MASS VACCINATIONS TODA Y S ALL OX CASE · PDF fileSports Editor Ron Kydd Editorial Assistant...

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MASS VACCINATIONS TODA Y S ALL OX CASE FEA R Blood driv e Goes ahea d The UBC Red Cross Blood Donor ' s Clink will continue .,. -as scheduled, pending wor d today from Red Cross offici-` _ aQs at Toronto, Major W . IL = Chisholm told The Ubysse y late last night. Chisholm, panel organizer o f the Vancouver Red Cros s Branch blood drive, said the the blood donated yesterda y ' at the Armory is being hel d at the Blood Bank Laborator y and will not be moved unti l word from Toronto clears i t of any possible contaminatio n by smallpox . This is a precautionar y measure, he said, As all donat- ed blood goes through exhaust- ive tests at the blood bank be - fore it is issued . UBC" cas e 'may be first since -193 2 The second recorded case o f smallpox in Canada since 194 6 and the first in B.C . since 193 2 may be resting in Vancouver General Hospital today . Kaneung Watanachai, a Co- lombo exchange student fro m Bangkok, Thailand, is the sus- -, petted carrier . He is a thir d year commerce student who ar- rived in Vancouver only 1 0 days ago to take up studies a t UBC. 119COST CONTAGIOU S ` Smallpox is described by med- ical authorities as probably one of the most contagious of al l diseases . The last known case in North America was that of James Or r who brought the disease into th e country from Brazil earlier thi s year. Because of the rarity o f the disease on this continent i t was not at once recognized. The effects of smallpox hav e not changed since it threatene d to wipe out whole population s centuries ago . TJNRECOGNIZE D The biggest danger today rest s in the fact that people fail to re - cognize the danger of the situ- ation until faced with an actua l scare, officials say. The disease is most frequentl y transferred from country t o country and from hemisphere t o hemisphere by international tra- vellers. The World Health Or- ganization received reports o f smallpox from 72 internationa l ports .in the first nine months o f 1961 . Foreign studen t may be carrie r Mass vaccinations began Monday night after a student sus- pected of being a smallpox carrier was discovered on campus . Almost all students in Fort Camp where the student lives were immunized in emergency booths set up in the Fort Camp ' dining hall . Vaccinations will be given in Wesbrook Hospital today be- ginning at noon to all campus students . The suspected carrier, Kaneung Watanachai, 25, a graduate . student in Economics from Bangkok, Thailand, is in good condi- tion in Vancouver General Hospital . Officials said it will be 48 hours before they can determin e whether Watanachai has small- , pox . Watanachai, a Colombo Pla n scholarship student, was put i n isolation at VGH after he wen t Fort camp vaccinate d Few people have done mor e than nod to him in the time h e was in the residence or attend- ing his classes in business ad - ministration . Dr . James Mather, assistan t dean of medicine, said vaccina- tions are being made availabl e to all students as a preventativ e measure . "Seven doctors saw 'hi m (Watanachai) today and the y are not prepared to say it i s not smallpox," Dr . Mather said . He said a number of tests were conducted on Watanacha i Monday and that blood sample s were being sent to Ottawa for laboratory analysis . The results of the tests wil l not be known until Wednesday . Dr . Mather said there are 9,000 doses of smallpox vaccin e in town and that more is be- ing shipped in from Toronto . 'Might b e He said Watanachai had gon e to Shaughnessy Hospital abou t a rash that covered his arms , hands and legs . He said that Watanachai wa s not seriously ill as is usual i n smallpox cases . The disease Dr . Mather sai d is transmitted by bodily contac t or breathing . in close quarter s with another person . Deputy city medical office r Dr . G . A . Mott, who examined the student Monday afternoon , said the odds are that this i s not smallpox at all . Continued on Page Thre e SEE : SMALLPD X Vol . XLV VANCOUVER, B .C., TUESDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1962 No. 8 Photo by Don Hum e TENSE EXPRESSION grips face of Eileen Sowerley, Arts 1, on e of about 700 Fort Camp students to be vaccinanted for small - pox Monday night . Administering the vaccine is Dr . Ian Shan d of Health Service . Process is actually painless . to Shaughnessy Hospital com- plaining of a skin rash . Doctors examined him an d committed him to VGH abou t 4 :30 p .m . Shortly after 5 p .m . booth s were set up in the main entranc e to the Fort Camp dining hal l all exits blocked off, an d students began receiving vac- cinations as they walked out . Seven hundred of Fort Camp' s 750 -students- were immunized . (The vaccinations are volun- tary but all officials of the Uni- versity Health Service are urg- ing students to take them) . Today beginning at 12 noo n vaccinations will be given i n Room 1 of the Wesbrook build- ing to all students wishing them . Watanachai arrived in Van- couver from Bangkok 10 day s ago aboard a commercial' air - liner, believed to be Canadian Pacific . - He lived for six days at 232 6 York before moving into a single room in Fort Camp las t Thursday. MYSTERY MAN MAY HAVE HAD SMALLPDX just rash ' All students who hav e not received a smallpo x vaccination within the pas t year should report to West - brook Hospital, . Universit y Blvd . and East Mall, at 1 2 noon today . The smallpox vaccina- tion process is painless , and takes less than a min- ute . A small area of th e upper arm is swabbed , vaccine is rubbed on, an d the area is scratched . A stranger came to Fort Cam p Kaneung Watanachai was a stranger in his own residence . Students living in room s near him in Hut 13, For t Camp, had spoken to him onl y a few times . Some had onl y seen him . All referred to him a s "quiet . " Watanachai now lies in iso- lation in Vancouver Genera l Hospital awaiting results o f tests to determine if he has smallpox . His condition is good . He came to Vancouver Sept . 21, but moved into the small square room 6 at hut 13 onl y last Thursday. He is a scholarship studen t from Bangkok, Thailand an d is enrolled in graduate course s in Commerce a n d Busines s Administration . But to his residence-mate s he was a stranger. Mike Wellings, an engineer- ing student who lives in roo m 7, said he had seen Watana- chai only a couple of times . "Hle said hello once an d once he asked me the time, " Wellings said . "He never in- troduced himself and I neve r got to know him . " Benno Przybylski, w h o lives just down the hall, sai d he had seen Watanachai onl y once but had never spoken t o him . * * * But news of the discovery and vaccinations spread quick- ly through Fort Camp dormi- tories Monday night . All doors to the Fort Camp dining hall were barred a s students ate . Only at the front door wer e students allowed to leave and there they had to pass by doc- tors and nurses administerin g smallpox vaccine . Most students stopped fo r their shots . * * * Students interviewed b y The Ubyssey were amazed a t the disclosure they had bee n living near a possible small - pox carrier . "The situation is well unde r control, but it's still a bit of a jar to go for dinner and get this for dessert," said Lorrain e Bella, president of the Fort Camp Womens' Council .

Transcript of MASS VACCINATIONS TODA Y S ALL OX CASE · PDF fileSports Editor Ron Kydd Editorial Assistant...

Page 1: MASS VACCINATIONS TODA Y S ALL OX CASE · PDF fileSports Editor Ron Kydd Editorial Assistant Joyce Holding ... Layout: Dave Ablett.REPORTERS: Ron Riter, Rob Watt, Tim Padmore, Lorraine

MASS VACCINATIONS TODA Y

S ALL OX CASE FEAR

Blood driveGoes ahead

The UBC Red Cross BloodDonor 's Clink will continue.,.

-as scheduled, pending wor dtoday from Red Cross offici-`

_ aQs at Toronto, Major W . IL= Chisholm told The Ubyssey

late last night.Chisholm, panel organizer o f

the Vancouver Red Cros sBranch blood drive, said thethe blood donated yesterday

'at the Armory is being heldat the Blood Bank Laboratoryand will not be moved untilword from Toronto clears i tof any possible contaminationby smallpox .

This is a precautionarymeasure, he said, As all donat-ed blood goes through exhaust-ive tests at the blood bank be-fore it is issued.

UBC" case'may be firstsince -1932

The second recorded case ofsmallpox in Canada since 194 6and the first in B.C. since 1932may be resting in Vancouver

General Hospital today .

Kaneung Watanachai, a Co-lombo exchange student fromBangkok, Thailand, is the sus-

-, petted carrier. He is a thir dyear commerce student who ar-rived in Vancouver only 1 0days ago to take up studies a tUBC.

119COST CONTAGIOU S` Smallpox is described by med-

ical authorities as probably oneof the most contagious of al ldiseases .

