vpt. l, no. 31 48 occupation unb suspension …...burnaby cops got busted vpt. l, no. 31 vancouver,...

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Burnaby cops got buste d Vpt. L, No. 31 VANCOUVER, B .C ., FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1968 48 228-230 5 Occupatio n curries o n MONTREAL (CUP) — The Canadian As- sociation of University Teachers Sunday con- demned the University of New Brunswick fo r its actions in the Strax affair . CAUT blast s UNB suspension By PAUL KNO X BURNABY (Staff) — Their numbers hav d dwindled, but Simon Fraser University student s occupying the SFU administration buildin g show no sign of giving up their struggle fo r freer admissions policies at the university . An occupation force of about 130 student s Thursday night manned the two floors of the building, which includes SFU president Ken- neth Strand's office, the SFU registrars and th e university's complete admission and academi c files. Strand cancelled all Friday classes at SF U and called a general student meeting for 9 :3 0 in the university's main mall where he wil l attempt to explain the university's position . Late Thursday, he rejected and refused t o negotiate with the students on a formula pre - pared by SFU senators Donn Korbin, a studen t senator, and Gerry Sperling, a political scienc e prof. The Korbin-Sperling formula, which was re- jected without debate by the SFU senate Wed- nesday night : • the university must accept the principl e of free transferability of all credits granted i n B .C . post-secondary institutions ; To Page 8 See : OCCUPATIO N Evidenc e The teachers' association criticized the UN B administration for suspending the nuclear phy- sics professor " without stated charges or pro- visions for an adjudicative hearing" . The move came at the semi-annual con- ference of the CAUT council held here thi s weekend . The meeting was closed. The association asserted : "Matters of aca- demic freedom and tenure are best handled b y . . arbitration within the academic community . " It then followed with an offer "to assist the University of New Brunswick to establish pro - per procedures to deal with an settle this case . " The association did not follow through to a censure of the UNB administration, similar t o the one imposed on Simon Fraser Universit y last year . The association lifted that censure Saturda y following the recommendation of an investiga- tion commission . CAUT officials disclosed after the confer- ence that an agreement had been reached be - . tween CAUT and the Canadian Union of Stu - dents to sponsor a joint commission on aca- demic freedom for students . The commission, to consist of two member s each from CUS and CAUT, will report on dis- ciplinary procedures and students' civil rights . CAUT president C . Brough Macpherson sai d the commission was called because "if there i s a real problem, the lack of satisfactory polic y for dealing with it obviously reduces the effec- tiveness of the university as a place for teach - - ing and learning. " By JAMES CONCHIE 12 :30 a .m. Thursday : Photog Powell Har- grave and I enter the administration buildin g through the chained first floor door . Outside , city newsmen try to get in, but are turne d away. The student steering committee is only admitting student press . We wander up to the second floor, headquarters for the occupation . The first thing that hits is the sound of voice s singing "The senators are bastards, we shal l not be moved" to the tune of We Shall Over- come. A walk around finds students movin g in food, toilet paper, tampax, cigarettes, baby formula (two families in sight), blankets, sleep- ing bags, pillows and books . It looks like a long stay . 1 :00 a .m. : Earlier in the evening, the occu- pation force broke up into groups of ten fo r discussions . Each group elected a spokesma n to sit on the central steering committee, whic h is meeting now to discuss the senate actions . Small groups go about their business — set- ting up the kitchen, writing and producin g pamphlets, relieving the guards at the door , searching files, etc . 1 :20 a.m. : Senate has finally adjourned , after passing a motion to meet some of th e student demands . A senate spokesman slips a copy of the motion under the chained mai n door . The motion says senate will set up a n admissions and standing appeal committee a s a separate and distinct body from the senate committee on admissions . It will consist of one member of the senate committee, the assistan t registrar, both of whom will not vote, tw o senators, one student senator, to be appointed by senate and one student chosen by student council . The steering committee breaks off it s meeting to gather all students for a discussion of the senate offer . 1 :36 a .m. : Downtown newsmen make on e final attempt to get in before they go off shift. There is , an elevator coming from outside th e first floor door to the third floor landing . The stairs leading from the third floor are barri- caded with filing cabinets. They hold. The newsmen retreat . Fire hose . is used to tie th e landing doors shut . Back on the second floo r there are four or five guys waiting to get thei r hair cut in the free barber shop that has jus t been set up . 2 :00 a.m . : People are taking advantage o f the five minute hourly door opening to go ou t Continued Page 2 — See : DIAR Y Only one ra g Due to popular demand, exams, and sever e fatigue, The Ubyssey will appear only onc e next week . Next Friday's mammoth editio n will be the last of the term, leaving Christma s to Santa's little helpers . ' powell hargrave photo BANJOIST JOHN MATE entertains students in Simon Frase r University's administration building Wednesday night . H e and several hundred other students weren't stringing th e administration a line though . The demonstration was stil l going strong as of The Ubyssey's press deadline. The Ubyssey here reprints two letter s from the SFU registrar's files which sho w that : non-academic — i .e . political criteria are used in determining whethe r a student is admitted to SFU, an d regional college students are no t given credit equal to SFU students fo r the same courses when they apply fo r admission . The first letter, dated Sept . 20, from the Burnaby RCMP detachment to registrar Harry Evans, details the procedur e for inquiring into the criminal and political status of SF U applicants . "This will serve to confirm a telephone conversatio n yesterday between yourself and Staff Sgt . B . L . Northro p of this detachment . "When it is necessary to institute inquiries with respec t to students, these will normally be made by Staff Sgt . Northrop, Sgt . G . V. Rasmussen, Const . R. A. Seeley, Const . T . N . Baldwin and Const . R . A . Flowers . Should there be any changes in our personnel, I will advise you accordingly . "In keeping with your request, we will only direc t inquiries to yourself, Mr . Douglas Meyers, or Dorothy Mc - Phie (assistant admissions registrar) unless otherwise ad- vised . " The second, from former SFU registrar D . P . Robert - son to present associate registrar Douglas Meyers (who handles all admissions) suggests that students from B .C . regional colleges should not be treated the same as thos e from SFU : "You know that statement in the calendar about ad - mission from regional colleges in B .C . This was copied from a regulation passed by the senate at UBC, and I thin k there is a very serious statement in it which I just realized . "The statement says that students who choose course s at a recognized regional college that are appropriate to hi s academic objective at university and who obtain adequat e standing in them may be accepted for further studies at th e university (SFU) under the same conditions that apply to a student who has taken all his post-secondary studies a t the university (emphasis Robertson's) . "Does this imply to you that students who are accepte d for further studies would have to be granted credit for an y course which they have passed since we ourselves gran t credit for Ds regardless of the student's record at SFU . "I have scratched this part of the statement out o f the admissions bulletin and I wonder if we shouldn 't drop it quietly from the calendar (emphasis ours) . Let me have your thoughts on how you interpret this . " a u'":'\ ., , thy {•.. .Y^~,' 'Si: . The Combat Diar y of SFU's demonstration

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Page 1: Vpt. L, No. 31 48 Occupation UNB suspension …...Burnaby cops got busted Vpt. L, No. 31 VANCOUVER, B.C., FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1968 48 228-2305 Occupation MONTREAL (CUP) — The Canadian

Burnaby cops got busted

Vpt. L, No. 31

VANCOUVER, B.C., FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1968

48

228-2305

Occupatio ncurries onMONTREAL (CUP) — The Canadian As-

sociation of University Teachers Sunday con-

demned the University of New Brunswick forits actions in the Strax affair .

CAUT blastsUNB suspension

By PAUL KNO XBURNABY (Staff) — Their numbers havd

dwindled, but Simon Fraser University studentsoccupying the SFU administration buildin gshow no sign of giving up their struggle fo rfreer admissions policies at the university .

An occupation force of about 130 studentsThursday night manned the two floors of thebuilding, which includes SFU president Ken-neth Strand's office, the SFU registrars and theuniversity's complete admission and academicfiles.

Strand cancelled all Friday classes at SF Uand called a general student meeting for 9 :3 0in the university's main mall where he willattempt to explain the university's position .

Late Thursday, he rejected and refused tonegotiate with the students on a formula pre-pared by SFU senators Donn Korbin, a studentsenator, and Gerry Sperling, a political scienceprof.

The Korbin-Sperling formula, which was re-jected without debate by the SFU senate Wed-nesday night :

• the university must accept the principleof free transferability of all credits granted inB.C. post-secondary institutions ;

To Page 8See: OCCUPATION

Evidence

The teachers' association criticized the UNBadministration for suspending the nuclear phy-

sics professor "without stated charges or pro-

visions for an adjudicative hearing" .

The move came at the semi-annual con-ference of the CAUT council held here this

weekend. The meeting was closed.

The association asserted : "Matters of aca-demic freedom and tenure are best handled b y

.. arbitration within the academic community ."It then followed with an offer "to assist the

University of New Brunswick to establish pro -per procedures to deal with an settle this case."

The association did not follow through to acensure of the UNB administration, similar t othe one imposed on Simon Fraser Universit ylast year.

The association lifted that censure Saturdayfollowing the recommendation of an investiga-tion commission .

CAUT officials disclosed after the confer-ence that an agreement had been reached be-

. tween CAUT and the Canadian Union of Stu-dents to sponsor a joint commission on aca-demic freedom for students .

The commission, to consist of two memberseach from CUS and CAUT, will report on dis-ciplinary procedures and students' civil rights .

CAUT president C . Brough Macpherson sai dthe commission was called because "if there i sa real problem, the lack of satisfactory policyfor dealing with it obviously reduces the effec-tiveness of the university as a place for teach -

- ing and learning."

By JAMES CONCHIE

12:30 a .m. Thursday: Photog Powell Har-grave and I enter the administration buildin gthrough the chained first floor door. Outside ,city newsmen try to get in, but are turnedaway. The student steering committee is onlyadmitting student press . We wander up to thesecond floor, headquarters for the occupation .The first thing that hits is the sound of voice ssinging "The senators are bastards, we shal lnot be moved" to the tune of We Shall Over-come. A walk around finds students movingin food, toilet paper, tampax, cigarettes, babyformula (two families in sight), blankets, sleep-ing bags, pillows and books . It looks like along stay .

1 :00 a .m.: Earlier in the evening, the occu-pation force broke up into groups of ten fordiscussions. Each group elected a spokesmanto sit on the central steering committee, whichis meeting now to discuss the senate actions .Small groups go about their business — set-ting up the kitchen, writing and producingpamphlets, relieving the guards at the door ,searching files, etc .

1 :20 a.m.: Senate has finally adjourned ,after passing a motion to meet some of th estudent demands. A senate spokesman slips acopy of the motion under the chained maindoor . The motion says senate will set up anadmissions and standing appeal committee a sa separate and distinct body from the senate

committee on admissions . It will consist of onemember of the senate committee, the assistantregistrar, both of whom will not vote, tw osenators, one student senator, to be appointedby senate and one student chosen by studentcouncil . The steering committee breaks off it smeeting to gather all students for a discussionof the senate offer .

1 :36 a .m.: Downtown newsmen make onefinal attempt to get in before they go off shift.There is ,an elevator coming from outside thefirst floor door to the third floor landing . Thestairs leading from the third floor are barri-caded with filing cabinets. They hold. Thenewsmen retreat . Fire hose. is used to tie thelanding doors shut. Back on the second floo rthere are four or five guys waiting to get thei rhair cut in the free barber shop that has justbeen set up .

2:00 a.m . : People are taking advantage ofthe five minute hourly door opening to go out

Continued Page 2 — See: DIARY

Only one ra gDue to popular demand, exams, and severe

fatigue, The Ubyssey will appear only onc enext week. Next Friday's mammoth editio nwill be the last of the term, leaving Christma sto Santa's little helpers .

'

— powell hargrave photo

BANJOIST JOHN MATE entertains students in Simon Frase rUniversity's administration building Wednesday night . Heand several hundred other students weren't stringing th eadministration a line though . The demonstration was stil lgoing strong as of The Ubyssey's press deadline.

The Ubyssey here reprints two letter sfrom the SFU registrar's files which showthat :

• non-academic — i .e . political —criteria are used in determining whethera student is admitted to SFU, and

• regional college students are notgiven credit equal to SFU students forthe same courses when they apply foradmission .

The first letter, dated Sept. 20, from the Burnaby RCMPdetachment to registrar Harry Evans, details the procedur efor inquiring into the criminal and political status of SFUapplicants .

"This will serve to confirm a telephone conversationyesterday between yourself and Staff Sgt . B. L. Northropof this detachment .

"When it is necessary to institute inquiries with respectto students, these will normally be made by Staff Sgt .Northrop, Sgt . G. V. Rasmussen, Const . R. A. Seeley, Const .T. N. Baldwin and Const . R. A. Flowers. Should there beany changes in our personnel, I will advise you accordingly .

"In keeping with your request, we will only direc tinquiries to yourself, Mr . Douglas Meyers, or Dorothy Mc -Phie (assistant admissions registrar) unless otherwise ad-vised . "

The second, from former SFU registrar D . P. Robert -son to present associate registrar Douglas Meyers (whohandles all admissions) suggests that students from B .C .regional colleges should not be treated the same as thosefrom SFU :

"You know that statement in the calendar about ad -mission from regional colleges in B .C. This was copiedfrom a regulation passed by the senate at UBC, and I thinkthere is a very serious statement in it which I just realized .

"The statement says that students who choose coursesat a recognized regional college that are appropriate to hi sacademic objective at university and who obtain adequatestanding in them may be accepted for further studies at theuniversity (SFU) under the same conditions that apply to astudent who has taken all his post-secondary studies a tthe university (emphasis Robertson's) .

"Does this imply to you that students who are acceptedfor further studies would have to be granted credit for an ycourse which they have passed since we ourselves grantcredit for Ds regardless of the student's record at SFU .

"I have scratched this part of the statement out o fthe admissions bulletin and I wonder if we shouldn 't dropit quietly from the calendar (emphasis ours) . Let me haveyour thoughts on how you interpret this . " a u'":'\ ., ,

thy{•..

.Y^~,'

'Si: .

The Combat Diary

of SFU's demonstration

Page 2: Vpt. L, No. 31 48 Occupation UNB suspension …...Burnaby cops got busted Vpt. L, No. 31 VANCOUVER, B.C., FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1968 48 228-2305 Occupation MONTREAL (CUP) — The Canadian

Page 2

T H E

U B Y S S E Y

Friday ; November 22, 196 8

DANCING GROUP OFTHE REPUBLIC OF CHINA

Recently from the Internationa lCultural

Exhibition,

Olympic,

Mexico,

1968

SPECIAL CAMPUS PERFORMANC E

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 196 82:00 - 4:00 P.M.

S.U .B . BALLROOMAdmission : FRE E

Tickets Available From International House Before Saturda y

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Be An Early Bird — Avoid the Rush and Save !Bring this Ad in and Save 50c o n

a Gallon of Anti-Freeze — Offer expires Dec . 15, 1968

See us for Winter Tires - Batteries - Chain s

UNIVERSITY SHELL SER VICE4314 W. 10th

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f CONCERT ffrom Winnipeg

JA. GUESS WHOsing their big hit s

WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 2 7S.U.B . BALLROOM

(Only 50c)

TEACHING INTERNSHIP PROGRAMfor University Graduates

University graduates interested in becoming secondary teacher sare invited to apply for enrollment in the Teaching Internshi pProgram at the University of Victoria . Applicants must beat least 28 years old and hold good university degrees withmajors in two teaching subjects or honours in one . Initialinstruction begins during the period from May to Augus tof 1969 ; interns will be employed at an appropriate salaryas full-time teachers from September 1969 to June 1970 .Further work at a summer session will lead to full B.C .certification .

For further information write to :The Dean of Education

UNIVERSITY OF VICTORI AVictoria, B.C .

DIARY OF A DEMONSTRATIO NFrom Page 1

and move their cars from the metered park-ing lot — they would be towed away if theywere left all night .

2:16 a.m. : The general meeting has decide dnot to accept the senate offer . Feelings are i tis too vague, the terms of reference are notclear — and besides the offer would still leaveadmissions under senate control . The meetingmoves onto discussion of how long to remainin the building .

2:24 a.m . : Associate registrar WilliamNelles, who earlier in the. evening had said "Iwill stay here to protect the files until thisthing is over," is pleading to be let out th echained door before the regular hourly open-ing 35 minutes away because "I have a heartcondition with all this strain, you know . " Heis let out. A very up-tight rent-a-cop entersand is divested of his official Dick Trac ywalkie-talkie . He phones his office and anargument starts . Rent-a-cop—"But I am, I amin the building I was told to go to ." Pause.Embarrassed cop covers receiver and ask s"What building is this?" Reassured, he tell sthe phone. "Yes, I'm in the AdministrationBuilding — what shall I do? "

2:47 a .m: People are still rapping abouthow long we should stay. Martin Loney getsup and urges people to leave before they getthrown out . "We are making a good point here ,but this thing could go bad very quickly . Thi sis going to mobilize the right wing. People ar egoing to be very reactionary tomorrow . Theywill talk about the occupation and ignore theissues that caused it. If that happens all i slost . We have shown that something is drastic-ally wrong here, and we should leave beforewe lose• our strength." He seems to have somesupport.

4:10 a.m.: The duration hassle is finallysolved . People agree with Loney, this thingmust not be allowed to die, but the feeling i swe cannot leave now . In the morning, we willsee what senate does, how the public reacts ,and decide then .

4:30 a.m .: Jay McGilvery, assistant to thevice-president, g ise up and tells us he ispleased with our conduct so far . Suggests weallow him to lock office doors so "the type swho just come to these things to steal, wil lnot cause trouble." He is told students wil lpolice themselves and, will take responsibilityfor any damage .

6:10 a.m. : Most people are sleeping now .The steering committee is meeting to decidetomorrow's policy . It's been a quiet night, notrouble, no damage, no dope — all but fiv estudents at the first general meeting votedagainst its use because of the bad public imag eit would present . Some interesting letters arebeing found — letters to, police, political or-

ganizations, the provincial government etc .asking about politicaL background of studentsapplying for admission . Seems to bear out thecharges of political discrimination in admis-sion policy. It's been a long night .

