prescription worth 480 pills — 20 a month for two the ... · leaky wesbrook pill policy by ann...

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UN-ORTHO-DOX SHE'S 18, SINGLE THE UNIVERSITY -OF BRITISH COLUMBI A HEALTH SERVIC E Our bachelor girl perforates ro . leaky Wesbrook pill polic y By ANN RATE L I'm an 18-year-old single co-ed, and I'v e got a prescription to buy a two-year suppl y of birth-control pills . How did I get it? Courtesy of UBC' s Wesbrook hospital . UBC Health service's assistant directo r Dr . C . A . Brumwell said Wednesday UB C will give birth-control pills to marrie d co-eds, but not to single ones . He said : "There have been cases wher e single co-eds have tried to get prescrip- tions for birth-control pills, but they hav e been refused ." Following this statement I wondered if it was indeed impossible for a single gir l to receive birth-control pills . And I found out it wasn't. Wednesday afternoon I borrowed a rin g and assumed a married name . Arriving at Wesbrook, I filled out th e regular health service's form with my as- sumed married name, but also wrote m y real name underneath . The attendant on duty asked me which name my UBC health service records wer e under and I told her they were all in my maiden name . I asked to see a doctor, but she said they were off-duty after 3 :30 p .m . and I could only see a nurse . I was shown to an examination room and, shortly after, a nurse entered . I asked her about contraceptives and she said I would have to return Thursday an d get a prescription from a doctor . Returning Thursday, I had a short bu t very interesting and revealing, discussio n about birth control with a health service' s doctor . Seeing my maiden name crossed out o n my records and my fictitious marrie d name written in, the doctor said birth - control information could not be given t o single co-eds . The doctor also asked me how long I had been married . "Since last Saturday," I replied. He asked me a few questions about m y relations with my husband and offere d me several alternatives to purchasing birth-control pills . He said no physical examination wa s necessary because all pertinent data re- quired by the hospital was available under and maiden name. He then filled out the prescription whic h allows me to buy Ortho-Novum birth - control pills for the next two years. x -'(91)2-4i fr. -1'n A"' 7-1 ' PRESCRIPTION WORTH 480 PILLS — 20 a month for tw o years — was handed our sneaky but single reporter b y Wesbrook doctor whose name has been obliterated . Pres- cription will be returned . Cli p an d swallow THE vsrssFr [ I I J ' Vol . XLVIII, No . 7 VANCOUVER,; -B .C ., FRIDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1965 CA 4-391 6 1 in 10 sig n fee protes t petition - - One tenth of UBC ' s students have indicated their will- ingness to join the fee fight, Education Action Progra m officials said Thursday . "Close to 1,500 students hav e signed our petition calling for a referendum on the fee fight, " organizer Randy Enomoto said . "We got 120 more signature s during the two-hour clubs day scramble . " And while students wer e signing the petition at a rat e of one a minute, another 10 0 students signed up for commit - tee work at the Education Ac- tion Program booth . EAP co-chairman Bob Cruis e said the response was "ver y enthusiastic . " "Now we're going to get ou t some concrete programs," h e said. The 1,600-odd students wh o have indicated strong interest in EAP represent about one - tenth of UBC's enrollment 16,200 . Signers of the petition no w do so more to indicate thei r concern for the problem tha n to achieve the fee fight refer - MAYBE MALTHUS WAS RIGH T ANNUAL ARGUMENT for birth control was armory scene Thursday as students cram- med themselves into building to check 68 c Iub displays . Picture shows 2,387 of the man y thousands who showed up . (See also page 3 and 14) . —don kydd photo endum the petition requests . AMS council Monday nigh t said a referendum will be held Oct . 29 on the issue . It will ask students to show support for student council by withholdin g their second term fees unti l negotiations between the Board of Governors and the AMS ar e deemed fruitful . "There is too much rule fro m the top," Cruise said. "We want the Board of Governors to tak e a more realistic view on stu- dent fees : " At the Canadian Union o f Students club's day booth, loca l CUS vice-president Blair Tull y said plans for the Oct . 2 7 march by students on Vancou- ver courthouse were movin g ahead . Tully said B .C . Commerce minister Ralph Loffmark's ar- gument Monday for retainin g fees were "rather weird . " "Not only can the federa l (Continued on Page 3 ) SEE : RALPH

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Page 1: PRESCRIPTION WORTH 480 PILLS — 20 a month for two THE ... · leaky Wesbrook pill policy By ANN RATEL I'm an 18-year-old single co-ed, and I've got a prescription to buy a two-year

UN-ORTHO-DOX SHE'S 18, SINGLE THE UNIVERSITY -OF BRITISH COLUMBI A

HEALTH SERVIC E

Our bachelor girl perforates ro.

leaky Wesbrook pill policyBy ANN RATE L

I'm an 18-year-old single co-ed, and I'vegot a prescription to buy a two-year suppl yof birth-control pills .

How did I get it? Courtesy of UBC'sWesbrook hospital .

UBC Health service's assistant directorDr. C. A. Brumwell said Wednesday UB Cwill give birth-control pills to marriedco-eds, but not to single ones.

He said: "There have been cases wheresingle co-eds have tried to get prescrip-tions for birth-control pills, but they havebeen refused ."

Following this statement I wondered ifit was indeed impossible for a single gir lto receive birth-control pills.

And I found out it wasn't.

Wednesday afternoon I borrowed a rin gand assumed a married name .

Arriving at Wesbrook, I filled out th eregular health service's form with my as-sumed married name, but also wrote myreal name underneath .

The attendant on duty asked me whichname my UBC health service records wereunder and I told her they were all in mymaiden name.

I asked to see a doctor, but she said

they were off-duty after 3:30 p .m. and Icould only see a nurse .

I was shown to an examination roomand, shortly after, a nurse entered .

I asked her about contraceptives and shesaid I would have to return Thursday an dget a prescription from a doctor.

Returning Thursday, I had a short bu tvery interesting and revealing, discussionabout birth control with a health service' sdoctor .

Seeing my maiden name crossed out onmy records and my fictitious marrie dname written in, the doctor said birth-control information could not be given tosingle co-eds .

The doctor also asked me how long Ihad been married .

"Since last Saturday," I replied.

He asked me a few questions about myrelations with my husband and offeredme several alternatives to purchasingbirth-control pills .

He said no physical examination wasnecessary because all pertinent data re-quired by the hospital was available underand maiden name.

He then filled out the prescription whichallows me to buy Ortho-Novum birth-control pills for the next two years.

x

-'(91)2-4i

fr.-1'n A"' 7-1'

PRESCRIPTION WORTH 480 PILLS — 20 a month for tw oyears — was handed our sneaky but single reporter b yWesbrook doctor whose name has been obliterated . Pres-cription will be returned .

Cli pand

swallow THE vsrssFr [ II

J '

Vol . XLVIII, No . 7

VANCOUVER,; -B.C., FRIDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1965

CA 4-391 6

1 in 10 signfee protestpetition

- -One tenth of UBC's students have indicated their will-

ingness to join the fee fight, Education Action Program

officials said Thursday."Close to 1,500 students have

signed our petition calling fora referendum on the fee fight, "organizer Randy Enomoto said .

"We got 120 more signature sduring the two-hour clubs dayscramble . "

And while students wer esigning the petition at a rat eof one a minute, another 100students signed up for commit-tee work at the Education Ac-tion Program booth .

EAP co-chairman Bob Cruisesaid the response was "veryenthusiastic . "

"Now we're going to get outsome concrete programs," hesaid.

The 1,600-odd students wh ohave indicated strong interestin EAP represent about one-tenth of UBC's enrollment16,200 .

Signers of the petition nowdo so more to indicate theirconcern for the problem thanto achieve the fee fight refer -

MAYBE MALTHUS WAS RIGH TANNUAL ARGUMENT for birth control was armory scene Thursday as students cram-med themselves into building to check 68 c Iub displays . Picture shows 2,387 of the man ythousands who showed up . (See also page 3 and 14) .

—don kydd photo

endum the petition requests .AMS council Monday night

said a referendum will be heldOct . 29 on the issue . It will askstudents to show support forstudent council by withholdingtheir second term fees unti lnegotiations between the Boardof Governors and the AMS aredeemed fruitful .

"There is too much rule fromthe top," Cruise said. "We wantthe Board of Governors to takea more realistic view on stu-dent fees:"

At the Canadian Union o fStudents club's day booth, localCUS vice-president Blair Tullysaid plans for the Oct . 27march by students on Vancou-ver courthouse were movingahead .

Tully said B .C. Commerceminister Ralph Loffmark's ar-gument Monday for retainingfees were "rather weird . "

"Not only can the federal(Continued on Page 3 )

SEE: RALPH

Page 2: PRESCRIPTION WORTH 480 PILLS — 20 a month for two THE ... · leaky Wesbrook pill policy By ANN RATEL I'm an 18-year-old single co-ed, and I've got a prescription to buy a two-year

Page 2

JUST PLUG IT IN

Electric librarymost automatic '

most automaticsaid Thursday .

He said that one millionbooks are being purchased eac hyear for the library .

A list of the new materia lwill be distributed to facult ymembers .

But the most important pro-ject getting underway is th emechanization of cataloging b ythe IBM system .

"I am looking forward tomuch progress within the com-ing year," said Stuart-Stubbs .

THE

UBYSSEY

Friday, October 1, 196 5

Brass, pipers markUniversities aid'relative' — Liberal

Senator J o h n ConnollyLiberal leader for the Cana - our 50th birthdaydian senate,

came to clubs UBC celebrates its 50th birthday today .day Thursday as a guest of The event will be marke dUBC Liberals . students and faculty member sby a combined faculty-student-

But he refused to d e a 1 administration

ceremony

atpresent

during

the

period

with

specifics when asked Brock Hall . 1915-1925 .

about

the

fee

situation

at An academic procession led The university first opene dUBC . by four pipers will walk from its doors to students in 1915 oii

He said that the govern- the Lasserre building to Brock the site now occupied by thei Vancouver General Hospital.

The move to the Point Gre ycampus did not come unti l1926 .

Vancouver writer Dav eBrock, whose father was Dea nof Applied Science from 191 4to 1935, will speak; at the con-clusion of the ceremony .

A reception in MildredBrock Lounge will follow .

UBC 's library system is now one of thein Canada, library head Basil Stuart-Stubbs

He said the library now ha sthree Xerox photo-copiers, ateletype system and a Telexsystem connected to all Cana-dian cities and parts of theUSA .

An IBM system which re-places call-slips is now in ful loperation and organization wil lbe completed within two weeks ,he said .

"Economy and better serviceare the base of the new sy-stem," said Stuart-Stubbs .

ment is going to continue toemphasize education in itsplatform .

But it will not put as'muchmoney into B .C. educationas into other provinces .

"You must remember B .C .is the second richest provinc ein Canada," he said .

"Aid to education is arelative matter ."

at 12:30.

Chancellor Phyllis Ross an dPresident John B . Macdonal dwill speak at the ceremony .

Other speakers will includeJustice A. E. Lord, and Col .Harry T. Logan, the only manwho has 'been a faculty mem-ber since 1915 .

Letters of invitation to theceremony have been sent to all

FROSH QUEEN CUTIES 15 A - GO - GO

SHERRY BIE

DIANE BREHM

LINDA DORRICOTT

.BARB DUGAS

BIRGIT FREYBE

LINDY JORDAN-KNOX

TRACY KENMUIR

LINDA KING

KIT McKINNON

DIANE NEUFELD

NIKI NORBERG

SUE RURYK

URSULA SCJHAEIFER

MARGARET TAYLOR

MELINDA WHRAKER

Page 3: PRESCRIPTION WORTH 480 PILLS — 20 a month for two THE ... · leaky Wesbrook pill policy By ANN RATEL I'm an 18-year-old single co-ed, and I've got a prescription to buy a two-year

Friday, October, 1, 1965

THE UBYSSEY

Page 3

Tories opt uppededucation money

—don kydd photo

MUSSOC'S LI'L ABNER rides again at clubs day exhibitThursday, but Daisy Mae was the star attraction . Ourphotog was too flustered by her smile and crushed b ythe crowd to get her name .