The last known case in NorthAmerica was that of James Orrwho brought the disease into thecountry from Brazil earlier thisyear. Because of the rarity o fthe disease on this continent i twas not at once recognized.

The effects of smallpox hav enot changed since it threatenedto wipe out whole population scenturies ago .

TJNRECOGNIZE D

The biggest danger today restsin the fact that people fail to re -cognize the danger of the situ-

ation until faced with an actualscare, officials say.

The disease is most frequentl ytransferred from country tocountry and from hemisphere tohemisphere by international tra-vellers. The World Health Or-ganization received reports ofsmallpox from 72 internationalports .in the first nine months o f1961 .

Foreign studen tmay be carrie r

Mass vaccinations began Monday night after a student sus-pected of being a smallpox carrier was discovered on campus .

Almost all students in Fort Camp where the student liveswere immunized in emergency booths set up in the Fort Camp 'dining hall .

Vaccinations will be given in Wesbrook Hospital today be-ginning at noon to all campus students .

The suspected carrier, Kaneung Watanachai, 25, a graduate .student in Economics from Bangkok, Thailand, is in good condi-tion in Vancouver General Hospital .

Officials said it will be 48 hours before they can determinewhether Watanachai has small- ,pox .

Watanachai, a Colombo Pla nscholarship student, was put i nisolation at VGH after he wen t

Fort camp vaccinatedFew people have done more

than nod to him in the time hewas in the residence or attend-ing his classes in business ad-ministration .

Dr. James Mather, assistan tdean of medicine, said vaccina-tions are being made availableto all students as a preventativemeasure .

"Seven doctors saw 'him(Watanachai) today and theyare not prepared to say it isnot smallpox," Dr . Mather said .

He said a number of testswere conducted on Watanacha iMonday and that blood sample swere being sent to Ottawa forlaboratory analysis .

The results of the tests willnot be known until Wednesday.

Dr. Mather said there are9,000 doses of smallpox vaccinein town and that more is be-ing shipped in from Toronto .

'Might beHe said Watanachai had gon e

to Shaughnessy Hospital abou ta rash that covered his arms ,hands and legs .

He said that Watanachai wa snot seriously ill as is usual insmallpox cases .

The disease Dr. Mather sai dis transmitted by bodily contactor breathing . in close quarterswith another person .

Deputy city medical officerDr. G. A. Mott, who examinedthe student Monday afternoon ,said the odds are that this i snot smallpox at all .

Continued on Page Thre eSEE: SMALLPD X

Vol . XLV VANCOUVER, B .C., TUESDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1962 No. 8

Photo by Don Hum e

TENSE EXPRESSION grips face of Eileen Sowerley, Arts 1, on eof about 700 Fort Camp students to be vaccinanted for small -pox Monday night . Administering the vaccine is Dr . Ian Shandof Health Service . Process is actually painless .

to Shaughnessy Hospital com-plaining of a skin rash .

Doctors examined him andcommitted him to VGH abou t4:30 p .m .

Shortly after 5 p.m. boothswere set up in the main entranceto the Fort Camp dining hal lall exits blocked off, an dstudents began receiving vac-cinations as they walked out .

Seven hundred of Fort Camp' s750 -students- were immunized .

(The vaccinations are volun-tary but all officials of the Uni-versity Health Service are urg-ing students to take them) .

Today beginning at 12 noonvaccinations will be given inRoom 1 of the Wesbrook build-ing to all students wishing them .

Watanachai arrived in Van-couver from Bangkok 10 daysago aboard a commercial' air -liner, believed to be CanadianPacific .- He lived for six days at 232 6York before moving into asingle room in Fort Camp lastThursday.

MYSTERY MAN MAY HAVE HAD SMALLPDX

just rash'

All students who hav enot received a smallpo xvaccination within the pas tyear should report to West -brook Hospital, . Universit yBlvd. and East Mall, at 1 2noon today .

The smallpox vaccina-tion process is painless ,and takes less than a min-ute. A small area of th eupper arm is swabbed ,vaccine is rubbed on, an dthe area is scratched .

A stranger came to Fort CampKaneung Watanachai was a

stranger in his own residence .Students living in rooms

near him in Hut 13, For tCamp, had spoken to him onl ya few times . Some had onlyseen him .

All referred to him as"quiet . "

Watanachai now lies in iso-lation in Vancouver Genera lHospital awaiting results o ftests to determine if he hassmallpox. His condition isgood .He came to Vancouver Sept .

21, but moved into the smallsquare room 6 at hut 13 onlylast Thursday.

He is a scholarship studentfrom Bangkok, Thailand andis enrolled in graduate coursesin Commerce a n d Busines sAdministration .

But to his residence-mate she was a stranger.

Mike Wellings, an engineer-ing student who lives in room7, said he had seen Watana-chai only a couple of times .

"Hle said hello once andonce he asked me the time,"Wellings said . "He never in-

troduced himself and I neve rgot to know him . "

Benno Przybylski, w h olives just down the hall, sai dhe had seen Watanachai onl yonce but had never spoken tohim .

* * *But news of the discovery

and vaccinations spread quick-ly through Fort Camp dormi-tories Monday night .

All doors to the Fort Campdining hall were barred a sstudents ate .

Only at the front door werestudents allowed to leave and

there they had to pass by doc-tors and nurses administerin gsmallpox vaccine .

Most students stopped fortheir shots .

* * *Students interviewed by

The Ubyssey were amazed a tthe disclosure they had bee nliving near a possible small-pox carrier.

"The situation is well undercontrol, but it's still a bit ofa jar to go for dinner and getthis for dessert," said Lorrain eBella, president of the FortCamp Womens' Council .

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Page 2

THE-URYSSEY

Tuesday, .October 2, 196 2

Winner of the Southam .Trophy

Authorized as. second class mail by the Post Office Department ,Ottawa, and for payment of postage in cash.

Published three times weekly throughout the University year in Vancouver by the AlmaMater Society, University of B .C . . Editorial opinions expressed are those of the EditorialBoard of The Ubyssey and not necessarily those of the Alma Mater Society or the Universityof B .C . Telephone CA 4-3242. Locals : Editor—25; News—23; Photography—24.

Editor-in-chief : Keith Bradbur yManaging Editor Denis StanleyCity Editor M. G. ValpyAssociate Editor

Fred FletcherNews Editor =-= Mike mounterFeatures Editor Mike GrenbyCUP Editor Maureen CovellPicture Editor Don Hum eLayout Editor Bob McDonaldSports Editor Ron KyddEditorial Assistant Joyce HoldingCritics Editor William Littler

Layout : Dave Ablett.REPORTERS : Ron Riter, Rob Watt, Tim Padmore, Lorrain e

Shore, Greydon Moore, Richard Simeon, Heather Virtue,Ann Burge, Norma Weaver, Ian Sandulak, Ron Jakimchuk .

TECHNICAL : Clint Pulley, Bill Millerd, Gail Andersen, JoanWeld .

LAYOUT: Sharon Rodney .;SPORTS: Donna - Morris (desk), Bert MacKinnon, Collin

Sabell,, Danny Stoffman, Janet Currie, Ron Kydd .

Letters to the editor

EDITORIALS

Do as 1 say, but not as 1 doDrinking, like sex, is a private matter .

Hypocrisy among elected officials is, re-

gretably, a matter for editorial comment .

Student officials at Fresh Retreat drank.

This in itself would be undesirable only if i t

resulted in actions that could be labelled il-

legal or damaging to the AMS.

But student officials announced before th e

^onference that no drinking would be allowe d

there .

- Further, they confiscated alcoholic bever-

ages from some of the delegates .

Some delegates, especially those girls for -

- tunate enough to pair themselves off with up -

per classmen, were permitted to indulge in the

special privileges allowed our leaders .

This, clearly, is hypocrisy, and, as such, is

an important part of the orientation program

the delegates to this conference receive .

Hypocrisy is a basic tenet of student govern-

ment at UBC. Liquor is banned by student

council legislation at AMS functions, but loo k

closely and you will find councillors amon g

the under-the-table drinkers .

As an example to these new students, the

practice is excellent. It shows them that

strength of character is the first thing they

must get rid of if they wish to go far in student

affairs .The old saying, "Laws are made to be

oroken," does not apply, surely, to those : who

snake the laws.Fresh Retreat did much to acquaint selected

first year students with extra-curricular activi-

ties at UBC .It is not a credit to our student leaders that

they also-learned the importance of activities

that are extra-curricular to normal extra-cur-

ricular activities .

Referendum: So who cares .Last, Thursday 's referendum was a loaded

question of the "have you stopped beating your

wife" type, but it was cleverly disguised .