6:45 : The decision to stay is firm . Half ournumber will leave later in the morning to tr yand rally UBC and Vancouver College support .Others will try and sway public reaction favor-ably — make them understand why the build-ing is occupied, not just the fact it is . The res twill continue the occupation .

8:07 a.m. : At long last, waiting at the doorwith 20 other people, we leave as soon as thetwo rent-a-cops and the city newsmen bac koff a bit . Bang! The door flies open, we chargeout, the cops charge in (without success), the.newsman snaps his prizewinning pic (but hisflash doesn't go off), and we are on our way .Sleep for a change .

NO MONEYFrom Page 4

exploitation of B .C . resources is over-developed(dams, highways, tax incentives, etc .) ; whereasthe public sector of the economy which is im-portant to human needs is gravely under -developed (hospitals, schools, universities, etc .) .Thus the Socred government simply does no tmake sufficient funds available to the univer-sities (and those funds available are distribut-e :1 by business-dominated BoGs to favor thos eareas of the university considered "productive, "science and education for example) . The solu-tion of the universities has been to limit enrol-ment severely. At Simon Fraser this is beingdone without announcing a formal intention t olimit enrolment (that could upset the people o fB .C.) Furthermore, the enrolment limitationcriteria have not been spelled out and havebeen applied arbitrarily by the Registrar' sOffice without the knowledge of those affected .And clearly the limitation has not been solelyon academic grounds, but on political, socialand personal grounds as well .

::iik:> ,.''fir;.<. »;f:.e.;%i:'•<r".':,°ro,cif>•c,•u, .fi~, ;<t ~,., . .:;,... :,:on...a .3arty. ;~<>^ ~:..l.. .s"~.>•.

CANADIAN FINGEREDFORCES

Recruiting officers will be onthis campus today from 10 a .m .to 2 p .m. in front of the armory .

Enlist in the J . SutherlandBrown Memorial Brigade .

Help the Canadian army inits war against American im-perialism .

— fames conchie photo

STUDENTS CONFER on the second floor of the SR) administration building .

Page 3: Vpt. L, No. 31 48 Occupation UNB suspension …...Burnaby cops got busted Vpt. L, No. 31 VANCOUVER, B.C., FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1968 48 228-2305 Occupation MONTREAL (CUP) — The Canadian

Friday, November 22, 1968

T H E

U B Y S S E Y

Page 3

— john Mz~ll photo

"BEER MAKES YOU STERILE," says UBC genetics prof David Suzuki as he collects his bee rgarden card from Gale Clark, nursing 4, "LCB causes mutations . "

Thoughts of beer in the garde ndraw line-up for membership card s

The Pit enrolled more than beer garden between noon and1'80 members in its first step 2 :30 p .m. in the cloakroom o ntowards operation yesterday .

the main floor of SUB .Identity cards were issued to

Organizer Sean McHugh, sci .prospective members to UBC's 2, was very pleased with th e

• Beering success is

`up to Joe Student 'By ALEX VOLKOFF

It's up to you, Joe Student, if you want a beer garden i nSUB .

So says the Pit Management Committee as the date of theopening approaches .

"The Committee has worked hard making sure all the lega lprovisions are upheld," said Bob Gilchrist, Alma Mater Societyombudsman .

"Now it's up to the students who attend to keep it runningwithin the bounds of the laws of both the province and theuniversity . "

"The main thing students must realize is the Pit is not apub, but a place conducive to promoting free and easy expres-sion," said Cornel Dukoweki, arts 4, the public relations ma nfor the Pit Management Committee .

• "We definitely do not want it to become an extension o fFraser Arms," he said .

The Committee does not want the novelty of the venture an dthe previous atmosphere connected with the pub-ins earlier i nthe year to give students a wrong idea about the Pit.

In the words of prof David Suzuki in genetics, quoted fromhis article in the October edition of the UBC Reports, the beergarden would be a place "uniquely suited to ameliorate existin gfrustrations . "

And so this is why the committee has taken every precau -• tion and delayed the opening.

This is why so much fuss was made over the need for threepieces of I.D. to get a membership card.

And mainly, this is why students must act responsibly wit hregards to the original concepts that gave birth to the Pit .

Students must show the administration and the public the yreally do want this to be a solution to the communication prob-lems the university community suffers under now, and not jus tanother place they can get drunk .

"The first session (on Thursday, Nov. 28) has to be a succes sin this respect or else we can say goodbye to further sessions,"said 'Gilchrist .

"We're just starting this on a weekly basis, but if we canprove it will work, we'll try to operate it daily," he said .

In order to do that, students must show the SUB Manage-ment Committee by their behavior a permanent beer gardenwould be workable and providing a necessary function .

To begin with, the Pit will run totally with voluntary help .Beer will be served three to the dollar, and sandwiches

will be the price of one beer ticket .The main thing is the Pit will be run almost entirely a t

cost . The little that might be made will be going into providingextras to produce a better atmosphere, or to pay student assis-tants once that system gets implemented .

But the organizers beg that you, Joe Student, don't put al l.their hard work to waste . In the words of Dukowski, "the Pi tis a place for social exchange, not an end in itself ."

number, especially consideringthey only have one of everypiece of equipment .

"The surprising thing is thelack of females who bough tcards," he said .

Only 15 per cent of the tota lnumber were brave sweetyoung things .

'Students Who produced threepieces of I .D. and signed apledge they were over 21 year sof age and not on the interdictlist were issued special card swith their photographs on them .

But these aren't merely mem-berships for the Pit .

"These are actually 'Studen tClub cards which permit theholder into the Pit," saidMcHugh .

"The idea behind this is tofoster better relations on th eacademic campus, as profSuzuki (in •genetics) suggeste din his article," he said .

The faculty are associatemembers •while students in theAlma Mater Society are activemembers .

"We haven't yet decided wha tto do about staff," 'McHughadded .

'Gail Clark, nursing 4, sai dthere were no problems wit hpeople trying to pass falseidentification .

The only people they had toturn away were those withoutenough I.D .

"Not everyone realized boththe old AMS card plus thenew library card and two otherpieces of I .D., all stating theage of the applicant are neces-sary," McHugh said .

Miss Clark said the Pit wil lopen for the first time nextThursday from 4 :30 p.m. to9 :00 p .m. in rooms 'K, L, and Mof SUB .

The club will be open oncea week after that, she said .

No guests will be permitte dat this first opening . Only cardcarrying members will be ad-mitted .

Membership cards will agai nbe sold at the price of $1 tomor-row and Wednesday and Thurs-day of next week, from noonto 2:30 . After that, cards wil lonly be sold on Thursdays .

SUB management

creates art committeeSUB has had a room off the main foyer containing pictures

and objects d'art since it opened, but now it has an art gallery.The distinction is functional rather than aesthetic and wa s

formally passed at the SUB management committee meeting las tnight .

The action creates a SUB art gallery committee to be respon-sible for programming and management of the art gallery, main-tenance of the Brock art collection, and the purchasing of ne wacquisitions .

Up until now the only similar group was the Brock art com-mittee whose function was only that of maintenance and acquisi-tions for that collection, worth some $30,000 .

The purpose of the gallery in SUB will be experimenta lexhibitions rather than a collection .

The motion also named Illyas Pagnois, a grad student in finearts, as curator, along with a full slate of committee membersand executive.

Pagnois indicated that a show was presently being plannedand would be presented before Christmas .

He also said in an interview that the authority the committe ehas now been given was needed to prevent abuse of the gallery .

He said that the gallery was not being used for its intendedpurpose nor to its full potential .

"The place is being used as a lunch room and flophouse, "Pagnois said. "People can't properly view paintings with bodie slying around ."

-He also said that some paintings had been damaged by ,

fingerprints and writing on the pictures, resulting from a lac kof supervision .

Pagnois cited as an example the work `Tension', currentlyon display and a part of the Brock collection, saying that som eone had written in ink on the work .

The work is a collage, and the writing cannot be easily re -moved. "Unless extensive repair is done, it can be considere das aesthetic write-off . "

He said it was insured for its purchase price of $1,200 bu twas worth some $4,000 on the contemporary market .

The committee also wants to consult the architect over thelighting in the gallery which Pagnois claims is very inadequate .

Computer troubledelays exam sched

The handwriting will be on the wall later than expected .Publication of the fifty-fourth annual edition of the Christ-

mas exam schedule has been delayed by your friendly neighbor -hood computer .

"The schedule will not be posted before next week," regis-trar's assistant Andy Wilson said Thursday .

"It just can't be any later than that . "Wilson said the delay has been caused by problems with

the computer system analysing possible exam conflicts ."I can't give a definite date," said Wilson, "I'll post the

schedule as soon as it's ready."

— lames conchis phot o

"LAW AND ORDER, that's my game boy," says one of th eSFU force . "If'n ya breaks the law, we locks ya up!"

Page 4: Vpt. L, No. 31 48 Occupation UNB suspension …...Burnaby cops got busted Vpt. L, No. 31 VANCOUVER, B.C., FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1968 48 228-2305 Occupation MONTREAL (CUP) — The Canadian

Page 4

THE

UBYS$EY

Friday, November 22, 196 8

THE UPYSSEYPublished Tuesdays, Thursdays and Fridays throughout the university year sby the Alma Mater Society of the University of B .C. Editorial opinions arethose of the editor and not of the AMS or the university . Member,Canadian University Press. The Ubyssey subscribes to the press service sof Pacific Student Press, of which it is founding member, and UndergroundPress Syndicate . Authorized second class mail by Post Office Department ,Ottawa, and for payment of postage in cash . The Ubyssey publishes PageFriday, a weekly commentary and review. City editor, 228-2305. Othercalls, 228-2301 editor; Page Friday 228-2309 ; sports 228-2308 ; advertising228-3977 . Telex 04-5843 .

NOVEMBER 22, 196 8

Classroom copsThink twice before you get up in class again to

denounce your professor.That bearded guy with the shades in the next sea t

taking notes may have more than an academic interest i nwhat you are saying.

As outlined in the front pages of today 's paper ,the occupation of the SFU administration building turne dup some very interesting documents concerning polic eactivity on campus .

It seems the Burnaby law, and undoubtedly Van-couver as well, have special officers investigating theactivity of students and, we imagine, certain outspoke nprofessors.

It is also shown that so-called `academic' authori-ties at SFU are aware of, are assisting, and basing somedecisions on the material these police informers, an dalso faculty informers, are turning up.

But UBC, we understand, is a lot more sophisticate din these matters than their counterparts at SFU .

UBC files that the administration would not liketo see get in the wrong hands have been safely locke daway so that in the event that an occupation of UBC 'sadministration building takes place, they would not b efound .

If travelling Ken, our intrepid president, is so muchon the side of the students and academic freedom, as theunsubstantiated rumors go, you would think he woul dstage a public file-burning, or at least open up all filesto press perusal .

-What all this proves, however, is that university

authorities will spare no means, lies, or hypocrisy i norder to protect themselves and their institution againstdisruptive influences, that is students or professors wh odare to challenge the undemocratic and totalitarian wa yin which they are run, and the direction which univer-sity education is taking .

Empty rhetoric about communication between th eadministration and students is just that — empty words— when administrators base their decisions not the con-sensus of freely-exchanged discussion, but on pre-con-ceived ideas based on secret discriminatory information .

In every instance of student requests and demand sagainst university authorities, it can be shown that stu-dents have consistently striven to obtain their just endsthrough debate as equals, but every time the adminis-tration provokes confrontation by their lack of goodfaith .

SFU senate did take a principled (its principles )stand at first in flatly rejecting proposals that the ma-jority of students and the population of B .C . are in favorof, and provoked the occupation, the only real meansstudents have to back up their demands .

We hope the SFU students will continue their occu-pation until they have won totally what they are fight-ing for .

Drug injusticeJail is a hell of a place to take a sabbatical leave .But mathematics assistant professor Eugene Sobell

chose to spend five months there in lieu of paying $100 0fine for possession of a small piece of hashish, whichapparently he forgot he was carrying in his suitcase .

Why he chose to do this we don't know, but the factthat he was given the opportunity to pay a fine rathe rthan the normal automatic jail sentence points out ablatant inequality in the justice meted out to ' respectable'members of society as opposed to others, like students .

Other injustices revolving around police narcoticsinvestigations, well-known to anyone having the re-motest connection with people who use pot or hash, isthe unhesitating willingness of narcs to violate basic civi lrights laws in tracking down users ; an example outlinedin Thursday's paper .

The injustice of, and ignoring of, the laws in relatio nto non-addictive drug investigation and prosecution aresecondary, of course, to the injustice of having anti-po tand hash laws in the first place .

A large section of the population, from high schoolteeny-boppers to Ottawa's go-go politicians, choose toconsciously flaunt these laws against drugs they kno ware no more harmful than, and more enjoyable than,cigarettes.

Some historical facts o nQuebec occupatio n

From THE McGILL DAIL YCanadian University Press

MONTREAL (CUP) — "I have all the re-quirements and all the marks", said Jean-LouisPoirier, a student at CEGEP Maisonneuve, "bu tI bet I won't be able to go to 1'Universite nex tfall . "

There are 5,000 fewer new places in theFrench universities (Montreal and Laval) forthe upcoming year, than there are studentslike Jean-Louis Poirier .

Jean-Louis' dilemma is one of the keys towhy most of the province's CEGEP's have beenoccupied by their students.

The immediate problems are due mainly t oadministrative bungling and indifference onthe part of the government. Promises for in -creased loans and a second French universityin the city both lie unfulfilled, and poor organi-zation and co-ordination within the hastily pu ttogether CEGEP's .ROOTS IN HISTORICAL DEVELOPMENT

But the roots of the mess go all the wa yback to La Nouvelle France and La Coquete.

Under the French regime, the CatholicChurch had all educational institutions (tha tis, some elementary schools, a couple of con -vents, one trade school and two seminarie swhich after became the French universities)firmly under its control, and the only way fora Quebecois to get a higher education was toenter a religious order .

After the English took over, the control ofthe Church was strengthened . Gradually, theChurch became entrenched alongside that ofthe English rulers, and the Church would re-ceive an allotment of money in addition to th etithes to organize Catholic education .

The Church, in conjunction with the govern-ment, ran education with very little visibl elong-range planning. It was content to add anEcole Normale here and a Technical Schoo lthere ,and somewhere along the way it set up1'Universite de Montreal and Laval to handlethe College Classique graduates .ENGLISH UNIVERSITY SYSTE M

The generally much richer Protestant Eng-lish, on the other hand, took after the Amer-icans and set up a secondary school systemthat led straight to University, and the com-munity saw to it that there were enough newplaces in University for all financially and intel-lectually qualified students . There was a not-able lack of English speaking trade and tech-nical schools and an even more notable lack ofdemand for them .

Then came 1960 and "La Revolution Tran-quille". For a start, the new Liberal govern-ment commissioned an inquiry into the stateof education in the province .

The Parent Report was firm in its reply :Quebec must initiate and complete a unifiedpublic school system, making educational insti-tutions of both language parallel and offerin gto both sectors secondary and post-secondaryeducational opportunities. One of the Report' sproposals was the creation of "Institutes" toincorporate the twelfth and thirteenth yearsand offer both a pre-university course and atrade and technical curriculum . Hence the name

CEGEP — College d'Enseignment General etProfesisonal .CEGEP'S ALONE MEAN NOTHIN G

But by themselves, the CEGEP's mean noth-ing. What's the use of giving students pre -university training while making no provision sfor expanded universities ?

The old Liberal government, recognizingthe problem, commisisoned the Rocher Reportin 1965. It recommended the immediate con-struction of a second French-language univer-sity in the city . But when the Union Nationalecame into office, the Report was tabled . It hasbeen at the bottom of a big pile of papers eve rsince .

Another more immediate sticking point isthe scandal over loans and bursaries. Back in1966 the government set up a Comite du Planto project the amount that would be needed forloans and bursaries each year. Before UGEGwould send representatives to sit on it, itextracted from the government the promisethat a policy of universal accessibility woul dbe pursued, and that the government woul dincrease bursaries over loans.

This year the government ignored theComite's recommendation and not only decreas-ed the total allotment but made the greate rproportion in loans. In practical terms, thismeans the student will have to take a $800loan (as opposed to $700 last year) to becomeeligible for a bursary .

There is no tuition at the CEGEP's . . . theyare part of the public education system — butfor the students who are taking the pre-univer-sity course the prospect of not being able toattend university next year is worse than bleak .

It means they will have taxed their families 'financial resources for two extra years to nopurpose. Understandably, the students find thi scombination of factors intolerable .CEGEP'S LIKE B.C. REGIONAL COLLEGE S

Regional disparities (ironically one of th ethings the CEGEP's were created to overcome )within the network of collegees is another com-plaint . Courses cancelled at the last minute ,poor facilities (most are old schools and otherbuildings bought by the government and has-tily transformed into CEGEP's) add to the stu-dents' ill feeling .

But these are the superficial problems, noth-ing that can't be overcome by better organiza-tion and a more concerned government . Thereis nothing remotely radical in these complaints :you can't radicalize an education system whichdoesn't exist . These are merely demands fo rmodernization .

However, some more basic problems are in-volved .

For instance, early estimates were that th erelation of vocational to pre-university student swould be 70% -30% . In fact, it is almost ex-actly the reverse .

And worse, more than 60% of the profes-sional (vocational) graduates have not beenable to find jobs in their line of work .

Neither of these is the fault of a bunglinggovernment. Both are parts of the basic Quebecfabric — a new desire for higher education andan economy as yet unable to absorb well-trained technicians .

Referendum backflipBy CAREY LIND E

Monday night council did its famous bac kflip and reversed an earlier decision to hol da campus-wide referendum on the constitu-tional revisions. Now it is back in the circu swe call a general meeting . Wielding hi sbureaucratic knowledge with great ineptness ,Donn Aven said it would cost $1 ;000 to hol dthe referendum. Bull Shit! He talked of anine-page ballot, when in fact it could befour one-page ballots, each about the size oflast year's athletic referendum .

