14
Britis h speeches fH~ UPYSSEY , will b e Labore d VOL. XLVII ., No. 13 VANCOUVER, B .C ., FRIDAY, OCTOBER 16, 1964 CA 4-391 6 Litterbug s draw threa t of bouncer s By ROBBI WEST Brock litterbugs face the possibility o f Bouncers if they don't smarten up, AM S Graeme Vance said Thursday . Vance said he is considering setting up a patrol of studen t councillors to enforce Broc k Management rules and force - ably exict any person caugh t disobeying them . He said the AMS executiv e is asking students politely fo r help to clean up Brock litter . "But if the that small seg- ment of the student body re- sponsible disregard this re - quest the blue boys will star t bouncing," he said . "We don't want to do this be - cause it would be a ridiculou s waste of time," Vance said . "But if people don't star t pulling their weight, we will . " The AMS executive has bee n concerned about the noon - hour accumulation of garbag e and used dishes around Brock for some time and approache d Buildings and Grounds regard- ing it, he said . B and G superintendent To m Hughes said, staff re-arrange - .ment resulted in a decrease o f day staff and increased nigh t staff . "So the accumulation o f rubbish at noon cannot b e cleared until evening," Hughe s said . He said he has observed many students making no at- tempt to use the garbage can s or return their plates or cups . Hughes told AMS executive . When Food Services was ap- proached about the problem o f cafeteria dishes scattered abou t Brock they said possible solu- tions might be hand trolley s in the corridors and specia l shelves in the cafeteria . _Vance said he is launchin g a general appeal to students t o clean up . "University students like t o be treated as adults and the y should act accordingly," h e said . 'No invasion ' a simple matter of projection . It goes like this : Men wan t us to wear what they want s o they make us think tha t EVERYBODY'S wearing wha t we should want to wear . * * It makes sense ! Thus the moral : If men ge t excited enough to write storie s about what they want us t o wear, and if we want men t o get excited about us, then w e should wear what they get ex - cited about us wearing, i .e . pink slims . AMS president Roger McAfee dunks Ubyssey editor Mike Horse y He's not all we t Rolly-polly Roger rolled o n to victory Thursday . Roger McAfee, AMS Presi- dent, out-rolled everybody fo r the title of Champion Lo g Roller on Campus at the for- estry sponsored contest i n Buchanan pool . "He has too much inertia, " Engineering president Stev e Whitelaw complained as he sunk to defeat at the feet o f rotund McAfee . Ubyssey editor Mike Horse y was crippled in the early actio n when his knee hit the bottom of the cement pool . Frosh president Kim Camp- bell, who defeated Educatio n Undergraduate president Dav e Lynn in the semi finals, wa s dfeated by Whitelaw in th e finals . Kim, first ever female Frosh CUBA'S CASTRO , KLAN'S CROS S (See Page Friday) Round Roger rolls ove r water - logged oppositio n Why pink ? Here's inside view of pink slim s president, returned to her of- fice to find her clothes, he r purse, and her door missing . " I think it was a dirty, rot - ten deal and very poor sports- manship," she said damply . But Kim's clothing myster- 'ously reappeared after, said By JOAN GODSEL L Ubyssey Women's Angl e Why all the excitement ove r pink slims ? Why the discriminatio n against red slims or yellow o r black ones ? I mean, why pink, anyway ? A downtown columnis t made a geographical distribu- tion study of pink slim s throughout B .C . this summer . * * * A Ubyssey columnist adde d his two cents . Everybody's talking about PINK slims and I'd like t o know why . * * * Personally, I like red slims . They wiggle just as well a s pink slims . They can be worn just as tight . And they're jus t as hard to get on . But maybe I've missed th e boat . I haven't noticed an in- vasion of pink slims any - where . - So I asked my friends—girl friends : They said : ",Aarrgh!" - "Cheap! " "Why pink? " But one girl said : "I like pink slims . I think . boys like them, too . " Ah so! * * * Maybe what she's got an d what I halven't got is one pai r of pink slims . But even she hadn't notice d a two-legged invasion in pink . So I'm inclined to think it' s Steve Beckow, Frosh vice - president . "The Engineers admitte d taking the door," Kim said , "but they say they won't re - turn it for a week becaus e they want an open-door pol- icy ." 'Krushche v stepped dow n voluntarily' By DOUG HALVERSO N Nikita Khrushchev has retir- ed as premier of the USSR, an d one UBC expert believes he di d so voluntarily . "At a Kremlin meeting Wed- nesday night Khushchev re - quested release from duty, " Slavonics professor Dr . H . E . Rominois said at a press con- ference Thursday . The release was given at a second meeting held Thursday , he said . Dr . Rominois said his infor- mation came from English an d Russian short-wave transmis- sions he monitored . Khrushchev's successor, Al- elei Kosygin, and Kosygin' s aide, ex-president L e o n i d Brezhnev, are thought to hol d the same ideas about commun- ism as Khrushchev, Dr . Rom : inois stated . The professor said h e thought they would serve onl y as a stop-gap government, sim- ilar to the one set up after Stalin . "It will take time to explai n to the Russian people what ha s happened . Khrushchev wa s very popular," he said . He said Khrushchev's ow n wishes weighed heavily in the matter . His successors are per- sonal friends and there was n o hint of military pressure, h e said . "It shows that the men at th e top no longer have to b e (Continued Page 3 ) SEE : NIKIT A Blue Blaze r co-ordinator

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Page 1: fH~ UPYSSEY - University of British Columbia Library · Nikita Khrushchev has retir- ... ent electric bass player with heavy duty equipment. ... directory available latter part of

British

speeches fH~ UPYSSEY,

will be

Labored

VOL. XLVII ., No. 13

VANCOUVER, B.C., FRIDAY, OCTOBER 16, 1964

CA 4-391 6

Litterbug sdraw threatof bouncers

By ROBBI WESTBrock litterbugs face the possibility of

Bouncers if they don't smarten up, AM SGraeme Vance said Thursday .

Vance said he is consideringsetting up a patrol of studen tcouncillors to enforce Broc kManagement rules and force-ably exict any person caugh tdisobeying them .

He said the AMS executiveis asking students politely fo rhelp to clean up Brock litter .

"But if the that small seg-ment of the student body re-sponsible disregard this re -quest the blue boys will star tbouncing," he said .

"We don't want to do this be -cause it would be a ridiculouswaste of time," Vance said .

"But if people don't star tpulling their weight, we will . "

The AMS executive has bee nconcerned about the noon-hour accumulation of garbag eand used dishes around Brockfor some time and approachedBuildings and Grounds regard-ing it, he said .

B and G superintendent To mHughes said, staff re-arrange -.ment resulted in a decrease ofday staff and increased nigh tstaff .

"So the accumulation o frubbish at noon cannot b ecleared until evening," Hughe ssaid .

He said he has observedmany students making no at-tempt to use the garbage cansor return their plates or cups .Hughes told AMS executive .

When Food Services was ap-proached about the problem ofcafeteria dishes scattered abou tBrock they said possible solu-tions might be hand trolleysin the corridors and specia lshelves in the cafeteria .

_Vance said he is launchin ga general appeal to students t oclean up .

"University students like t obe treated as adults and theyshould act accordingly," h esaid .

'No invasion'

a simple matter of projection .It goes like this: Men want

us to wear what they want sothey make us think tha tEVERYBODY'S wearing wha twe should want to wear .

* *It makes sense !Thus the moral : If men get

excited enough to write storiesabout what they want us t owear, and if we want men t oget excited about us, then w eshould wear what they get ex -cited about us wearing, i .e .pink slims .

AMS president Roger McAfee dunks Ubyssey editor Mike Horse y

He's not all wet

Rolly-polly Roger rolled onto victory Thursday .

Roger McAfee, AMS Presi-dent, out-rolled everybody fo rthe title of Champion LogRoller on Campus at the for-estry sponsored contest i nBuchanan pool .

"He has too much inertia, "Engineering president SteveWhitelaw complained as hesunk to defeat at the feet o frotund McAfee .

Ubyssey editor Mike Horse ywas crippled in the early actio nwhen his knee hit the bottomof the cement pool .

Frosh president Kim Camp-bell, who defeated EducationUndergraduate president Dav eLynn in the semi finals, wa sdfeated by Whitelaw in thefinals .

Kim, first ever female Frosh

CUBA'S CASTRO,KLAN'S CROSS

(See Page Friday)

Round Roger rolls ove rwater - logged opposition

Why pink?

Here's inside view of pink slims

president, returned to her of-fice to find her clothes, he rpurse, and her door missing .

"I think it was a dirty, rot -ten deal and very poor sports-manship," she said damply .

But Kim's clothing myster-'ously reappeared after, said

By JOAN GODSELLUbyssey Women's Angl e

Why all the excitement ove rpink slims ?

Why the discriminationagainst red slims or yellow orblack ones ?

I mean, why pink, anyway ?A downtown columnist

made a geographical distribu-tion study of pink slimsthroughout B .C . this summer .

* * *A Ubyssey columnist adde d

his two cents .Everybody's talking about

PINK slims and I'd like t oknow why .

* * *

Personally, I like red slims .They wiggle just as well a spink slims . They can be wornjust as tight. And they're jus tas hard to get on .

But maybe I've missed th eboat .

I haven't noticed an in-vasion of pink slims any-where .

-So I asked my friends—girl

friends :

They said :",Aarrgh!"

-"Cheap! ""Why pink?"But one girl said : "I like

pink slims . I think .boys likethem, too . "

Ah so!* * *

Maybe what she's got an dwhat I halven't got is one pairof pink slims .

But even she hadn't noticeda two-legged invasion in pink .

So I'm inclined to think it' s

Steve Beckow, Frosh vice-president .

"The Engineers admittedtaking the door," Kim said ,"but they say they won't re -turn it for a week becaus ethey want an open-door pol-icy ."

'Krushchevstepped downvoluntarily'

By DOUG HALVERSO N

Nikita Khrushchev has retir-ed as premier of the USSR, an done UBC expert believes he di dso voluntarily .

"At a Kremlin meeting Wed-nesday night Khushchev re-quested release from duty,"Slavonics professor Dr . H. E .Rominois said at a press con-ference Thursday .

The release was given at asecond meeting held Thursday ,he said .

Dr . Rominois said his infor-mation came from English an dRussian short-wave transmis-sions he monitored .

Khrushchev's successor, Al-elei Kosygin, and Kosygin'saide, ex-president L e o n i dBrezhnev, are thought to hol dthe same ideas about commun-ism as Khrushchev, Dr . Rom:inois stated .

