12
>r!: a>::;>:r : ;x : : :3 :7 .":'£#'% S! :Iov : : : :z : : ..: ;< : U :e, MM yr. :FO :r:ioy:;.; E AN OPEN LETTE R made this possible and promise s more for the future since it re- presents the only practical wa y for Canadian students to develo p coherent, carefully thought ou t policies and programs on ques- tions of academic reform and th e quality of life in Canada as a whole . UBC has . always been looked to as a national leader : I hope this referendum will mak e it clear that UBC students wil l continue as active members o f the Canadian Union of Students . Your sincerely, TOM FAULKNER president Students' Administrativ e Counci l Treasure Van offers trea- sures that blow your cool an d cause you to freak out for th e day. The price is proportional t o the value and use of the object but most of the items ar e priced under $10 . From Spain there are wine - skins for the winos; Haiti has a sort of mesh tube tha t catches your finger and hold s it, called a wife-leader . Kore a has an opium pipe made o f wood and brass that sells for 75 cents . There are strange object s all around that are rumoure d to have strange effects when the spirits are involved. The following open letter t o UBC students arrived at Th e Ubyssey Monday. It is from To m Faulkner, president of the stu- dent council at University o f Toronto : I would like to echo Shau n Sullivan in his support for CU S membership . In the past, CU S has made it possible for U of T to evaluate its professors, to save the student council from costl y errors in developing a studen t union building like your own, t o undertake the construction of ou r own student residences and t o mount a campaign that resulte d in the tripling of provincial stu- dent aid . I am sure that UBC ca n point to similar experiences . Our national stude tsf one 4 'U ',niversity of Toront o E Vol . XLIX, No. 18 VANCOUVER, B .C ., TUES ., OCT. 31, 1967 s€Er''''' sn .- '$ 224-391 6 'CUS tackle s student gripes ' Armstron g CUS future on the bloc k The Canadian Union of Student s stands or falls at UBC on your decisio n Wednesday. Here is the wording of the referen- dum to be presented to UBC students : "Resolved that the Alma Mate r Society of the University of Britis h Columbia withdraw from the Canadia n Union of Students . " If you vote yes, you are voting against CUS . A no vote means you sup- port CUS . A meeting to debate the merits o f CUS will be held at noon today in fron t of the library, or in Bu 104 if it rains . Speakers for CUS will include CU S president Hugh Armstrong, Alma Mate r Society president Shaun Sullivan, an d AMS first vice-president Don Munton . Against CUS will be Jim Taylor, la w undergraduate society president, uni- versity clubs committee chairman Mik e Coleman, and commerce undergradu- ate society president Peter Uitdenbosch . By NORMAN GIDNE Y Ubyssey Council Reporte r The Canadian Union of Students i s the most effective way to attack studen t problems, CUS president Hugh Arm - strong said in Vancouver Monday . Armstrong flew here from Toront o for the CUS referendum Wednesday . "CUS stimulates people on campus . It's a clearinghouse for information an d research," he said in an interview .. He outlined a four-point progra m on which CUS is concentrating its re - sources this year . It includes the quality of education , universal accessibility, the governing o f post-secondary institutions, and student housing . "CUS found in a means survey that one-fourth of university students com e from the richest six per cent of Cana- dian families and the other quarte r come from the poorest 52 percent," Armstrong said . "We discovered these facts and act- ed on them . It was our pressure that got the students loans act passed . " Student pressure has slowed the ris e of tuition fees although education cost s are rising, he said . "Now we're tryin g to get fees actually reduced ." Armstrong said CUS is also tryin g to remove a middle-class bias in Cana- dian schools with "head start" tutorial programs . These were successful at th e University of Victoria last year . "What CUS can do is provide an analysis of what's wrong and offe r some help." CUS believes students should re - gain control of the university, he said . "Administration should be the ser- vant, not the master . "Boards of governors reflect only the corporate elite in the communit y — lawyers and businessmen . They should reflect the broader community and include representatives of all the professions, labor, the farmers and s o on. Businessmen should be on the board only to advise on technical mat- ters . " The senate, a university's academi c policy-making body, should be supreme , Armstrong said . A national survey on student hous- ing, financed by the Central Mortgage and Housing Authority, is being car- ried out with the help of CUS . "We have a field secretary workin g full time on housing . "Students haven't been consulted o n housing and there have been expensiv e mistakes made . Students should decid e the specifications . " Armstrong named other CUS bene- fits : Cheap life insurance, travel pro- grams, scholarship exchange programs and a student government research ser- vice . "Some say CUS dwells too much o n international and national affairs bu t right now—and for the last two year s —we have been concentrating on th e four educational programs . "And we also have a Zimbabw e (Rhodesia) and Vietnam education pro - gram . " He also favored the establishment of provincial student unions to wor k with CUS in pushing CUS programs . "They perform a necessary job an d I wish B .C . had an effective provincia l union . The provincial and nationa l unions are complimentary. " "I think it's important that B .C . students don't cut themselves off fro m the problems of the rest of Canada . "The national union would b e seriously weakened by UBC's with- drawal . " Armstrong will be at UBC unti l Thursday when he goes to see CUS representatives there . BOYLAN ON CUS-SEE PAGE 4 CUS PRO and CON - PAGES 8, 9

CUS tackles student gripes' Armstrong...engagement ring to bring the area of brilliance u p on the finger. Each exquisite petal is set with two round diamonds - and so designed to

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Page 1: CUS tackles student gripes' Armstrong...engagement ring to bring the area of brilliance u p on the finger. Each exquisite petal is set with two round diamonds - and so designed to

>r!: a>::;>:r

: ;x:::3:7.":'£#'%

S!:Iov::::z::..:;<: U

:e,

MMyr.:FO:r:ioy:;..;

E

AN OPEN LETTE Rmade this possible and promisesmore for the future since it re-presents the only practical wayfor Canadian students to developcoherent, carefully thought ou tpolicies and programs on ques-tions of academic reform and thequality of life in Canada as awhole. UBC has. always beenlooked to as a national leader : Ihope this referendum will makeit clear that UBC students wil lcontinue as active members ofthe Canadian Union of Students .

Your sincerely,

TOM FAULKNERpresident

Students' AdministrativeCounci l

Treasure Van offers trea-

sures that blow your cool and

cause you to freak out for the

day.

The price is proportional t o

the value and use of the objectbut most of the items are

priced under $10 .

From Spain there are wine-skins for the winos; Haiti has

a sort of mesh tube thatcatches your finger and hold s

it, called a wife-leader . Kore ahas an opium pipe made o f

wood and brass that sells for75 cents .

There are strange objectsall around that are rumouredto have strange effects whenthe spirits are involved.

The following open letter toUBC students arrived at TheUbyssey Monday. It is from To mFaulkner, president of the stu-dent council at University ofToronto :

I would like to echo Shau nSullivan in his support for CU Smembership . In the past, CUShas made it possible for U of Tto evaluate its professors, to savethe student council from costl yerrors in developing a studentunion building like your own, t oundertake the construction of ourown student residences and tomount a campaign that resultedin the tripling of provincial stu-dent aid. I am sure that UBC canpoint to similar experiences.

Our national stude tsf

one

4

'U',niversity of Toront o

EVol . XLIX, No. 18 VANCOUVER, B.C., TUES., OCT. 31, 1967 s€Er'''''sn.- '$ 224-391 6

'CUS tacklesstudent gripes'

Armstrong

CUS future on the blockThe Canadian Union of Students

stands or falls at UBC on your decisionWednesday.

Here is the wording of the referen-dum to be presented to UBC students :

"Resolved that the Alma MaterSociety of the University of Britis hColumbia withdraw from the CanadianUnion of Students . "

If you vote yes, you are votingagainst CUS . A no vote means you sup-port CUS.

A meeting to debate the merits ofCUS will be held at noon today in fron tof the library, or in Bu 104 if it rains .

Speakers for CUS will include CU Spresident Hugh Armstrong, Alma MaterSociety president Shaun Sullivan, andAMS first vice-president Don Munton .Against CUS will be Jim Taylor, lawundergraduate society president, uni-versity clubs committee chairman Mik eColeman, and commerce undergradu-ate society president Peter Uitdenbosch .

By NORMAN GIDNEYUbyssey Council Reporter

The Canadian Union of Students i sthe most effective way to attack studentproblems, CUS president Hugh Arm-strong said in Vancouver Monday.

Armstrong flew here from Toront ofor the CUS referendum Wednesday .

"CUS stimulates people on campus .It's a clearinghouse for information andresearch," he said in an interview ..

He outlined a four-point programon which CUS is concentrating its re -sources this year .

It includes the quality of education ,universal accessibility, the governing ofpost-secondary institutions, and studenthousing .

"CUS found in a means survey thatone-fourth of university students comefrom the richest six per cent of Cana-dian families and the other quartercome from the poorest 52 percent,"Armstrong said .

"We discovered these facts and act-ed on them. It was our pressure thatgot the students loans act passed . "

Student pressure has slowed the ris eof tuition fees although education costsare rising, he said . "Now we're tryin gto get fees actually reduced ."

Armstrong said CUS is also tryin gto remove a middle-class bias in Cana-dian schools with "head start" tutorialprograms. These were successful at th eUniversity of Victoria last year .

"What CUS can do is provide ananalysis of what's wrong and offersome help."

CUS believes students should re-gain control of the university, he said .

"Administration should be the ser-vant, not the master .

"Boards of governors reflect onlythe corporate elite in the community— lawyers and businessmen . Theyshould reflect the broader community

and include representatives of all theprofessions, labor, the farmers and s oon. Businessmen should be on theboard only to advise on technical mat-ters . "

The senate, a university's academicpolicy-making body, should be supreme ,Armstrong said .

A national survey on student hous-ing, financed by the Central Mortgageand Housing Authority, is being car-ried out with the help of CUS .

"We have a field secretary workin gfull time on housing .

"Students haven't been consulted o nhousing and there have been expensivemistakes made . Students should decid ethe specifications . "

Armstrong named other CUS bene-fits : Cheap life insurance, travel pro-grams, scholarship exchange programsand a student government research ser-vice .

"Some say CUS dwells too much oninternational and national affairs butright now—and for the last two years—we have been concentrating on thefour educational programs .

"And we also have a Zimbabw e(Rhodesia) and Vietnam education pro-gram . "

He also favored the establishmentof provincial student unions to workwith CUS in pushing CUS programs .

"They perform a necessary job an dI wish B.C. had an effective provincia lunion. The provincial and nationa lunions are complimentary."

"I think it's important that B .C .students don't cut themselves off fromthe problems of the rest of Canada .

"The national union would beseriously weakened by UBC's with-drawal . "

Armstrong will be at UBC unti lThursday when he goes to see CUSrepresentatives there .

BOYLAN ON CUS-SEE PAGE 4CUS PRO and CON - PAGES 8, 9

Page 2: CUS tackles student gripes' Armstrong...engagement ring to bring the area of brilliance u p on the finger. Each exquisite petal is set with two round diamonds - and so designed to

Page 2

THE UBYSSEY

Tuesday, October 31, 196 7

—gearge hello photo

"Get out of school and get an education ."