So, on some foggy day in January, wewill all go traipsing into a general meetingto watch the engineers show us their seriousconcern for reforms. And when engineeringpresident Fraser Hodge decides it is time t oproceed, he will permit his lieutenant, Dav eZirnhelt, to start the program .

Therein will unfold the most confusing ,heated debate in the history of the joint .

In the name of democracy, efficiency andsport it is off to a general meeting again .Somehow I think it would have been somuch more sensible to simply have a refer-endum, so we can ALL take part, in thepeace and quiet of our sterile surroundings .

What would happen in Vancouver politic sif everytime a decision had to do to thepeople, we all had to go to a general meet-ing at city hall rather than merely going t othe nearest polling station? Let's fact it, weare not the high school the AMS thinks w eare. This campus has a total population o fnearly 28,000 people. It's time we reactedto this fact in a more realistic way . The dayof the general meeting is over — we arejust too big .

I

Page 5: Vpt. L, No. 31 48 Occupation UNB suspension …...Burnaby cops got busted Vpt. L, No. 31 VANCOUVER, B.C., FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1968 48 228-2305 Occupation MONTREAL (CUP) — The Canadian

Friday, November 22, 1968

THE

UBYSSEY

Page 5

Background to SF UBy John Conway from The Peak

"They think about nothing but screwingBut we are the ones who get screwed ."

— From Marat Sade .

The censure has been unconditionally lifted .We are still strangled by the same, disease-ridden, bureaucratic, rotten, and unaccountablestructure that we had before . What has chang-ed? Nothing. MeTaggart-Cowan was fired onthe faculty's request. Shrum resigned as BoGchairman on the faculty's request . These arethe answers of our profoundly wise faculty to adecrepit and authoritarian. university structure.With this new crisis uncovered (nothing be-comes a CRISIS until we become conscious o fit) regarding the political, social, and academicdiscrimination in the admission of students t oSFU, once again we confront a manifestationof the deeper structural crisis in this and ever yother university.

CONSISTENT TRANSFER SCREWINGThere is probably not a student here in one

of the Grade 13 graduate, transfer from anothe runiversity, transfer from a community or reg-ional college, or draft-dodger categories whohas not been screwed on being admitted toSFU. Unaccountable bureaucrats in the Regis-trar's office apply unclear criteria inconsistent-ly to students applying for admission, espec-ially those in the above categories. Suchstandards as do exist apparently change withthe whim, mood, or political inclination of th eparticular bureaucrat . Admission standards ar enot clear either to the applying student or,most importantly in this particular case, to th efaculties and administrations in B .C.'s regionaland comunity colleges (e .g . Vancouver CityCollege, Selkirk Junior College, Columbia Col-lege, etc .) . Hence, such transfer students oftenfind their credits reduced as a condition of ad-mission, some find credits promised arbitrarilywithdrawn upon admission, and, most psych-otic, find that they must appeal through thesame persons who made the original decisions! !

Furthermore, there are some cases in whichthe Registrar's office has sought (and often ob-tained) personal and political information aboutIMEEMEN.IBEIMMIMMISMUMENNE

EDITOR: Al Blrnle

News John TwigsAsst News John Gibbs

City Peter Ladne rAsst City Alex Volkoff

Managing • Bruce CurtisWire Irene Wasilewsk i

Photo .. . . Dick Button, Powell Hargrave

sports : Jim Maddi n

Associate Mike Finle yWithout Portfolio Paul Knox

Page Friday

Andrew Horva t

The rag was put to bed, as we say

in the trade, with love . Conchie, Th eJames, worked (?) all night on his par t

of the production . Twigg did likewise ,taking a brisk shower after the fact .Nate Smith and Frank Flynn appliedemotion in generous quantities whilePeter Kennedy just applied . Rob Ty-hurst and Covernton, Jane of, sough tphysical and mental union—in an Un-derwood fashion. Cavorting over thewood Jim Maddin scored again withthe physical types . Gibbs experiencedhis maiden masthead . Dick Button andFrizzel gained carnal knowledge of thedarkroom . Tony Gallagher learned alittle too . Dirk Visser, everybody lov-ingly agreed, learned far too much . Ah—sweet knowledge! Bruce Curtis cruellyraped bureaucratic tradition and des-cended from the heavenly confines o fof journalistic virginity to partake o fhuman pleasures—in triplicate . Knox,upon seeing the hill, went up on thehill, and made manifest . Alex, inno-cence among innocents, was plyed withliquid love and succumbed to tempta-tion, selling out to the pits of iniquity .She loved it . Yes, we all loved it andlook what happened — The Ubyssey,sporting temptress that she is, is ex-hausted . Allen, the big, appeared inblushing pink and announced a staffmeeting in the orgy hall at noon todaywith editorial jollies to follow . In thesame profusion was red the intentionthat all should gather for a repeat oftoday's profusions on Monday — yesVirginnia, on Monday! Al wants allweek to love Friday's copy. She's sleep-ing soundly, what now my love?

students who apply for admission . The purposeof such information is obvious and strikes downat the very root, any flourishing of academi cfreedom at SFU. Again, we see that the slogan"academic freedom" applies only to the faculty,and in no way can it be said that studentsfunction in conditions that can be describedas academically free .DRAFT-DODGERS OU T

Perhaps most shocking is the well-documen-ted fact that draft-dodgers find it increasingl ydifficult to gain admisison to SFU . The Asso-ciate Registrar has admitted that he has aske dstudents from the U .S .A. questions regardingtheir draft status . Why he asked such question sbecomes clear when one hears of case aftercase of draft dodgers with excellent academicrecords, and excellent qualifications, who ar eturned down with no reasons given . Often, themore common ruse of keeping these people ou tis simply not to answer them when they writ eletters of application .

Why can this happen? The answer is clea r— the persons making the decisions are no theld accountable to those who are affected bysaid decisions. We have access neither to aformal and clear-cut statement of admisison spolicy, nor to the procedures used in reachinga decision regarding the admission of stu-dents, nor to exact information as to extent o fthis discrimination. We must have control overdecisions that affect our lives . We must b eaware of the criteria upon which decisions ar emade .CRISIS IN EDUCATION MONE Y

Why is this happening? The reason this isoccuring lies at the very heart of the growingcrisis in education in B .C. All educational facili-ties in B.C . — at every level, and in everyregion (especially working class and poor areas )—are over-crowded and under-financed. This isthe consequence of the Socred government 'sfinancial and industrial polices — the "public"sector of the economy which is important toand subsidizes big business in its breathles s

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OFFICIAL NOTICESAlma Mater Society

International Affairs Conferenc eApplications now being received for those interested inattending the Ninth Annual Conference on InternationalAffairs from January 21 to 24, 1969 at the Universityof Manitoba . This year's conference will center on th etheme — Latin America! Progress or Revolution in ourHemisphere . Apply in writing to A .M.S. Secretary ,Room 248, S .U.B. before 4 p .m., Friday, November 22nd.

Chairman Required for Special Event sApplications are now being received for chairman ofthe special events, performing arts committee. Thisperson will be responsible for planning events of aspecialized nature which are of campus wide interest .Apply in writing to A.M.S. secretary, Room 248 S.U.S .before 4 p .m. Friday, November 22 .

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Page 6

T H E

U B Y S S E Y

Friday, November 22, 196 8

.. .. .. ... . ... . ... . ...

.

Activism keyin platform

• An independent city aldermanic candidate

has urged students to become active in theDec . 11 civic elections .

"Student protest is no good unless it i sfollowed by constructive action," restaurantowner Murray Rabinovitch said in an inter -view Tuesday .

"Students can become active in the civic

elections by voting or by backing a candidate ."Rabinovitch stressed that students do no t

have to own property to vote in the election .

"Any British subject 21 years of age or ove r

can vote if he has been a resident of Van-

couver since Jan . 1 or owned property as ofAug. 1 .

Rabinovitch said he will work to reopennow-illegal housing suites in the city on an

annual licence basis, "with proper inspectionand controls to ensure that rents won't be

exorbitant and living conditions are satisfac-

tory . "

(Illegal suites were closed down by city

council to meet city zoning laws . )

"Opening the suites will ease the Vancouve r

housing shortage . In the Point Grey area thi s

will especially benefit students," he said

CEGEP administrationcreates police state

MONTREAL (CUP)—You wonder why there is uproa rin the Quebec CEGEPs? The following list of "temporaryregulations" set by the administration and governing th estudents at CEGEP Maisonneuve may shed a little light o nthe question .

The rules are in force until such times as the student shold a student council election, to be run by the administra-tion, so that "dialogue" can be re-established with "respon-sible" representatives of the students .

Breach of any of the following regulations will resultIn automatic expulsion :

• No general assemblies of students, during or afterschool hours, can be held without administrative approval .

e There can be no distribution of pamphlets "of anynature" and no placing of posters without administrativeapproval .

• There can be no boycotts of classes .• Ther , can be no "reprisals against or provocation

of" administrators or "other" students .• Two student media, Radio Maisonneuve and Trait

D'Union (newspaper) are suspended pending establishmen tby the administration selected student council of a code o fethics of communication .

• The offices of the student council are closed unti lfurther notice .

• There can be no "strangers" allowed into the schoo lwithout administration approval .

• The "temporary regulations" may be "negotiated"only after the new student council is formed .

'Blue stockings 'for French fi x

Les Bas Bleu decided to take French de-

partment head Dr . Larry Bongie to task over

the outmoded exam regulations of the Frenchdepartment at a meeting Wednesday noon .

Les Bas Bleu (the blue stockings) is a group

of French students pushing for reform in theFrench department .

There are two major problems facing theFrench students now . One is the exam systems ,the other is the lack of a reading room forFrench students .

The group plans to submit a report toBongie outlining the French students' griev-ances .

A solution to the question of exams wouldbe solved best, they feel, by an individual classdiscussion and vote . They also want the wholesecond term outline reviewed as it is basedon what they feel will be past policies .

Students gainlimited power

TORONTO (CUP) — Students at York Uni-versity were given a measure of control ove rthe governing of their activities and conduct ,

t EILDORADO,

ELDORADO NUCLEAR LIMITE DELDORADO NUCLEAIRE LIMITE E

Eldorado Representative swill be available for interviews

on Campu s

November 28th

Opportunities exist in the following fields :

PERMANENT EMPLOYMENT :GeologistsGeophysicistsMining EngineersChemical or Metallurgica l

Engineers

SUMMER EMPLOYMENT :Geologists

(Post Grads & Undergrads)Mining EngineersChemical EngineersMetallurgical EngineersMechanical EngineersElectrical Engineers

Contact the Student Placement Officer forinterview times and further information .

control which previously was

held by the university's admin-istration president.

A new university committe e

will handle all legislative an d

judicial matters dealing with

student activities and conduct

and will be composed of 1 5

students — eight elected fro m

the student body and seven

appointed by the administration

president .

Though the administration

head has seemingly relinquish-

ed a great deal of his power ,

he is still given room to man -

oeuvre. He has the right of veto

over any of the committee' s

decisions though he must pre-sent his reason in 'writing t othe committee. As well, he ha sthe right to determine the com-mittee's sphere of competenc eand may evoke particular casesto faculty councils .

The new set-up came out ofa report presented to the boar dof governors by a four-mancommission created in Decem-ber 1967 to investigate thepowers of the administrationpresident .

The committee was made upof one representative each fromthe student body, the faculty,the administration and theboard of governors .

35 run forarts dean

The field has been narrowe dto 35 in the great dean of artssweepstake .

"We're approaching the stag ewhere discussions will be longand difficult," said Englishprof M. W. 'Steinberg, chairma nof the faculty committee tochoose the new dean.

"We're still hoping to mee tthe late December deadline weset for ourselves but it is not .certain that we will."

Steinberg said his committeebegan with 120 names for con-sideration and has received 17 0more applications and nomina-tions since :September .

Page 7: Vpt. L, No. 31 48 Occupation UNB suspension …...Burnaby cops got busted Vpt. L, No. 31 VANCOUVER, B.C., FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1968 48 228-2305 Occupation MONTREAL (CUP) — The Canadian

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Page 8: Vpt. L, No. 31 48 Occupation UNB suspension …...Burnaby cops got busted Vpt. L, No. 31 VANCOUVER, B.C., FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1968 48 228-2305 Occupation MONTREAL (CUP) — The Canadian

pf 2wo

Perls' wisdomBy DALE WIK

After getting past the guard at the door I was

able to have a non-interview with Dr. Perls in the

tea-room of the faculty club . All was quiet respect-

ability with the cultured tinkle of teacups in th e

background. Dr. Perls asked me not to use a tape

recorder, not to write anything down, and not to ask

questions . Other than that it was a normal interview .

He refused to tell me any of his personal history

so I slinked over to the Extension Department and

deviously obtained his dossier.

Dr. Perls is the founder of Gestalt Therapy which

is becoming recognized as the most important innova-tion of psychiatry since Freud's psychoanalysis .

Dr. Perls was born in Berlin, Germany in 1893 .

He received his M.D. there and left for South Afric a

in 1934, where he founded an institute of psycho -

analysis . Going to the United States in 1946, he

established a private practice there and received hisPh.D. in 1950.

For the past four years he has been psychiatris t

in residence at the Esalen Institute of California ,

Conducting seminars and workshops in Gestalt

Therapy, particularly its application to education.

"I love having people hate me . "This man has no front . He plays no games an d

he destroys yours . You don't have to search fo rthe real Dr. Perls because there is only one andhe is real, always. .

When you met him he will look at your min dand you will be stripped . Look at him but don' ttry to censor your thoughts because he knowspeople . You can feel the power of his mind be -cause he has self-knowledge a n d, inevitably ,knowledge of others .

"Come closer to me . You make your voice softbecause you want people to come to you but Iwon't play your game . "

His perception is frightening . You reach forconventions to bring the dialogue to a safer, moreimpersonal plane .

"Are you happy?" I asked ."Why do you ask me these stupid questions ?

You invent questions for answers that are alreadythere. What do you want from me? I must b estingy with my time . "

"I want to know what you're like ." Then therewas that look, the head slightly tilted back, anarrowing of the eyes under prickly eyebrowsand a who-are-you-trying-to-kid expression .

"You won't know me, not for fifty years . Nowtill me what you really want . "

He is completely invulnerable to people be -cause he sees through their guises and destroy stheir illusions about themselves. His honesty i spenetrating and ultimate . He turned my question sback on me.

"How would you feel if people wanted to suc kinformation out of you to use? You are powermad. When I first saw you I knew that . "

I felt discomfited ."You don't like ambitious people? ""Questions again . What is it with this like ,

don't like? You pass. judgment all the time . Talkslowly to me instead of tripping along. When youask questions you're projecting yourself onto me .Don't ask me any questions . Why don't we star tfrom the beginning and you can be honest foronce . "

You will see the impatience in his eyes withthe deep wrinkles beneath them curving to hi scheekbones. His. hair, grey sparked with white, i sthe most sensational element of his appearance ,but it is the eyes that draw you. They are un-fathomable .

Dr . Perls is the most human thing I have met .He lives his concept of unity of body and mind, abelief in the now which creates a mind of amazin gstrength .

Gestalt therapy is an assimilation of previou sschools of psychology and psychiatry with th eemphasis upon awareness and integration of selfand environment . One of the basic concepts i sthat the whole of the personality determines theparts rather than the whole being a sum of theparts .

Dr . Perls' psychotherapy revolves about dis-

entangling the outside pressures upon personalityfrom the inner conflict . What he tries to achieveis a balance, a realization in the mind of what i sinternal and what is external . He does not wanta segregation, an artificial barrier between thetwo. Instead he tries to establish an awarenes sof conflict so that the ideas can be integrated .Neither sides of the conflict should be suppresse dbecause this is a loss to the whole personality .Both should be expressed and assimilated .

Dr. Perls' voice is slow but never lethargic .The thought knows where it's going and doesn' thurry to express itself .

"I remember when I woke this morning therewas a grey mist over the ocean, a grey mist likemist in Japan . I thought that maybe I would comehere to live . "

He is stingy with words. so that you listen in-tently to each word as if it were his last .

"People in Tokyo were unhappy . A lot of thewomen I met were bitches . But in Kyoto I metvery few bitches . The people there were happy .A bitch is someone who is not open to people, amanipulator . To stop being a bitch is to star tbeing a human being . "

I wondered if Dr . Perls had ever been a phon yperson, had he gone through the agony of makin ga human being from a shell, or had he spontane-ously come to be as. he is now, so real, so honest?

I wanted to ask him how he had become him -self, yet as the question was crystallizing I realize dit for the inane thought it was . Each person hasthe potential for becoming himself and it is hischoice whether or not he realizes this potential .

There is little that a psychiatrist can do for any-one. When a person wants to become a humanbeing in total, to fill the holes in himself, he mustdo it himself. As Dr. Perls states :

"You have the responsibility for your exist-ence . "

My time was up . I felt the change in his speech .He gave me his hand, warm and solid, and w ekissed each other . It was. me, not him that I ha ddiscovered . I said goodbye but not thank you.

Big Mother fosters BiafraBy VALERIE HENNEL LMark Derrick tries again !It's a benefit : for him, fo r

you, and for the starvingchildren of Biafra .

And the name is The BigMother.

Mark Derrick is not a bigmother . He is not even a bi gfather, at least not that he'lladmit. He is, however, aman who has g r e a t l y in-fluenced the pop m u s i cscene in Vancouver, founde rof that illustrious establish-ment known as the VillageBistro .

But Derrick recently de-Bistroed. He sold the clubto two young Europeans an dis off to seek bigger an dbetter things .

And his latest venture isThe Big Mother. This is anew club cum discothequecum coffee-house located a t11.1 Dunsmuir opposite theGreyhound Bus Depot (theold location of 'Stage 2) . Theclub will be run on much the

same basis as the Bistro withseveral significant advant-ages . The auditorium has a300 - person capacity withgenerous room for dancing .It is air-conditioned and hasa m p le refreshment an dwashroom facilities (a reliefto those who are used tolining up to try to spend apenny at other local estab-lishments) .

The Big Mother will ope nthis Monday night with aRed Cross Youth sponsore dbenefit for the children inBiafra . Admission is 5 0cents minimum donation .The benefit will run for twonights, featuring four group snightly playing from 8 t osometime after midnight .

