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Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the list of Internet Media Types [MIME]."}],"FullText":[{"label":"FullText","value":" Death\nof a\nSalesman\nTHE 478 YSSEY\nAuditorium\nnoon\ntoday\nUCC rescinds charge\nScott not negligent\nbut system at fault'\nCouncil to\nask judge's\nresignation\nA student court judge will be\n\"invited\" to resign by student\ncouncil.\nCouncillors, Monday, passed a\nmotion \"inviting\" Fred Fletcher,\nnews editor of the Ubyssey, to\nresign from his position as alternate judge because \"the concept\nof iihpairtiality has been violated\nin recent court activity.\"\nThe motion arose as a result\nof a student court ruling on the\nrecent issue of council directing\nthe Ubyssey to print certain\nstories. Fletcher, a fourth-year\nArts student,, sat as a judge on\n\u201e the court which ruled the coun-\ncil's action illegal.\nStudent president Alan Cornwall had asked the court to rule\non the legality of the council's\ntight to carry out such action.\n'After the council read the\ncourt's verdict, it was then unsure of Cornwall's right to ask\n, tq have such a ruling made\nwithout council's consent.\nCouncil then referred the\njudgment back to the court for\na ruling on whether or not the\nquestion was correctly submitted to it-\nIt was then ruled inadmissible\nas a basis for judgment.\nCOUNCIL STATEMENT\nAn official council statement\nsaid: \"Members'\" of council feel\nthat the concept of impartiality\nhas been violated* : in recent\nstudent court activity.\" '\nThe motion passed with a\nvote of seven to;:three with five\nabstentions. There are twenty-\ntwo voting members On council.\nFletcher said^: Wednesday, he\nhas not received notice of the\nmotion.\nLance Finch, the court's chief\njustice, said he: asked Fletcher\nto appear at the hearing. \"It was\non- short notice, and I wanted as\nbroad a representation as possible,\" he said. |j\nLaw President, Chas. McLean, who brought the motion to\nthe floor, said principles Of impartiality should be maintained.\nFLETCHER BIASED\nFinch said it was Fletcher\nthat first mentioned his own\npossible bias. '\u25a0\nFletcher said when he first\nspoke to the court he mentioned\nhis bias and attempted to confine his comments to the technical aspects of the question.\nFinch said there was no possible chance that the rest of the\ncourt didn't know of Fletcher's\nconnection with The Ubyssey.\nHe said it is legal for the\ncouncil to request the resignation\nof a student court judge.\nCouncil Secretary Lynn McDonald said the motion is saying\n\"we hope he resigns.\"\nNO FORCE\nMcLean said' among gentlemen you don't ask men to do\nsuch things. \"I'm not forcing\nhim to resign at this point,\" he\nsaid.\nFletcher said he would certainly resign if he felt he had\nbeen serving -his own interests\nCofttmued'ott Page 3\n-See STUDENT COURT\nVol. XLIV VANCOUVER, B.C., THURSDAY, NOV. 2, 1961 No. 20\nHULA, HULA OOO-LA-LA! Come and shake a grass skirt with\nme at the Nurses' Undergrad Society's \"Hukilau\" Friday, says\ngyrating Norma Cann, Nursing 4. Dance will be held from\n9 p.m. to 1 a.m. at Sherry's Hall, 2723 West Fourth. Dress\nHawaiian and bring $3 a couple for tickets at the door.\nGrad referendum to be\nresubmitted to students\nThe Graduate Student Fee\nReduction ', referendum which\nfailed Oct. 13, because too few\nstudents voted, will be re-submitted to students November 16.\nGraduate students are now\nrequired to pay a $12 graduate\ncentre fee to defray operating\nexpences of the Graduate\nStudent Centre.\nIf the referendum fails, graduate students will have to pay\na total activity fee of $36 while\nundergraduates pay only the\n$24 A.M.S. fee.\nIf the referendum is approved\nby the student body, most grad\nstudents will still be assessed a\nfee equal to that of the undergraduates.