"CONTENTdm"@en . "http://resolve.library.ubc.ca/cgi-bin/catsearch?bid=1211252"@en . "University Publications"@en . "2015-08-27"@en . "1963-11-26"@en . "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/Ubysseynews/items/1.0126709/source.json"@en . "application/pdf"@en . " THEY ARE UNITED IN SHOCK AND SHAME\n... in\nthe U.S.\nSouth\nBy FRED FLETCHER\nDURHAM, N.C. (Staff) \u00E2\u0080\u0094\n\"It can't be true.\"\nThis thought lingers in the\nminds of many here, still stunned by the tidal wave of shock\nthat swept across the nation in\nwake of news that President\nJohn F. Kennedy had been\nassassinated.\nDuke is a divided university;\ndivided into those who disliked\nthe late president and opposed\nhis civil rights program and\nthose who worshipped him,\npartly for that same program.\nBut they were united in\nshock - and shame by the\ntragedy of an assassin's bullet.\nShock that this senseless\natrocity had occurred at all \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nand shame that it had occurred\nin the South.\nAnd there was sorrow.\nMore than 1,500 students\nbraved driving rain to crowd\ninto Duke Chapel for a special\nmemorial service Saturday.\nMany wept during the short\nservice.\nMuch of the student council\nfelt special ties with the young\npresident. Some were members\nof the youth brigade that worked so hard to elect Mr. Kennedy in 1960.\nA number of students left\nfor Washington \u00E2\u0080\u0094 300 miles\naway \u00E2\u0080\u0094 on Sunday to attend\nthe funeral services.\nClasses, dances, concerts, a\ngigantic pep rally to herald the\nfootball game of the year at\nFred Fletcher, a former\nUbyssey editor-in-chief, and\nMike Grenby, editorial board\nmember last year, write of\nstudent reaction to President\nKennedy's assassination from\nDurham, North Carolina, and\nNew York where- they are doing graduate work.\nDuke, and the game itself \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nall were cancelled.\nAbout 500 persons heard\nProfessor Robert Rankin say\nthe growing intolerance in the\nU.S. lay behind the assassination.\nRankin, a member of the\npresident's commission on civil\nrights, said he watched intolerance grow into hatred as he\ntoured the country in the past\nyear.\nIt has come to be that we\n(Americans) love to declare\nanyone who disagrees with us\na \"Commie\" or a \"Fascist\", he\nsaid.\n\"Americans must strive to\nwipe out this intolerance \u00E2\u0080\u0094 to\nstrive for liberty under the law.\n\"Who killed the president\ndoesn't matter. We do know it\nwas one who was very, very\nintolerant.\"\nThe news of the shooting\n(Continued on Page'3)\nSEE: NOTHING\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094don hume photo\nBOWED HEADS, DRAWN FACES OF UBC STUDENTS TELL STORY OF THE DEATH OF A MAN\nHONOR FALLS\nTO PROTOCOL\n(See Page 5)\n... and\nin the\nNorth\nBy MIKE GRENBY\nNEW YORK (Staff) \u00E2\u0080\u0094 The\nassassination of President Kennedy at first caused disbelief,\nthen horror and then agonized\nsilence.\nRadios told people of the\nnews. People were crowded\naround in little clusters listening.\n\"Please God, no,\" cried one\ngirl.\nPeople sat and stood stunned,\nit couldn't happen here, today,\n1963, said students.\nEverything was shocked to a\nhalt. Flags fell to half staff and\nchurch bells tolled, People\nprayed.\nBroadway theatres closed\nand much of Times Square was\ndark.\nFriday night's city of eight\nmillion was subdued. Christmas lighting was off. Weekend\nevents were cancelled.\nDazed and disbelieving\nstrangers talked in cafes and on\nstreets. There were many emotional outbursts of anguished\nhorror and anger.\nAll felt a personal loss.\nThere was anger at society\nand the assassin.\nRadios and TVs blared solid\nnews, later church and classical music with latest news reports and no commercials.\nThe Saturday New York\nTimes ran 15 ad free pages on\nKennedy.\nAnd the dull rainy day was\nsymbolic of the city's feeling.\nIt's pace is slowed, its tone\nmuted and there is little pre-\nChristmasor Thanksgiving\nspirit. (Thanksgiving in the\nU.S. starts Thursday.)\nThere is a conscious acceptance of the fact now but there\n(Continued on Page 3)\nSEE: SHOCK\nTHE UBYSSEY\nVol. XLVI\nVANCOUVER, B.C., NOVEMBER 26, 1963\nNo. 33\nUBC to hold\nmemorial\nservice\nUBC will pay tribute to\nAmerica's deceased president,\nJohn F. Kennedy, today at\na memorial service in the\narmoury at 12:30 p.m.\nDr. Phyllis G. Ross, C.B.E.,\nchancellor of the university\nwill preside at the ceremony\nto be attended by the United\nStates consul general in Vancouver, Avery Peterson.\nPlatform party at the ceremony will be Chancellor Ross,\nPeterson, President John B.\nMcDonald, Malcolm Scott,\npresident of the Alma Mater\nSociety, and the heads of\nUBC's affiliated theological\ncolleges.\nDuring the playing of the\nAmerican national anthem,\nThe Star Spangled Banner,\nthe gathering will stand in\nsilence.\nSUB okayed\nbut fee hike\njust misses\nA record turnout of voters have come out strongly in\nfavor of the Student Union Building.\nBut they turned down by less than 300 votes a second\nreferendum to raise the AMS fee by $5 to finance the $3.8-\nmillion building.\nIn results tabulated late\nMonday 75 per cent of the\nrecord 7,187 turnout endorsed\nthe building. A two-thirds\nmajority was required to pass\nboth referendums.\nStudent leaders hailed the\nresults as an unexpected and\noverwhelming vote of confidence in the building.\nSUB planning chairman\nDean Feltham said: \"I felt we\nwouldn't make it on either\nvote.\n\"I'm tremendously pleased\nwith the outcome.\"\nThe result means plans can\ngo ahead in preparation for\nactual construction, expected\nto be started within a year.\nStudent president Malcolm\nScott said he was pleased with\nthe support given the fee raise\nreferendum (62 per cent voted\nin favor of increasing the fee).\n\"We will put the fee raise to\nanother referendum, likely\nwith the first slate of AMS\nelections early in February,\"\nhe said.\n\"I'm quite sure it will pass\neasily now that we've got a\nmandate on the building itself.\"\nThe record vote was nearly\n50 per cent of student enrolment, surpassing by nearly\n2,000 votes the highest turnout on an AMS issue.\nVoting was spread over two\ndays\u00E2\u0080\u0094Friday and Monday\u00E2\u0080\u0094because of the death Friday of\nU.S. President John F. Kennedy.\nOnly two of 18 polls voted\nless than two-thirds in favor of\nbuilding SUB \u00E2\u0080\u0094 The Common\nBlock and the pro-Engineering\nBus Stop, the largest poll on\ncampus.\nMost polls were close to the\n60 per cent mark in favor of\nthe fee hike \u00E2\u0080\u0094 but big negative\nvotes in the Common Block,\nFort Camp and the Bus Stop\nturned the tide.\n(Continued on Page 2)\nSEE: ONE SNAG Page 2\nTHE UBYSSEY\nTuesday, November 26, 1963\nFor 'unbecoming conduct'\nCharges slapped\non two students\nTwo students have been charged in student court as a\nresult of a melee at the Homecoming football game Oct. 26.