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People ' s friend returns ed students to loung e By DAVID CURSONS Malcolm "Che " McGregor has struck . McGregor, head of the classic s department, has- something of a reputation as a crusty ari d reactionary academic, which h e takes no pains to deny . But another side of McGrero r emerged Tuesday as he personall y led about 75 education student s to liberate the student lounge i n the education building: The students had bee n displaced from the lounge at 4 :3 0 p .m . when administration president Walter Gage along wit h sundry administration officials 'and guests arrived for a tea party . The party was to mark th e beginning of construction of a new trigonometry building . Rod Gulmans, Educatio n Undergraduate Society president, asked students to clear the area , explaining that the "offic e upstairs" (the dean's office) ha d booked the lounge for the party . Asked if the lounge was not for student use, Gulmans replied : "Yeah, but it was booked fo r 4 :30 and I don't think anybody's gonna care, at least not educatio n students . They're so apatheti c anyways . " In fact, the students di d disperse with scant protest , moving to the stone floors outsid e the lounge . At this point McGregor emerged and declared th e administration ' s occupanc y unjust . "Were you told you had t o leave?" he asked . The students sighed an d nodded. "Well go back inside!," h e shouted . "It's your lounge, isn' t it?" With that, McGregor remove d the rope barriers and the students returned to the lounge . Usually unreliable source s report that McGregor wa s muttering "All power to th e people!" as he strode back to th e tea party . JERICHO 'READY FOR WORST ' By GINNY GALT and JOHN GIBBS Residents of Jericho Hostel are preparing to dig-in for a confrontation with the federa l government — although it ma y not come today . A federal governmen t spokesman said today that th e noon deadline for clearing th e hostel still stands and the more than 300 residents will b e expected to leave "within a reasonable time" . But hostel residents decided a t a meeting Thursday evening a t CITY COLLEGE HOSTEL ? See page 3 Jericho that they would stay unti l a permanent hostel is establishe d in Vancouver . "We don't know what wil l happen but we are preparing fo r the worst," said hostel staffe r Rev. Ted Mahood . "We need all the people we ca n get to come down here an d support us in the morning," h e said. Local justice department official T . E . Jackson, acting o n behalf of the secretary of state who is responsible for th e Canadian summer hostel progra m — reaffirmed that the hostel wil l definitely be closed . "And the occupants will 'b e expected to leave within a reasonable time," Jackson said . Asked what constituted a reasonable length of time, h e replied : "The hostels were set up to provide for a three-night stay at the most . " If the residents refuse to leave ? "I don't know . No one has said exactly what steps will be taken, " he told The Ubyssey afte r telephone conversations wit h secretary of state officials i n Ottawa early today . Meanwhile Jericho resident s spent the night working out distributed a leaflet with instructions for residents' an d supporters' conduct during the sit-in at hut 47 on the arme d forces base . It instructed demonstrators no t to "bring dope or alcohol, fight back physically, run or panic, be destructive . . . or wande r around" . The leaflet advised the demonstrators to stick close together at all times . They appealed to students a t Simon Fraser University an d Vancouver City College, as well a s UBC, to help by providin g sup p lies or in occupying th e building with the residents . While no one knows how o r when authorities will confront th e occupation, B .C . Civil Libertie s Association president Joh n Stanton warned that Vancouver City Police are likely to be th e agents of forceful action . He said the VCP technicall y have no authority on the base as it is a federal reserve — but "i t is unlikely that federal authorites will contest their right to arrest i f they do decide to move in . "People arrested by police wil l be prosecuted to the extent that the city prosecutor sees fit, " Stanton told The Ubyssey. Occupation plans — now fairl y definite — were in limbo at on e point Thursday evening . An organizational rall y scheduled for 5 :30 p .m . at Jerich o was cancelled at the last minut e following radio reports tha t Mayor Tom Campbell reached an agreement with the federa l government whereby the cit y would take over the hoste l operation and "phase it out" ove r a week. A subsequent report quote d Campbell as saying his proposal had been rejected but that th e federal government would tak e essentially the same action . And what do you think of campus food : By DAN MULLIGA N Students will be asked this year t o evaluate food services on campus . Discriminatory food pricing wil l continue indefinitely . Expansion of SUB food facilities wil l occur within the year . These decisions were made Thursday b y the revamped food services committee , members of which were recently appointe d jointly by the administration and the AMS . The committee includes commerce pro f Bill Stanbury and student Wally Malkinson , both of whom helped produce the controversial Bond report - commissione d by the AMS - which last June roundl y criticized Ruth Blair's food services fo r general inefficiency . The survey evaluating food services - which was recommended by the Bond repor t will consist of on-campus interviews an d 1,000 questionnaires to be mailed to a broad cross-section of students . It will be carriedout by a graduate student in business administration, unde r direction of commerce prof Stan Oberg . Student opinion will be sought on matters ranging from location of food outlets on campus to the make-up o menues . The last survey of this kind is abou t seven years old, " Stanbury said . Results o f To page 6 see : CAFETERIA —dirk visser phot o HEATED DISCUSSION carries on at Jericho hostel Thursday evening as young transients decide strategy in face of government order t o vacate ex-army barracks . strategy and consolidating thei r ranks for what they say may be a lengthy — but they hope peacefu l — occupation . "The occupation is going to b e a passive resistance type of thin g but you can never guarantee tha t there's not going to be violence, " one of the residents said . To help minimize th e possibility of violence, the ad ho c mobilization committee

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Page 1: JERICHO 'READY FOR WORST' - UBC Library Home · People's friend returns ed students to lounge By DAVID CURSONS Malcolm "Che " McGregor has struck. McGregor, head of the classics department,

People's friend returns ed students to loungeBy DAVID CURSONS

Malcolm "Che " McGregor hasstruck .

McGregor, head of the classicsdepartment, has- something of areputation as a crusty ari dreactionary academic, which hetakes no pains to deny .

But another side of McGreroremerged Tuesday as he personallyled about 75 education student sto liberate the student lounge i nthe education building:

The students had bee ndisplaced from the lounge at 4 :30p.m. when administration

president Walter Gage along withsundry administration officials'and guests arrived for a tea party .

The party was to mark thebeginning of construction of anew trigonometry building .

Rod Gulmans, EducationUndergraduate Society president,

asked students to clear the area ,explaining that the "offic eupstairs" (the dean's office) ha dbooked the lounge for the party .

Asked if the lounge was not forstudent use, Gulmans replied:"Yeah, but it was booked fo r4:30 and I don't think anybody's

gonna care, at least not educatio nstudents . They're so apatheti canyways . "

In fact, the students di ddisperse with scant protest ,moving to the stone floors outsidethe lounge .

At this point McGregor

emerged and declared theadministration ' s occupancyunjust .

"Were you told you had t oleave?" he asked .

The students sighed an dnodded.

"Well go back inside!," h eshouted. "It's your lounge, isn' tit?"

With that, McGregor remove dthe rope barriers and the studentsreturned to the lounge .

Usually unreliable source sreport that McGregor wasmuttering "All power to thepeople!" as he strode back to th etea party .

JERICHO 'READY FOR WORST 'By GINNY GALTand JOHN GIBBS

Residents of Jericho Hostel arepreparing to dig-in for aconfrontation with the federa lgovernment — although it maynot come today .

A federal governmen tspokesman said today that thenoon deadline for clearing thehostel still stands and the morethan 300 residents will beexpected to leave "within areasonable time" .

But hostel residents decided ata meeting Thursday evening at

CITY COLLEGE HOSTEL ?See page 3

Jericho that they would stay unti la permanent hostel is establishe din Vancouver .

"We don't know what wil lhappen but we are preparing forthe worst," said hostel staffe rRev. Ted Mahood .

"We need all the people we ca nget to come down here an dsupport us in the morning," hesaid.

Local justice departmentofficial T. E. Jackson, acting o nbehalf of the secretary of state —who is responsible for theCanadian summer hostel progra m— reaffirmed that the hostel willdefinitely be closed .

"And the occupants will 'beexpected to leave within areasonable time," Jackson said .

Asked what constituted areasonable length of time, h ereplied: "The hostels were set upto provide for a three-night stay atthe most . "

If the residents refuse to leave ?"I don't know . No one has said

exactly what steps will be taken,"he told The Ubyssey afte rtelephone conversations withsecretary of state officials inOttawa early today .

Meanwhile Jericho resident sspent the night working out

distributed a leaflet withinstructions for residents' an dsupporters' conduct during thesit-in at hut 47 on the arme dforces base .

It instructed demonstrators no tto "bring dope or alcohol, fightback physically, run or panic, bedestructive . . . or wanderaround" .

The leaflet advised thedemonstrators to stick close

together at all times .They appealed to students at

Simon Fraser University an dVancouver City College, as well asUBC, to help by providingsupplies or in occupying thebuilding with the residents .

While no one knows how orwhen authorities will confront th eoccupation, B .C. Civil Libertie sAssociation president JohnStanton warned that Vancouver

City Police are likely to be th eagents of forceful action .

He said the VCP technicall yhave no authority on the base —as it is a federal reserve — but "i tis unlikely that federal authoriteswill contest their right to arrest ifthey do decide to move in .

"People arrested by police wil lbe prosecuted to the extent thatthe city prosecutor sees fit, "Stanton told The Ubyssey.

Occupation plans — now fairl ydefinite — were in limbo at onepoint Thursday evening .

An organizational rallyscheduled for 5 :30 p .m. at Jerich owas cancelled at the last minutefollowing radio reports tha tMayor Tom Campbell reached anagreement with the federalgovernment whereby the cit ywould take over the hosteloperation and "phase it out" ove ra week.

A subsequent report quote dCampbell as saying his proposalhad been rejected but that th efederal government would takeessentially the same action .

And what do you think of campus food:By DAN MULLIGAN

Students will be asked this year toevaluate food services on campus.

Discriminatory food pricing wil lcontinue indefinitely .

Expansion of SUB food facilities wil loccur within the year .

These decisions were made Thursday b ythe revamped food services committee ,members of which were recently appointe djointly by the administration and the AMS .

The committee includes commerce pro fBill Stanbury and student Wally Malkinson ,both of whom helped produce thecontroversial Bond report - commissione dby the AMS - which last June roundl ycriticized Ruth Blair's food services fo rgeneral inefficiency .

The survey evaluating food services -which was recommended by the Bond repor t

will consist of on-campus interviews and1,000 questionnaires to be mailed to a broad

cross-section of students .It will be carriedout by a graduate

student in business administration, underdirection of commerce prof Stan Oberg .

Student opinion will be sought onmatters ranging from location of foodoutlets on campus to the make-up omenues .

The last survey of this kind is abou tseven years old," Stanbury said. Results o f

To page 6 see : CAFETERIA

—dirk visser photo

HEATED DISCUSSION carries on at Jericho hostel Thursday evening as young transients decide strategy in face of government order tovacate ex-army barracks .

strategy and consolidating thei rranks for what they say may be alengthy — but they hope peacefu l— occupation .

"The occupation is going to bea passive resistance type of thingbut you can never guarantee thatthere's not going to be violence, "one of the residents said .

To help minimize th epossibility of violence, the ad ho cmobilization committee

Page 2: JERICHO 'READY FOR WORST' - UBC Library Home · People's friend returns ed students to lounge By DAVID CURSONS Malcolm "Che " McGregor has struck. McGregor, head of the classics department,

Page 2

"ALL WE'VE HEARD so far is bullshit!" That wasbeginning of a lecture on sub-cultures by Mrs .Diane Moore at general meeting Tuesday noon . n

THE UBYSSE Y

Students voteto keep outgreen saliva '

By JOHN ANDERSE N"We don't want your goddamn SUB," shoute d

a member of Jericho hostel .But it was hardly necessary .Four thousand students had just voted mor e

than 3-1 against allowing transients the use of SU Bas a temporary sleeping quarters .

The vote came at the Alma Mater Societ yemergency general meeting Tuesday noon, called t odecide the fate of a student council motion to allo wthe transients the use of SUB under stric tsupervision when the Jericho hostel closed .

The AMS council had originally decided at aregular meeting Sept . 25 to open SUB to thetransients .

However, as student opposition to the pla ngrew, council decided at a special meeting the nex tevening to put the matter to the students .

And it didn't take the students too long t odecide they didn't want the hostel residents in SUB .

They put up with less than an hour o fdiscussion from several people before voting agains tit .

Grad student president David Mole, a sponsorof the original council motion, said : "This is achance to show we are different from the peopl ewho came before . We can say we believe in huma nbeings . "

Said grad student council rep Evert Hoogers :"The kids aren't the problem. The problem is agovernment that can't provide employment .

"These people are human beings, they don' tdrool green saliva," he said .

But the meeting voted overwhelmingly agains tthe proposal when the question was called an ddebate stopped .

AMS president Tony Hodge then put a nalternative motion — passed by the AMS executiveat a special meeting the previous evening — to th egeneral meeting for a vote .

The motion said that "in the event of that n oadequate facilities are provided at the time of theclosing of the hostel, the people of this assembly areprepared to march en masse to the Jericho hosteland prevent the closing of that building . "

But the students weren't sure they wanted todo that either .

When, after brief debate, the motion was put toa vote, Hodge ruled that it had failed .

But grad student Art Smolensky challenged thechair and after a second vote, Hodge decided it wa sclose enough to go to referendum .

Hodge announcer' the march issue would go t oa ballot vote next week . But this has been cancelle dsince the government announced it was to close th ehostel Friday .

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Welcome Students & Familie sTo UNITED-ANGLICAN CHURCHE S

Combined Services This Sunday at 11 :00 a .m .

ST. ANSELMS CHURCH—University Blvd .

Breakfast Club Will Hold Evening Meetin gSunday, 7 :30 P .M . at Univ. Hill United Churc h

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PUBLIC

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SENATE ELECTIONS :Are you willing to accept the challenge of a position on th e

U.B .C . Senate? If so, it will be your duty to participate fully in theresearch, discussion, and decisions of the senate and its committees ,taking into account the interest of the student body and the universit ycommunity as a whole .

Nominations are now open for the following positions :I . Senators-at-large — 2 positions ope n

II . Constituency Senator sa) Education -1 position ope nb) Applied Science -1 position ope nc) Arts -1 position ope nd) Graduate Studies -1 position open

Nomination forms can be obtained from Anne Clarkson, AM SSecretary in S.U .B . 248 . The closing date for nominations is Thursday ,October 15th at 12 :30 p .m . The election will take place Thursday ,October 29th .

