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Grab a sea t VOL . XLVII, No . 61 THE UPYSSEY VANCOUVER, B .C ., TUESDAY, MARCH 16, 1965 ms' s at th e genera l meet CA 4-391 6 Mob smashes into danc e 2,000 break in , $300 damag e By LORNE MALLI N A mob of 2,000 crashed a dance in the Armor y night and caused at least $300 damage . As many as 3,500 jam-packe d the dance at peak times . Student sponsors, Ken Der- cole, Comm . II, and Allen Bon- nell, Agriculture III, charge d police didn't give adequate pro- tection . "They weren't there durin g the first hour or so when we needed them the most," Der- cole charged. The crowd began breakin g in before police, who had been asked to come earlier, arrived , he said . The crowd smashed window s and swarmed in through wash - rooms and back entrances . One group broke windows i n the Navy office to enter th e dance , but found the inside doo r locked . The frustrated gang spilled Mob of 3,500 and crushed coat racks in Armory Saturday Saturday "Nobody really knows ex- actly what the final figure wil l be, since the files were prac- tically non-existent," he said . Vance said that there ma y possib'v be some revenue ye t to come in . This would be fro m the joint symposium held wit h Victoria College . Victoria College were sup - posed to share the cost of the (Continued on Page 2 ) SEE : LOSSES Two female slaves toile d in The Ubyssey office yester- day, thanks to an Aggie Slav e Day yesterday at noon . Ubyssey photographer Ber t McKinnon picked up two of the Delta Phi Epsilon slaves for a total of 85 cents and se t them -to work typing 'Twee n Classes and cleaning th e darkroom. The girls, Judy Fainstei n and Margo Korsch, both Art s I, enjoyed The Ubyssey at- mosphere so much they stayed past the required one hour period . One practical-minded Aggi e bid for and bought a slave, General meeting ends AMS , year Canadian Union of Stu- dents' president, Jean Sarin , will highlight the AMS gen- eral meeting in the Armory Thursday noon. The Ubyssey will have a special section about the meeting in Thursday's paper . Quorum is 1,500 students . Students reported at leas t one girl suffered minor cut s from jagged glass from broken bottles and windows . A Buildings and Ground s spokesman said the crowd ap- peared to be mostly high schoo l kids and downtown hoods . He said many dancers seem- ed very intoxicated . RCMP arrested a 20-year-ol d UBC student for drunkenness . "The line-up for the dance was packed five deep from the entrance back almost to Inter - national House," Dercole said . "About 8,000 people tried to get to the dance," Dercole said. "We estimated 3,000 or 4,00 0 in cars were turned back by the university patrol," Dercole said . The sponsors brought in a Seattle recording group at a cost of $800 . liquid on a rug and damaged a bulletin board, table and type - writer . The crowd inside the smoke - filled dance hall, smashed mor e than a dozen windows . Ten aluminum coat rack s collapsed, bent and broken, from the sheer weight of clothes. Cost of repairs to the coat racks was estimated by Build- ing and Grounds at about $15 0 and will be borne by the spon- sors . The sponsors closed th e dance at 12 :40 a .m ., an hour and a half early . "There was too much brok- en glass on the floor for th e dance to continue," Bonnel l said . "The dance was advertise d too much," Dercole said . Including posters and Ubys- sey ads, there were 74 ads on a downtown rock and roll ra- dio station . "They charged us 15 pe r cent of the profits, which turn- ed out to be $250," Dercol e said. "We originally wanted Rad- soc to sponsor the dance bu t they wouldn't accept the idea, " he said . (Both Dercole and Bonnel l are Radsoc members.) "The AMS told us the presi- dent of the club sponsoring the dance would be responsible fo r any losses involved," Dercol e said . "I don't think we will eve r be able to stage a dance o n campus again," he said . but only after checking he r teeth . Average price per slav e was about $1 . Meanwhile the sorority, a s a result of small male attend- ance at an auction (about sev- en) made $8 . The money will be donate d to the Canadian Cystic Fib- rosis Foundation to aid re - search about the incurabl e muscle disease. A spokesman said the Ag- gies, co-sponsors of the event , were busy watching a socce r game at the time of the auc- tion . More than $I,500 Watchdogs fin d big AAC losse s The Academic Activities Committee lost $1,578 thi s year . according to an AMS watchdog cbmmittee investigat- ing AAC operations . The loss was revealed Mon - day by AMS activities Co-or- dinator G r a e m e Vance an d Arts president Chas Pentland . They were appointed by th e AMS to take over AAC in Feb- ruary, after charges the join t Victoria College-UBC sympos- ium was mishandled and de - generated into petty squab- bling. "The situation is pretty bad, " said Vance . Women better Looking over toothy slav e Glass lit fered floo r than Engineer s Ubyssey cashes in on slave sale

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Page 1: Mob smashes into dance - UBC Library Home · bulletin board, table and type- ... sey ads, there were 74 ads on a downtown rock and roll ra- ... to the Canadian Cystic Fib-

Grab a

seat

VOL. XLVII, No. 61

THE UPYSSEYVANCOUVER, B.C., TUESDAY, MARCH 16, 1965

ms's

at thegeneral

meet

CA 4-391 6

Mob smashes into dance2,000 break in,$300 damag e

By LORNE MALLINA mob of 2,000 crashed a dance in the Armor y

night and caused at least $300 damage.As many as 3,500 jam-packed

the dance at peak times .Student sponsors, Ken Der-

cole, Comm. II, and Allen Bon-nell, Agriculture III, charge dpolice didn't give adequate pro-tection .

"They weren't there durin gthe first hour or so when weneeded them the most," Der-cole charged.

The crowd began breakingin before police, who had beenasked to come earlier, arrived ,he said .

The crowd smashed windowsand swarmed in through wash-rooms and back entrances .

One group broke windows inthe Navy office to enter thedance ,but found the inside doo rlocked .

The frustrated gang spilled

Mob of 3,500 and crushed coat racks in Armory Saturday

Saturday

"Nobody really knows ex-actly what the final figure willbe, since the files were prac-tically non-existent," he said .

Vance said that there maypossib'v be some revenue yetto come in. This would be fromthe joint symposium held withVictoria College .

Victoria College were sup-posed to share the cost of the

(Continued on Page 2 )SEE: LOSSES

Two female slaves toiledin The Ubyssey office yester-day, thanks to an Aggie Slav eDay yesterday at noon .

