by the canadian university press vsrsser · black sabbath vol. 4 ws 1887—paranoid--black sabbath...

8
Eastern its stv ent unio n boycott individual institutions . The Loyola proposal drew on the example of FEQ wher e Quebec is divided into si x regional government bodies . The regions elect a maximu m of 100 delegates to a general assembly, but representatio n is not based on population . Montreal has about 60 per cent of the students but only 30 assembly delegates and other regions have at least 11 . The Quebec delegate s contended that the metho d prevents one power bloc fro m controlling the organization . Each region must meet befor e an assembly meeting t o develop positions scheduled for discussion at the assembly . The proposed constitution called for representation fro m See page 8 : WES T By THE CANADIA N UNIVERSITY PRES S OTTAWA — Delegates fro m 44 . Canadian universities an d community college s established a new nationa l student union Sunday, but no t before Quebec and Maritim e representatives had walke d out . Creation of the Nationa l Union of Students/Associatio n Nationale des Etudiant s followed three days o f protracted, and sometime s tedious debate on a con- stitution proposed by a four - member steering committee , set up at a previous conferenc e at Windsor, Ont . last May . But the fledglin g organization's _ future is un- certain because potentia l members must conduct referendums on their cam- puses before being allowed t o join . Although a few studen t student councils had alread y authorized their delegates t o join the new union, only Simo n Fraser University has con - ducted the necessar y referendum . Delegates authorized th e central committee or NU S executive to solicit grants from potential members to finance its formative stages . The conference was perhap s the largest gathering o f Canadian student counci l representatives since th e dissolution of the old Canadia n Union of Students in 1969 . The Quebec-Atlanti c provinces walkout occurre d after delegates reached a bitter impasse over methods of membership in the new union . Quebec representatives, wh o came from the Englis h speaking universities and some English and Frenc h community colleges , demanded representatio n based on region . Loyola, which introduced the proposal , wanted all NUS delegates to b e appointed by regional student unions, with all five regions of Canada having equal votin g power . They were especiall y adamant that thei r representation come from th e growing Front des Etudiants du Quebec, rather than fro m THE vsrssE r Vol . LIV, No . 16 VANCOUVER, B.C ., TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1972 49 228-230 1 ITS NOT THE BAY muses tired shopper, but the Alma Mater Society craft sho p and co-op bookstore located in SUB basement has all kinds of groovy stuff like —ed dubois photo books you can actually afford and scratchy records and magazines and far ou t love beads and for those of you with strange tastes — leathers . AMS n Michael Warsh of SFU while Ball is a member at large . Ball said it was felt another con- ference was needed while the curren t student's councils are in power . This will probably be held February 8-11, i n Regina . The central committee will finaliz e the time and place at their meeting i n Vancouver during the Christma s break, she said . "It may take another year to a yea r and a half before we have somethin g functional with everybody represen- ted," Ball said . Despite the limited results of th e weekend conference she said she fel t the organization would succeed . "There is a great need for a nationa l organization of this kind and we aren' t as far apart from agreement as it ma y seem," said Ball . "Everyone is still afraid of wha t happened to CUS," she said . "We hav e to establish a trust and faith in eac h other . Then we'll succeed . " By KEN DODI) The Alma Mater Society has ten- tatively donated $1,000 to th e development of the new National Unio n of Students . The allocation of funds was approve d by AMS representatives at th e organization's founding conference thi s past weekend, in Ottawa . This was done as a show of good fait h imtlie future of the union, AMS externa l affairs officer;. Teri Ball., said Monday . Monday . The motion must pass throug h council before the funds can b e released, however . UBC is the only university which ha s yet indicated it will release such fund s at this time . Ball said 10 to 15,000 dollars ar e needed over the next six months t o cover operational costs . This woul d include the hiring of an executive secretary to act as a co-ordinatin g person . Eventually the organization plans t o apply to the federal government fo r funds as well, she said . Once the NUS begins to function th e bulk of the costs will be borne by an- nual fees paid by the students o f member student councils she said . The exact fees haven't yet bee n established but "they won't be mor e than 20 cents per student," said Ball . Each student council's membershi p must be approved by a referendum o f its students . Ball said she won't ask for th e referendum to be called until the exac t fee is established . This should be known by the end of January . Ball said she was disappointed in th e conference . She said it was poorl y planned and often chaotic, with muc h bickering between delegations . Eventually the delegates fro m Quebec and the Maritimes walked out . She they were interested in the union but because of internal problems were not prepared to join at this time . Quebec students are planning to go on strike next week because of a dispute with their department of education over compulsory classroo m attendance . The Maritimes are trying to get thei r own regional organization off the ground and felt the nationa l organization would conflict with thei r present interests, Ball said . Eventually a constitution was agree d upon by the 28 universities and com- munity colleges remaining . It was decided that the organizatio n would meet twice yearly, in spring an d fall . The sites of the conferences wil l rotate in order to promote nationa l $laity, she said . A central committee of 10 people, on e from each province, was elected, a s well as three members at large . B .C .' s central committee representative is

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Page 1: By THE CANADIAN UNIVERSITY PRESS vsrssEr · Black Sabbath Vol. 4 WS 1887—Paranoid--Black Sabbath BR 2077—Fog Hat BS 2552—Ten Years To-gether—Peter, Paul & Mary BS 2562—Master

Eastern

its stv ent unio nboycott

individual institutions .The Loyola proposal drew on

the example of FEQ whereQuebec is divided into sixregional government bodies .The regions elect a maximu mof 100 delegates to a generalassembly, but representationis not based on population .Montreal has about 60 per centof the students but only 30assembly delegates and otherregions have at least 11 .

The Quebec delegate scontended that the methodprevents one power bloc fromcontrolling the organization .Each region must meet beforean assembly meeting todevelop positions scheduled fordiscussion at the assembly .

The proposed constitutioncalled for representation fro m

See page 8 : WEST

By THE CANADIA NUNIVERSITY PRES S

OTTAWA — Delegates fro m44 . Canadian universities an dcommunity college sestablished a new nationa lstudent union Sunday, but notbefore Quebec and Maritimerepresentatives had walkedout .

Creation of the NationalUnion of Students/AssociationNationale des Etudiant sfollowed three days o fprotracted, and sometime stedious debate on a con-stitution proposed by a four-member steering committee ,set up at a previous conferenceat Windsor, Ont . last May .But the fledgling

organization's _ future is un-certain because potentia lmembers must conduct

referendums on their cam-puses before being allowed tojoin. Although a few studentstudent councils had alreadyauthorized their delegates tojoin the new union, only SimonFraser University has con-ducted the necessaryreferendum .

Delegates authorized th ecentral committee or NU Sexecutive to solicit grants frompotential members to financeits formative stages .

The conference was perhapsthe largest gathering o fCanadian student counci lrepresentatives since thedissolution of the old CanadianUnion of Students in 1969 .

The Quebec-Atlanti cprovinces walkout occurredafter delegates reached abitter impasse over methods ofmembership in the new union .

Quebec representatives, whocame from the Englishspeaking universities and

some English and Frenc hcommunity colleges ,demanded representatio nbased on region . Loyola, whichintroduced the proposal,wanted all NUS delegates to b eappointed by regional studentunions, with all five regions ofCanada having equal votingpower. They were especiallyadamant that theirrepresentation come from thegrowing Front des Etudiantsdu Quebec, rather than from

THE vsrssErVol. LIV, No. 16

VANCOUVER, B.C., TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1972

49 228-230 1

ITS NOT THE BAY muses tired shopper, but the Alma Mater Society craft sho pand co-op bookstore located in SUB basement has all kinds of groovy stuff like

—ed dubois photo

books you can actually afford and scratchy records and magazines and far ou tlove beads and for those of you with strange tastes — leathers .

