"CONTENTdm"@en . "http://resolve.library.ubc.ca/cgi-bin/catsearch?bid=1211252"@en . "University Publications"@en . "2015-09-11"@en . "1964-01-24"@en . "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/Ubysseynews/items/1.0128276/source.json"@en . "application/pdf"@en . " Bitter\nAsh is\nTHE U8YSSEY\nin the\nnudes again\nVol. XLVI, No. 44\nVANCOUVER, B.C., FRIDAY, JANUARY 24, 1964\n*\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 CA 4-3916\nADOORABLE, aren't they? Engineers invaded Brock Thursday and retreated with 11\ndoors. Doors were returned by night. Engineers lured Brock proctor into Frosh Office\nand kept him busy there while they unhinged the doors.\nIn Throne Speech\nPremier\nbag of\ndangles\ngoodies\nThe provincial government has promised more money\nwill be given to UBC in 1964.\nIn the speech from the throne, delivered by Lieutenant-\nGovenor George Pearkes Monday, the government stated\nits intention to allot more money for the operating expenses\nof the university.\nPub co-ordinator\n'pays off' RCMP\nThe AMS is paying off the\nRCMP.\nLaurie Frisby, Co-ordinator of Publications for the\nAMS, told council Monday\nthat he had given the police\nfive copies of Bird Calls in\nlieu of paying a speeding\nticket.\nHe said the RCMP annually takes five copies, but\nusually pays for them.\nIn the speech from the\nthrone, delivered by Lieutenant-Governor George Pearkes\nMonday, the government stated\nits intention to allot more\nmoney for the operating expenses of the university.\nAn increase in the amount\nof money available for scholarships and bursaries was also\nforecast.\nThe announcement that\nmoney would be given to the\nuniversity follows last Monday's announcement by the\nUBC Board of Governors that\nstudent fees would be upped by\na minimum of $50.\nThe throne speech was termed \"mild\" by observers in comparison to last year's statement,\nwhen the government announced the creation of three new\nuniversities.\nUBC film banned before showing\nAthletics\ngoes alone\nfor 2 years\nBy LORRAINE SHORE\nUBC is going to stay out of Canadian inter-collegiate\nathletic competition for at least the next two years.\nThe Men's Athletic Commit\ntee Wednesday sanctioned Bus\nPhillips, athletic director, to\nschedule competition outside\nthe Western Canada Intercollegiate Athletic Association for\nthe next two years.\n\"This means UBC will be\nplaying exhibition games only,\"\nsaid Malcolm Scott, student representative to the MAC.\nNO WORRIES\n\"Now \"we can experiment\nwith different types of competition and develop our own\nprogram, without worrying\nabout WCIAA regulations,\"\nsaid Scott.\n\"We will not enter the Evergreen Conference or any other\nconference on a permanent\nbasis for two years,\" said Scott.\nUBC has been a member of\nWCIAA for the last five years.\nAt the league's last meeting,\nUBC refused to renew its contract with the league, but it\nhad been speculated that UBC\nwould re-enter after next year.\nDecision for entry into any\nconference has now been postponed for two years.\n\"We want to see what the\nsituation is like two years from\nnow,\" Scott explained.\nNEW SCHOOLS\nHe said tha|t the University\nof Alberta at Calgary, Victoria\nCollege, the University of Saskatchewan at Regina and Brandon College in Manitoba may\nprovide good competition by\nthen.\nThe withdrawal from the\nWCIAA will provide more flexibility in the budget, said Scott.\n\"We won't have to spend so\nmuch on travel. We'll have\nmore for developing the teams\nand equipment,\" he said.\nScott said it cost $5,000 to\n(Continued on Page 3)\nSEE: ATHLETES\nBennetfs\nflag fades\ninto night\nBy MIKE VAUX\nNobody is saluting Premier\nBennett's flag these days.\nAnd they won't until the\npeople who stole it return it.\nThe flag, stolen from the\nnew education building last\nweek, was borrowed from Premier Bennett, according to\nFied Gordon, government supervisor of construction at the\nbuilding.\nGordon said the flag was 12\nby 24 feet in size, made of\npure silk, at great cost.\n\"The flag was going to be\nflown from the top of the\ntop of the building when it\nreached its highest point, but\nwe won't be able to fly it\nnew,\" said Gordon.\n\"When we went to look for\nit on Friday morning, we\nfound the cord cut and the\nflag gone,\" he said. \"I don't\nknown how they got up.\n\"This is a very costly item,\nand I'll have to make a full\nreport to the government.\n'Tm not going to say if I\nlike the flag or not,\" Gordon\nsaid. \"But the Premier chose\nit as the flag of British Columbia, and it's government property/and as such it should be\nleft alone.\n\"The flag was probably\nstolen after dark,\" he said.\n\"But that doesn't make any\ndifference, because we fly it\nnight and day.\"\n(Continued on Page 8)\nSEE: ENSIGN\nBitter Ash bites the dust - again\nHAMILTON, Ont. (Special)\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094Bitter Ash, the controversial movie produced at UBC\nby student Larry Kent, has\nbeen banned at McMaster University.\nMcMaster president Dr. H.\nD. Thode Thursday ordered a\nscheduled showing to be cancelled because the movie had\nnot been viewed by the Ontario Censor's Board.\nThe film, which contains a\nportrayal of the sex act, was\nshown at UBC last fall.\nThode received a letter\nfrom H. A. M. Whyte, a Toron\nto minister whose son Steve\nattends McMaster, protesting\nthe scheduled showing.\nNeither Whyte, his son, nor\nThode has seen the movie.\nRev. Whyte said: \"I am a\nminister of the gospel who\nhas had considerable experience in helping people recover\nthemselves from seeing the\nportrayal of acts that are not\nclean.\"\nHe said he was able to help\none minister of the gospel\nwhose mind had been \"affected by having seen a vulgar\nburlesque show in Toronto\nwhen he was 16 years of age.\"\n\"The detrimental effects- to\nhis mind had continued for another 17 years, and he had to\nbe counselled and prayed for\nto be delivered.\" he said.\nSteven, a first-year student\nof natural sciences, said he\nthought students who go to\nsee a film like Bitter Ash \"go\nfor sexual excitement with\nonly one thought in mind.\n\"I feel the people involved\nought to be ashamed. How\nwould you like someone to\ntake a picture of you sitting on\na toilet?\"\nThe student said the film\ncould have nothing but a detrimental effect on students,\nand could pervert them for the\nrest of their lives.\nSources on the campus say\nthe film was banned because\nthe administration does not\nwant any bad publicity.\nMeanwhile Kent, now in\nToronto, said the film would\nbe shown Feb. 3 at the University of Toronto.\nIt is being sponsored there\nby the Student Christian\nMovement. Page 2\nTHE UBYSSEY\nFriday, January 24, 1964\nOn way to class\nTwo girls\nassaulted\nin Victoria\nVICTORIA (UNS)-\u00E2\u0080\u0094A 27-\nyear-old man has been charged\nwith rape after two girls said\nthey were attacked as they\nwalked to classes at Victoria\nCollege.\nPolice have charged Larry\nKenneth Kanester, an unemployed resident of the city with\ntwo counts of rape.\nThe first girl was assaulted\nJan. 13 and the second Monday,\npolice said.\nKannester was arrested\nshortly after the second assault.\nThe 18-year-old girls both\nsaid they were dragged into a\ncar, blindfolded, hands tied\nand driven a short distance.\nThey were then choked and\nsexually assaulted, police said.\nAfter . . . they were driven\nback to the university.\nWho's Uncle Matt?\nLOS ANGELES (CUP) \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nUncle Matt says Experience ir\na wonderful thing. It enables\nyou to recognize a mistake\nwhen you make it again.\nOn Campus Interviews\nAnd games. And talking horses. It's all\nin a day's work. Because our engineers\nare in the business of thinking up, perfecting and producing first-of-their-\nkind toys like Chatty Cathy\u00C2\u00AE-the doll\nthat really talks\u00E2\u0080\u0094prized possession of\nmore than 5 million little girle. Producing her, and hundreds of other sophisticated toys and games, has seen our\nindustrial engineers solve lots of first-\nof-their-kind problems, too-using jigs\nand fixtures in highly original line layouts to provide volume production, yet\nassure opportunity for continual product improvement.\nMaybe you're a man who like nothing better than finding ways to make\nthings simpler, better and cheaper. If\nso, you'll find our business stimulating,\nrewarding and loaded with potential.\nBecause your brand of talent has\nhelped us grow so fast we've become\nthe biggest toymaker around, with no\nend to expansion in sight. That's why\nwe're substantially expanding our\nalready sizeable engineering staff,\nagain, during the next twelve months.\nWe work near the Los Angeles International Airport and raise our families\nin the pleasant beach and valley communities nearby. If you think you'd\nlike to join us - in manufacturing, R&D\nor administration - make an appointment today to see our interviewer, on\ncampus.\nWILLIAM STAFFORD\n. . . here Monday\nTop U.S. poet\nto read works\nProf. William Stafford, from\nLewis & Clark College In Portland, Oregon, will read selections from his poetry at noon\nMonday in Bu. 100.\nProf. Stafford is one of the\nnewest first-rank poets in the\nU.S.\nOn stage\nSake party ends\nFar East Week\nThe rich culture of the Far East is in the spotlight at\nthe conclusion of Far East week Saturday night.\nPar East Night, at 8 p.m. in\nthe Auditorium, presents a\nbroad spectrum of Asian culture, ranging from dances to\nart, from fashion to judo.