€vsrssertraffic backed up a quarter mile outside gates on university boulevard after spectacular...

8
TRAFFIC BACKED UP a quarter mile outside gates on Universit y Boulevard after spectacular five-car collision . Car whic h apparently lost its brakes and ploughed into rear of othe r Six cars Mornin g smash-u p ties traffi c By TIM PADMOR E Ubyssey News Edito r A six-car smash-up on Uni- versity Boulevard Wednesda y morning caused an estimate d $3,000 damage to cars an d jammed traffic for nearly an hour. A passenger in one of the cars, Heather Priestman, Edu- cation II, 133 East Osborne , North Vancouver, was taken t o Wesbrook hospital with mino r back and foot injuries . The accident occurred whe n the car in which she was rid- ing apparently lost its brake s and ploughed into t r a f f i c stopped ahead . FIRST CAR Police said the first car t o be hit, a late model compac t driven by Mrs . J . S . Forsythe , wife of the head of Chemica l Engineering department, wa s severely damaged . Her car was driven into fou r other late model cars also i n t h e right-hand, West-bound lane . Driver of the first ca r Louise Lennie, Education I I 285 West St . James, Nortl. Vancouver, said she thinks sh e was going about 10 m .p .h . when the collision occurred . HIT BRAK E "I was about two car length s behind some cars stopped i n front of me when I stepped o n the brake . The pedal wen t right to the floor . "I pulled on the emergenc y brake . but it hardly helped a t all . " "The car is only a week ol d and there are only 200 mile s on it . It worked perfectly com- ing over from North Van ., " she said . DAMAGED CAR S The other damaged car s were driven by Dave Hamel , Education V, Joyce Zolles, a secretary for the English De- partment, and Gary Switto , Arts I . A sixth car was undamaged . Miss Zolles, who said sh e had a sore back after the acci- dent, said she normally come s in on Chancellor Boulevard . "But I though I'd get in wit h the main flow today," she said. "I've been driving just over a year and the novelty jus t wore off." By NORM BETTS Ubyssey Staff Reporter A prairie family will fl y into the wilds of B .C .'s Rock- ies for a final search for UB C student Ted Johnson which officials have termed hope- less . Johnson's family, from North Battleford, Sask ., will fly over the area in whic h their fourth year Forestry student son has been lost sinc e Sept . 14 . They will look down on th e two-foot blanket of snow tha t forced the search to be calle d off late Tuesday afternoon . Johnson's family will fly Malcolm Scott, former Alm a Mater Society president Wed- nesday blasted reports whic h labelled his regime a financia l catastrophe . * * * "With respect to the so - called financial disaster of las t year, I think it should be clear- ly understood that this was no t the fault of open-handed spend- ing," the burly Scott said . The 26-year-old new vice - president of the Canadian Un- ion of Students listed tw o reasons for a financial loss o f $21,000 out of AMS surplus of $49,000 . Council authorized expendi- over some of the roughest ter - rain on the continent . The forestry student is los t 50 miles from Inveremere, o n a mountain more than twice the height of 4,500-foot Grouse Mountain . "It took my men six hour s to climb just 1,600 feet in th e search area," Cpl . W. N . Dor- nan of the Invermere RCM P Detachment told The Ubysse y in a telephone interview . The area is eight miles fro m the roadhead, an eight mile s which local woodsmen sa y takes six hours to cover whe n there is no snow on th e ground . tures over and above he said . (Scott added he felt thes e were absolutely necessary the higher education promo- tion campaign and the studen t means survey . ) * * * "But the big problem occur - red in publications," Scott said . Publications lost $14,500 las t year . "Specifically," Scott said "th e problem was in connectio n with yearbooks, where there was a shocking lack of contro l by those directly responsible . " "Some supposedly respons- ible individuals proved to be car, driving it ahead in a chai n damaged Valiant . Backed up right . —tim padmore phot o reaction, is visible behind badl y traffic can be seen at uppe r CA 4-391 6 fixed levies were cut to th e very minimum . This produce d a temporary surplus situation , but as last year aptly indicates , there is a basic lack of fund s for new programs ." "The solution is obvious we either cut existing pro - grams, fail to implement ne w ones or find more money," h e said . * * * "And I leave it to you t o determine the source of thi s money," he concluded . Scott McIntyre, editor of UBC's yearbook (Totem) las t year — and this — explaine d what Scott meant by h i s charges against those control - ling yearbook matters . "We set out last year with a budget that balanced," Mc- - Intyre said, "based on what w e considered a minimum numbe r of sales . * * * "But we realized at the tim e any success Totem would eve r have depended on a conscien- tious marketing campaign . "And this campaign was pu t out of our hands," the edito r said, "simply because we ar e an editorial staff and canno t be responsible for marketing , too . * * * "The people who were re- sponsible for marketing d i d nothing," McIntyre said . "The y were the people in the publica- tions office ." The office was headed las t year by publications co-ordin- ator, Laurie Frisby. . HUNTER JOHNSON /OL . XLVII, No. 3 VANCOUVER, B .C ., THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 196 4 income, extremely irresponsible i n their control of funds allotte d to their charge," Scott said . He declined to pinpoint an y individuals . But he did state the irresponsible element s were not members of las t year's student council but ap- pointed student officials . * * * Scott also attacked the ide a that a 20-year-old surplus ha d been halved in one year . "During the two years I wa s treasurer (196 1 . 63), the surplu s was doubled over what it ha d been in the last 30 years from $25,000 to $50,000 . "This came about because all For new story Family makes last search for so n Eighteen inches of snow fel l the second day of the search . Cpl . Dornan called off th e search late Tuesday, after a helicopter search . "The situation is hopeless, " Dornan said, "With a brea k from the weather on the firs t days of the search the result s might have been different . "But no break came," h e said. Fog and cloud also hamp- ered the use of a helicopte r chartered by a Vancouve r aunt of Johnson to aid th e search . Ten UBC forestry student s also went into the area las t .. . snows have secret weekend to aid in the search . vsrssE r Scott blasts criticism s of AMS financial losses

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Page 1: €vsrssErTRAFFIC BACKED UP a quarter mile outside gates on University Boulevard after spectacular five-car collision . Car which apparently lost its brakes and ploughed into rear

TRAFFIC BACKED UP a quarter mile outside gates on UniversityBoulevard after spectacular five-car collision . Car whic happarently lost its brakes and ploughed into rear of othe r

Six cars

Mornin gsmash-upties traffic

By TIM PADMOR EUbyssey News Edito r

A six-car smash-up on Uni-versity Boulevard Wednesda ymorning caused an estimated$3,000 damage to cars andjammed traffic for nearly anhour.

A passenger in one of thecars, Heather Priestman, Edu-cation II, 133 East Osborne ,North Vancouver, was taken toWesbrook hospital with mino rback and foot injuries .

The accident occurred whenthe car in which she was rid-ing apparently lost its brake sand ploughed into t r a f f i cstopped ahead .FIRST CAR

Police said the first car tobe hit, a late model compac tdriven by Mrs. J. S. Forsythe ,wife of the head of Chemica lEngineering department, wasseverely damaged .

Her car was driven into fou rother late model cars also int h e right-hand, West-boundlane .

Driver of the first ca rLouise Lennie, Education I I285 West St. James, Nortl.Vancouver, said she thinks sh ewas going about 10 m.p.h .when the collision occurred .HIT BRAK E

"I was about two car length sbehind some cars stopped i nfront of me when I stepped o nthe brake. The pedal wentright to the floor .

"I pulled on the emergenc ybrake .but it hardly helped atall . "

"The car is only a week oldand there are only 200 mileson it . It worked perfectly com-ing over from North Van .,"she said .DAMAGED CARS

The other damaged carswere driven by Dave Hamel ,Education V, Joyce Zolles, asecretary for the English De-partment, and Gary Switto ,Arts I .

A sixth car was undamaged .Miss Zolles, who said she

had a sore back after the acci-dent, said she normally comesin on Chancellor Boulevard .

