the upyssey - library.ubc.ca · the upyssey vol. no . 26 vancouver, b.c ., tuesday, january 20,...

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THE UPYSSE Y Vol . No . 26 VANCOUVER, B .C ., TUESDAY, JANUARY 20, 1970 228-230 5 "It is not the purpose of the university to serve the community ." UBC SENATE, Jan . 14, 197 0 DOUGLAS McK . BROW N lawye r director, Crown Life Insuranc e lessee of Fouks-Bonner penthous e APARTMEN T partnership between Bonner and Fouk s Page 2 : A special birth control question- naire . Page 4 : Some groovy little Vietnam horro r stories . Page 8 : Computer burnings are just part o f the Canadian way of life . lawye r Fouks versus Sun T directo r B .C . Brewers' Institute ARTHUR FOUK S lawyer UBC Board of Governors lawye r Insurance Agents of B .C . lawye r Insurance Bureau of Canada , administrato r B .C. insurance law s administrato r B .C . liquor laws ROBERT BONNER forme r attorney-genera l The above diagram illustrates some of the connections that exist between UBC board of governor s member Arthur Fouks, former attorney general Robert Bonner and lawyer Douglas McK . Brown . Bonner and Fouks have long been friends and associates ever since the days years ago when the y teamed up to win the debating championship for U BC . But we question their wisdom in entering int o a partnership in a business enterprise when Fouks wa s intimately connected to the liquor and insuranc e industries and Bonner was administrator of the laws concerning both . McK . Brown is icing on the cake, as director of one insurance company and counsel for the Insuranc e Bureau of Canada, while at the same time being a tenant in the Bonner-Fouks apartment . It is not surprising, therefore, to see McK . Brown acting as counsel for Fouks in his libel against The Sun Pub- lishing Company and Sun columnist Al Fotheringham . Neither is it surprising to discover a relationship such as the one outlined here . Such things are quit e common in corporate societies where company directorships, club affiliations and political preference s mingle and merge . We see no place for such activities at UBC . Board chairman Walter Koerner continually refers t o the university in terms of a business, a factory, a "plant" . If this is the way business operates, we' d rather declare bankruptcy .

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Page 1: THE UPYSSEY - library.ubc.ca · THE UPYSSEY Vol. No . 26 VANCOUVER, B.C ., TUESDAY, JANUARY 20, 1970 228-2305 "It is not the purpose of the university to serve the community." UBC

THE UPYSSEYVol .

No . 26

VANCOUVER, B .C ., TUESDAY, JANUARY 20, 1970

228-230 5

"It is not the purpose of the university to serve the community ."UBC SENATE, Jan. 14, 1970

DOUGLAS McK . BROWNlawyer

director, Crown Life Insuranc elessee of Fouks-Bonner penthous e

APARTMENTpartnership between Bonner and Fouk s

Page 2: A special birth control question-naire .

Page 4 : Some groovy little Vietnam horro rstories .

Page 8: Computer burnings are just part o fthe Canadian way of life .

lawyerFouks versus Sun

T

directorB.C. Brewers' Institute

ARTHUR FOUK Slawyer

UBC Board of Governors

lawyerInsurance Agents of B .C.

lawyerInsurance Bureau of Canada ,

administratorB.C. insurance laws

administratorB.C. liquor laws

ROBERT BONNERformer

attorney-genera l

The above diagram illustrates some of the connections that exist between UBC board of governorsmember Arthur Fouks, former attorney general Robert Bonner and lawyer Douglas McK. Brown.

Bonner and Fouks have long been friends and associates ever since the days years ago when the yteamed up to win the debating championship for U BC. But we question their wisdom in entering intoa partnership in a business enterprise when Fouks wa s intimately connected to the liquor and insuranc eindustries and Bonner was administrator of the laws concerning both .

McK. Brown is icing on the cake, as director of one insurance company and counsel for the Insuranc eBureau of Canada, while at the same time being a tenant in the Bonner-Fouks apartment. It is notsurprising, therefore, to see McK . Brown acting as counsel for Fouks in his libel against The Sun Pub-lishing Company and Sun columnist Al Fotheringham .

Neither is it surprising to discover a relationship such as the one outlined here . Such things are quitecommon in corporate societies where company directorships, club affiliations and political preference smingle and merge.

We see no place for such activities at UBC. Board chairman Walter Koerner continually refers t othe university in terms of a business, a factory, a "plant" . If this is the way business operates, we' drather declare bankruptcy.

Page 2: THE UPYSSEY - library.ubc.ca · THE UPYSSEY Vol. No . 26 VANCOUVER, B.C ., TUESDAY, JANUARY 20, 1970 228-2305 "It is not the purpose of the university to serve the community." UBC

Page 2

THE UBYSSEY

Tuesday, January 2'0, 1970

Birth Control Questionnair eIt's a fact that while men students can obtain con-

traceptives on campus by merely dropping into th emen's room in SUB, there are no similar facilities fo rwomen .

Officially, according to student health service direc-tor Dr. A . M. Johnson, the decision of the servicewhether or not to distribute contraceptives to women i sentirely up to the individual service doctor .

In an effort to discover the opinion of students o ncampus on this, situation the women's liberation grou pat UBC has prepared the following questionnaire .

Do you feel that Health Services should providea contraceptive clinic? (i.e . give information an dadvice on and prescriptions for contraceptives) .

Yes NoIf such a service was available, would you us eit?

Yes NoIf no, why not ?

(a) already practicing contraception . . .(b) do not want contraception

If such a service had been available at the tim eyou first obtained contraception, would you hav eused it ?

Yes NoHave you ever approached Student Health Ser-vices to obtain contraception ?

Yes NoIf yes, did you obtain contraception ?

Yes No

Are you married ?

Are you under 21 ?Yes No Yes NoYour sex:

female

male

What to do with itBoxes will be set up in Wesbrook Building, in the Buchana nlobby, in the Old Auditorum cafe, in the Education Build-ing lobby, in front of the bookstore, and main floor SUB ,to hold your completed questionnaire . Those who completethe forms after today can turn them in at the SUB informa-tion booth.

CONTEMPLATION, MEDITATION,RELAXATION

WORR BEADSFor details see January 23 Ubysse y

OPPORTUNITYIncorporated Group of

Senior Students engaged i ndiversified revenue project shas an opening for ambi-tious student . Shareholdin ginvestment required . Sendinquiries to Box No . 6343,Postal Station 'G', Van . 8,B .C .

10% Discountto UBC Students

2609 Granville at 10th

A complete stock of all the popular make s

of shoes for the college student, as well a s

Hosiery, Handbags, Boots —both Men's & Women's

Whatever your need in footwear you'll find it atDexall's . Pay them a visit — see the exciting ne wstyles — and ask for the 10% discount .

APPLICATIO NFOR GRADUATION

"Application for Graduation" cards are now being mail-ed to all students in Fourth Year Arts, Music, Science ,Commerce and Fourth Year Elementary and Fifth Yea rSecondary Education, anc will be available in depart-mental offices for students in the graduating years o fall other faculties . All Students who expect to graduatethis spring are requested to complete and return bothcards to the Registrar's Office (Mrs . Kent) as soon as pos -sible, but not later than February 16, 1970 .

"Application for Graduation" cards are avail -able in the Registrar's Office and students i nthese graduating years who do not receiv ecards in the mail should check their addressesin the Registrar's Office .

PLEASE NOTE : It is the responsibility of the student toMAKE APPLICATION FOR HIS DEGREE . If the studentdoes not make application, his name will not be put forwar dfor approval by his Faculty and by Senate.

NO APPLICATION — NO DEGREE

DEXALL'S — GRANVILLE BETWEEN 10th & 11th — 738-9833

Visit Our New Varsity Branch4517 W. 10th Ave.—(1 blk . from UBC Gates )

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10% Special UBC Discount—Students & Faculty

Page 3: THE UPYSSEY - library.ubc.ca · THE UPYSSEY Vol. No . 26 VANCOUVER, B.C ., TUESDAY, JANUARY 20, 1970 228-2305 "It is not the purpose of the university to serve the community." UBC

Tuesday, January 20, 1970

THE UBYSSEY

Page 3

UBC, Eastern profs ask pay

SUB comestumblingdown . . .

SUB is crumbling .Little more than a yea r

old, the student unionbuilding is already showin gcracks in the plaster andbrick of its walls andceilings .

The damage is mostapparent on the secondstorey of the building .There are fissures of varyingwidth in the newsroom anddarkroom of The Ubysseyand the Photo Societydarkroom has bricks looseenough to allow anappreciable amount of lightinto the room .

Dave Grahame, AMSco-ordinator, offered apartial explanation for thedecay. He said that theouter walls of SUB are theonly ones embedded in thefoundations, and thereforeare more .susceptible tosettling .

SUB building managerGraeme Vance was inconference at press time.

Professors at the University ofToronto, York University, and theUniversity of Western Ontari ohave begun jockeying for sizeablepay increases for the 1970-7 1academic year .

U of T professors aredemanding a 22 per cent payraise, York faculty wants an 1 8per cent increase while UW Oprofessors are asking for an 17 pe rcent raise . If successful the UWOprofs will have boosted theirwages by 30 per cent over twoyears .

U of T and York also hope toabolish their right to strike, bothfaculty associations want formalmachinery set up to negotiat esalaries, with the right to strikereplaced by arbitration .

If granted, the pay boostwould raise the average salary fo rall ranks of faculty at Toronto to$19,520 from $16,000; averagesalaries at York would rise to$15,930 .

Cohn-Benditin Canadafor a visit

MONTREAL (CUP) — DanielCohn-Bendit, student non-leade rin the French revolt of May-June ,1968, arrived in Montreal Frida yfor a Canadian visit of unknownlength.

Cohn-Bendit's visit wa sarranged by the Canadiantelevision network (CTV), to filma program for thei r" Face-To-Face" series .Cohn-Bendit is expected to travelto Toronto today to take part i nthe program.

Although the 25-year-oldstudent activist is still persona nongrata in France — during aone-hour stop-over is Paris on hisFrankfurst-to-Montreal flight, hewas not allowed to step off theplane — Cohn-Bendit whiske dthrough Canadian customs andimmigration in 15 minutes .

He was met at the airport byformer McGill political sciencelecturer Stanley Gray an dimmediately retired into seclusionuntil his scheduled Toronto

, appearance .Cohn-Bendit, formerly a

sociology student at th eUniversity of Nanterre, is also theco-author with his brother Gabrie lof the book "ObsoleteCommunism — A Left WingAlternative ." A description of thetique of Leninist party structure .

He is also rumoured to bemaking a cowboy movie withFrench film-maker Jean LucGoddard .

OVer his own protestations ,Cohn-Bendit was elevated to thestatus of "Leader" of the Mayrebellion by the French andinternational press.

The current wage scale a tWestern is : Full professors ,$21,688; associate profs, $15,823 ;assistant profs, $12,495 .

UBC faculty, who have thesixth highest wage scale is also

negotiating with its board ofgovernors .

The UWO wage demand breaksdown to five per cent to mee tinflation costs ; seven per cent to"raise UWO faculty to the level of

in creasesother professional educators ;" andfive per cent "merit pay . "

According to a UWO facultyassociation spokesman, the meritpay provision is only an average ,with money being paid to facultyon a scale "determined strictly b ythe merit of the work or researchin which he was involved . "

Western student counci lpresident Ian Brooks termed th ewage demand "extremel yunreasonable", and suggested tha tif the increase is approved, "eitherthere should be a 17 per centdecrease in tuition fees to offse tinflation and provide merit payfor students, of there should be a17 per cent increase in marks fo rthe same reasons . "

Bring it in line

Wayne Sumner, chairman ofthe salary committee for the U o fT faculty association, saidThursday the pay hike i snecessary to "bring the universitysalary structure in line with othe rteaching salaries .

A salary committee reportpresented last month to the U o fT budget committee claimed tha tteachers at Ontario colleges ofapplied arts and technology ar e"better off financially over boththe short and medium run" tha nteachers at U of T .

Sumner also said the decisionto ask for formal bargainingprocedures is a "compromis ebetween hard-line unionism an dthe old tradition of having te awith the president and handinghim a brief on salaries whilediscussing other things ."

UBC situation

UBC faculty associationpresident Dr . W. D. Finn said abrief is being prepared forpresentation to the board ofgovernors which will contain1970-71 salary demands .

