fire', warns belshaw as smoke thickensfire', warns belshaw as smoke thickens the,...

12
'Fire', warns Belsha w as smoke thicken s The, analropology ., sociology departmen t isn°t, peOCt, but over all, the recent tenur e _paoee'dings in the department were thoroug h and fair . And graduate students who have forme d their own tenure committee to review tenur e proceedings in the department "do no t understand the nature of the fire they ar e playing with " . This is the essence of a memorandum sen t to department members Monday by anthroso c head Cyril Belshaw. The four-page statement was released hal f an hour after the anthrosoc grad students' association executive met with Belshaw t o TORONTO (CUP) — Eleven people wer e arrested Saturday and fifteen plate glas s windows broken after demonstrator s commemorating the first anniversary of th e imposition of the War Measures Act i n October, 1970, clashed with police outsid e Eaton's downtown department store here . Demonstrators marched Saturday from a vacant lot down Toronto's Yonge Street stri p chanting slogans like " free Paul Rose", wit h police swarming all around the Yonge Stree t area . discuss the controversy surrounding tenur e proceedings in the department . In the memo, Belshaw discusses and reject s the subject of the Monday meeting : gra d students' views on the tenure proceedings . However, the memo was written before th e meeting and the grad students who attende d said they were not given copies of the mem o or told of its existence or impending release t o faculty members. They said they were called to the meetin g by Belshaw, who did not give an explanatio n of what was to be discussed . "The meeting was just a set-up . There' s really not much to talk about becaus e Uniformed police followed the 10 0 protestors in cars and on motorcycles a s plainclothes policemen marche d inconspicuously behind the chanting crowd . Taking their police escort by surprise, som e of the demonstrators holding Quebec patrio t streamers broke into a run outside Eatons an d charges down a side street breaking 15 of th e corporation's display windows . Even though demonstrators confined their ' trashing to Eatons, police moved in and afte r scuffling with demonstrators arrested eleven Belshaw already has his mind made up," sai d one grad student who asked to remai n anonymous because of fear of departmen t reprisals. To discuss the department situation an d the issue of tenure in general, the Union o f Radical Social Scientists — which ha s members in the anthrosoc department — plan s to hold a teach-in Friday . Meanwhile, Belshaw in his memorandu m charges that " The Ubyssey has recently bee n dealing in innuendos directed against th e integrity of the department in its handling o f tenure deliberations . " See page 9 : BELSHAW people . All those arrested after Saturday' s disturbance have been charged with mischie f to private property and conspiracy . Four people of the eleven have also bee n charged with possession of dangerous weapon s and two with common assault . Although the demonstration has bee n billed by radio and television as the work o f the Red Morning, `a Maoist organization' , only four of the eleven arrested came fro m the group's co-op residences . Vol . LIII, No . 1 5 VANCOUVER, B .C . , TUESDAY, OCTOBER 1 9 ax 228-2301 OPPRESSION takes many forms .. . photographer Kelly Booth took this symbolic study of the crushing social toll of modern technology at th e University of Edmonton . This is not a member of the UBC anthropology department, it has been reliably innuendoed . Eleven busted at war act dem o Quebecois writers to recite poems of love, revolutio n The following was written by a very anonymous student in the UBC Frenc h department . Raoul Duguay and Paul Chamberlai d are among the most representative poet s now writing in Quebec . Between them the y have written a good part of the bes t Quebecois poetry of the 1960s . Since 1962, Chamberland (born i n 1939) has produced four books of poetr y of which the best known is undoubtedl y Terre Quebec . Also an essayist and polemicist, he has written many articles o n the social, political and economic change s now taking place in Quebec . He was one of the founders and pillar s of the review Parti Pris (1963-68), which had a great influence on the politica l thought of young Quebecois . Quebecois author Leandre Bergeron wil l speak on Quebec history today at 12 :3 0 p .m . in SUB ballroom . Bergeron is the author of the Peti t Manuel d' Histoire du Quebec which ha s been published in English as The History o f Quebec: Patriot's Handbook . =RIM What do these poets have to say to us ? Those who come to hear a nationalis t Quebec poetry that is both radical an d violent will perhaps be disappointed . His speech is part of the Quebec Wee k program sponsored by the A lm a Mate r Society special events committee . On pages 6 and 7 of today's Ubysse y appears an analysis of the situation i n Quebec one year after the invocation o f the War Measures Act . Duguay and Chamberland talk o f Revolution and Liberty, but also of Lov e and Peace, and after their own fashion . Everything they do is distinctively afte r their own fashion . They also speak of a return to Natura l Harmony, of a more primitive Kebek, mor e tribal, more `amerindian', but after thei r fashion which is that of the poet . What they are doing is perhaps not s o very different from what West Coast poet s are doing . But come and listen to them and figur e it out yourself . Duguay reads at noon o n Wednesday, Chamberland at noon on Friday . Both will read in the SUB ar t gallery . Partial translations of some of thei r texts will be distributed at the readings . Duguay (also born in 1939) is less He was also a founding member of th e preoccupied with political and social literary review Quoi (1967), not t o problems than Chamberland but is no less mention his activities in theatre an d active to judge by his incredibly prolific cinema . output . Since 1966 he has produced three book s of poems, a manifesto, an encyclopedia o f 3,333 pages and a study of the music o f Quebec . :., .:t .. .+s ...,: , . v.. . . .n r..: .:.`un`.K r~Y'`'3' : ;'~i~'t cY ': . . .. . Bergeron speaks today

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'Fire', warns Belshawas smoke thickens

The, analropology., sociology departmentisn°t, peOCt, but over all, the recent tenur e

_paoee'dings in the department were thoroughand fair .

And graduate students who have forme dtheir own tenure committee to review tenur eproceedings in the department "do no tunderstand the nature of the fire they ar eplaying with" .

This is the essence of a memorandum sen tto department members Monday by anthroso chead Cyril Belshaw.

The four-page statement was released halfan hour after the anthrosoc grad students'association executive met with Belshaw t o

TORONTO (CUP) — Eleven people werearrested Saturday and fifteen plate glas swindows broken after demonstrator scommemorating the first anniversary of th eimposition of the War Measures Act i nOctober, 1970, clashed with police outsid eEaton's downtown department store here .

Demonstrators marched Saturday from avacant lot down Toronto's Yonge Street stri pchanting slogans like "free Paul Rose", withpolice swarming all around the Yonge Stree tarea .

discuss the controversy surrounding tenureproceedings in the department .

In the memo, Belshaw discusses and reject sthe subject of the Monday meeting : gradstudents' views on the tenure proceedings .

However, the memo was written before th emeeting and the grad students who attende dsaid they were not given copies of the mem oor told of its existence or impending release t ofaculty members.

They said they were called to the meetingby Belshaw, who did not give an explanationof what was to be discussed .

"The meeting was just a set-up. There'sreally not much to talk about because

Uniformed police followed the 10 0protestors in cars and on motorcycles asplainclothes policemen marche dinconspicuously behind the chanting crowd .

Taking their police escort by surprise, someof the demonstrators holding Quebec patriotstreamers broke into a run outside Eatons andcharges down a side street breaking 15 of thecorporation's display windows .

Even though demonstrators confined their 'trashing to Eatons, police moved in and afte rscuffling with demonstrators arrested eleven

Belshaw already has his mind made up," saidone grad student who asked to remai nanonymous because of fear of departmen treprisals.

To discuss the department situation an dthe issue of tenure in general, the Union o fRadical Social Scientists — which ha smembers in the anthrosoc department — plan sto hold a teach-in Friday .

Meanwhile, Belshaw in his memorandumcharges that "The Ubyssey has recently bee ndealing in innuendos directed against theintegrity of the department in its handling o ftenure deliberations . "

See page 9 : BELSHAW

people .All those arrested after Saturday' s

disturbance have been charged with mischie fto private property and conspiracy .

Four people of the eleven have also bee ncharged with possession of dangerous weapon sand two with common assault .

Although the demonstration has beenbilled by radio and television as the work ofthe Red Morning, `a Maoist organization' ,only four of the eleven arrested came fromthe group's co-op residences .

Vol . LIII,

No. 1 5

VANCOUVER, B .C . ,

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 1 9

ax

228-2301

OPPRESSION takes many forms . . . photographer Kelly Booth took this symbolic study of the crushing social toll of modern technology at theUniversity of Edmonton . This is not a member of the UBC anthropology department, it has been reliably innuendoed .

Eleven busted at war act dem o

Quebecois writers to recite poems of love, revolutio nThe following was written by a very

anonymous student in the UBC Frenchdepartment.

Raoul Duguay and Paul Chamberlaidare among the most representative poet snow writing in Quebec . Between them the yhave written a good part of the bes tQuebecois poetry of the 1960s .

Since 1962, Chamberland (born i n1939) has produced four books of poetryof which the best known is undoubtedlyTerre Quebec . Also an essayist andpolemicist, he has written many articles onthe social, political and economic change snow taking place in Quebec .

He was one of the founders and pillarsof the review Parti Pris (1963-68), whichhad a great influence on the politica lthought of young Quebecois .

Quebecois author Leandre Bergeron willspeak on Quebec history today at 12 :30p.m. in SUB ballroom .

Bergeron is the author of the PetitManuel d'Histoire du Quebec which hasbeen published in English as The History o fQuebec: Patriot's Handbook .=RIM

What do these poets have to say to us ?Those who come to hear a nationalis tQuebec poetry that is both radical andviolent will perhaps be disappointed .

His speech is part of the Quebec Weekprogram sponsored by the A lm a Mate rSociety special events committee .

On pages 6 and 7 of today's Ubysse yappears an analysis of the situation i nQuebec one year after the invocation o fthe War Measures Act .