Monday night offersTomorrow's Eyes, Seeds ofTime, Trials of Jason Hooverand The Fraser Delta Ferti-lity Band .

Mother Tucker's Yello wDuck, The Revolving Door,Cast of Thousands and The

Mock Duck play Tuesday .Lysergia provides the

light show which utilizesfour slide, four movie andtwo overhead projectors, aswell as a strobe. This ligh tshow will be a r e g u l a rfeature at The Big Mother .

John Jervis, classica lguitarist, will perform bot hnights .

The club will be openevery night but Mondays,with groups performing o na weekly basis . The MockDuck will play through toNov. 30 .

Prices will be phenomen-ally reasonable at The BigMother, running $1 .00 onweeknights and $1 .50 onweekends, with reduced stu-dent and couple rates .

So do yourself and the kidsin Biafra a favour — catc hthe opening of Mark Der-rick's latest . V a o u v e rn

c could use another hoppin gnight spot, and its successwill depend on your support .

T H E

U B Y S S E Y

Friday, November 22, 1968

Page 9: Vpt. L, No. 31 48 Occupation UNB suspension …...Burnaby cops got busted Vpt. L, No. 31 VANCOUVER, B.C., FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1968 48 228-2305 Occupation MONTREAL (CUP) — The Canadian

moo= pF 3hree

messing around . . . In anycase, Barbarella is a p o pparody that almost works,and when not taken serious-ly, provides the fairy-tale /comic-strip entertainment(albeit sporadic) of purity(?)and good combatting evil(otherwise referred to as " astate of primitive neuroti cirresponsibility") which gov-erns the Queen of Sogo an dDurand-Durand, earthling ona power trip. The openlyfeminine Buck Rogers wholeaves a silver bullet anddemocratically makes loveto every eligible male candi-date . . .

The film-medium and thecomic strip are virtuallyidentical . Resnais' Harr y

PfollyticksBy REILLY BURK E

For some reason the current passion for student versusauthority confrontations turns me right off .

It is far too much like the old rugby "scrum down"approach where the opposing groups face each other an dthen proceed to knock heads . At the end of the game allthe players are tired and battered, and there is no realwinner no matter which way you look at it .

It is quite conceivable that the whole student powerbag was created by the authority mongers as a diversion-ary "head 'em off at the pass" tactic, and the students ,amazingly enough, seem to have fallen into the trap. Theyare confined, and seem to enjoy it, content to shout alittle bit and push against the fence as a gesture, but the ynever really use their thinkers .

"Like, it's a safe activity, it's a good way for thelittle buggers to let off steam," is the way the feeling goe sin city hall, "but if they ever really get in our way, w ecan always knock the shit out of them but good"

It is precisely this patronizing attitude that gets methinking that, as a supposedly intellectual community, weshould be able to get together and out-think and out-smartthe whole damn country.

For instance, in December, the Vancouver city elec-tions for mayor, aldermen, school board, are coming up .There is no reason whatever for ignoring these elections ,for the city decides on a lot of issues that directly affectstudents . The requirements for a candidate for mayor oralderman are no obstacle, in fact it is easier to run forcity government than it is to run for the AMS.

Quite possibly the student community is in the bestposition of any group to run for public government . Weare not bound by overly rigid time schedules, nor are weunder the thumb of dogmatic reactionary employers whowould be unwilling to give us time off for government .

And finally, we have the manpower available for cam-paigning, door-knocking, and all the other assorted armtwisting that goes with steering a person into government .

The only difficult part would be getting the first stu-dent into office, but this shouldn't be insurmountable a swe are as much aware of the image making process as th ebest of the outsiders .

By this time it should be either a shoo-in or a bust forthe succeeding students. The only way to get the systemby the bag is to try it and see what happens .

Anything else is just farting in the wind.

Dickson, Godard's Lemm yCaution and Jessua's TheKilling Game demonstrat ethe awareness and concernof French film-makers withthe intertwined mediums. Atall times one is conscious ofthe medium—the question of"real life" is non-existent . Ifat any time the viewer start-ed believing what is happen-ing in Barbarella, the filmwould be immediately doom-ed to dismal failure .

Taken seriously or unde rclose scrutiny, the film oftenfalls flat . After the intro-ductory "I've got to get ridof this tail" the puns oftendrag, and the jokes andsatire are sloppy—an exalt-ation transference pill andthe ultimate pleasure orga nare both fun sequences tha tare just too drawn out . Thefilm searches randomly andincoherently for comedy ;effects are repeated and be-come tiresome, and even themarvelous fantasy aspectoccasionally becomes monot-onous .

For years Hollywood ha sbeen feeding the commercia lcircuits with films (good andbad) which progress in aslow crescendo towards on eor more scenes of violenceor sex (or some combinatio nthereof . . .) . However, wheredo you go when sex is hap-pening all the time, all ove rthe place, the subject ofendless visual and verba lgags? Sadism. When theheroine is captured, let' storture here! A somewhatdecadent attitude toward swomen, perhaps, but it'llsell tickets . . . And then, Imust admit, there is a ratherImpressive scene where agroup of seemingly innocenttoys become a horde offlesh-tearing, gnashing mech-anical dolls, operated withglee by a cluster of excitedchildren . . .

However, back to themocking caricatures offere dby the movie . David Hem-mings in fact steals the showas a bumbling, fumbling ,absent-minded revolutionarywhose secret-passages neverwork and who loses the pur-loined key to the demon -queen's evil secret shelter .

Milo 'O'Shea comes offreasonably well as the fiend-

ish torturer who plots th eoverthrow of the universe

with the aid of his raymachine . And then, Anit a

Pallenberg, arch-tyrant and

Queen of 'Sego who greet sour adventuress with "Hello ,

Pretty, Pretty" which degen-

erates later to "How pretty,Pretty, Pretty". She also

does nasty things prompting

some sweet utterances fromJane-baby: "Decrucify theangel! Decrucify him or I'll

melt your face!" Finally ,

there's the talking computer

who sounds like he's missin gsome teeth while voicingsome superb weather pro-

nouncements .

In this case, rather than aput-on, Barbarella is th e

first exemplary sci-fi flicktake-off.

By K. TOUGAS

Barbarella is a lot bette rthan I expected it to be . Forone thing there are theflourishing and luxuriant ar tnouveau sets serving a sbackdrops for an endlessfashion display, probably anew record for costumechanges. Barbarella is theultimate Barbie doll . Andthen there's little miss Fondainsisting every step of theway that she's no plainJane. Polies Bergere meetsDisneyland, naturally with aspace-age first : a first-class ,weightless condition strip -tease, with traces of humou rand with swarms of credits

By MICHAEL QUIGLE Y

Last weekend's Vancouver Symphony concerts wereimportant events, for they marked the beginning of a musi-cal revolution which has been brewing for some time . Theparticular work which started this train of events was th enow-notorious oratorio-cantata The Whale by the youngEnglish composer John Tavener .

What had been billed as "the biggest musical happen-ing on the continent" turned into much more . A small butrepresentative contingent of about twenty of Vancouver' sfamous Little Old Ladies' Brigade eventually left The Whal eon Sunday afternoon, and at the end of the piece abou thalf the audience got up and walked out without applaud-ing, while the younger and less conserdative element re-mained behind to loudly acclaim the work. On Mondaynight, the situation was much the same, though a large rnumber of young people remained to whistle and cheer fo rtheir new hero Tavener, who temporarily assumed thestatus of a pop star.

This was not, as Province music critic Lawrence Clud-eray maintained, "the first time in memory people walke dout at a Vancouver Symphony concert ." People walked outof The Rite of Spring in July, 1965, and the Estudios Sin-fonicos by Ginastera last year . Vancouver Sun critic Ma xWyman chided those who walked out, saying "such smal lmindedness can only help Vancouver gain a reputation fo rmusical intolerance and sheer bad manners ." At least walk-ing out is better than starting a noisy riot which drown sout the music like at the world premiere of The Rite ofSpring in 1913. Lloyd Burritt, UBC composer whose ownAssassinations for Orchestra and Electronic Tape will beworld premiered on Nov . 30 and Dec . 1, later said of themusical exodus, "At least they did something! "

What caused such a reaction after the light and delicat eflute-playing of guest artist Jean-Pierre Rampal was a workwhich appealed both to the senses of sight and sound . Tav-ener, in an informal discussion in the UBC Music Buildin gStudents' Lounge last Monday noon, stated he thought hi spiece was "visually interesting — if you get bored with thesound, you've still got something to look at . "

The visual element ranged from UBC's mini-skirte dChamber Singers to baritone Steven Henriksen stickin ghis head into the open piano and yelling, symbolic of Jona htrapped in the whale (which Travener said was not sup-posed to be funny in spite of outbursts of giggling in th eaudience at this point in both performances) . As well, therewas CBC newsman Harvey Dawes reading assorted biologi-cal data about the whales, plus seven percussionists, a nelectronically amplified harp and piano, choruses of vomit-ing, snoring, chattering teeth, and shouting with the aid ofbullhorns, and the composer himself adding tone clusterson the organ. For the grand finale, the entire orchestraplayed and stamped their feet loudly in rhythm, whichjarred quite a few people.

On the whole, the playing (and stamping) of the VSOwas extremely admirable . The composer himself later com-mented that the playing, especially the brass, was "muc hmore aggressive" than the London premiere performance ,where it was "tame, and sounded like Elgar or Walton . "In fact, if the high standard of performance set at the VSOconcerts this year continues, I don't see why the symphon ycouldn't develop into one of Canada's and North America' stop orchestras .

If you're sorry that you missed The Whale (and therewere more "young" people at these concerts than isusually found in the QueeniE), have no fear, for Tavenersaid at UBC that the piece will be recorded on the Beatles 'new label, Apple . (He's a close friend of John Lennon, an dcommented "I'd like to do something with Yoko Ono, butI'm not sure about The Beatles .")

In the meantime, while waiting for the record of TheWhale, you could help in Vancouver's musical revolution .The ultra-modern Sounds of the Century concert comingup next Tuesday night at 8:00 in the QueeniE is CHEAPand will be a valuable experience if you've got a receptiv emusical mind which isn't back in the nineteenth century .

Friday, November 22, 1968

T H E

U B Y S S E Y

Page 10: Vpt. L, No. 31 48 Occupation UNB suspension …...Burnaby cops got busted Vpt. L, No. 31 VANCOUVER, B.C., FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1968 48 228-2305 Occupation MONTREAL (CUP) — The Canadian

COLES, MONARCH, SCHAUM

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By KEITH FRASER

With really a paucity of Englishdrama in the nineteenth century, asseen especially in the untheatricalkind written by the eminent Roman -tics like Byron and Shelley, it was de-lightful to discover at the DorothySomerset Studio on Wednesday night(its official opening, evidence thatFrench drama from approximately thesame period couldn't be blanketedwith quite a similar generalization .

Alfred de Musset's No Trifling WithLove, which received a commendabl eproduction by cast and director alike,left me with no doubt that the Frenchreaction against its strict classical in-heritance in theatre was worthwhileso far as it went, and meaningful in-sofar as the adaption by Frank Caninowas a good approximation of de Mus-set's original conception .

Considered one of the four greatFrench Romantics, de Musset gave usa play equipped with a narrator anda chorus comprised of village lads andlasses who comment on the action ina manner that is freer than theirGreek predecessors both in languageand in movement — the latter thankslargely to the choreography of Rich-ard Blackhurst in the local produc-tion .

This tragical comedy, unlike manyplays under thesis production, was notplagued by untrained voices that gritlike sandpaper across the script. Theplayers here were cast with care b ythe director, Miss Adrienne Winter -mans, and costumed with help fromMiss Josephine Patrick, both dutiesaccomplished through eyes of an im-mediate audience rapport .

This immediacy was achieved by the

assistance of the chorus which en-gaged initial attention with a froli cand dance that are characteristic ofEnglish drama — especially that of theRestoration — primarily at the produc-tion's conclusion when the cow is safe-ly in the stall .

Since No Trifling With Love ends ina suicide, any similar embellishmentits conclusion would have been ob-viously inappropriate. Instead, thedeath of the simple Rosette (BrendaSheebin), occasioned by the aristo-cratic Perdican 's (Lionel Doucette) in-souciant disregard for her feeling safter be has pledged love, become smore pathetic if one considers the pur-poseful juxtaposition of the play's pre-lude and resolution .

No less appropriate was the opposi-tion of the natural scenes outdoorswhere Perdican reminisced in true Ro-mantic fashion about his younger daysspent in nature, and the artificialdrawing room inside which the like sof the foppish Baron (Jim Colby)schemed for Perdican's marriage toCamille (Susan Cadman) .

Camille's refusal-acceptance-refusa lof her cousin in marriage, and herultimate decision to withdraw to aprotective convent in face of Rosette' ssuicide for which she shares responsi-bility, were paralleled for the mos tpart in this production by music com-posed and arranged by Mr. Colby .This music added an intelligent lyri-cism to the play and, together withsmooth scene transitions, was respons-ible for a crisply-paced production .

Outstanding performances, whilenot easy to highlight in this fine cast ,would have to go finally to Miss Cad-

man and to Ellis Pryce-Jones who cap-tured, as he generally does, particularenthusiasm from the audience for hismarvellous portrait of the obese Fa-ther Bridaine — one of two priestsresponsible for the comic subplot .

Miss Cadman can only remain atalent to watch for in the future ; in -stead of rendering another nancy-pants heroine, often the case withyoung actresses, she explored the nu-ances of her role with tenderness andperception .

It is never simple to determine th edirector's share in the success of arole, but from what I 've seen previous-ly of Miss Winterman's work (Orion,a one-act play she directed last term )it's a good bet she aided Miss Cadman ,at least, in her stage movement, and ,at most, in the modulation of thi sactress's fine voice. Mr. Pryce-Jones ,on the other hand, was likely mostresponsible for his own role's success :his timing and reactions, always pro-fessional, appeared intuitive .

My reservations, brief indeed, mightbe summed up as follows : the produc-tion could have done with a slightlyless effeminate voice by Mr . Colby,who appeared occasionally to pla yonly for laughs, and whose asides werenot always so. And too, the play itselfis perhaps marred by Perdican's giftto Rosette, a dagger, which seemedgratuitous at best and an obvious indi-cation of the suicide to follow .

But it was to the credit of a soundproduction -that melodrama was neverpermitted to intrude here. This play ,to recapitulate, was very well doneand is quite worth your patronage . Itruns until Saturday evening .

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Friday, November 22, 1968

Page 11: Vpt. L, No. 31 48 Occupation UNB suspension …...Burnaby cops got busted Vpt. L, No. 31 VANCOUVER, B.C., FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1968 48 228-2305 Occupation MONTREAL (CUP) — The Canadian

pf Sive

Joe Hillis gone

By KEITH ROUTLEY

Joe Hill is gone . The Pinkertons are no longercracking the skulls of those shouting, "solidarity" .The idealism of those radicals of 1919, the Win-nipeg Wobblies, is also no longer with us . MaxTessler is today an old and dissillusioned man.What has happened to the dreams of unionismthese men held ?

Because the union movement operated out -side the established order it represented no inter-est group. The union movement did exercise itslimited power in ways that benefited greatmasses of people.

A union is powerless without a contract. Acontract is a legal agreement, the existence ofwhich depends on the maintenance of the lega land social order . The union has to maintain thisorder to maintain its power . And that, Jim, i swhy the union is becoming a reactionary forcein society .

At its birth the union movement had a clas sself-concept. When Red Doran stood on a soapbo xin Seattle during the winter of 1917 shoutin g"Workers, the sab-cat will meow," (in Wobblyjargon the sab-cat was the symbol of sabotage )nobody asked what a worker was. But the latersuccesses of the movement created class-mobility .Class-mobility destroys social stratification andclass self-concept . Lacking a class self-conceptunions have fallen into the hands of regional inter-est groups .

A tragic example of this in the U.S. is labour'sopposition to anti- poverty programs . Nationalunion leaders may join in singing "We Shal lOvercome", but when the economic interests ofregional members are endangered by negro de-

Poem I an unknown ProletarianMusk by Rudolpk Vvn lael cb~ -

Pub. by

Educational BureauChicago,'ASA

mands for the abolition of the colour bar i nmembership requirements, the music stops.

The national executive of a union is generall yelected through a long process of delegates an dconventions . They require the support of the reg-ional groups . This explains the disheartening atti-tude taken by union officials towards those peopl ewho disagree with the U .S. position in Vienam .

At the December, 1965 convention of theAFL-CIO, anti-war demonstrators were not onlythrown out of the convention hall, but once out -side, had their signs ripped up.

Not one union leader attacked these action sof George Meany and his supporters .

George Meany, head of the Executive Councilof the AFL-CIO, describes those American peoplecritical of the present U .S. foreign policy as those

"who are either a little woozy upstairs or who ar evictims of communist propaganda . . . it is up toall of us, on affairs outside the boundaries of thisnation, to have one policy . We can't disagree out-side the boundaries of the nation and have a neffective foreign policy."

Why? The economic interests of the regional

groups of American unions (the word commonl yused is international) is tied to the military econ-omy of the welfare capitalist state .

So when you see the California Grape Boy-cott billboard at the south end of the Granvill eStreet Bridge that the B .C. Federation of Labourpaid for, remember, the vines are 1500 milesaway.

FLYContinued from pf Sine

until she was afraid it would escape, to multiplyitself into millions before death .

She dared not stop it . Such a trespass wouldseemed sacrilegious .

It was resting on the bottom now cleanin gits legs, perhaps. spitting a sugary substance uponthem to cling more easily to the sides of the bottle .It almost seemed to be praying, to some Fly God .

With its whole being it wanted escape . Yetonce it had escaped there would be no memoryof anything that it had endured . Its efforts coul dbe so easily annihilated .

Would over-exposure to Coke kill it? Wh yshould it care whether it lived inside the bottleor outside? Surely the air was the same in bothplaces and it was so tiny that there could be n oclaustrophobic feelings .

Was there a loneliness for its fellow flies? Yetit was so like them, its company should be enough .

She lay there in the heavy twilight betwee nwaking and sleep and dared not turn the light soff .

