Some winsom e win som e losers VANCOUVER, B.C ., THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1968 . Vol . L, No . 25 48 228-2305 1 powoll harg►aw photo CASEY ANDERSON, folk-singer extraordinaire, sang in the SUB art gallery . Photographer Powel l Hargrave caught the halo effect by centering the image cast by the light seen below Anderson . By ALEX VOLKOFF Ubyssey Council Reporte r "If Senate rejects us, we should reject senate . " That was the final decision of students' council Monday i n reaction to a report to senate from a senate ad hoc committe e set up to discuss the student brief . The disappointment came from the Oct . 30 senate meeting where by a vote of 29 to 22, with 10 abstentions, senators rejecte d the idea of a joint student-senate conference . The general feeling of council was expressed by forestr y representative Frank Gregory when he said, "Nothing on campus , including the faculty club incident, has distressed me as muc h as this faith totally broken by senate . " "Senate has very definitely let our student population down . " But although councillors agreed on the need for a join t conference, they were split on the method of attaining it. A large number wanted to keep holding meetings between the AMS ad hoc committee, and that of senate, but the idea wa s voted down 10 to eight . One member of this minority, medicine representative Bu d Abbott, said council should have one more try with senate . "Many of the senators didn't really know what the issue s were, especially those from downtown," said Abbott . "After learning of our reaction and furthering their know ledge of the issue, I'm sure we can get those 10 abstentions o n our side ." As Gregory said, "Councillors should try through a persona l relationship with their own deans and other forms of lobbyin g to get that joint conference . "Senators had better get off their high horse and come dow n to where the problems are," he said . Another argument of the minority was put forth by AM S treasurer Donn Aven . "We issued the student brief for academic reform in July, " he said . "It is now November ." (Deadline for senate action o n the brief was set by the AMS at Nov . 25 . ) "Let's stop wrangling about an open committee and get onto the main issues at hand . There has been too much wrangling o n procedure, and not enough discussion on the substance of the brief." But AMS vice-president Carey Linde was in complet e disagreement . "The idea of openness is not only a procedural matter, but inherent in the main issues of the brief," he said . "Moreover, the manner in which we bring about the reform s is more important than the reforms themselves . " AMS president Dave Zirnhelt agreed with Linde, saying, "We must lay the ground rules first . " "When senate rejected the idea of a joint conference, m y gut reaction was I had been kicked in the head," Zirnhelt said . Tobin Robbins, external affairs officer, relayed to councillors President Kenneth Hare's comment he would come down o n the students' side in this issue . Linde said when a president of this university "could stand up and be shot down by his own senate, it shows something ' s bad with the system ." Continued Page 3 See : COUNCIL SFU students vote 1,123-685 to stay in CU S BURNABY (UNS) — Simon Fraser University students have voted by a 2-1 margin to stay i n Canadian Union of Students . The vote, announced Tuesday, was 1,123 to 68 5 in favor of continuing membership in the union . Only one-third of SFU's 5,400 students voted . The referendum, held Monday and Tuesday, in my 0 v-: .;. 2: ;>:. WHAT'S INSID E Humphrey wins p. 2 Housing survey p. 3 Zap Debate p. 5 p. 9 Sports p . 10 eluded four other questions . The following three were affirmed : • Do you favor the presentation of major student society policies to mall meetings, thus givin g the final say over important issues to the student body as a whole . • Do you favor the presentation to senate of student senator Stan Wong's proposal to make all lower level courses (redesigned and broadened accordingly ) cordingly) worth five credits, thus lowering the course load to three courses — per semester ? • Do you favor council action, such as a brief t o the federal and provincial• government, concernin g the new loan restriction, which makes loans available only to those taking 15 credits or over ? Turned down was a fifth item : Do you favor allowing political clubs to petition council for fund s based on an estimate of the club membership , number of activities and equipment fees, without any present fixed ceiling on the possible grant, withi n the limit set by the club's total budget? (Students for a democratic university is th e largest political club at SFU . ) "I'm very happy to see the CUS referendum ha s passed," said science president Scott Primrose . Perhaps now council will give up its witchhunt fo r radicals and get down to the serious business at hand . " "It's good to see the students are coming bac k to their senses," said former CUS staffer SDU leade r John Cleveland . "Students have seen through student presiden t Rob Walsh's moderate rhetoric bullshit . They are n o longer making a false choice by voting . for something just because Walsh says so . " Walsh, who initiated the. referendum and wante d SFU to withdraw from CUS, could not be reache d for comment . CUS president-elect Martin Loney also could no t be reached . He is presently on a speaking tour o f eastern Canadian universities . Thursday, November 7, 196 8 THE UBYSSEY Page 2 German students back lawye r WEST BERLIN (CUPI) — Some 60 people were injure d Monday in bloody clashe s between protesting students and riot police. FILM SOCIETY PRESENT S Michael Caine in: The demonstrators, s o m e 1,500, hit the streets to protes t government disbarment proceedings against lawyer Hors t Mahler for his active work wit h the students in their spring protests in Germany. FUNERAL More than 1,000 riot polic e moved in on the crowd to pre vent them from storming th e Charlottenburg district courthouse, scene of the disbarment trial. BERLIN The clash lasted for over two hours and resulted in injuries to 20 police and 40 students. Protestors countered p o l i c e billy clubs with paving stones . Most of the students wore helmets to protect themselves . Today: 12:30, 3:30, 6:00, 8 :30 Friday : 6 :00, 8 :30 OLD AUDITORIUM — 50c UVic homecoming invitations sen t VICTORIA (UNS) — University of Victoria officials ar e urging all alumni to return to the old Alma Mater for a slam bang homecoming weekend , Nov. 16-17 . — dick button photo THREE WORKMEN wallow in the SUB mud laying drainag e pipes . God knows the area around SUB needs drainage , right now it's one big quagmire . Richard M . Nixon's victory in the America n elections Wednesday was unpopular with Canadians if a mock-vote taken at various places i n Vancouver is any indication . Nixon tied for fifth place with George Wallace in a poll conducted in SUB, outside th e U .S . consulate, at Vancouver City College an d at SFU Tuesday . The poll showed Hubert Humphrey first , with 261 votes, followed by W . A . C . Pigasus , 189 ; Pat Paulsen, 123 ; Eldridge Cleaver, 111 ; then Nixon and Wallace with only 89 votes apiece . W. A. C . Pigasus was the mock candidat e supported by the American Yippie party, of which Jerry Rubin is a leading figure . UBC voters appeared to take the vote seriously, according to organizer John Mate . Some asked if the vote was official, to which Mate replied by showing ballots which read "official colonial American ballot ." Alma Mater Society Men's Athletic Committee Applications are now being received for a fifth member to the Men's Athletic Committee. This person will be responsible for making decisions on the administration of the athletic budget. Please hand in written applications to the A .M .S . Secretary, Room 248, S .U.B ., before 4:00 p .m . on Tuesday, November 12th . The invitation includes promises of a gastronomical orgy , dancing at the new SUB cabaret, and gambling at a rugbyclub sponsored casino night . Hump sweeps pig, Nixo n in colonial U .S. election By JOHN TWIG G Ubyssey Election Reporte r OFFICIAL NOTICES Other voters said, "Do we have to show ou r AMS cards? " Despite the serious tone of UBC students , the write-in votes showed some people have a sense of humor . Among the write-ins were Dick Gregory , (who was on the ballot in some states), And y Warhol, Benedict Arnold, Shaun Sullivan an d A . E . Neuman . When Ubyssey propaganda editor Irvin g Fetish heard his hero, Sullivan, had been beaten by Neuman, he said, "This is all very maddening . " Nixon, when contacted by The Ubyssey, didn't appear too worried about losing to Humphrey . But he was upset about losing to th e pig . "It looks like I 've been oinked out," he said . Mate said the votes were given to the U.S . consul Haron Coleman . When Coleman and the organizers of the event met, the organizers, about 70 strong, stood at attention and sang 0 Canada . The consul took the event as a good joke . He said the votes would be sent to Washington . International Affairs Conference Applications now being received for those interested in attending the Ninth Annual Conference on Internationa l Affairs from January 21 to 24, 1969 at the Universit y of Manitoba. This year's conference will center on the theme —Latin America! Progress or Revolution in ou r Hemisphere . Apply in writing to A .M.S . Secretary , Room 248, S .U .B . What you see today in London, Paris, Rome, and