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Seven in te n favor unio n By CHARLOTTE HAIR E UBC students Wednesday overwhelmingly reaffirmed their membership in the Canadian Union of Students . A total of 5,565 students voted 70 per cent in favor of UBC's remaining in CUS in an Alma Mater Society-sponsore d referendum . Of these, 1,743 voted yes to withdraw from the nationa l university students' union, and 3,811 voted no . There were 1 1 spoiled ballots . Only two polls—forestry and agriculture, and engineering voted to reject CUS membership . CUS president Hugh Armstrong, at UBC for the referendum , said Wednesday night CUS will now be able to move ahea d with strong new programs . "These results will be well-received by the rest of th e country," he said . "We now have a job to get done, especially in the area o f educational reforms . I look forward to strong UBC leadershi p in CUS . " Wherever there is a tradition of strong student government , CUS is supported, he said . "The other two schools which held CUS referendums thi s year, Windsor and Acadia, did not give strong support to CU S because they do not have the strong student governments ." Armstrong said he hopes UBC's council will take the lea d in effecting CUS policy : "How this is done depends on the local style . We recogniz e the local councils as the spokesmen for the students on a campus . "Shaun Sullivan is the head of CUS at UBC," he said . AMS president Shaun Sullivan said he was pleasantly sur- prised students here wish to remain in the mainstream o f Canadian student thinking . "I hope the interest that students have shown in thi s referendum will be carried into council so we may implemen t CUS programs and achieve active results," Sullivan said . Law president ` Jim Taylor, who supported the withdrawa l from CUS, said he never expected the referendum to pass . "I still think CUS membership is an issue which we wil l have to face," he said . "It is still an organization irrelevant t o local needs . " That we had a referendum at all, Taylor said, is enough t o make CUS sit up and make some changes . Doors opened to thefts , $6,000 in supplies gon e By STEPHEN JACKSO N Ubyssey Housing Reporte r There are 40 new openings in Acadia Park . +"N Forty double doors are among $6,000 worth of con- struction materials stolen so far from the family housin g building site . Housing administrator Les Rohringer criticized the lack of security at the project . "The contractor is responsible, and he has done nothin g about providing theft protection . There wasn't even a watchman or a lock on the door," he said . Emerson Mitchell, construction supervisor for Lain g Construction and Equipment Ltd ., which is building the Acadia Park units, said protection was difficult becaus e of the site's isolation . "We can expect some security," he said, "but we can' t control the whole area ." Watchmen had been present sometimes, he said . Mitchell did not suspect UBC students of the thefts , and denied that there has been any vandalism . Rohringer criticized Mitchell for not reporting th e loss to the university . His department found out about th e thefts in what he called an offhand way . "When I learned of it, I phoned Franz Conrads (super - visor of construction) at the physical plant," said Rohringer , "but he knew nothing about it ." VANCOUVER, B.C ., THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 196 7 UBC REMAINS I U S MONTREAL (CUP) — Student power got th e )d from university presidents here Tuesday . At the annual conference of the Associatio n Universities and Colleges of Canada (AUCC ) e issue of student representation on academi c nates received high priority on the agenda . Most presidents said after the closed meetin g e trend toward student representation is inevi- ble . They said representation could be most signifi - Lnt in matters such as bookstore policy, curricu - m, parking, on-campus housing, and other suc h nterns by participating on bodies below th e vel of the board of governors, particularly o n e senate and its committees, faculty council s kd departments . rez probe of student policymakin g kurt hilger photo THE STATUTORY TISSUE issue got dire in a Hallowe'en hang-over . Rolls like this are enoug h to bowl you over, said a flushed gull who dropped in to see if he could handle two lax student s who became all wound up in Tuesday's paper . G. C . Andrew, executive director of the AUC C said there was too much emotionalism surround- ing the issue of student power . He said universities should be governed on a rational, rather than on an emotional basis . H. D . Hicks, president of Dalhousie Universit y admitted that students are growing up quicke r than ever before but "they still have a hell of a lot to learn . " He said student involvement in policymakin g could be taken to ridiculous lengths . Most university presidents agreed that stu- dents had little or no contribution to make a t the lboard of governors level .
Transcript

Seven in tenfavor unio n

By CHARLOTTE HAIR E

UBC students Wednesday overwhelmingly reaffirmed theirmembership in the Canadian Union of Students.

A total of 5,565 students voted 70 per cent in favor ofUBC's remaining in CUS in an Alma Mater Society-sponsoredreferendum .

Of these, 1,743 voted yes to withdraw from the nationa luniversity students' union, and 3,811 voted no. There were 11spoiled ballots .

Only two polls—forestry and agriculture, and engineering —voted to reject CUS membership .

CUS president Hugh Armstrong, at UBC for the referendum ,said Wednesday night CUS will now be able to move ahea dwith strong new programs .

"These results will be well-received by the rest of th ecountry," he said .

"We now have a job to get done, especially in the area ofeducational reforms . I look forward to strong UBC leadershi pin CUS . "

Wherever there is a tradition of strong student government ,CUS is supported, he said .

"The other two schools which held CUS referendums thi syear, Windsor and Acadia, did not give strong support to CUSbecause they do not have the strong student governments ."

Armstrong said he hopes UBC's council will take the leadin effecting CUS policy :

"How this is done depends on the local style . We recogniz ethe local councils as the spokesmen for the students on a campus .

"Shaun Sullivan is the head of CUS at UBC," he said.AMS president Shaun Sullivan said he was pleasantly sur-

prised students here wish to remain in the mainstream o fCanadian student thinking .

"I hope the interest that students have shown in thisreferendum will be carried into council so we may implemen tCUS programs and achieve active results," Sullivan said .

Law president J̀im Taylor, who supported the withdrawalfrom CUS, said he never expected the referendum to pass .

"I still think CUS membership is an issue which we willhave to face," he said . "It is still an organization irrelevant tolocal needs . "

That we had a referendum at all, Taylor said, is enough tomake CUS sit up and make some changes .

Doors opened to thefts ,$6,000 in supplies gone

By STEPHEN JACKSO NUbyssey Housing Reporte r

There are 40 new openings in Acadia Park .+"N Forty double doors are among $6,000 worth of con-

struction materials stolen so far from the family housin gbuilding site .

Housing administrator Les Rohringer criticized thelack of security at the project .

"The contractor is responsible, and he has done nothin gabout providing theft protection . There wasn't even awatchman or a lock on the door," he said .

Emerson Mitchell, construction supervisor for LaingConstruction and Equipment Ltd ., which is building theAcadia Park units, said protection was difficult becauseof the site's isolation .

"We can expect some security," he said, "but we can'tcontrol the whole area ."

Watchmen had been present sometimes, he said .Mitchell did not suspect UBC students of the thefts ,

and denied that there has been any vandalism .Rohringer criticized Mitchell for not reporting the

loss to the university . His department found out about th ethefts in what he called an offhand way.

"When I learned of it, I phoned Franz Conrads (super -visor of construction) at the physical plant," said Rohringer ,"but he knew nothing about it ."

VANCOUVER, B.C., THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1967

UBC REMAINS I U S

MONTREAL (CUP) — Student power got th e)d from university presidents here Tuesday .

At the annual conference of the AssociationUniversities and Colleges of Canada (AUCC)

e issue of student representation on academicnates received high priority on the agenda .

Most presidents said after the closed meetin ge trend toward student representation is inevi-ble .

They said representation could be most signifi -Lnt in matters such as bookstore policy, curricu -m, parking, on-campus housing, and other suc hnterns by participating on bodies below thevel of the board of governors, particularly one senate and its committees, faculty council skd departments .

rez probe of student policymaking

— kurt hilger photoTHE STATUTORY TISSUE issue got dire in a Hallowe'en hang-over . Rolls like this are enoughto bowl you over, said a flushed gull who dropped in to see if he could handle two lax studentswho became all wound up in Tuesday's paper .

G. C. Andrew, executive director of the AUC Csaid there was too much emotionalism surround-ing the issue of student power .

He said universities should be governed on arational, rather than on an emotional basis .

H. D. Hicks, president of Dalhousie Universityadmitted that students are growing up quicke rthan ever before but "they still have a hell of alot to learn . "

He said student involvement in policymakingcould be taken to ridiculous lengths .

Most university presidents agreed that stu-dents had little or no contribution to make a tthe lboard of governors level .

Page 2

THE UBYSSEY

Thursday, November 2, 1967

SMALL SIZE AN ADVANTAGE

Totem classes a successare better students than I've previously had infirst year courses ."

Quiet discussions of the students round acircle of armchairs and couches are digressiv eand spontaneous . The professor sits as one ofthem, and guides the conversation by suggestin gtopics and posing questions .

Towards the end of the class, the discussio nshifts away from the main topic to other writin gand ideas .

After class, those who have other lectures onthe main campus leave while the others con-tinued talking. Scheduled to end at 10 .20 a.m. thesessions often extend another half hour .

Getting from the lounge to other lecturesacross campus on time is a problem, but thestudents take the inconvenienve lightly .

Totem's isolation affects the professors, too ."But I would rather drive there to teach 1 5students than stay here in Buchanan for 30,"Seamon said .

An expansion of the program would be eco-nomically impossible, he said, as the universitywould have to triple its English faculty . Thatwould mean tripling its budget .

"It is not a serious idea on a mass scale, "said Seamon. "What we have now is merelytokenism."

The program for the Totem classes is thesame as that for regular English 100 sections .

Seamon said the lounge setting had one mai neffect on students — "They talk more ."

Whitehead agreed: "They leave behind th epublic school mentality of being told, and startasking for themselves .

"Of course it's a very expensive way ofteaching a first year course," he said, "but it' sa good way to spend money if the governmen twants a first-rate university . "

No chess, no bridge

its not a newspaper

UBC math professor Dr . Nathan Divinskyapparently doesn't think The Ubyssey is Canada' sgreatest student newspaper .

