Labor course. striking out

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1 ~ MONTREAL (CUP) - One says it has enough money to pay soiety funds granted to the his view. But we see no reason of the whitest men in the world Smith if other aid is unavailable. debating union were to be used not to bring him in, said ould put MGill University The president of the anti- for a speeh whih union hair- Mongeon. students deeply in the red. apartheid South Afrian student man Peter MaCarthur desribed Jenkins said she did not objet an Smith, former Rhodesian ommittee at MGill ritiized as Smith s defense of his role in to Smith s appearane, but only prime minister and leader of the the hoie of Smith and alled the War and the evolution of to the expense involved. white minority-ruled nation until the union s deision ironi. Zimbabwe. MaCarthur said his union We d be the last to stop demorati eletions turned the The student ounil voted freedom of speeh. Now if he government Over to blaks, has unanimously to divest its funds ould justify the expense. been invited to speak at MGiu from a ountry whose institu- Smith will be an interesting wanted 0 speak for 1 tions are similar to Smith s and speaker. He was at the entre of mind* she said* for a fee of $6,000. now the debating union spends one of the major politial on- Jenkins said she believes the The debating five times the South Afria om- troversies in the world. hoie is alulated to reate has Sent a Contrat to Smith ask- mitteeps budget to bring in Debating union president ontroversy and sell tikets, ing him to appear in Otober. Smith, said Barbara Jenkins. Marel Mongeon said the offer whih the union does not deny. Although some faulty members will be asked to help The ommittee s budget is $1,200, said Jenkins. She added to Smith did not imply the union supporting Smith s politis. f we had a hane to bring in the Ayatollah Khomeini. we pay osts, the debating union that she was onerned student By no means do we support would, said MaCarthur. # Labor ourse striking out CARREL-LESS STUDENTS DEPRVED of study spae in Brok Hall luth books and huddle outside Henry Angus building, studying until sun goes down and eyes begin to hurt. Then, like waifs of bygone days, -swart &vis photo patheti aademi wrethes trudge down path to Wrek Beah, where they live in tattered tents, unable to find warm, four-walled homes. No one knows trouble thefve seen. Oh, lordy, lordy. Housing eases, fleas nof pleased By CRlS SON The student housing risis appears to be easing off, UBC offampus housing diretor Dave Johnson said Thursday. But Johnson said that although the volume of people heking out the university s housing listings is notieably down, it is impossible to tell how bad the situation really is. All students seem to have found a roof over their heads, he said, but many are living in less than ideal aommodations, suh as in temporary housing, with relatives or with friends until permanent housing an be found. B.C. Students Federation spokesman Steve Shallhorn said Thursday his offie is still hearing some housing horror stories. Shallhorn said one student ouple were fored to move out when they found their room infested with fleas. n searhing for the soure of the fleas they disovered the floor simply onsisted of some thin boards resting diretly on the ground, he said. The room was later found listed again on the Simon Fraser University housing board. Aording to Johnson, the UBC housing situation is the worst sine 1975, when appeals had to be made for Vanouver families to open their homes temporarily to students unable to - find aommodation. Johnson said the housing risis has aused some students to get a bad start in their aademi year beause of the time lost in searhing for a plae to live. Many students are simply giving up and going home rather than waiting for the housing risis to subside, he added. Shallhorn said the BCSF will be meeting with representatives from the boards of governors of the provine s three universities next week to disuss the problem. The federation will ontinue to pressure the provinial government to alloate funds for student housing projets, he said. The Universities Counil of B.C., an administrative body that ats as a buffer between the universities and the provinial government, has appointed an ad ho ommittee on student housing, Shallhorn said. A onsultant to the ommittee had reommended that the universities onstrut townhouse-type residenes, he said, but no mention has been made of where the funds would ome from. The B.C. student housing risis is part of a nation-wide problem faing students at several ampuses this fall. Other hot spots inlude universities in Calgary, Edmonton and Waterloo. By KETH BALDREY Speid to The Ubyssey To the B.C. Federation of Labor solidarity does not extend to allowing unions not affiliated with itself to partiipate in ollege ourses on labor. The federation is urging its members to boyott the labor studies program at North Vanouver s Capilano College beause the ollege allows non-federated unions to have a part in the program. Federation eduation ommittee seretary David Rie said the ommittee did not think the federation should endorse a program that servies non-affiliated union members or does not give the federation some sort of ontrol over the program. We ve seen the involvement of non-affiliated unions (in labor eduation) before and it s gotten out of hand, said Rie. Some unions have ontinual battles with us. You don t develop a program for nonaffiliates. Rie also said the program does not meet the guidelines for labor eduation set down by the federation and the Canadian Labor Congress. But ollege program oordinator Ed Lavalle said the guidelines are not appliable to the ollege. don t think the CLC guidelines are workable for publi institutions, said Lavalle. The issue is basially to what extent a publi program like ours will be required to follow the CLC guidelines, he said. Rie said the guidelines were formulated at the 1978 CLC onvention. The guidelines are generally seen as putting on ourses for rank and file members. The ollege ourses don t meet our definition. Labor eduation is not something with someone outside the movement telling us what we want. said Rie. The members expet to hear issues from the labor perspetive deided on at federation and CLC onferenes. (n this program) there is the likelihood some of the things you hear won t be the poliy of the federation and the CLC. Lavalee said he has never reeived any omplaints about the program. We ve never had a speifi omplaint about ontent. Most of the unions that have worked with us have been happy. All of our instrutors undergo rigorous evaluation. Lavalee said he did not think the federation s deision to boyott the program would seriously harm the program. t will have some impat on enrolment but not a major impat.. n the past, most of the federation s support of the program was through promotion within its membership. The endorsation meant the program is promoted, said Rie. t also gives the program some redibility.

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3 Friday, September 12,1980 THE UBYSSEY Page 3 Cash utting to- lose olleges? TORONTO (CUP) - Closing Alan Marhment made the the future looks bleak, partiularly $4.564 per university student om- be to lose institutions, said Marpost-seondary institutions in On- remark after last month s meeting for Ontario universities whih are, pared to the national average of hment. tario may be the only solution to between Ontario university ad- urrently, funded less per apita $5,597 per student. To bring On- All pratial money-saving hroni provinial government mininstrators and premier Bill than all other universities in the tario universities up to the average shemes have been applied at Onunderfunding, aording to the Davis to disuss provinial funding ountry, the Counil of Ontario would require an, additional $170 tario universities, the ounil said. hair of the board of governors at of universities. Universities said. million from the government. But there is only so far they an go Guelph University. Disussions were not fruitful and This year Ontario will spend The ounil said that either a- before money-saving shemes, essibility to eduation or aademi damage the usefulness of a universiquality would ontinue to suffer if- ty eduation, said Counil represenfunding onstaints remained. As it tatives. stands now, the ounil said, Counil member John dwindling funds over the past few Panabaker, president of Mutual years have led to poorly maintained Life of Canada, said he was imbuildings, below average pressed by the extent to whih the laboratories and libraries and an ex- srews have been applied in odus of faulty to the West and the budgeting and energy onservation United States. at MMaster Universitv in -glen unford photo PTTNG SKLLS AGANST seven years of inredibly bad taste, beer stains, puked-upon walls, taky terryloth tableovers, ratty rugs and windowless walls, workmen renovating Pit onsider turning subterranean esspool into dumping ground for radioative waste. Major improvement is said to be sign indiating men s sink is NOT urinal. Pit reopens Sept. 22. Soviets may hek Poles - The liberalizations of government rule won by striking Polish workers are similar to those that aused the Soviet invasion of Czehoslovakia, a UBC audiene was told Thursday. peter Petm a UBC Slavoni studies Professor, warned that he is unsure how far the liberalizations an go before the Soviet government moves to stop the proess. But Petro added that the Soviets will not allow relaxation of Communist Party authority to beome widespread. And UBC politid siene Professor Paul Marantz agreed as he told 30 people in Buh. 102 that it is unlikely the politid hanges taking Plae in Poland initiated by the massive workers strike would spread to other eastern blo ommunist nations. Marantz and Petro Were part Of a UBC Blo in Crisis. disussing The Morantz said other eastern European ountries have already experiened the disastrous results of liberaliza- VCTM OF SUB-sistent diet lies outside in gastronomi graveyard. Evidene of poison SUB-plot hathed against hapless hap an be seen in presene of offee up, apparently last liquid to grae lips of dearly tion attempts and are unlikely to follow the Polish example. Panelist Jan Soleki said that although poland is muh more highly developed than Afghanistan, the ountries are very similar in that their people are both highly patrioti and religious. UBC professor Soleki said these two fators are greatly inhibiting Soviet efforts to prop up the puppet Afghanistan government. And Slavoni studies professor Bogdan Czaykowski, predited the establishment of self-governing free trade unions in Poland (the major onession granted the strikers) will onflit with basi ommunist priniples. He said the role of the Communist Party is to represent the working lass and that the new unions ould usurp that role. The panelists were unsure of the eventual result of the Polish strikes but all agreed that if the situation threatens the overall position of the Communist Party, the Soviet Union will intervene. But even western universities are in trouble. At UBC Wednesday administration president Doug Kenny told the university senate that we are on the slippery to a mediore soiety. Kenny said aademi quality at UBC is in jeopardy beause the provinial government is underfunding post-seondary eduation. f there is not to be more money then the only way out might seem to Hamilton. Panabaker, past hair of MMaster s board of governors, said universities are oping with in - flation = well s private in - dustry and business. But some uts that would Seem pratial to business - suh as inreasing lass size from 20 to 100 to save on salaries - would simply damage eduation, Panabaker said. Big three tuk By MARK LEREN-YOUNG The ommon problem of rising tuition, dereasing student housing and provinial government proposals for Disovery Parks is quikening the thaw in relations between the student soieties of B.C. s three major universities. At a onferene on Saltspring sland later this month or in early Otober, student representatives from UBC, Simon Fraser University and the University of Vitoria will meet to disuss everything from the three universities... servie, politis, what we re doing, student rights, Allen Soltis, Alma Mater Soiety external affairs oordinator, said Thursday. The onferene, whih is the first of its kind between the three universities, was suggested by UVi president Angus Christian, Soltis said. Soltis said the reason we deided to have the Saltspring talks is that we are trying to get something together that gets us away for a day to find out what the issues are, and what to do about them. Some of Soltis onerns are that students have problems with housing, tuition, the deal on Disovery Park. And the fat that maybe students are going into Alberta beause of the high ost of oming in- to Vanouver to live. One, our student ounil would rather not get involved with other universities. But now there is a transition. We re isolated out here. We re proteted. t s nie to look around and see what other universities are doing, Soltis said. We have to have this meeting amongst the universities to determine where we re really going. Beause when you ompare the budgets we have with some of the universities bak east, well we ve got -0rl eggemon photo departed. Many students are SUB-sumed daily, felled by Frenh fries, stopped by soups, roked by rolls and poisoned by poison. to make some deisions. This gives us a hane to voie a olletive opinion, Soltis said. The effetiveness of the Assoiation of Student Counils, a university servie organization, will also be disussed. Part of our problem is that the University of Manitoba and the University of Calgary are trying to start up a western AOSC beause they feel that we re being dominated by the universities of Ontario, Soltis said. Last summer ounil members went to the University of Alberta, U of C, and the University of Washington. Soltis said he thought the trips were produtive and that we ve learned. a lot seeing how other universities are run. Soltis is sure the Saltspring talks will be produtive. We an ome up with a list of reommendations and take them to ounil. he said. Carrel loss affets few The UBC administration s losure of Brok Hall study areas will affet only a small number of students who were monopolizing arrels, a UBC spokesman laimed Thursday. Al Hunter, UBC s media relations offier, said the administration does not plan to supply alternative study spae beause there is already plenty of study spae on ampus, as long as it s used properly. But Anthony Dikinson, student member of the board of governors, said there are no statistis on the amount of study spae. He slammed the evition of students from Brok Hall and alled for restoration of the hall as a study area. However, Dikinson and Hunter agreed the arrels have been unfairly monopolized in the past. They both said it was ridiulous for the study arrels to be allotted to only one student per term. People who just laim a arrel for themselves aren t being fair to other students, Dikinson said. The administration announed Wednesday it will move study arrels from Brok Hall to make way for student ounselling offies, but did not indiate how many of the 80 arrels will be taken. Hunter denied there will be a shortage of study spae beause virtually every department on ampus has study libraries and reading rooms, in addition to spae is libraries and residenes.