"We don't release the figureswe ask for," he said, "but we weare certainly aware that theOntario faculties are asking for 2 0per cent increases . "

"There is often quite adisparity between our demand sand what we get . "

Full profs at UBC receiveapproximately $19,000 ; associateprofs get $14,200; and assistantprofs are paid $11,300 .

When asked to comment onthe decision at U of T and Yorkto give up the right to strike Finnsaid the UBC faculty has neverconsidered striking .

"Striking is not even covered i nthe faculty handbook ."

—maurson pens photo

SLOW RESPONSE was order of the day at aggie-sponsoredpancake and sausage luncheon outside bookstore Monday. Caro lMorrow was one of those who shelled out 50 cents a plate . Lunchcontinues today from 11 :30 a .m. to 1 :30 p .m. Proceeds to Houseof Hope farm for retarded children in Ladner .

Grape meeting askedGrape boycott organizers have asked Canada Safeway Ltd . to

discuss Safeway 's policy of selling California table grapes with them ."A delegation of public figures and myself request a meetin g

with you any time between January 26 and 30," said Pamela Smith ,B .C . 's United Farm Workers' representative in a telegram to Safeway' sregional director Mr. W. J . Kraft . "

The delegation will include Vancouver alderman Harry Rankin ,B .C .' Federation of Labor representative Ray Haynes, Burnaby MLAIrene Bailey, and evangelical church minister Bob Christie . Variouspriests and rabbis will also be included .

New Democratic Party leader Dave Barrett and Rankin will als oaddress an information-picket line outside the Safeway store atKingsway and Joyce Road Saturday, Jan . 24 at 2 p .m .

Only two candidates still in running for LSA presBy SANDY KASS

The Law Student Association held itsmonthly free-for-all Monday noon .

The role of the LSA, scheduled to b ethe main topic of discussion, was passe dover in favor of campaign speeches fo rthe executive election held today .

The positions of externalvice-president, internal vice-president ,treasurer, and secretary have been fille drespectively by A . B. Gibson ; law 1, DaveDonohue, law 2, Sean Hogan, andMargaret Fairweather, law 2 (byacclamation) .

Candidates for president were heard

first, but only two of them are staying i n

the election ."I am withdrawing my application fo r

president because two distinct groupshave formed in this faculty," said Pete rBrock, law 1 .

"There are the people in here for th emoney, and those that are just politica lreformers. It is tragic that this shouldhappen to the legal profession, " he said .

Presidential candidate Ian Meiklem law ,2, said : "It's time we started to gathe rideas of what the role of the LSA shoul dbe . We have to do more than think — wehave to get to work on it ."

Candidate John Parks, law 2, said therole of LSA president should be one o fco-ordinator and initiator, rather thanthat of instigator .

Candidate for ombudsman MarkKrotter, law 2, said the main qualificatio nfor the job is to be "a real bastard . "

"My friends, I feel that I amqualified," he said .

He than presented the Carey Lindepublic relations award (a jar of vaseline)to LSA president Carey Linde .

A motion to postpone discussion onthe LSA until the new executive havetaken office was withdrawn .

Spokesman for the anti-LSAers, Joh nSchmitz, law 2, asked of the LSA : "Dowe need it? We have the LSA, but do w ewant to keep it? Where does it lead us? "

He proposed establishment of a onecommunity set-up, where faculty, staffand students meet together to discus smatters of concern to all .

"We have tried representativedemocracy, but it doesn't work . It is timewe realized this," he said .

Asked one student : "If we canno texamine a small institution like the LSA ,what are we going to do when we get outof here?"

Page 4: THE UPYSSEY - library.ubc.ca · THE UPYSSEY Vol. No . 26 VANCOUVER, B.C ., TUESDAY, JANUARY 20, 1970 228-2305 "It is not the purpose of the university to serve the community." UBC

Page 4

THE UBYSSEY

Tuesday, January 2'0, 197 0

"Son, I know he's a VCby the nine bullet hole sin his chest."

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Journalist Orville Schell writes about his experiences during four trips to Vietnam, and discusse sthe vagaries of the comercial press war correspondence . From the New Republic .

Why Do YouHave A PoorMemory ?A noted publisher in Chicago re-ports there is a simple techniqu efor acquiring a powerful memorywhich can pay you real dividend sin both business and social advance-ment and works like magic to giveyou added poise, necessary self-confidence and greater popularity .

According to this publisher, manypeople do not realize how muchthey could influence others simplyby remembering accurately every-thing they see, hear, or read .Whether in business, at social func-tions or even in casual conversation swith new acquaintances, there areways in which you can dominateeach situation by your ability t oremember.

To acquaint the readers of thispaper with the easy-to-follow rulesfor developing skill in rememberin ganything you choose to remember,the publishers have printed full de-tails of their self-training metho din a new booklet, "Adventures i nMemory," which will be mailed freeto anyone who requests it. No obli-gation . Send your name and addressto :

MEMORY STUDIES835 Diversey Pkwy . ,Chicago, III . 60614 .

A postcard will do

UBC FILM SOCIETY

which in 1967 brought

you the un-cut "High"

now presents :

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FACAD EFridays : 23, 30

Saturdays: 24, 3 17 :00 & 9:00

Sundays : Jan. 25,Feb. 17 :00

$1

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R. W . McDonald, B .C . Censor

Early in September 1967, I returned to Saigon on an AI Dhelicopter from Quang Ngai Province, just below the DMZ in ICorp area, a province that has come to prominence because Myla i

is there. I had spent several weeks flying with the FACs (theForward Air Control), and investigating on the ground the

"pacification camps" for "refugees": men, women, and childrenwhose villages had been bombed, shelled and burned in the hugefree-fire zones .

The whole ol Quang Ngai and Quang Tin provinces was

devastated except tor a narrow cordon on either side of coastal

rout No. 1, and small areas around the provincial and countr y

capitals . The rice-growing region on the coast looked like the moon

— pockmarked by millions of craters, napalm burns, splintere d

trees and destroyed houses . In two counties, Duc Phoand Mo Duc ,

the local U.S . battalion commander estimated (conservatively) that

more than half of the populace was displaced . The all-too-fe wcivilian hospitals were overflowing with patients "generated " by

the war. The pacification camps were so full that food, shelter, an din some instances even potable water, were not available . Thesituation was so severe that our troops in the field were ordered t o

cease "generating refugees " si p as to take pressure off. Search anddestroy operations continued however, as did the ceaseless ai r

strikes and shelling of the land by artillery and by the Navy off the

coast . The province chief, Lt . Col . Huang Dinh Tho, when asked

what plans he had for civilians who were yet to be displaced by

military operations said : No refugees tlhistime, unless they ask to

come . "

By day, I flew over these provitn :es observing the endless ai r

strikes, sometimes "put in" simply because an aircraft had som estuff" on it and wanted to land. There was a rule that no aircraftcould land with any unexploded ordinance . Churches, thatche dhuts, bomb shelters and bunkers, rice fields, any sign of life

whatsoever, were cause enough for an airstrike . A man plowing a

rice field in a free-fire zone was a target for strafing . I remembe r

flying with a FAC when we guided in an F-4 strike, dropping four750-pound bombs simply because the pilot had seen a small basketof vegetables drying in the sun in a completely destroyed village ."When you see something like that," he explained to me, "you

know they ' re down there ." He did not say, perhaps he did no tknow, that many people had found the overcrowded pacificatio ncamps unbearable and gone back to their villages in the free-firezones, where they lived in holes .

On the ground . at night, talking to enlisted men, some o fwhom had reservations about our conduct in the war, one hear d

stories of "squirrel hunting ": a man would put a small calibremachine gun on a door stanchion of a "bubble chopper " and go

out over the fields for sport to "pop me some Dinks" . Stories o ftorture to make suspects talk were so commonplace they attracte dno attention, except from an outsider unfamiliar with the ways o f

war in this area . Any dead "Gook" was said to be a VC . Onecaptain, when asked how he knew that the man he had just sho t

running out of a hut was a VC, said "Son, I know he's a VC by the

nine bullet holes in his chest . "On our massive base, at Chu Lai, GIs lounged in the officer s

club over gin and tonics, watched stateside movies, or surfed on ai rmattresses in the beautiful blue ocean . The piecemeal destruction

of the Vietnamese and their villages had become so much an

accepted fact that not one person I encountered in the military ha d

the slightest compunction about showing me, a journalist, whateve r

I wanted to see .

That September afternoon, unshaven and covered with mud, Iwalked with my brother into JUSPAO in Saigon to catch the en dof the "Five O'clock Follies," the daily military briefing to thepress . Some 40 corrspondents were present . Ambassador RobertKomer, highest ranking American official in the pacificatio nprogram, was just finishing talking . A Japanese correspondentasked him what areas could be rated successes for the pacificatio neffort . He mentioned Binh Dinh Province, and then went on to say ,"Another place where clear-and-hold has been proceedin gremarkably well is Quang Ngai. I think Quang Ngai is going to tur nout to be one of the success stories of 1967 ." Not onecorrespondent challenged him. He concluded by saying his remarkswere "off the record" .

That was 1967 . By now it is fairly clear that atrocities, on apreviously unimaginable scale, have been committed for years byU.S . forces against the Vietnamese people — who to Americantroops are not distinguishable from the enemy . When I was inVietnam, there were almost 550 correspondents registered an dcleared with the American military . How was it that so few sawwhat was happening, or, if they saw, failed to report it? One woul dlike to think that the destruction of Mylai was "wholl yunrepresentative, " as Army Secretary , Resor says, and somethin gwhich might have escaped the attention of correspondents . One i sforced to conclude otherwise . For during the short time I was inVietnam in 1967, I personally witnessed the destruction of village sand their people from the air .

One rarely found a soldier who felt (or allowed himself to feel)the horror of what went on — what was happening to others asdistinguished from what was happening to himself. If asked whathe thinks about killing and destruction, a soldier usually only says ,"I don't bother with that . I'm just here to do my job." The term sof his job, of course, are set outside and above him . Accept themor reject them, he must continue to operate, and above all, t osurvive.

For many members of the working press in Vietnam, thesituation was similar . Few American correspondents I know an dtalked to seemed to question the basic assumptions of the war .(This was not true of the foreign press.) There was much writtenabout strategy, body- count, the success or failure of an operation ,progress in Revolutionary Development, or the stabilizing of th ecurrent Saigon regime . But few seemed to be asking, in 1967, if thewhole notion of pacification was desirable or tenable, whethe rWestmoreland was in touch with the realities of the war, whethe rAmericans should be in Vietnam to begin with. Manycorrespondents had opinions, complaints, and criticisms, and i nprivate would talk about them . But they would seldom write abou tthem. Like the soldiers, they too, needed to stay in favor, kee pofficial sources open, and avoid antagonisms between themselve sand the military, who were at once their guides and protectors inthe field .

Everything had a number or a slang nomenclature.Vietnamese were "Gooks", "Slopes" , "Dinks" ; the napalmcannisters were "napes" ; a gun ship helicopter was "Puff the magi c

dragon"; Vietnam was "Nam"; 20mm aircraft cannon were "mike

mikes". One masters this languate, or is an outsider ; just as onemasters control of himself as he watches men and women strafe dfrom the air, peasants swept from their villages and left in a ho t

Page 5: THE UPYSSEY - library.ubc.ca · THE UPYSSEY Vol. No . 26 VANCOUVER, B.C ., TUESDAY, JANUARY 20, 1970 228-2305 "It is not the purpose of the university to serve the community." UBC

Tuesday, January 20, 1970

THE UBYSSEY

Page 5

Vancouver photographer Kenneth McAllister's interpretation of U .S . Vietnam policy .

field for two days with sand bags over their heads, their hands tie dbehind them while waiting for helicopter evacuation to a"collection point" . If one does not master the lingo and thosefeelings of revulsion, one does not last long in the field. One learn sto view what is happening from an immediately acceptabl eperspective or risks being totally at odds with a dangerou senvironment. It is difficult to describe one's feelings, having jus tflown in from Hong Kong three days before, sitting in a FACCessna 02 which is shooting phosphorous rockets into a defenseles svillage, as markers for an airstrike, even when one knows that ther eis Vietcong in the area. I wanted nothing more in the world than t ostop what was happening or somehow purge myself of any critica ljudgment . Unfortunately, I could do neither .

