8
A stirring coffee tal e Bus Stop ahead 7,500 cup s By AL DONAL D If you are reading this stor y in the Bus Stop coffee shop , take a look at that cup yo u are drinking from . * * * You may be getting gypped . Bus Stop coffee cups are al - most 20 per cent smaller tha n coffee cups elsewhere on campus . Brock, the Cafeteria, an d the Ponderosa use the larg e mug-type container for thei r product . But the Bus Stop puts it in the smaller "V " - shaped cups . As a result, the Bus Sto p has been short changing stu- dents on its coffee for all fiv e years of its existence . The Ubyssey investigated the size difference in the cup s iVlonday and found that th e "V"-shaped cup held 200 milli - litres to the 235 mills held by the mugs . * * The coffee shop sells ap- proximately 8,000 cups of cof- fee a week . If the number of weeks i n an academic year is taken as 25, then in ,the five years tha t the coffee shop has been serv- ing students, it has short - changed customers more tha n 35,000 litres of coffee . If you are not a scienceman, , that means 7,500 gallons o f ."coffee . " Or at least $17,500 . The investigation of coffe e cups followed the appearanc e i nthe Brock coffee shop of th e smaller cups . Mrs. Janet Marsh, Brock dietician, said that cups had t o be borrowed from the Bu s Stop because of breakages an d losses in stock . "We can't buy any equip- ment until the end of the financial year," she said, "so we borrowed cups from th e Bus Stop . " ** Mrs . Rita MacLeod, Bu s Stop dietician, said that th e size difference was because of the serviec in the coffee shop . "People here wouldn ' t ap- preciate having a mug, " sh e said . "Here, they want a cu p and saucer . " So drink up and enjoy you r cup and saucer . THE UPY S Vol . XLVI, No . 65 VANCOUVER, B .C ., TUESDAY, MARCH 17, 1964 48 CA 43916 'Extensio n chops cu t UBC throat ' Hoopfina l Windso r lance s UBC hope s WINDSOR (UNS)—The reck- less abandon and exhilaratio n of Friday night gave way to quiet despair Saturday in UB C Thunderbirds' bid for th e Canadian Intercollegiate bas- ketball title . After waltzing to victor y over Sir George Williams Uni- versity of Montreal Friday, th e Birds were all left feet Satur- day, losing a 94-70 decision t o the superior forces of the Uni- versity of Windsor Lancers . The loss was a surprise only to the UBC contingent, a s Windsor had been favored t o successfully defend their title . The sudden-death final wa s exactly that — sudden death . Windsor quickly took the lea d and the final outcome was onl y a matter of time to the 2,20 0 partisan fans in Windsor's St . Denis Hall . Windsor guard Bob Horvath, who was named to the all-sta r team, earned the plaudits of th e crowd with eight field goals and seven foul shots for 2 3 points . John Cook was the standard - bearer for UBC with 25 points , while Dave Way, ailing from a cold, scored 19 points . Bill McDonald was the nex t high man for UBC with 1 0 points . Both Way and McDonal d were also named to the all-star lineup . Ron Erickson, UBC's usuall y high-scoring centre, was hel d to two points by the Windsor defence . Saturday's game contraste d with UBC's performance Fri - day, although Sir Georg e Williams built up a 48-38 lead at the half . One Warren Sutton was the chief Sir George threat, col- lecting 32 points and the tour- ney's most valuable playe r award . In hopes of stifling Sutton , UBC coach Peter Mullin s juggled his lineups until he came up with the right com- bination . Later, Windsor advanced in- to the final by beating Acadi a University Axeman 107-69 . —don hume phot o NO PIE IN EYE for Jim Ward, AMS first vice-president . Ward is entering second week of his fast for the Pilikw e drive to raise money for school in Bechuanaland . Pi e doesn't bother him (he says) . Story Page 2 . The UBC contribution to th e department will be cut by hal f to $100,000 over the next tw o years . All departments have bee n told they must make their pro - gram self-supporting . "This is ridiculous," sai d one supervisor . "How can a thing like a seminar make a profit . "It is like telling a professo r he will get paid on the basi s of the number of people wh o are in his class . "I could put on programs that would make money, but wha t are we, hucksters or educa- tors? " One supervisor said the de- partment as it is today will pro- bably be disbanded in a fe w years . He said it is being sacrificed . to the university's desire t o build primarily a graduat e school . "It all depends on what th e role of a university will be, " said another . "Is it to serve a nationa l elite or is it to serve the com- munity? "And how can it legitimately ask for community suppor t financially if it is not involve d in the community? " He said extension depart- ment activities are the onl y contact many people in the in- terior have with the university . The cutback on communit y programs may well alienat e them from it . "And this at a time whe n UBC is looking for public sup - port for its program . " The department will con- tinue with its education pro - gram for doctors . lawyers and teachers, and con- tinue its present evening credi t courses . But cultural activities, suc h as the province-wide hom e study discussion program, hav e come under the axe . More than 1,500 persons hav e been involved in the program , which is to be ended at th e end of the month . "Continuing education fo r the professions is the fashion - able thing to do these days, bu t cultural programs like this ar e felt unnecessary, " said one em- ployee . "Where is the old ideal of the liberal education? " He said increase in fees fo r courses will make it impossibl e for low-income families to bene- fit . Both supervisors asked no t to be quoted by name, because they have not yet left the de- partment . Here's a chanc e to really bee f All year you've been com- plaining about The Ubys- sey, now here is your chanc e to do it formally . On page eight today is a questionnaire asking a few simple questions about you r opinions of the paper . When you finish readin g The Ubyssey fill out the for m and return it to The Ubysse y or one of the ballot boxes i n North or South Brock, Bu- chanan Building, Educatio n Building, Engineering Build- ing or West Biologica l Sciences . UBC is cutting its own throat by chopping the exten- sion department program, two department supervisors hav e charged . They say UBC is failing i t its duty to the community an c is jeopardizing its suppe r among the public .

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Page 1: Bus Stop ahead 7,500 cups...A stirring coffee tale Bus Stop ahead 7,500 cups By AL DONALD If you are reading this story in the Bus Stop coffee shop, take a look at that cup you are

A stirring coffee tale

Bus Stop ahead 7,500 cupsBy AL DONALD

If you are reading this storyin the Bus Stop coffee shop ,take a look at that cup youare drinking from .

* * *You may be getting gypped .Bus Stop coffee cups are al -

most 20 per cent smaller thancoffee cups elsewhere oncampus .

Brock, the Cafeteria, andthe Ponderosa use the largemug-type container for theirproduct. But the Bus Stopputs it in the smaller "V " -shaped cups .

As a result, the Bus Sto phas been short changing stu-dents on its coffee for all fiveyears of its existence .

The Ubyssey investigated

the size difference in the cup siVlonday and found that the"V"-shaped cup held 200 milli -litres to the 235 mills held bythe mugs .

* *The coffee shop sells ap-

proximately 8,000 cups of cof-fee a week .

If the number of weeks i nan academic year is taken as

25, then in ,the five years thatthe coffee shop has been serv-ing students, it has short -changed customers more tha n35,000 litres of coffee.

If you are not a scienceman, ,that means 7,500 gallons of."coffee . "

Or at least $17,500 .The investigation of coffee

cups followed the appearanc ei nthe Brock coffee shop of thesmaller cups .

Mrs. Janet Marsh, Brockdietician, said that cups had tobe borrowed from the BusStop because of breakages andlosses in stock .

"We can't buy any equip-ment until the end of the

financial year," she said, "so

we borrowed cups from the

Bus Stop . "

* *

Mrs. Rita MacLeod, Bus

Stop dietician, said that the

size difference was because ofthe serviec in the coffee shop .

"People here wouldn ' t ap-preciate having a mug," shesaid. "Here, they want a cupand saucer . "

So drink up and enjoy you rcup and saucer .THE UPYS

Vol. XLVI, No. 65 VANCOUVER, B .C., TUESDAY, MARCH 17, 1964

48 CA 43916

'Extensio nchops cutUBC throat'

Hoopfinal

Windso rlancesUBC hope sWINDSOR (UNS)—The reck-

less abandon and exhilarationof Friday night gave way toquiet despair Saturday in UBCThunderbirds' bid for theCanadian Intercollegiate bas-ketball title .

