12
Powell hargrave phot o 5000 STUDENTS gathered Friday afternoon in front of Buchanan as a result of the Faculty Club takeover Thursday . It was one of the University's larges t turnouts of students ever . A result of the meeting is the teach-in Wednesday to air student gripes to individual profs . See story below . Student s should not let thei r hare dow n VANCOUVER, B.C ., TUESDAY, . OCf 1 R 29, 1948 are, Zirnhelt endors e student-pro f By JOHN GIBB S Wednesday ' s proposed teach-in has bee n endorsed by both Dave Zirnhelt and Kenneth Hare . In his first day back on campus since hi s illness, Hare, president of the university, me t with Alma Mater Society president Zirnhelt , and drafted a letter of approval for the teach - UBC president Dr . Kenneth Hare is back . Hare, who had been undergoing medical treatment i n London for flu and exhaustion which made him take a leav e of absence last month, said Monday he returned to pu t an end to the speculation about his position at the univer- sity . Hare said his illness will need further treatment some - time during the winter and he will return to the special- ists in London who were recommended by his own doctors . "I am very glad to be back," he said . "I am happy t o learn that the student occupation of the faculty club las t week was resolved without violence . "I am extremely grateful to members of the facult y and particularly faculty club president David Huberma n for having coped so effectively with a most difficult situ- ation . " Hare then suggested all persons on campus striv e harder to solve the problems that create dangerous fru- stration in students . He said there are no crises between him and the boar d of governors about policies . He suggested that any accusa- tion to this effect are "completely ludicrous ." Continued Page 2 See : HAR E Philosophers teach-i n on reforming classe s Students and facult of the philosophy department will mee t in SUB today to raise issues to be discussed at Wednesday' s teach-in . A department spokesman said Monday the pre-teach-in wa s conceived after Friday's noon meeting in order to avoid neglect- ing important issues at the teach-in . "We want to discuss meaningful issues," he said . "The issue is not whether it was wrong to bring a pig into the faculty club - or whether or not Jerry Rubin is a good guy . "The real question centres around the basic need fo r academic reform- " It will not be limited to members of the philosophy depart- ment, but will not be openly advertised, he said . "We want to get something done," the spokesman said . "We won't if there are too many people there who would rathe r turn the meeting into something like the faculty club confusion . "Something is bothering the students . We want to see wha t can be made of it ." in . The idea was proposed as a motion an d voted in at a mass meeting Friday noon at - tended by some 5,000 students . The letter said in part : " We propose tha t this (teach-in) take the form of inquiry durin g which we would maintain the existing struc- ture of classes . The purpose is to contribut e to the University's understanding of itself, it s nature and its relationship to to society . " The letter went on to call for co-operatio n of all members of the university communit y in the venture . Support for the motion was virtually unanimous at Friday's meeting but there wa s considerable concern about its legality whether or not it would get the support fro m faculty and administration many felt it neede d to succeed . Asked about this, Hare replied, "I don' t know if it's legal, it's sensible . Zirnhelt said students were welcome t o switch classes if they wished . "A meeting o f certain faculty and students is planned for to - night," he said, "where we will decide on wha t some of the issues are . We also hope to get a group who will go around to the classes an d lead discussions . " Dr . William Webber, president of the fa- culty association, said there was not any offi- cial association policy concerning the proposa l due to a lack of time . "It's very much a matter for individual pro- fessors," he said . "It's not something you ca n force anyone to do . " Webber said it would be discussed at a n open forum sponsored by the association a t noon today . The meeting, to take place in th e old auditorium, is open to all students an d faculty . Reaction among various student councillors Monday night indicated solid support of th e idea . Ruth Dworkin, internal affairs officer, sai d she supported the idea but that one day wa s not enough . "I'd also like to see it used to dis- cuss the idea of giving students a say in th e form of the Christmas exams which was aske d for in our report ." (The council brief "Fair weather or foul", presented during the summe r asked that this be acted on by Christmas .) Stan Persky also voiced a need for mor e time . "This is a good first step in understandin g why we are here," he said . The AMS's new secretary, Isobel Semple , said it was an excellent idea . "This is a grea t gift to the students . . . I hope they will sup - port it . " Asked about whether she thought Friday' s sit-in was responsible for it, she said, "I don' t care what prompted it . . . it would have come anyway, but more slowly . " Jerry Olund, education president, was con- cerned about the students not knowing what t o do . "It will be up to the faculty to take the ini- tiative," he said . The meeting that proposed the idea on Fri - day was the biggest of its kind in UBC his- tory. The 5,000 attending listened to man y speakers, most of them condemning the sit-in . Support for this viewpoint was by far the mos t predominate. Nearly all speakers, "left wing or right" , however, supported the teach-in . The meeting marked the formal end of th e sit-in as the last protesters left the faculty clu b to attend the rally . Before the noon meeting however, ther e were threats of violence as engineers attempte d to confront the protesters . At 10 :30 a .m . Friday a large number of en- gineers began to gather in front of the facult y club, threatening to erect a barricade and pre - vent any more "students and hippies" fro m entering the club . In a meeting with engineering presiden t Fraser Hodge, faculty club president D . S . Hu- berman said : "If you erect this barricade there Continued Page 2 See : SIT-IN

R are, Zirnhelt endorse student-prof · hare down VANCOUVER, B.C., TUESDAY,. OCf 1 R 29, 1948 are, Zirnhelt endorse student-prof By JOHN GIBBS Wednesday's proposed teach-in has been

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  • — Powell hargrave photo

    5000 STUDENTS gathered Friday afternoon in front of Buchanan as a result of the Faculty Club takeover Thursday . It was one of the University's largestturnouts of students ever. A result of the meeting is the teach-in Wednesday to air student gripes to individual profs . See story below .

    Students

    should not

    let thei r

    hare down

    VANCOUVER, B.C., TUESDAY,. OCf 1 R 29, 1948

    are, Zirnhelt endorsestudent-pro f

    By JOHN GIBBSWednesday's proposed teach-in has bee n

    endorsed by both Dave Zirnhelt and KennethHare .

    In his first day back on campus since hisillness, Hare, president of the university, me twith Alma Mater Society president Zirnhelt ,and drafted a letter of approval for the teach-

    UBC president Dr. Kenneth Hare is back .Hare, who had been undergoing medical treatment i n

    London for flu and exhaustion which made him take a leav eof absence last month, said Monday he returned to putan end to the speculation about his position at the univer-sity .

    Hare said his illness will need further treatment some -time during the winter and he will return to the special-ists in London who were recommended by his own doctors .

    "I am very glad to be back," he said . "I am happy t olearn that the student occupation of the faculty club las tweek was resolved without violence .

    "I am extremely grateful to members of the facult yand particularly faculty club president David Hubermanfor having coped so effectively with a most difficult situ-ation . "

    Hare then suggested all persons on campus striveharder to solve the problems that create dangerous fru-stration in students .

    He said there are no crises between him and the boar dof governors about policies . He suggested that any accusa-tion to this effect are "completely ludicrous ."

    Continued Page 2See: HAR E

    Philosophers teach-inon reforming classes

    Students and facult of the philosophy department will mee tin SUB today to raise issues to be discussed at Wednesday' steach-in .

    A department spokesman said Monday the pre-teach-in wa sconceived after Friday's noon meeting in order to avoid neglect-ing important issues at the teach-in .

    "We want to discuss meaningful issues," he said . "The issueis not whether it was wrong to bring a pig into the faculty club

    - or whether or not Jerry Rubin is a good guy ."The real question centres around the basic need fo r

    academic reform-"It will not be limited to members of the philosophy depart-

    ment, but will not be openly advertised, he said ."We want to get something done," the spokesman said . "We

    won't if there are too many people there who would ratherturn the meeting into something like the faculty club confusion .

    "Something is bothering the students . We want to see whatcan be made of it ."

    in .The idea was proposed as a motion and

    voted in at a mass meeting Friday noon at-tended by some 5,000 students .

    The letter said in part : "We propose thatthis (teach-in) take the form of inquiry durin gwhich we would maintain the existing struc-ture of classes . The purpose is to contributeto the University's understanding of itself, it snature and its relationship to to society ."

    The letter went on to call for co-operatio nof all members of the university communit yin the venture .

    Support for the motion was virtuallyunanimous at Friday's meeting but there wa sconsiderable concern about its legality —whether or not it would get the support fromfaculty and administration many felt it neede dto succeed .

    Asked about this, Hare replied, "I don' tknow if it's legal, it's sensible .

    Zirnhelt said students were welcome toswitch classes if they wished . "A meeting o fcertain faculty and students is planned for to -night," he said, "where we will decide on whatsome of the issues are . We also hope to get agroup who will go around to the classes an dlead discussions . "

    Dr. William Webber, president of the fa-culty association, said there was not any offi-cial association policy concerning the proposaldue to a lack of time .

    "It's very much a matter for individual pro-fessors," he said . "It's not something you ca nforce anyone to do . "

    Webber said it would be discussed at a nopen forum sponsored by the association atnoon today. The meeting, to take place in th eold auditorium, is open to all students andfaculty .

    Reaction among various student councillors

    Monday night indicated solid support of theidea .

    Ruth Dworkin, internal affairs officer, saidshe supported the idea but that one day wasnot enough. "I'd also like to see it used to dis-cuss the idea of giving students a say in th eform of the Christmas exams which was askedfor in our report." (The council brief "Fairweather or foul", presented during the summe rasked that this be acted on by Christmas.)

    Stan Persky also voiced a need for moretime. "This is a good first step in understandin gwhy we are here," he said .

    The AMS's new secretary, Isobel Semple ,said it was an excellent idea . "This is a greatgift to the students . . . I hope they will sup-port it . "

    Asked about whether she thought Friday' ssit-in was responsible for it, she said, "I don' tcare what prompted it . . . it would have comeanyway, but more slowly . "

    Jerry Olund, education president, was con-cerned about the students not knowing what t odo. "It will be up to the faculty to take the ini-tiative," he said .

