"CONTENTdm"@en . "http://resolve.library.ubc.ca/cgi-bin/catsearch?bid=1211252"@en . "University Publications"@en . "2015-08-28"@en . "1965-10-07"@en . "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/Ubysseynews/items/1.0127724/source.json"@en . "application/pdf"@en . " Beware\nof Grits\nVol. XLVIII, No. 9\nVANCOUVER, B.C.JHURSDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1965\nCA 4-3916\nPETERSONS PIN\nUNREASONABLE'\nBLADEN BUBBLE BURST\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094norm betts photo.\nLIKE A LITTLE LEG? Melinda Whitaker (left) and Kit McKinnon, followed an unidentified pair of legs down the runway in the annual frosh queen contest fashion show. The\nshow was run to the strains of the jerk and frug and the 15 girls danced through the\nusually staid frosh event Tuesday noon in Brock.\nAMS men non-committal\non Bladen's fee fancy\nOfficials of the 'Alma Mater\nSociety were largely non-\ncommital on the Bladen commission's recommedation regarding tuition fees.\nAIMS second vice-president\nPeter Braund said he would\nmake a complete statement on\nthe Bladen report to council\non Tuesday night.\nBut he said Wednesday: \"I\nam unhappy with the Bladen\nfee recommendations as I\nunderstand them.\"\nThe Bladen report urged the\nprovincial governments to resist popular pressure for the\nabolition of university fees.\nIt says free tuition for college and university students\nis impractical for the next 10\nyears.\nAMS president Byron Hender said: \"On what basis can\nFree tuition promised\nNewfoundland students\nNewfoundland university students will have their fees\npaid next year.\nPremier Joe Smallwood told 2,000 Memorial University\nstudents at St. John's Tuesday: \"The provincial government\nwill make tuition free for all students at this university.\"\nThe offer includes students in fifth year and will cost\nmore than $1,600.\nThe plan will take effect on the fall of 1966.\nStudents will also receive a salary to help finance their\neducation. Resident students will receive $50 a month and\nboarding students will receive $100 a month.\nBased on a total of 22,000 students at B.C.'s three public\nuniversities with an average tuition fee of $475 a student,\nit would cost the B.C. government $10.4 million to remove\nuniversity tuition fees.\nyou draw a line between high\nschool and university when it\ncomes to paying tuition fees.\"\n\"The real problem with the\nreport is that the commissioners have not looked at\nstudents who have never\nreached university,\" said\nHender.\nHe said, however, that the\nproposed increase in federal\nper capita grants to $5 from\n$2 was tremendous.\nThe report urges provinces\nto calculate their grants to\nuniversities on the assumption\nthat tuition fees will continue\nat about the same level.\nThe commission cautioned\nagainst any general increase\nin fees \"without assurance of\na simultaneous increase in student aid.\"\nIt argued that free tuition would be unfair to taxpayers who could not get a\nuniversity education.\n\"University graduates earned\nhigher incomes as a rule and\nthey and their parents should\nbe expected to finance their\nstudies as much as possible.\"\nUniversities must\ncontrol costs'\u00E2\u0080\u0094Les\nBy AL DONALD\nUbyssey Ass't City Editor\nB.C. education minister Leslie Peterson said Wednesday the Bladen commission's call for drastically increased\ngovernment aid to universities \"may well prove to be unreasonable\".\nThe report, released Wednesday, urges a five-fold boost\nin combined federal-provincial\ngrants to higher education, to\n$1,704 million by 1975.\nCanada's total university\ncosts will soar from 1965's\n$537 million to $2,032 million\nin ten years, the report says,\nand this price must be met to\ncombat the country's campus\ncrisis.\nPeterson told The Ubyssey\nthe Bladen commission's work\nis \"a good report, deserving\nof careful study by all governments. Parts of the report' on\nfinancial assistance have to be\ngiven serious consideration.\"\n\"But,\" he said, \"to suggest\nthat the (provincial education)\nbudget be increased that much\nLESLIE PETERSON\n. . . serious\nBased on static fee line\nmay well prove to be unreasonable.\"\nPeterson said the provincial\ngovernment would deal with\nincreasing university costs as\nthey came up.\n\"But the universities will\nhave to make a determined effort to keep costs under control,\" he said.\nPeterson welcomed the report's recommendation that the\npresent $2 capita operating\ngrant be increased to $5.\n\"T h e federal government\nshould share equally with the\nprovinces the cost of higher\neducation,\" he said.\n\"Federal grants have lagged\nin the past.\"\nThe report urges the federal\ngovernment raise its combined\naid to universities from $80\nDEAN BLADEN\n... his report\nIncrease gov't aid\nmillion to $330 million in the\nnext fiscal year.\nThis increase must be met\nby increased government aid.\ndonations by business and private concerns, and contributions by university graduates\nof one per cent of their income,\nthe report says.\nAppointed 18 month ago by\nthe Canadian Universities\nFoundation, the inquiry was\nheaded by dean Vincent Bladen\nof the University of Toronto.\nUBC president John Macdonald said the report was a\nwelcome analysis of the problem facing Canadian universities.\n\"It seeks realistic expression of the federal interest in\nhigher education while recog-\n(Continued on Page 2)\nSEE: BLADEN Page 2\nTHE UBYSSEY\nThursday, October 7, 1965\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094norm betts photo.\nTHE JERK, part of annual frosh queen' fashion show, draws unenthusiastic response\nfrom lunch-munching Dr. Malcolm McGregor. The classic head's judging duties Tuesday\nincluded watching queen candidates dance to popular music.\nEAP cost cuts grants;\nsix down 13 per cent\nBy CAROL-ANNE BAKER\nAlma Mater Society grants\nto six UBC groups have been\ncut because of the cost of the\nEducation Action Program.\nAMS treasurer Mike Som-\nmer's budget, handed down\nWednesday, gave $3,802 to\nthe EAP.\nAs a result, discretionary\ngrants to the groups have\nbeen reduced approximately\n13 per cent each.\nReceiving reduced grants\nwere Clubs' Committee, Debating Union, undergraduate\nsocieties, Grad Students' Association, Radio Society and\nthe Canadian Union of Students Committee.\nOther non-discretionary\ngrants are set by a general\nmeeting vote or referendum\nand cannot be changed without a general meeting vote\nor referendum.\nSommerse said: \"There are\nsome accounts that cannot be\nreduced because the council\nhas stated particular policies\nthat preclude any reduction.\"\n\"These include AMS office\nsalaries, and the world University Service.\"\n\"Other grants cannot be reduced because the events have\nalready taken place; for example registration photos and\nfrosh retreat,\" said Sommers.\n\"Because of these cuts there\nwill be more appeals to the\nfinance committee.\"\nThe AMS constitution states\nthere must be a margin of\nfive per cent of the revenue,\nbut the margin this year is\nfive per cent of the AMS fees\ninstead of five per cent of the\ntotal revenue.\nLast year the margin was 4.3\nper cent of the total revenue.\nLast year three changes\nwere introduced to prevent\nthe recurrence of the overspending of $15,500 which occurred in the 1963-1964 budget.\nThe changes included summer work on the budget, hiring a publications manager\nand hiring an assistant business manager.\nEstimated revenue from\nAMS fees this year is $423,-\n400. Other revenue comes\nfrom such things as college\nshop profits and rental income.\nThe largest expenditure is\nfor administration and general expenses, which amount to\n$46,630.\n(See budget breakdown, p.\n6 and 7.\nBLADEN'S PROBLEM\n(Continued from Page 1)\nnizing provincial rights and responsibilities,\" he said.\nHe also termed \"realistic\"\nthe report's proposal that tuition fees should not be eliminated within the next ten years.\nThe report's recommendations are based on maintaining\ntuition fees at their present\nlevel.\nIt warns that able students\nwould be kept out of college\nand the quality of higher' education would drop if its recommendations are ignored.\n\"Canada cannot afford not\nto invest these sums if we are\nto achieve the goals of general\neconomic growth which we\nhave set for ourselves,\" the\nreport says.\nUniversity costs are rising\ndramatically becaue of an unprecedented rush among young\nCanadians to get advanced education.\nThe report says that al\nthough half the high school\ngraduates could benefit from\na college education, only one\nin six graduate from university.\n\"In the long run we may\nachieve even greater wealth\nby this greater concern for the\nindividual; we will surely come\nnearer to achieving the good\nlife.\"\nBurling contest!\nIt's log-rolling time again at\nUBC.\nThe forestry undergraduate\nsociety has challenged all members of student council to a\nburling contest at noon Oct. 14.\nHie contest will be held in\nthe Buchanan quad, pool with\nthe (FUS supplying caulked\nboots.\nBirth control\nis only answer\nStepped-up food production\ncan only prolong the overpopulation crisis, an authority\non Asian economics said Tuesday.\nSir John Crawford, in a\nnoon-hour talk said he saw no\nsatisfactory solution to food\nshortage and overcrowding that\nexcludes birth control.