100 FROSH RETREATIt's retreat time for UBC's frosh .This afternoon, 100 frosh leave UBC for frosh re-

treat at Camp Elphinstone .The program starts tonight with history professo r

Dr. John Norris talking about the changing character ofuniversity life, followed by classics head Dr . MalcolmMcGregor on the individual's participation in campu sactivities.

A singsong and a dance will provide the evening' sentertainment .

The frosh split up into small groups Saturday to dis-cuss clubs and committees, publications and athletics withsenior students .

Former frosh president Kim Campbell will talk o nstudent government and Alma Mater Society's first vice-president Bob Cruise will discuss higher education .

Saturday night will see a student debate, followed byskits and another dance .

Rev. Jack Shaver of the United Church will give areligious service Sunday. The retreaters return to Van-couver Sunday night .

AMS treasurer Mike Som-mers was the first to be trie don a charge of being too stingy .

The jury found Sommersguilty by acclamation and hewas thrown in bodily .

Next to be tried was AMS

vice-president Bob Cruise. Hewas accused of not liking For tCamp food .

"Everyone knows that For tCamp food is scrumptious, "cried Judge Stevenson .

Cruise was also convicte dand thrown in the pond .

AMS president Byron Hen-der was tried for refusing torelieve a UBC co-ed of he rfrustrations .

"The poor girl was forced togo to the engineers, " said theprosecutor .

Before being ducked Hende rwas told to perform his dutieshenceforth according to theConstitution.

Last to swim was Vic Erick-son, recently elected EUSsports representative .

(Continued from Page 1 )

government give more to edu-cation but it's their duty to givemore," he said .

Loffmark said Monday tha tdecreasing student fees wouldmean decreasing the voice ofthe student in university af-fairs .

He blamed the federal gov-ernment for the shortage ofmoney at UBC .

MGM, Spockget campu scompetitio n

Part of UBC's 1965 extensionprogram will be competingwith Metro-Goldywn-Mayerand Dr . Jones Spock .

CBC film director Stan Foxwill instruct a course on fil mproduction starting Oct . 5 at8 p .m., in Acadia Camp.

The course will include shoot-ing and editing with emphasison continuity, planning andediting of non-theatrical films .

A 16-session course aimed atgiving parents a better under-standing of child behavior wil lstart at 8 p.m. Monday in Bu .2280 .

It is one of four UBC exten-sion department courses in psy-chology .

Vancouver artist Sam Blackwill give a course in itali chandwriting as part of the fal lprogram .

This 12 session series start s8 p.m., Oct . 7 in Bu. 2202 . Fur-ther information for all coursesis available from the extensiondepartment .

In announcing the fee fighttotals, Cruse said he wanted t oemphasize the march planne dfor National Students' Day i sonly part of the Education Ac-tion Program .

"And it will not be just agood-time parade, but an im-portant step in making ou rfeelings about higher educa-tion known."

—Joe varesi photo

ACADEMICALLY GOWNED ,B .C. I i e u t enant-governorGeorge Pearkes acknowl-eges his introduction duringThursday's fine arts centreopening .

Teach-intalkerstabbed

The program for the B.C .universities teach-in Oct . 8-10has been set.

The teach-in will consist ofdiscussions_ with a panel of ex-perts .

Topic of the teach-in is theProblem of Viet Nam Todayand !Tomorrow, leading to amore general discussion ofRevolution and Response .

Delegations of faculty andstudents from Simon Frase rand Victoria College will par-ticipate .

The program starts at 8p .m . Friday with a panel ledby Professor W. L. Hollandand Charles Bourne, both ofUBC, and T. B. Bottomore ofSF.

At 10 p .m. there will be ataped speech by Dr . LinusPauling, two-time Nobel Priz ewinner.

Saturday's topic will beViet Nam, and the discussionsfrom the University of Toron-to teach-in will be wired in .

Toronto speakers includerepresentatives from Northand South Viet Nam .

Professors Holsti and Will -mot of UBC will lead the dis-cussion locally .

Saturday evening's pane lwill be Canada's Role in th eRevolutionary World . Politicalleaders Howard Green, Tom-my Douglas and Paul Martinhave been invited to lead thispanel .

The teach-in concludes Sun -day with Moral Responsibilityof the Citizen.

Photogs meetin gMeeting noon today for all

Ubyssey shutterbugs underthe auspices of Barrel BertMacKinnon .

'NO KANGAROO'

Scrubby EU Scleans counci l

By KRIS EMMOTTThe engineers cleaned out the Alma

offices Thursday and scrubbed the official spond .

From a rock overlooking thepond engineering undergradu-ate society president ArtStevenson said, "The EUS feelsit is its duty to clean out theAMS office.

"I am the judge and the en-gineers are the jury. This is no ta kangaroo court and every-thing will be fair . "

The engineers had previous-ly stormed the AMS officesand carried their caged victimsto the pond .

Mater societyin the library

By ROSEMARY HYMA NThe national Progressive Conservatives have opted for

increased federal grants to education .An 11-point program released

by the conservatives advocate sa $5 per capita federal grantto the provinces, compared t othe present $2 grant .

Ian Drost, chairman of theTories' B.C. campaign commit-tee, said a conservative govern-ment would also discuss a moresatisfactory distribution for thegrants, on the basis of univer-sity enrolment rather t h a npopulation of the province .

Other points in the program :Increased research grants t o

the National Research Council ;Increased university research

grants to the Medical ResearchCouncil ;

Increased grants to the Ca-nada Council for research inthe social sciences and humani-ties ;

Implementation of the recom-mendations on education in theHall Commission report, in-cluding a capital fund for theexpansion of facilities in medi-cine, dentistry and nursing ;

Extension of grants for voca-tional and training schools ona 75-25 federal-provincial basis :

Contribution to the capita lcosts of colleges and univer-sities;

Income tax deductions forgifts to universities ;

And the establishment of adepartment of youth affairs .

RALPH IDEA 'WEIRD '

—defile goes photo

Page 4: PRESCRIPTION WORTH 480 PILLS — 20 a month for two THE ... · leaky Wesbrook pill policy By ANN RATEL I'm an 18-year-old single co-ed, and I've got a prescription to buy a two-year

Vital decisions

WOULD YOU Q1.IOW

TNIS MAN TO FIL L

A PZ.SCRIPTIO N

FOR YOU ?

THE WHEYPublished Tuesday, Thursdays and Fridays throughout the universit yyear by the Alma Mater Society, University of B .C. Editorial opinionsexpressed are those of the editor and not necessarily those of the AM 8or 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 general

excellence and news photography.

FRIDAY, OCT . 1, 1965

"The tigers of wrath are wiser than the horse sof instruction ." "

—Wm. Blake .

Another 50 yearsLooking over our Thursday editorial on the 50th

anniversary of UBC 's beginning, we began to think about

campus accomplishments again.And it made us feel good to remember the firs t

Ubyssey appeared Oct. 17, 1918, which makes us almost

as old as UBC itself.So, leafing proudly through our files, we came on

the cartoon reproduced here — a look at the future fro m1927 .

The various quaint touches reminded us how fan-

tastically inaccurate predictions of campus growth can

Home-Coming, 1978

AND LOOK AT THE OLD PARKING- SPCE FILLED WITHCOLLEGE PLANES AND REMEMBER OUR OLD COLLEGE CRATE

I

i T V7-

k1111I

l6

A look at the future from The Ubyssey, Sept. 9, 1927.

get. But today, when at noon in Brock the university' sanniversary will be celebrated with due ceremony, w eventure to make a prediction of sorts anyway.

We feel sure the universary will soon shake free oftheir adherence to a number of outdated concepts, andgear down to produce men and women to match ourera of the Children of the Atom .

Much of the unrest on the campus today, we feel, isdue to our arrival now at a kind of transition stage inthis process.

We don't feel the future holds the IBM-orientedmultiversity that the Berkeley rioters said they struck

. against . And neither do we feel the university's futurewill be a relapse into medieval patterns of learning .

Progress is certain, but whether the result will be acompromise of these two main possibilities, or the evolu-tion of another system entirely, is still vague .

But we are certain The Ubyssey will be around tolaud the 100th anniversary of UBC.

EDITOR : Tom WaymanNews Ron Rlte rAssociate George Reamsbotto mCity Richard Blai rPhoto — Bert MacKinno nSports _ Ed Clar kAsst News Dan Mulle n Janet Matheso n

Ass't City Al Donal dPage Friday _ John KelseyManaging Norm BettsFeatures Mike BoltonCUP Don Hull

LETTER SLIBRARY BLUESEditor, The Ubyssey, Sir :

Count first to 10 they say—but hell, I'm at 110 and I` mstill steaming .

One morning this week Ientered the College Library,not mad at anyone .

Approaching the loan desk ,I asked if it would be possibl eto renew a book .

"There's a hold on it," theloan desk guard said bluntly .

I asked her for a card t oput a hold on it myself. In-stead of handing the card tome, she flung the thing to theother end of the adjacentcounter .

Constraining myself, Iwalked around the counterand filled out the requiredinformation . The guard had inthe meantime replaced thebook on a shelf behind her.

When she peered over mycompleted card, she suddenlyleveled a menacing glare atme. "You've left somethin gout . "

Apprehensively, I told herthe call number was on th ebook behind her on the shelf .

"That isn't my job," shesnarled. "Look it up in th ecard catalogue!"

There being no S.P .C .A. forhumans, would it not be somuch easier — for everyoneconcerned — to replace suc hpeople with nice, friendlymachines?

V.IannaconeArts II I

A HACK HAWK

Editor, The Ubyssey, Sir :It was most encouraging to

read Thursday's article onthe engineers' conscriptionof a hawk to their ranks .

It's about time they had asymbol for their virility.

As any nature-lover knows ,the sight of a hawk soarin gand diving through the skiesis majestic indeed, if no tstimulating .

And for a faculty that oncesent a written apology to aco-ed because one of theirmanly members could notproperly hold his six beers(let alone 40), it is fittingtheir hawk is only four inche sin length from beak to tail.

A nature lover.

By IAN CAMERONSingers get up on stage and

put on a show . What happensbefore they appear?

Fred Hill, the Abominabl eShowman (publicity), intro-duces us .

"Brownie, Sonny, IanCameron . "

"Pleased to meet you . "(As it happens, I know very

little about folk - music . II couldn't think of any ques-tions that hadn't been askeda thousand times before . )

"Brownie, how do you fee labout this sudden craze forprotest songs? "

(Bloody awful question, butit's a start . )

"We think it's fine . We likeany kind of music, from rockand roll to hymns . We . . . "

(Oh' no, now what? Brockproctor . What the hell . . .)

"The place is full . When d oyou start? "

"I don't know. I'll find outfor you . "

(Good for you, Fred, nowmaybe . . .)

"You fellows don't singprotest songs, do you?"

"Not the ones you hear onthe radio . The songs we sin gare protesting for any race,but they do it by telling ho wit feels to be blue. I'm sing-ing for everyone, tellin gpeople my troubles so theycan understand how it feelsto have these troubles . "

(Good answer to a bad ques-tion . Uh . . .)

"Where do you get yoursongs?"

(0, for Christ's sake nowwhat . Fred .)

"Start in 10 minutes.""Thanks, Fred . ""Well, we use songs we've

heard all our lives, and wewrite a lot . . . "

(Not another one. MurrayFarr, special events chair-man. It figures. Why don'tall these people just . . .)

"Crowd looks great . Placeis really full."

"That's great, Murray ."(Yeah, that great . No of-

fence, Murray, you're a greatguy, but would you just . . . )

"Say, can we get som ewater?"

"Sure, I'll . . . ""Don't bother, Ian. I'll get

it .""Thanks, Fred . Brownie,

what do you think of univer-sity audiences?"

'Here's the water . ""Okay, ready to go . You

introduce them, Fred, wil lyou?"

"Glad to . You introduceme, and I'll introduce them .Ian can take them to thedoor, and I'll bring them on ."

"Excuse me, please. Makeway. Open the door please ,excuse me, sorry .'

. . and here they are ,Brownie Magee and SonnyTerry! "

And there they were .