    The meeting that proposed the idea on Fri -day was the biggest of its kind in UBC his-tory. The 5,000 attending listened to manyspeakers, most of them condemning the sit-in .Support for this viewpoint was by far the mos tpredominate.

    Nearly all speakers, "left wing or right" ,however, supported the teach-in.

    The meeting marked the formal end of th esit-in as the last protesters left the faculty clubto attend the rally.

    Before the noon meeting however, therewere threats of violence as engineers attemptedto confront the protesters .

    At 10:30 a .m. Friday a large number of en-gineers began to gather in front of the facultyclub, threatening to erect a barricade and pre -vent any more "students and hippies" fromentering the club .

    In a meeting with engineering presiden tFraser Hodge, faculty club president D . S. Hu-berman said : "If you erect this barricade there

    Continued Page 2See: SIT-IN

  • Page 2

    THE UBYSSEY

    Tuesday, October 29, 1968

    Sit-in supportedby

    SDUSFU'sStudents for a Democratic Society at Simon Fraser Uni-

    versity have voiced unqualified support for Thursday's occupa-tion of the UBC faculty club .

    In a statement released Monday, SDU members said :"The SFU SDU supports the spontaneous action of over

    1,000 UBC students to demonstrate their opposition to th emeaningless education that prevents students' self-determinatio nand a university structure that undermines the possibility ofcommunity and dialogue among equals, symbolized by th eexclusiveness of the private faculty club . "

    The statement said the SFU SDU recognized the widesprea dnature of student alienation and political rejection of anoppressive system demonstrated by students .

    The statement voices support for the demands made byUBC- SDS leader John Mate that all buildings on campus bemade open and that faculty and the board of governors pressfor the dropping of charges against Georgia Straight .

    "We hope that UBC students will continue their fightagainst an oppressive and undemocratic university structure,challenging the arbitrary power of the faculty, in the classroo mwhich corresponds to the arbitrary and exclusive privilegesthey maintain in the private faculty club .

    Canvassers will hit the class- The main donations com erooms Wednesday for prelimi- Thursday from the Teacupnary donations to Cool-Aid and game and the world-renownedthe Children's hospital .

    half-time chariot race .

    Lecture in Hebb give nby British economis t

    "What Can We Know About the Future?" will be the title ofa lecture by well-known economist-author Kenneth Bouldin gWednesday, Oct . 30, 8-9 :30 p .m., Buchanan 106 .

    Boulding is president of the American Economic Association ,professor at the Institute of Behavioral Science and departmen tof economics, University of Colorado .

    He is also former research director, Center for Research inConflict Resolution, University of Michigan, and author of numer-ous works including The Image and The Meaning of the TwentiethCentury.

    He will address UBC students on "Freedom For or FromWhat" Friday noon, and will lead a lecture-discussion on th esame topic Friday, 8 :30-10 p .m., in Hebb Theatre, as well as asymposium on the evening address Saturday from 9 :30 a .m. tonoon, in Buchanan 106 .

    Panelists at the Saturday symposium will be William Nicholls ,head of religious studies ; A. D. Scott, head of economics ; and W.Basil McDermott, department of behavioral science foundation ,SFU .

    SIT-IN REACTION SFrom Page 1

    will probably be a confronta-

    tion and then violence . If thereis violence I will have to cal lthe police . "

    UBC acting president Walte rGage then arrived and urge dthe engineers to leave thescene. Former arts presiden tStan Persky, acting as spokes-man for the protesters also ar-rived and anxiously inquire dif the engineers were going tostart something that mightlead to voilence . Persky thensaid the demonstrators wer econsidering leaving the clubfor the AMS general meetingoutside Buchanan .

    Hodge replied that he di dnot want a confrontation an dthen instructed his followersto to back off from the en-trance to the faculty club .

    But all were not as serious-minded. One unidentified girl

    was almost beside herself withglee early Thursday afternoo nright after leaving the club ."Wow, isn't this great . This i sthe wildest . It's really fantas-tic . "

    Inside, however, all weren' tquite so happy. Radio person-ality Jack Wasserman was en-gaged in a heated debate wit hone student . "There are left -wing bigots and right-wingbigots," said Wasserman, "andyou can't establish communi-cation between bigots ." (Whichleft and right wing bigots hewas referring to was not de-termined . )

    What was perhaps one ofthe most lucid comments wasmade by a math prof who said ,"They've blown it . A numberof departments were about tohold votes on putting studentson the departmental commit -tees . Now you don't have achance . "

    ENERGY IN CANS . Knocking it back in preparation for Thursda y' s"guts" dump their suds .

    — john frizell photoTeacup game, two youn g

    Free transportation to Thun-derbird stadium will be pro-vided Thursday by Pacific Na-tional Exhibition p a s s e n g e rtrains. The trains will be test-ed Wednesday, weather per-mitting, giving drivers a freeride to D lot .

    In a Monday Teacup boatrace, four nurses downed thesuds and their home ec oppon-ents, announcing that "bee rpower" would win Thursday' sgame .

    The home ec department ha dno comment except a politeburp .

    Grape griperswin U. of C.concessions

    BERKELEY (CUP - CPS) —Mexican-American students atthe University of Californiahave won important conces-sions from administration presi -dent Charles J. Hitch in theweek-long dispute over univer-sity recognition of the Calif-ornia table grape boycott .

    They call the concessions a"major victory" .

    Hitch has agreed to allowindividual UC campuses to d oaway with grapes althoughthey may not officially supportthe boycott.

    The United Farm WorkersUnion has called a nation-wideboycott of California tabl egrapes to back up their strikeagainst grape-growers in tha tstate .

    Hitch also dropped universitydisciplinary action against 1 1students who were arrestedafter occupying his office Oct .14 . Hitch will ask Californi acourts to deal leniently withthe arrested students who occu -pied to demand support forthe boycott .

    The students won two othe rdemands: construction of acentre for Mexican - America nstudies and increased minoritygroup admission to the univer-sity .

    CEGEP MOVEMEN TDYING SLOWLY

    MONTREAL (CUP) — The last holdouts in the Quebe cColleges d'Enseignement Generale et Professionel occupation ar eslowly drifting back to classes though students of two institu-tions remain defiant .

    CEGEP Maisonneuve was to resume normal classes Monda yafter a meeting of students and administration officials Thursday .

    At CEGEP Edouard Monetit, students are considering a nultimatum demanding their return to classes . The administrationhas said students will not permitted study sessions or class cuttin gfor the rest of the term in order to make up for lost time .

    Meanwhile, L'Ecole des Beaux Arts here is still occupiedand probably will remain so for a while . Students there havebeen administering the school for over two weeks and ar erunning classes by themselves . They say they have created thei rown type of school and curriculum which they have no inten-tion of giving up .

    Som 400 social science students at L'Universite de Montrea lcontinue to occupy their faculty despite administration threa tto cancel the year . "The situation can only lead to an impasse, "said an administration statement.

    Students have been asked to give up the "pressure tactic "so "channels of communication could be opened" . Administratio nofficials have promised to set up investigation commissions t ostudy university problems when the occupation ends .

    Commission would be jointly sponsored by the board o fgovernors and the student association . There has been no studen tresponse to the proposal.

    Student power knocked 'by Lethbridge faculty

    L E T H B R I D G E (CUP) — consideration to a general meet-Members of the faculty of the ing of the faculty some tim eUniversity of Lethbridge aren't within the next month .taking any of the students' sass .

    The executive of the facult yassociation released a statemen tlast week that attacked "stud-ent power" and said it is th efaculty that is "charged withthe responsibility of decidin gin what way the universityshould serve society . . . it isexpected that faculty will callupon students to contribute a sappropriate" .

    The document has been call-ed a reaction to student re -quests for increased depart-mental representation as wel las an expression of faculty fearof student moves to abolishtenure at the university .

    The document will go for

    PANGO PANGO (UNS) —Blorgs marked two by two, andeven three by three, into noman's land here Thursday, andthe death toll from the actio nwas surprisingly low .

    Officials say a pig wit hwounded pride was seen run-ning with cutlery in her jowls .

    Charities hope teacup leavesa fortune in their coffers

    HAREFrom Page 1

    "As for the board of govern-ors," he said, "it is true that I ehave been advocating to thema very liberal line of polic yand so far tb sy have accepte dall my suggestions .

    "At my last meeting wit hthe board, all my budget pro-posals for 1969-70 were accept-ed without a single change 'being made . "

    Hare said he must limit hi scommitments to a bare mini -mum until at least Christmas ,and thus must cancel a numbe rof speaking engagements hehad made earlier this year.

    "I will make one exception `to the limitation imposed o nme by my doctors," he said . " Iwill not refuse any studentgroup that wants to speak tome."

  • Tuesday, October 29, 1968

    THE UBYSSEY

    Page 3

    Forum to discussarts appointment

    Should arts students have a say in choosing their dean?

    An open forum to discuss the question will be held Wednes-day at 7 :30 p .m. in Hebb Theatre .

    It will be led by panel members J . S. Tyhurst, head ofpsychiatry ; William Fredeman, English department ; MalcolmMcGregor, head of classics ; and Ralph Stanton, arts under-graduate society president .

    A spokesman for the student assembly on the university ,an Alma Mater Society ad hoc group which organized the forum ,said student power and . academic appointments in general wil lalso be discussed .

    A faculty committee has been meeting weekly to choose anew arts dean from a list of 140 names submitted .

    The only student appointed to the committee, Don Munton ,resigned in September, saying that students should elect theirown representative to the committee .

    A similar forum in September on the topic of curriculumchanges attracted about 75 faculty and 150 students .

    STUDENT WALKOU TBACKS DEMAND S

    OTTAWA (CUP)—The University of Ottawa social scienc efaculty is preparing for trouble this week .

