clear Out- Jericho hostel. :, . . - UBC Library Home · She 'Was taken to hospital, treated for a...

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Page 3 - FLQ gains labor suppor t .IY .r l M*OUVER Bog, M1:0o Page 5 - The separatist debat e 0 TOWER 'DDX) " ,lf?: ' the hostel since O JERICHO HOSTELER IS GENTLY ASSISTED . to plush, chauffeur-driven limousine Man katowitz phot o waiting to . take him downtOwn to the cop-shop for a Thursday afternoon tea party . Of Ubyssey reporter (right) 'asked the nice policemen . Five times to •be exact . But th e course, the hosteler didn't know about the tea party, and wasn't in a very good , police weren't answering . They were too intent on the gentle assistance of their nic e bbsition-to ask 'exactly why the nice - policemen were assiting him so gently . So Young guest . ' ..clear Out- Jericho hostel . :, .. . .' By JOHN ANDERSEN . .. (Charges of participating in an unlawful assembly them it would tolerate their presence no longer . The and PAUL KNOX were laid against 'seven of the eight including one hostel was operated last summer by the government fo r About 100 fOrmer residents of the Jericho hostel set juvenile girl — and one was also charged with possession of transients, many of whom landed in Vancouver with n o up housekeeping in SUB last night, just hours after being a"dangerous weapon . money and no work . . . . evicted from the hostel by Canadian Forces troops, RCMP (The eighth youth was charged with assaulting an At 1 :50 p .m . Thursday the Canadian Forces troops , and riot-equipped city police . RCMP officer inside the hostel .) led by Col . Clive Rippon, entered the hoStel office . Some At least .eightpersons were arrested when Vancouver Former UBC student society viCe-president Christine wore black pajama-like coveralls and some were in dres s police. 'cleared the road infront of the hostel, about three - . Krawczyk was hit with a rock thrown at the RCMP . as uniform . hours after RCMP dragged .most of the 250 residents from .' they . cleared the ' Jericho : army base grounds the .- Their orders came frOm the_ federal department o f the ho'stel . transients . She 'Was taken to hospital, treated for a head - justice and defence and the solicitor-general . . Police, none of whom . wore badges or any other cut and released . , Krawczyk, who was in the hostel office at the time , identification, would not tell reporters why the people The transients- have been living on borrowed :time in said the hostel staff was told to inform residents they ha d ld four hours to l ct . 2 ; when the federal government t oeave . Half an hour later ; the troops were clearihg th e "We barricaded the' door but we didn't have any military training'," said Rick, an 8-year-old fro m Calgary who had been at the hostel about a, week . The bottom floor was bleared in "almost no time a t all," he said. The troops dragged the residents out of rooms , an d : . down-stairs ...Those with asked to go to other rooms to get their personal belongings were refined permission to d o The troops were soon joined by RCMP from several - Vancouver-area detachments, led, by Insp . W . E . Gibbon s , . . Of . Burnaby , . Gibbons led the RCMP forces which two , years ago , arrested' 114 'students ' who-'were occupying the Simon - Fraser -University administration building over the issue o f fair admission to the university . He said the RCMP wa s -called in by the Canadian Forces . The' RCMP . . and troops were unable at first :to reac h between 30 and 40 persons on the, top floor of th e three-stOry , building :'But - the building was emptied of the last youth abou t - "' -- - l h hours after the troops moved in, The hosteL residents were chased up the hill in-front . of the= building by about, 60 RCMP who sat On th e ,, -,, sidelines Once the, residents left the Jencho grounds , .continued on page 7: see, POLICE , were being arrested . . , - io n u .17 io n , By THOM 'WESCOTT . .". . . . university' would take action to , see .s .. Declaring : . Their iq ration to stick together ; ; not _ , . as lOno ag . ' ' bebarne-'larotracted" :a1thoilgh he , announce e Jericho!) residents settled clown :. o sleep iii SUB abotitwould not : call : in .police 11 2 a m . after yOwingto'leiVe by' 8a .ih;-today ., ,- .- . ." remained orderly . - , , ,.. , Th ' decision m - a ' de- by an .overwhelming - . .-,- , . At 1 a :m abou t out subhours "after the . transient s of about - the -SUB -' conversation-pit ign' -,. . had rnpve in afer 'Sobiety ent Tony the end '' of a :evening..-Of :frantic 'negotiations and" ttedgederhanded :th .. building clea .redj . music , student-officials. ; a few .,- confrontations . ?- intended .building 'to close; this , Alternate :and dancing bythe transicents p " drum m Oda n an d - : , sP~ : Tt , ., availabl e , .; ., .. . ' .. ;The -' ' $tltdents of- the university indicated at a - '' clearl y fh' h s apparently . didn ' thave-any definite ---- .-- . .-general meetingJhey do -not, .Fayyou . in' SUB," .. --plans s ' --hf where would .bttf, the vote,toleave ' Hodge announced ' voluntaril y -",- - . ., ." .' ' grotip: .: cahie in'the face-of an expected The tr nsients 'ignored" the e shoutin g ., . .,,. .. , . confrontatio n t etin to " ' but- over th Engineers wh ° guarde d : ' de& the dOnrs fostudents, .r . ,, - -- -.:- - a flight ; said they nybody` ' :-ge tting into SUB throligh the About ;'100 :engineer,:,. an d would = . : .. dt''6 :helo clear the bull dmg .,But-t e ,YP . Pr. , remainitng iii the :building by tonight . .- : . , the Stu' de meeting ' sponsore d c ,hh-ihr rco . in , frOnt att o,,ns. . :$„,,, ;, ." that uridergra.4 society, calle, d . for noon today !Ie re :were re' .. 7? ug 491 t aZ4 0 ,. . . . ' . . . , . SUB plaza 't - disbiiSS .' theO'c'cupatien. 1' Ahe residences were .,holding: meeting . p to , Administration president .Walter Gage said the continued 1. on page / -' . . ,, RCMP :

Transcript of clear Out- Jericho hostel. :, . . - UBC Library Home · She 'Was taken to hospital, treated for a...

Page 3 - FLQ gains labor suppor t

.IY.rl M*OUVER Bog, M1:0oPage 5 - The separatist debate

0 TOWER 'DDX) "

,lf?:'

the hostel since O

JERICHO HOSTELER IS GENTLY ASSISTED . to plush, chauffeur-driven limousine

—Man katowitz phot o

waiting to . take him downtOwn to the cop-shop for a Thursday afternoon tea party . Of Ubyssey reporter (right) 'asked the nice policemen . Five times to •be exact . But th ecourse, the hosteler didn't know about the tea party, and wasn't in a very good , police weren't answering . They were too intent on the gentle assistance of their nic ebbsition-to ask 'exactly why the nice - policemen were assiting him so gently . So

Young guest . '

..clear Out- Jericho hostel . :, . . ..'

By JOHN ANDERSEN

. . .

(Charges of participating in an unlawful assembly them it would tolerate their presence no longer . Theand PAUL KNOX were laid against 'seven of the eight

including one hostel was operated last summer by the government fo rAbout 100 fOrmer residents of the Jericho hostel set juvenile girl — and one was also charged with possession of transients, many of whom landed in Vancouver with n o

up housekeeping in SUB last night, just hours after being a"dangerous weapon .

money and no work. .

. .evicted from the hostel by Canadian Forces troops, RCMP

(The eighth youth was charged with assaulting an

At 1 :50 p .m. Thursday the Canadian Forces troops ,and riot-equipped city police .

RCMP officer inside the hostel .)

led by Col . Clive Rippon, entered the hoStel office . SomeAt least .eightpersons were arrested when Vancouver

Former UBC student society viCe-president Christine wore black pajama-like coveralls and some were in dres spolice. 'cleared the road infront of the hostel, about three - . Krawczyk was hit with a rock thrown at the RCMP . as uniform .hours after RCMP dragged .most of the 250 residents from .' they . cleared the ' Jericho : army base grounds

the

.- Their orders came frOm the_ federal department o fthe ho'stel . transients . She 'Was taken to hospital, treated for a head - justice and defence and the solicitor-general . .

Police, none of whom . wore badges or any other cut and released.

, Krawczyk, who was in the hostel office at the time ,identification, would not tell reporters why the people

The transients- have been living on borrowed:time in said the hostel staff was told to inform residents they ha dld four hours to lct . 2 ; when the federal government toeave.

Half an hour later ; the troops were clearihg the

"We barricaded the' door but we didn't have anymilitary training'," said Rick, an 8-year-old fromCalgary who had been at the hostel about a,week .

The bottom floor was bleared in "almost no time atall," he said.

The troops dragged the residents out of rooms , and: . down-stairs . ..Those with asked to go to other rooms to get

their personal belongings were refined permission to d o

The troops were soon joined by RCMP from several- Vancouver-area detachments, led, by Insp . W. E. Gibbon s

, . . Of. Burnaby,.Gibbons led the RCMP forces which two , years ago ,

arrested' 114 'students ' who-'were occupying the Simon -Fraser -University administration building over the issue o ffair admission to the university . He said the RCMP wa s

-called in by the Canadian Forces .The' RCMP .. and troops were unable at first :to reach

between 30 and 40 persons on the, top floor of thethree-stOry , building

:'But - the building was emptied of the last youth about-

"'

--

-l hhours after the troops moved in,The hosteL residents were chased up the hill in-front .

of the= building by about, 60 RCMP who sat On the,, -,, sidelines Once the, residents left the Jencho grounds ,

.continued on page 7: see, POLICE ,

were being arrested .

..

,

-

ion u.17 ion,

By THOM 'WESCOTT .. .". .

. . university' would take action to ,see .s . .

Declaring :. Their iq ration to stick together ; ; not _

, .

as lOno ag .'

'

bebarne-'larotracted":a1thoilgh he , announce eJericho!) residents settled clown :. o sleep iii SUB abotitwould not: call : in .police 11

2 a m. after yOwingto'leiVe by' 8a .ih;-today ., ,-

.-. ."

remained orderly . -,,

, . .

,

Th'

decision m- a' de- by an .overwhelming

- . .-,- , . At 1 a :m

aboutout subhours "after the. transient sof about -

the -SUB-' conversation-pit

ign'

-,.. had rnpve in

afer 'Sobiety

ent Tonythe end '' of a :evening..-Of :frantic 'negotiations and" ttedgederhanded:th.. building

clea.redj .

music ,

student-officials. ; a few.,- confrontations

.

?- intended

.building'to close; this

, Alternate:and dancing bythe transicents

p"

drum

m Oda n an d -

: , sP~: Tt, .,

available ,.; ., ... . '.. ;The-' '$tltdents of- the university

indicated at a- ''clearly

fh' h

s apparently. didn 'thave-any definite ---- .-- ..-general meetingJhey do -not, .Fayyou . in' SUB,"..--plans s'--hf where

would

.bttf, the vote,toleave ' Hodge announced

'voluntarily

-",-

-. .,

." .''grotip:.: cahie in'the face-of an expected

The tr nsients 'ignored" the e

shouting.,. .,,.

..

,

.confrontatio nt

etin to" '

but-over thEngineers wh°

guarded:

'

de& the dOnrs fostudents,

.r. , ,- --

-.:- -aflight ; said they

nybody`

' :-ge tting into SUB throligh the

About ;'100 :engineer,:,. andwould =

.

:

. .

dt''6:helo clear the bull dmg.,But-t e,YP

. Pr. ,remainitng iii the :building by tonight

.

.- :.

, the

Stu' de

meeting ' sponsore

d c

,hh-ihr rco. in, frOnt att o,,ns..:$„,,, ;, ."

thaturidergra.4 society,

calle,d. for noon today

!Ie re :were re'

..

7?ug491taZ4 0,. . .

.

' .

.

. ,

. SUB plaza 't- disbiiSS .' theO'c'cupatien. 1'

Ahe residences were.,holding: meeting .

p

to, Administration president.Walter Gage said the

continued 1. on page /

-'

. .

, ,RCMP :

Page 2

T H E

U B Y S S E Y

Friday, October 16, 197 0

AMS budget recognizesAsian war, unemployed

In the vila~ e2136 weste- Pa-k Wo, 22s-' nv

3011''S

Dn . ., or e

,-

e c

De D e

Van Centre NDP presents

An Evening o f

FOLK MUSI Cwith

FOLKAL POINT, OTHER S

SAT., OCT.1 78 :30 p.m.

at

Billy Bishop Legio n1407 Laburnu m

Phone 255-191 6tudents $1 .00

Others $1 . 5

HONG KON GCHINESE FOOD S

Just One Block from Campu sin the Villag e

WE SERVE AUTHENTI CCHINESE FOO D

AT REASONABLE PRICE SEat In — Take Out

We Now Have Delivery Service

Open Every Day 4 :30-11 :00 p .m .5732 University Blvd .

224-612 1

"PEOPLE "An Experience in Human Relation s

and Human Sexuality

Last Chance to register:

TODAY—12 :00-2 :30MONDAY—12 :00-2 :30

There will be NO registration after 2 :30 Monday

First "lecture-experience "

MONDAY—S .U .B . 7 :00

TICKETS Now On Sal e

First and OnlyVancouver Concert Appearanc e

Monday, Nov . 2 - 8 p.m .UBC War Memorial Gym

$1 .50 (Student advance) — $2 .50 (Student at door )$3.00 (Non-student )

Tickets at : Information Desk in theStudent Union Buioding (8 A .M:10P.M . )

A.M.S . Business Office (10 A .M .-4 P .M . )

For further information cal/ 228-3708

By GINNY GALT

A treasurer's lot is not a happy one . . .Alma Mater Society treasurer Stuart Bruce sa t

through Wednesday 's student council meetingnursing his ulcers, while the student councillorsallocated $4,400 of the AMS budget to various

projects .In separate motions, council voted in favor o f

giving $1,500 to the community visitationscommittee, $2,700 to the Unemployed Citizens 'Welfare Improvement Council, and $200 to theUBC Anti-War Committee .

Social work students' association representativ eBob Smith moved that the budget be amended s othe community visitations program be given non eof the AMS funds, and that council allocate $2,70 0to the UCWIC .

The visitations committee, headed by externa laffairs officer John Zaorzirny, plans to send a teamof students from various post-secondary institution sto high schools throughout the province .

"Our objective is to enable secondary student sto make a more informed, conscious decision abou twhat to do after secondary school, " Zaorzirny said .

He said the emphasis was not on universit yeducation, but post-secondary education . "Ourvisitation team will include students fro muniversity, a regional college, a technical school, an dvocational school ."

Smith flayed the visitations program, saying i twas a waste of student energy and money .

"It's a question of priorities really . We'reworking with a limitedbudget, and a limited numbe rof enthusiastic people, " Smith said .

He said the visitations program was superfluou sbecause it was aimed at mainly middle clas sstudents .

"And as middle class people, we know that i ttakes a university education program to stay in th eeconomic bracket, " Smith said .

But Zaozirny asked that the two organizations(the visitation commitee and UCWIC) b econsidered in separate motions .

Council voted in favor of splitting Smith' s

motion .Before council voted on the two motions ,

Bruce asked them not to vote in favor of givin gmoney to both committees .

But the motion that the budget be amended so

the community visitations committee be given non e

of the AMS fund was defeated 17 to 13 .And the motion to give $2,700 to the UCWI C

was passed .Zaozirny said he usually had a negative reaction

when outside groups came and asked for studen tmoney. "But these people are attempting to gai nsome self-respect and help themselves . I thing whatthey ' re doing is good, and I support them . "

UCWIC spokesman Peter Pretchett said $2,500would be used for the purchase and maintenance ofa van, and the operation of a co-operative store .

The remaining $200 would be used to set u peducational workshops for UBC students, and t oresearch the problem of university accessibility fo rwelfare recipients .

He said a student wing of UCWIC could alsoagitate for welfare rights for students unable toobtain summer employment .

(UCWIC applied to United Community Service sfor a grant and was turned down . )

The UBC Anti-War Committee asked council tosponsor a rally on campus on Oct . 30, to endorsethe Oct . 31 protest scheduled to leave theVancouver Court house at 2 p .m. for City Hall andto donate $200 .

