8
. .". ."" .......... """~............. """"... ...... " - . . . . . . . . . .. . I B.C. Fed, asks Socreds te let NDU live .SOME PEOPLE don't know how t o Separate work from leisure as witnessed by library book stacker who But there isn't that much money to give to the students who apply, who "dougfield photo research project probably would require co-ordination by professors. reads during break. Like moststudents who deal with libraries these days she is probably wondering why must havecompleted three years of university. 5th level entrance in Main has been closed down. Anybody know? See page 2: LIMITED

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Page 1: I B.C. Fed, asks Socreds te let NDU live · I B.C. Fed, asks Socreds te let NDU live .SOME PEOPLE don't know how to Separate work from leisure as witnessed by library book stacker

. .". ."" .......... """~............. """"... ......" - . . . . . . . . . . . .

I

B.C. Fed, asks Socreds te let NDU live

.SOME PEOPLE don't know how to Separate work from leisure as witnessed by library book stacker who But there isn't that much money to give to the students who apply, who "doug field photo research project probably would require co-ordination by professors.

reads during break. Like most students who deal with libraries these days she i s probably wondering why must have completed three years of university. 5th level entrance in Main has been closed down. Anybody know? See page 2: LIMITED

Page 2: I B.C. Fed, asks Socreds te let NDU live · I B.C. Fed, asks Socreds te let NDU live .SOME PEOPLE don't know how to Separate work from leisure as witnessed by library book stacker

. . . . . . . - - - . - . . - - . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . -. - . . . -. . . . . . . . . . . ..

Page 2 T H E U B Y S S E Y Thursday, February ,26, 1976

Fire hits CUP HQ OTTAWA (CUP) -The editorial

and executive offices of Canadian University Press were hit by fire

,. when an exploding light bulb in the offset press ignited chemical solvent used in the printing process and spread from there to an ad- jacent wall.

The Feb. 18 fire was put out quickly after firemen arrived, but not before the $6,000 press was complete!y destroyed. Smoke and water damage was serious, although news files and the organization’s records were not damaged.

Initial attempts by CUP printer Derek Amyot to put out the blaze with the fire extinguisher located down the hall from the offices

proved futile when it was discovered that it was empty.

CUP president Francis Fuca said the three-person national executive has decided the first priority is to set up temporary working facilities to resume publication of the twice-weekly national news service. He estimated it would take “at least a week, maybe more” before even a modified service could be put out.

For the present, the national office staff of, CUP have moved into the offi’ces of the National Union of .Students, which are located in the same building. Telephones for CUP have been rerouted to the NUS office until the CUP office is again operative.

Limited .jobs open From Dage 1 medicine and dentistry get $750.

“There’s only about 300 jobs,” Peters said. “Divide that up into 20,000 (students) and see how few that is.”

Spratley said to be eligible students must have completed their third year of study at the end of the current academic year.

(Also included are students registered in the second year of four-year programs in faculties - such a s applied science and commerce.)

Third-year students are paid $600 a month, fourth- and fifth-year students get $650, and graduate students and students enrolled in

r

I

I

- ’ NOTICE

Tuition Fee Income Tax

Receipts Available

Dept. of Finance

General Service Admin. Building

8:30 to 4:30 p.m.

I II

The amounts are the same a s last year.

“The labor department felt the wages were too high last year,” said Spratley. In any case, in- creases in wages would further decrease the number of students who could be employed, he said.

Under last year’s program, students worked in a variety of projects such as aid for native Indians and provision of free legal aid services. Application forms will be available at departmental and faculty offices.

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Page 3: I B.C. Fed, asks Socreds te let NDU live · I B.C. Fed, asks Socreds te let NDU live .SOME PEOPLE don't know how to Separate work from leisure as witnessed by library book stacker

........................................ . ” - . . . ........... ......................... .” .. . -

Thursday, February 26, 1976 T H E U B Y S S E Y

Under.5.C. RentAid proaram

Mo.ney back for rent By GREGG THOMPSON

If you pay rent for your living accommodatio?, whether it be on campus or off, you can get an extra $100 back this year on your 1975

It’s all.made possible under the RentAid program, financed by the provincial government and designed to help offset high rents. If you a.re under 65 and your taxable income is less than $10,000, you are eligible.

+ hcome tax return.

Here’s how it works. Basically, anyone over 16 years

of age who paid rent for their principle residence in B.C. on Dec. 31, 1975 i s eligible.

If you were in and out of the province in 1975, or moved into the

~. province during the year, you may not be eligible and must seek clarification with RentAid.

The maximum benefit paid by RentAid is $100. If you are under 65, the maximum benefit is $100 minus one per cent of your taxable income for 1975. No benefit can exceed 10 per cent of the total rent you paid in 1975.

For example, if your taxable income fF 1975 was $3,000, your RentAid rebate is $100 minus $30 (one per cent of $3,000). Your rebate is $70. But because the Rent Aid grant may be no more than 10 per cent of the total rent you paid in 1975, so if your total rent was less than $700, your RentAid grant would be 10 per cent of that figure.

Although RentAid is a B.C. government program, it is ad- ministered through the federal government’s income tax system. To claim RentAid, you must fill out the federal income tax form (T-l), even i f you have no taxable in- come.

Lewis

You must also fill out the Ren-, tAid claim form (B.C. Renter’s Tax Credit form T-1C-B.C.) which is included with your federal In- come Tax Return form.

If youhave never filed an income tax return before, chances are you won’t receive anything in the mail, so you’ll have to pick up the forms at any post office.

And you’ll need a social in- surance number for all this too, so if you don’t have one pick up an application form a t the post office and complete it.

If you live with a person who claims you as a dependent for income tax purposes, you cannot claim RentAid, even if you con- tribute toward the rent.

If two or more people, other than a taxpayer and spouse, pay rent for the same accommodation, you have two alternatives to choose from: you can designate one person to claim RentAid on behalf of the group; or you can make an individual claim in proportion to the amount of rent you each con- tribute.

Naturally, the total of indivi’dual claims must not be more than the total rent paid for the ac- commodation.

If you choose this method, you must attach a list of all the other claimants and identify which one of them holds the rent receipts. You don’t have to attach rent receipts but you should be prepared to provide proof of rent paid.

Rent paid for semi-permanent residences such as hotels, motels and rooming houses can be part of your claim providing you occupied them continuously for all or part of the year and they constituted your

blames big

principle residence. But you must not include any costs other than rent - no meals or board or special services.