    Some 400 students walked out of classes for two days lastweek to come up with proposals for change in their educationand have given the faculty one week to respond to their demands .

    Student leaders say they will call a general strike if theproposals aren't adopted.

    The demands fall into six specific categories .• bilingualism: French students demand they be per-

    mitted to write papers and exams in French, express themselve sin French and that employees by bilingual . More than 80 percent of the students are French-Canadian .

    • university and society : endorsement of universal acces-sibility and free education . The mony for free education woul dbe derived from government employment of students during thesummer months in return for payment of tuition in the fall.

    • university government : equal, tripartite representatio non all decision-making bodies of the university .

    • course and accreditation structure : detailed proposal sfor a revamping of the promotion system, course and degre erequirements .

    • teaching technique : restructuring of seminars, new defi-nitions of the roles of faculty and students, course exaluation, setqualifications for staff, more funds for teaching assistants .

    • library and documentation centre : proposals for a docu-mentation centre and an expanded library with periodical section sand study rooms ..

    The students compiled a 30-page report and presented i tto the faculty Oct . 18 .

    During the boycott, the Canadian Union of Students sen ta telegram of support to the students that read: "CUS expressessolidarity with the students of the faculty of social science whoseek to determine their own educational environment .

    "We congratulate them for having taken this initiative an dhaving successfully resisted administration pressure to under -mine their fight for self-determination . "

    Treasure Van is hereIf you're looking for swords, incense, jewellry or pipes ,

    come to Treasure Van .This project of World University Service of Canada ha s

    items for sale from more than 40 countries in the SUB partyroom. Proceeds go to WUSC .

    The sale is on from 11 a .m. to 5 p .m. and 7 p.m. to 9 p .m .until Friday, Nov . 1 .

    Sponsors say so far the response has been excellent . Thereare more goodies coming in continually .

    IS NOTHING SACRED? The old Ubyssey office (in Brock) has been taken over 6y students a sa meeting place .

    Revisions on rep by pop ,undergrad fees shot down

    At a special meeting held Sunday afternoon ,student council threw seven months of hardlabor down the drain .

    This is how Alma Mater Society vice-presi-dent Carey Linde views the way council treatedhis brief on proposed constitutional revisions .

    "For the last seven months I've put mymain energies into trying to reform the AM Sand the way it runs its business, and no wthey've rejected all my efforts," he said .

    The proposed revisions, contained in 1 1comprehensive pages, are concerned with thre emain issues . These are :

    • to enable undergrad societies to levytheir own fees ;

    • to implement the commission structure ;• to replace the present weighted vote sy -

    stem by representation by population .Four weeks ago, at the Sept . 30 council

    meeting, Linde brought forth these revision sand received the general support of council .

    On Sunday, the last day possible to approv ethese revisions in time for the general meeting ,

    -council members, who at times were not insufficient numbers to produce a quorum, wer esuccessful in defeating the main part of th eproposals Linde put forth .

    It was the first proposal that caused all th etrouble .

    Frank Gregory, forestry representative ,typified the opposition by saying the largerfaculties are afraid if they manage to pass areferendum allowing them to levy their own

    r fees, the smaller faculties would be taking ad-vantage of them .

    "Actually, this is happening now with thearts faculty," Linde said.

    "Arts students pay AMS fees like everyoneelse, but get a very small percentage of i tback . "

    Rod Ramage, the new AMS co-ordinator ,said he was against the proposed constitutional

    _revision because he didn't want to decentraliz ethe AMVIS .

    "Ramage's attitude typifies the most back-

    ward ideas in the AMS," said Linde ."He still wants the AMS to have power over

    value judgments, and that's exactly what w ewant to get away from . "

    But not all of the councillors were agains tthe proposed revisions .

    Commerce representative Russ Grierson sawthe revision as "the most exciting thing tha thas happened in council" .

    "In putting such emphasis on undergradsocieties, the students will certainly questionthe value of the AMS," he said .

    Linde affirmed the revisions were not abro-gating anything from council .

    "The ultimate power is still left to thetreasurer," he said . "All financial contract swill still have to go through his office, but aslong as the undergrad society has enough mone yin their budget, he has no right to refuse th edesired money . "

    After having the first of his proposed con-stitutional revisions defeated, Linde left thecouncil meeting in disgust.

    The other councillors tried to carry on th ediscussion concerning the revisions, but ther ewas no quorum .

    As this was the last day possible to discus sthe issues before the general meeting, the datefor the meeting was changed from Nov . 7 toNov. 28 .

    "I've given up with council," said Linde ."I'm now going to try putting the revisions t oreferendum .

    "The two main aspects of the problem wer ethe constitution and the antiquated authori-tarian nature of the business staff that used t olive in Brock and has now reared its ugly facein SUB in the person of one Ron Pearson, gen-eral manager .

    "If these two problems aren't solved, wecan't get anywhere on any other problem," h esaid .

    Council will discuss further constitutionalrevisions in a special meeting Sunday .

  • Page 4

    THE UBYSSEY

    Tuesday, October 29, 1968

    IDEAS AT LARGE

    BY JOHN TWIGG

    What obscenity meansTHE URYUEYPublished Tuesdays, Thursdays and Fridays throughout the university year sby the Alma Mater Society of the University of B.C . Editorial opinions arethose of the editor and not of the AMS or the university . Member,Canadian University Press. The Ubyssey subscribes to the press servicesof Pacific 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, 228-2305. Othercalls, 228-2301 editor; Page Friday 228-2309 ; sports 228-2308 ; advertising228-3977. Telex 04-5843 .

    OCTOBER 29, 1968

    :::"Y,'~x''lv:.>t:>'...>:>K>

    AftermathThursday's outburst was a spontaneous action by stu-

    dents arising from the inability of their leaders — radicals ,student councillors, or faculty — to provide meaningful path sby which to solve the dilemmas confronting them in uni-versity life .

    Since the occupation, no groups or individuals have pub-licly put forward directions that students should follow togive them more control over any or all aspects of th euniversity community.

    Wednesday 's teach-in is proposed to discuss, in class -rooms, the wide range of university reform . But, as alreadyindicated, no method of action has been proposed followingthis by any of the university's so-called leaders.

    Due to last week's events, students presently find them-selves, on an individual, undirected base, in a position wher ethey are in an unprecedented position of power to make thei rdecisions felt on the whole university structure .

    The faculty occupation effectively toppled the facultyand administration from their position of exercising contro land direction on the student body .

    They held this control only because the student bod yallowed this minority to govern and direct them in the chan-nels it laid out .

    But Thursday a significant and representative number ofstudents threw off the symbolic bonds placed on them bytaking part in a mass action of defiance .

    The faculty and administration at that point were power-less to exert influence on the students (other than outsidepolice repression) because students were physically and con-sciously taking part in an act which refused to submit to theexisting authority.

    The faculty was conscious of this ursurption of theirauthority and either came down to the student level and me tthem as equals as the club, or quietly withdrew from thescene.

    The administration also accepted that its authority hadbeen defied ,and refused to act, as well as later bringingpresident Hare back from retirement to go and talk to th estudents, again at their level .

    What is facing students now is the choice of letting th eadministration and faculty regain its power by default or b ypresspressing their demands and taking power out of th ecurrent vacuum .

    By simply having a discussion session Wednesday with-out specific demands backed up by the threat of using theirmass power again, the university will simply return to normaland authority will rest in the same places it did before themini-revolution .

    -But the power to. press the demands rests now as it did

    Thursday, with the individual student and the mass, devoidof any leadership which understands the current situatio nand has articulated proposals for the students to support .

    So the individual students, in their individual classes ,must realize that they alone have the power, and effectivepower, to see some basic changes made—and now, if theywish. And it also may be the last chance for some time .

    In the discussion sessions Wednesday students must de-termine for themselves what changes have to be made —whether they want parity on faculty curriculum and promo-tion committees, on administration budget committee, parityon senate and board of governors, a limit on class size, orwhatever—they must articulate what they want, and convinc etheir fellow students to press on to the end, by whatevermeans necessary, to see that these changes are implemented .

    Unfortunately, I don't see that the student body has th epolitical awareness or desire to take these steps, and whatwill result will be a frustrating day of fruitless discussion,leaving conditions unchanged and setting the stage for futur eoutbursts of a similar nature to last Thursday .

    But students will have to realize eventually that theycannot leave formulation of demands to their so-called leaders ,and that they themselves must formulate what changes theywish to see at the university and must be willing to take themeasures necessary for attaining them into their own hands .

    anxiously. Blurb, blurb, bulletin, that'sall we ever do, screamed Brynjolfsao nthrough the rigging. By Garr, com-mented social Norm Gidney. What's thespecific gravity of Karle Bureau, boom-ed Jim Maddin with breast bared an-ticipating Friday's diving contest, Murie lMoscovitch said she'd ruddy be a facul-ty club than a student strike, butwasn't sure . Dick Button and Joh nFrizzell snapped at the world, co ngusto . Owen Hertzman stayed and work-ed . Irving Fetish come back, we loveyou and we need an unobnoxious cityeditory . Second-hand silverware on sailwhile it lasts . Good bargains.

    First Al Gatheringfroth an dnow Forlorne Parton of thedowntown bourgeois press havetaken time to castigate Th eUbyssey .

    Apart from the obvious critic-ism that the downtown column-ists can find nothing else towrite about, there are otherfaults that can be found i ntheir genius as well .

    For example, Gatheringfrothfeatured an article concernin gThe Ubyssey and a dissatisfiedadvertiser who had cancelledhis ads in The Ubyssey .

    "Just five thou . . . and it oinks on the half-hourand yippees on the hour.

    A. After a noon speech by Jerry RubinThursday, somebody suggested that the stu-dents should occupy the faculty club, and onethousand students marched from the studentunion building to the Club .

    B. Why the faculty club ?1. The basic fact about this universit y

    is this : it is an authoritarian institution. Thefaculty club sybolizes this authoritarianism .This building is like a hacienda on a planta-tion . Only managers and owners are welcome— to the majority of people it is forbiddenground. By occupying the building the stu-dents have shattered this taboo.

