$7000 u bc legiondonation constructs gym coffee- … · the story concerns itself wit h ... of the...

4
f AMS, WUS CANDIDATES GIVE PLATFORMS, PROMISE S IVAN FELTHAM VAUGHAN LYON AL WESTCOT T If elected president of the AMS I pledge myself to : 1. An all out effort to complete the gymasium along th e lines of the original plan set out by the former presiden t of the AMS last summer . 2. The election of a vice-president to the council to cove r any eventualities that may possibly arise and to aid th e president in his administration duties . 3 . Investigate the question of 'constitutional reform . There is at present time i committee working on thi s problem . Their findings wil l be submitted to a studen t referendum this spring, Th e plan chosen by the studen t body is the one I will sup- port! ' 4. A n . investigation to se e if it is possible to raise th e per capita allotment fo r women's sports, which is a t the present time consider- ably less than men's . In addition to these point s I pledge myself to serve th e student body, as chairman o f their council, to the utmos t of my ability . I Decked in costumes from th e classic period or ancient Greec a members of the UBC Classic s ('Inh will appear in an III IIs h tr anslation of Euripides' "Alces- tis" Thursday in Brock flai l Lounge , The story concerns itself wit h the death of a 'rhesselian queen . She had consented to lake her Iws . hand's place when he was in dame . gel' and was rescued w i th the hel p of the demigod Hercules . BARE PLO T Such are the hare events of ti)' The play was translated and ad plot ; the limy had its origins in l apted over lust sunnmer by Joh n tutcicnl (I reek Mythology . mud wua Reeves of the (lassies departmen t token aver fur use in the theatre, who will also be Its director . Set Fellow students, these are some of the main policie s that, if elected, I shall strive to put into effect on you r behalf : 1. Constructive council attitude so as to foster and en - courage all campus activities . 2 . Revise the constitution so as to provide for adequat e representation of undergra- ' duate groups on council . 3. Establishment of a per- manent committee on ac- commodation , 4. Make Vancouver more , university conscious in orde r to make the people of Van- couver interested in an d proud of their and our uni- versity and at the same tim e to make them anxious t o help us to make it bigger an d better . Let me close by assurin g you that elected all m y time and energy will be de - voted to serving the student s to the best of my ability . VANCOUVER'S MAYOR Fred Hume fell prey to the lon g erms of AMS president Nonie Donaldson and Gym Fund Chair - man Bill Haggert and graciously signed a pledge for the Wa r Memorial Gym Fund drive . News Stories 'False ' Says Acadia Counci l . Stories carried by Vancouve r nenspapers last weekend or "wil d drinking parties until after 3 a .nt, ' at . Acadia Camp after the last cam p dtnnce were labelled false by Acadi a Council members . Council officials said last wee k Ihat dories of such parties an d other meows of damage and vio - lations of regulations herring mem - bers of the opposite sex from men' s ib ancient Greek mythology the tied women's residences were fals e play has uuclergone III tie charge or vastly exaggerated . In form for this modern ptmtdnc . Lion . Story and plot are snhsteld Repels of promiscully In resi ally the salve as Euripides ' uril„tS dosses the grossly uversensatinn- nal adaptation, and only a fete' al, said ("nulfl'I'e . Il e speeches have been added to sub .! that condition s in place of the! vtiey Iha t massed vnires, . g evorulu g poai',ihle, this month when the War Memo ' sal Gym Is unofficially opened . Debt Uutu'red by the Legion wil l be paid off alter five years of op• sion is 25 cents . ()ration, officials said . 06 REGULAR MEETING of the stn PROFITS FOR SCHOLARSHIPS dent i'nfted Nations Club itas pee n After repayment of the loan, any ! cancelled today, officials of the profits incurred from the opera- group said Monday . Lion of the coffee bar will go int o a general scholarship fund to fi- nance students through their ace . demic years at ['BC . The fund wil l be administered) through the offi- ces of Professor Walter Gage, dea n of administrative and inter-facult y affai r s, t it FILMS will be shown at a gam eral meeting of the Chinese Var:Sty Club today at 12 :30 p .m, Th e group will meet in the library i n Room 859 . FULL TURNOUT of Student Gr . Legion officials will obtain the y , chestra members is requested Wed . loan from the Bank of Montreal) nesday at 6 p .m . In the auditorium . As well as the regular rehearsal , photographs for, the Totem, stu- dent yearbook will be retaken . GENERAL MEETING of th e I nc CCF Club will be staged a t 12 :20 p.m . Wed . in Arts 100, fleet- ness will concern the election o r tut executive for the coming ter m and a discussion of the proposal s for the Spring Mock Parliament . VARSITY OUTDOOR CLUB wil l present films on skiing at Banf f Wed, at 12 :30 p .nl, in Engineerin g 200 . The club will stage an ice Nicetlug party tonight in the nort h cud of the Foram at S : So p,ne t o which club members and the gen eras student body have been in- vited . , h e t PRESENTATION of the Garnet t Sedgetrick ,Award, for outstandin g I work In the field or Civil Lil a ! lies, will be made to Dr, A . ('ooke Friday at 12 :30 p .m . in En . ', gimeerin .g 21)11 . CLI' will make th e en'ai 1 . 1)r . Panto will speak on lut e topic "Christioulty and Civi l I .Iher(les , The election of your president demands of yo't seriou s consideration of the candidate's qualifications and experi- ence in student government . In addition I am seeking election on: 1. A sound, down-to-earth administration based on a comprehensive working knowledge of the AMS . 2. A more representative student's council. 3. The holding of a uni- versity Open-House nex t Spring. We must make th e general public university - conscious . 4. The setting up of check- ing accounts for undergrad- uate societies , 5. Full completion of th e War-Memorial Gymnasiu m with funds from outsid e sources . 6. Further economies i n the administration of th e AMS, which can be effected . 7. A rigid fiscal policy t o ensure a fair share for all . I pledge myself to a repre- sentative student adminis- tration governed by th e students . IVAN FEI,THAM MARY LET T the function of WUS is to further the interests o f women on the campus . This can be done in the followin g wars : 1 ;' Through closer cooperation of WUS and WAA . 2 . By increasing the WUS executive to include repre - sentatiyes from women ' s residences . ' 3 . By sponsoring speaker s of interest to all campu s women . 4. By eliminating WTJS - sponsored tea-dances, prov- ed unpopular and financiall y unsuccessful . 5. By revising the WUS , constitution to , have execu- tive officers elected b y secret ballot . 6. By taking a definit e stand on contentious issue s of student government . If you cut your vote i n my favor I shall endeavor t o implement the above and t o give you effective represen- tation on student's council . MARY LETT DOREEEN ALBRECH T Asa candidate for the presidency of the Women ' s Un- dergraduate Society I present the following platform . i 1 . to consider and to advance the interests of wome n students through the promotion and development o f extra-curricular activities . z 2 . to attempt to find a more compatible means of repre- sentation of the Arts Stu - dents on WUS. 3. to carry out the policie s that may be recommende d by the present council fo r closer co-ordination betwee n WUS and the Women 's Ath - : e t .c Association . 4. to strive for further de- velopment of spirit and en- thusiasm among all wome n on the campus, as has bee n shown by the Residenc e girls . 5. to be conscious of m y responsibilities and obliga- tions to the ,student body e s Vice-President of the Alm a Mater Society . DOREEN ALBRECHT by Euripides . The author directe d his attention to a deeper plane o f significance, and concerned mos t with the hasI nd's reaction to hi s wife's self•sacriflce , PEOPLE ARE CHARACTER S The play may really be said t o be about the dramatic conflict be- tween egocentricity and altruisn e But a sense of the theatre remain : a and the characters are still peo- ple and not merely a projection o f philosophic ideas . VAUGHAN LYO N VOL . XXXUI TICKETS AT THE DOO R Greek Classic In Costum e 'Alcestis' Shows Thursday pointed on l afford so little pri - stlhtte solo vaice a lyric choruses fo r HERCULES HAS ROL E Eva :Nammnne plays the til e role . Colin Brawn )he,s oppusil e and Ed Homage appears as the a e civet Greek god, novelties . 'Pickets, on sale ut Hie door, ar k 2u cents fUl' ,'tII(l tutu 511 call ~ fur the gouen'al tmlblic I)r, . . ,1 . 111, MacKenzie, vvin alt-' I with Acadia residents and ('amt nil ~asl week said rumours that he ! threatened closure ()I' Acadia ('ant p were ridiculous . Ile said that . th e lueoling was merely the kind a t conference called Ihrnughout the ! 1 year to discuss cart) management . violation of regulation s this are practically Ile - AL WESTCOTT e Ubysse y VANCOUVER, B .C ., TUESDAY, FEBRUARY' 6, 1051 No . 45 $7000 U BC LegionDonatio n Constructs Gym Coffee- Sho p Snack Bar to Begin Operatio n When Gym Unoffidally Opene d A donation of more than $7000 by the UBC branch of th e Canadian Legion, to finish the coffee bar,in the War Memoria l Gymnasium, was made public today by Bill Haggert, chairma n s f the gym finance committee . Agreement between the admini stration and the campus branch o f the service group will be finalize d this week, Haggart announced . Total cost of the project will h e in the neighborhood of 14,000, Le- gion officials said . However, ap- proximately 7,000 of this suns wil l be written off by dairy, tobacco ! and coffee companies, who hav e agreed to install equipment on loan . ' DISTRIBUTION OF MONEY a UBC branch of the Legion wil l put up $7,491 to complete the col' fee btu' . Finishing the room wil l cost $5,5SI and heating, ventilat ing and lighting fixtures will make Chaplin Star . For Filmso c A comedy film revival and full length feature will b e presented in the .Auditorium today by the UBC Film Society . Charlie Chaplin will be featured at the comedy revival at 12 :30 p .m, in the auditorium . Admiaslo n up the remainder of the cost . is 10 cents . Coffee bar will begin operation At 3 :45, 6 and S p .m . the Societ y will show "The Great Waltz," feu - tutting the musk of Strauss an d starring Milizia Kol'jous, Admire 'Tw .in Clines `Greet Walk , and it will be underwritten by an - other branch of the service grou p in Vancouver . Loan and agreement have bee r approved by the Board Ol' Gover- nors . APOLOGY GOES T O WESTCOTT FO R ERROR IN PAPE R Humblest of apologies g o out to candidate for AMS pre- sident AI Westcott for the ty- pographical blunder appearin g in his seconder's statement I n The Ubyssey, Feb . 2. The statement was signe d with the unidentified signature "Terry Lynd . " It should have read "Terr y Lynch, Engineering 51 . " The Ubyssey offers its ap- ologies for this error , whic h came in such an unfortunat e place .