Bruce spoke against the motion ."I don 't know what the effects of such event s

have been so far, but I'm not in favor of another .It 's a waste of money, " he said .

The motion was carried 14 to 5 .AMS president Tony Hodge said there would b e

a two-week break before the next council meeting ,and asked Bruce if he'd have the budgetre-organized by then .

"The budget will never get straightened out a tthis rate," sighed Bruce .

Filth now on fileStudents .can now read all major undergroun d

newspapers published since 1965 on microfilm a tthe UBC library .

The library has just acquired 200 undergroundpapers, including Georgia Strait and the Yello wJournal of Vancouver, The Berkeley Barb, Lo sAngeles Free Press, Dallas Notes, and Octopus o fOttawa .

Only 75 of the original 200 are still publishing .

Dear Speakeasy ,At the beginning of September I moved

into a small one-bedroom apartment near th euniversity . The room is in terrible shape — thepaint is peeling and water drips in through thecorner - to say nothing of the exhorbitantrent .

But that is not my prime beef. For the pastfew weeks I have suspected my landlady o fsnooping in my room . Often things aren 't in thesame place in the evening as I remember the mbeing in the morning . Although I don't haveabsolute proof, I am fairly sure that she i sentering my room.

I am afraid that if I confront her she wil lbecome very angry and retaliate by eithe rraising my rent or evicting me . At this point Ican neither afford a higher rent or spare th etime to search for a new place . Does she havethe right to do either of these things ?

Wondering Student .If it is any consolation, your problem is

shared by thousands of students who becometenants during the year, but remain ignorant oftheir tenant rights .

Since this April there have been two piece sof legislation enacted which offer a certainamount of protection from the landlord ' s bigstick . These are the provincial Landlord andTenant Act and the establishment of theVancouver city rental accommodationgrievance board .

According to the provincial Act, you rlandlady has absolutely no right to enter you rrented room without giving you written notice

at least 24 hours in advance . Even then shemust come between the hours of 8 a .m and 9p .m .

As to your question of what she can do . . .The new act states that "no tenancy

agreement shall provide for an increase in rentduring the first year of a tenancy agreement . "The act also says that three months writte nnotice must be given before any rent increase isvalid .

If you fear eviction, the landlady must giveyou at least one month written notice . If shedoes, and you feel the cause is unjust, you maytake the matter to a judge .

In any case it would be advisable to consul twith . a lawyer of the Vancouver Tenant sCouncil (Rm. 600, 193 E . Hastings ; 688-1727) .He can tell you what action you can takeagainst your landlady and assist you in thi saction . From the letter you seem to have plentyof legitimate grievances .

The B.C . Tenants Organization haspublished a booklet entitled "Tenants Rights"and the city clerk at city hall has free copies o fthe city's grievance board by-law . Every tenantshould become familiar with both of thes edocuments .

You might want to discuss this or anyother legal problem with UBC 's free legal aidpanel . These people are in SUB 228 and 23 2every Monday, Wednesday and Friday noon .

For all of you who still don't know how toget in touch with us, look for our ad in thi spaper .

Friday, October 16, 1970

THE

UBYSSEY

Page 3

.- Bookstore discounts obtained the hard wa yBy JAN O' BRIEN

Books were allegedly going for half-price in the UB Cbookstore last week .

Charges are expected to be laid today against abookstore employee who allegedly sold books at halfprice in exchange for cheques made out to the employee .

It is alleged that students browsing in the bookstor ewere approached by a bookstore clerk .

After commenting on the high prices of books, theclerk would tell students they could get books at halfprice if they wrote a personal cheque .

The clerk would then wrap the books in brown paper ,write " telephone order — prepaid " on the package and thestudent would walk out past cashiers an dcommissionaires .

After receiving information, a Ubyssey staffe rapproached the employee and received books worth $2 5for $15, last Thursday. The bookstore administration wasinformed and the books were returned .

"If the RCMP don't press charges the university will,"

said Maude Race, bookstore administrative assistan tThursday .

The UBC student who told The Ubyssey about thealleged irregularities said the clerk responsible told herabout six students bought books in that manner each day .

This could amount to a loss of $2,000 to $3,000 a tthe bookstore in one month .

This is not the only way the bookstore loses books .There is the universally-known book-under-the-coatphenomenon . . Police have also been told books are beingmailed out and that students have reciprocal agreementswith some bookstore staff, mailing the cheques to them.

Race said nothing to support this suggestion has bee nuncovered .

The finance department would not tell The Ubysseythe financial loss attributed to book theft last year .

Treasurer Allan Baxter said the information wa sconfidential .

But he said the national average lost is three per centof the gross sale . Using these figures the loss would

amount to $64,000 at UBC last year .When asked whether UBC was above or below the

national average Baxter refused to answer .Bookstore manager John Hunter said book thefts d o

not raise the retail cost of the books ."We sell books at Canadian list prices at a 20 per cent

profit, " said Hunter, who could not explain why bookswere usually cheaper at off-campus bookstores .

"While book thefts don't affect prices, they do affec tthe expansion program, " he said .

"The net profit goes to expansion . "He said that under university laws an ancillary servic e

must pay its own way and that university money isn 'tavailable for expansion .

Both Hunter and Race said the operation of th ebookstore was inefficient because of inadequate space .

"The book pattern has changed over the last fe wyears . Students no longer have one textbook but severa lpaperbacks for each course," said Race .

"We don't have the facilities to deal with all th ebooks efficiently .

'Military student' bust sfour engineers for dope

—dave biair photo

"AW, C'MON YOU GUYS this isn't funny," blasts campu spatrolman after dunking by gears in library pond . Gears mayfinally have hit on something they can do right .

Campus cop dunkedFunloving engineers, out for a bit of a chuckle, tanked a campu s

patrolman last Friday .However, the patrolman didn ' t think it was funny and the matte r

may go to court .The Ubyssey learned Thursday that the engineers undergraduat e

society has been informed they face specific legal action as a result o fthe incident .

The EUS executive refused to say if the legal action involves acivil lawsuit or criminal charges .

The traffic patrol superintendant was unavailable for comment .The patrolman was abducted after he attempted to stop a dra g

race between the engineering and forestry undergrad society vehicles .A spokesman for the engineers told The Ubyssey Thursday tha t

the patrol man "should have known better than try to stop, the guys . ""I mean we got them all worked up to do something and onc e

they ' re worked up you can ' t just stop them, " he said . "The mob rules ,right?"

"He pointed to four people," said Hodge, "andright away, three RCMP people in uniform ran in ,frisked the guys against the wall, and then too kthem off. "

Hodge said that they found "what looked lik eounce bags of marijuana" on the four students .

The official spokesman for the universit y

By DICK BETTS

People in Quebec are angry, but not at th eFLQ .

"People in Quebec are angry at unemployment ,at improper medical care, at the government and th ebandits in industry who are running this society, "said labor leader Michel Chartrand, president of theMontreal council of the Conseil Syndicate sNationaux, in a telephone interview Thursday wit hThe Ubyssey .

The labor leader outlined some of the trendsrunning through the latest political developments i nQuebec .

"The people in Quebec are not in a frenzy, " hesaid. "It is Trudeau who is doing all the shouting."

In Chartrand's opinion, the kidnappings ofBritish diplomat James Cross and Quebec labo rminister Pierre LaPorte are reinforcing t ;". :, ideasmany Quebecois have about the society in whichthey live :

"They know that the society is not their own ,that it belongs to industry which is foreign-owned . "

He said that the CSN Montreal council had justpassed a motion solidly in support of the FL Qmanifesto .

"We believe in the workers' democracy that theFLQ is trying to get by spitting in the eye of th e`elected' parliament," Chartrand said .

He felt that the workers are coming to the sid e

WASHINGTON (CUPI) —More than 1,200 policemen fro m25 states demonstrate dWednesday for stiff federal lawsagainst persons, particularly."revolutionaries" , who attackpolice .

"We policemen are getting fe dup with being treated like fish in abarrel, " said John Harrington,

brought togethe rrepresentatives from universitites from the fourwestern provinces .

Also attending the banquet were administrationpresident Walter Gage and Dr . Michael S . Davies ,assistant electrical engineering prof .

After the incident, "the dinner just went on, "said Hodge .

The person who pointed out the fourstudents—apparently an undercove ragent—introduced himself at the banquet as beingfrom Royal Roads Military College in Victoria, sai dHodge .

"No one knew anybody there," said anothe rengineering student who attended the banquet . "Sohe (the agent) just got in with everyone else and go twind of what was happening . "

of more extreme politics ."Nobody here (in the labor movement) crie s

about LaPorte ."They remember that he forced thousands o f

construction workers back on the job for the bi gcompanies . He is not on the side of the people . "

8 a.m. classes?There 's nothing worse than an 8 :30 a .m. class .

Right ?Wrong . Classes at UBC could start at 8 a .m .

next year .Registrar Jack Parnall presented a proposal to

senate, Wednesday, that lectures begin at 8 a .m .next year and that all classes be scheduled on th ehour throughout the day .

The proposal was referred back to th ecommittee on class schedules .

"The purpose of the proposal is the provisio nof additional classroom space through moreextensive use of present facilities," said Parnall .

Senate was told there are more than 100 classescurrently meeting outside class hours .

Administration president Walter Gage, wh ochaired the meeting, recommended that thecommittee does further research into student an dfaculty opinion on the proposal .

policemen because it's toohazardous . A policeman's life isn'tworth two cents . His badge is atarget today . "

The demonstration was anorderly affair, with little of theintervention by the Washington ,D.C., police force that has marredprevious demonstrations in theAmerican capital city .

Four students were busted for possession of detachment of the RCMP was unavailabl emarijuana last Friday night when the RCMP invaded comment .a student banquet in the SUB party room .

It is not known whether charges have been lai d

The four—at least one of whom is from against the four .

UBC—were among about 70 students attending the

The conference

kick-off banquet to the Western CanadianConference of Engineering Students .

"We were just getting to dessert when we wer einterrrupted, " said Alma Mater Society presiden tTony Hodge, who was at the banquet .

"One guy at the table suddenly got up, an dyelled out `no one move . '

for

Labour council backs FLQ

Police demonstrate for stiffer lawsnational president of the FraternalOrder of Police, sponsors of th edemonstration .

The fraternal order said that o f61 policemen killed this year ,about 20 had been the victims o funprovoked attacks .

Joseph David of Aliquippa, Pa . ,a town outside Pittsburgh, said : " Iwouldn't want my sons to be

Page 4

THE

UBYSSEY

Friday, October 16, 1970

THE UPYUEYPublished Tuesdays and Fridays throughout the universit y

year by the Alma Mater Society of the University of B .C .Editorial opinions are those of the writer and 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 241 K of the Student UnionBuilding . Editor, 228-2301 ; city editor, 228-2305 ; news editor,228-2307 ; Page Friday, 228-2309 ; sports, 228-2308 ; advertising ,228-3977 .

OCTOBER 16, 1970

Final Solution ?What's that Charlie, you say it can't happen here ?Well, take a look around when you walk into SU B

today. What you will see there (or at least they werethere at press time) are the victims of one of the moreblatant bits of repression this side of the Third Reich .

Some 200 people were evicted by a small army o fcops from the Jericho hostel Thursday ; many of themare now in SUB because they had nowhere else to go .

What were their crimes? That they have n omoney, that they have no place to stay, that they live i na society that can't provide jobs for them.

The RCMP and the Vancouver police departmentseemed to enjoy themselves immensely .

Taking a lesson from their Chicago counterparts,most of the city police officers removed their badges sothey could not be identified . After all, who wants to b eknown outside police circles as a guy who clubs 14 yea rold kids? (that's right buddy, that's how old some o fyour "filthy hippies" are) .

There could be few sights more disturbing than aphalanx of nameless, faceless riot cops trying out thei rnew equipment on a group of homeless, ill-fed youths .

Thursday 's events destroyed whatever faint hopesanyone may have had that the various levels ofgovernment were seriously considering any othe rsolution.

The problem of Jericho has been with us over amonth. Throughout that time, the city, provincial andfederal governments steadfastly refused to do anything .

They made absolutely no effort to find apermanent hostel, where transients could go withou thaving to worry about being shuttled off to somewher eelse the next day. Needless to say, the thought of doin gsomething, anything, about the basic problem of yout hunemployment never entered their vacuous little heads.

Obviously, those in power decided some time agothat there is no use trying to help people when it i smuch quicker and easier to flaunt police power andbreak of few heads .

Okay, so now that the cops have had their fu n(and if you don't think they enjoyed it you didn't seethe smiles on many of their faces) what happens next ?

Many of the former Jericho residents have move dinto SUB, and it is to be hoped that students leave the malone.

Maybe you don't like them, maybe you did vot eagainst letting them into SUB three weeks ago, bu tplease try to understand what they 've been through .

They have been used as political cannon fodder ,screwed around by government and, finally, beaten an dkicked by cops .

The way they have been treated has forced the mto regard everyone as an enemy . No, it isn't a pleasan tsituation, but don't make it worse .

"Gee, Ecologia, wasn't it a good idea to stop pollution by leaving our car at home? "

DAVIES' RAVIES

BY JIM DAVIES

Serious trivia time

NATION ALSURVIVAL -OR

OCT. 19 4

Editor : Nate Smit hNe ws Maurice Bridg eCity John Gibb sManaging . ,. : J . BrucCurti sWire John Anderse nSports Scott McClo yAsst City Robin Burgess

Ginny Gal tAss't News Jennifer Jorda nLeslie PlommerPage Friday Tim Wilso nPhoto David Enns

David Bowerma n

Maurice ' s typewriter Underwood —dead three weeks now and sick from arancid pizza he ate Wednesday — had anightmare . A movie company turnedthe plot down because it wasn' tcredible but the blorgs were subjecte dto it anyway .

The mare started with a sleepy pres sday, galloped through a SEARING

DEADLINE and collapsed into a po tof glue at the printers .

Included in the whole sticky mes swere :

Judy McLeod, Alvan Maxwell ,Elaine Tarzwell, Josephine Margolis ,Sandy Kass, Nathalie Apoichtine, Phi lBarkworth, Dan Mulligan, Nettie Wild ,Ken Lassesen, Chris Krawczyk, Ja nO'Brien, Kathy Carney, Dick Betts ,Thom Wescott, John Andersen, Nel aLeia, Paul Knox, Robin Burgess, an dthe lovely Ginny Galt .

Photogs were Al Katowitz, Keva nPerkins and Jim Gorman .

McCloy forgot to turn in a list, butwe think the jocks were Keith Dunba rand Don Gardner.

As special helper was the indubitabl eFernley Beangrab.

A huge, giant staff meeting an dgroup grope will be held at 1 p .m.Saturday at Bridge's (address in office) .All staff encouraged to attend . BYOB .

Several interesting itemsaround campus and the city . . .

• Last week' s studentelections for Alma Mater Societyvice-president produced severalinteresting side-lights .

First, AMS councillors were incharge of the manning of th eballot boxes . Important? Councilgrad studies representative DavidMole didn't think so . He couldn' tmake it so he paid two student stwo dollars an hour each for sixhours to do the "dirty deed " forhim . Since there were 60 vote scounted from that poll, that ' sabout 50 cents per vote .

• Defeated v-p candidate ,Kelvin Beckett had his bi gpost-election plan shattered . If h ehad won, he maintains he woul dhave demanded a recount, the nresigned. Elected v-p Joh nMitchell is slightly less refreshin gand is reported to have raise dseveral hackles around SUB . Hedoes, however, have some right t obe ill-at-ease . There have bee nnumerous phone calls toadministration president Walte rGage in the past week leavingmessages with Mitchell 's name .Mitchell denies making any ofthese calls .

• If Mitchell is difficult t oget along with, however, ne wAMS ombudsman (elected byacclamation) Hamish Earle isimpossible .

