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V OL . XXIX VANCOUVER, B .C ., TUESDAY, MARCH 4, 1947 . No . 55 . Blood Donors Uni t Here On March 1 0 Free blood donations will be requested of University stu- dents when a mobile blood donor clinic will visit the Readin g Room, in one of the two huts behind Brock Hall, on Monday , March 10 . The blood is to be used for any hospital patient i n British Columbia who needs it . "All the free coffee and coke they can drink," is offered donors "befor e and after the service," according to Ted Kirkpatrick, President of the Alma Mater Society . MacMilla n Score s Forestr y Forestry engineering in Canad a was srpIy criticized in an address Thursday night by H . B . MacMillan , C,B,E ., who described the forestr y department at UBC as "too academi c and too sedentary ." Mr . MacMilla n was speaking to the Society of For- est Engineers in the Hotel Vancouver . Mr . MacMillan charged that th e Canadian profession is far behin d that of the United States, both i n sustained yield management and ad - ministration . The speaker claimed that too many insufficiently trained foresters wa s one of the reasons for the Canadia n lag and scored the UBC school, '(It ) has not risen to potentialities . It h s been too academic and too sduntai y . There is not enough flild work," h e said , Politics was advanced as anothe r 'meson or the lack of a progressiv e forest policy, Mi' . MacMillan urge d the establishment of a centralize d forest service in Cnada and state d ti-nit the Fed : ral Government maclis a big mistake in i 'c'incuishing contro l of the forest lands of the prairi e provinces . STUDENT OPINIO N On the o m)us opinion amongs t the students seems to side with th e charges if applied to the OldI course . The new course, initiated this term , calls for much more practical wok . Sam Parnum and Dave Ritchie , both fourth year students and mem- bers of the executive of the Fores t Club both hold this view, and stres s the rreedl of practical work whic h will be available to students now i n first year Arts and first year Forestr y Engineering . Bruce Low, also a fourth yea r student and member of the execu- tive of the club, commented on th e reported opening of the head of th e department when Professor J . E . .Liersch leaves this spring . "I hope that the nw head of th e forestry department will he a ma n with practical experience ." he said . COMMENTS Professor Liersch, commenting (i n the charges said " I think that sum . of the charges are justified . H)',\ ever, he (Mr . MacMillan) 1x)irItcd )II t the? semi of the objection ; ere 1)eh, g tact hied . The improvements . ft r which we have been striving for years , ta k t i no atI(I I fl( V T ne d Ia'i like lilr . t o spurns t I ise e lie ; , ' vsitv fUFsi id }{,a ', H ( :c :ss 1()(1 \','as built last summe r It "ill take tittle t> cLe lu) i (Almost) . to provide Iiinctica l for our uricicrgraluLitJs . ' UBC Coed Kille d In Weekend Cras h A regular skiing excursion t o Mount Baker end : ci in disaster, whe n Ffcl :ne Hamilton v.'s instantly kille d 111( [ Rohert Wahl was seriously in - ,iui•cci in a collision on the Kin g George I-1ih'i, early , Sunch y morning, The fatal crash OCCUI'I'Cdl about 1 a .m . The victims were taken t o Rcv 1 Cotu nhiati Flospito I where i t WUS fauncl that Vull ','ias sufferin g from severe chest injuries, facial cut s and shock . Miss Hamilton was be- lieved killed instantly in the crash . Cause of the 000i(lCnt, vies ; no t lete' .inined immediately by Surre y Police . It O,'os I ; I I hotti,i r ti .,ol it him mII (I 0 I-n \t'ohl s . uu LI 1 to avoid colliding head-on vit h Od)thCI' car, being driven I1()t1I a h1 highwiy . U()th first vi ; i stui net t U University of British Coiunhiu, th e d'U(I)Id IO'(I heeti companions for em s trill y(, c s Graduating front Prince of \\lid s f-li :l telitsl Iasi year, Miss Hiitniito n hu(l )lOtIttL'(l to Ott 11(1 Milts Uni' .st- sty next seem , Funeral services will be heidi \Vcd- tt'osday at 2 :15 in Mount Pleasen t Undertaking Chapel . E Washington Staf f Will Edit Pape r Eighteen editors and reporters fro m The University of Washington Dail y will descend upon Brock Hall thi s L\'c'IUt'LLt to begin prepetettons fo r taking ()VOt' this Friday's edition o f The Uhyssey . The Daily staff, all students a t Washington's School of Journalism , are repaying a similar visit paid b y U'byssey staff members to The Dail y several weeks ago, Cross Is Quee n OF Local Skier s Jaeqt (e Cross won this y'eat" o crown as queen of the local skier s lest Sunday on Grouse Mountain . Queen Jaguie led the field with a to jority of 1500 votes , retiring Queen Lan Reid of th e 'f'ee ski club crowned Jacquic an d presented her with a geld identifica- tion bracelet . Queen Jaguie thank s c'veryor..o V.ho supported her an d says "Die contest was lots of fu n : nd tl pi'occeds cci'tainly arc for a good cause . '' Proceeds from th e Cd Meet amounting to )379 .10 nit 12 :00 noon Sunday t will he donated t o the Ql\'Ipio Ski Te : : Fund , Runners-up for the title wer e Ttenc Sheen) of Cypress Ski Club , \ r :l. tiinio Ramsay of S .ytnour, Jo - An : Peers of the Tyco Ski Runners , Boy Robertson, Grouse Mountain , oat! Betty Griffiths of Getatil Sk i Club, C' :orge Coatis, Queen Cross ' campaign manager, i'OCIUCStS that all unsold t joke ts and fltOtlCy be turne d into him in the quad Tuesday a t 12 :30 p .m . Sedgewick Cite s Group Suffering s Dr . G . G . Sedgewick, head of th e department of English 'and officer o f the local branch of Canadian Civi l Liberties Union, used the Ukranian s Canadian Japanese, the espionag e trial and Jehovah's Witnesses r cx- ompl':s of groups stiff ring under ou r present code of laws in Canada, whe n he spoke to 300 students yesterda y noon in Arts 10 , A t'osol a tiun that Japanese Carta - (i]SflS sind iloti', hidi ns Is,' givc n lt,i '' :' :nclos \','ao totioted by th e Student Christian Movement, ap - t y It, C : :olt :ttt Civil Lihor - I i' ii Snipe end doptiid in ell hu t t '0 of if t) I t( Uts ' et U 2, A Jtt ,t 'tooc fihot'ni :ttt who gav e ILl) U good jolt to enlist in the Britis h Army i11(1 fIt ht in lii o Fat' East be - cruse 'he Cenadisn Army would no t Sc .' it hitti . returned to find his es- tate sold . 'l'hc' l'tico alone had bee n cnt ;ut'c(l fts I Inc : tie ' sand chiller s and thi whole property wee sold fo r two lIlOdISSfl(l clu :in't his ohsence , 1, A . \c,'otlan who was convicted i n the esldo :1 :I,se trial mci later acquit - tool, lost her job through the action . "WHit Uuot'ttnlecs It ye OU or I that such a precise will not b e ht'criItt on ris'?" Dr . S'odgewick ask- ed his auclionce . nn. TB X-Rays Take n Of 7000 Student s Neatly 7000 members of the studen t bach', faculty and staff were X-raye d at the Boil iUi Columbia Tuberculosi s Association clinic in the Universit y lI'alth Service hut, but ever thre e thiuSttn(l people neglected to get thei r yearly chest X-ray, according t o Health Service officials . "Students who neglected to hav e an X-t' :,' should certainly have on e before tI't(' clinic retains to the uni- versity next February", Health Ser- vice officials stated . Aitiiiritnents for ri free X-ray a t the down tOWfl clinic may be mad e by phoning FA, 6644 . AUS Meets Toda y To Plan Events The Agricultural Und'ot' g rtcltttit, ' Sot, Lol will hold a general inc ttti g leilttv In A .gie lot) at 11)011, NOt ) \'k'lKiiinon, Ami de Prestdent, mete s that till Aggics att'enc! , Plaits for the coining "ANA,' Day " tlitc) 'lui'tiiei's Frolic" evil' be dis- cussed . o vcll as thc Saturday Fiel d Day at Agassi, and Spring Banque t on the following Wednesday . Top Legion Post s Filled On Campu s Offices of president, secretary an d treasurer for the 1947-48 executive of Branch 72, Csnadian Legion, hav e been filled by acclamation announced ! Logion officials at the close of nom- inations . Friday . Perry Millar succeeds Grant Liv- ingstone as president ; John MacKen- zie is secretary, and Frank Maso n treasurer . Three 10 : ople have been nominator ! lot' the position of first vice-president , These include, Norman Littlewood! , John Norris o nd Don Lanskzul . Mis s Ilc'lcn Noel sac) :Sins Lee Brown to e L'c)fltet,tittO fur the offi :if n'ccncl t'ice -president , Iltlh Tiaras', Stti I . 'it, shot's, U : U Hunt I' I't lit' itt s EMI) ( le i In d John \Vcsl tt( c sit S Is Its h ii 5 - I t cc its' t ,thi : i - , Application forme for permitmin t ciitdy iritit the ttirftjrce are no w available in the U'ni' .' i'sit , Employ- ment Ba 'curt ii ittosrinced i'vlr, J . F . McLean yestei'cltiy , Air force officials :ti' c said to wan t ti nucleus of highly proficient tech- tiicol PCi'sOiiL I . '1'Iit y are there- foi'o inviting ttp))IiL'tItiOltS from )t'e - ,.' IctOis classes, students graduating i n 1947, and :tll Engineering Faculties , Architecture, ;ad Arts majoring i n Physics, lIlt', McLean stated , To qualify, cendidates must hi e sttiiiirrLcl Canadian or British sub - bets, t'ejtli'tit in Canada, betwee n 18 :1 tir! 24 years of age . Selected nieti w i l l he graded a s [°lit1ct ('acl,ic sad ptiicl 135,())) pe r II ntlt, phis In' :' rations and quar- ters, pins $30 .00 per month risk l)ci Y when actively engaged in L'l ,yitic', irs stated . Allot' successful completion of tw o ,ei, s ' tt'ttiniti,,' stiticlici :its tutly pro - ceed on specoilist commis to fit the m for it tocltnio :tl is well id flyin g career, tiii'I' orce officials prondsed . Laborers Wante d For Yukon Wor k About one hundred noon are wante d for summer employment in gold opera- tions near Dawson, Yukon Territories . for the iei'ioc! May 1 to September 15 , announcer! Mr, J . F . McLean of th e University Employment Bureau Tues- day . Seasonably husky men are required , he said . The rate of pay is .1 .00 per hoot' fo e 18 hour week, and 1,50 for a 48 t o 113 11(11,1!' WOOk, Board is $2 .25 a da y and income tax deductions will coni c to about 101 , he stated . Platte fate is $130,00 r'acli way an d will he advanced by the Nationa l Employment Service, Two weeks holi- day with pay is slated for thos e men who stay with the job until th e end of the period, he said . .'U I t t i(ejtt, , i (e'er( II . :' J, ,t :ts, , t , otl I , ' :cu,tt , 'tot' O'rtttott in ii i tetitttivc'ly set for Allay 10 to 14-' - titlist hit t the office of iiiitnrh 7 2 I)y J\Ittcs'l1 1 ; 'toted Den le inked , I (i1tiioii,' din titer, ycslecdey . At the convention d . higatos fro m all brunettes in the province will de - hate and decide on Legion poncho, fo r 1li ci,titittt1 yctit . elect the Provincie l fxocut'e end Dominion Coittin tic ) r(p :' :'s ntiltiVect and consider variou s resolutions, said L :inskttil , As the lorgest, branch in the icro- ittc'c, Stanch 72 will be able to sen d 25 members to the afl'sit' . Only fiv c will attend, liOwOct I', tires 1155 of th e heavy CXI)Cio,' s 110,01 V CI, he stttted . The university branch would lik e to liavo' the titcicto's of all the Legio n tiii'nili l's l't'titii the Vernon legio n who cute to attend the ettn\'eittiuli , ll potential cleleg td's must appl y to the Legion office la fors March 15 , he SSI(l, 5(1 their minas may L c l)t'OLtliit licfoi'c thu general Inmtin g next nmnth for approve' . SCM Camp Planne d At Ocean Par k "Co-operati r' Lit.'jii1" is tli thrict e 1'oi' Ito tiicieiit C'lti')tttjati TVIOV('iti a t yr <cud Cutup to he bolt) at (i)cettt i p t'k on Pilareli II and 9 . At the SC7/I IlVeskend camp to Mkt) dace next Satui'c)tty and Suncttty i t Ocean Park, iVil', A . J . Giant, genera l Sect'ettt'v of the SCM, will speak o n ii principles of co-operation, an d lilt's, Lin Brown of the Co-operative s Branch of the University Extensio n will cli'sl with the application of thos e iwinciples in many fields, The pro - greet also inclucics a student pane l id iitnl)le tituict for general studen t discussion . Also on the agende are outdoo r slid) its end hikes veatbei' permit- ting), Square dancing and indoo r i_ltititd's, Plenty of time will be pro- vided for fun inn relaxtit jolt , All stciilitts th it are interested i n L5)tliC on the trip liP isI':eil to go t rtcitii 312 in the Auditorium buildin g for fu 'thin' information , Buses letter' New' Westminster fo r iin Park on S'uloii'clay at 1(1 : 3(1 out ., 2 :20 pm,, and 5 .20 p .m Aggies To Stag e Pepmeet Wed . The Aggies will stage a pep-mee t tomorrow in the Armory at noon, i n preparation for the . "Apple Day" aan d "Farmer's Frolic" on Friday , LsSt1' Cole's Debutantes will b e the feature attraction of the show , although several of the new profes s sere of the faculty have be'm gettin g together 01101 have something u p their sleeves , Tb.5 professors, 'n6mb :1g Di . Aim s WOOd and Dr . E, Philips of the J\iiiiiitil lIusbtinclry Department, Pro- fc'sctcui' J . H . Young of the Agi'icLtltLtl'a ) lticu'htiiiics Department aid Dr . J . Campbell of the Dairying Depart - mat, will be judges of the "Bes t Dressed Farmer" contest, variou s ctiniptls organizations being invite d to enter their candidates for th e title , Frank Nightingale trill provide th e music for the show, as well as fo r the "Farmer's Frolic" on Friday , Tickets lot' the Frolic are on sal e in the quad at noon every day . Frolickers are reminded that the iIpPI'OVCd dress for the evening i s coveralls, and prizes will he . award- ed for the best "get-up" . The "Far- mexotte" contest will be the feature of the evening. The Leavy brothers have promise d to transport their 'still' to the Ar- mory and will refresh Folicket's wit h tipple juice. Dance Manager Gordon Murra y atid entertainment manager Fi'ec l Marshall have arranged a gala' even- ing, They urge that tickets be bough t early, with the soci,tii'i_a- banks and iLl_Sill' - This will be th e Symphony Concer t In Armory Frida y under conductorship cif Jacque s iiig :i' with jIlt's . Gertrude 1-but)', s ' Green, pianist, the Vancouver Sym- phony will give a two hour concer t Friday, 11 :30 a .m . in the Armory . The Vancouver Symphony is bein g presented by Spocinil Events Com- mittee , Tickets for Fraley's concert inn e n sale et Alnu Meter Society office ;In d the QLILICI ticket booth for 25 cents , The two lioouu' cuuic'ti't gill be situ) - lilt' in pi'og'i'ani to 0110 presented it t the Orpheuni theatre February 23 . 15 REDS The reading room, in one of tw o huts behind Brock Hall, will b e equipped by the Canadian Red Cross Society with 15 beds . "Students will give their blood fre e of charge," said Ailine Redlich, thir d year pro-med student and forme r Red Cross worker, No charge for th e blood will be made to civilian an d veterans' hospitals . No special diet is necessary for an y student who donates blood, accordin g to Red! Cross officials . The whol e procedure, horn the time a perso n enters the clinic, has a sampl e made of his blood, gives his blood and has some refreshment takes hal f an hour . 1500 STUDENTS The Eec! Cross mobile clinic ca n handle 150 students daily and 150 0 during its three week stay . "It is doubtful if any blood donor hank books will be distributed," Mis s Redlich, ex-Rec! Cross worker stated . Students may bring in their ban k books, however, and have the amoun t of their blood donation recorded . "We are especially after non-vet- eran students," Miss Redlich stated . "Servicemen did their bit, but w e would be pleased to see them again . " The Red Cross has three motorize d blood donor units which are visitin g various towns in B .C. this year to give full coverage to the province. Each clinic is staffed by a doctor , a nurse and technicians. REV . TOM MAXWEL L Rev, Tom Maxwell, B, A . . Tti .Tli, , Associate General Secretary of th e inter-Varsity Cutristian Fellowshi p I Cenadai, will speak on Wednesda y l()()ti in Arts 100 His subject is : "rho Crucible of Chai'actei" , Phrateres Danc e Given For Vet s Phrateu'cs will give a return danc e for the n',',:n of Fort Cant) in th _ In in 1 lounge e I S toe Ic Hall Thursdey . Sitii'e'li 6, at 9 :00 jc .iti , The dance is being arranged b y Maxine Linclow, Sheila Ketelian and Gltslvs Worrell, with Miss IS'Oi)el Cla y 5 pctti'oness, B . . ftoslitiiciits will b e served , various universities, They have ul- i'cacly Visitedl universities in th e eastern United States and Canada an d left this morning for a visit to easter n American universities . SUMMER THER E When questioned as to whetheth e tout' was being made on university Ineligibility May Sto p Invasion s Bill McKay, chairman of the Eligi- lI i I ty committee, stated yesterda y that he would recommend to las t night's meeting of the Student Counci l that all sport teams which have n o submitted lists for eligibility to par- ticipate in UE'C athletics be suspende d from further 'tivity until the situ- ation is reme ed . Teams which toe particularly in- volved at the present time are thos e who have not applied to take par t in the Victoria Invasion next Satur - Us,' . According to the existing regu- lation, application moist be made on e week before the team is to leave o n a trip . , only Victoria bound town to hav e STOP PRES S it was passed by Student Counci l last night that the following team s be declared ineligible to play for th e University until such time es th e eligibility lists of their players hav e b :€' approved by the chairman o f the eligibility committee . I . UBC Soccer team . 2. All second division rugby teams. 3. All miens' grass hockey teams . 4. All niens' bask :tbail teams. To this action MAD president Keit h MacDonald commented, "This troubl e is due to an office oversight and wil l be cleared up within 24 how's . Al l teams will travel to Victoria nex t weekend as scheduled . " its application submitted and approv - Cod, McKay said, is the Varsity socce r team , t Usual proceclui'e to obtain eligibility , 1 McKay said, is to submit tam list s 1 to the Registrar who then turns the m C ;','O to the committee . FARC E McKay told The Tjbyssey that h e I fens L) .)jng to make the rL'ci)innienda- t jot it ; because "the nititiucor in whic h 1)5' whole affair is being handled i s croIcimig a farce out of the eligibilit y ruling" . ''I JITI certain that the i'ecounmen - J ' ' otiS will be accepted," McKay t aciciccl . In McKay's opinion, responsibilit y 11cr the situation rests with the presi- dent of the Men's Athletic Directorat e whose duty it is to see that the list s are submitted to the Registrar. Teams which have not made appli- cation one the second division rugge r team, the grass hockey teams and th e UBC soccer team, McKay stated . Also absent from the list, but not involve d in the Victoria question are all th e basketball teams. CONFLIC T Conflicting statement op the situ- ' ation came from MAD 'presiden t Keith MacDonald who said he be- lici,'ed that "most of the application s are in the Registrar's office" . MacDonald said that he was "un- happy" about the present situation , terming the absence of the lists as 0th oversight'' . course is quite different from theirs . In New Zealand footi' separate col- leges, about 400 miles apart, special- ize in different fields . One is noted iou' its arts, science and medicine, tifl - I other for music and architecture, a third for art and engineering and th e rcitirth for Mining and Home Scienc e which corresponds to our Home Eco- nomics . There are two agricultural island. STUDENT ASSOCIATIONS Students' icsti>ciatid,ns in New Zea - l,tutcl universities are somewhat dif- ferent from ours . Students after a i ; .00 paying registration fee each 'ear , are entitled to membership in almos t any campus club without paying f'r- tlier dues . Their student organiza - tions include sports and cultural clubs much the same as o*n . S i . ti - MR . HERBERT ANSCO11 B Spoil to e :<titsplos used by Di' . : l (one s t t U i t t \' .'IS 'Hid ii i o f '.lt' a Is . t t a ttoI Itt F . tr : ye ' t t S I t I , 1 . y t Mr It It I ' i I , I t t, t . ' is t i \ tr011) U : Ut it kt'ttitt 1 it \ ', ' Ol( ' SLth',etSt\O The clones ti,ottitt lit ' Force Call s UM. Mtn we ei litter ',vixen Mini , Dc' . Sclgewolt said . u For Technician s Finance Minister Anscom b To Address Comm Banque t Guest speaker at the Commerce Banquet Thursday evenin g will be the Honorable Herbert Anscomb, the man who has jus t brought down the largest budget in B .C .'s history . --- ' . Arranged by the Commerce Under - graduate Society, the Banquet, to b e held in the Hotel Vancouver, Thurs- day, March 6, is intended primarily to introduce the graduating class i n Commerce to the business men of th e city . SUBJEC T Tho subject of Mr . Ariscomb's ad - dress will be "British Columbia' s place in the National and Internation- al Picture" ; a subject for which hi s wide experience in public life ha s ITIOCIC him adequately qualified . The Minister of Finance and Pros) - dent of the B . C . Progressive Con- servative Association was horn i n Maidestone, England in 1892 . He cam e to Canada and settled in B .C . in 1911 , During World War I he serve d as Li Sergeant in the Royal Flyin g Corps, Following his discharge h e took up Chartered Accountancy an d received a C .A . degree hi 1924. POLITICAL CAREE R Mr . Anscomb's political career started in Oak Bay Municipality where he served as Reeve from 1925 to 1927 . In 1929 he was elected Mayor cf Victoria, a position which he hel d for three years. In 1933 he moved u p to a seat in the B .C . Legislature. He first entered the Cabinet in 1940 as Minister of Mines, Trade and In- dustry, In 1942 he succeeded th e Hon . John Hart as Minister of Publi c Works and Railways . With the deat h of Mr . Maitland in March , 1946, Mr. Arisoomb was chosen to occupy th e senior position of the cabinet a s Minister of Finance , Last June, the B .C . Progressive Conservative Association chose Mr . Anscumb as their President to succee d the late Attorney-General Maitland , fr. this position he leads the Pro-Co n nation of the Coalition, e n n_ PCI Resolutions MP Opens Wit h CCF Agend a F' wii' huts will be ))t'(S('itlY(l to t)' i House of Commons of iVloc ' I k P ,! i . - Dead I ties Set For ' men' y t it "cooPet'tURe ' : : taton - oIt efl ' li t , k'i,tI d l o c'ct' tt ttl il lee pi e r, ('jill' (U"et' ti electien Mil d list Thtit'slttv, The "eptsnittg o f I tti 5j StOt'ttl" will lU's' i ' s' ,l .tto} t et 7 . 30 pm . Broil ; Hell . TIIRONT, SPEEC H Pttt'Iitim' . at will ()))Otl vttli tic' .' reeding of the she ch from th e Throne which is an ilmost exer t cUtjdictt ti_' of the one liven by G :ot'ge the Sixth when the first l3i'itisli Labo r Putty cotuc' to ofl'io's in 1945 . Afte r this the 48-scat Frderid House wil l ecil oct ma, only to assemble immediate - ly in oi'clei' to begin with introductio n of the bills, entorprise ." the biology departments o f Bill No, 1 deal s tion of chattere d OnCe companies , Cost step of the "CCF government " to " place the present capital - ist system with its inherent injustic e said Inhumanity, by ti social orde r ft'cci which the domination and cx- tloitation of one class by anothe r \till be eliminated, " HOUSIN G 'ri1, lioiisiiig pt'ogi'ain, which, i f pissed will be a \'Cl'7d iilil)Ol'ttllt piece I I oflegislation, according toi)aiUy as Best Settin g leader Cliff Greer . The bill will in- i tithe ii minim)! expenditure o f $500,000,000 . No 3 will introduce a social Say New Zealand Student s 't('cdit'jtl' act P1'0'iCl mit )iCtlsiOliti o f ¶50 .00 per month for citizens of sixty- By JOAN ChARTERS li''0 yOst's 0111(1 ','diLIl'tltiCiittl minds to "The Univei'isty of British Columbia has the best settin g tll students similar to DVA, of . any Canadian university," was the opinion of the 12 Ne w ' Those lout' Pi'OPOSedl pieces of leg- Zealand biology students who visited the campus last weeken d elation will be open for cic'hat's, a three month tour of North American universities . Greer hopes the bills ''will not be The 12 students, nine women and ' -- c They also found that ou r ' cIo'usccl as legal documents but to three men are making the tour t o bring out the respective arguments I stud y for private or social biolog y time, ono of the students smilingly colleges, one on eac h i'crnindecl the reporter that it wa s now SLIT1II'l'IC'l' in New' Zealand an d they were on their holidays . The y explained that their school term be- gins in March, which is aLttuxnn t o tiietii and o'uicls ii I'701'Lllii)et' . It i s divided into three Miens with a tw o weeks ; holiday between each. term . "North American universities ar e much larger than New Zei land once" , was the comment of one student .

