BOG seat won by chem head

Transcription

BOG seat won by chem head
BOGseat won
by chem head
Chemistrydepartmenthead
Charles McDowell has won a by
election for a faculty
seat on the
UBC Board of governors.
McDowell, who was rumored to
have thebyelection won before the
balloting even began, hada 28 vote
margin on the closest of his seven
competitors
when
voting
ended
Friday.
McDowell
will
only
hold
the
positionfor thethreeremaining
boardmeetingsbefore new elections are called in January. He said
rehe
intends
run
tofor
election. The
registrar’s
office
refusedtoreleasethecomplete
election results becauseof a senate
agreementmadeearlier
to keep
results
the
secret,
office
spokeswoman Mary Raphael said
Monday.
McDowell got 208 of the 1,012
votes cast in the byelection.
McDowelldiscountedclaims
a strong
that
had
he
built
organizationwithintheFaculty
Association to ensure his win. He
said
any
organization
wasthe
efforts of others.
“Maybe that waswhy I won,” he
said.
McDoweU was .on aonemonth
trip to Japan during most of the
electionperiod, in whichmail-in
votes were accepted from Sept. 12
till Sept. 30.
He took no part in the election
campaign and issuedhis campaign
statement by telephone fromthe
airport before leaving for Japan.
Other candidates in the byelection wereunaware
of their
position in thefinalstandings.
When contacted Mondayfaculty
associationpresidentRichard
Roydhouse wasunaware of any
election results.
McDowell said he waspleased
andsurprisedatthe
byelection
results. He said hewill put forward
the faculty viewpoint and uphold
UBC’s academic interests on the
board.
Voter turn-out for the byelection
was 54.7 per cent, about average
for a campuselection. Out of a
possible 1,849 faculty voters 1,012
votes were recorded,withthree
spoiledballotsand
three unidentified ballots.
McDowell
was
the
favorite
contender
among
UBC conservatives for the
job
UBC
of
administration
president
during
1974, when a successor
tothe
retiringWalterGagewas
being
sought.ButDougKenny,
a t the
time arts dean, was able to obtain
moreall-roundsupportandwas
selected as president.
‘Admin agamst
student arts reps’
I
I
Said-Maday it is up to department
Arts
undergraduate
society
presideiit FrW Watters ‘charged heads’ to ensurethatprofessors
encouragestudentparticipation.
Mondaytheadministrationis
d o u g field photo
“There hasnot been a great deal
trying
to
discourage
student
of interest in elections in the past LET IT BLEED this week upstairs in SUB and you too will smile as red stuff is drained out of your body for
participation in faculty decisions.
those that need it badly. Red Cross nurses are also bound to make you grin when th‘ey find out you have
She said the arts faculty is not where a student representative is
more alcohol than blood in your system.
informing studentsof their rightto elected, asitisalmostalways
uncontested, with not usually more
electrepresentativesforfaculty
than one candidate,” he said.
meetings.
27 faculty
Watters
said
“The administration refuses to
representative positions are open
do the job. The registrarrunning
is
the election but not publicizing it,”to nomination until Friday.
coordinate
decenCanadian University Press
“the market population” is
needed designed to
The AUS is allowed one first and
she said.
tralized
growth
of
the
Lower
encourage
to
commercial
DouglasCollege in New WestWatterssaid arts deanRobert onesecond-yearartsstudent
Mainland.
development
of
the
city.
minster
is
trying
to
fend
off
Will seems to be against having representative,and one third or
“If we don’t do this, BCDC will
He said
that
if the college
four-year
student
as represen- pressurefromtheprovincial
student
representatives
atarts
losecredibility.” McIntyre warned
decided
against
relocation,
government
to
relocate
in
the
for
each
of
the
faculty’s
25
tative
department meetings.
of the thecollege. “We want t o make
developerswouldpullout
departments. To date 15 students city’sdowntown and become the
Faculty
department
meetings
links so tight that no one will be
project
and
New
Westminster
keystone
to
a
massive
$160
million
help formulateacademic policy, have nominated.
able to drop out.
would
suffer
further
economic
redevelopment.
Watters
said
no
election
date
has
decide how department funds are
“The question that faces you is
depression.
College
council
chairman
John
as most of the
been setyet,
allocatedanddeterminedepartone
of greatmagnitude. I don’t
New Westminster,oncethe
will not
positions are contested by a single Sutherland said the college
ment organization.
think people have a choice.”
capital
of
the
colony
of
British
be
pressured
into
an
early
decision
“There’s been
lack
a
of co- candidate.
ButDouglasCollegeprincipal
a Columbia, has faced a decline in George
on theproposedmovedespite
At the
same
election
arts
operation
from
Will,”
on the
Wootton saysthe college
population since 1969 and many
B.C.Developstudents will be asked to approve a requestfromthe
studentrepresentativeelections,
does have a choice.But because
businesses
have
moved
out.
ment
Corporation
that
the
college
onedollar-per-person levy to fund
Watters said.
the decision
involves
different
decide by Oct. 15.
AUS activitiesthroughoutthe
Professors should alsobeenDouglas College councilhas also levels of government,thereis
a
year. The referendum needsa twoBCDC projectdirectorRobert
been warned by theBCDC that if it great deal of pressure to decide in
couragingtheirstudentstoparthirdsmajorityto
pass anda
McIntyre told the council Sept. 27 decides
against
relocation,
the
ticipateasrepresentativesin
favor of the plan.
quorum of about 1,500 voters.
departmentmeetings,Watters
that relocation of the college from whole Liveable RegionPlan would
Sutherland said last week that
The
position
AUS
of
vice- itspresentsiteiscritical
to the have to be scrapped.
said:
be pressured into
the college won’t
Assistantdean PeterRemnant president isalsoopen Watters said. redevelopment project because
The Livable Region program is
afavorabledecisionand“in
no
wayisanyoneto
assumethat
council has made up its mind.”
But Douglas College is locatedin
tempotary structures a t the New
IWestminster campus on land that
It wasthefirst
UBC studentleadership
By CHRIS GAINOR
was
oncea
garbagedumpand
conferencesincetherisingtide
of student funds
forstudy
of asiteneara
Was it a student leadership conference? No.
activism, ironically, ended such conferences
quarryabove theB.C. peniteniary.
Was it a worthwhile exercise? Yes.
in 1967 after
many
years.
As such,the only reminiscence of leader- justacrossthestreetfromthe
“It” refers to alittleget-together of about
conferences goneby was Connaghan and present site,will run out by Oct. 15.
100people involvedin one wayor another with ship
Plans
included
in
the
Dennisonrecalling
W C at a scenic butsecludedcampsiteeducationprofessorJohn
New
ago
tonight,
they
sat
in the old redevelopmentschemefor
overlooking Howe Sound.
how, 20 years
include
total
For two days and two nightsthe future of
lodge of CampElphinstone,just
100 yards Westminster
redevelopment
of the Fraser River
UBC, itsproblemsandpotentialweredebatedfromthelodge.wherelastweekend’s
waterfront, a 2,500seat performing
and lots of small
talk
was
exchanged.
meetings
were
held, and
heard
the
eerie
arts centre, a justice department
Theparticipants includedadministration.beepsovertheradio
of SputnikOne.
complex,
federalandprovincial
presidentDougKenny,vice-presidentsErichThey
sat and talkedaboutwhattheearth’s
government office construction,
Vogt andCharlesConnaghan,a
bevyof
firstman-madesatellitereallymeant,and
student
politicians
and
students
active
in
about how the
space
age
would change and a n overhead monorail system.