When he came into his math 200 class oneday, his students were reading The Ubyssey .

"What's in it?" he asked ."Nothing," said a student ."I can't understand why that newspaper wins

awards every year," Divinsky said.

"There's nothing in it . Do they have a bridg ecolumn? No. Do they have a chess column? No ."

He shook his head and went on with the class .

By STEPHEN JACKSO NUbyssey Housing Reporte r

By mistake, two English 100 classes are en-joyable this year .

Held Tuesday, Wednesday and Friday morn-ings in Totem Park lounges, they have onlyabout a dozen students each .

The size, say their professors, Dr. Lee White-head and Dr. Roger Seamon, is their chief ad-vantage .

Whitehead did not see how his class woul dwork with the normal number of students to aclass .

Although he would like to see the experi-ment established on a permanent basis, he sai dit would not work on a university-wide scale .

Those presently enrolled in the Totem sec-tions applied especially for it .

"These people are interested in English . Onthe basis of their writing, I would say that the y

Sir George topssenate rostrum

MONTREAL (CUP) — Students at Sir GeorgeWilliams University have been given four seat son a senate of 22 faculty and administrators .

This is the most significant senate represent-ation yet achieved in any Canadian university.

The senate also approved recommendationsallowing for two students on each faculty coun-cil, and also provides for student participation atthe academic department level .

All student representatives are to have ful lvoting rights, duties and responsibilities .

The recommendations were drawn up by ajoint committee of students, faculty and admini-stration, which began sitting a year ago .

The announcement was made by academicvice-principal Douglas Clarke, on behalf of thesenate, after it passed the recommendations atits regular meeting Friday.

Students staged a one-day boycott of classeslast Thursday, but this is in no way connectedto the announcement, which had been expectedfor some time .

Student union president Jeff Chipman sai dSaturday the recommendations represented amajor breakthrough in Canadian university edu-cation .

"We are most pleased that Sir George isassuming a role in the trend toward a responsiblestudent voice in university governmental bodies .

"It is a big step that will bring students intototal involvement and greater harmony withthe university," he said .

• Japanese tea ceremony

• international fashion show

• floor shows • international restaurant

friday, nov. 3rd, 7 pm.

saturday

4th, 2 pm.

'HIGH '

Film Soc PresentsLARRY KENT'S

B Nov. 2 & 3A Nov. 7 & 8r rD Auditorium

Restricted to Students, Faculty, Staff ,

AMS, Faculty, or Staff Cards must be shown.

ARTS - COMMERCE - ENGINEERINGHave you considered a career as a

CHARTERED ACCOUNTANT ?

Our representative will be on Campu s

November 13 and 14, 196 7

Please contact the placement office for further informatio n

and to arrange an interview.

PEAT, MARWICK, MITCHELL & CO .

CHARTERED ACCOUNTANTS

0•••••• FAMOUS ARTISTS LTD SQUEEN ELIZABETH THEATRE — NOV. 6 & 7 at 8:30

`a joy to watch' London Daily Telegraph

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NOV. 6—"ROSE LATULI PPE"—Choreographe dby Brian Macdonald .Music :

Harry Freedman .NOV. 7—"PAS DE DIX" — Choreographed b y

Balanchine . Music : Glazounov."THE STILL POINT"—Choreographedby Todd Bolender .Music : Debussy String Quartet ."MONCAYO I" — Choreographed byGloria Contreras . Music : Pablo Moncayo"DAYDREAM" (a Pas de Deux by Le oAhonen) . Music : Minkus."LES PATINEURS"—Sir Frederick Ash -ton—choreographer . Music : Meyerbeer .

QUEEN ELIZABETH THEATRE—NOV. 19 AT 8 :30

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4.50, 4.00, 3 .50, 2.50TICKETS THE

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THE BAY—681-3351

Thursday, November 2, 1967

THE UBYSSEY

Page 3

TOO IMPERSONAL

UBC conducive to suicide

— hurt hilger photo 'KEEPING WATCH over the local polling station can be adrag. Especially when Diane Karanko, arts 1, decides to takethe notice seriously and casts her vote for posterity .

Bedpanners vs homewreckersin annual sacred madness

By IRENE WASILEWSKI

A most sacred rite of madness will take place 'in the Thun-derbird Stadium today .

The ceremony,held annually, is widely known as the Teacu pgame.

The protectors of the hearth fires (home economics students)will do battle at noon with the changers of the bedpans (nurses)in what is touted as a football match.

Receipts will be used to aid the crippled children at th eChildren's hospital .

The warring • priestesses have been in holy retreat for amonth, preparing and purifying themselves for the conflict withthe help of UBC football teams .

At half time, when the players of the honored game willpause to refresh themselves, the red servants of Mars (engineers )and the green giants (foresters) will entertain the watching godswith a chariot race .

This feat of muddiness will be followed by one even moreOlympic, a boat race which is actually a drinking contest .

New gallery comin gUBC will have a new art gallery in two years, says B . C .

Binning, head of the fine arts department .An off-campus fund raising campaign, now under way, wil l

provide the gallery as part of the Norman MacKenzie Centreof the Fine Arts, Binning said .

He said the gallery has been held up by the universit yadministration, which he says puts top priority on teachin gbuildings ._

"A university gallery should be a teaching gallery and anexperimental gallery. It can try things that the city galler ycan't because it won't have to please a membership."

By FRED CAWSEY

The atmosphere at UBC is conducive to sui-cide, says campus psychiatrist Dr . ConradSchwarz .

"The fundamental reason for most suicides i sisolation, the feeling that nobody cares," Schwarzsaid in an interview .

Large campuses like UBC tend to deperson-alize students by giving them large lecture classe sand impersonal registration numbers, he said .

"With the system as it is, however, there i snot much we can do except let people know thereis someone who cares."

"People who are contemplating suicide need

Students, facultyarrested in sit-in

IOWA CITY (CUP-CPS) — More than ahundred University of Iowa students and facultymembers were arrested here Wednesday in thecourse of a sit-in to stop marine recruiting .

The demonstration, organized by Studentsfor a Democratic Society and the Iowa City Draf tResistance Union, blocked the entrance to th eIowa Memorial Union where recruiting was be-ing carried on for the marine corps . Occasionalviolence broke out during the morning a sstudents and counter - demonstrators from of fcampus attacked the sit-in line. Some student sgoing to interviews charged the human blockade ,and others crawled over it, stepping on demon-strators in the line .

Early Wednesday afternoon dean of academi caffairs Bill Hubbard and Iowa vice-presidentWillard Boyd tried to talk both demonstrator sand anti-demonstrators into leaving the area .They were not successful, and so called in out-side police .

A phalanx of over a hundred law officersfrom around eastern Iowa marched in formationagainst the hecklers and anti-demonstrators ,scattering them.'They then gave the sit-in grou ptwo minutes to clear the area. Some took ad-vantage of the offer, but most stayed on theline. Police then dragged them away to waitin gcars and wagons . Most went limp, but one gir llashed out with teeth and feet at police officers .

Some faculty members have made complaintsto the American Association of University Pro-fessors about the administration's failure to con-trol violence among contending factions ofstudents during the morning .

Persky pesteredAt least two members of the student counci l

are unhappy that arts undergraduate presidentStan Persky has severed formal relations wit hthe Alma Mater Society.

Don Munton, AMS first vice-president, sai dWednesday he was sorry arts would no longerhave a voice in student affairs .

"It will also damage the AMS," he said . "Rad-ical opinions are healthy in any organization ."

"A person should not withdraw because he isdisagreed with or opposed. Persky has brough tup some valuable points for the council t oconsider . "

Mike Coleman, chairman of university clubs ,also lamented Persky's decision Wednesday.

"It's unfortunate if he represents majorityarts opinion. I don't think he has the support ofa great many arts people," he said .

to know this . They want someone to care enoughto help them . "

Last year there were four suicides and 1 7attempts reported to the university health serv-ice .

"There were probably more that we didn'thear about," Schwarz said .

There have been no suicides at UBC so farthis year .

"The percentage of suicides among students ishigher than in the general public . "

A psychiatrist is on call 24 hours a day at thehealth service he said . "If anyone needs help,all they have to do is phone or come in . "

But talking to any friend or acquaintance isalso helpful . "Most people will take the time tohelp if someone in trouble phones them . "

Last year 400 students went to the psychiatri cclinic in the health service . Peak numbers wereduring November and January.

"Anyone who needs help only has to call usor come in and we will see them immediatelyor make an appointment if they wish," Schwarzsaid .

Legal aid a rightStudents don't have to appear before the

faculty council without legal aid .So said Alma Mater Society president Shaun

Sullivan Wednesday .The council has the authority granted by

senate to act as a student disciplinary body .' Sullivan said it meets in secret and some-times deals with what could be alleged crimina loffences against students .

"Students don't have to appear without legalcounsel," he said. "If anyone is given noticeto appear before the faculty council he can cometo the AMS and we'll arrange legal counsel forhim."

Altered cataloguingmay cause confusion

By HEW GWYNNEDon't panic next term if your favorite book

on Ethiopian ant eaters isn't catalogued whereyou're used to finding it .

Major systems changes in library cataloguin gand filing will be fully operative by January,said cataloguing head J. M. Elrod .

The changes are incorporated in new cata-loguing and filing rules laid down by the Anglo-American Cataloguers Association in Canada, theU.S ., Great Britain and Australia .

Studies of catalogue use in public and acad-emic libraries from 1934 to 1967 revealed thatthe present international system has always beentroublesome Elrod said .

The planned change, the first since 1911 ,is due to the advent of the computer .

Simplicity is the basis of the new rules be -cause computers, unlike humans, are unable tomake detailed subject distinctions .

In future more importance will be placed ondirect authority from the book, he said .

For example, to find Mark Twain now, astudent looks under Samuel Clemens .

Under the the new rules the book will becatalogued under Mark Twain.

