senate seats g6~to: larsen, emmott, mate, waldman · these four names were added to the roll call...

16
French college plan impractical ' By PAUL KNO X Leading UBC educators are pessimistic about a proposed French-speaking liberal arts college at UBC . The plan, proposed by Carl Baar, assistant pro- fessor of political science, is cluster college model - led on colleges at American universities which giv e instruction in languages other than English . It involves a semi-autonomous college withi n ABC. Dr . L . L . Bongie, head of the French department , ;aid the proposal was good as an ideal . "But all ideals are good," he said . "Baar will have to come up with a more con - ;rete proposal , supported by data, before his sug- gestion can be examined seriously . "There are far more Chinese-speaking person s III Vancouver than French-speaking . Even in places such as Manitoba, where there is a high proportio n of French-speaking people, there is no college o f the kind Baar has proposed . " Bongie said there is too much opposition t o bilingualism in B .C . for such a program to be ac- ceptable to the public, which ultimatelly woul d pay for the college . "There is even opposition to a French radio sta- tion in Vancouver, and a Vancouver alderman ha s said that we must wipe out all traces of the Frenc h language in our public schools . " Dr . V . J . Okulitch, dean of science, said there i s too great a lack of space on campus and the colleg e could not be accommodated . "It's a question of priorities," he said . "Student s at such a college would have to live in residence , and the money forthcoming from the provincia l government won't be enough to provide new build- ings, "A college system also creates an administrativ e headache, " Dr . Ian Ross, head of the experimental arts I program (which Baar said was a watered-dow n version of the type of college he proposed) als o questioned the number of French-speaking students in the Lower Mainland . "I don't know whether the proportion of Frenc h to English students is high enough to warrant suc h a college," he said . "But it sounds good in theory and shouldn't b e discarded because of lack of space ." Acting UBC president Dean Walter _ Gage said he had no time to study the _ proposal and had n o comment on it . Dean of Arts Dennis Healy was unavailable fo r comment . THE UYSS E VANCOUVER, B.C ., THURSDAY, OCTOBER 19, 196 7 tel. XLIX, No . 13 Senate seats g6~to : Larsen, Emmott , Mate, Waldma n hurt hilger photo "NOBODY CAN CALL me a boob" says senator-elect Ra y -Larsen as he eyes co-victor Kirsten Emmott . Third uhder- graduate senator Gabor Mate appears pre-occupied with other things . Members of the arts faculty meet today to conside r amending residence requirements so that extra course s ' and the summer session will enable earlier graduation . It is believed that this will be the first step toward s introducing the semester system to UBC . The faculty meeting, to be held in Buchanan 104, a t 2 :30 p .m . will also consider allowing students to take a sixth course on a pass-fail basis . The arts faculty had asked the senate to act on : —dropping the compulsory science requirement i n arts . —changing the English 100 and 200 requirements. _changing the two year foreign language require- ments . By BO HANSEN Ubyssey Senate Reporter Senator Ray Larsen . Senator Kirsten Emmott . Senator Gabor Mate . Senator Mark Waldman . These four names were added to the roll cal l of UBC's chief academic policy-making body Monday night. Larsen, arts 5 ; Miss Emmott, science 4 ; Mate , arts 4, and Waldman, graduate studies 3, swep t to victory in the first-ever election for studen t senators . Four new senate seats were opened up to students by a senate decision last spring . The move was in line with a continent-wid e trend toward student representation on univer- sity decision-making bodies .. Larsen topped the Alma Mater Society-run elec- tion with a whopping 3,514 votes . Miss Emmett followed with 2,840 and Mate with 2,789 votes in the impressive 6,200 votes cast. - In the voting for the one graduate studen t position on senate, Mark Waldman won wit h 113 votes to Ian Worley's 56 . Larsen, Miss Emmett and Mate were traile d by Ken Hallet, 2,655 ; Brian Wallace, 2,200 ; Hugh Madden, 2,056 ; and Arnie Abramson, 1,624 votes for the three undergrad positions . "Senate secrecy is over!" said winners Larse n and Mate . All four senators are committed to a platfor m of ending senate secrecy. "I'm inviting some students along for th e first meeting (next Wednesday)," said Larsen. "And that will include the press . " "Senate will undoubtably be shocked that so - called `radicals' have been elected," said Mat e after results were announced at 11 :45 p.m . "Senate will learn that many students don' t think this token represenation is enough . . Stu- dents vote dagainst tokenism when they vote d for us," Mate added . Larsen said he was going to start talking wit h people on senate and try to get on a senate com- mittee . "The first thing I want to do is talk to general meetings of the engineers and aggies, and other s who weren't supporting us . " Larsen and grad student Waldman have tw o year terms . Emmott and Mate serve one year . Miss Emmett was not available for commen t after the results were announced . Waldman stressed that the four student sena- tors should work as a group to demand change . "These changes will no doubt be considere d radical but they must be affected to make UB C a first class school," Waldman said . "The Universities Act leaves room for action , which we will take full advantage of," Waldman added . AMS president Shaun Sullivan and treasure r Dave Hoye said they thought students had mad e a wise choice . Acadians ou t By STEPHEN JACKSO N Ubyssey Housing Reporte r More' families living on campus are feelin g the housing shortage pinch . These families are those of graduate an d foreign students now living in the huts of Acadia Villa and along Clement Road who have bee n asked to leave . Their old dwellings will make way for the health sciences centre already partially buil t along Wesbrook opposite the fraternity houses . First to be vacated will b e the four huts on Clement Roa d which house 15 families . Thei r residents must be out by Feb . 1, housing administrator Le s Rohringer said Wednesday . T h e remaining familie s have his assurance they wil l not have to leave until May . "They can stay until Ma y 31 to finish their academi c MUNTON 'year," Rohringer said . "I don't see why the parking lot should be laid before the new buildings are completed, " said Alma Mater Society first vice-presiden t Don Munton . Munton did not know where the familie s to be ousted could go . Costs would be the main problem, he said. "The average rent for a two bedroom suite in their present housing is $6D a month," Mun- ton said . "Acadia Park suites are double that . These people can't afford those prices . " ro

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Page 1: Senate seats g6~to: Larsen, Emmott, Mate, Waldman · These four names were added to the roll call of UBC's chief academic policy-making body Monday night. Larsen, arts 5; Miss Emmott,

French college plan impractical 'By PAUL KNO X

Leading UBC educators are pessimistic about aproposed French-speaking liberal arts college atUBC .

The plan, proposed by Carl Baar, assistant pro-fessor of political science, is cluster college model -led on colleges at American universities which giv einstruction in languages other than English .

It involves a semi-autonomous college withi nABC.

Dr. L. L. Bongie, head of the French department ,;aid the proposal was good as an ideal .

"But all ideals are good," he said ."Baar will have to come up with a more con -

;rete proposal , supported by data, before his sug-gestion can be examined seriously .

"There are far more Chinese-speaking person sIII Vancouver than French-speaking . Even in places

such as Manitoba, where there is a high proportionof French-speaking people, there is no college ofthe kind Baar has proposed."

Bongie said there is too much opposition t obilingualism in B .C. for such a program to be ac-ceptable to the public, which ultimatelly wouldpay for the college .

"There is even opposition to a French radio sta-tion in Vancouver, and a Vancouver alderman ha ssaid that we must wipe out all traces of the Frenc hlanguage in our public schools . "

Dr . V. J. Okulitch, dean of science, said there i stoo great a lack of space on campus and the colleg ecould not be accommodated .

"It's a question of priorities," he said . "Studentsat such a college would have to live in residence ,and the money forthcoming from the provincia lgovernment won't be enough to provide new build-ings,

"A college system also creates an administrativeheadache, "

Dr. Ian Ross, head of the experimental arts Iprogram (which Baar said was a watered-dow nversion of the type of college he proposed) alsoquestioned the number of French-speaking studentsin the Lower Mainland .

"I don't know whether the proportion of Frenchto English students is high enough to warrant suc ha college," he said .

"But it sounds good in theory and shouldn't b ediscarded because of lack of space ."

Acting UBC president Dean Walter _ Gage saidhe had no time to study the _ proposal and had nocomment on it .

Dean of Arts Dennis Healy was unavailable fo rcomment .

THE UYSSEVANCOUVER, B.C., THURSDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1967tel. XLIX, No. 13

Senate seats g6~to:Larsen, Emmott ,Mate, Waldman

— hurt hilger photo

"NOBODY CAN CALL me a boob" says senator-elect Ra y-Larsen as he eyes co-victor Kirsten Emmott . Third uhder-graduate senator Gabor Mate appears pre-occupied withother things .

Members of the arts faculty meet today to conside ramending residence requirements so that extra course s'and the summer session will enable earlier graduation .

It is believed that this will be the first step towardsintroducing the semester system to UBC .

The faculty meeting, to be held in Buchanan 104, at2:30 p.m. will also consider allowing students to take asixth course on a pass-fail basis .

The arts faculty had asked the senate to act on :—dropping the compulsory science requirement in

arts .—changing the English 100 and 200 requirements._changing the two year foreign language require-

ments .

By BO HANSENUbyssey Senate Reporter

Senator Ray Larsen. Senator Kirsten Emmott.Senator Gabor Mate . Senator Mark Waldman .

These four names were added to the roll cal lof UBC's chief academic policy-making bodyMonday night.

Larsen, arts 5; Miss Emmott, science 4 ; Mate ,arts 4, and Waldman, graduate studies 3, sweptto victory in the first-ever election for studen tsenators .

Four new senate seats were opened up tostudents by a senate decision last spring .

The move was in line with a continent-widetrend toward student representation on univer-sity decision-making bodies . .

Larsen topped the Alma Mater Society-run elec-tion with a whopping 3,514 votes . Miss Emmettfollowed with 2,840 and Mate with 2,789 votesin the impressive 6,200 votes cast.

- In the voting for the one graduate studen tposition on senate, Mark Waldman won with113 votes to Ian Worley's 56 .

Larsen, Miss Emmett and Mate were trailedby Ken Hallet, 2,655 ; Brian Wallace, 2,200; HughMadden, 2,056 ; and Arnie Abramson, 1,624 votesfor the three undergrad positions .

"Senate secrecy is over!" said winners Larsenand Mate .

All four senators are committed to a platfor mof ending senate secrecy.

"I'm inviting some students along for th efirst meeting (next Wednesday)," said Larsen."And that will include the press . "

"Senate will undoubtably be shocked that so -called `radicals' have been elected," said Mat eafter results were announced at 11:45 p.m .

"Senate will learn that many students don'tthink this token represenation is enough .. Stu-dents vote dagainst tokenism when they votedfor us," Mate added .

Larsen said he was going to start talking withpeople on senate and try to get on a senate com-mittee .

"The first thing I want to do is talk to general

meetings of the engineers and aggies, and other swho weren't supporting us. "

Larsen and grad student Waldman have tw oyear terms. Emmott and Mate serve one year .

Miss Emmett was not available for commentafter the results were announced .

Waldman stressed that the four student sena-tors should work as a group to demand change .

"These changes will no doubt be consideredradical but they must be affected to make UB Ca first class school," Waldman said .

"The Universities Act leaves room for action ,which we will take full advantage of," Waldmanadded.

AMS president Shaun Sullivan and treasurerDave Hoye said they thought students had madea wise choice .

Acadians outBy STEPHEN JACKSO N

Ubyssey Housing Reporter

More' families living on campus are feelingthe housing shortage pinch .

These families are those of graduate an dforeign students now living in the huts of AcadiaVilla and along Clement Road who have beenasked to leave .

Their old dwellings will make way for thehealth sciences centre already partially buil talong Wesbrook opposite the fraternity houses .

First to be vacated will bethe four huts on Clement Roadwhich house 15 families . Thei rresidents must be out by Feb .1, housing administrator LesRohringer said Wednesday .

T h e remaining familieshave his assurance they wil lnot have to leave until May .

"They can stay until Ma y31 to finish their academi c

MUNTON

'year," Rohringer said."I don't see why the parking lot should be

laid before the new buildings are completed, "said Alma Mater Society first vice-presidentDon Munton .

Munton did not know where the familiesto be ousted could go. Costs would be the mainproblem, he said.

"The average rent for a two bedroom suitein their present housing is $6D a month," Mun-ton said . "Acadia Park suites are double that .These people can't afford those prices."

ro

Page 2: Senate seats g6~to: Larsen, Emmott, Mate, Waldman · These four names were added to the roll call of UBC's chief academic policy-making body Monday night. Larsen, arts 5; Miss Emmott,

— bob brown photo

THE RAIN IN SPAIN, and all the other places of the world, falls mainly on UBC . JohnnyWalk-er walks wilfully through the puddles joined by jouncy Jim jauntily jabbing the rocksand pebbles and concrete. Let it rain, baby .

