4, 1977 Kenny hits Soroka with reprimand By CHRIS GAINOR students and staff on campus, Kenny had threatened in even extreme heckling, that a speech to another in a lecture Law librarian Al Soroka many of whom denounced his earlier correspondence to dis­ speaker on controversial subjects sponsored by the university. received an official reprimand tactics in public. cipline Soroka by dismissal or can expect to endure." His letter also cited a senate Thursday from administration "This is an injury to my career other action. A group of demonstrators at resolution condemning the dis­ president Doug Kenny, ending and a threat to all others Kenny's letter strongly at­ Schwarz's speech drowned him ruptions and the Canadian Kenny's threats to dismiss him. similarly situated. I intend to tacked Soroka's conduct. out by shouting, "Fascists have Library Association's policy on no right to speak." But Soroka vowed to fight in seek legal remedies." Soroka is an outspoken sup­ intellectual freedom, which were But he said the fact he had porter of the Communist Party of "I conclude, then, that you did mentioned in his earlier letters legal channels the reprimand for in fact actively participate in (1) his protest of the October visit of escaped dismissal "is a victory Canada (Marxist-Leninist). "For these reasons, I must for those who stood up. President "On the evidence before me," depriving Mr. Schwarz of his conclude that you interfered with South African MP Harry Sch­ right to speak freely and (2) warz. Kenny and all reactionaries have Kenny said, "I am satisfied that, the freedom of speech of a lec­ not heard the last of Al Soroka." together with several other denying those who attended the ture- speaking at the university "I regard your action as mis­ The letter from Kenny arrived persons, you actively attempted lectures their right to hear the with full awareness that such conduct, which, in my judgment, only hours after Soroka gained to prevent and effectively suc­ speaker." conduct was contrary to accepted would ordinarily merit the the support of the Law Students' ceeded in preventing Mr. Sch­ Kenny said the issue is not the principles of the university and of severest sanction," Kenny said in Association in a meeting during warz from being heard by the political beliefs of Soroka or Sch­ your professional association." a letter delivered to Soroka warz, but whether one individual Thursday. which Soroka delivered a audience. This behavior far Soroka said he plans to fight the strongly-worded address. exceeded any form of heckling, has the right to deny freedom of reprimand with Faculty "Considering all the facts Association regulations, the however, I believe a lesser dis­ Human Rights Code and ciplinary action is justified. I whatever other means his therefore officially reprimand lawyers advise. you for your conduct in this af­ "This reprimand may be in­ fair," said Kenny. tended to intimidate me but I am But Soroka said Kenny's letter not intimidated." is "a very serious blow to THE UBYSSEY The LSA passed a resolution at academic freedom in Canada, its meeting stating an employer 4S and shows that he doesn't care at Vol. LIX, No. 53 VANCOUVER, B.C., FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 1977 *€HS»> 228-2301 Seepage 13: SOROKA all for the sentiments of the Council joins tuition chorus By KATHY FORD will vote on the allocations "within the next B.C.'s three public universities must couple of weeks. But with the majority they consider a substantial tuition fee increase if have, there should be no problem getting it they want to maintain current standards, approved." according to the B.C. Universities Council The report asks that "fee increases be 1977 budget report. accompanied by a highly effective student Figures in the report, released Thursday, aid program to ensure that individuals of show UBC will be about $14.8 million short of limited means but ample scholastic ability its original budget request of $126.1 million. are not deprived of the opportunity to secure UBC will receive an operating grant of a university education " $111.3 million — about 60 per cent of the The council also set out five funding $184.5 million allocated to universities in the criteria, identifying them as "areas 1977-78 provincial education budget. warranting increasing attention in the Simon Fraser University will receive $41.2 future." The report says the areas will be million and the University of Victoria will emphasized when the council reviews get $31.9 million. funding requests for 1978-79. According to the report, student fees and One of the areas is faculty service loads. other revenues will make up the difference The report says, "a definition of a standard between requested and actual amounts. service load in terms of hours devoted to Moe Sihota, student representative on teaching, preparation, research, ad­ UBC's board of governors, said Thursday ministration and public service should be either enrolment will have to increase established." substantially, or tuition fees will have to The council recommends those faculty increase. members not engaged in research activities He said revenue from tuition fees for 1976- "of demonstrated quality or high promise" a&a 77 was about $10.8 million. carry increased teaching loads. "I would say, based on those figures Connected with the area of faculty is the *S*> (contained in the report), fees will have to criterion of recognition of demographic rise by about $200. But I don't think they'll trends. go up by that amount," he said. The council did not make any recom­ "I think the university will cut back about mendations about faculty, but said it "views $1 million in some services, faculties, with some concern the prospect that the M4 teaching assistants, and so on. And as well, coming decade of limited growth in . . . they'll increase tuition by about 30 per cent. enrolment may result in the aging of a "This would mean a student in arts, for relatively immobile faculty, accompanied example, would pay a basic tuition fee rate by steadily increasing salary costs and of about $560. This doesn't include Alma without proportionate gains in con­ Mater Society fees. tribution." "The other thing they (the board) might The council report says universities must decide to do is increase fees by 20 per cent ensure opportunities are given to younger and then have a greater increase, perhaps people in the fields of university teaching as much as 40 to 45 per cent, for students in and research. professional schools such as law, medicine, The report urges reduction of course of­ engineering and so on." ferings in little demand and elimination of "My and Basil's (Peters, theother student courses in disciplines where "unnecessary representative on the board) job is to try to duplication" exists in the province. influence the extent of the increases. A hell To have the financial means to offer in­ of a lot's going to depend on the Tuesday novative programs, universities must avoid anti-tuition increase rally. unnecessary duplication of courses and "My personal opinion is the board should "curbproliferation of undergraduate course send the budget back to Victoria offerings in traditional programs." (Education minister Pat) McGeer gave us The council recommends teaching this headache — let him fix it." methods be examined, and that audio-visual — matt king photo Universities Council chairman William and computerized media be used as RALLY ORGANIZER LAKE SAGARIS hands out protest buttons Armstrong said Thursday the government teaching aids. The report urges universities to take advantage of "current and emerging technology without losing other values." Finally, the report says universities are Students will rally against tuition responsible for maintaining high standards. "If high standards reduce enrolments By VICKI BOOTH Some of the students didn't think the rally, Opinions on tuition fee increases were while increasing the quality of graduates, UBC students are split on the question of even if well attended, would have any effect split evenly. the net cost to the public could be lower, and whether to support Tuesday's rally against on the university's impending decision to "Fees are high enough as it is. I just the benefit to the university student and the tuition fee increases, according to a raise tuition fees. The UBC board of scrape by on what I'm earning now," said a public could be greater." Ubyssey survey. governors will decide on tuition fee in­ student who wished to remain anonymous. Jack Diamond, SFU chancellor, said About half the 18 students interviewed creases at a meeting Tuesday afternoon. And Jim Fraser, arts 4, said: "Raising Thursday: "I'm very upset over it (the fees would simply amplify the situation that Thursday said they will attend the tuition "The government made their decision, allocation). It's not very much and it's not fee rally on main mall at noon. exists now. Students from wealthy going to get the job done." and they'renot going to change it because of backgrounds, say, someone from West Van Most of the students interviewed said the any rally," said Al Thibodeau, science 1. Although L'BC received the highest effectiveness of the rally will depend on the is a lot more likely to go on to university allocation, SFU received a 9.3 per cent in­ number of people attending it. "(Education minister Pat) McGeer's a than someone from East Van." crease over the 1976-77 allocation, the "If a lot of people show up, they (the pretty insensitive person," said Vic "I don't think there should be tuition fees highest increase in allocations to any of the government) will see that many people are Williams, forestry 4. "He ignored all the at all," said Cill Cameron, science 4. "A three universities. affected by fee increases, but if few people rallies against car insurance increases, and raise would really affect me." UBC administration president Doug turn out, they'll think that no one is in­ there's a lot less people affected by tuition "Tuition is high enough. Why don't they Kenny was not available for comment terested," said Denise Wood, arts 1. fees." firpnaop V RPAPTIOM Page 2 THE UBYSSEY Friday, February 25, 197? Friday, I CITR gets cable A.M.S OMBUDSPERSON I UBC's student radio station couver. Cablevision clients will 1977-78 CITR will finally begin broad­ have to hook their cable to their APPLICATIONS WILL BE RECEIVED casting on FM cable this weekend. radios to receive the station, he at A.M.S. Business Office, Room 266, S.U.B. until The Pa CITR president Richard Saxton said. up its pn said Thursday the station will CITR applied to the Canadian 4:00 p.m. March 9th, 1977. the Trid begin broadcasting at 89.5 FM and Radio and Television Commission Applications available at S.U.B. 246 & 266. Bangor, 1 will reach 200,000 homes in Van- in January for permission to use PLC s the facilities of a local cable BILLBRODDY Thursday company. the last : Secretary-Treasurer Learn Saxton said CITR will become support the third Canadian university to be demning carried on FM cable. Carleton system. University in Ottawa and the And F Sportuguese University of Manitoba in Win­ released Now you, too, can learn Spor­ nipeg also have FM broadcasting served 6C tuguese in the privacy of your own facilities. group p Ubyssey office, in your spare time! protest.' Yes, the Ubyssey sports staff Hi-Fi Super Buys Asath (currently consisting of two poor, the PLC hard-working, beleaguered souls) tawato c needs fresh troops. system. If you want to be a sports CLASS OF LUX L-30AMP Chaprr reporter, come on up to SUB 241K The Mercedes of quality amplifiers. CLASSIC anti-Trid The Lux L-30 Is conservatively Credit M and talk to sports editor Paul rated at 32 watts RMS per channel VALUE AT Wilson or Ralph Maurer. 1977 at 8 ohms with less than 0.05% Bob Skel THD!!! For those who require ttfe clearest sound reproduction. $249.99 MLAs cc poses it. McGeer GENERAL MEETING CS34Ddolby the mv*d afpnoeh m fM.fc/y AKAI cassette opposed KENWOOD The mi Friday, February 25th, 1977 12:30 Bai