Love, sex, politics and moralitymake Needham's world go 'round

WHY BUY THE $8 .88EYE GLASSE S

ASIDE FROM THE ECONOMICAL PRICEONLY BAKER OPTICAL CERTIFIES TOUNCONDITIONALLY GUARANTEE AN DREPLACE LENSES AND FRAMES ATNO EXTRA COST IF BROKEN WITHI NONE YEAR OF PURCHASE .

SIMILAR SAVINGS FOR CONTACT

LENSES — $58.88 ALL FITTINGSINCLUDED .

EVENING APPOINTMENTS ARRANGED .

888 GRANVILLE Next to the O'rpheum Theatre

2nd FLOOR — ELEVATOR SERVIC E

688-4601i

tiSet

$725

crown the beautiful center gem in this enchantingengagement ring to bring the area of brilliance u pon the finger. Each exquisite petal is set with tworound diamonds - and so designed to give the effec tof marquise-cuts . The wedding ring is a perfect fit .

Eighteen karat white gold

Rings illustrated are exclusive Grassie designs ,and must be handcrafted

BUDGET TERMS—10% DOWNPreferential Discount to UBC Students

Diamond Specialists Since 1886

566 Seymour

685227 1Open S days a week -- Fridays anttil 9 p.m. — Closed Wednesdays .

By MIKE FINLA Y

One of his fears is being sold into whit eslavery at the Victoria YMCA .

He is Richard Needham, humor columnis tfor the Toronto Globe and Mail, who revealedthe idiosynscracy during a string of slightlysane remarks in Buchanan 106 Monday noon .

Commenting on everything from Canadianpolitics to the sex habits of various nationalities ,Needham stuck strictly to his topic, the Con-temporary Scene .

"A Canadian is a person who dies at 2 5and is buried at 65," he told 300 chortlingpersons .

"After love-making, an English woman says`Feeling better, dear?' and an American womansays, `There's a crack in the ceiling'," Needhamsaid .

Nurses, home ecs .take to gridiron

Well, here's mud in your eye — the annua lteacup game hits the dirt again Thursday .

The teacup game is an annual football matchbetween students in nursing and home eco-nomics. Last year the homemakers squadsquelched nursing 12 to 6 .

The girls have been training with help fromUBC's football team members for the pastmonth .

Game chairman Arnold Iwanick, engineer-ing 4, said Monday proceeds from a silver col-lection taken during the game will go to cripple dchildren at the Children's Hospital .

Halftime entertainment will be another an-nual event, the chariot race between the en-gineers and foresters . In a mud bath last year,engineers won .

Each chariot will be pulled by 30 men,Iwanick said. Goon squads of 80 engineers an dforesters will police the field during the race .

UBC's new mini-bus service will leave thebus-stop cafe at noon in plenty of time for pas-sengers to see the game. It starts at 12:45 p .m .in the Thunderbird Stadium .

Starting Nov. 5, the express, otherwiseknown at the PNE rocket train, will leave th ebus stop for C and B parking lots at peak traffi cperiods of 7 :45 a .m. to 9 a.m. and 3 p .m. to 5p .m .

Don Munton, Alma Mater Society first vice-president, said engineers are providing driversbecause they hope the idea will develop into a

.-long range solution of getting students to andfrom the parking lots . He said they hope to havetwo trains eventually each with a capacity of75 persons .

"A Canadian woman says, `There! That, byGod, should fix my mother . "

Needham touched upon a variety of topics ,all of which left the audience, including UBCtraffic czar Sir Ourvy Roberts, gasping for breath.

His home : "Toronto, for all you UBC geo-graphy students, is a little fishing village be-tween Calgary and Medicine Hat . "

His family: "My mother is a feminine ver-sion of Judy LaMarsh . "

His background : "I wrote editorials . Youknow, things like `Dire news from Sarajevo', "

His aphorisms: "Marriage is a romancewhere the hero dies in chapter one . "

Needham also displayed a talent for songwriting as he commented on the moral situationon the television series Bonanza :

"Homo, homo, on the range ,Where the stags and the fags go to play . "His tour de force was one of the fewl things

he was not allowed to print in the Globe andMail .

He calls it his "Lyndon Prayer" :"Our Lyndon, who art in Washington ,Hallowed be thy gall bladder . . .Thy bomares come,

Thy will be done ,In Ottawa as it is done in Saigon . . .

Needham demonstated a way with fairy taleswhen he told a strange version of Frankenstein ' smonster.

"The thing went insane and thought therewas a difference between a Vancouver aldermanand an Australian aborigine ."

He had but one word of advice for hi saudience :

"Get out of school and get an education."Needham says he will wander around the

campus until Thursday and is willing to speakto anyone. His visit is alleged to have been in-stigated by the English department.

!*? foiled again !Censorship has been foiled again .Larry Kent's latest sex-epic, High, which has

already been banned in B .C. and refused show-ings at both Montreal and Vancouver film fes-tivals due to censorship difficulties, is showingtoday at UBC .

Kent's film, Bitter Ash, was made at UB Cand shown here under a special arrangemen twith B.C. censor Ray MacDonald. The procedur ewill be repeated for High.

Only UBC students and staff will be admitted,thus making a "closed" audience .

High, made in Montreal, runs the .gamut ofsex, drugs, and crime . It also runs all this weekand part of next .

Page 3: CUS tackles student gripes' Armstrong...engagement ring to bring the area of brilliance u p on the finger. Each exquisite petal is set with two round diamonds - and so designed to

Tuesday, October 31, 1967

THE UBYSSEY

Page 3

Fight Socred govt,AMS tells governor s

— chris Make phot o

BROTHER DECUS CONVERTED many to thanataphobia Monday noon in a crowded Catarac t489. He now will return to the east coast of Vancouver Island to conduct formal instructio nsessions for the converted. The brother will return to campus soon to further spread hi sphilosophies .

SCANTY GROWTH

Monk hits university foliageWhat universities need is more shrubbery, a n

Aquarian monk said at UBC Monday.."Your campus is actually quite fortunate as

far as trees go," Brother Anthony Decus told 15 0persons in Cataract 489 during an noon . lecture .

"But it desparately needs more dense growth ,more low foliage . Without an environment whichincludes abundant leaves, opportunities for true

`communion with the wonderful blessedness ofnature are only too rare . "

The shrubbery would provide employment for

Student council Monda ynight told UBC senate andboard of governors to stand upto the Social Credit govern-ment.

Two motions passed un-animously by council called fo r"initial disapproval" of thedecision anndunced by actingUBC president Waiter GageOct. 26 .

AMS. treasurer Dave Hoye in .the motion also asked that rea-sons for the decision, which wa sdiscussed in senate, be request-ed from senate secretary J . E.. .Darnall, Hoye also asked . thatthe student . senators report tocouncil on the senate debate onthe decision . .

Another section asks for in-formation as to how the decis-ion to cut enrolment will affec tother institutions of higherlearning in B.C. .

"I understand a similar mo-tion suggesting enrolment re-striction was passed by the Uni-versity of Victoria and SimonFraser senates," Hoye said .

Hoye said the decision wasthe "thin edge of a deep andpretty wide wedge."

"The B.C. government gave$8 . million in constructiongrants to the universities. Thisis hopelessly inadequate . Thepostwar baby boom is hittingthe university yet ' our totalcapital grants declined last yearover the year before."

A second similar motion bysecond vice-president Ki mCampbell asked that all thebudget requests from the board

of governors to the provincia lgovernment be made public.

"The Social Credit govern-ment has shown a very highdisregard for higher educationin B.C.," AMS president ShaunSullivan said .

"Programs have been cutback, especially at the-,graduatelevel . Construction has been cutback because of this.

"I hope the board will standup and say to the Social ,Credit ,government : `Look . you .re .stunting. higher education. Startfulfilling' your obligations' : "

Sullivan urged - .the- beard totake a stand, against the pro . 'vincial government:

DENISE SEXTON, Miss forestryand home ec, was crowne dHomecoming Queen at Satur-day night's dance .

jobless gardeners, and would be ideal as handydisposers for such refuse as chewing gum, lectur enotes, and residence food, he said .

"It would also provide tremendous opportuni-ties for late night encounters with the nigh tcreatures . Can you picture the beauty of an elk,poised in the moonlight against physical plant? "

Decus finished his lecture by a special baptis mceremony for repentent bigomists . He returnsWednesday to the west coast of Vancouver Island .

UBC students report tenhousing race bar cases

Ten cases of housing discrimination against UBC studentsfor racial grounds have been revealed by the Alma MaterSociety.

Don Munton, AMS first vice-president, said the incident swere reported to the AMS as students sought room or suite sduring the summer.

The cases have never been made public ."After finding out whether or not the reported case wa s

true discrimination, we struck the listing from our housin gnames immediately," Munton said.

"As desperate as student housing is, we will not condonethat sort of thing. "

Almost all the victims of discrimination were Oriental ,he said .

"About six housing application forms read 'white only . 'Other owners simply told students the vacancy was occu-pied . "

Meanwhile AMS president Shaun Sullivan said as far a she knew, no discrimination had occurred.

Blaize Horner, residence representative on council, saidthe residences limit the number of foreign students in Can-ada less than two years to five per cent men and three percent women .

"But it is simply a matter of expediency," she said .

Sr~ .~'~r.:coa~:~;aE `' '̂.~atMEMM':F~;WR :;,a»Eff>k .M*i; :.. . :.

WELL , ALBERT, WHAT Do YOU THINK OF THE I SEE YOU'RE ST/LL UNREPENTANT! YOU'RE OFF-/C/ALLY IN THE ARMY, DON'T FORGET!I THINK IT STIME YOU WERE PROPERLY /AP//cTED.!

ELECTION PREPARATIONS? ;19111~NUCOULDN'T CARE Li' .

Page 4: CUS tackles student gripes' Armstrong...engagement ring to bring the area of brilliance u p on the finger. Each exquisite petal is set with two round diamonds - and so designed to

a dam - right alongside the clock tower .'

THE U 8 KS'S EYPublished Tuesdays, Thursdays and Fridays throughout the university yearby the Alma Mater Society of the University of B .C . Editorial opinions arethose of the editor and not of the AMS or the university . Member,Canadian University Presi . The Ubyssey subscribes to the press servicesof Pacific Student Press, of which it is founding member, and Undergroun dPress Syndicate. Authorized second class mail by Post Office Department,Ottawa, and for payment of postage in cash. The Ubyssey publishes PageFriday, a weekly commentary and review . City editor, 224.3916. Othercalls, 224 .3242 : editor, local 25; photo, Page Friday, loc. 24 ; sports, loc.

23; advertising, loc. 26. Telex 04.5224.

OCTOBER 31, 1967

A simple choic eUBC students face two decisions in Wednesday ' s

referendum on our membership in the Canadian Unio nof Students .

