"CONTENTdm"@en . "http://resolve.library.ubc.ca/cgi-bin/catsearch?bid=1211252"@en . "University Publications"@en . "2015-08-05"@en . "1962-03-29"@en . "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/Ubysseynews/items/1.0125604/source.json"@en . "application/pdf"@en . " FIREMEN, HEALTH SERVICE AGREE\nHAD ONE ONCE BUT.\ni\nAMBULA\nP\nBy TIM PADMORE\nThere is an intrigue on campus.\nAn ambulance is the principal character in this\nreal-life mystery \u00E2\u0080\u0094 an ambulance which, like the\nlittle-man-who-wasn't-there \u00E2\u0080\u0094,- isn't here.\nAn editorial in The uliyssey Tuesday brought out\nthe fact that the only vehicle on campus, to carry in-\nhalator equipment is the single university fire truck.\nIf an ambulance is required it must come from the city.\n-. V V TT\nEverybody agrees an ambulance is needed.\nAt least one ambulance has. been offered to the\nuniversity.\nYet we don't have an ambulance.\nWhy?\nTwo hours of probing produced few answers.\nAssistant fire chief, R. W. Rowland, generously\nadmitted the possibility Of simultaneous inhalator and\nfh-e calls but refused to comment on why UBC does not\nhave an ambulance.\nChief Gerard Foran said that an ambulance was\n.bought but later, inexplicably, dropped.\n\"I don't know what happened,\" he said.\nNo one seemed to think it was for financial\nreasons.\nA conversation with one of the firemen was a\nlittle more interesting.\nApparently there have been simultaneous demands for a fire truck and ambulance.\nThe fire truck has \"oeen tied up for as much as six\nhours attending an inhalator call.\nAt almost every inhalator call an ambulance is\nneeded; an ambulance which has to come five miles\nto the university, search among unfamiliar buildings,\nand finally transport the injured perhaps three blocks\nto Wesbrook.\nv *r ?r\nAt least 90 percent of this wasted time would be-\nsaved if an ambulance was based on campus.\nThere is space at trie iire hall to house an ambulance, and little or no extra staff would be needed\nas firemen are already trained in first aid.\nThe fireman didn't know why we shouldn't have\nan ambulance either.\nDr. A. M. Johnson of the University Health Service said an ambulance was \"not in the foreseeable\nfuture.\nWhy? (again).\n\"Internal, domestic problems,\" he said. Then,\nNEEDED\n\"correcting\" himself, he blamed it on \"jurisdictional-\nfinancial-administrative problems.\"\nE. D. McPhee, dean of financial affairs, was firmer:\n\"Until the volume increases it will be unnecessary\nto purchase an ambulance ror the university.\"\nIt certainly seems as if there is much dissension in\nthe ranks.\nPerhaps a good start to resolving the matter would\nbe to look into the \"internal, domestic problems.\"\nAs for the necessity of getting an ambulance in\nspite of the cost, our friendly fireman said:\n\"Eow can we measure money against human\nlife?\"\n* * *\nThe fire department has its problems too.\nIt is fighting fires with equipment described generally as outmoded. The truck is a modified 1942 air\nforce surplus model. The longest ladder cannot reach\nthe top of several campus buildings, and this ladder\nis not adequately manned \u00E2\u0080\u0094 six men are required t6\noperate it and only four are available.\n\"We are in the same position,\" said a spokesman,\n\"as a man with a '41 Ford looking wistfully at a '-62\nCadillac.\"\nr UBYSSEY\nVol. XLIV\nVANCOUVER, B.C., THURSDAY, MARCH 29, 1962\n.No. 74\n-Photo by Ted Ross\nVICTIMS of Social Credit anti-press motion Tuesday were\nUbyssey reporters Ian Cameron (left) and Mike Horsey. Pair\nput ears to door after being tossed out of Socred club's\ngeneral meeting.\nBombay grad wins IH\nforeign student award\nA graduate student from the University of Bombay\nwas named \"Foreign student of the year\" by International\nHouse, Wednesday.\nAfnar Kshatriya, 30, currently on a student visa to Canada, has spent two years at UBC taking a doctorate in Physics. He plans to return to India next year to lecture or do\nresearch work at an Indian university.\nThe award Kshatriya received is given on the basis of\noutstanding scholastic ability, participation in extra curric-\nular activities, and pleasing personal characteristics.\nUbyssey staffers barred\nfrom Socred club meeting\nBy MIKE HORSEY\nI was kicked out of a Social\nCredit club meeting Tuesday.\nSo were photographer Ted\nRoss and another reporter, Ian\nCameron.\nWe had been assigned as a\nteam to cover the second Socred\ngeneral meeting in as many\ndays for the Ubyssey. But we\nwere told to leave because the\nclub felt the presence of the\npress undesirable.\nIt's the first club meeting we\nhave been kicked out of. The\nLiberals, New Democrats, Conservatives and Communists\ndidn't seem to mind our presence at their meetings.\nMonday the Social Credit\nClub called a meeting at which\nit was to discuss the B.C. government's Bill 85. A motion was\nput forth to send a note of pro\ntest to Premier Bennett.\nHowever,, when it was noted\nthat a Ubyssey reporter, Krishna Sahay, was present the motion was tabled and further discussion on the topic was discontinued. The club called another\nmeeting for Tuesday\nThat set the stage for us to\ngo to the Tuesday meeting in\nBu. 317.\nWe quietly entered the room\nahd made our way to the front\nrows. The assembled crowd\nmurmured a note of disapproval and the current discussion\nwas stopped.\nAs soon as it had been ascertained that we were from the\nGarbage wrappings\non sale for $5\nUbyssey readers who will\nbe off campus next year don't\nhave to miss the scandals and\ngrudges The Ubyssey reports\nto its captive audience.\nGraduates, retired professors and others who don't\nmake it back can have the\nrag mailed to their homes for\n$5 a year.\nThe Publications Office,\nBrock Hall will sign up any\nsuckers who write or see\nthem giving name, address\nand five bucks.\npress a motion was put forth\nfrom the floor to the effect that\nthe presence of the press was\nundesirable.\nThe motion was carried and\nwe were asked to leave the\nmeeting.\nAs we left President-elect\nLome Hudson said that there\nwould be a statement at the end\nof the meeting as to what had\nbeen discussed.\nBut, when photographer Ross\nand I returned about an hour\nlater we were met with this\nreply:\n\"It has been passed by the\nmajority that there should be\nno statement whatever by the\nclub.\"\nWhen I asked several members who had attended the meeting if they had anything to say\nI received the reply \"no comment\".\nWe will never find out what\nhappened at that\ meeting.\nNeither will you. Can't help\nwondering what they were doing in there. They're getting as\nbad as their Big Brother in Victoria.\nNo court access for BCE\nHouse sits in judgement\nBy RICHARD SIMEON\nThe people who blow up\npower poles in the Kootenays\nhave more rights than the\nshareholders of the B.C. Electric Company, Jim Clarke,\nchairman of the shareholders\ncommittee for fair expropriation said Wednesday.\n\"At leasi they have the\nright to a fair trial before a\njudge and jury,\" he said.\nSpeaking with Clarke at a\npanel discussion in Brock\nLounge, H. L. Matthews, Victoria lawyer, said the provincial government is threatening the democratic rights of\nBritish Columbians by not\npermitting the BCE access to\nthe courts.\nOur committee does not\ndeny the power of the government to expropriate the\nBCE but if there is no right to\nnegotiation and arbitration,\nthen the takeover is tantamount to stealing, he said.\nIf the government can bypass the courts whenever it\nwants, then the courts and\nthe protection they provide\nthe individual will be finished, he said.\n\"Not one person in the B.C.\nLegislature knows the exact\nvalue of the BC Electric, yet\nthey sit in judgment,\" said\nMatthews.\nThe only fair method of\nexpropriation is to have arbitration, negotiation and judicial review, added Matthews.\nThe object of the Shareholders Committee is to get\nthe Power Development Act,\nunder which the company\nwas expropriated, amended\nso as to allow for a fair price\nto be set, said Clarke.\nIt now has more than 4,000\nmembers. Page 2\nTHE UBYSSEY\nThursday, March 29, 1962 Thursday, March 29, 1962\nTHE\nUBYSSEY\nPage 3\nDrift\n-*\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nWORDS\nBy MIKE GRENBY\nSince tomorrow's special edition is what it is, I'm saying my\nfarewell today.\nIt's been an interesting and\neventful year.\nAt least the campus seems\nalways to have been bubbling\nwith activity of almost every\nkind imaginable.\nAnd this, for a newspaperman, is just what the editor\nordered.\nThe year has gone far too\nfast, of course, but 74 editions\nof The Ubyssey have shown\nthat the hours were put to their\nfullest use.\nAnd now it's close to quitting\ntime.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nHow did you spend the year?\n(check the applicable answer)\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094I attended most of my lectures and did most of my assignments.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094I only cut lectures when I\nwent for coffee.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094I diligently studied m y\nwork every night, (deduct \"two\npoints for checking this)\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094I intended to study my work\nevery night but there was always something more important\nand April was such a long way\n. away.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094I went out three days a\nweekend.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094J went out three nights a\n^ weekend.\n-.\"'.\u00E2\u0080\u0094I got through the year losing (?) only three umbrellas,\ntwo overcoats, and a textbook\nwith all my notes in it.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094-1 made more friends and\nenemies than I've ever made\nbefore.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094I suddenly realized how\nlittle I know.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094I've learned a lot that no\nexamination will ever be able to\ntest.