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Cutbacks force resignation
By CHRIS GAINOR appears to be the general trend - four professors from different the program forms heart the of A mc sociology professorhasatleast in the faculty of arts. disciplines, is bellng taught this womens studies, Smith said. university of the to resigned because of education year by herself atid anthropology failure The cutbacks and the university ad- eight years, said taughtuntil two professor Helga Jacobson, who will treat thec o u r x seriously is the Smithy who has that here for ministrations neglect of the years ago, two and on be leave next year. cause for its decline, Smith added. Its been acontinuedfight to womens studies program. ASO in theprogram is a womens keep the going. It,s been a graduatestudentswerethenormal Dorothy Smith, whose course load for a professor. Now literature course taught by dean of fight with administrative neglect,,, resignation is effective June 30, the normal load is three C O U ~ S ~ S women as Margaret Fulton, an Them-student has been in said in an interview Monday well as graduate students. a n t h ~ P l o U - s ~ i o l o g Y seminar operation for four years. You have to go back to formal and a psychology course. cutbacks caused have sharply A big problem is that the course increased faculty teaching loads big cowses and giving formal It looks really unlikely that the is interdisciplinary.Releasing a andmaycausethewomensexams. She said professors have studies program she teaches to end less time to see students and give T U r * will be taught. Its future is professor for such a course means acut in an individual departments this year. individual attention their to work. doubt. available faculty members and And she the said burden of Smith said womens studies 222, The interdisciplinary course is few departments will make that provincial government education which issupposed to be taught by vital because a generalcourse in sacrifice willinglv. shesaid. cutbacks i s being placed on the f shoulders of faculty, making it more difficult for them to do a proper job of teaching. The over-all problem with the teaching thing results the from provincial government,said. she Its all dumped on the faculty. Y o u ro r t c h a n g i n g sh e VANCOUVER, B.C., TUESD.AY, MARCH 8, 1977 4?{w>4s 228-2301 students, Smith. said That

ITHE UBYSSEY

By Zf EATHER WALKER IJBC will not gut any more
The only remedy to the problem is to provide adequate money for the coursesand to administer them properly, she said. Smith has accepted a job at the University of Toronto. I wouldnt have gone except for the changes her e. I really didnt want to go. But it was going to be moredifficult todo a more proper teaching job. Fulton, a member of thecommittee which runstheprogram, refused comment on the problems which forced Smiths resignation. There is absolutely no doubt that this is a serious blow to this program, saidFulton. Associate dean arts Peter Remnant said he assumes replacements will be found for the two so the program cancontinue, but said such decisions are up to the committee. Committee chairman Sheila Egoff was unavailable comfor ment Monday.
McGeer says nyet to budget request
arerelated to the governments theamount of UBCs grant. the ability to pay, he said. board will have to change its The board plans to cut back estimates for tuition increases and money from education the department, education minister UBCs budget by $1.3 million as cutbacks, Sihota said. well a s increasing tuition fees if the in theairat the Its a l l up Pat McGeer said Friday. funds are not in- moment, he said. We weresure they (the UBC universitys board member Sihota said he is optimistic the board of governors! were going to creased, student government give will the a s k for more money and sure that lVIoe Sihota said Monday. Rut, he said, he did not know university more money. they werent able to get more where the cutbacks would be It looks good for getting more money. McGeer said. money. he said. Sihota said if the The board decidcd at its Last made. It depends onhow much more board students and continue meeting to ask.the B.C. Univerthe the sities Council for an increase in money we can get from the pushing government, university will get more money. firnding a s an alternative to in- government, he said. If the government does increase See page 2 : URC creasing tuition fees by 25 to 30 per cent. The council presents budget rcquests from theuniversities to thegovernment and then divides the provincialgovernment grant between them McGeer said education received a larger percentage increase in its budget than other government departments - seveninstead of Support is growing for the B.C. they will eventually be affected by five per cent. Federation that tuition f e e increases result If UBC is able to pressure some Students rally ministries to take less, Id be Thursday against education cut- from cutbacks, she said. backs, organizer Lake Sagaris said And support for the rally among delighted, he said. post-secondary students is strong IJBCs budget requirements are Monday. Sagaris said the BCSF expects after the UBC rallyMarch 1 that directly related to faculty and staff more than1.500 college, university drew 1,200 students. wage settlements, he said. I have beenimpressed by the If faculty and staff are willing and high school students to march This issue of from the Vancouver Vocational strong response. to give up some of theirsalary increases, then tuition fees could Institute at 250 West Pender to the tuition fee increases and cutbacks Queen Elizabeth Theatre plaza for has really been firing people up, be kept down, McGeer said. Sagaris said. the rally. McGeer sent a letter to the Sagaris said student societies at After the march,which begins at Universities Council last month saying the government could not 12 noon, the protestors will listen to Douglas College, Capilano College and Simon Fraser University have and speakersatthe pay salary increasesof as much a s folksingers plaza. Speakers will include repre- all supported a day-long boycott of the maximum allowable under sentatives from the NDP, the B.C. classes Thursday so students can Anti-Inflation Board guidelines. McGeer said the guidelines have Federation of Labor and the B.C. support the rally. She said manycolleges in the nothing to do with the amount of Federation of Women, Sagaris Interiorwillholdindependent said. the government has m a t t king photo money Many high school students are rallies Thursday against cutbacks. CONSIDERING 25 PER CENT SOLUTION is administration available. I dont think the AIB guidelines expected to join the rally because And colleges throughout B.C. are vice-president Michael Shaw,destined to plod along in r a i n. donating money and materials to the rally. Rally organizer Jhwon Wentworth said UBC students can get to the rally by chartered bus or in a The varsity outdoors club is demanding club? the VOC brief on the dispute says. Tht. surance, light, heat and supply bills, and this car cavalcade which will leave the SUB traffic circle at noon. owned the cabinso no figure was continually rising, he said. $30,000 from the Alma Mater Society for the AMS claimedthen that it She said the arts undergraduate sale was possible. Student administrative commissioner Hector clubs share in the Whistler ski cabin. Since thenthe VOC has attempted to get Mackay-Dunn said: Legally the cabinbelongs society has hiredfour buses for the The VOC will claim in student court today and Association of to the AMS but the VOC is claiming that due tripthe to compensation from the AMS foritsoriginal that the AMs owes the club $30,000 forconand Emtheir role in building the cabin and the expenses University College struction of the cabin because the ski club and work and negotiate for special privileges for considering ployees, local 1, is cabin use, the brief says. But no formall they incurred. they own the cabin. the AMS have taken over usethe facility. of He said theVOC may have an equal interest hiring another. One bus will return VOC treasurer Berni Claussaid Monday VOC agreement has been signed. who The VOC originally decided to let theski club in the cabin, considering the work contributed to campus for students want to members built the cabin in 1965 and the club attend 2: 30 p.m. classes. use the cabin because it no longer wanted a by club members. spent $30,000 for materials. Wentworth said a decision by the But, he said, noone knows exactly what The AMS gave the club three $5,000 interest- base in the Whistler area. representative assembly When the idea to build a ski facility in the happened over the last 30 years involving the student free loans tobuild the cabin,but the loans have Whislter area was first conceived of, no one sale of the old cabin and who legally owned it, not to spend any money on Thursince been repaid, Claus said. sdays rally has meant organizers The VOC hassaidthe AMS should com- could possibly have foreseen the direction so the issue is very confused. Thepurposeof the student court case will be have had to spend much of their pensate the club for the time andmoney it put which development would take, in particular into the cabin because the club no longer uses that it would quickly turn into a crowded, high- to establish what happened during the last 30 time just raising money. We a r e all quite pissed off with years in terms of ownership, and what was it. The ski club has operated the cabin since priced and fashionable ski resort. Claus said the skicabinbecame too ex- contributed by the A M s and the VOC to con- the SRA for supporting the rally in 1974. principle not but giving any The dispute began when the AMS blocked an pensive for theclub to finance. It was costing struction of.the cabin. money, she said. See page 2: VOC attempt by the VOC to sell the cabin to the ski us in excess of $2,000 per year, just to pay in-

5784 Universitv (Next to Bank of Commerce!
AGAINST TUITION INCREASES AND EDUCATION CUTBACKS
THURSDAY MARCH 10th Assemblies 1200 Noon Vancouver Vocational Institute
FREE Buses and Car Pool Leaving 12:30 N o o n from U B C

- S U B Parking Circle

JOIN U S
On March 1st over 1200 UBC students protested education cutbacks. Nows the time to join with all other lower mainland students in a united action to increase the pressure on the provincial government and demand:
STOP TUlTlON INCREASES! N O El3UCATlON CUTBACKS! FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CALL 228-2163