If you are married, and occupy rented premises with your husband or wife, only one of you can claim - the one with the higher taxable income for 1975.

The same applies if you married in 1975. If eligible, the one with the higher taxable income can claim for:

0 that portion of his or her rent paid prior to marriage;

0 that portion of his or her spouse’s rent paid pSior to marriage, and

a the rent paid during the period of marriage.

If marital bliss should dissipate with a resulting separation, the rules are simple enough but require a little co-operation.

The rent paid prior to separation may be calculated for the purposes of a RentAid (claim in any proportion the couple chooses, providing it amounts only to the actual rent paid. After separation, each may claim for rent paid while maintaining a separate residence.

You can include rent deposits in your claim if you moved during 1975 and that deposit became your last month’s rent. If you didn’t move, and therefore didn’t use the deposit as actual rent, you can’t claim it.

If you want more information on the RentAid program, and only the basic rules are outlined here, yoh can get it by asking the telephone operator for “Ask R.C.” for a toll- free call to the provincial govern- ment’s new central information switchboard. Contact your local Revenue Canada district taxation office about other tax questions.

government for disrupted social -welfare plans

David Lewis, former national leader of the NDP, warned Tuesday against the forces crip- pling Canada’s social welfare programs - primarily, big, centralized government.

“If you share my concern for our social welfare programs, and if you care that they remain - be on guard,” Lewis told about 250 people a t UBC’s school of social work. The speech was co- sponsored by the UBC school of social work and the B.C. Association of Social Workers.

Lewis blamed government for the large number of people receiving unemployment in- surance benefits.

“Public policy, for which governments are responsible, has created the vast amount of unemployment,” he said.

Lewis told the crowd the unemployment rate was four per cent when the Unemployment Insurance Commission was created iq 1971, and has since risen to seven per cent. The four per cent consisted of mainly unskilled and semiskilled workers, he said, but the seven per cent includes a significant number of skilled workers.

“Giving people payments of money will not end their suffering. We must help people to feel useful.

“The major purpose of society is not only to live together, but to help people attain what they need,” Lewis said.

“That’s what democracy means to me. It protects human dignity, enriches people’s lives, and respects individuality.”

Lewis also blamed a wrong approach by government for the .high cost of medicare.

“The way to deal with lowering the cost of medicare is not by closing down hospitals,” he said. “What is needed is a system of convalescent homes with $25 beds as opposed to $200 beds in

“It’s the same with your provincial government - they want more power. That’s why they closed down the resources boards. There was too much local input in decision-making, which meant less power to their ministers,” he said.

Bill Vander Zalm, Social Credit minister of human resources, announced Monday the proposed 23 community resources boards would be changed from decision- making bodies to advisory bodies, and would not be funded by the provincial government. Vander Zalm said one reason the resources boards were canned is to eliminate “another level of bureaucracy.”

hospitals.” LEWIS. . . watch government.

Lewis told the audience about debates he had about social welfare in his pre-Co-operative Commonwealth Federation days (the CCF was a forerunner to the NDP).

“When I mentioned pensions, my opponents said the people would lose their sense of thrift, If the poor people have holes in their shoes, at least they are their own holes, they said.”.

He also lashed oul. at “corporate welfarebums” -a theme familiar with those who followed the NDP’s last two federal election cam- paigns.

“Taking money from the large corporations means taking a part of their economic power,” he said. Large corporations are supposedly taxed 40 per cent, he said, but they “drive trains through tax loopholes.”

Hold it! Dear friends, ‘we know how

snowed under you are with mid- terms. We know how tough it is to get essays done, and we sym- pathize.

But‘ sometimes you lose sight of the really important things in life.

Like, The Ubyssey is publishing its annual creative writing issue March 5, and deadline for material is March 1.

Like, the deadline for nominations for Ubyssey editor is March 4. Anyone can run, though only Ubyssey staffers may vote in the election.

Like, there’sstilla.chance to join The Ubyssey before the winter session moves onto its greater reward

So if you want to be a photographer, sports writer, or, best - and most challenging - of all, news reporter, meander up to The Ubyssey office in SUB 241K, in the northeast corner on the second floor of SUB.

Page 3 f

Rep list As you should know by now, the Alma Mater Society - big

language for student union - has a new constitution which comes into effect March 5.

Under that constitution, the duties of the current 36-person council have been divided between two bodies, the student representative assembly [SRAI and the student ad- ministrative commission [SAC]. The latter is responsible for theday-to-day running of the affairs of the Society, work now carried out by the seven-person AMS executive which does not exist under the new constitution. ,

Unlike the current executive, this SAC is not elected. In- stead, it is chosen by the SRA.

The SRA is the policy-setting body under the new con- stitution. Some’what analogous to parliament or the legislative assembly in Ottawa and Victoria, it is responsible for setting long-range polidies, not for running the dayto-day administrative affairs of the society.

The SRA consists of student members of the board of governors, student senators and representatives of each of the undergraduate societies. What follows is a list, as nearly complete as we can make it, of the new student councillors and their phone numbers. Ladies and gentlemen, your 1976-77 student representative assembly!

MEMBERS OF THE BOARD OF GOVERNORS

Rick Murray . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 263-0694 Basil Peters . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 733-5360

MEMBERS OF THE UNIVERSITY SENATE

A t large: Dick By1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 224-5333 Brian Higgins . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 736-931 7 Keith Gagne . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 228-1321 David MacKinnon . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 224-6380 Bill Black . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 228-3818 Law: Gordon Funt . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 926-5063 Applied Sciences: John Swainson . . . . . . . . . . 224-0286 Agriculture: Susan Hoyles . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 228-9474 Arts: Bill Broddy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 228-2732 Dentistry: Gabriel Gedak . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 325-9195 Education: Joan Blandford . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 261-1035 Forestry: Hans Buys. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 738-9698 Grad studies: Don Poy. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . N.A. Medicine: John Lehuquet. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Y.A. Pharmacy: Robin Ensom. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 228-0669 Science: Robert Salkeld. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 224-9572 Commerce:. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . vacant

