"CONTENTdm"@en . "http://resolve.library.ubc.ca/cgi-bin/catsearch?bid=1211252"@en . "University Publications"@en . "2015-08-05"@en . "1963-01-10"@en . "Misprinted year, should be 1963."@en . ""@en . "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/Ubysseynews/items/1.0125723/source.json"@en . "application/pdf"@en . " Anything s fair\nRCMP\ntrucks.\nbag of tricks:\ntraps, trees\nUniversity RCMP even use\nr half-ton trucks as ghost cars.\nI They also use station wagons,\npink cars, the usual green and\nWhite Chrysler product, and\n-., sometimes sport cars.\nIn fact, say the men at the\ntrBC detachment, anything is\nlair when you're catching\nSpeeders.\n* I They use radar, of course.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 *\nThey have non-uniformed\nconstables driving ghost cars.\nOne, it is reported, even\nwore a blue and yellow UBC\nScarf.\nThese tactics, and others,\nnetted the RCMP $6,000 in\ntraffic fines\u00E2\u0080\u0094mostly from\n-- UBC students and faculty\u00E2\u0080\u0094last\nyear.\nDetachment head Sgt. D. G.\nThompson, said his men hate\n, doing it!\n\"It's a mistaken view the\npublic has that we take a secret\ndelight in issuing tickets,\"\nThompson said Wednesday.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\n* \"Using radar and ghost cars\nisn't a money making philosophy for us. It's solely an effort\nto cut down on speed and accidents.\"\n** One of the main things radar\ntraps and ghost cars succeeded\nin cutting down last year, was\nthe size of UBC students' billfolds.\nThompson said that about\n25 per cent of the tickets\nhanded out were for speeding. These offenders if/ere all\nNew board\nto ponder\nfee hike\nFour students and five of\nVancouver's top businessmen\nwill decide whether AMS fees\nshould be raised $5.\nThe nine men have been appointed to a special Student\nUnion Building Campaign investigating the financing of the\nbuilding.\nIn the next few months the\n\" committee hopes to propose a\nprogram to raise $4 million,\nDean Feltham, planning chairman for SUB said Wednesday.\nA $5 increase, which would\nhave to be approved by a student referendum, will bring in\nan additional revenue of $65,-\n000 a year.\nCOMMITTEE MEMBERS\nThe five businessmen, all\nUBC alumni, are:\nPeter Sharp, president of\nExpanded Metal Co. of Canada; Bob Whyet, of the Royal\nTrust Co.; Donald Fields, of\nClarkson-Gordon and Co.; Art\nPhillips of Capital Management;\nand R. J. Webster, James\nRichardson and Sons Ltd.\n\"The task of raising $4 million (cost of the proposed building) is so detailed and specialized we couldn't hope to tackle\nit ourselves,\" said Feltham.\nHe said the committee will\nconsider government sources,\nfoundations, loans, gifts\u00E2\u0080\u0094and\nstudent fee increases.\nAMS FEES $29\nAt present $10 of the $24 Alma Mater Society fee goes into\nContinued on Page Three\nSEE: UNION\ncaught in radar traps on access\nroads to the University.\nThe traps. Thompson said,\nare put at places where there\nhave previously been accidents.\nThey are kept in one place\nonly a couple of hours.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nAmong Thompson's favorite\nlocations for radar traps are\nthe winding section of Southwest Marine Drive, on bush-\nconcealed roads beside University golf course, and in the\nresidential area near Blanca\non Chancellor.\nGhost cars often lurk in\nsideroads of University Boule\nvard and in the 20 mile per\nhour school zone on Chancellor Boulevard.\nThompson says toe University is a place of learning for\nnot only UBC students.\nHe says RCMP trainees from\nthe Heather Street barracks\ncome to his detachment to\npractice catching speeders.\nThompson has a detachment\nof six regular men.