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Complete tonearm return and shut off. as they v. with quality magnetic cartridge, Includes HIGH TRACK Shure 99 walnut finish base and hinging magnetic cartridge. The bar LOVE AT THE GREEK— Neil Diamond— 2 LPs, only *]• dust cover. SPECIALLY MLAs anc "TOP VALUE' PRICED he said. AT ONLY $99.99 AT ONLY $159.99 The bai from opp legislatur NDP faile soun SOUND ROOM Indian lai 1972. PH0NI More Sound for Your Money Guerin THE PIACE TO BUY A MUSIC SYSTEM 682-6144 leader D en 2803 W. Broadway (at MacDonald) 736-7771 566 SEYMOUR ST. °P Thursday & Friday Until 9 p. leader Sci Friday, February 25, 1977 THE UBYSSEY Page 3 PLC campaigns against Trident By STEVE HOWARD Bangor, 100 miles south of Vancouver, and violates the Nuremberg agreements, the construction of Trident is an escalation, he The Pacific Life Community is stepping "any Russian equivalent." Shelford and Geneva Conventions and the Nuclear Non- said. up its protests against the construction of Skelly proposed similar motions last year Proliferation Treaty. The PLC has also protested the con­ the Trident nuclear submarine base in but the legislature never voted on them. The Nuremberg agreements condemn struction of two boat- and missile-loading Bangor, Wash. Jim Douglass, another PLC member who preparation for war and the Trident sub­ cranes by Heede International Ltd. in Port PLC spokesman Peter Chapman said served a three-month term in a Washington marine has a first-strike capacity, he said. Moody. The Canadian Commercial Cor­ Thursday community members have spent jail in connection with a fence-cutting in­ By 1979 Bangor will be the home of at least poration, a federal crown corporation, the last six weeks in Victoria lobbying in cident at the Bangor submarine base, said 10 550-foot nuclear submarines. They are helped Heede get a $3.2 million contract for support of a non-partisan motion con­ the Trident system violates international designed to each carry 408 individually- the cranes. demning the multi-billion dollar weapons law. guided nuclear warheads capable of system. reaching their target — without interception Shelley Douglass said other groups af­ Douglass said: "There's a real — from 6,000 miles away. filiated with the PLC are protesting in San And PLC member Shelly Douglass, just relationship between going to jail and the Francisco, where the Trident missiles are released from a Washington jail where she A first-strike weapon is one which has the legislation because Trident's in violation of potential to destroy the enemy's nuclear being built, and in Groton, Conn., where the served 60 days for a Trident protest, said the international law. submarines a re being built. She said a group group plans a "summer of non-violent arms supply at one blow. "Our federal government and the B.C. Douglass said the Geneva conventions ban in Michigan is protesting the Seafarer protest." communication system. As a third prong in the anti-Trident battle, government have both failed to take any means of war which kill civilians on a the PLC plans to send six members to Ot- stand and in the absence of the government massive scale. He said Trident is capable of Seafarer is a huge buried antenna which . tawa to convince MPs to oppose the weapons taking the responsibility, we've had to take such destruction. can send a low frequency radio signal to system. the responsibility, so we've had to go to The U.S. government has signed the submarines. It is 100 miles long and sup­ Chapman said he thinks the provincial jail." Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, which posedly can hold out long enough under anti-Trident motion, prepared by Social Douglass said the Trident submarine base says the leading nuclear powers must not bombing to transmit the order for an all-out Credit MLA Cyril Shelford and NDP MLA is against international law because it escalate the arms race, he said. But the nuclear attack. Bob Skelly, will pass because only one of 45 MLAs contacted by the group actively op­ poses it. Of 55 MLAs, education minister Pat* McGeer is the only member contacted who opposed the motion. The motion condemns the Trident base in Band pressure will start soon to settle claim By BILL TIELEMAN The Social Credit government has backed down on a campaign promise to settle B.C. Indian land claims, Musqueam band chief Delbert Guerin said Thursday. The,.band will take the government to court if necessary to settle its claim to the University endowment Lands, Guerin said. "We want to make this government sit up and live up to some of the promises they made," he said. "We're going to have to start putting pressure on them to get some attention. If they keep ignoring us we're just going to have to go the legal route," said Guerin. The band may also have to consider using the type of disruptive tactics employed by the American Indian Movement if the governments refuse to discuss the land claim, he said. The band is still waiting for a reply to a % letter it sent in January to labor minister Allan Williams, responsible for Indian land claims, before it decides what steps to take next, Guerin said. — matt king photo The Musqueam band had two meetings LAW HAS FINALLY CAUGHT UP with bush that has been growing illegally for five years near SUB traffic circle. Bush told inquiring last year with the "Liberal-Socred" reporters it plans to plead not guilty on grounds it has squatters' rights. Irate flora calmed down, however, when it was told ticket had Williams, as Guerin called him. been handed to illegally parked car whose owner, observing it comes from quasi-cop patrol, correctly filed it in shrubbery. They also had one meeting with federal Indian affairs minister Warren Allmand last November, Guerin said. Williams and Allmand had one general Accusations fly in contract talks discussion of B.C. Indian land claims last November but nothing came of it, he said. By STEVE HOWARD is based on the principle of equal pay for said. "He inferred that the university will "One way or the other we're going to get After six months of contract talks, and work of equal value. present us with a package deal." the two governments together with us at the with 60 issues still to be resolved, UBC's AUCE claims the administration Funston said the administration refused negotiating table," Guerin said. 1,200 library and clerical workers and the discriminates against the union's members, to discuss wages until the AIB-ordered wage The provincial government doesn't know university administration have accused most of whom are women, by paying them rollback was implemented. She said the how to deal with the Musqueam claim, said each other of stalling negotiations. less than workers in other campus unions. administration has refused to consider wage Guerin. The Association of University and College The contract expired Sept. 30. Contract increases greater than those allowed by the "I think that the basic thing is it's Employees, local 1, is asking for a wage talks are now going on with provincial AIB guidelines. something bigger than they're capable of increase of $191 a month plus 7.5 per cent, mediator Jock Waterston, after AUCE "I think it's bad faith not to negotiate for handling," he said. union organizer Fairleigh Funston said asked for a mediator in November. what's fair," Funston said. The federal government is also stalling Wednesday. AUCE also wants a $32-a-month Funston said there will be a union meeting But Grant said the union has not been action on the claim, he said. "We do have a increase to make up for wages rolled back Thursday to decide the union's priorities in willing to discuss wages. claim and they're realizing they don't want by the Anti-Inflation Board in last year's negotiations. She said Waterston told the "I think they were not prepared to get to settle." contract, she said. union "that perhaps we'd proposed too down to economics until the rollback was The band is retaining the Vancouver law But employee relations director Bob many additions to the contract." settled," he said. "We feel that now we know firm of Gardom, Volrich and Wark to handle Grant said the administration has offered "The mediator has suggested it's time we where both sides stand we can get down to its legal affairs. Garde Gardom is Socred only a six per cent increase in total benefits. made a list of our priority issues," Funston wage issues shortly." MLA for Point Grey and Jack Volrich is He said the administration may not be Funston said: "We haven't proposed a lot mayor of Vancouver. able to pay AUCE workers a wage increase of increased benefits." One of the firm's lawyers, Bob Eades, said as large as the AIB guidelines allow, She said the largest demands are for in­ Thursday he could not comment on the because the government gave UBC a lower creased wages, maternity benefits and band's claim. operating grant than it requested. Reaction vacation benefits. Guerin said signs notifying the public the '.'Our present contract is full of holes," The provincial government grant to the From page 1 UEL is Indian land were pulled down as fast three B.C. universities was up 11.5 per cent Funston said. "A lot of the changes we've as they were put up last week. this year, but it fell $10 million short of the cut back administration salaries?" asked proposed are wording changes. The band is trying to get the public to ask amount recommended by the Universities Peter Leitch, science 2. "We don't want to trade off anything the MLAs and MPs to negotiate the land claim, Council. "Everyone should be able to afford membership thinks is a priority," she said. he said. postsecondary education," said Melanie "We'll never give up our grievance The band is also trying to gain support In December, the AIB rolled back a 19 per Tsunoda, arts 3. procedure. The grievance procedure they're from opposition parties in the provincial cent wage increase gained in last year's "I think fee raises are inevitable. proposing would eliminate a lot of legislature, Guerin said. But he said the contract to 15 per cent and ordered library Everything else is going up," said Cynthia grievances." NDP failed to live up to its promise to settle and clerical workers to pay back the four Spencer, pharmacy 2. But Grant said the grievance procedure Indian land claims after being elected in per cent difference in excess wages. . "I don't think 25 per cent is an proposed by the administration is simpler 1972. Funston said AUCE wants a large wage unreasonable raise," said Doug Layden, and better. Guerin said the band has talked to NDP increase to achieve parity with the lowest- forestry. "We're getting a pretty easy ride "We've made the first movement on that leader Dave Barrett and Conservative paid residence and physical plant here " (the grievance procedure). Both parties leader Scott Wallace. technicians on campus. AUCE's philosophy have strong positions they want to defend." Page 4 THE UBYSSEY Friday, February 25, 1977 Kenny reprimand bullshit Doug Kenny has reprimanded Al Soroka for his participation in the Harry Schwarz protest. Kenny is _ kidding himself if Kenny thinks the Soroka embroglio will now blow over. A reprimand isn't as serious as firing Soroka, as Kenny hinted he would attempt. But it is still a slap on the wrist for something the administration has no business giving The envelope please Soroka a slap on the wrist for. Hundreds of pieces of mail flooded The Ubyssey office The student movement is alive, not dead Kenny has confused the issue after our call last week for entries in our song contest. Three And you know the fight can only be won from the start. "Clearly, the issue in of them were contest entries. When they're forced to cough up more funds. this case is neither your political Scoop took these home, studied them and gave us the beliefs nor those of the speaker verdict Thursday. The winner: Kevin McGee, arts 4, for his whose lectures were disrupted," he entry, sung to the tune of Country Joe McDonald's Feel Like CHORUS writes in his reprimand. I'm Fixin' To Die Rag. Kevin wins a subscription to The Ubyssey and dozen yeast cocktails. Now come on student throughout the land "The issue is whether an The coveted silver medal, which carries with it no material Come on out and lend a he/ping hand individual, whatever his or her reward, goes to Robert Slade, science 5, for his adaptation of Come on people don't hesitate beliefs, has the right to prevent the Battle Hymn of the Republic. Protest now before it's too late another individual, whatever his or Show Victoria we won't be fucked DA CHAMP. Sung to the tune.of her beliefs, from speaking freely and Or we're gonna pay a whole lot more bucks FEEL LIKE I'M FIXIN' TO DIE RAG being heard without interference in a Give me an M... C... G ... E... E... R lecture given under university, What's That Spell? CHORUS auspices." SHIT! SHIT! SHIT! CLOSE BUT NO CIGAR. To the tune of No, Doug, that isn't the issue. Well. . . come on UBC students BATTLE HYMN OF THE REPUBLIC You are trying to reprimand Soroka The AMS needs your help again for something he did in his spare Find themselves in a terrible jam From the depths of the grey building comes time, outside of his job as a law Fighting cutbacks as best as they can the world we all now fear librarian. He may have been a UBC So put down your books and come join us That the admin's going to sock it to us employee but during the protest he We're gonna make a helluva fuss! once again next year did nothing to draw attention to that CHORUS: But the AMS has strongly said, aspect of himself. He was protesting And it's one, two, three, what though it may cost us dear We don't pay nor more bucks as an individual, not as a are we fighting for? representative of the university. Show McGeer we do give a damn! CHORUS No employer has the right to Next target's Vander Zalm And it's five, six, seven, discipline an employee for an action Unversity's expensive open up the treasury gates And we are getting apprehensive taken during the person's own time, A in't no f'time, it's do or die While the student reps are getting pensive that has nothing to do with the We gotta get more of the pie But we won't pay no more bucks. performance of his or her duties. Now come on students don't be slow That is the issue, a fact that must be This is war if you didn't know The cost of food and lodging has just recognized whether you support or There's plenty good money to be made risen out of sight condemn the protest. Selling out arts for the technical trades And car insurance has descended on us Kenny should retract his If you don't act now and call a stop like a blight reprimand and Soroka should fight You may find that your program's dropped But the AIB says six per cent no matter to have the reprimand withdrawn. A CHORUS how we fight precedent which threatens our rights Now come on people let's move fast So we won't pay no more bucks is established if the reprimand Our big chance is here at last CHORUS stands. > To demonstrate to each Socred Letters Only an artsy could have written fake anti-gear letter "Ah-ha," you say, "The Gears' but I can't claim credit for the subject and not have someone do it No, I am afraid only an Artsie ever will have. During engineering unity is no longer." Well don't hold "literary work." This fact really for me. with hours of idle time could have week I was behind Godiva all the your breath! I am referring to the Heed not be explained to my fellow When you look at the letter, one composed it. As a matter of fact way (I had to sidestep for the horse letter that appeared with my name gears nor to those who know me, immediately asks what gear would my friends inform me that the acoupleof times though) and had a on it (Geer peeved, Letters, Feb. but as an up and cumming be stupid enough to express a view Artsie who wrote the work (?) is lot of laughs over the Red Rag; it 17). professional engineer I believe I like that. Look closer and you'll quite good at working things out was excellent. And to the Striped I hate to disappoint the Fartsies should express my feelings on the find yourself also asking how the with his pencil. Assed Ape who wrote the letter last hell could a gear compose a week, you, "sir," are in error! The "literary" work like that. I ain't In closing, I would like to say gears are UNITED! r never used English like that having that I support every stunt and Steve Blaine THE UBYSSEY barely passed English 100. function the gears have had and electrical engineering 2 FEBRUARY 25, 1977 Published Tuesdays, Thursdays and Fridays throughout the You've got to be kidding about Soroka university year by the Alma Mater Society of the University of Come off it. You gotta be kid­ are based on his belief that peoples' political acts. After all, it B.C. Editorial opinions are those of the staff and not of the AMS ding. politically, all those guys he just was the political acts of other or the university administration. Member, Canadian University "The issue is Soroka's right, and bumped off might do it to him. And people that enslaved the Africans Press. The Ubyssey publishes Page Friday, a weekly commentary everyone else's right, to act ac­ everyone's ol' buddy Adolf was in the first place. and review. The Ubyssey's editorial office is in room 241K of the cording to their political beliefs," such a libertarian because bqy, did Student Union Building. Editorial departments, 228-2301; he believe that those people just Besides, Soroka inhibited my eh? Sure. right to make a political act Advertising, 228-3977. Following that brilliant line of weren't as good as he was. Co-Editors: Sue Vohanka, Ralph Maurer myself. As you are aware, Harry thinking, one can have nothing but No way. The issue is the right to Schwarz attempted to make a praise for Idi Amin, since his acts be free from the effects of other speech claiming capitalism would "Ken Dodd's buying drinks," snouted an exuberant Sue Vohanka to Verne "Withdrawal" McDonald and Scoop the Fearless Newshound. Geof eventually eradicate apartheid in Wheelwright flashed his birthday ID and was kicked out by Chris Gainor, South Africa, if only we'd give it Kathy Ford and Paul Wilson. Steve Howard asked Bill Tieleman where the Photog perpetuates myth time. As you might imagine, I had staff was imbibing but Marcus Gee stopped him from replying. David a few questions to ask him about Morton and Merrilee Robson tried to ply Vlckl Booth, Jon Stewart and published in your Feb. 10 Bruce Baugh with liquor Into writing Page Friday so they could go home Congratulations to Doug Field that one. However, thanks to but Larry Green and Terry Ades cut them off. Robert Jordan and John for his photographs of Germaine paper in which Greer is made to Soroka, I couldn't even hear Morris tried to talk Dave Fraser and Dick Bale into buying Gray Kyles a Greer in which he has succeeded in look like the stereotyped hardline myself think. round or three. Doug Rushton decided to quaff a few himself while continuing to perpetrate the myth feminist. Was that really everyone searched high and low and lower for Mr. Early Nite at the Kevin Finnegan Printers, Ralph Maurer himself. of the intellectual bitch. necessary: K I refer, of course, to the photos P. Burnside arts 3 • i • • , • t>l