The first has to do with the nature of being a student .We must ask ourselves whether students are to be mer ewards of the rest of society - helpless to organize fo rtheir own betterment or for that of society as a whole .Or whether instead students are to assert themselves asadult citizens willing and able to organize in order toplay their proper role in shaping Canadian society .

We think the second choice is more befitting humanbeings so we're going to vote no Wednesday when aske dwhether we want to pull out of the Canadian Union o fStudents .

The second decision is whether we want to be par tof this country or not. If we think the world ends athe Rockies then, as UBC students, we should pull outf CUS and just muck around happily in our own littl e

dynamic society. But if Canada is one country, and B.C.is a part of Canada, then students at UBC should joinwith students in other provinces to deal with the prob-lems that face all Canadian students .

The choice is simple .A vote to pull out of CUS is a vote for the student

as helpless parasite . It is a vote also for Socred-styleseparatism .

Both of these concepts the vast majority of UB Cstudents reject. We urge students then to vote Wednes-day - as adult Canadian citizens - to retain their mem-bership in the Canadian Union of Students .

Two questionsA national student union is not something to be

tossed aside lightly. Students in Spain at this momen tare suffering expulsion, jail - even torture - in thei rfight to form an independent national union. That fightis not yet won - the Spanish student association re -mains government-controlled .

It is strange, then, that a group of students at UBCshould be so anxious to destroy Canada's national stu-dent union. It is especially strange at a time whenpressure groups have become so firmly entrenched a san integral part of national political life .

Anyone who says that government measures suc has student loans and student tax deductions would hav ecome about without intensive lobbying in Ottawa i sspeaking naive nonsense .

That lobbying was carried out by students' ow npressure group, the Canadian Union of Students. Thesame organization is currently showing the federal

, government why it must take student interests int oaccount when it revises the national tax structurein the light of the Carter Commission Report .

It is essential that students, like business, labor,and housewives, maintain an independent pressureorganization in Ottawa to inform government of thei rneeds .

Students in doubt about the value of their member-ship in the Canadian Union of Students should askthemselves these two questions :

Will students receive a fair deal if there is no easilyavailable spokesman for their interests ?

If our national union - CUS - is destroyed by aUBC pullout, who will speak for us ?

Maple Leaves

L3 3Uhaks c . oie bekween

QueenEditor, The Ubyssey:

Arts council distributes freeanti-calendars, and is termedirresponsible by AMS . The en-gineers destroy 13,000 copiesof The lJbyssey, and probabl ywon't even get billed for them .After this caper, Lynn Spraggsdoesn't deserve to be even th eHomecoming Queen .

ROGER SCHIFFE Rarts 1

Tough Lynn

feiebds'

. . . so, I am pleased to announce that UBC will be getting

Editor, The Ubyssey :L. D. Spraggs is wrong again .

I, a Ubyssey reporter wa spunched by an engineer onThursday, Oct. 19, whilst mak-ing my way down North Broc kstairs . I was knocked againstthe wall and punched abovemy right eye. I have no ideawho my assailant was and haveno idea why he hit me, exceptperhaps that I write for TheUbyssey . It seems that this be-havior represents the "true"engineers .

PAM MUTCHarts 1

Smart PeterEditor, The Ubyssey:

Peter Uitdenbosch, the finan-cial wizard, is playing pettygames with AMS money .

Last spring when the AMShad a referendum to increaseAMS fees by $3, Peter ad-vised students to vote againstthe increase because, he said,we would be able to take th emoney from the jocks in amotion at the general meeting .The referendum failed by 3 0votes . If he had thought fora few minutes, he would haveknown that a motion to re-move the non-discretionar ygrant to athletics would be de-feated . It was defeated .

Now he wants us to with-draw from CUS so that wewill have another $11,000 t oput into the tight AMS budget.

I don't think he has givenmuch consideration to thebenefits that students get fromthe 65 cents they put into CU Seach year. It is obvious thatthe interest free student loansand tax deduction permitte dfor our tuition fees are worthfar more than this small sumand yet Peter wants us todrop out in order to slightlybolster a tight budget he wasinstrumental in making tight .

BLAINE KENNEDYcomm. 3

BRIAN WALLAC Ecomm. 3

Pool in SUBEditor, The Ubyssey:

It seems ridiculous that auniversity of this size has apool that is available only amonth and a half or so duringthe school year. Not only doesthis fact pose a great incon-venience for the swim team,diving classes, etc ., but i tshows a true deprivation tothe many swimming enthusi-asts on campus .

Hoping that the administra-tion will cover Empire Pool ,or waiting for the administra-tion to think about a newpool next to the Winte rSports Centre, seems quite in-adequate . Are there in factconcrete reasons against apool in SUB? Unless the ad -ministration is definitelybuilding a new indoor pool(or covering Empire Pool)soon there is no reason weshould not plan for a new

pool right now.Just as Empire Pool charge s

the public in the summer, apool in the SUB can be open

to the public especiall yduring weekends and holi-

days .

C. J. LAMscience 4

Boylanon CUS

By CHARLIE BOYLAN

Boylan, last year's AlmaMater Society first vice-presi-dent, is spending this yearin Toronto. He is still reg-istered as a graduate studentin English at UBC .

Yes, I would say, vote toretain UBC membership inthe Canadian Union of Stu-dents .

There are many serious anddifficult problems facing theCanadian student community.As such they effect the fate ofthe nation as a whole . If thestudent community, i .e . all ofyou who daily attend lecturesand labs, does not have an or-ganized and articulate nation -al union leadership, it willabandon the task of solvingthese complex problems o feducation to other socially or-ganized communities .

Those who presently con-trol our universities also havea vested interest in who willattend university, what theywill learn, how they will liv ewhen they're at university ,and where they will workwhen they leave . Axe you will-ing to let them make all th edecisions?

In effect, what those whooppose CUS, best personifie dby compleat bureaucrats likeMike Coleman, are saying t oyou is: "Be happy with yourlot, students . Don't try tocreate your own problems, orget involved ."RECORD SPEAKS

Of course they'll all protestsharply and tell you howmuch they've suffered for youand how they're really inter-ested in local reform andaction. But their record defiestheir rhetoric. Coleman, forexample, was arts presidenttwo years in a row and didvirtually nothing to challengearts education, or create aserious movement of student sconcerned with the organiza-tion and content of their uni-versity . He made fine speechesin phoney model parliamentsabout the great future of theCanadian nation, but in actionhe tells you to leave a nationa lstudent union . Anybody a tUBC who listens seriously to

TO PAGE 7

EDITOR: Danny Stoffman

City Stuart GrayNews Susan GranabyManaging Murray McMilla nPhoto Kurt Finge rAssociate . . .. Al Birni ., KIrsten EmmettSenior Pat Hrushowysports Mike JesuitsWire Charlotte HairsPage Friday Judy BingAss't. City Beni Las

Oozing harm from every pore, abalding columnist with a black hear tand a black belt in karate preache dcelibacy, waving samuri swords.

"Just don't rifle m y pocket8, "cried Lin Tse-Hsu, taking a powde rstain from his tunic . Fearing thatvoices on tape recorders are ofstool pigeons, Godfrey Golashes con -tented himself with making Taffyin the corner. "Bit of a stick situa-tion, I say," ventured Fred Hill,his eyes popping.

Placid platonists, meanwhile, per -used periodicals and chewed peper-mints. They included Hew Gwynne ,Mike Finlay, Steve Jackson, LaurieDunbar, Judy Young, Irene Wasil-ewski, Mark DeCoursey, Richar dNeedless, Launne Armstrong andRichard Baer. Norman Gidney wentCamping.

In the jock shop, Jim Maddln, Joh nTwigg, Mike Fitzgerald and PloOran lifted weights between sleep-ing.

Funeral will be held Friday forKurdler Hilger, whose demise wassadly reported by Bob Brown, ChrisBlake, George Hello and Lawrenc eWoodd, all of whom had what ap-peared to be bloody hands.

Page 5: CUS tackles student gripes' Armstrong...engagement ring to bring the area of brilliance u p on the finger. Each exquisite petal is set with two round diamonds - and so designed to

Tuesday, October 31, 1967

THE UBYSSEY

Page 5

CROSS-COUNTRY NE

Duff-Berdhal under- fireTORONTO (CUP) — Competing programs to

study the results of the Duff-Berdahl Report onuniversity government came off pretty much asscheduled Saturday.

A crowd of 100 persons heard the Duff-Berdhal Report severely criticized Saturdaymorning by a student group led by TerrySulyma, last year's finance commissioner forthe Canadian Union of Students .

Most severe criticism was the total approachto the study, which was a survey of opinio nrather than a forward-looking recommendation .

Sharon Yandle, student senator from SimonFraser University, explained the concept of stu-dent power saying students are no longer askingfor power — "They demand it ."

She then said she was going over to theCUS alternative program because it was morerelevent .

The competing programs ended in a tie, bothin length and attendance but the CUS progra mwas characterized by much more spirited dis-cussion from the floor .

The Duff-Berdhal in person program in St .Michael's College offered critical comment onthe report in the morning, and in the afternoonwas devoted to reports on academic government

Grass study offVICTORIA (CUP) — Research on marijuana

has been vetoed by the narcotic commission inOttawa .

A request to carry on research by a Univer-sity of Victoria professor, Gordon Hobson wa sturned down by R . C. Hammond, chief of thedivision of narcotic control .

"There would appear to be no value what-soever in experimental work that is either de-signed to condemn marijuana, which is alreadycondemned, or to attempt to cast it out on theposition that has already been taken interna-tionally," he said in a letter to Hobson, actin ghead of the psychology department.

"I fully expected such a reply althoughnumerous conflicting reports involving reputablemedical persons would seem to indicate thereare still valid grounds for more research,"Hobson said .

Van's Folk MuskScene

THE VILLAGE BISTRO2081 W 4th

Open from 8 :00 Every Night ExceptMonday - Tel . 736-9920

U .B.C. Beauty SalonIn The Villag e

HairpiecesCleaned and Styled

Reasonable Prices

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Open Tues . - Sat.

Tel . 228-894 2

fashion atyour door!

Leather and wool jackets,coats, vests, shirts, slacks .

Suede suits, ties, purses.Cow, sheep, wolf skin vests .

Wedding dresses, dresses .Blouses, bathing suits and

jumping suits ,All garments tailored fo r

self measurements.

MEHMET'S TAILORS540 Granville St. - 684-081 1In Arnold & Quigley's Shop

reform undertaken at various universities, in-cluding Western Ontario, U of T, Carleton andUniversity of Montreal .

The student program heard reports on power ,functions of the university, and strategy fo rchange .

Provincial union sreplace dead AAS

ANTIGONISH (CUP) — The last congres sof the Association of Atlantic Students Sundaybecame the first Atlantics Students Conferenc eas AAS dissolved into three provincial unions .

The ASC will meet annually to exchang einformation and co-ordinate political actio namong the provincial bodies and unaffiliatedschools throughout the Maritimes .

Dalhousie president Dennis Ashworth said :"We didn't come here to preside over the funera lof AAS. We came to work for a strong politicalunion ." He said AAS failed because it lackedleadership and did nothing .

