THE 1!iPYSSEY · 2013. 7. 30. · DIAMOND RINIJI Rings include Hi-style Solitaires 3, 5 and 7 stone...

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THE 1!iPYSSE Y Would yo u want you r sister to marr y a fret rat ? Fol . XLIX, No . 39 VANCOUVER, B .C ., FRIDAY, JANUARY 26, 1968 48 224-391 6 AMS raps Mardi Gra s Student boycott urged , poor taste charge d By PAUL KNO X UBC's Alma Mater Society has urged students not to atten d Mardi Gras activities . In a statement released late Thursday by AMS presiden t Shaun Sullivan, the executive issued the following statement : "We strongly object to the theme of this year's Mardi Gras , which lends itself to interpretations which exhibit racial prejudices . "We condemn the extreme poor taste demonstrated by cer- tain fraternities in their skits at Thursday's pep meet . "The executive has agreed that the president of the AM S shall not attend any Mardi Gras functions . "We urge the general student body not t o attend Mardi Gras functions . " The statement followed a pep meet Thurs- day in Memorial gym which featured skit s depicting Negroes being beaten by Ku Klu x Klansmen and whites being beaten by Negroes. Frank Collins, president of the B .C . As- sociation for the Advancement of Colore d People, said the event this year is in extremel y poor taste . And the Student Non-Violent Co-ordinatin g Committee, Seattle-Bellingham chapter, termed FORD Mardi Gras disgusting. "The event presents a ridiculous image of the America n Negro," Collins said . Collins objected in particular to pictures of UBC student s with blackfaoe . His association will hold a meeting Friday or Saturday t o decide what action to take, Collins said . SNCC issued a statement strongly condemning Mardi Gras . "You cannot possibly realize our disgust and animosity to - wards the injustice of this specifically racist entertainment, an d those responsible for its perpetuation," the statement said . "We find it most disgusting that the so-called educated mem- bers of an academic community could re-introduce one of th e most shameful, outrageous, and dehumanizing periods of histor y —that of slavery . " Perhaps you are unaware of the million s of black men and women who were slaughtere d aboard slave ships, or those who survived an d spent the rest of their lives building the U .S ., " the statement said . Mardi Gras committee chairman Sta n Weber agreed Thursday that some fraternit y members- had shown poor taste . "The Mardi Gras Committee regrets tha t some Greek members have shown poor tast e concerning this year's theme," Weber said i n a prepared statement . DUNCA N "The theme is chosen mainly for its application to both th e music and choreography of the floor show . "Unfortunately, some fraternities, in an attempt to b e humorous, have demonstrated extremely poor taste . We sin- cerely apologize for any racial overtones in the interpretatio n of the theme. "This was most definitely not our intention . " UBC inter-fraternity council president Rick French, scienc e 4, could not be reached for comment Thursday . He was at the Mardi Gras bazaar . Meanwhile, Trinidadian students Lester Ford, applied sci- ence 1, and Art Duncan, pre-med 1, told The Ubyssey Thursda y that Mardi Gras should be realistic about the theme Down th e Mississippi . To Page 3 Disturbing move mad e The UBC board of governors has decided to change the location of the proposed 140-foot carillon clock tower . It is now closer to library study stalls . The site was changed from the south side of the librar y lawn to the north half, close to the pavement . The move will allow expansion room for the scienc e complex and the library, UBC director of informatio n Arnie Myers said Thursday . Governors earlier expressed concern over unfavorabl e campus reaction to the tower. The bell tower is a $150,000 gift from retired board ' k member, Leon Ladner . — kurt hilger phot o FRATERNITY MEMBERS donned the elegant garb of Ku Klux Klan members Thursday noo n and paraded around the gym to publicize their annual festive occasion — Mardi Gras . Acto r wearing blackface is destined to be part of that good old southern custom — lynching . Shrum loses profs' confidenc e A confrontation between faculty member s Id the Simon Fraser board of governors over -hiring a psychology professor led Thursda y a faculty association ultimatum to the board . The association passed a motion of non-con- fence in SFU chancellor Gordon Shrum an d e entire board of governors and proposed t o ke action unless the board reverses its decisio n L the re-hiring at its Feb . 1 meeting. The issue involves psychology prof Dr . K . R . irstein who was fired outright by departmen t ad Dr . Bernard Lyman . It went to a standin g culty committee on salaries and promotion s rich over-ruled Lyman's action and recom- mded Burstein be re-hired for one year . An informed source said , Thursday night the e year re-hiring is tantamount to firing . Usual ocedure is to :re-hire+ for two years . The question went to the university corn - Mee, highest appeal board made up of deans and department heads, which recommended re - hiring for two years . At its meeting Jan . 18 the board of governor s reversed this decision and voted for a one yea r reinstatement . After pressure from faculty th e board heard a three-man delegation from th e faculty association on Tuesday . Kenji Okuta, chairman of the association sai d he and two other profs, who were the delegatio n received rough treatment from the board . Okut a claimed remarks Shrum made about academi c freedom were arrogant and insulting . The association meeting Thursday approve d a letter sent to all board members asking whic h comments by Shrum represented board polic y and which were personal opinion . The non-confidence motion, tabled deliberate- ly, will become the first order of business a t the next association meeting if the board fail s to act .

Transcript of THE 1!iPYSSEY · 2013. 7. 30. · DIAMOND RINIJI Rings include Hi-style Solitaires 3, 5 and 7 stone...

Page 1: THE 1!iPYSSEY · 2013. 7. 30. · DIAMOND RINIJI Rings include Hi-style Solitaires 3, 5 and 7 stone Engagement Rings, Clusters, Dinner, Prin• cess and Gent's Diamond' Rings . Come

THE 1!iPYSSEYWould youwant you r

sister

to marry

a

fret rat ?

Fol . XLIX, No. 39

VANCOUVER, B .C., FRIDAY, JANUARY 26, 1968

48

224-391 6

AMS raps Mardi Gra sStudent boycott urged ,poor taste charge d

By PAUL KNO X

UBC's Alma Mater Society has urged students not to attendMardi Gras activities .

In a statement released late Thursday by AMS presiden tShaun Sullivan, the executive issued the following statement :

"We strongly object to the theme of this year's Mardi Gras ,which lends itself to interpretations which exhibit racialprejudices .

"We condemn the extreme poor taste demonstrated by cer-tain fraternities in their skits at Thursday's pep meet .

"The executive has agreed that the president of the AMSshall not attend any Mardi Gras functions .

"We urge the general student body not toattend Mardi Gras functions. "

The statement followed a pep meet Thurs-day in Memorial gym which featured skit sdepicting Negroes being beaten by Ku KluxKlansmen and whites being beaten by Negroes.

Frank Collins, president of the B .C. As-sociation for the Advancement of ColoredPeople, said the event this year is in extremelypoor taste .

And the Student Non-Violent Co-ordinatingCommittee, Seattle-Bellingham chapter, termed

FORDMardi Gras disgusting.

"The event presents a ridiculous image of the America nNegro," Collins said .

Collins objected in particular to pictures of UBC studentswith blackfaoe .

His association will hold a meeting Friday or Saturday todecide what action to take, Collins said .

SNCC issued a statement strongly condemning Mardi Gras ."You cannot possibly realize our disgust and animosity to -

wards the injustice of this specifically racist entertainment, an dthose responsible for its perpetuation," the statement said .

"We find it most disgusting that the so-called educated mem-bers of an academic community could re-introduce one of th emost shameful, outrageous, and dehumanizing periods of histor y—that of slavery .

"Perhaps you are unaware of the millionsof black men and women who were slaughteredaboard slave ships, or those who survived andspent the rest of their lives building the U.S ., "the statement said .

Mardi Gras committee chairman Sta nWeber agreed Thursday that some fraternitymembers- had shown poor taste .

"The Mardi Gras Committee regrets thatsome Greek members have shown poor tasteconcerning this year's theme," Weber said ina prepared statement .

DUNCAN"The theme is chosen mainly for its application to both th e

music and choreography of the floor show."Unfortunately, some fraternities, in an attempt to be

humorous, have demonstrated extremely poor taste . We sin-cerely apologize for any racial overtones in the interpretationof the theme.

"This was most definitely not our intention . "UBC inter-fraternity council president Rick French, science

4, could not be reached for comment Thursday. He was at theMardi Gras bazaar .

Meanwhile, Trinidadian students Lester Ford, applied sci-ence 1, and Art Duncan, pre-med 1, told The Ubyssey Thursda ythat Mardi Gras should be realistic about the theme Down th eMississippi .

To Page 3

Disturbing move madeThe UBC board of governors has decided to change

the location of the proposed 140-foot carillon clock tower .It is now closer to library study stalls .The site was changed from the south side of the librar y

lawn to the north half, close to the pavement .The move will allow expansion room for the scienc e

complex and the library, UBC director of informatio nArnie Myers said Thursday .

Governors earlier expressed concern over unfavorabl ecampus reaction to the tower.

The bell tower is a $150,000 gift from retired board 'kmember, Leon Ladner .

— kurt hilger phot oFRATERNITY MEMBERS donned the elegant garb of Ku Klux Klan members Thursday noonand paraded around the gym to publicize their annual festive occasion — Mardi Gras . Acto rwearing blackface is destined to be part of that good old southern custom — lynching .

Shrum loses profs' confidenceA confrontation between faculty members

Id the Simon Fraser board of governors over-hiring a psychology professor led Thursdaya faculty association ultimatum to the board .The association passed a motion of non-con-

fence in SFU chancellor Gordon Shrum an de entire board of governors and proposed toke action unless the board reverses its decisio nL the re-hiring at its Feb . 1 meeting.The issue involves psychology prof Dr . K. R .

irstein who was fired outright by departmen tad Dr. Bernard Lyman . It went to a standin gculty committee on salaries and promotion srich over-ruled Lyman's action and recom-mded Burstein be re-hired for one year .

An informed source said, Thursday night thee year re-hiring is tantamount to firing . Usualocedure is to :re-hire+ for two years .The question went to the university corn-

Mee, highest appeal board made up of deans

and department heads, which recommended re -hiring for two years .

At its meeting Jan. 18 the board of governor sreversed this decision and voted for a one yea rreinstatement . After pressure from faculty theboard heard a three-man delegation from thefaculty association on Tuesday .

Kenji Okuta, chairman of the association sai dhe and two other profs, who were the delegatio nreceived rough treatment from the board . Okutaclaimed remarks Shrum made about academi cfreedom were arrogant and insulting .

The association meeting Thursday approve da letter sent to all board members asking whichcomments by Shrum represented board polic yand which were personal opinion .

The non-confidence motion, tabled deliberate-ly, will become the first order of business atthe next association meeting if the board failsto act .

Page 2: THE 1!iPYSSEY · 2013. 7. 30. · DIAMOND RINIJI Rings include Hi-style Solitaires 3, 5 and 7 stone Engagement Rings, Clusters, Dinner, Prin• cess and Gent's Diamond' Rings . Come

Page 2

THE UBYSSEY

Friday, January 26, 196 1

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This weekend is an academic grab-bag, filledwith events .

A two-day program on Canada's alliances ,sponsored by UBC extension department, start stonight at 8 p .m. in Ang. 110 .

Dr. James Eayrs, a political economist fromthe University of Toronto, and Prof . LeonardBeaton, visiting professor of international rela-tions at the University of Toronto, will conductdiscussions about Canada's commitments to worl ddefense organizations.

Eayrs is recognized as one of Canada's out -standing scholars on defense and foreign policy .Beaton is former director of studies at the Insti-tute of Strategic Studies in London and militar ycorrespondent for the Times and Reuters .

Also participating tonight will be Dr . FrankMarzari, of the UBC department of politica lscience .

The conference resumes Saturday at 9 :3 0a .m., also in Ang. 110 .

Tonight at 8 :30 p .m., Dr. Huston Smith, pro-fessor of philosophy at Massachusetts Instituteof Technology, will speak on ways of fulfillinghuman life.

Author of books including Condemned toMeaning and The Religions of Man, Smith wil lparticipate in a symposium Saturday with Prof .William Nicholls, head of UBC 's department ofreligious studies, on To Found a Life — VariousViews and Implications for the Future.

