{"@context":{"@language":"en","AggregatedSourceRepository":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","CatalogueRecord":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isReferencedBy","Collection":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","DateAvailable":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DateIssued":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","Description":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description","DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","FileFormat":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","FullText":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Genre":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","GeographicLocation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","Identifier":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","IsShownAt":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","Language":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","Provider":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","Publisher":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","Rights":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","SortDate":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","Source":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","Subject":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/subject","Title":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","Type":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","Translation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description"},"AggregatedSourceRepository":[{"@value":"CONTENTdm","@language":"en"}],"CatalogueRecord":[{"@value":"http:\/\/resolve.library.ubc.ca\/cgi-bin\/catsearch?bid=1211252","@language":"en"}],"Collection":[{"@value":"University Publications","@language":"en"}],"DateAvailable":[{"@value":"2015-08-27","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1964-11-24","@language":"en"}],"Description":[{"@value":"Contains: \"Let's ski with The Ubyssey\".","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/Ubysseynews\/items\/1.0127363\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" THE UBYSSEY\nVOL. XLVII, No. 28\nVANCOUVER, B.C., TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1964\nCA 4-3916\n\u2014don kydd photo\nTO BE OR not to be, that was the question Monday when hardy Arts Council donned\nsheets to publicize Academic Activities on campus. It rained all day, but toga-wearers\nmet anyway in informal forum in front of Library. (See story Page 3.)\nAfter RCMP raid\nSecond student\nfaces drug rap\nAnother UBC student has been charged with possessing\nnarcotics, after a RCMP raid Friday night in Vancouver.\nThe   owner   of   the   Bunk\nhouse where Miss Hughes was\nfolksinging, said if she is convicted she will not be asked to\nperform here again.\nGeorge Dallas Selman, 23,\nArts IV, who gave his address\nto police as 2400 York, will\nappear in magistrate's court in\nVancouver this morning.\nHe appeared in court Saturday, but was remanded to today on his own recognizance\nand a $500 bond.\nSelman was charged jointly\nwith Helen Lynne Hughes, 24,\nof Seattle, and William Fred\nBissett, 24, artist, of 3317\nFleming.\nThe trio was arrested by\nRCMP at Bissett's home.\nLast Tuesday, Barbara\nBudd, a second-year arts stu-\nUBYSSEY\nSKI ISSUE\n(See insert)\ndent at UBC, was charged\nwith possession of marijuana.\nShe will also appear in magistrate's court in Vancouver\ntoday.\nUbyssey stops\nas year ends\nStop!\nThe presses will.\nThe   Ubyssey  stops   its\npress  Friday,  with   its   last\nedition this year.\nAny   plugs,   notices,   vital\ninformation, or such should\nbe in the hot hands of The\nUbyssey    as    of    Thursday\nnoon.\nAll   staff   members,   editors\nor  not,   are  cordially   invited\nto   drop   in   at   the   printers\nThursday night.\nAmbulance\nrepairs slow\naid for girl\nBy DON HULL\nAn ill co-ed waited for an ambulance for nearly an hour\nMonday while the university emergency vehicle was being\nrepaired.\nTrudy Monk, P.E. I, lay in\nDean of Inter-Faculty Affairs\nWalter Gage's office from 1:10\np.m. to 2:05 p.m. while the\ntraffic office obtained a downtown ambulance to take her\nto Wesbrook Hospital.\nMiss Monk fell on the stairs\nin the cafeteria at noon and\nstruck her head on a banister.\nA companion, Lyn Mackenzie, Arts IV, said Miss Monk\ndidn't seem to be injured.\nHowever about 1 p.m. Miss\nMonk began to feel ill, her\nfriend said.\nShe was taken to Dean\nWalter Gage's office nearby in\nthe Buchanan building.\n(More   mix-ups Page  3)\nAt 1:10 p.m. Doug Plum-\nsteel, Arts I said he phoned\nthe health service from Dean\nGage's office.\nA doctor from Wesbrook\nHospital arrived fifteen minutes later with a nurse.\nWhen no ambulance had arrived by 1:45 p.m., Buchanan\njanitor Paul Gowerluk said\nhe phoned the traffic office\nto enquire about the campus\nambulance and was told it was\ndowntown for repair.\nA downtown ambulance arrived at the Buchanan building at 2:05 p.m.\nA health services spokesman said the ambulance had\nbeen called by the traffic office after health services had\ncalled them.\nMiss Monk was taken to\nWesbrook Hospital where she\nis under observation.\nTraffic director Sir Ouvry\nRoberts said the shambulance\nleft the campus for battery repairs at 11:30 a.m.\nKYLE MITCHELL\n. . . will quibble\nAMS bows\nto union\ndemands\nThe AMS bowed to protests\nfrom the Musician's Union and\ncancelled the performance of\nthe Playboy Combo at the\nFrosh Sadie Hawkins Dance\nSaturday.\nThe Playboys, a non-union,\nnon-student band, were scheduled to play at the dance Saturday night, but were cancelled Friday noon when a union\nreplacement band, CFUN Classics, was found.\nThe AMS has an agreement\nwith the Musician's Union that\nnon-union bands may perform\nfor AMS functions only if the\n(Continued on Page 3)\nSEE: UNION\nBasically honest\nRare cheaters have easier time\nIt's easier to cheat at UBC.\nBut students don't.\nThis is the opinion of Registrar John Parnall, whose office is just finishing the\nscheduling of hundreds of\nhundreds of Christmas exams.\n\u2022 \u2022 \u2022\nThe schedules will be posted\nat various points about the\nUBC campus on Friday. Corrected timetables follow these\nones, as students report exam\nclashes in the first set of timetables.\n\"Our students are basically\nJOHN PARNALL\n. . . we're honest\nhonest and we don't need to\nbe as careful about cheating\nduring   exams   as some  universities are,\" Parnall said in\nan interview Monday.\n\u2022   \u2022   *\n\"The method of giving exams here is basically an honour system even though it\nisn't called that,\" he said.\n\"While cheating is not as\nprevalent at UBC as it is on\nsome campuses,\" he said, \"it\ndoes exist.\"\n\"We take a serious view of\nit and students caught cheat\ning are usually required to\nwithdraw.\n\"The student who cheats is\nusually in danger of failing\nanyway,\" Parnall added.\nStudents writing exams are\nseated in alternate seats.\n\u2022    \u2022    \u2022\nLarge lecture theatres like\nWesbrook 100 and Buchanan\n106 have three supervisors.\nOther rooms usually have\ntwo.\nThe Armory, with 600 students, is supervised by five\nto seven people. Page 2\nTHE     UBYSSEY\nTuesday, November 24, 196^\n\u2014mouth photo\nGIRLS WORKED off frustrations on Sadi e Hawkins' Day Friday in Brock Lounge.\nComely Freshettes shone shoes and gave backrubs for 10 cents. Sadie Hawkins dance\nfollowed  Saturday night in  Brock  Lounge.\nFirst time round\nWooten drops\nComing clues\nThe Second Coming has never been here before.\nCUS digging for\nsparkling types\nAre you articulate, intelligent and representative of\na broad spectrum of student\nopinion?\nCUS is looking for a seminar chairman to head the\nnine representatives it is\nsending back to the national\nseminar in Calgary at the\nend of August.\n\"It will be its first time at\nUBC,\" said Special Events\nchairman Chris Wooten Monday.\n\"This is perfectly serious,\"\nhe said. \"It is not a prank.\"\nWooten also urged students\nto be alert Thursday morning\nfor more information on the\nSecond Coming.\nThe Second Coming is\nscheduled to take place Thursday in the Armory ar noon.\n\"You'll know by then who\nit is,\" Wooten said.\n(2) Westinghouse\nWill be on Campus November 30 and December 1 and 2\nto interview 1965 University of British Columbia graduates in electrical engineering mechanical engineering\nand engineering physics.\nA well-defined training program is\noffered  to prepare candidates for\npositions of responsibility in:\nDesign Engineering\nResearch and Development\nManufacturing Engineering\nIndustrial  Engineering\nApparatus Marketing and Sales\nField  Installation\nService Engineering\nThese positions will afford opportunity for career\ndevelopment to Engineering graduates with potential. Professional salary scale and increases based on\nperformance as well as excellent employee fringe\nbenefit plans.\nContact the Placement Officer for detailed information, brochures and interview appointments.\nopINNing\nNovember 27\nWest kept out\nby Wall-Zuken\nThe Berlin Wall was built\nto keep West Germans out, not\nto keep East Germans in, a\nCommunist alderman from\nWinnipeg said Friday.\nJoseph Zuken, an elected\nmunicipal official in his eighth\nterm, spoke on Democracy and\nCommunism in Canada.\n\"Nazis, and pro-Nazi thinkers are still firmly entrenched\nin the government of West\nGermany,\" said Zuken.\n\"They must be kept from\nundermining the socialist\nPeople's Republic of Germany.\nThe Wall is a symbol of this\nbattle.\"\nZuken said the Communist\nparty  of  Canada  had a  long\nrecord  of fighting  for  democratic freedoms.\n\"Democracy is the vehicle\nby which complete socialism\nwill come to Canadian life,\"\nhe added.\nHave a Musical\nChristmas\nRecorders 99c\nGuitars from $11.99\nTuneable Bongos    $14.99\n6 Transistor Radios\ncomplete  from $9.95\nARNOLDS\nPAWN SHOP\n9S6 Granvffl* MU 5-7517\nHOLLYWOOD THEATRE\n3123 West Broadway RE 8-3211\nNov. 23rd \u2014 Nov. 28th\nJane Fonda - Cliff Robertson - Rod Taylor\n(Color)\n\"SUNDAY IN NEW YORK\" \u2014 9:20\nSmart Sophisticated Comedy!