After waltzing to victoryover Sir George Williams Uni-versity of Montreal Friday, theBirds were all left feet Satur-day, losing a 94-70 decision tothe superior forces of the Uni-versity of Windsor Lancers .

The loss was a surprise onlyto the UBC contingent, a sWindsor had been favored t osuccessfully defend their title .

The sudden-death final wa sexactly that — sudden death .Windsor quickly took the lea dand the final outcome was onl ya matter of time to the 2,200partisan fans in Windsor's St .Denis Hall .

Windsor guard Bob Horvath,who was named to the all-sta rteam, earned the plaudits of thecrowd with eight field goalsand seven foul shots for 2 3points .

John Cook was the standard-bearer for UBC with 25 points ,while Dave Way, ailing from acold, scored 19 points .

Bill McDonald was the nexthigh man for UBC with 1 0points .

Both Way and McDonaldwere also named to the all-starlineup .

Ron Erickson, UBC's usuall yhigh-scoring centre, was heldto two points by the Windsordefence .

Saturday's game contrastedwith UBC's performance Fri -day, although Sir GeorgeWilliams built up a 48-38 leadat the half .

One Warren Sutton was thechief Sir George threat, col-lecting 32 points and the tour-ney's most valuable playeraward .

In hopes of stifling Sutton ,UBC coach Peter Mullinsjuggled his lineups until hecame up with the right com-bination .

Later, Windsor advanced in-to the final by beating Acadi aUniversity Axeman 107-69 .

—don hume phot oNO PIE IN EYE for Jim Ward, AMS first vice-president .Ward is entering second week of his fast for the Pilikwedrive to raise money for school in Bechuanaland . Piedoesn't bother him (he says). Story Page 2 .

The UBC contribution to the

department will be cut by hal f

to $100,000 over the next tw o

years .

All departments have been

told they must make their pro-

gram self-supporting .

"This is ridiculous," saidone supervisor . "How can athing like a seminar make aprofit .

"It is like telling a professorhe will get paid on the basi sof the number of people wh oare in his class .

"I could put on programs thatwould make money, but wha tare we, hucksters or educa-tors?"

One supervisor said the de-partment as it is today will pro-bably be disbanded in a fewyears .

He said it is being sacrificed.to the university's desire t obuild primarily a graduat eschool .

"It all depends on what th erole of a university will be,"said another .

"Is it to serve a nationa lelite or is it to serve the com-munity?

"And how can it legitimatelyask for community suppor tfinancially if it is not involvedin the community? "

He said extension depart-ment activities are the onlycontact many people in the in-terior have with the university .

The cutback on communityprograms may well alienat ethem from it .

"And this at a time whe nUBC is looking for public sup-port for its program . "

The department will con-tinue with its education pro -gram for doctors .

lawyers and teachers, and con-tinue its present evening credi t

courses .

But cultural activities, such

as the province-wide home

study discussion program, have

come under the axe .

More than 1,500 persons have

been involved in the program ,

which is to be ended at the

end of the month .

"Continuing education fo r

the professions is the fashion-

able thing to do these days, but

cultural programs like this are

felt unnecessary, " said one em-

ployee .

"Where is the old ideal of

the liberal education?"

He said increase in fees for

courses will make it impossible

for low-income families to bene-

fit .

Both supervisors asked no tto be quoted by name, because

they have not yet left the de-partment .

Here's a chanceto really beef

All year you've been com-plaining about The Ubys-sey, now here is your chanc e

to do it formally .

On page eight today is aquestionnaire asking a fewsimple questions about you r

opinions of the paper .

When you finish readin gThe Ubyssey fill out the for mand return it to The Ubysse yor one of the ballot boxes i n

North or South Brock, Bu-chanan Building, EducationBuilding, Engineering Build-ing or West BiologicalSciences .

UBC is cutting its own throat by chopping the exten-sion department program, two department supervisors hav e

charged .They say UBC is failing i t

its duty to the community an c

is jeopardizing its supper

among the public .

Page 2: Bus Stop ahead 7,500 cups...A stirring coffee tale Bus Stop ahead 7,500 cups By AL DONALD If you are reading this story in the Bus Stop coffee shop, take a look at that cup you are

Page 2

THE UBYSSEY

Tuesday, March 17,196 4

'Ridiculous ideas

—donnie o'hume pix

SURE AN' BEGORRAH, it's wee Kenny O'Lei tch, lookin' for four-lecif clovers on Malcol mMcGregor's grasshockey field . Asked about the 17th of Ireland, all McGregor could dowas mutter about picture captions . "Sure, it's jealous he is, " commented Mr . O'Leitch ,who doubles as co-ordinator of activities .

By TOM WAYMA NUbyssey Council Reporter

AMS presidents Malcolm Scott and Roger McAfee Mon-day attacked University Residence Association 's inabilityto understand AMS ' affiliation proposal .

"They seem to have the feel-ing AMS is out to gobble up thepoor defenseless URA," Scot tsaid .

"That's one of the more ridi-culous ideas that's come up thi syear ."

AMS big- guns

hit URA silence

Gaunt Pilikwe fund-raise rWards off food thoughts

URA, which represents theexecutives of the UBC resi-dences, March 5 turned dow nthe AMS proposal that is affili-ate with the AMS, although de -tails of the AMS suggestionwere never released by theURA .

McAfee today made that in-formation public .

AMS requested that a studen tcouncillor sit on URA meetings—as URA wanted done thi syear .

URA was to be an autono-mous body in the AMS .

As such, it would be entitledto ask for grants or loans, Mc-Afee said. It would continu eto bank through AMS, as i tdoes now .

"We're not interested in tak-ing over anything or supplant-ing any residence council .

"The last thing we need i sto organize another skatin gparty."

Scott said AMS felt that URAwas the logical body to repre-sent the residence in makingsure full use is gotten out ofthe SUB by residence students .

"If AMS can't provide ser-vices to students through th eURA, we must find anotherway," he said .

"These facts don't seem t oget past them," Scott said . Hesaid he and McAfee have dis-cussed the matter several time swith URA personnel .

AMS co-ordinator Ken Leitchsuggested another possible rea-son why URA might have turn-ed down the AMS bid .

Leitch suggested ways AMSaffiliation would aid residencestudents .

"I certainly don't tihnk thatstudents should have to pay ex-tra for telephone and laundryservices . "

(At present phone and washfacilities are coin-operated.)

Jim Ward won't give up hisfast until $7,100 is collectedfor the Pilikwe school .

Ward has been fasting forover a week, but only $2,800has been raised for the Bechu-analand school.

He exists on only water,

vitamin pills and salt tablets .

"I'm all right medically, butI feel extremely weak," he

said.Ward is giving $1 to the

fund for every day he starves ."This is the money I woul d

It recommended that in fu-ture the administration usemore appropriate means to de -fend the posts and that stu-dents be informed that the goalposts will be defended .

The court also said manymore students than the twoaccused were involved in theincident, which resulted inminor injuries to several stu-dents .

Dean N. Scarfe and Dr. C .Smith will give a talk on"EDUCATION IN TH E

SOVIET UNION"on Tuesday, March 17, 8 p .m .

at the Prince of WalesSecondary School

2250 Eddington Dr. (Point Grey)There will also be a display o f

Soviet Children's ArtSponsored by :CANADA-USSR ASSOCIATION

ordinarily spend on food," h eexplained .

Although he looks gaunt an dhollow-cheeked, Ward says th efasting doesn't bother him .

"It's easy when you have acause. That prevents me think-ing about food," he said .

Ward urged each student t odonate at least 50 cents .

Donations are accepted atthe AMS office and collectioncans will be set up in each cafe-teria .

Pilikwe volunteers added$60 to the fund Monday byaddressing envelopes for theAMS student means commit-tee .

The AMS hired the Pilikwefund-raisers and paid them thenormal rate for adressing let-ters .

Not hookyFREDERICTON (C U P) —

Girls are not in university t ohook a man, according to JeanRamsay, dean of women at th eUniversity of New Brunswick .