4 Page 4 THE UBYSSEY Friday, September 12, 1980 ~- - The nferno t s easy to ath a taste, a sent of the ebullient bouquet of the finest student newspaper west of Blana St. You only have to read Dante s nferno. Poe s Fall of The House of Usher also has its ommon points with the fine madness experiened by otherwise happy, well-adjusted students who allow themselves to be used as briks to make a bridge to hell. At least that s how it looks to anyone entering our newsroom for the first time. Don t be fooled by shoddy imitations. The fat is, we are no more apable of true insanity than we are of passing ourselves as truly normal. We are told the main emotions felt by a student oming into our ozy nest in the northeast orner of SUB are fear and intimidation. This we an understand. The sight of a grown human b e ing writhing and sreaming beause something on a srap of paper doesn t fit an be disonerting even after it has been experiened several times. We would prefer to liken it to a lean slope of fine powdery snow lying before a pair of perfetly waxed Rossignol skis. There are wipeouts, true (our editor is one), but there are also the moments of sheer exhilaration when you ve finally got the goods ont some undoubtedly evil being or body and the prose is flying from your fingertips at the typewriter with the same sweet rhythm as hitting the moguls after a long shuss. We need people who have fortitude and strong stomahs to fae our bad manners, our bad taste and the intransigene of our soures. nside we are patheti, wasted reatures rying out for understanding, loose shoes, tight headlines and a warm plae to have a fit. f you dont ome around and give us a tty, you ll have to read rap like this the rest of the year. THE UBYSSEY September 12,1980 Published Tuesdays. Thursdays and Fridays throughout the university year by the Alma Mater Soiety of the University of B.C. Editorial opinions are those of the staff and not of the AMS or the university administration. Member, Canadian Univeruity Press. The Ubyssey publishes Page Friday, a weekly ommentary and review. The Ubyssey s editorial offie is in room 241K of the Student Union Building. Editorial departments, : Adverthlng, -. Editor: Verne MDonald Verne MDonald quietly refleted on the past week as he eat lounging in the Ubwwy Jauzzi with sex kittens Sott MDonald, Mark Leiren-Young, and Raymond Haruon. Hk reverieo was intempted as water buffalo Geof Wheehvright.bpanted hi- from r*ter Julie and delared Keith Baldrey a nm-entity. Bill Tieleman nme up from the bottom of the tub omplaining of hearing Stew Palmer, Jam Hut8ons and Nany Campbdb making sounds like buffalo6 with aqualungs. But man Steve MClure piped up end the tub suddenly over-howed as G q Strong and Glen Sanford waddled in, quishing Marguerite in the prows. Eri Eggemon and Joe Marh were quikly fslled in to lesn up the mar, but did not arrive More Eddie Wilde pulled the plug on them all, fw a mass orgie with Julie 0ve~. and Cris Sion. Keny Reigw left the mom and swithed on Bah. Utopia omes with separation - More people me& that the fate of the Fraser Valley will be the fate of the rest of the provine. More people an only be a weakening fator, not a strengthening one. More people are not the only fa- By CHRS FWLKER Separatism is an idea whose time has ome. British Columbia has more to gain from leaving this ompromise of a ountry than any other provine, and the reasons why are beoming inreasingly obvious. B.C. has a fine amount of resoures. Consider these what you will: land, housing, jobs, eletrial power, natural resoures. B.C. also has one of the two highest rates of immigrants entering the provine in Canada. This represents an infinite number of people taking advantage of a finite amount of resoures. That is the rux of the problem, and it is a problem whih all other provines are better able to ope with. The standard of living has already started to slip here. Remember the big population boom of 1969, and that hot summer? Remember all those houses going up? Well, during the population boom of 1980 all we got was Clarke lears muddy brew One again there seem to be a few mistakes in a number of the artiles hat appeared in the September 9 issue of The Ubyssey. Some very immrtant points, whih were disussed during the interviews, have been eft out of these artiles - perhaps to make room for the sensational itatements whih do appear. n the artile entitled AMs boosts beer pries again you failed ta mint out the inrease in osts relative to and preeding the inrease in )rie. n 1978, for example, a keg of draft ( servings) ost and a serving was selling for 85 per glass. Sine that time, he ost has inreased three times and a keg urrently osts $ This s a 38 per ent inrease over a omparable time period the retail prie in. :reased 15 to today s prie of $1.00 (only bottled beer osts $1.15). Therefore we have our osts inreasing 32 per ent and our prie inxeasing by only 17 per ent. Obviously we are making less money pex Erving. Now ombine this fator with a derease in sales over the 79/80 aa iemi year. (1978/79 sales were $543,000 and 1979/80 sales were E ) One would logially expet a derease in the earnings of the Pit given hat the other expenditures did not substantially differ from the 79/8(3 mdgeted amounts. Therefore his answer is not more likely that the Soial Centre manager has tightened up the inventory ontrol as wa! quoted having said; this is the only answer. The reason for the derease in sales is still under debate. Perhaps the -owdy, if not outright dangerous atmosphere aused people to avoid th Pit, who knows? However, the smell and hopefully the rowdy atmosphere will be elim. mted through the renovations urrently taking plae. Whih brings us to the $ figure your artile quoted us as th :osts for the renovations. This figure is reasonably lose, however, yo^ Fail to point out that the figure inludes $35,000 for painting an arpeting whih the administration will over, as stated in the indenturt between AMs and the administration; Re: SUB. Regarding the headline artile entitled $1.5 million AMs plans hit. 11 S true that, if there is no drasti derease in the student population foi this aademi year, the SUB debenture the AMs has been paying off foi 18 years will fmally be put to rest. However, the fee was originall! part of the AMs general fee whih, by referendum was applied to SUB md therefore would automatially ease to be levied. Len Clnrk diretor of finnn ondominiums and apartments. Look at the pollution problem on the beahes around Vitoria; look at the student housing problem.. How many of those students simply paked their ar and ame from Alberta or Ontario or some other hole? f some Albertan believes he was born with a silver spoon in his mouth and he thinks he has got the world by the balls then Alberta is where he belongs. ould generalize forever about how different all easterners are: how they are more onservative, short hair and suits types with gas monsters for ars and neanderthal politis. This way of thinking is going to go the way of the passenger pigeon in a few short years. The idea that development must ome only as a byprodut of rampant, unontrolled development is a modem-day dinosaur. Prosperity should not be spread thinly among hordes of newomers; it should be for British Columbians alone. We shouldn t have to hunt for aommodation in our own land; we shouldn t have to lose our irreplaeable farmland just to house others who have no feeling for the land on whih they live. People moving west don t think of moving to the prairies, they think of B.C. and espeially Vanouver. No doubt many of you reading this are testimony to that. Go home. Ah, you say, but what about all the money and jobs these prairie and Ontario expatriates bring? People with all their belongings in the bak of their station wagon, or pensioners, are not likely to reate too many jobs. Besides, their money is going to seem rather indigestible when we start to need more food or eletriity for them. Guess who the first ones will be to sream for nulear power plants when their lights dim... t is beoming extremely silly to argue about money and jobs when it is people and resoures whih really matter. f we are about our provine, whether we were born here or not, we will realize that it is rapidly beoming too populous to maintain our standard of living. B.C. has, right now, the potential to be an energy self-suffiient, resoure rih, environmentally undisturbed provine. tor. Ottawa-bashing is quite rightly beoming a popular pastime here. To fore individual provines in a ompromise of a ountry like Canada to give up muh of their wealth is bound to divide the ountry, espeially when we get little or nothing from Ottawa in return. When we have so little in ommon with the east it is riminal to take our resoures and give them to the east. The very diversity between provines reated the provinial boundaries. They represent a differene in people and geography, and it is doubly riminal to govern a provine suh as B.C. from Ottawa with one hand all the while ripping us off with the other. Those resoures belong to B.C., not to Ottawa. Any government that has the gall to delare Ontario a have-not provine is never going to get any support in the west, yet we sheep in British Columbia ontinue to pay through the nose. These resoures B.C. have are non-renewable, and for one will bet that we won t get a hill of beans out of the rest of this ountry when they are gone. To these fators you an add bilingualism, metrifiation, Canada Post, and Ottawa s hoie of a national flag. (As well as any other federal nonsense, money-wasting, bureaurati bungling, Ontario- Quebe favoritism, freight rates, tariffs, tax exesses and any others you an think of.) Do we really get a deent return for that 50 per ent of our tax dollar sent bak east? Who is paying for all the onstitutional pablum we are being spoon fed on TV and on billboards, et.? With all that evidene; it is no wonder that western separatism is on the rise, espeially in B.C. While there are several groups laiming to be separatists, none are really onerned with our provineexept the Western National Party. The party was originally formed in response to a letter to the editor of the Vitoria Colonist, under the name of the Committee for Western -ndependene, That was in Five years have seen many name hanges. leadership hanges, and poliy hanges. The party is now leaving the prairies entirely out of the piture, and is beoming a purely British Columbian separatist party. Aording to party seretary Stan Bennett, a strong supporter of the B.C.-only idea, party members inlude approximately one-third former NDP ers, whih may surprise some, given the onservative slant to the party. The issues outlined earlier are, however, extremely pressing and no doubt this has aused many to subjugate their left-wing or right-wing leanings for the good of their provine. The party right now is in somewhat of a state of hange. After Doug Christie left the party following a ourt ase in the spring. the party was (and is) resurreted under the old name of the WNP. To avoid spreading party resoures too thinly, a go-slow poliy is being followed with respet to organization in the prairie provines. Many B.C. members do not live in the Lower Mainland, but the party has an offie established in Vanouver at # W. Broadway. Dealing with the prairies as well as with B.C. was proving to be a bit of a strain, espeially sine 85 per ent of members are from B.C. in the first plae. The party also has a rather onservative slant to it, but separatism is the one plant that everyone agrees totally on. We the Sheeple. How appropriately this desribes so many people today. Most people either don t are about what happens around them or they believe that the first thing they re told is right and that progress at any ost is the way to ahieve this supposedly everlasting prosperity that we re always told to expet. People these days are too onerned about what s on TV tonight to are about anything im- See page 5: Separatism Chris Fulker is a third year arts student who obviously worries more about the future than the past. For a diffrent view on how to make a humane nation, see Perspetives on the next page.

5 ,., Friday, September 12,1980 THE UBYSSEY Canadians ignore human rights Do Canadians are that they have no rights that the government annot revoke? Are Canadians onerned about the ontents of the Charter of Human Rights that will be entrenhed in the new onstitution? Are Canadians interested in that whih makes our ountry fundamentally different from our neighbors aross the North Pole or would they rather find out what makes the Russians suh good hokey players? The onstitution has been the floormat for endless politial Separatism From page 4 portant, even if it s right in front of them. Eat your pablum and be a good boy. f you believe the Liberal s onstitutional nonsense at least you ll be following the sheep at the head of the line and you an t go wrong. B.C. needs more leaders and fewer followers now. f you are really onerned then the Western National Party an use you, regardless of whih party (if any) you belonged to before. The issues at stake now, for this provine, are more important than the soialism vs. free enterprise feud going on all the time. f some old lady tells you that you are a ommunist, separatist, fasist, Canada-wreking disgrae of a person, you will get used to it rapidly. But you will always know you are doing something onstrutive, even if you are a nasty separatist. Above all, don t just sit there. George & Berny s VOLKSWAGEN REPARS wrestling. The people of Alberta have fought for the right to govern oil pries that they might buy a seond El Camino. The people of Ontario have fought the people of Alberta that they might have heap gasoline for their Trans-Ams. Canadians everywhere have fought for the right to have three major Amerian networks on ablevision. But will anybody fight for their rights? The 1960 Canadian Bill of Rights (whih an be revoked by parliament at any time) guarantees the right of the individual to life, liberty, seurity of the person and enjoyment of property... equality before the law... protetion of the law... freedom of religion, freedom of speeh, freedom of assembly and assoiation, freedom of the press, and the right not to be deprived thereof exept by the due proess of law. Nobody an deny that freedoms must be aompanied by responsibilities defined by law. One shouldn t libel one s mother. But should the government have the power to outlaw a politial party? The Nazi party? When does a Doug Collins olumn beome an initement of raial hatred worthy of ensorship? When has a government film ensor abused his right to protet the publi from truly obsene material? The line between the rights of the individual and the government s obligation to protet him is a diffiult one to draw. n Canada there is one ruial issue that have not heard a word By Charles Campbell about during the urrent onstitutional debate. Cabinet is vested with the power to invoke the War Measures At. When this at is in fore no individuals have any rights. A petition signed by 10 MPs an bring the order-in-ounil before parliament for debate but in the ase of a parliamentary reess the government is not obliged to reall the house. Months ould go by before debate ours. f the order is in fat repealed in parliament the gov- ernment remains free of responsibility for for any ation taken in the interim. Remember the internment of Japanese-Canadians? Remember Otober 1970? The entrenhment of a harter of human rights in the onstitution will prevent it from being repealed by an at of parliament but will it still be subjet to the provisions of the War Measures At? apologize if am boring you, but think the relationship between the War Measures At and the onstitution is an important one. worry when premier Lougheed says, annot foresee any irumstanes where the rights of individuals might be abused by eleted offiials. see no reason to entrenh human rights in the onstitution. Page 5 issues worry that Canadians won t see the absurdity of that statement. n the opening paragraph of A Canadian Charter of Human Rights then minister of justie Pierre Trudeau writes that, One his primary requirements of seurity shelter and nourishment have been satisfied, man has distinguished himself from other animals by direting himself to those matters whih affet his individual dignity. On Monday premier Brian Pekford said, Canadians aren t interested in human rights, they re interested in where their next meal is going to ome from. Charles Campbell is a fourth yeor fine arts student. Perspetives b a olumn open to all members of the university ommunity. PANGO PANGO (UNS) - Hairy green and blue blorgs in this tiny island kingdom have deided against patriating a new onstitution. We re going to hange ountries instead, a spokesman said.., COMPLETE SERVCE FULLY GUARANTEED AT REASONABLE RATES W. 10th at Arbutus