The professor said hethought they would serve onlyas a stop-gap government, sim-ilar to the one set up afterStalin .

"It will take time to explainto the Russian people what hashappened. Khrushchev wa svery popular," he said .

He said Khrushchev's ownwishes weighed heavily in thematter . His successors are per-sonal friends and there was n ohint of military pressure, hesaid .

"It shows that the men at thetop no longer have to be

(Continued Page 3 )SEE: NIKITA

Blue Blazerco-ordinator

Page 2: fH~ UPYSSEY - University of British Columbia Library · Nikita Khrushchev has retir- ... ent electric bass player with heavy duty equipment. ... directory available latter part of

Page 2

THE UBYSSEY

Friday, October 16, 1964

Rates: 3 lines, 1 day, 75c—3 days, $2 .00 . Larger Ads on request

Non-Commercial Classified Ads are payable in Advanc e

Publications Office : Brock Hall .

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Autos For Sale Contd. 2 1

Lost & Found

11 FOR SALE — Austin A-40 196 4Sedan, $160. 738-1107 .

—fred ogden photoHopeful Dentists Jake Sorba, Science II, a nd Jeanette Lafont, Education II, practis eon display apparatus .

Chair soft touchexcept for drills

By LORNE MALLINDo you know what the mos t

world is ?It's the ultra-modern denta l

chair displayed at the Pre -Dental Society expositio nThursday noon .

Yesterday, in Brock Lounge ,I tested the blue leatherette -upholstered chair .

It was Heaven .The chair automatically fold-

ed back and I relaxed com-

tt

pletely .Until with

the operato rof drills .

The demonstrator called the$6,000 unit the Cadillac of den-tal equipment .

The display was held yester-day in the Brock lounge from11:30 a .m. to 2 :30 p .m .

Eight local dentists and tw omembers of the Faculty ofDentistry were there to answe rstudents' questions .

Scattered around on gree nfelt-covered tables were hun-dreds of pamphlets on al lfacets of modern dentistry .

Eric Weiser, president of thePre-Dental Society, said if thedisplay caught your eye yo ucan contact him at FA 5-7025 ,or for the next pre-denta lmeeting Wednesday in Buchan -an 204 .

He said he is especially in-terested in attracting girls plan-ning a career in DentalHygiene .

a push of a buttonwhipped out a set

Volunteerswill payfor help

The Homecoming Dance dec-orating committee attracts ai lkinds; the type that work fo rnothing and the others .

An advertisement in Thurs-day's Ubyssey said students ar eneeded to decorate the FieldHouse and Armory for theHomecoming Dances at $1 a nhour and $2 for overtime .

Chuck Campbell, vice-presi-dent of Arts Undergrads, ex-plained :

"It's easier to pay student sthan solicit for free workers . "

"Although we have fifty vol-unteers working for free westill need more help to guaran-tee a financial success . "

The Homecoming dance issponsored by both the Arts andForestry faculties .

"We have been allotted $20 0each to see the jobs of decora-tions and ticket collection ar edone," Campbell said . "There -fore, we have an obligation t opay some of the help . "

comfortable thing in the

University Boulevar d

at 9 :15 A.M.Under direction of the Anglican Chaplaincy

REV. J . ALAN JACKSONAnglican Chaplain to U.B.C.

Haar runs afoul

of Ouv's ArmyNo one escapes Sir Ouvry .

John Haar, Director ofHousing, admitted at a re-cent meeting of Lower Mal lcouncil that he had threeparking tickets from theTraffic Czar's army so farthis year .

FOUND ADS inserted free. Publica-tions office, Brock Hall., Local H .224-3242 .

LOST — Man's black diamond rin gwith initial B. Phone Judy, 987 -8603 . Reward offered for immed-iatereturn .

LOST — Wrist watch, men's wash -room, Bio Science Bldg., Tuesday.Reward . Call Glen, 224-0661.

FOUND — Darlene Wainwrightglasses in Brock washroom o nWed. 14th. Please contact Lois at YU 5-1495 .PUBLIC SHOWING: of Horsey' s

cattle prod scars in the Ubysse yoffice at noon today .

1 4FEMALE IN DISTRESS—Ride re -

81uir Wd. eves an

afte r5

edto Richmond, even s Marpole .

Interested parties phone CA 4-9017 , Fred Cunningham.RIDE WANTED for 8 :30 classes

from 35th and Granville . PhoneAM 1-1164 after 7 p .m .

DESPERATE — Ride wanted fro m2nd & Yew, Kitsilano area,- Linda .Phone 733-9736 .

RIDERS WANTED, vie . 49th or 41stAve . west of Oak, 8.30 classes, Mon .to Fri . AM 1-5880 after 6 .

Wanted

15WANTED IMMEDIATELY compet-

ent electric bass player with heav yduty equipment. Phone 224-6356after 4 .

CUSTOM RADIO for ' 56 Merc . orMonarch. Phone 731-7019 .

AUTOMOTIVE & MARIN E

Automobiles For Sale

2 1

'60 HILLMAN, low mileage, excel .condition, 4 dr. Sedan . RE 3-4526 , 3679 W . 22nd .1960 STUDEBAKER LARK, radio ,

excel . cond . N . Pollock, G eographyDept ., Mon . Wed . Fri 10 .30 to 1p .m ., or 3353 W. 29th .

BUSINESS SERVICE S

Typing

42 A

EMPLOYMENT

Help Wanted

5 1

INSTRUCTION SCHOOL SMusic

63

CLASSICAL GUITAR tuition to ad-vanced level . Segovia technique.W . Parker, 682-1096.

Tutoring

6 4

MISCELLANEOUSFOR SALE

7 1

SONY No . 571 4-track tape recorder6 mos. old, valued at $500 newplus $150 tapes, for only $400 o rclosest offer. Phone YU 5-3754 .

MUST SELL, complete Ski outfit,mint condition . Call-after 7 p.m.FA 5-1655.

BIRD CALLS—the most useful bookon the campus. Student telephonedirectory available latter part ofOctober. Limited number. Orderfrom the Phrateres Club . Only 75c.

iOTEM PRE SALES now at th eA 4S office.

SCOOTER FOR SALE, 'Allstate"second hand (one owner) . Please phone Don at RE8-8859 .rule SAeE—fledge pin, barely used.

Apply Bob Burton, The Ubyssey ,_.ortn Brock Basement .

RENTALS&REAL ESTAT ERooms

8 1

TWO SLEEPING rooms, one blockfrom Gates for one grad or seniorstudent to share with another al -ready in, $35 per mo., with kitchenfacilities, $40 per mo. CA 4-7496.

(0-b3660-o-s-o -O-o-b000000000000000 00000000000000000000000000000000000 0.ebb

moxAAsAciacm,

JUMP ALL HURDLESThe proprietor of this establishmen turges his clientele to subject thes eslacks to utmost scrutiny . They willshow their superiority in traditiona lline, quality, color and comfort .

Cotton Slacks in Wheat andBlack 6.95

Synthetic Blends in Self-Belte dStyles 12 .95

Continental Styled Hopsacks i nAll Shades

19 .95Worsted Hopsack Traditiona l

Slacks 22.50

Page 3: fH~ UPYSSEY - University of British Columbia Library · Nikita Khrushchev has retir- ... ent electric bass player with heavy duty equipment. ... directory available latter part of

Friday, October 16, 1964

THE UBYSSEY

Page 3

All that makeup causesthe trouble, says expert

IDEASat

LARGEHONDA HORROR

By OLD SOURDOUGH—Pesky motorcycles *%& !There I was, walking alon g

the tree-lined path leading t othe Buchanan Building, mind-ing my own business and med-itating in a learned fashion onthe character of Richard III ,then . . .

VARROOO MA motorcycle roared past,

just missing me, causing m eto take a frantic leap into theshrubbery, and throwing allthoughts of Richard III com-pletely . out of my head.

Then, today, I was sitting i nthe Buchanan study loung eassiduously reading somepoetry when . . . varr0000m ,some peasant on a motorcycl eroared up the path below me ,turned at the end, and .

.

.varr000m roared back again .

The least they could do isyet you know there is an offi-cial drag strip in front of thelounge. As usual, the publi cis the last to know thes ethings .

I started snooping aroundand what did I discover? awhole nest of assorted Hon-das, Saki-Sakis , Yamahaha sand other unpronounceabl enames parked in the Buchan -an quad .

What happened to that littl eold shed up in C lot wherethey used to park t h o s ethings ?

It wasn't too bad in th egood old days when all yo uhad to dodge on the walkway swas the occasional pushbike ,but when one has to cope withthose power-driven monsters

I will admit some makes o fmotorcycle are very silent .

But while this may be ablessing for those people try-ing to study, it also makes itall the better for sneaking u pon unwary pedestrians .

Students, arise against thesemechanized man-eaters .

As it happens, I have th eperfect answer .

Rope off the area wherethese monsters are parked ;blindfold all the riders ; andlet them go .

A m e r i c a n women spendmore on cosmetics than the_ombined budgets of the ne wAfrican Nations, an expert o nEast-West affairs said Thurs-day .

Felix Greene, s p e a k i n gThursday noon to a filledAuditorium on Russia, Chinaand the West said this typifie sthe imbalance of wealth in th eworld .

He said : "The fact the UnitedStates has so much wealth is

NIKITA(Continued from Page 1 )

liquidated to leave office . Theyare allowed to resign . "

Dr. Ronimois said he thoughtpart of the reason for the re-signation might be Khrush-chev's failing grasp of the worldCommunist party .

The split with China and re-luctance of the national com-munist parties to form a newComintern have greatly weak-ened his position, he said .

The UN Club is holding arally today in Physics 200where Dr . Ronimois will speak .

Other professors includin gDr. Juan Avankomavik wil lalso discuss the implications o fKhrushchev's resignation .

causing a growing restlessnesson the part of the underdevel-oped countries towards th eU.S .A . "

These impoverished peopleare jealous, said Greene .

He said another reason fo rthe restlessness is that the im-age of the U.S. as a helper ofthe underdog has been destroy-ed in these countries .

"The U.S. uses much of it swealth to keep governments inpower which are not liked by

the masses—government swhich are dedicated to pre -serving the Status Quo", hesaid .

Greene said it is fascinatingto hear the conviction wit hwhich Russian leaders predicttheir standard of living will behigher than that of the U.S .within a generation .

On the question of the Rus-sia-China dispute, Greene saidthe two countries are not reallyin conflict in their long-ter mobjective which is to decreasethe power of the United States .

"The real kernel of the dis-pute," said Greene, "lies inhow to cope with the U.S .' spreponderant power . "

Greene said he has foundthere are millions of people de-manding a change in the worldsituation .