Ubyssey photographer Ber tMcKinnon picked up two ofthe Delta Phi Epsilon slavesfor a total of 85 cents and setthem -to work typing 'TweenClasses and cleaning th edarkroom.

The girls, Judy Fainstei nand Margo Korsch, both ArtsI, enjoyed The Ubyssey at-mosphere so much theystayed past the required onehour period .

One practical-minded Aggiebid for and bought a slave,

General meetingends AMS , year

Canadian Union of Stu-dents' president, Jean Sarin ,will highlight the AMS gen-eral meeting in the ArmoryThursday noon.

The Ubyssey will have aspecial section about themeeting in Thursday's paper .

Quorum is 1,500 students .

Students reported at leastone girl suffered minor cutsfrom jagged glass from brokenbottles and windows .

A Buildings and Ground sspokesman said the crowd ap-peared to be mostly high schoo lkids and downtown hoods .

He said many dancers seem-ed very intoxicated .

RCMP arrested a 20-year-oldUBC student for drunkenness .

"The line-up for the dancewas packed five deep from theentrance back almost to Inter-national House," Dercole said .

"About 8,000 people tried toget to the dance," Dercole said.

"We estimated 3,000 or 4,00 0in cars were turned back bythe university patrol," Dercolesaid.

The sponsors brought in aSeattle recording group at acost of $800 .

liquid on a rug and damaged abulletin board, table and type-writer .

The crowd inside the smoke-filled dance hall, smashed morethan a dozen windows.

Ten aluminum coat rackscollapsed, bent and broken,from the sheer weight ofclothes.

Cost of repairs to the coatracks was estimated by Build-ing and Grounds at about $150and will be borne by the spon-sors .

The sponsors closed thedance at 12 :40 a .m., an hourand a half early .

"There was too much brok-en glass on the floor for thedance to continue," Bonnellsaid .

"The dance was advertisedtoo much," Dercole said .

Including posters and Ubys-sey ads, there were 74 ads ona downtown rock and roll ra-dio station .

"They charged us 15 pe rcent of the profits, which turn-ed out to be $250," Dercolesaid.

"We originally wanted Rad-soc to sponsor the dance butthey wouldn't accept the idea,"he said .

(Both Dercole and Bonnellare Radsoc members.)

"The AMS told us the presi-dent of the club sponsoring thedance would be responsible fo rany losses involved," Dercolesaid .

"I don't think we will everbe able to stage a dance oncampus again," he said .

but only after checking he rteeth .

Average price per slavewas about $1 .

Meanwhile the sorority, a sa result of small male attend-ance at an auction (about sev-en) made $8 .

The money will be donate dto the Canadian Cystic Fib-rosis Foundation to aid re-search about the incurablemuscle disease.

A spokesman said the Ag-gies, co-sponsors of the event ,were busy watching a soccergame at the time of the auc-tion .

More than $I,500

Watchdogs findbig AAC lossesThe Academic Activities Committee lost $1,578 thi s

year. according to an AMS watchdog cbmmittee investigat-ing AAC operations.

The loss was revealed Mon-day by AMS activities Co-or-dinator G r a e m e Vance an dArts president Chas Pentland .They were appointed by theAMS to take over AAC in Feb-ruary, after charges the jointVictoria College-UBC sympos-ium was mishandled and de-generated into petty squab-bling.

"The situation is pretty bad, "said Vance .

Women better

Looking over toothy slave

Glass lit fered floor

than Engineers

Ubyssey cashes in on slave sale

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Page 2

THE UBYSSEY

Tuesday, March 16, 1965

BONING UP are four of this year ' s UBC Woodrow Wilsonscholars . Left to right are Mel Best, Ubyssey news editorTim Padmore, Andrew Spray and Chris Brealey . Othe rUBC winners are Patricia Smith, Robert Diebolt, Denni s

Makes history

Mt. Robson clim b

a first for profBy ART CASPERSO N

A UBC professor was one offive men who made B .C. moun-taineering history last week .

Dr. Leif-Norman Patterso nof the math department was amember of a climbing partythat made the first winter as-cent of Mount Robson, thehighest peak in the CanadianRockies at 12,972 feet .

With Patterson were AlexBertulis, Fred Beckey, TomStewart and Eric Bjornstad, allfrom Seattle .** *

Patterson skied to Berg Lakeon Mt. Robson, which is ap-proximately 5,000 feet abovesea-level . The others snow-shoed in .

Patterson and Bertuli sclimbed directly up the Tumbl-ing glacier which took them tothe 8,500-foot level where the ypitched camp .

In the morning they consid-ered climbing the north fac eof the mountain which hasbeen climbed only once before ,in summer, but after inspectingthe face they decided to tak ethe usual route up the eas tface.

"The climbing of the nort hface is a major project," Pat-terson said. "It would takemore time than we had . "

* * *"The face is covered almost

entirely by ice and the last bitis rock. I would like to try itsometime," he said .

After leaving most of thei rgear at the 8,500-foot level theyclimbed to about 11,00-fee twhere they bivouacked in th esnow.

"It was a slightly cold nigh twith little sleeping gear for thetwo of us," Patterson said .

In the morning they climbedto the top . "We had to cut steps

for several rope lengths," hesaid. The rope they used was300 feet long.

After the climb all membersof the team reassembled at th ebase of the east face for th etrip home.

"It might 'be an idea to makethe area around Mount Robsona national park . It is very beau-tiful and not terribly inacces-sible by B .C. standards," saidPatterson.

Multi-millionproject seen

A proposal for a multi-million-dollar light industria lresearch development on un-iversity lands is expected tobe presented in the B .C. Leg-islature this week .

Plans for the centre ar esupposed to be similar to th eStanford Research Institut ein Palo Alto, Calif . wherelaboratories have been setup by industry research .

Departmentssplit in July

U B C president John Mac-donald said the Economicsand Political Science depart-ments will be split into separ-ate units July 1.

Professor John Young willcontinue as head of the Econ-omics department, Macdonaldsaid .

The new head of the politic-al science department is Pro-fessor R. Stephen Milne, wh ohas been teaching at the Uni-versity of Singapore since1961 .

Grad class picks officers ;gardens proposed for gift

Only 400 of the 2,200 graduating students attended thegrad class meeting Friday .

The grad class elected Grad Studies dean Ian McTag-gart-Cowan honorary president and Dorothy Somerset, ofthe theatre department, honorary vice-president .

Proposals for the grad class gift to the university in-cluded a memorial garden for either George Cunninghamor Dean Neagele, replacing the university gates, painting sfor Brock, student loans, an alumni chronicle .