S.U.B. Management Committee :Two of the 4 vital members-at-large positions are open — vita l

because the other 5 positions are filled by Council nominees . This isyour chance to help establish the Student Union Building policy t oprotect your SUB furniture and help allocate SUB management fund swhich are 50c per student per year . Help handle the money and theproblem . Nominations close Friday, October 9th at 12 :30 p .m . Pleaseapply in writing through the AMS Secretary SUB 248 to Hanson Lau ,Chairman, SUB Management Committee .

PUBLIC NOTIC E

All Candidate MeetingThere will be an All Candidates Meeting for the positio n

of AMS Vice President in the SUB Conversation Pit, Monday ,October 5th at noon . Come and throw lunch bags !

But did they use soap ?"The Alma Mater Society has officially washed its hands of th e

Jericho issue."AMS president Tony Hodge said in an interview Thursda y

evening that the AMS is not taking any official stand on the hoste ldispute .

"This does not preclude any members of the AMS, students ,council members or executive, from acting as individuals," he said .

He stressed that they would be acting as members of th ecommunity, and not as sanctioned representatives of the studen tgovernment .

"Thursday morning's meetings were ad hoc," and not officialmeetings of the AMS, Hodge said .

He said he was disappointed that the noon meeting called t oinform students of the Jericho hostel developments "was not open fo rdiscussion."

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Page 3: JERICHO 'READY FOR WORST' - UBC Library Home · People's friend returns ed students to lounge By DAVID CURSONS Malcolm "Che " McGregor has struck. McGregor, head of the classics department,

Friday, October 2, 1970

THE UBYSSEY

Page 3

School board to decide on new hostel proposal

l—thom wescott photo

TERRIFYING TOYS are object of fascination for grad student John Frizzell, a member of Thunderbird War Garners' Club, whose clubs da yexhibit is shown here . Members spend spare time mapping out strategy and overkill using weapons of various centuries .

.Faculty citizenship dispute unsettle dBy CAROLINE WOODWAR DThe dean of arts has refused to

release statistics on the relativerank of Canadian and foreignacademic staff hired in the Englis hdepartment .

To differentiate between aCanadian teaching assistant o rinstructor, and a Canadian who isa full professor is "nit-picking" ,Doug Kenny told The Ubysse yWednesday .

He was replying to Ar tSmolensky, co-author of acitizenship report on UBC faculty ,who questioned Kenny's figure sfor thee English departmenthirings .

Kenny said last week that theEnglish department appointed on eBriton, one New Zealander, fiv eAmericans and eight Canadiansfor the 1970-71 academic year.

(He was, at the time, replyingto the "alleged hiring of eigh tAmericans and only twoCanadians " in the Englishdepartment, as reported by theAlma Mater Society citizenshipstudy . )

But Smolensky said the eightCanadians Kenny referred to mayonly be instructors or lecturersand "are not really considere dfaculty" .

Kenny disagreed . He said as faras he is concerned, anybody wh oteaches — and who is thereforeappointed by the board ofgovernors — is faculty .

But he has refused, in any case ,to reveal the rank of th eCanadians hired as opposed to

that of the foreigners hired ."The real crux of the matter is

the person who is in front of th eclassroom, who is teaching b yboard appointment," he said in a ninterview .

"Who is to say that a fullprofessor will influence morestudents than a teaching assistant ?In many cases the TA comes incontact with more students than

does the professor and thereforethe rank issue is not at allrelevant .

"Secondly, to precisely defineor breakdown faculty citizenshipis to put the heat on teachers withspecifics — shades of NaziGermany," Kenny said .

The definition of whatconstitutes the member of theUBC faculty is a nit-picking

issue," he said .He said excellence of the staff

is the major criteria and, while hefavors the hiring of Canadianfaculty, the educational standardsof UBC must not be sacrificed .

The citizenship report ,compiled by Smolensky and AM Spresident Tony Hodge, wasparticularly critical of the hiringtrends in the English department .

A proposal to turn old KingEdward annex at 12th and Ashinto a youth hostel will remain upin the air until the next schoo lboard meeting on Oct . 19 .

The proposal came out of anad hoc meeting Thursday mornin gof persons trying to find alternat eaccommodation for transien tyouths now living in Jerichohostel .

School board trustee Frit zBowers told the meeting that th eKing Edward annex, presentl ybeing used by Vancouver CityCollege, will be vacant by Oct . 17 .

The proposal will go before abuildings committee meeting Oct.8 for consideration .

If the committee approves th eproposal it will go before the ful lschool board.

Bowers said he thought ther ewas a "strong possibility that thetrustees could be persuaded tha tthe annex be used as a hostel, ontwo conditions . "

The first condition was that aresponsible group, "such as Inne rCity Service Project", be in chargeof the hostel .

And the second stipulation wa sthat the hostel would not cost th eschool board any money .

Bowers said the annex include sa three-storey building and severalhuts .

PANGO PANGO (UNS) —Thousands of blymphic blorgs arecongregating in the royal citytoday in preparation for theannual ceremonies of Kankakee ,

the ancient hero-god wh o

immolated himself to protest th e

creation of the empendocles .

SUDBURY (CUP) — The boycott o fclasses by instructional staff atLaurentian University entered its secon dday Thursday with no sign of anyagreement between the board o fgovernors and the university senate ,representing faculty and students .

The decision of the senate for facultyto boycott classes is a continuation of astruggle that developed between thesenate and the board's executivecommittee last year over the firing o fadministration president Stanle yMullins .

A senate motion Monday suspende dclasses for one week starting Wednesda y"for the purpose of preparing astatement on Laurentian University, itsgovernment and future, for submissionon Wednesday, Oct . 7 . "

Both the board and actingadministration president Rolan dCloutier have branded the instructors'actions' illegal, but board chairman

Student and faculty boycot tcontinues at Laurentian

William Shea said Tuesday that he fel tthey were not .

The boycott is being supported by amajority of faculty, with only somescience and math instructors stillholding regular classes.

Wednesday, about 1,100 of the2,100 students jammed into a 700-seatauditorium to hear the senate explain it sposition in the battle .

The senate wants "a removal of theexecutive committee (of the board ofgovernors) and the appointment of anew executive committee with limite dpowers of recommendation withmembership to include faculty an dstudents . "

The board and its executive haverejected the demands and called for areturn to "normality" .

The senate charges that the executivehas "usurped powers pertinent to th eoffice of the president and had mad eunethical use of confidentialinformation in relation to details ofproposed professors salaries" b yreleasing the figures to the press .

A letter released Wednesday byadministration president Cloutie radvising students that "if you want t odestroy the university you will have t oaccept to be destroyed with it," haseffectively removed any chances thepresident might have had as a negotiatorin the dispute .

Many Laurentian students feel theuniversity may remain closed until i tadopts on governing board, replacingthe present senate and governors, eithe rgiving greater representation to facultyand students, or greatly reducing thepowers of the non-academic governors .

—dave enns phot oFORESTER SHOWS use of elbow grease in doubl ebucking contest this week, part of forestry week activities.

Saps show local artUBC forestry students have discovered culture, i t

seems, and obtained — at vast expense and trouble — 1 8paintings recently shown at Expo 70 for display her eduring forestry week .

The paintings, by Vancouver artist Sheila Gibons ,will be on display daily in the SUB art gallery untilFriday .

A forestry spokesman said the paintings are just bac kfrom an Expo exhibition in Osaka, Japan .

Receipts help charityThe Engineering Undergraduate Society receipt drive is a hit .Over $90,000 in bookstore receipts has already been collected b y

the mechanical engineers, said engineer Ken McClelland .In line with the bookstore's rebate policy whereby student s

receive a five per cent refund next spring on all their purchases upo npresentation of receipts, the engineers decided last summer to solici tthe receipts ,from students and then donate the money to charity .

Funds generated by this campaign ($4,500 to date) will bedonated to the Crippled Children's Fund .

Due to the excellent response, a booth has been installed in th ebookstore so that students wishing to contribute during the year ma ydo so, said McClelland.

Page 4: JERICHO 'READY FOR WORST' - UBC Library Home · People's friend returns ed students to lounge By DAVID CURSONS Malcolm "Che " McGregor has struck. McGregor, head of the classics department,

Page 4

THE UBYSSEY

Friday, October 2, 1970

7WE MS-MYPublished Tuesdays and Fridays throughout the universit y

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

OCTOBER 2, 197 0

The waiting game

DAVIES RAVIES

BY JIM DAVIES

Who are these peopl e

It's a hard thing to say about so serious an issue ,but the circumstances surrounding the Jericho hoste lclosure bordered on the absurd Thursday .

There were 350 people in the hostel, waiting fo rsome kind of a word on whether or not they would bethrown onto the street, but no one in a position toknow bothered telling them or the news media what wa sgoing on .

They spent the day awaiting any news whil epoliticians used their lives as scorecards for electio nbrownie points .

As this is being written (1 a .m. today) thesituation is still a mystery .

The only thing that anyone seems to know is tha tthe hostel will close at noon today . But the hoste lresidents have not been told if they will be given a certai nnumber of days to vacate or if the army will be there toevict them at 12:01 .

The confusion that surrounded Jericho Thursda ywas heightened by mayor Tom Campbell, who mad eone major pronouncement after another, reversing hi sfield every time he began disappearing from th ehalf-hourly radio newscasts.

Fir:t, Campbell said he had interceded with thefederal government and the city would take over th ehostel in order to phase it out gradually . Then he saidthe government had rejected his plan, but would do thesame thing on its own .

As things turned out later, it all appears to hav ebeen so much bullshit — Campbell never had any say i nthe matter because the hostel is on federal land .

However, one thing is almost certain . If theconfrontation between the hostel residents and thegovernment doesn't come today, it will probably cometomorrow, or Monday or a week from now .

The residents of the hostel have shown thei rdetermination to stay at Jericho until a permanenthostel is established in Vancouver . They have nointention of being evicted or phased out .

The city and the federal government have alsoshown determination — determination to continue wit htheir insane policy of trying to sweep the entire issu eunder the rug .

They still seem to believe that if they just shu tdown the hostel, all the people in it will magically findthe jobs they have been looking for all summer.

Unless there are some rapid changes in whateverpass for minds in high places and new accommodation i sfound, an occupation of Jericho seems inevitable .

Right now, the people at Jericho are preparing fo rthe worst . It's doubtful if the government will make an ymove today, so most of us can only wait .

But perhaps the people who demonstrated thei rsuport for the hostel residents earlier this week will goto Jericho and wait with them .

is the lovely Josephine Margoli stoday?" While McCloy wep tuncontrollably, Jan O'Brien heard th emuse to mutter : "You think you gottroubles. I haven't seen my leetl emeatball, Robin in a ribbon's age."

Caroline Woodward said the ledewas highly suspect . Steve Lucasadmitted he too was an atheist. It wastoo much for the chief rabbi . He sentDirk Visser and Dave Bowerman towrap the majestic mist around A lKatowitz's neck and nail them both toan em ruler. Maureen Gans, MikeGoodman and Dave Enns volunteeredto get pictures while Sharon Boylanand John Andersen triffled with th egreat schlong's digits .

Dan Mulligan and Johnny Zaozirn y— both devout traditionalists — sai dthe blorgs would all rot in hell for theirblasphemy. But Paul Knox mad ehim drink a pot of green salivic glu eand eat of the holy ribbon . ThomWescott took up his left leg and walke doff into a steaming southeast Asia njungle, never to be seen until Monday .

Unheard voices in the Jericho hostel issue :• Two engineers walking away from the

Tuesday general meeting. Behind them, SUB plazastrewn with papers, old lunches, and other waste .

"We couldn't let them live in our building —they'd wreck the place," comments one .

The other agrees. "Can you imagine the messthey'd have it in? "

They don't notice the condition of the plaza .The two voted in a block with the rest of th e

engineers who turned up en masse at the meeting .Their presence was not quite as evident as at manyof their activities because they dispersed throughthe crowd .

• Spoke to another engineer who vote dagainst the hostel move to SUB .

"Don't say we voted as a mob," he cautions ."We voted as individuals . "

The "individual" vote by the engineers mayhave been influenced at least a bit by anti-hippi etalks given them the previous day (in th eengineering first and second year classes) by Alm aMater Society president and fellow gear TonyHodge .

• Two hitch-hikers from the hostel picke dup Wednesday are asked where they were going t ostay if they were removed from Jericho :

"I didn't even know we were going to ge tkicked out," says one .

"Yeah, we're getting the boot on Friday, " say sthe other to his friend . "But I think I've got a placeto stay . "

The young man who hadn ' t heard of thegovernment removal order is visibly shaken . "Theycall me Ratzo at the hostel," he says . "You know,like in Midnight Cowboy ."

He explains he has something wrong with hislungs . "Maybe_ it's T .B ." he says . "I guess I'll go t oFlorida to die," he jokes, "just like Ratzo did in th e

Editor, The Ubyssey, Sir :As a result of the AMS general

meeting on Tuesday, I find mysel frather depressed about the lack ofconcern that many students haveabout others and themselves.

I saw many of my fellowstudents cop-out on an issue tha thas been thrown around bydifferent levels of governmentwhom supposedly cannot relate tothe "transient problem" . I heardmany intellectual pedantacism sconcerning other minority group swho find themselves out in theeconomic cold . I heard "amens"and "that's rights" in response t othe rationalizations forabandoning the "project ."

movie ." Although he is obviously trying to b efunny, it seems he believes a large part of what hesays .

The two ask to get out in front of a shop o nFourth . "They put doughnuts out for us every nightwhen they close for the day," says one . "I hop ethey have lots cause I haven't eaten hardly anythin gtoday . "

They hunch over the box, picking through itfor some good doughnuts .

• Three young men and a young woman, allof whom say they live in the Jericho hostel ar easked what they think of the students' vote whilethey sit beside the hostel's booth in SUB .

They stare for several seconds, then one of theyoung men says, "It's their building ." He leaves it atthat . It appears that none of them expected to beallowed to move into the building .

• A tall, husky UBC student is arguing wit ha long-haired young man from the hostel at th eThursday meeting .

"I pay my rent . I buy my food . I don't bum offanybody ."

The other disagrees . "We're down, sure .Everybody needs help sometime .You think I'mnot looking for a job?"