He said revolutionary force sare developing in the masses o fimpoverished peasants .

AMS wants barfor Homecoming

The Alma Mater Societyhas requested permissionfrom President John Mac-donald to operate a bar a tthe Homecoming Dance .

The bar would operate atthe dance in the Field Houseand would be restricted tothose Over 21 .

RUSHANTCAMERAS LTD .

4538 West 10th Ave.

Ready to Help wit hAll Your Photo Problems

Complete Stock ofDarkroom Equipmen t

and Supplie s

Your B.C. ILFORD Stockist ,

DON GRABOWECK Ito their Permanent staf f

the Store with the TechnicalPhoto knowledg e

224-5858

224-911 2

Vance not alone

CL'! NEWSGeneral Meeting of G.S.A. on Friday, October 30th,

4:00 p.m. Further details to be announced .

All Graduates expecting to complete requirements fo rtheir degrees before Spring Convocation should havetheir photos taken at Campbell's Mobile Studio on anyweekday between 9 :00 a .m. and 4:00 p.m. This Studio

is presently located at the Stadium and will be o n

Campus until October 31st . Please do not wait unti l

the last moment to have your picture taken .

Sports Items : Graduate Students interested in playing

Intramural Basketball please sign notice in the G .S .C .

Hockey on Tuesdays at 9 :30 p .m. at Thunderbird Sports

Arena . Further details, contact Chuck Irwin, Loc . 652 .

Quamless dinerstake more mil k

Many Fort Camp students insist on having their secondglass of milk free of charge .

Graeme Vance, AMS Co . -

ordinator of activities told inThe Ubyssey last week he wa srefusing to pay the five cent sthe extra milk costs .

Observation of the For tCamp milk dispenser at noo nreveals Vance isn't the onl ystudent who likes his secon dglass free .

One student, carrying awaya full second glass, said he fel tno qualms about it . He said hetakes a second without payingbecause he never has one for(breakfast .

The attendant said everyon etries to get away with it i fthey can .

Blazers break throug h

in brighter, bolde r

colours for Fall . . .Campus and career fashions always

get a head start at the Bay . . . and

this season blazers are off - and -

running in bold bottle green, war m

camel, blonde camel, forest green ,

conservative grey, plus traditiona l

black or navy. Note the neat natura l

styling . . . high three-button closing ,

centre hook vent and firm raised

seams . . . tailored in fine all-wool

flannel . Sizes 36 to 44, short, regular

and tall .

Each 39.95

The Bay Campus and Career, second floor

u1 a ' In liunpnntt .INCORPORATED 2"* MAY 1670.

GEORGIA AT GRANVILLE

Page 4: fH~ UPYSSEY - University of British Columbia Library · Nikita Khrushchev has retir- ... ent electric bass player with heavy duty equipment. ... directory available latter part of

TIIZ UEYSSZYPublished Tuesdays, Thursdays and Fridays throughout the universityyear by the Alma Mater Society, University of B.C . Editorial opinion sexpressed are those of the editor and not necessarily those of the AM Sor the University. Editorial office, CA 4-3916 . Advertising office, CA 4-3242,Loc . 26 . Member Canadian University Press. Authorized as second-classmail by Post Office Department, Ottawa, and for payment of postagein cash .

Winner Canadian University Press tronhies for generalexcellence and editorial writing .

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 16, 196 4

Bouquet dazePull on your rosy red glasses and stand back : The

Ubyssey is going on a bouquet binge .We have come out of our fog of cynicism long enoug h

to see several people deserving of recognition, peoplewhose deeds we don't usually see because we 're sobusy blasting the bumblers, babblers and boobs .

Today is flower day, and forthwith the petal ,parade :First, a humble Thank You to retiring chairman o f

the Board of Governors, George Cunningham, whos e29 years of service have seen UBC through its greates tperiod of expansion .

Wednesday, UBC students bestowed on him thehighest honor within their power to give — the Grea tTrekker award — and he is more than deserving of it .

A bouquet also to UBC student George Hungerfordand his buddy from Toronto, Roger Jackson, whose row-ing captured Canada's first Gold Medal of the 1964Olympics at Tokyo .

The coxless pairs is traditionally a strong Europeanevent which Canadians just aren't supposed to win ,but Hungerford and Jackson whomped the world 's bestwith a borrowed shell and two short weeks practice .

More flowers to Dean Walter Gage, warm-heartedand sponge-shouldered money-man to generations ofstudents, for his efficiency in handling the federal loa n

plan. And also for the aplomb with which he ignore dor rebuffed politicos and pressmen who were so eager t oholler "Cheat! " on the plan .

An orchid to Kim Cambell, pert, purty and pluckyfirst-ever female frosh president, for her fortitude a tthe Foresters' logrolling contest. And also for her de-termination to save the frosh from not only themselvesbut the upperclassmen as well .

A good luck garland to UBC 's faculty members in

their forthcoming fight to win a salary hike from the

administration .A handful of posies to our own Page Friday staf f

under Editor Dave Ablett for a job well done. They

have created The Ubyssey 's first successful magazin e

supplement in many years .And last a great big skunk cabbage to our whining ,

stomping French Canadian friends who managed t o

show themselves so well when the Queen arrived in

Quebec . They should have remembered that she wasn'tinvading the place—she was invited to come .

Carole's looking glass

Registration at UBC is lik elining up for a Beatles con -cert . And its going to sta ythat way .

According to tabulatin gsupervisor Jim Poole, pre -registration by compute rwon't be attempted at UB Cfor years

. .

In spite of the fact that theLniversity of Alberta turne dover its registration problem sto the computing center thi s,year .

In spite of the fact tha tWashington State Universitygave the task of schedulingclasses to its electronic com-puters .

* * *

But not UBC .You come to me with re -

ports that computers are beingused for registration at othe runiversities and ask why wedon't have them here," Pool esaid .

"Well we don't have to b ethe first to try them out . Let

some other university experi-ment and iron out all theproblems. Then maybe we'l luse them . "

He was smiling and hospit-able . He was also unruffle dand unwavering .

* * *

But then so was I . In Sep-tember I spent three hour shuddled under a leaking um-brella waiting to have m ycourses approved .

One month is not long en-cugh to forget such a drip-ping affair .

Why must UBC wait fo rother , universities to do thetesting'? Why not be a leade rin the field rather than a fol-lower ?

Surely the annual bottle -neck in the Buchanan an dPhysics buildings and in theArmory is living proof tha tsome part of the registrationsystem needs to be improved .

At Washington State, whereexperiments with machine

registration have been goingon since 1962, the computerswere given the complicate dtask of scheduling classes .

On registration day the stu-dents' choice of classes wererecorded on "marked sensed"cards and fed into a computer .The machine then matched theinformation with the sched-ule of classes and the numbe rof seats available .

If a class section was fille dup the computer tried 500 dif-ferent combinations to get th estudent into another class be -fore giving up .

* * *The whole procedure takes

less than ten seconds . It freesabout 100 faculty advisorsfrom the job of matching stu-dents with classes .

In Alberta the machinesworked in the same way . Thecomputer analyzed a student' sproposed curricula and for-mulated a timetable . Again i thad a maximum of 10 secondsto "think" on each card.

.. .ti:) 1 ,101tJ> D

A E2AlEn V .

But what about us?Back to supervisor Poole .He claims that mechanize d

registration at UBC is fa raway for two reasons. Thefirst is—naturally—money .

* * *His computing center hasn' t

the necessary machines no rthe money to buy them . Theother objection is time. Ac-cording to Poole the registra-tion cut-off date would hav eto be mid-August if UBC'sregistration were to be put inthe computer's hands .

So we're back to where westarted. It looks as if the onlyhappy face at registrationtime again next year will bethat of the Boss of the Univer-sity—the cashbox .

His face is constantly aglo was he listens to the soft rustl eof money pouring out of ourwallets and into his vaults .

In the meantime we standin lines. Let's hope it doesn' train .

LETTER SCrumbling FortEditor, The Ubyssey:

A note of thanks to JohnDilday and Paul Wood fo rtheir expose on Fort Campliving conditions .

I have been there for tw oyears and feel very qualifie dto say that they presented afair picture .

The administration is hardto deal with in these matter swhen a leaky faucet or some -thing else falls apart .

Let's have mote, guys .MAKIE WARNER ,Fort Camp .

Bryan's been bus yEditor, The Ubyssey :

There has been some confu-sion regarding my challeng eto Peter Penz and his letterconcerning "freedom o fspeech", etc., in Culba .

Since my marriage Oct . 8I have been kept busy. Atpresent the Canadian Dept. ofImmigration has begun pro-ceedings against my wife .

I am sure that Peter willunderstand my not contactin ghim personally but I reasonedthat as current affairs editorof Page Friday he would readhis own paper .

I apologize for not contact-ing him personally but I wa son my honeymoon .

Anyway I hope Peter willattend my talk Friday (Oct .16) in Ed. 100 so that I mayanswer any questions .

I have spoken to an ND Pexecutive member and theNDP will arrange a full de-bate on the topic, "Is Cub aDemocratic? "

I hope to answer any ques -tions at that meeting also.

BRYAN BELFONT ,Chairman, Studen tCommittee on CubanAffairs.

Good grief! PraiseEditor, The Ubyssey :

For a change, not blisterin gcondemnation or fuming de-nunciation of a malicious edi-tor and his synical, satani cratraps .

Instead, Kudos .Ubyssey . Best I've seen in

five years on campus . CUPtrophies sweep for- sure .

Page Friday . Major reasonf o r Ubyssey's improvementfrom being merely "the best" .

And now Hunter's articlein PF. Excellent assessmen tof the reciprocal effect of theadministration's s e e m i n ggaffes regarding legitimatestudent interests. First-rate .Finest single piece of writin gso far .

If you keep it up, I'll beforced to complain abou tlittle, unimportant things —like Engineers . But it's wort hit .

MIKE COLEMAN ,Law I.

EDITOR : Mike Horsey

News Tim PadmoreCity Tom Wayma nArt Don Hum eSports George Reamsbotto mAsst . Managing Norm Bett sManaging _-- Janet Matheso nAsst. City Lorraine ShoreAsst. News Carole Munro eAssociate Mike Hunte rAssociate Ron Bite rMagazine Dave Ablet tRick Maynard, Felicia Folk, Quinton(do you have another name?), BobWeiser, John Dilday, Robbi West ,Mona Helcermanas, Donna Pirrie ,Art Casperson, Richard Blair, Joa nGodsell, Doug Halverson, Paul Terry ,Jim Adams, Don Hull, Ian Mc -Dougall, Ed Clarke, Jack McQuarrie ,Lorne Mallin, Al Birnie, Steve Beck -ow, Sharon Rodney, Sheri Galen ,

Carol Anne Baker .