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Our Representative, Mr . J . B. Murphy, will be on campus

NOVEMBER 25th 6L 26th, 1968to arrange interview appointments for November 27-28-29

Mr. Murphy will be located in the office of Student Services

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Friday, November 22, 1968

T H E

U B Y S S E Y

Page 12: Vpt. L, No. 31 48 Occupation UNB suspension …...Burnaby cops got busted Vpt. L, No. 31 VANCOUVER, B.C., FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1968 48 228-2305 Occupation MONTREAL (CUP) — The Canadian

THE

U B Y S S E Y

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Representatives from our firm will be on campus on thefollowing dates to interview students for positions availabl ein offices of our Firm throughout Canada .

Monday, November 25 : Tuesday, November 26

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These positions are available for the graduates i nCommerce, Arts, Science, Engineering and Law .

Further information and arrangements for interviewsare available through the Placement Office .

A Hawk from

a Handsaw

A re-examination of the

work of Robert Forsythe

By FREDERICK IAN NOEL KIRKWOODDepartment of English

"I am but mad north-north-west; when the wind is

southerly I know a hawk from a handsaw. "(HAMLET II ii 375 . )

It is now some sixteen years or more since the death, inmysterious circumstances, of Robert Forsythe, the "mad critic" .My excuse for this reappraisal of a man who, in his own day,was dismissed as a "lunatic" by T . S. Eliot, a "fake" by F . R .Leavis, and a "damned impertinent bastard" by Ezra Pound ,is the discovery of new material which throws a fresh an dstartling light upon his position . Since Forsythe is so littl eknown today, however, some kind of brief biography ma ybe helpful .

Forsythe was born in 1881 on the island of Arran, in th eFirth of Clyde. His father was a gloomy religious recluse, andsomething of a mystic . After his death, Forsythe and hismother—with whom he had very strong connections—move dto the city of Glasgow, where Forsythe attended universit yfrom 1902 until 1906 . His subsequent career is ordinary an dundistinguished .

He held various university teaching posts off and on unti l1943, when he went into semi-retirement . His first scholarl yarticle was published in 1913 ; Faber published a collectionof his essays, The Muse's Tablets, in 1932, and he himselfsupervised the publication, at his own expense, of The FourBinri in 1947 . At the time of his death, in January 1952, h ewas working on a more extensive work, The Binraic Cos-mology . The cause of his death has never been determined .His housekeeper claimed that he foresaw it and was prepared .He died peacefully at home, from no apparent medical cause .(Forsythe himself doubtless would have said that he ha dmerely been "assumed" by the Four Binri . )

Forsythe's early essays, if not brilliant, were always sound .He was a fine prose stylist, and had a gift for summing uparguments, which meant that he had the final and definitiv esay in some of the minor critical controversies of the day . Hewas also a perceptive critic of contemporary literature, an damong the first to appreciate the true value of Ezra Pound' sverse. (See The Muse's Tablets, page 17 .)

But from his earliest days he showed a tendency t ostrange and bizarre theories, which gained him a certainamount of fashionable disrepute . Among the more notorious ofthese were his attribution of The Ring and the Book to Mrs .Browning; and his contention that Lycidas is largely reworkedfrom lost MSS by Edward King himself .

Despite, or perhaps because of, these eccentricities, For-sythe continued to be a critic of some standing until the earl y40's, when he first began to put forward his theory of theFour Binri . (Forsythe's spelling varies between "Binri", whichseems to have been the preferred form, and "Binrai", whic his closer to the cognate adjective, "Binraic" . Nowhere in hiswritings does he use a singular form : we can only conjecture—Binrus? B :nra?) This theory emerged gradually in his essay sover the years, and did not appear in cohesive form until 1947 .

Briefly, the theory may be summarized thus. Forsythesaw the whole creative life of man as being controlled by fou rSpirits, extra-terrestrial Beings, immortal but incarnate, whos einspiration lay behind the work of all true artists—takin g"artists" in its widest possible application . These four were :

Tanra, the LoverDocril, the PhilosopherHilmar, the Politicia nZidral, the Saint

Docril and Hilmar are male ; Tanra and Zidral are female .Yet Forsythe seems to have made a close association betwee nthe Binri and his four elder sisters, Ruth, Eve, Esther, andMary, all of whom died in infancy . Those who regard Forsyth esimply as a madman make a big point of this, and see th edeath of his sisters as the origin of Forsythe's psychosis .

All aspects of human creativity were fitted in to one ofthese four categories, and all the genuine creative minds (i .e .those whom Forsythe approved of) were regarded as bein ginspired by the appropriate Spirit . Those who had not bee n"visited" by the Binri were ignored or contemptuously dis -

missed; except for a select bandto be a leading member) who wof "The Enemy", a rather shadpurpose of an "Antichrist" figur eevil opponent of the Binri .

Such are the main outline :need here to go into the immensewove around these basic concermay read my forthcoming editiwork, The Binraic Cosmology,by the University of Manitoba F

Now this system in itself isfor example, the system advancbears certain affinities to the ccForsythe would have been forthad built some solid creative adBut, on the contrary, its resultsapparently, disastrous.

Forsythe's interpretations inow they became bizarre to thebe explained by his trying to tsscategories ; but with others, it ican account for Forysthe's pexamples :

Don Quixote : there reallyidentification of her with a, loc iculpable error by Sancho Pa mEnemy.

-Madame Bovary : Forsyth e

interpretation of herself, and sTanra .

Edward Young's "Night TIis the only truly great poem ofmissed as a "prattler" and Swi

Shakespeare is really th ewith "Mir . W. H." being Walsintan original theory, but Forsythshows up in his attribution of S Ition to Zidral, the Saint . )

King Lear : Cordelia is not ,a personification of Tanra, bu tEnemy. She is a cunning, ediabolic plans against her innateher fate .

Wordsworth was a bore, C cHomer was Sappho's husbaiDonne was a homosexual, ;'And so on — these essays

Yet many of them are not entir erejects the whole Binraic cos yarguments in these essays, gro wof literary criticism, which arestance, Forsythe's switch from tto a full-blooded detestation of 1

some piercing criticisms. Andences to Hilmar, the essay onbrilliant a piece of Chaucerian

However, in or around 195ther, and lost even the few f cwritings for valuable insights. Htrying to publish) reviews ofexistent authors. It seemed thatexisting evidence : in order to-theories he was now creating hi sand absolutely discredited, andment barely summoned a relu c

Upon his death, his privat eand mine, Professor David Callsity. Professor Caldwell, withForsythe as something approaattention to these papers. I cafessor Caldwell died about 18 :a great loss to the world oo liexecutor, and hope to bring oution of his critical essays .

As Professor Caldwell's eaForsythe papers. They were of :accepted the common estimatiervalued his insights, and even —

THIS SKETCH of the Four Birsythe's papers . It appears to band was probably made v"assumption."

Friday, November 22, 1968

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Page 13: Vpt. L, No. 31 48 Occupation UNB suspension …...Burnaby cops got busted Vpt. L, No. 31 VANCOUVER, B.C., FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1968 48 228-2305 Occupation MONTREAL (CUP) — The Canadian

pf 6ix do 7even

his wilder flights of fancy, I could never take seriously theman who had tried to palm off serious reviews of books whic hexisted only in his own imagination .- It was therefore• with idle and slightly indignant curios-

ity that, one rainy afternoon, I opened the file which Pro-fessor Caldwell had marked "Reviews of Non-existent Books . "I was flicking through it when my eye was caught by a re -view of a set of four novels which Forsythe hailed as thecomplete and final justification of his system. The novelswere all to deal with basically the same subject, but eachone was to represent the viewpoint of one of the Four Binri .Forsythe indeed referred to the novels as Tanra, Docril, Hil-mar, and Zidral . The author's name was given as "LeonardDurrant" . Several quotations were given; they seemed fami-liar . I checked. I checked further : they matched almost wordfor word . I realized that I was reading an accurate and ex-tremely perceptive review of Lawrence Durrell's AlexandriaQuartet .

Yet Forsythe died three years before the publication o fJustine.

Since then I have done extensive work on the "non -existent" books reviewed by Forsythe . There are 53 of themin all . In the sixteen years following his death, some 17 ofthese works have been published. Forsythe's reviews displayintimate knowledge of these books. In one review he quotesa full page of Iris Murdoch's The Unicorn with word-for-wordaccuracy.

Calligraphy experts testify that these reviews are defin-itely the work of Forsythe, and that they cannot possibly b eforgeries by Professor Caldwell .

I have found, in the "rejected" files of the Times Literary

ROBERT FORSYTHE

Supplement, a copy, dated 1951, of a review of William Gold-ing's Free Fall .

Mr. Ezra Pound has refused to confirm or deny the ac -curacy of Forsythe's quotations from an as yet unpublishedCanto.

I have sent to Gore Vidal a prediction of the plot of hi snext novel. He confirms it absolutely.

I cannot stress strongly enough the importance of whatI have in my possession. The Four Binri apparently dictate dto the dying Forsythe a complete picture of the course ofWestern literary culture over the next fifty years . All is fore -seen; all is predestined. The Binri have already decide dwhat forms our poetry shall take, what philosophical doc-trines shall appear plausible to us, what modes our musician sshall work in, what designs our architects shall create fo rus. In Robert Forsythe they gave us a warning, a map, sign-posts by which we may recognize their presence.

Sometime within the next two decades there shall arisea novelist of awesome power, the fullest and final expressionof the genre, a giant greater than Dostoevsky, than Dante ,than Shakespeare . Forsythe calls him James Trevis, but, a swe have seen, the Binri seem to be careless about names .But he is already living . In some small magazine, somewher ein America, he has published his first short story .

F.I.N.K.

University of British Columbia .November, 1968 .

Friday, November 22, 1968

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(of whom Ezra Pound came?re,-fegarded as direct agents)wy entity which served the, the powerful but essentially

of the system: there is noweb of detail which Forsythets . Those who are interestedin of Forsythe's posthumousto be published next springress .ho better and no worse than,ad by Yeats in A Vision. Itsmology of Blake . Doubtlessiven his eccentricities if h eLievement on this foundation .in Forsythe's criticism were ,

Lad often been individual—)oint of absurdity .. Some ma yist works into fitting Binraic

hard to see how even this.rversities . A few random

s a Lady Dulcinea, and the1 peasant girl is a gross anda, who is an agent of The

accepts 100% Emma's own!.e her as an incarnation of

oughts", inspired by Docril,he 18th century . Pope is dis-t as a "scribbler" .>xiled Christopher Marlowe ,Elam. (This is not, of course,!'s characteristic eccentricityakespeare/Marlowe's inspira-

ts might have been expected ,)f Hilmar, perverted by Th enniving politician, weavin gIt sisters, and fully deserves

.eridge a quack .d.love with Ben Johnson .

cake bizarre reading indeed.ly unconvincing . Even if oneLology, still there are som eded purely on the principlesvery hard to refute. For in-s early admiration of Poundze Cantos is accompanied byf one deletes all the refer -The Canterbury Tales is asriticism as I have ever seen.), Forsythe went a step fur-[lowers who still sifted hisbegan publishing (or rather ,

non-existent books by non-he had tired of twisting thesubstantiate his own wierdown evidence . He was finallythe Times Literary Supple-

tant obituary for his death .papers passed to his friendwell, of Manchester Univer-;hSred the general view o fhing a lunatic, paid scantnot really blame him. Pro-tenths ago, and his death istters . I am proud to be hi sat some future date an edi-

ecutor, I also received thettle interest to me, as I alsoof Forsythe. Although I ha dn a perverse way — enjoyed

i was found among For-based on a dream vision,

ry shortly before his

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7

pE Sight nn,.

Species: Pisces Perskensisin which it is discovered

that the origins of a certai n

student leader may be traced

back to a fish

Dick Lazenby's tattle-tale (Page Friday,Nov. 15) about ID cards cum American con -spiracy is much more in the style of th eAmerican hit-em-below-the-belt smear storythan it is in the mythic Canadian traditionof fair play .

As a dirty card carrying member ofthe student body, I'm sorry to hear thatmy ID isn't worth the plastic it's laminatedbetween .

Let me straighten out Mr. Lazenby onmy citizenship: as many people know, myfolks and I are from Dagger Lake, B .C . ; infact, my people have been up- at DaggerLake for nearly 300 years, Wore therewas even a west .

The only reason we got stuck in theStates for a while was because when theself-righteous Canadian government wasshipping my parents (who are of Japaneseancestry) to a concentration camp duringWorld War II (stealing our cattle and wap-iti in the process), a slight administrativeerror landed them in a relocation centrenear Weed, California . Shortly there-after I was impressed into the AmericanNavy where I was made to suffer bestialsexual degradations (cf. de Sade's Justine)which accounts for such eccentric conceptsas I presently espouse, e .g . love, community,democracy .

However, by dint of hard work, adher.ance to a 400-year-old Marxist family tra-dition, and with the instinct of one of ournative salmon I have made my way bac kto our beloved homeland . My first act uponmy return was to kiss the very water o fthe Fraser River that beautiful boys haveswum in since time immemorial . The only

citizenship I maintain is that of ThePeople's Democratic Planet of Mars . Whenone of our Canadian spaceships lands ther eI will be among the first to welcome us .

Mr. Lazenby's sick paranoia (as contrast-ed to the healthy justified paranoia of thepitiful Americans) reminds me that givin gmore importance than is due to ID cards ,Faculty Club damages, how to administe rSUB, etc ., is a way of frightening peopleand turning them away from a seriousissue : our university does not give studentsa good education.

Love,Stan Persky

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Friday, November 22, 1968

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~n~ pf Sine

The revolution is a drag

By ARNOLD SAB A

America is being swept by the strife which isprecursor _ to upheaval and disaster .

I fear we are to suffer slaughter and chaos .Thousands of people will be killed ; each one ofthose souls shall suffer his own death . There willbe dying in the streets, carnage in homes and onnewly-created battlefields.. There will be scenesof horror and outrage perpetrated against a piti-able humanity. Nature is cleaning house again .

I can not support this revolution . There isnothing more foolish nor vainglorious than thistype of violent action. It has never done a bit toimprove the human condition . It reshuffles, re-arranges, but keeps the human population downnone-the-less where they started — right downhere, feet on the ground, moving around the ches spieces they call reality .

I am grieved by the untold harm the revolu-tion will effect . It has already done more harmthan good: people have been killed, people worrythemselves to the nuthouse over it, masses ofpeople filled with hatred expend large amount sof energy to this destructive end .

I am not a reactionary or a conservative. Asmuch as any political activist I dislike the Estab-lishment or any deviously worded, cynical, utili-tarian so-called philosophy which keeps manbound in chains of his own forging, and worse,keeps him binding other men.

It is that dislike, in fact, which makes me s ounsympathetic toward the revolution . It is an es-sentially conservative movement, involving all thetraditional political-military trademarks : violence ,dogma, organization, hatred, and most of all, abelief in physical changes designed to freehumanity.

The revolution is, if possible, worse than thecreeping meatball . It is the rampaging bullshit-burger. It is not a revolution at all, but a con-tinuation of the wrong-headed regime which has

ruled the earth since Adam and Eve were turne dout of the garden .

Now my friends and contemporaries are pre -paring to lead the continent into civil war, i nwhich, as in all other wars, man will maim, slay ,and enslave his brother . I wish to dissociate my-self from the evil which has gripped this genera-tion .

To let man and peace grow from within, out -ward to attain their predetermined shape, or inother words, to leave well enough alone, is, I be-lieve, the only way any type of peace on earthmay be established .

However, I must allow the violent ones to dotheir thing. I can't stop them anyway. Perhaps

it is just another manifestation of the universe'senergy, one which I have not yet learned to ap-

preciate.But I want no part of it .

Fly undoneBy DALE WI K

"The mind is its own place and of itself canmake a Hell of Heaven or a Heaven of Hell," sai dMilton .

She lay on the bed and watched the fly insidethe Coke bottle . First there had been the noise o fair sawing through pipes, that would be the logi-cal explanation, but when she opened her eye sshe saw it there, the fly like an ugly helicopte rinside the bottle .

It clung to the sides of the bottle, creepingpast the lettering to the neck . Flies have theirhang-ups . It probably had agorophobia . And yetthere was one desperation to climb the air of th eneck, as if trying to cross the Hellespont escapin gthe Sirens.

Nothing held it back; nothing but air ; yeteach time it failed and sulked and plotted on th ebottom of the bottle .

It was nothing but a black rounded hill sittingthere on the bottom with one black line jabbingout in profile . She stepped closer to it, her mout hslightly open to make breathing easier . It wasquiet now and when she listened there was thattingling noise of silence .

The fly was looking at her, it must be, forflies have eyes all about their bodies . It movedand she closed her mouth for it seemed that itwould be able to cut the glass and air betweenthem and invade the privacy of her mouth withits germs .

She stepped back and watched it test the seaof Coke on one side of the bottle. The sea wasstagnant and the fly didn't drink . It was savingits energy, fiendishly obsessed with escape . It sattempts were more erratic now, it barely flewto the bottom of the "C" .

Yet how could she predict what it would do ?In a burst of super-fly strength it climbed crazil y

Continued on pf 5ive

TEAM WANTS YOUAs a member As a campaign worker As a voter

We 'll tell you all about it at our fund-raising breakfast on Saturday ,

Nov. 23rd. Come down to the Commodore, on Granville Street around

8:30, clutching 29c in your hot little fist . Team flakes — naturally — will

be served.

You'll meet Alarx Emmott and the candidates and you'll hear why

we're doing what we're doing . You'll also see the slide presentation

`MAN-MADE VANCOUVER', produced by TEAM members Geoffrey

Massey and Bruno Freschi . It will show you what this city is — and

what we hope to make it.

TEAM is a balanced slate of candidates, with clearly established

policies upon which all members are agreed. This organization is designed

to give people the opportunity to participate in the democratic process .

This is your chance to get involved .

You can meet these people, see the show, ask questions and get

answers and have breakfast, all for 29c . It 's the best offer you'll get this

Saturday. See you at breakfast.

VOTE FOR THE WHOLE TEAM ON DEC . 11

Friday, November 22, 1968

THE

U B Y S S E Y

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"Where elsecan you achieve

so much so quickly?"