\nThe referendum, endorsed by\nboth student council and the\nUniversity Board of Governors\nrequires that graduate students\n\"be assessed AMS fees only for\nthe first year they are registered ih the faculty of graduate\nstudies.\"\nIn order to pass, the referend\num must be approved by two-\nthirds of the students who vote.\nThe referendum will not be\nvalid unless at least twenty percent of the student body votes.\nUniversity Clubs Committee executive has decided Alma\nMater Society treasurer Malcolm Scott was not negligent at\nbudget discussipn group meetings after all.\nThe executive Tuesday rescinded its earlier approval of\na budget discussion group report that charged Scott with\nmonopolization of group meetings ahd refusal to.make budget\nchanges where necessary.\nThe meeting then passed a\nmotion which was essentially\nthe same as the discussion group\nrepprt but minus a clause which\nstated:\n'\u25a0' f'That the. treasure was neglecting his duty in not wishing\nto do any extra work to rearrange the budget where necessary, but rather suggesting that\ndissatisfied groups would find\nit' easier to apply for money\nfrom the margin.\" Rather than\nhandle the chair at these meetings he was seen to monopolize\nthese meetings with a constant\nstream of editorialization.\nPOOR TASTE\nUC-G president Eric Mitterndorfer! said, \"We deleted this\nstatement because on further\nperusal we considered it in poor\ntaste.\" Also we feel there is no\nfurther point in embarrassing\nindividuals when it was in fact\nthe system we were unhappy\nwith.\nIn the budget discussion group\nreport which UCC had approved\nOctober 25, it also charged:\n\u2022 that budget discussion group\nmeetings accomplished nothing\nother than clarifying; where\nsome of the other money was\nbeing spent; v\n\u2022 that the voting re additional\ngrants to any one of the groupti\nrepresented w a s automatically\ndeadlocked with each being\nafraid that if another was granted more, its own budget would\nbe cut;\n\u2022 that not quite enough insight was allowed the various\ngroups in order to specifically\nsuggest where the budget should\nbe cut to accommodate his own\nneeds.\nThe budget discussion group\nmeetings were chaired by Scott\nand had representatives from\nUCC, Undergraduate Societies\nCommittee, Women's Athletic-\nAssociation and Men's Athletic\nAssociation.\nWomen's Athletics Association representatives to the budget discussion group refuted the\nUCC statements in a letter to\nThe Ubyssey.\n\"At no time during the meetings did either Mr. Scott or his\nrepresentative, Mr. (Bernie)\nPapke, hesitate to answer all\nquestions to the group's satisfaction\", the letter stated.\nSCOTT REPLIES\nScott told The Ubyssey Wednesday, \"I have not been formally notified that the acceptance\nof the report has been rescinded\".\n\"I feel the attack was a personal one and a ipersonal apology is necessary: as ;well as\nformal retraction of the statement,\" he said.\nThe letter stated that>* the.\n\"personal attacks'} on the tr^ssfe\nurer were extremely, ljiiiflnry\nthat he had; not monopolized\nthe meetings and that he seemedr\nwilling to alter the budget; had.\nthere been any definite proposals forthcoming.\nMAA OPINION\nKeith Tolman, who represented Men's Athletics on the discussion groups, told The Ubyssey:\n\"If UCC was dissatisfied, it\nshouldn't have voted for the\nbudget.\"\n\"UCC came to the meetings\ntotally unprepared to justify\nany need for an increase in its\nallocation. When asked where\nthey needed more money, and\nhoit? they were helping themselves, their only answers were\nglorified remarks \\ which meant\nnothing\"; he said.\n\"I doii'f feel that Mr. Scott\ndominated the meetings at all;\nhe merely answered the questions put to him; nor do I feel\nthat he tried to bias the members\", Tolman added.\nConservatives shocked\nClub votes against nuclear arms\nTORONT0(CUP>\u2014Members\nof the University of Toronto\nConservative club sat aghast\nas members bf the Combined\nUniversities Campaign for\nNuclear Disarmament packed\na PC defence seminar and\npassed a resolution opposing\nnuclear weapons for Canada.