\nAlso:\nRobert  Mitchum    -    Martha Hyer\n\"LAST TIME I SAW ARCHIE\" \u2014 7:30\nEvery UBC Student Will Really Enjoy This Outstanding\nDouble Bill.\nAdults Evenings Only 50c\nINTERNATIONAL BUSINESS MACHINES\nVANCOUVER, B.C.\noffering careers in\nData Processing - Scientific Computing\nand Data Processing Education\nWill Conduct Campus Interviews\non November 30th,\nDecember 1st and 2nd\nFor Post Graduates and Graduates\nin\nENGINEERING\nMATHEMATICS and PHYSICS\nHONORS MATHEMATICS and PHYSICS\nCOMMERCE\nArrangements (or Personal Interviews\nMay Be Made Through\nThe University Placement Office\nINTERNATIONAL BUSINESS MACHINES  COMPANY  LIMITED\n1445 West Georgia     -     Vancouver, B.C. 682-5515\nIBM Tuesday, November 24, 1964\nLeft view\nGirls not\nalways\nright\nBy JOAN GODSELL\nUbyssey Women's Angle\nLeft-handedness  has  got  to\ngo-\nWhy? It's causing havoc,\nthat's why.\nExample\u2014The other day I\nwas sitting at a table corner\nin the library, minding my\nown business.\nThe next thing I know,\nsomeone with an over-active\nright arm is sitting beside me,\npumping his elbow like it was\ngoing out of style.\nAmazing!\nAmazing \u2014 because I was\ndoing the same thing.\nBut I'm left-handed. Inevitably we bumped elbows.\nI flashed him a toothy grin,\nturned crimson and moved my\nchair over.\nAgain we bumped elbows.\n(He had a big elbow.)\nAgain I moved over. Again,\nagain I moved over. We were\nstill bumping elbows.\nOf course, I eventually came\nto the end of the table and\nspilled my books all over the\nplace. Of course everybody\nglared at me.\nI felt awful.\nIf someone would invent a\nleft-handed desk, I'd beat a\npathway to his door.\nOn the other hand, I'd give\nmy left arm to be right-\nhanded.\nTHE     UBYSSEY\nPage 3\nUNION\n(Continued from Page 1)\nband members  are  university\nstudents.\nThe five member CFUN\nClassics band was signed to\nplay for $150, the same price\nthe Playboys charged.\nAMS treasurer Kyle Mitchell said: \"We've asked the\nPlayboys to submit their costs,\nbut we'll argue about paying\nthe full price of $150.\"\nUnder the contract the AMS\nis obligated to pay the Playboys $75 if the AMS cancels\ntheir performance within a\nweek of the dance.\nFrosh president Kim Campbell described the dance as a\ntremendous success, with 250\ncouples attending.\nShe said expenses totalled\nabout $265 and receipts $375\nmaking a net profit of about\n$100.\nThis is the first frosh dance\nin many years which has made\nmoney or broken even.\nSitar strummer\nplays Saturday\nOne of India's leading\nmusician - composers sounds\nthe strings of his sitar Saturday in the Auditorium at\n8:30 p.m.\nRavi Shankar has won\ninternational prizes for\nmovie scores, opera and ballet, and movie themes. He\nhas played with American\njazz  musicians.\nAdmission is 50 cents for\nstudents.\nEmergency mix-up\nAid slowed in\ncomedy of errors\nBy MIKE VAUX\nA comedy of errors kept a UBC co-ed from immediate\nemergency treatment of a mouth injury she suffered in a\nfall at the Sadie Hawkins dance in Brock Saturday night.\nduty,\nToga out as\ncampus style\n\u2014don hume photo\nLIBRARY RUSH is on. Exams start Dec. 8, and many\nstudents are rediscovering the Library. Some nap. Some\ntalk. Some even study.\nEven Negroes' in\nUBC fraternities\nInter-Fraternity Council president Dean Paravantes said\nMonday he doesn't worry about discrimination in UBC\nfraternities.\nThe Brock proctor on\nJohn Wilson, didn't know how\nto call the UBC patrol wagon-\nambulance after hours if there\nis no one in the patrol office.\nSo he called the hospital in\nthe Wesbrook building, got a\nnurse, then a doctor, who told\nhim to get some one to bring\nthe girl\u2014Jill McBride, Arts I\n\u2014to the hospital in a private\ncar.\nBut the student who volunteered his car had trouble\ngetting it going, so the girl\nhad to wait a little longer,\nbleeding badly from the\nmouth.\nBut when the car arrived\nat the hospital, they found\nthere was no equipment to\ncarry the girl up to the emergency centre.\nFinally a wheelchair on the\nthird floor of the hospital was\nbrought down, and the girl\nwas taken up.\nShe was treated and released.\nThe proctor said Monday he\nhas since learned the shambulance is equipped with a radio telephone, and can be contacted at any time through the\nB.C. Telephone Radio Operator.\nThe toga probably isn't the\ncoming campus fashion, Bill\nBier, Arts IV decided Monday.\n\"It's very comfortable but it\nhas a tendency to trip you\nwalking up stairs,\" he said.\nMonday was Toga Day at\nUBC, and Bier and seven\nother members of the Arts\nCouncil and the Academic\nActivities Committee wore togas to draw attention to academic activities on campus.\n'I think I've caught a cold,\"\nBier sniffed, as he stood in the\nrain.\n\"Reactions to the hardy Toga-\nclad ranged from dumbfounded stares to appreciative\nwhistles,\" Bier said.\n\"One bearded passerby commented: \"It's very you!\"\nBier said he didn't think it\ncould have rained very much\nin ancient Greece.\nWEDNESDAY NOON \u2014 NOVEMBER 25\nAUDITORIUM\nIMMORTAL    LAND\na film of Greece\nColour \u2014 Narration in English\nHe said he has yet to meet\nanyone who complained about\nbeing kept out of a fraternity\nbecause  of  discrimination.\n\"I haven't given fraternity\ndiscrimination at UBC any\nthought,\" Paravantes said\nMonday.\n\"There are Chinese, Japanese, and even Negroes in fraternities,\" he said.\nA Board of Governors regulation at UBC prohibits any\nform of discrimination in\nfraternities at UBC.\nopINNing\nNovember 27\nClothes\nFine material and\npainstaking craftsmanship combine\nto give you a suit\nof impeccable cut\nand lasting quality.\nPrice? A pleasant\nsurprise!\nClinton's\nMEN'S WEAI\n742 6raaviUe Street Ul-SttS\nWhat do you want in a\ncompany after graduation?\nGraduates who've been out a few years say the important things\nto look for in choosing a job are good training, an unrestricted\nchance to grow in a solid, recognized company, income, early\nresponsibility and a stimulating environment where intelligence\nand enthusiasm are recognized. The points are not always in that\norder, but these are the main ones. What, then, can Procter &\nGamble offer you?\n1# An outstanding record of individualized,\non-the-job training.\n2\u00ab Responsibilities and promotion based on\na man's ability \u2014 not seniority.\n^# A growth company which controls 30%-\n65% of all the major product markets in\nwhich it competes; at least one of our\nbrands is in 95% of all Canadian households.\n4# Among other benefits, highly competitive\nsalaries and profit sharing.\nObviously, you need to know facts before making an intelligent\nchoice of your career. We'd like to tell you more about us. Descriptive brochures are available at your Placement Office and\ncompany representatives will visit for interviews on\nWEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 2\nTHURSDAY, DECEMBER 3\nFRIDAY, DECEMBER 4\nfor positions in\nADVERTISING - BUYING - FINANCE - SALES MANAGEMENT and TRANSPORTATION\nPROCTER  & GAMBLE 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, Pounding 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 editorial writing.\nTUESDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1964\nTwo worlds\n, The following is exerpled from the McGill Daily. Three\nFrench Canadian universities pulled out of the Canadian\nUnion of Students in September and formed the core of\nthe Union Generale des Etudiante du Quebec. (UGEQ).\nThe founding convention of the Union Generale des\nEtudiants du Quebec raised questions whose importance\ntranscends the limited field of specifically student\ninterests.\nIt clearly revealed that the student elites of English\nand French Canada are now living in almost totally\ndistinct reality-worlds, marked by a nearly complete\nabsence of valuable communication.\nThis fact is unlikely to yield to simple or dramatic\nsolutions, and it is not our intention to propose any. But\nthe fact itself must be taken into consideration by all of\nus who are concerned with the future of the Canadian\nexperiment.\nWe tend to assume that all French Canadians, for\nbetter or for worse, spend much of their time thinking\nabout the English speaking half of the country. Even\nseparatism presumably demands an awareness of Anglo-\nCanada, if only for the purpose of rejecting it.\nThe impression received from the recent convention,\nhowever, was that most of the participants tended to\ndefine their goals entirely without reference to English-\nspeaking elements.\nNo one said, like Claude Ryan, that Quebec's interests\nwere best served by accepting a Canadian solution.\nNo one said, like Maurice Sauve, that he wanted to feel\nat home in the other nine provinces.\nOnly one of ten candidates for executive positions\nmentioned Canada at all, and one mote advised the\nEnglish-speaking people of Quebec to co-operate with the\nmajority. It seemed as if psychological separation had\nalready taken place.\nAlso noticeable at the convention was the extent of\nidentification with the recently independent states of\nAsia and Africa.\nThis was shown not only in the reference to \"the\nabolition of all forms of colonialism, imperialism an'd\ndiscrimination\" in the UGEQ charter, but by the suggestion that UGEQ will attempt to organize the student\ngroups of the \"uncommitted\" world as a third force\nanalogous to the existing communist and western\nfederations.\nThis general acceptance of quasi-revolutionary rhetoric probably conceals differences of opinion on specific\nissues which will only become obvious as the organization begins to function.\nIt symbolizes, however, a situation which is real\nenough. The disaffection of most Quebec intellectuals\nwith the internal status quo creates an awareness of\nproblems which, by their very nature, cannoifbe shared\nwith, or fully understood by, English-speaking Canada.