\n\"If man doesn't start controlling his rate of increase, it\nwill be controlled for him by\nexternal circumstances of an\nundesirable nature,\" said\nCrawford, who has worked extensively in India.\nHe said recent improvements\nin birth control have made\nfamily planning practicable\neven in inert societies..\n\"I refer mainly to the inter-\nuterine device. Interest in this\ndevice has spread much faster\nthan had been anticipated.\"\nFOR SCHOLARS\nMcGeer wants\nfree tuition\nStudents with first-class marks should have free tuition,\na Liberal M.L.A. told Simon Fraser Academy's liberal club\nTuesday.\nPatrick McGeer, MLA for\nPoint Grey and UBC professor,\nsaid the provincial government\nshould pay full fees of first-\nclass students, two-thirds of\nthe fees for the top half of\nsecond-class students, and one-\nthird of the fees for the rest of\nsecond-class students.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\n\"Bursary and student loan\naid would then be more available for the passing student so\nthat everyone would benefit,\"\nhe said.\nHe said students who attack\ntheir universities for increasing fees had little understanding of the situation.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\n\"They are like old-time doctors . . . who frequently bled\ntheir patients to try and help\nthem.\"\nMcGeer said university fees\nshould not rise because \"the\nvery purpose of the educational system is defeated when\ncapable people reject educational opportunity because the\nprice is a deterrent.\"\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nBritish Columbia was feeling the cost now, he said, of\nproviding insufficient funds\nfor education a decade ago.\n\"Our economy has been\nhandicapped by a shortage of\nmuch larger infusions of public\nhighly skilled people and our\ngovernment resources drained\nby the unskilled and unemployed. In the near future,\nmoney must go to our educational institutions.\"\nNobel winner speaks\nNobel Peace Prize winner,\nDr. Linus Pauling will speak\nFriday noon in the Hebb lecture theatre.\nHis topic will be \"Molecules,\ndisease, and evolution.\"\nPauling won the 1963 Nobel\nPeace Prize and the 1954 Nobel\nPrize in chemistry for his work\non the nature of the chemical\nbond.\nHere are\nhighlights\nof Bladen\nHere are the highlights\nof the Bladen Commission's report on university financing which was\nreleased Wednesday.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Both levels of government urged to boost\ncombined annual aid to\n$1,704 million by 1975,\ncompared to $335 million\nin 1963-64.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Federal aid of $330\nmillion recommended for\nnext fiscal year, with increases each year following. The current year's\nbudget allows only $80\nmillion.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Increases in federal\nper capita grants for operating costs to $5 from\n$2 immediately.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 New federal per\ncapita grants of $5 for\ncapital costs.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Appointment of federal minister of higher\neducation.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Increased income tax\nrelief for students, parents and university donors.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Federal grants for\nnew medical, dental and\nnursing schools and\nteaching hospitals.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Boost in federal and\nprovincial bursary aid to\nstudents to $245 million\nfrom $39 million planned\nnext year.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Universities urged to\nimprove administrative\nefficiency to save money,\nand hold the line on tuition costs.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 University and college enrolment projected at 461,000 in 1975\ncompared with 180,000 a\nyear ago.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Rejects conception of\nfree tuition.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Provincial scholarships should be tenable in\nany province or any\ncountry.\nTHE LAST JERK I From right, Jon Furberg, Arts IV, Guy\nSobell, Arts IV, and friend ogle frosh queen cuties\nin Brock Lounge Tuesday noon. Thursday, October 7, 1965\nTHE UBYSSEY\nPage 3\nSWEET SERENADE for sorority pledges (from left) Janis Stewart, Jill Newby, and Marg\nMortifee, came from fraternity members (again from left) Stan Webber, Jim Trites,\nMike Sommers and Larry Lacterman (piano) on Tuesday night.\nTHE NEEDLE DUG DEEP Tuesday noon in the armory. But students packed into Brock\nLounge to watch frosh queens dance and the blood donor clinic went dozens of bottles\nshort of their daily quota.\nUBC students will have\nweekend off for vote\nHIKERS LINE UP\nUBC students are running\nout of excuses for failing to\nvote in the Nov. 8 federal election.\nPresident John Macdonald\nsaid Monday that students unable to cast ballots in Vancouver would be given the\nweekend of Nov. 5-8 off to go\nhome to vote.\nFollowing Macdonald's announcement, student council\nformed a committee to arrange\ninexpensive transportation for\nstudents leaving the city that\nweekend.\nThe committee is made up\nof AMS second vice-president\nPeter Braund, arts president\nChuck Campbell, and commerce president Rick McGraw.\nStudents wishing to register\nfor transportation should go to\nthe public relations office up-\nDR. JOHN MACDONALD\n. . . weekend off\nstairs in Brock Hall within the\nnext two weeks.\nAt least 200 of the more than\n2,000 students eligible for the\nservice must apply before\ntransportation can be arranged.\nMeanwhile, the UBC Liberal\nClub continued its fight for\nstudents from outside Vancouver who feel they should be\nable to register to vote here.\nClub president Allan Gould\nsaid Wednesday the club is\ngoing ahead with plans to appear on behalf of these students in a court of revision\nOct. 15-20.\nAnyone wanting help in registering should leave his name\nand details of his situation in\nBox 121 at the AMS office in\nBrock.\nCouncil counts\nlittle in march\nBy DOUG HALVERSON\nUbyssey Council Reporter\nUBC students will march on\nthe Vancouver court-house and\nthe Bayshore Inn Oct. 27, student council willing or not.\nSixty students almost unanimously agreed Wednesday to\nsupport the proposed National\nStudent Day march.\nOf the 60 attending the organizational meeting chaired\nby Education Action Program\nco-chairmen Bob Cruise and\nPeter Braund, only undergraduate society representatives from arts, pharmacy and\nengineering would not support\nthe march.\n* \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nThe others strongly supported Cruise's proposed mass\nmarch and rally. They said\nthey would follow him with or\nwithout Alma Mater Society\ncouncil approval.\nBraund said that if council\ndidn't fall behind his committee, \"the march could turn into\na golden opportunity for the\ncommies and socialists to put\non a display.\"\nCruise said all interested\ngroups would probably parade,\nbut he hoped they would do\nso as students and not as organizations.\n* \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nBoth Cruise and Braund said\nthey would lead the march if\ncouncil wouldn't.\nThe only official opposition\nvoiced so far has come from\nthe faculties of forestry and\nengineering.\nBoth have said their student\nfaculties do not want to march.\nBut one forestry student at\nthe Wednesday meeting said\nmany members were willing to\nmarch. He claimed forestry\nundergraduate president Dave\nParker's statement that the\nforesters were against the\nmarch was untrue.\n* \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nDuring the meeting, Cruise\ncirculated a list asking people\nto sign up for work on the\nNational Student Day rally,\nthe January seminar on education, and speakers bureau\nwhich will talk to luncheon\ngroups off campus.\nThese sub-committees will\nreport to the EAP committee\nwhich reports directly to the\nstuden council.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094norm betts photo.\nDIANE NEUFELD, a frosh\nqueen contestant, jerks\ndown the runway in Tuesday's frosh fashion show.\n500 students in Brock Lounge\nwatched 15 freshettes model\nthe latest in clothes and\ndancing.\nCom. students\nshake cans\nThe United Appeal launches\nits campus drive Oct. 18.\nThe fund raising program\nruns from Oct. 18 to 22 with\na blitz program by 100 commerce students Oct. 20.\nThe Appeal's cans will be\ndistributed around campus\nfor donations.\nCampaign head Steve Mar-\nrit, Commerce IV, hopes the\ndrive will raise $2,000 as compared to last year's $1,500.\nAVID UBYSSEY READER ignores shapely calves during\nfrosh queens fashion show in Brock Monday. Interested\nspectator to his left said he had already finished the\npaper, and had nothing else to do but watch the show. Page 4\nTHE UBYSSEY\nThursday, October 7, 1965\nmmsssr\nPublished Tuesday, Thursdays and Fridays throughout the university\nyear by the Alma Mater Society, University of B.C. Editorial opinions\nexpressed are those of the editor and not necessarily those of the AMS\nor the University. Editorial office, CA 4-3916. Advertising office, CA 4-3242,\nLoc. 26. Member Canadian University Press. Founding member. Pacific\nStudent Press. Authorized as second-class mail by Post Office Department,\nOttawa, and for payment of postage in cash.\nWinner Canadian University Press trophies for general\nexcellence and news photography.\nTHURSDAY, OCT. 7, 1965\n\"The tigers of wrath are wiser than the horses\nof instruction.