UNDERGRADUATE SOCIETY REPRESENTATIVES

Agriculture: Marilyn Hynes. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 733-8243 Architecture: Don Porter. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . N.A. Arts: Bev Crowe. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 224-9881 Pam Edwards. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 435-5887 Dave Jiles. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 224-9706 Paul Sandhu. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 263-0222 Dave Van Blarcom. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 228-1291 Pam Willis. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 733-1753 Commerce: Doug Johnstone. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 261-4349 Dave Theessen. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 731-4529 Education: Ellen Paul. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 733-1200 Christine Paul. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 733-1200 Roz Manson. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 224-0293 Engineering: Ray The. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 228-4628 Forestry: Jim Stephen. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 266-6507 Home Economics: Eva Villeneuve. . . . . . . . . . 738-0717 Law: Kim Roberts. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 291-0874 Librarianship: Linda Medland. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 224-971 1 Pharmacy: Arlene Wong. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 733-3202 Physical education: Greg Heenan. . . . . . . . . . . 266-2755 Rehabilitation medicine: Lynn Braiden. . . . . . . 733-0882 Science: Blake Fleming. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.77-8692 Aksel Hallin. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 732-6053 Anne Katrichak. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4256673 Kerry Zoehner. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . N.A. Social work: Moe Sihota. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 263-0222

The phone numbers are there because these people don’t have offices and as student representatives should be available. So clip this out and save it. The next time you have a beef, look up your rep and give him/her a telephone call. They’ll be surprised, because AMS reps aren’t used to having a constituency that pays attention to them, but donY hestitate to call them.

Some SRA members aren’t included. That’s because nobody ran for commerce senator and the commerce un- dergraduate society must appoint one as soon as senate passes a motion allowing them to.

Some undergraduate societies have either not picked their SRA reps yet, or they haven’t bothered telling current AMS secretary Ellen Paul who their reps are. When we have the rest of the names, we’ll give them to you, along with the phone numbers not included here.

Let these turkeys know somebody’s watching them.

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.. . .

Page 4 T H E U B Y S S E Y Thursday, February 26, 1976

Mouth off On page 3 of today‘s Ubyssey there is an important list. It‘s a list of your representatives on next year‘s student

representative assembly - the successors to the Alma Mater ’ Society student council.

Bug them. That‘s right - talk their ears off. Bitch, complain, prod

them for action. That’s why they ran for office - to make things better.

This l is t provides a unique opportunity to have not only the guardians of the AMS a t your fingertips but also the reps on senate, the academic decision-making body, and the board of governors, the money controllers.

All these people have contacts around the university. They s i t on committees and they are listened to by administration types as the collective voice of -the student body.

The problem is that often they only talk for themselves. They don‘t get the input they want or need to properly represent student interests.

Student society affairs have been significantly revamped this year so that the representative assembly can be a forum for debate on meaty issues such as teacher evaluations, new program, budget cutbacks and the lndy 800 road race game.

The opportunity is there to provide a‘ united student voice, but, as in any organization, sim-ply changing the system doesn‘t guarantee improvement.

It’s up to the people involved. And politicians, even student politicos, operate better i f

they know their electorate is watching . . . waiting . . . ready to pounce on every mistake.

So keep the l ist on page 3. Put it beside your phone or hang it on your bedpost. Next time you’re outraged about anything, give a student rep a call.

I f it’s a complaint about food services, traffic control, r the bookstore, residences, lousy teachers or whatever, there

are people to talk to. Don’t be complacent. Call a spade a spade to someone‘s

face (or into someone‘s ear) instead of muttering under your breath.

I f you keep it to yourself you might get ulcers. “Good God, Smedley . . . we‘re RICH!!!

UBC is lacking

Graduation is almost upon us again, in a few more weeks this factorywill shut down its assembly lines and release us to the “real world.” With a mixture of semi- skills, we graduates must enter the hard world of reality.

This letter is not written in fear, nor in self pity. It has been written before in different tones by dif- ferent people, and it will be written in successive years until our damn administrators realize the com- plete failure our post-secondary education has become.

This university is not an in- stitution of higher learning any longer. It’s not even a satisfactory relay station. UBC, along with our other universities, is no more, the stage of intellectual debate.

In the past the university’s role wasto challenge the mind. It was a place for students to question why. “The idea of a university,” as Henry Newman expressed from his university chair, “is the high

the United States is leaps and bounds ahead of us, dealing .with post-secondary education. An example is their development of the community college. For in- stance, community colleges take the severe strain off first and second year students. They offer sophomores and freshmen the opportunity of experiencing post- secondary academe while simultaneously feeding them samples of the technical field.

After two years a diploma is granted along with the choice of continuing on either track. University entrance is stiff, requiring from the people who chose the academic field, the conviction to continue.

We at UBC are forcing students .to either get their four-year degree or drop uut without any tangible certificate. But not everyone wants to pursue an academic career. This may shock our administrators, but one does not need a degree in history to sell shoes for the Hud- son’s Bay Company.

We, .too, have community colleges and technical Institutes, but they are not fulfilling their proper course, but that is another ~~

protecting power of ‘all knowledge and science, of experiment and speculation; it maps out the territory of the intellect.

A university training aims at raising the intellectual tone of society, a t cultivating the public mind . . . at facilitating the exercise of pplitical powers.” It prepares a man “to fill any post with credit, and to master any subject with faculty.”

Is this UBC? My God, not even the department of classics comes close to this.

Our universities wallow in a greying middle ground. We are no longer the ivory tower, and yet we are not the ’ community’s playground. We are too worried about the cost of our degrees, that we miss the whole objective of education.

Though I detest admitting this,

happy trail. My complaint is of the wasted years we are forced to endure before we are allowed “to master any subject with faculty.” As our programs currently stand, we are indirectly coerced into taking the so-called “mickey- mouse” courses to receive the “all sacred” marks which will open the “golden gates” of our professional and graduate schools.

We are not judged by our in- tellect, but only by our abilities to juggle classes. Our administration encourages this. Until we are shocked into comprehending wbat a total mess our educational system is, we cannot even hope to comprehend the path of self- destruction our own country is following.

Our present education does not test our powers. We read, regurgitate, then forget, all in the

hope of receiving the diploma so we may get onto what we really want to study. This is not the theory of a university, but it is the ‘present’ reality.

Education has lost its lustre. Whose fault is this? Well certainly our administrators cannot take full credit. Fault is shared by many. Though UBC is incapable of retoring education to its rightful place, I do believe it is their responsibility, indeed it is their duty to bring this university from its knees.