    2. We came here to reject this hier-archy which is the basis of our authoritariansociety'.

    3. We came here to express to thefaculty our dissatisfaction that they occupythis position in that hierarchy, for example, byconstituting 75 per cent of the senate .

    4. The faculty club is only one of themany seats of authoritarianism at UBC. Othersare the graduate student centre, the adminis-tration building and the meeting room of theboard of governors .

    C . As a result of this action we ask allstudents and faculty to support the followingdemands :

    1 . Since UBC is a public institution,no area of the university should be the exclus-ive domain of any privileged group. Every uni-

    EDITOR: AI BtrnteNews John Twig sAss't News John GibbsCity Peter Ladne rManaging Bruce Curti sWire Norm Gidne yAssociate Mike FinlayPhoto Powell HargraveSports Jim Maddi nPage Friday Andrew Horvat

    Yi-Yi-Yippiehippiewhatsit! We've los tanother city editor, we groaned out ofunison. A mainstay gone, said JohnGibbs before the boat race. Sue Gordo nemmast her strength and gurgled

    We have a copy of the ad-vertiser's letter, and it reads ,"we will reconsider advertisingin your paper pending a gen-eral clean-up of the filth no wbeing printed . "

    There was no mention in theletter of "Filth and pornog-raphy" as appeared in the Sun .

    Saturday, Oct . 25's Provincecarried as usual a More'nPharton column on the frontpage of the third section. It toofeatured an unkind cut at TheUbyssey .

    In the Parton Thought per-

    tion of the column appeared"the (sic) Ubyssey, the wicked ,wicked journal from the uni-versity that printed that fourletter word recently, ran apicure, full page width, of thefellow who took a nude dip in .the faculty club pond.

    "But what's this? The Ubys-sey, that grand .defender ofradical freedoms, carefullypainted in a black rectangle inthe strategic place .

    "Could it be the (sic) Ubysse ythinks the male nude is ob-scene?"

    For starters, College Printers ,our print shop, and not TheUbyssey editorial board, cen-sored the photo .

    College Printers attends trialtoday with The G e o r g i aStraight because the city hascharged the Straight with ob-scenity for publishing a carica-ure of Acidman's balls, un-covered .

    Another obscenity charge in-volving College Printers wouldhave been embarrassing for -them to be involved with .

    But The Ubyssey is no prude .We find Canada's laws archaic ,as opposed for example toDenmark's, and by breakingCanada's laws, we hope to insome way start an improvemen tin Canada's laws.

    But more about Forlorne' scolumn. Alluding to words likefuck and shit by calling them"that" reflects a juvenile atti-tude reminiscent of the Vic-torian Age .

    There's more obscenity inalluding to swear words thanthere is in saying them. As isgenerally known, the imagina-tion creates more of an issu ethan the issue itself .

    Therefore, The Ubyssey isnot obscene, and definitely no tprudish .

    Parting Fart: Has anyonenoticed the asterisks the Sun'spage five editor uses in place -of four letter words . Might Iadd that "news, that, soap, lov eand salt" are four letter words .

    that aren't "dirty" .

    SDS occupation statemen tversity facility should be accessible to every 'individual in our society.

    2. That the board of governors issuea statement clarifying whether or not presi-dent Hare will return to his office.

    3. That the faculty, administration andboard of governors exert pressure on the B.C .government and the city government so tha tall charges against the "Georgia Straight" aredropped. This demand is included because wereject this type of authoritarian censorship andbecause the business community which is try-ing to crush the "Georgia Straight" also con-trols this university.

    D. No matter what the immediate result sof this event, students must not lose sight ofthe following conclusions :

    1. The occupation showed the tremen-dous potential power of cooperative student -action .

    2. By its expressed position, the AMScouncil revealed its impotence and its opposi-tion to any cooperative student action thatthreatens the status quo .

    3. Two years ago his action wouldhave been impossible at UBC . But there is aprocess of education of students going onthroughout the world, and Thursday's actionshowed that UBC is very much a part of thi sprocess. Much more action is forthcoming un-less the nature of this authoritarian institution ."is changed.

  • Tuesday, October 29, 1968

    THE UBYSSEY

    Page 5

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    First my great respect forSimon Fraser Univesity Stu-

    ► dent Council—they acted wit hgreat competence and maturity.By being genuinely toleran tand democratic they succeede din involving the majority oftheir fellow students and thusbecame a real student power .

    Now they must come to seethat their fight against the one -sided class structure of theirboard of governors must be ex -tended into a fight for mor egenuine academic freedom allround. And the greater andmore profound problem is thethreat to academic freedomfrom the personal vanities andgreediness of most estabishedpersons, i .e ., also most profes-sors . This is also the basic pro-blem at UBC and most otherunb.2 ersities .

    Our universities have be -come too much places of intel-lectual stagnation and brain-washing with the private biasand prejudices of the academicestablishment teaching out-dated cliches and refusing anybasic discussion, and formingcliques of intellectual inces tand hallucination, preventin geverybody from speaking whodoes not belong to their in-group, who is competent andno lackey.

    PREVENT GROWT HInstead of being places of in-

    tellectual growth and social ad-justment, our universities ar eto a large extent preventin gsuch adjustment and growth —not on account of a consciou sclass conspiracy — at least no tnecessarily — but as a resultof the unchallengeable positionof the academics with all thei rpetty vanities and limitations .

    There is, of course, an es-sential difference between thesituation of the arts and hu-manities, and education on oneside and the natural science ,etc . on the other . The naturalsciences have much more ob-jective contents and are there -fore less dominated by the bia sof the established professor .And while the standards fo rthe professional training ofphysicians, engineers, etc . mustremain more or less the soleresponsibility of the profession sand the academic authorities ,the basic discussion of generalgoals, the truth and relevanc eof philosophical thought, edu-cational theory, history an dpolitical science, etc .—especial-ly also law and social reform—must be thrown wide open .

    FIVE SUGGESTION SHere are five suggestions for

    the direction in which univer-sity reform ought to proceed :

    1) Introduction of challengelectures . Whenever a studentthinks that the p r o f e s s o rteaches nonsense, he may ob-ject ; and if the professor insist sand refuses any discussion, thestudent is entitled to challengehim to a public debate . Someauthority must be establishe dwhere the student can go toforce the professor to a debate.

    2) Every student if failed i sentitled to being given the rea-sons which he may challenge.Every examination dealingwith general problems may b eturned into a debate under aneutral chairman. Also profes-sors must be capable of show-ing that they can prove orargue their point .UNDERSTANDIN G

    3) The various departments

    and professors must be prevent-ed from developing a phrase-ology of their own and fro mmistaking this phraseologywith the whole reality, andfrom refusing to discuss inplain English . (This, of course ,again refers only to the arts a spointed out above .) In the art sand humanities some inter -departmental basic lecturesand discussions ought to be de-veloped in order to regain somefruitful unity and understand-ing each other . Especially als othe faculty of law ought to ad-mit some basic discussion ofthe legal system instead as atpresent to restrict itself to pro-ducing brainwashed lawyersfor the system .

    There must be a weeding ou tof course contents . It often de-pends more on what the pro-fessor happens to have learnedin his student days than o nwhat is meaningful . An ex-ample for this from Germany :students of Germanistic — tha tis chiefly future teachers o fGerman—used to have to wast emuch of their time on Gothi cand Althochdeutsch. But theynever come across these sub-jects teaching school. There i sno Gothic literature of anyvalue, but in order to be a goo dteacher of German at school—and to be a really educated per-son — one has, of course, to befamiliar with the best writer sof any country. The t i m ewasted on Gothic ought to havebeen spent on world literature .Or the students of Anglisti chad to spend much time study-ing every word of Beowolf bu tremained ignorant about par -ties, economy, law, etc. in theEnglish-speaking countries. Themain reason for this absurdityis the mental inertia of theestablished professors . Theirignorance of a changing worl dand their preference for whatthey had learned and what re-mains the same made them in-sist on the worthless . Here inCanada the same problem ex-ists and will be overcome onlyby student participation inplanning of the curricula. Onthe other hand, students ofte ntend to go too far in cuttin gdown requirements . For I thinkthat an academic education inthe arts and humanities mustinclude the mastery of at leastone foreign language to the de-gree of being capable of under -standing and expressing ideas .Otherwise the logical facultiesremain underdeveloped a n dmere words are mistaken forideas, phraseology for reality .The choice of the languageshould be free as long as thelanguage has a considerabletreasure of literature and phil-osophy and is different enoughfrom the native tongue of thestudent to be enough of chal-lenge .

    DEMOCRATIZ E4) It is necessary to demo-

    cratize the whole academic ad-ministration by having moreopen discussions, more studentparticipation, and more changein the top positions . It is notgood if somebody studies at thesame university, then teache sthe subject for twenty year sand then heads the departmentfor another twenty years . Thistoo easily transforms the de-partment into a court round amonarch by divine right, leadsto intellectual incest, and toselection of professors on th ebasis of incompetence in th einterest of the department

    head. It also is suspicious tha tnearly all top positions at ouruniversities are occupied b yBritishers .

    5) Most important is the de-velopment of an "Experimenta lCollege" or "Free University "to complement the courses of-fered by the establishment an dalso as the best means of break-ing the monopoly of the estab-lishment of admitting to anacademic career only him wholackeys to the bias and vanitie sof the department head .

    STUDIUM GENERALEWe cannot give credit e .g . in

    engineering for work in stu-dent government . We ought t ohave a ` studium generale' forengineers, etc . It means alsostudents of the non-art facul-ties ought to have to take somecourses for citizenship, somebasic philosphy and politica lscience and history, and say 1 0to 20 per cent of their profes-sional credits as stadium gen-erale . Student governmen twork and experimental collegecan then be credited as studiu mgenerale.