According to several AM Scouncillors, Earle had both the mand members of the Board ofGovernors either amused or angryduring his performance at thelatest BoG-AMS feast at thefaculty club . The same sources saythere are already several peopletalking about initiating petition sto have Earle removed, basicallyfor personality reasons .

One councillor, AM Sco-ordinator Hanson .Lau doeshave some faith in Earle . "He'llimprove . . . if he just keeps hishands off girls, he 'll getsomewhere," says Lau .

• The BoG-AMS tea partie sare not the only ones going onaround campus . UBC chancellorAllan McGavin has been invitingall of the executives of theundergrad societies over to the

faculty club for little friendly ge ttogethers . Good politics ,methinks .

• Elsewhere o ncampus . . . UBC PReports peopl ein their continua lpro-administration — anti-studen tline have done it again . After thei rlaughable survey of studen topinion satirized last week in TheUbyssey, they have tried toshatter a worthwhile attempt a tteaching evaluations at UBC .

Publishing a picture of TheUbyssey's Leslie Plommer, whohas been reviewing classes, wil lcertainly help profs presentunrepresentatively good lectur e. . . or have her removed .

Plommer's only comment onthe UBC PReports articl econcerned the headline beneat hher picture : "I am not `A Fre eService to Students ' ."

• Does this come under th eheading student power? At arecent political science prof-gra dstudent party, there was analleged fist-fight over a prof swife . Rumor has it that the pro fwas licked and stomped homewhile the grad student enjoye d

Arts IIEditor, The Ubyssey, Sir :

In a recent article on Arts I an dArts II (Ubyssey, October 6), yo ugave the impression that thisyear 's admirable Arts II programis the first of its kind . There was ,however, a similar program whichflourished in 1968-69 .

The first Arts II started on th einitiative of a group of student swho had taken part in the firs tyear of Arts I . We devisd our ow ncourse of study and lobbied for itsapproval by the faculty of artsand the senate .

Twenty students and professorGerry McGuigan participated inthe nine unit course .

the little woman's company . Thi scould spur new arguments — "M yprof can whip your prof! "

• As The Ubyssey ' sparty-by-party coverage of theforthcoming civic elections wil lsoon begin, here are two items towhet your political appetites :

• A possible mayoraltycandidate to head the NDP-COPEdual effort is provincial NDP MLABob Williams . Williams, acandidate for the NDP'sleadership at its last convention ,would stand up more thanadequately to Tom Terrific 'sbigoted oratories . He would relishthe chance for a T .V. debate withCampbell .

• TEAM is most certainlypresenting an interesting (diverse )slate of candidates for itsnominating convention. It israther difficult to comprehen dUBC medicine prof Bill Gibson("I have a meeting with U .S .president Richard Nixon onUrban affairs .") and GeorgiaStraight reporter Steve Brown("Up the Establishment") on thesame slate. But there theyare . . . so far .

established in 1969-70 . No doubtthese efforts played a part in theestablishment of a large-scale Art sII this year .

We feel that the first Arts II isworth remembering as a rar eexample of students on thiscampus taking an active an dsuccessful role in the shaping o ftheir own education . That Arts Ihas been able to motivate student sin this manner is not the least o fits achievements .

CHRISTOPHER MOOREArts 4

AUDREY SCHWARTZFEL DArts 4

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

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

LETTER S

Efforts were made by th e'succeeding group of Arts Istudents to have a similar program

Friday, October 16, 1970

T H E

U B Y S S E Y

Page 5

Behind tije kidnappings

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We only hear about the

most violent acts. But

they're part of a strategy—

for the liberation of a people.

By Christine Krawczyk

French Canadian separatism is nothing new t o

Canada .It has played an important role in Canada' s

history ever since the British beat the French mor e

than 200 years ago .This has been driven home to a bitter English

Canada in recent days with the terrorist kidnappin g

in Quebec of government officials in aide o f

separatism .There are now in Quebec two main separatis t

movements with very little in common — excep t

they are both working towards an independent

Quebec .Spokesmen for these two groups were recently

at UBC to explain to the students a little about th e

problem and the way they view the solution to the

problem .

Rene Levesque and Claude Charron are bot h

members of the Parti Quebecois . This party is trying

to achieve independence for Quebec through

parliament .

Charles Gagnon is a member of the Front de

Liberation Quebecois, a revolutionary organization

whose members have lost faith - in ever achieving an

independent Quebec through parliamentary means .

The FLQ — responsible for Quebec kidnapping s

-- is a party of revolutionaries who are using

revolutionary tactics because they believe they ar e

the only effective ones .

The separatists see Quebec as a conquere d

nation that has lived in a state of oppression eve r

since the French were defeated at the Plains of

Abraham . A nation that has only recently begun t o

rediscover itself.

"We are now beginning to re-discover ou r

potential, and our abilities, which we had forgotte n

we had. It is this discovery that has led us to wan t

to be independent, " said Charron, a member of the

Quebec National Assembly while he was at UBC .

"We don ' t want separatism so that we can

preserve a French language and culture or a Roma n

Catholic religion . We want to be independent s o

that we can decide for ourselves what kind of a

society we want to live in, " said Levesque, leader of

the PQ .Gagnon agrees with both Charron and Levesqu e

as to the reasons for separatism .

He disagrees with them when it comes to th e

means by which separatism will be achieved and a s

to the society that should be built in an

independent Quebec .

Gagnon sees the struggle of the Quebecois as

being part of the struggle for national liberation

around the world .

"Many people in many different countries arenow engaged , in revolutionary struggles for sel f

determinatio. The FLQ represents that struggle i n

Quebec, and that is why you should support it, "

Gagnon told the students at UBC .

Despite the fact that Levesque admits that th e

present electoral system in Quebec is corrupt he stil l

has faith that he can get his party elected through it ,

and thus achieve independence .

"You admit that elections are fixed, so why do

you think that when you get elected to office it wil l

be a just election?" Gagnon asked Levesque, at

UBC.

Levesque answered him by saying that he didn' t

think elections would always have to be corrupt .

Levesque and Gagnon also disagree on what

kind . of a society they want to build in an

independent Quebec .

L E V ESQU E. . . confirmed parliamentarist

"As long as we insure that we have control w ecan accept any foreign investor, doesn ' t matterwhether he is American or Chinese," said Levesque .

For Gagnon and the FLQ there is nocompromising on foreign investment, particularl yAmerican investment .

"We (the workers) must own all our ownindustries, there is no such thing as allowing anothe rpower to own a little bit . Particularly not the U .S .,"said Gagnon .

Both men are still fighting to try and achievetheir goal .

The FLQ has escalated its struggle : it i simportant to see that struggle in the revolutionar ysetting in which it is taking place .

For the FLQ , the "Quiet Revolution" ended along time ago . It is now time for action .

"The fight for independence of our country i sgoing to be a long bloody one . There has never i nhistory been a struggle for radical social change thathas been peaceful," said Gagnon .

By means of the kidnappings the FLQ i smaking people aware that they are serious whe nthey say they will fight for their country .

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THE

UBYSSEY

Friday, October 16, 197 0

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Chem 11 0MOVES TO

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Laurentian studentsreturn to classes

SUDBURY (CUP) — Laurentian students returned to schoo lon Tuesday with little more than a• whimper as the school reces s

declared by the senate on Sept . 30 ended .However the conflict between the senate and the university ' s

board of governors remains unsolved .The legality of the senate recess, questioned by administratio n

president Roland Cloutier, and the board of governors, resulted inthe threat of a court injunction against the actions of the senate . Theinjunction never materialized .

The split between the board and the senate has been buildin g

for over a year.The basic dispute arises from the feeling that the powers o f

the board of governors must be limited . A few groups of students ,the senate and some board members have accepted the proposal ofestablishing a single governing body to ensure a joint management o fall aspects of the university .

During the recess, the majority of students simply went hometo wait out the class embargo .

•In describing the shrinking popularity off the recess, on estudent commented : "There are two arguments about the situation .One says the university government stinks and we shut down until itis reformed . And the other says this is an educational institution an dit must be kept open to teach . People unfortunately have beenconditioned to accept the former . "

A senate motion to call off the recess said the provincialgovernment had "expressed a willingness to assist in a resolution ofthe university's problems . "

However, faith in the senate has been dwindling recently .Many accuse the senate of backing down from its motion of Sept . 20which censured the executive committee of the board of governorsand demanded its removal and replacement by a student-facultycommittee which limited powers of reference .

The board of governors has traditionally held closed meetingsand has no voting members from either the student body or thesenate- although members of these bodies are allowed to observe th emeetings .

The board has been reluctant to share university control wit hthe senate .

One hundred and fifty Laurentian students journeyed t oToronto Oct . 6 to meet with education minister William Davis abou tthe whole issue .

It is expected that Davis will make a statement some time thi sweek about the situation stating that differences between groups o ncampus are not as deep as some members of the public might hav ebeen led to believe .

Two issues were investigated during the present crisis . Thesenate claimed the board had usurped certain powers of th euniversity president and published confidential information durin gsalary negotiations . Many feel these are superficial details coverin gover a much deeper malaise at the university .

AMS budget alteredA few changes have been made in the Alma Mater Society 's

proposed budget for 1970-1971 .AMS treasurer Stuart Bruce told students ' council, Wednesday

night, that the community visitations committee budget had bee nreduced from $3,735 to $1,500 .

He said the university clubs committee budget would dropfrom $4,350 to $4,000 and the Canadian University Service Oversea sfund would get $765 instead of $600 .

The AMS plans to allocate $125 to the Society for Pollutio nand Environmental Control — $50 to cover the cost of a tenant' srights booklet, and $2,000 for a course evaluation survey .

The speakers committee budget will be raised to $3,000 from$2,765 .

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THE UBYSSEY

Page 7

Police scatter hostel residentsfrom page One

As the last residents werepushed out the gate by the RCMP ,

- young people on Fourth Avenu esouth of the hostel began to hurlrocks at the police .

Krawczyk was struck by one o fthese, and taken away after somedelay, by a military ambulance .

Meanwhile workmen in silve rhard hats began boarding up thewindows of the hut 47, the armybuilding that had been used as thehostel .

Traffic, including Gray Lineand several B .C. Hydro buses ,backed up quickly . The Gray Lin ebus pushed a car through th emelee, as the residents scattered .

An enraged resident then triedto throw a rock through thewindshield of a truck whose drive rwas motioning the young people'to clear out . A girl stopped hi mfrom breaking the windshield bu the smashed the truck's rear-vie wmirror .

At 3 :25 p .m. 10 motorcyclepolicemen from the Vancouve rcity force pulled up to the crowd .

Insp. Victor Lake read the first

(Continued from Page 1 )

take action, but this failed tomaterialize .

"About a dozen " extra RCMPofficers from around the LowerMainland — part of the squa dcalled to help in the eviction a tJericho — were assigned thecampus RCMP for the evening, a nRCMP officer told The Ubyssey .

There were also reports that- other groups of RCMP weremassed off campus, in the even tof trouble .- But the only police seen allevening were three RCMP whosearched SUB for three arme dbandits who had held up a Blac kTop cap just outside SUB, too k$25 and ran into the buildingaoubt 12 :15 p.m. The suspect swere not found .

The police presence wasgreeted with curiosity by th eoccupiers and Hodge announce dtheir intentions, assuring the

order to disperse . "Clear the wa yand let the buses through," h esaid through a bullhorn .

Residents shouted that the ywanted to be let inside to claimtheir personal belongings but Lak ejust continued to ask them t oclear the way .

"We want peace and safety asmuch as you, ladies andgentlemen," he told a group ofresidents . "The last thing we wan tto do is to clear you forcibly butwe will if we have to . "

The residents shouted thatthey no place to go and weredetermined to stick together .

The situation was stalemate dfor about an hour and a half .During that time representative sof Vancouver 's Inner City ServiceCentre attempted to convince theresidents to leave by offerin gthem alternative accommodationin about six different placesaround the city .

But none went, because the ywere reluctant to break up th eJericho community that ha sgrown during the hostel 's troublesof the past few weeks .

officers "are not here to hassleanybody" .

Throughout the evening therewas constant drum and bong omusic with most of the transients ,their supporters and hundreds ofcurious students milling around .

AMS co-ordinator Hanson Lauset up an alternative housingco-ordination centre and at 2 a .m .the centre said it had placed 6 0transientsand had furtheraccomodation for 114 in agenciesand private homes .

A medical aid centre staffed bya doctor, was established .

There was also a handful o fYippies and Vancouver LiberationFront members among the crowd ,but they met a cool reaction fro msome of the hostelers .

Several transients interviewe dsaid the groups are "outsiders whocome in to cause trouble t ofurther their own ideals ."

At 5 :15, Lake — who had givenrepeated dispersal orders, said :"Ladies and gentlemen, I believethis is an unlawful assembly . You ,have five minutes to clear th estreet . "

Five minutes later, the police —equipped with brand ne wyard-long riot sticks and plastichelmets — advanced toward thetransients in two lines off 1 0followed by a group of about 60others .

Persons sitting in the stree twere beaten repeatedly .

Rev. Ted Mahood, a hostelstaffer, was led away bleedin gfrom the mouth by hoste lresidents .

In two minutes, the street was turned a corner, I nearly fell ove rclear and the residents

ENGLISH 10 0MOVES TO

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the hill to the south . More policeadvanced from the western flankand forced them further up thehill .

The Jericho residents ran upthe steep hill to Eighth Avenueand began the trek to UBC .

In the street, at least thre epersons were arrested .

None of the policemen worebadges, and when sergeants an dinspectors were asked to identifytheir men they refused .

After the street and slope wereclear, one policeman wa soverheard to say :

"I must admit I hit one bumpretty hard ."

Answered another : "What doyou mean one? Every time I

forced on - you trying to hit them all . "

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Page 8

THE

UBYSSEY

Friday, October 16, 197 0

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Coupon must be presented .

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THIS TUESDAYSpecial Events and the Arts U.S resents

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Advance Student Tickets $1 .50

At the Door $2.50Non-AMS (Anytime) $3 .00

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Food services rip off student sFood services are robbing students of $13,000

by using 20 cent beverage cups .

At least according to graduate chemistr ystudent Art Smolensky, who conducted a nexperiment Thursday using graduated cylindrica lflasks .

He found that two 10 cent cups of drink wil lhold 13 per cent more liquid than one 20 cent cup .

He said at least one half of an estimated yearl ysale of $200,000 worth of pop and milk wa sprobably sold in the larger cups .

Students have been overcharged for 13 per cen tof about $100,000 which totals $13,000 .

"That means $13,000 profit for food service swithout any value given back to the students," hesaid .

Smolensky said that he had approached Foo dServices about the problem before .

"Several weeks ago I brought the matter to theattention of food services but unfortunatelynothing was done about it . I hope that no wsomething more can be done . "

The experiment used 10 different people wh owere asked to serve themselves an adequate servin gof pop into two of the small cups and one of th elarger . An average was taken of all the amount sresulting in the 13 per cent difference .

Beer for everyone in Pit,can get in with AMS card

Beer is once again available to students withou tleaving SUB — two days of the week, at least .

The Pit beer. garden re-opened for the first timethis year on Tuesday in the SUB party room an dwill open Tuesday and Thursday from 4 p .m. to11 :30 p .m. every week .

UBC students will not need special membershi pcards this year, only an Alma Mater Society card . I ncases of doubt, proof of age may be'required.

Guests will be admitted for a cover charge o f25 cents . Faculty and staff will also be able to ge tbeer at the Pit upon presentation of UBCidentification .

"For the last two years, the AMS has bee ntrying to get a year-round license for liquor o ncampus, " said Hanson Lau .

"The government says no, so for this year at

least, it's finished . In the meantime, we'll have th ePit ."

The Pit will eventually be moved to room 30 inthe basement, as soon as a door is installed there, tofacilitate control of people going in and out .

Poli sci unionAn organizational meeting for a political

science course union will be held at noon today i nSUB 113 for students interested in having morecontrol over their courses .

Organizers say an attempt will be made to for ma liaison committee between students and faculty todeal . with course content and style and the selectionof courses offered .

