the upyssey - ubc library home · dean f. n. chant. tell soon the board announced its di-vision of...

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"Any ma n who hate s children can ' t be al l bad" G . B . S . THE UPYSSE Y Vol . XLVIII, No. 49 VANCOUVER, B .C ., TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1966 CA 4-391 6 powell hargrave photo No fe e divisi ~ equitabi C President John Macdonald said Monday there will be no fee increase for UBC students next year — if division o f the increased provincial operating grant is " equitable . " "An equitable division shoul d ensure no increase in tuition fees next year," Macdonal d said . "But until the $25 millio n total operating grant is divide d among the three public univer- sities it isn't possible to fix th e final effect on UBC finances . " In his budget speech in Vic- toria Friday Premier W . A . C . Bennett announced a $25 mil - lion operating grant for B .C .' s three universities . DEMOLISHE D By CAROL WILSO N Little Pauline Sigurgeirso n and her brother Steven have had to cope with the insecurit y of changing schools once thi s year, and thanks to UBC' s housing administration, the y may have to do it again . Pauline, 9, and Steven, 7 , started going to Universit y Hill Elementary school in Jan- uary when their parents mov- ed into one of the married residences on Wesbrook Place . But now, the Sigurgeirson s will have to leave their hom e by May 15 because 10 huts on Wesbrook Place will b e torn down this year to mak e room for the new health cen- ter . Housing czar Malcolm Mc - Gregor is not peturbed at th e prospect of moving the mar- ried students . "Everything . will go per- fectly smoothly . If the hut s are removed, the people wil l be looked after . We're no t quite sure what we will do , but we'll do something. " But the Sigurgeirsons don' t want to move . "We are quite happy here, " said Mrs . William Sigurgei- son . "We used to live in Nort h Surrey, and if we hadn't mov- ed, Bill may have had to dro p the year . It was just costin g us too much for gas and rent . " "The move here was the best thing we could hav e done . University Hill schoo l is one of the best in Vancou- ver, and the children have im- proved greatly in their school - work. "We've been lucky in that some friends of ours are go- ing to England for the sum- mer, and we will be able t o sublet their place . But we wil l have to find somewhere t o live for the next two years, " Mrs . Sigurgeirson said . "The housing situation i n Vancouver is just terrible . You can live outside the gate s for $150 per month, if yo u can find a place taking four children . " The average rent on Wes - brook Place is $60 per month , with about $20 utilities . The Sigurgeirsons are not the only residents who are up- set about their homes bein g torn down . (Continued on Page 2 ) SEE : HOMELESS INCREASED GRANT Last year's operating gran t was $18 .5 million . The government's capita l grant for the three universitie s remains at $8 million . "The government has recog- nized by its one-third increas e in the operating grant that uni- versities need substantial in - creases every year to meet ris- ing costs of growth and devel- opment as well as increase d enrolments," Macdonald said . DIVIDE D UBC's share of last year' s operating grant was $13 mil- lion. Capital grant share was $4 . 2 million . The grants will be divided among UBC, Simon Fraser, an d Victoria College by the gov- ernment's university financial advisory board, chaired b y Dean F . N . Ch ant . TELL SOO N The board announced its di- vision of last year's grant Apri l 11, but this year's announce- ment is expected sooner . UBC received $800 per stu- dent under last year's division . Per capita grant for the othe r universities was $1,000 . Hudson is not officially a council member yet and canno t introduce motions . "I'll do that," said engineer- ing undergraduate society pre- sident Art Stevenson . "I 'don't see why we should thank him," . said AMS treasur - UBC Grits get national priz e OTTAWA (UNS) — UBC' s Liberal club has been name d the best in Canada . The award was made Sun - day at the annual meeting o f t h e Canadian Universit y Liberal Federation . The UBC club was cited fo r "impact and effectiveness " Universities were awarded trophies and autographe d photos of Prime Ministe r Lester Pearson . Term brea k gives harrie d Pubsters res t Over-wrought Ubyssey staf- fers are taking a holiday thi s week along with the rest o f the campus . The Ubyssey will not be pub- lished Thursday or Friday be - cause of the mid-term break , but, as a bonus, Canada's great - est will appear Wednesday . For students who still have- n't found where to pick up th e paper, here are the drop-of f points with the number de - livered at each point : Gym, 500 ; library, 80 ; Brock , 1,800 ; Buchanan upstairs, 1,000 ; faculty club, 200 ; graduate stu- dents centre, 100 ; the quad , 500 ; engineering, 500 ; bus stop , 1,500 ; and Ponderosa, 1,000 . Education, 1,200 ; electrical engineering, 300 ; Angus, 1,000 ; Wesbrook, 500 ; General hospi- tal, 100 . er Mike Sommers . "I think he was lax for not doing it be- fore . " "OK let's not use that mo- tion," said AMS vice-presiden t Bob Cruise from the chair . (AMS president Byron Hen - der ‘was in Montreal . ) "Have you got one less ob- sequious? " No one had any . .lore sug- gestions so t h e motion wa s dropped and the meeting wa s adjourned. Missing CNIB sign bring s dark days for caf operato r The CNIB sign is still nowhere in sight . The five-foot high sign disappeared from its shelf-to p rack at the Canadian Institute for the Blind coffee shop i n the education building two weeks ago . No one has seen it since, which creates special prob- lems for shop operator Smitty Currie=Smit, who is blin d and depends on the sign to warn customers to announce themselves . The sign, which bears the letters CNIB, is valued a t $20. "It's probably hanging among the panties in som e fraternity ." Currie-Smit said. LITTLE LARRY SYMONS . . also to be evicted from Wesbrook Place FOR HEALTH CENTR E .They can't go home again Council decide s " no thanks" Ma c By CAROL-ANNE BAKE R Ubyssey Council Reporter Council Monday night turned down an opportunity t o thank UBC president John Macdonald for appearing at th e student forum last Tuesday . AMS treasurer-elect Lorne Husdon asked if one of th e councillors could introduce a motion to thank Macdonald fo r coming to talk to the students .

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"Any ma nwho hateschildren

can 'tbe al lbad"

— G . B. S .THE UPYSSE YVol. XLVIII, No. 49

VANCOUVER, B .C., TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1966

CA 4-3916

— powell hargrave photo

No feedivisi~

equitabiCPresident John Macdonald said Monday there will be

no fee increase for UBC students next year — if division ofthe increased provincial operating grant is "equitable."

"An equitable division shoul densure no increase in tuitionfees next year," Macdonaldsaid .

"But until the $25 milliontotal operating grant is divide damong the three public univer-sities it isn't possible to fix thefinal effect on UBC finances . "

In his budget speech in Vic-toria Friday Premier W. A. C .Bennett announced a $25 mil-lion operating grant for B .C.' sthree universities .

DEMOLISHED

By CAROL WILSO N

Little Pauline Sigurgeirsonand her brother Steven havehad to cope with the insecurityof changing schools once thisyear, and thanks to UBC'shousing administration, theymay have to do it again .

Pauline, 9, and Steven, 7,started going to UniversityHill Elementary school in Jan-uary when their parents mov-ed into one of the marriedresidences on Wesbrook Place .But now, the Sigurgeirsonswill have to leave their hom eby May 15 because 10 huts

on Wesbrook Place will betorn down this year to mak eroom for the new health cen-ter .

Housing czar Malcolm Mc -Gregor is not peturbed at theprospect of moving the mar-ried students .