Tuesday, March 8, 1977

[JBYSSEY

Page 3

UBCs TRIUMF cyclotron will structure of nuclei and which makepossible a multi-milliondoctorswillusetotreatcancer. dollar business within a few years, Vogt said new kinds of isotopes TRIUMF Vogt, Erich can be produced when a beam of managementboardchairman, high-energy particles is directed predicted Saturday. samples of various elements. The produced Vogt, vice-president of student variety of isotopes and ,faculty affairs and a central depends on the energy and angle the figure in developing the $36 million with which thebeamstrikes sample. particle accelerator, outlined He said the accelerator can results of the first experiments at TRIUMF to about 200 people at a produce neutron-poor isotopes by boiling off neutrons from a Vancouver Institute lecture. nucleus by bombarding it with And he said that although initial protons. experiments at the accelerator We expect the production of may eventually yield millions of isotopes in this way is goingto be a dollars, modern nuclear physics is multi-million-dollar business in the still at a Stone Age level. next few years, Vogt said. The accelerator produces high energy subatomic particles which physicists usetoinvestigate the
an isotope which hassalesofover reactor you producea neutron-rich isotope. In a accelerator you produce n neutron-poor isotopes. You need at (an accelerator) with tremendous energy so you can produce commercial quantities. are thefirst We people really that are going to produce this in quantity. Theres a list of four or five (isotopes) which seem marketable at prcsent. I think well start with a couple, iodine mainlyand thalium, Vogt said. He saidTRIUMF can produce iodine 123, which, like iodine 131, is used extensively to treat thyroid disorders. Thalium isotopes are he used to. treat heart ailments, A nuclear reactor is really a sea said. of neutrons. You can create argon Vogt added the university would or iodine 131 - that happens to be probably not sell isotopes com$10 million in the U.S. In a

AMS decides on closure of co-op bookstore in SUB
The student administrative commission has decided to close the Alma Mater Society co-op bookstore April 30to make rental space in available SUBS basement. The co+p has operated since close the store because theco-ops gross profit is only about $1,000 each year. Director of services Brent Tynan said Monday the space could be leased to commercial retailers for $12,000 to $15,000 per year. Students who have books for sale 1970. on consignment may collect them The SAC decided March 1 to from the bookstore beforeApril 30. In a report to the AMS, Tynan said, Isee no reason why we could not stipulate that a future tenant consider hiring our present bookstore staff, if the staff so desired, and we would not be sellingour staff totally down the creek. In past years, the stores profits have depended on demand trends, the presence of vendors, seasons of the year, and the success of summer operations, said Tynan. Claiming that the real sales season is only September and October of each year, Tynan said a temporary exchange depot should be set up elsewhere in SUB. Tynan mentioned Eatons and Woodwards department stores as possible tenants for the space the bookstore occupies.
. ~,, ~ ~ ,.,.).,.,..,., : 5s: ~,,,. ,.<%X< *.W+%:.:.<. y.,. :. *%.*.+..,.. <,. >
mercially itself, but work with the national atomic energy board. In his presentation, which included short film clips, slides and music from the film 2001: A Space Odyssey, Vogt compared modern nuclear physics with knowledge of the solar system 4,000 years ago. We know the nucleus is an arena in which neutrons and protons are the primary components. We know thereareall kinds of forces which take place in make it this arena - you can shake, rattle, rotate, vibrate. But at present we have no picture of that in the nucleus. Were just beyond the Stone Age. Vogt said TRIUMF, a joint project of UBC, the University.of Victoria, Simon Fraser University andtheUniversity of Alberta,is now operating at about10,per cent of its full capacity. He said it Will be another before year the cyclotron peak operates at capacity.
TRIUMF could also open up the new field of solid state researchby breakthroughs in muon spin research. Muons are particlesproduced by the breakup ofpi mesons, shortlived particles produced by smashing abeam of protons into atomic nuclei. Vogt saidmore muons will be availableforresearchthanever before. because the facility will produce 1,000 times more mesons than have been available anywhere else in the world. Vogt said TRIUMF is more flexible than similar accelerators at the U.S. Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory and in Switzerland. The machine has here some unique features that make about half the experiments we do here unique, he said. Teams of scientists from around the world are visiting UBC to use the accelerator for experiments, Vogt said.

Admin interferes

PENTICTON (CUP) - Members of the administration at the Collegeof New Caledonia a t Prince George are disruptingtheactivities of the student government, college studentschargedFriday. Student Randy president TemDleton said the administration and saidadmGistratorsmay-& responsiblefor thetheft of files from the student council office. LyndaMorgan, student society secretary-treasurer, claimed the administrationhasthreatened to withhold almost half of the societys $14,000 spring budget. an Administrators are backing athletic department suggestion that council allot about $3,600 to college teams which played in the recent Totem provincial sports conference. Before the amount of money in activity fees was known, student council told theathleticsdepartment it would consider a reauest to. ~fund the teams;. Now administratorsI have threatened to garnishee to collect the $3,600, she

~ ~ ~~~~ ~~ ~

And Morgan the said administration still owes the council activity fees about $4,000 in collected in December. Until we really kicked up a fuss about it, the administration had not acted on turning over the fees, Morgan said.

Rally reiected

PENTICTON (CUP) - Cariboo College student courrcil will not join B.C.scolleges and universities in a March 10 protest against education cutbacks, student president Jim Piderman said Friday. At a B.C. Students Federation conference in Penticton, Piderman said the council will not support a class boycott as a demonstration of good faith in the administration. The BCSF called the March 10 rally last month to protest tuition fee increases and cutbacks in education spending. BCSF chairman Gordon Bell said Friday Cariboos council is overly concerned with its image with the administration. Theyre worried more aboutcredibility with the administration than with the students, Bell said. Piderman said he is conducting a letter writing campaign to protest as cutbacks andtuition hikes rather than militant-type actions such a walkout. Piderman admitted a letter writing campaign would be less effective than a walkout. But, he said thewalkout is not a constructive move. It might be politically effective, but were not.soldon it.

m a t t king photo

Panelists disagree about use of nuclear power in B.C.

By GEOF WHEELWRIGHT

B.C. Hydro chairman Robert Bonner clashed Thursday with Greenpeace Foundation vicepresident Patrick Moore and UBC political science professor Michael Wallace about the use of nuclear power in B.C. Bonner told 200 people at Place Vanier that B.C. will have to use nuclear power to make up for a projected increase in annual energy use of 8.5 per cent. In about 10 years time we are going to have to look at nuclear power, Bonner said. Wallace, western president of the Canadian Coalition for Nuclear Responsibility, said using nuclear power would be like introducing a biological Trojan horse into the environment. And Moore said no biologist will

Skelly article inaccurate reporting
What does Ubyssey the staff have against NDP MLA Bob Skelly? I ask this question because of the inaccurate remarks attributed to SkellyFrank by Kuerbis in his articlein the Friday stituency of Aiberni -- not Port Alberni (people from that area are fussy) ; 0 Skellysaidacargo shipsank in Barkley Sound, B.C. - not Barkelev Sound. Wash., and vertising the wrong room in which he was scheduled to speak. He spoke i SUB 115 - not SUB 215. n Come on gang, how much punishment can one man endure? Bob Willcox

Prisoners plight

Now that it is publicly recog- 1976, releasing them entirely nized that every effort should unharmed, did so for only one reason - t o bring the public in be made ensure to that prisonersemerge no moreantito see what had become unsocial than when they went bearable. They now face adinside, we can look forward to. ditional years of imprisonment some wsitive results from the as punishment for their efforts. shattering revelations being It is to be hoped that sufficient exposed by the present parliamentary committee in- public pressure will induce solicitor-general Francis Fox to vestigating the Canadian intervene on their behalf. penitentiary system. Would it not be a measure of From one who spent 80 hours justice that those who initiated inside the B.C. Penitentiary this enquiry should not. be duringthatdisturbance, as a punished for having done so? member of the Citizens AdThe seven prisoners who took visory Committee. two hostages B.C. at the Claire Culhane Prisoners RightsGrouD Penitentiary September. in
MARCH 8,1977 Published Tuesdays, Thursdays Fridays and throughout the university year by the Alma Mater Society of the University of B.C. Editorial opinions are those of the staff and not of the AMS or the university administration.Member, Canadian University Press. The Ubyssey publishes Page Friday, a weekly commentary and review. The Ubysseys editorial office is in room 241 K of the Student Union Building. Editorial departments, 228-2301; Advertising, 228-3977. Co-Editors: Sue Vohanka, Ralph Maurer
~ o y , said sue Vonanka t o Marcus Gee. Im sure glad thereare began, but Was only nine issues left thisyear.YeahKathyFord interrupted by Ralph Maurer. Ten, Sue, he said. Eight? H O W do Y O U get eight? sneered Vohanka as Heather Walker and Geof Wheelwright Lolled said their eyes and signed. I said 10, ifyoudbeenlistening,Vohanka, Maurer, as M a t t Klng and Rob Little dodged for cover. Dont yell at me. said as Tom Barnes called police. the Well, HOwd you get IO? she including one, this its d o , Maurer said as Doug Rushton Frank and Kuerbis consulted with Paul Wilson and Shane McCune in the UN security council. whoscountingthisone?Itshitthe streets, said Vohanka as Chris Gainor and Mike Bocking straffed the area w i t h nandbills urging people to vote. Fuck off, Maurer said. You always have t o have the last word, dont you? Vohanka said. Yes, Maurer said. In mastheads anyway.