"But I though I'd get in withthe main flow today," she said.

"I've been driving just overa year and the novelty jus twore off."

By NORM BETTSUbyssey Staff Reporter

A prairie family will flyinto the wilds of B .C.'s Rock-ies for a final search for UB Cstudent Ted Johnson whichofficials have termed hope-less .

Johnson's family, fromNorth Battleford, Sask ., willfly over the area in whic htheir fourth year Forestrystudent son has been lost sinc eSept . 14 .

They will look down on th etwo-foot blanket of snow thatforced the search to be calledoff late Tuesday afternoon .

Johnson's family will fly

Malcolm Scott, former AlmaMater Society president Wed-nesday blasted reports whichlabelled his regime a financialcatastrophe .

* * *"With respect to the so-

called financial disaster of lastyear, I think it should be clear-ly understood that this was notthe fault of open-handed spend-ing," the burly Scott said .

The 26-year-old new vice -president of the Canadian Un-ion of Students listed tworeasons for a financial loss o f$21,000 out of AMS surplus of$49,000 .

Council authorized expendi-

over some of the roughest ter-rain on the continent .

The forestry student is lost50 miles from Inveremere, ona mountain more than twicethe height of 4,500-footGrouse Mountain .

"It took my men six hoursto climb just 1,600 feet in th esearch area," Cpl . W. N. Dor-nan of the Invermere RCM PDetachment told The Ubysseyin a telephone interview .

The area is eight miles fromthe roadhead, an eight mileswhich local woodsmen sa ytakes six hours to cover whe nthere is no snow on theground .

tures over and abovehe said .

(Scott added he felt thesewere absolutely necessary —the higher education promo-tion campaign and the studen tmeans survey . )

* * *"But the big problem occur-

red in publications," Scott said .Publications lost $14,500 las t

year ."Specifically," Scott said "the

problem was in connectionwith yearbooks, where therewas a shocking lack of contro lby those directly responsible . "

"Some supposedly respons-ible individuals proved to be

car, driving it ahead in a chai ndamaged Valiant. Backed u pright .

—tim padmore phot o

reaction, is visible behind badlytraffic can be seen at uppe r

CA 4-391 6

fixed levies were cut to thevery minimum . This produce da temporary surplus situation ,but as last year aptly indicates ,there is a basic lack of fundsfor new programs ."

"The solution is obvious —we either cut existing pro-grams, fail to implement ne wones or find more money," h esaid .

* * *"And I leave it to you to

determine the source of thismoney," he concluded .

Scott McIntyre, editor ofUBC's yearbook (Totem) las tyear — and this — explaine dwhat Scott meant by h i scharges against those control-ling yearbook matters .

"We set out last year witha budget that balanced," Mc- -Intyre said, "based on what w econsidered a minimum numbe rof sales .

* * *"But we realized at the tim e

any success Totem would eve rhave depended on a conscien-tious marketing campaign .

"And this campaign was pu tout of our hands," the editorsaid, "simply because we arean editorial staff and canno tbe responsible for marketing ,too .

* * *"The people who were re-

sponsible for marketing d i dnothing," McIntyre said . "Theywere the people in the publica-tions office ."

The office was headed lastyear by publications co-ordin-ator, Laurie Frisby. .

HUNTER JOHNSON

/OL. XLVII, No. 3

VANCOUVER, B.C., THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1964

income, extremely irresponsible i ntheir control of funds allotte dto their charge," Scott said .

He declined to pinpoint an yindividuals. But he did statethe irresponsible element swere not members of lastyear's student council but ap-pointed student officials .

* * *Scott also attacked the idea

that a 20-year-old surplus ha dbeen halved in one year .

"During the two years I wa streasurer (196 1 . 63), the surpluswas doubled over what it hadbeen in the last 30 years —from $25,000 to $50,000 .

"This came about because all

For new story

Family makes last search for sonEighteen inches of snow fell

the second day of the search .Cpl . Dornan called off the

search late Tuesday, after ahelicopter search .

"The situation is hopeless, "Dornan said, "With a brea kfrom the weather on the firs tdays of the search the resultsmight have been different.

"But no break came," hesaid.

Fog and cloud also hamp-ered the use of a helicopte rchartered by a Vancouve raunt of Johnson to aid thesearch .

Ten UBC forestry studentsalso went into the area last

. . . snows have secret

weekend to aid in the search .

€vsrssErScott blasts criticismsof AMS financial losses

Page 2: €vsrssErTRAFFIC BACKED UP a quarter mile outside gates on University Boulevard after spectacular five-car collision . Car which apparently lost its brakes and ploughed into rear

Page 2

THE UBYSSEY

Thursday, September 24,1964

System ups price a dime

Computor to run bowling

Students waitMonday and Tuesday wer e

the busiest days this week atthe Bookstore and Fieldhousewith some students waitingmore than an hour to getthrough the cashier .

An electronics computer a scomplex as an IBM machine isgoing to modernize UBC' sbowling alley .

But it will raise the per gam ecost by ten cents .

It's part of an experimentthat is being conducted in thebowling lanes in the basementof the War Memorial Gym.

Automatic pin setters in thepast required four times a smuch apparatus as the newly-installed German ones .

The National Bowling an dBilliard Company, based i nVancouver, offered to put th enew equipment in UBC's laneson an experimental basis .

Gordon Allen, supervisor o fthe bowling lanes, refused torelease the installation costs ofthe new pin-setters .

Allen, however, said tha tmaintenance costs would becut in half .

"And the lanes will be asmodern and efficient as is pos-sible today," he said.

The new equipment can b etransferred to the new Studen tUnion Building which will alsohave bowling lanes at a smallcost, Allen said .

Intramural competition be-tween various faculties andfraternities and bowling forPhysical Education credits tak eup much of the time at thebowling alleys, but time isavailable for open bowling .

Soviet brain -power goeson display here Friday

Soviet brain-power will be at UBC on Friday.

For a dollar you can rub shoulders with several to pSoviet professionals in the lower lounge of the GraduateStudent Centre at 8 :00 p .m. on Friday . Tickets are avail -able in the AMS, International House and Graduate Stu -dent Council offices .

Both students and faculty are welcome to come an dconverse with the Russian educators, industrialists, jour-nalists and administrators who have been brought here bythe Canada - USSR Association .

One of the guests will be Mr. Kurdyumov, Deputy-Head of Pravda .

Wanted . . .The A.M.S. Office periodically requires the service of

student typists .

The work isn't bad (but the boss

is a grouch)

We don't pay too much (onl y$1 .00 per hour)

If you would like to apply please leave your name, phon e

number and a schedule of hours available with the A .M.S.

cashier.

New bus route goes directto campus along Marine

B .C. Hydro has added a new bus service via Forty-firs tand Marine Drive that will take students direct to UB Cfor combined Vancouver and University fares of 20 cents .

Buses leave Forty-first and Granville at 7 :40 a.m .and 8:55 a .m. Monday through Saturday, heading alongForty-first and Marine Drive to UBC .

Return buses leave University Boulevard hourly from2:35 to 5:30 p .m. Monday to Friday and at 11 :35 a .m. and12 :35 p .m. Saturday .

McGill principal headshonorary degree lis t

The Principal of McGill University will get an honorarydegree at UBC's fall congregation, Oct . 30 .

Dr . H. R. Robertson, forme rhead of UBC's surgery depart-ment, will receive a doctor ofscience degree .

Hugh Trevor-Roper, Regiusprofessor of modern history a tOxford, will be given an hon-orary law degree and will de -liver the congregation address .

Dr. Robertson, a native ofVictoria, received his B .Sc. andM.D. from McGill in the 1930s .

After service as a field sur-geon in the last war he wasappointed head surgeon a tShaughnessy Hospital in 1945 .

In 1950 he was appointedchief surgeon at Vancouve rGeneral Hospital and head ofUBC's surgery department .

In 1959, he became chie fsurgeon at Montreal Genera lHospital and professor at Mc -Gill until his appointment a sprincipal of McGill in 1962 .