Back in Saigon, one is protected, though you could hear an dsee bombs and flares on the city's outskirts. Here there are manyother journalists with whom t6 drink and gripe . One can veryquickly get wrapped up in local affairs. There is either the threat ofa palace coup to cover, or a pseudo election overseen by a troop o fpresidential observers who stand conspicuously but dumbly besid ea ballot box and have their pictures taken . There is the FiveO 'clock Follies in a neat air-conditioned auditorium . There are newoperations going out, and myriad press releases from hundreds ofgovernmental agencies, which are distributed from a huge rack a tthe press office . There are giant new computer schemes to tell us ifwe are winning the hearts and minds of the people .

There are black market scandals, corruption in the Vietnames egovernment, apathy in the ARVN forces, to be reported . There arestudents in jail, Buddhists protesting, human interest stories abou tprostitutes and shoeshine boys adopted by kindly GIs. Mostcorrespondents must file a story of some kind every day . The folksat home want progress reports . If a reporter dug too deeply into

official assumptions, the chances were (and probably still are) tha this story would be cut or dropped and that he would get nothin gbut the bitter animosity of the Vietnam military apparatus, uponwhich he was dependent for future stories, travel, and all the otherassistance he needed to keep on top of the news.

One correspondent for a Washington paper, with whom Italked upon returning from Quan Ngai, claimed that he knew al labout what was happening up there . Yet he wrote little whichspelled out the significance of the fact that the U .S . had destroye dtwo provinces without anyone's noticing it . The correspondenthimself seemed unmoved by what he had heard and claimed t oknow. Perhaps he had seen so much of the same kind ofdestruction in other areas that it hardly seemed newsworthy .

But even if a correspondent had been horrified by what he hadseen and learned of the war, there were few newspapers ormagazines that seemed disposed to print such unsettling reports .One Newsweek correspondent told me on returning from QuangNgai that he was shocked by what was going on in the countryside .Having had experience in Europe during World War II, he said tha twhat he had seen was "much worse than what the Nazis had don eto Europe". Had he written about it in those terms? No .

The press has, of course, on many occasions bravely ferrete dout news, despite official resistance . Newsmen have reporte dexamples of ghastly U.S. errors . and of cruelty for whichVietnamese civilians paid. But more often than not, incidents of a

' city destroyed to save it, or a village accidentally bombed, or o ftorture in government prisons, are portrayed as exceptions to th erule, rather than the rule itself. They are duly regretted, thoseinvolved are instructed to be more cautious, and the Americanpublic rests assured that they will not be repeated. That, at least ,has been the case up to now .

wednesday,

s

;LI

a multi—cultural serie s

jan .21

musicjan .28

danc efeb .4

poetryfeb .11

fashion

international hous ewednesdays at 7 :30 pm

HONG KONGCHINESE FOODS

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(Next to U .B .C . Barber Shop )

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• Universal Peace musthave direct action to bea reality .

• Life is not based o nfutility alone .

• Spiritual qualities thatadvocate individua lthought and responsi-bility.

• A way of life that de- 'spite malignment, dis-tortion, misinterpreta-tion and misunder -standing has stood th etest of time for over3500 years .

• A way of life that deal seffectively with th esometime painful actof Intermarriage .

• Write us for informa-tion on a way to asaner world .

Send $2 .00 for41

{

"JEWIS HINFORMATION "

Jewish Information Societyof America — Dept . C .

72 East 11th, Chicago, 60605

UBC FILM SOCIETY

which in 1967 brought

you the un-cut "High"

now presents :

LARRY KENT'S

FACAD EFridays: 23, 30

Saturdays: 24, 317 :00 & 9:00

Sundays: Jan. 25,Feb. 17:00

$1

Special admission

for this presentation only

SUB AUDITORIUMRESTRICTE D

no ADMITTANCE TO PERSONS UNDER 1S.

MENTWarning : VERY FRANK TREAT -

OF SEX

R. W. McDonald, B .C . Censor

a.$

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Page 6

THE UBYSSEY

Tuesday, January 2'0, 1970

THE URYUEYPublished Tuesdays and Fridays throughout the university yea rby the Alma Mater Society of the University of B .C . Editorialopinions 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 Studen tPress, of which it is a founding member . Ubyssey News Servicesupports one foreign correspondent in Pango-Pango . The Ubysseypublishes Page Friday, a weekly commentary and review . Cityeditor, 228-2305 ; editor, 228-2301 ; Page Friday, 228-2309 ;sports, 228-2308 ; advertising, 228-3977 .

JANUARY 20, 1970

BoG gets its manAs we all know by now, Walter Gage has bee n

named to serve as UBC administration president for th enext three to five years.

This represents the crowning glory for the kindl ygrandfather figure who has been patting students on th ehead for as long as anyone can remember . Right?

Perhaps, but it also represents the crowning glor yfor the board of governors' long career of backroo mpower plays .

The whole charade. began last February, when th eboard established a presidential search committee tofind a successor to Ken Hare .

The committee was about as democratic and a srepresentative of the university community as the boarditself . It consisted of three members of the board, threemembers of the alumni association (who play in thesame big business league as the board members) fou r"members of the faculty", three members of the senat e(more faculty), three deans (still more faculty), onemember of the administration bureaucracy and, in ,thetrue tokenist spirit of our time, four students appointedby the AMS .

The committee, which was supposed t orecommend criteria and a list of candidates, met onc e(that's right, once) and recommended good old Wall yfor the job .

The understanding at the time was that Gag ewould be a caretaker president until this spring, when h ereaches the "compulsory retirement" age of 65 . Thecommittee was to continue searching for a morepermanent president .

The committee wasn't heard from again until lateNovember when its chairman, Chancellor Alla nMcGavin, said he would fill some vacancies and call ameeting "in the near future. "

A month later, the committee was disolved and th eboard suddenly announced that Gage would remain a spresident on a year-to-year basis for as long as fiv eyears .

It suddenly became all too obvious that Gage wa sthe man the board wanted from the start . The onlyreason he was not appointed immediately after Hare' sresignation was to give the impression that a search wa smade and Gage was found to be the best man available .

Gage was the man the board could count on not torock the boat . They knew that Gage, the man studentsregarded as "a good guy", would convince the student snot to cause trouble and perhaps even to return to bein gunquestioning servants of the university .

The fact that Gage is scheduled for retiremen tseems to bother no one. After all, rules are only hardand fast when applied to students and aren't meant t ocramp the board's or the administration's style .

Few people dislike Gage personally, but h erepresents the kind of paternalistic administrator we al lhoped had disappeared with pep rallies and panty raids .

Any hopes some people may still have had fo rmaking this place into something other than a nacademic production line have been smashed .

It's business as usual for the next five years. ,N.S .

LETTERS TO THE EDITO R

T

A PILL I N

.__...

lIAE•YES

NINE

Editor : Michael Finla yNews . Paul Kno xCity . . . Nate Smit h

Managing

Bruce Curti sPhoto Bruce Stou tWire Irene Wasilewski

Sports Jim Maddi n

Senior John Twigg

Ass't News

Maurice Bridge

Ass't City

John Anderse n

Page Friday Fred CawseyNorbert Ruebsaat

Ganglia of the political nervou ssystem forced Jim Davies to stay awa yfrom nubiles Jan O'Brien, Lesle yMinot, Wanda Lust, and Ginny Galt .Sandy Kass heard Christine Krawczy kfinally say "no" to Tim Wilson an dShane McCune. Bev Gelfond refused t obelieve it . So did Brian McWatter s(who knows) . Maureen Gans ran Intothe darkroom followed by jocks Dl iBuddin and Tony Callagher . JenniferJordan, Robin Burgess, and Fra nMcGrath threw a "liberated" hen partyfor newcomer Charlotte Crane.

BiafraEditor, The Ubyssey, Sir :

The picture on the las tedition's Page Friday title pagewas both very meaningful an dvery beautiful . Unfortunately theheadline and the caption whichfollowed were detractions anddidn't come close to what thechild was saying . His eyes alon esaid it all .

The sarcasm of the headlinewas passe and inappropriate . Itwas, however, the attachedcaption which was most abusive .Indeed, the association of such acaption to that picture was, to sa ythe least pitiful .

Does anyone really believe thatall that the Biafran child wante dwas "a little freedom to govern itsown affairs"? Was there ever sucha thing as a "last post of freedom "for any of Biafra's children? Wh ohad those "dreams" that Cawseywas talking about? The child, o rOjukwu, or maybe himself? No tthe child .

Cawsey is critical of politics inthe caption yet it is enveloped inthem. Cawsey, and those whoagree with him, have misplace d"shame" and "disgust" when the yrefer it to Nixon, a Canada sittin gon its ass, Russia, or Nigeria . Th echild wasn't thinking about any ofthese. He was thinking about thewhole world — and of us, and hewas wondering why .

CALVIN WHIT E

More AACEditor, The Ubyssey, Sir :

I am writing with regard to th eAAC issue . In a discussion o nWednesday, during which th eparticipating AAC member wasbeing occasionally questioned (a smust happen for a fruitfuldiscussion) on the genetic theorieswhich he was spouting —apparently endlessly — he becameenraged at his opponent andthreatened to "punch hin in thenose if he interrupted again!" Thishe claimed was for his opponent's"own good," as he was "sick . "(His sickness being blatantl yevident in the opposing of aCommunist doctrine, of course) .

To pile it higher and deeper, h ethan proceeded to call hi sopponent, among other things, afascist! This I found to be aludicrous situation — as wasobvious to all but the AAC .

My experience with the AAC ,though limited, but supported byhearsay of other events ,(specifically the sciencesymposium) indicated this even tto be typical of them .

I find them to be extremelydogmatic, and in the advent o fany rational opposition, the yreply by shouting down ,interrupting, slandering orignoring their opponents . Theyseem to have no concept ofdiscussion other than a loudlyvoiced monologue delivered b ythemselves .

Thus, I have come to theconclusion that I must suppor tHodge's action in this dispute, as Icannot make them out to be an ymore than a political front .

ROSS HEDLEYarts 2

LibraryEditor, The Ubyssey, Sir :

I recently picked up and read acopy of your primary competitor ,UBC Reports . On the front pageof its latest issue was an article"Library outlook dark" . Thearticle read : "UBC's present bookcollection just over 1,000,000catalogued volumes . . . will have a2,000,000 volume book collectionby 1975-76 . "

I found this number to beenormous . At that point I aske dmyself why, with so many books ,the library is considered to beinadequate for a university thi ssize .

Again my mind whirred intoaction as I recalled a discussion Ionce had with a prof. "Whenmaking up your bibliography ,take books no older than 195 5unless they are primary sources, "he said . "If there are two bookson the same theme, take the mos trecent as it will have most likel yincorporated the former . "

It seems to me that the qualit yof information kept in a librar yshould be a greater consideratio nthan the quanity of books itholds . It does not take an expertin a field to know that certainbooks are overlapping or out ofdate .

The library has on its staff alarge group of people who runaround from desk to desk andwhose primary purpose seems t obe to make noise . Maybe if thesepeople were given the job ofevaluating the quality ofinformation in the library in

' consultation with departmenta lcommittees, the problem ofhaving an inadequate overcrowde dlibrary could be solved .

GERRY CANNO Narts 4

AAChol esHis Highness ,Lord Editor-in-Chief, Sir :

My initial reaction to theAcademic Activities Committeewas similar to that of moststudents in that I was angered an ddusgusted. But perhaps this valuejudgement was too hasty an dcolored by prejudice . At any rate ,my attitude now is one o fagreement with their actions ,which I whole-heartedly endorse .

After all, assholes are assholes ,and will continue to act asassholes even if they spell i tAAChole . Thus, my faith in thefirst law of personality has beenreaffirmed.

Secondly, what would happenif assholes weren't all segregate dinto the AAC? They wouldprobably be wandering thecampus at night, causin gimaginable trouble . Isn't it betterto have them isolated, rather tha ndispersed? Surely an organizationas useless as the AAC can besacrificed for the total bettermen tof the students at large. AnAAChole by any other nam ewould smell as shitty.

The Hairy Planaria

Fan clubEditor, The Ubyssey, Sir :

As much as I have enjoyedyour paper in past years, I findmyself increasingly disturbed bythe addition to your staff of on eJames Davies .

It was bad enough when he wa sprattling about graffitti groupiesand assorted forgotten trivia o fthe decade past . But thecollection of inane blatheringswhich has begun to appear underthe name of Davies ' Ravies is jus ttoo much .GEORGE KERSCHBAUM

Much as we tend to agree withyour analysis, we are consistentlyfaced with the problem of Daviescrying, screaming and threatenin gto hold his breath until he turnsblue whenever we decide not t orun something he writes—Ed .

