calgary lastweekend, stopped 30 Bison shots . . . many of hissaves were outstanding .

Buchanan scored twice and set up MacAneely ' swinner . Noted as a checker for his first two season son the 'Birds, Buchanan has suddenly develope dinto a prolific scorer.

Third-year vet Vanzella turned in his best gam ein two seasons on the blue-line core. He consistentlythwarted Bison rushes then led the return UB C

MEN'S INTRAMURALS

L . Spearing — Fort Camp, Cycle Drag .Softball and Volleyball—The sign-up

G. Morrison — Dentistry, Golf .deadline for these sports is Jan . 28 . To

Forestry I — Curling.sign up come to the intramural office,

Ed Day — P .E., Cross Country Turke yroom 308, War Memorial Gym .

Trot .Rugby and Two-Mile Walk—The sign-

Engineers I — Tug of war .up deadline for these activities is Feb .

We want to have confirmation that4.

these individuals and teams intend toWrestling — has been rescheduled to be at the banquet ; if you do aot intend

Feb . 8, 9, and 10 at 12 :30 in War to come the trophies will not be give nMemorial Gym . The wrestling weigh-in out.is . Feb . 4 at 12 :30 in War Memorial Gym .

This will be a stag banquet with ofINTRAMURAL AWARDS BANQUET

course full facilities, as well as severa lTeam trophies for all sports will be guest speakers yet to be announced .

presented at the intramural award sbanquet on March 1 in the SUB ball -room . All members of winning teams Bowling—Entries due Friday, Jan . 29.(Division I) will receive individual Table Tennis—Tables available in Warsport . So far this year the following , Memorial Gym lounge on Mon ., Wed.teams and individuals will be honored and Fri ., from 12 :30-1 :30, and every dayfor their achievements :

from 4:30-5 :30.Betas I — Football.

Watch for posters which will be post-Peter Dennert — Engineers . Badmin- ed at the office .

ton.

THE UNIVERSITY OF B .C .

FREDERIC WOOD THEATR E

ENDGAMEby SAMUEL BECKET T

January 29th to February 6t h

directed by Stanley Weese

STUDENT TICKETS $1 .00(AVAILABLE FOR ALL PERFORMANCES )

SPECIAL STUDENT PERFORMANCE SMonday, Feb . 1st, 7 :30 p.m.

Thursday, Feb . 4 — Matinee 12 :30 p.m.

Tickets: Frederic Wood Theatre — Rm. 20 7

SUPPORT YOUR CAMPUS THEATRE !

The University of ManitobaBisons proved that their 78-7 6victory over the UB CThunderbirds two weeks ago wa sno fluke .

They defeated the Birds 82-7 0last Friday night providing all theproof any WCIAA basketball fanmight need .

UBC coach Peter Mullin scommented that "they playedwell and shot extremely well " .

Their shooting percentage o f. 55 percent (65 percent in the firs t

half to UBC's 41) could have bee nthe difference . But it wasn't.

The difference was in.frebounding, where the game i soften won or lost. Mullin sstatement "we got clobbered onthe boards", tells the story . Th eBisons outrebounded the Bird s40-23, 15 of them by Ros sWedlake and 13 more by BobTown .

As in their previous game, theBisons combined a tight man toman defence with a 2-1-2 zone t oreduce the effectiveness of Ro nThorsen .

Ted Stoesz led the Bisons with25 points, Wedlake added 20, andAngus Burr, who had 36 in th eprevious encounter, was held t oonly 11 by Thorsen .

Center Terry MacKay led the

results in penalty points beingassessed against the car . Thewinner is the one with less points .

Before the rally even starts thecars entered are put through a nextensive safety inspection .

Rules specify that cars carr yflares, first aid kits and fir eextinguishers etc . And naturallyenough the cars will be equippe dwith studded tires and othe rwinter equipment accessories thatthe conditions demand .

Just in case someone gets ove rhis head in trouble, a four-whee ldrive truck will follow the cars .The truck is excellent at pullingcars from the road-side scenery .

The UBC Sports Car Club issponsoring the event which hasreceived entries from as far awayas San Jose; California andWinnipeg, Manitoba .

The reason for his sudde nhis new aggressiveness . . .

instead of being pushed around, Vanzella ha sdecided to do the pushing himself.

Barry Wilcox tallied UBC's other goal .Saturday the 'Birds toyed with the Wesmen fo r

two periods then got down to business.UBC scored seven times in the first 10 minutes

of the period and added three more late in the gam efor the league's biggest one-period output of th eseason .

The period was so one-sided that Winnipe ggoalie Terry Ross must have thought his defencewas still in the dressing room.

Ross managed to stop 20 shots in the period —46 overall — and his only support came from thegoal posts that stopped a few more UBC shots.