The symposium starts in Bu . 106 at 9 :30 a .m .

Carleton out of CUPOTTAWA (CUP) — The Carleton, studen t

newspaper of Carleton University, has withdraw nfrom Canadian University Press .

Editor Reg Silvester submitted the letterof withdrawal to CUP president Lib Spry Mon-day .

"In its present form," the letter said, "CUPis of no value to the Carleton."

Silvester said CUP had become an ideologica lorganization rather than a news service .

The UBC law faculty's Grand Moot wil lstart Saturday at 4 p .m. Drunken assault is thesubject of the mock trial, which UBC law stu-dents are required to perform each year .

Rounding out the weekend, Dr . Roy Daniells ,former head of UBC's English department, speak sSaturday night in defence of literary tradition .The Vancouver Institute lecture will be in Bu.106 at 8 :15 p .m.

Informal meetover secrecy

An open meeting to discuss problemsof senate secrecy will be held betwee nUBC senators and students Wednesday .

Alma Mater Society president ShaunSullivan said Thursday UBC registrar RegParnell has sent letters to all senators urg-ing them to attend .

All student councillors have also beenurged to go, Sullivan said .

The meeting will be held in Interna-tional Douse at 8 p.m .

It follows a decision by 600 student sJan. 9 to stage a sit-in at the next senat emeeting Feb. 14 to protest senate secrecy.

After the decision, student senator surged acting president Walter Gage to holda special senate meeting to discuss the issue .

Student council voted the same day tohost an unofficial meeting .

"It is our intention that the discussionstake place in a informal atmosphere tofacilitate achieving a meaningful dialogue,"Sullivan said in his letter of invitation.

"As an alternative to a sit-in, we proposea forum of discussion between students andmembers of senate . "

The discussions will be opened by threestudents and three senators, then break intoinformal group talks, he said . Anyone mayattend .

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Page 3: THE 1!iPYSSEY · 2013. 7. 30. · DIAMOND RINIJI Rings include Hi-style Solitaires 3, 5 and 7 stone Engagement Rings, Clusters, Dinner, Prin• cess and Gent's Diamond' Rings . Come

riday, January 26, 1968

THE UBYSSEY

Page 3

"Y'ALL HOLD mah magnolias, whall I whip ma hMardi Gras goes to help the retarded .

— lawrence woodd photo

slaves." Incongruously, money raised b y

'ROB'. . .

. . . SECOND

Churchland arts prezBy MIKE FINLA Y

Ubyssey Council ReporterJohn Churchland, arts 2, be-

came the new president of thearts undergraduate societyThursday .

Churchland, running un-opposed, received 456 of the683 votes cast in the two-dayelection .

Also elected were vice-presi-dent Ralph Stanton, arts 3 ,treasurer Mark Warrior, arts 2 ,tnd secretary Gyda Chud, arts 3 .

Arts president Stan Perskysaid Churchland would in ef-fect now be president, althoughhe does not officially take overuntil March .

Second on a write-in ballotfor president was UBC politic-al science professor MichaelBrenner, with 23 votes .

"I'm very complimented, "Brenner said Thursday. "Ionly regret I didn't get more . "

Third was this year's artspresident Stan Persky witheight votes .

John Mate, arts 2, and ParkerMacCarthy, arts 1, followedwith five votes each . Mao TseTung, Winston Churchill, Moi-she Dayan and Jean Belliveau ,who got one vote apiece .

Churchland said Thursdayhe would carry on the policy)f Persky's council with a fewminor changes .

"We're going to push for aca-

demic reform a little harder, "he said. "I'm going to go toAMS council meetings thisyear if they will let me sitinstead of Persky and willprobably go to the meetingsnext year . "

He said he plans to see AM Streasurer Dave Hoye withinthe next few days to ask formoney to put out an anti-calendar .

Vice-president Stanton, whose381 votes beat Dennis Hutton' s217 and Vernon Hunchak's 79 ,said Thursday he was please dwith the number of studentsvoting .

"Considering there was n opresidential race, I think thiswas a fair number of people, "Stanton said . "Only 750 votedlast year . "

Persky said he thought i twould be foolish to call th eelection a success due to thelack of a presidential raceand the 14 per cent turnout.

"But I am pleased with thecandidates who were elected,he said. "All the candidate swere good. However, I'm real-ly annoyed at running behin dBrenner . "

AMS president Shaun Sulli-van was disappointed at th eresults of the election .

"I thought arts was supposedto be a vibrant and active

faculty, but obviously they'r enot interested," he said Thurs-day .

"I think it's really strang ethat only 683 people out of5000 voted," Sullivan said .

By PAUL KNOX

The faculty of arts' language requirement doesn't serve it spurpose, says .a recent faculty committee report .

The report recommends the present two-year requirementbe abolished for students with a grade 12 level in a language .

Prepared by a seven-man dean's committee with a repre-sentative from each language department, it also urges that stu-dents with a grade 11 language standing be required to takethree units of the same language at IJBC or six units of a differ-ent language .

As well, it recommends that students with less than grade11 levels be required to take six units of a language .

Both requirements must be filled during first and secondyear.

The language requirement is based on the premise that lib-eral education includes proficiency in a foreign language, th ereport states.

"The study of a language should start in grade school,"the report says .

"The requirement, if any, should be completed before thestudent commences his specialized pursuits .

"Most important, the present requirement has no relationto proficiency.

"A student who enters university after four high schoo lyears of a language is much more proficient after the two-yearrequirement than one who has had no previous instruction . "

The committee says the faculty should consider adding in-tensive six-unit first-year courses for students wishing to satisf ythe language deficiency in one year .

The report comes before UBC's senate Feb . 14 .

From Page 1

"It's ridiculous for white people to dress up as black men .No white can capture the spirit of being black," Ford said .

"We're not against the theme of the plantation system —we just want them to tell it like it is . "

Duncan termed unfortunate the scences in Thursday's pepmeet .

"Serious episodes like lynching and flogging shouldn't betreated as things for laughter," he said .

"Only the southerner or people with the mental make-upof southerners could find humour in scenes like these ."

— lawrence woodd photo

Blackfaces carry off KKK member in Mardi Gras skit.

Page 4: THE 1!iPYSSEY · 2013. 7. 30. · DIAMOND RINIJI Rings include Hi-style Solitaires 3, 5 and 7 stone Engagement Rings, Clusters, Dinner, Prin• cess and Gent's Diamond' Rings . Come

THE UPublished Tuesdays, Thursdays and Fridays throughout the university yea rby the Alma Mater Society of the University of B .C. Editorial opinions orethose of the editor and not of the AMS or the university . Member,Canadian University Press. The Ubyssey subscribes to the press servicesof Pacific Student Press, of which it is founding member, and Undergroun dPress Syndicate. Authorized second class mail by Post Office Department,

Ottawa, and for payment of postage in cash . The Ubyssey publishes PageFriday, a weekly commentary and review. City editor, 224-3916 . Othe rcalls, 224.3242 : editor, local 25; photo, Page Friday, loc. 24; sports, loc.

23; advertising, loc . 26. Telex 04-5224.

Final winner Southam Trophy, awarded by Canadia nUniversity Press for general excellence . Co-winner Bracke nTrophy for editorial writing .

Undergraduates,By and large shabby:Wild geese flying off.

- Modern Japanese haik u

JANUARY 26, 1968

Hare

I showed themselves unwilling even to listen to his plea s

During his recent visit to UBC, new president

Kenneth Hare has thrown this weight solidly behind theprogressive forces in university education, making hi s

opinions clear on a number of issues . Like anyone who

takes a positive stand, Hare is bound to make someenemies .

His condemnation of the lecture system as practise dat TJBC, for example, will displease both studentswho require spoon-feeding and faculty who find it con-venient to coast along for decades on a permanent se tof lecture notes.

His willingness to meet students representing al lpoints of view on their own terms could upset some,including some students. For as arts president StanPersky remarked after a two-hour meeting with thepresident: "He's about 300 yards ahead of this year'scouncil. "

His remarks at a commerce undergraduate societydinner, on the need for "curricula that will civilizeas well as train, broaden as well as inculcate skill "may startle members of the commerce faculty who mus tbe painfully aware that the five-year commerce cours eaccomplishes no such thing.

At the same time as encouraging academic change a tIJEC, Hare has shown awareness of the political realitie sfacing the university. He has refused to blame theprovincial govrnment for its disastrous underfinancin gof UBC, saying the people deserve the government theyget. He has done this although he must be aware thatthe government has deliberately deceived public opinionabout university financing. He must also be aware thatgood government should involve leading and educatingthe public about higher education, the necessity ofwhich might not be immediately apparent .

We are skeptical about what success Hare canexpect with the Socreds. President John Macdonal dbefore him tried and failed to bring about realisticgovernment support of the university . The Socreds

on behalf of UBC : In his five years as president, Mac-donald receiveil a total of only 15 minutes of meetingswith Premier Bennett .

Perhaps Hare, with his persuasive manner, and hi splan to travel the province on speaking tours, can worka miracle . Perhaps he can encourage Victoria to bringgovernment support of UBC up to a level approachin gthat of other Canadian and American public universities .

We wish him luck - but won't blame him if hisw,prds fall on deaf Socred ears .

LETTERS TO THE EDITO R

Editor, The Ubyssey:Do you find that it is as im-

possible as it seems to keep you rbias from twisting even you r"news" stories? For example ,let us look at the events of thecurrent senate public galleryissue . Senators Larsen and Mate ,along with Mr . Persky, raisethe call for a sit-in . Studentcouncil disapproves of a sit-inand approves the arranging o fa joint council-senate meetin gto discuss the issue . Suddenlythe abve trio are saying that"We don't know of anyone whois planning a sit-in" and ar ecalling for a special meeting o fsenate . Gage says no . Counci lpresident Sullivan proceeds withthe joint council-senate meeting ,inviting all members of bothbodies to a meeting on Jan. 31

So what does The Ubysse yof Tuesday say? : "Alter stu-dent senators last week urgedan emergency meeting betweenstudents and senate on the sec-recy issue." I think it is arather disturbing situation whenthe students of this campus haveto rely on the downtown pressto find out what actually ishappening at the university.

DON MUNTONAMS first vice-president

Ed. note : Both student council

Senate

Editor, The Ubyssey:Many students at UBC might

be content just to read aboutand hear about other region sand universities in Canada, butfor those who would ventureeast o the rockies there exist sa unique plan enabling them t odo so. Organized and adminis-tered by the Canadian Union ofStudents, it is known as theInterregional Scholarship Ex-change Plan and each year ,through a program of travelgrants and tuition wavers, al -lows approximately ten UB Cstudents to study at anotheruniversity for one academicyear .

During the year 1966-67 Iattended McGill University inMontreal as an ISEP scholar .By doing so I gained an in-creased understanding of andenthusiastic interest in the af-fairs of eastern Canada in addi-tion to a realization of the di-verse nature of our country .

I recommend a year of ex-change as a refreshing changeof environment, a chance t o

and student senators urged ameeting to discuss the issue be -fore the regular Feb. 14 senatemeeting. The Ubyssey reportedactions of both council and stu-dent senators .

I

P

Go east

Editor, The Ubyssey:In your editorial of Jan . 1

you imply that the universilregistrar has been sadisticalwaiting for the day when Ican again make life uncomfozable for students on this camus. While it is to be hoped thyou and some of your staff a rsome of the students on cam pmay realize that there is sonconnection between the enlorcaction of the registrar and tiinformation contained on p a2 (education confab "crap") thmay not necessarily be tru ea large proportion of studenwho have no source of informtion other than The Tjbyss eIn fairness to Mr. Parnall ycmight take into consideraticthe relationship between bud gand optimum ways of accorpushing things, such as tFregistration of students.

S. H. WALL ]assistant to the desfaculty of educatic

sample student life in othi

parts of Canada, and a valuabeducational experience and u.nanyone interested to find oimore about the program at tiCUS office, Brock Hall.

MICHAEL HARD Oscience

No funds

Due to a printer's error,

the lettering on the Mardi

Gras "king" poster, right,

was omitted from t h e

photograph on page fou r

of Thursday's Ubyssey.

T h e Ubyssey apologizes

for any embarrassmen t

this error caused the kin g

candidate, or his fratern-

ity .