Presented as a straight forward issue—stay

bogged down or get the job done—it avoided

that real question of student government which

our councillors refuse to ask, the question of

just how much governing John Ubyssey reall y

wants .The overwhelming apathy prevalent on this

campus; should provide a sufficient clue to the

answer .The Commerce and Business Administra-

tion types, legal-caglets and budding Politica l

Economists that jam Brock , Hall tend to think

that their interests are representative of the

campus; that, therefore, student governmentis good and the more of it we have the bette roff we'll be .

Granting that the above mentioned find ser-vice in a governing body with a six-figure an-

nual budget both satisfying and supplementaryto their occupational goal, we cannot excusethem for looking down on sciencemen whofind their slide-rules much more interesting .

Nor have they the right . to strike a. holier-

than-thou attitude in the presence of those whofind their extra-curricular stimulation among

the intellectual table aesthetes, the war-memor-ial athletes, or the socially oriented sororities .

Some of us come here for vocational trainin g

some for enlightenment, some for a damn goo d

time; that the blue-blazer contingent manage s

to combine these elements is interesting bu t

hardly pertinent .They should remember this when they plan

the proliferation of student services that ourrevered Professor C . Northcote Parkinson soaptly warns us against .

And they should stop trying to create aguilt-complex in those who don't give a dam nwhat happens to their annual $24 contributionto Brock status .

—D.A.

Frosh condemn kindEditor,The Ubyssey,Dear Sir :

We are frosh, but not addle-brains . Other frosh, however ,are., We are referring to anepisode on the evening ofSept. 26, 1962 when, followingthe Cairn ceremony, we werethe innocent observers of aludicrous, absurd act of acro-batics .

The act in question was tha tof scaling the flag pole at th enorth end of the Main Mall .The climber accepted a wagerof one Diefenbaker dollar, tha the could ascend the aforemen-tioned structure. He did .

Dear Editor, we sincerelyhope that any further eventsof ; . this nature do not occu ragain, as any visitor might getthe impression that this cam-pus is crawling with psycho-pathic, lunatical vertebrates .

Yours truly,G . LEIGHTON ,Arts & Sc . I ,D. POJE ,Arts . & Sc. II

More symposiumsEditor ,The Ubyssey,Dear Sir :

The symposium on "PoliticalFreedom and Economic Neces-sity" brought together fouroutstanding men to view inpublic their accumulated fundof knowledge, wit and fore-sight .

This gathering of such not-able scholars in front of uni-versity students is a great stepforward in the de-isolation ofBritish Columbia .

We will forever be indebte dto the nameless donor wh omade this symposium possi-ble .

I would like to suggest to the"Debating Society" that theyapproach the donor asking hi mto match, dollar for dollar,funds which students couldraise to insure that events o fthis nature are a permanentoccurence on the campus .

Yours truly,

C. N. BULL .ommonwealtF► or nothingThe following is a reply

to the column "Common -wealth or ?" by JohannesAllgaier, which appeare don this page. It was 're- _eeived as a letter to the edi-tor . The ,writer is a fourthyear arts student .

By WALLY GEORGEdu TEMPLE

If you know what brotherly

co-operation is, if you kno wwhat a family pulling toge-

ther can be, you will know

what the Commonwealth is ,

and what it ultimately should

be .The Commonwealth is an

association not just of govern-ments but of peoples, people sof different races, differentcultures, and different reli-gions. Commonwealth co-operation covers the wholerange of human activities, in-ternational affairs, finance ,defence, education, justice ,medicine, agriculture, sport ,industrial planning, to men-tion only the obvious .

Our commonwealth rela-tionship rests completely onthe goodwill of the . memberstowards one another. Themembers are linked togethe rby a common sense ofvalues and ideals shared .

The fact that each of the

Commonwealth nations wasin the past administered byGreat Britain is partially re-sponsible for this communityof interest and sentiment .

The Commonwealth has n ocommon defense policy, n opolicy making body, no parli-amentary executive .

* * *It has Prime Ministers'

Conferences at which th efamily members discuss th eproblems of the day . No voteis taken on any issue, nopolicy is forced on a reluct -ant member. The Prime Mini-sters return home and comple-ment as best they can, some -times with regional adapta-tions, the general principle sarrived at through discussion .It' is admirable how these in-formal gatherings, based oncommon sense and friendship ,have in the realm of practicalresults, produced, and pro-duced well .

* * *Think of the Common-

wealth as a family, the child-ren growing up, some asBritain's own offspring, someas orphans in a foster home .As they struggled towardsmanhood, some came to dis-like supervision and the re-strictions imposed . One childrebelled in foolish impatience,

others grew peacefully tomanhood and rejected thei rfamily`, while the great ma-jority, although jealous oftheir new independence, ha dthe intelligence to forge abond of common fellowshipas thin as ribbon but as stron gas iron .

This is the Commonwealth .It exists only because of thedesire of each member thatit should live . It is based onlove and brotherhood. Wereit to crumble, those insidiou sevils, greed and selfishnes swould be the cause .

* * *

And when our Prime Mini-ster talks about concessionsfor Canadian butter, cabbages ,potatoes and wheat, yet fail sto mention the ideals forwhich the Commonwealt hstands, is not the Spore of anevil canker being sown in abog of ignorance ?

May the Commonwealthsurmount its greatest hour o fperil ; may it become moreand more the bastion ofdemocracy, of British • lawand justice, a magnificen tmulti-racial community, theonly true testing for thegreatest civilization the worldhas yet to know—the Britishempire .

—Lynn Watney Photo"WHERE DO WE HANG OUR COATS?"

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Tuesday, October 2, 1962

T H E U B Y S S E Y

Page 3

'' NFCUS Seeks govt aidor non -academic buildings

DIETRICH LUTH

. . . warm-blooded

Soap-boxersuffer s

- fla,me''-out- 'A student's one-man cam-

paign of support for the fal l

blood drive almost went up in

flames Monday .Deitrich Luth hot-footed i t

from his soapbox in front of thelibrary when students who ha dbeen pelting him with lunchesand garbage set his box on firewith a lighted bag .

Luth took a moment out fromhis crusade for blood to stampOut the fire :

During his speech, Luth threwpamphlets • to his listeners anddried :

Giving blood ° doesn't hurt atall. It makes you feel better.

"There's hno . reason- for stuBents not donating 10,000 pint stf blood. "

Fifteen hundred student sleathered to hear him .

"Students a r e indifferent*bout blood. But one day theywill need it," he said .

"Blood isn't something' tojoke about. Joke about religio nbr politics, but 'hot about blood .

Luth, a fourth-year arts stu-dent,' is -a perennial soap-bo xorator who 'has appeared inFront of the library with opin-loirs on everything from nuclearjiisa'rniainent to Buster's .

Asked if there was any rea lheed for. blood, Deitrich wasthouted down 'by one student'sscomment, "Just look at Deit-rich!"

At 1 :30 p .m. Luth picked u pthis charred soapbox . He was'Usti seen heading in the direc-a ion !of the i°ipmory .

for the' -Medica lServices Inc . health plan reg.istvatiort.' -has--been eaetendedto pour-Friday .

long term, low-interest loansfor the construction of univer-sity academic buildings andstudent residences .

The UBC delegation to th e26th NFCUS conference heldlast week in Sherbrooke, Que . ,proposed the broadening of th eAct to include all student facili-ties .

The •NFCUS congress gave

UBC will produce

national student magA University student publication will be going nation-wid e

this year.UBC has been mandated by

the 26th Congress of the NationalFederation of Canadian Univer-sity Students to produce a na-tional student magazine .

The Congress, meeting at theuniversity of Sherbrooke, Que . ,gave UBC the project after dis-cussing the feasibility of an of-fer by McGill University .

The University of B .C. will as-sume full financial responsibiltyfor the publication of the maga-zine .

"But," said UBC coordinato rof publications Bill MacDonald ,"with advertising and- a nomina lcharge per copy the magazineshould be self-sustaining."SELF-SUSTAININ G

Ten thousand copies of the 100

1

1page magazine will be produced Bof1 om falls outat an estimated cost of $3,000 .

An earlier plan, costing $5,000 ,by Montreal's McGill Universitywas turned down .

McGill said it was prepared t o'end the Federation $3,000 on atwo year, interest free basis pro-vided the Federation could pu tup the remaining $2,000 .

The standing finance commit -tee said the Federation did no thave the money to do so .

AMS treasurer Malcolm Scottproposed the new mandate .