\" -Wm. Blake.\nAnother Fowler?\nWell, Dean Vincent Bladen's report on financing\nhigher education is out, and it looks good.\nIncreases in federal per capita grants from $2 to $5,\nas Bladen suggests, would certainly nullify any board\nof governors' excuse for a fee increase next year.\nAppointment of a federal niinister of higher education, as suggested by Bladen, would mean at last the\nfederal government would be unable to sluff off its\nresponsibility of insuring tomorrow's Canada has a\npopulation equipped to handle tomorrow's problems.\nA boost in federal and provincial grants to universities of five times the present level (over 10 years), as\nsuggested by Bladen, would mean universities' plants\ncould expand to meet the students pouring in.\nAnd both the annual student population increases,\nand a few affluent students suddenly finding the doors\nopen, would be in the rush. For the latter would be\ncoming as a result of a, boost in bursary add, as suggested\nby Bladen.\nAnd the universities would find yet another source\nof income to help finance plant expansion if university\ngraduates were asked to contribute one per cent of their\nincome, as suggested by Bladen.\nYes, as suggested by Dean Bladen, the report on\nfinancing higher education has a number of very good\nthings.\nWe wonder, though, about the good Dean's opposition to free tuition.\nSince tuition costs are already above the amount\nstudents can earn in a summer, and since Dean Bladen\nsuggests fees should not go up, and since student fees\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nas they stand\u00E2\u0080\u0094will make up a very small percentage of\nthe $2 billion cost of higher education Bladen predicts for\n1975, we are puzzled.\nWe cannot see why he could not advocate an opening\nof the doors to opportunity, by advocating lowering of\nfees.\nBladen says he is against free tuition because it is\nimpractical, because of the amount represented by student fees (about 5 per cent of the 1975 budget), and \"for\nthe sake of social justice.\"\nFantastic.\nWe say again, as so many tiresome times before,\nno strata of society could possibly oppose having the\nopportunity for their children to attend university.\nThe Bladen report now goes to the Association of\nUniversities and Colleges of Canada meeting in Vancouver Oct. 26 to 29. They plan to modify it as they see\nfit, and present their version of the report to the federal\ngovernment as a brief.\nWe hope the federal government will see fit to\nimplement this brief, even though some progressive\nsuggestions may be considered too radical for the AUCC,\nand therefore watered down.\nStill, unless the AUCC is entirely reactionary, those\npositive points of the Bladen report they do pass on to\nthe federal government will be worth putting into effect.\nOnly one thing troubles us.\nDoes anyone here remember the Fowler commission\nreport on broadcasting?\nEDITOR: Tom Wayman\nNews Ron Rlter\nAssociate George Reamsbottom\nCity . Richard Blair\nPhoto Bert MacKinnon\nSports Ed Clark\nAss't News Dan Malien\nRobbi West, Janet Matheson\nAsst City Al Donald\nPage Friday John Kelsey\nManaging Norm Betts\nFeatures Mike Bolton\nCUP Don Hull\nDoug fiajverson, Pat Houshowy,\nHowie White, Ann Slipper, Susan\nGransby, Richard Taylor, Anne\nRate], Diane Forster, Vivian\nGigun, Gordon McLaughlin, Anne\nBishop, Robin Russel. Derick\nBlackie, Mary Treloar, Dennis\nGans, Joe Varesi, Rick Magnon,\nCole Byfleet, Fearon Whitney and\nPowell Hargrave.\nnevns item:\nUBC STUDENTS\nGRrXDE PROFS\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094from the Ryersonian\nHey Charlie I Is there a hyphen in 'meat head'?\"\nLETTERS TO THE EDITOR\nDear Rod ...\nRod MacKenzie, Law Faculty:\nAlthough I am addressing\nthis letter to you, it is intended for all the students at\nthe University of British\nColumbia.\nIt was very distressing to\nread in the newspapers that\nthe students of your University had given Mr. Lesage a\nrousing, spontaneous stand-\novation.\nMr. Lesage is a smooth talker, a real 'sharpie' and it is\na shame that university students were \"taken in\" so to\nspeak, by his speech of Sept.\n28.\nThe French-speaking people do not want Quebec, they\nwant Canada .... all of it,\nunilingual. The sooner the\nEnglish-speaking people realize this, the better. The English people as a general rule,\nare too complacent, too easily\nled.\nDo not let fast talking politicians blind you to the facts.\nB. J. Barlow, Danville, Que.\nWhy now?\nEditor, The Ubyssey, Sir:\nMay I use your columns to\nsolicit the assistance of your\nreaders? In brief, I would like\nto know \"What They \"Wish\nThey Had Known Before\nComing To College\".\nI am now writing a book\nfor Canadian high school and\ncollege students. Some of the\nproposed sixteen chapters are,\nSelecting a Canadian College,\nSelecting Courses, The Care\nand Feeding of Professors, Information Display, Instant\nSophistication, The Search for\nMaturity and Residence Life.\nAnyone who has time to\nwrite during this busy period\nmay reach me c/o U. N. B.,\nFredericton, N. B.\nW. J. Heddin,\nAssociate professor\nFee fight biz just non-dynamic\nBy DANNY STOFFMAN\nFee rebels can rest assured.\nTheir protests have been\nreceiving careful attention in\nthe highest councils of our\ngovernment. In fact, top level\ndeliberations took place only\nrecently and we are pleased to\nbe able to release the first full\naccount of these discussions.\nThe Premier, reports our\nagent in the corridors of\npower, was sitting at his desk\nchatting with his Minister of\nHighways and Col. Mac,\nliquor control board cxar.\nThe Great Man, says our\ncorrespondent, effused a wide\ngrin as he discussed his recent\nvisit to Rome.\n\"Colonel, youd never believe it. There's this street\ncalled Via Veneto, where they\nsit at tables on the sidewalk\nand actually drink alcoholic\nbeverages. Why there's even\nbars without hotels!\"\n\"My goodness!\" shrieked\nthe colonel. \"Such sin! And in\n\"That's what happens when\nyou don't have a dynamic society,\" remarked the premier,\nsuddenly turning pensive.\n\"Is vodka allowed, preem?\"\nasked the Highways Minister\nbreathlessly.\n\"I don't know,\" replied the\nGreat Man coldly. \"Gentlemen, let's get down to business. I had a great time in\nLondon. Really great. Rome\nwas great and I saw the Pope\nand he was great. Now I come\nhome expecting to find everything great and what do I see\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094the students don't want to\npay their fees. Gentlemen, I\ncan tell you right now, I don't\nconsider that great. It isn't\neven dynamic.\"\n\"I'm sure they've been\ndrinking, Mr. Premier,\" shuddered the colonel. \"\n\"Say preem, why don't we\nraise the campus speed limit\nto 70?\" suggested the Highways Minister brightly. \"That\noughta shut the little bastards\n^^^^^m^mm^^^mm&\nk'C'3A'/.V'.V'\n\"Free higher education!\nWhere do they get such\nideas?\" exclaimed the Premier with a gesture of frustration.\n\"Next they'll be wanting\npubs without hotels,\" squealed the colonel, as he paced\nthe carpet with haughty, mincing steps.\n\"Preem, we can't eliminate\nthem fees,\" roared the Highways Minister. \"If we do how\ncan we afford that four-laner\nfrom Horsefly to Bella\nCoola?\"\n\"We won't eliminate them,'\nsaid the Great Man, slamming\nthe desk with his fist. \"Those\npeople will just have to learn\nthat in this world you don't\nget something for nothing.\"\nThen our leader relaxed,\nsitting back in his chair and\ngrinning widely, showing all\nhis iteeth. He pressed a button\non his intercom.\n\"Irving, are the plans ready\nfor raising the homeowners'\ngrant? They are? That's great!\n. .Really great!\" . ...,.-.,, Thursday, October 7, 1965\nTHE UBYSSEY\nPage 5\nFOREGROUND\nWithholding fees\nNo answer, AMS!\nBy MIKE BOLTON\nUbyssey Features Editor\nThe AMS will be executing\nits fee-fight plans over the\nnext few weeks.\nSoon there will be no time\nor space for back-tracking.\nWe will be committed to\nthe present policies.\nNow the time is ripe for a\nthoughtful look at what's happening.\nAMS policy aims are reduced tuition fees, more government aid for the operating\nand capital funds of universities, more student aid\nthrough scholarships and bursaries and more power for\nstudent leadership vis-a-vis\nfaculty and administration.\nAdmirable purposes from\nthe student point of view.\nSpringboard for these aims\nis a sort of shock campaign.\nBasic strategy is to foster\nmass awareness. Tactical weapons range from a protest\nmarch to the court house to\npassive resistance in refusing\nto pay second-term fees.\nTo this point the council\nand the Education Action\ncommittee, the special agency!\ncreated to effect the fee-fight\npolicy, are getting almost\nblanket support from The\nUbyssey and AMS membership.\nDisapproval has been minor\nand spasmodic.\nIs the policy flawless?\nThe original goal was the\nprevention of further fee increases. To that end the council adopted a policy of persuading students to withhold\nsecond-term fees.*\nA referendum for student\nratification of the policy will\nbe held Oct. 29. Almost 1,500\nstudents signed petitions asking for the referendum.\nNo one will object to action.\nHow well does the don't\npay - second - term - fees stack\nup?\nWhat ends will it achieve?\nWill it increase the status\nof the university in the eyes\nof the provincial and federal\ngovernments and the public at\nlarge? Will it convince people universities deserve more\nmoney?