Nov. 10 - University of Victoria

Transcription

Nov. 10 - University of Victoria
i
Vol. 6
UNIVERSITY OF
VICTORIA,
VICTORIA,
B.C., NOVEMBER 10,1966
No. 10
Grubb Resigns Because
AMSLacksMoneySense
(
THREETRYSTES
PLANNED
i
1
a
By BOBMcMILLAN
Dick Grubb,AMSTreasurer,called
on the Students’ Council and his job.
it quits last Sunday
In a bitterstatement Grubb criticized the council for
Despite reconmendations at a
their “lack of consideration in the use of other peoples’ money”’
general meeting of the Alma
Mater Society last Thursday
and cited the decision on
Brian
Rowbottom’s
salary as
that morrey be found fromthe
merely capping his decision to resign.
TryStc for
pu1)lication
of the
The third yearArtsstudentaftertakingoverthejobfrom
Tbwer, Students’ Council decided
felt he was forcedintoactionsTerry
Gibson duringthe 1964-65
Sunday that money hr found to
academic year.
pu1)lislr a second edition of
which he felt were wrong or
Tryste for 1366 and possibly a
unjustilied as far as his office
Grubb’s resignation
came
in
third in January 1967.
was concernedandthat
con- themidst of sharpstudentcriti\loving the motion that Tryste
science
would
no
longer
permit
cism of the
budget,
especially
continue publications Director
sanction
such use of
from
graduates
and
club
repreKeith
Grlelpa
assured council h i m to
students’ money.
sentatives.
that he
could
find
the money
necessary and in no way jeoparAcceptance of theresignation
Grul)h, facing deficit budgettlizc the puhlication of a“half
is subject to Council’s ratification
decent” To\vcr. ”The Tower map
i n g this year, emphasized that he
at
a
meeting held Wednesday
have to have a soft cover but it
shouldbe“guardian
of thestunight.
Position
of Treasurer
will still be morethana
Grad
dents’ money” but instead council must befilledby
general elec1:ook” said Guelpa.
looked on the
Treasurer
as
a
tion unless, in face of no nominaAMs presidentStephen Bigs- ”gloritied bookkeeper”. H e felt tions, appointment.Grubbsaid
by said thattheTryste
would
his staff would continue
their
thecurrentbudget
was fairand
have to be sold hard to not only
time
new
a
added thatthegeneral
meeting duties until such
the
campus,
both student
and
last Thursday was a waste of treasurer is found.
faculty, butalso to advertisers.
time and emotion.
Council took advantage of a
AMS PresidentStephen BigGrubb filled the
Treasurer’s
technicality in the motion acsbyhad
no comment at press
cepted at the general
meeting to postlastspringbyacclamation
time.
reprieve Tryste. T h e motion only
..recommendes’ that money for
theTower
he found from the
Tryste and did categorically
not
state that it should he found this
way.
Council’s motion, seconded hy
A largenumber of studentsareexpectedSunday
a t theStuKen Hart. was carried unanidents’ Council meetingbeing heldin the SUB Upper Lounge.
mously.
7 p.m., theheads of all
At themeeting, scheduled tostartat
Final comment on the TowerTryste
love-hate
relationship
to date,
council departments will deliver reportsontheirprogress
came from Stephen Bigsby, who hopes for the remainder of this academic year and plans for 1967-1968.
said: If
the
students
want
a
“ I think ameeting of thiskind is needed atthis time,?’ said
year book they will get one but
they will have to do away with
AMS president Stephen Bigsby.
some of theluxuries of former
1
editions.”
GRUBB
Important Council Meeting Sunday
h
Bookstore Speakeasy
Clears the Atmosphere
There is absolutely no reason for the adminiatration to
deceive the qtudentsor to give false information about the
University Bookstore claimed Dean of Student M a i m R. R.
J ~ ~ A
laitS Wednesday.
Addressing a speakeasy called
t o discusstheproblems
of the
I
0
Symposium ProducesSemLMixed Reaction
By BRUCE TOBIN
,
The fall symposium began
Friday
evening
with
optimism
and ended Sunday with a multitude of mixed reactions.
Of the one hundred fifteen studentsandfacultymemberswho
spent the weekend at the Shawnigan Beach Hoteltherearesure
to be as many opinions as to the
success of the symposium. Commented oneprofessor,
‘‘I can’t
make up my mind whether it was
a miserable failure or a stunning
success.”
Tackling ttre subject
“Boredom”, Dr. TonySteele
of the
English
department
gave
the
keynoteaddress.
Saturdaymorningdiscussions
were led off bypsychiatrist Dr.
Charles Gregory who approached
the problem of boredom from a
social angle.
“We have a
framework. Too rigid a framework oroduces boredom. W e are
...
and have become individually
hound by time.”
Robin Wood, of theVictoria
School of Music, addressedthe
symposium on Sundaymorning
dealing with boredom asit
is
related to a professional musician. Thiswas followed in the
afternoon with asummation
of
the symposium byDr. John De
Luca of thePhilosophydepartment
who
officially ended the
symposium.
Wasthe
symposium really a
success?Students answered uncertainly.
“I am
rather
disillusioned.”
commented morethan one student.
There are several things. There
were many‘students attendingfor
thefirst
time. The second and
probably more important reason
is that of accommodation.
bookstore Jeffels said that there
has been no attempt to rook the
student.
The
bookstore
is
being
run
on
a break even basis and any complaints by the student of higher
prices
being
found
elsewhere
would be investigated.
Jeffels in explaining the opurtion of the
bookstore
pointed out that it wasvery difficult
to order books merely on an estimation of the
next
academic
yearsregistration of students.
Orders weresometimes delivered
late
because publishing
houses,
particularly
in North
America, were dealing with universities
all
wanting
the
same
books and the samedelivery dates
all at the same time.
I
-
”
Also in the case of some modernlanguages books and similar texts, orders often had
to be
sentabroad.
Othersonthe
panel included
Dean R. T. Wallace, Dun of
Administration; R. W. McQueen,
BursarandKeith
Guelpa, students’
representative
on
the
bookstorecommittee.
Manygeneralquestionswere
answered and some specific questians
were
left
for answering
through
these
columns. These
questions follow.
see
BOOKSTORE
p ? ~ c7
-
THE MARTLET, NOVEMBER 10,1966
2
AMs Petition Hid Grievances
Council Commentary
.
By DICK
GRUBB
Can anyone bel me whatwasaccomplished last Thursday? I, as the one around^ whom
the budget discussions revolve, would very much like to know! Perhaps the student body has
learned how our system of democratic government operates. Perhaps the student body has at
last realized that it is so apathetic that the University almost could have aboliahed the AMS
withoutanyone,exceptCouncil,
saying “boo!’:
ht”. This position wasvigorI feltthat a
:ree of sincerity was definitely
- lac1king in that opposition.
7rhe first clause of the petition
staltes: “Whereasit is feltthat
the current A M s budget seriouslY 1nisinterprets the wishes of the
stu dent body . . .”
What follows is only for those who believe there is a lot mor‘e
LYhere werethe 600-odd stuto the Kennedyassassinationthan
theWarren commission repol
den :t
Its on Sundaynight, October
would have us believe.
23, andTuesdayafternoon,OcA recentissue of Ramparts magazinenotes thateight p o p ]
er 25, a t which timesthey
connected in some way with the
assassination
have since died
clai:m their wishes were “seriousviolently.
They
were
lY misinterpreted”?
Intheevent
a new Warren commission isset up to explain
not atanymeetingtodiscuss
these deaths, here are some suggestions for it, based on the type
c)f
AN[S finances! I fully realize
reasoning and non-reasoning used in the now-famous 1964 report:
tha t manywhosignedthe
petiI t is true that gossip columnist Dorothy Kilgallen, the only perso
n
tior1 merelywanted to have the
bud(get
ever allowed to interview Jack Ruby privately,
died of acute barb idiscussed
in an open
turate and alcohol poisoning only a few days after she told, friends she metEting-and wherewerethey
was‘goingtobustthiscase(theassassination)
wide open’. BuIt on Tuesday,October 25? Ialso
actually, she had just sent Mia Farrow a singing telegram-“o~h. m y
the
difficult
fully understand
pos ition of students who have the
papa, to me he was so wonderful’-and the next evening some raIt
budlget thrown at themasthey
at a cocktail party slipped barbiturates into her martini.
I t i s truethatDallasreporterJimKoethe
died from a karat e entler themeeting
to ratify or
rejc:ctit.
chop to the base of the neck before he could complete his book on
Where were the indithe assassination.Butactually,hehad
been learningkarate
tpy vid.ual organization budgets when
correspondence, and accidentally hit himself halfway through cour:5e the y were requested so that full
dis’cussion could ensue
eleven.
and
a
be
presented
days
in
I t is true that Dallas reporter Bill Hunter was shot and killed bby
Prcjposal
rance of the
meeting?
The
Dallas city police detective Creighton Wiggins just a few hours aft4
the ‘1964 Warren commission learned that Hunter and
Koethe haId Firlance Committee certainly did
attended a meeting in Ruby’s apartment.Butactually,those
fir:st
no1: have them.
1rhis article is not a defence of
commission hearings pr0ve.d that even policemen makemistake s.
Co,uncil’s action;ratherit
Besides, as Wiggins testified later,(he
is an
waseventually
given a
suspended sentence) he had been playingcopsandrobbers
whe!n att;ack on the apathy of this univer.sity’s student
body
an
his gun slipped and went off.
apa re
Ithy
which
seems to deepen
I t istruethatDallastaxidriverWilliam’
Whaley, whodrol
wit h eachsucceeding year. The
Oswald away from the scene of the assassination, later died in a c: Lr
crash.Butactually,Oswald
could, not possibly have hadanythin Ig gerltlemansportingthe
placard
is
Sterile”
is
to do with it, since Jack Ruby
had killed him long before the cras ,h “TIhis University
qui te right in hisown
way. I
occurred.
I t is true that Lee Bowers, who testified he had noticed two me:n corltend thatthestudentswant
acting suspiciously at theassassinationscene,later
died, also in a “to havetheircake
andeatit
car crash. But actually, Ruby could not possibly have had anythin.g too:’. They regard the AMS as a
form of welfare
todo withit,sinceDallas
police hadjailedhimlongbefore
thle
agency
from
wh ich moneypoursforth
crashoccurred.
in an
enclless torren
I t is true that Hank Killam, husband of one of Ruby’s cigaretite
“Ask andye
girls, later died of a slit throat. But actually, our medical, sociologic:a1 sha.I1 receive”. Unfortunately ‘for
dried up.
and psychological experts haveall testified thatcigarette smokin 8 ma ny, thetorrenthas
Th,e result is somewhatshattercan cause throat trouble.