Scott said UBC was ready t otake a small loss on the projec tif necessary. "It's time s o m e -thing concrete was done on th enational ' niagazine a n d we a tUBC have enough faith i nNFCUS and the project to do i tourselves . "FIRST EDITIO N

He said the first edition shouldbe ready by February or March .

"And it will be no more tha n25 cents per copy," he said .

Editorial policy would be dic-tated by NFCUS .

"We would still control thebusiness end and technical qual-ity through," said co-ordinatorMacDonald.

Why did this western univer-sity get the project ?

"Because our publications set -up is so much more flexible tha nanywhere in Canada," said Mac -Donald .

Material for the magazine wil lbe solicited from every Canadianuniversity .

GRADUATE STUDENT ASSOCIATIO N

GENERAL MEET ING .bn

Thu-rstlby;Octobor 11th at T2:30in zt -Lower Lounge _o fGraduate StUdenf e`ntre '

All graduate students are urged to attend as there are som eextremely important matters to be discussed, such as theparking 'situation and -a proposed timendmeni t o- theConstitution .

UBC the go-ahead to form acommittee on behalf of thefederation to determine al lsources of funds for such need-ed student facilities .

The UBC committee was in-structed to report back toNFCUS at the 1963 congress .

The congress also approveda mandatory 10 cent fee in -crease per student for al lNFCUS 'member universities.

UBC was asked at the 196 1congress to raise student feesbut refused because the uni-versity did not think NF'CU Sbeiefits merited the increase ,said AMS second vice-presi-dent Ed Lavalle, Monday .

* * *UBC, despite the fact the y

turned down a similar propo-sal last year, will have to g oalong with the move .

Lavalle said the congresswoul consider a UBC proposa lthat the votes of member uni-versities be dependant uponthe size of the student body .

"UBC has the largest da yenrolment of any Canadia nuniversity," Lavalle said .- "But we still only have fiv evotes, the same as every otheruniversity . "

The NFCUS Congress als opassed what will become theofficial Student Charter whenapproved by two thirds ofNFCUS member councils .

* * *This charter, dealing with

academic freedoms, student ,and human rights, is a mora lguide rather than a bindin gcode, Lavalle said .

"It is a notable fact tha tUBC is continually beinglooked to for leadership in th edirection of the objectives ofNFCUS .

"Our AIMS stands out as themost autonomous and econo-mically strong unit of all stu-dent unions in 'Canada .

"Our student council isNFCUS on this campus andNFCUS policy should be the -external affairs policy of th ecampus." he said .

ITCOMING

SOON-

0

SMALLPDXContinued from Page One '

"The rash could be called bya number of things," he said ."It could be some type of ski ninfectiop that produces lesionsbut not contagious ."

But, said Dr . Mott, it is neces-sary to treat t h e disease as _smallpox until it is proved tobe something else .

A boarder at the house sai dWatanachai moved into theboarding house last Saturda yand left again -Sunday .

The man said four other Tha istudents who also lived in thehouse moved out when informedof t h e possibility Watanachaimight be a smallpox carrier .

Watanachai - s trip to UBC wasarranged by sasistant professorWilliam Hughes of the Facult yof Commerce .

Hughes was an economic ad-viser for the Canadian govern- .ment in Thailand this summer . -

'Hughes said Watanachai wasin company with 30 other Asiati cstudents heading for other Canadian universities .

Federal and provincial -healt hofficials are conducting an all- .out search through B .C. and Can-ada for contacts.

Hughes also said there had 'been an outbreak o fsmallpox in .Bangkok two weeks ago, shortlybefore Watanachai left for Van- .couver .

'In Bangkok I saw vaccinatio nmarks. onKaneung's arm," he -said . "I'm sure he Was vaccinatedat least twice . "

However, Hughes' .said fakeinternational smallpox certifi-cates could be bought in Bang=kok for $1 .50 .

Hughes said Watanachai visit-ed him in Vancouver 'GeneralHospital the moment he got offthe plane at 11 :30 a .m. Sept . 21 .

Hughes was in hospital for aminor lung` 'infectibn :

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The National Federation ofCanadian University Student swill investigate the possibilityof government loans for non-academic student buildings .

The move would mean loan swould be available for thelong-awaited UBC studen tunion building .

The present Canadian Mort-gage and Housing Act permits

MALCOLM SCOTT. . . proposes magazin e

of C - lot parkingThe mere thought of cam-

pus parking has given manystudents a sinking feeling.

But two students returne dto their cars to go home Sat-urday and found they werereally sunk .

The cars, parked in C-lot ,were mired up to their axle sin mud. Holes had apparentlyOpened beneath their carswhile they were in class. '

The two cars were parke dnear a rope barrier that ha dbeen erected around a depres-sion that had appeared Thurs-day: The role was not filledin .

Such soft spots have beenopening up all along the walkthat -goes from the back ofC-lot to University Boulevard .

Officials said they do no tknow the cause of the holes ,but are working on a solution .

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Page 4: MASS VACCINATIONS TODA Y S ALL OX CASE · PDF fileSports Editor Ron Kydd Editorial Assistant Joyce Holding ... Layout: Dave Ablett.REPORTERS: Ron Riter, Rob Watt, Tim Padmore, Lorraine

Page 4

T H E U B Y S S E Y

Tuesday, October 2, 1962

Frosh demand bigger partin activities on campus

NFCUS bossmust becomebilingua l

SHERBROOKE, Que ., (CUP )—The next president of the Na-tional Federation of 'CanadianUniversity Students will hav eto become bilingual .

The motion that the presi-dent become bilingual, put fort hby the University of Montreal ,was incorporated into the presi-dential list of duties. It doesnot mean however, that a presi-dential candidate has to be bi-lingual, but only that he mustmake an effort to learn eitherFrench or English, ' dependin gon his native tongue, after hiselection .

"It's time NFCUS started t opractice what it preaches," saidUniversity of Montreal studen tpresident Bernard Landry .

The motion was passed unan-imously .

* * *The term of NFCUS president

has been altered by the 26thNational Congress meeting a tthe University of Sherbrooke .

The Congress approved arecommendation o f out-goingnational president Walter Mc-Lean that the term run fromJune 1 to June 31 of the fol-lowing year .

The President will still beelected at the National Congressand will have almost a full yea rto "learn" his job from theincumbent president.

* * *Toronto's Ryerson Institute o f

Technology Tuesday became the40th member of the NationalFederation of Canadian Univer-sity Students .

Earlier in the morning, Vic-toria College became the Fed-eration 's 39th member .

Approval of the Ryerson ap-plication for membership cameafter three hours of discussion .The principal of opening NV-CUS membership to "non-uni-versity" institutions took mos tof the discussion time .

Ryerson has been a provisionalmember of NFCUS since the1961 Congress at Kingston .

Choir needs pianis tThe Choral Society is looking

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Frosh Retreat leaders partie dand drank until the early hour sSunday morning at Camp El-phinstone after announcing n oliquor would be allowed at th egathering .

About 30 student councillors .retreat leaders and some freshdelegates took part in the partyat the administration building .

The partiers were observe ddrinking, and a number ofcouples were lying on wall t owall mattresses .

The drinking occurred afte rnotice was given out last wee kby retreat officials that no liquorwould be allowed.

Two years ago measures weretaken to tighten up restrictionson liquor at the retreat aftermany Frosh drank liquor at thegathering .

At the camp, Froshsearched for liquor .

Retreat leaders apparently

Freshmen took time out fromlistening to upper classmen atFrosh Retreat over the week-end to take a few swings atthe way student leaders d othings .

Their message :• don't suspend publicatio n

of Raven, UBC's literary maga-zine. "We all ought to be will-ing to pay three cents (thenecessary subsidizing for themoney-losing publication) tomake sure a university of oursize has a literary magazine,"said one delegate ;

• put more news abou tFrosh activities in The Ubys-sey. "We pay for the papertoo," one student commented;

• give us a little encourage-ment when we try to join uni-versity clubs. It was agreedthat some clubs are too "club-by" fn that it is hard for new-comers to be accepted;

• clubs And organizationsshould appoint official greetersto help integrate new mem -bees ;

How To Stop SmokingIf you smoke and wish youdidn't . . . then read in October'sReader's Digest how to be yourown boss when it comes t ocigarettes (there are threesimple steps you can take t ostop smoking forever) . Is to-bacco really habit-forming . .does it help ease nervous tension

how does it affect the restof your body? Get your copyof Reader''s Digest today . . .39 articles of lasting interest .

