vol. xlviii, no. 18 we were concerned - ubc library … · we were concerned rebel sit-in answered...

12
First the Bayshore rNF v VANCOUVER, B .C ., THURSDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1965 now the worl d Vol . XLVIII, No . 18 CA 4-391 6 UBC MARCHED AGAIN TO PUBLICIZE PLIGH T WE WERE CONCERNE D Rebel sit-i n answere d by walkou t r By TOM WAYMA N Ubyssey Editor-in-Chie f Three students stalked out of an AUCC-marchers confronta- tion at the Bayshore Inn Wed- nesday over the seating of an unauthorized delegation. Randall Enomoto and Gary Taylor, representing the ad ho c March of Concern Committee , left the meeting when two stu- dents representing what they termed a "conservative" view - point insisted on being seated . Ed Lavalle, western regional president of the Canadian Union of Students, also lef t the meeting. The meeting between stu- dent representatives and mem- bers of the board of director s of the Association of Univer- sities and Colleges of Canad a was announced after 3,500 marchers reached the parkin g lot of the Bayshore Inn where the AUCC is holding its annua l meeting. The marchers were met a t the Bayshore by a small group of students carrying signs ad- vocating an increase in tuition fees. Two members of this grou p showered pennies on the firs t ranks of marchers as they arrived. The rebel group was then in- vited by the Alma Mater Soc- iety president Byron Hende r to send a representative to th e meeting with AUCC officials . Hender made the invitatio n when he announced the meet- ing. As the student delegatio n began to squabble about the seating of the two unauthor- ized students, UBC president John Macdonald asked that al l viewpoints be heard . The two students—Rod Mac - Kenzie and Norman Mackie , both Law III — insisted thei r viewpoint wasn't being ex - pressed by the official dele- gations . When they refused to leave , Enomoto, Taylor, and Lavelle walked out . At the round-table discussio n of the fee situation which fol- lowed the walkout, the student viewpoint was presented b y AMS first vice-presidents Bo b Cruise and Peter Braund, com- merce undergraduate societ y president Rick McGraw , Ubyssey editor-in-chief Tom Wayman, Simon Fraser Acad- emy representative Alan Gar r (Continued on Page 3 ) SEE : MEETING —norm betty phot o TROMP, TROM P SOGGY FEE FIGHTERS tromp watery way down Georgi a Street Wednesday . Block-long column represents less tha n half of 3,500 marchers, broken into two groups to avoi d blocking traffic on way to Bayshore . Vancouver tre k half NSD tota l UBC students hit the pavement Wednesday for th e second time in three years to publicize the financial plight o f higher education . Four abreast and packed into six city blocks, 3,500 marched two miles through rain and downtown Vancouver traffic to confront Canada ' s top university administrator s meeting at the Bayshore Inn . In March of 1963, 5,000 students hit Vancouver street s to " Back Mac "— asking for consideration of UBC presiden t John Macdonald's report on the needs of higher educatio n in B.C . Wednesday they trekked for the cause of universal ac- cessibility to higher education . Trekkers met by Ma c One of every two student s participating in the Oct . 27 Na- tional Student Day demonstra- ions across Canada were on th e wet Vancouver streets . Only 1,000 students fro m eight Nova Scotia universitie s marched through Atlantic rai n to the legislature buildings in Halifax . Eight hundred marched fro m four Ottawa Canadian Union of Students institutions, 600 turn- ed out from Toronto's thre e universities ; 700 Victoria Col- lege students made the down - town trek in B .C .'s capital . UBC's march of concer n started Wednesday with onl y 1,000 students attending a live - ly noon rally at the armory . But at 2 :30 p .m ., when th e march was scheduled to start , more students poured out of classes and into waiting car s and buses for the ride to Sun - set beach . Led by police, a pipe band and Alma Mater Society coun- cillors, they left Sunset Beac h at 3 p .m ., trekked up Burrard , along Georgia, and into the parking lot at the Bayshor e Inn . As AMS president Byro n Hender and the first ranks o f marchers entered the lot, UB C president John Macdonald an d Association of Universities an d College of Canada president Dr . J . A . Corry emerged fro m the AUCC convention inside . Fifteen minutes later, th e last marchers arrived . Macdonald said : "I am jus t as concerned as you . "Student concern has done much for UBC . " Pro - fee faction, to o Corry, competing with th e boos and catcalls that followed his mention of Hender, said students had shown an unmis- takeable interest in the fe e issue . "I accept this dramatic ex- pression of , your concern," he said . "We are all concerned, an d we shall certainly do all w e can to strive for a commo n goal. " However, Corry said, a pub- lic gathering was not the plac e to discuss differences about the fee question . "But you have certainl y chosen a good time to demon- strate," he said . The only disturbance wa s caused by a small group of students near the speaker s carrying signs reading : "Re- sponsible students pay fees " and "Too lazy to work? " Their signs were remove d by surrounding marchers . The same group had trie d to drive in front of the mar- chers with pro-fee signs dis- played on cars, but police di - rected them away from t h e march route . Banners amid the marcher s included two sponsored by a n ad hoc group . They read : "Abolition of fee s contrary to the official AM S view designed to stress "W e are concerned" banners . At , o n e point, Vancouver City police superintendant Alan Rossiter accepted a "we'r e concerned" march button and pinned it to his uniform . The marchers included a surprise representation fro m Simon Fraser Academy, 10 0 strong, and six trekkers fro m Victoria College . One SFA student said hi s group was defying an SF A Student council decision to no t support the march . INSIDE : MORE MARC H See Pages 2 . 5, 7, 10

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Page 1: Vol. XLVIII, No. 18 WE WERE CONCERNED - UBC Library … · WE WERE CONCERNED Rebel sit-in answered by walkout r By TOM WAYMAN Ubyssey Editor-in-Chief Three students stalked out of

First

the Bayshore rNF vVANCOUVER, B .C., THURSDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1965

now

the world

Vol. XLVIII, No . 18

CA 4-391 6

UBC MARCHED AGAIN

TO PUBLICIZE PLIGHT

WE WERE CONCERNE DRebel sit-inansweredby walkout

rBy TOM WAYMA N

Ubyssey Editor-in-Chief

Three students stalked out ofan AUCC-marchers confronta-tion at the Bayshore Inn Wed-nesday over the seating of anunauthorized delegation.

Randall Enomoto and GaryTaylor, representing the ad ho cMarch of Concern Committee,left the meeting when two stu-dents representing what theytermed a "conservative" view-point insisted on being seated .

Ed Lavalle, western regionalpresident of the CanadianUnion of Students, also leftthe meeting.

The meeting between stu-dent representatives and mem-bers of the board of directorsof the Association of Univer-sities and Colleges of Canadawas announced after 3,500marchers reached the parkinglot of the Bayshore Inn wherethe AUCC is holding its annua lmeeting.

The marchers were met atthe Bayshore by a small groupof students carrying signs ad-vocating an increase in tuitionfees.

Two members of this groupshowered pennies on the firstranks of marchers as theyarrived.

The rebel group was then in-vited by the Alma Mater Soc-iety president Byron Henderto send a representative to th emeeting with AUCC officials .

Hender made the invitatio nwhen he announced the meet-ing.

As the student delegationbegan to squabble about theseating of the two unauthor-ized students, UBC presidentJohn Macdonald asked that al lviewpoints be heard .

The two students—Rod Mac -Kenzie and Norman Mackie ,both Law III — insisted theirviewpoint wasn't being ex-pressed by the official dele-gations .

When they refused to leave,Enomoto, Taylor, and Lavellewalked out.

At the round-table discussionof the fee situation which fol-lowed the walkout, the studentviewpoint was presented byAMS first vice-presidents BobCruise and Peter Braund, com-merce undergraduate societypresident Rick McGraw ,Ubyssey editor-in-chief TomWayman, Simon Fraser Acad-emy representative Alan Garr

(Continued on Page 3 )SEE : MEETING

—norm betty phot o

TROMP, TROMPSOGGY FEE FIGHTERS tromp watery way down Georgi aStreet Wednesday . Block-long column represents less tha nhalf of 3,500 marchers, broken into two groups to avoi dblocking traffic on way to Bayshore .

Vancouver trekhalf NSD tota l

UBC students hit the pavement Wednesday for thesecond time in three years to publicize the financial plight ofhigher education .

Four abreast and packed into six city blocks, 3,500marched two miles through rain and downtown Vancouvertraffic to confront Canada 's top university administrator smeeting at the Bayshore Inn .

In March of 1963, 5,000 students hit Vancouver streets

to "Back Mac"— asking for consideration of UBC presiden tJohn Macdonald's report on the needs of higher educationin B.C .

Wednesday they trekked for the cause of universal ac-cessibility to higher education .

Trekkers met by MacOne of every two students

participating in the Oct . 27 Na-tional Student Day demonstra-ions across Canada were on th ewet Vancouver streets .

Only 1,000 students fro meight Nova Scotia universitie smarched through Atlantic rainto the legislature buildings inHalifax .

Eight hundred marched fromfour Ottawa Canadian Union ofStudents institutions, 600 turn-ed out from Toronto's thre euniversities ; 700 Victoria Col-lege students made the down-town trek in B.C.'s capital .