AMSn

Michael Warsh of SFU while Ball is amember at large .

Ball said it was felt another con-ference was needed while the currentstudent's councils are in power . Thiswill probably be held February 8-11, inRegina .

The central committee will finalizethe time and place at their meeting inVancouver during the Christma sbreak, she said .

"It may take another year to a yea rand a half before we have somethin gfunctional with everybody represen-ted," Ball said .

Despite the limited results of theweekend conference she said she fel tthe organization would succeed .

"There is a great need for a nationa lorganization of this kind and we aren' tas far apart from agreement as it ma yseem," said Ball .

"Everyone is still afraid of wha thappened to CUS," she said . "We haveto establish a trust and faith in eachother. Then we'll succeed . "

By KEN DODI)The Alma Mater Society has ten-

tatively donated $1,000 to th edevelopment of the new National Unionof Students .

The allocation of funds was approve dby AMS representatives at theorganization's founding conference thi spast weekend, in Ottawa .

This was done as a show of good faithimtlie future of the union, AMS externa laffairs officer;. Teri Ball., said Monday .Monday .

The motion must pass throughcouncil before the funds can bereleased, however .

UBC is the only university which hasyet indicated it will release such fund sat this time .

Ball said 10 to 15,000 dollars areneeded over the next six months tocover operational costs. This wouldinclude the hiring of an executivesecretary to act as a co-ordinatin gperson .

Eventually the organization plans toapply to the federal government fo rfunds as well, she said .

Once the NUS begins to function thebulk of the costs will be borne by an-nual fees paid by the students o fmember student councils she said .

The exact fees haven't yet beenestablished but "they won't be morethan 20 cents per student," said Ball .

Each student council's membershipmust be approved by a referendum ofits students .

Ball said she won't ask for thereferendum to be called until the exac tfee is established . This should beknown by the end of January .

Ball said she was disappointed in theconference . She said it was poorlyplanned and often chaotic, with muc hbickering between delegations .

Eventually the delegates fro mQuebec and the Maritimes walked out .She they were interested in the union

but because of internal problems werenot prepared to join at this time .

Quebec students are planning to goon strike next week because of adispute with their department ofeducation over compulsory classroo mattendance .

The Maritimes are trying to get thei rown regional organization off theground and felt the nationalorganization would conflict with thei rpresent interests, Ball said .

Eventually a constitution was agree dupon by the 28 universities and com-munity colleges remaining .

It was decided that the organizatio nwould meet twice yearly, in spring andfall . The sites of the conferences willrotate in order to promote national$laity, she said .

A central committee of 10 people, onefrom each province, was elected, a swell as three members at large . B .C .' scentral committee representative is

Page 2: By THE CANADIAN UNIVERSITY PRESS vsrssEr · Black Sabbath Vol. 4 WS 1887—Paranoid--Black Sabbath BR 2077—Fog Hat BS 2552—Ten Years To-gether—Peter, Paul & Mary BS 2562—Master

Page 2 -

THE UBYSSEY

Tuesday, November 7, 1972

Classroom reportBy JOSIE BANNERMA N

A wise somebody once said itis much nicer to look at onepicture than to listen to, orread, 1,000 words . ,Thereforethe two-part pictures here arephotosynthesis .

Professor Charles Beil toldthe Biology 102, section 8 classabout photosynthesis at 1 :3CMonday in Wesbrook 100 . Bei lis a guest lecturer on loan fro mthe botany department .

Photosynthesis is basic tolife . By this process plantsproduce carbohydrates fro mcarbon dioxide and water .Animals eat plants, and peopl eeat both .

Beil said photosynthesis ca nbe divided into two processes .

The light reaction, which ca nbe broken down further intocyclic and non-cyclic'photophosphorylation . The'product

of

cyclic!photophosphorylation is

adenosine triphosphate ,familiarly called ATP . Non -cyclic photophosphorylationinvolves the production ofmore ATP, and the transfer o f3lectrons to nicotinamideadenine dinucleotid ephosphate (NADP) to formNADPH2 .

ATP and MACPH2 are bot hhigh energy compoundsbecause they store energ yfrom sunlight . They are bothutilized in the dark reaction fo rthe production of sugars, saidBeil .

Cyclic and non-cyclicphotophosphorylation bothhappen on the lamellae of th echloroplasts because that' swhere the light is .

The dark reaction is con-cerned with the transformatio nof carbon dioxide in to car-bohydrate . "The dark reactio ndoesn't have to happen in thedark," said Beil. "It is justcalled the dark reactionbecause it doesn't require ligh tto happen, but it can happen inthe light .

"The dark reaction you willrecall, utilizes the light energ ystored in ATP and NADPH2.

Beil lectures quickly. This i sgood if one's homework i sdone, and bad if it isn't .

However, he drawsdiagrams, writes out the bigwords and makes frequentreferences to the text . One doesget a second chance .

Students in Biology 102section 8 have three hours oflectures a week (MWF : 1 :30Wesbrook 100) and a three-hour lab .

Lab and lecture topic ssometimes coincide, but notalways. This term in the lab ,students have been studyingthe functional anatomy o fplants and animals .This means they have beendissecting, or examinin gprepared dissections of plants ,frogs, turtles and dog fish t ofind out how various system ssuch as digestive, circulatory ,vascular, locomotive andsupport have developed tcenable the plant or animal tosurvive .

Very interesting .TORONTO (CUP) — The Association o f

Universities and Colleges of Canada decidedWednesday a report it had commissioned o nuniversity research needed more study by bot hgovernments and the universities .

The final session of the AUCC conferenceheard reports of workshops on various topicsincluded in "Quest for the Optimum", a reporton rationalization of university research, butleft all substantive issues to its board ofdirectors .

University of Manitoba president Ernes tSirluck said a majority of members in hi sworkshop on planning research accepted thenecessity for more planning of research i nunversities, as suggested by the report .

"A less substantial "majority found th ereport was not workable in large establisheduniversities," Sirluck said .

Another discussion group on research andteaching in graduate studies and the

AUCC report needs studyhumanities, recommended researchh funding beexamined by the federal government .

In the same workshop, Queen's Universityengineering dean R. J. Uffen chastizeduniversities for downgrading undergraduateteaching .

"Canadian universities must revise theirresearch policies and devote the same attentionto undergraduate teaching and reflectiveinquiry as they do to frontier research an dgraduate teaching," he said . His recom-mendation was similar to one in the report .

A workshop on social responsibility inresearch agreed the peer system is still the bestway to evaluate research . But, as former TrentUniversity president T . H. B . Symons reported,the group thought more study was needed o nalternative methods of evaluation and onresearch structure, guidelines and procedure .Symons was a key policy advisor to th eProgressive Conservative Party's recentfederal election campaign .

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Page 3: By THE CANADIAN UNIVERSITY PRESS vsrssEr · Black Sabbath Vol. 4 WS 1887—Paranoid--Black Sabbath BR 2077—Fog Hat BS 2552—Ten Years To-gether—Peter, Paul & Mary BS 2562—Master

Tuesday, November 7, 1972

THE UBYSSEY

Page 3

Seale backs SMCNov. 18 day ofanti-war protest

CYCLISTS TAKE NOTE, muses enquiring Ubysseypath construction . Ditch, located on Chancello rmedical student Howard Goldman's back .

