vol. xlviii, no. 10 vancouver, b.c., friday, · pdf filejulian bream, guitarist victoria de...

16
Ho THE UPYSSEY hu m Vol . XLVIII, No . 10 VANCOUVER, B .C ., FRIDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1966 224-391 6 Carolyn cop s THRONGS OF HAPPY VOTERS, 3284 i n democracy and universal sufferage in AM S president election, won by Carolyn (student —kurt hiiger photo all, practis e second vice- power) Tate . 3,280 give Tat e 117 vote margi n Tents flat , two . in ca r querie d RCMP are considerin g charges against two men wh o allegedly drove a car up the Main Mall . early Thursday an d tore down 12 tents . RCMP would not release th e name of the driver, who may be charged with driving on the wrong side of the road . They said further charges of wilfull damage against the driv- er and his passenger are als o under consideration . Steve Garrod, arts 2, tol d police the two men, shoutin g and screaming, drove a sport s car up the mall on the wron g side of the road . He said they stopped the ca r and began tearing down th e tents . Garrod said the men, w h o were wearing brown shabb y jackets, were young . He said there were only a half dozen persons sleeping i n the tents when . the incident occurred at 3 a .m. " They took out the centr e pole and ripped the flap o n one tent," he said . He said the raiders also pull- ed sleeping bags from empt y tents and left them in th e rain . Another tenter said his com- panion wanted to chase the in- vaders, but was unable to fin d his pants . "He was shy," he said . RCMP said they were wait- ing for more information be- fore charging the suspects . President John Macdonald' s open-door-day debuts nex t Thursday . The day will be the firs t of Macdonald's monthly face- to-face student sessions an- nounced in his welcoming ad - dress last week. "On that day, without ap- pointment, President Macdon- ald will hear students w h o feel their problems need hi s attention . But we don't ex- pect lineups of thousands of students," a university spokes - man said . Open-door day won't alway s be on Thursday . "Because of Macdonald' s crowded timetable a differen t date will be set every month and publicized in advance," h e said. Other committees for bette r student-administration contact , outlined in Macdonald's speech , have . not yet . been organized, he said . The new committee s include : A student liaison committe e led by Macdonald to meet wit h AMS council neveral times a year. A new housing committee t o deal with all residence accom- modation . A student committee to stud y food services, book-store, an d traffic and parking . Students will have to choos e their own committee repre- sentatives, the spokesman said . "No one will be appointe d by the university to the com- mittees ." For two hours Thursda y night the final decision on th e voting was uncertain when th e Vancouver General Hospita l voting box did not appear fo r counting in Brock Hall . It was later discovered ,b y acting returning officer B o Hansen that the poll was neve r organized because of lack o f interest . (Only 26 votes were cast at VGH in the last AMS presidential election .) Miss Tate said when her wi n became apparent : "I choose t o interpret the vote given me as a rejection by many UB C students of the present struc- ture of the student council . "The key point in my plat - form was the presentation of an alternative to the current coun- cil . "I thank the people w h o worked on my campaign an d those who voted for me . " MACDOUGAL INELIGIBL E The 2nd vice-president i s public relations officer for the AMS . She also acts as an ad- ministrative assistant to th e AMS president . The election was called when Ian Macdougal, chosen by ac- clamation last spring, w a s ruled ineligible . Macdouga l failed. 'tee meet the .65-.per . sent. TATE . . . she's i n acadmeic average required 'o f council members . Other elected members o f this term's council are presi- dent Peter Braund, first vice - president Charlie iBoylan, trea- surer Lorne Hudson, and co - ordinator Jim Lightfoot . They were elected in regular AM S elections last spring . Give thank s main librar y wont be ope n UBC's main library will b e closed Sunday for the Thanks - giving holiday . But Sedgewick , Woodward , Law and Mathematics librarie s will be open as usual . Eligible students, t h o s e working on an MA, PhD o r three-unit honor theses, wh o have applied for carrels i n the main stacks have to pic k up their assignments at th e main loan desk by Oct . 17 . After that date unclaime d carrels will be re-assigned . Students applying for a re - assigned carrel must presen t their eligibility sheets at th e main loan desk's window on e from 10 a .m . to noon or fro m 2 p .m . to 4 p.m ., Oct . 18 to Oct . 21 . TURKEY TALK , CROAKIN G (SEE PAGE FRIDAY) JUST WALK IN Mac cracks door Thurs Patrol tires impounding , finds regulations lackin g A crackdown on UBC's unladylike drivers petere d out Thursday. Three female drivers drove through patro l barriers on Chancellor Boulevard narrowly missin g patrolmen . After the said, "I have cars ." Kelly could him to impoun d normal method s we do have th e incidents, traffic supervisor J . H . Kelly., given my men orders to impound th e not quote the regulation`' authorizin g cars in such cases . " However, whe n of law enforcement prove ineffective , authority to impound a car ." By BERT HIL L Honors English student Carolyn Tate cast a vote fo r alleged superiority of the female Thursday by defeatin g three male contenders in the second vice presidency elec- tion . Miss Tate won by a narro w 117 vote margin . A total of 3,280 votes were cast in th e election . The final tally had Mis s Tate, arts 4, with 1,591 vote s to 1,474 for runner-up Davi d Black . ONLY 89 VOTES On the first ballot Miss Tat e was ahead of Black by only 8 9 votes . She had 1,209 votes , Black 1,120, with the other candidates trailing badly . Keith Mitchell picked up 668 vote s and Bob Weiser 270 . Transfers from the prefe- rential ballots gave all of Wei- ser's second choices to the three remaining contenders and i n the final count all of Mitchell' s second choices were give n either to Miss Tate or Black . Miss Tate won twelve poll- ing stations . Black took th e other seven . In the Engineering poll , Black, engineering 2, took 22 1 votes with the remaining 42 votes spread among the othe r candidates. NO VGH POLL

Upload: lyhanh

Post on 15-Mar-2018

217 views

Category:

Documents


2 download

TRANSCRIPT

Ho THE UPYSSEY hu m

Vol. XLVIII, No. 10 VANCOUVER, B .C., FRIDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1966 224-391 6

Carolyn cops

THRONGS OF HAPPY VOTERS, 3284 i ndemocracy and universal sufferage in AM Spresident election, won by Carolyn (student

—kurt hiiger photoall, practisesecond vice-power) Tate .

3,280 give Tate117 vote margin

Tents flat,two. in ca rqueried

RCMP are consideringcharges against two men whoallegedly drove a car up theMain Mall . early Thursday andtore down 12 tents .

RCMP would not release thename of the driver, who maybe charged with driving on thewrong side of the road .

They said further charges ofwilfull damage against the driv-er and his passenger are alsounder consideration .

Steve Garrod, arts 2, toldpolice the two men, shoutin gand screaming, drove a sportscar up the mall on the wrongside of the road .

He said they stopped the carand began tearing down thetents .

Garrod said the men, w h owere wearing brown shabbyjackets, were young .

He said there were only ahalf dozen persons sleeping inthe tents when. the incidentoccurred at 3 a.m.

"They took out the centrepole and ripped the flap onone tent," he said .

He said the raiders also pull-ed sleeping bags from emptytents and left them in therain .

Another tenter said his com-panion wanted to chase the in-vaders, but was unable to fin dhis pants .

"He was shy," he said .RCMP said they were wait-

ing for more information be-fore charging the suspects .

President John Macdonald' sopen-door-day debuts nextThursday .

The day will be the firs tof Macdonald's monthly face-to-face student sessions an-nounced in his welcoming ad-dress last week.

"On that day, without ap-pointment, President Macdon-ald will hear students w h ofeel their problems need hisattention. But we don't ex-pect lineups of thousands ofstudents," a university spokes-man said .

Open-door day won't alway sbe on Thursday .

"Because of Macdonald'scrowded timetable a differen tdate will be set every monthand publicized in advance," hesaid.

Other committees for betterstudent-administration contact ,outlined in Macdonald's speech ,have . not yet . been organized,

he said. The new committeesinclude :

A student liaison committeeled by Macdonald to meet wit hAMS council neveral times ayear.

A new housing committee todeal with all residence accom-modation .

A student committee to stud yfood services, book-store, an dtraffic and parking.

Students will have to choosetheir own committee repre-sentatives, the spokesman said .

"No one will be appointedby the university to the com-mittees ."

For two hours Thursdaynight the final decision on th evoting was uncertain when theVancouver General Hospitalvoting box did not appear forcounting in Brock Hall .

It was later discovered ,byacting returning officer BoHansen that the poll was neverorganized because of lack o finterest . (Only 26 votes werecast at VGH in the last AMSpresidential election .)

Miss Tate said when her winbecame apparent : "I choose tointerpret the vote given meas a rejection by many UBCstudents of the present struc-ture of the student council .

"The key point in my plat -form was the presentation of analternative to the current coun-cil .

"I thank the people w h oworked on my campaign an dthose who voted for me . "

MACDOUGAL INELIGIBL EThe 2nd vice-president is

public relations officer for theAMS . She also acts as an ad-ministrative assistant to theAMS president .

The election was called whenIan Macdougal, chosen by ac-clamation last spring, w a sruled ineligible . Macdouga lfailed. 'tee meet the .65-.per. sent.

TATE. . . she's in

acadmeic average required 'o fcouncil members .

Other elected members o fthis term's council are presi-dent Peter Braund, first vice-president Charlie iBoylan, trea-surer Lorne Hudson, and co-ordinator Jim Lightfoot . Theywere elected in regular AMSelections last spring .

Give thanksmain librarywont be open

UBC's main library will beclosed Sunday for the Thanks-giving holiday .

But Sedgewick , Woodward ,Law and Mathematics librarieswill be open as usual .

Eligible students, t h o s eworking on an MA, PhD orthree-unit honor theses, whohave applied for carrels inthe main stacks have to pickup their assignments at themain loan desk by Oct . 17 .

After that date unclaimedcarrels will be re-assigned .

Students applying for a re-assigned carrel must presenttheir eligibility sheets at th emain loan desk's window onefrom 10 a.m. to noon or from2 p.m. to 4 p.m., Oct . 18 toOct . 21 .

TURKEY TALK,CROAKING(SEE PAGE FRIDAY)

JUST WALK IN

Mac cracks door Thurs

Patrol tires impounding,finds regulations lackin g

A crackdown on UBC's unladylike drivers peteredout Thursday.

Three female drivers drove through patrolbarriers on Chancellor Boulevard narrowly missin gpatrolmen .

After thesaid, "I havecars ."

Kelly couldhim to impoundnormal methodswe do have th e

incidents, traffic supervisor J . H. Kelly.,given my men orders to impound the

not quote the regulation`' authorizingcars in such cases . "However, when

of law enforcement prove ineffective ,authority to impound a car."

By BERT HIL L

Honors English student Carolyn Tate cast a vote fo ralleged superiority of the female Thursday by defeatin gthree male contenders in the second vice presidency elec-tion.

Miss Tate won by a narrow117 vote margin. A total of3,280 votes were cast in th eelection .

The final tally had MissTate, arts 4, with 1,591 votesto 1,474 for runner-up Davi dBlack .

ONLY 89 VOTESOn the first ballot Miss Tate

was ahead of Black by only 8 9votes. She had 1,209 votes,

Black 1,120, with the othercandidates trailing badly . KeithMitchell picked up 668 votesand Bob Weiser 270 .

Transfers from the prefe-rential ballots gave all of Wei-ser's second choices to the threeremaining contenders and inthe final count all of Mitchell' ssecond choices were giveneither to Miss Tate or Black .

Miss Tate won twelve poll-ing stations. Black took th eother seven .

In the Engineering poll,Black, engineering 2, took 22 1votes with the remaining 42votes spread among the othercandidates.

NO VGH POLL

Page 2

THE UBYSSEY

Friday, October 7, 1966

ARMSTRONG & REAOPTOMETRIST S

2 Convenient Offices . .n BROADWAY at GRANVILL En KERRISDALE 41s.t at YE W

EYES EXAMINE D

CONTACT LENSE S

UNIVERSITY CHURC HON THE BOULEVAR D

THANKSGIVING SUNDAYST . ANSELM'S

8:00 a .m . & 9:30 a .m .Holy Communio n

11 :00 a .m. — MattinsThe Rev. C. H. Powles, M.A .

7:00 p.m .

Talk-Back

St . Anselm's

"DEATH OF THE CHURCH "

HAROLD MacKAY

JIM McKIBBO N

UNIVERSITY HIL L

11 :00 a .m .

Morning Worship

Queers &abetI theatre

Law students lobbyfor monthly salary

By CHARLOTTE HAIRS

—powell hargrave photo

LOVELIES ALL RUNNING for frosh queen, left to right from top, are : Marion Esau, RikaSalo, Cathie Griffiths, Bonnie Stefanko, Dor is Carter, Jane Dubord, Deanne Delaney ,Judy Dixon, Karen Anderson, Lurlei Lincke, Mimi Hockin, Mary McLaughlin and LesleyBrims . Voting is all day today, crowning Saturday in armory .

. MEREDITH DAVIE SMusical Director & Conducto r

present s

Peter's Ice Cream ParlorWish you a

. . .HAPPY BIRTHDAY !

. . . Is today your Birthday ? ?

if so prove it, because we have a

FREE Birthday Sundae for you I 1

3204 West Broadway

!'Vrs e' t°t'Vi'r,`l4 t' s'upa ''s" r " 4`L'i''[s['

UBC Jaw students are de-manding a subsistence articl-ing salary .