We should be prepared to p a y for school
A an education 2 student who is in the s same economic boat as RuthLawther I would like to debate her views of Ken Pivnicks recent letter on tuition fees, in which she claims that he ignorant, lacks insight is and is totally committed to denying her the right to education. Education is a valuable commodity in todays world. Througheducation you are able to pursue the professional goals of your choice. Education is an expensive process, and if you feel that the results of a high standardeducation a r e valuable, you should be prepared to contribute monetarily to its development. You complain because you have had to take a year off and work at summerjobs to get through school. If it isnt worth it to you why do you persist? University is open to all those who can afford it or are prepared to make a little.
personal sacrifice so that they canafford it. You appear to be upset because you are one of those persons who must make some sacrifices; you seem to think that everyone attending UBC should be brought up to the economic status of those who dont have to work in the summer. If education was free I am sureyou would still be complaining that many people attending school could afford to live in better accommodationsthan you. I imagine you would want the government do something to about that too, perhaps pay you to go to university? Further, when you finally manage to scrimp and scrape your way through school I hope you will teach your students to react to someone elses opinions with a bit of diplomacy, not by pronouncing them ignorant, inferior and unscholarly. Before youdismiss me as someone who is
call rallies and other protest actions. When they realize thisthey should become a more efficient, unafraid leadership, , On March we at UBC gave our council a mandate to spend the remainder of the rally budget on Thursday as the initial step in our stxuggle, because we realized that actions like March I. had to be continued. Council only endorsed our recognition. of the Thursday rallys significance. They held back on the money. That is a complete abdication of their Labor, described the present board to the responsibility to act on students dictates. It rally He characterized them as docile, makes a lot of us who have organized and dowrtown businessmen. protested very angry. It signifies that there Thursday is the next step in the fight.URC are definite leadershipproblems 011 this students should be a t the Queen Elizabeth campus and it also creates aproblem in 1 Well join publicizing and organizing UBCs parTheatre squareby p.m. that day. withother students, instructors and supportticipation in the rally. Whether the student staff from SFU, the Vancouver Vocational representative assemblys disregard of the Institute and Lower Mainland colleges and March 1 mandate depends on the inexhigh schools in making a protest aimed perience particular and personalities of directly at McGeer. those voting or whether it is related to the Well show the BCSF that they are the character of our student government is leaders of students who are not apathetic; something well have to exploreiater. Right well show them that we will act when they now we have to overcome the problems of organizing Thursdays rally. Interestedstudentshavealready found unfunds for this second rally.Thearts dergraduatesociety,externalaffairsand social work studentshave come up with money for publicity and buses.The grad studentsandthe womens centre are investigating whether or not they have funds that they can donate.The Association of University and College Employees consaying these thingsbecause 1 too a m in tinues to give us support in our actions. Now whats needed is a lot of individual league with Pivnick, McGeer and all their cronies in a massive attemptto deny you an interest. Go totheSRA workroom (SUB 230) at noon today. Get somepostersand put education I should inform you that: them up right away. If you have questions or 0 I am now completely broke; ideas go t either SUB 230 of SUB 224, find o 0 I work every summer; oneof the people who a r e already organizing 0 I have already taken year outto make a and speak with them. money so I could attend school in the first Talk to your friendsand your classes place : about the rally. a I intend to take next year off in order to Organize acar pool and cometo the Queen make enough money to complete my next E plaza as a part of a contingent leavingthe two years of study; traffic circle on the north side of SUB noon 0 I also fall asleep in class real (no Thursday. If you have a car and arent part relevance to the discussion, but I felt you of a pool by Thursday, come to SUB traffic should know we have been sleeping circle with youremptycarand pick up together), and students at noon. Free buses are also being 0 I a.lsolove education andfor that reason provided, leaving the traffic circle at noon. am prepared to work for it. Be in Queen E square at 1 p.m. Tell McGeer - no education cutbacks, no Rod Carmichael education 2 tuition increases!

Page 6

'Tween classes
NEWMAN CLUB ECKANKAR CHINESE STUDENTS ASSOCIATION Daniel Overmyer lectures on Taoist

Information Session

FRIDAY
NDP CLUB P S Y C H S T U D E N T S SOC
views o f life, noon, Bu. 106.

Slide-Tape Show

Thursday, March 10 - 8 p.m. International House 402/404 CUSO needs experienced health, education, technical and agricultural personnel.

EVER YONE WELCOME

General meeting, noon, 205. SUB Introductory lecture. SUB noon, 213.
YOUNG PROGRESSiVE CONSERVATIVES
T o m m y Douglas speaks, noon, SUB audltorium. Guest lecture, noon, Angus 223. HardTimesTworeturnsformore folk, $1 cover, 8:30 p.m., Lutheran campus centre. Specialslideshow Chem. 250.

on Nepal,noon,

AMS ART GALLERY PROGRAMS COWIMITTEE Exhibition Px Stitch in Time 11:30 a.m. t o 2 : p.m. until M a k h 18. A M S art gallery. CHINESE STUDENTS ASSOCIATION
speaks, M P rn s e r J oF a h welcome, noon, SUB 111. NFBfilm,ForecastforSurvival, p.m., residence Place Vanier canteen.

PLACE VANIER

THE CENTRE COFFEEHOUSE
Instrumental group practice, 7:30 p.m. International House.
INTER VARSITY CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP
CHARISMATIC CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP UBC CANOE CLUB
a I n v e s t m e n t s and securities. parable, noon, Chem. 250. Weeklyclubmeeting,noon,BuTo. 297. Vern Dettwiler speaks, noon, Old CIvils 201.
Prayer and snaring, noon, S U B 207.
General meeting. noon, SUB 211.

WEDNESDAY

NEWMAN CLUB P S F G K U N G FU CSA A N D C V C

CPSC SOC

TOMORROW - ANGUS 104
Bible study, noon, SUB 215. Practice. 4:30 party room.

to 6 : p.m., S u b

ECONOMIC STUDENT SOC
General meeting, elections. noon, Bu. 204.

DALE ALEXANDER

Free Cantonese 316.

class. noon, BU.

SAILING CLUB
Lecture.navigation, coastal in preparation for spring cruise. noon. SUB 205. Discussion, noon, SUB 211. General meeting, elections. noon. Chem. 250. I n t r o d u c t olreyc t uo n re transcendental meditatlon, midnlght, SUB 212.

ECKANKAR

CANDIA PIZZA DELIVSRY TAVERNA FAST FREE

Call 228-9512/9513

"The Codfather" Come hear - Eminent Nutrition Scientist
4510 W. 10th Ave., Open 7 Daysa Week 4 p.m. - 2 a.m.

speak on

Bu. 313. E C O N O M I C S T U D E N T S SOC Liqu!dity trap, 7:30 p.m.

THURSDAY

REC UBC
NURSING UNDERGRADUATE SOCIETY
SEX, GOOD HEALTH & COMMON SENSE
Author of"Arthritis & C o m m o n Sense" "Good Health & Common Sense" "Healthy Hair & C o m m o n Sense" "The Common Cold & C o m m o n Sense"
SwamiVishnuDevanandalectures, yoga and meditation in practice, noon. Bu. 202. 117. SUB

term papers, Reasonable etc. rates. My home, North Vancouver.

KPERT TYPING. Thesis,

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manuscripts, term papers, IBM. Experienced and qualified. Irene, 734-3170.
FUJICA ST601 w/ease, Fujinon
lens. 1 year old. Ph. 732-5802.

KPERIENCED,

SCHOOL DISTRICT NO. 56 (NECHAKO)
School District Representatives will conducting be interviews with prospective teachers for the District at and on the following:

30 -Jobs

NEED TYPISTS
ACCURATE and fast typing of essays, theses, etc. North Shore.