    At present the danger is thatonly students of wealthy par-ents can afford to get involvedin student government, there-fore money and credit must b emade available.

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  • Page 6

    THE UBYSSEY

    Tuesday, October 29, 196 8

    OCCUPATION LETTER

    SuggestionsEditor, The Ubyssey, Sir :

    UBC in the last few yearshas undergone phenomenal

    growth . In 1962, we had 12,000on the campus— in 1968 w ehave 20,000, and in 1975 it isestimated that we will reac hour maximum rate of growt hof 13 per cent, and have a cam -pus with a student enrolmen tof thirty to thirty-five thou-sand.

    Last week's demonstratio nis, if not directly, then in-directly a symptom of thi sgrowth, unparalleled in UBC' shistory. Last week, the stu-dents of our university, spark-ed by Jerry Rubin, unleashe dtheir many frustrations withthe administration of this cam -pus, and irrationally struck ou tat the faculty club, a club pri-vately owned and privatelyrun. Nevertheless, it indicatedthat all is not right with ou rcampus, and some changes willhave to occur before this typ eof action breaks out again . Itseems to me, after a length ysojourn on this campus (to us ean administration word), thatseveral actions could be im-plemented, that never beforehave been paid serious atten-tion .

    EIGHT SUGGESTIONSThe first of these, is tha t

    AMS, which criticizes the stu-dents for not attending AMSmeetings, should realize tha tthe average student is not in-terested in listening to pettybureaucracy in the top of th eSUB building, b u t rather,would soon become a captiv eaudience, if AMS brought al lissues to the students wherethey should be brought : on thefront of the library steps ,where 100 per cent of ou rapathetic friends congregate .With a good P.A. system (some-thing the AMS forgot to set u pearlier this year, when theyheld an informal gathering) ,the AMS could effectively ad -

    dress the students as to whatissues they are attempting t osolve. This could be done re-gularly — i .e . once a week .

    Secondly, it seems to me ,there is too much discontinuityfrom one AMS administrationto another, resulting in rathera piecemeal effort on the par tof student government . Also ,in this regard, AMS s h o u l dhave some kind of long-termplan (3-5 years) in which the yattempt to deal with the priori-ties facing an ever growing ,ever changing, monolithic,multi-university .

    LET'S HEAR HAREThirdly, as long as I've been

    on this campus (six years), I'venever yet seen our universitypresident come out of his ivorytower (his office) and come t othe library steps to address thestudent body. Why didn't ourpresidents (Macdonald, actingpresident Gage last year, an dHare) realize that the centreof our campus is not in ol dBrock, or t h e armories, ormany of the other obscureplaces they choose to speak ,but right on the front steps o four library? Let's hear fromHare or Gage from the librarysteps before this term is over ,maybe we will have less ofwhat we saw last week !

    Fourthly, with respect to thelife of the average student, ad -ministration's red tape is over-whelming! Why $30 late fe efines that the students canno tafford? Why poor service ex -

    tended to students in the ad -ministration offices, that grow sto epidemic proportions ever yfall and spring semester, whe nwe are forced to wait in longlines to get blue slips, pin kslips, white slips, and pin kpolka-dot slips so we c a nchange classes? Add-courseforms, drop-course forms, fac-ulty advisor appoval, depart-ment advisor approval, etc . !

    Fifthly, let's abolish prere-quisites for those upper yearcourses that do not follow up-on the learning in second year

    courses (and there are manymany of these on campus) .

    Sixthly, the parking rule sand regulations on this campusare one big pain — let's fac eit — the university makes bi gmoney off of the rat-patrol en-forcing the rules and regula-tions that state that the carwith a C-lot sticker can't parkin the president's spot ; I ad-vocate that there should be anend to the highly regulatedcampus parking, that duringthe daytime, parking is wid eopen in most lots, and that atnight, parking is wide open i nall those campus lots where itis possibly feasible .

    GET OFF BUTT SSeventh, let those long estab-

    lished institutions on our cam-pus that have become smu gand complacent over the years ,get off their butts, and get in-terested in understanding theother half of the campus —there is no room for com-placency ,on campus .

    Lastly, I'm down at CecilGreen Park every Frida ynight; why is it not possibl efor more professors to be dow nthere to engage in informaldialogue — maybe then we ca nhave a positive exchange o fideas between student and pro-fessor . Let's all put an end tolast week's type of activity onour campus — let's get with it .

    JEREMY S . CROLLarts 4

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  • Tuesday, October 29, 1968

    T H E

    U B Y S S E Y

    Page 7

    OTHER VIEWS OF THE FACULTY CLUB . .it wasn't all rock and pot

    Photos by Powell Hargraveand John Frizell

  • Page 8

    THE UBYSSEY

    Tuesday, October 29, 196 8

    CRUG: A $150,000 ACADEMIC DAYDREA MBy ALLEN GARR.

    Canadian University Pres s

    Ross Thatcher, premier o fSaskatchewan, has threatene dto close down any universityin his province when student sget rambunctious .

    Students marched on the Bri-tish Columbia legislature tw oyears ago to see then-ministe rof education Leslie Petersonand complain about inequitie sin allotment of loans and bur-saries . Peterson refused t ospeak to them except to say :"You should all be back i nyour classrooms or libraries ,where you belong . "

    The government in Quebechas, so far, sidestepped its pro-mise to build a second Frenc huniversity in Montreal and th eminister of education, Jean -Guy Cardinal, said he woul dback any action CEGEP ad-ministrators would like to use,short of bringing in the cops, t odrive the 45,000 protesting stu-dents back to class .

    The list of incidents of gov-ernment control, threatenedcontrol and interference in th eeducational system in Canadais endless. The buck passescontinually between the feder-al government and the prov-inces .

    'Student and faculty demandsreceived in Ottawa are bounc-ed out to the provinces an dback to Ottawa . Governmenta lheavy-handedness and irrespon-sibility at the federal level i sperhaps best realized in Tru-deau's classic statement : "Edu-cation is a provincial responsi-bility, you know. "

    But government interventionin academic affairs has beenfrequent in Canada since thesecond world war when gov-ernment subsidy of post-secon-dary institutions became their- -major source of income . Andthe government is determine dnot to pay for a pie it can' tkeep its fingers in .

    The most popular form ofgovernment control lies in itsappointment of governors orregents to university boards .

    What the government wouldlike to believe is a marriage

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    between themselves and highe reducation, academe calls rape .

    CRUG (the Commission onthe Relations between Univer-sities and Governments) wasconceived to clarify the rela-tionship between the twobodies .

    It is a co-operative ventureof the Canadian Union of Stu-dents (CUS), l'Union Genera ldes Edudiants de Quebe c(UGEQ), the Association o fUniversities and Colleges ofCanada (AUCC) and the Canad-ian Association of UniversityTeachers (CAUT) .

    Representatives of each ofthese groups— one each fromthe student organizations an dtwo from the professiona lorganizations — make up thesteering committee that acquir-ed $150,000 from the For dFoundation in November, 1967 ,to finance the study .

    The commission is to :• consider the distinctive

    role of universities in thechanging Canadian society par-ticularly with respect to theirresponsibilities for the develop-ment of this role at the variou slevels of society; community ,provincial, regional, nationaland international.

    • determine the need, na-ture, and extent of universityautonomy and government an dpublic control of universitie sand,

    • recommend the appropri-ate instruments by which rela-tions between universities andgovernment can be establishedthat do justice to their respon-sibilities .

    In discussing the mandate,co-commissioner Donald Rowatsays: "Almost anything to do

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    While Rowat is "impresse dwith the similarities of prob-lems in education from prov-ince to province" it is doubtfu lsimple description of them willdo more than scratch the sur-face . CEGEP de Hull in Que-bec is not Simon Fraser Uni-versity in British Columbia .

    He admits he doesn't thinkhe can study all problems indepth and seems to be mor ean academic chart-maker tha na social reformer .

    The overwhelming mandate ,however, is not th e. only thingwhich may render CRUG total-ly ineffective . CRUG co-com-missioners have only unti lJune 1969 to report and havehad few briefs presented t othem since they were appoint-ed in May .

    Letters requesting briefswent out this summer and seta deadline of Dec . 1, 1968 .This was to allow the com-mission time to review th ebriefs before their plannedthree month tour of open hear-ings from January to March of

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  • Tuesday, October 29, 1968

    THE UBYSSEY

    Page 9

    — gordie tong photoA MAZE? Actually it's the heart of the belltower with the staircase circling down .

    Reagan tries power pla yto ban political speakers

    BERKELEY (CUPI)—RonaldReagan, flint-eyed governor o fCalifornia, tried and failed las tweek in a preliminary step toban political speakers from theUniversity of 'California .

    The governor presented themotion to the university re -gents at a meeting in SantaCruz directed against EldridgeCleaver, scheduled to lectureat Berkeley throughout thecoming term .

    Reagan wanted to come inthe back door by taking allpowers away from the boardof educational development, agroup created after the FreeSpeech Movement controversyat Berkeley in 1964. This boardin the last three years hasinitiated over 100 experiment-al courses, including Cleaver's .

    ▪ Reagan told the regents "ourbacks are against the wall . Theregents must assume thei rrightful responsibility for theoperation of this university . It' snow or never!"

    B e f ore the Free Speec hMovement, even mainstreampolitical leaders of the UnitedStates were not permitte dspeaking rights . Richard Nixon,

    HUDSON'S BAY OIL AND GASwill have representatives on campu s

    November 5, 6, 7 and 8to interview 1970 and 1971 Graduate sand Bachelors candidates in Engineerin g

    320 Seventh Avenue S .W ., Calgary 2, Alberta

    CUS dealt knockou tLethbridge opts out

    LETHBRIDGE (CUP) — The Canadian Union of Studentstook it on the chin again when students at the University ofLethbridge voted 422-135 not to join the movement .