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094I've had a wonderful/miserable time, (underline two)\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094I don't want to remember\nsome of the things that happened this year.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094T'n never forget some of the\nthings that happened this year.\nScore yourself. Out of 13\u00E2\u0080\u0094\ncheck 10. normal; check 11, abnormal and quite natural; check\n12, you'd be an interesting person to meet; check 13. impossible.\nAnd now it's even closer to\nquitting time.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 * \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nI've enjoyed writing this column and I hope you've had\nsome enjoyment from reading\nit.\nTo those of you who have\ntold me your reactions to and\ncriticisms of \"Drift Words,\"\nmany thanks.\nWithout your comments I\nshould often have been at a\nloss in my endeavors.\nIf some of my words made\nyou smile. I'm glad. If some of\nthem made you think, even\nfrown, I'm glad.\nFor you returning in the fall,\nhave a pleasant summer and\nI'll see you in September.\nFor you who are leaving\nUBC, best wishes for the future.\nFor all, good luck and marks\nin the coming ordeal.\nAu revoir.\n-Photo by Won Hume\nWORRIED? WHO ME? says Glenn Schultz, Arts 1, who finally\ngot down to work for final exams. Revised exam schedules\nare expected to be posted this week\" by Registrar's office.\nNew executive\ncosmopolitan\nNext year's Parliamentary\nCouncil will have a cosmopolitan flavour.\nAn Englishman, Len\nBrown, was elected president\nby acclamation.\nAn American, Dick Arkley,\nwas elected vice-president in\na close race over Ken Gag-\nlardi, whose uncle is the B.C.\nHighways Minister.\nMUSICAL SOCIETY &\nCHORAL SOCIETY\nGeneral Meeting\nBu. 205 Thurs., Mar. 29\nBANQUET AND DANCE\nFri., March 30, St. Mawes\nBy The Sea\nNorth Vancouver\nMembers $1.75\nTotem posts open\nApplications are open for the\npositions of Head Photographer\nand Co-ordinator of Totem. Applications to Bill McDonald,\nPublications Co-ordinator, Publications office, Brock Hall.\nApplications must be in before noon, Wednesday, April 4.\nInterviews will be held at 5\np.m. the same day.\nRoom and Board\nFor Men\nm Kitohen Facilities Available for,\nSnacks\n\u00C2\u00AB Laundry Included\n\u00C2\u00A3 Close to Unlverstiy Gates\nm H'tudent Owned and Operated\na Good Studying Facilities\nAPPLY NOW!!!\nSummer Session Winter Session\n$55 per Montli $53 per Month\nUniversity Student's Cooperative\nAss'a.\n4082 West 8th Avenue CA 4-3631\nCouncil approves\neligibility rules\nStudent council Monday night approved, in principle, the\nelegibility rules the 1961 - 62 council proposed to the spring\ngeneral meeting.\nThe rules were not passed at\nthe General Meeting as there\nwas no quorum present. I\nCouncil Vice-president Peter j\nShepard proposed that the eligibility rules apply to the Spring\nSessional examinations.\nDEFEATED\nShaffer play\non hand soon\n\"Five Finger Exercise\" will\n-* -\u00C2\u00AB. * ^~ be presented at the Frederic\nThe motion was defeated, and! Wood Theatre, April 6 to 21.\nthen expunged from the records j Written by Peter Shaffer, the\nof the society. 'play deals with a wealthy self-\nShepard said he wanted \"thei made Englishman, his preten-\ncouncil and the campus inform- j tiously cultured wife, their college-age son and teenage daughter. When a young and personable tutor of German extraction\ned that if it was legally possible\nwe wanted eligibility rules in\nGffGCt \" I aw*'' *v\u00C2\u00BB*w~\t\n. \"The motion was defeated byj joins their household, \u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00AB\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00BB\nonly two votes,\" he said, \"and I that have seethed beneath the\nbv that time the issue was! surface are exposed with em-\ncloudy because the discussion\nhad continued so long and because Council was not sure of\nthe legal aspect,\" he added.\nNOT FORGOTTEN\nSecretary Barbara Bennett\nsaid she felt the motion should\nhave been passed in order to\ninform the students that moral\nresponsibility has not been forgotten.\nBernie Papke, Co-ordinator\nof Activities said, \"I don't know\nwhat Peter is getting at, if he\nintends this motion to bind\nCouncil morally it doesn't.\"\notional impact by the author as\nhe dramatizes the disorderly relationships between different\ngenerations.\nDirector is John Brockington,\nassistant professor, UBC department of theatre.\nANNOUNCING\nSPECIAL\nHAMBURGER SALE\nSATURDAY, MARCH 31\nONLY\nBuy One . . . Get Another for 5c\nDeluxe Burgers \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Cheeseburgers \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Fish & Chips\nJunior Burgers \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Cheese Dogs \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Hot Dogs \u00E2\u0080\u0094\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 French Fries\nChocolate \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Coffee \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Ice Cream\nPLUS OUR USUAL ICE CREAM SERVICE\nDAIRY QUEEN\n(Al and Sheila Browne)\nOpen 7 Days a Week \u00E2\u0080\u0094 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. \u00E2\u0080\u0094 4577 W. 10th\nKennedy outlines his\ncold war strategy\nLast year in Moscow, Khrushchev\nspelled out his master plan in no\nuncertain terms. But what is Kennedy's strategy? In this week's Post,\nin an authoritative article based\non talks with the President and\nhis chief advisers, Stewart Alsop\nreports on Kennedy's long-range\nthinking. And tells how such crises and Cuba, Vietnam and Berlin\nshaped the President's views.\nThe Saturday Evening\n P\u00C2\u00AB MARCH 31\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 ' ISSUE/NOW\nON SALE\nDO YOU\nfind\nstrange\nfeeling creep over you at nite\nafter a hard day at the textbooks?\nWe have the answer here at\nPIZZARAMA. The problem is\nHUNGER and the an\u00C2\u00ABwer is\nFOOD.\nNow, we know that late at nite\nno one wants to go out to eat,\nespecially if there are books to\nget bar k to. Why not have something delivered right to your door?\nThis way no time is wasted.\nArent you getting a. bit sick of\nChinese food? There ARE other\nforms of food heing delivered in\ntown. Why not give us a call and\nlet us deliver anything from our,\nvaried menu to you tonite? We\ndeliver up till midnite. Free delivery on all orders over $2.50.\nSay, do you set the feeling that\nthis ad isn't much? So do I.\nThat's why I'm quitting for the\nnite. Goodbye.\n2675 WEST BROADWAY\nBE 3-9916\nST. TIMOTHY LUTHERAN CHURCH\nON CAMPUS WORSHIP\nHUT L4 - EAST MALL\n11:00 a.m. every Sunday\nEveryone Welcome\nSENORITAS . . . just arrived at . . .\n\u00C2\u00A3JbiAa'A,\n(EXCLUSIVE DEALER FOR THE UNIVERSITY AREA)\n\"Fjorlane\" Sweaters\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 100% Virgin Wool\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Genuine Mohair\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Made in Italy\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 LOVELY SPRING COLOURS\nCARDIGANS 29.95 PULL-OVER 24.95\nCABALLEROS ... just arrived at . . .\nfifoiAa'A*\nBEAUTIFUL WINE SKINS (Botas) FROM SPAIN\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Numerous shapes and sizes.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Guaranteed to keep wine in good condition\nPRICED FROM $4.50 AND UP\n\u00C2\u00A3JbiAa'A*\n4479 WEST 10TH AVENUE\nCAstle 4-0848 Page 4\nTHE\nUBYSSEY\nThursday, March 29, 1962\nmMmE UJB YSSJEm\nWinner ot the Southam Trophy\nAuthorized as second class mail by the Post Office Department,\nOttawa, and for payment of postage in cash.\nMEMBER CANADIAN UNIVERSITY PRESS\nPublished three times weekly throughout the University year in\nVancouver by the Alma Mater Society, University of B.C. Editorial\nopinions expressed are those of the Editor of The Ubyssey and not\nnecessarily those of the Alma Mater Society or the University of B.C.\nTelephone CA 4-3242. Locals: Editor\u00E2\u0080\u009425; News\u00E2\u0080\u009423; Photography\u00E2\u0080\u009424.\nEditor-in:chief: Roger McAfee\nManaging Editor Denis Stanley\nAssociate Editor Ann Pickard\nNews Editor Fred Fletcher\nCity Editor - - - Keith Bradbury\nCUP Jgditpr Maureen Covell\nPhotography Editor P o n Hume\nSenior Jditor Sharon Rodney\nSports Editor Mike Hunter\nPhotography .Manager ------ Byron Hender\nCritjes Editor, - - David Bromige\nEditorial Research - Bob Hendrickson, Ian Cameron\nSTAFF THIS ISSUE\nLayout this issue: Bob McDonald\nREPORTERS: Krishna Sahay, Mike Horsey, Richard\nSimeon, Tim Padmpre, Heather Virtue, Mike\nGrenby, Lynn McDonald,' Nicky Phillips, Eric\nWilson.\nSPOJRTS: George Railton, Glenn Schultz, Bert MacKinnon, pill Wiljson.\nTECHNICAL: Pauline Fisher, Gail Kendall.\n',<^s>^\u00C2\u00ABbS^ \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00C2\u00AB\nT'V^v\u00C2\u00BB.!.--x\u00C2\u00BB4tfS--t. <~** &>$\u00C2\u00AB*\u00C2\u00AB>* ;-fv\nLetters to the Editor\nnow\nWell the inevitable has happened\u00E2\u0080\u0094thank God! This is the\nlast time you'll have to wade through the crap that usually piles\nup in this column. This is the last Ubyssey of the year.\nThe year has been a good one for the University and the\nAlma Mater Society. True we've had troubles in getting the\nstudent union building off the ground. The winter sports arena\nis finally moving ahead, out of the \"proposed\" stages.\nOur athletic teams are showing their usual prowess and\nwinning a few games. And The Ubyssey won the Southam\nTrophy.\nNew University buildings are going up and parking lots\nare disappearing. More buildings will go up and more parking\nlots will go down. Maybe someday a parkade will be built on\nthe campus. Probably about the same time as the student union\nbuilding goes up!\nWhat's going to happen next year? Well we'd like to make\na few predictions.\n. Unless the student body gets off its fat ass we're not.going\nto have a student government! Why should it. Why should a\nhandful of people slave their guts out for the rest of you slobs?