neuryssei - ubc library home · ubyssey scandal reporter a man and woman were seen making love...

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NEUR YSSE I No beer- - i n Vol . XLVIII, No . 22 VANCOUVER, B .C ., FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1966 LIe our 224-3$1 6 residence liquor regulations, a prominent Vancouver lawye r said Thursday . "Provincial law states tha t any person over 21 can con - sume alcohol in a privat e place," said William Deverell , executive secretary of the Civi l Liberties Association . "And a student's room in a residence constitutes his pri - vate abode . " According to housing cza r Malcolm McGregor in a Ubyssey story Tuesday : "UBC is a public institution-and mus t obey the provincial drinkin g laws . " EXPELLED McGregor also said, "any stu- dent caught drinking in UB C dorms will be expelled . " —derrick webb phot o RIGHTEOUS INDIGNATION spews from paint-bombed engineering president Eric New - ell, riding his horde-pulled chariot to victory over red-dyed foresters in Thursday's riot- ous teacup football half-time entertainment . University regulations state : "University policy prohibits th e keeping or consumption o f alcoholic beverages in resi- dences" and that students who do not maintain residence stan - dards "will not be permitted t o occupy university accommoda- tion . " Deverell said the regulatio n was a "prissy and Boston" sort of action. BIG FATHER "It is a dangerous thing fo r the university to try to main- tain a Big Father image and t o organize and direct studen t morality. " "A student over 21 woul d have a very good legal case i n defending his right to defy thi s regulation," the lawyer said. If students want the suppor t of the Civil Liberties Associa- tion, they can bring the matte r before the association's board o f directors, Deverell promised . MacGregor's expulsion threat . . . good case came in response to a story i n last Friday's Ubyssey t h a t drinking was now allowed i n dorms of Georgetown Univer- sity, Washington, D.C ., a pri- vate Catholic college . ESTABLISHE D The university policy , ha s been in effect for as long a s James Banham, university in - formation officer can remem- ber . "It's a long established re- gulation," Banham said . Dr . James G . Foulks, phar- macology department head ,an d a member of the B.C . Civil Liberties Association said th e rules are a definite infringe- ment on the student's civi l liberties but he was not sur e of their legal rights in th e matter . "Students have a good argu- ment on the basis of studen t maturity, aside from any lega l considerations," Dr . Foulkes said . 'ON THE BED' COST COMMITTEE $50 0 Sexy Brock painting turns on student s By BONI LEE Ubyssey Scandal Reporter A man and woman were seen making love fully cloth- ed on a couch in Brock loung e Thursday . Unsuspecting students react - ed strongly to the act . Greta Rasmunssen, arts 1 , commented : "It's really mov- ing . They really l o o k like they're having a good time . " Murray Dingman, arts 1 , said : "I think it'll bring th e crowds . " A first year arts studen t thought the spectacle was very colorful and brighten- ed up Brock lounge . "I think it ' s good ; it's raw . There should be more of it, " said Bob Fitzpatrick, arts 2 . Actually the scene seen was Greg Curnoe's modernisti c "On The Bed . " It depicts a man and wo- man making passionate lov e fully clothed on a couch . The $500 painting was pur- chased by the Brock art com- mittee in 1965 . The painting was mounte d today with the title : "This is a painting of a man and a woman embracing : The main colors used are : ultra white , bright yellow, geranium lake , and ivory black . " A Brock a r t committe e member commented : "The public need not be unduly alarmed. After all ,the onl y obscene thing about this paint - ing is the fact that the fornica - tors are clothed . " TEACUP FUN see page two Man and woman embracing .

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Page 1: NEURYSSEI - UBC Library Home · Ubyssey Scandal Reporter A man and woman were seen making love fully cloth-ed on a couch in Brock lounge Thursday. Unsuspecting students react-ed strongly

NEURYSSE INo beer- -

in

Vol . XLVIII, No . 22 VANCOUVER, B .C ., FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1966

LIe

our

224-3$1 6

residence liquor regulations, a prominent Vancouver lawye r

said Thursday ."Provincial law states tha t

any person over 21 can con-sume alcohol in a private

place," said William Deverell ,

executive secretary of the Civi l

Liberties Association .

"And a student's room in a

residence constitutes his pri -

vate abode . "

According to housing cza r

Malcolm McGregor in aUbyssey story Tuesday : "UBCis a public institution-and mustobey the provincial drinkinglaws . "

EXPELLEDMcGregor also said, "any stu-

dent caught drinking in UB Cdorms will be expelled . "

—derrick webb photoRIGHTEOUS INDIGNATION spews from paint-bombed engineering president Eric New -ell, riding his horde-pulled chariot to victory over red-dyed foresters in Thursday's riot-ous teacup football half-time entertainment .

University regulations state :"University policy prohibits thekeeping or consumption ofalcoholic beverages in resi-dences" and that students whodo not maintain residence stan -dards "will not be permitted t ooccupy university accommoda-tion . "

Deverell said the regulationwas a "prissy and Boston" sortof action.

BIG FATHER"It is a dangerous thing fo r

the university to try to main-tain a Big Father image and toorganize and direct studentmorality."

"A student over 21 wouldhave a very good legal case i ndefending his right to defy thi sregulation," the lawyer said.

If students want the supportof the Civil Liberties Associa-tion, they can bring the matte rbefore the association's board ofdirectors, Deverell promised .

MacGregor's expulsion threat

. . . good case

came in response to a story inlast Friday's Ubyssey t h a tdrinking was now allowed indorms of Georgetown Univer-sity, Washington, D.C., a pri-vate Catholic college .ESTABLISHE D

The university policy ,hasbeen in effect for as long a sJames Banham, university in-formation officer can remem-ber .

"It's a long established re-gulation," Banham said .

Dr. James G. Foulks, phar-macology department head ,anda member of the B.C. CivilLiberties Association said th erules are a definite infringe-ment on the student's civilliberties but he was not sur eof their legal rights in thematter .

"Students have a good argu-ment on the basis of studentmaturity, aside from any legalconsiderations," Dr. Foulkessaid .

'ON THE BED' COST COMMITTEE $500

Sexy Brock painting turns on student sBy BONI LEE

Ubyssey Scandal Reporter

A man and woman were

seen making love fully cloth-ed on a couch in Brock lounge

Thursday .

Unsuspecting students react-ed strongly to the act .

Greta Rasmunssen, arts 1 ,commented : "It's really mov-ing . They really l o o k likethey're having a good time . "

Murray Dingman, arts 1 ,said : "I think it'll bring thecrowds . "

A first year arts studen tthought the spectacle was

very colorful and brighten-ed up Brock lounge .

"I think it ' s good; it's raw .There should be more of it, "said Bob Fitzpatrick, arts 2 .

Actually the scene seen wasGreg Curnoe's modernisti c"On The Bed . "

It depicts a man and wo-man making passionate lov efully clothed on a couch .

The $500 painting was pur-chased by the Brock art com-mittee in 1965 .

The painting was mounte dtoday with the title: "This isa painting of a man and awoman embracing : The main

colors used are : ultra white ,bright yellow, geranium lake ,and ivory black . "

A Brock a r t committeemember commented : "Thepublic need not be undulyalarmed. After all ,the onl y

obscene thing about this paint-ing is the fact that the fornica -

tors are clothed . "

TEACUP FUNsee page two

Man and woman embracing .

Page 2: NEURYSSEI - UBC Library Home · Ubyssey Scandal Reporter A man and woman were seen making love fully cloth-ed on a couch in Brock lounge Thursday. Unsuspecting students react-ed strongly

Page 2

THE UBYSSEY

Friday, November 4, 196 6

ALL FOR A TEACUP

Reds win chariot warMad, mad, mad, stark rav-

ing crimson mad .

That was UBC s t stadiu mThursday, as nurses played

riot

as

red

engineers

andgreen

foresters

began

theman-drawn chariot race .

Bathed in red

dye a n d

lunchbags from

the

stands,but a

100-man engineer-for-ester

police

squad

k e p teveryone but the charioteers

home ec in the annual teacup liquid

manure,

the

35-man off the track .

game. A mob of fans, dissent - squads

battled

around

the Final score of the footbal l

ers, and others stumbled ex- oval with

early leaders en- game was by homewrecke r

citedly

to

benches,

railings, gineering winning. Judy Insley after a 43-yard

rooftops and spare knees as Both

teams

were

pelted run, to win the golden tea-

the stadium jammed to 7,000 . with

eggs,

applecores

and cup 12 to 6.

UFO sighted over Atlantic'Could be. UBC's moralman'

Ubyssey cartoonist Arnold Saba, now staffing th eoverseas news bureau located somewhere betweenGermany and the French Riviera, Thursday reporte da mysterious flying object heading for the Atlantic .

"It might be moralman returning to UBC campus,"Saba's hurried dispatch said.

He said he would check if he had time .Moralman last year appeared occasionally in The

Ubyssey to right moral wrongs and indignations of al lshapes and sizes.

See page four today .

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Nurses at the gates, wear-ing pink and white stripes ,collected $1,757.73 for theCrippled Children's Fund .

"We are, we are, we are, "chanted the dainty cheer-leaders, suspiciously clad inred sweaters, balloons andthigh high skirts .

We are, we are, we are the. . . nurses?" they continuedlamely ,

The offensive nurses kick-ed off the first half, andbumbled aimlessly about thefield until Quita Beraleyscored a touchdown .

Then home economics quar-terback, 5-foot, 103-poun dCarol Spradey, scored for 6-6at half time .

Chaos exploded into near

Liberals out;mock housemaybe no g o

Model parliament may notbe .

Parliamentary council decid-ed Thursday to postpone de-cision on whether it will goforward following a Liberalclub wtihdrawal from theparliament Tuesday.

Conservative, New Demo-cratic and Social Credit lead-ers said they will return t otheir individual clubs for a de-cision on future model parlia-ment policy.

A final decision is expectedearly next week.

Fall Campu s

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court today charged with being

hold Alma Mater Society office.Wise cannot hold the office

because he is not an arts

undergraduate .