"Everything .will go per-fectly smoothly . If the hutsare removed, the people wil lbe looked after. We're no tquite sure what we will do ,but we'll do something. "

But the Sigurgeirsons don' twant to move .

"We are quite happy here, "said Mrs . William Sigurgei-son . "We used to live in NorthSurrey, and if we hadn't mov-ed, Bill may have had to dro pthe year . It was just costin gus too much for gas and rent . "

"The move here was thebest thing we could hav edone . University Hill schoolis one of the best in Vancou-ver, and the children have im-proved greatly in their school -work.

"We've been lucky in thatsome friends of ours are go-ing to England for the sum-mer, and we will be able t osublet their place . But we wil lhave to find somewhere tolive for the next two years, "Mrs. Sigurgeirson said .

"The housing situation inVancouver is just terrible .You can live outside the gatesfor $150 per month, if yo ucan find a place taking fourchildren . "

The average rent on Wes -brook Place is $60 per month ,with about $20 utilities .

The Sigurgeirsons are notthe only residents who are up-set about their homes bein gtorn down .

(Continued on Page 2 )SEE: HOMELESS

INCREASED GRANTLast year's operating grant

was $18.5 million .The government's capita l

grant for the three universitiesremains at $8 million .

"The government has recog-nized by its one-third increas ein the operating grant that uni-versities need substantial in -creases every year to meet ris-ing costs of growth and devel-opment as well as increasedenrolments," Macdonald said .

DIVIDEDUBC's share of last year' s

operating grant was $13 mil-lion.

Capital grant share was $4 . 2million .

The grants will be dividedamong UBC, Simon Fraser, an dVictoria College by the gov-ernment's university financialadvisory board, chaired b yDean F. N. Chant .

TELL SOON

The board announced its di-vision of last year's grant April11, but this year's announce-ment is expected sooner .

UBC received $800 per stu-dent under last year's division .Per capita grant for the otheruniversities was $1,000 .

Hudson is not officially acouncil member yet and cannotintroduce motions .

"I'll do that," said engineer-ing undergraduate society pre-sident Art Stevenson .

"I 'don't see why we shouldthank him,". said AMS treasur-

UBC Grits getnational prize

OTTAWA (UNS) — UBC' sLiberal club has been namedthe best in Canada .

The award was made Sun-day at the annual meeting oft h e Canadian UniversityLiberal Federation .

The UBC club was cited fo r"impact and effectiveness"

Universities were awardedtrophies and autographedphotos of Prime MinisterLester Pearson .

Term breakgives harriedPubsters rest

Over-wrought Ubyssey staf-fers are taking a holiday thi sweek along with the rest ofthe campus .

The Ubyssey will not be pub-lished Thursday or Friday be -cause of the mid-term break ,but, as a bonus, Canada's great -est will appear Wednesday .

For students who still have-n't found where to pick up thepaper, here are the drop-offpoints with the number de-livered at each point :

Gym, 500 ; library, 80 ; Brock ,1,800 ; Buchanan upstairs, 1,000 ;faculty club, 200 ; graduate stu-dents centre, 100; the quad ,500; engineering, 500 ; bus stop ,1,500 ; and Ponderosa, 1,000 .

Education, 1,200 ; electricalengineering, 300; Angus, 1,000 ;Wesbrook, 500; General hospi-tal, 100 .

er Mike Sommers . "I think hewas lax for not doing it be-fore . "

"OK let's not use that mo-tion," said AMS vice-presiden tBob Cruise from the chair .

(AMS president Byron Hen-der ‘was in Montreal . )

"Have you got one less ob-sequious?"

No one had any . .lore sug-gestions so t h e motion wa sdropped and the meeting wa sadjourned.

Missing CNIB sign bringsdark days for caf operato r

The CNIB sign is still nowhere in sight.The five-foot high sign disappeared from its shelf-to p

rack at the Canadian Institute for the Blind coffee shop i nthe education building two weeks ago .

No one has seen it since, which creates special prob-lems for shop operator Smitty Currie=Smit, who is blindand depends on the sign to warn customers to announcethemselves .

The sign, which bears the letters CNIB, is valued at$20.

"It's probably hanging among the panties in som efraternity ." Currie-Smit said.

LITTLE LARRY SYMONS. . also to be evicted from Wesbrook Place

FOR HEALTH CENTRE

.They can't go home again

Council decides"no thanks" Mac

By CAROL-ANNE BAKE RUbyssey Council Reporter

Council Monday night turned down an opportunity tothank UBC president John Macdonald for appearing at th estudent forum last Tuesday .

AMS treasurer-elect LorneHusdon asked if one of th ecouncillors could introduce amotion to thank Macdonald fo rcoming to talk to the students .

— powelI hargrave photo

PHRATERES SWEETHEART candidate Christine Currie, art sII, was one of nine pretty Queen contestants taking par tin all-Phi fashion show Friday in Brock.

HOMELESS

Page 2

THE UBYSSEY

Tuesday, 'February 15, 1966

Province student's brie fpresented to Socreds

(Continued from Page 1 )

Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Tun ghave lived in their home sinceJune. At that time, they weretold the huts would not betorn dawn for at least tw oyears .

"We spent over $50 on ma-terials and got paint fromhousing to fix it up" Mrs .Tung said, "and now we'regoing to have to move out . "

"We have no place to moveunless housing finds us aplace. Our name is on thewaiting list, but we haven'theard anything ." They haveone child .

Another family has live don campus for three and ahalf years, one and a half ofthem in their home on Wes-brook Place .

They were not told of thepossibility of having to movewhen they moved in, but got

If you're a swinger andlove fun and frolic, yo ucan join the

KEY CLU Bcoming to the C a m p u s .

a notice from housing twomonths ago, saying they mustmove out by May 15 . Theyhave three pre-school chil-dren .

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By ANNE BISHOP

Victoria College students ,although tired from their fin-ally ended fee strike, haven'tgiven up.

A Victoria College delegationled by AMS vice-presidentJohn Thies, presented a briefon university finances to aSocial Credit party meetin gFriday at the provincial legis-lature .

The delegation spoke toabout 15 Sacred MLA's as theparty would not allow the mto meet a full caucus .

The brief was endorsed byUBC's AMS council and stu-dent councils at Simon Fraserand Notre Dame .

The brief urged :A government study of mo-

tivational, social and environ-mental factors leading studentsto seek higher education ;

That universities to giventheir requested operatinggrants ;

That the government providean equalizing grant for out-of-town students, and ;

That it consider financin guniversities on a five-year plan .

Thies said the brief was wel lreceived by the Socreds as be-ing a more responsible ap-proach to the situation thanprotest marches or refusal topay fees.

"That's only natural," Thie ssaid. "A brief doesn't drawthe public attention the way amarch does . "

Because many of the So-creds present were from out-lying areas, they were recep-tive to the point on grants fo rout-of-town students Thies said .

But some felt granting uni-versities all they request wouldlead to outlandish demands, hesaid .

Bert Price, MLA for Van-couver Burrard asked Thieswho had his small group re-presented and what right ithad in presenting the brief .

"Price was shot down whenwe told him we were the demo-cratically elected representa-tives of 3,000 students at Vic-toria and had the backing of

Shakespeariancomedy coming

An all-UBC student castwill present William Shake-speare's Love's Labor's LostFeb . 22 to 28 .

The comedy will be playe din the Frederic Wood Thea-tre at 8 :00 p .m. daily .