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zi& Food ByTERRYADES Have you ever been lured by the thought of a snack: a piece of Rye Crisp topped by the kind of cheese that melts, garnished with slices of tomato and broiled until the cheese, tomato and Rye Crisp stick together in a gummy but very palatable blend? Have you ever thought about it until your mouth waters? Have you Top-of-the-line in-dash ever then opened the cupboard to 8-track car stereo with 8-track car stereo with S^ find that someone had filched your CD PIONEER TP7005 AM tuner/FM Supertuner AM tuner/FM Supertuner^ last slab of hardtack for an illicit The car stereo unit with the tuner and preset tuning every car stereo enthusiast will soon snack of their own? OA PIONEER TP9005 and preset tuning be talking about (and listening to). Man does not live by Rye Crisp Car stereo for the man who insists on The TP-7005 combines all the finest going first-class all the way. Consider in 8-track car stereo with Pioneer's alone. The numerous bakeries with what It offers: flawless 8-track unprecedented FM Supertuner to their savory home-baked breads reproduction with all the necessary give you on-the-road entertainment controls, including, of course, as only Pioneer can. 8-track will attest to that. The following is automatic/manual program change, operation controls include automatic plus the car stereo tuner to end all: program change with an option for a sampling of bakeries, each with Pioneer's unprecedented FM manual. AM tuning Is equally its own specialty. Supertuner. AM tuning Is equally pleasant and sensitive. You also get pleasant and sensitive. The finely the bonus of pushbutton preset For good whole grain breads calibrated tuning scale is extra-large, tuning — of up to three FM stations so you know exactly where you are. PIONEER'S HEW FM SUPIJtTUNER and two AM stations. The TP-7005 made without artificial preser­ As If all these weren't enough, the fits so easily in the dashboard —you vatives, Lifestream Natural Foods TP-9005 offers the bonus of preset Thle PM*&tea market fcawts«wcf t unprecedented [for may even want to do It yourself! tuning, too, by pushbutton, of up to has a nice selection. They also five of your favorite FM stations and car- stored* $*&&&$•• m~ mmm*&« m«ufc«ttM$ tive AM stations. It's the only way to 95 carry such things as sesame seed, enjoy yourself on the road! bread, whole wheat English •y«Si»rtt ' M.S.L. 234 muffins, corn tortillas, and 95 chapatis. Chapatis are thin pan­ M.S.L. 259 cake-like breads that come from India. Not all the bread is made at CD PIONEER KP500 the Lif estream bakery. Such bread CIDPIONEER TP900 The KP-500 represents a high point as Essence bread, a heavy loaf in Pioneer's car stereo technology. Its containing only whole wheat flour Everything about the TP-900 spells superb cassette tape section is excitement. Looks. Design. I l_J_- *u- ^n.u _n—.n++n „.,•. matched only by the brilliance of its — no salt, yeast or shortening is Performance. You get superb 8-track Under-the-dash 8-track Under-the-daSh Cassette Car FM tuner. The unit offers everything — and the last word In car stereo that makes cassette car stereo an imported from San Francisco. tuners: Pioneer's new Supertuner. car stereo with Pioneer's stereo with Pioneer's new enjoyable driving companion: fast Lifestream is located on Fourth at This FM stereo tuner alone Is well forward, rewind and automatic worth your Investment. A look at the new FM Supertuner FM Supertuner end-of-tape eject. Of course, you Burrard. tuning dial will tell you this Is no have the option to eject the cassette The most authentic Pita bread in ordinary car stereo tuner. As for manually at any time. As for the 8-track, you get all the conveniences, tuner, it's none other than Pioneer's Vancouver is freshly baked at new Supertuner. Add separate bass Including automatic program change, l0j9l0Q and treble controls, plus a special Max's Bakery and Delicatessen on manual program change, light-up loudness contour switch — and you program Indication, manual eject, ISOoj know why the KP-500 is now the car Sundays. This bread sells quickly, repeat and fast forward. stereo unit to own. and properly speaking must be eaten the same day or kept frozen. $ 95 n ra Pita has been called diet bread M.S.L. 199 M.S.L. *1W because it contains only flour, salt, and water; no fats of any kind. At Max's, you will also find the kind of Ask about our PACKAGE DISCOUNTS rye bread that one uses to make Montreal-style smoked-meat sandwiches. The bread has a TS160 MPIONCECEn TS161 chewy crust with a moist, tender DOORMOUNT DOORMOUNT interior. For those who like their bagels with lox and cream cheese, TS-160: 6-1/2 in. full-range dual TS-161: 6-1/2 in. full-range dual Max's carries all three. The cone speaker. Magnet: Ceramic cone speaker. Magnet: Ceramic bakery is closed Saturdays and is type; 10 oz. Input power: 20 Speakersfor ca r owners type; 10 oz. Input Power: 20 situated on Oak at 16th. watts (max.) Freq. range: watts (max.) Freq. range: 40-20,000Hz Impedance: 4 ohms. 40-20,000Hz Impedance: 4 ohms. The baker at William's Bakery, who are also stereophiles 306 West Broadway is Dutch. This $31« «36w. * "pair then, is the place to get Dutch Oven ""*pair- bread, with the molded shape of a cake rather than a bread. Dutch TS164 TS100 TS101 TS165 Oven bread is a whole grain bread COAXIAL 2-WAY DOORMOUNT mgm COAXIAL 2-WAY with a texture all its own. SYSTEM DOORMOUNT SYSTEM The University Bakery, just TS-164: 6-1/2 in. cone woofer T S-100 4 in. full-range single TS-101 4 in. full-range single S-165: 6-1/2 in. cone woofer outside the university gates at 4487 and 1-21/32 in. tweeter Magnet: cone speaker Magnet: Ceramic cone speaker Magnet: Ceramic and 1-21/32 in. tweeter Magnet: West Tenth, has, among others, Ceramic type; 10 oz. Input type; 7 oz. Input power: 8 watts type; 7 oz. Input power: 8 watts Ceramic type; 20 oz. Input crusty breads topped with a power: 20 watts (max.) Freq. (max.) Freq. range: 50-14,000Hz (Max.) Freq. range: 50-14,000Hz range: 30-16,000Hz Impedance: sprinkling poppy or sesame seeds. range: 40-16,000Hz impedance: 4 Impedance: 4 ohms. Impedance: 4 ohms. 4 ohms. ohms. They also have a good choice of 95 w <29« sweet breads and rolls: fruit «46 <24 pair ^^ loaves, cinnamon buns, Danish ^"pair *^pair *"*pair pastries. Good croissants are flakey, Impressive to look at, Coaxial 2-way speakers for buttery, crispy and light all at once. The croissants at Notte's Bon Impressive to listen to grand sound all around Ton 874 Granville, have all these TS35 qualities and more. - Their ap­ The TS-3S If both eye-catching and TS693/694 .ear-pleasing. Mounted ftusn with input power of 40 watts means it's Whatever your car stereo sound source Is tape or petizing smell seeps through the- doors or with rear deck, or simply perfect for all kinds of stereo broadcast — It comes out beautifully, roundly, fully. paper bag all the way home. The pfacad on the rear deck. It Is bound systems, especially those with These top-flight performers from Pioneer Incorporate to captivate all eyes with Us clean, powerful amplifiers. extra-large magnets, assuring extra-refined stereo TS693 '34* Bon Ton also carries French lean lines - ana all ears with Its reproduction ali the way. Smartly designed and styled, rich, clear performance. Maximum both models can be mounted easily In the rear deck brioches, fruit and nut loaves, and "•pair where the best acoustical effects are obtainable. TS694 some of the best cakes and French pastries in town. In Gastown, drop in at the TS5 TS22 Breadline Restaurant. You can TS690 TS691 MOUNT 2-WAY SURFACE buy piquant herb and garlic breads ANYWHERE MOUNT from the counter. These round- TS-691: 6x9 in. full-range dual loaves, heated, are perfect for a TS-690: 6x9 in. full-range dual cone with free-edge Magnet: TS-5: 5-1/4 in. full-range single TS-22: 4 in. woofer 2-5/8 in. cone huge sandwich. cone Magnet: Ceramic type, 5 oz. Ceramic type; 10 oz. Input cone Magnet: Ceramic type; 3 oz. tweeter Magnet: Ceramic type; 4 Input power: 10 watts (max.) , power: 20 watts (max ) Freq. Input power: 8 watts (max.) Freq. oz. Input power: 8 watts (max.) At the Vancouver Vocational Freq. range: 60-12,000Hz Impeda­ range: 40-16,000Hz Impedance: 4 range: 180-13,000Hz Impedance: Freq. range: 160-15,000Hz Institute, on Pender at Cambie, nce: 4 ohms (2-8 ohms allowable). ohms (2-8 ohms allowable) 4 ohms. Impedance: 4 ohms. bread is. baked fresh daily. The 95 students at the baking school there A395 $71 *2495 |95 ,J *40 turn out some of the loveliest each ^^ **'each A. ^^ pair ^^ brown and white loaves in Van­ couver. A loaf of standard bread is Put the pure pleasure of Pioneer Sound in your carl only 25 cents *and worth every penny. Other kinds of breads are baked at different times of the day or year. But watch out, goods are very often sold out long before the day is through. The list of small bakeries around town could go on incessantly. Each 733-3822 Stanfor*^~ d bakery has its own specialty, from brioches to eccjes cakes. Even a 2665 W, BROADWAY home baker who absolutely eschews store-bought bread might become enamored of a particular 'HIGH-FIDELITY —LOW PRICES bakery. Try one. PLS Sound Page Friday, 2 T HE UBYSSEY Friday, February 25, 1977 movies Network kills boredom By DICK BALE "I know," thought Paddy Chayevsky one day. "I'll write a screenplay about how television is geared to nothing but ratings. That should pull the crowds in." (Actually he wouldn't have expressed himself in such simple diction.) And the result of this self-righteous idea is an unbelievable, platitudinous, overstated, melodramatic (and occasionally powerful) film called Network. Network Directed by Sidney Lumet At Lougheed Mall Chayevsky was not in fact so hypocritical in his intention. The idea, he claims, was spawned out of genuine anger. But he must have been stupid not to realize the im­ plications of what he was doing. Network comes out looking just like the programs exploiting fashionable themes that he is attempting to criticize. It is soap opera on a grander scale. Even more ironically, he satirizes formula television series that contain a "crusty but benign" hero. Network has a "crusty but benign" hero. If it is meant to be satire, Network is so exaggerated it lacks bite. Effective satire requires a degree of restraint; Chayevsky labors his points so badly they bore us. The thought that television and corporations are immensely powerful is hardly original. If it is meant to be just an exciting story with no pretensions (which it clearly is not), it fails because of its sheer absurdity. The characters are implausible and psychologi­ cally two-dimensional. Consistency is sacrificed to a plot which skips and jumps FAYE DUNAWAY .. .impressive performance as executive who lusts only for power and which ends suddenly and incon­ works for the least successful of the big ending is dramatic, well-constructed and discusses ratings in the throes of orgasm clusively. networks, UBS. Beale's ratings are falling, effectively edited. can become emotionally dependent on he is fired, and so he threatens to commit There are many fine acting per­ Holden. Perhaps worst of all, Chayevsky's script suicide on the air. Rehired because of formances, especially considering the But these psychological difficulties are is laughable. All the characters talk in dramatically increased ratings, he sub­ psychological backflips the actors must glosses over by the ending anyway. It is a exactly the same wordy unrealistic way sequently goes insane. (The film ignores the perform in deference to the plot. dramatic ending but also a phoney one. The (Chayevsky's way). Emotional, dramatic fact that the public endorses such sick William Holden does a good job as "crusty energy of the narrative stops dead against it scenes are destroyed by ludicrously rational goings-on.) but benign" head of the news department, without being dissipated. You can't help or poetic dialogue. This drama is played out against a back­ Max Schumacher. Holden's biggest job is to wondering what happened next, especially "Death is suddenly a perceptible reality to drop of corporate coups d'etat and personal convince us that a man with such integrity since one of the characters is narrator. me with discernible features," someone power struggles. With a dash of romance, a can fall in love with a soulless whore. If you like high-powered soap opera you says. Surely no one out here in the real world band of revolutionaries and a bag of popcorn Robert Duvall gives us a fine portrayal of might like this movie. But don't forget that talks like that. Surely no one swears like thrown in, whal more could the average an ugly, ruthless businessman. Finch is Network is a prime example of what it Chayevsky's puppets swear. Apparently it is movie-goer desire? good and Beatty is excellent in a small role. purports to attack. mandatory to inject a "fuck" or a "shit" as There are in fact a few powerful scenes Perhaps the most impressive per­ Says "Mad Prophet" Howard Beale: soon as a certain level is reached on the and some haunting images. The scene in formance is Faye Dunaway as Diana "We're in the boredom-killing business." tensionometer. which the corporate heavy (Ned Beatty) Christensen, the powerlustful executive that That statement applies to Network just as The plot revolves around an aging news­ explains to Beale the true nature of the Holden falls for. Her big task is to convince much as to television. Only Network is a reader, Howard Beale (Peter Finch), who world's economic order is chilling. The us that this cynical women who even hypocritical parasite to boot. Tarzoon falls short of potential By VERNE McDONALD Decades ago, Walt Disney gambled on a It was only recently that Ralph Bakchi, The violence and ceaselessly coarse Tarzoon is another step forward in the art revolutionary concept, an animated feature with his films Fritz the Cat and Heavy language is counter-balanced however, by of feature film animation. Whether it is a film. The time and expense involved in Traffic, began the new wave of feature- Tarzoon himself, a whimsical and humorous step in the right direction is a question that bringing such a project to the screen is length animation, aimed at a new audience: character. It is hard not to feel sympathetic will be answered soon by North American enormous, but Disney pulled it off and adults. towards him as he continually fails to rise to movie audiences. proved it could be done. Whether Bakchi's films were in any way the occasion, but never gives up. Unfortunately, things pretty well stopped an artistic success is a moot point; they Tarzoon fails once more in the task of Tarzoon, Shame of the Jungle there. Animated films remained a product were certainly successful financially. Just carrying the film and making it all it "should A film by Picha aimed at children, and were almost the as Disney had proved that the animated be. In the end, the potential of the film is not At the Coronet 1 exclusive property of Disney Studios. feature was possible, Bakchi proved that reached. they could be enjoyed by an audience When I spoke to Picha after the preview composed of people over the age of 18. screening, he admitted that production Now Picha, a Belgian-born cartoonist, has deadlines prevented him from making the released Tarzoon in North America, after film as good as he wanted it to be. "I would release in Europe with apparently strong like to have cut at least five minutes," he favorable response. said, "and done some different things with The plot-line is as simple as any of it." Burrough's. An evil queen plans to conquer the world from her hideout in the jungle. There is some unnecessary repetition and Obsessed with her baldness, she kidnaps irrelevant digression in the film which could June, Tarzoon's bitchy, sex-bomb mate, to have been left out. There is also the promise serve as the donor for a scalp transplant. of better things to come. Can Tarzoon save the day? It doesn't "Now that Tarzoon has proven successful, seem likely. A bumbling schmuck who can I'D have more freedom with my next film," only manage about thirty seconds of sex Picha said. "I'm still unsure of what it will every three months, he sets about rescuing be about, but I do want to do another." her in his endearing, clumsy way. It's an excellent framework for visual gags, and Picha doesn't miss very many, PANGO PANGO (UNS) — Rabid Moron, including some that you might perhaps co-editor of this tiny island kingdom's think he should have let pass. favorite leisurerag, Fazed Myday, officially This is a cartoon where people bleed when opened the magazine's creative mumbling they get hit, sometimes in rivers. Even a contest. stomach that can take SUB cafeteria food Moron, a past winner and loser, said without harm will turn a little, particularly something about the contest being in­ at s uch scenes as the death of the evil queen. tellectually stimulating but no one was able to completely catch what he said because it It helps to remember that Picha, worked was spoken under his breath and through his for the National Lampoon, and that the "beard." English-language version of Tarzoon was Merrily Rubbedwrong, the other editor, written by Michael O'Donoghue, another said Moron was the most interesting person TARZOON .. . bumbling schmuck tries to save the day Lampoon alumni. she had never talked to. Friday, February 25, 1977 THE UBYSSEY Page Friday, 3 muste .***$*&': Big Band shows new blood By DAVID MORTON The change was so great, in fact, necessary innovative instrumental titled Roy's Blues, was a standard the former as music "not written In the show business world there that many claim jazz music was voices. The soloists stood up one by blues arrangement beginning with for dancing, but you can dance if is always that unfortunate group of brought to a sudden end when Stan one, delivering nothing more than bass and percussion ac­ you think you can." This side of his ex-personalities that hang onto the Kenton came out with his so called lines popularized decades ago by companiment and working up to a program was generally higher key profession despite the demise of "progressive jazz." such passe virtuosos as Harry high tempo furor involving the and rich in tempo changes. It was their reputation. Comebacks like Kenton was a transitional jazz James, Benny Goodman and entire band. Reynolds rambled all the best part of the evening. Frank Sinatra's depend on an figure, who, with his feet on two Bunny Berigan. The section work, over the place blowing forcibly yet Kenton made no attempt to audience's thirst for nostalgia — different styles, never became as however, provided strong backing. tastefully. resurrect his aggressive con­ not the quality of their in­ famous as those who make an The trumpets especially, with their ducting style of the early 1950s. strumental virtuosity. abrupt entry into the jazz scene. rousing high-pitched lines gave a Other commendable solos were Instead, he was content to turn His music fits roughly between the necessary lift to the slow moving delivered by trombonist Dick over the reins to his new tradition of the silvered semi-jazz solos. Shearer and alto saxist, Michel musicians, and give them a bands of Glen Miller, Tommy Bard. deserving entry into the modern Dorsey and Ray Anthony, and the One exception to the solos was a As usual, Kenton divided his sets jazz scene. If anything, he is genuine big jazz bands like Benny standout tenor sax performance by into two parts — his concert music providing an honorable service to Goodman, Wood Herman and Roy Reynolds. The number, en­ and dance music. He introduced modern music. Count Basie. Kenton belongs to neither of these genres, but he did borrow from them. He took' the dance music of Miller and the flashy Orchestra welcomed section work of the Basie orchestra and seasoned them with extra­ By ROBERT JORDAN time one was convinced that Hetu, The closing work, the Haydn curricular solos surrounding them Mario Bernardi conducted the only 32 years old at the work's symphony, was the high point of with glistening limousines of excellent National Arts Centre composition, shows enormous the evening. Haydn was 63 years sound. The tone of the orchestra Orchestra from Ottawa and Robert promise as a very gifted and old when he composed his Sym­ depended on what soloists he had Silverman was the soloist in sensitive composer. phony No. 104. Although he lived at the time. Names like Maynard Robert Schumann's Piano Con­ nine more years after it, he did not Ferguson, Jack Sheldon, and certo in A minor, Op. 54 at the Robert Silverman is presently on compose another one. Shorty Rogers aided the Kenton second CHQM Great Composers the faculty in the Music Depart­ ment here at UBC. Justifiably It is as fresh and inspired, orchestras to commercial success. Series