He is registered in arts 6 .Student court counsel Mike

Coleman, law 3, will prosecute

the case in hut G-1 at noon .

Asked how he felt about thechange, Wise answered : "I'mchoked up. I'm going for acardiogram to see if I canstand it . "

He said the case will set aprecedent and after this AMSeligibility will be taken ser-iously. But he said when hegoes the AUS organization willgo.

Guido Botto, AUS executivemember, said Thursday thewhole case is petty and ludic-rous .

"If Don should be consid-

Arts pres. Wisecharged ineligible

Arts president Don Wise, arts 6, appears before student

Are Today's Filter-Ti pCigarettes Really

Safer Than Plain Ends ?How "safe" is the cigarette yousmoke? How much harmful ta rand nicotine is in the smokeyou inhale into your lungs? Fo ryears Doctors have warned thattar and nicotine in cigarettescan be dangerous to healthand can cause deadly lung can -cer . Now, U .S. cigarette man-ufacturers must label packageswith a caution warning . But ,when you buy Canadian ciga-rettes there is no way of know-ing how much tar and nicotinethey contain. The currentReader's Digest features a fac-tual, new laboratory reportshowing the latest tar andnicotine content of 25 leadingCanadian cigarettes and re-veals that some actually con-tain 200% — or more — tar andnicotine than others. It shows ,that in some cases the smokefrom filter-tips actually has ahigher content, of these in-jurious substances, than thesmoke from some plain ends.The latest, strange develop-ments provoked by the U.S.ruling requiring warning labelson cigarette packages, are alsoreported in this interesting ar-ticle . This Reader's Digest ar-ticle will be talked aboutfrom Coast to Coast — everyCanadian who smokes ciga-rettes should read it. It's inNovember Reader's Digest—onnewsstands now.

ered in this light why notother AMS members?"

He said if Wise is thrownout he will resign because "Ican't stand those bloody bour-geois snobs."

Theatre castingfrustrated ferns

A sex-starved w i f e, aproud beggar, and a dis-reputable monk are neededin the old Freddy Wood .

Casting for the three-actplay Red Magic continuesall week in the old theatre ,across from Ponderosa cafe-teria.

Interested students areasked to go to the theatre 'sGreen Room between 1:30and 4:30 p .m .

academically ineligible t o

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Page 3: NEURYSSEI - UBC Library Home · Ubyssey Scandal Reporter A man and woman were seen making love fully cloth-ed on a couch in Brock lounge Thursday. Unsuspecting students react-ed strongly

Friday, November 4, 1966

THE UBYSSEY

Page 3

We won't be policemen 'say Lower Mall don s

—derrek webb photoPSSST, SHE USES a man's deodorant says one home -wrecker to another as they attempt to bring down acharging bedpanner during Thursday's teacup game.

A six-foot physical educa-

tion co-ed Thursday chased aman wearing a kilt and awhite T-shirt over a construc-

tion site fence .Sarah Burns, p.e. 2, said

she recognized the man froma description in Thursday' sUbyssey .

The Ubyssey story saidWinona Ford, sc . 3, was grab-bed by the bottom in B-lot by

a man in a kilt and a soiledT-shirt .

She said when the mansqueezed her he yelled : "Yum-my."

"I read about the terribleattack, so when I saw theman I took after him fast, "Miss Burns, a track and dis-cuss major, said .

Miss Burns,, who is exactlysix feet tall, said she saw theman sitting on grass outide

rotten eggs, aggie muck, andliquid manure, Pubsters chug-a-lugged to a glorious victoryover the aggie team, usingCanadian champagne .

A bystander thought heheard Frank Gnup question thecontest, but the doubter wa slater identified as a malcon-tent engineer .

Already winners for generalexcellence i n journalism,Ubyssey staffers proved againthey are the finest in every-thing .

Look, lookMETROPOLIS (UNS) — A

blue and red form was sighted

flying madly over the citytoday .

All four lower mall women' sdons say they are throughwith being policemen.

"We feel dons can't do theirreal jobs as friends and coun-sellers to the girls when theymust act as policemen incharge of late-leaves," saidMrs. E . J. Summerfield, donof Phyllis Ross house.

The dons and resident fel-lows of the four lower mallresidences at a meeting twoweeks ago resolved that anygirl old enough for UBCshould be able to regulate herown life, she said .

"The dons thought s o m egirls weren't ready fo r

termine her own behaviour andset her own standards — in-cluding when to return to herlviing group" a front page edi-torial in the newspaper said .

All women students under21 at the college must live in

the ceremonies office building."He was reading The Ubys-

sey and seemed to be snicker-ing," the discus thrower said.

"I came at him and hesquealed — it sounded like'veep'."

She chased the barefootman east towards the newforestry-agriculture buildingwhere he climbed the con-struction fence.

"He caught his kilt on anail on the fence and rippeda piece of it," she said . "I gotthe cloth and handed it overto the authorities ."

Authorities today refused toallow a Ubyssey reporter-photographer team to view thepiece of kilt.

"It's an important clue andwe have to study it," one said .

plete freedom, but they agreedthat it was the best way tolearn responsibility. "

Sunday their proposals meta wall of indifference whenput to housing czar MalcolmMcGregor and supervisor ofwomen Miss Lorna Make-peace.

Dons in many other resi-dences approved of the pres-ent system .

approved housing unlessparental permission is obtain-ed for other accommodations.

Approximately 4,000 of the20,000 students are bound bya lockout curfew of 11 p.m.on week night and 2 a .m. onweekends .

Jim Bailey, staff writer forthe newspaper said : "We arenot just creating an issue —we feel something can be don eabout the situation ."

responsible for a don to tak ethe job and then criticize thesystem .

Most other dons would notcomment on the lower mal lproposals .

Residence girls had mixedreactions .

"My parents trusted meI could come and go any timeof the day or night," said on egirl interviewed while neckingin the foyer of Isabel MacInne swith her boyfriend .

"The system of graduate dtimes is foolish," she said ."Anyone can get around therules and stay out all night ifthey want to . "

Joan Campbell of Ann Wes-brook thought girls had morefreedom at UBC than a thome, and that there weremuch fewer restrictions a tIYBC than at other campuses .

"I find it amusing that boyshave complete freedom assoon as they get here," saidMoya Cavanagh of Hamberhouse, criticizing the doublestandard .

Curfew times for women are11 p .m . Monday to Thursday .But they can sign for 2 a .m .late leaves any week night .

Curfew is midnight Fridayto Sunday .

First year students are al -lowed two late leaves — unti l4 a .m . — a year, and four 3a.m.'s.

Girls over 21 and third andfourth year students are al-lowed unlimited 4 a .m's.

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Aggies chokedpubsters win race

By RON SIMMER

Ubyssey Pubsters out-chug-a-lugged all corner sannual boat race at the tea-cup game half time.

Guzzling Andres cracklingvin rose, Ubyssey staffer seasily defeated challengin gaggies Thursday noon, prov-ing again they are the biggestmouths and fastest arms oncampus .

Four of the hairy red hoardvanquished a forestry team inthe preliminary beer-bouts,which were slowed up whenit was discovered engineershad forgotten the bottle-open-ers .

Official boat-race judgeFrank Gnup declared the firstengineer-aggie bout no contestwhen the hairy red ones spill-ed most of their beer in theirbeards .

In a re-run, Aggies wo nhands down over the soddenslip-stickers .

Finally, in an atmosphere of

in the

Co-ed chases phantom kilt;finds evidence on fence

complaints, thesystem is quite lenient," saidAnn Winter, don of Ann Wes-brook house .

One don who refused to giveher name, said the decision ofthe authorities was fair and

con- I generous, and that it was ir-

"I have no

Paper protests lock-up .southern camp co-eds

SAN JOSE, CALIF. (PSP) — Curfew lock-outs offemale students at the San Jose State College residenceshave been attacked by the campus newspaper, the SpartanDaily .

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Page 4: NEURYSSEI - UBC Library Home · Ubyssey Scandal Reporter A man and woman were seen making love fully cloth-ed on a couch in Brock lounge Thursday. Unsuspecting students react-ed strongly

LETTERS TO THE EDITO R

Let us get the facts straight .

I soap-boxed on Wednesda y

afternoon to warn student s

about the real possibility o f

another fee hike .

I also suggested that the

way the financial arrange-

ments are in B .C. the stu-

dents would be forced to op-

pose the university adminis-

tration and not the provin-cial government .

This, I said, was bad . Ouraction should be directedagainst the provincial gov-ernment to prevent a fee in-crease, I said .

Furthermore, I never sug-gested that the Students fora Democratic University com-mittee would plan a strike.I simply said one of the al-ternatives facing students, ifsomething is not done first, i sthe possibility of a strike .

The committee has notmade any policy recommen-dations because it has no tmet yet . I hope some studentswill be concerned about the

'Gross nonsenser

Editor, The Ubyssey :

Your Thursday story andsubsequent editorial is gros s

nonsense .

Paper caperEditor, The Ubyssey :

Said the wicked young ladiesof Ross ;

"We grieve not for ourpurity's loss .

But the signing of paperBefore every caperIs enough to make anyon e

cross ."J . E. G. WHITEHORNE

grad. studies

problems facing all of us, andwill meet tonight at CarolynTate's house at 9 :30 p.m. to

discuss specific action pro -grams .

And, for your information ,

one of the recommendation sI would make, as would

others on the committee, is a

mass lobby of the provincia l

government in January. Itdoesn't take much politica l

genius to see the need forthat.

Hopefully, in future I wil l

not be quoted as speaking fora group that hasn't met .

Where you have SDU i nyour news story, you shouldhave said students. I spokeabout what I personally feltall students will be faced wit hif we do not act soon.

CHARLIE BOYLANfirst vice-president, AMS

'Sensationalism'Editor, The Ubyssey:

Tuesday's front page storyon late-leaves in residence isyet another example of TheUbyssey's asinine sensational-ism.

