Mar. 16 - University of Victoria

Transcription

Mar. 16 - University of Victoria
UNIVERSITY O F VICTORIA, VICTORIA,
MARCH
B.C.,
m
-K
TOVCY PHOTO
Increased liaim between students and administrative officiab in shown by lunch hour conference
in the SUB Director‘s office. 78 delegate3 attended.
OBSERVE!
Distribution of Academic Guidebook questionnaires will take place in
individual classes during the next week. Be sure that your class is represented. Should your class be missed, make sure that you contact the Guidebook
Committee through the SUB general office. Arrangements will be made.
r,
I
I
0
3enators and smgers
head Vietnam talks
Whatitsorganizeis
claim is
“the biggest event to take place
at Uvic this year” is set 21 hours
this Saturday and Sunday.
a
“Vietnam - an International
Seminar”, with ten speakers coming more than 22,000 miles, 3,000
pieces of literature on 25 tables,
seating for 1,000 at both sessions
and a budget of $3,000, appears
to be the“largest
in scopeand
most intense in examination of
any yet to be presented in Western Canada”.
As their Program states, “the
mandate is to provide as compreat#
hensive a forumandview
possible of thepresent
conflict
in Vietnam”.
Hopingto
present as many
points of view as obtainable, the
Vietnam
Seminar
Committee
feels that, ‘when youhave two
persons like Joan Baez and Senator Jackson on, thesameplatform, there is a pretty broad base
for discussion and examination”.
a
To make as fair andunlbieed
a program as financially and
organizationally feasible, t h e
Seminar Committee has chosen
as moderators, Dr. Harvey Richardson, Dr. Charles Tarlton, Dr.
Malcolm Taylor, Mr. Stephen
Bigsby, and Rev. Robert Morris,
andasspeakers
two professors.
two ministers. a physician just
returnedfrom
Vietnam, a Senator, a folksinger, a pacifist, a
politician, a man who has talked
at length with H o Chi Minh, and
a special guest speaker yet to be
announced.
The first session, on March
18.
will be held a t Lansdowne Junior
Secondary School, andthe sec-
Vietnam
ond, on the 19th a t Uvic’s Gordon Head Gymnasium.
Organizers advise that all who
plan to come buy theirtickets
early, these passes beingavailable
a t theSUB,at
Munro’s Bookstore,
and
at
Eaton’s Ticket
Bureau.
A Mobile Restaurant will
be
on hand Saturday. Pillows under
theseat would probably be an
excellent idea.
0
- an Internatid
scmiau
March 18Lansdown Junior Secondary
Doors: 9:15
First Speaker: 1O:OO
March 1Q”uvic Gymnasium
Doors: 12:15
First Speaker: 1:Oo
See
feature pages
8
and
9.
16,1967
was informed last month that his
two-year contractwould notbe
renewed. No reason was given.
Mr. Schwartz then appealed t o a
presidential
appeal
committee
whose report was released last
week.
The appealcommittee stated in
itsreportthatthe
briginal review committeeshould take another look at the decision not to
ren.ew the
contract
of Mr.
Schwartz.
According to thereport, unpublished manuscripts of Mr.
Schwartz were “not seen or fully
considered” by the original committee before it madeits decision.
The announcement earlier this
year bythe
university not to
renew the
contracts
of Mr.
Schwartzand
Alan Mackenzie,
both of the Englishdepartment
and Dr. Tarlton, of the Political
Science d,epartment raised a furor
amongstudentsandthe
public.
411 three were outspoken members of the faculty. No official
reasons were given for
their
release.
Leigihton G . Steele and Richard
Gravil, both of theEnglish departmentand Jack Bush of the
Philosophydepartment
resigned
to protest the dismissals of their
colleagues.
Schwartz Addresses Banquet
I
Highlight of last week’s annual
.4MB Awards
banquet
was
a
speech by ousted Uvic professor
Joseph (Jerry)Schwartz.
Schwartz
drew
thunderous
applause when he toldan audience of about 180 students about
his experiences and conclusions
after two years at Uvic.
Considered one of themost
..articulate” lecturers on campus,
he was thanked at the end of his
speech bya formerAMS president, Paul Williamson, who paid
shim what he said “is the greatest
compliment I can give you as a
student, and that is, to thank you
for being a good teacher.”
U.S. universities. H e thoughtit
would have a bureaucratic structure
but
not
one
@hat “while
chafing, wasnot strangulating”.
H e talked of the hierarchical
structure both of the departments and the university and his
feelings concerning
them
encountered d,uring his two-year
stay.
These first impressions, rather
than disappearing, took on new
Worst of all, he said, was the
effect of the university experience
on the students, many of whom
are “people whose passion to
know and understand, whose elementary decencies of love, loyalty and so on,wereasgreat
or
greater lihan those of any people
I’ve ever known”.
Mr. Schwartz said thetight
institutional control exercised by
the university
results
irr “the
fetish of objectivity, the kind ot
dead quantification” of subject
matterin courses thatpermits
“compulsive judging,examining
testing at every levelof university life”.
Schwartz, a lecturer in the
English department, was told ‘by
the administration earlier this
year that his contract would not
be renewed but was not given a
reason.
Schwartz told his audience that
he had not found Uvic as he had
expected from his experience a t
andfrustrating dimensions, said
Mr. Schwartz.
H e said there must be skepticism “about the wholerange of
codified sanctimonies ‘that surround us-a
healthyreserve
in
the face of authority-a mistrust
of .power just because it is power.”
SCHWARTZ
See SCHWARTZ page t
No. 26
the presidential appeal commit-
L
tee through another faculty mem-
ber.
Members of the committee
which heard the appeal of Mr.
Schwartz are Dr. (Jean-Paul VinDr.
ay, Linguisticsdepartment,
Charles Forward, Geography deDr. JamesHenpartmentand
drickson, History department.
Answering
charges
that
the
committee which originally reviewed the
contract
of Mr.
Schwartz
was
“stacked?’, the
appealcommittee
reportstated
thatit (originalcommittee) w a s
constituted “in a way fair to Mr.
Schwartz inasmuch as this committee was struck to consider all
the re-appointments in the English department”
I t rejected
“any
suggestion”
that the members of the committee
were
“improperly
selected”
by Dr. Alex Wood, Dean of Arts
and Science, “against theinterests of Mr. Schwartz”.
However, the report said “Mr.
Schwartzwasnotcreditedwith
any scholarly activities according
of evaluation as
tothecriteria
outlined in the
draft
tenure
document.”
They found,
fact,
in
that
Schwartz had manuscripts in
varying degrees of completion,
which the original committee had
“notseen
or fully considered”.
The appeal committeesaid it w a s
notits function to evaluate the
qualities of these manuscripts.
%heir report ends that because
“relevant evidence of scholarship
may not have .been considered we
sustain the appeal and recommend that the case Ibe reviewed.‘.
Dr. Malcolm Taylor, university president, said, “the case will
nowbereferred
to the original
committee whichwill reconvene
as soon as they can get together.
H e added, “I hope to have a
recommendation
from
them
as
soon as possible.”
0
Finally
a treasurer
The dragged
out
treasurer’s
race finally ended
with
Keith
Myerstrimming
Russ Tyrrell’s
beardto a close shaveand
a
Ill-vote election victory.
An earlier tie, the first in AMS
election history,forced thc contest to a re-run.
Final returns gave Myers a
627 totd a C
o
m
p
u
e
d t0
w-
d ‘ s 616.
0
‘
I
r
”
”
”
THE MARTLET, MARCH 16, 1967
2
F
I
/
To Hell and Back
ex-addict, and convict,now touring universities speaking on the
drug habit, told of his 17 years
of drugs addiction.
“Drugs were brought into the
prison by taping heroin to the
inside of the w a r d e n ’ s car
washed by the
inmates,”
he
stated.
Edwardson also talked of the
unusualuse of thetherapeutic
drug methedane. The white pill
taken orally to ease craving for
drugs
and
dispensed through
government clinics wasground
into powder by the addicts. They
then added waterputtingthe
solution in a syringe for a“Main
line fix” totakeafree“ride”
once, every three days.
When thedoctors discovered
the addicts misuse of the drugs,
the methedane was then mixed
in a greensyrup,makingan
inter-veiniousintroductioninto
the body fatal. The addicts soon
“Aftertheveins
of my arm
collapsed, therewerethe
ones
in my ankle and hands.”
A t first Edwardsontookone
“shot” a day; however in a short
time he was taking ten tofifteen
“fixes”eachday.
Costing $15
a shot,thetotalpriceperday
was $150 to $225 eachmonth
so
upto $6,000. Thecostwas
great that Edwardsonusedhis
construction company as a front
for “organized crime.”
Mr. Edwardson was caughtby
the police in his 17 year career
as an addict 27 times.
“I played thegame:I
paid
the price.”
Part of the price wasliving
alone, s e p a r a t e d fromhis
family.Hehadmetandmarried in Vancouver, then moved
to the States where he attended
Michigan University taking IndustrialEngineering.Smoking
marijuana at thetimecosting
30c a “stick,”headded“goofballs,” andbarbituatesraising
the cost to $220 a month, forcing him to put his wife to work.
Edwardson, to payforthe
rising price “involving friends”
in
buying
stolen
goods. The
“mental
habit”
of lying
and
thieving became an established
pattern. “I usedeveryone,”he
said.
Edwardsontriedcures,
“cold
Turkey” therapy and medicines,,
yet noneworked
“themental
habitwasstillthere.
No one
had cured my mind.” The faith
of his wife who stayed with him
for 14 years of his sickness,
plus the love of his children
changed his life.
“God used my children to put
a mirror in front of me.”
“With God I took the biggest
fix ofall.”
Since this time
Edwardson
has worked with Teen Challenge
travelling to Canada’s campnees
a n dc o m m u n i t y
gatherings,
speaking of his experiences. 0
0
w
M a n y awards presented
By JACK JACQUES
Small Blocks were awarded to; Marion MalAMS Secretary Linde Baker received a standlory, Heather Seymour, Bob Gage, Peter Westaingovationfrom
180 students as shewaspreway, Ross Bryant, Marg Maysmith, Marg Oliver,
sented with the President’s Award
at the annual
JOHN NlOHTlNOALL PMOTO
Joe Milligan, Tony Fantillo, Bruce Wallace, Ken
AwardsBanquet last Friday.