Concert. Flanking the perhaps even more so, as any of his Schumann concerto were the described as one of Canada's top This was a new sound which, on pianists, he possesses formidable symphonies and the NACO gave it its entry onto the jazz scene caused Symphony No. 3, Op. 18 (1971) by an accordingly fresh and inspired Canadian composer Jacques Hetu technique and interpretative waves of controversy — primarily powers. interpretation. from the so-called jazz purists. One and the Symphony No. 104 in D It was played to classical scale STAN KENTON . . . criticism was that Kenton's music major "London" by Franz Joseph He coaxed some amazingly composed controversial music beautiful sounds last Monday and in classical style, with no didn't swing. His perspective was Haydn. musical detail too small to receive as a composer rather than an evening from the somewhat Stan Kenton, pianist, band Hetu's Symphony No. 3, while at clattery VSO Steinway. The NACO sensitive, loving care in its leader, and composer, who played improviser, a more important dispensation. element of modern jazz. times quite dissonant, is also often accompanied him ably, tidily and, at the Commodore Ballroom last warmly lyrical and passionate. Its when the occasion demanded it, The program was deftly chosen, Friday night, is another example. But the reason Kenton wasn't as 17 minutes duration reveal a work most exuberantly. nicely balanced and extremely The audience, of course consisted profound an influence as he could well played in all respects. The of secure and imaginative con­ The over-all result was an ex­ of over-forty types who cheered have been, is because he did not struction. The dissonances serve NACO is a fine, refined ensemble warmly when they recognized a continue to develop his sound. The tremely satisfying performance of indeed and they were a great more a musical end than an in­ a work which is just not at the top song and went patiently silent on music soon staled, and became tellectual one. pleasure to hear. some of Kenton's more recent curious and unprovocative. inspirational levels of the piano Canada is fortunate indeed to work. Kenton's show at the Com­ The NACO's committed per­ concerto. One of the tops in have an orchestra and conductor of The Kenton orchestra is modore Friday night was not so formance was a fine one indeed. popularity perhaps, but even the calibre of the NACO and Mr. ostensibly Big Band, if indeed that much to play his old songs, but to Robust and glowing, the in­ Schumann himself has written Bernardi. They are most welcome name can be attached to anything show off his latest crop of young terpretation sustained interest more inspired music than his Opus in Vancouver as often as they are after Woody Herman's Herds of and aspiring musicians. Kenton from beginning to end by which 54. able to come here. the late 1940s. Kenton's style of looked on at his soloists like a jazz cannot be paralleled with the proud father, his elbow leaning on Ellingtons, Millers and Goodmans. the piano, his mind clearly Rather, Stan Kenton did more to elsewhere. Opal's diary poetic change the sound of that era than Like many modern Big Bands, anyone for a long period of time. the current Kenton edition lacked By KATHY FORD goings to school today for this is The most amazing aspect of Opal wash day is the fact that it was essentially and the mama did have needs of written by a five-year-old girl. me at home," reveal her ethnicity, Looking at us Opal is the diary of Opal and add charm to her writing. Whiteley, who was born shortly But Opal is also poetic in her By VERNE McDONALD The whole point of the book, before 1900. She began her diary approach to the world around her. Every Canadian has heard, or though, is the random interviews. when she was five or six, and living The average five year old would perhaps even told, the apocryphal They include the usual miscon­ in a lumber camp in Oregon. not write lines such as "The light of story of Americans coming up over ceptions: ". . .1 think of Canadians Orphaned before she was five, the day/was going from blue to the border in July with skis on their going to work every day, walking Opal was brought up by a lum­ silver. roof racks and wearing parkas in across the tundra. Cute." berman's wife and lived in 19 the sweltering heat. And thoughts had coming/down There are also some rather different camps before she was 12. the road to meet us. Most people chuckle and let it go embarrassing words of praise: "I They were thoughts from out the at that. Walter Stewart, however, think of simplicity, naturalness, Opal mountains where there are the decided to actually test the long­ ruggedness. It's wholesome, un­ By Opal Whitely OPAL WHITELY. mines. standing legend of American sophisticated, vigorous and Macmillan Publishers writer at 20 ignorance about Canada. They were thoughts from the beautiful." Ah, if only it were true. $6.95 hardcover, 179 pages them. But the words are Opal's." canyons. In other cases, there is truth, and Without that disclaimer, it would I did feel their coming close As They See Us it hurts. "You'rethe ones that gave She wrote her diary on scraps of Edited by Walter Stewart be difficult to believe a child of five about us. India the bomb, aren't you?" paper of all shapes and sizes. Jane wrote the words Opal wrote. Very near they were and all McClelland and Stewart And there is outright anger: Boulton, who edited the book, says Paper, 159 pages She writes, lyrically, of animals about. "They took in draft dodgers, yeller the diary was first printed as The and nature around her. Her friends, We went very slow. bellies, and that were't right." Story of Opal in 1920, on the are animals like the dog Brave We had listens to the thoughts. His method was simple. He What bothers me most about the initiative of Ellery Sedgewick, Horatio, a calf, Elizabeth Barrett They were the soul thoughts/of simply travelled around the United book is not the attitudes in it by editor of Atlantic Monthly Press. Browning, and a pig, Peter Paul little things that soon/will have States with a tape recorder and Americans, but the attitude that Boulton writes, "Desperately Rubens. their borning time." asked anyone he came across what the author is implied to have. In poor at the age of 20, Opal brought Opal's language is poetic, Opal is often funny, sometimes they knew about their neighbors to contrast to the Americans' a nature book she had written to without being deliberately so. This moving, but never cloying or the north. ignorance of us, there is an ob­ Ellery Sedgewick, in hopes of is partly the result of mixing sentimental. Boulton is to be The results are hardly sur­ session with the American point of selling it. There was little about the French and English grammatical commended for her sensitive prising. Some were just as in­ view on the part of Canadians. book to tempt a businessman, but rules. (Her parents, to whom she handling of a sensitive person's nocent of the Canadian reality as I can understand how a whore in the girl herself — 'something very refers to as "Angel Mother" and impressions of the world. This book one might expect, others were as Washington felt when Stewart young and eager and fluttering, "Angel Father," were French and is highly recommended to cynics, knowledgeable as intelligent, approached her with his like a bird in a thicket' — had a her real name is Francoise as well as those who experience the educated people should be. microphone, as told in this special appeal. After hearing bits D'Orleans.) world with every sense they All the same, the result is an dialogue: of her life story, intrigued by her Lines such as "I did not have possess. amusing and interesting book. "Hey, honey! Hey, you wanna go occasional French words, Stewart has done some digging and out with me?" Sedgewick was moved to ask if she come up with excerpts from "No, but I'm glad you stopped had ever kept a diary. With that political speeches, letters and me. I'd like to ask you a question." Opal burst into tears." documents dating back to the "What kinna question?" At Sedgewick's urging, Opal Creative Arts American Revolution to add some "I'm from Canada ... do you pieced together the diary, which "ftiday is the last d.iy for mih- will be irturncd Or the> can he weight to the book. know anything about Canada?" had been torn up by a stepsister missions to Page Friday's Creative picked up at the flivssev office At a time when Trudeau and "You puttin' me on?" when Opal was 12. After nine Art!i issue Bring your graphics, later Carter are forging a new "No, no. . ." months, it was ready for photos, short stones and poems to A book pi uv will be awarded to Canadian-American relationship, "You a cop or somethin'?" publication. th« Ubyssey oflire. room U41K in Ihe submission considered b\ the it is fascinating to read some "No, just a journalist. . . Do you Boulton took The Story of Opal, SUB Or drop 1 hem in the Ixixos in PF staff to Ix- the bi—l " The previous American positions on know anything about Canadians?" rearranged scenes, and introduced the fine arts English .ind creative ('re.ilive \iLs issue will appear on wj-itui", departments Mm ch 1 and the pt l/e v. inner w ill Canada, which can usually be "No, honey. I don't but if they's characters differently. She writes, 1 summed up as a call for immediate all like you, they's a poor bunch of "Since the lines seemed like •Submissions accompanied In .i In announced DIP following week invasion and annexation. peckers. ..." poetry, that is the form I gave stamped, .ielf addressed en\ elope Hui rv" Page Friday, 4 THE U BYSSEY Friday, February 25, 1977 music Bootleg records endangered By JOHN MORRIS because it only costs them about 50 cents to and BRUCE BAUGH produce an . But then they go back to Bootleg records may soon disappear. The the artist and say, "Well, we've got these law does not specify under what, if any, FBI confiscations 40,000 returns here, which we'll have to bill conditions bootlegs may be sold, and until against you,'' and he goes into a deficit. And those conditions are made clear bootlegs are unless the artist is smart and gets a cut of unlikely to appear on the record racks. the cut-out sales, the record companies sell The difficulties for the retailers of start crachdown the 40,000 (to retailers) and get the money bootlegs began on Sept. 24,1976 when a man from those whether the record sells or not. walked into Rather Ripped Records in an alternative in the industry to provide It became more and more important to PF: What is the artist entitled to in the Berkeley, California, bought one bootleg unusual items which aren't commercially control things. With the cost of touring and way of royalties? record and then introduced himself as an viable enough to press 40,000 copies. Right studio work now they can't afford to put all Kroll: There's a two and three-quarter per FBI agent. He explained the records were now when a new group makes an album, to the money into every group. And once cent royalty which goes to the author being sold in violation of the law and would break even they have to sell the same they've picked a group, they don't want that automatically. be confiscated. He was then joined by eight number that Led Zeppelin sells, due to the money to go to waste. PF: Does the performer get anything? other agents who began cataloguing and way finances are set up. If a new group puts PF: So the bootlegs fill the gap left by this Kroll: Only if they're the same person. boxing the records that were to be taken out a record, maybe it's really good and trend in the big companies. That's why you can have groups like the away. sells 40,000 copies, but they can't sell 120,000. Kroll: Not totally. It's filled by different Beatles or the Stones where Lennon and So began what almost became the first There's got to be an alternative middle things — by the likes of Berkeley Records McCartney or Jagger and Richards are very test case over the legality of bootleg ground. and other smaller companies. wealthy while other members of the group records. PF: Has there always been this sort of Bootlegs fulfill a need for collectors and owe bills and live in houses worth $10,000, Bootlegs are records which are produced sbppiness in the recording industry? history. It's like a library source. The record making, say, $20,000 a year. without the consent of recording companies Kroli: No, that came when the record companies can't afford to put out five or six or performing artists. They have long made business became really big. It's now bigger records of Paul McCartney on tour. If they up a good, if not the best part of blues than the film business. It's one of the largest want, they can pick one. Most live Royalties recordings. Rock bootlegs date from the industries in the country. don't make any money, though that's issue of The Great White Wonder, a Back in the 60s, you'll remember you had beginning to change now. PF: Thentheonly thing you would have to collection of Dylan songs taken from pay to anyone would be the royalties to the television shows, demo tapes and album author. outtakes. Since its appearance in 1969, Kroll: Right, which we were perfectly almost every major artist and group has willing to pay. It's supposed to be been bootlegged. mechanical if you pay the full percentage royalty. In other words, Paul McCartney can't say, "You can't record it," if you pay and if he's published the song. Distribution PF: Do the record companies have any Because of the generally inferior quality claim on bootlegs then? of bootlegs, they have remained an oddity in Kroll: Not really. Technically, if the artist the midst of the immense contemporary has possession of unreleased songs that he music market. Even with the wide variety of may have some day to choose to release, titles available, they are known mainly to then it's different. collectors and devoted fans. The live recordings are the easiest to Bootleg records are rarely pressed in defend, because they're alternative versions quantities of over 1,000. Retailers have of already recorded songs in most cases, generally had to deal with the producers and the artist is not in possession of those. directly; the distribution systems have been If the royalty problems could be solved irregular and limited. and the money paid, probably 60 or 70 per Nevertheless, the large record companies cent of the bootlegs on the market should be have considered bootlegs a thorn in their legal to sell. Unfortunately, it's still a side. In many cases, the best unreleased matter of how they interpret the laws. performances of an artist end up on The Attorney's office is now saying, bootlegs. However, the monetary losses to "Look, there's no way we can give you a companies the size of CBS is infinitesimal. clear mandate; the laws are just too con­ The problem with bootlegs is that while fusing. We can't even say you can sell the the copyright laws with regard to authorship records under some terms, because there's are clear, those that concern performance no clear mandate to be had." rights remain ambiguous. It was because of Obviously the industry doesn't want the ambiguities in the law that the U.S. bootlegs around. They don't want it to be district attorney decided not to take the case common knowledge that anyone can have a against Rather Ripped records to court. The record made, and it's very cheap. The attorney felt that the owners of the record reason there are bootleg records instead of store were sincere in their belief that they keeping things on tape is that it's very hard had not violated the law. to copy tapes with any quality at all — it costs too much. The average bootleg can be made for about 80 cents in quantities of 500 to 1,000. It can be done cheaper than that in No laws larger quantities. At first the records were to be given back: A statement of the attorney's was to be issued which would have made the selling of the records legal until the laws were Production revised. PF: Where are bootlegs being produced. Before that statement was issued, the Kroll: There are no pressing plants in record companies were informed. It seems Berkeley and no one is doing them in their that in response to their objections the at­ basement anymore — those romantic days torney modified his stance and decided to are gone. Now most of them are done in a issue a statement that requires the retailers regular pressing plant, and you'll notice how of bootlegs to pay the royalties on songs to much better the quality is these days. The the publishing agencies. only ones where they can get away with Since that point in late November, the really bad quality are those of Dylan, the records have been returned to the store, but Stones, the Beatles and Led Zeppelin. with no clear definition of the conditions PF: What proportion do you think under which they may be sold. Rather bootlegs take up of the recording industry? Ripped has its records, but cannot sell them, the Top 100 or Top 200 hits. There was PF: What portion of the market do Kroll: Just a partof a percentage. They're as the owners can no longer claim to be diversity and the record companies always bootlegs have? only available in about four cities in the ignorant of the strict interpretations of the had to try to stay on top. They couldn't turn Kroll: You only bootleg stars, groups that country: Berkeley, some parts of Los law. their backs on any of their groups because have diehard fans who will buy anything Angeles, Portland and a few places back In the meantime, several retailers in the any one of those might be the next big thing. they can get with their artists on it. You're east, but there's only about one store left in Los Angeles area have been taken to court, Things were continually changing and attracting the fanatical fringe of major New York. (They are available in Van­ where a better test case may be found. they had to deal with everyone, whereas artists' audiences. There's no one who couver.) Bootleg records have vanished from the now things are very, very controlled. They comes in and buys a bootleg instead of the PF: Do you feel you've been harassed in racks of Berkeley entirely and are almost can handpick the groups now, as we saw new release. all this? impossible to find in San Francisco and Los with the payola scandals of Clive Davis Sometimes bootlegs help artists, like Pink Kroll: Obviously. We had nine FBI agents Angeles. (former president of Columbia Records, Floyd. Between Dark Side of the Moon and who wanted to close the store to count and In November, when it still seemed who resigned in a case of payoffs to disc Wish You Were Here they took two years. In stack the records for nine hours; the possible that bootlegs could be sold, Page jockeys for playing certain records). It that time several bootlegs came out which publicity that came out afterward meant Friday spoke to Doug Kroll, one of the doesn't matter if Chicago's next album is kept the audience interested. business immediately went down. A lot of owners of Rather Ripped Records. good or bad, there will be a couple of million Part of the problem has been that artists people thought the store was closed. Page Friday: Why did the bootleg dollars spent to promote it to make it a don't get money from bootless; but many PF: How much business did you lose? business develop? number one seller. performers don't get them from their Kroll: About 20 per cent, plus the 10 per Kroll: The large record companies do Another company phoned around and put regular labels. If a lot of small companies cent we lost from the bootlegs themselves. things very wastefully. They throw out 20 extreme pressure on retailers to push one started sending out small but regular It's not the same. There was a time when records assuming only one of them will album they had chosen to make one group cheques to publishing houses and artists, it people would have rushed to us. You don't really make it. Their wastefulness has stars. In my opinion — and in most would raise the question of why the big have the radical community anymore. It's a produced a situation where now they have to reviewers' — it was a horrible album. When companies aren't paying money. very conservative community today. cut a lot of things out of the catalogue. As I refused to do a window display, they A record company can put an album on PF: A few years ago you could well have things get old or stop selling, they im­ threatened us, saying we could never get the market and it can sell respectably — say imagined the publicity helping you. mediately nix them. any more advertising money from that 20,000 or 30,000 — and they've pressed 60,000 Kroll: For sure. But that's no longer the More and more there's going to have to be label. which means the company breaks even, temper of the community. Friday, February 25, 1977 THE UBYSSEY Page Friday, 5 movies

