"CONTENTdm"@en . "http://resolve.library.ubc.ca/cgi-bin/catsearch?bid=1211252"@en . "University Publications"@en . "2015-09-18"@en . "1964-02-04"@en . "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/Ubysseynews/items/1.0128857/source.json"@en . "application/pdf"@en . " We've had\nour Phil\nTHS UBYSSEY\nof\nSocreds\nVol. XLVI, No. 48\nVANCOUVER, B.C., TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 1964\nCA 4-3916\nUBC rebel\nTories\ndisown\nmaverick\nA UBC student who was one\nof the leaders of the revolt\nagainst John Diefenbaker at\nthe Progressive Conservative\nStudent Federation meeting\nhas been disowned by the UBC\nConservative club.\nGeorge Dunlop, Arts IV, a\nmember of the campus club,\nproposed a resolution calling\nfor a secret ballot on the\nleadership of Diefenbaker at\nthe Ottawa meeting over the\nweekend.\nThe motion was passed. In\nthe subsequent vote Diefenbaker was approved by a\nsmall margin.\nDunlop is an outspoken opponent of Diefenbaker.\n\"The Diefenbaker vision\nstopped at Prince Albert,\" he\ntold the conference delegates.\n\"B.C. will not support him under any circumstances.\"\nCampus Conservative club\npresident Peter Hyndman said\nMonday that Dunlop was not\nattending as a UBC delegate.\nUBC was officially represented by Tom Chambers, Rod\nMcKenzie and Joe Clark, national president of the Federation.\nHyndman said Dunlop tried\nto get a motion calling for\nrejection of Diefenbaker's\nleadership at a meeting of the\nUBC club before the conference began.\nHe called Dunlop a maverick Conservative.\n\"The motion was defeated,\"\nsaid Hyndman. \"We felt we\nshould support the duly elected leader of the party.\"\n\"We support whole-heartedly the elected leader of the\nparty,\" said Hyndman.\nHe said there would be no\ndisciplinary action against\nDunlop.\n\"He can vote as he likes.\"\nDunlop joined Ontario, Quebec and Maritime Conservatives in the bid to unseat Diefenbaker.\nThe conference also passed\na motion calling for reinstatement of former Defence\nMinister Douglas Harkness to\nthe top leadership of the party.\nTHREE TIMES A QUEEN, Musa Lincke, Arts I was crowned\nQueen of the Snow Carnival at Waterloo, Ont. College\nqueens from across Canada took part in the contest. Miss\nLincke is also UBC Homecoming Queen and Frosh Queen.\nLaval in a royal snit\nover $1 million visit\nQUEBEC \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Laval University's student association\nwants money more than it wants a visit from the Queen.\nSo students are going to protest her visit next October\nbecause it will cost $1 million.\nAnd that $1 million could provide 2,000 more scholarships for needy students, Laval Law students' president\nBrian Mulroney said. \"It is only a symbolic gesture, but\nit is necessary under the circumstances,\" he added.\nGaglardi\nhints big\ngrant hike\nBy STEPHEN BROWN\nThere will be a big increase in the provincial government's higher education budget, highways minister Phil Gaglardi promised Monday. r.\nIt was the first statement by\na cabinet minister that an increase was coming.\nHe did not specifiy how\nmuch the increase would be.\nUBC students staged a massive protest last year when the\ngovernment refused to increase\nthe operating grant in accordance with UBC requests.\nGaglardi defended his nephew, Ken Gaglardi, president\nof the campus Socreds, who last\nweek let slip a remark that\nthe budget would have \"good\nsurprises\" for University students.\n\"I'm not mad at Ken, I'm\nproud of him,\" Gaglardi emphatically told The Ubyssey.\n\"He is a good forecaster and\na good boy!\"\nThe budget will be introduced in the legislature Friday.\nThere was considerable comment and speculation in the\ndowntown dailies that Premier\nBennett would be displeased\nwith the younger Gaglardi's\napparent 'leak' about the budget, made during an all-party\ncampus election debate Thursday.\nThe highways minister made\nhis budget promise in response\nto a question by a Ubyssey reporter following his heckler\nbombarded speech in Brock.\nGaglardi handled the constant heckling with characteristic relish.\nBut he furiously tongue-lashed a student for making a remark which he called 100%\nfalse, about Attorney-General\nBonner's personal habits during the question period.\nThe questioner was not\nbooed by the crowd. Gaglardi\nsaid he was disappointed at\nsuch an attitude.\nSee PHIL\n(Continued on Page 2)\nHON. PHIL GAGLARDI\n. . . more money\nSUS yanks two 'smutty stories\nScience plagued by irate mothers\nTwo major stories were\ntaken out of the Science Undergraduate Society paper\nBlack Plague following protests over an issue of the faculty's regular newsletter.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nSix irate mothers phoned\nuniversity to complain about\nthe content of the newsletter.\nOne parent notified the\nRCMP.\nDean of Science Dr. V. J.\nOkulitch said he disapproved\nof the newsletter.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nScience Un dergraduate\npresident Chuck Rennie said\nthe stories were taken out of\nthe Black Plague at the last\nminute following the complaints about the newsletter,\nwhich appeared last week.\nBlack Plague appeared on\ncampus Monday.\n\"We thought we should play\nit safe,\" he said.\nHe said the stories which\nwere changed at the last minute could be called smutty.\nSo far, University officials\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nhave taken no action against\nthe Science Undergraduate\nSociety.\nThe story in the Science\nnewsletter gave a description\nof the sex act, using scientific\nterms.\n\"I have seen last week's\nnewsletter and I don't like it,\"\nsaid Okulitch Monday. He said\nit was smutty and not\namusing.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nSgt. Doug Thompson said\nthe matter does not coneern\nthe RCMP. \"It is entirely a\nuniversity matter,\" he said.\nEarly poll\ntoday for\nabsentees\nStudents will elect the AMS\npresident, second vice-president\nand secretary Wednesday.\nThey will also elect Model\nParliament.\nAn advance poll will be held\ntoday from 11:30 to 3:30 for\nstudents who will be off campus Wednesday.\nEarlier education students\ncomplained'they would be unable to vote.\nRegular polls Wednesday\nwill be open from 10 a.m. to\n4 p.m.\nThey are located in Brock\nNorth, Brock South, the cafeteria, the library, bus stop, Engineering, Wesbrook, New Education and Buchanan buildings.\nFort, Acadia camp and Common Block residents can vote\ntoday from 5 to 7 p.m.\nStudents will mark ballots\npreferentially. Each student\nwill mark four separate ballots, one for each position, and\none for Model Parliament.\nCandidates for president are:\nMike Coleman, Arts IV; Ken\nHarrison, Engineering III; and\nRoger McAfee, Law 1.\nFor secretary: Ruth Dumont,\nP.E. Ill; Marilyn McMeans,\nArts II; Donna Morris, Arts\nIII.\nSecond vice-president: Howard Faulkner, Arts II; and Byron Hender, Commerce III.\nAll AMS members are eligible to vote.\nAn all-candidates meeting\nwill be held at noon today in\nBu. 203. Page 2\nTHE UBYSSEY\nTuesday, February 4, 1964\nB and G\nboobs on\nbanners\nAll AMS election banners\nwere taken down by Buildings\nand Grounds crews Saturday.\nThey were removed before\na Board of Governors tea, in\naccordance with a university\nrule which says no political\nsigrjs must be displayed on\ncampus during Board meetings.\nBut the rule does not apply\nto AMS elections, according\nto ceremonies office head Sir\nOuvry Roberts and Buildings\nand Grounds Superintendent\nTom Hughes.\nThe banners were ordered\ntaken down by Len Bayley,\nassistant supervisor of B and\nG.\nHe admitted that he had not\nbeen ordered to do so.\nThe banners were taken to\nthe banner room in Brock.\nSeveral were damaged by the\ncrews.\nSir Ouvry said the banners\nshould stay up.\n\"I understand they have remained up in the past, and I\nsee no reason why they should\ncome down now,\" he said.