EDWARDSON
Theaward,presentedtothestudent
who Jackson, John Cliff, Chris Knight, Darrel H w e ,
Dan Evans, Mike Hutchinson, Don Manning, Dave
has contributedmost to studentlifeduringthe
year,wasamongmanythatstudents
received Slater, Glen Harper, George Fuller, Carol Gl’beon.
Athletic pine were won by; DerekReimer,
Despitethethreat
of lung well as creating extra work for during the evening.
for
Bob Taylor, Jan Hooson, Mike Hutchinson, Stew
cancerandsmokers
c o u g h , the custodiansresponsible
Notables such as Judge J. B. Clearihue, Dean
cleaning the buildings.
East, Jill Kelly, AudreyStandal,Marge
Holk,
cigarettes are still being lit up
R. T. D. Wallace and Dean R R. Jeffels aided the
Also,
many
people
just
do
not
Kaki,
VickiMcCandless,
WendySmith,Marion
in the
lecture
rooms. But a
presentations.
Ann Batey,AnnGreenwood,MargMaysmith,
more real threat exists for the care to sit next to a smoke adE.U.S. Activity Award went to Bob Mitchell. Gaynol Vosburgh, Joan O’Boyle, Pat Davie, Mike
dict
for
an
hour
or
two
in
an
addictedstudent. By university
The Most Active Club was the Peace in Vietnam Woodley, Terry Dalton, Frank Vargo, Georges
decree no smoking is permitted already stuffy room.
Committee
and the Most Promising Club was the
A
plea
has
gone
out
for
both
in lecture periods.
Bombezin, Wayne Coulson, Sue Laubenstein
Christian
Council. The Hickman
professors and students to have University
This is a sensibleobjection
M a n a g e d a n d Coached Awards; J o a n
that butt in the ten-minute re- TrophyforCampusSpiritwasawardedtothe
since
many
rooms,
especially
O’Boyle, Chris Knight, Stew East, Tom Thompperiod
where
ash trays VarsityChristian Fellowship.
the new Education Arts lecture cess
son, Bob Crellin.
makecleaningeasierandthe
The Tin Pot Trophy was won by Guy Stanley
theatrewith its plushcarpets,
Activity Pins were awarded to; Carol Knight,
smoother.
0
and
Kathy
Tate.
The
Writer‘s Award
was
are having the floors ruined as breathing
Marion Macaulay, Dave Gillet, Susan Mayse, Jim
awarded to Robin Jeffrey;SpecialPublications
Hoffman, Frank Tovey, John Thomson, Cam ElAward,DerykThompson;
Tryste Award, Mike lison, Bob Robertson,JohnLunam,Stephannie
Hayes. MartletRallyTrophieaweregiven
to Doctermam,MaryParton,
DonGallacher,Sue
Rick Sinklerand Rick Lee. The Martlet Sports Humphries,
Mike
Hutchison,
John
Bergbusch,
Award for athletic ability and sportsmanship was John Anderson,&enLane,
Stein Gudmenseth,
won by Mike Woodley.
Peter
Lewame,
Denis
St. Clair, Connie DelArt Gillan,
BigBlockswereawarded
to; Georges Bom- marque,MarkWalmsley,SueEvans,
......
Ian Halket, Neil Williamson, Rhys Phillips, Steve
bazin,
Daryll
Bissel,
Brian
Craig,
Jack
Newnz:s
::*;<
::::>:
>:.;:
ham, Lyn Hagglund, Lee Hagglund, Bob Ireland, Sullivan and Deryk Thompson.
.:.:.>...
..........
x*
Extra-merit pins were
won by ; Jack SomJohn Phillips, Derek Reimer, Meredith Spike, Jim
........
.:’:.”..:.:.:..
.....
..
.....
......
mers, Sister Margaret O’Donnell, Mike de Rosen....
.....
Vosburgh,AnneJeffery,ClaudiaFerber,Carol
roll, Ellen
Farley,
Brian
White
and
Charles
Phillips, Pat Davie, Vanessa Lodge, James LongBarber.
0
ridge, Oscar Valdal and Gary Bruce.
Cut it out,cancerouscoughers
.:*
You can’t
beat
the taste
of Player’s
filteis.
Professor’s son wins scholarship
A fourth
year
Arts
student
ca. John Ewards, a recent
Under
the scholarship, P e q t
has won the
prestigious
Wood- Rhodes
Scholar
winner,
and
will receive one
wM
row
Wilson
Scholarship
with
Micheline
Paquette, h o n o u r s
education
(with
tutwoother Uvic students receiv- FrenchLiteraturewere
on the Of
ing honourable
mention.
honourable
mention
list.
ition
and
fees paid the
by
founPettit, althoughnotsure
of
dation)and a living stipend of
Robert Pettit’ ‘On Of profes- future plans,
listedYaleor
$2,000. In addition the FonndasorSidneyPettit,head
of the
Toronto as possiblechoices for tionwill award a supplementary
History department, was one of
continuing his studies in clas- grant to thegraduate school he
eightystudentsacrossCanada
history.
sical
chooses.
0
to win thescholarship,recognized as themostprestigious
undergfaduate award in Ameri-
Schwartz
When YOU think
. .
INSURANCE
think of the true cost.
(Continued from page 1)
Butin the middle of allthis,
he said, he has found good things
and goodpeople.
He ended his
speech, “probably my last to any
group at this university”, with
an adaptation of some lines from
a poem ,by George Barker.
“And so I send
Oh, all my faith and all my love,
to tell you, to tell you that you
canmove
morning.”
from mourninginto
0
Contact, now, without
obligation:
IAN R. M. BLAIR
ERNEST FISHER
Res. 384-0695
Bus. 385-1471
Res. 382-6277
Representatives
The Mutual Life
Assurance
Company of
*Canado
0
THE MARTLET,MARCH 16, 1967
3
Council Commentar
By DERYK THOMPSON
This council’s last regular meetingof the year saw participant:;
eagerly rush through a small amount of business in order to tie
up odds and ends before leaving office.
M.L.A. AlanMacfarlane (GOak Bay), who presented a
cheque from the AMS to Education Minister Leslie Peterson Ins:.
week in the Legislature wrote to
council complementing then1
their “public spirited approach.”
DerekReimer, Men’s AthleticRepresentativesummarized
f .
members a report proposing increased sports facilities
on campw
prepared by the Sub Committee on Physical Education andAthlEtip
Facilities. Council passed a motion to recommend tothe
ministration that they adopt the ideas in the report.
~
lj.
25 long-await: :i
CUS ChairmanBrianSmithreportedthat
Expo passports have arrived. These passports, for students
un&r
21 are on sale in the General Office.
Ken Hart, vice-president, informed council that his sole project
of the year, meal tickets, had been cancelled as only 15 were sold.
Hopefully the idea will be initiated again in September.
7/8 rulehas
approved a
A facultycommitteestudyingthe
procedure which would virtually eliminate the rule. Their proposal
has yet to be accepted by the hierarchical structure of tbe administrative bureaucracy.
For further information
384-7734
telephone
-
By CHARLES BARBER
“Unrest o n t h e u n i v e r s i t y c a m p u sis a symptom of an underlying disease in the whole
Jan Bevan, Free University researcher in Victoria.
system,” said Miss
“Unrest on the
University
campus is ‘a symptom of a n underlying disease inthe
whole
system,”said Miss J a n Bevan,
FreeUniversityresearcher
in
Victoria.
Speakingtoan
audience of
70, Miss Bevan outlined plans
beingmade
toinvestigatethe
establishing of a Free Univer.
sity
in
this
city.
“To conduct
sufficient
research and examine fully all the
possibilities, we need to work
for about three to four months,
andrequire a budget of some
$8,000.”
Paul Le Baron, anotherresearcher,statedthatthe
project would look into all methods
of financing, initiating,structuring, and finding staff for the
school. “Three qualified pro-
fessorshavealreadyexpressed
interest in working at the Free
University,” he said.
Although Bevan and Le Baron
conceded a t every point that
theyhadnot
committed themselves toanyset
philosophy
about a FreeUniversity,they
stressed that t hi s deliberate
non-committal was necessary at
this point, for they want to receive ideas, suggestions, comments, and help from people in
orderto find out whatismost
feasible,useful,andpotentially
successful.
“We’re notheretotell
you
what we aregoingtodo;
we
come and ask you totell
us
what we should do.”
Intheirterms,
it is “a university which allows students
andtiachersfreedomto
investi-
gate, inquire into or discuss any
subject; one where discussion
of controversialsubjectsis
encouraged,whereresearch
may
be pursued, where
establishments may be questioned, where
t o experiment
teachersarefree
with
teaching
techniques, all
withoutfear of reprisal, inhibition, or censorship within the
university.”
implication,
yB
mostuniversitiesare
not performing these functions.
Miss Bevan statedthatFree
Universities havebeen tried, and
some have worked, at New York,
San Francisco, Toronto, Boston,
Seattle, and even Victoria. “We
will drawontheirexperiences
and resources, and
with
this
found our Free Universities on
the
firmest
base we can.”
Heat of Apollo’s job
might be withstood
Bruce “Do-nothing”Wallace emerged victorious in the hotly
contested election for president of the Apollo Club recently.
There were no other candidates.
After the tense vote in the sun-lamp room, Wallace announced
that he had given severalminutesthoughttothejobandthat
“despite a groin pain I received playing soccer I am confident that
I can withstand the heat of the job.”
Outgoing president,
Steam
Sullivan, was elected 1967-68
Treasurer and promised to obtain a better deal from Clubs’ council.
Club’s director elect, Peter Gibson, was asked to comment on
Wallace’s victory and the Apollo Club in general.
“God Bless them both,” he replied.
Has been Clubs’ director
Jack
Macdonald was
most
enthusiastic.
0
ha,
“Ha,
ha,” he mumbled.
Not bloody good enough
In a three day drive 768 pints
of blood were donated to the
Red Cross by Uvic students. The
drive held from March 1-3 had
a goal of 1000 pihts.
~~
Clinical director, Mr. A. T.