To make Us stand up. In B.C. there is really

no choice byt to accom- modate the educational de- mands of the people. Individual colleges or universities may or may not be able to resist those pressures, but if our population continues to grow larger, we have no choice but to grow larger and more numerous, or both. Where there is a choice, and this is basic to my charge, it is the quality of university education. Quality has been allowed to be replaced by quantity.

Half-assed education will only give us half-assed lives, a half-

assed society. Semi-skills are not the government presently in power good enough. If society reflects its wil1,see its path cleared to further education, then education must be engage in sophistry and the earned,-not won in a crackerjack manipulationof the public to better box. its own (or out of country?)

political science 4 Students and faculty, I trust that you will be inclined to move as I have.

To be sung to the tune of “Happy

Grant McRadu pecuniary interests.

Ditty - Days Are Here Again”:

morn after the eve of that sup- Let US drink to Pat RkGeer posedly auspicious announcement again,

automobile insurance premiums I, by the greatest fortuity, happened days are here again. upon a parody Of the Social Credit Happy days are here again, campaign lay ‘‘Happy Days Are We’ve been shafted by a Bennett Here Again.”

The content of this ditty served to We can thank the god exacerbate my already petulant ‘‘Credit/Debit again, mood and a t once I felt impelled to Happy days are here again. express my dissatisfaction with the present provincial government for forcing such action.

epistle in the confidence that it Great!! Thus, I am submitting this

shall arouse the too latent sen- timent of the university body in a great job and keep it up. Might I Just a note to say you’re doing a similar, if not more strident take a moment to say this is the manner. It is a certainty that first time written a letter to without such agitation on this issue the editor? oh, no time? Sorrv,

Whilst in a fit of pique on the Happy days are here again.

concerning the raising of We’ll be on the bus or in arrears

again,

John Russell education 2

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 26,1976 Published Tuesdays, Thursdays and Fridays throughout the university year by the Alma Mater Society of the University of B.C. Editorial opinions are those of the staff and not of the AMS or the university administration. Member, Canadian University Press. The Ubyssey publishes Page Friday, a weekly commentary and review. The Ubyssey’s editorial offices are located in room 241K of the Student Union Building. Editorial departments, 228-2301; Sports, 228-2305; Advertising, 228-3977.

Editor: Gary Coull in our studio some very special guests - oh, sod it. I don’t want t o do

Good evening and welcome to World Forum. Tonight we have with us

this. I never wanted to be a quiz show host. No! 1 wanted t o be a lumb/click/ was the way it was. Wednesday. Feb. 25, 1976. This is your host Gary Coull. saying goodnight . . . news was brought t o you by

Sue Vohanka in Prague, Anne Wallace in Victoria, Nancy Southam id Denise Chong and Maureen Boyd in Ottawa, Ralph Maurer in Frankfurt

West Ham -the Hammers. The Hammers i s the nickname of what . . .) . Mark Buckshon in Tel Aviv and Marcus Gee in Athens. Executiv;

King did the sound and technical asslstance was by Dave Wilkinson. producer was Gregg Thompson, news direction was by Doug Field, Matt

Thanks to Jim King, Joe Clark’s top banana out here on the coast /click/ struggle .of class against claws is a W H A T struggie. A WHAT struqqle:

Reve BaGdell commerce 3

P.S. Go Habs, go.

The Ubyssey welcomes letters from all readers.

Letters should be signed and typed.

Pen names will be used when the writer’s real name is also included for our information in the letter or when valid reasons for anonymity are given.

Although an effort is made to publish all letters received, The Ubyssey reserves the right to edit letters for reasons of brevity, legality. grammar or taste.

Letters should be addressed to the paper care of campus mail or dropped off at The Ubyssey office, SUB 241-K.

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T H E U B Y S S E Y

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'76 i P

Clark: great compromise - By MAUREEN BOYD

OTTAWA - "The message of my can- didacy was unity in our party and our nation. It is now the message of my leadership," said young Joe Clark.

. Well, good luck, Joe, you're going to need it.

It was on the strength of the unity theme that Clark was elected leader of the op- position. Convention delegates have taken a big chance on Clark - based on his potential for growth and potential for unity.

. If this potential isn't realized, if he doesn't mature with the job and doesn't unite the party behind him, then both Clark and the Conservative party are going to end up big losers.

Clark's election is the election of the compromise candidate. Less than 12 per cent of the convention delegates picked him as their first choice - that he was an ac- ceptable alternative for the majority got

Clark's single most important asset was that he had no significant enemies within the party and managed not to alienate anybody over the course of his campaign.

That might have been enough to win the convention. But being second choice to delegates at a Conservative convention on a promise of unity isn't going to be good enough alone for Clark to win the next election.

And that's what the convention was all about - picking someone who could lead the Tories to victory against Pierre Trudeau and the Liberals.

To say Clark has a tough job ahead is an understatement. He has to reconcile all the different elements that make up the Con- servative party before he can devote his fulltime energies to tackling the Liberals.

There are several plausible recipes for Disaster ahead. Thev all have to do with

Hellyer% suicide' By MAUREEN BOYD

OTTAWA - The real loser of the Tory leadership convention last weekend was Paul Hellyer - a former politician and journalist.

And he just may have blown his credibility * as both with his convention performance.

The day after his abortive bid for the Tory top spot, Hellyer announced his intention to return to the parliamentary press gallery. He may have problems, however, picking up where he left off.

HELLYER . . . ain't smilin' no more

Several members .of the press gallery thought that he used his tenure as a jour- nalist from 1974 to 1976 simply to keep his name before the public and to gain press sympathy when the time came for his leadership bid.

Backed by more Conservative MPs than any other leadership candidate, Hellyer appeared to be a frontrunner going into the convention. In an attempt to consolidate right-wing support behind him fbr the first ballot, Hellyer took several swipes a t the left wing of the party in his Saturday afternoon speech.

There was mixed, if not confused, reaction from both Hellyer delegates and the block of Mps supporting him.

"Hdlyer isolated a , fact that had to be B.C. MP Ron Huntington (Capilano) said:

recognized - if the party keeps going the way it is, we will never form an alternative party that can form an alternative govern- men t. "

When asked whether it was wise for Hellyer to make 'an issue of ideological differences, Huntingdon said, "Some feel it had to be said. I personally feel it was just as well left unsaid or said another wag."