SUB FILMS presents "•M.MW Film shows class Out of his violent past By LARRY GREEN blowing and grin in the face of it. more in love than ever and come America's Dick and Jane are this nice, Segal always looks as though he's resolving to do it again. Everybody greatest music. comfy, nouveau riche couple. carrying the anxieties of every loves a winner. Bis songs-front They've got a big house, cars, man in his pocket. As Dick, he is "Rock Island Line" to marvellous taste in clothes. He has edgy, as he should be, but he knows "Goodnight, Irene - an executive job, she's got copper when to wink without being ar­ influenced McCartney pots and $20 cuts of meat for din­ tificial. The Street and Dylan. ner. At times, Dick and Jane looks A cartoon by Caroline Leaf like a Robert Altman film, with Produced by the National Film Ie is a legend Then, when Dick loses his job, all natural phrases and movements, Board they can see are mortgages, debts, secondary events, and character repossession and self-disgust. But twists. While Altman swoops down Caroline Leaf's short cartoon Dick and Jane are Americans, and on people to register their The Street, produced by the they do have American know-how. anxieties, frazzled habits and National Film Board, has been They rob stores and say they're affections, Kotcheff deals more in nominated for an Academy Award. sorry to the clerks, steal cars, and caricatures than realism. This film The Street is based on the using good old ingenuity, regain is too gimmicky and shallow, Mordecai Richler novel about a their self respect and their credit however intriguing the idea is. boy who waits for his grand­ rating. In what may be a movie first, mother's death so he can have her Jane Fonda, talking all the time, is room. Fun With Dick and Jane seen on the John, demonstrating Made with watercolors on glass, Directed by Ted Kotcheff just what women do. Most of the the characters and bodies appear At the Odeon picture is less questionable: they to be smudges and wisps. Yet as kiss while eating watermelon, they the scenes dissolve and reform, Fim with Dick and Jane starts plan their heists, and after a facial expressions and hand out staring class and complacency robbery they throw a party. At one movements appear and establish in the face. Fortunately they don't point, hearing a siren, they throw characters behind the brown lose any of it along the way; they loose bills out the window, leaving streaks. build on it. the passersby to dodge for them The grandmother is not wrinkled This Thurs., Sun. - 7:00 Fri., Sat. - 7:00, 9:30 Dick and Jane are Dagwood and avidly. or wizened but looks like the other Blondie moved to Southern If Dick and Jane doesn't irritate figures. She is confined to her bed Coming to this theatre next week: California and gone to seed. He's or let down, it doesn't sparkle. which she grabs with long pink The suspense thriller "JAWS" the kind of guy who probably There are only a few times when hands when she is taken away to an stayed up all night typing crib the film is unusually funny. Most of asylum. She utters only moans. notes for her college exams. She's the humor has been done before. the women who tries to save face in The scene changes quickly from front of the neighbors when her But when rich people hold up a the outside of the house up the shrubs are being repossessed by sex motel and throw a fiesta on the stairs, around and behind people as telling the landscapers that she's proceeds, the fun is that they ob­ the rooms seem to fall away. Body THERE MUSI FOREVER DE A GUARDIAN Show a^J,2-^5^ glad she phoned them to take the viously know how to live on $20,000 movement is carved out of moving AT THE GATE FROM HELL... j'.AO', 9.Ao'. stuff away. a day. smudges; the impression of pink, serqihel The message that greed pays can white and brown lingers. In The Many gory and frightening, voquE A wittier, more intelligent and be taken or left because it isn't Street, Leaf gives volatile images a scenes, B.C. Dir. 918 GRANVILLE restrained couple than George forced on us. Dick and Jane are left compelling beauty and unusual Sr= 685-5434 Segal and Jane Fonda could not be enjoying their new way of life, force. found. They may be more beautiful Show at 12.25, 2.15, 4.10, than most people, but they register 6.05, 8.05, 10.00. humor and emotions in a totally believable way. The stars and all the elements li/l \^°^t^ance Keitauranti 7Jf DICK AMD MME OQEON MATURE "!,=R*"V,.l« they deal with play ball expertly, I •**^OPEN FOR LUNCH 11:30 1251 ^WiTsT. 682-7468 fraying the edges of a premise that DINNER FROM 6:00 6843043 could have been a dud and coming up with a slick and funny caper Show at 12.20, 2.15, 4.10, 6.05, 8.10 movie. The film moves in short, well- 'TARZOON, SHAME OF THE JUNGLE" shaped little scenes that fit CORONET 1 An epic fantasy Crude and Suggestive Scenes, together like building blocks. Dick B.C. Dir. »51 GRANVILLE and Jane's conversation is sharp, amusing banter. of peace and magic. Jane Fonda is a great tease. She Show at 7.30, 9.30 can sense which way the wind is

