page 3: what makes a separatist tick uy$$ey · ph. 224-612 1 open every day 4:30 p.m. to 11 :30...

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PAGE 3 : WHAT MAKES A SEPARATIST TIC K Western civilization just wouldn't be the same without the human hand, photographed on a UBC lawn . —dave enns photo Bank burned in riot-torn Santa Barbar a Page 6 : The Americanization debacle : straight from the horses' mouths . Robin Mathews and James Steel e talk with senator Peter Ladner . Page 24 : Whither the UBC Endowmen t Lands? They just might becom e part of Vancouver . THE UY$$E Y Vol . LI, No . 36 VANCOUVER, B .C ., FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 1970 448 228-230 5 SANTA BARBARA (CUP) — More than 1,00 0 persons — protesting both the Vietnam war and what one student called, "increasing police repression aimed a t stifling political dissent — controlled streets here Wednesday for the second consecutive night . ' Street battles broke out Wednesday after a phalanx o f riot-equipped police charged a large demonstration a t downtown Perfect Park . { Retreating demonstrators pelted the officers wit h rocks and bottles as they took to the streets, smashin g windows in commercial buildings and setting numerou s bonfires . Fire gutted a bank building and a police car wa s fire-bombed before the California highway patrol declare d a state of emergency and sealed off the Isla Vista distric t near the University of California campus here . Demonstrations began here Tuesday night afte r sheriff's deputies on patrol stopped and questioned a black former student, recently expelled from the Sant a Barbara campus . One policeman was injured and at least six person s were arrested Tuesday, during a 10-hour outbreak whic h saw demonstrators erect street barricades, smash ban k windows and firebomb a patrol car . No injuries or arrests were reported out o f Wednesday's demonstration . Firemen were ordered awa y from the Bank of America blaze, while sheriff Jame s Webster described the situation as "'completely out o f hand," and asked Governor Ronald Reagan for 50 0 National Guardsmen . Students told reporters the branch of the largest U .S . commercial bank was fired because "it holds money fo r the war in Vietnam . " Police officials have attempted to link th e demonstration to a speech on campus Wednesday b y William Kunstler, a defence attorney in the recen t "Conspiracy 8" trial at Chicago . Kunstler told 5,000 persons Wednesday that the rea l violence in Santa Barbara is not in street demonstrations . "The real violence," he said, "occurs in th e backrooms of police stations . " "I think the shadow of the swastika is on ever y courthouse, on universities, on government buildings , maybe even on the apartment building door next to you . " For the first time in UBC history, a genera l anticalendar is going to be published for the 1970-7 1 academic year . The proposal for the massive campus wide course evaluation pamphlet was initiated by Alma Mater Societ y internal affairs officer-elect Sue Kennedy . AMS plans general anticalenda r Plans for the anticalendar will be made during th e next three weeks, after which a definite plannin g committee and program will be set up . "An anticalendar is something this campus ha s needed for years, " said AMS president-elect Tony Hodge . "I'm glad we're finally going to see it . " Mass media ~natcFmakin~t may have saved mik e By JIM DAVIE S Uby s y Matchmake r What has happened to Mike the deserter? Has h e found a wife? Has he been deported to the Unite d States? Is he in prison? Have any courageous girl s offered themselves as marital prospects to save him fro m a life behind bars ? Read on as the saga of Mike versus the American army continues . Since the article_ about Mike 's requiring a wife t o escape 40 odd years in U .S . Army prisons first appeare d in The Ubyssey, there has been considerable reaction . CBC television has done a feature on Mike, the Express, the temporary city newspaper, has covered the story, and the Georgia Straight has reprinted the origina l story . What all this coverage has boiled down to is simpl y this a prospective wife for Mike . During the first two days after the initial story appeared, 14 girls contacte d The Ubyssey office to say they had an interest in helping Mike . The principle disadvantage was that if the girl i s under 21 years of age, as were most of the applicants , she has to obtain parental consent : . In a situation such as this, parental consent is almos t impossible to obtain . However, Mike has received offers of help fro m several girls over 21 . Mike, 20, is presently involved in obtaining consent from his mother (his father is dead ) before M can proceed with his plans for a "toke n marriage" withone of the girls. At present, the girl wishes to remain anonymous fo r obvious reasons, however, it can be stated that she i s over 21, and is not a student at UBC . Applications for helping Mike have been filtering i n steadily from as far away as Mission City . , The Ubyssey wishes_ to thank all those girls wh o have expressed an unselfish desire to help Mike stay i n Canada and out of prison .

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Page 1: PAGE 3: WHAT MAKES A SEPARATIST TICK UY$$EY · Ph. 224-612 1 Open Every Day 4:30 p.m. to 11 :30 p.m. U.B.C. Home Service Larry Brownlee, Prop. COMPLETE AUTOMOTIVE.SERVICE ON THE CAMPUS

PAGE 3 : WHAT MAKES A SEPARATIST TIC K

Western civilization just wouldn't be the same without the human hand, photographed on a UBC lawn .

—dave enns photo

Bank burned in riot-torn Santa Barbara

Page 6 : The Americanization debacle:straight from the horses' mouths .Robin Mathews and James Steeletalk with senator Peter Ladner .

Page 24: Whither the UBC Endowmen tLands? They just might becom epart of Vancouver.

THE UY$$EYVol . LI, No . 36

VANCOUVER, B.C ., FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 1970 448

228-2305

SANTA BARBARA (CUP) — More than 1,00 0persons — protesting both the Vietnam war and what onestudent called, "increasing police repression aimed a tstifling political dissent — controlled streets hereWednesday for the second consecutive night . '

Street battles broke out Wednesday after a phalanx o friot-equipped police charged a large demonstration a tdowntown Perfect Park .

{ Retreating demonstrators pelted the officers wit hrocks and bottles as they took to the streets, smashin gwindows in commercial buildings and setting numerou sbonfires.

Fire gutted a bank building and a police car wa sfire-bombed before the California highway patrol declare da state of emergency and sealed off the Isla Vista distric tnear the University of California campus here .

Demonstrations began here Tuesday night afte rsheriff's deputies on patrol stopped and questioned ablack former student, recently expelled from the SantaBarbara campus .

One policeman was injured and at least six person swere arrested Tuesday, during a 10-hour outbreak whic hsaw demonstrators erect street barricades, smash ban kwindows and firebomb a patrol car .

No injuries or arrests were reported out o fWednesday's demonstration . Firemen were ordered awa yfrom the Bank of America blaze, while sheriff Jame sWebster described the situation as "'completely out o fhand," and asked Governor Ronald Reagan for 50 0National Guardsmen .

Students told reporters the branch of the largest U.S .commercial bank was fired because "it holds money fo rthe war in Vietnam . "

Police officials have attempted to link th edemonstration to a speech on campus Wednesday b yWilliam Kunstler, a defence attorney in the recen t"Conspiracy 8" trial at Chicago .

Kunstler told 5,000 persons Wednesday that the rea lviolence in Santa Barbara is not in street demonstrations .

"The real violence," he said, "occurs in th ebackrooms of police stations ."

"I think the shadow of the swastika is on ever ycourthouse, on universities, on government buildings ,maybe even on the apartment building door next to you . "

For the first time in UBC history, a genera lanticalendar is going to be published for the 1970-7 1academic year .

The proposal for the massive campus wide courseevaluation pamphlet was initiated by Alma Mater Societyinternal affairs officer-elect Sue Kennedy .

AMS plans general anticalenda rPlans for the anticalendar will be made during th e

next three weeks, after which a definite plannin gcommittee and program will be set up .

"An anticalendar is something this campus ha sneeded for years, " said AMS president-elect Tony Hodge .

"I'm glad we're finally going to see it . "

Mass media ~natcF►makin~t may have saved mikeBy JIM DAVIES

Ubys y MatchmakerWhat has happened to Mike the deserter? Has he

found a wife? Has he been deported to the Unite dStates? Is he in prison? Have any courageous girl soffered themselves as marital prospects to save him froma life behind bars?

Read on as the saga of Mike versus the Americanarmy continues .

Since the article_ about Mike 's requiring a wife t oescape 40 odd years in U .S . Army prisons first appeare din The Ubyssey, there has been considerable reaction .

CBC television has done a feature on Mike, the

Express, the temporary city newspaper, has covered thestory, and the Georgia Straight has reprinted the originalstory .

What all this coverage has boiled down to is simplythis —a prospective wife for Mike . During the first twodays after the initial story appeared, 14 girls contactedThe Ubyssey office to say they had an interest in helpingMike .

The principle disadvantage was that if the girl isunder 21 years of age, as were most of the applicants,she has to obtain parental consent : .

In a situation such as this, parental consent is almos timpossible to obtain .

However, Mike has received offers of help fro mseveral girls over 21 . Mike, 20, is presently involved inobtaining consent from his mother (his father is dead)before M can proceed with his plans for a "toke nmarriage" withone of the girls.

At present, the girl wishes to remain anonymous fo robvious reasons, however, it can be stated that she i sover 21, and is not a student at UBC .

Applications for helping Mike have been filtering insteadily from as far away as Mission City . ,

The Ubyssey wishes_ to thank all those girls whohave expressed an unselfish desire to help Mike stay i nCanada and out of prison .

Page 2: PAGE 3: WHAT MAKES A SEPARATIST TICK UY$$EY · Ph. 224-612 1 Open Every Day 4:30 p.m. to 11 :30 p.m. U.B.C. Home Service Larry Brownlee, Prop. COMPLETE AUTOMOTIVE.SERVICE ON THE CAMPUS

Page 2

THE UBYSSEY

Friday, February 27, 1970

Pacific Press managemen tresumes talks with union sHigh level talks between representatives o fPacific Press and the unions involved in the curren tcontract dispute will resume today in Victoria .

The management team will be led by Pacifi cPress general-manager Ed Benson but will include F P

Publications chairman Brig . R. S. Malone whorecently flew into Vancouver "for the regular board

meeting."

Representing the unions at the meeting will b eAmerican Newspaper Guild international presiden tCharles A . Perlik Jr ., International Typographical

Union president John J . Pilch, of the InternationalPrinting Pressmen and Assistants' Unio nvice-president Robert Brown, and a representativeof the International Stereotypers and Electrotyper sUnion still to be designated .

The meeting will be the first confrontationsince the company refused to bargain Dec . 1 andtermed the unions "irresponsible-. "

Sources close to the top have indicated tha ttalks were cancelled by the company because of a

Dear Speak Easy ,I'm writing you to describe a situation which

myself and probably many others are findingthemselves in . I have graduated from UBC and Ihad been led to believe that my degree woul dresult in a job that would be interesting as well a sfinancially equal to the investments one puts int ogetting an education .

Instead, I've discovered that few such job sexist . Somehow, someone has miscalculated th eeconomic conditions pertaining to the universityeducated individual . There are, however, somevery pertinent factors . For one, governmentanti-inflationary measures hit directly a tgovernment services which usually employdegreed people .

Having spent several months looking for ajob I'm beginning to feel my degree is worthless— a white elephant.

Well that ' s pretty well my situation and Ionly want to add that I still owe money for m ystudent loan and recently got a letter from th eSherriff's office of Vancouver City pertaining tomy loan . So: five years getting my diploma —money, time, effort, emotional investment . Hah !What can I do? Have a diploma burning .

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personality conflict between Benson and ITU loca lpresident Len Guy .

According to these sources, Benson has denie dthis and said that Len is a very nice Guy .

The company finally shut the plant down o nFeb . 15 due to "increased loss of revenue because o fproduction difficulties . "

When informed of a newspaper to be run by thenewly unemployed Pacific Press employees, thecompany informed the Joint Council of Newspape rUnions "they would soon learn just what wasnecessary to publish a newspaper . "

But the Vancouver Express was create danyway .

The first issue came out Feb . 21 and sold ove r100,000 copies . The second issue Feb . 24 did just aswell .

In fact it seems more than coincidental thatFP Publications' brass are in town the same weekand a meeting quickly set up .

It appears the higher echelon has been called i nto save face for the local wheels .

Dear Disappointed ,The plight of the "educated unemployed "

has been pretty much ignored by governmentsand everyone else . What makes the situatio nparticularly frustrating is the gaggle of H .P.D .teachers, parents and friends who told us "to ge tour education" and we would be set . Somebodymiscalculated indeed .

The job situation does seem grim withoutmuch prospect of improvement . If you have thestrength to keep looking, you might try th estudent placement centre on campus . Theyinformed us that last June they actually had job savailable that went unfilled. They also wouldhave the most up to date information aboutwhere "university type" jobs might be available .

If you are broke, you could apply forwelfare . It might also be worthwhile to contac tthe Unemployed Citizens' Welfare Improvemen tCouncil (1726 W. 7th, Vancouver, Phone731-0131) . This is a somewhat radical group o fpeople, I believe, on welfare . Perhaps if enoughpeople became aware of how bad the situation i sfor the unemployed, and got behind the group slike the above it might be possible to deman dthat the government provide, if not jobs, at leas ta decent welfare system .

Speak Easy is open Monday to Friday 1 2p .m. to 9 p .m. Phone 228-3706, Room 218 ,SUB .

NATE SMIT H. . . new editor displays team spiri t

Aroma of lox and bagelsto invade Ubyssey office

By NATE SMIT HUbyssey Appointments Editor

Nathan H . Smith, The Ubyssey's resident "super jew", ha sbeen named editor-in-chief for the 1970-71 academic year .

Smith was The Ubyssey's city editor this year and is co-autho rof the forthcoming best-selling jokebook "All-Time Weakies for CityDesk ."

When asked about Smith's appointment, his literarycollaborator Brian McWatters said : "That's great, now we can keepSmith in the editor's office and out of the newsroom where he onl ygets in everyone's way . "

Smith, who was available for comment, told reporters h ewould run the paper with an iron hand.

"I will run the paper with an iron hand, " he said ."Everyone around here will have to understand that I'm the

boss," he said. "What I say goes and anyone who doesn't like it canleave and, and what do I say now Paul? "

Smith 's appointment will be formally ratified when the ne wAlma Mater Society council takes office at the end of March .

AUDREYOHANNESE N

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Page 3: PAGE 3: WHAT MAKES A SEPARATIST TICK UY$$EY · Ph. 224-612 1 Open Every Day 4:30 p.m. to 11 :30 p.m. U.B.C. Home Service Larry Brownlee, Prop. COMPLETE AUTOMOTIVE.SERVICE ON THE CAMPUS

Friday, February 27, 197 0

Why a historia nand a labor leade rthink separatismis inevitable .By Christine Krawczy k

"I came here to speak to my friends the students an dtell the truth about what is happening in Quebec today, "Quebec labor leader and separatist Michel Chartrand sai dThursday .

The arts faculty sponsored historian Stanley Ryerso nand Michel Chartrand, who spoke on the history of theseparatist movement and its long range objectives .

Ryerson spoke on Wednesday . His talk was meant t oserve as an introduction to Chartrand .

Ryerson outlined the history of separatism, an dshowed how the problem had been aggravated in recen ttimes because of American domination of our economy .

History is the cause of the problem according toRyerson . "The cases of both English and Frenc h

Canadians are the .product of a historical phenomenon,"he said .

"English-Canadians were the first to establishseparatism when they set up Upper and Lower Canada a stwo separate-provinces," said Ryerson .

He went on to say that was just a historic scare crowused by the English .

Ryerson then showed how the state structure as w e

know it today is a product of imperialism of one kind o ranother .

"Old state structures were a product of merchantcapitalism and feudalism . An example of this is theQuebec Act," he said .

"Then came the industrial capitalist and feudaliststate which was perpetuated by the British through th eAct of Union," said Ryerson .

Ryerson showed how the entire state structure o fQuebec was established by an alien colonial power .

"What we have today is a corporate capitalis tsociety, " said Ryerson, "and the people must be mad eaware of the nature of their society and the direction i nwhich it is heading."

The fact that there is a French-Canadian nation inQuebec is obvious. French-Canadians have all th eessentials of a nation .

They speak a different language, most of them are o fa different religion and their cultural background i sdifferent from that of the rest of English-Canadians . Butperhaps what is most important is that the FrenchCanadians feel they are a nation .

"Instead of looking into the very basi csocio-economic problems of Quebec, historians are stillarguing whether or not there was a bourgeoisie class i nQuebec before the conquest," said Ryerson .

There still are today certain historians who refuse t osee a French nation in Quebec . Donald Creighton has

THE UBYSSE Y

called biculturalism "a product of politicians" ."Such an attitude is extremely naive to say the leas t

since even the Bicultural and Bilingualism Commission hasadmitted there are two nations living in Canada," saidRyerson .

It is commonly assumed that separatism is a 'recen t

phenomena . Ryerson pointed out this was false ."Separatists existed as far back as 1806 at which time

they were putting out a newspaper called "Le Canadien" .Not only are there two nations living in Canada bu t

the two do not enjoy the same status . The B&BCommission in this investigation found that there wer epolitical and economic inequalities between the Englis hand the French .

The B&B Commission however can not touch tha tproblem, since that is not the purpose of their inquiry .

"Today Trudeau tells us there will be a commissionto look into the constitutional question," said Ryerson ."It is already too late . All that can be done now for th econstitution is to abolish it" .

"The longer English-Canadians insist on ignoring th efact that there are two nations the harder it will be t ograpple with the problem," said Ryerson .

Today Quebec separatists are fairly united. They areaiming for "Solidarite ouvriers et etudiantes " sai dRyerson .

When asked to predict the outcome of the nex tprovincial elections in Quebec to be held in October ,Ryerson said he thought the separatists would make som econsiderable gains .

CHARTRAND: American domination

On Thursday Michel Chartrand spoke about what ishappening in Quebec today, relating it to the rest o fCanada.

"The economic structure of our society is like apyramid . At the bottom are the working people ; thencome the farmers and the professionals . Further up thepyramid is the lumber industry . Next come the insuranc ecompanies, the banks and at the very top is th egovernment dominated by Americans, " said Chartrand .

Chartrand then explained that it is the American swho decide where funds will be allocated, since they

Page 3

RYERSON : history of separatis m

control most of the funds ."Although our economy is dominated by the U .S . we

still have some bargaining power if we want to make useof it, " said Chartrand .

"We can withhold the goods they want from us . Wecan sell the produce we sell to the U .S . to China or Cuba .It would probably do a lot more good there, " he said .

Chartrand then went on to denounce capitalism a samoral, antisocial, and anti-nationalist . He said once th epeople saw that, they would denounce capitalism .

"The young in Quebec are no longer hypnotised b yAmericans . They have no inferiority complex, they ar emore educated than ever before and they are not afraid,"said Chartrand .

He said that Quebec youth is being radicalized . Ther eare more radicals in the junior colleges than in th euniversities .

"The new generation of Quebecois is not going to b eas patient as my generation was . That is how separatismwill be accomplished . "

Much has been said about the political orientation o fthose leading the Parti Quebecois . They have beenaccused of being opportunists, pro-American or bourgeoisby some radical groups .