Jock budget rejected Again

Page 2

THE UBYSSEY

Thursday, October 19, 1967

The proposed Men's Athletic Committee bud-get was again rejected 'by council Tuesday night .

Council, which provides '$68,460 of the MA C$118,707 budget, voted 10 to seven to send thebudget back again because the MAC had no tconsidered recommendations made by the stu-dent body last week .

They were:— that the MAC allocate $2,000 to intramural '

sports .— that it revise allocations to those sports re-

ceiving less than $2,600.— and that athletes benefitting from trave l

grants pay 10 per cent of travel costs .Law president Jim Taylor said the MAC dis-

regarded the suggestions of council ."I don't know if it was intentional or inevit-

able stupidity but they're disregarding the sys-tem. The cuts are rational and justified," he said .

AMS first vice-president 'Don Munton said th eMAC budget was five months in coming to coun-cil for approval . The budget was approved by th eMAC early in March and came to council i nAugust .

"The position taken by MAC is totally un -acceptable to council," Munton said .

Dr. Peter Lusztig, chairman of the MAC bud-get committee, said under questioning he couldn'texplain the delay .

AMS treasurer Dave Hoye asked him whatthe consequences would be if the AMS didn'tpass the budget .

"The money hasn't been 'spent yet, but if wepull out of a game it would be breach of con -tract and would be damned hard to reschedul ethat game," Lusztig said .

Athletes who travel with teams probably pa yfive to 10 per cent of the costs anyway ,he said .

"The budget statement of the MAC says i neffect, `screw you'," said arts president StanPersky.

"The only kind of alternative is not to passthe bloody budget ."

Hoye said the AMS couldn't tamper with theMAC budget since at last April's AMS general

meeting students voted for $4.20 to go to men'sathletics .

"Council is playing pretty gross games withthe student body," Hoye said . "It's rotten campu spolitics. "

"In two weeks the students will have a peti-tion demanding athletics grants from the AM Sbe turned over to the administration . "

A motion by Jim Taylor to cut the MAC bud-get by $3,000 was defeated.

Council finally voted to refer the budget bac kto the MAC with directions to refer specificallyto last week's recommendations outlined above.

Straight standsThe Georgia Straight is not gone .Yet.A two-page edition of the Straight appeared

Wednesday .And a full-size issue is planned for release

next week .No seizures of the new issue leave been re -

ported, yet," a ter i sn McLeod said Wednes-day.

endors are giving away the paper andaccepting donation, he said.

McLeod plans to have a downtowh tnagazineservice, distribute papers fell through .

"The- sales ban does not affect subscriptionor stores, but there is a $100 fine for dealingwith the Straight . "

The papers are all stamped banned by themayor .

McLeod s aid the Straight may go under i fsupreme court appeal doesn't go through soon .

"We made a profit on the last issue, but wedon't know about the next one . Going to courtcosts money, too . But we're not finished yet. "

The extra (five swatsika edition) shows apicture of a wall covered with girlie pictures ,allegedly taken in city hall .

"Just before the door was slammed in thephotographer's face," McLeod said .

Intake equals incomeFood services was the only UBC ancillary enterprise that

didn't eat up more than its income last year .Food broke even .But UBC officials said residences, health services and the

research farm incurred a total deficit of $17,238 .The health services loss was highest with $7,662 . Following

were the research farm, with $6,294 and residence losses of$3,282 .

These will be met with .appropriations from UBC generalrevenue .

The compus bookstore and post office showed a deficit o f$10,471, but were covered by last year's surplus .

Food services revenue of $776,566 covered food, labor andoperating costs and repayed an advance for construction of th ePonderosa.

Traffic and security patrol costs are viewed as part of build-ings and grounds and service costs .

Gallery called a 'dungeo nThe present art gallery in the library basement is a dungeon, "

says curator Alvin Balkind."The ceiling is too low for many modern paintings," he said

Wednesday . "Music can't be played except at a very low level ,othewise I get banging on the wall from the stacks. "

In spite of conditions, Balkind said that thousands of stu-dents find their way down to see an annual eight or nine exhibi-tions in the gallery .

Attendance depends on how scandalous the particula rexhibition is he said .

"But it is important for people to come down and be dis-tressed," said Balkind.

"Ideally it should not be just a gallery but a meeting plac e— a place of noise, confusion and excitement . "

Features Balkind would like added include a comfortablelounge and coffee facilities .

Lack of these improvements are due to an inadequate bud -get (around $7,000 excluding salaries) and his lack of time, h esaid .

Spend your moments-of-a-lifetime in Canada's finest moun-tain and lake setting . . . where holiday pleasures enhanc eyour every mood . You'll long remember evenings of musi cand laughter in the sparkling Copper Room . . . walks alon gthe lakeshore . . . the lively fun of golf, riding, curling, boat-ing. There's swimming in heated pools, too . And the cuisin eis marvelous . Expensive? Not for this most special occasion .A complete honeymoon holiday including your room for 3nights, breakfast each morning (in bed if you wish), 2 fabu-lous honeymoon dinners, a bicycle built for two, golf an dspecial surprise extras amounts to only $85* per couple ,off-season (Sept . 11 to May 11) .'For specified New Wing accommodation, add $15 per couple, off-season.

For reservations, see your travel agent or write to Max A . Nargil ,Managing Director.

HARRISONA Distinguished Resort at Harrison Hot Springs, British Columbi a

one moon at'CO'&`fl~sorL ies

COUNCIL MEETING . . . before they moved downstairs.

Page 3: Senate seats g6~to: Larsen, Emmott, Mate, Waldman · These four names were added to the roll call of UBC's chief academic policy-making body Monday night. Larsen, arts 5; Miss Emmott,

Thursday, October 19, 1967

THE UBYSSEY

Page 3

COUNCIL JOLLIES

BY NORMAN GIDNEY

AMS budget shot down

— powell hargrave photo

MY JOSH STICK burns better than yours says engineerin gpresident Lynn Spraggs after he refused to be outdone byarts council types burning incense at the council meetingTuesday night .

'Missionary, do go homefive-member panel agrees

•,

By MARK DeCOURSEYMost missionaries do more harm than good .This ,was the conclusion reached by a panel on Missionary ,

Go Home in Bu. 104 Wednesday .Dr. Cyril Powles from Tokyo, mediated the five-member

panel sponsored by the Student Christian Movement .Eric Low, an Anglican missionary on leave from India, sai d

he has seen some bad things done by missionaries but woul dnot class all missionaries as harmful .

"Arrogance not the missionary should stay home. On in-invitation, we can do much . "

Anthropology prof Bill Wilmott said the basic strategy o fmissions should be changed to allow missionaries to work withi nsocial structures .

"They should be assigned a post for life to allow them to ge tthe feel of the society they are trying to change," Wilmott said .

Cathy Finley, a former CUSO missionary in Nigeria saidchange could come about in society only through existingstructures.

"And it is impossible to teach rational disciplines such aschemistry to a pagan," she said .

"Sometimes missionaries fail to recognize they are teachinga system of thought also . "

There must be more careful screening of missionaries, saidDr. Norman MacKenzie, personnel director for United Churchmissions .

A UBC student from South Africa, Esso Mia, said he classedthe Peace Corps and CUSO as missionaries, too .

"And technical missions in a non-industrial setting are jus tas harmful as regilious ones in a non-Christian society," Miasaid.

An Alma Mater Society budget containingno money for arts was shot down in its secondreading Tuesday night .

In an ironic situation, the majority of coun-cillors favored approving the budget . But sinceit requires a two-thirds majority and a weightedvote was used, the budget failed to gain approvalin a 14 to nine vote .

(In a weighted vote, arts and engineering ge ttwo votes each, while science and education ge tthree votes each . The proportion reflects thenumber of students in each faculty who voted i ntheir undergraduate society elections .)

Debate on the budget again centred onwhether or not arts should get a budget .

According to members of council it was art sagainst the system .

"We must control the budget because art swant to screw the whole bloody system," sai dlaw president Jim Taylor .

"The biggest thing is that they don't want t oconform," said engineering president LynnSpraggs.

"If you give them the money, you're condon-ing them bucking the system," he said .

Spraggs said if the engineering undergrad-uate society was to run a free program it wouldcost $40,000 .

"Arts should get a budget but it should re-member that if it's going to change its mind, it' sgoing to have to suffer the consequences — on ehell of a lot of bureaucratic red tape," said AM Streasurer Dave Hoye .

The budget committee has agreed not t ochange the budget in favor of arts, Hoye said .

"You people are doing something wrong, "said arts president Stan Persky.

"How can you possibly jutify passing a bud -get that makes no provision?" he asked .

"I've disagreed with Persky on many pointsbut I agree with him here. There's no reason fora budget with nil dollars for arts," said clubschairman Mike Coleman .

"If you show some responsibility you'll ge tsome money," agriculture president Gene Zab-awa told Persky.

"You're not trying to be responsible," he said .John Cumberland, arts 1, said he has the

names of 125 students who are willing to with-hold AMS fees in January if arts doesn't get abudget .

"Lawyers say you haven't got a hope in hel lof making us pay our AMS fees . It's a civil liber-ties case," he said .

In one speech, Hoye addressed council once as"treasurer" and as an "individual. "

As treasurer, he said : "I had an understand-ing with the arts council that they were going topay for the anti-calendar with locker rentals_"

As an individual, Hoye said : "No undergrad-

Lethargic paintersLethargy is running rampant at the Totem

Park paint-in.Only a few panels out of a possible 90 have

been completed since the paint-in began threeweeks ago .

Most panels on the Totem Park constructionfence have been reserved by students at 50 cent seach .

One participant, Martin Greenall, said he andtwo others intend to do a three dimensional eggon a pink background entitled :

"Ovum, ovum, on the wall,"Who is the fecundist of them all? ""I'm painting my womb in a different way, "

Greenall said .

uate society president should be bitter about th eway arts is carrying out its program . "

Persky asked for a ten minute adjournmen tto discuss with the arts students present how h eshould vote .

They instructed him to vote against anyamendments giving arts less than $5,000 .

Senate candidate Ray Larsen leaped onto th ecouncil table before the actual vote was take nand delivered a speech .

"What would you do if you didn't get a bud-get next year?" Larsen shouted, pointing at var-ious council members .

"This council has gone on record time andtime again saying students shouldn't have to payhigher university fees yet here you're sayingstudents should have to pay and pay."

Debate was adjourned on the budget alloca-tion to arts after the vote not to approve thebudget.

The budget will return to the budget com-mittee and be presented again at council nextweek .

Incense stickscouncil capers

Smokebombs and incense sticks . Flash flaresexploding into brilliant light . Table top speechesand thrilling oration .

It happened at Tuesday night's council meet-ing in Brock lounge, during the first ever dem-onstration of psychedelic student government .

Participatory democracy in action becamereality as 150 arts students crowded into counci lchambers to hear debate on the second readingof the Alma Mater Society budget .

Finally, AMS president Shaun Sullivan ad-journed the meeting to Brock lounge.

Councillors moved tables into a makeshiftsquare and the meeting got under way .

"It's the first time council has been withoutits Linus blanket — the horseshoe table," sai darts undergraduate president Stan Persky .

Engineering president Lynn Spraggs, soonslipped away from the meeting for several min-utes and returned with six or seven redshirts .

Clouds of smoke billowed and flashes of lightfilled the temple—yea, even unto the roofbeam s—where the graybeards sat in council . Whoopingredshirts had lit smoke bombs and flares .

In midst of fiery confusion, Spraggs aske dSullivan if incense lit earlier by artsmen was i norder .

"It doesn't matter to me," Sullivan said .Spraggs then calmly lit a smoke bomb an d

held it as thick cloud poured aloft . ."It's engineering incense," he smiled, Buddha -

like ."Oh, Lynn," screamed nursing president

Jenny Ueda, who crawled under her coat besidethe grinning engineer.

"I suggest this qualifies as a proverbialsmoke-filled room and we should get on with themeeting," said university clubs chairman MikeColeman .

AMS co-ordinator Jim Lightfoot, radiant inan "I like SUB" button, opened doors and win-dows and the smoke slowly cleared.

Later, senate candidate Ray Larsen stompe donot a table with his rowhide boots and waggeda finger at AMS representatives, chiding themwith shouts for not given arts any money. Hereceived a solid two minutes applause .