Lashmir,said,“thesewerethe
three worst days in three
years.”
I n previous yearsthedrives
werefortwodaysyielding
a
similar total.
0
Phone
~
Obituary
Douglas J. Dutton, age 18,
first year Uvic Arts and
Science student p a s s e d
awayMarch 8, 7:30 p.m.
Royal Jubilee Hospital,
victoria. Mourning h i s
death are his parents, Mr.
and Mrs. J. A. Dutton of
Victoria, and his sister
andbrother, Dorothy and
Bruce, both Uvic students.
384-3552
2043
CADBORO BAY ROAD
VICTORIA, B. C .
“
UNIVERSITY ACCOMMODATION FOR
MALE STUDENTS
0
By mid-September the University will have approximately 165
places for male students in the two new residential buildings
of the first college.
0
Students planning to re-registerin
the session 1967-68 who
wish to apply for accommodation should do so through the
office of Mrs. Shirley Baker, M. Building. Application forms
.
.
ROB REEDMOTORS
-
SPECIAL SPRING SALE
One Vehicle Only
Magnificent 1950 PONTIAC
‘67 plates,Radio
Martlet office
??r ..
,
I
,
.
.
i
!.
j.
.
.:
. ,y.,
. ....::.. ... ..‘;x.:h:.
Y.
,-:
Applications will be received from graduate students, lecturers
and instructors who wishto serve as dons. Please
apply through
Mrs. Baker.
any offer consideredwithgreatdeliberation
deliversealed bids tothe
will be sent on request.
?
.
”
”
THE MARTLET, MARCH 16, 1967
4
University of Victoria
Authorized as Second Class Mailby
the Post OfficeDopartOttawa, and for the payment of postage in cash.
ment,
Subscription rates: $2.00 for students andalumni
year, For non-students, $3.00 peracademicyear.
Days: 477-3611
p a academic
CanadainPrinted
Q
Approach with caution
”?
-
The
introduction
of the
Prescribed
Substances
Act-the
anti-LSDandmarijuana
bill-into
the
presentsession of t h e B.C. Legislature raises the
traditional moral question of whether persons using
j u s t sickandthe
thesedrugsarecriminalsor
secondary, but stronger point, on whether governmentlegislationshouldentertherealms
of t h e
individualprotectinghimselffromhimself.
Crime
is
described
as
an
important
offence
against the laws of right or something seriously at
variancewithmorality.Whatwemustaskourselves-saddled as we are with, at present, a very
limitedamount
of information-iswhetherthe
at variance with
usage of LSD and marijuana is
society’s morality.
‘RETARD OR ADVANCE’
The question must be put. Is the present legisl a t i o n - o ra t t e m p t at it-theresult
of public pressure,oradministrationpanic,orisit
a sincere
attempt at correctinga rift in our moral makeup.
Thenaggingsuspicionisthatthelegislation
h a s beenintroduced
a t a combination of public
pressure (or, and we hate to admit this, newspaper
pressure) together with the populist theory
of our
province’s health and law departments.
Dr. Pat McGeer, anadmirable
MLA withan
obvious crusade, drew attention to the ‘epidemic’ of
LSD users in Vancouver high schools (it is
so easy
to exaggerate in these sort of cases) and the panic
buttons were pushed in James Bay-within a week
(a week of panic snow stories from our newspapers)
a bill was cranked out-a bill so brief that it can
be contained on one order paper and
so loose t h a t
one sometimes wonders whether it will be effective.
’C
house
There is no excuse for an introverted view of st,udent
activities!! Tlhe second subsection in the pre-amble to
Ju3t as n o a t t e n t i o n h a s b e e n p a i d t o t h e m o r a ourconstitution rea&-‘‘The
purpose of the Society is:
implications of t h e Bill no attention has been paid
to advance the cause of higher learning in the Province
to the possible effect of its implication on the hir
of B.C.”
school and university students.
I see the AM’S as a means’of certain ends. Our means
are limited but we do have some and we must use them
Everybody is aware of the rebellious nature of
to the maximum. Certain of these ends which we are to
theadolescent.Everybodyknowsthatmakingan
aim for are: (1) public education, thus ridding the public
exciting thing taboo, will, in the vast majority
of
of false conceptions and false stereotypes; (2) the aiding
LSD andmarijuana,and
cases,makeconsuming
of those not as fortunate a s ourselves, and (3) helping
any other drugs that are banned, the
‘in’ thing to
do. Why is it, only in recent weeks, that we have
been reading of cases of elementary school children
sniffing glue? What is the difference in this age of
progress between the teenager slipping behind the
woodshed for that forbidden smoke of two generationsago, of theexcitement of freelove of one
Dear Sir:
generationagoand
of taking a t r i p at ahippy
I am a ,high school student who, due to the backwardfriend’s
0
ness of the Victoria School Board,is forced to use the
facilities of your excellent library. Ins our s c h o l library
are sufficient books to satisfytheaveragestudentwho
wishes t o pass with the minimum amount of work, however,anyonewishing
togetanywheremustmakethe
W h a t we, as thegenerationaffectedbythis
long,long,journey“out
t o the University”.
If I may bepermitted an observation I havenever
legislation,mustattemptto
do, is toriseabove
beenin the library when it has been so crowded as to
thepresentcontroversy.Wemustpersuadeour
drive Uvic students to the can. But, if this situation does
parents and the legislators that the
LSD f a c t , f o r occur would some kind Uvic student enlighten me, whereall its s&iness, must be studied not only from the by I will relinquish my seat. I am recognizableby the
health viewpoint but from the moral viewpoint.
haunted look on my face and *my shifty eyes as I slink
about
stealingthe
students’seats.Forgive
me for my
There are rational views for and against the
presumptuousness.
drug. On our own campus there are professors who
Yours sincerely,
are researching deeply, under controlled conditions,
Betty Simpson,
i n t o t h e use of halloucengenics. They are approachhopefully Arts I next year 0
able, and they must be approached to see w h a t t h e
case is for or against this drug.
Agreed there is an immediate danger with the
expanding use of this drug, because of the ignorance that is rife, but we must not allow this to cloud
our views on controlling drugs.
__
There are many committees that need students; some
in thisissue of theMartlet; please
read the list and consider with which one you would like
to be involved. Application forms are in the SUB Office.
of thesearelisted
(Memo to RCM’P-I attended a Communist meeting
1964 andenjoyed
it-stick
thisinyour
inDecember
God bless
you
real
good!!)
0
dossier and
may
T.B. speaks
Find out
.;-
d,ian slip) will be responsible for the organization of from
houses, that will be used for student housing next
year. The Co-op committee needs at least five students
(not council twits) to help on the project.
2-4
Given a properpassage,givenexpansionon
moral as well as medicalgroundsthisBillcould
be one of t h e most progressive pieces of legislation
yet ‘seen in modem society.
Rushed through, the
Bill will only lead to the expansion of the mickey
m o u ~ esituationfoundintheUnited
States and
Canada at t h e present time.
0
Suppression
Gentlemen:
The Education faculty is running scared.
In the post
couple of weeks, since the coming to light of the course
and
evaluation questionnaire, many of the Ed.profs
lecturers have become almost paranoid in their attempts
,
t o suppressthe implementation of this evaluation.
These attempts have ranged from thinly-veiled threats
to cajolery. Themost
popularmethod
of dissuading
education students is to draw a n analogybetween DUZ
evaluation of ourprofessorsand an evaluation of ourselves as teachersbyourgrade
5 pupils. Thetheory
being, I suppose, to show ,how valueless our opinions are.
I have a child of m y own in grade 5 and I really don’t
see much comparison between her opinion and that d a
matureuniversitystudent.
-.
Nevertheless, the point I a m making is that much ir
being done and more will be done to prevent the E d u u tion students from making a complete evaluation of dl
their courses, and since they have nearly a year of cwditionedapathybehind
&em, they may not repsond to
this threat without the assistance and encouragement of
you Arts and Science peogle.
IHE M A W E T
EdiW
- Bob M e M i l b
Sincerely,
K e n n e k J. Kennedy
Ednertion and
(former Seminar Coavcner EVS
(continued
011
page I)
0
THE MARTLET, MARCH 16, 1967
6
Ousted AIberta professor tells all
By DERYK THOMPSON
I t happens a t Alberta too. Last year the contracts
of two professors a t the University of Alberta were not
nonrenewed underconditions
similar t o therecent
renewal cases a t Uvic.
InJanuary,
1966 Professors Colwyn Williamson
and David Murray, both of the Philosophy Department
at Albertawere told their positions at the university
would
be
terminatedinAugust
of thatyear.
Two
protest resignations followed.
Professor Murray held a B.A. and M.A. from Dalhousie and is a Rhodes scholar.
Professor Williamson, 28, who holds a B.A. and a
B. Philosophy from LeedsandOxford,lecturedhere
last week on Marx. Lastyear
heedited
anantigovernment
broadsheet
called
“Commonsense.” The
magazine made him a prominentcritic of the Social
Creditgovernment.
Williamsonoutlined thefactsconcerning
his dismissal as follows:
In November, 1965, knowing a decision concerning
his tenure a t Albertawasimminent,andhaving
been
offered a job a t his old university (Leeds), Williamson
discovered from his department head that tenure in his
case wouldbe “amereformality.”Hetherefore
declined the job a t Leeds.
After returning from a conference in December he
received a letter informing him that his contract would
not be renewed. Academic incompetence as a philosopher
andteacher,”was the givenreason.
Publicityresultedinmassivestudentprotest.In
of at
contrast t o talk of strikesandsit-insspoken
Uvic, Albertastudentssignedpetitionsand
organized
visits to administration officials reinforced by a deluge
of letters.
“The whole affairwasveryintimidatingandeffected the whole life of the university,” said Professor
Williamson.
At this point university officials backed down and
changed theirstand.Thereasonnowwas“thedes-
Letters
(Continued from Page 4)
Speechless
I)
,
Sir:
My thanks t o Stephen Bigsby
for presenting me with
the
President’sTrophyandAward.