New York, is also in style right here in Vancouver, the new swinging city of the world. YOU FIND ALL THESE LATEST OUTFITS AT : .e. . -?? o Lakehead U students hold out , demand open senate meetings PORT ARTHUR (CUP)—Lakehead University has offered students three seats on its 29member senate, but students may reject th e offer because the senate holds closd meetings . Student council president Peter McCormac k said council has a policy of refusing seats o n any closed body, but said the offer of senate seats would be "carefully considered . " Students were also offered four of 20 seat s on the admissions and scholarship committee , three of six seats on the judicial committee (which interprets academic regulations) and two of 13 seats on the library committee . Mc Cormack said these offers would probably be accepted . Lakehead asked for seats on the committees in a recent brief to the senate but had not aske d for seats on senate itself. Senate set conditions regarding selection o f students for the three senate seats: student members of senate must have completed a t least two years and only students who have completed one year are eligible to take par t in the elections . Vancouver's Largest Boutique Type Stor e With Fashions For Today and Tomorro w 1015 3499 CAMBIE ST. at 19TH AVE. and RoBSON ST . OFF BURRARD . I Thursday, November 7, 1968 THE Page 3 UBYSSEY COUNCI L From Page 1 — dick batten photo STICK IT OUT and you're sure to get a ride at UBC . But sometimes the bus comes, and then there's no one to clean u p what's left on the corner . If you drive, give 'em a ride . ' Housing obsolete'—Munton surve y By ERIK BRYNJOLFSSO N Ubyssey Housing Reporte r University residences now in use are obsolete, says studen t senator Don Munton . He was using as evidence the first results from the AM S housing survey conducted last spring. The results show that 31 per cent of the 1,144 single students over 20 years of age who responded to the survey prefe r a bachelor suite or one-bedroom apartment compared to onl y 11 per cent who want the present residence room and boar d arrangement, and 26 per cent who prefer to live at home wit h parents . Munton compiled the results into a report to the wireles s site residence clients committee, entitled "Do they . . . ? o r Don't they . . . ? Only the survey knows for sure! " The wireless site residence is a project to be built in th e area of the traffic office north of SUB for senior single students . Original plans called for 1,000 single rooms in three 17 storey high-rises and 98 housekeeping suites for two in lo w cluster dwellings. Munton is concerned that only 2 .62 per cent of the student s surveyed want room and board in a private home or boardin g house . "There must be at least 6,000 students who have been forced to take this kind of accommodation," he said . Three quarters of the surveyed students felt that a reason able rent for the present residence type accommodation woul d be less than $90 but about 50 per cent said they could pay more in view of their financial condition . Munton said the price ceilings set for the wireless site residence were in line with the prices students said they were prepared to pay for the accommodation to be provided . Rent for the new residence has been set at $60 for a singl e room and $130 for a housekeeping suite for two students . The plan to have separate facilities in the high-rise for eac h group of twelve residents agreed with student opinion . The report said that low rent, facilities provided, and lac k of restrictions were the factors which most influenced student s in their choice of accommodation. About 66 per cent of the men and 43 per cent of the wome n were in favour of an arrangement whereby male and femal e students would be living on alternate floors of a single residenc e building . Of the students surveyed about 50 per cent said that if th e conditions they desired were provided on campus, they woul d move on campus from their present accommodation . Anthropology, sociology cancel classe s All anthropology and sociology classe s have been cancelled this afternoon for a marathon discussion and workshop on th e department's student union and socia l science in general. All students taking any sociology or anthropology course, especially those majoring in either subject are invited to attend, starting at noon in SUB art gallery : 12 :30-1 :00 — Open discussion . 1 :00-2 :00 — Presentation of argument s on participation and membership in th e union . All present are invited to present . 2 :00-4 :00 — Small group discussion s on topics raised in the preceding hour . 4 :00-5 :00 — Reconvene as a whole for reports from small groups . 5 :00 — Break it up . 5 :30-? — "An organic experience i n social organization . " "What's happening now and in th e future of sociology and anthropology a t UBC is happening here," said one organizer who refused to be identified . Robbins said there are too many people "unwilling or unable" to see why students want a joint conference . "Council should publish its reasons for wanting this," he said . "If more of the faculty knew what we want, we would ge t much better support from senate . " Zirnhelt wanted to emphasize the idea that students are "equal but different" member s of the university community . "Sure we are transient," he said, "but we have as much right as anyone else to decide what we want here . " Student senator Mark Waldman remarked that implicit in the structure senate has set up, senate has the last say. "If we want to get anywhere , we must have a joint conference," he said . "To get this, and if facult y members are as put off by senate's decision as we are, we can only continue to lobby." "Senate wants to maintai n a balance of power," he said . "The members don't want to be put in the spot of opposing recommendations that woul d likely come from a joint conference . " One of the other studen t senators, Don Munton, summe d up the tone of the discussio n by saying, "Senate is not showing any measure of faith i n students by refusing to a join t conference . "Their decision was not onl y a damper, but a hatchet job o n the whole question of studen t participation . " Admin hasn't prosecuted in break-i n The university has taken no action concerning the recen t break-in of the bell tower . On Oct . 26 the university patrol caught several UBC students who had forced the loc k and sprayed paint and plaster in the interior of the tower . Following the incident, Leo n Ladner, who donated $160,00 0 to have the tower built, sent a letter to Dean Gage requestin g prosecution of the student s involved . If no action is taken Ladne r said he would see to the matte r personally. S . H . Kelly, superintenden t of the university patrol, coul d give no reason for the university's lack of action . He refused to release the names of students involved . Page 4 THE UBYSSEY LETTERS TO THE EDITO R THE UtYSSEY Published Tuesdays . Thursdays and Fridays throughout the university year s by the Alma Mater Society of the University of B .C . Editorial opinions ore those of the editor and not of the AMS or the university . Member, Canadian University Press . The Ubyssey subscribes to the press service s of Pacific Student Press, of which it is founding member, and Undergroun d Press Syndicate . Authorized second class mail by Post Office Department , Ottawa, and for payment of postage in cash . The Ubyssey publishes Page Friday, a weekly commentary and review. City editor, 228-2305 . Othe r caDs, 228-2301 editor; Page Friday 228-2309 ; sports 228-2308; advertising 228-3977. Telex 04-5843 . NOVEMBER 7, 196 8 .:t P PANGO-PANGO (UNS) - Senior editorial blorgs on th e nation's influential rag The Daily Blatt have expressed shock and disbelief at rumors lowly scum reporters on the paper pla n a pigsty revolt. Blue-nosed dissidents on the staff are reported incensed a t The Blatt's crimson editor, Seize-'er Gently, for his yello w journalism . Mutterings of mutiny arose when certain undeserving individuals were elevated to positions of relative power due t o unfortunate circumstances . "Et tu, Curt Brutus," Sieze-'er cried when he learned o f the foul plot . "But I believe the plot will peter out—we'll hav e only democracy here, and that means I make all the decisions . Law and order will prevail . " 53051:.. EDITOR : Al BIrni e News John Twigg Ass't News John Gibbs City Peter Ladne r Ass't City Alex Volkoff Managing Bruce Curtis Associate Mike Finla y Photo . .. . Dick Button, Powell Hargrav e Sports Jim Maddi n Without Portfolio Paul Knox Page Friday Andrew Horvat Ann Arky tore all her hair out i n protest after hearing her reputation had been slurred in public debate . Irving Fetish again denied all responsibility, claiming he did it all as a joke . "Very funny," muttered Muriel Muscovitch . Frank Flynn fumed at the thought Thursday, November 7, 196 8 and John Gibbs made jokes . Hanson Lau got his picture in, while Norman Gidney quietly stirred up dirt and scandal , forsooth . Erik Brynjolfsson ran screaming off to the printers when General Disaster, Corporal Punishment an d Major Catastrophe came marching i n sucking each other's thumbs and askin g for the latest on Curt Lemay . Dick But ton and Jimmy Maddin sported nervously, so Norbert Reubsaat broke the ice, for Ruthip to jump in to investigate . "What did I do to deserve Cawsey?" moaned Lawrence Woodd as he fondled his feelthies. John Frizell was shocked and outraged. Irving reveals the caption