Mostof
the buildings in New
campus
groups.
There
were
well-known
swciety.
Twenty years
later,
the
talk
was
Westminster
allegedly
are
facultyfiguresandsomealumnifromthe
much morecloser to home.
UBC Alumni
Association,
which
organized
But what
exactly
happened?
Well, the decaying,andtheredevelopment
wasrecord”
“off the
to allow scheme would demolishthe older
conference
meet. the
structures.
And there was your humble correspondent, freer conversation, but the basic outlines can!
The scheme would increase the
thesolerepresentative of newspaper
a
which
he presented
without
my head being1
present population of about 30,000
has been known tobe somewhat critical of the demanded
by disgruntled delegates.
to more than55,000,directly create
See page 2 : CONFERENCE
conference.
...~
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..:........:.... .:.:.: :. :
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2,000
jobs.
an~ estimated
”
Douglas College pressured
And we all had a realaood time
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Page 2
UBYSSEY
THE
Tuesday, October
4, 1977
Conference talk off record
From page 1
morning,andcruiseaboardthe
First of all, it was not a student
leadershipconference.Only
two
After aFriday afternoon journey Malibu Princess to Gastownand
hours
spent
was
directly
finally home.
by busandferry,
we arrivedat
Aldridge told theconference that discussing
the
question,
and
Elphinstone,
normally
a
YMCA
next year the students would have pehapsa couple moreindirectly.
summer camp, and had dinner.
Unlessmoretimeisspent
Kenny, after an introduction by to organize it.If they don’t want it,
it won’t happen, he said.
discussing the problems of student
conferenceorganizer,man-aboutBut given thecontroversythat
leadership,
and
more
time
campus and formerAMS president
preceded
this
year’s
production,
definitely
is
needed,
perhaps
Doug Aldridge, outlined where he
another label should be found for
sees UBC going in an era of fiscal whichincluded a refusal bythe
student represenative assembly to such a meeting.
restraint
and
stagnant
student
faculty
and
adenrolments.Aftercomments
by helppay the$7,000 pricetag, it may Although
be difficult.
ministration types were in a small
students and
faculty
delegates,
As was reported earlier in The minority,
they
stood
out
much
everyone got down to the serious
Ubyssey,
manypeoplethinkthe
morebecause
of theirrelative
business of enjoying 25-cent beers
an attempt to importance and experience.
conference
was
and
50-cent
mixed
drinks.,
Were the student delegates truly
The discussion of UBC’s future, indoctrinatestudentswiththe
representative of students? No, but
launched by Kenny, continued a t a administration viewpoint.
Somepoliticianschargedthat
therewas a good enough crossslower pace the next morning. A
the
selection
was
not
represensection
to
suggest
that
the
seaplane dropped in bearing Vogt,
organizers
were
not trying to
and
were
suspicious,
newlyelected board of governors tative
good
reason, of exclude certain groups of leaders.
faculty rep Charles McDowell and perhaps with
anything Doug Aldridge is behind.
If studentsorganizefuture
otherdignitariesfortheday’s
How true are these charges?
See page 8 : CONTACT
discussions.
Vogt,
McDowell,
alumni
representative
Paul
Hazel1 and
studentsenatorJohnRussell
providedwidely divergent views
about UBC’s future, and after two
Then you’ll probably be job huntingsoon, and you
sets of group
discussions,
the
might find that breaking into the business worldfor
conferees
broke
for
football,
the first time isn’t easy.
volleyball, frisbee throwing or just
chatting.
But The Financial Post Special Reporton Careers
Those who chose to gawk could
and the JobMarket can help you.
watchformerstudentpolitico
This special magazine reports on the issues
turned beer salesman Brent Tynan
affecting the current market for today’s graduates.
drivingaround
in hisMolson’s
Articles deal with the problems facing job hunters,
special events van, which he used
and outline thebest waysto get the job you want.
to shower theplaying field with
And profiles of various professionssuch as law,
Muzak rock.
medicine, insurance, science, media, government
Finally,
student
leadership
became
the
main
topic
of
and sales areincluded to help give youthe best
discussion. In atwo-hoursession
perspective on career possibilities.
thatnight,severalpanelists,
inTo find out where thegood opportunities are for
cluding this reporter, talked about
your future, pick up
the problems facing student groups
The Financial Post Special Report on
a sometimesheated
andgot
response.
CAREERS AND THEJOB MARKET
But the schedule caught up with
Avalable October 3rd at your Career Plannmg and Placement Office
us and it was back to those oh-socheapdrinksthatnight,another
even
slower
session
Sunday
I Graduatingthisyear? 1 1
fine new feathers!
SnomBM
the bubbly white wine
for when you next have
the flock around.
Tuesday, October
4, 1977
THE
Page 3
UBYSSEY
for the New
By LARRY HILL
does not planany futher forays into “It is really a victory
Democratic Party when someone
UBC law school graduate Svend the political arena.
like myself, who hasn’t a big name
“I’mgoing to runtheuniverbbinson called his
defeat
of
she
said.
“My board of but has beeninvolved fora number
Simon Fraser University president sity,”
of years in party activity, can be
governors,senioradministrators,
RulineJewettSundayforthe
nominated,”
said
Robinson.
Burnaby federal NDP nomination andfacultyhavebeenverysup176 votes to
I Robinsonreceived
.‘a victory of the grass roots party portiveandunderstanding,and
wouldn’t wanttostrainthat
un- Jewett’s 129.
nembershipovertheestablishRobinson said the NDP hasa
derstanding.”
ment.”
Shesaidsheplans
to continue strong chance of taking the BurJewett, 54, h a s a national
working on projects she had set fornabyseatinthenext election, so he
political reputation.Shewasthe
was aware the nominationmight
fourth
year
as
SFU
adthe
riding
of her
Liberal M p for
be strongly contested.
ministration president.
Norththumberland,Ontario,from
“I was not surprised that such a
Robinson, 25, is a former
1963 to 1965. She resigned from the
Liberal party in 1970 to protest the president of theB.C. Young New big name came into the contest,”
Democrats. He servedon the UBC said Robinson. “It was one of our
implementation of the
War
board of governors in 1975, and best ridings in the province and I
Measures
Act,
and
ran
unUBC law did not expectto win it by acfrom
the
successfully a s a n NDP candidate graduated
for the Ottawa West riding during school in 1976. Last year he studied clamation.”
Robinson has‘beenanactive
t ha et
London
School
of
the federal election of 1972.
NDP memberfor 11 years,and
Economics.
Jewettsaid
Monday thatshe
said that he had been “building a
strong campaign team in the past
two or three months. Young people
who haveneverbeforebeen
involved in politics helped me in this
campaign. These high school and,
universitystudents will stay on
with me for the fed-era1 election.”