\nPaul Danyliu, Education II,\nPAUL FRASER\ntwo charged\nProgram\npostponed\nto Friday\nThe International Week program for today has been postponed to Friday so students can\nattend the Kennedy memorial\nservice.\nEvents will continue as\nscheduled on Wednesday.\nInternational Week is held\nannually at UBC under the\nsponsorship of International\nHouse.\nSeminars, films and guest\nspeakers are included in the\nprogram.\nThe regular schedule of\nevents for the remainder of the\nweeks is as follows.\nWednesday: 12:30, Bu. 100\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nCrossroads, Africa, slides and\ntalk; Bu. 102\u00E2\u0080\u0094film of the\nSkopje earthquake disaster \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nBrock Lounge variety show,\n3:30.\nThursday: 12:30, Bu. 102 \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nMiddle East talk; Bu. 106 \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nPakistan seminar; International\nHouse\u00E2\u0080\u0094film of \"Letter to\nNancy\"; Auditorium\u00E2\u0080\u0094showing\nof Cohen's \"Inside East Germany.\"\nFriday: 8 p.m., Auditorium\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nIndia students present film on\n\"Pather Panchali,\" International House\u00E2\u0080\u0094China night.\nThe times and places of the\nre-scheduled Tuesday events\nwill be announced later this\nweek.\nArty types\nThere are 58 typographical\nerrors in the latest two-page\nissue of The Artisan, arts president Mike Coleman said.\nand Dave Johnston, Arts III,\nhave been charged with conduct unbecoming of a student.\nDanyliu was Frosh president\non Student Council last year.\nThe two students will appear\nbefore Student Court on Nov.\n28 at 12:30 p.m. in the Stage\nRoom of Brock Hall. The hearing is open to all students.\nThe charges stem from a\nbrawl between engineers and\nstudents following the Homecoming game.\nThe engineers were defending the goalposts at the request\nof Athletic Director Bus Phillips.\nSeveral engineers were injured in the melee, and a $120\nset of goal posts was destroyed.\nThe charges were laid by student discipline committee,\nheaded by Paul Fraser, follow;-\ning an investigation into the incident.\nIf found guilty the students\nare liable to fines ranging from\n$5 to $25.\nStudent court can also recommend expulsion from the\nuniversity and removal of all\nAMS privileges.\nActual expulsion is the responsibility of a faculty council, not the AMS.\nThe student court was recently reconstituted following\nan amendment to the AMS constitution passed at the Nov. 15\nmeeting.\nThere had been no court in\nexistence since last spring.\nONE SNAG\n(Continued firom Page 1)\nThe only remaining snag is\nthe administration's insistence\nthat the building be paid off in\n15 years. At present, the only\nway students feel they can do\nthis is to raise fees $5.\nScott said: \"Now that we\nknow the building is going up,\nwe can approach private donors\nand organizations such as the\nCanada Council asking for\nfinancial assistance.\n\"I am sure we can get a substantial amount from these\nl sources.\"\nu\nSPECIAL EVENTS\npresents\nINSIDE EAST GERMANY\nA Forceful and Objective Color\nDocumentary Film Personally Narrated\nBy Famed News Correspondent, Robert Cohen.\nTHURSDAY, NOVEMBER 28TH\nAUDITORIUM \u00E2\u0080\u0094 12:30 NOON\nADMISSION 25c\nStudents strike\nMONTREAL (CUP)\u00E2\u0080\u0094McGill\nstudents recently staged a sit-\ndown strike in their student\nunion restaurant, protesting\nthe regulation which asks them\nnot to eat box lunches there.\nStudents or not, UBC\nset to re-open Jan. 3\nB.C. school students have had their Christmas vacation extended, but UBC is still planning to open Jan. 3.\nAdministration officials said Monday there is no change\nplanned.\nLast week Education Minister Les Peterson ordered\nstudents to return Jan. 6, instead of the earlier date.\nStudent Council last week requested administration to\nchange the date.\nAMS president Malcolm Scott said students should\nconsider a strike or boycott if the request is not granted.\nMany students say they will not return to classes on\nthe Friday and deprive themselves of three days at home\nfor one and a half days' classes.\nr\nFlNTERNATMAL WEEK\n1 And Special Events\nPRESENT\nFilm and Lecture\n\"Inside East Germany\"\nAuditorium \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Thursday Noon\nSKIER'S INVITATION\nTO\nNORTH STAR MOUNTAIN\nKIMBERLY B.C.\n* MORE GROOMED SLOPES.\n* NEW HALL T-BAR LIFT SERVICING NEW SKIING\nAREA\nNow 2 lifts operating daily at North Star! \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Ride to tihe top of the\nmountain on North America's longest T-Bar lift, where 7 miles of ski-\nperfect slopes await you, or test your skills on the new (not even named\nyet) groomed slopes.\n* QUALIFIED SKI INSTRUCTION\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nNow learn to ski on 1,200 ft. long, 600 ft. wide specially designed beginners' slope, or advance to the expert stage with tuition from ERICH\nHOTTER, one of Austria's leading instructors. Private or group\ninstruction.\nir SPECIAL STUDENTS' GROUP RATES!!!\nPlan now for a fund-filled excursion to ffriendly North Star at VERY,\nVERY reasonable rates. The more the merrier!\n* EXCELLENT, REASONABLE ACCOMMODATION.\n* SKI RENTAL, PURCHASE SHOP ON THE HILL.\n* ALWAYS SKI-FUN AT NORTH STAR! THE LAND\nOF BLUE SKIES AND RELIABLE SKI PERFECT\nPOWDER SNOW!\nFor Infromation, Inquiries and RESERVATIONS, write ...\nManager: DOUG ROBINSON\nBOX 407, KIMBERLEY, B.C.\nLEftKUBT ELECTBIC\nrequires\nUndergraduate, Graduate and Post Graduate Electrical\nEngineers studying under Options I and II. On campus\nrecruiting will be conducted at U.B.C. Personnel office\non Monday and Tuesday, February 17th and 18th from\n9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. - 1964 Graduates ad Post Graduates\nmay be scheduled for interview at our Burnaby plant\nprior to February. Please call W. O. Clement, CY 8-2464\nfor appointment.\nLenkurt Electric Co. of Canada, Ltd.\n7018 Lougheed Highway\nNorth Burnaby, B.C.\nSUBSIDIARY OF GENERAL, TELEPHONES\n& ELECTRONICS LNTERNATIONAL\n~l\nL\nJ Tuesday, November 26, 1963\nTHE UBYSSEY\nPage 3\nHe's dead\nNothing\nCanadian\ncould say\n(Continued from Page 1)\nrocked the campus. Classes and\nbooks were forgotten as students tried to find out what had\nhappened.\nI was eating lunch with two\nother students from Canada\nwhen the news came. A grey-\nhaired woman, her eyes moist\nwith tears, came to our table\nand said quietly:\n\"Have you boys heard the\nnews?\" Told we had not, she\nsaid: \"President Kennedy's\nbeen shot. Oh, it's terrible . . .\"\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nIncredulous, we made our\nway to a radio where we learned the president still lived but\nwas critically wounded.\nStudents, not knowing what\nto do or say, gathered around\nthe television set in the lounge.\nStudents waited anxiously.