JUST MINK WHEN 50 YEARS HENCE WE ARRIVE OFF THE BU SPERHAPS FROM CH,NA , AND OBSERVE THE RADICAL CHANGE S

uA 1 l'J _c.7«tir.'sn

AND WATCH THE UNDERGRAOS GO BACK AND FORTH ON A .MOVABLE SIDEWALK IN FRONT OF THAT OLD RELIC_THE UHRAR Y

Hard-working types for this edi-tion were Ian Cameron, BrentCromie, Anne Bishop, Anne Balf ,Stuart Gray, Bill Graf, KrisEmnwtt,, Terry Brooks, SusanGransby, Sheila Dobson, JoanGodsell, Mike Kvenich, PeggyStein, Rosemary Hyman, JoanFogarty, and Anne Rate! .

Those pre-Brock concert blues

Page 5: PRESCRIPTION WORTH 480 PILLS — 20 a month for two THE ... · leaky Wesbrook pill policy By ANN RATEL I'm an 18-year-old single co-ed, and I've got a prescription to buy a two-year

Uncoiled for, tiro

crnnt^d end mostl y

unfcir, the followin g

'\' , o columns contai n

o whimsical review

of the post seve n

day, tit UBC

pag

IN EFFICIENCY: Ques-tion — What does you rsuper-keen student counciltalk about during the big,big fee protest meeting ?

Answer — Chicken fric-kasee and Joan Baez'image, that's what .

The ultra-secret strategypow-wow took a back seatwhile vice Peter Braunand freshy Kim Campbell

battled over a bird bar-becue before the BIGMARCH. Then music nutCliff Noakes mooted a folk-singer to lead the court-house tilt.

Council postponed the

folk singer bit because"folksingers have a beatnikimage." They didn 't sayw'hy ;they postponed thechicken feast .

• • •INDELIBLE : The head o f

Simon Fraser Academy'sgeography department hasnamed his nice little browncat Phyllis. Oooh, that' snasty.

• • •

INEXCUSABLE : S e 1 f -

appointed Dick Tracy ofthe campus patrol, Smilin'Cece Paul, has decreed thatno more than three per .sons shall enter his trafficoffice at one time. Hislittle henchman who stick sstickers and tells you t oshut up and pay your park -ing fines now tells you tobloody well stand in th erain until the three peopleahead of you are out of theoffice . For this we pay $5 .

• • •

THE NAME GAME : Pres-ident J. Barfoot Macdonaldtops the ink poll this week .He got his name in thepaper 32 times, an all-timerecord, because he is so niceand friendly with the stu-dents . AMS wheel BobCruise, who has startedhis campaign for presidentsix months early, got only16 . Others : Peter Braund,11 ; Byron Render, 6 ; KnuteB u t t e d a h l and Ralph(M-I-C) Daly, 3 each . Roge rMcAfee, Christ, and TheHawk got 1 mention apiece .

.INIMITABLE: Ralph(May-I-Correct) Daly wasSO worried that the uni-versity's image would suf-fer from the leak that peo-ple with less-than-60 percent averages were regi-stering that he wrote us athreatening (gasp) letter.Maybe he's the same per-son who phoned PEducatorBob Osborne and pleadedthat the Frosh drunk in th egym be hushed up. Dalyand Tom Alsbury ought toget together someday .

• • •INDIGESTION (contin-

ued): Ptomaine princessRuth Blair is cutting allthe corners she can — theorder has gone out that a1119-cent bag of chips incampus cafs must containno more than five ounces ofspuds. Waitresses admitthey used to dish out twiceto three times that, becausefive ounces doesn't even fillthe bottom of the littl epaper bag.

• • •

IN DARK CORNERS:Nobody has yet discovere dwhat the AMS auditorsdiscovered about the Col-lege Shop funds. Where'dit all go, fellers? . . . Forme rpresidential assistant GeoffDavries, who took a myster-ious " leave of absence "last year, has taken a per-manent post with with anew eastern university.He's the last of the old bud-dies of ex-president Nor -man MacKenzie to beeased out.

s • •INEVITABLE : Profs at

Simon Fraser thought i twould be down-to-brass-tacks, no-f r ills Gordo nShrum who would veto al ltheir requests for land-scaping, fancy office furni-ture, auditoriums andlounges. They figured goo dold McTaggart-Cow, or Mc -Phogg as the prexy's call-ed, would pull for all thesefrills . Now guess Who' spulling for frills, and guesswho's ordering cutbacks? .

• • •INCONCLUSIVE : Last

people to nail up their slop-py little booth at clubs daywere — yup — the Edu-cation ACTION boys .

Friday, October, 1, 1965

THE UBYSSEY

Page 5

Page 6: PRESCRIPTION WORTH 480 PILLS — 20 a month for two THE ... · leaky Wesbrook pill policy By ANN RATEL I'm an 18-year-old single co-ed, and I've got a prescription to buy a two-year

argumentYou're just clay, ma nStudents not workers ,they're raw materia lin multiversity factory

ill two

By DAVID YORK E

He stood on a car roof ,surrounded by students ,haranguing support forCORE's Mississippi Project .

Police arrived, bulledthrough the crowd, thre wthe student into the paddywagon, and Berkeley, Cali-fornia, erupted into thebattle for free speech .

That was one year ago ,Oct . 1, 1964.

Last week, President Mac-donald gave his analysis ofthe events at Berkeley .They were, he said, part of"a growing tendency towardirresponsibility and a grow-ing incidence of lawless-ness among students .

"I cite, for example, th eBerkeley students takingthe law into their ownhands . Many of them initi-ally r e b e l l e d without acause . For many It was revo-lution in search, of a cause . "

Macdonald's contentionsthat the Berkeley move-ments were pointless, law-less and irresponsible, ar ecompletely unfounded .

The questions of Berke -ley echoed uncomfortablyon every campus in NorthAmerica, UBC included. Itwas to avoid these question sthat the president sought todebunk Berkeley.

The central issue betweenthe Free Speech Movementand the Cal board of regentswas that of advocacy . Boardregulations prohibited advo-cacy of off-campus action sby persons or groups oncampus.

They further prohibitedsoliciting funds and recruit -

Dave York is a third-year forestry student.

He contributes to Scan, asocialist _monthly review,and is secretary of UBC'sparliamentary council,

A visit to Berkele ycampus early Septemberprompted this article.

ing members . This greatlyhampered SNCC, CORE, andother civil rights' groups, a swell as effectively prevent-ing student participating inthe US presidential election.

FSM held- that only thecourts, not the administra-tion, could regulate contentof speech .

Bettina Aptheker, execu-tive member of FSM, put itsuccinctly : "At no time havewe asked for more than ourconstitutional rights underthe first and fourteenthamendments. We will neveraccept less . "

As students fought forfull advocacy, the wholequestion of Universitystructure and c o n t r o lemerged . FSM challengedBerkeley president Clark

Kerr's multiversity concep tof a "knowledge factory" .

Mario Savio, philosophymajor and leading FSMspokesman, said, "He [Kerr]looks at a University thi sway: It's a factory and ithas a manager—that's Kerr—and a board of director s—that's the Board of Re-gents—and employees—th efaculty and Teaching Assis-tants—and raw materials—that's us ."

David Wellman, a T .A . ,says, "We aren't even th elaborer in the factory—that's the faculty. We arethe product, and as suchwe have no voice in ourdestiny."

Countering the conceptof the multiversity, FS Msaid, "The only defensibleidea of •a University is anintellectual community, aplace where people think to-gether about important mat-ters. It is a centre of inde-pendent thought and critic-ism where everything maybe discussed. A non-contro-versial university is a con-tradition M terms . "

Presenting their case tothe administration, FS Msaw "the dean and all thelittle deans, the chancellorand all the little chancel-lors," and an endless seriesof Faculty Student ConductCommittees, Ormimittees ofCampus Political Activitie sand more .

But when the administra-tion in all its forms abso-lutely refused to discuss is-sues, FSM adopted civilrights' tactics . They felt theissues were too, important t oget killed by administration.

FSM rallies and sit-inswere characterized by theirorder and discipline .

Joan Baez, who sang at allmajor FSM action, said theywere the "nicest, best look-ing, and most decent ralliesI've ever attended."

On Dec . 2, over a thousandstudents sat in at SproulHall, the Cal Administrationbuilding, demanding ' chargesagainst student leaders bedropped, and speech rightsbe restored . Inside, they heldup lectures given by T .A .s, ,study and sleeping areas ,etc .That night, 600 police with

clubs, guns and tear gas in-fested the building . The , stu-dents, who did not resist,were kicked, dropped anddragged down stairs—800 .were arrested .

The entire campus rushedto the support of the 800

. Profs raised bail, organ -ized defence committees andtacked notices on their doors

saying, "I will not teach with600 police on my campus ."The faculty overwhelminglypassed a resolution com-pletely supporting FSM de-mands .

The students struck toprotest the arrests and the

University ground to a halt .Moral and material suppor tflooded in from all sectionsof the outside community.

This support could nothave been produced by stu-dent riots. Clearly, all vio-

lence was a result of policebrutality, not the non-vio-ent student tactics . FSM tac-tics were always as valid a stheir demands .

Was anything construc-tive accomplished ?

Aptheker writes : "Withthe appointment of a newchancellor, we have won thepolitical fight . There will benew regulations which wil lmaximize political freedom.

"The alliance betweenfaculty and the students re-present new possibilities formoving in the direction of atransformation of the Uni-versity into a truly freecommunity of scholars an dstudents . "

FSIA won the immediateMight for free speech .

The gains made by the Ber-keley students have starte dcampus reform movements .

There are obvious paral-lels between structure andcontrol at Cal and UBC .Strong elements of the multi-versity factory are present .Like Cal, UBC is governedby outside business inter -ests, students and facultyplay insignificant roles set-ting policy and goals . LikeCal, we have an administra-tion that refuses to discussstudent demands—in ourems on fees

Cal demanded fttll rights tospeech ; we demand univer-sal accessibility to highe reducation.

The lesson of Berkeley isthat mass student action, re-sponsible but determined ,can win concessions, andstudents can gain some sayin running the university .

Dr. Macdonald's defini-tion of responsible studentaction is that it should no taccomplish anything .

In the next months wewill show Dr. Macdonaldexactly how well we havelearned the lesson of Ber-keley .

insideargument ' pf 2

books pf 7

cinema r- pf 2

dissent pf 6

drama,__ .

_ pf 6

jazz

--- -see,— pf 3

music se pf 4

opinion '_ .; pf 3

opinion __

pf 7

overseas

pf 5

whimsy pf 3

—gosh, Mac G

cinemaKnackLacksSnap

By WARD FLETCHE RThe Knack — "How long

do we have? "Richard Hester's The

Knack proved to be dis-appointing, in fact, very dis-appointing .

I was prepared for some-thing quite forceful afterthe sounds of ceremony die daway. Instead I was expose dto a mixture of CharlieChap l $..n , clever tricks ,theatre of the absurd, rac ydialogue — these things pro-vided Mr. Hester means t otry and convince audience she can do something seriousafter A Hard Day's Night .

The Knack has a tradi-tional plot . Tolin, a BritishMod, has the knack of win-ning (making it) with girls .Colin, a teacher, wants th eknack. Enter Rita Tushing-ham — a girl who comes t oLondon for the first time andis looking for a room . With ayoung man who wishes t opaint everything white, Mis sTushingham and Colin pusha bed across London thenproceed through other adven-tures .

The film ends with Colinwinning over the star of ATaste of Honey. They walkinto the distance and so end sThe Knack.

Mr. Hester's cleverness inhandling the film is what Iobject to. For when this istaken away, little remains.Voices commenting on theactions of the young Britishgeneration bring out the gul fbetween past and present-day England. However, usin gdialogue which points ou tthe lack of communicationswithin the young "in" crow ddoes not work. All the direc-tor manages to create smacksof t h e statements artistsmake when someone from amagazine interviews them inNew York or London .

Charlie Chaplin comedydid nothing for t h e film .Tushingham's acting had acertain sincerity but certain-ly was not enough to com-pensate for the script . I wasexcited by the scenes in thepark where the film has alyricism. Here photographydid not try to be clever butmerely showed the innocenceof all the actors .

I felt sad that RichardHester did not offer more .

pfOCT. 1, 1965

ON THE COVER: Students de-monstrate at mass rally on

Berkeley campus last October,protesting restrictions on thei r

freedom of speech.

