dietrich luth haranguing from his library soapbox the … · luth r 4 london , at hyde donald —if...

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LUTH r 4 LONDON , AT HYD E DONAL D —If UBC's per- soapboxer, Dietrich Were to visit London , where would you expect t o find him ? . Why, at the soapboxer' s Mecca, Hyde Park Corner, o f course. And that's exactly where I found him last Sunday after - noon, energetically hecklin g a veteran Hyde Park orator . "Let me up to speak," crie d Dietrich, persistently . He was granted the rare honor of be- ing allowed to speak to a crowd of about 100 fro m someone else's soapbox . For 15 minutes he spok e about the American Civi l Rights issue and the Vietna m war until he was asked to step down because his views were in conflict with those of th e soapbox owner . "It seems the right to speak depends on the ownership of a box," said Dietrich after- wards. Dietrich has been studying in Hamburg for the past win - ter . He received an M .A . i n anthropology from UBC las t spring . Dietrich came to Londo n for two weeks to study Hyde Park techniques and to visi t the British Museum . He said that he had trie d public speaking in Paris, , bu t with disastrous results . "I had to defend my . views with my fists there," he said . Optimistically, Dietrich hopes to use his Hyde Park (Continued on Page 23 ) SEE : SOAPBOX Dietrich Luth haranguing from his Library soapbo x Imagin e Playboy THE U8YSSEY i n Braill e VANCOUVER, B .C., FRIDAY, MARCH 26, 1965 VOL . XLVII, No . 66 Six men in dor m Leave s cancelle d over ' visit ' An early morning visit t o women's dorms by six UB C men resulted in late-leave can- cellation for 21 co-eds Wednes- day . Thursday, a five-woman dele- gation representing the 21 co - eds met with Assistant Dean o f Women Mrs . E . Morris to pro- test the action . Spokesman for the grou p Donna Morris, Arts IV, said : "We're being punished because we didn't report the boys t o the Don . How could we? We knew the guys and we didn' t want to get them in trouble . "But several other rooms were visited, many other girl s saw or heard the boys or kne w about it the next day and didn' t report it—why shouldn't the y be punished as well? " At 1 :30 a .m . March 16, si x men entered Isabel 1VZclnne s and Ann Wesbrook dorms t o visit approximately 30 girls . It is not known how they go t in . One week later, March 23 , Dean of Women Helen McRa e heard of the visit and cancelle d the late leaves for the 21 girl s for the rest of the term . However, after meeting wit h the girls Thursday Mrs . Morris agreed to reconsider the action . When asked if the ruling wa s fair considering the number o f girls who were involved and the number who were actuall y punished, Mrs . Morris said : "If there were more than 2 1 girls involved, we don't kno w who they are . If they want to come forward we'll discuss th e matter with them . " Donna Morris said they wil l know the Dean's decision in a day or two . DEAN MYERS .. . new president 'Builder dean ' headed bac k to Australi a By LORRAINE SHORE The man who came to . UB C co build the new engineerin g complex is going back to Aus- tralia to build a whole univer- sity . Dean of Applied Science David M . Myers left this wee k for Australia, where he has been named vice-chancellor o f La Trobe University in Mel- bourne . La Trobe is scheduled t o open in 1967, and an enrolment of 10,000 is expected within 1 0 years. Dean Myers, born and edu- cated in Australia, was invited to come to UBC five years ago . He was then dean of Engin- eering and head of the Elec- trical Engineering departmen t at Sydney University . When he arrived at UBC, the chemical engineering buildin g in the new complex at the sout h end of the campus had bee n completed . Later, the electrical engin- (continued on Page 3 ) SEE: MYERS President Macdonald tol d 650 students in Brock hal l Tuesday he objected to th e efforts of some faculty mem- bers to usurp the administra- tive role of the board of gov- ernors and the president . "They wish to administe r but they don't want to be called administrators," s a i d Macdonald . "They spend hundreds o f hours on committee work , which they complain about , and at the same time they sa y they want more voice in their affairs . "The faculty seeks a presi- dent to give them academi c leadership and then they tr y to take that leadership out o f his hands. Revolting faculty member s ;aid Dr . Macdonald's com- ments are off-base . "I don't know who Dr . Mac- donald was referring to . In for power of some facult y members, said one of Macdon- ald's supporters, a high-rank- ing Arts professor. He said some faculty mem- bers want to make their ow n rules and put themselves i n a better position to realiz e their wage demands . The president seems deter - mined to retain the reins o f administrative authority an d is annoyed that some faculty members have gone directl y to the board of governor s about salary demands rather than through him as is cus- tomary, the professor said . this university, people wh o want faculty participation i n administration are prepare d to take on additional responsi- bilities," said a faculty spokes - man. "I think it is especially im- portant that faculty have a sa y in the appointment of a new Arts dean," he said . "Dr . Macdonald accepte d this view in 1963, but no w seems to reject it," said th e faculty spokesman . Dr . John Norris of the His- tory Department had a sor t of compromise view of th e faculty-president relationship . "We don't want the presi- dent to be only a caretaker , but we do want consultation and cooperation with him, " said Dr . Norris . Macdonald had said som e faculty members wanted hi m (Continued on Page 2 ) SEE : BATTLE CA 4491 6 Calenda r on coals agai n Science's anti-calendar is on the coals again . AMS president Byro n Hender received a lette r Tuesday protestin g Science plans to turn completed anti-calendar questionnaires over to in- A dividual professors . The letter was signed Natalie Orwell, but Hen- der said he thought th e name was phony . But Thursday he called new Science presiden t Dave Williams and anti- calendar organizer Deve n Trusell in anyway, t o tell them they had taken the wrong approach in organizing the survey . At the meeting Trussel l assured Hender the sur- vey questionnaires woul d not be turned over to fac- ulty members . (Don York, ex-Scienc e president and anti-cal- endar co-planner, said i n Tuesday's Ubyssey that the completed question- naires would be turned over to each professor .) (Trussell said Thursda y York now says he can' t remember making tha t statement . ) 4 E By MIKE BOLTO N Faculty members are divided into warring camps ove r President John Macdonald's claim Tuesday that professor s want more authority but no responsibility in universit y administration. One group says Macdonald' s words don't apply to UBC an d that faculty should have mor e authority in the administra- tion of the university . The other group say the y agree with Macdonald tha t professors should leave ad- ministration to the presiden t and the board of governor s and concern themselves onl y with academic matters . Spokesmen for both fac- tions asked The Ubyssey not to reveal their names . The battle with the admin- istration involves increase d salary demands and a struggle JBM off base, say profs Faculty feudin g over Mac's blast

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LUTH r 4 LONDON ,AT HYDE

DONAL D—If UBC's per-

soapboxer, DietrichWere to visit London ,

where would you expect t ofind him?. Why, at the soapboxer' s

Mecca, Hyde Park Corner, ofcourse.

And that's exactly where Ifound him last Sunday after-noon, energetically hecklin ga veteran Hyde Park orator .

"Let me up to speak," crie dDietrich, persistently. He wasgranted the rare honor of be-ing allowed to speak to acrowd of about 100 fromsomeone else's soapbox .

For 15 minutes he spokeabout the American Civi lRights issue and the Vietnamwar until he was asked to stepdown because his views were

in conflict with those of thesoapbox owner .

"It seems the right to speakdepends on the ownership ofa box," said Dietrich after-wards.

Dietrich has been studyingin Hamburg for the past win-ter . He received an M .A. inanthropology from UBC lastspring .

Dietrich came to Londonfor two weeks to study HydePark techniques and to visitthe British Museum .

He said that he had triedpublic speaking in Paris, ,bu twith disastrous results .

"I had to defend my. viewswith my fists there," he said .

Optimistically,

Dietrichhopes to use his Hyde Park

(Continued on Page 23)SEE: SOAPBOX Dietrich Luth haranguing from his Library soapbox

Imagine

Playboy THE U8YSSEY i n

Braille

VANCOUVER, B.C., FRIDAY, MARCH 26, 1965VOL. XLVII, No. 66

Six men in dorm

Leavescancelledover 'visit '

An early morning visit towomen's dorms by six UBCmen resulted in late-leave can-cellation for 21 co-eds Wednes-day .

Thursday, a five-woman dele-gation representing the 21 co -eds met with Assistant Dean o fWomen Mrs . E. Morris to pro-test the action .

Spokesman for the grou pDonna Morris, Arts IV, said :"We're being punished becausewe didn't report the boys tothe Don. How could we? Weknew the guys and we didn'twant to get them in trouble .

"But several other roomswere visited, many other girlssaw or heard the boys or kne wabout it the next day and didn'treport it—why shouldn't theybe punished as well?"

At 1 :30 a .m. March 16, si xmen entered Isabel 1VZclnne sand Ann Wesbrook dorms tovisit approximately 30 girls .

It is not known how they go tin .

One week later, March 23 ,Dean of Women Helen McRa eheard of the visit and cancelle dthe late leaves for the 21 girlsfor the rest of the term .

However, after meeting wit hthe girls Thursday Mrs . Morrisagreed to reconsider the action .

When asked if the ruling wa sfair considering the number ofgirls who were involved andthe number who were actuall ypunished, Mrs . Morris said :

"If there were more than 2 1girls involved, we don't knowwho they are . If they want tocome forward we'll discuss th ematter with them . "

Donna Morris said they willknow the Dean's decision in aday or two .

DEAN MYERS. . . new president

'Builder dean'headed backto Australia

By LORRAINE SHOREThe man who came to . UBC

co build the new engineeringcomplex is going back to Aus-tralia to build a whole univer-sity .

Dean of Applied ScienceDavid M. Myers left this weekfor Australia, where he hasbeen named vice-chancellor ofLa Trobe University in Mel-bourne .

La Trobe is scheduled toopen in 1967, and an enrolmentof 10,000 is expected within 1 0years.

Dean Myers, born and edu-cated in Australia, was invitedto come to UBC five years ago.

He was then dean of Engin-eering and head of the Elec-trical Engineering departmen tat Sydney University .

When he arrived at UBC, thechemical engineering buildingin the new complex at the southend of the campus had beencompleted .

Later, the electrical engin-(continued on Page 3 )

SEE: MYERS

President Macdonald tol d650 students in Brock hal lTuesday he objected to theefforts of some faculty mem-bers to usurp the administra-tive role of the board of gov-ernors and the president .

"They wish to administe rbut they don't want to becalled administrators," s a i dMacdonald .

"They spend hundreds ofhours on committee work ,which they complain about ,and at the same time they saythey want more voice in theiraffairs .

"The faculty seeks a presi-dent to give them academi cleadership and then they tryto take that leadership out o fhis hands.

Revolting faculty members;aid Dr. Macdonald's com-ments are off-base .

"I don't know who Dr . Mac-donald was referring to. In

for power of some facultymembers, said one of Macdon-ald's supporters, a high-rank-ing Arts professor.

He said some faculty mem-bers want to make their ownrules and put themselves ina better position to realizetheir wage demands .

The president seems deter-mined to retain the reins ofadministrative authority andis annoyed that some facultymembers have gone directlyto the board of governorsabout salary demands ratherthan through him as is cus-tomary, the professor said .

this university, people wh owant faculty participation inadministration are preparedto take on additional responsi-bilities," said a faculty spokes -man.

"I think it is especially im-portant that faculty have a sa yin the appointment of a newArts dean," he said .

"Dr . Macdonald acceptedthis view in 1963, but nowseems to reject it," said th efaculty spokesman .

Dr. John Norris of the His-tory Department had a sortof compromise view of thefaculty-president relationship .

"We don't want the presi-dent to be only a caretaker ,but we do want consultationand cooperation with him, "said Dr . Norris .

Macdonald had said somefaculty members wanted him

(Continued on Page 2)SEE: BATTLE

CA 44916

Calendaron coals— again

Science's anti-calendaris on the coals again .

AMS president ByronHender received a lette rTuesday protestin gScience plans to turncompleted anti-calendarquestionnaires over to in- Adividual professors .

The letter was signedNatalie Orwell, but Hen-der said he thought th ename was phony.

But Thursday he callednew Science presiden tDave Williams and anti-calendar organizer Deve nTrusell in anyway, totell them they had takenthe wrong approach inorganizing the survey.

At the meeting Trussellassured Hender the sur-vey questionnaires woul dnot be turned over to fac-ulty members .

(Don York, ex-Sciencepresident and anti-cal-endar co-planner, said inTuesday's Ubyssey thatthe completed question-naires would be turnedover to each professor.)

(Trussell said ThursdayYork now says he can' tremember making thatstatement . )

4 E

By MIKE BOLTONFaculty members are divided into warring camps ove r

President John Macdonald's claim Tuesday that professor swant more authority but no responsibility in universityadministration.

One group says Macdonald'swords don't apply to UBC andthat faculty should have mor eauthority in the administra-tion of the university .

The other group say the yagree with Macdonald thatprofessors should leave ad-ministration to the presiden tand the board of governorsand concern themselves onl ywith academic matters .

Spokesmen for both fac-tions asked The Ubyssey notto reveal their names .

The battle with the admin-istration involves increase dsalary demands and a struggle

JBM off base, say profs

Faculty feudingover Mac's blast

50,000 milesworthPage 2

THE UBYSSEY

Fridax, March 26, 1965

BATTLE(Continued from Page 1 )

to .be no more than a care-taker .

Another faculty memberchastised Macdonald's unwill-ingness to delegate authorit yto faculty despite the growingcomplexity of university ad-ministration .

"President Macdonald seem sunwilling to distribute author-ity in a democratic manner,"the spokesman said .

He also said the president' sassertion that faculty are un-

"Faculty is unusually dedi-cated and loyal at UBC',, h esaid .

The other group of facult ymembers fully supports thepresident's stand .

One said faculty membersrejecting Macdonald's view ar eacting selfishly .

"Those opposing the presi-dent are largely young men a twhom UBC means nothing.They are primarily interestedin salary," he said .

"They should not be givenadministrative authority untilthey have been here a long timeand are mellow . "

"I will have no part in anymovement against the presi-dent and I think these othe rfaculty members should ceasebeing so damned selfish . "

He said the president ha sfull authority to choose theArts dean under the Universit yAct .

pretty good."In Mexico, most of the bus

drivers pick up hitch-hikers.But that can be scary. Theystart passing on blind cornerswhere there is a 1,000-footcliff and no guard rail . "

"But East Germany is th eworst of all, although mytrouble there wasn ' t only fromhitch-hiking. I spent one nightin jail for smuggling and laterfound out I could have goteight years . "

* * *Horne has some points fo r

other UBC students who wan tto try hitch-hiking .

"Always travel alone i fyou're male. I once had to wait17 hours because I was travel-ling with another person.

"But if you're a girl, alway sgo with someone else .

"Avoid travelling at nightin California. You'll find noth-ing but drunks and hoodlums . "

SUPA to sitdownon disarmament

The Student Union for Peac e

Action will stage a civil diso-bedience sitdown strike at the

Comox RCAF base in June .SUPA chairman Denis New-

man, Arts I, said the sitdownis part of a SUPA educationand research project to studydisarmament

• Eyes Examined

• Contact Lenses Fitted

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Uptown office :1522 West Broadway

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Kerrisdale office :2263 W. 41st Ave.

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wn?$5 a day covers hotel,t reak-

fast and sightseeing: _tilt_Lail

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Open Saturday 9 ,- 5

Hiker Horne hastips for hitchers

A UBC student who has hitch-hiked 50,000 miles on twocontinents in the last four years has some advice for other

foot-loose students."Just do it," said fourth year

education student Ed Horne .Horne, 21, who has hitch -

hiked in both Europe andNorth America, will be off onhis seventh trip to Mexico dur-ing final exams .