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V OL. XXIX

VANCOUVER, B .C., TUESDAY, MARCH 4, 1947 .

No . 55 .

Blood Donors Unit

Here On March 10

Free blood donations will be requested of University stu-

dents when a mobile blood donor clinic will visit the Reading

Room, in one of the two huts behind Brock Hall, on Monday ,

March 10. The blood is to be used for any hospital patient i n

British Columbia who needs it .

"All the free coffee and coke they

can drink," is offered donors "before

and after the service," according to

Ted Kirkpatrick, President of the

Alma Mater Society .

MacMilla nScoresForestry

Forestry engineering in Canad a

was srpIy criticized in an address

Thursday night by H. B. MacMillan ,

C,B,E ., who described the forestr y

department at UBC as "too academic

and too sedentary ." Mr. MacMillan

was speaking to the Society of For-

est Engineers in the Hotel Vancouver .

Mr . MacMillan charged that the

Canadian profession is far behin d

that of the United States, both i n

sustained yield management and ad -

ministration .

The speaker claimed that too many

insufficiently trained foresters wa s

one of the reasons for the Canadia n

lag and scored the UBC school, '(It )

has not risen to potentialities . It h s

been too academic and too sduntai y .

There is not enough flild work," h e

said ,

Politics was advanced as another

'meson or the lack of a progressive

forest policy, Mi' . MacMillan urge d

the establishment of a centralize d

forest service in Cnada and state d

ti-nit the Fed : ral Government maclis a

big mistake in i 'c'incuishing contro l

of the forest lands of the prairi e

provinces .

STUDENT OPINIO N

On the o m)us opinion amongs t

the students seems to side with th e

charges if applied to the OldI course .

The new course, initiated this term ,

calls for much more practical wok .

Sam Parnum and Dave Ritchie ,

both fourth year students and mem-

bers of the executive of the Fores t

Club both hold this view, and stres s

the rreedl of practical work whic h

will be available to students now in

first year Arts and first year Forestr y

Engineering .

Bruce Low, also a fourth year

student and member of the execu-

tive of the club, commented on th e

reported opening of the head of th e

department when Professor J . E .

.Liersch leaves this spring .

"I hope that the nw head of th e

forestry department will he a man

with practical experience ." he said .

COMMENTS

Professor Liersch, commenting (i n

the charges said " I think that sum .

of the charges are justified . H)',\

ever, he (Mr. MacMillan) 1x)irItcd )II t

the? semi of the objection ; ere 1)eh, g

tact hied . The improvements . ft r

which we have been striving for years ,

ta k t i no atI(I I fl(

V T ned

Ia'i

like

lilr .

t o

spurns t I ise e lie ; ,

' vsitv fUFsi id }{,a ',

H

( :c :ss 1()(1 \','as built last summe r

It

"ill

take

tittle

t>

cLe lu)

i

(Almost). to provide Iiinctica l

for our uricicrgraluLitJs . '

UBC Coed KilledIn Weekend Cras hA regular skiing excursion t o

Mount Baker end : ci in disaster, whe nFfcl :ne Hamilton v.'s instantly killed

111( [ Rohert Wahl was seriously in -

,iui•cci in a collision on the Kin g

George I-1ih'i, early , Sunch y

morning,

The fatal crash OCCUI'I'Cdl about 1

a .m. The victims were taken t o

Rcv 1 Cotu nhiati Flospito I where i t

WUS fauncl that Vull ','ias sufferin g

from severe chest injuries, facial cut s

and shock . Miss Hamilton was be-

lieved killed instantly in the crash .

Cause of the 000i(lCnt, vies; no t

lete'.inined immediately by Surre y

Police .

It

O,'os

I ; I

I

hotti,i r

ti .,ol it him mII (I 0 I-n \t'ohl s . u u

LI 1 to avoid colliding head-on vith

Od)thCI' car, being driven I1()t1I a

h1 highwiy .

U()th

first

vi ; i

stui net

t

U

University of British Coiunhiu, th e

d'U(I)Id IO'(I heeti companions for ems

trill y(, cs

Graduating front Prince of \\lid s

f-li :l telitsl Iasi year, Miss Hiitniito n

hu(l )lOtIttL'(l to Ott 11(1 Milts Uni'.st-

sty next seem ,

Funeral services will be heidi \Vcd-

tt'osday at 2 :15 in Mount Pleasen t

Undertaking Chapel .

E

Washington StaffWill Edit Pape r

Eighteen editors and reporters fro m

The University of Washington Dail y

will descend upon Brock Hall thi s

L\'c'IUt'LLt to begin prepetettons fo r

taking ()VOt' this Friday's edition o f

The Uhyssey .

The Daily staff, all students a t

Washington's School of Journalism ,

are repaying a similar visit paid b y

U'byssey staff members to The Dail y

several weeks ago,

Cross Is QueenOF Local Skiers

Jaeqt (e Cross won this y'eat" o

crown as queen of the local skier s

lest Sunday on Grouse Mountain .

Queen Jaguie led the field with a

to jority of 1500 votes ,

retiring Queen Lan Reid of the

'f'ee ski club crowned Jacquic an d

presented her with a geld identifica-

tion bracelet . Queen Jaguie thank s

c'veryor..o V.ho supported her an d

says "Die contest was lots of fu n

: nd tl

pi'occeds cci'tainly arc for a

good cause . '' Proceeds from the

Cd Meet amounting to )379 .10 nit 12 :00

noon Sunday t will he donated to

the Ql\'Ipio Ski Te : : Fund ,

Runners-up for the title wer e

Ttenc Sheen) of Cypress Ski Club ,\ r :l. tiinio Ramsay of S .ytnour, Jo -

An: Peers of the Tyco Ski Runners ,

Boy Robertson, Grouse Mountain ,

oat! Betty Griffiths of Getatil Sk i

Club, C' :orge Coatis, Queen Cross '

campaign manager, i'OCIUCStS that all

unsold t joke ts and fltOtlCy be turne d

into him in the quad Tuesday at

12 :30 p .m .

Sedgewick Cite sGroup Suffering s

Dr. G. G . Sedgewick, head of th e

department of English 'and officer o f

the local branch of Canadian Civil

Liberties Union, used the Ukranian s

Canadian Japanese, the espionage

trial and Jehovah's Witnesses r cx-

ompl':s of groups stiff ring under our

present code of laws in Canada, when

he spoke to 300 students yesterda y

noon in Arts 10 ,

A t'osol a tiun that Japanese Carta -(i]SflS sind iloti', hidi ns Is,' givc nlt,i '' :' :nclos \','ao totioted by th e

Student Christian Movement, ap -

t

y

It, C : :olt :ttt Civil Lihor -

I i' i i Snipe end

doptiid in ell hu t

t '0

of if t)

I t(

Uts ' et

U

2, A Jtt ,t 'tooc fihot'ni :ttt who gav e

ILl) U good jolt to enlist in the Britis h

Army i11(1 fIt ht in lii o Fat' East be -

cruse 'he Cenadisn Army would not

Sc .' it hitti . returned to find his es-

tate sold . 'l'hc' l'tico alone had bee n

cnt ;ut'c(l fts I Inc: tie ' sand chillers

and thi whole property wee sold fo r

two lIlOdISSfl(l clu :in't his ohsence ,

1, A. \c,'otlan who was convicted i n

the esldo :1 :I,se trial mci later acquit -

tool, lost her job through the action .