Gord Clements of Vancouver, a23-year-old student at the Universityof British Columbia, had been thinkingof joining a stock brokerage firm ongraduation — until he met a marketin gexecutive from London Life . That was acouple of years ago. Today he's asuccessful London Life representativ e— and a man who is convinced thatno other field can offer so much to th ecollege graduate. Read why .

At first, Gord thought the life insurance busi-ness had more than its share of hang-ups . As heput it : "I thought a life insurance salesman wa sa plodder, a man who pounded on doors day an dnight . And I thought everyone had insuranc eanyway, so there was really no market for th eproduct ."

But Gord had an open mind . He was curious .So he talked with a couple of his professors, wh ocleared away many of his misconceptions . "Theyhelped me realize that selling insurance takestechnical knowledge and skill in influencin gpeople . Plus imagination and creativity, be-cause you 're working with an intangible prod-uct," says Gord . "They also pointed out thatinsurance offers real opportunity, a great deal o fresponsibility, and even the chance to name you rown income . "

Gord still had doubts . But life insurance nowheld some appeal for him .

VIGOROUS COURS E

After an aptitude test, and a series of interview sat Vancouver and the company's head office i nLondon, Ontario, Gord was invited to join theLondon Life team . On graduating from universityin 1967, he began a 21-month training an ddevelopment program . During the first threemonths he was at London, where he was give na thorough training in professional salesmanship ,and a background knowledge about such sub-jects as the uses of insurance, financial plan-ning, business insurance, taxation and grou pinsurance .

(From his first day with London Life, thecollege graduate receives an assured income plu sthe opportunity for additional earnings.)

UNLIMITED POTENTIA L

"By the time I completed the course, and re-turned to Vancouver to work with a regiona lmanager, I realized that the life insurance marke tis unlimited, and therefore unique . That's be-cause insurance is the only product everyoneneeds . And most people need more than the yown . "

(Early in his career, the life insurance sales -man is given a significant job with a great dea lof responsibility . His work has a beneficial im -

pact on the lives of his policyowners, and a direc teffect on his own success and on the success o fhis company . In many other industries, a ma nmight have to wait five or ten years for oppor-tunities and responsibilities as meaningful. )

"I found out, too, that most people buy insur-ance many times during their lives, and for avariety of reasons . That's because insurance ha sso many uses . People who already own insur-ance, therefore, are willing to buy more as thei rneeds increase . Because the market is so broad ,you can build your own clientele, and you can doit by picking people with whom you want to d obusiness . "

(More than any other people, Candians appre-ciate the value of life insurance, because the ybuy more. And Canadians own more life insur-ance with London Life than with any othe rcompany . )

EARLY INDEPENDENC E

"Apart from what insurance can do for thepublic, I know what it has done for me . Likemost students, I was in debt when I graduated .My only asset was a commerce degree . Today ,most of my debts have been paid off and I a mbeginning to accumulate some fairly substantia lassets . Frankly, I can't think of another field i nwhich you can achieve so much so quickly . In-surance is the job for the young man who want sreal opportunity, who wants to get into busines sfor himself, and who even wants to name his ownincome and achieve financial independence at arelatively early age ."

(At London Life, you have the opportunity togrow. Plus the freedom and help to develop you rown skills, knowledge and income at the paceyou choose. Nobody holds you back. There i sno limit to what you can accomplish . If you wish ,you can build your entire career in sales — or, ifyou prefer, you can move up to management) .

To learn more about London Life, ask you rplacement officer for the booklet "A Career fo rYou with London Life ." Or arrange an interviewwith a London Life representative .

Interviews will be held on campus November 27, 28, 2 9

London Life Insurance CompanyHead Office : London, Canad a

THE UBYSSEY

Friday, November 22, 1968

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pt 12welve

Meanwhile, back at the

backsides, Ferd and Marth awere discussing the cultura lpotential of pre-Christmasentertainment . . .

I think I'll go to the opera ,said Michael Quigley : Wag-ner's Gotterdammerung, thelast of the Ring of the Nibe-lung cycle; about five hoursof music to keep you occu-pied on a Saturday afternoon(tomorrow on CDC-AM). Be-gins at noon and continuesforever . . .

To which Martha answer-ed: Tee heel Guess who'scoming to UBC? The GuessWho, that's 'who, in concer tat noon Wednesday, SUBBallroom, 50 cents . So GuessWho to you, too !

To which K . Tougas added :Ice Station Zebra, the latestCinerama effort at the Cap-itol is a competent filmwhich provides reasonablygood entertainment . How-ever, very simply, the fil mhas absolutely no reaso nwhatever to be in Cinerama ;

ArtI detected a small elemen t

of surprise and some confu-sion amongst the guests atthe opening of Paul Wong' slatest exhibition of Shuimopaintings and collages in hisown Bau-Xi Gallery . Mostwere touched by the subtl eelegance of the harmonies ofblack ink on paper but manyexpected a didactic exhibi-tion thoroughly expressiveof a changing chaotic soc-iety. Instead, they receiveda non-manipulative show,the inspiration of which wasdrawn from the primaril ypassive philosophy of Tao -ism .

The light delicate strok eof the Shuimo is much morepersonal than the unques-

at no time is the effect ofthis medium used in an yway of interest . Otherwise ,Patrick McGoohan providesa wealth of lively manner-isms in his portrayal of anEnglish agent, and the finalscene is appropriately in-teresting 'w i t h o u t bein gnearly as tense and effectiv e

as it could have been. It' sjust not worth the hard -ticket circuit . . .

Just then Tomorrow'sEyes phoned the assistanteditor to seek assistance .Our fourth member, And ySuttles, has finally got hisvisa to immigrate to Canada ,they said . We've been wait-ing for more than a year fo rhim to rejoin us. He isarriving at Vancouver Inter -national Airport at 11 :3 0Friday, and we hope anyon eand everyone will come tomeet him.

On Sunday night we ar e

holding an open reception t o

welcome Andy and to intro -

tionable boldness of Westernart, and is therefore hard tocriticize artistically . Drawnfrom Tao, it is a spontaneouscreativity derived from aquietistic life which flows i nharmony with the naturalorder . The flourish of spon-taneity can be examined i nthe light of this Taoism :"Doing something doesn' tmean anything, but doin gnothing means something . "This creation, then, is a valu-able outgrowth of contem-plation. From this one cansee a very personal relation-ship between the brush andartist, and the painting'sworth, in this case, can begauged only by the sensitiv-ity of the viewer .

Paul's Shuimos are oflandscapes, birds and matter sof nature . Most show greatstrength and boldness an dsome, like Birds, ring with a

duce him to our friends andfollowers here . It will befrom 8 :30-1 :00 at the JamesCowan Hall, Canada Wayand Gilpen in Burnaby .

There will be no admissioncharge for a two hour con-cert and refreshments .

Which having said theyfled .

But Sid Williams arrive dto tell us that the VillageBistro is on a communicationcampaign: on Monday night sthey will be having poets ,folk-singers, and just plainpeople all doing their ownthings of self-expression .'Communicate Night is th einteraction of ideas, the solepurpose of 'which is to ex-change, not to propagandize .Worth looking into if youhave a cause, or even if youdon't . (Students $1 .

Which was our backsidedday for this week . Accord-ingly we backed out and

tried to decide where to gofrom here. 'Cheers .Compiled by Valerie Hennel l

diffusion of sound throughthe forest . Still others, suchas Apart From Tao, exhibitclouds of black in whichmasses are pulled, force stwisted and fusions of shade screate a spectrum of colours .Action and serenity occurwithin the same strokes, aconscious reminder of thesymbol of Yin and Yang .

The collages, which usethe textures of JapaneseMulberry paper and Chineserice paper, which in turn ,serve to illuminate and tem-

per the black and white, did

not achieve the same power -

ful affect as the Shuimos . I

felt that Paul was more ex-

pressive with the 'Shuimo .

If you have time, I suggestyou visit the Bau-Xi Galler y

before November 30 .

Bruce M. Watson

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This is the place where, every week,we put the names of the people whoworked on the paper, and indulge in in -jokes which nobody understands, or eve nreads .

This may contribute to the widesprea dbut erroneous idea that Page Friday is a nelite closed exclusive group . I have noticedvery often this term that when I ask some -one to write for PF, they assume that wha tthey write will not be published, be-cause they think there is a set team ofP'F writers who do it all . This isn't true .If the same names appear in our column sweek after week, the reason may b esimply that they turned articles in an dnobody else did . (I say that in the nices tway, not meaning to insult our regula rcolumnists!)

But there must be hundreds of peopl eon campus who have their own specia linterests, about which they could write

clear, entertaining articles of some relev-ance and/or irrelevance to the universitycommunity at large . We want these articles .

So please don't be shyl, or modest ;please don't assume that you haven't achance. You probably have.

The in-jokes follow :A vast horde worked: only Maureen

the Mountain Girl brooded i n solitarysplendour, pizza-less . This left the rest ofus down in the Valley, who didn't reallynotice, since she had Eyes only for To -morrow. Stephen Scobie was giving geog-raphy lessons to Andrew Horvat, explain-ing to him that Elgin is a town in th enorth of Scotland, whose inhabitants ekeout a precarious living by drawing ovals .Out at the office, Sue Gransby and Bruc eDolsen fought to a draw, while down a tthe printers poor Dale had completely los ther Wik .

The Four Binri watched over all .

a

THE

UBYSSEY

Friday, November 22, 1968

Page 18: Vpt. L, No. 31 48 Occupation UNB suspension …...Burnaby cops got busted Vpt. L, No. 31 VANCOUVER, B.C., FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1968 48 228-2305 Occupation MONTREAL (CUP) — The Canadian

t

By RICK ROBERTSO N

Once upon a time I met at groovy chick . Instantelectric communication and love — love was ours . So Isaid

ant you to be mine ." An dE "Baby

yousa

and I wI LOV Esaid to me "Do you really love me — how much do

you really love me?" And I said "Darling I REALLY lov eyou — like the chocolate in a Smarties candy loves itscandy coating ." But she said "Do you really love me —I've got to know." So I took her hand but softly — andshe withdrew it . She said "Not the physical — first I'v egot to know if you love me truly." So I gave her a flower— but a beautiful flower . And she said "The flower isbeautiful but its beauty can't win my heart — only love . "So I leaned over and kissed her — gently— on the cheek .And she said "Your kisses will only have meaning if Iknow you love me — love me deeply." So I took her t oa cafe — a romantic cafe — with soft music, wine andcandles . And she said "It was beautiful — it is beautifu l— to be with you but tell me you love me — how muchdo you REALLY love me?" And I said nothing . And I sai d"I hate you ." And she said "I knew it right from thestart ." Then she was mine (and I hated it) .

A flower dosen't have to talk to you to look good .

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Page 19: Vpt. L, No. 31 48 Occupation UNB suspension …...Burnaby cops got busted Vpt. L, No. 31 VANCOUVER, B.C., FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1968 48 228-2305 Occupation MONTREAL (CUP) — The Canadian

Friday, November 22, 1968

THE

UBYSSEY

Page 1 9

1AP : a column of general irreverenc eIs it just co-incidence that the new administration

building looks like a fort, is build like a fort, i sback-to-back with the Jock Shop, is as far away a spossible from GSA and Faculty Club hotspots, asclose as possible to the local copshop, and has n owindows on the first floor ?

Alas, haggard stair-climbers, here's what couldbe in store for you if you want to use the exclusiveSUB elevator hidden away behind the Info office .First go upstairs to the AMS office and fill out i ntriplicate ten forms at the AMS co-ordinator's office .Then get them ratified at the administration build-ing and get a stamp from the library . . You can nowcome back to SUB and use the elevator . AMTS locko-

. crats started in this direction when they recentlyrestricted use in the lift to paraplegics and AMSexecutives, who are now the only key-holders .

If Jesus is really Jewish, how come he has aPuerto-Rican name .

If a senate snub brings an administration build-ing takeover at SFU, could the same be planne dhere? And while we're at it, what do the UBC filesof radical students and radical-refused-admission-students look like?

Speaking of takeovers, the library staff got win dof a library takeover rumor (why steal books whe nyou can take over the whole library?) following th efaculty club snafu . The keys to the central file(which would apparently take two years to sort outif it. got messed up) were checked out, staff weregiven instructions in case of invasion, security polic ewere snooping around. Lotsa fun .

About the same time head librarian Basil StuartStubbs was thinking of closing down the wholelibrary to prevent mass messups with the AMS -library card thing .

Hare we go again . . . faculty members (some ofthem) are apparently getting a little perturbed over

the come-and-go administration of the Great Whit eDoctor . He's back in England in December .

Mike Lange has resigned as secial events head ,but John Mate hung on when he heard a couple ofcommerce students were after his job as head o fspecial events speakers committee . Mate has line dup Jerry Farber, author of Student as Nigger, DickGregory, unsuccessful U .S . presidential candidate ,and Realist editor Paul Krassner for the next fewfew months .

It's almost funny watching the Sun trying topromote The Ubyssey's 50th anniversary party (Dec .7) but still smear this year's rag . The headline on arecent article says "Truculent Ubyssey Reaches Half -Century Mark" then quotes editor Al in a smallerhead saying, "Nothing to Celebrate ." The wholething is being promoted by Sun managing edito rBill Galt ; could it be he wants to get back some ofthe old Ubyssey stars to solve the Sun's chronicstaff turnover? One example : three reporters on theeducation beats have quit since May .

Either the Sun's anti-intellectual or else, a sone senior staffer there said when he heard storie sof Ubyssey editors quitting, lack of staff, etc. ,"Sounds like the same thing that's going on here . "

And what's this we hear about Al Fotheringhamresigning ?

At least the underground likes us . Both theGeorgia Straight and Berkeley Barb reprinted thepic of recent faculty club visitors smoking the weedand burning money . And the L .A. Free Press (Nov .1) printed Peter Lincoln's "Yippie Mafia coalitionexposed" article from Page Friday .

At Pete Elli Trudeau's recent visit to Queen' suniversity where he got an honorary degree and astanding ovation from 1500 students, someone aske dthe First 'Minister, "What are you doing aboutCharlie Boylan's citizenship?"

Charlie Boylan, for the uninitiated, is a CCC(card-carrying-communist) who was AMS first vice -pres. two years ago . He was born in the U .S., buthas lived in Canada for all but a few months o fhis life. He has sent letters to the immigration dept .in Ottawa from former UBC administration pres.Senator Norman McKenzie, Conservative bigwigAlvin Hamilton, and former UBC BoG chairmanand judge Nathan Nemetz, over the last year. Allhe gets in return is a letter from Ottawa saying, ineffect, forget it .

Trudeau reportedly said "Ah yes, the Charli eBoylan case, ah, well, of course we're looking int oit ." A long hard look, n'est-ce pas ?

Arts I types were warned recently to cut outpot smoking in their building . Smoke it whereve ryou want, they were told, but not here .

Is it true John Lennon is uncircumsized? See foryour self in the latest issue of the Village Voice i nSUB reading room where John and Yoko show them -selves as Allah made them .

When Einar Gunderson quit the board of govs .this week, he was going into his 13th year on theesteemed body . In a farcical paragraph of the uni-versities act it says "no member shall hold officefor more than nine consecutive years ." It's farcica lbecause another clause says "a member of the boardshall hold office for three years and until his suc-cessor is appointed or elected." So Einar could hav ejust sat there for years and years and years untilCece and he agreed to move in another of Cece'sfriends. The question is, Why did Gunderson quit

now?

Anatomical distortion of the week : (admitted b yDave Zirnhelt) "When senate rejected the idea of ajoint conference, my gut reaction was that I ha d

been kicked in the head . "

Auto theft splague UBC

A black 64 TR4 with wirewheels was stolen from C lo tbetween 8 a.m. and 11 p.m .Wednesday.

The local RCMP say they ar einvestigating the disappearanc eand have published the B .C .licence number — 112-378 .

The owner has offered areward .

There have been reports ofother like thefts, mostly of autoparts.

A graduate student's Corvettehas been taken twice from Dlot and found out in the woodswith signs of an abortiveattempt to take the wheels.

The Sports Car 'Club has als ohad parts stolen .

The university traffic patrolsays car theft is not their prob-lem, but they sometimes drivearound in their truck and helppeople find misplaced cars .

Indian monktalks at SFU

Interested in Vedanta Philos-ophy ?

'S w a m• i Vividishananda, amonk of the RamakrishngOrder of India, will be givingtwo talks at SFU, Monday, Nov .2'5 .

The first, at noon in Rm . 315 0of the Academic Quadrangle ,will be on Hindu Religion andPhilosophy, whiles the second ,at 8:00 p .m. in the formal din-ing room, will be on Yoga: it sMethod and Goal .

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(Your I .D . card will also be honoured for fare discounts b yother airlines in North America, and for co-operative rates with many hotels . )Get the details from your Swing-Air campus representative . For flight arrange-ments, see your Travel Agent . Orcall your local Air Canada office . AIR CANADA

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Page 20: Vpt. L, No. 31 48 Occupation UNB suspension …...Burnaby cops got busted Vpt. L, No. 31 VANCOUVER, B.C., FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1968 48 228-2305 Occupation MONTREAL (CUP) — The Canadian

r

Page 20

T H E

U B Y S S E Y

Friday, November 22, 196 8

Occupation continuedFrom Page 1

• Elections will be heldimmediately for a parity stu-dent-faculty appeal board t ohear grievances of would-beand actual students, withaccess to all admissions files ;

• Establishment of an SFUstudent society committee ofinvestigation with access to allfiles ;

• Initiation by the SFUsenate and administration ofa public campaign to increas efunding for higher educationand end the present schoolconstruction freeze ;

• A policy statement tha tnon-academic criteria will notbe applied in admissions poli-cies, and that equivalent aca-demic criteria will be appliedfor all students .

An unofficial general stu-dent meeting Thursday noonoverwhelmingly supported theKorbin,Sperling proposals an ddeclared a lack of confidencein the student society execu-tive .

The meeting was closed toVancouver 's commercial press .

