r~r up ysser...mater society," galbraith said. the committee which selects the award-winners...

16
Thi s wee k VOL. XLVII, No . 45 r~r g UP YSSEr ha s four ear s CA 4-391. 6 VANCOUVER, B .C ., FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 1965 4 s Two mor e candidate s acclaime d By JOAN GODSEL L Two more AMS executive members are in by acclama- tion—co-ordinator of activities Graeme Vance and treasurer Mike Sommers . Two candidates are runnin g for first vice-president in th e second-slate elections . They are present AMS firs t vice-president Bob Cruise an d former Communist club presi- dent Charles Boylan . FROM THE ARM S In a telephone intervie w from the Fraser Arms Mik e Sommers said : "I have th e qualifications and interest fo r the job of treasurer . " "I also have a fair numbe r of new ideas and I'll do m y best ." During his managership o f the College Shop Sommer s doubled sales over the prev- ious year . DISAPPOINTED Graeme Vanc e —dave hendereon photo COOL WORK on a rainy day. Ice sculptors were part of demonstration of contempor- ary art techniques in Buchanan building Thursday . Ice proved adamant to smal l butane torches but broke up easily when a flocked with a hatchet . Half of proceed s Filmsoc fee hik e bucked by AM S The AMS moved Thursday to thwart an attempt by Fil m Services Society to charge 50 percent of the house fo r certain film showings, of interest to the campus a t Film Services Society presi- large . dent Peter Harrison Wednes- Sigma Chi Fraternity an d day announced the new policy . the Young Bourgeois Author s "We raised the cost of hir- and Artists Association aske d ing one of our projectionists Film Service Society member s because we want to discour- to project cartoons in the aud- age campus groups from show- itorium immediately prior t o ing films not pertaining to the increase in price of th e their constituted aims ." projectionists. AMS president Roger Mc- "All duly-constituted group s Afee held a meeting with Film under the AMS, such as th e Services executives Thursday YBAAA, should be charge d to try to get the rates back to the regular student rate," Mc - normal. Afee said . "AMS subsidiary groups "In my opinion, the 50 pe r have the right to raise funds cent is unreasonable . Facilities in any legal way," said Mc- should be available to duly - Afee . constituted groups as cheapl y Harrison explained by films as possible," said AMS Treas- pertaining to group's consti- urer Kyle Mitchell said . tuted aims he meant such "There has to be some kin d things as Aqua Society show- of compromise . I don't want t o ing films on skin diving or s e e students over-charged, " Special Events showing films Mitchell said . Rowe r name d city's bes t UBC studen t Georg e Hungerford was name d Vancouver's athlete o f the year last night . Hungerford and Roge r Jackson of Toronto won Canada's only gold medal in the '64 Tokyo Olymp- ics by winning the pair s without coxswain event . Strictly darkhorse s Hungerford and Jackson , who had only been prac- tising together for a fe w weeks before the Olymp- ics, overcame seemingly impossible odds to swee p by the world's best row- ers and make-up some - what for the poor show- ing of the UBC - VO C eights. The other four athletes in contention for th e award were Terry Dool- ey, track, Jane Hughes , swimming, B o b Puddi- combe, tennis and Jim Sed . 4: needs someone wh o perience," he said . "And I'm looking forwar d to the campaign . " Boylan said : "The mai n reason I am running is becaus e I think there should be a voic e on council in the tradition o f Jim Ward, (AMS first vice - president in 1963-64), to stim- ulate debate and bring counci l closer to the students. " Boyland was president of UBC's Communist Club fro m 1962-64 . "However," he said, "I a m running strictly as a non-par- tisan . " ONE INELIGIBL E A third student, Mike Castlemain, Science IV, wa s also nominated for the posi- tion of first vice-president bu t was ruled ineligible . Castlemain placed his nom- ination forms in AMS secre- tary Marilyn McMeans' pos t office box instead of postin g them on the AMS bulleti n board as demanded by elec- tion rules . Nominations for second - slate positions closed Thurs- day at 4 p .m . Campaigning officially be- gan Thursday, ,6 p.m . The sec- ond slate election will be hel d Wednesday . PROF . DOUGLAS Kenny has succeeded acting dean Edr o Signori as head of UBC' s psychology department . Top AMS politico s honore d Honorary Activities Award s Committee has selected seve n UBC students for this year' s awards. The seven are : Rehabilitatio n Medicine undergraduate so- ciety, president Judy Bain, ex - Academic Activities chairma n Mike Coleman, Ubyssey ar t director Don Hum e, AM S president Roger McAfee, To- tem editor Scott McIntyre , Graduate Students presiden t James Slater and Homecomin g chairman Rick McGraw. The awards are made on the basis of excellence in student government, said committe e chairman Gordon Galbraith . "It's pure politics, the win- ners are the top politicians an d bureaucrats on campus," h e said . "Seven is the largest numbe r of candidates ever to be give n the award . This reflects the growing scope of the Alm a Mater Society," Galbraith said . The committee which select s the award-winners consists of all past winners who are stil l on campus : Ubyssey associate e d i t o r Mike Hunter, AMS treasure r Kyle Mitchell, AMS activities co-ordinator Graeme Vance , CUS chairman Gordon Gal- braith, Ubyssey Page Frida y Current Affairs editor Pete r Penz and Barry McDell, Art s IV . said, als o from the Arms : "I am dis- appointed there aren't mor e qualified people around t o fill this position. " "I tried to get some fellow s interested but the positio n seems to scare them off . " (Vance is the present AM S co-ordinator of activities . ) First vice-president nomine e Cruise said : "I have severa l new ideas for this positio n next year, aimed at creatin g closer communication betwee n the AMS and the students . " NEEDS EXPERIENC E "It's my feeling that a three-quarter million dolla r operation such as the AM S has ex -

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Page 1: r~r UP YSSEr...Mater Society," Galbraith said. The committee which selects the award-winners consists of all past winners who are still on campus: Ubyssey associate e d i t o r Mike

This

week

VOL. XLVII, No . 45

r~rg UP YSSEr ha s

four ears

CA 4-391. 6VANCOUVER, B .C., FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 1965 4 s

Two morecandidatesacclaimed

By JOAN GODSELLTwo more AMS executive members are in by acclama-

tion—co-ordinator of activities Graeme Vance and treasurerMike Sommers.

Two candidates are runnin gfor first vice-president in thesecond-slate elections .

They are present AMS firstvice-president Bob Cruise andformer Communist club presi-dent Charles Boylan .FROM THE ARMS

In a telephone interviewfrom the Fraser Arms Mik eSommers said : "I have thequalifications and interest forthe job of treasurer."

"I also have a fair numberof new ideas and I'll do m ybest ."

During his managership ofthe College Shop Sommersdoubled sales over the prev-ious year .DISAPPOINTED

Graeme Vanc e

—dave hendereon photoCOOL WORK on a rainy day. Ice sculptors were part of demonstration of contempor-ary art techniques in Buchanan building Thursday. Ice proved adamant to smal lbutane torches but broke up easily when a flocked with a hatchet .

Half of proceeds

Filmsoc fee hikebucked by AMS

The AMS moved Thursday to thwart an attempt by FilmServices Society to charge 50 percent of the house forcertain film showings,

of interest to the campus a tFilm Services Society presi- large .dent Peter Harrison Wednes- Sigma Chi Fraternity an dday announced the new policy . the Young Bourgeois Authors

"We raised the cost of hir- and Artists Association aske ding one of our projectionists Film Service Society member sbecause we want to discour- to project cartoons in the aud-age campus groups from show- itorium immediately prior t oing films not pertaining to the increase in price of thetheir constituted aims ."

projectionists.AMS president Roger Mc- "All duly-constituted group s

Afee held a meeting with Film under the AMS, such as theServices executives Thursday YBAAA, should be charge dto try to get the rates back to the regular student rate," Mc -normal.

Afee said ."AMS subsidiary groups "In my opinion, the 50 per

have the right to raise funds cent is unreasonable. Facilitiesin any legal way," said Mc- should be available to duly -Afee .

constituted groups as cheaplyHarrison explained by films as possible," said AMS Treas-

pertaining to group's consti- urer Kyle Mitchell said .tuted aims he meant such "There has to be some kindthings as Aqua Society show- of compromise. I don't want toing films on skin diving or s e e students over-charged,"Special Events showing films Mitchell said .

Rowernamed

city's bestUBC studen t George

Hungerford was namedVancouver's athlete ofthe year last night .

Hungerford and RogerJackson of Toronto wonCanada's only gold medalin the '64 Tokyo Olymp-ics by winning the pairswithout coxswain event .

Strictly darkhorse sHungerford and Jackson ,who had only been prac-tising together for a fewweeks before the Olymp-ics, overcame seeminglyimpossible odds to sweepby the world's best row-ers and make-up some -what for the poor show-ing of the UBC - VO Ceights.

The other four athletesin contention for theaward were Terry Dool-ey, track, Jane Hughes ,swimming, B o b Puddi-combe, tennis and JimSed .

4:

needs someone wh operience," he said .

"And I'm looking forwardto the campaign ."

Boylan said : "The mainreason I am running is becauseI think there should be a voic eon council in the tradition ofJim Ward, (AMS first vice-president in 1963-64), to stim-ulate debate and bring counci lcloser to the students. "

Boyland was president ofUBC's Communist Club from1962-64 .

"However," he said, "I amrunning strictly as a non-par-tisan . "ONE INELIGIBL E

A third student, MikeCastlemain, Science IV, wasalso nominated for the posi-tion of first vice-president butwas ruled ineligible.

Castlemain placed his nom-ination forms in AMS secre-tary Marilyn McMeans' postoffice box instead of postingthem on the AMS bulleti nboard as demanded by elec-tion rules .

Nominations for second -slate positions closed Thurs-day at 4 p.m .

Campaigning officially be-gan Thursday, ,6 p.m. The sec-ond slate election will be heldWednesday .

PROF. DOUGLAS Kenny hassucceeded acting dean EdroSignori as head of UBC'spsychology department .

Top AMSpoliticoshonored

Honorary Activities Award sCommittee has selected sevenUBC students for this year' sawards.

The seven are: RehabilitationMedicine undergraduate so-ciety, president Judy Bain, ex-Academic Activities chairma nMike Coleman, Ubyssey artdirector Don Hum e, AM Spresident Roger McAfee, To-tem editor Scott McIntyre,Graduate Students presiden tJames Slater and Homecomingchairman Rick McGraw.

The awards are made on thebasis of excellence in studentgovernment, said committeechairman Gordon Galbraith.

"It's pure politics, the win-ners are the top politicians andbureaucrats on campus," hesaid .

"Seven is the largest numberof candidates ever to be giventhe award. This reflects thegrowing scope of the AlmaMater Society," Galbraith said .

The committee which selectsthe award-winners consists ofall past winners who are stillon campus :

Ubyssey associate e d i t o rMike Hunter, AMS treasurerKyle Mitchell, AMS activitiesco-ordinator Graeme Vance ,CUS chairman Gordon Gal-braith, Ubyssey Page FridayCurrent Affairs editor PeterPenz and Barry McDell, ArtsIV .

said, alsofrom the Arms: "I am dis-appointed there aren't morequalified people around t ofill this position."

"I tried to get some fellow sinterested but the positionseems to scare them off . "

(Vance is the present AM Sco-ordinator of activities . )

First vice-president nomine eCruise said: "I have severalnew ideas for this positionnext year, aimed at creatingcloser communication betwee nthe AMS and the students . "NEEDS EXPERIENC E

"It's my feeling that athree-quarter million dollaroperation such as the AM S

has ex-

Page 2: r~r UP YSSEr...Mater Society," Galbraith said. The committee which selects the award-winners consists of all past winners who are still on campus: Ubyssey associate e d i t o r Mike

Page 2

THE - UBYSSEY

Friday, February 5, 1965

1st vicepresidentseconders

CHARLES BOYLA NBy Everett Northu p

There is still a chance forchange on Council .

The vote I received for AMSPresident indicates widesprea ddissatisfaction with the pres-ent establishment and agree-ment with my programme.

For this reason I am second-ing the nomination of CharlesBoylan for first vice-president .