Commenting on these accusations Chartrand sai d"Our problem right now is not a welfare state . Ourproblem is to have our own government to run our ownaffairs. "

"The P.Q. couldn't be bourgeois since the Quebecbourgeois is already involved with the established politicalparties . Sure there are many educated members in th eP .Q. but that is because there are More educated people i nQuebec than ever before," he said .

"In any case they will have to go to socialism to solv ethe problems of our province . An increasing number oflabor people are joining P .Q ." said Chartrand .

Chartrand explained why the French Candians fee lthey can ' t work with the English .

"We may have the same or similar problems but ou rattitudes toward them differs, " he said .

That does not mean there is nothing that students i nVancouver can do to help the Quebecois . They ca nconvince people that the cause of the French-Canadians i sa just one .

"The English-Canadians who sympathise with ou r.cause can help prepare the rest of Canada to accept a nindependent . Quebec and thus help us . There is nothin gthey can do for us inside Quebec, " said Chartrand .

`Quebec's young peopl eare notafraid '

Senate waffles on BelShaw recommendationsThe UBC senate didn't really do anything

Wednesday night, it just kicked a few things around i nhopes they would get lost .

Senate tabled three recommendations of theBelshaw report on long range objectives .

Recommendation two of the report calls for th eraising of the entrance requirement for all first year B .C .students to 65 per cent .

Senators felt that raising admission standards wa snot essential at this time as the present enrolment quot aof 3,400 new students next September would probablyexclude most students with marks below 65 per cent .

Recommendation three calls for the setting up of aquota system whereby enrolment to the first two yearsof agriculture, education, physical education an drecreation, and science as well as the first year o fcommerce would be restricted .

Senate tabled this recommendation until more workhas been done in finding the best way to apportio nstudents between the various faculties .

Recommendation four calls for the implementing ofthe quota system by limiting enrolment on the basis o facademic ability .

Since a quota system as recommended inrecommendation three had already been tabled bysenate, the senate was also forced to tablerecommendation four .

Said student senator Peter Brock after the meeting :"I was pissed off at senate . "

Student senator Jim Davies said : "I next expectsenate to table a motion on whether or not they areagainst apathy . "

The tabling of the motion will, at any rate, give

qualifications time to marshal their forces .A motion by economics prof Gideon Rosenbluth

met with more success .He suggested a committee be set up to investigat e

the physical, financial and academic resources availablefor each student and the maximum size of classe srequired to maintain the quality of education in eachfaculty .

Standards should be set up on information regardingthe standards prevailing at "good universities " . Thesestandards would deal with matters such as student-staffratio, library space per student, books per student, siz eof classes, laboratory space and equipment per student ,etc .

The formation of this committee was approved bysenate by a large majority .

Page 4: PAGE 3: WHAT MAKES A SEPARATIST TICK UY$$EY · Ph. 224-612 1 Open Every Day 4:30 p.m. to 11 :30 p.m. U.B.C. Home Service Larry Brownlee, Prop. COMPLETE AUTOMOTIVE.SERVICE ON THE CAMPUS

Page 4

THE UBYSSEY

Friday, February 27, 197 0

Editor : Michael FinlayNews Paul KnoxCity Nate SmithManaging Bruce Curti sWire Irene Wasilewsk i

Sports Jim Maddi nSenior John Twig g

Photo Dave Enn sAss't News Maurice Bridge

Ass't City John Anderse n

Page Friday Fred CawseyNorbert Ruebsaa t

We're . a little disappointed in the Vancouve rEx press .

There has been a lot of talk in the past about themonopoly that Pacific Press has on the newspapers i nthis city and about how things would be different if themonopoly could be broken .

Now we realize the Express doesn't have th emoney, manpower or facilities to put out a top notc hpaper, but it surely could be better than it is now .

We think there are more important things to writ eabout than T.V., women's news and sports . A ridiculou samount of space is given to these subjects .

The editorials read like the same old stuff we'vebeen seeing for years. Has no one got any new ideas o rpoints of view?

The philosophy behind the news coverage is n odifferent—witness the sensationalistic story i nThursday's paper about a murder being linked t o"orgies" and the murder house being a "den o fprostitution ." Such cliches, such inconsequential news .

And on top of all this, the paper looks like shit . I tlooks like a a poor imitation of the Sun or the Province ,standard broadsheet layout done poorly .

We understand that the Express "newsroom" an dprint shop have the air of a light social gathering whenthe paper is being produced . We admire the spirit of thepeople working under such hardship .

But putting out a paper in this city is a seriou sbusiness, especially now. This is a big chance for th enewspaper guild to show what its members can do andwhat sort of different paper can be produced .

It's not being done .Now, with the latest issue heavy with advertising ,

we fear the Express may lose sight of its initial objectiveto put our a paper as a public service—unlike Pacifi cPress—and now join Pacific Press in aiming primarily fo r

'profit.We hope this is not the case. But it would not

surprise us if it were.

Changes ?

Passing through the SUB cafeteria Monday, wesaw no less than eight tables occupied by people playin gcards.

At the same time, people were wandering throughthe tables and chairs, looking for some place to sit .

At one time there was a rule against card-playingin the cafeteria . Now, it appears, this rule is not beingobeyed and is not being enforced .

So, it remains for the individual student t oenforce the rule .

Our own battle plan involves a 10 cent glass o fthat sugary lemonade—or maybe coke would do .

We walk along with our lemonade and there's thi sbriefcase jutting out into the aisle and, oops, sorry, w eseem to have dumped our lemonade on your deck o fcards. Accept our apologies . It was an accident, o fcourse .

Published Tuesdays and Fridays throughout the university yea rby the Alma Mater Society of the University of B .C . Editoria lopinions are those of the writer and not of the AMS or th euniversity administration . Member, Canadian University Press .The Ubyssey subscribes to the press services of Pacific StudentPress, of which it is a founding member . Ubyssey News Servicesupports one foreign correspondent in Pango-Pango'The Ubysse ypublishes Page Friday, a weekly commentary and review. Cityeditor, 228-2305 ; editor, 228-2301 ; Page Friday, 228-2309 ;sports, 228-2308 ; advertising, 228-3977 .

Cards

THE URYSSE Y

FEBRUARY 27, 1970

David Bowerman and Phi lBarkworth put on the animal act of th ecentury . Even Smith was shocked . Ja nO'Brien and Ginny Galt teamed upwhile Bob Bennett and Christin eKrawczyk, came back . "Who the hel ldoes J . Broadway think he is?"chorused Bev Gelfond, John Butler ,David Schmidt, Dave Keillor, Jennife rJordan, Sandy Kass and Linda Hossiein four part arpeggio . Elaine Tarzwel lgot her feature held by a dirty old ma nnamed Brian McWatters .

"Silly, it's nylon, not silk!" sai dRobin Burgess . Sports people wereDick Button, Scott McCloy and Ton yGallagher . Thanx for turning in a list .

LETTERS TO THE EDITO RAbsenteesEditor, The Ubyssey, Sir :

On Tuesday last RobinMathews and James Steele spokeon the Americanization of theCanadian university . Throughoutthis past year we have heard man ycomplaints regarding these tw ogentlemen from various facultymembers . Yet when Mathews an dSteele come to speak on campuswe find that most of their critic sdo not attend the meeting . Worseyet, those who do come areunable to offer a single word o fcriticism or argument . We wonde rif our "critics" are now won ove rto the Mathews/Steele position o rif this is just another example ofthe truth that Jerry Farber taughtus "most professors don't havevery much in the way of balls" .

RALPH STANTO Narts 4

RacismEditor, The Ubyssey, Sir :

Your paper has in two issue s(Feb. 6 and Feb . 24) accusedAIESEC of promoting racism.

As an international associatio nof students in economics an dcommerce operating in 49countries, AIESEC's goal is topromote understanding amon gnations and help educate themanager of the future. Since1948, AIESEC has exchangedover 40,000 students around theworld . We have specialconsultative status with UNESCO ,ECOSOC (United Nation sEconomic and Social Council) ,and are on the special list of theInternational Labor Organization .

Clearly, in view of ou robjectives and activities we areagainst racism. However, the issuethat your paper has brought up i sthis : by sending trainees to SouthAfrica on an exchange program,does AIESEC implicitly supportthat country's government? Putanother way, is the sending of astudent on an educational visit t oan illegitimate government apolitical act—that of publicsupport and recognition ?

After heated debates and lon gdeliberation, I have decided that i tdoes. It is irrelevant whether o rnot AIESEC is non-political andnon-racist in intent, if in the eye sof the majority it is viewed a ssupporting apartheid .

On the other hand, the positiveeffects of the reciprocal

exchange—in which a SouthAfrican student has th eopportunity to see the fallacies o fapartheid by comparison withCanada's less racist society—havealso to be weighed . But this factordoes not compensate for thenegative effect of indirectlysupporting racism .

Therefore, following a vote b ythe UBC local committeemembers, I shall write t oAIESEC—Canada's nationa lcommittee in Montreal, ourInternational Secretariat inRotterdam, and the South Africa nnational committee, informin gthem of our wish to formall ycease exchange activities withSouth Africa .

JACQUES A . KHOURIAIESEC—UBC

local committee president

ExpressionEditor, The Ubyssey, Sir :

A letter credited to meappeared in the Feb . 24 edition o fthe Vancouver Express in aversion so mangled as to b escarcely recognizable . The editor sof that paper completely alteredthe structure of the original letter ,changed one adjective and on e(correct) spelling, and severalpunctuation marks'. Far moreserious, they misprinted a figureof crucial importance, whichshould have read $9,811,200instead of $9,200. The resultmade me look like a fool, which Ilike to think I am not .' Since I think the original lette r

had an important point to make ,and still does, I would appreciateit if you could print it as a lette rto The Ubyssey, along with this(or an edited version) disclaimerof responsibility for the letterwhich appeared in the Express ,This will not only help to get th epoint across, but save me theembarrassment of some funn ylooks I am getting from friends .

THOMAS L. PERRY JR .

Perry's letter to the Expressappears below as he wrote it—Ed .

The Editor,The Vancouver Express ,1655 W. Broadway ,Vancouver ,British Columbia

Dear Sir :I read in the Vancouver Sun of

February 9, 1970 that the BritishColumbia Government has sold

the Seattle Light Company th erights to raise the level of RossLake by 125 feet in order t ogenerate electric power to mee tSeattle's needs . The resultantflooding will apparently destroy awilderness area of considerabl erecreational value to the people o fBritish Columbia.

The Sun's article states that thecurrent retail cost of power inSeattle is 8 mills ($0.008) perkilowatt hour . The Rose Lakeproject will generat eapproximately 140,000 kilowattsof power .

Computation of the value ofthis power at Seattle retail price sis simple :

8 millskilowatt hour

x140,000 kilowatt s

x24 hours

day

$ 26,880,00 0da y

The province of BritishColumbia will receive $35,000 pe ryear in compensation for theflooding of 6,300 acres (abou t10 square miles) of the Skagi tRiver Valley . At the Seattle rates ,this is about 31 hours worth o fpower .

Put another way, in one yearwe will receive $35,000 for powe rwhose worth is $9,811,200 .

Such calculations do not takeinto 'account the aesthetic ,recreational, and tourist dollarvalue of the Skagit Valley, whichis reportedly unusually well suite dto development as a recreationalasset for the rapidly expandingpopulation of the Lowe rMainland .

Let us hope that someone i nVictoria has only made a stupid ,but pardonable an dREVERSIBLE arithmetical error .Mr . David Brousson, MLA , - hasassured us that it is not too late tocancel the agreement with Seattle .It would be a frightening prospec tindeed were this deal to represen tan official government policy o fselling away our future at bargainbasement prices .

Thomas L . Perry Jr.

Page 5: PAGE 3: WHAT MAKES A SEPARATIST TICK UY$$EY · Ph. 224-612 1 Open Every Day 4:30 p.m. to 11 :30 p.m. U.B.C. Home Service Larry Brownlee, Prop. COMPLETE AUTOMOTIVE.SERVICE ON THE CAMPUS

Friday, February 27, 1970

THE UBYSSEY

Page 5

Berkeley: The defection of the clerksU .S ., the losses of Berkeley seemto herald a new emigration, thi stime from West to East . Anemigration so similar to an earlie rone, that from the WeimarRepublic which so cruciall ydepleted the German will to resis tthe savagery of NationalSocialism, with consequences al ltoo often forgotten today .

Whether professors Rosovsk yand Lipset left Berkeley formotives other than the prevailingpolitical and social climate, thefact remains that this very climat ewith its blatant curtailment o facademic : freedom demanded tha tthey and their colleagues remai nat Berkeley . Granted that researc hand reflection are difficult in . th emidst of aerial gassings an dshotgun law, but it is precisely inthe midst of such a social cirisi sthat excellence is needed . In suchcircumstances the mediocre, th ewishy-washy hewers to policy andthe departmental toadies, as inwar, soon disappear, and all tha tremains are the courageous . Butcourage is not enough, it must bewedded to the cool analysis o fquality, to that intellectua lexcellence which demands fromthe few a personal commitment tothe many, a commitment to th econvictions they have up to no wonly been preaching .

If these few refuse to lead, toeven if need be go down into th estreets when the cause demands it ,then no amount of hair splittin ganalogies or academic fog wil lobscure the solid fact that they donot have the courage of the ownconvictions . When this happens ,then all the humanism and logicwith which they've surrounde dthemselves will stand naked ,revealed for once for what itreally is : mere academic cant .

By CHARLES CURMIIn the wake of large publi c

outbursts such as last year' sMoratorium Day demonstrations ,there usually follows a rash o fintrospective essays, article scolumns, and so-calle d"definitive" droppings from th eacademic tables of NorthAmerican Universities . TheOctober "cri de coeur" of anation desperately trying todisentangle itself from a socia ldisaster of its own making was noexception . And though one istempted to question th ehumanistic content of a mass ofconspicuous consumers suddenlyfaced with the economic realitiesof a prolonged war, somenoteworthy soul-searching hasnevertheless begun .

That onetime Canadian, JohnKenneth Galbraith, speaking ofthe October 15 marches, state dthat Richard M. Nixon might verywell have been affected by thesize of the crowds in New York ,Washington and Boston . Thoug hhis assumption hardly applied t ohis callous disregard of the orderl ymasses that flooded the Capitolone month later, he could hardlyhave failed to notice itsmiddle-class content — he, theself-styled voice of the neat an dthe clean, of that so-called "silentmajority . "

As a fulltime Canadian ,enjoying a certain degree ofgeographic remoteness (if nothin gelse) from the American scene .Moratorium Days and theirattendant diagnoses, brings tomind the lack of a comparabl eexaminiation of conscience afte ran occurrence whose impact o nAmerica might in time surpassthat of Vietnam . I refer

specifically to the defection fro mBerkeley of that nucleus of brain swhose quality for a time, gav ecredence to that institutions' sclaim of parity with Thoreau ' salma mater. Of this nucleus, th emost prominent defectors ar eHenry Rosovsky, Japanes eEconomic History, the economis tHarvey Leibenstein and th eeminent sociologist SeymourMartin Lipset, all presently atHarvard . Canada's University o fToronto gained the sociologistLewis Feuer, and in the samediscipline, Pennsylvania acquire dErving Goffman and Ohio State ,William Peterson .

A Berkeley source commentin gon these losses was quoted a sstating that "the numbers are notgreat . . . but when we begin tolose these types we get worried, "

to this he added that since 196 4Berkeley has lost an average of 2 4senior professors a year . From acampus of some 28,000 student sthis figure might not seem to oalarming, yet in contrast to th eAmerican ethic of success, volum eis not at stake here . What is atstake is quality — that rare formof intellectual excellence which i ndisciplines such as history ,sociology and economics (t oname but a few), demands o fthose who "have it," a doubl ededication : First, an academi cdedication to their specifi cdiscipline, then, and most crucialto their status of excellence, a"spiritual dedication " to thesociety they are analysing and it svaried individuals .

In the age of multiuniversity ,when so much appalling ;mediocrity is being forced ont othe students of even the bette runiversities of Canada and the

These are lean years for theintellectual, for who will risk theloss of tenure, a chair, majorityprestige or even arrest an dphysical violence for the dubioushonour of being taken seriouslyby one's students of finall ygaining their respect? Yet, is no tthis very loss of respect one of th efundamental reasons for the revol tof the universities? Are no tCanadian and American universit ystudents fed up with the lore o fcommitment from post-Sartianapologists whom they know wil lnever act? Has not the time com e(to use the haggard cliche) fo rthose who preach to "stand u pand be counted" ?

One who has stood up ,recently summarized America'spresent tragedy by stating that forthe first time in his life he foun dhimself wondering "whether this

country might not, after all ,succumb as Germany did, to adiabolism, Ku Klux Klanism ,armed vigilanteism, an dirresponsible militarism. I am sure[he continues] that there willalways be a nucleus who willnever surrender to th eobscurantists . What I am not sur eof — and this for the first time —is whether this nucleus can stil llead a majority in defence ofAmerican ideals and of the Bill o fRights . Ihope so ."

One can only join Professo rArthur Bestor in hoping that thi sdefence can still be effected yet . ,With Berkeley as an example on ecannot but wonder whether thenucleus of which he speaks ha snot already been depleted to th epoint of near extinction — fo rAmerica and for Canada, I hop enot .

1970 GraduatesB.Sc. (with interest in Data Processing )

B .A. (Economics Major )

B .C . TELEPHONE CO .Will be Interviewing on Campu s

March 5 and 6

Please Make Appointment Now at th e

U .B .C. PLACEMENT OFFICE

MORE LETTERS Cai ODEON kakiOh, no as it has in Shaw's play when Joa n

suggests that since now everybodyseems to love her she might returnto earth. Nevertheless I mustcorrect it .

To the best of my knowledge Inever said that I am definitelyleaving, nor have I made up mymind to do that . What I did say atstudent council and other places i sthat after fifteen years in Canada

The Ubyssey reserves the rightto edit letters for brevity ,grammar, legality and taste .

Letters should be typed, ifpossible, and triple spaced .

Letters to the editor can besent to The Ubyssey office in SU Bby Campus mail or can bedelivered personally .

without achieving anything I mayin the end leave . I pointed out tocouncil etc . that since I did fail toget any real number of student sinvolved e .g. in the idea ofsuggesting a meaningful Bill ofRights to the political partie sformulated as so called naturallaw (in essence not to be take naway again but amendable in formby qualified majorites) an dincluding the right to work andthe right to a guaranteed annualincome etc. I now wish to ge tsome money to get few thousandbooklets on this subject printed.This at least could still become areal service to this country — andthat perhaps after this work I mayleave if again I cannot find an ymeaningful work.