He started hitch-hiking inhis first year at UBC.

"I knew some girls fromAcadia camp who were goin gto hitch-hike to Las Vegas . Itried to talk them out of it,but ended up going myself,"Horne said .

* * *

Horne's first trip to Mexico

willing to accept the respon- was done in the week between

sibility that should accompany his last two exams in first year.

administrative authority was

Horne said people who pick

not relevant to UBC faculty .

up hitch-hikers are usually

TO MY ADVERTISERS

It is with great pleasure that I take this oppor-

tunity to thank the following Ubyssey advertiser s

for their continued support over the past academi c

year :

WILLIAM BIERAdvertising Sales Representative

Alexander & Axelson Appliances Ltd . 4558 W. 10th Ave .The Argyle Shop 2174 W. 41st Ave .

Arnolds Pawn Shop 986 Granville St .

Budget Rent-A-Car 1021 W. Georgia St .

Clinton's Men's Wear 742 Granville St.

Dean's Restaurant 4544 W . 10th Ave.

House of Stein Ltd 1005 Granville St.

Jack Elson Ltd . 545 Granville St.

Kerrisdale Cameras__ . . 2170 W. 41st Ave.

The Lion's Den . 771 Granville St .

McCuish Formal Wear Ltd 2046 W. 41st Ave .

Murray Goldman 774 Granville St .

Richards and Farish Ltd . 786 Granville St .

U .B .C. Thunderbird Winter Sports Centre . Campus .

United Tailors 549 Granville St .

University Pharmacy 5754 University Blvd .

Vancouver Airport Inn.Varsity Theatre 4375 W. 10th Ave .

Western Sporting Goods 10th and Alma .

ENTER THE biq Gillette HEADS UP CONTEST TOdAy!

Here's your chance to win a groovy little Honda 50! All you have to do is dream u pnames for the 'HEADS UP BOYS' you've seen on Gillette's TV commercials . Nameslike Sloppy and Smoothy . . . go ahead—you can do better! Get in on the actio n—win a bright red Honda 50 . . . and meet the nicest people! Pick up Entry Formswherever HEADS UP is sold or at many Honda dealers . And remember . . .

HEADS UP isthe new, clean kind of hair dressing that keeps your hair naturally neatand handsome . . . shampoo-clean . Try HEADS UPtoday . . . you could win a Honda !See the 'HEADS UP BOYS' during these popular TV shows : Danger Man—Mr . Novak —McHale's Navy—La famille Stone—L'heure des quilles . Check your local listing for time sand channels .

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Friday, March 26, 1965

THE UBYSSEY

Page 3

H• TLKhouryDear Dr . John Macdonald :

w I've never met you in per -son and may never get thatopportunity ; that's why I feltI'd write this open letter t otell you about my first yearat UBC .

What I have to say abou tmy frosh career will b eawfully dull to you, sir ,since with 15,000 studentsyou've probably met all th edifferent kinds . But, now tha tthe year is almost over, per-haps you won't be too busy toread my letter .

You know, sir, I'll neverget over how much freedom Ihad this year . Boy! An inno-cent, fresh kid straight out ofhigh school could smoke ,drink, talk about sex and saywords like Goddam, and no-body would notice, since ev-eryone was doing the same .

I met so many beautifu lgirls on campus that I neverdid too much studying . Imean, sir, how can a healthy ,normal, red-blooded Canadianboy sit surrounded by gorge-ous coeds and concentrate onhis work?

Then there were those filmsby Larry Kent . I saw SweetSubstitute five times and TheBitter Ash twice until I lostmy job as usher in thetheater .

I heard so much about TheUbyssey that I joined its staffso I could go to their wildparties . But, you know sir ,they're just a bunch of hard-working students who use sexto get what they want .

They wanted me to workforty hours a week as a jani-tor, but I said no and they al llaughed .

The .biggest shock I ha dsir, was on the Christmas ex-ams. Boy, sir, did my stud yhabits show their results! M ycounsellor told me I was justpassing through a phase an ddidn't have to worry aboutmy low grades, so I stoppedworrying .

I can't help chuckling whenI think of the first time I sawan engineer's stunt . Thosekids in red sweaters took 1 0boys and dumped them all inthe library pool . I laughed soloud an engineer heard meand decided to put me in thewater, too. I never laughed a tthem after that .

Really sir, I've got to han dit to you for giving so man yCanadians the chance tobroaden their minds at UBC .Before I came here, I was likeany other sixteen-year-old :narrow minded, gullible, in -experienced, inhibited .

Now look at me, sir . I'velost all my inhibitions and alot of money too. I smoke,drink like a fish and swimlike a fish (thanks to the en-gineers).

I'm experienced and nolonger a sweet, gullible sap .

You couldn't get me to be-lieve anything now—even i fit were true .

I'll always remember myfrosh year at UBC and willoften think of you while I' mat Simon Fraser Academynext year .

EXAMS? DID somebody say exams? Somebody did . It ' sthat time again: the sun is shining, the birds are singing,

the saps are stirring and we're studying, like this prett yco-ed .

Yours truly,

cognition. A great guy," saidAll Frosh Whitelaw .

(continued from page 1 )

eering building was construct-ed, and more buildings ar eexpected to be built in thecomplex .

Dean Myers is a member ofthe council of the Associatio nof Professional Engineers .

He took an active part in theestablishment of t h e Britis hColumbia Institute of Techno-logy, which opened in Septem-ber, 1964 .

Dean Myers was appointe dto the National Research Coun-cil of Canada. The appointmen twas due to take effect on Apri l1, but Dean Myers will not beable to accept the position now .

"The dean was the kind ofperson who was noted for hisinterest in people," said headof the electrical engineeringdepartment Dr . Frank Noakes.

Engineering Undergraduat epresident Steve Whitelaw ex-pressed the feelings of the stu-dents .

"He was the kind of personwho always went to bat for us,but he never told us about it .

"Dean Myers would receiv eabout 10 complaints ever yweek about our stunts, but h enever objected . He just calmedthe people down, and we neverknew until someone else toldus .

"As for student relations ,you couldn't ask for a .betterman," Whitelaw said .

"He helped a lot of students ,but he never reseived any re-

Visitorsout-ruggered

UBC T-Birds flashed theirmid-season form Thursdayin trouncing UCLA Bruin s31-17 in an exciting rugbygame - at Varsity Stadium .

Thunderbirds trailed 14-1 3after a free-scoring firs thalf, in which they showedgood offence but poor de -fence .

In the second half, 'Birdsswarmed all over the Bruins ,and didn't give them achance to get any playsstarted. Place-kicker Mik eCartmel led UBC with 1 3points .

MYERS

New housingpopular

Sixty-three per cent of re-spondents to the AMS's UB Cmarried students survey wil lapply for new married accom-odation on campus if it is avail-able .

Approximately 1,300 o fUBC's 2,300 married studentscompleted questionnaires mail-ed in December . Survey resultswere released Thursday .

Students who would applyfor accomodation said the max-imum allowable rents would be$80 per month for one-bedroomsuite, $85 for two bedrooms ,and $110 for three .

Nearly 70 per cent of mar-ried students living off campu spay less than $100 per monthfor accomodation, includin gheat and electricity, the surveyrevealed .

Only 33 per cent of the stu-

dents said they applied for ex-isting campus housing .

Two members of UBC 's administrationcareful Tuesday to evade the question o fterm.

During the question perio dfollowing the discussion onacademic goals, president JohnMacdonald was asked by TheUbyssey if fees would be raise din September .

Macdonald said: "That wil lhave to be decided by theBoard of Governors . "

The Ubyssey then asked pan-elist D. F. Miller, a memberof the board, if there would bea fee raise .

"It will depend on how muchmoney the government give sthe university," said Miller .

Asked how much mone ywould be required from thegovernment to forestall a fe eraise, Miller said that questionwould have to be answered byDr. Macdonald .

To the 650 students presen tDr. Macdonald said : "No com-ment . "

Panel jugglesfee hike queries

Slacks Narrowe dSuits Altere dand Repaire d

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UNITED TAILOR S549 Granville St .

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were extremel ya fee raise next

Off-Campus Housing List sThe Alma Mater Society is again providing a listing

service for off campus student accommodation for th e

1965-66 Winter Season . Housing lists will be. published

from July to September and will be available to the

students by mail or at the Alma Mater Society office .

The Royal Canadian Air Force has many attractiv ecareer opportunities for graduates f*om all faculties .Consider an Air Force Career in a technical personnelor administrative branch or if you are under 25 yearsof age you may apply for Aircrew Training. TheRCAF is Canada's biggest aviation business . A gradu -ate starts at a jr . executive level (Flying Officer) an da planned career provides for advancement in rankand in responsibility. Your inquiries. will be most

welcome at the

RCAF RECRUITING UNIT

545 Seymour Street

Vancouver 2, B.C.

Telephone: 684-7577

Is A FrozenRussian Corpse

Circling The Earth?Two Italian brothers antitheir sister, who is fluent inRussian, have radio tapes in-dicating that more than oneSoviet astronaut has died alonely death, victimized byfaulty speeded-up apacetechnology! Read in Apri lReader's Digest this fascinat-ing story—"Italy's Amazin gAmateur Space Watchers",on sale at all newsstands.

(In lieu of year-end Cartoon )

Dear Mike ,About that year-end cartoon ,

Mike . . .well , you know I've made ti e

deadline every day (almost), n o

matter what the rest of those idiot s

did, and you knot I've always worke d

hard and silently, but Mille old man

I couldn't make it today . . .And I'm

sorry di.ke, I really am, because

Mike, old scout old buddy old head ,

I wanted to get the last word in t o

all of those bumblers and boggler s

who gave you all your copy this year-

like Round Roger and Wordy Wralph

Daly and Burbling Byron Blunder, wh o

you didn't have to contend with mtnah ,

like, oh, Bob Crooz and Hustlin '

Hardial Bains and Da Preem and Mike

Coleman, the Studemt Prince and Bar -

foot, and, now that we're through, I

T can say it Mike, all the hum-

biers, Mike----even you o(Pfsvva

,J6(aD Y Nt MOE . . .

2HZ UBYSSZYPublished 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 AM Sor the University . Editorial office, CA 4-3916. Advertising office, CA 4-3242 ,Loc . 26. Member Canadian University Press . Founding member, Pacifi cStudent Press. Authorized as second-class mail by Post Office Department ,Ottawa, and for payment of postage in cash .

Winner Canadian University Press trophies for genera lexcellence and news photography.

FRIDAY, MARCH 26, 196 5

A last gaspVolume 47 . Number 66 .

That really doesn't mean much to the thousands ofpeople who have picked up The Ubyssey three timesa week over the last year .

But it means a lot to us.It means an end to a lot of learning, laughs, friend-

ships and inky problems .

It means The Ubyssey has survived 47 years of

administrations, student councils and pressure group swith more editorial freedom than most college paper scould hope for .

And, it tells us that many of Canada's greats andnear-greats in almost every profession have occupied aniche in our incredibly cluttered and battered NorthBrock basement .

It might mean more to you if we pointed out thatthis year 800 pages, 60 tons of newsprint and 1 .5 millionwords have passed through the hands and minds o fUBC's academic community.

That represents a lot of hours put in by a staff whic hgets paid nothing and bends its class schedules inridiculous maneouvres to get a few hours free to workon the paper .

Their motives aren't particularly altruistic or publi cspirited .

They get caught, and once trapped in an crazy out-.fit that pokes its nose into everyone else's business ,learn a great deal about UBC, and its denizens — andjournalism.

All of which is blended with a touch of public -spiritedness, a few parties and the odd summer jobopportunity.

And while the staff works the editor wonders whyanyone would put up with his procrastination, rash de-cisions, fuzzy idealism and bubbling pessimism .

So the year ends, too quickly, with dozens of untol dstories screaming for attention .

The staff has done a good job—the trophies attest tothat.

And a new man named Thomas Wayman, withfresh ideas and a funny beard, steps into the editor' soffice .

A 1964-65 vintage editor looks at this callow youthand complains he shouldn ' t sing refrains of "Let Hearstput you in the editor's chair," or at least not so loudly .

The day has come. March 26, 1965 . It's all over.That 1964-65 vintage editor retires to the ranks o f

his nit-picking predecessors and leaves a few words ofwisdom.

They're old, and cliched to boot, because he's adone man .

"Tuum est," he says, weakly pointing his finger.And, non illegitimus carborundum, Tom .

broken. sip?

',r

W. A.''Mr.4MEM

Pray for rain!Things have reached an

ironic limit when we are re-duced to asking for rain . But24 days of constant sunshineare fatal to studying.

If we don't get back to theusual dismal U B C studyweather, we won't be able topass water much less our finalexams.

UBC students are complete-ly vulnerable to sunshine—it occurs so rarely in Marchthat we feel we must takeadvantage of it .

Look for yourselves .The library lawn is cram-

med with sprawling bodies—and they are not studying .

Raincoats and umbrellashave been replaced by sweat-ers and iee cream cones .

Who can turn to philosophyor physics when the trail tothe beach has come out fromunder the puddles, or whenthe fish have come back t othe pools of the Japanes egardens ?

And so noon grows intothree - hour excursions with1 :30 classes almost deserted .

And in our naive enjoy-ment of the glorious weather ,we forget an important fact :

While we are strollingaround the campus, those finalexams are galloping toward sus .

Please, let us have a littl erain !

Maybe this will get us off

the grass and into the nicedry library .

Not only is the sunshinehard on studying, but it's alsobloody hard on column writ-ing, which is why we endhere with the suggestion thatif we don't get the rain weshould campaign for a littlenotation on our mark sheets :

RECORD SUNSHINE INMARCH. ADD 10 PER CENTTO EACH GRADE.

INSWUMIOMSBOYSIMMIMMOMelIBIMBISOMSM

EDITOR : Mike HerseyNews _ ___— Tim PadmorsClty Tom Wayma nArt ____ . ... ... .....—Don HumeManaging __Janet Matheso nSports George ReamsbottomAsst. City _y_ _ Lorraine ShoreAsst. News __Carole MunroeAsst. Managing Norm . Bett sPage Friday Dave AblettAssociate —_ Ron Biterassociate _ _— Mike Hunte r

Another year, another Southam-lotsa fun and lotsa work . This is thelast paper for this year, people, butthere ' s always the banquet—so comeone and all. Those who toiledthroughout the year are : RobbiWest, Carol-Anne Baker, CoralSmith, Mike Bolton, Lorne Mallin ,Rick Blair, Gordon McLaughlin, ArtCasperson, Al Birnie, Don Hull, Pau lTerry, Massimo Verdicchio, Sand yStephenson, Steve Brown, BobWieser, Doug Halverson, Elizabet hField,. Lynn Curtis, Tim Roberts,Bob Banno, Brian Staples, Pau lWood, Mona Helcermanas, Bert Mc -Kinnon, John Dilday, Brent Cromie,Jack McQuarrie, Ed Clark, Harol dMcAllister, . Joan Godsell, Art Neu-mann, Sharon Rodney, Shari Galen ,John Tyrrell, Don Kydd, DerrekWebb, Fred Ogden, Boyd Brown ,Dave Henderson, Al Donald an dDanny Stoffman . And don't forgetthe great Keith Bradbury, who gav eus his wisdom but probably won' tbe around to play father next year.Thank you, and hope to see you nextyear.

WAYMAN'S'GREATREPLY'Editor, The Ubyssey :

Since I am in the middleof an intensive soul-searchin gsession while awaiting theapproaching awesome d a ywhen t h e inky reins o fUbyssey power are' thrustjerkily into my rather dirtyhands, let me express myprofound appreciation fo ryour editorial in Tuesday' spaper .