UBC's march of concernstarted Wednesday with only1,000 students attending a live-ly noon rally at the armory .

But at 2 :30 p .m ., when themarch was scheduled to start ,more students poured out of

classes and into waiting car sand buses for the ride to Sun -set beach .

Led by police, a pipe bandand Alma Mater Society coun-cillors, they left Sunset Beac h

at 3 p .m ., trekked up Burrard ,along Georgia, and into theparking lot at the Bayshor eInn.

As AMS president ByronHender and the first ranks ofmarchers entered the lot, UBCpresident John Macdonald an dAssociation of Universities andCollege of Canada presidentDr. J . A. Corry emerged fro mthe AUCC convention inside .

Fifteen minutes later, thelast marchers arrived .

Macdonald said : "I am jus tas concerned as you .

"Student concern has donemuch for UBC."

Pro - fee faction, tooCorry, competing with the

boos and catcalls that followedhis mention of Hender, saidstudents had shown an unmis-takeable interest in the fe eissue .

"I accept this dramatic ex-pression of ,your concern," hesaid .

"We are all concerned, andwe shall certainly do all wecan to strive for a commo ngoal."

However, Corry said, a pub-lic gathering was not the placeto discuss differences about thefee question .

"But you have certainl ychosen a good time to demon-strate," he said .

The only disturbance wascaused by a small group ofstudents near the speakerscarrying signs reading : "Re-sponsible students pay fees "and "Too lazy to work? "

Their signs were removedby surrounding marchers .

The same group had trie dto drive in front of the mar-chers with pro-fee signs dis-played on cars, but police di -

rected them away from t h emarch route .

Banners amid the marchersincluded two sponsored by a nad hoc group .

They read : "Abolition of fee scontrary to the official AMSview designed to stress "W eare concerned" banners .

At , o n e point, VancouverCity police superintendantAlan Rossiter accepted a "we'r econcerned" march button andpinned it to his uniform .

The marchers included asurprise representation fromSimon Fraser Academy, 100strong, and six trekkers fro mVictoria College .

One SFA student said hisgroup was defying an SF AStudent council decision to notsupport the march .

INSIDE:

MORE MARCHSee Pages 2 . 5, 7, 10

Page 2: Vol. XLVIII, No. 18 WE WERE CONCERNED - UBC Library … · WE WERE CONCERNED Rebel sit-in answered by walkout r By TOM WAYMAN Ubyssey Editor-in-Chief Three students stalked out of

Page 2

T H E

U B Y S S E Y

Thursday, October 28, 1965

.

SWINGING SIGN INTO Bayshore Inn parking lot, AMS vice-president Bob Cruise (centre) and friend lead 3,500 damp students to confrontation wit huniversity presidents attending national convention. Pipe band in front of "universal accessibility" banner kept marchers marching over two-mile route .

.f

a 7.fir'

DISSENTER DISAGREE with 3,500 marchers arriving at Bayshore Wednesday. Pay-your-way fans waited at hotel after police curtailed their car cut-ups along parade route.

"DAGNAB RAIN" say Jill Coed, after two-mile trek throug hrain Wednesday . Dampened c o i f f u r e, didn't hurther enthusiasms for cause of publicizing student's financia lplight . powell hargrave photos

FORMER EXERNAL AFFAIRS minister Howard Green addresses dry marchers in armoryWednesday before they proceeded to Sunset Beach for two-mile trek to Bayshore .

Page 3: Vol. XLVIII, No. 18 WE WERE CONCERNED - UBC Library … · WE WERE CONCERNED Rebel sit-in answered by walkout r By TOM WAYMAN Ubyssey Editor-in-Chief Three students stalked out of

r

Thursday, October 28, 1965

THE

UBY'-SSEY

Page 3

0-- BROCK CLASH

Campaignlabelednegative

By ROSEMARY HYMANNational defepce minister

Paul Hellyer Tuesday calledthe current federal campaignthe most negative of eightelections in which he has takenpart .

"There is a great deal o fapathy in the country," saidHellyer, following a speec hto 300 students.

"I think there are quite afew people who would like tosee four years without an elec-tion ."

Hellyer branded "reprehen-sible" the tactics used by Cre-ditiste leader Real Caouette,in claiming that the Liberalswould introduce conscriptionin Canada to help fight theViet Nam war .

"I think we should try toinform and not mislead," hesaid.

In his speech, Hellyer saidCanada is the perfect labora-

tory for the experiment of inte-gration of the armed forces .

"People are watching. Al -ready there are signs tha tother countries will follow ourexample," he said .

Hellyer said that Canadia nmilitary planning was beingbased on the assumption tha tthere would be no major nu -clear war in the next 10 years .

"The most likely kinds ofconflict are insurrections andriots because such trouble canbe an exension of the foreignpolicy of powers, where thepowers feel the result is worth-while . "

Canada's major military roleswould be in peace-keeping op-erations and in contributin gto the nuclear deterrent of

' TO, he said.

MANITOBA premier DuffRoblin speaks on "Whic hway Canada?" noon toda yin Brock .

Ad hoc chairma ngiven bum's rushThe academic Activities office in Brock extension turne d

into a battlefield Thursday when Alma Mater Society co-ordinator Graeme Vance tried to have ad hoe committee

thrown out .AAC chairman, Ray Larsen ,

sent a letter Friday to Vanc easking him to issue a directivebanning non-members of AACfrom the office .

The letter said the office hadbecome a headquarters forMarch of Concern Committe emembers .

In it, Larsen said the offic ewas to be locked at all timesand "Thee only person it is to beopened for is me (Ray Larsen) . "

At 3 p.m. Tuesday ; assistantco-ordinator, Jim Lightfoot,saw Enomoto and some MC Cmembers in the office and ask-ed them to leave .

Enomoto, who is also pro-gram co-ordinator for AAC, re-fused.

Lightfoot told Vance, thatEnomoto was in the office andVance called the universitypatrol asking them for help.

A patrolman turned up atthe office and, after askin gEnomoto to leave, resorted todragging him out .

Vance said later he did no tknow Enomoto was a membe rof AiAC .

"We don't have a list of AA Cpeople," he said.

"Larsen refused point blan kto give us a list of people whoare allowed in the office," 'h esaid .

Larsen said Wednesda yVance had misinterpreted themeaning of his letter .

chairman, Randy Enomoto

MEETING(Continued from Page 1 )

and Canadian Union of Stu-dents' vice-president RichardGood .

They spoke with universityheads Corry, Mgr . L .-A. Vachonof Laval, R. P. C. Cormier ofMoncton, Dr. L. H. Cragg o fMount Allison, Dr . W. H. Johnsof Alberta, Macdonald, Dr . H .G. Thode of McMaster, andProf. W. J . Waines, Manitoba .

AUCC board members saidwhile they agreed fees ulti-mately should perhaps be re-duced, the whole problem wa sa matter of priority .

Corry said university admin-istrators have to worry aboutmaintaining and improving thequality of instruction given a ttheir institutions, as well as th estate of access to their institu-tions .

He said at present the forme ris the first priority .

Cruise asked the board mem-bers for some sort of sign thatthey were in general agree-ment with the ultimate ideaof lower fees .

"Is it possible for student sto get some sort of formal ,rather than unclear, committ-ment?" he asked .

Macdonald, said he, for one ,couldn't make such a state-ment .

"If you ask me to give youa guarantee that fees will no tgo up, in effect you are askingme to assign a higher priorityto keeping fees steady than toimproving the quality of edu-cation ."

STUDENT PRESIDENT Byron Hender (right) talks up a storm as president John Macdonaldtakes shelter under umbrella at Bayshore Wednesday .

of UGEQ, has indicated tha tthe agreement with McGill wil lapply to all CUS member uni-versities who wish to join th eQuebec union.

Sir George Williams, Loyol aand Marianopollis student courtcils have all passed resolu-tions mandating their execu-tives to seek UGEQ member -ship at the congress.

Miss Sholzberg said t h eUGEQ representatives h a dagreed • that English speakingmembers would be allowed touse their own language at th eunion's meetings .

Campaignheats up

Two UBC students haveheated up the federal electioncampaign by organizing aConservative hot line system .

Phil Lind and Bob O'Call-aghan, both arts IV, though tup the system which usestape recordings and nationa lphone hook-ups to give in-stant pick up of Conserva-tive party speeches as theyhappen .

The recordings are distri-buted to 28 B .C. radio sta-tions .

Lind and O'Callaghan ob-tain their material by phon-ing speakers shortly beforeor after the speech and ask-ing for short excerpts . Whatthe speaker says is recordedover the phone .

McGill has year

to make decisionMONTREAL (CUP) — Representatives of the Unio n

Generale des Etudiants du Quebec have agreed to allo wMcGill to join UGEQ while retaining membership in theCanadian Union of Students for one year .

At a meeting with SharonSholzberg, president of the Mc-Gill student council Oct . 25 ,the UGEQ spokesman decide dto change their organization' srule that members may notbelong to another union of stu-dents, to allow McGill o n eyear to choose between CUSand UGEQ.

After one year McGill wil lhave to leave CUS in orderto remain in UGEQ .

McGill will seek member-ship in UGEQ at the union'snext congress which opens i nQuebec City Oct. 28 .

