{"AggregatedSourceRepository":[{"label":"Aggregated Source Repository","value":"CONTENTdm","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:dataProvider"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The name or identifier of the organization who contributes data indirectly to an aggregation service (e.g. Europeana)"}],"CatalogueRecord":[{"label":"Catalogue Record","value":"http:\/\/resolve.library.ubc.ca\/cgi-bin\/catsearch?bid=1211252","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isReferencedBy","classmap":"edm:ProvidedCHO","property":"dcterms:isReferencedBy"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isReferencedBy","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource that references, cites, or otherwise points to the described resource."}],"Collection":[{"label":"Collection","value":"University Publications","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:isPartOf"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource in which the described resource is physically or logically included."}],"DateAvailable":[{"label":"Date Available","value":"2015-08-05","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dcterms:issued"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Date of formal issuance (e.g., publication) of the resource."}],"DateIssued":[{"label":"Date Issued","value":"1965-02-11","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:issued"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Date of formal issuance (e.g., publication) of the resource."}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"label":"Digital Resource Original Record","value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/Ubysseynews\/items\/1.0125667\/source.json","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:aggregatedCHO"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The identifier of the source object, e.g. the Mona Lisa itself. This could be a full linked open date URI or an internal identifier"}],"FileFormat":[{"label":"File Format","value":"application\/pdf","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dc:format"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource.; Examples of dimensions include size and duration. Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the list of Internet Media Types [MIME]."}],"FullText":[{"label":"Full Text","value":" ^FMM^S    If O If f\"  ^ff \u25a0 How about\ngalore f   H f     Iff D  F3 JCf more?\n^\u25a0f       ^B   ^V     ^HB ^^V      ^B^V      ^V      MlV     ^^V     ^^H       ^W Bennett)\nVOL. XLVII, No. 47\nVANCOUVER, B.C., THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 11,  1965\nCA 4-3916\nBonanza boosts grads\n$7 million grant\n'most generous'\n\u2014bert mackinnon photo\nCAGED  AMS  president-elect  Byron   Hender and Roger MacAfee (behind Hender) were\nparaded before the Library Wednesday noon. Earlier, 50 Engineers kidnapped Hender\nand MacAfee from their offices in Brock Hall.  Later the  redshirts  carried  a  chopped\nred Austin into Brock Hall. Engineering Week continues (See story page 2).\nTribute of silence\nQuiet ceremony\nsalutes Naegele\nA tribute of words and a tribute of silence was paid Monday to dean Kaspar Naegele,\nPresident John Macdonald,\nphilosophy head Dr. Barnett\nSavery, student Robert Anderson and acting dean Dr. Dennis Healy spoke of the Dean of\nArts who Saturday fell to his\ndeath from the tenth floor of\nthe Vancouver General Hospital.\nIMMEASURABLE LOSS\nMore than 1,000 hushed students and faculty members\nlistened to the simple, 20-\nminute commemoration ceremony.\nPresident Macdonald spoke\nof the loss to the university\nand the immeasurable personal loss.\n\"Not one of us can help but\nfeel that our aspirations will\nbe harder of attainment without him,\" he said.\n\"Why did he die?\n\"Not one of us can hope to\nanswer; yet not one of us can\nhelp but torment himself with\nthe question,\" the university\npresident said.\nMODEST AND HUMBLE\n\"Modest and humble in the\nextreme, I know this man who\nperceived others with clarity\nand compassion, could not see\nJELLYFISH\nGOT AWAY\nSee page 3\nin himself the greatness of\nhis gifts.\n\"That was his tragedy and\nnow it is ours,\" said Dr. Macdonald.\nDr. Barnett Savery spoke\nof his closeness to the Dean.\n\"Only last Friday I took my\nproblems to Kaspar and everything was wonderful, everything was fine.\"\n\"Now these is no Kaspar to\ntake the problems to,\" Dr.\nSavery said.\nFourth year arts student\nRobert Anderson talked of Dr.\nNaegele as a teacher and\nfriend.\n\"When a man comes to us\nand suggests to us through his\nown style of life a fresh\ncourse we become really excited. And so we go to see him\noften.\nTEACHER AND FRIEND\n\"And he asked us to live to\nthe last minute, and then, at\nthat moment, we would see\nour equations written out,\"\nsaid Anderson.\n\"We can say that for him all\nactions were symbolic.\n\"They were statements. And\nhe has made a statement, discreet and final, and it is true.\"\nDr. Dennis Healy, who was\nMonday appointed acting dean\nof arts, spoke about Dr. Naegele's tireless work for the university.\n\"There was something about\nKaspar Naegele that made\npeople want to give the best\nthey had \u2014 and they did.\"\nBOB CRUISE\n. . . re-elected\nCruise in\nwith big\nmajority\nBy CAROL ANNE BAKER\nIncumbent Bob Cruise was\nreturned as AMS first vice\npresident Monday by an overwhelming majority.\nMore than 4,300 students\ncast 2,675 votes for Cruise and\n1,698 votes for opponent\nCharles Boylan. First slate elections last Wednesday saw\njust under 5,000 students vote.\n\"I hope Cruise carries\nthrough his election platform\nin the coming year,\" Boylan\nsaid after his defeat. \"I'll be\nhere next year to watch him.\"\n\"I campaigned extremely\nhard, as did Charlie,\" said\nCruise. \"I wish to thank particularly my campaigners from\nFort Camp and Lower Mall.\"\n\"This election has done\nmuch to dispel and destroy tne\nold image of the Brock bureaucrat,\" Cruise said.\n(Continued on Page 2)\nSEE: ELECTION\nBy RICHARD BLAIR\nLumber magnate H. R. MacMillan's $7.2 million gift to\nUBC will put the university on par with U.S. ivy league\ncolleges, president John Macdonald said Wednesday.\nMacMillan announced Wednesday a $3 million grant to\nthe UBC Library which, with interest earnings over a 10-\nyear period, will total close to $4 million. The money will\ncome ffom MacMillan's personal resources.\nMoney for postgraduate fellowships totalling $3.2 million\nover 20 years will come from the MacMillan Family Fund.\n\"These fellowships will put\nus into competition \u25a0with the\ntop U.S. colleges such as Yale,\"\nsaid Macdonald.\nIn addition, Union College\nand the Anglican Theological\nCollege each receive $1 million endowment funds from\nMacMillan personally.\nThe $3 million gift to the\nLibrary will provide $300,000\na year for 10 years to supplement the operating budget for\nbooks  and  periodicals.\nThe fellowships for PhD students will provide $3,200 a\nyear for up to three years for\neach student and will be renewable each year depending\non performance.\n$500 FOR OVERHEAD\nUBC will receive $500 a\nyear for each fellowship for\noverhead and essential travel.\nMacdonald said: \"I believe\nthese are the most generous\ngifts ever made to graduate\neducation in Canada.\n\"Our first priority is to increase the number of our\ngraduate and post-BA professional students from 2,099 at\npresent to 5,500 by 1973.\"\nHe said the 1,300 graduate\nstudents at UBC receive an\naverage of about $1,000 each\nand the U.S. average is about\n$3,000 a graduate student.\n\"The library gift will provide tremendous impetus to\nour graduate program by\nstrengthening our ability to\nprovide library resources essential for research work and\nadvanced study,\" he said.\nTWO MILLION BOOKS\n\"The present 700,000 volumes will rise to two million\nvolumes by 1975 to make our\nlibrary the best in Canada.\nThese facilities are crucial for\nattracting top-flight faculty\nand graduate students,\" said\nMacdonald.\nThe endowment funds for\nthe two protestant colleges\nwill be used for research,\nscholarship  and  training.\nStaff members will be given\nopportunities for travel and\nstudy, visiting lecturers will\nbe brought to campus and refresher courses will be offered to B.C. clergymen.