But your rundown of theterrors ahead : bleary-eyed ,sandwich - munching forme reditors, glaring 96-point er-rors and completely misse d8-point revelations, do notstartle me .

For after a year as yourCity Editor, the foibles andquirks of the Great ReadingPublic have been broughthome to me with a ven-geance .

* * *A few excerpts from a pro-

posed Dictionary for DubiousDeskmen should illustrate .This handy-dandy g u i d ewould give definitions of var-ious news terms as said o rscreamed by the subjectswritten about :

"A slanted news story" —one which tells the point aspeaker made — clearly, con-cisely — but which doesn' tgive the point he thought hewas making, or wanted tomake, or should have made .

"A fair and impartial newsstory" — one which tells thepoint a speaker made—clear-ly, concisely — and whichhappens to give the point hethought he was making .

"Misquote" — what theauthor said, b u t lookingfrightfully emphatic starin gat him in cold, cold blackand white type the next day .

* * *"A gross violation of the

ethics of journalism" — anarticle or story which make sa point unfavorable to thespeaker.

"A credit to the fine idealsof the fourth estate" — anarticle or story which makesa point favorable to thespeaker.

"Quoted out of context" —passage in question was re-printed without either thetedious and waffling preceed-ing remarks, or the piles ofverbiage afterwards thespeaker hoped would com-pletely hide a n y positivepoint he was somehow force dinto making. (Like that . )

* * *Well, enough. Of course

The Ubyssey also uses term swhich have more behindthem than meets the eye :

"Doubtful sources amongt h e faculty" — news tip sfrom professors who cate-gorically refuse to pass us,but like to stir up a littlehell .

"An administration spokes-man" — Director of Inform-ation Services Ralph Daly .

"A faculty spokesman" —any professor.

And so on and on and on ,more than 70 issues worth .

Thanks again.

TOM WAYMAN

Suss- . . .

LRNE MALLI NSlung people . This is my

Iasi- "Wry-Line" for TheJnyssey .

Hein year "Wry-Lines"will come to you courtesy ofThe Tartan, the rag fro mSimon Fraser U, where Ihope to be editor .

Carole Munroe Bob Howard

Oh, for some rain

a

Uncalled for, un-wanted and mostl yunfair, the followingtwo columns contai na whimsical revie wof the past seven day sat UBC .

2COLUMN S

this

week

has

INSIDE STORIES : Thi swas the week that TheUbyssey packed it up foranother year, and the fol-lowing were the storie sthat never broke in tim eto print . But don't say w edidn't warn you they wer eabout to happen .

• The big hush-hush

deal that is to net the

AMS $250,000 for the SU B

will turn out to be a rent -

al arrangement with th e

Bank of Montreal for

space in the building .

• Plans for a new UB Cstadium near the Winte rSports Arena will be an-nounced. Cost: about $1million, with much of themoney going to make thebog-like land suitable tohold a stadium .

• The faculty-adminis-

tration rift will get more

bitter and come out into

the open .

• And UBC will half-heartedly get involve dwith athletic scholarshipsby announcing a new bur-sary program designedpartly to entice buddin gathletes away from youknow where .

• • •

INSIDER YET: A per-sistent rumor says theprice of campus coffeewill jump to 15 cents nex tfall .

INCOMPETENT : P o s t-ers blossomed all overcampus this week adver-tising the Tuesday Broc kmeeting featuring "presi-dent John MacDonald (a sin capital D .) Now, chil-dren, our first academic.goal will be to learn howto spell .

• • . •

SIGN OF THE TIMES :

Information pamphlet s

about_ Enovid E (that's th e

pill) turned up in mail -boxes in the female sec-tions of the Totem Par kresidences this week . It' sprobably significant t h a tthe booklets were given t oonly about half the wom-

en .• • •

INEBRIATED : Studentcouncil members heldtheir annual year end bashat the Lady Alex lastweek end with a grand to-tal of 24 bottles and 1 ½cases of cider . Well, it wasa rough year .

• • •INTRIGUE : AMS busi-

iness manager Ron Pear-son received a sizzling let-ter from his counterpar tat the U of T this weekdemanding the return ofa big, expensive bras snameplate saying "The

Varsity" stolen from thei rnewspaper's office lastAugust .

It was a bit too late .

The sign, which wa s

deftly liberated by a Ubys-

sey chap dressed as a

painter when he was bac k

there last year, was swiped

from The Ubyssey offic e

this week by Victoria Col-

lege newspaper types .

• • •

IN UTTER CONTEMPT :Play parliamentarians a tUBC's p 1 a y parliamentsettled for using an um-brella topped with a bal lof tinfoil as a play macelast Friday night after themace was stolen fourtimes earlier in the day byEngineers and others .

Then, engineering pres -

ident Art Stevenso .

dressed in a suit, walke d

in and helped himself to

the mace for a fifth tim e

without anyone recogniz-

ing him .

Play parliament woun dup using another old um-brella as the mace—with-out even any tinfoil thi stime .

• • •

I N TEENLAND: T h etap has been turned offf o r underage drinkers —UBC's most persecute dminority — because liquo rinspectors have put thepressure on all booze out -lets . Targets of the crack -

down, beer waiters andgov't dairy clerks, are re -fusing to serve the C-FU Nset by the droves .

. . •

IN THE THEATAH :Filmsoc gave its annua lP o e t Laureate award toA M S business manage rRon Pearson for whatthey described as melli-fluous phrasing in theiryear end internal audit .Mellifluous, for the bene-f i t of you phillistines ,means flowing sweetl yand smoothly. Really .

• • •

IN THE NAME GAME :McA'tee again . Who else ?

MORE THEATAH: Whosaid UBC's Theatre schoolwas being run by profes-sionals, for professionalsand not giving= student smuch of theatrical experi-ence? Larry Kent and EricGreen in articles in PFlast fall, that's who . Theschool has moved to recti-fy the situation by settin gup a summer stock com-pany with a departmentgrant which will see stu-dents doing everythin gfrom directing to acting t oselling the tickets .

THE UBYSSUY

Page Frida y

D & D: a triple view p . 2, 3plus: roll out the rowers p .7

pf

MARCH 26, 1965

ON THE COVER: A bit of o part designed to drive your eyesaround to your oars. Fine Art sGallery curator Alvin Balkindsays he's got a show of th estuff coming to UBC next fall .This an unidentified bit we gotsomewhere. Photo by Georg eTaylor.

Editor : DAVE ABLETT

Criticism John Kelsey

Books, Movies __Graham Olney

Artwork : Jeff Wall, Gerry Ehman,

Al Hunte r

So it's the end of ayear of Page Fridays.We've had some awful

lemons . And we've hadsome tremendous goofs .But there's been real ,great stuff too. And so .

Lead off this week ,with a discussion of theDiscipline an d Discov-ery report — that's th eone about throwing outArts as it is, and subbinga whole new concept o fa B.A. Bob Peyton start swith a student's point o fview. Then Dean Mc-Henry, new chancello rof the soon-to-be Sant aCruz University, give shis ideas — remarkablylike D and D. Dr. Bar-nett Savery, head o fUBC's philosophy de-partment, finishes with ap r a c t ical philosopher ' sopinion. Pages 2 and 3 .

Page 4, and overseasto Africa. And Page 5 ,Mark Markin, RussianWUS scholar, tells abou this views of Canada .

There's Jeff Wall's ex-periences with the row-ing team, and his idea o fwhy people row. He'sour cartoonist, and therower's coxswain . Page7 .

Further back, we'vegot jazz; Lance Harris-on's dixieland, and TonyChan's Crow Jim or JimCrow in Jazz . You'l lhave to read it to findout what Crow is . Page8 .

There's m or e there .Pique on page 10, JulianBream on page 9, yo ulook for it .

That's it . Glad youcould come .

ARGUMENT

A student who suspects h eshould approve the D and Dprogram doesn't — becaus ehe thinks it will turn thelower years into a BA mill

— don hume photo

What's the BA worth ?

PF Two

By BOB PEYTON

THE editorial in T h eUbyssey Extra (Marc h

10) stated that "the com-mittee is concerned with anideal — that every studentshould have contact with as

broad an area of knowledgeas possible" and suggestedthat many, if not most, stu-dents would concur wit hthe D and D proposals. Thefaculty, said The Ubyssey ,may be unwilling to accep tthe suggestions of their col-

leagues .• • •

As a student, I expect thatmy support of such a repor twould be considered as aut-omatic — that agreement ,however, is not entirelyforthcoming .

In their initial statement

of beliefs, the authors of D

and D offered two require -

ments which they consider-

ed essential if the BA is to

be of any value — the "mas-

tery of some sphere o f

knowledge" and "an aware-

ness of other areas of

thought and activity" .

All of those who considerthe BA as a worthwhile ex-penditure of four years ofstudy and effort must agreewith this contention .

The problem thus arisingis a simple one : what amend-ments to our present meth-ods are required to provid ethe desired goal of a value ddegree? I believe the D an dD report supplies only partof the answer.

• • •

The commissioners' basic

contention is that, at the

present time, the specific

courses offered by depart-

ments in their own disci-

pline do not best serve the

interests of general educa-

tion. They express the point

of view that a student fails

to be exposed to major

areas of knowledge under

the present system.

The substituted s y s t e mwould provide seminars inthree general fields — Manand Society, Man a n dThought, and Man and Ex-pression . The amendmentswould substitute genera lstudies for the discipline dapproach now being put for -ward for first year Arts Stu -dents .

• • •

The commissioners fur-ther state that it is valuableto avoid premature special-ization a n d commitmentand, in effect, the first yea rstudent has not the abilityto make a decision on hisacademic future so early i nhis university life .

The authors express theattitude that a general edu-cation program for firstyear is essential . Then, for

second year the followingassertion is made : "A stu-dent whose studies are 'root-ed' in a discipline will havea deeper understanding ofthe processes by whichknowledge has been advanc-ed and a more liberatin geducation than the studen twho is only a 'generalist" .

• • •

It is expected, therefore ,

that a student will, during

the four month interval, be-

tween first and second year ,

make the transition from a

"generalist" as outlined per-

fectly through the three-

phase seminar system to a

student rooted in a specifi c

discipline (History for ex-

ample) .

The student is expected ,through adroit participationin these seminars, to devel-op "personal relationships "with their faculty members .The faculty member is ex-pected to have such an in-timate knowledge of hi swards that when the decis-ion is to be made regard-ing a discipline selection, hewill be in a position to pro-vide an expert opinion .

The anticipated size of

the frosh class of that yearis 2,200 .

• • •

How can the limited num-

ber of faculty members be

expected to either mak e

such a decision, or to ac-

cept the inevitable full re-

sponsibility for it?

Finally, after eliminationof the language, science andother requirements, come sthe ultimate rejection—thatof exams. As the commis-sioners explain "we believethat every student should

THE WRITER

Robert D . Peyton, 24, isa former Special Assistantto Northern Affairs Minis-ter Art Laing. After termin-ating his employment with

Mr. Laing,he returnedto UBC andis now com-pleting h i sinal year

for a BA inPolitical Sci -ence and His -tory. Peyton

has served many positionsin the Brock bureaucrac yand is immediate past pres-ident of the Canadian Uni-versity Liberal Federation .

After Peyton finishes hisBA, under the old system,he hopes to continue in apolitical career — probablyin the Liberal camp.

be allowed to pass despitehis marks from the first tosecond year . . ." on thecondition that he have sat-isfactory lecture attendancerecords, and that he hassubmitted all written assign-ments (regardless of marks ,apparently) .

• • •The student therefore

having completed no sci-

ence requirement, no lan-

guage requirement and hav-

ing written no examinations ,

advances to second year .

The commissioners recom-

mend that for second year ,

again, no specialization

should be considered but

rather he should be intro-

duced to several disciplines .

I suspect that the effect

of such a program woul d

be to create what the Am-

erican Department of

Health, Education and Wel-

fare classifies as a "BA

mill", at least for the first

two years .

• • •

The elimination of exam-

inations and other items at

present used to eject unsuit-

able BA candidates, allow s

all students with minimu m

entrance requirements to

secure two years of univers-

ity education without once

being subjected to the pros-

pect of removal . The mere

completion of class essays

and lecture attendance auto-

matically — under the pro-

posed system — promotes

a student through one halfof a University education .

I cannot offer my sup-port to such a proposal, norI imagine could any stu-dent wishing to maintain ahigh standard for the B .A .

• • •

It appears to me that the

commissioners have failed

to accept the fact that a B A

can, in fact, be an end t o

itself . All students register-

ed in Arts I do not intend

to proceed towards a Doc-

torate or a post-graduate de-

gree. It is still a fact of life

that business, education an d

Industry require m i d d l e

management administrators

as well as doctors .

The proposals made for

the third and fourth year s

are basically sound, and for

them the D and D authors

deserve commendation . I

would hope that their pro-

posals would be given some

consideration in conjunc-

tion with an amendment of

our present system for the

first two years .

• • •

I don't believe, however ,

that the proposals made for

the primary BA years can

be accepted without lower-

ing the present standard .

Amendment of the entire

program as constituted to-

day would be valuable, but

certainly not under the sys-

tem proposed by the Disci-

pline and Discovery Report .

r

A chancellor looks to th eday when his big campus willappear small and the student,not the administrator, willbe the one who counts most

By DEAN E. McHENRY

THE regent, in effect, toldme to build a multipur-

pose university campus cap-able ultimately of accommo-dating 27,500 students .

It was understood, how-ever, that a chancellor o ra campus cannot be an is-land. Neither is free towrite the final formula ona blank slate .

The University of Cali-fornia, Santa Cruz, belongsto the people of California ,whose state constitution laysdown some basic rules .

• • •The limits on authority do

not seem unduly restrictive .The constitution of Cali-fornia makes the universitya public trust and grants itconsiderable independence .

Early in Santa Cruz cam -pus planning, it was sug-gested the goal be to so or-ganize the campus that itwill seem small as it growslarge.

Plan something different ,diversity considered. T h esearch for an effective re-sponse to that challenge hasled us to re-examine critic -ally many of the practicesof large universities and ofsmall colleges.

THE WRITER

The Santa Crux campu sof University of Californi ais seeking to achieve object-ives that run remarkablyparallel to those of the UBCDiscipline a n d DiscoveryReport .

Dean E. McHenry, chan-cellor of the new campus,discusses the objectives inthis article, excerpted fromCollege and University Bus-iness.

The article was the basisof a talk given by the Chan-cellor at a Vancouver Insti-tute meeting at UBC earl-ier this term .

The small independentliberal arts college is on e

of the most distinctive con-tributions our country hasmade to higher education .

The large American uni-versity also makes a greatcontribution to under-gradu-ate education, but there is atendency in many to com-mit proportionately m o r efaculty time and give more

credit for research andgraduate instruction thanfor undergraduate teaching .

Yet the universities ofte n

have library, laboratory and

cultural facilities that few ,

if any, small colleges could

match.There have been a few at -

tempts to combine the ad-vantages of the small col-lege with those of the larg euniversity .

From the late Beardle y

Ruml and the late DonaldMorrison I learned to kee p

my eye on course prolifera-tion, too-frequent course of-

fering, and the inefficienc y

of the small lecture class .

Doing something a b o u tthese admitted evils in a nestablished institution i slike trying to move a ceme-tery. But in a new institu-tion I anticipate at least ashort honeymoon in whic hthe needs of students wil lpredominate .

• • •

We hope to organize ins-truction in such a way thatthe advantages of a smallcollege — close instruction ,sense of belonging, residen-tial setting — are combinedwith those of a large uni-versity — great scholars ,excellent libraries and lab-oratories, and superior cul-tural events .