Prof. Trevor-Roper attendedOxford as a student, scholarand research fellow . He hasbeen Regius Professor ther esince 1957 .

His book, The Last Days o fHitler, was a best-seller afterpublication in 1947 .

Hiring pro payin gdividends already

Recent Alma Mater Societyhiring of professional publica-tions manager, Al Vince, haspaid off already, reports AM SPresident Roger McAfee .

McAfee told student councilMonday night that advertisingrevenue was up 40 per cent an dnumber of advertisers up 65per cent over last year in th efirst two AMS publications ofthe year, Tuum Est and Bir dCalls .

Ace Cycle Sho pOffers Ne w

FRENCH 10-SPEE DBICYCLE S$69.50

3171 W. Broadway

RE 8-981 8

Full Name or Initial s

GOLD STAMPE DON BRIEF CASES, WALLETS, ETC .

WHILE YOU WAI T

Percy TutteEngraving System s319 West Pander Street

near Victory Squar e

9 a.m. - 5 p.m.

MU 5-9614

Zebra-stripped lady Godivadraws long blonde look s

Lady Godiva, followed by a horde of 400 Engineers ,bounced around the campus yesterday .

Unlike the legendary rider, the Engineers' girl wasclad in zebra-striped bikini under an Engineer's sweater .

The red horde marched around the library fountain ,to Brock, through the Aggie building and finally to th enew Education building. The march took place withoutincident .

Lady Godiva, who was identified only as Miss B .C .Outdoors 1964, drew many long looks and words of en-couragement .

GSA NEWSMembership

All graduate studentse are automatically full active mem-

bers of the G.S.A. and the Thea Koerner House . Member -ship cards must be obtained at the house office after feeshave been paid. You most bring your Notice of Eligibilitywith you in order to obtain this card.

Applications for Vice PresidentThe position of Vice-President of the G.S.A. is open . Appli -

cations

for the position should be in writing and in thehands of the Secretary of the G .S .A. by Monday, Septem -ber 28, by 5 o'clock.

Faculty-Student Cocktail PartyGet to know your supervisor on a social basis . Invite himout for cocktails on Friday, September 25, from 3 :30 to5:30 .

The event promises once again to be a smashin gsuccess .

Pick up your tickets at the House Office . Ticketssell for $1 .50 and admit one .

Pick up your tickets today.

k4©~01

Alma Muter Society

OFFICIAL.11 NOTICES

1 . Office Hours of A.M.S. Executive:President, Roger McAfee—12 :30 - 4 :00 p.m . daily.1st

Vice-President, Bob

Cruise — 12 :30 - 1 :30

p .m.daily . ; Mon . - Thurs . : 3 :30 - 5 :30 .

2nd Vice-President, Byron Hender—11:30 - 1 :00 p .m .daily .

Secretary, Marilyn McMeans—Monday : 10 :30 - 11 :3 0a .m., 12:30 - 4 :30 p .m . ; Tuesday : 12:30 - 2 :30 p .m. ;Wednesday: 10:30 - 11 :30 a .m., 12 :30 - 1 :30 p.m . ;Friday: 10:30 - 11 :30 a .m., 12 :30 - 1 :30 p .m .

Treasurer, Kyle Mitchell—Monday : 11 :30 - 1 :00 , p .m. ;Tuesday-

11 :30 - 1 :00 p .m . ; Wednesday :

11 :30 -1:00 p .m . ; Thursday :

1.2 :30 - 2 :00 p .m . ; Friday:11 :30 - 1 :00 p .m.

Coordinator, Graeme Vance—12:30 -1:30 p .m. daily,or by appointment.

2. Frosh Election sNominations are open for the following positions:

President, Vice-President, Secretary, Treasurer,Girls'

Athletic Representative, Boys'

AthleticRepresentative,

Executive

Member,

Specia lEvents Chairman .

Nominations open on September 23, 1964 and clos eon September 30, 1964 at 4 :00 p .m .

Nomination forms and election rules are available a tthe A.M.S. Office in South Brock .

3. Personnel BoardMr. Jack Shaffer has been appointed Chairman o f

the Personnel Board .

4. Games Room SupervisorsApplication, for Games Room Supervisors for both

mornings and afternoons are now being accepte dat the Co-Ordinator's Office in South Brock .

5. Brock Management Committe eApplications for the Brock Management Committee

are being accepted at the Co-Ordinator's Offic ein South Brock. Applications must be in byFriday, October 2, 1964 .

Queens meetcouncillors

Candidates for Frosh Quee nneet student councillors and'rosh orientation committeenembers at the Queen's Tea i n

he grad student centre at 3 :00• .m. today .

Of the 23 girls chosen durin g

egistration week 20 remain .-udges today will reduce the'umber to fifteen .

The fifteen will then model

'heir own clothes before a

student audience in Brock Hall

at noon Tuesday .

Page 3: €vsrssErTRAFFIC BACKED UP a quarter mile outside gates on University Boulevard after spectacular five-car collision . Car which apparently lost its brakes and ploughed into rear

Thursday, September 24, 1964

THE UBYSSEY

Rage 3

McAfee slams CU S

—don kydd photoLADY GODIVA RIDES AGAIN . . . and again and again and again . Engineers peren-nial stunt is one of few other students en joy . Because The Ubyssey enjoys sex as muc has the next person we run a picture . agai n and again . . .

Brief urges council seatfor residences, camp s

By AL BIRNIEUbyssey Council Reporte rA residence representativ e

on student council is essential ,says Alma Mater Society pres-ident Roger McAfee .

In a brief to council Mondaynight, McAfee said councillorsshould consider the addition ofa non-voting member to coun-cil to represent problems of thenerly 5,000 AMS members re-siding on the campus .

"During the past years it hasbecome apparent that the in-terests of students in residencescannot be adequately safe-guarded or advanced throughthe present system. This is be-cause of the lack of any for-mal representation at t h epolicy-making level," said th ebrief .

"I have become concernedthat their voice will not b eheard in the program planningof the society. "

If approved by council, thematter would be put to stu-dents at Fall general meeting .

"People in residences com-prise a good percentage ofAMS members, and should behere to air their views," sai dMcAfee .

"They have many legitimateproblems, and at present theirelected representatives aren' tinterested enough to do any-thing about them ."

Jim Slater, Grad Studie spresident and former executivemember of the Inter-ResidenceAssociation, agreed with Mc-Afee .

"IRA has never really co-ordinated activities over thethree residences, and I do notsee how it will be able to doso in the future," said Slater .

"It has no financial contro lover residences, and at presentall major problems, financia land otherwise, are handled bythe administration's Housin gAuthority .

Measures called for included :A one-week 24-hour picket

of the South African Embassyand a continuing 12-hou rpicket thereafter .

Co-operation with the Cana-dian Labour Congress to setup a boycott on transportationof South African goods .

Educational programs inco-operation with various Can-adian organizations (students ,labour, women's groups, and soon) .

McAfee stressed UBC's op-position was not to apartheid ,rather to the boycott itself .

He had no objections to aneducational campaign on SouthAfrica .

"The motion was based on acomplete lack of information, "McAfee said. "No studentsknew what amount of trade i sbeing conducted with Sout hAfrica, and therefore no valid

judgment could be made on the -

proposal."

He said people are oppressedin many countries and that i f

Canadian students are not go-ing to oppose all oppressivegovernments there is no reason

for them to strike out at SouthAfrica .

Such a program would take

a great deal of time and moneywhich could be better spent o nCanada, he added .

Music prof. gives

second recitalDale Reubart, assistant pro-

fessor of music at UBC, nowstudying for the degree ofDoctor of Musical Arts at theUniversity . of Southern Cali-fornia, gave his second recita lof the month Tuesday over aSouthern California TV sta-tion .

The recital, part of a non-credit classroom series, feat-ured Reubart playing Varia-tions in G Major by Mozart ,Nocturne in A Major by Fiel dand Sonata in G Minor byClementi.