"WHit Uuot'ttnlecs It ye OU or I

that such a precise will not be

ht'criItt on ris'?" Dr . S'odgewick ask-

ed his auclionce .nn.

TB X-Rays Taken

Of 7000 Students

Neatly 7000 members of the studen t

bach', faculty and staff were X-rayed

at the Boil iUi Columbia Tuberculosi s

Association clinic in the Universit y

lI'alth Service hut, but ever thre e

thiuSttn(l people neglected to get thei r

yearly chest X-ray, according t o

Health Service officials .

"Students who neglected to hav e

an X-t':,' should certainly have one

before tI't(' clinic retains to the uni-versity next February", Health Ser-

vice officials stated .

Aitiiiritnents for ri free X-ray a t

the down tOWfl clinic may be mad e

by phoning FA, 6644 .

AUS Meets Today

To Plan Events

The

Agricultural

Und'ot' g rtcltttit, '

Sot, Lol

will hold a general inc ttti gleilttv In A.gie lot) at 11)011, NOt )\'k'lKiiinon, Amide Prestdent, mete s

that till Aggics att'enc! ,

Plaits for the coining "ANA,' Day "tlitc) 'lui'tiiei's Frolic" evil' be dis-cussed . o vcll as thc Saturday Fiel d

Day at Agassi, and Spring Banque t

on the following Wednesday .

Top Legion Posts

Filled On Campus

Offices of president, secretary an dtreasurer for the 1947-48 executiveof Branch 72, Csnadian Legion, havebeen filled by acclamation announced!Logion officials at the close of nom-inations . Friday .

Perry Millar succeeds Grant Liv-ingstone as president; John MacKen-zie is secretary, and Frank Masontreasurer.

Three 10 : ople have been nominator!

lot' the position of first vice-president ,

These include, Norman Littlewood! ,

John Norris o nd Don Lanskzul . MissIlc'lcn Noel sac) :Sins Lee Brown to eL'c)fltet,tittO fur the offi:if n'ccncl

t'ice -president ,

Iltlh Tiaras', Stti I . 'it, shot's, U :

UHunt I'

I't lit' itt s

EMI) ( le i

In d

John \Vcsl tt( c sit S Is Its h ii

5 -I t cc

its' t ,thi : i - ,

Application forme for permitmin t

ciitdy

iritit

the

ttirftjrce

are

nowavailable in the U'ni'.' i'sit , Employ-

ment Ba 'curt ii ittosrinced i'vlr, J . F .

McLean yestei'cltiy ,

Air force officials :ti' c said to wan t

ti nucleus of highly proficient tech-

tiicol PCi'sOiiL I . '1'Iit y are there-

foi'o inviting ttp))IiL'tItiOltS from )t'e -

,.' IctOis classes, students graduating i n1947, and :tll Engineering Faculties ,

Architecture, ;ad Arts majoring i n

Physics, lIlt', McLean stated ,

To qualify, cendidates must hi e

sttiiiirrLcl Canadian or British sub -

bets, t'ejtli'tit in Canada, betwee n

18 :1 tir! 24 years of age .

Selected nieti w i l l he graded a s

[°lit1ct

('acl,ic sad ptiicl

135,()))

pe r

II ntlt, phis In' :' rations and quar-

ters, pins $30 .00 per month risk l)ci Y

when actively engaged in L'l ,yitic', irs

stated .

Allot' successful completion of tw o

,ei, s '

tt'ttiniti,

,' stiticlici :its

tutly pro -

ceed on specoilist commis to fit them

for it tocltnio:tl is well id flying

career, tiii'I'orce officials prondsed .

Laborers Wanted

For Yukon Wor k

About one hundred noon are wante dfor summer employment in gold opera-

tions near Dawson, Yukon Territories .

for the iei'ioc! May 1 to September 15 ,

announcer! Mr, J . F. McLean of the

University Employment Bureau Tues-

day .

Seasonably husky men are required ,

he said .

The rate of pay is .1 .00 per hoot' fo e

18 hour week, and 1,50 for a 48 t o113 11(11,1!' WOOk, Board is $2 .25 a da y

and income tax deductions will coni cto about 101 , he stated .

Platte fate is $130,00 r'acli way an d

will he advanced by the Nationa l

Employment Service, Two weeks holi-day with pay is slated for thos e

men who stay with the job until th e

end of the period, he said .

.'U I

t t

i(ejtt, ,

i (e'er(

II . :'

J,

,t :ts, ,t , otl

I , ' :cu,tt

, 'tot' O'rtttott

in

ii itetitttivc'ly set for Allay 10 to 14-'-

titlist hit t

the office of iiiitnrh 72I)y J\Ittcs'l1

1 ;

'toted

Den

le inked ,I (i1tiioii,' din titer, ycslecdey .

At the convention d . higatos fro m

all brunettes in the province will de -hate and decide on Legion poncho, fo r1li ci,titittt1 yctit . elect the Provincie lfxocut'e end Dominion Coittin tic)r(p :' :'s ntiltiVect and consider variousresolutions, said L :inskttil ,

As the lorgest, branch in the icro-

ittc'c, Stanch 72 will be able to sen d25 members to the afl'sit' . Only fiv cwill attend, liOwOct I', tires 1155 of th eheavy CXI)Cio,' s 110,01 V CI, he stttted .

The university branch would liketo liavo' the titcicto's of all the Legio ntiii'nili l's l't'titii the Vernon legion

who cute to attend the ettn\'eittiuli ,ll potential cleleg td's must appl y

to the Legion office la fors March 15 ,he SSI(l, 5(1 their minas may L cl)t'OLtliit licfoi'c thu general Inmtin gnext nmnth for approve' .

SCM Camp Planned

At Ocean Park

"Co-operati r' Lit.'jii1" is tli

thrict e1'oi'

Ito

tiicieiit C'lti')tttjati TVIOV('iti a tyr

<cud Cutup to he bolt) at (i)cettt ip t'k on Pilareli II and 9 .

At the SC7/I IlVeskend camp to Mkt)

dace next Satui'c)tty and Suncttty i tOcean Park, iVil', A . J . Giant, genera lSect'ettt'v of the SCM, will speak o n

ii principles of co-operation, an d

lilt's, Lin Brown of the Co-operatives

Branch of the University Extension

will cli'sl with the application of thos e

iwinciples in many fields, The pro -greet also inclucics a student pane l

id iitnl)le tituict for general studen tdiscussion .

Also on the agende are outdoo r

slid) its end hikes veatbei' permit-

ting), Square dancing and indoo r

i_ltititd's, Plenty of time will be pro-

vided for fun inn relaxtit jolt ,All stciilitts th it are interested i n

L5)tliC on the trip liP isI':eil to go trtcitii 312 in the Auditorium buildin g

for fu 'thin' information ,

Buses letter' New' Westminster fo

r iin Park on S'uloii'clay at 1(1: 3(1 out . ,2 :20 pm,, and 5 .20 p .m

Aggies To Stage

Pepmeet Wed.

The Aggies will stage a pep-meet

tomorrow in the Armory at noon, i n

preparation for the. "Apple Day" aan d"Farmer's Frolic" on Friday ,

LsSt1' Cole's Debutantes will be

the feature attraction of the show ,

although several of the new profes s

sere of the faculty have be'm gettin g

together 01101 have something up

their sleeves ,

Tb.5 professors, 'n6mb:1g Di . Aim sWOOd and Dr . E, Philips of the

J\iiiiiitil lIusbtinclry Department, Pro-fc'sctcui' J . H . Young of the Agi'icLtltLtl'a )lticu'htiiiics Department aid Dr . J .

Campbell of the Dairying Depart -

mat, will be judges of the "Bes t

Dressed Farmer" contest, variou s

ctiniptls organizations being invited

to enter their candidates for th e

title ,

Frank Nightingale trill provide th e

music for the show, as well as for

the "Farmer's Frolic" on Friday ,

Tickets lot' the Frolic are on sal e

in the quad at noon every day .

Frolickers are reminded that the

iIpPI'OVCd dress for the evening i s

coveralls, and prizes will he. award-

ed for the best "get-up" . The "Far-

mexotte" contest will be the feature

of the evening.

The Leavy brothers have promise d

to transport their 'still' to the Ar-

mory and will refresh Folicket's wit h

tipple juice.

Dance Manager Gordon Murra y

atid entertainment manager Fi'ecl

Marshall have arranged a gala' even-

ing, They urge that tickets be bough t

early,

with the soci,tii'i_a-

banks and iLl_Sill' -

This will be the

Symphony Concert

In Armory Frida y

under conductorship cif Jacque siiig :i' with jIlt's . Gertrude 1-but)', s '

Green, pianist, the Vancouver Sym-

phony will give a two hour concer t

Friday, 11 :30 a .m. in the Armory .

The Vancouver Symphony is bein gpresented by Spocinil Events Com-

mittee ,

Tickets for Fraley's concert inn e nsale et Alnu Meter Society office ;In dthe QLILICI ticket booth for 25 cents ,

The two lioouu' cuuic'ti't gill be situ) -lilt' in pi'og'i'ani to 0110 presented it t

the Orpheuni theatre February 23 .

15 REDSThe reading room, in one of tw o

huts behind Brock Hall, will b e

equipped by the Canadian Red Cross

Society with 15 beds .

"Students will give their blood fre e

of charge," said Ailine Redlich, third

year pro-med student and former

Red Cross worker, No charge for th e

blood will be made to civilian an d

veterans' hospitals .

No special diet is necessary for any

student who donates blood, accordin g

to Red! Cross officials . The whole

procedure, horn the time a person

enters the clinic, has a sample

made of his blood, gives his blood

and has some refreshment takes hal f

an hour .

1500 STUDENTSThe Eec! Cross mobile clinic can

handle 150 students daily and 1500

during its three week stay .

"It is doubtful if any blood donor

hank books will be distributed," Mis s

Redlich, ex-Rec! Cross worker stated .

Students may bring in their ban k

books, however, and have the amoun t

of their blood donation recorded .

"We are especially after non-vet-eran students," Miss Redlich stated .

"Servicemen did their bit, but wewould be pleased to see them again . "

The Red Cross has three motorized

blood donor units which are visiting

various towns in B .C. this year to

give full coverage to the province.

Each clinic is staffed by a doctor ,

a nurse and technicians.

REV. TOM MAXWEL L

Rev, Tom Maxwell, B, A . . Tti .Tli, ,Associate General Secretary of th e

inter-Varsity Cutristian

Fellowshi pI Cenadai, will speak on Wednesda y

l()()ti in Arts 100

His subject is :

"rho Crucible of Chai'actei" ,

Phrateres Dance

Given For Vets

Phrateu'cs will give a return danc e

for the n',',:n of Fort Cant) in th _In in 1 lounge e I S toe Ic Hall Thursdey .

Sitii'e'li 6, at 9 :00 jc .iti ,The dance is being arranged by

Maxine Linclow, Sheila Ketelian and

Gltslvs Worrell, with Miss IS'Oi)el Cla y

5 pctti'oness, B. . ftoslitiiciits will be

served ,

various universities, They have ul-

i'cacly Visitedl universities in th e

eastern United States and Canada an d

left this morning for a visit to eastern

American universities .

SUMMER THERE

When questioned as to whetheth e

tout' was being made on university

Ineligibility

May Stop

Invasion s

Bill McKay, chairman of the Eligi-

lI i I ty committee, stated yesterda y

that he would recommend to las t

night's meeting of the Student Counci lthat all sport teams which have no

submitted lists for eligibility to par-

ticipate in UE'C athletics be suspende d

from further 'tivity until the situ-ation is reme ed .

Teams which toe particularly in-volved at the present time are thos ewho have not applied to take partin the Victoria Invasion next Satur-Us,' . According to the existing regu-

lation, application moist be made on e

week before the team is to leave o na trip .

, only Victoria bound town to have

STOP PRES S

it was passed by Student Counci llast night that the following teamsbe declared ineligible to play for th eUniversity until such time es theeligibility lists of their players haveb:€' approved by the chairman ofthe eligibility committee .

I . UBC Soccer team .

2. All second division rugby teams.

3. All miens' grass hockey teams .

4. All niens' bask :tbail teams.

To this action MAD president Keith

MacDonald commented, "This trouble

is due to an office oversight and will

be cleared up within 24 how's. All

teams will travel to Victoria next

weekend as scheduled . "

its application submitted and approv-

Cod, McKay said, is the Varsity soccer

team ,t

Usual proceclui'e to obtain eligibility ,

1 McKay said, is to submit tam list s

1 to the Registrar who then turns the m

C;','O to the committee .

FARC EMcKay told The Tjbyssey that h e

I fens L) .)jng to make the rL'ci)innienda-

t jot it ; because "the nititiucor in which

1)5' whole affair is being handled i s

croIcimig a farce out of the eligibilit y

ruling" .

''I JITI certain that the i'ecounmen -

J ' ' otiS will be accepted," McKay

t aciciccl .In McKay's opinion, responsibilit y

11cr the situation rests with the presi-dent of the Men's Athletic Directorate

whose duty it is to see that the list s

are submitted to the Registrar.

Teams which have not made appli-

cation one the second division rugger

team, the grass hockey teams and the

UBC soccer team, McKay stated . Also

absent from the list, but not involved

in the Victoria question are all th e

basketball teams.

CONFLIC TConflicting statement op the situ- '

ation came from MAD 'president

Keith MacDonald who said he be-

lici,'ed that "most of the applications

are in the Registrar's office".

MacDonald said that he was "un-

happy" about the present situation ,

terming the absence of the lists as

0th oversight'' .

course is quite different from theirs .

In New Zealand footi' separate col-

leges, about 400 miles apart, special-

ize in different fields . One is noted

iou' its arts, science and medicine, tifl -

I other for music and architecture, a

third for art and engineering and the

rcitirth for Mining and Home Science

which corresponds to our Home Eco-

nomics . There are two agricultural

island.

STUDENT ASSOCIATIONSStudents' icsti>ciatid,ns in New Zea -

l,tutcl universities are somewhat dif-

ferent from ours . Students after a

i ; .00 paying registration fee each 'ear,

are entitled to membership in almost

any campus club without paying f'r-

tlier dues . Their student organiza-

tions include sports and culturalclubs much the same as o*n .

S i. ti

-

MR. HERBERT ANSCO11 B

Spoil to e :<titsplos used

by

Di' .

: l

(ones

t t U

i

t t

\' .'IS

'Hid ii i

o f

'.lt' a

Is .

t

t a ttoI

Itt

F . tr : ye

'

t

t S

I t I

, 1 . y

t Mr It

It

I

' i I ,

I t

t,

t . ' is

t

i \

tr011)

U

:

Ut

it

kt'ttitt 1 it \', ' Ol( '

SLth',etSt\O

The clones ti,ottitt lit '

Force Call sUM. Mtn we ei litter ',vixen Mini ,

Dc' . Sclgewolt said . u

For Technicians

Finance Minister Anscomb

To Address Comm Banquet

Guest speaker at the Commerce Banquet Thursday evening

will be the Honorable Herbert Anscomb, the man who has jus t

brought down the largest budget in B .C.'s history .--- ' . Arranged by the Commerce Under -

graduate Society, the Banquet, to b e

held in the Hotel Vancouver, Thurs-day, March 6, is intended primarily

to introduce the graduating class i n

Commerce to the business men of th ecity .

SUBJECT

Tho subject of Mr . Ariscomb's ad -

dress will be "British Columbia'splace in the National and Internation-

al Picture" ; a subject for which hi s

wide experience in public life has

ITIOCIC him adequately qualified .The Minister of Finance and Pros) -

dent of the B. C. Progressive Con-

servative Association was horn i nMaidestone, England in 1892 . He cam eto Canada and settled in B .C . in 1911 ,

During World War I he serve das Li Sergeant in the Royal Flyin gCorps, Following his discharge h etook up Chartered Accountancy an dreceived a C.A. degree hi 1924.