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Page 1: $7000 U BC LegionDonation Constructs Gym Coffee- … · The story concerns itself wit h ... of the demigod Hercules . BARE PLOT Such are the hare events of ti) ... with the hasI nd's

f

AMS, WUS CANDIDATES GIVE PLATFORMS, PROMISE SIVAN FELTHAM

VAUGHAN LYON

AL WESTCOTTIf elected president of the AMS I pledge myself to :

1. An all out effort to complete the gymasium along th elines of the original plan set out by the former presiden tof the AMS last summer .

2. The election of a vice-president to the council to cove rany eventualities that may possibly arise and to aid thepresident in his administration duties .

3. Investigate the question of 'constitutional reform .There is at present time icommittee working on thi sproblem . Their findings wil lbe submitted to a studentreferendum this spring, Theplan chosen by the studen tbody is the one I will sup-port! '

4. An. investigation to seeif it is possible to raise theper capita allotment forwomen's sports, which is a tthe present time consider-ably less than men's .

In addition to these pointsI pledge myself to serve th estudent body, as chairman o ftheir council, to the utmos tof my ability .

I

Decked in costumes from th e

classic period or ancient Greec a

members of the UBC Classics

('Inh will appear in an III IIs h

tr anslation of Euripides' "Alces-

tis" Thursday in Brock flai l

Lounge ,The story concerns itself wit h

the death of a 'rhesselian queen .

She had consented to lake her Iws.

hand's place when he was in dame .

gel' and was rescued w i th the hel p

of the demigod Hercules .

BARE PLOTSuch are the hare events of ti)' The play was translated and ad •

plot ; the limy had its origins in l apted over lust sunnmer by Joh n

tutcicnl (I reek Mythology . mud wua Reeves of the (lassies departmen t

token aver fur use in the theatre, who will also be Its director. Set

Fellow students, these are some of the main policie s

that, if elected, I shall strive to put into effect on you r

behalf :

1. Constructive council attitude so as to foster and en -

courage all campus activities .

2. Revise the constitution so as to provide for adequat erepresentation of undergra- 'duate groups on council .

3. Establishment of a per-manent committee on ac-commodation ,

4. Make Vancouver more,university conscious in orde rto make the people of Van-couver interested in andproud of their and our uni-versity and at the same tim eto make them anxious t ohelp us to make it bigger andbetter .