Law school student presi-dent John Trueman said Thurs-day the students will presenta brief to the members of theLaw Society, backing up de-mands for at least $300 amonth while a lawyer isarticling .

Trueman said 70 per cent o flaw graduates are in debt .

"Outside of nursing," sai dTrueman, "law is the only

Grad's goldnot great

Physics department head Dr .G. M. Volkoff Thursday dis-pelled the myth of the ric hgrad student .

"I haven't seen any studentsin grad studies driving gold-plated cadillacs," he said .

"The pay is not the same a sthe wage he might be earn-ing," Volkoff told a noon meet-ing of the physics society .

"Students should shoparound when choosing a gra dschool. It wouldn't be muchuse, for instance, going toSaskatchewan to study oceano-graphy," he said.

field where the starting sal-ary is so low. This is a peren-nial problem a n d persist sacross Canada ."

Trueman said the law societyrecommends that apprenticin ggraduates get $225 a month .He said the medical professionpays its interns $200 to $350 amonth, with meals and livin gquarters .

"We want a minimum sub-sistence standard living stip-end of $300 a month .

"A committee is arrangingto meet the Benchers of theLaw Society to present ourbrief and background situa-tion." He said he did not kno wwhen the brief will be ready .

Trueman said previous at-tempts to raise articling salar-ies have failed because of lackof a unified stand .

"Law students," he added ,"forgo $22,000 in wages an dpay $11,000 dollars in ex-penses during their seven-yearcourse."

Slacks NarrowedSuits Alteredand Repaired

Tuxedos RemodelledExpert Tailorin g

UNITED TAILORS549 Granville St .

Blorgs againPANGO PANG() (UNS) —

Two hordes of great puceblorgs descended on this islandcapital today.

THE DEATH OF GO D

IN OUR TIME

TALK BACKSt. Anselm 's

Churc hUniversity Boulevard

Sunday Evening s

7:00 to 8:00

Death of the Church— Oct. 9

Death of Morality— Oct . 1 6

Death of Prayer— Oct . 23

Death of God— Oct. 30

Short address followed by question sand comments from the congrega-tion, concluding by 8 :00 p .m.

Coffee Hour follows for thoseinterested in further discussions

"TheGreatestSeasonEver "

11 CONCERTS including Benjamin Brit-ten's "WAR REQUIEM" for as LOW as$13 (additional 20% discount for students) .

Buy Your Season ' s Tickets Now !$13, $16, $20, $26 .50, $3SSunday Afternoon Series at 2 :30 p m .Monday Evening Series at 8 :30 p . mNov. 1st

OPENING CONCERTS OCTOBER 16th 617thGUEST ARTISTS

JULIAN BREAM, GuitaristVICTORIA DE LOS ANGELES, SopranoOSCAR SHUMSKY, ViolinOTTO-WERNER MUELLER, Guest ConductorCLAUDIO ARRAU, Pian oVICTOR FELDBRILL, Guest Conducto rIVRY GITLIS, Violi nPHILIPPE ENTREMONT, Pian oJOHN OGDON, Piano

special concertsincluded in Subscription Series

"KING DAVID" by Arthur Honegge rwith the BACH CHOIR

RABBI LEO BERGMAN, Narrato rMARY SIMMONS, Sopran o

CAROLYN STANFORD, Mezzo Sopran oGARNET BROOKS, Teno r

and the Canada Festival Presentatio n"WAR REQUIEM" by Benjamin Britte n

with the Bach Choir, the UBC Choral Unio nand University Choir

an dELLA LEE, Soprano

ROBERT TEAR, TenorDONALD BELL, Baritone

TICKETS AT THE VANCOUVER TICKET CENTR E630 Hamilton Street, MU 3 .3255 . . . and all Eaton Stores

except Tues. ,

A Career For You InEconomics—Statistics—Sociology

with the Civil Service of Canad aYou can participat ein Economic Researc hstudies on :

• Transportation• Marketing• Trade Agreements• Tariff s• Taxation• Labour Markets• Welfare Program s

QUALIFYING EXAM — OCTOBER 19 at 7 :00 p .m .ROOM 2225, BUCHANAN BLDG .

Exemption : only for those who hold Master'sor Doctorate Degrees in 1967

TO APPLY : It is preferred that you send, in advance of the examination ,Application Form CSC 100 (available at the Placement Office )to the CIVIL SERVICE COMMISSION OF CANADA, UNI-VERSITY RECRUITMENT, OTTAWA 4, ONTARIO . It willbe possible also to complete an Application Form at th eexamination .

Watch for a PANEL DISCUSSION on this subject coming to your campus soon .

Friday, October 7, 1966

—hurt hilger photo

THE OMNIPRESENT CARPENTER will soon rumble over the old Acadia camp marriedstudents' housing, to make way for new residences looking like this scale model . Rowhouses around high rise will total 275 units .

Frosh-in-stacks sticks ,replies head libraria n

T H E U B Y S S E Y

By TOM MORRIS

A scale model of UBC 's first high-rise apartment wasunveiled Thursday by Vancouver architect Vladimi rPlaysic .

The new high-rise is part o fa larger complex of houses ,parks, and play areas to be in-cluded in the new marrie dgrad students residence . De-signs of the complex were re-vealed for the first time Thurs-day at a downtown press con-ference .

The 275-unit complex in-cludes two large study areas .

Acadia Park, as the com-plex will be known, is Playsic' sbrainchild on the authorizationof the board of governors .

"The park will be built o n25 acres beside the presen tAcadia Camp," Playsic toldthe press conference .

"3t will contain a 15-storeyhigh-rise for couples wit hyoung or no children and 17 5separate houses for coupleswith older children ."

"The high-rise will contai n13 stories of resident units an dtwo stories of study and discs-sion areas," Playsic said .

INACADIA

Plan revealedfor high-rise

Page 3

By BONI LEE

The library's new frosh-in--the-stacks policy is working ,head librarian Basil Stuart -Stubbs said Thursday .

Stuart-Stubbs was replying

to a letter published in Thurs-day's Ubyssey .

The letter called the newlibrary policy a "grave in-justice . "

Stuart-Stubbs said: "Stu-dents in first and second year s

in the library will

Origin of Species, but had n oluck.

She tried the filing cabinet sfor Li Po's "Conversation inthe Mountains", but the indexcards were in Chinese .

A clerk gave Miss Ussnersome call letters for TheUbyssey, and she found a 1938copy in only 36 minutes .

Tour-seminars will be heldnext week at noon in Rm. 861for students who want guid-ance and information about thelibrary.

need to use stacks and willneed to do so until SedgewickLibrary is fully developed . "

He said student behavior inthe stacks has been exception -ally good so far this term .

So far, he said, the stackshave not been crowded .

Stuart-Stubbs outlined ananalysis of recent library com-putor records which show :

• Despite complete stackaccess, undergrads prefer touse Sedgewick library.

• First and second year stu-dents have borrowed 4,35 8books from Sedgewick com-pared to 361 books from th emain library.

• Third and fourth yearstudents have taken 4,746books from Sedgewick and2,982 books from the mai nlibrary.

"The study area is on thetop two floors and will beavailable to all resident grad-uate students .

"There will also be a super-vised kindergarten area at th efoot of the high-rise .

"The 175 house units will b eclustered around the high-risein 40 house groups," Playsi csaid .

"These two bedroom unitswill have about 900 square feet

PLAVSI C. . . new design

of space. Eleven kitchens willface on a central playing are aso mothers can supervise thei rchildren,

"There is a larger nursery inthe center of the plan andplaying field and tennis court sbeside the high-rise," he said .

The complex will have com-plete underground wiring .

The structures will be madeof brown brick with some useof wood .

Tenders will be called nextweek with estimates due onNovember 10 .

"Hopefully construction willbegin in mid-November an dfinish by September 1967, "Playsic said .

,,7cu t9h~dl

non T O

The all male toaet y that interests women' .

AF TyR SII .A,L CCIOONy SOAR DEODORAN THAIR TONIC TALC SHAVING CREA M

Library searchmuddles fros h

Frosh looking for obscure booksfind the odds stacked against them .

That's what The Ubyssey dis-covered when it sent freshetteMary Ussner to dig up, with-out help from the library staff ,a list of volumes.

On the list were an Agath aChristie mystery, Darwin' sOrigin of Species, a poem bythe Chinese poet Li Po, andan ancient issue of The Ubys-sey.

The Christie novel was notavailable .

Newspaperwoman U s s n e rsearched the stacks in vain for

Black Tate Mitchell

72

117

5 8

80

62

7 6

58

91

4 2

33

61

34

76

112

59

10

41

1 3

54

50

1 9

44

101

3 9

221

16

1 8

52

95

54

54

100

5 0

62

31

3 2

65

44

1 9

16

30

1 0

42

59

2 0

40

74

38

67

69

46

58

54

3 8

it': iBL'

4 ViX

N:.•x:y ..»}'., AL.Ai

LiLta'i LAwa.E"zk,.11,L

rele: .-cb.'u

Brock NorthBrock SouthBuchanan # 1Buchanan # 2Bus StopCafteteriaColl. Lib .Educatio nEngineeringAngusLibraryPhysicsPonderosaWesbrookAcadi aFort CampLower Mal lTotem ParkVG HShaughnessy H . 16

2

3TOTALS

1120 1209

66 8TOTAL VOTE — 3280

GET HELP !with A HARD DAYS NIGHT

THURSDAY, OCT. 13thTHREE CONTINUOUS DOUBLE BILLS BEGINNIN G

With HELP! At 12 :30 NoonLast Complete Feature Starts 8 p .m.

AUDITORIU M50c for as long as you can stand i t

No Readmissio n

PaperbacksThe largest selection of paperbacks

in Western Canada

at our three store s

Duthie BooksLocated a t

U.B .C . , BRANCH - 4560 W . 10th

PH . 224-701 2

DOWNTOWN STORES :—670 Seymour — Ph. 685-362 7

514 Hornby — Ph. 684-449 6

Paperback Cellar — Ph. 681-8713

ti

AT FIRST T -t HE IDEA L FOGNG 110ST 14UMBERIN THIS SIG VNIVEASITVS.:FIRED t'' .. ti0u KgpW-LOSS OF tDEATlr AA, CEasIn.uJG .

Bur 'PNEA 1 TANKED T J tM4p,',

NI ..EMAM 1M EY ZVj V,A CCOA14 OR Fac ►1

t04. P . ANDTMEV N .K.lbME PDSusT TO THE IDEA . Letters

ShockedEditor, The Ubyssey:

I was shocked to see th eEngineer's Lady Godiva pa-

raded around campus in a

state of undress . The satisfied

smirk on her face and the na-ture of the saddle could mean

only one thing.PETERS IC . OLD-TOOLE

Science 2 .

THE URYSSE YPublished Tuesdays, Thursdays and Fridays throughout the university yearby the Alma Mater Society of the University of B .C. Editorial opinions arethe editor's and not of the AMS or the university . Member, Canadia nUniversity Press . Founding member, Pacific Student Press . Authorizedsecond class mail by Post Office Department, Ottawa, and for payment o fpostage in cash .

The Ubyssey publishes Page Friday, a weekly commentary and review .

City editor, 224-3916 . Other calls, 224-3242: editor, local 25; photo, Pag eFriday, loc. 24; features, sports, loc . 23; advertising, loc. 26 . Night calls,

731-7019.

Winner Canadian University Press trophies for genera l

excellence and editorial writing.

OCTOBER 7, 1966

Arts challengeArts dean Dennis Healy has issued a challenge of

learning to arts students with his outline of a . new firstand second year arts curriculum .

Healy's plan — as outlined in last Friday's Ubysse y— would eliminate all departmental barriers to students ,and enroll them in the broadest possible lecture pro -grams combined with small seminar discussion groups .

The idea is to introduce students to the learnin gprocess, to try and equip them with the basic tools fo rcreative thinking without the verbal jetsam that float sthrough present courses.

But students are the customers and Healy doesn'twant to be a supplier without hearing from the buyer.

A huge amount of work is yet to be done beforeany curriculum revision can first become a pilot pro -gram and then a reality .

Since Healy wants to involve students in the de-cision making process, and since students have un-invitedly offered loud criticism of the present artsprogram, maybe students could do the bulk of thatthinking and working.

When Healy said he wants to be told what studentsthink about arts, that was as much of a challenge as adean working in a university bureaucracy can issue .

It means the mechanisms which will evolve th enew arts program are not yet built.

The glove he dropped is a challenge of learnin gfor all arts students .

To pick it up is to do some hard, creative thinkin gabout what arts should be, and to wrangle student voicesinto whatever mechanisms are formed .

The arts undergraduate society, in its present dis-organized condition, can 't do it .

But ad hoc student groups can, and should .

Bed buildingWhile we're t al k i n g about consulting students ,

here's a suggestion for the board of governors .

We applaud the board 's decision to build 3,000residence beds at UBC in the next five years .

But, as president John Macdonald said, pounds ofdesign work must yet be done before any shovellin g

starts .Nobody but us students will live in the finished

residences .So the logical people to ask about design are stu-

dents, although 50 years of building at UBC has never

included such a radical departure.A president's committee to make plans will be

struck. It will include (a couple of board members, th ehousing office 's Dr. Malcolm McGregor, several housingstaff members, and an architect or two .

