LEEDS STUDENT NEEDS Tetley Bittennen. STAFF URGENTI,Y AT THE POLY Join em. APPLY TO TIIE EDITOR No. 75 Friday, 1st February, 1974 SECOND EDITION 3p

. . Union staff not· New Executive post created on I iving wage

University Union Deputy President for Comm~ica­ tions, Jim Be,vsher, this week lashed out at the Uruon~ attitude to the payment of its staff members, some o~ whom are only receiving "It would cotst £16,925 to £13 per week. increase all their wages to His attack followed comp- 62! pence an hour, which would mean that some of lain ts from bookshop manager, Mr. Derek Perry, about the them would be receiving more low wages being received by than the permanent staff". many of the staff in the "The Union is sympathetic Union's three shops. to the permanent staff's Mr. Bewsher said, "I think claim," commented Mr. Perry, it is scandalous that in a but they aren't doing anything Union which sympathises about it. It is up to the Union . . olt to agitate fc:Jc reasonable wage CK WI with so many socia 1ist m • scales for their staff from the by Nt TCHEU ions, we cannot even ensure University". that our own staff receive A new Executive post of Education and a decent living wage". "I think the Union is just Off · g e c s s fo th4 ;r Welfare icer was created at a barely quo- Although Union staff are prod ucin x u e r ~ paid by the University, they inactivity" said Mr. Bewsher, rate University Union Annual General Meet- are theoreu.cally employed by "It. is upb tot us·t too do,, some- • d ft the Union and are responsible ....._ th1n_g.:...__a_o_u__ 1~,_n_w_. ______1ng yester ay a ernoon._, 1·he start of the meet­ to the President. All wage matters have ro go to the ing had to be delayed University Bursar via the Union. ' twenty minutes \Yhile the Mr. Perry, talking to quorum of 500 was Leeds Student, said: "The wages being paid tel some of reached. the shop staff are quite nitol­ erable. They compare very The meeting only lasted badly with tho TUC minin1um two hours and only half of of £25 per week or, for that the business ,va~ dealt wi'th matter, with the level of .before rthe quorum was chal­ student's grants. lenged and the meeting had to be adjourned until next "The wages scales of staff Tuesday lunchtime. in the Union do not relate to the work they do. Many could get more in similar jobs Union Council member dutside the Union". Neil Taggart, comn1enting on the low attendance said: .. The At the Union Council publicity for the meeting was meeting last Monday Deputy appalling. It is all indicative President for Services John of the dreadful lack of com­ Bisbrowne said the Union munication between the could not afford to increase Union and ordinary student the wages of all temporary members. We have got to staff,for which the Union are Paper trees on the Moor work harder at inspiring responsible. Our camerarnan, Ollie Milburn caught Anthony students to take a more ac­ tive interest in the Union." TORY BASH Pojuncr planting a tree on Woodhouse Moor last Wednesday. Among defeated motions The local education auth­ Eight trees bought by the UC MEMBERS was one elevating the post of ority of Gwent in Wales is University Union C()hserv­ RESIGN Publicity Secretary to Execu­ per cent challenging the Department df ation group with money tive status and another which Education and Science, and raised from the sale of old University Union Council proposed giving a £500 lec­ backing up the Grant's nc,vspapers collected in the members Pete Gillard, Mar­ ture fee to a miner's leader. Campaign, by proposing to Ex Union Council men1- abolish all parental means Union over the last few dn Lewton and Steve Smith OFF months were pla.'lted on the announced their resigoadon ber Pete Gillard said: "The tests and discretionary awards. moor. yesterday. barely quorate AGM is just All students in the area Mr. Henry Knight, Direc­ Mr. Gillard said: " I do another indication of the de­ are to be awarded full grants, tor of the Leeds Parks not feel I can continue to pressing position this Union regardless of the co1lege they Department, who attended serve on a body which has so is in. It reflects the total attend. The authority is also the planting ceremony, desc­ discredited itself in the eyes failure of the elected officers going to lobby \Velsh M.P.s ribed the grQllp's action as of the ordinary student mem­ to ~et through to the ordi­ to support them in tb~r stand. "most comendable". bership." nary student membership." ALL IMPORTED

. ', . ' . . '' . ·-- . ,· ~ . . . '