UINEtJ I GOT TOUNIUfRS11Y , l'D HEAR )

LOT A'E,OUl WEU1Dt)DE9.COL l.i'W2s. AuD 1

W 010 GF,TI'N ON 11 .

. . An10 dWT A'CII- 1 laAO! 60V !BOOZE AND 6R0A.DS EUERV etc i .. .

UJEEEND-LONG PARTIES . .. .my , DID I I,IUE I t UP. .. . swim

AT Tll1 FRAT FUSE . ., IeEVFP.

Gl)1 AN? SLEEP Al ALL,NAR.M.,,

AND ~IRLS! .,.ON, IT UlA3 ANTASTIC !EgTTIF1EofH4 y

NO KIDDING!

I WA% e,O BUS'lIIAVIIJD ABALL AI .LTIE

PIKE ti61P1 WURALL4, I

01DU't 00 A WOLF.LOT OF WORK .SO FLOWEDDU"( AFTER OK1E

liSU IS (g t,10F.QFUl-nWuc. TWF. 0PP0RZUll\1410 Go TO

UNIUf ~IZV . . . . 11 SUREas q .ol)

LOZ 9F UIONOERPU L

MENDR1tiS .

Whaaat ?It's the strangest case of the pot calling the kettle

black that we have come across .

The local Communists have refused to debate with

an American John Birch society because, of all reasons,

the Birchers are an extremist conspiratorial sect.

Which proves that moderation in the pursuit of

extremism is a virtue.

Or something.

By Carole Muroe

, ..w TIIA[ OPJESit TER, 21!

Easy registering, the computer way

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THE U.S .

Behind the KKK's violencelies a burning cross o ftwisted logic — 'We'reChristian patriotsfighting Communists'

By MIKE HORSE Y

MISSISSIPPI — Workingwith Negroes is not th e

exclusive domain of civi lrights workers in Missis-sippi .

The large and well-organ-ized White Knights of th eKu Klux Klan (KKK) hasshown a keen interest in theNegro .

Members of the Klan haveappeared in at least threecases in Mississippi this sum-mer concerning the death o fNegroes, or persons sympa-thetic to the civil rightsmovement .

And members of the KKKare suspected in the slay-ing of three young civi lrights workers in Neshob acounty early this summer .

Their acts of violence hav eshock value but the twistedlogic behind the movementis fascinating and m o r eshocking in the long run t othe northerner .

In Neshoba county theKKK men had a booth atthe county fair .

The Klan-Ledger, officia lpublication of the KKK, wa sdistributed "so that the rea ltruth regarding our positionin Mississippi will be knownto the whole world . "

Here's the philosophy o fthe Mississippi KKK mem-ber and his justification fordistinguishing between blackand white :

The Klansmen point outproudly that the KKK is aChristian organization an d"has no intention of perse-cuting anyone . "

They feel, as Christians ,they are "humbly obedien tto the Will of Almighty God ,and recognize the fact tha tthe black man is one of Hiscreatures, and is, thereforeunder His protection . "

"This Divine protectiondoes not, however, extend t osocial equality and integra-tion with the white man, thescriptures clearly show . "

The KKK then indicate sthat Genesis 49, 1-33 and ICor. 15-39 clearly show thatthere are many species with -in "one flesh . "

The average, intelligentNegro, say the Klansmen ,realizes that his brothers ar ebestial and that he needs th eprotection of the white man .

"No intelligent N e g r owould want to live in a so-ciety governed by Negroesand all Negroes live in fearof each other . "

The civil rights workerstrying to register Negro vot-ers are branded Commun-ists . They upset the basiclaws of nature with thei rtroublesome meddling andare really trying to bringabout the overthrow of(white) government, t h elogic goes .

Anyone trying to over -throw governments must bepretty bad—communistic a tleast - and committing acts

9f t

san . ;Y;,f

Hence, any suppression o fthe civil rights workers isan act of valor to the KKKand acts to stop these "Com-munists" are justified .

Remember that the threecivil rights workers Schwer-ner, Chaney and Goodman ,were murdered in Neshobacounty .

The KKK claims the civilrighters were, as all so -called civil rights worker sare, "Communist revolution-aries, actively working t oundermine and destroyChristian civilization . "

And just who murderedthe communist revolution-aries ?

One of two groups, saysthe KKK. American patriotswho are determined to resis tcommunism by every avail-able means; or the Commun-ists themselves for propa-ganda purposes .

And were the KKK meninvolved in the murder ofthe three workers ?

"Only to the extent of do-ing everything possible t oexpose the truth about theCommunist and political as-pects of the case .

"We are primarily con-cerned with protecting thegood name and integrity ofthe honest people of theState of Mississippi agains tthe physical and propagandaattacks of Communist agita-tors and the press .

Most white citizens inMississippi share the beliefthat the Nego is somehowsavage and definitely ment-ally inferior to the whit eman .

They do not all blame th eCommunists, as does theKKK, but the myth of in-feriority runs through thei rlives .

The same myth is repeatedevery time you hear some -one say: "See how the Ne-groes dance, what rhythmthey have, a n a t u r a lrhythm . "

Only in the South is this

immediately interpreted asa mark of the inferior man ,a bestial man ready to tearhis fellow Negro apart .

A Hobbesian world mad eup of Negroes, if you like .

The white Mississippian sI spoke to hedged about theproblems of the Negro .

Only once, during a tourof a historic monument, thefirst Mississippi state legis-lature, did a young ladyburst out: "If they aren't in-ferior why do they live insuch a filthy manner? "

The vicious circle starts .He lives this way because

the white man refuses togive him the paying jobs .And as long as the payingjobs are lacking he will con-tinue to live in "filthy" con-ditions. And because of hisfilthy conditions he will becontinued to be called in-ferior and unworthy of th every jobs he needs .

I spoke to the Rev . War-ren McKenna, head of theCouncil of Churches organi-zation working in Missis-sippi .

He works out of a ding yoffice in the Negro sectio nof Jackson, the capital ofthe state .

"The Negro is considere dinferior and is the victim ofa gigantic myth . "

"First as a slave and no was a second class citizen .

"You speak of a large andonly covertly discriminatedChinese population in Van-couver . Your Chinese havenot had the years of inferior-ity complex pounded intothem that the Negro has ha dto face . "

"This has been going on,

.

,

so long the Negro himselfbelieves he is inferior andnot entitled to the same em-ployment and educationa lopportunities . "

Rev. McKenna has spentthe summer trying to tel lthe Negroes they have a fewrights .

He will stay through thewinter .

This winter may be crucialfor Rev. McKenna and man yof the estimated 150 civilrights workers who willstay on .

They are fewer in num-bers and poorer in publicity .

There will be few news-papermen through the statethis winter and the presswon't hear much about thebeatings of civil rights work-ers .

It has been a hot summe rin Mississippi, it looks likea hot winter, too .

THE WRITER

OCT . 9, 1964

On the cover : Dooney, by Herber t

Katzman, from Banners, U .S .A . ,

currently on display in UBC Fin e

Arts Gallery . Photo courtesy Th e

American Federation of Arts .

The rest of the show is as gay ,

it's well worth seeing . Run s

through to Oct . 31 .

Editor : DAVE ABLET T

Current Affairs Peter Pen s

Criticism John Kelsey

Films Graham Olney

Today, a little bit of dat

of South in PF:

Ubyssey editor in chie fMike Horsey, o n thi spage, continues his ramb-lings on the state of Mis-sissippi (catch the littleplay on words there, eh) .

The artwork accomp-anying was clone by JeffWall who didn't go t oMississippi .

On Page 3, PF goeseven further south — an d

le ft, we guess — with ariarticle by Sonia Puchal-ski, one of a group ofCanadians who went toCuba this summer . Herarticle, bound to provokebitter reaction from som equarters, nonetheless rep -resents the thinking of asegment of our fair camp -us .

Further back in PF,Jim Lotz reviews Edmon-ton professor HenryKreisel's attempt at thenew great Canadian nov-eI . It's on Page 5, alon gwith the final half ofTony Hudz' anatomy of ajazz festival .

On Page 6, KrisThompson and C . J . Kooyvisit Howie Bateman'srevisited hootenanny a tthe QE .

Ethel Bloomsbury andPhil Surguy take a peekat two films ; Ethel a tElectra, Phil at Zulu .Their reviews are onPage 7 . On the same page ,Ron Quixote reviews Th eWise Have Not Spoken ,an Irish Tragedy per -formed by—wouldn't youknow it — the EmeraldPlayers .

Finally, them whatthinks they has somethin gto say in PF should tryto say it before Tuesdaynoon. That's when thefirst copy starts to gothrough the mill .

PF Two

Mike Horsey is editor ofThe Ubyssey.

He spent two weeks earlyin Septemberriding, walk-ing — an do n occasionrunning —through Mis-sissippi, t h emecca in re -verse for civ-il righters.

This is another in a seriesof articles appearing in Th eUbyssey and Page Fridayon what he found in thestate .

MN :7MM:Mg:MX

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A visitor to Castro's Cubafinds a big contrast inresults of two revolutionsaround the Bay of Mexico

HE'S .'VIVA' IN MEXICO

By SONIA PUCHALSK I

It is rather ironic due t oAmerican government polic yof harrassment and attempt-ed prevention of travel t oCuba, that any Canadianwho wants to go to Cubamust go through M e x i c oCity first .

It provides a very goo dcomparison of what the con-ditions in a Latin America ncountry before its revolu-tion are, and what they ar eafter a socialist revolution .

In short : dirty, then clean .You notice that about Cub aand Mexico. Mexico Citysmells . Cuba does not .

These are two countries :one with a social revolution ,and one with an ossifiedrevolution, that happened in1911, and has been "institu-tionalized" so far that themajor political party, whichpretends to be a party of re-form, is called the Party ofthe Institutionalized Revolu-tion .

Considering it for a while ,• one comes to the conclusionthat this .so-called revolu-tion is not one at all .

What has it done for Mex-icans? Almost nothing . Go-ing to Mexico from Vancou-ver is sort of like going fromdowntown Vancouver t oSkid Row .

Mexico is like a millio nsquare miles of East Hast-ings. Well, you can managenot to see what East Hast-ings is like .

But it is a little harder toavoid the fact of poverty i nMexico. You absorb i tthrough your nostrils, all th etime . In some places th esmell is terrible . No wonder .

