home he'll the udyssey shrum · 2013. 7. 30. · he'll get home the udyssey shrum time...

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He'l l ge t home THE UDYSSEY Shru m tim e Vol . XLV I Ex-rowe r takes ove r UBC cre w Glen Mervyn h a s bee n named the new coach of th e UBC rowing crews . Mervyn, 26, was a membe r of the UBC crew that won a gold medal at the 1958 Britis h Empire Games and a silve r medal at the '59 Pan America n Games . He stroked the eight s to a silver medal in the 196 0 Olympics in Rome . Mervyn replaces Lauri e West who, was relieved o f coaching duties late in th e summer . The announcement w a s made by Athletic Director Bu s Phillips after the decision t o appoint Mervyn was approved by the Men's Athletic Commit - tee and the Rowing Advisory Committee . Phillips said, "It was a popu- lar choice . Glen is a fine oars- man and a natural leader . " Mervyn, who graduated i n 1960 with a B .Sc ., has been teaching at West Vancouve r high school for the past three years . As a student of former coach Frank Reid, who origin - ally built the UBC rowing dy- nasty, it is expected Mervy n will use Reid's general techni- que . BY TOM WAYMA N BURNABY MOUNTAI N (Staff)—I haven't found SF A yet . Know why ? Because it rained, that' s why. All weekend . And I go t soaked through . On Friday, I was conveye d to the edge of C-lot by the specially equipped Ubysse y exploration car, and wave d goodbye to its hefty and hu- morous driver . Then I started walking . About 2 a .m . Saturday I got to Burnaby Mountain . I set up camp . It started to rain . It rained all day Satur- day ; it poured all day Sun - day, and it oceaned all da y Monday . VANCOUVER, B.C ., TUESDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1963 48 I'm going to ask the edi- tors if I can come home fo r homecoming . Get it, home fo r homecoming? How can the y refuse ? Meanwhile, t w o thing s have given a clue to Simo n Fraser Academy—which is is what I'm looking for . Carved on a tree was a heart, in which were th e letters : "G . S . loves S .F .A . " And on Saturday ,when th e rain slackened, I heard a voice up the hill singing : "Shrum-where, over the rainbow . . . Apart from these all I'v e seen is the rain . I haven't seen SFA up here at all . AB RICHARD S . . . Great Trekker Former AM S presiden t new Trekke r Former AMS president Dr . A . E . " Ab" Richards will re- ceive this year's Great Trek- ker Award . The award is given to a n alumnus who students feel ha s contributed much to his uni- versity and gained recognitio n in his field . Dr . Richards, president o f the AMS in 1922-23, was active in organizing t h e origina l Great Trek . He spearheaded the driv e which collected more tha n 55,000 signatures supportin g the Point Grey site for UBC . The university was housed i n shacks near the Vancouve r General Hospital at the time . He led a mass demonstra- tion to Point Grey where each student placed a stone on wha t is now The Cairn . Then, he and other student s went to Victoria fo see Premie r John Oliver . Work was started on th e campus soon after . Dr . Richards graduated from UBC with a BSA in 1923 and received an honorary doctor - ate in science in 1949 . He served for 30 year s the Canadian departmen t agriculture . Before his retirement las t year he was negotiator for the department at the European Economic Community in Gen- eva . The presentation will be made Thursday at the Home- coming pep meet rally . Last year's Great Trekke r award was awarded to former UBC president Dr . N . A . M. MacKenzie. CUS words fl y in Brock Loung e Students get a chance to - day to find out what th e Canadian Union of Student s really is . Delegates to the NFCUS national Congress will dis- cuss the new union, and an- swer student questions at noon in Brock Lounge . Participating in the dis- cussion, entitled " CUS, ca n it work?" are AMS presiden t Malcolm Scott, Ross Munr o and Roger McAfee. BATHTUB BARITONE Malcolm Scott lets fly with golden ton e at Saturday's football game between University of Albert a Gold Bears and UBC . Scott, AMS president, and othe r councillors tried to keep crowd cheering in face of 44-3 3 defeat for Birds . (See more pictures, Page 6 . ) Ubyssey's Perspectiv e seams to be all in stitche s A stitch in time is making The Ubyssey's feature s magazine two days late arriving on campus . Perspective, which was to be distributed Monday , will now be available at Ubyssey distribution points Wed - day . The delay is caused by binders stitching the 16-pag e effort together . It was not originally intended to stitc h the magazine . Contained in the first issue are articles on the U .S . race trouble, modern day Germany, and a Russian stu- dent's look at UBC and Canada . It's free . FEARLESS TOM Shrum-where in Burnaby Oceaned is a new word . I t means the air was wetter tha n the ocean . Who can go exploring i n the rain? All I've seen of Burnab y Mountain is my camp at th e bottom . For three days all I've don e is sit in my camp and swea r at the rain . Which is a bas e thing to do . I call it bas e camp . Meals up here are wonder- ful . Because of the rain I can't get a fire going—eve n after 11 years in the Bo y Scouts. I want to go home . I wan t to go back to the nice, war m Brock basement . I've thought of a plan . Home for homecoming ? Tom's search for SFA drizzles o n Universit y clams up o n oo .kstor e The Administration has clamme d policy . Friday The Ubyssey charge d that : The bookstore was mak- ing a high profit from studen t sales ($30,000 to $40,000) . The operating costs wer e out of line . ($200,000) . The markup on books i s between 25 and 35 per cent . Monday Bookstore manage r John Hunter refused to dis- close the profit made by th e bookstore . He said he didn't know . He said the person respon- sible is Bursar William White . But White refused to tel l The Ubyssey what the profi t is . He said it is not universit y policy to make public eithe r the profits or losses of admini- stration-supervised facilities . But Hunter admitted the bookstore was making profits . He said books were marked u p 25 per cent but the marku p only covered costs such a s maintenance and clerical an d administration charges . "A business either looses or makes money," said Hunter . "If you get left with a lot o f bad or unsold books on you r hands you can lose your shir t overnight . " He said he didn't think a student co-operative bookstor e would work out . He said co-operative book - stores in the U .S . pay out divi- dends from profits made . "But these often tend to en d up in a few hands or become lost," said Hunter . (The co-operative bookstor e at the UCLA campus in Berk - ley recently returned $76,00 0 to students) . up on its bookstore i n of

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Page 1: home He'll THE UDYSSEY Shrum · 2013. 7. 30. · He'll get home THE UDYSSEY Shrum time Vol. XLVI Ex-rower takes over UBC crew Glen Mervyn h a s been named the new coach of the UBC

He'llget

home THE UDYSSEY Shrumtime

Vol . XLV I

Ex-rowertakes ove rUBC crew

Glen Mervyn h a s beennamed the new coach of th eUBC rowing crews .

Mervyn, 26, was a membe rof the UBC crew that won agold medal at the 1958 BritishEmpire Games and a silve rmedal at the '59 Pan AmericanGames . He stroked the eight sto a silver medal in the 1960Olympics in Rome .

Mervyn replaces Lauri eWest who, was relieved ofcoaching duties late in thesummer .