Duguay and Chamberland talk o fRevolution and Liberty, but also of Loveand Peace, and after their own fashion .Everything they do is distinctively afte rtheir own fashion .

They also speak of a return to Natura lHarmony, of a more primitive Kebek, mor etribal, more `amerindian', but after thei rfashion which is that of the poet .

What they are doing is perhaps not sovery different from what West Coast poet sare doing .

But come and listen to them and figur eit out yourself. Duguay reads at noon o nWednesday, Chamberland at noon onFriday. Both will read in the SUB ar tgallery .

Partial translations of some of thei rtexts will be distributed at the readings .

Duguay (also born in 1939) is less He was also a founding member of th epreoccupied with political and social literary review Quoi (1967), not toproblems than Chamberland but is no less mention his activities in theatre an dactive to judge by his incredibly prolific cinema .output .

Since 1966 he has produced three book sof poems, a manifesto, an encyclopedia of3,333 pages and a study of the music o fQuebec .

:., .:t. . .+s. ..,: ,.

v.. . .

.n r. .: .:.`un`.Kr~Y'`'3':;'~i~'tcY ':. . .. .

Bergeron speaks today

Page 2

THE

UBYSSEY

Tuesday, October 19, 197 1

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TICKETS : $2 .50 & $3 .00 at Vancouver Ticket Centre 683-325 5and outlets ; Pants Plus in the Village .

Finance minister Edgar Benson 's budget meansa debt of $1 .07 billion — a debt for short term gain .

$498 million represents a quick attempt t o

provide employment for the country 's growing" jobless with $35 million for training. The balance ,$572 million is to absorb tax reductions .

The tax reductions have as their basis anattempt to stimulate consumption and capita l

growth . A seven per cent cut goes to corporat econcerns and this will mean profit increases with thehopes of investment and more jobs .

A three per cent income tax cut should increasemiddle class take-home pay by $1-2 per week .

Thus the total budget represents an attempt t odeal with the growing unemployment crisis in

Canada today .However, there are problems .The government is going into debt to the tun e

of $1 .07 billion dollars to transfer $498 millio nfrom unemployment insurance and welfare to thi s

debt.As well the $348 million business can expec t

from their tax cuts will not necessarily go into theCanadian economy .

The tax benefit has a one and a half year time

limit . The major beneficiaries are the America ncorporate giants in Canada who will be sending thei rgains south of the border to cash in on the capita ltax credits and higher write-offs under the ne w

Nixonomics .Benson's budget means, in real terms, marginal

short term benefits and long term disadvantages o flong term debt interest .

Canada is a country getting wealthier through atrade surplus. The beneficiaries in this situation arethe Canadian dollar and those who control the ra w

resource .Through a system of claims and crown grant s

OTTAWA (CUP) — The LeDain commission's inquiry intothe non-medical use of drugs hasconverted at least one researcherto the pleasures of smoking dope .

Dr . Charles Farmilo, 53, wasfined $100 Friday by an Ottawacourt after pleading guilty t oillegal possession of hashish.Farmilo is a former researc hscientist for the Le Dai ncommission .

He was suspended fromcommission work by chairman

the latter are able to produce for export at arelatively small expense with large gains as in th ecase Kaiser Industries and Kootenay Coal .

Here lies the unemployment problem . Ourmanufacturing jobs are being exported to the U .S .and Japan along with the resources .

To cut the unemployment rate we mus tincrease the development of secondary industryeither through private or public capital and at ahigher rate than the growth of the labor force .

This increase of development has bee nhampered by a lack of capital available to Canadian sfor the development of secondary industry .

The Benson budget is doing this very indirectlyand what money does end up in savings he is hopin gwill be turned into capital formation .

Vehicles exist in Canada which are not bein gused efficiently and which could be used t oovercome the unemployment problem . TheIndustrial Development Bank, the Banking Act an dother legislation can be used for privatedevelopment .

More important, we have a direct vehicle in th eCanadian Development Corporation .

The CDC is a public vehicle to createsecondary growth and industry . It would give direc tcontrol to the people of Canada and would look t otheir , interest rather than a private company whos eonly interest is itself .

More and more Canadian businesses owned byAmericans are closed by the parent companie s

during a recession . The only permanent solution i sCanadian control of the economy .

Benson 's billion should be going to the CDCas a more direct method of creating this secondaryindustry and the control of it . Instead of costing usmore than $1 .07 billion ; our short and long ter mgains (employment) would be substantial .

164 type stylesover 4000aKeefs

Killer weed gets researcher

Notice to Graduating Students i n

SCIENC EA meeting will be held in Chem . 250

Wednesday, October 20 at 12 :30 p.m.

to hear a representative from the Placement Offic e(Office of Student Services )

on the subjec t

GRADUATE EMPLOYMEN T

Gerald Le Dain in August ,immediately after the possessio ncharge was laid .

His lawyer told Ontarioprovincial court that Farmilo wa spreparing a text on drug abuseand that his use of hashish wasfor research purposes .

The court argued this was no tan excuse for illegal possession ofthe drug and rejected Farmilo'sdeclaration that his drug usagewas directly related to the LeDain commission's research .

"Not only have you done agreat disservice to yourself, "Farmilo was told by provincialcourt judge Thomas Swabey, "butyou have done a great disservicealso to every scientific project yo uhave been involved in ."

availa6ls' at tie

Benson's budget mean slong term disadvantage s

This article was written by Mark Read, first year UBC commerce student.

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Tuesday, October 19, 1971

THE UBYSSE Y

—kelly booth photoFLEA MARKET on the main filoor of SUB provides relief both for students escaping from dull classes an dfor the penniless entrepreneurs . The people behind the tables are selling everything from cowturd cookie sto commie literature, so drop around sometime for a looksee .

Page 3

'Nothing wrongwith war money 'say UBC biggies

By SANDY KASS and SANDI SHREV EMoney is money — even when it's dipped in blood .That was the reaction Monday to The Ubyssey's description o f

the funding of a visiting professorship scheme at UBC .The $600,000 which UBC benefactor Cecil H . Green has donate d

to the university to establish a series of visiting professorships is base dlargely on the supply of strategic equipment to the U .S . military .

A Ubyssey story Friday detailed how, as founder of Texa sInstruments Ltd .., Green has been instrumental in the manufacture o fproducts such as air-to-ground missiles and armaments, radar systems ,military data systems, target detection and acquisition programs, an dundersea warfare signal studies .

It is money from the sales of such items which is financing th evisiting professorships .

Physics department head George Volkoff, chairman of th ecommittee to administer the fund, said Monday that doesn't matter .

"I've been given $600,000 to establish the professorships, and a slong as I can get qualified people, I do not care where the mone ycomes from," Volkoff said .

Linus Pauling, a chemist, leader of the American pacifis tmovement and former Nobel Peace Prize winner, is-one of the peopl eVolkoff is considering for a professorship .

In a telephone interview Monday with The Ubyssey, Pauling sai dhe has not been approached officially by Volkoff, even though th etwo are personal friends .

"I do not take a firm attitude to funds coming from militar ysources if they are being used for non-military matters," he said .

"In fact, I think its a good thing UBC managed to get somemoney away from that war profiteer," Pauling added .

Pauling said he did not know to what extent a decision o naccepting a visiting professorship would be influenced by the sourc eof the funds .

"Time is a major factor in my decision to do anything," he said .Pauling is a chemistry professor at Stanford University in Lo s

Angeles and director of a mental disease research project .UBC administration president Walter Gage said Monday he "like s

Green very much as a person . "When asked how he feels about the source of the money Gree n

has donated to the university, Gage said : "Well, I imagine he made itin business. "

Chemistry department head Charles McDowell said Monday UB Caccepts money without question from corporations and the universit y

See page 8 : GAG E

English dept. publishing machine, say radical humanist sEnglish department head Robert Jordan is turning

the department into a faculty publishing machin einstead of an educational instituteion, says a bulletinissued by a group of arts students .

The bulletin is the first action taken by anewly-formed group called the Union of Radicals in th eHumanities and is an attempt to break the silence that

has fallen over the department since last year .

Already a number of junior faculty members in th edepartment who are concerned mainly with teachin grather than publishing have been refused contrac trenewals, the URH claims .

URH spokesman Stan Persky said Monday tha tthere is something radically wrong with education in the

humanities which must be changed .The union plans to hold a series of open discussion s

on various arts departments as well as publish a journalcontaining information on the university administratio nand the education system .

Information about the URH can be obtained fromColin Portnuff at 224-4140 or Sue Kennedy at732-0340 .

1 proudly displayed . The bookstore didn' t

"in Canada" price is proudly sold by thebookstore for $4 .35 .

This 34 per cent difference is even

bother to cover the $3 .25 price with oneof its own new non-removeable tags .

If the reader detects much venom o nthe part of this columnist towards fat-ca tpublishers, monopolistic book importingagencies and the chronic inefficiencies i nthe bookstore, I hope that he or she willfind justification in the above .

The end result of all of this is tha tstudents are being screwed but good . Themajor portion of the blame lies on th eimporter agents who contribute little t othe state of Canadian publishing . BursarBill White and his bookstore overseers arenot without blame .

-The tragedy is that the governmen t

through consumer affairs minister Ro nBasford seems sympathetic but unwillingto do anything about it . Basford' sdepartment has been grossly underfunde dby a Liberal cabinet whose links to largecorporations have been proved time an dtime again .

a consumer column-hExposureBy ART SMOLENSKY

Despite a Ubyssey story last wee ksomething fishy is definitely going on i nthe UBC bookstore .

A copy of one of the bookstore' sinvoices fell into our hands recentlydetailing in black and white what thebookstore really pays for its books . Theinvoice was found in a book purchase dthis fall in the annual Armory bookbuying festival .

Of Time, Work, and Leisure is asociology 353 text which has a $2 .95bookstore label on it .