winner at Friday' s meeting, noon for all newspeople . Saturday we cavort at a night-lon g extravanganza . Socred to 'e m tions a week . Quantity is obviously more important to you than quality . Editor. The Ubyssey, Sir : Perhaps in a brief flirtation with objectivity you will permit me to inform your readers tha t an executive meeting of the UBC Social Credit club was held at which it was agreed that since this law-and-order-at-university resolution ha s never been presented to the club : (1) There has been no official debate withi n the club on the matter . Therefore the clu b has not, through its president or otherwise , made a statement of policy . For the same reason a theory of division within the club canno t be substantiated . (2) Any member of the club is completel y free to say what he pleases about the resolution, but in doing this he is speaking as an individual, not on behalf of the club . (3) Since the resolution was passed by th e B .C . Young Social Creditors, and approved unanimously by the B .C . Social Credit League , it is the stated policy of the movement . MICHAEL MARTINOF F Platitudes Editor, The Ubyssey, Sir: Never have I been subjected to such platitudinous claptrap as I have when reading your "newspaper" . You assume a cloak of virtu e wihch doesn't hide your soap box . Do you purport to publish a newspaper or a propagand a sheet? If "newspaper" is the answer, wher e are your reporters? Editors you have in abundance . Your publication is one long editorial . You whine about not having the fund s which the UBC Report (sic) can command . Yo u have a good deal more money than you deserve . If you had to depend on students buying you r newspaper your advertising would evaporat e with your captive audience (sic) . Of course the financial remedy is partly in your hands fo r there is absolutely no need for three publica- The absence of any adverse criticism of th e recent faculty club sit-in seems to imply yo u exercise strong censorship . This has alway s been a feature of totalitarian institutions . Pravda has yet to publish letters critical of th e invasion of Czechoslovakia. ANNE McELROY Evaluation Editor, The Ubyssey, Sir : Noted with glee and happiness Jill Cameron's observation that more profs are questioning value of mandatory exams . Have lovely prof in Bio 321 who knows what democracy is : we have individual choice of evaluation . W e may opt for take-home, final written exam , mid-term and final (both written) or an ora l final . Prof . Haze deserves some thanks for this student-oriented approach because this is a large class and it means a helluva lot of extr a work . But as far as automatic Bs are concerne d - bull! I want an evaluation to see how I' m progressing . If I want a completely non-competitive course I can take all my courses as a sit-in . That way I can truly have a free education - complete choice of courses, no exams , no pressure, no fees . However, like most students, I must admi t that I want that ,little bit of paper at the end , because it impresses many idiots out there i n the big wide, and I'm a mercenary bastard a t heart . If we could all simply line up and get hand out Bs, a degree would have even less valu e than it has now . So, Jill, if you want ungrade d courses, simply audit y o u r own choice o f courses . If you want a final assessment and a degree, then go for the whole bit - but still fight for greater relevance, freedom of selection, and meaningful evaluation . ROBERT WHITE arts 3 EDITORIAL : American election caps year of manipulation To analyze the meaning of Tuesday's America n presidential election it is necessary first to revie w the events leading up to it and the mood of th e country. In the first place, America is a sick country — there is a substantial minority of blatant rascists , there are many more people simply worried about their security and afraid of their lives because o f the violence of the black city rebellions and th e alleged violence of the vanguard of the black liberation movement, the Black Panther-type militants. (Their 'violence' is entirely a journalistic creation . for their basic motivation is love for their fello w blacks, but they see the necessity of picking up a gun to defend their race against the violence perpetrated against them by the white capitalist societ y —economically and by the police . ) most of worried America was concentrating on what the Democratic party was doing—only those generally satisfied with the status quo were voting for an d applauding Nixon . Then came Chicago, and the obvious brutalit y and lack of democracy of the Democrats shocked an d dismayed this large minority of worried America , and plunged them into deep despair . Democratic popularity fell drastically, and th e commanding lead by Nixon in the popularity poll s was simply because of a lack of committment by this same worried minority .. But at the same time, most Americans don't se e the need for basic change of their society—althoug h they see many problems which need new an d radical solutions to overcome, and which the Johnso n administration was not providing . Wallace's appeal to the basic fascism of the country gained much support among the racist minorit y and some of the worried minority, but most wer e unwilling to go as far as he suggested, and simpl y despaired . Nixon's colorless campaign did not arouse an y excitement among the population hot committed t o his ideals because of its lack of imaginative remedie s —he offered nothing but a continuation of the presen t state of affairs . Into this vacuum only a few days before th e election jumped Johnson's Democrats with thei r bombing halt and four-sided peace negotiations — a 'new and radical solution' to the war . We saw a great groundswell of support for Rober t Kennedy's 'new vision' of American society (howeve r barren of concrete proposals) transferred by his assassination to Gene McCarthy . Throughout the early part of the year in primaries, we saw overwhelming rejection of the Johnso n administration vision of America and overwhelmin g support for the allegedly anti-war, civil-rights conscious candidates Kennedy and McCarthy . Nixon handily won the Republican primaries an d nomination with a generally colorless appeal for a continuation of the America the middle class an d upper class know and love—the corporate-militar y society they have now, with some emphasis on an other grand old tradition, 'law and order' . That the Republican party is even more undemocratic and manipulative than the Democrati c party (which became obvious to all in Chicago) was not really apparent during their convention because The hypocrisy of this war-oriented administration in suggesting 'peace' as a political manoeuvre just before election day, after four years of war, was consciously ignored by this large worried minority , willing to grasp at any straw of new solutions t o their problems . Unfortunately for the Democrats, the move didn' t quite work, for Humphrey fell just short of victory , as the despairing minority came out to the polls t o clutch at their straw and push Humphrey's vote t o within a fraction of Nixon's . Some say that if the Democrats had made thei r move a week before they did, the groundswel l Humphrey support would have had longer to mushroom and would have pushed him over the top, bu t this fails to take into consideration the basic unreality of the bombing halt and negotiations as a serious political move towards peace . As became apparent almost immediately, and Also a great deal of the population is sick an d afraid of the Vietnam war—the young who hav e to fight it and their parents who see their son s being killed without any military victory in sight . would have become even more apparent with anothe r week to develop, neither the Saigon government no r the National Liberation Front would accept any peac e proposals the Americans would offer . The Saigon government realizes that any fair and democratic political settlement, or withdrawal of American troops, would result in the establishmen t of an NLF government in South Vietnam, for th e Front is supported by the vast majority of the popuulation and the Saigon government exists only be cause of the American presence . The NFL, on the other hand, as is obvious b y their very hard-line demands at the Paris negotiations, realize that they are in fact the democrati c government of Vietnam, have defeated the American s militarily, and will realistically settle for nothin g less than complete control of South Vietnam, whic h the Americans have never indicated they will allow . (The NLF, though, has always said they are read y to talk openly and honestly, for with moral an d military truth on their side they cannot fail to gai n complete victory in honest negotiations . It is th e Americans and their Saigon government which have refused to allow the scheduled nation-wide election s provided under the Geneva agreement or any free and nation-wide elections since . ) The NLF has already brought this truth home i n their Paris statements, and would have done so even more strongly given another week - thus showin g the American public the dishonesty and unreality o f the Democratic 'conditions for peace' . Where to go from here? Nixon has only promise d harder, more unrealistic negotiations or more of th e same type of war, which with conventional weapon s and methods cannot be won, and with nuclear weapons is more blatantly genocidal and will set off