"CONTENTdm"@en . "http://resolve.library.ubc.ca/cgi-bin/catsearch?bid=1211252"@en . "University Publications"@en . "2015-08-26"@en . "1968-03-15"@en . "Misprinted volume, should be L."@en . ""@en . "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/Ubysseynews/items/1.0126312/source.json"@en . "application/pdf"@en . " Who the\nhell is\nVol. XLIX, No. 58\nVANCOUVER, B.C., FRIDAY, MARCH 15, 1968\nFast action\nfollows\nbook brief\nThe UBC student library report has prompted strong action by library staff.\nHead librarian Basil Stuart-\nStubbs said Thursday the library has been working on the\nrecommendations of the report\nsince they first became known\nearly in 1967.\nThe report was recently summarized and then published in\nThe Ubyssey Tuesday.\n\"We've been working on the\nadvice of the report for some\ntime now, and dozens of things\nhave been improved,\" Stuart-\nStubbs said.\n\"Students complained about\nthe short hours of the library,\nso now we're open until midnight and on Sunday mornings.\"\nMore signs have been put up\n\u00E2\u0096\u00BAin the stacks to direct students\nafter some complained they\nbecame lost.\nThe report contained several\ncomplaints about first and second year students creating\nnoise and confusion in the\nmain stacks. The library instituted a policy at the beginning\nof the last winter session prohibiting them from these\n-areas, Stuart-Stubbs said.\nComplaints of poor heating\nand lighting have resulted in\na revamping of the heating\nsystem and proposed replacement of light fixtures in the\nmain stacks, he said.\n\"Loan privileges to faculty\nmembers have been cut to\nsome extent but they kick too\nmuch about proposals for\nshort term loans.\"\nEfforts are being made to\ninform students of the workings of the library, said Stuart-\nStubbs. Next year students can\ntake an audio-visual instruction course on the library as\nwell as tours. The course will\nfeature closed circuit television, slides, and tapes.\nSome controversial practices\nwill have to remain despite\ncomplaints, he said. \"Students\nwill have to continue to show\nlibrary cards when entering\nthe main stacks. If they did\nnot, it wouldn't be long before\nthere were all sorts of people\nbesides UBC students using\nthe library.\n\"And it is impossible to allow phone renewals because\nwe have an automated checking system that depends on\nhaving the library card in order to work.\"\nLevying fines must also continue especially in cases where\nthere is a hold on the overdue\nbook.\nThe lack of seating space,\nseverely criticized in the report, will continue until more\nmoney is given to the university by the provincial government, Stuart-Stubbs said.\n\"We're hoping we will get\nthe money for a new undergraduate library, but we need\ncapital grants for that.\"\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 georga hollo photo\nGEOLOGY STUDENTS who recently complained their building is held together only by ivy have established an ivy\nchart indicating the deteriorating condition of the ivy on\nthe building.\nHippie image of CYC\noutdated says Clarke\nWidespread criticism of the hippie image of the Company\nof Young Canadians is outdated and misinformed, CYC director\nAlan Clarke said Wednesday.\n\"The people should worry about the hippie and school dropout problems rather than whether these problems are within\nCYC's jurisdiction,\" said Clarke.\nOnly four or five of the 20 CYC volunteers working with\ncity youths are in hippie projects, he said.\n\"Canadians should be much more involved with the problems of their young people in the cities.\"\nThe legislation under which CYC was set up authorizes\ninvolvement in co-operative education.\nPeople should be less preoccupied with CYC's constitutional\nposition regarding education. They should be upset about the\nfrustrations in the conventional education system, he said.\nAnswering charges that the CYC's involvement in experimental schools is unconstitutional, Clarke said: \"If there's anything unconstitutional it is in the legislation, not in CYC.\"\nCYC workers are active at Knowplace in Vancouver and\nthe Barker free school in Cloverdale.\nClarke said he was disappointed in the federal government's 20 per cent cutback in the CYC budget this year.\nThe cutback is much more serious than it sounds because\nit is on last year's budget, not next year's needs.\nCYC and the general youth volunteer phenomenon is growing fast, he said.\nThe company is getting 1,200 applications a year. One new\nrequest comes in every day from groups or institutions who\nwant CYC volunteer help.\nBut the group cannot fill the requests because of the budget\ncut.\nIN ALBERTAf\n~7Z T^^efEsmsnt*,-\nMarch result-\nfee hike review\nEDMONTON (CUP) \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Shouting, placard-waving University\nof Alberta students Tuesday forced their provincial government\nto attempt to stave off a tuition fee hike.\nThe 3,000 students, armed with a 6,500-signature petition,\nmarched a mile and a half from the UofA campus to the provincial legislature to protest the raise.\nPremier E. C. Manning announced after a meeting with\nstudent leaders that his government would review the operating grants it gives to the university.\nUofA board of governors recently recommended a $100\nincrease because they claim the grant is insufficient to maintain\nthe university's academic standard.\nThe increase would bring UofA fees to $400 a year \u00E2\u0080\u0094 still\namong the lowest in Canada. For medical, dental and grad students it will mean fees of $500.\nAs students stood in the 22 degree weather and 30-mile-an-\nhour wind, education minister Raymond Reierson came out to\nhear student union president Al Anderson state the students'\ncase.\n\"We're here to show many students are concerned about\nthe fee increase,\" Anderson told the minister. \"The upper and\nmiddle income brackets are already over-represented at this\nuniversity.\n\"A fee hike will accentuate this situation.\n\"Students' incomes are not keeping up with rising living\ncosts,\" he added. \"A fee increase could mean many students\nwould not be able to afford university.\"\nThe crowd cheered Anderson but booed when Reierson\ntold them their fees were not a government responsibility. \"Your\nboard of governors sets fees,\" he called through a megaphone.\nStudent leaders later met with Manning and four cabinet\nministers in a council chamber. Tbe government promised after\nthe meeting to review the university operating grant at its next\nexecutive council meeting and investigate charges of inequalities\nin distribution of student financial assistance.\nLaw students condemn\ndiscriminatory arrests\nUBC law students followed their professors' lead in protesting the arrest of 15 persons in front of the courthouse\nSaturday.\nBy Thursday afternoon, 114 of the faculty's 398 students\nhad signed a petition protesting what they called the abuse of\nthe legal process in the arrest and dentention of the 15.\nThe arrests were discriminatory and may have been illegal\nbecause of the allegedly defective warrants, they said.\nStripping and searching the defendants was unreasonable,\nand setting bail of $50 for an offence which carried a maximum\n$25 fine was oppressive.\nThe students also condemned the use of an order-in-council\nto discriminate against an individual or group on the basis of his\nappearance or any other arbitrary criterion.\nCopies of the petition, started by first year law students,\ngo to attorney general Robert Bonner, the federal department of\njustice, mayor Tom Campbell, the Vancouver Bar Association\nand the admissions committee of the UBC law society.\nExam times up next week\nStudents must wait until next week to learn dates of\ntheir final exams.