\nThe resolution \"that Canada should not accept nuclear\nweapons\" went through in\nspite of defence chairman\nMalcolm Wallace's (III UC)\nprotests that CUCNDers were\nout of order.\nWallace emphasized that all\nU of T students\u2014no matter\nwhat their political affiliations \u2014 were welcome to ex\npress their views, but some\ntook sucri vociferous advantage of the invitation that he\nhad repeatedly to reprimand\nthem for interrupting.\nRick Clippingdale (III Trin),\npresident of the PC Club, outlined the government's defence policy in its various\nphases. He lauded Canadian\ncontributions to the United\nNations Emergency Force \u2014\nserving on the Gaza strip and\nin the Congo\u2014and explained\nCanada's part in NATO and\nNORAD.\nBut members of CUCND\ndemanded that Canada withdraw from the arms race to\nwhich, they claimed, she can\ncontribute little. They insisted\nthat Canada should concentrate on furthering disarmament \" negotiations and technical inspection.\nSaid; the disarmamenters:\nCanada's withdrawal from the\narms race would lend weight\nto her disarmament proposals.\nWallace replied that the\nacceptability of Canadian disarmament proposals will depend not on Canada's neutrality, but upon the realism\nof the proposals. \"If an argument can hold water,\" he said,\n\"it holds water.\"\nPCs, undismayed by today's\nmeeting, will hold another de -\nfence seminar next Thursday.\nA general welcome to all\nstudents is again being issued. Page 2\nTHE UBYSSEY\nAuthorized as second class mail by the Post Office Department,\nOttawa, and for payment of postage in cash.\nMEMBER CANADIAN UNIVERSITY PRESS\nPublished three times weekly throughout the University year in\nVancouver by the Alma Mater Society, University of B.C. Editorial\nopinions expressed are those of the Editor of The Ubyssey and not\nnecessarily those of the Altna Mater Society of the University of B.C.\nTELEPHONES: CA 4-3242, locals 12 (news desk),\n14 (Editor-in-Chief), 6, 15 (business offices).\nEditor-in-Chief: Roger McAfee\nManaging Editor Denis Stanley\n\u2022 Associate Editor Ann Piekard\nNews Editor Fred Fletcher\nCity Editor Keith Bradbury\n' CUP Editor Bob Hendrickson\nPhotography Editor Don Hume\n-Senior Editor Sharon Rodney\nSports Editor Mike Hunter\n' Photography Manager Byron Hender\nCritics Editor David Bromige\nSTAFF THIS ISSUE:\nLayout this issue: Maureen Covell\nREPORTERS: George Railton, Peter Penz, Mike Grenby,\nPat Horrobin, Sharon McKinnon, Joy Holding,\nRichard Simeon.\nTECHNICCAL; Bob McDonald, Don Hume.\nJudges judge\nCouncillors have asked a student court judge to resign.\nThey felt that court judge Fred Fletcher was not operating\nwithin the bounds of \"judicial impartiality\" when he participated in a constitutional interpretation case involving The\nUbyssey.\nThey maintain Fletcher, news editor of The Ubyssey,\nshould have disqualified himself on the grounds he was not\ncapable of handing down an unbiased decision.\nWe are not going to argue the merits of this specific case.\nWhat we are concerned with is the fact that council is asking\nfor the resignation of a member of the judiciary, which, according to our constitution, is the sole AMS constitutional arbiter.\n- We are appalled with the method used in handling the\n\"resignation\" issue at the council level.\nWe feel that this particular case should be handled by the\ncourt itself, and not by council. If councillors feel justice has\nbeen miscarried they should ask tbe court to take remedial\naction.\nA dangerous precedent could be set if council removes\nthe judge in question. And it will have to if it wants to get rid\nof him, for he says he will not resign.\nUsing this action as a precedent council could, if the student\ncourt.ruled contrary to its wishes, replace the entire court with\njudges more amenable to council will.