A furnished room for SUB, books for the library, afountain near the engineering buildings, outside seatin gand the Three Universities fund .

— Frosh off Council ??

W .U.S.C. — is it worth $1 .00

H. A. A. Awards

- President' s Report

- Treasurer's Report

- Constitutional Amendments

- Meet Your New Counci l

- Auditor Appointment

LOSSES(Continued from Page 1 )

symposium, but no one in Vic-toria knows anything of suc han arrangement and there isno record of any agreement i nAAC files said Vance .

"There might be $500 to 60 0outstanding," he said .

Vance said there seemed tobe no financial control what -ever in the committee's af-fairs .

The report by Vance andPentland was presented tocouncil Monday night .

Also presented to councilwas a report by ex-AAC chair-man Mike Coleman. Colemanmade the recommendation thatnext year the committee's pro-gram be re-evaluated and heldto four symposiums with agrant made by AMS not to ex-ceed $2,000 .

Vance said this year's deficitwill not affect next year's com-mittee and will be paid fro mthe AMS surplus.

A/ma Meter Society

OFFICIAL NOTICE S

1 . Academic Symposiu mApply before March 25 to Bob Anderson, Box 1 ,

A .M .S . Office, for position of Chairman of Academi c

Symposium, 1966.

EveryoneLikes It . . .

BUYYOUR COPY

NO WBefore They

Are Sold Out

—don hume photo

Bevington, Timothy LeGoff, Angus McLaren and PatrickSteward . The $1,800-plus-tuition awards are tenable a tany Canadian or U .S. university and are for studentsinterested in university teaching .

Remember, You have a date —

Thursday Noon - March 18 - Armoury

A.M.S. General MeetingAGENDA

1,500 Students Needed to Make a Quorum

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Tuesday, March 16, 1965

THE UBYSSEY

Page 3

Rights workersplead for aid

Three civil rights workers Monday called for Canadianassistance in the fight against racial discrimination in theUnited States .

Student Non - Violent Co -ordinating Committtee mem-bers Karen Stockham an dPhillip Lapansky, and UBCarts student John Dilday, form-erly of Little Rock, Arkansas ,appealed to more than 1,00 0students at a noon-hour rallyat the Cairn.

The three outlined examplesof discriminatory practicesused by southern politicalpower to frustrate Negro civilrights drives, and called onUBC students to aid SNCC'scause by donations and demon-strations.

Miss Stockham, Northwestco-ordinator of SNCC, saidMississippi and Alabama havebecome police states whose in -justices should be brought tothe attention of the world.

—paul clancy photoLISTENING CROWD . . . and generous, too.

No changes

Bookstore reportliked; that's al l

Bookstore officials like the faculty committee report onthe financing and function of the bookstore, but they 're notpromising any changes .

Bookstore manager JohnHunter said Monday he ap-proved of the report, but saidthe bookstore's biggest prob-lem was lack of space .

The report, which rappedadministration refusals to re -lease bookstore accounting fig-ures to the committee recom-mended changes in the financ-ing and function of the book-store.

Hunter said he would liketo have a good trade book sec-tion and said he thinks thereis a place for a portable type -writer service.

"Our two biggest problemsare getting information fro mprofessors and arranging de -I i v e r y from publishers," hesaid .

"The thing that people whocompare us with Americanoperations must remember isthat books are the smallestpart o= their operations . Youcan buy everything but a carin American c o 11 e g e book-stores . Our main function isbooks," he said .

The committee also recom-mended prices be kept to aminimum consistent with serv-

"But what do we have — apresident who does thingsonly when politically exped-ient, and leaders like MartinLuther King who have losttheir effectiveness," she said.

"Negroes are to an increas-ing extent taking things intotheir own hands—witness Sel-ma—as they feel they have t osolve their problems by them -selves . "

Lapsansky said Negroes inMississippi were determinedto "break the state" which isdeterminedly trying to keepthe Negro impoverished andunfranchised .

"In Mississippi, when sheerbrutality fails to keep th eNegro from trying to registerto vote the most frustratingmethods imaginable are used tokeep him from qualifying .

"One section of the test re-quires an applicant to interpretone section of the Mississipp iconstitution, with a white stateofficial the sole judge of theinterpretation. Needless tosay, a Negro never passes ."

A silver collection durin gthe rally raised $192 .41, whichwill be donated to SNCC .

A rally protesting actions ofSelma authorities is scheduledfor noon today in front of theUS Consulate at Georgia andBurrard .

Exam protestresults seen

The protest by 25 educa-tion students about writingsix exams in three days mayget results .

Registrar John Parnelltold The Ubyssey Monday :"We have received the pro-test and are in contact withofficials of the educationfaculty . "

Parnell said he hopes tohave the final exam sched-ule out this week .

Money foranswersgets results

The preventive medicine de-partment's career survey hashad a 77 per cent responseduring its first week .

The survey is designed tostudy career choices of 29 1students in pre-medicine an dscience .

Survey co-ordinator EleanorRiches said : "I don't think the$2 cheque for completing thesurvey is responsible for theresponse alone . "

* * *"Several students have

said they would have filled outt h e questionnaire anyway, "she said .

Miss Riches said studentswho registered in 1962 or 196 3as pre-medical or science stu-dents were asked to fill out thesurvey .

"We've being trying to findthose people who haven't comein and another questionnaireis going to be handed out to-day at noon in Wes . 100, " MissRiches said .

"A lot of students whohaven't made it on the sched-uled days, have been fillin gout the forms in Wes . 300 dur-ing the week," she said .

Tiger roarsabout beasts

Dr. Lionel Tiger will roarabout men and beasts at8 :30 p.m. Wednesday in theJewish Community Centre ,Forty-first and Oak .

T h e UBC anthropologyand sociology professor wil lspeak on Is It Man and th eBeast or is Man The Beastin the fifth of a series of lec-tures at the Centre .

ice; capital sums be madeavailable for expansion and in-crease in stock ; and operatingfunds be made available forpayment of personnel special-ized in the book field .

The committee said the func-tion of the bookstore should beto :

Stimulate curiosity in fieldsother than those being studiedby providing a wide variety ofbooks which the library doe snot stock ;

Carry extensive stocks ofquality recordings and art re-productions ;

And pay careful attention toan attractive and convenientdisplay .

Totem salesskyrocket

Totem '65 sales have passe dthe three-quarter mark, Totemeditor Scott McIntyre reportedMonday.