About 600 students attend-ed the meeting, wliJich wasadvertised by wall postersthroughout SFU . A vote counton the non-confidence motio nshowed that it carried 250 -207, which indicates therewere about 450 SFSS votin gmembers in the meeting .

The others were UBC andVancouver City college stu-dents who are expressing solid-arity with the SFU students .

The meeting, punctuated bycatcalls and often bitter heck-ling, mainly of minority speak-ers, also voted to endorse theoccupation of the administra-tion building .

As a week's notice must begiven of any SFSS genera lmeeting, this one was not

legal . However, its motionswill be presented to a meetingThursday for ratification.

The SFSS student councilWednesday presented a num-ber of proposals to the SFUsenate which were adopted bythe senate .

Chief one is establishmentof an admission and standingappeal committee similar tothe one proposed by Korbonand Sperling, but with senaterather than faculty representa-tion and the power to investi-gate only "relevant" regist-rar's files .

Thursday's general meetin grepudiated that action an dvoted non-confidence in theexecutive.

Student president RobWalsh, who opposes the occu-pation, labelled the meeting"an exercise in railroad tac-tics . "

He charged that it had bee npacked by what he called"radicals . "

"I have persisted in fightin gthese tactics all year and I willfight you beggars to the end, "he said .

He was drowned out by sar-castic applause from the sup -porters of the occupation, andleft the platform with hi sthumb in the air as a gestur eof contempt .

Former UBC student andAlma Mater Society specialevents chairman Brian Plum-mer was one student who toldthe meeting of what he calledSFU's unjust accreditationpolicy .

Plummer said he attende dUBC for two years and receiv-ed credit for 21 units . How-ever, when he applied at lastsummer SFU he was told hewould be given credit for onl yone year . He was not inform-ed of this until Aug . 29 anddid not have time to appea lbefore the semester began .

He has since reapplied bu thas heard nothing from theregistrar on his request foradmission to the winter sem-ester .

S F U associate registrarDouglas Meyers, who handle sadmissions, is out of town andunavailable for comment .Registrar Harry Evans ha ssaid he does not handle admis-

sions and cannot deal with thestudents' demands .

Meanwhile, in the adminis-tration building, a spirit o frevolutionary discipline pre-vails .

The occupation forces hav esplit up into groups of about15 and elected representativesto a central steering commit-tee.

Other committees, such asfood and security, have bee nformed .

Students are guarding th efiles to ensure they are notbroken into . Strand reportedlytold SFU student ombudsmanAce Hollibaugh that he wouldcall in police if the files weretouched .

The doors to the offices arelocked, being opened only atspecified intervals to let stu-dents out and in . Observer ssay this is to ensure that onlythose who support the occupa-tion are allowed in .

(Earlier, a tiny group of SF Uathletics students gatheredoutside the office and threat-ened to forcibly expel the oc-cupation forces. )

Thursday night a number o f"teach-ins" were held on top-ics such as the Canadian newleft, the women's liberationmovement, and the role of th euniversity . These were open t oall students .

Leaders of the occupationinclude former UBC AMSpresidential candidate Miche lLalain, VCC Student Demo-cratic Union leader Lyle Os-mondson and SFU studentpoliticians Jim Harding, JohnConway and John Cleveland .

They appear to be prepare dto stay until all the Korbin -Sperling demands are met .

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Page 21: Vpt. L, No. 31 48 Occupation UNB suspension …...Burnaby cops got busted Vpt. L, No. 31 VANCOUVER, B.C., FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1968 48 228-2305 Occupation MONTREAL (CUP) — The Canadian

Friday, November 22, 1968

T H E

UBYSSEY

Page 2 1

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With a 2-0 victory over the North ShoreLuckies, the Thunderbird soccer team is start-ing its move to take over control of first placein the Pacific Coast SoccerLeague .

Coach Joe Johnson gotgood performances fro mHarvey Thom and TonyMayor who scored the goalsand from Barry Sadler whonotched his sixth shutout .Mayor got his goal byintercepting a pass back tothe North Shore goalie andknocking it home fromabout sixteen yards out .

Thom got his after mak-ing innumerable set-ups tohis companions and afterthe game received Johnsonscommendations for the bes toverall play of the night .

Another outstanding performance came fromBird goalie Barry Sadler who turned in hi ssixth shutout in 10 games in league play.

The coach was also pleased with thedefensive play of specialists John Haar andKen Elmer who he says did a good job of con-

taining the two key offen-sive players for N o r t hShore .

In planning for their nextgame against 7th place Bur-naby Villa where a win willput them undisputedly ontop of the league, the teamwill make no major lineupchanges and will try to in-crease their goals-for aver -age .

All fans are invited toturn out, even those `outwalking their dogs' as leagu eofficials will be in attend-ance and a large hom ecrowd will convince themthat the team deserves more

home games.Game time is 2 :00 p .m. at the Thunderbird

stadium .

BARRY SADLER 6 shutouts in 10 games

TODAY UBC CONSERVATIVES PRESENT

Lincoln Alexander, M.P.12:30 — Angus 110

"CANADA 1968 "

Swim team readies for.Thunderbird Relays

The T-Bird swimmers begin their competitive season o nDecember 1 at the Thunderbird Relays . In the meantime, underJack Pomfret, their coach, they workout four times a week forone and a half hours .

At each training session the men swim approximately tw omiles interspersed with a rigorous set of dry land exercises .

Pomfret, who has coached the team for many years, i sconfident of a winning team this year .

His predictions are based on the performances of returneesPhil Dockerell, Terry Lyons, and Frank Dorchester .

The team's freshman additions include Chris Hanna who las tyear swam for the Canadian Dolphins and Don Cooper, anothe rnew member this year, who is returning to swimming after afour-year absence .

These swimmers are representative of the excellent tea mthis year .

Heara lectureon

scientologyintroductionby Canada's greatestmusical comedy star

dean reganThursday, November 2 8

Lecture Angus Bldg. Rm. 104—12:30

Seminar & Books Rm. 104— 1 :30

Sponsored by:

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4 poets. 2 novelists. 6 important books .

Wild Grape Wine . Al Purdy .From aGovernor-General's Awar dwinner and one of the mostvital poets in the country, 68new poems .

Heaven Tak eMy Hand . Davi dWeisstub . A youn gpoet's involvemen twith the Jewis hcultural myth . A nevocative resolutio nof culture and now .

Selected Poems : 1947-1967 . Robin Skelton . Th ebest writing fro mthe Editor of the MalahatReview from eigh tprevious collections .

The Owl Behind the Door. Stanle yCooperman . New poetry that gets unde rthe skin and moves from an Associat eProfessor of English at Simon Fraser .

Erebus . Robert Hunter."It's as formless—yet asdisciplined—as most o fMillers' work . . . a big ,joyous, sad funny, hugel yambitious, marvellousl ysuccessful book . "Alexander Ross .

Ox Bells an dFireflies . Ernes tBuckler . " . . . it reache sdown to touc heverybody's dream of aworld of beauty, whe nwe were 'green an dcarefree' ." Claud eBissell .

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Page 22

T H E

U B Y S S E Y

Friday, November 22, 1968

Weekend Bird to watc h

TONY GALLAGHE RThe University of Victoria Vikings are on

the mainland this weekend and will provid ethe first official opposition for this year's edi-tion of the Thunderbird basketball squad .

The Vikings meet Simon Fraser this even _ing, and on Saturday will be at War Memorial -gym to take on the Birds in their first meetingof the season .

The game will allow Bird fans to get an-other look at this year's team, led by th etalented Ron Thorsen ; possibly the best guardin Canada .

Saturday's game will serve as an excellen tindication of what might happen in next week -end's Totem tournament at UBC, when theBirds meet Simon Fraser University Clansme nin their first of three encounters this year .

The Clan, with three American stars re-cruited in San Francisco, will be one of threevisiting teams competing in the tourney, and

A probable starting forward on thi syear's basketball team, after taking a two-year break, is this weekend's athlete to keepyour eye on .

As a starter on this year's team, the 24 -year-old Bob Barazzuol at six foot two inches !'!and one hundred eighty pounds is a poten tmember of coach Peter Mullins not-too-wea kteam .

Bob grew up in Vancouver, and has al-ready had three years of varsity experience .Bob has also been a two-time member ofCanada's national team, in 1964 and 1966.

This will be Bob's last year as he is nowin fifth year education .

In the 1965-66 season he set an all-timeUBC scoring record, hitting for 586 pointsfor a tremendous 20 .2 points per game aver-age .

His single game scoring record of 44points has not been beaten yet either .

Playing with the IGA senior A's las tyear he was instrumental in their winningof the Canadian Amateur Championships .

He and his team mates go out onto the ryMemorial gym floor for their first impor-tant game on Saturday night at 8 p .m .

will clash head on with the Birds next Satur-day evening . The other two teams are power-ful American schools, Portland State and GreatFalls from Montana .

Ticket troublesThe spectators who go to the game this

Saturday night when the Birds play UVic wil lbe given special tickets that will grant the mreserved admission to the 'Saturday night gameagainst SFU the next weekend .

People who do not have these special ticket swill be admitted on a first come first servedbasis until the capacity of the gym is reached ,then they will be turned away .

This will go on until the feature game startsat which time all reserved seats will be filled ,so the special tickets are only good until gametime .

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Canadian Forces Recruiting Centre545 Seymour St .

684-7341

Page 23: Vpt. L, No. 31 48 Occupation UNB suspension …...Burnaby cops got busted Vpt. L, No. 31 VANCOUVER, B.C., FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1968 48 228-2305 Occupation MONTREAL (CUP) — The Canadian

Friday, November 22, 1968

THE 'UB'YSSEY

Page 23

Intramural ReportNext term :

Activities—Soccer, wrestling, skiing, volley-

ball, rugby, field hockey and track and field .

Entry deadlines—Jan . 15, Jan. 28, Jan . 28 ,

Feb. 11, Feb . 11, Feb. 24 and March 4 .

Starting date—Jan . 20, Feb. 5, Feb . 9, Feb .

24, Feb . 24, March 3, and March 13 .

You can play any of the above sports by

registering with your unit or faculty sports

rep. or by coming to the men's intramural

office, room 308, Memorial gym any day be-tween 12 .30 and 1.30 p .m .

Referees are also needed for these events ,

so if you want to do it, and pick up a little

money, get in touch with Bill McNulty, chie f

referee, in room 308, Memorial gym .

Weekend Action BoxDateNov. 22

SportIce hockey

OpponentU . of Winnipeg

Location

Timeaway

Nov. 23 Ice hockeyBasketball

U . of WinnipegU . of Victoria

awayMemorial gym

8 :00 P.m -F

Nov. 23Nov. 23 Wrestling YMCA Open Vancouver "Y"

1 :00 P.m .Nov . 23 Cross-country League race Stanley Park

11 :00 a ° m .Nov . 23 Soccer Burnaby Villa Thunderbird stadium

2 :00Nov . 29 Ice hockey U. of Manitoba Thunderbird arena

8 :00 p.m .Nov . 30 Ice hockey U. of' Manitoba Thunderbird arena

2 :30 p.m.Nov . 30 Rugby Meralomas Wolfson field

2 :30 p.m.Nov . 30 Soccer Croatia Thunderbird stadium

2 :00 p.m.Nov . 30 Wrestling UBC Invitational Women's gym 7 a.m.-11 p.m .Nov . 30 Basketball Totem tournament Memorial gym 7:30 p.m.Dec . 1 Basketball Totem tournament Memorial gym 3:00 p.m.Dec . 1 Swimming Thunderbird relays Percy Norman pool

all dayDec . 7 Cross country League race VictoriaDec . 7 Soccer Firefighters Callister Park 2:00 p .m.Dec . 14 Cross country End of season race Stanley Park 11 :00 a .m .Dec . 15 Soccer Eintracht Callister Park 2:00 p .m .Dec . 20 Basketball Lewis & Clark College Memorial gym 8:00 p .m .Dec . 21 Basketball Lewis & Clark College Memorial gym 8:00 p .m .Dec . 20 Ice hockey U. of Victoria VictoriaDec . 21 Ice hockey U. of Victoria VictoriaDec. 2'3 Basketball California State Memorial gym 8:00 p .m .Dec. 26 Soccer Columbus Callister Park 2:00 p.m.Dec . 27 Basketball Portland State PortlandJan . 3 Basketball U . of Winnipeg Memorial gym 8:00 p .m .Jan . 4 Basketball Western Wash . S.C . Bellingham 8:00 p.m .Jan . 4 Cross country Abbotsford Champs. Abbotsford 11 :00 p .m .Jan . 4 Soccer Royals Thunderbird stadium

2:00 p .m .Jan . 6 Basketball Fresno Pacific College Memorial gym

8 :00 p .m .

Standings:PE is in first place in the overall Septembe r

to November standings with 1,168 points .Second is held by the Beta Theta Pi frater-

nity with 549 points .In third place, is engineering with 543 fol-

lowed by forestry with 334 and in fifth is lawwith 272 points .

Tied for twenty-first and last place are ATC ,Place Vanier and science, all with 10 points .

First term event champions are :

Softball

LawBadminton

International hous e(Kwan Kee-Sin )

Golf

Physical educatio n(Mark Ryan)

Swimming

PE won final meetAggies won dual meet series

Cross country — PE (Allan Smith)

— dick button photo

PETER DEWITT, a member of the frosh rugby team whic hhas a seven win — no loss record this year . Obviously thisteam gets the ball more than most other UBC teams .

Frosh rugby teamends winning season

The frosh rugby team became UBC's first athletic succes sof the year as they clinched the Junior Intercollegiate Rugb yLeague last Saturday with a 12-0 win over BCIT .

Outstanding performances by most df the players on the teamhave contributed most to the team's success . Captain and kickerDai Williams has been a standout all season with an enviable 8 5per cent kicking record, plus a good percentage of the tries score dthis year . Fullback Brian Taylor came on strong toward the endof the season to strengthen the attack, playing his best game ofthe year last weekend .

Coach Bob McGill also credits their powerful scrum for theteam's showing . Throughout the season the scrum, led by suchcolorful competitors as Dave Barlow, and Stan and Bob Rex -borough, has pushed through the opposition in their never-endin gquest for more points. Also deserving of credit for a fine per-formance is scrum half Tony Shephard, who Valiantly played th elast game with a broken hand .

It is expected that the frosh team will play second divisio nteams next term, and play junior teams from other universities .With their impressive average win of 30-3 this in league play thi sseason, it is expected that this team will continue its winnin gways next year . If UBC can continue to produce frosh teams a sgood as this for the next few years, we will continue to be thecollegiate power in west coast rugby .

BE CAREFRE EIN EUROP E

'69"Ask For Brochure"

WORLD-WID EINTERNATIONAL TRAVEL

on campus

5700 University Boulevard

224-4391

THUNDERBIRD TOTE M

Basketbal lTournament

SATURDAY, NOV. 30

7:30 Portland State vs. Great Falls Montana Colleg e

9:15 — U .B.C . vs. S.F .U .

SPECIAL OFFE R

In order to ensure that regular U .B .C . supporters can obtai nadmission to this game the following format has bee nestablished.

All U.B.C . fans attending the UNIVERSITY OF VICTORIAGAME ON SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 23 will receive an ad-vance admission ticket to the November 30 game of theTotem Tournament .

SUZUK I

MOTORCYCLE CENTRE

Service - Parts - Accessories

2185 W. Broadway

731-751 0

An M.A. Thesis Productio n

No Trifling With LoveBy Alfred De MussetNEW SOMERSET STUDI O

Nov . 20- 23 — 8 :30 p.m .Box Office : Room 207Frederic Wood Theatre

Films, Speakers, Discussion

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 23rd10:00 A.M. — 1 :30 P .M .

INTERNATIONAL HOUSECOFFEE SERVED — BRING YOUR LUNC H

CAR INSURANCEDUE?

Save withState Farm'slow insuranc erates fo rcareful drivers .See me .

Jack Mellil®r8455 GRANVILLE ST.,VANCOUVER 14, B.C .

261-4255

STATE FARM

MUTUALALTO/WIMP INSURANCE COMPAN Y

" Bt° a CANADIAN HEAD OFFIC E

TORONTO, ONT .

GOOD STUDENT? 25°o DISCOUNT

Page 24: Vpt. L, No. 31 48 Occupation UNB suspension …...Burnaby cops got busted Vpt. L, No. 31 VANCOUVER, B.C., FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1968 48 228-2305 Occupation MONTREAL (CUP) — The Canadian

Page 24

THE

U B Y S S E Y

Friday, November 22, 196 8

'TWEENCLASSES . . .

Lincoln Alexander,M.P., noon today

CLASSIFIE DRates: Students, Faculty & Clubs—3 lines, 1 day 75*, 3 days $2 .00.

Commercial—3 lines. 1 day $1 .00, 3 days $2 .50.Rats, for larger ads on request.

Classified ads are not accepted by telephone andare payable in advance.

Closing Deadline is 11 :30 a .m. the day before publication.Publication Office: 241 STUDENT UNION BLDG., UNIVERSITY OF B.C., Vancouver 8, B.C.TODAY

M .P. SPEAKSLincoln Alexander, speaks on Canad a1968, noon today. Ang . 110 .

LUTHERAN STUDENT SO CStan Persky and Allan Emmett dis-cuss What Makes A City, noon todayin SUB conversation pit.

DEBATING UNIO NToday's debate cancelled . Tues . noon,Bu. 202 .

VOCLast day today for membership fees.

SDU FORU MRev . McGuigan and B. McKee o nsocialism . SUB upper lounge or SF UAdmin. building, tonight 7 :30 p.m .

SOCIOLOGY 200Guerrilla theatre movement meetingnoon today. SUB 254 .

SKI TRI PPay deposit as soon as possible toJohn or Cherry.

LECTUR EDr . C . N . Parkinson on The ScienceOf Politics, noon today at FreddyWood theatre .Dr . Erich Kordt on Soviet ForeignPolicy As Seen In The Eyes Evolu-tion Of World Politics, Wed ., Nov . 27,noon, Bu . 100.

PH RATE R5SAll pledges meet noon today. Bu.104.

VC FPaul Little speaks on Christianity—Dead or Alive . Noon today . SUB ball-room .