KARL BURAU

Editor, The Ubyssey, Sir :I am delighted to read that you

do love me. At least I do hopethat your editorial is correct asfar . Otherwise it is a bi tmisleading . But I most willinglyforgive this if only it is true that Ihave always been wrong in myimpression that your constan tfailure to mention ExperimentalCollege was due to your dislike o fme as a person as well as of mygoals . I also much enjoyed thesigns of sympathy shown to meby many students having read thatI am living. Though I am not asaint like Saint Joan, in a way Ifear that correcting your storymay bring about the same effect

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Page 6: PAGE 3: WHAT MAKES A SEPARATIST TICK UY$$EY · Ph. 224-612 1 Open Every Day 4:30 p.m. to 11 :30 p.m. U.B.C. Home Service Larry Brownlee, Prop. COMPLETE AUTOMOTIVE.SERVICE ON THE CAMPUS

Page 6

THE UBYSSEY

Friday, February 27, 1970

THE COMMUNITYHAS A RIGHT TO KNOW

The Canadianization campaign of CarletonUniversity professors Robin Mathews and Jame sSteele hit UBC this January when student senato rPeter Ladner simply asked the senate to authoriz ea study of the overall citizenship makeup o fprofessors here .

Here he talks with the two professors aboutthe reaction to their campaign at UBC and acros sCanada .

Ladner : First of all, what has been thereaction to your statements across Canada?

Mathew, : On May 17 at Sir George William sUniversity, students and faculty of ten universitie smet for an emergency symposium onde-Canadianization . They set up a steerin gcommittee to look at special Canadian problems ,and they 've since published a number of reports .

There are also individual universities doin gstudies .

Some Windsor undergraduate students havedone a study and presented it to the Ontariogovernment ; the Canadian Liberation Movemen thas started in Toronto and the University o fToronto graduate students' association ha spresented a brief to the university authoritie spressing for advertising of all jobs in Canada .

(Art Smolensky, UBC GSA president, haspresented a similar request to the UBC senate, bu tit has not come up for discussion yet) .

York University has had a lot of writing abou tthis in their newspaper, and some students ther ehave been pushing for a two-file system .

(This means the file on potential Canadia napplicants for any university position would b econsidered ahead of a second file, which woul dinclude all non-Canadians . )

Some members from the executive of theCanadian student Liberal association have phone dme asking for advice on studies they would like todo .

The Conservatives have brought this up in th efederal parliament, and our studies wer ementioned in the Watkins manifesto to the New?'Democratic Party convention .

In general I would say Canadian people ar emuch more aware of the situation now . We havealso constantly related the problem to the whol eproblem of American imperialism in Canada an dsensitized people to that issue .

Ladner : You wrote a book called "TheStruggle for Canadian Universities ." How well hasit been selling?

Steele : The 3,000 copies of the first printingsold out in a month and a half. The book has no wgone into second printing but I haven't hear danything more since then .

Ladner : At UBC, several faculty members sai dthis whole issue was a creation of the press ; thatthe press out here imported the whole argumen tfrom the east, where it was nothing but a flash i nthe journalistic pen .

Mathews: Those people clearly don' tunderstand the Canadian community . They live ina little ivory tower which they consider aninternational outpost .

Canadians right across the country are veryconcerned and are growing more concerned . We'vehad as many letters from B.C. as from any othe rprovince in Canada .

Ladner : Another objection raised here is thatthe total number of Americans in Canadianuniversities doesn't exced 20 per cent at the most ,and at UBC, the overall percentage simply isn'thigh enough to worry about .

Mathews : But look at the hiring figures for1968-69: 1,013 new professors came from theU .S ., 545 from the U .K., 722 from other foreigncountries, and only 362 from Canada .

The greatest influx of new teachers is fro mthe U.S . and their numbers are increasing, so theAmericans are primarily the problem .

They're especially concentrated in sensitiveareas like social sciences and humanities .

You also have to talk about Americanexpansion in all other areas of Canadian life .

Ladner : My motion in the senate was oppose dby one Canadian faculty member who probablyconsiders himself anti-imperialist, but who wa sthrown out of the U .S . during the McCarthy er aand is afraid that any stronger links between the

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S 60107—Liszt; Concerto No 1 & No 2 — S.Francois piano, Phil . Orch .

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Page 7: PAGE 3: WHAT MAKES A SEPARATIST TICK UY$$EY · Ph. 224-612 1 Open Every Day 4:30 p.m. to 11 :30 p.m. U.B.C. Home Service Larry Brownlee, Prop. COMPLETE AUTOMOTIVE.SERVICE ON THE CAMPUS

Friday, February 27, 1970

THE UBYSSEY

Page 7

university and the outside community could leadto government interference and the end of theuniversity as an effective critic of society .You'r easking for legislation to implement some of yourrecommendations : How would you answer him?

Mathews : Every community has the right t oknow the personnel patterns in its intellectualcentres . That must be public knowledge, period .

The Canadian people have not beenMcCarthyite people . They have a right to addres sthe problems in their own country, and while inthe U.S . it might lead to forms of McCarthyism ,there's no reason to believe in this in Canada .

Ladner : Have any studies been done that havefound a correlation between a scientists citizenshipand his research interests? I had a lot of troubl edefending the need for Canadian citizens in th esciences .

Steele : No studies have been done but everyscientist must select a particular problem on whic hhe works ; he must have a sense of priorities . Oneof his criteria is practical application to which hi sscientific research must be put . His results will b eutilized by one community or another .

For example, a biologist might have to decid ewhether he does research on the black fly or th etse-tse fly . If he were a Canadian he woul d

The Vancouver parks board has dropped itsconsideration of a beach road and marin edevelopment project on Point Grey beach .

Park board chairman Andy Livingston eindicated recently that the board is considering th edevelopment of a seawall, "like the one in Stanle yPark," he said .

The plan also calls for offshore sand dredging t oprovide fill for the new beach development .

"We hope that by raising the level of the beachagainst the cliffs, we can stop a greater part of theerosion currently going on at the cliffs," he said .

Erosion causes the cliff face to recede anestimated three inches per year .

Bach to the good old music .Audrey Johannesen plays JohannSebastian Bach and others.

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probably choose the black fly, not the tse-tse fly .We want to make sure the peculiarities of the

local situation are respected .

Ladner : You've been attacked in the east andyour ideas have been attacked here by those whofear a concern with the number of Canadia ncitizens in a faculty could lead to discriminatio nagainst non-Canadians .

Steele : Failure to examine in a scholarly wa ythe social and scientific problems at hand isanti-academic and anti-scientific .

What we 're proposing — an eventualtwo-thirds majority of Canadian citizens — woul dmean that Canadian universities would have th elargest percentage of foreign scholars of an yuniversity system in the world .

Ladner : But in some of the European

countries where citizenship is compulsory for an yfull-time posts, apparently they ' ve been raising alot of fuss to change that regulation .

Steele: I too am fundamentally opposed t othe American or European solution to ou rproblem . They have a chauvinistic premise which Ifind most unattractive and limited .

They want to keep out all foreigners . It's all amatter of striking a balance .

The parks board is attempting to arrange ameeting with provincial government officials t odiscuss a possible $400,000 grant for erosio ncontrol .

Vancouver Point Grey Social Credit MLAGarde Gardom said if the seawall followed thenatural contours of the cliffs, it would be atremendous asset in erosion control an daccessibility .

"The seawall would be for strollers andcylists—not cars . This would be a tremendou srecreational credit," he said .

A counter proposal, against the seawall, hasbeen mentioned, but no details have been released .

THE PRE - MEDICAL SOCIETY

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Dr. Pierce of the UBC Pathology Department DiscussesThe Future Course of Computerized Medicin e

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Page 8: PAGE 3: WHAT MAKES A SEPARATIST TICK UY$$EY · Ph. 224-612 1 Open Every Day 4:30 p.m. to 11 :30 p.m. U.B.C. Home Service Larry Brownlee, Prop. COMPLETE AUTOMOTIVE.SERVICE ON THE CAMPUS

Page 8

THE UBYSSEY

Friday, February 27, 1970

TACUY to clean lake and send bill to BennettBy LINDA HOSSI E

Premier W .A .C. Bennett may be presented with a bil lfor the cleaning up of Burnaby Lake this spring .

This is one of the strategies The Action Committe efor Unemployed Youth planned at a meeting Thursday .

The committee says it "exists not to add to th eexisting facilities for recruiting summer jobs, but t oexpose the limitations of these facilities and present amore accurate picture of the state of employment amon gyoung people in the context of prevailing economic

trends . "It has two basic plans of action for this summer .The project to clean up one of B.C .'s polluted lake s

and present the bill to Premier Bennett is one of these

plans ."This is what students can be doing and if Bennet t

doesn ' t give us jobs, this is what we 're going to do—an ddemand payment, " said Stuart Rush, law 3 .

The project is a voluntary one that will take plac e

immediately after exams .Members of TACUY are meeting with the Society fo r

Pollution and Environmental Control this weekend t ofinalize the location of the project .

The important thing is to get students involved, Rush

said ."The more students we can get involved in th e

project, the greater the potential will be for th egovernment to realize this is what students should b e

doing," he said ."The issue is not just pollution, but conservation an d

community action such as establishing drop-in centres fo r

transient youths, " Rush said .He said the committee plans to demand union rate s

of pay .

The second project planned by TACUY involve sleafletting the Manpower office .

Rush said that TACUY plans an "information picket "to "draw attention to the fact that Manpower can ' tprovide the jobs they say they can . "

"Transient youths may have to resort to pett ythievery in downtown stores to stay alive, unless jobs ca n

By ROBIN BURGESS

Indian spokesman, Harold Cardinal, author of "TheUnjust Society" will be the featured speaker of aweek-long program on Indians beginning Monday .

Only 24 years old, Cardinal is president of th eAlberta Indian Association and a nationally known criticof the government's policy towards his people .

He is scheduled to speak Thursday at noon in SUB

mall .Sponsored by Indian students on campus India n

Week gets underway Monday at 10 :30 a .m. in SUBauditorium with six short films including "Encounter wit hSaul Alinsky in Roma Reserve" .

The films will be re-run at 10 :30 Tuesday .In panel discussions throughout the week Indian

leaders, students and professionals will deal with differen taspects of the Indian situation .

Monday at 12 :30 in SUB auditorium Jean Albin, ateacher, Ron Hamilton, an anthropology teachingassistant at University of Victoria, Ben Paul, a councillor

be found," Rush said .

He said student involvement will accomplish the goa lof making more jobs .

"We see success in terms of the number of people -involved, not necessarily in the number of jobs . Jobs arejust one aspect of the demonstration," he said .

for Indian Affairs, and Ray Bobb from the Native Allianc efor Red Power will discuss topics ranging from th eanthropology of Indians to colonialism.

Tuesday, same time, in SUB ballroom, members o f

B .C . Chiefs and North American Brotherhood, JoeMathias, Bernard Charles, Philip Paul, Wilbur Campbell ,and Don Moses, will describe the effects of economic an dpolitical legislations on the lives of the Indian people .

Noon Wednesday, in Angus 110, a panel on India neducation is planned, featuring Jocelyn Wilson fro m"Think Indian", Evelyn Paul, Gerry Larkin from NARP ,

and Angie Todd, a teacher .Indian young people Bob Hall, Larry Seymour, Ke n

Basil, Bill Wilson, Henry Jack, and Ron Hamilto n(members of the Native Youth Association) will make u pthe final panel Friday at noon in Angus 110 .

Indian Week comes to a grand close Friday night at 8

p .m. with a Benefit Dance at the New Indian Centre o n

the corner of Third and Vine . The dance is from 8 pm t omidnight and admission is $1 .

Well-known author, Harold Cardina lfeatured speaker during Indian week

THERE'S STILL TIMEWin aW~ek-End

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PLUS EXCITING EXTRA PRIZESEVERY WEEK : Dinner for two atHy's Steak House — Canucks Hockey ticketsfor two — Evening for two at Oil Can Harry's —Evening for two at the Daisy — Dinner for tw oat the Grouse Nest .

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Page 9: PAGE 3: WHAT MAKES A SEPARATIST TICK UY$$EY · Ph. 224-612 1 Open Every Day 4:30 p.m. to 11 :30 p.m. U.B.C. Home Service Larry Brownlee, Prop. COMPLETE AUTOMOTIVE.SERVICE ON THE CAMPUS

THE HEROIN ACCOUN T

THE AGENC YThe Agency had no definite beginning. It

occurred, reoccurred and is still occurring . Longbefore it came to be known as The Agency, it wasgrowing out of chance meetings, casual introduction sand brief conversations . Coffee was ordered ,cigarettes offered, taxis taken, plane ticket spurchased, names forgotten and faces remembered .Gradually, in different places at different times, i tacquired the name of The Agency with fluctuatin gdegrees of irony . The Agency is as difficult to fix i nspace as it is in time . It is composed of men andwomen who, insofar as they are associated, are for al lpractical purposes faceless and anonymous . In thei rfunction as associates, they permeate the blank gre ylandscape of our lives : offices, suburban homes ,telephone directories, highways, newspapers, th eairwaves . The Agency has no charters, no contracts ,no shareholders, no board meetings, no hierarchy o fcommand . It is not connected with any business o rpolitical interests and has no ambitions in thosefields . It makes no profits and pays no salaries . I tconsiders itself independent and neutral . Having noulterior motives, it can accept no credit for the resultsof its work : the work itself is both means and end, it sown reason for being what it is . It is the work itsel fwhich best defines The Agency.

THE HEROIN ACCOUN TRecently, The Agency took upon itself a difficul t

assignment : what has jokingly been referred to a s"The Heroin Account ." The problem, stated in itsbare essentials, is to involve a significantly largenumber of the populace in the use of the drug heroin .The Agency fully realized the difficulties of this

assignment : the use of heroin is widely frownedupon, even by many of those employing it . It wa sdecided that the first step would be to arrest ,minimize and eventually nullify the initial automati cnegative reaction to the mere mention of the drug . Todo this, it would be imperative to take into ful laccount the major and most resistent component o fthat negative reaction : the fact that heroin isdefinitely addicting . It is not enough to make theimmediate effects of the drug attractive :instantaneously and almost unconsciously thelong-term effects would be invoked and the entir esubject rejected . An approach that describes heroin asa pleasant and desirable experience and implies thatminimal use will preclude addiction was considered t obe not only clumsy and insulting to the intelligenc ebut in fact harmful, resulting only in the doubling o fthe negative reaction . It was therefore decided totreat addiction as an integral part of heroin use and i twas further decided that it would be naive to mak eheroin use and accompanying addiction merel yattractive . To make something appear attractiveimplies an appeal, to some degree, to the element o fchoice. Such an appeal could only weaken th eposition of The Agency . Thus it was determined toremove heroin use from the realm of choice and plac eit squarely in the realm of inevitability . What we nowhave is not an appeal but a challenge : a directconfrontation with the fact of the drug and th egradual accustoming of the public to the inevitabilityof their addiction . It will become apparent that theonly thing separating the public from heroi naddiction is the actual use of the drug and that usewill not be far behind .

SAMPLE APPROACHE S1 . I'm a heroin addict . That's right . You know of

anything better to do? (And don't fool yourself. )2. I'm a heroin addict . The only difference between

you and me is that you're not . Yet .3. The only good thing about heroin is that yo u

know it's the only good thing .4. Heroin means business . How about you ?5. Heroin is definitely an addicting drug . So yo u

know exactly what you're getting into . Howmany other things can you say that about ?

6. You can say all the bad things you want abou theroin . You can say them over and over again .And when you're finished it'll still be therewaiting for you . It can wait a long, long time .

7. Heroin doesn't give you freedom . It doesn't giv eyou truth or beauty or anything like that . It justgives you itself—heroin—and you know that' swhat you've really wanted all along .

8. The thing about heroin is that you get exactl ywhat you ask for . All you have to do is ask .

9. Heroin . Go ahead . Say it . Think it . Heroin . It' sthat simple.

PRESS RELEAS EIn presenting the sample approaches above, Th e

Agency wishes to stress that it is in no way connectedwith organizations or individuals currently o rpotentially engaged in the production, distribution o rsale of heroin . Its purpose in this press release i ssimply to acquaint the public with the existence o fThe Agency and its relationship with The Heroi nAccount . As we have stated, the work itself is th ebest definition of The Agency and the work i ssufficient to itself . In keeping with this, it will beobvious that the press release you are now reading isanother aspect of our work on The Heroi nAccount . The inevitability of the fact that someone,somewhere, should finally take up this Account i squite clear .

J

They Laughed When I Sat DownAt the Piano

But When I Started to Play !

page Friday

.I ~

"Can he really play?" a girl whispered . "Heavens, no/"Arthur exclaimed. "He never played a note in his life . "

Buncha fuckballs anyway this week smasthead is brought to you my the grea tinfamous egregious michael guiggle sthoroughly inebriated as he is and also withthe occasionally hlp of a(why the hell doesn tthis damn typewriter work)orbert rubesaa tand timothy (artist) wilson .

OK. First of all we'll telllll you what's inthis issue just in case you8ve read this far .(Look out Wilson, I'm doing my masterpiec eof a masterhead) on Page oNe we have thegreat work of art above and the great work o fart below (this) . One page Two three (tw othat is) we present the sinclair-DICKin reportwith none other than one of those dirt ycotton-pickin flax-eating mothahumpahscommie ratfinks sonfoabichth (etc.) whoinflict our daily campus existence in inconversation with our notorious duo . On pagethree Musical Grum Lbings by meself and als otougas who poops on a ,film of somewhatrepute (it even got a hype in playbo ymagaizeine which as we all know is cool since

it shows tits and ass and also) On pabe (that' spage for those who you not accusto ed t ofollowing typgoraphical erreurs) it ya (pagefour) it ya sur la quatrieme page et aussi sur l apage cinquieme quelque chose par M . Norber tRubetoob queeque chose sur le phenomeno nde M. John Julianai, un tres grosse sTheatrefreaken-glogekengl-uggenheimerschlatz . Read it anyway just incase youve misunderstuud what weve writtn eso fir : more mystery or page five in the nam eof mystery which norbie that rubetobe ha sforbidden me of which to speke . On thesixieme page frederico cawsey hed wop an dgreaseb all for this here organization you dirtyrat has his say about a film which has caugh this frivelous fancy . Page seven finds what is i tneswswsws of the contemporary arts withou ta capital f festival because of which somethin gyouall (Y'all) should be very aware so RED EREDE REDE READ YES////////////!!!!!!!!!! !And to grand organsmic climax this weaksissue for yall on page eight are two record

reviews by maurice liohs gate bridge and ji mraving fiend davies accomapnied by art b ytimothy (artist)wilson which causy calls als o

And((parkagraph) for the general layabou tand lays Id like to lay and stuff heres som equotable quotes (only twenty inches or is i tfive left) for all you masthead freeks //!!!!!!!!!!'7 wuit ; avjfk w9ti u

"Ask Roger the Roach to Instal CleanTowel" : "You don't have any feeling fo rolder people ." : "What's worthwhile besidesmoney?" : "Crispy critter" : "I think I'll gosodomize one of the linotype machines ." :"Do whatever you want I don ' t give a shit!" :"He's just an editor, not god" . "He was th easshole of the earth ." : "You can't fire m eFinlay, I quit!" : "(Nober yoger yodels i nimitation of Swiss goathedrd)"

gosh only_ one ich left well goodbye t obrunn degarde the mountain girl, jan ,meatball vat, good firl Susie and all the res t(who else remains?) a host of consecratedothers . . . mjg feb 25 1970 11 :25,25" PM .

