12
Copper-and-bronze sculpture decorating new Education buildin g $2000 for new mural West Vancouver artist Pau l Deggun has been awarded a $2,000 prize for a sculpture d mural decorating the ne w Education building . Competition for the priz e was organized on a cross - Canada basis and more tha n 30 models were originall y submitted to the judges . Honorable mentions went t o Jack Harman, of Burnaby , and Gray H. Mills, of Toronto . Prof . Elmore Ozard, chair- man of the judging committee , describes the mural as a non - objective abstract sculpture . It consists of three forms in copper, aluminum and bronze , each about five feet in height . The prize was donated by the B .C . Teacher's Federation . HEusrssEr bad wor d VOL. XLVII, No . 51 VANCOUVER, B .C ., FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 1965 CA 4-391 6 Hopping ma d Surve y keeps Ra y hoppin g The UBC chairman of th e National Student Means Surve y is hopping mad at UBC stu- dents . Ray Larsen Thursday said h e received only 100 replies out o f 1,163 students contacted for th e Means Survey . The Survey is being held Canada to determine the finan- cial status of university stu- dents . * * * "Every one of those peopl e received a first class letter tell- ing them they had been selecte d as a respondent and only 10 0 turned up," Larsen said . The letters request student s to fill out questionnaires in th e CUS office in Brock . "I can't understand ho w people can be so apathetic es- pecially when it looks lik e fees are going up again," h e said. Larsen said other student s cannot be used to replace stu- dents who had not shown up , because random s a m p li n g methods allow no substitutions . * * * "We've had about 20 peopl e working on this and the com- puting centre is even footin g the bill for the computor time . " "The ones who aren't co- operating are the students, and it's they who are directly con- cerned," Larsen said . Larsen said the CUS office , where the questionnaires ar e filled out, is open from 9 a .m . to 5 p.m . today and from 9 a .m. until noon Saturday . 16TH AVENUE NEW ROUTE ? (SEE PAGE 4) —don hume photo twic e RAY LARSEN . . . surveys 1,000 name s On wage hike s Still no commen t Official UBC reaction to B .C . education minister Les Peterson's hints Wednesday of wage increases for UBC's faculty was another round of "no comment " Thursday. "I can't react . I'm part o f the administration," said Dir- ector of Information Services Ralph Daly, speaking for th e administration . Faculty association head Dr . John Norris said he had t o meet with his executive be - fore making any statements . "I'll issue a statement Fri - day," he said . Peterson told The Ubysse y at the Bennett testimonial dinner in Vancouver Wednes- day UBC will get a fair share er by the dozen ." Colema n blasts AM S 'witch hunt ' Former Academic Activities Committee head Mik e Coleman Thursday lashed out at what he termed witch - hunting by interim chairmen of the committee . Council appointed AMS co - ordinator Graeme Vance an d Arts president Chas . Pentlan d as the interim heads afte r Coleman resigned when AM S council censured his commit - tee . "The proposal to set up a n investigation committee as Vance and Pentland was a n excellent one," Coleman said . "The motivation behind the By MIKE BOLTO N proposal, however, has over - tones of witch-hunting . "I would point out that a full scale purge woud have disastrous effects on the ac- ceptability of any academic program on this campus, " Coleman said . Coleman also attacked the closing of the Brock office o f the committee . "Locking the office hardl y seems a viable method o f gathering information from the occupants," he said . And Coleman pointed out b y AMS Bylaw 22 subsections (2 ) and (1), (a), student council- lors cannot hold positions a s committee chairmen, since thi s exceeds the number of activity - units students may have . "Other than the considera- tions I've already outined, an d a genuine concern over AM S tampering with the originalit y and creativity of UBC's aca- demic progress, I would sug- gest that the two individuals involved are well-chosen, an d will attempt to give an impar- tial hearing on legitimate prob- lems . " Vance said his actions i n (Continued on Page 2 ) SEE : BLAS T of the $19 .3 million the gov- ernment has allotted . "I'm sure the universities , in their budgets, will mak e provisions for increases in professors' salaries," Peterso n said. Premier Bennett appeare d in a jovial mood about th e university grants situation . "We've got lots of univers- ities," he quipped to The Ubys- sey's reporter . "They're cheap - Not jus t mud bu t SFA to o You may think there' s nothing but trees an d snow on the peak of Bur- naby mountain . Well, there is also SFA up there . SFA is a maze of mud , snow, water, c o n c r e t e foundations, pipes, sheet metal and steel girder s threatening to become a n academy . Yesterday I went on a tour of Simon Fraser Aca- demy with Chancellor Dr . Gordon Shrum and a party of 11 others, includ- ing Vern Housez, chair- man of the three univer- sities alumni annual giv- ing c h a it m a n, UBC alumni president David B r o u s s o n and several alumni and fund-raisin g public relations men . The tour began with a coffee reception for Dr . Shrum at 9 :15 a .m . in th e W. J . Park room of th e new Dairyland plant o n Lougheed . SEE: ALL (Continued on Page 2)

usrssEr - University of British Columbia Library scale purge woud have disastrous effects on the ac-ceptability of any academic program on this campus," Coleman said. Coleman also

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Page 1: usrssEr - University of British Columbia Library scale purge woud have disastrous effects on the ac-ceptability of any academic program on this campus," Coleman said. Coleman also

Copper-and-bronze sculpture decorating new Education buildin g

$2000 fornew mural

West Vancouver artist PaulDeggun has been awarded a$2,000 prize for a sculpture dmural decorating the newEducation building.

Competition for the prizewas organized on a cross -Canada basis and more than30 models were originall ysubmitted to the judges .

Honorable mentions went toJack Harman, of Burnaby,and Gray H. Mills, of Toronto .

Prof. Elmore Ozard, chair-man of the judging committee ,describes the mural as a non-objective abstract sculpture.It consists of three forms incopper, aluminum and bronze ,each about five feet in height .

The prize was donated bythe B .C . Teacher's Federation .

HEusrssEr bad word

VOL. XLVII, No. 51 VANCOUVER, B .C., FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 1965 CA 4-391 6

Hopping mad

Surveykeeps RayhoppingThe UBC chairman of the

National Student Means Surveyis hopping mad at UBC stu-dents .

Ray Larsen Thursday said h ereceived only 100 replies out o f1,163 students contacted for th eMeans Survey .

The Survey is being heldCanada to determine the finan-cial status of university stu-dents .

* * *"Every one of those peopl e

received a first class letter tell-ing them they had been selectedas a respondent and only 100turned up," Larsen said .

The letters request studentsto fill out questionnaires in th eCUS office in Brock .

"I can't understand howpeople can be so apathetic es-pecially when it looks lik efees are going up again," hesaid.

Larsen said other studentscannot be used to replace stu-dents who had not shown up ,because random s a m p li n gmethods allow no substitutions .

* * *"We've had about 20 people

working on this and the com-puting centre is even footingthe bill for the computor time . "

"The ones who aren't co-operating are the students, andit's they who are directly con-cerned," Larsen said .

Larsen said the CUS office,where the questionnaires arefilled out, is open from 9 a .m .to 5 p.m . today and from 9 a.m.until noon Saturday .

16TH AVENUENEW ROUTE?

(SEE PAGE 4)

—don hume photo twic eRAY LARSEN . . . surveys 1,000 name s

On wage hike s

Still no commentOfficial UBC reaction to B .C. education minister Les

Peterson's hints Wednesday of wage increases for UBC'sfaculty was another round of "no comment" Thursday.

"I can't react . I'm part o fthe administration," said Dir-ector of Information ServicesRalph Daly, speaking for theadministration .

Faculty association head Dr .John Norris said he had tomeet with his executive be-fore making any statements .

"I'll issue a statement Fri-day," he said .

Peterson told The Ubysseyat the Bennett testimonialdinner in Vancouver Wednes-day UBC will get a fair share er by the dozen."

Colemanblasts AMS'witch hunt'

Former Academic Activities Committee head MikeColeman Thursday lashed out at what he termed witch -hunting by interim chairmen of the committee .

Council appointed AMS co-ordinator Graeme Vance andArts president Chas . Pentlandas the interim heads afte rColeman resigned when AM Scouncil censured his commit -tee .

"The proposal to set up a ninvestigation committee asVance and Pentland was anexcellent one," Coleman said ."The motivation behind the

By MIKE BOLTONproposal, however, has over-tones of witch-hunting .

"I would point out that afull scale purge woud havedisastrous effects on the ac-ceptability of any academicprogram on this campus,"Coleman said .

Coleman also attacked theclosing of the Brock office o fthe committee .

"Locking the office hardlyseems a viable method ofgathering information fromthe occupants," he said .

And Coleman pointed out byAMS Bylaw 22 subsections (2 )and (1), (a), student council-lors cannot hold positions a scommittee chairmen, since thi sexceeds the number of activity-units students may have .

"Other than the considera-tions I've already outined, anda genuine concern over AMStampering with the originalityand creativity of UBC's aca-demic progress, I would sug-gest that the two individualsinvolved are well-chosen, andwill attempt to give an impar-tial hearing on legitimate prob-lems . "

Vance said his actions in(Continued on Page 2)

SEE: BLAST

of the $19 .3 million the gov-ernment has allotted .

"I'm sure the universities ,in their budgets, will makeprovisions for increases inprofessors' salaries," Petersonsaid.

Premier Bennett appeare din a jovial mood about th euniversity grants situation .

"We've got lots of univers-ities," he quipped to The Ubys-sey's reporter . "They're cheap -

Not justmud but

SFA tooYou may think there's

nothing but trees andsnow on the peak of Bur-naby mountain .

Well, there is also SFAup there .

SFA is a maze of mud ,snow, water, c o n c r e t efoundations, pipes, sheetmetal and steel girdersthreatening to become a nacademy .

Yesterday I went on atour of Simon Fraser Aca-demy with Chancellor Dr .Gordon Shrum and aparty of 11 others, includ-ing Vern Housez, chair-man of the three univer-sities alumni annual giv-ing c h a it m a n, UBCalumni president DavidB r o u s s o n and severalalumni and fund-raisingpublic relations men .