uncontrollable anti-American reactions around all th e third world. That is the dilemma, which can only drive the American public deeper into despair when they be come fully aware of it - leading to more blatant fascistic suppression of dissent at home, and makin g many more Americans realize that a revolutionar y change of government is the only means that peace , order, and justic can ever be established in Americ a and the world . se. Thursday, November 7, 1968 Page 5 THE UBYSSEY f a column o ZAP: general irreverenc e Campus Liberals are reportedly angry about a statemen t the party's provincial leader , Dr . Pat McGeer, made in Calgary last weekend . Student unrest, 1VbcGeer told the Alberta Liberal Associatio n (a force to be reckoned with in Canada's neanderthal belt) , is caused by "a tiny, international anarchist minority" . . . . He said unrest will "peter out " as soon as everybody realizes universities are being selected because their tolerance makes them vulnerable . Oh yes. McGeer, who mouthed off a year ago, to add fuel to the local LSD scare manufactured by Pacific Press, said most students are sensible and only want to study, get their degrees and march out, clea r headed, to make their mark in the exciting world of busines s and industry . But, then again, UBC Whigs , although mad at McGeer, sup ported mealymouth lawyer Garde Gardom for the Grit leadership last month in Penticton . The whole gang of dietitian s to that effect at a Nov. 15 meeting of the Grad Student Association. Reason : GSA doesn' t want to sound hypocritical when it asks that grad student s be admitted to the faculty club. Who says the sit-in didn't accomplish anything? . . . Council observers say novice coordinator Rod (his friends cal l him Ramrod) Ramage deserves the latest Regressive of the Week citation for his spirite d opposition to veep Carey Linde's constitutional revisions . Ramage typifies the blueblazer mentality which harbors a deathly fear of decentralization, something to which political systems the world over—including Canada's—are turning to lessen massive communications gaps . . . When, we wonder, will the SUB committee (which now includes former AMS president and latent power broker Shaun Sullivan—did you know?) get around to issuing keys for the doors leading ou to those i m pressive balconies? Are they afraid of suicides? Defenestration, perhaps? . . . (Medical stu- )AY, 4TH NOVEMBER, 1968, all posters must bear the following APPR3 roR r'JS i !'• :~ IN S U . B y ED were L. Gb'%AJS C.O w e.. AN BE APPROVED AT THE GAMES AREA DESK, AND THE INFORMATION ISTERS NOT STAMPED WILL BE REMOVED . SUB POSTERSTAMP . . . do it yourself responsible for the crud you pay exorbitant prices to eat at four UBC cafeterias met fo r lunch Tuesday in the SUB eatery . Much of the food lay untouched on their plates . . . . Ladner Bell Tower Memoria l Architectural Award for 196 9 will undoubtedly go to the new hideous administration building at Wesbrook and University Blvd . Squat, ugly and forbiddingly grey, it cost $1 .8 million to erect and will forever be a subtle reminder to the plantation hands who holds the whip . CONCRETE . . . John Boylan, electrician-brother of former AMS ' vice - president Charlie Boylan is helping to wire the administration's monstrosity . Greet white leader Dave Zirnhelt has ordered an investigation into the whys and wherefores of The Ubyssey , that tri-weekly emission of fertile journalistic sperm . Seem s Uncle Dave has had numerous complaints about the rag which he's referred to the editors, although chief blorg Big Al Birnie says he hasn't seen one of them. Chairman of the investigation is none other than Ruth Dworkin, the AMS's considerably disillusioned interna l affairs officer . First on the agenda, says Ruth, is an open meeting where students ca n put it in the editors' ears . Dat e and time to be. announced . . . . . . Look for the grad student centre to open to all students (who can pay the annua l fee) in the very near future after students ratify a motion dents, responsible for producing a monthly display just in side the Woodward librar y door, have come up with som e goodies the past two months. October saw a detailed exhibit of divers contraceptives, and this month's theme is mind-expanding drugs . Ther e are representations of LSD , grass, hash and other, mor e esoteric substances . Med students are wary, however, of saying whether or no t they're showing real stuff , mindful of what happened when Vancouver cops staged a similar exhibit in Oakridge auditorium and managed to lay some free trips on someon e who smashed the display case . Latest pitch for despondent students who flunked their mid-terms seems to be a blu e and white brochure from Log o Dynamics Ltd . "Knowledge expands every minute . . . why then do students fail?" asks the bold blue type . "Neglecting Congenital Defeet — you are basically equipped to digest any subject. I n fact, many authorities state categorically that the huma n brain is `infinite' in its capacity to absorb knowledge . " Attributing the success o f Edison, Einstein, Ford and Churchill to "inspiration" , Logo Dynamics says today it' s called "guidance — behavioral science — psycho-cybernetics." This technique is the firs t step to knowledge, claims LD . " Without it, is it any wonder that students have failure attitudes instead of success attitudes? Of course not! " What is the answer ? "First . Realize that it is direction from others that ha s made you whatever you are . "Second. Your total effectiveness depends on your ability to release it . "Third . The technique for releasing it is not taught in schools or universities . "Fourth . Much of the direction you have received is jus t bad programming." (We see now, just change the channel , tune out, as it were. ) Etc . etc. . .The clincher : The Logo Dynami c Semina r FRIDAY, NOO N "PRE-FAB MAN IN THE YR. 2,000" — notice affixed to kiosks . "Posters not stamped will be re moved ." We wonder who approves them. This could become an issu e . . . it did in Brock Hall thre e or four years ago . Greybeards remember the asinine spectacl e of anti-fight-the-fee-hike march AMS bureaucrats tearing dow n pro-march posters because they weren't authorized . Th e rationalization for all this is that it keeps off-campus advertisers from scalping free publicity . Unfortunately it's just a little too conducive to abuse . So, you're invited to affix The Ubyssey's own stamp at the left of this page to your poster . Dr . Margaret Corey, Medical Geneticist, U.B.C. ANGUS 11 0 Lutheran Student Movemen t UNDIMUDIMIMADDR. SUNDAY, 10:30 A.M. CELEBRATION I N WORSHI P — Mr. Gene Beads, Vicar, Luth . Ch. — Mo. LUTHERAN CAMPUS CENTR E 5885 University Blvd . Across from the Ne w Administration Bldg . "Its purpose? "1. To teach you how yo u got to be whatever you are. "2. To give you a technique for changing whatever you ar e to whatever you want to be. "3. To acquaint you with the penalties you now endure, if you do not apply the technique . " In '66 it was Reading Dynamics (you too can read 32,000 words a minute, just like Robin) and last year, the Maharishi transcendental meditation will save the world (for a trifling sum) . Whatthehell, Logo Dynamic s probably has as much on th e ball as Evelyn Wood or th e guru of Rishikesh . . . We knew SUB'd come of age when we saw someone rollerskating through the lobby Wednesday night . . . On this page is the aforementioned SUB committee's latest piece of fatuousness. It's the stamp which you'r e now required to have a bureaucrat affix to your poster if you want it to be legally posted i n SUB . "Posters can be approved at the games area desk, and the information desk," reads a EAT-IN, PICK-U P FREE DELIVERY over $2 .50 3623 W. B ROADWAY Phone 733-1617 Paul's "Fireball" Pizzas are mad e from fresh dough, specially spiced tomato sauce, mozarella cheese, tast y pepperoni, garden fresh onions an d hot pepper — Also our secret weapo n — copocollo — designed to give your Paul's "Fireball" Pizza — "PIZZAZ". This coupon entitles the bearer to purchase mouth-watering 14" Paul' s "Fireball" Pizza at our Special Price . Good for delivery, take-out or in ou r Store. Open till 1 a .m . Week-days 3 a .m . Week-end s , FREDERIC WOOD THEATRE Z MAN IS MA N Bertolt Brecht's farce-parable about th e transformation of a porter into a huma n war machin e with PETER JAENICKE–ALAN SCARFE–GREGORY REI D and an outstanding student cas t Directed by DONALD SOUL E Designed by RICHARD KENT WILCO X Music by JOHN CHAPPEL L NOVEMBER 8 - 1 6 STUDENT TICKETS $1 .00 (Available for all performances) SPECIAL STUDENT PERFORMANCES — - Monday, November 11 — 7 :30 p .m . Thursday, November 14 — 12 :30 NOON Tickets : The Frederic Wood Theatre Room 20 7 SUPPORT YOUR CAMPUS. THEATR E FREDERIC WOOD . THEATRE Page 6 THE Thursday, November 7, 196 8 UBYSSEY Damn peasoups' want economic control ; rebel against WASP cultural dominatio n ' By NORBERT RUEBSAA T "What do those damn peasoups want? " "What do those damn students want? " Canadian Marxist Stan Ryerson spok e on those two questions to about 40 students Wednesday noon in SUB ballroom . Ryerson is director of the Institute for Marxist Research in Montreal, editor o f the Marxist quarterly "Horizons", and is currently involved in a "counter course " in Canadian history at the University o f Toronto . He said that in Quebec, students and French-Canadian workers suffer the same oppression by English-speaking capitalists , and that the oft-heard