—audits singh phot o

reporter Gary Coull, on the depths of faulty bikeBoulevard route is the one which almost brok e

ExposureBy ART SMOLENSK Y

One of the more recent in-novations on this campus thatis geared to separating thestudent from his professor i sthe inadequate elevator ser-vice in the new Buchana ntower (MacMillan-BlodelBuilding, junior) .

It must be conceded tha tJohn Young,former Arts dea nand designer of the building ,has never been very interestedin the great flock of un-dergraduates who will use thebuilding, but really John, thisis too much .

Before the building wasconstructed, the Otis elevato rcompany, who were to be thesuppliers of the elevators ran asimple computer program tosee what the projected needs o fthe building would be .

The results of the studyshowed that five elevatorsshould be installed .

The result of John Young' splanning : three elevators inthe middle of an alienatingfoyer .

In addition to the in-convience of the slow elevatorservice, there are some safetyfactors which have bee nshaved to the margin .

What if some poor professoris asleep on the top floor whe nthe fire bell goes ?

Does he/she punch th eelevator button and wait fo rhalf an hour?

Does the university have anappropriate fire ladder toreach the top floor of that hig ha building?

"I'm paranoid about jum-ping out of a 10th storey win-dow," commented economicsgraduate student RobinHanvelt yesterday,"if only Iwere on the seventh . "

One outside observersuggested that the universitybuild an artificial mountainbeside the building with littl etunnels going to each floo rlevel . Besides being a goo daccess route to upper floors i twould provide a winter skislope and also help to hide oneside of the building .

Seriously, a temporar ysolution for the traffic jam i nthe building would be to makeone of the three elevators anexpress to the top floor .

By GARY COULL

U .S. Black Panther chair-man Bobby Seale endorsed thestudent mobilization com -mittee's call for an in-ternational day of protest Nov .18 against the Vietnam war .Seale was the keynote

speaker at SMC's first nationalconference last weekend i nToronto .

He arrived in Canada understrict security and was aske dto leave immediately after hi sspeech .

The conference was held t oformally organize SMC and toplan the Nov. 18 day of protest .

Two representatives fromUBC, Stuart Russell and DickTennant, both in arts 1, at-tended the conference with a$150 Alma Mater Society gran tplus funds they raised oncampus .

Russell said 17 universitiesand eight high schools wererepresented along with theVietnam mobilization com-mittee and the women' scoalition for abortion repeal ,Young Socialist organizations .

Four Vietnamese student sspoke on the Thieu regime an dthe necessity of continuingprotests, he said .

Other speakers includedMcGill political scienc eprofessor S .J . Noumoff, authorof How to Make a Killingand Claire Culhane, author ofWhy is Canada in Vietnam? .

Noumoff's report concernsCanadian economic in-volvment in Pentagon aid .

Russell said Presiden tNixon's peace proposals wer ediscussed and the conferencefelt the proposals werepolitical ploys .

"Nixon favors a nine-poin tproposal whereas we want aone-point proposal : out now . "

He said Lyndon Johnson ranas a peace candidate as di d

Another solution might be toadd the two missing elevatorsto the outside of the buildingsince installation of the twoinside would now be verycostly .

The erection and executionof this building has been fromstart to finish a visualstatement that there is no lon grange planning on this campus .

Both the physical plant andthe academic content of thecampus are subject to thewhims of a few of the powerfuland are done without theconsideration of the man yindividuals involved .

The construction of th eBuchanan tower and the

Nixon yet the number of bombshas been steadily increasing .

"We don ' t trust Nixo nbecause he has made peac eincentives before. We feel he i sa war worker not a peac eworker . "

Russell said the conferenc edid not come out in favor of—McGovern either .

"The only solution is throug hthe anti-war movement .

"Even China and the Soviet .Union are letting the Viet-namese down," he said .

Russell said even if Nixon' speace proposal was signe dbefore Nov . 18 the protes twould take place to re-enforc ethe movement .

The movement is outlined i nan action proposal SMC co -ordinator Barry Godso npresented which was endorsedby the national conference .

Among the proposals is thetotal immediate unconditionalwithdrawl of all U .S. forcesfrom Vietnam ; an end toCanada's complacency abou tthe war and getting Canadaout of the North AtlanticTreaty Organization, NorthAmerican Air Defence and theInternational Control Com-mission .

Russell said the purpose ofSMC in the future will be toeducate the people about thewar .

"For example we don't wan tCanadian troops to act in anypeace capacity in Vietnamafter the war ends. Most peoplewould think this was a goodidea but we would only bepuppets to the U .S . "

Russell said he believes theconference represented amajority of Canadians andAmericans .

Therefore they are pressin gthe New Democratic party t ocome through with thei rpolicies of ending the war an dCanada's complacency .

subsequent scattering o fseveral social scienc edepartments only contribute sto the isolation of thes edepartments from each otherand re-enforces the need ofprograms such as Arts I .

** *The Hudson' s Bay com-

pany's latest promotiona lgimmick borders on consume rfraud. The `cheque' belowlooks like a $100 gift . All you dois sign the back of it, right ?Wrong !

If you look at the small printon the back you find that ifsigned you are more or lessrequired to buy $100 worth ofstuff from the Bay .

Allan McGavin, a director ofthe Hudson's Bay Companyand chairman of the UBCBoard of Governors, should beashamed of his participation i nthis venture .

Hopefully he will publiclyrebuke Peter Buckley ,Western region generalmanager of the Bay an dperpetrator of this nifty littlescheme .

I can only imagine that theBay's business must hav edropped off considerably o flate for them to sink to thesedepths .

Page 4: By THE CANADIAN UNIVERSITY PRESS vsrssEr · Black Sabbath Vol. 4 WS 1887—Paranoid--Black Sabbath BR 2077—Fog Hat BS 2552—Ten Years To-gether—Peter, Paul & Mary BS 2562—Master

Page 4

THE UBYSSEY

Tuesday, November 7, 1972

I

Nationaldisaster

The new national student union is a disaster .The National Union of Students as it was named thi s

weekend in Ottawa, is also a farce. It has no representationbeyond Ontario's eastern border .

A "national" student union shouldn't exist if it can' tget through its founding conference without alienatingabout one-third of the country .

Quebec and the Atlantic provinces walked out of th econference about half way through when an equitabl esolution could not be found for membership criteria .

The conference should have ended there . Out of the 5 1universities attending only 39 were left and they were fro mOntario, the Prairies and B.C.

How this organization can claim to have a national basi sis beyond us. It makes no sense at all .

In fact, the whole concept of this organization make sno sense.

Following the first conference last May the organizer ssaid the organization would be non-political and woul davoid the controversial course taken by its predecessor, th e

mnow defunct Canadian Union of Students .That statement was itself a political statement. By

saying they would avoid politics and concentrate o nacademic problems the organizers were taking a politica lstand .

What kind of a life-span would a student union tha tprofesses to offer only service and to avoid politics have ?Not a very long one judging from the most recen tconference.

A national student union has to be political . Theproblems facing students are political .

Lack of student loans and financial aid from the federa lgovernment, faculty tenure, course evaluation and universityaccessability, to name just a few of the problems the unio nhopes to deal with, are political problems .

These political problems can't be adequately tackled b ya group of bureaucrats who can't even stay together lon genough to decide membership criteria .