10 %discountto UB Cstudents

a SUB FILM SOC presentatio n

BULLITTwith STEVE McQUEEN

Friday 16 & Saturday 17 : 7 :00 & 9 :30— Sunday 18 : 7 :0 0

Students 50c — Others 75c — SUB Auditorium

Mime Theatre at UB CSharon Boyla n

"Imagine that you ' re walkin gpast a tree. Shift balanceslightly . Move your knee . "

The fluid man on stage was,Adrian Pecknold, founder of theCanadian Mime Theatre . Thestiffer people were students an dsuch, trying to fabricate theillusion of matter out of space .Pecknold moved his leg back ,shifted his arms, and was out inthe country for a stroll .

Actually, he was in SUBgiving a workshop in mime t ointerested people . He's beeninvolved in theatre for ten yearsnow, until last year, as a student .Last year, after studying withthe Manitoba Theatre Centre ,and the Ecole Jacques Lecoq inFrance, Pecknold started a ne wCanadian institution with hismime troupe . His creativity isexpressed not just i nperformances but in workshops .

"Ok, climbing a wall . Establishthe wall . With your hands . Thewall's flat . Move your handssoft, then flat . Hard ."

"Now. Climbing . Put yourhands on top of the wall . Jumpup. Pull the wall level down wit hyour hands . About to the pelvis .Swing your legs up . Beimbalanced once you get there .Shaky . "

"To get down, fall . Swaydown, hold it a split second, fall .Look back at where you feelfrom quickly . Helps establish afeeling of depth . "

All the kids on stage falling ,looking up. Illusions of reality ,with the help of AdrianPecknold, master of mime .

The Canadian Mime troup eleaves Vancouver for its firs tnational tour . Canadians will b egetting a thorough introductio nto a comparatively new art formhere .

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DATE :Tuesday, October 20, 1970

TIME :Doors open at 6 :30 p .m. Exam commencea at 7 p .m .

PLACE :Room 106, Buchanan Building

(1) All interested students are remindedthat there are no exemptions fo radvanced degrees permitted in thiscompetition .

12) Additional information available atCampus Centre.

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Page Two

THE

UBYSSEY

Friday, October 16, 1970

/

—kevan perrins photo

Seagull General Meeting

Dickin on HumourHumour, somebody once remarked, is whateve r

is funny. If I knew who said it, I would thank thefellow personally .

A more helpful source, The New AmericanWebster Handy College Dictionary, (my next essaywill be on wordiness), defines humour as "th equality of inciting laughter, or of perceiving wha tis comical ; drollery ; facetiousness ."

In spite of this definition, humour is still avague concept . No-one has yet explained why theidea of humour exists . (Read that sentence again .It is very important .) When an authoritative sourceattempts to define the origin of humour, there is ,almost without fail, an attempt made to link it tohuman emotion . We are told that man loves andhates, is happy and is sad, and that humour is, insome obscure manner, linked to one or all ofthese .

The principal scapegoat is usually happiness . Weare informed, by those in the know, that humou ris an outgrowth of happiness, or a cause of fhappiness . Since people who laugh are usuallyhappy, and people who are happy have been see nlaughing, such a connection has never bee ndisputed .

Until now .To continue, then, the connection betwee n

humour and laughter is tenuous ; between humourand happiness it is arbitrary .

"People who laugh are usually happy " .Unfortunately, this is not true . Laughter can havemany causes, and, at the risk of appearing toconduct a circular argument, humour is only on emotivation for laughter . Yet, you may ask, sincepeople laugh at things they find funny, is not

humour the only motivation ?People do laugh at things they find funny, bu t

what a person may find funny does not necessaril yhave to be humourous .

"Nitpicker! " you cry. If people find it funny ,then they laugh at it and therefore it i shumourous .

"Slow down!", I reply . We have reached acrucial point . The question arises : Do people fin dsomething funny, then laugh at it, thereby makin git humourous, or do they laugh at it, thus findin git funny, and thereby making it humourous?

"Super-nitpicker! ", you scream, wha tdifference does it make if it's funny, or laughed at ,or humourous! It's the same thing . !

No, it's not! I interject . This is precisely th epoint . If you confuse these three things, an dscramble them up, having no respect for the orde rin which they occur, (or should occur), then howcan we possibly explain one in terms of the other ?

"Who cares!", you shriek . They don 't have t obe explained in terms of each other !

Then you agree with my thesis that humour i snot linked, in any direct manner, to happiness, an dthat there is little justification to connect it withlaughter ?

You are silent . "And, furthermore, you agree with m y

as-yet-unstated conclusion that the wholeinstitution of humour is instinctual and intuitive ,and that the so-called "comedians" of thetwentieth century are an abomination ?

You are silent . You remove your hat from thehatrack and walk out the door .

It's about time you got out of my essay ./

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Alma Mater SocietyOFFICIAL NOTICE S

— to all members of the 1970-71 Grad Clas sGRAD CLASS GENERAL MEETIN G

The first meeting of the Grad Class will be held on Friday ,Oct . 23, in SUB Auditorium at 12 :30 .

The purpose of this meeting is to elect the executive for thecoming year, which includes the following positions :

(A) President(B) Vice-President(C) Treasure r(D) Secretary(E) Social Conveno r(F) Public Relations Office r

The executive take responsibility for all major grad clas sactivities including such things as :

— Baccalaureate Service— Congregation Ceremon y— Graduation Bal l— Allotment of Grad Fees

(Come on Arts . Don't let the Engineers rule again! )

Friday, October 16, 1970

THE

UBYSSEY

Page Three

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

Many eons ago, 'before there was man ,

there was an island in what- we now cal l

the Pacific Ocean .

On this island, there was a village, full ofthree foot high . dwarfs . They were happy ontheir little island, no one bOthi-red them andthey tended their . little fields' .and fished unde rthe warm rays of the benevolent sun .

.In the village, there was a dwarf whose nam e

was Smix. Smix was small for a dwarf, for-he wa sonly two and one half feet high : His shortnessdidn 't bother him While he .was young, but as hegrew. older, the difference between Smix and hi s.fellow dwarfs -became more apparent : Gradually ,the other dwarfs began to shun him, eventually ,they wouldn't speak, to him at all, .

When the other dwarfs laughed and pointed athim, Smix : didn ' t,mind, because he had ' found atrue friend in Art, his pet rat . Smix and Art werealways together ;-'inseparable, they would wande rall - over-the island. Sometimes Smix,.would throwsticks for Art to fetch, and they never seemed,totire of this game. -

-

On the 'island, ''there were other rats, hit_ theserats were not _good,' nice rats, like Art, they were 'nasty and _ mean, they ate all the grain and-cheese, and--just out of nastiness,'they would bit ethe milkmaids . - -One day, , a gang of these rat scame upon Smix-' and Art as they played -theirthrow. and fetch game . When the bad rats sawwhat. Smix and Art were doing, they laughed an djeered :and threatened to bite Art . They taunte dArt into turning on Smix ; Art hated to do it, buthe bit poor Smix right.- on the nose . Smix wentinsane after this, and he ran from the rats leavingArt with the others:

'Now that Art was no longer _his true friend ,

Smix was all alone, he loriged fOr cOmpany,_bu tnone -of the, other Dwarfs would have anything -to ' do with hiM, because he was so short, and belooked so odd -dressed in clothes that-didn't fithim, for no one knew how to-make closthes for atwo and one half foot high dwarf, there - hadnever befOre been - such a thing . After severalrebuffed attempts to made friends with the othe rdwarfs in the village,'Smix wandered' sadly awayinto the enchanted forest ; and on the top of acliff, he built himself a small cabin .

Smix didn't leave the , forest for many yearg ,and all the dwarfs began to think that he hadperished in the enchanted forest .

.

.Eventually,' Smix tired of living in the forest

alone. Being a gregarious type, even sociall yaggressive, he would, sneak into .the village atnight, and look through the windows of th edwarf houses and watch the inhabitants as the yate their evening meal . Even this was not enoughtO - keep Smix happy, in fact, it made him angrywhen he saw all the warm houses full of happydwarfs and their children, because he could neve rbe a pait of it as he was only two and one halffeet high .

Smix- began to grow meaner with every visitto the village, he began to growl whn he looke din the windows . When the dwarfs inside thehouses _heard 'Sinix's anguished growling, theywere very afraid, at first they thought that only awolf could make such a horrible sound, but theycould never find a trace of wolfprints'when the ywept to look in the' morning .

This went on for some time, and the villagedwarfs' became afraid when they heard Smix' s.growling . Then Smix became bolder, and, hebegan pounding on the WallS of the houses as hegrowled, this frightened the other dwarfs eve nmore, and they began to believe that Smix was aghost, which of course was quite absurd since w eknow that there is no such thing as a'ghost . Smixeven' went 'into the houses and took 'all . of thegold and silver plates, then he would urinate on

d'

'the rug anreturn t his hideout with his. otreasures .

'

. '&nix went on 'like 'this - for some tiiiie : 'until

there were no more -plates to' steal, . and no more ,rugs to be urinated on .

Tim Wilson

Then one evening, Smix came upon themayor's wife as she walked along the path to the .well . Smix grabbed-her from behind, and raped . .her violently_ She screamed, but all the other 'dwarfs were afraid to go to her rescue . Later th esame evening, she recounted the rape to , th evillage . This . mortified the whole village and al lthe, women clustered around her to. comfort he rand find out the details .

Smix, way off in , his retreat, quietly chuckled ,and the next night, he raped her again .

This time the village went wild, but Smix wa slaughing, because the mayor's wife had agreed tomeet him the next night .

The secret 'rendezvous with the mayor's wif econtinued for- some. months, until Smix tired ofthe , whole thing, since the Mayor's - wife wa sreally not particularly ' stimulating, nor did shereally understand his sensitivities . - ' .

Theri one night, Smix peered out-from behin da flour barrel and saw the baker's wife, now she .

. was a . bit more to his -liking so he raped her . 'the' village went wild, and again Smix jus tAgain

, laughed because the Bakei's wife had agreed-to -meet -him- the' very - next night . But Smix tired ofher too, and so he went on to'the Butcher 's wife . .and. the Fisherman's until he had gone throughall the' wives' and nearly finished the daughters .'There was only one daughter left, Griselda an

d cheesemaker's daughter. She .hid the fairest skinand the most beautiful flaxen hair . that anyonewould want to see; and Smix longed after her ,but he - could hexer catch her alone, her fathe rkept her hidden away, andlie only allowed he rout when he could accompany her .

"Well,. this. won't do at all," Sniix thought

to himself .

-

He decided . that, the only way to get atGriselda would be to trick the cheesem-aker intoleaving her alone .' So one afternoon, he stole u pto the cheesemaker's- porch and placed a notethere . -The note invited the cheesemaker to awine and cheese party at the wihemaker 's ho'use .

Well, when the cheesemakei read that : note ,he rushed out of thee hotise, forgetting all about ,his daughter . for he loved wine and chees eparties above all things .

As soon as he saw , the . cheesemak. er leave thehouse, Smix crept out from where he had bee nhiding and hurried. over to the door and'.knocked, Griselda said "Is that you 'Papa?" an dSmix mumbled incoherently so that she woul dknow that someone was there, but so that sh ewouldn ' t know who it was . Griselda opened the .door, and Smix pounced upon her, covering he rmouth with his little hand and pulling her fac eclose to his" by her flaxen hair . '

He stood there holding her and breathing veryheavily, -his twenty-five year growth scratchin gher fair cheek. .

'Griselda began to sob, and her tears wette d

Smix 's little hand, he looked into her frightenedeyes, and saw his own- reflection . there, herelented and releasing her, he said "I'm sorry " ina voice that was more likea growl . .

_, She looked at him ; still frightened, and thenshe' realized who ,he was, she had -never seen ' himbefore, but this could be none other"than Smix ,the two and one half 'foot high dwarf .

'She was shocked at first, when she realize d

that he wasn't a ghost at all . She looked up athim, and "he seemed to , grow; and in fact, he didgrow, for-Griselda was really a fairy, and she ha dmade. him grow one half a foot because he ha drelease her . Of course Smix didn ' t realize whatwas happening until he looked in a mirror and . -saw that his clothes,suddenly , fit . him: Smix wasso happy that he burst out laughing,' but just atthat moment, the cheeSemaker returned; he sawSmix laughing with his daughter, and"he picke d

-up a big cheese with a hole in' the . middle, anddropped it over Sniix's head, pinning his arms . .Sniix leaped into the air, but he was firmly ,caught by the . cheese .

.

'

Page Four

, THE . UBYSSEY

Friday, -October 16, 1970

• The cheese maker put a 'rope around . Smixand led him outside, proclaiming, . " I ' ve caughtthe ghost . I've caught the ghost ." The wholevillage_ turned out to look at the ghost, and allthe women who had been raped were asked ifthis was the ghost that had done them the evil .Well none of the women wanted to say anything ,because they were afraid that Smix might tell o ftheir complicity in the sexual rendezvous, andthey all chimed in a chorus, "that's not him, th eghost that raped us was only- two and one hal ffeet tall ." It was true that he did resemble Smixthe two and one half foot tall high dwarf, bu tnow that he was the same height as all the other,dwarfs, they couldn 't prove anything . So thecheesemaker removed his cheese from Smix .

Griselda told her father that Smix, who-quickly changed his name to Walter, had onl ycome to visit her and that he had asked for .he rhand in marriage . Well this new development just 'floored the whole town began to get ready fo rthe wedding, since dwarf weddings are quit eelaborate and involve a great deal of preparation .

The ghost - - stopped visiting the town, an dmiraculously, all the things that had been stole nfrom the village dwarfs were returned to theirsteps that very evening .

- .So Smix and Griselda were happily married .

And at the wedding ; Smix-had a wink for all-thewomen there . They'thought him terribly saucy ,but none spoke _out, for none of them ha dforgotten their mad lustfilled evenings .spent withSmix, in some green . bower, in the . enchanted ,forest : Pedro and Griselda became a very sociallyacceptable' couple, in fact ' they were so popula rthat the very next mayor was none other Smi xhimself. Art .his pet rat had returned when he:saw Smix, having long ago . regretted his attack onSmix . So once again,- all the inhabitant's of the ,dwarf village went back to their daily labours .Under efficient mayoralty of Smix, the nast y:rats were sent away on a boat, - and, . thecommunity' once-again relaxed under the-warm 'rays of father sun .

Social Ramifications of Smix the Two and a- Half Foot- High Dwarf"Smix, The Two-and-a-Half-Foot-Tall Dwarf" ,

is one of the. best examples of the preoccupatio nof twentieth-century man with his in iediat eenvironment .

'In this case, (and this is especially important, '

in view of the fact that modern man is no longe rin close contact with nature, but now lives, forthe most part, ( in cities), ' the immediat eenvironment I refer -to is the social environment :It is with this ' environment that modern manmust struggle . He.no longer must cope with' tiger sand lions, but with the people in the area inwhich he . lives . .As I stated before, it is anenvironmental problem .

As professor J . G. Martinif states in hi sbrilliant 'analysis of this piece : "The very leastone can -say when attempting to divulge suc hdiversity is that the very basis of questionin gone 's existence is not merely enough . The proofof the .spirit is in the bottle . -Too often we fallprey to the slings and arrows of . outrageousmisfortune . What can be . done? The answers areall here . "

'While this view may appear to be too narro w

for our . present purpose, its .validity .cannot be -questioned.

There is, a' very obvious analogy betwee nSmix's rejection by his fellow dwarfs and theloneliness,— insecurity and alienation felt bymodern man in the concrete jungle . What is even . ,

more remarkable is Smix's reaction- to thi srejection .

.

Does Smix, as an : oppressed minority :group ,attempt to ' alleviate his plight through prope rlegal channels? No .

..Does Smix, as a downtrodden individual ,

attempt to have . his grievances . redressed by anombudsman or by_ petition? No .

Does Smix, .as ' a suppressed-political entity ,(and here we must note the ".̀ happy_ ending " ; i nwhich Smix :obtains political, power, her esignified by the position of mayor), attempt t oachieve his ends through violent revolution? . No .