A crowd gathers around the two as they argue.Like most of those at the meeting they have made adefinite choice as to which side they are on . Whileeveryone argues, a speaker blares out the Beatles 'song All You Need Is Love .

• A Hare Krishna sect member giving ou tincense and pamphlets during the Thursday meetin gsays he doesn't know what all the fuss is about .

"We don't have these problems in Hare," h esays . His solutions to the hostel issue : "If everyoneput God into their lives, no one would be in need . "

The haze over Vancouver may be more thanjust the worst air pollution of 1970 .

ourselves out in the cold and n omatter what privilege has been ou rguardian, we all react to the coldthe same way . We shiver .

We will find our . "brothers"more concerned with accumulate dphysical wealth than with hi s" brother's" welfare . Thishypocrisy and self-centred apathyis a disgrace . Let's start relatingsomewhere .

Let's start being part of whatwe are already implicated in . Let' sget out of our ivory towers andhitch down to Jericho now, talkwith the people . Think about it awhile, then do it . Love from thewest .

BOB MACKIE ,Arts 4 .

Editor : Nate SmithNews Maurice BridgeCity John Gibb sWire John Anderse nSports Scott McCloyAssociate John TwiggAss't City Robin Burgess

Ginny GaltAss ' t News Jennifer Jorda n

Leslie PlommerManaging Bruce CurtisPage Friday Tim Wilso n

Rumors were rank that Maurice'srecently deceased typewriter was see npounding its keys across a wildernessnewsroom .

Jinny Ladner, Mike McCaffery an dKen Lassesen reported seeing the agin gUnderwood eating Tom Harrison' sraisin pie. Amarjeet Rattan claimed t ohave seen the prolific apparition spitthe crust out on Shane McCune's dea djokes. "Pig, Pig" profaned the irat eAmarjeet until Judy McLeo dvolunteered to clean it up.

McCloy and his cohorts in the jockshop — Don Gardner and Keith Dunbar— exhorted multi-flanged mist : "Where

Dead fishLETTERS '

But not once did I hearconstructive ideas that did relat ethe university to the community .The university is a collection o findividuals who someday ,somehow, will enter the"outside ."

Whether we like it or not, thebasic faults in our technocraticage are opening up once again an dless motivated individuals orpeople who cannot physically fitinto the consumer-producersyndrome (which some of us clingto so insecurely) are beingheaped up like dead fish on theshoreline . And all we can do ishold our noses and complai nabout the stink !

Many of us, dear fello wstudents, are going to find

Page 5: JERICHO 'READY FOR WORST' - UBC Library Home · People's friend returns ed students to lounge By DAVID CURSONS Malcolm "Che " McGregor has struck. McGregor, head of the classics department,

Friday, October 2, 1970

THE UBYSSEY

Page 5

MORE LETTER SSolution

Editor, The Ubyssey, Sir :The general meetin g

Wednesday was very illuminating ,in particular the frank admissio nthat the SUB question was adummy issue set up to attract aquorum for the real issue, theproposed march on Jericho .

Tony Hodge achieved ne wheights of combined cando rand hypocrisy when he read out amotion urging our support for th eunderprivileged "regardless ofcreed, colour or ideology" an dimmediately went on to urge useof the "Jericho problem" to forcestudent demands on provincialand federal governments .

As someone pointed out at th emeeting, no suggestion has bee nmade to open SUB to old-agepensioners or Gastown derelicts .The Jericho residents merit AM Sattention because they are in th e17-25 age group, have long hair ,and can be amalgamated into th egeneral thrust of "studen tpolitics", a phrase which ha sreplaced "the rights of the workers "in contemporary political cant .

People screamed about treatingthe Jerichos as "human beings ,not cattle" . If any of theconsiderably more than 35 0Jericho supporters at the meeting ,so eager to vote away studen tfunds, had themselves each take na Jericho resident home, theseunderprivilegeds could be treate das charity cases, not politica lpawns and the "Jericho problem"would have been solved .

But of course, that isn't thepoint, is it?

A. RUSSELL WODELLEnglish 3 .

CorrectionEditor, The Ubyssey, Sir :

In order to correct severalitems in your Sept . 29 article o nUBC's newest day care centre, Ioffer the following .

The campus nursery co-op i sB.C.'s only day care centre fo rchildren of one and a half to thre eyears of age and is operating b yspecial permission of theprovincial department o frehabilitation and socialimprovement .

The centre is licensed and ha stwo qualified staff members aswell as parent assistants . Day car eservices are subsidized by thegovernment on the basis ofindividual family need .

We are well equipped indoors .Toys have been bought an ddonated, parents have builtfurniture and play equipment .What we lack is outdoor climlbing

equipment and one or two mor etricycles or kiddie cars .

We have paid $250 out of ou rown pockets to equip the presen tcentre and fence the yard .

Apart from governmentalsubsidies and rent-free use of thegrad student centre durin gsummer session, we have receive dno financial aid .

•In order to reach our goal o f

three adults to care for 1 2children, we need volunteers t odonate a regular half-day a week .Men, especially, are welcome .

Our concern is to provide goo dday care for the children nowinvolved. However, we arepreparedto offer information an dguidance to students interested instarting a similar group .

For those wishing furthe rinformation, we can be contacte dthrough the university day car ecouncil, Box 122, SUB .

MONICA MITCHELLSupervisor

Nursery Co-o pWe apologize for any

misconceptions about the daycare centre that you feel may havebeen left by the story .—Ed .

'Good night'Editor, The Ubyssey, Sir :

I must express my pride at theaction taken at the recent AM Smeeting by the majority of thestudents present in regard to the"youth hostel" question .

Instead of helping those whoconceivably may not deserve it ,we have helped nobody . Insteadof inconveniencing ourselves awee bit to exercise a little (pardonthe expression) christianity, wehave let things stay as they are .

Successful products of society ,we have gotten the other guybefore he has a chance to get us .So relax, everybody, no one' sgoing to mess up our preciousSUB. Close your eyes .

If any of those dirty hippie ssleep under a roof tonight, itwon't be your fault . Go sleepnow, babies . Daddy 's proud o fyou . You bastards .

DAVID LE E

More praiseEditor, The Ubyssey, Sir:

Don't you know I've got aweak heart? I am 84 years old ,experienced in life in three citie sand naturally interested in UBC .

Two years ago, I lost contac twith The Ubyssey as i tdegenerated into a somewha tvulgar rag . I served in both worldwars and I regard myself as thic kskinned, but I could not read The

Ubyssey of about two years ago .On Tuesday I visited UBC and

couldn't get over the changes inrecent years — the crowds, thecosmopolitan atmosphere in SUBetc .

' Then my eyes fell on a pile o fUbysseys . My nose turned up fo ra moment, but then (my nose no tgetting any stench) I intuitivel ypicked up a copy, (no collectionbox?) .

That evening I read it throughfrom start to finish . Ye gremlins !What has happened? Here is reall ya university paper — excellentthroughout . Shock! But onrecovery I want to thank you an dyour helpers very, very sincerely .

As Elvira Finch puts it, thepaper is "excellent beyondbelief ." I'm still scratching m yhead — nervous reaction . And ilo tonly excellent sense all the wa ythrough but exquisite humour a tno extra charge . (page nine) ."With their usual politeness ,students began to pack up thei rbooks before class time had ru nout, and while Stocker was stillspeaking . "

Candid cameras not allowed !Again, thanks for a pleasan t

surprise .S. C . HARRIES ,

2496 West 8th

Who's next?Editor, The Ubyssey, Sir :

With reference to those peoplewho voted against the housing o fthe Jericho people in SUB, it wil lbe interesting to register theirpolitical opinions five years henc ewhen they will be unable to findjobs. The market for engineers isdwindling these days .

PAUL McDOWELLGrad Studies 9

(Anthropology )

DesertersEditor, The Ubyssey, Sir :

With all these recent argumentsabout de-Canadianization I canno thelp wondering why one veryimportant aspect is constantlyoverlooked .

I am referring to the largenumber of draft-dodgers an ddeserters entering Canada .

These men must possess atremendous amount of courag eand determination to leave th eonly life they have ever know nand undertake a project regarde das cowardice by most people .

They came to Canada to makea new life .

Why are they forced to wast eaway in our hostels until eve nthese are taken away ?

BOB JOHNSONScience 1

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Page 6: JERICHO 'READY FOR WORST' - UBC Library Home · People's friend returns ed students to lounge By DAVID CURSONS Malcolm "Che " McGregor has struck. McGregor, head of the classics department,

Two VP candidates nominated

in AMS by-election next week

Page 6

THE UBYSSEY

Friday, October 2, 1970

that "promotional pricing features should be

continued only for the time being, until formal

guidelines are set down by the committee . "

He said one of the jobs of the survey will be t o

evaluate student opinion on this point .

The expansion of eating facilities in SUB will

involve re-organization of the present serving area

which the committee noted is badly congested

during noon hours .

Negotiations will have to be held between th e

AMS and the administration to determine whethe r

food services can acquire sufficient space to make

the expansion worthwhile .

their platforms Tuesday noon in the SUB

conversation pit .

The four extra Arts Undergraduate Society

council reps, meanwhile, have been elected to offic e

by acclamation. Introduced to council Wednesday

night were : Brian Sproule, Bob Mackie, Michael

Robinson and Lynn Brown .

For the first time, candidates are required to

post a $10 deposit, which will be refunded in whole

or in part, after the results are tabulated and th e

elections committee has investigated any allegatio n

of violations of the rules.

Krawczyk announced her decision not to stan d

for election - although she is now eligible - in a

letter to The Ubyssey .

"I am not interested in serving as the

representative for a group of PEOPLE that don't

care what happens to other PEOPLE," she said i n

the letter .

"That majority of students which voted agains t

allowing the PEOPLE presently living in the Jerich o

Hostel to stay in SUB if they could find NO

OTHER place to go, clearly indicated, to me at

Psychology 100

Mo'.~os t o

THE GEORGIA

OCT. 19th

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Only two candidates will be on the ballot when

students go to the polls for the Alma Mater Society

by-election Oct . 8 .

Kelvin Beckett, arts 4, and John Mitchell ,

education 4, have been nominated for

vice-president .

Hamish Earle, grad studies English, was the

only nominee for ombudsman and has assumed th e

office by acclamation .

Christine Krawczyk, acting vice-president, ha s

withdrawn her nomination because of an

"unwillingness to represent the students of UBC "

because of the Tuesday general meeting which

decided against the using of SUB for the Jerich o

hostel .

The Oct . 8 ballot will also ask students t o

decide whether or not the 60 UBC students wh o

study industrial arts education in Burnaby woul d

have to pay the $15 of the $24 AMS fee that goe s

to the operation of SUB .

Currently they are required to pay the full fee

although they never use SUB .

The by-elections are necessary because the

ombudsman and vice-president elected last spring

were unable to serve .

The ombudsman couldn't return to campu s

because of his academic standing . Krawczyk wa s

found to be ineligible to serve as vice-presiden t

because she had not been at UBC the mandatory

two years .

From page 1

the survey should be available by March,

1971 The decision to continue discriminatory

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meals, paid for by mark up on popular items lik e

coffee - runs directly counter to the Bond report .

The five-man committee, under economic pro f

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The food service ' s committee chairman, Byro n

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Page 7: JERICHO 'READY FOR WORST' - UBC Library Home · People's friend returns ed students to lounge By DAVID CURSONS Malcolm "Che " McGregor has struck. McGregor, head of the classics department,
Page 8: JERICHO 'READY FOR WORST' - UBC Library Home · People's friend returns ed students to lounge By DAVID CURSONS Malcolm "Che " McGregor has struck. McGregor, head of the classics department,

Things are happening all over the place . People Stripping inSUB over the Jericho Hostel thing. Films, Concerts, Clubs ,

Undercut, Fraternities, it's all so busy that I just don't know wha tto do, I just might go to sleep though, since I haven't had muchlately .

The playhouse starts its season Friday with The Secretar yBird, The Boys are all in the Band at the Magic theatre, The VS Ogave its first performance Monday night.

Herb Gilbert of the Fine Arts Department is bursting ou twith all kinds of activities for you involved Gallery goers, this time ,it's Free Roller Skating in the Fine Arts Gallery at noon Monday ,October S, bring your own skates to the Basement of the Library —if you can't, there will be some skates there .

Herb Gilbert also invites you to attend the closing ofPROCESS HYPHEN PRODUCT and ENVIRONMENTA LHYPHEN COUNTER SPACE in the F .A. Gallery, or you can visitduring the installation processes that start Tuesday, Oct . 6 at 10 :00a .m. This installation will continue until the CLOSING on OCT .24 .

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Friday 2 & Saturday 3 - 7 :00 & 9 :00 - Sunday 4 - 7 :00

Students 50 c — Others 75c — SUB Auditorium

An unprepossessing fellow came into the office toda ycarrying with him, part of a year and one half study of unified fiel dtheory complete with hordes of calculations and all sorts o fequations . It turns out that he has, or says he has, a qualifiedtheory for the introduction of a mathematical constant that couldlink just about everything to everything, from the number o fmoons on Jupiter and Saturn, to an atomic nucleus. His theor ydisputes the concept of gravitation as the cementing force of ou rsolar system . More about that later .

pfage two

THE U BYSSEY

Friday, October 2, 1970

Page 9: JERICHO 'READY FOR WORST' - UBC Library Home · People's friend returns ed students to lounge By DAVID CURSONS Malcolm "Che " McGregor has struck. McGregor, head of the classics department,

Wheel It's Harold's birthda yparty, celebrated, as the hos tsays with apologies, "si xscreaming tired fairy queens an done anxious queer" . Things ge teven more anxious as a straigh tcollege friend interrupts th erevelry and the poison o fself-betrayal carries the party t oa sodden but cathartic end .

The Boys in the Band is ligh tcomedy with a bitter aftertaste .The Actor's ContemporaryTheatre production i sremarkable successful i ncapturing the flavor, consideringthe touchy issue, th ecompetition of the film version ,and the difficulty of performing

the comedy of reality . Althoug hthe goal is not always reached ,the quality is still impressive .