In the slums of the city ,where most of the peopl elive, there are open sewerson the streets . And childre nwho have no shoes play onthese same streets, beside theopen sewers .

The government pretend sthat it has plans to alleviatethe poverty . We went to agovernment housing project .The guide explained that i twas built to house 75,000 ofthe poorer families .

But when we asked fur-ther about this we discover-ed that the rent charge dwould be one-half of a poorerworker's monthly w a g e .Consequently, nearly all th eapartments are inhabited bymiddle-class people and gov-ernment workers, w h i c h

THE WRITER

Sonia Puchalski is a third -year arts student — one ofthose who went to Castro'sCuba this past summer tolook at the socialist revolu-tion there.

Sonia is a member of theFair Play for Cuba commit-tee and of the Canadian Uni-versities Campaign for Nu -clear Disarmament .

Her article touches o nCuba, the U .S. and EastHastings Street but is main-ly concerned with what sh esaw in Mexico on the wa yto Cuba.

leaves only the slums for th epoor and the unemployed .Or, a lot of them live on th estreets .

You actually see childre nsleeping in doorways a n dunder store fronts .

But the most appallingthing about Mexico is theway people are treated, andthe way they treat eachother . That, I think, is whathas changed most in Cubasince before 1958. And tha tis one of the most importantthings about a revolution .People become friends, notenemies who take the breadfrom each other's mouths ,not because they want to ,but because they have to ea tthemselves .

But if you happen to besomeone who regards peopl eonly as a source of profit ,then you will never be abl eto understand what the Cu -ban Revolution means . Andthat is precisely how theU.S. government regard speople. And hence it doesnot understand Cuba. Thetwo governments have op-posing concepts of what ma nis . In Cuba it is the mindand spirit that count, andnot money .

Most of us on the tour didnot like having to be tour-ists in Mexico . That is wha twe were, of course, to theMexicans — we looked likeAmericans because of th eway we dressed and, com-pared to Mexicans, we ha dmoney . So we were treatedas tourists .

You want to buy mari-juana? Or other drugs? Ora woman? Just ask a taxi-driver, and you will prob-ably get what you want .

But if you take the troubleto look at him, you wil lprobably see contempt in hiseyes . For you . For you whiteAmerican tourist, who thinkyou are the only ones whohave the right to hold othersin contempt, because otherspoorer than you—you whiteAmerican who assumes tha teverybody's goal in life ispink refrigerators and $15,-000 necklaces, but preven tothers from getting them be -cause that would spoil th efun for you .

One day we went to thePyramids to the Sun and tothe Moon . At the bottom o fthe Pyramid to the Sun ther ewas a crippled man of abou t50 years old, who had onl yone arm .

He was sitting on a bench ,making his living weavin gstraw flowers with his toes .

An appreciative Americantourist-type audience w a slooking on approvingly ,thinking how clever — andweren't the straw flowersnice—and occasionally eve nbuying one or two .

It is not only the chil-dren who have bare feet . Itis almost any Mexican yo ucare to look at — except forthe businessmen, of course .

They are the ones who canlook at this mess and thinkof how much work they canget out of all these starvingpeople before they do actual-ly starve to death .

If you are a businessman

you do not have any oblga-tions to human beings — youonly associate with them ifthey can be useful to you .If you did think about theseconditions, you would soonbe one of those awful Com-munists, too .

On the topic of feet : thereare thousands of shoeshin eboys in the city . Childrenof about 12 years old, who ,even according to Mexicanlaw, are supposed to be inschool . But they aren ' t . Theyare trying to make enoughmoney to eat .

They are usually shiningthe black, already-shinyshoes of some businessman ,who isn't thin like the chil-dren usually are, and whodoesn't even seem to noticethat the child who is shin-ing his shoes exists — hecalmly reads his newspaper ,or if he hasn't a newspaper ,looks over the head orstraight through this humanbeing at his feet . He mighthappen to notice as he goesaway that his shoes look bet -ter than when he came .

After having heard allthis, it might be interestingto know that Mexico is con-sidered the richest of theLatin American nations, andhas the highest living stan-dard .

But on the drive back tothe city from the pyramids ,there were about 20 signs— I counted — painted o nfences, in support of Cuba .

Usually it is VIVA CUBA ,or VIVA FIDEL but one sig nthat said, OUT WITH BET-ANCOURT . Revolutionary

movement does exist, inMexico as well as in theother Latin American na-tions .

And the United State sgovernment is inadvertentlydoing all it can to promotethese revolutions.

This is what I saw in Mex-ico: immense poverty, filth ,disease; workers with nojobs; children who if theydo manage to live throughthe early years, have nochance of going to school ;women who are constantl ybearing children they have-n't the money to feed ; andpeople who live on thestreets because they have nohomes to go to . Even thedogs are starving .

In Cuba, which six yearsago was poorer than Mexico ,I saw all these things be-ing eliminated . And that iswhat a socialist revolutionin a Latin American coun-try, what we call an "under-developed" country, means :it means that the people inthat country finally have theright to live as men andwomen.

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Senior scientists from Imperial Chemical Industrie s

Limited, England, will be visiting the Campus o nMonday, 26th October .

They wish to meet graduates in any scientifi cdiscipline from Britain or the British Commonwealt hwho would like to discuss careers with I .C .I . in theUnited Kingdom . Recent arrivals, as well as thosewho are considering the possibility of returning to

Britain, are invited to get in touch with them through :

Mr. M. E. Hacking,Student Employment Officer ,Office of Student Services ,West Mall .

AUTO INSURANCE ATSUBSTANTIAL SAVINGS

For Drivers 24 yrs . & up

Call Bob Baker of A . R . Baker Ltd.1327 Marine, W . Van.

922.615$

TONIGHTTHROUGH OCT . 24

MATINEE SAT.-2:30 p .m .

THE PLAYHOUSETHEATRE COMPAN Y

PRESENT S

THE SMASH-HIT COMED YBy JEAN ANOULI H

Adopted by CHRISTOPHER FR YDIRECTED B Y

MALCOLM BLAC K

"SMOOTH and SLICK" . . .Wasserman, Su n

DELIGHT AND AMUS EEVERYONE WHO SEES IT . . . "

Richards, Su n

TICKETS NOW ON SALE VAN . TICKE TCENTRE, MU 3-3255 ; ALL EATON' SSTORES (Charge It) ; MODERN TRAVE L41st and VINE.

Note to StudentsSimply show you rStudent Card at theBox Office, Sundaythrough Thursdayand you will haveyour choice of seatsfor $1 .50 per personExcellent Parking Facilities

EXCELLENT PARKING FACILITIES ;

PF Four

—graham olney photo

The many faces of BarbaraDane, currently singing a tthe Ark .

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Fall musicprogramgoes forbaroque

By DAVE NORDSTRO MAlthough chamber musi c

is suffering even more thanusual neglect this season,compensated perhaps in th eDepartment of Music's as yetunannounced series of Col-legia Musica, the remainderof Vancouver's musical far eoffers considerable variety .

On campus, Harry Adask-in's annual Wednesday noon -hour concerts in Bu . 106 fea-ture this year the music ofBrahms.

Special Events sponsor spianist Merek Jablonski onOct. 20, followed on Nov .12 by the on-campus con-cert of the Vancouver Sym-phony, on Nov. 17 by guitar-ist Carlos Montoya, and o nNov. 24 by the internation-ally known Copenhagenquartet .

The Vancouver SymphonySociety (begins its season onOct. 18 with an orchest-ral concert under the bato nof new musical director Mer-edith Davies. The followingSunday, Oct . 25, Famous Ar-tists present the far-famedRussian pianist SviatoslavRichter . The Symphony re -turns on Nov . 1, featuringbaritone George London .

The Women's Musical ClubJoint Recital on Nov. 4 pres-ents violinist Helen Hagnesand soprano Patricia Mur-phy .

Symphonies compete onSunday, Nov. 15, when Fam-ous Artists hosts the JapanSymphony Orchestra, andVancouver Symphony wel-comes pianist Geza Anda .The city symphony com-pletes its fall program onNov. 29 .

Student contralto JudithLumb joins the UkrainianFolk Orchestra in a Phil -harmonic Music Club concerton December 6 . HeatherThompson returns intriumph to Vancouver o nDec. 9, sponsored by the Van-couver Women's Music Club .

DRAMAQuixote getshis Irish . upover . script— likes cast

By RON QUIXOT EAh, it's a foine people th e

Irish are, but there's somekinds of theatre they oughtto be after leavin' alone .

One kind is tragedy .Tonight and Saturday th e

Emerald Players will windup their eight-day run o fPaul Vincent Carroll's TheWise Have Not Spoken—andonly the cast's top-flight tal-ent will save the script fromchoking on its own tedium .

Carroll's tragedy is over-long and overboiled, but theEmerald Players rise aboveplot and script deficienciesto register a well-worth-see-ing performance at the newMetro Theatre .

PF Seven

First honors distribute dto the excellent non-pro-fessional cast must go t oAnn Grainger as Una andDes Smiley as Francis .

Una is a sensitive, warm -hearted Irish colleen por-trayed with understandingand realism by Miss Grain-ger .

Francis, the once-idealis-tic Republican, comes acrossstrongly as an embittere dand crippled victim of th eSpanish civil war .

Babs McConville puts ina convincing portrayal o fCatherine, the elder sisterwhose sanity is fast waning .

Des McManus does a gen-erally fine job as Peter, thebrother trying to save th efamily farm, but his dee pinvolvement in the rolecauses his own Scottish burrto override his stage Irishdialect at times .

Supporting actors RayCraig, Pat Warren, JohnDonohoe, Cecil Glass an dLance Walker register per-formances varying only fromgood to damned good .

Main fault with The Wis eis length. The Players' at-tempt to go all the way withCarroll's ending — w h i c hmixes rifle fire, dying andphilosophizing to intermin-able lengths—unfortunatelyweakens the overall perfor-mance .

CINEMA

Zulu's nota bongo-bongoCongo caper

it's goodBy PHIL SURGUY

I expected Zulu to be theusual wog-bashing, sun nev-er setting, thin red line ,battle over in time for teatype of adventure which hasbeen churned out for years .It is anything but .

In 1872, in Natal Colony ,94 British soldiers defendeda mission station calledRourke's Drift against anarmy of 4,000 Zulu warriorswhich had, a few hours be-fore, wiped out a column of1,500 infantry .

After the battle, whichlasted a day and a night ,eleven VC's were awarded—the highest number wonin a single engagement .