\nIn these circumstances a transitional period of psychological withdrawal becomes inevitable as Quebec concentrates on solving its own problems.\nHopefully, when these are solved, a more self-\nassured French Canada, and a more understanding\nEnglish Canada, can establish a relationship of genuine\nequality.\nEDITOR: Mike Horsey\nManaging   Janet Matheson\nCity   Tom Wayman\nNews  Tim Padmore\nArt _    Don Hume\nSports _  George Reamsbottom\nAsst. Managing   Norm Betts\nAsst. City   Lorraine Shore\nAsst.  News  Just Miss Munroe\nAssociate  Mike Hunter\nAssociate Ron Riter\nMagazine    Dave Ablett\nworking like dogs while the time\nrunneth out were Mike Vaux, Richard (letters) Blair, Bob Wieser, Don\nHull, Brian (signing) Staples, John\nKelsey, Robbi West, Carol-Anne-\nBaker, Lome Mallin, Corol Smith,\nAl Birnie, Steve Brown, Mona Hel-\ncermanas, Art Casperson, Sheri\nGalen, Sharon Rodney, Bob Burton,\nRobin Russell, Tim Roberts. Yeah\nWell O.K.\nAnd working night-side for the\ngreat and glorious Ubyssey (rah):\nHarold McAllister, Norm Betts, and\nGeorge Railton. God rest their souls.\n<4A\nrlMM| .  . . MR I Wmj I (\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 fN \u25a0\u2022\u2022\nW^HM^SKKUBK^i\nWe're irresponsible\nEditor, The Ubyssey:\nI cannot protest strongly\nenough against the thoughtless and irresponsible methods used in reporting the case\ninvolving the \"UBC Coed\" of\nFriday's Ubyssey.\nIt seems to me that the reporter's function is not only\nto report the facts of a particular case but also to use\ndiscrimination in his selection and presentation of them.\nThis involves simply a rational judgment as to what is\nrelevant, a judgment sorely\nlacking in the article referred\nto. When given alone, any set\nof particulars can be made to\ndistort the picture of the\nwhole; the dragging in of descriptions involved an implicit\ncondemnation, and connotations which have no place in\nanything but tabloid journalism of the lowest order.\nSUZANNE MOWAT\nArts III.\n\u2022Ji     sji     eje\nAnd tactless\nEditor, The Ubyssey:\nI wish to object to the tactlessness and the cruelty of\nthe front page story in last\nFriday's Ubyssey.\nI am objecting to the slanted, sensation-seeking and unnecessary exposure of a girl's\ndifficulty.\nI do not know the young\nlady but surely anyone can\nunderstand some of the anguish she may be going\nthrough. Would not kindness\nhave been more appropriate?\nDrugs on campus is a good\nissue, a significant issue. Significant enough to provide\nmaterial for a series of articles. And in a university\nnewspaper there would be a\nchance for solid analysis,\neven meaningful exposure.\nBut on Friday The Ubyssey\nchose the cheap way, chose to\nbe sensationally cruel, chose\na shoddy black headline regardless of who was hurt.\nThe story was essentially\nempty.\nIt raised no issues, analysed\nno problems, provided no significant information.\nTechnically, Mr. Blair, you\nare a good reporter.\nBut, please, Mr. Blair,\nplease, start to learn that\njournalism is much more\nthan mere technical expertise.\nStart to learn some of the\nthings that tried newspapermen respect\u2014a compassionate understanding of people,\na knowledge of what hurt\nmeans, a grasp of relevancy\nand a -sure instinct of when\nto kill a story.\nPlease Mr. Blair, start now\nfor you have much to learn.\nPETER   FLEMING\nUnclassified.\nrp    ^f\u00bb    Sfi\nAnd gobblers\nEditor, The Ubyssey:\nIs this a newspaper or just\nanother \"Garbage-Gobbler\"?\nI am referring to the reporting of the drug raid, Friday,\nNov. 20. Was it necessary to\ngo into the personal details\nof the girl's apartment? It's\napparent that your reporter,\nfor obvious reasons, is a frustrated author and will snatch\nat any opportunity to display\nhis  limited literary  abilities.\nOr is it the policy of this\npaper to grind its hobnail\nboots into the backs of unfortunates? Surely going into\nthese unhappy details has not\nfurthered the spreading of\nnews, just the \"mongering\"\nof malicious gossip\u2014a sad effort for the voice of this seat\nof enlightenment and, I believe, of tolerance.\nMAIDA LONG\nArts III.\nToo much Bains\nEditor, The Ubyssey:\nRecently a great deal of\ncoverage in the Ubyssey has\n.been made in connection\nwith Mr. Hardial Bains. I\nwonder if Mr. Bains and his\nstatements are so significant\nas to receive such a coverage.\nMr. Bains has been quoted\nas stating (Ubyssey, Nov. 20,\netc.) that he is anti-bureaucratic and is not interested in\nelected positions. However, he\nhas run and been defeated for\nat least the following campus offices: presidencies of\nthe GSA, Indian Students Association and the former IH\nClub, and the directorship of\"\nthe Board of International\nHouse.\nHe has organized the Internationalists and the BCSF,\nboth of which do not hold elections but Mr. Bains has become the president of the latter.\nMr. Bains is generally credited with initiating the Academic Activities Committee\nunder the AMS bureaucracy.\nThe Ubyssey reserves the\nright to edit letters for brevity, relevance and taste. Letters to the editor can be left\nin a box at ihe front of the\nUbyssey office in the basement of North Brock.\nYet he is anti-bureaucratic.\nHe is anti-clique but there is\na \"nucleus\" in the BCSF.\nThere is a \"secretariat\" but\nno bureaucracy.\nFrom what it has done and\nfrom the leaflet it has distributed, the BCSF under the\nleadership of Mr. Bains seems\nto intend to raise a hell but\nto do nothing constructive.\nThe Ubyssey has done enough to publicize Mr. Bains\nand the BCSF and perhaps\nshould devote its coverage to\nmore worthwhile endeavours.\nR. S. TSE. #?; W^^ff^^r- '*..\n* .^,4*a \u201e-';-;\u201e>,\nLet's ski\nwith\ntot rawj y\n\u00ab%\n\u00abU\nThis is the first of what\nThe Ubyssey hopes will\nbecome an annual issue.\nIn addition to our regular column we are trying\nto present some to the ski\nactivities that are open\nto UBC ski-bums.\nWe think you can see\nby the number of jackets,\nstretches, casts around\ncampus and the empty\nSaturday lectures that\nskiing is becoming UBC's\nlargest participant sport.\nInside you will find\nstories and pictures of\nuniversity ski trips, the\nThunderbird ski team\nand the problems of the\ncabin skier.\nThis picture was taken\ntoy Carol Russell on Mt.\nPrice near Garibaldi\nLake.\n\u2022 \u00ab****,\u00ab\u201e. -<.x Page 2\nTHE     UBYSSEY\nTuesday, November 24, 1964\nVOC members find Xmas\nski trips can be cheap\nThe Varsity Outdoors Club\nChristmas trip program offer\nskiing from yo-yo to touring,\nfor the novice or the expert.\nThis year ten trips to resort\nor yo-yo areas have been organized and over 100 people\nwill set off to the cabin on\nMt. Seymour or as far away\nas Schweitzer basin in Idaho.\nThe biggest group is making\ntheir base camp in Kelowna\nnear Big White Mt. and from\nthere they will tour the Okanagan.\nThe club has the use of a\nlarge building that will house\nover 30 people.\nWith this sort of arrangement the club has the real idea.\nThe girls do the cooking, wish\nwashing and cabin cleaning,\nwhile the stronger sex handle\nthe firewood, water carrying,\netc.\n\u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nThe group trips cut the cost\ndown by one-third, as most of\nthe grub is robbed from\nmother's kitchen shelves.\nAnother large group will\nmake headquarters in Banff\nand from there they will ski\nNorquay, Sunshine, Temple\nand Whitehorn.\nUp to this year the most\npopular trip was to the Kim-\nberly-Rossland area, but this\nis dropping off in favour of the\nOkanagan areas.\nA splinter group of the club\nis anti yo-yo and usually uses\ntheir Christmas holidays for a\nski touring trip.\nGaribaldi's Black Tusk\nmeadows has provided the\nclosest touring for VOC members. The club has used the\ncabin at Garibaldi Lake and\nfrom there they have climbed\nand skiied Price, Panorama,\nSphinx Glacier and the Tusk\nitself.\nThe club has run three very\nsuccessful tours into the Yo-\nHo Valley. Here a cabin\nowned by the federal parks is\nused.\nLast winter the club ventured into the Bralorne area\nfor a combination of rope tow\nand touring skiing.\nThis year the trips on the\nprogram are to Forbidden Plateau, back of Courtenay on\nVancouver Island, and into\nthe Jasper Park area.\nThe ski-tourer is special\nbreed, he seems to find fun in\npacking a 40-pound pack for\ntwenty miles into some remote\nspot, camp in a cold tent on\na glacier, and a few days work\nhis way out to civilization.\nThe  most  popular   trip the\nFELLOWS\nNeed Extra Money?\nMake it in your spare time\nContact: S. Brounstein\nPhone: 277-7209\nAUTO INSURANCE AT\nSUBSTANTIAL  SAVINGS\nFor Drivers 24 yrs. & up\nCall Bab Baker of A. R. laker Ltd.\n1327 Marine, W. Van.       M2-41M\n\u2014dermis holden photo\nFor two years Varsity Outdoors Club members have gone\ninto the Premier Range south of Jasper on touring trips.\nThe mountain pictured is Sir John Thompson. The ice fall\nin the foreground is over 200 feet high.\n\"CHRISTMAS TIME IS SKI TIME\"\nGoing Skiing?\nVisit Our Complete Ski Centre For\n* QUALITY EQUIPMENT\n* EXPERT REPAIRS\n* SKI RENTALS\nLowest Prices in Town\nSKI OUTFIT:\nGRESVIG SKIS\nCOMPLETE SAFETY BINDING\nMETAL POLES - Reg. $38.95\n$29\n95\nSKI BOOTS SKIS\nif Val Dor 29.95 * Yamaha Epoxi   89.95\nit Tyrolkrista        39.95 if Nevada Metal    89.95\nif Gresvig Skis from $21.95\n\"Stretch\"\nSki Pants\nLadle's & Men's\nImported\nSki\nSweaters\nICE SKATES\nC.C.M. - BAUER - DAOUST\nWestern Sporting Goods\n10th & Alma\nCA 4-5040\nclub takes is to their cabin located above the CBC tower on\nMt. Seymour.\nHere members seem to forget the idea of skiing and\nspends most of the time\npartying. At the cabin at any\ngiven time one will usually\nfind 40 or so people dancing\nand whooping it up.\n\u2022 \u2022 \u2022\nThe club plays host for a\ngiant New Year's party each\nyear in the cabin. The club\ngirls have a three course turkey dinner ready for the hungry mob returning from the\nslopes.\nAs the dishes are cleared\ninto the kitchen the cabin\nsettles down to the party that\nshould last until dawn.