You say, "First year stu-dents are alowed two late-leaves—until 4 a .m.—a year ,and four three o'clocks ."

"However, you don't men-tion that any girl in residencecan have a two o'clock leaveany night (except Sunday)she desires, simply by sign-ing a late-leave sheet .

True, this does producepaper-work for the residentfellows, but women's resi-dences are certainly not thepolice states you would havepeople believe . In fact, themajority of girls have far

EDITOR: John KelseyManaging .___ Richard Blai rNews Carol WilsonCity

Danny Stoffma nPhoto

Powell HargravePage Friday __

Claudia Gwin nFocus

Rosemary Hyma nAss't News __ . Pat HrushowyCUP Bert HillAss't Photo

_ _ Dennis Gan s

more freedom in residence

than they would living athome, and some have more

than they know how tohandle .

This is the second year Ihave stayed at Fort Camp ,

and another thing which

bothers me immensely isyour constant derision of For tand its living conditions .

If you interviewed a typ-ical resident you would findfar less dissatisfaction with

our home than the dispropor-tionate dissasisfaction thatseems to characterize the typ-

ical Ubyssey reporter .

It appears all the clamorabout our substandard mealsand general discomfort comesfrom pseudocrusaders wh onot only do not live in Fort,but who wouldn't know aFort hut, room, or meal wereit stuck up their collectivebehinds.

INGA FRIDRIKSSONAnne Wesbrook Hall

Appleby, Hroosh, Blair, andBig Al boat raced, humiliatin gaggies. Addict reporter Norma nGidney, Chinaphile Boni Lee ,Murray McMillan, Mary Ussner ,Bo Hansen, Cook Hrushoway, ValZuker, Charlotte Haire, Ron Sim-mer, and old Irving Fetish mad enews. So did Sue Gransby, th esport.

Cameroids were Kurt Hilger,Derrek Webb, Don Kydd, Chri sBlake, AI Harvey and the newleaf .

NORAL!f~!i "THEF I$HBONE

A „ ,F ISHINCIDENT”

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THE URYSSEYPublished Tuesdays, Thursdays and Fridays throughout the university yea rby the Alma Mater Society of the University of B .C . Editorial opinions arethe editor's and not of the AMS or the university . Member, CanadianUniversity Press . Founding member, Pacific Student Press . Authorizedsecond class mail by Post Office Department, Ottawa, and for payment ofpostage in cash .The Ubyssey publishes Page Friday, a weekly commentary and review .

City editor, 224-3916 . Other calls, 224 .3242 : editor, local 25 ; photo, PageFriday, loc. 24; features, sports, loc . 23 ; advertising, loc . 26. Night calls ,731-7019 .

Winner Canadian University Press trophies for general

excellence and editorial writing .

NOVEMBER 4, 1966MZWMRNIMI

MotherhoodLoath as we are to sob over motherhood issues like

freedom of the press, watching it being stomped into th eground by the journalism department at Vancouver CityCollege unnerves us .

Gerald do Boer, editor of the VCC Savant, admitshe has no final say in editorial policy .

Instead, journalism instructor Mrs. Joanne Stem oclaims the sole right to decide if student submissionsare suitable for publication .

For VCC students trying to make the place acollege and not just two extra years of high school ,Mrs. Stemo's priggish chirp is the last folio .

A few other newspapers still submit copy for admini-stration approval — including Moscow 's Pravda andMadrid's ABC .

But governmental censorship — even when th egovernment is kindly Mrs . Stemo — grinds the Cana-dian journalistic grain .

VCC journalism students who actually want tobecome newspapermen will only succeed by abandoningtheir present administration pimp sheet . Maybe thecourse should be abandoned too, since we haven 't seenany Vancouver newspapers fighting to hire last year'sgraduates .

That solution requires VCC students to form theirown paper backed by money they control; now, thewhole activity budget is thoroughly pawed and watchedover by the college administration before students getnear it.

Although there is no reason to doubt the benevolenceof the Vancouver school board, VC'C 's students — aged19 to 25 and up — must be old enough to handle i tthemselves .

If the adminstration won't let them do it officiall yperhaps UBC 's student regime, which is autonomousif nothing else could provide the aid and advice to d oit unofficially .

What mace ?There are strong parallels between the UBC Lib-

eral club's sneak out of mock parliament and the currentscene in Ottawa.

But, like all Canadian politics : the parallels crossand skew and come up confusion.

Campus Liberals correctly decry mock parliamentfor bickering and farcical discussion . But then the gritsopt out of a bad situation which they, as the governmentin recent years, are mostly responsible for .

The federal liberals are unable to see the same kin dof inane debate in the house of commons, and althoughno party member talks of pulling out, they're not doin ganything to improve Canadian government.

Model parliament deserves the lousy reputation it sgot, but it does provide a few days laughter in a dullweek.

For the rest of it, parliamentary council's activitiesshow as much imagination as the Liberals do when theyadvocate dreary forums and drowsy seminars in lieuDf the play parliament yuk .

The mot alarming part of the parallel is neithe rthe federal nor the campus debate gets any better, an dour main fear is what happens when the curren tuniversity crop hits parliament hill .

Maybe Aristotle ' s philosopher kings weren 't such abad idea after all.

23-skido0UBC students seemed too cynical to give anythin g

the old college try until we saw Thursday's chariot race .We take it all back.Rah rah is possible because it happened . Nobody

threw acid, nobody got hurt, and the chariot dra gitself — formerly a 200-man bloodbath ending in year -long animosity—became the friendly, if a bit unsanitary ,contest it ought to be .

To the dyed engineers, dung covered foresters, dis-sheveled nurses, tea-bagged home economists and out-chug-a-lugged aggies, a rousing rah .

Page 5: NEURYSSEI - UBC Library Home · Ubyssey Scandal Reporter A man and woman were seen making love fully cloth-ed on a couch in Brock lounge Thursday. Unsuspecting students react-ed strongly
Page 6: NEURYSSEI - UBC Library Home · Ubyssey Scandal Reporter A man and woman were seen making love fully cloth-ed on a couch in Brock lounge Thursday. Unsuspecting students react-ed strongly

!;nY•Fijn~ ..

SFA debates the issueOpen letter to the UBC Debating Union

It is with sincere regret that wemust turn down your kind invitationto participate in the UBC Debatin gConference Nov . 18 and 19 .

Of course . we must elaborate on thisrefusal as we owe it to you as well asto our own student body at SFA.

Your closing sentence expresses th ehope that we shall seek active mem-bership. Our own sentiments are notadverse to this offer . Yet, we cannotjoin you .

It is not that we would not havedelegates nor is it that we are tooaloof on this mountain of ours. Thematter is far more serious .

We believe that you would not ob-ject if we define a discussion as a nexchange of opinions and thoughts ingeneral . And it is easy to understandthat a debate ensues when there is apoint of disharmony .

Each participant then desires toclarify his ideas as adequately as theother person's thinking demands, pur-suing the goal of convincing the otherto be of a similar persuasion. Thisenterprise may or may not attain afruitful conclusion .

Providing that you have concurredwith this generalization, we may com-ment "so far so good". But here ouragreements are abruptly breeched. Therules governing the conference separateus. They separate us because we hav edifferent ideas .

We have certain convictions regard-ing the role of a debating society, therole of a debater in such a society, andour audience . To be with you on thosetwo days in November would mean thatwe have discarded these convictions ,

By LORNA TOWERS

The Sun (Oct . 31, 1966)printed a precis on RectorJim McKibbon's address t osome 65 UBC students atSt . Anslem's A n g l i c a nChurch. The Rector quote dextensively from the Gospelof Christian Atheism byAnglican Prof . T. J. J. Al-tizer, asserting that th edeath of God is a socologicalfact, a psychological exper-ience and a theological proc-lamation .

It is not surprising thathe comes up with this view-point. Had he freely use dthe Bible, he'd have arrive dat the same conclusion .

that we have erased them from ourminds so they will not haunt us durin gand after those November days.

If we are to be coerced to state ourconflict, we ask of debating whetherit is to be oratory or service . As toour answer, we opt for the latter :service .

It is a matter of concern to us tha twe cannot speak with similar surenes sof your stand . All indications are thatyou disagree .

The indications are that you are play-ing. The indications are that you areinsincere .

The rules are clear but unacceptable .We cannot engage in a debate on avital issue with our debaters' positio nchosen at random, as the regulationsspecify .

It cannot be denied that you havehad speakers who could not speak thetruth as they wished owing to thismethod of appointment . There is noguarantee that this will not be repeated .

We do not speak on the basis of amisunderstanding when we say thatyou have had speakers who stood be-fore their audience with heavy heartsfor they have stoned the truth .

For the brief time permitted thespeakers improbity was in the air . Wecannot bring ourselves to ask our fel-lows to do this . We respect them to omuch .

Let this be clear: we deny a freedomto this game, which is what you havemade of an important social function .Your young men and women are leftwith a meagre choice : hypocrisy ordefeat .

To pass an act of insincerity over to

'an audience they must engage i nrhetoric and oratorical quiddities, orlose the match.

So they fool their listeners, so the yare traitors, so they are winners, s othey are applauded .

Our concern lies elsewhere .You know our choice .Service is a nice word, isn't it? An d

particularly so since we earnestly in -tend it .

We wish to debate and we wish tohave as relevant a topic as the on eyou set forth, but our speakers willspeak their own ideas and not withborrowed voices. Their stand .: ., adispute will be the product of tie dia-lectics of circumstance .

Their task will not be to win, butto articulate a coherent series ofopinions that will prove to be of bene-fit to the audience .

The debating society of this univer-sity will endeavour to clarify and Mas son to the student the method andtotality of cogent analyses of mattersof interest, recognizing the intricacyand difficulty of attempts to makesense of this world.

The SFA student-faculty Academi cActivities Committee, of which the de -bating society is a branch, has beenset up in direct response to this .

Let us emphasize that words of ac-cusation came hesitantly to our lips ,after much deliberation . Nevertheless,we believe that we are acting correctlyin giving public utterance to our views .