Jacques Desjardin, president

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Page 4: Vol. XLVIII, No. 18 WE WERE CONCERNED - UBC Library … · WE WERE CONCERNED Rebel sit-in answered by walkout r By TOM WAYMAN Ubyssey Editor-in-Chief Three students stalked out of

Dear President Macdonald : While gaining my LLD . at SimonFraser Academy I had no trouble paying my fees . . .

LETTER S

MEII 1011Published Tuesday, Thursdays and Fridays throughout the universit yyear by the Alma Mater Society, University of B .C. Editorial opinion sexpressed are those of the editor and not necessarily these of the AM Sor the University. Editorial office, CA 4-3916. Advertising office, CA 4-3242 ,Loc. 26 . Member Canadian University Press . Founding member, Pacifi cStudent Press . Authorized as second-class mail by Post Office Department ,Ottawa, and for payment of postage in cash .

Winner Canadian University Press trophies for generalexcellence and news photography .

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1965

"The tigers of wrath are wiser than the horsesof instruction ." "

—Wm. Blake.sausaassaaniussawssussssmamasmaesmussaw smsaaaaaaasausneami

Good showIt was great .Thirty-five hundred marching out there in the rai n

behind the bagpipes and drums, getting soaking wet and

having a fantastic time .It was simply great .Thirty-five hundred showing that the phrases about

concern for higher education batted around by studen t

politicos in the past couple of months had a real mean-ing .

Or at least just about enough meaning to get some -

body in line behind those banners .Everything about the march was great . The crowds

were friendly, the police were good. And you could tell

the spirit of the thing clicked as stray UBC students

watching from the downtown sidewalks along the routewere urged into the line by their marching friends .

And at the Bayshore, as student delegations sat

down with university administrators to talk about thei rconcern, those students sat down with a feeling of

strength for their position .That strength came from 3,500 friends .It was great.

CashniksOnly one blot marred the Day .In a sense it is inevitable that in any society or group

there will always be a few who will childishly try toturn some positive action of their fellows into a chanc eto exhibit themselves .

So there were a few who did not march, but greetedthe marchers at the Bayshore with inane grins, sign sabout the Great Pumpkin advocating higher fees, and

showers of pennies.

Discount the fact that these people in their fancycars are the true cashniks — with more cash tha nbrains — who have absolutely no reason to care aboutfees one way or another.

What still made this the most infantile stunt of al lwas the insistance of these troublemakers at attendin gthe meeting with the Association of Universities and

Colleges of Canada board of directors .Every other student there represented a group whic h

had put long hours of work into considering the fee situ-ation from every angle .

That these cashniks, there for an obvious lark ,were invited into the Bayshore at all was an incompre-hensible mistake. That once inside, they maintained theirright to carry on the " :oke" despite the opposition o fevery student delegate present, is nothing short of tragic .

Tragic, because it presented the AUCC board witha squabble, a hot-headed walkout, and then a disgustin gdisplay of boorishly-expressed ignorance .

A squabble — after 3,500 students had demonstrate dthat the majority of those who care about anythingare concerned with higher education .

A walkout — precipitated by these cashniks de-sire to show themselves off to the assembled universityheads as representing something.

Finally, boorish ignorance — such statements as :"If fees are lowered and more people attend universityinstead of most jobs requiring a BA, soon those job swill require an MA, so why lower the fees? "

Plus frequent loud interruptions of the proceedingswith their comments .

It was obvious these people did not represent aviewpoint .

They represented bad taste, thoughtlessness, and aslur on their fellow students.

WE'RE SORRY IEditor, The Ubyssey, Sir :

On Oct . 22, a front pag estory appeared in The Ubysseywhich blamed the Science Un-dergraduate Society for ir-responsible'conduct of one o rtwo individuals.

The "story", entitled "Char-iot brawlers bloodied", wasroun d and firm and fullypacked with statements whichwere either wholly or partial-ly false .

I was not too perturbedwhen you quadrupled theweight of smoke bombs, andprinted an injury reportwhich made it appear tha tsciencemen had sustained bu ta single injury while the poor ,defenseless, (pardon while Ished a tear) engineers weremade to resemble the VietCong on an off day.

But when a statement suc has the one supposedly madeby Art Stevenson claimingthat the unfortunate aspects o fthe chariot race were the re -results of the " irresponsibilityof the SUS", then I get per-turbed .

An investigation is beingheld into the acid throwingwhich took place during thechariot race .

Preliminary results point toan individual or individualstaking things into their ownhands and procuring unau-thorized material, namel yacid, which they used in therace .

The policy of both the SUSand the EUS is that the "com-batants" are issued their am-munition by the undergradu-ate society only, and they areto obtain them from no othersource .

Apparently some individ-uals chose to ignore this and

regardless of their faculty,they are the irresponsibl eparties and they alone mustbear the consequences .

The article which appeare din The Ubyssey has given SU Sa bad name on campus be -cause of the actions of a fewstudents .

I hope that in future TheUbyssey will keep its cover-age of such events to know nfacts such as the fact that$1,500 was contributed to aworthy cause because of theteacup game and chariot race .

Save the wild stories untilall the pertinent and neces-sary details have beengathered .

I might add, Mr . Wayman ,that if such a story appearsagain it is conceivable that acertain, much criticized cam-pus figure may find himselfwith a dyed beard, or maybeeven no beard but a dye d(black and blue) chin .

DAVE WILLIAMSPresident, SU S

P.S . I might add that a join tcommittee of sciencemen andengineers will be meeting todiscuss rule changes as wellas review films of the even tin an attempt to discover theparties guilty of throwingacid .

DIRTYEditor, The Ubyssey, Sir :

Why must every minoritypressure group choose to de-face Totem Park as part of itsprogram ?

When these groups adoptresponsible, i n t e l l i g e n tmethods of presenting theirviews, then I will be inclinedto consider them responsibleand intelligent .

Until then, I will not .Totem Park resident

Lots of working types Wednes-day including Fearson Whitney,Anne Slipper, Vivian Gigun, Peg-gy Stein, Kim Richards, D o nHume, Pat Hrushowy, B r e n tCromie, Anne Balf, Doug Halver-son, Joan Fogarty, Stuart Gray ,Rosemary Hyman and half adozen others whose names aren ' tknown at this hour of the morn-ing .

Inth e

EarBy IAN CAMERO N

Whenever I get a chance t oread a paper from the USAI always read the classifiedads first .

To Cana-dian eyes,these ads con-tain thing sthat have noplace iii: asane newspa-per. Advertis-ers offer por-nography,crime to

CAMERO Norder, and personal servicefrom trained masseusses .

But in this issue, the adthat caught my eye was asquib reading `Happ yGrounds Funeral Home . . .conveniently located righ toutside the hospital gates . '

This led to an interestingspeculation . . . . it's abouttime the funeral peoplecaught up with everyone elsein the fields of merchandis-ing.

For this purpose I proposea mass-reduction set-up to becalled "Cameron's Corpsery" ,It will have a crematoriumin conjunction and will fea-ture the motto "Cameron ishot for your body . "

* * *The salesman will wander

around looking suitably dole-ful, wearing signs saying"Trust Cameron —the lastman to let you down . "

These salesmen will offera full range of burial ser-vice, including five modelsof caskets, ranging from the`Impervious; at $503, to the'Millenium', at $3,200 .

As far as the funeral goes ,the customer has a choiceof a Cadillac hearse, and asedate procession, for $250 ,a Rolls Royce, with hundred sof mourners and black crepehung along the route, f o r$1,695 or a Ferrari with PhilGaglardi driving, for $6,000 .(For ten cents extra, Philthrows in a sermon) .

The plots range from aview lot, with mausoleum, at$8,000, to a fast trip on theinner harbour, with lead, for$85 .

Now, one of the big pro-blems with funerals thes edays is that they're made formacabre people . How aboutuncle Joe, who's a happy-go-lucky lush? What does h eget out of staring at an em-balmed brother whom h enever liked much in the firstplace?

* * *It would be more to the

point if he was provided witha bottle and dancing girls ,while the necrophiliacs of thefamily drooled over the dea rdeparted.

And—you guessed it . We'regoing to be ready . At the farend of the building, as far re-moved from the chamber ofhorrors as possible, we're set-ting up the 'Casket a go-go' ,with the Ghouls as feature dentertainers, for the more joysous relatives .

It should be worth a Iheven though it will be a 'work. In fact, one m'most call it a graytaking . . .

EDITOR : Tom Wayma nNews _-_ _ Ron Rlte rAssociate

George Reamsbotto mCity Richard Blai rPhoto

Bert MacKinno nSports _ »._ ..— Ed ClarkAsst News __ Dan Mullen

Robbi West, Janet MathesonAsst City -- _ » ». AI DonaldPage Friday

John KelseyManaging ._—..._.—___.._ Norm BettsFeatures_ _ Mike Bolton

CUP Don Hul l

s

Page 5: Vol. XLVIII, No. 18 WE WERE CONCERNED - UBC Library … · WE WERE CONCERNED Rebel sit-in answered by walkout r By TOM WAYMAN Ubyssey Editor-in-Chief Three students stalked out of

r

Thursday, October 28, 1965

THE

UBYSSEY

Page 5

Politicos reviewelection promises

CONSERVATIVE S

FOREGROUNDOUR DAY

Marches fadedacross Canad a

One out of every two students who marched in Cana&on National Student Day Wednesday were from UBC.