\nThe usual climax to the\nbash is the climbers that leave\nbefore sunup to start the day\nfrom the peak of Seymour.\n1965   GRADUATES\nseeking employment\nregister NOW with the\nEXECUTIVE and PROFESSIONAL DIVISION\nNATIONAL EMPLOYMENT SERVICE\nPhone Mr. W. L. Roberts who will mail you\nan application and arrange an interview to\ndiscuss employment opportunities.\nUNDERGRADS\u2014will be registered later\u2014\nWatch for notice.\n1145 ROBSON STREET\nMU 1-8253\nGRADUATE   INTERVIEWS\nOntario Hydro\nwill interview on\nDecember 2-4\nfor\nScientific and Commercial Data Processing\nPostgraduate and Honour Mathematics, Engineering Physics, Commerce\nand Business graduates with preference for those who have taken\ncourse in digital computers.\nNuclear Plant Operation\nMetallurgical, Chemical, Mechanical and Electrical Engineers for training\nin plant engineering in Nuclear Power Stations. The 200 mw plant at\nDouglas Point is scheduled for service in 1965.\nCoal Fired Thermal Plant Operation and Maintenance\nMechanical and Electrical Engineers for training in the R. L. Hearn or\nLakeview Generating Stations on programs leading to plant operation\nand management. A new station with 500 mw units is under construction.\nPlanning, Design, Construction, Research, System\nOperation and Maintenance\nMechanical, Electrical and Civil for a variety of assignments in Toronto\nand on field locations.\nOntario Hydro's expanding program nuclear, coal-fired steam and\nhydraulic plants provides a variety of opportunity hoth on a training\nbasis and through immediate assignment to one of the above functions.\nFor further information and interview appointments contact\nThe University Student\nEmployment Office Tuesday, November 24, 1964\nTHE     UBYSSEY\nPage 3\nA cabin skier says:\nThis is the true sport\nEveryone says that you have\nto be brave to be a good skier.\nIt takes a lot more guts not to\nbe a good skier.\nAny idiot with the meat in\nhis coconut loose can wedlen,\nmombo, or schuus, but it takes\na man with real guts to meet\nsome wench on a mountain\npeak and talk her into going\nback to your cabin to cook\nyour  dinner.\nA skier can be sloppy in his\ntechnique and get away with\nit, but a shier must be faultless in form if he is to get\nover all the jumps and through\nall the gates that stand between him and his objective.\nA cabin skier must have\nextraordinary reflexes in order to get to the side of a\nsnow bunny in trouble before\nthose godamm ski patrolers\nget over and do their good\ndeed for the day.\nA cabin skier must have\nfantastic physical stamina if\nhe's to last through a night of\ntwisting, cabin hopping, poker\nplaying, bunny trapping and\nall its associated pleasures, and\nstill make the supreme effort\nand get to the slopes before\nthe sun goes down the next\nday.\nYou'll note that I said get\n\"to the slopes\" and not \"up\nthe slopes\" as the latter is\nstrictly vorboten to the cabin\nskier. There's no use in ruining a carefully built-up reputation.\nLast, but by no means\nleast, a cabin skier must have\nvast financial resources if\nhe's to be really successful.\nAn accomplished cabin skier\nmust of course have a cabin\nof his own (it is permissible\nto share it with a couple of\nbuddies, provided they don't\nski) and this is the largest initial outlay and also requires\nperiodical outlays for such\nitems as gas for the power\nplant (an essential for comfort\nand efficiency) repairs, paint\n(a bright little used color to\nget attention is preferable).\nAnother necessity that requires a fair sized outlay is\nclothes. A wardrobe of the\nlatest ski fashions is a must\nin order to create the impression that you're a skier without having to hit the slopes.\nSweaters should be patterned\nwith bright colors predominate. Pants must be of stretch\nnylon in order not to impede\nyour twisting and chasing.\nA car is another must, but\nthis does not have to be fancy\nas you want to create the impression that you spend all\nyour money on skiing and be-\nman\nhas\nCONflMHCE\nYou, too will hove confidence in\nCONTACT LENSES\n^m fcy LAWRENCE\nCalvert\n\"He specializes\"\n|70S BMs \u00bbUfl.   MU 3-18T4J\n\u25a0'_    t;SO-S:\u00bb\u00bb (Sot. Noon)\n\u2014a. k. cabin skier photo\nA likely candidate for ah evening's cabin skiing chuckles\nour cabin skier as he rushes to aid her with the bindings.\nYou will note the result of cabin skiing near the bottom\nleft of the picture.\nsides an old car (1940 or earlier) gets a lot of attention from\nthe younger set, many of\nwhom have older sisters. The\ncar should be small (two\nseats) so that you can only give\na ride to one person at a time;\nobvious advantage.\nFinally a successful shier\nmust pay for such things as\n:hairlifts (it's not proper to\nhike), badges for his jacket\nshowing the places he's (if\nyou'll excuse the expression)\nskiied at, sun tan lotion, food\n(at least until you meet enough\nbunnies who can supply the\nfood as well as cook it), and\nthe requirement of all requirements -BOOZE.\nU of Wash, ski club\nsponsors ski swap\nTransfer an Arabian bazaar to a snow scene and the\nresult is the giant ski sale that the University of Washington ski club held last week.\nThe club invited local shops and university skiers\nto exhibit their used equipment in a Ski Swap held in the\nstudent union building.\nThe skier's best friend\nSKIS\n*flti\/it\nHart Standards - a joy to ski on. Hold\nwonderfully on hard pack, plane beautifully in\npowder. Engineered for effortless turning. And\nHart's safety edges cannot... we repeat...\ncannot ever come off! In black or red or blue.\n124.50\nHart Pros \u2014 Lightning-fast performers for\nevery skier from beginner to expert. Super-speed\nand instant maneuverability on sapphire-hard\nHARCO speed, base. No waxingl Hart safety\n\" L\" edges can't ever rip off. 139.50\nBindings expertly mounted.\nArlberg\nSPORT HAUS\n816 W. Pender St.\nVancouver, B.C.\n\u2014 SKI \u2014\nDiamond Head\nGaribaldi Park\n3 TOWS TO SERVE YOU\nit Overnight\nAccommodation\nit Ski Rentals\nit Ski Patrol\nit Ski Lessons\nit Road to base camp now\nin top condition\nit New! Base Camp Inn\nfor light snacks\nFOLDER and  INFORMATION\nVic Stevenson\n5638 Holland St., Vancouver 13, B.C.\nPhone 263-3108\nALPINE\nOF VANCOUVER\nis the largest stretch\nslack manufacturer in\nWestern Canada\n. ... for Western\nSkiers and Curlers\nAlpine of Vancouver Supplies\n\u2022 Racing Slacks for the UBC\nSki Team\n* Western Canada's Top Ski\nInstructors\nUsing top-quality material and the best in workmanship,\nALPINE OF VANCOUVER gives you long wear, style and comfort .. . plus all-weather protection.\n\u2022 RACERS \u2022 \u2022 SKI KNICKERS\n\u2022 SKI STRETCH SLACKS \u2022 CLIMBING KNICKERS\n\u2022 CURLING STRETCH SLACKS \u2022 STRETCH SUITS A SLACKS\n(Seam* and zippers are guaranteed by Alpine ef Vancouver)\nAvailable ah\nArlborg Sport Haus\nBlue Line Sporting Good*\nAll T. Eaton Sporting\nGoods Departments\nHudson's Bay-\nActive Sportswear Dept.\nEarle Petersen,\nNew Westminster\nGeorge Sparling Stores\nWest VancouverSporting Goods\nWestern Sporting Goods\nIvor Williams, Kerrisdale\nAll Woodward's Stores\nSporting Goods Depts. Page 4\nTHE     UBYSSEY\nTuesday, November 24, 1964\nThe Thunderbird ski team finds it takes\nT'Bird ski team . . . strengthening the legs\nATTENTION\n\u2014 ALL SKIERS\n\/ Here is a new economical way\nto go skiing\nSpecial\nPackage Plan\nto   Mount   Baker\nStarting November 21st through March\nBuses Leave 7:00 a.m. every Saturday and Sunday\nTHE PLAN INCLUDES:\n\u25a0& Return trip by bus (with other congenial experts\nand snow-bunnies).\n-fo A 1% hour ski lesson by Franz Gobi's certified\nski school. (New American technique).\n-fr All day rope tow tickets! (All day chair $1.50\nextra).\nit 20% off rentals.\nTICKETS AVAILABLE AT:\n\u2666Eaton's Ski Village\u2014downtown\n\u2666Eaton's Sporting Goods\u2014Brentwood, Park Royal,\nNew Wes&ninster\n*Tepee Sporting Goods\u20141017 Robson\n\u20143279 W. Broadway\n\u2666Blue Line Sporting Goods\u2014154 W. Hastings\nAll Inclusive\nOnly\n$9.50\nTake A Trip and Save\nIs there something inspiring about running for three or four miles at night in 32\ndegree weather with car headlights glaring\nat you?\nOr perhaps \"running in the rain\" with sodden sweat pants, or along the beach on rocks,\npebbles, logs and sand which undermines\nyour steps and fills your shoes?\nThe inspiring element is supposed to be\nthat vision of grandeur as you win first prize\nin the combined Alpine events in every intercollegiate ski meet.\nWhen training it seems rather like the carrot on the stick before the panting ass, and\nthey say fools can't make choices.\nSo you don't; every Tuesday and Thursday\nfrom 6:30 - 8:00 p.m. and on Saturdays from\n1:30 - 3:00 p.m. you run, run and run and\nthen return to the equipment room in War\nMemorial Gym to do interminable conditioning exercises.\nBut after each session your outlook brightens a measure.\nYou feel a damn sight better after a good\nworkout; the sore \"muscles and blood and\nskin and bone\" gradually \"tone up\" and running doesn't seem quite the chore it did initially.\nBesides, it is inspiring to exercise with the\ngirls' ski team after those runs on Tuesday\nand Thursday nights\u2014somehow you're not\nquite as exhausted as you thought you were.\nThe simple fact is, it's a good program from\nwhich both the team and the individual benefit.\nUnder the excellent and rigorous coaching\nof Allan Fisher, an engineer formerly from\nU. of Washington, now in the pulp mill division of a local engineering firm, the team\nhas been training since the opening week of\nthe term.\nFisher has stressed long distance running\nup to six miles for stamina, including running\nalong the beach below the campus on Saturdays to build up leg muscles.\nThe usual course on Tuesdays and Thursdays leads from the gym, down Wesbrook to\nChancellor, out Chancellor to Acadia, up\nAcadia to University boulevard, out the\nboulevard to the gates and back to the gym.\nUpon returning to the gym the group\nworks through a number of exercises, primarily with an eye for skiing techniques.