Page 4: Senate seats g6~to: Larsen, Emmott, Mate, Waldman · These four names were added to the roll call of UBC's chief academic policy-making body Monday night. Larsen, arts 5; Miss Emmott,

Published Tuesdays, Thursdays and Fridays throughout the university yearby the Alma Mater Society of the University of B.C. Editorial opinions arethose of the editor and not of the AMS or the university. Member,Canadian University Press. The Ubyssey subscribes to the press servicesof Pacific Student Press, of which it is founding member, and Undergroun dPress Syndicate. Authorized second class mail by Post Office Department,Ottawa, and for payment of postage in cash. The Ubyssey publishes PageFriday, a weekly commentary and review. City editor, 224-3916 . Othercalls, 224-3242; editor, local 25; photo, Page Friday, loc. 24; sports, be.23: advertising, loc. 26 . Telex 04-5224.

OCTOBER 19, 1967

Students' choiceStudents had a clear choice in Wednesday's senate

election.On one side in the race for three undergraduate seat s

were four "responsible" candidates, committed to work-ing peacefully with the existing autocratic universit ypower structure .

On the other side were three candidates widelylabelled as "radicals ." These candidates were unitedin a commitment to end the notorious policy of senatesecrecy. They were united also in a commitment tospeak out strongly for the academic reforms longopposed by the vested interests — businessmen an dtenured academics — who now dominate the senate .

The radicals won and with their victory goes a clearmessage to the senate and to the board of governors:there is a widespread discontent among UBC's 18,00 0students with education as it is practised at our uni-versity.

We extend hearty congratulations to new senatorsRay Larsen, Kirsten Emmott, Gabor Mate, and to MarkWaldman, the new senate spokesman for graduatestudents.

If their performance in the senate lives up to thei relection campaigns, students will have voted wisely . "Hello, there, sports fans . Isn't it good to know that not all of our university students are

Irresponsible radicals and protest marchers? '

Golly. WallyNew UBC president Kenneth Hare can't get away

from his job at Birbeck College in London until nex tyear. So dean of student affairs Walter Gage has beenappointed acting president until Hare gets here .

Now, one of the chief functions of a university hea dis to inform members of the university community aboutuniversity policy .

You see, some of us peasants feel we ought to knowwhat the bosses are doing about problems like our over-crowded library and our decrepit system of undergradu-ate education. We're even interested in minor matterslike racial discrimination in Greek letter societies.

Hearing the word from the top — even if we'renot satisfied with the answers — at least gives us con-fidence that somebody cares .

So, remembering that past president John Mac-donald was easily available for comment during hisfive years in office, The Ubyssey this term sent somereporters to see temporary boss Gage .

We asked him about downtown press and radiostories that he had ordered a report into discriminatio nin UBC fraternities and sororities . The dean had nocomment.

Then, after librarian Inglis Bell announced thatbook and study space in the library was evaporating andthat there are no capital funds for library construction ,we went to Gage for enlightenment. "Everybody hastheir problem," was the university head's glib reply .

Then a Ubyssey reporter asked Gage about Mac-donald's plan for an undergraduate education experi-ment at UBC.

After pondering the situation, Gage said there waslittle he could say.

We repeat: part of the job of being head of a uni-versity is letting the people know what's being doneabout the problems that affect them.

If there is a policy with regard to the librarycrisis or to education reform, then Gage, as head of theuniversity, must be prepared to tell students and facult ywhat it is.

If there is no policy, we suggest he ring up the boardof governors and get one .

Fatuous remarks and "no comment" won't do fro mthe man at the top .

EDITOR : Danny StotfmanCity Stuart GrayNews Susan GranbyManaging Murray McMillanPhoto Kurt HiigerAssociate . . .. Al Birnie, Kirsten Emmet tSenior Pat HrushowySports Mike JessenWire Charlotte HairePage Friday Judy BingAss't. City Boni Le e

As the praise . turned into squeaksand the squeaks turned into jeers,an incredible variety of judo ex-,perts fell for one another. In be-tween belly laughs, a crusty AnnArky loafed about, mumbling shewas unable to stomach Brock' scrumby b r e a d . Adjusting their

. w:: .

horn-rime, several horny blorgsran after Irving Fetish with glassystares, making spectacles of them -selves . Choked with coke, whilesenate fever crackled around them ,187 students dozed in a proverbia lsmoke-filled doom.

Dodging peashooter pellets, BoHansen, Norman Gidney, SteveJackson, Judy Young, Paul Kno xand Irene Wasilewski retaliate dwith boomerangs. Mike Finlay,tearing, quoted B . S. Mark De -Coursey, Fred Cawsey, Denis New -man, Alexandra Volkoff, Ted Sy-perek, Leo Tolstoy and Jade Ede nBob Brown, Lawrence Woodd ,meditated. Hew Gwynne hewe dbriefly .

Practising ancient Aztec rites ,Powell Hargrave, Derrek Wood dand George Hello thought negativein the darkroom.

'Ashamed'Editor, The Ubyssey :

I must say that the displayput on by both universitiesand the UBC engineers at thegame on Monday night certain-ly deserves reproach. Surely ,the football players them -selves deserved some consider-ation .

I alo felt that Mr. GordonShrum lost a great amount ofrespect when he, at his clos-ing speech, condoned the stu-dents' actions .

If this is what it represents ,I feel digusted and ashamedto be a student at this uni-versity.

P. MORGANarts 2.

'Competitive spirit 'Editor, The Ubyssey:

I wish to place on recordmy disagreement with thecriticism of the conduct of theUBC and SFU students at thefootball game Monday. In fact,I should like to express myappreciation to the studentsfrom both universities for theircontribution to the success ofthis athletic event.

There was I naturally ex-uberance and excitement butboth the teams and the stu-dents displayed a praiseworthycompetitive spirit . It would bemost unfair if the member sof student bodies of UBC andSFU were held accountablefor the actions of a few boor-ish, unidentified rowdies . Iparticularly regret the jostlin gof musicians anti the inter-ference with the half-timeshow .

I am confident that nextyear we can rely upon the uni-versity students to exert amore effective control of therowdy element .

GORDON M . SHRU Mchancellor,

Simon Fraser University

Property damageEditor, The Ubyssey:

An open letter to the engi-neers :

It is unfortunate that alarge minority in the spectator-crowd at the game belong toa frustrated group called theengineers.

When the chips were downat the game in question, thered horde had to resort totheir childish pranks.

Some of their games areconsidered part of their grow-ing-up process, but the timehas come to end juvenilegame that endanger lives andproperty.

For example, we, the under-signed part of the photo staffof The Ubyssey, nearly lostall of our equipment during ascuffle between the red bloband some other unruly groups .We went in at some consider-able risk to our lives to rescueour equipment from a mobsome of whom were wieldingbroken whiskey bottles.

Sure, fun is fun, but letsdraw the line before someonegets hurt and, dammit, let swatch out for other people' sproperty .

GEORGE HOLLO, ed.4,LAWRENCE WOODD, sc.1, BOB BROWN, arts 1 ,POWELL HARGRAVE ,comm. 3, DEARE RWEBB, forestry. 3 .

'Bush leagues 'Editor, The Uhyssey :

Last Friday, Indian ,sarodistAli Akbar Khan boldly at-tempted a concert on campus ,and the university — at it susual loss for an appropriategesture — retaliated by deftlyand repeatedly insulting one ofthe world's most respectedmusicians . The "staging dif-ficulties" which delayed th eperformance for one-half hour,turned out to be either grossinefficiency or a simple ignor-

ance of the necessary seatingarrangements for the perfor-mers .

Once a crude compromis ehad been effected and the firstpiece begun, the question ofwhen the house lights wouldbe turned off arose . But theynever where, and so thosewhose enthusiasm eclipse&their sense of courtesy, couldbe seen as well as heard whilethey straggled in during thefirst 20 minutes of the per-formance .

The loss of the sound system—a debatable improvement—must have been hardly notice-able to those in charge, if infact such existed, since it re-mained off until the intermis-sion. Better stick with the ChadMitchell trio when you're stil lin the bush leagues .

BMJFgraduate studies

'Sorry, RayEditor, The Ubyssey :

I would like to make a recti-fication with regards to a cam-paign statement that was madeby the technical faculties . Onestatement seemed to have im-plied that only those senatecandidates who were respon-sible were supported by thetechnical faculties .

Although my name appear-ed as one of those who signedit, I never saw the statementuntil long after it was dis-tributed. I sincerely regretthat such a detrimental state-ment was made .

I truly believe that all candi;ates are responsible students ,convinced of their own cause .I apolozige in particular toMr. Ray Larsen who I con-sider a person with excellen tqualifications and surely wortha seat on the senate .

I am sorry this mishap ec-cured .

PETER UITDENBOSCHpresident, commerce

undergraduate society

Page 5: Senate seats g6~to: Larsen, Emmott, Mate, Waldman · These four names were added to the roll call of UBC's chief academic policy-making body Monday night. Larsen, arts 5; Miss Emmott,

Thursday, October 19, 1967

THE UBYSSEY

Page 5

THE STUZENTArrOZER

By JERRY FARBER

Farber teaches English at a college in LosAngeles .

PART 1

Students are niggers . When you get that straight ,our schools begin to make sense. It's more important ,though, to understand why they're niggers. If wefollow that question seriously, it will lead us past thezone of academic bullshit, where dedicated teacher s

'pass their knowledge on to a new generation, an dinto the nitty-gritty of human needs and hangups .From there we can go on to consider whether it mightever be possible for students to come up from slavery .

First, look at the role students play in what welike to call education . At Cal State where I teach, thestudents have separate and unequal dining facilities .If I bring a student into the faculty dining room, m ycolleagues get uncomfortable, as though there werea bad smell . If I eat in the student cafeteria, I becomeknown as the educational equivalent of a "nigger-lover". In at least one building there are even restrooms which students may not use . Also there is anunwritten law barring student-faculty lovemaking.Fortunately, this anti-miscegenation law, like it sSouthern counterpart, is not 100 per cent effective.

CHOOSE HOMECOMING QUEENStudents at Cal State are politically disenfran-

chised. They are in an academic Lowndes County. .Most of them can vote in national elections — theiraverage age is about 26 —abut they have no voicein the decisions which affect their academic lives .

ii'he students are, it is true, allowed to have a toygovernment of their own . It is a government run, forthe most part, by Uncle Toms, concerned principallywith trivia. The faculty and administrators decidewhat courses will be offered; the students get tochoose their own Homecoming Queen . Occasionally,when student leaders get uppity and rebellious,they're either ignored, put off with trivial concess-ions, or maneuvered expertly out of position .

A student at Cal State is expected to know hisplace. He calls a faculty member "Sir" or "Doctor"or "Professor' and he smiles and shuffles some as he

°b'tands outside the professor's office waiting for per-mission to enter . The faculty tell him what coursesto take (in my department, English, even elective shave to be approved by a faculty member) ; they tellhim what to read, what to write, and ,frequently ,where to set the margins on his typewriter . They tel lhim what's true and what isn't . Some teachers insistthat they encourage dissent but they're almost alwaysjiving and every student knows it . Tell The Man wha the wants to hear or he'll fail you .

When a teacher says "jump" students jump . Iknow of one professor who refused to take up clas stime for exams and required students to show up fo rtests at 6 :30 in the morning. And they did, by God !Another, at exam time, provides answer cards to befilled out — each one enclosed in a paper bag witha hole cut in the top to see through . 'Students stic ktheir writing hands in the bags while taking the test .The teacher isn't a prove ; I wish he were. He doesit to prevent cheating. Another colleague once caugh ta student reading during one of his lectures andthrew her book against the wall . Still another lec-tures his students into a stupor and then screams a tthem in rage when they fall asleep .

,.CLASS IS NOT DISMISSED !During the first meeting of a class, one girl got up

to leave after about ten minutes had gone by . Theteacher rushed over, grabbed her by the arm, saying"This class is not dismissed !" and led her back t o

,her seat . On the same day another teacher began byinforming his class that he does not like beards, mus-taches, long hair on boys, or capri pants on girls, an dwill not tolerate any of that in his class . The class,incidentally, consisted mostly of high school teachers .

Even more discouraging than this Auschwitzapproach to education is the fact that the student stake it . They haven't gone through twelve years of

public school for nothing. They've learned one thingand perhaps only one thing during those twelveyears . They've forgotten their algebra . They're hope-lessly vague about chemistry and physics . They'vegrown to fear and resent literature . They write lik ethey've begn lobotomized . But, Jezus, can they followorders ! Freshmen come up to me with an essay an dask if I want it folded and whether their name should'be in the upper right hand corner . And I want to cryand kiss them and caress their poor, tortured heads.