POLITICAL CAREE RMr. Anscomb's political career

started in Oak Bay Municipalitywhere he served as Reeve from 1925to 1927 . In 1929 he was elected Mayorcf Victoria, a position which he heldfor three years. In 1933 he moved upto a seat in the B.C. Legislature.

He first entered the Cabinet in 1940as Minister of Mines, Trade and In-dustry, In 1942 he succeeded th eHon. John Hart as Minister of Publi cWorks and Railways . With the deat hof Mr . Maitland in March , 1946, Mr.Arisoomb was chosen to occupy thesenior position of the cabinet a sMinister of Finance,

Last June, the B .C. ProgressiveConservative Association chose Mr.Anscumb as their President to succee dthe late Attorney-General Maitland ,fr. this position he leads the Pro-Connation of the Coalition,

e n n_

PCI Resolutions

MP Opens With

CCF Agenda

F' wii' huts will be ))t'(S('itlY(l to t)'i

House of Commons of iVloc 'I k P ,! i . -

Dead I ties Set For 'men' y t it "cooPet'tURe '

:

: taton -

oItefl 'li t , k'i,tI

dl o c'ct' tt ttl

il

lee

pi e

r, ('jill' (U"et' ti

electien Mil d

list

Thtit'slttv,

The

"eptsnittg

o f

I tti 5j StOt'ttl"

will

lU's'

i '

s'

,l .tto} t

et 7 . 30 pm .

Broil ; Hell .

TIIRONT, SPEEC H

Pttt'Iitim' . at will ()))Otl vttli tic' .'

reeding of the she ch from th e

Throne which is an ilmost exer t

cUtjdictt ti_' of the one liven by G :ot'ge

the Sixth when the first l3i'itisli Labo r

Putty cotuc' to ofl'io's in 1945 . Afte r

this the 48-scat Frderid House wil l

ecil oct ma, only to assemble immediate -

ly in oi'clei' to begin with introductio n

of the bills,

entorprise ."

the biology departments o f

Bill No, 1 deal s

tion of chattered

OnCe companies ,

Cost step of the "CCF government "

to " place the present capital -

ist system with its inherent injustic e

said Inhumanity, by ti social orde r

ft'cci which the domination and cx-

tloitation of one class by anothe r

\till be eliminated, "

HOUSING

'ri1,

lioiisiiig pt'ogi'ain,

which,

i f

pissed will be a \'Cl'7d iilil)Ol'ttllt piece

I

Ioflegislation, according toi)aiUy

as

Best Settingleader Cliff Greer . The bill will in- itithe ii minim)! expenditure of

$500,000,000 .

No 3 will introduce a social Say New Zealand Students't('cdit'jtl'

act

P1'0'iCl mit

)iCtlsiOliti

o f

¶50 .00 per month for citizens of sixty-

By JOAN ChARTERS

li''0 yOst's 0111(1 ','diLIl'tltiCiittl minds to "The Univei'isty of British Columbia has the best settin g

tll students similar to DVA,

of. any Canadian university," was the opinion of the 12 Ne w

' Those lout' Pi'OPOSedl pieces of leg- Zealand biology students who visited the campus last weeken d

elation will be open for cic'hat's,

a three month tour of North American universities .

Greer hopes the bills ''will not be

The 12 students, nine women and

'

--c They also found that ou r

' cIo'usccl as legal documents but to three men are making the tour t o

bring out the respective arguments I stud y

for private or social

biology

time, ono of the students smilingly colleges, one on eachi'crnindecl the reporter that it wa s

now SLIT1II'l'IC'l' in New' Zealand an d

they were on their holidays . They

explained that their school term be-

gins in March, which is aLttuxnn t otiietii and o'uicls ii I'701'Lllii)et' . It is

divided into three Miens with a tw o

weeks; holiday between each. term .

"North American universities ar e

much larger than New Zei land once" ,

was the comment of one student .

APPLE DAYWith the closing of the year 1946 ther e

came the retirement of one of the best know n

and best liked Agricultural professors. This

retirement was that of Professor Frank E .

Buck .

As a commemoration to this outstandin g

professor, the Agriculture Students, under th e

direction of their executive, are sponsorin g

an Apple Day and a Dance to raise funds t oobtain a fountain for the Lily Pond in fron t

of the Library .

This is truly a commendable dedication .It will not only pay due tribute to such a be -loved lecturer but it will also be a great ai din maintaining the pristine beauty of ou r

lovely campus .

What do you intend to do when you grad-

uate ?Many students are now asking themselve s

this question, but the fact is, they don't know .

In first year they are usually certain of thei r

aim, blissfully unaware of what is to be requir-ed of them, It is not until second or third yea r

that the great realization occurs . The likely

result at this point is a decision to stumble

through and get a degree . This means they go

through life wishing that they had done some -

thing else .There are, of course, many exceptions . Boy-

hood dreams do sometimes pay off . But in

general the freshman is not fully aware o f

what his capabilities might be . His choice o f

career is often based on information gaine d

from friends and relatives, seldom on a con-clusive investigation of facts .

If the students could only know what the y

were destined to do they could shape thei r

courses to much greater advantage. The mostlogical means of reaching such an end is pre-sented in psychological tests. Through the ap-plication of a well organized authoritative serie s

of tests the student could be advised of his ap-titudes. Such a test could well be administeredat registration in first year, or, better still inthe final year in high school . The tests need

not necessarily be obligatory but surely think-ing people will realize how little they know of

themselves, and accept the advice .

Member Canadian University Pres s

Authorised as Second Class Mail, Post Office Dept ., Ottawa, Mail Subscription - $2 .00 per year.

Publishers tie r ing the univer. ;ity year by the Student Publication ; Board of the Alma Mater Society of the Universit y

of British Columbia ,e t e* i Y

Editorial opinions expressed are those of the Editorial Board of the Ubyssey and not necessarily those of the

Alma Mater Society or of the University ,e e e e t e

Offices in Brock Hall, Phone : ALma 1624 .

For Advertising

Phon e

EDITOR-IN-CHIEF JACK FERR Y

e e e e t e

GENERAL STAFF : News Editor - Nancy Macdonald ; CUP Editor - Bob Mungall ; Sports Editor - Laurie Dyer ;

Features Editor, Norm Klenman; and Photography Director t Tommy Hatcher .

STAFF THIS ISSUE : Editor—Val Sears ,

GOING WHERE ?

Of taqeeay

A step in the right direction was evidenced

recently when the pre-med students were ex-amined by a written test and interview scheme

sponsored by the psychology department . This

plan was devised to determine whether or no t

the students should make application for admit-tance to medical schools . It is, however, unfor-tunate that the test had not been offered when

the students were in first year, instead of no wafter they have, more or less wasted three an d

four years ,In addition to the pre-med tests, the Psy -

Guest

with malice aforethough tBy PETER REMNANT

Ten 1 -hour Lessons - $2 .50

All Types of Ball Room Dancing Taught

339 W PENeoe

MARINE 470 9(Top Floor of Pander Auditorium )

LEARN TO DANC E

L DF OANCN G

%DELICIOUS DARK CHOCOLATE

Aggie Apple DY

How's Your Apple-Tite ?

Enjoy a

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on

MARCH 7

Courtesy of the B . C . Tree Fruits, Ltd ,

It's 12 easy to do !

IT!S THE simplest thing you know togive your hair added life and lustre, torid it of unsightly dandruff, to makeevery strand of it soft and silky—respon-sive to comb and brush.

Here is how you do it . An hour orso before washing your hair massage"Vaseline! Hair 'Ionic generously ontothe scalp, to tone up the tissues an dsupplement the natural scalp oils thatkeep your hair healthy . Then shampoo,and after the hair dries, comb in a fe wextra drops . Lovely? Who mould eve rthink your hair could have such glo-

rious sheen!

"Vaseline" Hair Tonic works wit hnature--not; against it—to keep yourhair always looking its best . It's at yourfavourite toilet goods counter—50 0

and 850 .

Cheiebrough Manufacturing Co . Com' d

PATRC A~

r

Tad ROASTED ALMONDS B245U

LOSTTennis racquet, on Sunday, February

16 at the'campus tennis courts . "Pen-

nant' Australian make. Please turn

ie at AMS office . Urgent .

Kueffo and Esser Slide Rule, tree

4083-3 Log log Vector, Reward . Con-

tact Art Butler, FRaser 2341 ,

Brief case and books in Brock Hal l

between 5 :45 and 5 :00 p.m. Tuesday .

Urgently needed. Return to AMS .

Pete, ALma 0664R ,

Brown, striped "Shaeffer" lifetime pa t

in Parking Lot or Armory, las t

Tuesday .Navy blue Burberry belt Monday ,

February 17 . Lost on campus . Phone

Pauline at ALma 2467 L.

One pair glasses with "Pitman Op-

tical House" on case . Chuck. PAci& c

7990 .Lost in Hut Ml last Wednesday on e

College Survey with name an d

phone number inside . Will finde r

please return to AMS or phon e

Dave at KErr . 2327 .

Will the fellow who was seen takin g

a brown overcoat from the Scienc e

building please return same fro m

where it . was taken .

Small crescent-shaped gold pin, inse t

with pc;u'ls Ienst either in Gy m

or Brock (lull Ian Saturday . Pleas e

return to Lynn Minishell .

th t

Publi' ;ttions cosec.

Envelope (ontaiaing pictures and

negatives Please phone ANall y

Roll : ; /\Isi 0011 .

Phone Kay a tGreen looselcaf

ward. Return to Legion Office

Fort Camp .

Brown striped Parker pen, Tuesday

morning between Ap, Sc. buildin g

and Brock . Return to AMS.Wallet and briefcase containing valu-

able notes . Taken from Science build -

CLASSIFIE D

wrong inincoat from AIL Se, 21 0

nn 'Cucsday at 5 :30 please phon eFA 3229Y .

Two (kattcrntan's tents . Names, Hugh

last Friday . Will finder please re -turn to AMS office ,

NOTICESStudy Group on Co-ops presents Miss

bin Brown speaking on Credi tUnion, ' Wednesday at 12130 in Arts

March 6, from 12:00 to 12 :30 p .m .

Every campus club is invited tosend a delegate. All the helper sin the recent drive also invited .

'Will the student who wished to par-ch :n o

other policy for Wednesday night .

All members, supporters and sym-pathizers welcome,

Communist Forum presents the firs t

of a series of three discussions onMarxism, Wednesdays at 12 :30 inArts 103. Ilse Shulman will leadthe discussion .

Girl Guide Club presents Mrs . Mundyspeaking on Hiking on Tuesday ,March 4 in Arts 203 . All intereste dwelcome,

FROSII DEBATES ,Noon, Arts 100 .

Socialist Foru m

FOR SAL E1935 Indian Motor-cycle. In excellen t

condition. Equipped with extraseat and good tires . $300 . Phon eKErr 2115 L.

Typewriter in reasonably good condi-

tion . Phone KErr . 1532 R.

Two varied year s

REVERSE

have passed since

VIEWS

I sat in a draughty

ldrill hall in Alder-

heard that world' s

best (tressed ice berg, Lord Vansit-

tart, outline his plans for the com-

plete eradication of the Garman

people, If, in the deceptive clarity

of wartime outlook, I agreed wit h

him at that time, two years has don e

much to reverse my views .

From the days when old Tacitu s

first described the German character ,

up to the present clay, Germany ha s

marked all her foreign dealings with

a crushing brutality - not the hal f

This Germa n

greatness — t h a t

seems to be the

'only applicable

word - manifested in art, literature ,

philosophy, even language itself, by

a driving, surging force - is nowhere

more evident than in the music o f

that nation .

By the latter

half of the eigh-

teenth centur y

great changes wer e

coming across Europe - Rousseau an d

Herder had sound_d the note of Ro-

manticism - and it was answered i n

Germany by the new storm an d

clrang poetry of Gacthe and Schille r

and the music of Beethoven . The

polite clays of Haydn were finishe d

- Beethoven burst the walls of the

In the realm of

SCHUBERT

s on g, however ,

GREATEST

Beethoven — as so

many had done for

him . was to play the part of a

pioneer, The long twin curves of

German ' music and German poetr y

come to a complete union in the

greatest song writer of them all -

Franz Schubert .

The genius of Schubert appears

most prominently in his ability t o

seize in his music on the deepest

emotional core of the poem to whic h

he is composing - and to arrive there-

by at a song that leaves no shad e

banish -

ment of a group which advocates

dictatorship. From the general ton e

of his letter he must mean the Cam-munist forum. Apparently he doesn' t

think his own ideas carry much

weight for he wants to smother other

ideas before they can be heard . Com-

munism stands for the political an d

economic democracy of the many not

of the few as in capitalist society .

This information was entirely incor-rect The person scheduled to sin g

was Arnie Ede ,

As I am one of the two studentsaffected, and as I object most strenu-

ously to having myself connected inany way with that other jerk, I here-by demand an apology .

ARNIE EDE .

apologetic cruelly of France, no r

the benevolent ruthlessness of Brit-

ain, but a sweeping, smashing vio -

lence ,

And yet - sonwhody said it, Plat o

or Dante - it is only the truly grea t

who can attain to extremes of goo d

- or evil - and this has been the

characteristic of Germany - a coun-

try inconceivably gnat, where th e

weight of a fcath :r has turned the

bal•'nce for right or wrong, Fo r

the future the endeavour must b e

to so weight the scales, that, th e

greatness remaining, the product wil l

benefit the world .

of a Northern tight knit solidity and

depth .

German folk song has been a lon g

time dead now, with its closest livin g

rcl : rive in the few remaining Min-

nesinger - tinter chin Linden fo r

one - and Meistersinger songs -

vhich resemble the old stock,, bu t

differ in bring the conscious prod-

uct of a tingle artist . Song, how-

clr wing room end scattered the m

like leaves - art went out into th e

wide world again ,

In the cooperative hands of Beet-

hoven and Goethe, the song took on

new life _ its spirit drawn from th e

old sources, and transformed into a

closer unity of music and thought -

wherein the melody rises from being

in accompaniment to the poem, t o

being its equal and companion i n

the e\pression of the idea ,

of meaning unexplored .

Just what Schubert did do, and how

he did it, will be demonstrated far

more clearly than mere words could

ever express, in this weeks Lieder

recital - by Joyce Newman - in th e

Brock Hall stage room - today at 1 :30

and tomorrow at 2 :30. This program

- devoted this week entirely to th e

songs of Schubert, is only one in a

series of German Lieder recitals be-

ing presented by the Symphonic Club

- and more especially - by Joyc e

Newman, soprano, and Martin Brown ,

pianist, with gnomish commentarie s

upon music, audience and situatio n

in general, by Gerald Newman .

French people world have put up

with it .

Perhaps Mr. Cole would like t o

know what Fascism is . Fascism is

ultra-reactionary. It is based on the

big corporations and the vested in-

terests . It crushes working class or-

ganizations and parties like the Com-

munist party and it deals ruthlessl y

with Jews and other minority racia l

groups .

HAROLD DEAN

JERK, TOO

Dean Sir :Lost Thursday your paper carrie d

a story which staled that Arnie Teas -

dale was to sing at the VOC pepmeet ,This information was entirely incor-

rect . The person scheduled to sin g

was Arnie Ede .

As I am one of the two student saffected, and as I object most strenu-

ously to having myself connected i n

any way with that other jerk, I here-by demand an apology .

ARNIE TEASDALE .

Alma 0486 R .Tipper notebook . Re -

New umbrella, white 'with blue border,

Gittnour nil Ron Wilson . Finders

Saturday in HE 10 or Arts building .

Please leave at AMS office .

One dark blue Waterman's 100 yea r,pen, between the stadium and gy m

orI

ing last Thursday . Return to AMS i 207. Everyone is welcome ,

office or KErr, 5352L .

ISS Committee in Arts 104, Thursday ,

Brown SheafTer pen Saturday at 2 :3 0

p .m, in HG 4 . Return to AMS office .

Zipper Iooseleaf containing McGraw -

Hill log tables ; fourth year Chem .

Engineer ing notes . Urgently needed .