\nFeatured on the program\nwill be Doctor Scuichi Kato of\nthe Dept. of Asian Studies, an\noutstanding Japanese novelist,\ncritic and scholar. He will give\nan illustrated lecture on the\ndifferences between Chinese\nand Japanese art.\nDances from China, Japan,\nthe Philippines, songs of the\nOrient\u00E2\u0080\u0094including a genuine\nJapanese Sake party (on stage)\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094will add color and gaiety to\nthe program.\nDisplays of judo and kendo\nfencing from Japan, and pugilism from China will be mixed\non the program with a show\nof fashions, both traditional\nand modern.\nThe Japanese koto and flute,\nand a traditional Chinese orchestra round out the evening.\nFar East Night is staged once\nevery two years to provide\nfunds for the Far East scholarship. Tickets, at the door, are\n75 cents for students and $1\nfor adults.\nThe Far East Week noon\nseries concludes today in Bu.\n204, with a lecture by Prof.\nRene Goldman on his recent\ntravels throughout Communist\nChina.\nLook out!\nEUS president Peter Shepard promised a stunt a day\nduring engineering week, February 9-15.\nFOR RENT\n3 large room unfurnished\nsuite (legal) priv.-entrance.\nCouple. Feb. 1st. $75.00 mo.\ninclusive. RE 3-0450 after\n5:30 p.m. 3420 W. 15th.\nVOLKSWAGEN\nRepairs \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Inspections\nBA Service Stn.\nDunbar and 30th Avenue\nCA 4-7644\n\"El Mocambo\"\nBurnaby's Attractive New\nNight Club\nLatin Decor by Candlelight\n1600 sq. ft. Hardwood Ballroom\nFloor\nOur Band Plays Everything\nKnquire about:\nUBC Student Group Rates\nSpecial Latin Nights\nBanquet Facilities Capacity 250\nPeople\nCY 9-3764 CY 8-7673\n4461 Lougheed Hwy\n\"CHATTY CATHY\" IS A REGISTERED TRADEMARK\nOWNED BY MATTEL, INC.\nA great future\ncould result from a\n20 minute interview\nThis interview could decide your entire professional career\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nprobably the most important twenty minutes in your life.\nThat is why we would like to talk to you in complete confidence. You tell us where you want to go in the years ahead\nand we'll tell you of the opportunities, the challenging\ncareers which are available at Northern Electric.\nNorthern Electric makes the things that make communications possible, from underground cable to tropospheric\nscatter systems\u00E2\u0080\u0094from crossbar automatic exchanges to telephone handsets.\nThere are excellent opportunities for:\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 graduates in engineering and other sciences\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 graduates in commerce and related fields.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 graduates in engineering technology\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 summer work for engineering undergraduates\nPlan to have a talk with a Northern Electric personnel officer\nthe next time he is on your campus. This interview could\nmean a great future for you.\nFor further information and appointment please contact your Placement Officer\n6063-9\na appointment please contact your riacement umcer a.\nHorthern Electric B_J\nCOMPANY LIMITED L__P\nAn all-Canadian company with over 17,000 employees Friday, January 24, 1964\nTHE UBYSSEY\nPage 3\nHARANGUING choreographer Barb Bennett throws barbs at Mardi Gras dancers as they\ntake a break during rehearsals at Brock. Tonight, they perform for a live audience as\nthe first night of the annual charity costume ball gets underway at Commodore.\n2,000 jam gym to watch\nUBC's British Greeks\nBy JOHN KELSEY\nMore than 2,000 students\ncheered on hoards of Greeks\nperforming Thursday noon\nat the Mardi Gras Pep Meet.\nThey lined up outside, paid\ntheir quarters and pushed for\nseats inside the War Memorial Gym.\nFourteen cand i d a t e s for\nKing of the Mardi Gras presented their skits.\nEach potential king and\nhis fellow Greeks danced\nabout in costumes and underwear to the music of UBC's\npep band.\nThe skits dealt with some\nphase of British life, in keeping with this year's Mardi\nGras theme of \"Laughs in\nLondon.\"\nThe kings' skits included\nprominent British Britons\nNew senator to discuss\nCanada's culture bind\nSenator Paul Yuzyk will speak on \"Canada, a bicul-\ntural or multi-cultural nation?\" Monday noon, in Brock\nLounge.\nYuzyk, a Slavonic studies professor at the University\nof Manitoba, was appointed to the senate in February of\nlast year.\nHe is being sponsored by the Ukrainian Canadian\nCoramittee and the Alpha Omega Society.\nAMS okays new\ncharter flight\nThe AMS is sponsoring another charter flight, this time\nto Trinidad.\nCouncil Monday passed a\nmotion to officially sponsor the\nflight and make a $500 deposit\nfor it. It is being organized by\nCarol Ann Clarke, Arts III.\nThe AMS already runs two\nflights to Europe.\nMiss Clarke said the flight\nmust have the backing of a\ngroup organized for a purpose\nother than just to sponsor the\nflight, although the AMS could\nin no way lose money.\nShe said the flight will leave\nfor Port - au - Spain, Trinidad,\non July 18, and return Sept. 5.\n\"If the maximum of 32\npeople go, the cost will be $325\nper person. We will go if we\nget 70, at a cost of $380.\n\"We have 29 people signed\nup already, without any official advertising.\"\nMiss Clarke said the flight\nwill not cut into the European\ntour, since at least half of those\ngoing to Trinidad will be West\nIndians.\nShe said the procedure for\npaying will be a $10 fee at the\ntime of registration, one-quarter of the $325 by April 18, and\nthe balance by departure time.\nAnyone who signed up and\ndropped out after April 18 will\nhave to pay the full price or\nsupply a replacement.\nAn advertising program will\nbe launched shortly with full\ndetails.\nfrom the Beatles to Andy\nCapp and two squads of the\nRoyal ballet.\nAfter the kings came the\nQueens.\nNine sororities paraded\ntheir finest, preceded by elaborately costumed entourages\nof sorority sisters and urged\non by fanfare from the band\nand wild cheering from the\naudience.\nThe pep meet closed with\nfolk songs by UBC's own Tom\nNorthcott.\nVoting for the King and\nQueen candidates was completed as students left the\nmeet.\nResults will be announced\nat this weekend's Mardi Gras\ndances.\nDoors walk off\nEngineers make\nBrock windy\nBy AL DONALD\nEngineers air-conditioned Brock Lounge Thursday.\nThe project was accomplish-\nATHLETES\n(Continued from Page 1)\nsend a football team to Manitoba for one game.\nWOMEN UPSET\nThe Women's Athletic Directorate is unhappy with the decision.\n\"Our program will suffer\ndrastically,\" said Pat Nichols,\npresident of WAD.\n\"The withdrawal will mean\nwe will lose a lot of worthwhile competition,\" said Miss\nNichols.\nWAD is now seeking a constitutional change in WCIAA\nto permit the women to continue in the association.\nThe change would enable\nthe men's and women's athler\ntics to enter the association\nseparately.\nMiss Nichols did not object\nto entry into the Evergreen\nConference, but feared that\ncomplete withdrawal from\ncompetition would cripple the\nwomen's athletics financially.\nWAD presently gets a $4,000\ngrant from the Board of Governors and an additional $2,400\nAMS grant to allow them to\ncompete in the WCIAA.\ned in less than a minute when\nmore than 200 redshirts descended on Brock to remove\neight sets of doors.\nA Ubyssey reporter - photographer team followed the\nstunt from its beginning in the\nEngineering building to its end\nwhen the engineers carried th(\ndoors away in the general dir\nection of the Engineering\nbuilding.\nBefore getting the doorr\nEUS vice-p resident Steve\nWhitelaw planned a diversion\nary tactic, sending 50 engineer\nahead of the main force to raid\nthe frosh undergrad society office in Brock Basement.\nWhen the group reached the\noffice, they found the windows\nclosed and the doors locked\nwith six frosh inside trying to\nlook casual about, the whole\nthing.\nAn engineer not wearing a\nred sweater was dispatched to\nthe proctor's office to tell the\nproctor there was a riot downstairs.\nThe proctor was fooled \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nhe went.\nAlmost immediately, the remainder of the redshirts, armed with hammers and screwdrivers, stormed Brock and\nremoved the doors.\nThe four main entrances ir\nto the lounge, the two outsid'\nfront entrances, and the back\nentrance to south Brock were\nraided and within a minute s\ncool breeze fanned couch\nwarmers in the lounge.\nMeanwhile the diversionary\ngroup had succeeded in removing a pane of glass from the\nFrosh office window and were\nscattering more than 4,000\nIBM cards on the floor in anr\noutside the office.\nThe red horde began to\nmove back to the engineering\nbuilding, bearing its trophies,\n13 doors, with it.\nThe lovers in the lounge\nsnuggled closer.\nFrosh began to clean up\ntheir office.\n\"It's the most childish thing\nwe've ever seen,\" one of them\nmuttered.\nLast year, when the engineers tried the same stunt,\nthe proctor captured an engineer and would not give him\nback until the doors were returned.\nAUTHORS AGENCY\nBring your manuscripts, itories,\narticles, books, songs, poems.\nFree Advice and Help\n1065 E. 17th Avenue\nTR 6-*3\u00C2\u00AB2\nAwards nullified\nif not collected\nIf you want your scholarship you'd better get it now.\nAward cheques not collected or endorsed by Jan. 31\nwill be returned to the\ndonors on Wednesday, Feb.