Editor: John Kelsey

Current affairs

Steve Brow n

Science, the arts

Al Franci s

Executive

Rochelle Morini s

DrawingsArnold Saba, Brett Smail l

Frederic Wood Thea-tre's Cocktail Party is aprofessional party, andstudent theatre takes an-other run down thefeatherbedded slope .

For two years now ,UBC's theatre depart-ment has been eliminat-ing student productions .This time, two studentshave roles — one second-ary, one minor, none lead .

Of the other seven act-ors, six are' professionalmembers of actor's equ-ity, one is a UBC pro-fessor .

We'd like to know howan actor is supposed t olearn to act if he neverfaces an audience fro man on-stage lead role.

We'd like to know howa director is supposed tobe one if he spends hisstudent theatre'tiine mov-ing sets around back-stage .

The department say sstudents learn by watch-ing professionals ; "Youcan't teach anyone toswim by throwing himinto deep water ."

You can't swim in awading pool either.

At the same time, we' dlike to know why theFreddy doesn't produceany new plays, or anystudent written plays .

N e w theatre at alllevels will never be ex-plored anywhere but atUBC, and UBC's theatr edepartment is not fulfill-ing its function.

That's to provide ,acreative outlet for stn.dent actors, directors and,writers . Everything does-n't have to be a profes-sional calibre, $2 .50 a seatproduction .

And while we're' ask-ing questions, we'd liketo know what unem-ployed actors in this teem,w o u l d do without the'Freddy Wood .

Page 6

THE UBYSSEY

Friday, October 1, 1965

Page 7: PRESCRIPTION WORTH 480 PILLS — 20 a month for two THE ... · leaky Wesbrook pill policy By ANN RATEL I'm an 18-year-old single co-ed, and I've got a prescription to buy a two-year

Dig Jazz ?Wild Africans Blow►n Monterey Show

3

By ANGUS RICKE R

The Monterey Jazz Festi-val was to be a plentifulweekend of wine, weirds,wit — and mostly wailingjazz .

The eighth installment o fthe MJF, Sept. 17-20, cent-ered on a salute to the jazztrumpet .

As an artistic productionthe MJF, with monstercrowds in the 7,000 seatCounty Fairgrounds Amphi-theatre, was an overwhelm-ing success .

The audience was a repre-sentative slice of the jazzpublic : musician, critic, hip-ster, beat, intellectual ,phoney and student. Anddespite the fact that beerand other goodies were read-ily available, the crowd re-mained attentive .

• . •A carnival atmospher e

permeated the fairgroundswhere an art show ran con-currently . Booths on the out-side of the amphitheatreshell were manned by SNC Cagitators, record and posterhucksters and (this is Cali-fornia) a palm reader .

The MJF is a uniquemedium for any number ofjazz hapepnings . New talentis uncovered; old is redis-covered; festival-producedhybrid groups flourish andwither — all within a piano-poly of uncertainty causedby musicians reacting to eachother and to 6,000 bodiesacross the lights .

This unpredictablity of re-sult produced an expectanttension, created the essentialset for a festival and con-fronted performer with audi-ence.

Foremost of the newgroups at Monterey was theJohn Handy Quintet . TwoVancouver musicians, bass-ist Don Thompson and drum -mer Terry Clarke form alto-saxist Handy's rhythm sec-tion. Michael White's violi nand guitarist Gerry Hahncomplete the front line .

Scheduled next to last i na late-starting program, th eHandy group lost no timerousing the Saturday after-noon audience with a strong-ly rhythmic If We OnlyKnew. Thompson's solo bas swork proved most able.

• . •The second and conclu-

ding selection is probablyHandy's most effective com-position. The Spanish Ladyis a long, stirring piecewhere Handy piles up cli-max in a virtuoso display ofblowing .

The audience and criticswere unanimous . Syndicatedliazz columnist Ralph Glea-son flatly declared "the Han-dy quintet produced one ofthe most musically satisfy-ing performances of the fest-ival's recent years . "

Audience applause drown-ed out even Diz in a fiveminute standing ovation .

Interest in recording the

Handy group has been shownby Columbia Records and itappears the quintet, now ap-pearing at the Both/AndClub in San Francisco, is wel lon its way .

If any group was to outdothe Handy five, it could onlyhave been that magnificentorchestral contraption, theDuke Ellington band .

Arriving fresh from histriumphant Grace Cathedra lconcert, the Duke had hi sfifteen cylinder Machine rev-ving high on a program ofnew Ellington compositions .

But it remained for one ofthe band veterans to breakthings up. Alto-saxist John-ny Hodges, some 34 years anEllingtonian, elucidated justone florid, glissando-lade nphrase and the sell-out Sat-urday night crowd blew it scollective cool .

• . •And with Johnny Hodges ,

it couldn't happen to a moreblase guy. Watching 7,000people going nuts at Mon-terey or a knifing in frontof the bandstand in an ob-scure dance hall, Hodges re-mains the detached, impass-ive observer.

After the Hodges perform-ance the rest of the bandslipped quietly into over-drive. Drummer Louis Bell -son laid down a beat thatcould have driven a train;F.1lington's piano fed thesoloists solid accompanyingchords and his new vocal dis-covery, Esther Merrill cam eon to display a powerful gos-pel voice .

Even if prize committeeshave trouble understandingDuke's music, jazz fans sel-dom do and his Montereyperformance proved to bean outstanding demonstra-tion why .

The third highlight of th efestival occurred Sundayevening when Cal Tjader'sAfro-Cuban quintet was fur-ther augmented by the DizzyGillespie horn and the congadrumming of Big Black .

The audience immediatelycalled for and got Tjader' srecent hit Soul Sauce . The

group hit a Latin groove tha tdeveloped into a conga duelbetween Big Black andTjader's man, Armando Per-aza. Peraza's finesse justwiped out Big Black .

• . •Proceedings then turned

into a real happening whena stranger walked on stageunannounced, apparently un-

Ralph Daly is UBC Direc-tor of Information Services .

He's been writing may-I -correct letters to The Ubysse yfor two years now.

Knowing Ralph, RalphDaly Corrects will be a re-gular Page Friday feature.

•Editor, The Ubyssey, Sir :

Your report on Page „9 o fPage Friday of September24 that "the word went ou tduring . registration week :accept anybody with cas hand a 55 percent average" isentirely untrue, and potenti-ally very damaging to theUniversity of British Colum-bia .

The Ubyssey staff ought t obe aware that admissionstandards are established by

invited, and began dancing .He performed until Perazaput down his conga and withsome wild spins and pir-ouettes wiped him out too .

If nothing else, this en-counter proved that the Afri-can drummer is still one ofthe most powerful elementsin jazz .

• • •There were other high -

lights too numerous to men-tion .Just a few: the marvel-lously precise chops of thefashion plate of New Yorkcity, trumpeter Clark Terry;his outlandish wordles svocal duet with singer Jo nHendricks on Terry's com-position Mumbles; the per-fect ear and burning bea tof Buddy Rich backing th eHarry James band; and fin-ally, the three young Negrocats who sat in front of meand were so hip that theyeven put the musicians on.You just never see that —they had to be out of sight.

But there were disappoint-ments as well : longer work sby festival musical directorGil Fuller failed to sustaininterest ; Louis Armstrongwas content with a sub-stan-dard night club routine; ajazz liturgy by Mary LouWilliams proved stilted anduneven.

But the quizzical CharlesMingus proved to be the big-gest disappointment of all.Bassist Mingus, the smashhit of last year's festival,again premiered origina lmusic at Monterey.

• . •Long on social protest ,

Mingus played two shortnumbers titled They Tres-passed the Sacred Lands ofthe Sioux and Once Upon aTime There Was a Holdin gCompany Called America .

Although tired by the lon gafternoon session the audi-ence received them enthusi-astically .

Then •crytically the bandgot up and serpentined offthe stage blowing a tragi-comic version of The Saints .

What happened? Wh oknows? There was moremusic scheduled but onenever knows about Mingus .

For that matter, one neve rknows about Montere yeither.

the University Senate, andcannot be altered in any wayby the Registrar or his staff.

The standards used thi syear were precisely thoseused in 1964-65 : for admis-sion, a student must have anaverage of 60% in Grade 12 .

Each year a few studentswith otherwise good highschool records, but with jus tbelow 60% average, hav ebeen admitted on the basi sof individual merit. But n oone is allowed to registe runder any circumstanceswith an average as low as55% .

I trust that in the interestof the university's reputationyou will make a clear andearly correction of yourunjustified slur on the in-tegrity of admission policy.

Ralph Daly .

opinionMcGeorgeis a liar(politicallyspeaking )says Gabor

By GABOR MATEThere are two opposing

groups of people who, judg-ing from their views on theVietnamese question, must beclassified either as liars or asfools.

The first group are thosewho say the Americansshould stay in Vietnam t opreserve Vietnamese free-dom. The second, those wh ocondemn American policybecause it is immoral .

In the first group com esuch persons as presidential

advisor McGeorge Bundy ,who was on television thisweek, patting his nation onthe back for her valiant de-fense of South Vietnameseliberty .

Since it is difficult to ima-gine a man of his positio nand intellect actually be-lieving nonsense such as h eused to justify America nactions, one must concludethat Bundy, in the realm o fpolitics, is a liar . Non-existent things cannot bepreserved, and South Vietna-mese liberty is as non-existent as academic freedomin a grade one spelling class .

Between French colonia lrule, Japanese occupation ,French re-occupation, andthe constant pressure of war-fare when did the Vietna-mese havg opportunity t odevelop the institutions ofdemocracy?

After the French left in1954 two rival dictatorship sruled the country: Ho Ch iMinh's Communist regime i nthe North, and Diem's re-actionary government in th eSouth . The major differenc ewas that while the Commu-nists carried out land-reformfor the benefit of the masses,Diem was content with themaintenance of the smal lbut enormously wealth ylandowning class.

In no sense, however ,could either government be

To PF 8See: MORE McGEORG E

whimsyRalph Aal 1 &'rrecLJ

Friday, October, 1, 1965

THE

UBYSSEY

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Frederic Wood TheatreDept. of Theatre

Revival of Hit Musical Revue

Sonny Terry and Brownie McGhee in Brock—dave henderson photo

IN THE ROUGHmusic

Dylan, McGhee and Ringo -all folk rock or folk folkand college folk dig it all

By TAJA BHAVA NWell, folk music and the

college crowd . . .T h e obvious question i s

whether one can say the so-called university type (eachof UBC's 17,000-odd studentscannot be classified in groupsbut are individuals in taste )likes folk music, and in whatform .

• • .Vancouver's noted actor

and publicist, Fred Hill, mad eme aware, by the over-useof Aristotle's ethics of stagepresentation, that every per-son in the audience — be h euniversity student, a d u l tviewer, male, female, misfi tor graduate — is in a coffee-house to be entertained an dto be a good entertainer onemust cater to all the individ-ual tastes and direct his ma-terial to fit .

Let's generalize a little-and,say folk music is "in" andwill always be in some formor other.

"Folk music, " says BrownieMcGhee, "will always bewith us and in that sense willwill never go out ."

in theory, he suggestedthat everything written isfolk music but that the mean-ing of a piece makes it whatis now classed as true folk .

He feels that folk has suf-fered recently from the re-search types who are tryingto get new material and suc-ceed in finding nothing butthe same old songs .

Brownie and his partnerSonny Terry write most oftheir own material and hav edone so for a number o fyears.

Brownie thinks folk wil lcontinue because of the ne wwriters and fresh material .I asked if this meant suchpeople as Bob Dylan. He,with his broad smile, said adefinite yes .

• • .

It's a new age in folk androck-and-roll. A few yearsago folk made a short spreeon the hit charts, then no-thing—only the beat genera-tion dug folk (and jazz) .

The trend started againwith such perennial folkgroups as t h e Limeliters ,Chad Mitchell Trio, Kingsto nTrio and the Brothers Four .Also around were Gale Gar-nett and Glen Yarbourghsinging folk lyrics.

The British reformation of

rock-and-roll brought t h eelectric 12-string guitar andsuch semi-folk artists asChad and Jeremy, Peter an dGordon and a large numberof female singers — the bestknown is Marianne Faithful .