\nHe says that although the\nsize of the student body is increasing, the RCMP is giving\nout fewer speeding tickets.\nContinued on Page Three\nSEE: TODAY'S SCHEDULE\ntlHSli\nliiiiisi\nalii\nisailiaii\nWmmm\n^P^Hpmi^^fciS^^^^^w^^^^^^^^^pKK^ff^^i^^\nikmmt\nTHIS IS WHAT your car looks like to a man behind the radar :\nset. Car at arrow was shown on graph to be doing 38 in j\n35-mph zone on University Blvd. last month. Officer writes\nlicense number, description, and time beside violations, and\nradios pickup car.\nTHS UBYSSEY\nVol. XLV\nVANCOUVER, B.C., THURSDAY, JANUARY 10, 1962\nNo. 37\nBook thefts\nhit new peak\nlast session\nBy KRISHNA SAHAY\nStudents stole $7,000 worth of books from the library last\nyear, the library reported Wednesday.\nIn addition, articles have been , , , .\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094Don Hume photo\nNOVEL CAFETERIA seating more than 500 is going up below\nEast Mall near Freddy Wood Theatre. New caf, which will\nalso be the new bus terminus, costs $600,000 and will be\nbuilt around a giant pine tree. (Story page 3.)\nHungry Nigerian students\ncome up with beef for lunch\nNSUKKA, Nigeria (CUP)\u00E2\u0080\u0094A student protest over poor\nfood which turned into a full-scale uproar against both the\nfood and \"oppressive regulations,\" has resulted in the expulsion of the entire undergraduate student body of the\nUniversity of Nigeria.\nThe demonstration began during lunch hour, when students refused to eat the food they were served.\nIt soon mushroomed as students began to scatter utensils\nand smashing university property. Reports from the university\nsaid two cars belonging to university officials were heavily\ndamaged.\nA police riot squad finally restored order.\nripped from periodicals \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 and\nbooks torn or defaced. Some\nlibrary officials have called it\nthe heaviest damage in years.\nInglis Bell, head of the circulation division, says the theft\nand damage is increasing proportionately with student enrollment.\nOUST THEM\n\"People who steal books at\nUniversity shouldn't be here,\"\nsays Bell.\n\"If they will do this sort of\nthing here, what will they do\nwhen they go out into the business world?\"\nHe said the stolen books cost\nthe University more than their\nprice.\nAn average $5 book costs an\nadditional $2 to order, catalogue\nand finally put on the shelves.\n\"In order to ensure complete\nsecurity it would be necessary\nto search each student individually.\n\"This involves searching students for books hidden under\ncoats and shirts,\" he said.\n\"Such searches would make\nsecurity offensive to the student.\"\nMANY REASONS\nBell said there are four reasons behind the thefts.\nSome students become so worried about their courses thai\nthey sneak out reference books.\nOther students steal books\nbecause they don't want to be\nbothered bringing them back on\nthe due date.\n(Contiued on Page 3)\nSEE: BOOKS\nMost UBC\ngirls go\nin groups\nUBC girls generally go\nin groups, a Ubyssey sur-\nvey found Wednesday.\nDuring Wednesday noon\nhour, more than 60 per\ncent of girls entering the\nBrock Basement washroom\ndid so in groups of two or\nmore.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 * \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nThe reason?\nConvenience, said most.\n\"We've been eating\nlunch together and are going to the same class at\n1:30,\" was a typical comment.\n\"We always do everything\ntogether!\" one pair said.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nA large group explained\nthat tftey had come to\npractise a song for Fhra-\nteres.\nOthers found the powder\nroom a pleasant place to\ncompare clothes, talk, and\nwatch hairdos being constructed.