GLAMOR RICH AME SMardi Gras "king" poster.

JAMES MEREDITH WOUL DWALK A MILE TO VOT E

Bleed!Bleed, dammit !

Armories, 9:30 a.m. to 4:30 p .m., until Feb. 2.

EDITOR : Danny Stoffma n

City Stuart Gra yNews Susan Gransb yManaging Murray McMilla nPhoto Kurt Huge rSenior Pat Hrushow ySports Mike Jesse nWire Norman Gidne yPage Friday Judy Bin gAss't . City Boni Lee

he moaned. In between rollickingriots, 187 popcorn vendors staged asit in. Buttering them up were Pau lKnox, who wondered if indeed therewasn'tas it was wondered ; Mike Fin-lay, who lit a cigar and went off i na puff ; and Mary Krisby, who ate adozen bananas . Elgin Lee brought asurfboard and a bored surf. MarkDeCoursey towered above the belles,and Leo Tolstoy made a pass at Rut hBlair . Judy Young. Fred Cawsey andGraham Crackers threw Brock mugsabout, although none of the staff werehurt .

Marching about, Lawrence Woodd,Chris Blake . George Rollo and Bo bBrown craned their necks and tookbrilliant shots with empty cameras.

James Meredith, immediately after he was shot during his march through Mississippi, June, 1966 .

First off. Irving Fetish got stuck ina bottle. When they tried to get himout, one of his vertebra broke. "Hea tthe glass," bellowed Ann Arky, feel-ing in an expansive mood . A handyblow torch was found, but Irvingquickly got browned off when it wasturned on the bottle . Then, sureenough, out he came in a trice . "It

Remember, an editorial blor g meet.was a case of snap, crackle and pop,"

big noon today.

.., :. . .

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Page 6: THE 1!iPYSSEY · 2013. 7. 30. · DIAMOND RINIJI Rings include Hi-style Solitaires 3, 5 and 7 stone Engagement Rings, Clusters, Dinner, Prin• cess and Gent's Diamond' Rings . Come

pt Zwo

piJANUARY 26, 196 8

On the cover : Page Fridaysalutes Mardi Gras. ,

Comic faces this week wereDonald Duck disguised a sJudy Bing (quack!), GyroGearloose inhabiting themind of Stephen Scobie ,Uncle Scrooge seducing BertHill to capitalism, and luckyduck Gladstone Gandermasquerading as ReillyBurke. Arnold Saba andGordon Fidler were ob-served wearing B e a g l eBoys Inc. sweaters andbadges.

The total lack of tastedemonstrated by the Greekletter societies in theirchoice of a Mardi Gra stheme this year is dif-ficult to believe. It isdifficult to believe thatso many people on thiscampus can be so insensi-tive to contemporaryevents, so ignorant ofwhere it's at, so callous ofthe feelings of Black stu-d e n t s at UBC and o fNegro people in general .True, any culture or per-iod in history which maybe chosen for the themeof such a non-event i sbound to have some repre-hensible aspects. Wha tmakes the use of the Ol dSouth theme today sowrong then? Watts, De-troit, Chicago, Harlem ,Selma, that's what . Havethe Greeks managed tohole up so securely in theirfrat houses that they haveescaped the connotationsof those names? Have theymanaged to hide out fromhistory so as to be insen-sible of the insult thistheme is to hundreds ofthousands of people ?

The struggle of the Negropeople for genuine free-dom demands sympathyand respect not patroniz-ing ridicule . Aspects o fthis struggle have been re-peatedly discussed in ourpages. This week LesterFord discusses the OldSouth on pf 2 and Bert Hil lreviews the book BlackPower: Politics of Libera-tion in America on pf 6 .

Nevertheless, the down -town papers have bothgiven full page spreads t opublicize the meaninglessevent and its egregioustheme. Since the proceedsgo to aid retarded chil-dren, Mardi Gras is sup-posedly beyond reproach .Charity, that hypocriticalsacred cow can "sugar o'erthe devil himself" .

J .B .

By CHARLOTTE HAIRE

Something happened at the UB CFifth Annual Science Symposium at Ro-sario Beach last weekend — somethin gthat caused approximately eighty sciencestudents and professors to "blow theirminds" .

The tension, intellectualism and lec-ture-type structure which characterizedfour preceeding symposia, suddenl ybroke down and society's technologicaltrainees turned their thoughts to "level sof consciousness", the spirit of man andthe feeling of unity with the universe .

A microbiologist pledged to give uphis life's occupation if it meant a choic ebetween it and a true search for know-ledge and humanity .

A bushy-haired genetics prof., turn-ing to the speaker, exclaimed, "Whatyou've done is really beautiful . No onehas reached the point where he knowswhat he should do as a scientist . Yetyou have made it, by stripping away th ecrap and getting to the core . "

The speaker? A very unlikely an dalso very uninvited speaker — a wild -eyed, long-haired mystic fresh with newsfrom San Francisco . His name was Dun -can and he was to set the tone for theremainder of the symposium .

Up to the happening with Duncan o nSaturday afternoon, frustration with thesymposium had been steadily growing .

The "passivist" is ubiqui-tous at UBC. His main char-acteristic is silence . He eitherhas no opinion on variouscampus, national or worldissues or possesses one, butdoes not express it beyon da limited circle of acquaint-ances .

His failure to do so iscaused by a ludicrous senseof inadequacy, or by the fic-tion of authority — the fic-tion that those who are indecision-making po s i t i o n sknow more than he does .

The important point is tha teven if he does not want toobey, he gives in to socialpressure. He submits, sensinghis own "inadequacy" inprecipitating social changeand realizing the danger ofhis own position should he"rock the boat. "

This university has beencharacterized by a noticeablelack of organizations whos edesigns and intents have beenradical. If the "passivist "goes so far as to look for suchan organization, he excul-pates his behaviour by stat-ing that he once sought butdid not find one .

The topic for the symposium was"The Social Responsibility of Scienceand Technology" and professors spoke t ostudents about the inherent benevolenceof knowledge, understanding as theremedy for society's ills and about som eform of social control over the unrestric-ted freedom to research .

We heard once more that the problemwas not knowledge, but the way it wasdirected.

We heard again that the businesse sscientists must work for are ridiculous ,disgusting and exploitative .

A former microbiologist for the U .S .department of chemical and biologicalwarfare said that scientists' groups haverepeatedly failed in their efforts to in-fluence government in the control ofwarfare.

He told us the scientist has lost thehumanitarian, benevolent teacher imagehe had before World War II and now ispictured as an unsentimental machine .The scientist now provides informationwithout interpretation .

The genetics prof . then said he feltthis was becoming a rehash of last year' ssymposium .

A zoologist said he was annoyed bythe mutual "knee patting" and synchron-ized whispers of "Isn't it just terrible? "

Something was bound to happen then ,but no one expected anything like Dun-can .

Duncan said there were lots of idea sshooting out but no physical place to putthem. He said there was a fragmentationof consciousness and the group could ,if it wanted, turn on to a higher, tota llevel of thought .

"Everything is an energy flow," hesaid, tracing sketches on the blackboard ."Pumpkin seeds are energy cells, peopleare energy . We must tune in to the pump-kin — tune in to the energy flow . "

Duncan did not adhere to the fiv eminute time limit, but when someonetried to stop him, the symposium sud-denly rose to his defense .

"To hell with the structure," said theAcademic Activities chairman, "Let'sjust do what we want . "

"Can I go get the beer?" asked a nArts I prof.

"Something is happening," exclaimeda philosophy professor, "Just what Idon't know."

What happened was that people start-ed coming up with answers .

The microbiologist said, "If you doreach the new level of consciousness, youthen become free from restricting prac-ticalities and the use of scientific dis-coveries will be apparent . "

After this, discussions were somehowfreer, more personal, concentrating onthe individual bringing himself to feelone with the world and treating every-thing as part of himself.

By DAN MURRAY

Don't disturb the passivist prostitut eThe real nature of the

"passivist" is unwittingly re-vealed as that of a social an dmoral prostitute . He sells hi scode of values to society. Helets it use him as it will — aslong as he receives his pay-ment. To him, freedom isachieved through prostitu-tion .

Appropriately enough, th e"passivist" receives a mor esophisticated form of condi-tioning at university. The in-stitution which is supposed

to produce thinkers unwit-tingly trains them in the art

of prostitution .

The atmosphere of retreatfrom the world is omnipres-ent, despite the attempts toavoid it . The retreat is int othe realm of self-interest ,marks satisfying the appe-tite. A transfer of learningoccurs when the student .leaves the university, an dsalary and position take overwhere marks left off.

As a student, the "passi-vist" prostitutes himself t othe demands of the univer-sity. His years in this at-mosphere are oriented to -wards the goal of self-inter-est . He receives his trainingSvell and becomes anotherpassive member of society.He tries to get as much as h ecan from the latter and findsthat he can take only noth-ing. This nothing he adds tohimself, slowly making him-self into zero .

iNHISTLING DIXgBy LESTER FOR D

This is Mardi Gras wee kand so we salute "Dixie th eBeautiful ." We shall displayall the pomp and splendo rand chivalry paying respect sto her Confederate flag andher riches bought with Blackblood .

We will re-enact a com-munion scene in a Dixi echurch and we will emphasiz eour affluence by providin gtwo cups, one for white, onefor black .

We can show-off our Dixi echeerleaders : mothers scream-

ing at officials trying to inte-grate a school .

We can demonstrate ourSouthern hospitality by re-enacting Bessie Smith dyin gin the streets because ther eis no Black ambulance .

We have two fine examplesof Southern marksmanshi pby demonstrating the shoot-ings of James Meredith andMedgar Evers.

Dixie anatomy demonstra-tions can be given in raping ,castration, and lynching.

Our Dixie cuisine includescharred coon, a Southern de-

light.We can show-off our Dixie

intelligentsia by providing th eworks of Governor Kirk ,Richard Russell, and the Wal-laces .

We will even paint ou rfaces black to demonstrateto you how a blackman looks.

This is the South we kndw;we made it so. But to theblackman, the geographicalentity called Dixie is in facta psychological and economicreality that we could hav ecaptured by taking a tripHalifax .

THE UBYSSEY

Friday, January 26, 1968

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Verbal choreograph yto verbal diarrhea

pt 3hree

By KEITH FRASER

If Listen to the Wind is indicative offuture productions by the Stage 2 Theatre ,then Vancouver's newest in-the-round pro-mises to become a triumphant typhoon . Pro-moted as a forum for Canadian and experi-mental drama, this . supplement to the Play-house Theatre could instead prove a rival.

The characters created by James Heaneypurposely appear to generate their own play ,as they observe with us "the web of child-hood" and allow the wind to make it bounce .It' is a story which superimposes the realityof adult relationships upon the wonders ofyoung imaginations . The continualshifting of locals and the aging of ageneration make it impractical toreconstruct what might inaccuratelybe termed the plot .

On perhaps the most interesting level thi splay is an exercise in verbal choreography .The chorus provides a wind motif for theaction, that blows lyrically from the northand south in the first act, until it whisper swesterly in the third . Whispers, because dueto the length, the author misses the conclud-ing potential of the chorus .

Otherwise the rhythm and poetry ofReaney's talent make his play a delightfulhappening for weather forecasters and child-ren at any university .

Patrons at the Metro Theatre are as un-common as buttons on a T-shirt this week .For a city that flexes a swollen population

eager to press toward NHL hockey, a pro -gram to develop its skinny interest in dram abeyond the Playhouse Theatre is certainlyin order .

In any case, the tandem of one act playsat the Metro is interesting for different rea-sons. Despite Eugene O'Neill's use of datedslang in Hughie, the underlying quality ofErie's (John-Destry Adams) loneliness in aNew York hotel lobby will always be valid .The alternating blue light, intended to ai drevelation of the desk clerk's (Wally Mc-Sween) private thoughts in contrast to Erie' sverbal diarrhea, works well. With externa lsound effects the set even smells New York-

ish, until the life-snapping effect onErie of Hughie's death stands real .