\nExam schedules will not be posted until early next\nweek, according to registrar's office spokesman Andy \u00C2\u00A3\nWilson. |\nSchedules had earlier been expected to appear today.\n\"We ran into an unexpected group of conflicts,\" WIl- :;\nson said.\nExams begin April 16 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 the day after Easter Monday ^\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 and continue until May 3. Page 2\nTHE UBYSSEY\nFriday, March 15, 1968\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 fred cawsey photo\nPADDY SHERMAN managed a grin during Gabor Mate's attack.\n'Papers must change to meet times\nBy NORMAN GIDNEY\nThe information explosion, electronic media\nand the need for more background explanation\nare radically changing newspapers, Vancouver\nProvince editor Paddy Sherman said Thursday.\nIn a debate with UBC senator Gabor Mate\non the role of a newspaper in society, Sherman\ntold a noon hour audience in Brock the newspaper ten years ago had a staple news diet of\naccidents and routine crime.\nToday, he said, more than 60 per cent of the\nnews in his paper is about events outside B.C.\nMate disagreed with a claim by Sherman that\nideology is dead on the editorial pages.\n\"When Sherman says ideology is dead he's\nignoring the facts,\" Mate said.\n\"The dominant ideology in North America is\ncorporate liberalism. Fred Wood represents corporate liberalism at its best,\" he said. Mate\nquoted a recent issue of Vancouver Life that\nWood was connected with both downtown dailies\nand many prominent Canadian corporations.\nMate said there was no conspiracy between\npeople like Wood and newspaper editors \u00E2\u0080\u0094 they\njust think alike.\nHe also said American news coverage of many\nimportant world developments \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Vietnam,\nChina, the Greek military coup d'etat \u00E2\u0080\u0094 are\neither biased and unfactual or incomplete.\nMate charged the war in Laos in 1959 was\nfought in the headlines of the American press.\n\"The function of the press,\" Sherman answered \"is to supply a kind of minefield through\nwhich government walks.\"\nIt should also be a mirror of society and try\nto interpret to the vast middle ground of the\npopulation the actions of the progressives and\nreactionaries, he said. This, said Sherman, is\nthe most rewarding role for a newspaper.\nSherman said television is unable to present\nthe interrelation of abstract ideas because of\nspace and time limitations.\nA&B SOUND\nRECORD SALE\nWIDE SELECTION AT LOWEST PRICES IN B.C.\nLUNCHEON STEAKS $1.19\nLuncheon Steak Dinner, anytime\u00E2\u0080\u00945 oz. Sirloin\nBaked Potato, Tossed Salad and Garlic Bread*\nNOW\nNEAR CAMPUS\n4489 West 10th Ave.\n100%\nHUMAN HAIR\nWIGS\n21.95, 31.95, 41.95 & 61.95\nWIGLETS\n$9.95\nBEAUTIFUL FALLS\n$29.95\nSALES\n10%\nDiscount to\nU.B.C. Students\n& Personnel\nSERVICE\n\"GONE WITH THE WIG\"\n49 W. HASTINGS ST.\nBetween Woodward's and A. & N.\nTELEPHONE\n688-1201\nMONO & STEREO\nFeaturing:\nJOHN WESTLEY HARDING\nAS I WENT OUT ONE\nMORNING\nDEAR LANDLORD\n$3.58\nReg. $4.98\nFeaturing:\nSUZANNE\nMASTER SONG\nWINTER LADY\nA*B SOUND\nMU 2-4846\nOpen Friday Until 9 p.m.\n571 GRANVILLE (at Dunsmuir)\nMU 2-1919 Friday, March 15, 1968\nTHE UBYSSEY\nPage 3\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 george hollo photo\nMORE THAN 600 education students marched from the\ncairn to the ed building Thursday before stringing up this\nmouse in annual toilet training rite.\nProgram to aid housing\nplanned at conference\nANN ARBOR, Mich. (CUP) \u00E2\u0080\u0094 A conference on low-cost\n^student housing at the University of Michigan March 1-3 produced plans for a United States organization to seek tax relief\nand direct financial aid for student housing co-ops.\nTwo hundred students from 41 universities in the U.S. and\nCanada attended. It was the first such large-scale conference of\ncampus co-operatives in several years.\nHoward Adelman, a professor at York University in Toronto,\nsaid the Canadian government has loaned more than $14 million\nto student co-operatives on 11 campuses in the past five years.\nHe said the government is now financing construction of a $5.7\nmillion, 10-story building for Rochdale College in Toronto, a coop college-in-residence democratically run by its 800 members.\nTrevor Thomas, director of the college housing program of\nthe U.S. department of housing and urban development, pointed\nout low-interest loans available for student housing. But these\nloans are only available through universities, he said, and only\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2one non-university-sponsored co-op has ever been granted funds.\nThe conference was hosted by the student corporation at\nthe Michigan campus which operates eleven houses. A second\nmeeting in Chicago later in March will lay the groundwork for\nthe new national organization.\nClassroom squeeze on,\neducation grants short\nTORONTO (CUP) \u00E2\u0080\u0094 More Ontario students\nwill get money from the government next year,\nbut they'll also be crammed into larger classes.\nObservers say these are the main results of\nthe Ontario government's universities budget\nhanded down Tuesday.\nGovernment spokesmen said the increase\nwould allow the universities to improve the\nquality of education.\nBut presidents of Ontario universities claim\nthe opposite. They predict larger classes and a\nwidening student-professor ratio. They also complain many special programs have been ignored\nby the budget.\nMORE THAN LAST YEAR\nThe government has allocated $209.3 million\nto operate the province's 140 provincially-\nassisted universities in 1968-69. This is 40 million more than last year's 169 million.\nThe grants will support an expected 82,000\nstudents, up from current enrolment of 73,000.\nOf an additional $32 million earmarked for\nstudent assistance plans, $26 million will go to\nthe province of Ontario student awards program\n(POSAP), almost double the $13.7 million set\naside for POSAP last year.\nThe increases in operating grants are in the\nform of a bigger per-student grant to universities.\nLast year, universities got $1,320 for each full-\ntime student. The budget increased this basic\nunit to $1,450.\nThe government two years ago adopted a\nsystem of formula financing to determine university grants. The grant is figured out by multiplying the number of students at the university by\nthe basic per-student grant of $1,450. The system\nalso makes adjustments for differences in costs\namong faculties.\nHIGHEST IN CANADA\nThe grants were announced Tuesday by Dr.\nDouglas Wright, chairman of the university\naffairs committee, an advisory body to the government.\nStudents to vote\non ed ombudsm\nEducation students can elect their own\nombudsman next week.\nThe position was created by the new\neducation council and will come before a\ngeneral meeting of education students for\nratification Thursday.\nEducation president-elect Gerry Olund\nsaid Monday the ombudsman will be chairman of the student-faculty liaison committee which airs student complaints.\n\"He will hear complaints from students\nand present them to the committee,\" Olund\nsaid.\nNominations for the post close today at\n1:30 p.m. and the election will be Wednesday.\nOlund also said applications for several\neducation committee positions are now\nbeing accepted.\nApplicants are sought for seminar rep,\nreturning officer, special events rep, grad\nrep, night school rep, Ubyssey rep and\nintramurals rep\u00E2\u0080\u0094both men's and women's.\n\"The per-student grants are the highest in\nCanada,\" he said. Quebec's per-student grant\nunit is $1,400. Ontario's is $1,450.