Gordon ll,lurray, BAy 5060L ,

Brown ringed Parker pencil Wednes-

day evening . Turn into AMS ,Practise set accounting problems in

Caf urgently needed . Don Scot tEvison, MArine 3682 or AMS office .

Mannhcint trig slide rule . Phone AL

oil3f , BIII 141cKeown ,

One grey pen in black satchel in Ap .

Sc . rebruary 14. Boltz, Alma 1339 L .

Yellow rayon kerchief left in Audi -

torium, Return to AMS .Log-log duplex trig slide rule . Frida y

21, KErr . 5448 L .

Will person litho took my coat, a grey

gaberdine from the library Satur-day between 1-2 p .m., return to AM S

office or library coat rack . BA 2851 R.

Large Mexican silver ring in Mildre dBrock Room last Thursday after -

noon . ALma 0955 M ,Slide Rule, K & E, old style, polyphase

left on window sill in north readin g

room of Library, Monday, 24th

Feb. a .m . Rule minus cursor. Blackcase, Leave at AMS office or library

desk .Would the person who removed the

The

'M'rs . Dorothy Sleeves

THURSDA Y

is presenting

in Arts 100 ,

KErr, 1811 shot

and

GREATNESS IN

MUSI C

to examine veteran students before registratio n

lnsi spring and last fall before the session s

bean . 'Phis series although doubtless of great buts .

told disjointe d

t aloe, could have been more thorough .

The faculty of Applied Science offers noon 'hole' discussions led by men successful in 'thei rre pective fields, This serves, to a certain CHANGE S

measure, to warn the prospective engineers of COMIN G

just what they are getting into .In some high schools a similar course of dis-

cussions is offered through the guidance classes ,Some already have aptitude tests of a sort an d

most have I Q tests .There is, nevertheless, a very real need fo r

the institution of a thorough service of thiskind throughout the province . It is high timethat university students had some notion o fwhere they are going, and some assurance tha tthey are going to be happy when they get there .

—D. F.

s the ontslandin g

Professor Buck while lecturing at UB Calso held important positions in ProfessionalSocieties. As President of the Town Plannin gInstitute of Canada and the Northwest Associ-ation of Planning Officials, he has served hi scommunity wisely. He has also been th eUniversity representative of the Architectura lInstitute of B .C. for fifteen years and a membe rof the Community Planning Association o fCanada .

In endorsing the endeavours of the Agri -culture Students to honour Professor Buck ,I would ask that every student co-operate wit hthem in making the activities of the Appl eDay on Friday a success - do buy an apple — !

Mr. Cole's ridiculous letter in Sat -and do attend the " Farmer 's Frolic".—

t„•try's Ubyssey necessitates a reply .

Editorial by Ted Kirkpatrick,

In the first place he classes himsel f

AMS President .

„s a member of the silent majority .

As a staunch defender of capitalism

he may be in the majority but hi s

group is far from being silent . How

many daily newspapers and radio

stations give the Capitalist point o f

view?—All of them . They make such

a roar apparently Mr. Cole can ' t hear

a thing .

Tuesday noon . She will discus ;

The "Regina Manifesto, "

Will the club who brought in th ealai, of Stun VV:dson last fall please

Lin . g Thu.isday your paper carrie d

a : ;Inry w'hlch stated that Arnie Teas -Inch it up at the News Editor's ,Isle was ; to sing at the VOC pepmeet .desk in the Pub . Thank you,

JER K

Dear Sir :

* * v

chology Department cooperated with the DVAThe roots of German music life -

a is the case with all great music - eves, h ;is talw'a,sys been an io,porLm t

it :hr folk son; nd in a Silk hart of German life, .nu t

song that stood apart front the MI- composers of the Biretta s

Southern ' K.P.E . Birch . and ;Alone

exponent their contributioe

the grea t

period -

- adde d

a •

4 a a

Student Forum

DEAN TO COL E

political freedom for the negroes wish

to deprive the 90 percent white popu -

lation of theirs . Mr. Robeson stated Ilghtiug a Communist dictatorship . I;r 1C-E polyphase slide rule that the racial question was mixed ' o .-scI t that if the Soviet Union ha d

please contact D . Cole via Art sLetter rack

up tti'ilh thelohor question and so net signed that non-aggression pac t

The {iymphouic Club will meet theon it is . Racial antagonisms are stirred , with Germany' in 1939 she would have

aggravated by capitalists to keep had to fight Germany and her satel -;Vl ;inc day, March -nth

' n g

t h e d ' crvat class fighting amongst kites by herself . Whilst Britain an dD nlblc Colnmittcc Roo 1oom

.

. Program 'bricrEspugua,” Rhapsody for IhcniSelves

. They are able to forceF'n :trace might have remained neutra l(h i

O .c :estrn Massenet-"Le Retie" from went; down by playing one group to the extent that they would hav e

u ,iiust the other . Unity between been Germany's bankers and mseu :l l6f :loon . Cncig-Concerto in A Minor, black and white worker is what the at least as long as the British an d

1,PP Caucus will meet on Tuesday, iI ,,,trpinycrs fear the most .Nbuch 4, in Arts 108 to discuss th eCC'S speech from the throne and

Mr . Cole then calls for the

Almost in the same breath M .' . Col e

calls for the counter-revolution

against a possible Communist Govt .

and by violence too . . .

Mr . Cole assorts that we did not

fight the war against Fascism bu t

rather against dictatorships . This is

very disconcerting for some of our

allies such as China, India and Brazil

could scarcely be called democracies .

Mr . Cole in his valiant fight agains t

dictatorships had better consider

Mr. Cole arrives at the appalling l Franco Spain .

asscmtption that people who advocate M' ., Cole asserts that if Germany

had honoured her pact with the

Soviet Union we might have bee n

Letters To The Editor

TIE UBYSSEY, Tuesday, March 4, 1947 . Page 3

COMMERCE UBYSSE Y:1E'

/

-~flee

0ra —

AIL KINDS OFACCC UNTIN G

Fat al NNE R SCor r

CII1RrFRE DSIMPL E

•4 D

— ErC

Anscomb To Speak

At Comm Banquet

Mr. Herbert Anscomb, British Columbia's Minister of Fin-ance, will be guest speaker at the annual Commerce, Graduatio nBanquet, Thursday, March 6th, in the Ballroom of the Hote lVancouver. It is expected that his topic of "British Columbia' sPlace in the National and International Picture" will prove tobe of major interest to the assembled group of business execu-tives, and senior students .

k . ,

k

CommerceProffersAwards

Many commerce students are not

aware of the various medals, scholar -

ships, and bursaries that are available

to them at all stages of their Univer-

sity education. Every effort is made

by the government, the University ,

and the public to help students com-

plete a successful education, Not onl yare these patrons anxious to see stu-dents finish their education but also

to see students who are proficient,in their year, rewarded . As a resul t

of this feeling, the following awardshave been made available to Corn-mercemen . (The Calendar should beconsulted for particulars. )MEDAL S

The Kiwanis Club Gold Medal i s

awarded to the head of the graduat-ing class for the B . Com. Degree.This is given by the Kiwanis Clubof Vancouver .

SCHOLARSHIPS FORGRADUATES

The University Graduate Scholar -

ship is awarded to graduating studentswho are going on in their studies at

this or any other University. Also

for those students continuing their

studies is the Anne Wesbrook Scholar-

ship.SCHOLARSHIPS FO R

UNDERGRADUATESIn an effort to reward Commerce

Undergraduates for their scholasticstanding, and all around ability ,many patrons have given scholarships.The following are open to Commerc eundergraduates : The Terminal CityClub Memorial Scholaridiip for second

year students ; The N . Leo KleinMemorial Scholarship for third yearstudents ; The Edwin Waterhouse

Scholarship for third year students ;The Alaska Pine Company Scholar-ship for second year students; TheWoodward Scholarship for first inCommerce 761, the other for first inCommerce 467,

One • other Scholarship has beengiven recently by the Transportationand Customs Bureau of the Vancou-ver Board of Trade which does no tappear in the Calendar. This Scholar-ship is for the best report in eachof four fields of transportation inCommerce 400.BURSARIES

For those students with high schol-astic standing and who are in financia lneed, the following bursaries ar eavailable : The Captain Le Roy Mein-oriel Bursary, The Khaki Universityand the Young Men's Christian As-sociation Memorial Fund Bursary ,The Rotary Memorial Bursaries, TheJack Cohen Bursary, The McLeanBursary, The Nat Bell Bursary, TheRCAF Veterans Bursary Fund, TheTeamster's Joint Council No . 36 Bur-sary, The Lauder Mercer and Com-pany Ltd. Bursary, and the SpecialBursaries Fund ,

Many of these awards are not auto-matic and must be applied for . Allof these are worth while striving for,so let's go Commercemen as the "BestMan Always Wins "

Comm CourseShould Exten d

By REG. T. ROSEExecutive Secretary ,

Vancouver Board of TradeA broadening of the opportunitie s

for specialization, especially in fina lyears, and the provision of integrate dcommercial training for women ap-pear to be the areas in which theDepartment of Commerce should ex -tend its curriculum .

The Vancouver Board of Trade ha staken a keen interest in the develop-ment of the department . This inter-est has been made practical by theprovision of bursaries and awardsavailable only to commerce studentsand by the provision of lecturers andspeakers from the field of activ ebusiness ,

As in few other universities i nCanada, UBC has provided for acertain degree of instruction in spec-ialized fields. These opportunitiesmight well be expended and consid-eration might also be given to thepossibility of field service duringthis period , Provided that basic train-ing had been provid! .ci, there aremany corporations in B .C. and Wes -tern Canada which could provideopportunity for supervised partici-pation in specialized departmentsrelevant to the students' needs .

Titent are many comparatively smal lbut important businesses whic hcould not employ a specialist on afull time basis but who could wel luse a graduate who combines spec-ialieed knowledge with commercia lskill whicli would permit extensionof usefulness . I believe there aremany possibilities for women grad-

uates who combine commercial skill sof shorthand and typing with an ade-quate preparation through the Com-merce Department .

Morrow PraisesCommerce Grads

Never before have I so reluctantl y

put pen to paper for the task of writ-

ing "valete" to a graduating class.

There are many reasons for this re-

luctance . One is that during you rshort stay at the University you have

contributed immeasurably to the

growth of the Department of Com-merce in performance and in strengt has well as in numbers .

One naturally feels reluctant to se e

leaving us men and women withwhom we have closely associatedduring years of success and expansion .

Stronger, however, is the feeling

that because of the large numbers,with the inevitable dispersal of seniorclasses and weight of administrationtherciby entailed, I feel that for the

first time in my academic caree r

I am writing good-bye to many stu-dents whom we have failed to ge tto know as well as we should hav eliked, The "hubbub" of daily con -tact on the campus lays without con-sciouesness the foundation for a nos-talgic relationship that lasts throughthe years between the graduate andhis teacher . It is no idle platitudeto say that durable friendships aremade in college clays not only be-tween student and student but alsobetween student and instructor .

Be assured, therefore, that you leavebehind you friends, who, in the years

to come will share vicariously in th esuccesses and promotions that lie be -fore you .

Speaking personally, I have confi-dence enough in you and the educa-tion you have received to believ ethat the class of 1947, by and large ,is ready and able to grasp its oppor-tunities, Valete .

Comm UndergradsReports Busy Year

To put Commerce on the map has

been the slogan used by Frank Phil-lips, president of the CommerceUndergraduate Society.

Aided by John Archer, Vtce-Presi-

dent ; George McKeon, Treasurer ;

Gloria Kendall, Secretary ; Ben And-

ers, Social Co-ordinator ; Charlotte

Christopher, Publicity Director ; TornGrant and Fred Jeffry, Executiv e

members ; and Al Lamb, Athletic

Director, Frank has been able to

achieve the meaning of this slogan .

The executive of C.U.S. has risenduring the '46 to '47 year from a

fledgling body of representatives t o

a fullgrown governing organization .The positions of publicity director,social co-ordinator and executiv emember are new and give broaderrepresentation of the undergrads,

A new system of voting has beeninaugurated this year . Formerly ,nominees for the executive postswere voted upon in a general meet-ing by a show of hands . In orderthat it may be easier for all studentsin Commerce to exercise their rights ,voting will be by secret ballot, inthe foyer of the auditorium on Tues-day, March 4th .

The executive feels that those stu-dents unable to attend the campaignmeeting at which the platforms willbe presented will still be able to vot efor their choice of candidate .

Frank Phillips has also inauguratedthe plan of electing the entire execu-tive simultaneously, rather than wai tuntil next fall to establish the entiregroup. It is felt, that in this manner ,those elected may get an early starton planning next year 's activities .

Commerce boasts a 1947 graduatin gclass numbering approximately 220of wihch 12 are women From al lreports, there will be little difficultyin placing these graduates in suitablepositions .

A tea dance has been planned forearly March which, it is hoped, willdraw a substantial crowd , The mixe rheld in the Brock, October 24th ,found many of the second year Corn-mercemen in attendance ,

Public speaking courses under thedirection of Mr , Bayne, Y,M.C•A . ,have been attended by two groupsof upperclassmen as extra-curricularwor k

Beware; now is the challenge offer-ed by Commerce to all those non -commerce students !

"Mania, what is 'alimony'? ""Alimony, my love, is sometimes

known as a married man's cashsurrender value ."

Chartered Accountant sUnappreciated By Publi c

In spite of the many years which have elapsed since ac-counting (in its widest sense) was recognized as a special callin g

and legislation was enacted for the establishment and regulatio nof societies and institutes of accountants - thus elevating it t othe status of a professional - comparatively little is known o f

the professional or chartered accountant . Even in the businessworld he is too often looked upon merely as an expert book -keeper or as some sort of industrial mathematician .

The lack of understanding or tip-0' —

preciation of the professional account- not only to be consistently resolute

ant is due, in part, to the technical in his efforts to succeed, but he shoul d

nature of much of his work which isnot easily explained to the layman

and, perhaps, to some extent to th e

ethical inhibition against blatant pub-licity or advertising.

But it is also attributable to th efact that people who merely keep

books, that is, make entries to record

financial transactions of any sort, ar ealso known as "accountants". Thehigher types of accounting, the wor k

of auditing, of investigation, of adozen different branches of research,

report and presentation which onl ythe trained specialist can undertake,constitute the diffeernce 'between th e

chartered accountant and the book -keeper or ordinary accountant, mak-ing the comparison invidious to theformer .

For the benefit of those who arethinking of seeking opportunity for

becoming students in the offices ofpractising chartered accountants th efollowing remarks may be helpful ,

The desirable and essential qualifi-cations of a dhartered accountant -whether he eventually enters publi cpractice or not - are integrity, astudious mind, high ambition an dgreat determination .

The profession is proud of the highstandard of honourable and depend -able conduct which has been firml yestablished as a professional attribut eand has consistently characterized it smembers .

So much of the work of professiona laccountant is of a confidential nature ,so much depends upon his honest yof purpose and his disinterested atti-tude in dealing with the affairs ofothers where his opinion or decisio n

Is required, that moral courage an dstamina are of prime importanc eamong desirable characteristics ,

The scope of study now requiredof students under articles of servic edemand concentrated effort for a lon gperiod and mental capacity of a highceder . The period of study ;or quali-fying finally by examination is non etoo long for the standard of fitnessdemanded . The student is compelled

BOB WILSON

B of C Course

Now 5 Years

One of the greatest changes in acurriculum that has taken place fo rmany years at the University of B .C .is materializing in the Commerc eDepartment's plans for a 5 yearcourse for a Bachelor of Commercedegree ,

The first three years of the planne d5 year course remains nearly th esame, except that a new intermediat eaccounting course will be a prerequis-ite which must be taken in the thirdyear . This course is designed t obridge the wide gap between ele-mentary and advanced accounting .

In the fourth year 18 units must betaken with Labour Problems andIndustrial Management as addedcompulsory subjects in addition toCommercial Law and Business Fi-nance .

This leaves room for two electivesto be chosen so as to conform withthe requirements of the option group-ings covering the fourth and fifthyears of the course . These groupsof options are designed to meet theneeds of a student's special interests

It is intended to have about tengroups of options or electives which ,however, will be of q flexible nature .A student who wishes to select cours-es from two or three groups may doso except when he is selecting hisoptions in conjunction with othe rdepartments of the University, suchas Agriculture or Forestry, when thefull group of options of courses mustbe taken .

