president scores - university of british columbia library · president scores - - - •-- _ _ ......

4
., , 1~t,E UI YSSZ Y VOLUME XXXVI VANCOUVER, B .C ., FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1953 Price 5c ; No . 2 1 - - - •-- _ _ President Score s CRUMB KEEPS CALM WHIL E CLASS' CEILING COLLAPSE S Dr . J . A . Crumb kept his temper Wednesday, while th e roof fell on him . Just as he was telling 150 Econmics 200 students about "high ceilings" and "falling prices", an Arts building janito r allegedly put his foot through the ceiling and showere d students with plaster and lathes . No students were injured as the six-foot-square piec e of plaster fell . "It's lucky the seat right underneath wa s empty," one student reports. "The lecture was completely disrupted," he added , S~creds Oppose ' Health Services ' B .C . Hospital Insurance is a shame to Canada as it is ad - ministered today, stated the Liberal Government in the UBC Mock Parliament yesterday, when its Bill of extension o f National Health Services passed after two hours heated debate . --' 4 Social Credit formed the of - MAGICALLY LASSOED by sleight-handed Roy Wheeler are , two amazed students wh o volunteered to assist the magician at the pep' meet Thursday . Although only 100 student s attended the meet 200 pounds of clothing were collected for Greek Flood Relief. —Photo by John Robertson B e y First pep meet of th e off to an Inauspicious start in Delamont added tremendously t o the Armouries Thursday noon, the program with popular music . but it contributed approximately CLOTHES DONATE D two hundred pounds of clothing An article of clothing or 1 5 to the "Clothes for Greece" drive . cents was the admission charged Tuesday . Sponsored by Lamnda Chi 1 Alpha for the World Universit y Service the pep meet was t o have' b0en s the bight point of th e clothing drive for victims of th e recent Greek earthquakes . DELAYED BEGINNIN G Coalitio n Practice s Denounce d "Welfare State" practices o f the now g defunct Coalition gov- ernment of B .C . were criticize d by J . 'Friend Day, economic con- sultant 'ex-professor of th e Commerce department, in a speech to the Social Credit Clu b Tuesday . Denouncing welfare state poi- icles ' as pestilential, Day sai d that B .C .'s old coalition govern- ment was "trying to outdo th e welfttre state concepts that th e CCF is rapidly implementing i n the province of Saskatchewan, " The speaker cited the variou s control boards which had bee n set up under Coalition to regu- late freemen ,trFsklesand the Hos- pital InaSim as esemples . Centissued on Page 3 Bee MOC K ARNOLD WEBSTE R ... Explain s CCF Leader tidal opposition at the meetin g which had to deal with one majo r bill proposing to extend service s under the National Health Pro - gram from grants of $30 millio n per year to $100 million . Progressive Conservatives sub- mitted an amendment to the bill , aimed at stopping the illicit traf- fic in narcotics by making it un- profitable . The government replied .tha t the information available on th e whole problem of drug addicts was inadequate to undertake suc h measures as proposed at the tim e being . CHARGES To charges that no such thin g as a National Health Progra m exists, the Liberal Minister point- ed out that the program is car- ried out through grants to ever y provincial government , The Social Creditors wished t o replace the Liberal bill with on e concen.tratln ' i on increased train- ing of medical personnel . The y feared strongly federal domina- tion . Their amendment was de- feated . Continued on Page 3 See SOCRE D ingham and editors Peter Syp- nowich, Jerome Angel and E d Parker will stand on a platfor m along with Applied Science un- dergraduate president Dave Dutt- on and other applied science students . Students will bid for chance s to pelt them with pies . Mone y collected will go to the Applie d Science sponsored March o f Dimes fund for the Children' s Hospital . Other "attractions" during th e Dec . 3 "big show" will b e sensational" wrestling matc h staged by the girls physical e d classes . Home Ec and Nursing wil l fight it out in a football game , wearing strip and pads . Organizing chairman Gran t Hepburn said 80 applied scienc e students will take collection tin s around to all morning classes 1 Wheeler echoed the sentiment s of Lamnda Chi when he sai d "Good afternoon Ladies and Gen- tlemen, and the people in th e vacant seats . " Wheeler's act, which include d burning flower-pots, cards tha t vanished and appeared insid e handkerchiefs, rings that only a n innocent girl could take apart , and, for one lucky young couple , an Egyptian wedding . Even a nuclear fission machine tha t Disciplin e Committe e Reorganize s First hints of the plans fo r a neW Discipline committee ar- rangement on campus were give n by Jim McNish to his Under - graduate Societies Committee o n IVionday . The actual organization of th e new committee is being left t o Rollie Selman, third year com- merce, Mchhsh said . Ills recen t mendations will be submitted t o Council before Jan . 