I was speechless forthefirst
timein my life,andtherefore
unable t o eulogize (as it deemed
I
suitableonsuchoccasions).
havenothadanyeasyterm
of
office - butStephenhascertainlymadeitaninteresting
one, andIsincerelyappreciate
his t h o u g h t f u l n e s s t o me
throughout the year.
am
I alsoverygrateful
to
Mrs. Kathy Bigsby for her invaluablehelpduringmy
tern
of office, particularly
in
the
re-run e l e c t i o n for A.M.S.
Treasurer, when sheand
Gail
Nash sympathetically took care
of the “behind the scene” strain
for me. To the
many
(about
700 all told) students who have
helped in the 1966-67 elections:
I’m afraid I haven’t figured out
a legitimate method of eliminating theseatrocities,butthank
you for your assistance.
Linde E. Baker,
retiring A.M.S. Sec’y.0
*
cheapsupportfoisted
on him
by the above student faction. He
could very well have won without it, thank you.
(At Least)
Three Disillusioned
Students.
0
of a moresubtleinsultthan
toasting someone with water.
Duringthevariousspeeches
andawardpresentationsthere
was a glaring,grossoversight.
There were many speeches congratulating people for receiving
some award or another but not
one person congratulatedStephen Bigsby for a very successWatery banquet
ful year’s work. It seems people
Sir:
receivingpettyactivityawards
realize
I
that perhaps
the
weremoredeserving
of praise
rules of etiquetteare notfolthan aman who has done so
lowed as often in Canada as much work and carried a great
they
are
in some
European
deal of responsibility for a full
countries but I still find it very year.
difficult t o explain
or
underSurelysomeonesuch
as Mr.
standtwo
occurrences a t the
McLeancould
havegivenSteAwards Banquet.
phen a vote of thanks. Onbehalf of those who noticed this
First of all, I wassurprised
t o putit
mildly,when
Judge oversightand who perhapsresented
it,
I
apologize
to
Mr.
Clearihueproposed
a toast t o
the Queen in water.Iam
not Bigsby.
Denis St. Claire
evennecessarilyinfavour
of
toasting the Queen but if it must P.S.: ,Will theperson who took
be done i t could at least be done
my activitypin a t thebanquet
properly. I find it hard t o think return
it.
0
please
*
0
the committee wavered but the
decision remained mchanged.
Professor Williamsondescribes theFaculty Dean
as a “very moral man.”
Calleda“friendlessman”
by the Dean after the
first decision he was labelled a “trouble-maker” after
student protest began.
With the issuance of the CAUT statement, there
has been no public comment by the university. But the
faculty is pushing demands for strong reforms in procedurewhich are essentially the same as pressed for
by Professor Williamson.
Williamson felt that Professor Murray, the other
non-renewal
case,
would have
received
tenure
except
for him.
the
Professor Williamson isgoingtoEnglandin
summer but has no definite future plans.
Williamson (27 at thetime)waschargedbythe
Head of the Department with a lack of publication in
the discipline. He has hadworkspublishedin
“Mind”
and the “American Philosophical Quarterly,” two noted
academic
publications.
However
forthreeyearshe
had no publicationsin Philosophy.TheHead
of the
Department has had no publications in Philosophy since
LADIES‘ SPECIALTY SHOP
Of a recentarticlebyWilliamsonin
a Political
Science magazine, the Head stated, “it may be of conceivable interest to Political Scientists but is definitely
not of interest to Philosophers.”
,Where does “Commonsense” come in? The Premier
of AlbertamadehishostilitytowardsWilliamsonclear
and had his speeches recorded which he then replayed
when the two weieconfronted in a publicmeeting.
Williamson charged that police kept a stake-out on his
house and called for an investigation The police issued
a confidential report stating, said Williamson, that the
stake-out hadn’t occurred but
if i t happened again to
let
know.police
0
Correction
Sir:
I would liketocorrect
some
syntactical errors in my
March
9 editorial. In the fourth paragraph,thelasttwosentences
should read “CUS, as a collective will,can
do noless.The
first option isthe onlyacceptable one.
In thefifth paragraph, “plebiscitary.’’ The last sentence should
read “ . . . will this be done
according
to
what
those
responsible
consider
relevantor
necessary, o r will they reflect
the dominant “reality ?”
The
last
paragraph
should
read, “The only satisfactory criteria to be used inconsidering
CUSS future must be based on
the ideologicalpositions of the
individualsconcerned.Anydirect
interference
by
“reality”
would result in complete dominance of Canadianconformity.”
Steven A. Horn
*
Thanks
Sir :
I would liketothankallthe
people who worked for, and supported me in both elections.
Specialthanksto
Me1 MacDonald,Diane
McKechnie, and
John
Thies
for
all
their
invaluablehelpandadvice.
I ti s a great honourto
be
elected tothis
position and I
will do my utmost to fulfill the
duties of treasurer.
Keith Myers 0
HELP WANTED!
interesting committees:
where you will find the latest trends in
I
Senate
1. Library
2. Book Store
3. Parking
Campus Fashions
DRESSES
MILLINERY
HANDBAGS
COATS
FORMALS
J EWELERY
SPORTSWEAR
ACCESSORIES
SUITS
4. CampusPlanning
5. Social Work School
AMS
1 . Co-op Housing
2. FinanceCommittee
3. CUS Committee
4. BCAS Committee
5. SUB Management Board
6. ConstitutionCommittee
7. and a multitude of EAC commi ttees.
There is a place for all interested students
- Please pick up application forms from
[
-
1617 1619 DouglasPhone
EV 3-7181
G-
1950.
Students are needed for a varietyof
Victoria’s Most Complete
Graft
Sir:
Wearethreestudents
who
would like to extend our sincere
sympathy
to
certain
students
of the university who have not
yet learned
the
meaning
of
democracy.
We do not wish tocriticize
Alex Muir.He
willdo a good
job. We are criticizing
those
who vote against a capable student because of irrelevant personalfeelings.Thenumber
of
students who blatantly admit to
using Charles Barber‘s Vietnam
beliefs as a reason for voting
him down as PUB’S director is
shocking.
Vietnam
has nothing
to do with the electing of PUB’S
Director.
The
PUB’S
Director
is not The Martlet editor.
We were disgusted and
sickenedby theimmaturity which
made a farce of this election.
We understand that Alex himself is not very happy with the
tructive effect Professor Williamson had on the universityandhisdepartmentregardingdemocraticprocedures and self-govern’ment.”
Williamson, tenmonthsearlierhad
beenmade
chairman of a committee struck t o propose reforms in
university
procedures.
“They
(the
committee)
were
strangledinthattheirsuggestionswereinitiatedin
reverse,”saidWilliamson.
In September, 1965, Williamson drafted a letter to the dean saying the committee was a farce but didn’t send it.
In March, 1966 both Williamson and Murray asked
for an investigationby the(CanadianAssociation
of
University Teachers) CAUT.
A CAU’T investigatingcommittee issued a statementin December which was published intheFebruaryquarterlyreport
of theassociation.Thestatement clears the professors of charges of incompetence
but is only mildly critical of the procedures used, just
stating they were “wrong.”
Williamsoncalled thereport“watered
down and
wishy-washy.”
Procedure involved in reviewingcontracts at the
University of Alberta is similar to that employed here.
A committee of the vice-president is organized by the
Dean of theFacultyandthe
Head of theparticular
department. Membershipincludes the Dean, the Head,
a tenured member of the department and two tenured
members of anotherdepartment.Allmembershave
a vote.Theoriginal
decision of thecommitteewas
unanimous.
An appeal by Williamson to the Academic Welfare
Committee of the Staff Associationbrought a recommendation that an entirelynewcommittee be struck.
Howeverthisrecommendationwasnot
followed
when a second tenure committee was convened.
When the second tenure committee met the Head
of the Philosophy Department, said he would resign if
theoriginal decision was not upheld.“Wehad
a personality conflict,” saidWilliamson.Twomembers (the them
of
the SUB general office. Interest only criteria.
~
THE MARTLET, MARCH 16,1967
6
-*
Canada
99 double header
Canada 99 has t w o simultaneous programs for thisweek.
These are the last two seminars
Piccolos
and water
in concert
On Thursday, March 16, at
8:OO p.m. in Ed. Arts 144, The
-.+
*
University of Victoria Band will
perform its fifth annual concert
underthedirection
of Howard
Denike.
The first selection is Concerto
in C Major forPiccolo and Band,
featuring soloistNancyChapman.Concerto in C Major was
composed by AntoniaVivaldi,
composed of nearly 70 string
concertosand 40 operas. Suite
FromWater
Musicby
G. F.
Handelisthesecondselection
ontheprogramme.
It features
the French Horn section and the
Trumpet section. Otherworks
include Siegfrieds’ Funeral Music
by
R. Wagner, Slavonic
Dance No. VI by A. Dvorak and
Tchaikowsy’s Franciscada Rimini (excerpts).
AContemporary
selection,
highlighting
the
evening,
will be
Concertino for Woodivina Quintet and Band, by Newel1 Long.
Thesoloists are NancyChapman, flute; Diana Brown, clarinet;andJim
Thompson,bassoon; also, Corinne D u n n,
Freneh Horn and Jan Franklin,
oboe, who have beenchosen to
be in TheNationalYouthOrchestra, 1967. Come and SUPport your band; tickets
will be
0
V a i l ,able at the door.
of the series and seats are free
for all comers.
The topic of the third Canada
99 panel is Canada’secenomy
during the 1960’s. As shown by
theFederal
government’screation of the EconomicCouncil
of Canada in 1964, this decade
of economic growth,advancing
technology, automation a nd
dominant American interest has
created an unprecedented public
awareness of the importance of
the ecenomic structure.
The panel consists of the following: Dr. Arthur J. R. Smith,
one of two
Directors
of the
Economic
Council
of Canada;
Professor Anthony Scott, Chairm a n of theDepartment
of
Economics at UBC;and
Professor Gordon Bertram,Chairman of
Uvic’s
Department of
Economics and Political Science.
Professor
Bertram
will chair
the panel discussion.
Eachspeaker will present a
brief statement of position: this
will be followed by a general
questionand discussionperiod.
Thismeeting
will be held in
E-A 144, Tuesday, March 21, at
8:OO p.m. Free seatsmay
be
reserved at theSUBGeneral
Office.