\n\"I don't think it will offend\nthe Board and their guests to\nhave them up on campus,\"\nsaid Hughes, \"It shows a\nlively and active campus.\"\nBayley said the banners\nwould be replaced by his\ncrews when told of Roberts'\nand Hughes' statements.\nThe election committees replaced the signs themselves,\nbecause they did not want to\nwait until university crews got\naround to it.\n\"Two of my banners were\ntorn beyond repair,\" said one\ncandidate.\nPHIL\n(continued from page 1)\nBut he quickly recovered his,\nand the crowd's rollicking\nmood.\n\"Everywhere you go in B.C.\nit's paved,\" Gaglardi shouted.\n\"Pave C-lot,\" shouted a heckler, louder.\nSpeaking of progress, Gaglardi began, \"The U.S. has just\nsent a missile to the moon \u00E2\u0080\u0094\"\nHeckler: \"With Bennett in it?\n\"We would avail ourselves\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nsomeone has to build the roads\non the moon,\" Gaglardi sallied.\nGaglardi said he is used to\nabuse, that every good man in\nhistory has been wrongfully\nabused.\n\"Remember, they crucified\nChrist,\" he shouted.\nLORD MARTIN CECIL speaks\non \"Sanity in an Insane\nWorld\" in Bu. 102, noon,\nWednesday, sponsored by\nthe Onrological Society.\nFestival\ncomedy\non today\nUBC's festival of the contemporary arts 1964 continues\nthis week.\nJean Erdman's production\nof The Coach With The Six\nInsides goes on stage at 2:30\ntoday in the auditorium. Admission 50 cents.\nThe production is a comedy\nof acting, miming and dancing, based on James Joyce's\nnovel Finnegan's Wake.\nA repeat performance for\nthe general public will take\nplace Wednesday at 8 p.m.\nTickets are $2.\nToday at noon, John Avison\nand the CBC Chamber Orchestra presents the music of\nCharles Ives, in the auditorium.\nMichael McLure presents a\nreading of his own poems\nWednesday noon in Bu. 106.\n\"McLure's poetry is a blob\nof protoplasmic energy,\" says\npoet Allen Ginsberg.\nSylvia Kind plays 20th century music for the harpsicord\nat 12:30 Thursday in the new\nCollege of Education auditorium.\nThis will be the second\nharpsicord concert by Miss\nKind in the current festival.\nAlso at 12:30, the players\nclub present a one act play in\nthe auditorium. Admission is\n25 cents.\nThursday at 3:30 the Vernon Zimmerman films To L.A.\nWith Lust and Lemon Hearts\nwill be shown in the auditorium.\nFrances Adaskin will play\nthe piano, and Hans-Karl Piltz\nthe viola Thursday at 8 in Bu.\n106.\nSmashing success\nScience goes\ngate-crashing\nThe accident at the gates Monday morning wasn't really.\nIt was a Science Undergradu\nate Society stunt.\nThe overturned Austin and\nthe orange smoke were deliberately placed there to emphasize the danger of the Tenth\nAve. gates.\nSeveral people thought the\nstunt was real.\nOne student came over to ask\nif there were any bodies.\nA bus driver blocked traffic\nby stopping to look at the accident scene.\nA police officer with light\nflashing raced to the scene.\nWhen they found it was a\nstunt, police got the science-\nmen to move the car a few feet,\nbut did not order the car taken\naway.\nBut the Sciencemen were\nonly trying to point out the\nlikelihood of an accident at the\ndangerous corner, Science\npresident Chuck Rennie said\nThey dragged the A-53 Austin which cost $15, from Deep\nCove late on Sunday night, and\nused marine distress signals to\nsimulate smoke from a burning\ncar.\nThe smoke covered the road\nand nearby golf course with\norange powder.\nBig jump ahead\nLONDON (CUP)\u00E2\u0080\u0094University\nenrolment in Great Britain is\nexpected to increase 60% in\nthe next 20 years. Six new\nuniversities will be built.\n750 bursaries\nstill unclaimed\nMore than 150 students\nare about to lose $35 to\n$125 each.\nThe students won University and provincial government scholarships and bursaries but have not bothered\nto claim them at the Accounting Office.\nProvincial awards not\nclaimed by the end of January should have been returned to the government\nsaid University Accountant\nH. M. Craven Monday. Students now have until Friday\nto endorse the cheques.\nAnother anniversary\nGAUL (CUP) \u00E2\u0080\u0094 If Charlemagne were alive today he\nwould be 1,222 years old.\nfreethought\ncriticism\nand satire\nIs Lee Harvey Oswald\nAlive In Argentina?\nJJvl foati&L\n35c Censored\nENTERTAINERS\nMusicians, Vocalists, dancers for\nnew downtown cabaret.\nPhone 736-6261\nU. B. C. Rings.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094orders now being taken\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094high quality, smart fashion\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094silver or gold\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094order date closes Feb. 12\nThe College Shop Brock Extension Tuesday, February 4, 1964\nTHE UBYSSEY\nPage 3\nGAVIN AND JEAN BERRY\nFair sex appeal\npretty pleas\nGavins\nfor girl\nscouting\nguides\nGavin Hume is looking for 900 girlst\nHe wants them to be girl\nguides.\nHume is chairman of the\nguides committee for UBC\nOpen House, March 6 and 7.\nThe girls will act as guides\nfor visitors to the affair.\n\"I looked up all the girls\nin my black book, and I could\nonly find 40,\" said Hume,\n\"So we had to appeal to 860\nother girls.\"\nThe girls will work three-\nhour shifts.\nRadio communications will\nbe used to keep the nine information booths in contact\nwith Open House headquarters in Brock.\nThe booths are on loan from\nthe PNE and the walkie-talkies\nare borrowed from the army.\nGirls interested in acting as\nguides can apply by signing\nup on one of the posters\naround campus.\nThey will give information\nto visitors, but will not guide\nparties around the exhibits.\nStudents flock\nfrom new union\nCALGARY (CUP) \u00E2\u0080\u0094 A new\nstudent union at the Southern\nAlberta Institute of Technology is empty.\nStudents, who campaigned\nfor the building for years, are\nspending their time in the old\ncrowded lunch room rather\nthan the spacious new lounges.\nOnly a few students turned up\nto the first dance in the new\nballroom.\nNobody checked\nthe ivory tower\nKINGSTON (CUP) \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Police\nhere tracked down an $18,000\nstamp collection and returned\nthem to Queen's University\nwhich didn't know they were\nmissing.\nThe police searched for\nthree months to find the\nowner.\nIn Throne Speach\nWe've only hope\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094 no challenge'\nThe Throne Speech offers no challenge for the future,\nAlan Macfarlane, Liberal MLA for Oak Bay said Thursday.\n\"We can only hope that the\n'Students\ncamouflage\ntheir faith\nUniversity students today\ntend to camouflage their\nChristian faith to suit the atmosphere of the environment,\na leading student evangelist\nsaid Friday.\nRev. Earl Palmer, minister\nof University Presbyterian\nChurch in Seattle, told a meeting of the Varsity Christian\nFellowship in Brock lounge\nthat a Christian has three alternatives when his beliefs\nare challenged.\nHe may abandon what he\nbelieves; he can accommodate\nhis faith; or he can \"stand and\ngo deep.\"\n\"The great temptation of the\nAmerican college student today is to accommodate his\nfaith,\" said Rev. Palmer.\nHe described Dietrich Bon-\nhoeffer as an example of a man\nwho held his beliefs despite\npersecution.\nBonhoeffer, who was a German minister and theologian,\ndied in a Nazi concentration\ncamp in 1944.\nRev. Palmer said that many\nstudents come to a conclusion\nabout the person of Christ\nearly in life, but tend to lose\ntheir faith when confronted\nwith a hostile world.\n\"What happened to what\nyou faced the full force of\nhostile history?\" he said.\n\"Do you know Jesus Christ\nas your lord?\" Rev. Palmer\nconcluded. \"That's the place\nto begin.\"\nRev. Palmer is leaving soon\nto take up a post in the Philippines.\ngovernment promise of increased grants to higher education is more than an idle\nstatement,\" he said.