The line of Richard Longpre and Norm Parkcentred by MacAneely accounted for eight of thegoals .

Longpre hit for three goals and three assists .Park had three goals, while MacAneely set up six ,goals and still found time to score twice himself .

Vanzella and Buchanan were active again, eachpicking up two markers. Roy Sakaki and To mWilliamson bagged the other UBC goals .

The two games were well attended. Friday2,100 filled the 1,600 seat Thunderbird Arena an dSaturday's clash with the last-place Wesmen dre w1,500.

UBC remains tied for second place withCalgary. Both clubs are 9-3, two games behin dManitoba.

rushes down the ice .blossoming could be

WrestlersAn eleven man team of

grapplers left early Fridaymorning for a series of freestyl emeets with the Oregon Stat e"Beavers" and the University o fOregon "Ducks" .

The University of B .C .wrestling team was represented b yseven wrestlers .

Victorious members against th e"Beavers " were Ken Mariash, LesBurgener, Taras Hyrb ; and DaveGrey tied his opponent .

Against the "Ducks" , Hyrb andCraig Delahunt were winners.

Thursday UBC will bewrestling Simon Fraser Universit yat SFU.

WOMEN'S INTRAMURALS

-vt

Page 12

THE

UBYSSEY

Tuesday, January 26, 197 1

Socialist Allende :It calls for nationalization of foreignmonopolies and Chilean-owned basic 'industries and banks —in other words, theexpropriation with compensatio n(probably in state bonds) will hit 2 per

Chile's

centpriva

twithin

e of thesecto

rChileanshich ,

leavin gwould

aals

o mixed an dquestionmark the generawl economic plan, with

workthr

Salvador Allende, newly elected socialistpresident of Chile, has yet to clearly defin ethe political and economic course of hi sadministration . Yet it is clear that the mos texploited sectors of the Chilean populatio nenthusiastically regard this as their victory .When a New York Times reporter asked apoor peasant what he expected ofAllende's government, he stated, "It is ou rturn now, I think . "

Adapted from the Guardian

Sectors of the middle classes ,bourgeoisie, landowners and other righ twing elements, have attempted to sabotagethe economic and political climate, as wa sthe case in the early period of the Cubanrevolution . This has included pani cemigration . flight of the dollar, induce dinflation, jitters on the stock exchange ,deliberate stoppage and sabotage o findustrial and farm production and a serie sof rightist bombings culminating in th eassassination of Gen . Rene SchneiderChereau, commander in chief of th eChilean army (who favored allowin gAllende to take power).

I f Allende, candidate of the Popula rUnity Front (UP) is to accomplish anythingof substance during his reign, he must (1 )stay alive (there are serious assassinationthreats) and (2) stay in power byweakening and neutralizing — but not yetalienating — the military, political an deconomic forces . Also, he must strengthenthe power and support of the workers an dpeasants and some middle sectors while no talienating them through precipitous action swhich might seem to counter Chile' shistory of bourgeois democrati cinstitutions — in which the people takepride and which allowed for Allende' selection . That he is in power today, giventhe limitations of an electoral victory witha multi-party coalition (includingnon-Marxist parties) and the absence of arevolutionary army, shows that at the veryleast Allende is a shrewd politician . Thequestion now is whether he has

compromised the possibility of socialistdevelopment in the process .

Besides popular pressure which will b eexerted by those who voted for Allend e(36%) and also a good percentage whovoted for the more moderate ChristianDemocratic Party (PDC), there have bee nsome positive signs towards radicalization .Take Allende's cabinet, for example .

The minister of interior, Jose Toh aGonzalez, has been the publisher of theMarxist newspaper Ultima Hora, linke dclosely with Allende's socialist party (PS)and the most radical daily in Chile .Clodomiro Almeyda Medina, the foreig nminister, represents the radical wing of thePS and is a strong defender of both theChinese and Cuban revolutions .

Jacques Chonchol Chait, minister o fagriculture, supported president EuduardoFrei Montalva, the PDC candidate on 1964 ,but soon broke with Frei due to the lack o fprogress in agrarian reform and helpedform the Popular Action Unity Movemen t(MAPU) with other dissedent PDC leader sand youth. MAPU is part of the UP .Chonchol helped formulate the agraria nreform program in Cuba .

Pedro Vuskovic Bravo, minister o feconomy, currently is director of th eeconomic institute of the university o fChile and defines himself as anindependent Marxist.

Vuskovic has also headed the grou pformulating the economic policy for theUP .