InSeminar No. 4, t w o acute
observer-participators will scrutinize the unfolding scene of art
in the second half of the twentieth
century.
What effects on
are are to be expected from the
impact of the new technology ?
Is “fine art” dead ? Has easel
the
painting a future ? Can
gap between
society
and
the
artist, opened dangerously wide
for capital.
........... .....
since 1906, be closed What of
“OP” and “POP’ and “OB”
Theseissues will be openedand many others - in a discussionbetweentwo
of themost
articulate
and
least
inhibited
spokesmen in Canada today.
Thepanel,chaired
by Professor Tony Emery, consists
of
t h e following:
Barry
Lord,
Editor of ArtstCanada, formerly
Canadian Art; ex-actor,
museum curator,
G ove rn o r General’s gold medallist, Woodrow Wilson Fellow, graduate of
McMaster
and
Harvard,
poet
andpoetryreader,andChairman of the St. John Committee
to End the War in Vietnam;
and
JackShadbolt,
56 - year - old
painter,
teacher
a n d Grand
Middle-Aged Man of Canadian
painting;graduate
of Victoria
College, ex-President of the
Students’Council,Mainstay
of
the VancouverSchool
of Art,
winner of the Guggenheimand
innumerable lesser a w a r d s ,
Canada
Council
andCanadian
GovernmentTravelfellowships.
REMEMBER! Education-Arts
Auditorium, Tuesday, March 21,
8:OO p.m. FREE! Coffee will
be.
0
TheBirth
of a Nation
In 1915, D.
‘W.
Griffithreleased what was to be the first
fullyintegratedfeature
in the
history of the cinema. This film,
“TheBirth of a Nation,”(originally titled “The Klansman”)
was of thehighestranks
of
filmic achievement. For over
thirty years it was the centreof
a raging controversy, bound up
in theracialand
Dolitical dis-
By CAM ELLISON
Last Tuesday, March 7, the Victoria Chamber Orchestra
under Bryan Gooch played its first concert at the University
in E-A 144, performing works by F’rancesco Banonti, Haydn,
andBenjaminBritten.
Barzonti is unknown to me, but the piece chosen, Opus
4, Number 1, was very well chosen, and well done, save that
the tempo was rugged at times in the first movement.
The major work on the program was the
Concerto in D
for flute and orchestra
byHaydn,althoughsomeclaimthe
piece is by Hoffmann.Peoplelike
thatarethe
musical
equivalent of the Shakespeare-Is-Really-Marlowe Committee.
But t o the point. Flautist Jan Menting, who normallydisplays a slightly astringent tone, proved himself highly adaptable, andproduced all the warmth that the
piecerequires.
The piece was very nicely done, but the orchestra re-entries
after the cadenzas were not very neatly done; thereshould be
no slowing of the tempo at the orchestra entry - it sounds
amateurish.
The Britten Simple Syphone closed the programme, and
balanced i t well. In some ways, this was the least well done.
a fairly difficultwork.
I feltthe
I t is,despitethetitle,
orchestra did not really get into the spirit of the piece until
part-way through the first movement, and at times the piece
lacked thenecessary,andcharacteristic
“flow” of Britten.
Despitethis, it was welldone, particularlyconsideringthe
difficulty of the piece.
I thought Mr. Gooch handled the concert well, and basically his interpretation was very
good.My
onlycriticism is
of hisconductingstyle.Havingplayedunderhim
at one
time, I am somewhat familiar with it. His wrist tends to be
a bit loose, and he would likely find it cosier and less tiring
if hekepthis
elbows down. It does tend to confuse the
orchestra. However, his command of thesituation is complete.
Tonight, at 8:00, the Uvic Concert Band will be performing in the Gym. Ticketsmaybehadfrom
Bandmembers,
in the SUB, or, I presume, at the door.
Tomorrow evening, at 8:00, the Choir and Motet will be
performing at St, Mary’s, Elgin Road, Oak Bay. There is
no admission but a collection will be taken. Both these
concerts should be good - do take the time to attend;
it will
be worth it.
0
of its initial
release
there
is
a
Two
AMS
presidents
have
been
appointed
to
a committee
longhistory
of rioting and
which
will
studyuniversitygovernment.
Past President Stephen
Picketingsurrounding
it, andBigsbyandnewlyelectedPresident
McLean will be part of the
by 1950 the filmhadbeen
90
committeewhichwill
examine the possibility of placing students
censored that only One half of on the Senate and the Board of Governors as outlined in an AMs
its Original length Of 200 min-policybrief
inJanuary.
utes remained.
President McLean said“This is a positive step in the direction
Theprint we shallscreen is
totally uncut and presented with
of more students influence in the total university picture.”
its historic,artistic,andenter-Last
month threestudents were appointed to the Senate at
tainmentmeritsonlyin
mind.Simon
Fraser University. A fewweeksago
a facultycommittee
Truly no retrospections of the at U.B.C., set uptoconsiderstudentparticipation
in university
American
cinema
silent
would
government,
recommended
student
senators.
0
be complete if i t did not include
this work.
Griffith’s intentions
was
to
prepare a historicallyaccurate
andentertainingstudy
of the
Every F R I D A Y - t h e Phuaohs, 10-2
American Civil War and ReconSATURDAY-%
Purple Onion prcstruction Era. However his
e n t s one of Victoria’s newcat formd
5-piece
g
r
o
u
p
personalbiasesseemed t o have
a rather
entered,resultingin
Couples Only
Food Available
uncomplimentary picture of the
Open Friday andSaturday
American
Negro
and
a hero
1 1 p.m. to 3 a.m.
worship of the KKK. However
382-0222
386-001 1
for the serious and casual
film
$1.00 reduction an Fridays
with
goers, “The Birth of a Nation,”
AMs &r&
is ,beyondquestionwellworth
the time spent watching it.
Parents and Students
THE McPHERSONLiBRARY
Protect your investment in
education
.. .
WILL BE CLOSED:
Extremely low term rates on the
lives of students. Convertible to
permanentinsurancea
fter
G. H. POlTER
Good
Friday,
March 24th
Easter Sunday, March 26th
Wm. G. HENDERSON, C.L.U.
THE
STANDARD LIFE
Library access but limited service on:
ASSURANCE CQ.
Mondpy, ktq&27th
Saturday, March,
25th
yp;
.I.
C q y k r ‘ s First
-
Sirkc 1833
2*tbtoI,
r
:,
I.
’
THE MARTLET, MARCH 16, 1967
7
~~
Ret,urnJournev
m
a jolly evening
1
TRANSLOVE AIRWAYS PRESENTS VICTORIA‘S
FIRST AUTHENTIC PSYCHEDELIC
’
LG
I HT SHOW AND
DANCE
Thetheatrewas
packed full
all three nights, and, at a dollar
a seat,must
have provided a
handsome return. Both the perf o r m e r s and the audiences
seemed to enjoy each other immensely. Where, then,wasthe
failure ?
After the initial impression of
large room stuffed with bodies
common to all these affairs, the
first thing that struck me was
the brilliance of the t w o red
EXIT signs. I would estimate
them at 700 watts apiece. The
luridred
glow theycast over
thedarkened
room andstage
seemed tosetthetone
of the
whole production. The house
lights dipped a bit lower, and
several figures stumbled
over
the s t a g e , taking positions,
tighteningtheir
tie-knots, and
patting their hair in place. Suddenly a faint light illuminated
one of the figures, who, striking
a striking pose, said: “Dylan
Thomas-poet.
Born . .Wales.
Educated . . . ’’ and so on. It
was somethinglike this, at least.
I have seen similar productions
a
’
.
in which grade-schoolers come
on stage andinform you that
they are the spirit of the trees,
the mountains, the working men,
and so on. I assumed that the
people who informed me about
Thomas in a similarlydramatized fashion were all Spirits
of Biography.
I t wenton
abit,
andthen
a
someone decided to
recite
poem. One of his colleagues
may have slyly warned me, but
I didn’t benefit fromthis
caveat. I was completely unpreparedforwhatwasto
come.
The reader assumed a soulful,
.poetic pose, raised one hand
with considerable effect, and
said, “We thrpm bik fomonoglish meggik lone
awek
the
zzaipin zzongish fuuur . . . ”
and so on. I was astounded. I
hadneverheard
such a sensitivity for the
musical qualities
of language.Herewas
an ear
for consonants, and vowel-ridden
soul. A n d the consistency!
Every one of thereadershad
mastered, to varyingdegrees,
this mode of expression. Every
one of the poems was a fascinating aural experience.
The prose was read in a less
sensitive fashion, which rendered it totally comprehensible.
consistency,
A
however, was
& CANADA 99
Last Two Panels
l8dIW7
featuring
Blues x Five
- .
D.B.G.J.W.
JugBand
Visual Stimulation by Hwdlighh
achieved here as well. All the
prose pieces seemed to be the
same story, with the
exception
of ‘sam Bennet with a bottle on
his finger,’ which wasdisgustingly well done, by far the best.
I know this not because I heard
it, but because I havereadit,
and it was the only prose selection on theprogramme
which
deviatedfromthe
norm. Actually, I fled after the second
intermission, ran to the library,
and looked forthe
Complete
Works to see whathad
gone
wrong. As it turned out, nothing had gone wrong. It is just
thatreadings
of Thomasare
done best by Thomas, in a completely informal and untheatrical environment. You can listen
to his records in your own home
with much moresatisfaction.
9:OO p.m.
Nominated for 2 Academy Awards
However, the audience seemed
toenjoythis
as anentertainment(and it p r e t e n d e d to
nothing more), and as a social
event. I can make no comments
it merely
on its faults,since
was what it was.
ReturnJourneywasrecreation, and the critic has no place
in recreation. He can fume
beis hapcausenothingcreative
pening, or he can assume that
someone was attempting to be
creative,
and
a t t a c k them
viciously.