A questionnaire developed by the UBC library .staff will be distributed to five hundred student sbetween Nov. 6 and Nov . 28. These will helpdetermine how the new rules can be best applie dat UBC.

ES, SIR!

THE SLAC KHOLE O FCALCUTTA

SIR!

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

NOVEMBER 2, 1967

ActionWednesday's overwhelming vote of confidence in th e

Canadian Union of Students was a vote for action .It was a rejection of the concept of students as non-

citiizens without the right to organize for educationaland social reform .

The most remarkable thing about the referendu mwas the interest shown by UBC students in their nationa lunion.

One-third of students voted — a large turnout in anyUBC poll — and 70 per cent of them wished to continu eas CUS members . This interest was previously untapped .CUS affairs have been shuttled aside by Alma MaterSociety councils into CUS committees which were rarel yconsulted.

But as CUS president Hugh Armstrong pointed outafter Wednesday's impressive victory, the local head ofthe national union is the student council president . AMSpresident Shaun Sullivan and his executive — as chief sof the UBC local of CUS —must now take on respon-sibility for making the organization work at UBC .

The last CUS congress passed some important re -solutions — particularly concerning educational reform .

It is time for these resolutions to be put to work .The Ottawa office can advise and ihform — but the locallevel is where the action is .

No wayCutting enrolment is no way to tackle UBC's finan-

cial problems. .For the only way to cut enrolment is to raise en-

trance standards. And the standards now used in the-university's admissions policy — based chiefly on high-school marks — are badly inadequate.

Student performance in the ugly atmosphere of B .C .high schools, we feel, does not indicate what admissionsofficers claim it indicates .

Education in most high schools has become a peri-pheral concern only . Primary aim of today's secondaryinstitutions is to inculcate students with the tribal habitsof the lower middle class — the home culture of highschool teachers .

Nothing else than this conclusion can explain th eperverse obsession of school principals and teacher sto do away with long hair and mini-skirts . Nothing elsecan explain the backwardness of curriculum and of teach-ing methods and the false insistence that authority i salways right .

In the process of high school "education", creativityand curiosity are likely to be dulled if not killed. Themost creative students are likely to drop out .

For these reasons we urge UBC's administration t oavoid the proposed plan to cut enrolment next year . Theuniversity should try to salvage — not shut out — thetalent damaged in public high schools .

Chess, anyone ?Math prof Nathan Divinsky says The Ubyssey is no

good because it doesn't have a chess or bridge column .We agree with the learned professor that Th e

Ubyssey could use a good chess or bridge column .We also agree with the growing feeling in Canad a

that student papers should not be student papers — the yshould serve the whole university community, includin gfaculty,

We extend, therefore, an invitation to write a ches scolumn for The Ubyssey to UBC 's top chess player —Dr. Nathan Divinsky .

CAL)q n d then we st'arh'ed k wonder what the

hell is the ood of(3-halo a teja , ?<yY

' :. :::fix ;.

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"I agree, Captain — that load will either rock the boat or sink the ship ." : > " ::.. .o..«'`rod>`a4t~%::' e"`p.:.

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UNTHINKING RESPONS E

Reception proves needfor loudmouth senators

By MIKE BOLTON

Reception of student sena-tors by some elder senatorsand by conservative opinion-leaders in the downtown pressconfirms that students chosethe right people .

Picture the consternation inthe face of poor, baffled sena-tor Stuart Lefeaux when stu-dent senators dared to speakout loud at their first meeting .

Lefeaux complained he hadsat in senate for a whole yea rwithout saying a word . Pre-sumably, if the senator ha danything to say, he wouldhave said it .

Like most alumni senators ,however, Lefeaux probablyhas nothing to say .

STARTLING

Far more startling was th ereaction of arts dean DennisHealy to student senators .

Gabor Mate asked when thecommittee considering dele-tion of the two-year languag erequirement for the B .A. pro-gram would report .

Senator Healy replied: "Thereport will be ready when i twill be ready . "

Well now, that's very dra-matic, senator, but it doesn' treally help elp much.

Probably academics don't al-ways make good administra-tors. But almost everyoneknows committees must some -times be prodded. Any house -wife organizing a tea partyknows it is sometimes neces-sary to remind the angel cakebaker to arrive on time .

Perhaps the senator shoul dconsult his wife on adminis-trative technique .

GAGE FAI R

Generally, the student sena-tors were happy with their re -

could they? Senate secrecyprevented it.

It claims student senatorsare verbose . Why not call themarticulate? They were electedmembers delivering their con-stituents' demands.

It speaks of the "noisy an dpowerful minority of studentopinion ." Does the Provinceeditor mean the majority wh ovoted for the senators? Is thismajority a powerful minority ?

ARROGANCEThe editorial also charges

student senators entered th echamber bearing conceale dweapons . It reads: "(They ent-ered) . . . fully armed with thenatural arrogance of their gen-eration and the self-righteous-ness of their activist philoso-phy

In future, I suggest, all stu-dent senate candidates mustbe screened for possession ofnatural arrogance and activ-ist self-righteousness .

When people react in thiskind of unthinking manner ,students almost feel obliged .to elect representatives likelyto cause upset . The reactionaccents the need for strongstudent senators .

who had a bulbous nose . Ann Arkywas skewered on a scythe, the nflew off the handle .

Meanwhile trembling truant straipsed toward two towering tur-rets teeming with testy terrorists,and grotesque glowering giants glee -fully gobbled greasy goblins. Feelingairy, but not making errors, wereMike Finlay, Norm Gidney, Lin Tse -Hsu, Paul Knox, Steve Jackson ,Jane Kennon, Fred Cawsey, Iren eWasilewski, L a u n n e ArmstrongPatrick Dean, Laurie Dunbar andJudy Young. Hew Gwynne waspuffy.

Into the jock shop wandered Mik eFitzgerald and John Twigs, wh opromptly dozed off .

As the hours passed, numblingmoans emitted from the darkroo mas Lawrence Woodd, Chris Blake,George Hollo and Bob Brown didpushups.

ception in senate. Senatechairman Dean Walter Gag etreated them fairly and manysenators appeared interested i nthe students' proposals .

The mere fact of senatorslike Lefeaux and Healy con-firms the need for studentsenators who are fearlesslyvocal and candid, who may in-duce these unwilling eldersenators to look at themselvescandidly.

That student senators needthese qualities is also apparentfrom their reception in th edowntown press. Particularly ,a Province editorial on Oct .28 contains curious percep-tions about active students .

If the editorial was an at-tempt to derive sense fromnonsense, it was barely suc-cessful . If not, it was merelyglutted with illogic nonsense .

SENATE SECREC Y

The editorial suggests stu-dent senators should haveknown money had been donat-ed specifically for a clocktower, and that they shouldalso have known there was asenate committee consideringdeletion of the two-yearlanguage requirement . How

EDITOR: Danny Wellman

City Stuart Gra yNews Susan Gransb yManaging Murray McMilla nPhoto Kurt Hilge rAssociate . . .. AI Birnie, Kirsten EmmettSenior Pat Hrushow ySports Mike Jesse nWire Charlotte HairePage Friday •• : Judy Bin gAss't. City Boni Le e

Without realizing the gravity o ftheir act, the gods turned the edi-torial room upside clown. Justweight and see, cried Jade Eden ,who hit the ceiling and pounded th eplaster in fury . Irving Fetish raspedhis nails against a light fixture andgot into a scrape with an electrician

rhursday, November 2, 1967 .

THE UBYSSEY

Page 5

LETTERS TO THE EDITO RHallucinationEditor, The Ubyssey:

I must repeat my complaintre your report on my lectureof Oct. 18 "UBC places ofsweet hallucination" in you rpaper on Oct . 19 .

This report has done memuch harm — anybody canpoint to it in order to proveme an irresponsible fool.

I wish to repeat that I amconvinced that your reporterfell victim to his confusion anddid not intend to reportwrongly . Still it is your dutyto try to undo the harm as farpossible .

I never said that the "pub-lishing Laws of Canada" aresimilar to those of Nazi Ger-many and allow publicationonly of something pleasant t othe government !

What I did say was that theattitude of Canadian editors—based on primitive prejudice— Ubyssey included — hasprevented me for twelve yearsto get such facts published as"the Crown can do no wrong "— compares in theory withHitler's position.

KARL BURA U

Censured !The President & Secretary,The Alma Mater Society,Dear Sir :

The Acadia Camp ResidenceCouncil, as a body independen tof, but representing 490 indivi-dual members (from a wid evariety of Faculties) of theAlma Mater Society has, forthe following reasons, passed amotion censuring the AMS forits financial policies with re-gard to its budget allotment tothe arts undergraduate society :

1 . The arts undergraduatesociety is the largest of theundergraduate societie s(having 5,646 members )and therefore should re-c e i v e a proportionallylarger allotment than otherundergraduate societies.

2 . The arts undergraduatesociety is proving itself aviable and responsible or -ganization, showing evid-ent concern for its mem -bers by providing:a) responsible democratic

government in its Jef-fersonian sense .

b) the valuable informa-tion in the free artsanti-calendar . .

c) the convenience of freelocker space.

d) entertainment in t h eform of free dances .

It is understood that they areplanning further beneficia lprograms .

3 . By the very nature of it soperation, the arts under-graduate society has led toa valuable discussion andexamination of the conceptof student government, itscomposition, and i t smethods.

It is therefore felt on thebasis of numbers, benefits of-fered, and general value, th earts undergraduate society wasunjustly dealt with in thisyear's Amla Mater Societybudget .

Yours sincerely ,

ACADIA CAM PGENERAL COUNCI L

EnoughEditor, The Ubyssey:

Along with The Ubysseythere appeared last Fridaysome copies of a sinister "docu-ment" called Enough, put ou tby the Frosh Orientation Com-mittee of UBC .

What was said in Enoughcars be read in any communis tpublication, and one can onlyconclude that the FOC mos tpossibly has connections wit hthe local communist party .