\nOne of the routines involves jumping from\nside to side over a row of benches, simulating a slalom course.\nAt mid-November the prospective ski team\nseparated from the general skiing conditioning program and concentrated more on developing reaction, coordination and balance\nthrough exercises, working on the trampoline\nand gymnastics.\nSoccer will be added to the Saturday workouts for coordination.\nHeading the alpine team in its special\ntraining is Don Bruneski, former Olympic\ncompetitor, and Joe Czismazia, who has had\nconsiderable gymnastic and ski racing experience.\nAmong those seriously competing to make\nthe four man alpine team are Leigh Brousson,\nTom Jenkin, Martin Kaffka, Tim Roberts,\nEugene Ruelle, Bill Shaak, Gary Taylor and\nDave Turner.\nThe prospective team will train in Rossland from Dec. 20th until the New Year, when\nthe final team will be chosen.\nAnd that brings us back to our inspiration\n\u2014-the meets themselves.\nUBC plays host to the other colleges (primarily northwest American teams) Jan. 1st -\n3rd in Rossland.\nU. of Alberta takes over from Jan. 29-31\nin Banff, and on Feb. 12 -14 the University\nof Idaho will host a meet in McCall, Idaho.\nProbably the last meet of the year will be\nFeb. 20-21 in Bend, Oregon, although two\nother meets in Montana and Washington are\nheld perilously close to exams.\nSo all that running, although depressing\nbeyond expression at times, provides an indescribably rewarding thrill during the meets\n\u2014that of competition, emotion, acquaintances\nand of skiing with quick, mechanical reactions\u2014and besides, like Guinness\u2014it's good\nfor you!\nUBC Jumper . . . iakw to the air Tuesday, November 24, 1964\nTHE     UBYSSEY\nPage 5\nre than snow to produce a winning team\n_ it\n\u00bb\nUBC racer\nlate for classes\nChristmas training\nsnow, lessons and\noffers\nparties\nRemember that airline stewardess that\nwalked out on the hill in her nylons and ski\nboots, dragging her skis behind her?\nShe was one of the many who've gone on\nthe Rossland Ski Week in the past nine years.\nI have been in the lodge as a high school\nstudent, when the UBC group was having one\nof its annual Christmas weeks, and I soon\nfound out that my approach to life was somewhat philistine. There is such a variety of\npeople that go for the week (Dec. 20 - Jan. 1),\nboth from UBC and downtown that it's bound\nto be an experience for anybody.\nYou don't have to be able to ski; the ski\nteam gives daily lessons, and if you're as\nhopeless as the airline stewardess, as we hope\nyou are, we'll give you private lessons all\nweek.\nAnd of course if you're expert we'll still\nteach you, but the whole of Red Mountain is\nyours if you wish\u2014all 1600 vertical feet of it.\nThe chair-lift, poma lift and rope tow cater\nto any skill or lack of same, and the snow\npromises to be good.\nIt's only $74 for the bus trip, tows, breakfast, supper, lessons, party and accommodation.\nThe accommodation is in town now\u2014that's\nwhere everybody used to end up at night\nanyway\u2014and the bus will take you to the\nhill each morning and back each evening.\nMeals are just half a block away. There'll\nbe a New Year's bash in the Red Mountain\nLodge as in past years.\nAny more information is available on the\nnumerous posters around campus, but the\ndeadline is Dec. 4th.\nIt's fun; it's organized.\nAsk anybody from last year who went up,\nor better still go yourself on the best Christmas trip on campus.\nYou Are\nInvited\nNORTH STAR\nMOUNTAIN\n\u2022\n\u2022\nKIMBERLEY, B.C.\nMORE GROOMED SLOPES\nHALL T-BAR LIFTS\nNow 2 lifts operating daily at North Star!\u2014Ride to\nthe top of the mountain on North America's longest\nT-Bar lift, where 7 miles of ski-perfect slopes await\nyou.\n* QUALIFIED SKI INSTRUCTION\nLearn to ski on 1,200-ft. long, 600-ft. wide specially\ndesigned beginners' slope, or advance to the expert\nstage with leading   instructors.  Private   or  group\ninstruction.\n* SPECIAL STUDENTS' GROUP RATES!!!\nPlan now for a fund-filled excursion to friendly\nNorth Star at VERY reasonable rates. The more the\nmerrier! Special tow rate $20 for entire Christmas\nholidays.\n* EXCELLENT, REASONABLE ACCOMMODATION\nif SKI RENTAL, PURCHASE SHOP ON THE HILL\n* ALWAYS SKI-FUN AT NORTH STARI\nThe Land of Blue Skies and Reliable Ski Perfect\nPowder Snowl\nFor Information and Reservations write:\nTOBY RAYNOR,  Kimberley Ski  Club\nBOX 407, KIMBERLEY, B.C.\nSKI CHARTERS\n.. .for skiers who want the best\nMU 1-6381\nPacific Stage Lines\n. . THE QUALITY LINE\nMU 1-6381 Page 6\nTHE     UBYS5EY\nTuesday, November 24, 1964\n'65 ski fashions are color, color, color\nBy CAROLE MUNROE\nFrom Todd to Timberline,\nSeymour to Sun Valley, the\naccent of ski fashions in 1965\nis on color, color, color.\nAnd it is color in an unbroken line from head to foot.\nThat could mean a soft gold\nV-neck sweater over tight\nstretch pants of the same color,\nV   ;\u2022'\n... '.,jA5f\ntopped with a perky knitted\nhat in matching gold tones. Or\nit could be explosive red pants\npaired with en equally bright\nred parka, perhaps streaked\nwith a stripe across the chest.\nOr the effect could be in\nblue: aquamarine stretch pants\nand matching top completed\nby a knitted jersey.\njtS*****^\nAU these outfits are locked\nin color continuity. This is\nthe axis; your imagination and\nsense of color can revolve\naround it endlessly.\nBrighten a black sweater\nand slacks set with a daring\nparka of pink-flowered design.\nAdd a matching pink headband and the vivid picture is\ncomplete. Play matching\nemerald green parka and pants\nagainst a bright navy sweater;\nor foil wine sweater and pants\nwith a stark white parka.\nOnce established this one-\ncolor look can lead to a limitless variety of go-fast looks.\nParallel sets are another\nnew look in '64 ski fashions.\nMen and women's outfits mate,\nbut only closely enough to be\nsmart, not identical. Fresh\nfashion parallels begin as look\nalikes, then proceed to distinguish between builds and figures, guys and girls.\nHe can wear a black stretch\nsuit with traditional ribbons\nof sky blue across the shoulders and down the pant legs.\nHer outfit combines the blue\nstripes on a white background.\nBoth wear matching knit hats\ntopped by a bouncing pompom.\nOr they can both wear sleekly tapered knickers which fit\nprecisely and blouse briefly\njust at the knee, his camel-\ncolored and hers a royal blue,\nboth with matching socks and\nsweater.\n\"Western stretch suit parallels are also destined to hit the\nslopes. For her it's a true\nkhaki with pants white-stitched up the sides and into a low\ndipped V-yoke across the hips.\nThe matching jacket covers a\nwhite turtleneck. His navy\nsuit is outlined in white and\nstitched into a broad yoke that\ncurves  across   the  shoulders.\nSo here they are: lively\nsweaters that coordinate or\ncontrast with the tautest ski\npants and smartest parkas,\nworn with peppy hats or\nmatching headbands.\nThis is ski fashion 1964 . . .\nready to spring into action\nwith the first fresh powder.\nTEPEE\nSPORTING GOODS\n1017 Robson St.\nVancouver 5, B.C.\n681-0511\n3279 West Broadway\nVancouver 8, B.C.\n731-5122\nA COMPLETE\nLINE OF SKI\nEQUIPMENT\nLARGEST SKI\nRENTALS IN\nWESTERN CANADA\nSki Rentals Also Available at:\nDIAMOND HEAD, GARIBALDI PARK\nTWO    GREAT    NAMES   ASSOCIATED   WITH    SKIING\nsMpro as societies\nSKI REPORTS ANYTIME\nCALGARY PHONE\n289-0271\nVANCOUVER SKIERS DIAL\nBRITISH COLUMBIA 431-4180\nCASCADE 431-4181\nNORTH WEST AND  ROCKY MOUNTAIN 431-41 {\nBOX 4052       VANCOUVER 9, B.C.\nFEATURING - News and events of\ninterest to skiers in the provinces of\nAlberta and British Columbia.\nSUBSCRiPTIONS-One year (8 issues)\n$1.00. 3 years $2.00 Special rates to\nski clubs.\njK\nName\t\nAddress\t\nCity\t\nZone Province.\nInformation and Accommodation Service\nArea Code 604 \u2014 431-2442\nsMpro associates\nBox 2531, Vancouver 3, B.C.\nWestern Canada's Only Monthly\nSki Magazine\n\u25a0pi\" Tuesday, November 24, 1964\nTHE     UBYSSEY\nPage 7\n\u2014don hume photo\nAn early fall of snow last week found students like the one above skipping classes\nand heading off to Mt. Seymour. The picture is taken in the meadows looking towards\nGoldie Rope tow.\nIn Garibaldi Park\nThe best in spring skiing\nFor a post exam bash most\nUBCers head toward the Arms\nbut members of the Varsity\nOutdoors Club release their\ntensions by heading into Garibaldi Park.\nFor several weeks in May\nthe club rents the Airways\ncabin on Garibaldi Lake and\nthis is used as the base camp\nfor the 100 odd spring skiers of\nthe club.\nFrom the cabin, six miles inland from Garibaldi Station on\nthe PGE, ski parties head off\nto Sphinx glacier, Panorama\nridge, Price Mt., the Black\nTusk meadows and Sentinal\nglaciers.\nThe cabin is built to accommodate ten people (not too\ncomfortably) but usually over\n30 are crowded into it at one\ntime.\nOthers are sleeping in tents\nnear the cabin or out on trips\nup the various mountains.\nPreparations begin early in\nMarch when the cabin is booked and group train rates are\narranged. Club girls go on a\ngiant shopping trip to buy enough food to feed a logging\ncamp. An airplane is hired\nto drop the food and tents on\nIS   ENROLLING\nIN\nTHE\nROTP\nContact\nFlight Lieutenant\nR. B. ROBINSON\nThe Armoury\nCA 4-1910\nthe frozen lake near the cabin.\nAt the cabin and in the\ncamps the girls do most of the\nkitchen chores, while the boys\nhandle the firewood, water,\netc.\nTwo routes are used to get\ninto the lake area. Skiers\nclimb into Diamond Head,\ncross Garibaldi Mountain, then\nover Spinx glacier down to the\nlake.\nThe other and most popular\nroute is from the PGE dropoff\npoint at Garibaldi Station.\nFrom here skiers can choose\ntwo routes, one up and over\nthe Barrier, a fantastic rock\nwall or up a switch back trail.\nThis hike, using skins on\nthe bottom of the skis most of\nthe way,    takes    around    six\nhours although it has been\ndone in much less. Some have\ntaken over two days.\nSnow conditions are not always the best as the hot spring\nsun turns the surface of the\nlake and mountains into a\nsopping mess.