A slightly larger committee could include, for in-stance, the grad students' housing guru Jim Slater,,AMS housing expert Ray Larsen, and maybe a fewunknown experts who happen to have lived in LowerMall for some years.

Dear Ralph . . .Two years ago, UBC director of information

services Ralph Daly whiled away many jolly hour swriting may-I-correct letters about picayune points t onewspaper editors .

He stopped when The Ubyssey nominated him Yo-Yo of the Year, but he still publishes the administra-tion's house organ, UBC Reports .

Thursday, UBC Reports contained a full page ex-tracted from President John Macdonald's welcomingaddress to students .

In it, Ralph neglected to point out only 300 student sattended the speech, and used a picture making th eminiscule crowd look almost adequate .

The same Ralph Daly and John Macdonald railedat the irresponsible Ubyssey for inadequately noticin gthe 4,000 strong, wildly cheering throng at last year 'swelcome .

Uh, Ralph, may we correct .

.) AAD NE %AS TNi GnR}T5tU5EAT NUM6Eii: 3334443 !NEMAC AN F. "' FOAM FROM'THE r,OVERMMEMT — 'TNgTMEMhS ME's $MART — SeNE T11KFF5 t0u4N CO S-SES1e4 aM0 Q 30 '

(St4M )

My brother learned the

other day that sociology pro-

fessors and engineers have

something in common: theylack a refined wit.

My brother's sociology classwas discussing the impact oft h e automo-

bile on mod-e r n society.

"What aspectsof our world

can be direct-ly attributed to

t h e automo-bile?" askedthe prof.

The fresh gave forth with

the usual answers . "Roads ,drive-in movies, bastards, etc . "

"What else?" prof. wanted

to know .

"Whitewall, tires!" volun-

teered my brother .

"What do you mean?" The

prof. didn't know what mybrother meant.

"That's what's wrong with

the world," said my brother."Whitewall tires . Most people

are unhappy and miserbalebecause they don't have white-wall tires. That is whatcauses wars.

"And the privileged fewwho do have whitewall tire s

look down upon everyoneelse, and think they are reallysomebody just because theyhave whitewall tires."

Having been expelled fromsociology class, my brotherwas lying on the lawn con-templating injustice and sum-mer school sociology courseswhen' a horde of red-sweater-

MATE

Whitewall tirescause all woes

WNO slOWS? Mulis hsotsmas ILL 8a MRS .b43! ANDwCh. sews

u sloths OF ucct.a 6 3 5MMMM M M .n..-.

.D O4NF

1J INSSEY

ed aborigines led by a scant-ily dressed prostitute on ahorse marched toward himyelling, "We are! We are!"

And then someone woul dbellow, "WHODAHELLARE-WE?!" and they would startchanting again, "We are . Weare."

"You are idiots all," sai dmy brother, hoping to aid thered men's search for identity .

As he emerged from thepool, sogging wet, he washeard to mutter : "That'swhat's wrong with the world .Whitewall tires and engi-neers . "

IISWMWEMIWMIMMEMWDRIOWMDINIRIRRIIOINIII

Star of the day was Pneumonia,who felled Wilczak. When Kelseystopped laughing he paid a sick callto Wesbrook's basement suite . MariaGiardiri was en-Gaged . Boni Lee,Tom Morris, Alan Neid, Rick Ward,Angela Ottho, Jill Green, Ron Sim-mer, Renata Kahle, Kathy Harkness,Val Thom, Bert Hill, Charlotte Haire ,Mary Ussner, John Appleby, Lin-tse-Hsu, Brock Halle, Iry Fetish,Diane Belshaw, Norman Gidney andVal Zuker newsed over lollipops .

Sportewise, Margaret Fairweather ,Jim Maddin, Arden Ostrander, an dHank Pakasaar stopped by. VinceHowell, where are you ?

Camera-clutchers were Kurt Hil-ger, Al Harvey, Don Kydd a n dDerrek Webb.

Perdu? Or pincz? Sambo certainly !A smash — bashed .

IIMRIINMMMIIIRIMHWMIHfSNNWIINfflfWNNE

EDITOR: John Kelsey

Managing Richard BlairNews Carol Wilso nCity Danny Stoffma n

Photo Powell HargravePage Friday Claudia Gwin nFeatures Rosemary HymanAsst News--- Pat Hrushowy, Anne Ball

He's pottyEditor, The Ubyssey;

Tent city is an honorableattempt to demonstrateagainst injustices, but it hassome serious drawbacks forthe participants.

Take, for example, the caseof the student who awakes inhis tent at 8 :00 o'clock. Hedoesn't have to get up be-fore this time because he hasa 9:30 lecture. He has beensleeping in, fighting the urgeto go to the bathroom. Butnow he has to get up .

But there are people outthere. He can hear them. Cau-tiously his head emerges fromthe tent, and he sees not justa few people, but lots ofpeople. And that bathroom isa long, long -way away . Thebushes are not much closer.A half nude man cannot godiving into bushes at 8 :00 inthe morning anyway. Peoplewould talk .

He surveys the run to th e(bathroom and gets set for thesprint. And to sprint the 880is not easy. He is all set . Thenhe looks at himself . He wearsonly his pajamas. Those loose ,baggy pajamas with the hugehole in the front . He cannotrun out there like a blood-hound .

Instantaneously his decisionis made. Tearing off his pa-jamas, he pulls on his pants .While buttoning his shirt h ebursts from the tent like theangel Gabriel and flees to-ward the bathroom.

People stare at this wildspectacle. Embarrassed, heslows down. But speed is im-perative — he sprints . Morestudents, unused to such dis-plays, their mouths gaping ,regard all with wonder .

Again he slows to a verybrisk walk, then runs again .

Fortunately this part of thetale has a happy end . For thenext night he has a solution .And the next morning hewakes at 8 a .m. His first lec-ture is at 10:30. The peopleoutside are no longer a prob-lem. He can hear them .

He pokes his head outside,and watches them, knowingwell they will not be subject-ed to such an exhibition o ffanaticism. But where doesone empty a potty on campus

Assaf Photo Dennis Gans without being seen?PATRICK MONAHAN

Arts 1

Youth at stakeEditor, The Ubyssey :

I have been increasinglydisturbed by the extremelyliberal attitudes possessed .byone Gabor Mate, as expressedin his recent articles about

MORE LETTER Son Page 1 5

Akr toles, THE ssn' DRY, 1:MET TA's DAR"sc 604 t N6u-3AA,4! NEtO.O ME WSz.IPCODE CIAO ztNG . NUM'BUS, so t GPVi IKM MtAREA GODS AND VMONENUMOEA !

\\ LATE CI WEVt gEE5 oN PFW tu1MRfEti l I SsS,SO ttEY.`PR00A01-4 %Se. NE TO Tor,DANCE AT THAT Pt-t10E NEP .ENA too on cnlefw

BY GABOR MATE

¼.

p f

is a weekly magazine ofcommentary and review.

SEPT . 30, 1966

editor: claudia gwin n

assistant: judy bing

photo: dennis ganspowell hargrave

kurt hilge r

don kyddderek webb

cartoons: judy hid

rae

stageCity and campus a r e

fast acquiring a favorablereappraisal of their thea-tre policies . The philoso-phy now includes varia-tion, availability and ap-peal .

Watch for good thingsfrom the urban 'Playhous ewhich this year offer ssome home town dram aby Clavell and St. Pierregarnished with a newproducer - to - public atti-tude. This comes in theform of a special studen tmatinee rate.

Closer at hand, fivetheatre grad students ar ecollaborating with thecreative writers in pre-seing their original prizewinning plays at theFreddy Wood Studio .

Casting tryouts are nowbeing set and are open toall .

Later in the term gradstudents doing productionstaging or directing inconnection with theirtheses promise more ad-venture in this field. Theyalso will be looking fortalented aides.

In the course of all thisshmozzle it seems ther emay be some restrictionon the use of the studi oby other student groups.It remains to be seen whe-ther this is a result ofmere crowding of theavailable facilities or an-other lesson in misman-agement.

Delegate talks TurkeyBy RENE WIER

The village of Pamukkalelies approximately twelvemiles northeast of Denizli ;a large town in southwestTurkey . Its inhabitants num-ber a little over a thousand .

I entered Pamukkale oneafternoon with eight otherdelegates and a Turkish pro-fessor Ersan Ilal who wasour interpreter . Leaving themain road, we walked down

Rene Wier was one of 43Canadian university stu-dents in Turkey this sum-mer under WUS auspices .Here he tells of a school-teacher struggling almostsingle-handedly to advancelearning in a rural village,which impressed him morethan Istambul's mosques orthe modernity of Ankara .

a wagon-rutted path, besidewhich flowed a white streamrich with lime .

After asking several smal lboys where the muhtar, o rvillage leader was, we weredirected to the coffee-house .It was a small building builtwith sun-dryed bricks (likeall the other houses in thevillage) and was shaped likea garage .

About forty patrons wer esitting on straight-backedchairs in the shade outsidethe coffee-house. No womenwere present . Before we ar-rived they were playing cardsor talking in groups of twoand three, but upon seeingus they all rose.

CO}'r si HOUSEThey had mustaches an d

were dressed in baggy blacktrousers and a gray shirtcovered by a black vest orjacket .

We sat in a semi-circl ewith the majority of the vil-lagers behind us . The muh-tar and hoca or religiou steacher and several othervillage councillors sat be-tween us and the coffee-house. Ersan sat to the rightof the muhtar.

Through Ersan, we learnedthat the villagers are rela-tively poor .

The muhtar related howpoor the agriculture is . Mostof the land is owned by theaga or local lord . The villag-ers resent the fact that theaga uses migrant workersand machinery instead ofhiring villagers.

NO WATERThe villagers have small

plots of land, most of the m10 hectares in size, which donot receive enough water .They cannot use the streambecause the limestone sedi-ment kills their crops .

Their one good well isconstantly running dry . Theyhave petitioned the govern-ment unsucessfully for anew well several times .

BROWN TWEEDThe muhtar had sent a

runner to fetch the school-teacher. Upon his arrival allthe men, including the muh-tar and hoca, rose. We alsostood up and turned to see

a tall man with a mustachedressed in a brown twee dsuit . He was not more thanthirty .

One of the councillors, sit-ting to the right of Ersan ,offered his chair to theteacher.

From the teacher welearned that he and a col-league had 112 pupils in thefive primary grades.

Primary school (ilkokul) i scompulsary. Pupils begin a tthe age of seven and attendschool for five years .

If able to continue theygo three years to secondaryschool (ortaokul) and thenthree further years to highschool (lise) .

VILLAGE APATHYThe interview began to

assume the aspect of a con-spiracy as Ersan and theteacher started talking softlyso not to be overheard bythe muhtar.

Through Ersan, the teach-er told us that the villager sare very apathetic, almostantagonistic, toward educa-tion in the village. At leasttwice a month he remind sparents that children mus tgo to primary school.

Fathers want their son sto help them with the farm-ing, while both parents wishthat their girls would stayhome.

The muhtar and the vil-lage council refuse to fi-nance a two-room additionto the school.

Each year the primaryschool has about twentygradutes. The teacher triesto persuade the fathers o fbright children to let themcontinue their education . Inthe last five years, however,only six graduates have gon eto secondary school at Den-izli . Of these, two finishedsecondary school and arepresently employed sellingsouvenirs and postcards atthe nearby ruins of Hier-apolis.

RESPECTEDNone of the villagers told

us about their school . Theyleft it to the teacher to speakabout their educational diffi-culties . Yet the villagers hadtreated Ersan and the teach-er, both learned men, withmuch respect .

Ersan was seated to theright of the muhtar. All thevillagers had risen for the

teacher; he had been seatedin the centre .

None of the young villagemen had interrupted th emuhtar's talk, yet the teach-er became the sole speakeralthough he was muc hyounger than the muhtar .

The learned are respectedbut not accepted .

MUSICThe teacher added that he

had been unable to getenough adults for nightcourses. Most of the men. pre-ferred to pass the eveninglistening to the radio .

Almost half of the housesin the village have a radio ,but most villagers shut theirset off when the news comes

on. The teacher has per-suaded some, but very few ,to listen to more than music .

He then offered to sho wus his school. The muhtarand one councillor accom-panied us .

THE FAMILYThe teacher led us to a

long whitewashed building,which served as his familyhome as well as the school .He introduced us to hi smother, h i s brother andsister, his wife and his tw ochildren . They have one bed -room and a kitchen withseveral mattresses on thefloor as sofas and beds .

Everything, as in the ad -joining schoolrooms, w a sspotlessly clean .

THE SCHOOLThe school has two larg e

rooms and a small office forthe teachers .

The classrooms are aboutthe size of ours, but thereare no lighting fixtures over-head. Each desk is largeenough to seat three to fourchildren .

Above t h e blackboardwere large colored graph sdepicting children by age,sex, height, and grade . Be-tween these charts and largemaps were hung detailed pie-

tures of pets and satellite sclipped from newspapers.

Along one side of the roomwere frames holding threa dspools on wires, similar toan abacus. The children hadbuilt them themselves forlearning arithmetic .

In the centre of the room ,in front of the teacher's desk ,lay a large box filled withsand and geometrical instru-ments. Here the class didgeometry .

ENEMIESAll this time the muhtar

and his friend had been inthe school with us . They had ,however, remained near th eschool entrance, whisperingbetween themselves.