As a true representative of modem man, Smix

turns within himself, .and goes away to live alone .He secretly' believes that in this way he, canachieve happiness, (note that the' forest, whil eprobably merely an ordinary-, dark, uninviting ,cold place, is referred ; to as ' "The -EnchantedForest"), but he is doomed to disappointment, a sare .all who would cut themselves off fromcivilization .

In this expose of the "hermit's life", we seethat the author is, as he refers to Smix as being ,'a gregarious type, even socially' aggressive ".Fo rthose who wish-to pursue this line in more detail ,I would recommend a biography Of the author ;The Life of Tim Wilson, in which his gregariousnature is luridly depicted . .

The basic reason for Smix's withdrawal, (an dlater violent and anti-social behaviour), is quiteobvious . Smix was (at the beginning : of thestory), socially maladjusted . Perhaps this

- stemmed from as unhappy ,childhood ; a lack o fparental , love, or rejection by the opposite sex . (Iam not, of course, disregarding the obvious 'possibility ;:that Smix was emotionally unstableas a result of his lack of height) .

We are allowed to sympathize with Smix, inspite of his evil behaviour, for two reasons : Hi sphysical deformity, (which provides a reason,i fnot an excuse for his behaviour) ; and the fac tthat he is,'at heart, really a nice guy .

.It is made clear throughout the fable, tha t

Smix is not really nasty, that the things which h edoes are .done, not ( out of criminal intent, bu tbecause, he has . no normal . outlet for hi sfrustrated emotions, having been cut off from his -society, by that very society : '

'- The true irony lies in the fact that Smix is no t

. accepted, (that is, does not become a "proper"dwarf), until .after he has committed the variousacts of- violence against the' society which hid rmade him an outcast. In this we may , see the 1essentially% , pessimistic outlook of the author ,who, , I have just shown,' finds the society oftwentieth-century man to be an inhuman andessentially unjust structure . '

Grant Dickin

t

v,

I

rf.) a

o

Professor Emeritus Dr Grant Dickin.

Friday, October 16, 1970

THE 'U BY SS EY

Page Five

MEET ME AT

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Oct. 1 9

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Who is Art ?Dear Sir :

Enclosed is an article which I hope you will consider fo rpublication . In the October 9 issue of Page Friday, there was areview of Women In Love . It raised the issue of the function of art .This is a question well worth pursuing (even if you type as poorlyas I do) and this is the intention of my article . It is not meant as analternate review of Women in Love, nor as a criticism of the revie wprinted .

Sincerely ,

RICHARD H . STANLEY .

Paul Klee, the early 20th century artist, wrote "I do not wis hto represent man as he is, but only as he might be ." For Klee, arthad to point to something higher in man than his present sad state .Art reflects the world around it ; great art shows us how to gobeyond that world, shows us what it could mean to be man .

This is why Women In Love is great art (whether the book ,or the film which accurately captures Lawrence's intentions) . Notonly does it reveal the world as it is, with all its dishonesties an ddistortions (Hermione, Gudrun, Gerald, and Ursula, and there is areason for putting them in that order) but offers a genuine an dhonest search for what a true relationship would mean (Ruper tBirkin, the typical Lawrence man, who emphasizes his sensualit yby running naked in the woods not because this sensuality is a nend, but to restore an authentic component to a world gon ecompletely intellectual and mechanical, and therefore mad) . Thewhole of Lawrence's work, indeed, is a search for what a tru erelationship would mean .

True is the key word here, for art must reveal a truth or it i swasting its time and we ours . This is why, when we recognize tha tWomen In Love a great film, we cannot accept as correct tha tits message is sensuality . To accept sensuality is to accept th emadness of Gudrun and her German Artist friend, whose ultimat ephilosophic is, "The purpose of lovers is to explore the furthes tlimits of sensuality ." Is the purpose of the lovers not to love eachother? Sensuality is what De Sade explored, and there is no love a tall in his writings .

And yet to refuse the sensual is to accept the death ofGerald, who commits suicide because he realized that he could n olonger intellectually and mechanically control his world, and ha dbeen wrong to try .

Only Rupert Birkin, and to some extent Ursula, is in th estrength of Rupert 's greater understanding of the fullness of love inthe world and of the world, move toward an answer . And theanswer is not a balance of sensual and intellectual, but recognitio nof the oneness with the world of a person in love .

What does that mean? Let me try to get at it indirectly .Anyone who has ever loved (say, for simplicity, a person, and o fthe opposite sex) and loved without attempting possession o rcontrol (be honest now, because this is the most common diseas eof our time, which is why Lawrence felt it worth spending his lif eexploring) finds, particularly in the sexual act, that the distinction sof mine and hers (or his), of me and him (or her), of me today an dof me and my point-scoring activities tomorrow, become irrelevant .In short, I no longer make the distinction between I and other a tall . This is most dramatically illustrated in the sexual act, but b yno means exclusively there . There is oneness . One becomes a partof the other and forgets the day to day . Sensual? Yes, but you'continue to think . In fact, that is one of the splits you no longe rmake : the split between the sensual and the intellectual . You mustbe intellectually conscious to feel, and must have senses in order t othink .

And there is a rightness to it, a truth . This is what we sensewhen we smile in a quiet comfort when seeing lovers kissing in apark .

When art points to this, it carries a truth too . Birkin nolonger makes the separations, but achieves a certain oneness withthe world . His dissatisfaction at the end of the film comes not fromhis relationship, which he admits is fine, but from the fact that it i snarrow, and in all other sectors of life, he is forced still to divorc ethe sensual from the intellectual, and in doing so, he does no tmerely leave half of himself behind, but the whole of himself .

And we recognize this truth, as we recognize the truth of th elovers in the park, as we recognize the falseness (though we do i tanyway) of attempting to possess our lovers .

It is the function of art to recognize this truth . And great artdoes this . This why Women In Love is great art, and why Who 'sAfraid of Viriginia Wolfe and If are great art . And Easy Rider wasnot . (I can hear the protests now) . Easy Rider was a good film, an dreflected the temper of the United States today very vividly, but i tnever showed a way beyond, or a higher ideal of what man migh tbe. Both Women In Love and Virginia Wolfe end in anunderstanding of love, and If suggests, in its deep characterization sand sensitivity, what man might be . Easy Rider merelyshowed thatthere were distortions in the United States, and it ended i nhopelessness, defeat, and death . Art that gives no hope and point sonly to death cannot be great art, for the same reason that a lifewhich is lived without hope and leads only to death cannot b e

a great life . Only art which affirms truth and a life which affirmslove can be great, and to understand this is to be able to be morefully in art and life .

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Page Six

THE

UBYSSEY

Friday, October 16, 1970

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Dancers at UBC

Contemporary Dancers 'Rachel Browne and Raymond Goule t

The Contemporary Dancersare coming to SUB on Tuesday .Rachel Browne, former classica ldancer, started the group sixyears ago with skill and har dwork. Miss Browne left th eWinnipeg Ballet to attempt mor einnovative and contemporar ywork .

She has choreographed

dances to Odetta's folk songs

and to Bach . The troupe itself i stechnically outstanding . This i san excellent chance to see fineCanadian talent . Tickets areavailable at the information deskin SUB .

RecordsJethro Tull's Benefit

One of the most originalgroups on the pop scene in th elast couple of years has beenBritain's Jethro Tull . Led bytheir fantastically-talentedcomposer-flautist Ian Anderson ,they have blended jazz and roc kinto a wild sound which, despit eits freedom, is channelled by it sjazz influences into a tightnes sand a quality rare in pop music .Unfortunately, their thirdalbum, Benefit (RS 6400), is abit of a disappointment . Don ' tget me wrong, it's a good record ,very good. Compared to most o fthe pop music records on themarket today, it's a gem . It's jus tnot quite up to the calibre whic hTull' s earlier efforts have led usto expect of them . Where Stan dUp (RS 6360), for example, wasexciting in its originality an delectrifying in its power, Beneiftis merely entertaining. It evendrags a little in spots . Thealmost-mystical quality offreedom which seemed t otranscend musical barriers andcreate beautiful new

atmospheres seems largelylacking . The old originality isabsent ; some of the songs soundalmost as if they were written bysomebody else . Also, there is adistressing sameness from cut tocut which suggests thepossibility that Ian Andersonand Co. may be trying to churnout too much too quickly . Onlya couple of times do they strikethe familiar unique spark into asustained flame . "With YouThere to Help Me ", for instance ,is almost other-worldly in it swild flights, while Ian Andersonsoars on his flute as of old on"Inside" . The presence of thesesongs reveals what Tull is reall ycapable of, and makes the rest ofthe album seem more mediocrethan it actually is . One of theironic things about being thebest is that it's hard to live up t oexpectations . Finding an encoreto Stand Up must have beendifficult, for on it Jethro Tullbecame too good for their owngood.

Bill Storey

Friday, October 16, 1970

THE UBYSSEY

Page Seve n

READ OVER 3000 W .P.M.

Kevin Ruddell can read through stack sof books in a matter of hour s thatwould require days for the averagereader to assimilate . Kevin is the son of

Mr. and Mrs . Elgin Ruddell of 1155 West64th, Vancouver, and now is studying atthe California Institute of Technology .

Watching Kevin's hand fly over the pages(his hand acts as a pacer) you can'tbelieve that he's actually reading . Hemust be skimming. But he's not. Kevincan read the average novel ten timesfaster than the average reader. Even onthe toughest material he rarely dip s

below 3,000 wpm .

Moreover, he can comprehend and recal lwhat he has read—right down to theparticulars .

Kevin learned this revolutionar y

Minister

Business Manager

TeacherUniversity Student

University Professor

Engineer

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in the world, presently has institute sestablished in most major cities of th econtinent with a record of over 500,000graduates . Each student receives alife-time membership and has theprivileges of an unlimited amount of

technique of rapid reading at the Evely nWood Reading Dynamics Institute i nVancouver, along with more than 30,00 0other graduates in this area since July ,1966, when the local institute wasstarted .

Our average student begins at about 30 0words per minute and graduates atspeeds of 1,500 to several thousand swords per minute . You may not learn toread as fast as Kevin (and then again ,you might!) but, the nationally know nReading Dynamics Institute guarantee sthat you'll at least triple your readingspeed with equal or bette rcomprehension or receive a full-tuitionrefund. Just to show you that Kevin i snot unique, here are tupical samples o fprogress in words per minute by Readin gDynamics graduates :

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Ending

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Comp .219

65%

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83.5%366

55%

3188

77 .5%323

49%

4592

78 %349

55%

4512

87 %250

60%

4800

85 %400

55%

7250

73 %

instruction at any institute throughou tthe world without additional cost .

Three-hour classes are held once a weekfor an eight-week period . Special classesare now forming for the pre-Christmasseason. For complete information, call732-7696 .

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UBC MusicOn Wednesday, October 14 ,

Harriet Crossland, Ronald deKant Warren (shuffle feet)Stannard, Roland Small an dRobert Creech gathered togethe ras the creme of the VSO unde rthe exact title of the Vancouve rWoodwind Quintet in the recitalhall of the Music Building . Theypresented a concert of one o fthe earliest wind quintets b yCambini and a contemporarywork by Samuel Barber entitle d"Summer Music" .

The five blurbed and hoppedor popped around as quintetsusually do for fifteen minutes o fCambini, except for Mr.Stannard who has succeeded insmoothing and mellowing hi sexpression to match his foo twork . But the Barber piec eproved that the group could ge ttighter in its rhythm anddynamics, for it called forminute attention to erratic andusually very amusing changes inexpression . The balance here wa sbetter aiding the audience in it sgrasp of motivic imitation anddevelopment . This grasp at time sreached profundity especially a tthe end of the first work whe nthe audience gave the quinte ttime for one or two intimat ejokes commencing to applaud . I twas an almost satisfyingperformance for an audience o fwind players .

The Vancouver SymphonyOrchestra presents it secondSubscription concert for th e1970/71 season at the Quee nElizabeth Theatre Sunday, Oct .18 at 2:30 p.m. and Monday ,Oct . 19 at 8 :30 p .m .

In concert with the orchestr awill be violinist James Olive rBuswell IV, performing th eProkofiev Violin Concerto No .2 .

A really excellent play ,Rosencratz and GuildensternAre Dead by Tom Stoppar dopens at the Q .E. Playhouse o nOctober 28 . Next Wednesday ,Ian Baxter will participate i nHerb Gilbert's Process HyphenProduct show in the Fine Art sGallery Library basement .Baxter will be transmitting visualsensitivity information . If youhaven ' t seen Herb's show yet ,get over there, its on until nextSaturday, and its really strange .

At the Vancouver Art Gallerythere is an exhibition o fanachronistic brass rubbings an dTuesdays, there are films for 50cents at 12:30, there are threenext Tuesday, one of which ;Garden Tides, a film by NormanRich is really good . Yesterday Iinterviewed Gordon Lightfoot ,but since today is Wednesday, Ihaven' t done that yet, nor have Igone to see what the Germanconsul to Canada thinks of thedisplay in the Queen E lobby .

Next Monday the 19th ,there's going to be a recital i nthe recital hall in the musi cbuilding, sometimes thes erecitals are really good, thi scould be a good one, it's part o fthe student composition seriesand it's all original, its free, so gotake a listen .

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Page Eight

THE UBYSSEY

Friday, October 16, 1970

Friday, October 16, 1970

T H E

U B Y S S E Y

Page 1 7

UBC dayyofprotest

UBC students will be amon gmany people protesting th ewidening Indo-China War onInternational Day of Protest and

• Mass Action, set for October 31 .The UBC Anti-War Committee ,

as well as the Vancouver Vietna mAction Committee, are plannin gdemonstrations .

The Alma Mater SocietyCouncil passed a motionWednesday, contributing $200 in

• support of activities planned bythe UBC committee .

These will include a rally oncampus at noon on Friday ,October 30 and a program in SUBballroom on Friday afternoon .

The Committee also hopes tohave Friday afternoon classescancelled, or at least to convinceprofessors to turn over theirclasses to discussions on Vietnam .

They are planning to show thefilm "In the Year of the Pig"before Friday, in preparation fo rthe activities .

"Students don't know what 'shappening," said Andrew Finlayof the committee . "The peacemovement can do things ifstudents inform themselves ,organize, and realize that thingscan be done . "

The UBC anti-war committe eneeds help in organizing all theactivities . Those interested shoul dcontact Finlay at 732-0064 .

The committee urges allstudents who plan to take part i nthe protest to read the GenevaConvention and educat ethemselves on as many aspects ofthe war as possible .

The protest organized by theVancouver Vietnam ActionCommittee will begin at noonOctober 31 .

It will start at the courthouse ,will march down Granville St . ,along Broadway, and will end upat city hall at 2 p .m.

Here, a rally will be held, an dVAC will challenge the candidate sfor civic office in Vancouver o nthe Vietnam issue and its effect son Vancouver .

"The growing economic andsocial problems in our city ar einseparable from the war and th ewar-geared economy," said Sheil aTurgeon, executive secretary o fVAC .

"No candidate who claims t ospeak for the needs of the citizensof this city can avoid that fact ."

On Wednesday, the AMSCouncil endorsed the VAC'sCourt House protest .

PANGO PANGO — Amammoth horde of blue-coate dswinish blorgs today descende dupon a pitiful swarm o flong-haired opalescent blorgs inthe nation's capital, ChicagoNorth .

The long-haired blorgs fled tothe neighbouring tower of ivorywhere they sought refuge fromthe bacon-rind blorg hordes .

Pango Pango chief of state ,Ralph Bemquist, immediatelydeclared a state of unequivocate d

▪ disaster and ordered thepork-chop eating blorgs in contro lof the country .

New Westminster mayor MuniEvers was not available forcomment .

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Sports Car Accessories, also goodies for Datsun — Mazda —Toyota -- VW — Cortina — Mini and other popular imports .