"A program of education isrequired—we should get IRAreps up here and show the mwhat the AMS can do for th eresidences . "

Education president D a v eLynn urged careful considera-tion as to how the residenceswill be approached .

"As a former residence mem-ber myself, I know we cannotmake the mistake of forcingourselves upon them," he said .

"Many students there takethe view that a residence pos -

ition on council is tantamoun tto control by the AMS . Controlis a dirty word . "

"We must face the fact thatresidences have special prob-lems that are not being handle dproperly through the presentset-up," added AMS first vice-president Bob Cruise .

"It is not sufficient that wehave members of council, wh ohappen to live in residence,looking after them . "

(Continued on Page 7 )SEE: BRIEF

French student executive sdie in summer car accident

MONTREAL (CUP)—Twoformer University of Mont -real student executives havebeen killed in a car accident .

Louis Cote, former coun-cil secretary, and A c h i 1 1 eTasse, director of the studentnewspaper, Le Quartier La-tin, were on a summer week-end trip to Perce, Quebec .Cote, who was e n t e r i n g

third year law, was elected

secretary of the General Un-ibn of Quebec Students atthe end of last year .

Tasse, entering fourth yearpolitical science, was a for-mer vice-president of PresseE t u d i a n t e Nationale, theFrench-language colleg epress service.

Jazz Soc .Presents, In Concert

JOHN HANDY IIIDirect from the

Monterey Jazz Festiva l

AUDITORIUM, THURS. SEPT. 24

Admission 50c 12:30 Noon

'Student boycottidiotic nonsense '

Alma Mater Society President Roger McAfee has slamme dlast week's decision by the Canadian Union of Students tosupport economic boycotts of South Africa.

McAfee called the mov eidiotic, ill-considered and non-sensical.

The 28th Congress of CUSat York University asked th enational executive to set up aprogram for non-violent directaction, "to bring the SouthAfrican government into linewith the aspirations of the ma-jority of its people ."

University PharmacyLTD.

FREE CAMPUS DELIVER Yfrom 4:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m .

DELIVERY PHONE 224-3202

MEN . . .

The Time For

Fall Rush

Is NOW

Register in the AMS Office,

South Brock, for

FRATERNITY FALL RUS H

SEPT . 14-16

Page 4: €vsrssErTRAFFIC BACKED UP a quarter mile outside gates on University Boulevard after spectacular five-car collision . Car which apparently lost its brakes and ploughed into rear

Gus goes to college

Remember the secret hand-shake? Remember the elab-orate initiation r itual withhooded figures made myster-ious by candlelight? Remem-ber the hazing of pledges ?And the paddling?

Remember the jewel-rim-med fraternity pin which youwore discreetly consp i cuous ,at the lower point of yourTattersall waistcoat ?

Of course many of us putmuch of this behind us aboutthe time we got out of col-lege and began to participat ein life. But good old BarryGoldwater, who forgets noth-ing and discards nothing, con -t i nues to believe in fraterni-ties as he believes in the ope nshop the straight razor an dthe economics of Chester AlanArthur .

* * *When the National Inter -

fratern i ty Conference held itsannual convention in 1960 ,whom did it choose as speak-er? Why, Goldwater, natur-ally .

Who else could be countedupon to characterize the fra-ternity system as "a bastionof American strength? " Whoelse would say that "we loo kmore and more to fraterni-ties to provide our future"

and that "where fraternitie sare not allowed, communismflourishes?"

He singled out HarvardUniversity as a seat of learn-ing where, in the absence offraternities, Communist an dSocialist philosophies are al-lowed to breed a faithlessgeneration .

* * *At Harvard, the fraterni-

ties themselves would un-doubtedly become socialistic ,preaching universal, insteadof selective, brotherhood an dadvocating social equality inplace of snobbishness .

Indeed, if this new-fangledidea of democracy is allowedto spread, such exclusivenes smay become as much of a nanachronism everywhere a sGoldwater himself .

EDITOR : Mike HorseyEditors :

News Tim Padmore

Managing Janet Matheso n

City Tom Wayma n

Art Don Hum e

Sports George Reamsbottom

CUP Lorraine Shor e

Associate Mike Hunte r

Associate Ron Rite r

Magazine Dave Ablett

Reporters : Joan Godsell, Carole Mun-roe, Tim Roberts, Frank Lee, ArtCasperson, Bill Graham, Bob Burton ,Carolyn Johnson, Bob Weiser, Eliza-beth Field, Bev Bie, Henry Unter-reiner, Steve Beckow, Robbi West,Paul Terry, Carole Anne Baker, A lBirnie, Al Donald, Donna Pirrie,Lorne Mallin, Richard Blair, andanyone else whom the beardedwonder forgot . (That's Tom . . .giggle . )Then there are all the ones we didn' tmention Tuesday because of ourhalf-crazed city editor who almostforgot again last night . Thanks t oyou too, although if you didn't com eback Wednesday and get your nam ein that way you don ' t really deserv eit. (Work, work, work . )

Engineers?Editor, The Ubyssey :

I find that the hoaxes th e

S EM i t4 School of Engineering per -form upon the newly-arrivedstudents to this institution ar esurely more beneficial to th eignorant victim than they ar eto the satisfaction of your nar -row intellects .

I am referring of course, t othe leaflet distributed to th eFreshmen students at the Ar-mory during the week ofregistration.

INFORMATIO NIt contained seemingly au-

thoritative information requir-ing students of English 100 t owrite a seven hundred andfifty word essay, from achoice of topics, relative t ouniversity life and education.

I, having foolishly fallen forthis humorous arrangement ,feel it is only fitting to informthe engineers of its benefit t ome .

The time involved in thecreation and revision of thi sexercise enabled me onceagain to practise coherent ex-pression in prose w r i t i n g .Now, with this additional sea-soning, I feel competent t oconvey my opinion of theprofession.

AUTOMATIO NThe occupation of engineer-

ing is more rapidly workingitself out of existence eachday. The effect of automationtoday upon the unskilled la-bourer will be felt tomorrowmost heavily by the peopleof the engineering profession .

The cranes that now put

fifty to a hundred men out ofwork are only a preliminar yto the computers and assem-

>

si :.,,„, bly machines that will replac ethe draftsmen, architects, de-

signers, surveyors, and execu-tive supervisors in the future .EDUCATION

The level of education a twhich engineers are nowstudying, in order to get aheadin this world, will be ele-mentary material in the nex ttwo decades or so . You engi-neers who are trying so des-perately to reach a standardof living at which you "haveit made" far beyond the realmof moderation, will becom ethe very teeth of a dog-eat -dog society .

And — it will happen justwhen you plan to settle downto growing old . So, gentlemen,the very avaricious nature o fyour ambitions will, in ap-proximately twenty y e a r s,leave you glumly in th emiddle of the most artisticand educated unemployed theworld has yet to see.

MARTIN C. DUNNArts I.

ED NOTE: Oops, it wasn'tthe engineers that pulled thefunny — it was the science-men.

Barry's Prat boysstopping commies

Reprinted from:The Washington Post

THE UBYSSEYPublished Tuesdays, Thursdays and Fridays throughout the universit yyear by the Alma Mater Society, University of B.C . Editorial opinionsexpressed are those of the editor and not necessarily those of the AM Sor the University . Editorial office, CA 4-3916 . Advertising office, CA 4-3242 ,Loc . 26 . Member Canadian University Press. Authorized as second-classmail by Post Office Department, Ottawa, and for payment of postag ein cash.

Winner Canadian University Press trophies for generalexcellence and editorial writing .

THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 196 4

Your UbysseyYour university paper has many functions .Primarily it seeks to inform.

It is a forum for campus debate and a vehicle fo ropinion .

It is a bulletin board and an entertainer.You, the students, play a large part in its operation .

You, individually and collectively, make much of the

news. You pay part of the printing bill.With so much at stake it is important that you make

use of the services offered. Not just reading it and then

wrapping what's left of your lunch in it . Everyone does

that already .You should be writing more letters, charging into

our north Brock domicile with more complaints o r

kudos about university life .