In Nova Scotia, only 1,000

students from the province' s

eight universities marched in

the rain to legislature build -

ings .

They were met by repre-

sentatives of , four politica l

parties .

In Fredericton, N .B ., Con-

servative leader John Diefen-

baker told a student rally : "Na-t-ion Student Day was a goodthing . "

At Montreal, Sir George Wil-liams university held a fivehour teach-in on universal ac-cessibility .

The parliament buildings i nOttawa were surrounded b y800 students from the four Ca-nadian Union of Students 'schools in the city .

They were addressed by stu-dent leaders and representa-tives of the political parties .

By BOB LANCE

"The Pearson governmenthas labored only to bringforward a mouse, they havedeceived the people"—this isthe opening note of the Con-servative party's educationplatform.

And the usual election-timeplatitudes follow: "Highereducation must not become a ninstitution reserved for theprivileged. The object of aConservative government i s

to ensure that higher educa-tion will be made available tothe widest possible number ofthese capable of taking it . "

All parties are promisinggreatly increased expendituresfor education .

The specific suggestions in-clude:

• An increase in the percapital grant from two to fivedollars ;

• An adjustment of theenrollment formula for distri-bution of grants to better re-flect varying proportions ofenrollment from province toprovince ;

• Increased grants for re-search in all fields ;

• Implementation of theHall Commission recommen-dations on education andhealth;

• Pay 75 per cent toward scapital construction costs inuniversities and colleges ;

• Set up a Department ofYouth Affairs .

T h e platform obviouslyplays it safe when it comes t othe controversial question oftuition fees, calling for "con-sideration to be given to meet-ing the problem of tuitionfees ."

The Conservatives are notsupporting federally-sponsore dscholarships while the Lib-erals are calling for the ex-penditure of ten million dol-lars over four years for thispurpose.

The party claims it is con-stitutionally impossible fo rsuch a scheme to succeed be -cause of Quebec's insistanceon non-inferference in areasof provincial jurisdiction .

Dave Fulton has labelle dthis Liberal promise a "cyni-cal piece of maneuvering . "

The Conservative s t a n dsounds pretty weak here whe ncompared with the view ofGeoffrey Andrews of the As-sociation of Universities andColleges, who supported theLiberal stand last week.

If this constitutional pro-blem is to prohibit the grant-

The fact that the writer wasforced to go to the officia lparty platform to find a polic yon education, because severa lprominent campus Conserva-tives were at a loss to explai njust where the party stood oneducation, makes one questionthe importance of this basical-ly well thought-out platfor mto the Conservative party.

Is it merely a reflection ofthe Santa Claus complex inCanadian electioneering ?

In the campaign to date th eConservatives have placedlittle emphasis on the positiveparts of their policy .

Diefenbaker has not evenbothered to comment on th erecently published Bladen Re -port .

DIEFENBAKE R

If he is as concerned overeducation as he professes to bewhy hasn't he establishe dsome stand on this importan treport ?

Rather the Conservattiveshave chosen to come downhard, time and again, on th esupposed incompetence of theLiberals in this a n d otherareas .

If the Conservatives wantto be taken. seriously in thi simportant area of publicpolicy they should campaignon their virtues rather thanon someone else's vices .

SOCREDSBy ERIC DOL L

Secretary-Treasurer, UB CSocreds

What is the Social Credi tview on the Bladen Report onFinancing Higher Education ?

The report has been greetedwith enthusiasm by everyoneexcept the federal government .This is hardly surprising sinc ethe report urges Ottawa to in-crease four-fold its contribution

to higher education .

* * *

While the federal govern-ment has been spending mil-lions, with more concern forthe welfare of the party inpower than for that of the na-tion, the provinces have fel tthe squeeze of too little revenu efor their growing responsibili-ties .

The government of B .C .Wong with other provincia lgovernments has long advocat-ed a return of federal monie sto the provinces .

Instead of contributing tohigher education from its re-venues, the central governmen tshould extend the policy it ha sinitiated in Quebec, that of sur-rending some of its taxingpower to the provinces .

* * *

This would leave complet eresponsibility f or educationwith the provincial govern-ments and would render un-necessary the proposed federa lministry of higher education.

The report places too muchemphasis on government as asource of revenue for highereducation. Canada's industriesshould realize the value in sup-porting universities through re-search fellowships and capita lgrants .

* * *

Another source of incomewhich the report failed to men-tion is endowment property .The universities of B .C. will re-ceive considerable funds fro mthe downtown Vancouver an dPoint Grey endowment landswhen their development i scomplete .

The report is a frank ap-praisal of the financial situa-tion in higher education .

Let us hope that both level sof government as well as thestudents accept their respon-sibilities without trying to passthe buck .

Rex Murphy, student counci lpresident at the Memorial Uni-versity in Newfoundland toldthe group : "I hope the exampl eof Premier Smallwood in in-troducing free education wil

.

shine forth over the rest o fCanada . "

Paul Kenniff, CUS presiden tsaid: "National Student Day i sonly the beginning of the CU Seffort to press the issue of uni-versal accessibility . "

In Toronto, only 600 stu-dents from the universities o fYork, Toronto, and Ryersonmarched to the provincial legis-lature where they were met.by political representatives .

The organizers said the ywere disappointed with theturn out .

At Victoria College, 700 stu-dents marched to a theatre indowntown Victoria where the ywere addressed by political re-presentatives .

The only jarring note to theday was in Winnipeg, at theUniversity of Manitoba, wherea referendum was held on th eabolition of fees .

The students voted 2,408against the abolition of tuitionfees, and 1,178 for abolition .

PETER BRAUN D. . . at rally

Noon rallymarchersfired up

By STUART GRAY

A lively rally held in th eAuditorium at noon Wednes-day left almost a thousan dStudents brimming with en-thusiasm for the fee protes tmarch .

The rally saw seven spea-kers receive a mixed responsefrom the crowd that hissed orapplauded at each point, de -pending on who made it .

Association of Universitiestive director, G. S. Andrew ,and Colleges of Canada execu-said during a burst of booing :

"I don't mind the boos andhisses, as long as you a l s othink . "

The speakers also includedSocred Burrard candidate E dChisholm, Vancouver SouthCommunist candidate Bil lStewart, Quadra Conservativecandidate and former Externa lAffairs Minister H o w a r dGreen, Liberal Burnaby-Co-quitlam candidate Dick Hayes ,NDP Burrard candidate Dr .Ray Parkinson, and CanadianUnion of Students vice-presi-dent Richard Good .

Parkinson and Good receiv-ed the loudest applause fo rtheir speeches demanding theelimination of fees on everyeducational level .

EDUCATIONON THE

HUSTINGSPort 1

The writer is a fourth-yeararts student majoring in poli-tical science. He has been as-sociated with both the Libera land the Conservative party oncampus .

ing of scholarships why does-n't it stop other federal incur-sions in the education field ,such as the loan fund ?

One might also question th euse of fixed per capita grantson the grounds that it ha sproved inadequate in the past,and even though the Conser-vatives call for a three dollarhike, it is unlikely to do morethan hold the line on fees inthe immediate future and willsurely prove to be inadequatein a very short time .

The fees are already toohigh .

Some way must be found t ospread the skyrocketing costsof higher educationevenly .

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Page 6: Vol. XLVIII, No. 18 WE WERE CONCERNED - UBC Library … · WE WERE CONCERNED Rebel sit-in answered by walkout r By TOM WAYMAN Ubyssey Editor-in-Chief Three students stalked out of

Page 6

THE

UBYSSEY

Thursday, October 28, 1965

UBC's baby 'peace corps 'is growing up rapidly

A baby "peace corps", four-year-old brainchild of tw oUBC students, is growing up .

Canadian University Ser-vice Overseas attracted 14 8volunteers from across Canadalast year, 18 from UBC .

* * *

This year CUSO is makin gan active pitch for UBC vol-unteers to serve for two year sin o n e of 24 countries inAfrica, Asia, South Americaand the Caribbean .

* * *

This year the nature o fCUSO operations will be des-cribed to faculties, clubs an dresidences, with returning vol-unteers giving talks .

Second and third-year stu-dents will probably be given

Smith give stalk on Sarte

Professor Colin Smith, of

University College, London ,

will lecture noon today inBu. 102 on "Sarte—Thinker

or Humbug?"He will give a second lec-

ture, "The Phenomemologyof Merleau-Ponty", 8 p .m .Friday in Buchanan pent-

house .

Smith's visit is , sponsoredby Dr . L. L. Bongie, romanc e

studies, and Dr . Peter Rem-

nant, philosophy .

a chance to take part in sam-ple training programs ; someare now coaching foreign stu-dents in English .

Only university graduate sserve in the overseas program .

Volunteers f o r overseasspend five weeks at a Cana-dian university before leav-ing .

* * *

They study the history, geo-graphy,language and culture

of their assigned country .

T h e federal government

then transports them to their

country .

Volunteers are paid by thelocal government or agenc yat the same wages as loca lworkers . They have no specia lprivileges .