The tour began with acoffee reception for Dr .Shrum at 9:15 a .m. in theW. J. Park room of th enew Dairyland plant o nLougheed.

SEE: ALL(Continued on Page 2)

Page 2: usrssEr - University of British Columbia Library scale purge woud have disastrous effects on the ac-ceptability of any academic program on this campus," Coleman said. Coleman also

Page 2

THE UBYSSEY

Friday, February 19, 1965

BLAST(Continued from Page 1 )

closing the AAC office andinvestigating the committee' sfiles were a necessary part o ftrying to discover exactl ywhere the group stands .

Vance said the group was indebt . He said he would releasea full financial statement Fri-day .

"We just don't know whathas been going on and nobod ycan tell us," Vance said . Hesaid Coleman has offered allassistance to the AMS investi-gators .

Vance has called a meetingtoday at noon in the Brockcouncil chambers for all AACmembers to discuss the situa-tion .

(Continued from Page 1 )"I promised Premier Bennett

I would not make the old mis-takes at SFA, so all the mis-takes you see up there are newones," said Shrum .

Students will register for the1965-66 SFA term Sept. 7 .

SFA's buildings will be con-centrated in one area rathe rthan scattered as UBC's are .

All buildings will be withi neasy walking distance of themain academic mall or core ofthe new academy .

Shrum said expansion wouldbe around the slopes immedi-ately below the core buildingson the peak of the mountain .

The group first visited thegymnasium-s w i m m i n g poolcomplex .

We climbed a ladder to theroof of the gym where we coul dview the whole project .

Workmen have finished theconcrete outline of the gym andboth the diving and swimmin gpools .

Dr. Shrum said the gymna-sium was especially importantfor SFA because over one-thirdof the students would be regis-tered in Education.

The academic mall, Libraryand gymnasium will be com-pleted first .

A foreman on the project

400yet

Redshirts guid etourist fros h

The engineers had their hands full Thursday noon tak-ing high-school students and frosh on a tour of their

buildings .Guides led the students to

the mechanical and metallurg-ical buildings to observelathes and models each de-partment of the faculty madefor their annual ball .

The chemical engineeringbuilding was next on the tour .

The tour was a big success ,said one West Vancouver highschool student . "Besides weget out of school for a day, "he said .

Most of the students showe dgreat interest in the exhibits .

"Even though I don't knowwhat I am going to take a tuniversity, this tour is stil lhelpful in pointing out engin-eering," another high schoo lstudent said .

Pique has birdback on screen

Beep beep, that fast littl eyellow bird, runs again o pWednesday .

Last month the Ubysseybrought the Roadrunner tocampus for a sell-out per-formance.

The Young Bourgeois Au-thors and Artists Associationwill present Return of Road-runner at noon Wednesdayin the Auditorium .

BEER BOTTLE DRIVE-I NWe Pay 25c Per Doze n

Rear: 3207 West Broadway

KLASSEN'SUsed Furniture Mart

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

Non-Commercial Classified Ads are payable in Advanc e

Publications Office : Brock Hall.

MU 4-414 5FAST SERVIC E

• THESES TYPIN G• ESSAY TYPING• COPY TYPIN G

• XEROX COPYING

Calf for rates . . .

Katharine Cook Ltd.415 - 355 BURRARD

VOLKSWAGE NRepairs - Inspections

6 A Service Stn .Dunbar and 30th Avenue

CA 4-7644

Meet Your Friends At

Dean 's Restaurant andDining Room

4544 West 10th Ave.

224-691 9

Open 8:30 a .m. to 11 :30 p.m. Mon. to Sat.

10 a.m. to 11 :30 p .m. Sun .

Free parking in the rea r

Lost & Found

-

1 1LOST — Brown briefcase. Reward,

$5 .00. On C Lot, 10:30, Tuesdaynight. Phone G. J. MacMillan, C Y

8-7169 .LOST — Black and gold fraternity

pin with solitary jewel. Lost Sat-urday, Feb . 13. 224-9096 .

FOUND — Gold necklace or bracele tin Biol . & Botany . Apply A .M:S .Publications Office .

Special Notices-

1 3HILARIOUS comedy! — Laurel &

Hardy star in one of their bes tfilms. Noon Friday, Feb. 26, Audi-torium .

RHYTHM AND BLUES — Tonigh tFort Camp. The big band sound ofthe dynamic Vancouver Accents,featuring exciting vocalist Gordo nScott.

Transportation 1 4RIDERS wanted for 8 :30 classe s

Monday to Friday from South Bur-naby . Phone HE 4-1877 .

Wanted 1 5

AUTOMOTIVE & MARINEAutomobiles For Sale

2 1

FOR SALE '47 DeSoto Sedan, $60.Phone AM 3-3992, evenings .

1959 STANDARD "Pennant" Sedan .Good cond . automatic clutch, H&D ,two-tone . Snap $395 . AM 1-6279 .

1960 PORSCHE Ivory Coupe. Radio ,Semperit tires. Excellent condition .Phone TR 6-2573 .

'56 RAMBLER 4-door, good condi -tion, snow tires . Phone 228-8620.

Scandals

39A

EMPLOYMENTHelp Wanted 5 1

NEEDED Math 120 Tutor. Call Bar-bara WA 2-1483 .

INSTRUCTION — SCHOOL STutoring

6 4

TUTORING offered for all Italiancourses. Phone AL 3-6874 or H E3-6508 .

MISCELLANEOU SFOR SALE

7 1ART BUSINESS, ideal as aide line ,

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

RENTALS&REAL ESTATERooms

8 1

Furn. Houses & Apts .

8 32 MALE students to share large

room of 2-room furnished apart-ment with one other, Broadway& Granville, call Bob, 738-4972 .

Apartments 8 3

MOVING to Simon Fraser? 2-year-old custom built 3 bedroom ranchtype home, .colonial kitchen, F toC fireplace, coloured plumbing,large lot landscaped, fully fence dwithin 15 min. University . Cleartitle, owner. WH 2-4871.

JUST ARRIVE D45 r.p.m. Recording of

DAVIDNarrated by

EARLEBIRNEY

OPEN DAILYMID-DAY . to MIDNIGHT

TEL: MU 5-581 4891 GRANVILLE ST .

I

PHeBOOKBag,ReL

4'

GoofOwing to a foul up in AMS

bookings the Dance Club's PinExams and the Model Parlia-ment were to occur on thesame date .

But the clash was fixed.willThe Model Parliament

sit on March 18 and 19.

All the mistakesare original ones

said these should be completedaround July 1, easily in timefor SFA's official opening Sept .9 .

The construction engineerequipped us with hard hats andled the group through the aca-demic quadrangle.

The quadrangle will containall the classrooms, the maincafeteria and the faculty diningroom of SFA .

We waded through six inchesof mud to enter the quadrangle .

The group did not tour thelibrary or the theatre becaus ethe mud made them almost in-accessible .

The theatre will be the samesize as UBC's new Frederic kWood Theatre .

Alma Mater Society

OFFICIAL NOTICE SC.U .S. MEANS SURVEY

The following persons have been selected to com-plete questionaires for the means survey, but their

addresses are unknown . Would they please go toBrock Extension 354 on Friday or Saturday to fill outquestionaires . Information may be obtained fromthe C.U.S. Office :

Albin, Stephen J .

MacLaren, John P.Alm, Edwin C .

McCarvil, Kenneth W.Anderson, Margaret E .

Maynard, Douglas J .Barkman, Doris E.

Moroz, Marcia J .Butters, Jacqueline

Richmond, Allan J.Chamberlain, Donald G. Sauve, Elizabeth G.Dean, Paul W.

Spencer, F'rederick C.Denton, Brian L.

Sherry, Brian D .Dill, Lawrence M.

Thomas, Ross M.Ferguson, Dale B .

Turner, Barrie A.Forsyth, Donna J .

Weaver, William W .Hutson, Donald A.

Wilson, Linda J .Kelly, Suzana M.

Wyse, David M.Kirby, Harley E .

Choral Soc concertSponsored by UBC Chora l

Society, Festival of Song, pre-

viously scheduled for Febru-

ary 19 is now set for Friday ,

Feb. 26 in the Auditorium .

FRIDAY NIGHT FEB . 19, 9-12:30IN BROCK HALL

An Uninhibited Shaker With

"THE CHESSMEN"AND BONNIE THE YOUNG ONE .

Tickets on sale now at AMS and at the door $1 .00 each

But Don't Delay! 1200 people attended the"last one at Totem Park

A CREDITISTE PRESENTATION

Page 3: usrssEr - University of British Columbia Library scale purge woud have disastrous effects on the ac-ceptability of any academic program on this campus," Coleman said. Coleman also

Undergrad • elections

Dave tries agai nas Forestry hea d

Third year Forestry student Dave Parker has been electe dpresident of the Forestry Undergraduate Society for nex t

Friday, February 19, 1965

LIDEAS

at

LARGEBy PAUL TERR Y

It is the women of the worl dthat keep the teeth of ourchildren white and strong .

At least when the femalesare such valuable specimensas UBC's wonderful cow, Ag-nes Riverdene Magic .

Agnes is a sleek-coated fullymatured animal with longbushy tail and deep brow neyes .

One would never believethat behind this contented ex-terior there is a dynamo ofphysiological activity .

Just as a human woman ,Agnes is very sensitive abou ther image .,

Being married for years tothe same husband may be th eultimate aim of most marrie dwoman but Agnes has man-aged to maintain a cow's ques-tionable moral standing whil esuffering through the affairsof many a cruel bull .

But alas she is forced usu-ally to spend her inactivehours at the pleasures of man .

Every day, Agnes subjectsherself to the frustration ofbeing put to pasture to roama lonely field behind C-lotonly interrupted long enoughto be milked .

* * *It is because of her unsel-

fish life that the children o fthis area have the opportunityto grow big and strong . Herlife is an example of the manysuch sacrifices performed bycows almost everywhere .

Not only has she submittedto this daily ordeal of beingmilked but has been kind andefficient enough to produc emore milk than any othei cowin Canada this year .