Tickets are available atthe Frederic Wood Theatreoffice, room 207 at $1 .75 foradults and 75 cents for stu-dents .

Those thinking of attend-ing the play are asked tonote the early curtain and toremember that there will beno performance F e b . 27which is Sunday .

councils at UBC, SF and NotreDame — all the university stu-dents in B .C .

The AMS at Victoria Collegeis encouraging students tospeak to their MLAs and findout what they intend to doabout the fee problem .

The Victoria delegation alsospoke to Liberal and New Dem-ocratic Party caucusses . TheNDP backed all the proposals,advocating free tuition as well.The Liberal reception was les swarm, Thies said, bdt agreedwith the brief in principal .

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A national investment deale rwill interview on the campus

February 22 - 25for those interested in a career in the

financial business .

and the Boston Pops

Recorded "live" atTanglewood—the musical meeting o fAmerica's foremost inter-preter of popular classic swith the man who created somany of them . In this newalbum, Arthur Fiedler andDuke Ellington play 12 o fthe Duke's tunes, arrangedto make the most of th ecombined talents of th eBoston Pops, the Duke's ow nsidemen on bass and drums ,with the Duke himself at th epiano . Here's a new "big bandsound" that really takes off .Included in this swingin gstudy of essential Ellingtoni aare "Caravan," "Mood In-digo," "Sophisticated Lady "and "Satin Doll," with line rnotes by the Duke himself.You'll love it madly .

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Tuesday, February 15, 1966

T H E U B Y S S E Y

Page 3

— norm betts phato sHIGH SCHOOL CO-EDS find point of interest during campus tour conducted Friday b yfourth-year chemical engineer Mike Robertson . Jackie Bennett (left) from Gladstone ,and Diane Watson from J . Lloyd Crowe i n Trail, attended two-day high schoolconference .

AMS election committeedecides to count votes

'IT'S NOTHING NEW'

Bell tolls old taleof campus unrest

Campus unrest is nothing new, a newspapera Vancouver Institute audience Saturday .

Max Bell, owner of eigh tCanadian daily newspapers in-cluding the Vancouver Sun,said dissent has been emana-ting from college campuses fo rcenturies .

Bell told 250 persons inFreddy Wood Theatre the busi-

is concerneddevelopment

owner told

All the ballots in the firs tvice-presidential election willbe recounted under studentcourt supervision today .

The recount, which will in-clude the previously disquali-fied cafeteria and educationpolls, was authorized at th estudent council meeting Mon-day night.

The two polls, which havebeen kept sealed since the Wed-nesday election, were disqual-ified because campaign poster shad been left up in the vicinit yduring voting .

Council also approved anelections committee decision t orescind returning officer JamesTaylor's ruling that candidateCharlie Boylan be disqualifiedfor handling in late the state-

By CAROL WILSONThe AMS suspension of al l

arts undergraduate societypublications was lifted Firdayafternoon by AMS presidentByron Hender and co-ordina-tor Graeme Vance .

The suspension was liftedwhen the AUS executive andthe editors of Consensus agreedto terms laid down by theAMS .

"We have agreed to send allour copy to AMS lawyer Ben

ment of his campaign expendi-tures .

The decision to recount wasmade after a hectic meetingFriday afternoon which sawmore complications added tothe already confused AMS se-cond slat e election .

When the candidates Boy-lan, Bill Grant, and Jim Tay-lor, arrived at the meeting theyheard committee chairmanJoan Curtis hand down a de-cision, made at an in-camerameeting at noon, which dis-qualified all three on the basi sof election infractions concern -

ing the display of posters .

The committee called for a

new election before March 3 1and said candidates could chal-lenge its decision by appealing

Trevino and a lawyer of our 'choice, Sid Simons, for a legalopinion on the content beforeit is published," said Nanc yCorbett, one of the editors ofthe magazine .

The suspension was place don the AUS publication sThursday night by Vance .

"There was some doubt of thelegality of the last articles, "said new AUS president IanMcDougall .

A recent article on board of

to student court .The decision did not mentio n

Boylan's infraction or disquali-fication .

Boylan's representative, thirdyear law student Greg Morleysaid the committee had notgiven him a chance to stateBoylan's case and called for thecommittee to reconsider its de-cision .

The election committee re-tired to an in-camera meetin gafter an hour of discussionwith the candidates .

They returned after 90 min-utes with the new decision .

In the first ballot of the elec-tion Boylan polled 1,442, Tay-lor 1,063, and Grant 1,044 .

If a candidate wishes to chal-lenge the result of the newcount, he must do so throughstudent court .

governors member Einar Gun-derson in the magazine causedthe resignation of arts presi-dent Chuck Campbell and thefiring and rehiring of editor sCameron and Mrs . Corbett.

Vance said he suspende dpublication after the confusionfollowing Campbell's resigna-tion as president of AUS.

- "The Arts people were sus-pended in publication and al lother activities because at thatmoment, !Thusday, no oneknew just who was responsiblefor the AUS," Vance said Mon -day .

"There was a president wh ohad allegedly resigned, a vice -president who was allegedly apresident, and so on . No oneinformed us of the situation .

"The whole thing wart a messso we put a stop to all activities;until they determined who wasresponsible for the actions o fthe AUS, and notified us ac-cordingly . "

The next issue of Consensuswill come out Feb. 22 Mrs .Corbett said .

ness communitywith universityproblems .

"Businessmen are sympathe-tic to the needs of universi-ties," he said .

However, off-campus com-ment is often rejected becausepeople outside the universityare looked on as "squares be-neath contempt," he said .

Bell said professors seemover-sensitive to outside criti-cism .

"Whenever a univerity is re-ferred to as a knowledge fac-tory, immediately a storm o finvective comes from students

alike that theis being dehu-

and lecturerswhole systemmanized ."

Bell said businessmen arevery interested in the Bladenreport's recommendations ofincreased aid to higher educa-tion .

At the same time, however ,universities ought to takepains to reduce their operatin gcosts, he said .

He pointed out that thesemester system, widely use din the United States, is repor-ed to save students $1,800 byreducing time for a degree t oless than three years .

Three bleedlots to shamepale rivals

Three faculties have reachedmore than 100 per cent of theirquota in the current b l o o ddrive .

The eight members of thefaculty of dentistry are in th elead with 333 per cent of theirquota. The aggies follow with188 per cent' and appliedscience has 106 per cent .

Law and grad studies arebringing up the rear with 1 6per cent and 15 per cent oftheir quotas respectively .

The quotas are set at 20 percent of each faculty .

Acadia has the most bleedersin residences with 203 per cen tof their quota, closely followedby Fort Camp with 195 pe rcent . Totem has 91 per cent ,end Lower Mall is lagging be -hind with 53 per cent .

The overall total reached b yMonday night was 63 per cen tof the quota .

The drive will continue onThursday and Friday of themid-term break .

Great say, senat eLONDON (CUP) — T h e

senate of the University ofWestern Ontario should havea greater say in policy andshould have a majority of itsmembers elected by and fro mthe faculty, says UWO'sfaculty association.

Engineer winsAthlone award

A one-year fellowship i staking a UBC engineerin ggraduate to Middlesex .

Randolph Young has beenasigned to Hoover Limited' sPerivale factory in Middle -sex, England, on an AthloneFellowship .

The scheme offers award sfor study at a British uni-versity or in a British fir mto Canadian engineeringraduates .