983. 89f B

4ESIS.
AMs JOB OP RUT PO T NY I E T RS H 77 DONG T I I I
To produce the editorial content of the student handbook. Contract basis for approximately PERIOD: 8 weeks. March 14,1977. COMMENCING: QUALIFICATIONS: 1) Must be familiar with A.M.S. Structure 2) Knowledge of campus activities 3) Ability to write and communicate effectively
DUTIES: APPLICATIONS AVAILABLE S.U.B. 226 - 246 DEADLINE March 9, 4:OO p.m. - S.U.B. 266 INTERVIEWS Thursdav March - 12:30 - S.U.B. 260
transcribe to tapes this week a t $4 w r hour. call Sue at 228-2301 or come to SUB 24lK a t noon today.
ESSAYS E T AL. prokssianal electric typing. 70c each double spaced page. 4 - ,

/ E KPERIENCED

WANTED: ART MAJOR
University of British Columbia MARCH 17 & 18
Hyatt Regency (During Northern Zone Spring Recruiting) MARCH 28,29 & 30
Campus candidates are asked to arrange for appointments t h r o u gh e i r th respective campus agencies. Candidates wishing a specific appointment for time the H y a tR e g e n c s h o u l d t y contact in writing:
am. graduating this semester. Must be available t o &art l 1 F. &ST, EFFICIENT ELECTRIC TYPING working i n April 1977. on Campus with grammaticalediting Requirements: typing, own car, good alsoavailable.Phone 224-7524. appearance,pleasantpersonality, w l l i versed in contemporary Preferart. able: Bilingual. Please call tW"l(113 '0 Wanted for interview.

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BILINGUALS

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Personnes bilingues Anglais) interessees a participer a uneexperience e n psychologie. Remuneration $10. pour 2 heures. Priere d'appeler Dr. R. Fremler. 228-2463.

40 - Messages

HELP IF YOU SAW a late 1950's car hit my red Chev. stationwagon as I was parking i Crescent n Road in front of the Faculty please Club, call me a t 228-1340 (home) or UBC local 4358 o r send a note to P. Busch, Political Science Department. UBC Please! I musthaveawitness.
Wm. Maslochko, District Superintendent of Schools, P.O. Box 680, Vanderhoof, B.C. VOJ 3A0

USE UBYSSEY CLASSIFIED

".

Page 7

Bears defeat 'Birds in hockey final
By ROB LITTLE conference all-star, continuedhis The Universityof Alberta Golden excellent play in the UBC net. The Canadian final, to be held in Bears hockey teamclaimed the this will Canada West championship in the Edmonton weekend, the Golden Bears, the third gameof a best-of-three final, feature defeating the UBC Thunderbirds 8- Thunderbirds, the University of Toronto and St. Mary'sof Halifax. 3. The will 'Birds the play 'Bird coach Bert Halliwell said University of Toronto Friday and his team"ran out of gas"after defeating the Bears5-4 in overtime Saturday in a two-game total point series. Bears The will play St. Saturday night. The Sunday afternoon game was Mary's in a similar series. The top never in doubt. The Bears opened two teams will advance to the,final scoring and led3-1 after one period to be played Sunday afternoon. St. Mary's needed three games and 6-2 after two.
Huskies scoredaf ter eight seconds. The University of Toronto needed only two games to dispose of the University of Manitoba Bisons. The Blues have been national champions in eight of the as last 12 yearsandmustrank favorites with 10 returnees from last year's team. But Edmonton will be a force to be reckoned with, a s they have the home ice advantage. UBC games be can heard on CITR radio (650 AM) at 8 p.m. Fridav and 6:30 a.m. Saturdav.
A.M.S OMBUDSPERSON 1977178
APPLICATIONS W I L L BE R E C E I ~ E D
scoredone goal andcontributed three assists and was named the game's star. first Primeau and Devaney twice scored while Broadfoot, Offrim and Rolin added singles for Edmonton. Marty Matthews ofUBC scored two and Bill Ennos added a single. Saturday Peter Moyls scored in overtime to force the Sunday affair. The 'Birck had overcome a 4-2 second-period deficit before Moyls scored the tiebreaker. Dan Lucas hada big nightfor UBC scoring three times while Tom Blaney added one. In Friday's contest the Bears squeezed by the 'Birds 4-3 much as they had done throughout the regular season. Randy Gregg, Jim Carr, Bryan Sosnowski and Dave Hindmarch scored the for Bears while Jim Stuart, Matthews Lucas and handled the 'Bird scoring. as a Ron Lefebvre, chosen

Page 8

Tuesday, March 8. 1977
Fenclng team wins Canada West

By PAUL WILSON

The UBC womens foil fencing team won the Canada West University Athletic Association Fencing championships held Feb. 26 and 27 at UBC. $heteam was led by Frances Sloan with aclear firstin foil. Jane Milton placed third andBarbara Hislop rounded out the title with a fifth. The University of Alberta
womens team placed secondin the competition and the University of Saskatchewan came in third. It was the first timein over four years that UBC has fielded a womens fencing team. In fact two of the three team members, Hislop and Milton were in competition for the first time. Sloan, though, is an experienced fencerhavingmany matches under her belt including a B.C. championships title. She is
more experienced than most the of male members of the UBC team. The UBC mens placed team third in the same competition. Mens foil was won by the University of Alberta with a very strong team. They swepttwo of the three events. other mens The victory was in epee. The University of Saskatchewangrabbed a first in the sabre event and placed second in each of the others.
Rob Margolis, Don Lee and Jurek Kaminski. The strong UBC team is preparing for their next meet, the B.C. Championshipsbe toheld March 19 and 20 in Victoria. We have a good chance this year of coming away with a good showingor possibly a titlefrom the
B.C.s, said Sloan. This year the teamreally has it together.The womens programhas developed remarkably fast. The B.C. championships will be the teams last event of the term. Next year they hope to enter more tournaments with increased financing from the athletic office.

Women bowlers tops

The UBC womens bowling team won the Canadian Western UniversityBowlingChampionships this weekend in Calgary, winning by 180 pins over 12 games. The UBC women defeated the University of Albertataking the lead in the final two games. The womens defending champions, the University of Calgary, participated as well but were for generally not in contention most of the year.Bowling for UBC were Marilyn Hynes, Barbara Miodzik, Karen Meyers, Judy
The individual winners were Tom Freeland of Alberta sweeping r the sabre and the foil individual prizes. Nick Brampton of UBC won Hickman, Brenda Lupik and Diane theawardin the epee event. Sloan, of course, won the title in the only Soles. Hynes responded to the pressure womens event, the foil. Membersof theUBC mens team of the close competition striking by out in a sensational final game to are Brampton,JimKoropatnick, take the trophy for womens high average with a score of 215.13. Hynes also won womens high tournament by three for the bowling a total of 720 over three games. Womens high single was 305, bowled by Laurie Finnerty of the University of Alberta. The UBC mens the team, defending champions, lost by only %pins to the University Alberta. of

More smorts on m a m e 7 I
Discover FRANCE and EUROPE.

Travel by train.

Anti-inflation Student-Railpass and Eurailpass as well as point to point tickets and reservations for travel in France and in Europe are available through your travel agent or our Montreal or Vancouver offices.

HILLEL HOUSE presents

FRENCH NATIONAL RAlLROADS
Room 436, 1500 Stanley Street. Montreal. (514) 288-8255 Room 452. 409 Granville Street Vancouver, B.C. V6C I T 2 (608)688-6707

ISRAELWEEKAT UBC

TUESDAY 8 MARCH Guest Lecture - Zvi Levanon on Israel AlEDNESDAY 9 MARCH Israel dancing, food-felafel
THURSDAY I O MARCH Movie. Casablanca - A Love Story
All programmesstart at 12:30 p.m. and will be held in Room 2071209 in the SUB. N.B. Because of Israel week, the Bnai Brith Free Lunch will be held on Wednesday 16th March at Hillel House.