\nMacfarlane told a Liberal\nclub meeting he was disappointed that law reform was\nnot mentioned in the Throne\nSpeech.\nHe called B.C. \"the backwoods of individual liberty,\"\nand said that citizens' rights\nand divorce were in need of\nparticular attention.\nMacfarlane criticized the\n\"increasing tendency to concentrate large amounts of\npower in the hands of a few.\"\nHe said that the legislature\nnow has no real check on the\nbudget and on such actions as\nthe purchase of the Black Ball\nFerries and the B.C. Electric.\n\"If this continues we are\nin danger of losing the essence\nof democracy,\" he said.\nKatz on committee\nDr. Joseph Katz, professoi\nof comparative education at\nUBC, has been named chairman of the Phi Delta Kappa\ncommission on international relations in education for 1964-66.\nHoopsters wont\nshare their beds\nUBC women basketballers\nwon't have to share their\nbeds in Calgary after all.\nThe Womens' Athletic Finance Committee decided on\nJan. 10 that the girls would\nhave to share double beds\nin Calgary for budget reasons.\nBut the girls and their\ncoach felt that four nights\nof all giggle and no sleep\nwould ruin the team's\nchances so the finance committee has added 50 cents a\ngirl to the budget to give\nthem' single beds.\nSchool gets help\nNEW DELHI (CUP) \u00E2\u0080\u0094Another university will be built\nhere this year to supplement\nthe present overburdened New\nDelhi University, which turned\naway 3,000 students last year.\nEXPERIENCED TYPIST\nStatements, Letters, Essays,\nTheses, Etc.\nNeat, Accurate and Reasonable\nWA 2-5981\nLCST:\u00E2\u0080\u0094One purse containing a\nmembership to the Pat Boone Fan\nClub. A lock of Sheppard's hair,\nnail filing*, a jar of Nair, a canary that whistles \"The High and\nthe Mighty,\" A bust of Balzac\nand If found phone Barry Cooper,\nAM 6-4030.\nDINE & DANCING\nLa Toverna Cabaret\nFORMERLY CAFE DAN\nBest Italian Food in Town\nOpen 11 a.m. to 4 a.m. every day\n352 Water Street, behind Eatons\nTop (Quartet) Orchestra. Phone 681-1718\nThere's a rewarding future for you as a\nCHARTERED ACCOUNTANT\nLearn how and why, February 10 to 21\nDuring this period, members of The Institute of Chartered\nAccountant!, of B.C. will be at UBC to interview students who expect\nto graduate in 1964. Arrangements for interviews may be made\nthrough Mr. Hacking at the University Placement Office. Earlier interviews may be arranged by telephoning the Secretary at MUtual\n1-3264.\nYOUR OPPORTUNITY TO JOIN A CHALLENGING AND\nFAST-GROWING PROFESSION\nChartered Accountants play a decisive role in Canadian business.\nindustry and government. Many have attained executive position* \u00C2\u00ABf\nconsiderable stature and Influence; their training and experience\nenables them, ai one writer has put it, \"to disentangle the threads\nof profitability that hold a company together.\"\nC.A. training offers interesting employment with practising\nchartered accountants. Your work \"on location\" will introduce you\nto a wide range of industrial, financial, commercial, service and governmental operations.\nThe Institute of Chartered Accountants\n530 BURRARD ST., VANCOUVER 1\nMU 1-3264 THE URYSSEY\nPublished Tuesdays, Thursdays and Fridays throughout the university\nyear by the Alma Mater Society, University of B.C. Editorial opinions\nexpressed are those of the editor and not necessarily those of the AMS\nor the University. Editorial office, CA 4-3916. Advertising office, CA\n4-3242, Loc. 26. Member Canadian University Press.\nAuthorized as second-class mail by Post Office Department,\nOttawa, and for payment of postage in cash.\nWinner 1963-64 Canadian University Press trophies for\ngeneral excellence and editorial writing.\n? TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 1964\nHere's the pitch\nLike Christmas, The Ubyssey's AMS elections edir\ntorial comes every year. The goodies we give you are\nthe usual cliches about getting out to the polls, it's your\ndemocratic right, and beef now or forever hold your\npeace.\nIn 1929, we told you that \"it is not enough to vote\nfor a man because he possesses a rugby record or a social\nmanner, nor for a girl because she is prominent socially\nor blonde.\n\"It is up to the student body to weigh carefully the\nmerits of these men^and women, some of whom will hold\nnext year, the most responsible positions the university\nhas to offer.\"\nAnd it was the same in the '30s and '40s and 50s on\nthe golden editorial pages of said venerable rag.\nTrouble is, the cliches are well founded, like any\nstatement that has survived UBC's democratic ages,\nwhich perhaps explains why we write them every year.\nProbably the election, and our annual editorial urging you to write, boil down to the students' once-a-year\nattempt to justify the AMS and its activities.\nWe leave it to your three presidential candidates who\nhave written their policy statements elsewhere on this\npage to convince you of the worth of the AMS. We also\nleave it to them to convince you of their personal worth\nas the potential leaders of the students for 1964-65.\nThe important thing for students to realize (here we\ngo again) is that election day is the one day in each university year to make a decision or take an influential\npart in the shape of things to come in the ivory tower.\nThere are dozens of other opportunities but none\nare so all important as a vote\u00E2\u0080\u0094besides, no-one ever takes\nthese other chances.\nMost students have never attended an AMS council meeting or spoken to a councillor about campus\nproblems. Few join committees or aid in any student administrative work even in their own club or undergraduate society. Most have no desire to do so.\nAlmoslt all students, however, have bones to pick\nwith the AMS and its executive. They're just too uninspired to do anything about it.\nTomorrow comes the easiest chance of all. Read what\nthe candidates have to say and if you haven't already\ndone so, talk to them at today's all-candidate meeting\nin Bu. 203. They're the ones you will have to put up with\nnext year.\nA few minutes and a simple 'X' will relieve you of\nyour obligations to democracy for another year.\nEDITOR: Mike Hunter Asst. City -. Richard Simeon\nAssociate __. Keith Bradbury Asst. News ___ Tim Radmore\nNews Dare Ablett Senior Maureen Covell\nManaging _ George Railton Reporters and desk. Lorraine\n_. \"\"\" -\u00C2\u00BB.. \u00E2\u0080\u009E Shore, Mike Bolton, the usual Mike\nCity Mike Horsey Vaux and his NEW Acadian, Steve\n_ -, Brown, Don Hull, Al Donald, Shiela\nPhoto Don Hum* Dyer, Norm Betts.\n_ . . \u00E2\u0080\u0094 \u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0080\u00A2*\u00E2\u0080\u009E Sports: Bill Willson, Janet Currie,\nCritic* Hon KIWI George Reamsbotton, Dave Carlson,\nSports Denis Stanley photo: Stu Clugson (welcum bak).\nThe Ubyssey asked the three candidates who are running\nfor AMS presiednt on Wednesday to write 500-word\nstatements of their policy. Candidate Harrison did not\nsubmit a picture as requested.\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 - *y ' - : ,\" **\" < > . , ,\nHarrison: oust clique\nI realise that many people consider my candidacy a\njoke. The fact that I am an unknown and have no experience aids in this misconception. But this is exactly the\nreason why I am running.\nThe students do not deserve the rotten treatment they\nare getting from the stuffed-shirt, blue-blazer set. They\ncannot compromise plans for a lavish SUB with plans for\nincreased academic assistance.\nI therefore, if elected, will bring to the job the willingness to work and the desire to help the average student, I\noppose the present SUB. I oppose the recent fee increases. I\noppose the Brock clique. I favor more government assistance. Vote Harrison for decent government.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094KEN HARRISON, Eng. Ill\n_l_\nColeman: assert\nMcAfee a key\nstudents' needs year for AMS\nI seek the presidency of the student body\nnot only because I recognize the problems we\nmust face in the coming year but because I\nhave a positive program of action to meet\nthese problems.