"The yearbook is sellingfantastically well," he said .

The books are available a tthe College Shop, AMS officeand the bookstore .

Hot Khoury

Pressure gets slacke rFirst the administration abolished ob-

ligatory physical education ."Great," everyone said as they dragge d

themselves to their classrooms, breath-lessly collapsing in their seats .

"We won't have to waste our precioustime developing our bodies and can de -vote ourselves to pure study," they said .

* * *Then the D and D (Discipline and Dis-

covery) report proposed doing away wit hChristmas and final exams up to thirdyear on the grounds that students get toonervous writing them and that meansthey cannot possibly give an accurate re -presentation of their knowledge .

Let's take a closer look at what student sfeel about this matter .

The final exams loom less than fou rweeks off, and with each passing daytension for UBC students is steadilymounting.

Spring is springing ; yet not many stu-dents are in the right spirit .

Only last Friday I saw a couple lyingon the grass in front of the library—bot hworried over their exams .

The boys, in fact, was so nervous hesteadied himself by repeatedly squeezingthe girl's arms and making other gesturescharacteristic of a troubled mind .

Evidently the very thought of examswas having a disastrous effect on him .

* * *"Worry, worry, worry," said a third

year Arts student about his economicscourses .

I asked him why."I'm taking four of them," he replied ,

his eyes twitching violently.He was completely in favor of the D

and D report, but wanted it to go all theway and include fourth year students aswell .

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—tim menees—u of washington daily

"I tried to schedule a speaking engagement at th euniversity but between George Lincoln Rockwell, Cho uEn-Lai, Gus Hall and Marshal Tito, they couldn't seemto fit me in ."

LETTERSLab problemsEditor, The Ubyssey :

I would like to add myvoice to the recent complaint sabout the quality of lab in-struction at this university .In the middle of a Chem 10 2lab. I tried (along with sixother students) to find a labinstructor .

We discovered that all fiveof the instructors assigned t oour section had disappeared .Presumably they were havin gcoffee together .

They were absent, leavin gthe lab wholly unattended ,for over half an hour. Durin gthe long wait, several mor estudents required equipmentor reagents which they wereunable to obtain becausethere was no-one in attend-ance .

As a result, many of us di dnot have time to complete ou rexperiments, or had to rushthrough them in order to fin-ish. I think this is grossly un-fair to students.

I suggest that in future theinstructors take shorter cof-fee breaks, and take them i nturns instead of all at once .

CHERYL MITCHEL LScience I

At At At

Bookstore polic yEditor, The Ubyssey :

Ubyssey is to be congratu-lated on drawing the atten-

Published Tuesdays, Thursdays and Fridays throughout the universityyear by the Alma Mater Society, University of B .C. Editorial opinion sexpressed are those of the editor and not necessarily those of the AM Sor the University . Editorial office, CA 4-3916. Advertising office, CA 4-3242 ,Loc. 26 . Member Canadian University Press . Founding member, PacificStudent Press . Authorized as second-class mail by Post Office Department ,Ottawa, and for payment of postage in cash.

Winner Canadian University Press trophies for generalexcellence and news photography.

TUESDAY, MARCH 16, 1965

UBC student support for the civil rights movement

in Selma, Alabama, should be encouraged .

It should be encouraged and pursued in a mannersimilar to the rally that collected $192 for civil right s

work Monday.Activity of this type within Canada is of more benefit

than actively working in the South.

To the suspicious Southern mind, foreign studentsare more unwelcome than intruders into the South fromother parts of the U.S.

. And running amuck of authorities, even when the yare Southerners with their own peculiar brand ofjustice, poses problems for re-entry into the U .S.

Some will say any help from Canadians is un-warranted.

Others will point to our bicultural and bilingualproblems, or those of the second-class status of theIndian and ask us to houseclean first .

Perhaps the day will come when Canadian studentscan become enthused enough to work as diligently a sthe U.S. civil righters on our problems .

But right now the civil rights movement needs sup-port—all it can get in moral and monetary terms.

There must be some basic issues, such as those o fthe right to vote and discrimination, which cross inter-national boundaries and become our immediate problemsas well .

R'r-uz$3bR>~

~o u I radar

4 rap . ..

Civil rights

A challengeThis year's graduating class has been offered a chal-

lenging proposal.Instead of giving a gift solely to UBC, it has been

suggested that the class make a cash donation to theThree Universities . Fund.

In short, the class of '65 will be giving $7,000 to thefund, if the proposal is accepted.

By contributing to the fund students would showthe taxpayer that they are vitally aware that govern-ment and other sources simply aren't giving the uni-versity enough money.

And while the student shouldn't be expected to footmuch more of the province's educational bill such agesture would indicate students are behind the drive—in spirit and in cash.

If some students are choked up at the thought ofproviding money which wouldn't only help UBC bu talso Victoria and Simon Fraser there 's a solution here ,too .

Money donated to the fund drive can be allocated tospecific institutions .

But why not go whole-hog and just turn over themoney to the fund with no conditions attached ?

It would be a simple, and dramatic, indication thatthe class of '65 realizes money for education is shor t

in B.C. and where possible students are willing to help .

And remember, money for the Three Universitiesfund is matched dollar-for-dollar by premier Bennett' s

boys .

THE UBYSSEY

tion of students to the con-tents of the Faculty Associa-tion's Bookstore Committe ereport, since for academicreasons a good bookstore i sessential to the function of aUniversity such as this .

It is, however, necessary todraw attention to one import-ant error of fact in yourstory. The committee did notsuggest that the "administra-tion relinquish control overthe bookstore" . If the book-store is to achieve the object-ives we set out for it, there isa need for considerable stockand capital expansion .

This implies an investmentof university funds, or fund sraised by the university, forwhich the responsibilit yshould k rest squarely with theadministration . We suggestedan Advisory Board, not aGoverning Board, with strongacademic representation toensure that the bookstore ful-filled an academic purpose .

I feel that if the studentbody is to exert an influenc eon bookstore policy it shouldbe in two directions, (a) fin-ancial, and (b) academic . Ifstudents are to influence pric-ing policy, they should lookbeyond the bookstore's pres-ent policy to the methods o foperation of publishers andwholesale book distributors.This is why our report sug-gested that on pricing mat-ters Mr. Hunter and indeedthe administration have very

< :;:,:; ;s«>v:,y$;

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c; little room to manoeuvre .CYRIL S . BELSHAW

Putrid poetryEditor, The Ubyssey:

Although there was noth-ing wrong with the article inlast Tuesday's Ubyssey, theheading Med dead was dis-gusting .