Let me close by assurin gyou that elected all mytime and energy will be de -voted to serving the studentsto the best of my ability .

VANCOUVER'S MAYOR Fred Hume fell prey to the longerms of AMS president Nonie Donaldson and Gym Fund Chair -man Bill Haggert and graciously signed a pledge for the Wa rMemorial Gym Fund drive .

News Stories 'False'Says Acadia Counci l.

Stories carried by Vancouve r

nenspapers last weekend or "wil d

drinking parties until after 3 a .nt, 'at . Acadia Camp after the last cam p

dtnnce were labelled false by Acadi a

Council members .

Council officials said last wee kIhat dories of such parties an d

other meows of damage and vio -

lations of regulations herring mem -bers of the opposite sex from men' s

ib ancient Greek mythology the tied women's residences were falseplay has uuclergone III tie charge or vastly exaggerated .In form for this modern ptmtdnc .

Lion . Story and plot are snhsteldRepels of promiscully In resi •

ally the salve as Euripides ' uril„tS dosses the grossly uversensatinn-

nal adaptation, and only a fete' al, said ("nulfl'I'e. Ile

speeches have been added to sub.! that condition s

in place of the!vtiey Iha t

massed vnires, .gevorulug

poai',ihle,

this month when the War Memo '

sal Gym Is unofficially opened .

Debt Uutu'red by the Legion wil lbe paid off alter five years of op• sion is 25 cents .

()ration, officials said . 06

REGULAR MEETING of the stn •PROFITS FOR SCHOLARSHIPS dent i'nfted Nations Club itas pee n

After repayment of the loan, any ! cancelled today, officials of theprofits incurred from the opera- group said Monday .Lion of the coffee bar will go int o

a general scholarship fund to fi-

nance students through their ace .demic years at ['BC. The fund wil lbe administered) through the offi-

ces of Professor Walter Gage, dea n

of administrative and inter-facult y

affai r s,

tit

FILMS will be shown at a gam

eral meeting of the Chinese Var•

:Sty Club today at 12 :30 p.m, The

group will meet in the library i n

Room 859 .

FULL TURNOUT of Student Gr .

Legion officials will obtain the y, chestra members is requested Wed.

loan from the Bank of Montreal) nesday at 6 p .m. In the auditorium .

As well as the regular rehearsal ,

photographs for, the Totem, stu-

dent yearbook will be retaken .

GENERAL MEETING of th e

Inc CCF Club will be staged a t

12 :20 p.m. Wed. in Arts 100, fleet-

ness will concern the election o r

tut executive for the coming term

and a discussion of the proposal s

for the Spring Mock Parliament .

VARSITY OUTDOOR CLUB wil lpresent films on skiing at Banff

Wed, at 12 :30 p.nl, in Engineerin g

200. The club will stage an iceNicetlug party tonight in the nort h

cud of the Foram at S : So p,ne to

which club members and the gen•

eras student body have been in-

vited .

,hetPRESENTATION of the Garnet t

Sedgetrick ,Award, for outstanding

I work In the field or Civil Lila

! lies, will be made to Dr, A .

('ooke Friday at 12 :30 p .m. in En .

', gimeerin .g 21)11 . CLI' will make th e

en'ai 1 . 1)r . Panto will speak on lute

topic

"Christioulty

and

Civi l

I .Iher(les ,

The election of your president demands of yo't seriou sconsideration of the candidate's qualifications and experi-ence in student government .

In addition I am seeking election on:1. A sound, down-to-earth administration based on a

comprehensive working knowledge of the AMS .2. A more representative student's council.

3. The holding of a uni-versity Open-House nex tSpring. We must make th egeneral public university -conscious .

4. The setting up of check-ing accounts for undergrad-uate societies ,

5. Full completion of theWar-Memorial Gymnasiumwith funds from outsid esources .

6. Further economies i nthe administration of theAMS, which can be effected .

7. A rigid fiscal policy toensure a fair share for all .

I pledge myself to a repre-sentative student adminis-tration governed by thestudents .IVAN FEI,THAM

MARY LETTthe function of WUS is to further the interests o f

women on the campus. This can be done in the followingwars :

1 ;' Through closer cooperation of WUS and WAA .2. By increasing the WUS executive to include repre -

sentatiyes from women 'sresidences .

' 3. By sponsoring speakersof interest to all campuswomen .

4. By eliminating WTJS-sponsored tea-dances, prov-ed unpopular and financiallyunsuccessful .

5. By revising the WUS ,constitution to , have execu-tive officers elected bysecret ballot.

6. By taking a definitestand on contentious issuesof student government.

If you cut your vote inmy favor I shall endeavor toimplement the above and togive you effective represen-tation on student's council.MARY LETT

DOREEEN ALBRECHTAsa candidate for the presidency of the Women 's Un-

dergraduate Society I present the following platform .i 1 . to consider and to advance the interests of wome n

students through the promotion and development ofextra-curricular activities .z 2. to attempt to find a more compatible means of repre-

sentation of the Arts Stu -dents on WUS.

3. to carry out the policiesthat may be recommendedby the present council fo rcloser co-ordination betwee nWUS and the Women 's Ath-: e t .c Association .

4. to strive for further de-velopment of spirit and en-thusiasm among all wome non the campus, as has beenshown by the Residencegirls .

5. to be conscious of m yresponsibilities and obliga-tions to the ,student body e sVice-President of the Alm aMater Society .DOREEN ALBRECHT

by Euripides . The author directed

his attention to a deeper plane o f

significance, and concerned mos t

with the hasI nd's reaction to his

wife's self•sacriflce ,

PEOPLE ARE CHARACTERSThe play may really be said t o

be about the dramatic conflict be-tween egocentricity and altruisn e

But a sense of the theatre remain : a

and the characters are still peo-

ple and not merely a projection o f

philosophic ideas .

VAUGHAN LYON

VOL. XXXUI

TICKETS AT THE DOOR

Greek Classic In Costume'Alcestis' Shows Thursday

pointed on l

afford so little pri -

stlhtte solo vaicealyric choruses fo r

HERCULES HAS ROL E

Eva :Nammnne plays the tile

role . Colin Brawn )he,s oppusil e

and Ed Homage appears as the a e

civet Greek god, novelties .

'Pickets, on sale ut Hie door, ar k

2u cents fUl' ,'tII(l tutu 511 call ~

fur the gouen'al tmlblic

I)r, . . ,1 . 111, MacKenzie, vvin alt-' I

with Acadia residents and ('amt •

nil ~asl week said rumours that he !threatened closure ()I' Acadia ('ant pwere ridiculous . Ile said that. th e

lueoling was merely the kind a tconference called Ihrnughout the !