\nYour student union will perform no effective function if it cannot vigorously assert the\nneed of the student to administration, government, and general public. This can be accomplished by:\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Immediate repairing of AMS-admini-\nstration relations through co-operation involving constructive criticism. Student council\nmust regain the trust and respect of the administration before it can truly represent the\nbest interest of the students.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 The AMS has a voice in the affairs of\nthe academic community by right. We must\ngain effective representation by the election\nof a member of the student community to the\nSenate.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Representation directly to government\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nnot only by an annual brief or sporadic\nattempts at pressure, but continuous negotiation combined with education of the public\nlie on the student position.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Students of the province must speak with\none voice in asserting their legitimate demands. The answer: create the structural\nframework of a B.C. Federation of University\nStudents, including UBC, Victoria, Simon\nFraser, and the junior colleges.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 The AMS must investigate the present\nstatus of student services: food, textbook\ncosts, and particularly residence fees. Student\ncouncil is obligated to protect your interests\nin this area.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 The Student Union Building must be financed and constructed before we lose the only\nreasonable site left. This is the primary way\nto offer a more vital involvement in university affairs to the commuter student. Economy\nand foresight demand that we attempt the\nshortest financing terms possible. ~\"\"--\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Re-appraisal of the whole structure of student government. AMS is not meeting the\nneeds of the individual student and participation is limited. An effective and representative system must be drawn up and presented\nat the next fall general meeting, even if we\nmust face the fact that much of our past effort\nand experience has failed us.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 New programs having meaning and utility\nfor every student must be initiated: joint student-administration counselling and orientation for freshmen; a summer work exchange\nprogram with other parts of Canada; increased\nemphasis on academic activities.\nThe issues must not only be talked about.\nMy program represents future action. My\npreparation is indicated by past experience:\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 AMS Council member\u00E2\u0080\u00942years, 1962-64.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Arts President\u00E2\u0080\u00941962-64.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Chairman: Government Brief.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Chairman: Finance Revision Commission.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Chairman: Health Insurance Commission\n(MSI Program).\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Student Government Revision Commission.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 NFCUS, WUSC Committees.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 AMS Finance Committee.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Open House Executive\nThe responsiblity of the AMS presidency\ndemand a broad background in student affairs\nand a bold approach to the solution of current\nproblems.\nConsider my program. Consider my record.\nOn this basis I seek your vote!\nMIKE COLEMAN, Arts IV.\nI would like here to deal with a number\nof the major issues facing UBC students in the\nnext year .issues which could make the year\none of the mosf critical in the history of the\nAMS.\nSUB: We must get the SUB built \u00E2\u0080\u0094 now.\nStudents approved this idea last fall when\nthey voted overwhelmingly in favor of the\nbuilding and agreed to pay it off over 30\nyears. However, the Board of Governors, who\nmust back our loans, want Unpaid off in 15\nyears, resulting in a direct saving to the students of $1.5 million in interest. This means\nAMS fees must go up $5. I am strongly behind\nthe SUB and intend to ask the students to\nmake this $5 sacrifice so we may get going.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\n$50 FEE RAISE: Under Dr. Macdonald's\nplan outlined in the \"Challenge of Growth\"\npamphlet, business, industry, government and\nstudents will in future pay set percentages of\nUBC's operating costs. This plan is equitable\nand I would not oppose a fee raise which can\nonly lead to improvement of our teaching;\nresearch and library facilities.\nFINANCIAL ASSISTANCE: I believe steps\nmust be taken to ensure that needy, but qualified students are not kept out of UBC for financial reasons. As president, I would undertake a study of student financial resources\nto determine the scholarship, bursary and loan\nneeds at UBC. In much the same way as the\nMacdonald report has been successful in\ncreation of universities and colleges, I believe\na well-reasoned, documented presentation\ncould improve the financial lot of needy students.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nADMINISTRATION RELATIONS: It is\napparent student-administration communication must be restored if the needs outlined\nabove are to be understood and acted upon.\nI hope that a new face and new ideas on the\nstudent side would contribute to a lessening\nof tensions. '\nCUS: The veto power of both French and\nEnglish speaking groups has resulted in a\nstate of virtual stalemate in the Canadian\nUnion of Students. In particular, the French\nveto has prevented CUS from seeking federal\naid to higher education. This is wholly unsatisfactory and changes must be made.\nRESIDENCE-COUNCIL RELATIONS: Per-\nmanent liaison arrangements must be made,\nso that the AMS council can do its part in support of resident-student demands, especially\nin warding off further increases in housing\nfees.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nUNDERGRAD SOCIETY ACTIVITIES: As\npart of a program to make the present government sytsem more effective, Undergrad society presidents must be given more responsibility on council and their societies encouraged to enlarge their activity programs.\nHere are my qualifications: I served on\nthe AMS council as Ubyssey editor and held\npositions on the Open House and Winter\nSports Arena Planning committees, and the\nAcadia Camp Council. I spent a year as president of Canadian University Press. I am now\nenroled n law and am the editor of Campus\nCanada.\nIf you agree with the program I have put\nforth and if you feel my qualifications are\nsatisfactory, I ask for your support, Wednesday.\nROGER McAFEE, Law I T6_sday, February 4, 1964\nTHE UBYSSEY\nPage 5\nELECTION STATEMENTS\nBACKGROUND\nRUTH\nDumont\nIf elected Secretary I will\ndo all in m|y power to give\nthe students of UBC the opportunity to express their\nvalued opinion and vote on\ncrucial matters.\nRepresenting and working\nfor the students will be the\ngoal of my office as will the\nsolving of an existing major\nproblem.\nThis problem is in Education, both the cost and the\ncalibre. To lower the former\nand raise the latter is one of\nmy proposals.\nDumont for Secretary.\nRUTH DUMONT\nMARILYN\nMcMeans\nThe position of secretary\nhas recently become a key\nexecutive post. This means\nthat she will be asked to\nchair committees and to work\nclosely with the president in\nputting forth his program.\nIt is ^for this reason you\nshould elect a girl with a\nwide variety of experience.