* * *

CUSO is otherwise financedby Canadian universities andmember organizations, t h eprovincial government an dprivate donations.

Volunteers serve in almos tany skilled capacity . Teachersare most in demand ; doctors ,nurses, agriculturalists, geo-logists and artists also go out .

For further information, goto the AMS office in Brock orInternational House.

Quebec university papersform new association

QUEBEC (CUP) — A press association of Quebecuniversity newspapers called Presse Universitaire Quebe-coise has been formed here .

Student newspapers of the Universities of Montreal ,Sherbrooke and Laval have pulled out of Presse EtudianteNationale, a French Language student press associatio nwith university and classical college members .

The McGill Daily, represented at the founding meet-ing, by its editor Patrick MacFadden, will be a memberof PUQ .

MacFadden said his paper will retain its member -ship in Canadian University Press .

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Page 7: Vol. XLVIII, No. 18 WE WERE CONCERNED - UBC Library … · WE WERE CONCERNED Rebel sit-in answered by walkout r By TOM WAYMAN Ubyssey Editor-in-Chief Three students stalked out of

Thursday, October 28, 1965

T H E

UBYSSEY

Page 7

AUCC HEAD SAYS:

'BEAR A SHARE'

SO WHY MARCH? Some had another way of burning of frestlessness from pressure of nasty mid-terms and rough ,hard university life .

UniversitiesCanada .

Speaking at the AUCC con-vention in Vancouver Wednes-day, Dr . J. A. Corry said : "Ifour resources were limitles sand governments boundlessl ygenerous, the consideration sfor free tuitions would be dif-ferent .

"But we have no evidencethat either of these conditionscan be met in the near future,"said Corry, principal of Queen' sUniversity, Kingston .

"If we are to have enoughgovernment support to keepthe university a worthwhil eplace to go, those who can beara share of the cost of their edu-cation must continue to do so, "he said.

Corry said :needs careful

times mistrustful of univer-sities .

"This tension between com-munity and university become sa matter of some importancewhen universities depend onpublic support .

"What the governments willdo in the long run depends onwhat the general public will

support .

"If the taxpayer is willin gto concede big expenditure o nuniversities, he may well saythe government should stopsome of the nonsense he thinksgoes on there," said Corry .

With this increased depend-ence on government grants, theuniversity will be subjected t ogovernmental influence an dsocial pressure never beforeexperienced he said .

"It is hard, however, to fin da basis for objecting to all out-side influence and pressure ."

"The way to have a vital rol ein a society is to be immersedin it, subject to its pressures ,and sensitive to its deeply fel tneeds."

-

The president's speech wa sfollowed by a report from th eexecutive director of t h eAUCC, Geoffrey Andrew, aformer UBC presidential assist -ant .

His report covered the busi-ness done by the various AUC Ccommittees and the reports re-ceived by the AUCC during theyear .

He said : "The study of uni-versity government in Canad awas completed this summer,

part of the AUCC secretariat .Plans are also underway fo r

a survey "of the developmen tneeds of university libraries t o1980 . "

A report on a survey of uni-versity summer schools teach-ing spoken French and spokenEnglish will be submitted soon ,Andrew said .

The survey was conductedby Prof. John Harney of th eUniversity of Quelph, and Prof.Charles Parent of Laval Uni-versity .

"The survey's object was todiscover what support schoolswould need to make their maxi -mum contribution to bilingual -ism in Canada," Andrew said .

"A joint committee on cor-porate aid to higher educatio nwith representation from theuniversities and businesses alsohas been established."

On financing, he said : "Dur-ing the past year $27.2 millionin federal grants was distri-buted to 86 Canadian institu-tions .

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University students must con-tinue to pay fees says the pre -sident of the Association of

and Colleges of

"Student aidattention and

more money, but the curren tcampaign for free tuition an d'universal accessibility' tendsto obscure the fundamentalissues.

"It will not do for the gov-ernments to provide free tui-tion until the universities hav ewhat they need to become andremain first class institutions ."

Corry also warned that in-creased support from govern-ments might result in increase dintervention in university af-fairs .

"We are in a period of socia lchange which will alter the re -lationship between the univer- and is expected to be publishe dsity a n d the community in early in 1966 . "many ways," he said .

Andrew said plans are under-He said the public has been way for the institution of a

perplexed, suspicious and some- ~ campus planning service a s

'Fees must continue '

Whatever became of:G. Fawkes,

CLASS OF '08 ?GSA NEWSExecutive Resolutions Concerning"March"

At the Executive Meeting of the GSA held on Mon -day October 25, 1965 the following resolutions wer epassed :

(1) "Regardless of the results of the special AMSreferendum regarding the mass student march, th eGSA Executive reaffirms its original stand concern-ing the Education Action Program ." The stand takenearlier and referred to above may be paraphrasedas, the GSA Executive support the concept of a Uni-versity Education for all students of ability withoutthe incurrment of undue financial stress, ie. theexecutive does not support the concept of abolitionof fees per se. nor a mass student march on October27 to protest University Fees.(2) "Moved that the Executive express extremedissatisfaction with the ambiguous and misleadingwording of the referendum regarding the mass stu-dent march on October 27, referred to as an, 'Orderlyacademic procession .' "(3) "Further, that no Executive member of theGSA plans to lead any official contingent other tha nthe originally agreed to in Minute No . 24 of theAMS meeting of October 12, as follows: 'A delega-tion to the Annual Meeting of the AUCC . . .' con-sisting of the Students Council, Five members fromeach Undergrad Society Executive, the GSA; andrepresentatives from Victoria University, SimonFraser University, the B .C. Institute of Technology;the Presidents of Senior High Schools in the LowerMainland; five representatives of . the CUS; and amaximum of ten faculty representatives ."The above motions were subsequently read at th eAMS meeting of Monday October 25, by Mr. GeorgeWooten, GSA President .

Voted the student likely to rise highest i nhis class, Guy will be remembered for hi smajor thesis "The Raising and Lowerin gof Buildings by a Revolutionary Method" .Cognizance was taken of this project byParliament. Always keenly interested i nproblems of rapid movement of mass ,Mr. Fawkes became attached to an earl yspace programme which failed due tonon-ignition of the propellant . Results o fsome of his earlier experimental spac ework are clouded due to excessive blast -off. However—who knows?—due to goodold Guy, this college might well hav ebeen the first to put a man on the moon .Conclusive evidence must await moresophisticated lunar exploration .

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Page 8: Vol. XLVIII, No. 18 WE WERE CONCERNED - UBC Library … · WE WERE CONCERNED Rebel sit-in answered by walkout r By TOM WAYMAN Ubyssey Editor-in-Chief Three students stalked out of

Page 8

T H E

UBYSSEY

Thursday, October 28, 1965

New Brunswick student sdemand premier apologize

Simon Fraser studentsagainst concern march

Simon Fraser Academy students are against a marchof concern, SFA student president Tony Buzan sai dWednesday.

Buzan told The Ubyssey an open forum and generalmeeting of SFA students Tuesday decided not to supportany march.

"We feel the public will misinterpret the demonstra-tion," he said . "UBC is demonstrating to the wrong people . "

He said SFA council's official policy was to freeze fee simmediately and also "to request immediate increases i nscholarships, loans and bursaries and then discuss th ematter of abolishment."

ELECTIONS COMMITTE EApplications are now being received for membershipon the Elections Committee . Applications should beaddressed in writing to the Secretary, A .M.S. (Box 54)and should include name, address, and telephon enumber . Deadline Monday, November 1st, 4 :00 p.m .

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Alma Mater SocietyOFFICIAL NOTICES

FREDERICTON (CUP) —The Students' RepresentativeCouncil of the University ofNew Brunswick has demand-ed that Premier Louis Rob-ichaud apologize publicly fo rintervening in a recent de-monstration against Prim eMinister Lester Pearson .

The council claims that aphone call from Robichaud

The statement went on to"request a formal apologyfrom the premier for his in-tervention . "

The premier's executive as-sistant in a phone interviewOct . 25 admitted that Robi-chaud made the call to Mac -Kay .

But he denied that th epremier had anything to d owith the cancellation of thebus .

He said the bus was can -celled by the leader of th ecampus Progressive Conserva-tive club after he had bee ncalled into MacKay's office todiscuss the matter .

to UNB president Colin Mac -Kay led to the cancellationof a bus the demonstratorshad chartered to take them tothe airport to meet PearsonOct . 16 .

A resolution passed Oct . 23protested "Premier Robi-chaud's unwarrented use o fhis position to prevent th estudent body from enjoying

their full rights as Canadiancitizens"

About 50 students showedup at the airport despite th ecancellation of the bus toheckle the prime minister o nhis arrival .

They complained that theyhad been disfranchised in th efederal election .

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Page 9: Vol. XLVIII, No. 18 WE WERE CONCERNED - UBC Library … · WE WERE CONCERNED Rebel sit-in answered by walkout r By TOM WAYMAN Ubyssey Editor-in-Chief Three students stalked out of

Thursday, October 28, 1965

THE UBYSSEY

Page 9

membership in the Union Gen-erale des Etudiants du Quebec .

The French-speaking unio nwhich opens its congress inQuebec City today, will hea rthe applications at this meet-ing .