\nMost skiing is done in the\nearlier part of the day when\nthe snow is firm. Last year\nthe heavy snow fall and cooler\nweather kept powder snow on\nthe upper slopes until the end\nof May.\nTo participate in this bash\nmost skiers need special equipment. Ski bindings that will\nallow the heel to lift are essential. Seal skins are used to\nprevent the skier from sliding\nback when climbing up hill.\nLEARN TO SKI!\nBEGINNER'S SET\nSKIS, HARNESS, POLES\nExcellent value for the novice. Fine\nquality skis with steel edges, enamel\nfinished tops. Double safety harness,\ninstalled, plus good quality aluminum\nski  poles.    Special\t\nyr\nFRENCH & AUSTRIAN\nSKI  BOOTS\nInvest in the finest boots, and save\nsubstantially now. Best quality black\ncowhide uppers, full double boot\nwith hinged heel, extra heavily\npadded for comfort. Sizes\nfor women  and  men.\nheavily _   _\n6   to   12 J4'\n50\nLearn to Ski\" Special\nCOMPLETE OUTFIT\nSkis - Poles - Boots\n$65\n00\nArlberg\n816 W. Pender St.\nMU 2-4288\nVancouver's Largest and Most\nComplete Ski Store\nEasy  Terms Mail   Orders  Welcome\u2014Trades   Accepted\nFree Parking\u2014D. P. C. lot, Hornby and Pender\n*.   *\nfly\nSo Who Skis?\nShe has a point! Today ski fashions go wherever the\nsnow blows cold . . . even if it's just to enjoy the brisk\nair walking 'round the block. So the Bay's gathered\nSwiss sweaters, flowered jackets, bold trimmed boots,\nhead-hugging helmets ... a fabulous collection of;\nfashions that ski when they have to . . . but look great\nif they do nothing more than loll around the lodge.\nWhether it's action or fashion you're interested in . . .\nyou'll find the fun-to-wear clothes at the Bay. P.S. We\nhave men's ski clothes to make him look good too . . .\non the slopes or off!\nIn The Bay Active Sportswear and Sporting Goods,\nsecond floor\nINCORPORATCO SI   MAY  1670.\nGEORGIA AT GRANVILLE\nShop Daily 9-5:30 - Friday 9-9 MU 1-6211 Page 8\nTHE      UBYSSEY\nTuesday, November 24, 1964\nSkiing\nis\nSKIING\nSKIING\nSKIING\nSKIING\nSKIING\nSKIING\nis getting up at 5:30 and packing ten people into a\nVolkswagen.\nis lying on a wet highway putting on your chains\n200 feet from the parking lot because some cop\nsays so.\nis forgetting your money for a lift ticket.\nis pinching your fingers in your cable bindings.\nis forgetting your poles.\nis having your goggles fog while all the girls are\nfastening their bindings.\nSKIING is having everyone walk over the top of your new\nskis.\nSKIING is watching the three-year-olds schuss by.\nSKIING is waiting in a tow line while the ski school classes\ncrowd in front of you.\nSKIING is coming out of your bindings in deep powder.\nSKIING is your bindings sticking when you have to go.\nSKIING is having your stretch pants split.\nSKIING is squirting wine from your bota bag on- your new\nsweater.\nSKIING is a long lunch line and cold chili.\nSKIING is putting on cold, wet gloves after lunch.\nSKIING is falling off a rope tow.\nSKIING is itchy long underwear.\nSKIING is snow melting in your boots.\nSKIING is crossing your tips.\nSKIING is losing a contact lens in the snow.\nSKIING is the ice melting on the chair lift seat.\nSKIING is forgetting where you hid your beer in the snow.\nSKIING is a frozen radiator.\nSKIING is GREAT!!\n\u2014Courtesy U. of Wash. Daily\nGET INTO THE SWING OF THINGS\nWITH A SMARTLY STYLED\nSKI JACKET\nfrom the\nQoUaqA$lrwp\nonly19.95\nit 100% Terylene and Nylon\nit lightweight But Warm\nit Styled By Syntax\nAfter That Day On The Slope, Slip Into A\nDUFFEL COAT\nTo Fight Those Cold Winter Night*\nonly 24.95\nit 100% Virgin Wool\nit Attached Hood\nit Choice of 5 Colours\nREMEMBER, THE COLLEGE SHOP IS THE\nPLACE TO BUY CLOTHES QUALITY CRAFTED\nTHE COLLEGE SHOP\nHours: 11:30-2:30 Brock Extension\nClosing For The Term December 4th\nMt. Baker builds\nnew  chair  lift\nMr. Baker is installing a\nnew 2,300 foot chairlift in the\nHeather Meadows area.\nThe lift, designed for intermediate skiers, will be ready\nfor Christmas skiing.\nThe resort will be running\nfor the Christmas week and is\noffering special prices for\nVancouver skiers using their\nbus service.\nGet the point\nNorm Betts, noted alpinist,\nsays skis generally work better when they are pointed\ndownhill, except when one is\ngoing uphill, of course.\nr r\n9 Kf *H0P tm\nTelephone 681-2004\n336 West Pender St.\nVANCOUVER 3, B.C.\nEATON'S\nSKimiAGE\nFashions For Fun On The Slopes\nA. Pedigree  Instructor's  Jacket\nReversible quilted nylon, with\nTerylene fill. Heavy slide fasteners at front and pockets. Knitted\ncollar, elasticized cuffs. Hidden\nhood. Black or navy. S, M. L, XL.\nEach   ...-- 39.95\nB. Alpine Instructor's Jacket\nTubular quilted nylon 2-way slide\nfastener, elasticized cuffs and hidden hood. Slide closures on pockets. Black, red, royal blue. S, M,\nL, XL. Each  19.95\nC. Alpine Cortina Ski Pants\nStretch Helanca, with \"zippered\"\nside pockets and adjustable belt.\nBlack, brown, royal blue, powder\nblue, green. S. M. L.\nEach   ...-- 39.95\nSki Instructors in Attendance\nLiev Kennedy, Grouse Mountain\ninstructor: Mondays through Fridays. Al Kovats, pro from Mont\nTremfolac: Fridays and Saturdays.\nAlso a complete line of Ski Fashions for Women, Boys and Girls,\nin this one convenient location.\nEATON'S Ski Village, Downtown.\nSimilar selection at all four Stores. Tuesday, November 24, 1964\nTHE     UBYSSEY\nPage 5\nBACKGROUND\nRock bit like Britain\nBy   AL   DONALD\nGIBRALTAR\u2014The Ameri-\ncan woman in the Gibraltar\npost office leaned over the\ncounter.\n\"Does anyone here speak\nEnglish?\" she asked.\n\"Yes, Madam,\" replied the\nclerk.\n\"Oh, good. Can you tell\nme what a dollar is worth in\nyour money?\"\n\"Seven shillings.\"\n\"How much is a shilling?\"\n\"Twelve pennies in one\nshilling; twenty shillings in a\npound, madam.\"\n\"Oh, you're English, then!\"\nexclaimed the woman.\nThe statement was more or\nless true.\nGibraltar is a copy of a\nsmall English town, from its\ninhabitants to its physical\nfeatures.\nThe narrow, crooked main\nstreet that winds through the\ntown is bordered by news\nstands, pubs and English style\ngroceries.\nAn English \"bobby\" directs\ntraffic at a crossroads, and the\nUnion Jack flies over the\nGovernor's residence outside\nof which a Royal Marine\nstands guard.\nUbyssey staffer Al Donald\nis touring Europe. Here is\nanother  of   his   reports.\nMost of the people are\nBritish, although the merchants and shopkeepers are\nSpanish, and the common\nlanguage is English with clipped, nasal accent.\nThere is the occasional\nIrishman, and kilts are a common sight on the streets.\nBut despite the British flavor there is an air of the cosmopolitan. American and\nSpanish sailors mix with the\nBritish and Gibraltar's second\nlanguage is Spanish.\nThe restaurants sell Spanish food, hamburgers and\nmilkshakes as well as fish\nand chips, and very English-\nlooking     uniformed     school\nAL DONALD\n. . . roving reporter\nboys speak to each other in\nSpanish.\nBecause of Spanish influence, it is surprising that\nGibraltar has remained British so long.\nSince 1703, the large two-\npeaked rock jutting out into\nthe Mediterranean has been\nunder the Union Jack. And\nthe Spanish Government,\nsince that time, has tried\nmany times to put it under\nthe Spanish flag.\nThe most recent attempt at\na partial blockade of Gibraltar began on Nov. 6 this year\nwhen the Spanish customs at\nLa Lineu, the town just behind the border, put an embargo on many products coming out of the peninsula.\nThe blockade continues and\nmany cars are being held up\nfor more than three hours at\nthe border.\nWhen you stand on top of\nthe Rock, the strategic importance of the position is\nobvious.\nTo the east and west the\nSpanish coastline stretches\naway; to the north are the\nmountains of southern Spain\nand across a few miles of\nMediterranean are the mountains of Morocco.\nA STORY OF LOVE BEFORE MARRIAGE\nThEVhiNG Ipvers\nA SAMUEL GOLDWYN, Jr. Production From M-G-M\n. . . deals with the revolution in campus\nmorals . . . COMING SOON.\n\"BIRD CALLS\" OMISSIONS\ncut out this list and paste onto Page 205 of your directory.\nZOHARI MOHAMAD B.,  224-7822       Talping,  Malaya.\nZOTZMAN, DIANNE G., HE 1-7595       3390 E. 49th Ave,   Vancouver.\nZRAL,   DINNIS  HOWARD,  HE  3-0608.        2565  E.   45th  Ave.,  Vancouver 16, B.C.\nZUBRECKI, ALICE, Box 819, Prince George, B.C.\nZUCCOLIN,   ALEXANDER,   TR 2-1997.\ncouver 12, B.C.\n3761  Nanaimo St.,  Van-\nZUEST, DAVID A.,   736-4667.\nZUEST, PATRICIA A.,  736-4667.\nB.C.\n2524 W. 1st Ave., Vancouver 9, B.C.\n2524 W.  1st Ave., Vancouver 9,\nZUMPANO, FREDERICK, Box 706, Revelstoke, B.C.\nZWARICH,  RONALD J.,  RE 8-5400.       RR 1 Westsyde,  Kamloops,\nB.C.\nZWARICH, AUDREY A., Lyne Rd., Westsyde, Kamloops, B.C.\nZWICK, EUGENE, 224-5681.    Box 823, Kitimat, B.C.\nZWICKEL, FRED C, 277-9571.      543 Francis Rd., Richmond, B.C.\nZYBLUT, E. R., BR 7-7256.        470 Steveston Hwy., Vancouver, B.C.\nZYSBLAT, ALLEN A., 1408 Colleen Ave., Calgary, Alta.\nEvery ship which passes\nthrough the straits of Gibraltar can be seen from the Rock.\nRoads to the summit are\npatrolled by police and army\nvehicles.\nFrom the side of the Rock\nyou can see modern gun emplacements pointing west and\nsouth. Part of the east side is\ntiled and used as a water\ncatchment area.\nThe slogan painted in red\non the side of a building facing travellers coming from\nLa Linea says: \"Gibraltar\u2014\n260 years British and still going strong.\"\nWhether Gibraltar has the\nsame strategic value it had\n100 years ago is open to question, but from the attitude of\nthe present British government it seems likely that it\nwill stay in the hands of the\nBritish for a long time yet.\nWANTED\nSTUDENTS\nWITH\nCARS\nand\nSATURDAYS OPEN\nTHE GLOBE AND\nMAIL\nCANADA'S NATIONAL\nNEWSPAPER\nrequires\nYOU\non Saturdays\nGOOD PAY\nCall Mr. Hall After 4:30 p.m.