(See Thursday's Ubyssey) .

* * *The average output of Ag-

nes is 44 quarts a day, enoughto feed 100 children or 50 0UBC students in a day .

Even with all these achieve-ments in her life time, Agne shas managed to find time togive birth to five lovely off-spring and is happily await-ing the birth of her sixth calf .

The most well known of herchildren is of course the bullcalled Ubyssey Magic Sover-eign, who was named afterthe best college newspaper inCanada .

Dystrophy gets$13,000 chequeUBC fraternities and sor-

orities gave $13,000 to mus-cular dystrophy researchFriday at the annual Gree kSongfest in the QE Theatre .

The money (the proceedsfrom Mardi Gras) was hand-ed over to the MuscularDystrophy Foundation bystudent co-ordinators o fMardi Gras, Catherin eBroderick and Robin Lecky.Zeta Beta Tau won the How-ser Cup for overall excel-lence by a fraternity .

HON. PAUL MARTIN, Cana-da's external affairs min-ister, speaks Saturday at8 :15 p.m. in the Fredd yWood Theatre on Curren tDevelopments in Canadia nForeign Policy. Talk is spon-sored by Vancouver Insti-tute .

Womenleadershonored

Nine new members havebeen named to the women' shonorary society, Delta SigmaPi .

New members are :Thena Ayres, Varsity Chris-

tian Fellowship; Judy Bain ,Rehabilitation Medicine presi-dent; Kathleen Gormely, HomeEc undergrad executive ; PennyJones, treasurer for women' sathletics; Eileen Olexiuk, Edu-cation undergrad executive;Sally Sargent, Librarianshippresident ; Maureen Schutz ,Totem; Wendy Woodland, Nur-sing president ; Joy Woolley ,Agriculture undergrad execu-tive.

year .Parker started out this yea r

as president of the society ,but was declared ineligiblebecause he had failed the pre-vious academic year.

Today Aggies hold thei rfirst slate elections .

. Arts executive nomination sto date are: Al Campbell fo rvice-president and C h u c kCampbell for president . Elec-tions are Feb. 24 .

Results of Education firstslate elections are presiden tNeal Wells and secretary Ar-lene I n k s t e r . Second-slatenominations close March 9 ,and elections are March 12 .

Graduate students have el-ected George Wooten as thei rpresident .

Pharmacy elected CharlesWillett president.

Other elections : Engineer-ing first-slate today, second

slate

Feb. 26,

third-slateMarch 5 ; Home Ec first-slat eFeb. 24, second-slate Marc h

16 ; Librarianship, Feb 24 ;Medicine, the first week i n

March ; Nursing, Feb. 24 ; and

Science today.

Tax receiptsStudents impatiently await-

ing their tuition receipts for

income-tax purposes can get

them now at the cashier in

Administration .

Tax deduction slips can beobtained with presentation of

AMS card .

Slide victimssent UBC bloo d

The blood you gave Wednes-day is on its way to the miner sinjured in Thursday's slide andmine disaster near Stewart, 13 5miles north of Prince Rupert .

UBC has the only large scal eblood clinic open in Vancouvernow, and it is the main sourceof blood for the injured per-sons .

The clinic at UBC is openfrom 9:30 a .m. to 4:30 p .m . to-day, which is the last day ofthe two-week clinic .

Page 3

Reds invadein peace

By BOB BURTONThe Russians invaded the

campus Thursday afternoon .

Forty black-uniformed Rus-sian sailors and civilian scient-ists from the 100-man Russia noceanographic vessel Nevels-koy based at Vladivostok visi-ted UBC as guests of Inter -national House .

At IH they were the mai nattraction during a Russian -speaking day where they ming-led with students .

They were impressed by thevariety of buildings : "Almostone for every change of mood,"said their interpreter, UBC ex-change student Mark Markin ,of Leningrad.

"They were most impresse dby their congenial reception,"he said .

The ship leaves Saturday butwill be back in September .

That's DON PARKE R"TRAD" SLACK S. . . lithe style -leaders setting thetrend everywhere ,on and off campus .You'll recogniz ethe distinctive styl eand immaculatefinish of TRAD Simmediately . TRADSby DON PARKER ,now available i nstretch materials fo ra full measure ofsuperb comfort .

THE U B Y S S E Y

RUSHANT CAMERAS LTD.

Annua lSal e

Last Days — Friday and Saturday4538 WEST 10th AVE .

CA 4-5858 & CA 4-911 2

B .C . Hydro & Power Authorit ywill be on campus

to interview

3rd Year Engineering Student sfo r

Summer . EmploymentDates : February 23 & 24

Please arrange an appointment time throug h

the Student Placement Office

Page 4: usrssEr - University of British Columbia Library scale purge woud have disastrous effects on the ac-ceptability of any academic program on this campus," Coleman said. Coleman also

Passing the — uh — buck

LETTERS TO TH E

111, UaYsszYPublished Tuesdays, Thursdays and Fridays throughout the universit yyear 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, Pacific

Student Press. Authorized as second-class mail by Post Office Department ,Ottawa, and for payment of postage in cash .

Winner Canadian University Press trophies for generalexcellence and news photography.

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 1965

Old reliableA usually reliable source told us late Thursday the

highways department will start construction on a nextension to Sixteenth before the end of 1965.

Highways Minister Phil Gaglardi put the lie to . oldreliable when he said no such announcement had com efrom his office.

But he did say the matter had been studied and thatthere might be more information coming after the high-ways estimates are down later this month or earl yMarch, or there might not. Well, that's Phil .

If, in fact, construction is started soon it won't be toosoon for UBC's commuters .

UBC traffic czar Sir Ouvry Roberts says that 13,000cars crush into UBC daily .

He estimates that Marine Drive, Chancellor an dUniversity split the load about evenly with a slightmargin to University .

A new entrance would reduce the pressure on al lthree initially and go a long way in preparing for a UB Cwith more than 20,000 students .

Students welcome any opportunity to get on campu sfaster during the jarring morning rush—even if it mean sthe RCMP will have another road on which to hide thei rradar traps .

Let's hope our usually reliable' source is reliable andthat Phil's just fooling .

The come-onYesterday we introduced you to a seductive little

redhead. We're happy to report she's already been har dat work.

As you'll recall, our come-on girl appears on govern ,ment-issued venereal disease posters, and we used herin a sneaky way to tell you about the Red Cross bloo ddrive.

Thursday the Red Cross more than doubled its taketo 323 pints from Wednesday's 148.

Red Cross officials saidour little wench probablyhad something to do withit.

Since the need for bloodis now acute — UBC bloo dwill go to the landslide vic-tims in Northern B.C.—TheUbyssey has a deal.

Today The Ubyssey givesyou two seductive wenchesfor doubling t h e blooddrive's total.

In next Tuesday's paperwe'll reproduce one (1) se-ductive wench for everyfifty (50) pints of bloodgiven today.

And perhaps our girl can help save a few lives inthe bargain.

Whose food ?The Editor, The Ubyssey :

Today I was the recipientof a revelation . The head diet-ician at the Lower Mall whereI reside, informed me that thefood on my tray was not mine .

Therefore I was not free todo what I wanted with it butI was obligated to either eat i tor throw it away .

This information was givento me as a result of the fac tthat I, on occasion, haveshared my meal with my fi-ance. Seeing as we will bemarried in the spring I can-not afford to buy her mealsand she is forced to exist O nthe meagre salary she earnshere at the university .

Seeing as your paper is afountain of information couldyou provide me with the fol-lowing information :

(a)Since I do not own myfood could you tell mehow I may contact thephilanthropic individua lwhose meagre fare I'vebeen defiling my diges-tive system with .

(b)How may I get a refundfrom the housing admin-istration for food be-cause I am being givennone. The food on mytray is not mine there -fore I shouldn't have topay for it .

Until I get a refund or abloody good explanation I in-

tend to do whatever I pleasewith the food I believe I havepaid for . I believe that it istime food services realizedthat we live in a capitalisteconomy in that you pay forwhat you receive and receivewhat you pay for.

A. C. Doulis .ED NOTE : Answers to (a)

God and (b) pray. If these ar eanswers of inferior quality tryGod's immediate superior —food services .

Dit

A dirty choreEditor : The Ubyssey :

Will Joe Student repeat histypically apathetic reaction t osituation which concerns himmost vitally? Will he onceagain assert his position as anindless blob?

The subject of a recent Uby-ssey editorial was "the press-ure to publish." This may beconsidered to be "that systemwhich demands that profes-sors publish to gain profes-sional, academic, and financialadvancement ."

This condition is not limi-ted to the faculty of Arts . Inthe faculty of science onedoes not have to look far tofind a professor who regardsundergraduate teaching as adirty chore which he is forcedinto so that he can work athis primary objective — re-search.

The editorial indicateschange in the system shoul dbe initiated at the facultylevel . This should be consider-ed unlikely . The changeshould be initiated by thosewho are affected most -- thestudents. This is an issuewhich has a direct influenceon every undergraduate atUBC. The question is — Dostudents give a damn abouttheir education?

Devin Trussell,Sc. III

EDITO RDylan is GOD

Editor, The Ubyssey :The executive and member-

ship of the UBC Folk SongSociety wish to thank TheUbyssey and their reporte rMike Bolton for the articleon the Brock Huts and in par-ticular the Folk Song So-ciety .

We hope that this articl ewill induce more students tocome around and share in theactivities we offer .

We would, however, like topoint out several slight in-accuracies . Firstly, we pro-test against the misspelling ofBob Dylan's name. It is spell-ed GOD .

Secondly, we would like toprotest the statement that wechew snuff. We only sniffsnuff, and then only the fin-est blend of menthol, opiumand English snuff .

Thirdly, we would like t oprotest the statement thatJohn Carver wears a noosearound his neck to symbolizehis continual protest. Hewears this noose because heplans to hang himself someday .