\nMore likely it will simply\ndeplete the universitie's operating monies. Maybe UBC\nwill be forced to shut down.\nWho will look foolish then?\nOr possibly students adhering to the policy will find\nthemselves threatened with\nexpulsion for not paying fees.\nPerhaps students will find\nit is to their benefit to reject\nthis policy.\nThe policy of asking students to withhold second-term\nfees seems doomed to utter\nfailure.\nThe wisest move for council now would be to drop\nthis policy before it becomes\nembarrassing.\nTo describe precisely the\nprocess of AMS decision-making is difficult.\nDo policies develop from\ndirectives of President Byron\nHender or from the chief fee\nBYRON HENDER\n... in command\nfight protagonists, vice-presidents Robert Cruise and Peter\nBraund?\nSo far councillors Cruise\nand Braund have been the\nspark plugs of the fee fight.\nBut I don't want to imply\nthat President Hender is too\nweak to direct AMS policy.\nI dislike equally the implication that councillors Cruise\nand Braund could design such\na hollow plan.\nThe policy of withholding\nfees grew from the need to\nreact immediately and decisively to the fee hike in May.\nIn candid moments councillors have intimated the policy was meant as a publicity\ngimmick and not designed to\nbe effective.\nThe only effect it can have\nis disaster.\nAnd no amount of rationalization can justify a public relations gimmick that gives\nonly adverse publicity.\nThere's a whole world outside the gates, councillors.\nLets show them we're\nready to fight\u00E2\u0080\u0094but don't\nrubject us to ridicule.\nNuns and birth control: j Court, sport,\nWhat about the pill? I spots filled\nThe following article is reprinted from the San Francisco Examiner. It was brought\nlo The Ubyssey's attention by\nLibrarianship student Sieglin-\nde Stieda, one of the founders\nof the UBC Demographic Society. The Demographic crowd\nis dedicated to spreading the\nword on birth control.\nRoman Catholic opposition\nto contraception pills does not\ngo to the point of denying\nthem to nuns and other women\nin danger of rape.\nThis is the conclusion to\nwhich three of the most eminent Vatican theologians have\ncome after mature study. Their\nfindings are reported in the\nauthoritative Catholic Church\npublications, Sludi Callolici\n(Catholic studies).\nMsgr. Ferdinando Lambru-\nschini, professor of moral theology at the pontifical Lateran\nUniversity, one of the main\nCatholic seminaries of Rome,\nmade the point that Catholic\nmarried couples are denied the\nright to use the pills even if\nthere are good reasons not to\nhave any more children. They\ncan use an even more radical\ntechnique for avoiding children\u00E2\u0080\u0094abstention.\nThe rape victim lacks this\nalternative and therefore can\ntake the pills, Msgr. Lambru-\nschini said.\nFather Francis Hurt, a Jesuit\nprofessor at the Georgian University, the main Rome seminary, said that a farmer has the\nright to defend his property\neven with machine guns and\nthat a human being in certain\ncircumstances is justified in\nsuspending various bodily\nfunctions, causing temporary\nblindness, deafness, indigestion, or interference with lung\nor even heart action.\nIn like manner, given the\ncircumstances of threatened\nrape, the female victim would\nbe justified in defending herself by arresting the germination function of the egg cell.\nMsgr. Pietro Palazzini, the\nsecretary of the Vatican's councilor congregation, the section\nconcerning the Catholic bishops of the world, shared the\nJesuit's view. He said a nun\nwould be justified in small\nself-mutilations, such as injections to cause facial carbuncles, in an effort to disgust a\nrapist and that a suspension\nof a procreative function\nwould be even more easily\njustified.\nThe discussion was promoted\nin part by sexual abuse of\nnuns in the Congo several\nmonths ago and by danger of\nnew race riots in other parts\nof the world.\nAppointments to student court and the winter\nsports centre management\ncommittee were made\nMonday.\nStudent council appointed Bruce Greyell,\nLaw II, to one of four\nstudent court judges' positions to be filled.\nGreyell previously held\nposts as president of the\ni United Nations club and\nco-chairman of the International Clubs Symposium.\nDonald Thomas, zoology grad student, and\nRoger Parkes, grad stu-\nIdies I, were appointed\nmembers of the student\nsports centre manage-\nI ment.\ni The management com-\nII mittee is a student-faculty\n|| group which operates the\narena, built two years ago\nby student money.\nThe Return of\nTHE\nROAD RUNNER\n(meep-meep)\nfive (beat Films\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2Jkr\nFORMAL AND\nSEMI-FORMAL\nRental and Sales\nTUX-DOS - WMITI DINNSt\nMOOTS ^ TAU - MOMMNO\nCOATS - ACC-SSOBIfS\nMcCUISH\nConsists Shm Rang*\nSTU0B4T SATES\nFORMAL WEAR\nLTD.\n2046 W. 41st\nMOtt-SAT.^ff-M *\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 $m\nPH. 263-3410\nGSR NEWS\nPHOTOS FOR TOTEM\nStudents who plan to graduate during this academic year\nand who wish their photographs to appear in the Totem\nYearbook may have their pictures taken on campus by\nCampbell's Studios, at their mobile unit which will be\nlocated next to the Stadium. The GSA has reserved the\nfollowing date: Thursday, October 14, from 9:30-12:00\nand from 1:00-4:00. Students who are unable to appear\nat this time may have their photos taken with students\nof other faculties, at the same location, up until October\n22, 1965. Thereafter arrangements must. be made with\nCampbell's Studios.\n. . . \"On the other hand, the Roadrunner's sensitive\ndevelopment was almost Dostoevskian in depth of feeling,\nas contrasted with the Becket-like austerity of the plot . . .\"\nFriday October 8\nTuesday October 12\nin the\nAuditorium\n12:30 Both Days\nSponsored by The Ubyssey and Pique Page 6\nTHE UBYSSEY\nThursday, October 7, 1965\nCOUNCIL BOX SCORE\nHere again is your handy-dandy box score on council\nattendance.\nBrought to you courtesy of The Ubyssey, it is a regular\nfeature to tell you who is working and who isn't.\nFor the second meeting in a row, there was 100 per\ncent attendance.\nNewcomers to the council are recently-elected architecture president Ken Hutchinson and library president Nick\nOmelusik.\nTitle\nNames\nPresent\nMissed\nQuebec government has deaf ear\nfor French student's demands\nMONTREAL w j Outstanding value\nin quality slacks \u00E2\u0080\u0094\ntailored, styled\nand luxuriously\ntrimmed by one of Canada's\nleading firms in \"prestige\nquality\" clothing. Featuring\nthe exclusive \"Kant Kurt\"\nwaistband.\ni rogressjjrand\nFor Clothing for Campus\nand Dress Up Occasions\nClinton's\nMEN'S WEAR\n742 Granville MU 1-5625\nJust a half block down\nfrom Birks Thursday, October 7, 1965\nTHE UBYSSEY\nPage 7\nv5tsSS*U\u00C2\u00BB-\u00C2\u00AB^\nCash comes and goes...\nStatement of Estimated Gross Revenue and Proposed Expenditure\nFor the\nYEAR ENDING MAY 31, 1966\nREVENUE\nDirector to A.M.S.\nAlma Mater Society Fees\nRental Income\nInterest Income\nSundry Income\nRevenue from Subsidiary Organizations:\nA.M.S. Charter Flight\nCampus Activities and Events\nCollege Shop\nPublications Advertising\nPublications Sales\nUndergraduate Societies etc.\nUniversity Clubs Committee\nRevenue of Associated Organizations:\nGrad Class\nMen's Athletics\nWomen's Athletics\nTotal Revenue\nALLOCATION OF FEES COLLECTED\nNon Discretionary:\n$ 423,400\n2,200\n20,000\n3,700\n55,050\n27,745\n30,770\n42,750\n12,250\n72,806\n28,787\n15,000\n32,750\n4,500\n$ 449,300\n270,158\n52,250\n$ 771,708\nStudent Union Building\n$ 219,000\nAccident Benefit Fund\n1,460\nBrock Art Fund\n1,500\nBrock Management Fund\n7,300\nCanadian Union of Students\n8,760\nMen's Athletic Committee\n61,320\nWomen's Athletic Committee\n11,680\n$ 311,020\nDiscretionary:\nUndergraduate Societies, etc.\n80,906\nIntramural Fund\n1,350\nOpen House Reserve\n1,000\nWorld University Service Committee\n11,700\n94,956\nEXPENDITURE\nA.M.S. and Subsidiary Organizations:\nA.M.S. Charter Flight\n55,050\nCampus Activities & Events\n46,800\nCollege Shop\n28,270\nPublications\n77,850\nRegistration Photographs\n4,400\nUniversity Clubs Committee\n33,312\nAdministrative & General Expenses\n46,630\n292,312\nAssociated Organizations:\nGrad Class\nMen's Athletics\nWomen's Athletics\nTotal Allocation & Expenditure\nMARGIN\n15,000\n32,750\n4,500\n52,250\n750,538\n21,170\n$ 771,708\n...to these groups, things\nStatement of Estimated Net Revenue and Proposed Expenditure\nYEAR ENDING MAY 31. 1966\nProposed\n1966\nPet. of\nBudget\nTotaJ\n1965\nAlma Mater Society Fees\nProfit from College Shop\nRental Income\nInterest Income\nSundry Income\n$ 423,400\n2,500\n2,200\n20,000\n3,700\n93.71%\n.55\n.49\n4.43\n.82-\n$ 430,168\n3,665\n2,019\n12,119\n3,739\nTotal Revenue\nALLOCATION OF FEES COLLECTED\nNon Discretionary:\nStudent Union Building\nAccident Benefit Fund\nBrock Art Fund\nBrock Management Funa\nCanadian Union of Students\nMen's Athletic Committee\nWomen's Athletic Committee\nW.U.S.C.\nDiscretionary:\nUndergraduate Societies\nAcademic Symposium, Schedule 2\nGrad Stud. Association, Schedule 2\nRadio Society, Schedule 2\nIntramural Fund\nOpen House Reserve\nW.U.S.C.\nEXPENDITURE\nCampus Activities & Events, Schedule. 