The main groups of options plan-ned so far are: Accounting, ForeignTirade, Fisheries, Marketing, Pro-duction, Transportation, Agriculture ,Forestry, Statistics, and Language ,

Cameron Directs

Summer Courses

The 1947 Summer Session will b eheld this year between July 2 an dAugust 16, under the direction ofDr . Max Cameron .

Five lectures a week, of two hour sduration, will be held in each sub-ject, lectures to commence at 8 :00a .m ., 10:00 a .m. and 1 :15 p .m . 9maximum of two courses per stu-dent will be allowed .

Several courses of interest to Com-merce students will also be offere dby the Department of Economics, toinclude; Econ . 200, Econ. 300, Econ .335 .

handled the major part of the down -town ticket sales for the Commerc eBanquet .

Bob Wilson, after several unsuc-cessful attempts to enter thearmed services, took up work inordnance; plants during the war . Hi sexperience in Commerce activitieshas been considerable . During the1945-46 regular session he was th esecond year representative in theCUS. Bob has also been active o nseveral Commerce committees thisyear and is the present chairman ofthe School of Business council .VICE-PRESIDENC Y

Art Ryan and Tom Harris, wh oboth served in the armed services ,arc competing strongly for the Vice -Presidency.

The position of secretary of th eCUS is being contested for by two

Federal Service

Needs GraduatesWith the exception of technical de-

partments Commerce graduates shouldbe able to find a suitable niche invractically any department of govern-ment .

It must be remmbered, however ,that government service is largelyanonymous, Salaries on the wholeare modest, thus achievement canno tbe measured in terms of monetarygain alone . Service to the countryis—and should be one's aim if satis-faction is to be achieved .

As stated, entrance to the publi cservice is through competitive ex-amination conducted by the Civil ser-vice commission of Canada . Announce-ments of vacancies are displayed inuniversities, public libraries, poe toffices, National Employment office sand elsewhere .

members of the fail sex . Marg Ros sand Mabel Woodman haw both par-ticipated in various campus activi-ties and each have had previou ssecretarial experience .LITTLE MENTION

Little mention is necessary for thetwo popular Executive Member can-didates, Al Lamb and Bill Smith . Theformer is a member of the presen tCommerce Executive and the latte ris president of Mamooks .

All indications point to a signifi-cant and interesting election but i tis vital that all Commerce under -graduates carefully choose and ag-gressively support their candidates.Voting is to take place in the FOYE ROF THE AUDITORIUM until 4O'CLOCK THIS AFTERNOON . Comeon everyone, let's have a 100% turn -out! !

PROF . E. H. MORROWbe convinced that the goal he seeks ,

when achieved, will reward his work

and efforts .

Today the polling booths are the

centers of Commerce election en-thusiasm as the many Commerce

undergraduates cast their votes. Inthe limelight are Al Bergstrom, ArtBotham and Bob Wilson who arecontesting for the presidency of theCUS .

Al Bergstrom, formerly a lieuten-ant in the RCNVR, has recently be -come active in campus activities . Alwas one of the founders of the cam -pus' newest fraternity, Tau Omega ,and is now acting as its social co -ordinator . Much of the publicitywhich the Mardi Gras received wa sdue to his efforts , Al is also activ eas a cross country runner ,

Art Botham served during the waras Flying Officer in the RCAF . Hehas been active on several commit -tees under the CUS and has recently

ART BOTHAM

0 This banquet has become one o fthe highlights of the Commerce stu-dents' life and one of the leadin gfunctions of the business year . Thebanquet provides an excellent oppor-tunity for the business men to view,in part, a function of our universityand to develop a closer relationshi pwith the future business men andwomen of the Province . To furtherthis plan the seating arrangementsare such as to permit a maximum ofintermingling of guests and students.

Convening the banquet are ProfessorE .H. Morrow and CUS President,Frank Phillips ably assisted by theCUS Executive and Commerce stu-dents, Distinguished guests will in-clude the Chancellor of UBC, Mr .Hamber ; the President, Dr. McKenzie;Dean Swanson ; Mr. T. Braidwood ;Mr . E.G. Rowebottom ; Mr . H.A. Ren-wick ; Mr . H. Merilees ; and Presiden tof the AMS, Ted Kirkpatrick .

The banquet is an undergraduateeffort and so it is fitting that thetoasts should be proposed by studentswho are representatives of our Com-merce Society. A second year stu-dent, Ray Dewar, will pay tribut eto the graduating class for the workthey hate accomplished during theirundergraduate life. The Board ofTrade, who have been so willinglyco-operative with the Commerce De-partment, will be honored by CUSExecutive Member, Fred Jeffrey ,Robert Young ,a graduating student,will speak on behalf of the Com-merce society to thank the CanadianManufacturers' Association for thei rwhole-hearted support

Ticket sales indicate a capacityaudience will be in attendance forthis major University function, andwe sincerely hope that this year's'banquet will be an even greater suc-cess than those of previous years

Commerce Votes Today

AL BERGSTROM

THE UBYSSEY, Tuesday, March 4, 1947 . Page 4

COMMERCE GAINS PRESTIGEThe cry for "Commerce as a Faculty "

will never be heard if supported by no bette r

reason than to add prestige to our degree. No

particular prestige is attached to the word"Faculty"; it is the quality of the training be -hind the degree that is significant .

Since the establishment of a CommerceDepartment in 1938, enrollment has multiplie dtenfold, many more and better courses hav ebeen given, and, particularly, downtown busi-ness has become aware of us . Their growinginterest and generosity presages even greate rpossibilities for the future .

More than ever before we are able tospecialize our efforts and to select the properbackground for our future vocation. The five-year course will help us materially in doin gthis, not only because of the extra fields t obe explored and the more advanced course sto be taken, but also because of the opportunityafforded to take the extra English, Mathe-matics, and Economics courses which for mthe foundation of the educated man or woman .

To a great extent it lies with Commercestudents as to how far we advance along linesof organizational independence. Businessmust find in the Commerce graduate the attri-butes of an educated mind, a mind trained to

reason and assimilate, and a background o fpractical business principles .

On the campus, too, the Commerce stu-dents must reveal their worth in the assist-ance and leadership they give to Undergradu-ate affairs. If the potential strength of theCommerce group is felt on and off the Campus ,further recognition is inevitable . The timewill come when a distinctive Commerce or-ganization will lend prestige to the University .

Let us think in terms of a School of Busi-ness, rather than a Faculty. Such an organi-zation would meet the growing demands of arapidly expanding technical field .

More freedom would be given to theSchool in arranging courses. More specializ-ation could be effected along particular lines .Visiting instructors could be more readily se-cured to meet specific needs. Post graduatestudies would be inaugurated to permit ad-vanced training . British Columbia's diversi-fied industries would prove a strong attractio nfor graduate study for students from all ove rCanada.

The outcome of such development wouldbe greater service from our University, moreutility in our education, and enhanced prestigefor our degree. Such development lies with us ;we must show the need. —By Frank Phillips,

The Mummery

By JABEZ

JOURNEY INTO COMMERCE

My qualifications for admission to this

Commerce issue of the Ubyssey rest upon a

shaky pass in Economics 100, which I took

in my first year and which convinced me be-

yond doubt that I was not the executive type .

My marks on the April exam clearly indicate dthat I was cut out for the proletariat, jus tone of the flabbier faces in the mob at thegates . I went into the examination room con-vinced of the merits of free enterprise, andleft it a rabid socialist, deep pink from ear to

ear.But, though I have forsaken forever th e

possibility of putting my number nines on asolid mohogany desk, with a dictaphone inone hand and a stenographer in the other, Icontinue to take a lively layman's interest inmatters commercial . Recently, for example ,I have been cheered to note that newspaperadvertisers are announcing clearance sales.Merchandise ordinarily selling for $4.00 hasbeen marked down to $4 .25. They're not sellinganything anybody wants to buy, of course,but I seem to detect a new note in their ad-vertising,a note of entreaty, of cajolery even,unheard since before the war . Until verylately, the average ad ran something like this :

SPECIAL !

FOUR PAIRS OF CLOCK SOCKS, FOR

MEN YHO DON'T KNOW WHAT TIME IT

IS. CONSTRUCTED OF GENUINE

PEATMOSS IN SEVERAL AMAZING

COLORS, ALL OF WHICH RUN LIKE

HELL IF HUMIDITY RISESABOVE 32,6 GUARANTEED TO WEAR

LIKE IRON — CLANK HOME IN A PAIR

TODAY! NO HOLES, NO HEELS, NO

CHANCE OF THEIR COMING OFF.

ONLY $3.50 EACH, OR $8 .00 A PR.

(No fair bringing your mother )

These socks went on sale at a certain timeduring the day, a zero hour which remainedsecret with God,, the general manager of thestore, and the head of the men's socks depart-

meat. Perhaps at 0900 hrs. or 1115 hrs, or 1529hrs, a clerk would suddenly look expectant,there would be a woosh of customers, andseconds later both counter and clerk would b estripped bare. If you arrived fifteen minuteslate you got nothing and the clerks ganged upand beat you over the head with their receiptbooks.

THE CUSTOMER IS ALWAYS . , . 4But gradually the scene is changing. To

be hired as a department store clerk it is n olonger enough merely to hate people. Wordis passing around that, under certain circum-stances, the customer may be right .

And the other day the papers carried afull-page department store ad with a streame rhead: "THE TABLES ARE TURNED! BUY-ER'S MARKET RETURNS! THE OLD BOS SIS BACK!" The entire ad was evidently in -tended to be the store's good-natured acknow-ledgement of defeat. They were throwing inthe towel ($2 .50, Main Floor) . One gaineda vivid picture of the store's executives lyin gin the window beneath upturned tables, smil-ing gamely as persons representing the Ol dBoss jumped up and down on them .

THE WHIP IN HANDMost of the other stores, however, seem

to be trying to make the transition as quietl yas possible, so that the customer will resum e

his rights without really realizing that th e

whip is back in his hand.This won't work with me. As soon as I

can buy a white shirt again, the clerk wil ltake out all the pins for me. With his toes,preferably. And when I buy that used carI've been waiting for since the spring of 1945 ,the first pedestrian to fall beneath the wheelswill be the pirate that sold it to me. Andwhen those seats get here I shall taketwo—one for me and one for my long, whit ebeard.

,Don 't worry about the sugar, Mother ;

Revenge will be mighty sweet .

Commerce Expansion Trend

Noted From Coast To Coast

CMA Important Universities Report On

To Comm Grads Growth OF Department

As the Canadian Manufacturers '

Association offers employment op-

portunities for a large number of

Commerce graduates each year, it

was thought that a short explanation

of this organization would be of

interest to many Commerce students .

POISONALITIE SLETTERMr. Les Forever ,

President ,

Army and Airforce Dept . Stores .

Dear Sir :

Realizing the great need for Uni-

versity Graduates in all walks of

life, especially in running a business ,

I have decided to work with your

firm for a short time as a stepping

stone to a better position with a

larger firm in the same line of

business.

It is only natural that you should

feel that my four years of highl y

specialized training in all phases of

business qualify me for a senior

executive position . Since, admitted-

ly, this is the first work I have eve r

done, I would be quite willing to

start at a nominal salary of say

$7,500 a year .The many courses I have taken a t

the University of British Columbia

have given me an intimate under -

standing of your business problems ;

to mention bat a few : -

In Accounting 1, I did exception-

ally well experiencing no difficulties

whatever except in distinguishing

between an asset and a liability . In

marketing, I studied many businesses

just like yours . After taking the

Advertising course, I have two or

three of my own ideas besides those

in the book, which I would like to

try out on your firm .

In Industrial Management I learned

how you could make your mer-

chandise as well as sell it. (Did you

know that 50% of the price of al l

products is because of marketing

services) .

This single idea of mine will sav e

you thousands of dollars . In Person-

nel Management I learned that em-

ployees work faster to fast music

than they do to slow . This woul d

enable me to reduce your staff 30M,

After studying transportation, I hav e

come to the conclusion that your de -

livery system should be by wate r

. . because it's cheaper.

I am sorry that I will be unable to

start right away, but I promise d

mother I would have a complete rest

for a month or so after exams.

You may phone me between 6:00

and 7 :00 p .m. on Monday or Friday .

Yours,

R. U. LUCKE,

She was a lovely young bride ,

radiantly fair, dewy-eyed, and as

slender as a wand . She walked down

the aisle, a picture of girlish inno-

cence and simplicity on her father' s

ar mAs she reached the chancel steps

her tiny feet brushed against a

flower pot, upsetting it . Silently

she looked at the dirt, then raised

her sweet, childlike eyes to the ol d

clergyman .

"That's a well of a place to put a

lily," she said .

Non-Creep Offer sSure Protection

The Bluntt Instrument Company

is a large corporation engaged in

the manufacture of a large revolu-

tionary line of lucite and magnesiu m

stays .

These are post-war, radar-con-

trolled models with built in fog-

lights and overdrive . They will play

ten 12-in records automatically. The y

are priced at $1365(F .O,B. Hatzic )

and are marketed under the brand

name Sister Myrtles Non-Creep Gir-

dles ,

One of these models was sold in

1944 and as a result of an all out

sales campaign, sales were boosted

by 100% in 1945 when two Non-

Creeps were sold. In spite of this en-

couraging trend Mr. Bluntt found

he was taking a $6,000 loss on eachsale . He therefore analysed his costs

for the year .

42 golf games at 25c a hole $180

58 tickets on Indian Broo m

at $2 11 6Juke Box Operation 200'Margie 1100Lola 1200Advertising: (7 Wilkie But-

tons erased and reprinted) 2

'This figure includes pin ball costs.At this point in the analysis th e

adding machine was removed by theFinance company, however, Mr ,

Blunt called In the company's re-search chief Herr Stiltzer, (Famousas the man who first isolated thedreaded Ultra Vines germ) .

They decided that a secondary pro-

duct should be manufactured usingthe waste material from the Non-Creep process. Therefore plans were

laid to produce a whiskey-type drinkto be known as Rare Old Armpit .Raw materials included used crank

case oil (Debit Miscellaneous Delivery

Expense), Drano, and several pairsof old gym shorts . It was planned ,

from the viewpoint of safety, to mar-

ket the product in lead bottles . Theproduct carried a life guarantee as

a sales inducement. The average lif eof the purchaser after consumptionwas estimated at 6 .4 minutes, I twas not thought that repeat orderswould be plentiful . Production ofRare Old Armpit went very success -fully right up to the day of theexplosion,

Instructions :

Women students only will write areport on this case . Prepare factor

sheets on at least the following items :Age, height, weight, measurements ,

temperament, financial status, con-dition of liquor permit, Pro? or Con ?

Thorough Cheate rPuzzles Assistant ri l

Recently the Corn 251 Assistant in

charge of recording the grades fo r

the "short" assignments given i n

this course, was very much puzzled .He had discovered two separate as-

signments, both bearing the sam ename for the same problem but withdifferent handwriting.

Upon checking the second sheetof one of the assignments he dis-

covered much to his amazement that

it bore a different name to thatappearing on the outside sheet ,

"Surely," thought the assistant,"no Commerce man would stoop solow as to copy another fellow'swork. In any case, he couldn't beso 'brilliant' as to copy both the as-

signment and the owner's name!"

Hoping there was some explana-tion, he queried Professor Bill VanHouten about it, who, somewhat an-noyed that a member of his classeswould make such a "complete" jobof copying, confronted the culprit .He too hoped that there would besome reasonable explanation .

Alas and alack there was no suchexplanation forthcoming! The guiltyparty when called to account for th ediscrepancy attempted three times

to clear himself but all he could dowas stammer and sputter .

The Association originated in 1871 ,

at which time its membership con-

sisted of only 100 members in the

Toronto-Montreal vicinity . In 1899

it was reorganized, and in 1902 re-

ceived a Dominion charter . At pres-

ent it has a membership of 5,580 firms,

which represents 80% of the indus-

trial production of firms eligible for

membership. As 83% of the mem-

bership consists of industries with

less than 100 employees, and as eachindustry has but one vote, control ofthe Association rests with the large

body of smaller industries in Canada .