MP Gordon Fairweather (Fundy-Royal), who backed Flora Macdonald, said that he felt the MPs backing Hellyer were pretty shaken by his remarks.

The disenchantment with Hellyer tran- slated itself into weak first choice votes and a fifth place spot on the first ballot. It became clear that the convention delegates were not going to commit themselves to a new leader who would have trouble bringing the party together again the day after the convention.

So where does Hellyer go from here? Hellyer claimed that he did not join the

Conservative party immediately after he resigned from the Liberal caucus because he had watched the "so-called Red Tories in the house," whose policies were "very similar to where the L w r a l party was or where the NDP had already been."

Boos from the Macdonald, Clark and Mulroney supporters greeted his remarks.

MP Walter Baker (Grenville-Carleton), Hellyer's convention arrangements chairman, said that he had no prior knowledge of Hellyer's intention to include the divisive remarks. He said that had he known, he would have tried to convince Hellyer to change the speech.

Hellyer later released a letter to the delegates explaining that his remarks on Saturday afternoon "were not a slip of the tongue nor were they an ill-considered accident."

At a Hellyer dance, he apologized to those supporters who thought he should not have directed his remarks to the Red Tories, but said that it was his intention to polarize the convention and force the party to make a choice on its future direction.

A look at.Hellyer's political career shows him to be a three-time loser.

His first major political setback came in 1968 when he was a candidate for the leadershipof the Liberal party. Even though it was clear that Hellyer could not win that convention, he refused to throw his support behind Robert Winters until it was too late to stop Trudeau.

While it was clearly the rejection of an "old politician" style of leadership rather than the rejection of a French-Canadian lea.der, Clark (and the party) has to get that message out immediately if he has any hope of consolidating support in"Quebec.

The second scenario for disaster is an ideological split between the right and left wing elements of the party..

Joe Clark is of the Stanfield mould ideologically, but will have to attempt to steer a middle-of-the-road course to appease the right-wing element in the party and the conservative shift in the country.

The third question is Clark's ability to handle the caucus. His age and his less than four years' experience in parliament aren't assets as far as riding a tight line on the ragged bunch of Tory MPs.

Can Clark overcome those potential problems? Two positive notes on a French- English and right-left theme enter the picture.

First, Claude Wagner's gracious and sincere motion to the convention floor to malke Clark's election unanimous will hopefully ease the way in Quebec for the new leader's orgaqizing abilities.

'_ Second. even though Clark was grouped

left wing that Sinclair Stevens (considered by some to be the most right wing of the candidates) could not come to Clark as his second choice. .

There is some basis for an alliance for- ming between the left-right and English- French elements and so there is potential for Clark's leadership prospects.

But it's going to take time and time is something that Clark may not have. The Liberals aren't going to wait around for Clark to gain any ground. First indications are that Trudeau will

make mincemeat out of Clark in parliament.

One danger for the Tory party is that Trudeau will make Clark, a political unknown before the convention, a household word throughout the country, but on Trudeau's terms.

Is two years, or less if the Liberals figure the time is right for an early election, enough for Joe Clark to make his own mark on the country?

Opinions are varied. But the country will be watching Clark's performance, and it would do well to remember his words: "I intend to conduct myself in such a way that will make my (leadership) victory a victory

ideologically as a prGressive, he was n d so for all."

OLD BOB . . . loping out to pasture

.

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. . . "" -

HILLEL HOUSE PRESENTS Hot flashes student centre garden room. Panelists are Cliff Scotton, NDP MLA Bob Skelly, Jim MacFarlan and Philip Resnick.

Federation who destroyed his NDP membership card to protest that party's drift to the political right. Resnick, a UBC political science prof, is a founding member of the Committee for a Democratic University and a critic of many NDP policies.

Refreshments will be sold. Fans wi l l a lso have the opportuni ty to renew their membership in or join the B.C. Committee on Socialist Studies, which is sponsoring the event.

Healfh Student health services will

hold a nutrition clinic Thursday from noon to 4:30 p.m.

The clinic will offer free

PROFESSOR EUGENE ROTHMAN CAR LTON UNIVERSITY reviewed

Almost three months after tne Scotton, former national NDP hammer came down on the NDP c a m p a i g n p l a n n e r , w a s Dec. 11, party types are still paratrooped into B.C. to become wondering what hit them. provincial NDP secretary and to

Four people who think they organize the party. The official might have answers to that rumor is that if Scotton hadn't question will be members of a organized the party, the NDP panel discussion: the NDP in might well have been shut ou, in power - a retrospective view. . December.

The panel discussion will be MacFarlan i s a former 7:30 p.m. Friday in the grad president of the B.C. Teachers ~ ~~~~~~~~~~

THURSDAY,

FEBRUARY 26

12:30 p.m. 1:30 p.m.

POP AVAILABLE

*Tween classes TODAY SATURDAY individual counselling on any WOMEN'S OFFICE

S l i d e s h o w s f r o m P u b l i c ROTATING COFFEEHOUSE Educatlon about Prisons, noon, whatever you want to know, and S U B 207. Featuring Tetelestai. 7:30 p.m. t o appointments can be arranged

12 noon, Marpole United church, 67 th and ~ ~ d s ~ ~ . between o a k through the student health Clinic

aspect of nutrition, dieting or

CHINESE CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP Pastor Jim Davies on the vine and

. PRE-DENTAL SOC the branches, noon, S U B 205.

Dr. Ken Tobias on esthetics, noon, IRC 1.

GAY PEOPLE OF UBC Meeting re dance, noon, S U B 224.

E C K A N K A R

SUB 119. Introductory lecture, 7:30 p.m..

Dance class free with rec card, 4:30 p.m.. Armouries 208.

REC UBC

I N T E R V A R S I T Y C H R I S T I A N FELLOWSHIP

Ge'orge Malone on man's needs,

noon, Chem 250. part of series on basic Christianity,

-~ and Granville.

1~

in Wesbrook.

The Second

GENERAL RATES: Campus - 3 lines, 1 day $1 .OO; additional lines 25c. Commercial - 3 lines, 1 day $1.80; additional lines 4Oc. Additional days $1 5 0 & 35e.

Chssified ads are not accepted by telephone and are payabhin admme. Deadline is 17:30 a.m., the day before publication.

Publications Office, Room 247, S. U.B., UBC, Van. 8, B.C. GRAD, CLASS FRIDAY E L C I R C U L O

A L L I A N C E F R A N C A I S E Genera, noon, Brock annex 351A.