Politically he is more of a question mar ksince while emphasizing the need t onationalize important sectors of theeconomy, to reorient production an ddistribution priorities, his arialysis lack ssocialist political content . In a recen tinterview he stated "(Nationalization) i snot a question of political principles. Thenationalizations correspond to th eexigencies of the (economic) scheme . . .and . . . are directed at solving fundamenta lproblems . " He also stated, "this is no tgoing to be a Marxist government . "

A few days after the election, Allend etold a mass rally that if the right wing

attempted to block his victory he woul dcall on peasants and workers to take overland and factories.

The maintaining of the local UP electio ncommittees and the proposed ne wconstitution, potentially could lead to ne wforms of popular control. The committee swere originally set up for the campaign butwill now function as a means of loca lcontact for the government in factories ,offices, and universities, etc. along withunions and cooperatives.

The UP program states: "Thecommittees of people's unity . . . will beinterpreters and fighters for the immediatedemands of the masses and above all, the ywill prepare themselves to exercise people' spower."

Under the proposed new constitution ,the supreme power would pass from th epresident to the "people's assembly," asingle legislative house, for which al lChileans over 18 could vote . The electorat ecould recall its representatives at any time .How and when both these and othe rchanges could be accomplished under th epresent system is unclear.

There are indications Allende ' s regimemay not go beyond reformism or do mor ethan modernize capitalism.

Radicalization is not part of theprogram, Allende has said . "Perhaps i fobstacles are artificially created, if there i sa conspiracy by ultrareactionary sectors, i fthe current attempt to provoke economi cchaos is accentuated, well, we' ll be forcedto take steps more quickly and decisively —that is, the process could be radicalized ,not because we want it to be but becausewe have no other choice . "

On Oct. 18, according to the Wall Stree tJournal, he emphatically stated that he willnot lead the country to communism. AnAllendista intellectual put it this way :"Nothing is going to happen here . We don' thave a mandate for much more thanreform."

The economic program is reformist ,failing to tackle the fundamental problem sof dependency and transition to socialism .

government controlling credit as aleverage .

The government will seek foreigninvestments which' benefit the Chilea neconomy, To achieve this much will b edifficult, since the UP does not have amajority in Congress . Congressiona lelections are scheduled for next March.

The revolutionary left have toned downtheir activities since the election. Theyconsider Chile_ has entered apre-revolutionary stage as opposed to asocialist revolution, since the bourgeoisstate apparatus, military and economi cpower remain intact .

Ultimately, they maintain, an arme dconfrontation will be necessary for th equalitative leap to workers' democracy . _

, According to a statement of socialiststudents and professors at the university o fConcepcion (the most radical campus inChile) : "We must call for a militan tmobilization of the workers, peasants, slu mdwellers and students, without worryin gabout how this may affect the nerves o fthe military . . . Only a militantmobilization of the popular masses can hal tthe reactionaries' plot." They call fortactical alliance with the UP to defend thepeople's victory .

Opposition will not only come from th eright but also possibly from some of thesectors the UP hopes to work with. Forinstance, according to data compiled by .American sociologist Dale Johnson, th eentrepreneurs neither are likely to supporteconomic reform . They ar eoverwhelmingly opposed to the PC and t osocialism . Large sectors of the middle class ,according to recent research, identify wit hthe right against the proletariat .

The Christian Democratic Party is split" ,on whether to work with the UP or follo wits own program. Since Frei represents themoderate wing and will probably lead th eparty, the latter course is more likely.

Most opposition forces have indicate dthey will not accept more than som eeconomic reforms, like nationalization o fcopper . This they define as "socialism . "" Communism" for them equals" collectivism" which equal s" totalitarianism."

WHERE All

THE ACTION IS

MY' SENTERTAINMENT

COMPLEX

3Sensationa l

Clubs in

* OIL CAN'SDANCE to the sounds ofNIGHT TRAI N

* THE BACK ROO MThe atmosphere of th eRoaring 20' sFrom Los AngelesMAC TRUQU E

* DIRTY SAL 'SListen to the unique voicesof JUDY & JIM GIN N

OPE N

752 THURLOW ST . 683-7306

MON. THRU SAT.

PHOENIX '71 PRESENTS :

SALOON NIGHTWed ., Jan . 27 - 7 :00 - 1 :00 a.m .

SUB BALLROOMGambling, Continuous Entertainmen t

Adm . 50c

Refreshments 3/$1 .0 0

PREGNANCYLAB. TEST

PORTE'SUPTOWN PHARMACY

Granville at 14th Tel . : 738-3107

HAVE ON EON US !

Free CoffeeWednesday ,

January 27th, 197 18 :00 - 3 :45

atthe GYM COFFEE SHO P

Pool Level, War Memorial Gy m

• EAT IN • TAKE OUT • DELIVERY .3261 W. Broadway 736-7788

Weekdays to 1 a .m .Fri . & Sat . 3 a.m .

PIZZAP.&T1 ss