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nAnd two girls wouldn't\ntell why they were together.\nThey fled into the female sanctuary and\nwouldn't come out.\n1\n\u00C2\u00A7\nSt Page 2\nTHE UBYSSEY\nOur world role\nelusive illusion\nCanadians should stop wandering around in international\npolitics seeking a role.\nThe CBC's Paris correspondent, Stanley Burke, speaking before an overflow noon hour\ncrowd Tuesday, struck out at\n\"Canada's overdose of illusion.\"\nA few years ago Canada provided a bridge across the Atlantic but that time has passed.\nThe Americans have by-passed\nus and built new bridges of\ntheir own, he said.\nA LIMIT\n\"There is only so much a\ncountry of 18 million people\ncan achieve,\" he said.\nBurke suggested that Canada\nshould look to the development\nof the Atlantic Community as\nan area where Canadians could\nexert influence.\nTurning to the United Nations,\nBurke said the world organization should be kept operative\nfor reasons other than world\ngevevament.\n\"The UN is an international\nworld stock exchange serving as.\na central clearing house for\ndiplomats,\" he said.\nThe two most useful rooms\nin the world can be found in\nlhe UN the North Lounge and\nthe Delegates' Bar.\n\"Even if it costs $68 million\nto operate these two rooms\nalone it is worth the price for\nthe amount of business transacted.\" he said-\nFRENCH NASTY\n\"The French,\" said Burke,\n\"are a ruthless, nasty people who\nare really moving.\n\"Our conception of the French\nwill have to be changed and we\nmust accept them as a truly\ntough and dynamic people.\"\nSince the war the French have\nmade giant strides and must be\nreckoned with, he said.\nBurke said Paris will become\nthe New York of Europe.\n\"Most of the news agencies\nWo fee, no class,\nstudents warned\nStudents may be excluded\nfrom classes next Monday if\nthey haven't paid their fees.\nSecond term fees are payable this week directly at the\naccounting office in the administration building or by\nmail.\nAll scholarships, including\ngovernment bursaries, may be\npicked up on Monday at the (\ncashier's wicket in the administration building.\nFee receipts for use in income tax returns will be\navailable Feb. 1.\nare moving their top men from\nLondon to Paris and Paris is\nbecoming an important information centre \"\nBurke said the military wars\nof earlier European times have\nbeen superceded by linguistic\nwars.\nHere the French are actively\npromoting a campaign to make\nFrench the language of the new\nEurope.\nThe British aren't sitting\nback while the French campaign\u00E2\u0080\u0094they . are saying that\nEnglish should be the universal\nlanguage as it is almost an international language now.\nThursday, January 10, 1962\n : - a\u00C2\u00BB.\nUniversity Hill United Church\n5375 University Boulevard\nServices 1 :00 a.m. Sundays\n-Evening Service 7 p.m.\nAll Welcome :\nLOST\nOn December 3rd in Buchanan 216\nor between there and faculty club\nlot a solid bracelet of flat-wound\nalternat ng- copper and silvery\nmetal, a keepsake of childhood in\nAngoia. Seward, $5.\n-/ *\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 * - ; . . . '; '-^\nSTANLEY BURKE\n... an illusion\nStrident President\nresigns from frat\nST JOHN'S (CUP) Memorial\nUniversity student president Bill\nJohnston has resigned from\nUpsilon Nu fraternity to show\nhe is against the whole concept\nof fraternities.\nHe said he had joined three\nyears ago, \"like the rest of the\nsheep\".\nJohnston is currently, leading\nthe fight to oust fraternities and\nsororities from the Memorial\ncampus.