Among his qualificationsare :

Academic record: graduatedin honors English with 79 . 5per cent average ; Member ofArts Council ; Member of AAC .

Three years member Parlia-mentary Executive Council ;UBC delegate to Common -wealth Conference; winner

UBC - U of A debating compe -tition; active UN club member;

founding member of BC Stu-dents Federation.

Put a new voice on council .Vote for Charles Boylan .

* * *BOB CRUIS E

By Bill Harvey

I second Bob Cruise for th eposition of first vice-presiden tbecause he has worked hardthe last four years in studentactivities .

Turning the first vice-presi-dent into an event programco-ordinator is just one of the

many positive suggestions inCruise's report Blueprint '66 —an analysis of the AMS .

The AMS must, next yea rmore than ever before, estab-lish better lines of communica-

andtion

students .between student counci l

Read Blueprint '66 to getCruise's ideas on this problem .

TIM HOLLICK-KENYON. . . most yet

Alumniscore major'breakthrough'

Alumni director Tim Hol-lick-Kenyon said Wednesdaythe 12 .5 per cent increase inalumni giving over last year' stotal of about $83,000 repre-sents a major breakthrough .

"The $100;000 mark was abig barrier," he said .

Alumni have donated $100,-576 for scholarships and gen-eral campus improvements in1965 .

"This is entirely separatefrom the Three UniversitiesCapital Fund," said Hollick-Kenyon. "It is strictly for us efor the benefit of this campus."

Hollick-Kenyon said afterthis year money donated byalumni will be given to theThree Universities Fund drive.

He said the $100,576 will b e

divided into a $25,000 Sher-

wood Lett Memorial Scholar-

ship Fund, grants to the lib-

rary, athletic department, andvarious campus activities, $350

scholarships to one studentfrom each B .C. electoral dis-trict, and a discretionary gran tof about $13,000 to UBC Presi-dent John Macdonald for gen-eral campus expenses.

Songfest will feature an 18 -piece orchestra. It will play amedley of old hits before sor-ority and fraternity singerscome on .

The Marjorie Leeming

trophy and the Houser cup, ac-tivities awards for the top sor-

ority and fraternity, will bepresented at Songfest.

Tickets are available at theAMS or the Queen Elizabeth

Theatre: adults $1 .50, students$1 .

are currently using the resi-dence .

Cruelty of youthirks geology prof

A UBC geologist Thursdayproposed young people betrained in the proper use o fwilderness areas .

"The attitude of youn gpeople today seems to be i fyou see something move,kill it," said Dr . WilbertDanner .

Dr. Danner was speakin gat a Varsity Outdoor Clubtalk on A Geologist's Vie won Parks .

V YOUR PIZZA I8 KUM

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Dystrophy gets

cheque at festProfit made by UBC sororities and fraternites at their

annual Mardi Gras Festival last month will be presentedto muscular dystrophy research next Friday .

The money will be presentedat the annual songfest in th eQueen Elizabeth Theatre at

8 P .m .President of the Muscular

Dystrophy Association, AlSimms and Dr . W. C. Gibson ,head of the Kinsmen labsearching for a cure to muscul-ar dystrophy, will accept acheque from Robin Lecky an dCathy Broderick, Mardi Grasco-ordinators .

The amount of the donationwill not be announced unti lthe presentation of the songfest .

Ten fraternities and six sor-orities will compete in the an-nual singing competition .

Spot for mo mon campus

If your mommy and daddywant to come visit you at UBC,now you can put them up righthere on campus .

Yorkeen House, at the northedge of campus, is availablefor short term residence at $ 4to $5 per day.

"If students' parents are vis-iting and wish to stay on cam-pus, this is the place for them,"said Director of Housing Joh nHaar .

The house will also be use dfor people on short courses an d

Judges will be Dr . Lloyd visiting professors . Forty corn-Slind of the Music department mercial fishermen on an 18-and critic Karel Ten . Hoope.

day technical fisheries course

Driving In Europe ?For renting, leasing, purchasing, in any European

Country, write for free brochure to

European Car ServiceSuite 1002

62 Richmond Street West

TORONTO 1, ONT.

Anti-hate rally cancelledafter only 10 students show

An anti-apartheid rally scheduled for the Hebb Theatr eThursday, was cancelled when only 10 people showed up .

"The poor turnout does not make me pessimistic," chair-man of the anti-apartheid committee, Dismas Adija, said .

"I am sure people are interested in what we are doing . "

MAKE YOU RWEEKENDRESERVATIO NEARLY

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Page 3: r~r UP YSSEr...Mater Society," Galbraith said. The committee which selects the award-winners consists of all past winners who are still on campus: Ubyssey associate e d i t o r Mike

Friday, February 5, 1965

High school conference

THE UBYSSEY

—slipetick phot oOUT, OUT, damned cock. Co-ed tries to shoo away chickens released by engineersin College Library at noon Wednesday . Fowl were later taken away by Buildingsand Grounds workers .

175 peek intoacademic curtai n

OnTap

By DOUG HALVERSO NThe fellow down the hall

grabbed me and pulled meinto his room as I walke dby last night .

"Ssh," he whispered, "Youwork for The Ubyssey —right? "

"Yes," I answered defens-ively, "but if you don't hi tme I'll quit—honest, I will . "

"You don't understand ,I've got a big story for you!"he said .

* * *"Gee whiz," I said grate -

fully. Do you think it's bigenough that Editor Horseywill give me my own pres scard and copy pencil andtrenchcoat if I get it? "

"This story is so big youreditor will give you anythingyou want for it," my assail-ant said .

"You mean it's a rea lscoop, " I cried, my mindfilled with visions of thethings every reporter long sfor — a genuine goose quillpen and simulated tortoiseinkwell, a one-quarter sizeworking model of WilliamRandolph Hearst . . . even aReader's Digest condense dvolume of Addison andSteele .

* * *"Fill me in! Fill me in! ""Well, look," said my as-

sailant . "This story is of in-ternational importance. It' sso great it's going to makeRussia, China and Americ aimpotent as world forces . "

"Gosh," I said. "That's al-most stop-the-presses news .Tell me the. rest . "

"It's like this," he said ,trying to appear mysterious ."Think of an island in theNorthern Atlantic that iscompletely surrounded b ywater and has shores on al lsides and is considered com-pletely harmless?"

"England!" I cried with anair of sudden enlightment .

* * *"No, fool!" he said as he

thumped me on the headwith his bust of Kipling .

He was a foreign student ."Iceland," he cried . "Icelandis the threat."

"Little, quiet, respectabl eIceland?" I inquired .

He said: "But under thatquiet is a plot . A plot to over -throw the world! "

"I can see it now ; 10,000Viking longships sailing onthe harbors of the world .New York, London, Mur-mansk, Prince Rupert . . . na-tions falling under the heavyblow of Viking steel . . . "

* * *I sneaked out of his room .I might have believed his

fantastic tale but I caugh tthe one slip he made .

He said that those Iceland-ers were going to invade inViking longships and every-one knows longships aremade of wood .

His story was impossibl ebecause Iceland has been de-frosted for centuries .

It was more proof of th ejournalist's superior mind .

High School conferenceSaturday .

Lens bugscrawl out

By ED BLACKNow is the time for all one-

eyed square-shooters to getbusy at the vats in their smell ydark caves .

UBC photographers havebeen given just three weeks t oproduce .

Their art will be exposed i nthe annual Hill-Tout Salon .

Deadline for the salon, hel din honor of University photo-grapher Ben Hill-Tout, isMarch 1 . Application forms areavailable from Lasserre 201 orHut G1 - Room 18 .

comes to UBC Friday andUnder chairman Bob Holt-

by, the conference brings 75high school students from al lover B.C. to the campus t ogive them a look at univers-ity life .

"We want them to knowwhat to expect of lectures ,what the different facultiesoffer — as many facets of uni-versity life as possible . "

Object of the conference isto have students return totheir schools and communitiesand explain what goes on atuniversity and what the uni-versity is like, Holtby said .

Delegates are met whenthey arrive and are driven t otheir billets, (if they arriv ebefore the program starts Fri-day at 9 p.m.) or to the cam -pus by members of the Hig hSchool Conference Committee .

Love cheapin Ubyssey

True love gets a cut rate inThe Ubyssey for Valentine'sDay .

Manager of Student Publica-tions Al Vince said that aspecial rate of 50 cents will begiven for Valentine messagesin the Classified Ads next Fri-day. Regular rate is 75 cents .

"This is the first time we'veoffered this," he said . "Wethink it will brighten up th esection ."

Page 3

No money,

meeting

suggestedMen's and women's athleti c

committees want more mone yand AMS president Roger Mc -Afee wants them to have ameeting .

The men's athletic programfaces a $35,000 annual defici tby 1966-7 if changes are no tmade in the present system offinancing, AMS first vice presi-dent Bob Cruise told counci lMonday .

* * *Women's program faces a

$17,535 deficit, WAC presidentLinda Williams said .

"MAC and WAC should gettogether, have a joint philos-ophy meeting, and present a noverall plan to council," AM Spresident Roger McAfee said .

AMS E u r o p e a n charte rflight director Ken Christensontold Council Monday 65 stu-dents have signed up for thetrip .

* * *He said he expects no prob-

lem filling the flight whichleaves May 21 and return sAug . '5 .

Grad student p r e s i d e n tJames Slater has been appoint-ed chairman of the AMS Elec-tions Eligibility committee .

Other members of the com-mittee are Engineering presi-dent Steve Whitelaw, Artspresident Chas . Pentland, UC Cchairman Gordon Galbraithand Lorne Hudson .

N

Students in all faculties:

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Accountants of B .C . will be at UBC to interview students who expec tto graduate in 1965. Arrangements for interviews may be mod ethrough Mr . Hacking at the University Placement Office . Earlierinterviews may be arranged by telephoning the Secretary at Mutua l1-3264.

YOUR OPPORTUNITY TO JOIN A CHALLENGING AN DFAST-GROWING PROFESSION

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Page 4: r~r UP YSSEr...Mater Society," Galbraith said. The committee which selects the award-winners consists of all past winners who are still on campus: Ubyssey associate e d i t o r Mike

"The fit isn't exactly right yet, sir . . . but your head ought

to get quite a bit larger in the near future ."

Posterity watchesthe quiet parade

TIES UDYSSZYPublished Tuesdays, Thursdays and Fridays throughout the universityyear by the Alma Mater Society, University of B.C . Editorial opinionsexpressed are those of the editor and not necessarily those of the Aidaor the University. Editorial office, CA 4-3916. Advertising office, CA 4-3242,Loc . 26. Member Canadian University Press . Founding member, PacificStudent Press . Authorized as second-class mail by Post Office Department,Ottawa, and for payment of postage in cash .

Winner Canadian University Press trophies for generalexcellence and news photography.

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 1965

VISMIDMISIOMMMSISEMWAMEW(WRESN

Gov't by defaultGovernment by acclamation is not as healthy as

government by election .

The three AMS positions that went by default this

year (treasurer, second vice-president and co-ordinator)

presumably were uncontested because student interes t

in AMS politics is low .

The 33 per cent turnout in the first slate Wednesday

tends to re-enforce this .

It is unfortunate that some effort was not made to

contest the defaulted positions.

The AMS committee system, for example, should have

been able to produce at least two candidates for each

position.

An election campaign establishes a tension. Pro-

grams, policies and ideas tend to flow from this tension.

The AMS presidential campaign will hardly be

i remembered for its scintillating clashes of wit an d

concept .

But it should indicate specific areas of concern fo r

president-elect Byron Hender.

He should analyze why Northup beat him soundly

in three residence areas .

Northup won Acadia 110-50, Fort 182-86 and Totem

Park 131-89.

The three areas are significantly removed from

the AMS geographically; perhaps there is an intellectual

isolation as well .

Or perhaps students were more impressed with

Northup 's plans for student co-op housing than Y rith

Hender ' s.

Hender is at least in the position of being able to

see areas of his own policy that need strengthening.

And the election has given president-elect Hender

a mandate of sorts .

It's a mandate from at least 2,482 students who think

Hender's program of increased aid to undergraduatesocieties, prompt student union construction andextensive study of our athletic program, is worthwhile .

As for the non-voters, the 10,000 or so who didn' tcare, life will roll along.