\nWright said the increases would improve the\nquality of education.\n\"While the increase in the per-student unit\nis 10 per cent, rising costs of living are only four\nto five per cent,\" he said. \"Anything above the\nfive per cent can be used for improvement.\"\nBut the committee of presidents of universities of Ontario Wednesday issued a press release\ndisagreeing with this conclusion.\nThey claim the grants were not sufficient to\nmaintain the already unsatisfactory student-\nfaculty ratio. Faced with an anticipated 12 per\ncent enrolment increase, the committee says, the\nuniversities can't afford to hire additional professors.\nThis will mean larger classes for students and\na resultant loss of contact between students and\nprofs.\nCOMMITTEE COMPLAINED\nThe committee complained development of\nspecial programs will have to be curtailed.\nDr. H. G. Thode, president of McMaster University, said in a statement Wednesday it will\nbe hard to maintain quality.\n\"It will be impossible to launch several new\nprograms we had contemplated, let alone nourish other programs that have been started over\nthe last two years,\" he said.\nHe said planned expansion of library holdings will have to be slowed down along with\nplanned improvements in some doctoral programs.\nUniversity of Western Ontario president\nCarleton Williams also said there would be some\nacademic cutbacks as a result of insufficient\ngovernment grants.\nHam, frog at trial\nMONCTON . ;-;>:\u00E2\u0096\u00A0-,- \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00C2\u00A3?**$\n-\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00C2\u00A7*\nwages guerilla artfare\nBy REILLY BURKE\nThe chalky scrawl on a tar-paper wall across\nfrom the Ponderosa reads, \"Graffiti is good\". It's\njust a casual observation on the worth of a very\nmuch alive campus art form, but it reflects the almost universal delight evoked by these guerilla\ngraphics.\nThe opportunity to write on a vacant piece of\nwall or pavement provides a platform for the little\nman to ventilate his frustrations or to publicly\ncommunicate what he thinks may be a vital message.\nThere is, of course, the familiar W.C. variety\nof wall writing which is usually short-lived due to\nthe long reach of the Physical Plant scrubbing arm.\nThis type of graffiti possesses a degree of vitality\nand resilience matched only by the Viet Cong, and\ncontinually regenerates itself much to the benefit\nof chaste little boys and girls, and the overcrowded\nfacilities at Riverview.\nThe more aggressive artists take to the outdoors\nwith a modicum of stealth and quantities of paint,\nspray-bombs, brushes, and even rollers.\nJock-minded pencil pushers from that other\nbush institution arrive nooturnally in their wheezing customised Vauxhalls to stencil \"SFU\" on our\nlovely architect designed sidewalks. A safe statement, mind you, and one that causes very little\nconsternation.\nThe red paint graphics of the \"Fort Boys\" are\nequally feeble. It's like a very famous person said\nto me one miserable rainy day \u00E2\u0080\u0094 \"So what?\"\nA little muck is moved, however, when the\ncharacter assassins arrive and draw public attention\nto the peculiar bedroom antics and anatomical\npreferences of certain faculties as in the \"Engineers\nEat\" type of expression.\nThere is no doubt that some of the engineers\ndo, but whether they do or not is of no great concern to most people. As a result, this kind of statement is similar to the W.C. variety In its negligible\nimpact.\nSocially motivated activists provide us with a\nmore cerebral brand of mural literature, and the\nopportunity to vicariously enjoy some establishment\ntail-pulling.\nUnfortunately the best examples of revolutionary graffiti have been flushed down the toilet of\nhistory.\nTwo years ago the hoardings surrounding the\nemerging medical complex sprouted eight foot high\n** \u00E2\u0080\u009E'\ni^^ry^rfX-\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 tf'&'Jf,*\"\".'. *~'X$;\nXMyx\u00C2\u00A5f{\n~\u00C2\u00BBdX'\\nAn organic folk art\n... a political indicator\nletters demanding \"LEGALIZE POT\", which caused\nsuch strong repercussions that cracks appeared in\nthe walls of the Seagram distilleries.\nDuring construction of the education facility a\nnumber of aesthetically desperate individuals\nmounted ladders and wrote \"UGLY UGLY UGLY\"\nin enormous letters across the side of the building.\nIt was a witty and incisive billboard editorial on\nthe sad creations of the campus monument builders.\nPerhaps if we had a disposable cardboard university instead of our super-rigid concrete Versailles\nwe might see more of this ever changing but persistently lively art form. The kaleidoscopic potential of such a transient environment absolutely\nboggles my mind.\nARE YOU CONCERNED?\nThe AMS Needs People\nCommittee Chairmen\nCanadian University Students Overseas\nFrosh Orientation\nHighschool Conference\nIntramurals\nPerforming Arts\nSpeakers\nSymposia\nWorld University Service\nCommittee Members\nAcademic Symposia Committee\nBrock Art Committee\nStudent Union Building Management\nWinter Sports Centre Management\nI\nGET IN VOL VED!\nAPPLICATIONS OR FURTHER INFORMATION-A.M.S. SECRETARY, BOX 54, BROCK HALL.\nDEADLINE 12:00 NOON, MARCH 19\nTHE UBYSSEY\nFriday, March 15, 1968 pf 7even m\n BEND WIRE INTO USEFUL THINGS\nCONoocrfo ijy UltCU (jOBDIf, MHCLE ^RH/r\u00C2\u00A3 jjfi\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0ws 5 x \"\u00E2\u0096\u00A0' Be Ready for Second Coming\nf \u00C2\u00AE&WM of Jesus, In October, 1975\nCrunch coming\nMOSCOW (UPI) \u00E2\u0080\u0094 An un*\nidentified e Iderly man\nharanguing a small crowd near\nJLenin's Tomb in Red Square\nbegan shouting at passersby\nabout the situation in the\nMiddle East.\nAll that could be understood\nfrom his largely unintelligible\nwords was that he opposed the\nceasefire.\nSuddenly he exploded.\nSOLICITOR LOSES\nCou-sii-J AL\nTortured 9 Years by\n2C0RNSandaWART\nConstipation\nHorribly\nunfair\npp p\nDead\nman had\nparsnip\nin bed . . . \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nA 22-year-old gardener was\n. probably under the\ninfluence of the hallucination\ndrug LSD when he' jumped\nnaked through a window at\nhis home and plunged 30 feet\nto his death, a coroner said\ntoday.\nAnd when police searched his\nroom they found a book on\nwitchcraft, a case full of toads\nand a large parsnip in his bed,\nthe St. Paneras inquest was told.\nThe arardener, Clive Amor, of\nNorth Hill Avenue, Haringey,\ndied as a result of a fractured\nskull.\nHis father, Mr. William Amor,\ntold the coroner, Mr. Ian Milne,\nthat Clive had been acting\n\" very peculiarly.\"\nHe said he knew his son had:\nbeen taking drugs, but did not\nknow what type.\nAdjourned\nAt about 5.30 a.m. on June 2\nhe took Clive a cup of tea. Then\na few minutes later he heard\na crash of glass. His son, he\nadded, had seemed quite all\nright when he took him the tea.\nTold by the coroner that a\ncase of toads had been found\non a table by the bed, Mr. Amor\nsaid his son had had them for\na long time.\nMr. Aliine a'.so mentioned that\na book on witchcraft had been\nfound in the room. Mr. Amor\nsaid he knew his son had the\nbook, but didn't think he was\nreally interested in witchcraft.\nStation Sergeant Eric Whelan\ntold the inquest that in addition\nto the toads and the witchcraft\noooik, he found \" what I can only\ndescribe as a ivery large parsnip,\"'\nin the b;d.\nPathologist Mr, N. Patel said\nhe could find no evidence of\nbarbiturate drugs or alcohol in\nthe dead man's body. He said\nAnior had died from a contused\nbrain due to the fractured skull.\nThe coroner adjourned the\ncase until July 5 for Mr. Patel\nto \"try and rccovt.