(

Page 7: THE UPYSSEY - library.ubc.ca · THE UPYSSEY Vol. No . 26 VANCOUVER, B.C ., TUESDAY, JANUARY 20, 1970 228-2305 "It is not the purpose of the university to serve the community." UBC

Tuesday, January 20, 1970

THE UBYSSEY

Page 7

ePf Records

It's always interesting to see . . . hmmm, . (the. . well, yes . Actually whenever a reviewer begins

with a phrase like that, one gets the feeling thathe is being asked to appreciate a record which i sonly a historical interest or which is otherwiseunenjoyable on its own merits . You know, som ecollection of junk that some weird reviewer like sfor some weird reason but which is really jus tplain awful . Not so in this case . The JohnnyWinter Story, (London NAS 13516) gives us alook at not only early Johnny winter but also alook at the blues and rock of the Old (1959 )South .

The fourteen cuts on the record are reprints'of 45's which Winter made about ten years ag oon small Texas labels . Sure, there's a lot of what(what seems) slushy early rock, but don't let theteen-age voice trip fool you . The power thatWinter displays today is only barely hidden hereand on occasion you would think you 're listenin gto 1969' and not 1959. Winter's guitar work i snot as polished and the timing not as intricate a sit is today, but he has a few riffs that will stil lexcite you . Songs like "Crying in My Heart" and"Oh My Darling" are examlples of slow, lyrical

rock that will stillmotion, not the words)give anyone a lift .

The Johnny Winter Story is not great blue sor great rock but it's Good Something . I guess i fyou can still dig Buddy Holly you'll love thi sone .

JIM MITCHELLA potentially ambitious musical treat await s

those of you mobbing the Stereo Marts forBangor Flying Circus, an esoteric trio —remember, there are only three of them — hear don Dunhill S 50069 .

However, may I stress the word "potential . "It's not that the Circus is not as good as athousand other average rock groups — they couldbe a shade better . The complaint lies in howthe ydo their trip musically, not whatthey do .

Recent FM and AM smash sounds such a svocals initating traffic, guitar riffs reminiscenr o fThe One way Street, blues wails in the style o fFred Glichstein of The Flock, organ-bass jams ala Blood, Sweat and Tears, and Mose Allisonmusical hog-calling abound throughout thealbum, all of which is musically bearable ,tolerant, and not impotent .

—"HENDRIX " PAKASAA R

EVENT: (see title above) The End of the Life of a Sovereign .CREATOR: Playwright Eugene Ionesco of France .TIME: Evenings (8 :30) January 16 to 24 .PLACE : The Fredercik Wood Theatre (UBC)INITIATOR: Klaus Strassmann of UBC .When a man dies, his world — presumably — dies also .As far as he is able to perceive, his world comes into existanc e

on the moment of his birth, and receeeds out of existance at the

moment of his death . And the order which he imposes (projects)upon this world — to secure his own equilibrium — crumbles i ndirect proportion to his approaching death .

And so when a king dies, his kingdom dies with him .And all of this obviously applies in the same way when a

playwright — in this case Eugene Ionesco — deposits an imaginar ycharacter in an imaginary world . The King exists (dies) when theplay is over.

"You will die in one hour and thirty-five minutes, at the end o f

this piece," his queen informs him.The traditional model for this, one of the latest plays o f

Ionesco, is the medieval morality play of Everyman, the sombre tal eof the man facing death totally unprepared for it .

But Ionesco merely says it : he does not pity, he does not

melodramatize . It is fact : the world, your "kingdom" , and anyover-riding system of order you have managed to erect, all die whe n

you die. There is no before, there is no hereafter . When the play is

over it is over forever.Klaus Strassmann 's production has many high points . Eric

House's performance is one . William Louis' objectifying narrative —to us, the watchers — is another . And many others : A total, cosmi ctheatre-filling heartbeat as we watch the king die ; a dissolution o f

the stage at the king dies . And many more .Go see, watch it happen .

— N R

page tuesdayPucks

Punch

BOFORS WNSeven men have as their "raison d'etre" the guarding of th e

Bofors gun . If any of the six gunners guarding the gun shirk theirduties, they are liable for five years in prison . If there are any lapsesin the guarding, the lance-bombardier in charge of the operation wil lhave his military career ruined .

The Bofors Gun has been obsolete for twenty years .Events While Guarding The Bofors Gun, a play by John

McGrath, had its North American premiere at the Playhouse onFriday, Jan . 16. The action takes place in a British army camp i nNorth Germany during the winter . It is not what one expects in amilitary play . There is no confrontation with the enemy . There nopitched battles with the omnipresent explosions one so oftenassociates with military plays . And, above all, there is no flag waving .

However, this is not to say the play is simply a moralisti ctreatment of the evils of war . The truth is that it is concerned notwith soldiers, but rather with people — who just happen to b esoldiers .

Although the play's cast has no weak links, two of the actors 'performances can be singled out as particularly brilliant .

Wilfred Downing, as the lance-bombardier in charge of th eoperation portrays the human frailty of weakness as if it were avirtue .

In directly contrasting him is Alan Scarfe, who as gunne rO'Rourke, is as overbearing and comically vulgar as is possible forman. It is O'Rourke, seemingly with the fullest life of the me nguarding the gun, who tragically realized the utter meaninglessnes sof his existence . His tragic realization of this futility creates achaotic situation, disrupting the guarding, making that winter nighthis last .

Events While Guarding The Bofors Gun is an excellent play .The acting is brilliant, and the message is provoking .

See it if you can .

.— JAMES DAVIES

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Page 8

THE UBYSSEY

Tuesday, January 20, 197 0

Computer smashings and othe rviolent protest actions shouldn'tsurprise anyone, says Le oJohnson. Here he tells why

eo Johnson is a University of Waterloo history professor .

'rom Canadian University Press .

V 0HEN Canadian historians compare Canada to th eUnited States, they unanimously agree that on efundamental difference between the two peoples i s

the non-violent nature of Canadians in contrast to th ecrime-ridden, six-gun-toting, negro-lynching Americans .

Thus when a computer was smashed and a buildin gdamaged during anti-racism protests at Sir Georg eWilliams University, Canadian leaders, such as Joh nDiefenbaker, react in shock and anger to thi s"un-Canadian" resort to "mob rule" .

"Because Canadians are a non-violent people," the yconcluded, "such violence must have been inspired andcarried out by communists, marxists or paid agitators ."

Yet further investigation by police has demonstrate dthat no such "foreign" (except for the presence of anumber of black, foreign-born students) inspiration wa spresent .

Why then did the press and authorities claim that"communists" and "foreigners" were responsible? Afurther examination of Canadian history is necessar ybefore any answer can be given .

Is Canada a "non-violent" country? Every labo runion member who has faced police protectin gstrike-breakers, every Canadian Indian who has to brea kthrough the barriers . of legal discrimination, every FrenchCanadian who has attempted to exercise his inherite dlanguage and cultural rights, knows that violence an drepression exist in Canada .

But the authorities who claimed that the result of th eprotest at Sir George Williams was "un-Canadian" wereright in one respect at least — Canadian workers an dCanadian minorities (including students) have seldo mprotested against discrimination and oppression in aviolent manner . It has been the "authorities" —government, business and civic leaders — who are mos toften responsible for violence when it occurs .

Moreover, when these authorities declare tha textra-parliamentary protests (that is; demonstrations ,marches and strikes) are unconstitutional or un-Canadiantheir leaders cynically neglect to point out that the chie foffender against the ideals of the British constitution inCanada has been the government itself . ,

This is not to say that such authority-directedviolence is necessarily illegal . If anything the opposite i strue in Canada. As John Porter pointed out in his book ,

The Vertical Mosaic, a strong stable elite controls th eCanadian government, civil service and judicial sytem .

The key to this control, of course, is money . ,Since both the Liberal and Progressive Conservative

parties are dependent on big business for funds to get int ooffice and remain there, these parties must pass law ssatisfactory to their financial backers or be removed frompower .

This control, however, does not end with an ability t opour money into election campaigns . Since the elite own sthe newspapers and controls the radio and televisionstations it can and does distort the news to serve its ow nselfish ends .

The importance of this control of the governmentand news media cannot be too strongly stressed . Since thenews media shape public opinion, and since they are ou rsource of information, by concentrated propaganda, th epublic can be persuaded to demand laws which wor kagainst its best interest, and destroy its rights and liberties .

Two such instances, the passing of Section 98 of th ecriminal code in 1919 and Quebec's Padlock laws, sho whow fragile our civil rights are, and how the facts ar emanipulated to allow their destruction . "

In 1919 Canada was experiencing a severe post-wa rdepression . Farm and labor unrest was widespread becauseof the profiteering and corruption which had occurredduring World War I . When government and businessleaders refused to recognize the desperate condition of th elaborers, farmers and returning soldiers, they decided t oforce concessions by means of a general strike, which wa stouched off in Winnipeg on May 1, 1919, and quickl yspread to other major cities .

In all some 54 unions including police, firemen, an dcivic employees voted to strike, although the police ,firemen, waterworks employees and bread and mil kdeliverymen remained on the job with the approval ofother strikers .

Although a Manitoba Royal Commission t oinvestigate the strike later concluded that the causes ofthe strike were unemployment, low wages, bad workin gconditions and the rejection of basic union rights b yemployers, the Winnipeg newspapers mounted a viciou spropaganda campaing declaring that the strike had bee ncaused by communist agents paid with "Moscow gold" .After several weeks of this propaganda, the federa lgovernment, responding to the demands of th emanufacturers and the brainwashed public, passed th enotorious section 98 of the Criminal Code .

Section 98, passed by these devious means ,completely reversed the most ancient of British lega ltraditions — the rights of an arrested person to b econsidered innocent until proven guilty . Thus, until 193 7when section 98 was repealed, the accused person wa sconsidered guilty until he could prove himself innocent .This, of course, was not easy to do when you were locke din jail waiting your trial .

In addition to Section 98, the government amendedthe Immigration Act so the the immigration departmen tcould deport anyone, who belonged to a "subversiv eorganization", without trial by jury. By these laws th egovernment could accuse a striker of belonging to a"subversive organization" and if he failed to prove that he

did not, then they would deport him .Between 1919 and 1935, more than 10,000 men an d

women were deported under these immoral laws — lawswhich could only have been passed and maintaine dbecause of the communist scare propaganda of 1919 .

A similar use of newspaper propaganda was made byMaurice Duplessis in 1938 . Duplessis wanted to destroyopposition to his corrupt control of the Quebecgovernment, and to do this it was necessary to close th efew small newspapers who dared to expose him .

His answer — like that of the-government in 1919 —was to claim that the opposition was communist .

AFTER a lengthy campaign which repeated, over and lover, that communists killed nuns and priests, and :that Quebec "Bolsheviks" were out to destroy the:

Catholic Church, the state and public morality, Duplessis;convinced the Quebec electorate that an anti-Communist, i"anti-subversive" law was needed .

The Padlock law gave the Quebec government theright to close buildings, jail editors and confiscated thefiles of any organization which the Quebecattorney-general declared to be subversive or"communistic" — no proof would be required other tha n.his statement . Not only did Duplessis silence hi swith the Padlock law, he used it to harass such groups a slabor unions, Jehovah's Witnesses, and the Liberal party .

The similarities between the methods used to pas ssection 98 and the Padlock Law, however, are not th eonly common aspects of the behavoir of the twogobernments. In both cases, having passed the laws tosilence the opposition, the governments resorted to aprogram of calculated terrorism to subdue their critics .Businessmen and strikebreakers, who were sworn in a sspecial constables, armed, and led by regular police ,smashed any protest which was raised against thes edictatorial methods, nor is "smashed" too strong a word .In Winnipeg on "Bloody Saturday", police attacked apeaceful demonstration, and killed a man and a boy .

Over the years, these episodes have been repeate dagain and again — in Stratford in 1933, in Oshawa i n1937, in Asbestos in 1949, and in Murdockville in 1957 .

THE DAILY 1

STUVE I

E

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THE UBYSSEY

Page 9

In each case the tame press justified the use of the polic eor army to crush protest against exploitation by greedyowners by raising the communist bogeyman .

Nor are the workers the only groups against who mviolence is used .

Everyone knows that European settlers destroyed th eIndian civilization, but few people know that thi soppression continues today .