We hope in this way to

help bridge the gap between

the curricular and the non -

curricular, and fill in the

chasm that so often yawns

between students and fac -

ulty .We plan to teach largely

in a series of liberal arts col-leges that will averageabout 600 students (samesize as colleges of Univers-ity of Kent at Canterbury) ,most of whom will "live in . "

• • •

By combining living and

learning, we expect to reach

the whole student and t o

augment educational effect-

iveness . Preliminary cos t

studies indicate that we canoperate on the residentia l

college basis at a cost no

greater than on the conven-

tional .

The undergraduate resi-dential colleges, numbering15 to 20, will be the prin-cipal instruments for fusinglearning and living .

Most courses probablywill be either very large orquite small in enrolment .Large lectures will be givento save staff time for manysmall seminars . My goal i sto have half of a typica lstudent's course work donein classes of 15 students o rfewer .

• • •

The academic p r o g r a mwill be heavy, the hourslong. A determined effor twill be made to reach the"whole" individual, and tooccupy his entire attentio nduring the academic week .

We will begin by stress-ing high-quality usdergrad-uate education. After wehave learned to walk, w ewill run to graduate andprofessional work as theneeds of the state requir eit and when we can sustainthe high standards of th euniversity of which we area part.

— don hume photoWhy?

the first year student shoul dbe open for those studentswho wish to elect them .

Students should k n o wabout Manand Society (thesocial sciences), Man, andThought (philosophy), Ma nand Expression (the arts—sixty per cent literature) ,but we have grave doubt sabout trying to make thes ecore courses in the firstyear, at least in the nea rfuture .

We would like these ques-tions answered :1. How soon will we have

all, or nearly all mem-bers of the faculty in thefields of social science ,including psychology andhistory able to cope, e : ni n discussion sections ,and even at the first yea rlevel, with basic prob-lems in the disciplines ofanthropology, sociology ,psychology, 1political sci-ence, economics, geog-raphy, and history?

2. Further, in the course ,Man and Expression :what percentage of thestaff in this area is com-petent to handle litera-ture (including theatrea n d creative writing) ,music, painting, sculp-ture, dance, architecture ,landscape design andtownplanning?And lastly, even though

we believe that an Arts stu-dent should be exposed t ophilsophy, we are convinc-ed that many students arenot ready for philosophy atthe first year ; or even, thesecond year, or the thirdyear — and sometimes wewonder about the f o u r t hyear .

And if all first year stu-dents wer required to tak ea first year course in phil-osophy, it would mean thephilosophy department mustadd 20 to 25 members to th estaff, most of whom wouldhave to be content withteaching first and secondyear courses .

Few, if any, competentphilo ;tophers could be hiredon such a basis . However ,we give the committee fullmarks in recognizing thesignificance of philosophyin an Arts curriculum .

We agree with the com-mittee that the years oneand two should be devotedto general education and d onot quarrel with the secon dyear program .

However, we have misgiv-ings about the third and

(to PF 10)See: more argument

PF Three

The aims of

. . . and thethe new campus aims of UBC'sat Santa Cruz

D and D Report

1. To shift from the freeelective, permissive curricu-lum to one that places moreemphasis on a common cor eof basic subjects.

2. To require all under-graduate students to becomeacquainted with major sec-tors of knowledge, includ-ing non-Western cultures.

3. To discourage special-ization at too early a stage .

4. T o concentrate stu-dent attention on fewercourses with greater intens-ity.

5. To provide ample op-portunity for independentstudy and honors work .

6. To stress interdisci-plinary approaches incourses and curriculums .

7. To erase impersonal-ity by integrating the teach-ing and living arrangements.

8. To claim the student' sfull time and attention .

9. To stress physical fit-ness for both women andmen through an extensiv esystem of intramural ath-letics.

10. To allocate faculty for(and provide rewards for )providing close instructionand counselling of students .

1. To eliminate the freeelective program for firstyear arts students and re-place it with a compulsorythree-course core program.

2. To acquaint first yea rstudents with as broad a narea of knowledge as poss-ible, broken down intothree areas of knowledge —Man and Society, Man an dExpression and Man andThought.

3. To remove forced com-mitment to courses of studyin the first two years o funiversity while forcing stu-dents to specialize as muchas possible in the final twoyears by elminating honor sand double major program sand replacing them with asingle major program.

4. To stress large lectureclasses and small seminar _groups .

5. To stress day-by-daywork over the term _ by re-quiring in the first ter mweekly assignments.

6. To eliminate final ex-ams in the first three year sof university and Christmasexams for all years, placingjudgment of student abilityon a direct assessmentrather than a final exa mmark basis .

D and D men'a bit naive— but notcompletely so

By BARNETT SAVER Y

T HE recommendations ofthe "Discipline and Dis-

covery" report are ideal fo rsmall liberal arts college .

The college would have afew hundred students, intel-ligent and highly motivated ,with a faculty of Renais-sance men, dedicated to thedemocratic ideal of sharing ,and the aristocratic ideal o fexcellence .

But given the problemsconfronting the Universit yof British Columbia, thecommittee reveals that it i ssomewhat naive — yet notcompletely so .

There are a number of ex-cellent suggestions in thereport. The present curricu-lum for the Faculty of Artsprovides neither adequatebreadth for a general education nor sufficient depth i none discipline .

It is odd that all stu-dents in the Arts programare, at present, forced totake a science course, twoyears of a foreign language,and two years of English . Ihave little to quarrel withthe present English require-ment, unless there are stu-dents, with demonstratedproficiency in this area, wh owould like to devote theirtime to other disciplines .

• • •The present foreign lan-

guage requirement and thescience requirement do notmake much sense . There ar emany students with littl eproficiency in these fields .

At best, they may slugtheir way to bare passe sand a year or two later, theywill have forgotten practic-ally everything of signifi-cance and, even if they d opass they will be left withnothing of ultimate value ,in connection with genera leducation and depth in aparticular discipline .

• • •And this is to say noth-

ing about many able stu-dents who are forced towithdraw from the univers-ity because of their inabil-ity to even pass the abovecourses. We believe thatthe removal of the presentlanguage and science re-quirements for an arts de-gree should be implementedat once, bearing in mindthat options in language ,science and mathematics for

A MementoTo Treasure . . .

toler"

'65

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Race relationshave neverbeen better,Thank you

By ALEX ANTONITES

A returning journalistcalled South Africa th emost belied country in theworld. Parallel or separatedevelopment of the nation swithin the territory ofSouth Africa (formerly call-ed apartheid) is frequentlycriticized as "racism" andan "insult to human dig-nity" . Why does the whiteminority in South Afric acontinue to oppress a ma-jority of non-whites in spiteof world opinion ?

Antonites is the Directorof White African StudentFederation at the Univers-ity of South Africa. Thisarticle is reprinted from th eFederation ' s magazine.

In South Africa there areWhite, Xosa, Zulu, Colored ,Venda, Isonga and Indiannations . The white and Ban-tu nations have their ownoriginal homelands in SouthAfrica . Parallel Develop-ment, as a policy of the pres-ent National Government ,means the advancement o fall these nations in political,social and cultural spheresof life within their o w ncultural connection. It fur-ther implies that none ofthese nations can or mayrule over each other an d

PF Four

that they all have the rightto self-determination .

The critics of South Af-rica ignore the White na-ion's right to self-determina-tion. The Whites came toSouth Africa at the sametime as the Bantu nationsimmigrated to South Africafrom Central Africa . Whilethe Whites moved north-ward and the Bantu south,the Whites settled in theirareas and the Bantu intheirs. In spite of severa lclashes which occurred, thesovereignty of each otherwas respected. The Bantuascertained smaller areas ofSouth Africa, but far mor efertile than those of themostly barren area of th eWhites. Because of t h eWhites' civilization, the thenmostly primitive Bantu vol-untarily flocked to theWhite homeland where theystayed a n d worked f o rmany decades .

In the meanwhile theirnumbers (later) exceede dthose of the Whites. Thishowever is no justificationfor genocide of the Whites .In the meantime, the Bantuareas, e .g . the Transkei, alsostarted to advance and de-velop on all terrains. TheBantu in the White home-land are now gradually (al -though not forced to do so)returning to their ownstates. The Transkei aremarching forward to full in-dependence as an exampl eto other African states. Theother Bantu states may soonbe self-governing too .

Parallel Development i snot an ideology, but an age-old traditional way of liv-ing. Because of this, frictio nis reduced to a minimumand at present race relationsin South Africa are bette rthan ever before .

The anti-Afrikaans racists ,being defected by publicopinion in South Africa ,have succeeded in carryingtheir ignoble struggle out-

side South Africa. Theirmost effective progagandaweapon was to associate theWhites with facists, nazisand oppressors . The SouthAfrican Communist Party ,with leaders like NelsonMandela and other "demo-crats", officially decided towork for a revolution i nSouth Africa .

A preliminary stage inthis totalitarian aim, wassabotage . Since many inno-cent lives were lost by or-ganized sabotage, the SouthAfrican Parliament had totake temporary strict meas-ures like the 90-Day Deten-tion Bill . The CommunistParty succeeded in creatin gworld-wide sympathy f o rthe "victims" of "police-state" measures and manynon-Communist leaders, es-pecially among certain re-ligious groups, unconscious-ly joined forces with theaims of Communits totali-tarianism. The CommunistParty however was com-pletely annihilated and a to-talitarian take-over thwart -ed. The 90-Day Bill was sus-pended. Everybody in SouthAfrica is free to oppose andcriticize the Government .This may be seen by thefree press and oppositionparties in the South Africa nand Transkeian Parliaments .If the opposition is defeatedby the overwhelming ma-jority of both white andblack, it is no justificationf o r subversive oppostion .South Africa distinguishesbetween legal and subvers-ive opposition .

The fact that the Whitesare annually spending hun-dreds of millions of pound sfor the uplifting of the non -whites is ignored . The sameapplies to the fact that thei rliving standard is risingabove that in a welfare stateand thus incomparably high-

(to PF 9)See: more oversea s

atanley g . trigge photoNORTHERN IMAGE, by Lauren Harris. Part of the Brock Art collection .

Well, comrade — I tried topresent the usual ugliness

_ they expect of a Communistbut after a year I find Imust atone for bank interest

By MARK MARKI N

Well, my dear comrade ,are you ready to face West-ern reality at its best? Infirst place, there's ttoo muc hrain. So much that oneshould be surprised howthey managed to keep abovewater in Vancouver and onone more Vancouver — Van-couver Island. Althoughthey have a good reason forthat: there is Victoria, thecapital of the province . So ,in all probability, it evolvedout of the British Custom :to have tradition, then anisland to put it on andeventually a capital to keepit in and so forth . . . Well,it's only natural and some-thing to co-exist with .

When I first arrived inVancouver, where I was tostudy at the University ofBritish Columbia, it was ausual day .

It was late September ,very rainy—yet without th ethunder and/or lightningflashes or sulphuric smell asin the air when a visitor ex-pects when arriving fromsuch a godless city as Mos-cow .

As you might guess I wasquite lost . As well, one ofmy suitcases took a flightin some direction. In mystray suitcase was my razor,named Sputnik and I startedto grow a beard tot presenta classical Western traditio nof the Russian image.

What was worse though,was that Vancouver seemedto have been lost in themists with UBC, my bed ,food and other amenities .

The only thing left for meto do was find a World Uni-versity Service representa-tive .

I planted myself in themiddle of a hall and dis-p l a y e d my remarkablebeard .

I made a particular effortto express a peculiar wild-ness and ugliness that I hadread somewhere, that mustbe the natural face of aCommunist .

I had been doing my best,without an adequate com-mand of English, to say "TheRed Kosak has come" but noone seemed to notice .

Meanwhile, WUS menwere working to find me .

Andy Pickard and Mik eBooth (my thanks to themboth) had been runningabout half an hour beforewith umbrellas in hand whenI landed.

My first experiences wit hwestern free enterprise werewhen I deposited my pocket-money in "My Bank" — TheBank of Montreal—and in-deed obtained a bank ac-count together with a chequebook and a profit of threeper cent per year on savings .

I even say "we financiers"enjoy looking over stock-change information in thepapers. I even discuss thechanges with my friends .

Sometimes I wonder if Iam a good comrade or finall ychanged to a capitalist bythe fatal power of per centsand profits .

To tell the truth, I stil lintuitively avoid exercisingthis title capitalist for my-self . I am trying to atone formy profit longing by doingmy share in the struggleaginst capitalism .

To fulfil this duty I amtaking money from my bankand spending it .

You will not hear toomuch from me opposing thissystem .

I am not keen on speakin gin favor of people wh owould eliminatte our chequ ebooks and deprive us of ourearned per cents .

But now it is my turn tosay "There is no more timefor pleasure ." Actually, myterm at the UBC is nearin gto the end. Less than onemonth left for me to be oncampus and examine the restof the western temptations.

By good luck I don't haveany exams, but all the sam eit will be—so to say—quitea grave honeymoon . Every-thing is coming to its end ,even this year's copies ofThe Ubyssey.

Still, before I started toperform my swan-song onthe UBC's threshold, I wanta chance to summarize myimpressions of the campus,and tell somewhat about myuniversity.

What I feel about Canadacan be best described by thisconversation with a girl ; le tus call her Miss Y . Miss Y

is a Commerce student andin a habit of making pro-found searches even at thetable, she being an eager ex-ponent of free enterprise' sideals . So her questionswere:"Will you quit yourgazing at your soup and be-gin to -look at me as every-one ought to? Tell me, areyou struck by the capitalismin Canada? Is it too muchcapitalistic to your taste? "

"No," I answered . "Canadais as capitalistic as it shoul dbe according to its owntaste, not to that of mine .Yet, it doesn't prevent mefrom enjoying my lunch, be-lieve it or not, even whe nresidence lunch is question-able . "

But I am impressed bymy year on campus in manydifferent ways. They aretoo countless to number .And it would be purehypocrisy on my part toclaim that all of them wereonly pleasant ,and suited tomy taste . But better let mesay frankly: most werepleasant .

So, leaving Vancouver I'lltake with me all my bes tfeelings and among them,envy of the campus' splendi dlocation. As a matter of fact ,my home university, Uni-versity of Leningrad, lik ethe most of old ones, hasmore historical buildingsthan new. It's true, one hasto be proud treading th esame stone steps as Turg-enev, Mendeleev and Chec-kov or Lenin, and graduat-ing where they in their timesgraduated from. But still up-to-date specialized architec-ture is more suitable fo rstudies and research .

University life is not lessturbulent there, than here

in the UBC. Numerous org-anizations (not only theYoung Communist League,take my word for it) bu t

from the student's trade unionup to the Jazz Club, runsover with activity .

And one more thing hasto be mentioned. The stu-dents and their opinionshave very important, prac -tical influence upon th estate of affairs in the univers-ity from the distribution ofscholarships, programs ofteaching and exams and giv-ing scientific degrees .

Student representativeshave not only the right tomake motions but to voteand their legitimized seatsin all kind of commission sand scientific counsels, inother words—on all admin-istrative levels of the uni-versity .

And going back to thetables and lunches, I mightrecollect the glorious hourswhen our director of theFood Service had been soscared by students that atonce he became able to pro-duce excellent dishes withthe same stuff . He does itfor sure now.

Anyhow, we may check itup at the table when I goback. Are there volunteers ?

So, before the curtain felldown behind me (I mean ametaphorical symbol of anend, not the Iron one. Be-lieve my experience, I ha dmet nothing of iron when Iflew to Canada) and, serious-ly, I leave Canada with afeeling of love .