* ;he end\nproducts of this L-SiD drug/'\nArmless Man Flies\nHIS APPEAL\nAt Parksville tne occasion\nwas marked for some people,\namong them an RCMP officer, by a tremor which\nComox armed services\nspokesman said could not\npossibly have been caused by\ntheir errant Voodoo and\nwhich seismologists said could\nnot possibly have been caused\nby their earthquake.\nSaanich seismologist Br. W.\nG. Milne was left shaking his\nhead in puzzlement\nEditorial\nArtistic anarchy as\nan alternative to\nHungarian musicians.\nWhich do you prefer?\nSend answers now.\nOf course, this is horribly unfair. We know that the West\nwon't launch a total war of all-\nout massacre if it can possibly\ns'3\n*o\nv. 5\n/WicK\nuJ .\nco \u00C2\u00A3\ntc -\n**\nenseen\nSi\niwemess\n~ showers/\nr* bright y\n?\u00C2\u00B1% ,NTER\u00C2\u00BBe\n%^JvaS\\nINTERVALS ' 4j,\nDumfries\n(SHOWERS %*-#\nTO-DAY'S WEATHER\nRoger Countill is a pseudonym.\n.3\nS_<\no _\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0K 3\no >\na c\n*\u00E2\u0080\u00A2*- *\.\n-X,\nAttests\nGordon For You?\nPARIS (UPI) - Felix\nLaurent decided Wednesday 'he\ncould no longer stand the\nquality of programs on\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0France's national television\nnetwork so he took his set to the\ntop of the Eiffel Tower and\nhurled it to the ground.\nCHERBOURG (Reuters) \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nFrance laid the keel of her\nsecond nuclear submarine,\nTerrible, at a brief ceremony r-jj\nhere Saturday.\nT\nm\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0*\u00E2\u0096\u00A0*\nCIS\nbe\nCO\nc\nCO\n-*\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00C2\u00AB\nS\nce\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 I-*\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0M\n\u00C2\u00AB*H\nJ. A. B. HAMILTON\nBritish Railway\nAccidents\nTells the whole story of twenty-\nseven ofthe great accidents ofthe\npresent century. Illustrated 30s.\nTHIS UFEBUOV\nTOILET SOAP HAS\nA GOUGEOUS SMEU-\\nAND IT \u00C2\u00AB\u00C2\u00A3A\u00C2\u00A3Xy GETS\nINTO THE POUES.\nMAW WAS M&HT.\nNOW I KNOWHOW\nTO SNO B.G.\nx.\ 1*\n.... ........ W,\n!&. A f~int> Tfanmr Jfrrhrrna f?irt%r*>11a J?ri*s**hf*rTV PrA/fv. *f?f__\"/v. Rron/n-eiV. $\u00C2\u00A3\nyu\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2*\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nA list of cows' names appeared in the advertisement of a set\nof dairy stock in Shropshire, 1809.\nEarnest, Curlpate, Jezebel, Judith, Bee, Gayless, Early, Secunda,\nA. One, Fancy, Firbrina, Firbrella, Roseberry, Pretty, Curly, Browney,\nYorkshire, Daisy, Rose Rosalina, Second, Standfast, K. Wouski,\nBroad Cap, Rosely, Helen, Fillbowl, Sexta, M. Broadface, Fillpan,\nRosebud, Wisky, Doctress, Lovely Lass, Urah, Third, Rworea, Cot\nLass, Rosamond, Rosella, Miss Key, Tertia, Furba.\nHtS\nHts\nits\nHts\nHts\nHts\nits\nHtS\nHts\nHtS\nHtS\nqxt\nHtS\nits\nits\nHtS\nHtS\nHtS\nHtS\nHtS\nHtS\nHtS\n306\nIfs best to live in a hedge\nHtS\n\u00C2\u00ABU\nHtS\nHtS\nHtS\nHtS\nHtS\nHtS\nHtS\nHtS\nHtS\nTOILETS\norturous\nEuropean oAoe *Store\nEXCLUSIVE DEALER FOR\nMANZ, THE CHOICE OF THE\nGERAAAN OLYMPIC TEAM, 1968\nIMPORTED FROM\nFRANCE, GERMANY, ITALY ANO SPAIN\n979 Granville St. at Nelson\nPhone: 683-2819\nNear the Downtown Theatre\nYOUR PRESCRIPTION . . .\n. . . For Glasses\nfor that smart look in glasses ...\nlook to\nPlescUbtion Optical\nStudent Discount Given\nWE HAVE AN OFFICE NEAR YOU\nE. EUROPE\nWe've specialized in this area\nfor a number of years and are\nofficial agents for all the Government Tourist Offices in Eastern Europe and the U.S.S.R.\nInformation on tourist facilities\nconferences and congresses\navailable through our branches.\n7 OFFICES\n2996 W. Broaway\n736-5651\n982 Denman St.\n682-7254\n925 W. Georgia\n684-2448\n4841 Victoria Drive\n879-4575\n468!i Kingsway, Bby.\n43T-6674\n|407 Columbia, N.W.\n526-7873\n1425 Marine Dr., W.V.\n926-4304\nHagen's Travel Service Ltd.\nHAGEN'S\nOpen 9-5 p.m. Incl. Saturday\nWE'VE RENOVATED OUR SHOP!\nCome in and inspect our newly-\nrenovated shop\u00E2\u0080\u0094We now have more\nnew equipment as well as a larger\nstaff so we can continue, to be the\nmost efficient as well as the most\neconomical V.W. repair shop in town,\n(inquire about this week's front-end special)\nAUT0-HENNEKEN SERVICE\n8914 OAK STREET (at Marine)\nPhone Hans 263-8121\nIf\n0\nI\n1\n0\no\na\ni\no\na\no\na\no\ni\na\na\na\na\na\na\na\na\nm\nFrom Province Files\n30 vears aso\nMarch 12, 1918\nVancouver Millionaires and Seattle,\npresent Stanley Cup holders, battle to\n2-all tie before record crowd at the\nVancouver Arena. Mickey McKay scored\nboth Vancouver goals.\n. . . and on the above date O. B.\nAllan jewellers had already been\nserving British Columbia for 14\nyears.\nToday, as then, their experience\n& integrity are your assurance of\nsatisfaction when buying a diamond.\n,<\u00E2\u0096\u00A0*\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\"\"\",\nRegistered\nJeweller\nA.UKRH'AX\n('KM SOOIKTV\n\"Gainsborough\"\n$300\nConvenient Budget Terms\nBalance in 12 months\nXit.d\nl.l.UITKI)\n('raiivill-- at Pender\nSince IH04\n1\n0\na\na\na\na\na\na\na\na\na\na\na\na\na\na\na\na\na\na\n0\nJ\nFriday, March 15, 1968\nTHE U BYSSEY Editor, Page Friday:\nA Russian film version of\nHamlet which was presented\nthree weeks ago at the Varsity\nended, as I imagine do most\nversions of this play, in a funeral procession, the solemnity\nof which I am sure failed to\nleave none but the hard-hearted unmoved. Upon leaving the\ntheatre short minutes later, I\nchanced to hear (as one does)\na comment about \"someone\ntripping in the funeral procession\", a statement whose incredible triteness I leave the reader to affirm. Evidently this impotent witticism had issued\nfrom the lips of a particularly\nboorish Philistine. I turned\naround, fully expecting to see\na tousle-haired, gum-snapping,\nfreckled and besneakered\ntwelve-year-old grinning at his\ncomrade who, convulsed with\nhilarity, expressed their primordial satisfaction at the lad's\ninsipid humor. Imagine then,\nif you will, my incredulity\nthat the damning words had\nbeen uttered by none other\nthan celebrated art nouveau\ncritic \u00E2\u0080\u0094 one Stephen Scobie!\nWell. If these words were\ncreated as an attempt at what\nsome people might describe as\n\"camp\", then allow me to say\nonly that the depths in which\nUbyssey \"culture\" wallows is\nfurther below my helping\nreach than I had imagined. If\nhowever, they were spoken in\na sincere effort to vocalize the\nmajesty, and subtle eloquence\nof one of Shakespeare's greatest masterpieces, then . . . one\ncan feel only pathos.\nPlease do not misunderstand\nme. I am not demanding Mr.\nScobie's resignation or even\nsuggesting such an action (although at this point a proclamation of complete dissociation\nfrom The Ubyssey would of\ncourse, be the only right and\nhonorable thing to do). I am\nsimply expressing my astonishment, indignation and perhaps \u00E2\u0080\u0094 yes \u00E2\u0080\u0094 a trace of\nbitterness.\nA disillusionment of this\nsort is always painful. I must\nurge all those who share these\ntroubled times with me to remember that, even with the\nworld about our knees, we\nmust try, somehow, to continue.\nDANNY SONNENSCHEIN\narts 1\nEd. note: Our critic grovels\nin unrepentance.\n*\nbe\n*m pr\nr\nCello channels\nschmaltzy Strauss\nBy ANDREW HORVAT\nThe passion and vigour of twenty-two year old Jacqueline du Pre, British cellist, and the intensity of the\nVancouver Symphony under Meredith Davies were out of\nplace at the Queen Liz Sunday, March 3rd.