We are sure that The Ubys-sey was not awarded theSoutham Trophy for suchputrid sensational poetry .

ANDREA MOE NSHEILA PRICE

DAVE WI3EMAN

CANADA'SUNKNOWNSTUDENTS

The Indian-Eskimo Associa-tion of Canada co-ordinatesand administers a program ofvolunteer service for univers-ity students among Canadia nIndians and Eskimos . Knownas the Student Volunteers 'Service Scheme, the plansends students to live in localhomes from June to earlySeptember .

Canadian politicians, mostrecently John Turner speak-ing at UBC, have been urg-ing the establishment of aPeace Corps working with -in Canada.

John Thomas, director o fInternational H o u s e, sen tthis clipping from the Mag-azine University Affairs toprove we already have ourdomestic Peace Corps.

The students receive $100honorarium plus room andboard and travel expenses inreturn for assisting Indianand Eskimo communities toset up adult education cours-es, recreation programs, im-prove fishing catches, estab-lish fish processing plants andsimilar projects .

Students working on Indianreserves are sponsored by theIndian Affairs Branch whilethose in the Territories ar esponsored by the NorthernAdministration Branch o fDepartment of Northern Af-fairs and National Resources .

Many of the volunteers areprospective teachers and so-cial workers and it is hopedthat the program will attractuniversity-trained persons towork with Indians and Es-kimos . This year (1963) 20 stu-dents will be sent to commu-nities in Ontario and t h-eNorthwest Territories .

Candidates are selected bya panel of Indian-Eskimo As-sociation executive members ,federal and provincial govern-ment representatives and theYMCA .

EDITOR : Mike Horse yNews _ _ Tim PadmorsCity Tom Wayma nArt ---- ..___. ._._—Don Hum eManaging __Janet MathesonSports George Reamsbotto mAsst . City Lorraine ShoreAsst. News —Carole Munro eAsst . Managing _Norm SettsPage Friday _Dave AblettAssociate ___ Ron Rlte rAssociate _ __— Mike Hunter

Happy group of workers (?) Mon-day were : Lorne Mallin, Doug Hal-verson, Bob Wieser, Brian Staples,Robin Russell, Sandy Stephenson,Art Casperson, Gordon McLaughlin ,Judy Fainstein, Al Francis, LynnCurtis, Carol-Anne Baker, MargoKorsch, Don Hull, Lizzie Field, Tom -my (editor-in-chief) Wu, Bob Bur -ton. Slowly going mad as city editorwas Richard Blair.

Dayside again fouling up night -side, with lousy dummying ; thanks ,Hoss baby. So this was the weekthat was : faculty comes up wit hwage complaints ; Radsoc entertain sthe high-school set in Brock Lounge ;CUS president Jean Bazin on cam -pus immediately hit with frog jokes ;Scott McIntyre's Totem comes outwith nothing on the great and glori-ous Ubyssey ; the Sun has shone fortwo weeks now . And this columnhas two padded inches .

(No, John, I won't work for PageFriday .)

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Tuesday, March 16, 1965

THE UBYSSEY

Page 5

BACK ROUN DBy RICHARD SIMEON

N E W HAVEN — Liberala n d moderate Republicansare on the warpath.

Their opponents are notDemocrats, but the "frantic ,frenetic, fanatic" right wing-ers who captured the 1964Republican convention in SanFrancisco .

The stakes are control ofthe party and their own poli-tical lives . The outcome isstill in doubt .

Two leaders in the battle,senators Thomas Kuchel ofCalifornia and Hugh Scott ofPennsylvania, were at Yalethis week looking for re-cruits .

* * *They were both active i n

the too-little and too-late at-tempt to block the nominationof GOP presidential candi-date Barry Goldwater at theconvention. K u c h e l backedLiberal governor NelsonRockefeller and Scott w a scampaign manager for Wil-liam Scranton .

Goldwater delegates booedScott when he tried to per-suade the GOP platform com-mittee to include clauses de-nouncing radical right groupsand supporting civil rights .Kuchel has been a frequen ttarget of Birchers, Minute -men and other kooks in Cali-fornia and elsewhere .

Richard Simeon is a form-er UBC student and a formerUbyssey assistant city editor .He' is doing graduate workin political science at Yal eon a Woodrow Wilson Fel-lowship .

Both Senators survived the1964 election debacle, bu tthey cannot forgive the Gold-w a t e r conservatives w h ogained control of the party ,nominated their man, repudi-ated past Republican policyon foreign policy and civilrights, and led the party t othe worst election defeat eversuffered by a major party.

Goldwater and Miller werenot the only ones to bite th edust — more than 500 otherRepublicans at state and na-tional levels lost their seatsin the Johnson sweep. Scottis one of the few survivors .Kuchel was not up for re-election, but there is doubt hewould have won if he ha drun .

* * *Moderates in the party say

they are not going to let ithappen again. Goldwater isback on the ranch in Arizonaand the moderates have oust-ed his protege Dean Burchfrom the chairmanship of theRepublican national commit-tee .

But that's just the begin-ning. Goldwaterites, o f t e nsupported by John Birchersand other radicals, still con-trol most of the grass-root sstrength of the party . They

BARRY GOLDWATE R. . . big mistake

are not going to be easy toroot out.

And time is short . Mid-termCongressional elections areless than two years away .

The bitterness and resent-ment of moderates for theGoldwaterites runs deep .

"They are the frustratedirreconcilables who infiltrate dthe ranks of the respectableconservatives," said Scot t ."And they are the people wh oa resurgent GOP must rele-gate to their frustrations.

* * *"We must take the road

back from lunacy — and fromSan Francisco, which was asymbol of that lunacy. I amgoing to travel throughoutthe country cutting off all theradical fringes I see — any-time, 'anyplace, anywhere . "

That's tough talk from aprofessional politician w h ohas been a member of Con-gress for 20 years, a formerchairman of the national com-mittee and who was Eisen-hower's Southern campaignmanager in 1952 — especiallywhen he is talking aboutmembers of his own party.

Kuchel, a Senator for 1 3years, said: "I regret that myparty has turned its back onmost of the decent things ithas stood for since the timeof Lincoln ."

* * *The 1964 convention was a

revolt of the rank and fileagainst the traditional partyleadership of such men asKuchel and Scott .

While t h e leaders slept ,small groups all over thecountry took over local an dstate conventions, nominatingGoldwater delegates for thenational convention. TheGoldwater nomination w a ssewn up long before the con-vention began .