The invoice from Doubledaypublishers states that the list price i s$2 .25 and that the bookstore received a41 per cent discount on it .

In effect, this makes their cost $1 .33 acopy, a handy profit of 123 per cent o nwhat they paid .

The bookstore claims that they get a33 per cent discount off of a $2 .95 lis tand that this price has been in effect fortwo years. Incidentally, underneath thebookstore's sticker is a $2 .45 publisher'simprint .

Further intrigue is added by the fac tthat the July, 1971 Paperbound Books inPrint gives the book a $1 .95 price .

Three things seem to be evident .1.The UBC bookstore had some old

stock from last year which theyover-priced both last year and this year .Thus they obtained a 123 per cent profi ton a number of texts sold this year .

2. The Canadian importer-distributo r(Doubleday) has slapped on a 20 per cen tcharge ($2 .45 to $2 .95) as its right forhaving a monopoly in obtaining thesebooks . Doubleday is a U .S . company .

3. The American publisher is raisinghis prices so fast that even the mostrecent book catalogues can't keep upwith the spiralling increases . In this casethe publisher has increased his price 2 0per cent in the last six months ($1 .95 to$2 .45) .

For those interested in a distinct caseof the bookstore pushing things above lis tprice the accompanying photo virtuall yspeaks for itself.

An Oxford book stated to have af2.95 price (in the U .S . ?) and a $3 .25

Modern EssaysCriticism

Ai ;hut. E.3arlcor

Page 4

THE

UBYSSEY

Tuesday, October 19, 197 1

Jungle generalitie s

green stuff, even though this year's budgetshows a significant increase for UCC .

And then there's the question of fundin gfor intramural sports and the revelation of arather slimy plot afoot .

But in this case, the blame is on athleticsstudents, who appear to have initiated ascare campaign .

They've been passing out leaflets sayingthe human government has a secret plan t oput a quickie death-to-sports referendu mbefore the students asking that the $ 5athletic fee be wiped out and that a $ 1voluntary fee be instituted for intramural sonly .

A look as the AMS council minutes show sthat there is to be a sports referendum — i nJanuary — and that it has the unanimoussupport of the student council .

The referendum will give students awhole range of choices on what to do abou tthe athletics fee and will be part of a genera lJanuary referendum dealing with fees of al lkinds .

Meanwhile, the $3,500 given tointramural sports in the budget now befor ecouncil covers intramural program costscompletely, up to January, when student san vote on the athletics issue.

And maybe the men's athletic committeewill someday get around to deciding whetheror not it can afford to allocate a tiny portio nof the more than $100,000 students hav ealready paid for athletics to bolster theintramural program .

All in all, however, the AMS budge tmakes more sense than Edgar Benson' srecent effort in,a similar sphere, and withthe athletics smear campaign laid to rest, theway is open for rational debate .

Anthrosoc department head Cyri l(Bwana) Belshaw, in a frenetic 72 hours, ha scranked out enough letters andmimeographed explanations of what's goingon in his small empire to fill an issue ofAmerican Anthropologist .

The only thing he doesn't explain is wh yhe's in favor of firing Matthew Speier an dRon Silvers — two teachers who have a goodpublications record (by norma lpublish-or-perish standards) and who arewidely respected as teachers by students .

And neither does he deal with the genera lissue of a democractic alternative to tenure ,as raised in The Ubyssey on Friday .

Really, Cyril, we aren't attacking you rwar record . We don't even want to make fu nof it . We're sure it's distinguished .

As for reporting, we have our ups an ddowns no doubt . Generally, we try to getthe facts straight. If department procedure sweren't cloaked in secrecy, there wouldn' tbe any danger of innuendoes (to use Cyril' sword of the week . )

But let's focus on the first area Cyril isn' tdealing with, and in his words, come clean .

We'd like answers to some seriou squestions about the Speier-Silvers case :

What criteria were used to decide whethe ror not to grant tenure ?

Were the criteria publishing and teachin g(in that order) ?

If those were the criteria, then how werethey applied to the cases of Speier an dSilvers?

Isn't it true that Speier and Silvers bot hhave better publishing and teaching record sthan at least two of the peoplerecommended for tenure?

Instead of jungle camouflage answers t oquestions that are easy to rage about — likethe ones on political tenure considerations —for which it would be impossible to produce

AMS treasurer David Mole has produced abudget .

Not only is it the earliest andeasiest-to-understand student budget i nrecent memory, it's something of a surprise .

Those students who expected the firs tradical majority student government at UB Cto grab the money and run, will be surprisedto notice that Mole's budget appearseminently responsible .

At the same time the budget emphasize sthe things that the student governmen tmembers said they would emphasize whe nthey ran as the human government slate .

No doubt there will be a few of the usua lgrumbles and perhaps some minor budgetaryadjustments. Clubs are demanding mor e

THE UPlUllOCTOBER 19, 197 1

Published Tuesdays, Thursdays and Fridays throughout th e

university year by the Alma Mater Society of the University of

B.C. Editorial opinions are those of the writer and not of th eAMS or the university administration . Member, Canadia n

University Press. The Ubyssey publishes Page Friday, a weekl ycommentary and review. The Ubyssey's editorial offices ar elocated in room 241K of the Student Union Building .Editorial department; 228-2301, 2282307; Page Friday,Sports 228. 2305; advertising, 228-3977 .

Editor : Leslie Plomme r"I don't like innuendos," Pat Kanopski told Laurenc e

Leader as Art Smolensky watched . Tricia Moore said theyare in extremely poor taste, but Dick Betts and Kath yCarney disagreed . Stan Persky suggested John Anderse ncome to some conclusion on the matter for both LesleyKrueger and Vaughn Palmer were left howling under th echess board .

"Screw innuendos," said Sandi Shreve . "What abou tblood money?" Sandy Kass thought so too and told Ia nLindsay and Dave Schmidt they had better agree with he ror she would call Leslie Plommer on 'em . Paul Knox calledfor cooler heads to prevail and they did as Randy Frith andMike Buck tied Leslie to her em ruler . Jan O'Brien had afew remarks about certain arseholes but Linda Hossie didn' thave time to agree because she was busy .

David Bowerman retreated to the darkroom and Kell yBooth was just as glad because Kent Spenser with Gor dGibson .

Mike Sasges worked .

concrete evidence — how about the abov eones?

It seems to us that the anthrosoc prom oand tenure committee is making the clai mthat it has rationally applied criteria to th ecases of all persons involved .

Yet, on the face of it, it's completel yunclear (to put it mildly) where th erationality is. That's the case graduatestudents in anthrosoc are making ; those arethe questions they're asking .

Instead of answers, all they've beengetting is blanket assurances about the fai rand considered treatment the chaps on th ecommittee gave to the chaps whose tenur ecases were heard .

No specifics . Just generalities .And that isn't good enough, Cyril .Okay, so we've played it your way . N o

cracks about your war years among th ewatermelon, no nasty hints about politica lconsiderations . Just some simple question sthat you have not answered .

Now let's go on to the other area you'v equickly sidestepped: the issue of tenur eitself .

We stick with our opposition to 'tenur emartyrs' and our support for an alternativ eto tenure itself . We notice that you'vewritten us a letter which addresses itself to aminor point (your war service) in Friday' sUbyssey editorial .

Yet you neglect the important editoria lquestion of a tenure alternative . And, wesuspect, for a very good reason .

You like tenure . And you like the waythe tenure system works .

The Old Guard, which comprises mos ttenure committees, shepherds the converte dinto a life of academic security, whil ediscarding the guys who just ain't gotreligion — despite the best efforts of th eacademic institution .

So let's have a few more answers and lo tless snow .

In short, we want the truth .

a3

Budgets and plots

Tuesday, October 19, 1971

THE

UBYSSEY

Page 5

LettersKosygin Lithuanians, and Ukrainians .

Cultural and religious genocide isalso a policy towards the threemillion Jews who have not bee npermitted to print ethnic workssince the mid-30s .

Therefore, if you are one ofthose human types who believe sin freedom and self-determinationyou should be interested in takingpart in the weekend's events.

On Wednesday there will be ageneral meeting at B'nai B'rithHillel House (behind Brock) a t12 :30 p .m. Anyone interested insupplying or receiving furthe rinformation or wishing to takepart in the weekend' sdemonstrations, please come .

Wayne Greenburg ,Hillel Club .

BelshawYes, indeed, for three year s

during the war, at approximatelyyour age, I was in the colonia lservice .

A major part of my task was toassist the people of a war-torn

country create, out of indigenou sforms, institutions to do wha tthey wanted to do by way ofsetting up businesses ,co-operatives, locally-controlle ddispensaries and schools, andcourts which reflected their ownlegal ideas. And don't tell me thi swas done to benefit big business ,since big business wasn ' t there .And if you don't think it waspossible to do these things and a tthe same time oppose the re-entr yof big business, you don ' t knowmuch about the climate of th etime and you have not read th equestions I had raised in th eEnglish House of Commons b yLabor party bank-benchers .

The role I was playing at thi stime was very much more relevant

and productive of real benefits tohuman beings than is the curren trole of the Ubyssey editor .

One of the many things I learn twas not to indulge in politics b yinnuendo : indeed the whole freeworld was in opposition to theHitlerian outcome of tha ttechnique . It is a lesson which youyourself have not learned . Theinitial story about events in thi sdepartment, and a subsequenteditorial, were in terms of baseles sinnuendo . You canno tsubstantiate the material, becauseyour innuendos were based uponthe innuendos of your informants ,not on facts . Your next stor y(October 15th) has some factualmaterial, but much of this i splainly erroneous . For example,

you state that in response tocertain events graduate students inthe department set up acommittee . Since the events youdescribe occurred after th ecommittee had been set u p(indeed after I had talked with it) ,you statement is clearly false .