6 ~~.. ~ ~~ ~ ~~ Page 6 THE UBYSSEY Friday, September 12,1980 TODAY NTRAMURALS Rglidential road run (3 km.1 open to men and women, noon. Malnnar fdd. Men's unit manager meeting. noon, War Memorial gym room 211. NTERNATONAL HOUSE FOLK DANCERS nternetionel house folk daning. 730 p.m., w ternational House upper lounge. GAY PEOPLE OF UBC Plsnning meeting. noon, SUB 105. LSM Lutheran student movement salmon bsrb&w, 8 pm.. Lutheran ampus entre. A wdaw DEBSOC Buaineas meeting, noon, SUB 215. SATU R DAY MEN'S VOLLEVBAU Tryouts for varsity and junior varsity men's teams. 9:30 a.m., War Memorial gym. SUNDAY LUTHERAN CAMPUS MNSTRY Welome aefvie for Vdker Greifenhsgan, MW ampus ministry arsbnant, 7 pm., Lutheran ampus entre. Whip with the euharm. 930 and 11 pm.. Lutheran ampus entre. MENS VOLLEYBALL Trvwts for vanity and junior vamiiy men's teems. 930 am., War Memorial gym. SPORTS CAR CLUB Novie slalom rae, 10 a.m., B-lot, rein or shim. Registration begins at 830 a.m. MONDAY NTRAMURALS Men's teem aptain meeting for touh football, noon, War Memorial gym. room 211. WOMEN'S GOLF Organhationel meeting for beginnen and experiened players. noon, War MemoMl gym. rm211. UBC CE HOCKEV THUNDERBRDS Varsity ie hokey tryouts begins. 545 p.m.. Thunderbird winter sports entre main rink. MEN'S VOLLEYBALL Tryouts for varsity and junior vamiiy men's teams. 7 pm.. War Memorial gym. TUESDAY EL CRCULO Maning, noon, Buh All wekome. NTRAMURALS Deadline for signing up for o-re softball, 530 lo 7:30 p.m., Malnnes field. UBC CANOE CLUB Organizational meeting, noon, SUB 213. LUTHERAN CAMPUS CENTRE Dinner and dbussion on how to study the BW, 6 p.m., Lutheran ampus entre. THURSDAY CAMPUS CRUSADE FOR CHRST Meeting. noon. SUB 205. All webom. VANCOUVER SCHOOL OF THEOLOOY. COOPERATVE CAMPUS MNSTRY, COALTON FOR WORLD DSARMAMENT Jonathan King, biology prof at Msssahuselts lnaitute of Tehnology, speaks on tha soial Hot flashes f vroom, zoom and beep-beep are your favorite sound effets, then you're definitely a latent sports ar freak. Come on, admit it. Your world never extends beyond the hekered flag, you're always dreaming of banked orners and you sleep with a rash helmet. Well, now's your hane to satisfy your imagination's wildest fantasies. You've got a real-life opportunity this Sunday, with a slalom hallenge sponsored by UBC's sports ar lub. The rae begins at 10 a.m. and registration opens at 830 a.m. t osts $4 to enter and it's all happening out at 8-lot. Seffimg sturs OK, so you think spikes are something that stik out of fenes or on shoe soles. And you think bumps are something that you get when you bash your head. And "set" is something tennis snobs refer to when they're trying to be ool. But don't despair. Your future as a volleyball star is still not beyond reah. Tryoh for the men's varsity and junior varsity volleyball teams are being held tomorrow and Sunday at 930 a.m., and at 7 p.m. on Monday in the War Memorial gym. There are 24 positions open on these two teams and all interested in playing ompetitive interollegiate volleyball are enouraged to try out. For more information, all Dale Ohrnan at 'Tween lasses reaponsibiliry of siene and students in the struggle for peae, noon, Lutheran ampus entre lounge. Jonathan King speaks on the medial, biologial and soial onsequenes of nulear war, 8 p.m., Vanouver Unitarian hurh, 949 West 49th Ave. ARTS WHNE GARDEN START THE YEAR OFF RGHT! Friday, September 12 Buhanan Lounge nterested in CA Employment? ARTHUR ANDERSEN E? CO. isseeking 1981 graduates for Vanouver and all other offies of the Firm. Submit your resume to the Canada Employment Centre on Campus (forms are available from the Centre) by Otober 1, All resumes will be aknowledged. You will be ontated on or about Otober 15th regarding ampus interviews whih will take plae rljovember 4,5 and 6. Additional information is available at the U.B.C. Canada Employment Centre and the Aounting Club. a KEEPYOUR HEAD ON! Sale We believe all ommuting ylists should wear a helmet - ome in and get yourself fitted with the most protetive and omfortable yling helmet today1 </ 1 Q 3771 W. 10th at Alma m a - a n [ z B SPECAL OFFER Stereo Console Amplifier... ".. L..._La_. t,.,,.. L.,...,".." watts per hennd nto 8 ohm from 20.20,OOO Hz with more than 0.08% THD. Separate demnded ban and treble ontrok Lwdneu with 12 db par OUve low filter Tape monitor Stereo headphone jak Volume and stereo baleno ontrok Monolateroo Hvith And more $18995 ONLY NOW STEREO AWARENESS "You Deserve T,$e Differene" m 2053 W. 41st Ave. (Near Arbutus) Closed Wednesday m St. Mark's Churh, Kitsilano (Anglian-Eplropal) Corner West 2nd and Larh Retor: The Rev. B. C. Gifford SUNDAY SERVCES 8:OO a.m. HOLY EUCHARST 10:30 a.m. SUNG EUCHARST Organist 8 Choirmaster: Jeffrey Campbell ENGLSH 100 STUDENTS Need help with writing essays? Register by FRDAY, SEPTEMBER 12th for ENGLSH COMPOSTON WORKSHOPS Phone , Loal 246 Reading, Writing and Study Skills Centre Centre for Continuing Eduation University of British Columbia Teahing Assistants! Markers! Tutors! FND OUT WHAT YOUR UNON CAN DO FOR YOU (and what you an do for your Union) CUPE 2278 GENERAL MEETNG THURS., SEPT GRAD CENTER FOR NFORMATON CALL: OR DROP N AT OUR OFFCE N THE GRAD CENTER THE CLASSFlEDS RATES: Campus - 3 lines, 1 day $1.50: additional fines, 35, Commsrlal - 3 lines, 1 day $3.30; additionai fines 5Q. Addiidnat days M.OO and &. Classdikd ads are not aepted by tefephom and are payeble in advane. Deadthe is f?:ad a.m. the day before publietion. Publiations Offie, Room 241, S.U. 6.. UBC, Van., B. C. V672A5 5 - Coming Events 10 - For Sale - Commerial 36 - Lost 28 NCH COLOR. 21 inh olor. New Adrniral 14 inh olor with warranty. Mint offers , 40 - Messages 1978 YAMAHA (bo, 15,000 miles, exellent ondition, reent tune-up, luggage rak, bekrest. Phone 321-WOZ. $1600 o.b.0. LOST: GREEN FOUNTAN PEN Wed. 230 Biology and Chemistry Buildings. Reward. 9266s Rentals 66 - Sandals 11 - For Sale - Private DANCE1 UBC Ski Club presents Montego RALEGH GRAND PRX, British-built, men's 22". well-maintained, new Carnpag. derailleurs, freewheel. $ Ladii' 1-speed, $ Phone BEETLE. Good working order. Asking $zmo. Tel (evenings) Found 20 - Housing YOU CRAFY OLD dasaifkd ad browser, you1 We know you are just in training for the next Buy and Sell1 FREE ROOM BOARD in exhange for 1520 hours house sitting weekdays. Private room. bath. 25th b Arbutus, 73E86S. Shine, Saturday, Sept. 20, 8 pm., SUB Ballroom. Tiiets $3 from the Club Offie, SUB 210. lunhtimes. YOU CRAFY OLD dassified ad browser, you. We know you are just in training for the next Buy and Sdll 86 - Typing EXPERT TYPNG. 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7