We trust that this letter will be re-ceived in good faith, to parallel ourown, by your membership .

ALEXANDER E . BANDYSFA Academic Activities Committee

Pr. . . a weekly magazine ofcomment and reviews.

i

NOV. 4, 1966

ON THE COVER: Hittinga high note during con-struction of the m u s i cbuilding. Photo hi-jack byAl Harvey.

editor: claudia gwinn

assistants : judy bingsue richter

photo : al _harve y

GnawThe mishmash over the

new arts program seemsto have settled into th earchives to be forgot-ten. It has been at leasta month since the planwas presented for stu-dent consideration .

But before the crawlybugs gnaw holes in theproposal lets give it somesecond thoughts .

The subject of freeuniversity is also becom-ing a major concern . Isit possible that theycould profit from oneanother .

Recently one of ourstaff visited the freeuniversity i n Seattle .The first impression wasfavorable.

Classes discuss every-thing from photographyto the history of thenegro in America . Theseclasses are free ex -changes between the stu-dents and the lecturer.

The lecturers incident-ly are both professorsand laymen or profes-sionals from the givenfield. Negro history i stherefore given by anegro civil rights workeretc .

Thus the student isexposed t o somethingother than the views ofsomeone who has stud-ied to a degree on thattopic from someone elsewho studied to a degreeand so on .

If the isolation of uni-versity is tended towar dnarrowness lets go out-side into the world orbring the world inside .

It is argued that theaverage freshman mindis not capable of copint,with this type of verbalexchange .

But to our way ofthinking this is the tim ewhen the mind is ripe t osuch equality . . . whenit still possesses the exu-berance and imaginatio nof youth . . . before theacademic machine tram-ples it into inadequacy .

Could this be the newarts concept?

Our Father who aren't in heavenMost of the world agrees

but most of the world is no tChristian, and 80 per centof so-called Christianitydoes not know Jesus Christ .

Behind the Rector standsa solid, almost impregnablewall of rebellion againstGod .

I am tempted to ask thisRector if he is a Christian .Does he, for instance believethat Jesus Christ is THESon of God? Divine ?

It is only by personal ac-ceptance of Jesus Christ as'Saviour ("for the Son ofMan is come to seek and tosave that which was lost"

Luke 19:10) that he has anyright to call himself aChristian .

Positive life is also in thebeliever . It must take adead man to proclaim adead God .

I am forced to the con-clusion that a man whoknows not God, knows no tJesus Christ, and that todeny the existence, import-ance, need of God, is to denyJesus Christ .That's why I ask the

Rector if he is a Christian ,and challenge all the God-is-dead exhibitionists to re-pudiate Christ, not just God ,for Jesus Christ claimed

parity with God . They are

inseparable .I would say to those 6 5

and other seeking yet un-committed students — ifyou earnestly seek God, re-pair to the Bible, you'llfind Him there .

You'll find love that will

shake you to the verydepths of your soul . You'llsight Calvary and the emptytomb, and you'll know thatJesus Christ did what Hesaid He'd come to do — togive His life a ransom formany. And you'll know asa glorious reality that Helives with God, right now.

a

Page 6

THE UBYSSEY

Friday, November 4, 1966

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Candida warms upBy KEN LIVINGSTONE

What does one do withShaw when the barbed wi tand caustic satire that makeup a large part of the au-thor's dramatic arsenal ar econspicous only iby their ab-sence, when in fact, th eplaywright himself tells usthat this is a pleasant play ?Of course, we say, he is talk-ing tongue in cheek to somedegree, but in the case ofCandida, which the Play-house Theatre chose to openits new season, this is not thecase .

In fact a program note bythe director, William Davis ,describes it as, "a truly posi-tive humanist play ."

The answer then and thisseems to be the approachtaken by Mr. Davis, is to em-phasize the play's genuinehumanity and to this end th ePlayhouse is fortunate tohave Francis Hyland as Can-dida . If the production seem ssluggish and. static in thefirst act, warms towards th eend of the second and onlyreally succeeds in the thirdact confrontation, it is pre-cisely because it is not untilthen that Candida takes con-trol .

Miss Hyland succeeds inmaintaining a delicate bal-ance between matronly

warmth and strong willed in-dependence without allow-ing Candida to become th eself satisified bitch that sheso easily might .

Peter Haworth is a suit-ably smug and vulnerableMorrell and Ted Greenhalghwould make a fine Burgess ifhe were a little less con-scious of Shaw's tortuous cock -ney dialect . As Marchlbanks ,the poet with a (bleeding heartHutchinson IShandro, is con-vincingly tormented, but alittle less limp-wristed an-guish might have resulted i na character whose motiva-tions were more poetic tha npetulant .

Daphne Goldrick is gen-uinely funny as Prossy with-out having to work at itquite as hard as Pat Rosewho, as Lexy, in his firstrole as a permanent memberof the Playhouse Companysuffers from unfortunatecasting .

Charles Evans' set is faith-ful to Shaw's description andcreates an effective mood ex-cept for the disconcerting useof obviously painted furni-ture at the downstage cor-ners .

Candida provides an enjoy -able evening's entertainmentand is worth a trip to thePlayhouse for the bonus ofMiss Hyland's performance .

Angelswheelalong

By STEPHEN SCOBIE

Time magazine, with it susual critical acumen, re-marked that The Wild Ang-els did not give an accurat epicture of its subject, andthat the film was thus a fail-ure—which must be aboutthe stupidest thing tha tTime has done this year .

Of course it's not accurate !

This isn't documentary —that's already been done byKenneth Anger. This is Rog-er Corman, the master o fthe horror film, weavinganother of his fables, atwentieth century neo -Gothic extravaganza, in th ebest 'Horace Walpole and Ed-gar Allan Poe manner.

The more absurd the plo tgets (as in the funeral orgy,with the corpse exhumed t osmoke a reefer and thewidow raped behind the al-tar) the more the film is tru eto its own artistic integrity .

The film's serious com-ment, must thus be chan-nelled through the form . Itcannot come directly . Toquote a latter-day Moham-med, "The medium IS themessage."

Corman delights in th e'Gothic, the Baroque — it i swhat makes his horror film sstand out from the mass . Ap-plied to war, it producedthat electric masterpiece ,The Secret Invasion . Here ittakes the motor-cycle Hell' sAngels mystique, an almostideal subject, and produce sa fascinating exercise in th egrotesque.

The film's major fault i sthat it doesn't take the mys-tique quite seriously enough ;it shares to too great an ex-tent its characters' inarticu-lateness about the force sthey are dealing with . Andeven if it feels compelled t ohave its hero confess . the in-adequacy of the movement' sphilosophy, at least it doe snot accept any of society' salternatives .

Blues is left at the endwith nothing to say and no-where to go .

The final image of him ,left alone to fill his friend'sgrave, is only one of man ywhich, as with all Carman' sfilms, stick in the mind lon gafter the lights come on an dyou light your first cigar-ette .

The Wild Angels is, in it sown individual way, one o fthe major films of the year .

If you missed it first timearound, be sure to whee lyour bike along to the sec-ond run .

THE UBYSSEY

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Friday, November 4, 1966

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Keep China yellow

Page 8

Mate

the

great

By GABOR MAT E

Critics of American foreign policy areoften confronted with several argumentswhich, although they do not relate directly t othe criticisms, serve nevertheless to confus ethe debate and to prevent discussion of thereal problems .

I am referring to those arguments whichdeal not with what the critics of Americanpolicy have to say, but which attempt toshift grounds of the debate elsewhere . Of themany arguments which belong in this cate-gory, two come most readily to mind.

"If you don 't like what our society isdoing, why don't you go live somewher eelse? If you disagree with America's polic ytowards China, for example, why don't yo ugo live in China?" This argument, thoughposed very often, has a number of obviou sdefects .

To begin, there are those critics of Ameri-can policy who are also critical of the Chin-ese government . These people would haveto find a neutral habitat. But since no gov-ernment is perfect, everywhere they wentthey would have criticisms to make, andwould then be invited to move on .

Clearly, they might as well stay wherethey are.

More seriously, even if one considersChinese policy more correct and less danger-ous to peace than American (which at thi stime it definitely is), one does not automati-cally become a Communist, and even lesseasily does one become Chinese . There islittle point, therefore, in suggesting that thecritic spend the rest of his life in Communis tChina.

At some time or other most people fin dthemselves in a dissenting minority, whetherthe issue be American foreign policy, fluori-dation, or Sunday blue laws . If these minori-ties migrated every time, our population

THE UBYSSEY

would .be reduced drastically. Or would any-one seriously suggest that those people wh ofavor fluoridation should move elsewheremerely because Vancouver does not yet havefluoridation?

The right to dissent loses its meaning if,having voiced dissent, people are asked tomove to places where their opinions mightbe more welcome .

Finally, there is a question of ethics . Ifyou feel your society is pursuing a wrongcourse, is it not better to stay and attemptto dissuade the majority than to flee to saferclimates?

It would be highly desirable that Chin aand Canada increase the number of exchangevisits, but permanent residence in Chinawould greatly reduce one's effectiveness a sa conscientious critics of our society .

"If you were in Hanoi or Peking you wouldnot be allowed to voice your dissent ." Thisis asking someone to shut up in the name offreedom .

What this argument says about Pekingand Hanoi may or may not be true, but isin either case quite irrelevant . One can hard,ly be expected to silence himself voluntarilysimply because elsewhere he may be silencedby force .

What these two arguments have in corn,mon is that they both evade the actual pro ,blems to be faced. Either America is righ tin Viet Nam, or it is not . Either China hasaggressive policies, or she doesn't . Eitherwhat the Western press reports about Chin ais basically correct, or it is not . Either theJohnson administration has lied about thetrue facts of America's involvement in South -east Asia, or it has not.

To say that the discussion of these ques-tions would not be permitted elsewhere, orthat those who persist in discussing themshould shut up or get out says nothing aboutthe questibns themselves .