The announcement w a smade by Athletic Director BusPhillips after the decision toappoint Mervyn was approvedby the Men's Athletic Commit-tee and the Rowing AdvisoryCommittee .

Phillips said, "It was a popu-lar choice. Glen is a fine oars-man and a natural leader . "

Mervyn, who graduated in1960 with a B .Sc ., has beenteaching at West Vancouve rhigh school for the past threeyears .

As a student of formercoach Frank Reid, who origin-ally built the UBC rowing dy-nasty, it is expected Mervynwill use Reid's general techni-que .

BY TOM WAYMA NBURNABY MOUNTAIN

(Staff)—I haven't found SF Ayet .

Know why ?Because it rained, that' s

why. All weekend. And I gotsoaked through .

On Friday, I was conveye dto the edge of C-lot by thespecially equipped Ubysseyexploration car, and wave dgoodbye to its hefty and hu-morous driver .

Then I started walking .About 2 a.m. Saturday I

got to Burnaby Mountain .I set up camp . It started to

rain. It rained all day Satur-day; it poured all day Sun -day, and it oceaned all day

Monday .

VANCOUVER, B.C., TUESDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1963 4 8

I'm going to ask the edi-tors if I can come home forhomecoming . Get it, home forhomecoming? How can the yrefuse ?

Meanwhile, t w o thing shave given a clue to SimonFraser Academy—which isis what I'm looking for .

Carved on a tree was aheart, in which were th eletters: "G. S. loves S .F.A . "

And on Saturday ,when therain slackened, I heard avoice up the hill singing :

"Shrum-where, over therainbow . . .

Apart from these all I'veseen is the rain .

I haven't seen SFA up hereat all .

AB RICHARD S. . . Great Trekker

Former AMSpresidentnew Trekker

Former AMS president Dr .A. E . "Ab" Richards will re-ceive this year's Great Trek-ker Award .

The award is given to analumnus who students feel hascontributed much to his uni-versity and gained recognitio nin his field .

Dr. Richards, president ofthe AMS in 1922-23, was activein organizing t h e originalGreat Trek.

He spearheaded the drivewhich collected more tha n55,000 signatures supportingthe Point Grey site for UBC .

The university was housed i nshacks near the VancouverGeneral Hospital at the time .

He led a mass demonstra-tion to Point Grey where eachstudent placed a stone on whatis now The Cairn .

Then, he and other student swent to Victoria fo see PremierJohn Oliver .

Work was started on thecampus soon after .

Dr . Richards graduated fromUBC with a BSA in 1923 andreceived an honorary doctor-ate in science in 1949 .

He served for 30 year sthe Canadian departmentagriculture.

Before his retirement las tyear he was negotiator for thedepartment at the EuropeanEconomic Community in Gen-eva .

The presentation will bemade Thursday at the Home-coming pep meet rally .

Last year's Great Trekkeraward was awarded to formerUBC president Dr. N. A. M.MacKenzie.

CUS words flyin Brock Lounge

Students get a chance to -day to find out what theCanadian Union of Student sreally is .

Delegates to the NFCUSnational Congress will dis-cuss the new union, and an-swer student questions atnoon in Brock Lounge .

Participating in the dis-cussion, entitled " CUS, canit work?" are AMS presiden tMalcolm Scott, Ross Munr oand Roger McAfee.

BATHTUB BARITONE Malcolm Scott lets fly with golden ton eat Saturday's football game between University of Albert aGold Bears and UBC . Scott, AMS president, and othe rcouncillors tried to keep crowd cheering in face of 44-3 3defeat for Birds . (See more pictures, Page 6 . )

Ubyssey's Perspectiveseams to be all in stitches

A stitch in time is making The Ubyssey's feature smagazine two days late arriving on campus .

Perspective, which was to be distributed Monday,will now be available at Ubyssey distribution points Wed -day .

The delay is caused by binders stitching the 16-pag eeffort together. It was not originally intended to stitchthe magazine .

Contained in the first issue are articles on the U .S .race trouble, modern day Germany, and a Russian stu-dent's look at UBC and Canada . It's free .

FEARLESS TOMShrum-where in Burnaby

Oceaned is a new word . I tmeans the air was wetter thanthe ocean .

Who can go exploring inthe rain?

All I've seen of BurnabyMountain is my camp at th e

bottom .For three days all I've don e

is sit in my camp and swea rat the rain . Which is a bas ething to do. I call it basecamp .

Meals up here are wonder-ful . Because of the rain Ican't get a fire going—eve nafter 11 years in the BoyScouts.

I want to go home . I wantto go back to the nice, war mBrock basement . I've thoughtof a plan .

Home for homecoming?

Tom's search for SFA drizzles o n

Universityclams up on

oo.kstoreThe Administration has clammed

policy .Friday The Ubyssey charged

that :• The bookstore was mak-

ing a high profit from studentsales ($30,000 to $40,000) .

• The operating costs wer eout of line . ($200,000) .

• The markup on books isbetween 25 and 35 per cent .

Monday Bookstore managerJohn Hunter refused to dis-close the profit made by th ebookstore .

He said he didn't know .He said the person respon-

sible is Bursar William White .But White refused to tel l

The Ubyssey what the profitis .

He said it is not universitypolicy to make public eitherthe profits or losses of admini-stration-supervised facilities .

But Hunter admitted thebookstore was making profits .He said books were marked u p25 per cent but the markuponly covered costs such asmaintenance and clerical andadministration charges .

"A business either looses ormakes money," said Hunter ."If you get left with a lot o fbad or unsold books on yourhands you can lose your shir tovernight . "

He said he didn't think astudent co-operative bookstor ewould work out .

He said co-operative book -stores in the U .S. pay out divi-dends from profits made .

"But these often tend to endup in a few hands or becomelost," said Hunter .

(The co-operative bookstoreat the UCLA campus in Berk -ley recently returned $76,000to students) .

up on its bookstore

inof

Page 2: home He'll THE UDYSSEY Shrum · 2013. 7. 30. · He'll get home THE UDYSSEY Shrum time Vol. XLVI Ex-rower takes over UBC crew Glen Mervyn h a s been named the new coach of the UBC

Page 2

THE UBYSSEY

Tuesday, October 22, 196 3

Open House

HOWARD GREE N. . . Canada and the UN

Top speakersmark UN'sbirthday

UBC United Nations club i s

marking the 18th birthday ofthe UN this week with a pro-gram of speakers and discus-sions .

Former External Affair sminister Howard Green wil l

be the featured speaker . He

will discuss "Canada and the

United Nations Wednesday

noon in Bu. 106 .

A film on the global struggl efor food will be shown today

at noon in Bu 106 .

Tonight at 8 p .m ., Dr . LionelTiger will discuss "Internation-al racism in the United Na-tions" at the Christmas SealAuditorium, 10th and Willow .

United States aggression i nSouth East Asia wil be debatedat model Security Counci lmeeting Thursday at 8 p .m. inInternational House .

And the UN itself will facethe jury Friday in a student -faculty debate, "Resolved theUN has failed . "

Liquor seizedin frat rai d

TORONTO (CUP) — Tor-onto police siezed 995 bottlesof beer and 35 bottles of liquorat a University of Toronto frat-ernity Friday .