\nThe first 15 H. R. MacMillan fellowships will be available in September. By September 1967, there will be 45 fel-\n(Conlinued on Page S)\nSEE:   GIFT\nJOHN MACDONALD\n. . . buy books\nGift made\ndreams\nreality\nWednesday's gifts to UBC\nwere president John Macdonald's dreams come true.\nIn his recently-issued 1963-64\nannual report, Dr. Macdonald\nasked: \"Graduate work must\nbe heavily subsidized: the number of graduate students will\ngrow in direct ratio to money\npoured into their support.\"\nAnd Wednesday money for\n$3.2 million worth of postgraduate fellowships over 20\nyears was authorized from the\nH. R. MacMillan Family Fund.\n\"This money must be used to\nestablish fellowships and to\nbuy books and equipment,\"\nMacdonald said.\nAnd a $3 million grant to\nUBC library from the* lumber\nmagnate's personal resources\npromises a total of nearly $4\nmillion, when interest earnings\nover a 10-year period are\nadded.\nUBC head librarian Basil\nStuart-Stubbs said Wednesday\nhe will use his money to aid\nthe two main kinds of graduate\nstudents on campus.\n\"This   means   many   more\nperiodicals   for   the   scientists\nwho want to keep, up on the\nlatest developments, and more\n(Continued on Page 5)\nSEE: DREAM Page 2\nTHE     UBYSSEY\nThursday,  February  11,  1965\nCaged\npoliticos\nparaded\nThe redshirts were joined\nWednesday noon by a red\nskirt.\nAMS president-elect Byron\nHender wore the girlish attire.\nHe was joined in a steel\ncage by Roger McAfee, present AMS president.\nThe cage was paraded\naround campus by a group of\nengineers.\nAbout 200 formed a parade\nwith a red car, a large red\ncardboard beer mug and the\ncage.\nEarlier the two AMS executives were peacefully abducted from their Brock offices.\nMcAfee pleaded physical incapability but was escorted to\nthe Engineering building\nwhere the parade began.\n\"This is goddam uncomfortable,\" McAfee protested as he\nwas led into the cage.\n\"Shut up or they'll split\nyou tongue,\" Hender suggested.\nThe cage was rolled along\non a dolly down the main\nmall, past Brock and around\nto the flag pole by the Faculty\nClub.\nAt the flag pole the red ensign was lowered and the\ngiant red cardboard mug was\nraised in its place.\nThe caged occupants were\nlater released.\nCANADIAN      COMMUNIST\nparty chairman Tim Buck's\ntalk here has been rescheduled for Monday noon in\nHebb theatre.\nELECTION\n(Continued from Page 1)\nThe heaviest poll was in\nSouth Brock where there were\n347 votes for Cruise and 150\nfor Boylan.\nThere were 22 spoils.\nPresident-elect Byron Hender was elected last Wednesday with a 466-vote lead over\nhis nearest contender.\nAlso elected in the first slate\nwas AMS secretary-elect Joan\nCurtis.\nTreasurer-elect Mike Sommers and first vice-presidentelect Peter Braund were elected by acclamation.\nAMS co-ordinator of activities Graham Vance was returned by acclamation.\nScienceman hits\ntowing red tape\nA tow-away led to the run-\naround Tuesday for a science\nstudent.\nRoger Magnall, Science IV,\ntold The Ubyssey he got the\nrunaround when he tried to\ndollect $13 damages to his\ncar after it was towed away\nfrom C-lot Tuesday:\n\"I noticed later the panel\nunder the back bumper of my\ncar was dented and scratched,\"\nsaid Magnall. \"The Traffic\noffice people told me to take\nmy complaint to Fraserview\nTowing.\"\n(Fraserview Towing are\ncalled in to help when UBC's\nregular company, Ken's, cannot handle all the work, Traffic Director Sir Ouvry Roberts explained.)\nThe towing company refused to pay damages because\nof the release I signed when\nI paid $10 towing charges,\"\nMagnall said.\n\"The damage is small but\nit is the principle of the thing\nthat worries me.  It was  ob-\nviously done by the tow\ntruck,\" he said.\n\"Students should check\ntheir cars carefully before\nsigning the release.\"\nSir Ouvry said students\nshould register a complaint\nwith his traffic office as well\nas the towing company. If\nthey are not satisfied with the\ntowing company's settlement,\nhe said, they should register\nanother complaint to him.\nDean to head\nhate probe\nMONTREAL (CUP) \u2014The\ndean of the McGill University's law faculty has been appointed chairman of a special\ncommittee to study hate literature.\nDr. Maxwell Cohen is one\nof seven Canadians appointed\nby Justice Minister Guy Fav-\nreau to form the committee.\nCanadian universities were\nplagued with hate literature\nlast year.\nWestern Canada's Largest\nFORMAL WEAR RENTALS\nTuxedos White 4. Blue Coats\nFull  Dress Shirts & Accessories\nMorning Coats Blue  Blazers\nDirectors' Coats 10%  UBC Discount\nOVER 2000 GARMENTS TO CHOOSE FROM\nE. A. LEE Formal Wear Rentals\n623 HOWE  (Downstairs)   MU 3-2457\n2608 Granville (at 10th)   4683 Kingsway (Bby.)\nRE 3-6727 (by Sears) HE 1-1160\nATTENTION!\nInstructions in Modern Conversational Greek will be\noffered at evening classes\nthrough the Vancouver\nNight School. Any one interested please write or\nphone The Greek Canadian\nCultural Society, 304 - 718\nGranville Street, Vancouver\n2, B.C.\nPhone: 681-6171\nANNUAL\nSALE\nof\nDISCONTINUED TEXTS\nART PRINTS\nand\nSTATIONERY ITEMS\n\u2022\nBegins\nTuesday\nFeb. 16\n\u2022\nUNIVERSITY\nBOOK STORE Thursday, February 11, 1965\nTHE     UBYSSEY\nPage 3\nFiery\nCaouette\ncoming\nBy DAVE ORCHARD\nFiery Creditiste leader Real\nCaouette is coming to campus.\nSecretary-treasurer of campus Creditistes Murray Farr,\nArts IV, said Wednesday\nCaouette will speak here Feb.\n25 or 26, probably in the\nArmory.\nCaouette is listed as one of\nthe patrons of the Creditiste's\nSemi-Formal Protest Ball,\nscheduled for Brock at 9 p.m.\nFeb. 19.\nOther patrons are Dr. and\nMrs. Bernard Lundahl, and\nPremier and Mrs. W. A. C.\nBennett.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\n\"I don't know if the other\npatrons will be there, but\nCaouette will be in Edmonton\nthe night of the ball,\" Farr\nsaid.\nClub president Barry Cooper said: \"It is clearly the Protest that is semi-formal, not\nthe ball.\"\n\"The ball itself,\" he said,\n\"is to be utterly unformed,\nwhile the nature of the Protest is a more Complex phenomenon to describe.\"\nFarr said the protest is being directed against the refusal of Model Parliament to\ngrant political party status to\nthe Creditiste Club.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nThe ball will feature the\nChessmen, special Creditiste\nrecords, and a French Canadian Creditiste organizer from\nMontreal.\n\"A certain cultural dress is\nusually worn, one intended to\nreflect the modern dilemma of\nalienation and despair bred in\nthe persona by a modern capitalist society,\" said Cooper.\n\"The transcendental state of\nconsciousness may be achieved\nby a full participation in the\nevening's ritual,\" said Cooper.\n\"Music and atmosphere is\ndesigned to effect such a state\nby an emphasis on patterns\nof recurrence and movement.-'\n\u2014bert macklnnon photo\nIt doesn't hurt, realeeee ....\nSteel men to drive\nhuman wheelbarrows\nA wheelbarrow race with human wheelbarrows will run\nFriday noon from Main Mall to the Armory.\nThe race is to spotlight the\nMotion deplored\nRed Cross blood drive on\ncampus which started Monday\nand runs to Feb. 26.\nEach undergraduate society\nis invited to send two representatives, said organizer\nWayne Green of Forestry Undergraduate Society, who are\nsponsoring the blood drive.\nPrize is a case of liquid refreshment, Green said.\nMore than 900 students had\ndonated by Wednesday, according to Red Cross officials.\nThis is about on a par with\nlast year, they said.\nPlastic jellyfish\none that got away\nYou should have seen the jellyfish that got away Tuesday afternoon.\nIt was 50 feet in diameter,\nfull of helium, worth $500 and\nhad 30 handlers.\nIt was engineer - architect\nJeffrey Lindsay's polyethylene\nmaze \u2014 meant to be a \"jelly-\nfish\". It was moored in front\nof the Arts building as part\nof the Contemporary Arts\nFestival.\nBut it got away.\n\"It was an accident,\" said\nassociate professor of Architecture Abe Rogatnick.\n\"It was a free-floating structure display, not meant to be\nreleased, but some people\nstarted cutting the lines,\" he\nsaid.\nHe said the Department of\nTransport was notified of the\naccidental release because the\nballoon could have been dangerous to aircraft.\nBut a DOT spokesman at\nVancouver International Airport said the jellyfish probably burst in the upper atmosphere.\nHe said the balloon would\nhave been difficult to track\nwith radar as it contained no\nreflecting  material.