Students don't ask that orders make sense . Theygive up expecting things to make sense long befor ethey leave elementary school . Things are true becaus ethe teacher says they're true . At a very early age weall learn to accept "two truths," as did certain medie -val churchmen. Outside of class, things are true t oyour tongue, your finger, your stomach, your heart .Inside class, things are true by reason of authority .And that's just fine because you don't care anyway .Miss Wiedemeyer tells you a noun is a person, placeor thing. 'So let it be . You don't give a rat's ass ; shedoesn't give a rat's ass .

SIRENS AND A RATTLE OF BULLETSThe important thing is to please her . Back in

kindergarten, you found out that teachers only lovechildren who stand in nice straight lines . And that' swhere it's been at ever since. Nothing changes exceptto get worse . School becomes more and more obvious-ly a prison. Last year I spoke to a student assembl yat Manual Arts High School and then couldn't get outof the goddamn school . I mean there was no way out .Locked doors . High fences. One of the inmates wastrying to make it over a fence when he saw m ecoming and froze in panic . For a moment, I expecte dsirens, a rattle of bullets, and him clawing the fence .

Then there's the infamous "code of dress ." Insome high schools, if your skirt looks too short, yo uhave to kneel before the principal, in a brief allegoryof fellatio . If the hem doesn't reach the floor, you gohome to change while he, presumably, jacks off. Boy sin high school can't be too sloppy and they can't betoo sharp . You'd think the school board would bedelighted to see all the spades trooping to school inpointy shoes, suits, ties and stingy brims . Uh-uh.They're too visible .

What school amounts to. then, for white and blackkids alike, is a 12-year course in how to be slaves .What else could explain what I see in a freshma nclass ? They've got that slave mentality ; obliging andingratiating on the surface but :hostile and resistentunderneath. Like black slaves, students vary in thei rawareness of what's going on . Some recognize theirown put-on for what it is and even let their rebellionbreak through to the surface now and then . Others—including most of the "good students" — have beenmore deeply brainwashed . They swallow the bullshi twith greedy mouths . They honest-to-God believe ingrades, in busy work, in general education require-ments. They're pathetically eager to be pushedaround. They're like those old grey-headed house-niggers you can still find in the South who don'tsee what all the fuss is about because Mr. Charlie"treats us real good . "

THEY CHEAT A LOTCollege entrance requirements tend to favor the

Toms and screen out the rebels . Not entirely, ofcourse. Some students at Cal State are expert conartists who know perfectly well what's happening.They want the degree and spend their years on theold plantation alternately laughing and cursing asthey play the game . If their egos are strong enough ,they cheat a lot . And, of course, even the Toms areangry down deep somewhere . But it comes out inpassive rather than active aggression . They're unex-plainably thick-witted and subject to frequent spell sof laziness . They misread simple questions . Theyspend their nights mechanically outlining historychapters while meticulously, failing to comprehenda word of what's in front of them.

The saddest cases among both black slaves andstudent slaves are the ones who have so thoroughlyintrojected their masters' values that their anger isall turned inward . At Cal State these are the kids

for whom every low grade is torture, who stamme rand shake when they speak to a professor . They gothrough-an emotional crisis every time they're calle dupon during class . You can recognize them easily a tfinals time. Their faces are festooned with freshpimples ; their bowels boil audibly across the room .If there really is a Last Judgment, then the parentsand teachers who created these wrecks are going toburn in hell .

So student are niggers . It's time to find out why,and to do this, we have to take a long look at Mr.Charlie.

The teachers I know best are college professors .Outside the classroom and taken as a group, thei rmost striking characteristic is timidity . They're shor ton balls. Just look at their working conditions . At atime when even migrant workers have begun to figh tand win, college professors are still afraid to makemore than a token effort to improve their pitifuleconomic status . In California state colleges the facul-ties are screwed regularly and vigorously 'by th egovernor and legislature and yet they still won' toffer any solid resistance . They lie flat on theirstomachs with their pants down, mumbling catch -phrases like "professional dignity" and "meaningfu ldialogue . "

THEY COPPED OU TProfessors were no different when I was an under -

graduate at UCLA during the 'McCarthy era ; it wa slike a cattle stampede as they rushed to cop out .And in more recent years, I found that my beingarrested in sit-ins brought from my colleagues, not s omuch approval or condemnation as open-mouthedastonishment : "You could lose your job! "

Now, of course, there's the Vietnamese war . Itgets some opposition from a few teachers . Somesupport it . But a vast number of professors, wh oknow perfectly well what's happening, are coppin gout again . And in the high schools you can forget it .Stillness reigns .

I'm not sure why teachers are so chickenshit .It could be that academic training itself forces a spli tbetween thought and action . It might also be that thetenured security of a teaching job attracts timidpersons who are unsure of themselves and nee dweapons and other external trappings of authority .

At any rate, teachers are short on balls. And,as Judy Einstein has eloquently pointed out, theclassroom offers an artificial and protected environ-ment in which they can exercise their will to power .

Your neighbors may drive a better car ; gas stationattendants may intimidate you, your wife may dom-inate you ; the state legislature may shit on you ; butin the classroom, by God, students do what you say-or-else . The grade is a hell of a weapon . It may notrest on your hip, potent and rigid like a cop's gun ,but in the long run it's more powerful . At your per-sonal whim—anytime you choose—you can keep 3 5students up for nights and have the "pleasure" ofseeing them walk into the classroom pasty-faced andred-eyed carrying a sheaf of typewritten pages, wit ha title page, MLA footnotes and margins set at 1 5and 91 .

RESPECT FOR AUTHORITYThe general timidity which causes teachers t o

make niggers of their students usually includes amore specific fear—fear of the students themselves .After all, students are different, just like blackpeople. You stand exposed in front of them, knowingthat their interests, their values and their languageare different from yours . To make matters worse,you may suspect that you yourself are not the mostengaging person . What then can protect you fromtheir ridicule and scorn ? Respect for authority.That's what . It's the policeman's gun again. Thewhite bwana's pith helmet . So you flaunt that author-ity. You wither whisperers with a murderous glance .You crush objectors with erudition and heavy irony .And, worst of all, you make your own attainmentsseem not accessible but awesomely remote . You con-ceal your massive ignorance — and parade a slenderlearning.

To be continued. Next installment: Sex.

Page 6: Senate seats g6~to: Larsen, Emmott, Mate, Waldman · These four names were added to the roll call of UBC's chief academic policy-making body Monday night. Larsen, arts 5; Miss Emmott,

Page 6

THE UBYSSEY

Thursday, October 19, 196 7

Wrong Buchana nEditor, The Ubyssey:

Your issue of Oct . 13 con-tains on P.2 a boxed new sitems that the arts council wa sto meet that day at noon todecide on a new name fo rBuchanan lounge. Mr. S. Per-sky, arts president, is quote dto have said, "We're tired ofhonoring a man ( UBC chan-cellor John Buchanan) fo rwhom we feel no high regard . "

For Mr. Persky's informa-tion the Buchanan building ,which contains the loungeknown as the Buchanan lounge,was named after Prof . DanielBuchanan whose portrait hangsin the Buchanan lobby . Hejoined the UBC staff in 1920,was head of the departmentof mathematics 1920-1948, andserved as dean of the facultyof arts and science from 192 8until his retirement in 1948 .He was a man of considerablecharm and wit, a professor ofgreat pedagogic gifts, belove dby many generations of stu-dents, and a dean respected byhis colleagues. It is certainlynot in the power of Mr. Perskyto change the name of a build-ing, nor of a lounge containedtherein, honoring the name ofone of the early builders ofUBC of whom Mr. Persky ap-parently has not even heard .

I am all in favor of "activist "

students, provided their "ac-tivism" contributes construc-tively to the promotion of the

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to speak with Shell's representatives to obtain career information .

Some summer positions are available for next to final year students .

Check with your placement office for company booklets, interview

schedules and further details .

Civil engineering additionto house line-up eliminato r

Third generation computers?That's what UBC's computing centre is putting in the over -

hanging east wing of the civil engineering building . This is nowbeing enclosed to provide 5,000 square feet of additional space ontwo floors.

The first computer generation was programmed by UBCscientists for their own use.`

The second, now operating, involves 1,500 undergraduatesand 500 graduate students using a single access IBM computer.

Standing in line—so to speak-would be eliminated by a newthird generation IBM computer system, approved in principleby the board of governors .

InterviewsRepresentatives of Cominco Ltd . will interviewundergraduates, graduates and post graduates i nengineering, honours chemistry and geology forsummer and permanent employment on the fol-lowing dates:

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Minority yieldsEditor, The Ubyssey :

The facts, uncolored by opin-ion pro or con, are these : theGeorgia Straight's busines slicense was suspended not forobscenity but for misconduct .The sale of this tasteless, petu-lantly anarchist newspaperoutside secondary and elemen-tary school encroached on theright of", parents to regulatetheir children's early environ-ment. They protested to theirelected officials , who took theonly disciplinary action thecity's bylaws permit .

The name of the game is thedemocratic process . When theexercise of an individual righ timpinges on the rights ofother individuals, the minorityyields to the majority . Ap-parently there are more par-ents than hippies .

The crusade of the press i smaking this dull little news-paper, which is undistinquish-ed by taste, talent or signifi-cant social comment (criticis mwithout commitment to reformis irrelevant), a legend in itsown time. Messrs . McLeod an dHlookoff should get down o ntheir knees and thank God —Or whoever — for the knights-

errant of the city and campuspress who charge about in alldirections defending the rightof the flower children to ped-dle children — although in sopeddling the former may havebeen intuitively seeking theirown maturity level .

FRANCES FILME Rarts 2

'May I correct'Editor, The Ubyssey:

A short time ago your papercarried a story originatingwith Canadian UniversityPress in which it was statedthat the Canadian Union ofStudents congress had adoptedan "action" program on Viet-nam which included the fol-lowing measures:

(1) a call for cessation ofAmerican forces;

(2) a demand that the Cana-dian government openly urgeAmerican disengagement;

(3) aid to "draft - objectororganizations" in the UnitedStates ;

(4) financial support andparticipation in "blood drives"for war victims ;

The story was in error. Noneof the above measures hasbeen advocated (or condemned)by CUS. No such resolutionwas passed (or even vote dupon) at the CUS congress i nSeptember .

DON MITCHEL Lvice-president, CUS

CAMPUS INTERVIEW DATES

Page 7: Senate seats g6~to: Larsen, Emmott, Mate, Waldman · These four names were added to the roll call of UBC's chief academic policy-making body Monday night. Larsen, arts 5; Miss Emmott,

Thursday, October 19, 1967

THE UBYSSEY

Page 7

DID YOU EVER have one of those days when you fee lsure you forgot something when you left home in the morn-ing ? Carl Weintrab, an instructor in the new free colleg efelt that way Wednesday during a lecture on obscenity .

McGILL REPS RESIGN

Council anti-democraticMONTREAL (CUP) — Two McGill student

council members resigned Wednesday chargingtheir council is anti-democratic .

External vice-president Mark Wilson and edu-cation director John Fekete said after their resig-nation the present electoral system allows the3,000 students in small professional facultiesto dominate council reps of 8,000 students ' in theundergraduate faculties .

Their resignation came after a controversia lreport submitted to council two weeks ago byWilson and Fekete .

The 35-page report demanded wholesale re -structuring of McGill university government ,calling existing structures paternalisti c ructuresatern ha stis and anti-democratic .

The motions in the report called for :• representatives on the board of governors

from different socio-economic groups in the prov-ince, appointed by the Quebec government froma list supplied by the superior council of educa-tion .

• officially 'bilingual board meetings with ern-

Traffic snarlsUBC's brownshirts are riding herd on cam-

pus cars again .Starting today, there will be no more lega l

driving past Brock, or the armory, or the book-store, or even the chemistry building from 7 :3 0a .m . to `2 :3'0, p.m.

Cars are 'banned at the above times on Uni-versity Blvd . from Wesbrook Crescent to LowerMall ; on East, Main, and West Malls from Uni-versity Blvd . to Crescent road; and all of Cres-cent road.

"The object of this regulation is to reducevehicle traffic in the centre of campus in orde rto avoid congestion and to facilitate the flow ofpedestrian traffic," said 'Sir Ouvry Roberts, UBCtraffic head.

ultaneous translation .• public deliberation of legislative decision -

making bodies with publication of agendas an dminutes and reasons given for in camera meet-ings .

•l direct student council appointment of an yand all student reps on these bodies.