Two residents were chargedwith illegally selling beer froma beer machine .

RCMP's numberis up again

The lucky number is 216-396 .

No Charlie, that's not th elatest Irish sweeps draw —it's the licence number ofthe RCMP's newest ghos tcar . .

It's a beige and white 196 2or 1963 Ford Fairlane .

The two-day weekend eventis designed to show people"their university" .

Theme of the triennial eventwill be "The University — apartner in your community' sprogress" .

A theme symbol, yet to b edecided, will be on all Ope nHouse banners, signs and sta-tionary.

More than 3,500 studentswill help out .

Clubs will have booths inthe Armory and faculties willset up displays in their bulid-ings .

Co-eds will lead campu stours .

Open House is being heldSaturday, March 7 and Sun-

day, March 8 .Previously, it was held Fri-

day night and Saturday ."The change is an . effort t o

reach parents of out-of-townstudents," said Barry McDell ,a member of the Open Housecommittee executive .

"Most parents just drop thei rsons or daughters off and neverget to see the campus. Nowthey can spend the weekendvisiting and get to know UBC, "said McDell .

A special program has beenlined up for high school stu-dents .

Engineering will sponsor a norientation program for highschool students interested i nEngineering .

Other faculties are plannin gsimrilar programs aimed athigh school students .

Major scientific experiment swill be shown . The music dep-artment will have a display onthe evolution of music and theeducation department wil ldemonstrate television as ateaching aid .

A satirical review will beproduced .

Two prizes, of $100 and $50 ,will be awarded for the bes tstudent-written reviews .

A joint student-faculty com-mittee, headed by student EdLavalle, has ben planning th eevent since last March .

Students will be able to se e

productions at the Queen Eliza-

beth Theater this year for one

sixteenth of the regular cost .

The Special Events Commit-

tee, in conjunction with Fam-ous Artists, is offering the

special rate to faculty an d

students .

All seats, which regularly

cost up to $4 .50, will, if no t

sold by the day of the produc-tion, be available for 75c .

Famous Artists this seasonwill present such artists as Vic -tor Berge, Johnny Mathis, th eKingston Trio and the BolshoiBallet .

Posters with informationabout upcoming events will be

PHILIP WHITE. heads campaig n

Red Featherblitz hitsWednesday

A one-hour United Appealblitz will hit the class-roomson Wednesday .

Students will enter class-rooms with collection can sduring the 11 :30 to 12:30 lec-ture period .

Last year the blitz raised$1,534.87 .

S t u de n t publicity chair-man, Larry Terrace, hopesthat the 1963 student contri-bution will be increased .

"Students should rememberthat this is the only appealofficially sanctioned by theuniversity during the year ,he said .

The 1963 campaign is alsothe first combined RedFeather-Red Cross appeal .

The entire university cam-paign is under the directionof a joint student - facultycommittee, headed by com-merce professor, Phili pWhite .

The Wednesday blitz is or-ganized by the commerce fac-ulty, but students from everyfaculty have been enlisted .

The 1962 total UBC contri-bution to the Red Feathe rdrive was $17,102 .22 .

Hospital lectureC. Naunton Morgan, vice-

president of the Royal Collegeof Surgeons will speak Wed-nesday, at 8 p .m. in the UB Cmedical building at Vancouve rGeneral Hospital .

displayed at several locationsaround campus .

To obtain a seat, studen t

should go to the Special Events

office in the Brock extension

and get a slip to be presentedat the theatre box office on th enight of the show.

the atti ccoffee house

October 23

JUBILATION SINGERS9:30 - 10:45 - 12 :1 5

3607 W. Broadway

RE 8-0410

U BC's art loversnon-absorbent types

UBC's art gallery director says students refuse to soa kup the beauty of modern art .

The director, Al Balkind ,complained: "Students respondto exhibits with immense ap- needed by AMSathy, shocked surprise, smould-ering resentment or open hos-

tility . "

He said many students wil l

attend a contemporary display

and verbally assault all they

see .

"They say they do not likeabstraction, cubism or othermodern schools," he said .

"Yet give them the realismthey ask for and they simplywill not bother to come .

"The art gallery is not abattle ground . "

The gallery should teach thestudent to see and appreciat ethe beauty that can be found i nalmost any artisitic work, h esaid .

"It should make the studentmore flexible in his or her ap-preciation," said Balkind . "Toomany people tend to view artand artists as mere channels ofmoral communication .

"The art gallery should be aplace of visual interest an dexcitement, not a pulpit . "

He said it is the aim of thegallery to present as varied aselection of art as possible .

23 art filmson at theatre

Twenty-three films on art

from 16 countries are beingshown at the Varsity Theatreon West Tenth .

The films, known as the Van-couver Festival of Films on

Art, will be shown until Octo-

ber 27 .The collection came from

the recent UNESCO Festivaland seminar in Ottawa .

BANK OF MONTREALeauadss;s 7G'z4e Sawa pis Stude .te

a big step on the road to success is an early banking connectio nu4-a 9

Clara Nette(Music 52.) says .

UBC doors openfor 100,000More than 100,000 people are expected to invade UBC

during Open House, 1964,

Faculty, students getcut rate on QE shows

Two delegates

The AMS wants to sen dtwo delegates to the Lava lConference on Canadian Af-

fairs Nov . 5 to 9 in Quebec

City .

Applications close Oct . 28at 4 p.m.—only cost to dele-

gates will be a $25 registra-tion fee .

MAC cash

boosts

intramuralsStudent council has grante d

an extra $1,410 to the under-graduate societies to bolstertheir intramural athletics bud-gets .

The money will be distri-buted to the various undergra dsocieties by the Undergraduat eSocieties' Committee .

The money has been reallo-cated from the regular men' sathletics budget .

Men's athletics receives amandatory $4.20 per studentfrom the AMS fee, but by cus-tom has been getting $4 .30 perstudent .

Law president Paul Frasersuggested the discretionary 1 0cents per student be ear-marked specifically for intra-murals . So it was .

Fraser said the extra moneywould help to foster increasedparticipation in intramura lathletics .

"It costs $5 or $10 for everyteam we enter in an intramuralleague," said Fraser . "Manyundergraduate societies haveto cut back on entries becaus ethey don't have the money . "

I strike the right note in my persona l

finances by paying expenses with a

'MYPersonal Chequing Account at . . . 'MY BANK'ro 3 Mrzao (M4DMks

Page 3: home He'll THE UDYSSEY Shrum · 2013. 7. 30. · He'll get home THE UDYSSEY Shrum time Vol. XLVI Ex-rower takes over UBC crew Glen Mervyn h a s been named the new coach of the UBC

Tuesday, October 22, 1963

THE ' UBYSSEY

Page 3

Censor orders Ash cutshowing

SCIENCEMEN'S SHACK. . . no match for arty arsonist

Sciencemen seekpermanent home

AMS PR's

bare boards

next weekThe Alma Mater Society

wants lots of publicity to getstudents out to the generalmeeting November 14 .

So all notices and advertise-ments on notice boards willbe torn down one week beforeto make room for general meet-ing publicity .

"The janitorial staff willtear down all notices, signs an dadvertising from bulletinboards," said Ken Leitch, co -ordinator of student activities .