\nSeveral muffled expressions of\nshock were heard as Walter\nCronkite told the nation it had\nlost its leader.\n\"It's official,\" he said. \"He's\ndead.\" Most students stood in\nsmall groups and just looked\nat each other. Later, as the\nshock wore off slightly, they\nbegan to discuss what would\nhappen to the country.\nThere was little a Canadian\ncould say.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 *\nIn Durham City, shops closed\nand special preparations for\nmemorial services were made.\nKnots of people discussed the\nsituation. Women wept.\n\"White and black mourned\ntogether,\" a local newspaper\nreported.\nBlack crepe, mourning the\npresident's death, contrasted\nsharply with tinsel decorations\nin this small city.\nLights on Christmas decorations in the shopping area were\nto be turned on Friday night.\nThey remain dark today.\nCo-education\nGENEVA, Switzerland\n(CUP)\u00E2\u0080\u0094A six-storey residential building to house men,\nwomen and married couples in\na Swiss students' village last\nwinter.\n. . . maybe, my friend\nBennett says\nhes thinking\nabout grants\nPremier Bennett says he\nwill give \"serious consideration\" to UBC's proposal to\nhave the new student union\nbuilding included in the government's matching grants\nscheme.\nStudent president Malcolm\nScott last week asked Bennett\nif the more than $2.3 million\ncost of SUB could be made\neligible under the University\nDevelopment Fund.\nThe provincial government\nhas already agreed to mateh\n$300,000 paid for the Brock\nExten s i o n, and $800,000\nwhich students pledged to the\nwinter sports centre and the\nfirst stage of SUB.\nBennett telegrammed Scott\nMonday and said, \"Your telegram is very much appreciated. This matter will receive\nserious consideration.\"\nIf the matching grant were\nto come through,, it would\nmean an additional $2.3 million in the University's coffers for capital expansion.\nSpot open for\nCUS co-ordinator\nApplications are still open\nfor the position of student\nco-ordinator for the annual\nCanadian Union of Students\nseminar in Quebec City in\nAugust.\nAll applications should be\nin the CUS office in Brock\nextension by 4 p.m. Tuesday.\nThe poignant farewell\nUBC watches in silence\nas JFK's casket lowered\nBy MIKE VAUX\nThe world said goodbye to\nJohn F. Kennedy Monday.\nUBC students joined it.\nStudents jammed the Brock\nLounge to watch the president's funeral on television.\nThe silence was complete.\nThe three-hour coverage of\nthe president's funeral followed the funeral party to the\nCathedral and then across the\nPotomac River to Arlington\nNational Cemetery where the\nassassinated chief executive\nwas buried.\nThe sad and moving ceremony brought to a close the\ntragic events of the weekend\nand left all those who watched\nit with a profound sense of\nloss.\nMore than 100 heads of state\nand their representatives attended the funeral, and followed the caisson to the cemetery,\nalthough' not all made it in\ntime to see the president's casket lowered into the grave.\nThe events of the weekend\ncaused a storm of conversation\naround the campus.\nProfessors discussed them in\nclass.\nStudents discussed them in\ncoffee shops and lounges.\nAnd the answer was a question.\nWhy?\nAll over the campus amateur\nand professional political scientists tried to analyze the political implications of the assassination.\nNot many succeeded.\nPeople remembered the poignant farewell of Mrs. Kennedy\nto her husband, when she\ncurtsied to his coffin and then\nkissed it.\nAnd while they admired her\ncourage, remembering why she\nwas there made them angry.\n\"God what an ordeal,\" said\none student. \"She must have\nguts galore.\"\nNot many people who saw\nher light the perpetual flame\nto the late President's memory\nwill easily forget it.\nNor will they forget the\nworld has lost one of its finest\ncitizens.\nSHOCK\n(Continued firom Page 1)\nis little emotional absorption.\nIt's the first and greatest\nshock for this generation, said\na Columbia University sophomore.\nMourning continues and almost everything was closed\nMonday to observe a national\nday of mourning for Kennedy's\nfuneral.\nSpeculation here is that Republican chances have increased for 1964 Presidential\nelection but not necessarily\nGoldwater.\nIt is felt there must be a\nwider-appeal candidate to win.\nNew President Johnson's\nfuture is still open to question.\nEngineering profs\nFRANKFURT (CUP) \u00E2\u0080\u0094 West\nGerman engineering schools\nused 3,092 teachers last year.\nFOR FALL\nFOR YOUR\nKITTEN\nCOLLECTION\nGlenayr\n0&L\nBe your loveliest in\nKitten's fabulous new\ntweed look for Fall!\nIllustrated is the new\n100% wool Jacquard\nTweed pattern available\nin exciting new fall\ncolour combinations.\nSizes 36-42, $13.98.\nAnd to match perfectly,\nKitten's fully-lined pure\nWool double-knit skirt.\nSizes 8-20, $15.98. At\ngood shops everywhere.\nWithout this label it is not a genuine Kitten\nWl/WU\nINTERNgnONLL\nweek.\nWEDNESDAY EVENTS\nTHURSDAY\nSPEAKER:\nDave Chapman\nCrossroads Africa-Egypt\nBu. 100 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 12:30\nFILM:\nWUS and Skopje\nBu. 102 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 12:30\nALL CLUBS DAY,\nBROCK LOUNGE\n12:30\nFILM:\n\"Letter to Nancy\"\nInternational House\nFilm Room,\n12:30\nSPEAKER:\nDr. Povoy\n\"Rising Expectations\nin the Middle East\"\nBu.102 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 12:30\nSPEAKER:\nMr. Wainman\non\nBulgaria\nBu. 100 \u00E2\u0080\u009412:30\niM(\u00C2\u00BB I M\njMM\u00C2\u00BBM THE UBYSSEY\nPublished Tuesdays, Thursdays and Fridays throughout the university\nyear by the Alma Mater Society, University of B.C. Editorial opinions\nexpressed are those of the editor and not necessarily those of the AMS\nor the University. Editorial office, CA 4-3916. Advertising office, CA\n4-3242, Loc. 26. Member Canadian University Press.\nAuthorized as second-class mail by Post Office Department,\nOttawa, and for payment of postage in cash.\nWinner Canadian University Press trophies for general\nexcellence, news photography, editorial writing\nTUESDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1963\nHe was ours\nIt is significant that the brutal assassination of President Kennedy had such a profound effect upon UBC\nstudents.\nAs news of the tragedy flashed across the campus\nFriday, classes stopped, study abruptly ceased, and coffee in the cafeterias got cold. Everywhere, students\nhuddled in groups, exchanging the latest bits of news,\nblurting anxious questions, muttering unbelievingly,\n\"Why . . . who . . . how . . .\" Hundreds packed Brock\nLounge to watch tihe story unfold on TV, hundreds more\nlingered unaccustomedly beside Radsoc's speakers, and\nthe fortunate few who had transistor radios were surrounded by dozens more in the hallways and on the\nsidewalks.