The initial interplay i spotentially hysterically funny .However, this gaiety is mitigate dby a certain heaviness of tone .The keynote is set by Michae l(Geoff Theobald), the host, whoinjects a touch of oratory int ohis chit-chat, has a straine ddeliberateness to his scathin gflippancies undue even in anaging faggot . There is aself-consciousness to hi sass-twirling and strutting whic his more appropriate to Emory ,the fag's fag . Glenn MacDonaldas Emory has wrists that bend

backward in the attempt to b elimp. Even Larry (Tom Carew) ,casually and attractivel ypromiscuous seems overl yintense as he enters with hi sfidelity-obsessed lover (JimMcQueen) . With these intensitie sthe first act in all its wr yribaldry still retains a rathernervous atmosphere .

The tenseness, however, fade swith the onset of rea lantagonism. Humor passes t ocatharsis . Larry and Hank ar ereunited in a beautiful statemen tof faith. Emory and .Bernar d(James Crawford), who is blac kand beautiful, help each othe rlimp away from the frightenin gscene of their self-revelation .The constricted straight (T yHaller) leaves as convinced o fthe horrors of sin as ever, bu treinstated with his wife . And allthe while Harold (Rober tGraham), occasionally playin gwith his birthday gift, a"midnight cowboy" (Michael L aFrance), lookston untouched .

Harold is, in fact, stunning .His entrance, in green velvet sui tand pale red glasses, is totallydevastating in effect . Heproceeds to play the ironicmaster of revels, interjecting adistorted cliche wit hfeather-light cynicism "not fo rall the tea in Mexico" ; "give m elibrium or give me meth" . He i sbeyond being destroyed by th einfantile jabs of his host ; he doesit so much better himself that h eneedn't bother . Above all it i sGraham as Harold who make sthe play, who throws away hi slines with the neurotic grace tha tHarold throws away his life .

The Boys in the Band is adifficult play, because it deal swith real people who sometime smake the mistake of puttingthemselves into dea dstereotypes . The AC Tproduction ' manages to creat ehumor and pathos withou tsinking into theatrical banality .

Heide

THE SECRETARY BIRD

Scene from the Secretary Bird

The Boys in the Band

Two of the boys

A middle-aged novelist glance sover his spectacles one evening t ofind his marriage on the rocks an ddecides to fight back . THESECRETARY BIRD, the comed ystill drawing capacity audiences i nLondon's West End makes it sCanadian premiere as thePlayhouse Theatre Company'sfirst production of the season.Tony Van Bridge, (spying throughthe door), stars as Hugh Walfordand Patricia Gage, (centre), play shis wife Liz . Bob Ross plays JohnBrownlow, the thrice-marrie dstockbroker who plans to run offto Italy with the beautiful Liz .

THE SECRETARY BIRD, b yWilliam Douglas Home, opens a tthe Playhouse this Friday underthe direction of Paxto nWhitehead . Again this year, thePlayhouse offers a student night.Students can see six plays for$10.00 on one Tuesday durin gevery performance of the sixplays . There are only 150 of thesetickets still available, so if you digtheatre, call the Vancouver Ticke tCentre .

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738-631 1

IS THE MOST MOVING, MOSTINTELLIGENT, THE MOST HU -MANE-OH, TO HELL WITH IT !

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

—Vincent Canby . N.Y. Timer

"IT'S ONE HELL OF A FILM! ACOLD SAVAGE AND CHILLIN GCOMEDY! Firmly establishe sNichols' place in the front ran kof American directors. Ala nArkin's finest screen perform-ance to date . 'CATCH-22' wouldbe an important event in an ymovie year."— Bruce W nlhamson . PLAYBO Y

"'CATCH-22' says many thingsthat need to be said again andagain! Alan Arkin's perform-ance as Yossarian is great! "

—Joseph Morgenstern. NEWSWEE K

PARAMgJNIPICINUSCORPOMIIONINASSOCIATION MIRFIIMIRYS INC PRESENT S

A MIKE NICHOLS FIL MALAN ARVI Nt%tIN ‘02?0

,

BASIEONiMENOVEIB Y

saaas

JOSEPH HELLER

MARTIN BALSAM; RICHARD BENJAMIN ; ARTHUR GARFUNKEL; JACK GILFORD; BUCK HENRY; BOB NEWHART ;

ANTHONY PERKINS; PAULA PREMISS ; MARTIN SHEEN; JON VOIGHT & ORSON MLLES AS DREEDL E

SCREENPLAY BY BUCK HENRY PRODUCED BY JOHN CALLEY & MARTIN RANSOHOFF DIRECTED BY MIKE NICHOL SPAOWC110NOESI6IB MCNAROSKIRT IICNMCOLORPMAVISION•APARAMOUNT PICIURI R UNOIRI!REOUIRESPARINIOR AOKICUAAOIAN

"Warning — Scenes o fnudity, disgust an d

R . W . McDonald—B .C . Director

STANLEYGRANVILLE AT 12th AVE . -733-262 2

Evenings 7 :20, 9 :30. Matinee Saturday & Sunday 2 :0 0

GZCWi NO ADMITTANCE TOPERSONS UNDER 18

violence"

Friday, October 2, 1970

THE

UBYSSEY

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Page 10: JERICHO 'READY FOR WORST' - UBC Library Home · People's friend returns ed students to lounge By DAVID CURSONS Malcolm "Che " McGregor has struck. McGregor, head of the classics department,

Obituary

Hendrix, Jimi

Jim Hendrix died a couple of weeks agoas a result of an overdose of barbituates . Hewas 27, and his talent was growing . His las talbum, Band of Gypsies (RS 5195), was hi sbest despite being a collaborative effort wit hBuddy Miles, who is a rotten singer and onl ya passable drummer . The music is wilder, ye tbetter structured than on earlier Hendri xrecordings . This is partially a result of theponderous, slow-footed drumming, whichHendrix seems to use as a sensual base .

This record, though not in some ways a sinnovative as earlier ones, is the bes tshowcase for Hendrix's mastery of theguitar . His playing had become mor econtrolled, and as a result, his ability on th estraight runs and fingering is more apparent .His pyrotechnical ingenuity is, as always ,very much in evidence .

Hendrix was a complex figure . Perhap sin spite of himself, he represented deep ,primitive undercurrents in human society i ngeneral and modern American society inparticular . His music was sensual, violent ,beyond morality . His performance of th eStar-Spangled Banner at Woodstock, i nwhich he recreated the Vietnam War i nsound with his guitar, and the somewha tsimilar effect he achieves on "Machine Gun"on Band of Gypsies, show that he was no tunaware of this element in his music, that he

felt the potential of his guitar as a sonicweapon. His concerts and recordings evoke datmospheres of animal anarchy, and wer eoften reminiscent of voodoo rites . Hendri xlife was like a jungle animal, free, sinuous ,smoulderingly powerful . Yet he privatel yeschewed violence, rejecting Black Panthe rphilosophies . His violence was a natrua lanimal expression, a reaction against theworst of the artificial barriers which havecaged the animal within us .

One of the great ironies of Hendrix' slife, seen in this light, is that his career fits sowell into the pattern of the society in whic hhe obviously felt himself a renegade . He rosefrom rags to riches, from boyhood in aSeattle ghetto to the peak of pop musi cpopularity . He was an ideal product o fAmerican capitalism, and as a result h ebecame a tinsel-wrapped plaything of th estar-spangled Rolling Stone culture rathe rthan a person. Yet Hendrix's art constantlyasserts his individuality and his sense o fbeing a part of life and humanity .

Whatever one may think of his music ,and he had many detractors, one is forced t orecognize one thing : Jimi was unique . I tseems unlikely that anyone else will eve rreach again the new worlds of sound an dsense that Hendrix found in his exploration sof the potential of the electric guitar .

Bill Storey

Jimi Hendrix

By MARK JACQUESLocal symphony-goers can breathe a bit easier thi s

year, since the Vancouver Symphony ' s Subscriptio nConcert programmes have improved noticeably . Jus tunder half of the upcoming season's pieces announce dso far — twenty out of forty-one works — were writte nafter 1900 .

Although only a few of these twentieth-centur yworks will offend symphonic little old ladies of bot hsexes, the balance between old and new works is animprovement over last year when the number o fpost-1900 pieces was an uneven fourteen out of a totalthirty-seven .

The number of Canadian works has also beenincreased in keeping with new Canada Council rulings .And the best news of all is that next spring there is apossible series of concerts devoted to contemporarymusic . One of the tentative pieces to be played wouldbe a spatial-electronic work created for the VSO las tyear (but never performed) by SFU composer Murra ySchafer .

Just for the record, here's a listing of some of th emodern works to be performed at the subscriptio nconcerts : Lutoslawski's Concerto for Orchestra (Oct . 4& 5) ; Prokofieff's Violin Concerto (Oct . 18 & 19) ;Pentland's Symphony for 10 parts, Henze's Firs tSymphony and Ravel's G Major Piano Concerto (Nov .1 & 2) ; Otto Joachim's Contrastes (Nov . 15 & 16) ;Walton's First Symphony (Jan . 10 & 11 next year) ;Schafer's Son of Heldenbleen and Bartok 's Third PianoConcerto (Feb . 7 and 8) .

Take note that there are also some works by thos eradical composers Bach, Mozart, Beethoven, Berlioz ,Tchaikovsky, Dvorak, Brahms, and Elgar, so b eprepared . . .

As has happened in the past, UBC students can se ethe symphony ultra-cheaply, assuming there are anyunsold seats left before the concerts . Just go down tothe Queen Eliz . Theatre, wait patiently in line, flashyour students' card and a buck, and a ticket will b eyours .

Be warned, however, that due to a glut of seaso nticket holders, there are only about 700 unsold seatsfor both the Sunday afternoon and Monday eveningconcerts . As a result, a few sell-outs are inevitable ,perhaps even at this weekend's opening concerts . Bu teven if you have to get a seat in the normal way, yo ucan still get 20% off the price by again flashing you rcard .

/

Meredith Davies

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THE UBYSSEY

Friday, October 2, 1970

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/

Concert

Ian and SylviaDale and Kathy

An enthusiastic audience listened to IANAND SYLVIA with their four-piece band onTuesday, but for this listener, they just didn 'tcome off. Sylvia was so tight, and so little used ,she looked as if ready to cry . Her voice, althoughpleasing, was rough . Ian didn't make it either ,with his poor attempt at imitating TomJones, microphone in mouth and all .

It 's bad, because in the past, Ian and Sylvia

used to sing together . Neither Ian nor Sylviapossess the range of voice or the power to b e

heard, let alone stand out above their four-piec eband. The Nashville-oriented band separates Ianand Sylvia physically and possibly emotionally .What emerges is in many respects amateurish . TheGreat Speckled Bird played well, especiall y

Buddy Cage on pedal steel, but with Ian and

Sylvia they just didn ' t come off as a group .

Like Bob Dylan, Ian and Sylvia have lostmuch of their individuality by immersingthemselves in the "Nashville Sound", but Isuppose that it sells allot of records for them .

Two singers that surely outshone Ian andSylvia were Dale Wilson and Kathy Payne . Theselocal folksingers had a firm grip on their material ,including some of their own excellentcompositions .

Dale and Kathy were reminiscent of the oldIan and Sylvia, Tuesday they sang well, eve njoyfully .

Together for only a year, they have attaineda harmonic individuality that Ian and Sylvia havelost .

T.W .

Ian and Sylvia

Dale and Kathy

—Photos by Dave Bowerman

Trudging home from Michelin 's Technique and acting combine t oone evening, he encounters an old reach a new mediocrity .school chum, brittle, witty and

The cinematic technique is aaging . Through this unengaging hackneyed montage of Frenc hpied piper, Jean Louis meets cinema in the last fifteen years ,Maud an aging bitch goddess complete with harshly realisti cwho pries into his religious background noise, the heav yconflicts while luring him traffic, the drive down th e(unsuccessfully) to bed .

pointless road . But this time to n opoint . It is effect without cause .

Fil mWOMEN IN LOV E

The film Women in Loveappears at first to be the ne wmedium equivalent of the classic scomic book. On second thought ,however, it appears as an entirelydifferent kind of art .

Women in Love concerns itsel fwith the sensual conflicts an dresolutions of two couples ; Ursulaand Rupert, and Gerald an dGudrun .

In Ken Russell's film version ,character depth is lacking . Ursul aappears as a rather typicaldomesticated woman with a desireto subdue Rupert into hearth an dhome . Rupert's infatuation withher is inexplicable, therefore ,since he appears as a broodin gintellectual, determined to be fre eand adventurous. Gudrun i sshown to be a rather pretentiou sartist type, domineering and eve ncruel in her power. Gerald, herlover, is

a

conservative

industrialist who cannot breakfrom the cocoon of traditionalethics . His attraction for Gudrunand his willingness to bedestroyed by her is difficult t ounderstand, given his character.

The characters, then are drawnwith firm and heavy lines, but th eoutline obscures the complexit yof their interrelationships andstruggles . Their inner battles withtheir own sensuality and thei rtradition are mitigated in effec tby the simplicity of thei rportrayal .

On the other hand, thetriumph of this film is in th etotality of the scene, the beautyof the moment . The scene o fRupert and Gerald wrestling in th estudy is a masterpiece of light an dmotion. The perverted aristocratHermione's dance is exquisite inits decadence . Gerald's slow walkinto the snow of the Alps is amagnificent visual finality .

In this sense, then, the filmsucceeds ; its visual portrayal ispalpable, deep, and beautiful . I tfails in making these moments

understandable and related toeach other by its lack of depth inits primary characters. Whileexploiting to the full theadvantage of the film medium, itneglects to provide motivation, t osubstantiate and justify thoseadvantages . It succeeds i nimpressionism but fails to makethe impressions into a coherent ,total masterpiece .

MY NIGHT AT MAUD S

Most people at least try t odisguise the fact that their live sare bounded by banality . EricRohmer apparently feels that thi sconvention is unnecessary, andthat his discovery of banality is insome way novel . He has created ,with the help of his potato-face dhero Jean-Louis Trintigant, ablack and grey essay in tedium .

My Night at Maud's is actuall ythe story of two nights of amundane little corporation man .

In his escape he meets a swee tCatholic college girl, who put shim up through a snow storm bu tvirtually rejects his advances . Ofcourse he's enchanted — but i tturns out that she too has he rlittle secrets . Neither anirresolvable nor particularlyinteresting secret, one discovers .in fact, very much like the onl yslightly soiled linen we're all toofamiliar with .