The teacher told us thatthe hoca was a powerfu lenemy who had absentedhimself from t h e coffee-house when the teacher ap-peared.

I saw the hoca immediate-ly afterward watching u sfrom beneath an oak treesome distance behind us .

To have a religious leaderagainst a teacher in a deep-ly religious country likeTurkey is dangerous . Sever -al fellow delegates who hadvisited other villages told methat often a muhtar and

SEE PF SEVEN

Page 6

6iy.~i'Gk~'%/fo' %93v'1~.'c{bT9'"Yvrkf,W3,nCs4:)i.3*i6sC}^}.'. Si;3,':n.:'.

THE UBYSSEY Friday, October 7, 1966

10% Discount onCorsages & Wedding

Bouquets

Vogue Flower Shop2197 W . Broadway

736-7344

THEY EARN

THEIR SALT

This science reaches new depthsBy CHARLOTTE STEEL

Take the sciences of bot-any, zoology, meteorology ,chemistry and geology to-gether with a large sectio nof physics and put themunder salt water.

You now have the rela-tively new and rapidly ex-panding field of oceano-graphy .

Oceanographers date thebeginning of the intensivestudy of the sea, from thefour-year around-the-worldvoyage of the HMS Challen-ger .

• • •

On this cruise, which be-gan in 1872, biologists, phy-sicists and chemists combin-ed to study marine life andthe chemical and physica lconditions it exists under.

The Challenger expeditionstimulated organized scienti-fic interest iin oceanography ,a subject which previouslyhad been limited to investi-gation within the individualpure sciences .

In the following yearsmany countries, includingCanada, developed oceano-graphic institutes to con-tinue research and trainoceanographers .

But according to the UB Cinstitute of oceanographydirector, Dr . G. L. Pickard ,the field is not a p u r escience .

• • •

"It's the application of pur escience to the study of theocean," he said .

The institute, formed i n1949, now has on its staffnine full-time faculty mem-bers. Four are physicists ,t w o zoologists, and theothers are specialists inchemistry, botany and geo-logy.

The UBC institute wasformed at the suggestion ofthe Defense Research Board ,which operates a navaloceanographic station a tEsquimalt .

Prior to 1949, research inCanada was confined main-ly to finding applications ofknowledge to fisheries andnaval operations .

Under the direction of Dr .W. A. Clemens and Pickard,who took over in 1958, th einstitute expanded rapidlyfrom, a one-man researchprogram into physica loceanography .

UBC oceanographers nowtake regular voyages onnaval and government shipsplunging nets and instru-ments into north-west coast-al waters in search of moreinformation about tides, andlife on the ocean floor .

But some resarch goes onabove the waves .

• • •

On a platform off SpanishBanks, a research team un-der professors R . W. Stewartand R. W. Burling is study-ing the interaction of th esea and air .

Using instruments to mea-sure the temperature, direc-tion and velocity of the windand waves, the researchershope to discover the effec tair turbulences have on theformation of waves .

• • •

They have tentativelyshown that waves originateas a result of horizontal heattransfer in the air .

The wave growth become smore rapid as the wave be-comes higher, influencin gthe nature of wind fluca-tions .

Many of the problemsthey face are concernedwith the instruments, thei rcalibration a n d accuracy ,which is a major objectiv eof the program .

• • •

Biological oceanographer sare keeping a careful watchon water discoloration in th ePowell River area, wher eshellfish poisoning took on elife during 1965 .

An analysis of the wate rrevealed the presence of amicro-organism, Gonyaulexacatenella, which had notformerly been associatedwith red tide poisoning .

Workers in the zoologica lfield are sampling coastaland deep sea waters in anattempt to find out whetherthe plankton in GeorgiaStraits is native or driftedin from the ocean .

• • •

The chemistry of s e awater is an important aspectof salmon spawning, sinceoceanographers find one ofthe few clues to the fish' shoming instinct in the in-dividual characteristics ofriver waters .

The Campbell River, fo rexample, has trace element swhich differ in proportionfrom the Fraser .

Physicists have studiedthe way fresh water fromthe river combines withthe ocean water .

The oceanographic geo-logists work is confined

mainly to river mouths andcoastal waters because it isvirtually impossible to ob-tain mud samples at grea tdepths .

He can, however, obtaina useful picture of the oceanfloor by using seismology .

This involves monitoringsound waves produced byexplosions on the o c e a nfloor and analysing them- forindications of the depth o fthe various strata .

• • •

The UBC institute is spon-soring research in this direc-tion in Georgia Strait, HoweSound and Jervis Inlet .

Pickard, w h o sees theocean as a major source offood supply, said the clai mthat scientists know lessabout marine phenomen athan they do about Mars, isexaggerated .

"We know what's goin gon," he said . "We just don't

know the details . "As the field expands, th e

j o b of the oceanographerwill be to fill in the details ,contributing to both pureand applied science .

One of the problems to besolved wit h the help ofoceanography is the riddin gof industrial effluents .

The Nanaimo biologicalstation recently made astudy of the sewage pro-blem at Port Alberni .

• • •

But so far as Pickard i sconcerned the UBC instituteis for research into the purescientific aspects of oceano-graphy .

"We regard it as a fieldfor study," he said .

• Man! Like I dig these cravats th emost!—so far out they are in! Lik ethey are not to beat!—I mean lik ecool colors and fab fabrics . Man ,control yourself ; you may flip! I did !

4445 W. 10thnear Sasamat

2901 W. Wdwy .dt Mackenzie

Friday, October 7, 1966

T H E

U B Y S S E Y

112CCK.:~Gf PL : N

Better Shoes for LessDEXALL'S — GRANVILLE AT 10TH — 738-983 3

MAX DEXAL LOFFERS

10% Discountto UBC Students

2609 Granville at 10th

A complete stock of all the popular make s,of shoes for the college student, as well a shosiery, handbags, slippers, rubbers an dumbrellas .

'What ever your need in footwear you'll find it a tDexall's . Pay them a visit — see the exciting newstyles — ladies ' and men ' s — and ask for the 10 %discount .

Page 7

GRAD CLASSFirst General Meeting

Membership: all students in the winter session who are

registered in the final year of a course leading to a

Bachelor's or the M .D . degree shall be members of the

Grad Class .

—positions open ore: President, Vice-president, Treasurer,

Secretary, Social Convenor, Public Relations Officer .—a meeting of the Grad class (all graduating students)

for the first time on MONDAY, OCTOBER 24, AT 12 :30

IN THE AUDITORIUM .

—nominations may be sent to the Secretary, AMS, post -

box 54.

of most Europeans, the true aggressors inSoutheast Asia are not the Communists bu tthe United States .

Unless neutralization of the area is af-fected, De Gaulle forsees a prolonged andwasteful conflict, leading possibly to wa rwith China. France wants no part of tha twar .

In 1965, therefore, she gradually with -drew from the American sponsored Sout hEast Asia Treaty Organization .

Similarly in Europe, France no longe rsees the threat of Communist aggression.In the French view NATO has become ananachronism, merely a device for the per-petuation of American control over Wester nEurope . A natural desire for freedom fro mdomination and fear that American leader-ship would involve France in unwantedsituations underlies France's final brea kwith NATO this summer, as well as thedevelopment of her own nuclear force .

De Gaulle's "force de frappe" may notmake France a world power, but it doe smake her an independent one.

Europe, in the French view, is a logicallycohesive unit, from the Atlantic to th eUrals, and De Gaulle has worked towardsmaking this logicality a political reality . Herefuses to treat the rust remaining fromthe Iron Curtain as a barrier to better rela-tions with Eastern Europe, and with Russiain particular .

"Russia is indeed and in respects theleading world power in the part of th eworld where she is located," De Gaulle sai don his recent visit to the USSR . "She seemsto France to be an interlocutor with whom 'understanding and collaboration are natura lto the highest degree ."

More cautiously, France applies the sameattitude towards China . Contrary to the U .S .policy of isolating China, De Gaulle sees theneed to maintain relations with that coun-try which is also rapidly becoming the"leading world power in the part of th eworld where she is located "

Paris now stands as the only major West-ern capital with an open door to China.This was dramatically demonstrated lastyear when Harold Wilson, good Americanally that he is, was ignored by the Chines ein his "Commonwealth peace mission" pro-posals, while Andre Malraux, France's Min-ister of Culture, was being entertained b yMao Tse-tung in Peking .

ing", a new attitude of dir-ectness and local care.

An important source forDorn is probably The Farm-ers' Daughters, William Car-los Williams' short-stories .Williams writes: "I give mylife willingly to experienceand to prove that Keyser-ling was right in saying lo-calism alone can lead to cul-ture ." His stories are proofof that, and Dorn has pickedup what makes them operate .

The fact that Dorn not onlygives us good readable stor-ies, but good cultural eco-logy as well is an indicato rof a changing situation.

Page 8

THE UBYSSEY

Friday, October 7, 1966

Mate

the

great

Croak

raIM2, 32333~383xd323232323838323aMM'82&M

83a38883

23

83

83

83

YOUNG MODERN SSHOW UP I N

PURE WOOL

18

888383at83

s

Whether you're off for aday of fun or an evenin gof friendship and chatter,you'll feel relaxed i nthis "London . Rib"" mock -turtle pullover with lon gsleeves and neck zipper .Just imagine—machine-washable, 100% English -Botany wool in lots ofnew shades for Fall . Tocompliment your sweat-er, these perfectly tailoredpure wool worsted slim swoven from 100% super -fine English Botany .They're dry-cleanableand perfectly dyed-to-match any Kitten Botan ywool sweater . At all fin eshops everywhere .

86~

. . there is no career that can match business in diversit y

of intellectual interest . . . A vigorous, free society calls

for the highest type of business leadership . . . "

THE STANFORD UNIVERSITYGRADUATE SCHOOL OF BUSINES S

invites you to meet its Admissions Representative ,Mr. Michael P. Burkart, on

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1966

to discuss the Stanford M.B.A. and Ph .D. Programs inBusiness Administration. Appointments to meet with

Mr. Burkart may be made throughMr. A. F. Shirran

DIRECTOR OF STUDENT SERVICE S

The M.B.A. Program is a two-year general management

course particularly designed for students who havemajored in liberal arts, humanities, science, and engi-neering. The purpose of the Doctoral Program is t o

train scholars for the stimulating challenge open to -business educators, researchers, and innovators .

Without this label it is not a genuine KITTEN .

€&FSE X42 o I g8S88t8888

88

83

Novel lauds the great un-American wa y

When units of De Gaulle's nuclear " forcede frappe" rolled through the streets ofParis for the first time in the 1965 BastilleDay Parade, the event symbolized France ' snew independence in military and foreignpolicy .

In North America this independence hasbeen presented as the unfortunate aberra-tion of a semi-senile, egotistical mind . DeGaulle, we are told, has shattered the West-ern alliance and jeopardized the securityof the free world merely to satisfy his nee dfor personal aggrandizement .

In fact De Gaulle has neither endangeredWestern security, nor has he pursued a per-sonal policy inimical to the interests ofFrance and Europe .

Aside from the question of the CommonMarket, the two basic purposes of Frenchforeign policy have been to establish closereconomic, scientific, and cultural ties withthe Eastern bloc, including China, and tokeep France out of unwanted foreign con-flict.

"While four of the five world powers fin dthemselves directly or indirectly implicatedin various conflicts and notably, in the oneexpanding in Asia," said De Gaulle in hisyear end message to the French people, "we ,as far as we are concerned, are engagednowhere. And we are doing what is neces-sary not to be involved, should the casearise, in any war that would not be our's ."

"What is necessary has been the totaldisengagement of France's military ties withthe United States . "

This has been most urgent in SoutheastAsia where • the U .S. is following a belli-gerent policy with which De Gaulle strong-ly disagrees . In the view of De Gaulle, a s

By STAN PERSKY

Ed Dorn has suggested ,half-humorously, in a talkhe gave about the Shoshon eIndians' of Idaho, that whatit really means to be un-American is simply, that youdon't have money. By thatdefinition the three couplesin his novel, The Rites ofPassage are un-American .

What they do have is theirown presence in a particularkind of land . Another thin gthat they have is a strongunspoken sense of being justthat, and of being right there,where they are, in the . daywhich is there to be seized.

They don't have regula rjobs or employment. They'redependent on the seasons, thetimes when work is to be

had. Their cars aren't shiny .When the cars collapse ,they're not sold back into themarket, but abandoned, clos eto where they die .

In his attempt to show therelationships between th epeople and any land they'r ein, Dorn goes a long way to-ward dispelling any naiveidea a person would haveabout what "corporate Amer-ica" is like .

He doesn't suggest that thi ssystem is changeable . If hethought so, I'm sure he wouldhave said. What he doesseem to indicate is that a manmight be able to effectivelyignore the structure at times.

Ed Dorn's work appearsunder the general banner of"The New American Writ-

Mob misses Indian message

4544 W. 10th Ave.Vancouver 8, B .C.Ph. 224-1351

• Full DiningFacilities

• TakeHomeServic e

GRADUATING 4STUDENTS

DON'T DELA YHave You r

GRAD PHOTOGRAP HTaken Now

The Mobile Studio is at theEngineering Buildingnow and until Oct . 1 9

No Cost — No Appointment Neede d(This Service is Covered by Your Grad Fee)

CAMPBELL STUDIO LTD .10th & BURRARD

736-026 1

By JASON HARE

Cree maiden Buffy Sainte-Marie, aided by her mouth-bow and guitar, Tuesday tol d2,000 people to go straight tohell—and all 2,000 applaud-ed .