I t is truethat Nancy Jane Mooney, one of Ruby’s strippers,
ing . The majority of clubssay
l a t e r a a s found hanged from her toreador pants at the Dallas count:Y tha t theycannotexist,yetthe
jail. But actually, three different F B I experts have testified that the1
ring and Outdoors Clubs seem
are 19 separate ways to kill a personusingtoreadorpants.
So thle to 1manage, and their budgets are
commission cansee no significance in. thefactthat
Miss Moone:Y
larlge. Why? Because their memwashung.And
besides, everyoneknowsthatstrippers
have nIO ber‘s haveenough
interestand
enthusiasm to dig into their.own
morals anyways.
I t is true that the brother of a witness to the slaying of Dalla1s poc:kets and produce the required
fun.ds. I suggest that many ‘more
patrolman Tippitt, minutes after the assassination, was later shot
iIn
clu bs, by doing this, will discover
the back and killed. I t is also true that his killers might possibly ha%re
members who are truly intermistakenEdward Benavides, theman killed, for his brother. the
BcIt
actually we have decided on the basis of 24 X-rays, 17 color photcr ested and enthusiastic. I suggest
graphs, and evidence from four FBI experts, that the
bullet whic:h tha t it is about time students a t
killed Benadives was also the bullet that killed reporter Bill Hunte r. thi!3 university realize thatthey
And therefore, Benadives’ killing was an accident. No, of course nLO
responsible ordinary citizen or member of the press will be allowe
to see the X-rays or the photographs.
3
Personally, I feel that the petition “discussed” last week was
deliberately made vague, to hide
the
grievance
that
individu;
organizationshadnot
receive
the money to which they have “
ousdy opposed,but
John Fraser
-
-
-
-B
4
The Universitypresents
I
THE VICTORIA
SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
(conducted by Otto-Werner Mueller)
IN A SPECIALPROGRAMFOR
f
p
Blue and Gold, the student’s guide to the student will be on sale
this week at a new, increased, price of 35 cents. The booklet will be
distributed at strategic points throughout the campus.
Cliff Ridley, First-year men’s rep. and Penny Davis, First-year
women’s rep. reported on the high school liaison committee held on
campusSaturday.
Ridley saidthe.highschoolstudents
found the idea of the
committee“very good” and.ithelpedthem
togettoknowthe
University. Therewashowever,
a dangerfeltbythem
tbat they
would be dominated a t things like the B.C. Assembly of Students .by
theuniversity delegates.
Keith Guelpa, publicationsdirector,reported
thattheMartlet
was now goingthrough a bigre-organizationparticularly
onthe
advertising side. This relieved me of his headaches. He wasstill
faced, however, with the problem of finding an editor for the Tower.
Council agreed to .pay after long discussion and referal with the
publications board to pay last year’s Martlet business manager Brian
Rowbottom $200 for his summer work for the paper.
This decision precipitatedtreasurer
Dick Grubb’s resignation
(seepage one).
Certainchanges to theathleticsconstitution
to accommodate
thesport clubs, which had been ignoredbefore.wereacceptedby
council.
Attention was drawn to a special financemeetingbetweenthe
board of governors and the council slated for Wednesday and to the
important meeting of council Sunday at 7 p.m. in the SUB lounge.
have
reached
the
stage
where
they
must
support
themselves
and their interests, supported by
nothingbuttheirownimagination an-initiative! The cold world
of reality has been reached-face
it like theadults
you aresupposed to be!
See PETITION page 6
I
cause of othervisitors,students
were repeatedly told to stay out
of the
hotel
lounge, through
which many of them had to pass
to reach their rooms.
Symposium
(continued from page 1)
Students
were
wandering
aroundwith
no place to sleep.
Students and faculty agreed that
f o o d wasentirely
unacceptable.’
“It’sdamn
pitiful,” commented
one student after a soggy paper
plate lunch.
Other students warned me not
to eat the vegetables.
True
the
students
did only
pay $8.50 for the entire week-end
and some of this must have gone
ontransportation.Buteachstudent was subsidized three dollars
from
the
administration
and
three from the AMS.
For $14.50 students expected a
lot more.
“We have anappointment to
see the management. Theyjust
didn’t deliver what
they
contracted for and I think we should
havemoney refunded,’ said one
member of theorganizing committee.
“It becameall
tooapparent
whoweretheguestsand
who
were the students,” said one firstyear student.
Because a t certaintimes, be-
Is it him or his
CHARTER CLUB
suit?
Styled for the campus and career set. Notural shoulder suits,
with sophisticated detail. T h e
vest. is reversible and odds a
Fshing air. Tailored in the
“ R T E R CLUB manner with
’ure Virgin Wool cloth woven
‘n new &des and exciting texrures. The girlyes-she’ll
: o m after the suit!
TheMADISON (3 pc) $69.95
l
@ CANADA 99 @
I
November 24-26
I
Tickoh $2.00 awilable SUB main offico
includes all seminars,panels,banquet.
I
UNIVERSITY STUDENTS
Guest Artist:Vladimir
Lamman, Violinist
Gordon Head Gymnorium
SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 20, at
8oQ-p;M.
ADMISSION FREE - Tickets available at the SUB
toUvicstudents,faculty
and staff only
SPEAKERS INCLUDE
. . .
Tommy Douglas
Paul Hellyer
Alvin Hamilton
Pierre-Ell iotTrudeau
Patric Watson
Claud Ryan
THE MARTLET, NOVEMBER 10,1966
8
!Residence Fashion Show
Christmas is a child’s delight. A
richly bedecked Christmas tree is a wondi.oue sight
to little children. Yet each year there are many children who have never known the joy
of this special day. Christmas to them is a very meagre celebration. There
are one bundred and forty-two girls in Residence who wouldlike to make Christmas day a brighter
one for as manychildrenintheVictoria
area as theypossiblycan.
We would greatly
appreciate your support - to the tune of 50c for a ticket to the Residence Fashion Show
to be held in the Upper SUB Lounge at 8:OO p.m. Monday, Nov. 14. We are indebted to
Mrs. Joan Fraser, Fashion Co-ordinator at Woodward’s Dept. Store, for providing us with
the lovely outfits to be modelled.
The clothes to be shown have been chosen for their suitability not only to your tastes
but also to your budget. Every
girl’s wardrobe must include sportswear, class wear and
eveningdress.Aspecialfeature
of theyear to beshownisthepopular“pantsuit.”
Tickets for theFashion Show can be obtainedinthe
SUB between 12:30 and 1:30 the
week of Nov. 7th to 11th or from any of the Residence girls. All proceeds will be donated
to the Colonist 500 Fund. We would appreciate your support.
All pictures
by
Dave MacFarlane
The popular p e t suit-ideal for the Martlet Car Rally and
other fantastic informal events. Modelled by Diana English
and Mary A d .
THE MARTLET, NOVEMBER 10,1966
4
I
Member of Canadian Univemity Pres8
Pul,lishecl weekl?- throughout the University year in Victoria by thePublications
Ucpartmrnt of the AlmaMater Society.University of Victoria. Editorial opinions
erprrssccl are thox of tllc Editorial 1:oard of The Martlet and not necesurily
thnrc o f the AlmaMater
Society of University of Victoria.
.\uthorizcd a5 Second Class Mail by the Post Office Department. Ottawa,
andfor Payment of Postage inCash.
Subscription rates: $2.00 for students and alumni per academic year.
For non-students. $3.00 per academic year.
Days: 477-1834
Printed in Canada
Q
Lomb to Slaughter
We, the students of the University of Victoria, who are
the Alma Mater Society, have killed the Tryste. The Tryste
-,
was thelambwhich we ledtothealtarofsacrifice.
And a
sacrifice was necessary, for we had to cleanse ourselves of
guilt. So we rose up and we went t o the socrificial ceremony
we killed it. Our
andthere we found a lambandthere
leaders were there and they didn‘t wantus t o kilt this lamb,
but we killed it anyway, and in so doing struck a blow for
democracy and just plain showed them who was boss.
You may wonder why we had to cleanseourselves of
guilt. It is really very simple. There are 3,500 of us, but
only two hundred of
us devoted time to creating the budget.
Now the 200 wanted us t o come to the many meetings held
to discuss the budget, but we were not interested. But we
became interested later on, after we had approved a budgetwhich
we didn’t understand. And when we became
interesterd, we began t o understand that because we were
not interested when we should have been, three weeks ago,
the budget did not properly reflect our interests. And then
we began torealizethatthe
200 hadactuallynotwanted
us to understand, and that they had supressed information
about the budget, and that they were delighted when we
stayed away by the
hundreds. But then, after very, very
careful thought, we realized that it was not true, that if
we were not happy with the budget it was our fault, and
that, in fact, we were guilty.
So we had a sacrifice. W e gathered together and we
killed the Tryste. And now, having cleansed our guilt and
created a budget which truly reflectsour wishes, we can all
go back to our little cubicles, contemplate our redemption,
and be disinterested until two weeks afternext
year’s
budget is passed.
Why did we choose the Tryste for our lamb? Well, in
a l l fairness, we know that there are many reasons why we
should have let the Tryste live.
W e realize that at a universitycreativityshouldbe
encouraged. W e realizethat
format is essential to a magazine of this type and that
it
could not be duplicated in the Martlet Magazine. In fact,
we realize that for the same volume of material the cost
would not be significantly different
if the magazine was
printed on newsprint. We also realize that several people
have been writing on the Tryste for eighteen months now
and that perhaps
we should have waited
t o see the issue that
is coming out in a few days before we killed it. W h a t we
want you to understand is that
we thoroughly considered
a l l these factors a t thesacrificialceremonybefore
we
butchered the lamb.
And besides,we don‘t think that the Tryste has been
so good in the past, even if we haven’t seen the current
issue. No we do realize that the magazine did have potential, in fact considerable potential. But a university is no
place t o squanderfundsonsomething
that mighthave
potential. N o t when we could spend that money on more
important things.
Oh yes, we should
make
it quite
clear
that
we have
ensured that the money saved by killing the Tryste will go
t o a good cause, a cause in keeping with our vigorous life
a t this university. It is going far a monument.
Well, maybe it‘s more like a tombstone than a monument. If‘s called a Tower, and os each of us graduates from
the university, a picture of us is placed in the Tower along
with a few nice words
sort of like an obituary. You can
see haw important this is, particularly for those of us in the
3,500 t h a t neverdoanything.After
all, it isthe only
record of our four years, except for some very dry records
in the Registrar’s office. Obviously this monument is more
important to us than some wishy washy potetial creativity.