On the blues-folk side ofthe reformation were th eAnimals (House of the Risin gSun, a five minute versionwith organ progressions), the(gasp) Rolling Stones withgreat flip sides such as Pla ywith Fire and Good TimesBad Times, and (gasp again)the Beatles with their owncompositions of I'll Followthe Sun, and, from their lastmovie, Hey, You've Got t oHide Your Love Away .

• . •The faithful chart-watcher s

have seen the rise of theTurtles, Byrds, Sonny andCher, Glen Campbell, P: F .Sloan, Randy Sparks, andBarry McQuire . These peopleare a new breed of pop sing-ers doing folk material witha basic blues or folk-bluesbeat.

It really was started byBob Dylan and his Subter-ranean Homesick B l u e ssingle .

Dylan has been writingfolk for years now and it isonly lately that Dylan andhis contemporaries have bee nnoticed . Songs now on th echarts, besides Dylan tunes,are Buffy St . Marie's Uni-versal Soldier and a numberof creations by P . F . Sloanwhich include Eve of Des-truction, Sins of the Family ,and Dawn of Correction . Dy-

To PF 5See: MORE FOLK

Student Performance — Wed., Oct. 6, 8:30 p.m.ALL TICKETS $1 .00

Your only chance to see this widely acclaimed per-formance starring Roma Hearn, D . M . Hughes, JamesJohnston and others .

BOX OFFICE ROOM 207, FREDERIC WOOD THEATR E

some hale i

some don't

"COMEDY HAS A NEW FREEDOM !It swells with joy, zest, delight in th eworld! A great film! Moviegoers can re-joise now! "

— Newsweek magazine

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Page 8

THE UBYSSEY

Friday, October 1, 1965

Page 9: PRESCRIPTION WORTH 480 PILLS — 20 a month for two THE ... · leaky Wesbrook pill policy By ANN RATEL I'm an 18-year-old single co-ed, and I've got a prescription to buy a two-year

More fol kFrom PF 4

Ian songs to watch for areBaby Blue, Gates of Eden ,and Mr. Jones.

A song by Joan Baez calledThere But For Fortune, i scurrently tops in England .

It is' a straight folk songreleased on a single and is

a big success .

Brownie McGhee summedup this new craze : "Bob Dy-lan is writing for 50 millio n

kids and he knows what they

want . The teenagers have

found in Dylan and his con-

tempories what they them -

selves think and feel ." Butthe writers are o n e ste p

ahead: "They know how t o

say it aloud."

About the n e w music ,

Brownie said, "I dig ill" The

folk crowd "digs it", like-

wise the university f o l k

likes it, the teens obviouslylike it, the teens obviously

tolerate it but even like some

of it — but does Joe Student

like it?

Judging by the profusio n

of dances on campus, t h e

number of frat rats that likes

rock-and-roll and folk music ,

the people on campus who

like the commercial sound o f

folk trios, the average uni-versity student likes it o rhas nothing really against it .

Now, what do campus folkfans like?

According to the Billboardpoll, there were no sharpchanges in undergraduatefolk music tastes last year .

The big vocal group o nAmerican campuses are theLettermen, Kingston Trio,Peter, Paul and Mary, Bro-thers Four, N e w ChristyMinstrels, a n d the Fou rPreps . Canadians generallyfollow.

In the favorite folk songcategory, Peter, Paul andMary head the list and theChad Mitchell Trio, Smoth-ers Brothers, Limeliters, an dSerendipity Singers follow-ing .

Joan Baez is the favoritefemale vocalist, beatin gOdetta, Miriam Makeba ,Judy Collins and BarbaraStreisand.

In the male folk vocalistcategory, Harry Belafont etakes first honors, secondedby Bob Dylan, with PeteSeeger next .

The Billboard poll clearly

shows that commercial andtrue folk are equally popu-lar on college campuses i nthe United States .Folk groups and trios will

always be popular on cam =pus, since they cater to allthose seeking entertainmen t— be it humor, song, folkmusic or popular music .

overseasMaoris White ?Verwoerdsaysthey sure are

By SUSAN ADAMS

Apartheid enters the fieldof sport, but for South Africait is no game .

South Africa's rugby tea mhas been touring New Zea-land. A return visit by theAll-Blacks is being plannedfor 1967. A hot question no warises — will South Africaa 11 o w both New ZealandWhites and New Zealan dMaories to kick on herfields ?

Usually decisions on sportare made by the South Afri-can national sporting bodies.This time however, prime-

ministers and the press havebecome involved .

Dr . Verwoerd, prime minis -ter of South Africa, has men-tioned that guests of SouthAfrica should respect SouthAfrican customs. Mr. Hol-yoake, prime minister o fNew Zealand, has said adominion of one people Can -n o t be represented by ateam chosen on racial lines .

A newspaper a r t i c l escreams: "If the races mix insports, the way is open t oother forms of social mix-ing . "

Another newspaper articlescreams: "No matter h o wmany people would like towelcome a New Zealandteam here, it cannot happenat the expense of a greatprinciple .

It will be interesting to seeh o w the problem will b esolved.

It has been whisperedthat South Africa might con-sider conferring "honorarywhite membership" on visit-ing Maori sportsmen .

This would indeed be mem-bership cheaply bought.

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THE

UBYSSEY

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By STEPHEN BROW N

Glad to see Vancouver's theatre goersare at last developing minds of theirown .

Freddy Wood Theatre Company's fineversion of Eliot's The Cocktail Party i spacking in near-sellout audiences thi sweek, despite scathing reviews from mostquarters .

The sets and lighting by Aristede sGazetas are superb and carry symbolicreinforcements—the dominant pale blu eof the drawing room set matching th ecool superficiality of the cocktail conver-sation; the white lighting on the whitesuit of Celia, a modern saint whose"honest mind brings her suffering" .

The play opened badly, with everyoneextravagently lilting in part repartee .

Antique dealer Rosemary Malkin ha sreturned to the stage to play with assur -

ante the difficult role of an unlovablewife .

Stanley Weese, one of just two stu-dent players in the presentation, givesmarvelous—and badly-needed—comic re-lief as an assinine gourmet .

Derek Ralston gets over the compellingpersonality of the psychiatrist extremelywell . Marg Malough is a mighty jumpyCelia, making fantastic leaps from thesofa to the far side of the stage betwee nsentences—but John Brockington's direc-tion was partly to blame here .

Eliot demands extreme listening con-centration . The cardinal sin of most ofthe cast is lapses into inaudibility durin gthe contemplative passages .

Is it asking Equity actors too much tobe able to project past the sixth row ofan intimate playhouse ?

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By M. S. JOHNSON

It was with varying in-terest that I perused anarticle by Gabor Mate inPage Friday.

He seems to be carryingon in. the tradition of lastyear's Wulfing' Von Schlei-nitz, also an atheist . Manytimes I was tempted to writ eto the latter and correct hismultitude of errors, whichto me stuck out like sorethumbs.

First of all, I agree withthe article somewhat, notnecessarily on how it is said ,

\as long as it applies only tothe Catholic Church . Thereare millions and millions ofpeope who are Christians,but not Catholics, who be-long to the more liberal an dfundamentalist Churches.

To get on the point, thecase of Onan cited by GaborMate is the Catholi cChurch's interpretation o fthe story, and not what theBible actually says . I wouldlike to quote from "Th eNew Morality" by H . W .Armstrong .

"Is planned parenthoodwrong?"The Roman Catholic

Church has always respond-ed: `Yes! '

"But if the Bible . . . beyour true authority, it saysno such thing !

"Sometimes the case ofOnan is cited in an effortto sustain the false dogmaagainst intelligent planne dparenthood . But that inci-dent upholds no such teach-ing .

`Judah, father of the Jews ,had three sons. Er, Judah' seldest son, died, leaving achildless widow. By Israelilaw, it then became thelegal duty for Judah's second,Onan, to marry the widowedTamar, for the very purposeof begetting a son to bearthe deceased brother's name.The legal statute involvedhere is stated in Deuteron-omy 25 (RSV trans .) : "If

brothers dwell together, andone of them dies and has noson, the wife of the deadshall not be married outsidethe family to a stranger ; herhusband's (unmarried) broth-er shall go in to her, and takeher as his wife, and performthe duty of a husband'sbrother to her . And the firstson whom she bears shallsucceed to the name of hi sbrother who is dead" (Deut.25 :5-6) .

Now continue the story ofOnan :

"But Onan knew that theoffspring would not be his ;so when he went in to hisbrother's wife he spilled thesemen on the ground, lesthe should give offpring tohis brother ." (Gen. 38:9-10 ,RSV . )

So God destroyed Onan .Why? Not for plannedparenthood—not for intelli-gent spacing of the arrivalof children. Onan's purposein preventing conceptionwas nothing of the kind. Heprevented conception be-cause he knew that the sonborn would not belong tohim—he did it "lest heshould give offspring to hisbrother ."

Onan's sin was not plannedparenthood. There is nobiblical law forbiddingplanned parenthood. His sinwas his refusal to obey thelaw which required him tobeget a son to bear hi sbrother's name . His disobedi-ence to that law was his sin .

. . . Planned parenthoodviolates no law of God! Itis a definite contribution tothis supreme purpose ofcharacter building . . .

Any teaching or legislat-ing which violates this divin epurpose of God—which in -stills in wives the dread andfear of pregnancy—is a reli-gious heresy, and/or a vio-lation of the higher laws ofalmighty God .

So you see, Atheist No .Two, there is a definite divi-sion between Catholics andthose who hold the Bible a stheir authority. Their beliefsdo vary somewhat, as I'msure you are now aware .

I truthfully hope you areenlightened

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THE

UBYSSEY

Friday, October 1, 1965

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booksAgent 007 gunnedby English profs

a

By AL DONALD

Cluttered up with Joyce ,Eliot, and Woolf, the Englishdepartment ignores one ofthe greatest of contemporarywriters — Ian Fleming.

W h i c h is a pity since Flem-ing's novels have the quali-fications for u n i v e r s i t ystudy.

Apparently, a book needsa psychological problem,preferably dealt with on th eexistentialist level, to get onan English reading list .

And the James Bondbooks have it . Bond is com-parable to Colin Wilson' sOutsider, Albert Camus 'Etranger, and some of Hem-ingway's heroes.

Dig beneath the exotic vil-lains and women, the licenceto kill, the ingenious spyequipment, and you find apicture of a man lost in theworld, a man whose greatescape from responsibilityis living close to danger ,revelling in sophistocation.

James Bond has little con-tact with the real world, theworld that puts moral re-sponsibility above pleasure .Instead, he exists in avacuum with no immediategroup of friends to help pu thim into perspective in thereader's mind .

His acquaintances have

BOND

little to say about him, andwhat they do say is inconclu -sive and superficial .

In Casino Royale, gir lsleuth and future bed-mateof Bond, Vesper !Lynd says,"He is very good looking .He reminds me of HoagyCarmichael, but there issomething cold and ruthlessin his . . . "

Hemingway painted theman to which Bond general-ly conforms in his shortstory "Soldier's Home" . Ayoung man, Krebs, returnshome to the U .S . after Worl dWar I.

He no longer is interestedin knowing people, but onlyin escaping the monotony ofpeaceful life. He has been

DONALDclose to death, and now he isbored .

"He did not want to comehome. Still, he had to com ehome. He sat on the frontporch. "

Bond first fights out thisproblem in Casino Royale .

Of course, Bond does notsit on the front porch . Hewould rather lose himself inadventure, but the existent-ial sickness is the same : thesame tendency to reject lif ewith its complicated ethicsand designate some thingsas good and others as bad.After a period of mental tur-

Negroes is to leave school a ssoon as possible and get asteady job. Then they ca nbuy a new car and clothes oncredit, and look every bit as"good" as the white man.

This attitude, understand-able though it may be, doescreate second-class citizensin our social structure.

It creates a division in theNegro communities, thosewho have work and thosewho have not . The have-notsformed the nucleus of theL.A. riots .

Working on the front sideof the button are manyNegroes throughout the U.S .who are trying to increasethe level of education.