\nWhy should council meet every Monday night for six or seven\nhours just to keep the operation above water? Why should\ncouncil members spend time, that could be spent more profitably on .their studies, attending various meetings just so you\ncan be represented? Why the hell should they fail, while you,\nfrom the solitude of the library or the relative comfort of the\nGeorgia, enjoy yourself.\nThis new system of student government we have was supposed to be the answer to the general disinterest in AMS governmental affairs. Well, obviously it isn't and we don't think\nthe system can be blamed.\nWe feel that the blame for this should lie with the people\nwho have the ultimate responsibility\u00E2\u0080\u0094and that's you!\nThe Alma Mater Society couldn't even get enough of its\nactive (laugh!) members to the spring general meeting. Perhaps if the quorum is lowered sufficiently the special fall meeting will be able to transact some business!\nWhen you don't take an active interest in your own affairs\nthose running them tend to get cocky and irresponsible with\nthe power you have given them. They have been known in the\npast to misuse that power.\nWell, if that happens next year, you have ho one to blame\nbut yourselves! So don't look around for a patsy!\n-$\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 %\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 *\u00C2\u00A3\nWe have only one regret concerning this year's operation\nof The Ubyssey. On occasion we were unable to furnish the\nservice needed by various campus organizations. We tried our\nbest, but that's the way it goes. We hear that next year's\nUbyssey staff is taking steps to remedy the situation. We wish\nthem luck.\nA purpose to USC\nEditor,\nThe Ubyssey,\nDear Sir:\nDarrell Roberts, last year's\nUSC chairman, completely\nmisunderstands the purpose of\nUSC. He recommends that\nUSC be disbanded because\n\"there is no need for a duplice\ncampus-wide representation\".\nOn the contrary, the new\ncouncil system was designed\nto increase inter-faculty contacts and help to spread student government functions beyond the doors of the Brock.\nBecause it is successfully doing this is no reason to disband\nthe only other body that permits undergraduate society representatives to meet and\nwork together.\nTo replace USC with a\ncouncil-appointed board would\nbe a step backwards. USC has\nproven this year that it could\nsupervise elections, blood\ndrives, charities, inter-faculty\ndebates and a song-fest, as well\nas taking over responsibility\nfor food services.. In the coming year, I intend to see that\nUSC relieves council of more\nroutine administrative tasks.\nI question Mr. Roberts' declaration that most USC representatives run for the position\nwithout understanding the\nfunctions of USC. Even if it\nwere true, representatives gain\nvaluable experience learning\nto cooperate with representatives from, other ..undergraduate societies. With the society presidents fulfilling such\nan important role in campus\naffairs, it is important to provide a body that can provide\ntraining in appreciation of\ncampus-wide problems.\nI believe that USC has been\nof great value and can be of\nmore value in the future by\nhelping to free council of\nroutine and allow it to concentrate on policy - level decisions.\nYours truly,\nPETER LEASK,\nUSC Chairman.\nOn scouring Jock\nEditor,\nThe Ubyssey,\nDear Sir:\nI was very interested to\nread Jack Ornstein's article on\nthe.dire consequences of a belief in immortality. However\nhe reached several of his conclusions rather hastily and I\nthink at least part of the confusion lies in his mistakes concerning elemental definitions.\nThis was particularly evident\nin his ideas on sacrifice and\nfor he sake of brevity I would\nlike to consider only this aspect.\nOrnstein states that real sacrifice constitutes an irremedial\nloss and that this is impossible\nfor the \"believer\". I would\nlike to show that such a state\nof affairs never arises. All men\ndesire happiness in life and\ntheir actions are constantly\nmotivated towards this goal.\nA man may be mistaken in an\naction, but at the moment of\nperforming the action, he\nthinks it will bring him some\ntype of happiness either im\nmediate or remote. A sacrifice\nis, then, an action in which a\ndesirable object is given up in\nbehalf of a higher object. It is\nquite inconceivable that a person would make a sacrifice if\nno higher happiness, which\nmay or may not be a spiritual\none, attracted him! It is a fact\nof human experience that\npeople never perform actions\nwithout some happiness in\nmind, and thus in Orstein's\nsense of the word, sacrifice\nwould always be impossible\nfor everyone, believer or not.\nIn fact Ornstein has seriously misused the word and I suppose that a further r scout of\nhis article will reveal other\nexamples of special reasoning.\nYours truly,\nM. K. MacVICAR.\nThe proper view\nEditor,\nThe Ubyssey,\nDear Sir:\nAfter reading Mr. J. Ornstein's article dealing with immortality, I felt very curious\nto know in what kind of God\nhe would think the church believes. From a few remarks I\ngather that he sees nothing\nmore than a being that permits\nsuffering of little children and\nallows such things as mongolism to occur.\nI am sure Mr. Ornstein completely overlooked the fact that\nman first of all suffers from a\nfree will. For example he is\ncompletely free to pursue free\nlove which very often engenders children having no normal\nenvironment to provide a harmonious development and are\ntherefore bound to suffer; he\nis completely free to seek marriage even if he suffers from\nsome hereditary disease or congenital disturbances even\nthough such things as mongolians can be engendered by him;\nhe overlooks the fact that man\nis completely free to aim only\nat the satisfaction of his desires\neven if this is harmful to his\nneighbors and eventually leads\nhis society to war which creates\nthe worst kind of suffering yet\ninvented by man.\nI don't say these things to\nprove that free will should not\nhave been given to man because after all this is one thing\nthat distinguishes us from animals. What I want to show is\nthat those men who utilize their\nfree will in such an individualistic fashion (e.g. the existentialists) are in fact responsible\nfor most of the sufferings we\nsee around us. It is a very pitiful subterfuge to put the blame\non God because this blame\nwould be nothing but saying\nthat God has been very wrong\nto give man free will.\nSubjection of one's free will\nto a ruling or moral code, be\nit the natural law, is as far as\nI can see what the Church calls\nsacrifice since it involves relinquishing the pursuit of\nthings that are good for the\nindividual but not for his fellow neighbors, even for \"his\nfamily.\nEven if one does not believe\nin immortality, he is just as\nwell bound to follow the ascetic life proposed by the Church\nsince we know from scientific\nobservation that natural law\nimposes even more stringent\nrestraints on human behavior.\nObservations on human behavior enable us to list the three\nmain requirements of natural\nlaw:\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094each man should preserve his\nown life and society should\nstrive after survival;\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094each man should work at the\nreproduction of the species;\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094society should rise by mastery of the mind over nature.\nLet me illustrate this by an\nexample: Consider a man with\nmental disorders or with an\nhereditary disease. Natural law\nforbids him to marry since the\nchances are that his progeny\nwill suffer from the same disease. On the contrary, the\nmoral code permits marriage\nin such a case and it is left to\nthe conscience of the individual\nto make the proper decision. If-\none abides by natural law,\neuthanasia becomes unnecessary because the harm has been\nprevented at the root, \"Mieux\nvaut prevenir que guerir\".\nIt is a historical sorrow that\nman became master over nature much before becoming\nmaster over his own self. This\nis the reason why man continues to use his technological\nfindings without subjecting\nhimself to any moral code, not\neven the natural law, thereby\nengendering more sufferings\nand more destructive wars.\nThe commands of natural law\nare completely independent of\nthe question whether man's\nsoul is immortal or not and\nmust be obeyed eyen if there is\nno after-life.\nIt is a very interesting fact\nthat long before science was-\nable to list the commands of\nnatural law and their consequences, the Church has given\nus from the teaching of Christ\na moral code which is in fact\neven less restrictive than the\nrequirements of natural law.\nOne should not believe in_\nimmortality for metaphysical\nreasons no more than he should\nbelieve in the existence of protons and electrons for mathematical reasons. A person hav-;\ning a minimum of scientific\nculture would not ask the question: \"are electrons and protons mathematical monstrosities?\", if they are at all monstrosities, they are physical \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nmonstrosities. As for immortality, if it is a monstrosity, it is\na theological monstrosity. But\neven monstrosities exist and\nwe must cope with them.\nMetaphysics can be compared\nto science if one recognizes the\nfact that in science man proposes hypotheses that must\ncheck with nature's answers\nwhen experiments are performed. Hypotheses that are contradicted by experiments must'\nbe rejected and new hypotheses\nlooked for. In metaphysics, hypotheses are also proposed but\ncannot be checked by any physical experiments. The conclusive evidence to check metaphysical hypotheses is to be\nfound in the Revelation of\nChrist. Nature's answer is here\nGod's answer. If the hypotheses\nare contradicted by revelation\nthey must be rejected whatever\nthe beauty of the system in\nwhich they fit.