Now we do realize that Canadian students spend a million dollars a year for these monuments, and we do realize
that the companies that
print yearbooks charge exharbitant
rates. But theyare not such bad companies. After all,
they sponsored a national yearbook conference right here
in Victoria last year
sa that students could find ways to
print bigger and better
yearbooks. Surely theydidn’t do that
because they are greedy.
Mind you, we must be careful about
money. Our leaders
wanted to charge us directlyfor a portion-sfthe cast of the
just like they used to for the Tryste, and they
yearbook
still do for the student directory and dances and special
events and even hamburgers in the student run cafe.
They just don’t reatize how important the Tower is tc
us. They can‘t seem t o put it in perspective. They musl
understand that it isn’t important enough for us to pay for
it, but it is certainly more important than creativity. Th
a
i
is a university, not a coffee house f o r Bohemians.
And besides that, it takes only a couple of people t c
build a Tower, whereas it takes dozens to create the Tryste.
As well as cleansing our sins, we have made it possible fol
some of the 200 t o join with us and do nothing all year.
” Now there’s a lesson in efficiency for our leaders.
It‘s the Premier. We hove24 hours to move the entire campus to the Coriboo.
RESIGNATION OR HOW TO BE
FORCED INTO MARTYRDOM
BECAUSE OF A DUMB COUNCIL
-~
-
-
-
By TIM GLOVER
The resignation of Dick Grubb both shocked and saddened me. H e has been trying
responsible and most unrewarding job within the
AMS. H e has
jone this job, as far as I can see, conscientiously and ethically.
Hehas’beenforcedintoresigning
because thecouncil, in their unwisdom, comx l l e d him to do somethingwhichheconsidered
seriously wrongandanunjustified
;quandering of the students‘ money.
Of course the Rowbottom decision on Sunday night was only a culmination ofseveral
;uch Occurrences in the past few months; occurrences such a5 the various budget meetings, the vain xryings of Grubb in the wilderness a s he tried toOvercome excess expenditure plusthevotingdownofthefourteenthamendment
in theAlmaMater
Society
tonstitution.
DickGrubb hasresigned because he was trying to protect you, the students; he
pesigned because of the frustration of informing the council of
a right financial move
2nd then seeing that right move demolished before his eyes.
Dick Grubb has resigned not because h e wants publicity, not because he wants to
M a martyr but just plainly because his advice is not being heeded.
Theresponsibility for hisresignation a n d t h e possible confusionthatwillreign
>ecause of his decision rests on our shoulders. W e are to blame.
Dick Grubb has my support for making
a right and proper move.
’0
hold down the most
In welcoming letters to the editor tbc
Nutlet will print only thm ktterr
which are signed and indicate the writ:r’s +tion
in the univetuty. The
name of the carreapandent will be withLld on request
Free Thinker
Sir:
I mustexpress my sympathy
with Mr. Sei1 Williamson’s
shame at hisownthoughtlessness, so obvious in his letter last
week, but I cannot find any
sympathy for his professed anger
a t thisuniversity or hisdisgust
at this nation. Mr. Williamson’s
attitudeaboutthearrest
of a
studentfor possessiom of Mariiuanaisthatfartoocommon
self-righteous indignation of the
so-called ‘free thinker’; offering
no solution and showing considerable displacement from reality.
Mr.Williamson
asks:“What
good has been achieved by this
arrest?” H e might as wellask
whatgood
is achievedby
any
arrest. N o arrest, conviction and
subsequent punishment can erase
thecircumstances of a criminal
act. Our social structure operates
within the framework of the law,
agreed to by therulingconsensus. The continuity of our social
framework,
with
its
legitimate
means forchange, is the good
that any arrest does
including
this one.
-
Mr. Williamson asks:
“Will
Victoria be a better place if the
person involved issent to prison?” I canthink
of nobetter
answer than to suggest that Mr.
Williamson give some consideration to the probable condition of
Victoria should law-breakers not
be penalized. Victoriamaynot
he anybetterforthearrest
of
this student, but it certainly will
not get any worse.
Mr. Williamson’s thirdquestion asks: “How many doors are
slammed shut w k n a person
acquires a criminal
record?”
Does Mr. Williamsonmean
to
imply thatbecause social ostracization is a result of criminal
conviction,weshouldcease
to
convict
criminals,
or
that we
should cease to record such convictions?
Finally, Mr. Williamson comes
to grips
with
what
is really
gnawing i t his vitals. H e asks:
“Whatindividudhastheright
to saythatinhalingMarijuana
is a criminal offense to be equated
with armed robbery?” Of course
this is not the right of any single
individual, butit is theright of
thr legislative
consensus
This
majority has determined that the
use and possession of Marijuana,
unless specially authorized, is a
criminal offense.
If Mr. Williamson could get
his head out of the clouds, where
it is notnecessary
for him to
really come to gripswiththe
issue, hemightdo
well to take
note of theletterthatpreceded
his. I am quitecertain thatthe
attitudes of both towards the use
of Marijuana areverysimilar,
hut Mr. Hanleyhaschosento
realizethat his energiesshould
he directed at changing the attitudes of thelegislativeconsensus - not bleating about anger
anddisappointment.
J. 11. Hutchinson.
Collecting
Sir:
I t seemsthat
our policemen
haveturnedfromchasing
bankrobbers to chaingAustinsand
Volkswagens.It’squite
a game ’’JW
Theseusurpers of thelawhave
been seen hiding around corners
waiting for the least provocation
tostop a student on his daily
route around the circle. .4re laws
really being broken or is it just
part of a great plan to collect
wages and fill magistrate’s pockets? I have seen various incidences on campus where students
have been red-lighted for aothing. I have to admit that some of
a s have been exceedingthe
20
mph. zone, hut I alsohaveto
admit to seeing these vocational
school policemen exceedingthe
zoneontheirpleasurecruiseor
co-ed spying trip around campus.
Must we keep on giving money
to these . . .?
Allan D. Green
4th Se. Ed.
* * *
Snobs
Sir :
Sincemydeparturefromthe
righteous city of Victoria and my
(continued onpage 6)
EDITOR
- TIM
GLOVER
Executive Editor
Bob YcYinan
PI4
Editorids
Photo Edita---Yanh.r
WJ.
Aivertising Manager ........ Prank Torr]r
w
i
n
-
Layout: Wayne BuckIey assisted by
T a y B a e t t and Angde St. H i h
Design:
Tom
Gore. Rewrite: Bob
Thomas and Jill Southern. Typists:
Marion Doan. Sue Reid and Brenda
Porter. Circulation: Rod Donaldson.
THE MARTLET, NOVEMBER 10,1966
Editorial
Qualified
Teachers
.I
Everyone agrees t h a t it is
importanttohavefullyqualified teachers
in
our
schools.
Only people with completetraining canadequately@deour
youngsters on to greater glory.
TheBCTF
is egcouragingall
thenormalschool“graduates”
to return to university and get
aneducation; thefederation is
doing this by verbal means and
by thegradualelimination
of
the lower teacher classifications.
The aim, and it is a commexidable one, is t o have only degreed
teachersintheclassrooms.
Theconcept of “fullyqualified teacher”
because
of its
vagueness can be misuged. Anyone at,theuniversity
who has
the
self-discipline
can
get a
degree.Few of them could become good teachers. You can
no more judge a person’s teachingabilitybyafewsuper-lessons than you can by his English 100 mark yet many people
whoborestudents
to sleepor
who just can’t gettheirideas
across are being
sent,
fully
qualifiedinto
the schools,and
left there to antagonize generations of pupils.
Perhaps a better measure for
teachers is their effectiveness in
theclassroomover
a period of
months as judgednotonly
by
testsbutalsobystudentreaction to
the
course
and
to
school in general.
Manypeoplewho
are qualified, inthetruesense
of the
word, are not allowed into large
districtssuchasVictoriaand
the Lower Fraser Valley area,
becausetheyaremissingone
insignificantcourse.A
student
inhissixthyear
of Fine Arts
cannot teach Art in a Victoria
school because he does not have
Latin 240. A universitygraduatewith a Frenchmajor who
has sincelived in Paris is not
qualified t o teach Frenchuntil
shetakessome
Education
courses.
Until thesefooliah
requirements are dropped, there will
DiscontentAbounds
Within University
By BARRIETAYLOR
~
1
Thismessage is not unique.Discontent
abounds withinthe
co1nfines of theUniversity
of Victoria.Everywheresmallbut
in!sistent voices are rupturing the placid surface
of complacency.
of hours that can be spent
It is amazing the contented number
co1mplaining and condemning the right in,” spokenfrom a union
r versityprofessorspeaking
edlucational conditions u n d e
activism and apathy. The centre,
Wf lich many of the
students
is advised by a number of noted
he re choose to suffer. However,
r om
progressive professors f
acjtive attempts are being made
Uvic, D r . T a r l e t o n ,
Jerry
wi thin this “hotbed of apathy,”
Schwartz, Emile Martel, f o r exVi,ctoria, to contact and expose
ample.
These
people
generawarenesg
supthle potential
ously
have
contributed
their
POsedly buried under many layknowledge
and
advice
gained
conditioning
ens of continued
fromexperienceundervarious
and complacency.
educational situations.
Thefoot is inthe doorbut
Many of thesediscontented
just howlong
this continued
People,nolongesatisfiedwith
response lasts dependsonthe
ailnless inaction are supporting
desire of the people of Victoria
an endeavourcurrentlybeing
t o have any active awareness of
iniitiated by a C o m p a n y of
important issues.
Ycmng Canadians volunteer and
Nonetheless, it is a justifiable
fo1m e r Uvic student, Lynn Curexperiment,probingtherecepname,
Social
EducatisI. The
ticIn Centre has been applied for tivity of the inhabitants of this
city to a progressiveform
of
WLmt of amoreinclusiveterm.
social socialeducationanddialogue.
It is anexperimentin
Manycriticismshavebeen
dialternative
co mmunication, an
rected a t it, one of themajor
to a social patternestablished
is
andperhapsmostvaluable
bY andinourpresenteduca“Does it really
being
early
also
an
ticmal system. It is
enough,withtheage
of the
a ttempttorevisethepresent
participants it appeals to ?” It
concepts of teaching and to put
th ese into practice a t t h e centre. does seem t h a t we are not cutting the tree off at its roots, but
DlIringdiscussions,informality
severing
a few
dead
re igns andparticipants are on merely
a level with the lecturer or re- limbs.Theanswerlieswithin
the primary grade age group, it
person
speaking.