8 1-*POetrY Poet seeks effetive speeh i By ERC EGGERTSON Brian Fawett is, first and foremost, a serious writer who takes himself and his poetry seriously. n this day and age the word serious an seem almost like an insult, but it aurately desribes Fawett. His friends and admirers omment on his intensity, his singleminded drive to ahieve whatever form of perfetion he has oneived. His detrators omment on his arrogane, and his heavyhandedness. The differing views of the man meet somewhere in between. After he has applied himself to a problem and found a Canada has a vgorous tradition of oral poetry. t's beoming part of a poeti movement. satisfatory solution he will argue for his way of thinking, no matter how unpopular it is. To some he seems bullheaded, to others he is a lear thinker espousing his ause. think he is a bit of both. Until very reently Fawett has been a ity planner for the GVRD. Presently he teahes English and reative writing to inmates of Matsqui prison. He grew up in Prine George but has been in Vanouver sine university. He has written several books of poetry and prose, most reently Creatures of State. His magazine, NMFG (No Money From the Government) has been oming out for several years, but has lapsed reently. PF: Why do writers give readings? BF: Poets give readings for three main reasons: first, they want people to hear spoken language with whih a very exating kind of are has been taken; seond, poets want people to hear their own work. And sine almost no one buys books of poetry they take every hane they get to read it aloud. The third reason is that poets want to make money. PF: From readings? BF: Sure. n this ountry in partiular. Canada has a vigorous tradition of oral poetry that is largely based on the fat that the Canada Counil pays Poets 8125 to give poetry readings. t's beome part of the poeti motive. nterestingly, that wasn't there in the Vanouver Poetry Centre readings. These are different from any readings that've been held in Canada. The Poetry Centre readings atually were very large, and the readers weren't paid. think most of the readers who read did so for the first reason mentioned. There was a hane of getting large numbers of people to listen to good language. Some of us also wanted to say things to that large audiene. did, anyway. of people regard free readings the way they do any free ride. They're suspiious about them beause they don't believe there is suh a thing, or there's a possibility they'll be put upon or felt up or whatever else happens when you aept a free ride. The Poetry Centre series proved that people are willing to shell money out to buy a stake in a serious ultural event that isn't baked by suspiious haraters or agenies, and they ame beause they felt they had a tangible responsibility for listening to the readings, like they do at the movies or a rok onert. That's the good side of the series. Alternately maybe they ought to just give every writer in Canada a ertain amount of money and let them organize their own reading tours. The Canada Counil now has a system that lienses writers to give a ertain number of C.C.-funded readings per year. For instane, get eight readings. Why not give me a thousand buks for the readings, let me organize my own tour, and 1'11 agree to read eight times during the year. There's any number of ways it ould be improved. The point, though, is that they ould ut off the program and no one has to wony about whether or not poets will read, beause most of us will read anyway. 've read at least eight times this year already, and haven't reeived a ent. A lot of people regard free readings the way they do any free ride... they're suspiious think most writers will read beause that's our responsibility, and an important way of getting to the people. PF: What type of obligation does the writer have to the publi? Does that depend on what sense of obligation the individual feels? BF: Well, given that there are a thousand exeptions to the rule 'm going to propose, think that writers do have publi responsibilities. One of them is to get their work to the publi as muh as possible. immediately make exlusions beause the nature of some people's work is not, by definition, of wide publi interest. And that says nothing about the quality of the work. 'm not saying everyone should write like Pierre Berton. Look. Writers, partiularly poets, are always talking to the muse or to history in some sense. But in another, and onneted sense, when you write you're talking to your friends, you're talking to a partiular audiene that you really want to get to at a ertain time. Those two audienes often appear to be mutually exlusive, and some We've had too muh from writers who really haven't earned the right to be involved in private investgations of themselves. PF: Also, the VPC was harging money, whih you an't do at a Canada Counil reading. BF: Yes. One of the things to be learned from the readings is that we live in a ulture in whih people assign more value to things they pay money for. That shouldn't be very surprising, but it is. think a lot Page. Friday 2 times they are. My own instint is to try to talk to history and to the publi at the same time, if for no other reason than that doing it that way keeps me more alert. think we've had too muh from writers who really haven't earned the right to be solely involved in private investigations of themselves. That FAWCETT... mode requires a rigor of study and a onentration see too little of. What mostly omes out is private puke and obsurity. There are a number of traditions that respet, and 've had enough respet for the English poeti tradition to have taken traditional and valued poems apart and rework them. did that a while ago with Grey's Elegy Written in a Country Churhyard and set the whole thing in the Okanagan, and right now 'm working with some of Coleridge's poems. work with a fairly substantial knowledge of the traditions of my raft and it omes into my work all the time. Why not? Poetry has the deepest hold on human language. There's one tradition get behind very quikly and eagerly - it's the one that goes bak to Homer, and it proposes that poetry really means "effetive speeh." PF: What do you all effetive speeh? BF: The learest linguisti path between point A and point B that doesn't ignore the omplexity of the passage. f you want a definition of poetry, that's as lose as an ome. You don't get that in the N news, or from Time Magazine, for instane. You don't get that very often at all in this world. Poets are really the janitors of the language. What we're supposed to do is lean and illuminate the passages between people, and between thought and ation. And that's a traditional task. There are other traditions don't have the same stake THE UBYSSEY an intense singleminded poet who strives for perfetion in, like wearing a smoking jaket and letting my eyeballs roll in opposite diretions. 'm not interested in being either a freak or an alien. want to be reognized as a itizen. Poets do have a value to human ivilization, and far too many poets have forgotten what their real job is. Beyond that, don't are what Earle Birney does, or what Margaret Atwood and Northrop Frye have to say about the Canadian literary identity. don't have a very heavy planner affet you, make you muh more of a politial person? BF: probably would have gotten just as politial driving a taxi, with all due respet to the planning guild. On the other hand, think some of the things 've learned as a result of lose ontat with governmental funtionings has made me more ritial of the system than would have otherwise been, and ertainly it's made me more knowledgeable of exatly how and why things get done (or don't). That Poets do have a value to human ivihzation, and far too many poets have forgotten what their real job is. involvement in those kinds of bogus traditions. They're basially redutive ritial traditions, and they operate on a logi that proposes as its initial fat that literature is textually obsured and generially aused - and that therefore requires interpretation. They end up not with literature but with a history of literature. A tradition isn't a desription of past ativity, it's a dynami energy. PF: Would you objet if someone alled you a politial person? BF: God no. But so is everyone. The pose of apolitiality is just a smokesreen for agreement with the status quo. PF: Does your work as a ity does ome into my work. t's also given me a reurrent impulse to take off and pretend 'm one of the elves in the forest. guess it's taught me the relationship between the personal uses and osts of things and the mass reality of how ities operate. What's valuable to a ity isn't visibly valuable to its individual itizens at any given moment. l guess my real sympathies are with the ity. Working for a living that way has also made me more bad-tempered than used to be. And more impatient. PF: Does that ome out in your writing? BF: Oh yes, sure. For instane, See PF3 Friday, September 12, 1980

9 Startling events fail to our By Doug.. Brown Summer is past, the rites of higher eduation are beginning yet again, and by some proess not yet fully understood by siene, the approah of the diurnal equinox auses editors everywhere to demand summer retrospetives (the journalisti equivalent of "What did on my summer vaation" essays). n keeping with its ionolasti attitude, though, The Ubyssey has dared to be the paper whih publishes a retrospetive on those events whih did not happen this summer. Granted, there are a lot of events whih most ertainly did not happen in the summer of 1980, but we will be avoiding the obvious ones: the Martians did not land on earth, Jimmy Carter's teeth did not sprout wings and fly off, Canadians did not wake up one morning to find their olletive underwear missing, and so on, ad more-orless infinitum. So, you ask with some trepidation, what really didn't happen this summer? We're glad you asked... Brue Springsteen did not release a new album (so what else is new?). The president of the United States did not delare war on ran (this is mentioned beause, if Reagan is eleted, it may not be true next summer...). The Rolling stones did n6t tour North Ameria (quik, how many rumors did you hear that they would be? Twenty? Thirty?). However, sine they tour North Ameria every three years, and the last Stones tour was 1978, this one probably won't be true next year,.either. The ators' strike was not resolved in time to film the fall season's episodes of most television series, whih has made the television ompanies quite happy - projeted profits for this fall are higher than they have been for a long time, sine there are no ators to pay when you do reruns. Whih leads us to the next item... The "suttlefish in the great Amerian heartland" (as Harlan Ellison so suintly put it) did not stop wathing television in droves, even with the prospet of an entire season of rere-rereruns looming on a 21-inh diagonal horizon. Do you reognize yourself in this piture? Liz Taylor did not lose any weight (so what else is new?). The Beatles did not reunite to put on a multi-benefit onert for Bangladesh, Cambodia, ranian hostages, and Terry Fox. Were you surprised? Paul MCartney did not retire. Were you surprised? The Ubyssey did not knukle under to administration pressure and prevented the AMS from establishing a media board whih would hoose the Ubyssey editor and govern the output of all ampus media. On the other hand, Student furore was not aroused by the attempt to establish the media board, sine the move was attempted after lasses were over. Canada did not partiipate in the Olympi Games. Then again, Canada did not help establish a world-wide moratorium on whaling. Politial onsiene, or just plain apathy? Spiro Agnew did not make a politial omebak (Agnew in,847). Bob Dylan did not renoune Christianity. He also did not use anyone from Dire Straits on his new album, and his new album did not sell. t's been a good summer for not doing things for Mrs. Zimmerman's little boy. Elvis Presley did not rise from his grave so that he ould do one more onert for his nerophilia1 fans and publish his own diet ookbook, Losing Weight Through Amphetamines. On the other hand, most major rok stars did not die. ClTR (UBC Radio) didnot get a low-power FM liense from the CRTC (so what else is new?). The Modernettes did not land a ontrat with a major label after releasing their first EP, proving that there is no justie in the musi world. As should be apparent by now, there were hundreds of non-events whih ourred this summer, many of them not attended by thousands of people (not to mention the millions who didn't wath them on TW. With any luk, there will be one more to add to the list: The Ubyssey will not publish any more retrospetives like this one for the rest of the year. So what else is new? "dls "A l.d D. L - nn rromm, 79, humanist, psyhoai Fawett From PF2 tend to see things more struturally now rather than in terms of personalities and events. So 'm more interested in narrative now, and less onerned with aestheti paraparadigms, or images... when my turn to read ame in the Poetry Centre Readings felt duty bound, both as a writer and as a itizen, and probably as someone who's been involved in planning ities, to address those larger irumstanes, whih thought were getting lost in the general glee and glitter of having all those people sitting in front of the poets. Just about everyone 've seen read has fallen for that, with the exeption of think, Robert Dunan, and in a milder way Robert Kroetsh and Ginsberg. Most of the rest just threw out their arms and said, "God, you love mel" gave a very formal reading that was deliberately relentless in its poetis and its attitude toward the event. said in the prefae to my reading that we were in trouble and that trouble was the oasion of these readings. said that we're living in a period where governments were unable to solve any problems and were turning to a nostalgia for disounts personality laissez-faire apitalism, and red nek elements that are looking for sapegoats. That's the ontext we're in. felt had to address that ontext and not say, "Gee, isn't it nie that we've all been poets for so long. " dunno. Maybe it's beause haven't been a omplex person and a poet for as long as, say, Robert Creeley has, or beause haven't had time to get nostalgi, whih 'm not by nature anyway. Having seen three readings after the one did think was right in making my introdution. said, look, we're oming into the 1980s and there are going to be problems, and let's address those ones rather than ongratulate ourselves for having lived in the sixties. The sixties were pretty rappy, atually. The "revolution" didn't happen and most of us spent our time getting brain damage from all the drugs. n any ase, we an't go bak to the sixties. So said that, and asked people to look at what was happening now, and guess ended up oming off as a heavy beause l wasn't willing to go with the festival atmosphere. The poems read were piked beause they had a onsisteny that followed the in- trodution, and beause they weren't personal. didn't want to do a number that simply said, "isn't it awful that life is so painful" the way Creeley did. Gee, knew that when was 25. stopped writing about it when was about 30. mean, a personal vision is just that: personal and insrutable from another person's point of view. ame out of Creeley's reading with a kind of rush that told me "boy, that was lifel" Only it wasn't life, it was Creeley's personal life, and when it ame right down to it, it wasn't a very large world. would rather propose a larger, more diffiult and maybe less emotionally attrative world, but one that has at least a larger and more usefully shareable ontent. PF: s that where you are speaking to posterity? BF: wasn't speaking to posterity that night, was trying to speak to everyone who was there. wanted to tell them things. have an absurd side that has led me to some strange things. 've been aught sweeping beahes... PF: Look, we an edit that out... BF: No, that's okay. 1'11 stik with it. Friday, September 12,1980 THE UBYSSEY Page Friday 3