What Canadian students need is a union that is willin gto face up to the political realities of Canada and students .

We think the new student union should be renamed th eBenevolent Order of Bureaucrats Who Don't Want to Upse tthe Apple Cart.

LettersSpeed

I have read with great interes tyour consumer column, byVaughn Palmer, in which theEvelyn Wood Reading Dynamic scourse is taken to task .

I do not pretend to th eexpertise of your writer, bein gpresently just in the fifth week o fthis same course ; however, I haveseen enough to satisfy me that ,while there are undoubtedly many"graduates" who have done nomore than merely triple thei rreading speed, there are, on theother hand, many who havebroken through the psychologicalbarrier and who have retrained

their brains to cope effectivel ywith dynamic reading .

In saying that the guarantee dincrease in reading speed (threetimes) can be obtained by othe rmeans, Mr. Palmer is probablyquite correct . However, he misse sthe point. To achieve thebreak-through to the fantisticspeeds which can be and ar eattained requires a lot of bloodyhard work over several months . Ifancy that he was not equal t othis, and would strongly sugges tto your readers that they talk (i fthey are interested) to som epeople who have succeeded ,rather than accept the word of aself-confessed failure .

In closing, I note that Mr .

Palmer mentions the courseoffered by the Centre o fContinuing Education in readingimprovement. I have no doub tthat this is a first class means o fimproving one's reading ability ,but I suspect that Don Mosdale i squite correct in saying that it doe snot compare to the Evelyn Woo dsystem. In quoting prices, all Mr.Palmer has done is to bring to ou rattention something that we al ltend to forget, namely that thi suniversity is very - heavil ysubsidized by the taxpayer .Personally (and I speak as on ewho definitely does not havemoney to throw around) I thin kthat the Evelyn Wood course i swell worth the money.

Hal Revilllaw 3

ForgottenSomewhere along the line i t

seems to have been forgotten tha ta headline and lead sentence hav ea dual purpose — they should no tonly attract the reader's attentionbut also give him/her an accurateview of the event being discussed .

In lecturing on the conditionof Jews in the Soviet Union, I wasnot arguing they, receive specialpreference . Quite the contrary .

I was making two points : 1)That the Jews in the Soviet Unionare placed under special burdens .Much more than other groups,they are discriminated against inregard to university admission, jo bpromotion, and cultural activities.

2) That while Jews suffer certainspecial difficulties, it still shoul dnot be forgotten that al lmanifestations of national striving— whether by Ukrainians ,Latvians, etc . — are severely deal twith by the regime .

In only one area have Jewsreceived something like specialtreatment . For complex reasons,the regime has been more willingto let Jews leave the country . Buteven this may now come to a nend with the imposition of exittaxes .

Paul Marant zassistant prof

political science

TypicalRe : John Andersen's article onthe election held last Monday.

It was the work of a typicalhigh school student who fancie shimself as having literary talentsand journalistic ambitions. I amsurprised he condescended towrite for you — he is obviouslyout of his element.

I question his politicalperception. In particular, hiscomment that "The Maritimes' a susual four years behind the rest o fthe country, appeared (myemphasis) to show an early tren dto the Liberals". Had he a bi tmore perception and a little lessB .C. bias, he would have note dthat although the Conservative slost three seats in the Maritimes, i twas not the Trudeaumania of

1968 . It was in fact BritishColumbia that was four year sbehind the times, ie . : a resurgenc eof Conservative strength and adecimation of Liberal ranks, aphenomenon which occurred i nthe Maritimes four years ago.

In closing I would recommen dyou find a more perceptivepolitical commentator for he nex telection . . . perhaps one with alittle less regional bias and a littl emore maturity.

Hendrick Van der Linde

UnusualWhy are letters addressed to

the editor(s) when they arewritten for the readers and, youdon't give a damn whether saideditor reads it or not? (preferablynot ; just prints it! )

A commonplace occurance o fhaving an essay returned became amost unusual incident for me theother day. I quickly flippe dthrough each page and saw tha tthere was a fair amount ofconstructive criticism. Slowly m ysoul started to go numb as therealization hit me ; I couldn't findthe mark! I became very upse tbecause my traumatic Herculeanefforts hadn' t been recognized orrewarded with one of thoseinvaluable numbers or letters. Thewhole exercise of writing seeme dmeaningless if I wasn't gonna get aletter-grade! Then, the though tcrept back into my conscious thatnobody got a mark for thisparticular exercise . I started to

THE URYSSEYNOVEMBER 7, 1972

Published Tuesdays and Fridays throughout the university year b ythe Alma Mater Society of the University of B.C. Editoria lopinions are those of the writer and not of the AMS or theuniversity administration. Member, Canadian University Press. TheUbyssey publishes Page Friday, a weekly commentary and review .The Ubyssey's editorial offices are located in room 241K of th eStudent Union Building.Editorial departments, 228-2307; Sports, 228-2305 ; advertising,228-3977 .

Co-editors : John Andersen, Jan O'Brie n

Stunning victory of the Pango Pango Paper Tigers over Dry Hump in th eKosmic League was announced by sleazy goaltender Kent Spencer. Other sparticipating in the 23-37 trouncing were Gary Coull, Lorri Rudland,Randy Rudland, Steve Morris and star quarterback Roger MacNeil ,Disinterested non-spectators: Ken Dodd, Sucha Singh, Bernie Bischoff, Ja nO'Brien, Art Smolensky, Josie Bannerman, Karin Nielsen, Ed Dubois ,Vaughn Palmer, Mike Sasges, Sondra Marshall Smith, Maurice Savaria ,Doug Higgins and Simon Truelove.

Page 5: By THE CANADIAN UNIVERSITY PRESS vsrssEr · Black Sabbath Vol. 4 WS 1887—Paranoid--Black Sabbath BR 2077—Fog Hat BS 2552—Ten Years To-gether—Peter, Paul & Mary BS 2562—Master

----------- -

Tuesday, November 7, 1972

THE , UBYSSEY

Page 5

Lettersclimb out of my wallowing apathyas , it became more acceptable t ome that we had all got the samemark . After a few minutes more, Ibegan to feel close, real close, t oall the people in the room. I fel tthat I was sharing learning withthem, each to the best of hi sability but, none the less equal.My feelings remained unspoke nand I don't know if anybodyshared them; I hope they did! Ifelt closer to that group than t oany group I have ever entered, allbecause for a couple of hours wewere judged the same . That markwas a great tonic for many of th eailments so commonly found o nthis campus.

Frank Tickle rarts 3

CriticismRe : Page Friday

I would just like to voice m yopinion in regards to your moviereviewer . I'm afraid that I havewrote to you about his views onWoody Allen's movie "EverythingYou Wanted to Know About Se xBut Were Afraid to Ask and hiscriticism of your movie reviewtechniques .

I went to see the movie TheOther last weekend regarded it a sone of the best "shockers" I haveseen in a long time, and I feel tha tis not only comes close to a fas tHitchcock thriller but maybe eve nranks as equal with it .

Even in the title of your moviereview you mention that the showcontained gore. Well I don' tconsider myself to have bette rthan average eyes, but there wasnot one drop of blood actuallyshown on the screen, even withthe number of deaths involved .And speaking of the number ofdeaths, your review mentions thateight people die . Again, My eye sare no better then anyone else' s(thought I'm beginning to doub tthe sight of your movie critic) butthere were not eight people killed ,there were only six deaths.