Any
so urce
active
sitp of formalization- is dik- is here that children’s
minds are boxedandcrated
to
couraged. One anxiouslistener
rersemble a n assemble line in a
ex,tended his arm in an attempt
packing plant But the objctive
to be recognizedandmetwith
of the centre is to pry off those
t h e words: “If you wait around
for me to let you speak, you’ll staplesanddestroythecardne!ver utter a word - just wade board casings of people like our-
The amplemy m
selves. If this can be achieved
wewould
havemade
a huge
strideinthedirection
of independentthoughtandawareness.
.
,\
Discussion
Any studentinanyfaculty
whowishes t o discuss a tonic
related to education at any level
is invited to submitmaterial
f o r this page.We
would also
i n v i t e participation by any
facultymember
who feelshe
wouldlike
to repudiate statements
which
appear
on this
page or would like to give his
opinionsabouteducation
p
I
SOCK
HOP
-
This
Thursday, Nor. 10
MATERIALS FOR ALL OCCASIONS?
BROCADES
BEADED TRIMS
-
-
SUB
VELVETS
8:O-1200 p.m.
SEQUIN TRIM
for theFestiveSeason
50g stag
75# drag
1218 Brood St. behween Yokr and View
E
continue to be a shortage of real
TEACHERS in our schools.
For
University of VictoriaCampusPlayers
Campus
Apparel
DAL
present
“THE BRAGGARTWARRIOR”
Translated from Plautus-by Dr. Peter
L. Smith
Director: Carl Hare
and
Phoenix Theatre
DARYL
-
University of Victoria
November 15-19, 22-26, 1966
8:30 p.m.
at
Resenotionr: 471-4821
Students: 2-for-l , except Friday and Saturday
Tickets $1.SO
y ~ualitied~ & e r
Still it is much easierto settle
back with an indifferent attitude disguised as objectivity and
the rotted
claim it is too late
tree remains standing.
-
Many
students
have
gripes
about the courses they take in
order to get a B.Ed.&d
many
profs
have
some
interesting
theoriesabouttheEd.classes
thattheyteach.
We’d love to
see these
statements
appear
here for the sake of discussion.
Submit any article to the Education Page/Martlet.
T
u
NOVEMBER
THE MARTLET,
6
Project Headstart
a * .
v
LElTERS
(continued from page 4 )
discontinued studies at t h e U. of
V. I have come into contact with
literallythousands
of people of
aII typesandclassesandhave
heen on several old and well
estalllishedcampusesahoutthe
globe to thispoint, I shallcontinue to do so and to form new
opinionsfrom what I see.
The reason for writing
this
letterto
you. as editorofthe
campus newspaper, at this point.
was to inform you of acritical
state on. yourcampusandperhaps give you a chance to correct
the pro1)lem. although I can’t
offer anysolution,hefore
i t is
realized b y toomanyandyour
can1;)us I)ccomes a shelter for
nnohs.
Victoria has many as such and
I suppose it is hard to keep them
from the campus, b u t the U. of
V. is heingexposedtoa
very
bad class
system.
Canada
is
supposed to be a classless society
state.People at 11. of V. get in
cliches and can’t he separated.
T \\-on’t .say anymore
hat the
wocs of this when .deliberated
upon ran
and
do seem quite
grave in nature.
Heaven help U.V. if they bring
i n fraternities!Chaos would exist! Think of what this would do
to
the
hit of university
spirit
which remains.
By university
spirit
I don’t
@ a 11 competition
hetween
groups, facultiesandindividuals,
hutapride
i n your campusand
adrivetoperpetuateits
name
andimage.
I
This may seem vaguebut
hope youwill
think on itand
take it seriously if you see
a
crisis.
Yours truly,
S. B. Willerton.
A&S 3 (U.V.,
5.1 Ridgemead,
Calne,Wiltshire
England.
More LSD Marijuana
Sir:
H a v i n g read
the
recent
“Martlet”publications,and
beingin
a position tocompare
them with several other universityand college newspapers, I
am forced t o the conclusion that
some M a r t l e t reporters are
thoughtless and irresponsible. I
am referringespeciallytothe
Oct. 20, featurearticleentitled
“Marijuana,LSDbeingcirculated on campus, and the
Nove m be r 3, issue’sbold-faced
special, “Marijuana charge
laid
JubilationSingers Here Next Tuesday
.
By ART GILLAN
Thisistheprogram
which
has been referredtoas“Project
Headstart”
in
the EAC
budget. I t could be one of the
mostsignificantandimportant
activities
undertaken
by the
EUS and/or AMS this year.
The aim of this project is to
helpprepareculturallydisadvantaged
children
to
benefit
from our educational system by
supplementing their experiences
and developing theirvocabulary.
These
“CD”
children
do not
have
adults
talking
to
them.
They have difficulty in their vocabularywithplurals,prepositions and connectives, and “not”
sentences. It is impossible to
assess a t this time how effective
we can be in influencing these
children; however, the potential
rewards to the children are importantenoughtowarrantan
attempt by US.
Thechildrenwill
be selected
from
the
local kindergardens
this term and necessary details
10,1966
such as parental consent will be
takencare
of. There will be
two workshops on the culturally
disadvantaged child and instructionalmethods
on January 14
and 21. The following week the
children will be picked
up in a
busandtakenon
a field trip.
We hope to have around thirty
children and a t least six instructors. Afterthe
field tripthe
children and instructors will returntotheuniversitywhere
they will have a further opportunity to talk about what they
saw. Thenthebus
will drop
them back at their s c h o 0 1
grounds.
As I saidearlierthis
could
be the most significant program
producedby the EAC. It must
havecompetent people.If
you
think that you can help or want
toaskquestionscontact
Miss
ValdaGourlayorArt
Gillan
through the EUS mailbox in the
SUB General Office.
against student.” Certainly this
is a masterpiece of “illogic” and
the latter of “illlogic”.
Concerningthe
first article,
thefirst s e n t e n c e decrying
“largequantities
of marijuana
and “possibly of LSDcirculating on the Gordon Head campus
is
commendable.
It isregretable, however that Mr. Glover’s
merits as a news reporterand
commentatoralso end withthe
opening paragraph.
Therearefourreasonsfor
this opinion. First,
the
only
support Mr. Glover cites for his
contentionsishearsay,p
rimanlyfromonestudent,
who
heard it from someone else
..
The second reason follows from
thefirst;sincetherewere
no
concrete observations of the frequency of usage and the number
of users,howcan
thatwriter
state that “most of the stuff is
being taken by first and second
year
students
to
‘experiment’
with?” Third, it is commonly
known thattheusual
dose for
anLSDsessionis
onemilligram;alsocommon
knowledge
isthefactthatthe
minimum
price for a session (or one milligram) is $10.00.
It is possible, therefore,to
pointouttwoglaringinaccuracies: a ) as wasaptlystated,
althoughslightlyexaggerated,
in previous
a
letter
to
the
editor(St.Claire,
November 3,
1966), “
500 milligrams is
worthmorethan
$lO,OO and is
enough to make
the
entire
population of North
America
‘high’ for one week if put in the
water supply;” and b),
accordingtoMr.
Glover, thegoing
rate of LSD is “upwards $10.00
per 500 milligrams,”the
basic
economic law of “supply and demand” has been violated, i.e., if
the ’students arepaying
only
1/500thepricethateveryone
else
pays,
then
certainly
the
demand
for
LSD
cannot
be
great. And fourth, Mr. Glover’s
obvious recouise to sensationalism, if not out of character, is
definitely out of place. This
type of inflammatoryapproach
seldom yields positive results.
However, Mr. Glover’s motivesarenotto
be questioned,
for his was a commendable effort.But
so aretheyall
commendable efforts.
Concerning the second article,
“Marijuana charges laid against
student,” it is all too painfully
clear
why
i t appeared boldfaced on the front page. Vindication. everyone
As
knows,
“One
swallow
makes a summer.”
Isn’t i t equallyjustifiableto
.
After two yearsand
many
requests, the Jubilation Singers
will be returning to Uvic to give
a concert on Tuesday, Nov. 15.
One of the foremost folk groups
in Canada, they have made
numeroustelevisionappearances,
a s well aa havingappeared at
most of the top Canadian night
clubs
and
coffee houses, and
have just releasedtheir
first
album on the RCA label.
Themembers
of thegroup,
when they are not on the road,
live in Vancouver, although Len
comes originally f r o m Nova
Scotia,andDorisfrom
Manitoba. They have a most unique
a n fantastically
d
successful
style of singing, which, along
with Doris’
good
looks
and
Len’s incredible guitar work,
makeanunbeatable
combination.
Forsomereally
good entertainment, don’t miss their show
on Tuesday at 12:30 in
the
SUB Lounge
Admission 35c.
-
say that since one personhas
been chargedwithillegal
possession of marijuana by a pressured police department
that
Mr. Glover’s
above
mentioned
article has been
vindicated
?
Also, the “Martlet’s” use of
this dope charge against a Uvic
student as implicit proof of Mr.
Glover’s “responsible”
.reporting
had
violated
one of the
basic axioms of our
judicial
system, namely “One is innocent
until provenguilty.”
1 amappalled
by
this
injustice
done
undertheguise
of supporting,
albeit ex post facta, a completely
unfounded
newspaper
article.
It seems that ““heMartlet”
subordinated by the radiance of
Mr. Glover‘s newly-gained notoriety,wasonlytoo
quick in
lowering itself even further
by
attempting to support a shoddy
piece of reporting at theexpense of a Uvic student.
If the “Martlet” continues to
report all alleged misdemeanors
of Uvic students,as
it might
a precedent,
since it hasset
then its type of reporting would
Jubilation Singers
not be unlike that of cheap pulp
tabloids
But so are they all commendable efforts.
R Marchand,
Graduate Student
.. .
. . Petition
(continued from page
2)
The second clause of the petition says:“Whereasthe
budget
fails to reflectthebestinterests
of the student body . .”
What interests? Have the students
got
any?
It is
hard
to
believe that they have. The student body failed dismally to give
agood account of itself, or its
interests, at the last two meetings
over 1966-67 finances. Instead,
Council was
obliged
to call
a
so that
SpecialGeneralMeeting
the “interests” could be aired. It’s
about time students on this campus took an
interest
in AMS
affairs; at the moment interested
persons
number
approximately150 out of 3,400! I call that downright disgraceful! I put it to the
average
student
that he
takes
whatisgiven
him asa“right”,
.
not to be denied. I alsoput to
the average student that what he
doesnot
get he screams heis
being denied.
Idonot
believe thisarticle
will start a surge of student activity - onthiscampus
that appears well nighimpossible.But
if you people do not like the way
in whichCouncil, or itsindividual members, is acting, do somethingl!Makeusresign
if you
will - but just be sure you have
somebody interested enough, enthusiastic enough, willing enough
and capable of filling the vacated
positionadequately.