GRAD STUDENTS

N M A I N OPEN OI T S N O

SCHOOL D T I T I R S C

FOR THE FOLLOWING G.S.A. POSITIONS

QUEEN C R n H LE AO

Applications are invited from student teachers interested in teaching on the Queen Charlotte I s l a n d si.s t r i c t D Representatives will be conducting interviews on March 24 and March 25 at U.B.C. Please arrange for interview appointm etn tr o u gh e h th placement office on campus.
-INTERNAL AFFAIRS -SECRETARY -TREASURER - SOCIAL CO-ORDINATOR

U.B.C. SAILING CLUB

Annual Skating Party will be held on Friday, March 11th at 9:45 p.m. on the main rink at the Thunderbird Winter Sports Centre. Everybody is welcome, and bring ; guest! Also, wed like to remind all members interested 1 in going on the Spring Cruise to come to the Wednesday meeting between now and March 30th. We are having a big General Meeting on Wednesday, March 16th, to elect a new executive. Please be there! New Members Welcome!
NOMINATIONS CLOSE MAR. 14 ELECTION MAR. 23
Nomination Forms Available In The Grad Centre
For More Information Call 228-1650

WE CURE ALL sick bugs

TOO! VOLKSWAGENS
Student Administrative Commission 1977-78
Applications will be received for the positions of:

U.B.C. STUDENT DISCOUNTS

-DIRECTOR OF SERVICES -DIRECTOR OF FINANCES -COMMISSIONERS OF S.A.C. (8 positions)
at the A.M.S. Business Office, Rm. 266, S.U.B.
Applications close 4:OO p.m. Wednesday on March 9th, 1977. Application may be picked up at Rooms 246 & 266 S.U.B.
BILL BRODDY Secretary-Treasurer
$305. For 40 H.P. $335. For A V.W. 1500 $355. For A V.W. 1600

1897 BURRARD

73118171 @@

doc1

monev for nexg fee

By MIKE BOCKING After a bitter debate Wednesday thestudentrepresentative assembly refused tospend money on the March 10 B.C. Students Federation rally against and tuition fee increases education cutbacks. But the SRA later passed a motion supporting the rally in principle donating and the placards and banners made for the March 1 tuition rally. The defeated motion recommended spending $500 for publicity andtransportation of UBC students rally, to the organized by the BCSF. Student board of governors member MoeSihota said theSRA ignored the 1,200 UBC students who turned out for the tuition rally Tuesday. We had a momentum going after the March 1 rally and we should have kept it going for Students on this campus March 10. We are starting to have showed some concern on March 1 an effect on this government, he and the SRA slapped studentson said. this campus on theface, said Alma Mater Society president Sandhu. We had the largest Dave Theessen,speaking in favor turnout at a rally in nine years of the motion said, weve done and then the SRA says they dont better many inthan other care anymore. stitutions across this country in Sandhu said the number of repprotestingeducation cutbacks. resentatives who abstainedand The motion required a two- graveyard the voting thirds majority and received 14 procedure which allows the votes i favor, loagainst and n four newly elected reps;to vote instead abstentions. of the old reps, was largelyto I was amazed that we could blame for defeating the motion. have a campaign on campus that Abstention is basically not was so well-supported and then having the guts to show where refuse to support an off-campus you stand on an issue, said rally, arts said senator Paul Sandhu. Those who abstained Sandhu. were AMS secretary-treasurer Sandhu said the SRA is in- Bill Broddy, who chaired the consistent in spending $lO,OOO for meeting, senator-at-large Bill the Tuesdayrally and refusing to Chow, arts undergraduate spend $500 for a rally which is society president 13ev Crowe and just as important, and in which science rep Linda Erdman. UBC students will be involved. The meeting was the first attended by the new SRA reps elected in last months elections. Sandhu said thenew members inexperience was a further reason why the motion was defeated. The new members tended to vote against it solely for financial reasons, he said. was Theessen said the SRA willing to support thetuition rally Tuesday because it was at UBC and involved only UBC students. They a r e unwilling to spend money on activities outside the university, he said. It is sort of ludicrous to.pass a motion of support and then not back it up with dollars, Sihota said. But he said the motion was tactically wrong. It seemed like the money was going to be given to the BCSF, ratherthanthe AMS external affairs committee, he said. Sandhu said the money would have been used only to publicize the rally to UBC students and to transport them to the Queen Elizabeth plaza. Community colleges in the Lower Mainland Simon and Fraser University are supporting the rally. Ive heard figures as high as $800 for Douglas Colleges contribution to therally, said Sihota. Its too bad we cant contribute $500, he said. But Sihota said other student groups on campusmaydonate funds to the rally. The external affairs office has $150 it can contribute he said, and the arts undergraduate the society, graduate students association and the student association the of school of social will work probably donate money. There shodd be no problem in other raising $500 from these sources, he said.

Vel. LIX, No. 56

VANCOUVER, RC.,
Fund request UBYSSEY chances slim

FRIDAY, MARCH 4,1977

request for additional funding to the council because the council between the serves as a buffer universities and thegovernment. If we (the board) approach the government theyd only refer us back (to the universities council), Dohm said.

200 Alberta

students

Drotest fees

EDMONTON (CUP] - T W O hundred students demonstrated in front of the Alberta legislature building last week against differential f e e s for visa students as government MLAs entered the house for the opening of the spring - i o n stewart photo session. Shouting Two-four-sixeight, EVERY PICTURE WINDOW tells a story at VancouverTheologicalsurroundings.Othersmustrelieve book sore eyes with stares a t gloomy Hohols fees discriminate and College, where students of religion are provided with inspirational grey concrete or drab drywall. Hohols fees are a racist disease the demonstrators, led by the Alberta Committee Equal for Access to Education, marched and - -~ distributed leaflets an hour and for Ia half. UBC students are being urged to send between the universities, and cannot give UEC Universities Council todiscuss funding and Advanced education minister telegrams protesting education cutbacks and more money unless it receives more from the accessibility to universities. Bert Hohol recently announced a I sent a letter to (council chairman tuition f e e increases to their MLAs, student government. for out-oftoday for the $300 fee differential board of governors member Moe Sihota said He said the student representative assembly William) Armstrong asking Alberta decided to send the telegrams Wednesday meeting, he said.We want to have it before country students attending at its Thursday. universities and $150 increase for the next board meeting on April 1. meeting. Sihota said he had a list of students from Sihota said council also wants start a letter those attending colleges, effective to differentconstituencies in the province and Council also decided to send representatives September. The two-tiered system campaign and will ask deans, department to Victoria to lobby MLAs, Sihota said. was contacting them about the telegrams. association towrite to the affects all first-year visa students. The telegramswill back up Tuesdays board We want to talk to them (theMLAs) before heads and the faculty Inside the house before the money for decision to asktheUniversities Council for theeducation budget is discussed in the house, Universities Council asking for more opening, Social Credit and official the university. more money before raising tuition fees, Sihota Sihota said. leader Clark They will also preparea petition for students opposition Bob Sihota said he is also planning a meeting said. See page 3: ALBERTA to sign, he said. representativesthe and The council divides provincial the grant between student

Tuition teleuram c a m d u n launched Qa -w

c*L*L*.,.*

. 7 - * . .

Page 2

UBYSSEY

Friday,

4, 1377

'Tween classes

ALLIANCE F R A N C A I S E F i l m francaise: Georges Q u i ? sur I'hlstoire I'ecrivain de francaise. Sous-titres en anglais; mid1 et demie, BU. 106. G R A D STUDENTS' ASSOCIATION Greenpeace film, Save the Whales, and speaker, noon, grad centre committee room. CHINESE STUDENTS'
ASSOCIATION AND CHINESE V A R S I T Y C L U B

-NUDISM'

takes shame the out of your body. The HYPERION CLUB, a family travel club. BC's largest' member of the American Sunbathing Assoc. Box 393, Surrey, BC. Phone: 585-2663,594-7916, (or answering machine: 254-4685).

"

SATURDAY
CHINESE STUDENTS' ASSOCIATION

MONDAY

AMS A R T G A L L E R Y
Choir practice, 9:30 a.m., SUB 212; film, Split, The 2:30 p.m., S U B 7:30 to auditorium; sports night, 11:30 p.m., gym a, winter sports centre.
HlLLEL HOUSE Purim party, 8 p.m.,

PHOTOSOC

E x h i b i t l o n : A Stitch In Time, 11:30 a.m. t o 2 : p.m., SUB artgallery. CHINESE STUDENTS'

Hillel House.

Free Cantonese class. noon, Bu. 316. SKYDIVING General meeting. noon, S U B 215. G A Y PEOPLE OF U B C Revueanddlscusslon on the art of female impersonation, featuring Sandy St.Peters, C y m a n d Dede. 8 p.m., SUB 207-209. AMS A R T G A L L E R Y UBC Photosoc exhibition. 11:30 a.m. t o 2 : p.m., SUB art gallery. Last day! INSTITUTE OF ASIAN R E S E A R C H No seminar today; next one March 1. 1
First-ever color processing course, 2 p.m., S U B 215.