And your editorial once againuses innuendo . Come on — comeclean . Tell your readers just wha tthe connection is between myservice for three years- in thecolonial administration, a tapproximately your age, in wa rtime — and anything that i srelevant now . If you can . And i fyou dare print this challenge .

Your faithful windmill ,Cyril Belshaw,(Uncle Ogre) .

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On Friday, Premier AlexeiKosygin of the USSR will b earriving in Vancouver .

It is the first and possibly th eonly time that such a high officia lof the Soviet Union will be i nVancouver .

Therefore, it is extremelyimportant that we as people stan d

-up against the oppression that hi sgovernment stands for .

For those of you who are s obitter about America nimperialism, I ask you not toforget Soviet imperialism. Theinvasion of Czechoslovakia i n1968, the invasion of Hungary in1956 (as a minimum ofexamples) . For those of you wh oshout against authority andscream for the right ofself-determination, how aboutSoviet policies of culturalgenocide ?

This is what results from theuprooting and forced resettlementof the Estonians, Latvians ,

Zionists to followKosygin during visit

A UBC committee plans to follow Soviet premier Alexe iKosygin around town during his visit here .

Kosygin will be intercepted on his way to Vancouver from th eairport around 3 p.m. Friday and will be followed to the Hote lVancouver .

The protest will climax with a Saturday midnight rally at th ecourthouse .

"The purpose of the demonstration is to indicate the concern ofVancouver Jewry for the Jews in the Soviet Union who are denie dtheir human rights stated in both the Soviet constitution and theuniversal declaration of rights ," said Jon Kaplan, chairman of the UBCSoviet action committee .

He said Monday that the group is also demonstrating agains tSoviet refusal to allow Jews to emigrate to Israel .

Further information can be obtained from Kaplan at 266-6442 .

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Library survey startsStudents using the Woodward bio-medical library will be aske d

to report all missing journals in a two-week survey. beginning Monday .

Students complained that many medical journals were missin gduring the spring and suggested loan procedures be changed, assistan tlibrarian Doug McInnes said Monday .

"The survey may show that borrowing procedures are not a tfault - that what is required is an improvement in internalprocedures," said McInnes.

He said the Woodward library will apply to the bio-medicallibrary committee to change loan regulations if they are the cause o fborrowing difficulties .

"If this survey proves helpful to us, we may also use it in othe rdivisions of the library," McInnes said .

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THE UBYSSEY

Tuesday, October 19, 197 1

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QUEBEC - What is the best strategy for social change i nQuebec? And what is the best strategy for containing socia lchange here ?

Both the changers and the stoppers of change seem to b eunsure of their course as the first anniversary of last October' skidnappings and imposition of the War Measures Act approaches .

First the regime .The Trudeau government, which obviously ran the show

and laid down the heavy stuff in the crisis, also seems to havebeen the first to catch on that the War Measures Act, the arrest sof the law-abiding left, and the extravagant language abou tbleeding-heart-liberals and a-c a is se-populaire-manager-may-be-next, were all poison, electorally and otherwise ,and should be tapered off from with all prudent haste .

The Bourassa government here, which came across as muc hmore vacillating and conscience-stricken in October, dumbly go ton some Trudeau tough-talk just as it was no longer the thing ,and said letting the Public Order Act lapse was "illogicalsoftness" .

Now it too has come around, and the last weeks of the firs tyear of post-War-Measures Quebec were devoted to sending ou tcheques of apparently arbitrary amounts in compensation t othose falsely arrested in October, and dropping cases agains tpersons charged with the War Measures crimes that no longe rexisted - membership in the FLQ, etc .

But the government has shown a certain amount ofhesitancy in its new tack . The compensated were required to signa document saying they had no further claim on the government .And the charge-dropping was by a procedure which, a crow nprosecutor pointed out, enabled the government to come backlater and prosecute, although the justice minister said it was, takemy word for it, final .

Jerome Choquette, the justice minister in question, stillspeaks with the same bland liberalism he has always put forward :me, use the courts politically, arrange the order of trials to keepthe accused on a string? Never . Justice isn 't perfect, but we' reworking on it . But don't forget those who criticize it arerevolutionaries, they don't want to improve, they want todestroy .

Meanwhile, it has emerged that the beatings in Orsainvillejail the night after the War Measures Act was invoked wer einvestigated at a closed inquiry in the spring, that it all came ou tin great detail, and that the government even used it as part of itscase against a jail warden it wanted to get rid of .

Now the government could have played this up, stressed itsimplacability with the breachers of civil rights even in times ofcrisis. But no, that would have brought back memories, let out aFortune-And-Men's-Eyes glimpse of prison, scratched sores . Sothey used it but didn't publicize it, and have been silent ormuddled since the news has been published .

Deeper and deepe rThe pre-October atmosphere here is like that through and

through. Guy Marcil of the policemen 's union speaks o fBrazilian-style death squads - of course he doesn't want them ,but he may be forced to accept them . Montreal Mayor Drapeau' s`little Canada Council ' says aid to the arts must uplift the arts 'morality, as in Greece .

Bourassa flees the reporters when they learn the FL Qcharges will not be pressed, flees their questions when they catc hhim .

His electoral situation is not Trudeau's : he's not up forelection for a while yet, and doesn't have to face touchy Torontocivil libertarians when he is . Bourassa enjoyed the 99 and 44/100per cent pure support he got in the crisis, perhaps not quite a smuch as Trudeau because he had to be danced into hard-linerdo mby Mr . Choquette, but he can cling to it longer . His Anglo-Saxon sare mostly scared and ready to approve anything, and he, unlik eTrudeau, knows that anyone who has of late shown any militanc yfor civil rights is pretty surely against him anyway .

He's counting on the unawakened working class whoseconcern is with livelihood rather than liberties, and he sloshe sdeeper and deeper in his crude capitalist cures for its problems :foreign capital, trips to New England haunts to chat wit hRockefellers, jobs, handouts to the pulp industry, surcharge-bal mto the distilleries (maybe), jobs, gran dprojects-in-the-north-financed-by-Con-Ed (maybe), jobs, capital .

It should all be qualified with maybe, really, becauseunemployment is keeping "cent mille emplois" a nightmare litan yfor Bourassa. And yet he is right, in a way : the averageworking-class consciousness in Quebec is not yet shocked by th ethought that prosperity is when ITT deigns to let you work fo rthem .

Now for the revolution, which depends on consciousnes scoming.

It is coming, and you can see it everywhere you look inQuebec . In the unions - even the timid Quebec City section ofthe Confederation of National Trade Unions was recently comingon strong with the second front, social action beyond the wagecontract . In the industryless rural towns, which are in the street sbecause they're tired of being industryless . In the popular arts ,where free press agencies pop up, scandal sheets reprin trevolutionary history, itinerant players take mad joual epics to

BEYOND

Tom S. Brown of thedescribes the situc

political force

the parish halls, rock stars tell working-class life like it is -terribly crushed and shy but terribly alive with juice at the same

time .And in the usual on-again off-again youth movements -

here in the capital, the kids are running a lovely, chea tgathering-place restaurant, starting an analytical magazin elaunching an anti-finance-company movement, keeping on wit lthe anti-private-fishing-preserve movement and the defence opolitical prisoners .

One steady current is the Parti Quebecois . The troops othe left almost all support it, work for it (even the FLQ manifest(claimed to have tried it and despaired after the election larcen yeven though they know it's not socialist the way they are, kno v

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Tuesday, October 19, 1971

THE UBYSSEY

Page 7

.ast Post News Servic eon in a nation whereare regrouping .

they don' t have more than a cheering-section role in it, know th eleaders are technocrats, sometimes even know that Pierr eBourgault isn't, as we say here, a gift .

It's a mass party and it's not too reactionary and maybe i tcan win, and there has never been a mass socialist movement inQuebec, and isn't now, and you can always do your other work inthe little left groups as well .

'Then there is the FLQ. The left is like everyone else ,

doesn't know just what it is, but cheers when it strikes its blow s— at least somebody's doing something, the powers ar escandalized so don't expect us to lbe, somebody's denouncing th ejudges for their their rich man 's justice, somebody is going clearlybeyond independence .

It would seem that the FLQ continues on always, anew, 'enough young leftists who cannot bear the slow prospects ofmovement-building to form a few cells, plan the acts that wil lmake crises without mass participation . It would seem to be acase of constant rebirth rather than continuity . But nobodyknows.

It's all been made more difficult to judge by the recen tVallieres-Gagnon thing . In summary :

Charles Gagnon, 1966 FLQ partner of Pierre Vallieres ,finally clear of all charges after a half a decade, gives an interviewto a Montreal English Establishment paper, the Gazette, to areporter who co-wrote an openly right-wing account of thekipnapping crisis, No Mandate but Terror . The interview i spublished just before October . Gagnon talks about revolution, theworking class, violence — takes standard Marxist positions .Except that the standard positions — (the working class mus tmake revolution, must be organized, is held down by violence —violence exercised or hovering in the air, violence that has bee nthe stuff of history — and may quite un-bloodthirstily feel th eneed to free itself by violence) don ' t say what specific course isright, here and now .

On that, Gagnon's statements seem to reflect a ne worientation . The FLQ's bombs and such were needed to shake th eworkers awake, but now they are awake, and the task is rather toorganize them into a party to move toward power . Like theBolsheviks .

But why plead for such a new orientation on the eve o fOctober through the Occupant's newspaper and a rightis treporter ?