cry is arising fo r workers and students to unite . He added that the problem in Que- bec is not only the two cultures but that "one is dominant and the other oppressed" . He described how, after the fall of th e Duplessis government, with its heavy com mitment to American industry, a challenge to the "English-oriented status quo " arose—both on the picket lines and in the schools . Ryerson outlined three results amon g English Canadians of the "challenge " from Quebec . Some showed a reactionary backlash, some a readiness for chang e which resulted in the royal commission on bilingualism and biculturalism", an d others expressed concern over EnglishCanada's own identity . He pointed out the bi-and-bi commission had shown the large economic dis- parity between the Quebec worker an d his English-speaking counterpart . " The problem is, therefore, not only a cultural, but also a political one," Ryerso n said . He added that what unified student s and workers in Quebec was a commo n "development of awareness of their suppression" and an increased desire for self determination . What "those damn students" want i s more control in their universities, an d what those "peasoups" want is a greate r control of their own economic existence , he said . He concluded that any restructuring of society cannot occur without a union of students and workers . — john irizeti photo HERE'S MUD in your eye . Portrait of a dung-covered charioteer wiping his face after chariot race last week . ~J 0 C~J VANCOUVER SYMPHON Y ORCHESTRA presents SOUNDS OF THE GENTLY RETROSPECT QUEEN ELIZABETH THEATRE Friday, Nov . 8, 1968 — 8 :00 p .m . TICKETS $1 .00 and $1 .50 Vancouver Ticket Centre, 683-3255 And All Eaton's Store s GIRLS GIRLS GIRLS GIRLS GIRLS GIRLS GIRLS GIRLS GIRLS GIRLS GIRLS GIRLS GIRLS GIRLS GIRLS .- GIRLS GIRLS GIRLS GIRLS GIRLS GIRLS GIRLS GIRLS GIRLS GIRLS GIRLS GIRLS GIRLS GIRLS GIRLS - GIRL S GIRL S GIR L GIRL S GIRL S GIRL S GIRL S GIRL S GIRL S GIRL S GIRL S GIRL S GIRL S GIRL S GIRLS SW1RG A T OIL CAN HARRY YS 762 THURLOW ST . VANCOUVER, B .C . 683-7306 Ron Harris spent last summer fishing for water. Mad? Not really ; Ron is a marine biologist with the Department of Energy, Mines an d Resources . The water he fished for and the sediments in it contained vital informatio n about depths, tides, navigational hazards and the nature of the seabed . After thre e months at sea, Ron produced a report that will make our coastal waters safer fo r navigation and help in the development of harbour facilities . Ron Harris is one of the new breed of people in public service . . . young, college educated, ambitious and dedicated . In Government service he has found a rewardin g and responsible future in the mainstream of Canadian development . The Publi c Service of Canada has career opportunities for young men and women like Ron . I f you'd like to know about them, write to : Z 'os P uO~ Career Info . , Public Service Commission of Canada , Tower "A" , Place de Ville , Ottawa, Ontario . THE Thursday, November 7, 1968 Page 7 UBYSSEY Flowers & Gifts • A COMPLETE FLORAL SERVICE f WEDDINGS ; & CORSAGES A SPECIALTY • GREETING CARDS & GIFTS FEIEFLORAI "Flavors By Wire " 10% STUDENT DISCOUNT O N PRESENTATION OF A.M.S. CAR D Three Short Blocks From UBC Gates — a . I. :cabin photo 4427 W. 10th Ave . 224-134 1 Under New Managemen t FALL FAIR . . . five nationalities advertise IH event Fair has wine, judo 'SKaleidoscope 68" is the name . It's the theme of the International House's annual f a 1 1 fair this year . Variety and harmony will be reflected in a colorful program featuring dis plays and booths from 1 3 countries around the world. Great Britain, U .S.A. and Pango-Pango are notable exceptions . An international restaurant will be set up in the party room, specializing in delicious delicacies of 18 different countries and lands . An international wine tasting booth promise s variety and fun. The Caribbean Moonlighters' Steel Band will play at a Saturday dance from 9 p .m . to 1 * a .m. Tickets are $1 each and are available at the door . Japanese students will pre sent the traditional tea ceremony at the ballroom extension . A professional Indian dancer will perform in a floo r show and there will be a jud o and karate demonstration . The fair will be held Friday, 7 p.m.-midnight, and Saturday , 2 p.m.-1 a.m. in SUB . Admission to the fair is $1 for adults an d 50 .cents for students and children. Wine and food are extras. "There is an amazing number of students who don't know that International H o u s e exists," said IH director Jac k Thomas. "Of those who do, the majority of students and faculty still think it is 'a place for foreig n students' . As a matter of fact , Canadian students stand to gain more from IH than foreign students," Thomas said . The invitation sent out w students reads : Come hungry, thirsty and full of questions. Puce blorgs celebrate PANGO PANGO (UNS) — Green, hairy, and puce blorg s showed at this island capital t o celebrate the election of nobody in particular . Colored blorgs in general , except for the red, white, an d blue blorgs, were pleased to learn that no walls were erected . "Tremendou s says Barrie Field-byt e Barrie is a 3rd year psychology major. He can read over 250 0 words per minute. Before taking the course in Effective Rapid Reading offered b y Reading Dynamics, Barrie read 400 words per minute (slightly faster than average) with a comprehension of 73% . He now reads over 2,500 words per minute and his comprehension ha s increased to 82% . "The entire course has given me a complete change of attitude in regards 'to effective studying and pleasure reading," say s Barrie . WHO HAS TAKEN THIS COURSE: GRADUATES PRAISE TECHNIQU E Over 400,000 throughout North America . . . over 3,000 in the lower mainland alone . This is the course President Kennedy asked his joint chiefs of staff t o take . . . the same course taken by thousands of students, workers, businessmen and housewives from coast to coast. Lynn Moffat — student — "read over 3 times faster — actually find my courses more interesting ." Julie Norton — student — "will help at University." Gordon Chow — Consulting Engineer — "I've enrolled my own children it's helped that much ." Arthur Lee — student — "helps me in my studies b y going faster and gathering more information ." Clyde Hertzman student — "much better comprehension . . . gained concentration ." ABOUT READING DYNAMIC S FREE PICICUP A DELIVER Y WARRANTY ARIL P i We guarantee to refund the entir e tuition to any student who fails t o at least triple his reading efficiency. REN T A-CA R 688.1484 1075 ALBERNI ST. Block West of Hotel Vancouver BOYS - BOYS - BOY . .InsS BOYS - BOYS . BOYS - BOYS - BIB ( 5 BOYS - BOYS - BUY S BOYS - BOYS - BOY S BOYS BOYS - BOY S BOYS - BOYS - BOY S BOYS BOYS - BOY S BOY `_ ()YS - BOY S "()YS, BOYS - BOY S BOYS - BOYS - BOY S BOYS - BOYS - BOY S BOYS - BOYS - BOY S BOYS - BOYS - BOY S BOYS - BOYS - BOY S WIDG MT OIL CAN HARRY 'S 752 THURLOW ST . VANCOUVER, B .C . 683-7306 II EVELYN WOOD READING DYNAMICS has been established in Canada for over 4 years. New institutes recently opened in Victoria, Calgary , Edmonton and Winnipeg. Students should note that Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics course is a life tim e membership : further or refresher courses may be take n at any time in any institute at NO ADDITIONAL COST ! Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics is recognized an d licensed by the Minister of Labour as an educationa l trade school and is tax deductable. FOJiMA L WEAR e Rentals and Sales TUXEDOS — DINNER JACKET S MORNING COATS — TAILS ACCESSORIE S Complete Size Range Latest Styles Attend A Free Mini-Lesson Today on Campu s in one hour you can learn how to double your reading speed . THURS . 12 :30 U .B.C. CAMPUS, Buchanan Building, Room 10 2 NOV. 7 — 7 P .M. VILLA MOTOR INN (Salon D ) 9 P.M. FRANK BAKER'S (Copper Room ) SAT. 7 P.M. 1900 W. BROADWAY (Reading Dynamics ) NOV. 9 — 9 P .M. 1900 W . BROADWAY (Reading Dynamics ) FRI. 7 P.M . 1900 W. BROADWAY (Reading Dynamics) 1_NOV. 15 — 9 P .M. 1900 W . BROADWAY (Reading Dynamics ) 10% UBC Discoun t Ur JIM ABERNETHY, MANAGER 2046 W. 41st 263-3610 y *a READING DYNAMICS OF B .C. LTD. 6D*—IO75 MELVILLE STREET. VANCOUVER S . t.U. PHONE 613523'74 I I I Page 8 THE UBYSSEY Thursday, November 7, 196 8 CHAIRS, and more chairs, for SUBureaucrats to rest their fannies on . Strike suspended, students to organiz e BERKELEY, Calif . (CUPCPS) — Hoping to either win their demands or "close thi s place down," University o f California students suspende d their strike for a week to wor k at campus organizing . The strike, officially voted a t a rally of about 3,000 peopl e on Oct . 