Directors Cy Endfield an dStanley Baker have con-structed the most detaile dand realistic recreation o fa battle ever filmed. TheZulus are shown, not as agang of spear-tossing, gib-berish - screaming savages ,but as a nation and peopl ewith customs and a distinc tarmy and military tacticsof their own.

Nobody on the British sid eattempts to justify the actio nand nowhere is there a flag .

The cameras superbly es-tablish the terrain, style andpace of the battle and, a tone point, in one long sweep ,cover all 4,000 Zulus line don hilltops surrounding th emission .

The terrifying charges o fthe warriors and the fury o fhand to hand combat arebrought home more force -fully than any picture ad-vertising a cast of thous -ands .

Michael Caine and Stan -ley Baker are the two com-

manding officers . Their con-flicts are dramatic but notobtrusive . Jack Hawkins ,out of khaki, is good as apreacher driven to the bot-tle and the edge of madnessby the thought of his parish-ioners killing each other .

No detail of battle strate-gy on either side is obscureand Baker and Endfieldkeep the fury of the thin gat a steady pace, but kno wenough to stop before theaudience's senses are dulledby a surfeit of action .

Greek tragedyon film ' makesElectra-fryingentertainment

By ETHEL BLOOMSBUR Y

One must, in criticizin ga film based on a play, con-sider whether or not th efilm stands by itself . Cacoy-annis' Electra, now playingat the Varsity, is based onthe play by Euripides .

In the legend, Agamem-non returns victorious fro mthe Trojan wars and is mur-dered by his adultress wife ,Clymnestra and her lover ,Aegisthus. Orestes, son ofAgememnon, is hustle dabroad to safety and his sis-ter, Electra, remains. UponOrestes' shoulders fall theduty of punishment and re-venge .

The film itself is ver ywell done. Cacoyannis doesnot have to rely on the rep-utation of Euripides toachieve success . Electra didnot, as some films of Shakes-peare have, degenerate int oa film record of a stageproduction . This is attribut-able to three factors—IrenePapas (Electra), Walter Las-sally's photography and`something else' which, forconvenience, I shall cal ldirection. Irene Papas is anexcellent Electra and seemsto carry the whole film .

Cacoyannis achieves avery acute sense of suspens ein the film by drawing eachscene out past the point ofendurance. The obvious pit -fall here is stark boredom .However, due to good edit-ing and Lassally's disciplin-ed photography, the pitfallis easily avoided. The resultis suspense and forebodingworthy of Hitchcock .

Coupled with this tempor-al extragance is the use o fnatural sounds and, most im-portant, silence . The directordoes not resort to stridentmusic to create suspense ;he lets the film and th estory do it for him. This re-liance on only the simplestof tricks is the true markof an artist .

Cacoyannis has solve dmany difficult problem shere: adaptation of the play ,creation of suspense andcontrol of the actors . Onebig problem in a film of thi stype is the Chorus. It wouldbe easy to simply let th eChorus walk around look-ing glum and mysterious .The Chorus in Electra i sbeautifully integrated in th efilm. They are almost hu-man, much in keeping wit hEuripides' down - to - earthversion of the legend .

I had thought, before go-ing to Electra, that filmedGreek tragedy would be asdull as oatmeal .

I was wrong .

At a Reasonable Price

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Page 10: fH~ UPYSSEY - University of British Columbia Library · Nikita Khrushchev has retir- ... ent electric bass player with heavy duty equipment. ... directory available latter part of

ART., .

Town goes totown withtechnicalbrilliance

By JACKIE FOORD

Harold Town is probablythe most fully achievedpainter in the country to-day . It takes time to view aTown canvas, for the mono-ltthiR dimensions and tech-nical brilliance sometimesobscure the emotional con-tent . Town is an artist acute-ly aware of the tools of hi scraft — his paints, brushes,canvas and subject matter.The result is a perfect unityof theme and form, throughwhich the emotion of thepicture comes as clearly asthe emotion in a T.S. Elio tpoem; Town has succeede din producing the objectivecorrelative on canvas .

This is particularly evi-dent in Children's CrusadeSet, a work with the herald-ic theme which Town fre-quently explores. This paint-ing is divided roughly i nhalf, the top representing amedieval town of orangecircle houses; the bottom, th eblackness of infidel lands .

Some of the houses areinhabited, but most are va-cant because the white-dotchildren stream out of th etown, into the blackness,eventually off the edge ofthe canvas world. One can -not view this compositio nwithout a sense of the patho sof the theme .

The effect of experiencin ga theme so directly is createdagain and again . Oracle Sethas a cave quality, createdby color, shape and perspect-ive . Icarus Set counterpointsa soaring Icarus shape at thetop of the canvas with theidentical shape, shattered, atthe bottom. Summit Meet-ing — two ominous blackshapes precariously separ-ated by a strip of white —has a terrifying effect . Par-ade Set, a panoply of posi-tive and negative shapesshaken from a floating bal lof color, has all the impactand intensity of a parade .

Every composition bearsthe mark of Town's ingenu-ity. The Tyranny of the Cor-ner series is Town's solution 'to the problem of corners ,which frequently are no tcontributing spaces on th ecanvas .

Vine Set and Galaxy Seta r e examples of Town' sawareness of his canvas notonly as a vehicle for ex-pression, but also a media ofexpression in its own right .In Vine Set, whole areas ofcanvas are exposed. In someplaces it is bare where thepaint has been scrape daway; in others, the canvasis not painted, but treated sothat one area bleeds int oanother .

The whole exposed canvasarea works precisely withthe total composition, bu tthe textural and color qual -

PF Eight

CALENDARRing Around the Moon,

QE Playhouse . To. Oct . 24 .The Playhouse Theatre Com-pany.

The Wise Have Not Spok-en, Metro Theatre. To Oct .17 . Produced by Emeral dPlayers .

Harold Town's Paintings.To Nov . 1 . Vancouver ArtGallery .

Royal Irish Brigade. Tues-day Oct . 20, in the Forum .Famous Artists .

Ski Film, "Persian Pow-der", narrated by John Jayand Fred Beckey . Tonite at8 :30. QET .

Inside Castro's Cuba. Rob-

ert Cohen's brilliant filmlecture on Cuba. Tuesday,Oct . 20. Auditorium, noon .

Flat Five . Tonight and Sat-urday only . Don ThompsonTrio and the Accents voca lquartet featuring Lynn Mc -Neil . Flat Five closed fo rremodelling to Oct . 31 .

Vancouver InternationalFilm Festival . Opening cere-monies tonight 8:30 at theRidge . The film is "NobodyWaved Goodbye" (NFB )which is supposed to b esomething like Sweet Subs-titute . Sex, sex, sex . $1 .25 .

Films on Scotland . Pre-sented by H. Forsyth Hardy .Thursday Oct . 22 at noon .Bu. 102 .

Banners, Collage in th eSixties; UBC Fine Arts gal-lery . Daily until Hallowe'en .

Electra, based on the pla yby Euripides . Directed byCacoyannis . With Irene Pa-pas . The Varsity .

A Shot in the Dark, se-quel to Pink Panther, play-ing at the Coronet . PeterSellers and Elke Sommerstar .

The Chalk Garden, withHayley Mills . Currently a tThe Odeon .

It's A Mad, Mad, Mad ,Mad World is still playingat the Strand Theatre . This

,Stanley Kramer comedy -epic stars zillions of Holly -wood comedians .

Alexander Nevsky, direct-ed by Sergei Eisenstein,kicks off Cinema 16's thirdseries—The Great Directors .Monday, Oct . 19 at 8:30 .Auditorium .

ity of canvas is never lost .In Galaxy Set, large area s

of scorched canvas are en-closed by color . (Town fre-quently scorches his canvaswith a hot iron. In a paint-ing such as Galaxy Set, theperceptive viewer can actu-ally smell the canvas — asensation which contributesstrangely enough, to the to-tal experience of viewers .)

An ingenious painter re-quires an ingenious viewer.If you cannot conceive ex-periencing a theme, or put-ting your nose to a canvas t obetter appreciate a painting,perhaps you would find th eTown exhibit bizarre. But i fyou are at all sensitive t othe complete unification o fmedia, form and content ,don't miss it .

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Page 11: fH~ UPYSSEY - University of British Columbia Library · Nikita Khrushchev has retir- ... ent electric bass player with heavy duty equipment. ... directory available latter part of

Friday, October 16, 1964

THE UBYSSEY

Page 5

LOU GOTTLIE B. . . headline r

Limelighterlight starat Pep Meet

The laugh-man of the Lime-liters will headline the home -coming Pep Meet Thursdaynoon in Memorial Gym .

Comedian and singer Lo uGottlieb will be master of cere-monies at the two-hour meet .

He was an original memberof the Gateway Singers, an ar-ranger for the Kingston Trio ,before becoming a Limelighter .

No stranger to universities ,Gottlieb has a Ph . D. in musicand writes a syndicated colum nfor college newspapers . He i salso an editor of and contrib-utor to Jazz Quarterly .

Highlights of the pep meetwill be presentation of the 196 4Great Trekker award to Georg eCunningham, and introductio nof Homecoming Queen candi-dates and cheerleaders .

UBC football coach Fran kGnup will introduce the foot -ball team .

Admission is 35 cents .

Mistress anyone ?TORONTO (CUP) — If you

want a mistress at the Univer-sity of Toronto, advertise forone. "Master seeks mistress .Write P. Cooper, 221 GlenayrRoad." was the ad in the Var-sity student newspaper .

Piqued

Financia lwoes buglittlema g

By MIKE BOLTONPique is at the peak of pique .Pique is the proposed 196 4

version of Ledpharttes—a littlemag with a humorous slan twhich appeared last April ,sponsored by a group called theYoung Bourgeois Authors' an dArtists' Association .

But Pique won't be muchmore than a proposal unlessAMVtS comes across with a $50 0grant, its editors say .

"We've asked Treasurer KyleMitchell for $500 of the $2,00 0AMS Supplemental Allot-ment," said Pique - editoria lboard member Scott McLea nThursday .

"If we don't get the money ,we'll 'piquet' him," saidPique's Editor Wayne Nyberg .

Pique will appear in someform with or without AMSsupport, editors said .

"But the size, number of is -sues, and quality of the mag-azine will suffer if we don' tget the grant," said McLean .

Pique will be a collection o fstudent humour and satire oncampus life . It carries the sam ename as the old official AMShumor magazine, defunct no wfor about 10 years .

"Anything well-written willbe printed," said Editor Ny-berg . "Don't worry about cen-sorship . "

Pique will be a welcome sub-stitute for the appalling lack o fhumour in the Red Rag, Plank ,Moobyssy and so on, editor ssaid .