And they may remain blissfully unaware that nearly$1 million of their hard-earned money, or their parents' ,is being handled by people they know nothing about.

Oh really dept .Det. Sgt . John Gillies, head of the Vancouver City

Police Narcotics squad, told UBC students that mari-juana is addictive.

Doctors tell us it is not, or no more so than cigaret

smoking and with about the same risk involved .

Which, for a starter, indicates some of the problem s

faced by those who wish to legalize the sale and use

of marijuana .

EIRSWEraWel'

By CAROLE MUNRO E

A prediction : The 1960's

won't make a big splash, but

instead will quietly parad e

across the pages of history

books complete with prepared

briefs and upheld banners .

Why? Because today the

best way to get what you

want—in any field—is to

talk about it .Forget the violence . In-

stead, use arbitration, concil-iation, down-to-earth and fac-tual DISCUSSION .

The best shot doesn't winany more. What he reallyneeds is target practice in thespeech field .

* * *This trend had its begin-

nings in the south when mil-lions of Negroes realized thatforce was getting them no-where . Their change to peace-ful tactics—in policy and inpractice—is gaining themground, even if slowly.

The general public doesn'tgo for violent demonstrations .And you can't offend thei rcultured tastes if you wan ttheir support .

Now university studentshave joined the parade—and

IMWMIMEg

organized a few of their own .

Two years ago UBC stu -

dents rallied the Lower Main-

land behind them with a Bac kMac campaign .

Just this week Universityof Manitoba students boycot-

ted classes and paraded to theLegislative buildings arme dwith a petition, a printed re-

port, and scads of facts .

* * *

Admittedly neither Minist-er of Education revolutionizedtheir budgets as a result . Butboth these drives definitel yindicate the trend .

Berkeley students at theUniversity of California im-proved their demonstrationtechniques and have had re-markable success .

There, the Free Speec hMovement reached the ulti-mate in sophistication of sit-in technique last term .

Thousands of students too kpart in a massive sit-inaround, on, in and over theadministration building .

Parades, leaflets, speechesand even an all-night rall ymade the nation aware some -thing was wrong at Berkeley.

Violence flared up infre-quently as students and fac-ulty supporters practiced thefiner points of non-violentdemonstration.

* * *And behind it all, a ration-

al, thoroughly prepared casethat couldn't help but be awinner .

This is it—how to succee din demonstrations withou treally shooting .

Watch for more and moreof it. This is what historywill remember us for .

Mr. D. R.McAfeereplies

Mr. Horsey, The Ubyssey'serstwhile editor-in-chief pon-tificated (in an editorialThursday) that "the establish-ment" retracted with a rareburst of energy" in enactinglegislation prohibiting adver-tising on behalf of a studentpolitician in The Ubyssey .

Mr. Horsey's council report-er, who doesn't seem to knowthat the AMS first vice-presi-dent is Bob Cruise and notByron Hender, claims in hercolumn of garbage, that coun-cil enacted the legislation be-cause "it would have dis-qualified AMS presidentia lcandidate Everett Northupfrom running . . . "

This is utter nonsense .Council's action was taken toinsure that no group, regard-less of hwo much money ithad, could spend it on behal fof a presidential candidate o fits choice .

In short the council was try-ing to keep elections on thi scampus from becoming meas-ured in dollars and cents .

And if you think thatcouldn't possibly happen letme inform you that in a re -cent by-election at the uni-versity of Manitoba one can-didate spent $1,200 . There areno limiting rules there, Mr .Horsey .

The Ubyssey urges Mr.McAfee to re-reed the edit-orial . Space once again, will

then be given to Mr . McAfeein Tuesday's paper to answerthe editorial's criticisms .

Mr. Horsey rightfull ypoints out another possible

loophole in even the new reg-ulation and I have only onequestion of him? Where washe Monday night when coun-cil was discussing the matter?He is, after all, a member ofcouncil and it would seem t obe one of his responsibilitiesto point out this problem .

I would not like to give theimpression that Mr. Horsey isnot capable of accurately re -porting what went on incouncil .

I would merely like to pointout that he spends so littletime at the meetings thatwhenever he does show up heimmediately becomes con-fused .

This I might add, is not areflection on council .

EDITOR : Mike HorseyNews Tim PadmoreCity Tom Wayma nManaging Editor .-.. Janet Matheso nArt ° Don HumeSports George Reamsbotto mAsst. City .. .... . . .. . . .. Lorraine Shor eAsst . News Editor

Carole Munro eAssociate Mike HunterAssociate Ron Rite rAsst. Managing Norm BettsPage Friday Dave AblettCritics John Kelsey

Another swinging day in the per-spiration factory granted a four-teenth of a laugh. What do you dowith old bowling balls, sez mootin glawerlet Bert (ha) McKinnon: stringnecklaces for elephants. Inane? Notso, say: Jack Khoury, Joan Godsell,Corol Smith, Carol Anne Baker, SaraSimeon, Mona Helcermanas, Robb iWest, Bob Wieser, Art Casperson,Brian Staples, Doug Halverson, GordMcLaughlin, Cassius Clark, HaroldMcAllister, Bob Burton, ElizabethField, Jack McQuarrie, Tim Roberts,Dave Orchard . We're waiting to se eArt Stevdiiiaon Thursday next . Andwe ' re waiting to see Al Birnie any-time, not to mention Lynn Curtis.Inane. Inane. Inane. Inane. Inane .(Everything seems inane today.)

Page 5: r~r UP YSSEr...Mater Society," Galbraith said. The committee which selects the award-winners consists of all past winners who are still on campus: Ubyssey associate e d i t o r Mike

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Page 6: r~r UP YSSEr...Mater Society," Galbraith said. The committee which selects the award-winners consists of all past winners who are still on campus: Ubyssey associate e d i t o r Mike

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FESTIVA L

Medium's message stayedbehind those hanging screensfor most of the audience—it's that old bugaboo forUBC students—mental blocks

PF Two

By JOHN KELSEY

EVER tried to involve peo-ple in a production?

Take an armory .Add hanging curtains, elec-

tronic music and noise, danc-ers, two dozen slide project -ors with colored slides .

Supply all the light wit hthe slides .

Sprinkle well with thun-dering attacks on all senses—touch, sound, sight, smell—and with the urge to com-municate

Add students.This was the Armory show

of 1965, THE MEDIUM I STHE MESSAGE .

. . .The show, part of the Fifth

Festival; oir the ContemporaryArts, ran three times Wed-nesday, with a total attend-ance of about 500 . It is onehour long .

The Armory was hung withcolored plastic cut curtains ,dividing it into distinct areasand providing a projectio nspace around the walls .

There were enclosures an dalleyways here, there andeverywhere, with a car dboard - and - cloth buildingthing in the middle .

The s l i d e projectorsaround the outside on scaf-folds in the middle playedcolored light, shapes and ob-jects all over the curtains .They continously movedand changed, following peo-ple and playing on differentscreens .

Performers with alpine-horns, violins, tapes, sheetsof tinfoil and microphonesall hidden in the hangingsmade noises . -

Dancers filled the . centerhouse and one corner area ;

they made textural move-ments on cloth screens be-tween them and the people ,pushed arms and legsthrough the holes, and danc-ed in and with the crowd .

The basic idea was to cre-ate a world, putting peopl efrom this world into it . Thentry to make people react ,make the presentation ap-pealing enough for peopleto take part, to try to com-municate back .

Some did, most didn't .The ones who did dance d

with the dancers, pushedback on the cloth screens ,shouted at the shouters. Onemooed back up the alpine-horn—startling the player .They made puppet shadowson the screens, swung thecurtains, and tickled fee tsticking out of the centerhouse .

It was a good attempt,showing a great deal of im-agination by the designers .The near darkness allowe dpeople to act as they do ina dark theatre, picking nosesand grimacing faces .

The crowd was unguided ;they roamed as their fancydictated, as their attentio nwas caught by something .And something invariablycaught one's attention . Abright flash of light, ascream, a loud moo, a brightred projector beam shinin gin one's face . Were there anyorder of procession, as inmuseum display, the effec twould have been lost . Lost

as surely as it would havebeen if there were a ,broad-cast program of instructions .

However, the action wa sall simultaneous. Perhaps itwould have been better ifthere was an intense concen-tration on in one place, andthen in another, keeping thecrowd at a constant highlevel rather than at an all -pervading medium level .But that would have left lessfreedom to wander. Onewould have to attempt sucha production both ways ,and see which achieved thebest result .

• . .But the main block was

the UBC student's naturalreserve. He's unwilling t oreact, unwilling to show hisfeelings.On most of the people,

those who were bewilderedor merely bemused, it hadan effect and this- show didcommunicate, if one was un-inhibited enough to let it.

There's a re-run today .Go take part, it's worth it .

ART

Dark Mirrorsheds somelight on thedismal arts

By JACKIE FOORDThe Dark Mirror, current-

ly showing at the UBC FineArts Gallery, is crucial fo rtwo reasons.

It has gone a long way incorrecting what I call thefallacy of modernity and itpresages a new direction inart .

By the fallacy of modern-ity, I am referring to the at-titude that "pessimism, de-gradation and despair" aresomehow the exclusiv eright of the post war paint-ers .

`This exhibit is important

because it makes a state-ment not about the modern ,

(Continued on Page 3 )SEE: MORE AR T

FEBRUARY 5, 1965

ON THE COVER: The dancerswho were near one corner atThe Medium Is the Message —the Fifth Festival of the Con-temporary Arts armory show .See Page 2. Photo by Dave Hen-derson, known to his friends a sFred.

Editor : DAVE ABLETTCrltldsm John Kelsey

Films, Books Graham Olney

Current Affairs Peter Pens

Artwork___Jeff Wall, Al Hunter,Gerry Ehma n

A look at the festival

today in Page Friday .B u t back there, on

Pages 6 and 7, a serie sof letters completely un-related to the arts raisesa question of interest .

The letters deal wit hHolger Herwig's reply t oGerman professor Erns tLoeb .

Putting p e r s onalitie saside — and the inter-change of articles andletters over the pastthree weeks on thes epages has certainly de-generated into a person-ality issue. Dr. LeslieMiller raises the ques-tions of what is a schola rand what is a scholar' sduties .

Assuming that m o s tpeople who live an dlearn in a univensitycommunity, either aspir eto being scholarly orcome in contact wit hthose who are, it is aquestion that cries for a nanswer .

What is a scholar ?Page Friday's pages

are open to those whowould give some kind o fan answer — student orfaculty. And we wouldhope that those in thebest position to give a nanswer would be thefirst to come forward .

Also, in today's PF, anew feature — a super-ficial, uninhibited, com-pletely biased look a tUBC's week .

Notice, p a r ticularly,the blatant theft of awell - known televisio nshow's format . It is com-piled by the staff, friendsand enemies of PF andThe Ubyssey . Its twinthemes are irreverencyand irrelevancy.

Lindsay's an engineer andarchitect who's got everythingbeat in the space structuregame—except the weatherThat towering (maybe) ,

flying (perhaps) rotating(well . . . ) space struc-ture that was supposed tobe erected T h u r s d a ywasn't.

It will, perhaps, b eerected today at 3 :30 p.m .the weather willing .

Jeffrey Lindsay, archi-tect and engineer, whowas supposed to erect thestructure as part of th eFestival of ContemporaryArts, said it couldn't b edone in the rain .

That means if it rainstoday, the structure willgo up on Monday at 3 :30 .If it rains then . . . andso on until the festival

ends, in which case, if itis still raining the struc-ture stays in pre-fabstage .

Lindsay isn't sayin gwhat the structure wil lbe—it could be anything.

He was given $500 byt h e festival committeeand 30 student assistant sto build it .

After it is up, it wil lperform in some way .

Lindsay is currentlyworking on the structura lsystem of the themebuilding of Expo '67 inMontreal and on a one-acre skylight for Simo nFraser Academy.

Page 7: r~r UP YSSEr...Mater Society," Galbraith said. The committee which selects the award-winners consists of all past winners who are still on campus: Ubyssey associate e d i t o r Mike

MORE ART

(Continued from Page 2 )

but about the human, condi-tion .