EDITOR : Mike Horsey

News — Tim Padmore

City Tom Wayma nArt __ —Don' HumsManaging Janet Matheso nSports George Reamsbotto mAsst. City Lorraine ShoreAsst . News __Carole Munro eAsst . Manag in g Norm BettsPage Friday Dave AblettAssociate _ — Ron RiterAssociate Mike Hunter

Here today in person were, n oless : Carol Anne Baker, Bob Weiser,Bob Burton, Gord McLaughlin, RickBlair, Sandra Stephenson, PaulTerry, Art Casperson, Massimo Ver-dicchio, Jack Khoury, Jock McQuar-rie, Elizabeth Field, Mike Bolton .They'll be lots more here tomorrow ,it ' s not a press day. Three count'emthree parties lined up for before thefinal banquet Mar. 27. But work-books must be stamped . Unsungstory of The Ubyssey's testimonialdinner scoop was Asst . M.E. NormBetts walking arm in arm with derpreem .

DAVID SELLERSPro I

Page 5: usrssEr - University of British Columbia Library scale purge woud have disastrous effects on the ac-ceptability of any academic program on this campus," Coleman said. Coleman also

2COLUMN SIN HIGH PLACES :This was the week tha tthe annual money - go -round began again a tUBC. The Ubyssey againwas first with the stor ythat the campus is face dwith financial trouble an da fee increase . Of course ,it surprised few exceptDr. John Macdonald anda few other administra -tion types who have yet t olearn that when they tryto sit on a hot story, theyinevitably get burned (inthe appropriate place) .Now every news agenc yin town is after the ad -ministration to c o m eclean .And it was the wee kthat the Faculty Associa -tion (a kind of weak tradeunion in the professoria lgame) ' confronted the ad -ministration with a bol dand unequivocal salary de -mand, which was some -thing new for the Facult yAssociation . This time theassociation only beganshilly - shallying w h e npeople began asking jus twhat exactly the profs ha dasked for . President JohnNorris gave The Ubysse ythis Calathumpium-likecomment on its speculat -ive story :"There are inaccuracie sin your story . But I won' tspell out which ones sincethat_ would be giving yo uthe information . "INTOLERANCE : It wasalso the week in which aJew by the name of Ro nAppleton took a back -handed swipe at racial in -tegration . The presidentof the local Hillel Club in -formed the campus that heand the rest of his racial -religious group feel moreat home by themselves i nan AMS-supported hut atthe back of Brock thanmixing with other stu-dents . Anti-semetism, h esaid, isn't dead . Neither ,it seems, is the ghetto -mind . • • •And then there was theflag : An administratio nofficial in a flap phone dthe AMS shortly beforethe new Maple Leaf wa sto be run up the pole t oask if the students coul dlocate him one in a hurry .The administration, he ad -mitted, had forgotten t oget one .While AMS first-vice -president Bob Cruise trie dto locate one the admin -type learned that traffic -czar Sir Ouvry Roberts ,who doubles as ceremon -ies head, had got one o fthe flags . Sir Ouvry als osent out one of his men t orun it up the pole . No one,needless to say, saluted—or

even watched — the un -ceremonious ceremony .• • •IN DESPERATION: To -tem, the dying campu syear book, hit deadline fo rthe section of the bookdealing with the year' scampus activities. That' swhy the editors had to de -cide what is going to hap -pen next month so i tcould be included in th eMarch section of the book .Students will be able t oread about what they di dthis March the first wee kin March when the boo khits campus .• • •And the campus versionof Real Caouette's Quebe cSocreds is playing som efunny money games . Tohelp defray costs of bring -ing Caouette to UBC th ecampus Creditistes areselling tickets to a danc efor $1 each or $2 .50 acouple . So much for th eSocred monetary theories .• • • 'IN OTTAWA : More flagwith 10,000 screaming civ -il servants watching ou rnew flag being raise dwhile the rest of the coun -try suffered a severe caseof mass ennui . And ofcourse Ottawa is the head -quarters for the Canadia nUnion of Students (a sor tof union that represents140,000 English speakin gCanadians and abou t10,000 French) . The tele -phone operators at th eCUS offices answer inFrench, one doesn't eve nspeak English — whic hmakes it a little tough forus Anglo Saxons .• • •SILVER SPOON DEPT :AMS president-elect Byr -on Hender is driving anew compact car since h ewon the AMS election .Hender's grandmother of -fered to buy him a smal lEuropean car when h ewon. But he did n ' t want aEuropean car so his grand -father came throughputting up the differenc ebetween the European jo band the compact . Contest :which well-heeled grand -parent will be the first t ooffer to pay for the dam -age caused this wee kwhen a UBC garbagetruck ran into the newcar? • • •AND IN PALO ALTO ,(Calif.) : A researcher ha sfound that sexual prom -iscuity among college co -eds isn't as prevalent a severyone thinks it is . Hesaid three quarters of Am -erican co-eds are virgins .The Girl Guides and theCatholic League for De-cency have not, however ,reported increased mem-bership from co-eds i nCalifornia .

Uncalle d for , un -wanted and mostlyunfair, the followin gtwo columns contai na whimsical revie wof the past seven day sat UBC .

thisweek

has

THE UBYSSEY

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Page 6: usrssEr - University of British Columbia Library scale purge woud have disastrous effects on the ac-ceptability of any academic program on this campus," Coleman said. Coleman also

ARGUMENT

Ex pot cop blasts Horst high —gives the real dope of the dru gbusiness. Here's the reason forthe laws, the why of the user, andwhat happens to him in the en d

PF Two

By TED KROPP

SIT at my typewrite rI with "pop" in my hand ,

not 'pot" . Beware of the per -son who thinks he can kno wall about pot through on eisolated experience .

One of the interestin gqualities of marijuana isthat no two experiences areexactly alike . One cannotpredict how he is going toreact. Generally it intensi-fies the person's presentpresent mood, but not al-ways .

Also, it is extremely rare ,in fact almost unknown,that a person is able to ex-perience any appreciabl e"high" the first time mari-juana is tried. Often it takesmonths for a person to lear nhow to enjoy its effect .

• • •One who is high feels he

is quite normal, and so i severyone else with whom h eis smoking . In like manner ,all drinkers at a party thin ktheir associates are actin gthe way a normally happyperson should act . But, haveyou ever been the onlysober person at one of thos eparties? The drinkers arenot acting normal.

The "pot" smoker, how -ever, is vaguely aware thatthings are somewhat differ-ent, but he is not certain inwhat way. In other words ,he has no concept as to theintensity of his impairment.

The only way he canlearn how high he was is t otry it again another tim eand compare the two ex-periences . Then he musthave a third, fourth and s oon until he has built up alarge number of experience swhich serve as a frame ofreference .

• • •The marijuana user con-

vinces himself that he is en-joying the sensation. Thistakes time, for some of thefeelings are e x t r e m e l yweird and intense .

"I got high, and I got realflipped. I just couldn't sta yin the basement anymore .My heart was pounding rea lhard, you know, and I wasgoing out of my mind ; Ithought I was losing mymind completely . . . Imind completely . . . Iwalked outside, and it wasfive below zero, and Ithought I was dying . .and so on .

This is from Howard S .Becker's report in the Am-erican Journal of Sociology ,Becoming A MarihuanaUser . There are hundreds o fsimilar stories . And this i sthe drug that is "not harm-ful like narcotics, which pu tyou to sleep" . What's wrongwith going to sleep compar-ed to the above experience ?

I worked with drug ad-dicts for 7½ years. Themajority of that time wasspent in the Research Unitsat Oakalla Prison Farm .

I am convinced that thesolution rests not in legal

drugs, but in public educa-tion .

Let me point to some ofthe inaccuracies which havecome to print lately .

Dr. James Foulks ofUBC's Pharmacy depart-ment smites that marijuanais not physically addicting .From this, someone deduce dthat it is therefore notharmful .

First, there is some con -fusion among experts as t othe addictive qualities ofmarijuana . Some say it is—some say it is not .

The U.S. Public HealthService Hospital at Lexing-ton, Kentucky, the majoraddict treatment center, hasreported cases of marijuan ausers showing withdrawalsymptoms. Dr. Foulks is cer-tainly entitled to his opin-ion and he has good com-pany, but there are otherexperts .

Second, even if it is no taddictive, this does notmean there is no harm inusing it. To say this impliesthe only thing wrong withdrugs is their habit-formingqualities . That is a danger-ous assumption .

• • •Third, an addict's psycho -

logical and sociological de-pendence on a drug is fa rgreater than his physical de-pendence .

A heroin addict can kic kthe physical habit in about12 days. He can be off th edrug for years—but as Soonas he gets the chance he re-turns to it . Why? Not be-cause he is physically ad-dicted. He is psychological-ly dependent upon the drug .

And, social pressuresforce him back into thesame habit . The marijuana"addict" is no different .

The use of marijuana isno new thing . It goes backmany centuries and i sfound in a number of cul-tures . (The Arabic name fo rthis drug is hashish . Onewho uses it is called hash-ishin. From this we get ou rword assassin . )

The phrase "run amuck"comes from the Malay wor d"amok" meaning kill, andwas first used to describe

THE WRITER

Ted Kropp, a theology I Istudent, wrote this articlein response to last week' slead article in Page Friday.

He worked in Oakalla for7½ years with persons con-victed on narcotics and drugcharges. From 1960 to 1962 ,Kropp was after-care officerfor released persons withdrug problems.

His job of counselling ad-dicts and users came to himvoluntarily .

Much of Kropp's workhas been with heroin ad-dicts. He is 32 years old.

the action of natives crazedby the drug. Not all peopl ewho use the drug react viol-ently, but they may, for itis extremely unpredictable .Therein lies its maindanger .

The person under the in-fluence of marijuana maybe animated and hilarious .He may be hysterical ,laughing or weeping with-out reason, or he may b edepressed or in a stupor .His sense of time and spaceis often distorted; he mayimagine himself very smallor very large and power-ful .

• • •

Hours may seem like min-utes or days . He may driveat 70 and think it is 30 ; acar almost upon him ma yappear a mile away. Fre-quently the user has delu-sions, seeing and hearingthings which do not exist .

Moreover, even s m a 1 1quantities of the drug candestroy will power and theability to connect and con-trol thoughts and actions ,thus releasing all inhibi-tions, perhaps viciously.