\nBy that I do not mean to say that the predominantly\nelderly, grey haired, ladies at the concert were unable to\nappreciate the predominantly nineteenth century programe.\nThe absence of younger people, obviously for financial\nreasons, proved that at least in this instance, youth was not\nwasted on the young.\nMiss du Pre was sensual; she commanded the Schum-\nmann concerto, and she stole the limelight in the Don\nQuixote. She was nervous, but when she played, all her\nenergies were channelled into her cello, and her instrument became the voice of a melodramatic Schumann, and\na schmaltzy Richard Strauss.\nThe orchestra was no less energetic in Daphnis and\nChloe, certainly more moving than any recording could\nhave been.\nBut why must the Vancouver Symphony constantly\nplay the classics? Surely some symphonic music must have\nbeen written after the Great War! Why must Miss du Pre\nbe a medium for the nineteenth century? Surely she is\ncapable of rendering the music of her own times as well\nas, if not better than that of her great grandfather.\nAnd even if it is the sound of the peerless masters\nthat reverberates in that labyrinth-roofed Queen Liz, why\nmust it terminate at the ear drums of tired business-men\nwhose wives dragged them to the only Sunday afternoon\nsocial event in Vancouver?\nNow that Vancouver has a Symphony Orchestra that\ncan play the prerequisites, why not have it play three unit\nthesis courses?\nBut three to five dollars is too much to pay for a\nsingle performance of Jacqueline du Pre. Especially when\nthe same outlay will buy a record of comparable value at\na certain downtown discount record shop. The problem here\nis that a recording and a live performance just do not\ncompare. A recording heard twice is simply a mechanical\nregurgitation, no matter how high the quality of that\nrecording may be. A repeat performance by a live orchestra\nis never the same no matter how second rate that orchestra\nmay be.\nThe matter concerning the price is one for Special\nEvents to decide, and while Special Events (or the Faculty\nof Music for that matter) is at it, they could arrange some\ncontemporary music, from Carl Orff onwards, to be played\non campus. Another solution to the money question might\nbe reduced rates, or free passes for next year's youthful\nprograms. ._\n ci\nrrioku pizza TYiokiA\nDine In \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Take Out \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Delivery\nAcross the street from the\nFraser Arms\n1381 S.W. Marine Drive 263-4440\nRENTAL & SALES\n* 2,500 GARMENTS TO\nCHOOSE FROM\n* Full Dress (Tails)\n* Morning Coats\n* Directors' Coats\n* White and Coloured Coats\n* Shirts and Accessories\nE. A. Lee Formal Wear\n(Downstairs)\n623 Howe 688-2481\nBETTER BUY BOOKS\nUNIVERSITY\nTEXT BOOKS\nNON-FICTION\nPAPERBACKS\nSpecializing in\nReview Notes\nand Study Guides\n224-4144\n4393 W. 10th Ave.\nFACTS You Should Know\nAbout Your New Student Union Building\nSUB! SUB! SUB!\nYour new SUB will provide the following recreation facilities:\n\u00E2\u0080\u009410 billiard tables.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094Table tennis.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00948 bowling lanes.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094Mens' and women's quiet rooms, plus showers and\nlockers.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094Vending.\nFor further information, watch for future ads, or\ncontact the SUB office, 2nd floor, Brock South.\nV\nFREDERIC WOOD THEATRE\nse\nfr\nWaiting Jcr fyfa\n>>\nby SAMUEL BECKETT\nwith\nRobert Clothier Gregory Reid\nLee Taylor\nDirected by Stanley Weese. Designed by Richard Kent Wilcox.\nMARCH 22-30, 1968\nStudent Tickets $1.00\n(available for all performances)\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 Special Student Performances -\nMonday, March 25th 7:30 p.m.\nThursday, March 28th 12:30 p.m.\nk\nTickets: Fredric Wood Theatre Room 207 or 228-26\nSupport Your Campus Theatre\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094^\u00E2\u0080\u0094FREDERIC WOOD THEATRE-\u00E2\u0080\u0094\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nA\nTHE UBYSSEY\nFriday, March 15, 1968 Friday, March 15, 1968\nTHE UBYSSEY\nPage 13\nThe odds and ends page\nGovt dissolves building restrictions\nTORONTO (CUP) \u00E2\u0080\u0094 The\nOntario government will soon\ndrop the distinction between\nacademic and non - academic\nCampus cop\nshoots man\nCOLLEGE PARK, MO.\n(CUP-CPS) \u00E2\u0080\u0094 A campus policeman has been suspended after\nshooting a University of Maryland student in the leg for playing a prank.\nCampus policeman Lenwood\nHolden, who shot Michael Fo-\nder, 19, while Foder was pulling down a bedsheet-banner\nfrom the first floor of a women's dorm, has been charged\nwith assault to commit murder.\nLt. Henry Nebel of the campus force told the Maryland\nDiamondback, the campus paper, that Foder had fallen and\nbroken his leg. But a bullet\nwas later removed from Fod-\ner's leg at the school's infirmary.\nSome witnesses to the incident said Holden yelled, \"Stop\nor I'll shoot\" before firing.\nFoder said he was so scared he\njust ran.\nuniversity buildings when\ndoling out capital grants.\nThis could mean student\nunion buildings, theatres, athletic complexes, etc., will get\na higher share of the costs of\nconstruction paid through government grants.\n\"There is every indication of\na new policy being announced\nwithin a month or so,\" said\nJames Bancroft, new director\nof the finance branch of the\ndepartment of university affairs.\n\"And the distinction between\nclass A and class B buildings\nwill go by the board.\"\nAt present class A, academic\nbuildings, receive government\ngrants for 85 per cent of their\ncost. Class B, non - academic\nbuildings, receive only 50 per\ncents grants.\n\"The former policy just\nwasn't providing, that well, the\nsupport that was necessary,\"\nBancroft said.\nConservatives headed\nBrian Prittie, arts 4, has\nbeen elected president of the\nUBC Conservative club, by\nacclamation.\nFormer campus socred president Ian Strachan, ed. 4, becomes first vice-president, and\nGeorge Gibault, arts 1, is the\nnew second vice-president.\nFORMAL\nAND\nSEMI-FORMAL\nrental and sales\nTuxedos, tails, white dinner iackets, morning\ncoats . . . complete size\nrang*.\nWe also make made-to-\nmeasure suits.\n10% U.B.C. Discount.\nMCCUISH POMF-AT^WBA*\nMon.-Sat. 9:00 to 5:30\n2046 W. 41st 263-3610\nROACH DELICATESSEN\nUMBERTO MENGHI - ANTHONY ANTISIN\nINVITE YOU TO TRY\nTHEIR ITALIAN FOOD\nLASAGNE & CANNELLONI\nPlease phone in advance for take-out orders\nIn our Delicatessen Dept.: Cold meats, cheeses and\nall kinds of imported foods.\n4471 WEST 10th AVE. 224-6722\nL\mvE.R&N 5WIC6-S- 10.00 f UllS\"\nTHE DAY YOU BUY A DIAMOND\nYou are buying for the future\nas well as the present . . .\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nSEE US FOR YOUR DIAMOND TODAY\n10% Discount to Students\nVarsity Jewellers\n4517 West 10th\n224-4432\nAlma Mater Society\nOFFICIAL NOTICES\nDISCIPLINE COMMITTEE\nApplications will be received up to March 16 for\n' positions on the A.M.S. Discipline Committee .Submit\napplications to:\nBox No. 65 President,\nA.M.S. Brock Hall Law Students Association\nCommittee Members\nApplications are now being received for Committee\nmembers for the following Joint AMS-Administration\nCommittees:\nAcademic Symposium Committee\nBrock Art Committee\nStudent Union Building Management Committee\nWinter Sports Centre Management Committee\nApplications for the above positions must include a letter\noutlinng qualfications, reasons for applying, and, where\napplicable, a proposed program. Eligibility forms are\navailable from the AMS Office, and must be completed\nby the Registrar's Office before making application.