A week from today sees the National ment will be able to claim that it ls Justi­ BOOKS Grants demonstration in London. Uni­ fied. in perpetuadog the present system." versity Union NUS Secretary Sue Slip­ "I strongly advise and urge all students man has called for a "massive mobilisa­ to make a stand for their rights on Feb­ tion" of Leeds Students: "I hope we will ruary 8th and travel down to London and be able to send t,000 students to Lon­ demonstrate that they have had enough Monday - Friday Massive don", she said. of the present grants system." In addition to the oadonal demonstra­ The call for action has been backed tion the NUS ls also calHng for a lecture 4th - 8th February up by Union President Andy Jarosz. boycott on February 8th. Speaking earlier this week he said: "The turn out · situadon is now critical. There are only "If students do not feel lite making the a few things students can do to voice trip to London," said Sue Sliprnan, "I their dissatisfaction with the grants po­ hope they will at least boycott their lec­ sition and the oadooal demo next week tures as a token of sympathy for the vam­ Is a vital weapon which must be used to palgn. at demanded · its full potential. She continued: "The demo will prob­ taJdng I ably be place the day after the "The government is only going to ac­ mineworker's ballot on whether to take cede to student demands for a fair grants strike acdon in support of their wage if they see that the vast majority of the claim. This being the case the demo has for next total student population of 700,000 in th.is added. significance in the struggle to country are behincl their leaders in pres­ smash phase 3 of the government's wages sing for a higher grant.'' policy. 84 WOODHOUSE LANE "If we cannot mobilise 50,000 students "ll we do get the rise of the mandatory LEEDS 2 TEL:- 42483 Friday Eor the march in London the government award to £665 as wc have demanded we is not going to be impressed. It ls cssen­ will only be back to the position we were dal for students to realise that this ls a in during the mid-sixties. That was the crucial stage in the grants struggle. If only dme when our grants were on a par there is not a massive turn-out the govern- with the rate of infladon." 2 LEEDS STUDENT - Friday, February 1st, 1974 LEEDS STUDENT 155 WOODHOUSE LANE nts man SUS Not this sabbatical The 1,000 members of the Poly Union's sports clubs must examine carefully the value of a sabbatical to run • their affairs before voting on the motion at next Thursday's AGM. uitta There are already four sabbatical officers serving the Union. If, as Nick Marshall says, the time spent by the A University Union Ents steward found Union on the administration of sports clubs is negligible the way of overcoming the problem must be to redirect not guilty of ejecting a student from a hop some of the responsibilities of one of the existing paid has been suspended from duty for two weeks. officers towards sport. Assistant Chief Ents A sabbatical General Athletics Chairman would still Steward, Laurie White, be required to bear all the day to day responsibilities of £85 iust was suspended for two general union administration and the organisation of weeks fo llowing a Disci­ campaigns that rest on any members of the Executive. for a diary plinary Tribunal meeting It is doubtful that he would get anymore work done last week. than a non-sabbatical Athletics Chairman because clubs Both he and fellow Ents University medical students ~teward Robert McCarron will be less likely to organise themselves, as they do at are considering withholding were accused of forcibly ejec­ present, when they know a paid member of the Union payment of their annual sub­ ting politics student Kevin Executive is on hand. scription to the British Medi­ P rior fro111 the Jeff Beck In any case a man is already being employed full time cal Students Association. concert in the University to administer sports in the Union and he is making a 1'his wa~ decided at a Union on January 12th. meeting last week following Mr White was found not very good job of it. an increase in the subscrip­ guiltv but request5 were made Touched up by Andrea tion from 9 pence per head that he should be suspended to 15 pence. from duties for two hops Pictured above is second year English student A crippling cut backi President of Leeds Medi­ since he admitted acting irres­ Andrea Waind touching up her depiction of student cal Students Representative ponsibly. life which she has painted on the wall in the Tartan The Tory Government are using education as a scape­ Council, Liam McGrogan, goat for cutbacks in public spending yet again. said that in view of the ab­ Ridiculous bar in the University Union extensions. There are no reasonable grounds at all for the Educa­ sence of any real benefits The painting forms part of a plan proposed by Cul- from n1en1bership of the As­ The Tribunal will have to ------tural Affairs Secretary tion Minister, Mrs Thatcher, to say that demand for sociation, the Council did not resit to discuss the behaviour W axum Daswani to make higher education is declining. If she continues to cut feel justified in paying out of ,vl.r Mccarron who did NEW FACES the extensions brighter and back spending at such a colossal rate the higher educa­ £85 block membership this not turn up for last week's more interesting. Mr Daswani tion system in Britain will be crippled. year in comparison to the meeting. At last Monday's Univer­ hopes that this will be the £45 paid in past years. John Bisbrowne, Union sity Council meeting, two first of many such paintings. It is important therefore that full support is given to ··The only benefit students Deputy President for Services Acdng Union Executive Student reaction to the the NUS demands for everybody to have the opportunity get is a free diary and repre­ and Mr White's representa­ members were elected follow­ work so far is mixed: it of entering an institution of higher education and its sentation at a national level, tive at th~ Tribunal, said iJlg the resignations of Andy varies from '·really good" campaign for full grants for all. which is very poor anyway," that he considered the sus­ Morgan as acting Hon. to .. I think it's bloody dread­ said Mr McGrogan. pension ·rather ridiculous' Secretary and Carol Jelley ful I" However, most people The matter is to be discus­ and that the whole affair had as House Secretary. The new seem to think it's at any rate sed at a regional meeting next been blown up out of pro­ officers are Chris Pike and better than the bare concrete week. portion. Bob Sheppard. walls.