"It's hard to get a quorum ,so we want lots of space fo rgeneral meeting notices . "

Quorum for the annual meet-ing is 2,000 students or tenper cent of the student body .

Aggies get moneyStudent council has agree d

to grant the Agriculture Under -graduate Society $82 to hos ta Nov. 3 conference of highschool students interested inenrolling in Agriculture.

mote our needs we areignored," he said .

Sciencemen built a ricketyshack on the library lawn las tThursday.

It was later burned down byprankish arts-men.

Rennie said last year hi sgroup commandeered a BrockHall office—but this was takenaway from them this year .

Co-ordinator of student acti-vities Ken Leitch said therejust isn't enough room in theBrock .

Rennie said the sciencemenneed a base because of theirlarge numbers . (2,700 strong) .

"It's difficult to organizeany activity we undertak ewhen you can't even get to-gether with your executive, "he said .

The Bitter Ash is not goingdowntown, but it is goingacross Canada .

The Ash finished its las tshowing at UBC Friday .

"I'm not really interested insending it downtown any-more," Ash producer LarryK,ent said Monday .

He said provincial censorRay McDonald, who saw themovie Saturday night, ordere da large part of a sex scene cutand the deletion of swea rwords if the film was to beshown downtown.

"It is just what we expect-ed," he said .

Cinema 1 6plans show

Cinema 16 presents a filmshowing Wednesday in Chem .250 at 8 p .m .

The program will includefilms on Rogers Pass, land re-clamation in Holland and asatirical film on physical fit-ness fads .

Admission is $2 for 'studentsand $3 for adults .

Kent said no downtowntheatres have offered to showthe movie .

"And I'm not going to riskmoney by renting a place my-self," he said .

He said he has made a profitof $100 on the movie aftershowing it at UBC for the las ttwo weeks .

"If a theatre did ask to showthe movie, I'd let them, eventhough the integrity of themovie has been destroyed bythe censor," said Kent .

"It would get me money tomake another movie, and that' sthe most important thing . "

He said he has started nego-tiations with the University ofToronto and McGill to havethe movie shown there—uncut .

"I'd like to form a club formaking movies among abou tfive universities, then we couldpool our resources and makemore movies," he said .

ORDER YOURMONOGRAMMED

UMBRELLA NOW *

$2.66regular $5.95

* 10-day delivery

UBC

SERVICEAllison & DalhousiePhone: CA 4-3939

Somewhere lurking on campus are sciencemen .

They are looking for officespace—any office space—fortheir undergraduate societyheadquarters .

"We're the third largestfaculty on campus and we'venever had a base," said scienc epresident Chuck Rennie .

"Then when we pull a stuntlast Thursday trying to pro-

CALLING ALL DOGPATCH ERS !

Musical Society

FINAL AUDITION Sfor L'il Abner

Wednesday, October 23 – 7 :00 p.m.at the Clubhouse

No previous audition necessary — if you want a lead —

COME AND TRY OUT !

Information : RE 8-3286

MIMMInMIle

80 students to getWalla Walla weekend

Eighty UBC students and a dozen faculty member swill spend the Nov . 8 to 10 weekend at Walla Walla biolog-ical research station discussing the "Individual in Mas sSociety . "

Fall Symposium chairman Hardial Rains said applica-tions available at the AMS office must be returned by Oct .30.,

Students chosen will pay only a $6 fee which willcover bus transportation to Walla Walla (and back) andcabin accommodation and meals at the reseach station .

SUB site best,planners clai m

The site chosen for the proposed student union buildingis the best available—according to those planning the project .

SUB committee chairmanDean Feltham told a meetin gof 200 students Friday: "If wedon't take the site offered now ,we'll have to take an inferio rone next year. "

Architectural consu l t a n tWarnett Kennedy said the siteis a good one .

"It is presently at the fringeof the academic centre," hesaid, "but will be right in thecentre in a few years . "

(The site is that of the pres-ent stadium, next to the gym) .

AMS president Malcol mScott said the question of whe-ther fees would be raised t opay for the building dependedon financing .

"If we have 20 years to pa yfor it, the present levy of $1 0per student will be sufficient, "he said .

"If a raise is necessary, "Scott added, "it will not bemore than $5, making a tota lof $15 per student . "

Students will give their fina ldecision on the project, now inits fifth year of planning, atthe AMS general meetin gNovember 14 .

Page 4: home He'll THE UDYSSEY Shrum · 2013. 7. 30. · He'll get home THE UDYSSEY Shrum time Vol. XLVI Ex-rower takes over UBC crew Glen Mervyn h a s been named the new coach of the UBC

THZ UBYSSZYPublished Tuesdays, Thursdays and Fridays throughout the universit yyear by the Alma Mater Society, University of B .C . Editorial opinion sexpressed are those of the editor and not necessarily those of the AM Sor the University . Editorial office, CA 4-3916 . Advertising office, C A4-3242, Loc. 26 . Member Canadian University Press .

Winner Canadian University Press trophies for generalexcellence, news photography, editorial writin g

Authorized as second-class mail by Post Office Department ,Ottawa, and for payment of postage in cash .

VANCOUVER, B.C., TUESDAY, OCTOBER 22, 196 3

John's a cardYou have to hand it to UBC president, Dr . John

Macdonald.He 's taken Premier Bennett for a ride .And a long, underhanded one at that . Not the kind

of thing you'd expect from a university president.But at latest count (immediately before press time )

B.C. had four universities .It was four times as many as B.C . had when Dr. Mac-

donald took office a little over a year ago .And it was almost certain not to stop at four .Why, the Premier was creating universities as fast

as he creates jobs for defeated cabinet ministers.And to what are we to give credit for the sudden

proliferation of educational plants ?The Macdonald Report, of course .A masterpiece of trickery and deceit that document

was .You will recall that Dr. Macdonald, tongue-in-cheek ,

hand-outstretched, palm upturned, called in his repor tfor only one university in B.C .

"In B.C., UBC will be the only university . It willgrow at the peak of a system of junior colleges, " the pre-sident said for all to hear. "One day it will be one ofthe great universities of the world . "

Everyone, including Bennett (who usually out-smarts the most educated of our leaders) fell for it .

Macdonald's low blow struck Bennett where it hurts—in the vanity .

We all now know Macdonald knew damn well thePremier wouldn 't accept his report.

Has the Premier ever accepted the recommendationsof any of his government's royal commissions and inves-tigators?

Macdonald, we see, knew he wouldn't stand a snow -ball's chance in Victoria of getting eight universities an done junior college if he asked for them .

The Premier would probably set up eight junior col-leges and one university, if he asked for that .

And that would be next to useless.So, after six months of grandstanding (described as

intensive research), Macdonald presented a report tha tasked for eight colleges and one university .

Macdonald waited and then laughed like hell ,as uni-versities blossomed everywhere from Simon Fraser toSouth Similkameen .