An agreement reached Oct .25 by UGEQ officials and ex-ecutives of the McGill studentunion, will enable the Englishuniversities to enjoy a year o fdual membership in UGEQ andthe Canadian Union of Stu -dents.

* * *Next year these universities

will have to leave CUS to re -main ,in UGEQ.

The agreement must be rati-fied by the congress, but Shar-on Sholzberg, McGill councilpresident, says she expects nodifficulties .

If McGill and Sir Georg eWilliams universities an dLoyola and Marianopolis col-leges are admitted to UGEQthe process of dividing Can-adian students on geographiclines, begun last fall, will havebeen carried to a point nearcompletion .

A year ago the Universitie sof Montreal, Sherbrooke andLaval left the Canadian Unionof Students to prepare for th efounding of UGEQ.

It' * *The 55,000 member union

brings together Quebec univer-sity students, and post-secon-dary students in the classica lcolleges, along with those o fthe technical schools a n dteachers' colleges.

UGEQ has emphasized fromthe start it is a union of "Que-becois" and not of "Canadien sFrancais" .

It rejected the entrance ofthe bilingual University of Ot-tawa to a special , status inUGEQ on the grounds that theuniversity is not in Quebec .

This year UGEQ is courtingEnglish Quebec and even al -lowing it another year in CUSwhile it grows accustomed t oits new home .

RUTHIE SHAVER (who is also Miss Music) comes on he rshimmering, smiling best for happy Ubyssey photographerwho drew fashion show assignment Tuesday noon a tBrock .

Bel of onte's protegeentertains at pep rally

Singer Carmen Christina, a protege of Harry Bela-fonte, will head the festivities at the pep rally today at noo nin Memorial Gym .

Miss Christina, who specializes in Mexican folk songs ,is currently making a tour of northwestern universities .

Also on the program is the presentation of the 1 7Homecoming queen candidates .

The cheerleaders will arouse the crowd after whichthe Thunderbird football team will be presented.

SLAVONIC CIRCLETwo films on Poland noon

Friday, in Bu . 202 .

INTERNATIONALPanel discussion, 8 p .m .

Thursday, Societies in transi-tion, India .

Important Notice

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English schoolsreject Canada

By Canadian University PressA split between Quebec students and those in the res t

of Canada could replace the traditional French-Englishdivision in Canadian student life .

The new split is threatenedby four English universities inQuebec who are applying for

set for libraryThe library will have a

new alarm procedure in afew days .

Library personnel, the UB Cfire marshal, and an officia lof the building and groundsdepartment held a meetin gWednesday to discuss newprocedures .

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-Ada "Mle'

4e Ir

Page 10: Vol. XLVIII, No. 18 WE WERE CONCERNED - UBC Library … · WE WERE CONCERNED Rebel sit-in answered by walkout r By TOM WAYMAN Ubyssey Editor-in-Chief Three students stalked out of

Page 10

THE

UBYSSEY

Thursday, October 28, 196 5

3,500 MARCHED

LABORERS SWORE

The day the rains came dow nBy PAT HRUSHOWY

"I hope it rains on themarchers—all three of them,"said an anti - march AlmaMater Society official l a s tweek .

It rained on all 3,500 ofthem Wednesday .

The march left Sunset beachat 3 p .m., 30 minutes behindschedule, and included 10 0SFA students who defied theircouncil and a few concernedVancouver City College stu-dents .

The march was completewith an eight-piece pipe bandand shopping cart .

Public reaction was gen-erally good but there were afew against it .

The march annoyed motor-ists all along the route . Saidone police officer, "You didn' tmake any friends with motor-ists . "

A lady in a cab said, "It' sgreat, but why do you have tomarch now? I'm in a hurry . "

TV newsman Brad Keencame to an on-route windo wand was loudly invited to jointhe march .

A radioman thought themarchers were trying to elec thim president .

CBC people covering th emarch were annoyed. Saidone, "Why don't you say some-thing? Why aren't you betterorganized? Where are you rprotest songs?"

"I haven't seen my daughter

yet so no comment," said a

bystander .

A CHAN newsman said ,"It's a good march, but howsuccessful are marches? "

"I admire your spirit butthe idea is wrong. Any stu-dent who really wants an edu-cation can get it in spite offees," said a successful uni-versity graduate ,

A pair of laborers, obvious-

ly tied up in traffic, swore .A working girl was als o

against the march : "My taxesare high enough already."

"Maybe they should getfees abolished; t h en theycould afford to get haircut sand shaves," a businessmansaid .

The march was met at theBayshore by a group of frater-nity kids bearing signs: "MakeUBC a private college for ric hkids," and "Raise the fees,

down with proletariat . "When asked who paid their

expenses, one said "Daddy . "

After hearing officials atthe Bayshore, buses left forUBC—without 150 marchers.AMS treasurer Mike Sommer sordered more buses and fre ecoffee for waiting students .

"Next week I'm going t oprotest marching in the rain, "said a soggy but still con-cerned trekker .

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Lost & Found

1 1

FOUND ADS inserted free. Publica-tions office, Brock Hall. Local 26, 224-8242 .LOST: U .B .C. JACKET FRI . NITE

at Lower Mall Dance, owner i nurgent need of glasses which werein the pocket . Please phone To-tem Park Heide 384 .

LOST - -UMBRELLA LEFT I NBlue Volkswagen Wed . afternoon ,October 20th . Will finder pleas e

phone Les, 736-4619 .LOST — ZOOLOGY LAB KIT ON

Chancellor, Monday. Phone 731 -3898 .

GIRL' S GLASSES, Brown & WhiteFrames, found in AUD. CAE . Oct.25

—Brock.Pick up at Publications Office

-FOUND CAR KEY IN CASE No .

183-361, field next to Memoria lGym, Monday. Call at UbysseyAdvertising Office.

FOUND — ONE WRISTWATCH.Probably lost while hitchhikingone to three weeks ago . PhoneDevin, AM 1-1549 .

FOUND IN WEST VANCOUVER—Duffle Coat, with Campus A-Go-Gotickets in pocket . Phone WA 2-6815 .

FOUND NEAR NURSES' BENCHduring Chariot Race, one blackpen, silver cap . E. J . Cakeyne ,Dept. of Math.

FOUND — 2 CLUTCH PURSES,1 gold watch, 1 silver lighter, 1pair women's brown glasses . AM S Office, Brock Hall.FOUND — HISTORY TEXT BOOK,

at Wesbrook Bus Stop, 8.30 p.m.Tuesday. Call at Lost & FoundDept., behind Bookstore.

EYE GLASSES—HAVE YOU LOS TYours? AMS Publications Officehas Five Pairs of Glasses lookin gfor owners.

LOST — LADIES DARK BROW NSuede Jacket in Biological ScienceBuilding, Tuesday, Oct. 26 . Pleasephone WA 9-2724.

Special Notices

1 3

CAVE IS NEXT .VOTE SHARIE MALISAUSKAS for HOMECOMING QUEEN.SWING WITH THE CHESSMEN

at another great Totem ParkMixer Friday, October 29th, from

9 :30 p .m. to 1 :00 a .m . AMS Card srequired at door.

DISPLAYS FROM EUROPE, ASIA,Africa — See these and muc hmore at Fall Fair '65, Nov. 5, 6,Armouries. Tickets 50c - $1 .50.AMS Office or Int ' 1 House .

THE FABULOUS MR. BARRY —Hypnotist. One more hilariousshow Fri ., Nov. 15, Totem Park.

Transportation

1 4

RIDE WANTED FOR TWO 8 :30Mon. to Fri. Vic. 41st & Cambie .Staying out some evenings pre-ferably. Marilyn 327-3862 or Mar y 321-9239.NORTH VANCOUVER — RIDER S

wanted, one or both ways . Leave7 .30 a.m., return 3 .30 p.m . Phone 988-4860 evenings.TWO DRIVERS NEEDED FOR

West Van carpool, Taylor Way to24th . Phone Christine, 922-3067 .

RIDE WANTED FROM 18th ANDRenfrew for 8 .30 classes. 433-259 6after six .

Wanted 1 5WANTED — SHARIE M,ALISAUS-

KAS for HOMECOMING QUEEN.

AUTOMOTIVE & MARINE

Automobiles For Sale 2 11959 NA'SH METROPOLITAN —

Tremendous condition . New pain tjob . RE 3-2686 .

1958 PLYMOUTH 6 CYL. STAND-ard 2 doors . Very good runningcondition $350 or best offer . RE 6-4620after 5 :30 p .m.

1965' VW DELUXE — PERFECTcondition, white, seat belts, 7,000milgs, Contact Rowell, 224-9845 ,Rm . 9, after 6 :00 .

FOR SALE 1958 M.G.A . CONVEIt-tible with wire wheels, radio.$600 or nearest offer. Can be seenat Thomas Motors, 715 Kingaway .

MUST SELL 1961 NSU PRINZ. EX-cel. cond. $450. Also 1964 HondaSport 50 $165 . John FA 7-1216 .

'53 FORD TUDOR STAND TRANS .Clean and in good running condi-tion . Rebuilt engine . $300 or bestoffer. WA 2-0913.