Said Scott: "The tactics ofthe right wing were the tac-tics of the Judas goats wholed the herd to slaughter.

"We are not going to letthem do it again . "

He described the tactics ofthe radical righters — "proto-fascists" was his word — inWashington, New Mexico andmany other states . He told ofMinutemen distributing ma-terial at GOP meetings .

"Rocky (Nelson Rockefeller )the International Socialist, "and "The Soft on Commun-ism Racket of Richard Nix-on", were typical titles .

At one meeting, he said, aspeaker charged that Eisen-hower and Kennedy wereCommunists, urged the im-peachment of Supreme Cour tJustice Earl Warren, calledthe Kennedy assassination oCIA plot carried out on ord-ers from Moscow and allegedthat Defense Secretary Rob-ert McNamara had troops outpractising for the Kennedyfuneral a week before themurder.

"And 1,300 people stoodup and cheered," said Scott .

Seldom before had such ex-tremist groups come so closeto power .

Scott and Kuchel want theGOP to get back on the roado f "Progressive - Conserva-tism" — though not of theDiefenbaker variety. They seethemselves as the responsibleopposition .

But their problem is thatthey approve of almost al lthe things the Johnson admin-istration is doing. "The John-son programs are also the Re-p u b l i c a n programs," saidScott .

In this sense, Goldwaterwas right : they are an echonot a choice — and so long asthe Democrats continue to beable to handle the countr ysuccessfully, the GOP is notgoing to be able to find anissue of the magnitude neededif they are going to win backthe presidency.

* * *But the battle between the

moderates and the rightistsgoes on . The result will havegreat implications . For ex-ample, Kuchel himself mustface an election in 1966 . Rightnow, he may not even get theRepublican nomination be -cause the California party hasbeen heavily infiltrated .

Veteran politicians can for-give many, many sins . Butthere's one thing they can-not condone: losing .

And when you lose the wayGoldwater did, there is nomercy .

Debaterswin it al l

A UBC debating team walk-,d away with the top troph yin Canadian university debat-ng at the weekend in Victoria .

Jim Taylor, Arts 3, and3etty Hall, Arts 2, won theMacDonald-Laurier Trophy fo rSupporting the resolution thatNationalism is a Necessity .

This is the second year ina row that UBC has won thetrophy .

The UBC team defeated Aca-dia from Nova Scotia, who hadearlier defeated Bishops ofQuebec .

UBC in January won theMcGoun Cup, emblematic ofWestern Canadian debating su-premacy.

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Page 6

THE UBYSSEY

Tuesday, March 16, 1965

Reps beat Birdsfor Rugger Cup

Rugby - - a UBC tradition

IN RUGBY ACTION Saturday at Varsity Sta diem UBC's 'Birds lost 24-8 to an all-sta rVancouver side. The game was the final match in the McKechnie Cup playdowns .

UBC rugby Thunderbirds were trounce dpowerful Vancouver Reps side in an excitingCup final Saturday at Varsity Stadium .

Upwards of 600 spectatorssaw the Reps dominate play i nthe first half, with the Birdsunable to muster an effectiveattack.

* * *'Birds were down 16-0 at

the half, and their plan of out-running the supposedly morepoorly conditioned Reps failed .Instead of running with theball in the second half, theVancouver players kept kick-ing to touch and slowing thepace. But play throughout th egame was wide- open andentertaining .

The experienced Vancouverplayers kept UBC off-balancewith a varied attack, and the'Birds threatened only forabout ten minutes in the sec-ond half.. Bob Hilton and KeithWatson scored tries for UBC ,with Mike Cartmel picking upa convert.

* * *UBC's backs had the ball

often, but their passes wereslow and inaccurate. T-Birdsdid very poorly in the looseplay, and this wasfactor in the loss.

What will probably be thebest rugby action in B .C. thisyear, the World Cup games ,can be seen Thursday at 1- p .m .at Varsity stadium and agai non Saturday'

School District No. 46(Sechelt on the Sunshine Coast )

Interviews with prospective teachers will be held byboard officials

a major

SPORTS

MAA electionnoon todayin men s gym

The annual general meetingof the Men's Athletic Associa-tion will be held noon todayin room 211 of the MemorialGym.

Elections will be held for thepositions of President, Vice -president and secretary.

Neither Brian Hemsworthnor George Reamsbottom, cur-rent president and vice-presi-dent respectively, are runningfor re-election .FIELD HOCKEY

In men's field hockey theVarsity defeated Pitt Meadowswith Warren Bell scoring thekey goal for the winning UB Cside.

A field hockey clinic, spon-sored by UBC's School of Phys-ical Education, was held Sun-day . Varsity coach EricBroome conducted the clinic.

24-8 by aMcKechnie

Rugby has an associationwith UBC, of longer standing ,probably, than any other sport .

It was played when the Uni-versity occupied the Fairviewsite, and even before that, wasplayed by McGill University inVancouver . Through the years ,the Rugby Team has consist-ently been UBC's most success-ful team .

UBC competes in severalcompetitions, but undoubtedlythe oldest is that of the Mc -Kechnie Cup . The Cup wa sdonated in 1896 by Dr . Mc-Kechnie, a former Chancellorof this University; and it isgenerally accepted that it isthe oldest trophy in B .C., if notall Canadian Sport .

Since the war, the teams inthis competition have beenUBC and representative teamsfrom each of Vancouver, theNorth Shore a n d Victoria .Though accurate records aredifficult to come by, it appearsthat UBC has won the Cup 1 8times . One of the more famou svictories was that of 1928 . Asplit with Vancouver in the

two scheduled games, necessi-tated a playoff to determinethe Cup winner. The UBCteam, coached by Jack Tyrr-whitt, and including the form-er Minister of Fisheries, JamesSinclair, played superb Rugby,and won the Cup. Followin gthe final whistle, the team wa scarried off the field by thei rexuberant supporters, followed

The author of this article, An -drew Spray, A UBC Big Bloc kwinner, is this year's Rhode sscholar for B.C . and is going toSt. John's College, Oxford, i nthe fall .

by a downtown parade andnight of celebration . It seemsdoubtful that such enthusiasmcould arise over any Univers-ity sport nowadays. Anothervictorious Cup team of notewas that of 1938, coached byCapt . A. G. Debbie . When UBCwent to play Victoria in thefinal, a boat was chartered ,and at least 500 out of a cam-pus enrollment of 2,500, ac-companied the team .