Although this interestin gpamphlet flits from one topi cto another in a most unrelatedand chaotic manner, it doe smaintain a semblance of unityin that it attacks "imperialism "a n d the "U.S. capitalists"(words heard quite frequentlyover Radio Hanoi) throughout .

It contains the usual rash ofquotes from Marx, Hegel, HoChi Minh, and of course, evenMao .

It succeeds quite well in in-ferring that fascism and th epresent American governmentare synonomous.

It blithely makes the mos tludicrous statements withouteven attempting to provethem: eg . Malcolm X was mur-dered by the CIA .

Then it "comes out with somebeautiful half-truths that onewould swear were copied rightout of Das Kapital : " . . . all

governments are institutionswhich serve the interests o fthe dominant class in society . "

It goes on to say : "The mos tbeautiful thing about the pro-cess of the Vietnamese revolu-tion . . is that they will winin the end." The idea of im-minent victory is a favorit epsychological pitch used bycommunists, and re-occurs per-sistently in writings of Marx ,etc :

The Frosh. Orientation Com-mittee has just done a fine jobof producing 16 sheets of com-munist propaganda, w h i c hmeans • sadly enough, that whatthey produced isn't even ori-ginal .

What I resent most, how-ever, is the fact that such apublication must have cos tmoney.

And where did they get tha tmoney?

From unsuspecting, innocen tstudents like myself when Ipayed my AMS fees .

BARRY GAET Zed 2

President of The We're NotGoing To Let The Commun-ists Get Aw lay With This

Society

TabooEditor, The Ubysse y

As in many letters to th eeditor I read, the criticism ofarticles often amounts to noth-ing more than the personal con-demnation of the writer, inthis case John Mate by criticRobert Shaw, arts 2. The sub-ject — obscene four lette rwords .

I think that what Mr . Shawfails to see is that such word sare merely a part of the greattaboo concerning all thing ssexual . It's only human to veilsex with an aura of secrecy.The word f-u-c-k may as wellbe s-h-o-e for all it really mat-ters (or if you will "A rose byany other name would smell assweet") for it is the iconoclas mof just saying the word that isreally important .

And of course the more youattempt to screen it, the moreimportant, risque, and auda-cious the word becomes ..

As Mr. Mate says, f-u-c-k i snot obscene in itself; it is ratherthe connotation of the sexua lact which is obscene.

But of course the sexual act

is not obscene, if anything it isa natural, possibly beautiful,and obviously most necessaryfunction in life.

But if people like Mr . Shawcontinue to be offended b ywords connoting sexual inter -course, they will continue toconnote sex as obscene,' andthe taboo will remain, andchildren will continue to whis-per and giggle at "dirty" wordsin back alleys .

Moreover, if Mr . Shaw andhis fellow Victorians reallywant a truly obscene four let-ter word to get hot and bother-ed about, may I recommen dthe word K-I-L-L .

MARCIA MACAULA Yarts 2

Mike againEditor, The Ubyssey :

Well done, Dr . Goebbels .I am writing this letter be-

fore the CUS referendu mpolls close, to say your Tues-day CUS issue (which the AM Spresident assured council o nMonday would be "objective" )had a far from impartial im-pact . (Boylan's personal dia-tribe didn't bother me ; in facthis castigation of my recor dwas delightful, in that he serv-ed two years on my counciland another as AMS VP, andnever got beyond empty rhe-toric and interdepartmentalmemos on the same issues .

But your failure to print ananti-CUS article by a memberof students' council after yo uhad promised to print it dis-turbs me.

And I would appreciate aprinted apology from whoeverwas responsible for the front-page story that included myname as a CUS rally speaker ,since the first I had heard ofthis "commitment" was onreaching campus at 1 :15 p .m .that day .

(Which is Ubyssey policy: toprint falsehoods deliberately ,or merely not to bother check-ing the truth of their informa-tion with the people concern-ed? )

Now that the fuss andfeathers have settled some-what, I presume (perhaps op-timistically) that you will per-mit a few remarks as to thepro-CUS Big Lie technique s oably utilized :

(1) CUS is still opposed to

the student loan plan in prin-ciple (source: CUS pres . Arm-strong at council Monday) ,despite recent claims that itengineered the plan (pardonthe pun) .

(2) CUS did not get theprovincial sales tax taken offtexts (a provincial tax! Theauthors of this blatant balder-dash didn't even restrict thei rlies to areas of ambiguity .)

I'm not sure which is agreater problem — an ineffec-tive CUS or an irresponsibl eUbyssey,

MIKE COLEMANPresident University

Clubs Committee

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DR. LAURIER LAPIERRESpeaks on

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THURSDAY — NOV. 2 — NOON (12:30) — ANGUS 11 0

Lecture — Discussion — Question s

FALL FAIREVENT:

"THE FLOODINGOF FLORENCE"

NOV . 4th, 1967 MARKS THE FIRSTANNIVERSARY OF THIS EVENT .

the film will be shown :Friday—7:15 p.m.

Saturday—4:45 p.m.

FALL FAIREVENT:

THE

JAPANESE TEACEREMONY

AUDIENCE LIMITED BY SPAC EFRIDAY: 8 :00 P.M .

SATURDAY: 2 AND 5 P.M .

SPECIAL ZVZNTS

Page 6

THE UBYSSEY

Thursday, November 2, 1967

ANOTHERLETTER

Why ?Editor, The Ubyssey:

As an arts student and amember of the arts undergrad-uate society, I would like topoint out to all Alma Mate rSociety members what is be-ing done by the AMS bud -get . The AMS budget, whichis a statement of where the$29, each of you pay to theAMS will go, has not allocat-ed any money to the largestundergraduate society o ncampus .

The AUS, representing 4,70 9students, was elected by thestudents of the arts facultylast year to plan a programfor them. Naturally theyunderstood that any such pro -gram was to be subsidised bythe AMS with part of the $2 9each of them paid . They evenrealised that such an amountwas not going to be sufficientto carry on the plans thatwere pending and voted t ohave another $2 from each o fthem go directly to the AUS.

Now, the budget commit-tee to the AMS has submitte da budget which grants noth-ing to a body of students wh ohave already paid them over$135,000 !

Why must we pay for noth-ing? Aren't we, in effect, sub-sidising other undergrad so-cieties without being giventhe same consideration bythem? Why is this kind ofdiscrimination allowed to goon in a democracy?

S. MITCHEL Larts 4 .

COLLEGESHOP

BROCK EXTENSIO N

By VLADIMIR VASCHEKIt's a small point Miss Blair .Being hungry and short of cash, Ruthie, I risked my money

on your bacon and tomato sandwich . (The price has dropped anickel to 35 cents in recent days! )

But when it arrived, Miss Blair, the sandwich was bare .Of bacon, that is, except for one shrivelled slice . Huge slabs o ftomato. Delicious tomatoes !

But only one slice of bacon?It is maybe like the proverbial pork and beans, Miss Blair ,

with a small rind of pork thrown in to avoid the more stringentof our misleading advertising laws ?

(My guess is food services got stung with a car load o ftomatoes and the price of pigs being what it is the student get sshaved when he buys a bacon and tomato sandwich . )

At least, Ruthie, mark it on the menu, "Tomato with Bacon . "Nobody wants to mislead diners about food services food . Right ?

As I said, Miss Blair, it's a small point .

/t.

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Also, interviews for Summer Employment will be held wit hGeology and Geophysics students in 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 4th andpost-graduate years .

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"CHELSEA GIRLS"Andy Warhol's Shocking Movie !

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YOU MUST SEE IT—ONE OF THE MOST TALKED-ABOUT ACCOMPLISHMENTS IN YEARS .

3 Showings in UBC's Aud.NOV. 10—FRI . — 1 :30 & 7 :30

NOV. 14 — TUES. — 7 :30AT S .F.U .—NOV. 18—7:30

Students & Staff $1 .50Others $2.00

SPECIAL EVENT S

"As I see it, Ievtushenko, your problem isthat your poems don't lose enough in thetranslation."

—from the Peak

Thursday, November 2, 1967

THE UBYSSEY

Page 7

TIME'S A-CHANGIN G

CYC means social chang eBy BILL GRAF

At a time of year when campus interviews forpositions in selling toothpaste and manufacturin gnapalm are taking place, the role of the Compan yof Young Canadians seems particularly significant .

The CYC offers $35 per month wages plus roo mand board and a 'monthly honorarium of $50 oncompletion of two years' service . Fringe benefitsinclude medical expenses, two weeks' vacation,life insurance, transportation costs and an annual$100 clothing allowance .

CROWN CORPORATIO NA crown corporation created by an Act of Parlia-

ment in July, 1966, the organization offers Cana-dian youth direct and personal involvement in theimmediate problems of poverty, racial discrimina-tion, unrealistic education and underprivileged socia lgroups .

Essentially CYC is concernedwith social change.

In a statement of its aims th eCompany deplores the dehumaniz-ing aspects of technology, the pro-liferation of bureaucracies and"the blatant contradictions of themodern world — the existence sid eby side of poverty and plenty, ofjustice and oppression, of freedo mand authoritarianism . "

"Yet these contradictions," the -

GRAFstatement continues, "strike at the very heart o fcontemporary technological thought ; namely, theinevitability of progress . . . We doubt the criteriawhich people use to justify this concept . Too oftenthese criteria appear to be quantitative things .

"Often `progress' seems to .be defined only inmaterial terms, with little or no reference to huma nvalues or relationships among individuals . "

The Company seeks to better the social, economi cand cultural needs of individuals and communitiesto help people learn to control their own destinie sand to establish "a society in which diversity rindvariety are at the basis of human life . "

To do this, it operates from a maximally de -centralized system of organization which is in fac trun by its members and in which ultimate respon-sibility rests with the individual volunteer worker.INVOLVEMENT AND SELFHEL P

The CYC's methods are total involvement andself-help . Volunteers live and work among their hostcommunities, working with and not for them ; assist-ing, not imposing .