PF Five

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AN ALUMNUS . . .

by eric nico lAn alumnus is a mostly-spherical body of matter,

age not easily determined, resulting from the collisio nof cosmic ignorance with a larger body of knowledg eand emitting potentially dangerous rays of nostalgiaand radioactive reminiscences of a rapidly-disappearinglocus in time contemporarily estimable in terms of lightyears and typically characterized by an attraction t ocurvilinear bodies associated with the phenomenon ofbeing out of this world.

ALUMNi

G1V1NG

by ha! tennan tAlumnus is having a degree, wondering what yo u

did to deserve it and wishing you'd paid attention a tthe time.

Alumnus is getting mimeographed letters askin gfor money and newspaper-style bulletins telling youhow handsome and wealthy the university' has grow nsince you left .

Alumnus is going to Western Universities dances inToronto and not wanting to endure the embarrassmen tof singing Hail UBC in front of strangers, without r emembering that you didn't like singing Hail UBC infront of strangers even when you were an undergrad .

Alumnus is feeling uncomfortable picking up anewspaper and figuring out that those sexy dolls sport-ing the Frosh buttons this year weren't even born whe nyou were wearing your frosh button .

Alumnus is discovering smugly that a hell of a lo tof your classmates have grown older, fatter, balder an ddumpier than you are — and then wondering with a pangwhether some of them would think you're getting old,fat, bald or dumpy; which would be a pretty mean thin gto say about a guy who's only' been out of university acouple of years or so . (All right — so it's fourteen years;but it's been a short fourteen years .)

THE MOST NATURA L

CONDITION OF LIFE

15 GROWTH

Page 2 ANNUAL ALUMNI GIVING March 26, 1965

March 26, 1965

ANNUAL ALUMNI GIVING

Page 3

ALUMNI

ANNUAL GIVIN G

HAS GROWN:

$12,21 5in 1949

$100,57 6in 196 4

WHAT IT'S FOR AND WHERE IT GOESBy JOHN HAMILTON

President, Commerce Undergraduate SocietyAlumni Annual Giving has been defined as the

financial measure of the interest and concern of th egraduates of UBC for the needs of their university .

The aim of Alumni Annual Giving is to acquire regu-lar participation from a maximum number of alumni.A.A.G . has existed since 1949 except for the years ofthe UBC Development Fund — 1957 and 1958 . Priorto 1957 the A.A.G. program was growing each year.Upon its resumption in 1959, however, the results weresimilar to the initial year's results—1949. The momentumlost in 1957-58 took five years to recover .

The A.A.G. Committee solicits funds from alumni insupport of the University. These funds go towards manyprojects including the following:

MacKenzie Alumni Regional Scholarships, Library,Athletics and Recreational Facilities, Student Unio nBuilding, Frederic Wood Theatre, Olympic HockeyTeam and UBC Rowing Crew .

Last year at this time, A.A.G. initiated a studentcampaign — the principle being to educate studentswhile on campus to the needs of the University an dtheir responsibilities when alumni.

For the next five years A .A.G. will work with the3 Universities Capital Fund in raising funds fro mAlumni . The majority of monies raised will go to th eCapital Fund. However, this will occur only after thebasic A.A.G. programs have been covered.

We cannot lose sight of the fact that the Capita lFund is a five-year program while A.A.G. is a programwhich we all realize must endure indefinitely. Conse-quently, it is of utmost importance that the A .A.G. pro-gram strengthen each year . The strength of A.A.G. inthe future will be decided by the participation of uswho are students at present .

The Student Campaign this year will be aimed atthe grauatiny class in an attempt to make them con-scious of our program. This objective can only berealized through the support of everyone concerned .

Student Union Building* 1,000.00N . MacKenzie American Scholarships 1,547.27Alumni Graduate Scholarships* 3,000.00Sherwood Lett Memorial Fund* 25,000 .00Dean MacPhee Loan Fund 249.27University Nurses Scholarship 1,117.60Dr. W. Campbell Bursary Fund 725.00Miscellaneous Scholarships 1,690.00Specific Schools and Faculties 5,037.46UBC Rowing Club* 2,500.00Canadian Olympic Hockey Team 2,150.00Winter Sports Arena 2,790.00International House* 500.00Panhellenic House 574.00Victoria University 457.50Alumni Conference* 2,000.00Fine Arts Project* 1,000 .00Student Residences* 1,000.00Miscellaneous allocations 1,374.00

$100,576.01

Unallocated funds of $42,234 .70 were distributed amon gprojects marked * to increase the total donor gifts for thes epurposes to the amounts shown above .

President's Alumni Fund* $ 17,663 .9 1N . MacKenzie Scholarships* 14,700.00Library* 7,500.00Athletics and Recreational Facilities* 4,000.00Frederic Wood Theatre Foundation* 3,000 .00

AN EXAMPLE . . .(Excerpted from The Ubyssey, Tuesday, Feb . 9, 1965.)

Good for the Alumni .Alumni Annual Giving – which, despite the polite

name, extracts cold, hard dollars from UBC's past grad s— exceeded the $100,000 mark in 1964.

This figure, a record, means that more and mor eAlumni are giving more and more to their Alma Mater .

This is encouragin gand heartening to both the uni-versity and the students, because it means more moneyis being made available for scholarships, student activi-ties and university operation .

Alumni Annual Giving officials attrabute the cam-paign's increasing success to "building in Alumni thehabit of giving ."

They are to be congratulated for the results the yhave accomplished .

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SPORT

Oarsmen are either fanaticsor they quit — but nobody'sdied of sweat and their mindsare trained to marvel atthe tough row they can hoe

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By JEFF WALL

On the blackboard in theclubhouse of the UBC row-ing crew is scrawled thelegend: "Nobody has everdrowned in sweat — yet . "

It was written by one ofthe rowers, possibly for ajoke. But it has not bee nrubbed out . Whoever wrot eit expressed, a little over-emphatically perhaps, th eattitude of not only the oars-men, but of the general, un-blooded public, toward thi shighly misunderstood sport .

Because of their eminentreputation for the extremesin physical exertion anddedication, the crews ar eusually shunned by greatnumbers of prospective ath-letes when recruiting timecomes .

"Rowing," states the pop-ular opinion, "is a sportfor placid, bovine types, in-sensible to the very limitsof physical torture, anddriven on and on past thos elimits by small fiendish ty-rants . Rowing is a disease,and those once afflicted ar ebeyond help ."

Although pure nonsense ,this statement does hold a nelement of truth . Oarsmen

PF Seven

either become fanatics abou tt h e sport, or they quit .There is no halfway point ,there is only total commit-ment or nothing at all . Soonce infected with the germ ,there is no real cure, no teven time.

A few years ago, a groupcomprised mainly of octo-genarians of the Harvar dclass of 1914, rowed aneight -oared shell on t h eCharles River t o g e t h e rmuch as they had 50 year sbefore, and as they hadwished to for the interven-ing time .

• • •The weather that day wa s

uncomfortable and all th eold men had a warm clubto retire to and a glass ofsomething satisfying, b u tthey stroked up and downfor a few hours, finishingstiffly satisfied and exhilar-ated. "I've been wanting todo that for 40 years," statedone of them, a New Yor kfinancier .

Ask a rower why he rows,or a cox why he coxes, andyou are not likely to get adefinite answer .

"Er . . . it develops ster-ling character, and . . . " •"You can learn self disci-pline" ; "You get neat shirtsfor races," are some of th ereplies .

Clues to the real answercome out more informally .

Listen to a group of oarsmentalk, in their free and easy ,yet intimate manner andone hears of a feeling — "ofhearing water rushing underthe shell" — a certain feel-ing, that, "when it comes ,you wrench the oar with al lyour strength, until it hurts ,a n d then break into asmile ." This, say rowers, i swhat rowing is about . Themedals, the big competi-tions, the newspaper storie sare important, but a by -product of the process ofsuccess .

This is an elusive feeling .UBC rowing coach WaynePretty, a veteran of twoOlympic races, has saidthat, in more than 10,000miles rowed, he was onl yfelt it at its very best fo rno more than 110 strokes .But then, he says, "You canhear the water roaring un-derneath you and the first15 feet of the bow comeright up out of the water ."This, inexactly, is the fund-amental goal of all oarsmen .

• • •A racing shell is 60 feet

long and 18 inches wide .Ideally, it knifes throughthe water at up to 13 milesan hour . It looks and feel smuch faster . To reach thisideal speed, in a controlledand precise state, a delicat ecombination of power andbalance is necessary . Onemistimed tug on an oar, oneerratic body movement, onecareless second, can, anddoes, completely shat to reverything, send it out ofbody and mind. An oarsmanmustt be in complete chargeof his body and mind everyinstant he spends in hi sseat . He must completelyexhaust himself, relaxin gonly in intervals of regulat-ed recovery betweenstrokes, if he is to be suc-cessful .

A normal boat race lastsa little over six minutes .The first six minutes, thebody of the race, are oftena preamble for the almostfrenzied sprint to the fin-ish .

If one could magically lif tan oarsman out of the shellafter those first six min-utes, just before that all-ou tdash, one would find that heis finished, exhausted. Thiswould disallow that beliefthat rowers are "placid bo-vine types . "

• • •

For where he gets tha textra strength from, is be-yond imagination . Possiblyit comes out of all the longtraining sessions, the slug-ging through bad days, thepushing of one's body as faras it will go . Possibly.

But oarsmen's minds aretrained not to despair ove rhow much his body has giv-en, but rather to marvel a thow much it has yet left togive. One cannot quit in -stead of forcing oneself tosprint . Many crew coacheshave implored, "Go an dwork yourself so hard yo ublack out at the finish, bu tdon't, for Christ's sake ,black out at 1,950 meters . "There is a subtle differencebetween winning and losing ,and the difference is in thehead and not in the body .

After the crew from YaleUniversity won the goldmedal for eights at the Mel-bourne Olympics in 1960 ,three of its members spentthree days recovering in

hospital.

JAll

Lance showsthe state ofDixie is notmuch musically

By ANGUS RICKE RThe state of Dixieland to -

day, as revealed by Lanc eHarrison's concert in theAuditorium Wednesday, isnot musically much . Out-side of a few perseveringartists such as Dick Cary,Wilber De Paris and DonEwell there isn't much hap-pening in the Dixie idiomanywhere .

With no attentive jazzpublic snapping at themthe Lance Harrison Dixie-land Seven tends to takethings rather casually . Socasually in fact, that thecurtain went up with trom-bonist Jack Fulton attend-ing an off-stage parkingmeter .

However, sponsoring Jazz-soc proved equal to the oc-casion. They forgot to pro-vide mikes for the bass andbanjo but were partiallycovered by bassist Doc Ham-ilton's ability to pull hi squarter-notes like a sling-shot .

And who wants to hear aDixieland banjo anyway ?

Lance showed a mixedbag of musicians whosevarying shades of musicalmodernity could be approxi-mated by the cut of theirsuits . Trumpeter Don Clarkproved to be the most ven-turesome.

Jack Fulton's solos weretightly constructed with a nincisive attack that provid-ed an interesting contras tto the blustery role thetrombone assumed in theensemble choruses .

• • •Lance Harrison tripled on

clarinet, tenor and sopranosaxes but his clarinet workwas marred by an acridtone and scrambly phras-ing. The soprano sax re-mains a challengingly un-derdeveloped i n s t r u mentbut Harrison chose not tosolo with it .

T h e Harrison approac hemphasizes t h e ensembl erather than the soloist . Andthe group's most successfultunes are those originallyarranged for ensemble blow-ing:' Jelly Roll Morton' s"Wolverine Blues" and Clar-ence Williams' "Royal Gar-den Blues."

Despite his playing, Har-rison remained wholly with-in the spirit of- things . Hedid a few telling impersona-tions; derided his pianist ,Frank Massel, mercilessly ;and (mercifully) refraine dfrom singing .

The audience (some 200escapists in all) were ratherstiff but maybe they couldnot easily forget the loss o ffifty cents. In sum the con-cert suggested Nat Hentoffsassessment of collegiate Dix-ieland jazz .

"The college kids w h oavidly sip their beer whiletapping their crepe-soledshoes to 'Muskrat Ramble 'are engaged in vicariousimaginings . 'Why, I could beout there, playing that low -down gutbucket stuff' ."

C3W'Y~.rrt~~I w~a(I~~

discrt mlna+lo nin

Crow jim, jimcrow calls Chanto crow crowor caw caw . . .

By TONY CHAN

SINCE the beginning of amore militant attitude

towards the Social Revolu-tion in the United States, apredominant and somewhatundesirable factor has grad-ually infested the sphere ofAmerica's most authenti cand most provocative artform .

• • •In recent years, an atti-

tude known as Crow Jim hasbeen a decided influence inthe field of jazz. AlthoughCrow Jim is not as power-ful or highly developed asits most immediate counter-part, Jim Crow, it does existand will still presist as lon gas Jim Crow has any effectin matters of equality. How-ever, for Jim Crow to col-lapse into oblivion, 'a pro -found change is required inman's thinking towards oneanother o r miscegenationwhich would undoubtedly bea result of a new attitude .

• • •Jim Crow has prevailed

(according to C . Vann Wood-ward) since the Reconstruc-tion period, when the Negrow a s constitutionally a n dtheoretically recognized as afreed man and vaguely as acitizen. Indeed, its segrega-tive principles did not appl yto slavery as this would haveundoubtedly prevented nor-mal interaction between mas-ter and slave and conse-quently would have mad eslavery impossible .

• • •Jim Crowism emerge d

largely because of the Ne-gro's passive and submissivephilosophy as personified byBooker T. Washington—wh oadvocated Negro inferiority .This profound apathy thatmust have appeared to somewhites as an incentive tofurther agression eventuallyinaugurated the Negro intobecoming a sectional scape-goat between white conserv-atives and white radicals inthe 1890's . The enfranchisedNegro had become merely amechanism to political pow-er for the Conservatives.

But with the emergenceof the Redeemer party who

were also vying for the Ne-gro vote, the Conservatives ,as a political expediency be-g a n disenfranchising t h eNegroes in the various state sand eventually thwarted theRedeemer's attempt for pol-itical success through theexploitation of black votes .Consequently, Jim Crow sta-tutes were applied, and inmany cases stimulated segre-gation and discrimination .

• • •In jazz, Jim Crow has ob-

viously persisted since a ma-jor portion of jazz musician sare Negroes . However, it sugly diseased head not onlyprotrudes to the Negro injazz but also in other crea-tive and/or non-creative pro-cesses and to other minoritygroups. Indeed, Jim Crowwith its negative attitudes isthe prime source of CrowJim. If Jim Crowism hadnever existed, it would havebeen virtually impossible forCrow Jim or even the blacknationalist movements to at-tain the status that it no whas. The pleasure domewhich Jim Crowism existsin has perverted some of theAmerican Negro jazz music-ians into a justifiable stateof social defense . These mus-icians believe emphaticallythat, with a few rare excep-tions, Negro jazzmen aremore "authentic" and tendto be more original and cre-ative than their white peers .

• • •They maintain that his is

not a hereditarily deter-mined condition but is aconsequence of e n V i r on-ment. It is the resat of thekind of experiences that aNegro in America has andthe white musician is, i neffect, an intruder or inter-loper . As a consequence ofthis feeling, an element ofracial superiority has de-veloped in these Negro jazz-men; an attitude of reversebigotry known as Crow Jim .