\nIf one believes in immortality, he must also believe in\nGod and in everything Christ\nrevealed since Christ is the only\nfinal authority in metaphysical\nmatters. From Revelation it is\nclear that man's soul is immortal and personally I would\nbe very glad to spend eternity\nwith a Being who was generous\nenough to give His creature\nfree will to decide his destiny:\nspend eternity with Him or\nwithout Him. I MEAN THAT.\nThe trading stamps of \"obedience\" and \"sacrifice\" you will\ncash in on eternity are those\nof obedience to natural law or\nto moral law and the sacrifices\ninvolved in this obedience.\nYours truly,\nMARCEL BANVILLE\nGrad Studies Thursday, March 29, 1962\nTHE UBYSSEY\nPage 5\nBy Jack Ornstein\n\"Adieu mes amis!\"\nThis will likely be our last meeting. But I refus;e to get\nsentimental. I'd just like to leave you with a few non-controversial thoughts. Like \u00E2\u0080\u0094 the most, important thing in life is\nlove. Love of a woman ranks first. Then love of creating. Then\nlove (respect) of self. Without these things, life would be pretty\nempty and meaningless.\nThe dessert of life is a keen sense of humor \u00E2\u0080\u0094 usually accompanied by a perspicacious outlook. You have to be able to\nthink straight in order to see things crooked.\nIt's not that \"The unexamined life is not worth living.\" It's\njust that such a life isn't worth examining. There must be times\nwhen you sit back, so to speak, and ask yourself how you're\ndoing. Even if the question isn't cognitively significant (can't\nbe empirically verified), still one ought to take a minute now\nand then to reflect on the course of one's life. (Browning\u00E2\u0080\u0094\n\"When is man strong until he feels alone?\") Particularly today\nwhat with the threat of annihilation over us all. I'd like to ignore\nit too \u00E2\u0080\u0094 but every time I open my eyes it's still there. (Maybe\nI should try closing my mouth?)\nWell, there's no use trying to philosophize to you. Most of\nyou are \"out here\" to get a better job or to while away the\ntime. You wear ivy league clothes and an empty smile. You're\nthe hollow men. And you who(m) I write to \u00E2\u0080\u0094 you don't need\nrite to tell you how to live. So I'll say good-bye with a quotation\nfrom my uncle Mel Swartz who, on the occasion of my bar\nmitzvah (when I still sang soprano), reminded me that:\n- ' \"Not in the shouts of the crowds in the street,\nNot in the clamour and plaudits of the throng,\nBut in yourself\nIs triumph or defeat.\"\nS_\nSargent\nSales & Service\n1205 Seymour\nMU 4-3933 MU 4-7730\nEuropean and Small Car\nSPECIALISTS\nQualified Mechanics\nGuaranteed Satisfaction\n\"Vancouver's Leading\nCitroen Dealer\"\nRental Service\nTUXEDOS\nBlack Suits, Formals,\nCostumes, Make-up\nSpecial Student Rates\nNew York\nCostume Salon\n4397 W. 10th CA 4-0034\nNear UBC Gates\nATTENTION GRADS '62\n-Get your tickets for cruise from class rep's or Alumni\noffice at noon hours.\n-FREE Convocation Ball Tickets available NOW! \u00E2\u0080\u0094 at Alumni office \u00E2\u0080\u0094 252 Brock, Extension.\nLetters to the Editor\nJust didn't say sj\nEditor,\nThe Ubyssey,\nVancouver, B.C.\nDear Sir:\nI would like io extend my\npersonal thanks to the Ubyssey\nstaff for the comprehensive\nand unbiased reports it has\nfeatured about the Canadian\nPeace Research Institute and\nmyself. I was truly sorry to\nsee what I regarded as almost\na record of fair reporting\nbroken in your last issue by\nthe front page report of my\nmeeting at Lord Byng high\nschool on Mar. 21. I refer to\nRichard Simeon's opening\nstatement:\n\"The fund-raising campaign\nof the Canadian Peace Research Institute has been hurt\nby the support given it by\npartisan groups such as the\nB.C. Committee for the Control of Radiation Hazards,\nDr. Norman Z. Alcock said\nWednesday.\"\nThis is not a \"misleading\nremark\" or a \"misinterpretation\". In an otherwise well-\nreported article, it is a completely erroneous statement,\nand utterly damaging to a\ngroup whose co-operation and\nleadership with regard to helping the Peace Institute get set\nup has been unexecelled.\nI deeply regret the embarrassing position into which\nthis places the B.C. Committee\nfor the Control of Radiation\nHazards and would greatly\nappreciate an editorial apology.\nYours truly,\nNORMAN Z. ALCOCK.\nCooler only lack\nEditor.\nThe Ubyssey;\nDear Sir:\nUpon receiving my copy of\nthe student union building survey, I was impressed by the\nnumber of childish alternatives offered. A craft and\nhobby room in which to make\nthings for your room. Indeed!\nMy room lacks only a beer\ncooler.\nI was angered at the suggestion our stadium might be\ntorn down, after investing\nsomething like $60,000 in 25\nyears, to build a union. A replacement would cost much\nmore and deprive us of pleasure and revenue for 2 to 3\nyears.\nAt present only the Brock\ncaf, the club rooms and the\nlack of a large dance floor pose\nany problems. I suggest that\nBrock be used as the nucleus\nfor a union complex by erecting an integrated 2 or 3 story\nstructure on the present site\nof the club huts. v\nIt appears that Mr. Mitchell\nand the members of council\nare suffering from delusions\nof grandeur which may prove\nexceedingly costly to the student body.\nYours truly,\nPAT MEEHAN,\nEngineering I.\nThe Ubyssey wishes to\nthank ail letter writers for\ntheir undying criticisms.\nIf you still have an urge to\nwrite \u00E2\u0080\u0094 wait. Next letters\npage will come out in September.\nKennedy sums up his\nfirst year in office\n\"Idon't think most Americans realize,\" says JFK, \"the way the situation has changed.\" In this week's\nPost, in an authoritative article\nbased on talks with the President\nand hischief advisers, Stewart Alsop\ntells how Kennedy has revamped\nU.S. strategy. What was behind his\nstruggle with the Pentagon. And\nhow the new plans are working out.\nThe. Saturday Evening\n^~~^T M ^ MARCH 31\n\"\"\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\" ISSUE/NOW\nON SALE\nLACK\nPOT\nLKOST THEE! Yes, the Spot\no\u00C2\u00BB cifeis the almost-free ad\nisicn uiice of (?;c) lowest ever.\n(Juite fitting, too, for inside can\ne he.: rd Canada's almost-gfreatesf\nazz group, featAiing1 sesontl-greiit-\n-t .pianist, all-time .foremost\nrummer and ether honourable\nenticn musicians. Great music\na the ''jazz\" or \"hot music\" idiom,\nna each player handles a talented\nriza-racldle between sets (Can\nin's greatest pizza-makingf jazz\nirnist?)\nIt is not often that a .\nianist can or will play good\nutic in a place where fine pizza,\noffee and elsewise are served.\nsir or see fcotn done aliy night\nxcept Mton. at the BLACK SBOX,\nl\"\"5 Duirtar (also for wannest\nukeiox AHTTWiiEBS!)\n1\nFOR\nTHAT\nSMART\nLOOK\nIN\nGLASSES\nLOOK\nTO\nPteschbtion Optical\nJSL\nWe use genuine CORECTAL lenses\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 clear frc m edge to edge \u00E2\u0080\u0094\n\"Ask Your Doctor\"\nContact Lenses \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Zenith Hearing Aids\nSpecial Discounts to Students\nth. MILDEST BEST-TASTING cigarette Page 6\nTHE\nUBYSSEY\nThursday, March 29, 1962\nIDEAS at large\nPROPAGANDA\t\nBy BERT MacKINNON\nUbyssey Staff Reporter\nListening to the radio news\nbroadcasts on my way to university in the mornings I realize just how biased reporting\ncan become.\nI wonder whether the officials in charge of gathering\nnews on a national level give\nus even a slight view of the\nother side of the story.\nThe occurence that brought\nmy thoughts to the surface and\nmade me decide to write this\ncolumn was a report of the\nresults of the recent elections\nin Argentina.\nI have waited to hear official censure from the western\nnations and have been sadly\ndisappointed. It seems that\ndemocracy only extends to\nother countries if it has a desirable result.\n* * *\nSo what if in a free election the people of Argentina\ndecid&d they wanted to be\nheaded by a Per on government. The western powers do\nnot--want the Peronists in\npower so they try to hush up\nthe steps taken to nullify the\nresults. I can see that the West\nwould not want to have the\nPeronists in power and they\nhave the right to think any\nway they want; this is democracy. But democracy must\nbe extended to all countries if\nit is to work.\nI believe that the news\nagencies should give both sides\nof the story and then let the\npeople make up their own\nminds. They should give, and\nlabel, the views of both the\nwestern and eastern powers.\nAnother incident that has\nme wondering is the Berlin\nproblem. I wonder if the west\nern forces are completely free\nof blame m the incidents that\nhave taken place recently. If\na person has had a chance to\nread the pamphlets that are\nput out by the Communist\npowers he realizes that the\npeople on the other side of\nthe fence are told the exact\nopposite from what we are fed.\n* * *\nMen have fought for democracy and truth. Aren't we entitled to the object of two\nworld wars?\nWe do not get the whole\ntruth. We are not told lies,\nwe're just not told.\nWhen you read the Communist bloc countries news\nreleases they look very familiar. If you were to substitute\nthe U.S. for Russia and vice\nversa you would have an almost exact duplicate of an\nAmerican propaganda release.\nHowever, we of the West do\nnot look on our release as\npropaganda.. * \u00C2\u00A5 *\nEverybody knows that propaganda is something that the\nother side engages in and that\nour news media give the true\nstory. There can be no doubt\nthat the press releases given\nout by our high officials are\nmeant to inform the western\npeople of the truth. I will admit that what -we get is the\ntruth. But is it the whole truth\nand is it reported as what it\nreally is?\nI ask that in the fields that\neffect our way of life, in fact\nour very lives, that we get\nmore comprehensive news coverage and questioning of the\npolicies that make the news.\nI want the truth, the whole\ntruth and nothing but the\ntruth.\nOne-owner 1960 Vauxhall\nCresta, mint cond. Two-tone\nblack grey, new leather upholstery, w.w.s. Phone owner\nAM 6-6157 evgs. or wk-ends.