Not satisfied with having stolen a continent from theIndian, now the RCMP and government officials areattempting to steal the few remaining acres left to th eindians and to repudiate the rights they were promised i nexchange for their freedoms. In Brantford in 1952 and i nBuffalo Narrows, Saskatchewan, today, the Indian's battl estill goes on .

The 1952 Brantford Reserve "rising" illustrates th epresent-day use of the RCMP to crush resistance to th eIndian Affairs Department's dictatorial rule .

The Iroquois Indians, having been England's allies i nthe American Revolutionary War, had been forced t ocome to Canada in 1784 when England lost the war . Theycame, however, not as a subject people, but as a free an dindependent nation which had been granted lands i nexchange for those which had been lost in England' scause .

With them they brough their own religion and for mDf government, a hereditary council, which the ymaintained into this century. The hereditary council ,however, resisted Canadian attempts to reduce their statu siuo from that of a free and independent people to that ofhere dependencies — just another band of Indians to be)ullied and dominated by the Indian affairs department .

In 1923 the Indian affairs department decided tocreak the ancient treaties and enforce their domination .fo do so, the officials pursuaded parliament to pas segislation which would allow Indian bands to substitue a nelected council for their traditional councils, if they s oiesired. This act was passed, but the Brantford Sixrations people still decided to keep their old governmen trnd laws .

Not at all nonplussed by the fact that the new la wdlowed the Indians to decide if they wanted an elected:ouncil, the Indian affairs department now imposed a

tame elected council on them . For almost thirty years th eSix Nations people did their best to return to their ownform of government, but to no avail .

I n 1952, with hope of justice gone, the Indian sdecided that a symbolic act was necessary . Late one nigh tthe hereditary chiefs and their supporters occupied th ecouncil house in hopes that the ensuing publicity woul dbring them public support . Unfortunately the yunderestimated both the willingness of the RCMP to us eviolence to disposses them, and the honesty of the press .

The next day the RCMP moved in with riot guns an dtear gas and made mass arrests. The press, in its usua lfashion talked, not of the frustrating years of seekin gjustice, but of the "irresponsible Indian lawbreakers" .Today the Mohawk Workers, as the traditionalists cal lthemselves, still are a majority on the reservation and stil ldream of a day when justice and freedom will return t othem .

DESPITE the power that control of parliament, th epress and the police give the elite, still this is no tenough . Their manipulations and control reach int o

even the so-called courts of justice . Trade unionists arevery familiar with two situations in which the courts are

abused : the political use of the conspiracy charge, and th eex parte injunction .

The charge of conspiracy is one which is seldom laid .First of all, it is difficult to prove . Secondly, it is mor ejust to charge a criminal with his crime, than it is with hi sconspiracy to commit that offence. There is, however, on easpect of the conspiracy charge which lends itself to abus e— as strange as it may seem, the penalty for conspiracy i foften more severe than that for the offence .

Since any planning which results in so minor anoffense as spitting on the sidewalk can be called aconspiracy — punishable with heavy jail sentences —unionists manning picket lines can find themselvescharged, not merely with obstruction (a handy catch-al lwhich generally results in a small fine), but wit hconspiracy to obstruct, and therefore, are liable to lon gyears in jail . Since it is the crown attorney, a politica lappointee of the elite interests, who decides which charg eto lay, it's not hard to understand why it is usedpolitically against the elite's enemies .

As students have recently discovered, the conspiracycharge can be levelled against them, as well . Students a tSir George Williams University are now standing trial o nsuch charges, and as students at the University o fWaterloo recently discovered, authorities here are anxiou sto use such charges to remove those who are criticizin gmismanagement .

Four weeks ago when radical students held a one-daystudy-in at the university (library to draw attention to it sinadequate budget and facilities, administration presiden tHoward Petch, although he was informed otherwise,claimed publicly that the intent of the students was t otake over the administration building and disrupt theuniversity .

The most serious aspect of these charges was that

president Petch claimed that the Radical StudentMovement met secretly to make its decisions — anecessary precondition to the laying the conspiracycharges .

Equally significantly, professor W . K. Thomas in theMarch 31 Kitchener-Waterloo Record is reported to hav echarged that students at the University of Waterloo werepart of an international communist conspiracy under the"guidance of Chairman Mao and the spirit of Ch eGuevara."

Such McCarthyite red-baiting could be lightl ydismissed were it not for the fact that is has been just suc hcrude propaganda that has preceded the end of civi lliberties in the past . Indeed, president Petch has alreadyforecast just such an end to liberty with his demands for a"code of conduct" at the university .

The ex parte injunction is perhaps the best known o flegal abuses in labor affairs . The essence of the ex parteinjunction is that the judge is asked to make decision sand issue court orders after having heard only one side —invariably the owner's side -- in labor disputes .

All the owner has to do is satisfy the judge thatviolence is likely to occur ii strikers continue to picket hi spremises . The fact that the reason that violence occurs i sthat the owner is bringing in strikbreakers to take th eworkers' jobs, and that these scabs are assisted by th elocal police in breaking the picket line, has no bearing o nthe decision. The justice or injustice of such a decision i snot the question that matters . Indeed, we do not hav ecourts of justice, we have courts of law — law that i spolitically made and, too often, politically administered .

These few examples of the way violence an doppression operate in our society could be extendedalmost without end — from Alan McNab's rampag ethrough Ontario's Norfolk County in 1837 to th eexpulsion of the Japanese from B .C . in World War II .

But why then ,, if violence has been so common i nCanada's past, do its leaders continue to propagate th eimage of Canadians as a non-violent people? What woul dyou do if you were in their position ?

If Canadian press, radio and TV told the truth, i fCanadians realized how law is used to oppress them, an dviolence used to uphold those unjust laws, Canadian swould rise up and demand an accounting .

But so long as Canadians can be fooled, and so long a sthe lying press can convince them that it is "un-Canadian "to throw off their yokes and demand such an accounting ,Canadians — Canadian workers and Canadian students —will never be free .

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Page 10 THE UBYSSEY Tuesday, January 20, 197 0

YOU ARE INVITED TO ATTEN D

A PREVIEW MEETINGof the

DALE CARNEGIE COURS E

WED ., JAN. 21st - 8 P.M.in the

HOLIDAY INN — 1110 HOWE ST.

Presented byLEADERSHIP TRAINING INSTITUTE

T . W. "Thorfie" Thorfinnson

535 W. Georgia St.

Phone 688-8277 (24 hrs. )

us last year, and we hope to do a tleast that well this year," sai dsuriey. organizer Ed McLachlan .

"Response at UBC is generallyvery good . It's usually hard to getyoung people to respond to suchmedical services," he said .

The clinic can detect other

Operation Doorstep is hereagain .

The free chest X-ray and T Btest clinic is at UBC for th esecond year in a row, and i savailable to everyone over 6months old .

"About 3,000 people came t o

Epp resigns Pit jobjob," said Epp . He is now theexecutive secretary of the BritishColumbia Union of Students .

Alma Mater Society presiden tFraser Hodge said he doesn'tknow who will succeed Epp as PitManager .

"The decision on this will b eup to the Pit mamagemen tcommittee," he said .

Those who wish to continu edrinking beer under Epp shoul dsign the "Erwin come bac kpetition" at the SUB informationdesk .

SUB Pit manager, Erwin Ep pannounced his resignatio nMonday .

"I quit because I got anothe r

Vietnam fil mThe Vietnam Actio n

Committee will sponsor Emile deAntonio's film "In the Year of th ePig" Thursday at the OlympicTheatre, 2381 East Hastings, a t7: l5 and 9 :30 p .m .

Admission will be $1 for adult sand 50 cents for high schoo lstudents .

Operation Doorstep givesfree campus chest x-ray s

Worry Beads:-~HOME CALLS THE M

THE MANY FACES OF FOLK VOL. I

B'NAI BRITH HILLEL FOUNDATIO NAND

SPECIAL EVENTSpresents

THE FANTASTICSINGING RABBIShlomo Carlebach

Don't miss the man who turned on U .B .C. students fo rthe last-two years — it started out as a 1-hour Folk -song Concert and turned it into a 2 1/2-hour happening .

Wed., Jan. 21, 12:30 p.m.

Anti-Up-Tight Baubles! ,

For details see January 23 Ubysse y

SUB Ballroom1•

ADMISSION 50 c /MI

EDMONTON PUBLIC SCHOOL SATTENTIO N

Industrial Arts and

Vocational TeachersDue to expansion the Edmonton Public School Board wil lrequire a number of qualified Industrial Arts teachers inthe multi-phase program at the Junior and Senior HighSchool level .

Vocational teachers in Beauty Culture, Food Preparation& Services, Graphic Arts-Lithography, Commercial Art ,Merchandising, Institutional Services, and Horticultur ewill also be needed .

For application forms and employment information con -tact : .

PLACEMENT OFFIC E

UNIVERSITY OF BRITISH COLUMBIA

VANCOUVER, B .C .

ailments besides TB ."Often cases of lung cancer

and heart ailments are discovered.We've even found people withstomachs upside-down," saidMcLachlan .

The clinic is serviced by -Women's Hospital AuxiliaryVolunteers.

The clinic will be located i nfront of SUB Monday, Tuesday ,Wednesday and Friday for thenext two weeks . On Thursday i twill be parked in front of Acadi aCamp, and on Jan. 29, it will b elocated at the corner of Dalhousi eand Allison Road .

Test results are available inSUB 130, 48 hours after the tes tis taken .

AQUA SOCIETY

S .C .U .B.A. COURSEN .A .U .I . Certificatio n

Starts Now—First Paid First I n— Sign in Club's Lounge, S .U .B .

THURSDAY NIGH Tfolknight with the RAIBLE BROTHERS

FRIDAY NIGHTdance to a LIVE BAN D

GETTING INTO THE

IS GETTING INTO A

TOTAL EXPERIENCE

ON RCA

(appearing Sat. Jan.24 at the Coliseum)

ALSO AVAILABLE IN 8 TRACK AN DCASSETTE STEREO TAPE S

ALSO AVAILABLE IN 8 TRACK AN DCASSETTE STEREO TAPE S

PIZZT

• EAT IN • TAKE OUT • DELIVERY *

3261 W. Broadway 736 .778&,Weekdays to 1 a .m .Fri. & Sat 3 a.m .

Y

Page 11: THE UPYSSEY - library.ubc.ca · THE UPYSSEY Vol. No . 26 VANCOUVER, B.C ., TUESDAY, JANUARY 20, 1970 228-2305 "It is not the purpose of the university to serve the community." UBC

Tuesday, January 20, 1970

T H E U B Y S S E Y

Page 1 1

American administratorsconfident they're winnin g

HOUSTON, Tex . (CUPI) — A feeling that "theworst is over" for campus administrators prevaile dat the annual convention of the Association ofAmerican Colleges, which ended here Jan . 13 .

"My own view is that we have reached the crestin student disputes," said Edward Bloustein ,administration president of Bennington College . "Atthis meeting last year, you saw the most frightene dgroup of men you've ever seen . They were askin geveryone for advice, including the bootblack outsidethe hotel .

"But we do not see that today — we arebeginning to meet the problems." he said .

Among factors cited as contributing to thenew-felt confidence were :

Prof predictsSAN FRANCISCO (CUP-CPS) — A Stanfor d

professor has predicted that the Bay area "will diesoon ."

"Ecological catastrophe is here now and weonly need to open our eyes to see it," Dr . RobertDreisbach, a professor at Stanford's medical schoo lclaimed.

• a feeling of "expertise in handling student

disorders ;"• an apparent shift in student activism towar d

what administrators considered "more constructive "protests, especially over environmental problems ;

• greater administration pre-occupation wit hmoney in the face of a squeeze in government an dprivate funds for education .

At least one conference delegate wa sdisappointed by the apparent decrease inanti-administration activity on campus : GeorgeWald, Nobel prize-winning biologist from Harvard ,argued that students are justified in their attacks ona "corrupted" older generation .

"When it gets warm, I kind of feel the studentswill go into the streets again," he said.

Bay area endHe called for legislation to control populatio n

growth in the San ,Francisco area, reusing present

post-resource fuel sources rather than _consumin g

more natural resources, banning individua l

automobiles, and taxing combustible engines 5 0

cents per mile .

ZOOLOGICAL LOVERS :FEEDING HOURS AT THE SAN FRANCISCO ZOO(Stoat Blvd . & Ocean Beach) :

Lions 2 p.m . except Monday sLeopards & Small Cats 2:35 p .m .