Page 10: PAGE 3: WHAT MAKES A SEPARATIST TICK UY$$EY · Ph. 224-612 1 Open Every Day 4:30 p.m. to 11 :30 p.m. U.B.C. Home Service Larry Brownlee, Prop. COMPLETE AUTOMOTIVE.SERVICE ON THE CAMPUS

Interview with

W. B. Sinclair(Reprinted from issue 2 of

THE STUDENT-PROLETARIAT SENTINEL .)

NOTE : G. Dickin, who conducted th einterview, is editor of The Student-ProletariatSentinel, official organ of the Maoist StudentMovement. W. B . Sinclair is Chairman of th eMaoist Student Movement, a new campu ssocialist organization .

Dickin : How will you go about smashing th ecapitalist-imperialist pigs ?Sinclair : They must be eradicated . We will linethem up against a wall and riddle their bodie swith socialist bullets . That is participator ydemocracy at its best .Dickin : Does that include the sympathizers, thatis, the lackeys of the imperialists, or will you givethese people who are, for the most part ,misguided and brainwashed, a chance to redee mthemselves through indoctrination an dassimilation into the student-proletariat societywith open arms and brotherly love .Sinclair : No, we'll slaughter them all . They hadtheir chance before the revolution . We're beingfairly reasonable now with them, but if theydon't reform before the bomb of socialismscatters the rotten meat of th ecapitalist-bourgeois society from the bones ofcivilization, then that's their tough luck .Dickin : That sounds fair .Sinclair : Damn right .Dickin : How do you see the students' role i nthe revolution ?Sinclair : The proletariat, when Marx was writing ,was the hope of society, but in North Americ athey have abused their opportunity to create abrave new world, and have instead joined th ebourgeoisie and capitalists in the greedy pursui tof luxury . The students, as Mao ha sdemonstrated, in his Great Leap Forward, ar enow the hope of socialism . The students are th eonly ones left to grab the axe and bury it in th emonstrous head of the capitalist society .Dickin : Then the proletariat has copped out an dbecome lackeys of the imperialists ?Sinclair : There are a few who remember thedifference between right and wrong, but manyhave fallen down before the altar of theAlmighty Dollar . You must see that a classsociety is the Opiate of the People .Dickin : What do you believe to be the greatestdifficulty in bringing about the revolution ?Sinclair : We've got the bombs, and we've got th eguns and ammunition, but what we really need ispeople to throw the bombs and people to shootthe guns. We also need to have connections i nhigh places .Dickin : How many students do you believe reall ysupport the struggle,- and how many hide behin dthe skirts of the lackeys?Sinclair : Last month we handed outquestionnaires to the students reading : "Do yo ureally support the struggle?" The results werefifty-fifty . One proposed reason for the result sbeing so high is that we distribute dquestionnaires only to members of the MAOIST

STUDENT MOVEMENT . The reason the resultswere so low is because many of them thought i twas an exam, and guessed at the answer .Dickin : I see . Will this have any effect on you rplanning?Sinclair : The revolution is next month .Dick in : There are certain factions which sugges tthat you have been moving too quickly .Sinclair : They will eliminated after th erevolution .Dickin : Your group has been criticized by certainrevisionist lackeys as being too extreme . Do youthink these pigs have a point ?Sinclair : They're entitled to their opinions, Isuppose . We'll eliminate them after therevolution, too .Dickin : You earlier mentioned contacts in hig hplaces . Do you feel you have any influence a tthis point over any levels of government? That is ,do you have anyone planted in the rottin gstructure of capitalist bureaucracy ?Sinclair : Well, we planted a bomb in the PostOffice last week, but it didn't go off. We suspec tthat the Post Office probably damaged it inhandling.Dickin : You can't trust crummy capitalis tmaterials, anyway .Sinclair : True . Very, very, true . They're a bunchof cheap shoddy materials made by exploite dworkers . . .Dickin : Who are being exploited byblood-sucking bosses, lackeys of the imperialists ,stooges of the capitalists . . .Sinclair : They're nothing but a bunch of AMShacks —Dickin : They don't represent the people !Sinclair : Nor the students !Dickin : Puppets! Puppets! Lackeys! Runnin gdogs of the imperialists! Servants of th ecorporate structure !Sinclair : It's a Military-Industrial Complexsucking the marrow from our bones, it's a CIAconspiracy . They're barnyard pigs, oinking at th eAlmighty Dollar, their sun and moon !Dickin : They're puppets! Puppets! I tell you ,Puppets !Sinclair : Worms! Snakes in the grass! Howlinghypocrites! Hyenas! Hunchbacked Camels !Lunatics petrified by the moon of capitalism !Dickin : Lackeys of the imperialists !Sinclair : Maggots! Grub-worms! Lackeys !Puppets! Running dogs of the imperialists !Caterpillars with no chance for butterflyhood !Dickin : Gutter-Press! Gutter-Press !Sinclair : Irrational mDickin : When the red, red sun of Ma oTse-Tungs's revolution rises in the east over theblackened earth of the capitalist Babylon, thelackey pigs and their running dogs will bedesiccated !Sinclair : Students of the world, unite! You hav enothing to lose but your AMS cards! Long livethe revolution !Dickin : Argghgghgaspargh !

of 2W0

"Accretio nPiece " — acelebration ofthe opening ofthe Fine ArtsGallery SoundShow by GathieFalk. (TapePiece)

VARSITY AUTOMOTIVE SERVIC EJACK REID — JIM SMIT H

A Complete Automotive Servic eGovernment Certified Mechanic s

33 Years at This Location

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Open Nights

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DAYSA WEE K

INCLUDING SUNDAY S

ON GRANVILL EORFHEUM THEATRE 685-0405 9

PLAYHOUSE THEATRE CO .

An Evening with Bernard Shaw and The Ladies

A DOUBLE BILL INCLUDIN G

VILLAGE WOOING and DEAR LIAR

8 :30 Nightly to March 6 — Sat. Mat. 2 :30

QUEEN ELIZABETH PLAYHOUSE

PLAYHOUSE 2 — THE CRIMINAL SDirected by John Julian ;

THE ARTS CLUB THEATRE — 1181 SEYMOU RTHE CRIME — Mar. 2, 4, 5, 9, 10, 13, 14, 18, 1 9

THE PUNISHMENT — Mar . 3, 6, 7, 11, 12, 1'6, 17, 20, 2 1

STUDENTS HALF PRICE — Monday to Thursda y

VANCOUVER TICKET CENTRE — 683-3x5 5

RUSSIAN BALALAIKAOrchestra ConcePt

SATURDAY, FEB. 28, 9 P.M.

SUNDAY, MARCH 1, 2 P.M.

EXCITIN GENTERTAINMENT

Concert selection sfrom works of

Classical and Russia nComposers

Serge Lusgins, Directo r

RUSSIAN COMMUNITY CENTRE2114 West 4th Avenue

General Admission $2 .00Students & Members $1 .50

THE

UBYSSEY

Friday, February 27, 1970

Page 11: PAGE 3: WHAT MAKES A SEPARATIST TICK UY$$EY · Ph. 224-612 1 Open Every Day 4:30 p.m. to 11 :30 p.m. U.B.C. Home Service Larry Brownlee, Prop. COMPLETE AUTOMOTIVE.SERVICE ON THE CAMPUS

being yet another casual, (ho hum )

put-down of a glossy film by pf' s

quick K. Tougas.

filmic mediocrityZ is a nice, simple, spelled-out commercial film without an y

political relevant significance (or if any, it is ultimatel yreactionary in its form ; high-gloss American Bpicture evasion) .Equivalent to the innumerable books resulting from the Joh nKennedy assassination, this film describes very little and teache snothing . Such is sensationalism . . . Z is dishonest .

Firstly it builds heroes .Gregoria Lambrakis, deputy of the Left Democratic Union ,

then the Opposition party in Greece, met his death at a rally i n

1963 . Resting on the laurels of his role in Resnais' La guerre estfinie, Yves Montand—as this deputy—strengthens a nice-guy simage. Mild-mannered revolutionary, impeccably dressed, he

speaks calmly about peace, lack of hosiptals/doctors, absur dmilitary budgets, lack of universitites/professors . . . Hence in afilm intended for the market of "democratic " countries, Montan dproposes an iconic image everyone can identify with .

So this man, in no way extravagant or radical, in no waydifferent from quiet, acceptable liberal views, bravely venture sinto the seething crowd, and is mortally struck—Sympathy . . .

The major hero appears, Jean-Louis Trintignant, theequivalent of an investigating attourney . He is the clean-cut ,silent, incorruptable, dedicated detective on his journey into th elabyrinth of dirt . He is a formalist hero in the Western tradition,

Gary Cooper style in High Noon. You are invited by the directo rto fervently, reverently and silently cheer him on—for h erepresents that everpresent search for justice, truth, fairness an dmoral honesty (exploited from Perry Mason onwards)—as h eunravels the mechanics of the assassination .

Next comes a civilian witness who dares come forward tospeak the truth, gets hit over the head, and ends up in a hospita lward by himself. Otherwise he has a workshop where he varnishe scoffins, and is such a nice guy you're supposed to sympathiz ewith him and his icepack. That's not enough . . . well how abou twe laugh with him? . . . So the corrupt cops appear and tell hi mhe's imagining things . Then mamma appears and wails, followe d

by sister who theatrically emotes for five minutes. Our hero ,buoyant Mediterranean, is amusingly baffled . Journalist appear swith camera, so he excitedly hams it up . . . a front-page picture ,why, he's going to be famous . . . Laughter ad nauseum .

Irene Papas portrays the wife of the murdered deputy . Sh eturns up, overhears the doctors relating the harsh medical facts ,and heroically holds back her tears . Later she returns to herhusband's hotel room and emotes longly . Thus having bee nsympathized with, she leaves the film .

Secondly there are the bad guys .These, instead of black hats, mostly wear medals . The

opening scene reveals them in a clumsy dialogue comparing thecontrol of mildew and ideological control . Nasty . . particularlythat comparision of people and grapevines .

After a hackneyed line reminiscent of Guess Who's Comingto Dinner in which Montreal is generously spelled-out as anOlympic champion, doctor, and university professor, a faction ofthe yelling demonstrators call him a fairy . So it's really morallyOK, you see, for the film director to continue to use the samewhipping boy when he comes to describe the killer . Like, he's akiller—not nice ; also a homosexual . . . well everybody knowshow nasty that is . . . And after an explicit scene, if you stil ldidn't get the point, the killer visits a male journalist-friend whobashfully insists "No, I can't . . . No, I'm busy . . ." Still don't ge tit? Next the film follows him to a bar where this young man i sworking a pinball machine . Our killer slips his hand over theguy's . and helps him push buttons . . . Very, very nasty .

Then, as if previous caricaturization of the bad-guy militarywasn't enough, their indictment is represented as a waltz yburlesque : going in one door, being accused (hick raising of

con 't on pf5—see INSIGNIFICANCE

Musical Diarrhea

By MICHAEL QUIGLE YThe following is a carefully contrive d

hype to get you to attend som e'contemporary musical events occurringon campus within the next two weeks .

First of all, the events in the MusicBuilding itself. As of today, you 'vemissed two of these : a piano recital byMontrealers Bruce Mather and PierretteLePage which was fairly uncontemporaryexcept for William Bolcom's boring NightMusic and Henri Pousseur's Mobile pour 2pianos . The latter piece was interesting inoverall structure, apparently a kind ofimprovisation between the two players .And on Wednesday last was a recital bystudent composers Anita Sleeman ,Gordon Lucas, Steven Gidora, andMichael Trew .

Coming events, all of which are tree ,include SFU composer Murray Schafer

talking on Soundscapes, which willpresumably be a tape piece performe dbefore his rappings . That takes place nex tMonday at 12 :30 .

On Tuesday at 4 :30 is contemporar ypercussion music by Colgrass, Shoaff ,Sleeman, Heney, and Sieve, and onWednesday at the same time chambe rpieces by Ibert, Rochberg, Fortner ,Wilson, and also including Rounds (fo rtwo harpsichords) by Luciano Berio an dHenri Pousseur's Madrigal Two for fou rancient instruments .

On Thursday at 4 :30 music to beheard includes piano music bytwelve-tone fiend Arnold Schoenberg ,UBC hexachord advocate Barry Trua xand Gordon Lucas, another UBC student .Also included is an improvisatory vocalpiece by Brian Hoover.

Climaxing the musical week will be arecital on Friday at noon which include sboth taped and live performances . Tape dpieces include Barry Truax' Children ,Terrestrial Fire By Ross Barrett, and Iconfor Organ and Tapes, a new four-tracktape-with-organ piece by Lloyd Burritt,former UBC Composition Major who hashad several of his pieces performed by theVancouver Symphony . Soloist for theUBC premiere will be Hugh McLean .Other works on the Friday recital willinclude LGames for Three Players byMichael Longton and A Light Blue Mythby Karl Kobylansky. The latter piece willbe probably written "the night before "according to its composer .

So GO!!!! All the above take place inthe Music Building Recital Hall .

Also associated with th eContemporary Arts Festival and music i sthe sound display-exhibition currently inthe Fine Arts Gallery which runs til lMarch 14 .

Unfortunately, some awkwardcircumstances are putting a damper o nthe exhibit . The people studying nearbyin the stacks as well as the AnthropologyMuseum people next door have beencomplaining about the noise, so thevolume levels of the cassettes and tapemachines in use have been considerabl yreduced, which seems ridiculous in vie wthat this is a sound show .

Go down and browse nevertheless .Most of the tape recorder displays com eequipped with earphones which help scompensate for the lack of overallvolume, even though it would be nice tohave a new soundproofed art gallery moreadequate than the presen tinconvenience-oriented space that GalleryCurator Alvin Balkind and his crew hav eto contend with .

* * *When I first saw the sixteen-year old

jazz pianist Craig Hundley on TV, I wa sfaintly impressed by his abilities — even abit jealous . However, after listening to hisrecent and third record album —Rhapsody in Blue (World Pacific) — it' ssomewhat apparent that Hundley's"talents" (if one could call them that )are being diverted in strange ways .

Take a look at the cover, for example ,where Hundley is being pushed as aclean-cut junior Glen Campbell of thepiano . See him with his Pepsodent smile

and his brand new George Gershwinsweatshirt .

Musically speaking, the would-bewunderkind emerges like Peter Nero ,rattling off cocktail-muzak tunes with asledgehammer touch. Adding to theeffect are some incredibly thi narrangements obviously inspired by th eworst back-ups of artists like Nero, Roge rWilliams, and Ferrante and Teicher . Hearthe insipid guitar dribblings, the swoopingviolins (there must be at least six ofthem), the gimmickly drumming, and thestatic brass outbursts .

Hundley's solo work is swamped as aresult . He also seems incapable of playin ga slow tune (there are about five minute sof un-up tempo music on the album) .

Poor Craig Hundley . It would be nic eto see him grow up to have even a bit o fBill Evans' jazz piano talents instead o fbecoming a momma's boy Liberace .

* * *GENERAL RAVINGS : Murray

Schafer's new electronic-with-orchestr apiece The Divan of Shams i Tabritz, wil lbe world premiered by the Vancouve rSymphony on March 8 and 9. Accordingto one advance rumour, the orchestra o nthis occasion will be divided up int othirteen sections which are scattere daround the Queen Elizabeth Theatre, on eof which is reportedly in the middle o fthe lower orchestra seats . More about thisnew work in next week's PageTuesday . . .the Georgia Straight willpossibly include its second popsupplement next week . . . the BeachBoys and Paul Revere tonight at theQueeniE — don't forget, nostalgia freaks !

p~ 3hreeFriday, February 27, 1970

THE UBYSSEY

Page 12: PAGE 3: WHAT MAKES A SEPARATIST TICK UY$$EY · Ph. 224-612 1 Open Every Day 4:30 p.m. to 11 :30 p.m. U.B.C. Home Service Larry Brownlee, Prop. COMPLETE AUTOMOTIVE.SERVICE ON THE CAMPUS

—John Juliani

consider my self "radical" in a theatrical, not a politica lsense . Political theatre is limited because it is invariabl ysomehow propagandistic, and often only topically relevant .

The `Revolution' — if we want to call it that — that I am workin gfor, is an emotional, a visceral one, seen in terms of ne wawareness and enlightenment ; not a political takeover . "

With these works, - Vancouver's "young", "radical" stagedirector John Juliani began telling me about his fairly persona lbrand of theatre : the kind of thing he is trying to project in hi sSAVAGE GOD productions, in his production of Jose Triana' sThe Criminals as guest director for the Playhouse 2, and finally ,actually, in his everyday life .

The man obviously — as I felt from the beginning of ou rdiscussion — has a kind of "all-inclusive" vision which one

JULIAthe regular proponents of strebecause his kind of revolutionalwhole human being, and not ju;statement .

"And furthermore," he ccbe able to dismiss me on the btown standards, they will have -"good" — and that will make iwhat I am saying ."

RELIGIOUContinually, throughout

Juliani's artistic vision, and his c n

on me. We talked about the adritual ; about his vision of a thea levent "just grabs you and pul lbiological-emotional revolutionintense awareness ; about the ac"enlightenment" of being trul yself, goes forth and "annointexperience ; about the theatre nnot just for an evening, but tinthings .

Since coming down fro gJuliani has been trying diligen talive, and working in this w:theatre at the Art Gallery th rmust be free because it is a feconsumer product" — and receivfor his efforts . . And consiste nfanatical dedication from his ac t

"Only through this kin dwill the actors truly master th'

unfortunately does not often find among todays so-calledprofessional" artists. He is no "established" director holdin g

down a job (like everyone else) but rather . . ." . . . the actor should be, I think, always a kind of priest .

He takes upon himself the collective inabilities — freely given —of the audience, and acts them out to completion . In this sens ethe theatrical experience becomes a kind of therapy for the whol ehuman being."

"I want the audience to be totally, biologically involved inwhat ' s happening on stage . "

The stage transcends pure politics .

COMMANDO THEATR E

Juliani came here from the. National Theatre School to ge tinvolved in the "exciting" artistic/educational experiment in th eCommunications Center at SFU. (when that institution was stillfresh) . His actual reputation as a "radical" stems from his tim ethere . . . until he was silently shoved off the mountain by th euptight administration . His main attacks then — and now — wer edirected against, as he put it "mediocrity of any kind" . Heconsistently refused to compromise himself in his idea of thi s

engaging, religious theatre, and thus ran inevitably int o

opposition from. the academic establishment at SFU, and thedowntown theatre establishment now.