\n5.\nAbout 150 students have\nstill not collected their\nscholarship or bursary\nawards, according to the\naccounting department.\nStudents should call at\nthe Accounting office to collect their cheques, or to endorse the cheques to apply\non unpaid fees before Friday, Jan. 31.\nMacMillan\ngives UBC\n$250,000\nThe MacMillan Family Fund\nhas given $250,000 to endow\ntwo theological chairs at UBC.\nOne will be at the United\nChurch's Union College, the\nother at the Anglican Theological College.\nThe Anglican chair will be\nin memory of MacMillan's\nwife, Edna MacMillan.\nFunds at the Anglican College will be used to set up a\nchair in church history.\nThe Union College grant is\nfor studies in systematic theology and Christian ethics.\nThe chair is already in operation with the help of personal\ngrants from MacMillan. It is in\nhonor of MacMillan's mother,\nJoanna Wilson MacMillan.\nThe MacMillan Family\nFunds were set up in 1962\nwith grants of $1 million and\n$2 million by MacMillan,\nformer chairman of the board\nof MacMillan, Bloedel and\nPowell River.\nWORSHIP ON CAMPUS\nEVERY SUNDAY AT\nSt. Timothy\nLutheran Church\nPastor H. Fox, CA 8-8166\n11:00 Worship\n10:00 Bible Study\nHut L4 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 East Mall\nSPEOAL EVENTS COMMITTEE\nApplications are now being accepted for next years committee. Applications must be written and contain all\npertinent information and may be handed in at the Special\nEvents Office, room 255, in the Brock Extension, or in' the\nSpecial Events Box at the A.M.S. Office. 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 mall by Post Office Department.\nOttawa, and for payment of postage in cash.\nFRIDAY, JANUARY 24, 1964\nA new era\nWe'd suggest the administration and Board of Governors seriously consider the proposal of one Douglas\nSmith, who offered UBC $10,000 to set up a college of\npublic relations.\nIt's our opinion, and plenty of other people's as\nwell, that UBC could stand a little education in that\nfield, particularly said administration and Board of\nGovernors.\nIt has become apparent in the past week that th\u00C2\u00AB\nBoard's handling of the \"Challenge of Growth\" pamphlet and particularly the tuition fee raise has been one\nhorrible bungle.\nThe blundering manner in which the information,\nparticularly the fee-raise announcement, was released has\nundone all the good intentions which the report contained.\nThe result has been the alienation of the students,\nfaculty, many businessmen and alumni \u00E2\u0080\u0094 and perhaps\neven the government and the general public.\nFritz Bowers, president of the Facility Association,\nsaid it for everyone: \"I think the whole affair has been\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2handled very badly.\"\nEducation Minister Peterson said no one even told\nhim about the fee raise, although this is probably a cover-\nup for a previously-worked-out deal, which Peterson has\nalready hinted at.\nThere is also the shadowy overtone given the fee\nannouncement because of its timing\u00E2\u0080\u0094why was it announced before the government's budget?\nAlumni are presently blustering because they\nweren't consulted or informed about the matter at all.\nAnd the students\u00E2\u0080\u0094who were most maligned by the\nicy administration secrecy\u00E2\u0080\u0094are downright insulted.\nThe key to the whole bungle is the president's quotation in his open letter to students, published Tuesday in\nThe Ubyssey, the paragraph which, he said, was the\nbasis for the Board's policy.\n\"Clearly, the task and cost of meeting the requirements for higher education in the years ahead are of a\nnew dimension. These costs cannot be met by any single\ngroup within society, but no group can avoid sharing\nin the responsibility.\"\nWe would suggest to Dr. Macdonald and the Board\nthat their stated policy is totally at odds with their\npractice.\nGentlemen, throughout the latest crisis, you have\nsteadfastly refused to allow any other group in society\nto share in any responsibility whatever.\nResponsibility is a lot more than $50 pulled from a\nstudent's or an alumnus's wallet.\nIt is time the Board realized this, and, further, it's\ntime they did something about it before UBC sinks completely. What we need around here is just what the\nBoard says\u00E2\u0080\u0094a new dimension in responsibility. Our own\nhouse is a good place to start.\nGreat Gooch!\nWe say hurrah for James Balderson, the editor of\nthe Education students' newsletter, Gooch.\nMr. Balderson was responsible for suggesting that a\ncommittee be set up to hear student complaints about\nineffective or incompetent faculty. What's more, the\ncommittee, he said, would print the evidence in the newsletter, which would publicly embarrass the academic\nconcerned.\nThe idea of being able to critically assess the performance of their professors has long appealed to students.\nAfter all, no one else seems to do much criticizing\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nthe administration itself admits it has no way of judging\na professor's in-class performance (so it instead judges\nhim on the number of articles he's had published).\nIt seems to us that if we're to be expected to \"share\nin the responsibility\" of higher education, to quote President Macdonald, we should be allowed something for\nour money.\nA little bit of criticism in exchange for $150 in the\nnext three years doesn't seem to us to be too big a price\nfor the administration to pay\u00E2\u0080\u0094especially since they're the\nones who continually harp about excellence.\nHiya! I been wachin' you for a long time and I've decided\nI'll take you to Mardi Gras even if you don't belong to a\nsorority.\nV'H, *\nORNSTEIN: a romantic\nsentimental bonehead\n\"Alas! that men must see\nLove, before Death!\nElse they content must be\nWith their short breath.\"\nSomeone called John Mills\nhad a funny letter in The\nUbyssey on Tuesday. He\nchampioned the 'chance encounter' and the 'casual contact.' And I'll be the first to\nagree that a planned life is not\nworth living. (I advocated\nplanned parenthood, not planned relationships).\nMost people have experienced the excitement of\nchance encounters and the\npleasures of contacting casually. And some of these will\nremain interesting memories\nfor their old age. But a life of\nsuch relationships (or are they\nrelationships?) would be as\nemotionally empty as some of\nthese brief meetings prove to\nbe.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nA healthy one or two-night\nstand is fine\u00E2\u0080\u0094for one or two\nnights. You come together\nknowing full well that you're\nusing each other. And after\ngoing without sex for a while\nyou'll go to bed with practically anyone frustrated or\ndrunk enough to resort to you.\nThere need be nothing ugly\nor dirty about these brief interludes. But this is the point.\nThese are interludes\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"short\nperformances between acts.\"\nThey are poor substitutes for\nthe real 'act'\u00E2\u0080\u0094that of love.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nOK. So call me an old fashioned, romantic, sentimental\nbonehead. There is such a\nthing as love\u00E2\u0080\u0094though it often\nmay fade or vanish. To love\nsomeone and to be loved is\nto live more meaningfully and\nmore satisfactorily than to be\never searching for 'chance encounters.'\nWe may joke and brag\nabout sex but this should\ncease when we come to know\nwhat it can mean between\ntwo people.\nIt has been said that happiness is not a laughing matter. Love, too, is no laughing\nmatter. I think I could ridicule everything but genuine\naffection. Love can be pathological, (with extreme jealousy, exaggerated pains and\nconfusions) but it's still better\nthan a life-time of one-night\nstands.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nWould I be too bold to assert that most of us are (or\nwere) searching for someone\nto love? And that once a profound relationship is engendered, then existence becomes\nsomehow more genuine?\nOne of the defining characteristics of an emotionally ill\nperson is that he cannot reate\n(or even communicate, in\nsome cases) to others. Would\nit be too bold to say that a\ntruly healthy person is one\nwho can love someone deeply?\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nLove is to our emotions as\ntruth is to our beliefs. Just\nas one who is too dull to see\nthe truth will deny or ignore\nit, so one who cannot love\nwill deny or ridicule it. But\nas Shakespeare said:\n\"And when love speaks, the\nvoice of all the gods\nMakes heaven drowsy with\nthe harmony.\"\nLETTERS\nTO THE\nEDITOR\nA challenge\nEditor, The Ubyssey:\nThrough the Ubyssey I\nshould like to issue a formal\nchallenge to the leader of the\nUBC Liberal Club, to a\nModel Parliament Campaign\nDebate.\nThe campus Conservative\nclub has reserved the Brock\nLounge for 12:30 on Thursday, Jan. 30. The purpose of\nthe debate is to stimulate interest in Model Parliament by\nbringing together, to debate\ntheir platforms, the leaders\nof the campus Conservative\nand Liberal parties.\nI would suggest that the\npresident of the Debating\nUnion act as an impartial\nchairman, with the following\nagenda: 10 minute main\nspeeches outlining platform,\nfive minute critiques, and\nthree minute rebuttals. Following this the floor should\nbe opened to audience participation.