/

Unfortunately George Ryga 'sJust An Ordinary Person is interest-

ing because it exposes its author as a shoddyartist . While his basic idea, to question therole of poet in society, is good, the way it ishoked-up as a grab bag of Ryga philosophy i sdownright bad. Not only does the play fai lto really discuss dope, God, war, literature ,life (not necessarily in that order), the pro-duction of it does not unify background andforeground . A railway station, for instance ,is completely peripheral to the inquiring ban -ter of Poet and Person from the audience . Itseems Ryga wants to say it all in one act,when O'Neill wrote a lifetime. Neverthelesshis psychedelic strobe light scene of poeticconfusion is engrossing, and worth the pric eof fossilized eyeballs.

symphony

'GIVE IT HELL FELLAS'

MARIKO VAN CAMPE N

exposes her tongue to

the loving concern of

Brian Bueckert in thi s

scene from James Saun-

ders' A Scent of Flowers ,

which can be seen at th e

f r e d d y Wood Studio

from January 31 to Feb-

ruary 3. The play is a n

M.A. Thesis production

by Judi Freiman.

DR. D. A. HUBBARDFuller Theological Seminary

Pasadena, Calif.

"A Christian Looks

At Marshall McCluhan "

Fri . Noon

Angus 11 0Sponsored by Varsity Christian Fellowship

PAPERBACKSNEW ARRIVALS

List No . 89 — January 19, 196 8

Academic Freedom & Tenure . Joughin . University of Wisconsi n(Education)

3.00Approaches to Canadian History . Mackintosh, Lower at al .

Univ . of Toronto (Can . History) 1 .50Art Nouveau. Madsen . McGraw Hill (Art)

_

_ . .

3 .25Basic Laws of Arithmetic. Furth . Univ. of California (Mathematics) __

Q .65Bosch. Bussagli . Thames & Hudson (Fine Arts) 1 .85Coleridge . Coburn. Spectrum (Literature) 2.25Confederation . Creighton, Stacey et al (Canadian History) 1 .95Dag Hammarskiold . Stolpe . Scribner (Philosophy)

_ _

1 .55Decisive Forces in World Economics. Sampedro. McGraw Hill (Economics) 3.25Decline of Empires . Eisenstadt. Spectrum (History) 2 .25Deluge . Marwick . Pelican . (Sociology) 1 .65Development Planning. Tinbergen . McGraw Hill (Economics)

2 .70Dickens. Price. Spectrum. (Literature) 2 .Q5Discovery of Time . Toulmin & Goodfield . Pelican (Physics)

1 .85Education Automation . Fuller . Southern Illinois Press (Education)

2 .55Egypt and the Sudan . Collins & Tignor. Spectrum (History)

2.25English Revolution. Gruber. Ardmore Press. (History) 2.45Envy and Other Works . Olesha .Anchor . (Translations) . 1 .65Europe : Grandeur and Decline. Taylor. Pelican. (History) 1 .65European Expansion & The Counter Example of Asia 1300-160 0

Levenson . Spectrum (History) Q.2 5Expanding Liberties. Konvitz. Viking Compass. (Political Science) 2.95Formation of the American Republic 1776-1790. McDonald . Pelican

(U.S. History) 1 .65French Revolution . Sobel. Ardmore Press (History) 2.45From Raindrops to Volcanoes . Blanchard . Anchor (Physics) 1 .45Geography of the USSR. Cole . Pelican (Geography) 1 .65Gothic. Henderson . Pelican . (Fine Arts) 3 .50Hirohito Emperor of Japan . Mosley . Avon (History) .95Honoured Society — The Mafia . Lewis. Penguin . (Fiction) 1 .65Human Communication . Aranguren . McGraw Hill . (Sociology) 3 .25Human Organism. Horrobin . Bantam . (Biology) .95Image of Childhood . Coventry. Peregrine (Literature) . 3.50Kant — Collection of Critical Essays. Wolff. Anchor (Philosophy) 1 .65Language of Life. Beadle. Anchor (Biology) 1 .65Leonardo . Monti. Thames & Hudson (Fine Arts) 1 .85Little Britches. Moody . Bantam (Children's Literature) .60Madness & Civilization . Foucault . Mentor (Psychology) 1 .25Mannerism. Shearman. Pelican (Fine Arts) 3.50Marne. Blond . Pyramid (History) .75Negro Pilgrimage in America . Lincoln . Bantam (U.S . History) .60Nine Chains to the Moon . Fuller . Southern Illinois Press (Architecture)

3.25Opinions & Prespectives From the New York Times Book Review .

'Brown . Peregrine (Literature)Our Children Are Dying . Hentoff . Compass (Education)Our Present Knowledge of the Universe. Lovell. Harvard Univ . Press

(Physics)Pagan Mysteries in the Renaissance, Wind . Peregrine. (Fine Arts)Picasso . De Michele. Thames & Hudson (Fine Arts) 1 .85Politics of Discontent. Schultz at al . Univ. of Toronto (Canadian

History)Portuguese Africa . Chilcote. Spectrum. (History)Pre-Classical From Crete to Archaic Greece. Boardman .

Pelican (Art) 2 .95Principles of Reasoning . Leonard. Dover (Philosophy) 3.50Promise of Americo. Blum. Pelican (History) 1 .65Quest for Peace through Diplomacy . Ketesz. Spctrum. (Political Science) 2.95the Race War. Segal . Bantam. (History)

1 .35Report of the Royal Commission on Bilingualism ' & Biculturalis m

Queens PrinterReproduction of Life. Lehrman . Bantam (Biology)Revolution & Tradition in Modern America Art . Baer . Praeger .

(Fine Arts)Rise of Toleration . Kamen. McGraw Hill (History)Robespierre . Rude . Spectrum (History) Ruskin Today. Clark . Peregrine (Literature)Russian Revolution . Lecar . Ardmore Press (History) Search for Amelia Earhart . Goerner . Dell (History)Science and Survival . Commoner . Viking. (Science)Seven Days to Lomaland . Warner. Pyramid (Geography) Structure of Life. Clowes. Pelican (Biology) Study of Total Societies. Klausner . Anchor (Sociology)This is War. Duncan . Bantam (History) .Tit-Coq. Gelinas. Clark (Canadian Fiction)Upper Canadian Politics in the 1850's . Underhill, as a l

Univ. of Toronto (Canadian History)Van Gogh . Marini. Thames & Hudson (Fine Arts)Vital Balance. Menninger. Compass (Psychology)Waves & Messages. Pierce . Anchor (Physics )World of An Insect . Chauvin . McGraw Hill (Zoology)Writers in the New Cuba. Cohen. Penguin (Translations) Young Offenders . West . Pelican (Psychology)

UBC BOOKSTORE

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Friday, January 26, 1968

By MURRAY McMILLAN

David Zinman is a show -man .

Zinman reminds one o fLeonard Bernstein. You canread the music by watchinghim. The 32-year-old Amer-ican moves over every squareinch of the podium as he con -ducts .

He reaches high above th eheads of the orchestra mem-bers, bringing them to theclimax of a movement .

He leans down over th eorchestra . You can read theface: "Give it hell fellas ." Al lconcealed in a grin that looks'ke it belongs to a six-year -

%

old with his first ice cream .The guest artist at Sun-

day's concert by the Van-couver Symphony Orchestr awas the antithesis of th eguest conductor .

Byron Janis is a lean, scare-crow-like figure .

But once his steel fingersgrasp the keys of the QueenLiz's Steinway, no one careswhat he looks like.

His playing of Prokofiev' sPiano Concerto Numbe rThree was nothing short ofsuperb. The American-bornpianist began the immenselydifficult composition as hefinished it, with a display o fsolid technical' prowess and

deep emotion.Other selections on Sun-

day's program approache dthe standard of the Proko-fiev, but never quite made it .

Bela Bartok's Dance Suit efor Orchestra came closest .It was a good performance ofthe spirited modern piece .

Mozart's overture to hi sopera The Impresario re-ceived a good, but slightlyrushed treatment .

Zinman moves, and in thefourth selection he movedfar too quickly . The paceZinman set made chord pas-sages slurred and solo pas-sages lose the brightness Bee-thoven wrote into them .

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This is not a nostalgic remember-when-we-were -young- we - used-to-grasp-the - cheap - news -print-and-pore-over-it-and-rip-the-covers-off-an dwhere-are-all-those-characters-now type comicbook remembrance (a la Jules Feiffer) . This i snot a facetious tongue-in-cheek glorification ofobviously crummy comic books (a la camp studiesof the Fantastic Four, etc .) . This is not a chummysociological article about how "500 billion Ameri -cans every day follow the latest tribulation sof . . ." (as if comics consisted of nothing bu tham-handed soap opera . Oh no. It sure ain't) ..

Arnold Saba owns a collection of 850 WaltDisney comic books .

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SEVERAL VIEWS OF UNCLE SCROOGE, the world' s

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Do you remember Uncle Scrooge and DonaldDuck? Possibly they were your favourite comi cbook characters . Surely you remember tha tUncle Scrooge used to go to far-off lands andhave fantastic adventures, and that Donald Duc khad the looniest set of relatives that ever fille da typical family album.

Well, I'll tell you why you remember that .Because they . were the best comics you everread (unless you happened to have laid you rpaws on some Krazy Kat, which is not likely) .

In 1937, Donald Duck appeared as a featureplayer in a Mickey Mouse cartoon . He was sobad-tempered that he was an instant hit, an dbecame a regular. About that time, the firs tcomic books as we know them were being pro-duced, and in December 1939 the first WaltDisney's Comics and Stories came out, consistingmainly of reprinted comic strips from news -papers .

in 1943, the comic started running originalstories. From the beginning, the comic bookswere under different control than the screencartoons. The characters were leased by WesternPrinting, Inc., which hired regular artists todraw the stories . This arrangement continues upto today .

The first guy they hired to draw Donal dDuck, some nameless genius who labored overthe pen from 1943 until 1949, subverted theentire approach of the publication. While othe rcomics moved on in their usual child-oriente dfashion, Donald Duck became sophisticated . Thestories were fast-paced, changing angle, situa-tion and locale in a style that would turn RichardLester green (all the more so because they neverlacked in continuity). The dialogue was modernand sparkled with unlikely sayings, and under -statement and sarcasm were used to tremendouseffect . The stories were almost s}irrealistic .

Donald Duck lived in a world filled withconventional trappings, but everything was ex-aggerated. Statues looked like jokes — sign sdidn't make sense. People were totally illogical.The whole thing betrayed a wit and a sense ofthe ridiculous that somehow made one feel that ,however absurd the situation, it could happenand maybe had happened to you. Normal situa-tions burgeoned ta the wildly impossible .

Ti—4A—T'' TI N

TURN E0-

GOLD „

UNCLE SCROOGE has met Larkies, the Minotaur,found the Seven Cities of Cibola, been to themoon several times, and has been all over theworld, both on the surface and underneath it.Here he finds the Philosopher's Stone.

FAST ACTION CHARACTER! :An effective comic techni cviolent action in small a rclimax a half page. The ef

HERE IS A SUDDEN SURPRISE, after the fairl ynormal progression of a story in which Donald

THE UBYSSEY

Friday, January 26, 1968

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D EAT THE)

I

t

In 1949, a new artist took over, maintainingthe style of drawing and humor, but addingmore realistic backgrounds and props, and bring-ing his own exotic bend to create adventure slike nothing so much as mediaeval tales of foreign]!ands . This trend coupled with the former style ;there was no dimension which Donald Duckcould not touch .

This artist and his three successors (to date)utilised a range of characters . Besides the mer-curial Donald, there were his nephews, whoinvariably rescued him, and Uncle Scrooge Mc -Duck, who owned nine cubic acres of mone y(see illustration) and used to swim in it—andwho was . the most miserly, tight fisted duck inexistence . Uncle Scrooge's enemies, the Beagl eBoys, were the perfect criminals—they walkedin lock-step, had Beagle Boys, Inc . on theirshirts, wore masks, and called each other bytheir prison numbers . -

Besides, there was Gladstone Gander, luckiestgander ever, who never had to do anything(Donald's pet peeve), and Gyro Gearloose, mad-cap inventor, who invented stupid things tha tactually worked . It is interesting to note thatnone of these characters has ever been animate d--they are solely the creatures of the comicbooks .

A BIT OF understatement.