less than a normal house to Three new permanent staff run and the sudents whose will have to be hired to Dear Sir, SIEFF WE CARE project it is expect to live manage continuous card We were seriously disturbed by your cavalier inclusion in there on a permanent basis. checks, all meetings in the the personal column on Friday, January 18th. Union will be vetted, no Directed at Mr Finestein, the notice referred to the recent St Andrews guest will ):)e able to buy outrage perpetrated against a private citizen, Joseph Sieff, anything, and a white line an incident which reflects the current breakdown of international There have been severe will be marked to ensure law and order. rc~cussions after a brawl no-0ne drinks within three This criticism is levelled at your editorial staff rather than at a Grants Campaign meet­ feet of the bar. the authors of the notice. Your publication has always been ing last \veek. At the meeting irresponsible but with this latest gaucherie reaches a nadir we Mr 'loun,g, an invited believe,d had been arrived at many months ago. miner was caking the stage London Yours faithfully, in order to present the Keith A. Lyon, P. T. W elch. miner's union policy, when A girl student at the University History Deot. a student, Mr Joneis, stood London University School of up to make a point of order Oriental and African Stu­ concerning the legicamacy of dies has had to suffer two DON'T FLASH THEM a political figure speaking pnnisbrnents for a drug of­ ANDY! a,c the meeting. Tho over­ fence. Dear Sir, At the moment John Spens, ruling of it by the chairman In view of recent articles in your newspaper co ncerning the Oxford While iJl prison on re­ the Union President and the was not beard by Jones possiblity of the police raiding the Union in connection with Oxford University has Mr mand for the fortnight ~ Union secretary are finding and he climbed onto the drug offences, may I warn the President of the Union against approved the constitution of themselves inundated with fore her hearing the girl, stage to defend his poinL Miss George, r~ved a let· committing any illegal offences. a central Students Union work and feel that more staff The chairman thought he I refer to a quote by him in ' Leeds Student' (25/1/74) "I have te.r from her college infor­ after a year of d1spute. The are essential for efficient was trying co cake over the worked my balls off over the last few months and do not intend year long wrangle over the ming her she had been running of the Union. The meeting and forcibly pre­ to hide the fact." The laws agaiost indecent exposure in this Union constitution bas been tr0uble-sbooter is a manage­ sacked, "because she would vented him from using the country still exist. both at University and ment consultant and former have fallen so far behind in Nigel Brown, student level, the former microphone. The scuffle at­ her stud1es during her two NUS Treasurer; if he tracted pugilists to both University of Leeds. over the question of a sabb· lccides more staff are needed weeks in prison." The girl's sides, one student was kicked atical officer and the then John Spcns intends to solicitor called the College's latter as to whether in the face, a pint of beer reaction "absurdly hysteri­ ~et another full-time admin­ was thrown at Mr Young, LETTER FROM AMERICA open meeting decisions istrator, "possibly a girl". cal" and the excuse for the Dear Sir, and the microphone was should be biJlding. The post dismissal "futile", but the I am confined in the US Penitentiary, Atlan ta, Georgia, and broken. By the end no less of Union President has been university authorities stuck wish to correspond with someone of the opp~ite sex! ' than 30 srudents had be­ It 'is extremely lonely here and I have no fri ends or relations made sabbatical and open Cambridge to their deeision and so be­ come involved. sides being placed on pro­ ( due to my lengthy imprisonment) to chat with on the outside!! meetings are to have equal Three Chileans have been weight with the Union The meeting w,as aban­ badon for two years the girl Perhaps somewhere there is romeone who, as I am, is suffer­ lccepted by Cambridge doned and tho police were Council. colleges and funds have been student had been forced to ing from loneliness and we could write and try to bring a called to make certain every­ litle cheer into each other's lives! ! raised in the University to abandon her Sanscrit and one ldt quietly and to en­ Write to me please at:- support other students. The Oriental philosophy studies, Newcastle sure that Mr Young and his sponsored places \Vere organ­ P .O. Box PMB The University's student wife left safely. Atlanta, Georgia 3031 S, paper, Courier, found crisis ised by the "Academics for USA news wouldn't sell. It ran Chile" Conunittee. Tbe subsequent inquiry UNiversity its whole front page on the by the Union Committee causes and effects of the found seven students guilty The inteniational Uni­ JANE BEEKEN IN CONJUNCTION WITH MAM recent troubles in an a~empt Brunel of offences ranging from versity that the UN Gene­ presents to widen Courier's coverage. The Brunel Environment assault to disruption and ral Assembly had voted to Sales slumped drastically and Group are going to build an beer throwing. They were establish in 1972 is to have BARCLAY JAMES HARVEST the "editt>rial collective's" "Echo-house" on the campus banned from the Union for its central campus in Tokyo. organiser hiad to admit that in February. It will use various lengths of time. The university will not offer & COLIN SCOTT it was due to students' mis­ rainwater, wind power for The Union itself is hav­ courses or grant degrees, but SATURDAY, 9th FEBRUARY, 1974 trust of 'the Socialist Society elccrlclty, sewage sludge for ing to face repercussions will consist of nifteen re­ at which has recently taken gas, and solar energy for from the police; it is under search and training centres BRADFORD ST. GEORGES HALL over Courier. heating, in the effort to the tblreat of having its in various countries, staffed prevent waste and pollution. licence removed unles3 it ,by international reruns of TICKETS £1.00 7Sp and SOp Durham Once built it will cost far strictly enforces its rules. scholars and administered Available from by a rector who will be re­ Thi! Box Office, St. Georgtts Hall, Hall lnrs, Bradford I A trouble-shooter has been sponsible to a board appoin· Postal Applications Accepted. Please enclose S.A.E. called iJlto the University ted by the Secretary Gene­ Union to assess its running. Edited by M.arcus Page ral of the UN. DOORS OPEN 7 p.m. for 7.30 LEEDS STUDENT - Friday, February 1st, 1974 3 • n1on by JOHN McMURRA Y A [?@[![]OiJ O Workers at the University are angry with the University and Poly Students' Union for on ower voting not to economise in using power. The Secretary of the local branch of the National • Union of Public Employees, Eric Squires, wrote to ®WOO University Union President Andy Jarosz saying that Cuts in education this action could cause hardship to NUPE members and "force them onto Although the letter was poverty level earnings." sent on 17th J...iuary, it was DRUGS MAN LOSES BITE appalling - Tallant not made public until eleven "Any action tak"Cin by stu­ ('i Cbapclto~ man who was tbe victim of a drugs dents to disrupt the saving of days later at Monday's Uni­ raid bit a detOC'tlve on the hand and then bit his jacket power in the University could versity Union Council meet­ lapel, Leeds Crown Court was told. The man, Hubert lead to NUPE workers hav­ ing. Gordon, of Back Francis Street, only calmed down A leading Labour Councillor in the House of Commons Mr Jarosz said that it was that: "something like 30,000 ing to go on short time work­ after his false. teeth had fallen out and broken. Gordon has hit out at what he des­ ing and thus suffer more than Union policy only to display wa~ found guilty of possessing 56 packets of cannabis, cribes as the 'appalling' cuts to 40,000 fewer purpose-built letters received in reply to higher education places the miners," stated Mr which he bought for £ 100 for a one pound wcight and in higher education made by Squires letter. the Union's letters. However, sold for 50p a packet. the Government this week. would be available by the