Most of its projects originate as requests fro mcitizens' groups, government departments or volun-tary agencies who supply the materials or fund swhile the CYC pays the salary and expenses of it spersonnel .

One of the Company's five national offices is i na second-floor office at 1929 W . Broadway. Headed

by ex-social worker Geoff Cue, the Vancouver offic eco-ordinates the eight CYC projects in B.C .

Dorothy Hill, 28, a registered nurse and one o fthe Company's first volunteers, described these pro-jects in an interview .

A Vancouver post-release center for Indian ex-convicts operated by Ross Eadie aims at compensat-ing for the shortage of probation officers .

Eadie's job is to assist the ex-con in returningto "normal" society — giving advice, finding jobs ,arranging further training and, according to Mis sHill, "mainly just being there when he's needed . "

Volunteers in Project Outreach work with Van-couver Boys' Clubs on street programs for teen -agers . Under Jim Patterson of Halifax the groupformed a dance band that played with others at th ePNE last summer .

Maeve Hancey helps public-housing tenants indeveloping their own self-help measures . In Pentic-ton, Roy Daniels works with youth in originating acoffee-house and teen drop-in center .

COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENTThe Victoria project has assisted in housing and

finding jobs for destitute hippies, and in promotingyouth activities of all kinds .

The Cormorant Island Project in Alert Bayunder Dal Brodhead was the subject of a Star Week-ly (Sept. 2, 1967) feature article. In this projec tBrodhead has succeeded in becoming involved in s omany activities that the project might be terme d"community development . "

Within a few months Brodhead has becom ean accepted member of the community, been"adopted" by a local Indian family, organized week-ly teen dances, provided sports and games foryounger children, formed a study group of ex -dropouts while persuading others to return to school ,participated in community activities from cleanin gbees to chopping wood, supplemented the area'ssocial services, acted as legal counsel for under -privileged juveniles and assisted in rehabilitationeffort, and acted as intermediary between the com-munity and higher levels of government .

FREE SCHOOL SAnd the Company works in two "free schools, "

one in North Van, the other — termed "Knowplace "occupies a large two-story house at 2426 York, em -ploys a ' staff of 22 .

Conceived and developed by a group of PointGrey parents and representatives of the CYC, Know -place represents a revolutionary approach to educa-tion at the high-school level .

There are no structured classes and students learnwhat they want to at their own pace. Field trips ,direct experience and creativity are its methods .

"At Knowplace," says Miss Mill, "the teache rwill ask the student `Will you help me do so-and-so 'and not 'Do this!' "

Characteristic of CYC projects, the free schools

attempt to give individuals the equipment to developtheir own latent capabilities .

No one pretends that the Company has enjoye dan unbroken string of successes .

"Any new public agency is bound to be contro-versial to the extent that it receives governmen taid," says Miss Hill .

In its first year the CYC has been granted a$1.2 million budget, which it has managed to reduceto $850,000 or about $12,000 per volunteer, whic his expected to drop to $8,000 in two years .

GREATEST PROBLEMSOne of the greatest problems is defining project s

and the role of the volunteer. Since the CYC standsoutside standard government agencies, is relativel ynew and not yet popularly accepted, the individualworker often complains of being isolated, unable todefine his role, and of lack of support .

Occasionally volunteers unsuitable for the Com-pany's demanding work have been randomlyselected and placed in difficult situations, which hasresulted in a number of resignations and abandon-ment of projects .

There are no formal qualifications for volunteers .The Company recruits from campuses, from laborand white-collar, from minority and majority groups ,wherever young Canadians are .

Young means anyone over 18. The oldest CYCvolunteer is 52 .

On the other hand volunteers must be energetic ,idealistic and realistic . They must be more thanaware of social problems ; they must have a sincereand active desire to correct them .

But the volunteer's activities, in Cue's words ,are a two-edged sword . On the one hand, he helpssolve human problems. On the other he receivesa learning experience which can profoundly affecthis own life: working with all types of people,translating theory into practice and doing selfless ,dedicated work .

WHITE MIDDLE-CLAS S"Most of us come from white middle-class en-

vironments," says Miss Hill, "knowing little of th erest of society .

"Here we learn to work with and understand alltypes of people and get immersed in something w ebelieve in . "

Miss Hill eloquently summarized her reasons forjoining the CYC, reasons which more or less applyto most volunteers .

A former nurse, she felt that even her professionwas too depersonalized and unrewarding .

"I think people are more worthwhile than ma -chines and computers," she says, "and I wanted toget directly involved in humanity .

"Financial support is important in helpingpeople," says Miss Hill, "but is strictly limited . Youcan't rehabilitate an alcoholic or restore an Indian'sdignity with money .

1i MOSr (POLAR ff D

ati Ti-I E CAMPOS. . ,

EL'EkyNIGHT AT. . .

1) Theological Colleges -Parking Lot - 9 p.m. 2) FortCamp Women's Residence -9:10 p.m. 3) Fort CampHuts - Corner Marine Dr.& Fort Rd. - 9:25 p.m. 4 )International - Panhelleni cHouse - Parking Lot 9 :35p.m. 5) Totem Park Com-mon Block - 9 :58 p.m. 6)Lower Mall Common Bloc k- 10:15 p.m. 7) Library -10:30 p.m. 8) Brock Hall -10:40 p.m. 9) FraternityHouses - 11 :00 p.m. 10)Acadia Camp - CornerAcadia Rd. & Agronomy

Rd. - 11:30 p.m.

Page 8

THE UBYSSEY

Thursday, November 2, 1967

— Ivan somlyoi photo

THE EDUCATION FLOAT in Saturday's Homecoming parade was of PNE calibre according t othe judges . EUS officers say they have been offered substantial amounts of money for thei rfirst prize float.

Child day careA day nursery for UBC's married students'

children at St . Anselm Anglican Church has beenvetoed by the church's vestory.

The vestory, or executive of the parish, turne ddown the proposal for a day care centre after itwas opposed by the sanctuary guild .

The guild is a group of 39 women who pre-pare the church for Sunday services, funeral sand weddings .

Guild president Majorie Rae said memberswould not be able to carry out their work i fthe centre was instituted .

"We have ironing to do, flowers to arrangeand kitchen duties to attend to," she said .

Guild vice-president Dory Best said the day-care centre was the university's responsibilty .

Jim Marshall, in charge of church insurance ,asked in a letter why the church should help uni-versity students when the hall could Ibe used bythe parish .

"Now we see what kind of a parish we are ,unwilling to inconvenience ourselves for the sake

centre vetoedof others," said C . P. Taylor, member of thechurch committee of St . Anselin's .

Gov't . hush heavedMINNEAPOLIS, Minn . (CUP-CPS)--The U .S .

air force has cancelled a research project at th eUniversity of Minnesota which was so secret thatthe university's newly selected president didn'teven know what it was .

When the president, Malcolm Moos, found outabout the project, he objected strongly, and sai dhe didn't want the university to be involved insecret government research .

But the air force said it cancelled renewalof the two-year $200,000 contract because of lackof funds, not Moos' objections .

The Minnesota Daily learned the contractinvolved methods of interrogation, humans wer eused as subjects, and the campus police were In-volved .

BANNED HIGH BANNED

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Restricted — AMS, Faculty o r

Staff Cards must be show n

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WestinghouseWill Be on Campus November 7, 196 7

to Interview 1968 Commerce Graduate s

(Marketing and Industrial Administration Options )

A well-defined training program is offered to prepare can-didates for positions of responsibility in :

COMMERCIAL OPERATION SPRODUCTION

These positions will afford opportunity for career develop-ment to graduates with potential .

Professional salary scale and increases based on perfor-mance as well as excellent employee fringe benefit plans .

Contact the Placement Office for detailed information, bro-chures and interview appointment.

THE INTERNATIONAL FALL FAI R

PROGRAMMEFRIDAY, NOV. 3rd

7:00 p.m.7:1 5

8:00

9:00

10:00

11 :1 5

12:00 midnight

OPENINGFILM: The Flooding of Florence, Italy .(Upper Lounge, International House . )JAPANESE TEA CEREMON Y(Lower Lounge, I .H . )FLOOR SHOW(Upper Lounge, I .H . )FASHION SHOW(Upper Lounge, I .H . )FLOOR SHOW(Upper Lounge, l.H . )CLOSED until 2 :00 p.m. Saturday.

SATURDAY, NOV. 4th

2:00 p .m .

JAPANESE TEA CEREMONY(Nitobe Memorial Gardens, Admission a tInternational House. )

3:30

Combined FASHION and FLOOR SHOW(Upper Lounge, International House . )

4:45

FILM: The Flooding of Florence. (To be intro-duced by the Italian Consul General .)

5:00

JAPANESE TEA CEREMONY(Lower Lounge, I .H. )FLOORSHOW(Upper Lounge, I .H. )Final Combined FASHION and FLOOR SHOW(Upper Lounge, I .H . )

9:00

DANCE to the Trinidad "MOONLIGHTERS."(Upper Lounge, I .H .)

Stop in any time for a light snack in the

INTERNATIONAL RESTAURAN TLower Lounge

West Mall a tSTUDENTS .50

ADULTS $1 .00

Northwest Marine on Campus

6:30

7:30

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Miss

AddressAddress

City lone—StateOFFICES TNRODUNOUT Y.S .A. AND CANADA

Parking control plan 'unacceptable '

— hurt hilger photo

THINGS ARE ROUGH all over . Even buildings and grounds workers are forced to take to th ewagon to rake leaves for something to do . We've heard of make work but this is ridiculous .

Thursday, November 2, 1967

THE UBYSSEY

Page 9

LONDON (UNS) — Parking controls will no tbe instituted at the University of Western Ontarioas planned .

In a letter to facutly, staff and studentsOct . 25, university president D . Carlton Williamswithdrew the deadline for a temporary system o ffees and controls announced last week .