True, the progenitors of"The Dark Mirror" arepainters like Munch, Ernstand Kokoshka, but these ar-tists in turn have their his-torical counterparts in theworks of Bosen, Breughe land Goya .

• • •If these painters are stil l

too modern to support mythesis, observe Strombotne' sThe Dangling Man. Thispainting illustrates the fateof the defector in the battleof the hall portion of theOdyssey .

Observe too, the Classicaltheme of Nude on the Rocks,the Gothic sentiment of TheDiscontented, the Rennais-sance concern with perspect-tive in A Kind of Hell. Whatthis exhibit represents is theeclipse of the existentialist,anti-dialectic approach toart . It seems that 20th cen-tury art is finally paying it sdebt to history, acknowledg-ing that we are human first ,modern second .

• • •As to the portentious na-

ture of the show, I predic tthat figurative art is comin ginto ascendancy, that the ageof squishy, oblique abstractsis in decline .

For these reasons, see Th eDark Mirror .

Don't despair, it is signifi-cant, honest art and it isgood .

POETRY

Welch made themlaugh — andthey forgot hecould be serious

By AL HORST"I want to thank Lew

Welch for his delightfulreading," the girl said . I'msure the entire audience feltthat the reading was delight-ful. Few thought it was any-thing more than that.Welch's effusive sense of hu-mor prevented the readingfrom being a complete suc-cess . He used humor veryeffectively in many of hi spoems but he used it so ob-viously that the audienc ebegan to listen for nothingelse and missed much of th eimpact of his "serious"poetry. Unfortunately, manyof those who came for edifi-cation found merely enter-tainment.

• • •Welch is an excellent read-

er; his voice is clear, his man-ner unpretentious. Most ofthe poems were from a col-lection called On Out. Theyranged from recollections ofschoolday experiences inwhich the "circular process"of association first mention-ed in Wobbly Rock (1960) i sstill evident, to his HermitSongs, written while in aself-imposed two-year herm-itage in the wilderness. 'theHermit Songs best show the

This is a part of one workin The Dark Mirror, currentlyshowing in UBC's Fine ArtsGallery.

effect of Buddhism on hi spoetry (American Buddhism,not oriental. He looks tohaiku and oriental Buddhistverse only for certain aspectsof form, not theme . "Man,the world's blowing up! Ihaven't got time to writ eabout dew drops on a rosepetal .")

• • •Those who attended the

reading will remember morethan anything else his"scores" or jazz -poems .These were funny, rollickingthings sung by Welch . (He ' sgot a great voice; used to bea jazz musician) "I want toget song and poetry back to-gether. "

His final poetic statementwas a simple, eloquent sum-mary of a poet's life, a poet' ssearch: "Shrineless, I pil-grim through the world."

Jack Spicer's reading onTuesday was entirely differ-ent . He read quietly, intent-ly; the audience listenedcarefully. It was the firstpublic reading of Language,his most recent book.

• • •As a listener, I found it dif-

ficult to connect Spicer' scountless metaphors, b u tthere was definitely a threadof theme running through allthe poems : as the relation ofletters and syllables formslanguages, so the interactionof the thougMU, objects, andenergies of the universeform language, the languag eheard and understood by th epoet . ("death is an image ofsyllables") .

Spicer calls the essential

unit of this language "graph-eme" .

Buchanan 106 was packedfor Spicer's reading. Perhap sthe spirit of the Festival i scatching on. I hope so . Thisis one of the few times whe nstudents at UBC are give nthe opportunity to question ,to learn, to experience and ,above all, to think.

CINEMA

Conner's art:a new quirkfor everyoccasion

By ED HUTCHINGSMr . Conner began his

show by improvising on themouth-organ against a sortof cantus firmus of rhythmson a film loop (the loop wa sthat 10-9-8 thing you see al lthe time) He followed thiswith A Movie, a film whichI enjoy and have seen sev-eral times . An untitled, (asfar as I know) rather slightfilm followed . Then he ra na Betty Boop cartoon( circ a193?) apparently because h efelt the situation required it .

Then came a film called ,I think, Report, which couldhave been better . He endedwith something called Cos-mic Ray or, sometimes TheMovie .

The Avant-Garde, or asizable fraction, claim tha ttheir mission is to distur bus . I certainly found myselfdisturbed by the effect ofshowing these films to aContemporary Arts Festivalaudience, compared wit hthe effect of the same filmson an everyday audience .

You'd think that the CAFaudience would have by farthe better attitude, but myimpression is just the re -verse. Cerainly A Movie ,which I found subtle andthoughtful on a previou sviewing at Cinema 16, seem-ed flat and rather arbitraryin Bu. 106 before an audi-ence who had damn wellpaid their money to beastonished .

Only something like Cos-mic Ray, which has a fewhonestly nasty moments andone good dirty joke, cancome across in this kind ofsituation. I suspect that Con-ner thinks so too: hence th eantics . . . the mouth organ ,the letter in the last Artisanand an impressive reversedsignature which must havetaken a while to work up .I don't blame him; for thiskind of situation I think I'dshow Betty Boop, too .

In fact, I'm beginning towonder if Conner might notbe an example of a newkind of Avant-Gardeist:Quirks For Every Occasion .Let no collegiate audiencedepart unamazed . Let nogaggle of jewelly patronsescape without a delightfulhint of wickedness .

Yet with all this, a fewhours a day for honest ef-fort, and, in Conner's case ,perhaps a solid corpus ofwork, and an honestly wo nreputation at the end of it.

PF Three

Uncalled for, un-

wanted and mostl y

unfair, the followin g

two columns contain

a whimsical revie w

of the past seven day s

at UBC .

2COLUMN S

this

weekhas

IN GENERAL : Bet aByron Header was elect-ed president of the AMSin one of the closest elec-tions in years . So far hisfrat brother George Lin-coln Rockwell (who real-ly is a Beta) has not com-mented on the victory.

Totem park residenceheld a "suppressed de-sire" dance last Friday ,which officials say was asignificant comment ont h e morality revolutiono n Canadian campuses.No one turned up nude.

O n Wednesday, Dr .John Barfoot Macdonal dannounced that 12 new .street lights will be in-stalled on Marine Drive .No wonder . He livesthere.

On Monday, whichwas Chinese New Year,several Totem Park Stu-dents dressed up in Chin-ese costumes and handedout fortune cookies tostudents as they wen tthrough the food line . I tdidn't surprise anyone .They were probably hiredby food services whichemploys coolie labor, ac-cording to student work-ers .

• • •

INSIGNIFICANT : Morethan 180 future teachersinvaded the campus lastFriday and Saturday tolook over UBC's educa-tion faculty . It is expect-ed about 175 of them wil ldecide to go into Arts .

AMS returning officerBob Peyton, who flew offto Ottawa as first slat eelections got under way ,took the Bureaucrat of theWeek award . The weekwas one of only two inthe year in which Peytonhas anything to do .There's still second slate .

• • •

Dr. John Macdonald'sGuidepost to Innovation ,the blueprint for UBC 'sacademic future that wasexpected to raise a con-troversy, didn't. Fort ystudents jammed a 450seat theatre to hear apanel of top speakers dis-cuss it last week .

• • •

IN THE NAME GAME:AMS president R o g e rMcAfee, who will com-ment on anything, got hisname in the paper 18times this week, some-thing close to an all timerecord. He easily beatout Mike Coleman (13) ,Hardial Bain: (6), andCasey the Groundhog (2) .

• • •

IN HONORARIUM:Mike Coleman, who hasbelonged to just about

every committee on thecampus, was this weekawarded a n HonoraryActivities Award for hiswork. Then student coun-cil, in a great burst ofconsistency, turnedaround and censured himfor the way he ran th eAcademic Activities Com-mittee. Committee - manColeman, HAA pocketed,quit .

• • •

In other awards THEBRIGHT IDEA OF TH EWEEK award goes to th eentire student council forvoting a supplementarygrant to the engineeringu n d e rgraduate society.The vote was taken afterAMS treasurer Kyle Mit-chell explained that thesociety has no moremoney and will be dang-erously close to bankrupt-cy if further funds areshelled out .

e • •

INCONSIDERATE : TheUBC accounting depart-ment, which announcedlast week that income-tax fee receipts will notbe ready for studentsuntil mid-February. Noword has come from Ot-tawa as yet that incometax forms will be accept-ed up to six weeks late .

Brock ManagementCommittee ordered theVarsity Outdoors Club tostop climbing walls i npractice climbs . . . Nowif the management com-mittee has any good ideasfor getting rid of the pit-ons on the library . . .

• • •

INADMISSIBLE : Pres-ident Macdonald an-nounced Monday that itmay be harder to get intoUBC in future. Studentswere not surprised . Evertried to get in at 8:1 5a .m . ?

And in model parlia-ment elections the Liber-als won again . A pros-pective cabinet ministerwas immediately accusedof . . . oh never mind.

• • •IN TROUBLE: Univer-

sity of Alaska's g o a 1keeper Dave Carter whoplayed against the Thun-derbirds hockey team andlet 29 goals into the netsin two games . "The sec-ond game score (13-2 )would have been highe rif we'd been using ourfirst team," said a modestUBC player .

• • •

BIGGEST STORY OFTHE WEEK : The engin-eers cut down a tree onthe library lawn. It was40-feet big .

night brad yeah, hose

Page 8: r~r UP YSSEr...Mater Society," Galbraith said. The committee which selects the award-winners consists of all past winners who are still on campus: Ubyssey associate e d i t o r Mike

PF's poet records for posteritythe contemporary arts bash—poets in odd places, screamingstudents, nude devil women andall that was made respectable

campus contemporary art festivalWhat a week!A painter splashing lots of paint on gobs

canvas with good results.A display of strange clock s

Wild sculptur e(every so often a student runsscreaming insaneout of the gallery)

and nude red warm woman devil paintin g

The odd poet(are all poets odd? )

in a lecture hall

(odd place for a poet)reading some good some bad som e

poetryAnd people jammed crammed slammed

in crowds droves herdslisteningno one dropping a pin

Modern painting poetry ar tmade respectable under the guise o f

Contemporar yAnd of course campus election week

simultaneously.—frank harris

ARTConners er—Mike's ea tturned out to be the bigges tfiasco of the year—ah, butthe rest of art in action wasfun—and a bloody good idea

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By JOHN KELSEY

Art in Action, yesterda yafternoon, brought 21 localand visiting artists to UBC ,to display and do their var-ious works in the corridorsof Buchanan building .

The most crowd captivat-ing features of the showwere Heinz Laffin's poetery ,Reg Holmes and Iain Bax-ter's ice sculpture, a n dBruce Connor's eating .

The Connor eat was cer-tainly the fiasco of the year .Connor, who last Monda yhad agreed to eat, decidednot to when Vancouve rTimes reporter Michael Val-py reported the comingevent in the paper .

Connor developed a dislike for Valpy, and so Valpydecided to do the eat him -self . He wasn't too entertain-ing, so the crowd storme dhis concealing screen to ex-pose the crunchy reporterand his chubby accomplice ,Murray Farr of Specia lEvents .

Laffin's pottery was (asusual) extremely competent.A potter with a wheel is al-ways a crowd drawer, be-cause of the starling meta -morphosis occurring in hi slump of mud .

Ah, but the ice sculpture.Six tons of ice on the quadwere attacked by a horde ofscreaming fine arts students,under Holmes and Baxter' ssupervision .

They used blowtorches ,icepicks and axes, colore dinks, and one flame thrower .

Like many of the paintersinside, they didn't take theproject very seriously —rather, it seemed to be alark. Which is as it shouldbe.

It was fun, it was made ,it was transient, it had noplan or coherence . It was abloody good idea .

PF Four

Art in action is always agood idea . It gives the stu-dent a chance to see whatartists are doing today, achance to ask them ques-tions, a chance to form afar more complete back -ground than one woul dotherwise have. With peopl eand canvases and color—anda little madcap—it can onlybe fun .

If it isn't taken too ser-iously .

This year's productionseemed to have just the rightamount of absurdity, levity ,and serious study into artforms to come off properly ;a good noon's entertain-ment .

The frivolously funny wasbalanced by the seriou sstudy — such as Wilkinson' sapplause, Chow's woodcuts,Graham's lithography, Laf-fin's pottery .