Asked what they would do to further thework done with the report, Fekete 'said he woul dcontinue to try to effect reform through the massmedia and individual contact .

"I intend to try to show students the falsityand oppression of their environment", Wilsonsaid .

;:.::":5:

.:5

Medics are seedyTwo UBC doctors are going to seed .Dr . William Gibson, medical history

head ,and Dr . Oscar Sziklai of the forestrydepartment, are importing 500,000 syca-more seeds into Canada from Greece .

From the island of Cos, to be exact .The seeds come from the tree under

which Hippocrates is reputed to have donehis writing. They will be sold to re-estab-lish the Greek island as the home of worl dmedicine ,and to build a monument toHippocrates .

Sziklai, who recently returned from theisland, brought 100 seeds with him . Therest will arrive in mid-November :

The doctors plan to raise $50,000 byselling most of the seeds to an Americanpharmaceutical company.

They also plan to plant and raise som eof the seeds so that donating doctors migh thave sons of the Hippocrates sycamore ontheir doorsteps.

Soft x-rays will be used to pick out th e25 per cent that will germinate .

Women's computer-like mindschanging marketing trend s

Women have minds like computers, says Dr . Gordon Chap-4iian, comptroller of Field's department stores .

"They take well to ordering by mail", he told 50 personsat a meeting of UBC marketing club.

That's part of the reason for a recent upsurge in mail orde rhouses, he said.

"Women have minds like computers which retain an dassess information in order to make a good buy," said Chapman .

Ease in handling and small operating costs are other in-centives .

He predicted markets will shift back to city centre andshopping centres will become obsolete .

"And mail-phone order business will fill the gap . "Stores are shedding apathy in other' ways, Chapman said ."They are doing more research into potential markets an d

are filling needs of present ones . "But modern advertising is terrible, he said ."You can't tell people about the product if it doesn't do

anything"You have to resort to telling people how wonderful you

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Page 8: Senate seats g6~to: Larsen, Emmott, Mate, Waldman · These four names were added to the roll call of UBC's chief academic policy-making body Monday night. Larsen, arts 5; Miss Emmott,

'LIKENAZI GERMANY'

Publishing law s

Page 8

THE UBYSSEY

Thursday, October 19, 1967

FREDERIC WOOD STUDIO

Canadian Premiere of a New British Comed y

LITTLE MALCOL MAND HIS STRUGGLE AGAINST THE EUNUCHS

by David Halliwel l

October 12-21 — 8:30 p.m.STUDENTS : 75c

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"TH EFRENCH

QUEBE CQUESTION"

FRIDAY NOO N

BROCK LOUNG E

By MIKE FINLA Y

The publishing laws of Canada are similarto those of Nazi Germany, says UBC critic a tlarge Karl Burau .

"You can only publish what pleases the gov-ernment," Burau told 25 persons Wednesdaynoon in Bu. 102 .

Speaking on "UBC — place of sweet hal-lucination," he said students are blind andinsecure .

"You all believe the government is neverwrong," he said .

"B.C. is full of medieval laws, all supportingthe establishment . "

Burau, a socialist, criticize dthe Canadian government asinefficient and undemocratic .

"No one will criticize thegovernment for fear of causin ganother election," he said.

He also accused the Cana-dian people of lacking vitality.

"Your population is notrising like that of the NorthAmerican Indians or Negroes . "

Burau also included a criticism of the Cana-dian Bill of Rights, an accusation that resistanceagainst Hitler failed in 1939, because Britain re-fused to help before the war started, and tha tthere are more thinking people in communistcountries than in Canada .

Burau said he began his war against theestablishment when he lost a teaching positionseveral years ago .

He says he was arguing with a superinten-dent who died from a heart attack during thediscussion .

Since that time, he says, he has been blac klisted and has not been able to teach .

Race issuecauses counci lresignations

WINNIPEG (CUP) — Fou rmembers of the University o f

Manitoba student

counci lhave resigned over claims bycouncil president that the uni-versity is participating i ncrimination against non-whit estudents .

Council • president Chri sWestdal, said in mid-Septem-ber the university carries tw olists for students seeking off-campus housing.

One list contains the name sof local homeowners who spe-cifically ask for Canadian stu-dents only, he said.

The four executive counci lmembers resigned Oct . 3 fol-lowing the defeat of their mo-tion on off-campus housing .

The contentious part oftheir motion said "landlordswanting to be listed with th ehousing service would b easked if they would refuseanyone on the grounds ofrace, religion or national 'or-igin." Those answering `yes'would be left off the list .

Later, after the four resig-nations had been submitted,the council reversed its standand accepted the originalmotion .

But the four resignationsstill stand .

The four are: external v-pJanis Johnson; internal v-pPat Gallagher; treasurerPeter Simmie; and secretaryGordon Mackie .

criticisedNonetheless, Burau proposes to give two non-

credit courses this year .' The courses will be What's Wrong with Can-

ada and Human Nature .

False reportinjures CUS

OTTAWA (CUP) — Canadian Union of Stu-dents' president Hugh Armstrong claimed Mon -day a false story circulated by the CanadianUniversity Press has had definite repercussion son Canadian campuses .

"One of these campuses was Windsor," hesaid .

"Students advocating withdrawal at Windsorreportedly made widespread use of a so-calle dCUS stand on Vietnam," he said .

Windsor voted to retain membership in CUS .

The CUP release of Sept . 13 said CUS con-gress delegates in London, Ontario, passed re-solutions on education and action on the Viet-nam war .

It said the congress called for Americancessation of bombing and a total withdrawalfrom the area .

The release said CUS asked Canada to open-ly urge American disengagement .

"Let me make it clear that CUS has no standon Vietnam," Armstrong said .

"The motion referred to by CUP was neverpassed or even voted upon at the CUS congress . "

The only Vietnam motion which was votedupon and passed concerned a Vietnam aware-ness program. It is listed in the CUS resolutionsbook under priority 10-08 .

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Page 9: Senate seats g6~to: Larsen, Emmott, Mate, Waldman · These four names were added to the roll call of UBC's chief academic policy-making body Monday night. Larsen, arts 5; Miss Emmott,

Thursday, October 19, 1967

Tt.E UBYSSEY

Page .9

Pacific rim theme;aw

homecoming goes

academic this yearBy ANN BISHO P

UBC's alumni are stil linterested in learning .

Homecoming w e e k ,which begins Monday, an druns to October 28, hasgone academic this year .

Following homecoming' sPacific Rim theme, thealumni association has ar-ranged four seminars .

Thursday's w o m1 e. in ' sseminar will study In-scrutable China and onFriday, Vancouver busi-nessmen will learn abou tDoing Business With Jap-an .

On Saturday, Octobe r28, the alumni associatio nwill run two more semin-ars, Confluence of Cul-tures, Japan and the West ,and Teaching A b o u tJapan.

More than 2,000 alumniare expected to return tothe campus for some ofthe homecoming activitieswhich includes Monday' sBoard of Trade luncheon ,

Student homecoming ac-tivities begin Monday wit ha Russian Smorsgasbordat noon in Brock Hall fol-lowed by a Jazz session ,also in Brock .

For 49 cents studentscan eat all the Russianfood they want . The jazzsession is free .

A different luncheo nwill take place every daynext week, featuring thefood and entertainment ofthe Pacific Rim areas .

An electronic jug bandfrom San Francisco wil lbe the main attraction atThursday's noon hour pepmeet in the War Memor-ial gym, along with the16 homecoming q u e e ncandidates.

Saturday, the final bigday of homecoming start swith, a student paradethrough downtown Van-couver .

At 2 :30 p.m. the UBCThunderbirds will playthe University of Saskat-chewan in the annualhomecoming game and theweek ends Saturday nightwith the two studentdances in the armouryand field house .

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DISCREPANCIES WERE just too much for one ballot counte rin Wednesday's senatorial race, after returning office rChuck Campbell took till 11 :45 p.m . to determine th eresults .

Want to get rid of kids :By JUDY YOUNG

A campus child care centre is being organized to meet theneeds of UBC students with children .

The scheme follows permission for the Acadia Park marrie dstudents' association to open a child care class in St . AnselmAnglican Church starting Nov . 1 .

At present, there is no full day nursery for mothers takingclasses at UBC, said Carol Howe, spokesman for the association .

The UBC child care centre , a kindergarten, has a longwaiting list .

"A $10 share entitles the purchaser to use the nursery anda proposed canteen which is to be established in one of thehuts," she said. "The money is to be used for initial expensesand would be refunded after termination of membership ."

"The centre is to be manned by a qualified teacher and twoaids . Full time care is $45 a month and part-time care (which isdiscouraged) is $40 ."

Class will be limited to 15 children, owing to license regula-tions . Any child three years or over can attend from 8 a .m. to5 :30 p .m .

"An important facet is the year-long aspect of the centre, "Miss Howe said .

"Parents working during the summer can still use it . "Many students in a Ubyssey poll have voted for a day care

centre to replace a planned eight-lane bowling alley in theStudent Union Building .

Information regarding the campus day care centre may b eobtained from John Tilley, president of the association, at224-5481 .

By PAUL KNOX

Coming as it did from a splinter group, the Plank, a supple-ment to Tuesday's Ubyssey, was somewhat presumptuouslytitled .

But the bile-green forestry sheet merits a second look ,if only in answer to' the specious claims made by its editor .

On pages two and three, there are editorials, a couple ofthings about Friday's Undercut, which interested at least enoughto buy all available tickets . Fair enough .

On pages two and three, there are editorials, a couple ofmildly interesting articles on changes in the faculty of forestry ,

and a documentation of the PNE festival of forestry .But on page four, the editors have abandoned their mediocre

standards and descended to a truly bilious level of literary non -achievement.

As one who enjoys a bawdy pleasantry, and delights in th e

occasional tasteful obscenity, I can only deplore the dismal failur e

of the Plank in this regard. What wasn't ancient was singularly

unfunny .

The juvenile collection of words about the problems of ani-

mal excrement on suburban lawns was revolting, not because of

its four-letter cliches, but because of its colossal triviality .

Now everyone has the right to publish triviality . But how do

the editors of the Plank reconcile their last page with their lead

editorial, which condemns The Ubyssey for "expounding weird

and perverse thoughts" ?

Surely a comparison of the fecal wastes of dogs and catscomes within the realm of perversity .

Presumably the editors of the Plank would relish somethinglike their last page as a regular feature of The Ubyssey .

Presumably they would hold this to be a step toward "some -thing representative of all students ."

The Plank was collegiate, albeit not quite Neanderthal, i nconcept . If Thursday's rag is the best that Forestry can do, thankgod The Ubyssey is written by "weak-blooded artsie-fartsies . "

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Page 10: Senate seats g6~to: Larsen, Emmott, Mate, Waldman · These four names were added to the roll call of UBC's chief academic policy-making body Monday night. Larsen, arts 5; Miss Emmott,

Page 10

THE UBYSSEY

Thursday, October 19, 1967

CUS congress confusio nreveals opposing views

By KIM CAMERO NThe Dalhousie Gazette

Special toCanadian University Press"This bloody resolution i s

nothing but mush! We're hid-ing our differences behindhpocritical rhetoric. It's timeeach of us declared where westand on these issues . "Canadian Union of Studentscongress in London, Ontario ,cheered University of NewBrunswich Nelson Adams' re -marks, but five minutes laterthe congress had returned tothe state of chaos which mark-ed the whole week's proceed-ings

The lid came off on the nightof the presidential elections .Peter W a r r i a n, prominentmember of Student Union ofPeace Action, h a n d p i c k e dby Doug Ward to succeedthis year's president HughArmstrong, had only one op-ponent. He was Steven Bigsby,dynamic past president of th eVictoria union, whose some -what aloof manner had alien-ated any potential support h emight have gained outside th eWest to beat the new left esta-blishment man from Ontario .GENERAL UPROAR

Several delegates walke dout quietly while the candi-dates made their speeches . Assoon as they were finished ,Ontario CUS executive re pGeorge Anderson leapt to hi sfeet . "I propose that the elec-tions be deferred for on ehour", he declared. A genera luproar ensued .

Dave Hoye, UBC treasurer ,complained that two othercandidates—Peter Larsen andJohn Cleveland — had beenallowed to withdraw withoutthe consent of the plenary . Afew speakers condemned An-derson outright as an obstruc-tionist; most lauded his in-tent — which many shared —but disapproved of his me-thods.