\nThe surprising thing was the genuine concern of the\nstudents, the deep sort of personal loss they all said\nthey felt. Some students actually cried; most were unnaturally quiet, tense, with a hollow feeling deep inside\nthat was much more tfban a habitual noon-hour hunger.\nSomething that was more than the electric excitement\nof the biggest event that had ever happened upon them\ncommanded their emotions.\nMore than once was heard the comment, \"If Pearson\nhad been shot, it wouldn't be like this.\" The atmosphere Friday, the way people were talking, points out,\nperhaps, the dependence, the need Canadians feel for\nthe leadership of the United States, the often-repressed\nattachment for the country and its people which guides\nours.\nBut more than that, for university students, the\ndeath of John Kennedy was not the death of the leader\nof the U.S. For us, it was rather the death of a personality which, like no other man of our time, has captured our imagination, which has earned our deepest\nrespect and admiration.\nFor us, this was the New Frontier that had been so\nabruptly cut down. It was a deeper, more philosophical,\nmore idealistic attachment we felt. It was our generation. It was Youth, it was Genius, it was part uf us\nwhich had been torn away, and it was tragic.\nIt is certainly true that his death had a greater\neffect upon us than any or all of the actions of his lifetime. With sobering suddenness, what John Kennedy\nwas dawned upon us.\nWe must all now feel a debt to the dead president\nwhen we think back to the Cuban crisis just a year ago,\nto the terrible uncertainty of those one or two crucial\ndays when nuclear fever was at its peak; and we must\nsurely be thankful for the courage and steadiness displayed by the one man who, for all we know, may have\nhad our fate in his hands.\nUndoubtedly now, and in future months, we will\nappreciate more easily what it means to have someone\nlike him on Our Side\u00E2\u0080\u0094not only in the immediate political\nworld, but in that deeper sense of our beliefs and ideals.\nHe represented, in the brief five or 10 years which\nwe have been cognizant of these things, perhaps the best\nexample of the qualities, private and public, which we\nand our society cherish. These are the qualities which\nare so desperately needed in this age of political and\nsocial uplheavel, in this time of The Bomb, the tranquilizer,\nand the juvenile delinquent.\nIf there is one thing we can learn from his untimely\ndeath, it must be that the things which to us he stood\nfor and the things which for us he was must be cultivated\nand replenished. The task here is one for people like\nthose who jammed Brock Hall on Friday, to us. Somewhere, somehow, among us we are going to have to find,\nor build, the kind of men who can be John Kennedys.\nEDITOR: Mike Hunter\nEditors:\nAssociate Keith Bradbury\nNews Dave Ablett\nManaging\nCity\t\nPhoto\t\nGeorge Railton\n... Mike Horsey\n Don Hume\nCritics Ron Riter\nSports Denis Stanley\nAsst. News Tim Padmore\nAsst. City Richard Simeon\nSenior Donna Morris\nSenior Maureen Covell\nREPORTERS: Mike Vaux, pon\nHull, Graeme Matheson, Mike Sol-\nton, Tom Wayman. Much more\nimportant is the fact that the following were not here. Lorraine\nShore, Terry Hilborn, Al Ronald,\nPat Horrobin and Ann Burge.\n^-v^NS '\u00E2\u0082\u00AC&\nClasses as normal..\n. %- *\n:\"i >: t, - .;\u00C2\u00AB:,*\nLETTERS TO THE EDITOR\nSelf-centred\nEditor, The Ubyssey:\nIt might be of interest to\nnote the self-centred provincial attitude of the Deans and\nHeads of Departments of this\nuniversity on Friday when\nwe all learned of the horrible\nand tragic assassination of\nPresident J. F. Kennedy.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nDespite the fact that such\nbodies as the United Nations\nand Parliament adjourned out\nof respect for the passing of a\ngreat man, these members of\nthe faculty felt important\nenough to ignore what to them\nmust have been a trivial\nevent, and to continue their\nmeeting into the evening.\nFollowing their august example, the brainless, green-\nshirted group of idiots known\nas Foresters did not cancel\ntheir dance scheduled for Friday night and no doubt had\na marvellous time.\nIt's fortunate, indeed, that\nsuch groups are few and far\nbetween.\nA.V.O.\nScience IV\nOn schedule\nEditor. The Ubyssey:\nLet's pat the Admin on the\nback \u00E2\u0080\u0094 they've done it again.\nIn Friday's Ubyssey, there\nwas a notice which said that\nthe examination timetable\nwould be posted today. A\nquick phone call today to Mr.\nMcCrae's office brings the\ngood news \"Tomorrow, but\ncheck with us before you come\nout.\"\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nI'm objecting because I'm\ngoing out of town over the\nholidays and in order to make\nreservations it is usually convenient to have a rough idea\nof when you will be finished\nexams.\nThe registrar's office warns\nthat the preliminary draft\nshould not be used to make\ntravel plans. It seems that this\nyear, the final draft will appear about two days before\nwe write. Have you ever tried\nto make a plane reservation\nin this season about a week\nbefore you depart? Impossible.\nAnother point to be considered is that a great number\nof students don't start the\npanic cram until the little\ngreen god appears. Maybe this\nis another way of insuring that\nonly the serious succeed, but\nin many cases, these Christmas marks are used in applications for Grad schools.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nSo some people don't report\nclass changes. Let them pay\nfor their folly, not us. Mr.\nMcCrae was not available for\ncomment at the time of writing.\nM. I. HUMPHRIES,\nArts III.\nPre-empted\nEditor, The Ubyssey:\nAt the filming of the Josh\nWhite concert in Brock Thursday afternoon, we were disgusted to see that the so-\ncalled folk lovers of the Folk\nSong Society had taken it\nupon themselves to rope off an\nentire front section in reserve for their esteemed members. Who in hell do they\nthink they are?\nIn future, we would appreciate equal rights, i.e., on a-\nfirst-come, first-serve basis,\nwith no discrimination against\nnon-F.S.S. members.\nJ. BOURHIS,\nG. THIERY,\nScience I.\nDare ya,Jack\nEditor, The Ubyssey:\nThat atheistic loud-mouthed\nCommunist Jack Ornstein\nwould never get away with\nhis blaspheming and propaganda at the University of Alberta, I'll tell you that.\nWe've got a province where\nlately the Provincial Secretary said there should be the\ngreatest freedom of speech at\nthe university as long as it\nconforms to the standards of\nthe people who pay taxes, the\ngeneral public.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nAlso this week our Premier,\nMr. Manning, said women\nshould guard their children\nfrom intellectual perverts\nwho question institutions that\nhave withstood the test of\ntime, naming the Scriptures\nand the Social Credit party\nas two examples. Also recently in Edmonton, three English\nprofs were heaved in jail for\nmaking a public denunciation\nof Edmonton's mayor.\nWe know how to take care\nof people like you here, Mr.