1 year to discuss cart) management .

violation of regulation s

this are practically Ile -

AL WESTCOTT

e UbysseyVANCOUVER, B .C., TUESDAY, FEBRUARY' 6, 1051

No. 45

$7000 U BC LegionDonatio nConstructs Gym Coffee- Shop

Snack Bar to Begin Operatio nWhen Gym Unoffidally Opened

A donation of more than $7000 by the UBC branch of th eCanadian Legion, to finish the coffee bar,in the War Memoria lGymnasium, was made public today by Bill Haggert, chairma nsf the gym finance committee .

Agreement between the admini •

stration and the campus branch o f

the service group will be finalize d

this week, Haggart announced .

Total cost of the project will h e

in the neighborhood of 14,000, Le-

gion officials said. However, ap-proximately 7,000 of this suns wil l

be written off by dairy, tobacco!

and coffee companies, who hav e

agreed to install equipment on loan . '

DISTRIBUTION OF MONEY

aUBC branch of the Legion wil l

put up $7,491 to complete the col' •

fee btu' . Finishing the room wil lcost $5,5SI and heating, ventilat•

ing and lighting fixtures will make

Chaplin Star

.

For Filmsoc

A comedy film revival andfull length feature will be

presented in the .Auditoriumtoday by the UBC Film Society .

Charlie Chaplin will be featured

at the comedy revival at 12 :30

p .m, in the auditorium . Admiaslonup the remainder of the cost .

is 10 cents .

Coffee bar will begin operation At 3 :45, 6 and S p .m. the Society

will show "The Great Waltz," feu-tutting the musk of Strauss an d

starring Milizia Kol'jous, Admire

'Tw.in Clines

`Greet Walk,

and it will be underwritten by an -

other branch of the service group

in Vancouver .

Loan and agreement have bee r

approved by the Board Ol' Gover-

nors .

APOLOGY GOES TO

WESTCOTT FO R

ERROR IN PAPE R

Humblest of apologies go

out to candidate for AMS pre-

sident AI Westcott for the ty-

pographical blunder appearing

in his seconder's statement In

The Ubyssey, Feb . 2.

The statement was signed

with the unidentified signature

"Terry Lynd. "

It should have read "Terr y

Lynch, Engineering 51 . "

The Ubyssey offers its ap-

ologies for this error , whic h

came in such an unfortunat e

place .

Page 2: $7000 U BC LegionDonation Constructs Gym Coffee- … · The story concerns itself wit h ... of the demigod Hercules . BARE PLOT Such are the hare events of ti) ... with the hasI nd's

Page 2

THE UBYSSEY

Tuesday, February 6, 195 1

How Dull Can You Get?

lie UbyueyMMBER CANADIAN UN1VY PRES S

Authorized as Second Class Mall Post Office Dept, Ottawa. Student Subscriptions $1 pe ryear (included In AMS Fees), Mail Subscriptions-•$2 .00 per year, Published throughou tthe university year by the Student Publications Board of the Alma Mater Society of th e

University of British Columbia ,Editorial optlnions expressed herein are those of the editorial staff of The Ubyssey and not

necessarily those of the Alma Mater Society nor of the university .Of(lees In Brook I l a i l , Phone Alma 1 2

For display advertising phone Alma BMEDITOR-IN-CHIEF RAY FROS T

GENERAL STAFF : Senior Editors, Ann Langbein, Marl Stainsby, Jolin Napier•Hemy ;Copy Editnr, Jim 13anhant ; (J P 1 11tor, Joan Churchill ; Women's Editor, Joan Fraser ,Sports Editor, Alex McGillivray ; Flue Arts Editor, John Jiroelrington ; Editorial Writers ,

Lea Armour, Hal Tennant ; Photography, 'Pommy Hatcher. .Senior Editor Thls Issue—ANN LANOBEI N

Assistant Editor— MARY RAWSO NWriters This Issue :

JOAN CHURCHILL

DON OLIVE RELSIE GORBAT

DOUG UPEX

Oh Pshaw!Editor, The Ubyssey ,

Dear Sir :Your edition of last b'riday con-

tains some quite false conclusion s

drawn .from remarks made by my -

Mr. In the first place, the gran t

of t the Arts Undergraduate So-cloty has been restored only Inso-far as It will he possible for th eAI'S to draw funds for such Arts ,

functions as are approved by th e

Co-ordinator and myself .

Mr. Midwinter and i met subse-quently to decide that the remain . 'Ina two free dances, of which tha t

on Jan. 27 was the forerunner ,should not take place .

The Ubyssey must remind It scorrespondents that letter sshould be kept to a maximu mof 150 words . Publication o flonger letters will not be guar-anteed. Letters of more tha n150 words will be subject tocutting,

Letters To The Edito rproductions of "Tire Gondoliers" orchestra foryon shits that I tun doing "all Ow l

I hope thi scontract work for director AVtI• issues ,hams," This is by no means th ecase . I ant simply trying to help sthe Mussoc executive in their year-ly search for student mosleiansfor their production, in view of l

of hiring union musicians, !trying "to form a studen t

DRAUGIITINGINSTRUMENTS

From $10.00T-SQUARES, PROTIIAhTIIIIS ,

SET SQUARE S

MITI! 1NII'Af, I:NGINEf,tt s%NI )

)'t11 .1'PIt1SE SLIDE RILES

ZIPPER RING !Hilli s

AiMES LETTERIN GINSTRUMENTS

Complete, with Sheets and Inde xFrom $2,611

FOUNTAIN PEN S

Clarke & Stuart

co. Ltd .STATIONERS and PRINTER S

516 Seymour SI, Vancouver, R .C .

the cos tand not SHIRTS and CLEANIN G

1-DAY SERVIC E

34 YEARS OF SERVIC E

TO THE UNIVERSITY O F

BRITISH COLUMBIA ,

ITS FRATERNITIE S

AND SORORITIES .

THERE'S A REASON

p(rff2'J J

Sincerely your s ,John MacKinnon ,Treasurer, AMS .

Mussoc . "will clarify these t',vo

Three young men who are asking foryour votes tomorrow in the AMS presidentialelections should get some mention on thispage for having conducted the most singularl ydull set of campaigns in UBC history .

Last year at eelction time, we found thatJoa College was back . And we thought hewas here to stay. But evidently we werewrong.

It was during last year's campaigns tha tone candidate tagged himself "Fireball" andlived up to the reputation until the last votehad been counted . All in all, it was a color-ful race, replete with bag-pipes, apple cider ,and plenty of the brass band type of razzle-dazzle which could keep our former acquaint-ance, Student Lethargy, safely in his grave .