People who seek to prove on a factua lbasis that the U .S. is pursuing a correct andnecessary policy may be wrong, and in thiswriter's opinion they are very wrong, but atleast they address themselves to the basicissues .

Consequently they are the only ones wh oshould be treated seriously by opponents ofAmerica's actions.

Friday, November 4, 196 6

I SPECIAL I EVENTSPRESENTS

TUESDAY, NOV. 8th - 8:30 P.M .THE AUDITORIU M

UNIVERSITY OF B.C.Tickets now available Vancouver Ticket Centre Ltd ., 630Hamilton Street, Vancouver 3, British Columbia . Genera lAdmission $2 .50, Students only $1 .50 .

Like to look "different" yet stay in style? O f

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China Teach InTODAY 12:30 — Auditoriu m

David Crook who has been teaching in China since 1947 discusses "The

Cultural Revolution" .

TONIGHT 8:00 p.m. — Totem Park Lounge

EYE-WITNESS ON CHINAVisitors' impressions of China presented through a panel involving Ren e

Goldman, Clive Ansley, David Crook and Gene Craven .

SAT. 9:30 a.m. — Totem Park Lounge

AMERICA AND ASIAProfessors Holsti, Holland and Brown in a round-table discussion of rela-

tions between two continents and the bearing of American foreign policy

on those relations.

SAT. 2:00 p.m . — Totem Park Lounge

THE CONTINUING REVOLUTION IN CHINADavid Crook, Paul Ivory and Rene Goldman present views on the curren t

upheavals in China and the long-range policies of her leaders .

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Friday, November 4, 196 6

By JUDY BING

Michel de Ghelderode be-lieved that life is magic .

But it is not a contest be-tween the polarized moralforces of black magic andwhite magic .Life is red magic."Red Magic" is the first

play whose direction is ac-cepted as partial fulfillmentof the requirements for amasters degrees in theatreat UBC, and its directorMichael Irwin has mastere dGhelderode's idiom well.

Set in medieval Flanders,it is the story of the wealth yHieronymous Dermot Hen-nelly who is so avaricioushe eats imaginary food an dshows his wife a picture offish and fruit to satisfy he rhunger pangs .

He has a chest of goldcoins and his fondest dreamis that they will multiplythrough impregnation of thecoins engraved with femaleheads by the coins withmale heads.

Armador plots with thebeggar Romulus, played t owicked perfection by BrianPaisley looking like a lech-erous satyr, Sybilla, Hier-onymous's frustrated virgi nwife, voluptuously playedby Elizabeth Murphy, andthe fat monk, John Johns -ton, the most hilarious char-acter in the play .

Death persists in Ghelder-ode's plays. He looked onthe inevitability of death ,his translator George Haug-

By NANCY CORBET T

The Vanishing Professor: A university play in four actswith the leading character increasingly absent .

Roles of leading character : teacher, advisor, fellowscholar, friend, and fellow supporter of non-academic ideals .

Teacher : 1st year—It is, of course, impossible for m eto see so many students in my office, so I will see none . It i salso impossible for me to mark personally your essays an dexams. Please do not interrupt lectures with questions . Typethem out and hand them in . I will try to deal with the msometime. Go to the library.

2nd year: Ditto .3rd year: There will Ibe a five-minute question period a t

the end of each Friday's class . Please do not interrupt th electures with questions .

4th year : Ditto .Advisor : 1st year—Go to the counselling service .2nd year: I don't know .3rd year: I don't know .4th year: I don't know, but take your grad studies some -

where else .Fellow scholar : 1st year—The reason I specifically asked

you not to come to my office is that I'm engaged in my ownresearch . Go away .

2nd year : Ditto .3rd year: Ditto .4th year: Ditto .Friend: All years—He might be . Nobody knows .Fellow supporter of non-academic ideals : All years—I

agree with you, of course, (with reservations) but I am per -sonally, 1) unable, 2) too busy, 3) not convinced that work -ing with students is effective or feasible .orthis is not, 1) the time, 2) the place, 3) the person .orwhat about, 1) the Indians in Canada, 2) the Russians i nHungary, 3) the bar in SUB? In any case, I can do nothinguntil, 1) I finish my book, 2) a new president is appointedor 3) any other reason whatsoever .

The above is unfair to, 1) a tiny minority of super-profs ,2) the hardworking comimttee on Arts 1, 3) Malcolm Mac-Gregor.

Red Magician cast

sexy spell, at Studio

Prof vanishes

ner tells us, neither as agrim terror nor as a happyrelease but as an intriguingfact. "Death? An adven-ture!" he once remarked .

Death catches up with th eplotters. Mortality mocksmaterialism for no amountof wealth can buy time .

Ghelderode embraced themysterious and the demon-ic. He doesn't pass moraljudgments on his characters .

His chief fault is that heallows mystery to degener-ate into obscurity .

His choice of which char-acters to kill and which onesto let live has no ration-ale .

Red Magic is erotic, oftento the point of brutality .

It abounds in images ofcopulation. Penny Wolver-ton's stage design is praise-worthy for its correspond-ingly mellow and physica lstage design, and the use o fsensuous velvets for costum-ing .

Red Magic continues tocast its spell tonight andSaturday at Freddy WoodStudio, next to the Ponderosa ,showing once more that it i spossible to produce goo dtheatre on campus withoutthe usual heavy reliance onprofessionals .

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THE UBYSSEY

Page 9

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Maple leaf forever

Ian secondsGordon review

Oh, get wick's !C)L30L

QUAKER MEETING FOR WORSHI PSUNDAYS 11 A.M .

FRIENDS' HOUSE, 535 W. 10th AVE .

Visitors Welcome

By IAN WALLAC EGordon Smith's paintings

are pleasant, often dynami cand quite competent . Theyare classy paintings and al-though they often show anattempt to be more signific-ant than elegant, there islittle in Smith's work whichleads the viewer into anyvisual experience that doe snot smack of the Deja-vue .

Smith is essentially animpressionist painter in thesense that he is primarilyconcerned with light an dcolor rather than statementor structure .

Poet Huff

harpoon s

pointedlyBy RAY STARRS

Looking like some raw-faced sea captain of Herma nMelville's, Robert Huff puton a whale of a show Fri-day .

An American in the natur-alist tradition but wit hFrench-Canadian roots, Huff ,unlike poets in general, ha sa real talent for reading hi sown poems .

The poems are folksy, hu-morous, conversational andclever. So is Mr. Huff . He' spedalling everyday life : aforest fire, a small - townsquabble, the facts aboutpoaching, the childhood me-mories of a soldier .

His statements are clea rand powerful; his languagerealistic and lyrical, and i tmoves with the natura lrhythms of dialogue . He is astory-teller, as is suggestedby the title poem of his newcollection, "The Course" .

And like all good story-tellers, Mr. Huff is capableof a first-class joke .

In an outraged, bombastica n d vaguely reminiscen tvoice, he read one poementitled, "I dream I'm DylanThomas on My Doctor' sCouch." It would have scare dthe ass off any English major .

It has often been state dthat he is a landscape paint-er. Yet a careful look at hispainting as a whole seems toindicate that he is less inter-ested in organic forms perse than as a frameworkwhich he can dress up withcolor .

As a result one feels acertain arbitrariness of styleand subject matter .

Red Wizard is nothin gapart from the fact that itis red. Summer Gardenmight suggest organic formsbut the color and light i sfar more decorative thanorganic.

If there was some kind ofconsistency behind Smith'sdiscrepancies then it mightbegin to take on a meaningand make sense but the var-ious assortment of styles(even though the feeling fo rcolor is essentially the same)is more haphazard than con-gruous.

Within a single year (1966)Smith has moved from ac-tion painting to hard edge,to Alan Davicism, to op art ,etc . . .

In every idiom he pro-duces a good painting, onethat maintains his colorcharacter, while followingstylistic advances made byothers .

Smith's most recent opprints, however, are th emost successful for here h eis using a style that wa smade for color painters .

The content of the oppainting is the interactionof color and Smith's use ofcolor here leads to harmonyand clarity rather than in-congruity .

Incongruity is not a vicein itself but when the artistdoes not intend it it is amistake .

This academic criticismis unfair in that Smith i san intuitive painter butnevertheless the solution t ohis problems is an intellec-tual one .

Smith is essentially a dec-orative painter but he feelsthat a painting should besignificant not merely dec-orative .

I think Smith has beenfooled by art historians intobeing prejudiced against hisown sensibility .

Significant painting i strue to itself and exploresall the possibilities of itselfwith courage and convic-tion .

SUZUK IMOTORCYCL E

CENTR ESERVICE - PARTS - ACCESSORIE S3627 W . Broadway

731-751 0

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OFFERS

CAREERS INBUSINESSMANAGEMENTA career in business management can offer you unsurpassed opportunities for persona lachievement, responsibility and growth if you select a company to join after gradu -ation that strongly believes in the value of its people .

The success of Procter & Gamble in Canada and throughout the world is made up ofthe individual successes of each of its employees . Because the Company recognize sthat personal achievement is a major source of individual satisfaction, every oppor-tunity is provided for its realization .

At Procter & Gamble you can expect :

To be able to develop your business education in a program o f

individualized, on-the-job training .

To be challenged daily with new ideas and new problems in a

stimulating environment where intelligence and enthusiasm arerecognized .

To be given responsibility based on your capacity to absorb it, an d

to advance based on your abilities to do a more demanding job .

To be encouraged and rewarc ed with continued opportunities ,

increasing income, and an uncommonly sound program of profit

sharing and other benefits .

You will want facts on which to make an intelligent choice of your career . To learnmore about Procter & Gamble ask your Placement Office for a descriptive brochur eand arrange for an interview o n

November 23, 24, ' 25

for positions i n

Marketing, Purchasing, Finance, Systems Analysis ,Transportation and Sales Management .

Graduating students from all academic disciplines are invited to apply .