\nOrnstein.\nWe dare you to come here\nand say that.\nGEORGE BOWERING\nTea & crumpets\nEditor, The Ubyssey:\nDo you know what there is\nat Victoria College? SFA.\nSweet Flowery Antiques.\nHARRY HICKMAN\nVictoriah\nGod again\nEditor, The Ubyssey:\nRe the recent controversy\nover God and ornstein.\nI submit, sir, that the question is not whether God\nexists, but; whether ornstein\nexists. After all, The Ubyssey has been noted for perpetrating hoaxes in the past.\nI submit, sir, that Ornstein may be a creation of the\nEngineers.\nGEORGE SMALLSON\nArts II Tuesday, November 26, 1963\nTHE UBYSSEY\nPage 5\nBACKGROUND\nWill right-left split\nwreck India's democracy?\nBy HARDIAL BAINS\nand\nBRIAN MACKENZIE\nDespite recent loud attacks\non Nehru's government in India, one fact remains unchal-\nlengable: Since independence\nin 1947, Nehru has provided\nstable and progressive government for his country.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nThe 74-year-old prime minister has made a tremendous\nimprovement in all economic\nand social conditions, which\nunder colonial administration\nprogressed chiefly from bad to\nworse. Most progress has been\nmade within the framework\nof the five-year plans, the\nthird of which ends in 1967.\nUniversal suffrage is now\nextended to all citizens,\nwomen included, over the age\nof 21. Eighty per cent of school\nage children attend schools\nand within the country there\nare 41 universities. Untouch-\nability restrictions have been\nabolished. More than 30 huge\nhydro-electric dams throughout the country provide a consistent water supply and generate electricity for industrial and domestic use.\nFour steel plants are now in\noperation and, with Canadian\nhelp, an atomic reactor is now\nfunctioning in Trombay (near\nBombay.)\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 * \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nPerhaps most significant in\nthis list of accomplishments\nis that the trend towards\nnational fragmentization has\nbeen halted. Despite the existence of 14 separate states, all\nwith different languages, despite the sometimes uneasy coexistence of Hindus, Mohammedans, Buddhists, Christians,\nSikhs, Parsis and Jews, a\nsense of national purpose, of\nMother India, has been established and seems likely to continue.\nHowever, the problems facing modern India cannot be\nminimized. A start has been\nmade, but most of the essential improvements have yet to\nbe brought about. India is still\na country of national saints,\nsacred cows and snake\ncharmers.\nIt is still a poor country,\nwith insufficient food for its\nfour hundred million people,\nand a country where population and birth control attempts have so far been futile.\nEighty per cent of the children\nare in school, but 89 per cent\nof the population is still illiterate.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nThese problems, and others,\nall further complicate India's\ntangled political situation.\nThere are four recognized\nnational parties in India \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nNehru's National Congress,\nthe Communists, the Parja\nSocialists, and the religious-\ncommunal Bharidya Jan\nSangh. There are also several\nsplinter parties, like the increasingly dynamic, right\nwing Freedom Party, all of\nwhich are free to run candidates.\nIn addition, there are no\nless than 16 recognized state\nparties, tor the legislative\nassemblies, and a multitude of\npolitical pressure groups.\nThe National Congress\nholds 365 of the 454 seats in\nthe parliament. The Communist Party, the only other\nwell-organized group, has 28.\nThe Congress itself is divided\ninto right and left wings,\nwhich are held together mainly by the personal dynamic\nleadership of Nehru.\nAlthought the moderate\nNational Congress sits at pres-\nTwo UBC students, Har-\ndial Bains and Brian Mackenzie, wrote this article for\nInternational Week, currently being held on campus.\nent in a fairly secure position,\nthere is a growing tendency\ntowards radicalism from both\nsides. Last year's border invasions by the Communist\nChinese, by the way, had little\neffect on the popularity of the\nIndian Communist Party,\nwhich is strongly Soviet-\noriented.\nLast month in New Delhi, a\nCommunist-sponsored demonstration drew 100,000 people\non a 10-mile march to the\nParliament buildings to protest high food prices. Mean-\n- while, two extreme right-\nwing parties, the Parja Socialists and the Freedom Party\nboth won crucial byelection\nseats from the National Congress earlier this year.\nThe rightists have been the\nleaders in criticizing corruption in government administration and demanding parliamentary reforms. The direction of government policy in\nIndia is going to largely depend on the directions taken\nby these right wingers and\non the influence that foreign\ncapital and power is allowed\nto have on the administration\nfollowing Nehru's.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nNehru's daughter, Indira\nGandhi, has been postulated\nas possibly taking leadership\nOf the country when Nehru\nsteps down. However, at present the most likely successor\nis Mararji Desai, Nehru's pro-\nAmerican, right-wing finance\nminister. Desai has expressed\nextreme opposition to the\nCommunists and will likely\ntry to curtail their rising\npopularity. It is expected that\nhe will ban the Communist\nParty and other left-wing\nparties opposing his policies.\nThe Communists and their\npotential sympathisers won't\ntake this passively. The first\nresult of this strife will be the\nconsolidation of right-wingers\nand left-wingers within the\nframeworks of each, without\ntoo much regard for nominal\nparty affiliations.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nThus, we face the unhappy\npossibility that India, the\npotential \"model democracy\"\nof Asia, will fall victim to an\nideological dispute, causing an\nextreme setback in her social\nand economic progress, and\neffectively nullifying her mediating role in world politics.\nc\nA\nM\nP\nU\nS\nS\nH\nO\nE\nS\nAfter Ski\nBoot\nWool Lined\n13.98\n4442 WEST 10TH AVE.\nFor Jumping\nPuddles On\nCampus\nJust Steps\nAway\nBlk. &Red\n$4.98\nSHEERLINC, $7.98\nRed-faced army brass\nhaul down Old Glory\nSomeone in the administration has a red face today.\nAn American flag flew over\nthe Armory Monday, in honor\nof the late President Kennedy.\nBut it violated almost every\nrule in the Canadian Army's\nbook of regulations.\nThe flag was hauled down\nas soon as COTC officers, resident in the building, were informed of the mistake.\nVerbal rockets began flying\nbetween B.C. Area Headquarters and the COTC.\nAn army spokesman said\narmy regulations forbid replacing the Canadian Ensign with\nthe flag of any other country.\nIt can only be flown with\nspecial permission, and then\nonly if it is lower than the\nCanadian flag, he said.\nA buildings and grounds\nspokesman said she did not\nknow who ordered the flag\nput up in the first place.