• make Totem cheaper o rmore interesting to individualstudent groups so that it willsell more copies . It was gener-ally agreed that the yearboo khas little to offer the freshmanbut delegates said they did no twant their own annual . (Totempresently sells about 3,00 0copies and loses about $3,00 0per year) .

* * *"We don't want to be treat-

ed as a separate entity," sai done freshman. "We want t obe included in an overall year-book . "

Chairman Tom Beckett sai dSunday he felt the Retreat wa ssuccessful in informing thefreshman of the extra-curricu-lar aspects of the universit yand the Alma Mater Society inparticular.

All delegates questionedthought the discussion groupswere well handled, informativ eand stimulating.

Some topics restricted dis-cussion because the delegate shad no previous knowledge o fthe subject, said Beckett .

* * *The final discussion wa s

centered on the Retreat itsel fand delegates were asked for

comments and suggestions .Complaints aired in the in-

terview centered on the rainand the coffee, although tw odelegates felt the faculty mem-bers and upper classmen mighthave mixed with the Freshmenmore .

This view was not shared b ythe remainder of those ques-tioned .

The issues of the upcomin gfall General Meeting wer epresented to the delegate sSaturday noon by Peter Shep-ard, AMS council vice-presi-dent, and a talk on the pro -posed Student Union Buildingwas given the delegates b yDean Feltham, Chairman of th eStudent Union Building plan-ning committee .

* * *Reaction of the delegates t ~

a proposal that the editor o fThe Ubyssey be appointed di-rectly by the student councilwas mixed. Shepard said theproposal will be considered bya general meeting Oct . 18 .

Many students felt the pres-ent system, whereby thepaper's editorial board screensapplicants and recommendsone to the council, should beretained .

were

ACCUSING FINGER points tostory in The Ubyssey Frida ytelling how liquor was to b ebanned at 'Frosh retreat .

Liquor for leaders ,Frosh retreaters dry

By RON RITER

'were allowed to keep theirs .Earlier, student leaders wer e

seen bringing liquor into theadministration hut .

Many Frosh complained thatif liquor was not to be madeavailable to them, the leader swere not setting a good exampl eby drinking themselves.

Others complained that theirluggage had been searched whil ethey were out of their cabins .

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The Fine Arts and Special Event sCommittee Present Last Minute

TicketsHave you always wanted to sit in the best seats i n

the best theatre, yet pay the prices of a pauper? Then ,students of U .B .C., take note of a King Midas-type creatio ncalled the Last Minute Club . This club makes availabl etickets, often in the $4 .00 range, for famous artists, usuall yappearing at the Queen 'Elizabeth Theatre, at the specia lstudent price of 75c . The tickets, only available at the"last minute", may be purchased at the A .M.S. Office 2days or later before the performance . Information regardingcoming performances can . be obtained at the A .M.S. Offic eand in the 'Tween Classes Column of the Ubyssey. Re-member, if you appreciate preformers such as Louis Arm -strong, Leonard Pennario, Ray Conniff, and the Vancouve rOpera, then, keep in touch with the Last Minute Club . Listsof most events will be available at the A .M.S. Office .

UNDERG RAP SHave you considered

combining your B.COM./C.A. training ?

A special programme has been arranged between the Facult yof Commerce and Business Administration and the Institut eof Chartered'' Accountants of British Columbia to enabl estudents to obtain the dual qualification of B . Corn . and C.A.within six years after obtaining University Entrance stand-ing .

Students taking the B . Com./C.A. programmereceive a salary from the C .A. firm employingthem, and also have their instruction fees paidfor them .

The combined B. Com./C .A. course should prove of particu-lar interest to undergrads in the First or Second Year Art sand Science or Commerce ; but all undergrads wishing fur-ther details of the course are cordially invited to attend ameeting on

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 18 — 12 :30 P .M.Room 2239, Buchanan Extension Bldg .

The Institute of Chartered Accountants of British Columbia530 Burrard Street

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Page 5: MASS VACCINATIONS TODA Y S ALL OX CASE · PDF fileSports Editor Ron Kydd Editorial Assistant Joyce Holding ... Layout: Dave Ablett.REPORTERS: Ron Riter, Rob Watt, Tim Padmore, Lorraine

Tuesday, October 2, 1962

THE U B Y S S E Y

Page 5

COLLEGE COMMENTS ON:

Political speakers on U .S. campuses.Freedom of speech -the university way :

Should members of the American Communist Party beallowed to speak on American university campuses?

This question was recently posed when Dorothy Healy ,former chairman of the Southern California Communis tParty, was refused permission to speak at the University ofSouthern Californa at Los Angeles, and Gus Hall . a formermember of the Washington Communist Party was refuse dpermission to speak at the Universty of Washington at Seattle .

President Clark Kerr of UCLA explained his position b ypointing to a Board of Regents' ruling allowing chief campusofficers to deny university facilities to any meeting which i sincompatible with the university's educational objectives an dto prevent the exploitation of its prestige by unqualifie dpersons who would use it as a platform for propaganda .

Student reaction to this policy is indicated by the follow-ing editorial from the student newspaper, The Daily Cali-fornian .

We question President Kerr 's statement, for we hav ealways thought that one 's education can be greatly ad-vanced by hearing diverse viewpoints; certainly, isn't freediscussion part of the University 's educational objective ?

The Regent 's ruling also assumes that listeners will beconverted to Communist way ; we hope that our educationalsystem and our society has instilled in us certain principle sby which we may choose freedom as opposed to tyranny,equality as opposed to regimentation .

We hope students do not need the protection the regent sseem so willing to provide, for if students do, then oursociety has failed in teaching us traditional democratic prin-ciples of tolerance, fairness, and equality .

In addition, why have the Regents excluded onlyAmerican Communist Party members when they allo wSoviet students—who may very well be Communists—to enroll here?

Also, why are Russian Communists such as GhermanTitov, who spoke to students last week, allowed to spea kon campus when American Communists are not ?

To hear other viewpoints is only healthy to a freesociety ; to allow free speech on University facilities is onlyeducational to a free, inquiring mind .

—The Editor .

FROM THE UNIVERSITY O FWASHINGTON DAIL Y

Arguments supporting th e"Odegaard policy" denyingCommunist speakers the righ tto speak on campus seem tofall into three categories :scholarly, legal and practical .

Of the three arguments, th e"scholarly" approach is at onc ethe most compelling, the mostdeceptive—and the most per-tinent to students . This type ofrationale, which was advancedby President Odegaard in hi saddress to the Faculty Senate ,leads one into a haze of fuzzythinking akin to that faced bythe inhabitants of Animal Farmand Alice's Wonderland .On this, the scholarly level,

the student bony and facultywould be persuaded that it i sin the name of academic truth-seeking that the speakers arebanned .

It is important for an under-standing of the. issues involve dthat it be noted immediatelythat Odegaard's key illustra-tion of the Communists ' atti-tude seems both reasonabl eand accurate .

LACK INTERESTCommunists lack, the presi-

dent declared, "a conscientiou sinterest in the modes of proofof assertions, a respect for evi-dence and consistency of argu-ment, and effort to be objectiv ein the approach to problems "Translated, this seems to

mean that Communists andtheir spokesmen don't seek th et rut h, conveniently chang etheir minds according to "partyline and are subjective, i .e . ,dogmatic. Few, if any, amongthe student body and facult ydisagree with this description .

Many do dispute, however ,the University's taking on estep further and denying thes e"truth-benders" the right tospeak on campus .

TO FIND TRUTHIf anyone is to determin e

what is truth and what isn't, i tshould be individual student sand faculty members. This iswhat they come to the Univer-sity for . And even they, as i n-dividuals, have no right to de-termine for others what truthis .

The ridiculousness of basingthe ban on the contention tha tCommunist speakers are sunm -jective and not open to proo fsurely can be seen. To be fairthe ban should be expanded t oinclude such committed, parti-san spokesmen as the Republi-can, Democrat, John Bircher

- and theologian, all of whomproclaim they hold the truthor a goodly hunk of it .

Nor should it be the "Univer-sity way" to " stand for some -thing" when this means to de-termine what truth is or theproper mode to find it . Theacademy's function is to searchcontinuously for truth, not t ostop at some point and declar eit has already found it, or t olimit the routes to Its discovery .

RIGHT TO HEARIt must be pointed out to o

. that the right of students andfaculty?) from outside voices

critical as the right of speechitself .

It is, overall, a sham to con-sider that the policy decisio nwas in any way based on schol-

arly considerations . The real

motive behind the policy, in

the considered opinion of bot h

pro-and anti-policy commenta-tors, lies in the demands of th e

outside society—the force tha tDr . Odegaard so eloquentl ypurports to warn must not b e

permitted to pressure the Uni-versity .