To these jazzmen, theblues, which is the parentof all legitimate jazz wa sthe product of the black ma nin America. It was theseblack slaves who, after pre-serving the rhythms a n dscales from Africa, gradu-

ally interfused them wit hthe form and tonality fromEurope; the old French pop-ular music that was in th eWest Indies and New Or-leans. Hence, jazz, in es-sence, is a unification ofAfro-European cultures; andsome -Negro jazz musi-cians, because jazz is a prod-uct of the Negro, feel thatthe white musician whoserace has been exploiting theblack man has no right t ofurther his exploitation int osomething that was blac kinstigated and black devel-oped .

• • •Moreover, these Negroes

look to the jazz situation to-day and state quite vigorous-ly that a high percentage o fthe Major jazz men are Ne-gro. Max Roach, one of themost influential drummer sin jazz history, in a DownBeat panel discussion aboutthree years ago, replied t othe question of black super-iority in jazz by stating that"if a guy wants a good jazzplayer, nine times out of ten ,he stands a better chance ofgetting him from the blac kpopulation than from thewhite population . . . "

• • •Another jazz influential ,

Oscar Brown, being ques-tioned on t h e quality ofwhite jazz musicians today ,replied "Dave Brubeck andStan Kenton . . . when theyplay jazz . . . they are jus tEuropeanizing Negro music . "

Moreover, many leadingjazz combos such as AhmadJamal, Yusef Lateef, Princ eLasha and Roach do not em -ploy white side men . Indeed ,it seems that this attitude ofreverse bigotry which isequally wrong prevailsamong Negro musicians whoare excessively bitter and i nneed of a defense mechan-ism .

In a '62 December DownBeat, Lennie Tristan stated,"a Negro may think thatjazz makes a man out o fhim (by his advocation thatjazz is his personal domain)but nobody has a corner onmusic ." Assuming, however ,that Negroes have a monop-oly on jazz and they weresuccessful in preventing out-side (white) penetration, thi swould in no way guaranteethat Negro musicians withi ntheir private sanctuar ywould perpetuate the veryexistence of jazz .

• • •For any creative process

to persist, and jazz in partic-ular because of its improvis-a t o r y qualities requiringnecessary expansion, theremust be a constant and guar-anteed overflow of new for-mats and ideas and the in-novators should be given aplace regardless of pigment-ation .

Charlie Mingus, one ofjazz's most dynamic bassiststoday, commenting at theVillage Vanguard a few sum-mers ago on his integratedband which included DonButterfield stated Butter-field was the "best damnedjazz tuba player in the coun-try." Asked why, Mingus de-clared, "I don't mention thatbecause he's white either.He's colorless, like all thegood ones . "

PF Eight

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MORE OVERSEAS

(from PF 4 )

er than the rest of Africa .More than 1,000,000 non-whites from foreign Africa nstates (e .g . Malawi) illegallyentered South Africa t owork and stay here. Canthis correspond with oppres-sion and racism ?

The granting of indepen-dence to the natives inSouth Africa is no tribaliza-tion, but realism. The Bant uculture is being developedand their language also be-ing spoken by Whites. TheWhite nation has no father -land but South Africa . Itslanguage, Afrikaans, w a sborn in and out of SouthAfrica . Like any self-respect-ing nation, the Whites wil lnot surrender their right t oself - determination . Whilethey do not deny this rightto the non-whites, they wil lalso fight for their ownright as they have done inthe past .

In spite of the indoctrin-ation waged against themoutside South Africa, the na-tions of South Africa aremarching forward to a Com-monwealth of South Africa nstates and declare: live andlet live!

MUSIC

It was tune,tune, tune andmore tune —.then just Breamy

By STEVEN BROWN

Julian Bream, England' srenowned lutenist and gui-tarist, stopped tuning his 14-string Renaissance lute andobserved with a grin, "It hasbeen said that if a lutenis tlived 60 years, he woul dspend 40 of them tuning up ."

The lute of Arabic originbut konwn better as th equeen of instruments dur-ing the Elizabethan era, i sundoubtedly an exceedinglydifficult instrument to mast-er . "I practice four-five, eightor nine hours a day — asmuch as I can get in," said

Bream, one of the lute's veryfew masters today .

Another i s Belgium' sMichel Podolski, also no win Vancouver on tour. Thismeans, according to theCBC 's Ian Docherty, tha thalf of the world's great lut-enists are here at the mo-ment .

Bream had just complete da solo recital of Elizabethanlute music and 18th centuryworks for guitar before a nenthusiastic capacity audi-ence in the UBC auditoriumWednesday night . It was theopening concert in the CBC' sspring music festival andMr. Bream's first Vancouve rappearance .

How did Julian Breamhappen to take up—and sub-sequently master — the an-cient lute? He explained thatit was simply his fondnessfor Elizabethan music whichled him to the lute, themost popular instrument ofthat period .

"And I learned it by har dwork," he said . "I am trulyself-taught . "

His lute was especiall ybuilt for him by a Londo nharpsichord-maker, one ofonly a handful of individ-uals so qualified today .

Refreshingly, the youngCockney musician is not ahigh-brow: introducing Noc-turnal, a mood work whichBenjamin Britten composedfor him, Bream said, "WhenBritten gave me this workI had to look up that wordnocturnal in the dictionary—and it's there. It meanssomething to do with night ."

Before he studied the lute,Bream was already a rank-ing guitarist, having bee nencouraged in his studies a tLondon's Royal College ofMusic by the great guitaristSegovia . As both lutenist andguitarist, Bream's importantrevival of early music haswon him a large followin gin both Europe and America .Currently on his seventhNorth American tour, Breams aid he is stopping over inVancouver "for a well-de-served rest."

His warm delicacy and pre-cision on the lute and par-ticularly on the guitar shonethrough at his recital herebut definitely in spite of theobvious need for a more in-timate hall than the UBCauditorium — and one with-out its creaky seats .

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By TOM WAYMAN

Pick a peck of Pique fora penguin full of laughs .

And if the figure o fspeech above seems distort-ed, whimsical, and vaguel yhilarious, it just about sumsup Pique, the campus hu-mor littlemag put out by th egroup with no less namethan the Young BourgeoisAuthors and Artists Associ-ation .

Take the penguin, for ex-ample . The bright types thatproduced the mag — underthe editorship of WayneNyberg, the poet who wonboth first and second plac ein the recent Artisan liter-ary contest — have mad ethe penguin something mor ethan a bird .

Like an archetypal sym-bol .

From the start, the dirtybird is everywhere. TheVoyage of Sir P e r c i v a lPique by Victor Neumanintroduces the thing in afunny — though hard t oread in a small type size —prologue - cum - introduc-tion, tying the whole messinto continuity with lastyear's YBAAAA publica-tion, Ledphartte's Magazine .

And right in the middleof the book, Pique's Pick ,the beauteous daughter ofa penguin farmer, providesthat bit of spice to thestewed Penguin meal whichmakes up the rest of thepublication :

The Great Flap Debate byChris Johnson, a horren-dous re-hash of you-know-what between the leader o fthe Whig(wam) tribe andthe Hoaries, led by LongJohn Beavertaker .

Two plays provide th e

Pique's piquantfare too spicybut it gotinto print

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PF Te n

s

rest of the bulk: a satire onHamlet by George Payerleand The Taming of Fre dSmerd by Ron Simmer .

For the artists, Ubys-sey cartoonist Jeff Wall is .

up to his usual standard insuch greats as an ad fo rreefers, and the ultimate i nphilosophic cliches .

And Robert Muirhead' sportfolio of the antecedantsto obscure folksinger Fen-der Greenie Jones songs aretopped by his history ofFerry Across the Mersey ,depicting a gigantic Ferrybearing down on Jerry andthe Pacemakers franticall yrowing Across the Mersey .

And for the poetry lovers ,the mental gymnastics o fRoberta West's literary situ-ation would amuse anyone .

Even the history of th emagazine is funny in aPique-ish sort of way .

First copy deadline wa sOct . 31, extended and ex-tended until the last bitsrolled up in February .

When Pique's printe r

UBC's Extension Depart -ment saw the manuscript ,they yelled for a sponsor ,but neither administrationnor the stray faculty mem-ber approached by t h egroup would touch it .

Finally, Extension saidthey'd settle for an O.K .from AMS officials, so gen-ial then-president R o g e rMcAfee signed sight un-seen .

And after a few more con-ferences and a modicum o fcensoring, Pique got printed .

But the jokes never stopin the Pique world . EvenThursday as the YBAAAAmembers were settling aprice for Pique, they raninto financial difficultiesover the AMS red tape: thatis, the YBAAAA was in thered, and the AMS was readyto tape the whole projectshut .

But virtue prevailed, andyou can pick up a copy fro many of the stands or booth sor salesman you see wan-dering around the campusin the next few weeks . Andafter that, the bookstore .

Cost is 35 cents, or rough-ly one-one thousandth of afull-sized, full-grown, red-blooded penguin . More thanlikely, wearing a Piquesweatshirt .

du MAURIE Rdurne,oweeao

MOREARGUMENT

(from PF 3)

fourth years . The honorsprogram should not be elim-inated. There is nothing in-compatible with democrati cprocesses and the develop-ment of an intellectual elite ;indeed, any society withoutone, is doomed to fail. Andeven if it has one, it wil lprobably fail also — so his-tory reveals .

Yet, we like the idea ofa more intensive major, butat the same time, we als owant room for a secondmajor, even though it beless intensive than the firstmajor. Our argument on thi spoint might not please ourcolleagues in the Facult yof Education .

Our belief is that a goodnumber of Arts graduateswill become high-school andjunior college teachers, an dit is much better that theyget an arts degree beforethey take an additionalyear in eacher training —if that is still deemed neces-sary .

Lest it may appear thatour remarks are mainly onthe negative side, our over-all appraisal is really on thepositive side . We say thi sbecause our present curricu-lum is very inadequate an dneeds drastic change .

bowie bateman presents

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Friday, March 26, 1965

THE UBYSSEY

Page 19

Research will takeprof around worl d

Here is the final part ofMike Bolton's feature onUBC International Studie sprofessor Dr . James Winter.

Similar to most UBC profes-sors, Dr. Winter finds littl etime to devote to research an dwriting during the academi cyear .

He is also working on a bookand hopes to complete it inabout three years .

Dr. Winter's biography ofVictorian intellectual - states-man Robert Lowe should tak ehim around the world befor eits completion .

Lowe was involved in thehistory of Canada, Englandand Australia .

* * *The professor will seek a

grant from the Canada Counci lto assist his research for theLowe !book .

He will spend part of ,hi ssummer holiday in the Can-adian archives a t Ottaw aworking on his two articlesand book .

Dr. Winter hopes to spen dsome time with his family at alog cabin he owns on Arcu sIsland in the San Juans nearPuget Sound .

He is an avid sportsman andenjoys skiing, hiking and sail-ing .

* * *The absence of squash facil-

ities at UBC annoys him be -cause he feels it is a grea tsport for academics .

Dr. Winter owns his Wes tVan home jointly with an in-surance company .

He estimates that he nowholds title to two bedroom sand a study .

Mrs. Winter is studying lib-rarianship in the Educationfaculty at UBC .

The rest of the family con -

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sists of two boys, age 12 andnine, and a girl, age 10 .

The Winter family migratedto British Columbia from NewHampshire to take advantageof a piece of land given tothem in the Canadian SanJuans.

He said UBC and Dartmouthcontrast sharply .

* * *Dartmouth is an ivy boy' s

school with a student body o f3,000, including some of thewealthiest and brightest stu-dents in the United States .

"Dartmouth students a r esmooth and polished, but arenot very hungry to learn," saidDr. Winter. "They regard acollege education as part oftheir 'birthright . "

He said Dartmouth is char-acterized by saneness and con-formity .

Dr. Winter finds the varietyof UBC's student body stimul-ating and gratifying .

"But the attrition rate hereis shocking because many justaren't capable of high leve lwork," he said .

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Page 20

THE UBYSSEY

Friday, March 26, 1965

WONDERING WHAT THEY'LL face on the other side of the net are t hese Thunderette volleyball players : (I to . r .) Katrina Izwmir, Dian eGodfrey, Sylvia McIntyre, and Diane Kirby . These girls and Mauree nFishleigh, Jackie Bell, Heidi Forstbaur, Jennifer Johnston, and Lauretta

Teschke will represent UBC in the Canadian Championships, Saturday,March 27 . First games begin 8:30 at Eric Hamber, Thirty-third and Oak .Semis and finals go at 5 p .m. in War Memorial Gymnasium .

UBC features volleybal lThe Thunderette Volleybal l

team goes into. the CanadianChampionships this Saturdaylooking for another victory t oadd to their impressive strin gof season's wins :

WCIAA champs and ranke dsecond in B .C. to the Canadianchamps, Vancouver, UBC wil lbe one of two university team sin the day long round robin .The ten clubs, section victor sfrom all over the country, ar e

On this, . the last publish-ing day of The Ubyssey itis deemed customary to saya few words appropriate tothe occasion.

What I would like to do iswish some people a great dealof luck in their future en-deavours .

First, because he perhapsneeds the most luck, is Dr . PatMcGeer who is pushing forathletic scholarships for UBC ,and looking forward to th etime when UBC will play Cal-ifornia for the Rose Bowl inPasadena with s c r e a m i n gthousands cheering them on.

Secondly, good luck tophysical Education instructorLorne Davies who takes onthe new athletic director'sjob at Simon Fraser Acad-emy. "Joe" as he was knownin :)is role as UBC's hardwo- cing football line coachmo' ed possibly the finestlint seen at UBC! Joe is bein ggiv i a free hand at SFA topici his own coaches and

ers with the aid of a

in two divisions, from whichthe top two teams will advanceto the finals .

* * *The B.C . Synchronize d

Swim Meet goes this Saturdayat the Vancouver YWCA. UBCThunderettes, defending cham-pions will be out once again tomake a big splash .

* * *The Thunderette track team ,

Canadian Collegiate Cham-

bounteous supply of athleti cscholarships .

Seven of lis proteges willturn out for.''-,pro football try -outs this year . The six UB Cstudents are: Bill IVTcLaugh-lin (Edmonton), Roy Shatzko(Calgary), Bo b Handle y(Lions), John Reykdah l(Lions), Llv 'd Davis (Hamil -ton), Ken Danchuk (Calgary)and Norm . Thomas (Edmon-ton) .

ByJACK McQUARRIE

Given a good chance of ap-pearing in the confines ofEmpire Stadium this year ar eShatzko, Davis, Danchuk andThomas .

Davis and Danchuk willtake the practise field as de-fensive halfbacks for twoclubs that are presently weakin these positions due to re-tirements . Danchuk will at -

tempt to fill the shoes of thedeparted Harvey Wylie at

pions, journey to Spokane ,Wash., this weekend, the siteof the U.S. National JuniorWomen's Track and Fiel dMeet .

Forty theology students shedtheir saintly aura, pulled thei rnoses from their books, andjumped, feet first, into infra-murals this year .

St . Andrews Theological Col-lege entered teams in almostevery sport . They beat out tw oRamblers' teams for the hockeychampionship and they tookthe track meet. As we go topress, they are a sizable mar-gin ahead of their nearest com-petitor in overall point stand-ing .

* * *This is remarkable consid-

ering many of their rivals havebetween four and forty time sas many members as St . An-drews 40 . Acknowledgementis made that some help camefrom the "third floor boys" ;St. Andrews Hall Is two stor-eys high .

SPORTSWAA award s

WAA Big & Small Blockswill be awarded in Broc kLounge next Thursday noon .

Gnup gives final wordon meet and baseball

Frank Gnup says : that there will be a football meetingfor all old and aspiring players next Tuesday in room 21 3at the War Memorial Gym .

Mr. Gnup also demands that his baseball stalwarts re-ceive full student support tomorrow when they play SkagitValley College in a doubleheader starting at 1 :30 p .m . a tWolfson field .