(10% Discount With AMS Card)

S.P .E.C. - ACTION MEETIN G8 p.m. Tues. 20th October

To establish Pt . Grey action committeeSt. Anselm's Church, University Blvd .

Advt. Sponsored by :

DUTHIES BOOK STORE S

A great youngrock group.

This group is younger tha nyou are—yet it's one of the bigges tsounds in the development o fnatural resources and productio nof specialty steels in Canada .

Rio Algom began in Canad ain 1953, with 'a staff of 3 and n osales . Today it has a staff of 5,50 0people, and sales in 1 969 wer e$173,000,000 .

Rio Algom mines uranium atElliot Lake ; mines copper i nSaskatchewan and Quebec ;it is developing Canada's larges tbase metal mine in B .C ., and auranium mine in Utah .

Two Rio Algom exploratio ncompanies, Riocanex and Rioamex,explore for new orebodies

throughout North America .

.Rio Tinto Nuclear Products a t

Elliot Lake is active in researc hand development .

The Atlas Steels Division a tWelland, Ont ., and Tracy, Que ., i sthe Commonwealth's largestspecialty steel producer —including mining, tool, high-speed ,machinery and stainless steels .

Atlas has its own moder nresearch unit and an extensivemarketing operation in Canad aand many other countries . -

Atlas Alloys Division market sspecialty metals throughou tNorth America .

Rio Algom believes that one o fits great natural resources is

Canadian youth . (Canadians are i ncharge of Rio Algom's uraniu mdevelopment at Utah, and ou rU .S . explorations . )

If you want to join our youn gRock Group, write to us a tIndustrial Relations Dept . ,Rio Algom Mines Limited, 12 0Adelaide Street West, Toronto 110 ,Ont . Or see your placement officer .The opportunities with us fo rreally good people are as broa dand as deep as the earth .

Rio AlgomRio Tinto

interviews at U .B .C. on Nov. 5 and 6Get the details from your placement office

Free U wants to see youPage 18

THE

UBYSSEY

Friday, October 16, 1970

Tired

of restrictiv egrade-centered university courses?

The Vancouver Free Universit ypresents a wide variety of coursesin all fields of interest fro mstringing beads to organic farming .

It is supported only by thestudents and therefore not subjectto control from without . Teachersare simply people interested in aspecific subject area, fromprofessionals to avid hobbyists .

It's free except for anon-compulsory $5 a semester o ryear . If you can't afford the fee ,you can barter or pay later .

The cost for individual course sis generally nothing, with rar eexceptions for hall rentals o rsupplies used in class .

A few courses offered are :Anarchy, Theory and practice ;Persian Language-Afganistan ;Canada : Imperialistic Colony ;

Yippie, a course designed to havepeople understand the Yippi erevolution by helping to mak eone ; Hebrew-Judaism, a course ondifferent aspects of the Jewishmind and thought through historyin addition to learning Hebrew ;

-PEOPLE to explore sexStudents will have a chance Monday to learn abou t

Technocracy and the Myth of the Impersonal Orgasm .But they have to be registered by 2 :30 p .m. at a booth in th e

south end of the SUB lobby .The myth of the orgasm will be the first topic dealt with in a

six-week series of lectures and seminars entitled People .The program will deal with the physiological, emotional an d

social concepts of sex as well as stressing the development o fself-awareness .

The Monday evening series will feature a lecture on a topic an dthen a seminar — with trained seminar leaders acting as sources ofinformation to facilitate discussio n

The series will cost $3 with the organization itself putting upanother $7 for each person, to cover all the costs .

Wouldn't you liketo graduate?

Saving is a lesson everyone should learn . And th eToronto Dominion Bank is prepared to show you al lyou'll ever need to know about it (incidently, it's a ver yrewarding subject) .

Once you understand what Saving is all about, we'l lshow you a couple of things about Chequing an dBorrowing (we've got our Masters in making Studen tLoans) . There's no enrollment fee . Simply visit a near-bybranch and open an account .

Do it soon . Its the kind of thing you can take a ninterest in for the rest of your life.

TORONTO DOMINIONthe bank where people make the differenc e

great shows present s

rod stewart & small face s

redbon e

the legendary seeds of tim e

sun., nor . 1 • 7 :30

agrodome concert tickets : the ba yadmission : $3 .50 adv . ; $4 .25 door

kelly deyong sound

Origami, the Japanese art of pape rfolding and many more .

For further information, writeVancouver Free University, 19 9West 6th Avenue, or phone879-5961 or 879-7856 .

a SUB FILM SOC presentatio n

BULLITTwith STEVE McQUEE N

Friday 16 & Saturday 17 : 7 :00 & 9 :30— Sunday 18 : 7 :00

Students 50c -- Others 75c — SUB Auditoriu m

This is the bottlefor the

Age of Ecology.What the world needs today are containers that re-cycle .

Because every container that isn't re-cycled becomes a refuse . Or worse still, litter.That's why the reusable, returnable bottle for Coke is the answer to an ecologist's prayer. On the average, it make sabout fifty round trips before it's through . And that means fifty less chances to add to the world's litter problem.

So buy Coca-Cola in returnable bottles . It's best for the environment—and your best value .

It's the real thing. Coke.Both Coca-Cola and Coke are registered trade marks which identify only the product of Coca-Cola Ltd .

WOMETCO (B .C.) LIMITED

Authorized bottler of Coca-Cola under contract with Coca-Cola Ltd .

-It

Friday, October 16, 1970

THE UBYSSEY

Page 1 9

The UBC Center for Continuing Education offers a

WORKSHOP IN ENGLISH LITERATUR EFOR INTERNATIONAL STUDENT S

A special course for students whose first language is not English ,who are presently enrolled in English 100 and need additiona lassistance with the English language.

Two evenings a week : Tuesdays & ThursdaysOctober 20 — December 1 0

7:30 - 9 :30 p .m .Fee : $70.0 0

To register or for further information call : 228-218 1

Notice to Graduating Students i n

ARTSA meeting will be held in Room 106, Buchanan Buildin g

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 20 at 12 :30 p.m .to hear a representative from the Placement Office

(Office of Student Services)on the subject

Graduate Employment/

Whieriguparidwalicsuit.

Every company who can make it will be there ,including us. Every company will do its level bestto get bright, ambitious and qualified graduate sto an interview, including us .

Then how come we're talking about you leav-ing the interview, when we 're trying so hard to getyou there in the first place ?

Simple. We believe if you know when to wal kout, you also know when to stay, and why . Webase this odd little theory on what we've foundout about interviewing strangers . The ability to comeface to Face with strangers happens to be our brea dand butter . Our very life depends on it .

We've written a booklet on the subject. It ' s

called "How to separate yourself From the herd . "Its thrust is to help you handle an interview on yourown terms. It talks about nervousness and mone yand the length of your hair. It talks about the gu yacross the desk from you . It even tells you abou twhen to leave an interview . Things like that .

Our eight page booklet is tucked into Th eEmployment Opportunities Handbook, which i salso new. You'll find it at the placement office .

" How to separate yourself from the herd "won 't make any magic between now and your firs tinterview .

But it just might help .

LONDON LIMInsura nceCompany,London,Canad a

. • Xmas exams not dead yetBy ROBIN BURGES S

Formally-scheduled Christmas exams wil lremain a fact of university life .

The UBC senate overwhelmingly rejected arecommendation Wednesday by the long-rangeobjectives committee that the current trend towar dfewer registrar-administered Christmas exams b eencouraged and that "Christmas examinations b escheduled outside the normal teaching hours onlywhen such scheduling can be demonstrated to b edesirable academically or for technical reasons . "

In presenting the recommendation Dr . J . M.Norris, a member of the committee, told senate tha tthe time saved by cutting back formal Christma sexams could be devoted to a reading period i nDecember .

Dr . Cyril Belshaw, chairman of the committe esaid : "In this recommendation we're merely sayin gto faculty members, `if you are going to give anexam, think about why you are doing it' . "

"There is absolutely no reason to believeremoval of the steeple-chase approach to learnin gwill result in laxity," said Belshaw .

Dr . Malcolm McGregor said his main objectio nto the recommendation was that it encouraged_

faculty members to schedule 50-minute in-clas sexams .

"More and more 50-minute exams are bein ggiven and more and more often a student will cut al lhis classes on the day of the exam," he said .

Dr . Robert Clark proposed a committee b eestablished to look into the role of marks, variou stypes of exams and alternatives to exams .

A second recommendation from th elong-range planning committee proposing theintroduction of a 13-week summer term and th ephasing-out of the present seven week summe rsession over a five-year period was also defeated b ysenate .

Lawyer David Williams told senate that th elonger summer session would "encourage a prope rintellectual attitude" among UBC summer students .

One senator pointed out, however, thatextending the summer session will mean in effec tintroducing the trimester system to UBC .

"Every university that has tried to run atrimester system has gone broke, " he said .

Both recommendations will be re-examine dby the committee involved .

Page 20

THE

UBYSSEY

Friday, October 16, 197 0

C,

a

FRIDAYVC F• Hootenanay in SUB 207-209 at noon .F ILMSO C

Steve M!cQueen in "Bullit", Fri . andSat, at 7 :00 and 9 :30 ; and Sun. a t7 :00 in SUB theatre.

NEWMAN CLU BPractice for Folk Mass in the musi croom of St . Mark's College at noon .

YOUNG SOCIALIST SPeter Buch, socialist activist an dauthor speaks on "Defense of thePalestinian Revolution" : Ang. 104 .

EAST ASIA SOCIET YBring food and booze to 2756 W . 10thAve . at 8 :00 p .m .

EXPERIMENTAL COLLEG EKarl Burau on "Guaranteed Annua lIncome" with reps from various poli-tical parties . SUB 125 at noon .

E .I .C .Bill Graham, Vancouver's city plan-ner discussing Vancouver's problems ,particularly the downtown conceptin Civil En g . 201 at noon.

COMPUTER SOCIETYJoint membership meeting A .C .M .Student Chapter in Chem . 250 at noon .

SATURDAYUBC MEN'S BOWLING TEAM

SUB lanes at 3 :00 p .m . More infofrom Vern at 224-9691 .

FOLKSOCAll welcome to party at 1089 W . 21s tSt . North Van. More info in SU B216B .

'tweenclasses

SUNDAYNEWMAN CLU B

All welcome to Folk Mass and coffe eafter in St . Mark's College Chapel at11 :30 am.

L'ALLIANCE FRANCAIS EHike up Mt. Seymour . All withou trides go to I .E . Friday noon. Car sleave at 11 :00 am.

FIRESIDE SEveryone welcome to hear speakerfrom Environmental Crisis Operationat the Union College Reception room ,6000 Iona Dr . at 8 :00 p .m.

MONDAYUBC PROGRESSIV ECONSERVATIVE CLU B

Meeting in SUB 213 at noon.PEOPL E

Dr . Martin Levin on "Technocracyand the Myth of the PersonalOrgasm" in SUB Ballroom at 7:00P .m . Registration for 12 "lecture -experiences" ends Mon .

U B C-N D PExecutive meeting at noon in SU B224.

EL CIRCULOProfessor Siemens with slides an ddiscussion on the "Peruvian Earth -quake" in I .H . upper lounge at noon .

UKRAINIAN VARSITY CLU BGeneral meeting in SUB 211 at noon .

USC LIBERAL CLU BFed . MOn . Art Laing in SUB Club sLounge from 12 :30-2 :30. Room fo rplenty.

USC WOMEN'S LIB GROU PMeeting in Em. 2449 New Wing Bio-logical Science .

HAM RADI OClasses for Amateur Radio Operator sLicense in Union College 206 at 6:30P.m.

TUESDA YUBC 'TEAM' CLU B

The Electors' Action Movement . Elec-tion of Club executive in SUB 205 a tnoon . All members and those interest -ed welcome .

CANOE CLU BMeetin g plus planning for Thompso nRiver trip in SUB 125 at noon .

SAricAtt{COUJfle1 p

Me

L5P41 '/eetr(s gIL &b.zr hi 1esl

"lb 14s $4W ) t:DcZ k.• .3* p,

i'•

L''t 1I$JP• 7i t$w'. Gs'rier.uL 'r

WfliPwW4cip c?E

PR E-ME 0Two General Practisioners speakin gon family med . in Wes . 201 at noon .

SAILING CLU BLecture on sailing for beginners inSuch . 104 at noon .

LIFE SCIENCES CLU BNew members welcome to genera lmeeting in SUB 105A at noon .

WEDNESDA YPRE-LA W

Chairman of Admissions Board speaksin Ang. 104 at noon .

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Dances

1 1DANCE IN SUB BALLROOM SAT .

Oct 17. 8 p .m. African Student sBand . "Ngoma Ya Africa" . Re-freshments .

TRIUMPHANT RETURN OF WIGgy symphony Place Vanier, Oct .16, 9 :00 - 1 :00 ; non-res. $1 .50 ; resi-dents $1 .00 .

Greetings

1 2TO SHARE A PERSONAL INSPIR -

ation or problem tune in RadioCJOR 600, Sundays 9 :15-10 :00 am .and 11 :30 p .m .-1 :00 . Or drop in an dchat with Sunday Line ModeratorChaplain Bernice Gerard Wednes-days at the Lutheran StudentCenter, Tuesdays— Chaplain's Of-fice, S .U .B. For appointment cal l266-9275 .

ELECTIONS FOR GRAD CLAS Sbureaucrats are happening noon i nSUB auditorium, October 23rd .Come on Education, don't let th eEngineers rule again !

Lost & Found

1 3REWARD FOR 2 PICTURES

taken from Pre - Med Display atClub's Day . Call Al . 224-0500 .

CASH FOUND, ON UNIVERSIT YBeach. Owner can identify, phon e224-452 8

LOST—BROWN BRIEFCASE, FR! -day aft ., student B lot . Need

- desperately . Phone Doug, 929-3304LOST FRIDAY MORN., LEATHE R

gloves while hitching 16th Ave .Girl in blue max left them in yourcar . Call Kathy 733-4709

SHIRTS LOST BY HITCHIKERride with father of girl in RehabMedic . Lives in Kits area. Please call533-153 3

Rides&Car Pools 1 4TWO GIRLS NEED RIDE MEXICO

XMAS. Will share expenses an ddriving. Call 263-7447 or 261-0991 .

Special Notices

1 5REDUCED PRICES ON HAIR -

shaping and jetstyllng at U .B .C. .Barbers (In the Village) .

ENCOUNTER GROUP. THOSE IN -terested in Student Encounte rGroups please phone 228-8164 .

LOST IN THE CLUBS LOUNGE -Federal Minister Arthur Laing.Come and find him, Monday, Oct .19th, Clubs Lounge, 12 :30 - 2 :30 .GREAT SHOWS PRESENTS RODStewart, Small Faces, Redbone &the legendary Seeds of Time ,Sun., Nov. 1 . Tickets at The Bay,$3 .50, at the Agrodome, $4 .25 .

GOT A POLITICAL BEEF? BRIN Git to 4-Party Debate, Thurs ., Oct .22, noon, SUB Aud.

FIRESIDES: SUNDAY 8 :00 P .M ., Aspeaker from E .C .O . (Environ-mental Crisis Operation) will hol da talk on pollution . Everyone wel-come. Place : Union College Re-ception Room (on campus) .

GRAD CLASS BUREAUCRATS T Obe chosen October 23rd, SUB Audi-torium at noon . Come on Com-merce, don't let the Engineers ruleagain !

NEW - DIFFEREN TCharacter profiles on hr. cassettes .

Comprehensive analysis of you rpage of handwriting. Know you rpotential! Confidential service.State age and sex. Send M .O . onl yfor $10 to : E.D.V. PERSONALI-TIES, BOX 128, Richmon d

STTBFILMSOC PRESENTS STEVEMcQueen in the fastest car chas eon the screen . See "Bullitt" Fri .and Sat ., 7 :00, 9 :30 : Sun. 7 :00 .AMS 50c : non-AMS, 75c . SUBTheatre .