General Athletics Secretary academic year 1976/77". Poly Union House Com­ Aid Alfred Tallant, Chairman Jim Greaves, moving a mo­ mittee Chairman Ashley Hart tion of censure on Mr Jarosz LEEDS' LADY LASSOIST of Leeds Education Commit­ lo announcing the cuts Mrs commenting on the letter said: "Wild West Annie" Armstr0og acted swiftly when she tee; said, "The wrong people said: "It is absolutely disgus­ Thatcher said that it had "Mr Squires doesn't under­ ting not to communicate this saw a stray steed outside her home in Cross Gates, Leeds. are being forced to make alrelldy become obvious that stand the full implications of She lasS()ed it with a flick of her daughters skipping rope sacrifices to cover up for letter to the Union Member­ the demand for higher edu­ the three-day week. It is a ship just because you perso­ and corraled it in her garden. In the absence of a locai the errors of the Govern­ cation was dropping. A state­ political con trick. To comply sherriff she called the police. ment." nally disagree with its con­ ment which Aid Tallant des­ with it is to support the tents. It is very important On Monday Education Mini­ cribed as a fiction to justify Government against the work­ that our members should MORE ACCIDENTS IN DARK ster Margaret Thatcher said the cuts. king class." know what the Trade Unions . .There. has been a ~ght r!,se in the number of people think.'' miured 10 road accidents 10 Leeds since some street Meanwhile, the original lamps were turned off to save power, says Leeds Accident motion had had very little Prevention Department. effect within th~ University A spokesman said it was too early to say whether Union; the lights are still the number of accidents had increased 1:Joecause of the only at half strength and the lighting cuts. laundrette closes down at 3 .30 in the afternoon because GANGS WORRY MR FELLA the University does not A gang of youth on the Halton Moor estate Leeds, have supply hot water after that been terrorising old people by throwing warning bollards time. about. "The old people are frightened to death", said Mr. Fella, who runs an over-60's club. A letter has been sent to the Chief Constable of Leeds OGM calJiog for more police patrols. censures FANS RUN RIOT Leeds United fans hlijacked a milk float and pelted Executive home fans with bottles, after last weekend's FA Cup The whole of the Poly match at Peterborough. Meanwhile, back in Leeds, Union Executive was censu­ Middlesbrough supporters returning from theii r reams red by a U nion General cup tie at Wrexham rioted in the " Three Legs" on the Mooting last Friday. Headrow. Over 500 glasses and bottles of spirits were Ti:Je Executive was heavily smashed. criticised for its spending of The licensee said: "If we had tried to stop them we more than £130 of Union would have been dead by now. As it is I do not know how fund on champagne at a staff none of my other customers were killed". party before Christmas. The RESTORING THE BALANCE = Champagne =! Executive is to recoup the ;:; - money by each member pay­ Leeds City Council's plans to free the city centre of ing £5 out of his own pocket traffic will be taking effect in the Ctiy Square later Bulman says no Council towards the bill. this year, when all traffic except buses will be banned. = =: Instead of the more The OGM also decided It is proposed, by 1979, to divert as much traffic as ~ usual Newcsatle Brown ;: against paying the fines of possible from the city centre area, including the Headrow, Vicar Lane, and Boar Lane. ,= and cirsps, University =! Union members ,vho are to to paid GAC - Unioq Council member :; appear in court charged with Titls is a policy of trying to restore the balance between ~ Christopher Schliack pro- ::;= disturbing the peace during people and traffic", said Coun. Woolmer, Planning Poly Union Sports Admioi~trator George Bulman = vided himself with cold a non-Union demonstration Committee- = chicken and champagne = outside the Queens Hotel, this week spoke out against demands for a sabbatical at Monday's meeting. - Leeds, in December. LEEDS BE IN GUYANA MAN General Athletics Chairman on the Union Executive. Encouraged by the sight A safuri led by the curator of Harewood bird garden The issue was raised last requirements and at the same of food and drink Coun­ will soon set off for a destination 120 miles from Leeds. week when an Athletics Com­ time provide academic cour­ cil promptly adjourned The other But thle Leods concerned is not in Yorkshire. It is a mittee meeting decided unani­ ses in sports administration and rushed off to the ooastal town in Guyana, South America. mously to call upon the forth­ and coaching'', he said. Tartan bar for half an coming Union AGM to make A majority of the union's ::; hours refreshmeoL = England STILL OUT OF POCKET the post of Athletics Chair­ Exec are also against the raillllll Ill llll\111,ll ll ll ll llll ll )I llllll ll.llllllllllllllllll1ll ll ll lllll lfr,;; After fining a kitchen porter £10 for damaging a man sabbatical. Ex-General creation of another sabbatical Plans are going ahead for a telephone kiosk in Leeds Magistrates gave him £8 Athletics Chairman Nick officer. Union President Julian a new publication by Nicho­ out of the poor box - £7 for board and lodgings and Marshall said after the meet­ Stevenson said: "I think such Beattie las Saunders, "Alternative £1 for his pockeL Wlten asked why be committed the ing that there is too much a sabbatical post is unneces­ England and Wales". It will offence, David Nichol, of Chapeltowo, said "I am work for a non-sabbatical sary. I believe that if the bashing give information on accom­ dead beat, I wanted somewhere to go." chairman if he is allowed to GAC organised the sports Steve Beattie, the Poly modation, food, money, Social do his job properly: "The Security, health and Wel­ clubs properly the workload Union Disciplinary Tribunal fare, the law, entertainment, Edited by Roger Yelland biggest number of people would not even be as large as Chairman, will face a 'No actively involved in this and many other subjects of it is at the moment." Confidence' vote at a Special particular use to students and union are the members of its Ian Steele, the External General Meeting today. 33 sports clubs. But the time not easily obtainable else­ JANE BEEKEN PRESENTS FOR LEEDS CHARITY RAG Affairs Vice-President, said Mr Beattie has been con­ where. taken in organising the clubs that it would be possible to is negligible compared with sidered incapable of carrying Later this month the fourth 'THE DYNAMITE KIDDIES' give one of the exsiting four out the duties expected of edition of his "Alternative that spent on other much less sabbatical officers some res­ well supported activities," he him as laid down by the London" which gives similar MUD ponsibility for sports clubs. Union constitution. said. details will be published. and GRECCO However, Mr Bulman says FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 15th that he honestly thinks there ISRAEL WEEK DEBATES PRESENTS is no need to make the post L.:EEDS TOWN HALL sabbatical. He thinks chat presents A stirring and informative discussion on the topic most clubs are well organised TICKETS 60p 70p & 80p by their own members and ILAN "THIS HOUSE BELIEVES THAT THE UNION Available only from Barkers - The Headrow that an athletics sub-commit­ ROGOFF JUGGERNAUT FAILS TO REPRESENT THE Doors Open 7 p.m. for 7.30 tee should be set up to assist a non-sabbatical GAC in the Israeli Concert INTERESTS OF STUDENTS." running of the sports clubs. Pianist SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 23rd Mr Bulman who is em­ Proposing: Alan Lenton. Opposing: Andy Jarosz THE RAG RAVE UP WITH ployed by the Polytec_hnic TUES., 5th FEB. "Bound to be a first class slanging match" administration on the union's GR!EAT HALL ROY WOOD'S WIZZARD behalf, wants to see the even­ 8 p.m. WEDNESDAY, 6th FEBRUARY, 1.30 p.m. and RAYMOND FR OGGA TT tual creation of a Sports and in the DEBATING CHAMBER Recreation department in the .... Tic:kets Available from Union Porter's 1 Week prior to event college: "The department 35p DOOR DON'T MISS IT AU TICKETS £1.lSp. POORS OPEN 7.30 would fullfil all students' LEEDS STUDE NT - Friday , February 1st, 197'4