And that indicates he rmessage of what the whiteman did to the Indian inNorth America either didn' tget through, or somehowdoesn't apply to UBC's whitechildren.

Or that her history re-writ-ing message is false .

To those who do what th esinger recommends—that is ,study history with care—the message isn't false .

To those who have ances-tors in Canada or the U.S . ,the message applies—our re-vered ancestors did perpe-trate one of the major in-justices in all human history .

As Miss Sainte-Mariepoints out, the injustice i sstill going on and rathe rlittle is being done about it .

But the applause meant itdidn't get through to theaudience, which isn't too un-usual considering all theother talks of inhumanity inthe name of progress thatpeople listen to but don' treally hear .

As a singer, Miss Sainte -Marie has profoundly influ-enced the rest of the folktribe, including the grea tidols Bob Dylan and JoanBaez .

The influence is a goodone-she sings with powe rand clarity . She comes acros sbest in blues and love songs ,and most powerfully whenshe looks at the audiencedirectly, and tells it wher eto stuff itself.

She does not succeed, how-ever, when she allows hervoice to warble, as she did i nher last song, and as she didin several numbers earlier i nthe program .

The acoustics in the gymare still atrocious despite amajor alteration over thesummer .

But UBC audiences have away around this : an anarchis-tic, almost vengeful way o feliminiating the nice orderl yrows of chairs and balconybleachers .

When Buffy returned fro mher half-time break, thechairs were mostly deserted ,and the people sat on thefloor in a sea from platfor medge to walls . She kept usingthe foolish microphone, butthrough audience proximitywas nicely audible in spiteof it .

TOMORROWSATURDAY, OCTOBER 8

THE 'BIG BEAT' SOUND OF THE

NOCTURNALS and EPICSIN THE ARMORIES

FROSH RECEPTION DANCE

Crowning of the Frosh Quee nand Ugly Man

Tickets AMS and South Broc kor at door

Only $2.75 per couple

8:30—1:00 p.m.

Friday, October 7, 1966

T H E U B Y S S E Y

Page 9

Kerensky talks with pf's Rod Wilczak

Alexander Kerensky, this is the man whowas .

Premier of Russia for three months in1917, he is remembered only as the man de-posed by Lenin . Ironically, Kerensky's fathe rwas Lenin's schoolmaster and was largelyresponsible for Lenin becoming a lawyer .

Now Kerensky is a senile, meandering oldman. He has his own version of Russianhistory which bears only occasional similar-ity with the truth .

pf: You told the Vancouver Sun, "Russi ais on the road to democracy ." Are you im-plying that Russia is not democratic now ?

Kerensky: No, it is not . It is a totalitariandictatorship . The people do not have anypolitical rights — to write and publish some -thing without the permission of the govern-ment. Naturally today they tolerate som emore free, liberal ideas, but this so calle dliberal period is not very ibrilliant becaus eunder the influence of the necessity to wagea civil war, they became more severe .

pf: I don't understand how you can saythat in the knowledge of certain vocal critic sin Russia today like Yevtushenko and others .

Kerensky : I said yesterday, that Russia willreturn to her historical role because historyof modern Russia is a fight for the introduc-tion of a completely democratic regime . Theregime which guarantees all rights for everycitizen to think and to speak and to writefreely and to be guaranteed freedom fro madministrative arrest and punishment .

pf: You don't think that in 1917, the So-viets were a more representative form ofgovernment than your provisional govern-ment .

Kerensky: The Soviets were organized i nthe beginning days before the abdication ofthe Czar. But in my time from July untilthe October counter revolution was the firs ttime Soviets were in the government a smembers of the democratic coalition . Se-condly the Soviets lost their position step bystep, because during the summer we restor-ed self government and universal suffrage .

Lenin in one of his secret letters sent in-structions to the Central Committee whenhe was in exile in Finland. He wrote, "Itwas not necessary to wait for the openin gof the Second Soviet because the Sovietswere 'a very useful weapon in fighting forpower but they will become a child's toy . "

On the same report he supported the con -vocation of the Constituent Assembly, the nhe promised the people that the Assemblywould be the only lord and master of Rus-sia .

At the same time he wrote, "We must no tawait the opening of the Constituent As-sembly because the majority of this organi-zation will be against us . "

All the time it was a double game . He con-quered under the mask of 100 per cent de-mocracy .

pf: In 1918, Lenin said, "The Bolshevikstalked of the bourgeois-democratic revolu-tion in 1905 . But now when the Soviets arein power, when the workers, soldiers, andpeasants, say, "We will take the whole pow-er and will ourselves undertake the build-ing of a new life,' at such a time there canibe no question of a bourgeois democratic re-volution .

Would you comment on this ?

Keresky : You can find enormous numbersof these lying declarations . In June, 1917 ,Bukharin said, "We from the beginning ofour work since 1917 in Russia had onlyone aim — to introduce the dictatorship ofthe proletariat .

And the dictatorship of the proletariatis the dictatorship of the Communist Partyand the dictatorship of the Communist Part yis the dictatorship of the Politburo and thedictatorship of the Politburo is the dictator -ship of Lenin and later Stalin and later o fKruschev and now is the intermezzo . Thefight inside of the Politburo is not finishedbetween economists and mild people .

pf: In July 1917, there were large demon-strations in Petrograd and Moscow agains tthe continuance of the war . These wereprompted by a major setback in the Galic-ian campaign . The Bolshevik party was theonly party which was definitely against th ewar. Wouldn't you say they were mor erepresentative of the people than your gov-ernment?

Kerensky : It was the beginning of thedecisive revolt organized by Lenin in accord-ance with the beginning of the counteroffensive of the German troops . At this timeI was at the front and this revolt under theslogan "All power to the Soviets" was aflop. Lenin disappeared from Russia fromthe fourth of July until October .

pf: In your address today, you made a fewremarks about the balance of power in theworld—could you elaborate, please .

Kerensky : There is no balance of power ,because on one side the U .S . became a super-empire, with the best navy, best submarinesand tremendous money . Western Europe isnot strong enough to compete with theUnited States and Germany. Russia wa sstronger a few years ago than now becausenow they are necessitated to count the ne wposition of China and the extremely diffi-cult economic situation .

Now there is the extremely importantindustrial and agrarian reform of Mr .Kosygin to improve the life of the large

masses. They recognize now that the firstneed of any government is to give enoughbread to the population . They are changingtheir industrial policy insisting that ever yfactory must consider the successes of pro-duction not only in number produced but inquality, and to produce the things which areneeded by the population . It is somethingelementary after 49 years of a regime whichdid not consider whether the peasant hadsomething to eat or not . Even Kruschev hadto buy wheat twice from Canada and Argen-tina for many millions of gold rubles . Thepeople understood what sort of a regim ethis is which in fifty years could organizethe most elementary system to feed thepopulation. The support of a population thathas nothing to eat is very difficult to obtain .

pf: In October 1917, Lenin said ,"Owing to the revolution, Russia in a fewmonths has caught up to the advanced coun-tries in her political organization . But thisis not enough. War is inexorable and putsthe question with unsparing sharpness :either perish, or catch up and overtake th eadvanced countries economically as well . "Would you like to comment on this state-ment, Mr. Kerensky ?

Kerensky: In the beginning, when hecame to Russia, Lenin said Russia is th emost free country in all Europe and Russiawill make enormous progress politically an d-economically. He promised to make a mir-acle . After the victory, he proclaimed thatour aim was not to organize a constitutionalassembly, but the dictatorship of proletariat .

In my memoirs is the story of how Leni nsupported by big money from abroad playedthe double game and played on the ignor-ance of the so called proletariat, which wa snot the proletariat but people from the vil-lages and townswomen, children, etcetera ,completely without education and political-ly and economically ignorant . He pleasedthem, I don't know why, because they wereso simple .

And Maxim Gorky in his newspaper, afte rdissolution of the Constituent Assembly ,wrote an article, in which he compare dJanuary 6 of 1917 with January 9 of 190 5when the Imperial Army killed many un-armed people who brought petitions to theCzar to ameriarate their lives . He said ,"And you Lenin , you are more terrible thanthe Emperor Nicholas II" This artcile waspublished in his newspaper, but if you looknow in the work of Gorky, in this editionthe article is deleted .

So, you see in conclusion that the realitywhich I saw myself, and existed in 1917 t o1919, and the legend which until now domi-ated in western countries have nothing i ncommon .

Are You About To Receive aBachelor of Science Degree?

Think about an ADMINISTRATIVE CAREER in one of themany technically oriented federal government depart-ments .

The Department of : AgricultureMines and Technical Survey sIndustr yPublic Work sTranspor tTrade and Commerc e

and other sare looking for YO U

To qualify, write the Civil Service Exa mto be held on OCTOBER 19 at 7 :00 p.m .

ROOM 2225, BUCHANAN BLDG .

Exemption : only for those who hold Master' sor Doctorate degrees in 1967 .

It is preferred that you send, in advance of the examin-ation, Application Form CSC 100 <available at the Place-ment Office) to the CIVIL SERVICE COMMISSION O FCANADA, UNIVERSITY RECRUITMENT, OTTAWA 4 ,ONTARIO. It will be possible also to complete an Appli-cation Form at the examination .

<::.. ::mmim. ..s:>;am. :z< :ium .:. mem » ..'o .;,omm=a<imm: .. .>`i. .6 :mral .: m es;

'WE DID . . . MUSES - RUSSIAN -

Non-history Kerensky style

G`?>'• .'~"s.~:'%:°HE:av::?4'<`5'%;<•...."

:;'~i`.>:%!:'.<%>.i:': .y%:3:;'?i!'.~Fis:: :3~~'x

;f~k9 :'~' ::;:$:: .sr:;! :ra~¢: ~r?n;4: ::°~r>i~x :'~.<:K:>i~:tsi :" :~FYa? ; ;.g:~:.: ::>: :~:~:u:>.v:.,

CLAUDE : But it's the third timein a week that I've lost an India nwrestling match.

BEA : It's remarkable how thatsoft lambswool sweater can takeit . Still looks great for other kind sof activities, too .CLAUDE : I knew it would stan dup. It's famous British Byfor dquality .BEA : Oh, Byford! Designer ,Hardy Amies !CLAUDE : Who's he ?BEA : He's an international d esigner known all over the worl d 'for expert styling . He's fromEngland . The British really knowwool and how to handle it .CLAUDE : What's an India nwrestling match when I haveyou, and Byford, too!

C 9 .5 .6 5

this exclusive, made in England,

BYFORD DESIGN CONSULTANT : HARDY AMIES

A GO GO

presentin g"SOUND UNLIMITED "

and th eA GO GO GIRL S

Dancing 9 to 3 EveryFRIDAY and SATURDAY

Ample Parkin g821 RIVER RD ., RICHMON D

at Richmond Marina o nthe Airport Roa d

Reservations, CR 8-2624

a tth e

Design it yourself. Your very ownindividually tailored suit. Pick fro mover 250 Action Swatches in Sil k& Wool, Venetian, Gaberdines &Hopsacks Tailored to Measure byTip Top Tailors Only $85 & $95 .

2901 West 'Broadway

DISTINCTIVE MEN'S STORE S/ow

4445 W. 10thnear Sasamat

2901 W. B'dwy .at Mackenzie

CN.1.7GF GL :.N

..1

f

Page 10

T H E U B Y S S E Y

Friday, October 7, 1966

Cubist not squareBy MAX VERDICCHI O

The reading of a play un-

like that of a poem, is a diffi-

cult task to undertake as itdeprives the audience of the

visual aspect of drama which

is its most vital characteris-

tic .

The danger of reading aplay, especially for the firsttime, is that it can be diffi-

cult to follow and boring forthe audience .

When playwright Donal dSoule, a professor of the

UBC theatre department,read his latest play "Why IKilled Kathy Pus" at theVancouver Public .Librar yAuditorium Tuesday eve-ning, it was neither .

Soule by his uncontestedabilities as-actor, producer ,stage and costume director ,compensated for the lack ofvisualization by performin gall these roles at once .

The play, as defined by theauthor, is a cubist play inthe form used by Picasso inhis paintings and by Law-rence Durrell in his famousquartet .

It is based not on a storybut on a series of physicalexperiences that summarizedgive us the character of oneman, George Maston.

The man under study, asthe cubist form demands, i sobserved from all angles —represented by the points ofview of each member of hisfamily.

Each angle is explored anddeveloped in single shortepisodes or scenes that cons-titute in themselves a com-plete story independent fromthe rest of the play. Onlythe characters are always thesame even if they inter-change roles as the view-point changes . Only commondenominator of these epi-sodes is their final purpose.

In Act II the man, GeorgeMaston, expresses his ownviewpoint, in relation to hisfamily.

The play requires fiveactors and fifteen "humanprops" . As the play empha-sizes physical experience,

Critic blasts babbleBy NELSON MILLA R

Tokyo Olympiad is a cele-bration of the speed, agilityand strength of the humanbody. Sight and sound juxa-position forms a sensuousand emotional mosaic stress-ing the equal value of groupand individual participation.

However, a soundtracktailored for American audi-ences interrupts the visualexperience by telling aboutit in words and by editorial-izing drama into certainevents instead of letting thedrama come from what ishappening visually .

This commentary combin-ed with sports ; announcers'excited babble, points to th eGames ' competitive aspects ,thereby going against the in-trinsic goals of the film.