"But provincial unions can do a lot of ef-fective political work, and provincial meetingswill force ASC delegates to do their homewor kbefore the annual conference."

ASC adopted the declaration of the Canadianstudent as a working guide , but its policy willnot be binding and it will not provide services .

CUS president-elect Peter Warrian Saturdaycalled the trend to provincial unions a historica lbind .

CUS vice-president Don Mitchell said theAtlantic universities are not ready for provincialunions, "there are two provinces with nothin gto work with — P .E.I . and Newfoundland .

"But the idea of a regional conference ofMaritime campuses is good, and could be usedto build a region-wide political basis . "

The AAS break-up was opposed by King' sCollege and St . Francis Xavier . King's presidentSteve Hart said the real problems of educationare not regional, not provincial, and urged astrong Maritime union to be built on the rubbleof AAS .

"We came to build AAS, not to kill it . ASCwill only be an exchange of ideas, not a politi-cal entity ."

UNB law soc studiessecession from counci l

FREDERICTON, N .B .(CUP) — The law societyof the University of NewBrunswick voted Thursdayto investigate the possibil-ity of seceding from thestudents' council .

This comes on the heel sof the withdrawal last wee kof post-graduate studentsfrom the council . Many stu-dents feel that if the lawsociety succeeds in its bidto withdraw, the engineer-ing undergraduate societywill follow .

Law students feel theydo not receive the benefitsfrom council that other fac-ulties and organizations ac-crue .

One case mentioned bylaw students is the questionof conference delegates .The UNB yearbook sentfour delegates to Vancou-ver, and the student news-paper, The Brunswickan ,will send three more to th ewest coast, both for confer-ences. The law society wa snot granted funds to sendlaw students to a confer-ence in Toronto dealin gwith the role of medicine inlaw .

Whether the law society

PAN AMERICAN PETROLEUMCORPORATIO NCalgary, Alberta

requires

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Postgraduates, Graduates and Undergradu-ates in Geology and Geological Engineering .

Regular and Summer Employment Opportuni-ties in our Exploration Department involvin gduties in the Calgary Division Office and i n

field locations throughout Alberta .

THE OPPORTUNITIES

Pan American is an expanding major pro-ducer of oil, natural gas and sulphur . TheCompany's operations now embrace Britis hColumbia, Alberta, Saskatchewan, Yukon ,North West Territories, and the Atlantic andPacific coastal waters . We offer excellentsalaries, benefits and opportunities for ad-vancement .

INTERVIEWS :Wednesday, November 8, 1967

Thursday, November 9, 1967

Contact your Student Placement Office for Company an dposition information .

Halloween DanceTONIGHT

BAND SPAPA BEARS MEDICINE SHO W

UNITED EMPIRE LOYALISTSPAINTED SHI P

DOLLA RSTROBE-LIGHT SHOW — SURPRISE S

8 'til 1

RETINAL, CIRCU S1024 DAVIE

withdraws or not will prob-ably depend on council' sdecision concerning the lawconference .

Post-graduate students ,who when they withdrew ,formed their, own graduatestudents' association, con-tended that council was un-justified in requiring thatthey pay for several studen torganizations which weredirected towards under -graduates .

Law students are pre-senting much the samecase. , The law faculty islocated in off-campus Som-erville House, and law stu-dents feel that the repre-sentative they send to coun-cil returns with nothing .

THEFAIR IS NOT

JUST A

NAMEFIND OUT

WHYTHIS FRIDAY AN D

SATURDAY

THE JOB i

Page 6: CUS tackles student gripes' Armstrong...engagement ring to bring the area of brilliance u p on the finger. Each exquisite petal is set with two round diamonds - and so designed to

Loan shortage no cause for alar mPage 6

THE UBYSSEY

Tuesday, October 31, 1967

Federal loan money is dwindling, but ther eis no cause for alarm, says the man in charg eof the loans for B.C.

"By now most student applications for loanshave been made," W. D. Reid, head of the B.C .student loan committee, said Thursday. "Butfurther requests will be carefully considered .

Dean Walter Gage, acting UBC president, saidthere is no guarantee of sufficient funds to meetthe demand of applications .

The money for student loans was allocatedby the federal government in July . Once the

'Discriminatio nnot practised '

UBC's nine sororities and 15 fraternities haveassured the senate that no discriminatory clause sexist in their membership requirements .

UBC registrar and senate secretary J . E.Parnall said Thursday all groups claim theirmembership requirements comply with a state-ment of senate policy on membership .

The senate statement said the traditions ofthe university were incompatible with restric-tion of membership on grounds of racial origi nor religion .

Religion, it said, was not a valid reason forrejection of potential members unless adherenceto a specific faith constituted "a bona fide tenetof the organization ."

allocation is used, it is up to the loan com-mittee to request a supplement of funds.

"We are approaching the allocation poin tnow but we will definitely ask for a supple-ment if it is needed," Reid said .

No exact estimate of the amount of fundsremaining for UBC students will be availabl euntil the end of the month, he said .

Lectures now freeFour remaining sessions in an exten-

sion evening series on Justice and theIndividual will be opened to student at-tendance at no charge .

A panel discussion today on non-con-formity and limits of sedition and treasonwill be entitled The Right of Dissent.

The Power of the Majority, a paneldiscussion on the law regarding persona lhealth and safety, will be the topic Nov . 7 .

On Nov. 14, a new deal for Indiansand Eskimos will be discussed, includingprinciples of past legislation and ne wdirections .

The last discussion, on Nov. 21, dealswith problems of divided jurisdictions anddemand for provincial rights . It is entitledProvince versus Nation .

All discussions are at 8 p .m. in Bu. 104.

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

(Or almost anytime for that matter)

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

Challenging OpportunitiesIn Mining

In Specialty Steelmakin gCareer opportunities

Career opportunities i nin uranium and base metal

the Atlas Steels' steelmakin gmines in Quebec, Ontario

operation in Welland,and Saskatchewan, research

Ontario, and Tracy, Quebec .and development lab-

Administration and market-oratories at Elliot Lake,

ing careers are availableand exploration throughout

in both Canadian and world -North America .

wide metals distribution .

THE INTERNATIONAL FAI R

MIXING BOWLBring Your Spoon

This Friday and Saturday a tInternational House

BIRD CALLS Yte "Ow 'A l .loo'oaf 2t.4'eThe Most Useful Book on Campu s

BUY YOURS TODAY PUBLICATIONS OFFICE,BROCK HALLUBC BOOKSTOR E

ENGINEERIN Gand HONOURS SCIENC E

GRADUATES REQUIRE Din the following departments :

EXPLORATION - PRODUCTIONGAS -MANUFACTURING

UNIVERSITY PHARMAC YIN THE VILLAGE

PHONE 224-3202

• ANYWHERE ON CAMPUS

• AT NO CHARGE TO YO U

Since Shell Canada's success depends to a great extent on soun dtechnical knowledge and achievements, much of the strength ofour company lies in the development and performance of ourengineers, scientists and other professionals .

Opportunities for graduates with Bachelor and Masters degree sexist in most of the company's major departments . We invite youto speak with Shell's representatives to obtain career information .Some summer positions are available for next to final year students .

Check with your placement office for company booklets, interviewschedules and further details .

Mineral Engineering

Honors Science GeologyMetallurgical Engineering

Metallurgical EngineeringChemical Engineering

Chemical EngineeringGeological Engineering

Commerce

See our management team on campus November 8, 1967 .

A recruiting team from our organization will be available todiscuss employment opportunities, answer questions, and interviewprospective graduates in the above-named courses—on campu son the dates shown. Undergraduates seeking summe remployment are also most welcome .Company literature and further information on interview timetable sare available at your Placement Office .

Rio AlgomRio Tinto Atlas Steels

CAMPUS INTERVIEW DATES

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. Tuesday, October 31, 1967

THE UBYSSEY

Page 7

— lawrence woodd photoARCHITECT ROSS KEMBAR Monday pointed out to a meetin gof the UN club where a proposed freeway will run throug hVancouver . Kembar said the city council and big businessenterprise decided on the route which will virtually destroyChinatown.

MORE BOYLANFROM PAGE 4

Coleman's empty rhetoric is afool.

The technocrats are anothercase . Engineers are tradition-ally the most socially conserv-ative force on most campuses .After all they make the worldwork and why should the ylisten to artsy-fartsy weirdy-beardy, commie pot-smokers .Yes, they help make the worl dwork (and they work hard atdoing it), but the majority ofengineers (throw in foresters ,aggies, even doctors andnurses) don't have a hell of alot to say about how technolo-gy will work . Or who it willwork for? The ethic of LynnScraggs becomes translatedwhen he graduates as "Wel lit's just my job."

OK, Lynn, but in the mean-time as an engineer you mightjust want to look around you—at pollution, traffic, housing .That's not just technology,baby. That's the "system" andI'm all right Jack with my$50,000 split-level, super-hotV-8, blonde and all that tra pyou see on TV commercials .So what's your answer? Biggerand better dances! Screw CUS .

"Sell CUS to my old AlmaMater", I heard myself say a tm i d n i g h t sitting at thi sdamned typewriter 3,500 miles

away in smoggy Toronto .Nope. I'll let the soft-linerstell you about the life insur-ance, the tax reductions andgovernment loans and all therest. And why knock it . Aunion is supposed to look afte ryour interests . CUS does it anddoes it well for a lousy 6 5cents a year .

SELF-INTERES TBut for the first time CUS

has tried to broaden its defini-tion of what your self-interestis . So let me ask you. Is it inyour self-interest to have anational dialogue on universitygovernment? Is it in your in-terest to pay students to studyeducation problems, organiz efrom one campus to another ,communicate the experienc eof one end of student-Canad ato the next? Is it in your self-interest to belong to an or-ganization which, howeverpainfully slowly, may help re-shape the constitutional re-sponsibility of education as anational one ?

If you organize and mobi-lize and make CUS come alivein an intellectual and politic-al way, you can't help butwin. Someday.

And all of these rambling swere to say mark my ballotby proxy . Vote to stay in CUSon Wednesday.

FILM SOC PRESENTS BANNED

Written, Produced, Directed by Larry Ken t

of

'Bitter Ash ' & 'Sweet Substitute ' fame

TIMES: 12:30 & 8:00

Tuesday, Oct . 31 — Friday, Nov. 3

Tuesday, Nov. 7 & Wednesday, Nov. 8

UBC Aud. — $1 .00

ALL SHOWINGS RESTRICTED TO UBC STUDENTS. AMS, FACULTY OR STAFFCARDS MUST BE PRESENTED AT THE DOOR.

EFFECTIVE

RAPIDREADING

can helpaccomplished, understoo dGUARANTEES to at least

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There's a long year ahead—a lot of reading must b eand remembered .

The Reading Dynamics metho dtriple your reading speed while retaining or increasin ghension .

FREE DEMONSTRATION O FEFFECTIVE RAPID READING Contact one of our

U.B.C. CampusRepresentatives

PERRY SEIDELMANPhone 261-1809 or leave amessage in student mailboxin law building .