They claim the name Piqu eis the surname of an authorwho wrote Pique's Pamphletfor Perverted Penguins about400 years ago.

Perverted penmen can sen dtheir contributions to EditorNyberg, 6560 N.W . Marine, sai dNyberg .

Bridge buffsplay for books

Student festivities forhomecoming week will beginSaturday with a campus -wide bridge tournament .Bridge enthusiasts will pla y

all day Saturday . Book prize swill be offered .The tournament is open t o

students, faculty and alumni ,amateurs and Brock bridgebums alike .Interested players should

register at the table outsidethe AMS office in Brock to -day .

TOTEM SHOESClearance Sale

SEE OUR WINDOW

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All Doctor's Eyeglass - Prescrip-tions filled . Only first qualit ymaterials used . All work per-formed by qualified Optician s

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Brock will serve Espresso mud next week . The

article, written by auniversity lecturer in archi -As

of Homecoming fes -part ed and the student groups wil ltivities, the student committee tecture, criticized the desig nperform on a stage .is

turning

Brock's

cafeteria and

structure

of

the

newinto a coffeehouse Monday and North Brock cafeteria will be School of Fine Arts .

WhenWednesday . serving the usual dull stuff . an apology was demanded ,

the

author

countered

withBeginning at

3 :30

p .m .

onMonday the Brock Coffeehouse Victoria site set further

criticism of the

ar -chitects .will feature folk-singing

withthe Folk

Song Society .

Wed-nesday

afternoon

after

3 :30for CUS debate The

editorial

committeewas fired. Suits are pending

p .m. Jazzsoc

will provide

the TORONTO (CUP) — UBC'e against

the

publishers,

the

entertainment . debating team will have to fol - university

student

council ,low the birds to Victoria Col - and the author .

There will be no admissioncharge, but you can buy you rcoffee from 20 waitresses i nblack tights .

The cafeteria will be darken -

CURLING CLU BJOIN NOW !

NO EXPERIENCE NEEDE D.

INSTRUCTION GIVEN :MON ., OCT. 19 - 7 p.m.

At THUNDERBIRD WINTE RSPORTS CENTE R

Practice Ice Available — Wed ., Oct . 21

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Curling on Mondays (men) ,

Wednesdays (mixed), &

Fridays (anything )

PLUS:

Homecoming 'spie l(Student rinks needed—enter now at 731-3801 )

NEW

• Exchange spiels with Victoria Colleg e

• Wind-up bonspie l

• Dances

MEMBERS WELCOME

Our Salesmen's minds aremost flexible . . .they'll dress you as a banker ,playboy or college guy . . . onething sure, wear our suits an dyou'll be "fit to be titled " , thebest dressed man in town .(We're so modest.)

Murrag Goldma n774 "Granville

"Up half a block from Birk's Clock "

Espresso yet

Brock caf -mudgetting thicker

Architects suestudent paper

AUCKLAND (CUP) — Anarticle appearing in theAuckland University studen tnewspaper has led to a$15,000 libel suit by a nAuckland firm of architects .

lege campus for the CanadianUnion of Students debatingfinals this year .

Last March UBC won the na-tional debating finals .

Shape u pcourses for expectant mother sare being held at the Universityof California .

The Doorway to aCollege Man's World . . .

4.

Page 12: fH~ UPYSSEY - University of British Columbia Library · Nikita Khrushchev has retir- ... ent electric bass player with heavy duty equipment. ... directory available latter part of

Page-6

THE UBYSSEY

Friday, October 16, 196 4

Five rugger T'Birds make reps

FRED STURROC K. . . on both

Five members of UBC' sThunderbird rugger squad hav ebeen selected to play for eitherthe B.C. Reps or the All-Canadafleps against Fiji's colorfultouring national team .

Dick Hayes, Bob May andChuck Plester will play for th eP .C. side and Gary Rowles wil lbe with the All-Canada XV .Fred Sturrock has been select-ed as a spare for both clubs .

Both Hayes and Rowles sawaction in international com-petition last year playing fo r

the 25 and under B .C. team

against the New Zealand All-Blacks .

Coaching the B .C. team,which will play the Fijians atEmpire Stadium Oct . 22 at 8 :0 0p.m., is UBC's assistant Ath-letic Director Buzz Moore, whois

also president of the B.C .Rugby Union .

Advance press reports haveheaped praise upon the

Fij iislanders

describing them ashaving "delighted the Rugbyworld of Great Britain andEurope with their unorthodoxbut attractive style of play . "

One commentator says "tech -

nically, at times, they do thecraziest things—wild passesback near their own line, hairraising kicks, gargantuan leapsinto the air in pursuit of hig hkicks, and aerobatic dives forthe line to score, as well as i nmaking some of the mostcrushing tackles seen for man ya day . "

Campus students wishing t osee the Fijians who have beenplaying before capacity crowdsof 20,000 to 55,000 in G.B. andEurope, may obtain tickets a thalf price from the Athletic Of-fice .

DICK HAYES. . . B.C. Rep

In Football

* * *

The world's most noted sk iphotographer, John Jay, wil lpersonally narrate his lates tfeature-color film, "Persia nPowder", at the Queen Eliza-beth Theatre . Friday, Oct . 1 6(8 :30 p .m .) .

Featured in the world ski -travelogue are highlights of tthe 1964 Winter Olympi cGames, in Austria, and a ski -safari to the remote mountain sof Yugoslavia, Lebanon an dPersia . Canadian Olympicskiers will be seen in theslalom events in the WinterOlympics .

* * *Many varsity extramura l

teams still need managers . P .E .credits are awarded to manag-ers who also get to go on manytrips with the various clubs .Anyone interested in manag-ing may enquire at the Athleti cOffice in the Memorial Gym .

Sports shorts

Varsityswingingin Fields

UBC men's field hocke yteams are swinging away thisweekend with all teams active .Last weekend Varsity clubswon two of three games withVarsity taking Redbirds 5-1 ,the Blues being awarded thei rmatch by default and the Gold slosing to Grasshoppers "B" 4-1 .

Games this weekend hav eVarsity vs Vancouvr "A" at1 :15 ; Golds against Hawks an dth Blues meeting India "B" a t2 :45 . All games to be played a tSpencer field .

* * *

The women's badminto nteam is looking for new mem-bers . Those interested are re -quested to attend practices atthe following times: Tuesday ,Oct . 21 at 5 :30 p .m. and Friday ,Oct . 25 at 4 :30 p .m . All work -outs to be held in the Women' sGym. Teams will be pickedsoon to play in the City league .

UBC women's golf and tennisteams are travelling to Edmon-ton to compete in W.C .I .A .A .intercollegiate t o u r n a ment sthis weekend. They will becompeting against teams fromother Western Canadian cam-puses .

Members of the golfing con-tingent are Dianne Kirby ,Gayle Hitchens and Judy An-derson . The tennis team con-sists of Marilyn Orr, Joan Bol-ton and Sally Stewart .

FRANK GNUP. . .perplexed

RESERV EYOUR CARNOWWITHType of Car

Overnight

Vauxhal lVolkswagen

Acadia nChevy I IValian tFalco n

ParisienneGalaxyImpalaMustang

the San Francisco area, are in-complete and contradictory.

One spy job, for example ,claims that SFU employs a 5-2defence while the other claim sit's a 4-4 .

A REAL GEMIt may seem incidental to the

uninitiated but the scouting re -port is an important aspect ofany team's game procedure . Of-ten a report contains a realgem; a weakness of the opposi-tion's which can be exploited .

Say your team was to receivea report that another club ha sa defensive halfback who can ' tkeep his eyes off the cheer-leaders . On game day youwould have your quarterbac kthrow into the lecherous one'szone each time the band strikesup, hoping to catch him off-guard .MAY BACKFIRE

Of course there are neutral-izing factors . There are frail-ties on your club which the op -position has been cleverly as-similating. For instance, you rquarterback may also like og-ling cheerleaders; in whichcase you're back where yo ustarted .

While the Birds are in'Frisco the Jay Vees will behosting the Seattle Cavaliers a tVarsity stadium this Sunday .

$1 .95+5c

$3.00+5c

$5.00+5 c

BUDGET

Gnup perplexedby spy reports

By JACK McQUARRI EThunderbird football coach Frank Gnup

The Birds migrate south Fri -day night for a game agains tSan Francisco University andhe still doesn't know what t oexpect from his opposition .

It all stems from the fact tha tGnup has in his possession no tone but two scouting reports .

Aha, you say, if there's onething better than one scoutingreport it's two .SPIES DIFFE R

Not so in this case . Both re -ports, received from forme rUBC players now working in

is perplexed .

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Page 13: fH~ UPYSSEY - University of British Columbia Library · Nikita Khrushchev has retir- ... ent electric bass player with heavy duty equipment. ... directory available latter part of

Friday, October 16, 1964

THE UBYSSEY

Page 7

In first home game

Royal treatment for Bird sA Royal welcome awaits day's game at Varsity stadium Both New Westminster and

UBC ' s Thunderbird soccer are the classy New Westmin- UBC are currently in a tie fo rteam when they return ster Royals, who have won fourth spot in the Pacific

home this weekend .

the Dominion Cup eight times, Coast Soccer League alon gTheir opponents for Satur- more than any Canadian team : with two other clubs . First

place is only two points awaywith three teams tied for thetop spot as the Coast leagueexperiences one of its tightestraces ever although the seasonis only a month old .

The Thunderbirds are in thePCSL for the first time thi sseason and have been admit-ted on a probationary basis .But if they can draw fans andkeep playing in the mannerwhich won them Mainlan dchampionships the last tw oyears in a row they are boundto be recognized as dull fledg-ed members of the League .

Head coach Joe Johnson i soptimistic about his team'schances to not only make aplayoff spot but Oven win theLeague championship .

Taking advantage of theclub's youth he stresses a wideopen style of soccer with theonus on each individual playe rto outhustle and wear downhis "check" on the opposin gside .

Among the top soccer talen tdisplayed on the Royals i sEnglish import Tony Crisp a tcentre forward, Danny Wil-son, who has been considerin gan offer to play professiona lsoccer in England, at rightwing and PCSL rookie of theyear Barry Sadler in goal .

Following is the tentativ estarting lineup for UBC .

Ed Wasylik in goal ; JimBerry and Tom Cryer as full -backs; Keith Commons, Wal-ter Manik and Noel Cum-mings on the half line ; with

SOCCER BIRD'S CAPTAIN 'JOE ALEXIS practices footwork

Joe Alexis, Dick Mosier, Bob -and ponders over strategy for game this Saturday against

by Johnstone, John Maar an dPCSL opponents the New Westminster Royals . Game time

Harvey Thom at the forwar dis 2 :00 p.m . at Varsity stadium .

positions .