LanguagesPanel
Discussion Nov. 20
On November 28 the Education Undergraduate Society and
the Greater Victoria Association
of Teachers of Modem Languages will present a panel diacussion in the Upper
of
the SUB at 8:OO .p.m. The topic
will be, ‘%hat an? our Goals in
teaching m o d e r n languages"
This is only
open
to people
interested, concerned, and everyone else.
...
Rather Urgently
writers
photographers
artists
reporters
newsmen
layout men
women
cartoonists
typists
aardvarks
and a cast of 10,OOO
.
Apply at once, if not considerably before to
Martlet Office, SUB Room 6, formerly
Clubs “A“
THE YABTLET, NOVEMBER 10,1966
Strachan
- Striving For a
-
A daywhensociety
recognizes theimportance
of post
secondary
education
and
will
allow students to have free university
tuition,
free
accommodation
and
even
perhaps
smallallowances
forspending
money. This is the hope of
RobertStrachan,leader
of the
opposition in
the
B.C. legislature.
Mr. Strachan,whospoke
to
theNDPClub
at a Tuesday
noon hour
meeting
told
me
duringaninterviewthatwith
allthishe
would still liketo
seetheentrancequalifications
forstudents at a higherstandard.
“Societymakesall
thisfuss
abouttheneed
foruniversity
education yet does not allow the
student some chance to get this
education,” he said.
“It is nonsensical thatstudents have to struggle for summer
jobs
keep
to them
in
universityespecially
thisyear
when the employmentsituation
could be difficult.”
Turningto
educationaction
week Mr. Strachan, commenting
on theproposedmasslobbying
of
B.C.
M.L.A’s
saidthathe
thought it could do some good.
“1 amsurestudents
will be
given
good
a
hearing
but
whether this will lead to governmentaction on the problem of
fees, equalisation grants and SO
on is another matter,” he
said.
He could not say if education
would dominate the coming session of thelegislaturebuthe
did firmly state that the NDP’s
were ready for such debates.
Hefurthersaidthat
some
attention would have to be
given to the allocation of government funds to the province’s
three universities.
“There is some evidence t h a t
VictoriaandevenUBC
could
become overshadowed by Simon
Fraser,”said Mr. Strachan.
“Education
the
is
biggest
spender of governmentmoney
thereforedebateon
it is important,”headded.
Turning to car insurance Mr.
Strachansaidthat
NIZP had
always advocated some form of
government
controlled
automobile insurance.
“I do not know if the Government will accept
the
Royal
. .. Bookstore
(continued from page 1)
“Why is the book B.N.A. Act
and .4ssociate Statutes listed as
casting $6 in the inside cover
when thebookstoresellsitfor
$7.36. This represents more
than
a 20% mark-up.”
The answer is “The above book
is on record in the bookstore’s
invoices at
suggested
a
retail
price of $7.75. When the student’s
5% discount is taken off the
presentsellingprice
of $7.36 is
ohtained. Mrs. McKay (manager
of the bookstore) has sent a letter to the Queen’s Printer asking
why there is thisdiscrepancy in
the price quoted on theinside
cover and the official invoice the
hookstore was given -quoting the
retail price of $7.75 for
this
book.”
“Why is the text Calculus and
AnalyticalGeometryMath
120121 selling for $12.49 in our bookstore when you can obtainthis
hook
for
$8 at
the
textbook
branch of the Government.
The answer is “The book that
you can obtain atthetextbook
hranch is adifferent text than
that selling in our bookstore. The
text for $8 does not contain the
materialforsecond-yearmath.
This is why it is cheaper.”
7
Free University
TIM GUIVER
Canada
99
Praised
By LINDA BERGIN and DERYK THOMPSON
T h i s month Uvic will .host a gathering of policital
s p e a k e r s w h o will take part in C a n a d a 99, a project w h i c h
could be t h e largest a n d moat successful student-organized
academic event in the h i s t o r y of t h e U n i v e r s i t y o f Victoria.
Overallelicitedresponse
has
Canadian industry and
politics.
beenenthusiastic:
G.
L.
ChatThelineup
of speakers as of
terton, M.P. f o r Esquimaltnow
includes:
T. C. Douglas,
Saanich,“May I extend to you
NDP partyleader; P. Hellyer,
my congratulations on. your inDefense Minister; W. A. C.
teresting selection of subjects
Bennett,
and
other
prominent
andparticipantsinthepanels
Canadians.
andseminars”;
Studentsareurged
to make
T. C. Douglas,nationalNDP
plansnowtoattend
this conthere is every inleader,
99 as
ference.SupportCanada
dication t h a t it will be an exanindication of our country‘s
citingevent. I wishyouevery
growing political
awareness.
success
and Davie Fulton,
Tickets can be obtained
at the
M.P., “the proposed
particiSUB office for $2.00, a figure
pants reflect the richacademic
low enough to attract even the
life of this country.”
poorest student.
Thoughseveralletters
of invitation
were
also
sent
to
prominent Quebec leaders,the
’
responsevariedfromcomplete
indifference t o politesnubs
on
their part. This was disappointingin view of theincreasing
stress laiduponbiculturalism
TheMartleteditorialboard
as Canada’s100thanniversary
kank
this week
appointed
approaches.
Tovey their
as
advertising
Canada 99 is the brainchild
manager.
of two Political Science honours
Mr. Tovey, who was a professtudents, MikeDeRosenrolland
sional
advertising
salesman,
Mike
Hutchinson.
This
large
before his entry into University
and ambitious undertaking will
takes over
duties
hisimundoubtedly
bring
fame
and
mediately.
prestige to Uvic and to the city
StephanieDochtermann,has
of Victoria as a center
of proresignedherposition
as pubgressive political thinking.The
lications Business Manager and
proposed
program
runs
from
has
also
severed
her
connecNovember 23 to 27, andwill
tions with the Martlet.
feature many leading figures in
“. . .
. . .”
MARTLET
STAFF
CHANGES
”OAW
STRACHAN, Free Universities
Commission’s Reportbutthere
againBennett would sellanything if political gain came out
of it,” he said.
“Thecommission,
of course,
is still sitting and I think that
the counsel is doing a good job
inexposingsome
of thefallacies in the present car insurance set up.”
Covering other major provincial topics Mr. Strachansaid
that he could forsee an increase
in electricity rates t o meet the
risingcosts
of thegiantdam
project in the province. He said
that the attack
on the provincial government
by
a Wall
Street financial journal could be
traced back to the takeover by
the Socreds of B.C. Electric and
not
to
the
present
financial
position.
Looking tothe
Cariboobyelection where attorney-general
The Math Department has requestedthatthetextcontaining
two years of math be handled by
thiobookstore.
/Any further
information
individual
bookstore
problems
be obtained
from
Keith
elpa.
on
Sludy
In Germany
Students wishing to study in
Germanynextyear
(1967-68)
should apply now.
G e n e r a 1 scholarships are
being
offered
to Canadian
graduates of Departments of
German as well as to graduates
of other
disciplines
(Bachelor
degree with outstandingly high
marks necessary). The twentyfiveavailablescholarshipswill
be granted on thebasis of a
nation-widecompetition.
Travel expenses will be taken
care of bythe.German
AcademicExchangeService.Furtherinformationcan
be supplied by Dr. J. B. MacLean,
Chairman of German, at rooms
347-9 in
the
Social
Sciences
Building.
MACFARLANK PMOTO
. .. .
RobertBonner
is holding the
SocialCredit
b a n ne r Mr.
Strachan, making the final comment of the
interview,
said:
“We have high hopes. We only
have to gain seven
hundred
votes.”
Needed
Equally
Urgently
ad salesmen.
you can gain
valuable
experience
plus 10%
commissign
with the
Martlet
sales
department
Apply at once, if not considerably before to
Martlet Office, SUB Room 6, formerly
Clubs “N’
THE MARTLET, NOVEMBER 10,1966
8
‘ictoria Symphow
HereonSunday
E
--=8
--
By CAM ELLISON
transcription of a violin conAlthoughthis column did
Martini’s
“Aria
con
E
- go to press lastweek, i t did certo,
Variazione,”
and
the
Bach
- not survive unscathed.
E
My
“Prelude
and
Fugue in G
- comments about Jill Paver,
E
- who sang two solos during major.”The last is characE
terized by a gradual and very
E
- Don Woodworth’s October 26
well-done crescendo.
1
- recital, fell to the layout
After the intermission, she
- man’s scissors.Whatwas
E
contained in those two
or turned to more modern pieces
3
three paragraphs was thatI
beginning with the “Third
- thought she had done a good
E
Chorale in A Minor”
by
E
- job, but sinceshe isa coloraCesar
Franck.
This
was
=
soprano,
and
because
- tura
lovely, but the second move=
- her voice has not fully ma- ment was spoiled by an outE
of-tune solo stop which was
- tured, her low notes were
E
- not particularly good, and I a bitpainful at times.The
- don’t think she
E
should do TheLizst“Evocation
a la
E that much Bach.
I t doesn’t
ChapelleSixtine,” a piece I
z
voice. However, I
did notpreviously know, ra- suither
f
do
like
the
voice. Shehas
thersurprised me - it has
f
(or it has) a qualitythat 1 the Mozart “Ave Verum Cor=
cannot compare to any other.pus ensconced, unchanged, in
Z
No Schreechenrauf exponent
the middle of it.
2
- she.
Dr. Mason finished with
E
Saturday
night
I had the two pieces by Dr. Leo Sower=
by, the first, “Bright, Blithe,
- opportunityto go toChrist
E
- Church Cathedral to listen
andBrisk,”dedicatedtoDr.
- toyetanotherorganrecital.
Mason, and written only last
E
year,thesecond,“Pageant
- This time it wasDon WoodE worth’sformerteacher,and
(1931),which has a very fast
E a presentteacher
of David
statement of thetheme
on
E
Palmer, Dr. Marilyn Mason.
the pedals, which she handled
Her
playing
and
registravery well. Fast pedal
pastion are totally different from sages
are
not
the
easiest
E
any other I have heard. The
thingstohandle.
only
word I can
think
of
At the close of the concert
=
which is in any way close is
Dr.
Mason encored with “ S O =_
- “gentler.” Her registration
nata for the Trompette RoyI
did
not
have
the
rolling
boom
E
do. In- ale” by the Spanish composer
- thatmostorganists’
Jose Laudin. TheCathedral
it
was
characterized
stead,
has
a good Trompette Royale
E by a complete blending of all
3
- the parts, so that the listener stop, and it was good to hear
E
is it used in the way i t was.
- rannot tell whether she
The
next
thing
of note
E
playing
on
the
pedal
or
great
E
organ,or
on the swell,or
(sorryaboutthat),isthe
Singers’
concert
E
whatever.