SUNDAY

V a r i e th o w , s y 2 p.m., SUB auditorlum. Admisslon. $1.50 members, $1.75 non-members.
Free Cantonese class, noon, Bu. 316. ASIAN STUDIES Wally Chung gives an illustrated lecture -Chinese on Canadians In B.C., 3 : p.m., Bu. 102. GRAD CLASS C O U N C I L Meeting, 5:30 p.m., S U B 206. WOMEN'S C E N T R E Important organizational meeting for Tuesday, International Women's Day, 5:30 p.m., S U B 224. PSFG KUNG FU Practice, 4:30 t o6 : p.m., S U B party room.

. % h L C Q

OPEN FOR LUNCH 11:30 ,25,.HOWE ST, DINNER FROM 6:OO 6843043
p d l & {,.'#$:,) QU. U '"*,."

Information Session

CANDIA TAVERNA

FAST FREE PIZZA DELIVERY Call 228-3

Slide-Tape Show

Hot flashes

Free lectures on law

The mmunity Co Legal Information Centre is sponsoring lectures on free legal education various different areas of the law. These free classes will be held in the New Westminster Public Library. The -first lecture, on Monday, will concern the subject of U n e m p l o y m e n t Insurance Commission legislation andwill be spoken about by Alan Maclean. On Tuesday the speaker will be Dave Mossop and the subject will' be welfare rights. Both lectures begin a t 7:30 p.m.
Thursday, March 10 - 8 p.m. International.House 402/404 CUSO needs experienced health, education, technical and agricultural personnel.

EVERYONE WELCOME

Develop your human potential with

SILVA MIND CONTROL

discussed in many leading magazines

IMPROVE:

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A.MS OMBUDSPERSON I 977-78
APPLICATIONS WILL BE RECEIVED
a t A.M.S. Business Office, Room 266, S.U.B.until 4:OO p.m. March 9th, 1977. Applications available a t S.U.B. 246 & 266.
BILL BRODDY Secretarv-Treasurer
Be in control of your life. March 7 - 13 - Century Plaza, 1015 Burrard
Free Introductory Lecture Monday, March 7 - 7:30 p.m.

SPECIAL STUDENT RATES

HAVE FUN! BEAT THE GAS PRICES!

BUY A MOPED

VELOSOLEX
AMs JOB OP RUT PO T NY I ET R G T 77 DOI S H I NI
To produce theeditorialcontent.of the student handbook. PERIOD: Contract basis forapproximately 8 weeks. COMMENCING: March 14,1977. QUALIFICATIONS: 1) Must be familiar with A.M.S. Structure 2) Knowledge of campus activities 3)Ability to write and communicate effectively

MOBYLETTE

200 m i l e s p e rgallon

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LOW pollution and noise level S i m p l e t o operate 0 No p a r k i n g p r o b l e m s

Natives

The Leonard Peltier Support Group is sponsoring a Native Salute to national liberation Saturday a t 7:30 p.m. a t the Vancouver Indian Centre, 1855 Vine St.

DUTIES:

MIKE'SMOPEDEMPORIUMLTD. 6069 West Boulevard at 45th - 261-481 1
Vancouver's Motorized Bicycle Specialist

n-1240

RATES: Campus - 3 lines, 1 day $1.50; additional lines S c. Commercial - 3 lines, 1 day $2.50; additional lines 50c. Additional days $2.25 and 45c.
APPLICATIONS AVAILABLE S.U.B. 226 - 246 DEADLINE March 9,4:00 p.m. - S.U.B. 266 INTERVIEWS Thursdav March 10 - 12:30 - S.U.B. 260
classified ads are not accepted by telephone and are payable in 1:0 advance. Deadline is 1. 3 a.m. the day before publication. Publications Office, Room 24 I , S. U. UBC, Vancouver. B., 1

- Typing

C k P U S DROP-OFF iot t pn. Reasonable y i g rates.

Call 3-

PROF. ERICH VOGT UBC Physics Department FIRST RESULTS FROM TRIUMF
Prof.Vogt, a- k e yf i g u r e in t h e development of t h eR I U M F T nuclear research facility at UBC.8 describes theresults of t h e f i r s t out on t h e experiments carried unique mesonproducing machine.

1807 at r EkW. fe

- For Sale - Private -
EXPERIENCED TYPIST for W y. aS term papere, Reasonable etc. rates. My home, N o r t h Vancouver. 988-7228.
Student Administrative Commission 1977-78
Applications will be received for the

positions of:

FUJICA ST601 w/caSe, FUiiIlOIi 1 s p56 lens. 1 year old. Ph. 73243OZ
EXPERTTYPING. Thesis, manuscripts, term papers, IBM. Ewerienced and qualified. Irene, 73Gil70. 6XPCRIENCED. ACCURATE and fast t pn o essays, theses, etc. Nmth y i g f

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lHESlS, ESSAYS ET AL. Rpfessioud electric typing. each doable sppc02 ed page. 6844084. EXPERIENCED TYPIST. rates. Call Monica
SATURDAY, MARCH 5 8:15 p.m. Lecture Hall 2 Woodward IRC

T 0 n 4 BtL5 h1 m

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I'LL PAY MONEY BIG
for y o u r l d o Kathi McDonald's Inaaae

224-9998.

-DIRECTOR OF SERVICES -DIRECTOR OF FINANCES -COMMISSIONERS OF S.A.C. (8 positions) at the A.M.S. Business Office, Rm. 266, S.U.B.

Applications close 4:OO p.m. Wednesday on March 9th, 1977. Application maybe picked up a t Rooms 246 & 266 S.U.B. ' BILL BRODDY Secretary-Treasurer
PIANO TUNING - ' - p e r t tuafllp and r e p a i r st o all makes. Reduced rates t o students. Call Dallas Hinton aeS

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- Miscellaneous

WEDDINGS, THREE MINUTE passports. Manu Photography, 791-1101. 1450 WestBroadwayat Granville Street.

UBYSSEY CLASS1FIED

BILINGUALS
Personnes bilinguer -a cb Anglais) interessees a p a r t m p e r a uneexperienceenpwchologie.Rei muneration S10. p o u r 2 heures. Priere d'appeler R Frender.

m 2.4.

Friday, March 4, 1977

Page 3

By MARCUS GEE refusing to allow them to speak The Parti Quebecois is giving French a t work. corporations. And Jean-Paul Pelltier, a leader major u.S. and English-Canadian the Marxiste corporations a free hand to exploit of Groupe Quebecers, two Quebecsocialists Revolutionaire, said the only way. said Wednesday. Quebec can be independent is if the Suzanne Chatjot. a leader of the workers Control the Provinces ~~._ industries. LigueSocialisteOuvriereand Pelltier cited a recent speech by editor of the socialist newspaper Liberation, said PQ the should Quebec premier Rene Levesque to the Economic Club in New York as nationalize all major companies evidence the premieris not serious not owned by Quebecois. making province The PQ really defends the in- about the terests of the capitalists in economically independent. Quebec, Chabot said. The whole history of Quebec Chabot told 40 people in SUB that nationalismisa struggleagainst US. and English-Canadian cor- foreign domination, he said. porations in Quebec discriminate Recently we have seen a mass against Quebecois workers by movement in Quebec against the
husband. So in that case, the wlte has the right call fora divorce. to Chabot said Quebec needs a new Pelltier said Confederation was laborparty to representthe in- forced on the people of Quebec. He terests of worke.rs and to make said that although Levesque is Quebec function as an independent drafting a referendum on whether nation. Quebecleave should Cona there never Cabot said the federal NDP has federation, wasdecide if Quebec referendum to betrayed workers by supporting should join Confederation. federalism. She said federalism cannot work and attacked statement.; by primeminister Pierre Trutieau that Confederation is like a marriage where both partners must agree to a split. I disagree with Trudeaus view of marriage. Quebec is a beaten wife and English Canada is the
domination of foreign imperialist
Pelltier charged the federal and provincial Liberals with hypocrisy. He said that during the November election campaign the Quebec Liberals Quebec made independence the mainissue but then after the election said the PQ was not elected for its stand on independence.