Students and faculty, to re-tain the keeness of mind neces-sary to scholarly pursuits ,must recognize that the Ad-ministration has made an "un-academic" decision in the nam eof the "University . " Perhapsfor legal or practical reason sthe policy can be defended ,e .g., the U is an arm of thestate (so much for the "acade-mic community"!) and cannotoperate apart from the societyit is in (again, so much for th e"academic community"!) . Itcannot be defended as the"University way . "

FROM THE DAILY CALIFORNIANThe creation of a Hyde Park free

speech area at the University has broughtup new problems relating to mass dis-cussions on campus, even though it hassolved some old ones .

Dedicated and first used in 1961, thearea was created by the University ad-ministration after student dissatisfactionwith restrictions on campus debates o nfast-breaking events and issues . Students ,faculty and employees may now speakand debate in the area at any time with-out having to obtain prior official permis-sion.

* * *In spite of the fact that the free speech

area does represent a liberalization ofUniversity policy regarding freedon ofdiscussion on campus, objections t h a tdetails of the Hyde Park concept are no tgood enough were raised as soon as th eproposal was made . Three main questionsabout specific Hyde Park provisions ar enow evident :

—Is the assigned locations of the dis-cussion area such a poor one that th epurpose of the area will be defeated fromthe start ?

—Can students, faculty, or staff mem-bers spontaneously express their opinionsanywhere else on campus when the moo dor situation arises ?

—And will persons who are notUniverstiy students, faculty, or employee sbe able to express their opinions in th efree speech area without specific permis-sion from the administration, as member sof the University community can ?

Although almost everyone on campu sagrees in principle with the concept o fa free speech area, some objectors to th eactual proposal say that the area nowdesignated is located in an out-of-the-wa yarea away from the most used campusthoroughfare

"While we agree with the principleof a free speech area, we don't think thearea down there is the best or the mosteffective," said Bob Phillips of the Stu -

dent Civil Liberties Union . "We think amore desirable location would be on thestreet level around the Student Union orSproul Hall . "

Chancellor Edward W . Strong indica-ted at the April 12 dedication of the HydePark area that the administration pres-ently believes there is no need to desig-nate a more centrally located free speec harea. When asked by an unidentifie dstudent whether the present area meansother areas of campus are not free speechareas, Strong said :

"No, but it is hoped that a traditionwill be set up to hold mass debates in thi sarea, which won't obstruct traffic o rclasses . "

At present, though, groups holdin gorganized speeches, debates, or rallies a tany place on campus other than HydePark must—if planning to present speak-ers—have their speakers approved by thedean of students' office at least 72 hoursbefore the event is scheduled .

But apparently the free speech are awill not be free to persons who are notUniversity students, faculty, or employ-ees .

* * *When Dean of Students Katherine A .

Towle submitted to the ASUC Executiv eCommittee, on behalf of Strong, the April13 proposal to set up a free speech are aon campus, part of that proposal read :

"The Plaza area would allow individ-ual students and student groups to hol dextemporaneous speeches or rallies with-out prior registration with the Dean o fStudents, provided the speakers werebona fide registered students, Universit yfaculty or staff ."

But persons not conforming to any ofthe above categories theoretically ma ynot make speeches in the free speecharea without getting permission at leas t72 hours before they wish to speak, an dtherefore are not supposed to speak at aHyde Park rally or debate if they ar erefused permission .

This is what University regulations

Washingtonplaces ba non radical s

FROM THE UNIVERSIT YOF WASHINGTON DAIL YExcept for a few hecklers, a

large crowd in the street listen-ed quietly to t h e man wh ostood on the front steps ofEagleson Hall in May, 1948 .

The speaker was Henry Wal-lace, presidential candidate o fthe Progressive Party .

Last February Gus Hall, lead-er of the Communist Party i nthe United States, spoke atEagleson Hall to an overflo wcrowd .

Both men had been refusedpermission to speak on campus .In 1948 University policy ban-ned all political speakers . Now,University policy bans contro-versial speakers .

On both occasions, however ,the YMCA leaders of Eagleso nHall decided that Universitystudents should have the op-portunity to hear varying point sof view on important issues ,and to judge for themselves.

Frank H. Mark, executivesecretary of the UniversityYMCA, believes the "Christia npoint of view involves respec tfor other people's ideas."

s,

say, but whether the regulations will beenforced is another matter. It would bean almost impossible job for administra-tion officials — including the campu spolice—to continuously stand guard overthe free speech area and see whether eachspeaker is part of the University com -munity.

University regulations ban from cam-pus any outside speaker whom the ad -ministration considers a rabblerouser ,since such a speaker is thought to be"inimical to the unemotional seeking oftruth" or a "biased tipper of the scale sin the weighing of facts and ideas"—andtherefore dangerous to the academic pro-cess of taching students how to look atall sides of an issue before making uptheir minds.

* * *What irritates some students, faculty,

and members of the general public abou tthe above rule is that in 1940 it was in-terpreted to mean that Communists woul dalways use University facilities to "ti pthe scales" in their own favor . Therefore,by this interpretation of University Pres-ident Emeritus Robert Gordon Sproul, allCommunists are automatically classifiedas dangerous rabble-rousers, and noneare ever to be allowed to speak o ncampus.

But University students may be Com-munists, although by regulation facultyor employees may not . So when "Hyd ePark" was dedicated, a student aske dStrong, "Can card-carrying Communist sspeak in this Hyde Park? "

"Any students who are card-carryingCommunists may speak here," wa sStrong's reply . But he added', "Of coursethreare no card-carrying Communists onthe faculty . "

Finally, outsiders who are Communistsor otherwise not acceptable to the admini-stration may not speak in Hyde Park—but keeping them from doing so maybe like trying to take all the oxyge nmolecules from the air by hand and put-ting only those molecules into a jar .

At the University of California

Free speech by permission only

A

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Page 6

THE UBYSSEY

Tuesday, October 2, 196 2

Water birds ro wto Pair-Am Gamesafter B tripUBC's rowers will represen t

Canada in the Pan-AmericanGames next spring .

$ The Canadian - Association ofAmateur Oarsmen decided Sat-urday to enter rowers in th egames at Sao Paulo next April.Previously the CAAO had de-cided. not to send any team tothe Pan-Am Games .

UBC will -represent Canadain the eights, fours a n d pairevents, with a Toronto entry inthe double sculling competition .Laurie West, head coach o fUBC will coach the Canadiansquad .

INVITATION EXTENDEDThe UBC rowers are still

considering a trip to Japa nafter the British Empire Game sthis November in Australia .

The Japanese government ha sinvited the Birds to row againstthe Japanese national crew .CHALLIER OUT

Herb Challier, ' of the UBCrowing team will not travel toAustralia for the NovemberBritish Empire Games .

Challier, who was in th epairs decided that his studie smust take ;preference . ,

No replacement . has beenchosen yet .

se.e.0 .sMANAGER OF BROCK HALL games room, Trevor Alexande rlines up a shot on the pool table . Alexander is trying to givethe Games Room an air of respectability so that co-eds wil lfeel more at ease in the traditionally male atmosphere. Prettysoon the only place a man will be able to get away from th efeminine influence will be the men's washroom .

Birds come close but -not quite = 4'-e e -Gaup

SPORTSEditor: Ron Kydd

Bauer's puckstersmeet on Thursday.

There will be a meeting of all prospective hockey player sin Room 216, War Memorial Gym, Thursday, Oct. 4.

* * *IN BADMINTON : Play com-

mences 8:30 tonight in WarMemorial Gym .

be held at 6:30 in Memorial Gymon Wednesday Oct. 3 .

* * *IN BADMINTON : The teams

will begin practice on Mondaysfrom 5 .30 to 7 :30 and on Tues-days from 5 :30 to 8 :00 .

* * *IN FIGURE SKATING : There

will be an organizational meet-ing, Wednesday, Oct . 3 at 12:3 0in the Women's Gym .

* * *Voting for Women's Athletic

Association Secretary will takeplace Thursday, Oct . 4, at 7:00,in the Women's Gym .

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* * *IN TENNIS : All players who

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* * *IN WRESTLING : All wrest-

lers meet at Memorial Gy mtowel cage, 3:30 today, to se tup mats . Workouts are . heldMonday and Tuesday at 4 :30 ,Thursday at 12 :30 and Saturdayat 2:00 for all those intereste din turning out .

* * *IN GYMNASTICS: There wil l

be a meeting Thursday Oct . 4 at12 :45, Room 216, MemorialGym.