The
effect was Jubilation
on
November
15, at noon, in
F
just
beautiful.
E
Beyond that I cannotsay
the S U B, admission 3 5 ~ .
Theseguysarereally
good,
I
- too much, except to give the
andit would be nice to see
- program. She did the “ConE
E certodelSignorTorelli”
by
theUpperLoungefullfor
p
Johann
Walther,
an
organ
once.
-
-
The VictoriaSymphony
Orestra returnstothecampus
Sunday,
November
20, to
esent a second special concert
r students.
Guest artist will be Vladimir
acman, a young Soviet violinwho won this year‘s Intertional Violin Competition i n
mtreal.
The concertbegins at 8 p.m.
the Gordon Head Gymnasium.
lmission isfree,andtickets
2 available now at theSUB
tinoffice.
LANCMAN
Once again,
the
Symphony
I1 be underthedirection
of
to-WernerMueller,currently
ring one course in the Univery’s musicdivision as well as
rryingouthisduties
as conctor.
The concertseries,arranged
President Malcolm Taylor
d senior members of the new
hool of Fine Arts, will be conwed nextterm if attendance
lrrants this.
Vladimir
Lancman,
24, was
m in Douchanbe inCentral
;ia. Hebeganhisstudy
of
e violin at the age of five, and
LS admitted
to
the
Central
hool of Music in Moscow in
54.
Equippedwith:
Disc Brakes
Fully Ssncro on the Floor
Bucket Sea&
Eleetrie W
~persand Washers
Sedan Seat .Belts. Padded Dash and Visors
Top Speed-90 mph plus
VictoriaPlace
the
for
In Montreal’s
des
Arts
is summer, Mr. Lancman was
ven thelongestovationthat
ever
received
y artist has
ere, following his rendition of
e Sibelius Violin Concerto
a t won him first prize in the
ternational Violin Competim. He is now on a North
nerican concert tour.
All
Delivered Price
$2195
of onlyl.“.l..-.”_
$219 down, $67 per month
(Provincial
and
licence
extra.)
“The youngest
dealership you
ever saw
with 30 years’
experience.”
SOTOZLS MD.
1.
”
Centennial Season Open!t
For Campus Players
To kick off the season marking Canada’s hundredthbirthday,theUniversity
of Victoria
CampusPlayershavereached
back almost 2,200 yearsfor a
high-stepping c o m e d y from
classical Rome.
The Braggart Warrior’ by
Titus Maccius Plautus,has been
translatedfromtheLatin
by
Dr. Peter L. Smith,chairman
of the University’s
Department of Classics. A bright and
lively musicalscorehas
been
added by Dr. Chet
of the English department.
Carl Hare of the theatre division
directs
the
production,
which runsfrom November 15
to 19 and from November 22 to
26 at
the
Phoenix Theatre,
Gordon Head Campus.
A farcicalsituation
comedy
abouthumanself-delusion,the
play
shows
Plautus’s
exubera n t verbal
wit
advantage.
to
Pyrgopolynices, a c o n c e i t c? d
Roman warrior,
abducts
t.he
concubine of a young man frc)m
1his
Athensandtakesherto
homeinEphesus.The
youn g
man’s servant,Palaestrio,
f Ollows ,them and establishes hi mselfin the warrior’s househc)Id
as his slave. Theplay concerTIS
the intrigues of the
to
deceive thewarriorand
rettITn
the girl to her y o u n g
er.
Brought into the intrigue arc! a
g a y old bachelor who lives nc? X t
dooF, a stupid slave of the W IarriorSs,
a
and her ma.id,
and a host of slaves in both 1:he
warrior,s and the old bachelo
r’s
households.
The braggart warrior is plaj
red
byDougal Fraser, who g r a cillof
ated
from
the
University
Victoriawith a theatre ma1mr
this spring and leaves in J~~
lUary for London to study at the
,
See P.LAYERS Page 9
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SUMMER EMPLOYMENT
1967
Applications and information booklets are now available in the
Placement Office and in Departments.
L
Please submit your application by 15 November, 1966, to ensure
fullest consideration to
EMPLOYMENT OFFICER,
NATIONAL RESEARCH COUNCIL,
OTTAWA 7 , ONTARIO
THE MARTLET, NOVEMBER 10,1966
r
1
intrysk
Sex Oriented
Computer
TORONTO
(CUP)-University
of Toronto’s World U n i v e d t y
service has a remarkable dating
computer
it’s sex-oriented.
By TOM GORE
Conceiveda few
Sept. 1 9 6 4 - - - “ b y
Bomby fewer
Nov. 1964.” -.”...
Raised1 9 6 4 - 1 9 L b y fewer still
AssassinatedNov. 1966.....-..._ by the vast herd
For two years a small group
of studentshavestruggled
to
produce what had the potential
to be thebestmagazine
of its
nature
in
Canada.
No other
Canadian university hasa magazinewhich
cancomparewith
Uvic’s Tryste and none have the
potentials which it had.
Tryste,
still
in
its
infancy,
wasa
childprogidy.From
a
technical
viewpoint
its
standards were of the highest order.
Insofar
as
its contents
were
concemed,
although
didn’t
it
have“somethingforeveryone”
ittried,andto
a largeextent
succeeded,inbeing
one of the
pacesetters
here.
On several
occasions apathy on the part of
its recipient
student
audience
almostkilledit.But
it and its
staff weretoostrongtoletit
die.
Now, finally,
having
found
that a t t e m p t i n g to choke
Tryste’s supply of material was
futile,thestudents(or,rather,
a segment of the student body)
hastakentheonlyremaining
method of bringingabout’the
magazine’sdemise.By
hitting
it hard in the pocket-book.
Why ? This is thequestion
which jumps to mind. To me it
seemsthattheuniversityhas
one main role, and that is being
a home for creative thought in
allitslevelsandfields.Many
peopleseem to differ with this
idea and this has given birth to
theodious “B. A. cult,”which
is so widespread
North
in
America. This is unfortunate
andthose who careaboutthe
academic world in all its phases
must do theirbesttocombat
this harmful idea. Tryste’s main
aim has been to provide a show
place fortheproducts
of this
creative process, particularly in
the fields of literature and fine
arts.Up
till now it has been
primarily aimed at the members
of the academic cbmmunity but
one of ita future hopes had alwaysbeentoprovide
a place
wherethecreativeproducts
of
the university could be seen and
made
available
to the community at large.Manypeople
who do not understand the mechanics of magazine production
... Ployers
(Continued from Page 8 )
Royal Academy of Dramatic
Art.
Wolfgang Baba plays
the
adroit servant, Palaestrio. Mr.
Baba w
l
l
i beremembered
for
his role as Botard in RhinoRobert Price portrays the
old bachelor, suggested by Margaret Hall as Acroteleutium,
the courtesan,
and
by
Helen
Smith as her maid. The young
c o n c u b i n e Philocomasium is
played by Kathe Flood, last eeen
in A View From The Bridge.
Pat Scottplaysherbumbling
young lover. .
-
seem to feel that it is quite
practical and in fact quiten&ssary to combine Tryste with the
Martlet
Magazine,
using
the
latter’s format.
These
people
do not understand the impracticality of running a 5,000 word
short story in something using
the Magazine’s format.Such a
story, with no art or title would
take wellover t w o solidpages
of the Magazine and would look
is lost on a tabdead.Poetry
loid sheet and quality of reproduction is s i m p l y not good
to wellenoughtodojustice
a
done line drawing, much less
half-tonedrawingor
phot0.
NeitherwilltheMalahat
Review do anything to fill the now
existing void, since it in no way
concernsitselfwith
the products of on-campuscreativity.
It must be emphasized that
Tryste was, at thetime of its
death, at its most crucial formativestage.The
one showplace
of student
and
faculty
creativityhasbeennippedinthe
bud.
And w h a t f o r ? So that there
can be a Year Book for all the
little
children.
So that t h e
small-mindedintellectualin
fantsmayadmirethemselves,
andtheyear,
o f which they
a giltwere a part. They want
edgedmirrorheldup
to them
so that they can admire themselves
and
preen
their
fluffy
little feathers before it. A Year
Book well done is a nice thing
t o have but quashing Tryste to
pay for it seems to be one hell
of a price to pay.
An A-part answer to question
two of the 72-part questionaire
willmatch
a datelessstudent
with a member of the opposite
sex. But a B-part answer to
thesamequestion
gets him a
date with a n individual of the
same sex.
GeorgeBim,one
of the coordinators of the program, says
if more than a hundred people
saythey
would like to date
members on their own sex, the
computer will match them up.
The
system
is superior to
other dating systems on campus
because it is psychologically
orientated, and is geared specifically touniversitystudents,’
said Biro.
Unlike other systems, it does
it
not mention appearance, but
does ask frank questions about
18, forexample
sex.Question
asks: ‘Are you a virgin ?’
Bruce Sharp
Wins Award
-
BruceSharp,4thyearArts,
the Gwen
Downes
Memorial
Book Prize
for the- best performance in a
universityplayinthe
1966-66
season.
has been
awarded
Sharp received his award,
which is considered to be the
University ‘Oscar,’ for his portrayal of De Flores
in
‘The
Changeling.’
Granted it is thestudents’
money which by and large pays
for these publications and therefore it is important to consult
their wants but it seems to me
that this is indicative of a very
short-sighted attitude.
W ith
freedom
comes
responsibility,
and it is alwaysdepressing to
see this irresponsibleattitude
of the
students
displayed
so
prominently.Seventy-fivecents
per student per year seems very
little to pay towards continuing
the rearing of what in the near
future could have been the
finest magazine of ita nature in
Canada.
Keep Off The Grass
It Can’t Fight Back
‘I consider The Martlet to be
irresponsible
journalism
and
until there is some measure of
responsibility, I will notspeak
to you.’
Thus spokeMr. A. J. Saunders, B.A., Sc. (Brit. Col.),
P.Eng., S u p e r i n b e n d e n t of
BuildingsandGrounds
of the
University of Victoria,
when
asked to commentonthe
student’s
habit
of ‘short-cutting’
across the lawns and killing the
grass rather than staying on’
the sidewalks.
Mr. Saunders was referring
to the recent Martlet editorial
which labelled some of his staff
as the ‘Gestapo.’
Meanwhilestudentscontinue
to tramp improvisedwalkways
acrosa newly planted grass, e8pecially outsidetheClearihue
Building.
Hence a plea, from us if not
Mr. S a n d e r s , to stay off the
lawns, at least until it’s tough
enough to fight back.
MEN:
LOOK S H A R P . . .
FEEL S H A R P . . .