If you want to experiencethe film to any significantextent take some ear plugs .

the only setting needed isexpressed in terms of thefifteen actors . Although theytake part physically in theepisodes they do not affectthe stories in any way .

The only sore note of thereading was Soule's an-nouncement that the playwill not be premiered inVancouver .

It is my hope that he willreconsider .

TURKEYFROM PF

hoca co-operate to the teach-er's detriment by votin gdown school finances and b yencouraging religious classe sto be held at the same timeas the school's classes .

AGENTSSeveral religious authori-

ties called the teachers th esecularisation working t odestroy the church in th evillage.

We were told by one Turk-ish Education Departmentofficial in Ankara that totake secondary education toeach of Turkey's 20,000 vil-lages would not be feasible .

Instead of trying to tak esecondary schools to ever yvillage, the speaker suggest-ed, one should build a fewgood schools and bring chil-dren from neighboringschools into these .

NO BUSThe suggestions put for-

ward by the speaker were ,[ think, extremely relevant ,but he did not mention theprovisions for villages likePamukkale where the chil -dren must go to 'Denizli fo rsecondary education b u twhere there is no means ofiaily transportation . Prospec-tive students must board inDenizli, imposing a finan-cial burden on their parentswho must be sorely temptedto keep them home to help .

In Kaetel, a village jus t)utside Alanya on Turkey' s>outhern coast, the villag ewas so close to Alanya tha tschool children could walk .E .lmost fifty per cent o fprimary , school graduateswent on to secondary school,

BANANA BELTBut lKastel is a wealthy

village in the banana belt ,vith most villagers havingiet incomes twice that o fhe Pamukkale farmer.

There is a correlation be-ween wealth and education .ertainly the wealthy farm -

sr can afford to send hison to secondary schoo lpore easily than the poorarmer .

Both the rich man and th eioor man may be ignorant o fhe importance of education ,)ut it will be the impoverish -td farmer who more likelyvill be forced to keep hi son home to help with thearming- duties .

Life is love at unique instituteBy LYN BOWMA N

In the spring of 1965 Joan Baezmet Ira Sandperl and asked him t otutor her in political science .

Joan's opinions, statements, andactions in the civil rights campaignand the peace movement had bee ncriticized by responsible members o fgovernment for the political naiveteof love .

By the time they had departe dthey had decided to welcome th epublic to the seminars, where peoplecould learn about, not only the poli-tical, but also the social, personal ,psychological, institutional, practical ,and economic applications of nonvio-lence .

The first sessions were held tha tsummer . There have been four otherssince then .

All over the world men agree tha ton pain of universal destruction or-ganized violence must be outlawed .Yet the one general accord that isheld throughout the world is that i tis proper and even patriotic to tak ethe life of a political foreign oppon-ent. This view is shared by all coun-tries and by all political groups withthe exception of the pacifists .

The Institute for the Study o fNonviolence explores every facet ofthis strange though commonly heldassumption, namely, the extolled or-tnodoxy of international murder .

The Institute is based primarilyon informal but disciplined seminars .The readings are chosen from suchbooks as : C. W. Mills, Power Elite ; A .Huxley, Ends and Means, Island, To-morrow and Tomorrow and Tomor-row; and L. Fischer, Life of Mahat-ma Gandhi .

I heard about the Institute in adocumentary on This Hour Has SevenDays last wirrter. Immediately afterexams two others and myself, holi-daying in California stopped at theInstitute. It was closed but I applie dfor a session from August 15 to Sep-tember 12 .

I was met at the Monterey busdepot by Holly Chenery, the secre-tary-treasurer of the Institute. Herfather has been a presidential adviso rand is now a professor at Harvard .

Holly dropped out of university inher second year because she believed

that greater knowledge does not neces-sarily create greater understanding ,that a better job is irrelevant to in-ner happiness, and that both greaterknowledge and a better job are detri-mental to one's personal morality .

The staff are vegetarians, and b ythe end of the session so were fiv estudents including myself . .

This is an extension of huma nlove to a love of all life. Naturall ysome line has to be drawn and w edraw it at inanimate life . It is need-less and immoral for a man, knowin gthat he can get all the protein he re -quires from dairy products, to killanimals .

I had never been a member ofanother group in which there was no tone person whom, even in the small-est way, I did not like . This close-ness and 'friendship was common t oall of us. As well as myself fromCanada, there was a girl from Italy,a boy from England, and the rest fromthe U.S .: New Jersey, New York ,Iowa, !Pennsylvania, Colorado, Wash-ington, and California .

Monday through Friday at on ep.m. everyone met at the Institute fora half an hour there was an exercis eperiod consisting of calisthenics ledby Joan, folk dancing led by Holly, orwalking led by Ira at 1 :30. We hadlunch at 2 .

The first seminar began with 2 0minutes of silence . The rest of thehour was spent discussing the pre-vious day's reading or anything any-one wanted to ;bring up .

From three to four was the mosttrying part of the day . Each of u sis left alone somewhere on thegrounds without books, music, cigar-ettes or other distractions — trappedwith our thoughts. Having to be si-lent, forced to watch and listen t omy thoughts, undistracted for on ehour is the most difficult thing I haveever tried to do .

At the end of the day we wereassigned that night's reading, general-ly ninety to one hundred pages .

Ira Sandperl is a fine, truth-ful, loving, nonviolent man. He drop-ped out of his first year of universityfor the same reasons that Holly didover 20 years later.

He travelled around Europe fo rmany years, returned to the U.S. to

participate in an educational experi-ment where the student was allowedto study as and what he pleased . Thislasted for 12 years .

Ira read widely and discovered Al -dons Huxley at an early age. Later,they became friends . It was becauseof Huxley's books, finally and specific -ally The Perennial Philosophy, thatIra became a devout pacifist in 1947 .

Ira is president of the Institute,and the person around whom theseminars centre . He decides whatbooks are to be read.

Joan dropped out of university inher first semester, having not onlyknown but studied under Ira . Forthe past seven years she has pursue dher career as a folk singer . She hasexcessive guilt feelings over hermoney. She has ceased giving con-certs because she makes too muchmoney from them, she stopped analbum release in August, and took aposter of herself off the market .

She supports the school, Holly ,Ira, and Susan . She has also sent agreat deal of money to a man in Sicil ywho is successfully combatting th emafia with nonviolence .

She is broke until she gets anotherroyalty cheque in January . Joan isperhaps the most celebrated pacifis tin America .

She has annually refused to pa y60 per cent of her taxes because tha tis the percentage of U.S. revenue spenton the armed forces .

This year the U.S. 'Governmen tseized, against Joan's will, over thirty-six thousand dollars in unpaid taxes .

The Institute was Joan's idea . Sheis simultaneously the vice-presiden tof the Institute and a student at it,every session .

The Institute, before Joan bough tit, was a shotgun shell factory .

The 'Institute is generally misun-derstood by those few people whoknow it exists .

It is not a guitar school althoug habout half of the students do pla yguitars, and Joan did lead us i nhootenaneys at night .

Neither is it an LSD or marijuanaparty. Use of both is strictly pro-hibited anywhere near the Institut eor the ranch .

The prime issue now is the at-tempt to get international murder out -

lawed . When that is done the pacifistwill get back to these other issues .

Civil disobedience is not the primeweapon of the pacifist. On the con-trary, civil disobedience is the last ,most regretted, yet undefeatable actof the pacifist.

When an injustice occurs the paci-fist first gathers as much informationas is available about the issue so tobe sure that an injustice is occurringto "raise an insurmountable moral an dlegal case against it .

Next he places his case before th eperpretrators of the injustice .

Often this is enough to stop th eunjust act . If not, the pacifist takeshis case to court . Only if the courtstoo refuse to admit the injustice exist sand to act against it does the pacifist,reluctantly, resort to civil disobed-ience .

Since the seminar I have discov-ered nonviolence and at the same timea love for people and the world. Idiscovered that life is not the cor-rupt cycle of birth, social condition-ing, a job, family, and death whichman has made it . Instead life is amuch simpler, more beautiful, mor edifficult thing. Life is love .

Not the popular view of love, bu tthe unconscious giving of yourself toeveryone in the world and asking no-thing back .

Love obviates violence . Usually thepacifist says : "It is evil to kill ." Hetherefore abstains from war. He isanswered by those who say, "I'd ra-ther kill than be killed ." To whic hthe pacifist replies, "No, I'd rather bekilled . "

Truth, love, and nonviolence ar enot things a man can attain for he al-ready has them . Every man must eli-minate society's conditioning, the har dcore of falsehood, hate, and violence ,that surrounds his "self" to know thisis true. Only then can he admit an dmeet his awareness of the evil ofsociety and find peace within himself .

And only this peace gives him th estrength to 'bear up under society'soppression and to change it .

Life is a continuous challenge an dresponse . A man only says that he willbe truthful, loving, and nonviolent inresponse to this challenge, now, thisvery moment, and by the series of"news", passing his life .

Samsonite breaks the cost barrier tosmartly styled, strong, light luggage.

Example:this 21-inch caseonly weighs51/4 lbs., costsless than $26.

Ladies' Beauty Case, 21" Overnite, 26 "Pullman, Weekend Tote . In Polar White ,Smoke Grey, Fiesta Red and Olympic Blue .Men's Companion (21"), Two-Suiter ,Three-Suiter . In Black Olive, Smoke Grey andSeal Black .New Samsonite Debonair is popularly price dluggage that offers a whole new rang eof advantages for people on the go !

An incredibly tough moulded shell i scombined with the famous Samsonit emagnesium frame-to make this luggage th elightest, best-looking and most durabl ein its class .

New Samsonite Debonair is available in seve nstyles and six new fashion colours . And thecolours are infused into the shell to eliminateany possibility of peeling or blistering . Othe rfeatures include recessed frame withtongue-and-groove seal to protect content sfrom damp and dust, inset locks to preven taccidental opening or damage in baggage

pile-ups and richly lined, beautifull yfinished interiors . Go happy, go lightly withnew Samsonite Debonair . It's luxury class—at economy price !New happy-go-lightly Samsonite Debonai rMade by Samsonite of Canada Limited ,Stratford, Ontari o

Page 12

MADE BY SAMSONITE OF CANADA LIMITED, STRATFORD, ONTARIO .

THE UBYSSEY Friday, October 7, 1966~, ..c .w-m .ar.waftavra.-s"ra naar.~.swa a .w.w .+w .ftn +t.a3-+aY T

4LIt i.tt i.Gb Gih6t bbiafi4 .4 RA.,

UBC's VARSITY ROWING CREW braves the early morning mist and chill as theyplough their way through the waters off Stanley Park . This scene is from a filmsponsored by the UBC crew, to be shown today at 12 :30 p.m. in Memorial Gym211—213. Admission is free and all are welcome.

Johnson's men competein St. Louis tourney

Friday, October 7, 1966

THE UBYSSEY

Page 1 3

BIRDS STAY HERE

Portland Statecalls Saturday

By GEORGE ROBERTS

The much-travelled UBC football Thunderbirds aren 'tflying anywhere this weekend .

The UBC soccer Thunder-birds left Thursday for a week -end collegiate soccer tourna-ment in St . Louis, Mo .

The Birds are guests of theSt . Louis University Billikens ,

UBC gir lgymnastsdo ' wel lTwo U B C students

competed for the Cana-dian women's gymnasti cteam at the world champ-ionships in Dortmund,Germany, Sept . 21 to 25 .

Sandra Hartley, phys-ical education 1, a n dLeslie Bird, science 2 ,gymnasts with the UB Cteam, were among sixwomen chosen to repre-sent Canada at thechampionships.

Both girls are fromNorth Vancouver .

Sandra finished first onthe Canadian team andseventy-first in the indi-vidual ranking w h i l eLeslie was second amongthe Canadians and eighty-eighth in the over - al lstandings. There were214 women entered inthe competition .

Canada was fifteenthin a field of 35 countries .

Both Sandra and Leslieintend to try out at Tor-onto in May for the Pan-American team .

The 1966 Pan - Amer-ican Games will be heldin Winnipeg in July .

1965-66 soccer champions o fthe National Collegiate Ath-letic Association .

Two other clubs from theSt. Louis area complete th eentries in the double - lossknockout tourney.

St. Louis draws most of itsplayers from the immediat earea, because the city highschool soccer league is verystrong .

Soccer is catching on in th eU.S. St . Louis expects a crowdof 10,000 people for a singlegame in this tournament .

The Birds were picked as ateam worthy of this tourna-ment after they defeated col-lege teams from San Fran-cisco and San Jose, Calif., lastyear .

This is the first time a Cana-dian soccer team has been in-vited to play against the Amer-ican champs .

UBC's athletic departmentis trying to get a return matchwith St . Louis here, but BuzzMoore, business manager forathletics, said UBC can't guar-antee any percentage of gatereceipts to defray travel costs,

and a return match is notlikely .

The Birds are leading th ePacific Coast League with tw owins, a loss and a tie .

The loss was a 5-2 decisionUBC dropped to Burnaby VillaWednesday at Callister Park .

Rugby clubsopen league

Two of UBC's five rugb yteams venture into league com-

petition Saturday in Victoria .The Totems and the Toma-

hawks, entries in the new B.C .Intercollegiate Rugby Associa-tion, kick off the season againstthe University of Victoria andRoyal Roads 'Military Academy .