The letter said : "Obviously my proposal has

Safe to sniff?One can't be too careful when checking wha t

me sniffs these days .Du Pont of Canada has issued a strong warn-

ing about sniffing vapors from products labelled;ale to use for other purposes .

Fluorocarbon 12, used as a refrigerant an daerosol propellant, has harmed many peopl erho inhale concentrated quantities for phyche-

ielic effects .

turned out to be unacceptable. It has been widelyinterpreted apparently as a `foot in the door 'dodge . "

Student cars were barred from the UWOcampus Oct . 24 following a protest park-in .

Students were protesting the parking regula-tions and the way they were imposed . A $12 stu-dents fee was imposed with no student consult-ation .

Western had never previously had parkin gfees .

Western had never previously had parkin gations with the staff association, university stu-dents' council, society of graduate students ,masters of business administration associationand the faculty association on the parking ques-tion .

Williams said that since summer meetings"everybody has changed their mind so they'resquawking . We'd better get back to the drawingboard ."

PANGO-PANGO ('UNS)—The purple suede blorgs Wednes-day approached the -opalescent puce blorgs to establish porna-

graphic relations. First reports indicate these hitherto unindulgedactions were a horny success . .

Westinghous ewill be on Campus November 6, 7 and 8, 1967

to interview 1968 Engineering Graduate s

ELECTRICAL - MECHANICAL - PHYSIC S

A well-defined training program is offered to prepare can-

didates for positions of responsibility in :

DESIGN AND DEVELOPMENT ENGINEERIN G

RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT

MANUFACTURING ENGINEERIN G

INDUSTRIAL ENGINEERIN G

FACTORY ENGINEERING

SERVICE ENGINEERING

FIELD INSTALLATION

QUALITY CONTROL AND TES T

TECHNICAL MARKETING AND SALE S

These positions will afford opportunity for career develop-

ment to graduates with potential .

Professional salary scale and increases based on perfor-mance as well as excellent employee fringe benefit plans .

Contact the Placement Office for detailed information ,brochures and interview appointment .

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fort°hemists and engineers in theonly solution potash mining compan yin the world toda y

Our representative will be on yourcampus for interviews

NOVEMBER 7th

Details are available in the studentplacement office .

Kalium Chemicals Limited

Page 10

THE UBYSSEY

Thursday, November 2, 1967

LAW JOURNAL

A flea to irritate the mindCOLLEGE

SHOPBROCK EXTENSION

Tutoring in All Subjects—Individua lNo Contract s

Mr. L J. LeddyB .A., M .A ., B.L .S . Director

Canadian Tutorial Centre

736-6923

A new law journal designed to make student sand faculty scratch their heads has appeared oncampus .

Carey Linde, editor of the Flea, said Wed-nesday he hopes the new law students' associationpublication will irritate people 's minds .

An editorial in the first edition released thi sweek says the journal aims to bring law educa-tion up to date and end traditional teacher -student rivalry in the faculty of law .

"The faculty must concern itself less with thegame of being faculty and the students shoul dconcern themselves less with being students," i tsays .

Linde said in an interview that the faculty

U of S works it outSSASKATOON {CUP) — Officials from the

University of Saskatchewan and the Saskatche-wan government have agreed to work out asystem of fiscal consultation .

Education minister J . C. McIsaac, and chair-man Allan Tubby of the U of S board of gov-ernors, said changes in university budgetin gprocedures can be made without altering theuniversity's independence .

Saskatchewan premier Ross Thatcher state dOct . 18 his intention to "reform our universityact in a major way . "

"The government is satisfied that the pas tbudgeting procedures of the university have re-sulted in careful scrutiny of university expendi-tures," said the McIsaac-Tubby release .

"With increasing costs, it is mutually agree dthat there should be developed an even bette rand more continuous system of consultation an dreporting . "

The release is viewed by some observers a sas a step back from the original government an-nouncement of direct financial control .

of law must come into closer contact with th erest of the university .

"We hope the Flea will contribute to a cross -faculty dialogue that will also bring law studentsand faculty closer together .

"Law has been steeped in tradition for 10 0years and law education has suffered as a result .People don't give money to law schools like the ydo to libraries and medical schools. "

The Flea will try to help students get moreout of their three years in law school than theydo at present, Linde said . "Many laws studentsaren't as serious as they should be ."

Although the law student's association active-ly supports the Flea, it can't spare enough mone yto publish the mimeographed journal .

"We'll have to solicit donations from stu-dents and faculty .

"We hope to avoid selling it by the issue ."The first issue has a circulation of 200 . This

will be doubled next month .Meanwhile, articles from law students and

faculty members as well as other students wil lbe welcome, Linde said .

Staff crisis seenVICTORIA (CUP) — Canada will soon be fac-

ing a university staff crisis .Harry Scargill, head of the University of

Victoria's graduate school, says Canadian gradu-ate schools must expand quickly to preventundergraduate programs from suffering .

"Canada is not turning out enough graduatesto staff three British Columbia universities nex tyear," he said .

He said approximately half UVic's staff wastrained outside Canada .

"How long can we expect American univer-sities to throw open their doors to Canadianswhen their own students are clamoring to ge tin ?" asked Scargill,

NEWLY RENOVATEDFeaturing Canadian and Greek Cuisin e

For your evening enjoyment a grea tnew band from Greece .

Introducing one of the famoussingers from Athen s

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Thursday, November 2, 1967

THE UBYSSEY

Page 1 1

IF YOUNGSTERS. . .

. . . GET INTERESTED

Field hockey has future here

Braves win secondof hockey season

The UBC ice hockey Braves put on their scoring skatesMonday night at the Winter Sports Center and left the ice witha 12-3 victory over the Richmond Flyers .

The Braves fired 48 shots at the hapless Richmond goaliewhile UBC goalie Mike Luchenko stopped 38 in a wide open

contest .Dwayne Biagioni led the Braves with three goals . Wes

Borkowski had two and Ernie Lawson, Wayne G'Froerer, Fran kLanzarotta, Mike Darnbourgh, Chris Latham, Tom Lewis, andLarry Watts had one each .

The Braves were leading 2-0 after the first period and hada 4-0 lead going into the third frame .

Coach Andy Bakogeorge was impressed by the team's wi nalthough he said it took them till the third period to really ge tgoing.

"They're a much improved team," said Bakogeorge . "Allthree forward lines are going well . "

The victory was the second straight in league play for th eBraves. They had previously beaten Ladner 5-2 .

Soccer story remains sameIt was the same old soccer story on Saturday .With, a chance to move into sole position o f

first place in the Pacific Coast Soccer League ,the Birds made some basic errors and playedto a 0-0 tie with North Shore United.

"Our team felt they could win easily butdidn't play good tactical soccer," said coach JoeJohnson.

He added he was happy with the tie sinceNorth Shore could have won the game .

"We underestimated the opposition," saidJohnson .

As a result the Birds are now tied for firstplace with Westminster and Burnaby Villa . Eachteam has four points .

POST HALLOWE'EN

BAS HQlJqhL jitain. Realm

UNITED EMPIRELOYALISTS

ARMOURIES, SAT., NOV. 4 8 :30-12:00 / e$1 .50 / $1 .00

Another chapter was written on Saturday in the continuingstory of the Blunderbirds .

For those of you who didn't see the so-called football gam ein Thunderbird Stadium, the Blunderbirds is the new nam efor the UBC Thunderbirds .

It was a stupid call by coach Frank Gnup which lead to theBirds' loss but he was not the lone goat . A few of the UBCplayers have to share the horns with Gnup .

The boners started when the Birds received the first Sas-katchewan' punt . We received the ball and a penalty for havingtoo many men on the field .

The Birds continued to have trouble with punts for o ntheir first punt of the game, Gnup apparently forgot to tell theteam they were playing Canadian rules not American .

The result was a no-yards penalty against the Birds.But did they learn from this booboo? No. The Birds got

two more no-yards penalties in the first half .Statistically , the Blunderbirds won over the Huskies .

They had more first downs : 7 to 6; more yards rushing :116 to 62; and more yards passing: 47 to 19 .

If they had had more brains, they would've beaten the ineptSaskatchewan team .

The call to try a field goal from the Saskatchewan 42, withtwo minutes left in the game, was Gnup's mistake and it led t othe silly Saskatchewan touchdown .

Gnup's promised secret offense didn't materialize . SaidGnup, after the game, "We were going to run it on the veryfirst play of the game, but we ran some other damn pla yinstead . "

The Birds have two games remaining in which to make u ptheir minds and start playing football .

Birds wrestle with proble min Saturday's muscle meet

The UBC Thunderbird wrestling team faces its first com-petition of the season this Saturday in the wrestling room of th enew Thunderbird Stadium .

The Birds will be fighting a team from Royal Roads whic hincludes several experienced wrestlers from Ontario . They ar eexpected to give the Thunderbirds strong competition .

The UBC team will be composed of Wayne Gilmer at 12 3lbs. ; Wayne Cave at 130; Denny Boulton at 137 ; Peter Rom-bough at 145 ; Dave Gray at 152 ; Dirk Heiss at 160; Paul Degraffat 167; Les Burgener at 177, and Bill Boyd at 191 .

Chris Nemeth will wrestle in the heavyweight division .First bouts begin at 2 p .m. on Saturday .

By MIKE JESSE NUbyssey Sports Editor

RESTAURANTandDining Room4544 W. 10th Ave.Vancouver 8, B.C.Ph. 224-1351

• Full DiningFacilitie s

• TakeHomeServic e

• Try OurPizza"Pick Up"

TUESDAYS —

12 :45 to_2 :45 p.m .WEDNESDAYS

2 :00 to 3 :30 p.m .7 :30 to 9 :30 p.m .

FRIDAYS —

3 :00 to 5 :00 p.m .7 :30 to 9:30 p.m . *

SATURDAYS —

3 :00 to 5 :00 p.m . *7 :30 to 9:30 p .m .