HEART FUND campaignersBillee Cohen, Bev Clarridge,Norma Scott and Viki Hild-reth — all of Alpha Phi soro-rity — will be after yourcontributions on c a m p u sWednesday .

Arts program revampersask student articulation

Revamping UBC's arts program will be discussed a t4 p.m., Thursday in Bu. 205 .

Walter P. Young and William J . Dusin, assistants toarts dean Dennis Healy have invited all students to atten dthe discussion the first day of the mid-term break.

"We hope for active student participation," Healy said .The meetings are part of an attempt to answer student '

questions about the new curriculum."We would like to meet the students and see wha t

they have to say," said Dusing.

CONSENSUS AGREES TO PREVIE W

Hender lifts arts hold

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

Winner Canadian University Press trophies for generalexcellence and editorial writing.

TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1966

"The responsibility of the pressis to report the Truth."

—Batman, Feb. 3, 1966

:

That the Canadian native Indian, due to his en-

vironment, has been largely unable to take a meaning-

ful place in Canadian society is a truism of the first

rank.

So when a group stops repeating the trite phrases

which compose the usual assessment of the situation, and

begin to do something concrete about it, the action

certainly deserves praise .

And this is especially true in the context of Canada's

universities, which so few of the native Indian popula-tion have been able to find the money or the educational

background to attend.

Ed Lavalle's Canadian Union of Students UBC com-

mittee is currently working on a co-op home project to

assist Indian girls to make the adjustment into the Big

Town.

Neither the scope of the operation (8 or 10 girls at a

time) nor the nature of the inhabitants (non-universitygoers) at first sight suggests the project is relevant t o

either the Indian problem or the university .

But of course, in both cases there is indeed somethin g

important represented by the home.

For the girls, albeit they are few in number, the

center should provide the temporary stability they needto find their way better through their new world .

As far as the university is concerned, the projec t

represents just one way in which CUS has began moving

out of their Brock Hall offices into some relevance to

young Canada .

But CUS this year has done more than spark social

action off campus. Under Pat Kenniff and his Ottawa

action crew, the student union which after the pullout of

our French confreres was considered a dead duck hascome through squawking healthily .

On most campuses across the nation, student gov-

vernment elections are being fought on the issues of

student action and social action, which were originallylaid out at the CUS national convention last fall a tLennoxville, Que .

The results, believe it or not have even showed here .On considering the recent AMS campaigns, we can ' t

help by being struck by the differences between lastyear's "more communication with the students" noise ,and this year's wide variety of rather more significan tissues such as fees, and participation in the universitycommunity.

Much of the guidance and presentation of this new

relevance for student government has been done throug hthe efforts of Mr. Lavalle's committee in both providingmaterial and ideas, and by setting a good example .

Our hats are off to them.

Relevance

TIE 19101?

IN THE EAR BY IAN CAMERO N

Editor, The Ubyssey, Sir :

On behalf of the Mardi Grascommittee of the Greek Let-ters Society of the Universityof British Columbia, I wouldvery much like to extend toextend our sincere thanks foryour help in making th especial Mardi Gras editionpossible .

We appreciate the time andenergy spent by your staff in

aiding us to put together the

final product, which was mostsuccessful .

Thank you again .

BUZ KNOTT

'NEVER'Editor, The Ubyssey, Sir :

When will you stop refer -ring to the University of Vic-toria as Victoria College ?

SUSAN SCOTTClass of '64

Ed. note: Never.

While walking along th eother day I saw a little kidlooking very despondent .

Now, I am not known for m y'kind heart ,but I likekids, so Istopped to seewhat th etrouble was .

It was avery sa dstory .

CAMERON He had justmoved into the neighbourhoodand didn't know anyone, andhis father had bought him akite, and then his father hadgone somewhere and the kidgot the kite caught in a tree .

At this tale of woe, I brokedown and joined the kid in hisstate of unhappiness .

MIAMI, Fla . (AP) — TwoCanadian girls sentenced to120 days in prison for dancin gon a rooftop and throwingcherry bombs will get a newtrial today .

Municipal Judge GeraldTobin agreed Tuesday to holdthe trial in his hospital room .

Tobin ordered a new triallast week after lawyers for

'ARITHMETIC PROBLEM'Editor, The Ubyssey, Sir:

I hate to point out a rathe rserious error in the arithmeti cof Kris Emmett.

In her article entitled "Cokesoak no joke", she sites theresult of a calculation inwhich she multiplies 2 .2 centsby 50,000 as $11,000 . Shestates further that this amoun tgoes unjustifiably for foodservices each year .

My arithmetic gives $1,100 .This is an excusable mistake

Being in a new neighbour-hood is tough enough with-out having an old man wh otries to help by buying a kitefor you .

Buying a kite, for God' ssake! What kind of fathe rwould buy a kite for his kid ?If I had asked my old man tobuy me a kite, he would havelaughed from here to nextyear .

And then his old mandoesn't know that when yo umove into a new neighbour-hood. the only thing to givea kid that's any use is boxin glessons.

Because the only thing todo is to fight anyone whowants to take you on, an dthen you have a place in your

the girls—Susanne and Moni-que Bison of Montreal— saidthey did not know the seri-ousness of the offence .

On the way to court Mon-day, where the new trial was

to be held, Tobin was hurt in

an auto accident .— The Province,

Feb. 9, 196 6

but one that must be correct -ed .

There is another point whichis perhaps more obscure .

In this case, if $1,100 (cor-rected value) is being unjusti-fiably gotten from studentsthis does not mean that any-one makes $1,100 profit ex-tra . This seems like a paradoxbut I bet Kris can resolve i twith a bit of headbone ex-ercise .

TONY MacPHEEGrad Studies

After I recovered from thisshock, I went back to myapartment and get some mar-bles for him, and left himlooking for some other ki dto play marbles with .

Meanwhile, excuse me . Ihave to buy a bottle of Sea-gram's so I can give him amarble bag .

ZHIMEEMIZEUMMENMEMMMil i

EDITOR : Tom WaymanNews Ron BiterAssociate

George Reamsbotto mCity Al DonaldPhoto Norm BottsSports __ . Ed ClarkAss't News

Dan Mulle nRichard Blair, Robbi West

Asst City Danny Stoffma nPage Friday .__ John KelseyManaging _ . Ian CameronFeatures Mike BoltonCUP

. . . __

Don Hull

Besides indispensible MarilynHill who types out those tweenclasses on the back page only fiveintrepid reporters were intrepidenough to brave the sunshine an dshow up Monday noon . The fear -less five were Ann Bishop, CarolWilson, Inge Mueller, Val Zuker,and Howie White . Carol-Ann eBaker and Doug Halveson record-ed the fumblings in Brock lateron in the evening. But we stilllove those who didn't come an dthere's a party with all mannerof diversion Thursday night a tthe bureau .

According to the command o four beloved editor, we are puttingout a paper on Wednesday. Thismeans TUESDAY IS A PRESSDAY . Your press-ence (pun) isrequired . Come down in cheerin geager throngs .

Oh, really? department

A 'thank you' from Mardi Gras type s

Ian just loves kids, too !new society. But buying akite.

And besides, this isn't th etime for kites anyway .

Kites don't come foranother month yet . Right now,you play marbles . The groundis just right for drawing acircle for marbles.

And if you don't want toplay marbles, you could findsome guy who had a tobaccocan with a hole punched inthe top and if you droppeda marble through the hole yougot ten marbles, if you drop-ped a marble through .