\nI believe I have this necessary experience and it is on\nthis basis I seek your support\ntomorow.\nMARILYN MoMEANS.\nDONNA\nMorris\nThis is my platform:\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 To re-vitalize the position of secretary by making\nit an executive rather than\na technical office.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 To represent the woman's viewpoint in Alma\nMater Society business.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 To support efforts to\nkeep down the cost of residence living.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 To expedite the execution of council policy through\nco-ordination of the activities of the various executive\noffices.\nDONNA MORRIS,\nBYRON\nHender\nWith the benefit of my\npast year's experience, I believe that I can further continue the efforts to build up\na good public relations committee dedicated to furthering your interests in what is\nbeing termed \"The Continuing Crisis in Higher Education.\"\nPublic response is directly\nproportional to student responsibility. We have this student responsibility, and we intend to communicate it. My\nstudent government experience and public relations\nknowledge have prepared me\nfor the tasks facing your student government in the coming year.\nBYRON HENDER\nHOWARD\nFaulkner\nWhat is the job of the second vice-president? It is to\nmaintain good relations between the students and the\nadministration, the students\nand the province. Do we have\ngood relations now? The\nanswer is no. With your help\nI hope to be able to work to\nrestore good relations between\nthe university and the rest of\nthe province. I feel I have had\nthe experience to carry\nthrough new ideas and to develop old ones.\nHOWARD FAULKNER\nStudent shovels\nfor his drinks\nWINNIPEG (CUP) \u00E2\u0080\u0094 A\nManitoba student, arrested\nfor drinking under-age was\nfined $25, but he said he\ncouldn't pay.\nSo the magistrate, a next\ndoor neighbor, sentenced\nCurtis Butterfield, 20, to\nshovel his driveway for the\nrest of the winter.-\nSaid Magistrate Isaac\nRice: \"I hope we have blizzards.\"\nLower voting age strikes\ndiscordant note with MPs\nOTTAWA (CUP)\u00E2\u0080\u0094Last session the House Committee\non Privileges and Elections\nagreed unanimously to adopt\na motion to extend the franchise to all persons 18 years\nof age and over.\nIt does not appear likely,\nhowever, that all parties will\nbe in harmony when and if\nthe motion comes before the\nHouse of Commons this session.\nIn a CUP survey House\nmembers were asked what position their party was likely\nto take on the floor.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nRichard Cashin (Liberal, St.\nJohn's West) commented that\na Liberal prime minister had\nsupported lowering the voting\nage to 18 a few years back,\nand \"I fully expect that this\nmatter will be supported by\nthe \"Liberal Party.\"\nPaul Martineau (Progressive\nConservative, Pontiac Temeis-\ncamingue) admitted that the\nparty to which he belonged\nhas not yet formulated publicly its policy.\nDavid Orlikow (New Democratic Party, Winnipeg North)\nsaid that his party \"will support the revision of the Elections Act to permit persons of\n18 years of age and over to\nvote.\"\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 * \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nRobert Thompson (Social\nCredit, Red Deer) said Social\nCredit decided to drop the voting age to 18 years at the last\nNational Convention.\nReal Caouette (Creditiste,\nVilleneuve) answered: \"Nous\nModel Parliament elections\nParties pound in\ntheir platforms\nElections for UBC's model parliament take place Wed.,\nendorserons la mesure d'accor-\nder le droit de vote a 18 ans,\nsi elle est proposee aux Com-\nmuns.\"\nWhen asked whether \"all 18\nyear olds should vote, and not\njust those in the Armed Service,\" there was some contention, however.\nCashin advocated lowering\nthe voting age for all.\nMartineau disagreed. He\nsaid that if all 18 year olds\nshould vote, it would be necessary to decide whether or\nnot the age of majority should\nbe lowered to 18 years.\nHe said most 18-year-olds\nare still at school and therefore not fully assuming all\nduties of citizens who have\nreached their majority.\nMr. Cashin disagreed:\"Many\nyoung people go into industry\nimmediately upon graduation\nfrom high school at an average age of 18. They pay taxes\nwithout representation until\nthe age of 21.\"\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nMartineau said the years 18\nto 21 is a period of life for\ntraining, observation, and the\nformation of character, not\nvoting.\nThe New Democrats, without giving reasons, said, \"All\n18 year olds should be permitted to vote.\"\nThompson said, \"Social\nCredit governments in Alberta\nand British Columbia have\ntaken the lead in this by already lowering the voting age\nto 19 years.\"\nCaouette agreed with Cash-\nin that all young people, \"sans\ndiscrimination devraient avoir\nle droit de vote a 18 ans.\"\nDid the members feel that\ntheir party's reasoning was\nthe correct position to take?\nMonarchy survives\nHAMILTON (CUP)\u00E2\u0080\u0094A Maritime university's proposal that\nthe British monarchy be\nabolished was termed \"absurd\"\nat a recent conference of the\nCanadian Union of Students\nhere.\nFeb. 5.\nThe party platforms are:\nCOMMUNIST\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Immediate rejection of nuclear arms from Canadian soil.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Recognition of Red China.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Free education from kindergarten through university.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Recognition of French Canada as a nation with the democratic right to secede.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Public control of large\ncorporations to guarantee full\nemployment.\nCONSERVATIVE\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Defence policy based on\nthe strategic necessity of\nNATO.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Deficit budgeting should be\nviewed as an emergency measure only.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Creation of one federal de-\npartment of health, education\nand welfare.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Abolition of government\nrestrictions on business hours.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Low interest loans for students.\nLIBERALS\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Comprehensive medical\ncare plan.\ncivil service.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Salary incentives to encourage bilingualism in the\ncivil service.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Free trade with Britain,\nU.S. and Europe.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 10,000 national scholarships of $1,000 each.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Foreign aid should be increased to one per cent of the\ngross national product.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Establishment of a federal\nand provincial omsbudman.\nNEW DEMOCRATIC\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Complete ban on nuclear\ntesting.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Lowering of voting age to\n18.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 National medical care for\nall residents of Canada.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Free tuition at. all levels\nof education to those who can\nbenefit from it.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Abolition of racial quota\nimmigration system and capital\npunishment.\nThe Social Credit Party platform was unavailable.\nCashin, Orlikow and Caouette said they thought it was.\nThompson said the principle\nwas correct but that \"19 years\nwould be more generally acceptable.\"\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nMartineau said, \"This is not\nstrictly a party matter and\nshould be decided by individual members according to\ntheir conscience and belief.