One more point you madeabout the movie was that therewas no subtlety, and that theviewers knew what was going tohappen all the time . Your criticmentions that this is bad anddoesn't give a shocking o rfrightening effect, but on th econtrary, because I knew wha twas going to happen, I sat in th etheatre (in the dark with only m ygirlfriend to hold onto!) terrifie duntil the `shock' took place, an dthen only then could I breatheeasy again.

As your last student moviegoermentioned, tastes vary greatlyfrom person to person, so i fyou're going to try and :review amovie (and I hope you continueto) try and give both a pro an dcon approach . If you can't dothis, then take your petty littlereviews and shove them up you rcinemascope!

Jerry Fischerscience 2

Morecriticism

I realize it is more difficult t osound clever and intelligent whe nyou are not taking potshots a tsomething. I also respect you rright not to like something . Butcouldn't you have left JohnHuston's "Fat City" alone?

First, you judged the film b yits attendance . What's next ,judging it by its advertising?

You call the movie boring. Ihonestly wonder whether you'r etalking about the same film . Forthe life of me, I cannot think o fone single part of the film thatwas boring . Your entertainmen tstandards must be rather perverse ,if they applaud the spectacle of agigantic breast cavorting on thescreen but reject a poignant ,realistic drama. Comedy is not theonly genre that entertains .

What's all this horseshit abou trealism? To deny the value of thi sparticular attitude is t odowngrade some of the fines tfilms ever made . And this Falstaffnonsense . Surely even you knowthe differences between twentiet hcentury cinema and Elizabethandrama .

You call the characters in "Fa tCity" dull and corny. Wake up,Clive . The film is probably thefirst to portray the boxing worl dwith real depth, unhampered b ythreadbare cliches .

On top of all this, you cop-out. You start out with "banal,boring and empty" and end upwith "sensitive, boldly honest ,and faithful to those it portrays . "Really, Clive, if you can't sayanything intelligent in you rreviews, what's the point of yourwriting them?

Very sincerely,Ryon Guede s

arts 1

TortureSehr geehrter Herr and geehrt e

Frau !Big Brother has invaded the

tranquility of the UBC campus. Irefer, of course, to the unmarke dautomobiles prowling the univer-sity byways.

I do not object to unmarke dautomobiles, but if they comeequipped with 2 to 4 heavy-dutyloudspeakers and two robot-lik eoccupants, one who operates th eaforesaid vheicle, the other whooperates the microphone which

amplifies the aforesaid operator' svoice into a raucous roar of themost obscene phrases imaginable :"Get your tickets for Macbeth ;only $2, $3," and on and on andon.

Not only does this racke tdisturb the peace, but it is also agrave imposition upon thethoughts and speech of thoseindividuals who happen to b etalking while these vehicles cree pby and commit their atrociousacts. The library no longer is thequiet haven for the serious stud-ent, but becomes a torturechamber. In the words of theimmortal Anon : "remember wha tpeace there may be in silence . "

Mit freundlichen Gruben ,David Mattiso n

grad 5R .W . Sargean t

pharmacy 1

Shrum(Regarding Gordon Shrum's

lecture to the gears) .

The Visit of theGreat Ecologist

The man who drinks Tordon 100Comes to Civil Engineering 20 1

and he explainsThat we should work really hard

all the timeto stimulate the neurons in our

brainsbut the most important thing i n

life is to have funAND I WONDERED

AND HE ASSURED USthat things were getting better all

the timeEXCEPT THE NDP

the fare is a quarter, not a nickel,not a dime

ON A B.C . HYDRO BUS .

And he told us to leave our light son all the time

ELECTRICITY IS CHEAPE Rthan higher insurance rates for

high rates of crime

AND THEN HE RANOUT OF TIME.

John E . Dumbenbaker

Early perception of dange rpoints and easy identification oftraffic signs so that their mes-sages can be instantly recog-nized, are two of the greates tproblems of road safety .The fluorescent colours no wused to mark highways ofte nfade after a short time . Bu tHoechst research has devel-oped persistent fluorescen tdyestuffs which have the valu-able attributes of maximumlightfastness and striking visua limpact . The qualities of thesedyestuffs improve identificatio nof highway danger spots, me nworking, traffic signs, railwaycrossing and unlit roads . In fac tthere is an almost inexhaustibl enumber of identification uses .This is a major contribution byHoechst to future road safety .

Ahead through system sthinkingThe new fluorescent dyestuff sare the result of Hoechs tknow-how and experience i nmany fields . They are theproduct of collaboration be-tween physicists and techni-cians engaged in research intodyestuffs and plastics .Systems thinking is th eHoechst strategy. Research ,development and product ex-perience in many areas ar econcentrated on the solution o fspecific problems .To keep ahead — to solve theproblems of today and to -morrow — Hoechst employs10,300 people in research an ddevelopment with a researc hinvestment of more than 1 50million dollars .

Helping Build Canad a

Products and ideas fromHoechst have touched and im-proved the quality of people' slives in every area around th eworld, in a hundred countrie son six continents . As an affiliateof the worldwide Hoechst or-ganization, Canadian HoechstLimited has a full century ofresearch and achievement todraw upon . In Canada, Hoechstis an autonomous compan yemploying Canadians to serveCanadian needs .Hoechst in Canada concern sitself with supplying both th epresent and future needs o fCanadians . The range of prod-ucts and services covers th espectrum through industria lchemicals, dyestuffs, plastics ,printing plates, human an dveterinary medicines, pharma-ceuticals, and textile fibres .Hoechst products and services ,Hoechst techniques an dknow-how in these fields ,combined with a large interna-tional fund of experience, hav egiven the company a reputatio nfor expertise which takes con-stant striving to live up to .Hoechst thinks ahead .

REG . T.M HOECHST .

HOECHSTCanadian Hoechst Limited4045 Cote Vert uMontreal 383, Quebec

Hoechst Research Increases Highwa ySafety

40 Lesmill RoadDon Mills, Ontario

Page 6: By THE CANADIAN UNIVERSITY PRESS vsrssEr · Black Sabbath Vol. 4 WS 1887—Paranoid--Black Sabbath BR 2077—Fog Hat BS 2552—Ten Years To-gether—Peter, Paul & Mary BS 2562—Master

Page 6

THE UBYSSEY

Tuesday, November 7, 197 2

Fiji hurricaneHot flashes CLASSIFIED

Rates Campos -- 3 lines, 1 day $1 .00; additional lines, 25c,Commercial -- 3 lines, 1 day $150; additional lire35c; additional days $1 .25 & 30c.

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

Publications Office, Room 241 S.U.B., UBC, Van. 8, B.C.The student committee for Fij i1•, lrricane relief is solicitin gclothing and cash donations fo rthe 50,000 victims of the Oct . 24hurricane and floods in the Fij iislands .

They will accept contributions,starting noon today, at a booth i nthe SUB foyer .

Talks continueC. B. Macpherson, Universit y

of Toronto political scientist,concludes his series of lectures o nthe life and times of libera ldemocracy, noon, Wednesday an dThursday, in Buchanan 104 .

Titles of the last two lectures,part of the Cecil H . and Ida Gree nvisiting professor series, are th eMid-20th

Century

Model :

Stevenson talksSharon Stevenson, publishe d

poet and former Alma Mate rSociety executive, speaks on asocialist perspective on women' sliberation, 7 :30 p.m., today, i nSUB ballroom.