duisbAR MATURE DUNBAR at 30th 224-7252

Jack Nicholson In Show at 7.15, 9.35 'ONE FLEW OVER THE CUCKOO'S NEST"

Violence and course language ^^^^^^^^_^bROAClWAy2^ Could be frightening to children 707 w. BROADWAY 874-1927

THE Show at 7.30, 9.40 SEVEN" MATURE

PERCENT DARK SOLUTION CAMBIE at 18th UNIVERSAL RELEASE 876-2747

^ Fellings ONE COMPLETE THE OLD ROLLER RINK Casanova Show at 8.00 Theatre Restaurant VARSITy 135 West 1st St., North Van. A classical sex story, B.C. Dir. ,,??4;3730 986-1331 4375 W. 10th

Unti Feb. 26th 'Laurence Oliver'sfilm o f Sunday William Shakespeare's Matinee only JESSIE at 2 p.m. WINCHESTER VARSITY iclKiltl III GENERAL 224-3730 & 4375 W. 10th

TIM WILLIAMS 20th CENTURY-FOX PRESENTS A RALPH BAKSHI FILM IT'S THE WIZARDS MOST COMING HILARIOUS Feb. 28th to March 1st COMING SOON SUSPENSE Show at 12.50, 3.00, 5.10, 7.25, 9.35 Mature, occasional 37 3461 RIDE OF CORONET 2 CHARLIE BYRD louqheed mallh coarse language, urnaby B.C, Dir. 851 GRANVILLE YOUR LIFE! 685-6828

Page Friday, 6 THE UBYSSEY Friday, February 25, 1977 books I Forked Road faintly praised By DAVE FRASER year period in which some basic When McClelland and Stewart decisions about Canada's future hired their flunky to write the dust were made. In 1939, according to jacket introduction to The Forked Creighton, Canada came upon a Road they must have blackmailed forked road. As a nation Canada the poor fellow because nothing could have continued along the else (except perhaps a natural familiar, old route of being an penchant for lying) could possibly inward looking, essentially, have induced anyone to spout such colonial nation. Instead, however, drivel. the government chose a new road into the future and worked toward The Forked Road developing the country's own By Donald Creighton identity as an independent par­ McClelland and Stewart ticipant in world affairs. Hardcover, $14.95, 293 pp. The transformation of Canada from a country whose foreign The pressured scribe speaks envoys prior to 1939 had behaved grandiosely of the "discerning like "awkward and tongue-tied insight," the "dramatic prose and country cousins" to a respected exceptionally clear perception" of middle power, was reflective of author Donald Creighton. He changes in our leadership. depicts the book as "a work of MacKenzie King, for example, had major historical significance and seen any Canadian foreign policy tremendous popular appeal." as "an expensive and dangerous At best, it is an adequate, luxury." Domestic politics to him, competent examination of should be almost the sole concern Canadian domestic and foreign of any Canadian prime minister. affairs between the years 1939-57 Lester Pearson, on the other but with frequent concessions to hand, saw his role as "taking boredom. There is nothing ex­ Canada out of its stuffy, ceptionally revealing or inventive meaningless North American about Creighton's treatment of this isolation and into the bracing period in history — the inquisitive currents of international affairs." student of Canadian affairs could The manifestation of Pearson's learn as much elsewhere. Mc­ thinking could be seen in Canada's Clelland and Stewart, undoubtedly willing participation in such in­ aware that Donald Creighton is no ternational bodies as the UN, match for Pierre Berton's NATO, and to some extent the audience appeal, had to resort to Commonwealth of Nations. some form of unorthodox Canada also matured GABRIELLE ROY ... Canadian arts come into their own salesmanship and hence, the dust domestically during this time jacket hype. period. Economically, Canadians New discoveries of energy and not hesitate to point out, for forces in Canadian territory (i.e. metals also helped Canada's self- example, how FDR dominated and the North) even those including Given an interest in Canadian survived several short recessions and fought successfully against image even though the mer­ overpowered MacKenzie King. He Canadians." history and a talent for remaining, chandising of these resources was calls their relationship one of awake and alert through serious inflation. Citizens now The few strengths this book enjoyed greater security through largely controlled by foreign "master and pupil" with FDR the seemingly endless waves of tedium (mainly American) interests. "acknowledged senior." possesses do not warrant its billing about parliamentary enlightened programs such as as "a work of major historical manoeuverings and constitutional family allowances and old age Unlike some of Canada's more On another occasion he chastizes significance." The student of impasses, there is something to be pensions. nationalistic minded historians the Canadian government, which Canadian history who is likely to be gained from reading this book. A new awareness was developing who tend to confuse fact and during the Second World War, turned on by a rather com­ However, don't expect to be ex­ in the Arts with the creation of the fantasy in what is essentially an allowed American military courts monplace and undistinguished ceed in the process. Canada Council, the Winnipeg elephant and mouse relationship, "the power to try all offences narrative, this book is heartily The Forked Road covers an 18- Ballet and the Stratford Festival. Creighton tells it like it is. He does committed by the U.S. armed recommended.

somewhere to go after class after the show ... after anything!

MacKENZIE KING . . . foreign policy an expensive luxury.