MIKE MENAR DPhone 266-5574

TONIGHT, OCT. 31 — 8:00 p.m.GROSVENOR HOTEL — Douglas roo m

WEDNESDAY, NOV. 1 -8:00 p.m.GROSVENOR HOTEL — Douglas roo m

THURSDAY, Nov . 2 — 8 :00 p.m .CAPILANO GARDENS — Copper room

SATURDAY, NOV . 4 — 8:00 p.m. JIM RUSTPhone 266-0403GROSVENOR HOTEL — Douglas roo m

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.Page 8

THE UBYSSEY

Tuesday, October 31, 1967

CANADIAN UNION OF STUDENTS:

,

What CUS(sing) does for yo uand the Canadian university

Common, problems needcollective actio n

By SHAUN SULLIVA NAMS Presiden t

Why have a Canadian Union of Students? Becaus eCanadian students face common problems in the environ -ment within which they find themselves . These commo nproblems can best be solved by collective action .

This concept must be accepted or rejected before an ydiscussion of the policy structure or CUS is relevant.

What about the policy? CUS's top priorities for thecoming year are concerned with thequality of education and the bodies tha tgovern educational institutions. Surelythese problems are of concern to all Cana-dian students . CUS, with its full timestaff, is best equipped to do the researchnecessary to formulate a viable programof action. By drawing upon the ideas an dtalent from all the member institutions ,this program can be transformed into

SULLIVAN

tangible results .What about the present structure ? There is room for

change. The question is do you change it from the insideas a member or from the outside as an observer . To saythat by our withdrawal we can change the structure anddirection of CUS is a fallacious argument .

What do we do about our membership in CUS? Main-tain it with a view to changing the organization so it bes tfacilitates the advancement of education in B .C .

By PETER BRAUNDAMS president 1966-67

Keep UBC in the Canadian Union of Studentsby voting NO at Wednesday's referendum .

Two reasons prompt me to urge this action .

As past president of the Alma Mater Society,I am vitally interested in your welfare .

Second, because of my personal association

with CUS over the last three years, I feel Ispeak with substantial understanding of whatCUS is doing for Canadian university students.

In the past CUS has successfully lobbied at

Ottawa for a student loan plan ,tax exemption for tuition fees ,

sales tax exemption for tex tbooks and low interest, long

term house financing. CUS isstill fighting to have the voting

age lowered for federal elec-tions to 18 and other vital issuesof legalized abortion and im-provement within the depart-ment of Indian Affairs.

CUS has developed an extensive student re-serach service which determines how students onCanadian campuses solve the problems of traffic ,student parking and food services .

This service also researches the structure ofstudent government, academic reform, the loca-

tion and design of student union buildings andathletic financing.

Several discount travel programs have beensponsored by CUS . These programs have allowedmany students the opportunity to travel exten-sively at much lower than commercial rates .

The issue of democracy in the university com-munity was spearheaded by CUS two years ago.UBC now has four students on the universit ysenate .

The Canada Student Means Survey con -ducted two years ago by CUS assimilated inform-ation so that individual university student union scould fight for fee reductions, and an increase i nbursaries and scholarships.

Any future chances for change in the financ-ing of university education will best be- achievedthrough lobbying at Ottawa and conducting ex-tensive research.

In addition to all the services I have mention-ed, CUS provides Canadian university studentswith a special life insurance plan, chartered tra-vel trips across Canada and overseas, an inter -national student identity card and a discountservice for local student buying .

Take a look at your campus, your pocketbook ,your community and your country . The successof your national student union is all around you .

CUS is constantly contributing to your wel-fare and the welfare of UBC. I strongly urg eyou to vote No at Wednesday's referendum.

UBC needs CUS as much as CUS needs UBC .

BRAUND

~U PONS

65c for CUS justified a sinvestment in education

CmpIjment fin tei'a7iee4Our representative will visit the campus

6th, 7th, 8th and 9th Novembe rBy DON MUNTON

AMS first vice-president

CUS must be regarded as an investment in

education, not as a purchase. Thus, to ask the

question "What do I get for my 65 cents" isreally to miss the whole point of a nationa lstudent union .

Nevertheless CUS can easily be justified in

merely monetary terms . For example :

1 . As a result of a CUS briefto the Tax Commission of 1960 ,

tuition fees are now deductiblefrom income tax. The money astudent saves each year fromthis alone would pay his CUSmembership for the next thirt yyears.

2, Life insurance is avail-able at $2.60 per year, per$1,000, via the CUS Life Plan .

This is approximately one quarter the regularcost . The money saved each year by a student inthis plan would pay his CUS fee for a century .

3 . Numerous Vancouver stores participate in

the CUS discount plan, each offering reductions

of 10 -25 per cent. On a purchase of $7 or more

your CUS membership fee is thus completely

refunded .

4. The CUS Inter-regional Scholarship Ex-

change Plan (ISEP) makes it possible for UBCstudents to study at a CUS member universityanywhere in Canada — tuition free.

5. Intensive lobbying by the CUS secretariatin 1963 led to the passage of the Canada Studen tLoan Act.

6. In 1963, the federal Liberal party promised10,000 $1,000 scholarships in direct response t oa brief submitted by CUS. Distributed evenly,this would absorb the per capita levy for the nex t75 years .

7. Negotiations are now being carried on togive credit on income tax for housing and text -book costs . This alone would, each year, pay theCUS membership fee for the next 100 years ..

The question we should really be asking is "Canwe afford to withdraw from CUS" . Obviouslynot. I would urge you to vote No on withdrawa lin the referendum tomorrow .

MUNTON

to interview graduating and post-graduatestudents in the following disciplines :

Mechanical Engineerin gChemical Engineerin gMathematic sPh .D.'s in Physical Chemistryand Chemical Engineerin g

for regular employment .Kindly contact your Placement Office for informatio non position openings and to make an appointment .Students of other disciplines are invited to forwar dapplications to us for consideration .

SUMMER EMPLOYMENTMechanical & Chemica lEngineering (Class of 1969 only)

DU PONT OF CANADA LIMITE DEmployee Relations Department

P.O. Box 660Montreal, P .Q .

You CAN Stop Smoking :A New Proven Wa y

What kind of smoker are you?Tension type, habitual, or realaddict? Unless you first find outwhat kind you are, yourchances of quitting are slim .Once you figure out why yousmoke you can work out a per -sonal program based on th emethods used in successfulsmoking-withdrawal clinics.Here is new hope for manywho have tried before andfailed . . . a new proven way t ostop smoking is in NovemberReader's Digest. You may beable to stop by just a simplebreathing exercise . . . or breakstubborn reflexes with littletricks. If you really want tostop, get November Reader'sDigest today.

"CHELSEA GIRLS "And Warhol's Shocking Movie !A Masterpiece ?! Or a Put-on !

3 Showingsin UBC's Aud.

NOV. 10—FRI . — 1 :30 & 7 :30

NOV. 14 — TUES. — 7 :30

SPECIAL EVENT S

YOU MUST SEE IT—ONE OF THE MOST TALKED-

ABOUT ACCOMPLISHMENTS IN YEARS.

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Tuesday, October 31, 1967

THE UBYSSEY

Page 9

ARGUMENTS FOR AND AGAINS TA bureaucratic stumbling block destroying student upsurge

By AL BIRNIEUbyssey Associate Edito r

CUS in 1967 is an anachron-ism at UBC but remains, as i nthe rest of Canada, a bureau-cratic stumbling - block to bedestroyed by the growing up-surge of student activism andinvolvement .

The questions to be answeredare: what is CUS and why isit irrelevant, what will replacea national student union, andwhy should UBC withdraw?

The technical faculties thinkthat Big Brother society willsee to it that their mindles stechnical training will be putto good use .

Unfortunately, this thinkingdoes not correspond to reality .

American capitalism, ofwhich Canada is but a mino rsubsidiary, is currently en-gaged in Southeast Asia, SouthAmerica, and Africa, in themost heinous crimes of geno-cide and enslavement that theworld has ever seen, due t othe fact that it is the mosttechnically advanced syste mthe world has ever seen .

DIE FOR FREEDOM

When the people, of Viet-nam, or Indonesia, or Boliviatake to arms to demand thei rfreedom from American slav-ery, they are murdered by ad-vanced techniques perfectedby the graduates of technica lfaculties .

The needs of British Colum-bians tail best be gauged b ythe people here, they say, an dwe should have our own or-ganiztions to do it .

The BCAS did its thing overthe Thanksgiving weeken dand found that it is in th esame bag as CUS .

Erstwhile an assemlbly ofall institutions of higher edu-cation in B .C., plus h i g hschools, some observers weremildly surprised when onlyfour per cent of B .C. highschools sent delegations .

Nevertheless, those thatcame formed committees, elec-ted officers, and passed resolu-tions, a n d then everybodywent home for another year .

In essence, they did the samethings that CUS does and inthe same way, but they di dthem here .

not people, will make the im-portant changes .

Former CUS and NFCUSpresidents Maurice Sauve (nowa federal cabinet minister) ,Richard Bibbs (UBC Board o fGovernors), and Doug Ward(president last year, now wit hthe OBC), and former AMSpresident and CUS vice-presi-dent Malcolm Scott (workingon the Expo '67 committee )spring to mind immediately .

POWER IN NUMBERS

Many student politicians,many radical student reform-ists, have the idea that stud-ents, in their numbers, hav esome sort of power base fromwhich to demand basic changesin their environment .

This myth extends in societyto middle-class liberals, wh ofeel that the middle classes,theoretically more intelligent ,socially aware, and influent-ial than workers, can band to-gether to make the change snecessary for a better an dfreer environment .

However, both groups fail t orealize, or refuse to admit tothemselves, that they have noactual power other than words ,for if they undertake an yaction which does seriouslythreaten the existing powerstructure, they will lose theirposition from so-called powerbase which they so cherish .

The middle class, theoreti-cally the largest in Nort hAmerica and upon the value sof which our culture is based ,owe their positions and mater-ial benefits entirely to the factthat they unquestioninglyserve the interests of thosewho control the economicwealth of the system .

A substantial number o fidealists, however, are caugh tin a dilemna, they feel some-thing should be done aboutsocial problems and eithercannot or refuse to see the con-tradictions in liberal establish-mentarianism .

FIGHT GOVERNMENT S

They try to do what they ca n— they form Alma Mater So-cieties to try to improve things

on the local level, and CUS o nthe national level, fighting thefederal and provincial govern-ments for students and humanrights.

All they feel can be done,however, is organize to makeminor protests to the syste mto try to wrest concession sfrom those In power .

CUS, by playing the game o ftrying to exert influence onthe federal government, apriori accepts this governmentas a legitimate Canadian powerwith the ultimate control ove rCanadian society .

In actual fact if the bureau-crats in CUS wanted to appealto the people in power in Can-ada, they should appeal to th eowners of the American indus-trial corporations who directl ycontrol 65 per cent of Canad aand indirectly the remaining35 per cent .

What are CUS's much-vaun-ted victories over the past fewyears?