\nLetters of application and eligibility forms must be\nsubmitted to the secretary, Box 54, Brock Hall, by Noon,\nMarch 19.\nAll applicants are asked to attend the AMS Council\nMeeting March 19, 6:30 p.m. in the Council Chambers,\nBrock Hall.\nCommittee Chairmen\nApplications will be received up to Noon, March 19 for\nthe positions of Chairman of the following AMS Standing Committees:\nCanadian University Service Overseas\nFrosh Orientation\nHigh School Conference Committee\nIntramurals Committee\nPerforming Arts Committee\nSpeakers Committee\nSymposia Committee\nWorld University Service\nApplications for the above positions must include a\nletter outlining qualifications, reasons for applying, and\na proposed program. Eligibility forms are available from\nthe AMS Office and must be completed by the Registrar's\nOffice before making application.\nLetters of applications and eligibility forms must be\nsubmitted to the secretary, Box 54, Brock Hall, by Noon,\nMarch 19.\nAll applicants are asked to attend the AMS Council\nMeeting March 19, 6:30 p.m. in the Council Chambers,\nBrock Hall.\nFinance Committee\nInterviews will be held during the week of March 18 to\nMarch 21 for appointment of members-at-large of Finance\nCommittee.\nLetters of application will be received by the Secretary\nof the A.M.S., Brock Hall, until noon, Tuesday, March 19,\n1968.\nLetters should include qualifications, campus interests,\nand eligibility forms.\nOfficers In The Canadian Forces Enjoy Challenging Jobs\nWith The Excitement Of Travel and Responsibility, and\nThere May Be A Place For You Among Them\nUNDER GRADS\nMay Qualify For Subsidized\nUniversity Training \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Including:\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Tuition Fully Paid\n9 Book Allowance\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 $187 M. Salary\n12 Mo. Yr. While Attending University\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Month Paid Holiday Annually\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Medical & Dental Care\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 An Assured Future\nUNIVERSITY GRADS\nMay Qualify For :\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Immediate Commissions\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Excellent Pay\n#) An Assured Future in a Unique and\nInteresting Profession\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Early Pension Benifits At Top Rates\nPhone or Visit The\nCanadian Forces\nRecruiting Center\n547 Seymour St.\nVancouver\n684 - 7341 Page 14\nTHE UBYSSEY\nFriday, March 15, 1968\n'TWEEN CLASSES\nLaos crisis analyzed\nSOUTH EAST ASIA\nPROJECT\nDr. Mandel of the economics department on Laos?-\neconomic and political crisis\ntoday noon in Ang. 104.\nEDUCATION US\nDean's forum, with guest\nspeaker Bob Young, principal\nof Campbell River Secondary\nSchool, today, noon, ed. 100.\nALLIANCE FRANCAISE\nGeneral meeting for elections, today, noon, IH. Bring\nmembership cards.\nHELLENIC SOC\nGreek Independence Day \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nProf. J. Gaitanakis, school of\narchitecture, speaks on The\nCelebration of an Idea, Monday, 7:30 p.m., IH. Refreshments and dancing afterwards.\nCANADIANS FOR NLF\nConcert today, 8 p.m., York\nTheatre, 639 Commercial. Admission free.\nDANCE CLUB\nFree party and competitions\nCampus-wide contest\nfor aspiring photogs\nPicture yourself in a photography contest.\nPhotosoc Is sponsoring a\nsponsoring a campus-wide contest for staff and students.\nDeadline for entries is March\n15. More information is at the\nPhotosoc office in Brock ext.\n166 or Lass. 201.\nat the lounge today, 8 p.m. All\nwelcome.\nGUEST LECTURER\nProf. R. Morton Smith, dept.\nof East Asian Studies, University of Toronto speaks at noon\ntoday in Bu. 102 on Caste in\nIndia \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Its Historical Origins\nand Development.\nNEWMAN CLUB\nLast mixer today, 9 p.m. \u00E2\u0080\u0094\n1 a.m., St. Mark's lounge.\nMembers, 50 cents, non-members, 75 cents.\nPRE-SOCIAL WORK\nMonday noon\u00E2\u0080\u0094all welcome\nto hear an overseas social\nworker, in Bu. 203. This is the\nlast meeting.\nCOLLEGE LIFE\nCAT-GIF \u00E2\u0080\u0094 meet tonight at\n9 a.m. at 6242 Yukon.\nFINE ARTS GALLERY\nNoon today \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Prof. Abraham Rogatnick, school of architecture, will conduct a tour\nof chairs exhibition.\nUBCSCC\nGarden path rally for members, Sunday, starting 9 a.m.\nfrom Queen Elizabeth park.\nNovices welcome.\nGERMAN CLUB\nKommen sie und sehen sie\neinen wunderbaren Farb-film\nAfrika auf English. Dienstag,\nIH 402.\nCHORAL SOCIETY\nReturn all music to clubroom, Brock ext. 360, anytime.\nLSM\nChristianity in the year 2000.\nPanel discussion Sunday with\ndinner at 6 p.m., Lutheran student center. Pre-fab man in\nthe year 2000, Monday, noon\nin Bu. 104 with medical genetics prof. Dr. M. Carey.\nPHRATERES\nImportant all - Phi meeting\ntoday noon Bu. 106. All members please attend.\nCOMPUTER CLUB\nAll members who wish to go\non SFU field trip Thursday\nnoon (March 21) please sign\nnotice in computer hut.\nYawn!\nPOINT GREY, (Staff) \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nMore than 200 fire-breathing\ncopy boys went threw up here\nearly Thursday to protest the\nweird sleeping habits of the\ngreat white number one garbage-producer to be.\nNEW YORK\nCOSTUME SALON\nRENTALS\nWHITE DINNER JACKETS\nTUXEDOS, DARK SUITS, TAILS\nCOLORED JACKETS\nMASQUERADE COSTUMES\nSPECIAL STUDENT RATES\n224-0034 4397 W. 10th\nWORLD WIDE TRAVEL\nare the agents for\nAlma Mater\nCharter Flights\nTO LONDON\nDEPARTS JUNE 3 AND JUNE 7\nSome Seats Still Available On Group Departure June 3rd\nSEE THE WORLD WIDE OFFICE\nON CAMPUS FOR ADVICE AND\nALL YOUR LAND ARRANGEMENTS\nOwl S&wuxa CoAi V0**- ^thinq.\nWORLD-WIDE\nAmerican Express\nRepresentative\n5700 UNIVERSITY BOULEVARD\n224-4391\nCLASSIFIED\nRates: Students, Faculty & Clubs\u00E2\u0080\u00943 lines, 1 day 75c. 3 days $2.00.\nCommercal\u00E2\u0080\u00943 lines, 1 day $1.00. 3 days $2.50.\nRates for larger ads on request.\nClassified ads are not accepted by telephone.\nNon-Commercial Classified Ads are payable in advance.\nPublications Office, BROCK HALL, UNIV. OF B.C., Vancouver 8, B.C.\nANNOUNCEMENTS\nDances\n11\nTHE GRASS HARP LIGHT SHOW\nand dance, Sat., Mar. 16, 9:00 to\n1:00, Brock, Girls $1.00, Guys $1.25,\nCouples $2.00.\t\nLAST NEWMAN MIXER! FRIDAY,\nMarch 15th at St. Mark's Lounge,\n9-1.\nLAST DANCE OF THE YEAR? \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nHear and see the Grass Harp in\naction Sat., Mar. 16, 9:00 to 1:00\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nBrock\u00E2\u0080\u0094Girls, $1.00\u00E2\u0080\u0094Guys, $1.25 \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nCouples, $2.00.\nGreetings\n12\nLost & Found\nIS\nTHE PUBLICATIONS OFFICE HAS\nthree watches found on campus\nplus several glasses and 2 wedding\nrings. Owners should identify and\nclaim.\nLOST: BLACK DIAMOND STONE\nfrom Man's Ring. Finder please call\n224-1545.\nLOST: MATH TEXT (THOMAS) BE-\ntween Hennings and Grad Centre,\nafter 7, 224-9711, Tom, Rm. 130,\nreward.\nLOST: BLUE KIT BAG LAST FRI-\nday, hitchiking to 16th Burrard,\nphone 685-2578 or leave at Athletic\nOffice, W.M. Gym.\nRides & Car Pools\n14\nSpecial Notices\n15\nUBC BEAUTY SALON. EXPERT\nstyling and cutting. No appointment necessary. 5736 University\nBlvd.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2DON'T PROCRASTINATE . . . SEE\nad in this paper for the Foreign\nStudent Reception Programme.\"\nFATHER BAUER SPEAKS ON \"THE\nPlace of God in Society.\" Mon.,\nMarch 18 in St. Marks Lounge at\n8 p.m.