3\nPublications, Schedule 3\nRegistration Photographs\nUniversity Clubs Committee\nAdministrative & General Expenses\nTotal Allocation & Expenditures\nMARGIN\n$ 451,800\n219,000\n1,460\n1,500\n7,300\n8,760\n61,320\n11,680\n100.00% $ 451,710\n48.47%\n.32\n.33\n1.62\n1.94\n13.57\n2.59\n311,020\n7,136\n400\n350\n215\n1,350\n1;000\n11,700\n22,150\n19,055\n22,850\n4,400\n4,525\n46,630\n97,460\n430,630\n21,170\n451,800\n68.84\n1.58\n.09\n.08\n.04\n.30\n.22\n2.59\n4.90\n4.22\n5.06\n.97\n1.00\n10.32\n21.57\n95.31\n4.69\n100.00%\n$ 219,555\n2,927\n1,500\n7,318\n8,782\n61,476\n11,710\n14,637\n327,905\n11,027\n400\n400\n250\n1,464\n1,000\n14,541\n18,677\n22,819\n4,491\n5,694\n46,183\n97,864\n440,310\n11,400\n451,710\nTHE WHEELERS\nSALES AND SERVICE\n4368 W. 10th Ave. 224-1828\nHONDA SPECIALISTS\nSPECIALS:\nRAIN SUITS . . . $2.99\nHELMETS .... $10.95\n10% Down and\n24 Months to Pay\nBAY\nSTARTS TOMORROW!\nThe Chalk Garden\nDeborah Kerr, Haley and\nJohn Mills\n(Color)\nPLUS\nCrooks Anonymous\nLeslie Phillips,\n Rtanlpy Baxte\nDELTA\nSTARTS TOMORROW!\nThe Lion\nWilliam Holden, Capucine\nplus\nThe Second Time Around\nDebbie Reynolds,\nAndy Griffith\nEATON'S\nBirkdale\nA foremost name in men's clothing, Birkdale\nmeans quality in workmanship and material.\nBirkdale . . . only at EATON'S!\nCasual Birkdale Shirts\n\"Specified\" sportshirts \u00E2\u0080\u0094 quality made long sleeves styles in\nSanforized, yarn - dyed woven\ncotton. Regular and button\ndown collars. Blue, green,\ngoldtone, brown.\nEach 5.00\nSizes S.M.L..XL,.\nBulky-Knit Cardigans\nBirkdale fully fashioned saddle shoulder style. Leather\nbuttons, ribbed style cuffs,\nwaistband. Sizes S.M.L. Beige,\ngrey, Dill green, black, Peat\nbrOWn- each 19.95\nAlso available in pullover style.\nEach 14.95\n^yW\u00C2\u00BB *.*\u00C2\u00BB$ S*&~K- ~ \u00C2\u00ABf *~^J ?%&*V?\u00C2\u00B0&i * '&%?'\n< ir,\n??7*'*i *Z\nChoose \"just the right\" English Briar Pipe\nMade to EATON'S own specifications . . . Briar pipes curve to the\nhand, clench comfortably in the mouth, offer easy draw. EATON'S\npipes are quality briars of light, durable texture. There's a style\nand finish to suit a man's personality.\nA. Haddon Hall Blue Dot, ^ 5.95\nB. Haddon Hall Red Dot, ^^ 795\nC- Haddon Hall Yellow Dot, ^^ 7,95\nD. Birkdale Custom Light Blue Dot, eac|I 10.00 Page 8\nTHE UBYSSEY\nThursday, October 7, 1965\nUBC commerce dept.\naids Asian universities\nBy MARILYN LEESE\nHelp.\nThat's what members of\nUBC's commerce faculty have\nbeen giving the Universities\nof Singapore and Malaya.\nThe .project .which began\nin May, 1961, saw the establishment of courses in accounting and business management at the two universities.\nDirecting the project was\nProfessor Leslie G. Wong who\nrecently returned to UBC\nupon completion of the program.\nThe need for the courses\nwas brought about by the government's decision to \"Malay -\nanize the civil service,\" said\nWong.\nThe government also urged\nbusiness in the country, which\nis now split into Singapore\nand Malaysia, to adopt the\nsame policy.\nThe resultant departure of\nforeign personnel sparked an\nurgent need for local talent\ncapable of assuming managerial positions.\nWong was first invited to\nSingapore in 1958 and spent\nten week there assessing the\nfeasibility of establishing commerce courses to train future\nexecutives.\nIn the same year the University of Malaya in Singapore, established nine years\nearlier by London University,\nsplit with a second division in\nKuala -jumper, which is now\nin the separate state of\nMalaysia.\nWong recommended that\naccounting and business management courses be introduced\nat the Singapore division, but\na change of government took\nplace and the implementation\nof his program was deferred.\nIn 1960, Wong returned to\nSingapore to reassess his original survey, this time spon\nsored by the Canadian government under the Colombo Plan.\nHis report, made in January\n1961, included a recommendation that business courses also\nbe started at the Kuala Lumper division as well as at\nSingapore.\nBy May 1961, the Canadian\ngovernment agreed to underwrite the program up to a\nmaximum of $500,000, and the\nfirst team of UBC professors\nwas on its way.\nWong believes this to be the\nfastest Colombo project implemented and he credits former external affairs minister\nHoward Green with the swift\naction.\nThe first team of five professors included Professor\nArthur Beedle, Professor\nDaniel McDonald, Dr. William\nHughes, Dr. Noel Hall and\nWong.\nUBC members of later\nteams were Professor Harvey\nBabiak, Dr. G. David Quirin,\nProfessor John C. Mitchell\nand Professor Hugh Wilkinson.\nThe business courses were\noffered by the department of\neconomics of each division as\na three-year program leading\nto a bachelor of arts degree.\nDuring the past five years\n2,097 Singapore and Malayan\nstudents have registered for\nthese courses.\nIn order to sustain the\nquality of the program with\nlocal staff, selected graduate\nstudents have been recruited\nunder Colombo Plan scholarships for graduate studies at\nUBC.\nWong said about nine are\nnow attending UBC prior to\nreturning to teaching positions at either the University\nof Malaya or the University of\nSingapore.\nThe two became separate\nand autonomus institutions in\n1962.\nThe Ford Foundation Thursday made a grant of $250,000\nto the two southeast Asian\nuniversities to finance a continuing program of graduate\nstudies at UBC and Harvard.\nWong said: \"One of the advantages of UBC handling the\nproject was that one institution was charged with the responsibility of staffing, and\ncontrolling the substance and\ncontinuity of the courses.\"\n\"Another advantage was\nthe coordination of administrative detail simplified such\nproblems as adequate housing,\" he said.\nWong said the expulsion of\nSingapore from Malaysia\nshould not affect the project.\nHe said the universites have\nestablished a liaison committee and co-ordinate such matters as new courses and the\nlevel of faculty salaries.\nHe said both the governments of Malaysia and Singapore are anxious to promote a\nhigher standard of living and\nare rushing programs in education and industrialization.\nProof of the success of the\nproject was the citation it received at the 1963 Commonwealth University Conference\nin London, England.\nThe citation praised UBC's\naction as an ideal example of\nassisting higher education in\ndeveloping countries.\nPentax _\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00C2\u00BB. _\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00C2\u00BB_\nSpotmatic $99 00\nSURE!\nON A BODY\nFOR BODY SWAP\nTrade your Pentax S.V. body and coupled Meter II\n(in good shape) on a new SPOTMATIC body for only $99\nthis week. Slightly more for older bodies or other makes.\nKERRISDALE CAMERAS\nFROSH BALL-\nCORSAGE ? ?\nCall Strathcona Floral\nCo. Ltd.\n5555 W. Blvd.\nAM 1-7271\nFREE\nTransportation\nFrom Campus to\nCollege Bible Class\nat\nBroadway\nTabernacle\neach Sunday A.M.\nPlease contact the\nPentacostal Chaplain\nMiss Bernice Gerard\nor Ken Gaglardi\n266-9275\nRoom 118, Physics Bldg.\nUNDERGRAD BUDGETS\nProp.\nAlloc.\n1965\nAgriculture $\nArchitecture\nArts\nB.Comm.-C.A. Students\nCommerce\nEducation\nEngineering\nForestry\nFrosh\nHome Economics\nLaw\nLibrarianship\nMedical\nMusic Students\nNursing\nPharmacy\nPhysical Education\nRehabilitation Medicine\nScience\nSocial Work\nUndergraduate Societies Committee\nMargin\n326\n174\nAlloc.\n1966\n$ 425\n154\n120\n400\n1,044\n1,192\n152\n725\n1,100\n1,490\n300\n57\n783\n117\n275\n900\n731\n218\n174\n239\n191\n83\n692\n692\n290\n900\n260\n265\n300\n235\n120\n840\n550\nBal.\nMay 31,\n1965\n$ 142\n\"( 62)\n110\n1\n118\n( 781)\n( 300)\n938\n( 177)\n294\n52\n55\n102\n( 211)\n( 13)\n( 266)\n( 21)\n91\n( 301)\n971\n$ 7,135 $ 8,839 $ 742\n$ 400 $ 400 $ ( 124)\nAcademic Symposium\nGraduate Students' Association $ 350 $ 400\nRadio Society\n$ 596\n$ 215 $ 250 $<1,367)\n* Bracketed amounts are deficit..\nThis Year's\nGRAD BOOK\n. . . will be a combination of \"campus life\" and the grad\nedition.\n300 picture-packed pages in a hard board cover.\n. . . advance orders receive an 8-page graduation supplement of your graduation ceremonies\u00E2\u0080\u0094mailed to YOU\nin June.\n... all this is yours for only $5.00\nCAMPUS LIFE . . .\n... 144 pages of you and your campus.\n. . . photos and photo essays with a record of events as\nthey happen.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 for undergrads - only $2.00\nBUY YOUR TOTEM NOW\nAvoid disappointment\nAt AMS business office and totem office BE 168\n2170 W. 41st\nAM 6-2622\nATTENTION UBC STUDENTS\nOur Selection of Sporting and Athletic Equipment\nIs Selected With YOU In Mind\nSee Our Selection of Bauer and C.C.M. Skates\nAlso Sticks \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Pads \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Helmets, etc.\nHOCKEY, SOCCER, FOOTBALL\nSPECIALISTS\nNORTH\nWESTERN SPORTING GOODS\nLTD.\nTenth at Alma\nPhone 224-5040 Thursday, October 7, 1965\nTHE UBYSSEY\nPage 9\nHitch a ride with Mike\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094Air Canada dubious\nSt. JOHN'S, Nfld. (CUP)\u00E2\u0080\u0094\n(Prime Minister Pearson told\nstudents last week that if all\nelse fails they should try to\narrange free flights home with\nAir Canada to vote in the Nov.\n8 election.\nHe made the suggestion\nafter he stated that the chief\nelectoral officer had not advised him there would be any\ndifficulty with student voting\nbefore he called the election.\nAir Canada President G. R.