"Most established theatre today is not emotionally relevant .Contempory theatre must deal with things, forces, happeningnow — regardless of when the play was written . It must be

topical . "What Juliani envisions — and is trying to achieve with his

Savage God group — is a kind of "commando-street theatre "which goes around and zaps minds . Again in more a religious thanpurely political sense . And in this process, there is an educationa lthing happening on all sides :

"The actor must develop his `craft' to perfection, he mustbecome extremely self-aware before presuming to step out ontothe stage in front of an audience . He communicates thi sself-awareness — through the medium of his entire self — to th eaudience in his role ."

In his idea of "craft" Juliani thus departs somewhat fro m

Apt flour

THE UBYSSEY

Friday, February 27, 197 0

. . . be sure to see Juliani's presentation of Cuban lose Triana's "th

Arts Club on Seymour — choose "maximum vulnerability" to tens e

opening Monday the 2nd to March 21 . "You must involve yourself on

the whole play!"

On this intense religiou :being merely an intensifica tmarried Donna Wong. Th

"performed" in the VancouSavage God production . An au

"You see John has thi:commented to me .

THE C"I don't think either, tt

by working for the Playhou:about his production of Thewill not be free — this is corn"prove" yourself to a pay iFurthermore, The Criminals_thing . . . "although I will doJuliani sees this production, vof a test case, a challenge t otheatre can work.

The play is admirably tcontemporary Cuban playwriin itself) and the play itselensconced in an attic ,frustrations against various auobviously at work here to ovengeance upon parents, tealpoint of view already a sta gwhether they have "actually despecially when, in the secon cfor their alleged actions .

The play thus a €"contemporary issues" as -"contemporary catch-phrase ."Revolution", "The Need fo r

`VULN IJuliani has already bega t

production . For "proper tran sinto two parts playing on cliff

Busoni. No, It's not food; Wsfood for thought. Pianist AudreyJohannesen plays Busoni, Bach,Bartak, Chopin and others; noo ntoday., SUB Aud. Admission 50c.

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Supine on the thick belt . She carries a whip - waits at thecorner -- open win dow grey shawl candy floss clouds oozing awhite plate the two women set the city — Loud and sudde noverture rearing viscous mass over leather jock . A phallus of thesame the roof — reach the stillness before a handful - open awound — skeleton dances . moving her bones . — gallons o fopalescent appear, dressed in shiny black plastic — neon pours i nslow barrage of electric guitars --- colored orange grey trance —mist floats away on blood — old dream leaving end of the musicfloats away on engines, the fish continue to twist — the drumme rfor Mexico — the fire cut the spinal cord — put his old drea muntil they 'explode — nothing was burning -- like a mechanism, arobot . The car stops screeching seeing the foam cover everyone —the Pope of rubber — the intersection is now — everyone exist sbut me empty — you can ' t fly — always get excrutiating hymn .Slowness — wont — clear your force I rip out a pigs foot —intersection points please immense white hands throw me yo u— get back to me — shabby man become the the hea dapproaching the wet concrete where I felt my body ; — a corpse i nthe shape of blank faces lift shovels . His overcoat like circlingaround a dead planet — I feel likeflickeringlayers of yellow fil moverexposed — desire to see for thousands of years . Black policecar — in Spite of the violence, the man waits at the corner - bot hat once . We can control an old man with white, black, pink an dsilver women — a cane seems intent mixed with dust it forms .She was practised in -- I begin to be born . Cries of a womangiving birth — the art of deception . Lady with two Catherin eHarley models, strangers to everything child tampers with th ecross . The crucified fire alarm box — letter in decaying hands —clams, I type them on my chest like two living crosses on ston yocean floor — yellow sun — she dances inside over dissolvingchurch — images on glass — he gets free from the plastic strip. Heexits .

Layers of reflection — these words - -these sound like thoseof a baby or old man — words are not me - eye shattered ingiving me life, the woman had thrown death to irretrievabl e

pieces — corner 7th and Bullard dirty husky dog — pavement —black Iiterature oozing cobalt the black paint suggests acremation ; my own death hate and blindness .

Insignificance con 't

eyebrows, phony expressions all designed for laughter) andleaving by another door to a loose musical tune . Still don't ge tthe point? Well, an indicated general is questioned bynewspaperman "Do you believe yourself to be a victim of judicia lerror, like Dreyfus?" Close-up of amusingly furious face ofgeneral : "Dreyfus was guilty" . Knowledgeable guffaws from theaudience . Long shot of general wiping his brow .

Thirdly there is dishonest omission .Where are the people? Where is the massive vigilant powe r

of populist support which made possible any enquiry by aninvestigating attorney—the people who ultimately ousted th eCaramanlis government? Where are the thousands of individual swho inscribed the thousands of letters "Z" (the first letter of aGreek word signifying "he lives") inscribed across the countrysid ewhich ultimately made this film possible?

I recall an incident where a small group paints the mark o na roadway . After that, they are forgotten and the film continue sits sentimental duel between heroes and villiains .

Fourthly, as I have pointed out previously, Z is dishoneststylistically. It is a game where the spectator is invited to applau dhimself as the victories of Montand and Trintignant fill th escreen . When the final few minutes appear describing the death s

and disappearances of all the main witnesses in the case, and therelatively light sentences received by the killer, its form develop sas a fleeting charade as though in jest .

And then comes a remarkable opportunity for the audienc eto pat itself on the back as it leaves the theatre . A list of thingsbanned by the military junta rolls across the screen (includin glong hair, mini skirts, Albee, Pinter, Sociology, Beckett, Ne wMath, Tolstoy, Trotsky, etc., etc .) and the spectator proudl y

realizes that his "democratic" country permits all these things . . .A final point : At the San Francisco Film Festival a loca l

anti-government Greek distributed handbills calling his "Fellowfree men" (those who had just given the film a standing ovation )to join him in a demonstration outside the Greek Consulate .Armed with hundreds of placards for the expected supporters, h eappeared at the appropriate time and place . Not one personshowed up . Commitment out the window. (Significantly th e

Academy Awards are receiving the film under their auspices . )Thus Z is a film painstakingly constructed to manipulat e

identification and to eke out fake sympathetic emotion—a lous ypolitical film and a passable American thriller complete with ga-ga

Ill lR CRIMINALeatre, guerrilla theatre, etc . ,Satre is directed towards thedemonstration of a political

aes, "I don't want people t of lack of craft . Even on thei rtept my kind of theatre asn harder for them to accep t

EATREtalk, the religious basis ofit of theatre, impressed itsel frigins of theatre in religiou stival, in which the theatrica l"away with it" — again thesrocess to a - new land oflest who, having gained theto communicate his entire

ople during the theatrica lualizing, demythologizing us ,aut our days . . . Beautifu l

rnaby Mountain last May ,keep his Savage God grou p

has been presenting- fre egut this winter — "Theatr ea public celebration, not afinancial return whatsoeve re demands a total, almostwhat they are doing .fanatical committmen trt. "

Crime" and Part II "The Punishment" . People will therefore hav eto come on two evenings to see the whole play . This was, Julianiindicated, to extend the theatrical action beyond a typica lone-evening- entertainment-package kind of thing and more int othe festive — longer time and wider space — event we were talkin gabout previously .

Furthermore, tickets will be sold on the basis of minimum ,medium, and maximum vulnerability, defined by the degree ofexposure to the play, in terms of the physical outlay of the Art sClub .

"The idea is," Juliani outlined, "To give people theopportunity to make a decision about how much they want t oget involved . For instance, minimum vulnerability could mean th eparticular specatator will watch the whole thing through akeyhole, or from behind some pipes ; whereas maximum

involvement position could put him right in the middle of what' shappening."

It is an effort to break down the whole idea of an audience ,watching something else . The entire Arts Club will be the "attic "(a kind of "private retreat" which John refers to as a"macrocosmic brain" — i .e . constantly rearranging itself) andeveryone will be a participant in what's going on .

"Originally I wanted to fracture the audience, fractureperception, to the point of having no one viewer seeing any othe ronlooker . . . but this turned out to be only partly possible as aresult of space limitations . "

In order to extend his play beyond a purely "theatrical "mileau and— again into a more total, all-inclusive lif ething, Juliani has invited various "outside" people from differen tfields — social workers, psychiatrists, teachers, writers, etc . — t oparticipate in rehearsals and, through communication with th eactors, become instrumental in the final productiion .

The Criminals is of course also not restricted in range

merely to the Arts Club . A recently received press release informsme that . . . "a commando raid was made on David Thompso nSchool on the 19th of February . A spokesman from 118 1Seymour Street stated that all members (of the cast) and Directo rreturned safely to base ."

(Members of the Criminals were also seen by this reporte rdemonstrating and making "a scene" outside the reverre dPlayhouse Theatre on opening night of the Shaw play two week sago .)

And who knows, they may be loose anywhere ; appear atany time . Watch for them !

After talking with Juliani, seeing the kind of urgency an dcommitment he is putting into this — an "ostensibly officiall ynormal Playhouse 2 production" -- I would definitely sugges tthat, if everything pans out even half successfully, this could b eone. of the finest farthest out theatre events to happen this year .

(In contrast to loud rumours heard throughout especiall yyounger circles these days, theatre is, as John Juliani put it ,"Alive .")

pf Sive

lminals" at thenatic action —evenings to see

life and art seem to fuse ; onethe other . Juliani recently

tual" marriage ritual wa s

rt Gallery as a " theatrical "was in attendance .about life and art," Donna

JALSwe compromised myself now(s John as we begin talkin ggals . Unfortunately, the play1 theatre, where you have tothence and are vulnerable .

"officially" a Savage Go dame things I normally do .".e was asked to direct, as sorthat his kind of experimental

Jose Triana, the author is ahich is, I suppose, 'nuff sai d

with three young people ,1 , about and act out theirfigures . The life-art thing is

a the kids "act out" theirtc . — on what is, from our+e are are never quite surese represented things or not :they put themselves on tria l

r articulates such stockthered under such stoc k

"The Generation Gap!"" etc .

:ITY '1y his own methods to thi si", the play has been dividedvenings . Part I will be "The

w

Friday, February 27, 1970

THE UBYSSEY

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By F . T . R . CAWSEYAs almost everyone knows, there are people who will

literally swim in manure for enough money . That is to say ,everyone has their price . Also common knowledge is that fac tthat the rich are decadent slobs and that money is useles sexcept to spend . Both these gems are well-worn andtime-honored cliches and hardly, one would think, the basisfor a bright, funny movie .

The Magic Christian, now playing at the DowntownTheatre, exploits these cliches so audaciously, however, thatthe result is surprisingly entertaining . Not a film to be takenseriously, The Magic Christian is a product, shall we say, of th efertile imagination of Terry (Candy)Southern . Possibly theonly real objection that could be made to the film —considering its authorship — is that the script requires star sStarr Ringo and Sellers Peter to run amok through too muchmetaphorical muck, so that all the hijinks become finally alittle tedious.

The story concerns fabulously wealthy Sir Guy Grand (agrand guy) who adopts a young man to be his son YoungmanGrand (a jolly grand guy) because he has been unable to sire ason of his own . Grand (Sellers) then leads Grand (Starr) by hisprominent proboscis through his wealthy new paces . Thisincludes a duck hunt in which Grand Senior hires an artiller yunit to blast a lone duck out of the sky .

The big social event of the season is the sailing of a newsuper-luxury boat, The Magic Christian, and only th etop-drawer members of the upper crust are allowed passage o n

the maiden voyage . All hell breaks loose once underway, an dthe vessel appears to be powered by 80 topless female galle yslaves .

As it turns out, the cruise is all a sham, and the unwarysuckers have parted with a lot of money without everdeparting from a dockside warehouse converted to look likethe inside of a ship .

The film itself is a sham as it only vaguely pretends to b emaking some sort of comment, where it is really just explorin gsome funny possibilities at the expense of none but those whocan afford it .

The Magic Christian is not more profound than asatisfying fart, but, to continue the metaphor, it does clear th eair .

And in the end, there is manure, as most of us know ,and The Magic Christian is no exception . Sir Guy, who ha sbeen increasingly obvious in his attempts to show tha teveryone has his price', fills a vat with tons of manure, urin eand blood and then throws in pounds of folding money . Theresult is predictable, but amusing nonetheless .

pt 61xTHE

UBY ,SSEY

Friday, February 27, 1970

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AP~EF co

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"IN THE FOREST " : :Nast Supper and Mantr a

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ART S1,14

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NOW IT IS MARCH, sprin gis here, the sun . . .and theContemporary Arts Festivalenters its final, most intens emonth of "eventing" on an daround this beautiful campus .

Throughout this monththere will be things happenin galmost every day, climaxin gperiodically in various highpoints . Each week's events wil lbe gathered under a sort of titl e

ie . next week is calledSOUND WEEK, then followsPoetry Week, Film Week .Theatre Week etc .

Scattered around this pagerandomly, are announcement sof some of the events — to giveyou an idea of approximatelywhat to look and hope for .Details (times, places, peopleetc .) will then be announce dweekly, just before theyhappen, in this very PageFriday .

So we will be celebrating al lthis month . . .SOUND WEEK — MARCH 2 - 6

Monday, March 2, 12 :30 —"IN THE FOREST": Ecstasyof Trees, food, singing,dancing, Totem ResidenceBeach Access.

Tuesday, March 3, 12 :30 —

CONTEMPORAR Y1970

CONTEMPORARY ARTS SEVENTY"IN THE FOREST" :Drumming and Chanting ,Totem Residence Beac hAccess .

Thursday, March 5SOUND AND PEOPLESPACE : Music Building Lobby ,continues to March 20 .

Monday, March 2, 12 :30 —"Soundscapes" by MurraySchafer, Music Recital Hall .

Tuesday, March 3, 3 :30 —"A Receiver . . .Frequency "continues at Fine Arts Galleryto March 14 .

Tuesday, March 3, 3 :30 —"Contemporary Percussion" ,Music Recital Hall .

Wednesday, March 4, 12 :30"Race Track Gallery Staff

Band", Fine Arts Gallery .Wednesday, March 4, 3— :30

— "Contemporar yHarpsichord" , Music Recital

Hall .Thursday, March 5, 12 :30 —

"Gateway to Olympus" :Tableau Theatre with tapes ,SUB auditorium .

Thursday, March 5, 4 :30 —"Contemporary Sounds" ,Music Recital Hall .

Friday, March 6, 1 :30 —"Contemporary Sounds" ,Music Recital Hall .

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What price culture? Would youbelieve 50c . Audrey Johannesen ,Canada's leading female pianistplays Friday noon, S .U .B . Aud.Admission 50c.

SCHOOL DISTRICT NO . 36 (SURREY)

Interviews for teaching positions i n

the School District No . 36 (Surrey)

may be arranged for March 9th to

1 1 th, inclusive, at the Student Place-

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YARBROUGH

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(BARN 4:00 P.M.)

VOTE — LAST DAY — VOTE

Friday, February 27, 1970

THE

UBYSSEY

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.}

AGRICULTURE UNDERGRADUAT ESOCIETY

FEE REFERENDUM PASSED 70 .5%$3 .00 will be levied against all

Undergrads registering i nAgricultural Sciences

The University of British Columbia

FREDERIC WOOD THEATR E– Theatre Excitement –

AS YOU LIKE I TBy WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE

(SHAKESPEARE'S CHARMINGEST COMEDY )

MARCH 6 - 14 - 8:30 P.M .DIRECTED BY IRENE PROTHROE

STUDENT TICKETS - $1 .00(available for all performances )

SPECIAL STUDENT PERFORMANCE SMONDAY, MARCH 9, 7 :30 P.M .

THURSDAY, MARCH 12, 12 :30 P.M. MATINE E

SUPPORT YOUR CAMPUS THEATR ETickets: The Frederic Wood Theatre, Room 20 7

3261 W. Broadway 736-7788

Weekdays to 1 a.m .Fri . & Sat. 3 a.m.

An interesting, poorly-recorded effort, John Mayall's Diary

of a Band (London PS570) is a new approach to the concept of a

"live" album .According to the liner notes, it is the result of some 60

hours of tapes made by Mayall of his Bluesbreakers band ,recorded at various clubs and shows . Consequently, the stigma o frecording is removed and the band gets into its material well, an dwithout pressure .

There is a constant hiss from the tape throughout thealbum, along with occasional dimmings in sound level an dquality . But the value of the work is similar to that of the ne wpresses of old records now being released in that they give a bit of

the feeling of the band as it was on its regular gigs .There are several short rap sessions that add little, but ca n

be blocked out pretty easily . One of the main points of interest i sthe guitar work of Mick Taylor, currently with the Stones .

His timing is good, underscoring Mayall's vocals, and he get sinto some good stuff in lead tracks on a couple of the longer cuts .

Less appealing is the reed work by Mayall's two sax men ,who have a very rough edge to their sound, and do little butexplore scales and octave jumps, which soon get boring .

Basically, the album is not a musical showpiece for theBluebreakers, but, as it says, a diary for one of the better bluesgroups England has produced recently .

—MAURICE BRIDG E

Every once in a long while a record of truly great stature

comes along . I'm On The Right Road Now (Liberty LST-7633)By Gary Lewis is one of those records .

Gary is at his musical best in this offering . The selections o n

the L .P . are quite as brilliant as his previous heavies such as "Thi s

Diamond Ring", "Green Grass", and "Just My Style " .The first cut on the delicious disc, "Something is Wrong" ,

sets the pace for the rest of the record.Other precious pieces of musical magnificence on thi s

raunchy recording include the tender "I'm Gonna Shoot TheMoon", the memorable "I Saw Elvis Presley Last Night", and themeaningful "Roll Over Rover" .

However, the grooviest groove on the record has to b e"Great Balls Of Fire" with a superb style somewhat reminiscentof the 1910 Fruitgum Company, a really boss band .

A sleeper in the set might be "Co-op Farm" .This record is without a doubt another musical giant . Boss !

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Friday, February 27, 1970

Page 17: PAGE 3: WHAT MAKES A SEPARATIST TICK UY$$EY · Ph. 224-612 1 Open Every Day 4:30 p.m. to 11 :30 p.m. U.B.C. Home Service Larry Brownlee, Prop. COMPLETE AUTOMOTIVE.SERVICE ON THE CAMPUS

Friday, February 27, 1970

THE UBYSSEY

Page 1 7

'Man who holds purse stringswears the crown'—Mathew s

By JOHN BUTLE R

"Canadians must be mastersin their own house . "

That was the messageCanadian authors Robi nMathews and James Steele o fCarleton University laid onTuesday in the SUB ballroom .

Speaking on Issues Facingthe Canadian University, Steelepointed out that Canadianstudents make up a rapidly'iminishing (49 per cent )

minority in arts faculties inCanada .