SUNDAYS

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

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

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

Skate Rental - 35c a pair . — Skate Sharpening - 35c a pairFor further information call 228-3197 or 224-320 5

U.B.C. THUNDERBIRDWINTER SPORTS CENTR E

SKATING SCHEDULE 1967 - 68

Effective September 29, 1967 to April 14, 1968

Contrary to what you maybelieve, field hockey, unlikepregnancy, is not restricted t owomen.

A good example of men' sfield hockey was given th efew spectators who turned outa week ago to see the touringAustralian National team playthe B.C. seconds at SpencerField.

Australia won 4-0 but a scoach Eric Broom, who alsocoaches UBC's field hockeyprogram, said, the B .C. young-sters were not outplayed .

"They were under pressurebut they came through well,"said Broom.

In fact we could have tiedthe score at one-all early in thegame but David Johannso nmissed the open net with awild drive. A wholly differen tgame may have resulted .

Almost the entire B .C. teamwas made up of UBC players.

When these same Australiansplayed the much tougher B .C .firsts on Saturday at Brock-ton, there were two presentmembers of the Birds andseven former members in theB.C. lineup ,

The Australians won thatone too, this time by a 5-2scot*, but three of those goalswere scored on an empty B.C .net.

In international field hockey ,substitution is not allowed sowhen B.C. goalie Harry Pres-ton was ejected for arguing

with the referee, the Aussie swere able to score three cheapgoals .

Broom says it should havebeen a draw or 3-2 for th eAussies.

"The 5-2 score was a littl ehard to take," said Broom.

UBC players have dominat-ed the field hockey scene inVancouver for years . Thisyear the Birds were split upinto two teams to even out thecompetition .

But in spite of their domina-tion here, Broom says theyneed to play international

competition to remain sharp .Private schools have field

hockey teams for boys but no tso at local high schools.

When four high schoolsform boys' field hockey teamsthen the Vancouver Athleti cAssociation will put the gameon a league schedule .

"It will be good for Canad ato have these young develop-ing players with internationalexperience," said Broom.

"In a couple of years, Cana-da will be a force to be reck-oned with in international fieldhockey."

Columbus is second with three points. Vic-toria has two, North Shore one and Firefightersare pointless .

According to Johnson, the league is goin gto be very close and competitive this year . Thenumber' of ties in play so far seems to bear ou tthis prediction .

The Birds will try to break the first placetie in their favor when they play Westminsteron Saturday in Thunderbird Stadium .

The Tomahawks beat North Burnaby Legion2-0 in their Sunday game .

Myron Rozumiak and Many Vartnou score dthe goals for the Tomahawks .

Page 12

T H E UBYSSEY

Thursday, November 2, 1967

'TWEEN CLASSES

The new politic sa la LaPierre

CLASSIFIE DRates: Students, Faculty & Clubs—3 lines, 1 day 754, 3 days $2 .00.

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

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

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

_

ANNOUNCEMENTS ~ Wanted—Miscellaneous

1 8Dances

1 1

SPECIAL EVENT SDr. Laurier La Pierre speak s

on the new politics confront-ing Canada today, noon, Ang .110 .ARTS COUNCIL

The new issue of the Moo nis now available in JS Mlounge, Buchanan building ,(free, of course) .

Hear a reading performancein JSM lounge (formerly Bu .lounge) of Macbird, starrin gJohn Linton as the infamou sLBJ. (free) Thursday noon.CIASP

Finance meeting for all mem-bers, Friday, noon, Bu . 1221 .PHOTOGRAPHIC SO C

Important general meetin gfor all members, today, noon ,Bu. 202 .SEX AND PORNOGRAPH YCOUNCIL

Mayor Campbell — fraud orenlightened censor? Copies ofPlayboy will be distributed to-night, , 8 p.m., Place Vanierlounge .EXPERIMENTAL COLLEGE

Karl Burau on What I sWrong with Canada and Hu -man Nature, today, 1 :30 - 2:30 ,Bu. 202 .

Fees uppedfor qualityat Stanfor d

STANFORD, Calif . (UNS) —A year's tuition at StanfordUniversity here will increas eto $1,920 from $1,770 start-ing in September, 1968 .

Room and board, $1,140 for1967 - 68, is not expected t o!increase, said vice-president -finance, Kenneth M. Cuthbert-son .

Tuition income covers les sthan half the private univer-sity's educational costs, hesaid .

"The costs of providing ahigh quality education arehigh and becoming higher ,particularly in the areas o ffaculty compensation and sup -porting services such as li-braries, computers, and labor-atories .

"Like many of our sister in-stitutions, we have relied ontuition to provide approxi-mately 40 to 50 per cent o fannual educational costs .

"Unlike many others, Stan -ford, as a younger university ,has been unable to rely on en-dowment income to the sam eextent and has had to make u pthe difference by attractin gexpendable gifts from alumni ,friends, foundations, and corp-orations ."

ED USFolk concert with Ann Morti-

fee and Joe Mock, noon, today ,ed. 100. Admission, 25 cents.DEMOLAY CLUB

General meeting for allDemolays, Friday, noon, Bu .223 .SQUASH CLU B

Fall squash tournament, Jeri-cho Tennis Club, Saturday ,6 p.m. Members only .COMMERCE UNDERGRAD

Starting tonight, an inform-al sports evening for com-merce students, 9 :30 - 11 p.m. ,women's gym .GERMAN CLUB

Booth decorating for fallfair in Pan Hellenic house, to -day .ATC ALUMNI

First organizational meetingwill be held at 1450 S .W .Marine Drive, tonight, 10 p .m .Refreshments will be served .SAILING CLUB

Come to hut B-3 to find loca-tion of the party Friday night .SCM

Billy Liar, scheduled fo rSunday night, has been can-celled .GOLF TEAM

Girls interested in playinggolf should contact MarilynPalmer, 261-0017, or Lauri sAnnes, CR 8-1115 .CARIBBEAN STUDENTS

General meeting, noon to-day, IH music room .SPORTS CAR CLU B

Gymkhana meeting, today ,noon, chem . 250 .EL CIRCUL O

Meeting today, noon, IH 40 2or 404.EAST ASIA SOCIET Y

Discussion on the problemsof modern Japan and speakerJohn Howes of Asian studie sat the meeting, 8 p .m ., Friday ,1032 Davie .MUSSO C

Anyone interested in doin gpublicity for Half a Sixpence ,meet in clubroom, Friday,noon.SLAVONIC CIRCL E

Regular meeting, Friday ,noon, IH 206 .NEWMAN CLUB

Hard Times mixer with liveband, Friday, 9 to 1, St . Mark' sCollege lounge . Bring a pal .

TH EFAIR IS NOT

JUST A

NAMEFIND OUT

WHYTHIS FRIDAY AN D

SATURDAY

POST-HALLOWEEN BASH, NOV -ember 4th, Armouries : Night TrainRevue, United Empire Loyalists .8 :30-12 :00, $1 .50, _

-Girls $1 .00 .

THE YARDBIRDS (ANTONIONI ' S )choice for "Blow Up". Mothe rTuckers Yellow Duck, The WiggySymphony plus Just Everybody willbe at the P.N .E . Garden Auditor-ium Nov . 10 and 11 . 8 :30-1 :00 p .m .

CHECK THIS PAPER FOR TH EFall Fair programme : Thirteen pro -gramme Items over two days, allfor .50 per day . Dance at 9 :00 p .m .Sat ., Nov . 4th at I .H .

HARD TIMES MIXER, LIVE BAN DFri ., Nov. 3, 9 to 1 in St . Mark' sCollege Lounge .

GOLDILOCKS! LEAVE YOUR POR -ridge and come to see Papa Bear,this weekend at Retinal Circus.Also United Empire Loyalists Fri -day and Saturday 9 :00 p .m. til 2a .m . Girls 50c . Guys $2.00 .

TOTEM PARK DANCE FRIDAY,Nov. 3. 9:00-12 :30 . Band In-Ten-sions . Admission A.M.S. 75c .

Greetings

1 2RICK: MANY HAPPY RETURNS OF

your 22nd Birthday . I shall loveyou always . Your Missy.

HAPPY 21st TO THE LOVELIES Tpair of brown eyes .

Francis.

Lost & Found

1 3.LOST A SLIDE RULE WITH VIC

Wilson on outside of case . PhoneBrenda please 224-9871. Reward of-fered .

LOST OCT . 23, BETWEEN ANGU SBldg . and lot behind Freddy WoodTheatre or 4300 Blk . W. 10th . GoldLink Chain Bracelet . Family keep -sake. Reward . Mrs . Reljic . HE 3 -8759, 6550 St. Charles Pl ., BurnabyB .C .

LADIES WATCH LOST 3rd LEVELstacks . Sentimental value . Rewardoffered . CR 8-6460 .

LOST OCT . 22, 1967 . GOLD GRUE NWatch in Curriculum Lab . Educa-tion Bldg. Reward . Contact 298 -1155 .

FOUND GIRL'S WATCH FIELDHouse Fri., Oct. 27. Phone Jo eEUS 228-3818 .

BRACELET FOUND SAT . NIGHTat Homecoming Dance in Arm -our . Claim at Publications Office .

A SLIDE RULE IN A BLUE CAS Ein the vicinity of Hebb. Rewar doffered . Please return . Phone 435-1168 .

FOUND IN BU. 106 AFTER NEED -hams talk on Mon . Umbrella. Clai min Ubyssey Office .

LOST PAIR OF BROWN GLASSE Snear MacMillan Building. Phone224-1509 .

LOST SPANISH 100 TEXT IN E .M .A .Finder please call owner, 733-5400 .

RETINAL CIRCUS IS NOT LOST .You can find it and lots of othe rn i ce neople and things to do at1024 Davie. Friday and Saturday.9-2 a.m .

Rides & Car Pools

1 4

Special Notices

1 5TOM JONES STARRING ALBERT

Finney in the Aud . Nov. 9, 12 :30,3 :30, 6 :00, 8 :30 . 50c .