The paper speaks freely on any subject it wishes.

It has 46 years of editorial freedom unhampered b y

student council or administration pressures .

We like it this way. We goof now and then, but we

have more spark and flare because of it . Compared to

many other Canadian papers, and most U .S. college

papers, we are much freer from controls and subse-quently more interesting .

Here's where you fit in . By taking an active part :

writing letters, telling us when you win a trip to Tooner-

ville, etc., you can contribute much to campus life . You

can toot your own horn, annoy people by pointing ou t

things they would rather hide and spark a bit of debate

on a large and lethargic campus .

And large we are . Almost 16,000 students this year

plus an assortment of faculty and staff to make 20,00 0

persons at UBC .Communication is difficult . But not when you use

the services offered by your paper. Almost everyone

reads it. Use it .

Money musicHello, Dolly !Welcome home, Dolly!It's so nice to have you backWhere you belong . . .

Louis Armstrong and the Democrats aren't the only

ones who have that catchy hit going for them this year.

Were it not for habitual Administration reticence ,

UBC's friendly bookstore Barons would doubtless bebursting into song—accompanied by clanging cash reg-

isters, clinking coins, and cracking greenbacks .

Dolly, alias Joe Student, is back where he belongs—

spending gobs of money at the bookstore and swellin g

UBC's coffers to the tune of an estimated $30,000 t o

$40,000 a year.One small snatch of the dollar symphony becomes

audible when you notice the lab coat price gap on

campus.It seems the AMS-operated College Shop sells lab

coats for $3.95 and $4.95—55 cents less than the Adminis-

tration-operated bookstore 's $4.50 and $5.50 .UBC's Administration repeatedly refuses to disclose

how much dollar-music student money buys through

such operations as the bookstore.Last year, The Ubyssey discovered from the book-

store manager his operation clears about three per cent

of total sales .

From

bursar, we found total saesrm the universitywere in the neighborhood of $1,150,000 .

Thus, $30,000 to $40,000 worth of payola that you ,

Dolly, are paying over and above your fee — and

through just one of Administration's several music halls.

Other discordant notes of "gouge" ring in foo d

services, and housing — UBC 's financial report lumps

them all together along with "etcetera" .But you don't need to take our word for it, Dolly .

Grab a handful of money and wander over to the book -

store .You'll get the biggest, dearest, "Hello!" of your life .

Page 5: €vsrssErTRAFFIC BACKED UP a quarter mile outside gates on University Boulevard after spectacular five-car collision . Car which apparently lost its brakes and ploughed into rear

Thursday, September 24, 1964

THE UBYSSEY

Page 5

Serviette badge of authority

Waiters loved the gentle tyrant

Ron Jeffels, Registrar a tVictoria College, charmed del-egates at a recent conferenceof the Canadian UniversityPress with this c h a r a c t e rsketch of Monsieur Bernard,a very Firench headwaiter at aParis sidewalk cafe. It isprinted here with the kin dpermission of the author .

serviette to distinguish himfrom the well-dressed me n

' who frequented the cafe b ynight .

* * *

His sole mission in life, itseemed, was to do nothing ,and his measured tread up an ddown the arcades was that o fa man consumed by boredomand lassitude . And yet, to hisfriends, he was just the oppo-site: warm, genial, efferves-cent, and hard-working .

I know because I used toarrive for breakfast everymorning at eight, just as theplace was opening .

He invariably came in tenminutes late to show that, af-ter all, he was the head-waiterand so not subject to the or-dinary rules of the establish-ment .

He arrived in a burst of en-ergy, full of smiling bonhomie ,as happy a man as you coul dmeet .

* * *

At that hour his dress wa scasual : he wore a pair of bag-gy high-waisted trousers, anaged tweed jacket, and a list-less topcoat washed by therains of the years .

There was genuine affec-tion in the round of "goodmornings" that came fromevery member of the staff. Hehad a handshake and a fe wwords for each of them, a pri-vate joke, a compliment, oran enquiry about things athome .

They loved him .At first I never dared spea k

because I carried a menta lpicture of his on-duty severity .

RON JEFFELS. . . recalls frenchman

But I learned to chorus anony-mously with the other, untilone day he shook my hand.

I had arrived .

Bernard ran acritical eye over it . He stoppednow and then, worked hismoustache, complained of thechef's lack of imagination ,struck off this, added that ,and returned the amendedversion to its author.

Finally, in order, came thehead barman, the sous-chef,the pantry boy, and a series o fothers who performed myster-ious tasks somewhere in theremote parts of the kitchen .

Each presented a bill or areport which Monsieur Ber-nard collected and filed care-fully in a tin box.

Then he prowled unhappilythrough the kitchen, into th estorerooms and behind count-ers until everything was readyfor the day and the first waveof customers arrived .

* * *He had a beautiful sense of

command, a genius for leader -ship, and at another time andunder different circumstanceshe might have been a ministerof state or a commanding gen-eral . He was a hard, demand-ing soul and his own person -

ality was mirrored in the 2 0or so waiters who worked un-der his direction .

For the better part of 3 5years Monsieur Bernard ob-served men and women en-gaged in a basic drive, food -seeking, and under such cir-cumstances human nature wil lout.

From a distance of tenpaces he claimed he coul dread a man's character on thestrength of what he ordered .

That, of course, is an exag-geration, but he was the bes tamateur psychologist I evermet.

He knew precisely how t odiagnose each aberration andI never saw a client yet whodid not yield to his treatment .

His English was grudginglycorrect but interlarded wit hstrange proverbs and cabal-istic declarations .

* * *He had learned it, chapter

by chapter, from one of thos emanuals, all equally bad, andall written to show that theauthor knew his Shakespear eand Johnson .

He loved to throw thesequotations into his conversa-tion at the most unusua lplaces, and I rarely had theheart to spoil his fun .

An example. "To get ideasfrom a woman is like tryingto draw a cork from an emptybottle . "

I'm still not sure I under -stand precisely what the sen-tence means .

Now and then, as a specialtreat, he took me into a priv-ate room and we dined togeth-er .

I never saw him eat any-thing except a plain omelet ,a piece of bread and perhapsa handful of grapes.

In reality he loathed food ,and I suspect he found thehuman refuelling process towhich he had given his life alittle vulgar and unnecessary .

His nose twitched faintly asthe waiters went by with thei rplatters of chops and cheeses,pies and pastries, and hewouldn't have touched any ofit for the world .

* * *Mind you, he was not

against other people derivinga certain pleasure from food ,provided they didn't feign ec-stasy at this or that dish .

For example, he liked t owatch a love-struck youngman feeding his lady with th ebest he could afford .

Monsieur Bernard nevershowed enthusiasm, of course ,but he would go over to the

young people and makeknowledgeable comment sabout the excellence of the in-gredients and the care withwhich they had been smooth-ed and blended into the mas-terpieces that appeared on thetable .

The young women woul dlisten with rapt attention ,hanging on every word, andon such occasions he neverfailed to call the waiter an dreprimand him for some slightmisdemeanor, usually some-thing he invented on the spot .

The waiter played his partto perfection; the girl slightlyembarrassed, loved every mo-ment of it; and her escort ,glowing with pride, added an -other 10 per cent to the tip .

So everybody was pleased .Monsieur Bernard retired

and went to live quietly inthe country where, I believe ,he kept a small inn .

He probably misses the ex-citement of Paris, its noise, itsbustle, its ceaseless comings-and-goings, and in particula rthe thousands of people wh oacross the years came to kno wand respect him .

And so, if you go to thesame cafe today, you can se ehis counterpart, one of th ewaiters he trained and pro-moted, prowling the arcade sunhappily, with just the wispof a serviette in his right han dto distinguish him from th erest of humanity .

CUS seeks$50,000for surveyThe Canadian Union of

Students wants $50,00 0A to finance a nationwide

student means survey .