10 Modernettes strike new hord in popular musi n ase you haven't notied, Vanouver has almost literally exploded with new musi the last few months. New releases by loal groups have flooded reord stores and more than ever before the people of this ity are able to hear just how good loal talent really is. One effort that stands out from the rowd of loally-produed diss is The Modemettes' Teen City, a whimsial musial look at the trials and tribulations of arrested adolesene. PF staffer Steve MClure spoke with the zany threesome (Jughead, drums and bifoals; Mary Jo Kopehne, bass and thighs; Buk Cherry, guitar and voals;) at their Vitoria Drive digs. Page Friday: Let's talk about your respetive histories first. Buk Cherry: was in a band alled Ative Dog and apparently one night at the Windmill John, Jughead here, ornered me in the bathroom when was pissed out of my mind and he said... Jughead: And said why did you hange the name of the band to Teen Brigade, did you hange any people in the band, no, did you hange any of your songs, no... BC: We hanged the attitude. Apparently said that to him. Mary was in a band alled Wasted Lives with Colin Griffiths from U-J3RK5 and Phil Sm-h and Andy Graffiii. And Brad Kent from DOA, the Avengers and Vitorian Pork was also in that band. Jughead and got together with the original voalist from Ative Dog, Bill Shirt, and we played together for a little while in a basement and Bill Shirt left and it was just Jughead and me. John Doe, the guitarist from Rabid was playing with us and then he got kiked out and Mary joined... Jughead: After a huge suession of bass players; we must have tried at least eight different bass players. PF: What were looking for all along? BC: A genius. And so we got Mary. PF: Do you do your own material? BC: We do some over songs like Time Won't Let Me n by the Outsiders, Can't Explain by The Who, The Way You Do The Things You Do, an old Smokey Robinson tune, and we do Green Onions. PF: Do you feel that you're going to get into the trap of being a sixties shlok revival group? BC: We're not that at all really. The songs that really like span so many different types of musi, so it's not a sixties revival-type band. There are bands like in San Franiso that are basially a teen-beat pop-ombo, whih is what we are exept that we have really severe personality problems. We all need help desperately. PF: And so this is your way of getting help. BC: No. You see we play pop-type songs but they all have a really sik psyhokinetiism to them. We're very maladjusted and so that when we play the songs don't ome off all squeaky lean, they ome off kind of slimy, you know. When we do Barbara, it goes "la de da, ute little girl in my home town," it's a real pop song, but obviously the whole intent of the song is that you want to fuk her up the ass, it's really sik, you want to tie her up and make her eat sperm and all that kind of thing. f the Beah Boys were really sik, that's what we'd be. We're like a sado-masohisti surf group. PF: Do you think that kind of attitude has any sort of staying power, do you think you an sustain that? BC: As long as you don't drink too muh. We've got staying power due to the fat that we're onstantly oming up with new songs. The seond EP is going to be nothing like the first one. PF: Who writes most of the songs? BC: write all of them at the moment. PF: How did you go over at the Commodore? BC: Not too wd. They loved us, but we got slammed in the press. J: We didn't play that well. PF: Were you nervous, stage-struk or oblivious? BC: One thing was that when you're a bakup band you don't get the protetiveness of the sound men that the headliner gets. So basially they go, all right we've got 45 minutes to put up with this band, they're in some town and some band they've never heard of omes on and they do their set and the sound men do a mediore sound job, and then they're finished and then they go to work when they work on the headliner. We sounded pretty bad guess. J: And so we hired ourselves our own sound man. BC: Who was just as shitty as anybody they ould have brought and so all we got to do was to throw f i buks of our own. See PF6 MADAM... drummer lain loss burnett photos Yegas sty1 snowballs By STEVE PALMER The Cave was full of suburbanites last night. t was frightening - an omen to be sure. A terribly boring omedian opened the show but everyone laughed anyway. Yes, a real winner of a rowdl As soon as Mr. Charles ame on stage some of the enlightened audiene began shouting, "Old man riverl" Cringe. But Ray, he just insulted us right bak for the rest of the night and still the rowd didn't mind. Ray Charles and the Raelettes with the Ray Charles Orhestra First the Ray Charles Orhestra ame out and played a ouple of shmaltzy W band tunes. ouldn't spot Ray in the melee of musiians and indeed we had to wait for the arrival of "The Genius" himself. His band is smooth and all, but they sound as though they're traking for the A Hamel Show: good musiians performing baseless arrangements. Finally Ray jives out onto the stage and sits behind the piano but, oh no1 sin of sins1 the piano is not even miked. mean jesusl no mike on the piano for Ray Page Friday 4 THE UBYSSEY Friday, September 12,1980

11 L reativity through drugs Musiians fall short of lassial masters By KERRY REGER The Masterpiee Musi series opened Sunday with a onert whih, while attrative, was unsatisfying at the bottom of things. Real love of their art was shown by the musiians, who played with vigor, giving a deisive rhythmi snap the musi. Very ompelling indeed, but'the performers' senses of balane were, as often is the ase in Vanouver, tending towards the exessively large-sale. By this mean that they played as though in the Orpheum, not the omparatively small Vanouver East Cultural Center. A Haydn flute trio in F began the program. Flutist Kazuo Tokito played with a fine, warm tone, but too often thoroughly overpowering the ello and piano, as he blasted out high notes that, had they been heard in the Oroheum, would have been a omfortable almost painfully loud. Atually not surprising, sine Tokito is a flutist with the Vanouver Symphony. n the Mozart piano trio K. 548 following, a similar problem arose. Gwen Thompson's violin sound, marvellous in a romanti work, was strident and overbold for Mozart. Those who remember Thompson's performane of the Brahms sonatas with Robert Silverman a few years ago must agree that she is a superb romantiist. Fine, but Mozart never met Brahms, and so onfined himself to a more deliate eloquene, whih Thompson did not reah last Sunday. Again, the same sort of disomfort obtained in the Deux nterludes for flute, violin, and harpsihord by Jaques bert; here it was the harpsihord. This partiular instrument built by Rutkowski and Robinette is a quiet one, but still agree with the sholar who said that if you an't hear the harpsihord, everyone forte. n this more intimate setting, they were else is playing too loud. end., To be sure, lbert was an impressionist,'but still believe that there should have been something more audible from the harpsihord than the silvery sort of haze there was. wanted to hear what was happening under the flute and violin. Now, what for Haydn and Mozart was unomfortable in this onern, beame a soure of strength in the Smetana piano trio whih losed the program. Smetana omposed this as a way of working out his grief over his reently dead young daughter. The program notes say that the trio is "full of restless energy and defiane," and it was this toughness in the fae of death that these romanti players were most effetive in portraying. Apparently the audiene felt the same way, moving to the edges of their seats during the musi and applauding rihly at the Shostakovih - a legend e o e in his own mind By KERRY REGlER Read Shostakovih's memoirs. But read them as fitional literature, otherwise you'll be misled into aepting them in devil, and will miss the grander sale of the book. TESTMONY, the memoirs of Dmitri Shostakovih Harper 8 Row, 19W 276 pp with index and list of major omporitiom and awards 1 hr Charles ial yokels harles? So he's singing away in that appeallg, gravelly voie but looking ridiulous sunding away on the keys without produlg any sound. All we an hear is the big snd drowning him out with preditable, 2mball arrangements. Then, some omi lief at last, out bop the Raelettes - five ioolate, Motown upie dolls with amply isplayed breasts singing, "Do it to me ow..." They stay around for the reminder, shakii and supplying some apropriate "Oooh-ooohs. " This was Ray Charles, legendary soul lan? felt like was at a Vegas show; all lossed over and arefully pakaged. verything fit right into plae but there was D sinere partiipation from the musiians. he Wasps ate it up anyway, whih, wme, is what the Ray Charles Show 1980 all about. Oh yeeh, suker the middle-lass lk with Johnny Carson muzak. Mr. Charles nd Co. refused even to retum for an enore ough the all for one was lengthy. At last ne of the women behind me ottoned on nd sreamingly pleads to the departing iusiians, "Come on you guys, get into itl" 00 bad, lady. "Testimony," the memoirs of the late Soviet omposer Dmitri Shostakovih, "as related to and edited by Solomon Volkov," purportedly began when Volkov, a lose friend of the omposer's, interviewed him about Soviet artisti life. Volkov then wrote and, hapter by hapter, Shostakovih approved it. This has been'disputed, most notably by Shostakovih's wife, who "disowns" the memoirs. True, a lot of words are spent, espeially in Volkov's prefae, building up Shostakovih as the noble rebel who stood UP in defiane even to Staiin. This is simply not true; Shostakovih did no suh thing, at least not in the grand heroi sense Volkov gives us. For example, when Shostakovih visited New York, he ould easily have remained, and would have been welomed, safe and free. nstead, when reporters asked him embarassing questions suh as how ould he involve himself with suh shabby propaganda films as "Unforgettable 1919," Shostakovih evaded the subjet (as he does in the book), and esaped to Mosow. And this was not beause he was a Russian patriot, whih unbelievably intense love keeps many dissidents there now. Witness Solzhenitsyn, whom the Soviet government deported. But all this is peripheral. The merit of the book lies not in speifi fats, whih of themselves ale unimportant. The trumpetings about heroism should not be permitted to obsure the deep impliit thought that is far more powerful than the expliit historial events. Volkov's laoni and intense style, bitterly nervous, lends itself to the theme of the book, that is, the pain of the Soviet artist, worker, itizen; the private pain that annot, absolutely annot be expressed, for fear of terrible reprisal. "YOU feel fear when you open the paper and it says that you're an enemy of the people, and there's no way you an lear yourself, no one wants to listen to you, and there's no way to say a word in your defense. You look around and everyone else has the same newspaper, and they're looking at you in silene, and when you try to say something they turn away. They don't hear you... The most frightening thing of all is SHOSTAKOVCH... Soviet enturion ompromised art with politial onern that everything has been said and deided, and you don't know why it's been deided that way, and it's useless to argue." This is not to say that Testimony is all dark and somber. There is humor and simple beauty, though always under the Of the entral idea. One of the happiest passages desribes a painter friend of the omposer's, Boris Kustodii. "Kustodiev liked to listen to me play. He told me many things about art and Russian painters. And he was very pleased to be abie to tell me something didn't know. He tdd me and grew happy, pleased that now also knew." But these moments are mere interludes in a pained, depressed book. The ondition of the Russian people in a totalitarian state is felt in a deep sense, muh more than the mere journalism made popular by suh books as Solzhenitsyn's "Gulag Arhipelago."These portray only bare events, whiie"testim0ny" onveysrelationships. A passage from #q-~imony#n onerning Shostakovih,s Symphony, with i~ "exultant" finale, illustrates the tenor of the book: "What exultation ould there be? The rejoiing is fored, reated under threat. t's as if someone were beating you with a stik and saying, 'Your business is rejoiing, your business is rejoiing,' and you rise, shaky and go marhing off, muttering, 'Our business is rejoiing, our business is rejoiing.' The finale of the F is irreparable tragedy." -, Friday, September 12,1980 THE UBYSSEY Page Friday 5

12 ~~ ~ ~ ~~ -1 Modemettes inspired trio dresser, 99 You an too. When you rent furniture from GranTree. Not only do we have terrifi dressers we also have great looking desks, hairs, sofas, beds, and tables. Everything you need to turn a house or apartment into a plae of your own. All with low monthly rental payments. And now they re even lower beause we re offering ollege students a speial 10% disount. (We ll even help you find a plae to rent with our free apartment loator servie.) Come in and let us introdue you to something you an really live with. i furniture you rent at Ckn Tree Furniture Rental. 3 For College Students o~ly This oudoii is gtd for a 10% disount on anv Student s name -~ - - ~ Limited to one oupon per student Expiration date Mnh 1,1981 F U R N T U R E R E N T A L@ 2967 Grandview Hwy, Vanouver, B.C. V5M 2E4 Phone 43797% n Dowritown Vunouivr: 894 Burrard Street, Vanouver, B.C. V6Z 1x9 Phone G& th sses the test. ThXtite Quiker Cliker penil. Pentel Stationery of Canada Ltd. Unit No Progress Court Sarborough. Ontario MlG 3V5. Telephone: (416) Kopehne feels she is just one of the boys From PF4 per on the street would say stay money when we ould have saved away from drugs and alohol bethat fifty buks and sounded just as ause it ll only lead you into the bad as we did anyways. welfare ranks. On the other hand J: was a bit nervous. was ve had a very suessful areer on sared shitless. the welfare ranks and see no rea- BC: wanted to go out and prove son to hange. that we were the greatest band in the world and we went out there pf: how do feel and proved that we were just like being the Only person in this any other bakup band and we otherwise male didn t sound all that hot. Mary Jo Kopehne: don t pf: Would you say that personal really know, m one Of the boys* exess leads to artisti exellene? J: There doesn t seem to be any BC: No, unless you ve got brains frition at all. to begin with. mean know a lot of MJK: t doesn t bother me at all. people who take tons of drugs and PF: The reason ask is that at drink a lot and they re just losers. least until reently to see a woman J: But you do get inspired when as part of a band was somewhat you re pissed. unusual. BC: Oh yeah, do. But it s sort of BC: Yeah, she d probably be taklike a two-edged nerf sword, blunt ing her lothes off. on both sides. Some people get in- J: Yeah, sometimes think the spired and some don t. happen to only frition that omes is when the get inspired when m pissed. women musiians present them- That s my formula for suess, get- selves as feminists or as presenting ting really out of it. some sort of politial viewpoint. t J: That seems to be the rule for doesn t seem to me that people are most people who are reative. going to think one way or another BC: But m not advoating that whether it s a woman or a man, to any teenager. To any teenybop- they re just gonna play. A NGHT N THE PHLPPNES SEPTEMBER 16, :oO p.m. Centennial Museum Auditorium by ourtesy of: The League of Filipino Organizations of B.C. The Canadian Soiety of Asian Art The show will inlude a presentation of slides, traditional and folk danes, instrumental musi and a presentation of ostumes. After the performane traditional Philippine akes will be served with tea and offee in the members lounge. ADMSSON: S1.m Page Friday 4 THE UBYSSEY Friday, September 12, 1980