Admission to the lecture, thi sweek's class in the women' sstudies program, is 25 cents .

AuditionTheatre graduate students wil l

audition actors and actresses fo rroles in four original one actplays, 7 p .m., tonight, in roo m112, Frederic Wood Theatre .

The plays written by B .C .creative writing students will beproduced for a Freddy Woo dfestival of one acts.

Get a job:The Canada Manpower

department is sponsoring Tuesda ynight talks on creative job searchprograms again this year .

The first three-hour talk begin s7 p .m., today at the VancouverVocational Institute auditorium ,Pender and Cambie .

Manpower reports 80 per cen tof the people who took the cours elast year landed jobs.

Szasz talksThomas Szasz, controversia l

University of Syracuse psychiatryprofessor, will speak on Madnes sis Metaphor 7 p .m., today, in th eSUB auditorium .

Szasz is an author of severa lbooks opposing involuntarycommitment and the standardmedical formulation of menta lillness .

IL GAFF EPizza Party, 50 cents refreshments ,8 :30 p .m. I .H . cafeteria .

SUNDAYLUTHERAN CAMPUS MINISTR Y

Discussion on Genetic Engineering ,9 :30 p.m. Campus Centre.Worship, 10 :30, Campus Centre.

DISSENT !

and the Jewish Studen t

Dr.David

Sidorsky

OPEN-ENDE DDISCUSSION

Thursday, Nov . 9 - 12 :30

HILLEL

SPECIALIZE DSERVIC E

we repair

Rides & Car Pools

1 4

TWO GIRLS NEED RIDE TO UBCby 8 p.m., Kingsway and Fraser.Phone 872-1832.

Special Notices

1 5

"THE POINT TO SHINING POIN Tdrivers endurance rally." If youhave a convertable sports car comeand race for your life. For infor-mation contact Rm. 100A in SUB .

LOST (STOLEN?) CAR KEYS &briefcase, Thursday night atSports Arena . Borrower (?) pleasereturn . Information Desk, S .U .B .No hassle, I need my notes !

ESSAY AND BOOK MANUSCRIPT Sedited by retired publisher forgrammar, syntax, spelling, punctu-ation, clarity . 263-6565.

NO . 5 ORANGE STREET, MAIN A TPOWELL is having a Junk Con -test! JUNK! Like stop signs, air-plane wings, toilet seats, and asoriginal as you can get, cuz if wepick your junk as a winner, yo utoo can win a dinner for two atthe White Lunch, a Free Bus Rideto Burnaby, a gift certificate atthe Army & Navy, and many othe rswell stuff . What will we do withthis Junk you ask? We're going toplaster our walls, ceiling, and al lavailable places with it so that youcan point to a wrinkled staine dbedsheet for instance, and proudlytell your friends "I did that . "So, starting when you want, startbringing it in . Bring as manyas you can, but securely tie you rname, address and phone numbe rto each piece, so we'll know wh oto contact . And don't forget, w egot second, third and fourth prizestoo, like 2 dinners for 2 at theWhite Lunch, and 5 Free Bus Ride sto Burnaby . OKAY ?

EDITING SERVICE — ARE YO Ubugged by double negatives? D oyou suffer from verbal flatulence ?My forty years experience mayhelp you. Let DAN MURRAYgather your dangling participles.Phone 733-2337 for term papers,theses, reports, etc .

$75 FOR 75¢40 Bonus Coupons In Thi s

Year's Bird Call sAVAILABLE NO W

BUY YOURS TODAY !Bookstore and SU B

ASSOCIATION OF STUDEN TCouncils Travel Service, Room100-B, SUB, 224-0111.

Wanted—Information

17

C-90 CASSETTES WITH PLEXI -glas case. Buy minimum of 6 at$1 .50 each — get 3 FREE! Guaran-teed against defects. Pickup pointon campus can be arranged . Call732-6769.

Typing

40

TYPING! ! —ESSAYS, BOOK RE -ports, etc . — Reasonable, 3 yearsexp . — Good location, 2nd & Bur-rard . Phone Sheri — 732-7823 .

ESSAYS, THESE, ETC. EXPI7RI-enced . Elec. typewriter, carbonribbon . Reasonable rates. 738-8848.EFFICIENT ELECTRIC TYPING ,

my home . Essays, thesis, etc. Neataccurate work. Reasonable rates.263-5317.

PROMPT, EFFICIENT TYPIN G(electric machine) of theses, essays ,examination papers, etc. Phone :688-4027.

TYPING — FAST, EFFICIENT —Essays, Papers . Theses. 41st andMarine Drive. 266-5053.

EXPERIENCED TYPIST—ESSAYSTheses, etc. Mrs . Brown, 732-0047.

EMPLOYMENT

Help Wanted

5 1

POSITION AVAILABLE IN A BOY' SClub working with 5-7 year-olds ,three afternoons per week 3 :30-6 :30, $75 month . For more info seeBob Freer at Speakeasy.

INTERESTED IN SELLING? - -Then why not be an advertisin gsalesman for the Ubyssey? Thispart-time job offers an opportunityto gain experience and to earnworthwhile commissions. Reliable2nd or 3rd year business-minde dstudent who will work hard for 10or 12 hours weekly is needed. Musthave transportation . If interestedapply to Publications Office, Room241, SUB, after 2 p.m . .

Work Wanted

52

DON'S MOVING & HAULING, 263 6West 11th Ave . 738-0096 . ServingKerrisdale, Dunbar & GreaterVan. area 24 hr . service . Insured.

INSTRUCTION & SCHOOLS

Tutoring Service

8 3

MISCELLANEOU SFOR SALE

7 1

VOLKL SKIS 215 CM . NEVADAbindings. All new. Cost $300, willsacrifice . 266-5781.

1tUAM~ NEVER UNDERSOLD!

N

14538W.1O 224-585 UNDERSOLD !NEVER

1 1Dance s

help sought

p.m .

Equilibrium Democracy, and Th eEmergent Model : ParticipatoryDemocracy .

'Tween classesTODAYANTHRO-SO C

Martin Silverman on symboli canthropology, noon, Angus 415 .

NEWMAN CLU BA Catholic student group o ncampus noon, SUB 105B.

CAMPUS CRUSAD ELTC, 7 p.m ., SUB 215 .

VO CMeeting, noon, Angus 104.

EXPERIMENTAL COLLEG EKarl Burau on Freud, Reich, an dVangguaard, noon, SUB 111 .

WOMEN ' S STUDIE SSharon Stevenson on SocialistPerspectives

on

Women' sLiberation,

7 :30

p.m .,

SU Bballroom .

CAMPUS CAVALIER SSquare dancing, noon-2 :30 p.m. ,SUB 207-209.

CAMPUS MINISTR YEucharist and soup, noon, Luthera nCentre.

CANOE & KAYAK CLU BMeeting, noon, SUB 125.

SAILING CLU BRacing rules, noon, SUB 205 .

WEDNESDA YFREESE E

Civilization, noon, 1 :35, 2 :2 0Free, SUB ballroom.

CAMPUS MINISTR YEucharist and soup, noon Luthera nCentre .AUCM executive meeting, 4 :3 0p .m., Lutheran Centre .

ONTOLOGY CLU BRon Polack on consciousness o f

CHRISpTIAN SCIENCE

. 216 .

Meeting, noon, SUB 211 .

S.U.B. FILM-SOC PRESENTS

THURSDA YPHOTO-SO C

Aquacolo rSUB 241A .