The euphoric debate wasended when past Toronto vice-president Dave Hunter — whoAnderson had suggested beput forward as a write-in can-didate -- took the mike. "Iwill not let my name stand,"he shouted. "•If I had wante dto ruin for president I wouldhave been here campaigningall week" .TWO EVILS__When the balloting finallycame, a large cross-section ofdelegates couldn't bring them-selves to . vote for either man .Fifteen of one hundred andnineteen ballots cast were sup-posedly spoiled. Others priv-ately admitted they wer evoting for the "lesser" of twoevils"

The night before past presi-dent Doug Ward had con-sented. to go hi Warrian andask 'him to drop in favor ofmore moderate new left manUniversity of Toronto presidentTom Faulkner. The deal fellthrough and Faulkner agreedinstead to second Warrian' snomination .

The Ward group had earlie rconsidered proposed alterna-tives, such as past CUS associ-ate secretary for communica=tioils Terry Morley and 1966presidential . hopeful • Wayne

Hankey but both were vetoe dby Ward as unacceptable .

The other three got togetherwith representatives of thesyndicalist viewpoint and keydelegates from the west an deast and came up with a unit ycandidate — Peter Larsenpresident of the University ofWestern Ontario student union .

Larsen decided to withdrawafter facing a tough questionperiod in the three regionalcourses. The self-confidence ofthe twenty-year old newcomerto student politics had beengradually undermined by thecontsant criticism of fellowUWO delegate Bob Baldwinwho was backing the new leftcandidate Warrian .

Cleveland, who had becomenotorious for his hard-linesocial unionist draft of a newDeclaration of the CanadianUnion didn't drop out until thelast minute .CHAOS

The result was chaos. Final-ly Peter Warrian defeatedBigsby 67 to 37, with fifteenspoiled ballots and or absten-tions .

The election night fiasc owas a vivid reflection of themood created by the legisla-tion-making sessions whichpreceeded it.

It was clear from the open-ing plenary that several am- Iorphously organized but ver yreal groups existed with dist-inct approaches to studen tunionism in Canada .

The largest and most power-ful group backed Peter War-rian for president and sought aa continuation and elaborationof Doug. Ward's new left poli-cies of concentration on rele-vant educational and purelystudent issues (democratiza-tion of post-secondary govern-ment, overcoming social andpsychological barriers tohigher education and soft-ped-dling economic and financialones, quality of education—i.e ., teaching methods, exams ,etc .) and withdrawal frommost national and interna-tional involvement on thegrounds that they were notamenable to mass •participa-tion ,LIBERAL CAMP ,

This year UBC, who repeat-edly threatened withdrawal ,switched to the "liberal"camp. McGill is now a mem-ber of Union Generale des Etu-diante de Quebec . Dalhousiewas split, but it supported thesocial unionists as, often as thenew left Ontario establishment.

Thus Warrian's support was.unnecessarily gathered at theCUS August seminar An Tan-couver, held just prior to thecongress: The remainder ofthe new left group was madeup of past board members (mostof whom defected on the presi-dential election issue) and DougWard's personal political basein Ontario .

The Schepanovich attac kon CUS' involvement in theaffairs of Canadian and inter-national society was contin-ued this year by Calgary; St .Mary's, Acadia, Southern Al-berta Institute of Technology,St. Pat's and Edmonton campusobservers Marilyn Pilkingtonand Al Anderson.

The. 'conservatives' man-

aged to defeat both the dec-laration and international af-filiation at the commissionlevel but suffered reverses inplenary .

FUTILE EFFORTSAn abortive attempt to or-

ganize new right-wing nation-al student union climaxedtheir rather futile efforts .Symbolically, Calgary an-nounced its intention to sup-port the Waterloo-Toronto re-vision of the Declaration indebates . Instead compromise swere worked out with repre-sentatives of other groups o nseveral important motions :high school organizing, de-mocratizing post-secondarygovernment, Vietnam, stu-dent scabs, the fee raise, andplenary when it clearly wasgoing to pass over their im-placable opposition .

It can be expected that thesocial unionist perspectivewill be posed more directlyon the campuses mentione dabove this year plus a coupleof others such as UBC, To-ronto and Regina. The con-frontation between the twodominant 'radical' approachesto student unionism and thenew left—has not yet oc-curred. It may be just aroun dthe corner .

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Page 11: Senate seats g6~to: Larsen, Emmott, Mate, Waldman · These four names were added to the roll call of UBC's chief academic policy-making body Monday night. Larsen, arts 5; Miss Emmott,

Thursday, October 19, 1967

THE UBYSSEY

Page 11 „

SAIGON MONKSPEAKS

U.S. creates commiesBy IRENE WASILEWSK I

American presence in Vietnam creates communism, a Bud-dhist monk from Saigon said Mondey .- "I know many intellectuals and students who dislike th e

communists but have joined them because the Americans aredestroying their land and people," Thich Honh told an overflo wcrowd of 450 persons in Bu . 106 at noon .

"The National Liberation Front has grown greatly becaus eof this . "

Despite common opinion that the war is between capitalist sand communists, it really is the U.S. against China as a nation ,he said .

"They are fighting out of fear of each other, even thoughChina is not aggressive in Vietnam. She can't afford to be . "

America's fear about China is not based on reality, he said .Only a few NLF's leaders are communists . The rest are

Vietnamese nationals .He named three so-called blocs in the war : the American

dominated South Vietnamese, the National Liberation Front ,and a large central bloc he called the third bloc .

The latter comprises most of the peasants and the religiou scommunity, who cannot support the destructive policies of theAmericans, he said .

They want peace and national independence, not the viola-tion of their human rights .

"If the war continues, the U .S. will do anything to preventits defeat, and even would use the atomic bomb . Only the thirdbloc could prevent this . "

Jocks jog at retreatSixty aspiring athletes made tracks to Camp Elphinstone

last weekend .The occasion was the first physical education and recreatio n

retreat ever held for UBC students .Faculty and graduate students spoke on the theme The

Problem of Professional Preparation. Guest speaker, ReverendJim Taylor, spoke on professionalism in general .

One suggestion offered in discussion was that students joi nthe Canadian Association of Health and Physical Education andRecreation .

Dr . Richard Ramsay, head of the recreation department spok eto recreation students . Mrs. Melaine Kamm and Miss Cindy Thor-steinsten, both rec . 4, were student speakers.

Student reaction to the retreat on the whole was postive ."It was great except for a shortage of faculty on the Satur-

day and a poor turnout of first year students," said Bruce Fisher ,PE 3 .

Ernie Yacub, PE 4, said the weekend was "quite successful ,very worthwhile, and thought simulating .

"Most kids brought their own supply of milk for the Saturda ynight dance because as jocks we don't imbibe," he added .

'Duality is an asset'Canadians should look on the French-English problem as a n

asset, a federal cabinet member said Tuesday ."We can contribute something to Canada because we are

different," Jean Chretien, Quebec Liberal MP and ministe rwithout portfolio told 600 students in Brock lounge .

"We don't want to join the U.S. We don't want a meltin gpot in Canada ."

Canadians should be optimistic about the future, becaus eof the younger generation, he said .

"There are extremists among the young in Quebec — youhave the same problem here.

"I know the feeling of Quebec students . I earned my waythrough Laval university working in a paper mill. "

"Quebec has long been a rural society and only now is ad-justing," he said .

"The people in Quebec feel uneasy because the institutionsin Canada do not reflect the fact there are two official languagesin Canada . "

"I think Quebec's future lies in Confederation . I am afederalist . "

Chretien was angry about the fact that there is no Frenchpublic school in Maillardville in the Fraser Valley, which hasa large proportion of French-speaking residents .

"It's a shame . In my home town there are 1,000 Englishspeaking persons yet they have two English high schools . "

Chretien, sponsored by the UBC Liberal club, was the firstspeaker in the Great Confederation Debate at UBC.

Waterloo students choosersWATERLOO (CUP) — Students will have a voice in select-

ing a new president for Waterloo Lutheran University, official sannounced Tuesday .

Acting on a request from the student council, the executiv ecommittee of the board of governors decided to seat a studenton the selection committee to pick a successor to presidentWilliam Villaume, who resigned last June .

In announcing the move, Dr. Henry Endress, acting presi-dent, said the decision reflects the university's recognition ofthe special interest and concern of the students and faculty inthe selection of a president .

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Page 12: Senate seats g6~to: Larsen, Emmott, Mate, Waldman · These four names were added to the roll call of UBC's chief academic policy-making body Monday night. Larsen, arts 5; Miss Emmott,

_f

Page- 12

THE UBYSSEY

Thursday, October 19, 1967

youth naturally revolting '

1

Resolved 'By STEPHEN JACKSON

Bleah! Youth is revolting .That was the conclusion of a

noon hour debate Tuesday bythe UBC debating union onthe resolution "that youth i snaturally revolting . "

Frances Crutchley and FernMiller, both arts 3, argued be-fore 15 students in Buchana n217 that . youth is both physic-ally and psychologically dis-gusting, repulsive and vulgar .

"Children love dirt," MissMiller said .

Their bodies are either pig-gishly fat or stringy like Icha-bod Crane, she said . "Theydon't have the grace that goeswith being human . "

Miss Crutchley said youthis aware of its repulsiveness .

"They defy the world tha tsets the standards that makethem repulsive," she said .

Knowing they are disgustin gto adults, youths turn to pre-marital sex and security props .

"Young children have toys ;older ones use drinks and cig-arettes," Miss Crutchley said,cuddling a yellow Winnie the

Pooh bear in a –red sweater .

No, it can't happen,

says AMS co-orilinato,Impromptu outdoor happen-

ings on campus have been ban-ned.

Jim Lightfoot, Alma Mate rSociety co-ordinator of activi-ties, said all outdoor event swill have to be booked a weekin advance.

The decision followed num-

erous complaints, he said .Before the event can be ap-

proved, a letter from the deanor department head involvedwho accepts responsibility fo rit must be obtained .

The booking is then sent tophysical plant to see if itclashes with any other events.

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Arguing against the resolu-tion, Leigh Brousson, law 1 ,said: "The statement reallymeans to ask if youth is withsociety or against it . "

Revolt, he said, implies astate of despair and a beliefin an ideal greater than con-cern for one's own life. .

He drew applause when he

referred to hippies as havingpseudo-individuality.

"They are not really revolt-ing because they have no con-viction, no alienation, no de-spair," he said. An example i sthe air of universal friendshipat love-ins.

Greg Mason, arts 3, also op-posed the resolution .

The key word, he said, was"naturally", which impliedyouth must inevitably be re-pulsive .

Adults generally considerthe youngest children cute ,Mason said .

"Everyone aspires to youth .Look at the health spas andthe cosmetics industry."

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Page 13: Senate seats g6~to: Larsen, Emmott, Mate, Waldman · These four names were added to the roll call of UBC's chief academic policy-making body Monday night. Larsen, arts 5; Miss Emmott,

Thvrsday,:'October 19, 1967

THE UBYSSEY

Page 1 3

. STANTO N. . . engineers should be more carefu l

Artsman incensed byhot infantile prank

Engineers' antics in Brock at Tuesday's AlmaMater Society meeting weren't funny to Ralp hStanton, arts 3 .

Stanton suffered burns to his hand and wa streated at Wesbrook after a smoke bomb hewas attempting to remove from a crowd ofpeople exploded :

"I saw an engineer place a brown paperbag in an ashtray and realized it was probablya smoke bomb or something of the sort," Stanto nsaid.

"It was near a crowd of people and I thoughtsomeone might get hurt so I picked up the ash-tray to move it . I got about 15 feet away andwas about to put the ashtray down when thebomb exploded.

"Right now I'm hung up on the pain pill Itook at Wesbrook," said Stanton as he returne dto the meeting to apply for a position on thetraffic and parking student-faculty committeeand to protect the AMS budget .

He. said the engineering stunt was infantile ."If the engineers are going to do stupid

things like this, they should make sure no onegets hurt ."

Music can lockssound of silence

"The only completely soundproof place is thecan . "

This was one student comment on the new$2,575,842 music building during a tour by aUbyssey reporter .

The music building is that new textured con-crete wall, precast concrete panel and colore dglass window building across from the audi-torium. .

Music was formerly housed in the old forestrybuilding, the agronomy barn and several temp-orary huts .

And the 48 professors and 200 students usingthe building appear to live in the lap of luxury

wall-to-wall carpeting, padded seats, air con-ditioning and free use of the elevator .

Problems still occur, however.The student lounge is empty unless one want s

to sit on the floor ; odd desks piled in hallwaysmake fast travelling an impossibility and paytelephones have not yet been installed .

Linda Irving and Alma Colk, both music 3 ,said policy in the new building is to close it eachweekend leaving 33 practice rooms and 83 pianossilent .