0
CLUB TAN&
March 18
$1.50 head
per
Michelangelo Antonioni’s
first English language
film
Vlnessa Redgrave
I
N- AdmHtmnc. k
“ I h
co-storring
David Hemmings
Sarah Miles
I
UNIVERSITY OF VICTORIA
CAMPUSPLAYERS
present
‘WAITING FOR GODOT“
by SAMUEL BECKElT
as a workshop project
Director:FrederickEdell
PHOENIX THEATRE
Seminar No. 3
Rapid Advance in the 1960’s
Panelists: MR. ARTHUR J.R. SMITH
0
(Director EconomicCouncilofCanada)
-
MARCH 24# 25# 27 April 1st
March 25 and April 1st
-
-
8:30 p.m.
2:30 p.m.
Reservations: 477-4821
Tickets: $1.50
Students: 2 for 1, except Friday and Saturday
PROF. ANTONY SCOIT
(Chairman Economics Department, UBC)
PROF.GORDON BERTRAM
(Chairman Uvic Economics andPolitical
Department)
Science
8 p.m.
SUBLounge
Seminar No. 4
UNIVERSITY OF VICTORIA
CHOIR AND MOTET CHORALE
4
CONCERT
of
Art and the Masses
Panelists:
BARRY
LORD
SacredandSecular,Music
(Editor Arts/Canadu)
JACK ‘SHADBOLT
FRIDAY
(Leading Canadian Artist)
MARCH 17
PROF. TONY EMERY
(Uvic Fine Arts Department)
a p.m.
Education-Arts Bld~., Room 144
1
French Hand Laundry (Vancouver)
By ECURB TENNEB
ReturnJourney,
a Dyla n
Thomas miscellany presented by
theEnglishDepartment
in the
lecture theatre of the EducationArts Building March 9 to 11,
was a smashing success and/or
failure.
~~
8:OO p.m.
”
7“I
b
I
THE MARTLET,
1967
MARCH 16,
8
“VIETNAM
AN INTER
=.
Professor Baez
Joan
Mordecai Breimberg
A world-famous
folk-singer,
an
ardent
pacifist, the vicepresident of TheInstitutefor
Prof. Breimberg, a member of
the Department of A n t h r o -
a Violent
World.”
the Vietnam
War.”
HORD
M r . Thomas
Hoyden
Rev. Ray Hord
Mr. Haydenhas been to Vietnam, held talkswith
Ho Chi
Minh, isco-outhoring
a book
Oneof the best-knownspokesmanfortheUnited
Church o
Canada,the
Secretary tothe
withStaughton
L p d , is a
past president of Students for a
Democratic
Society,
and
has
chosen for discussion the subject,“ChangingAmerican
&tosponse
Revolution.”
Vietnam.”
BAEZ
Do you needTIRES
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try the fabulous N e w P e r m”Curve“.
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382-464 1
388-5585
3884532
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cos
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1031 Hillside
of every
description
will
11)
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and
Social
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of
that Church, Rev.
Hard
examine “ A ~ e r i c a n
Disengagementfrom the War in
exchongc
I 964 Oak Bay Avenut
306-0621
Specialists in WEDDING PORTRAITS
and GRADUATE PHOTOS
CAMPBELL STUDIO
for the F i n e PHOTOGRAPHS
Children’sPortraits - Commercial
670 Fort St., Victoria, B.C.
Eaton‘s Entrance
Phone 383-5934
J. W. Price
THE MARTLET, MARCH
16, 1967
3
NATIONAL SEMINAR”
rofessar
aurence Evans
Also from Simon Fraser Uniof
versity, in theDepartment
History, Dr. Evans will analyze
“Strategy and the N a t i o n a 1
Interestinthe
United States’
Foreign Policy.”
Rev. Stephen Fritchman
A Unitarian Minister with an
international
reputation
as a
writer, lecturer, and philosopher,
Rev. F’ritchman has chosen as
his topic, ‘The Brutslization of
the American Soul.”
SenatorHenryJackson
Mr. Jackson, a member of the
Senate Armed ForcesCommit
tee, a second-term Democrat
Senator who has travelled PX-
tensively in South Vietnam, will
discuss and comment on “The
Domino T h e o r y Applied to
Asia.”
Ira Sandperl
A Gandhian scholar, a former
of the
teacher,thePresident
Institute for the Study of Nonviolence, Mr. Sandperl will participate,with
Miss Baez, in a
discussion of “Non-violence in a
Violent ‘World.”
Dr. GustavoTolentino
Returned but three weeks ago
from a 24-day investigating tour
of Vietnam, Dr. Tolentino will
present
photographs
and
exhibitsduring
his “Eyewitness
Report” onthe
effect of the
wsw nn
the
ateao
ha
vi-wd-
Vietnam calendar
First session
Saturday, March 18
Lansdowne Junior Secondary School
Doors Open: 9:lS
A. Moderator-Dr. Malcolm Taylor
10:15-12:15
Senator Henry Jackson
Professor Mordecai B r e i m k g
Second Session
Sunday, March 19
Uvic Gymnasium
Doors Open: 1 2 1 5
D. Moderator-&. Charles Tarlton
1 :OO-3:30
Mr. Thomas Hayden
3:45-5:oo
Dr. Gustav Tolentino
E. Moderator-Dr. Harvey Richardson
B. ModeratolcMr. Stephen Bigsby
7:oo-1o:oo
1:45-3:16
Evans
Guest
Special
Speaker
Professor
Lauremce
Rev. Stephen Fritchman
3 :30-5 :oo
Tickets:
Forum
Studentg
C. Moderator-Rev. Robert Morris
1 day pass: $1.00
2 day pass: $1.50
7:00-10:00
Rev. Ray Hord
Non-etudentaMr. Ira Sandperl
1 day pass: $1.25
Miss Joan Baez
2 day pass: $2.00
Tickets available at Munro’s Bookstore, Eaton’s Ticket Bureau, the SUB, and at the door.
FRRCHMAN
~ 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l ~ n ~ ~ l~ l ~l ~l ~l ~l u
~ ~ l ~l ~l ~l ~l l~ l~ lu l~ l~ n~ l~ w
~ ~ l~ l~ l~ l ~l ~l nl ug~ l~ l ~l ~l ~l ~l u
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~~
For Your
Scholarships and Bursaries, 19664
DANCE CORSAGES
at AMS 10% Discount see
An information sheet on awards t o be made
me
j
Phone 364-OS15
j
R
e
m
*
”
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ILOWS BEAUTY
SALON
for the
LATEST IN HAIR STYLING
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Road
-
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$7 a day and 6C a mile.
e1967 Chevrolet Chevelles
4 6 a d8y and 6C a mile.
.Buy only the ga8 you use.
Rates include proper
insurance.
843 Douglas
st.
388-5525
for academic performance for the current
session can be obtained in the Registrar’s
Office,Counselling
Officeandthe
SUB.
Students shouldnote
that a numberof
awards will be made automatically. These
are listed in the currentCalendar beginning
-on page 179. Awards for which application
must be made before April 30 are listed in
th Calendar beginning on page 185. Applicants should note that the Army, Navy and
Air ForceScholarship,
the Fred Spencer
Scholarship, and the Charles E. Copeland
Memorial Bursary have been cancelled. Any
new awards not shown in the current Calendar are listed in the Information Bulletin.
Application forms are available in the Registrar’s Office.
R. Ferry, Admission and Awards Officer
THE MARTLET,
1967
MARCH 16,
10
martlet
Invitational gymnastic meet here
sports
Play - by - play
FLASH! This Saturday, Mar.
18, Uvic is hostinganinvitationalGymnastics Competition,
consisting of top-notch gymnastsfromalloverthe
Pacific
Northwest.
This
will be no
small-town college meet.
CHARLES GROOS
1’A ST :
Ice Hockey-
Vikings vs Stockers............
Il’orsemen vs Esquimalt
All-stars
3-0
.
4-1
Field Hockey3-4
Valkyries vs Mariners........_........
Valkyries vs Oak Bay .............._..
3-5
RL1gbySsxons vs UBC Tomahawks 11-8
Saxons vs Royal Roads
24-6
SoccerVikinrs vs Luckies......................... 7-1
Norsemen vs Gorge Hotel ......3-0
PRESENT:
A mustforsportsfansthis
week is the Uvic Invitational
Gymnastic meetto be held on
Friday, March 18th at 7:OO p.m.
Some of the first performers in
the Pacific Northwest will be
competing so . . . see you there.
e
.
.
Studentstake on thefaculty
in theancientgame
of battledore and shuttlecock on Tuesday
and we . . . Oops! so sorry all
over.
0
.
Friday . . . Guess they’re not
the party type . . . Hello there
Ruggah men!
.
Award winning athletes were
conspicuous by their absence
from
the
awards
banquet
on
e
m
Valkyries wish to thank their
two staunch
supporters
Mike
and A1 . . . sorry about the tea
party.
e
.
.
Valkyries lose
FUTURE:
Ice HockeyVikings vs (opposition unkown
at press time)
Field ,HockeyValkyries . . . Boudreau Cup
Tourney Saturday at Windsor
Park.
SowerVikings vs Hourigan Kickies at
Heywood Park at 1:30 on
March 19th.
Vikings vs Hourigan Kickies at
Gordon Head a t 1:30 on March
24th.
0
Our Motto:
MENS SANA IN
CORPO SANO
(A muscled head in a
...
muscled
body.)
PRINTING
ACME-BUCKLE
PRINTING COO LTD.
Phone 383-2821
812 Broughton St.
Typical of the type of entries
will be the U.B.C. gymnastics
club, ledby
Bill Mackie, who
recently won the floor exercise
event at the Pacific Northwest
College meet. It goeswithout
saying that he is the top freeexercisemanin
Canada. Also
coming will be the Washington
Huskies gym team
from
the
University of Washington, led
by Yoshi Hayasaki, an exchange
Victoria, B.C.
the
In spite of the cold wind, rain,
and blizzard, the Valkyries challenged Mariners A Saturday
afternoon at Topazpark.The
game looked promising for Uvic
but in spite of thepersisting
and better positioning the Valkyriesweredefeated
4-2. The
Mariner’s victorywasdueto
their fast and accurate left wing
whose hard
shots
left
Goalkeeper Marion Mallory helpless.
Although Uvic seemed to have
the edge on this team with shots
on goal, Pat Davie and Vanessa
Lodge captured one goal each.