OBJECTIVE

The objects of the Association are,to promote Canadian industries andto further the interest of Canadianmanufacturers and exporters, and torender such services and assistance

to members of the Association, an d

to manufacturers and exporters gen-

erally, as is deemed advisable.

Any manufacturing business car-

ried on in Canada that gives employ-

ment to not fewer than five employees

in its mechanical department is eli-

gible for membership. The Associ-

ation is maintained by membership

fees, which are determined by the

number of employees in each firm .

DEPARTMENTS

The Association contains the fol-

lowing departments to provide expertadvice and assistance to the mem-

bership : Tariff, Transportation, In-

dustrial Relations, Trade Sections,etcetra, Further services offered arethe publication of the Canadian TradeIndex, which is considered the au-

thoritative directory of Canadianmanufacturing industry, circularsgiving latest changes in regulations ,and the monthly magazine "IndustrialCanada . "

Mr. R. V. Robinson, the AssistantManager of the B.C. Division, whe nasked the C .M .A.'s attitude to Com-merce training and graduates, repliedthat the Association approved entire-

ly of the courses offered, and, par-

ticularly, the steps taken by theCommerce department to acquaintstudents with the practical side ofmanufacturing and production . Also ,he stated that the trend on the partof the employers seemed to give

preference to men and women who

have had the advantage of the Com-merce training .

JOKES ?

The mother of a careless little girl

constantly corrected her, telling her

to keep her things in better order .

Her mother's warnings had little

effect.

One day, however, her mother camehome and found the little girl fran-

tically putting everything in place .Her mother, rather astonished, said ,"You are doing a wonderful job;what made you decide to put thingsin such good order? "

The little girl said, "Why, Mother!

Didn't you see the story in the paper

about two girls being arrested an d

put in jail for having a disorderl y

house?"

Wife (sarcastically) : "I suppose

you have been to see a sick friend—

holding his hand all evening? "

Husband : "If I'd been holding his

hand I'd have made money."

From our own University of B .C. in the West to Queen's

University in the East there has been a great trend to expan-

sion of the various Commerce Departments as well as the num-

erous Commerce Undergraduate Societies across Canada.

Following are excepts taken from letters received from the

different Universities :

UNIVERSITY OF ALBERTA

Entrance to Commerce Courses at

the U of A requires Senior Metri c

and takes three years for a degree-

-however it is likely that a large

portion of the students will take a

fourth year of Honours in Business

Administration when that course

gets underway in a year or so. Atpresent, Accounting is Alberta's"strong point" .

Commerce students at U of A ar eorganized as a Commerce Club forinter-faculty sports and social ac-

tivities . Similar to UBC a Graduatio n

Banquet concludes their year .

UNIVERSITY OF SASKATCHEWAN

Bachelor of Accountancy is an im-

portant degree at U of S with almos tfifty percent of the Commerce stu-

dents going on to graduate as C.A,'s.

Recently the course has been broad-

ened to offer a more diversifie dtraining . '

The "College of Commerce Society"sponsor varied sports and social ac-

tivities including the publication ofa Commerce yearbook, "The Grey -stone . "

At present the College has beenmoved out to the old quarters ofNo. 4 S.F.T.S. at the airport, as atemporary measure due to overcrowd-

ing on the campus.

UNIVERSITY OF MANITOBACommerce students at Winnipeg

are offered a diversified course. Theymay take either a Pass degree infour years or an Honour's degree infive . If a student takes the latterthere are two options—a RegularCourse or a course in Actuarial Sci-

ence. Actuarial Science Includes fouryears of Maths, four years of Actu-

arial Maths and two years of Finance .

Commerce students at U of M areassessed $4.50 for Comperce activi-

ties, the majority of which went thisyear for repairs to the Association' sCommon Room .

QUEEN'S UNIVERSITY

Unique at Queen's is the Depart-

ment of Industrial Management ,founded in 1938 in response to agrowing demand for a careful an d

impartial study of employee - em-ployer relations, It has proved a

popular and valuable course, Com-

merce at Queen's is organized as a

separate "School of Commerce andAdministration . "

The Commerce Club is more of aneducational and discussion society,

bringing to the campus speakers o nevery type of subject, The "Corn-

merceman", semi-annual publica-

tion of the club, features articles b y

students, faculty members and au-

thorities in fields of business andindustry.

UNIVERSITY OF TORONTOAt Toronto, Commerce is affiliated

with Arts, and because of its division

into colleges, (University, Victoria ,Trinity, and St . Michael's) with theattendant friendly rivalry, no over-all organization has been formed .There is, however, a Commerce Club,formed with the definite purpose o fovercoming this feeling.

Two interesting courses offered atToronto are, Economic and Politica l

Trends, and Financial Institutionsand International Relations. A fifth

year is also offered leading to a

Master of Commerce degree,

PLEASE, TOHN,

.U5T 7 CENTS

FORA CUP OFCOFFEE --

Zip). C

hair

JTeHN C 1V Mlkif.RC EHERO OF EVERY RED . `BL000EO CoMMERCEMA NAND SORORITY G.IAt . .

T TYPICAL 92E1' 4iRr

Am The Perfect Model

I am the perfect model of a pious Commerce Petagogue,I'm principally popuar with persons from Walegog ;I've solved the pressing problem of the common Commisariat,And how to pinch and plunder the 'varsity Proletariat ;I'm clad in purple vesture and draw a pauper's salary ,I'm unsurpassed in all the arts of playing to the gallery ,I clutch thespoils of office with unparalleled tenacity ,And don't propose to lose my job by ill-advised veracity.

CHORUS :

In fact in things unpractical, Utopian and water-logged ,

I am the perfect model of a pious Commerce Petagogue ,I pacify my students with lectures, prayers and promises ,I castigate the critics and deride the doubting Thomases ;

And when I'm not exhibiting the Department's vaunted vanity ,I demonstrate the workings of all commercial insanity .I rise to heights of eloquence in these proviso excursions ,I've proved the modem unions to be ancients Merles and Persians .For we alone are competent to mold the modern mania ,And build the ultra-perfect state of Fountain-pen Sylvania ,

CHORUS :

In fact in things unpractical, Utopian and water-logged ,I am the perfect model of a pious Commerce Petagogue .

Comm. Department

Role Increasin g

The Department of Commerce is as-

awning an increasingly important role

in the University of British Columbia .

From its modest beginnings in August

1929, when the first courses were of-

fered leading to a Commerce degree ,

it has now grown into one of the

largest department in the Faculty of

Arts and Science.

In 1929, five courses were added, to

the Department of Economics, Sociol-

ogy and Political Science, allowing

students for the first time to graduatewith the degree of Bachelor of Com-merce. J. Friend Day, Associate Pro-

fessor of Economics assisted by Mr.F. Field and Mr. J. Plommer as In-

structors in Accountancy, were ap-

pointed as lecturers in the field ofCommerce. The first graduate to re-celve his Bachelor of Carnrnerce degreewas J. W. Horne, in the spring of 1930 .

GROWING

In the following session, 18 studentswere registered in the third year and

fourteen received their degrees. The

enrollment grew steadily until in 1933

in the third and fourth years therewere 51 students, and in 1934, 66 stu-

dents .

With this increase in the number

of students came an increase in staff .In 1934. R. H. Tupper and T.K. Collins

were appointed as lecturers In Com-mercial Law. By 1939, the Depart-ment of Economics consisted of twoprofessors, four associate professors,

two lecturers in accountancy and threein Commercial Law.

At the time, due to the increasing

importance and popularity of com-

merce, a separate department was es-tablished with E. H. Morrow as Por-fessor and Head. Assisting him wereDr. A. W. Currie, Associate Profes-sor and F. Field and R. H. Tupperas lecturers in Accountancy and Law

respectively, During this term there

were 75 students in Commerce and 29received their degrees.

To meet the demands for a moreextensive course, three new subjectswere added in 1941, namely Corpor-

ation Finance, Industrial Manage-

ment, and Problems in Foreign Trade.

CO.OPERATIO N

Since the establishment of the Uni-

versity Employment and PlacementBureau, this department has workedin close co-operation in matters ofemployment of its students . Whileactual job placement is now underthe direction of the Employment Bur -

eau, the recommendation systemwhich the department employs is stillan invaluable aid to employers inselecting their personnel

This year is a landmark in the his-

tory of the department . In order t o

meet the needs of the more complexand specialized demands of the busi-

ness world, the commerce course has

been extended from four to five years .Both fourth and fifth year studies

will each comprise 18 units of work

of which specialization takes amajor part.

Campus ArmyCamp Look

Offset By Landscaping

By FRED BELL

The most beautiful campus in

Canada" is a phrase often heard a t

UBC. But do we ever stop to thin k

of how we came to have this most

beautiful of campuses ?

Behind the scenes, Professor Frank

E. Buck has been steadily helping t o

beautify the campus. As landscape

architect, Professor Buck laid out th e

plans for the tree-lined walks, flower

beds and lily ponds ,

LANDSCAPING

Since then he has presided over the

landscaping of the campus, completin g

in detail the rockeries and plants

needed to offset the "army camp" loo k

of the converted huts .

His service has not been restricte d

to this campus alone, however, Othe r

landscaping projects included those

of MacDonald College and McGil l

University, and he was nine years at

Ottawa as first assistant to the Do -

minion Horticulturist .

FOUNDER

Also active in many professional

and scientific societies, Professor Bruck

was a founder and president of th e

Canadian Society of Technical Agri-

culturists now the Agriculture Insti-

tute of Canada. Other presidentia l

positions included the Town Planning

Institute of Canada, the North West

World Relations

Topic For Course

The Workshup of Internetiunal l c -

[aliens, one of the feature course s

of the UBC Summer School will be

offered again this year between Jul y

7 and August 8. It will be under

the direction of Dr, Warren E . Tom-

linson, head of the department o f

history and political science at th e

Co l lege of Puget Sound, Meanie ,

Washington .

The workshop, established in 1 :A 5

of the suggestion of the Canadian -

United States committee en ede.c . -

tioh is especially concerned in di -

Moping friendly relations betty, in

the citizens of Canada and the Unite d

States, It hopes to accomplish tali .

by bringing together in study, dla-

cussion and social activities, teacher s

and students from the two couatr .•~s .

Outstanding Canadian and Ameri-

can authorities on inti rnation I re-

lations will be appointed as s :•-call

lecturers, The course will cell a t

of three hour lectures and L,' ; ee -

sion periods to

be

11 .1 :1

:DTI .

. y

through Friday each wick ,

Thr ee units credit towarL;

I . .1 .

degree will be granted I>y tin . l' ., .

t,rsity to student :, vehn I :

necessary prerequisites and wile cnn-

pleted the course, including the fina l

examination .

PNCC Conference

Slated For March

Twe representatives, from the Uni -

I .rsity of BriCsh Columbia, Gran t

l.,ivin :ton and Bob Harwood, wil l

int ro, on Wednesday, rch 6 fo r

the annual l– cific >Northu'-st College

Conference held this year at Reed

'ul l c near Po r tland .

La

only other Cana -

te e , n I deice tee l e

Will Inc the Unil : .it s

'Thar purer : n of th_t tm •tail '

del the opinions of college students

on important world nll' ,105 . 'I' hc (II ;- 1

feetnt I'aprescntatives will work i n

sections and their findings will b e

presented to the conference assembly ,

Onc• approved these findings wil l

be carried to the General Assembl y

of the United Nations when it meets

next, by two of the contarenee re-

presentitives .

Grant Livingston will be working

n 'he International Political and

Legal Problems section while Bob Har-

need well discuss World Economic

1 II hl_tre .

cc ilk tense will last for thre e

l ' ridey and t turdey .

:1 cede ,H will be represente d

le ins iMs in each of th e

ruee it

Tuesday, March 4, 1947 .

Mountain Dance

Course For UBC

Lloyd Shaw and his Cheyenne

Mountain Dancers will mike thei r

first Vancouver appearance unde r

the sponsorship of the B .C . Teachers'

Federation and the UBC depart-

ments of Extension and Physica l

Education, in the Ballroom of th e

Hotel Vancouver April 8 .

Dr. Shaw, lender of the group ,

superintendent of Cheyenne Moun-

te ;in School et ('oluredo Springs an d

t It hno\an semen chance caller, has

Leon :',' falncrts from Brox1VC

: Hollywood for his enthusiasm and

Page 5

by Stan Burke

in spreading the revival of the squar e

dance .

In addition to his appearance a t

the Hotel Vancouver, Dr, Shaw wil l

conduct a short course, in western

denaug, for school teachers and

physical education instructors, in

the UBC gymnasium on April 9 .

His unusual troup of dancers,

cceepused of high school students,

,will vi s it Vancouver during the

Fester vO,c.ation and appear with hi m

et the Hotel Vancouv' .r• This team

tours the west coast every autumn

end the Atlantic seaboard every

spring .

Dr, Shaw has recently retur ned

Iroi ;r Hollywood where he served

,Is dancing director of "Duel in the

Sim". II Sclmick International te :h-

nicolor production .

Association of Planning Officials an d

of several Horticultur a l Societies ,

The list of his activities is too num-

erous to include them all ; it is enough

to say that he is deserving of the

honor the Agricultural Society wishe s

to bestow upon him .

On "Apple Day" next Friday,

Agriculture students will campaign

for a fountain in his honor .

Nixon Speaks On

Radio Limitations

"The Limitations of Radio as a Dra

matic Medium and Problems of Cast-

ing" will be the subject of Dougla s

Nixon, Director of Drama at CBR,

when he speaks in the Men's Club

Room Thursday at 12 ;'30 p .m .

The script writing contest for mem-

bers of the University Radio Society

will be judged by Douglas Nixon ,

producer' of Vancouver Playhouse ,

and Kenneth Caple, head of the CDC

at Vancouver ,

The winning script will be pre-

duced on the trans-C :nude Network

end the author will b paid regula r

prices .

"BEEZF."

718 - z--"

= MUST VE GONE YOU L.At.K MORAL FIBER YOU ' er —

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AGAIN - ~-You'A6 Jeer HO Goan IF I AUNJ5 F~ t

BEST OvERALL.5

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hYt Lens Hell. 1 M16Hr rUMG Tie !

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ARMORIE S

MARCH 7,A

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f

DISPOSAL OF BUILDINGS

GRANT PLANS REVEALE D

By Bob Fynn

Disposal of the $5,000,000 .00 granted

for buildings on the University of

British Columbia campus is quickly

being carried out, according to Mr .

Thompson, of Sharp and Thompson,

architects for UBC Many buildings

have been started already, and many

more are slated to be built in the

near future .

Already on the way to completion

are the Physics building, the Library

wing, the Agriculture Pavilion, and

the power-house addition . The Phy-

sics building should be finished by

September 15, and ready for occu-

pancy when Fall lectures commence .

MATERIALS

If materials continue to arrive on

schedule, the Library wing's comple-

tion is expected by this time next

year . The Agriculture Pavilion, situ-

ated close to the cow barns, will be

completed and ready for occupancy

by the end of March Last details

on the power-house addition should

be finished by next September

If it is finally decided to have a

u(Ta'u's •

medical faculty on the campus, medi-

S .

cal buildings will have top priority1'r . 11 (1 1

no nn ichin_ry of the United Nation s

could tiring permanent pace .

"It will depend upon whether th e

peoples of the world work to make

it an instrunr .nt creating all atmos-

phere for the growth of poem" sh e

said .

Mrs. Rcosevcit also stated that th e

United Nations must (Menge wit h

the world, and that the work of th e

Economic and Social Councils wa s

probably more important in the lon g

run that what happens on the S .cu' -

ity Council .

VOC WILL HOLD

ELECTIONS SOON

The Annual Varsity Outdoor Clu b

elections will be held en Thursday

Mrarch 7 in Ala . Sc . 202 et 12' :30 p .m .

Notnin,atiune Ier the Positions o [

Hon. President, Hen . Vice Preeident .