Remedial training schoolsare being set up in manyNegro communities, to helpthe children after schoolhours and to provide themwith the background their

moil, he decides SMERSH,the Russian Secret Service ,is bad and the British espion-age operation is good .

Only after this decisioncan he continue to exist a she did before. To accept thereal world would mean fac-ing. what he does not havethe ability to face — com-plexity .

This then is Bond. Thetrue Outsider in the sense in

LYND

which Colin Wilson portraysthe Outsider. Cut off fromsociety by his own choice andlooking with disinterest at it,he seeks escape from him-self and moral responsibilityin the green beize of the cardtable, the roar of the battle -ship grey Bentley, the smel lof cordite and the caress ofblonde or brunette.

Since English instructorsare notorious for their searc hfor hidden meanings, it issurprising that none Of themhave noticed Flemings.

-Or perhaps they have, and

the popularity of the Flem-ing books keeps them offreading lists.

English professors have anaversion to any writer wh ohas sold more than a fewthousand copies in the pre-vious year .

Of course the books arepopular ostensibly becausethey are thrillers . JamesBond is not the classic exist-entialist ; unlike the protago-nists of Sartre and Camus,Bond is an extremely capableand efficient individual .

Fleming's real meaningcomes through only to thosewho look for it—we intellec-tuals — and once it doesBond's motivations becomeclear .

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Alma Mater SocietyOFFICIAL NOTICES

Games Room Supervisor— One afternoon and evening per week, plus every

fifth Saturday afternoon .— Honorarium : $225 per school year .— Duties: general supervision and incidental main-tenance in the Games Room .Applicants reply to Secretary, Brock ManagementCommittee, Box 5, Brock Hall, stating name, phonenumber and time available . Applications close Friday,October 1 .

Help Wanted4 members needed for the Accident Benefit FundCommittee — medical students or nurses preferred,but representative sample of UBC students needed .Apply iwriting to the Secretary, AMS, Mailbox 54

, Hall.

Grad ClassMembership : all students in the winter session wh oare registered in the final year of a course leadingto a Bachelor's or the M .D. degree shall be membersof the 'Grad Class .— the constitution requires election of executivewithin one month of the start of classes .— positions open are: President, Vice-President, Trea -surer, Secreta

Officer .

ry, Social Convenor, Public Relations

— a meeting o fthe Grad class (all graduating stu-dents for the first time on WEDNESDAY, OCTOBERS, at 12:30 in the AUDITORIUM.- -nominations may be sent to the Secretary, AMS ,postbox 54 .

Winter Sports Centre ManagementCommittee

— one year term .— meetings to discuss all policy with respect to theWinter Sports Centre including operating, schedul-ing, and financing.— applicant should be familiar with the "layout" ofthe arena .

- ,— applications in writing to the Secretary, Box 54 ,Brock Hall, no later than October 1st .

World University Service CommitteeThe I .P:A. (Share) Committee will hold importantmeeting Friday, October 1 in Brock Extension 25 7at 12:30. Anyone interested in publicity or programm ework is welcome to attend .

Homecoming Decorations ChairmanNeeded to supervise the set up of Homecoming Danc edecorations in the Armouries and Field House ; maleor female. Submit applications to Brock Hall, mail -box 81 .

College Shop Committee

-Applications now being accepted for positions on theCollege Shp Committee . No previous experience isrequired but applicants should have an interest i nmarketing and retail policy making . Apply in writing,

Student CourtApplications are open for: 1 judge of Student Court

1 clerk of CourtApplications should be sent to the Secretary, A .M .S .Box 54, and should be sent before October 1st .

By EVE COUPLANDI have never worn a civil

rights button .And I don't think I ever

will .There isn't room for th e

problem , on a button, andthere certainly isn't room forthe solution.

Last summer I spent sometime in Los Angeles and sev-eral months in San Fran-cisco.

I learned there are twovery valid sides to the pre-judice lapel button .

The pin side has some un-deniable facets. The averageNegro in the U.S. is ignor-ant and out fora fast buck .

For years the Negro coul dnot get a job, many stillcan't. Naturally he prefersthe security of employmentto the unprofitable processof education .

The aim of most young

parents don't have. Dona-tions provide libraries andequipment, the teachers arevoluntary .

These Negroes are prepar-ing their children to holdjobs other than janitors andwaitresses. . They are pro-moting as interest in edu-cation. They feel that whenthe Negro .standard of edu-cation is . lifted, he will beable to ' combat prejudicefrom a far stronger position .

Economic want causes ig-norance, which causes un-employment .

The vicious circle can b ebroken when the Negro isconvinced that not only ishe good enough to hold a"white man's job," but he isalso bright enough.

And that belief has tocome from within the Negrosub-culture's and no num-ber of ?student demonstra-tions eat :teach it.

Friday, October, 1, 1965

THE

UBYSSEY

Page 11

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termed free or democratic .There have never been

free elections in either Northor South. Indeed, how coul dresponsible governmentevolve in a country wher emost of the people are illiter-ate ?

Clearly, by supporting ananti-Communist military dic-tatorship in Saigon, the U .S .is only trying to preserveits own prestige and influ-ence. Supporters of Ameri-can policy pretend otherwise .

It is equally futile, how-ever, to criticize the Ameri-cans on the grounds thattheir intervention is im-moral and is against the in-terest of the Vietnamesepeople . Those who condemnthe "unjust war" in Vietna mare merely clouding the is-sue with puerile emotional-ism .

The last considerations i nanybody's mind, from Pe-king to Hanoi to Washing-ton, are morality or the in-terests of the Vietnamesemasses. Each power is mo-tivated pure 1 y by self-interest—the only considera-tion in international powerpolitics.

Just as Russia could notallow the Hungarian Revo-lution to succeed in 1956, sonow the U.S. cannot allo wthe Viet Cong—and thu sHanoi—to be victorious. Awithdrawal from Vietnamwould be .disastrous forAmerican prestige in Asiaand Africa, and, indeed, inEurope and Latin Americaas well.

It is pointless, therefore ,to say the Americans shoul dget out of Vietnam becausethey have no right to bethere. Despite the Americangovernment's justification ofits policy with falsities an dhalf-truths, and despite thefact that for the Vietnames epeasant life under a stablecommunist regime would bepreferable to existing condi-tions, the only basis onwhich the U .S. leaders canact is the self-interest oftheir own country.

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Friday, October, 1, 1965

THE

UBYSSEY

Page 1 3

Big bad Board speaks u pBy IAN CAMERON

"The UBC Board of Gov-ernors are a bunch of mendoing a helluva hard job."

"The UBC Board of Gover-nors are a bunch of rat-finkswho are drinking the studentsblood . "

The first of these statement scame from Justice NathanNemetz, the chairman of th eBoard of Governors .

The second is from an un-identified UBC student, andwas overheard at the recentfee rally .

The two statements showconsiderable discrepancy . Ob-viously, someone is wrong .The question is, who .

To most on campus the UB CBoard of Governors is a my-sterious, almost mythical bod yof 10 men and one womanwho decide the policy of th euniversity.

Some of them are elected ,some appointed . Some arebusinessmen, some profes-

ARTHUR FOUKS. . . Board interested

sional. Some of them areeasily reached, and eager totalk. Others are never to b efound and say nothing whenyou do get hold of them .

But they all have one thingin common.

They are all successful, andthey all agree that the Boarddoes a great deal of work .

Their names are Dr . PhyllisRoss, UBC chancellor . Dr .John B. Macdonald, UBC pre-sident . Hon. Mr. Justice Na-than Nemetz, chairman .

Arthur Fouks, Q.C ., Van-couver lawyer. E. A. Gunder-son, chartered accountant . J .Stuart Keate, Vancouver Sunpublisher .

W. C. Koerner, Rayonier ofCanada, Ltd . Leon J. Ladner ,Q.C. Dr. F. H. Soward, deanemeritus of Grad Studies, act-ing secretary to the Board .

Jo h n Liersch, Canadia nForest Products . D. F. Miller ,Canadian Fishing, Ltd .

Their backgrounds arevaried .

Hon. Mr. Justice Nemetz, wa sborn in Winnipeg, attendedschool in Vancouver, receivedhis B.A. and LLB from UBC ,

Fouks was born in Vancou-ver, graduated from UBC lawschool in 1949, and has bee non the executive of many pub-lic service bodies .

Walter Koerner was bornin Moravia, attended the Uni-versity of Prague, and hasbeen on many boards, both ofbusinesses and service groups .

John Edward Liersch wasborn in Manitoba, received aBA and BA Sc. from UBC andand MF from the Universityof Washington . He was at onetime head of the Faculty o fForestry at UBC .

Stuart Keate received hisBA from UBC, and has been

DEAN SOWAR D. . . hard-working

an active journalist in B .C .for many years . He has alsoserved on many committees.

Einar Gunderson was bornin Cooperstown, N. Dakota .He is a Fellow of the Instituteof Chartered Accountants, andis a member of the Board fo rmany corporations . He hasserved on many public groups .

Donovan Francis Miller wa sborn in Winnipeg, receivedhis B. Comm from UBC an dhis masters from MIT . He hasbeen on the executive o fmany organizations .

Dean Frederic Soward isthe acting secretary of th eBoard. He was born in On-tario, took BA at Toronto, B .Litt . at Oxford, and LLD atCarleton . He has held numer-

ous positions in the universityand community world .

The Board of Governorswas questioned by TheUbyssey regarding the re -action of the students to theirpart in the fee increase andto the attitude of the student stowards the Board . T h e i ropinions varied from "I ca nsee their point of view, an dsome of it may be our fault, "to a curt "irresponsible andchildish . "

First, Dean Soward :"The time I have spent

working on the Board of Gov-ernors has convinced me thatthey are among the mosthard-working men I have everseen. Some of them work 20to 30 hours a week, with littl epraise or glory .

"These men are all com-munity leaders, and good citi-zens. I have been impresse dwith the careful attentionthey pay to their duties on theBoard, and I am sure the ywork as hard here as they doin their own professions . "

Other members of the boardstressed not the time theyspend. but the reaction of thestudents to their actions .

"I feel that the fault is part-ly ours," said Stuart Keate ."There is a lack of communi-cation between the admini-stration and the students o nthis matter .

As far as qualifications go ,there seems to be genera lagreement among the mem-bers of the board that thepresent system may not beperfect, but is better than

others that have been sug-gested .

Arthur Fouks said he fel tthe main criterion for select-ing a particular individual t othe Board was his willingnes sto serve .

"The members on theBoardare, without exception, peopl ewho take an active interest i n

the community . They are onthe Board because they areinterested enough to want t odo something for the univer-sity . "

The board members I talkedto, to a man, were reluctantto discuss the fee increase .They felt that they had donethe best they could for thestudents, and that there i slittle chance of elimination offees in the near future .

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An active program of sports has been arranged forthe 1965-66 winter session. A Curling and BowlingEvening will be held jointly with International Hous eon Saturday, October 2, starting at 7 :30 p .m. Thesports will be followed by a social evening at th eGraduate Students Center starting at 9 :30 p .m. Ticketsare available at the Graduate Students Center offic eor from executive members .Students interested in Hockey are invited to atten dsessions at Winter Sports Center, Monday, October 4,at 11:15 p .m. Curling will begin on Tuesday, October5, at 9 :30 p .m. in the Winter Sports Center . The firstmeeting will be an organizational meeting . Bowlingwill begin shortly, the time and place to be anouncedin this column .

Since the success of the GSA Executive in planningand organizing, social and sports events depends uponcommunications between the Executive and the stu-dents at large, it has been decided to organize a com-mittee to deal with the problem . This committee willrequire the services of one student volunteer foreach department enrolling graduate students . Inter-ested students are asked to attend a meeting in th eCommittee Room of the Graduate Students Centerat 12:30, 'Wednesday, October 6 . With a small amountto the success of Graduate Student Activities.

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Page 14

THE UBYSSEY

Friday, October 1, 1965

—don kydd photoMOST COMFORTABLE SEAT in clubs day melee was alsothe most expensive . Nancy Donaldson arts II, gets check-up in $2,400 chair from pre-dental student John' Hopkins .