\nGeoffrey Davies, assistant to\nthe president said he did not\nknow how the flag got up\neither.\nHe said it had been planned\nto fly the flag from the Armory\nfor the Kennedy memorial\nservice today.\n\"The Canadian Ensign would\nbe flying from the main UBC\nflagpole near the faculty club,\"\nhe said.\nSoccer Birds have\nrest this weekend\nThis Sunday at Mclnnes\nfield the UBC Braves soccer\nteam plays Luso of the fourth\ndivision lower mainland soccer\nleague. Game time is 2 p.m.\nAlso Sunday the soccer\nTomahawks play North Shore\nUnited of the Junior Coast\nleague at 10 a.m. at Mahon\npark .\n3sT\nStudents\nYour Formal\nand\nSemi-Formal\nClothing Needs\nCan be Met Best at:\nMcCUISH *\u00E2\u0080\u0094$:\u00E2\u0080\u0094\n2046 W. 41st \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Ph. 263-3610\nMon.-Sat 9:30 to 8:80\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 \u00C2\u00BB*W __ \u00E2\u0080\u0094\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2pedal Slsconat to atodemta\nMade-to-Measure\nSuits, Jackets and\nSlacks Styled for\nThe Young- Man\nIn tribute to the\nmemory of\nJohn F. Kennedy\nTuesday events of\nInternational Week\nhave been postponed.\nEMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES\n(Regular and Summer)\nwith\nPAN AMERICAN\nPETROLEUM CORPORATION\nCALGARY, ALBERTA\nInterviews November 28 & 29\nfor\nPOST GRADUATES\nGRADUATES\nUNDERGRADUATES\n:OMMERCE-ACCOUNT!NG MAJORS\nGEOPHYSICS\nEngineering Physics, Physics Geology and\nGeological Engineering\nGEOLOGY\nENGINEERING\nPetroleum, Geological, Chemical or\nMechanical Engineering\nSee the University N.E.S. Student Placement Service for\nfurther particulars and to arrange an interview. Page 6\nTHE UBYSSEY\nTuesday, November 26, 1963\nBasketball Birds win\nopeners in Manitoba\nBy DAVE CARLSON\nUBC Thunderbird basketball\nsquad successfully opened\ntheir season over the weekend\nwith a pair of impressive victories over the University of\nManitoba Bisons.\nFriday night the Birds fell\nthree short of triple figures\ndrubbing the hapless Bisons\n97-65. The team connected on\nfifty-one per cent of their shots\nfrom the floor .\nForward John Cook led all\nscorers with 24 points, 12 of\nwhich were earned from the\nfoul line. Gord Betcher, a surprise starter, pumped in 14\nmore points.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nOn Saturday night, the Birds\nwrapped up the series with an\n82-48 whitewashing of the\nprairie crew. Guard Bill McDonald sparked the attack with\n15 points, followed closely by\nDave Way with 14.\nThe only bright spot for the\nBisons was five year man Dave\nMills, who collected 23 points\nFriday night, and added 12\nmore in the second contest.\nCoach Peter Mullins of the\nBirds, summing up the series,\nsaid, \"We were just too big\nand too experienced for them.\"\nMullins found ample opportunity to give his bench\nneeded action. Friday night\nall ten players scored. The following night, only Steve\nSpenser failed to reach the\nworesheet.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 *\nMorris Douglas, playing his\nfirst game with the Birds,\nparticularly impressed his\ncoach during the first game.\nThe next scheduled action\nfor the Thunderbirds is the\nannual Totem Tournament, this\nweekend in War Memorial\nGym. Eastern Washington College, Central Washington College and McGavins will provide competition for the Thunderbirds. Friday night's draw\nsees Eastern meeting Central\nin the preliminary game, and\nMcGavins tangling with the\nBirds in the feature event.\nIn other WCIAA basketball\nAvailable Near UBC Gates\n1 double room\n2 single rooms\nwith full cooking and washing facilities. Call CA 4-\n5054 after 6 p.m.\nAUTHOR'S AGENCY\nBring your manuscripts,\nstories, articles, books, songs,\npoems. Free advice and help.\nToronto, New York, Hollywood sales contacts. 1065 E.\n17th Ave. TR 6-6362.\nTHE IDEAL PLACE\nTO MEET\nYOUR FRIENDS\nTry Our Delicious T-Bone\nSteak with Coffee ,\n$1.35-If s Really Good\nFull Course Meals\nwithin your income.\nDO-NUT DINER\n4556 West 10th Ave.\nJOHN COOK\n31 points over weekend\naction this weekend the Saskatchewan Huskies beat the\nUniversity of Alberta at Calgary 88-66 Friday and 62-59\nSaturday.\nHuskies and Birds are tied\nfor first place in the intercollegiate league.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nFBXDAY\nUBC (97)\u00E2\u0080\u0094Cook 24, B. McDonald\n4, Osborne 8, Way 11,\nBetcher 14, Spenser 4,\nBarazzuol 5, K. Macdonald 5, Erickson 11,\n Douglas 10.\nMAHTTOBA (65)\u00E2\u0080\u0094Mills 23, Kings-\nmill 6, Angus 1, Ku-\nzych 10, White 3, Bi-\nlan 5, Mitchell 9, Zelmer 4 ,Falk 3, Gair 1.\nSATURDAY\nUBC (83)\u00E2\u0080\u0094Cook 7, B. McDonald\nIB, Osborne 11, Way\n14, Betcher 7, Barazuol\n8, K. Macdonald 8,\nErickson 5, Douglas 7.\nMAKXTOBA (48)\u00E2\u0080\u0094Mills 12, Kings-\nm i 11 4, Angus 4,\nKuzych 11, White 1,\nBilan 2, Mitchell 6,\nZelmer 6, Falk 2.\nWrestling victories\nfor Christensen, Green\nCentral Washington State College swept five of\n10 divisions at the UBC Invitational wrestling meet\nSaturday.\nThe only laurels for UBC\ncame from Cann Christen-\nsen's draw with Central's\nMark Lundberg in the heavyweight final, and Bruce\nGreen in the 123 pound class.\nChristensen won three\nmatches and drew in the\nfourth. Another total point\ntie came in the 137 pound\nclass against Alan Johnson\nand Wayne Lalley of Central.\nThere can only be a tie in\nthese finals when the combatants are weighed-in and\nthey are found to be exactly\nthe same.\n\u00E2\u0080\u009E\u00E2\u0080\u009E_ A weigh-off is used when\nCANN CHRISTENSEN two wrestlers are equal in\n. . . heavyweight points in one weight class.\nBEIL HEEDS EHGIHEERS\nFOR TOMORROW'S WORLD OF COMMUNICATIONS\nPlan now for an Engineering Career offering scope and\nresponsibility in a leading Canadian industry. Consider\nthe potential of a career in the Bell if you are graduating in\nELECTRICAL\nENGINEERING\nt\nAsk at your Placement Office for\ninformative booklets, and\narrange to talk with one of our\nrepresentatives when they visit\nyour campus.\nBELL\nBritt, rouged and owned by Canadians\nMake a date to discuss a career\nin telecommunications on\nMonday through Thursday\nJanuary 13 to 16 Tuesday, November 26, 1963\nTHE UBYSSEY\nPage 7\nBut oh that third\nUBC a winner\nfor 2 periods\nBy GEORGE HEAMSBOTTOM\nUBC's two-period wonders, the Thunderbird pucksters,\nmanaged one tie out of their two-game series with the Kamloops Chiefs the past weekend.\nthe\nIn Saturday's game\nT' Birds went into the third\nperiod with a 4-3 lead, but\ncame! out 5-4 losers as all-star\ncentre Peter Kelly watched\nfrom the sidelines.\nKelly was ejected in the\nsecond period for fighting.\nSPORTS\nEDITOR: Denis Stanley\nBasketball\nBraves cut\nMagee high\nBy BOB BANNO\nUBC Basketball Braves\nrolled to their third straight\nvictory Friday night at War\nMemorial Gym, crushing the\ngallant but thoroughly outclassed Magee High Blackshirts\n86-47.