\nI look forward to the reply\nof the UBC Liberal leader.\nPETER HYNDMAN,\nConservative Club\nImmature emotion\nEditor, The Ubyssey:\nConcern ing the article\n\"Let's Take The Hex Off\nSex,\" by Jack Orstein, which\nappeared in last Friday's paper. I'm sure that you can\nfind other ways to fill up our\nnewspaper than by printing\nsuch garbage. If this fellow\nOrnstein wants to live like a\ngoat, that's his business, but\nwhy should our newspaper be\na medium for such trash.\nJudging from his writings,\nOrnstein seems to be like a\nlittle child who escapes from\na playpen finds a pen (or\ntypewriter) and tries to get\nattention by scribbling (or\ntyping) the products of its\nimmature emotions.\nSTAN DOSMAN,\nScience I\nSee the light\nEditor, The Ubyssey:\nAs a member of this year's\nGrad Class, may I suggest that\ninstead of the usual book gift,\nwe apply these monies towards the purchase of adequate lighting and soundproofing in the older section\nof the main stacks.\nOne can't see with those\ndinky light bulbs that are in\nuse now; and if the librarians\n(and some students) cut down\non the amount of small talk\nbehind those paper-thin,\nloosely-fitted barriers, the library might be a half-decent\nplace to study.\nSTAN LENKO,\nArts IV\n'XI\nEDITOR: Mike Hunter\nREPORTERS AND DESK: The\ndrinking upper-class crew was\nhere today: We had such oddballs\nas Norman Betts, John Kelsey,\nMike Vaux, Hume writing heds\nas well as Ablett while Wayman\nwilled Birnie into doing a bit of\ncouncil crap. Of course ruggered\nJanet Matheson and no-relation\nGraeme MJatheson were also here.\nAl Donald, Christine Blyth and\nKathy Tait competed the award-\nwinning drinking crew.\nSPORTS: Lorraine Shore wrote a\nsports story today (she doesn't\nknowi anything about sports) to\nshow us how versatile she is. So\ndid Janet Currie, George Reams-\nbottom, Dan Mlullen and LINK was\nmissing.\nTECHNICAL: Vaux again. Senior\nEditor (MC), Neil Stewart, Atch\nand Nicky isn't going but she\nslept (alone) here all damn day. Friday, January 24, 1964\nTHE UBYSSEY\nPage 5\nTower highlight\nOpen House starts rolling\nWith a selection of a design for the Tower of Man\nThursday the open house\nsnowball has begun to roll.\nEd Lavalle, Open House\nChairman, said the winning\ndesign for fhe Tower of Man\nwas submitted by pre-archi-\ntecture student Alan Bell\nSecond place went to Alan\nHunter, Arts II. Thirty students entered designs in a\ncompetition. Bell will receive\n$15 and Hunter will get $5.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nLavalle said the tower,\n60-feet high, will be a tribute\nto man's achievements\nthrough knowledge.\nIt will tie in with the main\ntheme for the March 7 and 3\ndisplay \u00E2\u0080\u0094 how university\nlearning aids community progress.\nLavalle urged students to\nattend Open House as well as\ntry to get their families and\nfriends to attend.\n\"We feel this is an excellent\nopportunity for out-of-town\nstudents to invite their people\nto see the university,\" Lavalle\nsaid.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\n\"The more the public\ncomes to the university \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nthe more it identifies with it.\n\"And the more they identify with it, the more they will\nsupport it,\" he said.\n\"As for the student body,\"\nhe continued, \"there are many\naspects of the university that\nsome students have never par-\nticpated in, or have no knowledge of.\"\nClasses will be cancelled on\nthe Friday afternoon and Saturday of the open house,\nwhich will run from 4 p,m. to\n11 p.m. on Mar. 6 and 10\na.m. to 10 p.m. Mar. 7.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nLavalle said he expects\n100,000 people will attend.\nArrangements made for the\nmob of visitors include a\nbaby-sitting service, co-ordination of washrooms, increased\nfood services, provisions for\ncare of the aged and first\naid services.\nFirst year Engineering students will be co-ordinating\ntraffic, along with Sir Ouvry's\nUniversity Patrol. Lavalle\nsaid a move is under foot to\nsupply radio - telephone communication between the traffic handlers, and also be-\nVillanova girls\ntake back seat\nPHILADELPHIA (CUP) \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nThe student council at Villan-\nova University has refused to\ngrant girls equal extra-curricular status with men.\n\"It's not that we're prejudiced against women,\" said\nJames Murphy, senior class\npresident, \"but Villanova has\na male tradition and we want\nto keep it that way.\"\nOntario has\nunique cure\nfor housing\nLONDON, Ont. (CUP) \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nPlanners at the University of\nWestern Ontario have come\nup with a unique cure for student complaints about housing.\nThey're improving it.\nA new student housing development here will feature\ntwo-storey units with bedrooms on the second floor and\na spiral staircase leading from\nthe living room which will\nhave two couches facing a log-\nburning fireplace.\nNo more than two students\nwill share each unit.\nThe dining area has a maple\ntable and six captains chairs,\nilose to a bar. The kitchen is\nfully equipped with electrical\nappliances.\nEach unit will have an eight-\nfoot sliding glass door leading\nto a private patio and the\ncommon green area where\nstudents will find a heated\nswimming pool, tennis courts,\nsteam bath and a small gym.\nThe Royal Trust\nwill be on campus\nJanuary 27fh and 28th\ninterviewing B.Comm. and B.A. students\ninterested in a career with\nCanada's Leading Trust Company\nAppointments made at Student Services Office\ntween the student guides.\nMore than 900 eager co-eds\nare needed, said Gavin Hume,\na member of Lavalle's committee. He plans to launch a\nblitz campaign in two weeks,\nto recruit and train the girl\nguides.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nAll girls will be supplied\nwith answers to expected\nqueries, he said. He explained\nthat, at the 1960 open house\nthe girl's lack of knowledge\nsometimes was embarrasing.\nTied in with Open House\nthis year is a high school\norientation program encompassing tours and talks for\ndelegates from high schools\naround the province.\nLavalle outlined other activities to council Monday\nnight.\n\"We have received notice\nof at least 65 displays from\nvarious faculties,\" he said.\n'\u00E2\u0080\u00A2'This is more than ever before.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nSome of the highlights ot\nthe two day program will be\na balloon flying stunt, a curl-\nling bonspeil, an^ all-student\ntalent show, a military tattoo,\nand a musical satire.\nThe World University Service \"Treasure Van\", carrying handicrafts from foreign\nlands, will be here for open\nhouse also, Lavalle said.\nLavalle said that anyone\nwho is interested in assisting\nopen house work should get\nto touch with his undergraduate society presidents.\nFuture teachers here\nto discuss three R's\nA hundred future teachers will visit UBC Friday and\nSaturday for a conference on the teacher in society.\nThe annual conference is sponsored by the Faculty of\nEducation and the Education Undergraduate Society.\nStudents will discuss \"The Teacher as a person\" and\n\"The teacher is more than the three R's.\"\nREPRESENTATIVES OF\nTHE\nInternational Nickel Company\nOF CANADA LIMITED\nWill visit the University to discuss career opportunities\nwith graduates and post graduate students in\nGEOLOGY\nand\nGEOPHYSICS\nAlso interviews for Summer Employment will be held\nwith geology and geophysics students in 2nd, 3rd, 4th\nand post-graduate students.\non November 18 and 19\nWe invite you to arrange an interview through\nthe Office of Student Services\nTHE\nInternational Nickel Company\nOF CANADA LIMITED\nCOPPER CLIFF, ONTARIO\n\"\u00E2\u0096\u00A0J <'#\u00C2\u00BB Page 6\nTHE UBYSSEY\nFriday, January 24, 1964\nBYRON HENDER\n.can students pay?\nCouncil\nlaunches\nfee probe\nBy AL BIRNIE\nA plan for a survey of\nBritish Columbia's attitudes to\nhigher education has been\nshelved for the time being.\nThe Higher Education Promotion Committee plans instead a survey of student ability to pay the recent fee increase.\nByron Hender, AMS second\nvice-president, explained that\nthe new survey would have to\nbe decided on by council before anything could be done\nconcerning HEP.\n\"If council decides that the\nability survey is worthwhile\nand undertakes it, this will\ncut down on the money appropriated to HEP.\n\"However, the HEP plans\nwill probably go ahead later,\"\nhe said.\nThe HEP plans call for a\nsurvey fo be made to determine the public's attitudes and\nimpressions of higher education, and to ascertain how\nthese impressions were formed.\nThe survey would be made\nby a professional survey organization.\nThe abilities survey is a\nplan forwarded by AMS President Malcolm Scott, based on\na similiar Quebec survey.\nThe plan was forwarded by\nScott after he charged the\nboard of governors failed to\ntake students finances into\nconsideration when they drew\nup their plans for the increase.\nCouncil is presently investigating the value of conducting\nthe survey.\nThey like it\nBELLINGHAM (CUP) \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nFreshmen at Western Washington State university say university isn't as hard as they\nthought it would be.\nSays unionist\nBusiness should\nlearn from labor'\nA unionist said Thursday he wishes management would\ntake a lesson from labor and get organized.