SPECIAL EVENTSpresent s

CENTRAL AMERICAby

DWIGHT NICHOLS

See this color motion pic-ture of the lands that lin kthe Americas personally nar-rated by Mr. Nichols .Fri ., March 20: Auditorium

12:30 p .m. Admission 25c .

Church todayfading awayminister says

We're caught in the web o f

the '60's and the church isnot doing much about it, an

outspoken clergyman said at

UBC Monday .

"The church as it exists to-day, in many ways is notvalid," said Rev. David Em-berg .

Emberg said that the churchis losing its ability to putthings across to the commo nman .

"Society is caught in a webof statistics and thought pat-terns and paganism," said Em -berg .

CANADIAN STUDENT S

Undergraduates wishing toqualify under the Regula rOfficer Training Plan forfinancial benefits for the cur-rent term are reminded thatthey must apply befor eMarch 31st . Contact the Resi -dent Staff Officer of:

Navy —CA 4-331 3

Army — CA 4-543 3

RCAF — CA 4-191 0

RCAF ROTP QUOTA

A limited number of vacan-cies exist in the RCAF ROTPquota in the followingbranches for students gradu-ating in :

1966, '67 — Radio Navigato r

'65 '66 '67 Pilot'65 '66 '67 Technical

Contact Flight LieutenantRobinson, Armoury, CA 4 -1910 .

i

Ifs way you do it

Fighting Reds

not unbecoming 'A fist-swinging free-for-all cannot

dent court said last week .The comment was contained

in the court's judgement o nstudents Paul Danyliu andD. R. Johnston who were foundguilty of conduct unbecominga student for their part in abrawl during the Homecomingfootball game last fall.

Both were fined $10 ."Scuffling with members of

the EUS in the post revelr yof a football game is not con-duct becoming a student," thejudgement said . "However, themanner of. carrying out thisactivity in the case of the twoaccused was definitely conductunbecoming a student."

The judgement said the waythe engineers tried to defendthe goalposts after the gamewas "questionable ."

be condoned, stu-

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Comple' -Insuranc.:CoverageAvailable

Page 3: Bus Stop ahead 7,500 cups...A stirring coffee tale Bus Stop ahead 7,500 cups By AL DONALD If you are reading this story in the Bus Stop coffee shop, take a look at that cup you are

Tuesday, March 17, 1964

THE UBYSSEY

Page 3

Noble periwinkle extracts$55,000 from cancer grant

*

But there is more hopefulnews. One of the candidatesfor Fort Camp president hassuggested the matter even bedecided by referendum .

This columnist heartily sup-ports such a suggestion .

Of course, up to this issueof The Ubyssey, the outline ofthe AMS proposal was kepthidden in the dark from thethe residence student body, forreasons URA must know best .

And now it's out in the light ,it doesn't seem so terrifyingafter all.

Nobody's stealing the Can-teen Fund, nobody's going toorganize ski trips, and no-body's going to force the resi-dence councils to say boo .

* * *All that may happen is that

residence students might comein for some grants that couldend pay telephones, pay wash-ing facilities, and end the dis-interest in residence affair sthat is a result of executive splaying with pin money .

All in all, a tighter liaisonwith AMS doesn't seem to b etoo bad at all .

What is rotten is the deliber-ate clouding of the issue byURA when they did not re -lease details of the proposal.

The hint of a personalityclash that might have cause dURA's rejection is also a littl esickening .

* * *To think that URA would

try to railroad out a move tha tmight benefit the students inresidence whom they are sup -posed to represent, just be -cause some of their member sdidn't "get along" with som eAMS representatives, is noth-ing short of disgraceful .

Shape up, URA. Or shipout .

Cheating classgets new chance

POONA, India (CUP) —Twenty-eight students caughtcheating in an exam at th e

B. J . Medical College will beallowed to write their exami-nations again .

Only three students in th e

class of 31 taking the exam, apreliminary for the MB and

BS degrees, were found no tguilty of cheating .

ALFRED ADAMS. . . fund raiser

UBC hiresformer aideto Welensky

The former general secretaryof the United Federal Party ofRhodesia has been appointedexecutive secretary of the UB CResources Committee.

Alfred T. Adams will headthe committee which is respon-

sible for collecting private do-nations for the university .

The appointment fills the gapmade when Vancouver alder-man Tom Alsbury resigned a shead of the UBC DevelopmentFund last year.

Gordon Thom, a 1956 UB Cgraduate, was appointed assis-tant to Adams.

Adams worked in close asso-ciation with Sir Roy Welensky,prime minister of the Federa-tion of Rhodesia and Nyasa -land until its dissolution lastyear.

Before going to Rhodesia ,Adams was a political organizerfor the United Party of Sout hAfrica and national public re-lations officer of the Automo-bile Assocaition of South Af-rica .

He came to Canada last year .Alsbury resigned his post af-

ter disagreements with UBCpresident Dr . John Macdonaldover fund-raising policy .

By MIKE BOLTON

About $55,000 of the UBCNo one gets as much atten-

Cancer Research Centre' stion as the Jamaican peri- grant will be used for researc hwinkle .

on the periwinkle .

Change - making machinessweeten starving Brock

0 Henry has come to Brock Hall .So have Moirs Mint patties, Cadbury's milk chocolate

and other familiar brands .They will replace the contents of the present vendin g

machines in Brock, AMS co-ordinator Ken Leitch sai dMonday .

The new machines will also make change for hungrystudents .

Says CUS president

'Loan plan won'tsolve problem sInterest-free loans will not really solve the problems

of Canadian students, Canadian Union of Student sdent Dave Jenkins said Thursday.

"What we would really liketo see are bursaries (base dupon need and marks)," hesaid .

"But if only loans and scho-larships are possible at thistime, we will gratefully acceptthem . "

The Liberal government pro-mised to put up 10,000 $1,00 0scholarships during the lastfederal election campaign .

Jenkins said a plan for fed-eral aid to university studentsshould be worked out beforenext September .

"We would like to see con-crete results from the dominion-provincial conference in Que-bec City at the end of March . "

On his cross-country tour theCUS president has met withthe premiers of Manitoba, NovaScotia, Saskatchewan a n dPrince Edward Island. He sai dhe hopes to meet with severa lothers before the conferencebegins .

In a clarification of CUSpolicy, Jenkins said CUS isstrongly in favor of federal aidto students. But that eachprovince should be able to de-cide how federal grants to stu-dents welfare are to be spent.

Extracts from the peri-winkle are used in the treat-ment of some forms of cancer .

Dr. Robert Noble, Directorof the Cancer Research Cen-tre, said Monday the institut ehas been investigating theperiwinkle for almost 10 years .

Dr. James F. Richards, Dr.John E. Bier and several tech-nical assistants are workingwith Dr. Noble on the peri-winkle .

The institute received $165, -000 and three UBC men re-ceived individual grants fromthe National Cancer Institute.

Dr. H. F . Fidler got $11,547for his mass screening pro-gram for cancer of the cervix .

Dr . Fidler's tests have help-ed reduce the incidence of cer-vix cancer in B.C. women by45 per cent .

Dr . A. D. McKenzie and H .W. McIntosh will share a$6,000 grant to continue thei rresearch on thyroid cancer .

Muscled profsSEATTLE (CUP) — Profes-

sors at the University of Wash-ington have organized facultybody-building classes which in-clude calisthenics, weightlift-ing, running and swimming.

ROOM ON CAMPUSMay 1 - August 31

224-587 0After 6 p.m.

anytime weekends

IDEASat

LARGEBoo to

you, URABy TOMMY W U

It's bloody well about time .

After an agonizing pause ,the URA executive has at last

consented to let the residencestudents discuss the AMS' af-filiation issue.

Notwithstanding the fact

that URA executive has al-ready made a decision, thetopic is slated for the FortCamp general meeting Tues-day .

presi-

Awards boardA committee is to be struck

by AMS student council to es-

tablish criterion for grantingawards to students and for in-

vestigating methods of solicit- jing applications for theawards .