\nWinston Churchill's Mark\nChurchland paced Braves'\nscorers with 14 points. Forward Wayne Vollmer pumped\nin 13 against his former teammates and Prince of Wales'\nrugged Bill Humphries counted 12.\nB.C. all-star Alec Brayden\nturned in another stellar performance for the Braves, scoring 13 and 10 respectively.\n\"Our fast break is starting\nto jell,' 'said Braves' coach\nNorm Watt after the game.\nWatt has also implemented\nthe double-post offence to\ntake advantage of his outstanding guards.\nUBC\u00E2\u0080\u0094Vollmer 13, Dyck 6, Jones\n4, Brayden 10, MacDonald 4, Humphries 12, Hubner 4, Hill 5, Walker 6, Campbell 4, Banno 4, Church-\nland 14\u00E2\u0080\u0094S6.\nMAGEE\u00E2\u0080\u0094Murray 13, Ramsay,\nKorsmo 10, MacLean 4, Bthering-\nton 2, Hylton, Samster 3, Steele\n4, Kendall 8, Graigr 3\u00E2\u0080\u009447.\nSunday, the Birds, led by\nveteran Bob Parker, came\nfrom behind a 3-0 deficit to go\nout front 4-3, then ran out of\ngas and had to settle for a 4-4\ntie.\nThe scrappy UBC team was\nunable to cope with the greater\nexperience of the B.C. Intermediate champions.\nThe Chiefs demonstrated\ntheir experience by outclassing\nUBC while they were accumulating 33 minutes in the penalties Sunday, compared with 10\nfor UBC.\nParker, in the second period,\ntwice broke into the clear\nthrough the Chiefs' defence and\ndeftly beat the Kamloops\ngoalie.\nOther Bird scorers in Sunday's game were Kelly and\ncentre Ken Ronalds.\nScorers in Saturday's game\nfor UBC were defenceman Al\nMerlo, winger Ralph Lortie,\nStu Gibbs and Kelly.\nThe Birds were short three\nregulars for both, games because Mike Smith, Ron Morris\nand Dave Morris were all called out of town due to deaths in\ntheir families.\nIn goal Saturday for UBC\nwas Brian Wallace, who played\nwell behind a shaky defence\nas he and Jack Harris, in the\nnets Sunday for the Birds, continue their fight for number\none goal tending honours.\nTip-Top men\nclub cripples\nThe Locarno Football League\ncontinued its Saturday contests last weekend as the Tiptop Tigers ran away from the\noutclassed Cellar-dwelling Cyclones to a 63-7 victory .\nDespite the slippery turf and\nthe numbing cold, the Tigers\nromped to an early lead and\nnever looked back.\nRelying mainly on the short\npasses of Burnt MacAroni to\nRays Hoss and assorted seagulls, the Tip-toppers rolled\nup nine touchdowns while\nholding their hapless opponents to one major.\nFour of the Cellar Dwellers\nhad their legs in casts but they\nplayed anyway because they\nfelt that after winning 18\ngames in a row they should\ngive the Tip Toppers a chance\nto get an undeserved victory.\nLeague play will resume the\nweek after next, as the loop's\ntwo teams have byes for next\nSaturday.\nBarbarians\ntie Varsity\nRugger Birds managed to\npull from their slump to finish\nleague play for this term in\na 0-0 tie with the North Shore\nBarbarians.\nCoach Albert Laithwaite\nis confident that the tie puts\nthe Birds back into a fighting\nposition for intercollegiate\nplay in January.\nBirds lost their last two\ngames in league play.\nKeith Watson suffered a separated shoulder in Saturday's\ngame but continued to play until late in the game aggrivating\nthe injury.\nThe rugger Braves have one\ngame left in their league play.\nThere is a practice Thursday\nfor both Braves and Birds if\nthe fields are in shape.\nGARY BEGG\n. . . hat-trick Sunday\nOlympians\nsplit over\nweekend\nCanada's national hockey\nteam won one game and lost\nanother in a prairie tour during the weekend .\nSaturday the Regina Caps,\nstrengthened by some players\nfrom the Winnipeg Maroons,\ndropped the nationals 7-6 in\nRegina.\nThe seven goals is the\nhighest number scored against\nthe Olympians in a single\ngame this year.\nSunday the Olympians plastered the Drumheller Miners\n9-2 in Drumheller.\nDefenceman Terry O'Malley\nscored twice against Regina\nwhile Bob Forhan, Roger Bourbonnais, Terry Clancy and\nBrian Conacher added singles.\nAt Drumheller Gary Begg\nscored three times, Bourbonnais and Ray Cadieux added\na pair each while singles went\nto Clancy and Forhan.\nRichardson, Harper\nstage grudge match\nBy ROGER McAFEE\nThe weapons will be 40-\npound chunks of granite and\nthe distance will be 126 feet.\nThe principals will be\nworld curling champion Ernie\nRichardson and B.C.'s own\nGlen Harper, the only man to\nbeat Richardson in last year's\nCanadian curling championship.\nThe place will be the UBC\nsports arena Wednesday at 8\np.m.\nErnie Richardson, who won\nthe Canadian and world\nchampionships in 1960, 1962\nand 1963, will be out to\navenge a loss at the hands of\nB.C.'s representative in this\nyear's Canadian championship.\nThe B.C. champ, Glen Harper from Duncan, handed Richardson his only defeat in this\nyear's national final.\nHarper tied with Calgary's\nJim Shields for runner-up in\nthe championships.\nAnother game, between\nShield's and Edmonton's Hee\nGervais, world champion in\n1961, will round out the exhibition.\nThe four rinks, probably\nthe top four in the world, will\ngive a short instructional\ndemonstration and Richardson and Harper will both outline their strategy and reasoning as the big game progresses.\nA short discussion on skipping strategy and responsibilities will be held after the\ngames.\nStudent admission price is\n75 cents. Reserve admission is\n$1.50 and general admission\nis $1.\nTHE WEAPONS\n. . grudge match\nField hockey results\nVarsity field hockey team\nremained on top of the\nleague with a 2-0 win over\nthe Cardinals in first division play Saturday.\nTom Groenweld and Victor Warren scored for Varsity.\nIn other first division play\nthe Blues defeated North\nShore 4-2.\nGolds tied the unbeaten\nHornets 1-1 and the Advocates dropped a 1-0 decision\nto Vancouver \"B\".\nPedagogues' game was rescheduled.\nA REAL \"DUTCH TREAT\"\nWe mean Hollandia Pipe Tobacco, of\ncourse. Its pleasing aroma makes you welcome anywhere and you will enjoy its unique\nand friendly flavour. Doubly-satisfying\nHollandia is not just another Dutch pipe\ntobacco\u00E2\u0080\u0094it's a truly noble Cavendish, pride\nof Holland's master blenders. Cool as a sea\nbreeze, mild as Maytime, rewarding as a\nlifelong friendship. Perfect if you're taking\nup a pipe or seek a refreshing change.\nHappy smoking begins with Hollandia\u00E2\u0080\u0094a\nreal Dutch treat.\nSmoke Hollandia\nand really enjoy\nyour pipel Page 8\nTHE UBYSSEY\n'tween classes\nAMERICAN POET, Prof.\nJoseph Langland, will read\nfrom his own work Wednesday noon in Bu. 104.\nMemorial service today\nLoyola\nstudents\nboo Chaput\nMONTREAL (CUP) \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Students at Loyola College booed\na French separatist speaker\nand demanded he speak English at a public lecture last\nweek.\nMarcel Chaput, president of\nthe Separatist Quebec Republican party, was giving the\nfirst talk in a series scheduled\non \"Canada, where we stand.\"\nStudents waved placards\nwith the word \"Canada\" and\nheckled Chaput.