\ntDBO STUDENTS\n15% Discount\nImported Car Part* am*\nAccessories\n'Overseas Auto Parts J\n112th and Alma\nBE 1-7686\nROOM AND BOARD FOR MEN\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Kitchen Facilities Available for Snacks\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Laundry Included\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Close to University Gates\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Student Owned and Operated\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Good Studying Facilities\nA P P L Y N O W ! !\nSummer Session Winter Session\n$55 per Month $53 per Month\nUNIVERSITY STUDENTS' COOPERATIVE ASS'N.\n4082 West 8th Avenue CA 4-3631\nIT COSTS NO MORE TO HAVE YOUR\nWEDDING PHOTOGRAPHED BY\nQanajda'A leading\nWedding Photographers*\nSee samples in your home.\n29 Albums to choose from . . . priced from $37.50 to\n$219.00 complete (add $10.00 for Sundays and legal\nholidays). 60 to 100 pictures to choose from . . .\nposed and candid . . .\nHOME \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 CHURCH \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 RECEPTION\nFree M.C. Services if Desired.\nPHONE TODAY I\nRE 8-6707\nJmIulA \u00C2\u00A3kcre\nWEDDING PHOTOGRAPHERS\n* MORE BRIDES CHOOSE JULIUS SHORE WEDDING\nFHOTOGRAPHERS THAN ANY OTHER STUWO.\nCouncil leaves housing\ntill summer meeting\nStudent council won't be able to do anything aLuut poor\nstudent housing conditions in the university area until at least\nthis summer.\nAMS president Doug Stewart\nsaid council won't be able to discuss the matter until its regular\nmonthly summer meetings\nwhich don't siart until after\nexams.\nSURVEY\nA recent survey by geography\nprofessor Walter Hardwick, revealed that nearly one-quarter of\nUBC's student population lives in\nconditions of semi-saualor outside the gates.\n\"This is clearly a matter of\ncouncil concern. If city authorities are hiding on the issue we\nshould do something about it,\"\nStewart said.\nSecretary Barbara Bennett\nsaid it was not so much a matter\nof whether council should take\naction but whether it could do\nanything effective.\nBRIEF\nA brief on the subject of student housing was presented to\nthe mayor and city council in\nMay, 1960. The brief requested\nthat more areas be zoned to\nallow suites in private homes\nand that students be exempted\nfrom zoning regulations restricting the number of boarders\nallowed in each home.\nCity council \"received\" the '\nbrief but took no decisive action\non it.\nStudent treasurer Malcolm ;\nScott said the city should recog- j\nnize the \v est Point Grey area j\nwas a heavy transient area and |\nallow self-contained suites in it. i\nNO RESPONSIBILITY\nUBC administrator John Haar\nsaid the university does not assume any responsibility for accommodation outside the gates.\n'We do, however, assume a\nI moral responsibility for student\nhousing conditions,\" he said.\nHomecoming queen\nto represent UBC\nLynn Galbraith, 1961-o\"2\nHomecoming queen will be\nUBC's candidate for \"Festival\nQueen\" at the Annual Football Festival in Berkley, California.\nCo-eds from several universities will compete at the festival from Sept. 10-16.\nThe candidates' expenses including aid fare to Berkley, are\npaid by the Berkley Junior\nChamber of Commerce, sponsors\nof the Festival.\nTHESIS TYPED\nRUSH JOBS\n25c per page\nPhone RE 3-1935\nSpecial Prices for UBC\nCornette\nBeauty Salon\nMiss Barbara with European\nideas . . Mary, beauty care\nconsultant and stylist . .Lynn\nAdv.. stylist of Carmon Dur-\nans of Los Angeles .--. Mr.\nRoberts, one of the leading\nstylists of the House Of Beauty, has joined our staff . .\nElla Chambers, specializing\nin extra fine hair styling and\ntinting.\nOPEN FRIDAY TILL NINE\n4532 West TOth Ave.\nCA 4-7440\nDirectly across from\nSAFEWAY STORE\nBlack Spot\nDIRECT\nFROM L.A.\nThis weekend we are featuring authentic monogram-\nmed pizzas shipped direct\nfrom Harvey's Pizza Palace\nand Soul Warehouse in fabulous Los Angeles, reputed\nAmerica's greatest pizza\nwholesaler, and perhaps the\ngreatest anywhere. Drop in\nand mouth one of these contemporary, synthetic, funky\nr.Teataions, rolled direct to\nB.S. by age-old traditional\npizza-rolling artisans. You'll\nfind, too, piano stylings on\ntraditional upright piano-machine. All-inclusive prices\nfrom a near-free 75c.\nThe Black Spot 4345 Dunbar\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0nun MitiMicn in. nSUtM IfaM 8l\u00C2\u00ABm \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 1^ JbM^ \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 lKt(^ ^\nNew.. .Philips Battery Tape Recorder\nSmall Wonder-with a Big Voice\nfHere*** reatty new recorder that goes\nwhere the fun \u00C2\u00BB and brings it back\nalive. It records and plays -back anywhere, any time because its all-transistor\ncircuit is powered .by.\nPush a button and yoa're in record \u00C2\u00ABr\nplayback position ... in the car, at the\nski lodge, in the concert hall or the jazz\nloft. See and hear the Continental '100\nnow at your Philips\n;<\u00C2\u00ABM^J&Wfttfto.'- Slid it?S Ollly $144.95 tape recorder dealer. Thursday, March 29, 1962\nTHE\nUBYSSEY\nApplications open\nfor WUS conference\nPage 7\nTORONTO (CUP) \u00E2\u0080\u0094 World\nUniversity Service is offering\nsix scholarships to students\nwishing to attend the 1962\nCouchiching Conference.\nThe annual meeting, to be\nheld July 28 - Aug. 4, will deal\nwith the theme \"The New Europe.\"\nAwards pay for accommodation and meals at the conference. Recipients will be expect-\ner to perform certain administrative duties at the meeting.\nThe awards are open to men\nand women undergraduates or\nrecent graduates. Applicants\nmust be mature, of good academic standing and have shown\nleadership qualities through active participation in extra-curricular activities.\nInterested students should see\ntheir local office for details.\nCharity drives to go\nthrough USC committee\nStudent council Monday passed a motion directing all fund i\nraising drives on campus to the charities sub-committee of the |'\"\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0084\u00A2\n\"* Undergraduate Societies Committee.\nCouncil passed the motion\nafter discussing the Charities\n^ Committee report contained in\nthe USC minutes.\nFirst Vice-president Peter\nShepard said he felt the action\n\"^ was long overdue. ;\n\"There definitely should be a\ncentral authority to direct all\nthe various appeals for funds\n- on this campus,\" he said.\nCo-ordinator of Activities,\nBernie Papke said he felt the\nmotion would only affect charities associated with USC.\n\"Clubs already concerned\nwith doing charitable works\nwill probably just ignore this\nmotion,\" he said.\nBuster's si\nRCMP non\nThe RCMP is not planning\nany added enforcement of traf- \\nfie rules on campus, unless ap-!\nproached by university officials.'\nWe have not been advised'\nof any special problem, but if;\nthere is one as the President's\nCommittee on Accident Prevention suggests, we will oe prepar-\n\"'' ed for stricter enforcement, said\nan RCMP spokesman.\nConsidering the large number\n* of cars and pedestrians on cam- j\npus there are very few acci-j\ndents, he added. i\nThe RCMP cannot have a car\non the campus all the time as\n- it must enforce the Motor Vehicle Act in the whole University area, the spokesman said.\nTreasure van\nrolling in $\nTORONTO (CUP)\u00E2\u0080\u0094Treasure\nVan is still living up to its name\nfor World University Service of\nCanara.\nFigures for the tour of universities this year show that\nmore than $80,000 was amassed\nby the rolling showcases of international goods.\nThe University of Alberta at\nEdmontonp led the way in sales,\nbringing in $8,437.\nThe 1961 total is the highest\nyet, and is approximately\n$15,000 more than was collected\nlast year.\nTEMPORARILY out of order\nthe sign says in one of five\nphone booths where phones\non campus have been stolen\nrecently. In this one, in the\nBrock extension, telephone\ncompany has replaced the\nphone at a cost of $200.\nWinrom Insurance\nLtd.\nSPECIALIZING IN\nAUTO INSURANCE\n1678 W. Broadway. Vancouver 9\nRE 1-5338\nRoom and Board\nMay\u00E2\u0080\u0094September\n$70 Month\non Campus \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Kappa Sigma House\n2280 Weebrook Cresc.\nPhcme Pete Bildfell CA 4-4912\nVarsity Fabrics\n4437 W. 10th Ave CA 4-0842\nYard Goods, McCall Patterns\nSewing Supplies\nOpen Friday 'til 9\nThe Ideal Place To\nMeet Your friends\nLook For Oor Ddily Special!\nFull. Course Meals Within\nYour Income\nDO-NUT DINER\n4556 West 10th Ave.\nFish & Chips, Donuts to GOl\n//\u00C2\u00AB DnMatithH\nis extended to members of\nthe 1962 graduating class in\nARTS, COMMERCE or ENGINEERING\nto investigate a * career., in\nCHARTERED ^CWNTANCY i\nby contacting -v.. \u00C2\u00BBs\u00C2\u00BB.\nMcintosh, McVicar, Dinsley & Co.\n1075 Melville Street\nTo arrange an appointment, please telephone\nMrs. Teal at MUtual 4-8221\nsquabble\n(SKWOD^Gl), ;/, A noisy quarrel.\nFrequently caused by Saturday Night's controversial articles.\nJoift in the fun. Subscribe.\nBsaft a postcard to 55 Tor* Street,\nToronto l. Pay la*\u00C2\u00BBr.\nSNCC men indicted\nfor gov't opposition\nBATON ROUGE, LA. \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Student Nonviolent Coordinating\nCommittee Chairman Charles\nMcDew and Field Secretary\nRobert Zellner were formally\narraigned on Tuesday, March\n13, in Baton Rouge and charged\nwith being \"members of the\nStudent Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, an organization\nwhich is known to advoca'e,\nteach and practice opposition to\nthe government of the state of\nLouisiana by unlawful means.\"\nMcDew and Zellner were arrested Feb. 17, when they visited SNCC Field Secretary Dion\nDiamond at the Baton Rouge\njail. Diamond was arrested Seb.\n1, at Southern University. He\nwas charged with trespassing,\nvagrancy, criminal anarchy and\ntwo counts of disturbing the\npeace.