Alma Mater Society

OFFICIAL NOTICE SApplications are now being received fo rthe following positions :

MAMOOKS MANAGER : Honoraria of $150 .00 per yearplus 40% bonus on net profits

GAMES ROOM MANAGER: Honoraria of $225 .00 per yea rplus $80.00 incentive bonus

GAMES ROOM SUPERVISOR : Honorario of $225.00 peryear

Applications due by Thursday, March 26th inCo-Ordinator of Activities Office

NEWFORSPRING . . .THIS EXCITINGV-NECK STRIPEDJACQUARD byGlenayr

Swing into Spring, look you rloveliest in this dressy pur ewool, long-sleeved V-neckcardigan in contrastin gnew Spring shades o fbeige mix, navy an dlight grey! Sizes 34-42 ,$13 .98 . And to corn -plete your ensemble

"Kitten's superblytailored fully-line d_pure wool double -knit skirt makes a per -fect match! Sizes 8-20 ,$15 .98 . At better shopseverywhere .

Without this labe l

it is not a genuine KITTEN.

Page 4: Bus Stop ahead 7,500 cups...A stirring coffee tale Bus Stop ahead 7,500 cups By AL DONALD If you are reading this story in the Bus Stop coffee shop, take a look at that cup you are

THE UEYSSZY

UGt io n

SPAC ERESEARCH LAB .

"Thank you, Professor . Would you nom take a seat outside while irc discuss lour ul~hlk<,i :nr, . "

—Punch, London .

LETTERS TO THE EDITO R

Published Tuesdays, Thursdays and Fridays throughout the universityyear by the Alma Mater Society, University of B.C . Editorial opinion /expressed are those of the editor and not necessarily those of the AM 8or the University. Editorial office, CA 4-3916 . Advertising office, CA4-3242, Loc . 26 . Member Canadian University Press .

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

TUESDAY, MARCH 17, 1964

April showersWell, those ominous little blue schedules hav e

gone up on bulletin boards around the campus again . It 's

time for exams, the most farcical and most inevitable o f

UBC 's cobwebby academic traditions .

It is time for that pressurized push to the ultimat e

end, to that three hours in every year where the stu-

dent props a piece of plywood on his knee in the audi-

torium and scratches in a little booklet not what he

knows or has learned during the past seven months, bu t

what he has memorized in the eight hours since he wrote

a previous exam.

The system, we are afraid, is not only inefficient ,

and invalid as a test of an individual 's ability or perform-

ance, but it is also grossly unfair .

Many students have

at these littl eithis week looke

d blue sheets, and found that they must write two three-

hour final exams on the same day — others have four

or five in a row . We know of several students who had

to write three two-hour Christmas exams on the same

day .The tedious grind of examinations is exhausting for

even the most accomplished students — no one can b e

expected to do their best under the circumstances that

are thrust upon the student . But the worst part about

the system is that performance on one-shot examina-tions is the criterion for success and failure, and ulti-

mately for graduation .

A student who can 't pass these exams probabl y

wouldn 't be too successful under any other system —

but two exams in the same day, both counting for a s

much as 75 per cent of the student's final mark, can

mean the difference between a pass and a second, or a

second and a first class, all of which can be rather vital

in terms of a scholarship and bursary aid, employment

opportunity, or further academic work .

We suspect the better system — one in which the

student gains more and is evaluated more fairly — i s

one in which prepared work is emphasized, where dis-cussion is considered, and where exam questions have

been revealed ahead of time .

The courses we remember, the ones we thought

were most worthwhile, were laid out along these lines .

Most, however, have been a hashed-up version of both —

as soon as you've located some books and ground out a n

essay, those infernal exams are upon you again .

And the whole situation is made more depressing

by anguished cries from professors about how over -

worked they already are, and about how huge and un-manageable their classes are .

Perhaps we could arrange a death in the family

about April 13 . Then we could avoid the whole mess .

Rah! Rah! SexWe are pleased to see that Elizabeth Taylor has

chosen Montreal as the backdrop for her fifth and latest

trip to the altar .

This farcical event will undoubtedly prove to be the

best thing that ever happened to Miss Taylor in her

rather commercial career .

Canadian divorce laws being what they are, it wil l

be a long time before she can try Number six. And when

the NDP starts its most famous filibuster, Liz won ' t have

a chance .

For her sake, and ours, we hope she sticks with Dick .

Associate

Keith Bradbury

News

Dave Ablett

Managing

George Railton

City

_ _ Mike HorseyPhoto

Don Hume'Critics _ _

Ron Riter

Pilikwe explainedEditor, The Ubyssey :

Cannot Mr. Pulley eat com-fortably while that childstares at him? Does the con-figuration of the child's bod yoffend him ?

Mr. Pulley is lucky tha tthis child and others like hi mare not before him in th eflesh (what flesh they have . )

Mr. Pulley's letter last Fri -day re vulgar and sentimental-.icture on the Pilikwe poster sis a red herring, designed Ifear to distort the organizersand reduce the campaign t oa lethargic academic discus-sion of ethics .

The child in the picture isa human being . His starve dappearance is duplicated b yliterally millions of otherchildren. Vulgar and sentimen-tal it may be . Perhaps truthat times amounts to vulgarit yand sentimentality (offensiveto some cloistered tastes likeMr. Pulley's) .

But are these valid reasonswhy it should not be reveal-ed? Realistic, true-to-life il-lustrations, vulgar or not, ar eneeded to reinforce the fact spertaining to Bechuanaland ,eg. one in four childen diebefore they are four; only20 doctors were , serving apopulation of 340,000 in 1958;60 per cent of school-age chil-dren receive no education a tall.

The object of the Pilikwecampaign is to make theseand other facts of life inBechuanaland know n. Theorganizers hope that in dem-onstrating the needs to UB Cstudents, a positive respons ein the form of contribution swill be forthcoming .

Such contributions wouldenable the benefits of educa-tion to be extended to som eof those to whom they ar epresently denied. Onlythrough education will crop sbe increased and diversified ,stomachs regularly filled, andbasic sanitation developed .

Rationalized red herringssuch as Mr. Pulley's may re -move the discomfort of con-scious consideration of theconditions . They do not how -ever unburden us of our

responsibility to fellow hu-man beings . . . such as the un-dernourished child on the Pil-ikwe posters .

JIM WARDAgric. IV

Hey, doc !Editor, The Ubyssey :

Last Thursday the Gentle -men of the Varsity Field Hoc-ey Club gave a lesson in th emanly game of field hockeyto Fearless Frank Gnup andhis horde of delinquents . Des-pite Mr. Gnup 's weapons, im-precations, violence, and in-timidation of the officials ,despite the fact that he field-ed 18 mien simultaneously ,many of them armed wit htwo clubs and knuckle-dus-ters, the Gentlemen triumph-ed 2-0 .

Mr. Gnup, I understand, re-mains in hiding and in mourn-ing. But on Friday The Ubys-sey had the effrontery t oprint a studio portrait, a vividlikeness, of Mr . Gnup, alongwith the characteristically in-accurate information that hi sill-conditioned and inexperi-enced gladiators had won th egame !

Even apart from the super-ior skill and stamina of myGentlemen, Mr . Gnup's hire-lings had no chance of win-ning. I had been thoughtfu lenough to appoint myselfumpire and under no circum-stances should I have allowe dMr. Gnup's army to win—or ,for that matter, to score . TheGentlemen and I, therefore ,demand an abject apologyfor your scurrilous insult .

I remain, dear Mr . Editor ,your impartial critic .

Malcolm F . McGregor .Well, it was close, but n o

cigar —ed.

Yeah, yea hEditor, The Ubyssey :

UBC Radio Society de-serves to be congratulated onits remarkable contribution tocampus culture .

I am referring, of course ,to the magnificent danceparty sponsored and publi-cized by Radsoc .

By presenting the studentswith two solid hours of thebest in recorded music and

providing them with an op-portunity to participate inphysical self-expression of thehighest calibre, Radsoc is do-ing much to strengthen theimage of the mature univer-sity student .

But is the best always thatwhich sells the most adver-tisements, Mr . Wodinsky ?

ANTI-TRAS H

Pickup zoneEditor, The Ubyssey :

I don't blame students forhitchhiking to and from cam-pus when most of them hav ea limited budget and areforced to live several mile saway .

But why do 90 per cent o fthem have to ask for lifts a tyellow curbs, bus zones andother places where it is il-legal to stop a car?