Then came the move of Vallieres . He was not clear of th ecourts, he risked going back to jail, after three years in and only afew months out, on a charge developed by the authorities in th eaftermath of October, of inciting to crime during his previous jai ltime . One day Vallieres doesn't show up in court . And the nex tday the papers get a communique saying he has rejoined the FL Qunderground . If this is the case, he becomes the first FLQer fromone wave to go back to the movement in a later one, and th emovement begins to take on a continuity that had not bee napparent before . Photo-Police, a crime rag, speculates that he mayhave been killed by the authorities and the communique sent as atrick. But Robert Lemieux, Vallieres ' lawyer, says th ecommunique seems to be for real .

Where is the FLQ at ?But most of all it seemed to imply that Vallieres did no t

agree with Gagnon that the need for terrorism (the FLQ reject sthe word, but it is used here for bombs, kidnappings ,assassinations and other blows to the regime which can be carriedout by small groups and which do not in themselves bring larg enumbers of workers to bear on power) is over .

And yet even this is not sure, for the FLQ has never reall ystated its position in this debate . Its manifestos, and Vallieres 'book White Niggers of America, have been demonstrations of thegeneral need for social revolution, the injustice and anger o fQuebec as she is . They have not explained the precise choice o fterrorism, but have seemed to take it for granted as the sole pathfor someone who wants to start the armed struggle immediately .

Oddly, the only person in Quebec to write profoundly o nthe theme has been Charles Gagnon, who in an essay from jai lsaid that the culture . of the working class, its deprivation in th erealm of words, argued for violent blows to the system : "Th ebourgeois doesn't understand that, he who possesses the world b ywords . "

The FLQ has often rejected the notion that it is merel yterrorist, however. Vallieres' book is the precociou sautobiography of a Quebec "terrorist" in quotes, and he ha salways insisted that the FLQ did other revolutionary work :organization, etc . But it is impossible from the outside, to kno wwhat this work was, and it is the terrorist acts, by their natur epublic, which have remained the only external evaluation we ca nmake of the movement .

Gagnon's most recent ideas are important, no matter howodd the place which they have turned up . There is no way o fabolishing capitalism in Quebec without the participation ofmany thousands of Quebec workers, and the FLQ, successfulthough it is in staying alive and spectacular, is like all othe rleft-wing movements in not having found the way to engage those .thousands . It is the citizens' committees, legal, public, an dpolice-harried, which have made the best start at that .

For you cannot organize large numbers of peopleunderground while it is still at all permitted to organize the mabove ground. You cut yourself off from phones, posters ,meeting halls, magazines and other such aids to bringing peopl etogether before their experience has told them that it is com etogether clandestinely or not at all .

And in Quebec's case there is a historical reason to continuetrying the unexhausted aboveground ; it is that the left is comingto birth here — there have been mighty struggles of several kinds ,but there has never been a mass movement of workers fro mFrance, or almost any other European land, of the United State s— or even English Canada .

It may be long . It must be done .

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THE UBYSSE YPage 8

Gage : `I like Gree na lot, as a person '

From page 3cannot distinguish between sources of funds .

"Corporations exploit the consumer, and Texas Instruments i sexploiting the people of Vietnam," McDowell said .

"I don ' t think there 's much difference in the long run . "However, at least one faculty will not use money tainted with

military origins .Education dean Neville Scarfe said Monday he does not wan t

anything to do with the war in Vietnam, and if he was sure the moneyfunding the professorships came from a source connected with th ewar, he would have nothing to do with them .

In 1963, the year before the U .S . began its major escalation i nVietnam, TI's total sales were $276,476,571 and its net income wa smore than $13 million .

By the end of last year, sales had more than tripled, increasing t o$827,641,000 and its net income had risen to almost $30 million .

Most of that growth occurred between 1964 and 1968 whe nLyndon Johnson was president and major funding was directed a tmaintaining the U .S . military in southeast Asia .

Alma Mater Society president Steve Garrod called the visitin gprofessorships "nothing but a big-time public relations gimmick .

"The scheme is comparable to the master teacher award, in that i tincreases the prestige of the university without improving the qualit yof education in any way," Garrod said .

Garrod said men like Green become university "philanthropists "when they "have huge sums of money derived from the exploitationof the workers, military and third world nations to donate, an dinfluence the direction of the university .

"They give money to education to educate people to keep the min power," Garrod said .

He added, however, that students should not hesitate to atten dlectures given by professors under this scheme, "as long as student srealize it is not their fees that are paying their profs salaries . "

Pakistani teach-in toda yThe Emergency Committee for Pakistani refugee relief will hold a

learn-in on the refugee crisis Tuesday and Wednesday noon in the SUBauditorium .

Each day's program will include an hour of panel and audienc ediscussion followed by seminar studies of practical proposals for reliefand eventual stability in Pakistan .

The results of Tuesday's seminar groups will be presented durin gWednesday's discussion along with Indian government films .

Workshop setProfessor Lynn White Jr ., who

knows a lot about the history o fscience and technology will tak epart in a three-day historydepartment workshop whichbegins Friday .

White will lecture on India and

Tuesday, October 19, 197 1

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excuse?You could have gone water ski-ing or swimming or to a danc eat night . Instead you've spentthe entire day moping aroun dthe house feeling sorry fo ryourself . And why? Just be -cause it was one of those diffi-cult times? How silly. A lot o f

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medieval Europe, Friday, 12 :30p .m., in Buch 106 .

Most of the workshop will tak eplace in the faculty club and theWoodward bio-medical library o nSaturday and Sunday .

Details are available from R. W.Unger at 228-5162 .

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Tuesday, October 19, 1971

THE

UBYSSEY

Page 9

Belshaw letter, memo tell different tale sThe tenure proceedings an d

their outcome have given rise to anumber of charges by graduat e

some facult y

By LINDA HOSSI E

The Non Faculty Teachers' Union is satisfie dwith the results of the workshop meeting betweenfaculty and graduate students Friday, NFTUspokesman Mark Madoff said Monday .

"I would be more confident if I knew what th epattern of decision making will be, but I'm willin gto give it a try," Madoff said .

"It will be more than has happened up tonow . "

A brief outlining the past problems of th eNFTU in communicating with the administratio nwas presented by the union at the meeting .

The brief stressed the "delay tactics " used bythe administration in dealing with the grievances ofteaching assistants .

(Continued from Page 1 )

And he says he has bee ninformed that Ubyssey stories"contributed to the underlyin ganxiety" which led to theformation of the graduat estudents ' tenure committee toreview the proceedings by thedepartmental committee .

(There is no studen trepresentation on the departmen ttenure committee, which is th ebasic decision-making body on thematter of tenure — guaranteedlife-time employment with th euniversity . )

Pointing at the grad students 'tenure committee, Belshaw states :"While I have not the slightes tdoubt that the members of thi scommittee are doing their ver ybest, and while I intend t ocontinue to meet with them, Ifear they do not understand th enature of the fire. they are playingwith, and that we may ultimatelyhave to treat their burns as well a sour own . "

And while claiming in hi smemo that `Ubyssey innuendos' .led to the formation of the gradstudents' tenure revie wcommittee, Belshaw maintains ina letter in today's Ubyssey thatthis is not the case .

The tenure dispute aroseapproximately two weeks ago ,when it became known that tw osociology profs were likely to los etheir jobs as a result of tenuredecisions by the anthrosoc tenur eand promotions committee .

The two professors, RonSilvers and Matt Speier, numbere damong six profs in the departmen twho were up for tenure decision sthat amounted to `hire or fire ' .The other profs are: RobinRidington, George Gray, Bo bRatner and Robert Macdougall .

Since that time, thedepartment committee ha sapproved three of the profs by aclear majority for tenure ; refused

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As for the committee, it hasbeen charged that :

The quality of teaching an dgraduate student supervision wasnot given much weight as acriterion for granting or refusingtenure ;

The criteria that were used b ythe committee were not applie duniformly to the cases of the sixprofs ;

Anthropologists, wh o

The brief also outlined some of the demands o fthe NFTU such as a wage increase, recognition ofthe TAs as teachers and the establishment of a ful ltime board to handle TA affairs and grievances .

Graduate studies dean Ian Cowan agreed tha twork needed to be done about the situation befor ethe university's budget is formulated next spring ,Madoff said .

He said the workshop has agreed to mee tweekly until December when they expect to have acomprehensive picture of how TAs are being use dby the university .

Madoff said the Friday meeting revealed th elack of information on both sides of the table .

"There's still more to be done," Madoff said ."But I was satisfied with the concrete things tha twere settled on Friday ."

dominate the committee, favor acertain brand of sociology and ar eattempting to exert influence ove rthe direction of the sociologists i nthe combined anthrosocdepartment .

In his memorandum t odepartment members, and arecent barrage of letters sent t oother members of the universitycommunity, Belshaw denies al lthese charges.

On a more general level ,graduate students are belatedl yobjecting to the fact that theyhave little say in the department' stenure proceedings .

Their formal participation t odate has been restricted to writin gindividual letters commenting o ncases coming before thedepartment committee .

However the grad students'tenure review committee, forme das a response to the current tenuredecisions, is to submit a report t othe faculty of arts committe ewhen it comes to deal with th ecases of the six anthrosoc profs .

The committee, headed bygrad student James Heap, has als omet with Belshaw to discuss th esituation .

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SCANDAL:Don't Be Publi c

Enemy Number One!Get Your Haircut

Or Style At

CORKY'SMEN'S HAIRSTYLIN G

3644 W. 4th Ave .

Longhair And Shag CutsOur Specialty

tenure to one prof ; and approve dtenure for Speier and Silvers by anarrow margin with mainl yabstentions .

students andAs department head, Belshaw members ,

submitted his own report on the Some are aimed at Belshawtenure decisions, which will now personally ; and centre on claim sbe reviewed by the faculty of arts that he influenced committe etenure and promotions proceedings on the basis of acommittee . In his report, Belshaw history of personal animosity an drecommended against tenure for political disagreement with Speie rSpeier and Silvers .

and Silvers .: a.