_

U.B .C . BARBER SHOP IN THEVillage . 3 barbers . Open week -days 8 :30 - 6 p.m., Saturday 'til5 :30 .

NOT JUST ANOTHER CAMPUSEvent' Come to the Internationa lFair and see for yourself.

ALL THOSE INTERESTED I Nparticipating in the Japanese TeaCeremony at International Fai rthis weekend . Sign list at I . House .Number of participants is limited .

GET HIGH IN THE AUD. TUES . ,Oct . 31 to Fri., Nov. 3 . 12 :30, 8 :00 .Aud . $1 .00 .

FILM : ON THE FLOODING OFFlorence, Nov . 4th, 1966 will b eshown Nov . 4th, 1967 at the Inter-national Fair, 4 :45 p.m .

POST-HALLOWEEN BASH / NOV -ember 4th / Armouries / Nigh tTrain Revue, United Empire Loy-alists / 8 :30-12 :30 / $1.50, Girl s$1 .00.

CHECK THIS PAPER FOR THEFall Fair programme : Thirteen pro -gramme Items over two days . Allfor .50 per day .

BANNED Larry Kent's HIGH . AUD .Nov . 2 and 3, 7 and 8, 12 :30, 8 :00.$1 .00. Restricted to University .

DIRECT FROM BUNKER HILLafter a four hour battle — theUnited Empire Loyalists, Fridayand Saturday at Retinal Circus .Papa Bear's Medicine Show will b ethere too! 9 :00 p.m . ' til 2 :00 a.m.Girls only 50 cents ; guys $2 .00 .

Travel Opportunities

1 6.50 IS YOUR TICKET TO A UNIQU E

travel experience to over fifteenforeign countries . This weekend a tthe Fall Fair .

DON'T MISS THE JAPANESE TEACeremony at the International Fal lFair. Three performances only .Friday . 8:00 p .m ., Saturday, 2 :0 0and 5 :00 p .m .

Wanted—Texts 1 7INTRODUCTORY MYCOLOGY B Y

Alexopoulos . Used . Phone Shirley876-1850 after 6 .

AUTOMOTIVE & MARINEAutomobiles For Sale

2 11956 CADILLAC 4-DOOR GOOD EN -

gine, trans. P.B., P.S. Radio,W.W.'s . $525 . Phone 291-1059.

WALKING? THEN BUY 1956 DODG Egood running order, tires, clutch.Big V-8 . $120.00 . 987-3997 after 7P .m .

1959 VANGUARD IN EXCELLEN Tcondition. City tested . Call Wendy261-4653 .

FOR SALE 1957 TR-3 . GUY, 224-7858 -4968 Chanc . Blvd . $600 . Radio. Discbrakes . New paint . S. belts .

Motorcycles

2 6BMW 1963 250cc $450 . EXCELLENT

cond . 224-0534.FOR SALE NORTON 650cc . NEW

tires, chains, compet . clutch . Moto rperfect . 731-9630 . Aft . 6 p .m .

BULTACO LEASE TO OWN, $9per week . No deposit required . Re -pairs all bikes. Open 9-9 . 54th &Victoria Drive, Amor, 327-9111 .

Copying & Duplicating

3 1

Miscellaneous

3 2STATIONERY - ART SUPPLIES -

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

GETTING ENGAGED: SAVE BE-tween 305, and 50% on Engagemen tRings . For appointment call 261 -6671 anytime .

SEX ! ANGLICANS UNITE ! A.T .C .alumni residents meeting at theArms tonight at 10 :00 p.m. Topicdiscussion — "Benefits of Lifeat A.T .C . "

Orchestras

3 3

BUSINESS SERVICE S

Scandals

37LARRY KENT'S HIGH TUES ., OCT .

31 to Fri ., Nov . 3 . Nov . 1 & 8 12 :30 ,8 :00. Aud . $1 .00.

FREE—KITTENS WIT,T, DELIVER .Phone 732-6719 .

JOHN TURNERHere next week.

BARTY AND HAGER ARE SOpleased that P.C . had such a gian ttime at the Wed. night affair .

IS SOCRATES DEAD ? Where hid-eth the six-toed mystic ? The IHJBnaf blue .

LARRY KENT'S HIGH IN THEaud . Nov. 2 & 3, 7 & 8, 12 :30, 8 :00

, adm. $1 .00 .

Typewriter Repairs

3 9ANDERSON TYPEWRITE R

SERVIC ETYPEWRITERS _

ADDING MACHINES

ROOMS ON CAMPUS FOR RENT .NEW AND' RECONDITIONED

Close to meals . 225-9662 (male) @REPAIRS TO ALL MAKES

$40 mo. ; 2250 Wesbrook .Free Estimates

Reasonable Rates ROOM FOR RENT WITH OR WITH-ALL WORK GUARANTEED

out board, student girl, non drinker .185 West Broadway

879-7815

Dunbar area . 263-3143 .Across from Zephyr Motors

MAIN FLOOR ROOM WITH KIT .Service Centre

priv . for girl, at 24th & Macdonald.Phone 733-4670 .

Typin g 40

AT LAST! An exclusive typing ser-vice for students. 24-hour service ,elec . typewriters, 1 block from cam -pus . All this for only 30 cents ap age! University Typing Services —Around the corner from World WideTravel — next to R .C .M .P . 2109 Al-lison Rd . at University Blvd . Mon. toFri . 9 to 5 . Phone : 228-8414 . _TYPING, ESSAYS, ETC. LOW

rates . Two drop points . (On cam -pus & West End) . Phone 683-2859 .

TYPIN GPhone 731-7511—9 :00 to 5 :00 . 266 -6662 after 6 :00.

EXP. TYPISTS for MMS, THESE20c page . Call Betty 433-0669 . .Bonnie 433-8190.

EMPLOYMEN THelp Wanted—Female

51EXPERIENCED TYPIST NEEDE D

4 hours a day . Apply Prof. Dicker-son, Faculty of Law.

Help Wanted—Male

52

Male or Female

5 3Maths . Tutors, 4th year or graduates ,

GRADES 7 to 1 3 736-6923 — 4 :30 - 7 :30 P .M .

NEEDED IMMEDIATELY — THEUbyssey requires a copy runner totransport material to printers . Caressential . Apply Murray McMillan,Managing Editor, The Ubyssey,Brock Hall .

QUICK DRIVERS WHO KNO Wthe campus needed to deliver on eor two evenings . Phone 224-083 3after 6 p.m.

WE DON'T TRY VERY HARD !BUT WE WILL VENTURE OU TON COLD RAINY NIGHTS

(Or almost anytime for that matter)

• ANYWHERE ON CAMPUS

• AT NO CHARGE TO YOU

UNIVERSITY PHARMAC YIN THE VILLAGE

PHONE 224-3202

TO DELIVER YOUR SCHOOL SUPPLIES, SHAMPOO, FILMS ,FLASHBULBS, SOME MORE MIXER OR EVEN PRESCRIPTIONS

INSTRUCTION

Special Classes

63

Tutoring

64

FRENCH, E N G L I S H, HISTORY ,Russian lessons given privately byB .A ., M .A ., B .L .S. 736-6923 .

WILL TUTOR IN SPANISH—also conversational Spanish .Please phone 688-1898 .

SPECIAL INSTRUCTION BY NIGH TTrain Revue, United Empire Loyal -ists ; Saturday 8 :30-12 :00 ; $1 .50, girls

$1 .00 . Armouries.

MISCELLANEOUS

FOR SALE

7 1

LOOKIN G

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

McIVER Appliances Ltd .3215 W Broadway—738-7181

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

STUDENT DESK, TYPEWRITER,new electric Sunbeam shaver, golfclubs. One dozen new 1 .50 golf balls.Electric shoe shiner . 733-2088 afte r7 p .m

. WOODEN SKIS — NEW BASEcomplete with Harness — alsogirls double boots . All for $40 .AM 6-2784 .

OLYPUS PENF HALFRAME SLRwith normal lens and 105mmtele ,$125 ; Nikon 28mm wide, $125 ;Sixtar lightmeter, $25 ; or offers ?Phone Bill, 224-1869 .

ELECTRIC TYPEWRITER — SMIT HCorona . Electra 120 . Like new, use dless than 1 year . $140 . Dr. Melton ,228-3536 .

SIZE 10 HADERER SKI BOOTS $140 ,new $60 ; also Kastle and Head skis .Contact Al Vittery 988-8868 .

THIS WEEK ONLY. "CHARTER "brand Recording tape, regular $2.74 ,1/4"x900', 5" reel — Kam-Tap Salesprice $2 .35 each . We also carry acomplete line of tape-recorders ,radios, etc . Call Bob Williams, 263 -9679 anytime .

NEW TWELVE STRING GUITARand reverb . amp. for sale. 816 W .8th Ave . 874-0744 .

RENTALS & REAL ESTATE

Rooms

6 1

FURN. STUDY-SLEEPING ROOM.4593 W . 14th, 224-5410 after 5 :00 p.m .

EXPERIENCED TYPIST — ELEC- I tric . Phone 228-8384 or 224-6129.

Room & Board

82PROFESSIONAL TYPING, ARDALE ROOM AND BOARD, MALE STU-

Griffith Limited, 8584 Granville

dent, on campus . 5475 Agronom yStreet (70th & Granville) . 263-4530 . Road, 224-9667 after six .

QUIET PRIVATE STUDY — NOchildren, good food — only seriousstudent need apply. 266-4056, nearMcDonald bus, reasonable .

EXPERIENCED TYPIST WIL Ltype at home . Please contact688-1898 .

Furn. Houses & Apts .

8 3

WANTED : GIRL TO SHARE FURN .apt. with 3rd year student . PhonePam 732-5751 .

GIRL WANTED TO SHARE FUR -nished apartment near 4fh & Alma .Phone Judy, 733-6994.

BUY — SELL — REN T

WITH

UBYSSEY

CLASSIFIED


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