• • •

Many psychiatrists stat ethat habitual use may resul tin more 'lasting psychoticdisease, characterized byconfusion, hallucinatory anddelusional trends.

"In countries where thehemp plant (marijuana) isused widely, at least 25 pe rcent of all mental cases ar edue directly to use of thedrug." says Daniel Carlsen,

about marijuana, heroinand legal drugs .

Vancouver has more drugaddicts per capita than anyother city in North Amer-ica . But, our problem hasbeen relatively simple .Practically all our addictswere delinquent before theybecame addicts . They didnot become addicts an dthen turned delinquent . No"innocents" were being se-duced into a life of "hell" .

Now our problem is morecomplex . Some of the uni-versity set decide there isnothing wrong with mari-juana—except that it is il-legal .

It is illegal for a reason .They feel there is no nee d

to search out that reason .But because of the law

they must meet in furtivegroups to use it . In this at-mosphere a heroin user isbound to turn up. Some ofthese thrill seekers are go-ing to try this new kick—heroin .

In other words, the drugnow available to non-delin-quents . This situation hascome about because peopledon't believe the law. Sonow society. has the mistak-en idea that there is nothingreally wrong with mari-juana .

More "innocents" will tr yit—just as 18 year olds willdrink liquor even though i tis against the law.

Society doesn't reall ytake that law seriouslyeither .

• • •If we make pot legal we

can do two things: put it onthe open market wherethousands will try it becaus ethey think it is not . habitforming; or make it a pre-scription drug only . Thisact of legalizing will con-vince the public even moreof its harmlessness .

If it can be had by pre-scription only, you can restassured that there will bepushers selling illegal jointsto the interested public whoare curious to see what allthe fuss is about .

The climate has been setand it will take years to getrid of the impression thatthe only thing harmfu labout a drug is its habit-forming qualities .

There is not space to dis-cuss the pros and cons oflegal drugs. Learn the factsand come to your own con-clusions. But don't readonly one aspect of the prob-lem .

One more major fallacy :legal drugs in England .

The law in England i slittle different from ours . ABritish 'doctor may treat anaddict for his addiction pro-vided the addict :

1. does not associate withknown criminals ,

2. leads a responsible ,law abiding life ,

3. remains fully employ-ed ,

4 . aims toward total ab-stinence from the drug.

• • •I know of no delinquent

addicts who could live up t othese conditions .

I have sent several t oEngland and they have allfailed .

Our law states that a doc-tor may treat an addict forhis addiction . The problemis we have delinquent ad-dicts and lots of them.

If a doctor treats one—the next day 50 will be athis door . They will takehim for all he is worth .

FEBRUARY 19, 1965

ON THE COVER : Artist Jeff Wall'shows what he thinks of th epeople in the news during th elast week . Most of their misdeedsare mentioned in This Week Ha sTwo C o l u m n s, right next toWall's work. The authors of ThisWeek prefer to remain anoyn-mous.

Editor: DAVE ABLETTCriticism John Kelsey

Books, Movies . Graham Olne y

Artwork: Jeff Wall, Gerry Ehman,Al Hunter

Bad news again—onlysix pages. Or perhap sit's good news . . .

Starts with anotherlook at the pot business .This time with a differ-ence, though; the manwho wrote it (Ted Kropp )knows what he's talkin gabout . The care and feed-ing of addicts and user shas been his professionfor about eight years .Page two .

On page three, CaroleMunroe glows with ad-ulation for Pierre Ber-ton. Ah, Beeg Pierre, youare zo tremendeusement. . . . Obviously, Carol ewas quite taken by Pier-re, but she returned t oearth long enough t owrite about him .

And Dr . Cyril Belshawpasses on advice to stu-dents about getting job soverseas. That's on pag efour .

Then there's the greatopera harangue on pagefive. French Tickner ofthe music departmenttakes a flying swing atpeople who want t oleave operas in their or-iginal language . Ticknershould know, he's theman in charge of operawork at UBC. But, as hesays, his argument i smost one-sided . Page Fri-day invites more discus-sion .

And there's some art ,and some cinema, and ajoust with Page Friday' spoet .

You might find more .But not much more.What can you do withsix small pages, anyway?

organizerAdvisorycotics .

The above experiencesand reactions are availableany time you want them . Iwould suggest that Mr . Horstwas very lucky that a per-son cannot really get highon his first kick, so his ex-perience was "pleasant, sortof 'so what' . "

Mr. Horst will have doneus a great service if the pub-lic is stimulated enough byhis article to find out more

of the Nationa lCouncil on Nar-

Page 7: usrssEr - University of British Columbia Library scale purge woud have disastrous effects on the ac-ceptability of any academic program on this campus," Coleman said. Coleman also

PEOPLE

Here's the views of Berton,as he praises his Klondike,hails high The Ubyssey, andrattles the railings on theAnglican church's plaype n

By CAROLE MUNROE

P IERRE BERTON return-ed to Vancouver 1 a s t

week to be greeted by oldcronies from his VancouverHerald days, and by new re -porters trying to follow be -hind.

The press conference i nBerton's Bayshore suite wasinformal as he is — he toldus he didn't like them any-way.

"I never went to the mwhen I was a reporter," hesaid . "Always went for m yinterviews after or before .But press conferences areuseful to me now; or Iwould not do them . "

He was at the end off our interview-filled day sfor TV, radio and newspap-ers across Canada ; publiciz-ing his already well-know ncriticism of the AnglicanChurch, T h e ComfortablePew.

As Berton put it, salesare fabulous. One hundredand ten thousand copies arein print in Canada now, andthe book may be publishedin the U .S. and Britain .

"The church gets 25 percent of the gross receipts,

which is more than I get, "he said . "But they deserveit — they thought the boo kup .

"The timing was right,"is his explanation for th esuccess of The Pew. "I don' thave a new attitude, but it' sthe kind of approach that islong overdue . "

Berton's attack is aimedat the leaders of the church .Preaching has got to get bet-ter or they might as wellstop it altogether, he says .

Is he hoping for a sweep-ing change as a result o fThe Pew ?

"Every writer hopes foran effect on society . I don' tthink there will be an im-mediate change, but ulti-mately there will be . The re-forms are coming awfullyslowly and awfully late —maybe too late . "

"Anyway, it gives t h eministers a new topic topreach about. They neededthat . "

What about the book's ap-plication to other religions?

"It was written about theAnglican Church for theAnglican Church . But oneJewish rabbi told me that

if you put rabbi in place ofpriest, and synagogue inplace of church, it wouldapply just as well to his re-ligion ."

Has the book chan g e dBerton's public image?

"I used to be known asthe man who wrote the se xarticle in Macleans . NowI'm the man who wroteabout the Anglican Church . "

But Berton doesn't con-sider this his most import-ant book. That distinctiongoes to Klondike.

The one he most enjoye dwriting was The WonderfulWorld of 0g. He wanted towrite a children's book thattheir parents would enjoyreading .

"The stuff my kids werereading — and I had to readto them — was nonsense .Kids like big words. Lookat the popularity of Alicein Wonderland, and it's fullof big words. They don'thave to understand whatevery word means; but theylike to see them."

To the other extreme —what about Hugh Hefner' sPlayboy Philsopohy ?

"My God, has anybodyread it all? Hefner goes onand on, and there are onlyso many hours in a day . "

On a more serious level ,Berton talked about univer-sity education .

"University should befree just like high school—if you have the marks . ButI'd like to see the entranc erequirements raised to 65per cent . "

And does he think we'l lget it?

"Who knows? When Pear-son was on my TV show re-cently he promised free edu-cation eventually. But itcould just be political hedg-ing . " ,

A n d from this to TheUbyssey, which Berton onceedited .

"You'll never get any bet-ter journalism training tha nin those offices," he said ."I walked out of The Ubys-sey editor's chair and into ametro daily's city editorshi p—and that was my onlytraining .

"The Ubyssey is the bestcollege paper in Canada an dit deserves all the awardsit's been getting . It's a lotmore sophisticated now thanit was when I was here . Wedidn't have a Page Fridaysection and we didn't printart or book reviews. "

Berton is now off for athree week Mexico holiday .

In the meantime, the Ang-lican Church is planning asequel to The Comfortabl ePew. It will be a collectio nof critical essays by variouswriters, including Berton .

PF Three

224-3730 4375 W. 10th

Social WorkersThe Department of Social Welfare of the Provinc e

of British Columbia is inviting applicants for the fol-lowing positions in the Department . The availablepositions may be in any one of the district offices lo-cated all over British Columbia. The salaries quotedare effective April 1, 1965 .

SOCIAL WORKER I : Salary $371 .00 to $426 .00 .Education qualifications : Bachelor of Arts Degreeor equivalent preferably with majors in the Socia lSciences.

SOCIAL WORKER II: Salary $445.00 to $525.00 .Educational quallifications : Bachelor of SocialWork Degree .

SOCIAL WORKER III : Salary $465.00 to $565 .00 .Educational qualifications : Master of Social Wor kDegree .All usual Civil Service benefits are available .Representatives from the Department will be at

the Student Placement Office on Campus MARCH 3rdand 4th and during the week of MARCH 8th to inter-view persons interested in employment with the De-partment .

Appointments may be made by calling Local 432 .Further information can be obtained from the

TRAINING SUPERVISOR, DEPARTMENT OFSOCIAL WELFARE

800 Cassiar Street, Vancouver 6,

or by calling Cypress 9-9131

/FLOWER SHOP

y//e B ro dwa yBroadwa y

Moving February 20 to :2197 W. BROADWAY

10% Discount to Student*RE 3-3021

RE 3-7322

• Eyes Examined

• Contact Lenses Fitte d

Armstrong & ReaOPTOMETRISTS

Uptown office :1522 West Broadway

RE 3-161 1

Kerrisdale office :2263 W. 41st Ave .