\n'0-\nLillian Casuals\nOUR\nJANUARY SALE\ni s\nYOUR OPPORTUNITY\nto\nAdd A New Look To Your Wardrobe\nReductions to 50%\nHours: 9:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Closed Wednesday\n4456 W. 10th 224-5440\nPERMANENT EMPLOYMENT\n' graduating students\nThere are many interesting career opportunities being offered at\nthe Company's Prince Rupert and Castlegar pulp mills for students\ngraduating witlj the degree of Bachelor, or higher, in Mechanical\nEngineering, Chemical Engineering, Chemistry, Electrical Engineering and Civil Engineering. Electricals or Civils applying should\nbe fairly sure that their interests lie in manufacturing.\nfurther information\nA pamphlet describing Columbia Cellulose Company, Limited and\nthe opportunities it has for permanent employment may be obtained\nfrom your University Employment Office.\n1 inter views\nCompany representatives will be at the University from\nMonday, January 14 to Friday, January 18\nSUMMER EMPLOYMENT\nWe are able to offer Second and Third Year Engineers\nand Chemists good w^ages and an opportunity to obtain\nvaried-experience related to their academic studies.\nARRANGE APPOINTMENTS THROUGH YOUR UNIVERSITY EMPLOYMENT OFFICE\n*\nCOLUMBIA CELLULOSE COMPANY, LIMITED\nManufacturer of Acetate, Viscose and specialty sulphite pulps,\nhigh quality bleached kraft paper pulps and lumber products. Thursday, January 10, 1962\nTHE UBYSSEY\nPage 3\nat\nAD MAD\nBy ROW RITER\nA strange thing happened\nto me the other night.\n* It was, I suppose, the culmination of the insidious effects of advertising; or, in this\ncase, the even worse effects of\nwhat you might call dis-adver-\n' tising.\nYou see. there's something\nthat's been bothering me for\n'*$T'\n1/\n**\"\n**^OM*Z~.\nl-fcQ&V\nA* \u00C2\u00BB\n*\u00C2\u00A3\u00C2\u00AB*\nt- i\nA\nA PERSONNEL OFFICER OF THE SUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADA\n\VA-r\nw/flw jr\u00C2\u00A5W\nWILL\n\"\"\"***0\u00C2\u00AB..\n6/\n/\"\n'\u00E2\u0080\u00A2A\niJ\u00C2\u00BB0ft\n^\nMembers of the Class\nof '63 are invited to\nconsider the varied\ncareers outlined in\nthe booklet 'Careers\nWith Sun Life' which\nmay be obtained at\nthe placement office.\n> *\n**' W*M4\nThursday, Jan. 17\nand\nFriday, Jan. 18\nA\n\\n^\n, M*Miiw**vw*rifl*'\u00C2\u00AB*w*,,,*A*^\n***\njs>\\ - v\nr~ ,\u00C2\u00AB*\u00C2\u00BB.\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 .-WMCVAp^jpM\"\n\"<*\u00C2\u00AB*,\u00C2\u00BB\n^\u00E2\u0084\u00A2j&sLu* f* Page 4\nTHE UBYSSEY\nEDITORIALS\nMachinations on Frat Row...\nIn federal elections, it's the party with the\nbiggest machine which goes to Ottawa.\nMachine politics also win in provincial and\ncivic politics. .\nThey win at UBC, too.\nWhen elections for the AMS council positions are held next month it will be a tried and\ntested \"machine\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094the fraternity machine\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nwhich, if as successful as in past, will put frat\nmen or sorority women into a majority of the\nexecutive seats on student council.\nAnd a number of prospective good councillors will lose because they lack the support of\n, an effective organization.\nj This is what has happened in the past.\nIt is no coincidence, for instance, that during the past dozen or so years, two-thirds to\nthree-quarters of students elected on a campus-\nwide basis to the council have been from the\nten percent fraternity minority.\nHalf of the executive on this year's council\nis from Frat Row.\nThe continued success of the Greeks\u00E2\u0080\u0094on a\npredominantly anti-Greek campus\u00E2\u0080\u0094is amazing.\nIt is also the result of calculated planning and\npoliticking by the fraternity family.\nThe fraternity candidate for a council position is supported by a powerful campaign committee. It puts the frat man's name in front\nof the students wih poster campaigns, board\nchalking bees, personal conversations and\nthrough support of fraternity men already on\nthe council.