If you didn't, which wasalways, he kept the marbles .

And this kid was flying akite, in an alley, with wiresall over the place.

"Go play marbles', I sai d.;n :>:` :<::. .:::.»`:>:::: ::; :<;,:v. .. .e: :t :: :<>..;;>: :.: x: : .~:€€"x::><:>

x .

'I don't have any', he replied .

.: .

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Jesus, come back to old fold

Tuesday, February 15, 1966

T H E

U B Y S S E Y

Page 5

NO WORK

Creeping leisure

kills societies

By STU GRA Y

A primitive tribe that has known only stone tools issuddenly given modern mechanized farm equipment .

By THOMAS BEN MOSH EThe time has come for

the jews to take back Jesus .For a couple of thousan d

years, the great message ofthis prophet has been distorte dand misused by berserk an dhysterical refugees from Jud-aism .

Which, except for the in-herent moral evils perpetrate din the prophet's name was pro-bably in the order of things .

But in light of recent devel-opments — in both Christi-anity and Judaism, it is be-coming increasingly obviousthat there is a real necessityfor Jewry to formally acceptthe teachings of their greatestlatter-day prophet .

Jesus of Nazareth, as anhistorical figure, was indispu-tably Jewish. All his teachin gwas directed at creating a kindof Reform Judaism, such as i sn o w prevalent throughoutNorth America .

* * *Except for a quirk of fate,

the teachings of this prophetwould have led to no mor eramifications than an earlyversion of the present ortho-dox-reform split .

Unfortunately, due to mis-understandings, Saint Peter,and a paganizing of his teach-ings, a strange hybrid cult wa sformed called Christianity .

And since this cult as it wa sfirst created is now nearly ex-tinct, the time is ripe for Jewryto welcome home the errantteachings of one of its foremos tsons .

Misunderstandings a r o s eabout Jesus' message becausein part his teachings contra-dicted the teachings of theearlier prophet Moses .

All Jesus was trying to do

was to point out that the ruleslaid down by Moses in th ewilderness weren't necessarilyapplicable in the good seden-tary life of Palestine the tribeswere now enjoying.

And the elders felt then thatJesus was corrupting the ster nmessage of Moses . They pro-bably felt he had to be got ridof as there was a need to keeptheir young resolved to figh tthe Romans, just as Arabs arethe main villains. The youthare kept hopped-up to fight to-day.

* * kAs for Saint Peter, th e

"rock" of the church : he andsimilar glory-hounds managedto begin to weigh down th esimple statements of the Jewishreformer with hidden mean-ings and to create a complet enew system of worship basedonly loosely on the synagogu esystem then prevalent .

Paganizing was the last ste pin the perversion of the Jesus 'Jewish reform movement . G .B. Shaw has said : "When yo uChristianize a savage you sav-agize Christianity", and his re-mark sums up only too wel lwhat happened .

Christmas took over the win-ter year-death festival Easte rthe Hagan spring rites, and oneby one the pagan custom ssnuck into the church .

* * *But why is today so impor-

tant for the re-absorbtion ofthe original, clear Christiandoctrine into the Jewish faith ?

Well, for one thing becausethe new Christian athiests —including much of tht "proges-sive" clergy — seem to b edenying the divinity of Christ .

And that puts him back in -to the prophet status, where

he started out and where butfor a few of his friends hewould have remained .

As for Jewry, it is obviousit has been following the pro-phet's teachings for quite sometime .

* * *

All during the church-promp-ed progroms of the MiddleAges, right up to Hitler' swholesale slaughter, the tenetof the faithful has been meek-ness — as Christ would hav ewished .

Only the Zionists, with theirprompting of the 1948 Hol yWar — strangely reminiscen tof the Crusades — have beenaltering the basic Christiantenet of love which has beenfollowed so well.

Today, with the new "Fight ,fight fight" attitude slippin ginto the Jewish consciousness ,there is a vital need to reabsorbthe basic Christian humanityof the faith which as so clearlydistinguised it from the fana-tical, warlike, "Christian" andMuslim cults .

* * *

If Jewry is to continue tocontribute something to man ,it must continue to contribut eits example of love — the trul yChristian tenet .

Work is done quickly ,fields are till e d by fewmen with a few machineswhile the others standaround and watch .

The watchers grow moreand more restless; begin tofeel useless and distrustful .

They must now changetheir tribal rites, streamlinetheir moral codes and socia lcustoms, or risk disintegra-tion as a society .

This analogy by RusselLynes describes the situatio nof the western world toda yas it faces creeping leisure .

Few of us are yet aware ofleisure as a problem, letalone a social crisis .

Yet corporate use of lei-sure has been said to havethe power to build or destro ya nation's culture, mora lworth, and destiny .

Our affluent society —with labor-saving devices inall phases of life and wit hthe onset of automation —is fast becoming a new so-ciety of leisure .

Dr. Robert Lee, in TheProblem of Leisure, say sleisure threatens to replacework as the basis of culture .Like other sociologists ,

Lee feels the problem o fleisure is the problems ofmeaning and emptines swhich haunt modern man a she is swept around a mater-ialist eddy .

The failure to cope withleisure brings an increase inboredom .

Rudyard Kipling o n c ewrote: "The curse of Americais sheer, hopeless, well or-dered boredom ; and that isgoing someday to be th ecurse of the world . "

Anxiety, boredom, aliena-tion, meaningless, all havebeen named as forming th esocial sickness of our time .

Even in a university, withits inherently stimulating at-mosphere, these qualitie smay readily be observed .

The proliferation of engi-neering and science stunts ,couple - crowded residen t

Two guys for every girland two girls for everyguy. Impossible, not in the

KEY CLU Bcoming to the C a m p u s .

lounges and cafes are attempts to combat creepingleisure .Lee and others main-

tain leisure time will makelife meaningless or pointless .

They say that leisure to-day may be a challenge ora threat, hazard or oppor-tunity, vice or virtue, bane ,or 'blessing .

It is our choice .

Church isolated

from evil world

The devastating split be-tween church and state suchas happened in Nazi Ger-many is repeating itself to-day, a UBC history professorsaid Monday .

Dr. John Conway said afear of mixing church andpolitics, plus wasted church'effort in debates on less vitalmatters — like sex — hasmade the modern church ir-relevant .

"Following the establish-ment of the Nazi GermanRepublic, pastors soon sup -ported extremely national-istic parties, not rejectin gtheir anti semitic policies forfear of involvement," hesaid .

"Today people are beingmurdered in Vietnam, buthow many of you are askin gthe Church to intervene?" h'e

asked the audience ."I can only that if the

clergy were united in protestof Hitler, the Nazi storywould have been greatly different," he said .

Elementary & Secondary

FUTUR E

TEACHER S

*

DON' T

BELIEV E

RUMOR S

*

The Vancouver School Boarddoes hire many teachers

directly from university

S O

when you are

applying for anelementary or secondary

teaching position,remember to apply to th e

Vancouver

School Board1595 West 10th Avenu e

For an interview

call RE 1-113 1

DEPARTMENT OF THEATR EFREDERIC WOOD THEATR Epresents . . .

Shakespeare's Romantic Froli c

LOVE'S LABOR'S LOST

AN ALL STUDENT PRODUCTIO NDirected by John Brockington .Designed by Aristides Gazetas

Feb. 22 - t 28. Curtain 8 :00 p.m .