Interspersed between theeternal confrontation (on twofronts) are some interminable ,stale philosophical discussions —Life, Love, Religion .

As a slice of very ordinary life ,My Night at Maud's is a success.

The actors vie for dullness.Trintignant is, in fact, , socompletely uninteresting that anymotive is sucked from the action .(But perhaps "action" is toostrong a word .) He iswell-matched by the women ,although Maud holds an initialfascination for her poise an dvampish beauty .

This film appears be be eve nless concerned with scruples thanits characters are . They at least arein a normal state of ethicalconfusion . My Night at Maud'scommits that worst of sins — t obore without even the excuse ofsincerity .

Heide

Friday, October 2, 1970

THE UBYSSEY

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Page 12: JERICHO 'READY FOR WORST' - UBC Library Home · People's friend returns ed students to lounge By DAVID CURSONS Malcolm "Che " McGregor has struck. McGregor, head of the classics department,

Sinc1air4ickin Report

The Dickin Report on SinclairSinclair is the enemy of the people .Yesterday, when I was buying 108 square feet of plastic, who knows wha t

he was doing? Not I .He wasn't writing the Sinclair-Dickin Report .For a long period of time, the exact nature of Sinclair ' s subversion has no t

been clear .It is now obvious, however, that he has been insidiously undermining the

progress of the revolution. Just yesterday, he was observed not buying a "Powe rto the People" button. At the same time, he purchased a bottle of Coke .

Extensive in-depth reporting has revealed that Sinclair holds stock i nAmerican Telephone and Telegraph, and has worked for such companies a sCrown Zellerbach, Dow Chemical, Lockheed and Standard Oil . He wa sinstrumental in delaying the development of F-310 by at least four years.

Sinclair ' s involvement with the Military-Industrial Complex dates back t ohis early childhood . At the age of six, he received a military scholarship from th ePentagon for his "outstanding

Sinclair has arrived .It is 1 :07 .Sinclair has slept in .

The Sinclair Report on Dickin

I 've known Dickin for much too long. He's getting on my nerves. Everytime I turn around he 's doing something behind my back . He's simply anuntrustworthy person .

Although I have, as I said, known him for some time, I was never trul yaware of the lower 4/5 of the ice-cube . Today , l walked into the Ubyssey office ,and there he was — sitting at the typewriter writing ugly things about me . Me! I'mthe one that gave_ him his big chance, back in 1945 . I introduced him to Dary lZanuck and told Daryl, a close personal friend, that Dickin was a "natural ", andwould go far. How cruelly I was deceived! Dickin is a natural all right, a natura lslob. He's a traitor, and a back-biter to boot . Dickin hasn't the slightest iota o ftalent. Not the slightest quantum .

When I first met Dickin he seemed like an okay guy. The dog! Thehyprocritical dog! That was just a ploy of his . He wanted to use me as a steppin gstone, just like he's used every one else all his life . His 3rd ex-wife, who was hei rto a vast fortune, told me he took her every penny and when the money was gon eran off with another heiress . The treads of Dickin 's running shoes are all over m yback .

At first the idea of a Sinclair-Dickin report seemed like a good one . I madethe mistake of assuming Dickin had the talent he boasted of . I was cruellydeceived! Look at the trash he turned out this week, and then look at the fin ewell-turned prose I myself caressed into existence . The facts of the case areobvious . Ladies and gentlemen of the jury, I rest my case .

The Dickin Report on theSinclair Report onDickin

As I was saying before I was so rudely interrupted by the arrival of Sinclair ,my partner in literary crime received a scholarship from the Pentagon for, (andhere I quote from the news release), "outstanding devotion to the advancement o fhand-to-hand combat, and outstanding performances in the Glee Club . " While hi smusical ability has rapidly declined, (as is obvious from listening to his latestalbum), his desire to do personal violence to others has increased . (As may be see nby reading his latest writing . )

His personal accusations, slanderings, and libel against me are too ridiculou sto comment upon . I will, however, say one thing about them . They are, for themost part, totally untrue . They are lies .

My third ex-wife will testify to the fact that I never wear running shoes .

Sinclair ' s Rebuttal !If Dickin thinks he ruffles my equanimity, he's sadly mistaken . My

equanimity is unruffable . I will not be baited into losing my cool by the totallypreposterous, patently imbecilic, thoroughly false, ridiculous, horribly obsceneattacks on my impeccable honesty . The facts are that the scholarship he mention swas not granted to be for any of the reasons listed in the news release. I wasgranted the scholarship because of my unusual athletic prowess . I was then, and Iam now, an athlete with a talent that astounds coaches all over the country . Myfeat at the recent Winter Olympics is an example . I did the giant slalom uphill !

I may add that my musical ability is as good as ever . (Get my new album ,Sinclair Live at Thunderbird Stadium) .

Dickin on the other hand is positively a vacuum of talent . He was deniedentrance to kindergarten because he failed the battery of aptitude tests . He ha snever, as far as I know, held a job for longer than a few days . As soon as hi semployer has a chance of seeing him actually at work(most of his first few days ar espent in coffee break) he is promptly fired. But enough of this idle praise . There i sno hope Dickin can be rehabilitated. He is totally inept .

I want to state categorically that I have tried to help him . God knows I ' vetried! But he is incorrigible . He is determined not to leave the slime, and there ,until Judgment Day, is where he will stay .

Other than that I kind of like him .

THE LAUNDERMAT

busy myself, expecting whistles ,sirens, and flashing lights todescend on my clothes . Theowner walked by both dryer sand said nothing, but she di dlook at my funny. "Just dryingmy clothes," I said, and notice dI was fingering a white lacebrassiere . "I use them as earmuffs," I called after her, bu tshe was gone .

What do all those counters d oin the laundermat, besides tak eup space? Are they for foldin gclothes? I think no . I've see npeople folding clothes i nwashers, dryers, baskets, on th efloor, in the air, and on top ofthe soap machine, but never o nthe counters. Do you knowwhy? Because there's alway sthree full ashtrays, a box ofsoap, and that morning' snewspaper scattered over them . Ithink there must be asubconscious urge in a humanbeing to lean over a launderma tcounter reading, because a lot o fpeople seem to do it . It is prettycool, after all, and it's the onl yplace you can do it . At homesomebody's bound to walkk u pto you and ask why don't yo usit in a chair . In a laundermat, o fcourse, there are no chairs, s oyou lean on the counter, and i fyou're questioned, you say ,"Just drying my clothes ,officer", smile, and turn thepage .

I noticed a machine hidden inthe corner that nobody wasusing, while I was there . THEEXTRACTER, it said, and i tspins out excess water . SAVE SMONEY, it said . Now that' s abit much. I ask myself whywould they want to save u smoney? If they really wanted t odo that why don't they mak ethe damned things free? It's te ncents for seven minutes in th edryer . Hey, fellows, do youknow how long it takes to dry apair of socks? It's cheaper t owear them wet and buy linimen tfor your athlete's feet . And thenthis sign has the nerve to saySAVES MONEY . I can imaginethe board meeting, and one gu ysaying, "Fred, I really think weshould install that extracter .Saves money, you know . "

"I don't know, Sid. I gave acouple of thou to the Salvatio nArmy last month, and I thin kI'm doing my share . ""Come Fred, those devils

have it pretty rough, you know .They deserve a break . "

"Awwwwwwwwwwwww . " '"Fred, you old softie ." Fre d

blushes and blows his nose .

By JIM O'LEARY

The laundermat is a nic eplace to visit, but I wouldn' twant to live there . Walking i nthe other night, I was merel yoverwhelmed by it all, and no tthe least by the fact that th efirst thing I noticed was a washe rsudsing over . It was making asmall gurgling noise as the sud scame pouring over the top . Nowthat's funny, I thoughtinnocently, why doesn' tsomebody do something ?Nobody seemed to even notic eit, and you know there's notthat many distractions in alaundermat .

However, I soon melted int othe sway of things . Luckily therewas a dryer open. (I had cleverlywashed my clothes beforehan dand not so cleverly had thuscarried twenty five extra poundsof water down with me. Ofcourse, I should have taken th ewater out before coming .) Iknew that there was a certai nrhythm to working in th elaundermat and that you don' tjust barge in and dry yourclothes, so I was just standin gthere, swaying and unpackingmy clothes on the counter whe nthis little guy with glasse stempoed over to me . "Groovy, "said I . "Right on," he replied ,and stole my dryer . What could Ido? It's not exactly justifiablehomicide . That's the troubl ewith laundermats . They alway shave five dryers for a floatin gpopulace of eleven people . Youhave to line up in front of adryer and discreetly rabbi tpunch the guys on either side o fyou and look nonchalant as the yslump about your feet . I line dup and looked over mycompetition . Why is it that thewomen in laundermats all loo klike professional wrestlers ?They're the kind that stand righ tin the middle, their hair in a nic elittle butch, their sweaters rolledup to show off their biceps, an dlook over all the dryers, ready t ograb the first one that's empty .

Did you ever see the sign saround a laundermat? FILLWITH 1/5 WASHER LOA DAND IN PROPORTION T OBOTH . Cross your heart and hopeto die? I didn't know what to do s oI stuffed in the whole twent ypounds . It was hard to fit it al lin, but I finally made it . Idropped in the coin . Grrrrimp hsaid my dryer rolling over, an ddied. I quickly opened the drye rnext to me and pretended t o

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THE

UBYSSEY

Friday, October 2, 1970

Page 13: JERICHO 'READY FOR WORST' - UBC Library Home · People's friend returns ed students to lounge By DAVID CURSONS Malcolm "Che " McGregor has struck. McGregor, head of the classics department,

RecordsMcCARTNE Y

The breakup of the Beatle sseems likely to turn out to be adisaster . If Paul McCartney's firs tsolo recording is any indication ,the creative power generated bythe four together will probably belargely lacking in their separateefforts . The music on McCartne y(STAO 3363) is pleasant enough ;in quality, however, it is painfull y

.mediocre stuff from the man wh owrote "Hey Jude" . There is oneexcellent song ("Every Night")and one nice tune ("Junk") .Apart from this, there are a'

More Film

The Life and Times ofChester-Angus Ramsgood

Don Wilson and Dave Curnickare two young former UB Cstudents who have turned to film

-making . Their first enterprise is a1% hour comic production calledTHE LIFE AND TIMES OFCHESTER-ANGUS RAMSGOOD .The film techniques areexceptional for a first film ,however the acting is quite rough.

The actors in the film, many ofthem UBC students, worke dwithout pay, arid some of them ,particularly the girl who plays theobject of Chester-Angu sRamsgood' s affection, areoutstanding in the light of th evirginity of the film makers .

The film will be shown in SUBTheatre Monday to Friday nex tweek . Shows will be at 12 :30 and

couple of so-so songs and anumber of tunes that sound as ifthey were tossed off in fiveminutes and immediatel yrecorded. Most of these are notsongs at all, but shreds of song .McCartney's simplicity i ssometimes refreshing ; after a time ,however, it becomes tedious, an dhis repetitious catch-phrase s"baby" and "momma" only ad dto the discomfort .

The album is totall yself-centred . All the songs, all thephotos on the cover are of orabout the great man and hisfamily . There is, for example, asnapshot of his boat, which i snamed (what else) Paul . On top o f

3:30 every day, with additiona l

shows at 7 :30 and 9 :30 on

October 6, 7, and 8 .

VIRGIN AND THE GYPSYD. H. Lawrence's Virgin is

played by Jonnna Shimkus, theGypsy by Franco Nero . The filmis relaxing, even refreshing, it i snot a complex story, but rather, aportrait of a few days in the lifeof Yvette, the stifled daughter o fa clergyman, and her experience swith a stereotyped flashing-eye dGypsy .

The film could have bee nshorter, without any adverseeffects . It is not, like WOMEN INLOVE, enough to warrant acontinued inspection . Still, as thesimple plot interacts with itsenvironment, some of Lawrence' spoetic qualities enter thedimension of film .

T.W .

all this, McCartney plays all theinstruments, and seldom rise sabove mediocrity on most ofthem. His guitar work is fairlygood, his drumming predictablyabysmal. All this could beaccepted if it were not for thefeeling the listener, gets thatMcCartney has not tried, that heis so overconfident of his ow nabilities that he feels he can tossoff a great album with no effort .The sad truth seems to be that

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HENDRIX RENTS HISTORIC HOM E

Pop music star Jimi Hendrix has moved into a houseoccupied at one time by composer Georg Friedrich Handel .

Of his new house in the exclusive Mayfair district of London ,Hendrix said, "I didn't know this was Handel's pad, man, untilafter I got in . To tell the God's honest truth, I haven't heard muc hof the fella's stuff. But I dig a bit of Bach now and again ."

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1

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The Following Projects Will B e

SUCCESSFULLY COMPLETE DThrough The

Vice-President's Office . . .1) COURSE CONTENT SURVEY. We are planning to conduct acomprehensive survey of all the courses presently offered at UB Cto determine how much local content is in the courses, andwhether students are satisfied with it or not . This will of course beapplicable to all courses.After the survey has been completed we will move to try and ge tmore local content if that is what the survey indicates is needed .Other functions the survey will serve will be pointing ou trelationships between the citizenship of the instructor and the tex tbooks used, and the amount of local content in the course . Lots ofmanpower is needed if the survey is to be effective .

2) TUTORIAL SCHEME . We are planning to institute a tutoria lscheme on campus . The idea is to run the program on a pilot basi sfor this year in order to establish a need . We want to devise assimple a mechanism as possible that will bring together peopl ewho need help and those that want to offer it . Lots of manpowe ris needed if the scheme is to be a good one .

4) MARIJUANA REFERENDUM . October 15th has bee nselected as the day for a national referendum to find out students 'attitudes toward the legalization of Cannabis . The referendum wil lbe co-ordinated from UBC so lots of manpower is needed if it i sto be successful .

5) TENURE. We want to set up a committee to look into th ewhole concept of tenure and make recommendations as t owhether it should be kept, if so how should it be determined . I fnot, what should be used as a substitute . Lots of manpower i sneeded if these investigations are to be comprehensive .

6) COMMUNITY INVOLVEMENT . We are working on a schem ewhereby students will be able to study actual problems i nVancouver, propose solutions to these, and get credit for itthrough their courses. This all ties in with making courses mor erelevant and getting the university out of its "ivory tower" . Lotsof manpower is needed if this project is going to get off theground .