13 Poet looks for love in unloving world Bi ERC EGGERtSON A nude woman painfully relines on the front over; a well-armed upid kneels with his bow drawn on the bak over. The battle of love and lovers reurs in Artemis Hates Romane, a strong olletion of poems by a woman who has been through separation and divore. Sharon Thesen's style in this, her first book of poems, ranges from a detahed, ironi view of men and women to an angry explosion of hostility. Artemis Hates Romane by Sharon Thesen The Coah House Press, pages This is not to say that Thesen is obsessed with male-female relationhips - she's not. But she does, in between glimpses oi Thesen as poet and Thesen as riti of hyporisy, make the reader aware of the inonsistenies between romanti love and sensual, brutal, physial love. n "Jak and Jill" Thesen rejets romantiism, Your heart ahing in your head did not are about that. She breaks up the rhythm of the traditional nursery rhyme, Jak went up the hill 8 Jak fell down the hill breaking his head on the stones of the earth. That dark image is intensified by the polarity between Jak and the women: The stones of the earth are the petrified heads of women mouths agape. Thesen has a real talent for desribing her physial and emotional "spae" to the reader. "t Being Over/There Being No Other Way" is an evoative piee, mixing sentiment with Bah, and Vanouver's perpetual rain with her plans to paint a bookshelf. "After Joe Clark Winning/The Federal Eletion" is a look at the non-ommuniation of neighbourly exhanges. At times Thesen's anger omes through to the extent that the poetry is lost to a fast flush of emotion. n "Dediation" she bluntly expresses the bitterness that is only implied in some other poems. muh prefer the implied emotion of her more ontrolled piees to the undisguised ontempt of "Dediation. " But to dwell on the problems had with one or two of the poems is to ignore the effet of the book as a whole. Artemis Hates Romane aptures the hesitany that omes with love in an unstable world. Only maternal love seems to hold enough ertainty to reeive a onstant, gentle touh in the poems. Other kinds of love, espeially sexuality disguised as romanti love, are sathingly redued to the games that they are. "Japanese Movies. 2" explores the horror that love an beome. The arhetypal "warrior-artiste" returns to his spurned wife and finds her to be "just as beautiful as ever." Her beauty is only an illusion, and the vision turns to pure horror. She was dead all skull & bones & dust 8 her hair hased him all around the rotting house him yelling 8 terrified & then with a soft, swishing kind of sound it swept down upon his nek & throttled him in his prime. Sharon Thesen lives in North Vanouver where she teahes at Capilano College and is Poetry Editor for The Capilano Review. Some of the poems in Artemis Hates Romane appeared in The Body, an anthology of mostly North Vanouver writers (Tatlow House, 1979). Curlsen's tour of ran 'onfusing' By JOE MARCH The ranian revolution involves the defeat of the materialism fostered by the regime of Shah Pahlavi and supported by the United States. A new spiritual self, pure and devoted to the will of Allah is to be developed by a strit adherene to his teahings as they are reorded in the Koran. This is to result in the natural development of a soial order that is in fat what Allah desires. Man thus an beome God-like whih is the ultimate spiritual goal of all Moslems. 17 Days in Tehran bv Robin Woodswotth Carlsen By following the ditates of slam ran will eventually be responsible for the spiritualization of all mankind. ran through slam, will defeat the olletive expression of greediness in man that is most learly evident in the imperialisti tendenies of the U.S. All oppres- Carlsen takes the reuder on nothing rnarefhun u self-indulgent tour sion will eventually end when the proper balane between spiritual needs and material needs is reahed. Happiness is distorted by the exlusively material pursuits of the West. slam provides the natural guidelines neessary to reah the proper balane between spirit and body. That spiritualization will first take plae in ran. There, did it1 just gave you the sum total of the useful information ontained in 17 Days in Tehran. Robin Carlsen in the introdution to his book promises to delve into the psyhi essene of the ranian revolution. He promises to reveal the whole psyhology and religious basis of the revolution. He also swears that he will try to de-emphasize the U.S. hostage inident as it is not related to his deeper philosophial pursuit. Carlsen then proeeds to disredit himself by taking the reader on nothing more than a shallow, self-indulgent and at times offensive Cook's tour of slam and Tehran. The man spends 17 days in ran and expets the reader to believe that he ompletely understands its psyhology. The book is throughout an ill supported, defiiently r e searhed hodgepodge of personal reminisenes and anedotes. t is a sort of "How spent my spring vaation" essay that probably would assure him a plae in a remedial omposition lass. t is a shameful apitalization on a dangerous politial situation. Carlsen seems onfused as to how he an onvie his readership. He spends half the book painting one piture of an ordered and totally united ran and spends the other half ontraditing that piture and unonsiously exposing a set of seemingly insurmountable diffiulties for the ranian revolution. This only sueeds in undermining his ultimate onlusion. The first piture Carlsen paints is one of the unity and purposefulness of the ranian people that make them spiritual superiors to the west. The seond portion sees him disredit all that in his desription of KHOMElNl... spetre of radial slami thought haunts U.S. administration the existene of strong opposing fations in the ountry and the limited understanding the large majority of the populae have of the subtleties of slam whih is essential if the ountry is to be rebuilt along the lines of the universal design of Allah. sophial minds of history. He dramatizes himself and the purpose of his quik visit to Tehran and attempts to blow his book into a ma- jor philosophial treatise. Reading the book was a waste of time and a shameless waste of the natural resoure on whih it is printed. Friday, September 12,1980 The author only sueeds in showing the reader a ountry in turmoil and a state near anarhy. He bases his thesis on his own intuitive feelings about the revolution and third-hand reports made to him by taxi drivers. He relies on dubious analogies throughout to onvine the reader of his superior knowledge. The book is an overly ambitious attempt by an inadequate mind to grapple with abstrat onepts that have troubled the greatest philo- THE UBYSSEY Page Friday 7

14 Dressed To Kill 'slightly rude' t By SHAFFN SHARFF Diretor Brian De Palma's Dressed To Kill is slightly rude when ompared to Stanley Kubrik's more psyhologial and hallenging arhetypal film, The Shining. Kubrik may be the master of the two filmmakers, but De Palma is more in tune with what most moviegoers want in a suspense-thriller: sreams, jolts, and the sheer feeling of helplessness. While trying to figure out the mysteries in The Shining is a bit like trying to deipher the hieroglyphis without the aid of Champollion. Dressed to Kill presents a more exiting trip: stylish and thoroughly pleasurable. Dressed To Kill Playing at Capitol Six Direted bv Brian De Palma Dressed To Kill is roughly divisible into two parts: the first part deals with the vitim before her violent death; and the latter with efforts to identify and apture the unknown killer. De Palma's handling of the subplot about a frustrated 851 GRANVLLf quent vlolane and oaalonal nudlty. -B.C. Dlrotor. language - B.C. Diretor. housewife's fatal quest for sexual gratifiation is superb. The amera is forever invading her privay: from athing her masturbating in the shower to traking her in the New York Museum of Modern Art through the labyrinth of the struture and her wariness in approahing an attrative man. What makes the sequene in themuseum partiularly memorable is that it is played almost without dialogue; the ambivalent feelings of the woman (played by Angie Dikinson) are onveyed through loseups and body movements; from boredom while sitting alone in the museum to the antiipation of having an affair with the man she has just seen, and who will beome her lover. Her happiness, however, is shortlived. After spending the whole afternoon with him, she inadvertently disovers that her lover has venereal disease. Now she begins to feel guilty for what she has done. She rushes out of his apartment and into the elevator, only to notie she has left her wedding ring in his bed- "CHEECH AND CHONG'S NEXT MOVE" 851 GRANVLLE b quent oarse language: a satire on drugs Showtimea: zm 4:m 8:m 8:w 1Om Showtimw: BLUES Warning: Frequent oana lingua a and swearing. -B.C.&mor. r "... tehnially auperb, poeti without apparently THE -A EMTY3N Mng aware of k..." - Vinenr Canby, New York Times CLOSE 1 ShowtimM: 'B DUNBAR at 30th OF ME THlffD KW) ) ing; oaalonal nudity and suggwtlve senes. -B.C. Dlre tor. Showtlmw: 7msm Subtltiad 4375 W. 10th Sunday mat. Cotaeu's"B.auty and the BMat" 2 p.m. Only Page Friday 8 room. She and her slayer are marvelously juxtaposed. We an see her in the elevator, frantially pushing the elevator button to return upstairs but not the killer learly yet. His presene is only suggested by two fators: a pair of blak sunglasses that peak through the transluent window of the fire exit door and the amera whih imitates the quik pae of the killer to the elevator door. She never makes it out of the elevator; she is slain, by a transexual, as it turns out, who has one important thing in ommon with his vitim: they both share the servies of the same psyhiatrist (Mihael Caine). n an inredible slow-motion shot, we view the deadly gleaming razor, whih has already struk, oming down again to slie off the fingers of a high-pried hooker (Nany Allen) who extends her arm to help the dying Angie Dikinson, while the elevator door is losing. The killer fumbles and drops the razor, but Allen has already seen him. From this point onward, Dressed To Kill beomes a at-and-mouse murder from whih they annot es- De Palma is extremely fond of degame. The film now fouses on the ape. tails; all his shots are preiselyhooker with the heart of laed silk Dressed To Kill manages to de- timed and exeuted. He makes use and Dikinson's son (Keith liver many suspenseful senes that of mirrors (and intentionally reveals Gordon), an eletronis genius who sare the pants off the audiene: the identity of the killer to those few ombine fores to identify the we're really at De Palma's mery who an pik up the subtle lue). troubled rogue who stalks Allen. and he alone knows what will hap- While all the ators deliver om- Everyone in this movie has a pen next. Later in the film, when petent performanes, the best pertroubled sex life: Dikinson annot the killer slips behind Allen, who formane, surprisingly, omes from find sexual fulfillment, her husband has just stepped out of the shower, Angie Dikinson as the aging, an perform very well, her son the split-seond awareness that he unsuspeting woman who unwithasn't disovered sex, Allen is a is not where we imagined him to be tingly falls in the killer's trap. Gone hooker, Caine wants to but annot shoks US as we see his refletion in is the polie woman person, replahave sex with his female patients. the abinet mirror and the swift ra- ed by a ontrolled, almost mature And the killer has a onfliting sex zor leanly slits her throat. skill. psyhe. Adam and Eve's original sin A good previous shot follows Alin Paradise was not eating the fruit len through a bumpy subway ride of knowledge, it seems, but sex. - right into the deadly presene of De Palma relishes in keeping his the killer. audiene terified. He uses some Unfortunately, suh high levels very lear amera angles, lighting of suspense are not maintained (or the lak of it), and horal mu- through the movie. The sript, also si, whih worked so well for him in by De Palma, has disonerting, Obsession. However, unlike Obses- talkative gaps during whih harasion, Dressed To Kill does not have ters attempt to explain the behavior a hazy, foggy quality to onvey a of the killer; this breaks the pae. sense of halluination and personal When Allen explains the mehanis dilemma, like Cliff Robertson's in of a sex-hange operation to Gor- Obsession; one was never quite don, and in the proess shoks a sure in that film if the bizarre un- snoopy eavesdropper, the sene folding events were real or a part of provides omi relief, but the inter- Robertson's imagination. Dressed lude is largely unneessary; also, to Kill has a sharp-edged, rystal this sene is shot in very bright lear feel to it; all the players are light, whih is unharateristi elseaught up in guilt, fear, sex, and where in Dressed To Kill. DCKNSON... gets lose shave rrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrvrrrrrrrrr~r FREDERC WOOD THEATRE : Long Day's Journey nto Night.)r by Eugene O'Neill September (Previews Sept. 17and 18) EARLY C U RTAl N 7:30 p.m. Direted by Stanley Weese Set and Costumes Designed by Brian H. Jakson Lighting Designed by an Pratt Student Season Tikets - 4 Plays for $10 Available for All Performanes e, Sept Long Day's Journey nto Night (O'Neil) Nov The Skin Of Our Teeth (Wilder) Jan Breht On Breht (BrehtlTabori) Marh The Rivals (Sheridan) BOX OFFCE * FREDERC WOOD THEATRE * ROOM 207 Sipport Your Campus Theatre ****+***+***+*****+************************ THE UBYSSEY Friday, September 12, e.)r