\nMike's odes\nprobed\nProfessor R. J. Clemens will\nspeak on Michaelangelo \u2014\nHis Poetry as a Key to his\nArt in La.  104 Friday noon.\nFriday evening at 8:00 p.m.\nin Bu. 106 he will speak on\nDante and the Western World.\nProf. Clemens is a professor\nof Romance studies and head\nof the department of Comparative Literature at New York\nUniversity Graduate school.\nSTYX\nCOFFEE HOUSE\n48tb, and  Elliott St.\nLadner\nFri. & Sat. Folk Singing\nSunday, Talent Night\nBILL GRAHAM\nFrom The Clansmen\nFebruary 12-13\nalso\nTHE TERRA-NOVAS\nWhigs threaten\nsplit with CULF\nThe UBC Liberal club is threatening to pull out of the\nCanadian University Liberal Federation.\nThe UBC Liberals are pro\ntesting a resolution passed by\nthe National CULF convention\nheld in Ottawa last week.\n\"The resolution was passed\nthat with due respect to Her\nMajesty the Queen, that she\nbe removed as head of state\nof Canada and be replaced by\nthe Governor-General,\" said\nPeter Braund, UBC Liberal\npresident.\n\"It was the last resolution\nof the convention brought up\nSunday afternoon,\" Braund\nsaid.\n\"Only half the delegates\nwere there. A lot of them had\nalready left for home,\" he\nsaid.\n\"It was an individual vote\nso the eastern clubs with more\ndelegates pulled the vote\nthrough,\" he said.\n\"The Queen may not be a\nunifying symbol in Canada\nbut removing her could have\na disunifying result,\" Braund\nsaid.\n\"The vote was a flagrant\nviolation of democratic procedure.\n\"After the resolution was\npassed we told the convention\nwe would seriously consider\nrevoking our charter from\nCULF,\" Braund said.\n\"All the western clubs were\nwith us.\n\"Our club will spend the\nnext couple of days considering the move,\" Braund said.\nThe UBC club won the\nArthur Laing trophy for the\nbest Western club.\n\"All the talk was about the\nQueen and the theme of the\nconvention was Canada and\nthe U.S. and Canada in international affairs,\" Braund said.\nUBC delegates were Allan\nGould, treasurer, Liz MacKenzie, vice-president, Bob Peyton, past CULF president and\nBraund.\nNEW YORK\nFORMAL  WEAR\nTUXEDO'S\nTAILS\nWHITE DINNER\nJACKETS\nSPECIAL RATES\nFOR STUDENTS\n4397 W.   10th Ave.\n24 Hr. Service      CA 4-0034\n* Eye Glasses\n* Contact Lenses\n* Prescriptions Filled\n* Immediate Optical\nServices\n- Student Rates -\nPITMAN OPTICAL\nVancouver Block\n734 Granville       MU 5-0928\n\"A CURTAIN OF IGNORANCE\"\nHear World-Famous Correspondent\nFELIX GREENE\nAuthor of \"AWAKENED CHINA\"\n; Tell how tht American and Canadian Public \/\nhavo been mis-informed about CHINA\nThe only American-based correspondent who has been to China I\nmore than once since the Revolution, Felix Greene returns from\nhis  third' trip In recent years to tell of the startling changes i\n\\ that are taking place.       ,\nTravelling 12,000 mites* In three and one-half months, this\ntrained observer covered both urban and agricultural areas of\n| the Chinese mainland, venturing far into the hinterlands. Granted\npermission to travel freely In nomadic Inner Mongolia, he rode\n. camels In cold blizzards and took jeeps through trackless wastes\nI. to learn the true conditions there.\n\u2022    Is life behind the,Bamboo Curtain as grim as it is painted\nI in the Canadian press? Felix Greene spoke with people in all\n'walks   of  life  from  Prime  Minister Chou   En-lal  down  to the ,\nsmallest child in the most remote area of the country senior j\n\u00a7tvil   servants,   commune   leaders,   Western   diplomats,   artists.\"\noctors,  teachers,  religious leaders, and Just plain people.   He .\npresents a vivid cross-section of an awakened and growing China i\n| at this crucial moment In its history. '\nSATURDAY, FEB. 13th, 8 p.m.\nP.N.E GARDEN AUDITORIUM\nSponsored by the Canada-China Friendship Association\nAdmission $1, Students 50c\nJack of Hearts\nThe annual Jack of Hearts\nBall will be held Sat., Feb.\n13th, in Brock Lounge, 9:00\np.m. to 1:00 a.m. 5-piece\norchestra and half time entertainment.\n$2.50 Couple\nTickets  at AMS.  Office\nSpecial Student Performance\nThursday, 12.30\n75c\nAuditorium\n\u2014^* nuuiiviium ^i\nBells Are Ringing\nAdults: Wednesdoy thru Saturday Night\n1.50 - 2.00 - 2.50\nTickets at CA 4-1111 or CA 4-3242 THE UBYSSEY\nPublished Tuesdays, Thursdays and Fridays throughout the university\nyear by the Alma Mater Society, University of B.C. Editorial opinions\nexpressed are those of the editor and not necessarily those of the AMS\nor the University. Editorial office, CA 4-3916. Advertising office, CA 4-3242,\nLoc. 26. Member Canadian University Press. Founding member, Pacific\nStudent Press. Authorized as second-class mail by Post Office Department,\nOttawa, and for payment of postage in cash.\nWinner Canadian University Press trophies for general\nexcellence and news photography.\nTHURSDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1965\nSuee, i'll tell\nVOU fRMKLY\nWHY I c,N\\0K\u00a3\nMMiUMNA,\t\nLETTERS\nVulgarity\nThe President's Report on UBC's 1963-64 academic\nyear is recommended reading.\nIt's full of facts and figures.\nIt's a compact but comprehensive statement on the\nactivities and accomplishments of UBC's faculty and\nstaff \u2014 as seen from where Dr. John Macdonald sits.\nAmong a wealth of interesting data, we find in the\nsection on the Faculty of Arts two especially illuminating sentences:\nThere are (other faculty members) whose names\nare not found in the University's Bibliography for\nsome years, for they are devoting themselves to the\nkind of long-range scholarship that eventually finds\nits fulfilment in books. Such men must not be subjected to the contemporary vulgar pressure to\npublish.\nWe commend the president for his stand.\nBut why should the waiving of this admittedly vulgar\npressure apply only to those devoting themselves to a\n\"kind of long-range scholarship . . . ?\"\nThe fact that 77 pages of the 144-page report\nare devoted to the university bibliography\u2014publications\nof faculty and staff\u2014would indicate that far too many\nfaculty members are \"subjected to the contemporary\nvulgar pressure to publish.\"\nA man can be required to be teacher, administrator\nand author to only a certain degree before one of his\njobs\u2014not to mention the man himself\u2014begins to suffer.\nUnfortunately, from the student's point of view, the\nfirst job to be neglected is too often that of teaching.\nMore unfortunately, from anyone's point of view,\nthe man himself begins to suffer under the pressure.\nMore than one prof will privately speak out against\nthe system.\nBut neither individual faculty members nor the\nfaculty association will publicly denounce this system\nwhich demands that profs publish to gain professional,\nacademic and financial advancement.\nThe system is nothing new \u2014 it's been around for\nyears and some say it's endemic to any overcrowded\nand under-financed university.\nBut this is no justification for maintaining the status\nquo.\nThe President's Report has offered the hint of a lead.\nThat lead should be followed\u2014the earlier and the\nmore vigorously the better\u2014by the faculty association,\nthe Senate, and the president himself.\nThe vulgar pressure to publish should be given\nintense scrutiny and met with honest, outright resistance.\nWell-treated\nOrganizers of the high school conference are to be\ncongratulated for their efforts.\nThe conference, held at UBC for the last 18 years,\nis designed to acquaint high school students with problems they might encounter here.\nBy all accounts the students were well treated and\nsuitably impressed by the efficiency of the conference.\nAnd a conference such as this can present problems.\nOne year a young high school co-ed was sent home\npregnant.\nIt'll be a little while before we know for sure, but\nour guess is that this year's batch of high schoolers were\ntoo well looked after for any of that.\nEDITOR:  Mike  Horsey Another  long,   long  trailer  as   the\nNews                                  -rjm  Padmore election results came in and report-\n-...        __\u201e \u2022\u00ab.\u201e\u201e,\u00bb ers  went out.  Those who did man-\nc'*y   Tom wayman age   to  stagger around productively\nManaging  Editor .... Janet Matheson Wednesday    were:    Dave    Orchard,\nArt                                           Don   Hume Lynn   Curtis,   Ross   Acutt,   Richard\n_      \" '\" '\"\"        .   .. Blair,   Jack   Khoury,   Mona   Helcer-\nsP\u00b0rts   George Reamsbottom manaS| Gord McLaughlin, Art Wat-\nAsst. City  Lorraine Shore son, Bob Burton, Robbi Wsst, Steve\nAsst. News Editor        Carole Munroe Brown,   Robin  Russell,   Bob  Burton,\n.         .  4                               \u00bb\u00ab\u2022\u25a0     u     \u00bb Carol   Anne   Baker,   Linda   Hawley,\nAssociate   Mike Hunter Lome  Mallin,   Elizabeth Field,  Jock\nAssociate  Ron  Riter McQuarrie. Hangers on included Don\nAsst. Managing   Norm Betts Hul1.   sunfink,   timesfink.   Art   Cas-\n_         _. . .                               _          ,. . .. person,    Al    Francis    and    news    of\nPage Friday ....-  Dave Ablett Mike   Bolton.   Link  Ablett  stumbled\nCritics   John   Kelsey through likewise, even.\nrn esottim.\n\\wm PACTB\n\\ 6010,... WW\nMy c\u00abjd\\kd.\u201e,\ntXl W G\u00a3T\n% high m\nYoo USE\nw. tarn,\nALL US EDITORS\nGOT TROUBLES\n(Part of an editorial by\nThomas L. Beell excerpted\nfrom the University of Washington Daily, Seattle.)\nMy 15-week tour as Daily\neditor rumbles to a halt today   .   .  .\nIn a way, getting out has\nall the joys of being discharged from the service. In\nanother, all the regrets of\nbeing retired.\nBeing Daily editor, to begin with, is frustrating, annoying, disappointing, nagging, exhausting and never\nwhat you expected.\n. . . The cluttered desk and\noverflowing in - box suggest\nall the stories still unwritten\nand plans still undone. Fif-\nteen weeks just aren't\nenough. There can be no \"30\"\nto this job. So I'll just write\n\"29\" and leave it at that.\nAMS vs. profs\nEditor, The  Ubyssey:\nLast Saturday, an International Studies 100 class was\ninterrupted twice by an AMS\nrepresentative. Dr. Winter\nwas finally forced to leave in\norder to let high school students hold a seminar. Thus,\none professor and 400 students were forced to conform\nto the dictates of a body of\nincompetent  AMS  officials.\nAre we to tolerate the control of our professors by a\ndisunited and seemingly in-\neffective bureaucracy at\nBrock? I say no!\nI would suggest that public apology by the responsible persons be made to Dr.\nWinter. Following that; a\nthorough examination of the\nAMS planning committees\ncould be beneficial.\nCYRIL   W.   HACK\nArts  I\n*)\u2022 \u00abt* \u00abT*\nContemptuous staff\nEditor,  The  Ubyssey:\nOn Tuesday morning at\n8:35, a distinguished looking\ngentleman was present in the\nFort Camp Dining Hall wishing to have breakfast. He\nexplained that he was a guest\n\"from Europe\" and that he\nhad ordered breakfast the\nprevious evening.\nThe staff then cheerfully\ntook the full price for breakfast and handed him a continental breakfast. When he objected that he had ordered\neggs they peremptorily refused, making no attempt to\nexplain  the  situation.\nWhile I realize that meal\nhours must be relatively\nrigid, I do not think it would\nhave been inconvenient for\nthem to have given him two\nboiled eggs in view of the\nfact that no one had informed\nhim of the meal hours. In\nany case their miserable lack\nof common courtesy was inexcusable.\nI sincerely hope that he\nwill receive much greater\nhospitality elsewhere, lest he\nhave only unpleasant memories of our university.\nThis incident illustrates\nthe absolute autocracy existing within the food services,\nwhen kitchen staff can be\ncontemptuous of guest and\nstudent alike.\nPerhaps they have forgotten that the residences are\ncompletely self - supporting,\nthat it is the residents who\nsupply their jobs. Perhaps it\nis time things were changed.\nBERK MADDAFORD\nPre-Med   II\nV        V V\nPink panthers\nEditor, The Ubyssey:\nOnce again, through the\ndevice of the famous \"Cun-\ning Stunt\", the Pink Panthers have treated the academic\ncommunity to a significant\nform of socio-academic comment. They have drawn our\nflagging, often misdirected\nattention to some educational, political, or social inadequacy or injustice previously\nunperceived by any but the\nastute engineers.\nThe smearing of incendiary\nmaterial in the foyer and\nlavatories of the college library, so too the liberation of\na number of chickens in the\nstudy areas,  has  proven  the\ndepth   of   social  conscience\nand conscious of the EUS.\n\u2014Hasn't it?\nWe personally cannot see\nthe point, merely the disruption of studies for the academic faculties. We can only\nsee the obvious danger of incendiaries. We do miss the\nsignificance.\n\u2014Don't we?\nLet's face it, only one girl\nwas burned, merely ruining\nher blouse, and she was,\nafter all, only slightly injured. We must look deeper\nthan this for the hard core\nof purpose inherent in Cunning Stunts.\nFor the information and\nedification of us out-of-tune\nacademicians, we request a\nrational explanation of this\nlatest engineering coup. It\nmust have a rational explanation.\nBARRY  L. WILSON\nArts II\n\u2022JU *JU \u2022\u00a3\u2022\nThe TR4 Myth\nEditor, The Ubyssey:\nThis is an open letter to\nMr. Michael Hunter (famed\nTR4 driver) and to all those\nother souls who might be\nlaboring under the misconception that the TR4 is the\n\"greatest car ever made\".\n(Ubyssey, Thurs. Feb. 4).\nI would like to call Mr.\nHunter's attention to the fact\nthat at 6:30 Sunday evening\nJan. 31 \u2014 the final day of\nthe Thunderbird Rally \u2014 the\nONLY cars remaining on the\nrally route (or off it as the\ncase was) were two of Mr.\nHunter's \"greatest cars\" and\ntwo of its predecessor, the\nTR3. (One of which was nose\ndown over a ten foot bank.)\nHallelujah \u2014 what an incongruous end for the greatest cars ever made.\nR. XZ. COOK\nEng.  Ill\n' \u25a0*?!\u25a0' 'Jw>\u00a3-!,\n^'\u25a0^^<**%V\u00ab%'iX -\nfc5l*?~Ttlei35 bj, r\u00ab*Htn\nckan^e me.\nmummuiMi Thursday, February 11, 1965\nTHE     UBYSSEY\nPage 5\nFar-out festival brewed\n6 months in modern minds\n. . . pinned\nBi-loyal\nfrat rat\nin at last\nBy BOB BURTON\nSaturday 18 pledges\nwere initiated into Sigma\nChi Fraternity at UBC.\nOne of the new frat-\nrats is a Ubyssey reporter\u2014me.\nUbyssey reporters are\nvery anti-fraternity. I was\nno exception.\nI was reared in a very\nVictorian home. I thought\nsex and drinking were\ndirty and evil, so, naturally, I thought fraternities were dirty and evil.\nSince I was a typical\nfraternity-hating Ubyssey\nreporter, I was told to\nrusrTtne trats and expose\nthem for the nasty, evil\nthings they are.\nMy chance for glory\u2014\na spy for the Ubyssey.\nSo I rushed.\nI received bids! They\nwanted me! A Ubyssey\nreporter, a social leper.\nSo I pledged.\nAnd I went to the\ndrunken and debauched\nfrat parties. But they\nweren't even as drunken\nand debauched as Ubyssey parties.\nMy newspaper friends\nwould greet me in the\nhalls and Ubyssey office:\n\"Hey, Frat-rat; drunken\nFrat-boy!\"\nAnd disbelievers in\nother fraternities would\nwhisper: \"You're a spy\nfor the Ubyssey . . when\nare you going to depledge\nand write your distorted\nstory for that Ubyssey\nrag?\"\nI persisted and comments continued. I stopped trying to argue with\nthe Philistines; instead I\nwould simply break off\nthe conversation with a\nchuckle.\nI was playing neutral\n\u2014in the Ubyssey office I\nwould yell anti-fraternity\nslogans and at the frat\nhouse I would accuse The\nUbyssey of inaccurate reporting and mediocre\neditorials.\nBut now I'm a real\nfrat-rat\u2014gold pin and\nstriped shirt and all.\nThey can't expel me and\nThe Ubyssey won't fire\nme because I am a conversation piece . . . the\nUbyssey frat-rat reporter\n. . . chuckle.\nBy   CAROL-ANNE   BAKER\nThis year's Festival of the\nContemporary Arts, which\nended last night, was six\nmonths in the making.\n\"We have ideas about certain things we wanted at our\nFestival and we had to arrange\nwhat was available at the\ntime,\" said B.C. Binning,\nchairman of the Fine Arts\ncommittee.\nThe Special Events Committee in conjunction with the\nFine Arts Committee have\nbeen bringing Festival events\nto the campus for more than\n10 years.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nBut it was not until five\nyears ago that all the events\nwere concentrated into a ten-\nday event.\n\"A contemporary theme was\ndecided on for the festival for\nmany  reasons,\"  Binning  said.\n\"We are a young university\nand the phenomena of our time\nand place should be of interest\nto the young people attending\nthe university.