\nCouncil would then become the all-powerful body that\na few of, its members seem to think it now is. These same\nmembers are often under the impression that whatever is good\nenough for them is \"damned well good enough for the rest of\nthe campus. After all, aren't we elected representatives of\nthe student body, etc., etc.\"\nThe Ubyssey feels that the rights of the individual should\nbe protected. To this end we believe council should not be the\nTHE UBYSSEY\nThursday, November 2, 1961\nfinal arbiters of our constitution.\n\/\nSome councillors feel the motion was one of censure.\nHaven't we got enough words in tihe language to say what we\nmean? If censure was wanted the motion should have been so\nworded. \u2022\nThe Ubyssey does not feel this is a motion of censure. We\nfeel it is, in effect, asking for Fletcher's resignation.\nWhen the motion was put on the floor a councillor unsuccessfully requested that it be tabled until Mr. Fletcher could\nbe present. If council is basing their motion on a matter of\nprinciple, it should consider another well known principle.\nA man has a right to appear in his own defence.\nThe Ubyssey wholeheartedly supports the principal of judicial impartiality, but we feel that council should not intrude\ninto the student court and we deplore the method in which\nthis motion was handled.\n.&&*.\n\"JOE, OLD BOY, I THINK YOU'RE CARRYING THIS RADIATION THING A BIT TOO FAR.\nLetters to the Editor \u2014\n~~i\n$1,000 prize\nEditor,\nThe Ubyssey.\nDear Sir:\nHate is an ineffective weapon, against Communism.\nKnowledge of the enemy is\nimportant.\nIn order to stimulate . research arid study about, the\nuniversal horror of Communism by ALL people who have\nlived under it, I am sponsoring a contest with a prize of\n$1,000.00.\n\u2022 This prize will be given, for\nthe most responsive answer to\nthe question of why people\nrisk their lives to escape from\nCommunism and the closest\nestimate of how many persons\nhave fled Communist countries\nfrom 1S45 to the present.\nLength is limited to 50 words\nand replies must reach me by\nDecember 5, 1961.\nSincerely,\nAMBROSE P. SALMINI\n12 Park Hill Terrace,\nYonkers, N.Y.\nThumbs up\nEditor,\nThe Ubyssey.\nDear Sir:\nThrough your noble and\nbroad-minded paper, I would\nlike to bring to the attention\nof your readers the plight of\nthat down-trodden, dust-ridden\nfigure: the hitchhiker.\nMany a time., after a hard\nday's work (engineers wouldn't\nknow about this) I have stood\non the curb, chewing dust, and\nspitting out exhaust fumes, my\nthumb vainly outstretched, as\nif in the hopes of hooking the\nbumper of a fast moving van.\nAnd to what avail? Cars\nsnarl by, some close enough\nthat I must curl my toes to\navoid being run over. Some\nmerely turn their backs and\ncross to the other lane, while\nothers roar by, spraying mud\nand dust over that tragic and\nheroic venturer, so many of\nwhom end up at home with\nthat dseaded disease \"thumbia\ndisjointia\".\nTo thumb things up, I'd like\nto say, \"Don't thumb your nose\nat a thumber, for thumday he\nmay be in a position to thumb\nhis at you.\"\n.Yours sincerely,\n\u2022 , JIM. MORRIS\nScience I.\nExperts?\nEditor,\nThe Ubyssey.\nDear Sir:\nStudent politics, campus\nclubs and debates on promiscuity versus virginity are all\ngood harmless extracurricular\nactivities. However, a new\nStudent Union Building is far\ntoo important an issue to be\nleft to well-meaning but misinformed and insensitive committees.\nMost of the campus buildings\nare obvious results of \"too\nmany cooks\" (Boards, advisors,\nmisguided zealots and hired\nassassins). The few good buildings are the results of strong\nindividual direction. This direction depends on the skills\nand is the responsibility of the\nArchitect. The Medical complex is \"committee construction.\" This campus does deserve better.\nA workable, almost adequate\ncompromised solution will result if student-laymen, decorators and parking lot \"experts\"\nare allowed to dictate to an\narbitrarily selected architect.