To cater to hitch-hikerswithout breaking the law orobstructing traffic, I sugges tproviding a passenger load-ing-zone with a lay-by ateach end of University Boule-vard . Suitable unloadingplaces already exist — for in -stance, for incoming traffic ,at the junction of UniversityBoulevard and East Mall .

NORMAN THYERThen those of us who don' t

like people sticking thumbsat us could avoid the area—ed .

Sweepstakes ?Editor, The Ubyssey :

I recently read where somestudents went on a hunge rstrike to raise funds . Why notstart a UBC sweepstakes atone dollar a ticket—themoney could be used for th eworthy cause .

So it's illegal, but so is theIrish sweepstake. And Ispend more than $20 a yearon it .

F. B. SHANDLER,1150 Robson St.

Tower of kids ?Editor, The Ubyssey :

The "Tower of Man" reminds me of a giant pile o fchildren's building-blocks . Isit intended to be a hint thatmankind has not grown upyet?

NORMAN THYER

EDITOR: Mike Hunter SportsAsst . CityAsst . News _Senior _ _ _Senior

Denis StanleyRichard Simeo n

Tim PadmoreMaureen Covell

Donna Morri s

REPORTERS : Lorraine Shore ,Mike Bolton, Al Donald, Don Hull ,Stephen Brown, Mike Vaux, Joh nKelsey, Joan Godsell, Tom Way -man.

Page 5: Bus Stop ahead 7,500 cups...A stirring coffee tale Bus Stop ahead 7,500 cups By AL DONALD If you are reading this story in the Bus Stop coffee shop, take a look at that cup you are

Tuesday, March 17, 1964

THE UBYSSEY

Page S

BACKGROUN D

SFA's year-round grindspreading campus concep t

SWEET CO-ED Carol Ann Baker pulls lever on one o fseven new vending machines that have appeared i nBrock . Candy machines now supply name brand goodies .Some of them even make change .

—don hume phot o

Dozen more tried'

Three studentscommit suicide

Let's ditcharts council ,says artsman

Arts vice - president - electChuck Campbell wants theArts council to abolish itself .

Campbell will ask the coun-cil Wednesday to recommend

its own extinction to the artsgeneral meeting to be held this

week, and also to reconsider a

closely-defeated proposal to ex -tend the Arts elections vote

to frosh .

Outgoing arts president MikeColeman said the AUS withou tthe 30-member council woul dbe "just another bureaucraticexecutive structure . "

He said council, made up o fany interested arts students,has provided many good idea sand discussions .

Campbell's motion wouldempower the newly-electedAUS executive to act withoutconstitution until the fall gen-eral meeting .

The motion to give frosh thevote in arts executive election swas made recently by Cole-man because arts frosh canno tat present vote in the sprin gelection for their second-yea rrepresentatives .

By DAVID C. WEB B

OTTAWA (CUP)—Canadianuniversities and colleges, fac-ed with steadily-increasinglycosts and enrolment pressures ,are reviewing their traditiona loperating procedures to dis-cover whether some differentforms of organization mightmore effectively handle theincrease in student numbers .

The idea of operating on ayear-round basis is one con-cept being seriously studied b ya large number of institu-tions .

It appears that there arethree distinct stages in achangeover from one calen-dar system to another : the re-view stage, the transitiona lstage, and the operating stage .

In the first, the institutionconsiders whether the needfor change exists and studie sthe various types of calenda rsystems in terms of its par-ticular requirements. Shoulda decision to change be made ,the second stage commenceswith the introduction of th enew calender and the phasing-out of the old.** *

Stage three is reached whenthe entire institution is operat-ing under the new system. Thelength of each stage is infinite-ly variable .

There are 75 institutions o fhigher education in the United.States that have reached stag ethree in a changeover to year-round operation . There are 2 0or more in the transitiona lphase, including the entireState university system ofNew York and California .There are at least as manyagain at stage one .

In Canada, the majority ofuniversities and colleges areat the first, or review stage .To my knowledge, the ques-tion of year-round operation i sunder discussion at MemorialUniversity, Dalhousie, MountAllison, the University of NewBrunswick, Laval, Ottawa andAlberta . Formal committeesto study the concept are i noperation at McGill, SirGeorge (Williams, Carleton ,Queen's, York, Western On-tario and Manitoba .

* * *Simon Fraser Academy

due to open in 1965 or 196 6in Burnaby, has already signi-fied its intention to begin wit han all-year operation .

The University of Saskat-chewan and the graduateschool of the University o fToronto have reached the sec-and, or transitional phase. At

Saskatchewan the six-weekinter-session period, betweenthe end of the second term andsummer school, has grown sorapidly that a large part ofthe university is virtuallyoperating on a year-roundcalendar now .

It requires only a formaldecision and, some relativel yminor curriculum adjustment sto be made before a third termcould be introduced similar

Mr. Webb is director o fresearch, Canadian Founda-

tion for Educational Develop-ment, Ottawa.

to the split-trimester systemin operation at Florida Stateand the University of Michi-gan .

One institution—the Univer-sity of Waterloo—will shortl yenter stage three . The uni-versity is presently undertak-ing a featibility study—witha grant from the Ontario gov-ernment—to determine whe-ther or not to place the artsand science faculty on a work -study year-round calenda rsimilar to that which has beenso successful in the engineer-ing faculty . Early reports in-dicate it is entirely feasibleand likely that the programwill be adopted soon .

* * *The concept of a year-round

calendar, being a changefrom the traditional, is conse-quently a controversial ques-tion that has proponents an dopponents at all levels offaculty and administration .

Discussion of the problemsinvolved in year-round opera-tion centre around four majorareas: complexity, staffing ,honors' programs and studentfinancing .

The problems of staffingand honors' programs are in-terdependent and may be re -viewed together . Some say,in this connection, that an in-stitution on year-round opera-tion would require a 50 percent increase in staff, thusadding to an already severe

shortage and consequentl yjeopardizing honors' programswhich are relatively unecono-mical in terms of staff usage .

Others point out that thisoverlooks the fact that a 50per cent increase in staffwould only be required ifthere was also a 50 per centincrease in student enrolmen t—that, in practice, the num-ber of additional faculty re-quired under a year-roun dcalendar is in direct propor-tion to the number of addi-tional, students accepted .

The advantage of a year-round calendar is that underit the college can accept a 5 0per cent increase in facultyand students without a com-parable increase in its facili-ties .

* * *With regard to student fin-

ancing, it is pointed out thatthis would only be a proble mprovided (a) the student isallowed to accelerate, and (b)he relies on his own earnings .There are no figures to tell usthe number of students tha tthis would involve .

Whatever the pros and cons ,the majority of Canadian uni-versities and colleges are tak-ing a long, hard look at th eyear-round calendar system .

ForQUALITY and COMFORT i n

Contact LensesAt a Reasonable Pric e

SEELAWRENC E

CAL VEIIT705 Birks Bldg.

MU 3-181 69 :30-5 :30 p .m .—(Saturday 'til noon)

TORONTO (CUP)—Three University of Toronto stu-dents committed suicide last year, Dr. G. E. Wodehouse, headof the U of T Health Service, said last week .

At least a dozen more at-tempted to take their own lives,while "perhaps 400 and pro-bably more," with mental dis-orders ranging from mild toserious, sought psychiatri chelp .

Four of them ,psychotics, wereOntario hospitals .

"The problem,"Wodehouse, "is muchthan we ever see . "

"Last year, for example, thehealth service referred 43 7cases to outside consultants.More than half of these wer epsychiatric problems .

"None of these are frivolou scases," said Dr . Wodehouse ."They were here because the yshould be . "

Next year it is hoped tha tthe health service will becom ean accredited institution fo rpart of the postgraduate cours ein psychiatry . This would, Dr .Wodehouse says, help reliev ehis shortage of trained person-nel .

diagnosed ascommitted t o

said Dr .greater

6th Annual U.B.C. Singles

Scratch Bowling Tournamen tMAR. 21, 1:30 P.M., (5 GAMES) FEE : $1

Pinsetters Provided. Eligibility Same As Varsity Sport sEntry forms in Room 210, and bowling lanes Mem . Gym .