28, was in effect onl y a day and a half . Estimates of the effectiveness of the strike varied . Mos t strike leaders estimated that 2 5 to 30 per cent of 28,000 students stayed away from classes , but checks by the Daily Californian and other newsmen indicated support was probabl y not greater than 10 per cent . Rick Brown, the main spokesman for the students, called the strike "fairly successful" an d said it had given "unity an d organization" to the movement which began over the denial of credit for an experimenta l course in racism taught in part by Black Panther leader Eldridge Cleaver . Although they still wan t credit for the course, the striking students have expande d their demands . When they called the strike last week, they demanded no university or court action against the 19 7 persons arrested in sit-ins at Sproul and Moses halls and the hiring of more members of minority groups by the university . Last week at the request of the Afro-American s t u d e n t union, they added further demands for the establishment o f a black studies curricula al ready designed and propose d by the . b l a c k students, and hiring of more non-white professors, counsellors and othe r staff members, including chancellors . Black students had remaine d aloof from the student effor t earlier . "This is your universit y and you (whites) are the one s who have to liberate it," explained Don Davis, a spokesman for the blacks . "We als o know that getting credit for Eldridge Cleaver's course won' t end university racism . " 'But he added that black students would support the strike if the white students showe d they were sincere in their opposition to racism by adopting th e additional demands . Support for the strike wa s even lower among the facult y than among the students . Strik e leaders had hoped that the American Federation of Teachers would vote to go on strike . Carl Heiles, professor of astronomy, told a rally that a s much as 20 or 30 per cent of the faculty might eventually g o on strike but not until afte r negotiations over the Cleave r course now going on betwee n the faculty and the regents ar e completed . He said that might take until January. The administration has com e down hard against the strike . William Bouwsma, the vic e chancellor for academic affairs , warned that any faculty mem- tiers or teaching assistants who strike may be fired, denied reemployment, or face "othe r appropriate sanctions," according to a resolution passed b y the regents to deal with a n earlier strike in 1966 . Graduates and Post Graduate s in Science MASTERS AND DOCTORATES ONL Y RESEARC H Biological, Physical and Chemical Science s INTERVIEWS ON CAMPU S November 18-20, 196 8 GIANT FALL SAL E of Over 1000 Typewriters at Savings up to 50 % New and Reconditioned Electric, Portable, and Standar d Machines of all makes an d models, at the Lowest Price s in Canada . Every Machine Fully Guaranteed Top Price For Trade-In s Poison Typewriter s LTD. 2163 W . 4th Ave . 731-832 2 Open Daily & Sat. 9-6 — Fri . 9-9 BACHELOR GRADUATES, (Majors and Honours ) ALL SCIENCES for NON-RESEARC H INTERVIEWS ON CAMPU S November 12-15, 196 8 Public Service of Canada DETAILS AND ADDITIONAL INFORMATION AR E AVAILABLE AT YOUR PLACEMENT OFFIC E THE BIO-PHYSICAL SCIENCES PROGRAM PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION OF CANADA Thursday, November 7, 1968 THE UBYSSEY Manitoba U . capitulates to demand s lohn Fri:ell photo 'SOUND AND FURY' debater, city alderman Harry Ranki n in familiar stance at SUB conversation pit . Debate o n anarchy was "sound and fury, signifying nothing ." -Rankin, Aisbury - orate in SUB pi t By JOHN GIBBS "A tale, told by idiots, full of sound and fury, signifyin g nothing . " That was city alderman Harry Rankin's description of Wednesday noon's Oxford-style debate in the SUB conversation pit . The debate, attended by about 350 students, pitted Ranki n with fellow alderman and former mayor, Tom Alsbury, in a verbal duel with UBC . students Ed Hamel-Schey, law 1, an d Jim Leavy, on the topic "Freedom and not servitude is the cure for anarchy . " Rankin summed up the whole idea with his definition of a debate as a "forum to talk about nothing . " His fellow debaters apparently agreed as their argument s tended to be theatrical rather than intellectual . Alsbury tried his hand at the art of the stand up comedia n (politician) as he directed humorous shafts at the city counci l and the press . He claimed that for calling a local Sun reporter "an s .o .b . , I got my name in his column 17 times . . . When election tim e comes I'll just swear and get my publicity for free . " Alsbury alleged the reporter had called his seven letter name unprintable . "The Ubyssey won't print it either," he said . "They never use a seven letter word when a four letter on e will do ." He was met with enthusiastic applause . After calling for intelligent, directed rebellion, he turned the podium over to Leavy. Speaking in his native Irish brogue, he worked his wa y through a series of jokes, to a call for anarchy as the ultimat e condition of man . "Man wants something more noble than the petty matter s 'the system' offers," he said . Rankin then spent most of his time mocking the Irish an d alluding to his opponent's brogue . "Ireland is ruled by anarchy, " he said, "and look what it is ; a bunch of peasants scratchin g the soil . . . why it got so bad, all the Irish anarchists came over here . " He endorsed anarchy in a limited context however . "It' s all right in bits and pieces, for a little fun," he said, "like th e takeover of The Vancouver Club of UDC ." Then seriously he added that this type of action didn't solve any problems . He drew a distinction between the words "revolutionary" and "radical", calling the latter a meaningless word . "If you're serious, you pick an issue and fight . Then you are a revolutionary." Referring again to the faculty club take over he said : "To leave the next morning was servitude . " Rankin finished by calling for the scrapping of the Oxfor d debate . "The next time I come out here I want a real issue . " The last speaker for the negative, Hamel-Schey, used th e podium for attacks on the "bible-punching" Socred government and various other "evils of society . " He launched into definitions of the words in the resolutio n using numerous and obscure quotations which he claimed were - "conclusive . " He confined his discussion of anarchy to a few comment s about a campus personality he claimed resided in Brock basement . (Ubyssey staffer Ann Arky now works out of the ne w SUB office . ) "Ann Arky is too sordid to discuss," he concluded . The chairman then called for discussion from the floor whic h was met with silence and students leaving for class . t A vote was then called and the aldermen's affirmative position gained the majority of the few votes cast . WINNIPEG (CUP)—The University of Manitoba administration has virtually capitulated to student demands in an effort to break through a massive procedural tangle in the government of the university. Students have refused to fill six senate seats for two month s as part of a demand for open board and senate meetings, board representation and student control of senatorial selection. The administration has complied with three of the conditions . It has pledged to open the senate, allow election of student representatives to th e board, and leave selection of student senators in the hands of the student council . The students have held the upper hand . The provincial legislature last year restructured university government bu t the new bodies canno t meet until students sit on th e senate . After two months of desperate bargaining an d threatening, the administration gave in . Council has, as yet, not indicated it will finally send students to the senate . Apparently, it will wait to see what the board says about open meetings . Concessions weer made Friday at a lengthy senate meeting which approved the studen t demands, providing for in camera sessions to deal with items such as awarding of honorary degrees, personnel appointments and real estate transactions. Page 9 Xappi eoa.tA GINZ A JAPAN ART S 1045 Robson 684-662 9 Wine from Grapes and Othe r Fruit Concentrates can be made now . . . LOVER'S SPECIA L SPAGHETTI MEAT SAUCE Supplies, equipment and know-ho w available at an d GARLIC BREA D WINE ART 3417 West Broadwa y 731-472 6 Vancouver 1108 Lansdale North Vancouver 987-8713 4525 East Hasting s North Burnaby 299-9737 1548 Fairfield Victoria 384174 1 FRIDAY ONLY $ 1 THE FRIA R 224-0833 for Delivery 4423 W . 10th Ave . ARMSTRONG & RE A OPTOMETRIST S EYES EXAMINE D CONTACT LENSES 2 Convenient Office s n BROADWAY at GRANVILL E 'KERRISDALE 41st at YE W McDONALD, CURRIE & CO . CHARTERED ACCOUNTANT S Representatives from our 'Firm will be on campus on th e following dates to interview students for positions availabl e in offices of our Firm throughout Canada . Monday, November 25 : Tuesday, November 2 6 and Wednesday, November 27, 196 8 These positions are available for the graduates i n Commerce, Arts, Science, Engineering and Law . Further information and arrangements for interview s are available through the Placement Office . Join the Commerce Grad s at Great-West Lif e Some are investmen t specialists . Others have become marketing experts . Many are with th e computer crowd . Where would you like to be? The fact is , no matter what area of busines s you wish to enter, you can fin d the opportunity you're lookin g for at Great-West Life. You'll be working for one of th e fastest growing companies in th e country, in a job that is stimulating and demanding . The future ? It's just as big and bright as yo u want it to be . Now is the time to get more facts. Start by picking up a copy of Great-West Life's career booklet from your Placement Officer. A t the same time make an appointment to talk to the Great-West Life Career Counsellor who wil l be on your campus : NOVEMBE R 13, 14, and 1 5 TFI E Great-West Life ASSURANCE COMPAN Y 0—m r Page 10 Thursday, November 7, 196 8 THE UBYSSEY FALL FAIR DANC E TRINIDAD MOONLIGHTER S STEEL BAN D SATURDAY, NOV . 