\nThen, if this support isn't enough to sway\nthe non-Greek vote in favor of the Greek candidate, the frat man can always count on the\nfrat block vote. (There are more than 1,000\npeople in fraternities and sororities at UBC.)\nThe non-Greek has little chance.\nAdd to this the fact that the frat man can\nprobably list off a string of committee positions\nhe has held previously as a result of having\nfriends on the council, and he is almost a certainty to be elected.\nBut The Ubyssey suggests (for the reasons\nstated in today's second editorial) that the\ncampus is not getting the best government it\ncould.\nAn unsuccessful move toward defraterniza-\ntion of the council died an unfortunate death\na couple of years ago when the \"New Blood\non Council\" movement was defeated at the\npolls.\nBut it is time for a resurrection of NBC or\nthe start of a similar group. That is, if the\nninety percent of students who are not Greeks\nfeel as strongly as we do, that they are tired\nof being governed by the machine from Frat\nRow.\n...or Greek democracy, UBC style\nWhy do fraternities try to control student\ngovernment?\nThe best answer we have seen so far is in\nan article written for the NFCUS magazine,\nCampus Canada, by a former UBC fratman-\neouncillor.\nHis thesis: prestige.\nPrimarily it's prestige for the individual\nfraternities to which the councillors belong,\nbut more generally the frat block swings together for the prestige of fraternities in general.\nAnd the result is that UBC is probably not\ngetting tihe best government it could have.\nThe frat men's interest, according to the\narticle which will appear next month, is that\nfraternities here are interested in winning the\nHouser Cup, symbolic of public service on the\ncampus. And how better to get it than by\nhaving great numbers in prestige positions.\nIt may be good for winning the Houser\ncup, but not for the student body.\nThursday, January 10, 1962\n~THiTuB YSSEY\nWinner of the Southam Trophy, 1961 and 1962\nWinner of the Bracken Trophy, 1962\nWinner of the Montreal Star Trophy, 1962\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 Vancouver\nby the Alma Mater Society, University of B.C. Editorial opinions expressed\nare those of the Editor-in-Chief of The Ubyssey and not necessarily thog\u00C2\u00BB\nof the Alma Mater Society or the University of B.C. Telephone CA 4-3242,\nLocals: Editor-\u00E2\u0080\u009425; News\u00E2\u0080\u009423; Photography\u00E2\u0080\u009424.\nEditor-in-chief: Keith, Bradbury\nManaging Editor . Denis Stanley\nAssociate Editor Fred Fletcher \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nNews Editor Mike Hunter\nCity Editor M. G. Valpy\nPicture Editor Don Hume\nLayout Editor , Bob McDonald\nSports Editor Ron Kydd\nFeatures Editor Mike Grenby *\nCUP Editor Maureen Covell\nEditorial Assistant Joyce Holding\nCritics Editor William Littler\nLayout: Bob McDonald\nREPORTERS: Ann Burge, Tim Padmore, Lorraine Shore, -\nDouglas \"Swoop\" Thompson, Graeme Matheson, Janet\nMatheson, Krishna Sahay, Gerard Hivon, Pat Horrobin,\nLloyd Drake, Catherine Janitch, Jo Britten.\nTECHNICAL: Mike Atchison.\nLetters to the editor\nNo sooner is the fratman in office, than a\nlarge number of his friends and brothers from\nhis fraternity are appointed to the committees\nunder him. The major committees today are\nall controlled by frat men i or sorority women.\nMany are openly admitted to be a result of\npolitical patronage.\nAnd once fraternity men are on the committees or council they often fight along fraternity lines. More than once in the past student council decisions have been affected or\npostponed because councillors were divided\naccording to fraternity or sorority allegiance.