Robinson said Monday’ that he
agreed with the common
consensusthatthefederalelection
’
would beheldinthespring.
“I’m going tostartmycampaigning immediately.”
Robinson
complained
about
of‘ the
“Trudeau’s
bungling
economy, the outrageous level of
unemployment,
and
the
constitutional chitchat on the question
of nationalunity,”
ratherthan
tackling the real issues.
ROBINSON..
. svelte Svend
Barn blaze
short-circuit
By MIKE JONES
An electrical wiring short-circuit
caused a fire that killed 150 pigs
and
destroyed
UBC’s swine
24, a
research
facilities
Sept.
University Endowment Lands fire
department
spokesman
said
Monday.
“We believe the originof the fire
beto
due to arcing
(shortcirc.uiting)insidethejunction
box,”
said
Herb
Crawford,
assistant chief of fireprevention
for the UEL department.
The short-circuit, he said,
“could
have been (due to) moisture, or a
breakage in the insulation due to
normal vibration.” A breakage in
the on is possible,Crawford explained,
because
fire
the
originated in anareawhere
students Were engaged in
laboratory work.
Crawford said he was certain the
fire was not caused by arson.
“Thereis nothing to suggest that
it was arson,” he said.
R. M. Beames, associate animal
sciencesprofessor,saidMonday
“this type of electrical fault could
occureanywhere if it iswhat I
think’ it is.”
Beames said the facilitieswill be
rebuilt, but no plans have yet been
made to do so.
“We will be rebuilding. We will
hopefully modify some sections of
the tmilding,” he said.
Thefacultyresearchprogram
needs to get “backon the track” as
“Men don’t use sports for health soon as possible, Beames said.
he
said,
adding
that
the
only called women and the males were
By KATHY FORD
called boys. He said one man took but to be an athletic object,” he
common denominator advertisers
North American menare just as can count on between classes in exception to this. Earlier the samesaid. “We learntoavoidsports
“We have got certain research
in need of liberation a s North NorthAmerica is themyththat
man had called a womantrivial where we could improve andgo to commitments and, therefore, it is
American women.
imperative
that
we get
these
menmust be superior when it when she objected to his referring the ones where we can be seen.
That’s theview of social scientist comes to sexual powers.
facilitiesreconstquctedatthe
to the women there as girls.
“In
university
and,
college
we
WarrenFarell who saidFriday
earliest possible time.”
Farrell said the exercise taught take student fees andpourthem
“When the product isbought the
men are brought up to be “mini- woman doesn’t come with it,” he
him that
men
have
“original
Beamessaidhehopesthe
into the one or two per cent of the
rapists”and are taughtto stifle said.
choice power” while women have
students who play for the school. facilities will be built by March
theiremotionsand
to objectify
He said women are trained to be “veto power.”
1978.
“We call that athletics.”
women.
He said many North American
“mini-masochists”
to
go
along
Farrellalsocalledforjob
Animal
sciences
graduate
Farrell, who was speaking a t a with the “mini-rapists.”
menspendtheirlivestrying
to sharing,where
a husbandand
student Tim Ngwira said Monday
lecture
sponsored
by the Cold
show
their
wives
and
families
how
“We have theguts and the nerve
wife, f o r example, share the same thatalthoughhe wasconducting
Mountain Institute, a centre that
to call this process (of becoming much they love them by working job.
specializes
humanistic
in
hard. In the processthey often lose He said more researchshould be research on the pigs, his study has
“mini-masochists”and“minibeen only slightly disrupted.
education, said men must
choose rapists”) love.”
their family’s love.
done on birth control for men and
between
sensitivity
and
inHe said his studies were set back
He cited a study that found the said
that
more
conciousness
Farrell described a role reversal average
vulnerability and most choose the
North
American
man raising groups should be set up by about four weeks.
to
exercise
he
led
at
a
workshop
latter.
spends 11 minutes and 37 seconds and for men.
Agriculture
undergraduate
“They make women into pieces illustrate the stereotypes that men with
37
his
children
and
only
And in addition
to
women’s
society
vice-president
Ken Stone
use
in
the
sexual
and
women
of ass and the wholething becomes
seconds
communicating
with
studies‘coursesthereshould
be saidMondaytheagricultural
process.
a game,”hesaid.
“Mostmen
sex-role courses and men’sstudies society regretstheexperiments
He said that after 10 minutes the them.
unlearn this in one way but not in
Farrell said thatin 20 to 30 years COWSeS.
will be set back.
woman
who
chose
him
was
calling
another.”
he expects to see men working in
“Theconcretechangeswe
Dan Thompson, aggie president
Farrell said men are taught to him frigid.
childcarecentrs. Healsohopes to shouldaskfor
a r e aseven-year
“The exercisebroughtoutthe
a
said
Monday
the
fire
was
believetheymustbepowerful.
see
more
men
dropping
their
longer
life
span,
less
rape,
“terrible tragedy.”
Thiscreatesuncertaintyand
in- worst stereotypes in everybody,” children off at centreson their way homicide
and
suiCide,
fewer
he said.
security among most men.
melast fireoncampus occurred
to work. He said this would give ulcers, less .job specialization.
His
description
of
some
of
the
He said that in a recent survey,
last fall at the HomeEconomics
themthechancetosharethe
“The
intangible
goals
are
being
lines
the
woman
used
brought
84.6 percent of men surveyed said
building.Oneroomsustained
groans and laughs of recognition responssibility to a greater extent. able to ask for help, being abel to $20,000 to $25,000 damage.
theyfeltmoreuncomfortable
frommost of the women in the , He also expects tosee new forms fail,moreintimacywithwomen,
around womenthantheythought
Crawford added that the UELFD
of mort withlessemDhasis
on being able to cry in public and
audience.
the average man did.
handles between 25 and 30 fires a
Farrell said that
for the purposes becoming good to one aiea of one ,being more comfortable with
“This (insecurity) is the perfect
year.
men.”
sport.
of the exercise, the females were
fodder for the capitalist
system,”
North American menneed liberation
”
-
rage
.
4
THE
-
”
”
”
UBYSSEY
”
..
-
-
-
.Tuesday, October. 4, 1977
Time gentlemen, please
When B.C.‘s longest legislative session ended last week,
premier Bill Bennett said,“wecan
all look back with
pride,”andcalled
it the ”most productive session in
British Columbia’s history.“
Piffle., It was perhaps one of the most raucous sessions
in B.C.‘s history of raucous legislative sessions, and one of
the most destructive for the average voter. The premier’s
friends in the business elites of the
province
would
probably agree with him, though.
We have already outlinedourobjections
t o bills
placing community colleges
under
direct government
control, erasing faculty bargaining rights under the B.C.
Labor Code, and tightening up rules for student reps on
university governing bodies.
About the only bright spot in this bleak sessionwas
the creation of a provincial Ombudsman, a post which has
long beenneeded. But a look a t other legislation would
lead one to believe the Ombudsman will be very busy upon
appointment.
Bill 65, the bill destroying the VancouverResources
Board, is the most important step in inhuman resources
minister Bill Vander
Zalm‘s
campaign
to consolidate
power. To those knocked outofworkbytherotten
economy (which theSocreds have aggravated), it means no
understanding their
for
problems,
and
a totally
desensitized bureaucracy designed t o pinch pennies a t the
cost of those who need the money.