BE S H A R P . . .
We Suggest
1. useyourGillette
Order your C h r i h a s Cakes, Puddings,
Shortbread,Sousage Rolls,
2. See Jim Robertson
e&.
ut...
Hollondia Fine Pastries
“Where’.quality is the Best”
I
University
Homecoming Dance
SATURDAY, Nov. 19,1966
CCfllB.
All seats are reserved. Tickets
at $1.50 (students get two for
the price of one), are available
box
fromthePhoenixTheatre
office, 477-4821.
9:OO=l:OO
Crystal Garden
Semi-Formal
/ Formal
$3.00 per couple
Tickets on sole ONLY at SUB Office
NOVEMBER
THE MARTLET,
10
10,1966
Basketball Opener
Spoiled By Wlacs'
ByBOBCRELLIN
"ROB
RKKD PnOTO
John Lauvaas shows his form in controlling ball during
jump at last Saturday'sgame. Dale Bate (10) blocks
out his man in anticipation of p-lay. Despite the 76-46
drubbing the Mac's
handed
the Vikings individual
efforts show potential for teambalance as the season
goes on.
UVic Vikings' basketball season
opened
on
a sour
note
Saturdaynight
as theywere
beaten 76-46 by Victoria Coffee
Macs. A good number of university supporters saw the Vikings unable to generate a consistent attack against the more
experiencedSenior
"A" team.
Vikings held a small lead early
in the game but the Macs soon
gained
complete
control.
The
"good guys" were only down 13
points a t halftimebutinept
shootingpreventedthemfrom
closing
the
gap
in
the
final
period. The team hit
14% from
the field and were 0 f o r 6 from
the foul line in the second half.
Rebounding was probably the
brightestspotinthe
Vikings'
game as bigBrianBrumwell
controlled the defensive boards.
Brian Craig and A1 Glover also
pulled down a number of stray
shots.
The
scoring
although
scarce was evenly spread among
nineplayersshowingthebalancetheteamhas.KenJackson' led the scorers with 10
points. Brian Craig had 8 while
BrianBrumwelland
Bill Carlson added 6 apiece.
Vikingshave
t w o weeks to
preparefortheirnextgames
which are in Vancouver against
Vancouver
City
College
and
U.B.C. Jayvees.Theytravel
to
Portland the following weekend
for the year's first game against
American
competition.
T eh
openinggame at UVicwill be
Friday,
December
2 against
SkagidValley Jr. CollegeCardinals.
Soccer Vikings Edge Molsons
Norsemen Sink Tug and Barge
ByBRUCEMcKEAN
The
University
of Victoria
SoccerVikingscontinued
their
winningways last Sundaydefeating the Gorge Molsons by a
wore of 1 to 0.
Although they had the better
of the
play
throughout
the
game,the first halfwastheir
best. The
only
goal
of the
game
came,
however,
in
the
second half. Joe Milligan instigated the play when he
booted
the ball at the goal, only to have
it hit a post. The goalie, after
comingout
to cut down the
angle on Joe's shot, was caught
out of position when Greg Pearson shot home the rebound.
The
score
could have been
much greater forthe Vikings
but for three things. They had
difficultyfinishing off playsin
the goal area; they were greatly
hampered by the number of offsidescalled againstthem;and
lastly by the quality of Gorge's
goalie.
"00. M L D PHOTO
Backboard control was the brightest spot of the Vikings'
play. Bill Carlaon tries for tip-in whileBrian Brumwe31 (34) and Ken Jackson (11) jockey for rebound
position.
martlet
sports
BOB McMIUAN
Extramural
Council
Desperately Needs
SECRETARY
DUTIES:
Write up Minutes Once a Week
tish,
the
same
that
beat the
against
Gorge
Hotel.
Game
Vikingsbyonegoalforthetime
is 2:Oo p.m.
ColonistCUDsomeweeksazo.
Theteamwill
be outtoerase
thismemoryandchallengefor
some of theleadershipinthe
First Division.Thegameis
at
Topaz Park at two p.m.
STUDENTS!
Get a 10 % Discount on
*
*
Maycock Optical
Dispensary
New Optical Prescriptions
Contact Lenses
The Replacing of Broken
Frames and Lenses a t
-1327 h o d
-
Also nextweek, Coach Milligan will
unveil
his
secret
weapon
from
the
Geography
Department.
0
.
.
In Second Division soccer action
last
Sunday,
a spirited
Norseman
squad
sank
Island
Tug and Barge for their second
win of the season.
Thegamewasaclosesniping duel with University getting
an early 1 to 0 lead in the first
half.
Dave
Fuller
beat
the
Tugmen at the 15 minute mark
of the first half.
In the second half the Norsemen trooped on with sharpened
battle axes, forcing the Tugmen
backintotheir
own end for
most of the half. Robin Jeffrey
looked sharpest, banging in two
goals.
On the creditside, Jack Magee
played his best game since joiningtheVikings.Thisdefenseman repeatedly
had
boot
or
head to the ball to save a ticklish situation. While Jack
stood
out specifically, Ed Chala too
playedhisusualsteadygame.
Withtenminutesleftadesperate opposition put on a suddenburstintotheUniversity
end. A low, fast shot from the
eighteen yard line beat the defence for Tug's only tally. Final
score - Norsemen 3, Island
Tug 1.
Next week the Vikingswill
play those nasty Canadian Scot-
This
Sunday
the
Dlav a tB e a c o n
"
PRODUCTS
Norsemen
Hill Park
IMPERIAL OIL LIMTED
MARKETING DEPARTMENT
Career opportunities are
available to
1967 graduates in thefollowingfields
*
Merchandising
*
Retail Sales
* Commercial Sales
'Interviews will be conducted at the University of Victoria
NOVEMBER 14 and 15, 1966
Appointments for interview can be arranged
by contactin9
M r . J. H. Enns
Head, Student Placement Office
who can provide additional information.
384-7651
NOVEMBER
THE MARTLET,
10,1966
HOCKEY SKEINEXTENDED
By LADD PAVLIS
Ciochettebeganhisperform-finishingpolish
thatis usually
The Vikings almost had their
anceearlyinthethirdframe,theirforte.
Solid workby
the
victory bubble burst last Friday
defence
and
individual
efforts
picking up two rather questionnight by anex-Vikingplayer.
by Rudyk, Sarkission,
Harper
able
goals
that will probably
Jerry Ciochette picked up a hot
have Ted Hurd screaming in his and Shkwarok kept the Vikings
trick fortheTudor
Monarchs
winning streak intact.
steepforquitesometime.His
i n a thrilling 4-3 decision for the
The three stars as selected by
twllegi:ans. ‘l’he game was ex- firstgoalfoundtheredlight
RupeePalinwere:
No. 1, Bill
zone via several deflections and
trcsnwly close throughout
the
Rudyk (V); No. 2, J e r r y Ciohopr.The
second effortwas a
entire s i x t y minutes and superb
bouncer that looked like a slow chette (T.M’s); No. 3, Ted Saryoaltending by both go:llies kept
kission(V).
Koufax curve as it slithered bet h r , score ;IS low as it was.
“1:ockrt” Rutlyk performed up tween Hurd’s skates.
Withthegametied
midway
to h i e usual high capacity, picking UI) two picturexoals
:ind
through
the
final period. Jim
:Id(ling some tinr checkingand
Srhkwarakand Ted Sarkission,
I)l:~y-mhking. H P scnretl the
who kept
the
Monarch’s front
o n l v marker in the initial frame
lines off stride all night
1
- with
o t l :I pcrfrct pass from
Sarkistheir
tenacious
checking,
added
Last weekend the Women’s
a couple of insurancegoalsto
: Field Hockey Valkyries
travelputthegameaway.Ciochette
led to Seattleto
play in the
rollected his thirdgoallate
in
PacificNorth-West
Conference
the period duringadesperate
with 15 t e a m s representing
Monarch drive to get back into WesternCanadaandthe
U.S.
the game.
The trip was not too successful
The,Viking offense seemeda
for the Valkyries who were debitsluggishseveraltimesdurfeated in 4 out of 6 starts. Howing the game and
it lacked the
ever as the weekend progressed,
the play improved and the team
won their last game
against
Seattle 7-0. Susan
Qually
led
thescoringwith
3 goals, P a t
Davie and Marg Maysmith each
on a strong scored 2.
The Goths, lower Island cham- seasonandrelied
I
forwardlineto
produce their
Other games played were:
pions Men’s
in
Field Hockey
fine leagueshowing.However,
UVic vs North Vancouver 0-1
last year,
chalked
up their
a very
Uvic vsKingEdward
............ 0-5
third win of this
season
on this year, the team has
able coach in John Simmonds, a
Uvic vs Northern California 0-3
Sundaywith a 3-1 victoryover
teacher at University School.
Uvic vs Eugene ..............
1-2
Victoria hlen.
Theresultingimprovementin
Uvic vs Brittania ............
1-1
John Warrington, playing his
Uvic vsSeattle ........................... 7-0
first season with the Uvic team, individualandteamplaywas
AlthoughtheValkyries
need
scored two of the goals. James evident in the win over Vic Men
more
experience
playing
toLongridge, manager of the team last week.
gether as a team,
and
some
thisyear,
pushed in thethird
Theteamis
now practising
members are new to their posipoint. VicMen
gottheirlone
tions,thereis
good potential
tally
from
a
p e n a l t y shot for a special exhibition game on
November20th. The Goths will
and the team is looking forward
awarded on a ratherquestionto a successfulweekend at the
:rble callin front of the Uvic playagainsttheGrasshoppers
from Vancouver inwhat
proEvergreen Conference to be held
net.
mises to be their toughest game
at Ellensburg, Wash., on NovThe Goths last
year
went
ember 18, 19 and 20.
without a coach for most of the of the season.
I
~
WOMEN LOSE
ROAD TRIP
1
Goths Beat Men
II
Norsemen Upset Victors
Vikings Battered
It was a weekend of surprise
and frustration for Uvic Rugby
sides.
The Norsemen, supposedly outmatched, clung to an
early lead to defeat a powerful
Western Washington State Collegeside 8-6. Inthefollowing
game,
the
Vikings
lost
two
players to injuries and the game
to Cowichan, 31-8.
The
Norsemen
were
pitted
againsttheWesternWashington side when it was impossible
to re-schedule the V i k i n g s ’
league match against Cowichan.
The
Washington
team
is the
same one that the Vikings will
meet
after
Christmas
in
the
N o r t h we 5 t Inter - Collegiate
RugbyConference.
The Uvic sidesurprisedthe
Washington squad with an early
t r y by outside-centre Greg Minnaker. After Greg had squirted
throughforthethreepoints,
Locke-forward R i c kF y k e
punched a booming kick through
to put the Norsemen ahead 5-0.