R e n d e z - v o u s , midi trente. la8 maison internationale, le salon.

General meeting, discussion of open house, noon, SUB 215.

Spain, 8 p.m., 1208 Granville. Fred Nelson on the upsurge in

Jazz guitarist Michael Kleniec.

campus centre. 8:30 p.m. to 1 a.m.. Lutheran

S K Y D I V I N G C L U B

YOUNG SOCIALISTS

T H E C E N T R E C O F F E E H O U S E

ASSOCIATION PSYCHOLOGY STUDENTS'

UBC administration president

discussion of psychological issues, D o u g K e n n y leads an open

noon, Bu. 203

( DECORATE WITH PRINTS

MEETING 5 - Coming Events 0 - Rentals "CONSORT WITH the followers~of all

religions in a spirit of friendliness

mal discussions on the Baha'i Faith and fellowship."- Baha'u'llah. Infor-

every Tuesday night at 5606 Presi- dents' Row. Phone 2247257.

TTRACTIVE SEMINAR ROOMS to rent - blackboards and screens. Free ust of projectors. 2285031.

will be held on 15 - Scandak SILVER JUBILEE REUNION, Smith

M e m o r i a 1 School, Port Alberni, March 27-28. For information contact Cheryl Toly, 3858 Bruce Street, Port Alberni, 723-3447 .

""

DISCO PARTY - Friday, Feb. 27th a t 8 p.m., SUB Ballroom. All students welcome. Tickets available in AMS office. Door prizes, liquids.

"~

DR. BUNDOLO is proud to announce

Saturday Night, Feb. 28, 7:30 p.m., "Enough seats for everyone." This

Old Auditorium. It's Free!

SATURDAY NIGHT comedy special!

Old Auditoricm It's Free! Dr. Bundolo Sat., Feb. 28, 7:30 p.m.,

AN YOU HANDLE IT? Find out Feb. 27th at The Party: Disco in SUB Ballroom a t 8 p.m. Sponsored by - UBC Ski and Skydiving Clubs. Tic- kets in A M s Office. Buy Now!

ONTRARY TO malicious rumors Sub- filmsoc is showing Clockwork Orange this Thurs., 7:OO Fri.. Sat., S u n . , 7:oO 9:30 in the SUB Aud. So be Sure to beat the c a. 20,OOO standing in line! 75e.

Thursday, March 4 at

1 : 30 p.m. 70 - Services

in Buchanan 106 iXPERlENCED MATH TUTOR WiU coach 1st year. Calculus, etc. Even- ings. Individual instruction on a one-to-one basis. Phone: 733-3644. 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. daily.

:USTOM CABINETRY & woodworking. Renovations, additions, new contruc- tion done anywhere. Guranteed work, free estimates. 889-3396.

10 - For Sale - Commercial

grin -bin CLEARANCE of scientific calculators. Texas Instruments, H.P., etc. 25 to 50% off. Call 738-5891. r

3209 W. Broadway

738-23 1 1 (Opp. Liquor.Storeand Super Valu)

Art Reproductions Art Nouveau

Largest Selection of Posters in B.C. Photo Blowups

from Negs & Prints Jokes - Gifts, etc.

' DECORATE W!TH POSTERS

DR, BUNDOLO 11 - For Sale - Private

'61 V.W. VAN, $200. FACULTY PARX- ING STICKER. 734-1980.

BO - Tutoring

SATURDAY SPECIAL 15 - Found 85 - Typing

\ CALCULATOR FOUND. Identify to claim. Dave Jones, 228-0665. 'AST, EFFICIENT TYPING. m Y S .

thesis, manuscripts. 2665063. EFFICIENT ELECTRIC TYPING, m y

home. Essays, thesis. etc. Neat ale

283-5311. curate work. Reasonable rates -

M I L L TYPE your term papers, essays, thesis, etc. Call Mrs. Fryfield. 3cpT- 5381.

20 - Housing

ROOM & BOARD, Kerrisdale home. Mature responsible student, male preferred, references, $150.00. Avail- able March 1. Evenings 281.0158.

STUDENT TO SHARE four-bedroom house with three others. Near 13th

March 1st. & Cambie. 879-0305. 0CcuPSZlC.V

lities, private entrance and bathroom. Non-smoker, male preferred. Near UBC gates. Tel. 2&9319 after 8 p.m.