* * *WOMENS SPORT S

IN ARCHERY : There will bea meeting for all interested at12:30 Wednesday in Bu . 318 .

* * *IN JUDO : An organizational

meeting of the Judo Team wil l

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COLLEGE., SHOPPORTLAND—The difference

could have been Peter Kempf' s

missed convert, Tom Thomson' sjust-out-of-bounces pass comple-tion, or Norm Thomas' fumbleof a crucial fourth-down pass .

But ask the UBC Thunder -birds and they'll tell you th edifference was a slippery Port -land State Little All-Americanhalfback candidate—Billy "By eBye" White .

White did everything—well ,almost everything—a footbal lhalfback c a n do, leading hi s'Viking mates to a 14-13 win ina night game Saturday at Lin-coln High Field .

* *Bye Bye got 51 yards on

punt and kick-off returns; heplayed a vital role in the • de-fensive backfield when the'Birds made a final 50-yardMarch downfield ; he skirtedleft end to score a fourth-periodMajor which set -up the game-Winning convert; he snaredthree passes for 66 net yards ;and he lugged the ball 26 timesfor 157 hard-fought yards .

And hard-fought yards the ywere, because the Thunderbirdsthrew up an almost impene-trable forward wall anchoredby a pair of. "pachyderms," .those twin tackle terrors, Ro yShatzko and Pete Lewis .

Impenetrable? ' Not - to Bye.Bye. But the 'Birds - defence di dStop the Vikings, not once, bu ttwice, with a mere yard' to gofor a first down on the- UBC 9 .And they did stop Portland cold,bn a fourth and six (inches),situation ou the .IBC ,=44.

Yes, the Thunderbirds threwa great :defence and a good of-fence at Portland -state and ,

ROY- S IMZKO. . defensive-standout

zone from the Viking 21 . Overthe deadline . ruled the refere eas a disgusted Thomson firedthe ball into the turf .

* * *Luck, tob, on the following

fourth and ten play whenquarterback Barry - Carkner ,with regular field-goal kicke rDave Barker, elected to gamble—and. lost when Thomas, onone k.n a e, dropped the passwhich _would . have given the'Birds. new life.

The.`fi'-Birds opened the scor-ing in - the second, 9uarter in

five yards for the touchdown .Kempf's (point after t r y was-just wide: 6-0 . -

* * *A Mike Schrunk-to-White

pass, and it was Bye Bye for- 37 yards to set up the tyin gtouchdown . Abetted by a rough-ing penalty-one of four againstUBC—the 'Viks took the - bal lto the six . Schrunk then pitched,a strike to end George Kersey ;

Jerry Humphreys kicked th econvert : 7-6, Portland.

As if to show that they didhave a running attack, Carknerthen marched the 'Birds -62yards in six ground plays. BobSweet for 16, fullback Bob Mc -Gavin for 5 and 18, Sweet for5, McGavin'for 14, and Thomaswent over on a three-yard en dsweep .- for his -second- touch-down.

Kempf's-' convert gave th eThunder-birds a 13-7 third-quarted lead, which held• upuntil : White got : his converte dmajor with but - 2:56 left . in thegame.

Double -Breasted Suits .Converted to .

, Single Breasted .

'Slaeks Nartow!ed

Uh41D'T IX49 'Granville St .

SEE1Cwisttng at the Red -Onion • Bob Reichert onthe Dumps Of Entities -Ran ^ •Othmar Schneider, Pepi. Stiegler,'Egon -Zifa raait,-'Guy-Peri lat inPortillo a Doug Pfeiffer SkiingMorris in Alta • Pto World'Ohampionshi ptlfe dti$e l Olcant*N Of Southern Chile -• `red ,Tohason, Bill Tish''an . raa + e• Pet i-Wrantehaitlmer ill Soh Valley • Aader lMolterer in AsRpen .

Spring Powder in the.TieBfith"Rockies -- • New Zealand's Unbelievabl e

Ice Seracs on the Tasman Glacier (Skiing on the Moon )

• -SKIU .S.A.

New Zealan dCanada South Americ a

QUEEN `ELIZABETH THEATR E

Thursday, Oct. 4 --13 :30 -p:r , ' -

$2.00 & $1 .50

Wads-7 O'clock Show, CBUT Channel -2 -

TUESDAY, 'OCTOBER 2n d

Tickets will Ave an sale -outsider °A:M$ OfficeToday and TomorrtW4 .,

OCTOBER- 2nd AND 3rd ' -

spectacular fashion .The 'Birds got the ball o n

Portland's 45 after a quick kick.short of breaking Bye Bye's leg,

On the first play, Catkner tos -might have won with a little ! sed a perfect one to Thomas,luck .

who took the -ball on the ru nLuck in the :dying seconds,! over his shoulder and ranibled

down 14-13, UBC r e s e r v equarterback Dick Gibbons, rol-ling to his right .on a Sally Randreverse, hit Thomson in the end-

DICK- 'BARRYMOR- EPRESENT S

'SOME' LIKE

IT COLD'

Personally NarratedFi lmed in Color

2 Hours of Action• Adventur e

• Laugh s• Travel s

Page 7: MASS VACCINATIONS TODA Y S ALL OX CASE · PDF fileSports Editor Ron Kydd Editorial Assistant Joyce Holding ... Layout: Dave Ablett.REPORTERS: Ron Riter, Rob Watt, Tim Padmore, Lorraine

Tuesday, October 2, 196 2

;.B Basketball Bird spriming for action

The UBC Thunderbirds yesterday started to work thei r

muscles into shape for the ' 62- ' 63 basketball season .

Coach Peter Mullins' Birds the city Junior League that in -Monday started a program of eludes CYO, YMCA, Kerrisdale ,running, with actual basketball Ryerson and New Westminste rpractice to begin next week . Mullins only word on the pros -Mullins would not commit him pects of these two junior teams :-self on the team's prospects un- "Okay . "til he sees the squad in action

Nucleus of the team will b eformed by centers Keith Hart -ley and Ron Erikson, forward sMike Potkonjak, John Cook an dCourtenay . Broussan, and guard sGordon Betcher, Ken McDonald ,Earl Farenholtz, Laurie Predin-chuk and Jack Lusk . Betcherand McDonald are the only newplayers .

* .* *First WCIAA games for the

Birds are November 23 and , 24 ,against the University of Al.

'berta . Both games are in Edmon-ton .

Practices have already begu nfor Alan Yarr's Jayvees andKen Winslhde's Braves . TheAdministration's new releaserule—UBC players must ge tpermission to play for outsideteams—has increased turnout sthis season . The Braves number3'5, the Jayvees 25, with cut scoming in a week.

New names on the Brave sroster include many of last

ARCHERY CLU Byear's top high school stars : Pat

Meeting for all interested i nConkey from Prince of Wales ,Olaf Knezavic, John Oliver and_Ken Atkinson from Magee .

Braves and Jayvees will prac-tice every day this week . Theirseason begins the first week i nNovember. Both teams play in

CURLING' CLUBGeneral meeting Wed . noon

in Bu . 102. All those wishing t ocurl should attend .

Bu. 318, Wed, noon . First week -ly shooting night Wed. 7:30 inthe Fieldhouse .

KEITH HARTLE Y. . . returns to Birds

T H E U B Y S S E Y

WEEKEND RESUL TSFOOTBALL: Portland State14, Thunderbirds 13 . Jayvee s10, Washington State Reform-atory 6 .

SOCCER : Thuncerb 1r d s 3 ,North-West Athletic Associa-tion 2. Braves 2, PMBA 1 .CROSS COUNTRY : Vancou-ver Olympic Club defeatedUBC 10-34 .

Women. m l he dar kover Athetks ' Day

Despite the fact that therewill be no athletics day, th eUBC women have decided t ohave an athletics night .

The evening will f e a t u r emixed games, a general meetingat w h i c h the new Women'sAthletic Association Secretarywill be. elected and an indoortrack meet in which spectator swill be able to participate.

The . event will take placeThursday, Oct . 4 at 7:00 in, theWomen's Gym .

Matz' & Wozny548 Howe St .

MU 3-471 5

Custom Tailored . Suitsfor Ladies and Gentlemen .

Gowns and HoodsSpecial Student Rates

We specializ ei n

Ivy Leagu eClothe s

Uniforms

MULLINS EXPERIMENT S

Coach Peter Mullins said that

the team was using this race t oexperiment with their runningstrategy . In this. meet Mullins

had the team running as a pack ;in the future he plans to change

Page 7

to a more staggered type of rac-ing with only three top ,runner sracing in a group .