\"\nWe then asked: \"Would you\nvote for an 18 ye_r old in your\nconstituency?\"\nCashin said, \"If he was a\nLiberal I would.\"\nAnd the others:\nOrlikow: \"I would vote for\nany candidate who supported\nthe ideals in which I believe.\"\nThompson: \"A candidate\nshould be 21 years old.\"\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nCaouette: \"Tout depend de\nla personnalite du candidat,\ndu programme qu'il defend,\nde la qualite de ses adver-\nsaires et de leur programme.\"\nThere are more than 100,000\nhigh school and university\nstudents between the ages of\n18 and 21.\nThere are one million or\nmore other young people who\nwould get to vote.\nThe effect of such a franchise is uncertain and political experts hesitate to say what\nnew voters would do in a national election.\nWhen the House reconvenes in February, the parties\nwill give some careful thought\nto extending the franchise to\n18 years, wondering whether\nto open a Pandora's box that\nmight decrease their present\nHouse standings or increase\nthem handsomely in the next\nelection.\nAUTHORS AGENCY\nBring your manuscripts, stories,\narticles, books, songs, poems.\nFree Advice and Help\n1065 E. 17th Avenue\nTR 6-6362\nAlma Mater Society\nOFFICIAL NOTICES\nHOMECOMING CHAIRMAN\nApplications now being received for Chairman of the\n1964 Homecoming.\nAll questions should be directed to Mr. Bob Bailey,\nAM 1-1066, last year's Chairman.\nApplications to be returned to Box 55, Brock Hall.\nWINTER SPORTS CENTRE\nMANAGEMENT, COMMITTEE\nApplications are now being received for students to sit\non the Winter Sports Centre Management Committee.\nAny questions may be directed to Mr. Bill Redmond,\nAM 6-7743. Applications to be turned in to Box 55,\nBrock Hall. Deadline February 15, 1964.\nHONORARY ACTIVITIES AWARDS\nNominations now being received for the Student Hon-\nourary Activities Awards\u00E2\u0080\u0094application forms and further\ninformation may be obtained in the A.M.S. Office, Brock\nHall.\t Page 6\nTHE UBYSSEY\nTuesday, February 4, 1964\nTHEY'RE IN THE STRETCH\nSPUNKY Bob Barazzuol (6'2\") outjumps teammates Ron\nErickson (6'7\") and Dave Way (6'5\") to snap rebound from\nHuskies Gary Globle (6'6\") and Terry Little (6'5\") in rugged\nweekend action which saw UBC and Saskatchewan split\ngames to even the league's top spot again\u00E2\u0080\u0094don hume photo\nCairns monumental\nas puck team wins\nUBC Hockey Birds managed to squeeze their slecond\nwin of the season Saturday night defeating University of\nSaskatchewan Huskies 3-2 in Saskatoon.\nFriday, Huskies humiliated\nUBC with an 8-4 victory. Star\ncenter Howie Kellough scored\nthree goals for the Huskies and\nset up two others.\nKen Carins scored twice\nfor UBC and singles came\nfrom Bob Parker and Stu\nGibbs.\nCairns was the big gun for\nUBC in the retaliation meet\nSaturday night scoring the\nwinner with five minutes left\nand picking up an assist on\none of the other goals.\nGibbs picked up UBC's first\ngoal at 10:06 of the first period\nand assisted Cairns in the\nfinal goal.\nThe other goal came from\nJohn McLeod's stick in the\nfirst minute of the third\nperiod.\nFriday's highscoring game\nrecorded only four penalties,\neach team taking two.\nGary Moris was handed a\nfive minute penalty in the\nthird period for fighting.\nSaturday's game saw as\nmjany penalties in the third\nperiod including a Husky team\npenalty in the final minute of\nplay for having too many men\non the ice.\nBird netminder Jack Harris\nhad a busy time in the goal\nFriday night being called\nupon to stop 32 shots.\nHuskies outhula\nT-Bird hoopsters\nSaskatchewan retaliates\nafter Fridays whipping\nBy DAVE CARLSON\nUBC 88, SASK 57\nUBC 53, SASK. 55\n\"They have got to learn that each game is different from\nall the others.\"\nThese were the words of\nbasketball coach Peter Mullins\nafter the weekend series with\nthe University of Saskatchewan Huskies.\nMullins was referring to his\nteam's narrow loss Saturday.\nThe night before his Birds\nhad deflated the prairie crew\nwith a 31-point margin.\nFriday night the Birds utilized their latent potential\nand couldn't do anything\nwrong.\nDave Way and Ron Erickson picked up four goals in\nthe first half. Mo Douglas was\nsent in as a replacement, and\npoured in 12 points in less\nthan ten minutes.\nDouglas kept the team at\n37-31 before intermission.\nSUDDENLY ERUPT\nThe Birds suddenly erupted\nin the second half. Way\nwhipped in 15 points.\nBill McDonald fouled out\nwith 17.31 left and the Birds\nkept soaring.\nWhen it was all over, Way\nhad netted 18 points, John\nCook had potted 17, and\nDouglas had plunked in 16.\nUBC won handily, 88-57.\nThe Birds completely out-\nhustled their opposition. They\nsnagged 43 rebounds, 7 more\nthan the taller Huskies.\nLOST THUNDERBIRDS\nSaturday the team couldn't\nfind itself. The score was\nclose, but UBC had many opportunities to shoot ahead.\nSaskatchewan led 30-26 at\nthe half.\nDave Osborne made a second half bid to lead his team\nto victory. The 6'4\" guard\ndropped in 12 points, mostly\non jump shots, in the final\nframe.\nAn attempted pass to 7' Orville Fisher was knocked away\nby Douglas, to end up in the\nUBC hoop.\nNo space for God\nBELLINGHAM (CUP>\u00E2\u0080\u0094The\ndevelopment of space travel is\npushing God further away, a\nminister told students at Western Washington State University recently.\nField hockey team win\ngives Varsity a boost\nUBC's Varsity field hockey team came up with another\nimportant win in city league action on the weekend.\nVarsity scored a very decisive 5-0 victory over Vancouver to keep a tight three-point hold on first place.\nIn other first division play, Blue lost 4-0 to second\nplace Red Birds.\nSecond division play saw Golds tie 1-1 with India B.,\nand Advocates fight to a scoreless tie with Hoppers.\nThe Pedagogues, showing some of their before-\nChristmas form swamped Hornets 5-0 in third division play.\nThe win keeps the Gogues in second place\nThe last few minutes saw\nthe teams never more than\ntwo points apart. In the dying\nseconds, with the score . tied\n53-53, Saskatchewan guard\nGale Downey made a drive\ntoward the Bird basket. With\nthree Thunderbirds covering\nhim, he flipped the ball in the\nair, and, swish, two points.\nWith two seconds left, UBC\nwere dead.\nOnly Saskatchewan's first\nstring scored, led by Fisher\nwith 15 points. Osborne paced\nUBC's attack with 14 points.\nSaskatchewan and UBC\nhave six games left.\n\"If we play another game\nlike Saturday's there may not\nbe any worry about a tie at\nthe end,\" said coach Mullins.\nBirds fail convert\nOregon State beat UBC's\nRugby team 5-3 Saturday in\nCorvallis.\nThe difference was UBC's\nfailure to convert after its\nthree-pointer.\nSUMMARIES\nFRIDAY\nUBC (88) \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Cook 17; Way 18; Bill\nMcDonald 7; Osborne 10; Betcher 5; Spencer 2; Barazzuol\n5; Erickson 8; Douglas 16\t\nSask (57)\u00E2\u0080\u0094Downey 9; Fisher 8; Fry\n6; Goble 6; Hook 2; Treen 5;\nRuschelnsky 1; Foster 2; Gjo-\nsund 3; Little 15.\nV *f\" V\nSATURDAY\nUBC (53)\u00E2\u0080\u0094Cook 12; Way 10; Bill\nMcDonald 9; Osborne 14;\nErickson 6; Douglas 2.\nSask. (55)\u00E2\u0080\u0094Downey 11; Fisher 15;\nFry 11; Goble 10!; Little 8.\nMARRIED ACCOMMODATION\nOne bedroom and all-in-one\nsuites (unfurnished) for rent\non campus. Apply Housing\nOffice or Phone Local 332\nPETER MULLINS\n. . . on warpath\nBookstore red\nover free book\nHAMILTON (CUP) \u00E2\u0080\u0094 A\nstudent at McMaster University bookstore pulled out his\nwallet and payed for the\ntext he was carrying.\nAs he walked out of the\nbuilding he discovered a\nnote saying \"This book is\nsent with the compliments\nof the publisher for examination as a text or reference\nbook.\"\nThe bookstore refunded\nthe student's money.