Be there next Friday and Saturday when UBC playsSt. Martins College and the University of Western Wash-ington in doubleheaders at 1 :30 p .m. at Wolfson .

From .the - press box

Let's go down in flamesCalgary while Davis will tryto take over where RalphGoldston left off at Hamilton .

Shatzko, a tackle, knownas the "Badger" by his team-mates, has attended the Cal-gary camp before and by al lreports, has a job waiting fo rhim . He had a job waiting fo rhim with the NFL New YorkGiants last year too—until he

. found that 235 pounds was nobetter than scatback size in

the NFL.Norm Thomas showed well

in the Montreal Allouettetraining session last summe rbut was traded to Edmonto nwhere he is rated as having agood chance to crack the line-up as a flanker. He will jointwo other recent T'Bird grads ,Pete Lewis and Tom Thomp-son .

The same philosophy mor eor less seems to lie behind allof these students' willingnes sto risk their limbs in the rig-ors of pro football . Here's hop-ing that all their breaks ar egood ones .

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Friday, March 26, 1965

THE UBYSSEY

Page 2 1

AIPOUND THE GOA lEf I V.0#1111 FLOWER

SHOP2197 W . BROADWAY

10% Discount to Students736-7344

By BENNY DOYD

Now that I am rid of my feathers, I am contemplatin gif I should have a Yul Brynner hair-do . No, I had betternot, the price of clipping has gone up and on my salary Icouldn't afford the daily head shaving .

On the other hand, I could join Howie Yung with his Iri-quois style . But that is too wild and Howie doesn't like to b ecopied now that he has won an acclaimed 7 awards . Yes ,Maxie made the smart move when he traded flying Phil ,robust Buddy and everyone's friend Bashing Bill to get Howie .For if it wasn't for Yungsy good old Vancouver wouldn't bein the Stanley capers with the high riding Bruins from Bos-tonia .

For hollywood star handsome Howie is going to fill theBennet-Pearson-Rathie Coliseum this weekend when the firs tof the 14 game series commences . But he doesn't mind toomuch if he is the drawing card . For he told me that he isdevoted to his team-mates and they all share his fame .

Seven awards? How can they? The most valuable player ,high scorer, most gentlemanly player, most penalized player ,top defenceman, best dressed player and the Academy award .Although the latter hasn't anything to do with hockey ,Yungsy deserves credit for being the only start to stay mar -ried to Liz for more than 18 months . That takes teamwork .

When action resumes and wayward Howie tees off withReg. Flewing in the face-off circle, there is bound to be a ful lhouse for the remainder of the series . That is if Howie doesn' tdisappear .

One of the startling surprises this year was in the cherishe dRose Bowl when Michigan State held powerful Simon Fraserto only two touchdowns but lost 14-0 . Joe Davis must be giv-en full credit, for in his rookie year as coach with a nothin gteam, he took them to the historical classic . And Won it too !But the biggest steal of the year was when he signed To mTamath to a 9 year scholarship after which he will succee dDavis as coach . Mr. Davis is rumored ready to take over asChancellor when Tamath's term expires .

Kaputzi out to lunchDavis did a magnificent job of luring Tom away fro m

the grabs of Kaputzi and Company. He offered him anestablished career as player-to-be-coach with some educa-tion to boot . Who says you can't win them all ?

Yes, it has been a good year for sports! One of the greates tfeats in the sporting world was Canada's unprecedente dWorld Hockey tournament victory.

They had a close call in the "B" championship round whenthey edged Japan 2-1 and Italy 1-0, but the "A" competitionwas far easier than expected .

In front of 15,000 astonished fans at Moscow Palace, Can-ada edged Russia 9-0 in the finals. Bower's boys had earlierdefeated Sweden and Czechoslovakia by identical 13-3 scores .Finland game them their closest game 5-1 .

And to no one's surprise Eddie Shack was named the tour-nament's top player. He only got one goal but the opposingplayers were so busy watching his hockey manoeuvres thatthey forgot to watch the rest of the team .

No, I won't get an Iroquois cut . I am going to grow anotherbeard so that I can be a Santa Claus this Christmas . That wayI will have extra money so that I can pay for my Yul Brynnerhair-do next year.

UBC Thunderbird Winter Sports Centre

For SKATING, CURLING, HOCKE YPleasure Skating Hours:

12.45 p.m. to 2 .45 p .m. 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 15eSKATE RENTAL AVAILABLE, ALL SIZES

Skating Parties each Wednesday, 7 :30 p .m. - 9:30 p.m.Book Now for Your Club

Phone Local 365 or 224-320 5Last Day of Program will be Sunday, April 11th .Summer Program Commences Friday, June 25th .

Well I'll be dammedFor the fourth straight year UBC's_ field hockey team is

tops in Vancouver—and that might as well read Canada ,since Vancouver is the leading field hockey city in thecountry . .

Undefeated since February,1964, the team has recoveredfrom the loss of several keyplayers and numerous injuriesto repulse all challenges byLower Mainland teams .

GEORGE REAMSBOTTOM —please be nice George, and don' tcut it down to four lines 11 1

(You didn't put the results i nTuesday's paper either ; nor th eweekend schedule last Friday ;c'mon George, field hockey isn't apiddly minor sport any more eventhough our budget is $760 .00 com-pared to football's $17,000.00. )

So far this season, UBC ha splayed seven games, won sixand tied one. They have scored21 goals and given up only 8

.,for 13 points .Much of the credit for th e

continued success of UB Cteams is due to a rejuvenatedtraining program initiated byEric Broome, new field hockeycoach this season, who cam efresh from training Britain' sOlympic team .

(So what else is new?)

What's NEW i nSports Car Equipment & Supplies ?

Keep up-to-date. Drop in and see our large stock.New items arriving daily.

10% Discount by Showing Your AMS Car d

12th & Alma

736-9804

/

4

HAPPENINGTHE ADULT DISCOTHEQU E

1111 WEST PENDER STREETDancing Every Friday and Saturda y

"WHERE THE LIVE PEOPLE GO! "/

Studies in asporting lifeThe sport coat, like the sports car, goes just about every-place these days . . . on campus, feat parties, holida yhoots, island hopping, country jaunting . The right sportjacket adds to the fun! The.. this-minute cotton cord anddenim sport jackets in blue, grey, maize or seersucker stripe sof grey or blue give an exhilarating lift to every sportingoccasion . Wear them now, with natural shoulder lines,high 3-button styling, cut-away front, flap pockets an dsingle centre vent. 36-44 regular.

Each 19.95The Bay Campus and Career Shop, second floor

GEORGIA at GRANVILLE

Page 22

THE UBYSSEY

Friday, March 26, 196 5

UBYSSEY-EYE VIEW

This year has 1 page CAR INSURANC EWe Can Reduce Surcharged Premium s

Winram Insurance Limite dRE 1-5328

U .B.C. THUNDERBIRD WINTERSPORTS CENTR E

Programme Schedule 1965-66Summer Schedule 1965

Skating and Curling rinks Closed April 12 to June 24, 196 5Re-opens Friday, June 25 to August 15, 1965 inclusive forPublic Skating and Skating Parties and Hockey .

Closed from August 16 to September 23, 1965 inclusive .

Winter Schedule 1965-66Public Skating, Skating Parties and Hockey open for th eseason commencing Friday, September 24, 1965 .Curling opens for the season commencing Monday, Sep-tember 27, 1965, with one week of practice and/or in-struction and LEAGUE PLAY commencing MONDAY ,OCTOBER 4, 1965 .All student clubs or groups are urged to book your ic erental requests NOW for Hockey, Skating Parties, Curlin gLeagues, Bonspiels and Special Events .

Telephone 224-3205 or 224-1111, Local 305 NOW !

If you run out of ink withthe new Scripto Wordmaster ;it's your own fault .

See !

We've done everything we can to prevent such a thing . Inside thi sWordmaster, with its newly-designed chrome cap, there's an exclusiv e

Telegauge refill . It lets you see when you'll need another refill*, lon gbefore you'll need it! And its tungsten carbide ball never skips .

Never clogs . Price? Just $1 .29 with new chrome cap . Not bad for aball pen that you'll never run dry with! That's the long-writing Script o

Wordmaster .*Scripto Telegauge refills are availabl eeverywhere at only 59¢ .

designed, manufactured and guaranteed by Scripto of Canada Limite d

161 Bartley Drive, Toronto 16, Ontari o

PARADISE VALLEY HORSE RANCHSQUAMISH, B.C .

Wants to thank herewith all the girls who have writtento us and applied for the summer jobs . The positions arenow filled .

For those unique trail rides and hay rides . . . it's ParadiseValley Horse Ranch, Squamish, telephone : 892-5044 .

. . . and after the ride . . . enjoy a break at

PARADISE VALLEY RESORT

By LORNE MALLI N

This year at UBC had significantly mor ethan two columns .

This year, more than 15,000 students plug-ged the registration lines .

UBC students cashed in on the interest -free federal loans to finance their year'sfees, gas and booze.

Director of Information Services Ralp hDaly started on the administration payrol land occupied himself with "May I correct "letters to The Ubyssey .

The AMS announced it was losing money.So what else was new ?Sweet Substitute was delivered from th e

womb of campus film-maker Larry Kent .

Bookstore line-ups

It wasn't as dirty as The Bitter Ash butKent pulled in packed houses anyway.

The beginning of the term came too earlyfor Totem Park residences and Housinghead John Haar was caught red-faced wit hhis walls bare .

Ubyssey readers were introduced to Pag eFriday, our artsy-craftsy Friday supplement .

The Ubyssey revealed that a $5 .7 millionloan to build new residences would cost UBCstudents $10 million over the next 50 years .

The Creditiste Club was formed oncampus .

"Je parle croaque . "The annual Cairn ceremony came off with -

out the usual preceding banquet. Therewere only eight tickets sold .

The AMS declared war on campus thieve safter a rash of thefts .

Kim Campbell became the first femal efresh president ever .

* * *The late George T . Cunningham was nam-

ed 1964 Great Trekker, the Alma Mate rSociety's highest honor .

A report issued by UBC president JohnB. Macdonald recommended a trimester sys-tem, no Christmas exams and fewer lectures .

The report also approved of beatnik lifein Fort and Acadia camps.

UBC had' its best football action of th eyear wfen a screeching, seething mass ofhome economics homewreckers blanked th eshaken collection of nurses, 13-0.

About 450 black robed graduates at th eFall convocation jammed the Auditorium t ohear British historian Trevor-Roper speak onthe significance of their degrees .

Hardial Bains formed the B .C. StudentFederation as an anti-bureaucrat organization .

A UBC co-ed was charged with possessionof marijuana following a midnight raid byVancouver police on a Point Grey pad .

After weeks of publicity, The SecondComing never came . Slated to speak at UB Cwas George Lincoln Rockwell, AmericanNazi commander .

Then the dam burst as Christmas exam sflooded the campus in blood, sweat andtears .

The Ubyssey gathered in the goodiesagain at the Canadian University Press con-ference, winning the Southam trophy fo rgeneral excellence for the fourth year in arow .

Students returned to campus in Januaryto be confronted with a 15 cent bus farehike .

* * *After protests by the AMS, BCSF and

high school students, bus fares were reduced .The $4 million Student Union Buildin g

came off the drawing board after four year sof haggling. The building is scheduled tobegin this winter .

Liberals won a close victory to form thegovernment in play parliament .

Hender won by a whisker to become AM Spresident over Everett Northup and a Wulf .

Lower Mall residents joined up with theAMS .

UBC's Faculty Association demanded pa yraises averaging $2,000 a professor .

Students were shocked by the death o fDean of Arts, Dr. Kaspar Naegele and hon-ored him at a memorial service in Broc klounge.

* * *UBC's coffers were bolstered by a $7 . 2

million gift from lumber magnate H . R. Mac-Millan.

Hardial Bains slipped silently off campu sand out of the country .

The CUS means survey came up againsta stone wall of student inertia . McAfee wasmad, the survey chairman was mad, and fa tformer AMS president Malcolm Scott gota few licks in, too, attempting to break downthis campus tradition .

The Socred government announced plan sto turn the endowment lands into a crowncorporation .

The general meeting finally got a quoru mbut engineer and sciencemen pranks disrupt-ed the meeting anyway .

This has been the past year at UBC.Take it, it's yours .

Winning SUB design

Friday, March 26, 1965

THE UBYSSEY

Pa9e 23

Grads give gobsto UBC, Fund

UBC's 1965 grad class has given $3,500 to the ThreeUniversities Fund and will give UBC alone a further $3,500for an undergraduate bursary .

The donation to the fundwas made to focus attention onthe plight of higher educationin B.C .

Philosophy honor studentDonald MacKay told a gradclass meeting: "We should in-dicate that as graduating stu-dents we are aware of our re-sponsibilities to contribute t ohigher learning .

"We should show we ar ewilling to donate money tohigher education and not justto UBC," he said .

Graduating classes usuallymake a gift to UBC only.

This year's 2,200 membergrad class collected $7,000 .

The Book Store

Will Be Closed

All Day

Wednesday, March 31st

IMPORTANT NOTIC E

r

SOAPBOX(Continued from Page 1 )

experience at UBC, if hecomes 'back .

"I might be back at UBCsometime in the future," hesaid, "but my plans are veryvague."

The soapboxers at Hyd ePark are many and varied .** *

In addition to contingentsfrom the Roman Catholi cChurch, the Salvation Army,and the "Church of the Los tIsrael," there was a Britis hGuanian of East Indian descentwho was attempting to con-vince a large crowd that thecolored section of the popula-tion would soon be runningBritain .

"Why don't you clear outand leave us to it, you idiots,"he said. "You English are stu-pid, uneducated, and sexless .I don't know how any of youwere born ."

* * *Another speaker, backed by

a large red flag, was condemn-ing U.S. raids on North Viet-nam. He was surrounded byabout 10 policemen to protecthim from the crowd .

In all, there were about 1,000people standing in the rain lis-tening to the 10 or more speak-ers at what is probably theworld's most popular place toexpress an opinion .

Housinghead retires

Housing administrator A . R .Baird is retiring April 1, after19 years with the university.

Baird came to UBC in 1946and was instrumental in bring-ing the army huts from Oak-ridge and Richmond to UBC ~where they now make up Ac-adia adia and Fort camps .

Mrs . Rose Wells, Baird's sec-retary for many years said :"He is a very able administrat-or and I am sure he will begreatly missed at UBC . "

Final scheduleFinal exam timetables should

be up by the beginning of nextweek, maybe, according toassistant registrar Donald Mc -Crae .

Awn Mater Society

OFFICIAL NOTICES1. Discipline Committee

Applications are now being received for member -ship on the AMS Discipline Committee. Apply inwriting to AMS Secretary by Friday, March 26 ,1965 . (Box No. 68) .

2. WUS Committe eThe World University Service Committee is ac-cepting applications for the position of Pres sOfficer . All those interested in this work or anycommittee work for WUS are invited to come tothe WUS office, Brock Extension 257.

3. Capital Fund Drive Committe eLooking for a student who would be willing towork for two or three hours a week over the sum-mer on the Student Capital Fund Drive Commit-tee. Anyone interested please phone Bob Cruise ,immediately.

4. 1965 Homecoming Committe eThose interested in working on next year's com-mittee, please apply to Box No . 47, AMS Office.

5. Leadership ConferenceApplications are now being received for position son the Leadership Conference Committee for nextyear. Letters giving experience and intersts shouldbe submitted to the chairman, Box 78, Brock Hall,no later than 4:00 p.m. Friday, March 26.