\n684-1714\nSPECIAL EVENTS\npresents\nThe\nCopenhagen String Quartet\nNOON TODAY - AUDITORIUM\nDon't Miss This Once-a-Year Attraction\n\u2022 \u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\nLecure on 'Indian Music'\nby Dr. Ida Malpern\nTonight 8:30 p.m. \u2014 Hut 017\nFREE\n\u2022   \u2022\u2022*\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\nRAVI  SHANKAR\nSaturday, November 28\nAUDITORIUM \u2014 8:30 P.M.\nRAVI SHANKAR, the great Indian sitarist and composer,\nwinner of practically all of the international awards for\nhis scores for films made in India, will be heard here on\nhis first tour io the Western Hemisphere since his spectacular successes at the Edinburgh, Festival, the London\nseason and a Continental lour, which followed.\nOften called \"India's Man-of-Music\", he is classed\nwith the greatest virtuosi of the world. He was chosen\u2014\nwith Casals, Oistrakh and Ansermet\u2014for the International\nBroadcast to celebrate the 10th Anniversary of the United\nNations and\u2014with Menuhjn and Oistrakh\u2014for some of\nthe most important International Music Congresses of\nParis and other European capitals.\nShankar has proven that his improvisional techniques\nhave a very close kinship to modern jazz.\nRESERVE NOW\nAt AMS, Vancouver Ticket Centre or at the Door\nStudents: 50c.   \u2014   Adults: $2.00\n\u2022 \u2022\u2022      \u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\nTHE  SECOND  COMING\nIS COMING\nThursday,  November  26 \u2014 Armouries \u201412:30\nThe best- Page 6\nTHE     UBYSSEY\nTuesday, November 24, 1964\nEx-editors\nstart own\npaper\nLONDON (CUP) \u2014 Seven\nstudents who last month resigned from the Gazette, student newspaper of the University of Western Ontario, have\nstarted their own  paper.\nThe seven students, three\neditors and four writers, left\nthe Gazette Oct. 21 after a\npolicy dispute with editor-in-\nchief Rob Johnson.\nJohnson had refused to run\na satire on a fraternity during\nSilence Week, a period when\nfraternities are forbidden to\nrush future members.\nFirst edition of the mimeographed paper appeared under\nthe name Veritas and was distributed to about 1,800 students.\nShortly after, Western's student council issued a statement supporting Johnson in\nhis right to exercise control\nover the content in the Gazette.\nopINNing\nNovember 27\nMMSCRIPTION I\nEYE GLASSES\n16\n95\nlw\nAll Doctor i Eyeglass Prescriptions\nfilled. First quality materials used.\nAll work performed by qualified\nOpticians.\nGRANVILLE OPTICAL\n861 Granville      MI 3-8921\nBM MoiMy-QacV Ouorant\u00abe BH\nDAVE\nBROADFOOT\nCanada's No. 1 Comedian\nttm songs by\nDONNY WRIGHT\nMonday through  Thursday\naf Hie\nBUNK HOUSE\nCOFFEE SHOP\n812 Davie\nReserve Now . . . 683-9790\n. . . and remember\nJazz every Sunday Afternoon\n2-5:00 p.m.\nthe\ndrunkard\n(SOLD OUT TONIGHT\nAND WEDNESDAY.\nRESERVE EARLY FOR\nFUTURE    SHOWS)\n3607 West Broadway\nReservations: RE 6-6011\nSTUDENT    HARDIAL    Bains\nand Dr. Keith Clifford attended the second annual\nacademic symposium at\nVictoria College last weekend.\nBirth control\nPills go on sale\nSTOKE, England (CUP) \u2014\nContraceptives will go on sale\nin a university shop at a\nNorthern   England   university.\nStudent leaders at Keel University said that a poll of\n1,000 students and professors\nshowed they wanted contraceptives to go on sale.\n\u2022    \u2022    \u2022\nAuthorities  at   the   university are firmly opposed to the\nplan.\nThe vice-chancellor said he\ntold the president of the students' union the proposal must\nbe abandoned.\n\u2022    \u2022    \u2022\nHowever student president\nRoy Moore said contraceptives\nwill be available to those who\nwant them.\n\"We want to deal with modern problems in a modern way\nand we don't want to impose\na morality ban,\" he said.\nBlorg selections go\nKNOCKMAROON (UNS) \u2014\nMost hated men on campus\nwill tonight terrorize this quiet\nresidential street for their annual green, hairy blorg selections.\nNEW YORK\nFORMAL  WEAR\nTUXEDO'S\nTAILS\nWHITE DINNER\nJACKETS\nSPECIAL RATES\nFOR STUDENTS\n4397 W.   10th Ave.\n24 Hr. Service      CA 4-0034\nBELL\nMEEDS\nMALE GRADUATES\nTO HELP MANAGE TOMORROW'S WORLD OF COMMUNICATIONS\nTake the long view when you graduate.\nPlan a career offering scope and responsibility in the management of a\nleading Canadian industry.\nConsider the potential of a position at\nthe BELL if you are graduating in\nCOMMERCE  -   BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION\nAsk at your Placement Office for\ninformative booklets, and arrange to talk\nwith one of our representatives when\nthey visit your campus.\nBuilt, managed and owned by Canadians\nBELL\nMake a date to discuss a career\nin telecommunications on\nMonday through  Friday\nNovember 30 to December 3 Tuesday, November 24, 1964\nTHE     UBYSSEY\nPage 7\nBANNO'5\nEYE VIEW\nOF BIRDS\nBy ROBERT BANNO\nThe problem of the apathetic UBC sports fan opens,\nonce  again,   the matter  of\nathletic scholarships.\nWe must be realistic and\nface the fact that no amount\nof juvenile, rah-rah school\nspirit garbage will revive fan\nsupport (if it even existed) at\nUBC. What is needed is clear:\n\u2022 A vastly improved calibre of play, with schools like\nWashington, Oregon, UCLA\nand Southern California.\n\u2022 A complete overhaul of\nour present system, making\nuniversity athletics a community, not just a university institution.\n\u2022 An adequate stadium,\nseating at least 20,000 fans,\nan enlarged gymnasium and\nhockey arena.\nTo accomplish this, a system of vigorous recruiting\nand athletic scholarships\nmust be instituted.\nThe prospect appears\nbright.\nIn a Ubyssey article last\n\u2022March 26th, UBC athletic director Bus Phillips stated\nthat \"the Men's Athletic Committee has had the question\nof Athletic scholarships under consideration for some\ntime.\" Phillips went on to\nsay, \"We are pleased that Dr.\nGordon Shrum plans to implement our ideas into Simon Frase'r's athletic program.\"\nThe encouraging article\nalso stated that several MAC\nmembers favored scholarships, including Alumni representative Dr. Gerry Nest-\nman who said, \"there need be\nno conflict between Academic and Athletic scholarships.\"\n\u2022    \u2022    \u2022\nLet us hope that \" ideas\"\nwill be also implemented by\nUBC   within a   few years.\nFor our present program\nis not only half baked and\nhypocritical, but is an outright failure which does not\nachieve   its   objectives.\nIt fails to attract student\ninterest and it fails financially.\nWe should eliminate our\npresent hypocritical system\nand embark on one of two\ndirectives: the one suggested\nin this article and supported\nby Phillips, Nestman and\nmost people connected with\nuniversity; or the complete\nelimination of inter-collegiate\ncompetition.\nUBC third\nin track meet\nUBC placed third in the\nsenior Varsity team event of\nthe Pacific Northwest cross\ncountry tournament held at\nUBC last weekend.\nWashington State won the\nsenior event with 12 points,\nfollowed by Van. Olympic\nclub with 42 and UBC with\n61 points.\nIndividually the first place\nfinishers were Chris West-\nman and John Valiant, both\nof Washington State, who\ntied for first place.\nUBC's HOCKEY BIRDS showed Olympic class against\nRossland Warriors. Saturday night in their first game of\nthe season they tied 4-4 with the Warriors. Sunday they\ndowned  Rossland  by  a   4-0  score.   UBC  defenceman  Al\nIn Hockey\nHappy debut\nfor UBC crew\nIt was a happy debut for UBC's Thunderbird hockey\nteam as they tied and defeated the Rossland Warriors in\ntwo games over the weekend.\nSPORTS\nSaturday in their first game\nof the season the .Birds took\ntwo periods to get their timing, then exploded for three\ngoals in the final period to\ncome from behind and tie 4-4\nwith the Warriors.\nSunday the Birds showed\ntheir Olympic class as they\nshut out and outscored the\nWarriors in a 4 - 0 victory. The\nBirds were never in trouble,\npunching out a two-zip first\nperiod lead and adding single\ntallies in each of the final two\nperiods.\nMARTIN  GREAT\nIn both games Rossland's\noutstanding goalkeeper and\nplaying coach Seth Martin\nmade like a magician as he\nmystified the Bird's would-be-\nscorers by coming up with\nsome unbelievable saves.\nSaturday, with seconds left\nin the game, Martin deftly\nplucked the puck from Gary\nDineen's stick as Dineen tried\nto drive home a quick rebound\nfrom a low, hard, point shot by\nUBC defenceman Ab Merlo.\nBut the Birds' goaltender\nKen Broderick also came\nthrough with fine performances, especially Sunday when\nhe blanked the Warriors, turning aside thirty shots.\nTop point collector for the\nBirds was centre Dineen with\nsix assists in the two games.\nSunday he assisted on each of\nUBC's goals.\nBirds' scorers Saturday were\nBob Forhan, Bill Bowles, Al\nMcLean and Les Johannensen.\nSunday Forhan added his second and third goals of the\nweekend and Bowles and McLean each scored their second.\nEDITOR:\nGEORGE REAMSBOTTOM\nSoccer Birds\ncant find\nscoring eye\nUBC's Thunderbird soccer\nteam fell nine points off the\npace losing 3-1 to league-leading Columbus in PCSL action\nSunday.\nOnce again the UBC club\nwas unable to locate the enemy's goal with John Haar\nscoring the Birds' only goal in\nthe second half when his hard\nshot deflected off a Columbus\nplayer into the net.\nThe Birds head south Wednesday travelling to Berkeley\nfor a game with the University\nof California and another in\n'Frisco against a local All-Star\nsquad.\nGUITARS\nFROM SPAIN '\nInstruction - Group & Private\nMusic - Strings - Repairs\nMediterranean Shop\n4347  West 10th  Ave.\nPhone 228-8412\nMcLean is shown here checking Warrior Gary Morris as\nRossland's famous goalkeeper Seth Martin views the\naction. Morris, actually a UBC type, was loaned to\nRossland for the game.\t\nCharging rugger Birds\ncross off another victim\nEx-Britannia was crossed off UBC Thunderbirds' list in\na free-wheeling rugby game Saturday before a surprisingly\nlarge crowd at Wolfson field. The Ex-Brit squad came up\nwith a great effort, but the 'Birds proved too powerful for\nthem.\nUBC scored early in the game, when Chuck Plester, on\na fifteen yard run, broke three or four tackles to score.