\n\"You who are yelling at me\nare helping my cause,\" he said.\n\"Each time the English act\nas you are today, more and\nmore French Canadians\ndecide to become separatists.\"\nAnti-Negro\nGreeks hit\nBERKELEY, Calif. CUP)\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nAll six sororities were suspended at Portland State College because of claims of discrimination against two Negro\ngirl rushees.\nA faculty investigation was\nstarted to see why the two\ngirls were dropped from rushing after the first round of\nparties.\nThe girls were \"eminently\nqualified\" according to Mark\nHoward, public information\ndirector of the college.\n\"Sororities started here in\n1960 with the clear understanding of no racial discrimination,\" he said.\nCampus clubs have cancelled\nmeetings today so their members can attend the memorial\nservice for President Kennedy,\nto be held in the Armory at\nnoon.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nPRE-MED SOC\nDr. W. Wood will give an illustrated talk on Dermatology,\nWednesday noon in Wes. 100.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nUNITARIAN CLUB\nMeeting Wednesday noon in\nBu. 3252.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nCLUBS DISPLAY GROUP\nMeeting of all club reps, for\nclubs putting on displays for\nOpen House '64 in Bu. 217.\nSpace allotment and financing\nto be discussed.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nGAMMA DELTA\nW. Schumacher, theological\nintern at Bellingham, Washington, will speak on \"What do\nyou mean, the Church?\" Wednesday noon, Bi. 3202.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nSPECIAL EVENTS\nLast minute ticket sales \"A\nMan for All Seasons\" with\nRobert Harris, Wednesday at\nthe Queen Elizabeth Playhouse.\nVouchers at Special Events\noffice.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nCHORAL SOCIETY\nRehearsals: Tonight in Brock\nLounge; tomorrow night in Bu.\n104, both at 6 p.m.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nBRIDGE AND CHESS CLUB\nMeeting Wednesday at 7:30\np.m., Brock TV Lounge.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nONTOLOGICAL SOCIETY\nSecond in a series of talks by\nRichard Thompson, M.A. Cambridge, will be given Wednesday noon in Bu. 221.\nNEWMAN CENTRE\nLeg auction: St. Mark's College Lounge, Wednesday noon.\nAll proceeds go for Crippled\nChildren's Christmas Party.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nEDUCATION UNDERGRADS.\nSample copies of previous\nFirst and Second Year sessional\neducation exams (including\nEng. 100 and 200) will be sold\nfrom November 26 to 30, in\nthe New Education Bldg. Proceeds go to a Christmas Party\nfor underprivileged children.\nUNDERGRAD. WRITER'S\nPoet Joseph Langland will\nattend the meeting tonight, 8\np.m., at 4706 West Sixth Ave.\nHe will also read his own\npoetry Wednesday at 12:30 in\nBu. 104.\nTuesday, November 26, 1963\nStudent Court\nHearing\nStudent press \"fired\"\nCHICAGO (CUP) \u00E2\u0080\u0094The student newspaper at the Chicago\nTeachers' College was suspended when it printed a cartoon\ncritical of Chicago's superintendent of schools.\nTake notice that Student\nCourt of the Alma Mater\nSociety will hear charges of\nconduct unbecoming a student, under by-law 11, section 6 (b) (i) (c) of the AMS\nconstitution, against\nPaul G. Danyliu\nDave Johnston\nas a result of occurrences at\nthe Oct. 26 football game.\nHearing will take place in\nthe Brock stage room at\n12:30 noon, Thursday, Nov.\n28, 1963.\nStudents multiply\nINDIA (CUP)\u00E2\u0080\u0094The student\nenrolment in colleges and universities during 1961-62 increased 11 per cent over the\nprevious year.\nFOR RENT\nRoom on campus.\nMale student.\nPhone 224-5870\nafter 6 p.m.\nTHREE DOORWAYS tractive plans that\nI \J- r\ lilaVVMRUiniU ing circumstances\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0JJ1! |,T,| |DET \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00C2\u00B0f y\u00C2\u00B0unS men interested in a career as a\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \3 I \J t\^^ commissioned officer in the Canadian Army:\n111 THE REGULAR OFFICER TRAINING PLAN - This is a tri-service plan under which\nhigh school graduates receive advanced education and leadership training at one of the Canadian\nServices Colleges or at a university to become officers in the Royal Canadian Navy, the Canadian\nArmy or the Royal Canadian Air Force.\n(&\ THE CANADIAN OFFICERS TRAINING CORPS - University undergraduates may obtain a commission by training during their spare time and summer holidays. They are paid for\nactual training time and, after graduation, may choose either full-time service in the Regular\nArmy or part-time service in the Canadian Army Militia.\nW> MEDICAL AND DENTAL SUBSIDIZATION PLANS -These are tri-service plans under\nwhich university students in medicine or dentistry can be subsidized during their course and\nbecome commissioned medical or dental officers in the Canadian Armed Forces after graduating\nand obtaining their licence to practise\n^f. You may obtain full information on any of these plans from the\nz%% local Army Recruiting Station listed in your telephone book.\nNEW BATTERY\nSALE\nas low as\n6 volt $ 8.95\n12 volt 13.95\nUBC\nHOME\nSERVICE\nPhone: CA 4-3939\nAllison & Dalhousie\nCHALLENGING GRADUATE OPPORTUNITIES\nUnited Aircraft of Canada Limited, formerly\nCanadian Pratt & Whitney Aircraft, is a\ncompany with a successful record of\ncontinuous growth for over thirty years.\nOutstanding opportunities exist for\nversity graduates in the areasjjfJrfarrOfactur-\ningand Engineering B^*grTand Development.\nRequirements-for'Engineering grajluate* in\nManufacturing include production Englrteer-,\nflarit ^Engineering land^Tmdustrial En-,\ngifleWing. Our- Manufacjurirw capability is\nBing enlarged to cqpe fvKfijpx^anding pro\nlict lines. This expansk\nrid modern iza\ntion has created exceptional opportunities\nfor new graduates.\nRequirements for Engineering graduates in\n\u00C2\u00AB\u00C2\u00AB\u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"-* \"isifiK and mssm^aarA^MJlL\n.-ATTalytTBalj Test,\n' and Metallurgical Departments. \ 1 tie Com\ni pany'sJ4research prj>g|-am in jjgas; urtrine:\nLj^jiichf'ipsulted in(lhe PT6 gas imtrineipn&f\ni itl otrWr low powered engines-* pntinues,\nI With more advanced models presertly under\n| devefOprnent. Additional studies of high\n7 speectirMatirrg machinery ha\ije be\nv y\nip^cn\nUnite<\nm\n3 fe^Z^A^--!'\"^;--'.\n1LX--\nP.O. BOX NO. 10-~U.ONGUEUIL, QUEBEC\nPRATT & WHITNEY ENGINES \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 SIKORSKY HELICOPTERS \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 HAMILTON STANDARD PRODUCTS \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 NORDEN ELECTRONICS"@en . "Newspapers"@en . "Vancouver (B.C.)"@en . "LH3.B7 U4"@en . "LH3_B7_U4_1963_11_26"@en . "10.14288/1.0126709"@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 .