\n\"It is easier to obtain exhibits for contemporary shows\ntoo,\" he added.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\n\"Also Vancouver is often\nconsidered the end of the line\nculturally, and we often don't\nhear about contemporary\nworks until a year later. So\nthe Festival was sort of a pioneer venture,\" he said.\nThe whole committee works\ntogether on Festival ideas.\n\"There are many ideas and\npossibilities for future Festivals and improvements of past\nFestivals,\" Binning said.\n10 show\nblind able\nWhite Cane Week this week\nhopes to show Canada what 10\nblind UBC students have already proved.\nThe ten blind students on\ncampus, one of whom works\nfor UBC Radio, have made the\nfirst step in proving to the public that they are not helpless,\nand White Cane Week hopes to\nmake this acknowledgement\nuniversal, a White Cane\nspokesman said.\nWhite Cane week, observed\nacross Canada until Saturday,\nis designed to make the public\nmore aware of blindness and\nthe blind.\nLindsey speaks\non Great Wall\nDr. C. C. Lindsey, of the\nUBC Institute of Fisheries will\nlecture on the Great Wall of\nChina Monday at 8 p.m. in Bi.\nSci.  2O00.\nDr. Lindsey recently returned from an eight-day visit to\nCommunist China.\nAnglican chaplaincy\nDean J. Richardson speaks\non Christians in India\" at 7\np.m., 4660 West Ninth.\nThis year's festival brought\n3an Francisco artist Bruce\nConnor to the Fine Arts Gallery, with The Dark Mirror, a\njhow of contemporary cool art.\nDesigner Jeff Lindsay built\na jelly-fish structure out of\nof plastic bags; the Medium is\nis the Message confounded and\namused in the Armory for several days.\nArt in Action covered Buchanan building with paint\nand ice. Musicians made\nchance noises and film-makers\nshowed far-out films.\nAnd there were poets, sculptors, lectures, plays and tours.\nDear Abby-style program\non co-ed sex life planned\nRadsoc has come to the rescue of co-eds with sex\nproblems.\nEvery Thursday Radsoc will present a new program\nSex and the Co-ed.\nStudents can write in with their problems and master\nof ceremonies Marg Perry will answer them over the air\nduring the day.\nProblems should be addressed to Radsoc, Brock Hall.\nGIFT\n(Continued  from  Page   1)\nlowships   available,   including\nrenewals, and the same number including renewals for the\nnext 17 years.\nApplicants can come from\nany university, but must be\nCanadian citizens. The fellowships can be used only at UBC\nand each applicant must undertake to remain in Canada\nfor a reasonable time after\ncompleting a PhD program,\nprovided he is offered a satisfactory position.\nDREAM\n(Continued from Page 1)\nbooks for the arts students,\"\nhe said.\nUBC dean of graduate studies Ian McTaggart-Cowan said\nhe is excited about the grants.\n\"We can now go ahead with\nour Ph.D. program,\" he said.\n\"We need more Ph.D.s in\nhumanities and especially in\nthe  social   sciences.\n\"And a good library will attract better profs and better\ngraduate students.\"\nPMsctimoN i\nEYE GLASSES\nMdUnlU\nAll Doctor*! Eyoflou Proscriptions\nfillod. first  quality  materials usod.\nAll  work  performed  by  quolrfitd\nOpticians.\nGRANVILLE OPTICAL\n861 Granville     M (J 3-8921\nPoetry   Reading\nAl Purdy\nMilton Acorn\nFri., Feb. 12, 8 p.m.\n1208 Granville St.\nSponsored by\nVanguard Books\nProceeds go to the\nAlexander Defence Fund\n\"THE\" PLACE\nto meet\nyour friends\nis at the\nDo-Nut Diner\n4556 W. 10th Ave.\nTry  Our  Delicious  T-Bone\nSteak $1.35\nIt's really Good!\nFull course Meals\nwithin your income\nStudent Meal Tickets\nAvailable\nSpecial Events of the Arts\npresents .\nCANADIAN OPERA COMPANY - ON TOUR\nDIE FLEDEBMAUS\nJohann Strauss' Comic Opera (in English)\nTUESDAY, FEB. 16 - 8.30 p.m.\nAuditorium\nTickets: Students 75c; $1.25 at AMS and\nVancouver Ticket Centre\n\u2022     \u2022     \u2022\nFEBRUARY 18 - BROCK \u2022 12:30\nEconomist Robert Theobald\nPanel Discussion\nSunday, February  14th\nEight o'Clock\nJewish Community Centre\n41st Avenue, at Cambie\n\u2014 THE B.C. INDIAN \u2014\nA Second Class Citizen?\nThe Panel Will Consist of:\nPat  Burnt \u2014 Radio Commentator\nProfeasor  R.  W.  Dunning\u2014Dept.\nof Anthropology,  U.B.C.\nGloria    Webster \u2014 Social   Worker\nFrom. Indian Centre.\nAlfred Scow\u2014Lawyer.\nDunstan Campbell\u2014Youth Representative.\nGlen   McDonald, \u2014 Moderator \u2014\nLawyer.\nTUXEDO RENTALS\nfor Fraternity Formats\nSpecial Rate . . . $6.00 includes\nTuxedo, cummerbund, shirt, tie, studs, links, suspenders\nTUXEDO JUNCTION FORMAL WEAR\n2   Locations:   4683 Kingsway,  Bby by Sears  HE 1-1160\n2608 Granville at 10th Ave  RE 3-6727\nApplications Wanted for the Position of\nAAANAGER-Fort Camp Canteen\nPosition to be available July 1st, 1965, and\nincludes apartment plus salary.\nRESTRICTION: Manager must be a married student in\nfull-time attendance at U.B.C.\nREQUIREMENTS:\n\u2014Knowledge of double entry bookkeeping\n\u2014Knowledge of wholesale buying\n\u2014Ability to handle staff\nPREFERANCES:\n\u2014given to former Fort Camp residents\n\u2014given to students able to continue for two or\nmore years.\nWritten applications, stating age, qualifications, etc.,\nmust be submitted to:\nPRESIDENT,\nFORT CAMP MEN'S COUNCIL,\nFORT CAMP, U.B.C.\nby 5:00 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 13, 1965\nAll   applications   will  be   answered   and   interviews\nmay be requested. Page 6\nTHE     UBYSSEY\nThursday, February 11, 1965\nB. C. S. F. CONFERENCE ON\nCONCERNS & CONFLICTS\nOF CONTEMPORARY  STUDENTS\nFEBRUARY 27-28\nStudents are part of a surrounding political world; whatever unique qualities they may have are\nset within a context of attitudes\nand ideas deriving from political\nrelations and social institutions.\nThey are moving into the world of\npower relationships, in a state of\ntransition between the world of the\nchild who sees problems as personal\nand familistic, and the world of the\nadult who, hopefully, sees problems in their deeper social setting.\nThe apathy of the campus, the silence of students is not a unique\nquality of the young, nor is it a\nmystery; student indifference to\nlife is part of a general indifference\nin mass society.\nSocial and political life demands\nthree convictions of its votaries:\n(1) that it is important for the individual to have a relationship to\nand a concern for the world; (2)\nthat it is possible to understand the\npolitical world; and (3) that individual or organizational actions can\nbe effective in the actual world or\nthat more is to be gained by social\ninvolvement than is to be lost.\nMost people will concede that\npolitical and social action is important. Far fewer, however, can\nperceive the political dimension of\ntheir everyday problems and tensions. What is not clear to most is\nwhat it takes, and how much it\ntakes to change things, and to what\ndegree these things should be\nchanged. Fewer still believe in\ntheir capacity to understand society. Ours is a world of increasing\npolitical complexity, in which one\nmust have expertise to understand\nany part, but in which a specialist\ncannot understand the whole. The\nturbulent social world is full of\nbuzzing confusion from which the\npillars of conviction and certainty\nhave been removed. It is almost impossible for the individual to believe in his own importance in the\npolitical world. In a world of billions of men and of massive material and technical power, the individual seems infinitely small.\nThe two worlds of men, the\nworld of events in which men live,\nand the world of values and visions\nwhich give structure and meaning\nto events, seem hopelessly separated. There is a perennial tension\nbetween the best and the possible,\nbut today the two seem utterly incompatible.\nThere is little in the actions and\nattitudes of contemporary students\nin Canada which would tend to\nsuggest a unique contribution to\nCanadian life. The stamp of mass\nsociety is found in almost every\nfacet of student life, whether or not\nthe activities are termed 'political'.\nThat quality may be observed\nclearly in three elements of current student life: (1) the personnal-\nist fixation; <2) student demands for\nimmediate satisfactions or solutions; and (3) the poverty of vision.\nNonetheless, it is difficult to\nblame the contemporary student.