Except for the eating fi-asco, which could have beenhilarious, and wasn't .

Poor .Hernandojust didn'tsense theprofundity

By BEVERLY BI E

Hernando : J e e r , Mari-anne, what a bunch o fcrap .

Lookit this guy, p-f-f-i-f--e-r, pffiffer, I mean, Pffif-fer . What's with the no capi-tal letters bit? I guess that'sartsy-craftsy or some-thing . . .

Anyways, get the wayhe's slopping the paint o nthat thing. Reminds me ofthe time I painted the kit-chen and my mother chang-ed her mind about the colorwhen I'd half-finished, afterthe dog ran through.

Marianne: Shshsh! Hello ,Elfrida . Just love your - uh -appliques!

Hernando, don't you see ?I mean, don't you just fee lit right here?

Hernando: Where's that ?Marianne : Your soul, your

Hernando . That black in thecentre is the depth of man' sunconscious, the .head ofdarkness, and the yellowcircle around the edge rep-resents the conscious mind ,the self we manipulate t opulse in tune with the uni-verse around us . That mag-nificent vibrating daub ofred in the upper left corneris The Apple, Hernando .Don't you feel it ?

Hernando: Barf .Marianne : Shhh. Let's go

downstairs and see the pot-tery. I have two of 'HeinzLaffin's pots in my bed-room, you know .

Hernando: One i n n e rtube, two coke ads, one beat-up seven-up sign, a wheelwith spokes, three rusty tincans . I don't believe it. Ijust don't believe it .

Marianne: But don't yousee how expressive it is ofthe collective TwentiethCentury human conscious-ness? Why, it's the Grea tSociety in a nutshell . . .Everyman lost, bewildered ,wandering in a billboar djungle. It's the epic of mod -ern man, it's today's Beo-wulf .

Hernando : Look, Mari-anne. I could do one ofthose with my big toe an dmy eyes shut .

Marianne : Oh, you Philis-tine. Come and see the pot-tery . Oh, wouldn't it be th emost sublime experience t ocreate a pot out of mudwith your own two hands—so elemental—did you- not-ice how cleverly they haveput Laffin right next to thepop art?

A visual poem, isn't it ?Natural man and civilize dman, really . Oh, let's followall those people, here's sucha crowd, it must be some -thing good.

Hernando: Hey, this ismore my style. C 'mon,here's a couple of seats.God, what's all the garbageon the platform? Hey, let' seat, huh ?

Marianne : Hernando ,Shhhhh. You can't eat now .That's Bruce Connor, theartist, you know. We caneat later, he's going to eatnow. O000h, he's so marvel-lous, and so terribly pro-found .

New partner,newer ideassharpen upthe Flat FiveBy TAJA BHAVAN

Much has been said aboutthe revitalization of theFlat Five in the newspapers .

The new spark in thefield of jazz expression inVancouver is now presen tonly at the Five. Jazz hasnever, at least in the past ,been a staple diet of coffee -houses that have managedto survive bankruptcy .

The various jazz clubshave gone broke or changedpolicy to a folk or eveneast-end entertainment .

Even Howie B a t e m a nclosed the Inquisition be-cause he was losing toomuch money trying to pro -mote jazz in a coffeehouse .His .big money loser andclosing act was Miles Davis .

The Flat Five may be-come a winner now thatthere is a new major part-ner, Robert Cardinal, whohas run a few small clubs inMontreal. He is young andhas new and vibrant ideasthat are already present inthe renovation of the club' sinterior .

The atmosphere is ex-cellent for all-night gigs .

When Stan Getz was intown last week, he and hisside-men (mostly his side-men as Getz always seemedtoo tired) would go downafter their last shows andeither practice or just havea session. The club is theor-etically open just on theweekends and on Wednes-day nights for poetry read-ings but there is usuallysomeone drinking coffee ,

(Continued on Page 5 )SEE: MORE BISTROS

GSA NEWSAny graduate student interested in applying for

a University Fellowship is reminded that the

closing date is March 15, 1965 . Awards are made

to students selected by the Scholarship Committee

from those recommended by departments . Students

who propose to proceed to a higher degree at the

University should get in touch with the department

concerned without delay .

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Page 9: r~r UP YSSEr...Mater Society," Galbraith said. The committee which selects the award-winners consists of all past winners who are still on campus: Ubyssey associate e d i t o r Mike

. . . tandem painters at Art in Action . . .

MORE BISTROS

(Continued from Page 4 )

playing a guitar, or jus ttalking .

Peter's Ear is the restaur-ant in the front area of theestablishment that is now inthe process of being reno-vated and made into a dis-tinct part where anyone de-siring good food can gowithout having to pay theFive's admission price. Thiswas the idea of the otherpartner, David Parkin .

The idea is to create anew and different atmos-phere than the club's insidewith good service and dif-ferent foods. It will, I im-agine, be open as soon a sthe rebuilding is complete .

MUSICAt lasta pianist whotreats one notelike another

By BASIL RATZLAFFOnce in a while, people

have a chance to hear andreally enjoy a pianist's inter-pretation of music withou tbeing dazzled by flashy tech-nique and unnecessary pian-istic mannerisms . I'm surethis is the way the wholeaudience felt about Bori sRoubakine last Tuesday .

I have not heard such finepiano playing in a long time .

Technique became the ve-hicle of expression insteadof the controlling overbal-ance one so often hears . Mr .Roubakine's performancewent beyond finger work ,musical dynamics and phras-ings into the real under-standing of the music .

The interpretations werehis own and he played wit hunfailing assurance and con-viction . He is one of the veryfew artists who is able totreat each note as if it werejust as important as the nextand not letting this aspec tovershadow the whole mus-ical idea of any given com-position .

The Beethoven Sonata ,Op. 110, which opened theprogram, is a giant amongpiano works . In 35 minute sof music there is shown al laspects of the composer's life—the fierce, gnarled rootsof inner turmoil to the ser-enity and quietness of laterlife.

With no fuss, Mr. Rouba-kine sailed through the tech-nical hardships and showedus all the aspects of themusic as clearly as if he hadpainted them on a canvas.

His hands were steel o rsilk as he chose ; nothing wa somitted .

The Brahms—Handel Var-iations and Fugue were play-ed with the same assuranc eand thorough understandingof the composer as well a sthe composition.

The last work on the pro -gram the Davidsbundler(League of David) dances o fSchumann were played ex-actly as Mr . Roubakine ex-plained they would be — im-promptu, fleeting glances ofreal life. There is some com-edy here since there was noLeague of David, and thesepieces were not character-istic dances . Even this subtlehumor came through in th eperformance .

The encores, Schubert' sMoment Musical in F minorand Brahms' Intermezzo inE flat, Op. 117, No. 1, wereideal finishing touches to aperfect evening .

Lieder recitalbeats technicalproblems ofMahler, Brahma

By GRAHAM CLINEClear presentation, full,

warm tone, exceptional mus-ical understanding' — theseare three of the many quali-ties which made last week'sLieder recital of Marls Schil-der and Phyllis Schuldt amemorable occasion .

Supported by a sensitiv eand sure accompaniment ,Mrs. Schilder was able toovercome the technical dif-ficulties of the Mahler andBrahms songs and give usrichly satisfying music .

(Continued on Page 6 )SEE: MORE MUSIC

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An excellent opportunit yexists for a capable and ex-perienced fishery biologist ,with a capacity for adminis-tration and leadership, todevelop a new unit undervery favourable circumstan-ces, with Government prior-ities being given to researchexpansion, provision of newlaboratories, research ves-sels and associated facilities .

There has been some basicwork carried out in NewZealand on demersal speciesand on invertebrates ; how-ever, the present and con-tinuing need is for substan-tial expansion of the basicbiological studies on whichvalid management practicescan be founded .

Priority is being given t obuilding up a fully qualifie dgraduate staff, and a techni-cal staff to an initial totalof 30.

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Tickets at A.M.S. — 75c and 1 .25Don't procrastinate! We had to turn away over 200 .

Late Ticket Buyers at Our Shankar and Montoya Concerts

Page 10: r~r UP YSSEr...Mater Society," Galbraith said. The committee which selects the award-winners consists of all past winners who are still on campus: Ubyssey associate e d i t o r Mike

MORE MUSIC

(Continued from Page 5)The six songs of Gustav

Mahler which opened th eprogram are among themost difficult in the reper-toire. Both performers dis-played vitality and controlin this group and althoughMrs. Schilder's pitch some-times was not sure, this wasover-shadowed by artisti cand sincere interpretation .

The eight Gypsy songs o fBrahms were well done .Here both soloist and pian-ist displayed the sensitivit yand co-ordination so neces-sary to make Lieder a suc-cess .

The last group on the pro -gram was a representativeselection of Brahms' roman-tic songs. Musically as wellas technically difficult ,these songs provided bothartists with the opportunityto prove their musilal worth.Each song in this group re-ceived its special musicalapproach .

Toward the end, the pitchof the soloist again tendedto be a little flat, but con-sidering the difficuly of theprogram and the vitalit yneeded to make it a success ,this was insignificant .

Both Mrs. Schilder andMrs . Schuld are to be con-gratulated .

DISSENT

A drenchedanswer tohitch-hikerhater Hunter

By MOLLIE HENNE Y

Scene: Corner of Chancel-lor Boulevard. just d o w nfrom the flagpole. Time: Al-most dark. Weather: Normal(pouring rain) .

Driver : Hop in! Sure, I'l lgive you a lift . Always roomfor one more! Miserabl enight, eh ?

Hiker: Boy, I'll say. It' sreally pouring there . Goodof you to stop . I certainlyappreciate the lift .

Driver: Think nothing ofit . I'm always ready to lenda helping hand to a fellowtraveller. Besides, you'd bedrenched through in no timein that downpour . Do untoothers, I always say .

Don't suppose you've go ta cigaret? Thanks, forgot topick some up at the laststop. Got a match? Hate touse the lighter unless it' snecessary . A penny saved isa penny earned, you know .Ha! Ha !

Hiker: Hope I'm not drip-ping water all over . So kindof you to stop .

Driver: A little waternever hurt anything, I al -ways say .

LOUD BAN GHiker : What was that ?Driver : Sounds .like a

flat . Darn, and me with noraincoat. Say, do you know

PF Six

how to handle a jack? Good .' I'll take the umbrella an d

re-direct oncoming traffi cwith this red light I broughtalong. Always be prepared Ialways say .

(Gets out and looks attire . )

Rotten luck, old boy, weseem to be stopped in arather deep puddle . Makes ita bit of a challenge for you!Give me a call when you'refinished — with this um-brella to hold I won't b eable to help . . . Oh, well ,too many cooks, you know !

Driver : Hmm! Strange —not one car for me to re-direct . As I always say, bet -ter safe than sorry! Gee, yo ulook rather wet . Guess onecan only get so wet, eh? Ha !ha!

Got a cigaret? Thanks .Even the cigarets are a bitwet; you should have leftthem in the car. Your lastone, eh? Hate to take it, butif you insist . . . Any drymatches? Thanks .

Hiker: My God, I'm soak-ed to the Skin!

Driver: How about aquick cup of coffee? That'llwarm the cockles of yourheart !

Hiker: I could sure u s esomething hot after that or-deal .

Driver : We'll stop at theWhite Spot just a little fur-ther on. I'd better pull inhere and get some gas first.

Say, don't suppose you'v ea credit card I could use?Hate to break a large billand I'll pay you at the nexttown. I don't use one my-self. Only buy what you canpay cash for, I always say .

(To gas station attendant . )Fill 'er up! Better check

the oil, too . Gee, didn't real-ize it was that low . Betterthrow in a couple of quarts .Oh, say, put some cigaretson there, too, will you —hate to keep borrowing frommy passenger here. Never aborrower or a lender be, Ialways say !

Hiker: Let's get that cof-fee, I'm freezing. Haven' tyou got a heater in thi sthing ?

Driver: Never turn it onwhile I'm driving, makes mesleepy. If you're going todrive, don't sleep, I alwayssay . Here's the drive-in.

Hiker: Thank heavens !I'll get the coffee .

Driver : While you're inthere grab me a hamburgerand a side of chips! Don'tforget, lots of ketchup !