A further remark of notehere concerns one of the greatplayers of that team, Howie

McPhee. Following his untime-ly death in 1940, a trophy wasawarded in his name, which isgiven annually to the playe rin the Vancouver Rugby Unionwho best exemplifies the qual-ities of leadership, sportsman-ship and playing ability shownby McPhee .

Besides the McKechnie Cup,UBC also competes in the inter-club competition with t h eother members of the Vancou-ver Rugby Union for the Milla rCup. UBC has won this Cupmany times, being undefeate din tie competition in 1923-4and from 1944 through 1949 .

In the Millar Cup this year ,the Birds, under new coachBrian Wightman, lost but on egame, a 19-17 defeat to th eMeralomas which cost themthe Cup. A notable victory wa sa 16-8 win over the 'Kats' Club .a team which for five year shad seemed virtually uncon-querable .

Monday, March 15 ,

Tuesday, March 16,

9 a.m. to 5 p.m .

UBC Placement Office(opposite the Armoury)

Persons interested in teaching on the Sunshine Coast an d

unable to arrange an interview for these days are in-vited to telephone:

MR. P . C. WILSON, Secretary-Treasurer,

at 886-2141 Gibsons, B.C .for further particulars .

Brock Management CommitteeInviting Applications for

GAMES ROOM MANAGER - -

GAMES ROOM SUPERVISORS -

MAMOOKS MANAGER - - -

$225 plus bonus

- $225

- $150 plus bonus

Apply in person or in writing to

Co-ordinator of Activities, South Brock

'Thompson golf spectacular'greatest of them al l

The U.S. Open, the Masters, the Bob Hope Pro-AmClassic and now the "Thomson Golf Spectacular" .

That's right golfers. Friday morning is the opening o fthe 2nd annual classic tournament, a Big Block Club even twith host Tom Thomson leading the way at the Universitygolf course .

The classic is open to all students and faculty but thetickets, a hole in $1 .25, are putting thin . So get yours now,from Mr . Thomson or at the Athletic Office

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Tuesday, March 16, 1965

THE UBYSSEY

Page 7

Iran THE BIRDSBy GEORGE REAMSBOTTOM

Ubyssey Sports Editor

After waiting in excited anticipation for almost tw oyears my restless readers are about to be rewarded.

In this the first of two columns on the long standing, butnever solved problem of extra-mural athletics at our campus ,I am revealing the Reamsbottom critique on UBC sports .

The debate goes on about the status of UBC sport but thereare indications that the argument on the state of athletics atUBC is receding more and more into indifference.

The meagre attendance at sporting events indicates few stu-dents are interested, and the views of faculty and alumni arerarely heard .

UBC sport wavers between the conflicting philosophieswe have absorbed from the English and American concept sof how games should be played . While both approaches hav etheir points it is rather tough to be caught between .

*

Oxford has a fine rowing crew and a rugby team; butdoesn't have to worry about football or baseball . U. of Tor-onto supports football and basketball ; but pays no attentio nto rugby or soccer .

A survey taken among Canadian colleges in January thisyear shows UBC to have the most extensive program in th ecountry; one which includes 27 extra-mural sports .

The emphasis on participation means that energy, attentionand finance is spread out and dissipated on an astonishingnumber of sports.

And that's not al lPerhaps even more restricting than the number of sports

is the conflict between the contrasting philosophies of Englis hand American sport . At UBC we find ourselves in the positio nof trying to follow the English "the games the thing" ap-proach, while competing with opponents who stress victoryas the all-important goal .

Our athletes, who are awarded no concessions for practic etime or otherwise, for entertaining their fellow students i nthe Stadium, Gym or Arena, compete against opponents wh oare helped to put every effort possible into winning .

This is the principal problem, how to reconcile the tw oconcepts .

* * *

There are other problems such as competition withhighly publicized professional teams for the attention ofthe public.

There is the geography factor which leaves UBC isolated500 miles from the nearest Canadian university .

The main reason UBC pulled out of the Evergreen confer-ence six years ago was the belief of athletic officials that stu-dents are not interested in games against small America nschools . But there was no improvement when we entered theWestern Canadian League . The won-lost record improved bu tinterest did not .

This re-introduces another controversial subject ; whetherto re-enter the WCIAA or remain independent competingagainst a combination of top Canadian and carefully-selecte dAmerican College teams .

WCIAA - - pros and consThe best system, of course, is the present one ; but for th e

record here are the pros and cons toward re-entering the Can-adian League :

Pros• play schools of similar status

• development of Canadian spirit

• students have opportunity to visit CanadianUniversitie s

• national collegiate championships

Cons• heavy traveling expenses

• wide variability in calibre of competition

eliminates attractive (to the players andcoaches) American competition becauseof double round robin schedules whichare mandatory in football and basketball .

* * *

The present independent schedule provides the ideal ar-rangement for an extended interim period while other B .C .Universities, such as Simon Fraser and Victoria Colleges, aregrowing to athletic maturity .

(The second part of the Reamsbottom critique will appearin Thursday's Ubyssey.)

SPORTSA T

UB C

* * *Thursday night, for the first

time ever, the Thunderette Vol-leyball team earned a positionin the Canadian Champion-ships.

By placing second to theVancouver Alums, defendin gCanadian champions, in theProvincial playoffs, UBC aswell as the Alums enter thetournament as B.C. reps .

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Executive positions in WAAare open to responsible wheel-er-dealers. Nominations forPresident, Vice-President, Sec-retary and Treasurer must bein to the Women's Gym by12:30 p.m., March 22 .

Applications for the variedchairmen and for positions oth-er than those of the four mainofficers must be received by12:30 p .m. tomorrow, Mar . 17 .

** *The high-flying 'Birds of the

Badminton team slashed to twoimportant titles in the Van-couver and District Tourna-ment this weekend .

In the "B" Mixed Doubles ,Anne Knott and Eric Sand-strom took first place andSandstrom repeated his victor yperformance with Vic Connellyin the B Men's Doubles .

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ART SGENERAL MEETIN GTUESDAY, NOON MARCH 2 3

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Page 8

THE UBYSSEY

Tuesday, March 16, 196 5

'tween classes

Prof lectures his lastDr. R. W. Dunning, associate

professor of anthropology andsociology, gives his Last Lec-ture today at noon in Bu . 107 .

* * *PRE-LIBRARIANSHI P

Talk on business librarian-ship in Bu . 225 noon today .