Elephants 3 :30 p.m . dailyHOME

Could send you there FREE!

For details see January 23 Ubyssey

THE MANY FACES OF FOLK VOL. I ISPECIAL EVENTS

presents

RussTHORNBERRY

—Formerly of the Pozo Seco Singers and New Christy Minstrel s

—Already with an Album released, he is a favorite in EasternCanada

Tues., Jan. 27, 12:30 p.m.

SUB BALLROOM

ADMISSION 50c

r

Two Panthers surrende rafter escaping raid

OTTAWA (CUP) — Two Black Panthers who escaped an Ottawapolice raid last September surrendered to Chicago police January 14 .

Robert Bruce, 23, chairman of the west suburban Chicagobranch of the Panthers, and Nathaniel Junior, 24, Panther Fiel dSecretary, were the objects of an Ottawa search in September, alon gwith Panther Captain of Defence Merill Harvey, 23 .

Police claimed to find weapons and explosives in their Ottaw adwelling.

American officials had charged Bruce with jumping bail ,kidnapping and assault with intent to commit murder . Junior wascharged with bond default for failure to appear in court in connectionwith an alleged attempt to purchase machine guns .

No clues about bombThe bomb explosion in the math building remains a mystery .The bombing Jan . 9, caused an estimated $600 damage to th e

building."We are still continuing with an investigation, but have foun d

nothing we can make public at this time," said RCMP Sgt . GeorgeStrathde .

"Our report will only be made public when our findings arefinalized and charges can be laid," he added .

WE'RE FLYING HIG H(FINALLY)

Thursday, 12 :30, SUB 21 1

"Flying CF-104's andother light aircraft"

U.B.C. FLYING CLUB

OFFICIAL NOTICESAlma Mater Society

Elections for A.M .S. Executive will be held asfollows :FIRST SLATE :

President, Secretary, Ombudsman, Co-ordinator o fActivities

Nominations Open - Jan . 28Nominations Close - 12:00 Noon Feb . 5

Election - Feb . 11

SECOND SLATE :Vice-President, Treasurer, Internal Affairs Officer ,External Affairs Office r

Nominations Open - Feb . 4Nominations Close - 12 :00 Noon Feb . 12

Election - Feb. 18

NOTIC E

Re-Late Payment of Fee sA late payment fee of $20 additional to all other fees wil l

be assessed after JANUARY 15, 1970, this fee will be in -

creased to $30 after January 30, 1970 . Refund of this feewill be considered only on the basis of a medical certificat e

covering illness or on evidence of domestic affliction . Stu -

dents who are unable to pay their fees on time owing tonew Canada Loan or Bursary arrangements not havin gbeen finalized should see the Finance Department prior to

January 15, 1970. Appeals must be made by February 15 .

If fees are not paid in full by February 16, 1970, the regis-tration of students concerned will be cancelled and they

will be excluded from classes .

If a student whose registration has been cancelled for

non-payment of fees applies for reinstatement and hi s

application is approved by the Registrar, he will b e

required to pay a reinstatement fee of $10, the lat efee of $30, and all other outstanding fees before he

is permitted to resume classes .

ciaisij5TH . d FIR, VANCOUVER, LC

SWING I NPSYCHEDELI C

SOPHISTICATIONBack Ely Popular Deman d

The Fabulous

Good Fortun eWed, to Fri .

8:30 p.m. to 2 a.m.

Sat. • 8 p.m. to 1 am.5th Ave . at Fir — 736-4304

THIS COUPON GOOD FOR

$1 .00OFF REGULAR ADMISSION

WITH STUDENT CARDMONDAY THRU THURSDAY

ADVANCED LEARNING PROGRAM S

TRAIN YOUR MIND TO STUDY685 - 7929(FOR FREE INFORMATION )

.

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THIS WEEK IS -

A IE WEE KSIX DAYS DEVOTED B YAGRICULTURE TO FUN AN DCHARITABLE CAUSES ,ENDING ON SATURDAYWITH THE GREATES TDANCE OF THE YEAR :-

TH EFARMER'S FROLI C

SAT ., JAN . 2 48 :30

?

TICKETS FROM AMS E;USINESSOFFICE OR ANY AGGIE .

Page 13: THE UPYSSEY - library.ubc.ca · THE UPYSSEY Vol. No . 26 VANCOUVER, B.C ., TUESDAY, JANUARY 20, 1970 228-2305 "It is not the purpose of the university to serve the community." UBC

EVENTS TH IS WEEK :BOOKSTOR E

—CHUCKWAGON PANCAK ESALE IFRONT O FBOOKSTORE . ALL PROCEEDSTO HOUSE OF HOP E-12:30, FREE FILMS IN SUB .

CAMPU S

Wednesday : —APPLE DAY ON CAMPUS .PROFITS FROM THE SALE O FLUSH B.C. APPLES GO TO TH ECRIPPLED CHILDREN' SHOSPITAL . BY DONATION .

LIBRARY

thursday : —SEE THE DEATH OF AQUASI-AGRICULTURALIST-AND HIS BURIAL . IN FRONTOF LIBRARY AT NOON .

LIBRAR Y

—INTER-FACULTY BOAT RAC EAND BALE RACE. AT TH EPOND IN FRONT OF TH ELIBRARY AT NOON .

SU B

today :2

0

2

2

friday :

saturday :2

4

THE FARMER'S FROLIC—OU RGIFT TO THE UNIVERSITY .LIMITED NUMBER OF TICKET SAVAILABLE .

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Page 14

THE UBYSSEY

Tuesday, January 20, 1970

COLLEGE LIF ETONIGHT 9:00 P .M .

Place Vanier Common Block Lounge

DOOR PRIZE & REFRESHMENT S

Come Sing & Share with u s

SPONSORSHIP : CAMPUS CRUSADE FOR CHRIST

,.a.,,.e.a.e.n.a.o'a.o'a.o'e.o4, 'oe, .oeu.e'o.oeca.oe,.eae

ENGINEERS andCABLE CAR BUFFS

I

For details see January 23•

Libyssey

You could tour the San FranciscoCable Car Power Houseand Car Barn courtesy of HOM E

Rates: Students, Faculty & Club—3 lines, 1 day 750, 3 days $2.00Commercial—3 lines, 1 day $1 .00; additional lines 250;4 days price of 3 .

Classified ads are not accepted by telephone andare payable in advance,

Closing Deadline is 11)30 a.m . the day before publication .Publications Office, STUDENT UNION BLDG., Univ . of B.C.,

Vancouver 8, B.C.

CLASSIFIED

4

TUESDAYUBC FLYING CLU B

Ground school lectures, 7 :30 p.m ., Wet .son Air Service, Old Airport .

IwwAlex Ferguson will speak, noon, SUB211 .

GEOGRAPHY CLUBDiscussion, noon, Geo.-Geol. 200.

PROGRESSIVE CONSERVATIVE SMeeting, noon, Council Chambers, Em .

GERMAN CLU BMeeting, noon, Lit

BILL WILLMOTT'S LECTUR ESERIES ON VIETNA M

Lecture, noon, Ang. 104 .INTERNATIONAL HOUS E

Hot meals daily for 85 cents.DAY CARE CO-OP

Urgent meeting, noon, SUB 213 .ClAS P

Mexican summer training meeting, 7:30p.m ., 4630 W. 5th .

SCIENCE FICTIO NMeeting, noon, SUB 105A.

WEDNESDAYECO

Bob Hunter speaks, noon, Bi.-Sc .2000 .

REHABILITATION MEDICIN ERehab . med . vs. B . C . Paraplegic Bas-ketball Team, 9 p.m ., Kitsilano Com-munity Center, 12th and Larch .

THUNDERBIRD MOTORCYCLE CLU BMeeting, noon, SUB 211 .

IW WMordecai Briemberg, noon, SUB PartyRoom .

EXPERIMENTAL COLLEGE CLU BOF UB C

Seminar, noon, SUB 125.SPEAK EAS Y

Mon., Wed., and Fri ., 12-9 p .m ., SU B218 .LEGAL AI D

Campus legal aid panels, every monoWed, and Fri ., noon, SUB 237-237A.C US O

Film, noon, SUB 211 .NEWMAN CENTE R

Meeting, noon, SUB 105 B

'tweenclasses

THURSDAYUBC FLYING CLU B

Capt. Horn speaks, noon, SUB 111 .PRE-SOCIAL WORK CLU B

Orientation tour at school of socialwork, noon, School of Social Work .

ALLIANCE FRANCAIS EFrench film, noon and 7:30, Bu. 100.

THUNDERBIRD WARGAMER SMeeting, noon, Em. 130.

STUDENTS INTERNATIONA LMEDITATION SOCIETY

Information, every Thurs . and Fri. ,SUB main floor.

CAMPUS CRUSADE FOR CHRISTTeach-in, noon, Ed. 202.

CAMPUS CAVALIER SSquare dancing, noon, SUB 207-200.

VIETNAM MOBILIZATION COMMITTE EFilm, noon, SUB And.

IWWPanel on Women's Liberation, noon ,SUB 211 .

UBC FLYING CLU BLecture-meeting, noon, SUB 211 .

INTERNATIONAL HOUS EDiscussion on DDT in Africa, noon ,1 .11.

VARSITY ROD AND GU NMeeting, SUB 117.

POLITICAL SCIENCE UNIO NMeeting, noon, Political Science Com-mon Room, Angus .

FRIDAYIW W

Films, noon, SUB And .ALLIANCE FRANCAISE

Meeting, noon, I.H.

WEDNESDAYUBC SAILING CLU B

Film and meeting, noon, Bu . 217.GALLIMAUFRY THEATR E

Theatre, Wed., Thurs ., and Fri., noon,SUB ballroom.

E3 SUZUKIMOTORCYCLE

CENTR EWorld Champion Lightweights

SALES — SERVICEPARTS — ACCESSORIES

For Complete Service Call2185 W . Broadway

731-751 0

AQUA SOCIET Y

S .C .U .B.A. COURSEN .A .U .I . Certificatio n

Starts Now— First Paid First I n—Sign in Club's Lounge, S .U .B .

E & B RESTAURANT

DeluxeWestern Cuisine

4423 W. 10th

ANNOUNCEMENT SDances

1 1DOUBLE DANCE AT PLAC E

Vanier with the Crosstown Busand Tomorrow's Eyes . Fri ., Jan .23 . 9-I . Non-res. $1 .50 . Res . $1 .25 .

TRADITIONAL POLKA PARTY ,Friday, Jan . 23, 9-1, live band, re-freshments . Great fun . $1 .25 each .International Rouse .

Greetings

1 2GOT A QUESTION ?GOT A HANG-UP ?

SPEAK EASY, SUB Rm . 218, 228 -3706 . Mon ., Wed., Fri ., 12-9 p .m .

CONTEMPORAR Y 1970* watch Campus posters each wee k• for new Festival announcements.* TODAY : III. lecture in LAS . 104 ,

12 :30, by British artist BernardCohen : "Art and the Structureand Function of Creative Learn -ing" .

* this Thurs ., 4 :30 in Lasserre lob -by : "Sound Sculpture" .

* this Friday : 12 :30 in Music Re-cital Hall : "Random Tape Perfor-mances" .

* next week Gallimaufry! (Becket t& Pinter) .

Wanted Information

1 3HELP FIND MY DOUBLE-WOULD

the guy who completely mistookme for someone else he knew o nThurs . 15 In SUB. Please leav ethe double's name etc. with D.Jeffery, 403 Robson P1,, Van . orcall 224-9720 .

Lost&Found

14LOST: "HELLO DOLLY" POST-

ers left in VW convertible, Wed.afternoon by boy, girl hitchhiker.Leave at MUSSOC office, SUB ,or call 228-9203 ,

Rides&Car Pools

1 5Special Notices

1 6HAVE A SPACE ODYSSEY WITH

Guided Meditation .A highly creative wa y—two step bystep instructions on a 12" LP record— $6 .60, by a Western Yoglnl :

Swami Sivananda Radhasharing ancient techniques studie din India under Swami Sivananda inthe Himalayas.

Ashram Records, Box 9 ,Kootenay Bay, B .C.

OUT IN THE COLD?DATES + Ski

*

Phone P .Y.C. — 434-263 6

*

FREE Ski Membership Girls 18-23

Beginners Welcome!