NVCMeeting, noon, SUB 211 .

CAMPUS CRUSAD EMeeting, 8 p .m ., 196 2

CAMPUS MINISTR YSupper, value game,Lutheran Centre .

CC FGalatians, noon .

WARGAMER SPractice for war games tournament ,noon, SUB 119 .Avalon Hill board games 7 p.m. ,clubs room.

FRIDAYWOMEN ' S ACTION GROU P

Meeting, noon, grad centre boar droom .

SKY DIVER SMeeting, noon, SUB 205 .

ND PMeeting, noon, SUB 117 .

PRE-SOCIAL WORK CLU BSpeaker : B .C . Association of Socia lWorkers, noon, SUB 105B .

SATURDA YSAILING CLU B

Regatta

Party,Agnew's House.

demonstration, noon ,

8 p.m., Dave

5 :30 p .m . ,

Acadia Rd .

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Travel Opportunities 16

Scandals 37

Wanted—Miscellaneous

18 RENTALS & REAL ESTATE

AUTOMOTIVE

Rooms

8 1

Autos For Sale

2 1

'69 VIVA DELUXE, IMMAC., 2-door, 4-speed, radio, whitewalls ,2 new snows, extras, city-tested.$950. Private . 266-9009, Mark .

1959 JAGUAR D.O .H .C., 3.4 LITREsedan. Automatic trans. Goodleather. Top shape. F78-15 ' s snowson rims. Asking $1000. Call Chri sat 681-0579 after 5 p.m.

BASEMENT ROOM FOR RENT 421 4W . 15th . $50 . Share kitchen . Call224-3737 for details.

Room & Board

8 2

CAMPUS ROOM AND BOARD, 578 5Agronomy Road . Sauna, color TV,good food, recreational area . Phone224-9684.

Automobiles—Parts

23 Communal Housing

8 5

—Reasonable Prices—Quality Workmanship—Fully Guaranteed

Thurs. & Sun. 7 :00Fri. & Sat. 7 :00 & 9:30

sss n sss,ssssseas

BUSINESS SERVICE S

Photography

3 5

the Krug anlI *butter(await

DIMENSION

LENS SAL E28 mm F.2 .8 was $95 .1 0

is 7 .2 035 mm F.2 .8 was $62 .9 5is5d.5 0

135 mm F.2 .8 was $73 .9 9is 59 .4 0200 mm F .3.5 was $89 .2 5

is 71 .3 0Many More Lenses to Choose From

While Quantities Last Only3010 W. Brdwy. 736-7833

ROOM FOR RENT IN HOUS Ewith two females. Available now.

976-1501. Irene or DentROOM FOR RENT, FRIENDLY

shared house for girl or couple(fourth year+) . 10th & Macdonald$35-40. 731-3962.

Use YourUbyssey

Classified

Page 7: By THE CANADIAN UNIVERSITY PRESS vsrssEr · Black Sabbath Vol. 4 WS 1887—Paranoid--Black Sabbath BR 2077—Fog Hat BS 2552—Ten Years To-gether—Peter, Paul & Mary BS 2562—Master

Tuesday, November . 7, . 1972

THE UBYSSEY

Page 7

Mutiny_hurts tea mGrid hands aba n

By KENT SPENCE RHeading into their final' Citing "hurt pride" in hi s

league game Saturday, the decision to quite, Vanderhors tThunderbird football team is was known throughout hissorely depleted following the career as a tough, solid, hard -loss of several key veteran hitting player — just the typeplayers .

that the team needs .Abe Vanderhorst, Ken Ar -

.thur, and Nick Zuccaro haveleft the team in what amountsto a bitter squabble with thecoaching staff over game time ,coaching moves to try player sat new positions, and specialt yteam play .

Vanderhorst, in his fourt hyear and a starter at defensiveend, has quit the team over adispute involving the coach' sdecisions not to play himregularly .

don shi p

At the football awards'banquet last spring he wa sawarded the "most in-spirational player" award .Certainly his ability and ex-perience leave a large hole tofill .

Joining Vanderhorst i nleaving the team was utilit yman Ken Arthur, a playercoach Frank Gnup describesas "a good man for us tohave" . Arthur played a

number of different positions ,including back-up centre ,guard, and linebacker o ndefense .

Arthur's reason for quitting— not enough game time andtoo many positions to learn t oplay. His absence leaves the'Birds with little 150 poundEddie Chan as back-up centreto Jim Vilvang .

Also quitting the team wa sNick Zuccaro of Notre Dame, astarter at running back bu trelegated to the bench after astint at defensive linebacker, aposition he had trouble lear-ning to play .

Zuccaro and Len Suitt OfVancouver College had bee noffered $200 scholarships eachby the UBC AlumniAssociation in an effort to luretwo or three top high school

football prospects to UBC eachyear .

Since the scholarships wereconditional on playing out thefull year, neither playercollected as Suitt has also quit .

At the start of the year the'Birds also lost defensivetackle Brian Murphy, a starte rall of last year with college andsemi-pro experience . Mur-phy's reason for quitting alsoinvolved lack of game time .

The 'Birds may also have toscratch left linebacker andplace kicker Bruce Kiloh fro mthe line-up, who was injuredduring a kick-off return inSaturday's game against th eSeattle Cavaliers . The severityof his injury, a charley-horse ,was not immediately known .

Reserve quarterback Kir kSmalley has also left the team .

FRANK GNUP . . . faces mutiny .

- TRYSOUTHSI D E

New 1972 "510" Sedan s

CLEARANCE SPECIA L

$2495„„,5-rem

Standard or Automatic Transmissio n

Southside Datsu n

Specia lPrice

PRODUCTOF NISSAN

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324-4644

In hockey :

'Birds falter, then dieThe University of Calgary

goalie with one minute left toDinosuars were lucky to win Game results play. Calgary's Tom Wisema nthe Hockey Canada Regional

HOCKEY

scored into the empty net .tournament played at UBC on

Friday

In Saturday's other semi-the weekend .

Calgary 7, Victoria 3 .

final round Calgary was ver yAided by a UBC collapse in

Saturday

fortunate to beat UBC. Thethe semi-final round Saturday

Lakehead 6, Alberta 5 .

'Birds skated to leads of 4-0 andnight, they edged into the final

Calgary 6, UBC 5 .

5-2 before Calgary came backgame against Lakehead

Sunday

three goals in the thirdUniversity for the Sunday p .m .

y

period to tie the game .UBC 6, Alberta 6 .championship game .

After eleven minutes ofAnd in the final they were

Calgary 5, Bakehead 3 .

overtime, Calgary wingeroutplayed by a hustling

FOOTBALL

Wayne Forsey beat UBC goalieLakehead team but managed Seattle Cavaliers 32, UBC 23 . Fred Masuch cleanly on theto win 5-3 by scoring two goals

BASKETBALL

stick side to notch the win .in the last two minutes of the

UBC 83, Grads 78 .

In Sunday's game the 'Bird sgame .

In the final period both teams again skated to a big leadIn the championship game scored twice before Calgary's before Edmonton came bak to

both played cautious, tight- Ron Gerlitz broke in alone on tie the score at six-all . UBC ledchecking hockey . Calgary led Lakehead goalie Noel Smith the Bears 6-2 with only four1-0 after the first period but and scored from close in .

minutes to play . EdmontonLakehead . fought back in the

Calgary's final goal was then scored four goals in les ssecond to deadlock the game at scored when Lakehead coach than three minutes .1-1 going into the third .