* * *FINE ART S

Professor William H a r tspeaks on The Influence of Af-rica on 20th Century Art, noontoday at the Fine Arts Gallery.

* * *CHORAL SOC

Important general meetingnoon today in Bu . 220 .

* * *UN CLUB

General meeting today noo nin Bu. 104 . Elections for nex tyear's executive .

*CONSERVATIVES

The Hon. Howard Green,former Secretary of State forExternal Affairs, speaks atgeneral meeting Wednesda ynoon in Bu. 214. Model parlia-ment plans to be discussed .

* * *COMMUNITY PLANNING

Movie: The City — Cars orPeople, Wednesday noon in La .102 .

* * *PRE-MED SOC

Medical practice oversea sdiscussed, and first slate elec-tions, Wednesday noon in Wes .100 .

* * *NEWMAN CENTR E

Father Ed Bader speaks onEcumenism and the Church ,noon Wednesday in Bu . 102 .

DR. DUNNING. . . speaks today

HILLE L

Dr. Steiman speaks on NobelPrize Winners in Medicine,Wednesday noon in HillelHouse . Special guest: Dr. Gib-son of the Faculty of Medicine .

* * *PRE-DENTAL SOC

D r. Merre11 speaks andshows slides on Endodontic snoon Wednesday in Bu . 204 .

ENGLISH DEPT.

Jonathan Williams, publish-er of Jargon Books and RonaldJohnson — poetry reading andliterary colour slides in Bu . 10 4Wednesday at noon.

* * *ONTOLOGICAL SOCIETY

Healing, a talk by Michae lCresh in the series CreativeSelf Expression, Wed. noon inBu. 221 .

* * *CIRCLE IC

Installation banquet at GradCentre on March 19 . Ticket savailable from Ron McMahon .Elections Wed. noon in Bu .2201 .

* * *ARTS US.

Arts Council meeting in theCouncil Chambers tomorrowat noon. New members wel-come.

* * *

LAST MINUTE TICKETSL.M .T.'s available for The

Cave, Isy's, The Public Eye an dThe Private Ear .

* * *UBC BA CLU B

First meeting Thursday noo nin Brock Lounge.

Bright giftThe Three Universities Capi-

tal Fund Wednesday receiveda $35,000 contribution from theWest Kootenay Power andLight Company Ltd .

ENGLISH 40 NOTE S

WANTED IMMEDIATELY

BY ADULT STUDEN TPrefer correspondence course

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Thinking of entering the

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Supper provided, if interested please contact

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Paintedwork benchhigh priced ,

There is a rather unusualpainting entitled Expo '67 be-ing exhibited at the Nova Sco-tia Society of Arts annua lshow .

Well, not exactly a painting .If the truth be known, it i s

nothing more than the top ofa work bench used for signpainting .

A little jazzed up of course .The paint-smeared wood sur-

face was framed and glazed a tan art shop before artist Mur-dock Cranston, a Halifax signpainter, entered it as a joke .

Exhibition juror Prof. AlfredPineky, chairman of the finearts department at Sir GeorgeWilliams University in Mon-treal, accepted the work forthe art show .

And while Cranston claimsthe whole thing is only a gag ,he has put a price tag on hiswork.

The price is $1,000 .

Star watchersget big gift

A million dollar gift willbuild the University of Tor-onto a planetarium as part ofthe Royal Ontario Museum .

The money for the projec tis a gift from Col. R. S. Mc-Laughlin .

Lost & Found I 1FOUND — Woman' s black leathe r

gloves Wednesday in Library . Cal lMaureen AM 6-0057 .

FOUND — A woman's watch onWreck Beach Thurs. Phone Lorri e921-7250 .

FOUND — Sekonic light meter o nMarine Drive, a couple of milessouth of here. Phone Parkin224-9869.

LOST! Gold "Norma " 4-color mech-anical pencil in Engineering Build-ing last Thursday. Reward. CallMLE. Dept . office, local 230 .

FOUND—Contact lens . Apply AM SPublications Office .

FOUND—Slide rule inblack case, inRidington . Apply AMS office .

LOST—One sorority pin—a gold andpearl key . Reward . Please contac tRuth, AM 1-4518 .

LOST — Near Burnaby Bog afte rT.S.B . one plump pink Ambrose-on-wheels. Reward . Barf. PhoneP.J .K., CA 4-9020 .

WOULD the person who found m yblack sweater at the Viceroy splease call REgent 3-2395 . I'm cold !

FOUND — Two keys on a charmchain. Phone Goldie, AL 5-0557 af-ter 10 :30 p .m .

LOST—One pair glasses with blackframes in vicinity of Wesbrook orWoodward Library. Phone Barb ,876-8448 evenings .

LOST—Wallet . Am particularly con-cerned about ID cards, licence, etc .Peter Usher, phone 733-2932 .

FOUND—Last Thursday in CollegeLibrary, wrist watch . Phone Tot -em Res., Haida House . Ask forDes in Rm. 383 . Leave message .

LOST—Silver Dorso man ' s watch .Finder please phone AM 6-8173 .-

WOULD the student who kept th ekey to the statistics lab on Mar.5th either return it to the econom-ics office, or to Gary at CA 4-0091 .

Special Notices-

1 3

OWN a MG - TC - TD or TF? Whynot join the classic MG Club ?Parts, service, advice, Box 3183 ,Van . Phone 929-1613 .

ACADIANS clean up with Les onM, .rch 17th. Experience plus Driv eEq aals Success .

WOULD ANYONE witnessing ac-cic ent between car & pedestria non Wesbrook corner on Feb. 12phone 943-2392--or leave messag eat Rm. 22, Hut 7, Fort Camp.

Transportation

14WANTED—Ride to Montreal or N .Y .

after exams; will share driving &gas . Phone Jenny, AM 1-4397 orJoanna, 734-4950 evenings .

Automobiles For Sale 2 11953 AUSTIN A-40 Convertible . Good

condition . Completely overhauled .1965 licence . $150 . Phone LA 1-390 3after six p .m .

AUTOMOTIVE & MARINEMotorcycles & Scooters

2 7HONDA 90 for sale cheap. New con-

dition . Phone Dwight at CA 4-985 6after 6 p.m .

BUSINESS SERVICE STyping

4 2PROFESSIONAL typist for essays,

etc . Phone 325-3145 after 6 :00 p.m.

INSTRUCTION — SCHOOLS

Tutoring

6 4

MISCELLANEOU S~'OR SALE

7 1

RENTALS&REAL ESTATERooms

8 1

Room & Board

82