\nTUXEDO\nRENTAL & SALES\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 1000 Garment* to\nm Full Dress\na> Morning Coats\na Director's Coata\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 White and Blue\nCoats\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Shirts *\nAccessories\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 10% UBC Discount\nE. A. Lee Ltd.\nOne Store Onlyi\n623 Howe St. Ml) 3-2457\nSIpOCAW florist ltd.\n2523 Kingsway\nsfpeciaVxirtg in corsages and wedding bouquets. 10% off to all\nUniversity students. Call; HE\nJim Piarsail's wife asks:\n\"Why do they call\nmy husband crazy?\"\nTo the fans Jim Piersall is a hot-\ntempered screwbaH. But to his\nwife, he's \"calm and sensible, art\nunderstanding husband.\" In this\nweek's Post, Mary Piersall tells\nhow the fans made Jim \"a marked\nman.\" Says how close he came to\na breakdown in 1960. And why\nshe's confident about this season.\nThe Saturday Evening^\nISSUE/NOW\nON SALE\nattractive\npositions\nopen now...\nThe Hudson's Bay Company has the following positions open NOW to young\nArts or Commerce graduates, who desire challenge, rapid advancement and\nattractive executive salaries.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Trainee for Accounting deportment \u00E2\u0080\u0094 for young\nman desiring to take further training leading to\nan accounting degree while working with the\nCompany.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Merchandise Trainees\u00E2\u0080\u0094to advance to department\nmanager and merchandise executive positions.\nYou will receive\nintensive training including:\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 4-month induction period covering all store\nfunctions.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 2-year lecture course in merchandising.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 On the job training under an experienced department manager, in Sales Management,\nBuying, and Departmental Administration.\nTake this opportunity to achieve management status within 3 to 5 years.\nMake an appointment now for an interview by phoning the Hudson's Bay\nCompany personnel department, fifth\nfloor, at MU 1-6211, or drop in between\n9 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through\nFriday.\nACT NOW SECURE YOUR FUTURE\nWITH CANADA'S MOST\nPROGRESSIVE COMPANY!\nINCORPORATED 2\"!? MAY 1670.\n$Mi*i\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00ABt GronvMe .... Phone MU. l-\u00C2\u00ABll Page 8\nTHE\nUBYSSEY\nThursday, March 29, 1962\nProtesters greet Kennedy\nat California convocation\nBERKLEY, CAL. (CUP) \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nU.S. President John Kennedy\nwas greeted by picketers protesting the resumption of nuclear tests, segregation in the\nsouth, and American spy trials,\nwhen he arrived in Berkley to\nspeak at the University of California convocation last Friday.\n* * *\nCalifornia Attorney General\nStanley Mosk called on students\nplanning to picket to reconsider\nand \"join all their fellow Cal-\nifornians in paying tribute to\nthe head of the greatest nation\non earth.\"\n_ The chairman of the anti-Kennedy Ad Hoc Committee said\nthat picketing was the only way\nhis group could effectively make\ntheir opinions known to the\npresident.\nAn Ad Hoc committee member said the group \"didn't give\na damn\" about arguments that\npicketing was in bad taste.\nAbout 200 pickets joined in the\nCommittee's demonstration\nagainst the resumption of nuclear testing and segregation.\nAnother group of pickets lead\nby Mrs. Morton Sobell, protested the sentencing of her husband to 30 years in prison in\nconnection with the Rosenberg-\nSobell conspiracy espionage\ncase.\nA demonstration in support\nof Kennedy's policies was held\nby the Charter Day Support\nCommittee.\nRENT A GOWN\n25%\nOFF\nFor\nUBC\nMARIE BRUCKER SALON\nDesigners and Dressmakers\nExpert Alterations\nEvenings by Appointment\n4683 Kingsway HE 1-1160\nLovely\nselection for\nBrides,\nAttendants,\nFormal Wear\nFur Stoles,\nWhite Fox,\nDinner Jackets\nMatz & Wozny\n548 Howe St. MU 3-4715\nCustom Tailored Suits\nfor Ladies and Gentlemen.\nGowns and Hoods\nUniforms\nWe specialize\nin\nIvy League\nClothes\nSpecial Student Rates\nCampus Barber\nShop\nMonday - Friday 8:30 - 5:00\nSaturday 8:30 - 12:00\nLOCATED IN\nBROCK EXTENSION\nFREDERIC WOOD THEATRE\npresents\n\"FIVE FINGER EXERCISE\"\nby Peter Shaffer\nStai Tins DOROTHY FOWLER and BILL RUCKIXG HAM\nA Gripping Drama\nDirected by John Brocking-ton\nAPRIL 6th TO 21st at 8:30 p.m.\nTickets $2.00 and $1.50\nPhone CA 4-1111 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Local 540 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 for Reservations\n.\nOn this, our last edition for the school term, the Ubyssey Advertising Department would\nlike to thank the following Ubyssey Advertisers for their regular support during the\npast University year;\nABBOTSFORD AIR SERVICES LTD.\nALEXANDER & AXELSON APPLINANCES LTD.\nALUMINUM COMPANY OF CANADA LTD.\nAMERADA PETROLEUM CORPORATION (CALGARY)\nATOMIC ENERGY OF CANADA LTD., (CHALK RIVER)\nAQUALAND DIVING CENTER\nBANK OF MONTREAL\nBANK OF NOVA SCOTIA\nBELL TELEPHONE CO. OF CANADA LTD.\nBENSON & HEDGES CO: LTD.\nALPINE CIGARETTES\nCYANAMID OF CANADA LTD.\nCAFE DAN CABARET\nCALIFORNIA STANDARD CO. LTD.\nCAMPBELL'S STUDIOS LTD.\nCAMPUS SHOES LTD.\nCANADA PACKERS LTD.\nCANADTAN IMPERIAL BANK OF COMMERCE\nCANADIAN CHEMICAL CO. LTD.\nCANADIAN GENERAL ELECTRIC CO. LTD.\nCANADIAN PRATT & WHITNEY LTD.\nCANADIAN TAMPAX CORPORATION\nCAVE SUPPER CLUB - -\nTHE CAVALIER SHOPPE\nCHANEL No. 5\nCHARLTON & MORGAN LTD.\nCIVIL SERVICE COMMISSION OF CANADA\nCOCA-COLA CO. LTD.\nTHE COLLEGE SHOP\nCOLUMBIA CELLULOSE LTD.\nCONSOLIDATED MINING & SMELTING CO. LTD.\nCORNETTE BEAUTY SALON\nCREATIVE SHOES LTD.\nCUNNINGHAM DRUGS LTD.\nCURTIS PUBLISHING CO. LTD.\n(SATURDAY EVENING POST)\nDEAN'S RESTAURANT\nDEPARTMENT OF NATIONAL DEFENCE\nDEFENCE RESEARCH BOARD\nDOW CHEMICAL CO. OF CANADA LTD.\nDUPONT OF CANADA LTD.\nDUTHIE BOOKS LTD.\nT. EATON CO. LTD.\nJACK ELSON LTD.\nFAMOUS ARTISTS LTD.\nFENGATE PUBLISHING CO .LTD.\n(SATURDAY NIGHT MAGAZINE)\nU.B.C. FILM SOCIETY\nFORD MOTOR CO. OF CANADA LTD.\nGLENAYR KNIT LTD.\nMURRAY GOLDMAN LTD.\nGREYHOUND LINES OF CANADA LTD.\nGUYS &GALS LTD.\nHIGHLAND HOUSE\nHUDSON'S BAY CO. LTD.\nHUDSON'S BAY OIL & GAS LTD.\nHYDE PARK CLOTHES INC. (NEW YORK)\nIMPERIAL OIL OF CANADA LTD.\nIMPERIAL TOBACCO CO. LTD.\n(BRAHADI'S PIPE TOBACCO)\n(PLAYER'S MILD CIGARETTES)\n(PLAYER'S FILTER CIGARETTES)\nINQUISITION COFFEE HOUSE\nINSTITUTE OF CHARTERED ACCOUNTANTS\nINTERNATIONAL BUSINESS MACHINES LTD.\nINTER FRATERNITY COUNCIL\nINTERNATIONAL NICKEL CO. LTD.\nR. L. FRISBY,\nAdvertising Manager,\nAlma Mater Society\nIRON ORE OF CANADA LTD.\nKAUFMAN RUBBER CO. LTD.\nKEN'S AUTO TOWING LTD.\nSMITH, DAVIDSON & LECKY LTD.\nLEADER BEAUTY SALON\nE. A. LEE FORMAL WEAR RENTALS LTD.\nTHE LION'S DEN\nTHE LION'S DRIVE-IN\nMACDONALD TOBACCO LTD. (EXPORT CIGARETTES)\nMacLEAN HUNTER CO. LTD.\nMacMILLAN, BLOEDEL, POWELL RIVER LTD.\nMATZ & WOZNY LTD.\nMOBIL OIL OF CANADA LTD.\nU.B.C. MUSICAL SOCIETY\nMUTUAL LIFE ASSURANCE OF CANADA LTD.\nNATIONAL RESEARCH COUNCIL\nNATIONAL EMPLOYMENT SERVICE\nNATIONAL TRUST CO. LTD.\nNEW YORK COSTUME LTD.\nNORTHERN ELECTRIC CO. LTD.\nNOBTHAM WARREN COMPANY LTD.\nCUTEX NAIL ENAMEL\nOVERSEAS AUTO PARTS LTD.\nPAN AMERICAN PETROLEUM CORPORATION\nPETER JACKSON CIGARETTES LTD.\nDU MAURIER CIGARETTES\nPHILLIPS APPLIANCES LTD.\nPITMAN OPTICAL LTD.\nB. C. PIZZA PRODUCTS LTD.\nPOINT GREY JEWELLERS LTD.\nPRESCRIPTION OPTICAL CO. LTD.\nPROCTOR & GAMBLE CO. LTD.\nPROGRESS PUBLISHING CO. LTD.\nROYAL CANADIAN AIR FORCE\nROYAL CANADIAN ARMY\nROYAL CANADIAN NAVY\nREADER'S DIGEST ASSOCIATION OF CANADA LTD.\nRICHARDS & FARISH MEN'S WEAR LTD.\nROYAL BANK OF CANADA\nRUSHANT CAMERAS LTD.\nSHELL OIL CO. OF CANADA LTD.\nTHE SHIRT N TIE BAR\nJULIUS SHORE PHOTOGRAPHS\nTHE SNACKERY\nSOUTH SEAS IMPORTS LTD.\nSPOTLESS STORES LTD.\nSTRASSER TRAVEL SERVICE INC.\nSUN LIFE ASSURANCE OF CANADA LTD.\nTHUNDERBIRD CHEVRON SERVICE\nTOTEM SHOES\nTRADER'S FINANCE CORPORATION LTD.\nTRANS CANADA AIR LINES\nTROYKA BOOK STORE (TORONTO)\nUNITED AIR LINES\nUNITED TAILORS\nUNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE\nUNIVERSITY PHARMACY LTD.\nUNIVERSITY THEATRE DEPARTMENT\nUNIVERSITY OF TORONTO PRESS\nTHE UNIVERSITY TRAVEL BUREAU (TORONTO)\nUPPER TENTH BARBERS LTD.\nPETER VAN DYKE BARBER SHOP\nVANCOUVER OPERA ASSOCIATION\nVARSITY FABRICS LTD.\nVARSITY JEWELLERS LTD.\nVARSITY THEATRE LTD.\nWINRAM INSURANCE CO. LTD.\nR. B. MocKAY\nVancouver Sales Manager\nThe Ubyssey Thursday, March 29, 1962\nTHE UBYSSEY\nPage 9\nUBC delayed by fight\nU of M started on $250 grant\nUniversity beginnings .unorthodox'\nBy PAUL BECKER\nVice-President of NFCUS\nThe history of Canadian\nhigher education is strewn\nwith unorthodox foundings\nand strange namings.\nOne of the oldest and most\nfamous universities, Dalhousie,\nwas established with 10,000\npounds collected as customs\ndues at the port of Castine, in\nMaine, held by British troops\nduring the War of 1812.\nThe University of Manitoba\nwas launched at a time when\nthere were not ten thousand\n-white settlers in the province,\nand provided by the legislature with a grant of $250 a\nyear. It did no teaching for 23\nyears, had no president for 36\nyears and no alumni associations for 44 years.\nTen and two\nMount Allison was empowered to begin conferring degrees \"when it should have ten\nstudents and two professors.\"\nQueen's mustered only this\nmany students when it opened\nin a small house on a Kingston\n.side street; and a now forgotten university never possessed\nany buildings at all, and after\n;conferring one or two degrees\nQuietly folded: the University\njof Halifax.\nIn the days of the University\nof Regiopolis, which was located in Kingston with Queen's,\nthe Ontario shore was crowded\nwith universities. There was\nAlbert College in Belleville\nand Victoria University in Co-\nbourg. When Regiopolis closed\nand Albert College lost its\ncharter, Q u e e n's was left\nalone.\nBoth Toronto and McGill\ntook many years after securing their charters to erect\nbuildings and begin teaching.