VOC WINSRacing over a three and thre e

quarter m i 1 e course aroundBrockton Point, the Birds wer eled by three best runners RodConstable, Steve Forsehe, andJim McKay. VOC's Roy Hamp-ton won the race in 19 minute sand 37 seconds.

The Birds next outing is adual meet against VOC nextSaturday and Mullins rates histeam's chances as much bette rdue to the new system that theywill employ .

Trackers begi nwith false start

The UBC cross country team got off to a poor start bydropping their first meet of the season to the Vancouver Olympi cClub Saturday .

The meet was scored underthe reverse scoring method, i n

which the first place runner get sone point, and the followingrunners get . a higher number o fpoints . The team with the low-est number of points wins th emeet .

The score was 10-34 for VOC .

"PERFECT -MILDNES SIN YOUR PIPE"

(;de ~̀zr1c"Traditionuls" suits made with

Orion. . . Brahadi's smokingtobacco is a specia l"Cavendish" blend ofMild tobaccos . Comfort -ably satisfying . . . a mildsmoking tobacco with adelightful aroma .

50c for 2 ouncessuggested Price

Also available i nvacuum packed half pound tin

For Your HIPSTERS in the UNIVERSITY ARE A

Regent 8-6656

AMherst 1-4420

Smartest lookers on campus choose authentic natura lshoulder suits in a luxurious fabric of 65% wool blendedwith 35% Orlon . Combining rich softness with extr ashape retention . . . Orlon gives these vested suits day-longpress and neatness, keeps you handsomely groomed fo rall occasions .Available in a wide range of fabric designs and colors .Suits about $65 . With vest, about $75 .

QN PONT DII PONT OF CANADA LIMITED • MONTREA LC A N A D

These fine-suits available at:

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Page 8: MASS VACCINATIONS TODA Y S ALL OX CASE · PDF fileSports Editor Ron Kydd Editorial Assistant Joyce Holding ... Layout: Dave Ablett.REPORTERS: Ron Riter, Rob Watt, Tim Padmore, Lorraine

Page 8

'tweenclasses

Dance club starts noon lessons.

THE UBYSS .EY

Sargent Sales and Service1205 SEYMOUR STREET

SALES: MUtual 4-7730 ; SERVICE: MUtual 4-3933European and British Small Car Specialists

• Qualified Mechanics

• Guaranteed Satisfactio nTRANSPORTATION TO SUIT EVERY STUDENT'S POCKE T

BUDGET TERMS AVAILABL EContact:

SARGENT SALES AND SERVIC EFOR ALL YOUR MOTORING NEEDS

Tuesday, October 2, 1962

Noon hour instruction begin stoday. Everybody welcome .General meeting Thursday i nBu. 104. Members please attend .

*

*

*

FROSH.ORIENT ATIO NAll Frosh reminded that nom-

ination forms f o r Frosh elec-tions may be picked up in AMSoffice. Nominations close Oct.5 .

*

*

*

CHORAL SOCIETYFirst practice: Wed. 6 p.m .

in Physics 202. Everybody wel-come, Tenors- and basses urgent-ly needed .

NITEIy ,-CHURCH YOUN GIDPLE '

Meeting, Wednesday, .hut- I,-* * *

WRITERS' WORKSHOPFirst meeting, 8 p .m. Wed .

at 3591 W. 11th Ave. Anyonenterested is welcome .

COMMONWEALTH CLUBGeneral meeting and elections

Wed. in Fine Arts 102 .* * *

UBC SOCREDSGeneral meeting noon today

Bu 317 . All interested.* * *

PRE MED SO COrganizational meeting Wed .

12:30, Wesbrook 100 . Talks byDr. Williams and Dr . Johnstone .

* * *NEW FOREIGN STUDENT S

Tour of City Hall and B .C .Telephone Building leaves In-ternational House 2 :30 Wed. Allnew foreign students who havenot entered their names, con-tact secretary at Internationa lHouse .

UN CLUBGeneral meeting for all mem-

bers in Bu. 100 noon today. .Important elections. New mem-bers welcome .

*

*

V O C. ,-General meeting " .Wed. . noon

auditorium, Long-hike organ-ization .

H CDr. Lionel Muller on "Hyp-

nosis" noon, Wed. in Interna -tional House .

INTERNATIONAL ROUSETalk and slides in Europe and

'USSR by John Woodsworthnoon Thursday.

*

*

EL CIRCUL O"Cities of Spain" lecture and

slides by M. Tomsich, Fridaynoon in Bu . 205 .

CLASSIFIEDRIDE WANTED from North Vancou-

ver, vicinity of 15th and Jones. CallBob RE 8-1514 .

RIDE WANTED from West Vancou -'ver (West Bay) for 8 :30 lectures .Phone WA 2-8402.

TWO RIDERS WANTED Monday t oFriday, 8 :30 lectures. Via 49th Ave .from Kingsway and Boundary. Mau -rice HE 1-8195 .

WANTED : Would any girl wishing t oshare a. locker in Buchanan, pleas ephone Diane at YU 8-0595 .

WANTED : Ride from North Vancou-ver . Phone 985-2676 .

FOR SALE : Pair of ski poles, steel,4 it. 9 in . $7.50 . Phone MU 5-075 9evenings .

FOR SALE : Chem. 210, Brewster andMcll3wan $5 .00. Chem. 407 Expt.Physical chemistry by Daniels andAlberty. Phone Jerry at CA 8-8853 .$5 .25 .

LOST : Would the person who took myreversible white and black-brownraincoat from Buchanan 104 at 9 :30Thurs . Morning please call Tony a tRE 3-2222 .

LOST : Black waterproof coat withyellow lining. Phone - CA 8-8325 .

UBC LIBERAL CLU BFall general meeting today

Bu 102 . Plans for the year to b ediscussed and two executivesto be elected .

FINE ARTS CLUBGeneral meeting — elections ,

program planning, etc . Todaynoon, Fine Arts 107 . New mem-bers welcome.

SCMScience & Religion Series—

"The Nature of Religious In-quiry" with Michael Bertiauntoday noon, hut L-3 .

*

*

*

NEWMAN CENTRECommunion Supper at St .

Mark`$ College, Thurs . 5:30 p .m .New students & St. Marks' free—others 75c.

JAll SOCImportant general meeting to-

day noon in Bu . 203.* * *

NEW DEMOCRAT SDr. J. Endicott speaks on

World Peace Congress, Wed .noon in Bu. 104.

* * *BRIDGE & CHESS CLUB

General meeting Wed . 7 :3 0p .m. in Brock Men's Club room .Everyone welcome .

*

*

*

WEDNESDAY NOO NCONCERT S

First free concert of season,Wed. noon in Bu. 106. Beetho-ven String quartet w i l l pla yBeethoven's Quartet Opus 1 8No . 1 .

*

*

DESERET CLUB-

Organizational meeting Wed.noon in Bu: 315. Film. DeseretClub is Mormon youth club.

UBC's fine arts gallery wil l

open Oct . 2 with the works of

Lyonel Feinenger and an exhi-bit of contemporary Brazilian

prints .Feinenger, a German painte r

who died in 1956, followed theCubist influence.

The Brazilian Printmaker sExhibition, sponsored by th eBrazilian Delegation to the Or-ganization of American States,consists of 41 abstract woodcuts ,etchings and lithographs .

The exhibit continues unti lOct. 22 and can be viewed fro m10:30 a .m. to 5 p.m . Tuesdaythrough Saturday in the base-ment. of the library .

* * *

Because of the multi-tude of clubs and organiza-tions holding meetings oncampus, The Ubyssey ca nonly guarantee publica-tion of ONE advance notic efor an event .

Students or club official sare asked to insert notice sonly for the paper immedi-ately preceding the ,eventin question. This will as -sure all clubs a chance topublicize their event .

After Monday, Oct . 8 ,NTO notices of regula rweekly club meetings wil lbe printed. By that time,your club members shouldknow the routine . Specialspeakers or films will, o fcourse, be given space .

''weer} ; classes noticeswill not' be accepted afte r12 :$5 noon on the day prio rto ' publication .

West: Point Grey United Church"Just Outside the Gates"

4595 West Eighth Ave .

MINISTER — REV . WILFRED FEARN,SERVICES — 11 A.M. AND 7 :30 P .M.

Young Peoples Union to which all students are invited meet sSundays at 8:30 p.m .

Choir practice Thursdays at 8:00 p.m.

On Sate Now . .U.B.C. BOOKSTOR E

Price 75c