9 9 :00 P .M . SUB . BALLROOM ADMISSION ONE DOLLAR THE CANADIAN ARMED FORCE S REGULAR OFFICER TRAINING PLAN Have you considered the advantages o f joining the ROTP? While attending Uni versity members receive the followin g benefits :-FULL TUITION FEES PAI D —$187 .00 PER MONTH PAY —BOOK AND INSTRUMENT ALLOWANC E —MEDICAL AND DENTAL CAR E -30 DAYS ANNUAL LEAVE (PLUS TRAVELLING TIME ) —ALL OTHER BENEFITS THAT MEMBERS O F THE FORCES RECEIVE On graduation you step into a positio n of responsibility as a leader and manager of men . FOR FULL DETAILS CONTACT TH E Canadian Forces Recruiting Centr e 545 Seymour St .-684-7341 The Most Useful Boo k on Campu s ` ie`UniverF;ityej `BritisljGolurrLbia jtudent `TelepttorLe `Di>ectorf ty'r r — dick button photo FROZEN IN ACTION, UBC frosh rugby team grapples with Victorians in hard-fighting lineout . UBC won 24-6 . Says coach Bob McGill : "We don't play stupid rugby like some of the team s we have to beat ." Team has averaged 30 points a game, allowing only three . Frosh ruggahs victorious , juniors down Victoria 24- 6 UB'C's frosh rugby tea m rolled to another impressive victory last weekend, defeatin g University of Victoria 24-6 i n a junior intercollegiate league game . This year's frosh team, on e of the strongest in years, i s forming a solid base for th e Thunderbird teams of a fe w years from now . Head rugb y coach Donn Spence is v e r y Plane makers bombe d dove group suspecte d MONTREAL (CUP) — It just isn't safe being an executiv e on an aircraft manufacturer's payroll . Small time-bombs were placed near the homes of four Mont real executives of the aircraft industry Sunday but only one exploded, causing little damage . Three of the men are executives of United Aircraft of Canada Ltd . and the fourth is a vice-president of Canadair . According to police, the bombs were similar in constructio n to the ones planted in September at the homes of Hawker Siddeley executives in Toronto . Police suspect a connection between the two incidents and a Toronto cop is in Montreal to study the home-made explosives. Toronto police credit the September bombings to "radical , anti-war" groups . United Aircraft produces helicopter parts for the U.S . defense department. Its PT6 turbine engine powers the U21A U .S . army aircraft in service in Vietnam . CROME SYRCUS PREVIOUS VANCOUVER APPEARANCE S Your Student Telephone Directory BUY YOUR COPY TODA Y Only 75 c On Sale At U.B.C. Bookstor e Publications Office, S .U.B. * Retinal Circus — Jan . '68 * Q.E . Theatre with the Joffrey Ballet V .I .F . '68 * Coliseum with The Doors, July, '6 8 NOW AT THE RETINAL CIRCU S FRI ., SAT. AND ALL NIGHT SUNDA Y ALSO THE SEEDS OF TIME ! pleased with the calibre of th e team, and frosh coach Bo b McGill is elated with hi s charges . The frosh team is far ahead in their league, as yet undefeated in regular play . They have averaged over 30 point s while allowing only thre e points against, per game . The frosh team shows an excellent balance of speed and ' weight . McGill feels a large part of the team's success i s due to the ability of the back s to think in tight situations . He claims : "We don't pla y stupid rugby like some of the teams we beat . " This team will insure UB C rugby supremacy for the nex t few years . Thursday, November 7, 1968 THE UBYSSEY Page 1 1 SPORTS Arm y invades UB C for wrestling mee t The UBC wrestling team starts their competitive season a t 1 p .m . this Saturday, at the Thunderbird stadium wrestling room. They will be competing against a team from Royal Road s and the Canadian Forces base at Esquimalt . Seeing action for the Birds will be three-time Western Canadian intercollegiate athletic association champions Can Christensen, who is fighting in the heavyweight division and als o Gunnar Gansen who will be in the 191 pound class . Coach Paul Nemeth is optimistic, but he points still to his dire need of men in the lighter categories if the Birds are to d o very well. Any experienced wrestlers in the 123, 130, 137 or 145 clas s are asked to contact the coach or come to the meet . The coach is especially interested in the former high schoo l wrestlers and hopes to see them up at the stadium . For all those who don't know, the wrestling room is on th e south concourse of the main corridor at the Thunderbird stadiu m and since seating is limited, the earlier you get there the better your chance of getting a seat is . Ski girls need mone y This year promises to be an interesting one for the UBC women's ski team . Thirty women are vying for a place on the eight member team . The eight girls returning from last year' s team are by no means guaranteed places this year as pre-season training has everyone in shape for a six day training camp at Rosslan d over Christmas. To enable the team to finance their seaso n they will be showing two ski films on Tuesda y at noon in the 'SUB auditorium . Charge will be 50 cents for the two exciting films . Track and field training starts There will be a meeting for all those men intereste d in turning out for the UBC track and field team on Tuesday Nov. 12 at 12 :30 p .m . in room 211 of the War Memoria l gym . 4 Practises will be held every Tuesday and Wednesda y at 4 :30 p .m . in the armouries as well as on Thursday noon at the John Owen Pavilion . t UBC judokans winner s in New West . tourney The UBC judo club saw the first results of Olympic silver medalist Doug Rogers' training program last Saturday . As expected, the club did very well, with Art Adams an d Charles Maingnon winning division titles . Adams won the brown belt heavyweight competition afte r five bouts, ending with his knockout . He displayed a new style which is accredited to his coach, and obviously works . Maingnon was the lightweight black belt victor, and again his training helped him win . The other three team members acquitted themselves nobl y as they won more bouts than they lost . The club hopes to raise enough funds to send a team 'to th e Canadian intercollegiate championships this year, as result s already indicate they will have a good chance of finishing well . U.B .C. THUNDERBIRD WINTER SPORTS CENTR E SKATING SCHEDULE 1968 - 69 Effective September 28, 1968 to April 13, 196 9 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 1, 2, 15, 16, 29, 3 0 January 10, 11, 24, 2 5 February 14, 1 5 Admission : Afternoons—Students 35c . Adults 60c Evenings—Students 50c . Adults 75c . Skate Rental - 35c a pair . - Skate Sharpening - 35c a pair For further information call 228-3197 or 224-3205 i Join the Arts and Science Grad s at Great-West Life Some have become marketin g experts . Others have joined th e computer crowd . Many are i n administration . Where would you like to be? The fact is, no matte r what area of business you wis h to enter, you can find the opportunity you're looking for a t Great-West Life . You'll be working for one of th e fastest growing companies in th e country, in a job that is stimulating and demanding . The future ? It's just as big and bright as yo u want it to be . Now is the time to get more facts . Start by picking up . a copy of Great-West Life's career bookle t from your Placement Officer . A t the same time make an appointment to talk to the Great-Wes t Life Career Counsellor who wil l be on your campus : NOVEMBE R 13, 14, and 1 5 TH E Great-West Life ASSURANCE COMPANY G-m r Page 12 THE U B Y S.S E Y 'TWEEN CLASSES. .. CLASSIFIE D Teach-in spiri t still breathing Meeting 8 p .m ., tonight, SUB art gallery, to maintain teach-in spirit . EdU S Ed . General meet today noon, ed . lounge . Boycott in . YOUTH RESOURCES Papa Bear's Medicine Show in SUB ballroom noon t o 2 :30 p .m . today, admissio n 50 cents . FILM SO C "Funeral in Berlin" — Old Aud . today, 12 :30, 3 :30, 6 , 8 :30 ; Friday 6 and 8 :30 p .m . 50 cents . LEGAL ADVISOR Y COMMITTE E Free legal advice in vp' s office, SUB, every Monday , Wednesday and Friday . GRAD STUDENT CENTR E Annual general meet, grad center assoc ., Friday, Nov . 15 ; to open centre to al l members of academic community . VO C Tuesday's notice wrong — last day for membership qualifications is Nov . 17, not Nov . 10 . MUSOC DANCE 'AUDITIO N Today, 7 :30 p .m ., Grace MacDonald Dance Studio, 218 2 West 12th . CAMPUS CAVALIER S Square dancing today, noo n 2 :30, club lounge . WOMEN'S SKI TEA M Two color films of the '6 7 Dumaurier and skiing i n U .S . resorts will be shown Nov . 12 noon, SUB auditorium . ASIA SO C Dr . Shuichi Kato discusses background and issues i n current Japanese student unrest, 8 p .m . Friday, 465 5 Langara . BYO refreshments . PRESOCIAL WOR K Field trip to New Haven , meet Buchanan entrance o n East Mall, noon today . UBC ND P Exec . meeting SUB 213, to day noon . SD'S Joint steering committee meets tonight 7 :30, club room SUB . COMMERCE U S Applications for seven office s in society must be in t o Comm . US office, 7th floo r Ang . by Friday 5 p .m . CAMPUS CRUSAD E FOR CHRIS T Ron Conerdale in Ed . 201 , today noon . SU S Science general meet toda y noon, Hen . 200 . VARSITY ROD AND GU N Biologist Lorne Russell talk s on Ducks and the B .C . Wild life Federation on the lowe r mainland, today noon, SU B K. MARKETING CLU B "The media is the message " today noon, Ang . 215 wit h reps from several media . Free . MUSIC RECITAL Recital of organ, choral an d brass music Sunday after noon, 3 :30 p .m . at West Poin t Grey United church, 8th and Tolmie . A collection will be taken for the choir fund . SPORTS CAR CLU B General meeting noon toda y chem . 