\nChris Towers told a noon\nhour audience more manufacturer's associations would be\ngood for labor as well as business.\n\"Manufacturer's associations\nremove the bother of each\ncompany bargaining with the\nunion separately,\" Towers\nsaid.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nTowers is business agent of\nthe Amalgamated Clothing\nWorkers of America.\nTowers said employers in\nVancouver should organize.\n\"The first step is to brinj?\ncontracts into line, so they all\nexpire on fhe same date.\n\"Then you propose to the\nmanufacturers that they may\nas well all bargain together.\"\nTowers said his union promotes the prosperity of members by making sure industry\nstays vigorous.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 * \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\n\"If a clothing company is\nbeing ineptly managed, the\nunion becomes concerned,\" he\nsaid.\n\"A Vancouver manufacturer\nwas in trouble, about to close\ndown. So the union sent an efficiency expert from California, who showed the outfit how\nto lay out the shop, and how to\nmarket successfully.\n\"A representative was sent\nup to review costs and the company was saved.\"\nThe union, he said, has even\nbought ailing companies outright, put them on their feet,\nand re-sold them to private\nenterprise.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\n\"Although our union is rich\nand powerful enough to buy\nout much of the clothing industry, we don't do it.\" Towers\nexplained.\n\"We realize there is a schism\nbetween labor and management that can never be bridged.\nTowers predicted the B.C.\nclothing industry would prosper in the years ahead because\nof labor-management co-operation.\n\"Co-operation will make\nskilled help available, and\nclothing will be an important\nfactor in the Vancouver\neconomy,\" he said.\nTowers graduated from UBC\nin 1959.\nHe spoke Thursday on invitation of the campus New'\nDemocrats.\nWANTED: 2 girls to share\nlarge furnished apartment\nnear university gates. $3.50\nnear university gates. $35.00\neach per month. Phone Sharon at RE 3-4191 (8:00-5:00)\nwkdys. or CA 4-5837 after 6.\nFINE ARTS\nGrad required' by Canada's foremost supplier. Applicant\nshould have special interest and experience in drama,\nstage crafts, lighting, costumes, etc.\nA permanent position and excellent working conditions\nare offered to the properly qualified person. A complete\nplan of fringe benefits will add to a generous salary.\nWhen applying, in your own handwriting, be sure to give\nfull particulars. All replies will be treated confidentially.\nMALIABAR\n375 HARGRAVE ST.\nUK WINNIPEG. 2\nStudents, alumni\nplan joint feed\nUBC students and alumni\ncan get together at the\nSecond Annual Alumni Banquet to be held Feb. 6 in the\nMain Brock Lounge.\nMore than 200 students\nare being invited. Anyone\ninterested can apply at the\nAlumni office in the Brock\nExtension.\nDr. and Mrs. John Macdonald will be in attendance.\nFeatured speaker this year\nis David Brock of the CBC.\nspeaking on \"My Days at\nUniversity\".\nTim Hollick-Keyon, head\nof the Alumni Association,\nsaid: \"This is the only time\nof the year when students\nand alumni can get together.\nROOM AND BOARD\nAvailable for immediate\noccupancy, good food, use of\nhouse facilities.\nPhone 224-9052, \"Doug.\"\nWANTED\nADVERTISING SALESMEN\nFOR\t\nAMS PUBLICATIONS\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 UBYSSEY\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 TOTEM\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 BIRD CALLS\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 TUUM EST\n* Students who will be returning to campus next year and are interested in\nearning extra money over the summer\nare asked to apply for a sales position\nwith AMS Publications.\n* Some selling experience is necessary.\n* Commissions vary from 13-15% on\nnet sales.\n* Apply in writing or in person to PUBLICATIONS OFFICE, North Brock,\nWhat's doing\nin Aluminum\nFABRICATION?\nLots\u00E2\u0080\u0094because fabrication is an important part of Alcan's\nbusiness. About 15% of our ingot production is fabricated\nin Canada into finished products. (The other 85% makes\na vital contribution towards Canada's export trade.) In our\nown plants, we make semi-finished and some finished\nproducts:\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 At Kingston, Ont.: (where this picture of an aluminum sheet rolling\nmill was taken): Sheet, plate, foil, extrusions and tubing.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 At Arvida, P.Q.: Rod for wire production and other applications;\naluminum paint pigment.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 At Shawinigan, P.Q.: Wire, electrical cable, cable accessories.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 At Etobicoke, Ont.: Die castings, permanent mold castings and\nsand castings.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 At Vancouver, B.C.: Extrusions, rod and wire, electrical cable.\nFabrication at Alcan is a challenging business, not only for\ngraduates in physical metallurgy and mechanical engineering,\nbut also for those in nearly all other engineering and many\nscience disciplines. A typical metallurgical problem might\ninvolve development work in the fabrication and heat\ntreatment of Al-Mg alloys used in sheet plate and extrusions\nfor road and rail transport. Whatever your specialty, you\nare likely to find challenging assignments at Alcan.\nPlease ask your Placement Officer for an\nappointment to meet the Alcan representatives on January 27th, 28th, 29th, and 30th.\nThe following booklets and information sheets are available at your\nplacement office: Presenting Alcan to the University Graduate. / The\nRole of the Physical Metallurgist in Alcan and its Associated Com-\npanies./The Role of the Mechanical Engineer in Alcan and its Associated\nCompanies. / The Role of the Chemical and Extractive Metallurgist in\nAlcan and its Associated Companies. / The Role of the Chemist in Alcan\nand its Associated Companies.\nALUMINUM COMPANY OF CANADA, LIMITED Friday, January 24, 1964\nTHE UBYSSEY\nPage 7\nCritics' Page\nArts festival\nunique to UBC\nTine Festival of the Contemporary Arts, with its emphatic orientation toward the avant-garde, the imaginative and the daring, and with\nits ability to crowd into a ten-day period performances and presentations of the highest quality, is a unique phenomenon.\nUsually it is only a coincidence which may bring two or three of\nthese events together at any one time in a major city or university.\nThe UBC Festival makes this exciting confluence possible because it\nspecifically asks the question: Where are we artistically at this moment,\nand in which direction are we likely to be headed?\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nIn the three Festivals which antedated the one commencing\nJanuary 29, there were performances that must have seemed, to the\nuninitiated viewer, to be slightly mad, or even outrageous events,\nhaving relation neither to each other nor to the \"sane\" world at large.\nOn the other hand, there are those who have detected certain\nrecurring themes; and often these themes have given hints, not only\nof recurring from one art form to another, but also of developments\nin fields of activity other than the arts. The 1964 Festival of the\nContemporary Arts has deliberately attempted to seek out these relationships. This time it hopes to make a \"connection.\"\nThis review of the Festival w_3 contributed by Alvin Balkind,\nassistant curator of UBC's Fine Arts Gallery.\nAlthough he feels faculty contributions are out of place in a student\nnewspaper, we persuaded him to make his one exception, because we\nfelt the Festival important enough to warrant an insider's view.\u00E2\u0080\u0094ed.\nThere is every likelihood that the Connector may be Dr. Marshall\nMcLuhan, who is not strictly speaking a performer, although his\nmethod of presenting his ideas is, in the best sense, a \"performance\";\nand the controversial nature of his theses, put forward with his verve,\noff-beat style and vitality, is, in the highest degree, \"entertaining.\"\nAt least one of the people to appear at this year's Festival has been\ndirectly influenced by McLuhan's writings\u00E2\u0080\u0094Gerd Stern, from San\nFrancisco. But, by and large, most of the events are an outgrowth of\nmassive developments in today's world\u00E2\u0080\u0094developments that have pushed\nthe arts toward their present objectives, and have provided the stimuli\nto McLuhan's thought and writings. The times, the arts ,and McLuhan\nhave ineracted upon one another, evoking McLuhan's revelations on\nthe impact of communications in the Electronics Age, and inspiring\ncertain artists to create new forms which may be the corroboration of\nMcLuhan's theories.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nWhat are these massive, indeed, cataclysmic, developments? Anybody's list would have to include nuclear energy, supersonic jet flight,\nTelstar, explorations into space, computers, automation, expanding\npopulations, and all the other overwhelming social and political complexities of today which have become journalistic cliches, but, nevertheless, make up the character of our times.\nThis is a little frightening, perhaps, and certainly confusing. But\nlike it or not, it is the world of 1964. How nice it would be if\nartists were to ignore all this, and to behave as though they were sitting\nunder the spreading chestnut trees in mittle-Graustark, and, in waltz\ntempo, taking gentle sips of claret cup.