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NFTU brief received favorabl y

'Mat ha ronyo~ur

If you ' re about to graduate, you ' re also abou tto move into a corporate world dominated by olde rpeople. Older people have been known to get quitetense about long hair and beards .

What do you do if your hair is longer tha ntheirs? Cut it off and feel like a cop out? Leave it an drisk losing a fine job ?

Not shattering questions . But they may bepart of a thicket of little problems, all twitching at yo uas you start those job interviews .

We wrote a booklet about going to job inter -views . Eight pages only, but we packed it with wha twe've learned about coming face to face with stran-gers . The thrust is simple : how to approach, engagerin and leave an interview on your own terms.

It's called " How to separate yourself fro mthe herd ." It talks about handling nervousness ,money, and the guy across the desk from you . Ittalks about hair and how to turn an interview around .Things like that.

Yo u ' ll find it tucked into a much larger book ,also new, called The Employment Opportunitie sHandbook. The handbook is yours for the asking a tthe placement office .

Please understand, though . We don't kidyou that eight pages, packed or otherwise, are goin gto pull off a miracle between now and the time yo utake your first interview.

But they just might help .

MDOMUFEInsuranceCompany,London,Canada

Page 10

THE

UBYSSEY

Tuesday, October 19, 197 1

ween classes

r

TUESDA YCHINESE STUDENTS ASS ' N

Visitors from the People's Republic ,12 :30 p.m ., IH upper lounge.

CUSOCUSO and Indian, 7 :30 p.m., I H402 .

IHProgram committee, 12 :30 p .m ., I H406 .

YOUNG SOCIALISTS12 :30 p .m ., SUB 213 .

KUNG FU CLU BLessons, 4 :30 p .m ., SUB ballroom .

CLUBS COMMITTE ECUSO and Indian, 7 :30 p .m ., IH .

NEWMAN CLU B12:30 p .m ., St . Mark's Music Rm .

CHINESE VARSITY CLU BGeneral Meeting, 12 :30 p .m ., SU BClubs' Lounge .

SPECIAL EVENTS—QUEBEC WEE KLeandre Bergeron, 12 :30 p .m ., SU Bballroom .

CC FSingspiration, 12 :30 p .m ., SUB 211 .

18th CENT . CLU BDr . Brent Thomas on 18th cent .medicine, Memorial Rm . ,Woodward Bio-Med . Library.

SEE12 :30 p .m ., SUB 119 .

EdS ASpecial lecture, 12 :30 p .m ., Ed 100 .

SAILING CLU BGeneral meeting on skippering ,12 :30 p .m ., Buch . 104 .

EXPERIMENTAL COLLEG ECanadian

constitutional reform ,12 :30 p .m ., SUB 111 .

CANOE CLU BForthcoming trips, 12 :30 p .m ., SU B125 .

VARSITY DEMOLA Y12 :30 p .m ., SUB 215 .

WEDNESDA YPSYCHOLOGY CLU B

Beer-nite . Faculty and students i npsych- invited, 7 p .m ., IH uppe rlounge.

AMATEUR RADSOCBeginners code classes, 7 p .m . ,Radio shack, Brock 358 .

A direct charter bus to th eNorth Shore is in danger ofbackfiring .

More riders are required if th eservice is to continue in the winte rmonths .

The cost is comparable to usingB .C . Hydro but the direct route i sabout 40 per cent faster and a sea tis guaranteed .

The bus stop outside SU Beliminates an often wet walk, t ooutlying parking lots .

The bus can operate better i nsnow than a car because it has th eweight in the right area, say sdrivers of the charter company ,Vancouver Tours and Transit Ltd .

211 .SPECIAL EVENTS— QUEBEC WEE K

Raoul Duquay, Quebecois poetreads 12 :30 p .m ., SUB Art Gallery.

EDUC . STUDENT SBeer and chicken night, 8 :30 p.m . ,Cecil Green Park.

TAEKWON-DO CLU BPractice led by Mr . Choi, 4 :3 0p .m .-6 p .m ., Place Vanier, Ballroom .

ANGLICAN-UNITED CAMPU SMINISTR Y

Informal

supper,

5 :30

p.m . ,discussion on UBC, 7 p .m .

EXPERIMENTAL COLLEG EFreud, Jung, Adler, Reich, 10 a .m . ,SUB 111 .

PRE-LA WOrganizational meeting, 12 :30 p .m . ,ANGU 414 .

AC EGuest speaker : Dr . Vera Mckay ,12 :30 p .m ., Ed 204 .

UBCSC CSecond general meeting — beer ,films . 8 p .m ., SUB 212 .

HILLE LRabbis' confrontation with Premie rKosygin . 12 :30 p .m ., Hillel House .

GERMAN CLU BFilm, 12 :30 p .m ., IH 402 .

ITALIAN CLU B12 :30 p .m ., IH stage .

Students interested in the bu sline should phone Randy Frith a t985-1053 .

188 get breadThe alumni associatio n

provided scholarships andbursaries for 188 students thi syear .

Sixty-four students enteringUBC from high school wereawarded $350 N . A. MacKenziescholarships .

Sixteen regional collegestudents with averages above 65per cent were granted $350 Joh nB . Macdonald bursaries .

The other 108 students wer eawarded alumni bursaries fro m$100 to $300 if they had average sabove 65 per cent .

CC FTestimonies, 12 :30 p.m ., SUB 205 .

VO CGeneral meeting, new member swelcome, 12 :30 p .m . . HEBB .

SPECIAL EVENTS — QUEBEC WEE KPierre Bourgault, 12 :30 p.m., SU Bballroom .

VO CUsed outdoor equipment sale, al lday, SUB 205 .

"The number of 1971 award sis the most extensive in th ehistory of our program," sai dalumni funds chairman Kennet hBrawner .

Job hunt onIt's recruitment time again, as

companies in such fields as oil ,lumber and chartere daccountancy begin interviews wit hjob-hunting students .

Student placement officer CamCraik said Monday students ca nnow make appointments for th einterviews, which continue unti labout February .

Appointments should be mad ethrough the placement office o nWest Mall .

FRIDAYIH BEER GARDE N

Invitation to jamming musicians ,every Fri . 4-8 p.m ., IH Uppe rlounge .

STUDENT LIBERALSGeneral meeting, new member swelcome, 12 :30 p .m ., SUB 205 .

EdSAB . McKerlich : "Open area schools, "12 :30, Ed 204 .

SUNDA YALPHA-OMEGA SOCIET Y

Soviet suppression of non-Russia npeoples, 2 p .m ., SUB Audit .

PANGO-PANGO (UNS) — Thecrisis deepened Monday on thi sformer island paradise as hordesof giant foo birds joined theinvasion of the shithawks .

Sources here claim th eturdbirds are based on the nearb yisland of Bongalokreega ; home o fthe popular singing group Castratiand the Eunuchs.

Speculators speculated th einvasion results from the puc eblorg edict that the group is to beshot on sight for their rendition ofGo Away, Little Blorg .

Wanted—Miscellaneous

1 8ARTISTS — PAINTINGS NEEDE D

to be sold in a new, attractivegallery. Phone 853-2400, House ofFine Art, Abbotsford, B .C .

WANTED TEN - SPEED BIKE.Phone 736-5316, ask for Karen.

Scandals

37RUBBER BIBLES AT WHOLE -

sale prices . Place deposit withC .I .C . Chem. 162, Tues . noon a tlatest .

C .I .C . LAB. COATS ARE STILL INstock . Only $4 .00 each . Chem . 162 ,noon hours.

BUSINESS SERVICESTyping

48TEDIOUS TASKS, PROFESSIONAL

typing . IBM Selectric—days, even-ings, weekends . Phone Shari at738-8745. Reasonable rates.

FAST & ACCURATE TYPING INmy home on IBM Exec . Reason-able . 685-1982.

ESSAYS AND THESES TYPED,Experienced Typist . Mrs . Freeman ,731-8096 .

EFFICIENT ELECTRIC TYPING —my home . Essays, thesis, etc . Neat ,accurate work . Reasonable rates .Phone 263-5317 .

ESSAYS A'ND THESES TYPEDneatly, accurately . 25c a page . Cal lCarol, 732-9607 (after 6 p .m ., Mon. -Friday) .

EMPLOYMEN THelp Wanted

51PART-TIME RESEACHER (BIO -

logical/Anthropological literature )$3 hr . write Doran 2716 West 10t hAve ., Vancouver 8 .

GIVE HELP, GET DOLLARS! UBCTutoring centre needs tutors . Allcourses . Register SUB 228, 12 :30 -2 :30. Open to grad students ,honour students, or .

WANTED ORGANIST AND GUI -tarist, funky sound, straight-type ,no experience required, Steve 738 -8628 .

INSTRUCTION&SCHOOLSSpecial Classes

6 2TAI CHI CHUAN: LEARN THI S

graceful art of meditation-in-action ; also for centering, increas-ed health, dexterity & self-defens efrom Raymond Chung, N.A. ' s fore -most master ($6 month) . Also join thands practise for the experienced .Contact Doug Seeley, 228-4143.

Tutoring Service

6 3BIG CLASSES CONFUSING? GET

individual help with't a tutor . Rea-sonable rates — all courses . UBCTutoring Centre, SUB 228, 12 :30 -2 :30 .

MISCELLANEOU S FOR SALE 7 1KENWOOD KR-4140 95 W . AM/F M

tuner, Lenco L-75 turntable w/$6 0cartridge . JMI Monitor V speakers,Pioneer headphones (SE-45) . $95 0value . Offers! 987-3897 .

CUTE BLACK LABRADOR PUPP Y3 months old . Female, reg. Phon ePat, 985-0707 after 5 p.m .