The survey will be use das the basis of a brief t obe submitted to the Can-adian Universities Found-ation Commission on fin-ancing higher education .

The 28th CUS Congres sat York University auth-orized the CUS nationalexecutive to seek an es-timated $50,000 in outsideaid to finance the survey .

The Commission wasestablished by the Found-ation to study all aspectsof higher education. It sfindings will be submittedto the federal and provin-cial governments.

The congress expressedits disappointment in thelack of student represen -tation on the commission .

The brief should beready January, 1965. Itwill include local and pro-vincial variations in stud-ent means .

CUS will prepare an -other brief on aid to high-er education for the Com-mission September 19 .

By RONALD R . JEFFELS

I can never remember a con-versation during which hefailed to show his mild dis-belief and gentle cynicism b yone of those deep continenta lshrugs . The gesture is uniqueand no man born outside thehexagon of France can carryit off with any real measureof success .

Generated somewhere inthe small of the back, it roll sup the spine, pulls the head t oone side, retracts it below th elevel of the shoulders, and atthe same time causes the armsto rise in listless resignation .

It was his way of saying:Well, my friend, what do yo uexpect . That's life . And afternearly twenty years as headwaiter in one of the good-though-not-expensive sidewal kcafes of Paris, he knew a greatdeal about life.

To the casual observer whocame only once or twice to sipa coffee he was a tyrant, bul-lying the waiters, waging waron the tradesmen, and treatingthe customers with polite dis-dain . There's no doubt aboutit, he was an imposing figure :fiftyish, silver hair, controlle dstoutness, impeccable, blacksuit with silk lapels, and in hisright hand just the wisp of a

* * *

A host of people descendedon him, ritualistically. Firstthe little women who took thecash threaded the steam of agardenia through his button-hole .

No word was exchanged .He acknowledged her pres-

ence with a barely percept-ible nod of the head . Then thechef, fresh and crisp in whit ecoat and towering cap, pres-ented the menu for the day,like a hesitant staff officershowing a battle plan to hi sgeneral .

Monsieur

*a an anqlican?. . . then you should know that the new Anglica nchaplain on the Campus

THE REV. J. ALAN JACKSON

is preaching in

ST. ANSELM'S CHURC Hthis Sunday

SEPTEMBER 27TH AT 11 A .M .

P .S .—Even if you are not an Anglican you should hear him !

St . Anselm's Church

Other Services

3/4 mile inside gates on

at

University Blvd .

8 a .m. and 7:30 p.m.

Auto Premium Reduction sFOR :

Single men under 25 who have driven 4, 5, and 6years without claims or convictions .

WINRAM INSURANCE LIMITE DRE 1-5328

1678 West Broadway, Vancouver 9, B .C .

SPECIAL EVENT SOF FINE ART S

Special Events is a happy kind of committee . We're notvery keen, and we don't hang around Brock very much .

We just like to bring to UBC a number of interesting

events and we go about doing it in a rather unspec-tacular way.

If you 're interested in getting ahead at UBC, try some -

thing else. Special Events kind of people don 't really"get ahead". But if you think you 'd like to help presentat UBC, some stimulating concerts—and things—then

look us up.

We've presented classical pianists like RONALD

TURINI and jazzmen like STAN GETZ . We've had

ELEANOR ROOSEVELT and JAMES BALDWIN . . .and if you like popular things, we've had the CHAD

MITCHELL TRIO and THE FOUR PREPS. And we

almost had LENNY BRUCE !

This year, we shall continue to present these first -

class people, and we need some interested, un-keen,hard-working, intelligent, happy kind of people t o

help us out .

Apply to Christopher Wootten, Special Events Office ,Brock Extension. Oh, and our first event is October 6 .PHILIP H,ANSON, a, one man theatrical company, wil l

act out "Villains and Fools" from Shakespeare .

Page 6: €vsrssErTRAFFIC BACKED UP a quarter mile outside gates on University Boulevard after spectacular five-car collision . Car which apparently lost its brakes and ploughed into rear

FR-0S ORECEPTIO N

Saturday, Oct. 38.30 p.m. ARMOURIES

FEATURING

Brick Henderson & His Band

Folk & Blues Singer Don Crawford

CROWNING OF THE FROSH QUEE N

Freshmen $2.50

Upperclassmen $3 .50

Page 7: €vsrssErTRAFFIC BACKED UP a quarter mile outside gates on University Boulevard after spectacular five-car collision . Car which apparently lost its brakes and ploughed into rear

Thursday, September 24, 1964

THE UBYSSEY

Page 7

Homecoming feature sRooftop singer s

Skydivers, a Japanese symphony orchestra, a sports ca rrally, bonspiels, bridge tournaments and the RooftopSingers . . .

Next year's PNE?Hardly . It's this year's Home-

coming, set to sprawl over onefull week—Oct . 17 - 24 .

Fee for the renowned Roof -top Singers, who will entertainat the two giant dances Oct .24, is $2,000 for two shows .

Besides the 80-member Jap-anese orchestra, music-loverswill go for the 35-piece RoyalCanadian Engineers Band ,which played for U .S. presi-dent Johnson at the PeaceArch ceremony last week .

The skydivers, one a UBCstudent, will drop into the an-nual homecoming f o o t b a l lgame .

But all is not roses for home-coming chairman Rick Mc-Graw.

The planned UBC-profession-al hockey match has virtuall ygone by the boards for lack ofan opponent .

And Jack Wasserman andPat Burns have cancelled ou tof the panel discussion .

Sales stopBooks will not be sold in

the field house after Oct . 3 .

—photo by don hum eTREE FRAMES construction of new comme rce and social sciences building at corner o fMain Mall and University Boulevard . Multi- million dollar skyscraper (for UBC it's a sky -scraper) will be ready for 1965 students, say builders .

Lost AMS cardsnow replaceable

Students losing the com-bined AMS-library card safter Monday may apply fo rnew ones through the regis-trar's office .

Interim library cards willbe issued while new photocards are being processed .

All Forme rEnglish 100

StudentsRead This !

If you obtained a firs tclass in English 100 last yea rand if your notes are legibl eand reasonably well organ-ized, you should get in touchwith us immediately byphoning 738-6375 or 733 -3614 (evenings) .

Several sets of notes ar ewanted. Your prompt ac-tion upon reading this admay very well result inhard cash in your pocket .

Atheists, picketmiss symposium

Dr. Griffiths proclaimed tha the was not an atheist .

"An atheist is a man whoknows that God does not exist, "he said .

"I prefer to leave the ques-tion open . "

Next lecture in the serieswill be given by Professor E .M. Nichols of the departmentof Religious Studies, on GodDethroned ?

Science Symposium chair-man Mohamed Yalpani com-mented on the picketer's pro-test: "We are not trying to dis-place God, but to evaluate himin view of observable evi-dence."

"The picketer is certainlyoverstating his cause," h e , said .

Several members of theStudent Christian Movementwere asked . about the mystery

_ picket ."Oh, him! He's been hanging

around here trying to convertus for a year," they said .

Urbanism fil mThe second in a series of

films on community planningand urbanism will be show nnext Wednesday in Fine Arts102 .

'Give gatesthe gate'

Student council again wantsto give the gates the gate .

Council Monday night ap-pointed Law president DickHayes and Engineering presi-dent Steve Whitelaw as com-mittee of two to re-open nego-tiations with university a n dprovincial government author-ities to have UBC's Universit yBoulevard gates moved to aless dangerous position .

Alma Mater Society secon dvice-president Byron Hende rsparked the motion .

"Last week, for the ump-teenth time, I was almost hi twhile driving past those gates, "he said .

"Surely something can b edone about this situation ."

Students and councils alike ,over the past years, have calle dfor the gates to be moved backfrom Blanca to cut an acknow-ledged accident hazard on th esorrier .

AUTO INSURANCE ATSUBSTANTIAL SAVINGS

For Drivers 24 yrs . & upCall Bob Baker of A. R . Baker Ltd.1327 Marine, W . Van .