Those were the days that make the pas tweek look pretty sick .

Intent on conducting what they like to

call . "a clean, serious, down-to-rfarth cam-paign," our three aspiring presidents hav egone after the votes as if they were seekin gthe presidency of the National MorticiansAssociation .

Each of them has had just about enoughimagination to observe publicly that theWar Memorial Gymnasium is a fine projec tthat ought to be supported in one way o r

As I See ItIf the production of "As You Like It, "

lately in our midst, is any indication, it i tquite safe to say that the so-called "star "system in the theatre was never'farther fro mextinction. Here is "As You Like It ;" ofHepburn, for Hepburn, and, well, not b yHepburn, but somehow I don't think it wa squite what Shakespeare had in mind either .

The producer's point of view is all fooevident in this offering of the Theatre Guild .One can almost hear the thought processes ."Well, Shakespeare is bad box-office, hut i fwe give it a glamourized production wit hoverwhelming sets and costumes and use abig personality star we might have a sell-out .And they did have a sell-out . Everyone wen tto see Hepburn, and the Hepburn personalityis worth seeing anytime, but the theatre, sup-posedly, is something more than a show cas efor personalities .

Gorgeous as the twangy drawl used i nmovies like "Adam's Rib" and the "Philadel -

By Felicity 'Wining, dining and dancing seem so fa r

to have been dominant in reports on th eseminar. This gives a false picture . Duringthose five weeks most of us took our res -ponsibilities pretty seriously . We real i zed itwas a unique chance to discover the truth o nthe things that we only hear second hand . Wefound that many of the things we had bee nled to believe were false—as far as student swere concerned, at any rate .

Most of us over here, if we are gealifie dand know what we want to do, can set a jo bwhich will give us a decent living. The aver-age girl has a chance to get married an draise a family . This is not so in Europe, Eve nthe most brilliant student has little hope o femployment which will provide him withmore than the bare necessities, and the ma-jority face unemployment, for there is stil la social taboo against their doing unskilledLeber . Girls so far exceed boys in number a tthe present time that most of them cannotlook forward to a normal life . It is little won -der, then, that we were struck by the com-plete lack of hope on the part of the Europea nstudents; they seemed, many of them, to b eparalysed by despair . They felt that theywere living just to provide the cannon fodde rfor the next war and that it would be hettet 'to let the race die out than raise families'; .This seems like a pose to us, but when you

another .The rest of what they all said durin g

their platform speeches Monday could easil yhave been lifted from recordings of past years '

campaigns .In fact we are quite tired of being tol d

that every candidate seeking an AMS postis honest, capable, experienced, popular, ener-getic, ambitious, sincere, hard-working and ,in short, in possession of every other virtueexpressible in public .

Or, more correctly, every virtue but one .That one is imagination. If any of them hadimagination, he would have turned the cur -rent campaign into a rip-roaring, beer-and-pretzels type of fight .

We understand ,what with alcohol at it spresent price, that candidates' budgets mightcut them down to the pretzels alone .

That problem is essentially the sametype of poser that AMS councillors face afte rthey get into office .

A man who can run a smart campaignstands a good chance of running a smart act -ministration .

On that basis, we suggest that tomorrow'svoting ought to be a dull tossup among al lthree .

By Joan, BastedrY

phia Story" may be, it appeared more thanslightly incongruous when applied to Res-alind .

think in terms of what they have been

through and what they have to live for and

if you hear them speak you would roalia e

the terrible sincerity of what they say .

This attitude was perhaps highlighte d

by the predominance of philosophy and re-ligion as topics of discussion . Most of the

Canadians were concerned with philosoph y

only as an academic subject, their lives ha dbeen too simple to need it in any other way--

not se in Europe . '!'heir attitude to religio n

was open shallow and insincere . I would saythat thirty out of the forty Canadians were

piacticing Christians . The only practicingChristians among the Europeans were theCatholics, two Lutheran theology students ,and a Lutheran girl . The rest were agnosticslife they were better agnostics than we wereChristians, that is, their position had stoo dthe leg ()I' bettor experience and deep an dserious thought. In view of this feet it i sl,e! hales ; iuterest.ing that it was generalh,: :;reed at the end of the Seminar that th eroot of the crisis today lies in our lac k('f religion . We are sheltering under a fals ecloak. Our whole civilzation is founded o nCreek philosophy and Christian religion, w eare the heir's of Greece and Rome, but themajority of us do not know what that implies .l + is a poor heir who does not know leis ow ninheritance .

sense of having see npretty .

ISS Student Seminar

Wet ‘ Paintby Rolf plakctad

The fact that Arts is left wit hnothing but their Ball Is not, Ibelieve, a display of over•genero-slty and "soft•heartedness," espec-ially in view of the fact that S Oper cent of any profits from th eArts Ball are to go to the War Me-morial Gymnasium Fund, as agreedbetween AUS president 13111 Neenand WMGF chairman Bill 1-Taggart .

Morris Graves Is one of bho(, r

rare figures in Western cultur ewho speaks iris most profound sen-ses in silences . ills art is wonder -fully an art of omission, The In •Iitterably marvellous "bird onreek" Is ostensibly a hurried littl esketch pf a bird set . In a grey wast eof dried ink . But the picture brea-thes a magic life of Its own . ,No

lyric poem ever evoked such beau-tiful sadness as this thoughtfu lbird sitting in his lonely corne rof the world . So much do we sens eIts life, that a flicker of air a stiny as from a mosquito's win gwould not leave the surface un-rippled .

In your article on the need fo rmusicians to play for 'the Mussoc

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Toby and Callahaas are, for ma !less interesting . Callahan seems 'to be a belated brother of Gustav eDore who decided to re-engrav eDante's "Inferno." Some of theTohys are quite lovely, however . jand very beautiful . Other interest• !leg paintings by Toby are "Indian 'Country" and "Testament . "

But Graves ••----!

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PA(NID WITN CIIVIR COM MSIARNIING DIALOGUE, AND '

SOME OF iNt TUNNIS !SITUATIONS LVI I

ON iNi S0I1110

like a gigantic musical comedy.

Technically it was a superb exhibit o f

enchanting costumes, delightful sets and

But let us leek at the womlerfu lartistic lighting, but please let us come away I ominous ruler in his ow nfrom the theatre with something more than a, twilight kingdom ; and the equall y

something terribly ` v('omlerfnl watercolors of Chinese !ritual vessels, These latter glow '

__ like the rich [intina on their an •! dent bronze counterparts . Ohwell! [ shall Jest Ionic sadly int othis spirit land and long to es .cape the poisonous atmosphere o

f radio and press that fills our lives.