RENTALS & REAL ESTATE

Rooms

-

8 1ROOM WITH SHOWER & TOILET .

Private entrance . Light cooking .$.10 .00 :per month . Phone 261-0771 .

Room & Board

8 2

Furn. Apts .

8 3FEMALE TO SHARE 1 BEDROO M

apt. 7th & Vine. $75 .00 inclusive .Phone 731-0969 .

"MATURE" MALE STUDEN Twanted to share bsmt . suite wit hVan. Art School student, if musi-cal, great . $55 month- 1705 W. 10th ,No . 5 . After 5 p .m.

Unf. Apts .

8 4

STUDENT SPECIA L3 Rooms of Furniture

From $199 .9 5HOUSE OF GROUPS

1278 Granvill eDay 687-5043

Eve . 277-924 7

LARGE, ONE BEDROOM UNFUR -nished apartment . Available Nov .1st . 3520 West Broadway . $120 .

Houses—Furn. & Unfurn. 86RESPONSIBLE COUPLE- FOR 3 -

bedroom furnished home, $25 0month, UBC area . Nov. 1st toJuly 31st 1972 . Ring 224-6918, lease .

ANNOUNCEMENTSDances

1 1

Greetings

1 2FUR COATS $19 & LESS . PAPPA S

Bros . New Annex . 459-461 Hamilto nat Victory Square . Double fur bed-spreads $79 . Open Fri . nite 7 :00 -9 :30 p .m . Sat. 11 :00 a.m .-5 :30 p.m .Satisfaction guaranteed !

Lost & Found

1 3LOST: STERLING SILVER CHARM

bracelet. Great sentimental value.Reward offered . Contact Sharon ,263-4134 .

LEFT BLUE TOTE BAG IN CARhitching Saturday night, pleas ecall 263-8307, 3425 W . 31st .

Rides& Car Pools

1 4WHEELCHAIR STUDENT IN VIC -

inity of 41st & Nanaimo require sride Monday thru Thursday . CallAudrey Hill, 434-7052 .

Special Notices

1 5WIN SET OF GREAT BOOKS AN D

earn $123.00 week minimum doingit . 687-8872 .

THE PURCELL STRING QUARTETat Grad Student Centre, Tues ., 19Oct ., 8 p.m. Tickets 75c each a tthe Grad Centre office.

THE LUTHERAN CAMPUS CEN -tre — A human place where thereare many questions and fewanswers and much in between .Come by and ask your questionsand share your answers .

COMMUNITY WORSHIP — STU -dents and community, Sundayevening 7 :00-7 :45 p.m. 6050 Chan-cellor V .S.T . Chapel . Sponsored b yresidents and S .C .M . All invited .

BAZIL REPORT BY COLIN JOHN -stone, Sunday, Oct . 24, 8 :00 p .m . ,6050 Chancellor V.S .T . Sponsoredby residents and S .C .M . all invited.

U .B .C . BARBER SHOP IS OPE NMon .-Sat . See Dino or Rick at5736 University Boulevard (near

— Campus) .FREE KITTENS . 228-4474 DAYS .

263-69471 nights .SOCIETY FOR ENVIRONMENTAL

education meeting in room, 11 9SUB, 12 :30 Tuesday, all intereste dwelcome .

PUBLIC 'SERVICE EXAMINATION ,Administrative Trainee and For-eign,Service Officers, tonight, 7 :0 0p .m . Buchanan 106 .

FEDERAL GOVERNMENT BRIEF -ing Session for Economists an dStatisticians will be held at 12 :3 0noon, Wednesday, October 27, 197 1in Buchanan 217 .

EXCELLENT R & R, BLUES .dance hand for parties, Group —Ambleside . phone 985-5713, 988 -1973 . 985-7963 .

THE GRIN BIN HAS THE LAR -gest selection in Canada of post-ers and pen art . Also Jokes, Gift sand 24" x 35" photo blowups fro myour own prints and negatives .Enquiries welcome at the Gri nBin, 3209 W . Broadway across fro mthe Liquor Store. Call 738-2311 .

Wanted—Information

1 7

AUTOMOTIV EAutos For Sale

2 1'63 GALAXTE 500 H .T ., V8 . RADIO ,

auto . trans., excel . cond. $495 o rsold to highest bidder. Must sell .879-1084, anytime .

Automobiles—Repairs

2 4

CAR REPAIRS TOVOLVO, MERCEDE S

PORSCHE, VOLKSWAGE N* Factory trained mechanic s* Fully Guaranteed Wor k* Reasonable Rates

P .S . We also now repai rDatsun, Toyota, & Mazda cars

SALES AND SERVIC E8914 Oak St .

263-812 1VW SPECIAL—REBUILT MOTOR S

and trans . exchange service, als orepairs . Brakes relining, $25 . Kin gand link pins, $30 . 683-8078 — 760Denman St . (rear) .

'TANTIWAR CLUB

FOLK SONG SOC .Activists welcome, 12 :30 p .m .,SUB

General meeting, 12 :30 p.m ., Rm .105B .

BAHA'I CLU B12 :30 p.m ., Buch . 230 .

KARATE CLU BLecture : History and Philosophy ,12 :30 p .m ., SUB 119 .

AYN RAND SOCIET YIndignant letter writing, 12 :30 p .m . ,SUB 130 .

EXPERIMENTAL COLLEG EDr . H. Harger and Dr . Griffiths ,How bad Amchitka? 12 :30 p .m .SUB 111, same as Wed ., 3 :30 p.m .,SUB 111 .

EdS AIndian Ed — videofilm and pane ldisc ., 12 :30 p .m ., Ed 100 .

ALPHA-OMEGAM r . John K o la s k y —"Contemporary Dissent i nUkraine," 12 :30 p .m ., SUB 105A .

FINE ART SStudent serigraph experiment, al l

THURSDAY

day, Lasserre Lobby .MUSSOC

HILLE LGeneral meeting, 12 :30 p .m ., SUB

Prof .

Fackenheim :

"Jewis h125 .

Militancy, " 12 :30 p .m ., Buch . 106 .CHRISTIAN SCIENCE

MODERN CHINA12 :30 p .m ., SUB club lounge .

Film/slide discussion by

Ke n

UBC WARGAMES

Woodsworth, Centre for Continuin gPractice, 1 :30 p .m ., SUB 125 .

Education, 12 :30 p .m ., SUB Audit .

IIIIIIIIINIIIIIIIINNIIIIININIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII► IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIINIINIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIBIIIIIIINIIIIIIIIIIIIIIN111111111n111111111111111111111II11111111I111II11111111111INIIINN11111111N1I11111111111111 @111NINlIIIIIIIIIIIIINNIIIN1111111111111111111111111 1

Hot flashesIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIiIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIINIIIIIIIIIIIINI IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIINIIINIIIII IIIIIIIIINIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIINIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII I

Bus servicemay backfire

5 Joe 5tjoppel

Biba Soft Unlined Suedes by Hanna Shop Corp .Black - Peach - Dark Brown - Rust - Red - Red Onio n

only $33 .00

Open Thursday and Friday nites. C .O.D . orders accepted . Credit and Chargex cards honored .

542 Granville and 435 W . Hastings St.776 Granville — Adams Apple Boutiqu e

* "Design and word Trade marks in Canada of theVillager Shoe Shoppes Ltd ."

et'r8llOEtS POFC1B

'LOC 770il 4'

CLASSIFIE DRates: Campus — 3 lines, 1 day $1 .00; 3 days $2.50

Commercial -- 3 tines, 1 clay $1 .25; additionallines 30c; 4 days price of 3 .

Classified ads are not accepted by telephone and are payableadvancer Deadline is 11 :30 a.m., the day before publication,Publications Oflce, Room 241 S.U,B., UBC, Van. 8, B .C.

Tuesday, October 19, 1971

THE

UBYSSEY

Page 1 1

FREECHRISTIAN SCIENCE

LECTURE

'"What Makes A Happy family "Lecturer :

Mr. Harry Smith, C.S.B.

Thursday, Oct. 21st ,at 12 :30

Clubs Lounge, S .U.B.EVER YONE WELCOME

MAX DEXAL LOFFER S

105 Discountto UBC Students

—garry gruenke photoBRIAN HOLDEN successfully boots the ball past the outstretched arms of a Bison defender durin gSaturday's game . UBC blockers were able to contain Manitoba rushes all game enabling Holden to get awaysome long punts .

`Birds beat the bestBy KENT SPENCE R

They won a football game .The 'Birds beat the number

one ranked University ofManitoba Bisons 8-5 in a nexciting, innovative contest .

`Gnup 's a genius' was th econsensus of the 400 fans atThunderbird Stadium .

Coach Frank Gnup triedanything and everything to win .

On offense he came up wit hthe old ` flying wing' formation . I nit, six players lined up in front o fthe quarterback and the rest spli tout wide in a second offensiveline .

Quarterback Jim Tarves wouldpass to someone in the wing, an dthen the blocking line would gangup on the lone_ Manitob adefender .

Gnup 's three man line shut offthe vaunted Manitoba runningattack .

"Our line looped to theirstrength," he said .

The 'Birds had another geniusworking for them, quarterbackJim Tarves. He completed 11 o f23 passes for 82 yards, and playe d

the gruesome Manitoba blitz ver ycoolly .

IntramuralsHOCKEY preliminaries start

Thursday at 5 :15 p .m .CYCLE DRAG goes Thursda y

at noon at the John Owen Track ..SWIMMING finals are o n

Thursday at noon .SOCCER deadline is Octobe r

25 .

Broomballanyone ?

All students interested inplaying broomball are invited tothe co-recreational BroomballNight to be held on Rink 1 of th eWinter Sports Centre on Thursdayfrom 8-10 :15 p .m .