\nThe Ubyssey suggests this is not how student government should be conducted. It suggests that people who run for office purely for\nthe prestige, either for themselves or for their\nfraternity, are probably not the best people to\nrun councils or control committees.\nStudents should consider these points when\nelections roll around. The time is only a month\naway.\nMistaken impression\nEditor,\nThe Ubyssey,\nDear Sir:\nI was amazed to read the\nnews \"Nigeria opens first university\" in the Tuesday issue of\nthe Ubyssey. I really wondered\nif this was excited journalism\nor lack ot adequate knowledge\nof the area the news was\ncovering.\nFellow students have started\nconfronting me with, \"say, is\nAhmadu Bello the only university in your country?\"\nI would like to correct the\nmisconception and make it\nclear to your readers that\nAhmadu Bello University is\nthe fifth university in Nigeria,\na country about the size of\nBritish Columbia. There are\ntwo universities in Western,\nNigeria, the Federal University, and University of If\u00C2\u00AB,\nboth at Ibadau; the former was\nuntil recently, a branch of\nLondon University and was\nstarted in 1947.\nThe third is University of\nNigeria at Nssuka; the fourth-\nis the University of Lagos.\nApart from these universities, there had in the past been\ndegree-granting colleges of\nTechnology, in each of the\nthree regions.\nSo you can see that the\n\"significant milestone\" does\nnot, after all, read Mile number 1, as your paper deemeooks, T.V., songs, poems. Have\nNew York - Hollywood contacts.\nBring- what you Have. Free consultation. 1065 K. 17. TR 6-636:'\nfrom\n3The Tulane administration.^\ndecided two weeks later tQ inte-i\ngrate-the schooL\n\u00C2\u00AB#*i\n'%iZ. Ouality Diamond rin*si___i|J\nPbone w 7.2S89\nnever keen u**a. -\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 rote SAI.E\nPontiac 194?i 2-aooj; Sedan, low\nmileage. Frigate oyrijer, since-\nnew. A-l ^cflndition. .Bteaier. Snow.|\ntires, etc. $300. 410$7W. 10th. Ave. i\nOA 4-3001. ' \ 7\nSingle rooms and board $75.\nLunches packed, laundry.,\n3120 West 11th. RE 1-2620.\nClinton^\nWonderful selection . . . however this is a year-end CLEARANCE arid consists of\nclothing that we have been selling regularly . . . PROGRESS BRAND, SHIFFER-\nHILLMAN, AQUASCUTUM-Hence broken size ranges, odds and ends, discontinued\nlines. No charge for minor alterations. Shop early for best selection. Use a budget or\nlay-away account, but shop early.\nRegular $59195\n, to $99,5Q\nON SALE FROM\n$3493 to *6995\nThese include all wool English Worsteds, Venetians, Twists, Flannels, Terylene and Wool Wash 'N Wears, etc. Regulars,\nShorts and Tails. Styled in 2 and 3 buttons.\nrt\nRegular 134.95\nto$o9f95 ,\nON SALE FROM\n95 to H9\nIn this group are all Woo^Saxbnfes, tweeds, Hopsdcks, Flannels, Lightweight Worsteds, etc. Styled in 2 and 3 buttons.\n$19*5 to $79*5\nRegular $59.95\n, to $95\n-.^^.\u00E2\u0080\u0094-.^^ ^ r. .. _ ON SALE FROM\nFme^aifefialsmertftfing Crombies, Colorful English Tweed s. Gabardines, Covert Cloths, Wool and Cashmeres, etc.\nStyledjn the shorter length double breasted and single breasted models with split shoulder design as well as raglans\nand set-ins. 7\nSLACKS\nRegular $14.95\nto7$25.95\nON SALE FROM\n$995 toH6*5\n:\u00C2\u00AB#licrlrfift^trl line, pleatless and singfe pleat, in wool flannels and fancy worsteds. Sizes 28 to 42.\nRegular |l 1.95\nto $2i95(,\nON SALE FROM\n$| 95 to $16-88\nstriped and plain, zip arid button cardigan and wide assortment of pullovers.\nDress, Sport 6t\nRegular $4.95\nto $9.95\nON SALE FROM\n$|.8B\nPopular snap tabs, button downs, hi-boys, and regular collar styles in long and short sleeves.