\nWomen sweep into\nmens residences\nBy BILL GRAF\nStudents in the men's residences at Lower Mall, Acadia\nand Fort Camp may wake up one morning and find a\nwoman in their quarters.\nThey'll be female janitors\nwearing identification card attached to their lapels.\nResidence cleaning and\nmaintenance has recently been\norganized under a housekeeping section which is subordinate to the housing administration.\nThe newly created department, under Mrs. Doreen\nKNUTE BUTTEDAHL\n. . . teamwork\nCUSO wants\n600 more\nvolunteers\nOTTAWA (CUP) \u00E2\u0080\u0094 The Canadian Universiy Service Overseas (CUSO) wants to triple its\nprogram by 1967.\nAt the national conference\nof CUSO held in Ottawa Oct.\n2 and 3, the student organization resolved to increase its\npresent S23 overseas volunteers to 1,000 within the next\ntwo years.\nWhether the projected expansion can be achieved will\ndepend on CUSO's relationship\nwith the federal government\nand the Company of Young\nCanadians, according to Paul\nLadouceur, international affairs secretary of the Canadian Union of Students.\nCUSO has a budget of $215,-\n000, half of which comes from,\ncorporate donations and half\nfrom the federal government.\nPrime Minister Pearson, ad-\n^dressing the conference at a\n^ttKicheon Oct. 1, said the government would continue an\n\"active partnership and co-operation with CUSO whether\nthrough direct assistance or\nthrough the Company of Young\nBlackwood, will function as a\nkind of \"janitor-pool.\"\nInstead of the system of one\njanitor to a house or hut, personnel will be assigned for\nspecific tasks.\n\"The aim of the new system,\" says acting housing director Knute Buttedahl, \"is to use\nour present staff to best advantage and develop specialization and efficiency.\n\"For example, extra demands on janitorial staff would\noccur after a residence dance,\nor for spring cleaning.\n\"Functioning as a team, several men and women can work\nmore effectively in cleaning\"\nhe said.\nButtedahl said the system\nwas first tried experimentally\nat summer school in all residences and women janitors\nhave been at work in Totem\nresidences since the beginning\nof the fall term.\n\"In both cases, it seems to\nhave worked very well,\" he\nsaid.\nLower Mall, Fort Camp and\nAcadia residences have not\nyet been affected.\nIn a prepresentative poll of\nresidence students, it was\nfound that less than 1% were\naware of the change.\nIn fact, not one of five janitors polled knew of the change.\nReactions among male students were: 64 per cent against\n26 per cent indifferent, 10 per\ncent in favor. Virtually all\nwere opposed if the change involved a lay-off or dismissal of\npresent staff.\nMany students plan to actively oppose women janitors\nentering men's residences.\nSome of the plans of resistance\nwere ingenious. Others were\nobscene.\n\"I'd rather fight than\nswitch,\" said Larry Gradin,\nArts II, of Lower Mall.\nSaid one Fort Camp student.\n\"I guess it's all right if they\nhire some nice young ones,\npreferably recent immigrants\nfrom Sweden.\"\n\"If a student lives off cam-\npus\u00E2\u0080\u0094in a boarding house or\nhotel for example\u00E2\u0080\u0094one must\nuse a little discretion,\" said\nButtedahl. \"There's no reason\nwhy the same principle cannot\nbe applied in residences.\n\"Female staff especially will\nbe thoroughly instructed to employ discretion at all times.\"\n\"Signs will be posted on\nwashrooms and in halls whenever a janitoress is present,\"\nhe said.\nButtedahl denied that any\npresent staff will be laid off\nor fired as a result of the\nchanges.\nMacGregor, in a phone interview, reacted to the story by\ntelling students:\n'They are wasting their\ntime getting in touch with us.\nThere are a few laws about\nthis you know,\"\nAsked whether the Prime\nMinister had been in touch\nwith him he replied:\n\"No.\"\nThe Canadian Union of Students estimates that over 7,000\nstudents of voting age live at\nleast 500 miles from home.\nNearly 4,000 of these live at\nleast 1,000 miles from home.\nAccording to Air Canada\nfigures it would take approximately 28 Vanguards and 30\nDC-8's to airlift the students\nto the polls. Total cost at\ncharter rates for the return\ntrips would be a minimum of\n$375,000.\nWINRAM INSURANCE LIMITED\nSPECIALIZING IN REDUCING\nSURCHARGED AUTO PREMIUMS\nRE 1-5328\n1678 West Broadway\nAnglicans and United\nCome Together\nto\nA Short Service, Discussion\nand Coffee Hour\n\"\nUniversity Hill United Church\n5375 University Boulevard\nthis Sunday, October 10th, at 7:30 p.m.\nSpeaker: Rev. Desmond Kimmitt,\nSt. Anselm's Anglican Church\nGEORGIA AT GRANVILLE\nadvanced jacketry\n... wide wale corduroy with leather-\nlike detail on pockets, matched with\nleather buttons . . . combined to be a\nworthy escort for a smiling co-ed and\nequally adept on-campus or off! Subtle shades of beige, brown, green or\ngrey all coming up effectively in\nlustrous cotton corduroy, in 3-button,\nnatural shoulder styling, with centre\nvent. Sizes 36-44 for regular, short\nand tall.\nEach 29.95\nThe Bay Career and Campus Shop,\nsecond floor\nCanadians.\" Page 10\nTHE UBYSSEY\nThursday, October 7, 1965\nFOOTBALL BIRDS SET FOR HOME OPENER\nIAN DONALD\n. . . these\nGEORGE BRAJCICH\n. . , five\nMIKE ROHAN\n. . . will\nThunderbirds entertain\nLumberjacks Saturday\nBy DAN MULLEN\nThe UBC Thunderbirds will\ntry for their first 1965 football\nvictory when they open their\nhome season Saturday against\nthe Humboldt State College\nLumberjacks.\nUBC has lost to Western\nWashington and tied with\nSouthern Oregon and McMaster, while the Lumberjacks\nhave defeated Central Washington and Hawaii, and lost last\nweek to Williamette.\nHumboldt State is a small\nschool (its enrolment is barely\nover 3,000), but its football attitude is big league.\n\"They take the game very\nseriously, and it pays off for\nthem in the win column,\" UBC\nhead coach Frank Gnup says.\n\"Their coach (Phil Sarboe)\nhas won 100 games and lost\nonly 33 since he took over at\nHumboldt in 1951, and when\nyou look at the films of their\ngames, you see why. They're\nbig, fast and tough. They charge\nstraight ahead at good teams,\nand they beat them.\"\nYanks-Soviets\nclash at UBC\nTickets for the Russia-U.S.\nvolleyball match are now available at UBC Memorial Gym.,\nin the athletic office.\nThe Russian men's team,\nOlympic and world champions,\nplay the U.S. Nationals, Oct. 16\nat the Memorial Gym.\nThe Soviet women, who won\na silver medal at the Tokyo\nOlympics, play an exhibition,\nwhile a local all star team plays\nthe U.S. national women.\nTickets are $3, $2, and $1\nrush, and are also on sale at\nVancouver Ticket Centre, Kerrisdale Travel and. all Eaton's\nstores.\nNicholson speaks\nJohn Nicholson, minister of\ncitizenship and immigration,\nwill speak on community planning Friday noon in Lasserre\n102.\n10% OFF CORSAGES\nTo All UBC Students\nORDER EARLY\nVOGUE FLOWER SHOP\n2197 W Broadway 736-7344\nHumboldt State arrives here\nthis afternoon from Areata,\nCalifornia, to prepare for Saturday's clash at Varsity Stadium. Game time is 2 p.m.\nThe Lumberjacks won eight\ngames and lost two in 1964,\nposting a 4-1 record in Far\nWestern Conference play. They\nmauled Whitworth College 21-3\nin an small college playoff bowl\ngame.\nSports Illustrated lists them\nas strong contenders for the\nFar Western title again this\nyear.\nAnd the Thunderbirds are\nbracing for a rugged afternoon.\nVeteran Dick Gibbons will\nstart at quarterback for the\nThunderbirds. Newcomer Aldo\nVenier will run from the full\nback slot, flanked by halfbacks\nPaul Danyliu and Ron Kincade.\nIan Donald, in his fourth\nseason with the Birds, will man\none end post, and speedy Lance\nFletcher will be at the other.\nLeading UBC interior lineman will be captain George\nBrajcich, tackle. His running\nmate is John Christopher.\nAt the guards the Birds will\nhave Kevin Murphy and Paul\nKileen. Mike Rohan is the\ncenter.\nSPORTS\nEditor: Ed Clark\nIVOR WILLIAMS\nVARSITY\nSPORTING GOODS\nSKI SPECIALISTS\nHART-GRESVIG\nSTUDENT HEADQUARTERS\nFOR ALL SPORTS EQUIPMENT\nSkate Sharpening \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Restringing\n4510 W. 10th 224-6414\nU.B.C THUNDERBIRD\nWINTER SPORTS CENTRE\nSKATING SCHEDULE - 1965-66\nEffective September 24th 1965 to April 15th 1966\nTUESDAYS\nWEDNESDAYS\nFRIDAYS\nSATURDAYS\nSUNDAYS\n12:45\u00E2\u0080\u00942:45 p.m.*\n2:00\u00E2\u0080\u00943:30 p.m.\n7:30\u00E2\u0080\u00949:30 p.m.\n3:00\u00E2\u0080\u00945:00 p.m.\n7:30\u00E2\u0080\u00949:30 p.m.**\n3:00\u00E2\u0080\u00945:00 p.m.\n7:30\u00E2\u0080\u00949:30 p.m.**\n12:45\u00E2\u0080\u00942:45 p.m.\n7:30\u00E2\u0080\u00949:30 p.m.\n(Beginners & Preschool Children)\n* Special student admission: 15 cents.\n** Except when hockey games scheduled \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Nov. 19 & 20,\nJan. 28 & 29, Feb. 11 & 12 and two more dates not scheduled.\nADMISSION: Afternoons \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Students .35* Adults .60<\nEvenings \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Students .50* Adults .75?\nSkate Rental .35* per pair \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Skate Sharpening .35* per pair\nNOTE: The Centre will be closed all day Christmas Day\nand Good Friday.\nFor further information: Call 224-3205 or 228-3197\nLANCE FLETCHER\n. . . start\nDICK GIBBONS\n. . . Saturday\nExfension department\noffers IBM courses\nFive evening courses on computers start next week.