The play pretends to be nothing, more, Mid the lovely "bird on thethan a pastoral fantasy sharpened by bits of shore"—how can such a fragil e

Shakespearian wit, and alleviated by farcical wash of Ink be filled with suc h

comedy. Over all there is an atmosphere of ! w°''1(1 wonder! Why do we cloy s oblindly to 0111' "way of life"" I t

merry England. Not in the Theatre Guild % our culture should pass, nothint ;production however, which obviously took', would be lost compared to a dig

piece in some marvelleous Americr.n fairy ! appearance of ()dental though t

tale. The Wizard of Oz might have walked 11n1 happily such (vlll lint happen

en at any moment . As a result of the comedy,! llow many western wnid ;s do w esee filled with that jilt

mg " 'degeneration into slapstick, and the general iagic of life that lie find in th eg l amour of the whole blossoming into extra- bulk of the art of the 1'ar Eas tvaganza in the last scene it began to look and in Graves, the adopted son ?

Picture that mysteriously breat hinto, and out of the air in whic hthey are hung .

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.

a

4

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Tuesday, February 6, 1951

THE UI3YSSEY

Page 3

Previous to the question perio dthe three candidates, Ivan Felt- lowanee for women's sports wit h

ham, Vaughn Lyon and Al West• a

cott outlined their platforms tostudents in five minute speeches .

Ivan Feltham, junior member on 'council this year advocated a mor erepresentative student counci l"based on the needs of the unlVer . 'atty. "

ADVOCATES CHECKIN G

He 'proposed the establishmentof checking accounts for tinder.

graduate societies to eliminatepetty cash disbursements and givethe groups more control of thei rfinances .

He warned that these account swould' be for petty cash only antihot for large expenses whic hwould have to meet with the ap•proval of the business managerand the AMS treasurer.

Legion president Al Westcot tpledged himself to continue the all .

ClassifiedLOS THAND-KNIT GLOVES, brown wit hembroidery on the backs. Returnto Lost & Found .RONSON LIGHTER, Silver Bank-ers' Model . Lost last Wed . in AP100. Phone AL 0184Y, or returnto Lost & Found .

RONSON LIGHTER, initialle dRSM, in vicinity of Eng. Bldg. orAggie Parking Lot .

LADY'S PURSE, taken from Che mBldg. last Thurs. A.M . Please tur npurse and wallet over to Lost &Found. They are KEEPSAKES .REWARD for return of persona leffects in GREY PLASTIC PURSEtaken from Locker 82, outside Rae .Lab. Return to Lost & Found o rphone Sheila at CE 7922 .

1DENTiFICATION CARL) & key scontalued in black purse, lest InHA5 or AP 100, last Wednesday .Return to Lost & Found or phoneFR 9302 .

FOUNDLADIES HAT, may be identifiedat Lost & Found .SLIDE RULE, may be Identified a tLost & -Found .OVERCOAT, found some time ago ,may be identified in Lost & Found .FAWN RAINCOATS, may be iden-tified in Lost & Pound .

-

ROOM & BOARD ETC .

ROOM & 2 meals a day for on eboy. 1 block from BBC gates . Ph .Norm at AL 1221M, after 5 p .m .ROOM, male student to share com-

fortable room in private and pleas-ant surroundings. Good meals . CE0707 .

FOR SAL E

TUXEDO, size 37, $35 . Phone P R1409 ,EKCO'S NEW STAINLESS stee lwaterless cookers are now avail -able . For free demonstration ph .Ken Bourns at KE 2307R .SKIS . Steel edges, Glazite base .Cheap. Phone Hans at NW 3564R .TUXEDO, A-I condition. $30. A L32411 . .

RADIO, Emerson portable elect •rec . $45 . Al Van Ryswyk, AL 3449L .MEETING, ANNOUNCEMENT SWHAT iS :HMO? This will hethe first lecture of the .Indo Clu bon Thurs ., ,ian, Stit in MS . All i nterestetl are welcome ,CANDY SAI .E by GYM F'I'ND an dTeacher 'training . FRIDAY. Deli-clot's, chewy and cheap . help theTeachers Help the Gym ,TILE NEW WMAR17VEit HEALT Hmethod or cooking is now bein grepresented in the i'uiversity area ,Morris Daancey, 11 .Ed, (URC) CE4644 .

TYPING : English & Foreign lan-guages, essays, theses, manuscript scard work, letters of ...application('amtms rata' . llias Eloise Street ,Dalhousie Apts . Al, et;551t ,

To Questions From Few StudentsThe VBC Liberal Club "has always but a candidate up' for

the AMS presidency " a law student told a sparsley-attendeclstudent gathering who came to hear would be presidents statetheir platforms Friday .

' out effort to complete the gy mlie stated that to:his knowledg e

such a move had never been car-ried out by the club . "I have

intention of carryin gtics into the studen tflees," Lyon said .

"I resigned as president of th eliberal Club because 1 did no twant students voting for the pres-ident of the Liberal Clnb," he said .

H earsWould-Be aPresidents Stand U

noparty poli-enuucil or -

He said he would do his bes tto see that student apathy stayeddead . "'This is not an easy thing t odo as you can see by the attend-ance at this meeting," he said ,

Less than 150 students turnedout to the opell fo ttat ; ''

~1 gftoo#hsplatform were election or a vice -

dentt

o

student council, iniple•jA~,~Over Campusmutation of stuuent wishes In the RR

~ field of constitutional reform, and

Polling booths for student elec .

Investigation of the per capita al- tions will be set up Wednesday i nthe south end of the Arts build-ing, the Auditorium foyer, sout hend of Brock Hall and the mainentrances of the Physics building ,Biological Sciences building an dEngineering building .

Voting is from 10 a .m. to 4 p .m . ,and each student casting their bal .lot will be given a lapel tag toshow they have voted .

through "renewe dcation to governmen t

additional' 'funds .

MAKE VANCOUVER CONSCIOU S ,Other planks in the Westcot'l

view to raising It.

vigorous

MINATIONS

DUE WEDNESDAYDeadline for second roun d

''nbhilhatione' It Wednesday,Feb',Ihry 7 .Candidates are reminded, they

aril 'gbh' parrltted'to appoin t`ona" $crUflnei'vi toe each' pioll ,and' Mal ft# 'theserlitIneerI'• wi gs! be Mad 'e bythe' biindlditei thelmaeIvee .