NATIONAL UNION OF STUDENTS

ruar , Stanley Baxter says that he NATIONAL DEMONSTRATION would rather not have been born. But he was, 47 years ago, in IN SUPPORT OF THE GRANTS CAMPAIGN . Now a highly regarded entertainer at the top of his chosen profession he strives for perfection in everything he does. He is never satisfied with any "FULL GRANTS FOR ALL STUDENTS" performance. The next piece of work RALLY must be better than anything he has ever done before. Speakers from NUM - AEUW Stanley's obsession with perfection puts great strain on his own mental resources, often drives his co-performers to despair and leads him to make fewer and fewer perfor­ mances every year. His hour-long television production ·'Toe Stanley Baxter Big Picture COACHES LEAVE FROM - Show" screened just before Christmas took five months to n1ake. Ton1orrow, he plays UNIVERSITY : PARKINSON STEPS 7.45 - 8.00 the dame in the pantomime "Mother Goose" at Leeds Grand Theatre for the last time this season and it could be the last time ever that he takes part in a panto- 1nime. (TICKETS ON SALE AT PORTER'S OFFICE - SOp) Forty years

He feels that he has now Jost the atheltic ability required to play a dame; a type of part which involves numerous quick changes of costume and great agility on stage. More­ over Mr Baxter says that he is happier on Stanley Baxter the other side of the footlights writing LEEDS POLYTECHNIC UNION material for and directing other people. and producing the show from Rangoon to by playil Still only in his middle years Stanley Mandalay, was a Sergeant by the name of actor is , Baxter has been entertaining audiences for , who was then looking he went for a way to break into entertainment. In a forty years. His acting career began at the shows, p, recent radio broadcast he described his spell age of seven when he started appearing in staged a in the army as: "The time of my life. It was church halls and by the lime he was four­ LondOD. teen he was making regular radio broadcasts. my university." By this time too, Britain was at war anrl Stanley Baxter looks back on his army when Stanley's tum came to join up he days as being an invaluable part of his found himself in the army being trained apprenticeship for the stage. Far different as a clerk. But he was not behind a desk from the sheltered life he had lived as a It iJ for long. After being posted to India he boy in Scotland when he was encouraged by played ar answered a plea for people who thought his mother and her family to take part in his Dllllli they could perform and had his first flight amateur shows. Even with the professional word. If in an aircraft to attend an audition in Singa­ experience he had gained in the army Baxter every r~ found it far from easy to make his way as pore. playing t Next Thursday, 7th February an actor when he was demobbed. He was accepted as an actor but it was meant i: eventually realised that the majority of the Against the wishes of his father he aban­ eye for I 2 pm Tech Hall troops weren't especially keen on drama and doned plans to become a teacher and found tually l! Corporal Baxter became part of a company a job in repertory theatre. H aving realised talent ;:i set up to stage a revue. Among the people that acting was his vocation he spent three biggest a who were to work with Baxter, performing and a half years training as a straight actor realises tl More, less, or different Sabbatical Officers? self as T, says ht il No Quorum for General Meetings? JAMES MILES ILEEDSJ LTD. ings of 11; BOOKS OLD AND NEW Not t!i Abolition of External Vice-President and liant, ii I Man11 Cultural Affiars Vice-Presid~nt? Coming into Stock in the course of the discussi:l next few weeks it aside t Baxter'1! Plus other maior Constitutional Changes A COLLECTION OF 3,000 SECONDHAND BOOKS IN THE FIELDS OF i mperS

"I have alinost ceased going to the theatre ·Twinl

A bit too hot Blowing out Bette Midler to handle? ( ATLANTI C RECORDS) It's depressing to note that Executive Action Bette Midler, with the release ODEON 2 of her second LP, has taken the easy way out. Her first alb"um "The Divine Miss M" In the three year period ion" is placed upon the theory was a superb com bi nation of following the assasination of and consequently takes place entirely in one room where rock classics given a lusty, President John F. Kennedy, 18 full-blown treatment, and con­ witnesses interviewed by the the group meets. We are not told exactly who or what these temporary gems such as Buzzy Dallas police, the FBI, or t~e Linhart's Friends", re-arranged. Warren CommKsion died: S'IX men ( led by Robert Ryan, in by gunfire, three ~n. motor his last film, and Burt Lan­ Miss M. on stage is unin· accidents, two by su1c1de, one caster) own; could they have hibited and 'her show is decid­ from a cut throat, one from been directors of ITT for edly theatrical, yet her first a karate chop to the neck, example/ Nor are we admitted album tried to de-empha~ise three from heart attacks, and into the White House to the (invisible) visuals and two from natural causes. A witness the machinations of concentrate on the Divine British actuary calculated t hat Robert Ryan. It is vaguely One's vocal talents. There were the odds of these people dying indicated that he is perhaps the indications to the slant of the from natural causes by 1967 third or fourth most important stage show ( a crazy version of were 250,000 trillion to one. man in the country and yet Right on brother: one of th~ 111isadv e111ures i11 'Heavy T,·affic' "Leader of the Pack" for instance) but on the whole "Executive Action" posits nothing is specific - every action is reported or completed it was a success, a genuine that the murder of Kennedy out of vision. breath of fresh air with was engineered by a small humour too. group of ultra right:wing The om,ss,on of these important Southern business­ details is worth reflecting on. Obscure strip "Bette Midler", the second men who framed Lee Harvey The theory is a plausible one album, unfortunately blows it. Oswald. The actual shooting Hip h"umour made the jump but he lacks the intelligence Which is not to say it's a considereing the available from comic strip to big screen being done by professionally evidence. The implicit message Heavy Traffic to utilize this ability for any­ bad LP, but the whole em­ in one highly successful leap phasis is back to the theatrical, trained assasins. Th is theory seems to be that it is possible PLAZA thing more than entertaining naturally involves massive cor­ when "Fritz the Cat" was comedy. When he tries to and the points made so lightly and necessary to remove released, and now the same ruption in high places: the Presidents who conflict with be serious, he becomes boring. on "The Divine Miss M" are FBI, the CIA, and the Secret team Ralph Bakshi and Steve culture, they are frequently As a swipe at urban life, bluntly forced on the listener. the big businessmen who Krantz, have made the follow­ Service ( part of which formed self-indulgent, often obscure, "Heavy Traffic" goes wide of There are a number of really rule America. Therefore, up: "'Heavy Traffic". This time Kennedy's personal bodyguard). with implications so contro­ consistently inarticulate and the mark nearly every time; continuoations of themes, but Also, of course, the most the hero is not feline, how­ ultimately trite. the few occasions when it versial and contemporary, it ever. "Heavy Traffic" involves these are taken fairly straight, important men in the White is hardly !urprising that so does hit home are hardly notwithstanding the triple­ House had to be involved the apparently meaningful The animation is juxtaposed enough to salvage it. much dramatic action is missed misadventures, usually sexually, with some impressive film of tracked harmonies and the somehow. I liked "Fritz the Cat"; break-neck pace. The out­ out; if we had been shown of a virginal young male. American urban life, but as The implications of this exactly how and by whom the Bakshi is good at maknig me standing songs which graced a dramatic effect, it is too laugh but I wish he would theory are enormous and are White House and various law It would have been better often abused by sheer over­ the first album are sadly stop trying to make me think; mi~sing, and while "Uptown" perhaps in some measure re­ enforcement agencies had been had they stuck to cats and use; "Heavy Traffic" looses its sponsible for the film's failure manipulated then it would he is rather better at the and "Hig·her and Higher" are laughs; intellectual posing does impetus through such indul­ former, as a piece of cinema. The whole have all been too hot for not suit the "Fritz" crew. As gence. Ralph Bakshi's command involving, most of the others emphasis of "Executive Act- American Society to handle. is the case with a lot of hip of visual effects is undeniable, on "Bette Midler" are too by Mike Allen camp, or too familiar to sustain interest on repeated ,, , .,. plays. I haven't given up hope though • this is just probably a temporary lapse from Miss M Leeds Univents by Andy Murray presents - TONITE - From t he U.S.A. at Ellerslie Hall 'DISCO' Admission 20p THE DOOBIE BROTHERS Bar 8 - 12 ALL WELCOME THE DISCOUNT (The Rainbow date sold out in 1 hour!) plus SNAITH Next to "Student Stationers" THE BOOK CENTRE on SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 2nd BAR-B-QUE HOT MEALS AND SANDWICHES ALL DAY Tickets: 65p (really!) from Porter's/Services AT STUDENT PRlaS HANDBOOKS - PAPERBACKS - CLASSICS - MODERN FICTION - FINE ARTS MUSIC EDUCATION Tel.... • : llSl-4 SOCIOLOGY - POLITICS - HISTORY - PHILOSOPHY APPS & SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY - HOBBIES - RADIO DICKENS HI-Fl CARS THE CINEMA COOKERY auto .,...,_. • panel beedna sprayfna FACSIMILE REPRINTS b...icdown a cowtns ~ pre M.O. T. dleclca a repeln Plus thousands of GENERAL and SPECIALISED BOOKS - 1t" Dlo- .. ,., ••ed .. ., u.a,a Can! - AMAZING BLONDEL 273 MEANWOOO ltOAO Special St udents Discount of 15% on all purchahses of LEEDS 6 £1.50 and over of Discount Books and BEVERLEY MARTYN ( wife of John Martyn) 8.30 p.m. TONIGHT LEEDS POLY TECH HALL 138 Cardigan Road, PARAPHENALIA 166 POLYFOLK Fo r Headingley, Leeds 6 MONDAY, FEBRUARY 4th. IN THE COMMON ROOM GALLERY SWEDISH CLOGS -CLOGS O pen 9 a.m. - 8.30 p.m. Mon. to Sat. TICKETS ON THE DOOR. FLOOR SINGERS W ELCOME INDIAN COTTON DRESSES large Selection of CANDLES TELEPHONE: 787031 NEXT WEEK: Friday, February 8th · ( Opp. Pa rkinson Buildina) Buses 7, 45, 49, 56, 74, 76. Electric lighting when permitted An evening of Baroque Music, with Alan Cuckst on, anda wide range of other Galina Solodchin, Stephen Prest on and Joy Hall. goods LEEDS STUDENT - Friday, February 1st, 1974 7