PROCTER & GAMBLE1

1

2

34

Page 10

THE UBYSSEY

Friday, November 4, 1966

Page 11: NEURYSSEI - UBC Library Home · Ubyssey Scandal Reporter A man and woman were seen making love fully cloth-ed on a couch in Brock lounge Thursday. Unsuspecting students react-ed strongly

w» s's'#~?rr: :::<E::i.,vr~~5;k~~i>~;':*.F~S"$;K .r;?.n

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UNIVERSITY PHARMAC Y

By JOHN REI D

The war in Viet Nam is ,for America, not only rightbut necessary.

We live in a society whichhas agreed that the will ofthe majority must prevail ,and the minority must sub-mit to the wishes of the ma-jority. In Viet Nam therights of 200 million Ameri-cans to proceed with thei rvision of Asia is opposedby merely a few millionVienamese .

The total figure of Viet-namese objectors is indoubt, but will undoubtedlybecame smaller and smalleras the war progresses.

As time passes, the rightof America to stay in VietNam becomes stronger an dstronger .

Secondly, Viet Nam serve sas an excellent trainingground in practical warfarefor the American army ,navy and air force. Newtechniques can be tested an dtroops can be made profi-cient in the art of war.

The Viet Nam war serve sin much the same capacityas did the Spanish Civil Warfor the Nazis, namely as acheap area in which to trainmen not to be squeamis habout killing .

Viet Nam offers greatscope for the developmentof the American individual .It offers an opportunity fo rthose who oppose the warto lead peace marches, andfor those in favor of warand destroying communismto fight for their ideals .

It is an excellent metho dfor developing the right ofeach American to fight fo rwhat he believes .

One must remember tha tas our modern industria lsociety is based on war, itis very important to have awar in progress . But it mustnot be a major war whichwould strain the economy .Fortunately, the limited wa ragainst the Vietnamese isideal for this purpose .

One of the dangers of oursociety is that it is chang-ing too rapidly . While on eis fighting one c a n n o tchange society to any greatextent, since those whowould be building a betterworld are now engaged i nfighting.

We are fortunate to pos-sess Viet Nam, which can b eexpected to retard growt hto the satisfaction of anyconservative .

The Vietnamese war i snot only America's right,it is America's necessity .

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1968Science (General)

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Mechanical Engineerin g

IN ADDITION, PERMANENT AND SUMMER VACANCIES ARE AVAILABLE FOR STUDENTS UNDERTAKING POSTGRADUAT ESTUDIES IN ENGINEERING PHYSICS, CHEMICAL ENGINEERING AND CHEMISTRY IN THE RESEARCH DEPARTMENT ATSARNIA, AND IN THE PRODUCTION RESEARCH AND TECHNICAL SERVICES DEPARTMENT IN GALGARY .

OPPORTUNITIES FOR REGULAR EMPLOYMENT ARE ALSO AVAILABLE IN THE CHEMICAL PRODUCTS, BUILDING PRO -DUCTS, AND COMPUTER SERVICES DEPARTMENTS .

Our Representative, MR . R. G. INGS, will be on the campus o n

NOVEMBER 7th, 1966to make interviewing appointments for students enrolled in the above courses

who are interested in filling the advertised vacancies .

MR. INGS will be located in the Studnt Placement Office on the West Mall .

Friday, November 4, 1966

THE UBYSSEY

Page 1 1

1968Geological EngineeringEngineering PhysicsHonours Geolog yGeophysics

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MiLSIMIMM&

Centre art altaredBy IAN WALLACE

The Swiss sculptor Ton ySisig has erected a circularbronze altar for the NewLutheran Student Center' s`chapel in the round' .

Most works of art ar efunctional only in the pleas-ure or the revelations thatthey give . But the altar hastwo functions: to serve as apiece of ceremonial furni-ture and to act as a sym-bolic medium to contempla-tion of the divinity .

In this way it is used a sa focal point for the visualsenses—something concreteupon which the non-con-crete messages of prayermediation can be traced .

The art of the altar is toserve as a ritual device t ocarry the meaning of th eceremony . It does this bycreating space.

The ceremony is controll-ed by the space created b ythe altar . It's circular orspiral mandala platformpulls one into the centervisually but leaves onephysically on the periphery .The roof funnels up abovethe central altar to a crossand a skylight giving thespecial effect of a cone, with

By CHRISTIANA EPP

It all started innocentlyenough. There was a prettyposter in the caf which an-nounced a symposium inbright red letters . It was tobe held at Rosario Beach.The word beach convincedme .

The pretty poster had saidthat the topic of the sym-posium was liberalism, butfrom the first panel discus-sion it was apparent tha tliberalism was the dirtyword of the weekend .

I was mildly surprised ,having always thought thatliberal (lower-case "1") wa sa complimentary adjective .

That was only the begin-ing .

Most of those attendin gthe symposium were activ-ists of the New Left . Whilethe New Left itself gets agreat deal of publicity, it sactual views and opinion sdo not. To those who likemyself attended the sym-posium without havin gmore than a superficial ac-quaintance with the New

OBSAMRHHMMIMNMMMNMMLMWZ.M

the congregation circlingthe inside periphery .

Besides creating a cir-cular ritual space arounditself, the altar also has a ninclusive map space in it sheavily textured bronzesurface and its strong prim-itive tactility .

As the congregation gath-ers around the altar as phys-ical presences in physicalspace, their eyes are engage dupon its surface and thevertical space above it whic hcan be spiritually but notphysically entered ; andhence there is an encompass-ing psychic space .

This is essentially themeaning of a religious gath-ering: to gather as a singl ebody around a unifyingcenter (the faith, symbol-ized by the altar) in orderto join together into a com-mon mediation .

The altar, in creating apsychic space, induces thebeliever to come out of hisisolated individual body in-to a contemplative realmthat is shared by others—tomove from the particle tothe whole—to move fromthe periphery of the circl eto the center .

Left, it came as a shock tohear views expressed whichare almost the opposite o fthose one reads in the morn-ing paper .

Especially so as theseviews were not the rantingsof maladjusted neurotics,but rather articulately ex-pressed statements backedby research. This sympos-ium achieved its purpose ifit motivated those who at-tended to base their viewsof the world situation onsources other than the morn-ing paper and the glossyAmerican weeklies .

Of course being told tha tthe miseries of the worl dcan in large part be tracedto the structure of our so-ciety — a society which fo rmost university students i svery comfortable — can b ea disturbing experience .

All weekend I had astrong desire to read Win-nie-the-Pooh .

JEFFERSONAIRPLANE

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Record GalleryRobson - Opp . Library

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life in british Columbiais wonderfu l

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SUMMER EMPLOYMEN T1967

Applications and information booklets are now avail -able in the Placement Office and in Departments .

Please submit your application by 15 November 1966 ,to ensure fullest consideration .

to

EMPLOYMENT OFFICER,

NATIONAL RESEARCH COUNCIL ,

OTTAWA 7, ONTARIO .

Frederic Wood Theatre . . .

THE MOST EXCITING AND SENSATIONAL PLAY EVER SEEN ON CAMPUS

The Persecution and

Assassination of Maratas performed by the inmates of the Asylum at Charen-ton under the direction of the Marquis de Sade.

By Peter Weiss

Directed by John Brockingto n

November 180-0261–08:30 p.m.Special Student Performances : Monday, November 21 — 7:30 p .m .

Thursday, November 24, 12:30 p.m .

Student Tickets are Available for All Performances .

Due to the elaborate production student tickets for this play only will be $1 .00

BOX OFFICE: RM . 207 FREDERIC WOOD THEATR E

There has been a tremendous advance interest in this play . You are advised to get your tickets early .

Page 12

T H E U B Y S S E Y

Friday, November 4, 1966

Page 13: NEURYSSEI - UBC Library Home · Ubyssey Scandal Reporter A man and woman were seen making love fully cloth-ed on a couch in Brock lounge Thursday. Unsuspecting students react-ed strongly

Friday, November 4, 1966

THE UBYSSEY

Page 1 3

CANADIAN BOWL

Scores upset selectors

—derrick webb photoBURBLE, SPLASH, DROOL says frothy liquid as Ubysseystaffer participates in most popular sport on campus .Name of game is a boat race, but who cares whetherit has anything to do with boats or not .

Basketball, footbal lgame highlights here

UBC grads bounce tonight I for rugby at Wolfson field.in the reunion basketballgame .

Action starts at 8 o'clockin the Memorial Gym .

In football action the UBCThunderbirds play the Uni-versity of Calgary Saturday ina home game. Game time is2 p.m.

Saturday is also a big day

The selectionthe Canadian college bowl ran

into trouble last weekend .

The committee, which mustselect two college footbal l

teams to compete in the na-tional final Nov. 19 in Toronto ,were confronted Saturday

with a series of almost un-believable scores .

The unranked UBC Thund-erbirds, who were expected t ojump into the top 10 by virtueof its defeat of Alberta werehard pressed to defeat Sas-katchewan 23-22 in SaskatoonOct . 29 .

Saskatchewan, badly beatenby Alberta earlier in the sea-son, are currently rate dseventh .

Queens Golden Gaels pull-ed the biggest surprise bydumping previously undefeat-ed Toronto Varsity Blues 23-1 5in Toronto.

The victory gives Queens

Staff meet sImportant meeting Monday

noon for all sports-writers inUbyssey office, North Brock

basement. New writers wel-

come .

the outcome of each team'slast regular season game thisweekend.

ARMSTRONG & REAOPTOMETRIST S

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The UBC Rugby Thunder-birds play the Georgians at2:30 p .m. The Braves play theAll-Blacks, also at 2 :30 p.m .

At 1:30, the Tomahawksplay City College and theTotems take on BCIT .

The cross country Canadia nChampionships complete sSaturday's sports events .

committee for and Toronto identical won- I be played between the Gael slost records in the senior inter- and the Blues, regardless o fcollegiate football conference .