1

'::: seer!•- utwust wsiO'a.GOnN ' '70

}d4~. ' J

LUCKY COUSIN GLADSTONE . When he andDonal• meet they invariably get in a scrap .

Until 1960, they continued to fulfill ever yfunction of great literature, and through con-tinued association they fused like one epic novelto form a vast absurd panorama of man (duck?)and his doings . No one source was ever so fullof so many of the universe's wonders (except a nencyclopaedia) .

Since 1960, they have lost their magic . Thelast artist of the dynasty tried hard and didwell, but lacked the original flair, and reliedlargely on imitations . In the last year he ha sbeen farmed out and the comics are again achildren's land.

Yet in the vast past, of 17 years of comics ,there lies an unforgettable cast of characters ,led by Donald Duck, wide-eyed, brash, too eage rand too stupid, enthusiastic, and, above all, well -meaning . Like many great characters, he is oneof us, and he is a part of at least my literaryheritage .

Slacks NarrowedSuits Altered an d

Repaired

UNITED TAILORS549 Granville St.

An M.A. Thesis Production

A SCENTOF FLOWERSDirected by Judith Freiman

JANUARY 31 —FEBRUARY 3 — 8 :30Matinee Feb . 1 — 12:30

Students $1 .00

Adults $1 .50

FREDERIC WOODSTUDIO

TUXEDO

RENTAL & SALES

• 2,500 GARMENTS TOCHOOSE FROM

• Full Dross (Tails)• Morning Coats• Directors' Coats• White and Coloured Coats• Shirts and Accessories

E. A. Lee Formal Wea r(Downstairs )

623 Howe

688-2481

'I ,

THE VILLAGE CAFEWhere Friends Meet & Dine

' DISCOUNT ONPIZZA TO GO

IA Block Eastof Memorial Gym

at 5778 University Blvd .

Phone 224-0640

STUDENT SThat have Scholarship, Bur-

sary or Provincial Governmentcheques coming, must pic k

them up at the cashier' s

wicket by Jan . 29.

After this date all awards wil l

be cancelled .

I

NURSIN GFirst Year Arts and Sciencestudents interested in enteringFirst Year Nursing in Septem-ber are invited to come t othe School of Nursing for in-formation about our program .We hope you will stay fo rcoffee .

Tuesday, February 67:30 p.m.

WESBROOK 237

THE DIALOGUE was neither satire nor parody.It was pure sarcasm, with a wierdly hip slant,as individual as the language of Pogo or Li ltAbner. it complemented the plot and action,which were just as likely to be full of distortedmodern isms .

SCIENTISTS WERE a particular breed — fog-brained genii, useful items in a world where

anything might happen. Doctors, lawyers, show-e ing lye

men — in fact, all professions — looked equally- . Indians .

absurd.

'riday, Janu6ry 26, 1968 THE UElk YSSEY

What Makes WomenWeep—So Often ?

Men think when a woman criesshe's sad. "Wrong", says amember of the crying sex wh oexplains what all the weepin gis about. This article, in Febru-ary Reader's Digest, tells hus-bands why it's important todifferentiate between tears ofvexation, sentiment, tendernessand the ways to handle tears .Does the "tell me about it later "technique work? When is i twrong to shut off the faucet?How do you handle the "EasyCrier" when an attack comeson in public? This examinationof women's weeping is in Feb-ruary Reader's Digest, now onsale . This issue also featuresthe authoritative article, "Is thePill Really Safe?"

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p! 61x

Liberation in Black and WhiteBlack Power: The Politics of Liberation

in Americaby Stokely Carmichael and Charles V. Hamilton

Vintage Paperback $1 .95

by BERT HILLIn August, Stokely Carmichael was in Havana

at a meeting of the Organization of Latin Ameri-can Solidarity, where he identified the struggl ein American ghettos with the struggle aroundthe world against colonialism, neocolonialismand imperialism .

James Reston of the New York Times wasin Havana to cover the same meeting. Restonhas an image as the sane, solid, responsibleAmerican columnist that sane, solid, responsibl eRepublicans and Democrats read so that theyknow what their opinions are.

Reston managed to get out of his value-freebag and got morally worked up about ear-michael's speech —. something he has avoideddoing over Vietnam. His column assured thesane, solid citizens that American Negroesweren't interested in condemning America orthe whole middle class way of life . On the frontpage of the same issue there was the news thatyet another American city ghetto had blown up.

A recent public opinion poll indicated tha t35% of all Black Americans inside and outsidethe urban ghettos had reached the conclusionthat rioting could help their cause. 15% approvedof rioting and would participate if the opportun-ity presented itself. Just 20% thought riotingwould hurt their cause.

Why? Only 29% of the urban slum dweller sthought their lives had changed for the betterbetween 1963 and 1966 .

In the deep South, less than six per cent ofall Black children are in integrated schools . Therural areas have become the preserve of corpor-ation farms and grinding poverty for the declin-ing six per cent of the population that still livesoutside the urban centres.

In the urban centres, the celebration of thefifties over the great American democracy with

power and affluence for all has given way to ahalf-hearted recognition of fundamental socialpathology .

People pay for their affluence by committingtheir lives to the great bureacracies: government ,labour, business and education . Their afflu-ence is. eaten up by inflation while technologyhomogenizes and destroys what privacy an dmeaning their home and family offer .

Into this void steps Carmichael and colleague,a Black political scientist.

The bankruptcy of coalition politics is ex-

'41posed in a recounting of the fiasco at the Demo-cratic 1964 convention when LBJ and his liberalside-kick Hubert Humphrey tried to get the Mis-sissippi Freedom Democratic Party to accept acompromise with the racist, establishment Mis-sissippi Democratic Party on seating arrange-ments at the convention,

One is reminded of Senator Everett Dirksen'sbacking of the Civil Rights Bill in the Senatewith the stirring sentiment that 'nothing is sopowerful as an idea whose time has come. '

The idea didn't have any staying power, i twould appear, for shortly afterwards, Dirksenwas nominating Barry Goldwater, that great de-fender of states rights and safe streets as theGOP presidential candidate of 1964 .

No wonder Andrew Kopkind says liberalismis dead .

The major value of this book for whites i sits ideas on alternate structure and parallel in-stitutions . While it only moves tentatively in thisdirection, describing attempts by blacks to con-trol schools and other institutions of the ghettos ,it is valuable for its rich description of politics inAmerica .

The major value of democratically controlle dinstitutions is that they fulfill the deep psychic :need for community and remove the individualfrom his highly vulnerable isolation where heis easy prey for manipulative power structures.Sufficiently strong and human-centred organiza-tions can rob the bureaucracies of their majorfunction which is control and reveal theirfundamental lack of vitality which is every da ybecoming more clear in the non-response to th e'Negro problem' in the U.S.A .

The value of this book is that it defines th eboundaries and failures of various conventionalforms of politics as well as the usual bumpfabout revolutions of 'rising expectations' an dprovides some of the theoretical foundation of amovement to lead not only poor blacks andwhites but also middle class whites out of ajungle of despair, alienation and powerlessness .

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THE UBYSSEY

Friday, January 26, 1968

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CWp~ 7even An M.A. Thesis Production

A SCENTOF FLOWERSDirected by Judith Freima n

JANUARY 31 —FEBRUARY 3 — 8 :30Matinee Feb. 1 — 12:30

Students $1 .00

Adults $1 .50

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Is"The Pill "

Really Safe?A million Canadian women take"the pill" yet, there is stilldoubt about possible dangerousside effects! February Reader'sDigest reveals there is still apossibility of "the pill" causin gcancer . . . that its use coul ddouble the chances of blood clots. . . that it plays a role i nemotional problems and weigh tgain! Why are some doctorsasking patients to stop takingit? Be sure to read this authori-tative article on why some

- women should be cautious abou ttaking "the pill" . FebruaryReader's Digest is now on sale— get yours today while copie sare still available .

Canada'sleading trust companycan offer rewardingopportunities to studentsgraduating in 1968.

A RoyalTrust representativewill be interviewing interestedgraduates January 30 & 31.Make a point of talkingwith him. Opportunities to advance with Royal Trust —

Canada's leading trust company—ar elimited only by the individual's desire toget ahead .If you are interested in a rewarding caree rwith a company that has been respecte dthroughout Canada for 68 years, talk to you rUniversity Placement Officer with a viewto seeing the Royal Trust representative .

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Alma Mater Society

OFFICIAL NOTICES

A.M.S. ElectionsPresident

First Slate

External Affairs OfficerWednesday, Feb. 7, 1968

Internal Affairs OfficerSecretary

Vice-PresidentSecond Slate

TreasurerWednesday, Feb. 14, 1968

Co-ordinator of ActivitiesOmbudsman

Nominations for first slate will open on January 24, 196 8and close at 12 noon on Thursday, February 1, 1968 ;for second slate, nominations will open on January 31 ,1968 and close at 12 noon on February 8, 1968 . Nomina-tions forms, certificates of eligibility and copies of theelection rules and procedures are available from th eA.M .S. Office .

Senate ElectionsNominations for the vacant student seat on senate willopen on January 24, 1968 and close at 12 noon on Thurs-day, February 1, 1968. Voting will take place Wednes-day, February 7, 1968. The term of office ends this term .Nomination forms and information are available fro mthe A.M.S. Office .

SPECIAL EVENTS PRESENT S

DR. HUSTON SMITH - Prof . of Philosophy a! M .I .T .

SPEAKING O N

The Coming World Civilization "AUTHOR OF :

1. "The Religions of Man"

3 . "The Purposes of Higher Education "

2. "Condemned to Meaning"

4 . "The Search for America "

Prof . Smith describes his current interest as centering in Philosophical Anthropology — Re-flection on the human condition ; What it means to be a human being, to live a human lif eor alternatively ; can we, by taking thought, add to our stature, increase the quality of ou rpersonal lives ?

He has pursued this interest by attending to the complementing perspectives on man affordedby east and west, science and the humanities, and philosophy and religion .

9an. 26th. noon — d3iw;ck dP.o.tubq.v 3Aiday

1 1

''ktiA womb

with a viewBy STEPHEN SCOBI E

Even if I didn't think that Genevieve Bujold was(as Playboy might put it) one of the most stunning piecesof female pulchritude to hit the screen for aeons, I guessI would still enjoy Philippe de Broca's King of Hearts .

It is a thoroughly delightful film, but also has aspects

of profundity . Indeed, it succeeds precisely where DickLester's now I Won the War failed .

The plot revolves around the inhabitants of an insane

asylum: but these are not to be taken as accurate picture sof lunatics, any more than the inmates of Charenton ,to whom they bear at first glance an unsettling resem-blance .

Here, they represent an excuse for fantasy ; theyembody a possibility, and an ideal—refined, courteous ,charming, and essentially incompatible with the harshe rinsanities of the "real" world .

The film is fantasy with a purpose ; it exists in agolden haze of whimsical comedy, but its reference pointsare war and grotesque violence .

De Broca achieves in his film a comprehensive comi cvision of life, illuminated by a warm depth of humanity .And then. there's always Miss Bujold . . .

As a Scot, let me make one nit-picking remark abou tthe presentation of my race in this film. I don't object tothe Scots being ridiculed — only to its being done badly.

It is somewhat amusing to watch Alan Bates (anEnglishman) and Adolfo Cell (an Italian) perform theirimpersonations of the stock caricature of the comic Scots -man. Beyond a few standard jokes on kilts, De Broca getsno life at all out of this aspect . (And Georges Delerue'sconception of what bagpipes sound like is hilariousl yout .)

It would have been far funnier to get a real Scotsactor, and thus exploit the true character of the Scot(which, God knows, is ludicrous enough) ; or else to le tAlan Bates exploit the true character of the English(which, God knows, is even more ludicrous) .

Meanwhile, down at the Lyric, The Doctor SpeaksOut . This grotesque affair consists partly of an education -al documentary on birth—how to stop it, or not, as thecase may be — and partly of a sub-standard medica lsoap-opera . Both aspects are delivered in flat middleEuropean accents . The film uses black and white, butchanges into color for the operations .

It at least has the distinction of being the first com-mercial movie in my experience to use the word "uterus"in its advertising.

The advertising promises a nurse in attendanceat all shows. But apparently we of the press are con-sidered to be above ordinary mortals : there was nonurse at the press preview, so I cannot even review her .