3) COURSE EVALUATION . We have set up a committee madeup of both students and faculty to work on the publication of a

7) SPEAKERS PROGRAM . We want to bring good speakers o ncomprehensive course evaluation booklet for the 1971-72

campus who will make the students more aware of theirAcademic year. Lots of manpower is needed if the booklet is to be

surroundings . Lots of manpower is needed if there is to be ainformative .

stimulating speakers program .

IF —You Decide

To Make Them Successfu l

If YOU think any of these programs are worth completin g

come and see me CHRISTINE KRAWCZYK in the AMS Offices

pfage Bight

T H E UBYSSEY

Friday, October 2, 1970

Page 15: JERICHO 'READY FOR WORST' - UBC Library Home · People's friend returns ed students to lounge By DAVID CURSONS Malcolm "Che " McGregor has struck. McGregor, head of the classics department,

Friday, October 2, 1970

THE UBYSSEY

Page 1 5

in theOnly 8 students in class

but still it was a lecture

MEET ME A T

The Hotel Georgi a

Oct . 1 9

By LESLIE PLOMMER

Political science is the topic today — i nparticular a course labelled contemporaryJapanese international politics .

Professor Frank Langdon teaches thi stwo-hour every Thursday at 1 :30 p.m. in Bu .230 .

This week he outlined Japan's World WarII status, the wartime conferences andagreements pertaining to Japan and the aim sof Allied authorities occupying Japan after it sdefeat .

There were eight students in the room —an ideal number for a seminar . However, thisis a lecture-format class .

Langdon seemed friendly and open t oquestions but few questions wereforthcoming, although the lecture left muchroom for clarification and elaboration .

Since a prof can only cover so muchmaterial, however, raising additional question sis up to students .

Under Allied occupation aims, fo rexample, Langdon listed disarmament ,punishment, democratization and economi crecovery .

On the punishment of so-called Japanesewar criminals, Langdon said that over 700 ofthese people were given the death penalt yafter the defeat of Japan .

Eleven countries, including Canada, wer einvolved in trying the `criminals' and eac hnation sent its own judges .

It seems obvious that Canadian student sat a Canadian university would be intereste din knowing more about Canada's role i njudging and sentencing these people .

Langdon did not deal with this . Nor di dany student raise the question of Canada' srole . Neither was the structure of occupationauthority dealt with, and again, student sdidn't raise the question .

In 1947, Langdon said, Japan was worseoff than at any period during the war . He

speaks with experience because he was inJapan at the time .

He said he recalls people wandering thestreets in Japan dressed in incredible clothingcombinations — because of the shortage ofcloth at the time .

Unfortunately, Langdon did not tal kmuch about his personal observations o nJapan from that time . His remembrances camemostly in the form of slight digressions, an dclass business was returned to shortly .

The poor condition of Japan in 1947 waspartly a result of Allied desires for larg echunks of Japanese territory as wa rreparation, Langdon said.

Another Allied occupation aim — onLangdon's simple, four-point list just like theone you learned in high school about the fou rcauses of World War II — was that ofdemocratization .

Run for RhodesWant to travel and get a bona fide ticke t

to the Good Life — an Oxford degree ?

You can get paid for spending two orthree years at Oxford if you happen to winthe one Rhodes Scholarship available to B .C .students . Applications are open to Oct . 25 .

But you have to be a guy, a Canadian ,single, between 18 and 24 years of age, an dpreferably in third or fourth year university .

Application forms and particulars ar eavailable from Michael J . Brown, 804 Roger sBuilding, 470 Granville Street .

Japan's current party-parliamentarysystem — similar to Canada's — is a direc tresult of constitutional proposals forwarde dby the Allied occupation forces, Langdo nsaid .

He cited a provision in the Japaneseconstitution stating that Japan would no tresort to the use of violence in solvinginternational disputes . In short, that Japanwould not declare war on or attack anothe rnation .

The provision, Langdon said, was insiste don by American general Douglas MacArther inline with the Allies' aim of "making Japanpeaceful . "

Perhaps the element of imperialism isobvious in such moves by the Allies, bu tLangdon did not discuss it .

It seems certain that MacArthur's desirewas not only to ensure that the U.S . wouldnot be attacked physically by Japan, but als othat the Coca-Cola franchise in Japan wouldbe protected forever more .

These deficiencies in dealing with thetopic could easily have been remedied byquestioning from the eight students inLangdon's class, for it seems clear that th eprofessor is interested in his subject matte rand is open to questions .

There was a conscious and state dintention on Langdon't part to relate Worl dWar II developments hinging on Japan t ocurrent conditions in Japan .

His chief shortcoming perhaps, was in notintroducing enough evaluation of events ,facts and statements .

Langdon tends to relate the facts withoutassessing them particularly . About as far as hewill go is to tell the class that such and such atreaty was `important . '

Beyond that, there is little evaluation .Once again, students can play an importan trole in introducing this element into the class.

CANADIAN PREMIERESUNDAY, OCTOBER 4, 8 P.M.

STARS IN ATTENDANCE"FIVE EASY PIECES" IS A PERSONAL PICTURE MADE PRIMARIL YBECAUSE IT SAYS SOMETHING ITS MAKERS WANTED TO SAY . ITOUGHT TO BE SEEN BY ANYONE WHO CARES ABOUT AMERICAN FILM .

Stanley Kauffman—New Republic

"LISTEN, I'VE WAITED. HERE NEARLYWO YEARS FOR AN AMERICAN PIC-

TURE I COULD FULL-OUT GET BEHIN D. . .NO HEMMING AND HAWING, N OQUALMS THAT MATTER. SO FAR, THI SIS IT! "

COLUMBIA PICTURES P' s a BBS P .oduLOo n

JACK NICHOLSON

rnfrEASY PIECES KAREN BLACK end SUSAN ANSPAC HSL nAAAA ., e. ADRIEN JOYCE srory e, BOB RAFELSON ..,a ADRIEN JOYCE P•nm.e.a e, BOB RAFELSO N...e RICHARD WEC' S ; FR

P ., BERT SCHNEIDER o. .ec,.a or BOB RAFELSON

cc_:, a

— Jacob Brackman . ESQUIRE

Coronet851 GRANVILL E

685-6828

PREMIERE PERFORMANCE SOLD OUT . . .REGULAR ENGAGEMENT STARTSMONDAY .

It's toughGROWING

UP

IAA,When you were a kid you couldget away with climbing trees an dplaying games and just generall yhaving fun . But things are a littl edifferent now . Even clothes can bea problem . And getting those eye -lashes on in under 15 minutes i snext to impossible . That monthl yperiod is a drag . Well, that is, un-less you use Tampax tampons .

Tampax tampons are modernsanitary protection worn inter-nally . You don't have the bothe rof uncomfortable pads and belts .Tampax tampons are great . Theydon't show—no one wil lever know its that time o fthe month . And you can' tfeel them when they're properl yin place. A doctor developedTampax tampons, so you kno wyou can trust them. Millions ofwomen all over the world do .How about you?

Tampax tampons come in thre eabsorbency-sizes—Regular, Supe rand Junior—and a little folder i nevery package explains exactl yhow to use them .

MELTSNO PIN SNI PAISNI 1111

DEVELOPED BY A DOCTORNOW USED BY MILLIONS OF WOME N

TAMPAX TAMPONS ARE MADE ONLY B YCANADIAN TAMPAX CORPORATION LTD . .

BARRIE . ONTARIO

-.r

Page 16: JERICHO 'READY FOR WORST' - UBC Library Home · People's friend returns ed students to lounge By DAVID CURSONS Malcolm "Che " McGregor has struck. McGregor, head of the classics department,

Page 16

THE UBYSSEY

Friday, October 2, 197 0

POWER &TH EThe Community Educational and Research Center, under the sponsorship of the AMS, presents — with stree t

theatre, music, slides and speaking voice — a program on who rules, how we are ruled and how we do resis t

The death of Mr . Fred Boyd Brown wasreported in the August 24 edition of theVancouver Sun and Province. The active an dhonorary pallbearers as listed in the press were :P. G . Birks

Dr . J . A. McLean L. L . G . Bentle yH . N . Burgess

H . M. Gale

J . S. KeateG . C. P . Gray

G . C . King

A. B . Christophe rV. F. McLean

C . N . Effinger

Dr . R . E . McKechni eC. H . McLean

N . R . Whittal

H . R . Butle rG . B . McKeen

J . A. McMahon C. D. Anderso nE, C. Mainwaring J . A. McLallen

Who are these men ; Who was Fred Brown ;And how are they connected ?

F . B . Brown held senior executive position sand directorships in 14 companies with tota lassets of over 6 billion dollars . .

With V. F. McLean he shared the operatio nof the largest Vancouver food-distributing chain ,Kelly Douglas Company . Victor McLean worke dhis way up to President of this company in onl yten years after joining the firm in 1947. It maybe more than coincidental to his rapid rise tosuccess that his mother was Hazel Ellen Kell yand his grandfather the founder of the firm .Like his late friend Fred Boyd Brown, Victo rMcLean is an Anglo-Saxon, a Protestant and amember of the Vancouver Club .

George McKeen also knows Victor McLea nthrough the Vancouver Club . Relaxing fro mdiscussions of Grouped Income Shares Ltd ., ofwhich both are directors, they can reminisc eabout their wartime experiences as RCAF pilotofficers . Victor McLean and George McKeen ar eboth in their middle forties, about the same ag eas Fred Brown's son-in-law Ronald Laird Cliff .

Ronald Cliff and George McKeen are bothcommerce graduates from the University of B .C .But as the directors of 19 companies and th echairmen and presidents of still more, they hav elittle time to spend on their profession. LikeRonald's older brother, Arnold Bickell Cliff ,who gave up his law practice after six years t odevote full time to his many businesses.

As for- George McKeen and Fred Brown ,they were most directly connected throug hStraits Towing Ltd. where George is presidentand treasurer and Fred was chairman .

What of Fred Brown and Cyrus HaleMcLean? B .C. Telephone is Cyrus McLean' sresponsibility, along with telephone companie sin the Dominican Republic and Haiti . CyrusMcLean is chairman of the B .C. Tel Board andFred Brown was vice-chairman . The two also gottogether at meetings of the Board of the Bank ofNova Scotia . Of course there was always theVancouver Club; and for sports and business ,directors meetings of the Vancouver Hocke yClub .

Merchandising, transportation ,communications, finance — the friends wh ogathered at the funeral of Fred Boyd Brown ar ekey directors of these sectors of the Vancouve rand B.C. economy. But not only these sectors.They direct natural resource exploitation andthe knowledge industry . John McMahon andReginald Whittal are president and chairman

respectively of Inland Natural Gas . LeopoldLionel Garrick Bentley is senior vice-president o fCanadian Forest Products Ltd . Hi sbrother-in-law, John Gerald Prentice is thepresi dent .

And the son of L. L. G . Bentley and th eson-in-law of John Prentice are directors an dexecutives in the various subsidiaries o fCanadian Forest Products. Perhaps one of the mwill earn the presidency of the company as Joh nPrentice did when his father died in 1950 . JohnPrentice also is president of the Canada Council .Here he meets James Stuart Keate, director o fPacific Press (Fred Brown was chairman of th eBoard), a Publisher of The Sun and a formermember of the UBC board of governors . StuartKeate undoubtedly compares fortunes wit hCyrus McLean, a member of the board ofgovernors of Simon Fraser University, when th etwo meet at the Vancouver Club .

One person who is not a member of th eVancouver Club is the surgeon and medica ldirector of the Mr. and Mrs. P. A. WoodwardFoundation, Dr . R . E . McKechnie . However, Dr .McKechnie can meet many of his corporatio nfriends at the Royal Vancouver Yacht Club .

In addition to corporation, club and collegethere is charity and patronage . George McKee nis governor of the Sunny Hill Hospital forchildren. Cyrus McLean is on the advisory boar dof the National Theatre School of Canada .Harold Meredith Gale is president of the B .C .Cancer Treatment and Research Foundation .Mr. Gale is also vice-president of National Trust ,which is definitely a business and not a charity .

We can recognize when someone's speakinga foreign language. English, Italian, German ,Chinese, Russian, French . With effort we canlearn to speak a foreign language. But do all thepeople who speak the same language, English ,for example, understand each other ?

" Hell, we should have stayed out a fewmore weeks . Now that I'm back to work I seehow much we really hurt them (bosses)" — saidan oil-wroker. "Wherever there are industria lenterprises, there is a quasi-group of theincumbents of roles of domination, the laten tinterests of which are in conflict with those of acorresponding quasi-group of incumbents ofroles of subjection" — said a universityprofessor . We can call this the barrier of acommon language and we recognize i timmediately even if we can't eliminate it easily .

But there are other barriers t ocommunication that are more important ,barriers that we don't automatically recognize .

Think of some street names in Vancouver :Dunsmuir, Powell, Beatty, Hamilton, Abbott .The words sound familiar, but that's precisel ythe deception . We have come to accept asfamiliar names that represent interests that ar ealien and antagonistic to our own and tha tseparate us from our own history .

For example, Dunsmuir . Robert Dunsmuir ,after \whom the street is named, was the first

mining baron of B .C. He received a grant of coa lrights to 1,000 acres of land from a subsidiary ofthe Hudson's Bay Company as gratitude for hi sloyalty — he had refused to go on strike with hi sfellow miners . When operating his own mines ,Dunsmuir stopped food supplies, closedcompany stores, imported scabs and usedgovernment troops against miners rather thannegotiate with them .

When native people in Vancouver usePowell and Abbott as street markers they keepalive the memory of Dr. I . W. Powell, the firstsuperintendent of Indian Affairs in B .C., and H .B. Abbott, the general superintendent of th eCPR who aided in the transport of governmen ttroops to suppress the Riel rebellion . Whenunemployed youth in Vancouver talk of BeattyStreet they commemorate A. M . Beatty, aVancouver real estate agent and land auctioneer .

I n fact many of the streets of present da yVancouver were first surveyed and named by th elargest landowner, the CPR . In memory of L . A .Hamilton, the land commissioner of the CP Rwho did the survey and naming, we haveHamilton Street .