    The referendum, representing a 55 per cent turnout, i sanother in the growing list of losses from the national organ-ization .

    Earlier this month, both Windsor and Waterloo Lutheranuniversities voted to let CUS go its separate way . The Unionwon at Laurentian University last week .

    On the same referendum was a section dealing with mem-bership in World University Services of Canada which passed364-187 .

    Cultured PearlsGINZ AJAPAN ARTS

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    Cuban — 85cSubmarine — 85cTomato Puree Soup — 15c

    Tuesday Oct. 29 Onl y

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    Adlai Stevenson and HenryWallace all at one time or an-other were refused permissionto speak .

    Now, anyone can speak aboutanything on the campus . The

    steps of the administrationcentre, Sproul Hall, are usuallyclogged with people addressingstudents through a university-owned speaker system providedfor that purpose.

    DEAN' SRESTAURANT S

    • Take-HomeService

    PIZZAS - CHICKE NHAMBURGER S

    4544 W. 10th

    224-135 15688 Yew at 41st 266-7188

    Hours: Weekdays 7 a .m . to 11 p .m .Sundays 10 a .m . to 11 p .m .

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    ENGINEERSGEOLOGISTSGEOPHYSICISTS

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    4427 W. 10th Ave. 224-134 1Under New Management

    Flowers & Gifts• A COMPLETE FLORAL SERVIC E

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    COME! HEAR !PARTICIPATE !

    "Should students participate in theselection of the Dean of Arts? "

    PANEL: Prof . M. MacGregor—ClassicsProf . W. Fredeman—EnglishRalph Stanton—Arts Pres .

    MODERATOR: Dr. J . S . Tyehurst—Psychiatry

    WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 30—7 :30 P.M.

    HEBB THEATRE

    Sponsored by the Student Assembly on the University .

    November 7to interview 1970 Graduates and Bachelors an dAdvanced Degree candidates in four year majoror honors Geology, Geophysics, physics and Mathe-matics.

  • Page 10

    THE

    UBYSS'EY

    Tuesday, October 29, 1968

    — dick button photoMICKEY McDOWELL MISSES on this shot as rookie Wayne Schaub waits for rebound.

    SPOR YSTHE FRIAR4423 W. 10t h

    Fish Burger - 45 cSpaghetti - $1 .00

    Friday, Nov . 1 Only

    Rugby coac hlikes winning

    Lets put it this way," sai dhead rugby coach Don Spence ,about the Birds game agains tthe Georgians, "my ulcer didn' tbother me. "

    Don Crompton probably di dmost to keep the coach happy ,as he accounted for all of theBirds' points .

    Three penalty kicks and atry Saturday leave Cromptonthe Birds highest scorer on theseason .

    Spence said that the Georg-ians have one of the best teamsin the league on paper, so hewas pleased that the Birdswere able to pull it out of thebag .

    Except for a few lapses,when the Georgians scoredtheir points, the Birds playedthe way they should have, theirown wide open brand of run-ning game.

    Next weekend's game will b eagainst the Rowing Club an dwill be one of the most im-portant on the UBC schedul ebecause a loss here will putthem out of contention.

    Other weekend rugby resultswere: Braves 17-6 over Georg-ians ; Georgians 22-12 over To-tems, and the Fresh 39-0 overRoyal Roads .

    Hockey Birds win season openerThe Thunderbird hockey ing the Vancouver Carlings 4-3

    This year sees the return ofteam showed a lot of potential, at the Winter Sports Center on Glen Richards to the Birds ,but a lack of polish in defeat- Friday night,

    after missing a year due t o

    ACADEMIC ACTIVITIES COMMITTE E

    CZZCHOSL0VAKIAWEDNESDAY, OCT. 30—Manuel Neira

    Talks on Political & Social Reforms instead of Tuesday ,

    Oct. 29 as originally planned .

    BUCHANAN 106 — 12 :3 0

    4 POOC ANIACX *

    Cmpk'.#nen t Pit tenJiede4Our representative will be visiting the campu s

    NOVEMBER 12, 13, and 1 4to interview students of the following disciplines:

    CHEMICAL ENGINEERING — Bachelor, Master and Ph .D .MECHANICAL ENGINEERING — Bachelor, Master and Ph .D.CHEMISTRY — Bachelor and Ph .D .PHYSICS — Ph .D .MATHEMATICS - STATISTICS — Master or Ph .D.

    Your Placement Office will be pleased to supply you with informatio non job openings for 1969 graduates and if you are interested theywill arrange an interview appointment .

    DU PONT OF CANADAEmployee Relations Department

    P.O. Box 660Montreal 101, Quebec

    "Who me?'Yes, you . On problem day s

    can you honestly say you'v enever asked for a gym excuse ?Or given a feeble answer whe nthe gang decided to go horse -back riding or swimming on th espur of the moment ?

    If your answer is definitel yno, never-von probably al -ready use "Tampax tampons -the world's most widely usedinternal sanitary protection . I fyou have to admit that yes ,sometimes you've dropped ou tof the fun-here's your aswer .

    Tampax tampons were de-veloped by a doctor over 3 0years ago for the benefit of al lwomen, married or single .There arpe no pins, pails or belt swith Tampax tampons . Whenproperly in place, you can' teven feel them . No odor o rchafing, either . And both th eTampax tampon and its con-tainer-applicator arc easily dis-posable . They just flush away .

    In short, nothing can forc eyou to drop out of the fun un-less you really want to . Unles syou just may have another date !

    Tampax tampons are avail -able, in three absorbency -sizes : Regular, Super an djunior - wherever such prod-ucts are sold .

    TAM PAXG>nry~>.t s

    SANITARY PROTECTION WORN INTERNALL Y

    MADE ONLY B YCANADIAN TAMPAX CORPORATION LTD ., BARRIE. ONT.

    knee surgery .Coach Bob Hindmarch alsofeels that the excellent groupof newcomers to the team willserve to strengthen t he mgreatly .

    In adidtion, the Birds haveacquired Cam Kerr from Brig-ham Young University, an dutility man Brian Jones fromthe University of Toronto.

    Hindmarch feels that theteam played well for the firstgame of the season .

    Next weekend's game sagainst University of Victori ashould see the Birds hit theirstride in preparation for theopening of their league playNovember Z2.

    They're Going Fast

    Buy Your CopyToday

    BIRD CALLS 75 cSUB LOBBY

    Missingsomeonefar away?

    She's lonely like yo u- phone her tonight !

    BC TEL o

  • Tuesday, October 29, 1968 T H E U B Y S S E Y

    — dick button photoBIRD QUARTERBACK ROGER GREGORY seen here with the ball is about to be tackled by th ePacific Lutheran Knights' end, Jack Irion . Gregory and his Birds were again held scoreless a sthey went down to a 40-0 defeat .

    Page 1 1

    Birds fail in fieldlucky tie, poor loss

    The field hockey Thunderbirds played one of their weake rgames on S'aturday, •and were lucky to come away with a score -less tie with India "A" .

    Bird goalie Sandy Hall saved his shutout, when he stoppeda direct penalty shot midway through the second half .

    The only other player who showed well for the Birds wasKelvin Wood . The rest of the team didn't get untracked .

    Mark Skorah scored a hat-trick and got all the goals in theTomahawks 3-2 victory over the Pitt Meadows "B" team .

    The Braves also played poorly, as they fell 3-2 to Grass -hoppers "B" .

    The Birds will play Jokers I, the Tomahawks take on Joker sAlso, and the frosh play the Jokers Again team . The Braves wil lbe playing away .

    AQUA SO CIS SPONSORING AN AQUARIU M

    TOUR OPEN TO ALL MEMBERS

    Thursday, October 31, 1 :00 p.m.

    Meet around aquarium doors at 12 :45 p .m .Information on club board . Cost 25c .

    Birds bombed at homecomin_

    gAfter Saturday's game at Thunderbir d

    Stadium, football at UBC has nowhere to gobut up . For the record, the Birds lost to Pacifi cLutheran University Knights 40-0 in the Home -coming Game before about 2,700 fans in theirpoorest showing of the year .

    In the first half the Knights amassed muchof their 400 yards in total offence and most o ftheir 19 first downs .

    The Birds failed to complete a pass, hadthree intercepted and generally looked inept.

    Before the first half ended, the Knight sadded two touchdowns by quarterback BobLovell and another by end Mike Murphy to go

    C.A.S.A. SKI SWAPSHOW MART BUILDING P .N.E .

    SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 2nd 4 - 8 p .m.Take ski equipment to be sold to th eNorth Door of the Show Mart Building o n

    FRI . NOV. 1

    7 - 9 P.M.SAT. NOV. 2

    11 A.M.-1 P.M.You sell at your own price : 10% retained for C.A .S .A .

    Registration charge: 150 per itemJumping and cross country skis accepted.Pick up money and unsold equipment o n

    SAT. NOV. 2

    9 - 10 P.M.SUN. NOV. 3

    1 - 4 P.M.For More Information Please Call :DAYS—688-2737 EVENINGS—985-6364

    Metro Goldwyn Mayer presents

    Potnkio Neo2in Frank D. Gilroy's Pulitzer Prize winning

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    Cross countryThe UBC cross country team showed over

    the weekend that it has good legs .

    They proved this point well by putting fou rrunners on the team that is going back to St .Lambert, Quebec to represent British Colum-bia in the National cross country champion-ships .

    UBC dominated the placing in the OpenMen's race as Tom Howard, Jack Burnett, andBob Tapping placed third, fourth and fifth re-spectively . Tapping and Howard will run o nthe B.C. team.

    In the Junior Men's race, UBC frosh KenHirst won a place on the provincial team byhis first place finish .

    Pat Mills won the women's division toearn the right to go back east also .

    ahead 26-0 . On all these plays the Birds' de-fense was badly beaten .

    The left side of the defence was badlybeaten many times as was the secondary onthree of the touchdowns .