The adoption of the studentloan plan — The Libera lgovernment, in its 1963 elec -tion campaign, promised 10, -000 $1,000 scholarships. Whenthey were reminded of thi safter t h e election by CUSthey said, 'Aw gee' in beingcaught at breaking anothe rpromise and gave out theirloans .

WHY PAY FEES?

The basic question in thi sissue is not where are studentsto get the money to pay fees ,but why should they pay fee sin the first place .

CUS also claims responsi-bility for getting fees deductedfrom federal income tax —crumbs worth a few dollars —Wow .

What other great accom-plishments does CUS claim?

They have a field secretaryhelping organize students co-ops . The idea is to get studentsliving in a community set upas a radical learning structure—the co-ops are to become ahot-bed of student activism .

In reality, what this is doingis turning students radicals(who theoretically are organi-

zing the co-ops) into business -men, and taking the onus of fthe university and society t oprovide housing for students .

Radicalism cannot be in-stitutionalized, The best co-op sare informal, small groups inindividual houses or apart-ments . For the basic learningprocesses, groups of less thana dozen are the only efficientunits, for learning comes onlyto the exent that people ca nfreely interact.

Programs to assist studentsin their fight for representa-tion on university governingbodies .

"What will four students ,among perhaps 80 s e n a t emembers accomplish ? I thin knot very much." —ex-presi-dent Macdonald.

DISSATISFACTIO N

Just as many students on thiscampus feel dissatisfied withthe AMS bureaucratic struc-ture and a compulsory $29 fee,so should they feel dissatisfiedwith their compulsory mem-bership in CUS, only a higherextension of the AMS and inwhich they have absolutely nocontrol .

Things like the arts coun-cil are doing the most effectiv ejob, at the base level, in com-batting this situation .

Shaun Sullivan and theAMS executive, supporters o fCUS, are justifiably afraidthat if the CUS bureaucrac ygets tossed out of UBC, theirsis the next to go.

Kill CUS Wednesday .

"THIRD WORLD WA R

IMMINENT" -SAYS LINDSE Y

The Arab-Israeli War will be considered in the ligh tof Biblical prophecy by a visiting lecturer at U .B .C. thisweek. Hal Lindsey, a graduate of Dallas Theological Semin-ary, is convinced that we are heading for a third worldwar and that the present powder-keg situation in the Middl eEast will draw the major powers into open conflict . "This,"he says, "is what the Bible clearly teaches about the endof the Age. I believe the outbreak of Armageddin, th ewar to end all wars once and for all, will occur within ou rgeneration."

For the past five years Lindsay has been speaking a tU.C.L .A. and is considered an authority on Bible prophecy .The Institute of Biblical Studies at San Bernardino, Cali-fornia, has recently appointed him as their National Travel-ling Lecturer for North and South America .

In each of his three talks Lindsey will present differ-ent aspects of his main theme : 'Israel, the Middle Eas tCrisis, and the Bible' . He will relate his analysis of th epresent day situation to specific Bible passages, takin ggreat pains to explain these and drawing from them darin gopinions concerning future events .

Hal Lindsey is thirty-five and the fact that he was atone time a Mississippi riverboat captain is not surprisin gfor he looks the part . He will be speaking Wednesday noo nin Angus 110, Wednesday evening at 7 :30 in Education 100 ,and Thursday at a time to be announced later this week .

V

WRONGS NOT RIGHTEDRecent history at UBC and

in Vancouver, and an examina-tion of the CUS bureaucrats,can easily show how CUS inpractice does does nothing t ochange the basic wrongs ofsociety which cause studentsto protest and demand change ,and in fact perpetrates in thesame way as establishmentstructures the myths that keepthe ideals of such documentsas the Declaration of the Cana-dian Student from every be-ing realized .

CUS, in fact, is an establish-ment training ground inhabi-ted by liberal opportunistspreparing for well-paying jobsin the establishment hierarchy ,and well-meaning social demo -crates seduced into believingthe subtle myth that power,

DR. LAURIER LAPIERRESpeaks an

"The New Politics Confronting Canada"THURSDAY — NOV. 2 — NOON (12:30) — ANGUS 11 0

Lecture — Discussion — Question s

SPZCIJZL ZVZNTS

Page 10: CUS tackles student gripes' Armstrong...engagement ring to bring the area of brilliance u p on the finger. Each exquisite petal is set with two round diamonds - and so designed to

Page 10

THE UBYSSEY

Tuesday, October 31, 1967

UBC's field hockey teamsfind magic key to victory

SKIERS BALK AT HIGH PRICES/ON WHISTLER MTN. LIFTS

the Tomahawks tying Jokers II 2-2 .

Any interested fans will be able to see the

UBC teams playing this weekend starting at

1 :30 p .m. on the new Chris Spencer Fields b y

the new stadium .

The Birds will be playing the Grasshoppers ,

while the Braves take on the Pitt Meadows A

team.

Immediately following these games or start-ing at 3:00 p.m., the Tomahawks play the Hawks

C and the newest addition . to the UBC field-hockey teams, the Scalps play Pitt Meadows B .

Some Thunderbird teams are doing very wel lthis year .

Some of these are the field hockey teams .The Birds showed they had learned some-

thing from the visiting Australian . National Team ,whom they played Thursday, by ` defeating theNorth Shore first division team 10-0 Sunday .

The whole forward line • got into the- act, withBruce Hodgson scoring three, Warren Bell, TomSchouten and Maarten Tjebbes getting two . andDavid Johannson . scoring one for the Birds .

The other two UBC teams won and split;

with the Braves defeating Vancouver 2-1 and

at theInternational

House

allstudents .50

• japanese tea ceremony

• international fashion show

• floor shows • international restaurant

friday, nov. 3rd, 7 pm.

saturday

4th, 2 pm.

The following

Campus Leader sSupport

Withdrawa lfrom C.U.S.

1. Jim Taylor—President, Law Students Associatio n2. Oscar Johvikas—President, Parliamentary Counci l3. Robin Russel—President, Science Undergraduate Society4. Kent Pearson—President, U .B .C . Liberals5. Nancy Schwartz—President, Home Economics Undergraduate Society6. Harry Clare—President, U .B.C. Socred s7. Mike Coleman—President, U.B .C ., Clubs Committee8. Ed McBean—Chairman, Engineering Institute of Canad a9. Paul Sabatino—President, U .B.C. New Democrats

10. Ed Van Eerden—President, Forestry Undergraduate Societ y11. Gene Zabawa—President, Agriculture Undergrad Soc .

12. Peter Uitdenbosch—President, Commerce Undergrad . Soc.13. Jim Lightfoot—A .M.S. Coordinator of Activities14. Andy Gates—President, U .B .C. Conservatives15. Lynn Spraggs—President Engineering Undergrad . Soc .

HELP US HELP YOUVOTE YES WED, NOV. 1

By PIO URAN

Skiers are, as a rule, a happy-go-lucky bunch who don' tmind paying out a little money to enjoy their sport .

But now two unhappy skiers have decided that theywould like to save a little money at one of our area's mos tpopular ski mountains .

Bill Phillips and Brent Kerr are circulating a petitionat UBC, SFU and some of Vancouver's high schools to ge ta student rate at Whistler Mountain .

They ask Garibaldi Lifts Ltd . for at least a 20 per cen tdiscount for students on the adult fare .

When Whistler opened in 1965 a day ticket was $4 .50 ,in 1966 the rate went to $5 .50 and this year it's $6 .00 .

According to Phillips there have been no improvementsthis: past year to merit the increase :

A phone call to Whistler, however, came up with th efollowing list of improvements : cutting of new trails, groom-ing of trails for the beginner and intermediate, an increas ein the capacity of the red chair lift of 110 people more perhour, elevating the Alpine T-bar to cope better with deepsnow and increasing its capacity by 100 people per hour .

Whistler, which gets about 1,500 skiers on a goodweekend, half of whom are students, is not worried tha tthe increase will send people to other mountains .

Kerr and Phillips' petition, which will be in Nort hBrock and Sedgewick for the next few days, is lookingfor some 3,600 signatures .

Monday's tally at UBC was about 800 signatures .

Junior varsity grid teamplays victory tune again

The UBC Junior Varsity football team ended their season ona winning note at Monroe, Wash . on Saturday .

The Jayvees defeated Washington State Reformatory 10-8as they posted their second straight win .

Rick Beck scored UBC's touchdown after the defense inter-cepted a pass. The Jayvees were good on a two point conversionand later got a safety to make it 10-0 .

Washington came back to score a major in the last minut eof play.

Cross country runner scancel out competition

British Columbia will be represented by UBC at the Cana-dian Championships in Calgary next Saturday .

This is the situation as the Thunderbird cross country teamswept the first three places at the B .C . . Junior Championship sat Duncan on Saturday .

Ken French, Tom Howard, and Dave Greening ran 1-2-3 inthe meet and will represent the province .

The fourth and fifth runners, Vern De Melt and Barry Kietfinished 12th and 17th respectively, giving UBC a total of 3 5points . SFU was second with 54 points .

ATTENTIO N1968 GRADUATES

ARTS, SCIENCE, COMMERCE

The Institute of Chartered Accountants

of B .C . is sponsorin g

Al FREE NOON HOUR FIL M

Tomorrow, November 1, at 12 :30 p.m. i n

Room 250, Chemistry Buildin g

Repro

alk c of the Institute will be presented t o

ii! u. cr clue i ion_ about A career in chartered accountancy .

Page 11: CUS tackles student gripes' Armstrong...engagement ring to bring the area of brilliance u p on the finger. Each exquisite petal is set with two round diamonds - and so designed to

FOOTBALL

ANYBODY ?

Driven to drinksBy MIKE FITZGERALD

The first varsity football game in the newThunderbird Stadium was played Saturday be -fore a happy Homecoming crowd .

It was between the UBC Thunderbirds andthe University of Saskatchewan Huskies .

The Huskies won 14-6 .

There were a few notable plays during th egame .

For example, at 3 :21 of the first quarter ,someone in the press bnx passed around a bottleof Old Scotland. This was diagnosed as anexcellent play .

Then at 13 :06 of the second quarter, ArthurDelamont struck up the band to that well loved,=piece of music, The Stripper. Everyone applaud-ed at the fine showing .

Numerous times during the fourth quarter ,the performance in the stands was interruptedby repeated and uncalled-for outbursts of activ-ity coming from playing field .

At one point, a large green thing from theopposing side proceeded to kick the footbal lhalfway down the field and plop on it for a

touchdown.Later Thunderbird quarterback Kent Yaniw

galloped (as in horse) over on a rollout and gota touchdown .

This was just too much for the fans as the yhad come expecting a much more civilized gam efrom these two stalwart teams .

A tide of tenseness rolled up to the las tbleacher as action exploded before the be-wildered spectators .

Passes were thrown, some were even com-pleted, safeties were scored, and even somethingcalled a field goal was magnificently executed .

Fans rose in unison and applauded thismagnificent effort on the part of both sides toproduce what one reporter called "Amazing .I've never seen anything like it before . "

Yes, readers, history may have been mad eon Saturday. Doubtless the many fans of thisnew spectator sport will continue to grow insize and appreciation.