\nTHE IDEAL PLACE\nTO MEET\nYOUR FRIENDS\nTry Our Delicious T-Bone\nSteak with Coffee\n$1.35-Ifs Really Good\nFull Course Meals\nwithin your income.\nDO-NUT DINER\n4556 West 10th Ave.\nENDS THURSDAY\nTHE EXCITING HAWAIIAN FOLK TRI O\nTHE TRAVELERS 3\n3 SHOWS NIGHTLY\nOPENS FRIDAY\nTHE ELEANOR POWELL\nFEATURING\nDICK WESTON\nWITH \"AUNT MARTHA\" & \"CLARENCE\"\nRESERVE NOW!\nSHOW\nH\nE\nCAVE\n626 HORNBY \u00E2\u0080\u0094 MU 2-3677\nDINNERS FROM SEVEN\nNOTE TO STUDENTS ! !\nTICKETS FOR THESE EVENTS MAY BE OBTAINED\nFROM THE: A.M.S. OFFICE Tuesday, February 4, 1964\nTHE UBYSSEY\nPage 7\nSum of triangles sides\nadd up to Bird defeat\nCANN CHRISTENSEN\n. . . wins decision\nMike McConnell, UBC\nWrestling team manager, de-\ncisioned two opponents in the\nweekend triangle meet with\nUBC - Washington - Alberta\ncompeting.\nFinal team scores were Alberta 20, UBC 16; Washington 23, UBC 13; Washington,\nton 23, UBC 13; Washington\n26, Alberta 13.\nMcConnell decisioned J.\nKachman from Alberta and\nJ. Henderson from Washington.\nOther individual winners\nfor UBC were Rod Carrow\nwho decisioned B. Switzer\nof Alberta. Cann Christensen\npinned Larry Bird of Alberta\nin the heavyweight and\nBruce Green won on a forfeit by Alberta.\nBraves scalped\nby Washington\nBy BOB\nUBC hoop Braves lost to\nand managed a victory over a\nday night.\nFriday, Braves journeyed to\nBellingham and lost 73-41 to\nWestern Washington.\nUBC managed to trade baskets at par for ten minutes but\nfell apart against the poised\nAmericans .Half-time score was\n38-16.\nBill Humphries scored 11\npoints for Braves. Guard Alec\nBrayden managed nine.\nSaturday night at War Memorial Gym, Braves downed Magee High School 77^62.\nHumphries led Braves again,\nscoring 20 points.\nGuard Don MacDonald came\nup with his finest performance\nof the year, tallying 19 points.\nJohn Campbell added 13 for\nUBC.\nBANNO\na small college freshman team\nhigh school Friday and Satur-\nSoccer Birds\nwin another\nSaturday UBC soccer Birds\nkept rolling along in first place\nwith a 2-1 win over Mount\nPleasant.\nUBC needs one win in their\nfour remaining games to cinch\ntop place in Lower Mainland\nfirst division soccer.\nSecond place Royals are two\npoints behind with two games\nleft.\nMount Pleasant took a first\nhalf lead with a goal on a penalty kick by Gilbert Dawson\nbut UBC came right back to\ntie it up with a goal by Jim\nBerry.\nBird's winning goal came on\na penalty kick awarded midway through the second half,\nscored by Keith Commons.\nIn other UBC soccer action\nColumbus beat the T* Hawks\n5-0, winning the two-game total\ngoal Jim Seggie Cup series by\na 7-0 total score. The Braves\nwere also losers as they lost\n4-1 to Luso.\nSPORTS\nEDITOR> Denis Stanley\nPhilpot\ncollects\nhat trick\nBy JANET CURRIE\nUBC women's grass hockey\nteam was the only team which\nbrought home laurels.\nUBC's Varsity grass hockey\nteam beat Queen Margaret's\nschool 4-2 in Duncan.\nLiz Philpot led the attack\nfor UBC with three goals and\nDiane Oswald scored one.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nIn swimming UBC women's\nswim team placed well down\nthe list of the 25 teams competing in the Pacific Northwest\nchampionships at Seattle.\nUBC's only points came from\nBonnie Bertram who placed\nsecond in the 400 yard freestyle relay and from the 400\nyard freestyle relay team\nwhich placed sixth.\nAt Longview, Washington,\nUBC's volleyball team won\nfour of its eight games to place\nfifth in the 10-team volleyball\ncompetition.\nWednesday UBC Thunderettes met the Richmond Merchants, leaders of the Senior A\nLeague and suffered a 55-35 defeat.\nUBC managed to retain their\nsecond-place position in the\nleague despite the loss.\nUBC was leading in the\ngame at half-time but dropped\nquickly in the second period.\nHigh scorer for the Thunderettes was Linda Kaser with\neight points.\nPlayoffs for the Senior A\nchampionship begin February\n12\nRichmond Merchants\nthe title last year.\ntook\nVote CONSERVATIVE - vote TORY\n\"... towards a reformed Model Parliament...\nrr\nCampus Conservation Club\u00E2\u0080\u0094Model Parliament Platform\n1964\nThe Campus Conservative Club is campaigning \"towards a reformed Model\nParliament.\" To achieve a much needed reform in Model Parliament practice and\nphilosophy, we advocate:\n1. A concerated effort to improve the quality and content of Model\nParliament Debate.\n2. The presentation of issues for the sake searching academic\nanalysis, and not for thesake ofdoctrinaire pragmatism.\n3. The establishment of a seriesof Public Affairs Committees, which\nwould present the views and issues of U.B.C. students to municipal\nprovincial, and legislative authorities.\nThe Conservative campaign platform concerns itself with three main areas:\nThe Nation, Man and His Government, and The Student and His Responsibilities.\nI. The Nation\u00E2\u0080\u0094A. External Affairs\nInternational influence is based on strong national unity. Canada's defence\npolicy must be based on the strategicnecessities of NATO. Foreign embassies\nand consulates in the fields ofdiplomacyandtrade and commerce should be streamlined and co-ordinated. Foreign aid must be increased, but through the provision\nof deveelopment loan funds, and the establishment of performance criteria.\nB. Biculturalism\nWe advocate a Royal Commissionasafact finding body in the field of multi-\nculturalism within Canada as thesource of a distinctive Canadian culture. French-\nEnglish problems in the economic and political spheres should be settled through\na Federal-Provincial Conference. To promote Canadian unity, educational standards should be based on Federal requirements, leaving the administration of\nthese to the provinces.\nC. The Economy\nDeficit budgeting should be viewed as an emergency procedure justifiable only\nin terms of self-realizing capital expenditures. Our promary industries must be\nstabilized as a prerequisite to thebroad development of secondary industry.\nII. Mon and His Government\nThe individual and the nation derive the optimum benefit from a balance of power\nin which the individual realizes his responsibility to society while at the same\ntime the Government respects his freedom.\nA Welfare\nThe creation of one Federal Department of Health, Education, and Welfare to\nadminister all forms ofsocial assistanceefficiently. Reform of the present system\nof unemployment insurance by compelling recipient to accept available work\nwithin the reasonable range of their qualifications, and by exempting students\nfrom unemployment insurance payments. In lieu of family allowances a scheme\nwhereby each chold is assured afullycomp rehensive health service.\nB. Freedom of the Individual\nThe abolition of government restrictions on business hours. The abolition of\ncensorship of adult entertainment. The abolition of restrictions on hours\nand conditions under which liquor may be sold and consumed.\nIII. The Student and His Responsibilities\nUniversity education in Canada is a force for Canadian unity. We advocate the\nestablishment of a comprehensive inter-regional scholarship exchange programme,\nand a National Graduate School. Low interest loans with repayment after graduation should be made available on a wide basis. The present Federal government\nshould be prodded into fulfilling its promise of ten thousand University scholarships.\nThe student has a responsibility to public affairs. Continuing committees of\nU.B.C. students should be established in conjuncetion with Model Parliament,\nto preesnt student research and views onissues of concern to local, provincial,\nand Federal authorities. Our system of primary education should be re-evaluated.\nVote CONSERVATIVE - vote TORY Paqe 8\nTHE UBYSSEY\nTuesday, February 4, 1964\n'tween classes\nElection debate on today\nUBC CLASSIFIED\nCandidates for first slate\nin AMS elections speak noon\ntoday in Bu. 203.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nARTS US\nSir Ouvry Roberts* Last\nLecture, noon today in Bu.\n102.