"If this trend continue sthere will be less work done o nCanadian problems," he said .

"Canada is practically theonly country in the world thatallows non-Canadians to teac hin universities without takin gout Canadian citizenship," h esaid .

ROBIN MATHEWS'Canada gives . . . U .S. takes'

"Only in Canada do foreignscholars compete wit hCanadian scholars on an equaland impartial basis . "

The U .S . is the largestforeign operation in Canadaand it controls 60-80 per cen tof the economy .

"The man who holds thepurse strings wears the crown, "said Mathews .

"A recent study of 25 7books in 17 courses at CarletonU., showed that only five wer ewritten by Canadian authorsand four of these had nothin gto do with Canada," sai dMathews .

He spoke of a Canadianrepresentative for a U.S .publishing company who at ameeting in New York asked :"Why don't we publish morebooks by Canadian authors? "

He was told : "Because theydon't sell in the U .S . "

"We are in a sad state inCanada when most of ou runiversity administrators ar enon-Canadians, " Mathewsexplained. "Many professors inour universities know littl eabout Canada . "

Two American PhDgraduates wrote to CarletonUniversity requestin gemployment . The letter wasaddressed to Carleto nUniversity, Ottawa, England ,he said .

Commenting on the rape ofour natural resources, he said ,"Canadian-U .S . relations wor kon the principle of give andtake . Canada gives -- the U .S .takes ."

HUNGARIAN BORN POE TGeorge Jonas will read at 8 :30p .m. Wednesday in Bu. 106 .Jonas, who now works as a radi oproducer in Toronto, haspublished poems in many leadin gNorth American journals.

Three undergraduate societie spassed fee referendums Tuesday .

Pharmacy students voted 90 t o22 in favor of a professional fee .At the same time they rejected a$3 levy for the Canadia nAssociation of Pharmacy Student sand Interns .

The medical undergrad societ yfee referendum was passed by avote of 57 to 7 . It calls for a $1 7fee from third and fourth yea rstudents and a $2 fee from firs tand second year students .

Forestry students voted 98 t o16 in favor of a new $4 fee .

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Page 18: PAGE 3: WHAT MAKES A SEPARATIST TICK UY$$EY · Ph. 224-612 1 Open Every Day 4:30 p.m. to 11 :30 p.m. U.B.C. Home Service Larry Brownlee, Prop. COMPLETE AUTOMOTIVE.SERVICE ON THE CAMPUS

Page 18

THE UBYSSEY

Friday, February 27, 1970

Token studentreps recalled

EDMONTON (CUP) — Student councillors at the University o f

Alberta adopted the position of "parity or nothing" Mondayconcerning student representation on the university's general faculty

council (academic senate) .By a 20-10 margin, the council agreed to recall its tw o

representatives on the GFC and all other representatives o nadministrative bodies until students received parity on the

university-wide body . .According to student council vice-president Liz Law, th e

student decision would affect 39 students now sitting on a variety o fadministrative committees .

Acceptance of student parity would require the seating of 1 0graduate and 38 undergraduate students on the general facult ycouncil .

The student move came in the wake of a GFC refusal Mondayto discuss the case of philosophy professor Ted Kemp, refuse dtenure at the U of A despite widespread student acclaim for hi steaching ability .

Philosophy department officials say Kemp has not fulfilled hi sPhD requirements, and that Kemp is not a good "professional"philosopher .

Monday, the GFC refused to put the Kemp case on the agend adespite strong urging from student GFC representatives .

Student council president David Leadbeater said the GF Cdecision showed "the uselessness of token representation" o nadministrative bodies at the university .

The student council also decided to continue agitating fo rdiscussion of Kemp's case, mandating Leadbeater to petition th eGFC executive to call an emergency meeting within one week t odiscuss Kemp's tenure appeal and come to a final conclusio nregarding the professor's future .

The council also agreed to sponsor a mass meeting — billed a sthe first "student-faculty assembly" — in order to discuss the issu ewith students .

AMS gets intomental health

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Mental illness is a very realproblem today, but it remains oneof the least understood forms o fillness by a large portion of thesociety .

In order to furthe runderstanding of UBC student sabout the problems faced by th ementally ill, and the avenues o frehabilitation open to them, theAMS is starting a new menta lhealth program this year.

Over the next few years, pane ldiscussions, films, and lecture swill reach the students to helpthem understand and deal wit hproblems of mental health .

This program is one of theitems under the Service sCommission in the propose dconstitution and is currently beingrun from the AMS secretary'soffice .

The first item on the program ' scalendar is the film Warrendale, t obe shown at 7:00 p.m. thisTuesday . The film deals with a nexperimental home set up i nOntario for disturbed youth . It isa close look at the life they lead .

After the film, Ena

Brocklehurst from Brown Camp sin Vancouver will lead adiscussion on how the film affect sits viewers.

A dmission to the filmWarrendale is free .

Pompidouwelcomed

MONTREAL (CUP) —Montreal students Wednesdaycelebrated the first official visit t oNorth America by Frenchpresident Georges Pompidou, b ypresenting a 1,500-name protes tpetition to French consulat eofficials here .

The petition, presented by agroup entitled the committee fo rsocial justice, criticized a selectiveFrench arms embargo againstIsrael, the sale of French jets toLibya, and attacked Frenchcomplicity in jeopardizing peacein the Middle East .

The petition was signed byMontreal students and universityfaculty members, primarily fro mAnglophone McGill and Si rGeorge Williams Universities .

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Medieval scholar talksEugene Vinaver, a distinguished scholar and teacher o f

medieval French and English literature and an expert onCamelot and the legends of King Arthur and his knights wil ldeliver three lectures and a series of graduate seminars fromMarch 1-20.

The first lecture, will be in Lassiere 104 Monday at 8 p mon "Meaning and Form in the Novel" . It will be open to thepublic .

On Wednesday Vinaver will speak to literature student sand faculty on "The Rediscovery of Malory" at 4 :30 pm in theBuchanan penthouse .

The last lecture, Monday, March 12, will be an illustrate dtalk on "Medieval Interlace" , tracing aesthetic patterns hel dcommon by literary and graphic arts of the Middle Ages .

The lecture will be held in Lasserre 104 at 12 :30 pm .

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Page 19: PAGE 3: WHAT MAKES A SEPARATIST TICK UY$$EY · Ph. 224-612 1 Open Every Day 4:30 p.m. to 11 :30 p.m. U.B.C. Home Service Larry Brownlee, Prop. COMPLETE AUTOMOTIVE.SERVICE ON THE CAMPUS

Friday, February 27, 1970

THE UBYSSEY

Page 1 9

.'Student evaluation of profs' teaching helpfu lA spokesman for the Germa n

department said that student swere extremely generous inevaluating teachers and didn' twant to knock a person especiall yif he was a teaching assistant .

Most of the faculty presen tagreed that students can ge tcarried away with a teacher' s"dynamic enthusiasm " even if theteacher really doesn't know wha the's talking about . Numerouspeople including Ross suggeste dthat a neutral professional bod yshould also evaluate a teacher .

Physics prof Walter Westphalquestioned the usefulness of th e

Who's in SUB Aud . at noo ntoday? Bach? He's dead . Bar-talc? He's dead . Fred Chopin?He's dead. Audrey Johannese nbrings them back to life . Is sh ea medium? No, simply a greatpianist . Admission 50c.

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Students' evaluation o fteachers should be among thefactors for promotion and gradingof a teacher said English prof IanRoss at a teaching evaluationseminar Thursday .

Economics prof, Michael Kelly ,announced the results of aquestionnaire he gave to hisEconomics 200 class asking th estudents to grade his teachin gability, knowledge of subject ,handling of questions, value o ftext, and his overall performance .

Kelly said the students replie dhonestly and he learned severa lthings from the results. "Asignificant minority thought Italked too fast, " he said .

LSA picks managerfor new bookstore

The law students association has appointed a manager for it sproposed student bookstore .

Don Sorochan, law 1, was given the position at the LSAgeneral meeting Thursday .

He was appointed after a motion to turn the bookstore over t oa private group was defeated .

The private group, led by Larry Kahn, law 2, said they wouldsell new books at cost and sell used books at a profit .

The students also passed a motion donating $250 to the gradclass for an after graduation party . $50 will be used to rent the Hote lVancouver executive suite and the remainder to buy gifts for certai nfaculty members .

Former president Carey Linde introduced a motion to sen d$500 to the Chicago Seven and their lawyers so they could launch a nappeal .

The students said they supported Linde's motion in principl ebut that there were better places to spend the money .

Linde said after the meeting, "It shows the priorities of th estudents around here . They spend $250 for a drunken party an dnothing for the protection of people's rights even though they agre ewith it in principle . "

The LSA members also voted to join the B .C. EnvironmentalCouncil, a group which is co-ordinating the efforts of all th eanti pollution groups in the province . It will also serve ascommunication between these various independent groups .

Pick up on ecologyDuring the week of March 2- 5

workshops will be held in SU B111 from 1 to 3 p .m. to findviable solutions to the variouskinds of pollution threatenin gmankind .

On Monday water pollutionwill be discussed, Tuesday, ai r

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questionnaires . "Maybe a, professor's class thinks he's a badteacher but the questionnairedoesn't tell the teacher why he i sbad," he said .

"At present," said Ross, "onl ythe commerce, economics,psychology, classics, German an d

Registration for summer work

Students seeking summer employment should register at thestudent services placement office (opposite the armory) .

"Last year by the first week in July, there were more job slisted on the bulletin board than were students available to fil lthem," said placement officer J . Cameron Craik .

The office is open every day from 9 a .m. to 5 p .m .

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pollution, Wednesday pesticide sand food, Thursday, th etransformation . The workshop ssponsored by Ecological Crisi sOperation are serious and onl ypeople really concerned wit hpollution are asked to attend .

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• EAT IN • TAKE OUT • DELIVERY .

Asian studies departments havequestionnaires . The sciencefaculty has the Black and BlueReview (an anticalendar) but Iwould like to see students in ever ycourse having a say in th eevaluation of their teacher'sability .

nos

.•

Page 20: PAGE 3: WHAT MAKES A SEPARATIST TICK UY$$EY · Ph. 224-612 1 Open Every Day 4:30 p.m. to 11 :30 p.m. U.B.C. Home Service Larry Brownlee, Prop. COMPLETE AUTOMOTIVE.SERVICE ON THE CAMPUS

Intellectual treated as foe.of the cultural revolution

The intellectual was frequently treated as a nenemy in the Chinese Cultural revolution, professo r

Paul Lin said Thursday .Lin, a professor of Asian Studies at McGill

University, lived in China from 1949 to 1964 ."He (the intellectual) is a great deal mor e

conservative than the peasants, " Lin said ."They think they are the custodians of truth

and justice and take on the elitist attitude they weresupposed to have been fighting .

"If you really want to be a revoluntionary yo umust learn from those you want to liberate, thos e

who are disposessed . "He said the Young Communist League wa s

attacked for the same kind of elitism."They come out of meetings looking wise and

secretive," he said . "They act as if they are thinkin g

`you are not going to know what I know' ."He said the Young Communists could easily

become young fascists unless they are unde rconstant education .

Lin said the most important but leastunderstood aspect of the cultural revolution was the"reidentification of the individual . "

"People think since society has been a certainway for several thousand years it is human nature, "

he said.On conformity of thought Lin said young

factory people in China are more sharply criticalpolitically than Canadian university students .

He said China was trying to ensure theperpetuation of their changes after the death of Mao

by social dynamics .As a final comment of what life would be lik e

in a society like China's Lin said, "If you canno tadapt to a society which is overwhelmingly movingin one direction and you are moving in another, yo urun off to Hong Kong . "

Lakehead Ares backs down

► ,

Page 20

THE UBYSSEY

Friday, February 27, 1970

THUNDER BAY (CUP) — Theadministration at Lakehea dUniversity has backed down in itsattempts to fire sociolog yprofessor Victor Wightman .

In a letter received b y

By GINNY GALT"How does the rest of th e

world see America?""I could cut this whole speech

short of saying `It doesn't ' whichis always a frightful thing to sayto Americans," said guest lecture rAlistair Cooke at the FreddyWood Theatre Wednesday .

Cooke, British broadcaster an dAmerican correspondent for theManchester Guardian, said theU .S . has a vast desire to make theworld over in its own image .Americans have the illusion thateveryone wants to imitate them .

"One thing that American sdiscover with astonishment whenthey go abroad is that theLebanese would like to remai nLebanese," said Cooke .

He said the trouble with U .S .foreign policy is that theyapproach all countries on the basisof "are you with us or against us" .

"The intense chauvinism tha thas taken over the world wa sstarted by the `reverent 'Woodrow Wilson when he, arrive din post-war Europe with hisidealistic 14 points and draft ofthe League of Nations . No onenot even Arnold Palmer — has ha dmore reverence . "

When the people saw Wilso nthey thought they were seeing th esecond coming — "unfortunatel yWilson thought so too," Cook esaid .

"What you notice in goingiround the world is the conflic t:ietween American preaching and

merican practice ."They want democracy fo r

.ieryone but will form immediat e':liances with anyone whoposes the Russians ."

Wightman Monday ,administration president WilliamTamblyn told the popularprofessor that "It has beendecided not to insist upon thetermination of your contrac t

Cooke . . . intense chauvinism

The domestic situation of theU.S . . has also changed since th ewar . In a press conference beforehis speech, Cooke said the mos tdangerous thing in the U .S . is therooted tendencies to fly toextremes .

"There are repressive periods ,and then periods where peopleare drunk on liberty, but nomiddle periods . "

under the terms of the noticegiven by my letter of January 29 ,1970" .

At that time, Wightman wa stold that "budgetar yconsiderations" had made hisdismissal from Lakehea dnecessary . Wightman- wasreportedly fired on therecommendation of departmenthead Cecil French, who declare dthat his decision was backed by amajority of faculty in th edepartment .

Subsequent investigationindicated faculty had not beenconsulted in the dismissal .

Wightman had supported acounter-bookstore set up i nThunder Bay to fight the hig hprices in the administration ' sbookstore—a move the Lakeheadadministration regarded as an

affront .In addition to a review o f

Wightman's firing, the student swere demanding a tota lrestructing of hiring, firing,promotion and tenure procedure sat Lakehead, increase drepresentation of students onhiring and firing committees, an dfull access to "all relevan tinformation such as budgets ,graduate programs and othe radministrative and academi cmatters which affect decisions"

on hiring, firing and promotion .The administration 's decision

to forestall Wightman 's firing mayeffectively short-circuit thedemands, though students are stil lrequesting that a review board beset up to investigate the events .

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the problems of the world and start doing something about them.Are you ready to? Are you ready to accept a meaningful

position? Earn your own income? Be responsible for your ow nfuture security ?

If you are, you're ready to see us about our Regular OfficerTraining Plan . It leads to an officer' s commission and a degree i nArts, Sciences or Engineering .

For more information contact your local military careercounsellor.

-14CANADIAN FORCES

RECRUITING CENTR E545 SEYMOUR ST., VANOUVER

Conflict in Americanpreaching and practice

BETTER BUY BOOKSUNIVERSITY TEXT BOOKS

BOUGHT AND SOLDNON-FICTION PAPERBACK S

Specializing in Review Notesand Study Guide s

4393 W. 10th Ave .

224-4144

I

$1 BOOK SALE $1New Books — Large Selection

Any Book In Store — $ 1BONAVENTURE BOOKS

2355 Burrard St .

Page 21: PAGE 3: WHAT MAKES A SEPARATIST TICK UY$$EY · Ph. 224-612 1 Open Every Day 4:30 p.m. to 11 :30 p.m. U.B.C. Home Service Larry Brownlee, Prop. COMPLETE AUTOMOTIVE.SERVICE ON THE CAMPUS

Tuesday, February 2'4, 1970

THE UBYSSEY

Page 2 1

NOW out to conquer loneliness by telephon eBy SANDY KAS S

People helping people is the idea behin dNOW .

Initiated by the Crisis Intervention an dSuicide Prevention Centre of Vancouver ,NOW (736-7376) was established to form acommunications link with the city's youth .

After the center's seven months o foperation, assistant director Norm Gibbon sfelt there was a need to reach the youngpeople who had previously not approache dthe centre with their problems .

"I think the connotations behind th eword `crisis ' scare a lot of kids," he said .

NOW is not yet a 24-hour service, an deven after its official opening March 1, it i sdoubtful that it will be .

"Out of the 70 volunteers we havetraining now, at least half of them wil l

NOW wants people who arefor people. If you are NO Wpeople, call Alex at 736-7376 ,or Ann at 266-8621 after 5p.m.

'drop out because of the pressures put uponthem," said Gibbons .

"It'll be hard to stay open 24 hours aday, but we will try for at least 1 8

Several of the volunteers are from UBC .The telephone service, which provide s

young people with an immediate listening ,helping, and answering service, is run by astaff of volunteers .

The volunteers are not professionals ,but are individuals who are just interested

in helping people ."Especially for NOW, we're looking fo r

people who don't over-identify with things .A volunteer has to think practically, no ttheoretically, and has to know how t ohandle immediate and short termintervention in people's lives," he said .

While the service has not yet officiall yopened, volunteers have already receive dhundreds of calls from confused andhelpless teenagers, just looking fo rsomeone to talk to .

"NOW means immediately, and that' sexactly what the service is trying t oprovide," said Gibbons .

While problems range from drugs topregnancy, the most extensive is loneliness .

"There is an amazing number of lonelykids out there, " he said .

"They either don't know what to dowith themselves, or there's nowhere fo rthem to go—consequently, many of the mfeel locked out of society . "

"People like this only show up the gap sin our community . "

Besides the telephone service, NOW ha san emergency visiting committee of peopl ewho go out and talk to the people thatphone the centre .

"This is only done when volunteerscannot cope with the problems of th eindividual over the phone," Gibbons said .

Gibbons also expressed a desire to setup a drop-in centre as a place for youngpeople to go when they have nothing todo, "something the local communitycentres have yet to provide ."

"We're working towards getting othe rgroups to take on this responsibility . "

NOW is also planning to publish adirectory of information that young peopl ewould be interested in knowing.

GIBBON S. . . practically, not theoreticall y

The Free Vancouver, as it will becalled, will give newcomers to the cityimmediate information that it normallytakes weeks to obtain .

"It's an idea centre," said voluntee rAlex Michaels .

"We welcome people to call us with

ideas on how to help," he said .Besides solving other people's problems ,

NOW has several of its own to solve .Its cramped office quarters at 173 5

West Braodway are becoming increasinglyinadequate in meeting the centre ' s growin gneeds .

A search for a new location i scontinuing, but as yet nothing has bee nfound .

The biggest problem, however, i smoney.

There has been little response to NOW' scampaign for money on radio stationCKLG, and while grants are coming in "i tjust isn't enough" .