\nOnly an architectural competition, judged by competent impartial professionals, can give\nthis University a Student Union Building of which it may\nbe proud.\nMany such competitions have\nsuccessfully been held, the details of which may readily be\nobtained. The students certainly would set the requirements\nfor the competition. However,\na general statement of the site,\ncost and function is all that is\nnecessary. Leave the planning\nand the aesthetics to the architect. The result will be worthy!\nStudents of 3rd Year\nSchool of' Architecture.\nLook out\nEditor,\nThe Ubyssey.\nDear Sir:\nIn reply to Mr. Bruce Rich-\ner's letter in the October 31\nUbyssey:\nBravo, Mr. Richer! But\nwhere the devil are the rest\nof your brethren? The SCM\nhas traditionally been known\nas an \"open\" movement, and\ntherefore part of our Basis and\nAim is for \"... all students\nwho are willing io test the\ntruth of the conviction that...\nin Jesus Christ are found the\nsupreme revelation of God and\nthe means to the full realization of life.\" It seems to follow that such a claim cannot\nbe properly tested without such\nstudents as yourself. Perhaps\nif you had looked more closely\nat ' our program, you would\nhave seen that attempts are\nbeing made to begin a study\ngroup with atheists and agnostics. All we lack, however,\nare these very people.\nI agree with you that \"...\nthe revolutionary force of\nChristianity has deteriorated\n. . .\" but it is most unusual\n(particularly for , those of us\nwho've been called everything\nbut) to hear someone term the\nSCM \"reactionary\" or basking in the security of the\n\"status quo\". I have been to\nSCM work camps where\natheist students enjoyed the\n\"stfcnulating clash of dialectics\" and have participated in\nNational Study Conferences\nwhere some of. the arguing was\nso \"open\" as to drive away in\nhorror the \"traditional'' Chris-\nian. If we in Hut L-5 have\nactually given the impression that we are not prepared\nto invite such discussion, then\nwe accept your criticism and\ninvite your help to correct the\nsituation.\nYou tell us to look at the\nworld outside our hut \u2014 I invite you then, as part of that\nworld, to help us face the main\nissues with which we are commonly concerned, for without\nyour opinions our picture is\nnot clear.\nDAVID G. SMITH\nSCM Nat'l Student\nChairman. Thursday, November 2, 1961\nTHE UBYSSEY\nfage 3\nIDEAS\nat targe\n\u2014 FREEDOM \u2014\nBy PETER PENZ\nUbyssey Staff Writer\n'Long live freedom. Freedom\nis a thought that has pervaded\nman's thinking throughout the\nmany centuries and millennia of\nfhe existence of homo sapiens.\nWhat is usually not taken into\naccount by the impassioned patriot who shouts \"Long live\nfreedom! Down with the enemy!\" is the complexity of freedom.\nAbsolute freedom of action of\nthe individual is anarchy. It\nmeans that nobody has any\npolitical control over anyone.\nBut it leads to chaos and undermines the freedom to live in\npeace and order. Democracy has\nestablished, at the expense of\nthe dissenter's freedom to act\ncontrary to the dictate of the\nmajority, an order which provides feedom for \"the people\".\nThe totalitarian wants to frete\nthe people from the slowness\nand inefficiency of the cumbersome democratic process. And\nthe feudalist wanted to free the\npeople from troublesome responsibilities by providing for them\nan atmosphere of childlike felicity, as Dostoevsky's Grand\nInquisitor so fervently argues.\nYet this means authoritarianism\nand the abdication of political\nfreedom by the ordinary man.\n\u00bb: An important issue in the\nCold War is the inflated dich-\n>tomy between the private enterprise system and the controlled\nsconomy. The advocate of the\nfirst order will proclaim the\nvirtues of. freedom of enterprise.\nHis opponent will say it also\nneans the worker's freedom to\ntarve and the economic dictatorship of the bourgeoisie and will\night for freedom from economic\nvant.