Board returns low rise rent hike UBC admin to
By STEVE HOWARD tenants, Van Blarcom said. We The board of governors has sent received overwhelmingsupport for brought back 18.9 per cent rent increases the principle of being under the Landlord and Tenant for Gage low rise to the administration for reconsideration, Act. Van Blarcom said he listed four chairman of the student housing access committee, said Thursday. reasons in his letter to the board why low rise tenants rents should The decided board at its February meeting to increase not be raised by more than10.6 per rents to $936 per person next year cent. He said low rise tenants had in the from $787. Gage low rise is a three- no representation the instorey apartment complex for negotiations which set creases. childless married students. The lawyers think the low rises The rent increase for Gage low rise is the highest increase set for are covered in theLandlord and next year. The lowest increase is a Tenant Act because they are really 3.2 per cent increase for a double three-floor walkups, he said. And, he said, residents are mostly room in Totem Park. married students cannot and Van Blarcom saidhe wrote a letter to the board asking that low support their spouses. He added it is more difficult for rise rent increases not exceed the marriedstudents than for single 10.6 per cent a yearmaximum allowed by the Landlord and students to fall back on their parents. Tenant Act. Hesaid all 59 of the 110 the AMS low rise residents contacted signed Van Blarcom said lawyers think the Gage low rises the letter. Other UBC residences are not are covered by the Landlord and covered by the act. Van Blarcom said he expects the boardto makeits final decision about low rise rents at its April meeting. He said he thinks one reason the joint committee residences The Alma Mater Society passed recommended the highest rent its outstanding business Thursday increases for Gage low rise is that at the annual generalmeeting with it is the only campusresidence the help of the Bellamy Brothers without student representation on band. the committee. Thejoint residence committee suggests rent and food rates for residences to the board.
Tenant Act, and will talk to the administration thisweek about the possibility. Rent increase:; arent the only reason for bringing low rises into the Landlord and Tenant Act, he said. Students.are particularly vulnerable to landlord and tenant hassles. Disputes ruin could someones academic year. The administration will make all sorts of arguments about human r e t s until it affects the pocketbook, Van Blarcom said. They have beenknown to evict tenants on 48 hours notice. In September, 1974 five residents of aninth-floor Gage high rise quad were given 48 hours notice after guests at a party were alleged to have thrown beer bottles over the balcony. Under the Landlordand Tenant Act there isa minimum of 30 days notice and there is an appeal procedure if threatened with, eviction, Van Blarcom said.

Stewart photo

AGM short, sweet
statement, which had been on file since Oct. 15, 1976, and approved Peat, Marwick, Mitchell and Company as auditors for the societv in 1977-78.
Van Blarcom the said ad-. ministration tried to increase fees more in Gage low rise and towers than in Vanier, and especially in Totem because Park Totem always has trouble renting its rooms. He said the administration wanted to make the Gage low rise relatively less attractive. 98 vacant This termthereare beds in Totem Park. But Van Blarcom said married childless couples are not allowed to live in residences other than the low rise, and there is no reason to raise its more rent than other residence rents. Its fallacious reasoning, he added. We had a meeting with low rise

- eric ellington photo

A L L THECOMFORTSOFHOME become necessary as students t i e themselves to carrells preparing for final exams and term papers. Chain on kettle is designed to foil studentsscroungingmoney to meetnew, improved tuition fees.
Expect oil spill a day, says NDP MLA
By FRANK KUERBIS There will be a n oil spill a day if the proposed tanker routealong the B.C. coast is established, NDP environment critic Bob Skelly said Thursday. Skelly, NDP MLA for Port Alberni, told about 40 people in SUB that one tanker whoseonly navigational device was a magnetic compass had already run aground in Barkeley Sound, Washington, dumping its cargo of Datsuns on the shore. 300,000 Skelly saidthe projectedquotais barrels of crude oil perday.Tankers will transport 600,000 barrels a day when in full operation. Butoil companies dont consider the high probability of a major oil spill, he said. The Queen Charlotte Island coastline is treacherous and weather is often bad, Skelly said. Hurricane-force winds of 80 to 120 miles per hour a r e common, he said. The oil tankers, which needten miles of water to turn in,would not be able to negotiate the narrow channels, he said. The public would have to expect one major oil spill every four years, he said. And disasters would increase, Skelly said. Skelly saidKitimat Pipelines own studies show that the entire northern B.C. coast would be affected by the oil spills. He said spills would destroy the commercial viability of the whole area for 10 years. is And, Skelly said there no proper equipment on B.C.s north coast to fight oil spills. There are few slick lickers, booms and containment systems for use in an emergency, he said. He said environment minister Jim Nielsen refused to comment on thesefacts. And he accused Nielsen of giving in to fear tactics. I dont think he can answer the question, because hes been advised by premier Bill Bennett to shut uponthe whole subject, Skelly said. Other provincial cabinet ministers took stands in favor of the pipeline and oil development in northern B.C., he said. Skel1:y also said he is concerned about the proposed MacGregor diversion of water from the Peace River through the Parsnip River to the W.A.C. Bennett dam. The crucial issue, said, is theimpact of the he diversion on the Fraser River. It will cut the Frasers waterflow to 25 per cent, he said. The volume at Hope, would be reduced by 17 per cent, he said. The solution to environmental problems, he said, is to fire Nielsen, and hire an independently appointed and financed ombudsman. Skelly said the environment should be for future protectedagainstexploitation generations.

He said although NDP leader Dave Barretts proposal to ship oil by rail was laughed.at, a similar scheme to ship oil from Utah to Los Angeles was successful. A pipeline, only servesthe oil companies, as which useit to by-passmiddlemensuch marketing agencies to bring products to market. But railways would be multi-purpose, he said. He said the issues are transportation of oil, conalternate energy sources and energy servation. Skelly said B.C. could cut energy its consumption by 50 per cent and still keep c u r r a t standard of living. We should not be prepared to sacrifice the environment of our north coast, Skelly said. He said concerned individuals should write to Bennett and Nielsen, and collect petition signatures and forwardthem to the provincial government.

Alberta march

From page 1 supported the protest sayingthe fee is another instance of the government trying to walk over some aspects of our postsecondary education. But, Clark added, Im not sure whether this is the place for them (the protestors) to plead their case. NDP leaderGrant Notley, the lone NDP representative in the house, joined the picket line with staff with his and talked protestors.

Page 4

First forward and then back
Perhaps it was too good t o be true. On Tuesday, after weeks of hard work and preparation bythe tuitionrally committee, UBC witnessed the largest student rally since 1968. The leadership that board student of governors members, student senators and student representative assemhly reps showed - and the participation of 1,200 students i n the rally - was a spectacle rarely seen onthis campus, and everyone involved deserves congratulations. The SRA and UBC students took three steps forward Tuesday. On Wednesday the SRA took five steps backwards. Our politicos voted against giving financial support t o the B.C. Students Federation tuition rally March 10. The SRA clearly had a mandate from the students to continue the fight against education cutbacks. Students who attended Tuesdays rally urged the SRA t o spend money t o support the downtown rally of Lower Mainland students. On Tuesday, the UBC rally was the lead item on radio and television news coverage. Students had clearly demonstrated their cohesiveness and power; they were treated as a force t o be reckongd with. The limp-wristed behavior of those reps who abstained orvoted.against financiallysupportingtherally is allthe moretragicwhencompared t o theexceptional teadership they showed Tuesday. Just whenstudentpoliticos were getting it together theyve let us down,particularlythe 1,200 studentswho attended Tuesdays rally. The Alma Mater Society spent about $5,000 on the last rally. The defeated motion recommended a paltry $500, t o be spent a t UBC, for UBC students. SRA reps will go to Victoria next week t o lobby against education cutbacks. Strong student rallies in Vancouver can only strengthen their hand when dealing with education deparTment officials. Because UBC students were thefirsttodemonstrate genuine student opposition t o education cutbacks, it is ironic and sad their leaders are the first t o give up the fight. AMS hacks will be gettingtogetherthis weekend a t Mount Whistler. We hope the mountain air will clear their m inds.