President, Vic.-Inr,ich nt, `'~ecrct,uy

'Tr .asurcr• Ass ;• Trciietiee. !.achivia ,

Publicity Director end Chief ;\inrsha l

must be signed by five members in

good standing end handed into Roy

ftooley as soon as possible ,

COUNCIL HEARS

RIPPON APPEAL

Motion of appeal between Thoma s

Rippon , student at University of

British Columbia, and the disciplin e

committee was discussed at Counci l

Meeting last night with Ron Gran t

acting for defence of Rippon .

Results of Council's action are not

known at prosstime Rippon wa s

tentictcd and had his A :11S pass re -

VOke l l for playing on en outside

trim

Next on the list of priority are th e

Pharmacy and Biological, Home Eco-

nomics, and Women's Residenc e

buildings. The first two are to be

located on the grounds at the south -

east corner of the junction of Univer-

sity Boulevard and the Main Mall .

The Women's Residence is to be built

onto the present temporary gym-

nasium ; therefore it cannot be con-

str ucted until the new gymnasium

is erected .

Montreal universities and colleges

gathered in Sir Arthur Currie Morn -

oriel. Gymnasium February 24 to

hear Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt in an

imponnptu address on internationa l

Montreal Students

Hear E. Roosevelt

By the Canadian University Press

MONTREAL—Students from four

Roosevelt, apt el.in e in het h

and Ln ;lish, (l eland tha t

with the sum of $1,500,000 put to-

wards the construction. If no medi-

cal faculty materializes, or if th e

buildings for that department ar e

situated on the present site of th e

Normal School, the priority will mov e

to the Applied Science building, t o

be situated at the northwest corne r

of the block on which the power -

house is located

OUTSIDE FIRST

Only the outside structure of th e

Applied Science building will be

completed at first, and the inside wil l

be finished when funds are obtained

for the purpose .

Spencer's store hours 9 aim . to 5:30 p.m:—closed Wednesdays, of course—MArine 711 2

If kittens came in colors they 'd look just like these soft, downy

I-Ielen Harpers . Some are pure wool, others wool and angora . All

are kitten soft, lovely to feel and look at — each a little pet of a

sweater that you'll want to add to your wardrobe now. Sorry, no

orders can be taken by telephone .

Sportswear, Spencer's Fashion Floor .

1 . pure botany wool cardigan kvith a row of

bright gift buttons! Long sleeves . ribbed waistband .

14 to 20 . Sportswear, Spencer ' s Fashion Floor .5.95

2. angora and wool in a short sleeved pullover, with

attractive diamond design . Wide, waist-hugging ribbed

band . Sizes 14 to 20 . Sportse ear, Spcnrer ' s Fashion Floor, 5,.95

3 . fitted pullover with slimming ribbed wais .band

and long sleeves . High round neckline. Pure Botany

wool. Sizes 14 to 20 . Sportse car, Spenrer ' s Fashion noon 4,50

GEHRKE'S Ltd.

PRINTERS & STATIONERS

566 Seymour Street

Vancouver.

DAVID SPENCER

LIMITED

PUG AND GROAN TOURNAMENT GOES FRIDA Y'BIRDMEN DEFEAT LIONS

Gym To Be Scene Of Firs tTO RETAIN McKECHNIE CUP

S'

°fir

, ,r Intramural Fight TourneyAnother trophy was added to the campus collection Satur-

day afternoon when Roy Haines' Thunderbirds edged out Van -again the McKechnie cup, symbol of English Rugby supremac ycouver Lions by the relatively narrow margin of 8-3 . Oncein western Canada, was brought home by victorious Blue an dGold ruggermen .

A beautiful day crowned the efforts®

of the Varsity stalwarts, who although

suffering a definitely off day, showed

that they were made of champion

stuff when on several occasions th e

Lions threatened the Blue and Gol d

line .

Holding top spot on next weekend's sport card is the Intra-

mural Boxing and Wrestling extravaganza to be held Frida ynight at 7:30 o'clock in the gym . The fight is the culminativ e

of three months of planning on the part of fight promoters JackPomfret and Ivor Wynne and many hours of training by som eninety boxers and wrestlers .

During the past week, promoters

Pomfret and Wynne, assisted by

coaches Jim Gove of the Boxing Club

and Wally Walling of the Wrestlin g

Club have supervised eliminations in

the stadium, They have whipped

the boxers into material for nin e

bouts and eliminated the wrestler s

down to material for four bouts .

The pointage system which will b e

worked into the intramural standing s

has been doped out by Ivor Wynne .

Twenty points will be given to the

winner of a bout and 10 points will

be handed out to the runner-up for

having made the finals ,

Scoring opened at the 35 minute

mark when star of the day, Mar -

shall Smith, crashed over the lin e

for 3 points . Don Nesbit made th e

convert good, and the half-time scor e

was 5-0.

Roughness of the game was eviden t

by the number of limps developed

in the second half of the game.

Barney Curby developed a sore bac k

during the second half and Dave

Moon went on in his place, half wa y

through the second half ,

A heavy attack by Vancouver a

few moments later put the Leos in a

positon to score, and, as per usual ,

a penalty kick was awarded th e

Green and Gold and Bill Kinde r

made the kick good for 3 points,

Final score came late in the gam e

when Johnny Wheeler passed to Nes-

bit who went over for the score . The

convert attempt by Barrie Morri s

missed the posts.

The winning of the McKechni e

silverware leaves the Birds with one

more cup, the Rounsefel, to play for .

The lads will also play a series of

exhibition games with Victoria and

the University of California .

On the campus Varsity kept thei r

gap in the 6r.lgue standings clown to e

minimum by shaking the Vancouve r

squad with' a 4-0 victory . Nick Her -

rick was instrumental in the Varsit ywin. The speedy student goali esmothered many a Vancouver shot i n

the well-known nick,

Ping Pong, Skiin gOn Mural Agend a

Intramural proxy, Ivor Wynnehop; fully expects lists cf ping pang

contestants from all organizations t ob; in by Teasdry afternoon, He mus tget them by Tuesday because thistwo day tournament is scheduled toget underway Wednesday of thisweek ,

A teeth will consist of 2 single .

teams and 1 doubles team, constitut-

ing if nun front each orgeniz.at :un ,

Of further lot jest in the nea r

future is the Intramural Ski Meet .

All entries for the competition nes t

he handed in to Ivor Wynne b y

March 8, There will ha positively n o

extension of time for Lie entries ., a s

the programme of the Meet has t o

lia completed well in advance o f

running time .

Swimmers Bow

To Puget Soun dPuget Sound's swimming Logger s

again proved themselves a mite sup-

erior to the UBC Thunderbirds, a s

they repeated their triumph in Tacom a

by whipping Doug Whittle's natators

at the Crystal Pool, Saturday night ,

to the tune of a 40-27 margin .

Again it was the 200 yard freestyle

relay race that proved to be the de-

ciding event . Had the Blue and Gold

aquamen managed to edge the fast

Tacomamen over the four length

route, they would have captured the

meet by one point, 34-33 .

Roundball Artists

Win, Lose Saturday

Saturday's feature soccer game sa w

the Varsity club sweep to the eleventhconsecutive victory without a loss

when the students easily defeate d

Vancouver United by a 2-0 score a t

the Powell street grounds .The UBC eleven, hosts to the New

Westminster Legion, were less for -

11 battle ,peuth Hill maintained its two-poin t

lead in the league standings by over-whelming the North Shore Merchant sby 6-0 .

Varsity soccer team is eligible fo rthe Victoria invasion, according t omanager Bud Ha.rford who statedrecently that his team's clegibilit ywas proved by the Registrar on Janu-ary 23.

TENNIS CLUB

All tennis players are urgently re -quested to attend a meeting in Aggic100 on Thursday at 12:30, Teams mus tbe chosen to meet College of Puge t

Sound on the UBC courts on March29 . There is also other importantnews for players and club members ,

R14

ALL-TIM E

HIT PARADE

6 :15 Nightly

cKNW

DIAL 1230

BIG BOXING AN D

WRESTLING SHOW

FRIDAY 'MAR . 7

U.8,C . GY M

STUDENTS 254

OTHERS

So p

LAURIE DYER, Sports Editor .

Associate: Chick Turner ; Assistant : Hal Tennant .Reporters This Issue : Harold Murphy, Ron Freudigcr, Dave Darker, Nev

Tompkins, Yvonne French, Jack Leggett, Tom Wilkinson .

BIRDS, LOGGERS BATTLE

IN VAIN FOR PNWC TITLE

The iiasketballing Thunderbird s

had off their Conference season

n it blare of glory Saturday nigh t

:;le a n they defeated the Loggers o f

These ;haled le. it 07-19 nee eh], Th e

~;-,

unl s(I s ()Illy swot Ito remin d

Mu, i I' hue. but and cold the '13 rd -

Idol Miele, Ron Weber ant i

to lose a ball game, If tryin gcould win games, UBC migh thave taken the opener of the

twin bill, but shooting, passing an d_

et

MUST SEE POMFRET

Finalists in the boxing and wrestlin g

bouts must inform Jack Pomfre twhether they are going to fight in -

dependently or for an organization

entered in intramural competition .

A 20 x 20 standard ring will be used

for the affair . The rest of the spac e

on the gym floor will be covered with

chairs to catch the overflow from

the stands .

Tickets are now on sale at the of-

fice of Graduate Manager of Athletic s

Luke Moyle and at downtown spor t

centres. Prices are 50c for adults an d

25c for students ,

JOKERS LEAD

Jokers are at present holding the

top spot in the intramural standings

with a safe total of 627 points. Beta

Theta Pi holds second slot with 596points, The Phi Dolts are in thir dspot with 566 while the Fijis are a

close fourth with 541 points. The

Physical Education, which is expected

to enter a large, impressive card, isclown in 16th place with 280 points .

Women Hockeyists

Defeat Brits, 2- I

Varsity s tern grass hockeyrsts pu t'henlsel\'CS in direct line for the finalsof the season's loop by clowning theBritannia Grads 2-1 on Saturdayafternoon ,

UBC hewed to the Ex-Kits eleve nby a 6-1 score in a similar match th esame day ,

Isabel

M .IcKin non,

assisted

byArne Munroe, nett :d the first tall y

'sly in the opening half, The Munro-MacKinnon combination later wo n

the contest, making up for the lone

talliation on the Brits' side of thescore board .

STOP PRESS

The Women's Senior F Basketballteam will meet the Abbotsford quin-

tet in the semifin :c1 ; felt the Lowe r

Mainland Championship at 8 :00 p .m .

tonight at King Ed . gym .

YES !

We Have Sandwiches At

The Legion Canteen

Also Coffee, Soft Drinks ,

Cigarettes

Open 8:30 .4.30 Mon. - Fri .,

8 :30 .1:00 Sat.

To all Students and Faculty

VARSITY VICTORIOU S

UBC, VARSITYWIN IN HOCKEY

Grass hockey race for the Mainlan d

League tightened considerably over

the weekend, with both UBC an d

Varsity teams downing their city

rivals by healthy margins . With but

one game remaining, UBC is perche d

—rather precariously—on the top of the

Jimmy Hawthorne was the class

loop standings, with a one-point lead. of the pool as he swam the 50 yar d

On the rough North Shore turf, backstroke in a blistering 32.4 see -

UBC off the medley relay team,UBC scuttled the Norse crew with a end was the Point Grey institution ' s5-1 triumph, Les Bullen sizzled four

only diver .hot goals past the bewildered North In

lilt 200 yard freestyle Don Moe -opened goalie after Tom Wilkinson '''n .steam n clash second to Logher-opened the scoring with a marker

Ilien Bl yde. while ec the 100 yar din the first fifteen minutes of ploy

'meet . Fred O :;enhury was two fee t

' I• the pace set by Puget Sound', ;

Br : :.tier . Hall Brodie was edged ou t

in the 50 yard freestyle event b y

Fredericks, who completed a gran d

alien in these events for the Ameri-

can lads,

Fred Oxenbury ,

most consistent performers, was sec-

ond in the 100 yard breastroke ,

one of Whittle' s

1~liP~t, ~ac7t~r/v

OflOTHER GREAT STA RCOMES TO THE CAMPUSARMORIES Monday at 8 :30 p.m.

JOA NCHARLE S

THOMASWORLD RENOWNED BARITON E

* "He can sing with the best ' in any category - his voic eremains one of the finest in its smoothness, luster, rangeand command of true bel canto, He continues to sin glanguages as if the words were meant to be understood .He is both artist and showman . " New York Times .

* "One of the most tremendous voices of all time, richl yeven from top to bottom through an immensely widerange," San Francisco Chronicle .

* " .He is not only the finest singer, but the finest inter-pretative vocal artist before the public today." Hollywood.Citizen-News .

TICKETS ON SALE ON THE CAMPUS DAIL Y

From 12—1 p .m. Starting Wednesday

SPECIAL RATES TO UNIVERSITY STUDENTS

1 :48 .

—Ubyssey Cartoon by Jack Thomas .

EVERYBODY'S DOING IT--It's quite obvious that everyone will want to go to the bi g

Intramural Boxing and Wrestling Match this F1'iday night and although many fans will not be

able to have a police escort, you'll want to be on e of the first to get there so you can have one

of the choice ringside seats . Action will start at 7 :30 p,m, sharp at the gym .

GAR ROBINSON

WINS TOURNE Y

ON GROUSE MT.It certainly was a field day for

UBC on Grouse Mountain Sunda y

when Garvin Robinson twisted an d

winded down the tricky slalom course

to capture the individual honours in

a field of 94 contestants .

Also taking a winning spot wa s

Arnie Teasdale who raced 1 .1 seconds

behind Robinson's twinning time o f

The course, set by UBC coach Peter

Vajda, was one of the toughest seen

en local ski hills owing to the steep-

ness an dicyucss of the lower par t of

the course—the Nose-dive .

Doug Fraser, UBC, grasped eighth

spat with 2 :611 .-1 n ilil (terry I,ncichor l

10th in 209 .6 .

In the women's, i,hl'Inu Melly Bur lplaced fifth with 4 :12 .° while Jo C eti -

Ilnu and Bev Pobrrts.un o•cro (Ii' .

-

. :

t heme :III Welled 12 merker shove been

swoon luneever ,qualified,

t , vV 1 (I the L'BC cause wh i le Frank -In the R jumping Arnie Teamin1 ; ' they were overwhelmed by the

Gn. contributed nine more and Haasplaced eighth with his 197 .7 points .

Loggers 57-38 in the Friday fracas,I nd McGeer, seven each ,

TOP RING GONE .

Splitting the series with the CP S

men simply cancelled the hopes o feither team of topping the Cunfer-

ence this year . Final standing of th etop four will be determined on Wed-

nesday night, The loop leaders, Lin--field Wildcats, still have one game t oplay r ainst Willamette while th eIdaho Coyotes, currently in the sec-

ond slot, play a twin bill with th ecellar-dwelling Pacific U . Badgers .

The Friday night affair saw th e'birds doing everything that watpos-sibl e

tunate than their Varsity brothers,

, Igoing down by a 5-0 count on the ; evenupper field of the campus .

Varsity's Gordy Shepherd broke th efirst half deadlock in the second

canto, dribbling up to outplay th eUnited goal-keeper handily, Jimm yGold added the second counter no t

long afterward with his screen shotfrom the penelty ato m

IIILLMEN WI N

In the remaining round

Ii1C,l

[heel:inc. .,I1 left something to b e

dc.ir'd .

'RUMS ( :1sT HOT

It m,a< an eitioetlier diffe r ent team

~ ~l the lame'ls is the Sute ralt

Look to RCA Victor Records for theLatest Hite . . . Here are Ins a h w

LIND ASO THEY TELL M E

Charlie Spivak mid his Orchestr aVictor Record 20 . 1047 75 0

I TIPPED MY HAT(And Slowly Rode Away )

NOT SO LONG AG OBuddy Sager and The Bluebonne t

SerenadersBluebird Record 58. 0020 60IO

SONATAI HAVEN'T GOT A WORR Y

IN THE WORL DLarry Green and his Orchestra

Victor Record 20-2010 75e

GOTTA GET ME SOMEBODY TOLOVE (from "Duel in the Sun " ),

THAT'S MY HOM ETommy Dorsey and his Orchestra

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Played by FREDDY MARTIN and his Orchestr a

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ALSO HEAVEN KNOWS WHEN

Freddy Martin and his Orchestra

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