6. High School ConferenceApplications are now being received for positionson the High School Conference Committee, 1965-1966 . Applications should be addressed to GayleGaskill, Chairman, Brock Hall, Deadline March 26 .

For

Annual Stocktaking

NOTIC E

List of Clubs Constituted

Under U .C.C.Associated Childhood Educatio nAfrican Student sA.I .Ch .E.—C .I .C .A.I .S .E .C .Alliance FrancaiseAssoc. of Grad . Students i n

Community Plannin gAqua SocietyBadminton ClubCaribbean Students Assoc .Campus CavaliersChinese VarsityChoral SocietyChristian Scienc eCircle K.Communist ClubConservative ClubDance ClubDemographic SocietyDeseretE. I. C .East Asia SocietyEngineering Physics SocietyFencing ClubFilm SocietyFine Arts ClubFolk Song SocietyGamma DeltaGerman ClubHamsoc (Amateur Radio)Judo ClubLiberal Club

Lutheran Student MovementLower Mall Residence Assoc .Native Canadian FellowshipNew Democrat sNewman Centr eNisei Varsity ClubNuclear DisarmamentParliamentary Counci lPhrateresPhoto SocietyPre-LibrarianshipPre-Medical SocietyPre-Social Work ClubPhysics SocietyPsychology ClubQuaker Discussion Grou pRamblersRod & Gun ClubRiding Club

,sSailing ClubSlavonic Circl eSocial Credit ClubSports Car ClubSquash ClubStudent Christian Movemen tStudent Committee on Cuban

AffairsUnitarian ClubUnited Nations Clu bVarsity Christian FellowshipVarsity Outdoor Clu bY.B .A.A.A .

The above groups have Constitutions on file with the University ClubsCommittees; Please note that as of September bookings will not be accepted .from groups which have not filed their Constitution .

GRAEME VANCE, Co-ordinator.

4

elk

Page 24

THE UBYSSEY

Friday, March 26, 1965

'tweenclasses

Artists daub on screenCLASSIFIE D

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

Non-Commercial Classified Ads are payable in Advanc e

Publications Office: Brock Hall.

s

Three films on contemporaryartists, Karel Appel, Cer iRichards and Francis Baconwill be shown today in La . 104by the Fine Arts Club . Admis-sion is 10 cents for non-mem-bers .

* * *UBC SOCRED S

Hon. A. B . Patterson, MPfor Fraser Valley, speaks noo ntoday in Bu. 200 .

* * *SPECIAL EVENT S

The Japanese Gagaku En-semble will perform Saturdaynight at 8 in Hebb Theatre.Tickets at AMS .

* * *NEW DEMOCRATS

Dr. Ray Parkinson, Burrardfederal NDP candidate, wil lspeak at noon today in Bu . 104 .

* * *CUBA

Dorothy Steeves speaks o nthe Student Tour to Cuba noontoday in Bu. 102. Student swishing to spend six weeks ona travel, study, work tour ofCuba, all expenses paid, com etoday; 100 from Canada, atleast 10 from B .C .

* * *UC C

Special SUB informationmeeting Wednesday noon inCouncil chambers . All interest-ed club members invited .

* * *

PARLIAMENTARY COUNCILGeneral meeting and elec-

tions Tuesday noon in Bu . 202 .All political club membersplease attend .

* * *NEWMAN CENTE R

The Silent Pope, an exam-ination of Hochuth's The Dep-uty noon today in Bu. 214 .

Rev. Alan Jackson speaks o nContemporary Art and theChurch, with slides today at8:00 p .m. at St. Mark's.

* * *

SOCRED CLU BDynamic society film on Col-

umbia River project Thursdaynoon in Bu. 104 ; 10 cents ad-mission .

* * *VCF

VCF presents Dr . LionelGurney speaking for the RedSea Mission team today noo nin Bu. 106 .

* * *

GOSPEL STUDENTSRev. David Wilkenso n

speaks on drug addiction-caseHistories Monday noon in Bu .106 .

UBC MADRIGAL Singers wil lperform Sunday, April 4,in Hebb Theatre . Free tick-ets available from AMS.

DANCE CLUBAll members, general meet-

ing for election of new officer sMonday .

* * *ATTENTION GIRL S

Anyone interested in a GolfClinic contact: Lauris Innes ,CR 8-1115 or Gayle Hitchens ,YU 7-9156.

* * *DEMOGRAPHIC SOCIETY

General meeting and illegalhandouts noon today in Bu .225 .

* * *EL CIRCUL O

Last meeting of this year ;elections noon today in Bu .204 .

* * *UBC LIBERALS

General meeting to elect ex-ecutives for next year toda ynoon in Bu . 220 .

* * *GRAD CLASS COUNCIL

Class reps to meet in Bu .227 Monday noon . Important.

* * *DEBATING UNION

General meeting for electionof next year's officers noon to-day in Bu. 218 .

* * *VOC

Important! Meeting for allthose in town this summer ,noon Tuesday in Arts 124 .

* * *SPECIAL EVENTS

Last minute tickets availabl efor the Vancouver SymphonyOrchestra, Marion Anderson ,The Cave, That Was the WeekThat Was, and Isy's.

CharterBusService .

37 and 4 1

Passenger Coaches

now available i n

Vancouver

Phone 684-0522

for information and prices

Squamish CoachLines Ltd .

Lost & Found 1 1HELP — Lost. A folder containing

research papers, geography prac-ticals, and English essays, Wed-nesday, March 17th in vicinity ofAuditorium. Phone Irma, 733-426 2evenings .

LOST — Small gold wedding band ,inscription. Great sentimentalvalue . Reward . Phone Elsie, AM1-2306 .

FOUND—Took a Woodsonia rain -coat from Buchanan 106 Saturdaynight, March 13, by mistake. Lefta similar coat with gloves in poc-ket . Telephone 224-4903 .

WOULD the person who removed aLondon Fog Raincoat from th eSailing Club Monday please returnthe keys at least to the club roo mor phone 922-4717 .

FOUND — Tuesday morning (March16) in Organic Chemistry cloak -room, topcoat and watch exchang-ed for my coat. Phone 988-8121 .

LOST—One black Schaeffer "Dot "pencil vicinity Hennings Building.Phone 988-8121 . Reward .

LOST — Male ' s black glasses nearWoodward Library . Phone Pat,RE 8-1741.

FOUND—Set of car keys outsideWomen's Gym last Friday. "Stew -

art Austin B .C . No. 9-402" is writ -ten on enclosed tag. Phone CA4-5214 after 6 :00 p .m. Ask forBruce Brown or leave a message .

REWARD for green coat (pipe i npocket) taken from Phy. Lab Mar.18 . Pete, 731-7429 . No ques . asked.

FOUND—Girl ' s Class Ring ; blackletters on gold pin ; man's watch ;woman's ring ; gold ring ; car keysin case ; driver ' s license ; girl ' sleather black gloves . Apply AMS Office .

FOUND—In women ' s wash room inBrock Hall on March 19, 1965, alady's watch . See Proctor in Broc kHall .

LOST—One pink French purse con-taining important cards. CollegeLibrary Tuesday noon. 224-7585 , call Helen .

MEN 'S black-framed glasses, i nblack leather case, lost Monday i nBuchanan main hall or washroom.Please phone RE 3-2105.

LOST—One pair girl's glasses inbeige case. Near Ed. Building .Name inside . FA 7-3642 .

VOICE and Piano books, Machli stextbook and notebooks takenfrom Ponderosa washroom Fridaynight. Phone CA 4-1897 . Desperate !

TIME FLIES—Mine flew from Bu .3224, Feb. 28 at 10:30 and hasn' treturned . Have you seen it? Phon eJim, YU 8-8538 .

FOUND FLAG on which are 3 mart -lets Et Al . Bona fide owner . Con-tact Ken Dryden, 224-9035 .

FOUND—Car keys front of Women 'sGym, March 19. Contains cardStewart Austin B .C. No. 9-402 .Phone CA 4-5214 after 6 :00 p.m .Ask for Bruce Brown or leav emessage.

FOUND—One lady Elgin gold watch ,near Stadium lot . Call 224-9946 ,Hut 30, Room 13, Acadia .

Special Notices-

1 3

GRADUATION IS SOON — Reserv enow, GIRLS, beautiful formals (ren tor sales) . FELLOWS—Tux ' s, whit ejackets or tails. Discount on al lformals. Also discount on corsageswith above orders. DELUXE COS-TUMES AND FORMAL WEAR ,1292 Kingsway . Phone 874-6116 .

RIDE wanted after exams . Ottawa ,Montreal, Boston or New York .Share gas and driving . Phone Lee ,RE 8-8505 .

HOOTENANY & Poetry Reading atVancouver Peace House, 314 8Point Grey Road, Friday, Marc h26, 8 :00 p.m. Single : 75c—Couples :

$1 .00—Proceeds to Comox Project—'65 .

Transportation--cont.

14RIDE WANTED to Montreal after

May 1st. Share expenses and driv-ing. Brenda, CA 4-1581:

RIDERS WANTED—to share gasand driving Toronto, Montreal orBoston, Mass . Phone Al, WA2-0865 .

'58 VOLKSWAGEN—Excellent con-dition . Cash and terms . Call Steve,224-5874 .

1953 BEL-AIR CHEV .—City tested.Good running order, $150 .00 . C A4-7346 .

MG TC—Excellent con., Reid Lally ,phone CA 4-6214.

Wanted 1 5WANTED. Amateur talent, folk

singers, jazz groups, etc . All wel-come. Contact Irving, LA 2-0433 ,or Evenings, LA 1-8393 .

AUTOMOTIVE & MARINE

Automobiles For Sale 2 11957 FORD Standard V-8, good con-

dition, best offer, after 7 p.m.681-3929 .

FOR SALE — Rolls Royce Merlin ,Mk . III Motor . New, Supercharger.Offers . Phone CA 4-1996 between11 and 12 p.m .

Boats & Supplies 26NEW 35 ft. sloop for charter . Idea l

for group parties of 10 . From $5 .00.AM 1-6646, 8-10' p .m .

Motorcycles & Scooters 27

BUSINESS SERVICESTyping 42THESES and Essays expertly typed .

Reasonable rates . Phone 263-4023 .

EMPLOYMENTHelp Wanted

5 1

INSTRUCTION — SCHOOLS

Tutoring

84FAILING in Essays, English o r

Psychology? UBC grad . will tutor—Reasonable rates . Phone RE1-2563 evenings .

WANTED — Chem . 102 tutor forproblems . CR 8-8763, George .

MISCELLANEOU SFOR SALE 7 1

20 TUBE regulated power supply ,300 volts, 150 ma . and 150 volts ,also 5 inch dual trace scope . Phone Mike, CA 4-7471 .RETURN HALF of AMS Charte r

Flight . Leaves London August 5th .CR 8-1878. Students only .

TABLE $10, chairs $3 each, studiolounge $35, 9x12 rug $15, recordcabinet $10, record player $40,

or

portabl eSuite 206, 5550n Yew O St

261-685 1

DESK (42 " x 30 " ) and chair, book-shelf ((32 " x 36") and green bed-chesterfield. Phone TR 9-1060 .

Rooms 8 1BRIGHT, CLEAN sleeping room

near U .B .C . Gates . Non-smoker sor drinkers . CA 4-5063 .

Room &Board 82ON CAMPUS for summer—Availabl e

now, excellent food, Zeta Psi Fra-ternity House, 2250 Wesbroo kCrescent, CA 4-5006 .

SUMMER room and board . DUHouse . Phone CA 4-5258 or CA4-9841 evenings .

Furnished Houses&Apt. 83WANTED — Teacher returning fo r

Summer School, July-Aug ., wouldlike two bedroom furnished suitein University area or, . close by.Please write Rm . 107, 3000 - 15t hAve ., Prince George, B .C .

MODERN 3-room furn . apt ., avail -able June 1 - Aug. 15 . Marrie dcouple only . Rent $112. RE 3-356 15 :30 to 7 :00 .

GIRL to share house, Dunbar & 23rd ,own bedroom., comfortable house.$40 .00. CA 4-1096 .

LARGE 2-bedroom apt . for rent.May to September. 4336 W. 10th .CA 4-4096. Evenings.

QUIET bay - view one bedroomapartment, Pt . Grey Rd. May 1 -Sept . 1 . $100 month . Call RE 8-269 3or inquire at Buchanan 172 .

INTERESTED in sharing accom-modation in Calgary for the sum-mer? — See Morris Mennell, C A4-9029 .

Unfurnished Houses 8 4EUROPEAN executive would like 2

or 3 bedroom unfurn. house or apt .vic . UBC or Point Grey for Apri l15th . Please contact R . Chriz, 6560N.W. Marine Drive, Vatic . 8 ; tel.224-9070 after 6 p.m.

ONE BLOCK from Gates, fully fur-nished accomodation for 1-3 stu-dents starting May 1st. Self-con-tained, three piece bathroom andcooking facilities . Internationalstudents welcome. Phone CA4-4245.

*

EL CIRCUL ODr. F. Marquez lectures on

El Buen Amor, in Spanish, inBu. Penthouse, Tuesday a t8:00 p .m . Everyone welcome .

* * *FILMSOC

English 200 students : GreatExpectations, directed by Dav-id Lean, next Thursday noonat 3 :30, 6 :00 and 8:00 in audi-torium; 50 cents admission .

* * *PRE-SOCIAL WORK

This Hour Has 5 Surprises .All members noon Monday inBu. 202 .

* * *

ALLIANCE FRANCAIS ELast films of the year: Jules

Verne, Deracinements, noo ntoday, Bu . 205 .

* * *VOC

Second Garibaldi meeting inArts 124 noon today .

* * *HILLEL HOUSE

Last chance today to votefor next year's executive. Re-sults will be announced thisafternoon.

* * *VARSITY ROD & GUN

Meeting for elections noontoday in club room. All mem-bers please attend.

* * *CHINESE VARSITY

General meeting for elec-tions noon today in Bu . 212 .

* * *ARCHEOLOGY CLU B

Election meeting noon Mon-day in Bu. 204 .

Peitnlj:wise and, aolai'-iuis ,Th,e Amiga urlo wou1filike tO the,11iihse t1ti,s saving stratcgena bit each veal, t'nthe Bola !BANK OF MONTREAL

ea4ada4 ?e a S's.d aoe Stedeata

A big step on the road to succes sis an early banking connection

'MY BANK '10 3 Mil1ION CANADIANS

The Bank where Students' accounts are warmly welcome d

Your Campus Branch:

The Administration Building : MERLE C . KIRBY, Manager

SPECIAL college rate subscriptionsfor PLAYBOY magazine : 1 yr .$6.50 ; 2 yrs. $12.00 ; 3 yrs. $16.50 .Discounts on all Playboy products also. Call Fred, RE8-4504 .

ANNIE—Happy 18th and remembe rnon - illegitamus corborundum .From the JAR' s and Papau .

PIQUE IS ARRIVETH !The thinking man ' s teething ring.Buy it! Think about it ! ((In that order. )

STEVE H. — Have a happy 21s tbirthday Tues ., March 30 . Get that candle melted down !WILL SELL return half of Charte r

Flight . Student only . London toVancouver leaving August 5'.Phone HE 1-3827 .

Transportation

14TWO girls need ride to Toronto Apri l

30th or later and we ' ll share ex-penses and driving. Call 224-6966 .Mary.

RIDE Wanted, M-S esp. for 8 :3 0classes. T, Th, S fr . vic . of Knightand S .E . Marine AND/or retur nto campus after supper . Phone af-ter 6, FA 5-9648 .

NEED RIDE to Ontario before May1st. Will share expenses and driv-ing. Call R. James, 224-9865 .

ti