AM 1-1911

a'really big' nightvancouver spring carnival

masqueradebal lat the bayshore inn onmarch 6, 1965lance harrison orchestracostume and door prizesrefreshments from 7:30 p.m.,dinner at 8:00 p.m.,tickets $7.50 each at thegeorgia hotel ,bayshore inn, andvancouver visitors bureau,650 burrard .For further informationcall Mrs. A. Dawson,MU 2-4445 or MU 3-5048(evenings )

KNIFE IN THE WATE RDirected by Roman Polansk i

"A Polish thriller as sharp as a knifeand as smooth as water." TIME MagazineInternational Film Critics' Award1962 Venice Film Festival .A Kanawha Films, Ltd. Presentation .

THE

THEATR E

Pick a pack of PF poetpouring out of thewoodwork and tearing each other to bits.

onthe wonderfu l

PF poe tcrumpled eggshell dribblingsof only slightly coherentuninspired word breaki

ngspoor tasted infant snideriesabout individu

o have honestals wh

claims to distinction

what's in a name ?that which we glorify in printby any other medium i s

nto b

or ede sc

figure it out ?gosh, you ought to be a

PF poet(frankly speaking . . . )

disgustedly yours,AL CAMPBELL

Page 8: usrssEr - University of British Columbia Library scale purge woud have disastrous effects on the ac-ceptability of any academic program on this campus," Coleman said. Coleman also

OVERSEAS

Go abroad, youngstudent; and fitfair squarely intoyour foreign niche

By DR. CYRIL BELSHAW

IT IS both surprising an dencouraging to know that

a considerable number ofstudents and young peoplein the community are inter-ested in equipping them-selves for professional workon technical assistance mis-sions abroad .

Quite frequently the in-terest and enthusiasm i sdampened by difficulties i nfinding an appropriate post-ing, particularly when ther eis such a diversity of agen-cies with specialized re-quirements operating in th efield .

• • •The international agencies

are the most difficult tobreak into .

They require senior ex-perienced personnel w it hup-to-date expert training ofa specialized kind for spe-cialized jobs .

Recent graduates almos tnever qualify, and if youhave ambitions in this direc-tion it is necessary to spendseveral years gaining exper-ience, preferably in over-seas countries .

Despite this, professionalmembers of the public (so-cial workers, doctors, engin-eers, planners) often tend t ounderestimate their qualifi-cations, and don't applywhen they could well do so .

General applications tointernational agencies usual-ly do not work. It is bestto find job descriptions fo rparticular posts and applyfor these. University De-partment s, Internationa lHouse, the Personnel Of-fice, and the External Ai dOffice in Ottawa have postdescriptions . It is then bestto apply directly to the in-ternational agency con-cerned .

• • •The External Aid Office

in Ottawa sometimes has aslightly wider range of postsavailable : for example, the yneed teachers for class-roomwork in Africa, whereasUNESCO usually is inter-ested only in administrativeor higher technical advisors .

Such posts are usually re -served for Canadian citizens .

Many applicants are im-migrants to Canada fromEurope: they should appl yto their own countries forwork in bilateral aid pro-grams. An exception is theBritish Ministry of Technic-al Co-operation.

This Ministry is interestedin getting the jobs done, an dwill employ Canadians andothers if they have th equalifications .

How does one go aboutgetting the necessary exper-ience?

Work in a technical ca-pacity with Canadian Uni-versity Service Overseaswill undoubtedly count inthe future . UBC's two home

PF Four

economists who served incommunity developmentprograms in Ghana in 1962had contacts with F .A .O . of-ficials in the field, and weresought after by F .A.O. be -cause of the evident compe-tence of their work, andtheir demonstrated abilityto handle problems in term sof the needs of other cul-tures .

Agriculturists, nurses, andothers who work profes-sionally in missionary soci-eties also gain relevant ex-perience .

There are three sourcesof professional overseas ex-perience which are frequent-ly overlooked, a l t h o u g hthey are very much to thepoint for overseas students .

• • •One is work in the civi l

service of a developingcountry as an expatriateemployee . This applies par-ticularly in Africa, wheregovernment departments ar estill unable to fill all postswith their own nationals .

In the nature of things ,such employment can onlybe temporary until suchtime as the countries con-cerned train their own grad-uates. Material condition sare usually quite good, andthe experience is priceless .

Another kind of experi-ence is work in oversea suniversities. If you have agood bachelor's degree yo ucan expect to be placed in ahigh school, if your subjectis one (such as mathematicsor foreign languages) inwhich teachers are in shor tsupply, and you may findthat senior form work isthe equivalent of junior uni-versity here .

• • •If you have a master's de-

gree the chances are goodfor high school, and in someinstances for universitywork, since emphasis on thedoctorate is not as heavy a sit is with us .

It is sometimes practica lto combine university teach-ing with research towards ahigher degree .

The best sources of in-formation about posts i ncivil services or universitiesare the embassies of th ecountries concerned in Ot-tawa or Washington .

Other good sources of in-formation are the Englishnewspapers (such as TheTimes, The Mancheste rGuardian, The New States-man and The Economist) .

Another way of gainin guseful professional experi-ence overseas at an earlystage in one's career is tomake use of a Common-wealth Scholarship to an Af-rican country or to India o rPakistan .

These are available forwork toward higher degrees .If the university abroad doesnot offer its own higher de-gree it is usually possibl eto do work there for a de-gree from a Canadian uni-versity .

• • •Such Commonwealth

Scholarships still have toofew applicants, and notnearly enough from studentsfrom professional faculties .

Work abroad is not easy ,but it is not the fearsomething that some imagine .

Common sense„maturity ,and sensitivity usually carrythe day, and the stimulationof testing one's ideas underthe constant pressure ofnovel experience Is a mag-nificent reward .

theyoungdancers

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Page 9: usrssEr - University of British Columbia Library scale purge woud have disastrous effects on the ac-ceptability of any academic program on this campus," Coleman said. Coleman also

ART

Yeah, but herethe sun onlyshines through-yellow glassesBy CLAIRE WEINTRAUB

J ENNY says everyon efought to go away from

Vancouver from Decemberto March. Oh, Lord, it' sraining again and I justbarely scraped through an -other German test (I ' llnever learn this vocabulary ;why do I even try?) and i fI drink any more coffee inthat noisy cave I will goout of my MIND .

So I put on my yello wglasses which I bought inthe drug store (I foresee atime, when the VancouverPolice will snatch away myyellow glasses, saying I haveno right to get high onsunshine if I manufactur emy own) and wend my waythrough the mass of unen-lightened parasol - carriers ,dripping their dusty waythrough those globules ofsunshine mucking up t h esidewalk .

On impulse, I go inthrough the glass doors anddown the stairs, thinking Imight as well completelyundo myself with a runaround the Bruce Conno rexhibit . Into the art galleryI go, Oh, Jenny, yes, onereally ought to . . . Butwait. What's this? A newshow?

I don't believe it . I DON' TBELIEVE IT. It's great.

Great b i g photographi creproductions (too bad theyare not in colour, but Isuppose you can't haveeverything) of Gaudi's build-ings, like gingerbrea dhouses, like hobbit-holes ,like Pooh corner never was,like wonderland . All youhave to do is go to Spain . . .

And on the other side ofthe room, demarcated bysome glass cases filled withfans and glass vases andj e w e l r y which Sitwellought to wear, are poster scalled ART NOUVEAU.Bright cheerful — ToulouseLautrec, and, and . . . Mymind spinning with gaiety ,I slink from the room, turn-ing mental cartwheels as Igo .

MUSIC

Whither multi-lingual opera?The case forthe English e e

By FRENCH TICKNE R

0 PERA as an art form isa combination of both

musical and theatrical de-vices, one incomplete with-out the other.

First, there is a story line ,communicated to the audi-ience by word; second, anaction appropriate to theemotion expressed; andthird, the above accompan-ied by a quality of musicbest suited to express theemotion, word and actioninvolved .

An art-form has twoprime purposes : to teach

and/or to entertain .' Thesetwo purposes are not funda-mentally opposed to eachother and are in realitycompatible . However, in themusical theatre they are cir-cumvented and negate dwhen an audience does no tclearly comprehend the lan-guage used.

It behooves the 'opera -goer' to understand thor-oughly that which inspiredthe composer. If the lan-guage is unfathomable, i tstands to reason that thework loses the better part o fits teaching and entertain-ing value .

• • •Of course, there are thos e

who state that if one knowsthe story intimately beforethe performance and has alibretto in hand, translatio nis not only unecessary, bu tlamentable .

I do not happen to sharethis view, and defer to theEuropean custom of produc-ing the opera in the lan-guage of the country inwhich it is performed .

(There is an interestingsociological observation con-cerning art in general thathas plagued the English-speaking countries and spe-cifically, Canada and theU.S., for many years . It i s

Reprinted from the man-uscript—the newsletter ofthe Music Students Associa-tion.

a European psychosis stem-ming from a North Ameri-can inferiority complex ."Home-grown products justcan't compare with those ofEurope." Thus, for years wehave exported Marys andAlberts and welcomed theirreturn as Marias and Alber-tos. But this is a topic thatmust be reserved for anothe rdiscussion . . . back to lan-guage! )

The concept that operamust be performed in theoriginal language is largelya product of a small seg-ment of the opera-goingaudience and is most fre-quently found on the NorthAmerican continent . This i snot even a debatable ques-tion in countries wher eopera is well establishedad an integral part of dailylife.

O d d l y enough, Verdi' sDon Carlos (an Italian opera ,written in French) is mostmeaningful and exciting toa German when performedin German. This same situa-tion applies to a Frenchmanin France or an Italian inItaly. This is because operai Europe escaped the tyran-ny of snobbery and ha sflourished in the congenialmilieu of the general pub-lic .

I have heard many reas-ons for opera performancesin the original language andmost, to my mind, are un-sound and were forgotteninstantly . But of all thebattle - scarred snickernee sthat have gouged away atthe armor of opera, a few oft h e more ridiculous one scome to mind .

At the risk of being suedfor plagiarism by two o rthree thousand irate operalovers who honestly believethey originated them, I shal llist a few of those that re-occur most frequently .