15 Movie fans Suffer in summer By JAMES HUTSON The Summer of '80. Definitely forgettable, in terms of movie entertainment. When the best films are a si-fi sequel with a mindless plot and a revised lassi from two years ago, you know it was a rough summer. Movie fans would have been better off reading a book or wathing TV this year. The really good films were few and far between this summer. The best, of ourse, has to be The Empire Strikes Bak. George Luas turns his omi book dreams into tehniolor realii. Despite the retinous plot, its speial effets save the show. The other movie that shares top honors with Empire is Steven Spielberg's new Close Enountem. Sure, it's a heap way to make a buk. Re-edii an old print and add some new footage, then suk in all those people again. Why didn't Spielberg use all this great footage in the original print? At least the tikets should be halfprie. Oh, well. That's show biz. And Close Enounters is even better seond time around. After these two, the pikings get slimmer. The Great Santini stars Robert Duvall as a middle-aged Marine who runs his house like an army barraks. Duvall's performane as Lt.-Col. Bull Meehum leaves him tl bet for Best Ator this year. There was My Bodyguard, the story of a boy and his goon. The boy (played by Chris Makepeae) is in need of protetion from the shool bully. He hires a big goon, Rik Linderman (Adam Baldwin), who turns out to be an okay guy after all. Of ourse they end up as pals, and the bad guys get their lumps. Despite its preditability, a good film. For horror fans, there was Brian de Palma's Dressed To Kill, the n Davis rises in areer in Australian flik By JULE WHEELWRGHT Every young writer dreams of the sweet taste of suess. But for a woman growing up on an isolated farm in Australia's outbak at the turn of the entury, a arqr is as rare as summer rain. My Brilliant Career Playing at the Bay Theatre Direted by Gill Armstrong Judy Davis stars as Sybylla in the semi-autobiographial story of a 16-year-old woman determined to have her own areer and esape the drudgery of seemingly eternal motherhood on an isolated farm. This is a well rafted film that takes a refreshing look at women. Sybylla is intelligent, passionate, ourageous and determined to live her own life. This insight into the hoies and pain women experiene may be due to the fat that the diretor, produer and writer of this film are women. The story opens with Sybylla deiding that there must be more to life than her two existenes: "work and sleep." By fantasizing about this life yet to be, she bloks out the ugliness of farm life in Sybylla's mother, played by Julia Blake, informs her daughter that the family an no longer keep her and a position as a domesti servant has been arranged for her. But lukily Sybylla's maternal grandmother extends an invitation to ome and live with her on the family's prosperous homestead, Caddagat. Life at Caddagat allows Sybylla to develop her talents in musi and ultivate her interest in literature in a world where she felt she had always belonged. While life on the homestead is more gentile, even pleasant, Sybylla must ope with a new threat. Her grandmother (Aileen Brittain) and Aunt Helen (Wendy Hughes) are both trying to find a suitable and wealthy husband for her. Almost immediately she is pursued by Frank Hawdon (Robert Grubb) gives a humorous portrayal of a bumbling English visitor to "the olony" and wants to take Sybylla bak home, as his wife. Sybylla has other ideas and when Frank proposes to here she dumps him into a sheep bath. But Frank is undaunted and soon returns to Caddagat only to be dumped again. Meanwhile, Sybylla has found other interests and beomes involved with Harry Beeham (Sam Neil11 the owner of Five Bob Downs, a neighboring homestead. Harry is onsidered a very eligible bahelor and Sybylla's Aunt disourages her from beoming too involved with him after she spends a week at Five Bob Down visiting with Harry and his mother (Pat Kennedy). Soon Harry makes it lear that he wants to marry Sybylla and she asks him to wait while she tries to disover, what is wrong with myself and the world." Then her omfortable life at Caddagat is interrupted and she is sent to the outbak to work as a governess to work off her father's debts. Sybylla retains her fiere desire to beome a writer and when to her relief and delight she is dismissed from her position and sent home, she is visited one again by Harry. n the end she rejets his proposal and deides to live her life independently pursuing her areer. This is no small deision for Sybylla as she is a woman with little eduation and poor parents. She is urged not to "throw away reality for an impossible dream." The parting shot is one of Sybylla wathing the sun rise as she posts her finished ACTORS... swoon under impat of boring summer fliks diretor's kinky, gory tribute to Hithok. And Stanley Kubrik's flawed but well-done The Shining. The best fright flik has to be Werner Herzog's Nosferatu, the re-make of the original hilling vampire epi. Comedy was more like tragedy this summer. Probably Airplane, the shleppy spoof of the Airport series, was the best. Not far behind was The Blues Brothers, starring the new Abbott and Costello - Belushi and Akroyd. Not muh else omes to mind. On the foreign film front, we had several deent arrivals this Spring. At the Varsity Film Festival, there was the exellent doumentary, Best Boy, and Soldier Of Orange, a Duth WW yarn. Australia gave us two interesting AUSSE... form of marriage vows performed in bizarre ritual and well-made movies. Storm-Boy was a family movie that put to shame any of Disney's latest efforts. And My Brilliant Career is a beautiful - if somewhat slow - story of a woman who deides a lonely areer is better than a happy marriage. As for Canadian films... Well, there wasn't a single deent prodution made in this ountry in the summer. So muh for the Canadian film industry. Now, for the bad movies. t was a good year for bad films. Number one on the list has to be Can't Stop The Musi, starring those groovy guys, the Village People. t thankfully hammered the last nail in the diso offin. Close in its sheer nauseousness was Xanadu, with peahy Olivia Newton-John and prunish Gene Kelly. The Summer of '80 will also be remembered (or forgotten) for suh un-notables as the leaky Raise The Titani and the Maxwell Smart fiaso, The Nude Bomb. And it will be remembered as the year Peter Sellers died, after ompleting the ghastly Fiendish Plot of Fu Manhu. There were lots of bad omedies in the summer. Caddyshak was pure garbage, another dud in a long line of Animal House rip-offs. Cheeh B Chong's Next Movie was only funny if you were so stoned you fell asleep after the opening redits. Other God-awful omedies Turn to PFlO manusript ff to a publisher in filmdom but she is a believable films to ome out of Australia in the Sotland. harater who has an imagination, past few years. t is the first major While the plot of this film is energy and vitality. These qualities feature film that Gillian Armstrong almost like something out of a are displayed in senes where she has direted and she deserves Harlequin romane, the ending is takes on Harry in pillow fight, redit for offering audienes a refreshing, the ating is of a high leaves Frank standing in a field with harater like Sybylla who is a alibre and it is an honest portrayal a four mile walk home in tight strong, sensitive, passionate of women. Sybylla is not the typial boots, and disturbs a quiet river woman. passive, mild mannered woman ruise by apsizing the vessel. Hopefully there will be more films that we have ome to know in Career is ertainly one of the best of this type in the future. Friday, September 12, 1980 THE UBYSSEY Page Friday 9

16 Summer films: good, bad, and ugly From PF 9 lassis of junk film this summer. A summer of the good, the bad, inluded Used Cars, Die Who ould forget Bear sland, and mostly the ugly. But one movie Laughing, and The Hollywood filmed in northern ~ ~.7 Our great fits iato none of the ategories. The Knighm- Some would also inlude ountry also brought US Nothing Urban Cowboy was a flop, but the anemi Blue bgoon in the list penonal, with Donald Sutherland Rawhide Shops are springing up on of sumrner laughers, though its every orner, and the musi waves produers had a different intention. and Summe hnmers in a Plot are filled with twanaina voals and Canada did Drovide several thats too dumb to desribe. instruments. What s n&? The Urban Padre, in whih Travolta sends Gospel to the top of the WOMEN S ATHLETCS ham? The Urban Yodeler, in whih our hero starts a new trend in sheepskin fashions? We an only Managers wait with bated breath to see what the Summer of 81 brings us. are still needed for the following UBC women s teams: BASKETBALL, FENCNG, FELD HOCKEY (3.V.1, ROWNG, SOCCER. VOLLEYBALL Contat Athleti Offie - Room 208. War Memorial Gym - Phone the 20% DSCOUNT ON ANY SERVCE with presentation of this ad - by Terry, Karin and Debbie Expires Sept. 30, 1980 For appointment ken hippert, hair o. td University Blvd. (next to Luky Dollar Stom The AN New Fog Show: THEHOTARSHOW Every Monday Night beginning at 8:OO p.m. in The Pit e No Charge t s all new, it s so new we hanged the name! The Art Gallery Lounge presents REFLECTONS feat u ring JAZZ T UP WTH JUNE KAT2 September ll, 12, 13 8:30 p.m. - 11:30 p.m. bull Failities Free Hors d oeuvres No Admission Charge The Art Gallery Lounge is open daily 4:OO to midnight Whether you live off-ampus or in res - we have the applianes you need. Fridges, Stoves, Dishwashers. Washers and Dryers, Mirowave Ovens and Freezers For off-ampus students: We rent, sell, and rent with an option to purhase - ah the major applianes; For the students in res: Keep it ool - We have put together a speial on brand new bar fridges - $12.48 per month (tax inluded) For siudents in Gage... Rent a larger fridge to share with other students. Save money OD delivery - Get 3 friends to rent and you pay only one delivery harge. HOW DO YOU GET YOURS? Simple. Phone or or drop in and see u8 at: TRAL RENT-A-FRDGE LTD. The ADDliane.. Rental Peoole -r No. 3 Road Rihmond, B.C THE Poster Et Print PLACE in B.C Deomta With posiers W. Broadway, Van lllllllllllllllllllllll~lllllll Thurs., Sun. 7:OO fri., Sat. 7:OO 6 9:46 5O WAMS Card Sub Aud lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll CAM.DUS D CYCL S 0 Sales - Ladies and Gents 1,3,5, 10 and 12-speed. 0 Aessories 0 Pam and Repsin - Same day servie on small repairs - n by 10 a.m. - out by 6 p.m. 24 Hour Servie On Most Other Repairs 0 Used Bikes - Bought and Sold 0 Rentals - Hourly, Daily, Weekly 0 Open 7 Days A Week OUALTY BCYCLES 8 RCCESSORES 5706 U N WE RSTY BLVD. RECREATON U.B.C. nstrutional Lessons - Fall 80 Badminton (beginners) DynaFit Fitness & Weight Training Gymnastis ie Skating (basi & elementary figures), Jazz Daning Karate Modern Dane Tennis (beginners) Tennis (advaned 1 Yoga Women s Self Defene Mon. Wed. Mon. Wed. Fri. Mon. Wed. Fri. Mon. Wed. Fri. Tue. Wed. ( FULLTue. Thur. Mon. Tues. Wed. Thur. (FULL) Mon. (FULL) Tue. Wed. Fri. (FULL) Mon. (FULL) Mon. (FULL) Wed. (FULL) Wed. Mon. Wed. Tue. 1:30-2:30 6~30-7:30 3:30-5:30 7:00-9:oo 11 : :30-1:30 7:- 9:30 5:00-7:oo 12:30-2:30 7:s 9:30 1:30-3: : :15 12:30-1: :15 8~30-9: : ~30 9:30-10:30 4~30-6:m 7:30-9:30 REGSTRATON FEE $10.00 $10.00 $10.00 $10.00 $10.00 $10.00 $10.00 Registration for all lasses will take plae between 9:oO a.m. and 4:OO p.m. until September 19 at the Rereation U.B.C. offie, Room 203, War Memorial Gym. Enrollment is limited. Classes begin the week of September 22 and ontinue through the week of Deember 1. (Tennis lessons begin the week of Otober 6.) New lasses will be formed in January.