But it left him with one problem ."That name UBC has a certain amount of emotional

attachment, I suppose," he was heard to mutter . "But Iguess they'll get used to Point Grey J .C . "

"Excuse me, please," he added . "I have an appoint-ment with Gordon Shrum . "

Passing the bookThe arrogant manner in which bookstore and ad-

ministration officials dismiss student queries and com-plaints about their little gold-mine remind us of Mr.Bennett's infamous financial tactics.

Hide all the figures in bookkeepers' hugger-mugger ,and soak the customer until he screams.

Secrecy, its seems, is becoming a habit with the me nwho run UBC .

Mr. Hunter, the bookstore man, says he doesn't kno w!low much profit his operation is scooping from th estudents .

Mr. White, who holds the administration's pursestrings, won ' t say.

You can't get anything from the university 's finan-cial statement, published for the first time this year underthe public bodies ' financial information act. The book-store is lumped with food services, housing, hospital ,"etc ., " under one total .

It is time the bookstore, at least, told the studentsjust how much they're being gouged for. It's time thoseinsidious little price-stickers, which sometimes appear inthe threes and fours on a single book, were justified.

Open up, chaps . What's good for the board o fgovernors and the bookstore obviously isn't good for thestudents .

''—IM''tiliMERWAIRMSEMEEtNiMEr/MiaMMaMi'MMOIERMal5iM iS::iMilaMiiijA

LETTER Sfinding of the still confi-dential report on teaching sa-laries published by the Cana-dian Association of Univer-sity Teachers in December "will be that UBC's salarieswill drop from 8th place to12th place .The report referred to is

an annual survey. It is notconfidential : It merely hasnot yet taken place . As ofnow no one knows what itsfindings will be . The drop to12th place is merely my pri-vate guess. I hope I amproved wrong .

F. K. BOWERS.President, Faculty Association .

Red-bloodedEditor, The Ubyssey :

While we, of the culturedengineering hierarchy, do no tclaim to be amorphous or ani-malistic as stated by the asex-ual artsmen, we feel that ou rr e d -blooded supremacy i smore than ample to demon-strate unparalleled superiori-ty over all campus groupswho continuously attempt t obask in the glory reflectedfrom our broad, red-coate dshoulders .

However, as the challengeissued by the artsmen con-tained degrading statement sconcerning the glorious engin-eers, we feel that we must no tonly accept the challenge, bu tinsist that a penalty be im-poCed upon the losing team ;the said penalty to be decide dupon by the Engineers .

Since the Arts US is thechallenging group, they areentitled to supply the rope ,and since the EUS is an advo-cate of fair play and sports-manship, we will decide therules .

STEVE WHITELAW ,Vice-Pres. ; EUS .

Bookstore:a mask ofgood faith

If it is true that the book-store is not a non-profit or-ganization, then we encounte rthe strange irony that thosebooks which we, as studentsand staff, use in the searc hfor truth become instru-ments of deceit in the handsof the bookstore and univer-sity administration .

Whereas previously theproblem seemed to be asimple one of policy in whichwas debated the merits of abreak-even service for stu-dents vs . a profitable sourceof income for the university ,we are now faced with th elikely possibility that notonly is the bookstore profit-able, but its profitability i sbeing maintained through adetermined effort to hide th etrue extent of its dollar-valu ein order to prevent an uproa rof outrage an evil that, if true ,would make the financial ma-chinations of the provincia lgovernment, in comparison ,seemingly motivated by pur ealtruism .

* * *In the event that the ad-

ministration of our univer-sity is gouging us behind th emask of good faith, it will b eseen that that body is com-posed of truly Machiavellia npersons who, instead of guid-ing us to an approach to truthcyncally pervert the truth t oguide us down the gardenpath for the sake of a fewmore thousand dollars of ad-ministrative income .

If the deceit proves to betrue then we are going to beembarrassed by a moral scan-dal of enormous magnitudeand very far-reaching impli-cations . That a seat of higherlearning could exploit its stu-dents in such a manner evi-dences a crassness nearly be-yond belief .

* * *This is not an issue to b e

dropped now. The suspicio nis in the air and we shouldnot be bluffed out of it nomatter what explanations aregiven until it has been prove dto the students' general satis-faction that the books theypay too much for are not aresult of a policy of blood -sucking intent on the part ofan administration hiding be -hind priviledged postion .It would be nice to believe

that the problem is only aresult of inefficiency, but le tus not belive it without proof.

—Shancrallre -sieges '

;asEDITOR, Mike Hunter

EditorsAssociate Keith Bradbur yNews

Dave AblettManaging ____ George Railto nCity

Mike Horse yPhoto Don Hume

_Sports Denis Stanle yAss't News _ Tim PadmoreAss't City __ Richard Simeo nSenior Donna MorrisSenior

Maureen Covel lREPORTERS AND DESK : Lorraine

Shore, Ron Biter, Ron Thody,Graeme Matheson, Tom Wayman,Al Birnie, Joan Godsell, Caro lAnn Baker, Bob Burton, NicksPhillips, Don Hull .

SPORTS : Dan Mullen, Roger Mc-Afee, Bill Willson, Janet Currie,George Reamsbottom, Don Can-non .

No moneyAt first glance, the UB C

student is astounded at Gor-don Shrum's confident plan sfor a second major B .C. uni-versity with graduate facili-ties . He is astonished when heenters UBC's stacks and find sa shortage of books, a paucityof research material .

He is astonished when hefinds that UBC's graduateschool hasn't the facilities t ooffer degrees in certain fields .He is astonished when h ereads comparative studies ofteaching salaries at UBC an dother Canadian universities .

He is astonished when hehears of the shortage of brilli-ant students at UBC who mustbe first distinguished by stif-fer entrance requirements ,yet to be put into effect .

How much money and howmuch time will it take befor eGordon Shrum sets up an-other library as basic as theone at UBC or another gradu-ate school as limited? Howdoes he propose to buildminds when UBC has a hardtime finding the potential todevelop ?

Maybe, in the last analysis ,it is not Gordon Shrum' splans we should condemn butthe B.C. government's tigh thold on the purse strings .However, Gordon Shrum i sdefinitely involved . It is hisunrealism as to how much th eB.C. government can do i nthe next 10 years for two ma-jor B .C. universities that criesto be criticized .

SECOND THOUGHT S

Not confidentia lEditor, The Ubyssey:

Allow me to make on esmall correction to Friday' sstory on UBC professors' sal-aries . I did not say that a

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Tuesday, October 22, - 1963

THE

UBYSSEY

Page 5

BACKGROUN D

Quebec: 'The dominate dnow want to become free '

THE GORDON COMPLEX. . . Cochon National

By MIKE VALPY

PETERBOROUGH, Ont. (Staff) — Peterborough'sembryo Trent University has wooed the director ofUBC 's Institute of Social and Economic Researc hfrom the west coast.Trent president Thomas

Symons announced this weekthat Prof . B. R. Blishen wil lbecome associate professor ofsociology here next Septem-ber .

Tiny Trent takesUBC researcher

By MICHEL BEAULIE U

MONTREAL (CUP) — Oneof the crucial problems of thehour is without doubt that o findependence for Quebec. Itis evident in different ways ,but anyone preoccupied withthe great economic, politica land social problems of Con -federation agrees with its im-tance.