\nThe Canadian education system\ndoes not conceive its task to be one\nof equipping the student with the\ntools of analysis by which society\ncan be understood with a view to\nadvancing it. Rather, it sees itself\nobliged to provide the necessary\nnumber of trained personnel to\noperate the industrial society more\nor less as it is; its concern for the\nstudent centers on providing him\nwith the tools which will guarantee\nemployment and high salary. Passivity has become the logic of the\nsecondary school: discipline is becoming tighter, the 'fluff' subjects\nare being eliminated, the student is\nbeing encouraged to assimilate and\nreproduce and command masses of\ninformation. \"Adaptive man\" is\nbecoming the ideal for the student.\nIn order to realize the nature of\nthe problems and the path to their\nsolution students must use their\nfacilities for researeh and understanding and apply them directly\nto the problems which face both\nthemselves and the world around\nthem. It is only through the struggle to solve these problems that the\nstudents can become aware of their\nnature and dimension. Only\nthrough active participation in our\nsociety can we become aware of\nourselves and of our significance\nin terms of other men.\nB\nC\ns\nT\nU\nD\nE\nN\nT\nF\nE\nD\nE\nR\nA\nT\nI\nO\nN\nS*\nFEBRUARY  27 \u2014 28\nBROCK HALL, UBC, VANCOUVER\nApply  before  Feb.  22  -  See  delegate  form  below\nB.C. Students' Federation has provided an           1. rallying on issues of education  (cost          Program of the Conference shall include\nopportunity for students to get involved in of text books,  fees,  residences,  food comprehensive seminar groups on\ntheir society on issues that are pertinent to^ and standards, etc.;                                             ,      ,_ ,    .       ,        . ,               ......\ntheir socio-political situation. The students          0 \u00b1     .      . ,                            _   .               L  student and social responsibility;\n2. jg-=i^i=-iSA \u00ab-           2.   student needs;\n1. cost,   standards and   nature   of  their ^\u201e\u201e\u201e,,\u00ab,   \u2122~<~\u00ab\u201e\u201e  \u201et m\u201e+,\u201eai   .,\u201e,w 3.   role and purpose of educational insti-\n\u2022*\u2014-= lKKEK!S\u00a3\"L3\u00a3 tutionsin^h CoW.1*. and\n2. their relation towards faculty, teachers sessions,   conferences,   seminars   and 4.   structure, objectives and program of\nand administration;                                                symposia. B.C.S.F.\n3. their responsibility towards the better- These and other issues require serious SOCIETY IS EVERYONE'S\nment of less priviledged in B.C., Can-       discussion and thinking in order to direct CONCERN\nada and other parts of the world; and       ^ ^^ change desirable for ^ better.        ^J  US  MAKE   IT   RELEVENT\n4. their national and international obli-        ment of all. This  conference provides an       _^   \/>|ii>    KIEEf>C\ngations to problems of freedom and        excellent opportunity for the students to        \u00bbU   OUR   NCCDd.\nPeace- get together and evolve a meaningful com-        Join  B.C.S.F. now.   (You can  become  a\nThe students can best confront these situ-       munication amongst themselves and their        delegate to the conference by paying 25c\nations through: respective educational institutions. for membership and $2.00 for delegate fee).\n\u25a0 THIS IS YOUR DELEGATE FORM J\n-       Name *  Phone        |\nMail this I     JM^ _ _  I\nDelegate Form '           _  |\nWJiL   Kee L \"\u2022 Name of educational institution you are presently attending. I\nBefore February 22nd ^^^   \u25a0 I\nWj^m       I The delegate fee is $2.00 minimum for members. \u25a0\ntO f I The delegate fee is $2.25 minimum for non-members.\n_\u25a0_\u00ab   \u00abA.     m*% \u00bb                                           m Any bonifide student at any educational institution in British Columbia is eligible       I\n4373    TT.   13th                                             I to attend. Members of faculty and administration (teachers in high schools and\nI members of the School Board) are welcome to attend all the sessions except the       \u25a0\nB business session. Accommodation and transportation for out-of-city delegates is       |\nVancouver,   B.C.                                        | arranged.\niMail Delegate Form With Fee Before February 22nd To: |\n4373 WEST 13th AVEL, VANCOUVER 8, B.C. \u25a0\nB.C.S.F. IS A UNIFIED NON-PARTISAN STUDENT MOVEMENT Thursday, February 11, 1965\nTHE     UBYSSEY\nPage 7\nAROUND THE CAMPUS\nBy ELIZABETH FIELD\n\"Women's sports!\" said McQuarrie with sarcasm.\n\"What are women's sports?\" He didn't like my answers,\nso I put this question and others to some people in a\nposition to know.\nFor some unknown reason, men often value another man's\nopinion above a woman's, so I went to see Bus Philips who\nis the Director of Me's Athletics.\n\"Women's athletics have a very definite place in the university,\" he said. \"They provide an opportunity for developing above the normal ability and for participation in the community at the university level.\"\n'While men's sports are more intensified, the women are\njust as keen although not so aggressive.\" And, get this please,\nMcQuarrie, he stated definitely that women's athletics \"don't\ndetract from feminine appeal\".\nHe told me that the Senate Report of 1958 lent support\nto women's athletics by including them in a general policy\nholding that \"athletics are an integral part of campus education.\" Who are you to fight the Senate, McQuarrie? Don't\nanswer.\nThen I went to see Marilyn Russell, Co-ordinator of\nWomen's Athletics who said of the purpose of female sports:\n\"Basically we believe university life is more than just the\nacademic. Opportunity is provided for developing other\nskills\u2014music, art, drama\u2014and this should carry over into\nsports. There should be an opportunity for both recreation\nand competition.\"\nShe pointed out that women's sports emphasize an interest\nin the individual and that girls are just as intent on improving their skills as are men.\nWomen's athletics at UBC were first officially recognized\nin 1913.\nThe first sports we played were basketball, grass hockey,\nand ice hockey, all originating before 1915. At this time, when\nfemale enrolment was between 150-200, the budget was\n$182.10.\nThe shining light in WAA history, came in 1930 when a\nUBC team won the World Basketball Championship at the\nPrague Olympics. Have your men done that, McQuarrie?\nWomen's athletics have expanded until they include, at\npresent, 18 sports, several having more than one team, and\nmore than 500 participants at the extramural level and 800\nat the intramural level.\nThere is a notion, which is becoming increasingly passe,\nthat sports on a diversified scale are undesirable for girls,\nwould detract from their feminity and turn them into muscle\nbound females. The protectors of the great American Dream\nwere naturally against this. So UBC finds its only worthwhile competition in the WCIAA. We're better than the\nAmericans, McQuarrie, are you?\nAt present Thunderette teams hold western champion-\nshipsships in speed swimming, synchronized swimming and\nbadminton doubles. In the past they have held basketball,\nvolleyball, figure skating and golf trophies.\nThe original budget for 1964-65 was $16,400 but this was\nlater cut by AMS to $15,700 and recent requests for more\nmoney have been refused. As an example of just how tight\nfunds are, consider that on trips a girl is allotted $1.25 for\neach meal. Surely this is carrying an AMS interest in keeping\nthe students in shape, too far. McQuarrie drinks more than\nthat.\nSo mat's it, McQuarrie, that's what women's athletics are,\ntheir purpose, and what they include. What do youlhink now?\n\u2014don hume photos\nALTHOUGH one year of PE classes are no longer compulsory, many are taking\nadvantage of voluntary classes which are open to all students. Shown here peering\nthrough hair screen as she swats badminton bird is Marilyn Rice, PE II.\nColumbus here Saturday\nSoccer Birds must win\nUBC's Thunderbird soccer\nteam has been doing some\nheavy thinking this week.\nIn the Pacific Coast Soccer\nLeague only the top four\nteams in the standings advance into the playoffs.\nPlaying their first game in\nthe second half of the PCSL\nschedule, UBC is eight points\nout of a playoff position.\nBut this Saturday the Birds\nhave an opportunity to charge\nback into contention.