Meanwhile, the Thunder -birds entertain the West Van-couver Barbarians in an ex-hibition game at the Thunder-bird Playing Fields west ofthe Winter Sports Centre .

Game time is 2:30 p.m. Sat-urday.

They're playing hosts to the

Portland State College Vikingsat 2 p.m. Saturday at VarsityStadium .

Last week the Birds flew toHonolulu, and the week be-fore to Arcata, Calif.

Losses on both road tripsand a scoreless tie with West-ern Washington have left UB Cwinless, and head coach Fran kGnup hopes friendly VarsityStadium will be the scene of aThunderbird victory Saturday .

Gnup says his brood is i ngood health with only guardVern Lieb on the injured list .Lieb will be out for threeweeks with a dislocate dshoulder .

Quarterback Dick Gibbonshas been bedridden for th epast two days but was expect-ed to be at Thursday's practice .

If Gibbons can't play he'll b ereplaced by Kent Yaniw, Thiswould result in more groundplays and eliminate many ofthe Birds' new play-actionpasses, Gnup said .

The Vikings are difficult toevaluate since UBC's films -o nthem are two years old and

Jayvees seeksecond win

The UBC football JuniorVarsity travels to Belling-ham, Washington, Saturdayto engage the semi-pro Mt .Vernon Bell-Jets .

Jayvee coach Ross Heth-erington said Thursday heis pleased with the develop-ment of the team, especiallywith Ken Reid, an insidelinebacker, and Don Walden ,the fullback who is recover-ing from a knee injury butis playing well.

reports say they are very vers-atile, Gnup said .

He does know that Vikingguard Tom Fee tips the scale sat 280 pounds and their pass-ing quarterback weighs 210and stands six feet four inches .

Gnup plans to use the "win gT" and "double wing" forma-tion for yardage in tight spots .

Gnup will use two sets ofbacks . Halfbacks Vic Iwata an dBob Sweet and fullback DaveCorcoran will provide speed ,and Ron Kincade, Paul Dany-liu and Eric Savics, power .

Overseas Auto Parts12th and Alma

736-9804

DRIVING AND FOG LAMPS

Lucas — Machal — Cibi e

$14.95 to $29.95

Complete Stock of Sports Car Accessories, including :

VOLKSWAGON, MUSTANG and CORVAI R

10% Off with AMS Card

Cnitons

oMEWS WEAR

Clothing for campus and dress-up occasion s

742 Granville

MU 1-5625

corduroy casuals

in brick brown,

charcoal onyx,

powder blue, rust

and black. New

wide whale and

elephant whale

jean styles or

mod styles.

Page 14

THE UBYSSEY

Friday, October 7, 196 6

NO FREE TUITION

Policy meets Waterlooeducation minister) after this, "he said .

But today, Sheppard w a squoted as saying he will givecouncil two weeks in which t o"come up with something bet-ter than the status quo or elseI will resign . "

He charged the eight coun-cillors who voted against theresolution were "trying toblock others' chances" for aneducation .

"I only wish the referendumcould be taken among peoplewho can't afford to go to uni-versity," he said .

Meanwhile, efforts to obtai na student referendum on th ematter are proceeding .

The U of W's student feder-ation constitution says a peti-tion signed by five per cent ofthe students is required beforea student referendum can b eheld on such a question.

OPTICAL DEPT.

Bring your optical prescriptio nto us and save !

Glasses Single vision from 9.95PRESCRIPTION

Contact Lenses 49 0 50(ANY COLOUR )

NOW 2 LOCATIONS DOWNTOWN ONLY

677 Granville, opposite The Bay Phone 681-61741 Hour Free Parking at Rite Park

New Westminste r675 Columbia, Opposite Army and Navy

Phone LA 1-075 1

WATERLOO (CUP) — T h e

Canadian Union of Students '

education policy for universalaccessibility failed its first ma-jor test of the year at the Uni-versity of Waterloo .

Students' council decidedMonday night to reject the na-tional union's stand on uni-versal accessibility, in a bitterdebate which dragged on unti l3 a .m .

After four hours of debate ,council voted 8-7 with one ab-stention to reject the free tui-tion and student salary con-cepts approved at last month' sCUS Congress in Halifax .

The vote came after counci l

Although scholastic abilityis of prime importance, char-acter, qualities of leadership ,and interest in outdoor sportsare also considered .

One applicant from B.C., be-tween 18 and '24 years of age ,will be chosen. Students in-tersted should apply to theregistrar before Nov . 1 .

Six hundred CanadianRhodes Scholars have studiedfor two or three years at Ox-ford University .

The value of the scholarshipis approximately $3,000 peryear .

Michael Brown, secretary ofthe provincial selection com-mittee, says the committee willmeet in the second week ofDecember .

The Rhodes Scholarships ,established in 1904 under th ewill of Cecil Rhodes, are th ebest-known of internationa lscholarships .

had passed a "principles in edu-cation" resolution, and otherC U S Congress resolutions .Among these resolutions werestatements such as : "Every in-dividual has the right to an edu-cation. This right must be guar-anteed him by society," whichpassed 17 to 1 .

When the universal access-ability resolution went downto defeat, council presidentMike Sheppard announced h ewould have to resign his posi-tion .

"All summer I've battle dwith the Ontario governmentfor changes in the Ontario ai dprogram.

"I can't face Davis (Ontario' s

Arts presdraws outof charity

Collecting for the United Ap-peal is not the business of theArts Undergraduate Society,arts president Don Wise sai dThursday .

"It's a matter of drawing theline somewhere," said Wise. "Idon't have time for it. It is notmy job "

Arts students contributedonly $28 .62 to the appeal driveearlier this week, less than allbut three other faculties. Driveco-ordinator Peter Colbeck,commerce 3, termed the arts re-sult disappointing .

Wise said he thought therewas no place on campus for thistype of a campaign .

"I can't justify taking upclassroom time. It just doesn' tstrike me as being that fan-tastic ."

set your course

for great good looks.. .

our coordinated

sport coat and vest

leads the way

Why "dress down" for a leisureoccasion, when our coordinated sportcoat and vest make it so elegantlysimple to stand out from theslacks-and-jacket crowd? Our natura lshoulder sport coat comes in awide variety of color combinations i nbold masculine plaids .

Road to Rhodesbrawny, brainy

Rhodes Scholars from UBC are made of smart, athletic

unmarried male leaders in their third or fourth year .

Selection is made by per-sonal interview on the basis o f

the candidate's record .

QUAKER MEETING FOR WORSHI PSUNDAYS 11 A.M.

FRIENDS' HOUSE, 535 W . 10th AVE .

Visitors Welcome

from $49.50

Etimt lath.GENTLEMEN'S APPAREL

545 GRANVILLE MU 1.9831

S

THANKSGIVING

WEEKEN DHOURS at

The VancouverArt GalleryFriday : 10 am - 5 pm

7 :00 - 10 pmSaturday : 10 am - 5 pmSunday: 2 - 5 pmMonday : 10 am - 5 pm

GUIDED TOURS t oImages For ACanadian HeritageFriday : 12:15 pmSaturday : 2:30 pmSunday: 2:30 p mMonday: 2:30 pm

at no extra charge

ImagesFor A

CanadianHeritage

British Columbia's Centennial is honored a tThe Vancouver Art Gallery in the most importantretrospective exhibition of Canadian art eve rshown in the Province .

THE VANCOUVER ART GALLERYSeptember 23 - October 30Tuesday through Saturday 10 am - 5 pm.Friday evening 7 - 10 pm ; Sunday 2 - 5 pm .

Admission : Adults $1 ; Students and school childrenMembers free_

-WY

A special souvenir catalogue will be available at $2 .50,

or free to the first 500 people to become members of the Gallery

during the run of the show.

The show presents a continuing image of Canada asreflected by her artists from 1671 to 1966. The changin gCanadian scene is memorably evoked in 125 works ofpainting and sculpture ranging from historic to commonplace,national to regional, intimate to heroic .

In particular, the exhibition aims to alert young people ofthis province to their accumulating art heritage .

To complement the exhibition, a series of lectures will be given a t

the Gallery. October 4: Recollections in Tranquillity. October 6 : The Seve n

Tears War – to the War to end Wars. October 18 : Canada Limited

and Unlimited . October 20 : Canadian Art – International .

MORE LETTER S

Lovely Fort Camp, crummy dance s

Friday, October 7, 1966

THE UBYSSEY

Page 1 5

whole article was the fac tthat they classified residence sas a whole . This is a seriou smistake .

Each residence is a separateand distinct community . Ihave lived in Fort Camp sinc e1963 and after this time I cansay that I like Fort Camp .Now don't do anything rashsuch as calling the little menin the white coats until I ex -plain .

Fort Camp has an atmos-phere. This atmosphere is no twhat it is generally rumoredto be (the same as what comesfrom the aggie barns) but a natmosphere that contribute sto a pleasant place to live .

The lounge at Fort Campwas built by the students withthe express purpose of pro-viding a place for friendlyconversation . It was not builtas a geometric showplace. Itwas built of junk, rough lum-ber and burlap . What couldbe more informal?

The rooms at Fort Campmay be small and unattrac-tive but a few posters, bottles ,pictures, fishnet, etc ., make

Little green man join sUBC chemistry dept .

A member of the research team which synthesizedchlorophyll has joined UBC's chemistry department as avisiting professor.

Dr. Raymond Bonnet, oneof the four visiting professor sappointed to the UBC facultyfor the 1966-67 academic year,is an expert in the chemistryof natural products .

Bonnet plans to lecture grad-uate students and continuepreparation of a book for pub-lication .

Another visiting professor,Dr. Gunter Menges, will joi nthe department of mathematic sand economics .

As a full professor of sta-tistics and econometrics, hewill teach advanced statisticalanalysis and a seminar inmathematics .

Dr. Joel Brenner, a special-ist in linear algebra and agraduate of Harvard Univers-ity, will join the mathematicsdepartment to give lectures inoperations research.

Dr. Lars A. A. von Haart-man, of the University of Hel-sinki, has joined the depart-ment of zoology for a year togive a graduate course in orni-thology and an undergraduatecourse in invertebrate zoology .

them quite attractive and liv-able. The food may not b ethe best but I have yet to hearof anyone who has passedaway due to malnutrition o rfood poisoning in our home .The dining hall at Fort Cam pis, without doubt, the mos tinformal place on campus .

As for study facilities, i fone is to just look there aremore places to study in res-dence than Carters have live rpills . So why all the fuss an dfuror? A little more work an da little less complaining wouldmake life in residences no tonly bearable but very enjoy -able .

DAVID BATESONEd . 4

BubblegummersEditor, The Ubyssey:

In recent dances in the ar-mory, there have been no

AMS - members - only restric-tions, since larger profits ca nbe realized if outsiders are letin .

An a result, an ever increas-ing number of bubblegum-melts and young punks attend .Since none of them seem abl eto hold their liquor, they comein very sad shape. In fact, th eonly thing they seem able todo is start fights and at thisthey succeed admirably .

It is the duty of the AM Sto enforce restrictions so tha ta fellow can take his girlto a dance and know he won' tend up dancing beside som e16-year-old girl .

He should also feel assur-ed that he won't get into afight or have to witness one .

These are university dances .The damned bubblegumshould Ibe kept out of our hair.

ALAN DAVI SApplied Science 2

Classical Guita rInstruction in Technique

and Repertoire

W . Parker, 682-1096 or 874-354 7Studio at 2695 W . Broadway

RE 3-4022

The modern way to see is with

Have them expertly fitted at areasonable price by

LAWRENCE CALVERTMU 3-1816

705 Birks Bldg.

JUDG EFO R

YOURSEL F

Consider the evidence .

Millions of girls have used bil-

lions of Tampax tampons . Theywere developed by a doctor forthe benefit of all women—activeor inactive, single ormarried. Made of pure,surgical cotton, highl ycompressed, they give sure ,trustworthy protection undereven the sheerest clothes .

The verdict is never in doubtonce you try Tampax tampons .In three absorbency-sizes, Regu-lar, Super and Junior, whereversuch products are sold .

WANTE DStudents for

HOMECOMING '66WESTERN M 0 V/ES

THE SHERIFF OF FRACTURED JAWOCT. 11, AUD., 12:30 - 2 :30

THE UNFORGIVENOCT. 12, AUD., 12:30 - 2 :30

THE MAGNIFICENT SEVE NOCT. 14, AUD., 12:30 - 2 :30

Admission 50c per perso n

marijauna, prostitution, andevil life in general .

I must protest that his fri-volity revolts my sense o fdecency and my love of pureliving .

Do you realize the effec tthis material might have onyoung, healthy minds? Wordslike pot, tripping-out, sex ,will enter into both conversa-tion and imagination to des -try the work of conscienti-ous parents everywhere . Thewell being of our youth is a tstake!

I would ask you to pleasecurb his freedom immediate-ly. If this isn't done I amafraid that I shall have tocancel my subscription .