\nThe UBC extension department is offering introductory courses in digital computer applications, IBM 1401\nprogramming and Fortran IV programming.\nClasses meet Tuesdays and Wednesdays at 8 p.m.\nA mangement operation research course will be held\nMondays at 8 p.m.\nA short course in the use of computers in structural\nanalysis is also planned.\nFurther information may be obtained from the UBC\nextension department.\n... GO TO LONDON DRUGS\nOPTICAL DEPT.\nfor the\nlowest prices in town.\nEyeglasses $0-95\nINCLUDING FRAME, %M\nLENSES AND CASE FROM ^*\nBring Your Optical Prescription\nD-f-_-___l__ with lenses, frames 1A AC\nbllOCalS and case from l_C_93\nContact Lenses 49.50\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2Single Vision Glass.] Only\nEmergency Prescription Service Available\nOur Prices\nor* THE\nLowest in\nTown!\nimiTEl\nOPTICAL DEPT.\nONE LOCATION ONLY\n677 Granville, opposite The Bay. Phone 681-6174\n1 Hour Free Parking at Rite Park Thursday, October 7, 1965\nTHE UBYSSEY\nPage 11\nSPORTS BACKGROUND\nCanadians were finally there\nThe following is an account written for the\nCanadian University Press by Bruce Kldd, famed\nToronto track star, who accompanied the Canadian\nteam to the Universiade 1965 in Budapest, Hungary. These are the World Games of the \"Federation Internationale du Sport Universitaire\"\n(FISU). University athletes from 38 countries participated in the games from Aug. 20-29.\nBy BRUCE KIDD\nIf it wasn't for the spanking new Maple\nLeaf flag they were marching behind, you\nwould have thought the team members of\nCanada's first entry to the World Student\nGames were just ten gypsies who had wandered in from the moors and accidently got\nmixed up in the gala parade of the Games\nopening ceremony.\nIn sharp comparison with the other 1700\nsmartly-stepping, nattily uniformed athletes\nparading into Budapest's National Stadium,\nthe Canadians, dressed in a motley assortment of suits, sweaters, sports jackets, and\nblazers, plodded aimlessly around the track.\nYet they were there.\nAfter many years of frustration for Canadian college athletes who wanted to compete\nin the Games, but couldn't, Canada had\nfinally sent a team.\nSending it there had meant a good deal of\nblood, sweat, and tears for the Canadian\nUnion of Students executive, who last year\nseized the initiative and decided to get some\nCanadians to Budapest. Just raising enough\nmoney was a major problem, and CUS was\nbarely able to scrape together enough to fly\nin ten athletes and provide them with competitive uniforms.\nBut the effort was well worth it.\nFor a significant contribution has been\nmade to both the international and the Canadian intercollegiate sports movement.\nUp until the Universiade, the Games had\nsuffered from the absence of many western\ncompetitors. Canada's appearance and the\nentry of such athletes as Bill Crothers and\nHarry Jerome contributed to the raising of\nperformances to such a level that very soon\nthe Universiade will rank second only to the\nOlympics.\nAnd the fact that now Canadian college\nathletes can look foward to international\ncompetition in the Tokyo Universiade in\n1967 has provided a tremendous boost to\nthe college sports scene.\nWhile they dressed like paupers, the Canadians ran like princes, capturing four\nmedals in the last four days of competition.\nHarry Jerome began the march to the\npodium with a bronze medal in the 100\nmetres. After Cuba's Enrique Figuerola withdrew because of a pulled muscle, the anticipated race of the year between the two still-\ncompeting medalists in the Olympic 100,\nJerome and Figuerola, was all off, but spectators got the race of the year anyway.\nIn a photo finish final, Japan's Hideo\nIijima nipped USA's George Anderson for\nthe championship, while a near-lame Jerome\nwas a half a body's width behind. The winning time was a fast 10.1 and the first six\nfinishers were clocked in 10.3 or better.\nBill Crothers gave the Games its classiest\nvictory a day later with a thrilling exhibition\nof steel nerves and a quick kick. Until a\nmere hundred yards from the finish, the\nToronto graduate pharmacist lingered in\nseventh place \u00E2\u0080\u0094 and then he moved. Forty\nyards later the 800 final was in the bag, as\nthe fastest 800-meter men in the world tried\nin vain to catch the fleeing Canadian.\nCrothers' winning time of 1:47.7 established a new Games record.\nEasily one of the most courageous performances in the Games was Abby Hoffman's\nthird-place finish in the women's 800. Miss\nHoffman literally fought her way past Hungary's Olga Kazy on the final bend to enter\nthe stretch in third about ten yards up on her\nnearest pursuer. But then fatigue hit her\nlike a hammer and it appeared that she\nwould never finish. But hang on grimly she\ndid, and staggered across the finish with a\nbronze medal by a yard and a new Canadian\nrecord of 2:07.8.\nDespite the keen competition which characterized every sport contested at the Games,\nrivalry was powerless to stop spontaneous\noutbursts of camaraderie and good spirit\namong the student athletes. Best example of\nthis was the victory ceremonies, where instead of the national anthem of the winner,\nthe international student song, Gaudeamus\nIgitur, was played.\nEvery time a winner was declared, the\nwhole stadium rose as one and joined in,\noften with interlocking arms. And usually\nthe athletes on the podium sang the loudest.\nHardly lacking any of the heights of performance of other international games, the\nUniversiade in Budapest by its friendly spirit\ndemonstrated without doubt that sport can\nbe one of the world's great unifiers of men.\nH. W. PARKER\ndesign director of the Royal Ontario Museum\nfaolulion ogih* C/huaJ UJohld\nBeing an examination of the world of sight and sound\nIt is unique and edifying and not to be missed\nNOON TODAY\n25c\nAUDITORIUM\nSPECIAL\nEVENTS\nTODAY 12:30 BROCK 25c\nTHE THREE D's\nSpecializing in folk music, they expand from there and\nrun the entertainment gamut from light comedy to sem-\nclassical song, accompanying themselves on a variety\nof instruments from trumpet to banjo. The three D's won\nthe best song academy award for\ntheir Chim Chim Chiree, the theme song\nof \"Mary Poppins\"\nOCTOBER 8, 9 & 10\nB.C. UNIVERSITIES\nTEACH-IN AT BROCK\nB.C. UNIVERSITIES' TEACH - IN\nA faculty-student seminar discussing RESPONSE to REVOLUTIONS\nFRIDAY, OCT. 8, 8 P.M.: Panel discussion to introduce the issues.\n10 P.M.: Dr Linus Pauling.\nSATURDAY, OCT. 9, 10.30 A.M.: The UBC Teach - In joins the University of Toronto\nTeach - In by direct wire to hear representatives of the U.S. State Dept., the Saigon\ngovernment, the National Liberation Front (Viet Cong), and Cambodia discuss the\nwar in Vietnam\n2:30 P.M.: A panel chaired by Dr. Holland, Head of UBC's Asian Studies Dept.,\ndiscusses Vietnam. Panelists include Dr. Wm. Willmott and Dr K. Holsti. Also\nRobert Scheer, of Berkeley.\n8:30 PM.: Canada's Role in crisis situations is discussed by Howard Green (P.C.),\nJack Austin (Lib.), and Bob Prittie (NDP) Chaired by Dean F. H. Soward.\nSUNDAY, OCT. 10,9:30 AM.: Delayed broadcast from Toronto of the debate between\nCheddi Jagan (British Guiana), A. Lock ward (Dominican Republic) and A. Berle\n(U.S. State Dept.).\n11:00 A.M.: UBC panel discusses self-determination in S.E. Asia, Africa, Latin\nAmerica and Eastern Europe.\n2:30 P.M.: Moral Responsibility: the question of personal committment is debated\nby Wm. Nicholls (Head of UBC's Religious Studies Dept.), Robert Scheer of Berkeley\nand two students.\nALL SESSIONS include time for STUDENT DISCUSSION from the floor.\nALL EVENTS IN BROCK HALL - FREE\n..F_\u00C2\u00BB-_\u00C2\u00AB_T_fc.-r_,i Page 12\nTHE UBYSSEY\nThursday, October 7, 1965\n'TWEEN CLASSES\nPubsters\ngo beep!\nThe Ubyssey and Pique are\nrunning the Second Annual\nRoadrunner Film Festival Oct.\n8 and 12. Cartoons run at noon\nin the Aud. Friday and next\nTuesday for only 50 cents.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nSPORTS CAR CLUB\nGeneral meeting noon today,\nChem. 250.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nNEWMAN CLUB\nAll new and prospective\nmembers invited for today ant\nFri. noon.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nNISEI VARSITY CLUB\nGeneral meeting in BU. 216\nnoon today. All members\nplease attend.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nPOETRY READING\nSubversive introduction today noon in BU. 102.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nSQUARE DANCE CLUB\nImportant meeting noon today, Hut L6. All welcome,\nespecially beginners.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nSPECIAL EVENTS\nFilth-free-tfun with the Three\nD's today noon in Brock.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nSUS\nGeneral meeting noon today\nin Hennings 200. All science\nstudents welcome.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nCUSO\nGeneral meeting noon today\nin BU. 202. All interested invited.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nFINE ARTS GALLERY\nJack Wise will discuss his\npaintings today at noon in library basement.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nDANCE CLUB\nGeneral meeting noon today\nin Dance Club Lounge, Brock\nExtension. All welcome.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nFIGURE SKATING\nPractice tonight at 6:15 in\nWinter Sports Arena. All interested please attend.