250 . GERMAN CLUB German faculty-student coffee party noo ntoday, SUB 207 and 209 . INTERNATIONAL MEDITATION SOCIETY Meditators, come and shar e the good vibrations 7 :30 tonight in SUB 125 . willy van yperen 4410 w. 10th avenu e vancouver 8, b .c . 224-541 2 contemporar y jewelr y design potentia l chartered accountants . . . who will be 1969 graduates of any faculty are invited to discuss opportunities , in the Chartere d Accountancy profession . Our representatives will be on campus November 18, 19, 20, 1968 . Thursday, November 7, 196 8 Rates : Students, Faculty & Clubs—3 lines, 1 day 75¢, 3 days $2 .00. Commercial—3 lines, 1 day $1 .00, 3 days $2 .50. Rates for larger ads on request . Classified ads are not accepted by telephone are payable in advance . Closing Publication Deadline is 11 :30 Peat, Marwick, Mitchell & Co. Chartered Accountants St . John's • Gander • Halifax • Montreal • Ottawa • Toront o Hamilton • London • Windsor • Sault Ste Marie • Winnipe g Regina • Saskatoon • Kindersley • Edmonton • Calgary Penticton • Prince George • Vancouver • Victoria the day before publication . Office : 241 STUDENT UNION BLDG., UNIVERSITY OF B.C., ANNOUNCEMENT S Dances Auto . For Sale (Cont .) 11 Greetings 12 THE UNKNO WN SUBTLETIES O F '68 — INVITATION — '69 1 . SKIING—Mt . Baker ski pass i s valid on any holiday. 2 . MOVIES—12 movie passes are valid during 3 wee k Christmas holiday except 3 legal holidays. 3. RESTAURANTS—Valid as man y times as yo u want . BUY NOW Lost & Found 13 HALIFAX GIRL WHO LEFT UM brella in red sportscar phone Gerry , 325-0055 after 5 p.m . LOST ? T -BIRD CHANGE -ROO M Thurs ., noon brown wallet need I.D . Reward! Phone 325-3122 or Ubyssey Doug Bernon. DON'T FORGET SUB LOST AN D Found is at the Information Desk . We have many keys, text books , notebooks, umbrellas, etc . waiting tb be claimed . LOST GREEN VINYL RING BINDE R in the Bokstore Oct. 28 . Contains all my course notes . Phone Fran k 266-6574 . Reward offered . LOST LADY'S GLASSES BETWEEN Oak and campus last week. 733 8542 . LOST OCT. 25 NEAR ANGUS . ON E Teak and Silver tie pin, sentimenta l value . Please phone 224-1578 . BROWN PURSE TAKEN FRO M Library . Please return ID to Lind a Suchow, 224-1084 . Rides & Car Pools 14 Special Notices 15 THE GRIN BIN HAS POSTERS , Jokes, Cards, Gifts and a Pos t Office. You'll find it across fro m the Liquor Store at 3209 West Broadway . REDUCE THE COST OF YOUR IN surance by as much as 20% . All risks insured and no cancellations . Motor bikes also. Phone Ted Elliott , 299-9422 . '68 — INVITATION — '69 A student-oriented booklet of 3 3 different entertainment passes valued at over $50 .00 . Available She Clothat the Bookstore, He & ing (The Village) Canteens in th e Residences and the Informatio n desk at S .U .H. $2 .50. CANADA ' S RESERVE ARM Y OFFICER TRAINING PROGRA M Students are being enrolled now fo r Officer Training in the Militia. Join the British Columbia Regiment an d receive part-time paid t r a i n i n g throughout the school year and excel lent paid summer employment. 1 May to 31 Aug . For more information phon e 681-3834 (recruiting officer) or apply 620 Beatty St . Tues. evening . NEEDED IMMEDIATELY MAL E student volunteers to supervise Tee n Drop-in Centre, Wednesdays 7 :30 10 :00 p .m . Phone John 224-3619 . THE NEW YORK LIFE AGENT O N your campus is a good man t o know . Travel Opportunities Wanted Information 18 17 $5 REWARD TO ANYONE WHO can give relevent info . concerning the minor accident involving a n M.G.A . and a late model blue seda n on Marine Dr . between 5 :30-6 :0 0 p .m . Friday . — No obligations 266 6300 anytime . 21 G T 6 an d SPITFIRE S at GRAND PRIX MOTORS Special Consideration To Student s Ph . Lee 682-7185or WE 6-205 7 YEAR END DISCOUNT SALE O N new Peugeot — all models . Call at 1162 Seymour St. GRAND PRIX MOTORS SALE : RAMBLER 1962, GOOD COND. Low mileage . Phone 228-925 6 1962 VOLVO P-1800, ONE OWNER. Low mileage, overdrive, new pirellies . Private sale. Phone 299-2762 . '61 RED MGA, 1600 . 1 OWNER. 65,00 0 miles . $650 .00 . Phone 738-8037 afte r 6 p.m . B.C. 6 4 FIRST YEAR MATHS, CHEMISTRY, physics lessons given by excellent tutors . 736-6923. ENGLISH, FRENCH, HISTORY LES sons given by B .A ., M .A ., B.L.S . Other languages offered . Phone 7366923 . FRENCH LESSON . BY MATURE Frenchman . Reasonable rates . 738 8400 evenings. MISCELLANEOU S FOR SALE 71 BUNK BEDS, SET, $29 .50 . 2'x4' TOP , unpainted double pedestal desks, each $29 .50. New 26'2 coil single ' Hollywood beds, complete, from $49 .50. Unpainted book cases, from $8.95 . KLAS SEN' S 3207 West Broadway RE 6-0713 ' (Beer bottle drive-in at rear of store ) YES, WE STILL HAVE COCONU T oil best for your hair and skin . Plus appointment service . Upper Tenth Barber, 4574 West 10th Avenue, 224 6622 . IMMEDIATE SALE . JAPANESE NA tional 3-speed tape-recorder, mode l Automobile—Parts 23 706S . Just imported . 874-9530 afte r 5 p.m. STEREO SET . EX Automobile—Repairs 2 4 COMPONENT cellent quality . Forced to sell . Phone Nigel at 224-9986 . Motorcycles 2 6 PHILIPS PORTABLE STEREO RE cord player has many extra fea1964 SUZUKI 80. GOOD SHAPE . $120 .00 or best offer . Phone Fre d tures . Good shape . $65 . 224-9110 . 738-2217 — 3258 W . 13th Ave . ROBERTS 1630 STEREO TAPE RE corder . 3 speed, 4 track . Excellen t machine . Like new $225 . 224-9110 . BUSINESS SERVICES CASSETTE TAPE RECORDER . Barely used . Sony TC-100 . Phon e Dance Bands 3 1 Jeff 224-3014 . HEAD SKIS, TYROL BOOTS, STE P Duplicating & Copying 32 ins, poles . All for $90 . Call 688-7484 between 5-7 p.m . POOL TABLE $150 .00. PORTABLE Miscellaneous 33 stereo R .C .A. $40 .00 . Phone 733-6929 . Sacrifice ! NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY at the UBC Barber Shop & Beaut y Salon. It pays to look your best. " The Handiest Book on Campu s 5736 University Blvd. 228-8942 . Home Entertainment 35 Guaranteed Expert & Efficient Repairs Color TV — Black and White T V Record Players — Radio s Stereo Equipment — Tape Recorders ALEXANDER AND AXELSON LTD . 4512 W . 10th — 228-908 8 Complete Record Departmen t Rentals—Miscelleous Scandals JOHNNY'S BARBECUE WAS A hanic mais in lou of corn wishky donner us this weak for couth . YOUR STILL MY FAVORITE GIR L friend, Alice Long. S. Rabbit. I WISH TO PUBLICLY DISASSOCI ate myself from the UBC Libera l Club condemnation of the Facult y Club take-over . Roy Derrick, Firs t Vice-president, UBC Liberals . Sewing & Alterations 38 Typing 40 ESSAYS AND SEMINAR PAPERS all expertly typed, 26c per page, 5c copy . Fast efficient service . Phon e 325-0546 . EXPERIENCED TYPIST . ESSAYS , etc . Reasonable rates . Ph. 738-7881 . TYPING . PHONE 731-7511 . 9 :00 TO 5 :00 . After 6 :00 — 266-6662 . GOOD EXPERIENCED T Y P I S T available for home typing . Please phone 277-5640 . 51 52 APPLICATIONS ARE NOW BEIN G taken for the Pizza Patio Pizza tossing program . Training cours e will be held at the Milano Pizza Training Institute — Italy. For further information contact : Personnel Director — Pizza Patio The Home of Perfect Pizza, 688-238 1 Only 75c at Bookstore & Publication Office, SUB male students $40 per month . 327 5 W . 13th . Phone 733-5436. ROOM FOR RENT - SINGLE - MAL E student . Desk breakfast, laundry. $50 mo . Phone 733-7485 . FURNISHED ROOM FOR RENT , kitchen facilities, girl preferred . Phone 879-8736 after 5 :00 p.m. 81 ROOM AND BOARD AVAILABLE . Male student over 21 years . Appl y 4493 West 8th . Phone 228-9258 . ROOM TO RENT, BOARD OPTION al . 224-6035 . -ON CAMPUS ROOM AND BOARD I N professional home for mature femal e student or married couple without children in exchange for light house hold duties. Phone 524-1857 . WHY EAT CRAP? ENJOY GOO D food, comfortable furnishings, an d social privileges in modern frater= nity house . Phone mgr . 224-9667 . $9 5 month . Furn. Houses & Apts. 83 MALE SENIOR OR GRAD STUDEN T to share house vie . 16th and Dunbar . Phone738-8400 . TWO GIRLS TO SHARE FURNISHed house near U.B .C . gates. Phon e 738-807$. BUY — SELL — RENT USE UBYSSEY CLASSIFIED 53 54 INSTRUCTIO N Music UBC's STUDENT TELEPHONE DIRECTOR Y Room & Board GASTOWN SOU L Male or Female Work Wanted BIRD CALLS RENTALS & REAL ESTATE 3 6 Rooms 81 37 TWO SEPARATE ROOMS FOR TW O AQUA SOC—TWO-DAY BOAT DIVE Nov . 9-10. Sign list on Club notic e board. EMPLOYMEN T 1 8 Help Wanted—Female WANTED ONE WIFE ANY CONDI tion . Only females need apply . Phon e Help Wanted—Male AUTOMOTIVE Automobiles For Sale_ Vancouver 8, 2 1 Tutoring 1960 VOLKSWAGEN . RADIO, HEAT er. New tires, seatcovers, new battery . $500 . Call 224-1201 . SKIING? CAMPING? L A R G E '60 Plymouth Wagon . Very clean . Perfect condition . Family car . Push button drive. Good mileage . 6 cylinder . 228-8341. 1956 DODGE SEDAN, 4 DOOR, MO tor, finish good . Phone days MU 4 3941, Eves . WA 2-9249 . '61 FIAT-TUDOR GOOD COND . EX . clutch, brakes $400 or best offer . Ph . 224-1677, 7-8 p .m . '64 YOLKS, GOOD COND. WHITE . Low mi., w/w . 2 new tires ., n . brakes . $695 . 985-7382 . '60 METEOR AUTOMATIC . NEWLY relined brakes . New battery . 4-door. Good condition, radio . $375 . 263-7327 evenings . 1961 AUSTIN 850. GOOD CONDITION . Private sale $200 . Phone 261-5840 . 1964 CORVAIR MONZA, RADIO . IN excellent condition . Call 299-9273 after 6 :00 p .m . Wanted—Miscellaneous Nick S . Please contact the Placement Office for furthe r information and to arrange an interview. a .m . and UBYSSEY ADVERTISING 62 OFFICE = GROUP FOLK LESSON S 10 Evenings $9 .88 — Starting Soon Now Located In BILL LEWIS MUSI C 3645 W . Broadway RE 8-0033 ROOM 241 — S.U.B. .r,
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