Meanwhile, the Socreds can pour some of the money
they save into private schools for their fat cat friends. The
Independent Schools Support Act, Bill 33, is an expensive
andunnecessary blow to the tattered principle of equal
opportunity to education.
If people
want
their children to have a special
education, they should be prepared to foot the bill.
There‘s
also
legislation
ending
gift taxes
and
succession taxes, which will only help the wealthy.
And the Residential Tenancy Act, which replaces the
Landlord and Tenant Act, t i l t s the legislative balance again
in favor of landlords,
and
gives the Rentalsman
extraordinary powers to settle landlord-tenant disputes.
The thrust of it all? The poor have to scrape for living
money, the wealthy enjoy tax breaks, and middle-income
earners pay the bills.
There is also another disturbing trend
in
this
legislation. The powers of the legislature are being reduced.
Why? Because the Socreds
don’t
like bickering. And
because the legislature, like democracy in general, is very
inefficient.
Where have we heard that before? Just a hint - people
who live under governments with similar beliefs don‘t have
the option of complaining.
.
Impolite
debate
Stuart Lyster’s response to
my
letter re education and salaries is
evidence that therea r e still people
on this campus who are unable to
participate in a polite debate.
To differwithmyviews
is not
only
agreeable
but
entirely
welcome. But to corrupt my very
normal first name and to slander
therespectable profession to which
I
aspire
is
purposeless,
unimaginative, and cheap.
F u r t h e r m o r eL, y s t e r ’ s
generalizationsandemotional
sensationalismdistortmycomments and evade the thrust of my
comparatively careful arguments.
I had hoped that my response to
George Hermanson’s article would
havesparked an intelligentand
temperatediscussionbetween
gentlemen.Itappears.however,
that it has so far evoked only the
unenlightened utterances of a cad.
Patrick Raynard
librarianship
Joe who?
In a recent issue of The Ubyssey
you reported on therelative
strengths of the political clubs on
campus. The report statedthat
;;the t h e e main political clubs on
the
campus - the NDP club,
Young SocialistsandtheLiberal
club - gained only 50, 22 and 20
new members
respectively.”
IJnfortunately, you failed to
mention the success of the Young
ProgressiveConservatives
on
campus.
The UBC Young PC’s were able
toattract over30new members on
be
the two clubs’days.Itshould
noted that just under a year ago
you printed a storywhich indicated
that
the
Young PC’s was
the
leading political club on campus.
The headline of tha report stated,
“UBC clubbers like Toriesover
Grits.”
I’m sure that this omission was
just an oversight on yourpart, that
thisleadingpoliticalclub
on
campuslastyearwas
notmentioned inthisyear’sreport
on
clubs’ day.
Charles Henderson
president, UBC PCs
THE UBYSSEY
OCTOBER 4,1977
~~
-
Published
Tuesdays,
Thursdays
and
Fridays throughout the
university year by the Alma Mater Society of the University of
B.C. Editorial opinions are those of the staff and not of the AMS
or the university administration. Member,Canadian University
Press. The Ubyssey publishes Page Friday, a weekly commentary
and review. The Ubyssey‘s editorial office is in room 241 K of the
Student Union Building. Editorial departments, 228-2301;
Advertising, 228-3977.
Editor: Chris Gainor
Chrls Galnor flounced Into the office, then floated Ilghtly to
hls desk.
“Scatter,” screamed KathyFord, “He’sbeen smoklngVerneMcDonald’s
clgarette’sagaln.”
But Dave Wllklnson. wlth
hlssharpartlst’s
eye..notlced
that the edltor was qulte unstoned. “I thlnk he’s lost some blood,” he Sald.
and Lloyanne Hurd falnted. Blll Tleleman
grabbed Heather Conn and told
her to go downtothecllnlcandbleeduntll
shegot
a story. “Blood.
blood.”moaned
MarcusGee andSteveHoward,
as Gee let loose wltha
dlnner tray that just rnlssed T o m Barnes. Doug Fleld and Cralg Heale trled
o f thecorpulent corpuscles In the bag thatGalnor
to getsomeclose-ups
wavedabove hls head, whlleGrayKylesandLarry
Hlll rushed downthe
hall t o get thelr own llttle baggles of Anernla Red. Carol Ferber told Marlo
Lowther that he wasn’t her type, and Mlke Jones slyly Interjected that he
was a unlversal donor. Don Maclntyre and Carl Vesterback wondered what
Anlta Bryant would have thought of It all.
weekdaysthelasttripfrom
Burnaby will be at9:33 p.m. andon
Saturdays the last trip
will leave at
5:33 p.m.
Ransom
Thecampus should beaware
that the engineers willno longer be
At the present time the last trip
wearing
their
sparkling
red
on weekdays and Saturdays leave
jackets. It seems that due to the
at 11:13 p.m. Many students, staff
e n g i n e e r iunngd e r g r a d u a t e
faculty
were
against
the
society’slack of security,all of and
their jackets, sweaters, mugs etc. cutbackslastyearonSundays
service from 41st to only six hours
(includingtheirinfamousred
of servicefrom
16 hours. More
panties) have fallen into unfriendly
cutbacks willoccurunless
UBC
hands.
joins otherorganizationsto fight
We, as
an
organization
conbe
thebuscutbacks
whichwill
cerned
with
the
bettermen
ofinstitutedonabout
half thebus
society, feel that we can help the routes in the city.
gears
retrieve
their
colors.
On the positive side, bus service
Payment for our
duties
shall
consist of a donation of$100 to the will return to Totem Park atnight
United Way campaign by the after 7 p.m. seven days a week via
route 10/14. Bus fare is still only 15
engineers.
cents with a n AMS card butonly a s
Confirmation of this in the far a s Blanca or 41st and Marine.
manner of a letter to The Ubyssey
Nathan Davidowicz
from the United Way, will lead to
unclassified 5
thereturn of the misplaced articles. Time is of the essence for it
is $well known thatanengineer
The thysseywelcomes
letters
without his red is likeatoilet
from all readers.
without paper.
Lettersshouldbe
signed and
A friend typed. Pennames
willbeused
when the writer’sreal name is also
included for our information in the
letter and when valid reasons for
anonymity are given.
I wouldlike
to voice my obLetters should be addressed to
jections
to
the
planned
transit
the paper care of campus mail or
cutback on Oct. 28, 1977. The 41st dropped off at The Ubyssey office,
servicefromBurnabyPlaza
to SUB 241K.
Walk home
UBC will be cut backas follows: on
.
’
.b.
’
,:
.Tuesday,‘ Ortober’4,1977
By SCOTT GRIFFIN
THE
tulips. Welfarerecipients
Page 5
.UBYSSEY
of this
The time has come fora change rich provinceare allowed to live
on
in theSocialCreditgovernment.
a barely subsistence level.
Will Bennett stand idly by while
Vander Zalm dismantles oneof the
alterations, but I believe that therelasthumancontactstructures
in
must be an immediate change in the welfare system, the volunteerthe ministry of human resources. orientedVancouverResources
Idealists and realists clash over Board?
most
issues,
normally
settling
Vander Zalm is outof touch with
their
differences
and
comreality.Heresides
in thriving,
promising.However, politics and plastic Surrey where everythingis
politicians are anythingbutnornew and
shiny.