CIRCLE KMeeting with speaker, noon today,council chambers .

FILM SOCTaming Of The Shrew in SUB sud .today. 6:30, 9 p .m . 50 cents.

UBC IND PLabour committee meetin g noon to -day. SUB 208 .

COSASkating p arty. T-blrd arena, tonight7 :30.9:30 p .m .

SIMSDaily meditations : SUB 213. 7 :30-9 :30a .m . and 4-53 p.m. Film Thurs ., Nov.28, noon, Bu. 104. Initiations onThurs . can 228-3706 .

COMMUNICATIONS COMM.Meeting in AMS exec . conferenceroom noon today, on the financialstate of The Ubyssey.

LEGAL AI DFree legal aid in AMS offices a tnoon Mon., Wed, and Fri .

PRE-LAW SOCFaculty club pres . . Dr . Huberman ,speaks noon today on the law .

WEEKENDALLIANCE FRANCAIS E

International ball at SFU, Saturday .Tickets today noon in 28 at meeting .Meeting with Dr. Grover on Frenchauthors at Dr. Bongie's home, 3746West lath Ave . tonight at 8 p .m .

Exams are less than thre eweeks away .

In recognition of this dreadedfact, the engineers have printedup some past Xmas exams .

The money collected will be

NEW YORKCOSTUME SALON

RENTAL S

WHITE DINNER JACKETS

TUEXDOS, DARK SUITS, TAILSCOLORED JACKETS

SPECIAL STUDENT RATES

224-0034 -- 4397 W. 10th/

UBC SC CClosed gymkhana Sunday 9 :30 a.m.D lot .

P .E . CONFERENC EConference on new concepts for P .E.All day Friday in SUB . All day Sat-urday in Carnarvon Elementary . Cost ,including meals, $7 .50 . Extension dept.

DANCE GROU PDancing group of Republic of China .SUB and ., Sat . 2-4 p .m . Free ticket sin 3M .

CUSOAfrican symposium. Sat . 10 a.m .-1 :30P .m . International House . Speakers,etc ., bring your lunch .

NEWMAN CENTE RWine and cheese party Sunday 7 :30p .m.. St. Mark's music room for mem-bers only RSVP by Thurs . BYOB .

NEXT WEEKNEW DEMOCRATS

Assistant to Tom Berger and TEA Maldermanic candidate tell how B .C.

govt . short-changes Vancouver. Tues . ,Nov. 26, noon, Bu . 102 .

BIG BLOCK WOME NMeeting Monday noon SUB meetin groom E .

ALPHA OMEG AUkranian varsity club meets Monda ynoon, SUB 215.

5FF E NMeeting noon today. SUB club work -room.

PEU SMr . R. Osborne speaks on plans fornew facilities, Monday, Nov. 25. Em .211-213 W.M. Gym .

ROCK CONCERT SGuess Who at noon. Nov . 27 . SU Bballroom, 50 cents . Tomorrow's Eyes ,noon. Nov . 28, SUB ballroom .

SKYDIVIN GImportant meeting Mon . . Nov. 25,noon. Bu . 219.

EXPERIMENT COLLEGEDr. Laplan's ideas . Monday noon . Bu .100.

VEDANTA PHILOSOPHYSwami Vividismananda, Indian monk ,speaks Monday at SFU: Hindu Reli-gion and Philosophy at noon. Em .3150, Academic quadrangle; Yoga—Its Method and Goal at 8 p .m . in for-mal dining room.

CV cDance with Rosalind Keene & th eApollos, Nov. 23 . SUB party room .8 :30 p .m .-12 :30. Members : $1 .50.

UBC CONSERVATIVESSpeakers forum : Charles McLean ,Nov . 25 : David Sinclair. Dec . 2, noon ,council chambers.

GRAD CLAS SFirst council meeting, Nov . 25, noonin SUB 213.

MUSSOCPublicity meeting in clubroom, noonMonday.

donated to the Cup of Lif eFund (formerly the Cup of MilkFund), which is sponsored bythe Vancouver Sun .

These exams, mainly direct-

ed to frosh types, will go on

sale Monday, Nov . 25 .

Class blitzes will occurthroughout the week. And ifyou don't go to your classes ,they will be sold every noonhour in SUB .

ANNOUNCEMENTSDance, 1 1COME TO THE PHARMACY GOO F

Ball - Nov. 23 - SUB Ballroom -Be There !

"THE BIG MOTHER" . 111 DUNS -muir, Benefit, Monday & Tuesday .SOc per nite . Four groups each nite .Open 7 :30 p .m .

l)ANCEt! THE HOFBRAUHAT] SGerman Beer Garden . Live band -SUB Ballroom . Nov . 29, 9-1 . Admis-sion $1 .56 .

GIANT STROBE LIGHT FOR RENT .Reserve early for your next party ,dance, or drunk. Phone 922-1451.

SWING WITH THE WIGGY SYM -phony at Totem Park this Saturday ,8 :10 to midnight .

PHARMACY PRESENTS THE GOO FBall. Nov. 23, SUB Ballroom .

GERMAN CLUB POLKA PARTY I.H .Saturday, Nov . 23, 8 :30-12 :30 . $1 .2 5each, $2041 couple . Band, refresh-ments . Everyone welcome !

Greetings

1 2

Lost&Found 1 3LOST: THEORY OF' MARBLE S

(hard cover Upensky in disguise) . Desperate for return . Call 263-6604 .LOST: ENG. 340 NOTEBOOK IN

Brock bsmt . Nov . 9 . Reward, Phon eBill 733-3733 after 6 :00 .

LOST: TUES., NOV. 12, SET OFkeys in brown leather case . Phon eMurray 266-7236.

LOST ONE MAN'S GREEN RAIN -coat Thurs. Angus Rm . 315 . Phon e738-6257 . Ask for Brent .

LOST: UBC JACKET FROM COATrack, Place Vanier dance Fri . night,Phone Fraser 224-9927 .

LOST: BROWN U . TEXAS CALU -lus, UBC "?"—notebooks . Text "Lesmains Sales" . Peter, Rm. 410, 224 -9011 ,

LOST FRIDAY, RED WALLET ,Freddy Wood parking lot. Pleasereturn to Nancy, 874-3701 . Reward .

Rides&Car Pools 1 4RIDE WANTED FOR TWO FROM

Pt. Roberts, Tswaw. Second termfor 8 :30. Phone 435-0693, Dave .

RIDE 'WANTED FOR TWO FRO MWest Van, 20th & Gordon call 926 -1208 Max .

Special Notices 1 5SKI APEX - STAY TWIN LAKE S

Guest Ranch in Penticton . Make upa group for an exceptional ski week -end. For a minimum of 12 peopl ewe provide accommodation, lodgefacilities and meals, Friday nigh tto Sunday for only $12 per person .For complete details write or wireTwin Lakes Guest Ranch, Box 37 ,Penticton.

TODAY - LINCOLN ALEXANDERM .P. - Angus 116 . Free !

HEAR THE GUESS WHO SING ALLtheir big hits - once only, Wed.noon - SUB Ballroom .

THE GRIN BIN HAS POSTERS.Jokes, Cards, Gifts and a PostOffice . You'll find it across fromthe Liquor Store at 3209 WestBroadway .

THE NEW' YORK LIFE AGENT O Nyour campus is a good man t oknow .

REDUCE THE COST OF YOUR IN -surance by as much as 2047 . Allrisks insured and no cancellation..Motor bikes also. Phone Ted Elliott .299-9422 .

C.U .S .O . WORKSHOP ON AFRICA .Intn'l . Hse . Sat., Nov. 23, 10 :00 a .m,-1 :30 p .m. Panel discussion will fea-ture African Students and returne dvolunteers. Everyone is welcome .

CHRISTMAS IS C 0 MIN G BUTYouth Cards are here Now. Fly halffare until your 22nd birthday onl y$3 . Call to get yours delivered per-sonally, Deirdre SwingAir Rep, 738 -1678 .

Travel Opportunities

IS

AUTOMOTIVE

Automobiles For Sal.

2 11948 DODGE IN GOOD OPERATIN G

condition . Rebuilt 1956 Dodge si xinstalled 2 years ago . $100 . 733-9665 .

1958 FORD. WGN . VS AUTO . RUN Swell. $300 . 224-9380 .

1957 HILLMAN MINX, FOUR SPEED.Like new. $125 . Phone 266-0184.

Auto. For Sale (Cont.)

2 1

G T San d

SPITFIRESat

GRAND PRIX MOTORSSpecial Consideration To Student s

Ph, Lee 682-71$5 or WE 6-2057YEAR END DISCOUNT SALE O N

new Peugeot - all models. Call at1162 Seymour St . GRAND PRIX MOTORS1965 MUSTANG FAST-BACK, 289 4 -

speed . Good shape, red line tire, .Phone 688-5195.

1956 VW. NEW BRAKES, SOUNDengine, trans . $150, 536-6878 or 228-2726 .

MUST SELL '61 FIAT-TUDOR .Good condition . Excel, b r a k e s ,

clutch . $400 or best offer . Ph . 224-167 7betW. 7-8 p.m.

1965 CORVAIR CORSA—JUST TEST-ed everything perfect . Immaculat eblue exterior, black leather interior.See it yourself, Offers from $1,400.736-6281 .

1960 METIOR, 4-DOOR V-S AUTO .trans ., good motor, body fair condi-tion,$250.Ph.224-7660.

G 00 D TRANSPORTATION. 1952Chev, $100 . Phone 263-6180 .

GIRL FRIEND PREGNANT, MUS Tsell 1961 Zephyer, $350 or best offer ,Fort Camp 9-14 or 584-4494 .

'56 CONSUL NEEDS TRANS. BU Tmotor, rubber, brakes good . $69 .50.738-0214 .

Automobile—Parts

2 3

4 FENTON MAGS 14" . $175 .00 PLU Srims. Phone 261-0820 between 5-7 :30 .

REVERERATOR FOR CAR. AT-taches under dashboard . $10 firm .For information call George 731-3757 .

WANTED TWO USED 45 DCOEWeber carbs. Phone John 922-1451 .

Motorcycles

2 6'66 DUCATI 350CC S-BAGS, ACCES -

sories. $4410 or best offer . Phon e228-9521 ask for Bill .

BUSINESS SERVICE S

Dance Bands

3 1

Duplicating & Copying

32

Miscellaneous

3 3

S I L K SCREEN POSTERS . BEAU -tifully made . Lowest Possible cost .24 hr . service. 731-7301 .

BUSES FOR CHARTERAvailable in VancouverFor Rates That Pleas e

SQUAMISH COACH LINES580 Howe

684-0522

Home Entertainment 3 5GUARANTEED EXPERT AN D

EFFICIENT REPAIR SColor T.V. - Black and White T .V .

Record Playe rs - RadiosStereo Equipment - Tape RecordersALEXANDER AND AXELSON LTD.

4512 W. 10th - 228-9088Complete Record Department

Rentals—Miscellaneous

3 6

DUNBAR COSTUME RENTALS.Costumes for all occasions. NEWADDRESS: 3567 W. 41st . Phone263-9011.

Scandals

3 7

DON'T MISS THE "GUESS WHO" .Next Wed . noon - SUB Ballroom .Only 50c .

THE NEW COFFEE HOUSE . "THEBig Mother", 111 Dunsmiui' facingthe Greyhound Bus Depot .

RENT THE PAISLEY MULTICOL-ored Strobic Light-Show to makeyour party or dance happen. Rea-sonable rates. Paul 731-730 1

DON'T BE A DROP-OUT! MAK Esure you graduate by becoming on eof UBC's fastest readers . In eigh tweeks you'll read dynamically an dhave better comprehension of wha tyou read . To register for Novembe ror January classes, call 732-7696 ,

OTHER BANDS ADMIT THEY CAN -not match the Wiggy Symphony .Dance Saturday night, Totem Park ,

WILL LORD TOPPINGTON APPEA Ras a suckling pig dancing an 18t hC . minuet Nov . 28? Buy your ticke tbefore Fri . and find out . Englishoffice, Buchanan, 4th floor,

LEAD SINGER NEEDED FOR COM -niercial Rock Band . Call Hunt 985 -1646 or Ray 987-1706 .

Typing

40

EXPERT IBM SELECTRIC TYPIS T- experienced essay and thesi stypist . Reasonable rates, TB 4-9253 .

EXPERIENCED E S S A Y TYPIST .Reasonable. Phone 681-8992.

Help Wanted—Female

5 1

Help WantedMale or Female

53EXCELLENT EARNING OPPOR -

tunities for serious spare-timers .Call 985-9220 from 10-1 and 3-5 p .m .

CMAS COMING - LIKE TO EARNextra money in spare time? No ob-ligation . Phone Mr. Wu 263-5982weekdays 9 a.m. - 12 noon.

INSTRUCTIONMiisic

6 2

Tutoring

6 4FIRST YEAR MATHS, CHEMISTRY,

physics lessons given by excellen ttutors. 736-6923 .

1st AND 2nd YEAR MATHS, CHEM ,physics by science and engineerin ggraduate, 731-1930 or 731-3491 .

MISCELLANEOUSFOR SALE

7 1

GOING TO EUROPE, MUST SELL :10-speed racing bike, $50. 2—12 "speakers in bass reflex cabinets ,2/$50 . G.E . 2M mobile XCVR, $25 .Transistors ; odds & ends. 733-1575 ,17 :00-18 :30, 23 :00-08 :38 hrs.

ONE PAIR OF LACE SKI BOOTS , $15 .00. Phone Ed, 224-9957 .BOOKS FOR RADICAL THINKING

students . Feature works of Marx ,Lenin, Malcom X, Che Guewera H .Marcus, F . Fanon, etc . VanguardBooks, 1208 Granville ,

SKIS, HEAD MASTER 205CM STEP -in safety release $80 . Phone 224-3341 ,

WESTINGHOUSE 19" PORTABLETV Model P-8969, new, guarantee ,reg . $279 .00, will sell $250 .00 or near-est offer . Phone 224-7230 .

T W 0 5 .60/5 .90x15 WHITEWAL Lsnow tires mounted in Volkswage nrims . 2 month's use, $50 .00 . Phone922-6364 ask for Skip or leave nameand number .

MARTIN GUITAR 018 . CONCER Tmodel with case, as new . Best offer! 988-0752 . Must sell!BLACK HARDTOP FOR M.G.B . •

Phone 263-0174 after 6 p.m.

ENGLISH 200 NOTES SECT. "A" . 4Full term compiled by English Gradstudent $2,410 . 24 pages, 988-0847 or926-1205 .

The Handiest Book on Campu s

BIRD

UBC's STUDENT

CALLS TELEPHONE DIRECTORY

Only 75c at Bookstore

Also at Publications Office &

Information Office, SUB

RENTALS & REAL ESTATE

Rooms

Si

FURNISHED SINGLE AND DOUBL Erooms for spring term. Prefer male students . Phone after 7, 733-5255 .TWO SHARING FURNISHED BSMT .

rooms . Ext . phone, fireplace, priv .enti' . Marpole. 263-9700 .

ROOM OR BOARD AND ROOM FO R1 girl to share with same. TV. 224 -4790 or 4674 West 8th .

ROOM WITH HOME PRIVILEGES .Pt . Grey area, Ph . 856-2201 (Alder -grove) on weekend, or 732-844 8(Vancouver) till new phone installed .

TWO LA li 0 E COMFORTABLEsleeping rooms available in famil yhome. $45 .00. Call after 5 p.m. -261-4106 .

RIGHT AT GATES : 4500 BLOCK W .11th . Fully furnished rooms : 1 large ,1 or 2 persons $60. 1 smaller single$40 . Private entrance, phone, kit-chen, bathroom, all inclusive. Phone874-9436 after 6 . Available Dec . 1 o rsooner ,

ALL STUDENT HOUSE, G 0 0 Dstudying facilities, kitchen, etc . 3rd& Burrard . Phone 736-7128 . Maleonly ,

MALE STUDENT. SINGLE ROOM ,share frig, shower with another .Kit, priv., sep. entrance . Non-smoker. Vacant no', $45, 733-8778 .

ROOM FOR RENT . KITCHEN FA-cilities, Separate entrance $35 permonth . Call 713-9758 after 7 :00 p .m .

Room & Board

62

LIVE IN A. STUDENT COMMUNE .$65 month room, 4306 W . 13th, Seeus any weekday, 6 p .m.-8 p .m .

ON CAMPUS ST . ANDREW'S HALL,Men's residence, Share double room ,224-7720 or 224-5742 .

ROOM AND BOARD ON CAMPUS ,2120 \Vesbrook, 224-9074 . Call afte r5 :30 . Quiet hours, good food .

Furn. Houses & Apts.

$3

2 MEN TO SHARE STUDIO LOUNGE.224-5245 after 5 .

TIRED OF LANDLORDS? OURS I Sdead! Have a room for senior stu-dent . Either sex . Cheap! Yew & 8th. 732-8074 .

WANTED MALE STUDENT TOshare West End apt. with same .Phone Neil at 688-2074.

WANTED MALE STUDENT T Oshare apartment. $75 per month .Phone 736-5196 .

PRIVATE ROOM FOR GIRL I Nmixed Kits apartment to shar efacilities and expenses with thre eothers . 733-5679 .

XMA SSPECIA L

$1 .2568 - INVITATION - 69

655 Granville St .

683-665 1Vancouve r

47 W . Hastings St ., 682 . 3801Vancouve r

622 Columbia St .

526 .377 1New Westminste r

Gears sell old exams

ifiifierg CELEBRATE THEIR 46t hANNIVERSARY

With The Bridal Bouquet Diamond Even t

WIN an ALL EXPENSE PAID WEDDIN G

No purchase necessary to win . Just register your names atany of MILLERS 3 stores and you CAN WIN $500.00.

However, if you purchase your diamond and wedding ring a tMillers and you are declared the winner, you win an extra $500 .

HURRY - REGISTER YOUR NAMES NOW !This offer closes Dec. 31, 1968 .

Convenient Credit Terms arranged with CourtesyDiscount to U .B .C. Students and Personnel

ten -Vancouver Stores Open Fridays Until 9. New Westminster Store Open Thurs . & Fri . Until 9

==