Hiker : Yeah .Driver: That was refresh-

ing—good of you to treat—guess you really appreciatethis lift, eh? Yes sir, I'm al -ways going out of my way tohelp the other guy if I can .

People who know me wellall call me Generous George ,and the shoe fits, even if Ido say so myself .

Here we go again — toobad that window won't clos eon your side there . It's a bitchilly. Oh well, blow thecobwebs out of your head !Darn, there's that b l a s t e dwindshield wiper stuckagain .

Say, seeing as you're al-ready soaked, would youmind riding out on the hoodand helping them out a bit?

Where are you going'?Hey, come back! We're inthe middle of nowhere!

Not even a thank you. Un-grateful vagrant. Oh well,takes all kinds to make aworld, I always say .

Confidence .You, too, will have confidence i n

'Contact tenses

cby LAWRENCE

ALVERT"He specializes"

705 Birks Bldg: - MU 3-1816-9 :30-5 :30 (Sat. Noon)

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During the summer, we prom-ise you coolness, cleanness, fresh-ness . These are just as importantin the winter . Everyonewants to feel fresh an dclean . And the problem o fodor (which Tampax pre-vents), the problem of feeling over-heated, can certainly arise in win-ter's warm rooms.

Come to think of it, maybewe'll stop saying anything differ-ent in the wintertime than we d oin the summertime . Swim any timeof the year! Canadian TampaxCorporation Limited, Barrie,Ontario .

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Social Officer, Cultural Officer, Public Relation sOfficer, Sports Co-ordinator, Club Night Chair-

man and Special Services Officer .

ANNUAL GENERAL MEE NG—Tuesday, Feb. 9 . A

bar will be open from 3 .30 to 4 .00 at which time

the meeting will begin .

SKIING TRIP—Would all those interested in a skiing

trip to Mount Baker on Sunday, Feb. 7 please

sign the list in the G.S.C. or contact Chuck Irwin

at Local 652 or 224-0644. Come and meet your

fellow students and enjoy the snow .

Do theLouie - Louie

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Page 11: r~r UP YSSEr...Mater Society," Galbraith said. The committee which selects the award-winners consists of all past winners who are still on campus: Ubyssey associate e d i t o r Mike

Warren rangbells withnine iratemusicians(The following was signed

by nine students of themusic faculty. )

It is unfortunate that yourPage Friday critic Mr. War-ren Bell failed to tinder-stand the purpose of th eMusic Department's Colleg-ium Musicum .

If Mr. Bell is looking foran evening of musical en-tertainment, he would b ebetter advised to confinehimself to concert-going .

• • •His criticism that Mr .

Piltz's remarks were of in-terest primarily to studentsof musicology, is compar-able to a crticism that ameeting of L'Alliance Fran-caise is incomprehensible t oan "outsider" because it isconducted in French .

It is obvious that Mr .Bell missed the whole pointof Collegium. Its purpose isnot to provide an evenin gof relaxing entertainmentfor the general public, bu tto give an illustrated lect-ture on lesser-known as-pects of music, about whichone would not generall yhear .

There is no reason whyanyone should feel like anintruder, if he is willing toaccept Collegium as it isintended .

A secondprofessorhits Holger'sscholarshipBy LESLIE MILLE R

Asst. Professor of German

Mr. Holger Herwig's sec-ond utterance in The Ubys-sey (in response to Dr . E.Loeb's letter calling atten-tion to factual errors in Mr .Herwig's report on Ger-many) raises a quesion o fserious concern to a univers-ity community .

The issue is not whethe rthe "enlightened views" ofMr. Herwig are "shared" bytwo noted British historians,nor whether Dr . Loeb i s"getting paid" to be an ex-pert on Thomas Mann — adepressingly primitive con-ception of the role of ascholar.

• • •The question is whether ,

when one is granted themeans to study in a foreigncountry, one honors the re-sponsibility to report on thatcountry with objecivity andaccuracy, and how one re -acts when it is suggested tha tone is guilty of factual in-accuracy .

In his latest article Mr .Herwig alludes to the re -action of an audience at th eUniversity of Munich to aspeech by Professor GoloMann on the question o fGermany's frontiers: it ispuzzling to me that a stu-dent of German histor yshould make no allowanc efor the political climate o fthat particular geographical

area before citing events inMunich as an indication ofthe political thinking in Ger-many as a whole .

Would a foreign studentin the U.S .A. be as naive asto draw conclusions aboutthe attitudes of most Ameri-

cans, from the receptionwhich one can predict wouldbe accorded the ReverendKing, were he to speak be-

fore an audience at an insti-tution such as the Univers-ity of Mississippi?

• • •It is, moreover, an over-

statement to say that Pro-fessor Mann's views wer eattacked by the "entire"German press; it should als obe pointed out that a consid-erable body of informedopinion in Germany sub-scribes to the views of his-torians such as Professo rMann (even if there arethose who read with satis-faction the theories of schol-ars such as Professor Hog-gan) and that the majorityof West German highschools do not stop short intheir history classes at theyear 1871 .

• • •Part of Mr. Herwig's re-

sponse is to identify Dr .Loeb with the forces in Ger-many which provoke Mr .Herwig's fears : (e .g . " . . . Mr .Loeb's comments do throwsome rather interesting lighton the habit of Germans totake any criticism of theirnation as a personal in-sult . . . ") .

T h e gentleman cast byMr. Herwig as such an ar-dent and sensitive Germannationalist w a s , however ,forced to flee from Germanybecause after 1933 he wasconsidered by those in powe rto be "un-German" .

Mr. Herwig's thesis wouldthus be merely amusingl y

inaccurate were it no in suchpainfully poor taste .

May I conclude with theearnest suggestion that Mr .Herwig re-read ThomasMann's works, in particula rthe letters and the "Betrach-tungen eines Unpolitischen".

• • •He may not emerge an

"expert" but he will dis-cover what Mann wrote inthat long work, when hewrote it and whethe rThomas Mann did reject anopportunity to lead the Ger-mans in 1945, as Mr . Herwigappears to believe .

. . . and heisn't muchof a gentlemaneither . • ."

By GEORGE WEISSENBOR N

Judging by your firs tarticle on Germany (PF Jan .15), Mr. Herwig, I had tocome to the conclusion tha tyou do not favor the schol-arly approach to a subject .

Having read your secon darticle on Professor Dr .Loeb's reply of (Jan . 29), Iregret to find that yours isnot the attitude of a genle-man, either !

How many more revela-tions may we look forwardto, Landsmann ?

Sine studio et ira .

OVERSEAS

Lumumba, manand ghost,stalk Congotogether

By SUSAN ADAM S

Lumumba comes back t oThe Congo — this time as aghost .

Over Congolese fields ofblood Lumumba's image i sbeing rebuilt—the image ofa martyred hero .

Before his death in Febru-ary 1961, Patrice Lumumb awas prime minister of theCentral Congolese govern-ment. Before premiership ,he was one of the many na-tionalists fighting to gai nindependence from Belgium ,and before that, he was aminor clerk .

Lumumba's end is shroud-ed in myth and mystery ,and perhaps this is why h eis making such an excellentghost .

Soon after the arrival o fUnited Nations troops in TheCongo, Kasavubu ordere dLumumba to be seized. Kas-avubu was then commander-in-chief of the Army andpresident of The Congo . For-merly he was the politica lrival of Lumumba.

The former prime minis -ter was then soon freed, an dhe worked hard gathering agood deal of support in sev-eral provinces.

In December, 1960, he wasabruptly arrested and sentto prison without trial .

Legend tells us that whil ePresident Tshombe of th eseceded Katanga provinc ewas seated in a theatre i nhis capital, he received atelephone call from Presi-dent Kasavubu . Kasavubusaid that he was sendin gTshombe "a precious gift" .

According to Tshombe a'plane arrived next day con-taining Lumumba accompan-ied by two of his deposedcabinet ministers . The threemen's hands were tie dstretched behind their backs .They had been beaten an dbruised, and were vomitingblood. Some claim that oneman was already dead .

Their last 'plane flightmust have been a hideou sone. Evidently, a few hourslater, Lumumba died fro mhis wounds .

But there are other ac-counts of the death ; eitherTshombe had the three pris-oners shot, or Lumumba es-caped from jail and wasmurdered while fleeing.

Who is to blame? Kasa-vubu could have ordered hi spilots to beat the passeng-ers and Tshombe might havehandled his `gift' more care-fully.

President Tshombe is no wprime minister of the re-united Congo . Pro-Lumumbarebels are gaining strengt hand civil war continues .

The ghost Lumumba isprojected as the saviour o fhis people, but what was theman Lumumba ?

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Page 12: r~r UP YSSEr...Mater Society," Galbraith said. The committee which selects the award-winners consists of all past winners who are still on campus: Ubyssey associate e d i t o r Mike

FESTIVALTODAY .

12 noon . Repeat perform-ance of The Medium is theMessage, repeating everyhalf hour or so until 3 :30 .At the Armory . Admis-sion 25 cents .3:30 p.m. "T h e DumbWaiter" again in the Audi-torium . Admission 25cents. Performance willbe followed by a discus-sion on the Theatre of theAbsurd.Also at 3 :30. Free Jazz inBuchanan 106 . No admis-sion price listed .

MONDAY12:30 in New Educatio n100 . Improvisation, againstthe spoken word andagainst pre-recorded tape.3 :30. A program of experi-m e n t a l films includin gScorpio Rising by Ken-neth Anger. Auditorium ,for 25 cents.

TUESDAY12:30. Chance Music byfaculty and students of theDepartment of Music, NewEducation 100 .Also at 12 :30, Dr. D. J .Watterson conducts a tourof "Dark Mirror" in Fin eArts Gallery .3 :30 p.m. Poetry readin gby Dave Dawson, Grey-don Moore, Wayne Ny-berg and others . Bu. 100 .

WEDNESDA YFeb. 10. 12:30. "Contract-ing Evolution", an illus-trated lecture by JeffreyLindsay. Freddy Wood.

3:30 p.m. Programe of ex-perimental films . Auditor-ium. 25 cents .7:30 p .m. "Instant Politicsin an Electronic Age " . Atalk by Dr. Ed Black ofPolitical Science depart-ment. New Education 100 .Festival ends.

CALENDARLecture series at the Van-

couver Art Gallery, 114 5West Georgia .Tuesday, Feb. 9 — "Tutan-khamun" .Feb . 16—"Thebes" . (Therich and glorious past ofThebes in Ancient Egypt-ian history) .Feb . 23 — "Nubia" . (Theattempts to save the Bub-ian monuments, particu-larly Abu Simbell) .Dr. Henry Riad, Directo rof the Greco-Roman Mus-eum Alexandra Egypt wil lgive all three lectures. Allfor absolutely nothing .Lectures start at 8 p .m .

Arms and the Man. Play pre-sented by Emerald Play-ers . Metro Theatre, 137 0SW Marine Dr., Feb . 5-13 .Tickets $1 .50 to $3 .00 .Doors 7 :30 and c u r t a i n8 :30 . "Latecomers will notbe seated until after th efirst act ." Growf .

Jose Greco and his companyof Spanish Gypsy Danc-ers . QET Sunday Feb. 28at 8:30 .

Yacov Zak. "The Great Sov-viet Chopinist" . QET Feb .11 at 8 :30 . Famous Artists .Tickets $4 .00 to $1 .75 .

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Page 13: r~r UP YSSEr...Mater Society," Galbraith said. The committee which selects the award-winners consists of all past winners who are still on campus: Ubyssey associate e d i t o r Mike

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Friday, February 5, 1965

THE UBYSSEY

Page 5

BACKGROUN D

Tree dean still gree nBy LORNE MALLIN

Here's how it feels to be adean .

"I feel like a freshman,"says Dr. J. A. F. Gardner ,new dean of Forestry.

Dr. Gardner took officeMonday.

He has worked in the Fed-eral Forest Products Lab oncampus for the last 17 years .

* * *"I used to look out over

water, and now I look outover green-roofed, tar-pape rshacks," he said in an inter-view in his comfortable officein the Forestry and Geologybuilding.

Dr. Gardner graduatedfrom UBC in 1940 .

He grew up in Nakusp, B.C ."I love to fish and camp .