Travel Opportunities

1 8

CHARTERS U .K., CONTINENT ,Africa, other distinatlons, 1-ways .Mick, 687-2855 or 224-0087, 106-70 9Dunsmuir St. Mon . - Sat ., 9-9.

LONDON RETURN $22 5also other destinations - 1-ways.

657-1244 - 224-008 7

STUDENTS - EUROPE FORChristmas, Easter or Summer.Employment Opportunities, Econ-omic Flights, Discounts . Write fo rinformation (air mail) Anglo-Am-erican Assn ., 60A Pyle St ., New -port 1W., England .

Wanted—Miscellaneous

1 8POETRY WANTED FOR POSI -

sible Inclusion Cooperative Vol-ume. Enclose stamped envelope ,Editor, Box 4444, Whittier, Calif .90607.

PART TIME WORKERS. CALLMark 682-3481 for information. Bepersistant .

UBC-JAPAN STUDENT EXCHANG ESlide show and info for all personsinterested in travelling to Japan or inJapanese Cultural Exchange in Bueh .106 at noon .

PSYCHOLOGY CLU BDr . Lee Pubs speaks on encountergroup therapy in Ang. 24 at noon .

PRE-DENTAL SOCIET YNew members welcome to hear Mis sWeich speak on Dental Hygiene i nSUB 213 at noon .

AUTOMOTIVE

Automobiles For Sale 2 11962 IMPALA, 85,000 MILES . P .S . ,

P.R. Excellent running cond ., $600or offers Phone Lawrie, 277-748 8evenings .

1957 CHEVROLET : RADIO . THREEspeed stick, new muffler, six cyl-inders, good rubber, brakes $200firm. 224-9869 . Bob in Room 209.

'64 PARISIENNE CONVERT . EX -cellent rebuilt engine, $550 . Cal lKathy after 10 p .m . Ph . 685-747 8

BLACK A1 T STINCAMBRIA '58 INexcellent condition, $300 . 224-412 3

Automobiles—Wanted

2 2Automobiles—Parts

2 3Automobiles—Repairs

24TURN ON - - - TUNE UP .

Full Services to All MakesLicensed Mechanic s

Scope Tuning and Brakes a Spec-ialty.

MACDONALD TEXACO16th and MacDonald

CAR REPAIRST O

VOLVO, MERCEDESPORSCHE, VOLKSWAGEN

• Factory trained mechanic s• Fully Guaranteed Work• Reasonable Rates

Ilmelo Autr)SALES AND SERVIC E

8914 Oak St .

263-812 1

Motorcycles

25

BUSINESS SERVICES

Art Services 3 1CREATIVE GRAPHICS - UNIQUE

poster and display artwork ; pre-cision publication and scientifi cgraphics ; photography. John, 224 -4146 .

Day Care & Baby Sitting 32A

Photography

34

Scandals 3 7GRAD CLASS BASH, OCTOBER

23rd noon in SUB Auditorium .Executive will be elected as well.Come on Aggies, don't let theEngineers rule again !

BROADS THII4OWIN' PARTY -Place : Vanier, Oct . 16, 9 :00 - 1 :00 ,Wiggy Symphony . . Cheap .

HASSLED BY THE• "CAN I HEL Pyou, Sir" routine when shopping ?Browse unmolested thru Pier Iimports in Gastown - Powell an dColumbia - with items from 6 3countrie s

HOMOSEXUAL GUYS AND GIRLS- . - FREE 36-page essay frommale student, 22, on meeting Van-couver gays Box 8969, Station H,Vancouver phone 683-4864 . Avail-able at Speakeasy . Name not give nout . 850 sent.

CORKY'S MEN'S HAIRSTYLING :make it a good trip Try Corky's.4494 W. 4th - 4th on Alma . Ap -pointments, 731-4717

SEE THE MOST HAIR-RAISINGcar chase on film ; it's Steve Mc -Queen against the bad (good?)guys in "Bullitt" this weekend ,SUB Theatre ,

Sewing&Alterations 3 8

Typewriters&Repairs 39Typing 4 0ON-CAMPUS TYPING. FAST; AC -

curate, all types of theses, texts,essays, IBM electric, 224-9183 .

EXPERIENCED ELECTRIC HOMEtyping. Essays, theses, etc . Neat,accurate work, reasonable rates.Mrs . Troche - 437-1355.

EFFICIENT ELECTRIC TYPINGmy home: essays, theses, etc.Neat accurate work reasonabl erates. Phone 263-531 7

EXPERT ELECTRIC TYPIN Gfast, accurate work, theses, essays,papers ; 35c per page . Call Mrs.Duncan, 228-9597

AYN RAND SOCIET YOrganizational meeting in SUB 130at noon .

MISCELLANEOU SSIM S

Room for meditation Mon .-Fri. 8 :00-11 :00 am . ; Tues ., Wed ., Fri . 3 :00-6;00p .m. ; and Thurs 4:006 :00 p .m. inI.H. 406 .

CHINESE VARSITY CLU BMeeting at noon in SUB Club's LoungeTues. Wed ., and Fri .

EXPERT FAST TYPING. THESE Sterm papers, essays . Pick up an ddel . Selectric machines . Miss But-ler, 681-4888 - 24-hr . service .

- TYPING SERVICE -Mrs . Gail Symons

224-6435 - 3885 W. 12th Ave .

EMPLOYMENT

Help Wanted

$ 1TOPLESS DANCERS NEEDE D

Two References Require dOne on Each Sid e

GULF CLU B48 E . Hastings

Interviews from 10 :30 p.m. 684-383 8

REQUIRE IMMEDIATELY PART -time light house-cleaning 8 hrs.per week at $1 .75 per hr. Mr.Norton, 688-3411, 9-5 or 263-507 9after 6 :00.

NEEDED : MEN AND WOMENfor part-time work in Canadia nand International Company lead-ing to career possibilities at ex-ecutive level . If interested, pre-sent this Ad. on either of the fol-lowing nights at 7 :45 p .m., Oct .15th and 19th at Golden, Canada .Products meetings held at th eBlue Boy Hotel . Sponsor : DougMcDougall, General Distributor.

GIRLS! A CHANCE FOR YOU TOhave fun making some extr amoney. Please apply at 550 Gran-ville St., October 16th to 20th .

COMMERCE & ECONOMICS STU -dents . Looking for a job upongraduation? Find out about theopportunities with Proctor &Gamble . Come to SUB 224 between9 am, and 4 p .m. Monday, Oct .19, 1970 .

NEEDED : MEN AND WOME Nfor part-time work in Canadianand International Company lead-ing to career possibilities at ex-ecutive level If interested, presen tthis Ad. on any of the followin gnights at 7 :45 p.m., Oct. 22, 26 ,29 at Golden Canada Produc tmeetings held at the Blue BoyHotel. Sponsor : Doug McDougall ,General Distributor .

Employment Wanted

5 2DRUMMER REQUIRES ANY

work . Funky preferred, eight year sexperience . Phone after 7 p.m .Dan, 733-9594 -

INSTRUCTION & SCHOOLS

Instruction Wanted

6 1PRIVATE ENGLISH TEACHE R

wanted . Please write to Tony Lui,837 West 44th Ave ., Vancouver 13 ,B .C.

Music Instruction

6 2

LESSONS IN PIANO, CLARINET ,Recorder, Helena Sandler (B .Mus. )McGill in your home . Call 684-3587 .

THE MEDITERRANEA N

GUITAR SHO P* instruments * lessons* repairs* fine imported strings* hand built Spanish guitar s

(10% discount with AMS card )

77 Powell St., right in Gastown

687-232 8

Special Classes

83SPANISH CONVERSATION, THE

shorter way to speak . Prof. Parej a(Colombia, Argentina & UBC) wil ltutor $3 hr., individual, no groups,M to S . from 10 a.m . to 9 p.m. 1 2hours minimum paid in advance.Limited number. 1405 Cypress (nr.Cornwall) 738-5692 .

MISCELLANEOUS

- FOR SALE 71

SMITH CARONA PORTABLE,1966, $45 . 228-3584 or 263-5030

STEREO RECEIVER AND AMPLI -fier, $80 . Watts IMP power . Su-perb sound production. CallByron, 738-1957 aft. 6 .

THERE ARE 2100 TICKETS FO RSteve McQueen in "Bullitt" onsale Fri . & Sat . 7 :00, 8 :30 ; Sun.7 :00 at the SUB Theatre TicketBooth, 50c AMS, 75c non-AMS .

GERMAN CLU BEveryone welcome to I .H . 400 ever yTuesday at noon . Free coffee .

ZEN CENTRE OF VANCOUVE RFree meditation at 139 Water St .Tues . and Thurs. at 7:30 p .m. ; andSat, at 8 :00 am .

LEGAL AI DEvery Mon ., Wed ., and Fri. at noonin SUB 228 and 232 .

IL CAF EEvery Wed, at noon in I.E . First dooron the right on third floor .

BIRD CALLS

Your Student Telephone DirectoryNOW AVAILABLE $1 .00at the Bookstore and

AMS Publications Offic e

Pre-sole tickets redeemed only a tPublications Office

QUALITY USED CLOTHING ,very reasonable prices. Sonia' sDry Cleaning, 957 Denman, nearStanley Park. 688-6814.

MIRANDA SENSOREX, $140 ; 105f2 .8 Auto Miranda Telephoto, $75 ;Miranda DR, $65 . 738-0994 after 6 .

MY EQUIPMENT FOR A SONG !Fender Telly Humbucking P .U .(Belonged to Poppy Family), Tra-nor Head, 2 - 15" spkrs. Jacques,228-932 5

KLASSEN'S BAGA1N WJ±iEl( . .Widest selection of ready-to-finishfurniture in Western Canada,3207 W. Broadway. Phone 736-0712 ;Beer-cans and Bottle Drive-In atrear .

CIVIL ENGINEERING BOOKS FORsale at Great Reductions, by fam-ily of deceased engineer. Ph . 228 -8104 after 5 p.m.

FIVE STRING BANJ'O . EXCEL -lent condition, $45 . Mal, 732-815 1after 6.

KOFLACH GOLD STARS : DOUBLEboot (leather, F/glass) ; new $115 ,used 1 yr. ; offers, Dan . 261-8067

ONE PR. NH. NEW SKI BOOTS ,size 6 ; 1 pr. skis, Salamon bind-ings, used 1 season. 175 cm. Call926-2977 aft. 6 :30.

NEW TONI SAILER, LB 45, LR 55 ,205, 210, 215 cm. Also 220 Kestl eDownhills . 731-2564 aft . 10 p .m .

PHILIPS PORTABLE CASSETTEtape recorder, includes recordingadaptor, $45 . Phone mornings ,evenings, Monica, 255-2089

RENTALS & REAL ESTATERooms

8 1TIRED OF COMMUTING? LIVE

on Campus for less! Rooms wit hkitchen privileges . Large loungeand study room . Ph . Bill Dinsmore ,224-4530 or come to 5760 TorontoRoad .

BOOM FOR TWO . PRIVATE EN -trance and bathroom 4515 W. 1stAve . 224-5770

DUNBAR : SLEEPING AND STUD Yroom for male student . Breakfastlunch and laundry included . Ph.733-748 5

SEMI FURN., PRIV. ENTRANCE ,semi-priv . washroom, light hskpg. ,UBC Gates, $55 - 224-106 8

O- NE STUDENT TO SHAR Ehouse in Kerrisdale with thre eothers . Own bedroom, $57 plusutil . Phone 266-7850

LARGE CLEAN FURN. BEDROO Mwith shared kitchen and bath .Quiet UBC girl preferred, $70 pe rmonth. Call 224-1727

Room & Board

8 2

ME NRoom & Board avail : at the D.U.House! Convenient, reasonable ,and the beat food on Campus !Phone the house manager at224-9841 or drop by at 5780 Tor-onto Rd.

ROOM AND BOARD NEAR UBC.2 male students, quiet, abstainers,non smokers . Good home and goodfood. 738-230 5

DUE TO THE NUMBER OF STU -dents who were unable to occup yresidence accommodation for th eWinter Session, there are a num-ber of va'bancies for female stu-dents. Please contact HousingOffice in the New AdministrationBldg or phone 228-281 1

Furnished Apts. 8 3

MALE STUDENT, 23-30 TO SHAREluxurious 1-bedrm . apartment inKitsilano, Nov. 1, $85 . Phone Roy ,688-0879

STUDENTS WANT GIRL TOshare large house. Private room ,$45 month . 874-3061

3FEIMALE GRADS SEEK AN-other girl to share 4 br. furnishe dapt ., $55 mo. 733-3601

MALE STUDENT TO SHARE FUR -nished apt ., $50 mo . . Call 731-630 0after 4 :00. Location, 15th & Maple .

Unfurnished Apts . 84

Houses—Furn. & Unfurn. 86

4 0Typing (Cont . )

CLASSIFIEDRates : 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 ,Closing Deadline is 11 :30 am . . the day before publication.

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

I For Sale Misc . (Cont .) 71

Friday, October 16, 197 0

A group of' UBC students wil ltake to the barricades nea rdowntown Vancouver Saturday .

The students will be joining i nthe barricade of several Vancouve rstreets into a pedestrian mall b ythe same committee tha tsponsored the Festival of Survivalon March 25 .

A spokesman for th eorganizing committee said thatthe streets to be barricaded areRobson and certain adjacent sid estreets starting from 8 a .m .

"In the festival we did ashotgun affair hitting the wholeproblem of ecology. Here we ar eaiming at one specific problem - -Vancouver ' s worst — airpollution," he said .

"We would like rapid transit ,non-polluting, and preferably free .Look at San Francisco andChicago with their freeway sconstantly being built through th ecity only adding to air pollution ."

"The activities start at 8 a .m."he said, "but we would like th epeople to meet at 7 :30 a .m. at th eparking lot next to the LCB stor eat 1716 Robson ."

He said that the mall would be

formed by blockading the stree twith trees and then setting u pbooths within . Everybody i swelcome and they should brin galong food, musical instruments ,and cups for the coffee and te abeing donated, he said.

Another tryfor college

Another attempt to set up anexperimental college at UBC isslated for Friday .

A meeting for intereste dstudents will take place at 12 :3 0in SUB room 125 .

The purpose of the group is t oattempt to bring about universityreforms and to improve th euniversity in general .

Karl Burau, the honorarypresident who has been behin dpast attempts to get the colleg egoing, will introduce a proposa l"guaranteed annual income" an dthe meeting will then be open fordiscussion .

THE UBYSSE Y

MEET ME A T

The Hotel Georgi a

Oct . 1 9

BURGERS & CHIPSHOT CORNED BEE F

andHOT BEEF -- HOT HAM

SANDWICHE S12 Flavors of Ice Cream24 Exotic Sundaes to

choose fro m

Open 11 a. m . to 10 p.m. Daily

IF YOU'R ENOT BUYIN G

YOUR RECORDS ,8 TRACK TAPES ,

& CASSETTES

Page 2 1

SAVED by Edward Bond

(An M .A. Thesis Production )Directed by JOHN GRA Y

STUDENT TICKETS — $1 .00Reservations: Room 207 — Frederic Wood Theatre

SOMERSET STUDIO - UBC

NOW. . .

chooseCONTACT

LENSESin 27 colorsA better choice than eve r. . . 3 shades of blue or gree neven intriguing new lavende ror also cot's eye brown, blue ,azure, grey or pink .

• PRECISION MAD E• EXPERTLY FITTE D• 27 COLORS

ONE PRICE ONLY

$49 5 °

Come hi, No Appointment Needed

BRING YOU ROPTICA L

PRESCRIPTIONTO US

OPTICAL DEPT.