In our own lifetime we see how names ca ndivert attention from the actual way in whichproperty and wealth is accumulated and therebyturn our legitimate anger into submissiv egratitude. The Vancouver aquarium and theVancouver planetarium both have plaque sdedicated to H . H . MacMillan, a man who i senormously wealthy not because he was bor nunder a lucky star but because he paid lo wwages to fishermen and loggers to risk their live sfor products that he could sell at high profit .And his partner, Prentice Bloedel, who als odestroys the forests of B .C. for his own profit ,wants us and our children to remember him a sthe man who built the elaborate hothouse t opreserve and grow tropical trees and plants o ntop of Queen Elizabeth Park .

Dunsmuir, Hamilton, Beatty, MacMillan ,Bloedel — these are members of the ruling classand their names perpetuate the history of tha tclass . But there are no streets or buildings i nmemory of Arthur Evans who organized and le dunemployed workers in Vancouver and the relie fcamps of B .C. during the depression . There ar eno streets or buildings in memory of AlbertGoodwin, an organizer of mine, mill and smelte rworkers who was shot in the back and murderedby police, an act that provoked the first genera lstrike in Canada . There is no Gutteridge streetfor Helena Gutteridge, a suffragette an dorganizer of B.C. working women. Evans ,Goodwin, Gutteridge — these are members o fthe working class and their names perpetuate thehistory of that class.

Yesterday and today the power to own i sthe power to name, part of the on-going colonia ladministration of the mind . The power torename is part of the fundamental struggle fo rliberation, the struggle of people everywhere t oexercise full control over their own lives for th ebenefit of all and no longer for the profit of afew .

POWER 81 TH E

to-

Page 17: JERICHO 'READY FOR WORST' - UBC Library Home · People's friend returns ed students to lounge By DAVID CURSONS Malcolm "Che " McGregor has struck. McGregor, head of the classics department,

Friday, October 2, 1970

THE

UBYSSEY

Page 1 7

PEOPLE OF B .C .Part I : Power Structure of B.C.

October 7

Educational syste m

October 14 Media

October 21 Political syste m

October 28 Economy

Part III : Racism (January)

Part II : Vancouver City

November 3 Real estate & retail interest s

November 4 Courts and police

November 11 Tenants' struggle s

Nov. 18

Welfare & unemployed struggles

November 25 Youth struggles

Part IV : Labour Movement (Feb . )

where to get it . . .The main presentation will be in the SUB ballroom from 12 :30 to

1 :30 p.m . On the same clay starting at 7 p .m. in the SUB Clubs' Loungethere will be a continuation of the afternoon presentation an ddiscussion . As the Ubyssey will carry a feature story once a wee koutlining the main argument of each up-coming presentation, thos ewho miss the live noon-hour performance can still participate fully i nthe evening discussion .

* * *

This is not a lecture series. Street theatre, music, slides andspeaking voice will be used. You won't mistake either the medium o rthe message for what you get in lectures.

* * *

This program is sponsored by the AMS and produced by th eCommunity Educational and Research Centre (CERC) .

* * *

Normally those who do research consider themselves 'experts'

and they look down on ordinary people who they consider to b e'ignorant' . These experts are hired by the rich and powerful to solv eproblems for the rich and powerful . Ordinary people are deniedresearch and educational facilities that are concerned with thei rproblems . The goal of CE RC is to create such facilities for the people o fVancouver and B .C. This involves speaking and writing in clear an dunderstandable language . This involves attacking the myth that onl y'experts' can solve problems and building instead respect for genuin eskills by showing how people themselves can master these skills . Aboveall, in research and discussion, as in action, CERC strives to involv edirectly the people concerned — for only in this way can they truly gai ncontrol over all aspects of their lives .

* * *

Community Educational and Research Centre is at 509 Carrall St .Phone : 683-2630 .

Hours : Mon. to Fri . : 1-5 and 7-9 .

PEOPLE OF B .C .

Page 18: JERICHO 'READY FOR WORST' - UBC Library Home · People's friend returns ed students to lounge By DAVID CURSONS Malcolm "Che " McGregor has struck. McGregor, head of the classics department,

Page 1 8

FRIDAYALLIANCE FRANCAIS E

French speaking meeting in Inter-national House at noon .

PRE-SOCIAL WORK CLU BAll welcome to first meeting in SU B105B at 12:30 .

FLYING CLU BGeneral meeting in SUB 105A at noon .

'fweenclasses

V.C .F .Gordon Stewart's "The Christia nStudent and the University" at noonin SUB 207-209 .

COMPUTER SOCIET YVern Dettmiler speaks on "The UB CDuplex 360/67 System" at noon inChem . 250 .

F ILMSO CBurt Lancaster in "Castle Steep" to -night and Sat, at 7 and 9:30 p .m . an dSun . at 7 p .m . SUB theatre .

UBC-ND PInterested people welcome to genera lmeeting in SUB 211 at noon .

New YorkCOSTUME SALO N

RENTALSSingle and Double-Breaste dTuxedo and Dinner Jackets

Black and Colore dFlare or Straight Pant s

Up-to-Date Accessorie s

SPECIAL STUDENT RATES

224-0034 4397 W . 10t h

sZe-er-sSs€x-e

On don Tin, esPI'S A C/iip 'r

.sclersese

-

9 l

r/cv€Jo_ .

-

FULL GOSPE Land

CHARISMATI C

TYPE STUDENT Sare invited to a

GET-ACQUAINTE D

EVENIN G

Mon . 7:00 P.M. Oct . 5

5611 HEATHER ST .(Oakridge )

Yes, Bring a Frien d

For informatio n

Ken (UBC) 433-1788Dave (SFU) 291-3180

321-1833Bernice Gerar d

266-9275 Chaplain

English 200Mc"s t o

THE GEORGI AOCT. 19th

PH RATE RE SAll Phi and Pledge sign-up, Bach .104 at noon .

JUDO CLU BAll welcome to general meeting i nSUB 213 at noon .

SATURDAYSKYDIVING CLU B

All interested are invited to a danc ein SUB party room from 9 till 1 .

V .O .C .Long hike party to Hollyhurn Mtn .Buses leave SUB loop at 7 :45 am .Tickets in V .O .C . clubroom Frida ynoon .

MONDAYEL CIRCUL O

Orientation meeting and film "Holida yin Latin America" at 12 :30 in Int .House .

Anthropology 20 0Moves to

THE GEORGI AOCT. 19th

THE UBYSSE Y

CUS OReturned volunteers will he at a nopen coffee party in the upper loungeof the Int. House from 7 :30 to 10 :30P .m .

SKYDIVING CLU BMeeting to organize training classes .All members meet in SUB 207-209 a tnoon .

HELLENIC CULTURAL SOCIET YGeneral meeting at 7 :30 p .m . in mt .House . Dance follows .

UBC KARATE CLU BNew people welcome to meeting inSUB ballroom at 7 :00 p.m .

VARSITY DeMOLAYMeeting in SUB 215 at noon .

ENGLISH DEPARTMEN TProfessor Hermann Palsson lecture son "Aspects of the Icelandic Sagas "in Such . 104 at noon .

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Dances

TiDANCE AT INTERNATIONAL

House, U .B .C . Sat . Oct . 3 - LiveRock band . Refreshments .

Greetings

1 2TO SHARE A PERSONAL INSPIR -

ation or problem tune in Radi oCJOR 600, Sundays 9 :15-10 :00 am .and 11 :30 p .m .-1 :00 . Or drop in an dchat with Sunday Line Moderato rChaplain Bernice Gerard Wednes-days at the Lutheran Studen tCenter, Tuesdays— Chaplain's Of-fice, S .U .B . For appointment cal l266-'J275 .

Lost & Found

1 3LOST RING OF KEYS CAR, UB C

House Keys. Reward . Contac tFrank Chen, Eng. Building No . 13 .

FOUND - WILL THE STUDENTwho sharpened pencils in the Bin -dory Dept . —Library last Frida ypick up the book left behind.

Rides&Car Pools

1 4HAVE YOU EVER DRIVEN A

piano? Experienced gentle drive rneeded to take small van to Tor -onto October 6 — Expenses paid.Contact Burke Taylor, 687-4201 .

IIIDRRS WANTED ANYWHEREclose to and along Broadway as kfor Florence . 254-3883 .

ROOM FOR PASS . FROM KERR1S -,lale for 8 :30 classes, leave 3 :30every day 'cept Thursday . Phon eSue, 261-8476 .

Special Notices

1 5

THIS WEEKEND, A GOOD FIL Min a good theatre "Castle Kee p "with Burt Lancaster Fri. & Sat .7 :00, 9 :30 ; Sun. 7 :00 . AMS SOc.Non-AMS 75c . SUB Theatre .

REDUCED PRICES ON HAIR -shaping and jetstyling at U .B .C.Barbers (iii the Village .

JOIN A BAND!!! SENIOR IIANI)has openings for interested play-ers . Meets Sundays 2 hrs . MarpoleCenter . F'or more info . phone Mar y728-006') .

ANYONE WITNESSING TH ETues . morning accident betweengreen Beaumont and small blu ecar at 0th and Alma, please con-tact Woody or Ron at 224-9691 .

IN 80 COUNTRIES

7,000,000speakers. Join them . Learn Esper-anto for peace . Box 12 SUB.

CAROLYN : CALL US. FRED AN DNina. 876-769 3

ST. ANSELM ' S THRIFT SALE —Sat ., Oct . 3, ii am. - 1 :30 1)_rn. ,University Hill United Church ,5375 University Blvd.

REMINDER— CANADA STUDENTLoans. To maintain interest tre estatus on previous loans, Con-firmation of Enrolment . Schedul e2 must be completed and delivere dto the Bank prior to 30th Nov -ember 1970 . Not required if yo uhave already obtained a new loan .Courtesy, Hank of Montreal, SUB.

Travel Opportunities

1 6LONDON RETUR N- $ 19 9

also other destinations - 1-ways .687-1244 - 224-008 7

CHARTERS ILK ., CONTINENT ,Africa, other distinations, 1-ways .Mick, 887-2833 or 224-0087 . 106-70 9I )unsmnir St . Mon. - Sat ., 9-9 .

Wanted—Miscellaneous

1 8

T .V . SET WANTED (CHEAP) . PH.72 :1-5756 — also Stereo tape dec kfor car (S or 12 track) .

Automobiles For Sale

2 11961 \\V . TESTED, GOOD SHAPE .

85,000 miles . nest- clutch, muffler,battery . Call Dave 275-277 0

1962 A1'STTN MINI . GOOD SIECH -anieallv $250 or offer. Jim, 738-396 6

1957 VOLKSWAGOX TIC" GOO Dcondition, $200 . 60,000 ml ; Phon e988-8188, evenings .

MUST GO TO HIGHEST —OFFER :'60 Alpine '63 . motor trans . W .W.O/D . Excel . cond . John, 299-297 6

'65 RAMBLER 220, STEREO TAPEdeck . New trans ., good tires, plu ssnow tires . $850 . Ph . 261-960 9

'61 VW 22,000 MI . ON REBUIL Tengine . Good mech, condition, $225 .433-677 1

'67 At'STTN SIft . 41,000 MILES, A lcondition thro-out . Phone 277-6192after five .

TUESDAYUBC LIBERAL CLU B

Meeting in SUB 209 at noon .GERMAN CLU B

Free coffee and doughnuts for every-one in Int . House 400 at noon .

UBC ANTI-WAR COMMITTE EZane Boyd speaks on "The Canadia nAnti-War Movement" in SUB 211 a tnoon .

SAILING CLU BGeneral meeting and slide show a tnoon in Such. 104 .

UBC PROGRESSIV ECONSERVATIVE CLU B

Meeting in SUB 207 .URBAN LAND ECONOMICS CLU B

Ken Brim from the Pacific Cente rDevelopment in SUB 211 at 8 :00 p .m .

AUTOMOTIV E

Automobiles—Wanted

2 2WANTED : FIAT 124 SPYDER OR

late model Triumph )TR 6-250) i ngood condition . Will pay cash . Ph .721-3706

Automobiles—Parts 2 3Automobiles—Repairs

2 4

CAR REPAIR STO

VOLVO, MERCEDE SPORCHE, VOLKSWAGEN

• Factory trained mechanics• Fully Guaranteed Wor k• Reasonable Rate s

bubo A iSALES AND SERVIC E

8914 Oak St .

263-812 1

Motorcycles — 2 5

1968 YAMAHA TWIN SCRAMBLER180 cc's with two helmets, $395 .Ph . 731-7971 . Sony 250A Stere oTap deck, $110 . Ph . 731-737 1

SUZUKI 80 FOR SALE — EXCEL -lent condition . Helmet . Ph. Ann ,228-3089 during the day, $120 .

BUSINESS SERVICE S

Art Services

3 1

CREATIVE PRE - SCHOOLERS 'day care . Play, paint areas, out-ings, Kitsilano primary teacher .Phone 733-2184 .

CREATIVE GRAPHICS — UNIQUEposter and display artwork ; pre-cision publication and scientificgraphics : photography . John, 224-4146.

Scandals

37

HOMOSEXUAL GIRLS AN Dguys : free 9000 word essay on Van-couver gay life from graduate stu-dent 22, Box 8969, Station H, Van-couver 5, Phone 683-4864 . Over 75 0copies sent already .

CAN BURT LANCASTER KEE Pthe Castle? Find out in "Castl eKeep" Fri ., Sat ., Sun. in SUBTheatre, Still the cheapest, alway sthe best !

Sewing&Alterations — 3 8

Typewriters &Repairs 3 9

Typing 40

FAST, ACCURATE TYPING ,electric typewriter, my home .325-2934 .

ON - CAMPUS TYPING, FAST ,Accurate, All types of theses, texts ,essays, IBM Electric, 224-9183 .

EFFICIENT ELECTRIC TYPIN Gmy home : essays, thesis, etc . Neataccurate work . Reasonable rates.Phone 263-531 7

EXI'ERIENCED ELECTRIC HOM Etyping . Essays, theses, etc . Neat ,accurate work, reasonable rates.Mrs. Troche — 437-1355 .

EMPLOYMENTHelp Wanted

5 1

GUITARIST WANTED : ELECTRIC ,own equipment and willing towork at joining present group.Lee or Al, 872-730 1

FRIENDLY OUTGOING GIRLS T Osell flowers evenings . Can choos ehours . Commission . $10 .00 to 020 .0 0for evening. Phone now, 684-2618 .Car is asset but not necessary ,

TIME IN — TIME OUT NEED Svolunteers . Help run a free com-munity children's program, 7 - 9p .m. Alternate Fridays . BeginsOctober 2 . Come with ideas to 181 1West 16th or telephone evenings ,261-1867 ,

S W STUDENT NEEDS BABY -sitter for one infant Mon ., Wedn .and Thurs . Urgent, 738-1587 .