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nGRAD CLASS\nGrad class council meeting\nFeb. 6 in Bu. 202.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nVARSITY DEMOLAY CLUB\nUBC - U of A debating exchange in Calgary. All interested debaters apply to Box\n28, Brock Hall. Deadline, today, 4 p.m.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nUBC LIBERALS\nArthur Laing, Northern Affairs and Resources Minister\nspeaks noon today in Brock\nLounge.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nSPECIAL EVENTS\nLast minute tickets for Jose\nMelina Spanish Dance group\nand Travellers Three Friday at\nSpecial Events office.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nPRE-DENTAL SOC\nMrs. C. W. Gardner speaks\non Oral Hygiene, noon Wednesday in Bu. 204.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nNEW DEMOCRATS\nDr. John Norris, history department, speaks on \"Financing a system of free education\nat all levels,\" noon today in\nBu. 104.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nHITCH-HIKERS\nHitch-hikers' club organizational meeting noon Thusday\nin Bu. 223. New members welcome.\nARTHUR LAING\n... in Brock today\nBRIDGE AND CHESS CLUB\nMeeting Wednesday at 7:30\nin Brock TV Lounge.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nSPECIAL EVENTS\nAlberto Ponce, Spanish guitarist, noon today in the Frederic Wood Theatre.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nFESTIVAL OF THE ARTS\nToday: The Music of Charles\nIves, noon, Auditorium. The\nCoach with six insides, 2:30\np.m., Auditorium!, admission is\n50 cents. Wednesday. Poetry\nreading, noon, Bu. 106. The\nCoach with six insides, 8 p.m.,\nAuditorium.\nCIRCLE K CLUB\nDr. H. L. Purdy speaks on\nColumbia river power noon\nWednesday in Bu. 2218.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nNEWMAN CENTRE\nCampus mission, noon, Feb.\n3-7, in Bu. 100. Father William Collins, O.F.M., speaker.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nBAHAI\n\"Direction of humanity,\"\nnoon, Wednesday, in the Board\nRoom, International House.\nFrank Harris and Zanetta Var-\nley, discussion leaders.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nPRE-MED\nSurgical film, noon Wednesday, in Wes. 100.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nCOMMUNIST CLUB\nWm. Stewart, party city secretary speaks on \"A program\nfor Canada,\" noon today in Bu.\n204.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nPRE-LIBRARIANSHIP\nTour of special collections,\nconducted by Mr. Mclnnes,\nnoon today. Meet at Special\nCollections.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nUNITARIAN CLUB\nMeeting, Wednesday noon in\nBu. 225.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nCOMMUNITY PLANNING\nFilm on Toronto's 1953 slum\nclearance program, Wednesday noon, La. 102.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 * \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nARTS US\nImportant Arts council\nmeeting Wednesday noton in\ncouncil chambers.\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nJACK OF HEARTS\nJack of Hearts ball, Brock\nHall, Feb. 8 from 8-12 p.m.\nTickets, $2.50 per couple.\nTEXT WANTED for Asian Studies.\nReadings in Contemporary Chinese\nLiterature, Vol. II. Also text notes\nfor above. Pub. by Yale Press. Ed.\nby W. C. Liu. Call eves., room\n223, CA 4-9047.\nFOR SALE: 1952 Hillman sedan.\nLooks and runs well. $55 cash.\nSee at 4639 West 9th Ave.\nNEW Stereo squipment. Harmon-\nKardon, Dual, Trio, Shure, Empire, Eico, etc. Cheap! RE 6-4972.\nWANTED: Additional drivers for\nNorth Van carpool. Preferably\naround Lynn Valley and Lonsdale\nUpper Levels area. How about\nenlarging present carpool? TU 5-\n1288 or YU 8-9576.\nWANTED. Ride to Richmond, at\n5:30. Vicinity of Williams between\n2 and 3 Roads. Phone Lynne or\nIse, BR 7-7366 after 7.\nWANTED: Girl to share house 2\nblocks from campus. Elegantly\nfurnished TV, stereo, automatic\nwasher, dryer. Phone 228-8473.\nWANTED: Daily ride for 2 students\nfrom vicinity of 49th & Marine.\nPhone Garry or Gordon, AM 6-\n9842.\nSITUATION WANTED: 6'5'\ 270 lb.\nhouseboy requires position. Can't\nmix drinks or make coffee, but\n' am experienced. Phone Bill Mc-\nLachlan, YU 8-9810.\nFOR SALE: 1950 Ford Tudor. Radio,\nheater, only $85. 1925 W. 12th, RE\n1-8047. Ask for Don.\nFOR SALE: Buick '52, excellent condition, engine recently overhauled,\nbody good, $150. Write or come\nto Chris Bahner, 2120 Alma.\nHELP! Desperate for return of\nbrown leather wallet. Phone Barb\nat BR 7-7238 or leave with Education Commissioner. Reward.\nLOST. Gamma Phi Beta Sorority\npin. Gold and pearl? letters on\nblack crescent. Back inscribed\nLeona Nelson. Call CA 4-4847.\nWANTED: A ride from Lower\nLonsdale, North Vancouver. If\none is available, call Sandra, YU\n7-0923.\nRIDERS WANTED: From vicinity\nof 12th Ave. & Fraser, Mon.-Sat.,\n8:30's. Call Wally at TR 4-8851.\nFOR SALE: '56 Pontiac 4-dr. H.T.,\nautomatic, good condition, clean,\n3 seat belts, radio. Call Brian at\nRE 3-1980 after 5.\nRIDERS WANTED: From Edmonds\nand Grandview along 12th and\nBroadway. 8:30 Mon.-Sat. Phone\nRon at 522-5210.\nWOULD YOU like to live on campus? The Kappa Sigma Frat\nHouse has a vacancy. CA 4-9986,\nDerek.\nFOR SALE. Two pairs of Kastle\ncompetition skis; 1 pair 'downhill'\n(215 cm), 1 pair metal 'giant slalom' (210 cm). Phone RE 8-3208\nafter 6 p.m.\nLOST: A gold lady's wrist watch\nwith black strap in vicinity of the\nlibrary. Jocelyn Wark, CA 4-1619.\nWANTED: A carpool Mon.-Fri. from\n41st & Joyce Rd. HE 4-4701.\nLOST: Glasses, in your car Wed.\nmorning 8:15 by hitchhiker. If you\nhave them please phone Dick, CA\n4-7775.\nWEST VAN. I want to join carpool\nin area from 20th Street eastward.\nPhone 922-5504 nightly.\nATTENTION: T. Angeles! I have\nyour briefcase. Meet me 12:30 p.m.\nfront of College Library or phone\nCA 4-5467 after 5 p.m.\nMAGI. Wish rendezvous with white\nVolks. Love blue Volks.\nRIDERS WANTED: Macdonald &\nBroadway area, via Broadway &\n8th, 8:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Mon.\nthru Fri. Phone Ron 738-4600,\nevenings.\nIt makes\na difference?\nBERKELEY, Calif. (CUP) \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nThe student council at the university of California here\nwants to play it safe.\nThey decided recently to\nask that signs warning against\nthe danger of smoking be\nplaced where cigarets are on\nsale on campus.\nBut they changed the proposed wording: \"Smoking can\ncause cancer\" to \"Smoking\nmay cause cancer\".\nCommerce course\nnaive, useless\nTORONTO (CUP) \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Business students at Ryersonian\nInstitute of Technology were\ntold recently their courses\nwere naive and of no use in\nthe business world.\nBrian Clarke, a Rye business\ngraduate, said he had to unlearn business principles and\nlearn politics, to prosper in the\nbusiness world.\nALMA MATER SOCIETY-FIRST SLATE ELECTIONS\nWEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 5th.\nVOTING FOR THE FOLLOWING POSITIONS AND CANDIDATES WILL TAKE PLACE TOMORROW\nFROM 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.\nPRESIDENT\nCOLEMAN, Michael\nHARRISON, Ken\nMacAFEE, Roger\nBROCK HALL NORTH\nBROCK HALL SOUTH\nCAFETERIA\nLIBRARY\n2nd VICE-PRESIDENT\nFAULKNER, Howard\nHENDER, Byron\nPOLLING PLACES\nSECRETARY\nDUMONT, Ruth\nMcMEANS, Marilyn\nMORRIS, Donna\nENGINEERING BUILDING BUCHANAN (Commerce Wing)\nNEW EDUCATION BUILDING WESBROOK\nBUCHANAN (Outside Dean Gage's\nOffice)\nBUCHANAN (Outside BU-106)\nP^^,,\u00E2\u0084\u00A2\u00E2\u0084\u00A2,,.^,. j,,\u00E2\u0084\u00A2 .vw^fi \"\u00E2\u0080\u009E''\"\"'* ~r\"> r- \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\"*<,< *\"?' \"t,'\"- . \"'\"'\"'-'\nI\nADVANCE POLL - FORT, ACADIA, COMMON BLOCK - 5 - 7 P.M.\nTONIGHT"@en . "Newspapers"@en . "Vancouver (B.C.)"@en . "LH3.B7 U4"@en . "LH3_B7_U4_1964_02_04"@en . "10.14288/1.0128857"@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 .