Closing date for entries is March 19, 1964 .

SUMMEREMPLOYMENT

Available for a number of Second and Third Year Com-

merce Students in the Marketing Option who are inter-

ested in pursuing a career in Pulp and Paper Marketing .

Appointments and application forms obtained throug h

the Placement Office . Interviews will be conducted on

March 19th and 20th, 1964 .

MacMillan Bloedel

and Powell River Limited

Page 6: Bus Stop ahead 7,500 cups...A stirring coffee tale Bus Stop ahead 7,500 cups By AL DONALD If you are reading this story in the Bus Stop coffee shop, take a look at that cup you are

Page 6

THE UBYSSEY

Tuesday, March 17,1964

In sports

T - Birdsbouncedin rugby

The UBC Thunderbirdsrugby team was defeated 8- 6by Western Washington in a nexhibition game played at Bel-lingham Saturday.

UBC led 6-0 at half time on

tries by Lloyd Kane and FredSturrock .

* * *Poor conditions on UBC' s

playing fields cost the Thun-derbird soccer team a chanc eto clinch at least a tie for th elower mainland first divisiontitle .

The game was postponed un-til next week .

* * *Liz Philpot of UBC won th e

women's title in the B .C. In-door Tennis Tournament a tUBC over the weekend .

She won all three of hermatches and beat Lindsay Wattsin the final matches 6-3, 4- 6and 6-2 .

Miss Philpot succeeds lastyear's winner Vicki Berner.

* * *Ramblers won the intra-

mural hockey title Tuesdaynight, defeating the GradStudies 8-5 .

Bob Redhead scored the win-ning goal in the third period .

* * *The bicycle racing seaso n

opened Sunday with the annua lO. B . Allan handicap, a 6 .3mile race sponsored by theVancouver Bicycle Club .

A field of eighteen ridersfrom Seattle, Bellingham, Vic-toria and Vancouver competed .

The first three places wen tto riders from Seattle and Bel-lingham with Joe Hailey o fUBC coming fourth in a tim eof 15 minutes 59 seconds .

* * *Applications are now open

for 28 positions on the Women' sAthletic Directorate for nextyear.

Nineteen extra mural teammanagers, five tournament co -ordinators, an intra mural co-ordinator, travel WCIAA co-ordinators and a PRO are als oneeded .

Applications must be i nwriting to Pat Nichols in theWAD office in the Women'sGym .

Closing date for applicationsis 5 :30, Wednesday, March 18 .

Press freedom'hurting church'

TORONTO (CUP) — T h eRoman Catholic Church i nQuebec has been 'discreditedand the intelligentsia areleaving it in droves, says thestudent president of the Uni-versity of Toronto .

Doug Ward told a churchgroup last week that a waveof anti-clericalism and in-creased freedom of the pressunder Premier Jean Lesagehave caused the change .

FATHER E. C. GARVEY. . . to Toronto

St. Mark'sgets new

head, booksSt. Mark's College is get-

ting a new principal and a gif tof a 160-book theological re -search collection .

Father E . C. Lebel, now pre-sident of Windsor's AssumptionUniversity, will be the ne wprincipal of St . Mark's .

He succeeds Father Edwi nGarvey, who will teach philo-sophy at St . Michael's College ,University of Toronto .

UBC chancellor Phyllis Rosshas donated 160 volumes — in-cluding some rare volume spublished about 1870 — to St.Mark's library .

Father Garvey said books forthe Phyllis T. Ross Collection ,on the fathers of the Churchand early Christian theology ,were collected by both Mrs .Ross and college staff.

Liberal deductionsOTTAWA (CUP) — Student

income t a x deductions of$3,000 were proposed by dele-gates to the annual Liberalfederation convention here .

day ."Canada doesn't use or ap-

preciate her intellectuals," sai dDavis .

"In England and Germanyand also the U.S., intellectual sare cultivated in s p e c i a lschools. "

He said the Canadian senateshould be scrapped or recon-stituted to attract intellectual swho will set long-term policy .

Davis spoke in the Physic slecture on "The Individua lCanadian and Canada's Fu-ture."

About 15 people attendedthe lecture sponsored by theArts undergraduate society .

Davis claimed all progres sresulted from the work of in-tellectual oddballs .

These people can view ob-jectively, are energetic andarticulate, and have broadtraining .

Ninety per cent of peopl enever have a unique thought intheir lifetime, " he said. "Theyjust follow the minority . "

Canadians are liked in othe rcountries because they are in-offensive, he said .

He urged students to be ar-rogant but objective.

He said the thistle and th erhino survive because they ar eprickly, and have tough hides .

Nice Nellies don't surviveand in Canada there are toomany Nice Nellies in leader-ship, he said.

nstructorwins grant

An instructor in the UB CSchool of Medicine has won aS30,000 Markle grant for teach-ing and research .

Dr. John Birkbeck, 31, wa sone of the 25 teachers in North .America to win the fellowship .

The grant provides $30,000to the medical school wherethe scholar will work, to bepaid at $6,000 a year .

Dr. Birkbeck, who has bee nat UBC since 1962, is a special-ist in endocrinology. He is agraduate of the University ofEdinburgh .

The Markle grants are de-signed to "relieve the facult yshortage in medical schools b ygiving support to young teach-ers and investigators early i ntheir careers ."

Students to getsummer in Quebe c

A few summer jobs in Que-bec are availal3le to UBCstudents .

Interested persons shouldwrite to Remi Bouchard, 91 3rue Moncton, Quebec 6, P .Q. ,stating age, course of studies ,working experience a n dknowledge of French .

Closing date for applica-tion is March 27 .

Wooten gets jo b

— a year lateA shuffle of the Specia l

Events deck has brought Chri sWooten up on top again .

The third-year arts studenthad been slated to head theSpecial Events Committee fo rthis year, but a Canadian Un-ion of Students scholarshiptook him to the University ofWestern Ontario .

But this year's chairman Ric kMcGraw persuaded him to runagain for the position and coun-cil Monday re-appointed hi mfor next year .

He said a racial seminar i splanned for November, whichmay bring Negro author Jame sBaldwin back to UBC .

'Canadians botc htheir politics '

By DON HULLAmateurs botch too many decision s

tics, says a Calgary consulting engineer ."Too many decisions ar e

made by untrained men, whose

messes have to be cleaned u pby the intelligentsia", E . H .

Davis told students Wednes -

poli-in Canadian

1964 GRADUATE SThe NES University Student Placement Division hasorders for the following vacancies :

ENGINEERS

Jr. Executive TraineesCHEMISTS

(B.Comm., B.A . )BACTERIOLOGISTS

C.A. Articled StudentsGEOLOGISTS

Pharmaceutical DetailSOCIAL WORKERS

SALESME NElectronic Equipment, Construction Machinery ,

Life and General InsuranceALSO

orders covering employment opportunitiesin other areas .

For further information 'phoneMr. W. L. Roberts at MU 1-8253National Employment Service

STEWARDESS INTERVIEWS- For

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Page 7: Bus Stop ahead 7,500 cups...A stirring coffee tale Bus Stop ahead 7,500 cups By AL DONALD If you are reading this story in the Bus Stop coffee shop, take a look at that cup you are

Tuesday, March 17, 1964

THE UBYSSEY

Page 7

BASIL STUART-STUBB S. . . stacks up

Librarychief oneof boys

By DON HULL

UBC's new librarian, BasilStuart-Stubbs, 33, is the firs tto be appointed to the postfrom the ranks of the existinglibrary staff.

Stuart-Stubbs, who succeedsDr. James Ranz as chief librar-ian, said the library will havea million volumes by 1970 i fthe present rate of increase i smaintained .

Work on the new stack sec-tion is slated to commence thi ssummer, although tenders havenot yet been called, he said .

The new Woodward MedicalLibrary should be opened forservice in September, saidStuart-Stubbs, it will be th efirst of a series of decentral-ized library facilities to besituated around campus .

Other libraries . aros plannedfor engineering, forestry andgeology.

Stuart-Stubbs said he hopesto make increasing use of auto-mation in the business opera-tions of the library, to provid eimproved service at lower cost .