\nRegular lo $32.50\nPRiCE^f^-M^D\nCord Pants\nRegular 9.95 to $12.95\n&7.9S\nCotton Pants\nRegular 6.95 to 9.95\n$4.95\nRegular to $12.95\nSALE PRICE fi\u00C2\u00BB^ rV(-\nas low as __ ,Tl>B%J3\nMany other non-advertised\nSpecials on Sale\nClinicn\n742 GRANVILLE ST. MU 1 -5625\nrOPEN FRIDAY EVENINGS UNTIL 9 P.M.I\nDRESS ancWi\ncasual atioes\nBroken size ranges in\nassorted styles.\nRegular $10:95 to $29.95\n*!T-95 TO $ % O'95 Thursday, January 10, 1962\nTHE UBYSSEY\nPage 7\nCanadian U N aid\ncalled insignificant\nA brief prepared by the UBC United Nations Club says\nthat Canada's foreign aid contribution is selfish and insignificant.\nI capita income of $2,000, is one\nThe brief says that: \"As Cana- of the most selfish nati0ns radian citizens we have the right\nand responsibility to cry out\nagainst Canada's shameful contribution towards underdeveloped countries.\"\nThe Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development, of which Canada is a\nmember, says one per cent of a\nnation's gross national product\nis a minimum requirement for\nforeign aid.\nThe brief says Canada's position in this regard is \"disgusting.\"\nFigures quoted say. Canada's\nforeign aid contribution as a\npercentage of GNP is .18 compared to France's 1.55 and the\njU.S.A.'s .67. As dollars per capita it is $3:50 compared to\nFrance's $21 and the U.S.A.'s\n$19.\n\"Canada, the second richest\nnation in the world with a per\nWUSC brings 12\nMexicans lo UBC\nTwelve Mexican university\nstudents will visit the University next week.\nThe visit is sponsored by the\nWorld University Service committee and the Experiment in\nInternational Living.\nThere are eight women and\nfour men ranging in age from\n17 to 27. They will also visit\nVernon, Penticton and Victoria\nCollege.\nLoyola closes\nmen's lounge\nMONTREAL, (CUP) Footprints on tables and walls, soft\ndrink stains \"all over\" and apple\npeelings on' walls have forced\nclosure of the men's lounge at\nMontreal's Loyola College.\n\"Students have been doing\nthings,\" one staff member said,\n\"that they would not think of\ndoing at home.\"\nThe lounge has been closed\nfor an indefinite period to end\nthe misuse.\nThe Ideal Place To\nMeet- Your Friends\nTry Our Delicious T-Bone\nSteak with\" Coffee\n$1.35 - Ifs Really Good\nFull Course Meals\n.within your income.\nDO-NUT DINER\n4556 West 10th Ave.\nShould the\nDoctor Tell\nv\t\nShould a patient be told he has\nan incurable illness? He may\nbe led to suicide 'if told the\ntruth \u00E2\u0080\u0094 but. if not told, dying\npatients may be cheated out of\nsomething precious that's in\neach of us. This painful'dilemma\nSs debated in January Reader's\nDigest by two distinguished\nphysicians with opposing'views.\nGet your Reader's Digest today\n... 36 articles of lasting interest.\ngarding foreign aid contributions,\" the report says.\nThe brief, prepared last November, refutes the argument\nthat Canada cannot increase her\nforeign aid due to austerity by\nsuggesting Canada could give\nCanadian manufactured goods\ninstead of money.\nIn light of the recent dollar\ncrisis and the tariffs imposed\nby the Canadian government,\nCanada is quickly becoming\nrecognized as a selfish nation,\"\nthe brief says.\nLibrary study\ngets $3,000\nThe University has received a grant of $3,000\nfrom the provincial government's Public Library Commission to conduct a study\non the future development of\npublic libraries in B.C.\nMiss Rose Vainstein, associate professor m the school\nof librarianship, will visit all\nof B.C.'s 65 public libraries\nduring the 18-month study.\nThe main purpose of t h e\nstudy is to find more effective\nways of making library services available on a province-\nwide basis.\nMiss Vainstein has just\ncompleted a survey of public\nlibraries in the Victoria area.