What I shall say you pro-bably already know, but th eapproach will be different be -cause I consider myself poten-tially assimilable, though a tthe same time refusing to beactually assimilated.

* * *Two nations exist within th e

same State. One is the major-ity with respect to number sand with respect to politica land economic primacy: theAngle - Saxons. The ether ,with respect to culture : theQuebecois . In the total pic-ture, one dominates and th eother is dominated. That i sfine if one is lucky enough t obe on the right side. But ifone has the "misfortune" o fliving on this other side ofthe fence, everything is quit e.different .

* * *What must be admitted on

both sides at the outset is tha tQuebec is in a period of crisis ,that it, has had an extremel yrapid evolution during thepast decade, that it has, i neffect, developed too quicklywithin a span of time insuf-ficient for the realization o fall the potential bottled up solong in a state of impotence .

For years and years, thespirit of this province has beenimpoverished, while the An-glo-Saxons grew rich at ou rexpense (the many betrayal sof all the French-Canadianswho reached higher position stestify to this fact). With apoorness of spirit equal to thematerial wealth of the Anglo -Saxon, the French-Canadianfound himself with a succes-sion of political regimes tha twere each more corrupt thanthe other.

* * *The realm of education, fo r

example, controlled by theclergy who, knowingly ornot, tended to stifle any eman-cipation by collaborating withthe oppressor, while at thesame time limiting moralityto the notion of sin, remainedin all embryonic state . Allreligious education in French-language institutions is nega-tive: don't do this, don't d othat. It goes without sayingthat the Quebecois sufferedfrom a mass of complexesand repressions .

Education, as everyone

UBC grad wins

$1,800 award .A UBC graduate studen t

has been awarded an $1,800

fellowship .Arnold William By of Trail,

who is working towards aPhD. in chemistry, has re-ceived one of the Shell Canada

Fellowships .

knows, remains the prime tas kof every Nation desirous ofcultivating its unique charac-ter. Without it, nothing ispossible in the area of self-determination, and such alack invariably signifies thesystematic aborting of everyeffort which must be basedin its absence, on brute force .

An understanding is never-theless possible between ou rtwo communities . It is pos-sible so long as we are ableto discuss on the same level ,which is not the case now .We must discover common

Michel Beaulieu, co-editorof Le Quartier Latin, studen tpaper of the French-speakngUniversity of Montreal, wrotethis article for the McGillDaily.

points of agreement . But wehave none in our presentsituation. It is a matter ofthe dominated who wish tobe free, and the dominating ,who are willing to give a bi trope—as exemplified by thebilingual cheques—but wh orefuse to give up any real par tof their power .

The gesture of the French-speaking student's associationswith regard to NFCUS is sig-nificant. The fact that theirresolutions at the last congres swere adopted unanimously bythe delegates is also signifi-cant. French and Anglo-Saxonsequal footing at the studentwill from now on be on anlevel .

* * *It must be understood abov e

all that we are not speaikn gup• against English students .We understand and approve o fthe efforts now being mad eto establish bases of under-standing between the tw oethnic groups . The fact thatthese lines are published in

Injuries paid offClaims totalling $737 .55 hav e

been approved by the AccidentBenefit Committee. All theclaims were by students par-ticipating in intramural and ex-tramural athletics .

your newspaper is an obviou sproof of this, even if thes eefforts come too late to repai rall the harm done in the past .

We are not against you, bu tagainst your fathers, agains tyour grandfathers, againstthose who negotiated the pactof Confederation, a g a i n s tthose who oppressed us a hun-dred times among the sermon sand the hopes that were hal ffulfilled or not fulfilled at all .

We have the right to dis-trust any agreement, and yo ushould understand this dis-trust . We fear that one da ywe shall again see our right sviolated by an unscrupulousgeneration, no doubt not yourown, but one which will ap-pear the day we become tooconfident, well caught in thesilky web of some sweet song.

I am an Independentist .That oes not mean to say tha tthe Anglo-Saxons will live inQuebec in the same way tha twe live in Canada, in a coun-try in which we feel likeforeigners .

That means to say that weshall truly become ourselvesonly at the moment when theNation becomes a State .

* * *To understand our problem ,

it would be necessary for youto live the same conditions o flife that we have known fo rthe past hundred years, and Iam convinced that you wouldthen, and only then, accept th efact of Independence.

Choral SocietyThere will be a practic e

Wednesday night in Bu. 704 at6 p.m .

FROS ,H: Public relations' office rand newsletter editor needed fo rfresh council . Applicants fo rthese positions leave name and ,phone number in Box 62, AM Soffice.

WATCH THE TIBYSSEY : Frabsare coming. Remember the wor dis Frab.

ANYBODY wishing to sell ticke tto the opera "Norma" for th enights of Oct . 22 or 24th, pleasecall CA, 4-4366, ask for Eilee nWarnock .

WANTED: Person to share LH Ksuite with senior male student ,own bedroom . Call Jim Keenan ,2218 Blenheim St . or 731-1246 .

Prof. Blishen is now an as-sistant professor . He has bee non leave of absence fromUBC for two years as secre-tary and director of researc hfor the Royal Commission onHealth Services .

RESEARCH GRANTHe holds research grant s

from UBC, the Koerner

Foundation, Columbia Uni-versity, the Canada Counci land the Social ResearchCouncil .

At the moment Trent Uni-versity has little more tha nits own stationery and an acr eor so of mud outside th emetropolis of Nassau Mills ,three miles northeast of here .

But in 1965 the universitywill open as one of Canada's

most modern and well-equip-ped liberal arts colleges .DERELICT SCHOOLHOUSE

Classes begin next fall ina derelict Peter boroughschoolhouse shared with theoverflow from one of thecity's high schools .

There will be only a hand-ful of freshmen arts an dscience courses offered thefirst year but each sessionthe curriculum will expan dalong with the enrolment .

A couple of years ago, theuniversity's administra t i o nset out to raise a buildingfund of $5 million—most ofit from local industries an dpublic subscription .

And although everyone iscagey about saying how muchhas been collected, it's a well -known fact in Peterboroug hthat the money is pouring i nand the fund expected to goover the top .

That makes a few peopl eout in B .C. look niggardly .

away

High School Conference Chairman

Information may be obtained from A.M.S. Sec-

retary, Brock Hall .

Applications and Eligibility forms for the abov e

positions to be submitted to the A.M.S. Secretary, Box

74, Brock Hall, before 4:00 p .m., Monday, October 28 ,1963 .

' Winter Sports Centre

The skating rink will be open for student skating

from 12 :30 to 2 :30 on Thursday at a special rate of

15c per student .

Brock Hall Art Committe e

Information may be obtained from A .M.S. Secretary.

Brock Hall .

Campus Canada

Requires a distribution manager . Information ca n

be obtained from Frank Millerd, WA 2-5624.

Chairman Continuisig Committee on Higher Educatio n

Information can be obtained from George Boechler ,

WA 2-4063 .

CONFERENCE ON CANADIAN AFFAIRSLaval University, November 5 - 9

Two students will be selected to attend the Laval

Conference on Canadian Affairs . The theme of theconference is "The New Quebec ". Further informationand application forms can be obtained fro mthe recep-

tionist in the Alma Mater Society offices in Brock Hall.