Students 75c. (Adults $1 .75)

NOTE — Univeristy students are advised to securetickets early as High School group booking sare already coming in .

BOX OFFICE — ROOM 207 — FREDERIC WOOD THEATRE

Page 6

THE

UBYSSEY

Tuesday, February 15, 1966

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BEARING UP BRAVELY, Elva-Maria Hailer, takes needle c a l m l y to give blood toRed Cross drive in armory. Drive, which ends Friday, is short of quota and badly need sbrave bleeders .

UBC girls cut finefigures for 3rd win

UBC figure skaters won their third straight Women'sWestern Canadian Intercollegiate title Saturday in Saska -toon .

Callings capfermentingsoccer Birds

UBC Thunderbirds soccerteam failed to snap ColumbusCarlings' win streak Saturdayby losing 3-1 in a Pacific CoastLeague game at Varsity Sta-dium .

It was the eighth straightwin for the Italian club andthe first loss in three games forthe Birds .

Columbus' goals were score dby Steve Djoric (on a penaltykick), George Zambrano, andSergio Berti .

Paul Beckow scored theBirds only goal, late in thesecond half.

The Birds more than heldtheir own in midfield play butcould not pierce Columbus 'stacked defence.

The game was rough withseveral mixups between play-ers and fans.

The win moved Columbusinto a second place tie withthe Birds . The Italians, how-ever, have two games in handover UBC.

In junior action the Toma-hawks fought to a scoreles stie with Firemen and ended upin third place in league stand-ings.

You saw "Hef's Pad" inthe last issue of Playboy,but just wait til you get aload of the

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UBC finished first with 9 7points while the hosting Uni-versity of Saskatchewan fol-lowed with 62. University ofAlberta (Edmonton) was thir dwith 32 .

In the singles competition ,UBC's Sheila McConnachyand Louis Lind captured th ejunior and senior titles while

Clare Newall and Sandy Guest

won the junior dance .

Peg Cunning and Miss Mc-Connachy captured top honor s

in the senior competition .

In the WCIAA gymnasti cchampionships, UBC lost t o

Edmonton 130-115 .

SYMMETRY . . FROM $100

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And here's the best part. You just can't payless, and still get a true sports car . So get thenew Austin-Healey Sprite, and you'll agree . . .nobody puts more into car-making than BMC .

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Tuesday, February 15, 1966

THE

UBYSSEY

Page l

I WINS CONTINUE

Meadows reapedby hockey tea m

The Thunderbird field hockey team continued its win-ning ways Saturday, blanking Pitt Meadows 2-0 whileplaying the second half a man short .

It was the fifth shutout ina row for goaltender Bria nRattray.

The Birds are currently em-barked on one of the longestunbeaten streaks in UBC's ath-letic history .

On Feb . 22 this streak wil lhave extended through tw oyears for a total of 33 games .

The UBC club which is gen-erally recognized the best clu bside in Canada, has provide dthe backbone for all recent Pro -vincial, National, and Olympicteams.

At the moment, six membersof the team are training withthe National squad in prepara-tion for the next Olympic an dPan-American games .

The Braves, most of who mare future Thunderbirds, arecurrently dominating the thir ddivision .

On Saturday they registereda 2-1 victory over Vancouve r"B" while Tomahawks wentdown to a 3-1 defeat at th ehands of Jokers Too.

In women's field hockey ac-tion Saturday, UBC blanke dNorth Vancouver 5-0 to mov einto first place in the secon d

McKinnon failed to division .muster enough energy to get Varsity lostthe conversion over the cross- I but defeatedbar .

In the second half McKinno nmade up for his first-half lapseby blasting a great penaltygoal and then took a pass fromAllan to streak away for fiftyyards, finishing with a, spec-tacular dive into the corner .

In a preliminary game Vi cCollege II's outplayed UBCHawks to win 16-0 a n d atRoyal Roads UI3C Totem smaintained their winning way sby stopping the tri-service club17-3 .

In Bellingham, the Birds de-feated the spirited defense-minded Western WashingtonVikings 16-5 .

The Birds leave Wednesdayfor a three game tour of Cali-fornia . Two of the games arepart of the four game seriesknown as the World Cup .

The last two games for theWorld Cup will be played atUBC March 24 and 26 .

ARTS UNDERGRADUATE SOCIETY

ELECTIONS 196 6Nominations open Wednesday, February 9t h

Nominations close Wednesday, February 16th 4 p .m.

President – A.M.S . eligibility requiredVice-president – Open to all members in good

standing of A.U .S .TreasurerSecretary —

Speeches Mon ., Feb. llsi, By . 106, noonFURTHER INFORMATION SUCH . 182

By DOUG MOSE R

UBC's rugby Braves whippedVictoria College Saturday inthe capital city .

The Braves' powerful scrumand speedy backs proved toomuch for Victoria — winnin g16-5 .

Gerry Allan and Danny Mc-Intyre stood out in a heavy, buthighly mobile scrum that work-

well. as a unit to give theirbacks a monopoly of the ball.

UBC opened the scoringwhen Dean McKinnon used hi sgreat speed to flash away fromhis own half.

Vic College stopped him jus tshort of the goal line, but DaveAustin snapped the ball up t oscore . McKinnon converted .

Braves were soon on th e

UBC's track and field squa dmeets top U.S. colleges in itsfirst major competition of theyear at the PNE Agrodome thisweekend .

Fielding strong teams in themen's mile and two-mile relays ,UBC is hoping for a strongshowing against formidablewest coast teams in this im-portant Canadian National In-door Championships meet .

Meet director and formerUBC track star, Dr . DouglasClement, has already receivedentries from Washington Stateand Universities of Washingtonand Oregon — all top track

schools .

They will provide UBC withvaluable experience before theintercollegiate championshipsin Winnipeg Feb. 26 .

Coach Lionel Pugh h a sdrawn his teams on the basisof time-trial performances on anewly finished rubber-asphal ttrack near the ThunderbirdSports Arena.

This $50,000 all - weathe rwonder was designed by Pug hto incorporate both trainingpractices and top-flight com-petition. It is particularly well-suited to handling a variety offield events at the same time .

Crack U.S. collegestest our track squad

BIRDS VS HISTORY

Bears hold Hamber, stillBy JOHN RODENHIZE R

UBC's Hockey Thunderbirds lost theHamber Cup to the University of Albert aGolden Bears on the weekend for the four-teenth time in the sixteen year history o fthe competition.

The birds came out on the short end ofthe 14-0 score in the two game total-goalseries Friday and Saturday night at theThunderbird Winter Sports Centre beforenearly two thousand fans.

The bigger, stronger Albertans took acommanding lead by winning the first game5-0, getting a three goal performance fromspeedy winger Darrel Leblanc .

The Bears were forced to go with twolines after three of their players wereejected from the game . Even with thisadvantage, USC could not get on the score-board.

After the first period 'Saturday night,

the Bears were leading 4-0 and appeare dto be walking away with the trophy.

The Birds finally came to life an dscored three unanswered goals by DanCummings, Glen Richards, and Jack Litt-ler.

But it was too late .

JOCKEY BRIEFS :Bears defenceman Ralph Jorstad was

awarded a penalty shot when Len Bouque tpulled him down from behind, but goalieKen Broderick smothered his wrist shot onthe pads; Broderick, suffering noticeabl yfrom a leg injury, played 'both games forUBC; Bears split their goaltending dutiesbetween Bob Wolfe and Hugh Waddle .