He cited figures to show ho wUBC's library stacks upagainst some other campuslibraries in North America .

"UBC has the most user'library in the country", h esaid. "Our circulation is ove r600,000 books a year and ex-ceeds that of the University ofCalifornia at Berkeley, withits 25,000 students and threemillion books . "

UBC spends $1 .50 on stafffor every dollar spent onbooks. At University of Toron-to they spend $2.51, while theAmerican average is $2 .82 ,said the new librarian .

Stuart-Stubbs graduate dfrom UBC with first-class hon-ors in philosophy in 1952. Heobtained a B .L.S. at McGillin 1954 .

Since 1956 Stuart-Stubbs ha soccupied several senior librarypositions .

.In 1961-62 he was adminis-trative assistant to the librar-ian and in 1963 he was super-visor of collections .

He is the present editor ofthe B.C. Library Quarterly an dhas received a Canada Counci lgrant to gather material on abook on the historical carto-graphy of Canada .

He will ask for 25 per centof income taxes, 25 per centof corporation taxes, and 10 0per cent of inheritance taxes .

The Montreal universitieshave made arrangements fo ra special train to carry 60 0students to Quebec . It is alsoexpected that the some 55members of FAGECCQ (th eassociation of classical col-leges) will be represented .

(English universities in Que-bec will not join in the protes tmarch . One council presidenttold CUP that this was not th eright time for such protests . )

They view the recently an-nounced interest-free loan fundand the scholarship fund (10, -000 of $1,000 each) as uncon-stitutional and that they be -long properly within the prov-incial jurisdiction .

Prime Minister Pearson tol dthe House of Commons lastmonth that his government'sproposals were constitutional .

One students said that thefact that the government offer ssuch scholarship and bursar yfunds proves that they havethe money to do so, but thatthis money should properly b ein the provinces for their greatneeds .

Quebec has budgeted aroun d$450 million for education i n1964-65, which represents one-third of their total budget .

The only alternative to gainthe money are to add furthertaxes within the province o rto reduce their expenditures .But, neither of these solutionsis practical, claim the student s

Quebec is presently one ofthe highest taxed province sand further direct taxes by theprovincial government is im-possible, they say. They alsosuggest that reduction of thebudget is impossible, especiallythe educational requirements .

Clergy approvesof apartheid

HAMILTON (CUP) — Th eBible approves apartheid, aSouth African preacher toldstudents here .

Irving Benton quoted St .Paul who told certain slaves torespect their masters .

He said Christians do no tbelieve in equality .

Radsoc held upfor another year

Bryan Holder has beenelected Radsoc president for1964-65 .

For the last two years hehas been Radsoc businessmanager.

Ken Spencer, former tech-nical manager, was electedvice-president by acclamat-ion.

The UBC Woodwind Quintetvon first place ' and $150 inthe annual Young MusiciansCompetition Sunday .

The quintet consisted ofUBC music students AndrewBrodie, flute; Elaine Smith ,oboe; Jerry Summers, clarinet ;John Bulmer, bassoon; andBruce Dunn, horn .

Dunn and Inez Smillie, als oof UBC, tied for second prizesof $50 each in the contest,sponsored by the Friends o fChamber Music .

Top librariandiscusses Quebec

One of Canada's leadinglibrarians is a visiting lectur-er at the UBC School ofLibrarianship this week .

Father Edmond Desroch-ers, president of the Cana-dian Library Association andauthor of more than 90 ar-ticles on librarianship, wil llecture on libraries in Que-bec .

Thursday at 8 p.m. he willlecture on problems of bi-lingualism and biculturalismin Canadian libraries .

Father Desrochers is headof the Jesuit library at LaMaison Bellamnm in Mont-real and a part-time lecture rat the University of Mont-real .

Bourgeois native sPARIS (CUP)The "bour-

geoisie of the natives" in Afri-ca was criticized by a recentmeeting of the Federation ofstudents from Black Africahere .

Prof leavestwo monthsin advance

UBC psychology professorDr. Douglas Fraser will begi nhis one year sabbatical twomonths early .

The early departure will en -able Dr. Fraser to visit hissick father in Britain .

His courses have been take nover by other members of Th edepartment .

His official leave of absencewill begin officially at theend of April . It would normaI-ly begin at the end of June .

"Rather than have him comeback here and leave again, thebest thing was to push hi sleave back two months," saidActing Department Head Dr .Edro Signori on Monday .

Literary campaig nLE PAS, Bolivia (CUP) —

More than 1,000 Bolivian stu-dents have started a literac ycampaign here .

French to stag emarch on Quebec

OTTAWA (CUP) — French-Canadian students willmarch on the federal-provincial meeting in Quebec CityApril 1 to back demands of Quebec Premier Jean Lesagebefore the federal government .

Lesage is seeking return ofcertain taxation areas to hi sprovince to meet the increasedneeds of his government's bud-get .

UBC quintetwins $150 prize

STUDENT PUBLICATION S1964—196 5

APPLICATIONS ARE NOW BEING RECEIVED FO R

THE FOLLOWING POSITIONS WITH A.M .S. PUBLI-

CATIONS FOR THE 1964-65 T E R M . STUDENTSSHOULD APPLY IN WRITING TO :

MANAGER OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS ,PUBLICATIONS' OFFICE,ROOM 201, BROOK HAL L

* EDITOR: TOTEM YEARBOO KHONORARIUM OF $200 . PER YEAR

* EDITOR : "TUUM EST" HANDBOO KTHIS IS A SUMMER JOB . APPLICANTS SHOULDBE AVAILABLE FOR JULY AND AUGUST .

* EDITOR : "BIRD CALLS" TELEPHON EDIRECTORYTHIS IS ALSO A SUMMER JOB. EDITOR WIL LWORK WITH ADVERTISING SALESMEN I NSECURING ADVERTISING DURING SUMMER .

PLEASE GIVE NAME, VANCOUVER ADDRESS, PHONE NUMBER ,FACULTY, YEAR . . STANDING ON YOUR APPLICATION. BECAUSEOF CURRENT ADNIINISTRATTVE REVISION, APPLICANTS WILL NO TBE NOTIFIED UNTIL EARLY MAY .

* ADVERTISING SALESMEN! "BIRD CALL S

* ADVERTISING SALES : "THE UBYSSEY

rr

THESE POSITIONS ARE AVAILABLE FRO MMAY 1ST. COMMISSION OF 15% IS PAID ONADVERTISING SOLD .

, .APPLICANTS SHOULD HAVE KNOWLEDGE O FVANCOUVER AND UNIVERSITY MARKET. JO BCOMENCES ON SEPT. 1ST. COMMISSION OF13% PAID ON ADVERTISING SOLD .

Page 8: Bus Stop ahead 7,500 cups...A stirring coffee tale Bus Stop ahead 7,500 cups By AL DONALD If you are reading this story in the Bus Stop coffee shop, take a look at that cup you are

Page 8

THE UBYSSEY

Tuesday, March 17,1964

'fween classes

UBC CLASSIFIE DTrio jazzes upthe noon hou r

* * *PARLIAMENTARY COUNCI L

General meeting for elec-tions, Wednesday noon Bu .102 .

* * *SCIENCE UNDERGRAD S

Second term general meet-ing, noon today Chem. 250 .

*PRE-MED SOC

Elections of president, secre-

the Mike

tary, secondyear representa-tive. Film, Uterine Cancer .

Wes . 100, Wednesday noon .

* * *WUSC

Meeting, Council Chambers ,Brock Hall noon today .

* * * -ROYAL UBC CRICKET CLU B

Film : Tottingham Terrors vs .Biggleswade Bandits. Speaker ,S. U. Lipp. 1341 Tyneside .

* * *UNITARIAN CLU B

Tolerance, noon Wednesda yBu. 225 .

* * *FINE ARTS CLU B

Film, The Twin, on Michel-angelo. Today noon Bu. 106 .

* * *CARIBBEAN CHARTER

FLIGHTRegistration and final or-

ganization for the flight Bu .218, Wednesday noon .

* * *INTERNATIONAL HOUS E

Slides about Persian life

and modern Iran in the read-ing room noon today .