He has
flatly
mal in British Columbia. One of the refused to visit the urban core of
mostimportantministries
in the Vancouver to see theconditions,
provincialgovernmentis
that of instead
remaining
in
his
inachuman resources. A great deal of cessiblebastioncontentwithhis
responsibility goes along with the
sterotype images. Is he afraid
of
appointment.
being exposed to the
harsh realities
be a of his programs?
The ideal minister should
gruehumanitarian
while balanI wonderif Vander Zalm believes
cing
that
asset
with
sound
that the 20 per cent or more of the
economic sense. Why are both British Columbianslivingbelow
these traits so hard to find in the povertyline arecontent in their
British Columbia’s politicians?
situation. The welfare recipient in
B.C. receives a basic$175 a month,
one of the lowest in Canada, to be
spent on
food,
clothing,
and
shelter. When oneconsidersthat
We have
had
history
a
of rent can be well over$120 a month
ministers with one quality or the for a bug-infested room, not much
for luxuriessuch a s
other; a humanitarian or a straight isleftover
“Go home, I tell you ! The recession is over!
rooming
economist,butnever
in tandem. food. T h e downtown
covered
by the
Under W. A. C. Bennett, we were hotels are not
subjected to Phil Gaglardi’s policy Landlord and Tenant Act, so rents
“makeroadsnot cheques. In 1972, and conditions a r e atrocious.
The cost of living over the past
the
NDP
swept
into
power,
swingingthe ministry of human three years has risen over 25 per
cent whilebenefitsunderSocred
resources
from
strict
the
economist’s grasp to that of a legislationhaveactuallygone
poor
humanitarian. The welfare system down. Thismeansthatthe
havehad
to
decrease
their
food
and
wasgreatlyimproved,butthis
direction, no decision,
vacillate
med the conference a success. “It
By VERNE McDONALD
movewas extremely costly, both
to other expenditures by 25 per cent
Our jailsare
with precision.”Bucksbegan
to was
a house-keeping
mainly
the treasury and to the NDP as a overthisperiod.
While
UBC
conducted
its
pass through the crowd.
conference,” he saidafterwards.
government. On thebasis of this overflowing with people who can’t leadership
conference
this
make
it,
costing
thousands
of weekend, a counter-conference
Then tensions
began
to rise “We were here €0 denounce some
fiscal
mismanagement,
the
pendulum swung back to the right dollars per year.
took place ata beer parlor in Rich- among the delegates. A split for- traitors toour cause, like the B.C.
It
costs
four
times
more
to mond.
med a s to
which
position
the Lions, who weregreatfollowers
and into the hands of Bill Bennett
maintain a person in jail than to
conference should support as that until recently,anddeclaresome
and his assorted cohorts.
Termed
a
followship
conference
allot a decent welfare payment. It by its organizers, none of whom
exemplified
best
which
new people to the Follower Hall of
InchoosingNormLevi’ssucthat
the
basic
Fame, like Jack Horner.
cessor, Bennetthadonly welhff is suggested
were directly responsible for it, it followership.
Traditionalists favouring doggyHe added that theprovincial
businessmen to chosefrom. One payment be $230 a month, with cost wasa scene of controversyand
a near-violence.
considerations,
for
style
clashed
with
radicals
cabinetalmostbeatHornerout,
would imagine, when
he
was of living
espousing the “ideological purity” and “we have great hopes for the
searching fora suitable ministerof single person.
“There are no leaders, only of the daisy-chain,
Who a r e these people? Many are
Vancouver Canucks.”
and
fights
humanresources,thathe
would
followers,”
was
the
keynote
threatened to break out at several
Doll Cando, whom Toyota called
look forsomeonewithsome
ex- the people who built this province, declaration of theconference,
tables .
“a ‘superlative follower,”joined
periencewith people as well as working their lives awayin mines, which
began
ritual
with
in theforestsand
on the seas.
Violence was averted only when himin announcingthewinner of
business.
Unfortunately,
the
defacements
of postersdepicting
Many
have
been
victimized
by
all of the members of each group thefollower’s logo contest.Dave
chosen one turned outto have very
Stalin, and Mussolini, held
tried to get behind eachother,
Guile walked away with the prize
limitedcontact with thelow in- society and are in the snake pit of Hitler,
up asexamples of the“evils of forcingthe respective camps out
unable
to escape
this
of for his design of adouble-tailed
come group, but lotsof experience poverty,
leadership.”
financial morass. Are these people
opposite ends of the bar.
sheep bleating “Yea” and “Nay”
with tulips.
As the
conference
reached
a
Organizer
Schmoe
Toyota
terfrom
each
end.
The
minister
responsible
Bill to be forgotten - cast aside now
that our society feels ithas no need peak,members beganwandering
VanderZalm.isindeedtreating
-The
Totem Park Residence Association presents:
aimlessly in circles, chanting “No
the citizens of B.C. as if they were of them?
I thinkthesecitizens
of ‘our
__
Scott Griffin is a first-year arts province
should
be
treated
as
Another humor column from
student. Perspectives is a column humanbeings. not garbage - or
VerneMcDonald,resident
office
o,fopinion and analysis open to all
tulips. It’s timefor a new minister humorist.
members of the UBC Community. of human resources. Now.
I’m swe all who readthishave
their own viewsontheneeded
‘I
Passing the buckat the
foMowship conference
-
LATE PAYMENT OF FEES
A late payment fee of $35.00 additional t o all other fees will be assessed if
is notmade on orbeforeSeptember
23.
payment of the first instalment
Refund p f this fee will be considered onlyonthe
basis ofamedical
certificate covering illness or on evidence of domestic affliction. I f fees are
not paid in full by October
7 , 1977, registration will be canc:elled an8 the
student concerned excluded from classes.
NOMINATIONS
ART$ ELECI IONS
If a student whose registration has been cancelled for non-payment of fees
applies for reinstatement and the application
is approved by .the Registrar,
the student will be required t o pay a reinstatement fee of $35.00, the late
feeof $35.00, andallotheroutstanding
fees beforebeingpermitted
to
resume classes.
Vice Pres (1)
SRA Reps (2)
I
TUES. OCT. 4
WED. OCT. 5
WED. OCT. 12
FREESEE
I
Sponsored by the Office of the Dean of Women
With the support of The Leon and Thea Koerner Foundation
Id
Ir!
AMERICA
A PERSONAL HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES
OCT. 5 - NOV. 16
EVERY WEDNESDAY
Forms Available
in the A.U.S. Office
Buch. 107
at Totem Park Residence
-
12:35 p.m.
FRI. OCT. 14
WED. OCT. 19
SUN. OCT. 23
WED. OCT. 26
FRI. OCT. 28
MON. OCT. 31
COFFEE HOUSE
TOTEM
NIGHT*
with Dance
Contests, the GongShow,prizes
and lots of bears. 8 - 1 a.m.
- 8:30 p.m.
MOVIE
NIGHT
featuring AI
Pacino in the
Godfather I I
BAVARIAN
BLITZ
with live
German music and atmosphere.