FOR R E N T Sleeping room, snack fact- ."

~~~ ~ ~

George & Berny's VOLKSWAGEN

REPAIRS

90 - Wanted

9NYBODY OUT THERE teach clari- mt? strugmg beginner needs

p.m. assistance. Phone 228-8519 after 5

SUITE on 2nd Ave. near Jericho Beach.

Call Mark, 278-7I324 between 9 a.m. Rent %160/month female preferred.

and 4 p.m.

. 99 - Miscellaneous

WILL TRADE - old homestead a d 2 B.R. m m d h o w (eleCtriCo plumbing) near coast in Lwd, B.C., for 2 B.R house or apt. in de. Aug. 1976 to Aug. 1977. Wrik 6. Man, R.R. 2, Powell River.

FRATERITY HOUSE on campu5, $80.00 per month. Kitchen privileges, room only. Phone 224-9679 evenings. mana- ger.

30 - Jobs S.U.B. COMPLETE SERVICE BY

FACTORY-TRAINED MECHAN ICs

USE SUMMER JOBS in Eapbera cpnada Long hours: good pay. Interviews in person Tues. & Thurs. 130, 330. 7 p.m. in Rm. 224 SUB.

EARN $15.00 MONITORING psychology subjects for 24 hours. Monitors may eat, sleep, study, etc. Required to play tape during experiment. Sign up Friday. Feb. 2'?, 12:30, room 13, Henry Angus.

"- THEATRE UBYSSEY FREE SATURDAY

LIVE RADIO COMEDY FEBRUARY 28,1976 FULLY GUARANTEED A T REASONABLE RATES CLASS1 F I ED a CBC production 7:30 P.M.

THE OLD AUD.ITORIUM 731-8644

~

35 - Lost

GOLD WATCH LOST in Vicini& Panhellcnic House - Small diamond on either side of face. Sentimental value Reward. Phone 224-7237,

2125 W. 30th a t Arbutus Sat., 11:30 a.m.-CBU 690 A

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Thursday, February 26, 1976 T H E U B Y S S E Y Paae 7

‘Pot’ pourri in Calgary CALGARY (CUP) - Smoking

marijuana and hashish has become very commercialized with new products being introduced to the market weekly, says the owner of this city’s largest “head” shop.

Smokers can bubble the dope through wine, water, or beer, heat it electrically, super toke it, bong it, or roll it in banana flavored paper, says Rod Chapman.

“We sold over 40,000 pipes last year,” he said. “Everything from $37 hookahs to the $21 weed pipes.”

Although marijuana and hashish are illegal, the equipment for smoking them is not.

The store’s most popular ex- pensive pipes are the large

Pakistani hookahs which stand about three feet tall and are equipped with party bowls for group gatherings.

And for the cleanest weed possible there is a weed cleaning kit. A small plastic wheel separates the stems and the seeds from the green leaves.

“There are even dope testers now so you can test the quality of the marijuana or hash,” says Chapman.

Because there are new pipes and more accessories arriving on the market constantly, Chapman keeps in touch by making frequent trips to the United States for new supplies.

“I go to dealers’ shows and displays and they send me new brochures and s,amples,” said Chapman.

One of the pipes sent him for distri6ution is the electric pipe. It includes a burner that is elec- trically heated, causing the marijuana or hashish to smolder. The smoke is caught in a glass bubble and drawn Out through a hollow tube.

Although there seems to be an endless variety in pipes and smoking accessories, “actually there are only about five different ways of smoking marijuana or hashish. All the various pipes work but manv are basicallv onlv a

Education hurts natives different “shape or ma& from a different substance.”

Of course there are still many people who prefer to roll their own

All they have to d.o is decide on

.. according to AIM group rather than use a pipe.

WINNIPEG (CUP) - Education since the “whiteman makes all the plum, cinnamon, banana, has been “one of the main enemies guns.” But Indians, he said, have strawberry, licoricej

of the native people,” according to the most powerful weapon in the chocolateor lemon a spokesman for the American world - truth - on their side. papers. Indian Movement (AIM). . Speaking at the University of Winnipeg, .Vern Bellacourt said it must not be long before whites recognize native people’s right to the land and their culture.

Bellacourt said native people must walk with the peace pipe in one hand and “the freedom fighter’s gun” in the other because they have been contaminated by the violence brought upon them by the white man and white education.

He called prisons “institutes of higher learning for Indian people” because natives were “pushed out” of the white education system by racist curriculums. For example, he said native people make up only five per cent of the South Dakota population, yet account for 32 per cent of the prison population in that state.

AIM helped establish a “survival schooi system” in the U.S. where native languages, hunting, crafts and songs are taught to native children in the Minnesota-South Dakota area. He predicted that Canada would soon have its own native community college.

Bellacourt said native people could not put down their pipe of peace, without being destroyed, L

Your University -. Formal Wear

Centre Special Occasion

Formals Graduations

Dinner Jackets Tuxedos

Bride N’ Groom Formals

224-5221

4397 W. 10th ACe. (at Trimble)

INCOME TAX REFUNDS! Don’t get ripped off again! I f you need money against your refund come to THE BANK first. We offer fast service and much lower costs. In most cases you will qualify for an advance and need only be:

1) A student a t U.B.C. 2) A customer of the B of M on Campus

A A Oroa in and see us for more details.

MBankof (Campus Branches Montreal Only)

UBC SINGLE STUDENT RESIDENCES

REQUIRE HOUSE ADVISORS F0.R

1976-77 As a mature senior student living and working within the residence, the House Advisor provides basic paraprofessional advisory services to residence students.

As a student leader and a part of a residence area team. a House Advisor i s important in developing a sense of community within the residence area and in contributing to the overall quality of residence life.

This position involves diversified tasks and calls for a commitment of purpose and flexibility in, responding to varied situations. Candidates will possess a basic knowledge of human relations skills and a willingness to further develop in areas such as communication, leadership and counselling.

Application forms are available at the front desk of each residence area, Totem Park, Place Vanier and Walter H. Gage, and a t the Housing Officejn the New Administration Building.

Applications will close on Friday, March 5, 1976.

L

Nominations for executive positions will be received between March 3 and March 17 - Forms may be picked up and sub- mitted to Room 208 War Memorial Gym.

EXECUTIVE POSITIONS:

PRESIDENT SECRETARY VICE-PRESIDENT MEMBER-AT-LARGE

Letters of application for appointment to managerial positions will be received between March 3 and March 26. Submit applications to Room 208, War Memorial Gym.

POSITIONS A V A

Public Relations 0

ILABLE:

f f icer Gymnastics Equipment Manager Golf Badminton Skiing Basketball Swimming Curling Tennis Fencing Track & Field Field Hockey Volleyball Figure Skating

UBC SINGLE STUDENT RESIDENCES TOTEM PARK AND PLACE VANIER

REQUIRE RESIDENCE FELLOWS FOR

1976-1977 A Residence Fellow, as the name implies, is a fellow residence student who interacts with House members on a daily basis. In this role, the Residence Fellow acts as a friend and peer counsellor in helping students develop as ’individuals and community members.

The position provides an opportunity to develop basic human relations skills that will enable the Residence Fellow to make a positive contribution to residence life. As a part of the total residence team, the Residence Fellow contributes to the overall quality of residence life and provides support and assistance to the House Advisor.

Application forms are available at the Housing Office in the New Administration Building and at the front desk of each residence area: Totem Park, Place Vanier and Walter H. Gage.

Applications-will close on Friday, March 5, 1976.

VOLKSWAGENS TOO!

U.B.C. STUDENT DISCOUNTS MOT0 RS R EBU l.LT

12 Month Warranty 12,000 miles (Bugs Only)

. . . . . . . . . . . .

. . . . . . . . . . . . $235 For 36 H.P. $265 For 40 H.P. $295 . . . . . . . .For A V.W. 1500 $305. . . . . . . .For A V.W. 1600