Clubs go all waysfor new members

By TERRY BROOK SThe only thing safe from

being squashed on clubs dayin the armory was the banner

for the UBC squash club .It was fluttering from the

rafters.BUt then so were most of the

members of the outdoors' clubs .They came swinging downfrom the rafters with ropes an dgags to capture new members .

Jack Khoury of the debatin gclub summed up the spirit ofthe day .

"I saw a blonde over therebut she disappeared," he said .

"We need members like herbut they always run away. "

Marsia Kalensky g i v i n g

papers out for the jazz societywas pushed into a cubbyholewhen the engineers exodus be-gan. She fought back but waslost from sight for severa lminutes .

Later she was back, a dirtytennis shoe printed on he'rsweat-shirt, but still giving outleaflets .

By JEFF WAL L"Blood, sweat and tears, any-

one?"The UBC rowing crew

started their 1965-66 opera •tions Tuesday with the annualorganizational meeting. Headcoach Wayne Pretty outlineda policy of hard work and de-dication which he hopes willlead the /Thunderbirds to theWorld's Championship in Sep•

tember, 1966 .Pleased with the large turn•

out of new prospects, Prett y

stressed the ideas of top con•ditioning and of competitio nwithin the crew for places in

The age of specialization

will be replaced by an age ofsynthesis . "

Professor Henry F. Angus,UBC's Dean Emeritus of Gra-duate Studies and honoredspeaker at the opening cere-monies of the, Angus Building,said the new age will bebrought about by the continu-ing advancement of knowledgeand its growing homogenaeity .

The former professor anddepartment head (1930-56) ofeconomics, political scienceand sociology, first Dean ofGraduate Studies (1948-56) andmember and chairman of nu-merous government commit-tees, recalled the limited facili-ties of his day .

He compared himself to

the varsity eight . "Everyonehas a chance as of right now, "he told a crowd of 130, whic hincluded 25 returnees from196465 .

The Thunderbird ' s objectivesfor this year will be the West•ern Sprints in San Franciscoin May, the Canadian Henleyat St . Catherine's in July, theAmerican National Champion.ships in New York in Augustand the World's Champion•ships in Yugoslavia in Sep•tember.

A freshman-oriented race isscheduled for November 15against Oregon State Univer -

Moses who, reaching the pro-mised land, said, "Look here !I have lived to see it all ."

"The Angus Building wasconstructed at a cost of $3million," said UBC presidentJohn B. Macdonald. "It is thehighest building on campus ,houses a faculty of 135 an dcontains impressive statisticaland psychological facilities . "

Its 2,000 - student - per - da ycapacity is equal to the entir estudent body of Simon FraserUniversity, he said, eying

Chancellor Gordon Shrum ofSFU, who was in the audience .

Also present were B .C. edu-cation minister Leslie Peter-

- son and B.C. Lieutenant-Governor George Pearkes .

sity, the University of PugetSound and Pacific LutheranUniversity in Tacoma, Wash .

UBC crews defeated allthree universities in meets las t

season .

Daily calisthenics, unde rteam captain Bruce Jacks, areheld in the gymnasium at 4 :30p .m. These are specially deve-loped exercises which are in-tended to condition the oars-men for racing .

The rowers love companyand anyone interested is in-vited to join the crew by sim-ply turning out to the work-

outs.

PRESCRIPTION

EYEGLASSE S=

s1 69

U55

All Doctor's Eyeglass Pre-scriptions filled. Only firstquality materials used. Allwork performed by qualifiedOpticians.

GRANVILLE OPTICAL!t1 Oratll/ille

MU 8-6921Money .Back Ouarantse

Age of synthesiscoming Angus

A

4

Thunderbird rowers aim fo r66 world championship s

Faculty and StudentsAre invited to

THE INTERNATIONAL HOUS E

LANNUAL FALL TEA

to welcome new foreign studentson OCTOBER 3rd

Sunday between 3 :30 and 5:30 p.m .at International House

Community Members and Friends 50c

Students free

On and After October 4

Textbooks Will Be SoldOnly at the Bookstore

NEXT WEE K

Shop for all Your Suppliesat You r

BOOKSTORE

Shall webottle now

or after thestrike is over?

Now !is the time to visit the largest selection o fpaperback books in western Canada at

DUT11IE BOOKSOpen 'Til 9 Friday

4560 W. 10th Ave.

CA 4-701 2901 Robson St.

684-4496Paperback Cellar

6814713

MEN'S WEAR741 Grenville Sheet ee1-5425

Outstanding value

in quality slacks —

tailored, styled

and luxuriousl y

trimmed by one of Canada's

leading firms in "prestige

quality" clothing. Featuring

the exclusive "Kant Kurt"

waistband .

Page 15: PRESCRIPTION WORTH 480 PILLS — 20 a month for two THE ... · leaky Wesbrook pill policy By ANN RATEL I'm an 18-year-old single co-ed, and I've got a prescription to buy a two-year

Friday, October, 1, 1965

THE UBYSSEY

Page 1 5

e

* * *

Last year for five homegames UBC's football teamwent undefeated against top-notch American Colleges, buta total of only 1,200 studentsattended the five games.

Our hockey team playe dbefore an average of 10 0spectators a game . Rugbydrew • a bit more and basket-ball was a little better .

UBC has a bad smell—an dthe skunk rests in the ath-letic department .

SF began its athletics onscholarships. The Thunder -bird campus must do the

Scholarships add an incen-tive to spectators . WatchSimon Fraser and you knowwhat I mean!

* * *Having the largest number

of sports in Canada isn'tdoing the campus a bit ofgood. It costs money to keepup all these sports and moneyis what we don't have, ath-letically speaking.

We are a big university ,but one wouldn't know thatby our spectator sports. Weneed student support to makeour athletics go Big Time .We're not getting it, so let'stry something different .

The answer has to bescholarships .

* * *Take SF, for instance . A

new university with a greenfootball club but a club base don scholarships had 1,800-turn out for a football game—an exhibition match withKats of the Pacific Northwes tAmateur League, a team eventhe Jayvees could beat . Mostof the spectators were stu-dents.

I AROUND ME CAMPUSBy ED CLAR K

Brutus had his chance to save the state of Rom ebefore he cowardly plunged his dagger into Caesar . Onehundred score and nine years later, UBC president JohnMacdonald committed the same crime when he slice dUBC ' s athletics in his welcome speech.

He said, I quote : "We haveby far the largest acreage o fplaying fields in Canada ; wehave the largest number ofsports in Canada . "

How true, but so what! Ifthe big wheels in the bandwagon would stop and thinkfor a second, because only asecond of their time is a t l i-l e t i c a l l y a i l a b l e , v a the ywould realize that what UB Cneeds is not a surplus of play-ing areas, but a surplus ofspectators, to partly pay forthese athletics .

* * *The only way the Thunder-

bird campus will get spec-tators is through spectatorsports, namely f o o t b a l l,hockey, rugby and basket-ball . Furthermore, these spec-tator sports need scholarshipathletes . Our president neve rmentioned scholarships .Not that UBC hasn't good ath-letes without these scholar-ships . But it has been fightin ga losing cause, athletically . UBC is bleeding badly inEvery year the athletic de- athletics . The dagger is inpartment screams because of pretty deep and there was oneits mediocre budget. man who could have starte d

dressing the wound last week ,but ignorance prevented this .

CLARK

The UBC Thunderbird soccer team nests atopPacific Coast Soccer League and it plans to stay thereweekend .

UBC plays host to St. An-drews at 2 p.m . Saturday atVarsity Stadium in its firs thome PCL game. The Bird swon their league opener in Vic-toria last weekend 2-0 .

UBC, a freshman team in th ePCL last season, won its firstgame after four consecutivedefeats last year in which th eBirds finished on the bottomrung of the strong PCL ladder .

Coach Joe Johnson contri-butes Birds' success this seaso nto the teamwork, desire an dthe squad's much improvedmorale .

"We have 11 players on th efield all working as a team,each with the ability, desir eand determination to win," h esaid . "We haven ' t any reall ygood players, but to me team-work is far more important ."Johnson said .

St. Andrews will have tw oformer Thunderbirds in thelineup Saturday . They aregoalie Don Cary and Noel Cum-ming, a wing half.

UBC has added Russ Hillmanto its roster .

Soccer birdstackle St. A.

DON CAR Y. . . against 'Birds

• :

thethis

Bird teams flythis weekend

Both UBC football teamsplay out of town this week -end .

The Thunderbirds fly eas tto Hamilton and a Staturdayafternoon engagement witht he McMaster UniversityMarauders . The Birds smoth-ered McMaster here 47-0 lastyear .

The Junior Varsity is se tto meet the Snohomish Ath-letic Club in a Cascade Foot -ball League game in Sno-homish, Wash .

SPORTSEditor : Ed Clark

same, or die while watchingSF grow .

We might have the largestplaying fields, but they willeventually go to pasture. Wecan have the largest numberof sports in Canada and wewill be buried with them.

SKATING SCHEDULE — 196S-66Effective September 24th 1965 to April 15th 196 6

TUESDAYS

12 :45—2 :45 p.m. *WEDNESDAYS 2:00—3:30 p.m .

7 :30—9:30 p.m .3 :00—5:00 p .m .7 :30—9 :30 p.m .* *3 :00—5:00 p.m .7:30—9:30 p.m .* *

12 :45—2 :45 p .m .7 :30—9 :30 p.m .

* Special student admission : 15 cents .** Except when hockey games scheduled — Nov . 19 & 20,Jan. 28 & 29, Feb . 11 & 12 and two more dates not scheduled .ADMISSION :

Afternoons — Students .35¢ Adults .60 0Evenings — Students .50¢ Adults .75 0

Skate Rental .350 per pair — Skate Sharpening .350 per pairNOTE: The Centre will be closed all day Christmas Da y

and Good Friday .For further information : Call 224-3205 or 228-3197

Overseas Auto PartsPARTS FOR. THE IMPORTED CA R

SPORTS CAR ACCESSORIE SWe carry a good coverage ofVolkswagen Replacement Parts

736-9804

2780 Alma Rd.at 12th Ave.

10% Discount with AMS Car d

REGISTRATIO NPHOTO S

Photos for AMS cards will be taken in

Brock Stage Room Monday, Oct. 4 and

Thursday, Oct . 7 . Times - 12 :30 p.m. to

3 :30 p .m . Students without AMS card s

must bring their ELIGIBILITY FORM .

Cards will be at the camera .

U .B.C. THUNDERBIRD.WINTER SPORTS CENTR E

(Beginners & Pre -school Children )

Pimm's No.1 has a Gin bas e

Pimm's No. 5 has a Canadian Whisky bas e(both are absolutely delicious! )

Slacks NarrowedSuits Alteredand Repaired

Fast Service — ExpertTailoring

UNITED TAILOR S549 Granville St.

Two things about Pimm's : easy t oserve, and a taste you'll enjoy .

Just pour into a tall glass and ad dice and fill up with your favourite ligh tmix. You can add a slice of cucumber,a piece of lemon, or a sprig of mint to

make the traditional Pimm's, famou sthroughout the world . But don't botherunless you're in the mood .

A new generation is rediscoverin gPimm's . . . and enjoying every momen tof it .

DRIN KPIMM'Ssimply because you'll enjoythe taste of it.

Ii . CORBY DISTILLERY LIMITED, CORBYVILLE, CAN .

This advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control Board or by the Government of British Columbia.

Page 16: PRESCRIPTION WORTH 480 PILLS — 20 a month for two THE ... · leaky Wesbrook pill policy By ANN RATEL I'm an 18-year-old single co-ed, and I've got a prescription to buy a two-year

CLASSESPage .,

THE

UBYSSEY

Friday, October 1, 196 5

Teach-in takes in al lSCIENCE SYMPOSIUM

Register Oct. 1-3 at AMS of .fice . Topic "Progress Re -examined" . Cost $6 .50 .FRIENDS OF CHAMBE RMUSIC

Vancouver Ticket Centre ha s50 tickets for students only .Seven concerts $6 .75 .

VARSITY STUDENTSPLAN NOW TO ATTEND :

Morning Worship

11 :00 a .m .

"The Unknown Quantity "7:15 p.m .

SPECIFIC TO STUDENT S

College Age Bible Class9:45 a.m .

Informal College Age Meeting9:00 p .m.