Social Respectibilit yEd. 3

Worst everEditor, The Ubyssey :

May I take this opportun-

ity to congratulate Mar y

Ussner and Norman Gidney

on one of the worsst articlesI have ever read in The Ubys-sey. The worst part of the

TYPEWRITERSSPECIAL STUDENT RATE S

3 Months $18.00All Makes, Standard or portable

also Electric PortablesConsolidated Typewriters

534 W. Pender MU 5-6371

Fall Campu s

—SPECIAL

CORDUROYCOAT S

b y

CROYDO N

$10 .9 5Style - 3 Shade s

Regularly 529 .9 5

Take advantage of thi s

Manufacturers Clearanc e

b y

UNITED TAILOR SBRITISH WOOLLEN S

549 Granville

MU 1-4649Open Fri . till 9

FROM PAGE 4

VARSITY GRILLCHINESE AND WESTERN CUISIN E

ECONOMICAL STUDENT MEALSFREE DELIVERY

Join the Crowd a t

VARSITY GRIL LNext to Varsity Theatre

CA 4-1822CA 4-3944

4381 W. 10th Ave .

Deep-RibbedHigh-Rise

Turtle-NeckSweaters. . .stand-out

in every group

The total look from Swinging Old London call sfor sweaters that go both high and deep. Thepoor boy look .

from $16.95

Mg ( qty tabs 'I npFOR YOUNG MEN

L 550 GRANVILLE MU 1-7814 j

Contact Lenses

MOULT S

NO PIN SNO PAD S

NO 000 0

DEVELOPED ST A DOCTO RNOW USED IT MILLIONS OF WOME N

TAMPAX TAMPONS ARE MADE ONLY BYCANADIAN TAMPAX CORPORATION LTD.,

w..

a

Page 16

THE UBYSSEY

Friday, October 7, 196 6

'TWEEN CLASSES

Russians tip tea cups

A / I , . . . A L A AA A f t , ,. . . . I A A A A L A A A

CLASSIFIE DRates: 3 lines, 1 day, $ .75—3 days, $2 .00 . Larger Ads on reques t

Non-Commercial Classified Ads are payable in Advance

Publications Office: Brock Hall, Ext . 26 . 224-324 2

I.H.The Russians are coming t o

the T .H. tea, Tuesday 2:30 p.m .Upper Lounge. Everyone wel-come — refreshment free .ARCHEOLOGY CLU B

Meeting noon today in Bu.204 .

COMMERCEFilm "Technological Chang e

and Management" with speak-er Mr. H. Alexander, Control-ler of Canadian Imperial Bankof Commerce, noon in Ang . 407 .

CIRCLE KMeeting Wednesday, Oct . 12

in Br. Ext. 156. Bring time-tables. All welcome .

P.C .General meeting noon to-

day, Bu. 214 "The LeadershipQuestion" .WUS

General committee meetingin Brock Conference Room,noon Tuesday, Oct . 11 .VCF

Stephen Smith speaks on"Believing is Seeing", noon to-day in Ang . 110. All welcome .Thetis weekend — bus leave sBrock for charter boat at 5 :45p.m .CHINESE VARIETY

Movie on "Higher Educa-tion in Taiwan" Bu. 106 noon

Why You Get ThatT-i-r-e-d Feelin g

=and How To Fight It .October Reader's Digest reportson some surprising and helpfulnew studies that reveal the truenature of fatigue. New theo-ries, advanced by scientists,claim fatigue is caused by anacid in the muscles and thebest way to rid yourself of itis to get tired more often . Thi srevealing article gives five help-ful suggestions you can use ifyou have less energy than youshould. October Reader's Digest

Tuesday . Free. Everyone wel-come .VIETNAM COMMITTEE

General meeting and dis-sussion of student days of pro-test, Tuesday in Bu . 212 . New-comers welcome .TENNIS TEAM

All interested in playing onUBC tennis team meet in theField House today, 5 :30 p .m .

ALLIANCE FRANCAISEMeeting noon in I .H. Con-

versation, coffee and film —Les Tachiste .

PRE-DENTAL SOCT h e meeting tentatively

BETTER BUY BOOKSUNIVERSITYTEXT BOOK SNON-FICTIONPAPERBACKS

Specializing i nReview Note s

and Study Guides4393 W. 10th Ave .

224-4144

scheduled for Friday noon hasbeen cancelled .U.N.

General meeting noon Bu .202. Program discussion . Allinterested welcome .CHRISTIAN SCIENCE

Testimony meeting Fridaynoon Hut 0-12, between th eEd. Bldg . a n d West Mall .Everyone welcome .I.H.

Dance at I .H. Lower Loungetonight 9 p.m. Admission 2 5cents . Free refreshments .PRE-LAW SOC

General meeting Tuesdaynoon in Bu. 223 .

N

NEW YORK

COSTUME SALONRENTAL S

WHITE DINNER JACKET STUXEDOS, DARK SUITS, TAIL S

COLORED JACKET SMASQUERADE COSTUME S

SPECIAL STUDENT RATE S

CA 4-0034 4397 W. 10th

LOST KEYS FOR OFFICE, HOME,car . If found deposit at AMS of -fide for Charlie Boylan .

LOST LADIES BROWN GLASSES ,Brock Lounge, Wed. Call 738-2017 .

FOUND LADIES RING IN PON -derosa on Wed., Oct. 5. Phone988-1277 to claim .

ANYONE WHO TOOK MY CHEA Preplica in exchange for an expen -sive umbrella in the Fredi Wood -Theatre at 8 :30 on Thursday,please phone AM 6-651)0 and askfor Steve .

WILL THE WOULD BE RUSSIANwho "displaced" my "Knuga "from the library please return it !

FOUND : MAN'S WATCH ATU.B.C . Bowling Club Mondaynight. Call John Strom at 224-9794.

FOUND A GREY-BLACK NYLO Njacket in gymn at Buffy Sainte-Marie concert. Inquire at Publi-cations Office .

Greetings

1 2

EX P.W. RUGBY . INTERES eel)in playing 2nd Division. Contact-rubgy Doug (RE 3-2241) Groovy ,up tight and out-of-sigt .

Coming Dances

12A

Special Notices 1 3WHY PAY HIGH AUTO INSUR -

ance rates? If you are over 20and have a good driving historyyou quailify for our good drivin gates . Phone Ted Elliott, 224-6707 .

WANTED: STUDENTS FORHomecoming '66 Western Movies .THE UNFORGIVEN, Wednesday ,Oct. 12th. Auditorium 12 :30 - 2 :30 ,admission 50c .

WANTED : STUDENT FOR HOME -coming '66 Western Movies. TH EMAGNIFICENT SEVEN. Audi-torium, Friday, Oct . 12th . 12 :30 -2 :30, admission 50c .

WANTED: STUDENTS FO RHomecoming '66 Western Movies .THE SHERIFF OF FRACTURE DJAW. Auditorium 12:30-2 :30 ,Tuesday, Oct. 11th . Admission50c .

DALTON CAMP NATIONAL . PRO-gressive Conservative Presidentspeaks at noon Tuesday in Brock .

HAVE YOU EVER SEEN A DOU-ble headed beatle bill? See one ortwo for 50c . Thurs ., Oct. 13th ,Auditorium 12 :30 to 8 p.m .

TALK BACK AT ST . ANSELM ' SChurch . Sunday 7 p.m .

Transportation

1 4

DESPERATE — RIDE NEEDEDvicinity 10th Ave. Burnaby for8 :30's Monday to Friday . Ph. 526 -2149 .

RIDE WANTED FROM VICINITYof 10th and Oak for 9 :30's. Phon eRose-Marie 733-5881.

RIDE .WANTED FOR 8 :30's M-F.Vicinity Renfrew and Parker .Phone Vicki 255-0428 any time .Those who phoned -before pleasephone again .

RIDE WANTED, KINGSWAY &Jersey, 8 :30 class, M-F . PhoneDave 434-0422.

Wanted

1 5

GOT A GARAGE FOR RENT? Cal lDave at 224-9803 Rm . 268 . After 6or leave address .

AUTOMOTIVE&MARINE

Automobiles For Sale 2 11954 CHEVROLET . I N RUNNING

order. Radio, ne w batery, goo dtires. $125 . Phone Ed . 224-9667 .

1957 PLYMOUTH. GOOD RUNN -ing condition . $400 or best offer.Phone Ken. 224-7230 between 6 :30 and 6 :30 p.m.A STEAL—1964 TRIMUPH SPRIT E

— only $1,050 — Excellent mech-anical cond., radio. Buy now andsave $200 . Phone 224-6857.

'53 FORD. RADIO, NEW BAT-tery. Good tires, Running condi-tion $85 . Call 738-1672, 6 :30 p.m .to 7 :30 p .m .

1957 MORRIS 1000 CITY TESTED ,Starts well, runs well, (to 70) ,$275 or best offer 224 7793 after 6 .

CORVAIR CORSA 2 DR. H.T. 140H.P. Posi-traction, adj . steering,reverb . HE 3-6906.

'61 SIMCA HARDTOP, LOW MILE-age, lady-driven, phone 988-8668 .

PORSCHE ' 1600 '62 CINTURATOtires, radio leaving for Japanwithin week, 922-9233 .

Accessories & Repairs

22

Motorcycles

2 7

BUSINESS SERVICE S

Orchestras

35

Scandals

39A

DIEF A-GO GO GOING DALTO NCamp Progressive ConservativePresident at noon Tuesday i nBrock .

HAPPY 21st BIRTHDAY GLENNwith love from your Puritan .

Typewriters&Repairs 42GOOD CLEA N TYPEWRITERS , $2 0

up . Also Typewriter repairs at50 percen t savings. Poison Type-writers, 2140 W . 4th. Phone RE1-8322 .

Typing

43

EMPLOYMENT

Help Wanted 5 1A 2nd OR 3rd YEAR STUDEN T TO

sel l advertising for the UBYSSEY .Thi s is an excellent opportunit yto gain sales experience an d toearn commission . Mus t b e hardworking, well organize d and beable to work 8-10 hrs . a week . Ifsincerely interested apply to Pu -blications Office. Brock Hall .

STUDENTS WANTED TO WATCHthree continuous showings of adouble bill Beatle Bash. Thurs. ,Oct . 13th. Auditorium starts 12 :30.Last feature 8 p .m .

Instruction-Tutoring

64

Instruction Wanted

66TUTOR WANTED FOR CHEM .

200 phone 261-7119 and leave mes -sage .

MISCELLANEOU S

FOR SALE 71BIRD CALLS—th e most useful book

o n the campus. Studen t telephonedirectory availabl e latter par t ofOctober. Limite d Number. Ordernow , onl y 7 5 cents fro m Phratere s or publications office, Brock Hall .PURE COCONUT OIL — UPPER

Tenth Barbers & Toiletries. 4674W . 10th .

BOOSEY HAW KE CLARINETwith case for sale . Phone 922-463 3after 6 .

50c FOR TWO GREAT BEATLEmovies. "Help" plus "Hard DaysNight ." Thurs., Oct . 13th . Aud . 12 :30 noon .USED 3 PCE . CHESTERFIELD,

$5 ; 24" Electric range (220v) $5 ;old working vacuum cleaner. Freewith above . 224-1635.

FOR SALE : SEVERAL PROFES-atonally completed manuscripts —Authors Agency, 767 Kingsway , TR 6-6362 .NEAR-NEW LUDWIG META L

snare drum $90 . Phone Mr. Peters after 5 :00 p .m . 733-1005.MAN'S TEN SPEED BIKE EX -

cellent condition $50. Call' Ste. 1 .4336 W . 10th .

RENTALS & REAL ESTATE

Rooms 6 1WANTED GIRL TO SHARE BIG view apt. Kits . Rees. 733-4657 .SLEEPING ROOM . GENT. 4TH &

Larch. $45 mo. Coffee & laundry incl. 738-7474.AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY,

housekeeping rooms. One or tw ogirls, 10 mina to UBC . Ph . 731-5197731-5197 .

ROOMMATE WANTED TO SHAREhouse with two male MBA Gradstudents. Preferably Grad orSenior. One mile from UBC gates . 3928 West 10th .RENT THE AUDITORIUM FO R

50c and sleep thru 3 double billsof "Help. "A Hard Days Night" .Thurs ., Oct. 13 . From 12 :30 .Onc ein stay in . Bring sleeping bag .

Room & Board 62ROOM AND BOARD AVAILABLE

for on e girl. Phone 266-8581.

Furn. Houses & Apts .

63

LARGE FURNISHIJ'D APT. TO BEshared with male senior student .1% blocks from Brock Hall oncampus . Utilities paid . $35.00 mth .Phone Eugene between 4 :30-6 :30 Thursday or Friday at 224-4629.

ACCOMMODATE FEMALE STU -dent . Share costs . Modern Apart-ment located Dunbar and 16th .Phone Myrna 224-6397. 4 :30-10 :30 .Mon . - Fri .

BUY — SELL — REN T

WITH

UBYSSEY

CLASSIFIED

Village Beauty SalonHalf Block East of Memorial Gym

HAIRSTYLING, CUTTING

TINTING

for STUDENTS 1/3 Discoun ton Perms

Phone 228-8942

5736 University Blvd .

Village Barber ShopSame Address

Saturdays Open till 5 :30 p.m.

o canwear aSoft Shouldersuit ?Not everybody. It really depends onyour build . . . but then don't ruleyourself out if you are tall and husky,lean and lanky or short and stocky.

If you can wear soft shoulder you shouldtry it. You will find it to be lighterand more comfortable . It will make .you look slimmer, younger and providea new touch of flair to your appearance.

For the finest in soft shoulder suits,see our selection authentically tailore dby Cambridge in the world's best . . ePure Virgin Wool .

Come in soon.

LTD

2174 W. 41st. in Kerrisdale AM 1-2750Look for the Woolmark on the label when

shop. pNI N

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Lost & Found

11