It was Pyke’s boot t h a t finished
the Uvic scoringashescored
with a penalty goal just before
the halfended with the Norsemen well in command 8-0.
In the second half, the Western
Washington
side
showed
their excellent conditioning and
desire as they stormed through
for two unanswered tries, which
they were unable to concert.
Inthe Vikings’leaguegame
against Cowichan, whom they
had beaten in their first meeting
thisseason,the
Uvic sidewas
d o o m e d to disappointment.
Cowichan produced ofie of the
finestclubbackfields
thathas
been on a Victoria field in some
time.
Playing with r e m a r k a b l e
poise,Cowichanpushed
for an
early 5-0 leadonthebasis
of
some razzle-dazzle passing that
had the Vikings scurrying from
side to side. Not to be outdone,
theVikings
showed thatthey
had some power too, as the Uvic
pack swept through their Cowichan
counterparts
time
and
againuntilinside-centreJohn
Todd smashed
through
on a
twentyyardrambleforatry
between theposts which Hook
Dan Evans converted to tie the
score.
It looked as though the spectatorswereinforsome
fine
Rugby with both teams willing
to throw the ball around - and
both
able
Unfortunately
to.
thegame fell apart.Vikings’
scrum-half caught a knee in the
right shoulder and had to leave
thegameathalf-time.Winger
so lucky,
Grant Closewasnot
hewaskicked
in theshinand
sustained a fracturedlegthat
will keep him in a cast for three
months.Withtheloss
of both
these players, the Vikings found
themselves hard-pressed even t o
stay in the game. As the Cowichan side piled up points almost
at will, theVikingsrefusedto
give up. Eighth-man Bob Overgaardmanagedtwotriesbut
onewasdisallowed
on a forward-passcall.Thefinalscore
of thegame at 31-8 wasnot
indicative of the
comparative
abilities of the two teams.
I n Duncan,theSaxonswere
humiliated by Cowichan Juniors
as they blew a half-time lead of
9-0 and lost by a score of 14-9.
No other information about the
game
was
available
at press
time.
VICTORIA
YM7YWCA
Our Modern Focilities
Include Such Items os:
A 25-Metre -Swimming Pool
I
.
Fully-equipped Gymnasium
Handball Courts
Outdoor Running Track
Complete Weight Training Room
For Information
Phone 386-751 1
SPECIAL
. . , StudentMembership:
880 Courtney Street
$15.00 for the School Year,
r--t
--
12
THE MARTLET, NOVEMBEB 10,1966
i
CLASSIFIED
JOB OPPORTUNITIES
TUESDAY, Nov. 15
12:30 SSC. 163 VCF "Perspective:ALongHard
Look."
Members don't miss it.
* * *
* * *
Jubilation
Singers
- SUB
Lounge-12 :30. Admission 3 k .
-
Oil Limited
Marketing Depart
Uovember 14 & 15-Imperial
ment
Arts & Science graduating students i
n
t
e
in I
career in marketing and sales.
Yovember 1 C T h e Royal Bank of Canada-Arts & Science gradu
atingstudentsinterestedin
a career in banking.A
limite
number of similarly interested undergradustea (clrrss of 1968:
will be considered for summer work.
November17-BritishColumbia
Room 166 Elliott Building
session for graduates.
Civil Service - 12:W to 1:30
- pre-interview general b r i e f i n 1
-
* * *
UniversityChristian
Council
interdenominationaldinner J
Watch
posters
for
time
and
place.
..
* * *
I
7:30 p.m.,
* * *
WEDNESDAY, Nov. 16
Italian Club meeting, 12:30,
C-201. Conversational
Italian,
"Spaghetti-Feed"discussion.
* * *
THURSDAY, Nov. 17
Dr. Howard Petch, vice-president of CAP, p r i n c i p a l of
Hamilton C o 11e g e , McMaster
U n i v e r s i t y , willspeak on
"AtomicMechanisms
of some
Hydrogen-Bonded F e r r o e 1 c-e
trics". 1:30 p.m.,El.-168.
SUB and Library Hours
F'riday, Saturday
and
Sunday,November 11, 12, 13.
Libraryaccessandcheckout
only2 to 10 p.m. daily.Curriculumlab.2
p.m. to 6 p.m.
daily.SUB,
1 to 10 p.m. daily.
* * *
LibraryTelephone
Number
Please. note that after 12:OO
p.m. Saturdayand
6:OO p.m.
other days the direct telephone
line to theCirculationDivision
of the McPhersonLibrary
is
477-2422.
* * *
German Celebrities
Coming to Campus
'
Vovember 14 & I b M e t e o r d o g i u l Branch, Federal Department oi
Trursport-Majors and Honours Mathemati- andlor
Physia
graduating students.
-
6:OO p.m. SUB Upper Lounge,
ChickenFeed. First chance f o r
all members of Christian Clubs
t o get acquainted. 76c.
Jazz Club meeting.
SUB Upper Lounge.
Yovember 14 & 16"Bank of Mont&Arts
- Science g r a d u a t i n g
students interested in a career in banking.
On Friday, Nov. 25 inSSC
163, theGermanactressLilian
Westphalwillactscenesfrom
German
classical
and
modem
drama. On Monday, Dec. 5 in
theSUB
at 8 p.m., t w o folksingers,
Elsbeth
Jandar
and
Fritz Noetzoldt, will give a recital of German
Bunkellieder
and Moritaten.
Biolo&al Science
November 1 0 v i l Service Cornsmission
(Non-Research) Graduating students with majors
o r honour
in Biology, Botany, Chemistry o r Zoology.
November 18 & 21-Defense
Research Board
Graduate a n I
Graduating students with majora or honours in Physics,
Mathe
matics,ComputerScience,Chemistry,Biological
Sciences o
Psychology f o r permanentandsummeremployment.
Undex
graduates (Class of 1968) honouring in the above courses wil
be' considered for summer positions.Highacademic
achieve
ment
November 21-International Nickel Company, Manitoba
DivisionGraduating and undergraduate students in Chemistry or
Ge
ology forpermanentandsummer
work. Applicationsfa
will be accepted.
summer work fro'm other students
November 2"The
Great-WestLife
Assurance cOmp.ny-Art
and Science Graduating students interested
in Marketing an
Sales Management, Investment and Systems Analyeis, Admix
istration, programming or actuarial
careers.
November 23-Dow Chemical
Honours Chemistry Graduates fc
analytical, research or development work.
November 23-Canada
ManpowerDivision,Department
of Mal
power and Immigration Graduating students from any facult
interested in personnel selection.
November 24-Industrial Acceptance
Corporation Ltd.-Graduatin
students preferably with strong Economics and/or Mathematic
background for sales and finance management training.
November25-International
Business MachinesCompany Ltd.GraduateandgraduatingstudentsinMathematics,
Physic
andlor Computer Science.
November 28 & 29-Imperial Oil
Limited
(1)ProducingDepartment-Graduatingstudentsin
Math1
matics andlor Physics preferably with at leaat one coun
in Geology for Geophysics career. Limited openings f c
similar undergraduates (Class of 1968) for summer en
ployment.
(2) ComputerServicesDepartment
~raduatingstude;;
inMathematicsand/orPhysicsforpermanentwor
1
Limitedopeningsforsimilarundergraduates(Class
1969) for summer employment.
November 28-Ford MotorCompany of Csnda, Limited
AI
graduating student with preference given to those with a goc
background. in Mathematics and/or Economics.
November 28-The Proeter & Gamble Company of Canada Idmitc
Graduating students in Arta & Science interested in a care
in
Finance,
Marketing,
Purchasing,
Sales Management 1
Systems Analysis.
November 29-Aluminum Company
of Canada, Ltd.
Grad&tix
studentswithmajorsorhonours
in Mathematics,Physi
andlor Chemistry.
Civil Service .
November
30-British
Columbia
Government
Graduating
students
in
Botany,
Biochemistry,
Chemistr
Economics, Statisticsandthoseinterestedinthe
fields c
probation, social work and clinical psychology.
Christmas Work-Students interested in
work at the Post Offic
should register with the Student Placement
Office as soon a
possible.Theyshouldalsohave
a current Social Insuranc
book, obtainable on the first floor, 1039 JOHNSTON STREIT
Uponrelease of theChristmasExaminationtimetable
regir
tered students should report to the Student Placement
OffiC
for specific job referral.
For ,further information and appointment please contact
Yo1
Student Placement Office,
1979 ArgyleAvenue.
-
OD PIANIST FOR NEW YEAR'S
Eve
n o n e Rick at 383-7760.
dame.
Wanted
-
-
ST YEAR'S MUSIC 120 TEXTIN
rood condition. Please phone Geomre
r t 384-7003 if YOU Wbh to d
l
VOUD.
-
-
-
Representativesof
Company of Young
Canadians
The International Nickel
Allinterestedpeopleare
invited to attend the Speakeasy in
the Upper Lounge of the SUB,
Monday a t 12:30.
srrle.
Mced low for quick
C.n be
lcred Nov. 11-13.Phone QR 82956
required.
* * *
Stewart Goodings,Associate
Director of the
Company
of
be in
Young . Canadianswill
Victoria to speak on the C.Y.C.,
at a Speakeasy Nov. 14. Other
members will be present to answeranyquestionsrelating
to
volunteerprojectsherein
Victoria.
~
VW. $laoO; '61VOLVE COUPE
i1100. Both In A-1 condition.
&
Company of Canada, Limited
will beoncampus
NOVEMBER 21rt, 1966
Interviews
can
be arranged at the
Employment
Office by studentsfrom all years in thefollowing
courses:
CHEMISTRY
GEOLOGY
,
Leapin' Lizards Bahnan!!
There's a Geni in M y Telly!
Belowis a dissertation on the subtle connotations and hidden meanings held in illustration
above
...
The studious chap with the do-it-yourself crewcut, specks,lean-hungry look and expression
of rapt concentration symbolizesa typical Uvic
student.Gorgeous creaturewaftingfromthe
phone
symbolizes
Eatan's
Personal
Shopper
andthe .gift boxes in gay,festivewrapping
symbolizes Christmas. The stars don't symbolize anything but they're kind of pretty.
I
Messagecontained - You can do all your
Christmas gift shopping, buying and wrapping
byphone.Just call Eaton'sPersonalShopper
andshe'llchoosethem,chargethemtoyour
account and have them wrapped, if you wish.
And if you're in a delimma idea-wise . she's
brimming with advice.You can callour Christmas geni-usat 382-7141.
..
Ask for tho "?.no#
Soppu"
l
EAT0N'S