\nBut artists of probity cannot\u00E2\u0080\u0094and do not\u00E2\u0080\u0094do so. What we are,\nand what 1964 is, cannot be denied, however much we might want\nto push it all under the carpet. As McLuhan likes to point out, we do\nthis at our peril.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nThe '64 Festival may be the vehicle to give us the opportunity of\nseeing how some of our contemporaries are meeting their era head\non. We may see it at the Festival exhibitions: Art Becomes Reality\n(Pop Art), The New Ceramic Presence, and, for three days in the lobby\nof the Frederick Wood Theatre, the collage/poems of Gerd Stern.\nWe may see it in Jean Erdman's The Coach With The Six Insides,\na professional exercise in integrated, total theatre, based upon James\nJoyce's Finnegan Wake (Joyce, incidentally, was a great influence on\nMarshall McLuhan); and in the films of Vernon Zimmerman and\nAl Sens.\nWe may hear it in the \"beast language\" of poet, Michael McClure;\nor in the music performed by Sylvia Kind, the CBC Chamber Orchestra\nand the members of UBC Department of Music.\nIt may manifest itself in Gerd Stern's presentations of Mosaic\nand Verbal American Landscape Take Two, or in Philip Thiel's Notes\nFor The Symphony Of Space.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nBut, above all, it may be discerned in what Marshall McLuhan has\nto say, which may, all in all, lead us to that fascinating \"connection.\"\nAt this university, the student presents his mind (and his fees) at\nthe cashier's desk, and hopefully gets something in return. Call this\nFestival of the Contemporary Arts a dividend. It is not listed in the\nregular curriculum. But judging from the impact and repercussions\nof the past three Festivals, the 1964 presentations are likely to result\nin one of the most memorable and influential courses of events in this\nyear's calendar\ncinema\nJhsL QtouvdbwL:\n\u00C2\u00A3th&L qwsA. ufL\nThe Cardinal, directed by\nOtto Preminger, is another of\nthose pictures which attempts\nto glorify a certain institution\nof society by pointing out the\ntrials and tribulations of a\nmember within said institution.\nThe film suffers most from\nwhat has laughingly been called \"a subtle reshaping of history.\" It suffers from various\nother illnesses as well, particularly sloppy sentimentality and\ndownright bad acting.\nThe Cardinal traces the steps\nof a Roman Catholic priest\nfrom his days as a theological\nsludent to his final triumph\nwhen he is made a Prince of\nthe Church. He suffers various\npitfalls which, oddly enough,\nrequire him to make decisions\nbased on his religious training\nrather than personal experience.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nFor example, his dear sister\n(Carol Lynley) is in love with\na Jew. Since they cannot marry\n(due to the conflict of religion)\nlittle sister runs away, becomes\na dance-hall girl and becomes\npregnant (without becoming\nmarried) by a sneaky-looking\ndance partner, Ramon. In the\nhospital, the priest (I forget his\nname, but he is played, rather\nunconvincingly, by Tom Tryon)\nis faced with the big decision.\n(I forgot to let you in on some\nmore of the plot. Little sister\nis of too small a stature to have\nthe baby and the doctors would\nhave to perform a foetal craniotomy to save her.)\nNow, Tom has to decide. Will\nhe let poor sister die and save\nthe baby or will he agree to\nthe operation to save little sister? To the tune of \"But\nThat's Murder\" and a few catechisms, he decides that little\nsister must go in order to save\nthe baby.\nBut all turns out well in the\nend anyway, 'cause little baby,\nnot unpredictably, grows up to\nlook almost exactly like her\npoor tragic mummy. In fact,\nthe likeness is so striking you\nwould swear Carol Lynley was\nplaying both parts. (I nearly\nfell off my seat laughing. The\nwhole scene is about as tragic\nas Charley Brown being booted\nby Lucy.)\nLater on, the Catholic\nChurch, in the person of what's-\nhis-name, is shown as: (1) Leading the fight against segregation in the State of Georgia. (2)\nLeading the fight against the\nNazis in pre-war Austria. The\nofficial policy of the Vatican,\nin the film, is that Nazis are\nbad little boys and must not\nbe tolerated. (3) Leading the\nfight against . . .\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nI give up. I could go on and\non, but I would wear you out\nas well as myself\u00E2\u0080\u0094and the film\nwas wearing enough. The Cardinal is plain and simple, a poor\nfilm with mechanical readings\nof idiot cards in place of acting (the^only bright spot in the\nwhole cast is Romy Schnieder\nwho has a relatively small\npart) as well as a general aura\nof incredulity about the whole\nthing.\nI guess you could bear the\nfilm if you were a\u00C2\u00ABCatholic and\nliked colour films that dwelt\non religious ritual cumrevery-\nJhing. I couldn't.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094efhel bloomsbury\npainting\nMalik}.\nFor the first time in Western\nCanada there will be an exhibition at the Fine Arts Gallery,\nUBC, by the creators of the\nAmerican Pop Art and related\nmovements.\nThis exhibition runs from\nJan. 29 through Feb. 8 and is\none of the major events of the\n4th Festival of the Contemporary Arts at UBC.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nThe title of the exhibition is\n\"Art Becomes Reality.\" This is\nclosely associated philosophically with the writings of Dr.\nMarshall McLuhan, a world-\nrenowned figure who writes on\nthe Electronic Revolution and\nwho will also be at UBC for the\nFestival.\nThe Pop Art movement has\nalso been called \"Pop Goes the\nEasel,\" and \"The Art of the\nCommon Object.\" This art of\nthe common object is becoming reality.\nROMY SCHNIEDER, according to our Ethel, is the only bright spot\nin The Cardinal. In this scene she is shown talking to Cardinal\nWhat's-is-name. Tom Tyron plays Cardinal W-h-n. Ethel forgot\nwhat he (Cardinal) is called in the show because he (Ethel) was\nlaughing so hard he (Ethel) nearly fell off his (Ethel's) chair. Ethel\nis a he. Isn't Ethel a funny name for a boy? Page 8\nTHE U&Y6SEY\nFriday, January 24, 1964\nKEN LEITCH\n. . . boo boo\nBook census\nunder way\nin Library\nAmerican history prof. Dr.\nA. N. MacDonald and his 90\nhistory students are taking on\nthe massive job of cataloguing\nevery book and periodical on\nhis subject in the campus\nlibrary.\nHe claims the survey is\nprimarily for his own satisfaction to give him an idea of\nwhat books are needed.\nDr. MacDonald said UBC's\ncollection of periodicals and\ncurrent works are adequate \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nbut warns that the library is\nshort on books written before\n1948.\n\"It is difficult to order\nbooks without knowing exactly how many (and which\nones) the library has,\" he said.\n\"At the moment, I am not\nthinking of how to get the\nmoney to purchase the books\nwe need,\" Dr. MacDonald said.\nbut added. \"It is important we\nknow which books we need.\"\nAlready, Dr. MacDonald has\nhad photostats made of the\nHarvard Guide to American\nHistory which lists nearly\n20,000 works on the subject.\nUsing the library's card catalogue and indexes, his students will check the Harvard\nGuide to discover which ones\nthe campus library has.\nENSIGN\n(Continued from Page 1)\nFlag protocol calls for flags\nto be lowered at sundown. It\nis disrespectful to fly a flag\nafter dusk.\nGordon said there would be\nno charges laid if the flag is\nreturned immediately.\nEarlier a Canadian ensign\nwas stolen from the faculty\nclub pole and sent to The\nUbyssey in a letter to the editor.\nThe Ubyssey still has the\nflag because the administration has not asked for its return.\nGrad class gift\na real blast\nBERKELEY, Calif. (CUP)\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 A blue and gold cannon\nwas presented to the University of California recently as the grad class gift.\nA grad class spokesman\nsaid: \"We wanted to give\nsomething different.\"\nLeitch goofs\nFrosh, Engineer\nweeks collided\nYou can't fight city hall\u00E2\u0080\u0094or the engineers.\nBecause of an error in AMS\nco-ordinator Ken Leitch's office, Engineering Week and\nFrosh Week were scheduled to\nheld at the same time.\nSo Frosh week has been\ncancelled.\nAt Council Monday night,\nFrosh President Jason Leask\ndisputed with Engi n e e r i n g\nPresident Peter Shepard as to\nwho had the prior claim.\n\"The week of Feb. 14 has\nalways been Engineering\nWeek,\" Shepard said with a\nwide sweep of his hand.\n\"Besides, I wrote it in on the\nmaster sheet myself.\"\nLeask said that Frosh had\nbooked the week with the coordinator's office shortly after'\nhis council was elected.\nAl Birnie, editor of the\nFrosh Newsletter, said the\nFrosh Council blamed the\nAMS for the mix-up.\n\"It seems there were two\nmaster sheets,\" he said.\nHe said Leitch had accepted\nresponsibility for the error.\nBrian Copeland, Executive\nmember on Frosh Council said\nthat most of the events planned for Frosh week, including\na pizza feed, sock hop, and a\nstunt day, had been cancelled.\nJapanese fight\nfor pacificism\nThe feeling of the Japanese\npeople is essentially pacifist,\naccording to UBC professor\nFrank Landon.\nLangdon, an Asian Studies\nprofessor, said even in the most\nconservative Japanese families,\nthe women and young people\nare against any form Of rearming.