Ron Morris scored the Birds final goal;Birds power play again was almost non-existent ; Golden Bears' Hugh Twa wasbanished Friday night for fighting with thereferee.

Rugby squad primedfor California trip

move again as the scrum heeledwell for Halloway to get hisbacks moving .

Vic College closed ranksquickly but Gary Bowlesbrushed aside two would-b etacklers to score a magnificenttry under the posts .

Dean

qetcin, ))tap ied?Yours for the Asking . . . Our FREE

"Take Home" Invitation Album — mailedto you or call at our store

Another Feature : only the finest papersand the very latest styles, all thermo-graved in just 12 days .

mu CARD SHOPCorner Robson and Burrard MU 4401 1

Let's Talk TravelHAGEN'S TRAVEL SERVICE suggests you use the Mid -Term break to talk about travel . We offer a completetravel service to anywhere. We also have one of twospecialties:

* STUDENT TRAVEL:Our Earnest Bartlett spent several years in Londo ndoing nothing but arranging student travel . We thinkhe probably knows more about European facilitie sfor student travel, accommodation and study than an yother agent in Vancouver.

* U.S.S .R. and EAST EUROPE:We are official agents in B .C . for the Governmenttourist offices of the USSR, Poland, Hungary, Rumania ,Bulgaria, Czechoslovakia, Yugoslavia and East Ger-many. Although travel to these countries is easier tha nit was, it still needs careful preparation, and we'v ebeen doing this for several years now .

* FIRST HAND KNOWLEDG EWe believe in seeing the places to which you wish t ogo. Actually, as far as Europe goes, all three of u slived there .

Hagen's Travel ServiceOpen 9:00 - 5 :00 including Saturdays

2996 W Broadway (at Carnarvon)

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More fun than S c i e n c eSmokers—and it is moral-

ity squad proof . That's the

KEY CLU BI coming to the Campu s

Lsoon.

4-8 to North VanKits 4-2 Sunday .

BRIAN RATTRAY. . . fifth shutout

BAYTHE LIST OF ADRIAN

MESSENGERG. C . Scott, Dana Wynte r

plus SURPRISE GUESTS an dTHE LUCK OF GINGER

COFFEYR . Shaw, Mary Ore — Students 75s

DELTAFEBRUARY 18 and 1 9

ADVANCE TO THE REARGlenn Ford - Stella Steven s

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ROCK-A-BYE BABYJerry Lewis

r

Page 8

T H E

U B Y S S E Y

Tuesday, 'February 15, 196 6

Royal chanters hereCLASSIFIE D

Publications Office : Brock Hall, Ext. 26. 224-324 2

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

Non-Commercial Classified Ads are payable in Advance

SELF CONTAINED SUITE. NEARgates, phone 224-3695 after 6 p.m .

Les Petits Chanteurs d uMont-Royal . Gregorian chantand Renaissance masterwork ssung by a 40 voice boys' choirnoon in And .

CHORAL SO CChoir picture Wednesday

noon in Bu . 104. White shirt sand blouses . Rehearsal at 6p .m .

CUSNoon Brock, Rae Murphy ,

editor Scan Magazine — ey ewitness to Viet Nam .

UBC SQUIRES SOCWatch for first annual Paci-

fic Norwestern InvitationalSquires Championship nextweek .

PHYSICS SOCTrip to SFU Physics Dept .

Feb. 25 . Sign up in Henn. 204now .

ONTOLOGICAL SO CFinding yourself — reveale d

by Dr. Bill Bahan Wednesda ynoon in Bu . 221 .

VIET NAM DAY COMMITTE EDr. Wm . Willmott speaks

Wednesday noon in Bu. 102 .All welcome .

BADMINTON CLUBAny member wishing to par-

ticipate in this years tourna-ment sign up this week . Tour-nament starts Feb. 22 .

FINE ARTS GALLER YNoon Bagged place revisite d

in the round — an incident inan environment by Ian Wal-lace and Co .

SPECIAL EVENTSLAST MINUTE TICKETS

rvailable for- Vancouver OperaAssociation's production ofVerdi's II Trovatore for $1 .Rm . 255, B .E. for details .

IL CAFFEItalian speaking day in IH

Wednesday .

EL CIRCULOSpanish speaking day today

at IH. Coffee available .

AQUA SO CImportant mid-term d i v e

meeting noon in clubroom .

JAll SOCGeneral meeting noon in

Bu. 216 . Planning concert . Al lmembers please attend .

SUSNominations for executive

positions open until Feb. 23 .Elections March 2. For detailsand forms enqiure at Hut 0-8 .

WEDNESDAY NOO NHOUR CONCERTS

Tomorrow in Bu. 106 cellistAudrey Piggott, a n d pianistRobert Rogers perform .

PRE-DENTAL SOCMeeting noon today in Bu .

204 . Speaker — Dr . Middaugh .Everyone welcome .

LUTHERAN STUDENT SRev. T. Nilson speaks Wed-

nesday noon in Ed. 204 .

ADVANCE FOOTBALLCAMP

Feb. 21 -Mar. 4 daily at 4 :30 .Equipment handed out at Wolf-son Field today and tomorrowfrom 3:30-5 :00. Football experi-ence not necessary .

An exclusive

KEY CLU Bis coming to the campussoon. 0 n 1 y key-carryin gmembers will be allowedin.

ANNOUNCEMENT S

Lost & Found

1 1

FOUND ADS inserted free . Publica-tions office, Brock Hall . Local 26 ,224-3242.

LOST—IN VOC CABIN AT WHIS -ler, a pair of Greozig set skis .Return to Kathie, AM. 6-4325 .

LOST — KEYS ON CHAIN INblack plastic case . $5 reward atChemistry Office .

LOST—MAN'S OVERCOAT, GREYcheck . Phone L. Hunter, 7-10p .m . at 224-7776 .

FOUND — BLACK RIMMEDglasses, last Thursday, near Pon-derosa . Phone 228-2763 .

LOST—MATH AND ECONOMIC Snotebooks from, the Bookstorelast Wed. Please phone Lorne ,FA 1-8993 after 5 :30. Urgent ;

LOST — BLACK ALLIGATORwallet, money and all identifi-cation . Call Mark at 224-3924.Reward .

LOST—PARKER 51 PEN IN YEL -low case, left by telephone i nReserve Library Thurs . ContactWilliams, 3051 W. 8th Avenue,

TAKEN — BROWN BRIEFCAS Einitials C.P .N.) from Totem Park .Contents rather urgegntly need -ed. Please return notes, atleast, to same place .

FOUND — SMALL PURSE I NPonderosa on Sat ., phone AM1-0947 after 6 p .m .

LOST—MAN'S BLACK WALLET .Phone 277-0224 . Lost on Cam-pus .

FOUND — RING ON MAIN MALL ,latin insignia, Phone 266-6398 .

Greetings

1 2DEAR X. WE DRINK THIS

week. Love Y .HAPPY BIRTHDAY, REG HAND -

FORD, exalted leader of th eRobson Red blood s.

DEAREST JOHN D: EVENthough you think I'm a trollop ,I crave your bawd. Happy Val-entine's Day! Stag-ingly yours ,Gail .

Special Notices

1 3

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

ROCK TO THE ACCENTS IN TJ:I ELower Mall Ballroom, Wed . 9-1,Feb. 16th. Just before mid-ter mbreak . I guess so, eh?! !