Henry Akervall pulled his

Neither team scored in thesudden death overtime period .

The game was not wellplayed with both teams skatin gin fear of body contact, thehardest hitting being the bac kslapping after a score .

The UBC collapse in the finalminutes of the game was un-fortunate but the lackadaisica lattitude of the team when i thad the lead and the spottygoaltending cost them dearly .

In the preliminary gameFriday night, Calgary knockedoff Victoria 7-3 .

USHANR CAMERAS4538 W.10 224-5858 NEVER UNDERSOLD!

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Trojans bombedBy PETER MacQUEEN

The Thunderbird rugby teamconfirmed the opinionSaturday that they are achampionship team be beatingthe Trojans 33-0 .

The scrum finally played asa unit, and deserved the triesthey worked so hard to get . Thebacks played adequately withsome sparks of brilliance bu tdefinitely needs some work forthe big games in the weeks t ocome .

It took awhile for the 'Bird sto get on the scoreboard butRay Banks' penalty goal afte r30 minutes was a welcomesight. Bob Jickling's try fiveminutes later on a bruisin geight yeard run made the score7-0 at the half .

The 'Birds ran the Trojansragged in the second half witha concerted attack that justwouldn't let up . Scoring triesfor the 'Birds were GarethHendrikson, Leigh Hillier ,Doug Carr, newcomer CharlieBeamon, and a second one b yJickling .

The second team Braveswere treated with a visit by therugby team from the NotreDame University at Nelson.Unfortunately for Notre Dame ,however, they were a bit toogreen for the Braves as theyfell 52-0 to a very strong Bravesteam .

oro,~

ABRAXAS

~~2-~.1l~~i.~,",~a2+%.~:1153~~~~~'~~~i~`".~11a~L~-~\2~~,"~~2~1.^ia"~2~i.~ -l:

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BOOKSTOR Eand SU B

Steaks-Pizza-Spaghetti-Lasagna-Ravioli-Rigatoni-Chicken Cacciatore

OPENMon. - Thurs.

11 a .m. ' 3 a .m .Fri . = Sat.

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TAKE OUT ORDERSHOME DELIVERY 738.9520 738-1 11 3

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Page 8: By THE CANADIAN UNIVERSITY PRESS vsrssEr · Black Sabbath Vol. 4 WS 1887—Paranoid--Black Sabbath BR 2077—Fog Hat BS 2552—Ten Years To-gether—Peter, Paul & Mary BS 2562—Master

West favors school votePage 8

THE UBYSSEY

Tuesday, November 7, 1972

From page 1

individual institutions based o ntwo votes per school . Mostdelegates from the west an dOntario favored the plan, but i twas amended to a modifiedpopulation formula after theQuebec-Atlantic province swalkout .

The Atlantic provinc eparticipants wante drepresentation from provincia lorganizations, with eac hprovince having equal votin gpower .

The Atlantic provinces sai dthe organization could becomecontrolled by Ontario andQuebec under representatio nby population .

They said insufficient at-tention would be paid t oAtlantic region problems . Theyalso claimed representation b yinstitution would result in toounwieldy a body .

After being voted dow noverwhelmingly (16-73-8 )Friday night, the Atlanti cdelegates supported th eQuebec proposal, but it wa sdefeated Saturday morning bya vote of 27-54-11 . Each in-stitution at the conference ha dtwo votes apiece .

A compromise then began t oemerge as Ontario and B.C .delegates appeared willing toallow each province the rightto appoint its delegates to NU Sas it chose . A measure to allowschools to give their regional orprovincial associations theirproxy votes gained widesupport and was eventuallypassed .

Although delegates cam eclose to agreement on method sof delegate selection, theconference floundered over theallocation of delegates tovarious regions and provinces .

Just after the Quebecproposal for regiona lrepresentation was defeated ,the University of Guelph in-troduced a motion declaringboth institutional and regiona lappointment were validmethods of delegate selection .Most delegates from west ofthe Ottawa River hoped tha tthis, along with the prox yvoting proposal, would suf-ficiently appease Quebec an dthe Atlantic provinces .

The two dissenting regionsimmediately caucussed .Delegates were sharply

divided on whether the newproposal was acceptable. ThenCarleton University studen tcouncil president BruceCameron, who served on thenational steering committee ,entered the caucus room with acompromise proposal .

The proposal, whichoriginated with some B .C .delegates., would have unitedthe delegates because theQuebec-Atlantic

provincecaucus gladly accepted it . Itsfailure amid angryrecriminations wrecked NUSas an initially Canada-wideorganization .

The Cameron plan woul dhave allowed each province todetermine its mode ofrepresentation but would havedivided the size of represen-tation as follows : six per cen tto each of the four Atlanticprovinces, 20 per cent toQuebec, 20 per cent to Ontario ,seven per cent to each of thethree prairie provinces and 1 5per cent to B .C .

Immediately after theSaturday lunch break ,delegates overwhelmingl yapproved the Guelphdeclaration . Cameron the nintroduced his plan, but it wa simmediately attacked forgiving over-representation tothe Atlantic provinces .

"If the Maritime provincesare going to get 24 per cent ofthe votes, then I wonder if theyare willing to pay 24 per cent ofthe fees," Susan Geason,administrative assistant of theUniversity of Toronto part -time student council said .

The University of Albertathreatened to withdraw if theproposal passed . The Prairi edelegates, who had stronglyrejected the regionalismconcept, caucussed an dproduced a plan for modifie drep by pop — one vote forevery 5,000 students in an in-stitution or fraction thereof .

The Atlantic provinc edelegates angrily rejected thi splan and McGill and Bishop' sUniversities made a counter-proposal which the Prairie sand many Ontario and B .C .delegates found equallyunacceptable . The plan calledfor a 100-memberorganizational assembly ofwhich 30 delegates would be

chosen on the basis of three pe rprovince, and 70 would beallocated by provincial studen tpopulation. Cameron acceptedit .

Chairman Dan Boisvertfrom Loyola University ruledthe McGill proposal out o forder. Cameron challenged thechair but the ruling was uphel d49-19, with 20 delegates' votes ,mostly from the Atlantic area ,abstaining .

At this point Dawson com-munity college from Montrealwalked out, saying : "Thisconference has proven to u sthat the federal concept ofrepresentation within th epresent boundaries of Canad acannot permit democraticprocess . "

Amid considerable uproa rand confusion, Cameron' soriginal percentage proposa lwas rejected and► the Prairierep by pop plan accepted .

Tom Leroy of St . ThomasUniversity in Fredericton ,N .B . then walked to themicrophone and read a biblica lquotation, referring to thedecay of civilization . When hefinished the delegate srepresenting the six Atlanticprovince schools at the con-ference walked out together .

All Atlantic schools ap-peared willing to negotiatefurther and said they wouldreturn to their student councilsto discuss it. An Atlanticprovince student union con-ference will be held Nov . 18-1 9in Charlottetown and the NS Uwill be on the agenda .

Immediately after theeastern walkout, most of the 1 1Quebec delegations left .Chairman Boisvert left wit hthem to be replaced by AlmaMater Society treasurer Davi dDick .

In a controversial move ,they added a bylaw whichrequires one-half of all NU Sstanding and special com-mittees be composed o fwomen .

Only 24 institutions were lef twhen the constitution wa sapproved . The walkouts cut thesize to 39 from 51 and otherschools left to catch trains orcatch the attractions of Ot-tawa .

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