\nOPEN DOOR DROP-IN CENTRE \u00E2\u0080\u0094\n(Coffee house in Church cellar.)\nEvery Friday night, 9-12 midnight,\ncorner of 11th and Fir.\nVARSITY CHRISTIAN FELLOW-\nship execution, on skull hill, Hubert\nButcher, BU 100, March 18, 20 &\n21 at 12:30.\nEXPERIENCE THE MAGIC OF THE\nGrass Harp\u00E2\u0080\u0094Light Show and Dance\nSat.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Brock\u00E2\u0080\u00949:00 to 1:00.\nATTENTION COEDS \u00E2\u0080\u0094 BE SAFE\nand confident in all situations.\nParties, strange cars, automatic\nelevators, blind dates, dark streets.\nNew pamphlet shows how to use\nshoes, purse, umbrella or plain psychology to handle jostlers or attackers. The best of judo, karate and\naiki-do plus a new chart of over\n40 nerve centres and pressure\npoints. Easy to read, easy to learn.\nPamphlet plus chart only $1.25. No\nC.O.D. Available now through Box\n128, Station G, Montreal 18, P.Q.\nTravel Opportunities\n16\nWanted\u00E2\u0080\u0094Miscellaneous\n18\nUBC TEXTS BOUGHT AND SOLD.\nBest prices, Busy \"B\" Books, 146\nWest Hastings, 681-4931.\nAUTOMOTIVE & MARINE\nAutomobiles For Sale\nai\n'54 PONTIAC, EXCELLENT MECH.\ncond, must sell. AM 1-3690.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A255 PONTIAC RELIABLE TRANS.\nCall 261-9501 after 6 p.m., Dick.\nAutomobiles Wanted\n21\n61-64 6 - CYLINDER AUTOMATIC\nstation wagon prefered, not necessary, for cash, phone 299-9032 Sunday 12-4.\nBUSINESS SERVICES\nMiscellaneous\n32\nUBC BARBER SHOP, IN THE VILL-\nage, open 6 days a week.\nYOU DON'T HAVE TO DRIVE A\nFirebird to be with the \"incrowd\".\nJust have the experts at Corky's\nstyle your hair. Corky's 4th Avenue\nBarber Shop, 4th and Alma Road,\nph. 731-4717 for your appointment.\nScandals\n37\nSELLING YOUR TEXTBOOKS? TRY\nThe Bookfinder. 4444 West 10th\nAve. 228-8933.\nBEEP BEEP \u00E2\u0080\u0094 ROAD RUNNER\ncartoons, Wed., Mar. 20 noon, Aud.\n50c.\nYOUNG ALUMNI CLUB \u00E2\u0080\u0094 CHEESE\ntasting party (and all that that\nentails) Friday night, Cecil Green\nPark. After eight. (T.G. I.F. as\nusual 3:30-6:00.)\nDANCE TO THE SCANDALOUS\nsounds of the Grass Harp \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Light\nShow incl.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Sat.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Brock\u00E2\u0080\u00949:00 to 1:00\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094Girls, $1.00\u00E2\u0080\u0094Guys, $1.25\u00E2\u0080\u0094Couples,\n$2.00.\t\nDOUG AND TERESA: CONGRATS\non 2 times 9 months: and only 18.\nGood God! The Group.\nTyping\n40\nEXPERT ELECTRIC TYPIST\nExperienced essay and thesis typist\nReasonable Rates TR. 4-9253\nTYPING \u00E2\u0080\u0094 ELEC. MACHINE\nPhone 738-7881\nACCURATE COPY TYPING 30c/\npage, phone 274-1075 anytime except\nweekends. \t\nEXPERT TYPIST \u00E2\u0080\u0094 ELECTRIC\n224-6129 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 228-8384.\nGOOD EXPERIENCED TYPIST\navailable for home typing. Please\ncall 277-5640.\nSHORT NOTICE TYPING DURING\nthe day: 25c page; phone Ruth,\nRE 8-4410.\nEMPLOYMENT\nHelp Wanted\u00E2\u0080\u0094Female\nSI\nHelp Wanted\u00E2\u0080\u0094Male\n91\nLIFEGUARD & SWIMMING IN-\nstructor wanted. The Village of\nLillooet requires the services of a\nlifeguard & swimming instructor\nfrom. May 15, 1968 to Sept. 1st, 1968.\nSalary range to $500 per month,\ndepending on qualifications. Interested persons please contact the\nundersigned before April 15, 1968,\nstating qualifications and salary expected. G. A. Wiley, Village Clerk,\nBox 610, Lillooet, B.C.\nHelp W'ted\u00E2\u0080\u0094Male or Female 53\nINSTRUCTION\nInstruction Wanted\n61\nWANTED NATIVE FRENCH\nspeaker for conversation, 1 or 2\nhrs. per week: W. Cohn (Sociology)\n228-3830 or 263-6372.\nTutoring\n64\nFIRST YEAR MATHEMATICS AND\nsciences other undergraduate subjects to fourth year. Canadian Tutorial Centre, 736-6923.\nENGLISH 100 & 200 STUDENTS:\nExperienced tutor available, $4.00/\nhour (single or group). Carol Clarke\n224-5460.\nEXPERIENCED TUTORING IN 1ST\n& 2nd year English, History, Math,\nChemistry, French, and other languages. For appointment phone Mr.\nHuberman\u00E2\u0080\u0094B.A.-LLB.\u00E2\u0080\u0094 Huberman\nEducational Inst., 2158 West 12th.\nPhone 732-5535 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 263-4808.\nMISCELLANEOUS\nFOR SALE\nTl\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 OLD TOTEMS FOR SALE \u00E2\u0080\u0094\n1963, 1965 & 1966 issues 50c.\nCampus Life's 25c. Publications Off.,\nBrock Hall\n.357 S&W MAGNUM REVOLVER.\nNew with many extras. Phone Phil\n433-7668 after 6:30.\t\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2NEW LINES AT THE DISCOUNT\nHouse' of tape-players, tape recorders, all sizes in transistor and electric radio's, watches, luggage, binoculars, jewelry and gift items; 1500\nlatest style ladies bathingsuits to\nchoose from, wholesale prices on all\nmerchandise. 3235 West Broadway.\nPhone 732-6811.\nMALLORCAN SPANISH CLASSICAL\nguitar. Tone rated better than $700\nGibson-Goya. $115. 224-9017. \t\nHAGSTROM - HAGSTROM - HAG-\nstrom and other musical goodies.\nMediterranean Guitar Shop \u00E2\u0080\u0094\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 228-\n8412 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 4347 West 10th Avenue.\nSEVERAL HAND KNITTED DRESS-\nes from $10.00, size 10-14, make to\norder, knitted & crochet dresses Ss\ndressmaking \u00E2\u0080\u0094 224-3672, 4689 West\n12th Ave.\nGET FIT\u00E2\u0080\u0094HUNDRED POUND BAR-\nbell outfit, including sleeves and\ncollars, $10,phone Don 224-6975.\nRENTALS & REAL ESTATE\nRooms\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A21\nSUMMER ACCOMMODATION IN\nToronto from May 8 to Sept. 15.\nSingle, double, and triple rooms as\nlow as $65.00 per month (meals included). For information and applications, write to Campus Co-op,\n395 Huron Street, Toronto 5, tel.\n921-3168.\nWALKING DISTANCE TO CAMPUS,\nnear Village and meal services.\n224-9662. $40.00. 2250 Wesbrook Cresc.\nRoom & Board\n6t\nROOM AND BOARD FOR FEMALE\nstudent, $70.00 per month. Phone\n266-0978 after 6:30 p.m.\nFurn. Houses 8t Apts.\n83\n1 BDRM. APT., FURN., KERRIS. TO\nsublet May 1-Aug. 31, $120 mo. Ph.\n261-4487 after 6:30 p.m.\t\nROOMMATE SHARE FURN. WEST\nEnd apt. Reas. 21-over Eng. or Fr.\nspeaking girl. MU 3-8858.\nTWO WORKING GIRLS NEED FUR-\nnished one-bedrm. apartment, May\nto Sept., 733-3827, Sandi, after 6. Friday, March 15, 1968\nTHE UBYSSEY\nPage 15\nTHP Clfl Ril AA Wrestlers try out\nI I I E *m l\k I EP \M mm\ Six UBC wrestlers will be\nBy BJORN SIMONSEN\nAs you are probably well aware of, this has been one of\nthe poorest ski seasons we have had in years. This has been reflected both in the total number of people using facilities on\nlocal mountains and in the ski shop business.\nSki shop operators report a considerable drop in business\nthis year as compared to last and many shops\nhave been left holding the bag with a backroom full of stock.\nThis could be beneficial to the skier since\nthis merchandise must be put on sale. Thus\nyou may be able to pick up a pair of $150\nskis for as little as $100.\nThe biggest factor in determining whether\nor not it will be a good or bad year for skiing\nis of course the weather. Last year's record\nsnowfall was caused by high precipitation\ncoupled with a continual high freezing point\nSIMONSEN elevation.\nThis year it has rained about as much as it always does but\nthe freezing point has stayed around 5,000 to 6,000 feet, resulting in a very small snowfall.\nLate spring skiing may be very poor this year because of\nthis chronic lack of snow. This condition was somewhat changed\nthis week with Whistler receiving over 40 inches of new snow\nwhile the North Shore mountains got considerably less but\nenough to make them skiable again.