The game also forces aleague championship game to

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Page 14: NEURYSSEI - UBC Library Home · Ubyssey Scandal Reporter A man and woman were seen making love fully cloth-ed on a couch in Brock lounge Thursday. Unsuspecting students react-ed strongly

Page 14

THE UBYSSEY

Friday, November 4, 1966

Frats attempt UBC hoaxdemand 'CUS withdrawal '

By CHARLOTTE HAIRE

A group of frat men posing

as outside agitators are at-

tempting to hoax UBC into

pulling out of the Canadian

Union of Students .

A person claiming to be anon-student began circulatinga petition Thursday asking fo rUBC's withdrawal from CUS .

The sponsors of the petitio n

Scholarshipsup for grabsto top grads

The Woodrow Wilson na-tional fellowship foundationis offering help to studentsentering first year graduatestudy.

The fellowships include pay-ment of university fees andtuition, .a $2,000 living allow-ance, and an additional allow-ance for married students .

The foundation primarilysupports students showing aninterest in college teachingbut recipients need not neces-sarily enter that field .

Students cannot apply di-rectly but must be nominatedby a faculty member .

Nominations should be in nolater than Oct . 31 to ProfessorH. B. Hawthorn, departmentof anthropology and sociology .

More information is avail-able from Dr. Peter Remnantin Bu. 1264 .

claim they represent a myster-

ious Quebec organization .

Oscar Fraser, who says he

is one of two Quebec salarie dagents sent to UBC, refused t o

comment on identity or size o f

the organization .

Fraser said he has contacte dseveral interested UBC group sand is playing two UBC stu-dents to aid him .

The assistants, Tim Kerr ,arts 2 and Derry Nelson,comm. 4, refused to identifythemselves .

"CUS is a useless organiza-tion," said Fraser . "There is noQuebec representation and Al-berta has withdrawn .

He said CUS would be re-placed with another nationa lorganization which would in:

elude French identity .

He would not say w h owould set up the new organi-zation.

AMS president Peter Braundsaid the petition is not legal.

"It is not properly worde din terms of the constitution, "he said .

According to by-law 3 of th e

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AMS charter, a petition must

ask for a definite referendum .

"If they do get 500 signa -

tures and re-word the peti-

tion," said Braund,

"council

still must pass the referendum

with a two-thirds majority forany action to be taken . "

Braund said he is not wor-ried .

"This is probably some sortof a phantom joke," he said ."If these people were reall yserious and had the confidenc eof their convictions, theywould come forward and iden-tify themselves ."

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Page 15: NEURYSSEI - UBC Library Home · Ubyssey Scandal Reporter A man and woman were seen making love fully cloth-ed on a couch in Brock lounge Thursday. Unsuspecting students react-ed strongly

Friday, November 4, 1966

THE UBYSSEY

Page 1 5

' SCHOLAR CLAIMS:

'Chinese not aggressor sgle has been toward an indepen-dent government unified an dsecure from foreign invasion .

"The Chinese are waging adefensive struggle against f or-foreign depredation in order topreserve the integrity of thei rown country . "

"Only by discarding t h emythology of Chinese aggres-sion can we begin an accurateexamination of Chinese rela-tions," Brown concluded .

Medical hopefuls mee tfor careers conference

The third annnual medical careers conference willbe held this Sunday at International House .

The conference is for all students considerin gmedicine as a career . Fifteen doctors including generalpractitioners, specialists and faculty members wil lattend .

Topics discussed will be: future of the GP- meritsof different Canadian medical schools; and medical

ethics .Prospective medical students should apply to con-

ference chairman Chris Bates at 224-9913 . Cost to non-pre-med club students is $2 .50 .

By BONI LEE

Chinese aggression is a myth ,a Ford Foundation scholar said

Thursday .

"It is not the Chinese wh o

have been the main agressive

and expansionist force — quite

the reverse," Professor MortonBrown told 300 people in Brocklounge Thursday . .

He was the third speaker inthe UBC China teach-in .

"We gather here overburden-ed with hearsay and prejuidce, "Brown said .

"We should forget what wethought we 'knew' about China .

"We 'know' that China'sforeign policy is aggressive, ex-pansionist, inconsiderate of hu-man life, jeopardizing worldpeace and unsettling to thesecurity of nations. "

He said there was evidenc eclearly controverting the imageof an expanionist and agressiveChina .

Of Korea: "Only by forget-

ting the antecedents to Chinese

entry can one parade this a s

an example of Chinese aggres-sion ."

Of Tibet : "In Chinese and in-ternational law, Tibet has beenregarded as an integral pro-vince of China .

"It is hardly convincing toadduce China's involvement inthe 1959 Tibetan revolt as anexample of C .h i n e s e inter-ference . "

China amicably compromise dsome of her initial claims toterritory in Nepal, Burma, an dPakistan, he said.

China made no attempt inher conflict with India to re-tain control of the areas sh edominated.

"She instead withdrew to th eboundaries she had consistentlyoffered to negotiate with theIndians."

In Chinese history, foreignpowers have dismembered andplundered China, he said .

"The Chinese political strug-

Set your sight in Collegewith glasses

from . . .

'Examine redshirtsevery five years'

MONTREAL (CUP) — Professional engineers should

be re-examined every five' years to make sure they arekeeping up with the times, the industrial engineering

department head said here recently .

At a seminar of the Canadian

Council of Professional Engin-

eers, Dr. Arthur Porter propos-

ed a system of revalidation un-

der which the original licenc eto practise would be restampedafter each periodical re-exami-nation .

Lamenting engineering back-wardness he said: "Ninety percent of engineers who gradu-ated before 1960 know absolutenothing about computers, yetthey are already the main toolof engineering design . "

Porter forecasted profoundchanges in engineering educa-tion.

He also said he is lookingforward to a time when all pro-fessional disciplines includingmedicine, law and social work ,

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Page 16: NEURYSSEI - UBC Library Home · Ubyssey Scandal Reporter A man and woman were seen making love fully cloth-ed on a couch in Brock lounge Thursday. Unsuspecting students react-ed strongly

Page 16

T tIE UBYSSEY

Friday, November 4, 196 6

'TWEEN CLASSES

Major fighting farces VIETNAM WEE Kby student Vietnam Comm ., N .D.Y., Scm .

NOV. 7 - 11 NEXT WEE K

Mon ., Nov. 7 Vietnam Films – Bu. 106Battle scenes from Vietna m

Tues., Nov. 8 Dr. Inglis of Vietna mMedical Aid Committee plus Docu-mentary Film – Auditoriu m

Wed., Nov. 9 "Bitch-in"Student Vietnam rally-in front of thelibrary or auditorium if rains . Comeand bitch about the war .

re

r

CONSERVATIE S

Major Thurgood speaks on

Hellyer's United Farces, Mon -

day at noon in Brock .

PRE DENTAL CLU BSmoker tonight at 7 :30.

GERMAN CLU BMeeting today at noon in Bu.

203 .

PHYSICS SO CGrad talk on nuclear mag-

netic resonance at 1 :30 todayin Phys-soc . Lab tour willfollow .SOCREDS

MP Howard Johnston speak son Canada's role in World Af-fairs, today at noon in BrockLounge .

DEATH OF GODJack Shaver discusses the

Death of God theology, todayat noon in BE. 350 .ALLIANCE FRANCIASE

D. Baudoin discusses dusadisme au lacisme today a tnoon in Bu . 102 .

KOERNER LECTURERProfessor Eugene Vinaver

discusses Arthurian Romance ,today at noon in Bu . 106 .

NDPAlderman B o b Williams

speaks Monday at noon in Bu .204 .VIET NAM WEEK

Battle scenes from Viet Nam,Monday at noon in Bu. 106 .

Dr . Inglis of the medical aidcommittee shows a document-ary film in the auditoriumTuesday at noon .IH

Dance tonight in lowerlounge at 9 p .m. Admission 2 5cents.CREATIVE WRITING

There will be a poetry read-ing today at non in Ang. 104 .CHINA TEACH I N

David Crook who has beenteaching in China since 1947speaks on The Cultural Revolu-tion, today at noon in the audi-torium .

A panel composed of Dr .Rene Goldman, Clive Ansley,and Gene Cravan discusses Eye

'65 AUSTIN HEALEY 3000

light blue, dark blue interior, low

mileage, excellent condition. See at

Home Service, Edgemont & Queens

in North Vancouver.

Witness China, tonight at 8 i n

Totem Park lounge.

SPANISH CLUBMrs. Helen Grauft speaks o n

Brazil to Vancouver today a tnoon in Bu. 202 . Slides will beshown .LSM

Arnie von Dehn discusse sWhen Should the Christian op-pose the State Monday at noonin [Bu . 104 .

EUSDance to the ;Shockers at th e

Engineering - Residence mixertonight at 8 :30 in Brook Hall .

LUTHERAN STUDENTSFire-side discussion of birth

control, 7 :30 p .m. Sunday atthe Lutheran Student Centre .

VCFClaude Gelinas speaks toda y

at noon in Ang. 110. Groupsinging in the VCF hut Mondayat noon .

CUS OJudy Ransom speaks today a t

noon in Ed. 100 .GERMAN SPEAKE R

Dr. Katharina Holger discus -

INVESTIGATE AMANAGEMENT CAREE RWrite for this free brochure

Our current expansion plan screate outstanding career oppor-tunities for university men whopossess leadership potential, mar-keting aptitudes, and social mo-bility and skills . This brochureoutlines thechallengingfive phaseprogram leading to executive re-sponsibilities in Agency Manage-ment . For your copy write directto Mr. A. L . Andrews, C .L.U . ;Agency Superintendent at ou rHead Office 200 Bloor Street East ,Toronto 5, Ont .

MANUFACTURERS LIFEINSURANCE COMPAN YBranch Offices Across Canada

ses Heinrich Heine : Ein Dichter

zwischen Deutschland an d

Frankreich. Monday at noon

in [Bu. 320 .

PHRATERES MIXE RDance to the Organizations

and the Cumberland Four Sat-urday from 8 to 12 p.m. inBrock lounge .

WUSGeneral meeting in counci l

chambers at noon Monday.

DISSENTER'S CLUBFirst meeting today at noon

in Bu. 100 .