Seriously, one wonders exactly what class of peoplethat kind of advertising is aimed at ?

Theatres are trying all sorts of cute gimmicks jus tnow. When Ten Little Indians shows at the Coronet, weare promised a sixty-second "Whodunnit break" to mak eup our own minds .

And at the Capitol, we are told that during the lasteight minutes of Wait Until Dark, "the house lights willbe lowered to the legal limit" while the terrifying climaxtakes place in complete darkness .

What this actually means is that the last eight min-utes are run under normal conditions, and the rest o fthe film is run in an atmosphere so light that you couldeasily read a book without straining your eyes . (Andthe Capitol's "legal limit" is still considerably lighte rthan the average show at the Varsity .)

Wait Until Dark has towards the end of it a ratherspectacular shock-cut; but the significance of this wasspoiled, the time I saw it, by a badly goofed reel change .Altogether, a bad show for the Capitol .

But the film itself is fine. It is admittedly far-fetched and implausible, featuring a diabolical plan, th ecomplexity of which would be entirely inexplicabl ewere it not for the fact that otherwise there would beno movie .

(Which is also the reason why Hamlet doesn't killhis uncle right away like a good boy . )

However unlikely it is, though, Wait Until Dark i san ingenious and efficient suspense thriller, more or les ssurviving the inevitable comparisons to Hitchcock's Rea rWindow .

Audrey Hepburn, although blind, still radiates sweet-ness and light; and Alan Arkin, resplendent in gleamingleather and dark glasses, is chummily villainous . Theclimax, played out in the aforementioned darkness, i sguaranteed to set young ladies of a nervous dispositio nclutching frantically at the arms of the strong, re-assur-ing males beside them .

Friday, January 26, 1968

THE UBYSSEY

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C1:4 i

' JAN 18FEB 1 6

In The New MUSIC BUILDING Recital Hal l

TONIGHT — 8 P .M . — UNIVERSITY CHAMBER SINGER SDirected by Cortland Hultberg . Music of Webern, Gabrieli, Hindemit h

JAN 29 — 8 P.M. = FACULTY PIANO RECITALDale Reubart . Music of Mozart, Ravel ,Copland, and Beethoven .

NO ADMISSION CHARGE

SCHOOL DISTRICTNo. 36 (SURREY)

Interviews with student teachers who have completed thei rprofessional year of training and who will be eligible for a nE.A. certificate or better by September, 1968 will be hel dregularly at the School Board Office in Surrey, 14225—56t hAvenue, Cloverdale, each Friday .

Interviews during other days of the week may be arrange dby phoning 594-0411 .

E. Marriott ,

District Superintenden tof Schools .

r

Page Friday's Wensley Moleinterviews Arnold Saba andGordon Ffidler in this secondinstalment of a three-part serieson their ,works.

-Because Wensley Mole speaksonly Serbo-Croatian, we hiredan expensive interpreter andlet him root through the under-ground.

Here is a taped discussionwith two kindred Mole-soulsfound making three films sim-ultaneously in a basement bywinding cellophane sidewaysthrough a battery of eggbeaters.

pf: A few weeks before start-ing your latest film, you toldme that a film should hav ethe precise design of a crystal .arn : Certainly it seems towork out that way.grf : No, I didn't mean that.pf : Well, can you tell me wha tyou do mean ?

arn: As I see it, it's a matterof shaking and warping theperceptual integrity of anygiven situation, to form asupra-reality, above all transi-tory states. Corybantic in es-sence.grf: I disagree. There is nosuch thing as knowledge, onlyqualified ignorance .pf: Then you mean that any-thing can have reality for th edirector ?grf : :I accept nothing.pf: How do the actors react tothis?arn : To what?grf : What?pf: Didn't you understand m yquestion ?grf : Pardon ?pf: Have you considered you rlink with the impressionistpainters ? You stated inHeath and Hearth (Sept . 1921 )that the true religion of allartists is their craft .grf : Indeed, and I would in-clude the fact that no matterwhat the time, the true mean-ing of all religion is to wor-ship artists .arn: You mean carphology asa means to discovering a newsubjectivity, or ethic .pf: Gordon, how does whatyou said to me before lastyear's festival in Cannes af-

feet your transpandanism?grf: I don't believe I've everspoken to you before . Are yousure?aril : Our films are more of aculmination than any thingwe've done before .pf: But what can you do toreconcile this to your socialconscience, say, the war inVietnam ?grf: The war where? I haven' tseen a newspaper for severa lweeks. What's Hitler donenow?pf: By the way, I recall a shot

in Three Poems that obvi-ously had been set to allow ablending of light at the pointof ultimate interest . . .arn : Can you? I can't . Are yousure?pf: Yes! It's in the third part ,fourth shot . The two faces areseen clearly and the arc o flight set up by the set struc-ture brings a climax on theface of the girl .grf: Is that right, eh ?am: I think I remember tha tvaguely. It was quite beau-tiful, wasn't it ?

pf: Yes, it was . But yet, whatcan one say in face of ac-cusations of indulging th emedium to a point where

some of your films have the

consistency of soft butter ?grf: It's a valid accusation,but they're missing the, point.

pf: I see .

am: But let's talk about youfor a while.pf: No, really . . . tell me

about your latest ethos.arn: We do believe in the

One Picture — One Ethosstyle. The last film is allabout sex . The next is noth-

ing but violence .grf: It's rather like the Shij -

nik ritual of chanting Shij-

nik shijnik shijnik shijnikshijnik shijnik until you en-tirely lose the meaning ofthe word and the ritual be-

comes a magic circulation ofconsciousness .pf: In other words, to be-come one with duality . Butdon't you think this is a

proud attitude?arn: Yours? Yes .pf: It's been the same through -out the history of evolution ,that the ritual is the message ,to coin a phrase .arn: Precisely! What can thefilm-maker do in this regard ?It's our primary concern t oreach through the barriers ofreality and into pristinephabululation .

pf: How can you say that?am: Simply because thiscauses a certain separatio nbut the benefits of a remo-tene are manifold in that.grf: What Arn is trying tosay is that there is no suchthing as filmics, only quali-fied ritual .

pf: Are you anti-drug, then?You have made cogent digs attoday's culture, by seeminglyvenerating it, as in Pussycat .Yet was it . . .grf: I think the man is com-ing with the tea .arn : We still haven't talkedabout sprocket holes .

Tremendous fight ensues;much physical damage and endof interview.

Leonard Cohen's

now at the

RECORD GALLERYROBSON (near Hornby )

VANCOUVER OPERA ASSOCIATIO Npresents—in German

WAGNER'S

THE FLYING DUTCHMAN(Der Fliegende Hollander)

STARRINGDAVID WARD

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Queen Elizabeth Theatr eFEBRUARY 3, 7, 10, 13, 8 :00 P.M.

Tickets available at all Eaton's Store sAny unsold tickets the evening of the performance ar e

available to Students for $1 .00 at 7 :45 p .m .

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THE UBYSSEY

Friday, January 26, 1968

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Friday, January 26, 1968

THE UBYSSEY

Page 1 3

— bob brown photoI KNEW HARE was here but I didn't know DeGaulle was in town. But you knew God wasn'tdead — he is alive and well at Wreck Beach but only the Lord knows when he will make hi sreturn known .

Brief rejects pressure tacticsWATERLOO, Ont . (CUP) — A report on uni-

versity government prepared for the committeeof presidents of Ontario universities rejects poli-tical pressure tactics .

The 21 page report, to be released Monday ,rejects the assumption that the community ofscholars will perform its functions better if i tis organized along political lines .

The paper is not a declaration of policy butrather seeks to place the matter of student in-volvement in the context of the universities '

basic goals .The report makes two basic assumptions : that

there is room for improvement in university gov-ernment, and that the approach to improvementmust be through civilized discussion and the ex-ercise of rational judgment .

It rejects political pressure tactics . "The only

legitimate power within the community o f

scholars is the power of the intellect, " it says ."There is no such thing as a student `right '

to representation on university government, "

;he report says .Making the whole university a democracy —

eased on the adversary principle — would yield

nothing more than a sham democracy, accordin g

;o the report.It points out distinctions between consulting

Ind involving students in the decision making

erocess . It advocates student participation o n

lepartmental and faculty comittees, where they

lave direct interests .The report questions whether student repre -

;entation on the board of governors would im -

)rove a university's functions. But student in -

,olvement would lead to a better understandingif the monetary workings of the university, i t

Iates.According to the study, the functions of a

iniversity include serving the needs of society ,'acilitating individual students' personal develop-nent, increasing industrial productivity, train-ng members of the learned professions, improv-ng physical conditions of mankind and explor-ng the fundamental values of contemporar yiuman existence . But the report states that th e)rimary purpose of the university is the pre-servation, transmission, and increase of know -edge .

The committee evaluated objections fro m'arious sources about student involvement at th esummit of university government :

Four Britain-boundBritain in the fall .This is the destination of four UBC graduat e

engineers who have won the annual Athlone'ellowship apa:rds . They are William Cripps ,xary Elfstrom, James Elliott and Clark Weaver .

The four will spend one or two years in uni-'ersities or with industry, in Britain. The award sover travel costs, living expenses and fees.

• student leadership changes too often . Butsome students admit that their contribution wil lbe qualitatively different .

• students don't have enough time . The studyquotes Dr . Robin Harris of Queen's Universit ythat it would take 10 hours a week — even fo ra person familiar with the university — to be -come a competent university governor .

"Top-level decisions demand delicacy andconfidentiality." The report agrees with a YorkUniversity student brief that student participantsare not only the representatives of the student sbut of the whole university, just like any otherrepresentative .

By JERRY APFELBAUM

A giant road scraper rumbles along the mainmall. A turbine helicopter whirrs overhead. Anda sky diver drifts down to land before the mathbuilding.

This will be the scene Monday at the start ofengineering week.

Launching the event will be a campus parad eof heavy B.C . industrial machinery, valued a tmore than $3 million .

Included in the creaking, clanking lineupwill be road graders, Euclids, tractors, loggingtrucks, and other machinery .

After touring the campus, the equipment wil lpark on main mall until Wednesday .

Other highlights of the week include a pe pmeet for engineers in the auditorium, and stuntsWednesday and Thursday .

The forty-ninth annual engineer's ball will beheld Friday night at the Showmart building inthe Pacific National Exhibition .

Called EngineEras, its theme will be engineer-ing history.

Guests will include industrial developmen tminister Ralph Loffmark, Simon Fraser Univer-sity president Patrick McTaggart-Cowan, actin gUBC president Walter Gage, engineering deanWilliam Armstrong, and B .C . Liberal leader RayPerrault .

Featured at the ball will be judging by engi-neering department heads Of student workingengineering projects, months in the making.

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~~ Excellence admitte dExcellence hi endeavor .That's the distinction of Demosthenes society award

winners .The annual awards are made for excellence in literary ,

artistic, and governmental arts, said society president Mike

Coleman, law 3, university clubs committee chairman .

er

This year's roster includes AMS president Shaun Sulli-van for latent leadership ; treasurer Dave Hoye for sharpbudgeting; Harry Clare, UBC Social Credit club president ,for social liberalism .

Ubyssey editor Danny Stoffman was praised for firin gthe imagination by suspended animation, and managingeditor Murray McMillan for news management .

Other winners were: The Ubyssey staff, arts presiden tStan Persky and UBC library employee Mrs . Penny Damm .

FILMSOC APOLOGIZE S

We of the UBC Film Society would like to express ou rregret in having to cancel the film "BLOW-UP" yester-day. Unfortunately notice of the cancellation of thefilm did not reach our offices until 4 :30 p .m. Wednesday .We sincerely hope that no one was inconvenienced bythe abrupt change of program. We have taken steps toinsure that this does not happen again and Film Sgpietyprograms are as scheduled for the remainder of the term .