    The offence was inconsistent throughou tthe half; the only Bird threat died when KentYaniw dropped a pass from Roger Gregory o nthe Knights' five yard line .

    The Birds' specialty squads again let the mdown. Twice they set up PLU touchdowns withbad snaps to punter Tom Ellisop ; also, the kick-off return team couldn't provide good block-ing for the return men .

    Their fifth TD came on a forty yard touch -down pass to second string end Vic Eaton.

    By the end of the third quarter the Knights 'hard hitting began to show and the Bird sslowed visibly .

    The final Knight TD came on an intercep-tion of a pass thrown by Murphy Costello, th eJayvee quarterback injected late in the game.

    Costello provided some of the Birds' mostexciting plays, as did halfbacks Paul Danylieuand Ron Ritchie who ran well .

    The Birds lost for three reasons — first ,they weren't up for the game physically ormentally, and were not running, blocking o rtackling up to their potential .

    Second, they showed glaring deficiencie sboth on offence and defense, especially atquarterback, at corner linbacker and in th edefensive secondary.

    Third, they came up against a team thatcould and did capitalize on the breaks .

    It was a poor showing — but we can alwayshope for better days ahead .

    UBC JACKETS !ORDER NOW THROUG H

    THE THUNDERBIRD SHOPOPENING SOON IN THE BASEMENT OF S .U .B .

    NAME . . . . . . . STYLE A

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    PHONE Sizes 38 - 46

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    Take this Order Form to the Information Desk on the main floor of the S .U .B.

    Two traditional styles to choose from — both in navy blue melton cloth wit hleather sleeves . . .

    (A) "U .B .C." embroidered on the front — $20.95(B) "UNIVERSITY OF B.C." crested on the back — $26 .45

    Payment and delivery upon the opening o f

    THE THUNDERBIRD SHOP during Novembe r-------------------- -

  • -v

    Page 12

    T H E U B Y S S E Y

    Tuesday, October 29, 196 8

    I ERates: 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 an dare payable in advance .

    Closing Deadline is 11:30 a.m . the day before publication .

    Publication Office: 241 STUDENT UNION BLDG., UNIVERSITY OF B.C ., Vancouver 8, B .C.

    4

    'TWEEN CLASSES- .- , ;

    Prof pad plundered,what now my love ?

    Open forum in Aud . noon to-day for student-faculty dis-cussion of events followin gFaculty Club sit-in .

    SAILING CLU BThose wishing to sail ; seeboard and/or pick up mem-bership cards Tues . to Thurs .noon, outdoors clubroom .

    VARSITY DEMOLA YMeeting Wed., Oct. 30, 7 :3 0p .m., SUB O .

    AQUA SO C

    Aquarium tour Thurs . Oct.31. Meet at Van. PublicAquarium doors 12 :45 p .m .Open to all members .

    LEGAL ADVISORY COMM.

    All students needing legaladvice come to AMS Vice-pres . office Mon ., Wed., andFriday noon every week ,

    HISTORY DEPT .

    Berkeley prof. speaks on"Landlords. Peasants, Revo-lution: The Lesson of India"Wed . 1 :30 in SUB 209 .

    ARTS LECTURE SERIE S

    Geography prof . J . D. Chap -man speaks Wed . noon SUBAnd .

    JUDO CLUB

    Judo competition at Centen-nial Community Centre, Ne wWestminster this Saturday7:30 p .m .

    NEWMAN CENTR EDance at Autumn Leaf Nov .1, 9-1 SUB ballroom .Licensed. Tickets in AMS .

    CHOR SOCPractice Wed., 6 p .m. Bu .104 . Males needed .

    NISEI VARSITYMeeting Thurs . noon, Bu .204 . Elections .

    PRE-SOCIAL WORKFilm: Boy with a Knife, Fri -day, noon, Bu . 204, lOc .

    SKI TRI PMeeting, Wed., noon, PlaceVanier Common Lounge, forall interested ; or else, phoneCherry, 224-9878 .

    CROSSROADS AFRIC ASummer '69 exchange pro-gram info' Thurs ., noon, Up-per Lounge, InternationalHouse .

    WU SGeneral meeting, noon today ,SUB 205 .

    DEBATING UNIO NDebate : SUB 105A noon to -day .

    SPORTS CAR CLUBLadies comm. meeting noontoday Bu 1221 .

    ANNOUNCEMENTSDances

    1 1VANCOUVER'S TOP BANDS AR E

    managed exclusively by MCM &Associates. 731-4741.

    FOR RENT: GIANT STROBE FO RDances of 200 to 1,000 . For informa-tion phone 922 1451 .

    ANDY WORHOL' SVELVET UNDERGROUND

    At The Retinal CircusHalloween Costume Bash, Oct . 3 1

    $2.6 0H A N C E TO WIGGY SYMPHON Y

    Nov . 1, 9-1 in SUB Ballroom .Tickets in EroekAMS . (Licencedl)-

    l)ANCE TO THE MOCK DUCK.Totem Park, Fri. Nov . 1, 9-1 . Girls75e, guys $1 .00, couples $1 .50 .

    BLACK CAT BALL SUB BALL -room

    Sat., Nov. 2 - 9-1 -Tickets on sale now

    A .M .S . orRoom 1119, Math Annex.

    Greetings

    1 2SALLY MUNN : LETTER FRO M

    Paul . Phone Gail 277 7936.

    Lost & Found

    1 3

    REWARD FOR VALUABLE INFOR -mation regarding theft of Mag .wheel from brown 1950 Chev . In"TI" lot on Friday . Phone AL 5-5096 .

    LOSP—PICKETT YELLOW META Lslide rule in black case in Heb btheatre . 'Phone Jim 266-6076 . Re-ward .

    FOUND WOMAN'S WATCH LOWE RMall near Engineering bldg . Call122-1265 after 6 p .m .

    LOST TWO MEN'S RINGS TNHenry Angus . Reward . Phone 434 -8073 .

    FOUND PAIR OF LADYS GLASSES .Black rim . Phone 224-7374.

    Am_

    LOST : ItLA('K WALLET, WED . ,Oct . 23'62 . Phone 987-3259 . Reward .

    itlJUf' AT THE P- F' HOF'SF'Sat, night . Ellis woman's leathe ri'oat . To claim call Don at 224-966 5at 6 :15 any night .

    LOST FRIDAY AFTERNOON NEA RArmouries French 304 text Moder nFrench Literature . Finder PhoneMaureen 253-6700 .

    LOST(?) ONE BROWN LEATHE RJacket Saturday night at the A.D .House . Finder please phone 224 -6961 . Reward .

    Rides & Car Pools

    1 4RIDE DESIRED TO SEE THUNDER -

    bird's second touchdown at Cald -well, Idaho Nov . 2 . Phone Dan 224 -9706.

    NEED PASSENGERS TO TORONTO .Shorter hops O .K. Leaving Thur sday, Oct . 31 or weekend . Manue l228-8035 evenings .

    Special Notices

    1 5THE GRIN BIN HAS POSTERS,

    Jokes, Cards, Gifts and a PostOffice . You'll find it across fromthe Liquor Store at 3209 WestBroadway .

    THE NEW YORK LIFE AGENT O Nyour campus is a good man to know.

    REDUCE THE COST OF YOUR IN -surance by as much as 20% . Al lrisks insured and no cancellations .Motor bikes also . Phone Ted Elliott,299-94H .

    "ALL PERSONS INTERESTED INserving on the committee for th e'Brock Hall Art Collection' (now inthe SUB) please contact ProfessorGeorge Rosenberg, Fine Arts De-partment, Lasserre 401A, 228 275 7 by Wednesday 30th October . "KNIGHT ERRANT, SOLAR CROS S

    please contact 224-9031 Room 10 .'68 - INVITATION -

    A student-oriented booklet of 3 3different entertainment passesvalued at over $50 .00 . Availabl eat the Bookstore, He & She Cloth-ing (The Village) Canteens in th eResidences and the Informatio ndesk at S .U .B . $2 .50 .

    ALL CARIBBEAN STUDENTS -0 e n e r a I Meeting, InternationalHouse . Noon, October 31st.

    TREAT YOURSELF AT THE AU -tumn Lear, Nov . 1. 9-1, SUB Ball-room. Tickets in A.M .S .

    Travel Opportunitie s

    Wanted Information

    1 7

    Wanted—Miscellaneous 1 8

    AUTOMOTIVE

    Automobiles For Sale

    2 1'62 GALAXIE 4-DR. V-S AUTO . P .B .

    & r .S ., new brakes & trans. $800 .Phone after 6 . 732-8346 .

    1967 FIAT 850 SPYDER UNDER 6,000miles . Phone 266-6176 .

    1953 STUDEBAKER, GOOD CONDi-tion . Best offer . AM 6-9544 .

    '64 V .W. VAN. EXCELLENT CON -dition . Overhauled engine . 4 newtires . 44,000 miles. Double doors o nboth sides . Best offer . 733-8047 . Bill.

    Auto. For Sale (Cont.)

    2 1'62 AUSTIN 1{EALY 3000 MVI I

    Special Knock off Disc wheels .$1,200 .00 . Phone 733-0993 and askfor Ron .

    1957 CONSUL LICENSED . CIT Ytested . W.W. needs clutch work .263-6159 .

    1964 TRIUMPH 2000 SEDAN, EX -cellent condition, overdrive . PhoneGrant 731-9974.

    '64 M .G . MIDGET EX. COND . MECH.Perfect . See on campus . $850 . CallM .W. at 224 9769 .

    Automobile—Parts

    2 3AUSTIN COOPER EQUIPMENT : 2

    Dunlop GT Mags ; 2 Cooper "5"rims ; 2 (new) Firestone 2 (used )Goodyear racing tires . John Hum-phreys . 224-9029 . If not availabl eleave number.

    Automobile—Repairs

    24

    Motorcycles

    2 61967 SUZUKI 100 CC's . EXC. COND .

    Offers 263-4462 .