In Nakusp the water was to ocold for swimming, a n dcrawling around the hillsdidn't interest me as a young-ster," Dr. Gardner recalled .

* *"I haven't had much of a

chance to do any skiing thisseason. I'd go anywhere toski," Dr . ,Gardner said .

"I don't like to hunt, because I like the animals to omuch. But when I was ayoungster I hunted for food, "he said .

Dr. Gardner was called Mr .Cedar by members of the for-est industry because of his re-search on cedar trees .

DR. J. A. GARDNE R. . . feels like fros h

"All my adult life I've bee nworking on wood," he said .

"This deanship is an inter-esting and exciting new ex-perience. A lot of the facultyare old friends and everybod yhas been very helpful.

* * *"My objective as Dean is to

strengthen the faculty an dimprove Forestry education . "

Dr. Gardner was aske dabout the Forestry under-graduate society and theirnewspaper, the Plank .

"They have a great deal o fspirit . I haven't seen thePlank yet, but I remember

the CUS national office andmade available to intereste dpersons .

All UBC students involved inthe survey will be notified byFeb. 14 .

UBC survey director RayLarsen urged students chosento co-operate.

Students interested in as-sisting the survey are asked t oleave a note for—Larsen in AM Sbox 153 .

that faculty editions used t obe a competition to get awa ywith as many off-colour stor-ies as possible," Dr . Gardnersaid .

"UBC students are the sameas students anywhere . They'reinteresting because they'reyoung people and alwayshave a new way of looking atthings that older people likeme can benefit from," he said .

* * *"Seems to me there is a lot

to be gained from increasedstudent-faculty contact .There's always room formore.

"I'd Iike to meet as manystudents as possible .

"But if I stretched it to omuch I wouldn't have tim efor my duties as Dean."

Greased pig tilt rained outas clean-up campaign end

Katie and the Kampus Klean-up Kampaign got washe dout Thursday .

Katie a $12 piglet belonging to the Aggies, was suppos-ed to be chased around the stadium by undergraduatepresidents . But the rain brought cancellation of the pigchase .

"Katie is living in the Aggies' bull-barn until the eventis rescheduled," said Blake Dunlop of Circle K which i ssponsoring the campaign .

The Friday debate on liquor ads in The Ubyssey be-tween AMS president, Roger McAfee, and an engineer wil lgo on as scheduled, at noon today in the Library pool .

Students are urged to attend the debate, and to throwgarbage at debaters.

oreral 'Walt ~ ewe~olt .Jos , ' Occaawt.s

GO FORMALTO THE LIMELIGHT BALL

Tuxedos - White Dinner Jacket sTails - Morning Coats - Director Coats

Complete Sim Range and Latest Styles

..er..:.1 9.1 *4..•

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CUS means tosurvey us agai n

Look out, here comes anotherThe Canadian Union of Stu- -

dents, with the Dominion Bur -eau of Statistics, the CanadianAssociation of U n i v e r s i t yTeachers and the CanadianUniversity Federation, willconduct a means survey on 1 0per cent of all Canadian uni-versity student s, includin gsome from UBC.

Last year the AMS here con-ducted a means survey for UBCstudents only .

Results will be tabulated by

means survey.

Purely Puritanica l. . . a simple skimmyJust when you're looking for some -thing definitely dramatic, simplyskimmy . . . the Bay CollegienneShop comes up with a subtle navyto skim over Iithe, lean figures. Todramatize the pure simplicity there' sa dash of white in the Puritan colla rV-ing down the front, appearingagain in deep cuffs on the sleeves .Sizes 7-15. Each $25 .

The Bay Collegienne Shop, third floo r

u15 11'

dompatta .~~A7E El <

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GEORGIA AT GRANVILLE

Page 14: r~r UP YSSEr...Mater Society," Galbraith said. The committee which selects the award-winners consists of all past winners who are still on campus: Ubyssey associate e d i t o r Mike

Page 6

THE UBYSSEY

Friday, February 5, 1965

HEAVEN FORBID, exclaims Carroll College "Fighting Saint "Bill Albright (14) as T'Bird Gene Rizak scores a lay-u phelping his teammates chalk up a 61-58 victory Thursdayafternoon in Memorial gym .

Rugger Championsmeet favorites

The UBC Thunderbirds run up against their most chal-lenging opposition of the Pacific Coast Intercollegiat eConference when they encounter Oregon State University' srugby squad Saturday at Varsity Stadium .

The game goes at 2 :30 and will be switched to WolfsonField if the Stadium field is in unplayable condition .

In other action at Wolfson Field Saturday the Brave stake on Georgians and Tomahawks meet Oregon Stat eJayvees, both games commencing at 1 :00 .

By TIM ROBERT S

The Thunderbird ski teamhad its moment of glory, andis now looking for anotherone .

There's little chance of theteam's ever beating the Uni-versity of Washington squad ,but last weekend's secondplace finish at Banff was acoup d'etat of sorts in the ski-ing world .

U. of Washington, MontanaState College and, to a lesserdegree, U. of Idaho are sports-scholarship-stocked teams withfinancial support considerablygreater than that of UBC's .

* * *Their Nordic teams are al-

most wholly comprised of Nor-wegian imports on scholarshi pin the United States.

The Montana State Collegeteam drives about in impres-sive 1964 Pontiac Station Wag-ons with "MSC" on the sideand two rows of Head Vectorson top of the cars.

The Montana skiiers oftenhave afternoons off from clas-ses to practice on the slopes .

The UBC team has made upmuch of the difference throughsteady training, and is likelythe best conditioned team onthe circuit .

Coach Allan Fisher has beena steady inspiration to the teamboth on and off the slopes .

The weather last term als ohelped since the team was ableto run outdoors continuously ,enabling it to build up endur-ance in long runs over varyingterrain.

Due to the snow, sessionshave now been forced indoors ,and stress has been laid on run-ning the bleacher stairs and onexercises .

On weekends the alpin eteam either practices slalo mor enters local races, as it willdo this Sunday in the Tyro lGiant Slalom on Mt . Seymour .

The cross-country teamworks out on the "miserysticks"—coach Fisher's approp-riate term for cross-countr yskiis—or enters in local com-petition .

The jumping team is a non-entity until each meet, whenregular alpine racers LeighBrousson, Tom Jenkin, Eugen eRuelle and Dave Turner sub-mit themselves to airy flight sfor the sake of team points .

In Banff they were jumpingup to 150 feet, saving the teamfrom falling behind Montan aState College in the overallstandings .

* * *Elsewhere on the UBC scene ,

VOC is planning two skiingtours this Sunday .

The first, comprising some20 people, will be in the Dia-mond Head region and theother, led by Rick Moodey ,will find itself on Mt . Sedge-wick near Woodfibre .

Upon returning to Vancouv-er, the two groups will mee tfor a sing-song and "feast" in"Kakademon Kloset" at thefoot of the Squamish Chief.

UBC entersRegatta

The UBC Sailing team willcompete in the NorthwestInter-Collegiate Yacht RacingRegatta in Seattle, Feb . 6 and7 .

The combined men and worn,

en's team has won the NorthAmerican Collegiate SailingChampionship and the P .N.W .Team Racing Championships ,three times in the last five

years . Perennial Thunderbirdrival is U. of Washington whowill be at a slight advantageon their home grounds.

In basketball

'Fighting Saints'fall out of step

By JACK McOUARRIEThursday's noon-hour basketball game had everything—

cheerleaders doing the twist, an opposition forward wh oyelped like one of President Johnson 's beagles, half-timeballet, crazed basketball coaches, and oh yes, best ofall a win for the homeside .

The T-Birds defeated th eCarroll College "FightingSaints" from Montana 61-58in a display that rivalled thevictory earlier in the yearover Seattle Pacific as an up-set and for thrills .

The Birds were led to vic-tory by Bob Barazzuol whostaged a tremendous sho wscoring 21 points, 14 in a hec-tic second half . Most of Bar-azzuol's efforts were of thedriving, twisting variety . AlexBrayden earned second starhonours, scoring 6 of his 11points in the decisive finalquarter .

UBC faced a 31-27 defici tat the half .

T'Bird basketball mentorPeter Mullins, although al-lowing that "our shootin gwas not up to par in the first half" was happy with his team' sperformance . This will probably be news to anyone watchingMullins perform under game conditions . During the warm-uphe sits very relaxed and perfectly under control, the pictureof composure so to speak.

Then the whistle blows ; he squirms as one of his boys com-mits a needless foul, groans as another fails to execute a playin the accepted manner, shrieks when another throws the ballaway, then fully out of control spends the rest of the gamejumping out of his chair ranting and raving at officials andplayers alike . Finally, haggard and dishevelled, he pulls him-self back into something resembling order and limps exhauste dback to his seat, only to leap up again seconds later, victi mof yet another misdeed .

Not for nothing did a local scribe label Mullins "The Yo-yo" .In summary it was great .

Next exhibition goes tonightat 8 :30 p.m. See you there .

EYE GLASSESLsn 695All Doctor's Eyeglass Prescriptionsfilled . First quality materials used .All work performed by qualifie d

Opticians.

GRANVILLE OPTICA L861 Granville M U 3-892 1

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Support K.K .K.Feb. 1- 5

VOLKSWAGE NRepairs - Inspections

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CA 4-7644

GRADUATE STUDENT ASSN .

Annual General Meetingand Elections

TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 1965

Nominations open for the following positions:

President

Public Relations Office rVice-President

Social Office r

Secretary

Special Services OfficerTreasurer

Sports Co-ordinatorCultural Officer

Club Night Chairman

TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 196 5

Annual General Meeting at 4:00 p.m . Nominees foroffice will be present. Sherry will be served at 3 :30p.m. Nominations close at adjournment .

MONDAY, FEB. 15 and TUESDAY, EEB. 16 pollsopen 10:00 a .m. to 7:00 p.m. in the office at the Centre .Obtain further details at Graduate Student Centre .

PETER MULLIN S. . like a yo-yo?

Page 15: r~r UP YSSEr...Mater Society," Galbraith said. The committee which selects the award-winners consists of all past winners who are still on campus: Ubyssey associate e d i t o r Mike

Friday, February 5, 1965

THE UBYSSEY

Page 7

Thunderette sin Saskatoo n

Thunderette teams travel toSaskatoon this weekend fo rWCIAA competition in basket-ball and curling .

Participating in the roundrobin tournaments will be: U.of Alberta (Edmonton), U. ofAlberta (Calgary), U . of Sas-katchewan, Regina College,Brandon College and U . ofManitoba .

UBC last won the basketballtrophy in 1963, when theyshared it with Calgary and Sas-katchewan .

UBC GYMNASTS have been preparing this week for meetwith Eastern Washington Saturday in the Memorial gy mat 2 p.m. Working out on the parallel bars is an unidenti-fied member of the Thunderbird squad .

UBC faces Denveron road tripThe Thunderbird hockey

team left last night on a fourgame road trip . The Birds playthe University of Denver Fri-day and Saturday. They thenmove to Provo, Utah wherethey will meet the BrighamYoung Cougars for games Mon-day and Tuesday.

* * *Birds Olympic stars Gary

Dineen, Barry McKenzie, KenBroderick and Al McLean willmake the Denver trip . Theywill return home Sunday asthey leave later this month tojoin the National team over-seas and do not want to misstoo much of their studies.

The wrestling team, recentwinners of the B .C. openChampionships, hosts Centra lWashington tonight in theWomen's Gym . The meet goesat 7 :00 p .m .

* * *In Memorial Gym at 2 p .m .

S a t u r d a y, the Gymnasticsteam, after a strenuous week' spractice, meet Eastern Wash-ington .

The Men's Volleyball teamtravels to Seattle, Saturday tomeet a sharp U . of Washingtonsquad .

Volleybal lLongview, Wash ., is the des-

tination of •both the Women'sVolleyball teams this weekend .

The senior team, coached byMiss Marilyn Russell, is com-

for posed of Jacquie Bell, MaureenFishleigh, Diane Kirby, DianeGodfrey, Sylvia McIntyre, Jen-ny Johnston and LauretteTeschke .

ATTENTION! Imported Car Owners !We Can Supply All Popular Parts For Your Car

Plus a big range of accessories . These include drivin glamps, racing mirrors, wood rimmed steering wheels ,air horns, racing stripes, adjustable shocks, rally equip-ment, etc .