Deadline for applications is 4 p.m., October 28 .

McGILL CONFERENCE ON WORLD AFFAIR S

McGill University, October 30 - November 2Two students will be selected to attend the McGil l

Conference on World Affairs . The theme of the con-ference is "Regional and bloc activity in world affairs . "Further information and application forms can beobtained from the receptionist in the Alma Mate rSociety offices in Brock Hall .

Deadline for applications is 4 p.m., October 24 .

A/ma Muter Society

OFFICIAL NOTICES

1

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Page 6

THE UBYSSEY

Tuesday, October 22, 196 3

The faces of footballEYE OF CAMERA catches theatmosphere of Saturday' sU B C Thunderbirds - AlbertaGolden Bears football game .There was plenty of action offthe field as well as on it. Stu-dent Councillors Jim War d(wearing tie) and MalcolmScott added zest to the cheerleaders, while a slight dis-agreement occurred w h e nsome UBC students attemptedto abscond with a member ofthe Alberta cheer-leading sec-tion. Meanwhile, a juniorband-leader keyed the drum-mers to the downbeat . —Photos by Hume and McAfee.

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Tuesday, October 22, 1963

THE

IUBYSSEY

Page 7

Birds couldn'tgrin and Bear i t

RAY WICKLAN D. . . scores major, blocks conyert

UBC penalty . From the 19,Smith passed to Nielsen in theend zone for the major . RayWickland smothered the at-tempted convert s

Back came the arouse dBirds, hammering out a touch -down in eight plays. A 27-yardpas from Gibbons to end IanDonald set up the score on theAlberta 13 .

SPORTSEDITOR : Denis Stanley

Olympians carveprairie chickens

Father David Bauer's Olympians won two and droppedone during weekend action in Alberta .

Friday evening they beatthe Edmonton Oil Kings o ntheir home ice, 5-2 .

The second game in thestrenuous weekend against theCentral Alberta League All-Stars in Red Deer was droppe d3 -2 .

"That was the roughest gam ethe boys have played all year,"said Mickey McDowell, whostayed behind to catch up onhis studies," some of the guysgot pretty badly banged up ."

The final game against theCalgary Junior Buffaloes was a9-2 walk-away for the Olym-pians.

Ray Cadieux led the Olym -

UBC teams failto get their men

UBC's women's t e n n i steam lost their WCIAA titl elast weekend in Winnipeg.

The team, consisting ofLiz Philpot, Libby Penwar-den and Marilyn Orr camethird in the four team com-petition .

The women's golf team ,WCIAA titlists in 1961, tookfourth place . The team con-sisted of Wendy Irish, DianeKirby and Barb Ellis .

The tennis team was han-dicapped by the absence ofa UBC men's team, in themixed doubles .

pians with a hat-trick eveningfollowed by Dave Merrifieldwith a pair while Roger Bour-bonnaise, George Swarbrick ,Bob Forham and Brian Con-acher scored one each .

The Olympians's next gameis Friday at the official open-ing of the new Arena duringthe homecoming activities .

They meet the Edmonton Oi lKings who are returning lastweek's visit . Saturday theymeet again in Victoria .

Colours tooCactus, Olive, & Black

Only $6.95at

41st & W. Blvd. AM 1-151 2

Alberta beats UBC 44-3 3despite aerial comebac k

By DAN MULLE N

The Bearscould see .

Besides the other side of the moutain, they saw their wayclear to first place in the WCIAA standings after bouncingUBC Thunderbirds 44-33 Saturday .

But the Thunderbird offensecame from behind to withinclawing distance of the Bears,exciting the 1500 fans .

UBC quarterbacks Dick Gib-bons and Roger Hardy filledthe air with footballs, com-bining for 20 completions in 3 2attempts for_25.8 yards .

Robin Dyke, To-m- Thomsonand Norm Thomas put on anexciting exhibition of pass re-ceiving .SCOTT LEADS CHEE R

Chubby, bespectacled, Mal-colm Scott led the chering sec-tion, after an abortive effortby UBC cheerleaders to get aresponse from the crowd .

,Two kickoff returns early i nin the game caught the Bird sunawares . A defense adjuste dto stop Alberta's running gam eproved vulnerable to its pass-ing attack .

Alberta wasted no time inopening up. Bear halfbackKen Nielsen took the kickoff85 yards for a touchdow nafter receiving the ball on ahandoff from the kick-receiver.

The convert was good, andthe Birds trailed before the yhad their hands on the ball .10-0 AT TWO MINUTE S

Norm Thomas returned Al-berta's kickoff to his thirtyyard line, but fumbled as h ewas hit . A Bear recovered. andon their second play fromscrimmage halfback I r w i ntouchdown pass to Kachman .The convert attempt was suc-cessful, and the Bears led 14 -0 with the game not yet tw ominutes old .

Unbeaten recordgets watery grave

BY JOE HACKERShot down in flames is the only way to describe the

undefeated record of the UBC golf team as the group ofeight amphibians lost their match at the Capilano Golf Club ,

Sunday .The weatherman had prom-

ised rain and the North Shorelooked like a river turned up -side down. The dampness di dlittle to enhance the scores ofthe collegians .

Wayne Vollmer had littlesucces in his match with John-ny Russell, who toured hishome course in 69, comparedto Vollmer's 77 .

Vollmer, the Canadian jun-ior champ and his partne rGraham Zellmer did managesome points as Zellmer nippedDoug Bajus by one stroke .

The team of Rusty Goepeland Don Cannon picked upseven of nine points as Goepelproved to be a tower o fstrength for his side . Only th ewet greens and a few unfortun-ate breaks kept streamline dRusty from matching par .

Jim Seed and Jim Stevens

came over the mountain to see what they

Later in the first quarterthe Bears marched from theirown 38 to score in nine plays .Garry Smith capped the drivewith another pass to Kachman .UBC's Al Eger blocked the ex-tra point .

Then the Birds got off theground . flying from their 3 7to paydirt in eight plays wit hthe aid of three rough playpenalities . Ray Wickland blast-ed over his left tackle fromthe Alberta two. Bob Mc-Gavin's point-after was block-ed .ANOTHER 80 YARDS

The Bear deep men crosse dagain on the kickoff, but thi stime Ken Neilsen kept the bal land galloped 80 yards to score .The convert was batted down .

UBC was still in the foot -ball game, in the early mo-ments of the second periodThunderbird Barry Callaha nintercepted a pass on his own40.

The T-bird offense took itfrom there . In ten plays theydrove 70 yards for their secon dmajor .

Gibbons threw six times an dcompleted all six in the drive .On the scoring play, Hardymoved in to quarterback, andhanded the ball to Gibbonswho hoisted a pass to BobSweet on the five, and Swee twent over standing up .

MoGavin kicked the extr apoint to make the score 26-13 .POINT AFTER SMOTHERED

Alberta roared on, moving69 yards on five plays and a

combined well in their matchbut lost by two points. Seedhad the misfortune of fallin ginto a creek on the 15th holeand getting more drenche dthan he already was .

Jim didn't know it but thatis the septic tank for the gol f

club. Here's hoping that thepower failure Sunday nightdidn't effect the hot water sup -ply at the Seed household .