. 677 GRANVILL E681 . 6174

• 675 COLUMBIA, NEW WEST .LA 1-075 1

• 1825 LONSDALE, N . VAN .987-2264

• 2987 GRANVILLE of 14t h736-7347

. 4068 E. HASTINGS, N . BUR .(Across from Wosk's )291-849 1

e 5618 CAMBIE ST.327-945 1

.1320 DOUGLAS ST., VICTORIA,B .C . 386-757 8

165 STATION ST ., DUNCAN, B .C.746-4322

VOLKSWAGEN SPECIALISTSQuality Workmanshi p

Competitive PricesGenuine Volkswagen Parts Only

All Work Guarantee dComplete Body Repairs and Painting

225 E. 2nd Ave.

879-0491

A college graduate who seeks to serve Canada in the Profes-sion of Arms can find the rewards of a challenging career wit hthe Canadian Armed Forces. There are immediate responsibilitie sunder modern management techniques . Good financial rewards .And the kind of work that will provide personal satisfaction .

The tasks will be worthwhile, in the cause of peace, and i nthe service of one's country.

Investigate the following commissioned officer vacancies :

• SEA OPERATIONS

• AIR OPERATION S• LAND OPERATIONS

• ENGINEERING• SUPPORT SERVICES

The Military Career Counsellor at the address as listed wil lbe pleased to provide complete details and to arrange for a ninterview at a time convenient to you .

Why not ask one who serves?

CANADIAN FORCES RECRUITING CENTRE

545 Seymour St. — Vancouver

3 LOCATIONS TO SERVE YO U655 Granville St ., Vancouver

683-665 1

1820 Burrard St ., Vancouver

758-581 8

622 Columbia St., New Westminster

526-377 1

ALL MILLER SOUND CENTRES ARE AUTHORIZED"SONY" SERVICE DEPOTS

THE CANADIANARMED FORCES

-vt

We're with it!

UEflY GOLDMA N164 W. HASTING S774 GRANVILL E760 COLUMBIA, NEW WESTMINSTER

Page 22

THE

UBYSSEY

Friday, October 16, 197 0

Birds win first with last minute heroics 'By DON GARDNER,

Photos by Keith Dunbar"We were lucky . Jeez, we were

lucky . "Those were the words of UBC

football coach Frank Gnup afte rhis team scored a touchdown onthe last play of the game to defea tthe University of Saskatchewan9-8 .

Lucky or not, the Birds wo ntheir first game of the season an dfully deserved to do so . After alacklustre first ' half, the Bird soffence started to move while afired up defensive unit kept the min the game .

In the first half, both offense shad been so impotent tha tSaskatchewan's 1-0 advantagelooked like a fairly safe lead . Butthe Birds offence, led by th erunning of Ron Uyeyama,managed to get untracked in th esecond half.

With two linebackers keying onDave Corcoran, Uyeyama was abl eto gain 105 yards on 24 carries .

The Birds scored their firstpoints at 5 :42 of the fourthquarter when John Wilson 's 22yard field goal gave them a 3- 1lead .

But after an exchange of punts ,Saskatchewan regained the leadon a beautiful 53 yard pass and

DANCEAt: Place Vanie r

With : WIGGY SYMPHON Y

TONIGHT 9 :00 - 1 :00

Cum Chum

JUNIOR HOCKE YTonight 8 :30

Vancouver Centennial sVS

Penticton Broncos

KERRISDALE AREN AAdvance Tickets Availabl e

at Thunderbird Shop

Students $1 .0 0Fri ., Oct . 30, 8 :30 vs Vernon

run play from Dave Pickett to Ji mWalker . The convert made it 8- 3with less than? minutes remaining .

After the kickoff, the Birdsdrove right down the field and

when Al Larson hit tight end Ric kPeck with a 12 yard pass, thecrowd went wild .

But two running plays lost fou ryards and on third down from the

five Larson underthrew Peck in through in the clutch, stoppingthe end zone. With only 1 :30 the Huskies on two running playsremaining in the game, the Birds and forcing them to punt .looked like they 'd blown it .

With only 17 second sBut the Birds defense came remaining, the Birds had the bal l

at the Saskatchewan 39 . Larsondropped back to pass, scramble daround, and finally threw a longpass to split end Ed Dempster ,who was standing on the sevenyard line .

The pass went incomplete, butDempster was interfered with onthe play . Because the game cannotend on a penalty the Birds weregiven one last chance .

Larson faded back to pass bu ta mix up in the backfield cause dhim to bounce into his ownplayers . With Saskatchewandefenders swarming all over him ,he tossed a desperation pass to E dDempster, who was all alone inthe end zone . Dempster grabbed itand in storybook fashion theBirds won their first game of th eyear . 9-8 .

Although the offense score dthe winning touchdown, th edefense deserved much of th ecredit . They held Saskatchewan toonly eight first downs and a tota loffence of 157 yards .

The pass rush, led by AlfKonrad and Ian Jukes, wa s

(Continued on Page 23)

"PEOPLE "FIRST LECTURE — EXPERIENC E

"Technocracy and the Myth ofthe Impersonal Orgasm "

by : DR. MARTIN LEVI N

MONDAY, OCT. 19 S .U.B .

at 7:00 p.m .

Ballroom

Please come at 6 :45 to pick up your receipt — pass and the nameof your group leader .

Enquiries : OFFICE OF INTERPROFESSIONAL ED .Westbrook 301 — 228-308 1

TWO FULLY LICENCED MECHANIC SCOMBINING 25 YEARS OF BRITISH AN DEUROPEAN SPORTS CAR EXPERIENC E

TRY OUR FRIENDLY SERVIC E

16th & Macdonald Ph. 732-621 2

KEV'S AUTOMOTIV EWE.SPECIALIZEIN IMPORT S

Ecstatic Birds hug flanker Ed Dempster (left) after his game-winning touchdown .

1;111 CIIF22'' IS THE MOST MOVING, MOSTINTELLIGENT, THE MOST HU -MANE—OH, TO HELL WITH IT !

—IT'S THE BEST AMERICANFILM I'VE SEEN THIS YEAR! "

—Vincent Canby, N.Y. TimesPARAMOUNT PICTURES CORPNMION IN ASSOCIATION WITH fILMIMYS, INC PRESENT S

A MIKE NICHOLS FILM

ALAN ARKIN~IN

stetCNJOSEPH HELLE R

swimMARTIN BALSAM ; RICHARD BENJAMIN ; ARTHUR GARFUNKEL; JACK GILFORD ; BUCK HENRY; BOB NEWHART; ANTHONY PERKINS; PAULA PRENTISS; MARTIN SHEEN;

JON VOIGHT & ORSON WELLE S AS DREEDLE . SCREENPLAY BY BUCK HENRY PRODUCED BY JOHN CALLEY & MARTIN RANSOHOfF DIRECTED BY MIKE NICHOL S

PROWCTIB DESIGNER MCIIAROSYERERT TECRMCOLR"PANAVISlON apple

15 '" WEEK

NO ADMITTANCE TOPERSONS UNDER 18 WARNING—"Scenes of Nudity ,

Disgust, and Violence "R . W . McDonal d

B .C . Directo r

STANLEY 733-2622GRANVILLE AT 12th AVE.

EVENINGS 7 :20, 9 :30Mat . Sat ., Sun .—2 :00 p .m .

ep'i. E Levine. presents An Avco Embassy UmACarlaPonti Production startin g

Sophia

i0

Doren Nlastroianniin Vittorio DeSica s

Sunftowrer

with Ludmila SavelyevaExecutive Producer Joseph E. Levin eMusic by HenryMancinl•Screenplay by Cesare Zavottin iProduced by Carlo Pont' and Arthur Coh nDirected byVittorio DeSica .Technicolor • Prints by Movielab'Original soundtrack albwn and tapes exclusively on Avco Embassy Records.

AM AVCO EMBASSY RELEASE /a

STARTS PARK ROYAL tieTODAY

WEST VANCOUVER 922-917 4EVENINGS 7 :10, 9 :00

Filmed inRussia

AwomanFrom the born for love.Kremlinnto theUkraine.

A man born to love let

1.

Friday, October 16, 1970

T H E

U B Y S S E Y

Page 23

spearingfrankly

Tony GallagherBecause it is not basketball season, I feel compelled t o

comment on the outstanding team that this campus has th eopportunity to watch.

. Of some notation might be the fact that Derek Sankey, a sta rfor the last two seasons and last summer for the UBC hoo pThunderbirds, will be unable to join this year's edition on the court .The reason, while it might prove slightly embarrassing for Sankey, i sbecause he failed to carry his year . Derek was in first year law las tyear and because of his time spent on becoming one of the bes tbasketball players in Canada, he managed only a 53 per cent average .

That arbitrary figure seems unobjectionable until on econsiders that CIAU regulations mumble something about having t o

> carry your year in order to continue in athletics . The problem seem sto be that there is no differentation between jocks taking a fiel dhockey major and those in law school . While one might be inclinedto argue that there is no difference, there tends to be a sligh tdiversity between work loads . However, be unwilling to lament forMr. Sankey . He seems suitably satisfied with getting his historydegree this year and retaining the year's eligibility .

However, one might shed a tear for Peter Mullins, coach ofBirds. He loses the top rebounder in the WCIAA last year and a bigman with an exquisite shooting touch .

But there are apparently some saviours on the way to rectifythis unprecedented horror .

Daryle Gjernes, a six-foot-four inch bloke who played verywell for the Jayvees last year and for Winston Churchill before that ,is reputed to be improving at such a rate that the name of Sanke ymight be forgotten by even the most vociferous enthusiast — well ,anyway, they say he's good .

Jack Hoy is another . He was the hot shooting character whoentered the frays in rather important junctures during a game an dmanaged a field goal or two at just the right moment .

However, Jack Hoy is unlikely to replace Sankey as the leadin grebounder in the West, which brings us to John Mills . Last year thi sgood fellow had a shooting touch that prompted his patien tteammates to refer to him as "stonefingers" on more than oneoccasion . Not discouraged, John worked at his infirmity and rumo rhas it that he has accomplished medical history . He is an aggressiv erebounder and if he has the shot, John Mills might be one of Mullins 'starters this time around .

Who will replace Alex Brayden — of course decisions o fimportance will not be made until the last possible second before th eopening game, it will be Rod Matheson . The reasons are numerous —the experience he picked up in Turin and during last year's playoffs ,the knee that Stan Callagari owns but has no control over and th ecareful grooming of Bob Dickson as the guard to replace John ,pardon, Ron Thorsen .

And so with everything cleared up, I have only to predict tha tthe Birds will get some trouble from the Manitoba Bisons befor ethey win the West and some more problems from those Easter nteams before winning the CIAU title once more .

himself and scrambled for acouple of key first downs. Themost encouraging sign, however ,was the way he came through inthe clutch .

This Saturday, UBC travels t oWinnipeg for a rematch withManitoba. The first game was wonby Manitoba 46-2 .

On the basis of that it look slike the Bisons stand a goo dchance of ending the Birdswinning streak .

FOOTNOTES: Rick Peck suffere da shotjlder separation and is ou tfor the season . . . Next homegame is October 31 against Simo nFraser . . . Saturday's game wasbroadcast across western Canadaby CBC Radio .

UBC 's Ron Uyeyama (26) — game's top rusher .

BIRDS' WIN . .

(Continued from Page 22)

excellent throughout . Theysacked Saskatchewan quarterbac kDave Pickett five times for a totalloss of 39 yyards .

The defensive backs ,particularly Kent Watts and Roge rGregory, played well, especiallyagainst the run, where they cameup and stopped the sweeps .

Al Larson gave the Birds th ebest performance this year fromtheir quarterback . After a slo wstart in the first half, he began t oassert himself and wound u pcompleting six of 13 passes for 6 7yards and no interceptions .

He also impressed with hi srunning, as he kept the ball

Thunderbird rugby team remains

undefeated so far this season

mid-way through the second hal fgave center Doug Shick a nopening for the try to break th egame. Banks' converted .

McTavish put on the finishingtouches with a final try late in thegame .

Early this week the Birds tookon the University of AlbertaGolden Bears and finished with a35-11 win to remain undefeatedthis season .

In the first half the Golde nBears took advantage of loose ,sloppy play by UBC to take the

half-time lead 11-8 .This was not the story in the

second half, however, as the Bird spiled up 27 unanswered points .Good conditioning and tight ballhandling by the Birds caused theBears to wilt under its attack .

In other play, the secon ddivision Braves proved . . . asexcellent both offensively anddefensively as they too blanke dthe second division Kats, 11-0 .

Both teams travel to Queen'sPark this Saturday to mee tPocomo in Vancouver league play .

The Thunderbird rugby team'spreparation for a tough matchpaid off with a 16-0 romp ove rperennial champion Kats .

Tight forward play and the fin eUBC back line combined for th efirst league win by the team sinc ea 16-8 decision in 1964 .

An unconverted try by winge rSpence McTavish and a penaltygoal by fly-half Ray Banks gavethe Birds a shakey 6-3 half-timelead .

Banks' well placed kick ahea d

(

Delicious

Yugoslavian Cuisine

Come With SomeoneYou Love

KAFANA BOSNA1127 E Hastings St .

Entrance in d!Back Alley

Thunderbird rugby team remains

undefeated so far this season

mid-way through the second hal fgave center Doug Shick a nopening for the try to break th egame. Banks' converted .

McTavish put on the finishingtouches with a final try late in thegame .

Early this week the Birds tookon the University of AlbertaGolden Bears and finished with a35-11 win to remain undefeate dthis season .

In the first half the Golde nBears took advantage of loose ,sloppy play by UBC to take the

half-time lead 11-8 .This was not the story in the

second half, however, as the Bird spiled up 27 unanswered points .Good conditioning and tight ballhandling by the Birds caused theBears to wilt under its attack .

In other play, the seconddivision Braves proved . . . asexcellent both offensively anddefensively as they too blanke dthe second division Kats, 11-0 .

Both teams travel to Queen'sPark this Saturday to mee tPocomo in Vancouver league play .

The Thunderbird rugby team' spreparation for a tough matchpaid off with a 16-0 romp overperennial champion Kats .

Tight forward play and the fin eUBC back line combined for th efirst league win by the team sinc ea 16-8 decision in 1964 .

An unconverted try by winge rSpence McTavish and a penaltygoal by fly-half Ray Banks gav ethe Birds a shakey 6-3 half-tim elead .

Banks' well placed kick ahea d

(

Delicious

Yugoslavian Cuisine

Come With SomeoneYou Love

KAFANA BOSNA

Back Alley

Thunderbird rugby team remains

undefeated so far this season

mid-way through the second hal fgave center Doug Shick a nopening for the try to break th egame. Banks' converted .

McTavish put on the finishingtouches with a final try late in thegame .

Early this week the Birds tookon the University of AlbertaGolden Bears and finished with a35-11 win to remain undefeate dthis season .

In the first half the Golde nBears took advantage of loose ,sloppy play by UBC to take the

half-time lead 11-8 .This was not the story in the

second half, however, as the Bird spiled up 27 unanswered points .Good conditioning and tight ballhandling by the Birds caused theBears to wilt under its attack .

In other play, the seconddivision Braves proved . . . asexcellent both offensively anddefensively as they too blanke dthe second division Kats, 11-0 .

Both teams travel to Queen'sPark this Saturday to mee tPocomo in Vancouver league play .

The Thunderbird rugby team' spreparation for a tough matchpaid off with a 16-0 romp overperennial champion Kats .

Tight forward play and the fin eUBC back line combined for th efirst league win by the team sinc ea 16-8 decision in 1964 .

An unconverted try by winge rSpence McTavish and a penaltygoal by fly-half Ray Banks gav ethe Birds a shakey 6-3 half-tim elead .

Banks' well placed kick ahea d

(

Delicious

Yugoslavian Cuisine

Come With SomeoneYou Love

KAFANA BOSNA

TIE

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Equipment not claimed by 6 p .m., October 18th will become th eproperty of C .S .A .

Equipment to be sold will be accepted at the Pure Foods Bldg . ,P .N .E .

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 16th, 12 NOON - 11 P .M .an d

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 17th, 9 A .M. - 12 NOO N

ONE SALE DAY ONLY ! ! !SATURDAY, OCTOBER 17th, 1 P .M . - 10 P .M .

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Page 24 THE UBYSSEY Friday, October 16, 197 0

photos by;David Bowerman

andMaurice Bridge