\nTheir opponents Saturday in\nwhat Bird's coach Joe Johnson calls a \"four point must\"\ngame are Columbus Italians\nwho currently have possession\nof the all important fourth\nand last playoff position.\n\"Our last game out was\nmore than a moral victory,\"\nsaid soccer coach Joe Johnson\nreferring to the T'Birds' last\ntrip   out   against   the   PCSL\nSports at UBC\nHockey goes international\nThe following is the second in\na series of articles on men's field\nhockey at UBC. Broome is head\ncoach of all teams at UBC.\nBy ERIC BROOME\nThe majority of Canadians, if they have heard of\nfield hockey at all, think\nof it as a girls' game, and\ngirls do play it very well.\nBut it is also a men's\ngame and because they bring\nto it a greater degree of\nspeed and strength, it is extremely strenuous and demanding. If the game did\nnot offer this challenge to\nmen it is hardly likely that\nit would command the wide\ninternational interest it does\ntoday, with over 50 countries as members of the\nInternational Field Hockey\nFederation.\nAs mentioned in a previous\narticle, Canada is a newcomer\nin the international scene, but\nin the last few years her colours have been seen with distinction on foreign fields, and\ninterest and standards have\nrisen sharply. B.C., and\nU.B.C. in part, have been\nprominent in this growth.\nBy beating the U.S.A. at\nthe International Tournament\nat Lyon, France in 1963 Canada won the right to represent\nthe American Continent in\nthe Olympic Games Hockey\nTournament at Tokyo.\nThis was a meeting of the\nworld's top field hockey nations, and our concluding article will be by one of the\nfour U.B.C. players who were\nin the Canadian team.\nWhat of the future? The\nVancouver based executive of\nthe C.F.H.A. is not content to\nrest on its hard won laurels,\nand it is already actively\nplanning and working towards the next Olympic\nTournament in Mexico City\nin 1968.\nTo qualify for the honour\nof once again tilting at the\nworld's   top   teams,   Canada\nmust win the Pan American\nGames Tournament in Winnipeg\u20141967, in which six to\neight teams are expected to\ncompete.\nBefore that, Canada has\nbeen invited to take part in a\nCommonwealth Tournament\nin England in the spring of\n1966, and it is hoped that we\ncan test our strength against\nAmerican and European\nteams at Rye, New York in\nMay of this year.\nU.B.C. is a cornerstone in\nthese ambitious plans, and her\nplayers are once more likely\nto form the backbone of Canadian teams.\nVarsity runs three teams,\nand, in the pre-Christmas\ngames the undefeated 1st\nteam headed the B.C. 1st Division. New players, both beginners and experienced, are\nalways welcome, and coaching is available. Details from\nme at the Men's Gym. Why\nnot join in the fun?\nleaders   Vancouver   Canadians\nwhich the latter won 3-2.\n\"This good display against\nthe league leaders has shown\nwe will be a force to reckon\nwith from now on. We intend\nto prove this Saturday.\"\nThe Birds will host Columbus Saturday afternoon at one\np.m. in Varsity Stadium.\nPrices have been cut and students without 'A' cards will\nbe able to enter for 50 cents.\nBig Valentine Dance\nand Miss Valentine Contest\n(Open to any Young Lady)\nSaturday, Feb. 13\nOrchestra - Refreshments - Door Prizes\nFun For All   -  Everyone Welcome\nPedersen's Ballroom, 4336 Dunbar\nTelephone: BE 8-2308\nLow-cost permanent protection\nfor your books\nBook-Ion Plastic Laminate\n\u2022 Easy to use      \u2022 Self-adhesive      \u2022 Crvstal clear\nProtect your investment in books with Book-Ion,\nthe modern washable plastic laminate. Book-Ion\nkeeps books, documents, drawings, etc., like\nnew, or can be used to repair damaged articles.\nAvailable at your favourite book, stationery or\ndepartment store in rolls 40\" x 9\" and 40\" x 13\".\nLarger rolls, size 400\" long by various widths,\navailable on special request.\nDistributed by Ben Sanders Company Limited, Toronto Page 8\nTHE     UBYSSEY\nThursday, February 11,  1965\n'tween classes\nViet Nam battle at noon\nAcademic    Activities    Committee presents a rally on Viet\nNam in Bu. 104 at noon today.\nSpeakers include anthropology\nlecturer Dr. William Willmott.\n\u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nRAMBLERS\nSoccer players go to Ramblers at noon today.\nfell\n\u2022 *   *\nUN CLUB\nWilliam   Barlett,   secretary-\ngeneral of Canadian Commission  for  UNESCO  speaks  on\nCanada's Role in UNESCO Friday noon in Bu. 220.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nLMT\nLMTs available for Oh Dad,\nPoor   Dad,   Vancouver   Symphony, Ballet Bihari, Cave and\nIsy's from Special Events office.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nDR. WILLIAM WILLMOTT\n... on Viet Nam\n*\nACADEMIC GOALS\nPanel Discussion on Student\nLife with Rev. Richardson, Dr.\nMann,   Education   president\nDave Lynn, Clay Perry and Ed\nHutchings in Brock at noon today.\nPHYS ED\nCome to the P.E. Valentine\nDance,   the    Cardiac    Thump\nSaturday. $3.50 per couple at\nCanadian Legion at Fourth and\nTrafalgar 9 p.m. to 1 a.m.\nVisiting profs to examine\npopulation, foreign policy\nA series of public lectures by visiting professors will\ntake place in February.\nNext Friday Dr. John Borchert from the University of\nMinnesota will speak on urban population shifts in the\nAmerican Midwest in F and G 100 at 2:30 p.m. The lecture\nis sponsored by the Leon and Thea Koerner Foundation.\nFeb.  19 John McDiarmid, University of Washington,\nwill lecture on Oresteia of Aeschylus at noon in Bu. 102.\nAlfred Grosser, from the University of Paris, will discuss DeGaulle's foreign policy Feb. 22 at 1:30 p.m. in Bu.\n2239.\nGRAD CLASS COUNCIL\nFaculty grad class reps meet\nin Bu. 227 Monday noon.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nALLIANCE FRANCAISE\nAward-winning feature film\non Algeria Les Oliviers de la\nJustice at noon today in Bu.\n102; 25 cents.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nNDP CLUB\nMP Bob Prittie speaks on\nhis House of Commons bill to\nlegalize contraceptives noon\ntoday in Bu. 212.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nPOETRY READING\nDan McLeod reads in Bu.\n100 noon today.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nCARIBBEAN STUDENTS\nGeneral meeting noon today\non Carnival dance.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nTHE ODYSSEY\nThe editor speaks on The\nImportance of Deadlines. Noon\ntoday in Frosh office.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nNISEI VARSITY\nValentine's Dance Saturday\nat Airport Inn 8:30 to 1:00 with\nL a v e r n e Gerard and The\nShades; $3.00 a couple.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nNATIVE CANADIANS\nGeneral meeting noon today\nin Bu. 218.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nDEMOGRAPHIC SOCIETY\nDr. Poland speaks on the\nPlanned Parenthood clinic in\nBu. 202, today noon.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nINTERNATIONAL HOUSE\nRussian Day in upper lounge\ntoday and every Thursday.\nCAMP COUNSELLORS\nSummer Positions Open With Pay\nSkills and experience desirable in:\nWATERFRONT ACTIVITIES - CANOEING - RIDING\nCAMPCRAFT - WILDLIFE\nAlso experience in working with young people.\nMeeting in Room 211 - Memorial Gymnasium\nFRIDAY, FEBRUARY 12 - 12:30 Noon\nCLASSIFIED\nRates: 3 lines, 1 day, 75c\u20143 days, $2.00. Larger Ads on request\nNon-Commercial Classified Ads are payable in Advance\nPublications Office: Brock Hall.\nLost & Found\n11\nLOST\u2014Ring. Gold set, tourquoise\nstone. Missing since February 1st.\nPhone 224-9098, Rm. 677 after five\np.m.\t\nPLEASE RETURN RECORDS left\nin your car Friday to Record Library in Extension Department.\nSorry.   \t\nREWARD waiting for the person\nwho returns my red keycase and\nturquoise green coat which disappeared from the Library Shelf\nMonday. Call Bernice Gerrard, AM\n6-9275 or report at Grad Centre.\nLADY'S WATCH found in vicinity\nof Buch. 3239. Phone Ray CA\n4-9493  after  6  p.m.\nLOST\u2014Lady's gold wrist watch. Reward offered. Phone Pat Mullln,\nCA 4-9970, Room 112.\nLOST\u2014Unusual silver wedding ring\nin College Library, women's washroom.  Reward.  Call CA 4-3357.\nDICTIONARY\u2014Phone Bob: 298-7438\nif found.  (Lost Old Arts Tuesday).\nWOULD THE PERSON who took\nblack ski jacket from LA 104 on\nTues. morn please return to ATC\nor phone 224-9846\u2014Ask for Keith.