First comes the usualstatement from some music -ally gentle operargoer whobuys a season ticket to the

opera (orchestra seats), butnever attends. Her learnedcomment may very well be"But Italian (she under-stands none and has onlyrecently learned to phonateI quale dire:lone e gabin-etto) is a language so liquid ,so pure in its vowels thatthe beauty of the soundsthemselves lead a singer di-rectly into producing a beau-tiful tone. But English !Harsh, gutteral, nasal, a con-glomerate, unbeautiful, un-singable language!"

Perhaps this is support-able if you discount theworks of Purcell, Handel ,Britten, Stravinsky, Cope-land and Menottt, to men-tion but a few. I do notdeny that foreign tongue sare beautiful when sung butI cannot accept the usualNorth American concept of"unsingable" when appliedto my native language.

Then perhaps a more ser-ious jouster might accos tyou with "Mozart wrote inItalian for the Austria ncourt!" (Formidable!) Thisis a stronger statement butnot really good enough.

Since the courtly lan-guage of Vienna was offic-ially Italian (a snobbis malso) and since most of the`artists in residence' wereItalian, it is easy to under-stand why the operas werecomposed in that venerabletongue. But not when Moz-art composed for the Ger-man-speaking p u b 1 i c, hecomposed in the Germa nlanguage . Do we dare con-sider this pandering to pub-lic taste ?

Now, a new approach thi stime, countering with theargument involving the mis-e r a b l e translations avail-able, full of "archaic, unsing-able English." A glance athis collection of scores, ifany, will probably revealthe names of the ReverendJ. J. Troutbeck, Natalia Mc-Farren and T. H. Baker astranslators .

If you have perused thei rtranslations with even halfan eye, it is easy to see thatthey are what he says theyare . However, these transla-tions were, for the mostpart, done in the late 19thand early 20th centuries an dwere not meant to be reallysingable, but were commis-sioned to allow the ignoran tEnglish-speaking listener o rsinger to vaguely under -stand what he was listeningto or singing.

• • •With opera in English o n

an overdue up-swing, themusic publishing companieshave taken a closer look atthe buyers' market and arehurriedly commissioningnew, adapted, singable Eng-lish translations from thos etranslators who are the mostcompetent in their field .

If you should be fortun-ate enough to have exhaust-ed the usual number of ar-guments by the end of theevening without h a v i n gbeen personally insulted oryour legitimacy questioned ,the parting jibes (if you ar estill speaking) may be theusual frantic, last ditch com-mentaries . . . "I don't careif I understand what's goingon or not, it's the beauty o fthe music that counts ." . . .

(Continued on Page 6 )

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Ado Muter SocietyOFFICIAL NOTICES

1. ACADEMIC ACTIVITIE SGeneral meeting of all academic activities commit-tee members- in the council chambers, Friday noon .

2. GENERAL MEETIN GIMPORTANT.Any proposed amendments to the AMS Constitutionand By-laws must be received by the secretary n olater than Friday, March 5 .

3. COMMITTEE CHAIRME NAPPOINTMENTS• Anyone interested in being appointed chair -man of any of the following committees must writea letter of application to the secretary.• Application letters and eligibility forms must b ereceived by the secretary no later than 'Friday noo npreceding the .Monday on which the appointmentwill be made .• Eligibility forms available AMS office .MARCH 1 (Application letter must be in by Frida yFebruary 26 .

— Special Events Cairma n

- Homecoming Chairma n— College Shop Manage r— Frosh Orientation Chairma n

- U .B .C. Radio PresidentMARCH 8 . (Application letters to be in by March 5 )

— Canadian Union of Students Chairma n— Totem Editor— Bird Calls 'Edito r— Tuum Est Edito r— Intramural Sports Chairma n- High School Conference Chairma n

MARCH 15 . (Application letters to be in by March12) .

— Ubyssey Edito r

- Academic Activities Chairma n- Canadian University Students Overseas

Chairma n- World University Service Chairma n- Student Cour t— Leadership Conference Chairman .

4. FINANCE COMMITTE EApplications are now being accepted for position sin the Finance Committee :

1) Three Assistant Treasurer s2) Secretary3) Member at Larg e

Please apply- in writing to Box 47 by Ferbruary 26,1965 .

5 . ELIGIBILITYCandidates for positions 'on Students Council areasked to have the Registrar's Office complet ean "Eligibility" form on his or her behalf as soonas possible .Forms are available in the A.M.S. Office and whencompleted should be forwarded to the Secretar yof the A.M.S .

6. WUSC TRAVEL AND EDUCA-TIONAL SEMINAR OF ONTARI OAND QUEBEC

Canadian students at U .B.C. are invited to apply forparticipation in a travel and educational Seminarfor overseas and Canadian students that will tak eplace from May 19 to June 6, 1965 . The Seminar ,sponsored by World University Service of Canad ain co-operation with the Canadian Centennial Com-mission and the External Aid Office of the Govern-ment of Canada, will travel throughout and studyOntario and Quebec during the three-week perio dfor the purpose of providing the participants wit hthe opportunity to travel in a region which theyhave not previously visited or whose visits in theseprovinces have been extremely brief and localized .Cost to the participant will be minimal . furtherinformation can be obtained from Brock Extensio n257. Application . due March 4.

Page 10: usrssEr - University of British Columbia Library scale purge woud have disastrous effects on the ac-ceptability of any academic program on this campus," Coleman said. Coleman also

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(Continued from Page 5 )or . . . "Any intelligent mus-iscian would see that . . . "Then a polite smile and apersonal compliment m a ysave a lifetime friendship .

T h e arguments againsttranslations will continue aslong as there are those whobelieve they are committinga personal auto-da-fe for thecomposer in holding out fo rperformance in the origina llanguage .

For my part, I think it i sany composer's wish to havehis works performed (bothfrequently, and in a satis-factory manner) in transla-tion, an adaptation of th eoriginal language ; but mostimportant, to be completel yunderstood and enjoyed byall.

CINEMA

. Nothing reallyhappens withthe guest, butit's funny . . •

By GRAHAM OLNEY

At the preview showingthere were a number ofpeople shaking their headsand wondering what washappening and a few enjoy-ing the film completely .

The problem is that noth-ing really happens in The

Guest as it does in otherfilms . There is little plot andthe film doesn't "move" asis expected of movies .

What is enjoyable abou tThe Guest is not the action—plot development — but thedialogue and the relation-ships of the characters .

Some sequences are rem-iniscent of the Goon Show swith Spike Milligan andPeter Sellers .

For instance, an argumen tbetween the three charact-ers, each played remarkablywell, is interrupted by thesound of water dripping into

THE GUEST, dir. by CliveDonner. With Alan Bates ,Donald Pleasence andRobert Shaw . Originallytitled The Caretaker.Written by Harold Pinter .Studio for one week .

a pail . A discussion aboutthe leaky roof ensues. Theold man says, "What do youdo when it's full" . Long sil-ence. Elder brother answersslowly, "Empty it. "

Hilarious .But a girl in front of me

shaking her head. "What' sit about " she was probablysaying to herself.

Perhaps nine out of 1 0people will leave the Studioslightly perplexed. This willbe their punishment for notjust sitting back and enjoy-ing the film .

The film is photographe dwithout ingenious or imagin-ative cuts—a strictly meatand potatoes film . But, afte rall what can a director dowhen almost all the action

takes place in a single clut-tered room .

An acquaintance utteredwhat will probably be thetypical reaction to Th eGuest. "Yecch. Give me aHopalong Cassidy . "

I argued valiantly but hejust coudn't see the humorin the film. I suppose youjust have to be English .

CALENDAR

Art Wanted . Lower Mal lResidences are trying todig up paintings for aLower Mall Art Display .Splash, dab and scrapeentries from all studentswelcomed.

A Night of Opera Excerptsincluding La Boheme, I lTrovatore, Cosi fan tuttiand Lament of Ariadne .Tonight and tomorrownight at 8 in the UBCAud .

Sonny Terry and BrownieMcGhee, blues in concert .Wild, wild, wild, mean .Brock, 12:30 today, 25cents . By special events .

The Crucible, by ArthurMiller . Directed by Frank-lyn Johnson, produced b yVancouver Theatre Guild .Metro theatre, opens to-night, 8 :30 .

Knife in the Water . Direct-ed by Roman Polanski .At the Varsity . Reviewnext week maybe if you'r elucky .

Dave Wiffin, blues singer .At the Bunkhouse this

weekend, accompanied byJon York on an electric12 string guitar.

Chopin Recital by MadameMaria Varro. FreddyWood, Saturday, Mar . 6at 8 :30 . Students $1 . Tick-ets at Vancouver Ticke tC e n t r e . Sponsored b yUBC Slavonic StudiesDept .

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Page 11: usrssEr - University of British Columbia Library scale purge woud have disastrous effects on the ac-ceptability of any academic program on this campus," Coleman said. Coleman also

Friday, February 19, 1965 TH•E UBYSSEY. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Page S

By JACK McQUARRIEDoing a commendable job of controlling their success-bre d

contempt, the Thunderbird basketball team after havin gdemolished most of their American competition, will loo kto the University of Alberta (Calgary) Dinosaurs to supplythem with worthy competition this weekend.

The games go Friday andSaturday evenings at 8 :30 p.m .

The Dinosaurs are currentlytied for first place in the W .C . -I .A.A. Conference standingswith a 6-6 record along withEdmonton .

If you wonder why they cal lthemselves the Dinosaurs alook at their center will relieveyour bewildered state. He issix foot eleven inch Bob Ingliswho weighs 240 pounds andkeeps coming up with hoopprints on his forehead .

Inglis is a transfer fromBrigham Young University andhas put in time with the Leth-bridge Nations . He is presentlythe team's top scorer with a 1 3point average as well as a toprebounder .

Dinosaur coach John Dewarcapped off his raid down southby enlisting six foot one inchHans Schamp from Utah Statewho has been averaging 1 1points a game .

The game will afford Birdfans their first opportunity tosee how the home club faresagainst Canadian competition .

The Thunderbirds s e a s o nrecord stands at 13-7 with thetally reading 9-7 against theirAmerican opponents .

Six victories over U.Sschools form the current T -Bird victory string . In otherwords they're hot .