\nDalhousie, which was able to\nput up a building immediately\nwith the previously mentioned\ncustoms funds, did not begin\nteaching for twenty years, and\nthen closed shortly afterwards\nfor another twenty.\nOld McGill\nOld McGill, as it is known\nto its students, still operates\nunder a corporation styled The\nRoyal Institution for the Advancement of Learning.\nThe foundation of the University of British Columbia\nwas delayed until after World\nWar 1 because Victoria and\nVancouver could not agree on\nwhich of the two cities should\nbe the site.\nFor years, therefore, university courses . were taught in\nBritish Columbia in high\nschools and prescribed by McGill.\nPerhaps the factor which\nmost effectively delayed the\ndevelopment of the French-\nspeaking universities of Quebec was the widespread devel-\nUBC CLASSIFIED\nWANTED: Ride to Montreal April 28 - May 7. Share driving\nand gas. Phone Sandy, RE 8-\n8751.\nWANTED: Saxophone in exchange for a B-flat trumpet.\nDuring these summer months\nmany new .techniques in art\nof blowing can be learned, so\nwhy not take advantage of it.\nPhone Mike, AM 1-6632.\nRIDE WANTED: Dunbar and\n30th, Mon. to Sat., 8:30-5:30.\nPhone CA 8-8700.\nSUMMER RENT: Self-contained\nlegal 3-room basement suite.\nAvailable May - Sept. Phone\nAM 6-8283.\nFOR RENT: Apartment for the\nmonths May - Aug. Furn., on\non campus, 2 bedrooms, kitchen, private phone, quiet. $75\nmonthly. Call CA 8-8644.\nFOR RENT: 2-bedroom furnish-\n.. ed apartment inside university\ngates for sub-lease. Available\nMay 1 or for summer school\nstudents. Phone CA 4-6739 or\nCA 4-6113.\nFOR RENT: Light housekeeping\nroom on main floor, hot plate,\nfridge, good view, at 4696\nWest 4th Ave. Call CA 4-5229.\nFOR SALE: Typewriter, brand\nnew condition, cost $65, will\nsell for $20. Complete with accessories. John Kadrill, Hut\n13, Fort Camp. Phone CA 4-\n9925.\nFOR SALE: 1953 Chev. 4-door:\ngood tires, body and motor,\nradio, $365. Contact T. Nisbet.\nlocal 600 days or LA 1-6992,\neves.\nFOR SALE: Going east\u00E2\u0080\u0094selling\n17\" Philips TV, 24\" GE range,\n1948 Pontiac sedan, Philco\nfull-freezer frig., portable radio, clock radio, records and\nhousehold effects. Bargains.\nPhone CA 4-7341 evenings.\nFOR SALE: 1956 Volkswagen\ndeluxe, r and h, w/w, $775\ncash. Available end of May.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Phone TR 9-4181, anytime.\nFOR SALE: 1957 Chev. station\nwagon, 2-door 6-cylinder model, new tires, 47,000 miles.\n$1,425 ($1,350 cash). Phone\nRE 1-5653 evenings.\nLOST: Bucherer wrist watch\nwith a broken strap on Wed.,\nMar. 14. Call Pete, CA 8-8677.\nLOST: Jade bracelet (five stones)\nat Blanca loop Mar.13. Finder\nplease phone Celia, HE 4-8190.\nFOUND: Man's wrist watch, on\nTues., Mar. 27 near gym at\n11:30 a.m. Owner contact\nBruce, YU 5-1288.\n$5 REWARD: For the return of\nbrown rimmed glasses, lost in\nBuchanan washroom. Name\nand phone inside. Urgently\nneeded. FA 7-1209.\nU\nTHE SNACKERY\n3 LOCATIONS\n3075 Granville - RE 3-5813\n4423 W. 10th Ave. \u00E2\u0080\u0094 CA 4-0833\n5075 Kingsway - HE 1-8818\nFREE HOT & FAST PIZZA\nDELIVERY\nu\nopment of the petit seminaire\nand classical college. Although\nLaval University's origins go\nback to the Grand Seminary\nof 1663\u00E2\u0080\u0094still an integral part\nof the University\u00E2\u0080\u0094it was not\nuntil 1852 that Laval received\nits royal charter.\nSix years old\nEven until after World War\nI, Laval had only 2000 students, contrasting with today's 5,000. The present University of Montreal was then\nonly a branch of Laval and the\nUniversity of Sherbrooke is\nonly six years old.\nMost notable and oldest of\nthe bilingual institutions is the\nUniversity of Ottawa. Originally founded as the English\nlanguage college of Bytown, it\nwas teaching pure and applied\nscience shortly after Confederation.\nToday, there are nearly 350\ninstitutions of higher learning\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094including only those which\nteach college and university\nlevel courses\u00E2\u0080\u0094of which 45\npossess the authority to grant\ndegrees.\nEight of these institutions\nhold their degree powers in\nabeyance while they remain\nin affiliation or federation\nwith another degree-granting\ninstitution.\nDegrees offered\nThirty-one of these institutions offer master's degrees\nand, in turn, 18 of these offer\nthe doctorate.\nLaval and Montreal whose\nenrollment consists primarily\nof the graduates of classical\ncolleges who have already received the baccalaureat are, in\ntruth, primarily graduate\nschools. \u00E2\u0080\u00A2' : i\nLast year, Canadian institutions of higher learning enrolled approximately 114,000 full-\ntime students. If present indi\ncators are correct, a conservative estimate would indicate\nan enrollment of over 300,000\nstudents at the end of the present decade.\nWithin ten years of time,\nthen, the present total university budgets must rise from\nover 100 million dollars to\nover 400 million if the increased enrollment is to have basie\nfacilities and if the staff-student ratio is to be kept even at\nits present 1 to 13 level.\nPORTRAITS\nPEOPLE\nGRADUATION\nINDIVIDUALISTS\nfor...\nPORTRAITS\nFINE ART PHOTOG'Y\nAPPLICATIONS\nANNOUNCEMENTS\nFINE PRINTS\nJCon, VyUOJUiAtejL\nPEOPLE\nALSO STUDENTS\nCA 4-5340\n4331 West 10th Ave.\n\"He never gave an\ninch,\" says Kennedy\nLast spring, Kennedy and Khrushchev faced each other for the first\ntime. Says the President grimly:\n\"He never gave way at all.\" In this\nweek's Post, in an authoritative article based on talks with the Presi-\nden t and his chief advisers, Stewart\nAlsop reports on why the meeting\nwas so \"somber.\" Why Kennedy\nfeels the Reds have the \"advantage\nof a dictatorship.\" And what\nJFK's own cold-war strategy is.\nThe^SoturdayEvening\nMARCH 31\nISSUE/NOW\nON SALE\nHIKERS! CAMPERS!\nMOUNTAINEERS!\nThe summer climbing and camping season is fast\napproaching! For the specialized needs of the climber\nand lightweight camper you can't beat the selection at\nArlberg - Vancouver's foremost recreational store,\nHERE ARE A FEW OF THE HARD-TO-FIND ITEMS!\nClimbing & Hiking Boots\nLa Fuma and Berggn's\nRucksacks\nIce Axes\nClimbing Hardware &\nRopes\nSpecialized Clothing\nLight Tents\nLightweight Cookware\nSmall Stoves\nConcentrated Foqds\nGoggles gnd Sun Glasses\n\"Skreen\" for Sunburn\nCamping With a Sportscar?\nLET ARLBERG SOLVE YOUR PROBLEMS\nWE SPECIALIZE IN SKIN DIVING EQUIPMENT AND INSTRUCTION\nWrite or Drop in For a Free Catalogue\nMail Orders Receive Prompt Attention\nArlberg (Ski HutJ Sporting Goods\n608 ROBSON - AMPLE PARKING ON SEYMOUR\nMUtual 5-9411 Page 10\nTHE U B Y S S E Y\nThursday, March- 29, 1962\nTHE END OF THE BEGINNING FOR THE ARENA |\nARTIST'S CONCEPTION of the new Winter Sports Arena as viewed from the northwest corner. The War Memorial Gymnasium is seen in the background.\nArena may be present for Christmas\nBy G. E. RAILTON\nThe university will have a complete winter\nsports arena for a Christmas present next year, the\narchitects say.\nThe clients, or joint student-faculty committee,\nwill receive the final plans from Thompson, Berwick and Pratt April 9 at their final meeting.\nThe, committee will make minor changes to the\nplans, tenders will be called and construction begun\nin the \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2'latter part of June, officials said.\n. UBC team officials have seen the second stage\nplans and have made recommendations to the clients\ncommittee, in preparation for the April g meeting.\nTo date, only two things are definite. The chosen site is north of the War Memorial Gym and east\nof the stadium.\nThe $500,000 arena is to contain a hockey rink\nand eight Curling sheets.\nA winter sports arena has been under consideration for years tout actual headway was not begun\nuntil three years ago.\nIn 1955, the university was negotiating with\nthe University Endowment Lands but the plans fell\nthrough.\nIn 1959, the students entered an agreement\nwith the administration to ; provide an arena and\nstudent union building, splitting the cost of construction in half.\nLast year the two plans were divorced and the\narena and SUB have gone their own ways.\nDuring the last academic; year the most progress\nhas been made. A student-faculty committee was\norganized to draw up minimum facilities and standards. . - \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 '\nAfter six months, -the committee returned their\nrecommendations to the board of governors and the\nstudent council. After several meetings both groups\naccepted the recommendations with- several changes.\nThe facilities planned are: a 195' by 85' nockey\nrink, eight curling sheets, a coffee-shop, first aid\nroom, skate shop equipped for rentals,.large dressing room facilities (small ones for intramurals),\nand a press gallery.\nThe hockey rink will be equipped with 1,500\npermanent seats and with provisional room for 1,500\nmore. There will be capacity for 200 spectators in\nthe curling area.\nThe planned building is a three-storey structure with skate shop and equipment rooms in the\nbasement.\nClients committee chairman Dean A. W. Mathews has said priority of use will go to the students,\nthen faculty, physical education programs, and lastly, outside organizations\t\nHis committee had also considered a secondary\nbuilding to house squash and handball courts and\nan indoor swimming pool. These plans were cancelled in favor of a better building for the arena.\nThe clients commicLee lias also chosen a management, committee to run the building. This also\nwill be a joint committee; two students, two faculty\nmembers and-a chairman appointed by the university president.\nRugby Birds face\nend of the world\nBy GLENN SCHULTZ\nThe University of California Golden Bears bring an 18-man\nsquad with them to help UBC's rugger Birds round out their\n1962 season Thursday noon and Saturday.\nThese last two games also\nwind up the World Cup compe.\ntition for this year.\nBears have a 13-point lead\ngoing into the third game of the\nfour game series. UBC lost both\ngames in California last month\nby scores of 9-3 and 16-9. Bears\nwill win the cup if they win or\ntie Thursday's game.