SAVE ON BLANK TAPE PHILIPSC-SO Cassette $3 .15. Call or se ePeter Jim 320 Okanagan House .Phone 224-7876 or 224-9062 .

THEATR E10 filles, 5 Hommes, Requis .

Linda, 277-7193, De 6 p .m . A 9 p .m .WHY PAY HIGH AUTO INSUR -

ance rate if you are 20 years o rover and have good driving re -cord you may qualify . Phone Te d Elliott, 299-9422 .AQUA SOC BEER NIGHT THIS

month is Jan . 22 . 4-8 p .m . Slidesshown too. Hut M-27 .

AQUA SOC GENERAL MEETINGThurs., Jan. 29, Brock room 303 .Discussion of election .

BOB HUNTER SUN COLUMNISTspeaks about Sociological Impli-cations of Pollution . Wed., 12 :30 ,Bio-Science 2000 .ANGLICAN-UNITED CHURCH

CHAPLAINCYAll interested students and facultyare invited to an afternoon of dis -cussion on the future of chaplain -cies on campus . Saturday, January24, at 1 :30 in the Lutheran Studen tCentre, 5885 University Boulevard .

Special Notices (Copt .)

1 6

WHISTLER MOUNTAIN YOUTHHOSTEL OPEN S

Special weekend packages availabl efor ONLY $8.00 — Includes twonights accommodation and al lmeals . Open 7 days a week, beau -

tiful location on Alta Lake —skiing, snow shoeing, ice skating ,fishing, etc.Reservations and further informa-tion can be obtained at the Cana-

dian Youth Hostels Association ,1406 West Broadway, Vancouve r9, 738-3128 .

WE ARE ALIVE AND WELL I NSUB 211, Thurs ., 12 :30 . UBC Fly-ing Club Office 216G.

- Double Dance -

*TOMORROW'S EYES

&

CROSSTOWN BU S*

Fri ., Jan . 23 — 9- 1

PLACE VANIE R

*Non-Residents $1 .5 0

Residents $1.2 5

Travel Opportunities 1 7YOU COULD FLY FREE FOR A

Free weekend in San Francisco .There will be six available. De-tails Jan, 23,

TRAVELLING OVERSEAS ON ABUDGET ?

Then visit your Youth Hostels in -formation desk which is open everyWednesday from 12 :30-1 :30 p .m . op-posite the information desk in theStudents Union Building .Canadian Youth Hostels Associatio n

1406 West BroadwayVancouver 9, B.C .

Tel, 738-312 8

Wanted—Miscellaneous

1 8AUTOMOTIV E

Automobile For Sale

2 1'62 V .W. DE LUXE . GOOD CONI)I -

tlon . 145G. Contact George 435 -5733, 6-8 p.m.

1960 VAUXHALL, 42,000 MILES.Excellent condition . 325-4488 be -tween 4 and 10 p.m., radio 4 dr.$490 cash.

1963 NSU PRINZ. RUNS CHEAP.45 ml ./gal . Best offer . Phone JohnRoom 434, 224-5214.

'62 CHEVY II, EXCELLEN Tmechanical condlion. $450 .00 phone224-9045 ask for Rm . 470 after 7 :00P .m .

'58 PONTIAC, RELIABLE RUN -ning condt'n . Only $120 . Call 224 -9662, Philip,

Motorcycles

253965 HONDA S90, HELMET . MUS T

sacrifice to pay fees. First offer$125 takes . John 224-4146 ,

BUSINESS SERVICESDance Bands

31Miscellaneous

33ARTIVORK POSTERS DRAUGHT -

ing and photographic darkroomwork done very cheap . John Kula ,224-4146.

Photography

34THE VIEW OF SAN FRANCISC O

at night from Telegraph Hill i sspectacular! You could see i tFREE! Details Jan . 23 .

Rentals—Miscellaneous

3 6Scandals 3 7VERONICA LAKE : WOULD YOU

spend a weekend with me in SanFrancisco if I win one of the SI XFREE trips from Home ?

R. H. MeL .-

400-505 Burrard StWITNESSES OF ACCIDENT AT

Wesbrook and Agronomy Thurs-day a.m. January 15 . Please con -tact Kathie at Black Cross Tableor 731-540 .

DON'T SIT AT HOME AND SULKtonight . Come to Place Vanierand dance to Tomorrow's Eye sand the Crosstown Bus. 9-1 . Non -res . $1 .50, Res . $1 .25.

Sewing&Alterations 38Typewriters & Repairs

39

Typing

4 0FAST ACCURATE TYPING—MRS .

Treacy, 738-8794 — 35c page, S cco py .

COMPETENT TYPING (DOCU -ments, theses, essays, general) m yhome. Sr. Legal Secretary-Book-keeper, excellent references. 946 -4722 .

EXPERT IBM SELECTRIC TYPIST .Experienced essay a n d thesi stypist . Reasonable rates . 321-3838. Forestry Term Papers .

TYPIST — ELECTRICPlease call 224-612 9

ESSAY TYPING, 3589 West 19t h Ave . 733-5922 .

EFFICIENT TYPING — MY HOM E20" carriage desk model type-writer . Phone Ruth — 731-8578.

"EXPERIENCED ELECTRI Chome typing . Essays, theses, etc .Neat accurate work, reasonablerates . Phone 321-2102 .

ACCURATE EXP. TYPING FROMlegible work ; reas . rates ; 728-682 9

after nine am, to nine p .m.

THESES TYPED. EXPERIENCEDtypist IBM-machine . Call JeniferTomlin, days 668-8572, eves. 682-5380 .

TYPING, PHONE 731-7511 — 9 :00 -5 :00, after 6 :00 phone 266- 6662 .

EMPLOYMENT

Help Wanted—Female

5 1

PART-TIME SALES HELP, WEE Kdays and weekends . Aggressive,fashion minded sales gals foryoung groovy boutique shops . Pre-vious sales experience preferred .Apply in writing to 1178 Hamilton, Vancouver 3.

PART-TIME TELLERS WANTE Dby Bank of Montreal, S.U .B . Mon-days and Fridays. Prev. exp. Isrequired . Phone Mr. Fisher 228 -9021 or call at the office.

Help Wanted—Male

52

Male or Female

5 3.PART TIME HELP WANTED. NO

soliciting . Please phone Al Tarbet521-7731 .

DO YOU HAVE A CAR? CAN YOUuse an extra $100 .00? Can yo uspare 5 hours a week? Phone522-3011 betweeen 3 p .m. and 5p .m. for interview .

Work Wanted

5 4GRAPHS AND CHARTS EX -

pertly done for theses, publica-tions, etc. Call Vane. 298-6805 eve .

INSTRUCTIO N

Language Instruction

61ASPANISH 200 STUDENT WOULD

like to practice Sp. conversationwith anyone interested . Ph. Judy435-9604 .

Music

6 2

Tutoring

64WANTED THIRD OR FOURT H

Year Eng. major ; Geog. major totutor second year student, 942 -4281 .

EXP. TUTOR IN 1ST AND 2N Dyear Math & Chemistry by gradu-ate . Phone 738-5603 .

TUTORING IN MATH - PHYS . -Stat by instructor (Ph .D.) $5 pe r hour . Ph . 733-6037 . Eve .PSYCH 206 TUTOR NEEDED .

Prefer grad student. Phone 261 -5290 aft . 6 .

MISCELLANEOU SFOR SALE

7 1

BIRD CALL SYour Student Telephone

DirectorySTILL AVAILABLE — $1 .00

o the Bookstore,AMS Publications Offic e

and Thunderbird Sho p

100% DOWN SKI JACKETS AN DImported track suits still avail -able Memorial Gym 305, Mondaysand Thursdays, 12 :30-2 :00 or phon e683-3442 . Ask for Hank lowes tprices .

Misc. For Sale (Cont.)

7 1NEAR NEW STEREO. HAL F

price . Great condition and sound.Phone 738-7447 between 6 p .m .and 7 p.m .

L A N G E BOOTS, HEAD 360's,poles, canvas cover, all one sea -son old. Phone 261-0394 after 6 :00P .m.

LADIES AFGHAN SHEEPSKI Ncoat . Size 14 . $80 . 321-6954 (before9 :30 p .m . )

BLUEPOINT MALE SIAMES Ekitten 3 months . 'ery good natur-ed . $20 .00 . Call 321-6954 before9 :30 p.m.

HEAD COMPETITION GS SKIS 21 0CM and Lange boots, size 10M .Phone Ralph 224-9016.

1 PAIR 215 CM KNEIISSL REDStars, never used . What offers? $179 .00 new . 263-4390 .

FRENCH MADE BLACK MAX Icoat, hardly worn $65. Call 733 -1531 .

NEW PR. DYNA SPEAKER S(never used), 2 Wharfedale speak-ers (3 mo . old), 2 pr. RSC speak-ers in walnut cabinets . 224-5194 .

FRIDGE, GOOD CONDITION, $20 .228-3471, Diana.

RENTALS & REAL ESTAT E

Rooms

8 12 LARGE BEDSITTING ROOMS ,

kitchen privileges, use of phone . $50_00 month . Call 733-9762 .

ON CAMPUS ROOMS, STUDYlamps, mirrors, towel hangers ,w/w carpets, shoe cupboards,large bunks. Sigma Chi House, 5725 Agronomy, 224-9610.ROOMS, STUDENT HOUSE USE

of house facilities. $35 .00 month .Ph . 873-1117 .

LHK ROOMS, MALE STUDENT,private entrance, kitchen privi-leges, near bus. Phone after 5 p .m. 733-5255 .

LARGE FURNISHED ROOM FOR 1student . $34 month rent . Sharekitchen, T.V., etc. Inimed. occu-pancy. 733-7358 eves .

ON CAMPUS ACCOMMODATIONfor 2 students . Light housekeep-ing, available Feb. 1st. 224-6397 .

Room & Board

,8 2

SIGMA CHI HOUSE — LARGES Trooms on campus ; two lounge sand dining hall. Free room clean-ing ervlce, laundry, color TV,good food . Come out and see us. 5725 Agronomy, 224-9620, 224-6374 .

ROOM AND BOARD PLUS RE -muneration offered in exchange forbaby sitting, cooking and ligh thousekeeping. For six months. TTr-gent. Office : 228-2225 . Home : 266 -9544 .

ROOM, BOARD $75. FEMALE STU-dent. Near Mcdonald bus . 261-0804 .

ON CAMPUS BOARD & ROOM .Available immediately at UnionCollege . Free parking. Homecooking . Apply matron, 224-3266 .

TIRED OF COMMUTING ; T R Ybeing a boarder at Phi GammaDelta . Good food and rooms ; tenminutes from any , building oncampus . $90 a month . 224-9769 ask for Dave or Bob .

MALE - STUDENT. CLOSE TO. U.B .C . Tennis - table, 3 meals

daily . Good food . Tel . 738-2305 .

SPACE FOR ONE MALE STUD -ent in St . Anderw's Hall . Applyto Dean—phone 224-7720 .

FREE ROOM AND BOARD EX -change for light housekeeping &supervising 2 boys after school, 5blocks University gstes Call Lynndays 736-7391, even .

224-5738 .

Furn. Houses & Apts .

8 3

GIRL STUDENT TO SHARE FUR-nished modern apt . In West End . Call MU 1-7707 .

WANTED — GIRL 30 TO 40 T Oshare 2 bedroom furnished pent -house apartment with same . Kit-silano District $85 .00 per monthplus telephone and hydro. Tele-phone 731-3639.

1 BDRM. FURN . APT . TO SUBLETKerrisdale area, couple pref . Ph .263-9057 .

BSMT. STE. TO SHARE WITHgirl, 19th & Dunbar, $45/mo. ,washer, dryer . Phone 738-021 9after 6 :00 .

Page 15: THE UPYSSEY - library.ubc.ca · THE UPYSSEY Vol. No . 26 VANCOUVER, B.C ., TUESDAY, JANUARY 20, 1970 228-2305 "It is not the purpose of the university to serve the community." UBC

Tuesday, January 20, 1970

THE UBYSSEY

-Page 1 5

SPORTST' Birds advancetowards ball title

The continuing march of the UBC basketball Thunderbirds to th eWCIAA championship took its seventh and eighth steps on the weeken das the club topped both of its Manitoba opponents on the weekend . . .

Friday evening the victims were second place University o fManitoba Bisons as they fell 72-65 to the Birds .

The battle was won on the boards as the rebounds were 46-28 i nfavor of the winners, 16 of them by 6'7" centre Terry MacKay .