Lost & Found

1 1

LOST KEY RING WITH THRE Ekeys including one UBC key re -turn to key clerk buildings andgrounds .

HELP! — WOULD THE PERSO Nwho took wallet from glove com-partment of white '56 Pontiac, re -turn papers, AMS card, etc . —Reward if everything returned—Contact R . E. Townsend, 327-7077 .

LOST — MAN ' S BROWN WALLETvicinity book store on Tues. Pleasephone Allan Harris 263-8021 even-ings .

ROY POLISCI PH.D. CONTAC TJan 224-6062 for lighter, cigs.

HITCH HIKER WHO LEFTblack woman ' s umbrella in mycar call RE 8-5778.

Greetings

1 2

GRANDPA: HAPPY ANNIVER -sary Sat . Love T .O.L.O.B.M.

Coming Dances

12 A

ED. U.S. INVITES YOU TO THEBlue Grotto formal, CommodoreSat., Nov . 6th, $5.00 ($4 with Ed .card) . Tickets in AMS office andEd Building, B.Y.O .B.

MIXER BROCK SAT., NOV. 5.8 :00 featuring Organization, Cum-berland-Four. $1.00 per person ,sponsored by Phrateres.

Special Notices

1 3

WHY PAY HIGH AUTO INSUR -ance rates? If you are over 2 0and have a good driving historyyou quallify for our good drivin gates: Phone Ted Elliott, 224-6707 .

ANYONE WITNESSING ACCI-dent in "B " lot Monday, Oct. 31at 9 :10 a.m. Please contact Alexat 224-7236 between 6 :00 - 6 :30p.m. or 224-9088 between 10 :00 -5 :00 p.m.

RE-REELECT LOCKIE FOR MR.Gullible of 1966. He has aPROBLEM .

MARDI GRAS TRYOUTS. TODAYis last day, please come if inter-ested in dancing or singing . Broc kStageroom .

GRANNY DARLING ONLY 211,months left . Then two weeks i nFiji. A huge bed, 14 children, aSt. Bernard and I ' ll love you forthe rest of my life. Love Granpa .

HEAR A TRULY ENLIGHTENE Dman, Brock Hall, Nov. 9, 12 :30 .

WHY USE ACID OR POT? TAKEa trip in your own boat, Broc kHall, Nov . 9, 12 :30.

J .M. WHO IS ME! CONTACT ME about M .P . E .N.

DESERT CLUB PRESENT SErnest Eberhard M .D ., Professor ,Counsellor from Provo, Utah dis-cusses "The New Morality " Mon . ,12 :30, Bu 100.

Transportation 1 4

RIDE WANTED NORTH BURN -ay, 298-3452 .

RIDE HOME URGENTLY NEED-ed M.T .W. - 6 :30. Friday afte r2 :30 . Vicinity Edmonds and Kings-way. Please call Lorraine 521 -4189.

GOING SOUTH AT XMAS W Eneed a ride as far as you aregoing and farther . Phone Joe :224-9064 or Ed 224-9049. Will pay .

Travel Opportunities

1 6SAVE ON AIR FARES

Group fares via Air Canada DC 8to Toronto and London, Ontario.$196.00 return economy, leaves onDecember 19 and 21 . Return an ytime any flight within one year .Phone Mr. Paul Bourke for fur-ther information . 521-6496 .

A .M .S . CHARTER FLIGHT TICK-e t_ for sale — one way only —London to Vane . Aug. 25 . Phon eDerek 224-9769 .

Automobiles For Sale 2 1FOR SALE. 1962 M.G.A., BLACK ,

glass slide windows, $1,260 .88.733-4858 .

1950 PLYMOUTH. GOOD . CONDI -tion . Recent engine overhaul .Radio . Offers . 738-8180 after 6 .

1964 TRIUMPH SPITFIRE: RE-built engine, radio, new tires, on eyear guarantee . Only $1,050. Ph .224-6857 .

1952 HILLMAN MINX 22,000 MILESguaranteed . New paint, tires.Good engine, trans . Call Bob324-0600 .

EXCELLENT BUY — 1963 DAT -sun Sports Mechanic owned . Mustsell. Leaving for Australia $1000 .Phone day 5'21-1700 . Nite WE 9-5333.

1960 CONSUL DELUXE FOR SALE,green and white . New seat cover,fine good tyres, $300 . 736-0859 af-ter 6 p .m.

'53 CHEV. '54 REBUILT MOTOR,76 miles, 6 tires w.w., radio . Mustbe seen to be depreciated . $245 , 733-3426 after 6 .'56 FORD, $195 .00. V-8 STANDARD,

Radio, good condition. Ph. first224-1753 or second 224-0781, Ki tTaylor.

Accessories & Repairs

22IMPORTED CAR PARTS! SPORT S

car accessories! Metric tools! Ge tthem all at :

OVERSEAS AUTO PART S12th & Alma

736-9804(10% Student Discount)

Automobiles Wanted

2 5

Motorcycles 2 7663¢ SUZUKI 250, X-6 . ' Leaving

country. Must be seen . Call Barry,321-8142 .

FOR SALE 1964 HONDA 55'CC $130 .($20) Helmet included . Perfectcond . 879-4807 after 6 p .m .

BUSINESS SERVICESMiscellaneous

34

Scandals

39AELEVEN BEWARE!! THE PA -

jama grabbers will getyou .HEY SAMPSON COME IN AND

and see Del-Ella at the Campu sBarber Shop, 153 Brock Hall Ext.

EVEN COLD SHOWERS, MYdarling Wendy, can be fun (whe nthey're with you) — Fond lov efor everything, Terry .

Typing

4 3Professional Typing

ARDALE GRIFFITHS LIMITED70th & Granville Street

263-4530

EMPLOYMEN T

Help Wanted

5 1

FEMALE OFFICE MANAGER RE -quired for UBC, Alumni Associ-ation to supervise a small officestaff and manage all aspects o foffice operation : — accounting —stock — payroll — mass mailin g— records. Address all applica-tions in writing to : Mr. Tim Rol-lick-Kenyon, Alumni Director, 252Brock Hall, U .B .C., Vancouver ,B.C .

BABYSITTER TUESDAY-THURS -day afternoon weekly. 14th andSasamat $2 .60 per 4 hour after-noon. CA 4-5042 .

Music

63

INSTRUCTION — SCHOOLS

Instruction-Tutoring

64PRIVATE LESSONS, COACHING

for exams, English, German ,French Translations, 731-878$ —1265 W . 10th Avenue.

Instruction Wanted

86TUTOR WANTED FOR EC . 804.

Phone John, YU 5-3945.

MISCELLANEOUSFOR SALE 7 1BIRD CALLS—the most useful Desk

on the campus. Student telephonedirectory available . Now . LimitedNumber. Buy now, only 75 centsfrom Publications Office, Brock Hall, or the Bookstore .STUDENT COUNCIL HAS VOTED

to discontinue Campus Life sowe are selling 1964, , 1965 and 196 6issues for only 50 cents — Pub-lications office in Brock .

ROBERTS 1600 RECORDER, Philipsportable record player, Pentax36 mm camera; as new. Bryan ,after 6 p.m. 261-2831 .

RENTALS&REAL ESTATERooms S 1TWO SINGLE BEDROOMS $30

each $45 with breakfast, close toeverything . Mrs . Mainfroid, 2210Macdonald .Phone733-2069 .

LARGE ROOM FOR RENT. JUSToutside gates. Fully self-contain-ed . Suitable for two male stu-dents: Phone 224-6757.

SINGLE ROOM, PRIVATE EN-trance . Private bathroom . Neargates, male graduate student .Phone after 6, CA 4-3152.

Room&Board 62ROOM AND BOARD PLUS JOVIAL

companionship at Zeta Psi Fra-ternity House. Reasonable rates .Phone Sandy Sandilands 224-089 7or 224-9662 after five p.m .

Furn . Houses& Apts.

83WANTED : GIRL TO SHARE WEST

End Apartment $60 per month ,Thurlow and Harwood. Phone874-2489 after 10.

CLASSIFIED '

BUY — SELL — RENT

WITH

UBYSSEY

by Miss Judy Ranso mNational C .U.J .O. Associate-Secretary ; Past India

Coordinator and Returned Volunteer.

Friday, Nov. 4 — Education 100 — 12 :30 .

Saturday, Nov. 5 — International House — 7:30. CoffeeParty and Talk .

Sunday, Nov. 6 — Lower Mall Lounge — 6 .45 p.m .

Tuesday, Nov. 8 — Engineering 301 — 12:30 p.m .

Friday, Nov. 11 — International House — 7 :30 p.m .Public Meeting .

Miss Ransom will show slides and movies and is interested in meetin gstudents individually. For appointment or further information . Phone In-ternational House or contact Brock Ext. 165.

ANNOUNCEMENTS

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

Non-Commercial Classified Ads are payable in Advanc e

Publications Office: Brock Hall .

' Help Wanted (Can't.)FEMALE: APPLICATIONS ARE

invited for position o fPROGRAM DIRECTOR

of theUBC ALUMNI ASSOCIATIO N

This position requires a young ,energetic person to service aslide range of alumni committeesand programs, on a full-time yearround basis. This person, prefer -ably a UBC graduate, must haveorganizational skills, and be ableto work under pressure. Applica-tions in writing to : Mr. Tim Hol -lick-Kenyon, Alumni Director, 252

AUTOMOTIVE & MARINE Brock Hall, UBC, Vancouver 8.OFFICE MANAGER

MALE: REQUIRED FOR U B CAlumni Association to supervisea small office staff and manageall aspects of office operation :—accounting — stock payroll —mass mailings — records. Addres sall applications in writing to : Mr.Tim Hollick-Kenyon, Alumni Di -rector, 252 Brock Hall, U.B.C . ,Vancouver 8 .

TWO PAIRS LADY'S SKI BOOT S size six to seven phone261-7026 .FOR SALE LARGE OAK DESK

top with legs . 738-7400.

l