\nHUDSON UNHAPPY\nSince the last two Cup games,\nBears have won four of seven\nmatches, but coach Miles Hudson is not too happy with the\nrecord. The only excusable loss\nwas the 11-t) one to New Zealand; he f6els.\nCalifornia also lost to Stanford 13-fl, and in the Monterey\nRugby P e s t i v a 1 they were\nknocked out in the first round\n3-0 by University Club of Berkley.\nSUBSTITUTION\nOnly substitution for the\nBears since they played the\nBirds last is Jerry Walter in the\nfirst 5/8 position. He r-eplaces\nBrian Reid. California's current\nrecord is eight wins and four\nlosses.\nCoach Albert Laithwaite's\nUBC fifteen hasn't been up to\npar either since their California\ntrip. They have not won a game\nsince their return, losing their\nlast game 32-3 to New Zealand.\nHowever, that game was not as\nbad as the score indicated.\nfor the games, only a few minor\ninjuries reported.\nA doubtful starter is Dave\nHowie, who was hurt in the\nNew Zealand game.\nLAITHWAITE\nBirds have won the cup 13\ntimes in 22 previous series.\nCoach Laithwaite has led the\nteam to six cups since he joined\nthe UBC staff in 1947. This is\nhis first year back after a two-\nyear absence.\nThe short, stocky coach from\nLancashire, England, will lose\nat least five players through\ngraduation this year. Playing\ntheir last games will be Roy\nBianco, Bill Dubois, Neal Henderson, captain John Phrllips,\nand Dave Lee.\nSINCE 1920\nThe World Cup was first set\ninto competition in 1920 by the\npublisher of the defunct Vancouver World (now the Province) , John Nelson.\nGame time Thursday is 12:30\nand Saturday 2:30. \"A\" cards\nwill be good for both games/\nUBC women host\nvolleyball meet\nTwo UBC women's volleyball\nteams will compete in the annual Western Canadian championships Saturday at the Worn-\nBirds are in fairly good shape | en's gym.\nCoaches needed\nfor kids' grid\nCoaches are urgently needed\nfor several peewee and bantam minor football leagues in\nthe Vancouver area this summer.\nAny students interested are\nasked to contact Lorne Davies\nat FA 1-2563 anytime. Experience is not a necessity\nWho IS the Fairest One of All?\nYOU ARE YOU ARE YOU ARE YOU ARE\nYOU ARE YOU ARE Y\nYOU ARE YOU ARE\nAnd Kitten makes you\nlook that way with this\nexciting new medium-\nweight Orion\ncardigan. Campus\nkittens will delight\nin this chic new\nstyle with eyelet\nfull-fashioning and\ntiny, ribbed collar!\nIn exciting new\nspring colours!\nStyle #230. Sizes\n34-42 . . .$12.98.\nAt better fashion\nshops everywhere\nWithout this label\nE YOU ARE\nYOU ARE\n$fiUL(\nit Is not a genuine\nKITTENI\nGLENAYR Thursday, March 29, 1962\nTH E\nU B Y SSE-Y\nPage 11\ni*OII THE BIRDS\nBy MIKE HUNTER\nWhy the hell would anyone want to write a sports column\nanyway?\nI mean, all you get is crap. Crap from your staff, crap from\nthe editor, crap from the copy desk, crap from the printers, the\nreaders, the players^ the managers, the coaches, the Men's Athletic Committee, the Women's Athletic Committee, the Men's\nAthletic Association, the Women's Association, and all these people's public relations officers.\nYour labs and. essays and assignments are always late because you sat up all night Sunday night trying to think of something funny or something which you can attack, or somebody\nyou can glamorize, slander; or something. You think it's hard to\nwrite a letter home once a month. Just try writing 750 words\nabout some lousy football game which your team lost 42-0. and\nwrite it on a Sunday night, at that. I mean, in a letter home,\nyou can always talk about the weather and how you're reeling,\nbut in a sports column, weather's usually only good once a year,\nand your health, well, who cares about your health? Most people wish you were dead, anyway.\nI have never been able to figure out how some of those\ndaily columnists manage to turn out their 500 or 750 words a\nday every day, let alone how they manage to keep them interesting, funny, infuriating or whatever their column's supposed to be.\nV -V \u00E2\u0080\u00A2!\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nDuring the past two years, I have written some 50 articles\nunder this head. Migawd, what a waste of time, I sometimes\nthink, because most of them were mediocre, lousy, or just\nstraight filler. I haven't even been writing long enough to come\nup with a good one, maybe. Anyway, how do you know whether\na column's good? The biggest question in the minds of any writer is, well, what do the readers think of it? I mean, why write\na column, anyway, especially when you're not getting paid for\nit? Sure, you get a big charge out of seeing your name up there\nmaybe for the first 10 times or so, or maybe you just like the\nsound of your own typewriter.\nMost of your satisfaction, I think, comes from knowing that\npeople read your stuff. Unfortunately, I sometimes get that awful\nfeeling that the only people who read my column are the editor, the copy desk, the printers, and the proofreaders (because\nthey have to); and the players, the managers, and the coaches\n(because they're all egotistic and like to see their names in the\npaper because they have some silly idea that it's a sign of greatness, or something, to get your name in the paper); and the\nMAC, MAA, WAC, and WAA (because they think the newspaper\nmight be slandering them); and those goddam public relations\nofficers (who read it because they want to see if all that crap\nthey gave you the day before got in the paper, for some silly\nreason). \u00C2\u00A5 *' \u00C2\u00A5\nThe only consolation to the writer after all this is that there\nmust be somebody else out there \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Joe Student, or something\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nwho reads your stuff, too. I mean, if nobody else reads it, why\ndo the PRO's and MAC'S editors and proofreaders worry about\nwhat it says? Anyway, sometime I must write a column on that.\nWhat I'm trying to say is, I won't be writing any more of\nthese columns. I'm being promoted. At least that's what the editor says. They're going to put nfe on the copy desk. Instead of\nsitting here and copying people like Red Smith, you sit over\nthere in a ridiculously-shaped desk with a bunch of mad makeup\ngirls and headwriters and city editors and photography editors\nbuzzing about you and sort of look important. You know, with\nyour shirt collar undone and your hair messed up, and your\nglasses on the end of your nose and a cigarette hanging out of\nthe end of your mouth. You get a big, black, dirty copy pencil\nand wield it over those rookie reporters' stories like Lizzie Borden wielded that axe over her father.\nThe idea is, see, they do all the work. You don't take any\ncrap from them anymore. Nosiree. You don't get nasty looks from\nthe players and the coaches arid the MAA and their public relations officer. All you get it from is the Social Credit Club and\nthe Communist Club and the Liberals, Conservatives, NDP's,\nBehkoites, all of. UBC's hundreds of clubs, committees, and\ncouncils, from faculty members, and even (gasp) student coun-\ncillors. Add to all these at least one public relations officer per\ngroup, and those same printers and proofreaders.\nAll Students and Faculty of U.B.C. are requested to\nparticipate in the April 21\nfflsauoL WjoacIl\nStart 9:30 at Fraser and Kingsway (Robson Park), going\nalong Kingsway to Broadway, Burrard, Pacific and Beach\nAvenue to Second Beach, Approx. 12:30.\nTHEME: \"NO NUCLEAR WEAPONS\nFOR CANADA\"\nSimilar marches will be Hei\u00C2\u00AB xn England (Aldermast<;n), U.S.A.,\nand in every major Canadian city.\nSponsored by the Canadian Campaign for Nuclear\nDisarmament, formerly Canadian Committees on\nRadiation Hazards\nCOFFEE AND SANDWICHES WILL BE AVAILABLE\nSports shorts\nRamblers top intramuraIs\nRamblers have clinched their\nthird aggregate men's intramural championship in four\nyears, with play in only three\nsports still to be completed.\nRamblers climaxed a season-\nlong race with Engineers, Frosh,\nand Phi Delts with a fast finish,\nwinning the track and wrestling\nchampionships March 23 and\nthe basketball Wednesday.\nEngineers had got off to a fast\nstart with first-place finishes in\nswimming and touch football.\nPhi Delts moved ahead after\nChristmas with a victory in golf,\nwhile Ramblers stayed up high\nwith seconds in cross-country,\nfootball, tennis doubles and soccer.\nWith only ping pong, bowling,\nand Softball remaining to be\nplayed, Ramblers are now out of-1\nreach of all competition. j\nGYMNASTICS \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Local gym- \\nnastic fans will get their last!\nchance to see the UBC's team in !\naction ABrjJK&7. when they host\nthe , Pacific Northwest AAU\nchampionships at Memorial Gym.\nTeams from all over B.C. and\nthe Pacific Northwest are ex\npected, including those from\nWashington Athletic Club,\nSeattle YMCA, University Hill\nTurners, Eastern Washington,\nWashington and Washington\nState, Richmond and Vancouver.\nThe meet starts Friday at 7:30\np.m. and continues Saturday\nafternoon and evening.\nTENNIS \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Western Washington meets the Birds at. 1:30 on\nthe Memorial Gym courts.\nStudents!\nFor a new dining pleasure\ntry our daily special.\nDEANS\n4544 W. 10th\nOpen 'till 11:30\nSTUDENTS! 1\nSTUDYING TOO HARD? |\nKEEP ASPIRIN WITH YOU\nAT ALL TIMES\nASPIRINS!\nUNIVERSITY PHARMACY\nLTD.\n5754 University Boulevard\nCA. 4-3202\nWen- Prtud to tfithounce\nthe opening of\nThe \" "Newspapers"@en . "Vancouver (B.C.)"@en . "LH3.B7 U4"@en . "LH3_B7_U4_1962_03_29"@en . "10.14288/1.0125604"@en . "English"@en . "Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library"@en . "Vancouver : Alma Mater Society, University of B.C."@en . "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/"@en . "Original Format: University of British Columbia. Archives"@en . "University of British Columbia"@en . "The Ubyssey"@en . "Text"@en . ""@en .