Ons piaster Per" oahildate l e

appll• l 't111'o perlrflssabie 'at ' oac poll -

sources" rnr

lhg '611060; '

P

-

Which One For 'Sweetheart of Sigma Chi '

ONE OF THE THIRTEEN lovely girls above will soon become the second "Sweetheart of Sigma

Chi" at UBC. Candidates were photographed at a Sigma Chi alumni cocktail party Saturday ,

.where they met the three judges who will make the decision . It won't be an easy choi:o!

IMO

a

Since the discovery of Canada's Nickel deposits ,

hundreds of uses and vast markets have been

developed for Nickel through a planned program

of research, So Nickel is now one of our most

important exports to the United States and other

countries. As a result millions of U .S. dollars come

to Canada, which the Nickel industry uses to pa y

wages, taxes, freight, and to purchase lumber.,

machinery and supplies .

CANADIAN NICKE L

"The Romance of Nickel "a 60-base hook fulls illus-trated, will be sent free esreguaf Is atom interested.

a

In the laundry wherebaby's diapers arewashed, Xicke! alloyequipment eliminates, ,rust and verdigris 'stains because it israstepivof and eerr'o-sion•resislaul,lt doesnot develop jaggededges, so (','event sfearing of the wash .

Much of the equipmen tused in the plants whencod liver oil, medicinesand toiletries are process-ed, is made of Nicke lalloys to maintain thepurity of the product.

To commemorate the 200t hanniversary of Cronstedt' sdiscovery of Nickel in 1751 ,the Royal Canadian Mint ha sthis year issued a new fttvc-cen tcoin . This coin, like previou sfive-cent pieces, is made ofpure Nickel.

,

THE' INTERNATIONAL NICKEL COMPANY OF CANADA, LIMITED, 25 KING ST . WEST, TORONTO

Page 4: $7000 U BC LegionDonation Constructs Gym Coffee- … · The story concerns itself wit h ... of the demigod Hercules . BARE PLOT Such are the hare events of ti) ... with the hasI nd's

Page 4 THE UBYSSEY

Sports Editor—ALEX MacGILLIVRAY

Tuesday, February 6, 195 1

Wow! Cagers In

First Triumph

By AUSTIN DELAN Y(The possibility of reelgation between the Pacific Coas t

Soccer League and the Vancouver and District League con-cerns this university, in as much that UBC's first divisionV&D entry may receive an offer to move into the "selec t

company." in view of the importance of this the Ubysse yhas asked Austin Delany, probable the top soccer writer i nCanada, to give his opinion on the subject . Mr. Delany, whois now an active writer with the Vancouver Sun, playe dsoccer from 1927 to 34 with the famous dominion championsNew Westminster Royals . Those were the days when one

had to . possess first class ability to make a team . ThereforeI feel there is no other man more suited to Write the Articl e

than he .—E4.)

But The Old Boys . . .

THERE has been much talk of lately among B .C. soccer leaders

here on the advisability of inviting a Varsity eleven leto the

strangest senior soccer league in Canada: the Pacific Coast League .

The person responsble for throwing Varsity's hat Into this elite ring i snone other than an old alumnus, Dave Todd, whose sur name has bee nsynonymous with the game In the University for years .

Whether or not the tight little Coast League group acre As aVarsity entry (and i doubt they will) is beside the point but it i sinteresting to know that one of the Todd family is as loyal as eve rto the'game and to the University, and anxious to raise the game

to a major statue on the campus .in giving Todd a hearing on the matter members of the Coas t

League were not entirely unselfish . They are not unaware, for in -stance, that the University has one of the most perfect playing area s

in Canada and stands capable of handling a fair crowd . With tem-porary bleachers seats at each end a much larger crowd could be

accommodated .

Varsity No Wonder, Team

THIS, of course . was emphasised by Dave when he made,his or-

iginal plea, and more . He pointed out quite clearly that much

was to be gained for soccer if it regained a major status at the Univer •

'city with block letters and other paraphernalia that goes with the

sports elite out there.Graduates who take up teaching as a profession, and who happened

to be interested in soccer, would be in a preferred . position to sprea d

the gospel of the game . At present it is recognised quite frankly that

few teachers in public and high schools know anything about th egame, its laws, and methods of coaching .

Furthermore, Todd maintained, when players of the Universit y

team graduated they would in the main be excellent material fo r

other teams in the league .That, in short was Todd's case. As a member of the Coast Leagu e

executive he knows, of course that there are many Vancouver an d

District Leagae teams better than the present . Varsity team, but thes e

teams have not the financial backing and potential support a good

Varsity team would have if accepted into the Coast League.Collingwood, South Hill, and now Fireman all want berths in th e

Coast loop but it is the name old story . It would mean that more team s

would be cluttering up Callister Park, as they do even now, and extr ateams without an enclosed park of their own would be forced to i tout weeks at a time waiting a tur n .

Would Benefit Socce rF THE League is enlarged, and some claim it must enla r ge or go

I to seed, then Varsity with a perfect ground and an organizatio n

unmatched behiud .them are in a preferred position .Unfortunately their present team is a puny thing at best an d

with the possible exception of Bobby Moulds melt of the player scould not get jobs as ball boys at Callister .

How Todd proposes to improve the team is something hn hasn't

enlarged upon . He merely raises his eyes in surprise, and mutters ,

"Oh things will improve." The answer to that, I gases, Is that o fcourse they will . They couldn't possibly be worse than the are .

Only last week (ahout 30 years late) the Dominion Footbal lAssociation promotional committee decided to set up a coachin gschool for soccer coaches here. If school teachers respond to the call ,as it is expected they will, then in a few years time more and bette rplayers should be available to University elevens .tram, as it Is laughingly called, and they have winced out loud a twliat they saw .

Mr. Delany Has The Floo r

MEANWHILE members of the Coast League have been takin g

every opportunity of giving the once over lightly to the Varsit yWhat they sass' was a long long way from the Varsity team of the

Iwenties that won several senior trophies and was one of the bes tdrawing cards at Con Jones Park (now Callister) ,

Those were the days of Heggie Mosher, Eh ('rntee, Lorrle Maker .Ilex Cameron, lion Phillips, Jock l .nndie, et al .

Todd hopes the University teams of the future will be as success-ful as that famous eleven . Without players and unless he can pull aWalt Disney and pull them out of the air—his dream is doomed t oremain in a self created cloud of his own hopefulness,

Box, Squirm Show ToHave 13 Events

The fifth annual intramural boxing and wrestling show wil lIn' held from February 19 until the final day March 2 .