    BUSINESS SERVICE S

    Dance Bands

    3 1

    Duplicating & Copying

    3 2ELECTION HANDBILLS AND ALL

    other printing : Photo - Offset orMimeo . Ian 228 8427, Floyd . 224-5513 ,Kirk 224-4936 .

    Miscellaneous

    3 3NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY

    at the UBC Barber Shop & BeautySalon . "It pays to look your best . "5736 University Blvd . 228-8942 .

    BUSES FOR CHARTE RAvailable in VancouverFor Rates That Pleas e

    SQUAM!SH COACH LINES580 Howe

    684-052 2

    Home Entertainment

    3 5Guaranteed Expert & Efficient Repairs

    Color TV - Black and White T VRecord Players - Radios

    Stereo Equipment - Tape Recorder sALEXANDER AND AXELSON LTD .

    4512 W . 10th - 228-908 8Complete Record Departmen t

    Rentals—MisceHeous 3 6DIJNBAR COSTUME RENTALS

    Costumes for all occasions. New ad -dress . 3567 West 41st . Ph . 261-901 1

    Scandals

    3 7BOOZE YOUR BLUES AT THE

    Autumn Leaf! Nov . 1 in SUB Ball -room.

    CONGRATS BURNS ON YOUR 2nd 2is a grand and proud number, bu tremember that 3 is just that muchbetter . Go get 'em Burns !

    HEROINis one of the freakiest songs ever an dyou can experience it at The Retina lCircus when the Velvet Undergroun ddo up for the Halloween Bash Oct . Ii.

    Sewing & Alterations

    3 8

    Typing

    4 0EXP. TYPING E S S A Y S AN D

    theses, reas. rates ; legible work ;phone 738-6829 after 10 am . Mon . -Thur ., and Sundays .

    EMPLOYMENT

    Help Wanted—Female

    5 1

    Help Wanted—Male

    5 2APPLICATIONS ARE NOW BEIN G

    taken for the Pizza Patio Pizzatossing program. Training cours ewill be held at the Milano PizzaTraining Institute - Italy. For fur-ther information contact :Personnel Director - Pizza PatioThe Home of Perfect Pizza, 688-238 1

    Male or Female

    5 3BE RICH !

    Earn maximum rates for minimu mtime .Campus Rep, for respected Interna-tional company . See file P-393 . Per-sonnel Office .

    Work Wanted

    5 4RESPONSIBLE MARRIED COUPL E

    would like babysitting or odd job sfor weekends. Reasonable rates .Phone 733-1375.

    INSTRUCTION

    Tutoring

    64ENGLISH, FRENCH, HISTORY LES -

    sons given by B.A., M .A ., B .L.S .Other languages offered . Phone 736 -6923 .

    TUTORING IN ENGLISH HISTOR Yand French First and Second Year .Reasonable rates . 733-4394 Evenings .

    MISCELLANEOU S FOR SALE 7 1BUST "B" BOOKS - USED UNI-

    versity texts bought and sold . 14W . Hastings, opposite Woodward..681-4931. -

    BUNK BEDS, SET, $29.50 . 2'x4' TOP ,unpainted double pedestal desks ,each $29 .50 . New 262 coil singleHollywood beds, complete, from$49 .50 . Unpainted book cases, from$8 .95 .

    KLASSEN' S

    3207 West Broadway

    RE 6-071 2 (Beer bottle drive-in at rear of store )YES, WE STILL HAVE COCONU T

    oil best for your hair and skin . Plusappointment service . Upper TenthBarber, 4574 West 10th Avenue, 224 -6622 .

    PAIR FISHLER ALU SKIS WITHMarker bindings . $1 .00 . 266-9804 .

    BLUE COMFY OLD 3 PCE . LIVINGrm. ate . $30 or offer . Call 224-164 0after 5 p .m .

    WATCH : RODANIA CHRONOGRAPHwrist watch . Precision time pieceplus two dials for stop-start pur-pose cost $100 . Used 2 weeks . Ph.228-9448 .

    HEAD 210 GS . MARKER HEEL ANDtoe $90 or offer . Phone 261-4113 as kfor Peter .

    The Handiest Book on Campus

    BIRD

    UBC's STUDENT

    CALLS TELEPHONE DIRECTORYOnly 75c at

    Bookstore & Publication Office, SUB

    RENTALS&REAL ESTAT E

    Rooms

    8 1MALE STTID. SEN. BED & BREAK -

    fast . $50 packet lunch optional .Large, bright room, desk & closet .Mrs . I : . Stone, 4545 W . 6th Ave . ,224-1460 .

    BED SFTTINC, R()02'I WITH PRIV-ate entrance, shower, fridge. PhoneCA 4-3465 ,

    BEDROOM, \3 A S H B 0 0 M , HOT -plate in exchange for $25 per monthcare of 3 schoolage children . 263 -7288 .

    BED-SITTING ROOM, HOT PLATE,share bath . Mrs . Craig, 2316 W. 6th Ave . 738-5724 .Room & Board 82ROOM AND BOARD. EXCELLEN T

    meals . Breakfast, lunch and dinner .736-5020 .

    ONE TO THREE GIRLS. THREEmeals, laundry, priv. telephone ex-tra . study, studio space. $90. 224 -0074.

    COMPLETE PRIVACY FOR GIRL .Bedroom sittingroom and toilet . Allmeals . $80 .00 month . 731-9743 .

    SINGLE WORKING GIRL OR STU -dent to babysit Sundays and som eevenings, do dishes, make schoollunches for large family in pleasan tsurroundings in return for room &board — live in bed-sitting room -fireplace—private bath . Year round .FBC campus area, after 4, 224-3565 .

    BOYS -. SINGLE (DOUBLES )Board optional not basement; al lfacilities available . Chinese student swelcome . 2620 W . 10th Ave . 713-367 8phone after 3 p .m .

    LIVE ON CAMPUS AT THE DELT AUpsilon Fraternity House, goodfood, short walk to classes, quiethours enforced for study . Phone 22 89389 or 224-9841 .

    Furn. Houses & Apts .

    8 3

    GIRL TO SHARE PLEASANT TJR-nished apartment, Kitsilano . Lowrent in exchange for light baby-sitting .

    733-314 8FURN. APT. AVAIL. OCT . 31 . Nov

    21, tO mm, to main library . Singlecouple stud ., $45 . Others $60 . 228 -9472 even .

    SENIOR OR GRAD. TO SHARElarge legal suite near gates . Cal l 224-1935 . Avail. Nov . 1, 1968 .HOUSEKEEPING S U I T E GATES .

    Available 1st November . Male stu-dent to share . 224-3517 .

    SUITE TO SHARE . MALE ONLY $4 5month . Light house keeping, cook-ing facilities . Private bath . Quiet ,clean, furnished . Close to UBC . Cal l224-0417 at 4597 Belmont .

    FURNISHED BASEMENT S TI I PB ,Kerrisdale, Suitable for one or tw omen preferred . 261-4319 .

    GRAD./SENIOR STUDENT WANTE Dto s h a r e comfortable furnishedapartment . Near campus . $50 permonth . 738-28513 .

    BUY - SELL - RENT

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    OFFICE

    Now Located In

    ROOM 241 - S .U.B.

    BIRD CYCLE CLUBMeeting Wed. noon, SUB215 .

    OPEN FORUMDiscussion on selection ofDean of Arts Wednesday 7 :3 0p .m. in Hebb .

    SPEAKERSMark Rudd, leader of Colum-bia rebellion, noon today,SUB ballroom, 25e .

    PRE-MED SO C

    Dr. Kennedy to speak onprov. health dept . Wed. noon ,Wesbrook 201 ;

    MUSSO C

    Fall banquet Sat. Nov. 2 ,7 p .m., SUB ballroom. Freefor members who sign inclubroom .

    ACADEMIC ACTIVITIE S

    Speaker on Czeck reformsWed. Oct . 30, noon, Bu. 106 .

    PSYCH. CLUB

    Dr . Lee Poulos will discusstraining and group therapyWednesday noon SUB 211 .

    GAMMA PHLEGM AUrgent meeting for all, andprospective members noon,today, SUB E .

    GEOPHYSICISTSSEG meeting today noon ,Geophys . annex, 202 .

    SCIENCE FICTIO NFan club. Meeting todaynoon Bu . 222 . Elections .

    YOUNG SOCIALIST SGeneral meeting on studen tpower . Wed. noon, Bu . 221 .

    BIAFRA DISCUSSIO NFilms etc . Fri . Nov, . 1, 8 p .m .Alpha Delta Phi ., 2270 Wes -brook Cres .

    FLYING CLUBCPA tour tonight .

    SLAVONIC CIRCL EMeeting today noon, SUB K .Talk on Yugoslavia, Thurs . ,Oct . 31, Bu. 104 .

    CAR RALLY

    G i m m i c k rally Thursda ynoon .

    IL CAFF EMeeting, Wed. noon, Inter-national House 402 Italianconversation .

    ClASPMeeting, Wed. noon, SUB105B .

    CIRCLE KNew members installed Wed .7 p .m. at Harry's .

    CAMPUS CAVALIERSNo meeting on Thurs ., Oct .31 .

    WOMEN'S ATHLETI CASSOC .

    Tennis practice Thurs . Oct .31, 6-7 :30 p .m .

    PRE-DENT SOC/HYGIEN EMeeting Thurs . Oct . 31, noonSUB 119 E .

    ONTOLOGY SO CMeeting tonight 8 p .m. SUBC .

    PARLIAMENTARY COUNCI LCUS comm. meeting noonWed. SUB 210 .

    GERMAN CLU BMeeting noon today SUB215. German castle discuss-ion .

    FILMSOCTriumph Of The Will Thurs . ,old Aud., 12:30, 3:30, 6 :00 ,8 :30 . Friday: 6 :00, 8 :30 p .m .

    YOUTH RESOURCE SMeeting noon today, SUB101 J .

    C