UBC got off to an excellent start as they were able to use their ful lcourt press effectively and this, combined with their rebound edge ,decisively limited the number of Bison shots .

"We didn't get enough shots to win," said Manitoba coach Jac kLewis after the loss . With rebounders like that MacKay and Sankey it' sdifficult to get possession to take the shots . "

Unfortunately for the Bisons the loss could conceivably prov emore costly than simply the league title .

The Bird victory means that Manitoba or any other clubcompeting against UBC in the playoffs will have to play all the games a tWar Memorial Gym; the place Peter Mullins had in mind .

Saturday night UBC unexpectedly had their hands full . TheUniversity of Winnipeg Wesmen put up a spirited struggle in the firs thalf and led 34-30 at the break .

-Early in the second half the Birds stormed ahead by 10 points an d

with the help of rookie guards Rod Matheson and Joe Kainer held off afinal Wesmen surge in the last two minutes .

The result came in the form of 78-71 victory, caused mainly b ythe fine play of Bob Molinski who had 20 points, Derek Sankey wh oadded 17 and Ron Thorsen who finished with 15 .

Apart from the obvious success in that the team picked up twovictories, there was other good news for Mullins . The lack of depthwhich was evident on the American road trip seems to have cured itself .

Friday night Jack Hoy was able to come off the bench to reliev eSankey and hit two outside shots to maintain the UBC momentum . O nSaturday Matheson and Kainer did the job .

Hence it might be reasonably assumed that the Birds have mor ethan five players ; an excellent asset especially when plagued by chroni cfoul trouble .

The Thunderbirds continue their prairie jaunts as they play th eUniversities of Calgary, Alberta and Lethbridge next weekend . '

Intramural sHOCKEY — Jan. 15 : Arch (2), Kappa

Sigma (2) ; DU (6), Ed (2); Figi (8), Ps iU (5) .

POINT STANDING — JAN . 19701. Engineers

1379 + 127 = 150 62. Beta Theta Pi 1192 + 52 = 124 43. Union College 934 + 85 = 10194. Forestry

727 + 21 = 74 85. Kappa Sigma

740

7406. Phi Gamma Delta 520

5207. Agriculture

470 + 1 = 4708. Arts

416 + 1 = 4178 . Physical Ed .

203 +- 214 = 41 79. Sigma Alpha Mu 314 + 1 = 31 5

10. Delta Kappa Ep, 268 + 21 = 28911, Commerce

28112. Delta upsilon

25313. Phi Delta Theta

25 014. Dentistry

20 015. Law

19116, Sigma Chi

18017. Education

+ 3 = 17618. St . Marks

16519. Grad Studies

14520. Alpha Tau Omega

12821. Pharmacy

12022. Alpha Delta Phi

9323. Zeta Beta Tau

9024. Carey Hall

6526. Pl. Vanier Res.

+ 54 = 5426 . Medicine

33

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—dick button photoUBC GOALTENDER RICK BARDAL came out on the right side of a lucky break on this shot b yManitoba Bisons forward Dan Topolinski as the puck slid under his pad but wide of the goal .Unfortunately, for Bardal, nine others found the mark as Manitoba trounced the Birds . Things went alittle better. Saturday night as Bardal held Winnipeg to three goals and the Birds picked up a 7-3 win .

Birds beat prophetslose to prairie boys

By DICK BUTTO NContrary to popular predictions, the UBC

Thunderbirds did not trounce the opposition fro mthe Universities of Manitoba and Winnipeg thi sweekend.

In fact, the Birds came out on the short en dof a rather bad trouncing themselves as HerbPinder, formerly of the Canadian National team ,and a few other players comprising the Universit yof Manitoba Bisons scored a rather convincing 9- 1victory Friday night .

Pinder himself tallied five of the goals, plu sadded a couple of assists . Of course, he also madesome good defensive plays to maintain a balance dgame.

Saturday night the Birds looked a little bette ras they defeated the University of Winnipe g

Wesmen 7-3 in a rather lackadaisical game .Play was good in some spots, but overall wa s

not up the standard the Birds have shown before .The Birds started slowly Friday night, picked

up a penalty at 1 :32 for too many men on the ice ,then less than a minute later found out tha tManitoba has a fairly potent power play .- The Birds had difficulty staying out of th epenalty box, and Manitoba scored again in the firs t

10 minutes.Halfway through the period, the Birds settled

down and took control of the game .Barry Wilcox and Wayne Schaab missed a few

good chances as the puck bounced the wrong wa yfor them, then UBC picked up their only counte rof the evening on a close in shot.

A record crowd of nearly a thousand watched

UBC come out flying in the second period, the ndie .

Two minutes into the period, they took amajor penalty for butt-ending and Pinder an dcompany went to work.

Three goals and five minutes later, the Birdswere back at full strength and behind 5-1 . Theynever recovered and gave up three more goal sbefore the second period finished .

The defense was notably absent on a numbe rof the goals.

Saturday, the Birds approached the game witha healthier attitude and slightly better play .

Again it was a night of frustration for many ofthe Birds, especially Roy Sak :aki who picked uptwo goals and was robbed of a hat trick b yWinnipeg goaltender Grant Clay who playe dstrongly for two periods before he left the game .

Doug Buchanan had two good breakaways ,but Clay made better plays and Buchanan wen tscoreless.

Larry Watts picked up a nice goal on a UBCpower play with a hard shot from 10 feet out afte rtwo similar shots had been stopped .

Mike Darnborough slapped in a hard drivefrom 30 feet out, and Barry Wilcox and To mWilliamson slipped shots past the unsuspectin gClay to round out the UBC scoring .

Birds were without the services of LaurieVanzella who was sidelined with an elbow injur yand a bad bruise on his leg. Hopefully, he will beready for next weekend when UBC tackles th eUniversity of Alberta Golden Bears and Universit yof Calgary Dinosaurs here .

INTRAMURAL SSCHEDUL E

HOCKEY—Jan. 20, Rink I, 6:20 : PE vs.Deke; 7 :35 : Eng II vs. Beta; 8:50 : SigmaChi vs . Phi Delta, Jan . 21, Rink II, 6:40:For vs . St. Andrews; 7:55: Union vs.Grad `B' ; 9:10 Ed vs . Comm 'A ' . Jan . 22 ,Rink I, 6:20: Eng I vs . Psi U; 7:35: Gra d'A' vs . Figi; 8 :50 : DU vs. Kappa Sigma ,

BASKETBALL — Jan . 21, 7:00: St.Marks vs. Law; PE III vs. Aggies; 8 :00 :VCF vs. Union III; Eng III vs . Ed III;9 :00 : Phi Delta vs. For III ; Carey Hallvs. Eng VI; PV V vs. Union IV ; 10 :00 :PV IV vs. Eng VII; Dekes vs. SAM 'IY;Figi vs. SAM 'C' ; 12 :30: Beta vs. SigmaChi . Jan . 23, 12:30: Pharm II vs. Eng II ;Med II vs. Grad St; Eng V vs . SwimTeam .

RESULTSBASKETBALL—Jan . 14 : Eng VI (27),

PV VI (26); PV IV (29), PV V (26) ; PE II(33), Union III (30) ; Carey Hall (46), PhiFelta II (25) ; Ed III (46), VCF (26); PVIII (44), Law II (29); St. Marks (43), Ag-gies (24) ; Totem II (41), Eng III (20) ;PV I (37), Figi I (20) . Jan. 16: For II(23), Arts English (28) ; Swim Team andEng V win by default .

MC FILM SOCIETY which in 1967 brought you the un-cut "HIGH" now presents

LARIPY ILICAD E~KENT'S

FRIDAY:

23, 30

7:00

SATURDAYS: 24, 31

9:00

SUB AUDITORIUM

SUNDAYS: 25, 1

7:00

$ 1

Special admission price for this presentation only

$ 1

110 ADMITTANCE TO PERSONS UNDER 1 8

Warning : VERY FRANK TREAT-MENT OF SE X

R. W. McDonald, B .C . Censo r

RESTRICTED

a's

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Page 16: THE UPYSSEY - library.ubc.ca · THE UPYSSEY Vol. No . 26 VANCOUVER, B.C ., TUESDAY, JANUARY 20, 1970 228-2305 "It is not the purpose of the university to serve the community." UBC

I.

Page 16

Tuesday, January 2'0, 1970

Security guards'eyes on Loyol a

MONTREAL (CUP) — After a one-week ban on all campu sactivity, the doors of Loyola College opened again Monday with a nunauthorized faculty-student rally, and the announcement of new ,restrictive hours of business for the campus .

Approximately 900 students and faculty filled the Loyol aauditorium during the early afternoon, and agreed to ask student swho have not paid their second-term tuition fees to withhold th emoney in protest against the Loyola administration's firing of 2 7professors .

Immediately following the rally, approximately 75 student sfiled over to :the Loyola bursar's office, to demand a $25 refund ontheir fees — their approximation of the portion of tuition lost durin gthe administration's one-week ban on classes .

The students arrived at the office to discover the door wa sbarred and guarded by a security guard .

The one-week ban was announced to "facilitate a freer an dmore profitable exchange of views of all concerned" with the curren tLoyola crisis . Jan . 12, 150 riot police entered the campus to evic tstudents and faculty sitting-in at the Loyola administration building .

In a press release Monday administration president Patric kMalone declared that current security regulations on the campus wer einadequate, and announced new, early closing times for all campu sbuildings "in the best interests of the college community . "

Henceforth, the college will close at 10 :30 p .m. weekdays, Ip .m. Saturdays, and all day Sunday .

Security guards have been stationed in most campus buildings .

Classroom strategyplanned at McGill

MONTREAL (CUP) -- McGill sociology students Friday decide dto shift their emphasis on reform from the committee to th eclassroom, while negotiating a new form of government in thei rdepartment .

Approximately 150 students attended a mass meeting whic hmade that decision, while agreeing to return student representatives t oa joint student-faculty caucus which previously ruled the departmen tby consensus.

Students withdrew from the caucus last Monday, after facult yunilaterally dissolved the body and then attempted to reconstitute i twithout consulting the students .

Neither side is in favor of the current consensus procedure, bu tmany faculty would like to see the caucus, originally formed on aparity basis, replaced by a formal structure in which students woul dhave only one-third representation .

In the meantime, David Abbey, chairman of the sociolog ystudent union, said the student group would sponsor a series ofmeetings, seminars, and teach-ins to discuss a "radical approach" t osociology .

Eventually, students will be trained to debate professors in th eclassroom on the political significance of course material, he said .

Campus day care centr estill looking for home

The UBC Parents' Nursery Co-op, conceived three months ago ,is still looking for accomodation on campus .

"We've applied for everything that became vacant in the last fe wmonths but there's always an excuse why we can ' t have it," saidSibylle Klein, an organizer of the day-care centre .

Those involved in the plans for the centre see the parents co-o pas a nursery where parents will take turns supervising the childrenunder the direction of a full-time kindergarten teacher . Programs andinstruction will be organized for the children while they are at thecentre .

A spokesman for the community care facilities at thedepartment of social welfare has given her full support to plans for th eco-op .

Yet according to UBC administration there is no space availabl eon campus to set up a centre such as this .

There will be an important meeting Wednesday noon in SU B224 for parents and parties interested in plans for the parents' nurser yco-op .

For details see January 23 Ubyssey

THE UBYSSE Y

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now be taken & proofed in color . B & W can be ordered .

Re-takes at no extra cost including those wanting re-take s

from the Extension Department .

One 5 x 7 in a folder, choice of 5-6 proofs inclusive . Sitting is paid fo rthrough your gradfee. Extra copies in folders are: 4 x 5 site in B & W$1 .50, in Color $2.95, 5 x 7 B & W $2 .00 . Color $3 .95, 8 x 10 B & W $4 .00 .Color $4 .95 . But best of all will be our package rates on which we'r estill working.

Since there is no immediate deadline, we will be taking as much careand time as possible and take your Grad Portraits at our studios startin gFeb . 2/70. We're located at 3343 West Broadway and have lots of free ,easy and unrestricted parking. Bus stop is practically outside our door .Leave bus at Waterloo going East or Blenheim going West .

We'll be taking sittings Evenings and Sundays too . Come well

groomed. Gown and Tie, etc . covers all your other clothing .

For appointments phone 731-4845, our special UBC Gradline.

Candid Photography & Portrait Studios731-4845

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