And remember co-re cvolleyball is played everyWednesday noon in the MemorialGym .

Tarves scored the winningpoints with five minutesremaining in the third quarter. I twas on a one yard sneak. It cameafter defensive half Dou gLaterneau recovered a Manitob afumble at the Bison 48 .

Seconds later Tarves hit en dGary Gordon for a 30 yard gain .The next play the Bisons werecaught for pass interference onGordon, and a roughing penalty .

From the seven Tarves sent thebackfield to the right and carriedthe ball left . The Bisons went fo rthe fake and next play Tarve sscored .

His touchdown made it 8-5 fo rUBC .

With . 5 :28 left in the game ,Manitoba quarterback Wayn eHinkel moved his team down tothe ' Bird 11 .

After a missed pass and a ru n

Star-studde dbadmintonchampionship

The Vancouver Racquets Clubwill host the Rothman's B .C .Open Badminton Championshipson October 22, 23 and 24 at theVancouver Racquets Club courts ,33rd and Ontario Street .

This tournament will featureplay by 13 top women and eighttop men from across Canada . Allare nationally ranked .

B .C. players include UBC' sMike Epstein (men's singles) an dSandra Kolb (ladies singles) a swell as Bruce Pollick, and Sharo nWhittaker .

Play starts Friday night at 8p.m. and continues throughSaturday and Sunday .

Tickets are half price fo rstudents and can be obtained a tthe Athletic Office in the Wa rMemorial Gym, or at th eVancouver Racquets Club . Thereis a limited number of seat savailable so get your tickets early .

into the line, the Bisons were leftwith third down and nine .

A field goal would have tied it ,a touchdown would have won it .

The Bisons decide to go for it .Hinkel tried a quarterback swee pand was piled up .

The mighty Bisons had stalled .The 'Birds held on the next

four minutes to win 8-5 .For the 'Birds it was a welcome

return to the conference an drespectability . It was their secondwin in two years, the last on eagainst the University o fSaskatchewan October 10, 1970 .

After the game Gnup smiled alittle as he puffed on a big, fa tcigar .

"We fooled 'em," he said .

2617 Granville at 10t h

A complete stock of all the popular make s

of shoes for the college student, as well a s

HANDBAGS, BOOTS —both Men's & Women' s

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

Better Shoes for les sDEXALL'S — GRANVILLE BETWEEN 10th & 11th — 738-9833

w

'On-the-Spot Reportof Rabbis' Visi tto Ottawa'

Hillel House ,Wednesday,

Oct. 20,12:30 p.m.

An eyewitness report of thefirst assemblage of all Canadia nRabbis, Conservative ,Orthodox and Reform, toconfront Premier AlexiKosygin on the question ofSoviet Jewry will be made atHillel House on Wednesday ,October 20 at 12 :30 p .m .

Rabbi Marvin Hier, Orthodox ,Rabbi Harold Rubens, Reform ,and Rabbi Wilfred Solomon ,Conservative, will address th estudent body on th ehappenings in Ottawa, wit hparticular emphasis as to howto relate this to Vancouver' s

.Protest Saturday night at th eCourthouse .

All students and intereste dparties are requested to attend .

PLEASE BE THERE!!!

"JEWISH MILITANCY:—Why & How"

BUCHANAN 106, THUR . OCT. 21-12:30 p .m .

Dr. Emil L. Fackenheim, regarded one ofthe foremost exponents of moder nJewish thought will speak on "JewishMilitancy : Why & How" at Buchana n106, Thursday, October 21, at 12 :30

p .m .

A rabbi, Dr . Fackenheim is professor ofphilosophy at University of Torontowhere he obtained his PhD .

Prof . E . Fackenhel m

The author of numerous books, 'articles and essays of vita linterest to Jewish survival, his writings have had as thei rconsuming theme the effect of the Holocaust on Jewish faith an dthat of the entire world as well .

His books include Paths to Jewish Belief and Jewish Theology .More than 100 of his articles and reviews have appeared inscholarship publications .

Prof. Fackenheim has received many honors including :president's medal of University of Western Ontario ; GuggenheimFellow, 1957-58; LLD, Laurentian university ; memberinternational Bergen-Belsen Remembrance committee ;lectureships at Marquette university, University of Indiana ,Hebrew Union College, New York university .

The event will be presented by B'nai B'rith Hille lFoundation at U.B.C. and all students as well as anyinterested parties are welcome and invited to attend.

Page 12

THE

UBYSSEY

Tuesday, October 19, 197 1

Canadian native Indians are held bac kby the white educational system .

This is shown in the fact only five pe rcent of Indian students complete 12 yearsof education .

However, in North Vancouver, only5 .2 per cent of Indian students droppedout in 1969-70, a figure much lower thanthe national average .

The credit for this should at leastpartially go to the Squamish Indian bandand the North Vancouver school board ,which have formed an educationcommittee to discuss the dropoutproblem and to find some solutions .

Glen Newman, chairman of thecommittee and a member of theSquamish band outlined to The Ubysseyrecently the main problem facing India nstudents in the past .

"There was an attitude in some case sbordering on discrimination among th eteachers .

"They said Indian children were slowand disobedient .

"Now this is the just not true . Someare slow and some are bright and som eare in between, the same as in an ygroup," Newman said .

This attitude caused the India nstudents to lose a great deal of thei rself-respect, he said .

It also obscured the real problemfacing the students . They were not slow,but they were ill-prepared for the whiteeducational system because thei rbackground is so different from th eordinary white middle class child .

"The white child is brought up quit edifferently from the Indian child .Unfortunately this difference is connotedas superiority, but this is not true," sai dJames Inkster, the committee 's schoo lboard representative .

"Indian children are brought up t ospeak only when they have something t osay and then only after a great deal o fthought .

"The white child, however, i sencouraged to chatter all the time . "

Inkster said when the Indian child goe sto school this silence is interpreted b ymany teachers as slowness, but usually i tis that the child hasn't the vocabulary toexpress himself .

Also when the Indian child enterselementary school he is unprepared forthe discipline, he said .

"The ordinary white middle-class chil dhas experienced this discipline all his life .His parents are continually telling him _what to do — or more often what not t odo — and so he has a great deal o fpractice in obeying orders .

"Indians have a philosophy in direc tcontradiction to this . They allow thechild to discover things for himself andseldom forbid or order .

"Because of this the child i sindependent and curious. But thisindependence can work against him inthat he has a hard time adjusting to theregimentation, " Inkster said .

The education committee has come u pwith a program called Project Read as a nanswer to this situation .

"It will allow the children to progres sat their own speed in the reading lesson sand in doing so will eliminate an yfeelings of failure," Newman said .

Newman said this is very important i nbuilding up the Indian child 's alreadyshaky self-image .

"Failure can destroy the child's imag eof himself and make him believe some o fthe lies about Indians he hears from othe rpeople," he said .

This program will also extend into th ejunior secondary schools in NorthVancouver, specifically Hamilton JuniorSecondary .

"Project Read should eliminate thelast of the discrimination by allowing thebright ones to excel and the slow ones to

INTEGRA

What are the consequences an dbenefits to natives of integratio n

into the white man's schools ?Lesley Krueger looks at th e

example of the North Vancouverdistrict's integration program .

progress to the best of their ability, "Newman said .

Chief Joe Mathias is working on th esituation from a different angle .

He is concerned with improving theenvironment of the students to help the m

in their studies."In order to study properly the

student has to have a decent place wit hgood light, heat and other facilities,"Mathias said Wednesday .

Mathias said the students often livewith their large families in small house swhich lack the privacy needed for study .

"We are working on developing betterhousing. It is one of the most importantways I am associated with the educationa laspects . But I cannot over-emphasize th eimportance of education," he said .

Trained personnel are needed by th etribe to help in its development Mathia ssaid .

"Right now we are being helped bytrained white people in all fields and w eappreciate their assistance . But we waitfor the time when the Indian communitycan be fully responsible for its ownaffairs," he said .

Most of the older Indian students fromthe Squamish band and a number on th eboarding program who come toVancouver from isolated tribes go t oCarson Graham Senior Secondary inNorth Vancouver .

Principal Tom Carlile said they had nospecial program for the Indian studentswho form five per cent of the studen tbody .

"We feel they are here for aneducation on the same basis as anybodyelse and will be treated the same .Moreover that's the way they want it, "Carlile said.

"We build up the Indian student 'sself-esteem by teaching him about hisculture in different ways," he said .

One of these ways was to introduce asection on Indian heritage in the Socia lStudies 11 course .

Another was the annual celebration ofIndian Day in the school when thenon-Indian students are introduced tomany aspects of the Indian culture .

"Another important facet was theformation in the school of an Indiansenate," Carlile said .

"The name is mis-leading. The senateis open to non-Indians and not all theIndians in the school belong to it," hesaid.

They are actively involved in workingout different problems concerningrelations between the Indian an dnon-Indian community .

Renee Taylor is a boarding studentfrom Alert Bay attending Carson Graha mwho is actively involved in the India nsenate .

"It was a big jolt coming down fro msuch a small community to such a big oneand adjusting to the boarding famil yroutine," Taylor said .

Taylor has experienced only isolate dincidents and these in the communit yrather than the school .

"If you want to find prejudice youwill, but I have only very rarely hadsomeone yell `Come here squaw' o rsomething .

"The attitude in Carson Graham i svery good," she said .

Carlile suggested that the attitud eextended throughout the NorthVancouver school system .

"I find effective programs such as theone in North Vancouver are found inpockets," Carlile said .

Renee Taylor's tribe in Alert Bay i sanother one concerned about improvingthe school system for Indian student sCarlile said .

"Perhaps if the other communities andIndian bands in Canada showed an equalamount of effort the number of Indianstudents completing their educationwould reach comparable levels to thegeneral population, " he said .