Entries for the big event must • - -he in by lehruar)• I I, Entries alai,, l'ehruary 19 .

he turned into either Director I), I°c'bruau'y 14 ,WEIGHT CLASSE S

(Intramural Standard )Boxing (Open and Novice )

Rant ant wt, under 1 :15 tbs .harp a me- feather wt, 1 ;15 .114 lbs .the health I Light wt, 145 . 154 Ibs ,

Welter wt . 155 .164 tbs .:little wt, lti5•174 Ibs ,Light . Ily . wt . 175 . 1 .89 lbs ,Heavy wt . 190 over ,

Wrestling (open )Under 1 . 15 Ibs ., 145 . 154 tbs ., 155 -

has been decided as yet .

1164 ; 1115 . 17 5Here are the p;u'hculurs :

1 1114 Ibi s 165 . 174 no s 175 . 1911 lbs . ,

Finials, Alurc1 2 ; Eliminations, 190 lbs, over .

THESE are the skiers who recently won the Kandaha r

downhill championship . From left Frank Willis, Gar Robin-

son, Gib Wade, Bill Sellens and coach Vajda . Robinson wa s

active over the weekend in college meet at Banff ,

SLOW START

UBC Third In Ski

MeetAt Banff

University of B.C. ski team got off to a poor start Saturda y

and ended up in third position at the completion of the fift h

International Intercollegiate ski meet at Banff .

University of Washington ski• wasers, led by Coach Buster Camp- l les sbell, took Saturday's cross•coun• I tontry and giant slalom • titles with points . LowestUBC second,

by team membersteam.

TRACK MEETIN GThere will be a Track Club

meeting Friday, Feb . 2 at 12 :30 inHL2 .

Lose To CPS Friday But Clip

Rangers In Overtime Saturday

By DOUG HAWKES .

Winning basketball games and UBC Thunderbirds don 't

usually go together but Saturday night at the gym the Porn-

fretmen got into the swing of things, winning their first Con-

ference game of the season against St . Martins Rangers 41-38 ._-

—Ranget's after' erratic shot at the hoop . it ap•1" 10(1 braced 4o be missing by the pro.tuclmd- verbial mile, but at the last mom -

. oce, ! cut tall lion threw his arm Int oht of the path of the ball, sending it int o

i a zig zag spin and then into thecash register .

However, the game wasn't wo non flukes . The Birds out-hustledthe hangers and held down thei rstar performer, Don Dion, to S

Don Hudson and Maury Mulhernplayed their best game of the year .Roth gave two way performanc e

throughout the match .High man for the Soundmen

was ace forward Darwin Gilchris twho collected 18 points with jum pshot artist Ron Gibbs setting u pmost of the plays. Maury Mulher nwas the star for UBC, chalking u pa nice 14 points with Ron Bisset t

Foul Shooting Still Wea kWhen referee Wally Henderso n

sounded taps it seemed as if UBChad won the Olympic Games cham-pionships instead of a simple leasgue.game. A great roar went upfrom the seats and Pomfret dis-appeared among his jubilant hoop -Stel 's .

ST. MARTINS—Dion 9, Barthol-omew 2, Donahue 10, Hall 2, Burn s6, Mulvaney 9, Total 38 .

SPORTS NOTEBOO K

IwtmtI ; Entries, I)ueintraunural Office .

I'eut Or .tohtuty Owen ,l;lintinaHnus gnat underway I'c'h •

nary 19 ,

All contestants mus t(kcal examination a tcentre ,

There will he seven boxing di -visions this year tam) six svres tsections ,

'rho shore is being planned fo rthe new gyro but nothing definite

16 .1 points, about 43 point s

than second place Washing-

State. UBC scored 64 . 2aggregate score

Sunday's events of Downhillsaw UBC skier Gar Robinso nthird behind Gulttern Berge o fWhitman College and Gord yMorrison of University of Wash •ington formerly of Banff.

UBC failed to place a man inthe first six for individual com •bleed honors .

The Huskie team total score

Gib Wade of UB Cin the ddwnhill withtenth .

was winning

They defeated th ea tightly played overtim ein which the G00 spectators ,lag Mr. Pomfret, let thei r

a tuhuountous peakencouragement .

reachreshot

Ron Blssett., freshman hope fo rUBC, was the hero of the piec ewith his two overtime baskets ,one of which was rather an oddity .The basket in question was scoredafter a Bird guard had fired an, points .

Hudson, Mulhern Were Good

behind him with 10 .

Ron Sisson was big gun in the'Birds second week-end game . Hecollected 13 points and Art Phil -lips got 11 .

At half time IrJBC was trailin g15 . 16 and during the tfemeinder ofthe game the lead changed) hand sseveral times . In the overtime theyout-scored the visitors 7 .4 to winthe ball game .

UBC is still weak as far as thei rfoul shooting is concerned . Fridaythey were gives 25 free throws and

completed only 14 . The Loggers'shot 27 times and made 18 good .Saturday the Birds, out of 25 re -

placed eighth tempts, only marked up 13 point sFronk Willis lwhile the Rangers only made 4 out

of 14 attempts .

The win Saturday night came a sa surprise'to the avid followers o fthe sport . St . Martins had won twoConference games and lost thre ewhile the locals had lost all eigh tleague games .

UBC—Stuart 4, Bissett 13, Phil -lips 11, Hudson 6, Louie, Total 41,

EATON'S Campus Favourite of the Week

. . Copy by Joan

. . . Modelled by BARBARA CUMMIN G

Take practical "separates," mix and

match them, for wardrobe multipli-

cation miracles . Look pretty and watc h

your budget when you star tri m

separates from EATON'S 'Sportswea r

Department .

Pictured is a good•loolcht ggray skirt featuring a pleatedfront and a plain hack . Yoursfor a 'basic skirt . Spot tscraf t

makes it .

• 12.95

Jaunty rod weskit is mad e

ioy ,[antes Chambers of Van-couver.

7.95

I .oug-s I e e v e d "Alluracel '(rayon) blouse is beautifull ytailored, easily accnssorizerl .Au Original Blouse . 5,95

l:asyto•Iatuuler is this shor tsleeved nylon sweater, It' sjust right for the classroomand nice under a suit . 6.85

Luxourious cashmere I' o rspecial occasions, Colours ar esheer delight .

16.95All separates fro m

Sportswear Department ,Second Floo r

New design for the favorit e"Rattles". Note the strap sacross the instep, bucklos a lthe side . EATON'S Ow nnut Ice,

6.95Shoe Department ,

Second Floo r

I S IT o9 .C°into

—PIiOTOS BY SKIPSEY STUDIOS

a