ALWAYS ON SUNDAY10 a.m .—At-Ten Worshipping

Community (Folksong Mass .)11 a.m.—Discussion : "The Word and

Contemporary Issue"10 a .m.—St . Timothy's Sunday School and

Scripture Study11 :15 a .m .—Morning Worshi p

LUTHERAN CAMPUS CENTR E5885 University Boulevard

Phone 224-1614

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INTERESTED

IN THE MINISTRY ?Union College of B .C. (a Theological College of the Unite dChurch of Canada) invites applications to attend a "Consul-tation on Ministry", on Saturday and Sunday, Feb . 3 and 4 .It is open to men and women who have completed grade 1 2and would be interested in discussing vocations in an dthrough the Church, without obligation or pressure to entera Church vocation .

If interested, please write to Principal W . S. Taylor, UnionCollege of B .C ., 6000 Iona Drive, Vancouver 8 by Monday,January 29th, or phone the College office (224-3266) or (224 -0069) and leave name, address and telephone number .

'.

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Page 14

THE UBYSSEY

Friday, January 26, 1968

'TWEEN CLASSES

FUS is out for bloodNEW YORK

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224-0034 4397 - W. 10th

leadership candidate J o eGreene speaks today, noon ,Bu. 106 .

FRENCH STUDENTSMeeting to discuss prof-stu-

dent conferences and ne wconversation program, today,noon, Bu. 204 .

CHINESE VARSITY CLUBFormer Conservative MP

Douglas Jung speaks on Chi-nese in politics, today, noon ,Bu . 205 .

AMSThe housing survey is com-

ing. Watch for it in the mail ,fill it out when it comes andreturn it as soon as possible .

ALPHA OMEGAMeeting Monday, noon, Bu .

223 .

PSYCHOLOGY CLUBMeeting today, noon, Bu .

penthouse .

Feel safe with French ?If not, attend a meeting to

discuss French prof-studentdialogue and the UBC spokenFrench programs today in Bu .204 at noon .

Mrs. Barbara Schumiatcher,arts 2, who is one of the meet-ing's organizers, said a 1 1French students are urged t oattend.

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Granville at Pander Since 1904LIMITE D

REGISTERED JEWELLER, AMERICAN GEM SOCIETYr l— r— I— r—

r— r r— r l— I— r— I— r— I— f— r— I— r— I— I — i]

LSMAbi Janis discusses the crisis

in African leadership, Monday ,

noon, Bu. 104 .

INTRAMURAL DEBATIN GAll applications should be

returned to AMS box 30 be-

fore 5 p.m. Monday .

NEWMAN CENTR EHootenanny Sunday, 8 p.m . ,

St . Mark's lounge . Bring gui-

tars .

CANADIAN UNIO N

OF STUDENTSFull information on CU S

summer travel program avail -

able in Brock ext . 258 .

CHORSOCPractice Saturday 2 p .m. to

5 p .m., Mildred Brock.

UNRULY HAIR ?Best Men's Hairstyling Service

at the

Upper Tenth Barber4574 W. 10th Ave .

1 block from gates

ANNOUNCEMENTSDances

1 1

Lost & Found

1 3LOS T — WINE COLORE D PURS E

Jan . 2 2 in Women' s Gym . Phon e987-8725 .

T O THE PERSON WHO "BORROW -ed- my briefcase from 3rd floo rAngus. Please return at leastglasses and notes. Angus 3rd .

LOST : NURSE'S WATCH ARMOUR -ies — Farmer s' Frolic, also gold sig -net ring, initials L.K. Call Linda,266-5857.

Rides & Car Pools

1 4

Special Notices

1 5WH Y PAY HIG H AUT O INSURANC E

rates ? If you have a vali d driver' slicens e an d good driving habits yo umay qualify . Phon e Ted Elliott,321-6442 .

DON' T MIS S " EY E BALL " COMINGFeb . 9th. A n International event atthe Hotel Vancouver' s "Pacific "Ballroom . Ticket s at I .H. o r fromA .M .S .

WOULD THE GIRL I N RESIDENCEwho wished t o see the survey result spleas e contact me again . Lost you rname. Thanx . BlaizeHorner.

OPEN DOOR DROP-IN CENTRE .(Coffee hous e in Church cellar. )Every Friday night, 9-1 2 midnight,corner of 11th and Fir.

GOLDEN DOVES.W .M .L . . . HTFB

PENDULUMTravel Opportunities

16

Wanted—Miscellaneous

1 8WANTED , MORRIS, AUSTIN , ETC .

195 7 on . Reas . shape . $10 0 — $150.Phon e Brian . 266-552 1 afte r 6 p .m .

AUTOMOTIVE&MARINEAutomobiles For Sale

9 1

' 63 V .W ., 1500 SEDAN. NEW VALVEJob, good tires, clutch, and body . $800, phone 325-2687 or 684-4011 .WHY BUY A BRAND NEW ONE ?

Save $300.0 on this '68 M.G.B . 450 0miles . 738-5291 .

1954 BUICK SPECIAL 4-DR SEDAN(American) . Auto. Trans. Radio.Good condition . $200. 922-7171.

'59 M.G.A. $700 . GOOD CONDITION,Michelin X tires, wood panelling .navy blue metallic . 732-6696 after 6 :00 .1962 METEOR 4 DOOR SEDAN . V- 8

standard. 55,000 miles, good tires,new brakes. immaculate condition.F.P. $975 . 261-8006 .

1962 SUNBEAM ALPINE HARD AN D soft tops ; good condition, 988-7061'60 ZEPHYR, 5 SPEEDS FORWARD ,

reverse rims, radio, heater, dualWalker exhaust, metallic blue, black sides 321-9673 .Automobile Parts 2 3SEE OU R COMPLET E RANGE O F

Sport s Car Accessories. 10 % dis -count with AMS card . Oversea sAuto Parts. 12th and Alma. 736 -9805 .

Motorcycles

2 6HONDA-FIAT

Motorcycles - CarsGenerators - Utility Unit s

New an d UsedSPOR T CAR S

N

T0 Motors S

R

ET W

146 Robson

H

688-128 4

BUSINESS SERVICESMiscellaneous 3 2Scandals 87SELLING YOU R TEXTBOOKS ? TR Y

Th e Bookfinder. 4444 Wes t 10t h Ave . 228-8933.Typewriters&Repairs 3 9STANDAR D REMINGTO N "NOISE -

less", excellent condition, $60 . Olde rUnderwood standard, $15, evenings,433-7844.

Typing 40EXPERT TYPIST - ELECTRIC — 224-6129 - 228-8384.TYPING. EXP. WORK GUARAN -

teed. Call 684-5783 any day 8 :00 a.m.-9 :00 p.m.

EXPERIENCED TYPIST . REASON -able rates, phone 733-6679 .

GOOD EXPERIENCED TYPIS Tavailable for home typing, pleasecall 277-5640.

Typing (Cont .)

40UNIVERSITY TYPING SERVICES ,

2109 Allison Rd., 228-8414, aroundthe corner from World Wide Travelnext to RCMP open 9 a .m. - 5 p.m .Monday to Friday . EMPLOYMENTHelp Wanted—Female

81

Male or Female

53Work Wanted

54

INSTRUCTIONInstruction Wanted

6 1

Tutoring

64ENGLISH, FRENCH, HISTOR Y

tutoring given by B .A., M.A. ,B .L .S . Individual , $2 .9 5 hr. Phon e736-6923 .

MATH , PHYSICS , CHEMISTRY , BI -ology lessons given by competen ttutors. First year only, 736-6923.

MISCELLANEOU SFOR SALE

71Still a few left

— BIRD CALLS —on Sale at : Publications Offic e

Brock Hall or UBC BookstoreONE PAIR NEW ALBERG SKI-

boots, mens, size 8M, never used .$45, phone 261-1714 .

NEW MAGNETIC TAPES FOR SAL E1 mil. Mylar Acetate . 5" reel a t 1 .25 at International house.7' HICKORY SKIS, SIZE 11 BOOTS,

Cubco binders, poles, $35 .00 . Seehut A-2, Don Gill, 224-4611.

VOX 12 STRING GUITAR WIT Hcase. $275 or best offer. Bill 922 -2450 .

COMPLETE P .A. SYSTEM. ALLcomponents in excellent condition .Phone Rick 522-9077 .

HEAD STDS . 210CM GOOD COND ' N.with or without harness . Koflac hBoots. Best offer . Phone 261-8469.

RENTALS&REAL ESTATERooms 81SINGL E ROOM AND BREAKFAST,

UB C male student , 370 8 W. 38thAve., 266-9280.

ROOM FOR ONE MALE STUDENTsharing, at 5529 University Blvd . ,Phone 224-1772. $36.00 per month .

SLEEPING ROOM WITH KITCHE Nprivileges . 3869 W . 19th Ave. Phone228-8343 . $40 .00 a month, excellen t studying conditions.ROOM MAIN FLOOR — NEAR GAT E

private entrance. Men preferred . Phone 224-7623 after 5 p.m .TWO FURNISHED BASEMEN T

sleeping rooms—Kits. Private bathand entrance. Two students . 733 -7352 .

Room & Board SIIGNORE CLAIM S OF BRAN D X —

check with Deke s first, phone Len,224-5916, after 6 .

RESIDENCE ACCOMMODATION .Carey Hall. On Campus, good food ,friendly atmosphere, privacy re-spected . Single or double room .University rate. Phone the Dean ,224-6939 or evenings 224-5086 .

BEST ROOMS . BEST FOOD ON campus. Phi Kappa Pi. 224-9667.ROOM AND BOARD ON CAMPUS.

Zeta Beta Tau . Phone 224-9660 be-tween 6-7 p .m .

Furn. Houses& Apts. 88WANTED TO REN T FOR DOCTOR

an d wife small furnished house ,UB C vicinit y from Apri l fo r 6 mths .Cal l 521-1911 , local 52 1 (Office) ; o r 733-0229 (res.) .NEAR UBC . MODERN 3 BDRMS .

fully furn. hse : 5 mths lease : Feb . -June $300 monthly incl . heat 'an dlight . Phone 224-4992 after 6 p.m.

Unfurn . Houses & Apts. 84TWO MEDICA L STUDENTS WITH

apartment nea r V.G.H. woul d likeanother roomat e to share expenses .Phone 731-6630 aroun d 1 :0 0 p.m. o rbetween 11 :0 0 p.m. an d midnight.

BUY — SELL — RENT

WIT H

UBYSSE Y

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FORESTRY US

Save a dime—have coffee or

coke at the big coffee party i n

the armory today and all nex t

week. The Red Cross needs

your donation.

ARTS COUNCI LFree dance today, noon,

Brock lounge .

CHINESE OVERSEASSTUDENTS ASSN.

China Night, with tradition-al Chinese folk music, songs ,dances and modern drama ,Saturday, 7:45 p.m., Univer-sity Hill High School .

SLAVONIC CIRCLERegular meeting today, noon ,

IH music room .

LIBERAL CLUBAgriculture minister and

French progra mdiscussed, noon

INDIA STUDENT SASSOCIATIO N

ISA celebrates India Repub-lic Day at IH on Saturday, 7 :30p.m. An evening of dances ,songs, food, skits, films. Every-one welcome. Tickets, 50 cents .

EXPERIMENTAL COLLEGEKarl Burau speaks on What

is Wrong with Canada an dWhat to do About It, Tuesday ,noon, Bu . 203 .

ALLIANCE FRANCAISEMeeting today, noon, I H

upper lounge .

RACE TO BARGAINS!

SK I

SWEATE R

CLEARANCE

SAL E

20% to 50% OFF!

Ivor Williams Sporting Good s4510 West 10th — Phone 224-641 4

Just 2 Blocks Outside the Gate sVARSITY SRI SHOP

CLASSIFIE DRates: Students, Faculty & Clubs—3 lines, 1 day 75g. 3 days 82 .00.

Commercial—3 lines, 1 day $1 .00, 3 days $2.50.

Publications Office, BROCK HALL, UNIV . OF B .C., Vancouver 8, B.C.

Classified ads are not accepted by telephone .

Page 15: THE 1!iPYSSEY · 2013. 7. 30. · DIAMOND RINIJI Rings include Hi-style Solitaires 3, 5 and 7 stone Engagement Rings, Clusters, Dinner, Prin• cess and Gent's Diamond' Rings . Come

Friday, January 26, 1968

THE IJBYSSEY

Page 1 5

IN SOCCER

First place beckons

y

The UBC soccer Thunderbirds have a dat ewith the Italians on Sunday .