17 A The Hand Trees Et the wind, the moon rising out of the southwest over the alm lagoon like a Joseph Conrad story night birds and all that, the traditional tools of poetry at hand. But the pleasure of it trikles through my hands, the old Sense of Beauty grown perverse, arries a faint stenh to the wind pushing shadows before green leaf Et branh the illusory tropial firs are ommon, are rooted in a dark, like Beauty Et the things we live with every day Et take for granted are rooted in the degradation of the earth Et the misery of millions of human beings n the largely personal tangle of poeti truth to fore the appearane of our real shadows to slime The Rose with fats like those of the systemati murder in the Congo of as many as 25 million people between 1890 Et 1910 fats not seondary to nor separate from the leisure to write poems, or the moonrise on a summer's evening, the amber wings of a butterfly my son resued from a tangle of weeds this afternoon proudly upped to show me in his two small hands. For him if nothing else want to evoke fatual disturbanes in the at of thinking and writing until what 've known as Beauty beomes aountable to the fats of the world we are part of or if those fats are to be partitioned from the onerns of Art then art must be reognized and ondemned as at least an aomplie in the maintenane of the onditions that make misery and violene the dominant truths of most lives. want to learn to turn my hand against mere Beauty until suh fats are a memory unthinkable in the ats of living men Et women. told my son to let the butterfly go, that it has a message to deliver in the several days of life it has, that this is no world to make suh beauty aptive. He opens his hands to let it go, it spills out into the weeds again, but then flits up, takes flight. See? 1 let that story exist no longer an isolated fat of poesy removed from the 25 million Afrians murdered in the eonomi servie of what was set up by the European Powers Et the U.S. as a "Free State" under the ontrol of Leopold ll of Belgium who used the proeeds to buy the finest art of Europe, repatriating the Flemish Masters & filling the museums any number of us have wandered through in awe. As the darkness desends the TV news offers footage of another war in Afria, seems genuinely onfused at the Afrians' hatred. Our best writers estimated the Congo death toll between million, uninterested in the variane of 30 million human lives more interested in athy metaphors about a one dark ontinent on fire as if an artful phrase explains the unburied bones piled up in every Congo village explains administrative massares Et the doumented pratie of making the Congo onstabulary aount for bullets with severed human hands, meaning not only brutal death for thousands but should a soldier go hunting for food Et miss his quarry say six times six right hands, usually of women Et hildren a few of whom survived to be photographed Et now the photographs stand alongside those beautiful reprodutions of Renoir's rosy-heeked hildren or the works of the Flemish Masters rowding the walls of Brussels' galleries Et in the splendid dusk the longshoremen unload wine Et fruit from South Afria Et Chile Et what lies do the nightbirds sing for us, do we hear what they really have to tell us? What matter that the butterflies drift inside the old moon's slow asent. Who poles the boats aross the nightmare Beauty hides? What should do with these hands? Briin Fawett lfl MNUS EXH B T1 0 N AND SALE of FNE ART REPRODUCTONS NEW THS YEAR: Limited Edition Prints of Woodland ndian Art Featuring: Old Masters, mpressionists, The Group of Seven, Australian, Ojibway, Oriental and Modern Art, British Museum Posters, Esher, Wyeth, Danby, Folon, Curtis and others. Over 700 Different mages September :00-5:00 Art Gallery, SUB Pries: Most Large Prints 3.75 ea. or 3 for $9.00 Most Small Prints $2.00 ea. or 3 for $5.00 Friday, September 12, 1980 THE UBYSSEY' Page Friday

18 , SPECALZNG N GREEK CUSNE B PZZA HONG KONG CHNESE FOOD (Self Serve Restaurant) 5732 >*a UNVERSTY BLVD.~. Eat n and Take Out # 0 0 WEELBACK/ Open Daily from 11 a m SUNDAY from 4 p.m W. 10th Ave r n 0 H. P f WHTE TOWER PZZA &! SPAGHETT HOUSE LTD. KTS - DUNBAR. CT. GRLV A varrery of great dishes indud '"9 Moursaka, Kalamaria Souvlakia, and Greek ' salads Mon Thurs 4 pm2 30 am Frr b Sar 4 prn 3 30 am Sunday 4 pm 12 Pm or DOWNTOWN 3611 West Broadway ljss PARKNG AT REAR "-5491 UBG 8 Ganapvs...". Pi2223 J!!y Steak (t Pizza - Lasagna Spare Ribs - Ravioli Chiken - Greek Salads ' Souvlaki Fast Free Loal Delivery lours: Mon.-Thurs. 11:30 a.m.-200 p.m.; Fri. ll:3saa.m.-3.wp.m,, Sat.4:00p.m.-3:00a.m.; Sun. 4:OO p.m.-1:00 a.m Western Parkwav HARD DAY AT CLASSES? Relax at the Sands Bayside Room overlooking English Bay DENMAN and DAVE, STAUFFER~ SPECALTES Fully liened.... a restaurant of distintion Cantonese reipes Exeptional Continental uisine ontemporary setting espresso or appuinno. By/fet served daily Fri., Sat. & Sun. ev Treat yourself tonight to something speial. Come to Sfauffer's and relax in our omfortable wood and stainedglass lub-style dining room. Enjoy great food ooked just for you. We're not a hain. We're 1 ust a friendly one-of-a-kind family restaurant. The kind of plae where you an let go after a hard day's work... bring along the whole family... drop by when you're out for a night-on-the-town... or treat visitqrs to a great meal you an always ount on. Fine food at pries you an afford. And Stauffer's is fully liensed. We have a great seletion of fine wines plus 15 fantasti speialty offees to hoose from. And we're so easy to reah, right on Broadway near Granville. With plenty of free parking next door. So live it up Stauffer'sStyle. Let yourself go, to dinner tonight at Stauffer's. Stauffer's on Broadway. 0 Gourmet meals at moderate pries 0 A large seletion of fine wines 4 15 fantasti speia1t;r offees 4. Ample free parking Easy to reah, right on Broadway near Granville 0 Party failities for up to 30 paople (And we an prepare a speial menu too) 0 Just drop by Or for rese -vations all STAuFFER's W. Broadway at Granville 'Chef of the Year Award Winner 1972' Mr Mee, who was born in Revelstoke, deided on his profession at a very early age " was ten when went to work in the kithen even use to skip shool to wath the loal hef There was nothing else wanted to do but ook " Mr Mee was appointed "Chef of the Year", by the B C Chef's Assoiation in 1972 He is hef of Stauffer's Restaurant "Good food, well prepared is what most people enjoy ' Page Friday 2 THE UBYSSEY Friday, Septer ber 12, , '.a. ) _ 1 9,-.*....

19 MAURCE... and the Clihes appearing with the Slugs, Saturday night at SUB ballroom. Now that everyone's written their version by Tom Cone. Phone the essays desribing their summer Playhouse at for details. debauheries and even exams are The Greater Vanouver Artist's looming in the not distant enough Gallery is presenting an exhibition future it's time to dig into Vista of works by Camrose Duote, Linda one again. Covit, and Karen Kazmer entitled The Vanouver Symphony Or- "Plasti Makes Perfet." The show hestra under the diretion of on- previews on Sept. 15 at 8:30 p.m. dutor Kazuyoshi Akiyama will but will be open at regular hours open its Jubilee Series Sept. 21, 22 after that. Phone for and 23 with a performane by the details. renowned ellist Leonard Rose. Tamanhous Theatre Presents Rose will perform Boherini's ello "We Won't Payl We Won't Payl" onerto in Bflat major. For further by Dario Fo beginning Sept. 12. information and times phone the Phone for details. Vanouver Symphony Orhestra at Vanouver's first Annual ESP Psyhi's Fair will be happening The Vanouver Playhouse will Sept. 18 through Sept. 21 at the open its Mainstage Season Sept. 13 Forum Building at the PNE with "The Servant of Two grounds. Admission is $3 per day. Masters" by Carlo Goldoni in a new Leroy Sibbles and the -Tal Grove PUBLSHER, CARLTON PRESS, N.Y. 1 t gives THE ACD TEST to you (1 How long have you been out of the trees? Please Order at the Book Store NOW, A NEW BURGER THAT'S MORE BURGER will be bringing his brand of reggae musi to the Commodore Ballroom Sept. 18 and 19th. Tikets are $8 aad $8.50 at the door. The Frederi Wood Theatre will be presenting "Long Day's Journey nto Night" by Eugene O'Neill from Sept. 17 to Sept. 27 (exluding Sundays). For reservations all or drop by room 207 of the Freddy Wood Theatre. Stage 33 opens its seond season Sept. 11 with a abaret style revue: "Hold Mel" by Jules Feiffer. This revue will be running three or four weeks. Tikets are available from the Vanouver Tiket Offie or Eatons. Viewspae Gallery at 3210 Dunbar is running an exhibition of Cibahrome prints by Jim Clarke, a graduate of the Banff Shool of Fine Arts. Call Viewspae at for times. Ultravox will be appearing at the Commadore Ballroom Sept. 15. This will be their seond appearane in town. Tikets available at the Vanouver Tiket Centre. "Turning Thirty," a one woman show starring Cheryl Cashman opened at the Arts Club Theatre on Seymour Street on Sept. 10. Tikets are available from the theatre's box offie at , the Vanouver Tiket Offie and Eaton's. The Carnegie Centre at 401 Main Street is presenting a show of reative talent of artists living in the downtown east side of our ity. Phone for details. A benefit for the Right To Poster will be happening on Sept. 14 at the Aradian Hall on 6th and Main at 8 p.m. On the bill are the Subhumans, AKA, and the Bonus Boys and the Warts. Student Speials- DAMS LNCOLN MERCURY SALES NEW Lynx * Capri * Zephyr Used Gas Savers, 77 MAZDA GLC 4 yl. 4-speed, very lean was $4795, now BOBCAT, 2 dr., 4 yl. auto Sundav 5:OO D.m.-10 D.m. A / Mon.-Thurs. 'Noon-10 p.m. / Fri. end Sat. $3580 $2825 $ MAVERCK, 2 dr., 6 yl. auto Call Randy Lord Ave., Surrey (6 bloks west of Guiluord Mall on 104 Ave.) 12 p.m.-12 a.m. unday Night b!! E JAZZ featuring "The Dave Phyall Trio" SPECAL SUNDAY DNNER 7 Soup, Falafel, Kabob, Salad, Rie, Coffee - all for $ WEST BROADWAY Ph CAN YOU DANCE? YES Then Come and See Us NO Read this First Then Come and See Us w- ntroduing the new hamburger from the DARY QUEEN BRAZER store. n a new "six to a pound" size that really gives you some meat for your money. nstead of a banquet of bun. You see, while other burger hains get as many as ten hamburgers from a pound of beef, we get only six. And that gives you "more burger than bun." A burger that's tender, deliiously-ooked. Every time. The new burger from DARY QUEEN BRAZER. Friday, September W. Broadway ANYONE CAN DANCE. OUR PAST EXPERENCE N TEACHNG OTHERS PROVES THS. We are the UBC DANCE CLUB AND WE WANT YOU TO TRY US. WE OFFER'YOU OPPORTUNTES TO MEET LOTS OF PEOPLE EVERY WEEK. FUN W H LE LEARN N G SO M ETH N G YOU'LL ALWAYS USE. LESSONS BY TOP PROFESSONALS. ALL THS AND YOU DON'T EVEN NEED A PARTNER TO JON! WE HAVE LESSONS FOR ALL LEVELS OF DANCNG EXPERENCE. YOU'LL FND US N SUB 200 PARTY ROOM EVERY NOON HOUR AND ON CLUBS' DAYS. THE UBYSSEY Page Friday 13

20 -4 THE UBYSSEY Friday, September 12,19 Prie Performane *V V SHARP RT-10 Stereo Cassette Dek This Sharp Stereo Cassette Dek plugs right into the rear panel of your present stereo. t tapes radio & phono diretly, without piking up room noise. Play the tapes you make at home, in your ar, or on any portable assette reorder [even non-stereo models!). "Metal Tape" ompatibility means learer sound with all types of assettes. Use "standard" assettes for maximum eonomy. Or hoose "hrome" or ferrihrome" assettes for the widest frequeny response available with onventional tape tehnology... or go all the way to the top with the new "metal partile" assettes that just ame on the market. "Metal tape" means even wider frequeny response 8 lower bakground "hisssss." BONUS The tehnial advanes that make this Sharp Stereo Cassette Dek ompatible with "metal tape" also make it sound learer with all onventional tape formulations. Sharp RT-10 "Metal Tape" Stereo Cassette Dek NEW MODEL SHARP RT 10 Metal Tape Stereo Cassette Dek STCREO HEADPHONE DOLBY NOSE MCROPHONE JACKS TAPE SELECTOR for all SELECTOR for newly LED'S replae slower JACK. REDUCTON keeps "!ape for "live" stereo onventionalassettes developed "Metal mehanial meter hiss' low reording Partile" assettes needles S854E STEREO CARTRDGE High performane - exeptional value. The SWE Cartridge has an Elliptial Full diamond Stylus that is apable of stereophones World's most asked for stereophone The Koss PRO14 Triple A. featuring extra-large driver elements, Pneumalite' earushions for a more perfet seal, and a unique, lighter. human-engineered design that makes the Triple A amazingly omfortable $6gg5 NO OTHER RADAR DETECTOR 1 CRAG 1019 FM/AM n-dash Stereo Cassette Player gives you great mobile sound and features like loking fast forward and rewind, loal distant FM reeption swith and lots morel Get your show on the road this weekendl CRAG V103 Flush-Mount Speakers mount easily in almost any loation Mesh and hrome grilles and moisture resistant ones keep them looking good and sounding great' $

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