TOTEM NIGHT * 8 - 1 a.m.
TOTEM CAR RALLY
DISCO DANCE 8 - 1 a.m.
TOTEM PARK BOOZE CRUISE *
aboard the “M.V. Malibu Princess”,
MANDRAKE
THE
MAGICIAN
HALLOWEEN FIREWORKS
(* Non-Resident students must be signed in)
ENJOY OCTOBER FOR A C H A N G E
FREE SUB AUDITORIUM
All Students, Faculty and Staff are invited.
- COME TO TOTEM =THE ENTERTAINMENT CENTRE OF U B C ! m
THE
Paae 6
Tuesday, October 4, 1977
UBYSSEY
I International Students'Program I
'T'ween classes
TODAY
CSA
WEDNESDAY
KAYAK AND CANOE CLUB
North
Thoppson
booze
crulse
organlzatlonalmeetlng,
Executlvemeetlng,
CCCM
General meetlng, n o o n , SUB 215.
n o o n , SUB
Snooker nlght, 7:30 p.m., SUB pool
hall.
Weekly fellowship, noon, SUB 205.
PRE-MEqSOCIETY
SlMS
- K U N G FU C L U B
Practlceandregistratlonfornew
members, 4:30 to 6:30 p.m., S U B
party room.
i n t r o d u cl et oc tr uy r e
transcendental
medltation.
Art
Young
speaks
Crlsls:
Challenge
General meeting, noon, S U B 212.
SUB 212.
NCELW
UM
BA N
Organizational meetlnq for weekend
trlp. noon, SUB 213.
on
noon,
Lunch
meetlng.
Voting Hours: 1 1 :00 a.m.
THURSDAY
Larry Hurtado, 7:30 p.m., Lutheran
Campus Centre lounge.
_.
1
lecture,
noon, S U B
LILH.
AMs SPECIAL EVENTS
on Canada In
uBc wind s y m p h o n y
t ot h eL e f t ,
noon,
noon. SUB auditorium.
J O NM
GY
- K U N Q FU C L U B
noon, SUB 119.
6:30
p.m.
Student memberships may be renewed to vote.
Nomination forms
received
until 9':30 a.m. Oct. 7.
Information re Election: obtainable fromthe Director
228-5021.
ECKANKAR CLUB
Introductory
n r.
- 3:OO
INTERNATIONAL HOUSE
CCF
Bu. 316.
YOUNG SOCIALISTS
N D P CLUB
CANOE CLUB
CHINESE STUDENTS'
ASSOCIATION
Cholr
7:15
to
n o o n , SUB
Explorlng
dance
technique
and
Improvisatlon, 3:30 t o 5:30 p.m.,
SUB party room.
noon,
Lecture o n generalpractlce,
I RC 1.
MY JONG
Freefllmserlesbeglns.
auditorlum.
CONTEMPORARY DANCE CLUB
n o o n , S U B party
Generalmeetlng,
room.
D E A N OF W O M E N ' S O F F I C E
CCF
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 7th
SAILING CLUB
General meetlng. noon, SUB 215.
cvc
I Committee ELECTIONS I
Cantonese class, noon, Bu. 2238-2239.
ECKANKAR CLUB
215.
5:30 p.m., S U B
234.
reglstratlon,
and
Practlce
p.m., S U B party
room.
4:30
to
p.m.,
9:15
international House.
CSA
noon,
Mandarin
class,
228-9512
Bu.
2238-2239.
LUTHERAN STUDENT
MOVEMENT
Supper
and
dlscusslon,
Lutheran Campus Centre.
6
SPECIALIZING IN
GREEK CUISINE
84 PIZZA
p.m..
-
.
.
"
Z
WOMEN'S COMMITTEE
Lesblan drop-In, noon, S U B 130.
General
organlzatlonal
meeting,
5:30 p.m., SUB 130.
Budgetdiscusslon, 4:30 p.m., S U B
TUESDAY, OCT. 4
130.
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE
ORGANIZATION
Testimony
meeting,
noon,
ROOM 130
SUB
212A.
ALL WOMEN WELCOME
300 TITLESAVAILABLE
IBETTER
I
-
budget discussion 4:30
general meeting 5:30
ALSO GARAGES
BASEMENTS
I
I
LARGEST SELECTION OF REVIEW NOTES IN B.C.
I ISUS NEEDS A T-SHIRT!I
BUY
B O O K I~
224-41
4393 VV. 10th Ave.
44
A.M.S. Special Events presents
U.B.C. WIND SYMPHONY
bSu"ms
I
moderately p r e s e n t s 1
Thursday Oct. 6th
STEREO
AWARENESS
-
,
-
FREE - FREE
IThe Co-operative Campus1
IMinistry invites you
1
..
'
5" Coming Events
FRIDAYHAPPY
30
263-0878
,
.
. .. .
Salesperson
ECOLOGY ORIENTED environ-
ANEW
ment club is being formed. All those
interested in becoming
involved
in
the club,pleasecontactPaulat
734e211 orStarletat
6720271 or 437-
Film Series.
-"
.
.
- Jobs (Continued)
HOUR. YAC, at Cecil
Sept. 23, 4
Green
Park,
beginning
to 6 p.m.
EV-
I'
i,
~
ery Wed., 1235 p.m. SUB Aud. F r e e
2053 W: 41st
Vancouver
,
Classified ads are not accepted by telephone and are payable i n
advance. Deaaiine is 1 1:30 a.m., the day before publication.
Publications Office, Room 24 1, S.U.B., UBC, Van., B. C. V6T ICV5
~
"You Deserve the
Difference"
. , ,
-
1254
STEREO
AWARENES
.
RATES: Campus 3 lines, 1 day $1.50; additional lines 35c.
Commercial
3 lines, 1 day $2.50; additional lines
50c. Additional days $2.25 and 45c.
FREESEE: America Starting Oct. 5.
A S t o rWe i t h
A
Difference! No Gimmicks,
no House
Brands,
no
Rip-offs. What we offer is
Quality Brand
Names,
known for Performance
and True Value, at Super
Low Prices.
.. ..
T H E CLASSlFlEDS
SUB AUDITORIUM
FREE
...
I sus OFFICE BY WED. OCT. 12 .I
12:30 p.m.
Sat 7:OO & 9:30 7 %
There wlll be n o bar servlce
I
BRING YOUR BRAINSTORMS, FANTASIES,
NIGHTMARES WHATEVER.. .TO THE
."
"
~~
~~~~~
~-
Apply
tober 6, 12:30 a t Hillel House.
We areopen t o all those involved in the struggle for
meaning and meaningful action. We are representatives
ofthe ANGLICAN-UNITED CHURCHES AND THE
STUDENT CHRISTIAN
MOVEMENT
a t U.B.C.
I
Events:
Weekly Worship: Wed. 4:30
p.m.;
Weekly
Pot
Lucks:
Wed.
5:30 p.m.;
Fall
Retreat: October 15 t o 17;
Philip Potter World
of
Council . of Churcheson
Liberation
Study
Groups.