Dr. W. G. Marquis, head of the music depart-ment, said he was pleased the new building issituated in the centre of the campus.

"It makes it much easier for students to jointhe three choirs, concert band or student sym-phony orchestra," he said .

The 'building has been wired for open an dclosed circuit television and radio broadcasts.

Music can be recorded from or transmitted toany part of the 'building through a central controlroom.

The 285-seat recital hall has provisions fo rinstallation of a pipe organ.

Traffic czar vs carsLatest traffic patrol figures for UBC parking

lots show them near saturation .At 11 a .m. Wednesday there were 9,468 cars

in parking lots and surrounding areas .Only 354 parking lot spaces were vacant ."Not enough of a margin," commented traf-

fic czar Sir Ouvry Roberts .11,142 car and motorcycle stickers have been

issued, and there are 8,200 parking spaces oncampus .

New AMS secretaryPenny Cairns, arts 4, has been elected Alm a

Mater Society secretary by acclamation .She replaces Cathy Kerr, ed. 4, who resigned

in August .A psychology major, Miss Cairns comes from

Calgary and lives in residence .

S.C.M. FALL CAM POCT. 20-22

U .B .C. FORESTRY CAMP

"HOMO LUDICROUS"—Zorba The Greek—Rev . Jack Shave r—Dr. Roger Seamen—Miss Iris Garland - S.F.U .

Cost $7

Information Brock Ext . 350or Phone 228-3144

Coming Next Wednesday

3 y

a

S.7tIt

x,; . ..

UBC

BIRDStudent

CALLSTelephone Directory

PRE-SALE TICKETS 75c

AVAILABLE ONLYTODAY AND TOMORROW

PUBLICATIONS OFFICE, BROC K

& THE BOOKSTOR E

PRICE AFTER PUBLICATIONWILL BE $1 .00

Officers in The Canadian Forces Enjoy Challenging Job sWith The Excitement Of Travel and Responsibility, and

There May Be A Place For You . Among ThemUNDER GRADS

UNIVERSITY GRADSMay Qualify For :

• Immediate Commissions

• Excellent Pay

• An Assured Future in a Unique an dInteresting Profession

• Early Pension Benifits At Top Rates

May Qualify For Subsidize dUniversity Training — Including :

• Tuition Fully Paid

• Book Allowance

• $187 M. Salary12 Mo. Yr. While Attending University

• Month Paid Holiday Annually

• Medical & Dental Care• An Assured Future

Phone or Visit Th e

Canadian Force sRecruiting Center

547 Seymour St.Vancouver

684 - 7341

Page 14: Senate seats g6~to: Larsen, Emmott, Mate, Waldman · These four names were added to the roll call of UBC's chief academic policy-making body Monday night. Larsen, arts 5; Miss Emmott,

' Page 14

THE UBYSSEY

Thursday, October 19, 1967

There's been a lot said about the so-calledriot at Monday night's UBC-SFU football gam eand most of it has been distorted . _

So let's set the record straight .To be truthful, what started out to be fun did

get out of hand for about 10 minutes.The UBC engineers, tradi-

tionally, have been the excite-ment makers at any campusfunction and they do it well.

The pressure that had beenbuilt up over the grid game wasfantastic. It was to be the foot-ball game of the century.

But it wasn't ." About a dozen engineers de- A

tided to go over to the SFU

JESSENside of the stadium and throw a few water bombs .

As everyone at UBC knows, the engineersdo this in fun, just as they have fun throwingstudents into the library pool .

But the Clansmen supporters unfortunatelydidn't look upon this as fun .

As the dozen red coats retreated to the UB Cside of Empire Stadium, they were chased by twoSFU heros and one of them was mad beyondreason .

This student from the Burnaby hilltop schooljumped the fence surrounding the track andthrew a punch at one of our engineers.

No attempt at retaliation was made .These engineers simply picked up the punch-

thrower and proceeded to bring him over to thestands for a dunking .

Immediately the SFU stands began to empt yand close to 200 so-called university student sbegan to pour across the field, disrupting thegame and engaged in fist fights with the engin-eers who had left their seats to protect theirmates .

Pent up emotions became the rulers of thesituation .

SFU supporters wanted to hit back for beingthought of so long as a no-football school . Andthey weren't satisfied to . let their football teamdo the convincing .

But where were the police during the earl ypart of this skirmish, when it could have beenstopped quickly ?

At the height of the brawl, I counted threepolicemen trying to break it up . Against 400 stu-dents !

Finally about 15 cops gathered their courageand dispersed the trouble-makers .

These same riot-squad experts stood by whenat half-time a lone engineer ran over to the SFUstands_with a smoke-bomb and was set upon b y10 or 15 ,Clansmen fans.

This engineer was being beaten up and not

until the engineering undergrad president LynnSpraggs talked to the upholders of the law, didany of them go over to help bail out thatengineer.

Next year there will be more police on handsays the UBC athletic department but it doesn' tmatter how many there are if they don't do theirjob quickly .

The fights over, the engineers returned totheir seats and for the rest of the game behavedlike young gentlemen .

Even when their mate with the smoke-bombwas being punched and kicked, the red-coats 'restrained themselves and thus prevented furtherviolence .

It has been suggested !by several people thatthe engineers should act as policemen at nextyear's game and this sounds to me like a goodidea .

Now, about that football game .The UBC Thunderbirds were beaten, soundly,

by a better team. And as any coach will tell you,there's nothing disgraceful in losing to a betterteam.

But when your team loses by making mis-takes then it is disgraceful.

Coach Frank Gnup's squad did very littlethat was right.

They couldn't tackle . Often a SFU offensiv eplayer would run through 10 tacklers befor ebeing stopped. And there was no gang tackling .

They couldn't run with the Clansmen. Plod-ding UBC runners were often left behind as fleet -footed Clansmen scooted away.

They couldn't stop Wayne Holm . This onefactor alone cost them the game. Time and againHolm sneaked by the UBC defensive line gallop-ing 20 to 30 yards before being stopped . He seer.ed three of the Clansmen touchdowns himself .

Holm passed for the other two SFU majorsand his passes were accurate and his receiversmade few mistakes . Holm and Mike Martin,who took the helm for a few plays, were success-ful on 50 per cent of their throws .

The Birds' quarterbacks, Rent Yaniw andGordon Hardy had a miserable record of fivecompletions on 13 attempts .

The referees didn't help to make the gamean interesting one either. Their determination atcalling every little infraction was sheer stupidity .

Calling the most obvious infractions wouldhave sufficed and kept even the Birds' fans alittle happier.

It has been said that it's not whether you winor lose but how you play the game. But if youdon't know how to play the game, what's theuse ?

Gnup promises that things will be differentnext year. I hope so .

FREDERIC WOOD THEATR E

JAPANES ENOH THEATRE

Lecture Demonstration by Major Mulhollan d

THURSDAY, OCT. 19 — 12:30 P.M.

FRIDAY,

OCT. 20 — 12:30 P.M.

ADMISSION FREE

ilLi PREDERIC WOOD THEATRE A

Alma Mater SocietyOFFICIAL NOTICE S

Charter Flight Directo rApplications are now being accepted for the position o fA.M.S. Charter Flight Director. The appointee will b e

responsible for arrangement of flight . He or she will

co-ordinate promotion for the flight and be responsiblefor the sale of seats. Letters of application should beaddressed to Penny Ann Cairns, A .M.S. Secretary,A.M.S. mailbox number 54 . Applicants will appear a ta meeting of Students Council, Monday, October 30 ,1967, at 7 :00 p .m., at which time the appointment willbe made .

Committee AppointmentsApplications are now being accepted for the followin gcommittees :

Constitutional RevisionsStudent Housing

Constitutional Revisions Committee and Student Hous-ing Committee applications should . be addressed to DonMunton, 1st Vice-President, AIMS mailbox number 51 .

TONIGHT

COLLEGE LIFE

1"lukitutid

KOLEfilluoi~,14 t

AUDITORIUM

8:30 P.M. - 50c

SPONSORED BY CAMPUS CRUSADE FOR CHRIST SOME PEOPLE thought it was a joke and they jeered and laughed as the cops busted u pthe near riot at Monday night's UBC-SFU football game. On the field the Clansmen beatthe Birds 32-13 .

Page 15: Senate seats g6~to: Larsen, Emmott, Mate, Waldman · These four names were added to the roll call of UBC's chief academic policy-making body Monday night. Larsen, arts 5; Miss Emmott,

Thursday, October 19, 1967

THE UBYSSEY -

Page 1 5

With the first half nearly over, SFU already led 26-0 .

Wayne Holm, SFU quarterback (outside left), tries to go around the UBC defense on a quarterback sweep, a play that was very successful for the Clansmen.

UBC halfback Ron Faulkner (20) is chased by SFU's Don Andrews (61) and another tackler .

UBC engineers lead Lady Godiva and her pony around to bring the Thunderbirds luck .

— photos by bob brown, powell hargrave, derrek webb, lawrence woodd and george hell o

Two SFU defenders close in on UBC's Dave Corcoran (35) . SFU's Wayne Holm scores one of his three touchdowns .

EXPORT(AHAW. %

ft A 1

2, f

Yilllii4 . iuuu 40

Am* mum I $

Z8

Z

Z

Coaches, Lorne Davies of SRI (top) and UBC's Frank Gnup.

Page 16: Senate seats g6~to: Larsen, Emmott, Mate, Waldman · These four names were added to the roll call of UBC's chief academic policy-making body Monday night. Larsen, arts 5; Miss Emmott,

Page 16

THE UBYSSEY

Thursday, October 19, 1967

'TWEEN CLASSES. . . . .ONCE AGAIN

Japanese drama demonstration todayTHEATRE DEPT.

The Frederic Wood Theatr epresents a NOH Theatre (clas-sical drama of Japan) lecturedemonstration by Moyra Mull-holland, noon, today .

LUTHERAN STUDENTSAward-winning J a p a n e s e

film The Island, noon todayBu. 104 and And. 3 :30 p.m. ,Admission 50 cents .

UBC SPORTS CAR CLU BNoon rallyette today—prac-

tise for Totem Rally . Start atsouth end of C-lot .

COLLEGE LIFEIllusionist, Andre Kole, to -

day, 8:30 p .m ., Aud. Admis-sion 50 cents .

AMS FIRST VPAcademic Reform . All per -

sons interested in discussingthis or • related subjects : openblab session in first vice-presi-dent office across from Broc kcafe, Monday noon .

STUDENTS CHRISTIA NHomo-Ludicrous — SCM fal l

camp — Oct. 20.22, at UBCforestry camp at Haney . WithDr. Roger Seamon of the En-glish department, Iris Garlandof SFU centre for communica-tion and the arts, Jack Shaver ,UBC chaplain, and Zorba th eGreek. Information at BrockExt . 350 .

ARTS COUNCIL

Free rock dance, Friday, 2 :3 0p.m. to 4:30 p.m., Brock, fea-

turing the Mother Tuckers an dthe Yellow Duck .

EXPERIMENTAL COLLEGEMr. Stockholder's course ,

Imperialism in Literatur enoon today, Bu. 226. KarlBurau's course, What isWrong with 'Canada, 1 :3 0p.m., Bu. 202 .

Noon today, the L-ShapedRoom in Ed. 100. Admission25 cents .CLUB CANADIEN

General discussion, noon to-day, Bu. 212 .NEWMAN CENTRE

General meeting today, noon ,Bu. 203. Pick up schedule ofevents, membership cards .Free coffee .SCIENCE US

Science general m e e t i n gnoon today, Henn . 200. Elec-tion of first year council.EL CIRCUL O

Conversation group t o d a y12 :30-2 :30 p.m. in IH 402 and404 . CIASP members welcome .Bring lunch. Come and go asyou wish.SLAVONIC CIRCLE

First annual meeting today ,noon, IH music room .CLASSICS CLUB

First meeting of the year — 8 .p .m., Friday at 4495 WestSeventh . C. W. J. Eliot willgive an illustrated talk on th eGreek Island of Anaphe. Newmembers welcome .SCIENCE US

Election for SUS treasurertoday. Vote .PHRATERE S

Pledge all Phi coffee partyand sub chapter sign-up, noontoday, Mildred Brock .

CINEMA 16 MEMBERSwith Series One Vouchers

Please

CLAIM YOUR TICKETSin Brock Extension

Room 357

GIGANTICPOST GAME SOUL SPECTACULA R

2 GREAT BANDSROSALIND KEENE & THE APOLLOS

BILLY DIXON & THE ACCENT SAND THE GO-GO GIRLS

Only $1 .50 * Armoury * Friday * 9:00 p.m.