GC staaecrtt tiPhjstw1 &L ,kcclbws ill a9 hospital bcd ::From th poUd ` orsHe elf and saw star sNow he's t in

space flikt insteadif bills your finances are wreckin :Give a thought to Personal Chequin ;The account that says `whoa ;To your vanishing dough —To the B of M now yowl be trekin?

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Your Campus Branch:The Administration Building: MERLE .C. KIRBY, Manager

I AROUND THE CAMPUS IBy ED CLARK

I was warming a chair in the student's favorite hide-awaynursing a jug of caffeine and trying to calm my ever restles snerves when I overheard two boys in red jackets knockingdown the best boxer in the world : Cassius Clay, alias Moham-med All .

Now I am the type of guy who usually minds his ow nbusiness, like everybody should, but when people start lip -ping off about something they don't comprehend, then it i sabout time I put them straight .

* * *For instance, the statement that Cassius had no right t o

fight for the title and that he doesn't deserve it is pure gar-bage. Anyone who knows anything about the fight game ca nsee what a ridiculous statement this is .

Back in 1954, when Clay was only 12 years old an dweighed a flimsy 85 pounds, some kid stole his bicycle . In-stead of fighting the thief, a neighborhood cop persuadedClay to learn how to fight first . He did and ever since Clay' sopponents have suffered all 'because of a bicycle .

Clay knew where he was going then and he got thereten years later by dethroning the Big Bear, Sonny Liston .

* * *On his way he won The Louisville Golden Gloves i n

1958; the National Golden Gloves and National AAU Light -Heavyweight Championships in 1959 and repeated his per-formance in the heavyweight class one year later . From therehe went, where every amateur boxer wants to go, to th eOlympics . Cassius Marcellus Clay beat his Polish contenderto a pulp to win the finals in Rome .

As an amateur he won-100 out of 108 bouts . Since heturned professional in 1960, he has won 18 without a defeat .

If he doesn't deserve the championship, who does ?* * *

During the discussion, the two boys were joined by athird (without a jacket) . He seemed more ignorant than hi sfriends. How can a so-called intelligent person say that Clayis stupid because he flunked the army exams and taking thi sas his evidence, say that the Loud One couldn't cut it atuniversity . Gentlemen, if I had his money I wouldn't eve ncare about university .

Bear with me for a moment while I do a little compar-ing. For example, let us say that the average Engineer make sabout $8,000 annually, if and when he starts working. Well ,the Louisville Lip made eight times that much in just twentyminutes when he knocked out Alex Miteff on Ocober 7, 1961 .

* * *A full time UBC -lecturer earns about $7,000 per year ,

a professor makes around $13,00 .0 annually. That is not to ogood compared to Cassius' bundle . He raked in over $65,00 0when he sent Archie Moore to the canvas in the fourth roun don November 15, 1962 .

Finally, UBC President John B. McDonald was reportedto have made around $22,000 last year . Well, when yon Cas-sius persuaded the Big Bear to go back to his den last Feb-ruary 2,6, the loquatious Kentuckian netted about $150,000 .That was a pretty fair sum for 30 minutes work !

So gentlemen, jealousy will get you nowhere . Clay maynot be the smartest but you all must admit he is the greatestcollector of internal revenue agents in the world .

* * *To say that Cassius is a poor sportsman just because h e

ridicules his opponents with verses of vast conceit is trulypreposterous . Everybody has a gimmick of some sort to us ein this hectic world of ours .

University students use a diploma to gain them employ-ment and money in the (bank . So Cassius uses his lines ofpoetry and. praise to fill the thousands of seats at ringside .They all . come to see him get severely mauled and sent t ooblivion by his hateful foes .

But lo and behold it is yon Cassius who comes forth thevictor, the great predictor and prettier than ever, laughin ghis way to the bank:

There is no reason for people to say that Clay should bestripped of the title just because he is a Muslim . What dif-ference does that make?

* * *The only place Clay should lose the Crown is in the

ring, not outside it The World Boxing Association knows tha tClay will keep the title for quite a while, so they are usingthis religion angle to defeat him .

Sonny Liston is an ex-con, yet he kept the title untilCassius stepped in . Neither race, creed, breed nor backgroundmakes champions . Championships are won and lost in thering.

'So Gentlemen, we can't fight ignorance but we can liv ewith it ; so next time you refer to Cassius Marcellus Clay a sa bum, just look in your wallet because it might be you .

All Your Campus Favorites

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Sports Coats and Campus Coats

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MU 1-2934

Open Friday Nights Till 9

Page 14: fH~ UPYSSEY - University of British Columbia Library · Nikita Khrushchev has retir- ... ent electric bass player with heavy duty equipment. ... directory available latter part of

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THE UBYSSEY

Friday, October 16, 1964

'tweenclasses

'Dirtiest' singer strums Will Fine Arts criticsbomb the Banners ?

The Fine Arts Gallery has gone collage with its new-est display .

The display consists of two exhibitions on the genera ltheme of collage and presents works from New York an dVancouver. (A collage is a flat sheet with objects pastedand painted on it . )

The major exhibit, entitled Banners USA, is circulate dby the American Federation of Arts and contains 11 ban-ners and eight cartoons by well-known New York artist sof the Pop school .

The second exhibit displays collage work by local ar-tists—Bisset, Doray, Shadbolt and others .

Meet Your Friends At

Dean's Restaurant an dDining Room

4544 West 10th Ave .

224-691 9

Open 8:30 a .m. to 11 :30 p.m. Mon. to Sat.10 a.m. to 11 :30 p.m. Sun .

Free parking in the rea r

r

Jon York, described by theToronto Telegram as the "dirt-iest singer ever to play in Tor-onto", appears today in theAuditorium at noon . Admis-sion, 35 cents, Folksong Soc .members free .

* * *ARCHAEOLOGY CLU B

Those going on field tripmeet 12 :30 Sat . in front of th elab .

* * *LOWER MALL RESIDENCE S

Phyllis Ross-Robson Housesdance tonight in Shrum Com-mons. Music by Lou HiltonCombo. 9 p .m. to 1 a .m. 50cents AMS card .

* *BRIDGE TOURNE Y

Pre-registration for Home -coming Tournament noon to -day outside AMS office .

* * *ED US

Belfont's Back From Cuba :Bryan Belfont gives impres-sions of Cuban internal situa-tion noon today in Ed . 100 .

* * *PHOTO SOC

Special meeting to hearBasil Fox, UBC Extensio nDept ., in Bu . 216 at noon.

* * *UNITARIAN CLU B

Meeting in Bu . 225 noon to -day. Non-religionists welcome .

* * *SPECIAL EVENT S

Robert Cohen's brilliant fil mlecture Inside Castro's Cub apersonally narrated. Monday12 :30 in Auditorium .

* * *COMMUNIST CLUB

Maurice Rush, editor o fPacific Tribune speaks in Bu .202 today on Education an dAutomation .

* *QUAKERS

Meeting for Quaker worshipin Buchanan Penthouse, ever ySunday at 11 a .m. Everyonewelcome .

* * *CARIBBEAN STUDENT S

All West Indian studentsasked to attend meeting at IH3 p .m. on Sunday .

* *BOOSTER CLU B

General meeting in Bu . 219noon Monday. Everyone .

* * *WAA

Women interested in CurlingTeam come to first practice ,12 :45 p .m. Sat . at Pacific Curl-ing Rink, 4th near McDonald .

* * *CINEMA 1 6

Eisenstein's Alexander Nev-sky opens great director serie s8 p.m. Mon . Auditorium. Tick-ets from AMS or at door .

* * *PRE-SOCIAL WORK

Film Profile of a ProblemDrinker . Bu . 202 Monday noon .Non-members 10 cents .

* * *UKRAINIAN CLUB

Mon., noon Bu. 223. Allmembers attend .

* * *BOURGEOIS ARTISTS

Pique peaks at 12 :30 p .m. to -day in Brock Board Room .

* * *LUTHERAN STUDENTMOVEMENT

Guest speaker from Los An-geles, Rev . Milton C . Johnson ,regional stewardship counselorfor the L.C.A. will speak Mon-day at 12 :30 in Bu. 102, on Th eConcept of Christian Intention .

BARBERSHOP SINGERSThose interested in forming

a barbershop Harmony Grou pthis year meet in Hut 0-17.ioon Monday .

* * *GERMAN CLU B

Members and friends invite dto dance and social evening a tInternational House Saturday ,8:30 p .m . Members free, non -members 25 cents .

* * *IH

Free - tea today at IH from 3to 5 p .m. Weekly show tonightfrom 8:30 p .m. featuring TheSlavonic Circle, admission 2 5cents .

UBC LIBERALSArthur Laing, Liberal Legis-

lation in Canada's 26th Parlia-ment, noon today in Brock.Come out and meet Alan Mac -Farlane, B .C. MLA, in Mildre d

rock Monday noon .

EL CIRCUL OFirst meeting of year, noo n

today, Bu. 204 . All interestedin Spanish culture invited .

* * *UBC RADIO

Eng. 200 students: Hamlet b yOld Vic company Mon ., 8 p.m . ,Tues ., 3 :30 p .m . 65 on dial fordorms and residences .

* * *NEWMAN CENTRE

Beginners' Duplicate BridgeTournament 8 p.m. Sunday .

* * *Father Francis Firth on the

Primitive Church, 7 :30 p .m. inSeminar Room at St . Mark's .

* * *CHINESE VARSITY CLUB

Fresh mixer Saturday at 8p m ., Brock extension . Every:one welcome .

* * *FINE ARTS CLU B

Films Monday noon: TheProvince of Cezanne, Cubism .Non-members 10 cents .

NICKEL . . .its contribution is QUALITY

HOW INCO HELPED MAKE IT POSSIBLE TO STORE SUPER-COLD LIQUID OXYGE N

Liquid oxygen is the main fuel componentfor propulsion of some of the giant rocketsthat lift satellites and capsules into space .Liquid oxygen, or LOX, is stored at minus297°F. Previously, economical storage washindered by the lack of a tough, low-cost,

low-temperature steel . Inco research devel-oped the 9% nickel steel to answer this re-quirement. This development was anothe rexample of Inco's continuing research con-tribution which, for some sixty years, ha sled to improved techniques and products .

THE INTERNATIONAL NICKEL COMPANY OF CANADA, LIMITE D55 YONGE STREET, TORONTO