922-618 8

BADMINTO NTry-outs for the men's an dwomen's U .B .C. badminto nteam start Thursday, Sept .24, from 8:30 p .m.-11 :30p.m. and every succeedingTuesday and Thursday atthat time in War Memoria lGym.

BRIEF(Continued from Page 3 )

Final decision on this mat-ter will be reserved until nextweek .

Also, as part of the brief ,McAfee suggested that theFrosh undergrad society be dis-banded and its president re-moved from council .

"In keeping in line withavoiding double representationI would suggest that the fresh-men be assimilated into under-graduate societies, thus swell-ing the ranks -and energies o fthese societies and providingfreshman orientation withsmaller groups of new stu-dents," said the brief .

On a motion by Frosh presi-dent Jason Leask, councilvoted to hold off discussion o fthis question for two weeks, toavoid interfering with thisyear's Frosh elections .

NEW COIN WAS HNEW DRY CLEANIN G

~. .

NEW MACHINES

Campus Laundromat4354 W. 10th

(across from Varsity Theatre )PARKING AT REAR

Also Coin Dry Cleanin g

$2.00 per load

Wash 25c Dry 10c

Hours : 8 a .m . - 11 p.m .

Monday's mystery picket didn' tThe placard-bearing myster y

picket who charged that theScience Symposium was organ-ized by a "group of self-seekingatheists" did not picket thefirst Symposium lecture .

And it's a good thing h edidn't — the symposium hadlittle to do with atheism .

The lecture by Dr . G . M .Griffiths was conducted i nthe realm of pure science an dmentioned religion only to con-clude that "some of our phil-osophical and religious idea swill have to be made consistentwith new theories of the uni-verse" .

show up.

ARTS UNDERGRADUATE S

HARVEST BAL LFRIDAY OCTOBER 2

COACH HOUSE IN N8:30 p.m. - 2:00 a .m .

TICKETS $3 .50 COUPLEAvailable at AMS Office and Buchanan 115 .

BRICK HENDERSON'S BAN D

and

TOM NORTHCOTT, ENTERTAINER

Page 8: €vsrssErTRAFFIC BACKED UP a quarter mile outside gates on University Boulevard after spectacular five-car collision . Car which apparently lost its brakes and ploughed into rear

Page 8

THE UBYSSEY

Thursday, September 24, 196 4

'tween classes CLASSIFIE DRates: 3 lines, 1 day, $ .75—3 days, $2 .00 . Larger Ads on request

Non-Commercial Classified Ads are payable in Advanc ePublcations Office : Brock Hall, Ext . 26 224-324 2

Student affair sseminar subject

TORONTO (CUP — Thethird annual Canadian Unionof Students seminar on Inter-national Student Affairs wil lbe held next spring at LoyolaCollege in Montreal .

One delegate from eachCUS member university, col-lege or institution will at-tend. More information ca nbe obtained from UBC tUSchairman Gordon Galbraith .

Loan plan

misses those

who need itTORONTO (CUP)—The fed-

eral government's loan plan i sin danger of missing its mar k—the students who need theloans, the Canadian Union o fStudents congress was told .

Howard Adelman, Universityof Toronto students council fin-ance commissioner, told th econgress here that studentsfrom low-income families ar eafraid to borrow .

He said they are reluctant toattend university when theyhave to borrow to do it.

* * *Adelman gave his warning

in a brief on the financing ofhigher education to the con-gress at York University.

Adelman said the cost of ed-ucating an Ontario arts studen tliving away from home foreight months has risen at least75 per cent to $1,660 since1947-48. At least 20 per cent o fthe increase has resulted fro mtuition increases, he said .

The inability of parents t ocontribute to the cost of educa-tion is a significant factor i npreventing students from ob-taining an education, he said .

* * *Children of parents earnin g

$15,000 a year and more mak eup only 1 .2 per cent of all Can-adian taxpayers but accountfor 11 .6 per cent of arts stu-dents; children of the 36 .5 percent earning less than $4,000 ayear account for only 10 .5 percent of arts students, he said .

"It is often claimed that in-creased scholarships and bur-saries are the answer to risingfees," he said . "But, U of Tstatistics indicate that the ris ein scholarships and bursarieshas barely exceeded the rise inenrolment and the amount ofaid has failed to keep pace withrising residence and tuitionfees ."

* * *He said per capita student aid

available at U of Tin 1961-62was $108 while in 1963-64 i thad risen only $4 to $112 .

Adelman said loans only en-courage the idea the student isa commodity for the labor mar-ket. He said the arguinent thatloans are an economic invest-ment in the student's futuremeans the student mortgageshis future .

Of those who work, morethan half earn less than $70 0and more than a third earn lessthan $5,500, he said .

Director electe dPaul Williamson, of Victori a

College, has been elected tothe national board of direc-tors of Canadian Union o fStudents at the 28th Congres sat York University.

* * *NDP CLUB

General Meeting to electNew Democratic Youth con-vention delegates noon todayin Bu. 218 .

* * *WAA

Women's Field Hockey firs tpractice Tuesday 12 :30 in theWomen's Gym .

Boys' Rules Basketball prac-tice today for all girls inter-ested in playing on Junior an dSenior teams .

* * *LOWER MAL L

Dance Friday night at theCommon Block. Admission 5 0cents, from 8 :30 - 1 :00; musicby the Playboys .

* *LAST MINUTE TICKET S

Tickets available for Korea nsingers and dancers, for Frida ynight performance from SpecialEvents office .

UBC JUDO CLUBMembers of the execut i ve

please contact M. Marshall at731-7300 .

* * *POLITICAL ECONOMY 10 1

Those accepted have theirnames posted outside Bu . 100 .

• * *ARTS US

Tickets for the Harvest Ballat the Coach House on Oct . 2now on sale at the AMS officeor Bu. 115 . $3 .50 a couple .

ANNOUNCEMENTSLost & Found

1 1FOUND ADS inserted free . Publica-

tions office, Brock Hall ., Local 26,224-3242.

LADIES' WRIST WATCH in Buch-anan . Phone CA 4-3164, ask fo rKen Carrington ,evening, please .

LOST—Set of keys on 11th . WorldJamboree key ring, Honda carand house keys . Earl, CA 4-1078.

FOUND—Motorcycle keys by skeete r shed in C lot. Phone FA5-5372.QUICK! I am soluble . Umbrella los t

or lifted. Vicinity of Brock. Phon eDave, FA 7-2393 .

LOST—Lady's wrist *atch, gol dbracelet, between library and To-ronto Road, Tuesday, 5 :30 . Reward .Phone CA 4-1274 .

Transportation

1 4IF YOU NEED a ride or riders to

and from campus, use UbysseyWant Ads . Publications office ,Brock Hail, tel. 224-3242, Ext. 26._

RIDE WANTED at Victoria and 41s tAve. for 8 :30 classes . Phone FA5-5231after 6 p .m.

CARPOOL WANTED! One car withone driver to drive 2 weeks alter-nately from S. Burnaby. Phone HE 1-7864 after 6 p.m.RIDERS WANTED, Capitol Hill -

Westridge area. Phone CY 8-3840evenings .

WANTED—Ride in car pool, 20thand Trafalgar, 8 :30 classes. Phone RE 3-4746, Brian.URGENT — Ride needed vicinity

Davie and Denman in West End .Phone MU 3-1774 after 6 p .m .

TWO STUDENT DRIVERS wantedto complete West Van car pool .Phone922-3137.

WANTED—Car pool, 67th and Cy-press, 8 :30-5 :30 . Bob, AM 6-7479 .

CARPOOL OR RIDERS wanted ,vicinity 41st and Oak, 8 :30's or9 :30 ' s Mon.-Sat. Prefer 9 :30 lec-tures . Call Craig, phone AM 1-0432 .

RIDERS WANTED from area westof Lonsdale Ave . in N . Van . Phon e YU 8-1832 or YU5-5254 .RIDE DESPERATELY needed fro m

West Van . Prefer for 9 :30 classes .Will take any. Ph. Eleanor at922-9803 evenings.