Son of Bizarre The Homecoming Love Story by Harold Pinter Jeremy WORKSHOP THEATRE ODEON MERRION After the first Act of this week's Workshop Theatre If you want to wallow in production of Harold Pinter's adolescent nostalgia and re­ play "The Homecoming", you member your first beautiful begin to wonder why the out­ love don't miss "Jeremy". wardly successful eldest son Take a box of tissues to T ed,dy has bothered to pay a stem the tear$ of pain or visit to his strange and bizarre home. As the play progresses laughter. This film could leave it becomes evident that it is you cold or yawning but, if not Teddy who is equipped to you're a "True Life Romance" deal with hi,s family but his type you'll be racked by the precrse wife. agony of fifteen year old love. The lines and action are It's Romeo and Juliet all over loaded wth symbolsm; from again but now they're budding the clipped sentences excel­ intellectuals. 7ulie Christie, Hilary Mas 011, Clelia Matania i11 "Don't Look Now" at 1he Odeon I lent1y delivered by Teddy's This time parents try to brother Lennie, to the honest, understand their kids and only placid deivery and actions of fail out of the goodness of ' t

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.. ,. ... LEEDS STUDENT - Friday, F~bruary I st, 1974 9

SALFORD O . . . LEEDS 3 Spectator takes over Astonishing refereeing cast a shadow of gloom over the University 1st Soccer team's after referee walks off dard. Salford offered very series of scrappy goalmouth 3-0 away defeat of Salford University last little opposition to the Uni­ tussles. week. versity attack and the vi..,i­ In the second half, Leeds tors took the lead after 20 went further ahead when One seemingly legiti­ the referee stormed off minutes. Lamb rose to meet Joughin's Goodacre grabs record mate goal for Leeds was the pitch after several comer and headed powerfully disallowed, two Salford players had questioned Hopson, playing superbly into the nee. Soon after, a The University Medics RU team's 35-0 thrashing for Leeds up front, headed defensive mist.1ke by Salford's of Malton & Norton RC at Weetwood last ,veek sa,v players were mysteriously his decisions, abandoning on a long clearance fron1 Burn presented Roach with secoad ro,v forward Brian Goodacre top his record booked, and at half time the match. Main, and Roach slipped past his second goal and Leeds' a defender to chip the ball third. total of a hundred point'> The rest of the ga1ne was r~fcrced by a spectator, whon1 over the Salford 'keeper. At Despite the iood running for the club this season. the players ~ec1ned to think this point, Leeds were play­ of Leeds' forwards Roach and He is the only player 6V'6T niada a n1uch better job of ing well, but complacency be­ Hopson, this was a disn1al oo do this, and is now set to ' it than the appointed official gan to creep in. Shots fron1 performance for a team of break the club points record • had been doing. Cray and MacAdam went Leeds' calibre. However, in of 109 points in one sea~n. wide, and Roach had a goal the light of the referee's ac­ The game was one-w:3y Controversy, apart, it was disaUowed. The Varsity tion at the P.Ad of the first traffic from the start,. with clear fron1 the start that attack failed to capitalise on half, it is likely that the the Medics 11.lways in co­ Leeds were up against a side Salford's ineptitude, and the League will request that the mmand. Forming a substaa ci.al , well below their own stan- game degenerated into a match be replayed. lead in the first half, Leeds ron.solidated rhis after the ( interval, aad Malton & Nor­ 11 l'On put up very little resist­ \ ance. FLORA SPEARS WIN • Veterans Nigel Chapman 'fhe University Men's . . The previous Wednesday, and Ron McGill were both the same team earned a gool­ playing their hund.teidch ga":e hockey 1st team visited Hockey less draw against a strong for the club. They turned lll Wakefield Hockey Club Ndttingham University side. brilliant performances for thtc last Saturday and can1c produce any goals, and both Although Leeds' Cox and club that ,hey have both sides went in at half-time Taylor played magnificently captained during their tim.: away with a useful 1-0 win tucked under their witb the scoreline blank. in midfaeld. many promising at Leeds. A.frer the interval, the arracks broke down before the belts. Varsity me:n continued to solid Nottingham defence. Always in control, Leeds, pressure the op pooition, and The only real chancei they had pushed Wakefield back into at last rece1ved some roward. was when right half Hefford thcir own half almost at once. Bell, overlapping on the right burst through the crowd@d SCORELINE Flora was the ~pearhead of the wmg, pushed over a fine area, and aurempted a first attack, displaying some brill­ cross which Leeds man Taylor time shot. But he was immed­ iant stickwork, and hitting the picked up and slammed past iately .brought down, and ASSOCIATION FOOTBALL post on one Qccasion. But the Slil'anded Wakefield subsequent appoals f-0r a L•/ 2S, sex University side 26-10 EASTGATE SPORTS De La Salle Old Boys 0 and the second disposing Durham Univ. 36. Leeds Univ. 9 of Leicester University CENTRE More Sport Page 10 24-13. 17 EASTGATE- l.:EEDS 1 Tel. Leeds 25573 For ... ADIDAS - PUMA - GOLA - MITRE - HUMMELL FOOTBALL BOOTS AND TRAINING SHOES. also CLUES ACROSS 6 Trouble, u our guest's a pre, Umbro - Bukta - Sereena - Litesome Football historic inim11 { 11 ). BOOK 3 Help mule in wretched c•ndi, Jerseys and shorts. tion ( 7). 10 Toples.s teither has no htsiucion Adidas and Litesome Track Suits. 7 Squeeze out • pound for deJuxe in makine eVN"f one ( 4 ) . version ( S ). 11 Consume tea-setl ()\, DISCOUNT FOR STUDENTS 8 ) Poetry written btfore Christi open as normal despite restrictions. 13 Use your's to fi,,d it ( 4 ). Quite the contrary! ( 7 ). 9 Hotstuff in tho m•mbenhip ( S ). IS Navy afe c,v~r tne ct,1.nnel ( 6 ). Hundreds of Paperbacks & Second SPECAL REDUCED RATES TO snJDENTS 11 Old Bob consumed this to satisfy I 7 Girl's i..nderwea.r on the cricket ( 4 ). fi~ldl ( 5). 13 Brave man eave airl nothine ('4). 19 Spire at (he ~euide, perhu,s (5). Hand Books in all subiects. CHARLIE GOULD 14 Rub a cook the wrone way ( S). 20 One who cell's untruths about LTD. 1S Impetuous infl•m m,tion ( 4). rail dispute ( 4). 18 Pa.rt of a. hors.e.dra.wn arrbae Open Monday· Friday 9.30 till 5 p.m. DRESSWEAR HIRE SERVICE ( 4 ). SOLUTION TO NEWDIGATE No .. 58 4 Grand (n-tre) Arcade, L11dl 1 21 S,y roodbye to lS (S). 22 Have it out in teachinf (7) . Union Basement 23 Recall island mentioned DINNER SUITS £1.70 PER. DAY Eliot's "Profrock" 1 ( S ). (lndlldlftsV.A.T,) 24 Dots Desmond ever have meritl This is YOUR bookshop, All Sizes Available Accessories if Required ( 7 ). C.UES DOWN why not try it ? HIGH-Cl.ASS TAILORING T~1l6S73 Needed great variety to h.ave Est 1900 deteriorat