\nManning Park continues to offer good skiing as does Mt.\nBaker, if you are lucky enough to pick a sunny day. Whistler\nwill no doubt be the best and probably the only area that can\nstill offer good skiing after exams.\nSix UBC wrestlers will be\ntrying for places on Canada's\nnational team in the Canadian\nchampionships to be held in\nEdmonton this weekend.\nThe wrestlers, part of the 22-\nman B.C. team, are Peter Rom-\nbough and Denny Boulton, 138\nlbs.; Dave Gray, 154; Les\nBurguner and Bob Ormond,\n171; and Chris Nemeth, 213.\nThe first three finishers in\neach division will be invited\nto the national training camp\nwhich will eventually decide\nCanada's team.\nField hockey finals\nUBC's field hockey teams\nwill be playing their final\nleague games of the season this\nSaturday.\nThe Birds play Pitt Meadows\nat 1:30 p.m. on Spencer Field.\nAt the same time, same place\nthe Scalps play Hawks \"C\"\nand at 3 p.m. the Scalps play\nNorth Shore \"B\".\nThe Tomahawks have two\ngames at Pitt Meadows, the\nfirst at 1:30 p.m. against Pitt\nMeadows \"C\"; the second at\n3 p.m. against Wasps.\nf/fanAty ef tying a Qiamend?\nIllillcr*\nAt Millers you are assured\nof excellent value, superlative stylins* and fine craftsmanship combined with\ncourteous service.\no\nConvenient Credit Terms arranged with Courtesy Discount\nto U.B.C. Students & Personnel\nAT 3 CONVENIENT LOCATIONS\n jM\nLieutenant |CFR] \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\n842\n867\n902\n937\n972\nCaptain\n892\n922\n962\n1002\n1042\n1082\n1122\n1142\n1162\nM-*,-\n1117\n1147\n1177\n1207\n1237\n1267\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nLieutenant-Colonel\n1286\n1321\n1356\n1391\n1426\n;\nColonel\n1482\n1527\n1572\nAIR NAVIGATORS\nLieutenant\n694\n759\n774\nLieutenant |CFR)*\n77,\n804\n839\n874\n909\nCaptain\n833\n863\n903\n943\n983\n1023\n1063\n1083\n1103\nMajor\n1009\n1039\n1069\n1099\n1129\n1159\nL ieutenant- Colonel\n1208\n1243\n1278\n1313\n1348\nColonel\n1482\n1527\n1572\nMEDICAL OFFICERS\nCaptain\n920 960 1020 1085 1133 1181 1229 127o 1 .. j j j ::\nMajor\n1232\n1280\n1328\n1376\n1424\n1473\nLi e u le na nt-Col one!\n1428\n1476\n1524\n1572\n''$$\u00C2\u00A3'\u00C2\u00A7.\nColonel\n1564\n1605\n1647\nDENTAL OFFICERS\nCaptain\n920\n954\n988\n1026\n1064\n1121\n1169\nHI?\nMajor\n1077\n1125\n1173\n1221\n1269\n1316\nVM\niin\nLieutenant-Colonel\n1329\n1377\n1425\n1474\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0ixM\nfll\nColonel\n1419\n1467\n1515\n1563\nLEGAL OFFICERS\nLieutenant\n607\n;M\u00C2\u00A3-:\nCaptain\n727\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2739\n752\n764\n777\n805\nXxX\nill\nMajor\n931\n946\n961\n983\n1021\n1081\n1120\n1175\nLieutena nt-Co lo n el\n1198\n1246\n1294\n1342\n1422\n1471\nColonel\n1562\n1657\n1752\nThe pay scale to the right is self-explanatory. While attending university you would be paid as an officer cadet,\nthat is, $187-$192 per month. In addition to free tuition\nplus, pay, you are provided with a uniform and with a\nbook allowance of $125 per year. Summer months are\nspent in Service training.\nApplications for the forthcoming academic year should be made not later than 1 July to\nTHE CANADIAN ARMED FORCES RECRUITING CENTRE\n547 Seymour St., Vancouver (phone 684-7341) or, 1002 Wharf St. in Victoria or, 2908\u00E2\u0080\u009432 St. in Vernon\nFOR FURTHER INFORMATION, VISIT, WRITE OR PHONE Page 16\nTHE UBYSSEY\nFriday, March 15, 1968\n_ i\n. . EOTTOfU MHCE JESSE* -\nBirds battle Columbus\nin crucial league game\nUBC soccer Thunderbirds are putting all their money into\ntheir game against Columbus Sunday at 2 p.m. in Callister Park.\nThe big game will probably determine who will win the\nPacific Coast soccer league championship because there are\nfew clashes left in the 18-game schedule and the leaders are\nclosely bunched.\nIt is the Birds' last league game while Victoria and Columbus have games in hand, but coach Joe Johnson doesn't appear worried.\n\"If Columbus loses to us, which I expect\nthem to, then they will be two games behind\nwith three to play and that is a difficult deficit to erase,\" said Johnson. \"The team is\neager to win, we want to prove that we are\nnot up there by error.\"\nUBC has a good chance of winning the\ngame as it has played well lately.\nEarlier in the season, UBC played to a JOHNSON\n2-2 tie and a 1-0 loss to Columbus, but that was when the squad\nhad scoring troubles.\nThe Birds have other advantages going for them as well.\nThey have the best goals average in the league, a talent which\nwill be helpful as a tie-breaker.\nThere has been no decision yet on a protested game against\nVictoria Oaks, and this is good. In that game, the Birds were on\nthe wrong end of several bad calls and the referee was purportedly not too consistent.\nJohnson might come up with a few surprises in Sunday's\ngame, just to confuse Columbus.\nFourth year defenceman Jim Berry could be moved up to\nforward to add scoring punch. He scored two goals last weekend\nand led the team to a seven goal second half against South Hill\nLuckies.\nRugger men hoping to get\na Boot out of SFU squad\nBy JOHN TWIGG\nThe UBC rugby Thunderbirds will get a big boot out\nof Saturday's game against\nSimon Fraser University.\nThe game, which starts at\n2:30 p.m. in Thunderbird Stadium, is for the Boot.\nThe Boot is the new trophy\ndonated by last year's Thunderbird rugby team as a memento to now-retired coach\nBrian Whightman.\nApparently, near the end of\nthe last season the players\nswiped Wightman's boots, and,\nknowing that he was going to\nretire, had them gilded and\nmounted. One boot was presented to Whightman and the\nother was set up as the trophy\nfor the annual SFU-UBC\nmatch.\nUBC should win the game\nas the second division team,\nthe Braves, have already\nbeaten SFU, but it was early\nin the season. The Clan has recently beaten UVic, while the\nBirds only tied UVic.\nIt is the Clan's big game of\nthe year and they are going all\nout to win. There is widespread support on the SFU\ncampus and there's a rumor\nthat their pep band will attend\nthe game.\nUBC coach Donn Spence is\nplanning to use an open style\nof rugby because this style has\nbeen more effective for the\n\Z79 SEYMOUR ST-\nes\n//\niW-fabulous\nOttVSTCRS\nalso -fearturT-ng\nEAm COtUMS Mhe MOJO\n^^^\u00C2\u00AB^*<-**\u00C2\u00BB ^^_\u00C2\u00BBicr <\n1 MUKCH II* *\u00C2\u00BB Ti\nri\nBirds than a ball-control style.\nThe open style also leads to\nmore spectator enjoyment.\nThe game will be played under international rules which\nmeans there are 40 minute\nhalves and no substitutions.\nThe rules may not help UBC\nbecause they have several injuries. Four first-stringers will\nnot play and their positions\nwill be taken by former\nBraves.\nCenter Dave Austin is expected to lead UBC as he has\nplayed well in recent games.\nHe is one of the surest tacklers\non the team and has started to\nadd some tries to the Birds'\nattack.\nSpence is looking for a win,\nespecially after the disap-\npointing\nsouthern\ntour. \"We're\ngoing to\nbreak tradition and not\nchoke against\nSFU,\" said\nSpence, as he\nAUSTIN smiled at\ncoach Peter M u 11 i n s who\nwas in the vicinity of the interview. \"It will be one of\nUBC's last chances to prove\nour supremacy over SFU this\nyear.\" It is also the Birds' last\nhome game of the season.\nQhDOML (L (DicwwncL\nWith* Qon$L "Newspapers"@en . "Vancouver (B.C.)"@en . "LH3.B7 U4"@en . "LH3_B7_U4_1968_03_15"@en . "10.14288/1.0126312"@en . "English"@en . "Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library"@en . "Vancouver : Alma Mater Society of the 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 .