10 - For Sale - Commercial
I
1
~
-
: 65 - Scandals
'
SUBFILMS
REPEALS
, presents "Lucky
I
j 70 - Services
"
"
in season. 25c per
Okanaganfruit
pound
by
the
case. Free delivery.
73S-8828 or 733-1677 eves.
~
'
1I
25 - Instruction
-
~~
60 - Rides
ORGANICALLY GROWN, UNSPRAYED
prohibiton, and
Lady" this weekend.
OUT OF PRINT books
searched.
Fh%
tion or non-fiction. Write
Steve
Slavik, 401 Ker Ave., Victoria, B.C.
V9A12B8 f o r debtails.
t
PIANO LESSONS by experienced teach-
er.Graduate
of JuilliardSchool
Music. Bothbeginnersandadvanced.
students welcome. 731-0601.
!'
of
30 - Jobs
-
80 - Tutorina
~
~
"
85 - Typing
~
B.C. certificaterequiredfornewtutorial
service.Phone 228-9631, 738-8053.
QUALIFIED TEACHERS with
__~_
Rev. George Hermanson is our chaplain and is available
for counselling
and
talking. We are found a t the
Lutheran Campus Centre (University andWesbrook) Come Around.
j
11 - For Sale - Private
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I
40 - Messages
~
Thursday, Oc-
for approx.
PUBLICATIONS
OFFICE
RoOm 141K S.U.B.
Deadline Oct. 5, 1977
~
F I L M "ISRAELTODAY"
requ1r.d
I
~~
~~
~
~
'
~
Reasonable
731-1807.12 noon to 9 p.m.
EXCELLENT
TYPING.
rates.Call
~
99 -Miscellaneous
RESPONSIBLE INDIVIDUAL neededfor
girl seven, andlight
childcare,one
housekeeping,everydayafterschool.
Good pay for rightperson.Someflexibility.Phoneafter
6 p.m. 228-8524.
,
1
ANY PERSON INTERESTED in learning
HAP-KI DO pleasecontactJimmy
Lee, telephone 224-9679.
UBYSSEY CLASSIFIED GET RESULTS
Tuesday,
4, 1977
T H E
Page 7
UBYSSEY
____
Football ’Birds stumble
to victory over Dinosaurs
“I’d rather look badandwin,
than look good and lose. Today we
won. ’’
So spoke UBC head
football
coach
Frank
Smith
after
the
Thunderbirds
defeated
the
University of CalgaryDinosaurs
34-14 atThunderbirdStadium
Saturday.
WIFL STANDINGS
W L
T
Pts. F
3 0 1 7 9 2 5
2 2 0 4 6 1 8
2 2 0 4 7 3 7
Alberta
Calgary
Manitoba
A
3
5
7
IJBC
1
Sask.
1 3 0 2 5 2 6 3
2
1 3 103 99
UBC looked badearly
in the
game when a 50-yard first quarter
march was halted on the visitor’s
one yard line, andagain when
Dinosaur’s John McCorquindale
recovered a blocked Calgary field
goalattemptandranfor
a first
down.
UBC’s defenceheldCalgaryto
two early field goals, however, and
”craig heale photo
I
.
quarter. Wanvig replaced starter
the ’Birds began to get untracked
late in the secondquarter. With Darrell Moir, who was shaken up
less than a’ minute left in the first in thelastquarter.
The final touchdown came when
half, JohnTureckirecovereda
linebacker
Marsh
fumbleon Calgary’s17-yard line. A UBC outside
MacLeod intercepted aDinosaur
touchdown swingpassfromDan
30 yards for
Smith to Paul Pearsonon the next pass and returned it
11:41 of thelast
play gave UBC a 13-6 halftime the majorat
period.
lead.
UBC’s offence, despite
some
“I’m concerned aboutour lack of
still
piled up
a
“We inconsistency,
consistency,”
said
Smith.
needa
betterpassrushand
a sizeable amountof yardage. Smith
our deep passedfor 153 yards, while Gord
biggereffortfrom
Penn and Glen Wallace ran for 64
backs.”
and 107 yards respectively. Overall
The next of the big plays which
a UBC rolled up 342 yards in total
won the game for the ’Birds was
offence to 289 for Calgary.
20-yardtouchdownpassfrom
Coach Smith voiced disapproval
SmithtoPearsonearly
in the
second half, increasing UBC’s lead of this season’sschedule,which
has the ’Birds playing three games
to 20-6.
in eight days. UBC visits Calgary
Greg
Gardener,
taking
over
today inthe second game of a backfromSmith
early inthethird
and
meets
the
quarter, madethe score 27-6 when to-back series
Bisons
he scampered 19 yards into the end University of Manitoba
Saturday in Winnipeg.
zone at 2:19 of the fourth period.
Smithsaidheexpectsstrong
Calgary’s only major came on a
competition in today’s game.
oneyardkeeperbyquarterback
“If I beat your ass the first time,
Kirk Wanvig a t 5:28 of the fourth
you’ll want to beatmyassthe
second time,” he said.
UBC 1-3 in soccer league,
off on exhibition road trip
-
ByGRAY KYLES
The’Birdsstarted a fivegame
The UBC Thunderbirdssoccer
road tripin Colorado andUtah
team continues to hover near the
Monday.
cellar of the B.C. SeniorSoccer
On Wednesday
at
Capilano
League First Division, with a 1-3
UBC
record, after it was defeated2-0 by Stadium,Columbusbombed
Dover Olympics Saturday.
7-3.
The Olympics have won all four
of their regular season games and
when the Old Boys were assesseda racked up their third shut-out by
By TOM BARNES
penalty inside the five yard line. blanking the’Birds at Capilano
Three times in the last four years
‘Bird
captain
Preston
Wiley Stadium.
the
Thunderbird
rugby
team
elected
to
go
for
the
penalty
kick
UBC coach Joe Johnson was
started the season by losing to the
unhappywith theresult, but felt his
UBC Old Boys in the annual Moore rather than attempt to run it in.
AWARENESS
playersworkedhard
throughout
Mug game.Thetrend
continued Whyte was wide by inchesand
Jenkins
scored
off
the
ensuing
The
STEREO
AWARENESS
the
match.
Saturday a t Jericho Park as the
points, the Old
advertisement o n Page 14 of
“I think we had the game in the
’Birds fell victim the
to Old Boys 20- play.Up byten
Boys’ containedthe‘Birdswith
Tuesday, September 13 lists a n
first half, we had several chances
13 in a well -played match.
incorrect phone number.
hard tackling and power running but they just didn’t payoff,” he
With f ive new faces in the scrum up the middleby
Hindson and said after the game.“We began to
THE NUMBER
this year the ‘Birdsweregiving
Henrickson until very late in the
SHOULD H A V E R E A D
slip in the secondhalf and made a
away a lot of sue and experience game.
bad mistake forming a wall on a n
to the Old Boys forwards.While the
“It
was
simply
a matter of indirect kick.”