Carnegie crash out to Londoners CARNEGIE O . . . DULW ICH HAMLET 2 Carnegie soccer team were knocked out of I by Ian Coxon I Bowling the second round of the FA Amateur Cup last the field paid off with a them over Saturday despite putting on a fine perfor­ good goal. Bladon brought the ball down the pitch pas­ The Poly ten-pin bowling club mance against the Isthmian League side Dul­ sed to the other Hamlet win­ defeated over sixtv univer­ wich Hamlet at Beckett Park. ger Jackson who crossed the sity, college and polyrechnic Police called after ball into the Carnegie goal­ teams In the Leeds Trio The college side were always in the game and mouth where Pudney was in Tournament of the UCTPT looked to have a good chance of winning or at least position to slot the ball in competition held at the Union card stolen forcing a creditable draw until opposition centre­ the net. The Leeds team tried Merrion centre last Sunday. Police were called to the University Union last for\vard Pudney scored the first goal of the game hard to come back and Saturday after a number o~ Stud!nt's Union cards had brought on tub~titute Smith Outstanding perfomances came from Armitage, who rolled been confiscated by Executive officers. midway through the many creative moves. College in place of winger Priestlev second half. From then right-winger Green Showed in the 73rd minute. 724 over four games, and The police were called by who took the card fron1 the Gay with a 722 over four 1 on the greater experience great intelligence but often But Dulwich n1ade sure of a student from James Grahan student and handed it over to a place in the third round games. Both were well supp­ Teacher-Training College the police when they arrived of the ,veil disciplined thought for 100 long before orted, particularly by Crei­ London side set them passing the ball. However he of the cup when the man of who said his Union card had said: "There have been a lot managed to test the Dulwich the match, Jackson, after a ghton who scored 674, and been stolen. David Boothby, of people getting into the apart from the students. defence with a number of had a high game of 218. Union Student Treasurer, Union with invalid cards. I brilliant solo move, found the Over 150 supporters made good croses into the opposi- college defence split wide The combined total at the eo.i took this one to check whether the journey north to cheer tion goalmouth. open and knocked in the was 2,120, seventeen pins it was valid or not and re­ on the Hamlet and they were Eventually one of Dul- second goal three minutes ahead of University College, Lecturer turn it to its proper owner. more than ~urprised by the wich's sudden breaks down from time. London. I'm still not entirely sure of stem opposition that Carne­ its validity." gie put up. Until the first found dead Union Council member goal was scored neither team A man was found dead Nel Taggart, who intervened managed to don1inate play with his throat cut in the in the dispute between Mr for any appreciably length University on Wednesday Boothby and the student, of time. But Carnegie produ­ afternoon. said: "Dave overstepped the ced some fine chances and H e was Alan Robert James mark by not giving the card had the college n1anaged to Gaskin, 47, a lecturer in En­ back once it was shown to score it n1ight have been a gineering Geology in. the be valid. He had no more very different story. University Earth Sciences right to confiscate a ~,~lid Thirty n1inutes into the first Department. He was found Union Card than a dnvmg half college full-back Brown lying dead at 2.20 pm in the licence. All he is required to came very close to scoring Earth Sciences Dpartment. do is to get the person out \Vhen his free kick ricocheted Mr Gaskin, of Shadwell of the building if he thinks off the comer of the Dul­ Park Avenue, Leeds 17, has they have been using drugs. wich crossbar. Soon after been at Leeds for 15 years. Earlier on in the evening, Carnegie striker White missed Leeds wi11ning the ball fro1n a scr111n against De La Salle He was an Oxford graduate Mr Boothby confiscated a a chance to score when oppo­ and had worked in industry number of out-of-date Uni­ sition keeper Roffey lost the and Africa t,efore coming to versity Union cards fron1 ball in a goalmouth scramble. the University. people who he believed were The twenty-two players re­ He leaves a wife and two using drugs in the Green­ turned to the field for tht' slade concert. VENGEFUL LEEDS children. second half with the score­ line reading 0-0 and every­ LEEDS 25 . . . DE LA SALLE 0 thing to play for. White con­ l 'he University RU tean1 scored 12 points in the Officials bound over tinued to work hard for Car­ negie although good marking first five minutes of their match against De La Salle Four students union ofl"icials involved in a demon­ prevented him from making Old Boys last Saturday and went on to win 25-0. stration outside the Queens Hotel, Leeds, last Decem­ Percy pleased punters last Despite losing thcir skipper week by selecting a record ber \Vere each fined £10 and bound over for two years Hooper \vhi> sustained a head four winners out of six run­ by the city's Stipendiary Magistrate yesterday. Nixon slams in six goals injury in the first half the ners including Sir Mago first Poly Union House Chair­ college sioo \Vere on top past the post at 7-l. Selec­ 25, and University Union throughout the game. Bainton, t,ions for th.is week are:- man Ashley Hart, 23, Board Accommodaoion Secrcrary of Reps members Rob Ann­ against weak Wolves Griffiths and Roberts, twice, strong, 23, and Ed Waller Alan Lenton each admitted crossed the line and three of PERCY charges of acting in a manner LEEDS 11 . . . WOLVERHAMPTON 1 the tries were converted by Friday, 2.15 Ayr calculated to cause a breach 'rhe Poly ladies Hockey side captain, Nixon, Hedley wro also scored a CREDIT CALL Muir wins of the peace and obstructing slammed in six goals last Saturday in Leeds' eleven penalty. Friday, 1.30 Sandown the highway. The four union goals to one victory over Wolverhampton Poly. Earlier in the \veek, on PITPAN (nap) UC seat officials were each fined £ 10 Wednesday, the University Friday, 3.00 Sandown on tbe obscruction charge. Playing in poor weather High Melton last week, and lost their chance of going into SIMIAN Ian Muir, an Economic H is­ They were bound in the conditions, Leeds found it dif- knotched up another excellent the UAU quarter-finals when Saturday, 1.00 Wetbe~y tory srudent was elected onto sum of £25 to keep the peace ficult to keep control of the win, beating them five goals they were v;ell beaten by REIGNON the University Union Council for two years. ball, but soon settled down, to nil. Durham 36-9. Saturday, 1.30 Wetherby in this week's bye-election. H e The demonstration which scoring twice in the first ten i------t-u_d_e_n_t___ _ MOONLIGHT ESCAPADE defeated Accommodation Sec­ was not supported by either minutes. Goals galore fol- 5 The final score was three (nap) retary Alan Lenton by 312 goals, three tries and two of ttie students unions took lowed in quick succession, and strikes gold penalty goals to a goal and a Saturday, 1.30 Sandown votes to 190. Sarah Ward re­ place in support of Women's by half time the Poly were EAGLE FEATHER ceived 118 votes. well on the way to a record penalty goal. H edley scora:I Lib during a supposedly all A student from Leeds won a penalty for Leeds and then HOTSPUR Hr Muir is a former sec­ male dinner held by the win, leading 8-0. converted a first half try by retary of the Su~mmittee Scorers for the Poly were a Gold Medal m the mara­ Saturday, 2.15 Ayr Leeds Law Students' Society than at the Commonwealth Robinson scored form a five Against Racial Discrlmlation. at thlc hotel in City Square. Nixon (capt), 6, Matthews 3 GAY PERCH and Andrews 2. Games in Christchurch, New ya rd scru1n. Saturday, 2.45 Ayr Although fielding a Zealand, yesterday. Durham go on to a quarter­ SKYMAS weakened side, tlhe Poly mixed Ian Thompson a student final against Swansea and Saturday, 3.45 Ayr hockey team gained a con­ at Trurity and All Saints Bristol play Manchester in T\VO SPADES vincing 5-1 victory over Don­ College, Horsforth, clocked 2 the othler outstanding quarter­ Saturday, 1.30 Sandown ca~ter Technical College last hours 9 minutes 12 seconds final. Loughborough and EAGLE FEATHER week. the second fastest time ever Leicesrer are through to the Saturday 2.00 Sandown The sonic team also played for the 26 mile event. semi-finals already. MONEY MARKET