\nThe freedom o f enterprise\nnay also conflict with the free-\nlo'm of making a wise choice.\n\\jiybody who has read Vance\nPackard's Hidden Persuaders\nvill agree that there are means\no decisively influence men's\nictions by propoganda and indoctrination is important, con-\nrol has to be exercised over the\n>ersuaders, which, however, is\nform of censorship.\n, With the increasing popular-\nzation of Freud's hobby, people\niave become more conscious of\nheir desires and inhibitions.\nComplete personal freedom\nvould give the green light to\n11 the latent forces of the id\nnd the sweeping aside of all\numbersome and frustrating in-\n4bitions. But such an unin-\nibited world would inevitably\nlass with freedom from in-\nerurity and violence.\nWhat has happened to the\nlory of freedom now? Perhaps\nre can salvage something from\nlis confusion of abstractions,\n'erhaps we can draw a com-\nfomise between this profusion\nf extremes in order to arrive\nf a conclusion, a conclusion,\nuite peculiar to our personal\nlaracters.\nBut let's be wary about who\nthe defender of freedom and\n'ho is its violator. The usage of\nle word freedom is usually\niuch too superficial.\nENGAGEMENT RINGS\nEnjrag'empnt ring's of the finest\nquality at'e available to you near\nmanufacturer's cost\nFOR PFRPOXAL, PRRVTfR\nAXD INFORMATION CATA,\nPAUL CURTISS-RE 1-7928\nA-ts IV After i> p.m.\nReward offered for\nstolen football gear\nA down marker and four\ncorner flags valued at more\nthan $30 were stolen after the\nHomecoming football game,\nSaturday, an athletic department official said.\nA reward has been offered\nfor their return.\nWUSC book\nproblem\nnears end\nBy GEORGE RAILTON\nThe problem of the World\nUniversity Service books is almost solved, the committee\nchairman reported to student\ncouncil Monday night.\nStuart Robson said the committee has had' a large number\nof requests for books from universities around the world. It is\nexpected that distribution of the\n7,000 texts will be well under\nway by Christmas.\nThe books were gathered in\n\u2022j drive last spring and were\nintended for Japanese and\nPakistani universities. Only ten\nof the books matched the needs\nof the two countries' schools\nand the remainder of the books\nsit in the basement of Robson's\nhome.\nRobson said the main problem\nis to make sure all the books\nwill be used, even the grade\nfour readers.\nHe said his committee spent\nfive weeks this summer compiling a 5\u00a3-page book title list and\nboxing the books.\nHe said the list has been sent\nto WUS headquarters in Geneva and to a dozen universities.\nFellowships available\nStudents interested in receiving Theological fellowships will be interviewed by\na University nominating committee Tuesday, in Buchanan\n256, at 2 p.m.\nThe fellowships are being\noffered by the Rockefeller\nBrothers Theological Fellowship Program and enable\nProtestant university graduates to study theology for a\nyear at any accredited theological college of their choice\nin Canada or the U.S.\nStudents may not apply for\nthe scholarships but may be\nnominated by a faculty member or clergyman.\nInformation may be obtained from Dr. R. M. Clark\nin the Department of Economics in Buchanan 2276.\nTUXEDO\nRENTAL & SALES\n1,000 Men's Formal Wear |\nGarments to Choose From!\nE. A. Lee Ltd.\nOne Store Only!\n623 Howe St. MU 3-2457\nPoint Grey\nRiding Stable\nRiding lessons available at\neasonable rates. 20 horses\nfor rent. Ring and trail rides\nalso. Time may be arranged.\nLocated on Univ. Endowment\nLands. Convenient bus trans-\noortaticn- Phone AM 1-3752\nafter 6 p.m.\nDisarmament speaker\nJude claims crisis of despair'\nBy MIKE GRENBY\nMankind is at present suffering a severe nervous breakdown in a crisis of despair,\nsaid nuclear disarmament\ncampaigner Francis Jude\nTuesday.\n\"In the course of time all\nthis will change.\" Jude said,\n\"but we must see to it that\nsuch an element of time will\nexist in the future.