Unfortunately, no engineers were on handto explain in detail the fundamentals of thegame to the bewildered spectators. Their acutesense of thinking was sorely missed .

* * *

Ex-quarterback Gnup loses gameas play from bench backfires

By JOHN TWIGG

The UBC Thunderbirds lost a foot race to thegoal-line and a football game simultaneously ,but coach Frank Gnup blames himself entirely .

With UBC's offense going nowhere, UBC wa sfortunate to escape the first half down only twoto nothing on a safety touch by Tom Dutton .

The only team on the field that looked goo din the first half was the cheer-leading team.

Early in the thirdquarter, Wayne Strud•wick tackled punterHerb Lang in the endzone for the Huskies'second safety, makingthe score 4.0.

Several plays later ,1fter an interception byrohn Bellamy on UBC's33, the Huskies wer ecalled for roughing an dUBC was first and tenon their own 48 .

CORCORANGordon Hardy dropped back and quickly

threw a high pass to Kent Yaniw on a down an din pattern to the 25 yard line .

Three dives by tough fullback Dave Corcorantook the ball to the Huskies' nine . For some rea-

son UBC ran the same play to Bernie Fandricktwice and were pushed back to the 12 yard line .

Yaniw replaced Hardy at quarterback . Hecalled a roll out left and got great blocking fro mthe left side of the line, waltzing in untouched .The convert attempt by Dick Stein was blocked .

With about three minutes left, and UBC win-ning 6-4, UBC tried a field goal from the 42 ,but it was blocked .

Wayne Gallop, the end who blocked thekick, started to soccer dribble the ball down thefield fast enough to out-race the Bird blockersto their own goal line . He then fell on the ballfor a touchdown, graphically illustrating th espeed UBC does not have .

The convert was good, and the Huskies le d11-6 with only two minutes left.

When UBC took over the ball, Hardy prompt-ly fumbled on his own seven and the Huskiesagain took advantage of a Bird error, scoringtheir final points on a field goal by Gordie Gar -vie .

After the game, Gnup said to a dejectedteam, "It's my fault, I've got to laugh . I'll takethe blame for that call (the field goal)."

Gnup continued to mutter, "A basic rule offootball is, 'when in doubt, punt', and I tried afield goal . "

Coach pleased with rugger actio nafter teams win, place and show

Coach Donn Spence was fairly pleased withthe win, tie and narrow loss that the UBC rugb yteams brought home from the weekend's action .

The Birds continued to be plagued by badluck in their game with Kats . Captain TomFraine became ill on the day before the gameand probably won ' t be playing for a few weeks .

The Thunderbirds started the game one manfort with 14 players . They were short of backsand a scrummer was forced to play in the back -field.

Abe ; scrum half, Steve Schofield, was hurtearly in the -game and the Kats ran up an 11-0lead. at half time .

*Mike Bird was injured at the beginning of

the second half , forcing the Birds to play with 'only 13 men.

Despite this disadvantage, the team fough tback on nine points from a drop-goal by Rei dOwen and two penalty kicks by Tom Crompton .

Kats scored and converted a try in the dos-ing minute to finish the game with a 16-9 win.

"I was pleased with our showing agains tthe top place team, especially since we playedwith only 13 players," said Spence .

The .Braves played. to a 6-6 tie in Seattle, a sthey extended their unbeaten record in leagueplay

The Totems defeated the Kats seconds 10-3 .

Tuesday, October 31, 1967

THE UBYSSEY

Page 1 1

Pagoda RestaurantChinese FoodFree Delivery

Tutoring in All SubjectsIndividua lNo Contract s

Mr. L. J. Leddy738-3104or B.A., MA ., B.L .S . Director

2946 W. Broadway

731-4721 Canadian Tutorial Centre

736-692 3

THE PHI KAPPA SIGMA FRATERNITY

RUGBY TEAM ANNOUNCES THAT I T

DEFEATED THE PSI UPSILON FRATER -

NITY RUGBY TEAM 3-0 LAST SUNDAY .

Set your sight in Collegewith glasse s

=

from . . .~<

a

ter:

.xf

lk

#

~h r.

'~

2,y

P °N

sv

3

.y v .66bb

.

S

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theOPTICAL DEPT.

LONDON DRUGSLimited

GLASSES from 9.95 Complete

CONTACT LENSES one price only$69 .50Includes any color, insurance for one year,

lifetime prescription change, all fittings .TWO CONVENIENT LOCATIONS ONLY

Vancouver677 GranvilleOpp. THE BAY DOWN TOW N681-6174

LA 1-075 1657

New

Columbi aWestminster

Opp. Army 8 Navy

AMS REFERENDU MCONCERNING

Canadian Union of Student sRESOLVED that the Alma Mater Society of the University ofBritish Columbia withdraw from the Canadian Union ofStudents immediately.

VOT EYESU

NO q

ADVANCE POLLS : TODAYSouth Brock

11 :30 to 3:30Education Bldg.

11 :30 to 3:30Residences

5:00 to 7:00College Library

5:00 to 9:00Main Library

5:00 to 9:00Woodward Library

5:00 to 9:00

REGULAR POLLS WED., NOV. 1 — 10 a.m. 4 p.m.Brock North

Education

McMillan Bldg .Brock South

Henry Angus

Woodward LibraryBuchanan

College Library

CafeteriaBus S

Main Library

EngineeringWar Memorial Gym

Page 12: CUS tackles student gripes' Armstrong...engagement ring to bring the area of brilliance u p on the finger. Each exquisite petal is set with two round diamonds - and so designed to

Page 12

T H E U B Y S S E Y

Tuesday, October 31, 1967

'TWEEN CLASSES

Ezra's birthdaycelebrated today

CLASSIFIE DRates: 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.Non-Commercial Classified Ads are payable in advance.

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

ANNOUNCEMENTS I Special Notices (Cont. )

ERZA POUND FAN CLUBAll welcome to meeting to-

day to celebrate o u r poet' s82nd birthday, noon, Buch-anan penthouse. Bring pound-cake, candles and cantos.

ENGINEERSAll faculties are challenge d

by the engineers to a boat rac eafter the Chariot race at th eTeacup Game. Those interest-

ed contact Doug, 731-8551 .AAC

Anyone interested in discus -sing the feasibility of a Co-opbookstore at UBC meet in th eAAC office, Brock Ext . 260 ,noon, Wednesday .

ECONOMICS SOCIET YD. E. Wordsworth will spea k

on the effect of the war i n

Vietnam on Canada, today,noon, Ang . 213 .

EXPERIMENTAL COLLEG EKarl B u r au on What i s

wrong with Canada and Tru eHuman Nature, Thursday, 1 :30to 3 :30, Bu . 202 .

SPORTS CAR CLU BGeneral meeting and film

afterwards, Thursday, noon ,Chem. 250.

SAILING CLU BCome discuss plans for a

party on Friday night at meet-ing Tuesday, noon Bu . 106 .PRE LIBRARIA N

No meeting Wednesday .

ONTOLOG YThe Mental Block - talk b y

Dale Maranda, Wednesday ,noon, Bu. 223.

CHINESE VARSITY CLU BMasquerade party at IH, to-

night, 8 to 11. Admission 5 0cents . Those unmasked wil lnot be admitted .

INTERNATIONAL HOUSEBring your problems to the

fall fair committee meeting ,noon today, IH 400 .

STUDENTS' WIVES CLU BRegular monthly meeting ,

Wednesday, Cecil Green Park .Guest speaker is Vincent For-bes from the Better BusinessBureau .

CLUB CANADIE NProfessor Bear discusses his

proposal for a French colleg eat UBC, Wedneday, noon Bu .203 .

AQUA SO CLast day for deposits for

Nov. 11 drive is Friday.

PSYCHOLOGY CLUBFilm on The Medical use of

iypnosis, Wednesday, noon ,.ng. 207 .

?RE MED SOCIETYInteresting and informative

film, the Causes of Cancer ,Wednesday, noon, Wes . 201 .

NOON CONCERTLieder of Schumann an d

Mahler, by Marie Schilder ,contralto, with Harold Brown ,piano, Wednesday, noon, musicbuilding recital hall .

MENS INTRAMURAL COM-MITTEE

Men's intramural manager smeeting to discuss c r o S scountry, today, noon, memo-rial gym. 309 .

COLLEGE LIFEHean Mall Lindsey, forme r

river boat captain, prophesizsWorld War Three coming, Wed-nesday, noon Ang. 110 ; .Wed-nesday 7:17 p .m. Ed. 100 .

VOLLEYBALL TEAMVolleyball team practices

Tuesday, 7 to 8 :30 p .m., Thurs-day, 6 :30 to 8 :00 p .m., memoria lgym .

EL CIRCUL OMeeting today cancelled .

Please remember fees on Thurs-day .

EIC TOASTMASTER SProfessor Willmott, depart-

ment of anthropology, speakson Background to Vietnam, to-day noon, eng . 201 .

HISTORY 206History 206, political science

204 and 308 : film, Lest We For -get, today, noon, Bu . 106 .

CHORAL SOCIET YThe practice is cancelled bu t

the party isn't . See clubroomfor details .

IL CAFFEItalian day. Wednesday, IH

Dortissa De Stefanis speaks o nIi Palio di Siena, noon, rm. 402 .

CUSCheck the information booth

outside bookstore for informa-tion on CUS .

NAAApplications being receive d

for positions on women's athle-tic directorate-gymnastics man-ager, WCIAA co-ordinator, an dThunderette basketball tourna-ment chairman . Deadline is 5p.m. today . Apply in writing t opresident of WAA, women' sGym .

SCIENCE U SBlack Plague correctional in-

stitute—first non-credit coursein creative writing, tonight ,7 :30, hut 0-8 . Refreshments wil lbe served .

ELECTION COMMITTE EBallot counters required for

CUS referendum, Wednesday7 p.m., Brock TV room .

JAll CONCERTCBC presents a noon hour

jazz concert, featuring Bobb yHales Big B a n d performingthree original works, today ,noon, recital hall . Admissionfree .

VISITING LECTURE RProfessor A la n Lancelot ,

Under DeGaulle, today, 3 :30p.m., Ang. 213 .

EUSTeacup game and chario t

race at new stadium Thursday .Donations for Cripple Child-ren .

ClASPnoon, Bu. 1221. General meet-ing for all members, Wednes-day, noon, Bu . 1221 .

INTERNATIONAL HOUSEOpen afternoon tea, 3 p .m .

today, upper lounge .

COMPUTING CLU BFree film on the introduc-

tion of IBM's system 360, Ang .110, Wednesday, noon .

Dances

1 1DON'T MISS THE POST-HOME -

coming special coming November4th ; Night Train Revue and UnitedEmpire Loyalists/Armouries 8 :30 -12 :00/Preview by special arrange-ment next week watch this section .