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nSAILING CLUB\nGeneral meeting today noon\nin Angus 110.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nCOMMITTEE TO END THE\nWAR IN VIETNAM\nFounding meeting today\nnoon in BU. 100.\nBrock food isn't\nJor councillors\nHungry student councillors\nare looking for a new place\nto eat.\n\"We are not satisfied with\nwhat we are getting in Brock\nfor the price we are paying,\"\nsaid AMS treasurer Mike Sommers.\nCouncillors have dinner in\nBrock every Monday night before the council meeting.\n\"Off-campus caterers are too\nexpensive,\" said Sommers.\nGeorge Wootten, grad\nstudies president, is looking\n> into the possibility of having\n\the councillors eat at the\nGraduate Student Centre on\nMonday nights.\nDean's Welcomes Back\nU.B.C. Students\nTRY OUR TAKE HOME SERVICE\nOsanA fisL&tauhanl and (Dining dhoom\n4544 West 10th Phone 224-6919\nCLASSIFIED\nRates: 3 lines, 1 day, $.75\u00E2\u0080\u00943 days, $2.00. Larger Ads on request\nNon-Commercial Classified Ads are payable in Advance\nPublications Office: Brock Hall, Ext. 26. 224-3242\nANNOUNCEMENTS\nLot! & Found 11\nLOST AT TOTEM PARK DANCE,\nOct. 2, UBC jacket (white leather\nsleeves), pockets contained personal papers. If found contact\nJohn Hopkins, Acadia Hut 30,\nRoom 3, or phone 224-9946.\t\nBLACK KEY CASE, LOST IN\nfront of Ponderosa Sept. 28. Finder phone 684-7053.\t\nLOST: WALLET AT FROSH RE-\ntreat. Reward. Please contact\nClive, AM 1-8737.\t\nLOST: CALCULUS AND ANALY-\ntical geometry in Chem. 200, Mon-\nday. AM 6-0587.\t\nLOST: BLACK LADY'S HANDBAG\nin Chemistry 424 Lab., Monday\nafternoon after Chem. 230 Lab.\nCan keep money, but I need I.D.,\netc. Phone Carol Wilson, 224-9047,\nMaclnnes Hall, Fort Camp. Reward.\nFOUND IN LIBRARY FRIDAY\ngirl's black glasses. Pick up in\nPublication Office, Brock Hall.\nFOUND: SET LAB. INSTRU-\nments in front of Wesbrook Hospital Thursday, Sept. 30. Phone\n731-1991. Ask for Barry.\t\nFOUND: ST. CHRISTOPHER\nMedal with \"Protect U.S.\" on one\nside. Call 731-6465 after 5.30 p.m.\nFOUND: MAN'S SILK SCARF,\ngrey pattern, outside Registrar's\nOffice\u00E2\u0080\u0094east side, Tuesday, 11:30\na.m. Call at Publications Office,\nUbyssey, Brock Hall.\t\nFOUND: EDWARD TAYLOR'S\nEnglish 451 notebook. Call Penny\nat UBC Radio, South Brock Basement.\nFOUND: 3 KEYS (EATON'S) (Mc\nKay Cycle) on chain. Apply\nBrock Proctor. \t\nLOST: BLACK SCHAEFFER\nfoutain pen, vicinity A Lot or Fort\nCamp. Reward. Greg Lee. Phone\n224-9016.\nFOUND ADS inserted free. Publications office. Brock Hall. Local 26,\n224-3242. \t\nSpecial Notices\n13\nFORESTRY WEEK \u00E2\u0080\u0094 OCT. 11 - 15\nWatch For Special Events.\t\nFORESTER'S HARD TIME \"UN-\ndercut\" Dance Oct. 15 PNE Show-\nmart Bldg. 8:00 p.m. Buses from\nResidences. All students invited.\nONLY SEVEN MONTH TO QRADU-\natlon. Next Year's TOTEM will\nbe nearly 300 pages and Advance\nOrders will receive a special 8-\npage graduation supplement. Order\nnow from AMS Business Office.\nINTERESTED in Figure Skating &\ndancing on Ice? UBC Thunderbird\nArena Tuesdays 7:30 - 8:30 p.m.\nSpecial rates. For full information\ncall Pt. Grey Winter Club. 224-\n7628. \t\nEVOLUTION OF THE VISUAL\nWorld. H. W. Parker talks about\nIconic and Pictorial. Noon today,\nAuditorium. ;\nWANTED AFTER 6 P.M. THURS.,\nride to Cranbrook or Golden for\ntwo. Will share exp. Ph. 224-9054,\nRm. 403. \t\nGOING SOUTH? WOULD LIKE\nride to Seattle or Portland Friday\nnight. Share gas. Maggie. RE 3-\n9544. \t\nTHE SONICS AND THE VANCOU-\nver Playboys will be here this\nSaturday in the armories for\nFrosh Reception Dance. Tickets\nsold at A.M.S. Office.\nTHE SHOCKERS, HAVING RE-\ncently placed fourth in a Pacific\nNorthwest Contest (88 bands participated), will be at Campus A\nGo-Go playing all your Mersey and\nfolk-rock favorites! And they're\nonly the SECOND of SIX great\nreasons for you to be at Campus\nA Co.-Go!\nTransportation\n14\nRIDE WANTED TO SAN FRAN-\ncisco this weekend. Share gas,\ndriving. Leave Friday aft. Return\nTuesday morning. Contact Kim,\nRoom 392, Haida House (Totem\nPark), 224-9751 evening.\nRIDERS WANTED, VICINITY 3200\nBlock, Broadway. Call 731-1991.\n20c a day return.\t\nRIDE WANTED TWO ROAD AND\nSteveston Hwy., Richmond, 8:30\nclasses. Phone Liliane, 277-8189 or\n277-3661.\t\nCAR POOL URGENTLY NEEDED,\narea of Lynn, Valley, Second Nar-\nrows, North Van. Phone 985-3202.\nRIDE WANTED TO CALGARY\nFriday, will share driving and gas.\n736-7001 evenings.\nRIDE WANTED FROM 63rd AND\nCambie. Please call Cathy, 321-\n2482. \t\nWanted\n15\nWANTED: GEOGRAPHY 101 TEXT\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094Strahler Economics 100 Text.\nHeaton. Phone 921-7028.\nAUTOMOTIVE 8c MARINE\nAutomobiles For Sale\n21\n'61 MOD. SPRITE, NEW BRAKES,\ntires, paint. Also snow tires, ski\nrack. Mowich 253-8876.\t\nATTENTION RALLY FANS! 160\nSkoda Sports Convert., spotless,\nnew tires, brakes, clutch, etc. 1100\ncc. Twin Carb. $500 or offer. BR\n7-2012. \t\n1962 VALIANT SIGNET \u00E2\u0080\u0094 2 door\nhardtop-automatic. Fully equipped.\nIn excellent condition. $1700.00 or\nbest offer. Phone 738-2988 after\n5:00 p.m.\n1957 SUNBEAM RAPIER. Sale or\ntrade for sports car. Stick, tach.,\ngood cond. AM 6-0162 Grant\n1953 MG-TD, GOOD CONDITION,\nbest offer? Phone 684-7053.\n1950 DODGE FOR SALE. PHONE\n321-6461. \t\nPRIVATE\u00E2\u0080\u0094'57 METEOR 6 CYL.,\nauto, trans., radio, motor recently\noverhauled. Priced for quick sale.\nMr. Wagner, WA 2-4111 or YU\n7-0164. \t\nM.G.A. CONVERTIBLE, WIRE\nwheeles. Except, clean condt., $700.\nPhone Mike at 263-599L-\t\n1955 CHEV. 61 STANDARD, $325.00.\nCall Fred at 224-9720.\t\nMUST SELL, 1961 SIMCA. DEPEN-\ndable transportation, $395, or best\noffer. 224-9066 or 731-5009. Gary\nor Janet.\n60 ALPINE, WIRE WHEELS,\ntonneau, radio. Good shape. Dave,\nWA 2-6327. \t\nAutomobiles \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Wanted\n25\nMotorcycles\n27\n1965 HONDA \"90\", 5500 MI.\nValves and rings done at 4900\nmi. Good condition. 434-8246 after\n6 p.m.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A264 HONDA 160 SUPER SPORT.\nExcellent condition. Windshield,\nlegshields, saddle bags, two helmets, two rear sprockets, plus\nmore. $465. John, 922-3497, after 6.\nBUSINESS SERVICES\nTypewriter- & Repairs\n42\nGOOD CLEAN TYPEWRITERS, $20\nup. Also Typewriter repair* at\n50 percent savings. Poison Typewriters, 2140 W. 4th. Phone KB\n1-8322.\nTyping\n42\nTHESES, ESSAYS, BOOK RE-\nviews, and cases typed by qualified typists. From 40c per sheet\nincluding paper, one carbon copy,\nand binder. See us for mimeographing, dittos, stencil cutting,\nand Multilith master preparation.\nWe also offer complete editing\nand rewrite service \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Ardale\nGriffiths Limited at 70th and\nGranville. Phone 263-4530.\nEMPLOYMENT\nHelp Wanted\n81\nBABYSITTER WANTED: ACADIA\nCamp. Usually three mornings\nevery second week. Simultaneous\nstudying possible. Call CA 8-8026.\nFREE ROOMj AND BOARD FOR\nfemale student in exchange for\nbaby sitting and very light duties.\nDay help maintained. Car pool\nnearby. Phone AM 6-0628.\nPART-TIME WORK AVAILABLE\nas taxi drivers. Black Top Cabs\nLtd., 701 Beach.\nWork Wanted\n32\nINSTRUCTION\nTutoring\n$4\nInstruction Wanted\n66\nGERMAN 200 TUTOR WANTED.\nBasically for conversation. 224-7592\nafter 6. \t\nMISCELLANEOUS\nFOR SALE 71\nMARTIN 6-STRING GUITAR.\nPhone Craig, 526-6070 eve.\nBIRD CALLS\u00E2\u0080\u0094the most useful book\non the campus. Student telephone\ndirectory available latter part of\nOctober. Limited Number. Order\nnow, only 75 cents.\nBALLS & CHAIN! IDEAL FOR\nStags, etc. 15-45 lbs. From $7.50.\nFA 1-1776 and AM 6-2869.\nRooms\n81\nUBC GIRL TO SHARE MAIN\nfloor suite with same. RE 8-3064,\n2273 3rd Ave. West.\nFurnished Houses & Apts. 83\nSELF-CONTAINED, FURNISHED\nsuite. Ideal for one or two students. Phone RE 3-5561, evenings.\nHOUSE of STEIN Ltd.\n901 GRANVILLE or 1005 GRANVILLE\nVANCOUVER, B.C. MU 3-6120, MU 3-6311\nMU 5-5611, MU 5-8657\nBRINGS YOU\nFor The First Time Under $300\na\nA\nA PROFESSIONAL MINIATURE\n\u00E2\u0080\u009E^ TAPE RECORDER\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 MOST BRILLIANTLY ENGINEERED\nDimensions\nTRUE FIDELITY - '*\u00E2\u0084\u00A2\"\"\u00C2\u00AB'\nFULLY TRANSISTORIZED\nAutomatically stores: your ideas, reports, {nemos . . . repeats them en\n.errand. A \"must\" fer the busy\nexecutive or professional man.\nCheck These Outstanding\nFeatures:\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 SO minutes recording or\nplayback time.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Capstan driven, precision 15/16 I.P.S.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Weighs only 1V* lbs.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Operates on four inexpensive panlite\nbatteries.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 UNCONDITIONALLY\nGUARANTEED\nAs Illustrated:\nEicrou\nComplete with dynamic microphone, batteries, earphone, reel\nof tape, empty reels.\no\u00C2\u00ABw\n1.50\nIntroductory Offer!\nYou get absolutely free with each\nrecorder 3 long playing tapes.\nPlus\nTelephone adapter to record from\nany phone, your important conversations.\nORDER BY PHONE, MAIL or WRITE\nDiscount to UBC Students\n10%"@en . "Newspapers"@en . "Vancouver (B.C.)"@en . "LH3.B7 U4"@en . "LH3_B7_U4_1965_10_07"@en . "10.14288/1.0127724"@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 .