\"\nThe world is coming to accept nuclear war as inevitable,\nhe said, and this tendsncy\nmust be checked.\n\"We must bring a little\nsanity back to this insane\nworld in which we live,\" said\nJude, the Secretary of the\nChristian Group of the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament.\nPrayer is not enough for\nChristians, concrete action is\nnecessary as well, he said.\nFRANCIS JUDE\n. . bomb-banner\n\"The most needful thing in\nthe world today- is an organized and responsible third\nvoice in the council of nations,\" Jude said.\n\"This group would be in\na good position to spark a disarmament race.\"\nHe urged that everyone\nspread \"a contagious disease\nof peace from one to another\" and he said that \"this\ndisease must spread rapidly\"\nif the human race is to survive.\nA member of the audience\nasked Jude whether he would\nrather be \"Red than dead.\"\n\"With the policy I have outlined neither would be necessary,\" answered Jude.\n\"But in the last resort I\nwould prefer to be dead by\nthe Reds than by any H-\nbom-b.\"\nFrom Page 1\nStudent Court\nrather than those of justice in\nparticipating in the decision.\n\"But my conscience is clear,\"\nhe said.\n\"The decision was a technical\none involving interpretation of\nthe wording of the constitution\nand I feel I would have made\nthe same decision under any\ncircumstances,\" he added.\n\"I considered whether or not\nI was able to make an impartial\ndecision, not what people would\nthink. Perhaps I should have.\"\n\"The court has no rules of\nprocedure in such cases and I\ndid what I thought was fair at\nthe time.\"\nUBC Blood Drive\nreceives praises\nfor 1,864 pint total\nIn a letter to President N. A.\nM. MacKenzie, Red Cross Blood\nDonor Panel Organizer W. H.\nChisholm, congratulated the\nstudent body and the staff on\ntheir support of the Blood Drive.\nA total of 2,222 donors presented themselves during the one\nweek drive, giving a net collection of 1,864 pints of blood or a\ndaily average of 372.8 pints, the\nletter said.\nThe letter states that \". . . all\nwho were involved are to be\ncongratulated, especially the\ndonors to whom we are very\ngrateful.\nVarsity Fabrics\n4437 W. 10th Ave CA 4-0842\nYard Goods, McCall Patterns\nSewing Supplies\nOpen Friday 'til 9\nDIVERS\nTake advantage of the Pre-\nXmas clearance sale. This\nweek only\n20% OFF\nEverything in the Store\nNew Sportaway's Equipment\nNow in Stock\nCustom-made Wet Suits from\n39.95\nAqualand\nDiving Centre\n875 King-sway \u2014 TR 6-6011\nSpecialists In Custom-made\nForestry to help pay\nfor damage to Brock\nForestry Undergraduate Society executive decided Wednesday to give the Alma Mater Society $10 to help pay for damage to Brock Hall during last\nweek's \"King\" crowning ceremonies.\nForestry, Engineering and Agriculture societies' representatives had earlier agreed at a\nstudent discipline committee\nmeeting to ask members to\nagree to paying $10 each toward the $80 damage bill incurred at the ceremony of\n\"King of the World\" Homer\nTomlinson.\n\"Our members were there\nbut we don't feel that they were\nresponsible for the damage\ndone,\" said forestry vice-president Jack Newman.\nEngineers and Aggies are undecided yet as to what is to be\ndone. Spokesmen for both societies said it was too early\nto say whether they will follow\nthe Foresters' lead.\nStudent council cannot force\nthe societies to pay, as there is\nno machinery in the Alma Mater Society constitution for such\naction.\nBE THE HEAD OF THE CLASS!\nLeader Beauty Salon\n4447 W. 10th AVENUE CAstle 4-4744\nOPEN FRIDAY NIGHTS\nSt. Anselm's Church\nUniversity Boulevard\nCOME AND HEAR\nThe Rev. Professor G. G. W. Nicholls\nHead of the Department of Religious Studies, U.B.C.\nSaturday night, November 5, at 7:30 p.m.