\nIt's all I had.\nLOST\u2014Lady's black frame glasses.\nReward offered. Phone Diana, CR\n8-6950.  Desperate.\nValentine Greetings\n12\nLAST CHANCE For Romance. Do\nit soon\u2014Today by noon. Special\nrate of 50c for tomorrow only.\nSoecial Nolices-\n13\nThe BIG sound of the \"Hornful\nSouls\". Totem Park\u2014Friday night.\nDon't  miss  it!\nTHE SHOCKERS are coming to electrocute the PSIV House Feb. 12!\nThe   SHOCKERS!\nSPECIAL college rate subscription\nfor Playboy Magazine. 1 year, $6.50,\n2 years, $12.00; 3 years, $16.50.\nCall Fred,  RE 8-4504.\nTransportation\n14\nWanted\n15\nWANTED\u2014One motorcycle crash\nhelmet.  Phone  Dave,  RE 1-2808.\nAUTOMOTIVE   8t   MAHINE\nAutomobiles For Sale SI\n1961 FIAT 600, white, 34,000 miles,\nradio, good condition, city tested,\nMr. Johnson, \"Physical Education,\nMiem'orial Gym.\t\n1961 AUSTIN Cambridge. Excellent\ncondition, low mileage, new snow-\ntires, good student transportation.\nAM  1-2122  evenings.\t\n'52 CHEV 4-door, 2nd engine, '65\nplates.   Offers.   Gary,   CA  4-6401.\n27\nMotorcycles\nWILL the PSIV House withstand the\nsonic assault of the SHOCKERS?\nTomorrow night\u2014the SHOCKERS!\nScandals\n39A\nWHAT has  12  legs and fluorescent\nhair? The  Shockers!  Coming Feb.\n12th.  The Shockers.\t\nHEAR  The   Shockers  pound  It  out!\nSneak   preview   at   224-3520.    The\nShockers.\nEMPLOYMENT\nWeJp Wanted\n51\nSOMEONE to teach me to play blues\nmouth organ. Suzanne, RE 8-4511\nafter 6 p.m.\t\nINSTRUCTION  \u2014  SCHOOLS\nTutoring\n64\nMISCELLANEOUS\nFOR SALE\n71\nART BUSINESS, ideal as side line,\nfor male or female. 1065 E. 17th\nAve. TR 6-6362.\t\nRENTALS   &  REAL  ESTATE\nRooms\n81\n1 FURNISHED room. Use of kitchen facilities, phone & fridge.\nPreferably male student. Phone\nRE 3-3678.\nALMA MATER SOCIETY\nTHIRD ANNUAL\nCHARTER FLIGHT TO EUROPE\nMAY 21-AUGUST 5\n$360\nWHEN\n\u2014Leave Vancouver May 2L\n\u2014Arrive London May 22.\n\u2014Leave London August 5.\n\u2014Arrive Vancouver August 5.\nCOST\n$360.00 which includes:\n\u2014Return flight by C.P.A. jet prop Britannia.\n\u2014First class meals with complimentary dinner wines during flight\n\u201444 lb. baggage allowance.\n\u2014Transportation from London Airport to London City centre.\n\u2014London Airport Taxis.\nWHO IS ELIGIBLE\n\u2014All members of Alma Mater Society.\n\u2014UBC Faculty.\n\u2014Members of immediate family of above two categories which includes:\n\u2014father and mother if living in same household.\n\u2014husbands, wives and children.\n\u2014Members of immediate family must be accompanied by member of\nA.M.S. or Faculty.\nAPPLICATIONS\n\u2014Applications may be picked up at Travel Directors Office \u2014 BROCK\nHALL, or write to TRAVEL DIRECTOR. AMS CHARTER FLIGHT,\nBOX 140. BROCK HALL. U.B.C. Further information available from\nTravel Director.\nTRAVEL IN EUROPE\n\u2014In co-operation with World Wide International Travel information\non travel in Europe will be available through the Travel Directors\nOffice.\nCOMPARABLE FAKES\n\u2014A person travelling by commercial airliner Vancouver to London\nand return would pay:\n\u2014First class\u2014in excess of $1,000.00;\n\u2014Thrift Class\u2014in excess of $600.00;\n\u201421 Day Excursion\u2014in excess of $550.00.\nAS THERE ARE ONLY 30 SEATS REMAINING THOSE\nINTERESTED ARE URGED TO APPLY AS SOON AS\nPOSSIBLE.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"oc:AnnotationContainer"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Genre":[{"label":"Genre","value":"Newspapers","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"edm:hasType"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; This property relates a resource with the concepts it belongs to in a suitable type system such as MIME or any thesaurus that captures categories of objects in a given field. It does NOT capture aboutness"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"label":"Geographic Location ","value":"Vancouver (B.C.)","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:spatial"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Spatial characteristics of the resource."}],"Identifier":[{"label":"Identifier","value":"LH3.B7 U4","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:identifier"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context.; Recommended best practice is to identify the resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."},{"label":"Identifier","value":"LH3_B7_U4_1965_02_11","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:identifier"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context.; Recommended best practice is to identify the resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"IsShownAt":[{"label":"DOI","value":"10.14288\/1.0125667","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"edm:isShownAt"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; An unambiguous URL reference to the digital object on the provider\u2019s website in its full information context."}],"Language":[{"label":"Language","value":"English","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:language"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A language of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as RFC 4646 [RFC4646]."}],"Provider":[{"label":"Provider","value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:provider"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The name or identifier of the organization who delivers data directly to an aggregation service (e.g. Europeana)"}],"Publisher":[{"label":"Publisher","value":"Vancouver : Alma Mater Society, University of B.C.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:publisher"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An entity responsible for making the resource available.; Examples of a Publisher include a person, an organization, or a service."}],"Rights":[{"label":"Rights","value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy, or otherwise use these images must be obtained from The Ubyssey: http:\/\/ubyssey.ca\/","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dcterms:rights"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Information about rights held in and over the resource.; Typically, rights information includes a statement about various property rights associated with the resource, including intellectual property rights."}],"SortDate":[{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1965-02-11 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."},{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1965-02-11 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","classmap":"oc:InternalResource","property":"dcterms:date"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF].; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."}],"Source":[{"label":"Source","value":"Original Format: University of British Columbia. Archives","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:source"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource from which the described resource is derived.; The described resource may be derived from the related resource in whole or in part. Recommended best practice is to identify the related resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"Subject":[{"label":"Subject","value":"University of British Columbia","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/subject","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:subject"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/subject","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The topic of the resource.; Typically, the subject will be represented using keywords, key phrases, or classification codes. Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary."}],"Title":[{"label":"Title ","value":"The Ubyssey","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:title"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The name given to the resource."}],"Type":[{"label":"Type","value":"Text","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:type"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The nature or genre of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the DCMI Type Vocabulary [DCMITYPE]. To describe the file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource, use the Format element."}],"Translation":[{"property":"Translation","language":"en","label":"Translation","value":""}]}