StudentsYour Formal

andSemi-Formal

Clothing Need sCan be Met Best at :

MCCUISH Formal WearLtd .

2046 W. 41st — Ph. 263-3610Mon .-Sat. 9 :30 to 5 :3 0

ALL NEW GARMENTSSpecial Discount to Students

Made-to-Measur eSuits, Jackets andSlacks Styled fo rThe Young Man

e

00444 . 1 S00*000 .00 .

Page 8: home He'll THE UDYSSEY Shrum · 2013. 7. 30. · He'll get home THE UDYSSEY Shrum time Vol. XLVI Ex-rower takes over UBC crew Glen Mervyn h a s been named the new coach of the UBC

Page 8

THE .UBYSSEY

Tuesday, October 22, 196 3

Tiger speakson UN racism

Dr. Lionel Tiger, political sociologist, will speak on "Inter -national Racism in the United Nations . " The program willstart at 8 p.m. in the Christmas Seal Auditorium on Tent hand Willow.

DR. LIONEL TIGE R. . . speaks tonigh t

A film, "Global Strugglefor Food" will be held todaynoon in Bu . 106 .

Howard Green will speak o n"Canada and the UN Today"in Bu . 104, Wednesday noon .

PRE-LIBRARIANSHIP SOC .Graham Elliston will spea k

on "Cataloguing and Classifica-tion" today noon in Rm . 861 ,south wing library .

PRE-MED SOC .Dr. M. Blair will speak on

"Quacks in Medicine", Wednes-day noon in Wes . 100 .

PHILOSOPHY CLU BRichard Thompson, of Cam-

bridge, will speak on ontology(an argument for the existenc eof a God), Bu . 203 ; Wednesdaynoon .

UNITARIAN CLU BUnitarian Club meets Wed-

nesday noon in Bu . 225 . Topicwill be the future plans of th eclub.

BRIDGE AND CHESS CLUBThere will be a meeting

Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. in theBrock TV Lounge.

0 # aFCHINESE VARSITY CLUB

There will be a film, "HongKong Today", W e d n e s d a ynoon in Bu . 204 .

SLAVONIC CIRCLE!Want to try speaking Rus-

sian? Regular, informal con-versation groups will be hel dfrom now on—Tuesday, Wed-nesday and Thursday noon inBu. 2201 ,

CICDr. Polglase of the biochem-

istry department speaks o n"Bacteria and Chemistry" to -day noon in Chem . 250 .

SPECIAL EVENT SLast minute ticket sales for

the Wednesday Vancouver ap-pearance of Polish Malcuszin-ski ($4.50 tickets for 75c) areat Special Events office Tues-day and Wednesday noon .

CUSCUS (the new NFCUS) —

Can it Work? — a forumfeaturing CUS Congress dele-gates Malcolm Scott, Ros sMunro and Roger McAfee, willbe held today noon in' Brock .

FROSH COUNCI LA public relations office r

,.and a newsletter editor areneeded for the Frosh Council .Applicants should put theirname and phone number inBox 62 in the AMS Office .

PARLIAMENTAR YCOUNCIL

General meeting in Bu . 202today noon .

Meeting of all politcal clubmembers — Communists, Con-servatives, Liberals, New Dem-ocrats and Socreds, Bu . 202Wednesday noon.

NEW DEMOCRATSUBC New Democrats pre -

sent Romeo Mathieu, federalvice president of the NDPspeaking on "Separatism ver-sus confederation" noon todayin Bu . 205 .

WOMEN'S ARCHERY TEA MWomen's Archery Tea m

meets Tuesdays and Thursday sfrom 4 :30 to 5:30 in the FieldHouse. No experience neces-sary. Equipment provided .

Cut rates setfor students

Students will be able t o

skate in the new UBC aren a

for 15 cents on Thursday

noon hours .

The special rate is in ef-

fect from 12 noon to 2 p.m.

Student council had re-quested the lower rate at it s

Oct . 1 meeting .

Frosh votestill valid

The frosh election resultsare still valid, despite the

entry of some dubious candi-dates into the fray .

Frosh orientation chairman

Gordon Galbraith said the fac tthat the engineers attempted t o

run two phoney candidates inthe frosh elections wouldn' t

alter the outcome .

He said there have ben pre-

cedents for such actions andthat the election must stand .

NOON HOUR CONCERTSWednesday noon hour con-

certs are being held tomorro win Bu. 106 . Songs and Sonat afor Piano and Bells by CharlesIves will be presented .

UBC CLASSIFIE DFOR SALE: 1960 Renault Sedan ,

34,000 mi .—good clean car—ask-ing $500 cash. Phone Laurie be-tween 5 :30 and 7 p .m. at CA 4 -9052 .

RIDERS WANTED : Around the vi-cinity of Oak and Broadway ,Monday through Saturday, 8 :3 0to 5 p.m . Call Ed at RE 8-8908 .

WANTED: Lecture notes or out -lines (any year) for Comm . 321 ,Marketing 467, Finance 371 . Sale,rent, or loan. Phone Paul Chan,Loc 523, or. 733-4805, evenings.

FOR SALE : Need cheap transporta-tion? 50 cem NSU sports motor-bike, 200 MPG, 2-seater, all ac-

cessories, A-1 shape, 5,000 miles.$150 or best offer . Call AM 6 -4235 .

LOST : A lady ' s Bulova wristwatchbetween Buchanan and Broc karea . Finder please contact Susieat RE 1-4403 .

LOST: Gold ring with silver coi nin it, Wednesday in Brock Ladie swashroom. Sentimental value.Reward . Please phone Musa, AM6-2516 or turn in to proctor.

APARTMENT TO SHARE : NearDunbar . Privacy—male—graduatestudent preferably—'$35 a month .Call RE 3-3340 .

RIDE : Leaving Monday, Wednes-day, Thursday, Friday, vicinityRenfrew and Hastings for 8 :30's .Phone Carol AL 3-1978 .

WANTED : Part-time salesman ,University area. Apply Mr. Hill ,Basement, 4302 West Ninth .

cinema 16present s

M -ErMWSHOWCASE

1963-64UBC Chemistry Building —

Room 250 ,

WEDNESDAYS, 8 :00 p.m.—OCTOBER 23

$3 .00 ADULTS ; $2 .00 STUDENTS & STAFF

EATO N' SPresents

The Sassy . .

OLIVER LOO KBig girls are going for the little boy

look, shown at its best in the

"Oliver . " Cocky tailored jacket

covers long-sleeved white "Oliver"

blouse, while for the mad, mad final

touch, there are knee-length knick-

ers! And to top the outfit, a cheeky

urchin's cap! Also skirts and culottes

in identical herringbone pattern .

Be first with the latest . . . see, try

on the "Oliver" look at EATON' S

today .

Cap,Each,

4.95Jacket,Each,

19.95

Each, Knickers,

12.95Blouse,

6.95Each,

EATON'S Campus Shop —All Four Stores

4

'tween classes

"America's Finest Folksingers"

JOSHWHITE

at the Homecoming

PEP RALLYThursday, October 24 — Noon in the Gym