B roadwayWest

Baptist

Church

3500 W. 7th AVE.

AT COLLINGWOOD

Making final plans for B.C .Universities Teach - In. Allfaculty and students welcome .Mon . 8 :30 p .m ., Bu. 100 .AUS

First meeting of Arts Under-grad Soc. Monday noon, Bu .3202 . .CHEERLEADIN G

Meeting for Thunderbirdsoccer cheerleaders Monda ynoon, Bu. 155. Everybody wel-come .LUTHERAN STUDENTS

Dr. K. Erdman speaks o nHow The World Began, Mon ,day noon, Bu. 104 .FINE ARTS CLU B

FAC present a film on HenryMoore noon today, Lasserr e104. Non-members welcome .NOON LECTURE

Prof. V. R. Lorwin on Con •flict a n d Compromise in aMulti-lingual Country — theCase of Belgium — noon Mon •day in Bu. 100 .VCF

Information meeting — B u1 '06 noon today .CONTROVERSIALSPEAKERS

Ed. U.S. presents L o r n eBrown and Your Role in Con-troversy, noon today—Ed. 100 .EL CIRCUL O

Meeting today noon in Bu .204, and 8:00 opening evenin gin Buchanan penthouse .DANCE

Sherwood Lett and PhyllisRoss Houses present dance atLower Mall with the AC-CENTS tonite, 9 p .m. to 1 a .m .-75c .INTERNATIONAL HOUSE

IH's upper lounge reservedfor speaking French, ever yFriday from 10 a .m. to 5 p . mAll welcome .NDP

General meeting . Everyonewelcome. Mon. noon, Bu. 204 .DISCOTHEQUE MIXE R

Records, prizes, entertain-ment, Rolf Johannson . Fri . 8p .m. till 12, Ed lounge. Men60c, women 45c .NEWMAN CLUB

Hayride and Barn DanceSat ., Oct . 2 from 7:30 to 12 ,Richmond Riding Stables . $1each . BYOB .P.E .

Orientation day Saturday .Swimming, games, dinner, dis-cussions, dancing . Faculty andstudents welcome .

totem '66totem IS '66

totem is a newdesign

totem is a way oflife

totem is you andyour campus

totem is pictures

totem is stories andreports

totem is yourYEAR BOOK

UBC SOCRED SGeneral meeting Mon. noon ,

Bu. 313 .CHRISTIAN SCIENC E

Organizational meeting noontoday, Brock stage room .RECORD HO P

International House, 8 :30 to.night, 25c .

ANNOUNCEMENTSLost & Found

1 1

LOST — BRIEFCASE, in vicinity ofLibrary . Urgently required . Returnto Ubyssey Office or phone 224 -7198 .

BRIEFCASE TAKEN IN BUS STOPCafe 2 .00 p .m. Tuesday. Pleasereturn to 4188 W. 10th or to Cafe .

FOUNI) — WALLET containin gsum of money. Call Doug Keith ,224-9055 .

FOUND — FOUNTAIN PEN in EastMall Annex . Apply Ubyssey, Publi-cations Office, Brock Hall .

FOUND BU 1221 (ladies) watchFriday 24. Phone Hut 6, Room 4 ,Fort Camp .

LOST : Physics 101 Lab Report Bookand Text Book. Need urgently !Phone 321-2883 ask for Gary.

FOUND ADS inserted free. Publica-tions office, Brock Hall. Local 26,224-3242.

Special Notices 1 3ONLY SEVEN MONTH TO GRADU-

ation. Next Year's TOTEM willbe nearly 300 pages and Advanc eOrders will receive a special 8-page graduation supplement . Ordernow from AMS Business Office.

SPECIAL COLLEGE RATE SUB-scription for Playboy Magazine ,1 yr. $6 .50, 2 yrs . $12 .00, 3 yrs .$16.50 . Call Fred RE 8-4504 .

HEAR THE NEW SOUND OF THEDartelles at Totem Park, Saturday ,October 2, 9 .00-1 .00 . Admission 50 cwith A .M.S. Card .

HOW DO YOU use your sense o ftouch and smell for watchingtelevision? Find out Thursday .

INTERESTED in Figure Skating &dancing on ice? UBC ThunderbirdArena Tuesdays 7 :30 - 8 :30 p.m.Special rates. For full informatio ncall Pt. Grey Winter Club . 224-7628 .

YOU DIG THE SOUL SOUND? Yo uthink the Mersey Beat is gear ?Or do you Just appreciate goodbig-beat music? Then you be a tthe Armouries, Sat . Oct . 16, 8 :3 0p.m. - 12 :30 a .m. for the greates tdance ever to hit the campus . It'l lbe something else! Watch for de -tails Monday .

Transportation

1 4

RIDE WANTED vicinity Renfrewand Charles, 8 .30 classes, Mondaythru Friday. Phone Vicki, AL 5-0428 .

NORTH BURNABY — RIDE wante dMon . Wed. Thurs. Fri., 8 .30 ' s .Phone Gina, CY 8-8519.

RID7dRS WANTED from Richmon d8 .30 classes, Mon. thru Sat . Phone277-9338 .

CAR POOL URGENTLY NEEDED.Area of Dunbar and 32nd, 8.30lectures . Phone AM 6-7758, ask fo rJohn .

RICHMOND — RIDE URGENTLYneeded, vicinity Westminster Hwy .and No . 1 . Phone BR 7-8576, askfor Bev .

RIDE WANTED FROM CRESCEN TBach . Phone 531-2694 after 6 p.m .

DESPARATE RIDERS needed dailyexcept Tuesday. 4th and Alm aarea . Phone RE 8-8007 . Reliabletransportation !

RIDE WANTED from New West-minster for 8 :30 ' s . Phone GloriaLA 1-5556.

HELP! - 1 NEED A RIDE from. North Burnaby -vie . Willingdon

and Hastings phone Susan orleave message CY 8-1688 .

DRIVER WANTED : New West-minster area. 9:30 classes only.Call Phil . Between 6 :30 - 7 :30 . LA1-3262 .

RIDE WANTED Monday to Fridayfor 9 :30 ' s . 4th Ave . and McDonaldphone RE 1-2563 after 7 :00,.

WEST VAN CARPOOL wanted for2 girls vicinity 20th and Mothersphone Linda 922-7750.

AUTOMOTIVE&MARINE

Automobiles For Sale 2 1FOR SALE — 1953 CHEV, 2 Door ,

Bel Air, in good condition . Newpaint. Best offer. Nick, CA 4-1449 .

A TRULY AMAZING SUNBEAMConv., perfect for Student. Bestoffer. Phone RE 1-6284.

MUST SELL ' 59 M.G.A. Best offer.Phone 733-5380 after 6 p .m .

' 53 FORD . EVERYTHING NEW —after 5 p .m . RE 6-5171.3643 W. 1st .

'62 M .G. MIDGET, top cond. Newtires, seats, windows ; $115'0. AM6-7887.

1963 A .H . SPRITE — EXCELLEN Tcondition, only 18,000 miles. Onegirl owner. Light blue. Phone CA4-9585 .

ATTENTION RALLY FANS! 160Skoda Sports Convert ., spotlessnew tires, brakes, clutch, etc . 1106

cc . Twin Carb . $500 or offer . BR7-2012 .

'61 SPRITE, New Clutch and Gen-erator, good condition. HE 3-1890.

MUST SELL 1950 CHEV . Depend-able transp. Phone 431-2494. $9 5or best offer .

$900 OR BEST OFFER : 1959 SimcaConv . Sports, pullmanized seats ,Michelin "X" tires. All trans.radio . Cheap on gas. Phone 255-4283 Mon .-Fri . after 7 p.m . All daySat . & Sun .

'54 STUDE. LOWBOY . Rebuil ttrans . and motor. $350 or offer .Lyle, AM 6-7887.

1959 M .G. REC . MOTOR JOB . Goodtires, trans ., radio, heater, $875 .228-8296 .

1962 VALIANT SIGNET — 2 doorhardtop-automatic . Fully equipped .In excellent condition. $1700 .00 o rbest offer. Phone 738-2988 . after 5 :00 p.m.1960 TR3 IN GOOD CONDITION call WA 2-8440 .1957 SUNBEAM RAPIER. Sale or

trade for sports car . Stick, tach . ,good cond . AM 6-0162 Grant

Motorcycles 271965 SUZUKI 50 c .c ., $215. 224-9986.

Kappa Sigma House .

HONDA 90, NEAR NEW, 3900 M .Need money to pay fees. Cheap.922-6731 .

1965 HONDA 90, 4% months old, 2safety helmets . Contact Bruce,Hut 6, Rm 12, Fort Camp. 224-988 0

ONE ONLY! 1965 80 cc . SUZUKIMotorcycle . Good condition, only$235. Phone Earl, CA 4-1772, afte r6.30 .

YAHAMA 60 1965 MODEL bran dnew-licensed . Reg. $330.00. Cash$275 .00 Call AM 6-9841 or RE 3-3022 .

BUSINESS SERVICES

Typewriters&Repairs 4 2GOOD CLEAN TxPAWRITERS, $20

up . Also Typewriter repairs at60 percent savings. Polls= Type-writers, 2140 W. 4th . Phone ARSE1-8322.

Typing 43ESSAYS, BOOK REVIEWS AND

cases typed by qualified typist .From 40c per page including pa-

' per, 1 carbon copy and binder .Ardale Griffiths Ltd., 70th and Granville . Phone 263-4530 .TYPING (HOME) . ALL KINDS .

Mrs . Wood . Phone 986-5086 .

EMPLOYMENTHelp Wanted

81WANTED — 1st FLOOR HOUSE

"Mother " — Apply Sherwood LettHouse. 224-9014 .

BABY SITTER WANTED — FRI-days, noon to five — Kerrisdale-two children, ages 2-5. Call 261-4766.

FEMALE STUDENT for light housework and babysitting four hour sper week . Pref. Thurs . afternoon .Phone CA8-8434 .

MALE OR FEMALE—PART TIMEwork available in the Departmen tof Recreation or Physical Educa-tion with the BURNABY Y .M .C .A .Call CY 9-6411 .

Work Wanted 5 2NURSE will look after children—

weekdays . Phone 224-6738 .

INSTRUCTIONTutoring

64TUTORS WANTED FOR ZOOLOGY

422 Ethology and Psychology 100 .Please phone 224-9776 in the even-ing and ask for Judy, Room 214.

MISCELLANEOU SFOR SALE

7 1BIRD CALLS—the most useful book

on the campus. Student telephonedirectory available latter part ofOctober. Limited Number. Ordernow, only76 cents.

BALLS & CHAIN! IDEAL FO RStags, etc . 15-45 lbs. From $7.50.FA 1-1776 and AM 6-2869 .

HIGH DENSITY & FLUORESCEN TDesk Lamps, $6 .95 and $9.95 . Cal-vert-Craft Hardware & Gifts, 320 9West Broadway. Phone 738-2311.(Opposite Liquor Store, Peter' sIce Cream, and Super Yalu) .

FOR SALE — SET OF DRUMS ,Bass, Large and Small Tom-Toms ,Ludwig Super Classic Snare $250,Cash. Call Joe . HE 1-0889, after 6 .

Wanted 1 5

CLASSIFIE DRates: 3 lines, 1 day, $.75—3 days, $2 .00 . Larger Ads on request

Non-Commercial Classified Ads are payable in Advanc e Publications Office: Brock Hall, Ext. 26. 224-3242

Know "Who 's Who"—where they live _

—their phone numbe r

—faculty, year, etc .

All the information you need about

UBC Students

in "BIRD CALLS"The Student Telephone Directory

RESERVE YOUR COPY FROM

PHRATERES CLUB MEMBERS

Only 75c per Copy

Available Mid-October

UPPERCLASSMEN —

HEL PWELCOM E

the Frosh at theFrosh Reception

DANC ESaturday, Oct . 9 – Armouries

Dance to the Fantastic Sound o f

THE SONICS (The Witch)

From Seattle

See the Frosh Queen Crowne d2nd Year — 3rd Year — 4th . Year. — Grad s

— semi-formal $3.50 per couple

— 8:00 - 12 midnight Tickets at AMS

- AMS Cards to be presented at the doo r

ALL WELCOME

4