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l

Page 8 T H E U B Y S S E Y Thursday, February 26, 1976

Tory feuds still there F ~ A page 1 organizer and fund-raiser,

still poksessed the party - demons Mulroney was the one who in- of party factions - of bitter troduced Wagner to Stanfield, in passions and of endless defeats, 1972 and in Mulroney’s mother’s

national magazine of the events to Of surely convoluted logic were unfold. On national television, a the Camp connections linked to reporter portrayed the yet-to-be- leadership candidate John Fraser, held convention as “an arena for the MP from Vancouver-South. He the party to tear itself apart.” had to be of the Camp following,

Perhaps they thought they were the gossip pundits said, because he setting the stage for high drama was, after all, a personal friend of and political theatre by casting the Malcolm . Wickson, who was event - ironically the most open Stanfield’s campaign manager in political convention ever held - in the 1974 federal election, and who terms of back room politics, by had political connections with trying to perpetuate old suspicions Norman Atkins, Camp’s brother- and worn out myths. in-law.

Undoubtedly, divisive under- While the backroom gossip currents remain in the Tory ranks, ch-culated among the lofty and the including the away-from-centre less than lofty elements of the ideological leanings and fran- party, word still came from the cophone participation in the party. heme's mouth, but a t a Premium, Sources of distrust linger on - the Camp himself having acquired the old quarrels and personal feuds status of a paid political pundit. within the party not sufficiently In reference to Diefenbaker’s healed. apparent rejection of Mulroney’s

right up to balloting day, however, parliamentary experience* Camp it was the intrigue of the dismissed the “stop Mulroney’” backrooms that preoccupied many faction Of the party as a group of the pundits. The notion typically ‘‘having Some Of the finest entertained was one of Dalton seventeenth-century - . .. minds in

“Bloody Sunday” said one apartment.

Throughout the campaign and. candidacy because of his lack of

wounds and battle scars of per- sonal feuds and quarrels, but of lingering divisions in the Tory ranks, the party emerged somehow exorcised of its demons.

But surely one of the most im- portant legacies of the convention was the farewell address of the outgoing party leader, Robert Stanfield.

An urgent appeal for party unity, Stanfield’s speech was one of the most remarkable of his career. Perhaps surprisingly, for Stanfield in his eight years of leading the Tory party had neither healed the personal rift between himself and Diefenbaker (Diefenbaker hasn’t attended a caucus meeting in eight years) nor achieved detente within the party.

But in his address to delegates, however, his blunt confrontation of the divisions that had plagued the party illustrated clearly the need for a sense of common purpose, and the responsibility of -the party to unite behind the new leader chosen by the convention, to work as a team.

With Stanfield’s words still echoing over the convention hall on balloting day, Diefenbaker’s vote went virtually unnoticed by delegates.

The old chieftain of the party turned out to be - not a kingpin - but a mere curiosity.

Camp and John Diefenbaker as Canada.’’ puppeteers behind the scenes, despite the fact that the kingpins on balloting day. delegates going into .the four-day

had Hellyer, Horner and to a lesser reminded and warned

blessing of the former Tory prime minister, on the other hand, they linked in turn each left-wing candidate, to Camp, the man who had depsed the senior chieftain.

Throughout pre-convention week, reporters watched eagle- eyed over Diefenbaker and his

While onthe onehand the pundits leadership convention, were

extent Muhoney vying for the by the pundits of not only of the

aides, ready to swoop down should he give the slightest hint of whom he favored and whom he didn’t.

The pundits, shrugged, and surmised that Hellyer had to be the blessed one, since he had as active supporters not only aging MPs from the Diefenbaker era, but current Diefenbaker aides. While the Chief didn’t come right out and declare support for the, former- Liberal-turned-Tory, he did say, after all, that he thought political conversions were acceptable -

with parliamentary experience, of cour se .

This was immediately taken as a Diefenbaker swipe - actually the first of several - at Mulroney, the only Tory leadership candidate who had never held public office.

According to the grapevine, Difenbaker had been irked by a newsletter which Mulroney had sent to convention delegates, containing a photo of the candidate with Diefenbaker.

Then, on the morning the con- vention started the pundits shrugged again, but this time in confusion. Reports out of Ottawa’s civic centre had it that Diefen- baker stopped deliberately at the Horner booth, picked up one of the brochures with Horner’s face staring larger than life from its cover, and signed his name to it. Horner supporters were overjoyed.

So as not to be outdone, however, rumors abounded in the Camp camp as well.

Flora Macdonald, the real Red Tory, had the closest links with the Camp political machinery, having joined forces with Camp in initiating the leadership review which. finally ousted Diefenbaker and brought about the Stanfield election in 1967. She herself was fired by Diefenbaker in 1966 from her p i t i o n a s secretary to the national director of the party.

Based on even less than cir- cumstantial evidence, both Clark and Mulroney weresimilarly allied with -the Camp psychosis; Clark because he supported Stanfield at the 1967 leadership convention, and served a three-year stint as his executive assistant. Mulroney’s connections with Camp. however, contrary to what the “Mulroney- Camp” anti-posterswould have led one to believe, were more con- strued: as a longtime Quebec Tory i

Full Refreshments Available I EVER YON€ WELCOME

UNIVERSITY O F C A L G A R Y FACULTY O F ENVIRONMENTAL DESIGN

A graduate faculty offering degrees in

ARCHITECTURE URBANISM ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE

The Faculty acknowledges the changing character o f the professions and their responsibility in, and to contemporary Canadian society. The academic setting provides for learning and research opportunities directed to a better understanding o f environmental issues. The program prepares graduates with professional skills that enable them to contribute to soc i e ty in the traditional as well as n e w institutional settings. Opportunities exist for exploring new approaches to environmental design and for re-examining the values, the scientific premises and institutional arrangements which have hitherto shaped Canadian environments. The M.E. Des (Architecture) degree is on the R.A.I.C. list of accredited

Institute of Planners as qualification for membership. There is, as yet , no programs. The M.E. Des (Urbanism) degree is recognized by the Canadian

recognized professio.nal association for environmental scientists. There are n o prerequisite degrees or courses for adnlission. Applicants to the degree program will normally possess a baccalaureate degree from a

s tudy o f at least 3.0 ( in a 4 point grade system). The Faculty considers recognized university with a grade point average in the final two years o f

qualifications of equivalent standing. Students who already hold a bachelor’s degree in architecture may apply

aspects o f professional practise including urban design and planning. and pursue a specialized program in interdisciplinary research or certain

Fellowships and scholarships up to $4,800 are offered by the Faculty. Other financial assistance is available in the form of research and service scholarships. Deadline for applicatiod is April 1 for registration in the Fall Session: November 1 for registration in the Winter Session.

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