RIDE WANTED from vicinity ofCambie and Marine Drive for 8 :3 0lectures . Phone 325-2976.

RIDE WANTED, North Vancouver ,vicinity Mahon Park, for 9 :30 ' s (o r8 :30) . Prefer staying late. (10 p.m. )Tues . and Thurs. Ph AL 988-8405 .

AUTOMOTIVE & MARINE

Automobiles For Sale

2 1PROBATION OFFICER, returnin g

to UBC, must sell 1963 Belair 6,automatic, radio, P .S . elec. heater,seat covers, perfect cond., $2,250. Call William, 321-3181 .'54 FORD CUSTOMLINE, $300 .00 or

offer. Contact Al Donald, Ubysse yEditorial Office, or Ph . AM 1-2462.

1958 HILLMAN CONVERTIBLE,radio, snow tires, $450 .00. Phon eYU 8-0233.

Motorcycles

2 7MOTORCYCLE. 250 cc ., 1957, N.S.U .

end of C lot, $120 or offer .736-9334 .FOR SALE—55 c .c . Honda sports, 2

months old, exc. cond. Call Craig,AM 1-0432 . Must sell immediately ,$275 .

BUSINESS SERVICE S

Rentals

3 9GARAGE FOR RENT, Fort Camp_ area. Phone 224-9143 .

Typewriters & Repairs

4 2STUDENT TYPEWRITERS, all

makes, all prices . Free delivery.Modern Business Machine Corp.Ltd . 461 E . Hastings. Phone 682 -4016 .

EMPLOYMENT

Help Wanted 5 1SEVERAL STUDENTS (not Frosh )

to sell advertising for Ubyssey.Commission paid for part-timework . Send note of application toManager of Publications, Broc kHall.

FEMALE ASSISTANT to accom-pany 20 scientists on Easter Islandexpedition this winter . Biologicalexperience required . Contact Dr. Rekoj by phoning 1191 .FEMALE MAILING CLERK for

Ubyssey. About 2 hrs. work onMondays, Wednesdays, Thursdays.Pay $1 .00 per hour . Apply publi-cations manager.

Work Wanted

52GUITARIST — Have fender equip-

ment . Will play lead if asked nice-ly. Phone CA 8-8252, M . McKortoff.

MISCELLANEOUSFOR SALE 7 1BIRD CALLS—the most useful book

on the campus . Student telephonedirectory available latter part ofOctober . Limited number. Orderduring Registration from membersof the Phrateres Club . Only 75c.

ATHLETIC DATE CARDS admityou and your date to over, 50M .A.C . athletic events . Buy now .Don't miss out on this bargain.

LOOKING FOR A SOUND INVEST-MENT? Stereo equipment at reas-onable prices . Phone 736-4972, any -time .

GENTLEMAN ' S tuxedo, almost new ,size 40 . Complete with accessories .Phone 738-5250 .

RENTALS&REAL ESTATERooms 8 1TWO MEN, share double room, priv.

entrance, bathroom, $30.00 each .Three blocks from Campus. 191 1Knox Road . CA 4-6197 .

ACCOMMODATION two male stu-dents, quiet, privacy, close beach,bus, U .B .C. Moderate rent . Phon e 733-0596 .ROOM FOR TWO men, shower,

bathroom, 2 desks, twin beds ,facilities available, half bloc kfrom gates. Phone 224-4128 .

Room & Board

82ROOM AND BREAKFAST for two

UBC students. Share very largeroom, $40 .00 month each. 1993 West 44th . Phone261-6863 .DOUBLE ROOM for 2 male or fe-

male students, 3 meals, 5 mina .from campus . A.M .S . approved .Phone RE 1-1566.

GIRL STUDENT from 3rd year tograduate, one block from campus ,7 minutes to Buchanan, room andbreakfast, coffee and snacks, pri-vate room, home and phone privi-leges, laundry facilities. Ph. CA8-8929 . 1792 Western Parkway.

ONE SINGLE, ONE double roomand breakfast for 3 male students .CA 4-9380 or contact Hal Rogers ,Room 425, Chem. Bldg.

Furn. Houses & Apts .

83TWO BEDROOM fully furnished

suite, $85 per month . Availabl eOctober 1st . Mrs. Bakony, ,ph .738-2382 .

All Doctor' s Eyeglass Prescrip-tions filled. Only first qualitymaterials used . All work oer-formed by qualified Opticiafi s

CRANVILLE OPTICA L861 Granville

MU 3-8921Money-Back Guarantee

Ukeleles, from

3 .99

Guitars, from $10.9 9

Tuneable Bongos, from _$16.5 0

Baritone Ukelele $14.99

Used Banjo $39.95

Drum Outfit (English) ___$149 .95

ARNOLDSPAWN SHOP

986 Granville

MU 5-751 7

Soviets to - meetstudents, profs

There will be factulty-student reception for a Soviet dele-gation on Friday at 8 :00 p.m. in the Lower Lounge of theGrad Student Centre . Tickets at AMS, GSC and Inter -national House.VOC

Splash and dance Frida ynight, September 25 . Splash 6p .m. - 8 p .m., dance 8 p.m. - 1a .m. Frosh and VOC 50 cents ,others 75 cents at the Memor-ial Gym.

* * *THUNDERBIRD SKI CLU B

Ski tra i ning starts tonightfrom 6:30 - 8 :00 p .m. Genera lmeeting before session .

TRAIN WITH '* .109 UBC SQUADRO NUNDER TH E

REGULAR OFFICER TRAINING PLA N(ROTP)

Regular Officer Training Plan : The federal government ,through the Department of National Defence, sponsors aprogram of university education and leadership trainingfor selected numbers of young men who have the poten-tial to become officers in Canada ' s Armed Forces .

The Department of National Defence provides for :• tuition and other essential fees • $75 each year topurchase books and instruments • $73 per month pa ythroughout the year • $65 per month living allowanc e• free medical and dental care • twenty evenings oftraining during the academic year and formal trainin gduring summers • annual leave (30 days plus travellingtime) with pay and allowances, usually following th esummer training period • assured employment afte rgraduation, for fhree years at $5052 annual plus on eyear at $5532 (single) or $6432 (married) . (Aircrewreceive an additional $900 annual during flying trainingand an additional $1500 annual as active aircrew .)

Qualifications: Single, physically fit, male, Canadia ncitizen or landed British subject . Age limit varies accord-ing to the graduation year .

Flight Lieutenant R. B. Robinson,

CA 4-191 0No. 109 UBC Squadron, The Armoury,University of British Columbia ,Vancouver 8, B.C .

Please mail, without obligation, details on the Regula rOfficer Training Plan (ROTP) .

NAME AGE

ADDRESS

____ CITY

FACULTY YEAR

TEL.

ENGINEERING OPPORTUNITIE SAT COLUMBIA CELLULOS E

Columbia Cellulose is a medium-sized producer of forest prod-ucts, employing over 2,000 persons . Capital investment in al ldivisions totals some $120 million .

The Company operates a dissolving grade pulp mill at Princ eRupert, B.C., producing acetate, viscose and specialty sulphit epulps for the manufacture of textiles, plastics and chemicals .Operation of the mill puts into practice the most advancedtechnology in cellulosic chemistry .

The Company's other pulp mill, located at Castlegar, B .C., i sprobably the most modern bleached kraft paper pulp mill i nthe world today. Equipment such as a Flakt airborne drier, tw oKamyr continuous digesters, a 5-stage bleach plant using tw ostages of chlorine dioxide, and other equipment of advance ddesign, offers an unusual range of experience to graduatin gMechanical, Civil, Chemical and Electrical Engineers .

Because the Company has followed a policy of continuous ex-pansion in the manufacture of forest products, it has provide dmany opportunities for the advancement of its professiona lpeople .

Future progress depends on developing a growing team o fpeople with technical and managerial skills in many fields .

A senior team of interviewers will be on campus in November .Contact the campus Employment Office for an appointment .