EVE SMITH IN CONCERT WITH WYATT RUTHER POP, BLUES, JAZZ ALWOLD authentic Italian ice creams JOHN NOLAN espresso • cappuccino fresh juices -snacks Saturday, February 26, 8:30 homemade desserts $3.00 JAMES COWAN THEATRE, 6450 GILPIN ST. WEST 4th AVE. & COLLINGWOOD SPONSORED BY THE BURNABY ART GALLERY — 731-8522 — 291-9441 Open Early and Late Every Day Friday, February 25, 1977 THE UBYSSEY Page Friday, 7 "ft*. •VISTA- By TERRY ADES p.m., Night Moves, starring Gene Every Sunday night from 7 to 10 Here is your chance to see the Hackman and Jennifer Warren is p.m. there is Night Watch Coffee­ world premiere of The Case, a one- showing. house situated in the United act play written by UBC's Morris There is still time to see Tran­ Church basement at Second and Panycz. Performances, by sitions, an art show appearing at Larch. Bring instruments, games members of the theatre depart­ the Fine Arts Gallery until March and food. ment, are free. The final per­ 5. Transitions is an examination of Here is an opportunity to see a formance is on tonight, Feb. 25 at 8 extreme changes in style and program of mime vignettes done p.m. in the Dorothy Somerset accompanying attitudes. It free of charge by the Axis Mime Studio. features well-known artists Ivan Tlieatre. A company of four, The downtown public library at Eyre, Brian Fisher, Al Mc- directed by Wayne Specht, ex­ Robson and Burrard is sponsoring Williams, Gordon Smith and plores a variety of stylistic ap­ a four-week series, Writers of Our Richard Turner. The gallery is proaches to humor, delighting all Own: B.C. authors reading and located in the basement of Main ages. This show is playing at the talking about their work. The first Library and the hours are from Dunbar Community Centre, 4757 program is on Thursday, March 3 10:30 to 5 p.m. Tuesday through Dunbar, and starts at 2:30 p.m., at 8 p.m. SFU writer in residence, Saturday. Feb. 27, a Sunday. George Ryga, will be reading from FINE ARTS GALLERY . .. untitled by Al McWilliams his latest novel. Admission is free. On Feb. 27 at the. West End Community Centre there will be a poetry reading featuring George McWhirter, Rosalind MacPhee Introducing and Robert Bringhurst. Open readings are from 2 to 3 p.m. while the scheduled poets go on at 3 p.m. Bring your poetry. Admission is unsurpassed performance free. The Vancouver Brass Quintet featuring the principal brass musicians of the Vancouver for under $160 Symphony Orchestra will be playing at the James Cowan Theatre on Friday at 8 p.m. The program will be highlighted with selections by J. S. Bach, Bartok and the King of. Rag, Scott Joplin. Tickets are $4 and $3 for students. Bach fans are particularly lucky this week. On March 2 at 8:30 p.m., Patrick Wedd, one of Canada's most distinguished and widely heard organists and harp­ sichordists will be having a Bach harpsichord recital. The place is the Koerner Recital Hall, Music Centre, 1270 Chestnut. For students, tickets are $2. They are Technics available at the Magic Flute by Panasonic Record Shop or call 732-6026 for -reservations. The Vancouver East Cultural SL-23 Centre presents Days Months and Years To Come, the Centre's resident New Music ensemble. Tickets are $3, $2 for students. The event is on Sunday, Feb. 27 at 9 p.m. David Rosenboom is one of the most active experimental musicians on the North American continent. On Feb. 28, at 8:30 p.m., he will perform a new work, using a biofeedback instrument, at the Western Front, 303 East Eighth. During the course of this com­ position, a computer analyzes the information detected from the performer's nervous system and translates this data into patterns which are made audible by Rosenboom's specially designed synthesizer. Admission is $1 for For years you've members, $2 for others. known Technics direct- drive turntables. Unsurpassed Seven musicians of the performace at any price. Now you can get a Technics turntable for only Provisional Brass Tacks Choir will $159.00. With the Technics servo-belt drives. entertain at the Burnaby Art Unsurpassed performance at that price. Gallery on Sunday at 2:30 p.m., They did it by applying Technics direct-drive technonogy Feb. 27. Vocal pieces from to our belt-drive system. By using a frequency generator classical to jazz will be included as servo-controlled DC motor with highly reliable IC circuits that many well as various instrumental manufacturers save for their expensive turntables. music, costumes and dances. Free, They did it by adding electronic speed switching instead ot mechanical switching. admission. So you won't get stretched belts. But you will get greater reliability. There's also a servo amplifier that electronically locks the motor into the correct speed. So fluctuations in At the James Cowan Theatre, AC line voltage or frequency won't affect turntable spead. S!-23Semi- jazz night is Feb. 26 at 8:30 p.m. The results. The kind of outstanding specs you expect from Technics. Like rumble, wow and flutter SPECIFICATIONS Automatk Eve Smith, a blues and jazz singer figures so low they're virtually inaudible. Like extremely low power consumption. So there's less heat will perform. Advance tickets are" and less deterioration of internal lubrication, which means longer motor life. Wow and flutter (WRMS) available at Leader Sound, $3. For precision tracking, a statically balanced S-shaped tone arm. One anti-skating adjustment for all Rumble (DIN B) -65dB At the Vancouver East Cultural types of styli. And viscous-damped cueing. And there's more. Like 6% variable pitch controls. CD-4 phono cables. An integral base with simulated Power Consumption 3 watts Centreon Monday nights, there are metal finish. A hinged detachable dust cover. Plus, there's a built-in stroboscope and automatic return. movies for $1.25. On Feb. 28 they Suggested Retail Price' are showing It's a Wonderful Life The Technics frequency generator servo turntable. Unsurpassed performance for only $159.00. $159.00 starring James Stewart and Donna Reed. The show starts at 8 p.m. Also at the centre on Feb. 27 at 2 p.m., the children's matinee is showing the movie Kidnapped. CANADA'S LEADING Tickets are 50 cents for children and $1 for adults. STEREO CENTRE • The Pacific Cinematheque shows films from Monday through 2699 W. Broadway Saturday for $1.25. The showings are at 1155 West Georgia and the 733-5914 doors open 15 minutes before show time. On Friday, Feb. 25 at 7 and 9 "The Finest For Less"

Page Friday, 8 THE UBYSSEY Friday, February 25, 1977 Friday, February 25, 1977 THE UBYSSEY Page 13 Soroka rejects reprimand From page 1 warz roast, I wasn't wearing a sign the meeting only one of the 10 law TftlMMCftS has no right to censure or fire an which said, 'Al Soroka, law professors he had approached with HAIR DESIGN employee for his persona] beliefs librarian.' I was not identified as a a petition on the subject would sign — as exercised outside working UBC employee in any way." it. "Among the comments we had 10% OFF STYLING SERVICES hours — which in effect supported He asked why no disciplinary was that they were afraid to sign WITH STUDENT CARD Soroka. action is being taken against it." UNTIL AUGUST 31, 1977 Kern said later many professors "I am not pleading for my job," protesting students if action is taken against himself. had "legalistic objections" to the Soroka told 200 law students at the petition, which took one and a half 689-7619 meeting. "I don't care if I have to "The implications of this are days to draft. 1050 W. PENDER ST. VAN. chop wood in Pouce Coupe. I will extremely sinister. It sort of The Association of University not retreat from my principles one parallels the Watergate episode. I and College Employees, local 1, millimetre." don't know whether that statement passed a motion at a membership Soroka said he kept silent on the was a libel of Nixon or a libel of meeting Thursday deploring any issue for two months after hearing Kenny," Soroka added as the actions against Soroka. from Kenny in the hope Kenny audience laughed. "Any attempt to threaten the would back down. Several faculty "I will not promise you that I will livelihood of Mr. Soroka or any members told him Kenny would not oppose fascism and give up my other person as a result of freely back down quietly, he said. right of protest for my job." expressed views and legal political "When I went to the Harry Sch­ LSA president Andrew Kern told actions is immoral and contrary to natural jusiice," said the motion, which did not endorse Soroka's actions at the Schwarz speech. "Therefore we demand that the university and presidenl Kenny cease their harassment of Al TUESDAY - FRIDAY 8 p.m. 12:30 a.m. NIGHTLY Soroka and refrain from any SATURDAYS 7 p.m.- 12:30 a.m. NIGHTLY HAPPY HOUR FRIDAY 8 - 9:00 p.m. measure designed to, or having the FAMILY HOUR SATURDAY 7 8:00 p.m. effect of, preventing the expression of his political views." MAIN FLOOR - SOUTH END - S.U.B.

WE CURE ALL sick bugs .« VOLKSWAGENS TOO! e

— jon Stewart photo U.B.C. STUDENT SOROKA . . . at law student meeting DISCOUNTS AVAILABLE

ARTS *£* ' BEAR GARDEN $235 For 36 H.P. Friday, Feb. 25 $265 For 40 H.P. $295 For A V.W. 1500 CHEAP BEARS $305 For A V.W. 1600 GREAT MUSIC 4:00-6:30 p.m. ERIC'S BUG STOP Buchanan Lounge CHARGEX 1897 BURRARD 731 -8171 QS ATTENTION: ARTS STUDENTS The U.B.C administration has indicated that student tuition fees could rise as much as 40% for the coming year. Tuition fee increases of 40% for students in the Faculty of Arts would mean tuition fees as high as $650. A tuition fee of $650 would hinder accessibility to post-secondary education and as well make it difficult for many students presently enrolled in the faculty to return next year. Cutbacks in education will effect various innovative and effective programs in the faculty of Arts. Programs such as Arts One, Womens Studies and Urban Studies may be eliminated in order to maintain reduced faculty budgets. Cutbacks in education will also effect the quality of education in the Faculty of Arts. Departments I such as Psychology, Political Science and Sociology will be forced to drop many sections and courses. Reductions in these areas will increase class size, make tutorials larger or non-existant and make it difficult to reach professors outside of class. The implications of tuition increases and educational cutbacks are immense and they will have far-reaching effects in the Faculty of Arts. For these reasons the Arts Undergraduate Society urges all students in the Faculty of Arts to protest against tuition increases and educational cutbacks on March 1 st SUPPORT THE MARCH 1st RALLY 12:00 Above Sedgewick Library ISponsored by the Arts Undergraduate Society 25, 1977 Page 14 THE UBYSSEY Friday, February 25, 19| Friday,