\nDISCUSSION AND REFRESHMENTS FOLLOW\nCIVIL SERVICE OF CANADA\nCAREER OPPORTUNITIES FOR\nUNIVERSITY GRADUATES\nin\nEconomic and Historical Research\nForeign Service\nPublic Administration\n\u2022 Starting salaries range upwards from $4560 per annum\n($380 per month)\n\u2022 Regular salary increases\n\u2022 Numerous opportunities for promotion\n\u2022 Generous fringe benefits\nWRITTEN EXAMINATION - NOVEMBER 4, 1961\nFOR DETAILED INFORMATION SEE YOUR UNIVERSITY\nPLACEMENT OFFICER Page 4\nTHE UBYSSEY\nThursday, November 2, 1961\n'TWEEN CLASSES\nBonner to speak today\nUBC SOCIAL CREDIT\nAttorney General Robert Bonner will speak tn Brock Lounge,\nnoon today, ori the \"B.C. Electric and other topics.\"\nINDIA'S STUDENT ASSN.\nDocumentary.. films on India\ntonight in International house,\n8 p.m. All welcome.\nT* V V\nDANCE CLUB\nA special instruction session\nwill be held in the clubroom at\n1:30 today. Jive Flips will be\ntaught. Non-members welcome.\n9ff \u00abJ\u00ab *fi\nJR. CHEM CLUB\nDr. Hooley speaks on \"Chemistry in Europe\", noon Friday,\nin Chem. 25fri\nX. If. If.\nFOLKSONG SOC.\nMeeting in Bu. 104 noon to-\niday. Members only.\nit, if. if.\nWRITERS' WORKSHOP\nMeeting at 3591 West llth\ntonight at 8:3\u00ab;\n*F V \u2022*\u2022\nROD AND GUN\nGeneral meeting noon today\nin Bu. 217. Films will be shown.\nSPORTS CAR CLUB\nBy-election meeting for Vice-\nPres> in Chem. 250 at noon.\nSpecial new film, \"Player's 200-\nMospprt\".\n^f* *t* ,T\"\nINTERNATIONAL HOUSE\n- Political PaneI Discussion\nneon today li itaternatitHiat\nMouse. A1bo; \u00bb in^tirig \u00bbf those\n^terestfd? in macwetiftg, sluing\nat Banff after Christinas.\n',$,-* *\nA fijte att*;\u25a0twlfl'^peakers out-\nliningt the pfiilosoffliy and practice of contemporary Buddhism,\nSunday at 35 p.m., International\nHouse.\n* * *\nPEP BAND\nMeet in the Armory instead\nof Hut L6 for practices until\nfurther notice.\nRental Service\nTUXEDOS\nBlack Suits, Formols,\nCostumes, Make-up;\nSpecial Student Rates\nNew York\nCostume Solon\n4397 W. lOHi CA 40034\nNear UBC Gates\nUPPER\nTENTH\nM*.\n4574 W. IdflrlSiVE.\nOne Block Past tKte Gates\n[ Featitring European Trained\nBarkers\nFOt SiME\ncmnrsiaiaiiE\u2014'so aiocris Mta-\n\u00bbr, Ilk* sew tap, dual vxpes, discs.\nDandy s&stpe. Come see far yourself! Call \u00bbtTBT at AM 6-2473\n(after 7:30 p.m.).\nACCOMMODATION\nMale student to share beautiful view apt., own room. $30\nmo. Near campus. Call CA\n4-0133.\nDEMOLAY CLUB\nFirst meeting of the year. Important that all attend.\n* * *\nPSYCHOLOGY CLUB\nA film: \"Psychiatry in Action\"\nat noon today in Bu. 102. Ten\ncents for non-members.\n* * *\nGERMAN CLUB\nMr. Kai Hermann and Mr.\nFrank Schmidt-Husen will speak\non the German university system. Talks will be in English.\nFriday noon, Bu. 204.\nCariboo bishop in\nBrock next Friday\nThe University Religious\nCouncil and the Varsity Christian Fellowship are sponsoring\nan address at 12:30 on Friday\nin Brock lounge by Bishop\nRalph Dean, Anglican Bishop\nof the Cariboo on \"Who is a\nDisciple?\"\nThe University Religious\nCouncil is composed of student\nrepresentatives of Catholic, Protestant and; Jewish religious\nclubs on the ; campus, faculty\nmembers and eight chaplains\nactive on the campus. Bishop\nDean is the first of a number of\nspeakers whom the Council\nhopes to sponsor this year.\nUBC CLASSIFIED\nWANTED: Would the five students who paid $30 on lease\nfor house on 2026 W. 14th\nAve., Van., on Sept. 7, please\nphone WE 8-3225. Urgent. M.\nMajor.\nWANTED: I'd like to borrow for\nreview a Spanish 90 text book\nfrom someone not taking the\ncourse' this year. Call MU\n1-2063 after 5:30 p.m.\nWANTED: Commerce 151 tutor\nfor immediate employment.\nDesperately needed! Contact\nJim at CA 4-9688.\nWANTED: Tutor in Math. 120.\nWill pay of course. Please\ncall Ruth W. at CA 4-9033 or\nCA 4-9922.\nWANTED: Frosh. Anyone inter-\n\u25a0 ested in writing for the frosh\nnewsletter or doing typing,\nmeet in room 260 Brock Ex-\ntention Monday noon.\n'Salesman1 reading\nThe UBC Players Club is\npresenting a reading of \/Death\nof a Salesman', noon todajy and\nFriday, in the Auditorium.\nThe cost for all students is\n25