Drop Into

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Phone: 736-980410% DISCOUNT BY SHOWING A.M.S. CARD

UBC Thunderbird Winter Sports Centre

For SKATING, CURLING, HOCKEYPleasure Skating Hours :

12 .45 p.m. to 2 .45 p.m. Tues ., Thurs . and Sunday3.00 p.m. to 5 .00 p .m., Friday and Saturday7 .30 p .m. to 9 .30 p .m., Tues ., Fri ., Sat . and Sunday

THURSDAY STUDENT SPECIAL 15 c

Skating Parties each Wednesday, 7 :30 p .m. - 9:30 p.m.SKATE RENTAL AVAILABLE, ALL SIZES

Book Now for Your Club

Skating Tickets at Reduced Rates ,Available

For Information Phone Local 365 or 224 .320 5

/

Provincial titlenext for curlers

UBC's Pacific Coast curling champions wil lthe Provincial title this weekend .

Jack Arnet takes his rink(Terry Miller, Glen Walker,Soren Jensen) to Kamloops tochallenge the Interior repre-sentative who will be declaredlate Saturday night .

Arnet will play a best ofthree series Sunday. The win-ner goes to the Canadia nChampionships in Saskatoo nMarch 1- 5 .

Since starting the Consolplaydowns in January, Arnetand his curling cohorts havewon 12 games without defeat .Two victories have been overthe 1964 World Championshi prink skipped .by Lyall Dagg .(Roy Vinthers skipped theChampionship rink in Arnet' ssecond meeting . )

OTHERWISE : The Thunder-ette girls curling rink left fo rSaskatoon Wednesday to com-pete in their" Western Canadia nIntercollegiate Athletic As-sociation spiel February 4 - 6 .

Members of the UBC rinkare Dolores Doige, skip; LindaBarber, third; Faye Thompson ,second and lead CarolynSwart. UBC last won thetrophy in 1961 .

be out

Pimm's No.1 has a Gin base

Pimm's No. 5 has a Canadian Whisky base(both are absolutely delicious! )

Two things about Pimm's : easy t oserve, and a taste you'll enjoy .

just pour into a tall glass and addice and fill up with your favourite ligh tmix. You can add a slice of cucumber,a piece of lemon, or a sprig of mint to

make the traditional Pimm's, famou sthroughout the world . But don't botherunless you're in the mood.

A new generation is rediscoverin gPimm's . . . and enjoying every momen tof it .

DRINKPIMM'Ssimply because you'll enjoythe taste of it.

This advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control Boardor .by the Government of British Columbia .

4

Page 16: r~r UP YSSEr...Mater Society," Galbraith said. The committee which selects the award-winners consists of all past winners who are still on campus: Ubyssey associate e d i t o r Mike

Page 8

THE

UBYSSE Y

'tween classesCoffee machines

Cuban justice seen for libraryVICTORIA (CUP) — Cof-

fee vending machines maybe installed in the librar yon trial today at Victoria College.

AMS vice-president Roll iCacchioni suggested the ma-

Vancouver lawyer John Macy looks at Cuban justice noon chines be put in the base-today in Bu. 100. Films and slides will be shown at the ment lounge of the library .lecture which is sponsored by the Student Committee on However library staff ob -Cuban affairs .

ALLIANCE FRANCAISE ject on grounds they do not* * * Color films Metropolitan and have the money or janitor

GRAD CLASSThaumetopoetia by Robert En - staff necessary for such a

Grad Class Council Facultyrico, noon today, Bu . 205 . project .

reps meet in Bu . 227 Mondaynoon . * *

* * *VCF

1H, GERMAN CLU BGerman Day every Tuesday Bikes left

Communion with God, Rev . 10 a .m. to 5 p.m. in IH upper

Bob Birch, Hebb Theatre, noontoday.

lounge. Everyone welcome .Slavonic Circle presents cul - after snow

* * tural evening tonight at 9 inB.C.'s

snowy

winter

h a sED US IH. Dance to follow. struck again .

Harold Huggins speaks on French Speaking Day in the Sgt . Thompson of the Uni-alcoholism as a growing prob- upper lounge 10 a .m. to 5 p .m. versity RCMP detachment saidlem in schools today . * * * Wednesday that six bicycles

* * * EL CIRCULO have been found apparentlyIRC Guitar recital noon today in abandoned on campus . He said

IRC Formal Feb. 6, 8:30 to Bu . 204 . they were probably abandone d1 :00

a .m .

at

Flame

Supper * because of the snow.Club. Tickets $3.00 a couple .

* * *NDC and NDP

Peter Light speaks on Non-violent Direct Action, Albany ,Georgia to Lamacaza, Quebecnoon today in Bu . 224 .

* * *PRE-SOCIAL WORK

Paul Winn, talk and slides onNeighborhood Houses Mondaynoon in Bu. 202 .

* * *TATE ENTERPRISE S

Cartoon show presented byTate Enterprises . Speedy Gon-zales and a host of other char-acters. Aud. noon Wed., 25c .

* * *JAPAN EXCHANG E

See Japan this summer. Ap-ply in Bu . 42'62 by Monday.

Women urgedto forget Mrs.

MONTREAL (C U P ) —Women at McGill Univer-sity have been urged topostpone marriage and con-tinue their education.

Mrs. M. J. Sabia, presi-dent of the Canadian Fed-eration of University Wom-en, told women they shouldgo on to graduate studies inthe sciences, professions andengineering .

Room & Board 82VACANCY EXISTS in PSI Upsilon

Fraternity House, 2260 WesbrookCrescent . Phone CA 4-0952, askfor Mike Pearson .

ON CAMPUS — Room and boardZeta Psi Fraternity, excellent food ,good atmosphere. Call 224-9885 .

Friday, February 5, 1965

Alma Mater SocietyOFFICIAL, NOTICES

WUS Exchange Scholarship sApplications for the following exchange scholarshipswill be accepted until Feb. 10, 1965:

1. SPAIN (University of Madrid) .

2. U.S.S.R. (University of Moscow or Leningrad) .

3. JAPAN (University of Keio) .

4. GERMANY (University of Hamburg) .

Application forms and additional information are avail-able in the WUS office, B.E. 257 . Deadline for appli-cations, transcripts, and references is February 10 .

SAL ERUSHANT CAMERA S

4538 W. 10th Ave .

224-5858 : 224-9112

Annual Sale Fehe 6th-20thOn All Equipment and Supplies '

NOTE: Space limits listing all items . Come early to avoi ddisappointment . Sale definitely ends Feb . 20.

Open Fridays till 9 p.m .

NEW 35mm CAMERASReg. Sale

Fujica Auto M Kit

$128 .00 $99.00Exakta VX 11A F/1 .9

195.00Taron C .D.S. W/C

79.00 49.95Kowa H . S.L .R . Auto

89.95Konica EE Auto. W/C

49.95Fujica Auto . Magic W/C

39.95Fujica Drive ½ Frame 79.95 59.95Topcon RE .S .L .R.

299.00Konica F.P. S .L .R .

129.50

USED 35mm CAMERA S

Konica

35.00 19.95Paxette

38 .50 19.95Agfa Silette

29 .50 17.95Retina f3 .5

35.00 22 .5 0Argus C3

15.00 9.50Argus C4

29.50 19.95Kalimar

19.50 10.9 5Argus Auto

39.00 29 .9 5Retina IA

39.50 29.95Walz 35—S

39.95 27.95Regula 35

29.95 17.95Contaflex 1

79.95 59.95Zeiss Colora F

33.95

MISCELLANEOU SLinhof 2 1/4x3 1/4 Roll Back

35.00for 2¼x3¼ Linhof Camer a

Bolex H16 Body only 255 .00 165 .00

NEW LENSE SBiotar f2 .58m m

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80.00 37.50Symmar f5.6 210mm

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240.00 180.00Tessar f2 .8 50mm

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60.00 39.95Polaris Zoom 90—190

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89.5 0135mm F/3.5 Screw Mt .

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139.95 59.95

USED LEICA STEREO OUTFIT $30.00Leica 200mm f .4 .5 Teleyt

85.00Soligar f2 .8 35m m

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126.00Petri Tele & W.A.F/1 .9 set 10.00135mm F/4 Tele Agfa reflex 75 .00100mm F/3 .5 Tel e

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69 .0050mm F/2 Summitar Leica

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NEW MOVIE CAMERAS 'Kodak Auto 8

64.50 34.50Kodak Auto 8 Electric 99 .95 59.95Konica 8 Zoom

129.9 5Bolex P3 Meter &

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399 .00 299 .0 0Sankyo 8 CM Zoom

89 .0 0

USED MOVIE CAMERA SCrown Meter & Case

69 .50Yashica M

15 .0 0Bolex B8 2 lenses

60 .00Keystone K28

20 .00

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39 .50 32.50Kingsway 8 x 30

29.95 17.5 0Telstar 7 x 35

31 .50 17.50

NEW SLIDE PROJECTORS

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89 .95 69 .9 5Pradolux

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USED SLIDE PROJECTORSBell & Howell

42 .50Prado W/C

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FREE PARKING AT REA R

Everything Greatly Reduce d

SAL E

FACULTY DEBATINGResolved that Red is Better

than Blue . Affirmative,Science; negative, Frosh . To-day noon in Bu . 217 .

A student can come downto the station at 2137 Alliso n'Road and claim his bicycle bycorrectly identifying it at th ecampus station .

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

Non-Commercial Classified Ads are payable in Advanc e

Publications Office : Brock Hall .

A Winte r

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by

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Being cleared a t

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Laminates Included

UNITED TAILOR SBRITISH WOOLLEN S

549 Granville MU 1-4649

Open Friday 'til 9

Lost &Found 11 AUTOMOTIVE & MARINE

LOST — Brown wallet Monday 4.30 . Automobiles For Sale

2 1Phone Mike at CA 4-9856 . Rewardoffered .

LOST — on campus! A ladies' redbirthstone ring with white gold a tboth sides . Would finder pleas ephone TR 4-2065 . Reward .

LOST — Pearl & diamond ring inBio Science Bldg. Call BarbaraWA 2-1483 .

FOUND — Ladies ' wedding ring.Initials C . M . C. Near Gym . ApplyPublications office, AMS, BrockHall.

LOST — Light blue ladies' sweater,checker board knitting pattern ,lapels & pockets . Commodore, Jan.22 . Please call Ella-May RE 3-8900 .

Valentine Greetings 1 2TELL HER she 's the sweetest—or

him—in the "classified" way. Spe-cial rate of 50c for Friday, Feb. 12 .

Special Notices .

1 3THERE'S no insulation against th e

SHOCKERS! In one week th eSHOCKERS will strike .

PART-TIME rock n' roll drumme rwants band to play with . PhoneCasey, 261-2167 .

WANTED—Escorts for Lower Mal lDorm Formal . Apply Phyllis Rosslounge—Sunday 2 - 3 :00 . Must beneat !

HILLEL Foundation . Skating party ,Y .N .E . Forum, Sat . Feb. 6th . 9 :30 -11 :30 p .m. Info-Hillel House, CA4-4748 .

Transportation 1 4RIDE wanted from 49th & Arbutus

area for 8 :30's, back at 5 :30. PhoneMarg., AM 6-0468, after 6 :00 p .m .

EMPLOYMENTHelp Wanted

5 1DRUMMER for small R & R group .

Phone John after 6 p .m. AM 1-7510 .

INSTRUCTION — SCHOOL STutoring

64

MISCELLANEOUSFOR SALE

7 1ART BUSINESS, ideal as side line,

for male or female . 1065 E. 17thAve. TR 6-6362 .

RENTALS&REAL ESTATERooms

8 1SLEEPING room for rent. Bedding

included . Ride for 8 :30' s. Fraser &Marine. 325-0824.

1 FURNISHED room. Use of kit-chen facilities, phone & fridge .Preferably male student . PhoneRE 3-3678.

'53 AUSTIN Sommerset on warrantyservice . Record available . PhoneJohn, HE 5-9603 after 6 :00 p .m .

'57 BUICK Standard 8 ; floor shift.What offers? BR. 7-9508 after 4p .m . Brian.