Bird basketball coach PeterMullins gives one the suspi-cion that the homeside isn' tabout to have their more under-rated (basketball-wise) country-men from Calgary break thisstreak .

Reservedly he adds, "Wehaven't had anything to dowith the Western Canadia nleague this season so we actu-ally don't know what to ex-pect."

UBC's field hockey teams swing into their second weekendof action since the Xmas holidays this Saturday with threegames scheduled .

Varsity goes against NorthShore 'A' at 1 :15 p.m., Bluesplay Blackbirds at 2 :45 p.m. ,and Golds take on Hawks at1 :15 p .m. All games are to beplayed on the fields behindBrock .

Last weekend Varsity won4-0 over Grasshoppers withDietrik Wolsak rapping inthree goals, and Warren Bellscoring the fourth . Blues turn-ed in a disorganized displayagainst Hawks of the seconddivision, with the only goalscored by Tom Babalola in a3-1 loss.

* *The women's synchronized

swimming and volleyballteams take to the air thisweekend .

Their destination is Winni-peg and a WCIAA roundrobinin each of the sports. Bothteams are defending championsin their classes and are fav-ored to repeat last year's per-formance .

* * *UBC's wrestling team is

travelling to Saskatoon thi sweekend to participate in theWCIAA championships .

-* * *

The Thunderbird swimmingteam takes on the Universityof Puget Sound at Percy Norm -an Pool Saturday at 6:00 p.m .They are not competing to-night with the U. of Wash . norwith Western Washington andUniversity of Alberta Satur-day, as published erroneouslyin Thursday's Ubyssey.

Dinosaurs to test our Bird sfirst time this yea rwith non-U .S. team

BOB BARAllOU L. . . these three

GENE RIZAK. . . lead 'birds

STEVE SPENCER. . . in scoring

In World Cup rugby

T'birds want trophy backBy HAROLD McALLISTER

The UBC rugby Thunder-birds begin their most import-ant series of the season Satur-day . when they travel toCalifornia to play University o fCalifornia Golden Bears in twogames of the four-game totalpoint World Cup series .

The 'Birds will be playin gagainst the same Cal team that

defeated them for the WorldCup last year, but 'UBC is avastly improved club .

The Bears feature size andpower, and their style of playis sure to be a hard-hitting one .Their scrum weighs an aver-

age of 215 pounds per man ,with their backs averaging 190each.

Sports roundup

Field hockey buffsoff and winning

The Ski 'birds are also activethis weekend taking part i nthe Mt. Bachelor Alpine meetat Bend, Oregon .

* * *In track and field UBC wil l

compete in this Saturday' smeet to be held in the P .N.E .Agrodome.

Pimm's No.1 has a Gin base

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Two things about Pimm's : easy toserve, and a taste you'll enjoy.

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simply because you'll enjo ythe taste of it.

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

PIMM' SA new generation is rediscovering

Pimm's . . . and enjoying every momen tof it.

The Thunderbirds, on theother hand, weigh in at anaverage of 176 pounds perplayer, with scrummers at 18 6and backs 165 . They are with -out captain Dick Hayes, whohas torn knee ligaments .

UBC is taking 22 players o nthe trip as the two games willbe played under Californiarules, which allow unlimitedsubstitution . However, coachBrian Wightman says : "We donot intend to use free substitu-tion except in the case of in-juries . It's not really rugby . "This rule will definitely workagainst UBC, because Cal play-ers will probably be in poore rcondition .

The playing field will be nar-rower by fifteen yards, and thiswill hinder UBC's backfiel dmovements, which they depen don to a great extent .

However Thunderbirds arehighly polished in rugby tech-niques, and it is likely that theywill win at least one of th egames.

On the way back Birds playOregon State University in anexhibition match, and arrivehome next Thursday .

'Vikings '

seek repfrom UBC

The University of Victoria"Vikings" hockey team wil loppose the UBC ThunderbirdsSaturday afternoon at 1 :00 p .m .in the Thunderbird WinterSports Centre .

The Birds are still smartingfrom last week's two losses t oBrigham Young's strong all-Canadian scholarship team .The two scores were 7-1 and5-2 .

The Vikings go into the

weekend ' s game against th e

Birds as an unknown quantitybut hope to be anything but

when they come out of it .Victoria is presently pushin g

to get their athletic progra minto the W.C.I .A.A . Conferenceand a good showing against theBirds on Saturday would do alot to impress league officials .

Notre Dame had the same in -

tention in their game agains t

the T'Birds a few weeks back

and the result was disastrous

for UBC .

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Page 12: usrssEr - University of British Columbia Library scale purge woud have disastrous effects on the ac-ceptability of any academic program on this campus," Coleman said. Coleman also

Page 6

T H E U B Y S S E Y

Friday, February 19, 1965

'tween classes UBC Thunderbird Winter Sports Centre

For SKATING, CURLING, HOCKEY

Get slant on bias today Pleasure Skating Hours:12 .45 p.m. to 2 .45 p.m. Tues ., Thurs . and Sunday

3 .00 p.m. to 5 .00 p.m., Friday and SaturdayWhose Problem is Prejudice? VCF IH 7 .30 p.m. to 9 .30 p .m., Tues ., Fri ., Sat. and Sunday

is sociology professor Werner Dr. John Ross speaks on Let's International Dance at IH THURSDAY STUDENT SPECIAL 15cCohn's topic today at noon in Get With It noon today in Bu . Friday evening. Admission 50 SKATE RENTAL AVAILABLE, ALL SIZES

106 . cents .Brock Lounge . The talk is spon- Skating Parties each Wednesday, 7 :30 p .m. - 9:30 p .m.

* * * * * *sored by UBC Hillel . AAC QUAKERS Book Now for Your Club

* * * Important general meeting Meeting of worship in Bu. Phone Local 365 or 224-3205

FACULTY DEBATIN GResolved that East is East,

but West is best . Noon today ,Bu. 217 .

* * *FINE ARTS GALLERY

Architecture Abraham Rogat-nick will speak on The Archi-tecture of Antoni Gaudi atnoon in La . 104 .

* * *PRE-SOCIAL WORK

Talk and film by Salvatio nArmy Capt. Byrd on Vancou-ver's skidroad. Monday noo nBu. 202 .

* * *EAST ASIA SO C

Talk and discussion on Mo-dern Japanese Society by Mis sTsurumi tonight, 8 :30 p .m. at6630 Churchill.

* * *ALLIANCE FRANCAISE

Films Le Chaudrounier an dA 1'Aube d'un Monde, noontoday in Bu . 205 .

* * *VOC

Annual Open House at th eSeymour Cabin, Mile Seven ,Mt . Seymour, Sunday from 2to 5 p .m. Slides . All welcome .

* * *STUDENT ZIONIST

Conversational Hebrew clas-ses today at noon . Beginners ,Bu. 212, advanced . Bu. 214 .Everyone welcome.

* * *CLASSICS CLU B

Dr. John McDiarmid speaksnoon today in Bu. 102 on Ores-teia of Aeschylus .

noon today in the council cham-bers.

* * *LS M

T. P. Solem talks on TheComfortable Pew — How True !Monday noon in Bu . 102 .

* * *EL CIRCUL O

Talk on Miguel Hernandezby Miss Maria Tomsich todaynoon in Bu . 204 .

* * *INTRAMURAL DEBATES

Resolved : that the best thingsin life are free . Fijis vs Psi Unoon today in Bu . 216.

* * *UBC NEW DEMOCRATS

Two war propaganda filmsMonday and Thursday at noonin Bu . 100; 25 cents .

* * *ARCHAEOLOGY CLUB

Meeting Monday noon in Bu .204. Susan Whipps speaks onExcavation at Marmes RockShelter . Slides .

* * *UN CLUB & VANCOUVERINSTITUTE

Hon. Paul Martin, Ministerof External Affairs, speaks inBu. 106 Saturday night at 8 :0 0p .m .

WEST POINT GREY .BAPTIST CHURCH

Eleventh Avenue at Sasa:natRev. A. J. Hadley

9:45 a .m. Elective StudyCourse s

11 :00 a .m.—"It 's Up T oYou"

7:30 p.m.—"Stop, Lookand Live! "

8:45 p .m.—Young People' sFellowship

Penthouse Sunday at 11 a .m.

It YOUR Pl22A If It*tt8T

IZzMAIT'S

Now Offering

Jet FastDelivery Service

plus

10% Discounton orders over $10.00

2676 W. Bdwy. - RE 6-9019

APEX ALPIN EPENTICTON, B . C.

—daily operations until Easter

- 90% powder snow condition s

—only 5 hours from Vancouver

—Government maintained two-wayroad

-95% clear vision

—no long line-ups

—beginning slopes to advanced

—for package deals, write or call

AL and MILLIE MENZIES641 Winnipeg Street

Penticton, B.C.

Phone 492-039 6

SKI

Just Arrived – A Complete Selection of

ABARTH MUFFLERSFor All Makes and Models of Sport Cars

10% Discount by Showing Your AMS Card

12th & Alma

736-9804

OVERSEAS

AUTO PARTS

*le afat .

&

Just checked in -the Internationa lpop art pla nSeen on campus now i nhigh colours that mak ethis checked coat an dhat one of the freshest ,strongest fashion plan sin years . Pleat-burstingskimmer coot and hel-met hat show influenc eof the Mods from Eng-land and the Ye Y efrom France . . . i nstriking brilliant pin kand conservative came lcoloured checks on fin ewool Sizes 5-15 .

Coats 39 95 89 5 0Hots 1 4 95 1 5 9 5

Illustrated Coat 49 95 Hot 15 9 5

The Bay Colie-gaenne Shopthird floo r

.tJU-,ia Al t, .ANvIll €

Wanted — 3 Girl sHorse-loving and horse-experienced to ride and to guideon our scenic trailrides and packtrips and to participate

in all our dude ranch activities o nWeekends and During the Summer Holiday .

Room and board is provided . Please write in detail toBox 188, Squamish B .C. (40 miles from Vancouver) .

PARADISE VALLEY HORSE RANCHSquamish, B .C .

Box 188