TOPLESS DANCERS NEEDE DTwo References Required

One on Each Sid eGULF CLU B

48 E . HastingsInterviews from 10:30 p.m. 684-3838

Friday, October 2, 197 0

WEDNESDA Y

UBC TEAM CLU BThe Electors Action Movement . Ne wmembers are welcome to hear Ald .Walter Hardwick at 12 :30 in SUB 215 .

MISCELLANEOU STHUNDERBIRD SKI CLU B

Dryland ski conditioning program fo rall skiers . Every Tues, and Thurs . at6 :30 and Sat, at 1 p .m . in the ap-paratus gym in the bottom floor ofMemorial Gym .

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

INSTRUCTION&SCHOOLS_asInstruction- Wanted

6 1

Music Instruction

62 -

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

Special Classes

6 3

CHINESE MARTIAL ART S(Kung Foo) — Self-defence lessons .Ancient meditation for tension re -lief. Chinese studies/languages .

For inquiries phone 872-110 6

MISCELLANEOU SFOR SALE

7 1

BIRD CALLSYour Student Telephon eDirectoryPRE-SALE TICKETS — 75 c

at the Bookstore an dAMS Publications Offic e

TRAYNOR HEAD AND CABINET -with two 15" speakers . Also elec .guitar, $50 ; Shure mikes, cheap .Jacques, 228-9325 .

MENS S U I T S AND JACKET Ssizes 40 to 41 . Top quality, inex-pensive . 736-9387 .

SONY 150 3-HD TAPE DECK $140 ;AM/FM component stereo phon o& speakers, $140, 718-0994 .

PEAKTICA NOVA CAMERA FORsale, Just ovehauled Kits Cameras,Lens 2 .8, Auto Tessar $72 . 224-067 09-11 p.m.

SKIS : I PAIR ALLAIS MAJOR 21 5cm Nevada binding 1 yr . old . $130 ;1 pair Fischer metals 193 cm Solo-mon binding $75: Men's doublebreasted leather coat . Size 38 . $60 .224-0942 or 926-4789 ,

E FLAT CLARINET $5Q. SKIboots, press size 11 . $55. Ski poles ,$10 . All excellent quality and con-dition . See at old Extension Annex.Room B3 .

RENTALS&REAL ESTATERooms

8 1VERY SPA C- IOUS SUNNY ROO M

on main UBC bus route . All housefacilities, 738-1376 or 224-1705 ,

ROOMS ON CAMPUS, $50 . KIT-chen privileges, large lounge andTV room . Linen changed weekly .Ample parking . Phone Bill Pins -more, 224-4530, or 224-9660, orcome to 5760 Toronto Road,

U- PSTAIRS SLEEPING H 0 0 M . -Private bathroom, 224-7471 . D .Morris, 4307 IV. 13th Ave.

ROOM FOR RENT AT U.B.C .gates . Pleasant and clean. Phon e224-0196 .

Room & Board

8 2W A N T E D ROOM, BOARD —

Mother, two year old . Exchang efor babysiting evenings plus $30 .00 .Preferably near Byng School .Have babysitter. 261-7601 after 6 .Ask for Marsha .

ME NRoom & Board avail . at the D .U .House! Convenient, reasonable ,and the best food on Campus !Phone the house manager a t221-11841 or drop by at 3780 Tor -01)10 Rd .

ROOM AND I3()ARI) FOR MEN O NCampus . 2270 Wesbrook Crese .224-9866 .

F- urnished Apts .

8 3_Ea _FIRST YEAR TEACHER WANT S

3rd or 4th year girl to shareapartment . Furnished . $65 month .Phone 731-1540 ,

FERN . SUITE WITH KITCHEN -ette for male student — 3157 W .7 Ave . 733-8942 . $75 . Clean an diuiet .

Unfurnished Apts .

84

Houses—Furn. & Unfurn. 86

3-BEDRM. HOUSE WITH COT -tage on 'Az-acre in Ladner . Roo mand Board $75/month or share ex-penses . Need two people. Oct . 15 . '-946-6371 .

CANADA

FIRST OR SECOND YEAR?? ?

Opportunities exist to becom ean OFFICER in. the Vancouve r

NAVAL RESERVEin the ROUTP programme inHMCS Discovery . For moreinformation, come to HMCSDiscovery, Stanley Park, onTuesday from 7:30 to 9:00pm .

UNIVERSITY

SHELL SERVIC EPETER LISSAC K

Repairs and ServiceSpecialists

Specializing i nElectronic Tune-Ups

Disc Brakes — Exhaust Contro l

11 Years in This Location

4314W. 10 Ave .

224-0828

VOLVO

HONG KONG CHINESE FOODSJust One Block from Campus in the Villag e

IWE SERVE AUTHENTIC CHINESE FOOD - AT REASONABLE PRICES

EAT IN — TAKE OU T

Now, we also have Delivery Service

Open Every Day from 4:30 p.m. to 11 p .m .

5732 University Blvd .

Phone 224-6121

CLASSIFIE DRates: Students, Faculty & Club—3 Lines, 1 day $1 .00; 2 days $1 .75 .

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

Classified ads are not accepted by telephone and are payable in advance .Closing Deadline is 11 :30a.m . . the day before publication .

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

Page 19: JERICHO 'READY FOR WORST' - UBC Library Home · People's friend returns ed students to lounge By DAVID CURSONS Malcolm "Che " McGregor has struck. McGregor, head of the classics department,

Friday, October 2, 1970

- THE UBYSSEY

Page 19

a.

-to

RUNNING FOR THEIR LIVES was an activity that many of the Birds engaged in at Thunderbir dStadium yesterday . The final score showed that the Manitoba Bisons had crucified the Birds 46-2 .Here, UBC quarterback Chris Balzer (22) casts a weary look at Manitoba's Jim Fildey while Fred Maie r(61) looks on .

Birds remain in cellar

Athletic. NoticesGrapplers at Brockton Oval, Stanley Park a t

1 :15 and 2 :15, respectively .

By DON GARDNERUBC football coach, Fran k

Gnup said before the Manitob agame that if his team didn't playwell they'd be beaten by 40points .

He proved to be moresuccessful as a prophet than as afootball coach, as the Universityof Manitoba Bisons completelydominated his team in rolling up a46-2 victory .

This loss allowed the Birds t omaintain their strengthening hol don last place in the conference .

A crowd of about 2,00 0witnessed the contest, (perhaps i twould be more accurate to 1,000 ,as almost everyone left at halftimewith Manitoba holding a 28-0edge) .

Manitoba displayed a noverpowering offence in ramblingfor a total of 400 yards . Theywere led by their very capablequarterback, Bob Kraemer, wh ocompleted 17 of 32 passes for 232.

yards and three touchdowns . Hi sfavorite receiver was HenryLodewyks who caught five passe sfor 133 yards and twotouchdowns .

Lodewyks was also the favorit ereceiver of the Birds quarterbacks ,as he intercepted- two passes fo reight yards .

UBC's offence reached anall-time low as even their defenc emanaged to outscore them . Theteam's only points came when abad snap from the Manitobacenter allowed their punter to becaught for a safety touch.

It was the same old story forthe Birds . They couldn't pass, an dthey couldn't run inside oroutside as they ran into a virtualnine-man line .

They managed only seven firstdowns and a total offence of 120yards : 78 running, and 42 passin g

Chris Balzer started atquarterback and was relieved byGlen Hara and then Al Larson .

None of them was very sucessful,but the quarterbacks are only partof the game .

The Birds' cornerbacks go tburned on numerous occasions .Three times halfback-optionpasses by Dennis Hrycaiko wer ecompleted over their heads, tw ofor touchdowns .

The Birds next game is Octobe r10 when they host the Universit yof Saskatchewan . -

JUNIOR HOCKEY

TONIGHT 8 :30

Vancouver Centennial svs.

Victoria Cougarsa t

KERRISDALE ARENAAdvance Tickets Availabl e

at Thunderbird Aren a

Students $1 .00

Mon ., Oct . 5, 8 :00 vs Chilliwack

Students that desire to lear nthe sport of Olympic Free Styl ewrestling are invited to turn out t othe T'Birds Wrestling Tea mworkouts held at Thunderbir dFootball Stadium Wrestling Roomon Mondays, Wednesdays an dFridays from 4 :30 - 6 :30 p .m .

There is a dire need o fHeavyweights over 190 lbs . andup to 300 lbs .

First meet of this season willbe held on Nov . 21 .

Rugger me npost 1st win

The Thunderbird rugby tea mstarted the season off on awinning note last Saturdaydefeating the Vancouver Red lion sin a lopsided score, 51-8 .

Scrummers Drew Rose, Bo bJackson, and Garth Hendrickso ncombined for six tries . From thethree-quarter line, Doug Shick ,John Mitchell, Barry Leigh, an dSpence McTavish added sevenmore .

Mitchell kicked-a goal and RayBanks added two more goals an done convert .

This weekend will provide atruer test for this year's team. TheThunderbirds and the Braves play

GetSquashed !

There is a new plan in theworks to promote the game ofsquash for junior boys . The pla ninvolves a series of teaching ,coaching and playing session swhich will take place at the UB CSports Centre .

Any boy under the age of 1 9can register for the course at theVancouver Racquets Club, 33r dand Ontario, Saturday Octobe r3rd at 1 1 :00 a .m .

For further information, phon eEd Berwick, 926-4164 after 6 :00p .m .

IntramuralsThe event is UBC's FIRST

ANNUAL TURKEY TROT ,or otherwise known as th ecross country race . Twoturkeys are being given awayfor first and second place . Tofacilitate the turkey trot thedate of competition has beenmoved up to the Thursda ybefore Thanksgiving, Oct .8th . Please take note that theregistration deadline has bee nmoved up to Oct . 7th .

SKIInstructors' Training Course

at

GARIBALDI'S WHISTLER MTN .

Sats . and/or Sundays Oct. 10th — Nov. 15th

Any parallel skier can join — Instructors jobs availabl e

for information phone :

JIM McCONKEY, General Del ., Alta Lake B .C.932-5422 or 926-1034

H

CANADIAN FORCES RECRUITING CENTR E545 Seymour St ., Vancouver

THE CANADIAN ARMED FORCE S

After you've earned your commission o nthe Regular Officer Training Plan (ROTP) ,we think you could . VVe'll give you a tactica lmilitary training . And ROTP will give you aUniversity education leading to a degre ein Engineering . Sciences . Or Arts . So whe nyou graduate you'll be ready to step into aposition of responsibility . Ready to tak echarge .

Contact your Military Career Counsello rabout ROTP .

FOR PREFERRED RISKS ONLY.It Pays to Shop for Car Insuranc eYOU CAN SAVE MONEY ON CAR INSURANCE AT WESTC O

Fill in and return this coupon or phone today . No obligation . No salesman will call .

LIST ALL ADDITIONAL DRIVER S

AgeMale o rFemale RelationiLicense d

Years Married

% of Useor Single

#1'

#2

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FBR UBC 7

= NM st♦ — stn — stn MI I st• — MI stn n

MAIL THIS COUPON FOR OUR LOW RATES ON YOUR AUTOMOBIL E

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Married C] Single q

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Give number and dates of accident in last 5 years ,(circle dates of those accidents which were not you rfault) .

Year of automobil e

Make of automobil e

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Model (Impala, Dart, etc . )

2/4 dr-Sdn, a/w, hit, cony.Days per week driven towork, train or bus depot ,or fringe parking are a

One way driving distanc eIs car used in business(except to and from work) ?Give number and date sof traffic conviction sin last 5 years.

Car No . 2Car No . 1

Yes No EYes El No q

In the last five years has you rlicense been suspended?

Are you now insured? ._ . . .. .____ _ .

Date current policy expire s

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

COweeINSURANCE COMPANY

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

Page 20: JERICHO 'READY FOR WORST' - UBC Library Home · People's friend returns ed students to lounge By DAVID CURSONS Malcolm "Che " McGregor has struck. McGregor, head of the classics department,

SEA OF STUDENTS listens Tuesday noon to former grad student president Art Smolensky speak against use of SUB as youth hostel .

—dave enns phot o

X-Kalay course on therapy to be taught hereBy AMARJEET RATTAN

X-Kalay is bringing its message to the UBC campus .The X-Kalay Society will offer a full-scale, non-credi t

course — taught by X-Kalay members themselves —through the UBC centre for continung education .

"X-Kay is pretty much isolated from the genera lcommunity and this course will provide an interactio nbetween X-Kalay members and the public," said HenryRosenthal, head of the social sciences division of th ecentre .

The eight-week course will be taught by X-Kala yexecutive director David Berner and education

department head Luis Molina . The course begins Oct . 1 3at a cost of $10 for students and $15 for non-students.

Called "X-Kalay : "The Dynamic of Change in Life" ,the course will consist of one lecture a week and isdesigned to give students an insight to the therap yprogram used at X-Kalay .

There are 38 X-Kalay members now living in a fra thouse on campus and in order to continue living here the ymust be qualified students, Rosenthal said . They must b eenrolled in some type of educational course .

"This course will fulfill the legal requirements o fX-Kalay members on campus," Rosenthal said "but it i smore than an administrative device to get around this rule .

"It will be of great educational value to X-Kala ymembers and also to students who take it . "

X-Kalay was started in 1967 when some Indianinmates at the B .C. Penitentiary started a half-way housefor ex-convicts . Today the membership ranges fro mex-cons, hippies, businessmen, residential students t ohousewives, Molina said .

"X-Kalay forms an educational community wit hemphasis on growth and co-operation of members, notcompetition," said Molina .

In offering this course, our purpose is not to turnour members into university students because that's a lo tof crap . We want more participation of the student bodywith us . "

ORIGINA L

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WORLDRIDE

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224-4391

THE LIFE AND TIMES O FCHESTER-ANGUS RAMSGOO D

A Van-Made 16mm Color Featur e

Starts Mon. thru Fri — 12:30 - 3 :30Tues . Wed ., Thurs . — 7:30 - 9 :00

Rush Tickets—$1' 0 °—SUB Aud .

sir