It's not a dinner invitation to some smal lspaghetti house but an afternoon outing on theCallister Park turf for a game of soccer withColumbus, Vancouver's pro-Italian soccer club ,who are presently in first place in the PacificCoast Soccer League .

If the Birds win the game on Sunday, how-ever, they will be in the top spot .

The last time these two teams met, UBCcame from behind a 2-0 deficit to tie the game2-2 .

Columbus is a powerful squad which boastssuch players as Peter Simpson, who has playe din the National Professional Soccer League i nthe United States, and Sergio Zenatta, who ha splayed left wing on Canada's national team .

It was Zenatta who scored both of Columbus 'goals. when they last played UBC .

The Birds are fresh from their 5-0 . victoryover -Burnaby Villa last weekend and are full yaware of the importance of Sunday's game.

"They're feeling good and they feel theycan win it," said coach Joe Johnson after Thurs -.day's practice .

All players who came to the practice arehealthy. Kirby Carter, who hasn't played allseason, is still bothered by a bad knee and it i sdoubtful if he will be available to the Birds thi syear .

BASKETBAL L

The UBC basketball Thunderbirds are inSaskatoon this weekend for two games with theUniversity of Saskatchewan Huskies .

The Jayvees are also on the road, playing to -night in Seattle against the Seattle Universityfresh. Saturday they tangle with Big Bend Com-munity College in Moses Lake, Washington .

FIELD HOCKEY

The Spencer Fields adjacent to the WinterSports Center will be the scene of three fiel dhockey games on Saturday .

At 1 :30 p .m. the Thunderbirds meet Jokers Iand at 3 p.m . the Braves play North Shore I andthe Scalps challenge Hawks IV .

GYMNASTICSLimbs will flail when UBC's gymnastics team

hosts the University of Washington team Satur-day. The muscled rivals will tangle at 2 p .m .in UBC's War Memorial Gym.

RUGBY

It's off to Bellingham on Saturday for theUBC rugby Thunderbirds where they will playWestern Washington State.

The rugby Braves meet the All Blacks a tKinsmen Park at 2 :30 p .m. on Saturday .

ICE HOCKEY BRAVESThe Braves will play in the Arbutus Club

jamboree tonight. Saturday at 5:15 p.m. theygo up against the University of Washington andMonday at 7:30 p .m. they meet the Vancouve rHornets. The last two games will be in the Win-ter Sports Center .

WOMEN'S BASKETBAL L

With the thunder of applause echoing in thei rears, UBC's Thunderettes have done it again .

The nimble basketball misses squashed Mt .Pleasant Legion 44-36 Wednesday night .

This leaves the Thunderettes second in theSenior A women's basketball league, after th eVictoria Rawlings . Mt. Pleasant is third .

TENNISThe UBC tennis team makes its first jaunt

south this weekend as four members, Vic Rol-lins, Don McCormick and Bob and Tony Bardsleytravel to Portland to play in the Oregon Stat eIndoor Championships .

This is the team's first real competition of th enew year and it won't be easy going, as many

Johnson made some changes for the Villagame and was satisfied with the results so heplans to use the same lineup on Sunday .

Against Burnaby, Ash Valdal was moved toright wing and Jim Briggs to inside left . Bothscored goals and played strong games .

Johnson was also impressed with the play o fJim Quinn who was called up from the Toma-hawks. Quinn, who hails from Powell River, wa sinstalled at right fullback and did a creditablejob. Because Quinn has now been brought upthe league maximum of three times, Johnsonplans on making him a full fledged senior .

Jim Berry and Ken Elmer also received ac-colades from Johnson. "Berry saved us a coupl eof times with good defensive plays on Villa'sHarold Hansen," said the coach .

Columbus is tied for first place in the leaguewith the Firefighters but the latter team is idlethis weekend. Both teams have 13 points . UBCand New Westminster are tied for third with 1 2points.

Westminster plays Burnaby on Saturday buteven if the Royal city team wins along withUBC, the Birds would be the top team since theyhave a better goals against average .

So when the Birds take to the field at 2 p .m .at Callister on Sunday, they won't be hungryfor spaghetti, but for the top spot in the league .

The Tomahawks play Legion 148 on Sundayat 11 a .m. at McInnes Park . It will be a big gamefor the Tomahawks as they are presently i nsecond place in the junior inter-city league .

of the top-ranked players in the Pacific north -west are entered .

WRESTLING

The UBC wrestling team will face tough com-petition on Saturday when they wrestle teamsfrom Seattle Pacific College and Western Wash-ington State College .

Although in the last meetings the Birds werebadly defeated, coach Paul Nemeth hopes for anumber of wins this time .

The Birds will have a disadvantage as theyare without the services of a 123-pound wrestlerand their 137-pounder, Denny Boulton is adoubtful starter . The meet is in the women' sgym and starts at 1 p .m .

VOLLEYBALLThe UBC men's volleyball team will be in

Calgary this weekend to face such teams asBrigham Young University and the Air Forc eAcademy .

Unfortunately, such players as Mike Rock-nell, most valuable player in Canada last year ,Ken Witzke, Robert Boyle and Dale Ohman, allof whom were all-stars in 1967, will not be mak-ing the trip .

Ohman is out with torn ligaments in hi sankle .

TRACK AND FIELD' Figures just released show that UBC has won

a recent telegraphic women's track and fieldmeet.

Six universities took part in the event whic hUBC has won for the last three years .

UBC finished with 100 points, only fiveahead of second place ,University of Saskat-chewan . The University of Guelph had 34 points .

Anke Troelstra of UBC tied a record whenshe came first in the 100 yds . with a time of 11 .5seconds . Joanne Hetherington also from UBCcame second in the event with a time of 11 .8 .

Miss Trolestra was third in the long jumpwith a jump of 15'11".

Leona Sparrow was first in the javelin com-petition with a toss of 105 '10 1h". She was als othird in the discus event with a toss of 98 ' 7" .

Linda Schaumleffel threw the shot 34'6/"and finished third in the shotput .

The 440 relay was won by the UBC girls i na time of 52 .3 seconds .

LIBERAL LEADERSHI PCANDIDATE

JOE GREEN EMinister of Agriculture

BU. 106

-

FRI. NOON

Aquatic Positions . . .Applications are invited for : (1) Supervisor for complet eaquatic program — 2 pools — 250G registrants — 15 staff ;(2) Diving Instructors; (3) Swimming Instructors . For May -September, 1968 . Kamloops Aquatic Club, P .O. Box 752 ,Kamloops, B .C. Deadline March 1, 1968. All applicationsacknowledged .

KAMLOOPS AQUATIC CLU B

Ontological Symposiu m

TH E

SCIENCE OF SURVIVA LSaturday, February 3rd, 2:00 — 7:30 p.m.

Sunday, February 4th, 10 :00 — 11 :30 a .m .

Key SpeakersLord Martin CecilMr. Michael Ceci lMr. LeRoy JensenMr. Wm. ThompsonDr. Ronald Polack

' For Informatio n

andRegistration

Call731-3505

DR. I . ZIFERSTEI Npracticing and research psychiatrist at Mt . Sinai Hospital ,Los Angeles, spoke at U .B.C. on Wednesday, January 24,1968 on

The Psychological Habituation To Wa rand recommended these books :

1 . How the U.S. Got Involved in Vietnam by Robert Scheer .75s . Single free copies are available from the publishers :Center for Democratic Studies, Box 4068, Santa Barbara ,California, 93103.

2 . Vietnam: The Logic of Withdrawal by Howard Zinn .Beacon Press $1 .50 .

3 . The United States in Vietnam : An Analysis in Depth byGeorge MucTurnan Kahin and John W. Lewis . DeltaBooks . $3 .45 .

A free copy of Dr. Ziferstein's paper "Psychological Habitua-tion to War : A Socio-psychological Case Study" . Amer J .Orthopsychiatry, April 1967, may be obtained by writing to:

1819 N. Curson Ave., Los Angeles, California, 90046 .This notice placed by University Teachers' Committee on Vietnam

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Page 16: THE 1!iPYSSEY · 2013. 7. 30. · DIAMOND RINIJI Rings include Hi-style Solitaires 3, 5 and 7 stone Engagement Rings, Clusters, Dinner, Prin• cess and Gent's Diamond' Rings . Come

Page 16

THE UBYSSEY

Friday, January 26, 1968

SPORTS

— bill cunningham photo

TOM KORETCHUK will be out to scare the Huskies off the ice tonight and Saturday.

IN ICE HOCKEY CONTES T

Teacher versus pupi lTonight and Saturday the UBC ice hockey administered by UBC in the first series of th e

season .In addition to the battle for first place honors,

the Birds and Huskies will also be vying for thecoveted John Owen Memorial Trophy . Thistrophy will be decided on total goals in the twogame series .

Game times are 8:30 p.m. tonight and 2 :3 0p.m. Saturday .ICE CHIPS

• X-rays of Don Fiddler's nose have provedthat it was not broken .

• Popular Thunderbird, Glen "Cowboy"Richards had the cartilage removed from hi sright knee Saturday and is probably out for th eseason .

What may be one of the oldest means of travel on snow i spresently gaining much popularity among skiers in this area .

This is the art of cross-country skiing which was developedin Scandinavia many centuries ago. From this beginning sprangthe variety of ways to ski that is known today such as downhillskiing with its highly specialized equipment and techniques .

Cross-country skiing ceased to be a major attraction withthe development of tows and chairlifts which eliminated havin gto spend most of the day climbing up the mountain for on eglorious run down before dark .

This type of skiing never really died out completely butwas for a long time reserved for "mad Englishmen" or evenworse, Scandinavians with fond memories of the good old daysback in Telemark .

Nordic competitions have been held eachseason on the local mountains but never re-ceived much attention. Such competitions ar ea major event in the Olympics where they ar edominated by the Scandinavians although theRussians have been coming on strong recently .

The new wave of cross-country skiers stillhas an element which says humbug to lift sand other easy means of going uphill, but mos tof the group is made up of people who merelyadopt cross-country skiing as a means of get-

SIMONSENting up into the more remote areas, far away from the schuss -boomers and the' ever increasing lift lines.

They are real `outdoor' types who like to keep themselvesin shape .and don't care about people who point and say, "Hey,look at that weird looking guy with the skinny skis and th erunning shoes . "

Cross-country equipment does look a bit different fromconventional stuff. Skis are generally quite narrow and verylight, being made of hickory, fir or birchwood . There are nosteel edges since most cross-country skiing is done in loose snowon terrain with few steep hills where edges are not reallyneeded . Boots are flexible and quite low to allow for lightnes sand easy movement . The cost of equipment is about one-thirdthat of downhill gear .

When one also considers that lift fees are eliminated, it isnot difficult to see why this sport is beginning to draw mor eand more interest among skiers today.

Hit the slopes !Schussing, slaloming, snowplowing—everyone fromnovice to seasoned expert has headed for the slopes.And Eaton's Ski Villages are stocked with all th ethings you need for great skiing — ski boots ,sweaters, toques, mitts, jumpsuits — even apres sk iwear! The welcome mat is out, Eaton's Ski Villagesare ready to go . We've got

EATOeverything but the s n o w !

BLOOD DONOR CLINIC :

ARMOURIESMon. — Fri . Jan . 22 — Jan . 26Mon. — Fri . Jan . 29 — Feb . 2

9:30 a .m. — 4:30 p .m . (continuous )

THE RECREATIONACTIVITIES PROGRAMHAS STARTED AGAIN

Badminton

Ballroom Dancin gTennis

Circuit Trainin gSkating

Women's Keep Fi t

and many other activities ar eoffered free at any level of abilit y

Information :Rm. 208 — Memorial Gym

o r

Phone 228-38 .3 8

Thunderbirds, coached by Bob Hindmarch, wil l

meet the University of Saskatchewan Huskies ,coached by Dave Chambers who last year playe ddefence for Hindmarch and the Birds .

This is just one of the highlights of the Birds 'weekend series with the top team in the WesternCanadian Intercollegiate Conference . If UBC wonboth games, they would rise into first place .

The Huskies have only one loss and that was

The Birds are currently tied for second spotwith the University of Alberta Golden Bears .Each team has eight points compared to Saskat-chewan's 10 .

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