Thunderbirds held theirown in the taking the percentage play,” said
The
Ubyssey
regrets
any
Johnson was referringto a Dover
set scrums the Old Boys took the Wiley after the game. L‘Wewould
inconvenience caused STEREO
free
kick
in
the
72nd
indirect
loose ball for most of thegame. have been within a penalty kick of
AWARENESS or their customers.
minute. Because the.ball must be
The Old Boys backs took ad- tying thescoreandtherewas
touched by a player other than the
vantage of constant possession to plenty 9f time to come back. It’s
kickerbeforeenteringthegoal,
movedangerously
on many oc- prettyrough to run in fromthat
there was no need for the ’Birds to
casions.
closeof apenalty, there wasa good form the defensive wall.
InjuriesforcedThunderbird
chance the whole thing would have
The ‘Birds were bunched up in
coach Dmnn Spence to jury rig his just amounted to a 25-yard scrum front of thegoalafterthekick,
backfield.Internationalcentre
in the end.”
giving Dover lots.of playing room.
David
Whyte
was
shifted
to
Itappearsthe’Birdshave
BrianWright
smashedtheball
fullback, andhe cooly returned anotherstrongrugbyside
this passed‘BirdsgoalkeeperJim
kicks under pressure.
as Kitsul to open the scoring.
season.
The
backfield
is
division
The backs moved the ball well, dangerous asanyfirst
Alan Regan added theinsurance
but errant passesshowed itwas the side in Vancouver and the scrum is goal in the 87thminute afterKitsul
not far off the mark.
came too far out of thenetand
first game of the year.
Tim Lott staked theOld Boys to a
This weekend the ‘Birds travel
to bungleda save. Regan, who was
10-4 lead in thefirsthalf,sandAbbokfordfora
two-day tour- standing to Kitsul’s right, took the
a nament.
wiching penaltykicksaround
ball and chipped it into the goal.
Roy Hindson try. Flyhalf Gary
Hiryama scored UBC’s pQints with
a try.Inthesecondhalf,
Rob
JenkinsandGarthHendrickson
scored tries for the Old Boys and
Lottaddedaconvert.
Jim Burnham scored a try for the Birds as
heconverted a drive built around a
long run by Hiryama. Whyte
rounded
out
the
score
with
a
convert and penalty kick.
The turning point of the match
came just before Jenkin’s try early
in the second half. The ‘Birds had
driven deep into Old Boy territory
GORD PENN . . fights for yardage
Rugby ‘Birds hold own
but full to Old Boys
STEREO
263-0878
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Page 8
THE
Tuesday, October 4, 1977
UBYSSEY
neck, face and all parts of the body. Relax more
deeply as you go along.
Use this technique 20 to 30 minutes once or twice a
By LLOYANNE IIURD
Life for a student can be full of hassles and stress.
,+-,,,.
To help students and others deal with this problem,
UBC P%’choloW counsellorDu-FaYDer has devisedSystematicrelaxationis
a progessivemethod of
several
methods
of reducing
stress.
relaxing
muscle
groups.
The
usual
method
is
to start
in withone or two muscle groups and-include others
‘‘Strf%s is a normal and necessary occurrence
the life of a student but over-stress and under-stress
can be harmful,” he said Thursday.
To use this method start with the right
foot, tighten
“An organism that never encounters stress hasno your toes for five seconds and relax them for five
purpose in life and simply dies,” Der said.
seconds.Thentightenyourfootmusclesforfive
“However;when stress on an individualcomes
second.
Repeat this
all
the
way up your
from too many
and cannot be pinminted body includingyourstomach,chest,shoulders,arms,
over-stress occurs and hypertension, nervous breakneck and face,
downs, and ulcers result.”
“These methods are an alternative for the usual
Procrastination, sleeping more than usual, waking methods
if treating stress with tranquillizers,” Der
up tired and insomnia are allsymptoms of stress that said.
victim
The
of stress usually has two negative,
may be repressed or unidentified.
and entering exam
are solutions totheproblem.Thefirstis
to continue in the
Studying for
both equally high stress incidents. Students suffering strgsfdsituation with no hope for improvement. The
from over-stress procrastinate and put off studying second is to r107away from the situation.
until thelast minute. As aresult,theysufferguiltand
Often t h y
an unconsc~ousdecision todevelop
apprehension that heightens the.stress.
physical symptoms suchas migraine headaches and
Der’s meditation
technique
mvolves breathing
bckaches.
exercises. Sit in a comfortable chair in a quiet, dim
these
symptoms
with
Doctors often treat
r*m*
your
breath in and Out and then tranquillizersand the health problem becomesgood
a
make a sound such as “peace.”
to terms wththe stressful
excuse fornotcoming
Do this twiceaday
for 15 minutes. If you getsituation.
can be expected with any change in a
distracted and loseyoursound just return to it. Do not$‘StrgS
meditate before bedtimeor immediately after meals, person’s life,” D~~ said. “Even dating, while it may
he suggests.
be a pleasant experience, can be stressful.
Auto-hypnosis also requires a quiet, dim room. Sit
out problems with friends who don’t to
try
<<Talking
!in a comfortable, high-back chair with hands on lap avoid or change the subject is one
of the best ways of
” J
Contact gained
at conference
STUDENT . . . under constant stress
HASYOURLUNCH BEEN GIVING YOU
A CASE OF THEBLAHSLATELY?
T h e nw h y not try adelicious,
but reasonablypriced
gourmetChinesemealatDeansWayLamRestaurant,
conveniently located at 4544 West 10th.
.
From page 2
conferences, perhaps a better mix
itmay
can be found.Although
entail
certain
difficulties,
organizers should look outside the
Alma
Mater
Society,
undergraduatesocieties,clubsand
fraternities for some delegates.
Were the students indoctrinated?
No, butwe wereprovided all-too
an
rarefirst-handglimpseintothe
thinking of faculty
and
administration leaders, and they got
to size up students.
It was profitable for both sides,
because
most
people
left
with
fewermisconceptionsthanthey
came with. A number of people
harbored misconceptions about
The Ubyssey, for instance, but left
Elphinstone with a balanced view.
I hope the conference will lead to
a morefaculty-admin-student
contacts, because that is the only
waystudentscanenhancetheir
power and influence.
And, oh yes, the food was great.
WHY AREOURPRICESLOW?
Because t h e meals are prepared by student chefs enrolled
in the
Gourmet
Chinese
Cooking
Program
of the
Vancouver Vocational Institute.
THEMEALS MAY BE INEXPENSIVE
BUT THE SERVICE AND FOOD S
I FIRST-RATE
’
UNISEX APQMNTMENT
HAIRSTYLES
Deans is open for lunch from 11:30 a.m. t o 2 p.m.,
Tuesday through Friday.
FOR
224-1922
224-9116
‘
9
COME IN 7ODAY AND GIVE DEANS A 7RY
5784 University (Next to Bank of Commercc!
SCIENCE
UNDERGRADUATE
SOCIETY
That’s Right -
TWO
I
DOUBLE DISCO
Discos Happening in
the same building simultaneously.
Your choice or both.
-
Friday, October 7th 8:30 p.m. 1:00 a.m.
At the Graduate Student Centre
Free Punch and Soft Drinks
I.D. Required
Advance Tickets = Show S.O.S. I.D. Card .50c
Non-Science Student $1 .so
will cost more at the door.
I
I
Advance
tickets
during
noon
hour,at
available at the AMS business office or
the S.U.S. office Room 216 Auditorium Annex.
-