'53 RED & WHITE HARD TOPFord Sedan, excellent runnin gcondition, $175 .00. Good whitewal ltires, signals . Phone, 988-2997 after7 p .m .

'62 M.G. MIDGET, SHARP, FAST ,economical, 1 owner, good condi-tion . Phone WA 6-1729 .

Motorcycles 271965 MONZA DUCATI 250cc, $580,

or payments . ,2455' W. Broadway.Phone738-4992 .

'65 HONDA S90 ONLY 2400 MILESAl condition phone 224-9793, Roo m143 after 6 p .m. Leave message .

BUSINESS SERVICES

Typewriters & Repairs

42

GOOD CLEAN TZ -iewRITSRS, $3 9up. Also Typewriter repairs et50 percent savings . Poison Type-writers, 2140 W. 4th. Phone RRii1-8322.

Typing

4$

THESES, ESSAYS, BOO K RE-views, Notes. ARDALE GRIF-FITHS LIMITED, 70th and Gran-ville . Phone 263-4530.

ESSAYS TYPED ON I.B .M . ELEC -tric by Registered Public Steno-graphers. 30c per page include spaper. L. J. Brown, 5-6 p .m . RE . 8-1971 foe detail .

EMPLOYMENT

Help Wanted 111PART-TIME WORK AVAILABLE

as taxi drivers. Black Top CabsLtd., 701 Beach.

PIZZA PATIO IS CONTINUINGwith its policy of making employ-ment available to students for par ttime evening work—one or twoevenings a week. Students con-sidering applying must have cleandriving record for use of Companycars and be 21 years of age orolder . Contact Manager at th ePizza Patio most convenient t oyou after 5 p .m . Locations in Ker-risdale, South Van., Downtownand West Van.PS : New outlet coming close t oU .B .C.

INSTRUCTION

Tutoring

6 4

IT'S HERE "COMPLETE GUIDE"to Chem. 101 Labs . Your Experi-ments will be easy with your newChem. 101 Guide . • This book iswritten as your experiments shouldbe written up . • Shows how t owork calculations step-by-step .• Complete with theory, proce-dure, data, calculations and dis-cussion .• If you would like the reward-ing thrill that Chem. Labs ca nbring drop into The College Shop ,Brock Extension, for your com-plete guide to Chem. 101 . Labs. —$2.50 .

MISCELLANEOUSFOR SALE

71

BALL AND CHAINS! 15-45 LBS .From $7 .95 . AM 6-2869 after 6 p .m .

6 STRING ELECTRIC BASS GUI-tar must sell, group disbanding offers YU 7-5737 .BIRD CALLS—the most useful book

on the campus. Student telephonedirectory available latter part ofOctober. Limited Number. Ordernow, only 76 cents.

Ben's Carpet CentreUBC STUDENTS SPECIALS 9x1 2rugs $29 .50 up. Desks and book-cases, $9.95-$23.95 . Open Fri . 'til 9 .Cor. 4th & Burrard . RE 1-891$ .

Rooms

8 1

SLEEPING ROOM NEAR U.B .C .Hotplate . $40 month. Board can b earranged. Phone 263-4328.

ROOM AND COOKING FACILITIESavailable near Eighth and Arbu-tus . (Cost $30 per month .) PhoneRuss Affleck AM 3-3580 .

BAY 5 , 952 2

HELD OVER !

LA DOLCE VITA

Marcello Mastroiann iAnita Ekberg

(Restricted)

STUDENT RATE — 75c

DELTADRi, f ,, M1cF s-

,

OCT 29 and 30

STAGE TO THUNDER ROC KScott Brady — Marilyn Maxwel l

CRACK IN THE WORL DDana Andrews — Janette Scott

BRITISH SCIENTIST SSenior scientists from Imperial Chemical Industrie s

Limited, England, will be visiting the Campus o n

Monday, 1st November

They wish to meet graduates in any scientific disci-

pline from Britain or the British Commonwealth who

would like to discuss careers with I .C .I . in the United

Kingdom . Recent arrivals, as well as those who are

considering the possibility of returning to Britain ,

are invited to get in touch with them through :

MR. A. F. SHIRRAN : — Office of Student Services .

Who Says You Can't Affo rd

An AR GUS Remote Projector?A large factory purchase of all Argus models has enabled us to giveprices equal to any in town. But we have no more room in our

storage room and more stock is on the way ; so we are putting priceson some of these units which we believe to be as low as you will

ever see between now and Christmas. Please help us make room !

Features 10' remotecontrol slide changer, Universal f/3 .5 lens, brilliant 500 -watt CZA lamp . single slide editor, elevation and fin efocus controls, automatic tray release, turbo-blower.cooling, steel and aluminum self-contained case . Useslong-play Spacesaver trays .

This model feature sforward and reverse slide changing and focussing b yremote control . Has Universal f/3 .5 lens, brilliant 500-waf tCZA lamp, single slide editor, elevation and fine focu scontrols, turbo-blower cooling, steel and aluminum self- .contained case . Uses long-play Spacesaver trays .

Silent electricallypowered operation by remote control runs slides throughforward or reverse ; and fine focusses up to 10' away . Otherfeatures include 500-watt CZA lamp, f/3.5 lens, single slideeditor, turbo-blower cooling, all metal self-containe dcase . Uses long-play Spacesaver trays .

Trades Welcome .

Featuresautomatic timer that changes slides at pre-selected inter-vals . Remote control changes slides forward or revers eand fine focusses,—has built-in pointer light, 500-wat tlamp, 4 inch f/3.5 lens, turbo-blower cooling,self-contain-ed design . Uses long-play Spacesaver trays .

▪ Easy Term s

KERRISDALE CAMERAS2170 W. 41st AVENUE

AM 6-262 2

HANNAY'S CAM ERAS2289 W. BROADWAY

Buy NOW For ChristmasRE 8-5717

-List 129 .95

9488

List 149.9 5

104 .88

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

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

Page 11: Vol. XLVIII, No. 18 WE WERE CONCERNED - UBC Library … · WE WERE CONCERNED Rebel sit-in answered by walkout r By TOM WAYMAN Ubyssey Editor-in-Chief Three students stalked out of

.r

Thursday, October 28, 1965

T H E U B Y S S E Y

Page 1 1

MARXIS Tspeaks on

the VERTICA LMOSIAC

ANALYSIS OF GLASSSTRUCTURE. OF CANADA

Noon Thursday(Today)

Henry Angus 110

SOCIALIST CLUB

UBC's women's gymnasti cteam is on the beam again .

Returning from last year' steam, which placed third inthe Western Canadian Inter-collegiate Athletic Associa-tion competition, is coachMonique Lindeman .

Miss Lindeman, a nativeof Germany, ranked amongthe top 10 gymnasts befor ecoming to Canada 12 yearsago .

She now serves as chair -man of the Women's Techni-cal Committee of Gymnastic sin B.C. and Secretary of th eB .C . Gymnastic Association .

Ruth Johnson, who re-ceived her Big Block lastseason, is back in good form .

Practices are held in theMemorial Gym apparatu sroom, Tuesdays and Thurs-days from noon to 2 :30 p .m .

New members are wel-come, no experience neces-sary .

Womenflyingin gym

Join the Football TeamFor a WeekendIn San Francisco

CHARTER FLIGHT TO SAN FRANCISCO BEING PLANNED FOR THE NOV. 5th-7th

WEEKEND, LEAVING VANCOUVER FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 5th AT 5 :30 P.M.,

RETURNING SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 7th, AT 9 :30 P .M .

Return Fare — Vancouver - San Franscisc o

$60•00(Regular Fare — $118 .00)

Those interest should apply at Athletic Office in The Memorial Gy m

not later than Wednesday, November 3rd .

$60.00 payable at time of application .

Flight Limited to 50 Passengers — Sign Up Immediatel y

Less than 25 seats left - Don't miss this opportunity to trave l

with the Thunderbirds and see San Francisco.

SPORTSEditor : Ed Clark

10% OFF CORSAGE STo All UBC Students

ORDER EARL Y

VOGUE FLOWER SHOP2197 W Broadway 736-7344

Look-Ski SETS!'Beginning of the season ' 'SPECIAL S

NOVICE SE TINCLUDE S"AMERICANA" SKI — has a 'poly-tex ' base steel edges, plasti ctop, tip and heel protectors . Color—White with black $27.50trim . Sizes 1S0cm. to 205 cm L

"MILLCO" POLE — Tapered metal pole has formed grip, $5.95leather wrist strap, moulded basket -

SAFETY HARNESS — Toe piece has a full double actionfor fast release—front lever has famous "pistol action "

$1 1 .95cable release

TOTAL

SAVE _

COMPLETE SET ONLY _

$45 .40

7.90$37.5 0FOR THOSE TRADING U PFamous "ANDERSON AND THOMPSON" ZERMATT SK Ipiece laminated . 'polym3ca ' plastic base, inlaid plasti ctop edges, interlocking steel edges, metal tip and heelprotectors . Color—blue --SAFETY HARNESS — World famous "MARKER" toepiece . "GRESVIG" front lever

"MILLCO" POLE"—Tapered metal pole has formed grip,

$C .95leather wrist strap. moulded basket .. . ri

TOTAL

SAVE

COMPLETE SET ONLY —_ .