Tuition arguments answered
university - a t least to gain the I would like to answer the argument about tuition fees made skill, diversityandworkingconby Ken Pivnick in a letter in ditions of the potential job which may from result university a Tuesdays Ubyssey. You think it is fine that most degree. students who go to universities are Why doyou think many do not frommiddle classfamilies. You then say: Obviously people from come here? Lack of motivation? ruraland working classfamilies Love of typewriters? Love of the are not geared towards university assembly line, or the outdoors? because of the people around We a r e in a position that is them. especially susceptible to economic Let me answer you, Ken Pivnick, pressures. Most people are. Some fund by pointing out that you are parentscanaffordtohelp kids their post-secondary ignorant and lack insight about a and r.oom andboard. - education, major sector of our country working people. Others cant. So their kids either Certainly you are not an ideal have to workduringanyspare they can including find, university student. You are an time example of an inferior, unscholarly taking a year or twooff - or their parents cant even afford to have byproduct of this university. Manyyoungpeople of working their kids continueto live a t home. Then they must fare their own on class families would love to go to
somehow, without any financial support from their parents. Ken Pivnick, my family is made up of unionized working people. With the cost of housing, energy, food, clothingand dental care mostly unchecked by the AntiInflation Board - they can barely make ends meet.
Do you think they can afford my tuition? Wouldnt more it be I out economical if wentand worked a s a typist for $4 or $5 an hour to supplement my family or myself?
Why would you want to stifle my
life, my full growth and potential?
Im glad that your friend worked for a couple of years and is now receiving student loans. Did he ever live a t home during that time? Did he ever have pay to more than $150 rent every month? How old will he be when hefinally receives a degree? also I worked for a I year; scramble around every summer temporary looking for a full-time job, and I often fall asleep in class due to working part-time. And still, getting student loans is a red-tape hassle. Still, loans savings, with and shared accommodation any and budget-saving manoeuvrings, I barely makeit to Aprilbecause rent, food, tuition and a few books have spent it all away. Does youfriendhaveparents funds he can always rely on? Do youknow what it is like with no money in the bank and amonth to go before school is out? Where is the money going to come from to pay the landlord and eat? Im sorry, Ken Pivnick, but nobodys going to tell me that Im not of university calibre. Ive had A, B and C-plus marks since I was in primary school, and I happen to love education. I a m going to be a school teacher, Ken Pivnick, and you, or education minister Pat McGeers mining friends, are not going to deny me that right. Ruth Lowther education 2

And that was when I decided that Iwouldnt go back to the land. The country wasbad a s the city and at least a,s in to town I can go a movieor send outfor a pizza if I feel like it. We might get another cu,tting off it if the weather stays good, Donanswers. Iknow they coulduse the money. Theyve been having a :lotof trouble out here. They bought four calves but they all died. I think Myra killed them. I mean, I was out here just afterbought the calves. they Don came in from the fields forlunch and told me about to the them. I got all excited and wanted to go out barn and see them right away. Having animals seem& to make their farm venture a bit more legitimate. Then Don told me the calves were sick and enthusiasm waned a lot. my But I saw them later when Myra went out feed them. to She picked up the bucket on the back porch and the flies flew angrily off it. The back porch was miserably hot. Myralooked a t the bit formula stuff in the bottom ofthe of bucket. Shedumped it out and looked a t the pail again. I guess I should wash this out, she said, looking at me. Then she shrugged, But Zm not gonna bother. It was then that I started to wonder how badly Myra wanted to get off the farm. I wouldnt blame her if she.really was that desperate. We went out to the barn and one the calves was dead. of He waslying in themiddle of the penwhile the omnipresent flies inspected him and the other calves stepped listlessly around him. Thqy came up to Myra but they wouldnt eat; they just stood therelooking a t the pail, with light yellow shit running continuously from their bodies. Eli came running into the old barn. Hey, whats the matter with him, he yelled, trying to climb in with the calves. Eli, dont go in there, I said quickly. I moved closerto the barn door. Then Iheard a squeal and grabbed for the pig just before he got out the door. The pig turned around to avoid and headed the other me way. I slammed the door shut. Eli forgot about the calf and ran after the pig. They both squealed. Myra stopped trying to coax the calves to eat. She put down the pail and looked worried. The pig came toward me again. I grabbed for it and missed. Myra started to laugh. We chased the little pig around the dark barn for a while, trying to forgetaboutthedeadcalf.Theother calves watchedus mournfully, mooing softly. We were all laughing like crazy.And Imalmost sure that Myra let the a pig get away couple of times when she could have caught it, just to prolong the fun. Finally Eli and I both threw ourselves on the pig at the same time.We both went down on thefloor but I managed to hang ontothe pig. Then Myraand I put him backin the pen and Eli went back to the house for a hammer and some nails to fix the loose board. We were still laughing really hard when wecame out of the barn.Myra left the pail:in the barn. I startedto worry about germs from the barn floor. I mean, the calves were dying. But I thought I might have become.too hysterical about hygiene from living in the city and always buying things in plastic packages. I didnt say anything to Myra but I washed my hands when I got back to the house, althoxh Ididnt think it would doany good, and I tried not to bite my fingernails that afternoon. A couple of weeks later the pig did get out and they never saw it again. the calves oneby one. died the They donthave any animals now, only the cats and

of That jolt brought to my senses. The naive optimist me former times behind me forever, I had now become a cynical hustler.Not giving a damn,I would rush in where angels, or a t least naive optimists, would fear to tread, snatching rare beauties from beneath the very noses of my competitors. In the infrequent event of a failure, I would sneer mockingly in the face of the prim refuser, retiring to my drink which I gulped stylishly, and my cigarette which I dragged on manfully. Every nightI returned home with a different young in tow, andmy thing collection of trophies, in the form of some piece of underwear or other, grew such quantity thatI thought of in

Friday, Marcb, 4, ,1977

the same results.After an hour or two, I was mouthing the.Opening a corner store and living the relaxed life of the petit bourgeois for the remainder of my life. soundsperfectly.Ievenwentthroughthe whole set of But one night, after experiencing a strange feeling of questions with one girl while standing right up her at by the bar, looking her straight in the eye. deja vu with the object of my desires, who was languishing inmy arms at time,I was suddenly struck the Finally, in desperation, I asked the first girl to dance To by the fact that I had exhausted the possibilities of the again. Surely she would notice something unusual. my found ritual the stimulating; situation. I no longer horror, she returned the same mechanical responses as enervating would have been a more appropriate word. before.Convinced now thatshe too musthaveatape But I am not a n early quitter so I resolved to try a little recorder concealedabout her person, I startedthorough a experiment in order to ascertain whether appraisal of my frisking. Not now! hissed a voice in my ear. Suddenly the art of discothequing was a reasonableone not. or violated rulefive, section B(.2), realizingthat I had governing the rate t which one a can progressin the field of I placed a miniature tape recorderin my jacket pocket physical intimacy, I grew uncontrollably violent. I pushed with aseries of standard questions recorded thereon. The her into a dark recess and with one hand ripped up her result was a little bulky in appearance but not so much dress and with the other I tore off her panties, my final that anyonewould notice in a room full of smoke, flashing tape recorder was bleating its out trophy. All the time the lights and sweaty bodies concerned only with moving familiar enquiries and comments, butI must admit I a m with the music. unsure whether the girl was still answering themor not. On entering the discotheque approached atightly-clad I When I cast a backward glance s I left the discotheque a blobof colour.I craftily switchedon the tape recorder and for the last time, all I could see was the scrum of mangirl a voicecrackled, Ya wanna dance? The got UP and nequins convulsing like epileptics. Presumably none had followed me to the crowded dance floor. Periodically I noticedmy act of dissension, or maybe they had just would lean over to her and the voice would crackle out assumed I was from of town and was unfamiliar with out from the region of my left nipple. Expressingno surprise the rdes of the game. a t the locationof my voice-box, she replied mechanically Whatever happened to the girl I do not know, but I still to each question. Applying my strictest scientific prinhaveher panties. Disillusionedforever with the moribund ciples, however, I concluded that this may well have been world of the discotheque,I a m now involved in a far more an untypical result. I lively art, where at least the reactions are spirited. I asked another girl, but the same occurred. And SO I breathe heavily down telephones to housewives picked a t asked another, andanother, and another, all with exactly random.

McDonald, B.C. Director

7:20,9:05 - Matinee Sat. & Sun. 2:20

burnaby

.",.-,
at Show in Jack Nicholson

00 *._I

GENE WILDERJILL CLAYBURGH RICHARDPRYOR
Shows at 12:40. 2:45. 5 : 0 5. 7:20. 9:40 MATURE"Occas1on coarse language. - R. W. McDonald

7 W. BROADWAY

7.1 5. 9.35

"ONE FLEW

OVER THE CUCKOO'S NEST"

7 W. EROADWAY

Violence and course language Could be frightening to children

Page Friday, 9

NURSING UNDERGRADUATE SOCIETY
Nominationsnow open for March 7/77 elections of:

HILLEL HOUSE presents

((ORRESMOVING L TRANSFER

ALSO GARAGES BASEMENTS

President Treasurer Nursing Week Rep
Nominations open next week for March 14/77 elections of:
Vice-president Secretary Social Coordinator Sports EUS Rep HSCC Rep
humus - great food, small charge TUESDAY 8 MARCH Guest Lecture - Zvi Levanon on Israel WEDNESDAY 9 MARCH Israel dancing, food-felafel THURSDAY 10 MARCH Movie. "Casablanca" - A Love Story
ISRAEL WEEK ATUBC March 7"March loth, 1977 MONDAY 7 MARCH Beit Cafe - eggplant salad,
All programmes start at 12:30 p.m.and will be held in Room 207/209 in the SUB. N.B. Because OR 'srael week, the B'nai B'rith Free Lunch will be held on Wednesday 16th March at Hillel House.

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