Again the Valkyries were in
action on Sundayafternoon in
a match against Oak Bay. Once
more Uvic was outscored by this
excellent and fast team in a 5-3
defeat. Sole scorer was Vanessa
Lodge. The
Valkyries
played
with accuracy and skill and kept
Oak Bay on their toes for the
entire g a m e . Unfortunately
shooting in the circle was a little
weak.
The conclusion of the Hockey
season comes next
Saturday
with a roundrobin tournament
including all the Vancouver Island clubs, Uvic won the tournament and the trophy last Fear,
but the team will have to play
some outstanding hockey to rttain
cup.
0
student from Japan.
Yoshi has
the traditional flawless style exhibited by all Japanese gmnasts.
Competing for the University
of Victoria will be Rick Johnson, Darryl Howe, and
Steve
Chatton.Darryland
Rick both
competed on the B.C. teamto
the
Canadian
Winter
Games,
held in Quebec City earlier this
year. Also coming will be some
non-college gymnasts such as
Gordon Cannon fromthe
Vic-
toria YMCA. Gord was a member of the Canadian team to
:World Games, and is rate
of the top
gymnastssuch
in Can
a.
With
competitors
as this,
4F
the Uvic meet should be the
most spectacular ‘sp.orting event
ever seen on this cignpus.
Remember, that’s this Saturday, March 18, at 7:OO p.m.,
1O:OO p.m. at the Gordon Head
Gymnasium. Be there
or
be
0
square.
SOCCER :
LUCKIES AREN’T
If nothing else this week you will see many names in
t h i s w e e k s s t o r yas t h e U n i v e r s i t y of Victoria Soccer Vikings
downed the Luckies by a score of 7 t o 1.
Tony Fantillo
started
the
parade when he headed in a
great cross from GeorgeKemshaw for the first goal.
Pat Sargent got what turned
out to be the winning goal in a
scramble aroynd the net where
TonyFantilloagain
played a
prominent
part.
Before half
time, however, the Luckies got
one goal back. Theplayand
score at half time did not hint
at the deluge to come.
After a slow start bythe
Vikings which lefttheirfans
limp, the scoring fest got under
way, with Pat Sargent by scoring his second goal.
Bob Moysey, p l a y i n g his
second gamewiththeVikings
after a long lay-off, got credit
for the fourth goal. He was the
last VikinK t o kick the ball into
a mob of Luckdefenders.
The
ball went into the net-courtesy
of the opposition.
TO add insult to the injuries
suffered by the Luckies and also
cause a very mild sensation, defenceman Tony Gage wandered
up thefield all by his littlelonesome and scored hisvery own
goal. He will be moreinsufferablethanusual
now I suppose.
The sixth and seventh Viking
goals were scored by Greg (goal
a game) Pearson and Joe Milligan.Joewasplayinghis
first
partial game since his operation.
Another newcomer - playing
his second game - is Stu Finlyson. We hope hisgoal
soon.
Two gentlemen who
score any
goals
but
deserve
mention are Messrs Jack
Magi
andOscar
Valdal. They both
played excellent games and were
responsible in part for themagnitude of the victory.
Next week the Vikings will be
playing two games against the
Hourigan Kickers. They play on
Sunday at Haywood Parkand
again on Good Friday.
0
FIE8TDNISION
GP W L T
Can. &ottlsh i$ % Z Z
Victorla West 12 6 4 2
Unlvsrsib
10 6 3 1
Hourlcells
10 6 4 0
Red Ldons
12 5 6 1
Tall~4fo
12
1
12 3 6
7 2
Lucklee
Gorge
12 2 s 1
P
51
A m -
is-5
23 1s 14
26 15 18
18 14 12
25 25 11
16 %
?
27
i-8l
11 31
n
SECOND DIVISION
GP W L T F
University
18 10 4 4 49
Londonlbx’g 18 10 5 3 43
Colony Inn 17 10 6 1 37
Island Tug
17 8 6 3 39
Victorla West 14 7 5 2 37
3ldney Hotd 17 7 8 2 47
Gorse FC. 16 6 7 3 36
Falcons
lS 1 18 0 14
A%.
25 24
30 23
28 21
25 1s
21 16
41 16
30 16
102 2
NOTICE TO STUDENTS PLANNINGTO
RE-REGISTER FOR THE SESSION
SKI BASH
1967-68
1 . The last date for submission of applications for re-registration
in the session 1967-68 is Friday, 30 June 1967. This is a new
. .
date authorized by theSenate.
Tomorrow
white
Club Member
I966 Volkswagem
Model 1 500,
radio, white -...$ 2195
3. Although students are required t o re-apply by 30 June stating
the courses they intend totake, they will have the opportunity
of making changes in courses a t the time of registration in
person in September.
Q
$2100
2. A copy ofthere-registrationformwill
be mailedto each
student who writes final examinations in April. This form
will be included with the student’s Statement of Marks.
See
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o Good Deal More
REGISTRAR.
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**
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New Optical Prescriptions
Contact Lenses
The Replacing of Broken
Frames and Lenses at
~~
,
THE MARTLET, MARCH 16, 1967
11
-Saxon streak broken
Bowlers trip
scalDed bv tomahawks Yank squad
w
-
m
-~
v
I
-
~~”
TheSaxonswereunabletodefendtheirwinningstreak
of theSecondSemesteron
UBC first Freshman team.
Saturday in a well fought match against the
the kick-offof the second half,
TheSaxons, d e f e n d i n g a
record of five wins
and
one Vic Horton took the ball from a
loss, wentundertothe
Toma- loose scrim and ran it over for
threemorepoints;the
kickby
hawks 18-11. TheSaxonscame
anyone
If
finds
a Cortina
on to
the
field a little dis- Pyke was good, and the Savons
washed up on a local
beach
organized and were still cold a t werestill five pointsaway.
please
contact
Brian
Lee and
the kick-off, and in the time it
The final three points for the
John Prosser, the organizers of
took fortheteam
t o organize
Saxonscamefrom
a penalty the
Sports
Car
Club Spring
UBC,had placed eight on the kick by Rich Pyke and gave the
Rally. Of the
seventeen
cars
scoreboard.TheSaxonslost
no Saxonselevenpoints,only
t w o which startedoutlastSunday,
heartand
came back witha
behind. But ‘the Saxons did not that wasthe
onlyone
which
narrow t r y by Pophaminthe
come back, and the Tomahawks
comer.
The
conversion was put up five morepoints for a failed t o makethe course. Except for a rather up-hill tenthshort,
and
the
Saxons
were
seven point victory.
of-a-mile sprint (on foot), sundown five points.
The
TomaIt was a great game and the
nyskiesmade
for a pleasant
hawksreturnedin
a rushand
Dave
Lynn
and
Agnes
scored from the wing, the kick Saxons put up a hard fight f o r day.
w3sgood,
andtheir
lead was their clinching of first place in Howard won another with but 6
theinter-collegiateleague.The
penalty
points.
A1 Jonesand
ten points at half time.
Saxons
will
now end up
in
Eric Perkins lost 30 points on a
missed route control (nice work,
second place aftertheydefeat
In the second half the Saxons
B.C.I.T.
this
coming
Saturday.
Dave and Agnes!) to take third
picked up a little more support
place
with
35 points. Second
(thanks Rich and Bob) and How about coming out and givwere Ken Mason and Bob Vinwere
determined
to
even up ing us your support in our final
cent. Anyone who wants to get
game.
0
thematch.Inshorttimeafter
in on the fun for the summer,
jointhe club.We
plantorun
right
through
’till next
fall.
Watch out for notices regarding
the meeting next Friday, March
17th (possiblywith
a ‘bloody’
film). It’ll be, at 12:30 in C1.106. There should be a fun
rally on the 12th too.
0
Spring has
rally run
*Hikers find “life”
at Botanical Beach
0
Botanical Beach, situated on
thewestcoastnearPort
Renfrew, draws many visitors yearly
for ita unusual rock formations
and especially attracts biologists
with its bounty of readily observable plant and animal life.
Recently the Biology and Outdoors Clubs of Uvic visited Botanical Beach to have some fun
while at the same time studying
some of theabundantmarine
life.
cious man-eating
algae
and
others of the sort); to hike up
or down the beach, eitherto
explorehugeseacoves;tohave
the fright of a lifetime standing
by a “blow-hole” - a formation
where
the
compressional
force of a wave is projected verticallyinto a 40-foot spout,or
to see the “Devil’s Pooltable”platter-like
a
sandstone
basin
surrounded by high cliffs, while
others simply beachcombed.
Since the bestfeaturesare
visible at low tide (and the tides
being what they are this year),
the two clubs met at’ 4 a.m. to
organize (would you believe, to
distribute keep-awake pills?).
t o enEven JohnLawpaused
quireaboutthenature
of our
insanity.
A fewmemberspaid
a visit
to the resident biologists, a pair
of studentslivingpermanently
right on the beach and working
to c o m p 1 e t e post-graduate
studies in biology.
H o w e v e r u, n d a u n t e d
and bleary-eyed,
we
stumbled
forth to JordanRiver to count
heads(morepills),andthence
to Port Redrew. Another hour
found usindaylight
(7:30) at
the beach for a joyful slog from
thecars.
A t that pointabout
40-45 members spread in various
directions: to delve into
the
many
deep
potholes
- some
(eek) camouflaged - teeming
with
marine
specimens
(fero-
Inflation Protection
Victoria
See what a CHARTER CLUl
suit can do for
yeu.
Everyone
knows
that a goo(
appearancemeans
a lot. Tail
ored to perfection in PUR1
VIRGIN WOOL FABRICS.
You’ll be smiling all overwher
suit.
youwearyournew
$69.95 at the Cavalier Shop
G. H. Pottor
Wm.
,We again wish to congratulate A1 Martin on his fine showing
on the
ferry
as well as on the bowling
lanes.
0
Sight is A Kind of love
THURSDAY
DENIS BROWN
”Non-Conformist Consciousness“
SUB Vending Caf
8:OO p.m.
You don’t hove to rob o bonk to buy one.
Low Cost Term
1061 Fort St.
Art 546, B a m e 533, A1 Martin 537, A1 Conlan 532, Owen 486,
Me1430.