\n1400 - SUMMER POSITIONS - 1400\nfor\nUNIVERSITY STUDENTS\nwith the\nPUBLIC SERVICE OF CANADA\n$245 to $305 A Month\nFor Undergraduates\nUp to $537 A Month\nFor Graduate Students\nI\nECX.\nPlus, where applicable, travel allowances\nto and from positions and subsistence in\nthe field.\nMost positions are for students with a backgroud in Engineering or Science, notably Forestry, Geology and Agriculture, but some will be drawn from other faculties as well.\nDetails and application forms available at\nUNIVERSITY PLACEMENT OFFICE\nOR\nCVIL SERVICE COMMISSION OFFICES\nCLOSING DATE FOR APPLICATIONS - JANUARY 31\nT\nI\nI:\nUl\nI\nCHALLENGING GRADUATE OPPORTUNITIES\"\nCanadian Pratt A Whitney Aircraft is a\ncompany with a successful record of\ncontinuous growth for over thirty years.\nOutstanding opportunities exist for university graduates in the areas of General\nAdministration, Manufacturing and\nEngineering.\nRequirements for Engineering graduates in Manufacturing include Production Engineering, Plant Engineering and\nIndustrial Engineering. Our manufacturing\ncapability is being enlarged to cope with\nexpanding product lines. This expansion\nand modernization has created exceptional\nopportunities for new oraduates.\nRequirements for Engineering graduates in Product Design and Development exist in the Design, Analytical, Test,\nInstrumentation and Metallurgical Departments. The Company's research program\nin gas turbines\u00E2\u0080\u0094which resulted in the\nPT6 gas turbine and in other low powered\nengines\u00E2\u0080\u0094continues, with more advanced\nmodels presently under development.\nAdditional studies of high speed rotating\nmachinery have been undertaken on behalf\nof government agencies.\nAs a subsidiary of United Aircraft Corporation, this company, in Canada, represents Pratt & Whitney Aircraft, Sikorsky\nAircraft, Hamilton Standard, and Norden\nElectronics. Products from these divisions\nprovide Canadian Pratt & Whitney Aircraft\nwith complementary lines, ensuring a\ndiversified operation for our Canadian\nfacilities. In addition, the outstanding\ntechnical and administrative resources of\nthese companies can be drawn upon\nreadily.\nA company representative will visit\nthe campus shortly. Applications are\ninvited from graduates. Please contact your Placement Office to arrange\nfor an interview'\nCANADIAN PRATT & WHITNEY AIRCRAFT\nCOMPANY LIMITED . P.O. BOX 10, LONGUEUIL, P,Q.\nu\nSUBSIDIARY OF UNITED AIRCRAFT CORF-ORATION\nPRATT & WHITNEY ENGINES . SIKORSKY HELICOPTERS \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 HAMILTON STANDARD PRODUCTS .NORDEN ELECTRONICS Page 8\nTHE UBYSSEY\nThursday, January 10, 1962\n'tween classes\niQarsmert\nrequired\nRecruiting meeting for all\nprospective members of the\nrowing e?ew, 12:30 Friday in\n-.\u00C2\u00BBii; 21-7* .^..\n: !\u00C2\u00BB'.r: .;\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\" \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00C2\u00AB 7 * * *\nPt|^ER5 CLUB\nimportant general meeting,\nFriday, 12:30, Green Boom. All\nmembers out.\n* * *\n\"WUSC\nSpecial meeting, Friday, 12:30\nI. H. Important that everybody\nattend.\n, * * *\nVCF\nRev. Robert Birch speaks on\n\"Looking Forward to a New\nYear,\" Friday, 12:30, Bu. 106.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 * * *\nBIOLOGY CLUB\nAn illustrated talk by Jerry\nVan Tiets on \"The Sea Birds of\nFame Island^.\" noon today. Bio.\n2000.\n* * *\nSCM\nfieneral meeting, noon today.\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0Bu, .204. Everybody out.\n&.<\u00C2\u00BB<-.I- <<*V.\nV* "Newspapers"@en . "Vancouver (B.C.)"@en . "LH3.B7 U4"@en . "LH3_B7_U4_1963_01_10"@en . "10.14288/1.0125723"@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 .