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DISCO in RSH. Frid•y. February 1st. Sorry Wendy, we don't do landscapc.-s. BOOZE till one, invest in Pure Silver, 9 pm onwards. Only I Sp. jive to Fumble. Waltz t o tht Ballroom Dancing Society is havine a ,NOOPY mobile Disco and liahu . Dance B,nd. Listen to J.S.D. personal 'Thinks' to all our past, presenc SOCIAL TONIGHT ( !st Feb.) in and future ENGINEERS BALL is great enter• the Special Dinina Room . Admission friends. tainment value. lOp. All welcome. Adam Lomas. fl.at 6, Woodsley Ter• CAROL OKI BY PETE. eolumn BODINGTON BALL FEBRUARY I Sth race. Tel. 22013. FOOD FOR THOUGHT. Tickets 12.2 pm in Union foyu. ENGINEERS BALL - see us in the AGRIC BIOL BALL. BRITISH FILMS OF THE SIXT!cS . . \ -"" . .· . . . . Union at lunchcime for your ticket. TRAMP SDICK the .. IN-place ..... See Dateline for- details. Tickets I.A.M. Which safe liberal seacr listen to the increpid experiences I Sp from Union Record Shop, BUNAC BUNAC BUNAC BUNAC of "" M.D." Gumbley. Ena B•II (stoned ena revisited) Feb. M.P. - What is itl BUNAC BUNAC. CAROL OK! BY PETE. 8th. JSD B,nd, Fumble. Pure Solver Groups. Disc-os. Dince B1nd. Folk. DISCO in RSH. Frid•y. February 1st. How many points for nameless scrub· Double tickecs £3.00 ind. mt.ii. group, Tom and Jerric.-s - they are 9 pm onwards. Only I Sp. bers, Micky! STU DENT CAR SERVICE _ REPAlkS. al lat ENGINEERS BALL. Feb. 8th. ANDROMEDA DISCO FOR HIRE - AGRIC- BIOL BALL. RESPRAYS, ENGINE SWOPS ETC. Double tickets including meal Wide range of sounds plus lishcs FRIDAY. MARCH 8th. - ALL AT £1 AN HOUR. TOOL £3.00. Phone Phil. 788495. £3 double ticket, supper inclusive. on H1RE. TROLLEY JACKS. ENGINE Mature Pyschologist seeks friendly HAPPY BIRTHDAY. DANN Y! ule now from Committee members. LIFTS, SPECIAL TOOLS ETC.. ALL television set with view to com­ UNDERGROUND FI LMS by Stove OK CHARLES. We aive up. What S% discount on production of Union cards AT HALF GARAGE PRICES. LEEDS . panionship. Apply Niael. Box 2S8. Dworskin, Peter Gid-a l. Simon Hartog, gender is it 7 620385. DON'T FORGET BODINGTON BALL, with the British Film Festival. See SPARKY. WHY ARE BAGS SO POPU· every night except Saturday BUNAC BUNAC BUNAC BUNAC FEB. I Sth. TICKET £3.50 on Sile Due line for de tails. Tickets 1Sp LAR AT 19 GRIMTHORPEI BUNAC BUNAC. NOW. from Union Record Shop. CAROL OKI BY PETE. Published by 'Leeds Student', 155 Woodhouse Lane, Leeds 2. Tel. 39071 & 30171 and Printed by Regent (Printers) Ltd., 29 Leathley Road, Leeds LS lO JBG. Tel. 21 404 All advertising contracted by the Ads Manager, 15S Woodhouse Lane, Leeds 2. Registered as a newspaper with the GPO