U.B.C. THUNDERBIRDWINTER SPORTS CENTR E

SKATING SCHEDULE 1967 - 68

Effective September 29,

TUESDAYS —WEDNESDAYS —

FRIDAYS —

SATURDAYS —

1967 to April 14, 196 8

12:45 to_2:45 p .m .2:00 to 3:30 p .m .7:30 to 9:30 p .m .3 :0,0 to 5:00 p .m .7:30 to 9:30 p .m . *3 :00 to 5:00 p .m . *7 :30 to 9 :30 p.m .

SUNDAYS —

,12 :45 to 2 :45 p .m .7 :30 to 9 :30 p.m .

*Except when Hockey Games scheduled :November 10, 11, 24, 25 .December 1, 2.Jahuary 12, 13, 26, 27 .February 23, 24 .

Admission: Afternoons—Students 35c . Adults 60c.Evenings—Students 50c . Adults 75c .

Skate Rental - 35c a pair . — Skate Sharpening - 35c a pairFor further information call 228-3197 or 224-3205

SPECIAL EVENTSNDP Charles Taylor discus-

ses the French-Quebec situa-tion noon Friday in Brock .Admission 10 cents .

TENNIS TEAMAll new members for tenni s

team meet 5 :30 p .m. Friday infieldhouse .

NEW ARTS 1Excellent CBC film on pu-

blic schools vs "free" schoolsfor new arts 1 students, today3:30 p .m., Bu . 106 .

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Dances

1 1UNDERGROUND ROCK BANDS AR E

where it ' s at. For your next danc ePhone Magic Theatre. 685-1711 .

GIGANTIC POST GAME SOUL SPEC -tacular featuring 2 Great Bandsonly $1 .50 . Rosalind Keene & Th eApollos plus Billy Dixon & The Accents . Armoury, Friday, 9 :00 p.m .DANCE TO THE BETTER HALF

Friday, Oct . 20 at the Hallmar kHall . $1 .50 per person .

COME TO TOTEM PARK DANC ESat ., Oct. 21, 9 :00 - 12 :30. TheShockers. Admission 75c.

Greetings

1 2FROM "THE ISLAND". AWAR D

winning Japanese movie. Showin gtoday only. 12:30, Bu . 104. 3:30 ,Aud . 50c.

Lost & Found

1 3CELL PHSIOLOGY 330 NOTEBOOK

lost Oct. 12, Buchanan 203, reward .Phone John 526-7595 .

Rides&Car Pools

1 4WISH TO SHARE DRIVING, .PRE -

ferably for 9 :30's. Live in vicinityof Central Park . Phone434-0422 .

RIDERS FROM NORTH BURNABYwanted for 8 :30's — phone Russ ,299-0721.

WANTED : CAR POOL FROM WESTVan. will drive one day a week,922-2304 .

Special Notices

_ 1 5WHY PAY HIGH AUTO INSUR -

ance rates? If you are over 20 an dhave a good driving history youqualify for our good driving rates.Phone Ted Elliott, 298-5966.

GSA WILL HOLD ITS GENERA Lmeeting for: fall on Thursday, Oc-tober 26, 194, at 12:45 p .m., in theLower Loun of the Graduate Stu -dent Centre . ;Plans for Centre ex-pansion and densequent fee increas ewill be discussed .

:KITS, SINGING, BANJO — PICKIN 'Guitar Playin' . It 's all at TalentNight, Friday 20 Newman Centre ,8 :00 p .m. Free Coffee . Dance after.

' , THE ISLAND" JAPANESE FEA -ture . Showing today only . 12 :30 ,Bu . 104 . 3 :30, Aud ., 50c .

IS COUNTRY JOE WITH A GUITA Rbetter than Mother Tucker' s Yel-low Duck? M.T .Y .D. Friday, Oct .20. Kits Theatre, 8 :30-1 :00 .

DID YOU MISS THE YARDBIRDS& White Rabbit Show at the Ker-risdale Arena this summer? Re -pent! The time is Nov. 10! PNE GardenAuditorium.TOM JONES STARRING ALBERT

Finney in the Aud. Nov. 9, 42 :30,3 :30, 6 :00, 8 :30. 50c.

Travel Opportunities

1 6Wanted—Miscellaneous

1 8 AUTOMOTIVE & MARINEAutomobiles For Sale

2 11965 SPRITE. TOP CONDITION .

Complete service record. Neverraced. Has UBC Staff Sticker. 321 -2482 after 6.

'53 CHEV. BELLE-AIR, TWO-DOOR .Radio, well chromed . Good Condi -tion. Asking $275. Phone688-3203 .

MUST SELL 1957 FOUR DOO Rautomatic Ford. Good radio andtires . $250.00 or best offer. Phone 733-9774.1960 ENVOY . GOOD CONDITION.

$495 . Phone Jean 433-2655.1958 MORRIS MINOR, EXCELLENT

condition, $300 . Sally, 684-5437 after6 p .m .

MGA 1600. FANTASTIC CONDITION .Can be seen at Z .B .T . House. Rick ,224-9660 .

'59 RAMBLER AMERICAN 2-DOORSedan. Good brakes, tires, heater,engine. '63 Rambler, (31,000) miles .Best offer, Phone in evenings, RE3-5627.

1960 DAUPHINE . BEST OFFE Rtakes . Phone Bob, 879-2341 eves.

ALLIANCE FRANCAISEAll those who signed for -the

Friday night activity and newmembers attend meeting, noo ntoday, Bu. 202. Membershipcards ready.

-MUSSOC

Fall banquet Saturday inBrock, 6 :30 p.m. Call or signlist in clubroom by Fridaynoon if attending.

CIASPInformation, Brock Ext . 354 .

All applications due Friday .

Motorcycles 26HONDA-FIAT

Motorcycles - CarsGenerators - Utility Unit e

New and UsedSPORT CARS

N Motors

T0

SR

ET W

145 Robson

H

688-1284S U Z UK I 80S TOP CONDITION .

Leaving town, must sell . $190 . Hel-met included . See it o ncampus call :Carol 228-3320 afternoons, mornings ,weekends684-3724 .

1964 HONDA CB 160. VERY GOO Dcondition . $325 or best offer . Phone

224-9953 and ask for Alan.

Miscellaneous

32WHOLESALE PRICES TO ALL UB C

students on trans . radios, tape re-corders, record players, watches,jewelery, etc., at THE DISCOUNTHOUSE, 3235 West Broadway, Tel.

732-6811 .STATIONERY - ART SUPPLIES -

Gift & Party Shop . See Walter' sStationery, 2910 W. Broadway. Ph .733-4516 .

PHILIPS CONTINENTAL 150 (EL3302) Tape Recorder, $75 .00 . Phone926-3304 .

GIRL'S LONDON BRAND NE Wleather coat ; size 14 ; $50; phon e RE 8-4410 after 5 :30 p.m.SOLID ROSEWOOD BASS GUITAR .

Fender Jazz bass pick-ups and ma-chine heads. Bass fiddle shape .Highest quality workmanship als oBassman Amp . 738-1633. No. 3 ,2500 W. 1st.

Orchestras

3 3DANCE TO THE WESTER N

Swing of the "Trail-Aires " . Phone(Bob) 942-7749.

BUSINESSSERVICES

Scandals 37ARE YOU GETTING ANY? COM E

to the Witches Brew at the Hall -mark Hall Oct . 20 . The Better Half

$1 .50 per person.MANFRED YOUR FEARS ARE

well founded—Barb .MOTHER LET IT ALL HANG OUT.

Saturday (Mini-Mini) Surf is dead ; Sparrow over Jimbo in 69th. BDFG.ILLUSIONIST ON CAMPUS TO -

night in Auditorium at 8 :30. Bring50c to see Andre Kole.

CAT BALLOW RIDES INTO THEAud. on Oct . 26 . 12 :30, 3 :30, 6 :00 ,8 :30 . Adm. 50c .

FANTASTIC BLACK MASK BASHSat ., Oct . 21, 8 :00, 25c/person.Dance Club Lounge, Brock Ex-tension. Wear a costume Thingeey .

Typewriter Repairs

3 9ANDERSON TYPEWRITE R

SERVIC ETYPEWRITER S

ADDING MACHINE SNEW AND RECONDITIONED

REPAIRS TO ALL MAKE SFree Estimates

Reasonable Rate sALL WORK GUARANTEED

185 West Broadway

879-781 5Across from Zephyr Motors

Service Centre

Typing

40

EXPERIENCED TYPIST — ELEC-tric . Phone 228-8384 or 224-6129 ,"GOOD EXPERIENCED TYPIST "

available for home typing.Please call 277-5640.

EMPLOYMENTHelp Wanted—Male

52WANTED DRIVER WITH OW N

car to deliver Sat. nite for Th eFriar . Contact Paul 224-0833.

Male or Female -

53

MATHEMATICS AND SCIENCEtutors required . Fourth year orgraduate, 736-6923, 4 :30-6 :80 p .m . ,except Tuesday.

LOOKING FOR PART TIME EVEN -ing work as waitress — experienc enot required. Call 224-0833 after6 :00.

ACADEMIC ACTIVITIE SDr. Conor Cruise O'Brian

speaks o n Neo - ColonialismSunday 1 p .m. at IH. Students75 cents, faculty $1 .PSYCHOLOGY CLUB

Film Escape, noon today ,Ang. 207 .ZOOLOGY DEPT.

Special arts section zoology105, 65-66 . Reunion Fridaynoon in Zoology extension HutB-6, office 12A. Copies of bookwill be distributed .

INSTRUCTIONMusic

82

Special Classes 8 3Tutoring

8 4Maths . Tutors, 4th year or graduates,

GRADES 7 to 13

-736-6923 — 4 :30 - 7 :30 P.M.

MISCELLANEOU S FOR SALE 71THE FINEST MEN'S HAIRSTYLING

at the Upper Tenth Barber. 4574 W.10th Avenue. 1 block from gates.

LOOKINGFor clean, used, guaranteed appliances.Also complete repair service for allmakes and models .

McIVER Appliances Ltd .3215 W Broadway—738-7181

sBC TEXTS BOUGHT AND SOLD.Busy B Books, 146 W. Hastings.681-4931 .

GOLF CLUBS 1964 WILSON STAFF2-9 Irons Ex. cond . $175. Phone Ross266-6503 . After 6.

OLYMPIA PORTABLE TYPEWRI-ter, manual, small type, zippere dcarrying case, like new. $55. 874- •4096 evenings .

DOUBLE-BED & DINETTE TABL Ewith four chairs, rug. 224-9666.Erie : Try anytime.

RENTALS & REAL ESTATE

Rooms

81ROOM FOR RENT, FOR MALE

students, near Alma St. Phone 738-4792, ask for Mrs. Wang.PHI KAPPA SIGMA DOUBLE ROOM

available after 15 October, Phon e228-8476 evenings .

SLEEPING ROOM FOR 2 GIRLSnear camm+s . Private facilities. $35ea . CA 4-6389 .

Room & Board

82DELTA KAPPA EPSILON FRA -

ternity is now inviting inquiries foraccommodation in their new $155, -000 36-man- house on AgronomyRoad. The house will be officiallyopened Jan. 1, 1968, but room andpossibly board will be offered inearly November. The house will fea-ture the best living facilities atTTBC for residence rates . For fur-ther information and opening datesplease write : H. Harrison, No . 6 ,3851 West 4th Ave.

NEAR UBC. TWO MALE STUDENTSto share very large nice room .Good meals, table tennis . 738-2305 .

ROOM FOR MALE STUDEN Tbreakfast optional. Non - smoker ,non-dirnker . 224-7174 .

Furn . Houses & Apts.

83WANTED GIRL TO SHARE FLA T

with young couple. $60 per month .681-2679, West End ._

GIRL 21-25 TO SHARE FLJRN. APT.with two of same. 41st and Vine .Call 263-9217 .

Unfurn . Houses& Apts . 8 4DESPERATE, COUPLE JUST MAR -

ried . Requires self-contained suiteimmediately. Call Ed after 6 . 224 -3479 .

BUY — SELL — RENT

WITH

UBYSSEY

CLASSIFIED

CLASSIFIE DRates: Students, Faculty & Clubs—3 lines, 1 day 75 ., 3 days $2.00 .

Commercial—3 lines, 1 day $1.00, 3 days $2.50 .Rates for larger ads on request .

Classified ads are not accepted by telephone.Non-Commercial Classified Ads are payable in advance.

Publications Office, BROCK HALL, UNIV . OF B .C., Vancouver 8, B.C .