"It will cost $15,000 to operate NO Wfor a year," said Gibbons .

"If people want this service, they arejust going to have to help us provide it," h esaid .

The money is used to pay rent, phon eand other bills, and to pay the salary of adirector, assistant director, and secretary .

Appeals have been made to several larg ecompanies, but the majority of funds hascome from individuals .

"NOW is a place for young people t ocall for any reason whatsoever . We haveaccess to many resources in Vancouver thatmost people don't even know about, an dwe hope to provide any person that callsus, with any resource that will help theirproblems to be solved," he said .

"NOW should always be what'sneeded ."

UBC Flying Clu bSUB 216G

228-4392

MARCH 3

NOON SUB 105A CF -104 LEC-TURE — 7 :30 P .M. SUB 215NAVIGATION COURSE

MARCH 6, 7

CESSNA 150 OPEN HOUS EDISPLAY

CLARKESINIPKINS

USED CARS'69 VOLVO StationWagon. Radio —Tape Deck, Auto .

'69 CORONA—Auto.Radio $2245'68 TRIUMPH SPIT-FIRE Convert .

$1795'68 ISUZU BELLETTExcel . Cond . LowMileage $1295'67 TRIUMPH SPIT-FIRE Convert .—Veryclean $1495'66 AUSTIN HEALEYSprite Convert. 12,000 miles . MintCond . $1395'64 CORVAI RMONZA $695'59 HILLMAN MIN XSedan

$95

CLARKESIMPKINS

"HOME of FIAT"

7th and BURRARD736-4282

Group 80'. Air Canada's$ 271 -way to Europe

and back

This amazingly low new group af-finity return fare is yours when yo uorganize and fly with at least 79other members of a bonafide asso-ciation or organization, the mai naim of which is not travel, and ofwhich you have been a membe rfor at least six months .You go and return as a group o nregularly scheduled flights . Andyou can stay as long as a year .

Air Canada affinity 'Group 80 'Economy Class fares apply fro mmajor cities in Canada to dozen sof exciting European cities . Startyour 1970 holiday planning now .Air Canada can clear up any ques-tions you may have about organ-izing your group . But do it nowand make your arrangements verysoon to get the benefit of the low -.est affinity 'Group 80' fares of th eyear .

Apr. 1 — May 3 1Aug . 10 — Oct . 31 June 1 — Aug . 9

$294

$342$ 300

$352Ask about affinity 'Group 25' and 'Group 40' fares as well . For all the details, call Air Canada .Fares subject to Government approval .

Go Group 80' AIR CANADA

$3595

l aa

Fro mVancouver

I nNow

effectto

fro m

Mar . 3 1~

V ,

to

Nov . 1 — Mar. 31/71

London

$271Paris

$277t,

Page 22: PAGE 3: WHAT MAKES A SEPARATIST TICK UY$$EY · Ph. 224-612 1 Open Every Day 4:30 p.m. to 11 :30 p.m. U.B.C. Home Service Larry Brownlee, Prop. COMPLETE AUTOMOTIVE.SERVICE ON THE CAMPUS

Page 22

THE UBYSSEY

Tuesday, February 24, 1970

CLASSIFIE DRates : Student*, Faculty & Club—3 lines, I day 7M, 3 days $2,00.

Commercial—3 lines, 1 day $1 .00; addtionI lines 25 ; 4 days price of 3 .

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

Closing Deadline is 11 :30 a.nl . The day before publication.

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

*

ANNOUNCEMENTSDances

1 1Greetings

1 2STARTING MONDAY! SPEAK

Easy will be open 10 a .m .—9 p .m .Drop by SUB 218 or phone 228 -3706 ,

Wanted Information

1 3LOST: CLEAR PENCIL CASE A T

bookstore phone booth Feb . 16th .Pen and notebook wanted . Re-ward . 752-9820 or SUB info .

EVERYONE UNDER 75 ADMIT -ted free—a doctor will be in at-tendance at all times—Warren-dale . March 3, 7:00 p.m. SI'I3Auditorium .

Lost & Found

1 4LOST NEMO STANDARD (Large )

black podle . Owner desolate, $5 0reward, Phone 771-3483 .

l'orNr) . A SET OF CHEM . NOTE -cards Cliff, 261-4431 .

LOST . ONE GITANE TEN-SPEE Dracing hike . Phone 122-671 :: withany information ,

LOST PAIR SANDALS IN BROWNbag . Call Ron, 731-0985

Rides & Car Pools

1 5

Special Notices

1 6THIS WEEKEND SUB THEATRE .

Se, Michael Caine, Francois eDorleac in "Billion Dollar Brain . "Fri & Sat . . 7 :00, 9 :30 . Sun. 7 :00 .Still the cheapest , in town . Onl y50 c

IT . OF T. STUDENT (FEMALE )seeks apt. in Vancouver withITIIC students this summer . Writ eChris PeCatanraro, 44 DevonshirePlace, Toronto 181, Ont.

THE GORD OF HOSTS WAS 2 1on Wednesday. Drop by and sayhello . Carrell 1071 -1st level stacks.

BITSONI . NO IT'S NOT FOOD ;It's food for thought. Pianis tAudrey Johannesen plays Busoni ,Bach, Bartok, Chopin and others :noon today, SUB Aud . Admission50<' .

I'LACE VANIER RESIDENCE SIT .B .C . Art Show . March 7 & 8,1970 painting student art work.

HAVE YOU HEARD OF BAH A'tT'LAH? Come and find ou tabout the Baha'i faith . Int . HouseRoom 402, Mon ., 12 :30 .

CHINA NIGHT : CHINESE CULT -ural display . Evening of enter-tainment . SITE Ballroom, 8 p .m . ,Feb. 28 . Refreshment served .

RUMMAGE SALE !Arcadian Auditorium

2214 Main St .Sat., Feb . 28, 12 :00 -3 :0 0

111K' FLYING CLUB . MARCH 3,noon . SUB 105A . CF-304 lecture.Tactical flying 7 :30 p .m . SUB 21 5Navigation Course. Bring yourcomputer .

VOLUNTEERS! PLEASE HELPinterviewing visitors at the UBCopen house architectural evalu-ation project . Call X 2721 or mee ton main mall in front of presi-dent's office at 3 p .m. Monday,March 2 .

SOFTBALL PITCHER NEEDEDfor 'a Commercial C League team .Phone Ken MacLachlan, 327-2737 ,6-7 p.m . any evening .

GOLDEN GLOVES BOXING, MAR .6 & 7, 8 :00 p .m ., $2 & $3, P .N.E .Garden Auditorium .

INVITATION . THE S T I T DEN TDiscount Book, is now selling fo rtinder half price in the Bookstor eand at SUB Information . Two forthe price of one at Odeon, Con-certs, Plays, Nightclubs, Restaur-ants, etc . All this , for only 75c.Don't Miss It!

VICI<'S T .V . & RADIO CO .513 West Pender - 685 .862 2

Guaranteed Repairs TVs . radios,(ape recorders—10% discount t ostudents ,

1005$. BIODEGRADABLE DETER -gent does the best job for less$8 . See Richard Hollins, 351 Sal-ish . 224-9755 .

Travel Opportunities

1 7FOR SALE: ONE-WAY— TICKET

N .Y . - Luxemburg . Good 'til May15, $98 .00 Can . Phone 874-6068 .

EUROPE FOR SWTNGTN GSINGLES AGE 17-30 .

meals, accommodation, tours &transportation .

3 weeks $225 .0 06 weeks $330 .00

DINERS FI T GAZY TRAVEL -688-2545 .

Wanted—Miscellaneous 1 8WANTED : RACING/TOURING

bike .

Till, 228-2134, 736-5397.

AUTOMOTIVE

AutomobilesFor Sale

2 1'58 V .W. GOOD RUNNING COND .

Radio. Asking $175 . Ph . 263-4118 .

19611 SITZU BELLETT DELUXEExcellent condition $875 .00. Radio .Call Sasha. 266-8035 after 6 .

'57 PLYMOUTH 2 DR . H.T . with'62 Chry. 383, 3 spd . auto., Dua letch ., H .D. Susp . $350 . 526-6073 .

1958 CHEVY . AUTOMATIC WIT Hradio, heater. Excellent condition .Phone 224-3865.

1954 CHEV . WELL MAINTAINED .Above average condition, ca ndemonstrate . 929-4129 nites.

1961 FORD FAIRLANE . AUTO .4-dr., 6-cyl., radio, snow tires .228-8562 .

A-utos For Sale. (Cont .)

2 1'59 CHEV. $70 OR REST OFFER .

Phone 224-1769 .FOR SALE. 1965 ECONOLINE

camping

truck .

$850 .

224-418 5- after 8 p .m.1961 SUNBEAM . ECONOMICAL

transportation for student . Ask-jog $230 .00 . Jim, 228-3898 day, 228 -9609 eve .7 TRIUMPH TR4A CONVERT .Good condition, Michelin X radi-als, hr . green, $1400 . Call Dou gat 224-3340 between 5 :70 & 7 :30 ,

1955 BUICK SEDAN, EXCEPTION -al condition, 88,000 miles, on eowner, one driver . Power win-dows, power seal . Transmissio nrebuilt 1969. $577, or best offer .266-7695 .

'86 TRIUMPH TR4A—IRS . EX -<'client condition throughout . EX -tras Asking $1700. 261-2915 . Rick .

1961 V .W. IN PERFECT SHAPE .Must sell . No reasonable offe rwill be refused . 261-5720 .

1982 MINI WAGON : NEW TIRE Sand brakes . Good condition . $400 .Phone 224-7623 . Ask for Roger .

1974 CHEV . 2-DOOR HARDTO Pfor sale, 224-6350,

'63 PONT . PARISIENNE CONVT .I'S, auto, P .S ., PB ., radio, tapedeck . Good condition . $950. 321 -8695 .

'64 BEAUMONT V-I STD . RADI Onew paint . Good condition, Ph -435-0732 .

6-8 DATSUN 2000—135 HP, 5 SPD. ,etc . with or without hardtop. Bestoffer . 261-2439 .

FOR SALE : 1968 TRIUMPH 250 .Best offer accepted, Phone Bob ,263-6484 after 6 p .m .

1967 DODGE DART, 6 CYL . STAND -arch excellent condition, $1295 .Offers? 261-8366

'67 V .W. 1500 IN GOOD SHAPE . 4eitr weinstr ./OHW i RGE

Awinter tires, radio . $1250 . Phon e738-0104 . Must sell .

1962 CHEVY II, AUTOMATIC,radio, four new tires, good shape.Best offer, Irene, 874-3814eves.

'59 MATCHLESS 500 SINGLE,good condition, $350 .00 ; '60 Falco n2 dr . std ., as is, $150 .00 . 263-4801

1966 ENVOY EPIC EXCELLENTcondition . Two new tires, phon e224-3385 after 7 p .m .

'54 METEOR, $50 ; '59 FORD, $225 .Barrett, 224-158 1

'57 FORD, GOOD SHAPE, 2 DR.hrd . top. Low mileage . "C" Lo tpermit ; radio, 8100 . 224-946 0

Automobiles—Wanted

2 2

Automobiles—Parts

23Motorcycles

25'C7 180 YAMAHA. 7,000 MILES

Electric start. $285 . '70 plates526-6073 .

FACTORY YAMAHA DIA Lgauge (for ign ., timing) $25 . 435 -2970.

'66 DUCATI STREET SCRAM:bier" 6,500 miles, excellent condi-tion . Call Tom at224-9545 .

'67 250 HUSTLER, 7000 MILES ,new transmission, excellent condi-tion . Ph . 733-6201 .

650 CC B .S .A . CUSTOM (1967 )must be seen . Ph . 224-9665 . Gerd ,Rm . 2 0

DON'T LET THIS BEAUTIFU Lweather pass without having abike . Yamaha 80, as new, Pau l926-1069

'66 ZtTNDAPP ' SCRAMBLERexcellent buy . Barrett, 224-158 1

BUSINESS SERVICES

Dance Bands

3 1

Art Services

31ASCIETIFIC GRAPHICS—SPECIAL -

istS in graphs, maps, textboo killustrations, complex formulae .Scientific Displays Advertising .Phone 711-4506 .

Duplicating&Copying 3 2WISSENSCITAFTLICHE GRAPHIK

—Experten in techn . Zeichnugen ,Landkarten, lluchillustratioflefl ,Complexen Entwuerfe, Wissen-schaftl . Ausstellugen U . Werbung.Tel . 731-4506 .

Miscellaneous

33BACH TO THE GOOD OLD

music . Audrey Johannesen play sJohann Sebastian Bach andothers . SUB Aud ., noon Friday .Admission 50e .

Photograph yNO ONE WILL BE SEATED

after the first half hour. No on ewill leave during the last hal fhour—Warrendale . March 3, 7 :0 0 P .m . SUB Auditorium .

Rentals—Miscellaneous

36Scandals

37CAINE VS BRAIN, SUPER SPY

stuff and all that jazz! Sit i ncomfort for only 50c . That's thisweekend in SUB theatre "Billio nDollar Brain" .

BUBBLE S LOVES PENELOPE

HEAR BARTOK . . . WITHOUTgoing into a bar! Audrey Jo-hannesen plays Bartok, Bach .Chopin, and others in SUB Aud .Friday noon . Admission SOc .

WARNING - SOME OF THElanguage may offend you—com eand see. Warrendale . March 3 ,7 :00 p.m. SUB Auditorium .

Scandals (Cont .) 3 7BEDSIDE MANOR MEDICINE

can't he beat! Wine and cheeseparty for friends . Sat ., Feb . 28.

EVER SEEN REAL LION DANCE ?This and other goodies in "Chin aNight", Sat ., 8 p .m., SUB Ball -room . Refreshmens .

VOC BANQUET. MARCH 13 .Tickets available from executive .Contact Jim, 224-9855 .

Sewing & Alterations

3 8

Typewriters & Repairs

39

Typing

4 0

EXPERT TYPING - THESIS 35 cper page - Essays 30c per page -Sc per copy . Fast efficient serv-ice . Ph . 327-0545 .

EFFICIENT ELECTRIC TYPINGmy home . Essays, Thesis, etc .Neat accurate work . Reasonabl erates . Phone 263-5317 .

ON-CAMPUS ACCURATE EXP .typing . 40c per page, IBM selec-tric . Phone 224-9183 after 5 p .m .

FAST, EXPERT TYPING DON Eat a reasonable price . Will pic k up and deliver . Phone 988-9781 .ACCURATE EXP . TYPING FRO M

legible work . Reas . rates, 738-68299 am, to 9 p .m.-

EXPERIENCED TYPIST - ELEC -trie machine . Reas . rates . Phon e728-7881 .

ACCURATE TYPING - GERMAN ,Dutch, French, English . At home .Reasonable rates. Phone 261-3751 .

"FAST, ACCURATE TYPIST -will do typing in my home. Pleasecall 263-0196 .

ELECTRIC TYPING ; UBC GRAD ;English major ; 35c a page ; 736 -9874.

QUALITY TYPING SERVICE. (Private) . 681-1805 after 6 :00 p.m.ESSAY TYPING .

3589 West 19th Ave .733-5922

ESSAY TYPING FOR FACULTY• of Arts . Phone 732-6739 evenings .

IBM Selective typewriter .FAST, ACCURATE TYPING OF

theses, essays, term papers, docu-ments . Reasonable rates . 266-426 4

"ACCURATE ESSAY TYPING" -Mrs . Pasqualotto, 434-1402

EXPERT ELECTRIC TYPIST, ES -says, theses, etc . 50c per page .Mrs . Duncan 228-9597 .

FAST ACCURATE TYPING MYhome . Essays, thesis, etc . Phon e325-2934 .

COMPETENT TYPING (DOCU -ments, theses, essays, general) ,my home. Sr. legal secretary-bookkeeper, excellent references. 946-4722.FAST, ACCURATE TYPING--MRS .

Treacy, 738-8794 . 35c page - 5 ccop y.

EFFICIENT ELECTRIC TYPIN GMy home. Essays, Thesis, etc.Neat accurate work. Reasonabl erates. Phone 263-9317 .

EXPERIENCED T Y P I S T, FO RYour essays, reports etc . Reason -able rates . In my North Vancou-ver home . 988-7228 .

EXPERIENCED FRENCH - ENG -lish typist. Thesis-Essays-Trans-lations-Publications, a n y othe rwork . Contact : Miss Danielle Cou-nord, office hours : 682-1878 ; even.hours : 879-3568 .

EXPERIENCED ELECTRIC HOM Etyping - essays, thesis, etc . Nea taccurate work, reasonable rates .Phone 321-2102 .

EMPLOYMEN T

Help Wanted—Female

5 1

Opportunity for women studentswith a mm . typing speed of 3 5wpm - vacation employment .

OFFICE ASSISTANCEVANCOUVER LIMITE D

684-7177

ATTRACTIVE VERSATILE FE -male vocalist for steady weekendwork . Call 526-9356or 987-7214

LOOK REQUIRES GIRLS FORPart-time telephone work . Broad-way location . Salary and bonus.Call 879-5911 for info . Also full -time summer work .

Help Wanted—Male 52WE REQUIRE PART-TIM E

salesmen to handle a fast mov-ing product at top commission .Phone 684-5010 for an appoint-ment .

Male or Female 53PART TIME NOW FULL TIME

summer . Brian684-0609 .MARRIED COUPIE ATTENDANT S

for campsite on Hornby Island.Graduate student preferred . Trail-er provided ; leisure time; avail -able June 19 - September 8. Ap-plicants phone Saunders, 224-735 5between 6 :30 p .m. - 7 :30 p.m . ,Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday .

Work Wanted

5 4

INSTRUCTIO N

Instruction Wanted 6 1Language Instruction

61A

Music 6 2PREMIER DRUMS . LUDWI G

Snare . Ziljian Cymbals . Hard shel lcases . Excellent condition. $350 .0 0Phone 266-5025 eves .

PIANO VOICE THEORY COACH -log by qualified teacher. Coiling -wood and Fourth . 731-545 9

Tutoring

64

FEMALE MATH TUTOR, THREEmornings a week for grade te nnight school student living oncampus . Must be grad studen tor have teaching certificate .Reply Norm Brown, Children s

- Aid Society, 879-8821 .TUTORING IN MATH AND

Physics by graduate . Call Phil ,731-1930 .

TUTORING IN MATHS - PHYS .- Stats. by Ph.D. Instructor .$5 .00 per hr. Phone 733-6037 even-ings .

MISCELLANEOU SFOR SALE

7 1

FISCHER GLASS GT SKIS 21 0cm . Marker Bindings . Used onl yonce . Best offer! Phone 688-9050after 5 p .m .

WHAT PRICE CULTURE ?Would you believe 50c? AudreyJohannesen, Canada's leading fe-male pianist plays Friday noon ,SUB Aud . Admission SOc.DOUBLE BED . BEST OFFER,

and white wedding gown, train ,veil, $60 .00 . 731-4550 after 6 :00 p .m .