FALL SELECTION OF BETTER QUALITY LADIES' and MEN' SSKI JACKETS — Such names as "HELLER", "WHITE STAG"and "TYROI:" . Good color assortment .

$20.00 to $45 .00Priced from -_°

NEW ARRIVALS IN SWEATERS, Patterned and plain. Ideal forfall campers, curling or skiing.

Complete Ski Repair Service — Now is the time to chec kover your skiis and get those needed repairs !

Free Parking D.P .C. Lot, Pender & Hornby — Open Friday 'til 9 p.m.

-21 -

$37.50

Watch for the opening of Arlberg's Sho pat Whistler Mtn .

Listen to "Outdoors with "Arlberg"—Thursdays at 6 :15 p.m. — CHQM

l

ARLBERG SPORT k'AU S

816 WEST PENDER ST., MU 2-4288

DEMONSTRATING form that ranks her in the top fivegymnasts in Canada is UBC's Leslie Bird . Miss Bird, agraduate of North Vancouver High School, is a member ofthe UBC Gymnastic Club which competes in WCIAA com-petition .

Simon Frase routlines it's

athletic policyThe following is a press release from Simon Fraser

Academy's Director of Athletics, Lorne Davies, outlinin gSFA's athletic program.

During the early planning of Simon Fraser Academypublic pronouncements were made regarding the place o fathletics in the university .

Excellence in the athletic program was to be established ,commensurate with excellence in teaching and researchgoing on at the university .

To prevent the drain of good students from BritishColumbia, plans were set in motion to establish first-rat ecoaching in athletics and steps were taken to secure financialassistance for those students eligible for the university whohad, as well, good athletic abilities .

Such an approach simply acknowledges a responsibilit yof a modern university .

If a student is admitted to the university with goodabilities in athletics, is clearly the responsibility of theuniversity to provide for the expansion and enhancement o fthose abilities .

* * *A wide range of evidence now suggests that the univer-

sity must acknowledge the fact that well co-ordinated mindscan be found within co-ordinated bodies .

To ignore athletics or to provide second rate coachin gis clearly to abdicate responsibilities to students in BritishColumbia .

It is our belief that a well organized athletic teamprovides more than just a place to discuss and test self-discipline and achievement theories; it furnishes a labora-tory for actual practice .

This educational laboratory demands actual response sto situations just as much as life does in general .

Athletics provide students with a unique learning ex-perience which is both physically and psychologically chal-lenging .

To this end the following individuals have been grante dathletic scholarships :

* * *FOOTBAL L

Christopher Beaton, Robert Boyer, Ronald Faulkner ,Patrick Fears, Leonard Harding, Hans Jaanusson, SimoKorpisto ; Herb Lang,

Lumb, Robert McGeein, ,R_gpertWin, Joseph Marcuzzi,

iairi --)'Doherty, Kim Rawley,Ron Reichelt, Richard Sanders and Bolko Skapsi.

BASKETBALLEmery Baker, Douglas Dougan, Gary Field, Gunne r

Kuehn, James Mills, David Murphy and Robert Wright .

SWIMMIN GPeter Marshall .

SPECIAL AWARDS FOR ATHLETIC ABILITIE SThe Fred H. Dietrich Athletic Scholarship — James

W. Jardine; the Victor Spenser Athletic Scholarship —Russell W. Jenkins ; the Fred Bolton Athletic Scholarship —R. J . 1VFcLaren ; B.C. Lions Football Club Athletic Scholar -ship — Edward B. Warkentin ; Carling Breweries <B .C.) Ltd .Athletic award for swimming — Mary Stewart .

All of our endeavours are marshalled to provide awell rounded athetic program . The recipients of these awardsare outstanding people of the highest calibre .

It is to he noted, however, that this is our initial an-nouncement of Athletic Awards and further announcementsof awards will be made in the very near future .

Page 12: Vol. XLVIII, No. 18 WE WERE CONCERNED - UBC Library … · WE WERE CONCERNED Rebel sit-in answered by walkout r By TOM WAYMAN Ubyssey Editor-in-Chief Three students stalked out of

'TWEEN CLASSES

Roblin gives Tory view

Page 12

THE

UBYSSEY

Thursday, October 28, 1 .965

Premier Duff Roblin of Mani-toba, on a one-day electionvisit to Vancouver, will addressstudents at noon today inBrock .

Following the rally, Sir Ouv-ry Roberts will host a luncheonat the Faculty Club for Rob-lin and Conservative candidatefor Vancouver Quadra, Howar dGreen.

Roblin has been mentionedas a possible successor to JohnDiefenbaker for the Tory' snational leadership .GAMMA DELT A

Talk in Bu. 2201 by Dr . Wal-ton on "Reformation in ModernPerspective ." Friday, noon .AFRICAN STUDENT S

Film and get together at In-ternational House, 7:30, Thurs .PHYS. SOC.

Grad Studies talk on Geo-physics and Oceanography ,Thursday, 1 :30, room 204, -Phys . Bldg .SUS

Grad students meeting inroom 100 Math Bldg ., Friday ,noon, lecture on "Graduat eEmployment . "COMMITTEE TO EN DVIET WAR

Film produced by NLF (Viet-'cong) Friday, noon, Bu . 102 .SAILING CLU B

Emergency general meeting ,Bu. 202, noon Thursday .VOC

Hon. Arthur Laing speaks on"Canada's National Parks andGaribaldi ." Noon Thursday, inHebb Theatre .RAMBLERS

General meeting, Bu. 214 ,Thursday noon .BIG BLOCK

Big Block dance for membersand campus athletes, Vancou-ver Rowing Club, Nov . 13 at9 p .m., featuring The Accents .

Tickets $3 . Bar will be open .SKATE SO C

Meeting Thursday, Thunder-bird Arena, 3 :00 to 4:20. Every-one welcome.MUSSOC

Mussoc's Fall banquet Satur -day night at InternationalHouse from 6 :30 to 1 :00 a .m .C .A.A.C .

Pre-fall symposium evening

session. Dr. Laindauer, Thurs-day, 8 :30 p .m .

SOCREDSB.C. cacus chairman, Herb

Bruch, speaks on "Federal -Provincial relations, Broc kHall, Friday noon .SOCREDS

Social Credit CandidatesDonald Gosse and NormanHoward, lBrock Hall, Mondaynoon .

RELIGIOUS AND ASIANSTUDIES

Lecture by Dr. Edwar Conzeon "Buddhism and History "Friday at 8 :15 p .m. in Fine arts107 .

QUAKER GROU PWorship meeting Sunday,

11 :00 a .m. Bu. Penthouse .

NDPWar Propaganda film, Thurs-

day noon, Bu . 100. Admissio n25 cents.

THEATRE CLUBHarold Pinter's "The Collec-

tion" Thursday and Friday at

noon, Frederic Wood Theatre .Admission 25 cents .

ACADEMIC ACTIVITIESPoetry Reading by Susanne

Mowat, Leslie Cartr, and Fran kHarris, Thursday noon, Bu. 204 .LUTHERAN STUDEN TMOVEMEN T

Film `"Martin Luther," Angu s104, 12 :30 Thursday . Free .SOCIALIST CLUB

Marxist speaks on "The Vert -ical Mosaic" noon, Thursday ,Angus 110 .FINE ARTS

Thursday, 12 :30, tour of JeanPaul Riopelle exhibit at Ar tGallery . Rides from southwestcorner of the Lasserre Bldg .U.C. THEOLOGICAL

Dr. Ken McMillan speaks12:30 in Theolog. CommonRoom .PANHELLENIC ASSOC.

Open House, Friday 6 :30p .m.VCF

General meeting, Thursdaynoon, Angus 110 .

Corsage Needed

For Homecoming Dance?

Call:

STRATHCONA FLORAL CO .5555 West Blvd.

AM 1 .7271

Erick Hawkins has created a work for the theatre that

explores with daring, lyric humility all we have eve r

thought about movement and sound.

YOUNG MENC'

SUNBEAM SHOE S

STYLED FOII TH EYOWIR CIIOW D

It leading shun snrywhsrs

THE WHEELERSSALES AND SERVIC E

4395 W. 10th Ave. 2244914}

HONDA SPECIALISTS

SPECIALS :RAIN SUITS . . . $ 2 .9 9HELMETS $10 .9 5AUTO HEADRESTS 5 .9 5

10% Down an d24 Months to Pay

Prime Minister

PEARSO N

Will Address the Student Bod y

Friday, October 29MEMORIAL GYM — 12:30 NOO N

THE

A Play by Harold Pinter

THURSDAY - FRIDAY12:30 - NOO N

OCTOBER 28 - 2925c AT THE DOOR

AT THE FREDERIC WOOD THEATRE

V-Neck Pullover SleevelessPace Setter For

1966

A Must in Every Student's Wardrobe

LAMBS WOOL $9 .95

As Usual . .

Better Sweater s

Richards & Farish Ltd.786 Granville St.

Phone 684-4819

CLASSICAL GUITARTuition up to Advanced

Level - Segovia Techniqu e

W. PARKERRecitalist . 882.1091

Tickets on Sale at A. M. S. and

Vancouver Ticket Centre

I EVENTS I