3s\»£ w', &^Ns<*. -. 4?£^8s1. >&~'ts&°*>. vi&^s .'^Siy>,,c, V..*«a? &?', Hot flashes THE ANNUAL to be legally aware. These u Mexico in room 105 of the Cana­ programs are an excellent way to GENERAL MEETING Emotional dian Memorial Church at 1811 increase your awareness of the law The I West 16th. of the self defence as it affects you. team i Check the listings for channel Univen UBC's women's centre is People's law Bear's > and time. ALMA MATER SOCIETY sponsoring a weekend workshop Now you can attend the 17 gam on emotional self-defence for Vancouver People's Law School in will be held on winter s women. the privacy of your own home. Volunteers, pis* UBCr losses tc The workshop, which begins The law school is presenting a The Consumer Action League THURSDAY tonight and continues until could t> series of legal education programs needs volunteers to help with free Thev Sunday, will be led by feminist on cable television throughout income tax returns for senior at a bet therapist Sara David. Registration B.C. You've already missed the citizens and low income people. MARCH 3rd 1977 'Birds t forms are available at the women's first one, women and labor law — People are needed to answer for a b centre, SUB 224. at it was aired Tuesday. the phone and lill out forms. If For n you would like more information, outhust Remaining programs include Bears I Mexico today telephone the league's office at small claims, parts one to three, 12:30 p.m. IN THE The Want to find out about Mexico which will run Tuesday, March 8 873-1939 from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Dzus, n but afraid of being jailed by fed­ and 15 respectively, and Tuesday to Friday. After 6 p.m., SUB CONVERSATION PIT than h erals or robbed by bandits? Then immigration, parts one and two, telephone Bonnie Martin at Peter 298-6201 or Andrew Scott at centre listen to Philip Russel, who will which will run March 22 and 29. BILLBRODDY 733-3705. opportu speak at 7:30 p.m., Monday on Now you have no excuse not Secretary-Treasurer weeken Edm< BLACK & LEE had cr but h Tween classes TUX SHOP ATTENTION scoring NOW AT Titch TODAY SUNDAY 1110 Seymour St. five L SKYDIVING PRE-MED SOC INTRAMURAL POSITIONS numer< General meeting, noon, SUB 215. Conference on psychological 688-2481 ALLIANCE FRANCAISE portuni problems involved wltn use of Film, La Prise du Pouvoir de Louis contraceptives, $1, noon, lecture All tl XIV, noon, Bu. 106. hall 2, IRC. OPEN FOR 1977-78 wasted CONTEMPORARY than tw DANCE CLUB MONDAY The Intramural Program is seeking applicants for the Kundalini yoga class, $1.50, 9:30 AMS ART GALLERY was sti a.m. every Friday. International PROGRAMS COMMITTEE MOVING* TRANSFER following positions: plexigk House lounge Exhibition, UBC's photographic CSA society, part 2, 11:30 a.m. to 2:30 Reasonable bench. BCFCSA dance, members admission p.m. until Friday, AMS art gallery,, Rates The t S3, Sheraton Plaza 500. PSFG KUNG FU *• MEN'S PROGRAM organiz CSA AND CVC Practice, 4:30 to 6:30 p.m., SUB Big or Small Jobs Free Cantonese class, noon, Bu. party room. DIRECTOR with gc 316. CENTEMPORARY DANCE ALSO GARAGES on the CITR Modern dance class by Drelene BASEMENTS ASSOCIATE DIRECTORS (4) Thunderbird hockey from Calgary, Gibb, 7:30 to 9:30 p.m., SUB party with a 7 b.m. on CITR radio. room. & YARDS AQUASOC CSA AND CVC Film, noon, SUB 212. Free Cantonese class, noon, Bu. 732-9898 WOMEN'S PROGRAM WOMEN'S CENTRE 316. M Workshop on emotional self defence WOMEN'S CENTRE CLEAN-UP DIRECTOR FRID; by Sara David, registration forms at Meeting, noon, SUB 224. FENCir women's centre, until Sunday, ASSOCIATE DIRECTORS (3) IS S 3!3§]SSI!2]!3!§1@]3!3S!I]S)§]9 BjgggggggBjgggggrijBjggEjrjiii! Cana Brock lounge. Asso SATURDAY Gym VANCOUVER INSTITUTE 1 CANDIA TAVERNA I CO-REC PROGRAM SWIMM Ebernard Bethge speaks on Dietrich Senk Bonhoeffer and the totalitarian |3 FAST FREE PIZZA DELIVERY 13 DIRECTOR Cana P Call 228-9512/9513 |3 state, 8:15 p.m., lecture hal! 2, IRC. ASSOCIATE DIRECTOR (1) SATUI VOC FENCII Square dance party, $1, tickets at {§ 4510 W. 10th Ave., Open 7 Days a Week 4 p.m. -2 a.m. |] Can; door, ail welcome, 8 p.m., SUB 13 igBlaLlIaBBlSIsBBLsBlaBSIaBlalalalalala [sESSGalalalalsELalals |tn Asso party room. PUBLICITY Gyrr CSA SWIMM Choir practice, 9:30 a.m., SUB 212. DIRECTOR Seni> Film, The Crossroad, 2:30 p.m., Cane SUB auditorium. Apply in writing to the following by Friday, 4 March RUGB\ Sports night, members only, 7:30 to 1977 — Nestor N. Korchinsky, Intramural Co-ordin­ Unlv 11:30 p.m., winter sports centre, the GSA presents 2:30 gym A. ator, School of Phys. Ed. and Recreation, War SKYDIVING SUND Weekend of student jumping, rides Memorial Gym. will be arranged at noon meeting, boogie Saturday night in Chilliwack, GRADUATE STUDENTS Chilliwack drop zone. PARTY & DANCE THE CLASSIFIEDS RATES: Campus - 3 lines, 1 day $1.50; additional lines 35c TONIGHT Commercial — 3 lines, 1 day $2.50; additional lines VANCOUVER 8 p.m. to 2 a.m. 50c. Additional days $2.25 and 45c. INSTITUTE Classified ads are not accepted by telephone and are payable in Take Ballroom of the Graduate Centre advance. Deadline is 11:30 a.m. the day before publication. your Publications Off ice. Room 241, S.U.B., UBC, Vancouver. CLUE lectures FULL FACILITIES 75' FREE COFFEE B.C.' DR. EBERHARD BETHGE 5 — Coming Events 70 — Services the Union Theological Assc AN EVENING OF FOLK MUSIC feat­ WEDDINGS, THREE MINUTE passport),! B Seminary uring Canadian artists. Saturday, Adams Photography, 731-2101, 14»; Feb. 19th, 8:00 p.m. Ukranian Ball, West Broadway at Granville Street New York 80S E. Pender. Admission $2.50. Re­ freshments. Sponsored by Vancouver PIANO TUNING — Expert tuning and: DIETRICH BONHOEFFER Young Communist League. repairs to all makes. Reduced rates; AND THE to students. Call Dallas Hinton 286-, [oi TOTALITARIAN STATE 8123 anytime. Dr. Bethge was a personal friend 10 — For Sale — Commercial of Dietrich Bonhoeffer and wrote cetjtte 85 — Typing 'DEC a biography at the famed German COMMUNITY SPORTS theologian after his death at the CAMPUS DROP-OFF for fast accurate! hands of the Nazis in 1944. Dr. typing Reasonable rates. Call 731-1 RACQUET STRINGING 1807 after 12:0O Bethge is also the executor of COFFEE Bonhoeffer's will. Very low rates. Excellent workman­ EXCELLENT TYPING at home on fflMs ship. 24-hour service, plus excep­ Selectric. Vancouver pick-up. Reas-| SATURDAY, FEB. 26 tional prices for racquets. Call 733- onable rates. 986-2577. < 8:15p.m. 1812. 3616 West 4th Ave. Open 10 HOUSE a.m. FAST EFFICIENT TYPING, near 41st 4 \ Lecture Hall 2 Marine — 266-5053. Woodward IRC Fridays at 8:30 TYPING: Letters, Thesis, Reports, etc, 11 — For Sale — Private 922-2591, Weekdays after 6:00 p.m.,' Weekends 9:00-6:00 p.m. Vancouver institute Feb. 25 BOOKS — Prof, relocating, must sell, psychology books, great opportunity lectures take place on VANCOUVER'S OWN to build your library. Call 943-2902. 99 — Miscellaneous ART Saturdays at 8:15 p.m. 1969 VW. Must Sell, leaving town. SKI WHISTLER ~| GAVIN WALKER Perfect condition, radio rack, S775. on the ubc campus Bent cabin day/week. 732-0174 eves, i PREMIER JAZZ ARTIST 228-«780 or 594-4722. in lecture hall no. 2 Plus The Gavin Walker Trio instructional resources 20 — Housing BILINGUALS COMING - FRIDAY, MARCH 4 centre Personnes bilingues (Franeais- "CRAIG ELDER" 30 - Jobs Anglais) interessees a participer a admission to the general une experience en psychologic Re­ public is free muneration $10. pour 2 heures. at the lutheran campus centre Priere dappeler Dr. R. Frender. 35 - Lost 228-2465. university & wesbrook $1.00 iOECC Friday, February 25, 1977 THE UBYSSEY Page 15 UBC breaks U of A winning streak By ROB LITTLE Cummings returned to the net the 'Birds Saturday. Cory's hard The UBC Thunderbird hockey just long enough for the Bears to hitting had the opposition forwards team managed to break the work the puck into the 'Birds' zone looking all night while Tottenham University of Alberta Golden and get a faceoff. led several good rushes. Bear's winning streak at a record Again with six attackers the The 'Birds played equally well 17 games, Saturday night in the Bears scored to pull within one. Friday but were defeated 3-1 by the winter sports centre. But the fine work of Ron Bears. UBC has endured seven previous Lefebvre in the UBC net stymied the Bears for the remaining minute Edmonton netminder Cummings losses to Alberta, only one of which was the difference Friday stopping could be called one-sided. of play. Ross Cory, Dan Lucas and Doug 31 UBC shots, 17 of them in the first The victory could not have come period. at a better time. In two weeks the Toher scored the other UBC goals. Rugby team plays 'Birds travel to Edmonton to play Titchener's fine play may have Edmonton scored a goal in every for a berth in the national finals. earned him a regular spot on the period, the last with just 26 seconds For nearly 58 minutes the 'Birds team. UBC alternate goaltender remaining. outhustled and outchecked the Dave Fischer was especially en­ The Hamber Cup was awarded to Bears building a 5-2 lead. thusiastic about the play of Tit­ the Bears for having defeated the for Tisdall Cup chener and newcomer Rob Jones, The unlikely stars were John 'Birds in seven of the eight games Despite losing the Canada West counterpart from the Vancouver Dzus, noted more for his tough play who saw his first action on Friday this season. The award is an an­ night. rugby title for the first time in Rugby Union 8-7, on the weekend in than his scoring prowess, and nual affair between the Bears and recent memory, last fall the Victoria. Peter Titchener, a fourth-string Defencemen Cory and Tot­ the 'Birds. Alberta has won the cup Thunderbird rugby team is As UBC has already beaten centre who was given his first tenham played extremely well for for the past five years. fighting on four fronts for various Vancouver it now appears to be a opportunity with the 'Birds this championships. contest between the Island side and weekend. the 'Birds for possession of the Edmonton coach Clare Drake The 'Birds travelled to Oregon last Friday and Saturday to play trophy. The McKechnie Cup is had criticized Dzus' play Friday UBC teams in nationals symbolic of provincial rugby union but he responded Saturday, two games in the Northwest Inter­ The UBC men's and women's Saskatchewan with four and collegiate Conference. On Friday supremacy. scoring two goals. volleyball teams dominated the Alberta with 3.25 points. The The 'Birds will meet the Fraser Titchener was on the ice for all they trounced the Beavers of third tournament of the Canada Thunderettes are also repeating as Oregon State 52-0. Saturday UBC Valley Rugby Union side on March five UBC goals and created West University Athletic the champions. 5 at Queen's Park, in their next numerous other scoring op­ scored eight tries, shutting out the Association finals Feb. 11 and 12, The 'Birds placed three players University of Oregon Ducks 43-0. McKechnie Cup round. They are portunities for his linemates. winning berths in the national on the first all-conference team scheduled to meet the Island side All the hard work was nearly finals to be held at Waterloo, Ont., and another three on the second Meanwhile in the Vancouver March 19 at Thunderbird Stadium. wasted though. With just more Feb. 25-27. team. Tom Jones, Keith Gallicano Rugby Union, UBC is hot on the The fourth title the 'Birds are than two minutes remaining, play The 'Birds swept all their and Gary Warner were the UBC trail of their first Tisdall Cup in after is the World Cup. The game was stopped to repair a broken matches for the second con­ reps on the first squad while Brian many years. The 'Birds have will be played at UBC this year plexiglass panel near the UBC secutive year during the tour­ Gambourg (Saskatchewan), played seven games against first when the 'Birds host Long Beach bench. nament, held in War Memorial Richard Chappel (Victoria) and division clubs and has lost only State, March 24. The break enabled the Bears to Gym, to amass a perfect 15 points. Bruce Wasylik (Alberta) rounded once. They have to defeat the Ex- Two weeks ago the 'Birds ap­ organize their six-man offence The University of Victoria was out the team. Brits in their final game to sew up peared off stride as they dropped a with goaltender Jack Cummings second with 8.25 points, the Three Thunderettes were named the first round title and the Cup. 12-4 decision to a tough James Bay on the bench. The move paid off University of Saskatchewan third to the women's first all-conference The game has been scheduled team in what was billed as the with a goal at 18:02. with 7.5 points, Alberta managed team. Thunderette captain Jo- three times. TheEx-Brits have had championship of the province. four and Calgary pulled up the rear Anne Fenton, Kim Brand and to cancel each. It now appears the The 'Birds' next action will be a with 2.75 points. Dorothy Schwaiger were from game won't take place until near Northwest Intercollegiate league Match box The Thunderettes also cleaned UBC, while Melanie Sandford the end of the term. game against the University of FRIDAY up finishing the weekend with a 15- .(Saskatchewan), Sandy Stevens In the race for the McKechnie Washington Huskies on Saturday. FENCING point record. Calgary was second (Calgary) and Linda Chui (Vic­ Cup, the Vancouver Island Rugby Canada West University Athletic Game time is 2:30 p.m. in Thun­ Association championships, 1 p.m., with 10.25, Victoria got five points, toria) also made the team. Union Rep side defeated its derbird Stadium. Gym B, Thunderbird sports centre. SWIMMING Senior Invitational meet, all day, Canada Dolphins swim club. SATURDAY FENCING Canada West University Athletic Association championships, all day, Gym B, Thunderbird sports centre. SWIMMING Senior Invitational meet, all day, Canada Dolphins swim club. RUGBY Only 3 Days Left. . . University of Washington at U6C, 2:30 p.m., Thunderbird stadium. SUNDAY FENCING Canada West University Athletic Association championships, 1 p.m., Gym B, Thunderbirds sports centre. SWIMMING Senior Invitational meet, all day, Canada Dolphins swim club. HOCKEY RENEW YOUR Vancouver Community College at UBC (jvs), 3:15 p.m., winter sports centre.

Takes the shame out of your body. The HYPERION AUT0PLAN CLUB a family travel club. B.C.'s largest member of the American Sunbathing Assoc. Box 393, Surrey, B.C. Phone: 585-2663, 594-7916 [or answering machine: 254-4685] " DECORA TE WITH PRINTS'* REALTY & INSURANCE AGENCIES LTD. 4514 W. 10th Ave. At Sasamat grin bin 224-3277 ART REPRODUCTIONS/ ART NOUVEAU Largest Selection of posters in B.C. Fri. 8:30-10:00 Photo Blow-ups from negs and prints, jokes, gifts, etc. Sat 10:00- 6:00 3209 W. Broadway 738 2311 Sun. 12:00- 5:00 (opposite Super-Valu) WECORA TE WITH POSTERSi Page 16 THE UBYSSEY Friday, February 25, 1977 THIS AD CAN SAVE YOU MONEY harman/kardon 330C — The 'Best Buy' rated AM/FM stereo receiver from this respected manufacturer has over 40 watts RMS with very low distortion and excellent FM. Clean crisp and powerful, we know you'll be impressed. 960 The 'Best Buy' belt drive multiple play turntable available today. A very *,*4t,, tat**. ';;;,;::; sophisticated tonearm tracks the popular SHURE M91ED magnetic cartridge "' (included). A 300 RPM 24 pole motor turns a heavy 12" platter with only 0.05% WRMS. Base & dust cover are included.

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