WANTED - A GOOD QUALITYportable stereo tape recorder . Cash .733-4013 .

FENDER AMP - (PRINCETO Nmodel) ; electric guitar (Kent )

and carrying case . Excellent condi-tion . Call Tom—224-9545 .

HELP! MY CAR INSURANCEis due so I must sell part or all ofmy stereo system. 224-5194.

FOLK BANJO FOR SALE, FIX -cellent condition, $60 .00 . Phone 732 -9820 after 6 weekdays .LISST UPRIGHT PIANO WIT H

bench, one year old . $500 .00 ornear offer . Financing possible .263-5975 after seven.

STEREO RECORD PLAYER, POR -table, Electrohome, cost $160 . Lik enew, $69 . Offers? 261-8366

HEAD STD's 210's STEP - INS ,one year old . Muntz four trac ktape, deck 18 tapes, speakers, $70 .266-4656, ask for Terry .

SANSW 500

STEREO RECEIVER

180 watt, reg. $659 .95, spec . $399 .Stereo amplifier, 65 watt, soli dstate, reg. $139.95, spec. $95 .00 .Sansui received, AM-FM S .W . ,$68 .00. Fisher stereo ompl., 60w ,

reg . $299 .85, spec. $188 .00 . Scottradio tuner, best buy, $138 .00.

HOUSE OF STEIN

ELECTRONICS LTD.

901 Granville

685-561 1

SMITH & CORONA TYPEWRITER ,older model in excellent condi-tion, $50. Phone 738-9108

'69 HEAD SLALOM SKIES, 21 0ems, Barker bindings. Demandin gand high-spirited' skis for th ecompetent skier. Mike, 224-0500

BIRD CALLSYour Student Telephon e

Directory

STILL AVAILABLE - $1 .00at the Bookstore,

AMS Publications Officeand Thunderbird Shop

RENTALS & REAL ESTAT E

Rooms

8 1

MALE OR FEMALE UPSTAIRSsleeping room, private bathroom .224-7471 .

OWN BEDROOM WITH ALLhouse facilities. All guys, goodstudying atmosphere, not Co-op .Ph . 718-0784 .

GRAD. STUDENT & WIFE NEE Droom with kitchen facilities. Phone224-9774 after 7 p .m . Ask for Chua ,room 116/leave message .BASEMENT BED SITTIN G

room, fully furnished ; fridge, hot -plate, $70 mnth . 3035 Hemlock ,male student . Tel. 738-4090 after 6 .

LIVE ON CAMPUS CHEAPLY !Room & kitchen privileges formale students, only $50. Board ifdesired $45. Weekly linen. Cleanquiet accommodation & parking .224-0327 or come to 5670 Toront oRd .

FURNISHED LIGHT HOUSE-keeping and sleeping rooms . Clos eto UBC and trans. Students only .Available immediately, $60 single ,$45 double . Lloyd or Tom ,738-1895

ROOM FOR MALE, NEAR UB Cgates . Kitchen and laundry facili-ties, $35 . Ph . 224-1678

MONDAY

LEGAL AI DCampus legal aid panels, every Mon ?Wed, and Fri., noon, SUB 237-237A.

FINE ARTS GALLER Y"Sound Scapes", by Murray Schaffer ,noon. Music Building, Aud.

VARSITY DEMOLA YMeeting, noon, SUB 213.

MUSSOCGeneral meeting and election, noon,old Auditorium.

POLITICAL ECONOM YProf. L . M. Goodrich speaks, noon ,Bu, 104,

UBC YOUNG SOCRED SCacus meeting, noon, SUB 130 .

AIESE CMeeting, noon, SUB bOA,

ClASPTraining meeting, 7 :30 p.m ., 3035 W .10th.

COMPUTER CLU BOpen house volunteers meeting, noon.

Chem, 150.UBC FLYING CLU B

Insurance seminar, 7 :3.0215 ,

UBC FLYING CLU BCF-104 lecture—tactical flight, noon,SUB 105.

iE''in2ls7s5i:5Ks

'tween

classes

< ":'- 7iss '.. 5171;*1ii;Ii$717:111511i(liB..5 111,, "5. 5i .

TUESDAY

PRE-LIBRARIANSHIP SOCIET YTour of microfilm division, meet atcard catalogue, noon ,

FILM SOCIET Y"The Billion Dollar Brain", Fri . andSat., 7 and 9 :30 p .m., sun. 7 p.m . ,SUB Theatre,

MARKET CLU BHon. Ron Basford speaks, noon, Ang ,104.

JOURNALISTSDr. Stefan Schnell speaks, noon, Bu.202.

PSYCHOLOGY CLU BOpen house meeting, noon, Ang. 24.

NDP CLU BModel Parliament caucus meeting,noon, SUB 113 .

ALLIANCE FRANCAIS EMeeting, noon, I.E.

SPECIAL EVENT SAudrey Johanneson plays, noon, SUB

Auditorium.

WEDNESDAY

VARSITY OUTDOOR CLU BGeneral meeting, noon. Chem . 250.

UBC YOUNG SOCREDSCaucus meeting, noon . SUB 130.

UBC STUDENT WIVES ASSOCIATIO NMonthly meeting. 8 p.m., Cecil Gree nPark.

THURSDAY

VARSITY OUTDOOR CLU BMountaineering lecture, noon, Chem.150.

Room & Board 82

ROOM TO RENT NEAR UB Cgates, Available March 1st . Phone224-3152 after 5 p .m. Prefer malegraduate students.PHI KAPPA SIGMA . COLOR T.V.

Sauna. Good food, 5785 Agronom yRoad . 224-9684 or 224-7843 .

Furn. Houses & Apts .

8 3MARCH 1st 3 BEDROOM UPPER

duplex, furnished, 5th & McDonald .874-8511. Newly remodelled .

2 BEDROOM SELF CONTAINE Dupstair suite, $120, couple only . 733 -1767,

WANTED : THIRD PERSON ($60P.m.) or couple ($90) to share quie troomy house . 738-0808 .

BACHELOR SUITE FURN . $85 .All found, priv . ent . 3011 Heathe rSt . Avail. imm .KITSILANO - CLEAN 2 ROOM

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34

P .m., SUB

Page 23: PAGE 3: WHAT MAKES A SEPARATIST TICK UY$$EY · Ph. 224-612 1 Open Every Day 4:30 p.m. to 11 :30 p.m. U.B.C. Home Service Larry Brownlee, Prop. COMPLETE AUTOMOTIVE.SERVICE ON THE CAMPUS

Tuesday, February 2'4, 1970

THE UBYSSEY

Page 23

Hoopsters lookfor WCIAA crownchampionship .

The WCIAA finals begintonight at War Memorial Gym andthe guests will be the revengeseeking University of Manitob aBisons . The prairie club qualifiedto meet the Birds by disposing o fthe University of Alberta instraight games last weekend intheir semi-final series .

The Bisons finished the regularseason in second palce with theironly two losses coming at thehands of the Birds ; 59-48 at UBCand 72-65 at the Manitoba fiel dhouse . Hence one would expec tthat they will be here seeking ,not only revenge for their onlytwo conference losses but also atrip to the Canadian finals inHamilton .

Bison coach Jack Lewis has alarge well balanced club led by th eleague 's second leading score rCliff Cornelius . The 6'4" forwardplayed four years at Wartbur gCollege in the NAIA before goin gto Manitoba and has helped th eBisons both scoring wise and onthe boards . Another starter fo rthe Bisons will be the veteranguard Terry Ball who this yearwas nominated for Manitob aathlete of the year and who, wereit not for Ron Thorsen and BarryKing of Winnipeg, would certainlyrate as an all-star .

The other starters willprobably be John Loewen an dRoss Wedlake up front with Te dStoesz at the remaining guardspot.

For the :Birds it represents afight against complacency as wellas the talented Bisons . It's been solong since a team has playedextremely well against them tha tthey may have forgotten th etension of a tight game . Howeverif they continue to play as theyhave of late, a good memory willnot be necessary .

Basketbal lFriday 5 :30 in the Memorial

Gym will see the UBC women'sbasketball team clash for thesecond of a best out of three gameseries . Their opponent, Victoria ,did not prove an easy victory a tthe last game . Using constant fastbreaks, Victoria out hustled th eThunderettes, until Ken Shield sgave his girls a `talk' at the hal ftime .

This game is crucial because i fUBC wins they will b erepresenting B .C . at the 'Canadia nFinals in Halifax . Otherwise, the ywill have to head back to Victori afor the third decisive game .

basketbal lCommencing thi s

Thunderbirdsweekend things get a lot tougher for the UB C

their continuing quest for the CIAU

The defensive assignments forthe Birds will probably be muchthe same as they were for theearlier contests . To forward Bo bMolinski will likely fall thedubious honor of puttingCornelius in the proverbial bagwhile captain Alex Brayden willendeavour to handle the ball .

A prediction? Glad to oblige .The Birds, if they play volleyballon the Bisons' backboards as the ydid in both previous games, wil lwin by 15 points each night .

in

Four members of the UB Cmen's tennis team competed inthe Pacific Northwest InvitationalIndoor tennis championships i nEugene, Oregon, last week .

Wrestlers hopefu lTaras Hryb, UBC's only winne r

in the WCIAA wrestlingchampionship will represent thewest in the 177 pound class in theCanadian Intercollegiat echampionships in Edmonton thisweekend .

Hryb is favoured to win hisweight class against the best fro mfive eastern conferences .

The western team consists ofsix WCIAA champions from theUniversity of Alberta, and on eeach from UBC, Calgary ,Saskatchewan and Manitoba .

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SPORTSRugby team returnsbruised and beaten

Little did unsuspecting coach Donn Spence or his Thunderbir drugby team realize when they left for sunny California lastWednesday that there was an extra passenger riding with them .

This gremlin, as he shall be called, caused enough foul-ups ,misunderstandings, injuries and the like to last coach Spence thi smany years .

The little fellow struck early for the Birds, as they were led t obelieve before they arrived at UCLA that they were to be supplie dwith accommodations and food . When they got there theaccommodations were there but not the food . The team wa ssupposed to be given meals throughout their stay at UCLA bu tsomehow were not . Consequently, the team had to buy each of thei rmeals out of their own pockets .

With this first fiasco in their minds they proceeded to go ou tand play the UCLA Bruins with a 45 mile an hour wind in thei rfaces.

The gremlin was there throughout the entire game as UBC jus tdid not get the breaks . This is not to take away anything fromUCLA but it is a fact that not one of the trys they scored were se tup by their offense . UBC's mistakes amounted to the entire Bruinoffense .

The -field was not in it's best condition either . The grass wassparse and the ground hard resulting in injuries to three first strin gplayers, Hillier, McTavish and Austin .

The final score was somewhat academic, UCLA over UB C

29-0 .Between the two games the gremlin was extremely busy . By

- prior arrangement the players strip was supposed to be cleaned fo rthe next match. The-laundry was not picked up so they had to us ethe facilities where they were staying . After it was washed the yfound the drier did not work so the players were forced to play thegame in wet strip . But the gremlin's work was not finished . Not onlywas the strip wet but the team was given no time to warm up whe nthey reached the field .

The team came up on the wrong end of the score losing 21-3 ,but they kept hustling for the entire game . The services of Scott andJackson were lost this game .

So much for the World Cup series, but the Birds ' troubles werenot over yet .

Monday the team travelled to the University of Stanfordand with regards to the score suffice it to say that they were buriedbadly .

"They've got the finest college rugby team, talent-wise, I'veever seen . Six of their seven backfielders can run the 100 in under 1 0seconds as can two in the front line," said Spence .

Coach Spence is hoping that the little gremlin has . forsaken hi steam for some other unfortunate soul as they will tackle toughWestern Washington in another away game this Saturday .

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Team captain Bob Bardsleyreached the `finals of the men' ssingles where he lost to Seattle' sDick Knight 6-3, 8-10, 6-2 .

The team will be travelling toSeattle this weekend for a retur nmatch with the University o fWashington whom they defeatedlast term .

The women's team sent fou rmembers south to play fourCalifornia universities . SusanEager, Barbara Johnston, Miss yCasement and Joanne Bergstromwere UBC's representatives. Thewomen did well against th eAmerican competition defeatingClaremont College 3-1 and CalState at Long Beach 4-2, whiledropping decisions to Cal State a tSanta Barbara and USC .

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Intramura lNotices

The Arts 20 relay road race will beheld on Thursday, March 5 . The courseis 7½ miles long and teams will bemade up of eight runners. The racewill start at 1 :15 and end at about 2 :00in front of the old. administration build-ing. Entries are welcomed from anyundergraduate, faculty, or other organ•ization . Entries must be received byMarch 2.

Golf : Entries must be in by March 2 .Competition will be held March 7 .

Track and Field : Deadline for entrie sis March 5 .

Snooker : Competition has started. Seeschedule at Intramural office .

Softball : Competition begins March 4 .Watch for schedule .BASKETBALL RESULTS

Education I won the Division I basket-ball championship on Wednesday, de-feating Engineering I 27-23. It was thefirst time that Education has won a nintramural championship.

Union College II took the Division I Ichampionship, defeating Education I Vby a score of 34-31 .

Carey Hall beat Engineering V 4145to take the Division III championship .

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DISPLAYING this same form will be high scoring forward Dere kSankey for the Thunderbirds as they go up against the Universityof Manitoba Bisons tonight and Saturday . Starting time for bot hgames will be 8 :00 pm . If necessary, a third game at 2 pm Sunday .

Racquets return

Page 24: PAGE 3: WHAT MAKES A SEPARATIST TICK UY$$EY · Ph. 224-612 1 Open Every Day 4:30 p.m. to 11 :30 p.m. U.B.C. Home Service Larry Brownlee, Prop. COMPLETE AUTOMOTIVE.SERVICE ON THE CAMPUS

w

Page 24

THE . UBYSSEY

Tuesday, February 24, 1970

All that bush .

. . . what will they do with it?Since the Point Grey campus opened, UBC ha s

had its endowment land available for futur eexpansion .

But will it always ?Not if the Social Credit government gets its way .Lands and forests minister Ray Williston said in

the legislature last week that developed parts of th eendowment lands will be turned over to the city ofVancouver .

"There hasn't been a formal bill introduced yet ,but government policy is to eventually turn all th eendowment lands over to Vancouver, " said provincialLiberal leader Pat McGeer .

Story byGinny Galt and ]an O'Brien

Photo by Dave Enns

The provincial government endowed theuniversity 2,700 acres of land on Point Grey in 1923 .Now, 47 years later, 1,700 acres remain undeveloped .

About 700 acres have been developed int oresidential lots . Although profits from leasing o rselling the endowment lands were to add revenue t othe university, none of the money ever came to UBC .

"The lands were given to produce revenue butthey never have," said UBC information directorArnie Myers .

Said Alma Mater Society president Fraser Hodge :"During the 1940s the provincial government offere dto sell the land to the board of governors for a nabsurdly low price, but they just didn't have th emoney then . This is unfortunate because if we had aclear title there would be no problem . "

University president Walter Gage said th euniversity has no control over the use of th eendowment lands .

Vancouver city council is currently negotiatingwith the provincial government for control of theland. Alderman Halford Wilson, chairman of th ecouncil's university endowment land sub-committee ,said the council was motivated by a governmentproposal that the boundaries of the city be extende dto include the developed areas of the endowmentlands .

"The architectural firm of Webb and Knapp wh odeveloped Place de Maria in Montreal for Expo '6 7have a comprehensive plan for the whole of th eendowment," Wilson said .

They have had to buy back developed land that theyoriginally owned at a much higher price .

This has also happened at the University o fAlberta in Edmonton .

McGreer suggested a university city where th euniversity has complete control of the land .

"This can be done if the university bids for allthe houses as they come up for sale and leases the mto residents . In this way the university can regain thelands already alienated in a matter of a generation," hesaid .

"The city of Vancouver is very imperialisticabout the endowment lands, they want control ofzoning, but this can't be the purpose of theuniversity .

"If the university doesn't take initiative the lan dwill fall to the city ."

Taxes will go upRankin said one problem is that people are afraid

of zoning because they don't understand it .He said if the land is turned over to the city this

will be an ideal opportunity for the planningdepartment of the university . "It will move theplanning department out of the academic and int othe practical, " he said .

Ald. Hugh Bird said : "My main concern in thi ssettlement is the city's great need of undevelope dland for housing . There are hardly any vacant lots inVancouver . "

He said an area should be put aside for scientifi cresearch and the rest should be used for housing . "I'mnot concerned about who runs the land, just that it' sdeveloped, " he said.

Sweeney said endowment- land residents areenjoying a tax concession while similar city propertie sare taxed much higher .

"Someone is obviously subsidizing this propertyand it must be the lands and forest department, " hesaid .

Taxes will go up for endowment land residents i f

they become part of the city ."The position of the university is being eroded -

because the provincial government has made thedecision to get rid of these lands," said McGeer .

Williston was unavilable for comment to Th eUbyssey . After reaching the minister's office byphone, The Ubyssey was asked to hold on whil eWilliston talked on another line .

After two minutes a secretary said Williston hadgone to a meeting .

"The plan includes single family dwellings, tow nhouses, high rises and shopping centres . It wasestimated that this development would have apopulation of 70,000 including university students . "

Wilson said the government doesn ' t want to pu tthe undeveloped endowment lands on the marke tuntil other undeveloped land such as the Canadia nPacific Railway land in the city has been utilized .

By doing this he said the endowment lands wil lbe more valuable and Premier Bennett will makemore money .

Hodge said "Bennett couldn't give a flying go ddamn about the university .

"The part already developed doesn ' t make muchdifference to the university . It's just a matter ofadministration and maintenance . But the whol edeveloped area is a tremendous source of potentia lrevenue . If the government turns over the wholeworks to the city we'll just lose out on everything . "

Said aid . Harry Rankin: "there is no policy yet ,negotiations will go on for another couple of years tofind one that is compatible with Vancouverresidents . "

The committee for retention of universityendowment lands sent out a flyer to endowment lan dresidents Thursday supporting the retention of th earea as a separate entity (a university municipality) .

Would the city want if?

The committee said one reason is theopportunity it presents for the development of anindustrial park where very specialized industries suc has electronics could be developed in conjunction wit hthe various faculties and schools of the campus .

The committee is meeting with governmen trepresentatives in Victoria March 4 .

"I'm not sure the city would want the alread ydeveloped land . It would only turn into a liability asthe endowment land will not provide enough moneythrough taxes to pay for policing and other services, "said Ald . Ed Sweeney .

The property owners association of th eendowment land already has its own work crews, firedepartment and garbage collection arrangements . It i sa member of the Greater Vancouver Sewerage an dDrainage Board and buys its water wholesale .

Universities in the U.S. which started off withlarge areas of publicly owned land that was sold t oraise money are finding that expansion is a problem .