MAGIC HALLOWEEN DANCE OCT.31 . Featuring Mother Tucker's Yel-low Duck . Price $1 .00 . Costumes,lights, fun . Kits Theatre. 2114 Wes t4th . A White Rabbit Production .

EVERYBODY'S STILL TALKINGabout the last Yardbird Show andMulti Media Dance. Find out wh yNov. 10th and 11th . PNE Garde n Auditorium.Advance tickets $1 .00.

HALLOWEEN DANC EDON'T BE TRICKED OUT O F

your Treats by Second rate dance sthis Halloween. Bag the best baby- Tues. . night at the Retinal Circu s— three bands - Papa Bears Medi-cine Show, United Empire Loyalists,Painted Ship Strobe Light-Show,

Surprises, 8 til 1 . One dollar .POST-HALLOWEEN BASH, NOV-

ember 4th, Armouries : Night Trai nRevue, United Empire Loyalists.8 :30-12 :00, 11 .50, Girls $1 .00 .

Greetings

1 2WELCOME TO VANCOUVER HAL

Lindsey. Hear Hal speak out onProphecy today. This means You .

Lost&Found 1 3PURSE FOUND : OCT. 19. DROP

note in Locker 470, near Bu . 315.LOST - GOLD RING. FAMILY

crest engraved on it . Phone Wayn e261-2134 .

LOST A SLIDE RULE WITH VICWilson on outside of case. Phon eBrenda please 224-9871. Reward of-fered .

PLEASE! PLEASE! RETURN RINGfound in Sedgewick washroom ,Thurs. 26, to library desk .

% LENGTH SUEDE COAT LOSTin Girl's washroom near Fine ArtsDivision . Will finder please leaveit at Reserve Book Counter.

FOUND UMBRELLA IN VOLVO .Belongs to nurses who hitched aride to St . Paul's on Friday, 4 :3 0p .m. Pick up at TJbyssey Office .

LOST OCT . 23, BETWEEN ANGU SBldg . and lot behind Freddy Woo dTheatre or 4300 BIk . W. 10th. Gol dLink Chain Bracelet. Family keep -sake . Reward . Mrs. Reljic. HE 3-8759, 6550 St . Charles P1 ., BurnabyB .C.

RED PARKER PEN LOST OCT. 27 ,8 :30 Angus 104 . Reward . Phone Diane, 681-4666 .FOUND : BLUE JACKET WITH RE D

lining : Slide Rule collect Proctor ,Brock Hall . Ladies' watch, phon eChem Eng. 228-3218 . Ladies' 'Li-berty' scarf, phone 263-6057, An-nete pick up yr umbrella Pub. Off .

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

Rides&Car Pools 1 4PART TIME DRIVER AT W. 63rd

and Marine needs carpool for 8 :30's .Call Hal AM 1-1584 .

RIDE WANTED FOR 8 :30's WITHcarpool from South Burnaby thatstays out late . Will share driving.Call Brigitte 435-1553 .

RIDE NEEDED FOR 8 :30's MONDA Yto Friday from Buxton and Nelson(near Simpson's Sears) . Bonnie

434-6194 .RIDE URGENTLY - NEEDED Vi-

cinity No . 1 and Westminster High -way. Phone Lorraine, 277-8576.

WANTED RIDE FROM VICINIT Yof Broadway and Heather . Wendy ,876-1879 .

Special NoticesTOM JONES STARRING ALBER T

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

U .B .C . BARBER SHOP IN THEVillage . 3 barbers . Open week -days 8:30 - 6 p.m., Saturday 'ti l5 :30 .

NOT JUST ANOTHER CAMPU SEvent! Come to the Internationa lFair and see for yourself .

YOUNG MAN WHO WITNESSE Dwhite Rover drive into rear ofwhite MGA at entrance to Frase rlot on Oct. 17 around 10:30 a .m .Please phone 943-3788 . Urgent . -

THIS IS 13 . K. D. WEEK. ENJOYit Donner .

The Corne rHALLOWEEN DANCE

This notice plus 99c good for on eadmission to Retinal Circus Hallowee nDance Tuesday - Three bands - 8til 1 .SPECIAL PREVIEW - U N I T E D

Empire Loyalists, noon Wednesday :Music Plaza (Angus steps if rain-ing) .

SPECIAL LECTURER ON CAMPUS .Hear Hal Lindsey former Rive rBoat Captain speak on Bible Pro-phecy.

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

ANDROCLES AND THE LIONPlayhouse. 7 plays for $10 .00. Start stoday Q .E . Playhouse. 8 :30 .

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

WOULD THE POINTE CLAIR Egirl who hitched ride to gates 4 :0 0p .m. Friday. Phone Dave W. 224 .-9921.

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

Travel Opportunities 1 6ANYONE TRAVELING TO SA N

Francisco via air Dec . 22 Jan . 8willingto accompany 2 children ag e5 and 8 for remuneration pleas econtact Sherrill Perry 73-9582

- after 6 p .m .

UNIQUE TRAVEL EXPERIENC Eoffered next weekend at the Inter -national Fair on Campus . Watch fordetails .

.50 IS YOUR TICKET TO A UNIQUEtravel experience to over fiftee nforeign countries . This weekend a tthe Fall Fair .

Wanted—Miscellaneous

1 8

AUTOMOTIVE&MARINEAutomobiles For Sale

2 11959 PORSCHE 1600, SILVER COUPE

healthy condition, 2250 Wesbrook ,224-9662 . $1,395 .

1964 MORRIS OXFORD. 2 OWNERS.$550 O .N .O . Ph. 224-7593 .

Motorcycles 2 6BMW 1963 250cc $450 . EXCELLENT

cond . 224-0534 .'65 NORTON 650cc. NEW TIRES,

chains, competition clutch, over-sized valves, $650. 731-9630, Satur-

day 8 am.

12 a .m . -FOR SALE NORTON 650cc . NEW- tires, chains, compet . clutch . Motorperfect . 731-9630 . Aft. 6 p.m.

Copying&Duplicating 3 1COPYING AND DUPLICATING

Everyone is trying to copy or dupli-cate the Spirit of Hallowe'en tonight.Only Retinal Circus with 8 bands fo r1 dollar, can bring you sights an dsounds and surprises and wizardryand witches and other groovy Hal-lowe'en trips . Tonight 8 til 1 .

Miscellaneous

3 2WHOLESALE PRICES TO ALL USC

students on trans. radios, tape re-corders, record players, watches,jewelery, etc ., at THE DISCOUN THOUSE, 3235 West Broadway, Tel.

732-6811 .STATIONERY - ART SUPPLIES -

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

GETTING ENGAGED : SAVE BE-tween 30 and 50% on Engagemen tRings . For appointment call 261 -1671 anytime.

3W ' REFLECTOR TELESCOPE, 30 -388x, finder, good mount, adjust -able tripod, like new . 261-6153 after5 . 261-6153, $50. -

Orchestras 3 3SPECIAL PREVIEW/UNITED EM -

pire Loyalists, noon Wednesday :Music Plaza (Angus steps if rain-ing) .

BUSINESS SERVICES

Scandals

37

DON'T MISS THE POST-HOME-coming Special coming November4th ; Night train Revue and UnitedEmpire loyalists, Armouries 8 :30-12 :00 . Preview by special arrange-ment next week . Watch this sec-tion .

P.0 WISHES TO EXPRESS AGreat Thankyou to Barty and Nagerfor a rewarding evening, quite asuccess.

-TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN

Meet me under the Strobe at th eRetinal Circus Thursday night - allmy love Mandy.LARRY KENT'S HIGH TUES ., OCT .

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

Typewriter Repairs 3 9ANDERSON TYPEWRITE R

SERVIC ETYPEWRITERS

ADDING MACHINESNEW AND RECONDITIONED

REPAIRS TO ALL MAKESFree Estimates

Reasonable Rate .ALL WORK GUARANTEED

185 West Broadway

879 .781 5Across from Zephyr Motor .

Service Centr e

Typing 40EXPERIENCED TYPIST - ELEC-

tric. Phone 228-8384 or 224-6129.EXPERIENCED TYPIST—ESSAYS,

term papers,etc . 25c page . Campu s pickup . 277-0782 ."GOOD EXPERIENCED TYPIST I S

available for home typing. Please call 277-5640 . "PROFESSIONAL TYPING, ARDAL E

Griffith Limited, 8584 Granvill e Street (70th & Granville) . 263-4530 .

EXPERIENCED TYPIST WILLtype at home . Please contac t688-1898.

Typing (Cont .)

AT LAST! An exclusive typing ser-vice for students. 24-hour servicelec. typewriters, 1 block from cam -pus. All this for only 30 cents tpage! University Typing Services -Around the corner from World Wid eTravel - next to R.C .M .P. 2109 Al-lison Rd . at University Blvd . Mon. t oFri . 9 to 5 . Phone : 228-8414 .

Help Wanted—Female

51

EXPERIENCED TYPIST NEEDE D4 hours a day . Apply Prof . Dicker-son, Faculty of Law .

EMPLOYMENT

Help Wanted—Male 52INSTRUCTOR : PRE-SKI CONDI -

tioning classes, Tuesday and Fri -day evenings, Nov. 7 to Dec. g.Call Burnaby YMCA 299-6411.

Male or Female 53Maths. Tutors, 4th year or graduates ,

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

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

QUICK DRIVERS WHO KNOWthe campus needed to deliver oneor two evenings. Phone 224-0833after 6 p.m .

-

INSTRUCTION

-

Special Classes

-i

Tutoring St

FRENCH, 21 N G L IS H, HISTORY ,Russian lessons given privately byBA., M.A., B .L.S. 736-6923 .-

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

MISCELLANEOUS

FOR SALE

7 1

LOOKINGFor clean, used, guaranteed appliance* .Also complete repair service for allmakes and models .

McIVER Appliances Ltd .3215 W Broadway—738-7181-

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

GET MONO KLH 10 HI-Fl SPEAK -er, $45 .00. 733-3163.

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

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

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

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

8mm SANKYO ZOOM MOVIE CAM -era . 10-30mm( coupled meter, car-rying case . Like new, 261-6163 afte r5 p.m . $60, or offer.

RENTALS & REAL ESTATE

Rooms

SiACCOMMODATION FOR ONE MALE

student . Share facilities with othe rstudent . 2241 West 7th . Phone 733-6873 .

SLEEPINGROOM AND KITCHE Nprivileges for one girl in exchangefor baby-sitting. Phone 733-1253.

Room & Board 82

BURNABY STUDENT-S .F.U. STU -dent will exchange UBC prlv. room& board . 224-9236 .

Furn. Houses & Art.. 83

AVAILABLE FOR IMMEDIATE OC-cupancy . Fully furnished apartmen tfor 2 or 3 . Phone 736-4048 after five .

GIRL WANTED TO SHARE F'URN-ished apartment near 4th & Alma .Phone Judy 733-6994 .

GRAD STUDENT NEEDS GIRt,. TOshare furnished apartment near 4t hand Alma. Phone Anne, 228-385 6before 7 :30 p .m .

BUY - SELL - RENT

WITH

UBYSSEY

CLASSIFIED

15