Theexcellentcondition
of thelanesenabledeveryone
to bowl well above average. In the main event, A1 Martin, with a
league average of 168, averaged 199, with games of 211,213,158,
214; A1 Conlan averaged 174, A r t 166, Owen, 178, Me1 152, B a d e
151. Withgames of939,956,962
and 962 against University of
Washington’s 932, 954, 848, 852 we swept all four games.
Withthe incoming tideand
thelikely possibility of a few
strandedmembers(eh,Hugh),
we reluctantly turned our backs
on the fagcinatingandunique
Botanical Beach for another
0
year.
Life Insurance Specialirh
THE
STANDARD LIFE
ASSURANCE
COMPANY
A1 Martin sparked the University 10 pin rep
team to a win
overtheUniversity of Washington last Sunday.TheUvic
team,
composed of A1 Conlan, Art Gee, Owen Lange, A1 Martin, Me1
Miners, and Barrie Turnham, rolled a four game series at the a8
lane bowling establishment in the lower basement of their SUB.
In thepreliminary bowling onSaturdayafternoon,
we posted
.
three
game totals of:
G. Henderson, CLU
Ca #do’s First since 1833
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Once
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theDon’t
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For
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Victoria’s Import Showplace
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c.2
THE MARTLET, MARCH
12
16,1967
“Waiting for
Godot”
p.m.
CLASSIFIED
Campus Players: P h o e n i x
Theatre - “Waiting for Godot,”
Samuel Beckett play, directedby
Frederick Edell. $1.50 (students
two for one on weeknights). All
seatsreserved.MatineeSaturSaturday, March 25,2:30p.m.;
Friday - Saturday, March 24-25,
8:30
0
Education
Symposium
There is animportant symposium on March 17in
EA.
144. The topic is “QUO Vadis
E.U.S.” There will be speakers
and
panel,
a
coffee will be
served as will dinner. Low cost
of $1coversall.Register
at
noon.Don’tbe
leftout! ’Come
SUandjointheIntellectually
perior.
0
Dance and Dine
Your chance to visit Victoria’s
newestand
m o s t glamorous
night spot! It is an evening
of dancing a t the Old Forge,
completewithdinner
for two.
Support P h r a t e r e s Service
Club’s Oyshan Constantinus, by
donation.TicketsinSUBand
Caf,Wednesday,March 22 and
0
Thursday, March 23.
Seminor on
Viet Nom
International Seminar on Viet
Nam:LansdowneJuniorHigh
school - speakers include Senator H. Jackson, Rev. Ray Hord
and Joan Baez. Furtherinformation may be obtained at SUB.
to 1O:OO
Saturday, 9:16
a.m.
Pm-
0
Expo ‘67 film
Phrateres Women’s Service
Club on Campusinvites
Uvic
students to a film on Expo.
Monday,March 20 at 12:30 in
E1.-167. &e!
0
THURSDAY, Mar. 16
MONDAY, Mar. 20
UvicBand
5thAnnual
cert. E A . 144, 8 p.m.
minar, Professor McA.
C.
Con-
*
FRIDAY, Mar. 17
Biology Toga Hop. Last neat
SOC Hopof the year. Featuring
theMarquis. 8-12p.m.
Department of Chemistry SeDowell, Head,Department
of
Chemistry, University of British
Columbia,“SomeRecentElectronSpinResonance
States in
Free Radicals,” 8:OO p.m., Room
160, Elliott Building.
*
Ski Club’s final fling. Purple
Onion. 10 p.m. - 2 a.m. B.Y.O.B.
- *
Film “Mechanized Death” presented by Sports Car Cluband
Saanich Police Dept. All drivers
on campus should see this film.
Sports Car Club members please
attend. C1.-106,12:30 noon.
*
Grad-FacultyTeaand
Coffee
Party; 2:OO to 4:OO. All ‘grads
’67 and members of the faculty
are invited.Drop in for a spot
0’ tea and a farewell to all your
profs.SUBUpperLounge.
*
Frederick Edell of the Theatre
Division will lecture on Samuel
Beckett.
The
lecture
will be
illustrated with scenes from the
forthcoming p r o d u c t i o n of
“Waiting for Godot. The lecture
will takeplacein
E.A. 144 a t
12:30.
*
TOWER ‘67
Announces that anyonewishing to receive a copy of TOWER ‘67 must fill out one .‘
of the forms below and leave it a t the SUB
general office before the end of this term.
Thosewho wish a copy and will pick it
up themselves when it is published will fill
out the first form and (because of the referenda) pay $2.00.
Those who wish to have a copy mailed
to them at their permanenthomeaddress
will fill outthe second (lower)form
and
pay an extra 25/.
‘I
1966 HONDA 160, GOOD CONDITION. LOW MILEAGE.
PHONE
662-1684.
~
1949 PLYMOUTH, VERY GOOD MOTOR. RADIO. $60.00.
PHONE EV6-3822.
$260.00.EV6-3822.
*
1961 CHEVROLET
-
ENGINE EXCEILJENT SHAPE, BODY DENTED,
DEpendable transportation. 565.00. A D P ~Lynne Remos. SUB office.
TUESDAY, Mar. 21
A.C.C.:
Rev. R. Morris of
First Unitedand Canon B. T.
Page d i s c u s s Anglo-United
UNION. 12:30. C1.-209.
*
1964 HONDA. GOOD BUY AT$176.00.
6 p.m.).
C A U TERRY AT 477-4466(AFTER
-
1960 FIAT
600-D: 36.000 ORIGINAL
MILES;
ONLY
JUST BROKEN IN
after completeengine
and tranlnnisaion rebuild; 7 good tires Including 2
new flrat linesnowtires;
$460 invested over originalprim: over 60 milea
tothegallon
on regular gas; cheap to operate. immaculateinterior
and
exterior. Sacrifice at $660. Phone 668-6411 after 10 p.m. or all day
Bicycle Rentals
SPRING IS HERE! FOR ALL ROUND FUN RENT A BICYCLE F R O M THE
Victoria Sporting Goods. 1410 Douplsl. (Tandem and regular models).
Tom Berger, M. L. A., will
Speak in C-106 at 12:30. Mr.
Berger was the chief legal council for George E. P. Jones who
recently won a $15,000 slander
suit againstPremierBennett.
In addition, Mr. Bergerrepresented the C a m p b e 11 River
‘Water District in theB.C. Court
of Appeal.Hewastherefore
instrumental in obtaining a reversal of the decision to grant
Western Mines Ltd. the right to
dump mine tailings into Buttle
Lake.
Typing
TYPINGOFTHESISANDESSAYS.
MRS. TURNER,PHONE
668-6147.
Articles Wanted
ONE PAIR OF STILTS FOR DISABLEDMILKMAN.CONTACTERIC
382-4663.
WALKER.
Transportation Available
A RIDE TO AND FROM Expo 67. LEAVING A F I g B EXAMS. BEcmRNI
June 1st. Call 477-4389 ai* 6 ma.
Houses for Sale
bedroosl.
TWO BEAUTIFUL FAMILY HOUSES FOB S A L E ON MOUNT ‘PQWIIE. 10
minutea walk from Uvic. 4 and 6
Omer built. WJton, 1780
Glestonbuw. Phone 477-6313.
~~
The
topic
of Mr. Berger’s
address will be, “Politicsa-go-
*
Articles
for
Sale
“
14 FO(YP SQUARE STERN
Phone386-3866.
CANOR
FIB==
PHILLIPS CARTRIDGE TApBl RECOBDEB, PLUS -8.
at 4 7 7 4 6 6 (ai* 6).
CO-.
I).
TO ONE W H O WILI. UNDERSTAND: J.F.B.
wherein w e l l catch the coxwchce of (bs Quean.
O m .
S l S , CALL TEBBY
Pemonal
Silent Film Classics:“Birth
of a Nation” by
W. Griffith.
A film unique in its field. NB
Room Change, El.-167, 7:30 p.m.
Presented
by
your
Activities
Council.
TOE’S “ES
TElos.
*,
Mr. P. J. Kitley, Co-ordinator
of Teacher
Recruitment,
will
speak on “The need for teachers
in B.C.” Have you ever consideredteaching ? This is an
importantitemforallpeople
concerned
with
Education
in
B.C. Room 168 in EducationArts at 12:30 (both days). This
will also take place on Wednesday, March 21.
B
*
Psychology Colloquium: Time :
4:30p.m.
P 1 ace : S.Sc.-263.
Speaker: Dr. Robert D. Hare
(UBC).
Topic:
Psychopathic
behaviour:somerecenttheory
tmd research.
Interested
students are cordially invited.
*
V.C.F. at 12:30 in S.Sc.-163.
This is a very important meeting becausenextyear‘sexecutive will be elected. Art Hadley
will be the speaker.
*
E.A.-144, Art and the Masses.
Jack Shadbolt and Barry
Lord.
*
WEDNESDAY, Mar. 22
Pleasecutoutappropriate
box andtaketo
office along with money payment.
Cars and Motorcycles For Sale
1966 DUCATI 126 C.C. MOTORCYCLE. 2800 MILES. HELMET
INCLUDED.
go.”
Dr. Lars Von Haartman will
present a lecture“ClutchSize
andpopulationDensity
in The
PiedFlycatcher,”
12:30,Room
061, Elliott Bldg. Dr.Von Haartman is presently a visiting professorinthe
Zoology Departm e n t , University of British
Colu’mbia. His research interests
lie within the field of ethology
and ecology. Students are Particularly invited to attend.
Rates: 3 lines, 1 day, 5Oe. Larger Ads on muest. Non-Commereial
Cl.eei5ed Ads are payable in Advance.
Martlet Omce, SUB, 417-3611
All Ads must be in by Monday noon.
SUB
Relieve those nearthe-end-ofterm blues and come to the skating party at MemorialArena.
Tickets are 6Oc per person and
are available at the SUB office
or at the door. Party is from
9 to 11 p.m.
T
Traditional Natural Shoulder Campus Suits. Here
it is with all thedetails that look expensive, stay
smooth and hold their shape! Trim three-button
stylingwiththe
look you like to carry you from
Campustoexecutivesuite
. . and the Bayhas
them in latest springshades inall woolhopsack
or fine silk and wool blends. Price 69.98-89.98
.
The Bay, Cbmpus and Caner, main
D