\nMike Cartmel, whose kicking of late has been excellent,\nmade the convert good. Five minutes later, Cartmel added\na 35 yard penalty kick.\nThe score was 8 - 8 at half time.\nIn the second half, Ex-Brits came out playing inspired\nball, but UBC held them without a score, and the tide\nturned.\nWith ten minutes gone, Tetsuhiko Kariya picked up a\nloose ball, dodged half the Ex-Britannia team, and scored\nin the corner. Cartmel converted another tough one.\nGary Rowles and Tom Fraine added a try each and\nCartmel made good another convert to give Varsity a decisive 21-8 Victory.\nThe Thunderbirds play a league game Thursday against\nthe Braves in Varsity Stadium, and the Braves would like\nnothing better than to shoot down the high-flying Birds.\nYOUR  CAMPUS CHRISTMAS\nHEADQUARTERS\nFor A Wide Selection Of\nChristmas Gifts & Cards\nUniversity Pharmacy Ltd.\n5754 University Blvd. Phone 224-3202\ndcacbunic tfcfwitieA\nInternational House is in the news this week. Coming up\nthis week are two important noon-hour events. This Wednesday\nthe 25th in the Auditorium at 12:30 you'll be able to see the\nGreek picture \"Immortal Land\". The next day the Indian Trade\nCommissioner will speak at International House, also at 12:30.\nAlso in the works is a Hootenany Dance scheduled for\nFriday the 27th at 8:30. And for those who will be near campus\nduring the Christmas holidays, two parties are planned. One\non December the 18th, at 6:30, and a following one December\n29 at 8:00. Page 8\nTHE     UBYSSEY\nTuesday, November 24, 1964\nDONALD SMILEY\n... seminar speaker\nCUS offers\nXmas cram\non union\nLet your Christmas include\nConfederation \u2014 sign up for\nthe Canadian Union of Students seminar.\nThen you can spend your\nChristmas holidays reading all\nabout Confederation in preparation for the seminar Jan.\n14 in International House.\n\"It is based on a seminar\non Confederation held last\nsummer in Quebec,\" said UBC\nCUS committee chairman Gordon Gaibraith.\n-\"Also we will have some of\nthe same speakers, for instance Dr. Donald Smiley of\nthe department of political\nscience.\"\nApplication forms are available in the AMS office or the\nCUS Committee office, room\n258, Brock extension.\n'tween classes\nStudents string\nalong with Danes\nCopenhagen String Quartet plays in the Auditorium noon\ntoday. Event, sponsored by Special Events, costs 25 cents\n\u2022\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nAFRICAN   STUDENTS\nFilm African Awakening,\nThursday 12:30 to 2:30 p.m. in\nBu. 102.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nCURLING CLUB\nGrey Cup Curling Party,\nSaturday from 8:30 to 1. Tick-\nets $2 per couple at AMS or\nfrom curling executive.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nCHORAL SOC\nInterested singers can join\nChoral Soc Wednesday from 6\nto 8 p.m. in Bu. 104.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nGREEK FILM\nImmortal Land, in colour\nand with English narration\nWed. noon in Aud.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nPRE-MED SOC\nBBC film, On Call To A\nNation, Wednesday noon in\nWes. 100. Admission for non-\nmembers 10c.\n\u2022 \u2022    *\nONTOLOGICAL SOC\nRichard Thompson speaks\non Vigorous Living, Wednesday noon in Bu. 221.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nYOUNG BOURGEOIS\nPiquers congregate today\nnoon in Brock Conference\nroom.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMARDI GRAS\nChorus line auditions this\nweek. Males: Mon., Wed., and\nFri. Females: Tues., Thurs.,\nand Fri. Time: 11:30-2:30.\nEveryone welcome.\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\nFOUND ADS Inserted free. Publications office, Brock Hall., Local 26,\n224-3242. -\t\nLOST \u2014 One strand of cultured\npearls, Tuesday. Reward, phone\n224-9805, Carolyn Allan. Lost Hebb\nTheatre, BI, Sciences, Forestry &\nGeology.       \t\nAutomobiles For Sale\n21\n'61 ALPINE new oversized engine.\nExcellent condition. HT, ST., T.C.\nwire wheels, black with red upholstery.  Phone Geri,  CA 4-9258.\nEMPLOYMENT\nLOST\u2014Arrow-shaped sorority pin.\nJewels on shaft. Greek letters\nPi Beta Phi on head. Phone Carole\nMunroe, CA 4-9070 after 6.\nReward.\nPOUND\u2014Duffel coat at Zate House\non homecoming weekend. Will exchange for mine which is smaller.\nPhone  Josie,   RE   3-1566.     .\nFOUND\u2014Man's glasses, dark grey.\nApply circulation div. office Library.\nSpecial Notices.\n13\nIF  YOU  are   suspected   of   being  a\nstudy  space  hog\u2014BEWARE!\nMOON RIVER PROM featuring \"The\nSinners\", Dunbar Heights, Kairos\n24th & Collingwood, Nov. 28, 8.30\np.m. $1.50 per couple. Tickets at\nthe door.\nHEAR the young lovers in action.\n731-9108. Soon you can SEE the\nyoung lovers in action.\t\nOBTAIN CUS Life Insurance now\nand you won't cuss later. Enquire\nRm. 258 Brock or phone TR 9-2924.\nTransnortalion\n14\nWANTED ride to Ottawa or vicinity\nXmas. Will share expenses & driv-\ning.  Phone Mel 224-9011, Rm.  170.\nRIDE WANTED Mon|-Fri. 8:30's,\n18tb & Arbutus area. Phone Dave,\n733-1265.\nRIDE WANTED for 8:30 lectures,\nvicinity 12th & Macdonald. Phone\nElaine, RE 8-1607.\t\nSki Trips\n16\nMT. BAKER Ski package every Sat.\n& Sub. for $9.50. You get return\nbus trip, l'\/2 hour ski lesson, all\nday rope tows, 20% off rentals.\nDeadline to sign up Thursday eve.\nTickets at all Eaton Stores, Tepee\nSporting Goods, 1017 Robson and\n3279 W. Broadway, and Blueline\nSporting Goods Ltd., 154 W. Hastings, or phone CA 4-395S.\nHelp Wanted\n51\nHOME EC field work? Domestic help\nwanted, 5138 Maple. Phone 266-4740\nMISCELLANEOUS\nFOR SALE\n71\nSMART QUALTTY clothing for all\nthe family, like new, at terrific\nsavings. Ex Toggery Shop, 6246\nE.  Blvd. AM 6-6744.\nFOR SALE\u2014Metal Blizzard Reisen\nslalom skis, 200 cm. Hardly used,\nnew $150. Sell for $100. Call Helen\nStirling CA 4-9090.\nCHEM. 101 lab. guides to Chem 101\navailable in the College Shop.\nThese have been compiled from\nthe labs of the top chem. students\nat UBC. Perfect for in and out of\nlab studying & Xmas exams.\nRENTALS  &  REAL ESTATE\nRooms\n81\nFURNISHED ROOM (garage if\nwanted). AM. 6-9487 evenings after\n6.    3794 West 37th.\nRoom & Board\n82\nATTRACTIVE ROOM & board for\none or two, vacant now, own wash\nroom. AM 1-6863.\nROOM & BOARD now available at\nPhi Kappa Sigma House, excellent cook, 2 blocks from University\ngates.   4506 West  9th.  CA  4-3601.\nAVAILABLE NOW, ,aingle room &\nboard, male student. AM 6-2593.\nFurn. Houses 8c Apis.\n83\nFURNISHED home, students, teachers, five adults, spacious rumpus\nroom, TV, etc.; warm, near UBC.\nHome for students for years, Telephone AM 1-4332, 12-1 p.m.\nOPERATION CROSSROADS\nGary Mullens of the Geography department shows slides\nand discusses his experience in\nthe African country of Malawi\nnoon today in Bu. 217.\n\u2022    \u2022    \u2022\nSPECIAL EVENTS\nLecture on Indian Music by\nDr. Ida Halpern, tonight 8 p.m.\nin Hut 017. Free.\n\u2022 *    \u2022\nLast minute tickets available for The Taming of the\nShrew, Don Crawford and\nDaniel Shaffron from the Special Events Office.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nRavi Shankar Saturday 8:30\np.m. in the Aud. Tickets at\nAMS and at door.\n\u2022 \u2022    *\nNATIVE CANADIANS\nMeeting with guest speaker\nWednesday noon in Bu. 218.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nCOMMUNITY PLANNING\nPart five of CBC Metropolis series: How Things Get\nDone, Wednesday noon in Bu.\n102.\nScience name\ntheir building\nThe   Science    Undergraduate  Society   has  suggested\na  new   name   for   the  new\nStudent Union building.\nSUS    Monday    suggested\nthe building be called SUB,\nScience Undergraduate\nBuilding.\nAbout   fifty   science   students signed their names to\nthe letter in support of the\nname.\nAt present the SUS has its\nquarters in Hut M 21. \"We\nare trying to  get room for\nthe SUS in their building,\"\nsaid   AMS   president   Roger\nMcAfee.\nopINNing\nNovember 27\nSTROKE:\nCan This Killer\nBe Curbed?\nIt used to be thought that\nstrokes occurred suddenly...\nwithout warning. Now doctors know that 3 out of 4\nvictims have been warned by\n\"little strokes\" ... bur didn't\nknow it! Here are the symptoms... and what to do about\nthem...plus some good news\nabout rehabilitation for the\nmillions of stroke survivors.\nDon't miss this informative\narticle in December issue of\nReader's Digest, now on sale.\ncsa NEWS\nAn  introduction  to   Canadian   University   Service   Overseas:\nThursday, 26th November; coffee served in the Lower Lounge,\nGraduate Student Centre.\nA talk and slide show describing the activities of C.U.S.O. Information on application procedure, fields of foreign aid, and\ncountries concerned will be available.\nADVANCE NOTICES\nAnnual Kiddies Chirstmas Party now being planned. Similar\nto the one held last year. New Year's Party in G.S.C. Details\nto be announced later.\nREGULAR\nand\nKING SIZE\ndu MAURIER\no product  of Peter  Jocfcson Tobacco  Limited \u2014  makers of fine cigarettes","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Vancouver (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"LH3.B7 U4","@language":"en"},{"@value":"LH3_B7_U4_1964_11_24","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0127363","@language":"en"}],"Language":[{"@value":"English","@language":"en"}],"Provider":[{"@value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","@language":"en"}],"Publisher":[{"@value":"Vancouver : Alma Mater Society, University of B.C.","@language":"en"}],"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\/","@language":"en"}],"SortDate":[{"@value":"1964-11-24 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1964-11-24 AD","@language":"en"}],"Source":[{"@value":"Original Format: University of British Columbia. Archives","@language":"en"}],"Subject":[{"@value":"University of British Columbia","@language":"en"}],"Title":[{"@value":"The Ubyssey","@language":"en"}],"Type":[{"@value":"Text","@language":"en"}],"Translation":[{"@value":"","@language":"en"}],"@id":"doi:10.14288\/1.0127363"}