I HAVE your coat from the Ex -Magee dance at the Lady Alex-ander, do you have mine . Phon eRick, WA 2-7420 .

TUTOR available, French 110, Poll _tics 101, Philosophy 100 . Phone 922-7153.WANTED: Ride to Toronto, leav-

ing April 29 to May 2. Will shar eexpenses . Phone Karen, 733-3609.

FOUND : In Riddington text "Eco-nomie History of Europe . " I too kit by mistake! Phone Dave, A M6-4422 .

LOST : One black History 100 not ebook . Would finder please tur nit in at Lost and Found or cal l224-9874 .

BYNG GRADS—1954-58 : Anyone in -terested in a reunion send name ,address, etc . to George Agnew ,2125 E . 28th Ave ., or phone 327 -4276 .

FOR SALE : Baby carriage, play -pen, child's car-bed and car seat .Good condition—only two child old .Phone 261 .3621 .

GOING to Ottawa for summer .Want male student to share a napartment . If interested, call Ted ,AM 6-6022, after 6 p .m .

FOR SALE . Student's desk . Birch-finished—7 drawers (2 are fil esire)—Plate glass top—A steal a t$40 . RE 8-4419 .

FOR SALE . Scuba gear—complete.New and near new . Phone MU 1 -

0602 after 6 :00 .

Anderson namedsymposium head

Robert Anderson has bee nappointed chairman of th e1965 Academic SymposiumCommittee .

Anderson, a third-year hon-ors anthropology student, ser-ved as a member of thi syear's committee and was adelegate to the symposium in1963 .

Applications for other com-mitte positions should be mail-ed to Academic Symposium ,AMS Box 1 . Final selection o fthe committee will not b emade until next fall .

LOST : Green Schaeffer's "Snorkel "type fountain pen in the vicinityof Buchanan Building, Library -and parking lot behind Brock . Re-ward . Phone Larry, RE 3-0164 .

RIDE WANTED : West 16th andHighbury : For 8 :45 . Return 6 or5 :30 . Phone Anne, 228-8195 afe r6 p .m .

FOLK SINGERS : Year-old 4-strin gbanjo with carrying case, tuner ,2 instruction books. Phone Bobat RE 1-1048.

LOST. Pearl ring set in gold . Los tTues . afternoon, March 9 . Pleasecall FA 7-3294 .

LOST : One black wallet somewherenear or in auditorium cafeteria o rstacks in the Library . Phone 681 . 1713 .LOST: Red binder containing Zo o

105 notes in Bookstore 12 :30 p .m .Friday. Finder please turn int oLost and Found or phone Don a tHE 4-4822 after 6 .

TUTOR WANTED : For Grade 9English & Science . Needed no wbut can wait until after Easter .Contact Mr. Swanson, MU 3-6134 .

FOR SALE : Spalding golf clubs, 5irons and driver . Will sell o rswap for good 35 mm. camera .Phone Bob, 681-5801 .

LOST : Brown purse in Civil Eng. ,or Chem. Building during OpenHouse. Keys and I .D . cards need -ed . Phone Barb, RE_1-6451.

FOR SALE : Semi-automatic 8m mmovie camera with case . Adde dfeatures, "zoom" lens and pisto lgrip . Camera NEVER used . Pric e$110. Phone Wayne afer 6 :15—946 -

6435.FOR SALE : Sun Fun 1962 Puc h

Scooter . 6 h.p., 120 m.p .g., 3000miles . Like new, $333. Ken, CA4-5392 .

YOU read it first in The Ubyssey .

WANTED : Writers, composers, mu-sicians, actors, interested in form _ing a satire society in 64-65 ses-sion . Put names in Box 44. P.S .watch for "MacBennett, ' it's com-

ing.LOST. Basket (6" diameter—n o

ted of lino-cutting tools. Lust nearvicinity of Education Music huts017 . Reward_ . Phone TR 6-0109 .

TICKETS are-re available still for thetrip to Ottawa contest. PhoneCA 4-9052 after midnight .

FOR SALE : 32 ft. "Star" class sail-ing boat . New mast, rigging andfittings . 3-yr .-old dacron sails . Re -conditioned hull . Asking price o f$1300 includes trailer and misc .equipment . Phone Bill McKechni eat RE 3-6211 .

WANTED : French language recordcourse, "En France, " Phone Kevin733-4259—Leave message .

WEDDING dress, floor length for5' 8" person, small size . Drycleaned and sealed in plastic . $10 0original cost. Asking $5u or bes toffer . Phone 263-4287 .

FOUND : A silver sword tie pin dur _ing Open House . Call Miss Gordon ,CA 4-1111 . Loc . 808 .

FOR SALE, Four competition Volvowheels . $3 .00 each . Phone Doug .TR 2.1080 before 4 p .m . week -days.

Flighty courseLENINGRAD (CUP) — Mor e

than 100 Leningrad students

have formed an "outer space "

club . They study physics an d

astronomy and the older stu-dents take "flights" in jet train-ers.

Jazz Society will sponsor a free concert byTaylor Trio in the Auditorium at noon today .

* * *COMMUNITY PLANNIN G

First of two films on solu-tions to suburban living in si xcountries . La. 104 Wednesda ynoon .

* * *AQUA SOC.

General meeting for elec-tions noon today, Bu . 226 .

* * *CAMERA CLUB

The best slides of the Be nHill-Tout will be shown in La .102 noon Wednesday .

* * *CARIBBEAN STUDENT S

Film, Trinidad, Home of th eCalypso, noon today Bu . 203 .

* * *FENCING CLU B

Novice tournament, Wednes-day 7:30 p .m. All who are notc o m p e t i n g please turn inequipment .

THE UBYSSEY QUESTIONNAIRETHE UBYSSEY is interested in what you think of the paper . Below are nine

questions about the paper . The answers to these will give the staff a key to you rdesires and changes to better the paper will follow .

Six boxes will be on campus Tues day and Wednesday for you to retur nthe answers. The boxes are located i nBROCK HALL (North and South), BUCHANAN BUILDING, EDUCATIO NBUILDING, ENGINEERING BUILDIN G, BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES .

1 . I have trouble obtaining a copy of The Ubyssey on :a) Tuesday

yes q no

b) Thursday

yes q no

c) Friday

yes q

noa) News copy

yes q no

b) sports pages

yes q

no

c) critics pages

yes q

no

d) 'tween classes yes q

no

e) editorials

yes q

no

f) letters to the ed yes q

no

g) columns

yes q no

h) advertising

yes q

no

i) whole paper

yes q

no

3. It takes me to read The Ubyssey (check )a) five minutes

b) ten minutes

c) fifteen minutesd) twenty minutes

e) longer

f) how long? . ... . . .

4 . It would be better for me if the paper came out (check )

a) before classes, 8 a .m: 8:30

b) mid morning, 10-10 :30

c) noon hour, 12-12:30

d) afternoon, 2-2:30

5. Do you take the paper home

yes q

no

6 . Do you mail the paper anywhere?

yes q

no

If the answer is yes, where? 7 . The Ubyssey could be improved by the addition of (please write in

suggestions) :

9. News from other universities should be (check )a) left outb) stay the sam ec) increase

d) commen t

2. I read the :

8. I am generally happy with The Ubyssey

yes q

no qComment :

qq

Challenging Opportunitie san d

Rewarding Business Careerswith

The All-Canadian IAC Group of Companie s

The I.A.C. Family of Companies includes:

INDUSTRIAL ACCEPTANC ECORPORATION LIMITED

MERIT INSURANCE COMPAN Y

NIAGARA FINANCE COMPANY LIMITE D

THE SOVEREIGN LIFE ASSURANC ECOMPANY OF CANAD A

INDUSTRIAL-TALCOTT LIMITE D

NIAGARA MORTGAGE & LOAN COMPANY LIMITE DNIAGARA REALTY LIMITE D

University Men Invited to Apply

Comprehensive selection policy starts success-ful applicants on a career designed to providerapid advancement based on performance ,plus broad-scale and long-term protection be-nefits . . .a unique combination of opportunitie sfor early promotion, financial achievemen tand security .

Contact: MR. T. A. WOLFE for further information1754 West Broadway

Vancouver, BC .Phone 736-5911