ARTS-A-GO-GO-GO ; ARTS U.S .elections nominations close Feb. 16 .See Bu . 182 .

NEWMAN CENTRE — MONDA Yto Friday, 12 :30-1 :30 p.m. and10 :00-11 :00 p .m. Sandwiches an dhamburgers . Free coffee .

CRASH IN, COMMERCE TYPES ,Crash dance, Thursday, Febru-ary 17th, at the Johann Stauss .Tickets at depression prices $3 .00cple. On sale now till Wednes-day in H.A. Lobby and AMS of-fice .

REWARD — FOR INFORMATIONleading to the recovery of - aNova Tech "Pilot II" transistor-ized portable aircraft radio -re -moved from Room 102, Metal-lurgy Bldg. Thurs. morning,Feb . 3 .

KENNY BURNETT — HAPPYValentine's Day — I love you —Brian Davis.

Transportation

1 4RIDE WANTED TO TOD (KAM -

loops) during mid-term break. 2girls . Phone WA 2-2525.

RIDE WAN TWANTED URGENTLYfrom N. Vane., Capilano Mt .Royal vicinity, Monday throughFriday, 8 :30 a.m. and 5 :30 p.m.Tel. 987-4237 after 6 p.m.

RIDE WANTED! 1ST ANDArbutus. 733-0581 . 8 :30 classes .

Wanted

1 5WANTED. HELP ! NEED BOOK

The Origins and Development o fthe English Language . Pyles .Please phone 733-9542.

AUTOMOTIVE & MARINEAutomobiles For Sale

2 1HILLMAN MANUALMATIC 1958,

4-dr., top condition, 1965 re-builtmotor, one owner, new tires . Termsto be discussed . Call 224-7374 o r 522-1924after 5 p.m.'61 TRIUMPH HERALD . GOOD

running cond. TR 4-7236, Walter,after 5 :30.

' 57 CHEV. REBUILT MOTOR.New paint Job. Excelelnt condi-tion, 921-7589.

'54 METEOR NIAGARA, 4-DOO Rsedan, radio and heater. Veryclean . Mechanically sound . 738-4679 .

1954 P O N T I A C LAURENTIA Nsedan, with all extras includin gradio and snow tires . Immacu-late condition both inside andout . Only $200 . Phone Ken, IL E4-4326 .

1960 AUSTIN 850, NICE CONDI -tion . New license . See anytime a t 4650W . 4th, $325 . Phone 224-651 3BEST OFFER 1954 MORRIS CON -

vert. Motor gone. Good for parts.FA 7-5840 after 10 p.m .

Scandals

39-AELAINE, HAVE FORSAKEN AL L

others . Belated Valentines Greet-ings. Love, Mike.

GEE WHIZ, CRAIG, I DIDN'Teven know we had a king ! Love,Queen of the Polacks .

BUSINESS SERVICESSewing & Alterations

__4 0GRADUATION GOWNS ; SHEATH

dresses ; separates. Custom design-ed and made by European de-signer . Reasonable prices . 731-200 3evenings .

Typewriters & Repairs

4 2GOOD CLEAN TYPER RITERS. $2 0

up. Also Typewriter repairs a t60 percent savings. Poison Type-writers, 2140 W. 4th. Phone RE1-8322.

Typing

43PROFESSIONAL TYPING, ARDALE

Griffiths Limited, 70th and Gran-ville, 263-4530 .

TYPING : 25c PAGE OR $1.95 HR .West End, 685-5539 eves . "Campuspick-up & dellverey 224-6341 (John )leave tel . no.

EMPLOYMENT

Help Wanted

5 1PIZZA PATIO IS CONTINUING

with its policy of making employ-ment available to students for parttime evening work—One or twoevenings a week. Students con-sidering applying must have cleandriving record for use of Compan ycars and be 21 years of age o rolder. Contact Manager at th ePizza Patio most convenient toyou after 5 p.m. Locations in Ker-risdale, South Van ., Downtow nand West Van .PS : New outlet now open clos e toU .B .C.AMS PUBLICATIONS OFFICE RE -quires experienced clerk-typist 'fo r

eight months employment per year,Sept.-April . Due to this fact, thecampus location, and the work in-volved the Job is especially suitablefor a lady married to a senior stu-dent or a staff member. No chil-dren . Applicants must be availabl efor at least the next two years . i'o rfurther information call Manage rof Student Publications, 224-3242 .

INSTRUCTIONTutoring

6 4TUTOR FOR RUSSIAN, POLISH ,

Serbocroation . Phone 738-4933 after7 p.m.

CHEM 101 : COMPLETE GUIDES T OChem 101 Labs available now a tthe College Shop, Brock extension .• Complete with data, procedure ,calculations

a n d

discussions .• Helps you to obtain a bette rperspective and understanding ofyour labs. is If you would like therewarding thrill that Chem Lab scan bring, drop into The Colleg eShop, Brock Extension, for yournew "Complete Guide to Chem 10 1Labs " , $2 .50 .

MISCELLANEOU SFOR SALE

71FOR SALE . ZEISS WINKEL MIC-

roscope, oil immersion lens t o1,200 power. New condition, $200 .May be seen at room 306, Elec-trical Bldg., Mr. Loney.

RENTALS & REAL ESTATE

ROOMS

8IBED SITTING ROOM. SHARE KIT -

chen and other home privileges .Faculty or senior student preferred(female) . References exchanged.CA 4-4282 .

ROOM FOR RENT. PRIVATEentrance and shower. 4524 Wes t11th. CA 8-8568 .

FOR MALE STUDENT — LARGEbedroom — kitchen privileges .Car pool available, $37 .50 permonth . RE 6-4058 .

ROOM-MATE WANTED (MALE )preferably senior years . to shareexpenses of fully furnished tw obedroom apartment . Phone IRE3-7805, (reasonable rent, $25) .

Room & Board

$2ROOM AND BOARD (OPTIONAL) .

Near gates, 1st & 2nd yr . male stu-dents . Excellent study facilities .224-1631 .

ON CAMPUS ROOM AND BOARD .PSI . Upsilon Fraternity . Phone224-9790'.

YORK UNIVERSITYSCHOOL OF BUSINESS

Applications are now being accepted for admissionto Bachelor and Master Degree programmes .Students with two years of General Arts are eligibl efor admission to the third year programme in Busi-ness Administration .For complete information please write :

The Registrar,York University,Toronto 12. Ontario.

Civi lEngineers

1966 GRADUATE S

Se\eral vacancies are available for structural en-gineers in the Vancouver office of H. A. Simon s(International) Ltd .

Recent graduates are invited to arrange for em-

ployment Interviews through the Placement Offic eof Student Services on the West Mall .

Mr. D. J. Watts will be available on Campus to

interview applicants o n

MONDAY, FEBRUARY 21st, 1966

H. A . Simons (International) Ltd .Consulting Engineers to the Pulp and Paper Industry

16 E. Hastings

Vancouver, B .C .

685-341 1

/

TODAY AT NOO NSPECIAL EVENTS PRESENTS

I

in a program drawn from Gregorian Chants an d

Masterworks of the Rennaisance Age . A very unusua l

boys choir performing in a very unusual concert .

TUES., FEB. 15 - 12:30 p.m.35c

COMING FEBRUARY 24THE VANCOUVER SYMPHON Y

February 25 KIMEO - ETO - Blind Japanese Kato Playe r

'TWEEN CLASSES

Apartments

83