\nLibrary receives\n47 Indian books\nThe UBC Library has received 47 books on India from the\nIndian government.\nThey were presented to\nG. P. Mather, India's trade\ncommissioner in Vancouver.\nIt is the second gift of books\nto the UBC library from the\ngovernment of India\nAcademics, 80 strong,\nneeded for symposium\nAcademic Symposium Committee is looking for 80\nacademics in a hurry.\nAnd they must hurry to file their applications for\nAcademic Symposium no later than today.\nSymposium organizers say few students have applied\nfor the three-day affair. Last year more than 250 students\napplied for the symposium.\nApplications can be picked up at the AMS offices,\nInternational House, and the Engineering Undergraduate\nBOARD AND ROOM\nON CAMPUS\nMEN ONLY, $70.00\nPHONE: CA 4-9087.\nWe bend an ear to undergraduate money\nproblems of all kinds, from setting up a savings\naccount, to budgeting, to discussing your financial\nfuture. Any time we can be of help . ..\nROYAL BANK\nThese Items Now In Full Stock\n^ UDV JdCKCIS (LEATHER SLEEVES) 11 \u00C2\u00AB/0\n* Science Jacket 19.50\n* Education, Arts, Science Cardigans.. 15.95\n* UBC Sweat Shirts 2.50\n* UBC Scarves 3.25\n* UBC Beer Mugs 5.00\nCOLLEGE SHOP\n- Brock Extension - Hours: 11:30 - 2:30\nOPERATED BY THE AMS FOR YOU !\nWay back when,\nmother wondered\nif Tampax\nreally\nmade\nall that\ndifference\nNO BELTS\nNO PINS\nNO PADS\nNO ODOR\nThere's nothing wrong in\nbeing a \"doubting Thoma-\nsina\" about Tampax. You\nmay feel that since you can\n\"get along\" with pads\u00E2\u0080\u0094why\nchange?\nMillions of present-day\nTampax users once shared\nyour doubts. But once\nthey changed, it became clear to them\nthat Tampax really\ndoes make an enormous difference. You feel so secure when\nodor doesn't bother you . . .\nwhen there can be no tell-tale\noutlines.. .when disposal isn't\ndifficult any more . . . when\nyou can't even feel your protection, once it's in place.\no ,\nArts III, is one of two new\nappointments to the Brock\nArt Committee approved by\nStudent Council Monday night.\nThe Brock Art Committee is\nthe student-faculty group responsible for the purchase of\nthe controversial $1,500 \"Sun\"\npainting last term.\nThe other appointment confirmed was that of Chris Ken-\nworth, Arts IV.\nMetro Theatre Centre\ntemporarily located at\nTHE KITSILANO THEATRE\n4TH & ARBUTUS\nJAN. 21 TO 25\nWEST VANCOUVER LITTLE THEATRE GUILD\npresents\nA Comedy by Ted Willis\n\"DOCTOR IN THE HOUSE\"\nDirected by Gordon Allan & Anna Smithurst\nwhose young people\nthe needed money\nUBC.\ninterior parents S\n>eople can't raise Q\nloney to attend tt\nDOORS OPEN: 7:30 P.M. CURTAIN: 8:30 P.M.\nTickets $1.25 to $2.50 available at Theatre\nOpen Days 12:30 - 5 p.m. , 736-9915, 736-4828\nStudents admitted two for the price of one\nFor furher\nBe a subscripion member and save up to 25\n_ information telephone 736-9315. _\nAll: Every Man for Himself!\nLousy Pere UBC!\nTraitor and Mean Skunk!\nTb\u00C2\u00AB Trio of Terry Clarke\nfeaturing:\nGlenn MacDonald \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Tenor\nDon Thompson \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Bass\nTerry Clarke \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Drums\nTHIS FRIDAY AND\nSATURDAY NIGHT\nRALPH DYKE TRIO\nSUNDAY NIGHT\nOpen from 9:00 p.m.\nc u. s. o\n(Canadian University Services Overseas)\nLAST CHANCE\nApply for Canada's \"Private\" Peace Corps\nGO TO AFRICA\nASIA\nCARIBBEAN\nSOUTH AMERICA\nfor 18 months to 2 years\nStill Needed\nStudents\nGraduating in ...\nEDUCATION\nARTS\nTECHNICAL & SCIENCE COURSES\nMust fill information forms in AMS office by Saturday,\nJanuary 25, and return to MR. J. B. WOOD, Extension\nDepartment, UBC, or BOX 24, AMS. Information booklets at AMS also.\nSTATEMENTS. LETTERS.\nTHESES. ETC.\nNeat, accurate and reasonable, WA 2-5981.\nWest Point Grey\nBaptist Church\n4509 West lllh Avenue\nREV. A. J. HADLEY.\nB.A., B.D.\n9:45 a.m. Young People's\nClass\n11:00 a.m. 'Union or Unity\"\n7:30 p.n_ \"Natal City of\nthe Soul\"\n8:45 p.m. Young People's\nFellowship\nOn Campus Interviews\nOur engineers talk to\nhorSeS. And, this horse talks back!\nHe's Blaze\u00E2\u0084\u00A2-the talking hobby horse\nwhose legs move realistically as he gallops, bucks and rears. Nobody had ever\nmade such an animal before, so our\nR&D people had to solve lots of interesting new problems in the process -\nlike developing the linkage and springs\nthat make this bronc perform with\nequal enthusiasm whether his rider\nweighs 35 lbs. or 70, while simultaneously licking stress and fatigue problems similar in scope to those found in\naircraft design.\nIt's stimulating work. Technically\nchallenging. Not only in R&D, but in\nmanufacturing and administration, too.\nAnd, most rewarding\u00E2\u0080\u0094in terms of\nboth salary and satisfaction. Wheel\nspinning is kept to a minimum and a\nsurprising number of the ideas bur\npeople propose end up in production.\nMaybe because so many have been good\nideas \u00E2\u0080\u0094that are reflected in products\nselling at a rate demanding that we\nsubstantially increase our engineering staff, again, to keep up with our\ngrowth. This opens up some choice\nspots for men particularly interested\nin finding ways to make things simpler,\nbetter and cheaper.\nConsider the possibility of coming to\nwork at our facilities near the Los\nAngeles International Airport and of\nraising your family in one of the\npleasant beach or valley communities\nnearby. To find out more, see our professional employment interviewer - on\ncampus - soon.\n\"BLAZE\" IS A TRADEMARK OF MATTEL, INC. Page 10\nTHE UBYSSEY\nFriday, January 24, 1964\nMullen\nspeaks for\nscholarships\nBy DAN MULLEN\nAll of a sudden everybody's\nexcited about athletic scholarships. That's fine.\nBut with all this talk in the\nsports section of this newspaper on scholarships, it has\noccured to me that no one has\nspecified what form of assistance (financial or otherwise)\nshould be given to college\nathletes.\nThe connotation of \"athletic scholarships\" to many\npeople is the result of the\nabuses common to U.S. football factories during the early\nand middle fifties.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nFootball squads lived in\ndorms separated from the rest\nof the students, took sham\ncourses or received automatic\npasses from alumi-cowed professors, and picked up monthly \"allowances\" in flashy, donated automobiles.\nAt least that's what writers\nof boys' sports stories would\nhave us believe.\nThese allegations were\nborne out, in part at least, by\ninvestigations of the National\nCollegiate Athletic Association.\nThis body dug down into a\npile of potential fertilizer, and\ndecided it was time to put\nsome legitimacy back into\nAmerican college sport.\nSo, they adopted a set of\nrules restricting the amount\nand types of aid that a school\ncould offer to prospective athletes.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nAt the same time they made\nit known that certain institutions had better raise their\nacademic standards for athletes, or apply the same measuring rod to sport-types as\nthey did to other students.\nSchools that didn't clean up\ntheir aid programs were\nslapped with heavy limits on\ntheir recruiting of high school\nathletes, and as a result had\nto suffer through long periods\nwith teams of inferior quality.\nThe evils of full athletic\nscholarships awarded to near\nimbeciles have been corrected\nby U.S. universities.\nThe abuses have been minimized. College sport is back\nin the hands of the students.\nWhat should this mean to\nUBC?\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nIt provides an ethical, tested method for raising the\ncalibre of a school's athletic\nstatus. This in turn can( and\nalmost always does) bring in\nhigher class opponents, larger\ncrowds, and more money.\nIn schools half the size of\nUBC, with urban areas several times smaller than this,\nmoney left over from athletics is used to build additions\nto campus libraries, improve\nclassroom facilities, and such.\nMany American schools do\nlittle more than find jobs for\ntheir athletes. Others contribute part or full tuition.\nIt is, I believe, only a matter of time until UBC is\nforced into granting its athletes some form of aid.\nPETER MULLINS\n. . . walks out\nCoach goes\nwhen team\ndoesn't\nBy DAVE CARLSON\nCoach Peter Mullins walked\nout of Tuesday night's practice\nand told his basketball team\nthat he didn't want to' see them\nagain until today.\nMullins is worried about the\nmental attitude of his team.\nHe later explained: \"I don't\nwant to come to practices to\nwatch those guys bobbling the\nball around. They do the difficult things well, but cannot do\nthe simple things.\n\"It is all a matter of attitude. And if it doesn't change,\nI'll cancel next week's practices also,\" he said.\nThe UBC Thunderbird basketball crew opens its 1963-64\nWCIAA home schedule tonight.\nThe opposition is the University of Alberta-Calgary Dinosaurs.\nCalgary currently holds\ndown fourth place in conference standings (not fifth and\nlast place as erroneously reported yesterday.) The team\nclaims two victories and four\ndefeats.\nThe Dinosaurs are fresh from\nt series sweep over the much\n\"mproved University of Manitoba Bisons.\nLast season Calgary dominat-\nad over their West Coast rivals\nin league play, but have lost\nfour of their best players. However, capable replacements\nhave been found in returnees\nBob Smith, Skip Morgan, and\nTom Sindlinger.\nGame times are 8:30 tonight\nand Saturday,\nBig car rally\nthis weekend\nUBC Sports Car Club is putting on a weekend blast known\nas the Thunderbird rally this\nweekend.\nThe overnight rally will take\nentrants over a variety of road\ntypes to Kamloops and back to\nVancouver.\nThe start is at Plimleys on\nFourth, entrance fee is five\ndollars and further information\ncan be obtained from the club\nhouse behind Brock Hall.\nSPORTS\nEDITOR* Denis Stanley\nSoccer Birds are\nhoming pigeons\nBy GEORGE REAMSBOTTOM\nThunderbird soccer fans will be treated to two home\nNew lines\nfor hockey\nThe Thunderbird hockey\naam puts its record on the line\nhis weekend.\nThey are daring University\n>f Manitoba Bisons to stop\nheir two game losing streak.\nPlaying tonight and Saturday in Winnipeg the Birds can\nlimb over the Bisons and out\nof the league cellar by winning\n' >oth games.\nCoach Dennis'Selder has announced several changes in his\nlineup.\nHe has formed a new checking line with Stu Gibbs centering Clint Smith and Bill\nBowles who is back after being\nout three weeks with a badly\nsprained ankle.\nAnother new line has Ken\nRonalds between the Morris\nbrothers, Ron and Dave.\nOn defense UBC will be going with three defensemen, Al\nMerlo, Don Rogers and John\nVIcLeod.\nSelder is taking only 14\nolayers to Winnipeg.\nHockey manager Bill Sturn\nleft for Denver Tuesday. He\ns endeavoring to line up some\n?ames with Denver University\naext season when UBC is pulling out of the WCIAA.\nTop teams\nin women's\ntourney\nBy JANET CURRIE\nSeven of BC's top Senior\nWomen's basketball teams and\none from Oregon will arrive\nat UBC this weekend for the\nAnnual Thunderette Basketball Tournament.\nSenior A teams from Naniamo, Kelowna, Portland, University of Victoria, Richmond,\nand Mount Pleasant Legion\nwill be entering along with the\nThunderettes.\nThe tournament which is\nscheduled for tonight and Saturday is co-sponsored by UBC's\nWomen's Athletic Association\nand the School of Physical\nEducation.\nIt aims to \"foster growth\nand interest in women's basketball in B.C.\"\nThe tournament starts today\nin the Women's gym with first\ngame matching Mt. Pleasant\nLegion with Victoria College.\nOn Saturday the tournament\nbegins at 8:30 a.m. with the\nSenior A Orphans meeting\nPortland.\nThe consolation game takes\nplace at 7 p.m. with the final\ngame to decide the winners at\n9.\nEach team in the tournament\nwill play three games and a\nfree throw contest is scheduled\nbetween the two final games.\ngames this weekend.\nImperial Cup games have\nmessed up the first division\nlower mainland league schedule and the Birds will pay\nItalo-Canadians at home Saturday.\nThey had been scheduled to\nplay their second match of a\nfour-game road series.\nSunday they will host th<\nOregon university soccer team.\nOregon is among several\nAmerican universities considering the formation of a National Collegiate Athletic Association soccer league. They\nhave indicated that UBC would\nbe welcome to join the new\ncircuit.\nCoach Joe Johnson is interested in playing exhibition\ngames but feels the Birds are\ntoo strong for most of the\nAmerican university clubs, and\nisn't too interested in joining\nthe proposed NCAA league.\nIn Saturday's regular league\ngame the Birds wil start the\nsame lineup which defeated\nSapperton 5-0.\nThe UBC club is one point\nbehind Royal Oaks\nTeam T-Bird\ncleans up\nRCSCC triad\nTeam T-Bird, UBC sports car\nlub's entry in the annual\n: CSCC Trail, won the first\n^am prize and the drivers are\n. xpected to place well up in\nhe individual standings.\nAlthough final results are\nnot available the team did so\nwell in the three events first\nJlace has been conceded to\nthem.\nThe Triad, sponsored by the\n\"loyal City Sports Car Club is\na three week event where cars\ncompete either in teams of\nhree or as individuals in a\nrally, gymkhana and an auto-\nross.\nIn the individual standings\ndriver Pierce Isaacs is expected\nto claim second overall and\ndriver Tom Burgess should get\nhird overall.\nOther members of the Team\nT-Bird are driver Bill Botham,\nnavigators Jim Lightfoot, Bill\nFane and Hank McKinnell.\nIn the auto-cross last Sunday\nthe three cars placed behind\na series of Volkswagens and\nDodges but gained enough\npoints to hold onto their first\nplace position.\nTHIS SUNDAY, 8:30 P.M.\nIN CONCERT\nCHAD MITCHELL TRIO\nQUEEN ELIZABETH THEATRE\nPRICES: $4.00, $3.25, $2.50, $1.75, $1.25\nNEXT SUNDAY, 8:30 P.M.\nTHE MODERN JAZZ QUARTET\nTHE BARNEY KESSEL TRIO\nQueen Elizabeth Theatre\nPRICES: $3.25, $2.50, $1.75, $1.25\nTickets for both events at\nThe Vancouver Ticket Centre, 631 Hamilton.\nAll Eatons Dept. Stores \u00E2\u0080\u0094 \"Charge Them.\"\nFraser Radio-TV, 41st and Boulevard Friday, January 24, 1064\nTHE UBYSSEY\nTHE SKI BUM\nBy TIM ROBERTS\nWho thought Vancouver\nwould ever be one up on Innsbruck?\nWith last week's generous\nsnow fall we can once again\ncurse our chains at mile zero\non Mt. Seymour, stand for\nhours in the lineups for Grouse\nMountain's chairlift, and do\nbattle with the level slopes of\nMt. Hollyburn.\nA slightly saner trek has\nstarted for Diamond Head on\nGaribaldi, which affords. a\nmost enjoyable and considerably more relaxing day of\nsking for $3.00, although the\narea has been temporarily\nclosed because of excess snow\non the roads.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nIf you're considering the\nlocal hills, any time after 8:30\na.m. is sheer frustration.\nPerhaps an hour's wait in\ntraffic or lift lineups might\nallow us that moment of reflection to compare the potential in skiing development\naround our fair city and the\nfacilities afforded us at the\npresent.\nIt's unfortunate that we had\nto wait for a vision of Olympic\ngrandeur to provide an impetus\nfor the Whistler Mt. project.\nBut it's satisfying to know\nthat we will soon be able to do\nsomething with all this snow\nrather than meekly surrender\nto the three hills \u00E2\u0080\u0094 then perhaps we will be able to talk of\nVancouver and Innsbruck in\nthe same breath.\nThe \"Baker Invasion\" met\na blizzard counterattack last\nSunday, sending many of the\nless hardy souls to the shelter\nof the ski lodge. Three buses\nfrom Fort Camp, Education,\nand V.O.C. braved the weather\nsouth of the \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 border, and the\ngroups seemed to have enjoyed\nthe day despite themselves.\nSunday the Men's Residence\nis sending another bus to\nBaker.\nTwo smaller trips are planned by V.O.C. this weekend,\none to Whistler Mt. and the\nother to Hollyburn.\nThe Whistler Mt. affair will\nsee about ten skiers leaving\nby train to Alta Lake on Saturday morning and returning\nSunday night.\nIn connection with this trip\nthe club is currently investigating the area as a future\ncabin site. Five skiers intend to\navoid the crowds and break\ntrail to the peak of Hollyburn\nSunday.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nThe men's intramural ski\nmeet will not be held this Sunday as previously announced.\nThe meet has been moved to\nFebruary 23 and the course\nwill be in Brockton Gully,\nabove the chairlift on Mt. Seymour.\nAny club, fraternity, or\nfaculty may submit any number of entries, however only\nthe best four times count for\nthe team results.\nRegistration is on the day of\nthe meet.\nThe Thunderbird Ski Team\nis again competing in the\nPacific Northwest Intercollegiate meets.\nDecember 21 to January 1\nthe Alpine team worked out in\nRossland under coaches Don\nBruneski and Ted Hill.\nJanuary 1 the team left for\nthe first meet in McCall, Idaho.\nThe Thunderbirds, with\nundermanned teams, placed\nfourth among seven U.S. College teams.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nThe best performance was\nby Dave Gibson who ran fifth\nin the cross-country.\nAlan Sturgess, and Denis De\nJong round out the Nordic\nteam. Tom Jenkin, who didn't\ngo to McCall due to injuries,\nGary Taylor, Tim Roberts, and\nMartin Kaffka make up the\nAlpine team.\nMore consistency, already\napparent in the second meet in\nMissoula, Montana should\nmake the Alpine team a more\nserious contender among the\nstronger U.S. teams.\nGEORGE SWARBRICK\n. . . beats Czech goalie\nCzech win,\ncheck win,\ncheckmate\nFather Bauer's squad had\nbetter luck against Czechoslovakia's \"B\" team than they\ndid against the Russians when\nthey squeezed a 3-2 win Tuesday night.\nThe Russian \"B\" team scored a 2-1 victory over Bauer's\nboys last week.\nThe Czech Olympic team\nalso beat Canada 6-1.\nThe Czech news agency\nCetreka said the Czechs were\ntied with the Olympians 1-1\nat the end of the first period,\nthen the Canadians pulled\nahead 3-1 at the end of the\nsecond, the Czechs scored an\nunanswered single in the\nthird.\nCanadian scores were by\nGeorge Swarbrick, Bob Forhan and Gary Begg.\nCanadians were tagged with\nseven of the 12 penalties.\nField hockey\nFirst division Field Hockey\nleaders Varsity meet the Cardinals at noon Saturday at\nUBC.\nThe other first division Blues\nmeet North Shore at 3 p.m.\nEarl E. Riser\n(Ag. 51) says:\nI plough a straight furrow\nin my finances with a\nPersonal Chequing Account at..\nt0 3 miilDH CASADWIi\nGgOJ\nBank of Montreal\n0O4UUU& \"pOiAt Sa*c "Newspapers"@en . "Vancouver (B.C.)"@en . "LH3.B7 U4"@en . "LH3_B7_U4_1964_01_24"@en . "10.14288/1.0128276"@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 .