15, 1954 . "Se far, 1hiltharn and I hav e just eel and talked about . life powerful men representing re- iistionary finance and capita l can wrest control of the univers- i ty from the people of Ontario . " Need Roo m Says Hunte r iVhal this campus needs i s new self-service bookstore wil t plenty ()I' space, eommenle d monaser Jahn limiter followin g r es e nt l i bsitsce criticism or t h e ' hookstore service . "Of course *hi service is no t salisfoclory as it should le e tvllal ji would like 14) see is ii POOL TABL E Members of the facilities corn . millet, hooded by Mike Nuttali , ids() recommended investigatio n into the possibility of installin g billiard taint' in the new gon e iiis rosin . A report will be mad e I() council regarding the feasi- bility of thi s The Heiliien committee, vtihe h inshmos Ahts President Ivu t lh llbam Allan Goldsmith, Dic k Underhill and Johann Stuyva , recumn,isled Ih ;il .ftadsn e iennilthd lo install four new t hmdnpvitkers the main Iotmst i It) improve nuinieal r(yro(tue- hon Connell ;ireal,. olic y MacKenzie Outline s Aims Of Educatio n By ED PARKER Quebec's refusal to accept financial aid for universities {re m the federal government might endanger the extension o f educational opportunity in Canada, UBC President N . A . M . MacKenzie intimated Thursday . .. , "It is going to be difficult t o e tween classe s maintain the present level of fed- j t. eral aid to universities if Pre- SPC to p I mier Maurice Duplessis con tinues to refuse such aid for Quebec universities," said Dr. MacKenzie in a Ubyssey inter . view . The president, back on th e campus this week after attend- ing a "Canada's Tomorrow" col a ference in Quebec City, was com- menting on his speech at the con- ference . OBJECTIVE S At the conference, Dr . Mac - Kenzie cited as the four basi c objectives of Canadian educa- tion : 1) To prepare the young Canadian to make a living ; 2) 'Co prepares him for enlightened ci- tizenship in a democracy ; 3 (To attempt to refine his emohons , his intellect and his taste, and 4 ) To extend thruogh him "the rid e of love among men . " The attainment of these objec- tives "will require a more gen- erous conception of the assist- ance which the Federal Govern- ment may be able to give the universities than ' has hithert o been the case in our Canadia n economy," the president stated . At A t WOMEN'S RESIDENCES ar e holding a dance in the Brock a t 9 p .m . tonight . STUDENT CHRISTIAN Move- ment will sponsor Mr . Donald K . Farris, who will speak on "Re - construction in Korea," Monda y noon in Arts 100 . ACADIA CAMP MIXER wil l be held in Brock Lounge Satur- day at 9 p .m . Admission is 50c for men, 25c for women . Every - one welcome . UNITED NATIONS CLUB i s sponsoring the sale of Christma s cards in the Quad everyday at ' noon, the AMS office an y tines in the foyer of the Mem- orial Gym on Monday, Tuesda y and Wednesday and in Arts 10 0 every Friday al noon . Proceed s of the sole will go to the Un- ited Notions International Chil i j dr('HS Emergency Fund . At At At SOCIETY OF MICROBIOLO- GISTS will show ii film, "Trac i ing' Infectious Diseases" Monda y miss in Wesbrook 201 . Continued on Page 3 See CLASSE S Are March i Voices Idea l Before Crow d In an explanation of Socialis t principles, Arnold Webster, ML A and leader of the opposition i n the B .C . legislature, defended th e CCF stand to a large crowd i n Arts 100 Wednesday , Emphasizing that social chang e is inevitable, the MLA stated tha t nothing was sacred about huma n institutions . It was his opinio n that once an institution has bee n outdated, there is nothing unpat- riotic about re-adapting it o f even abolishing it .. Further, Webster said that the i Border Cc s Canadian public needs a new Thursday . JIM CARNE Y year go t The chance of a lifetime, t o throw mushy pies at Lj i byssey ed - Mors, will be realized next Thurs- day during the annual campu s March of Dimes campaign . MAGIC MACHIN E Several students took part i n Editor-in-Chief Allan Father - concept of the function or gov e crnmvnt . lie stated that Cana -jtO Editor ehlinittee," he continued, A(1m o dians still held to the old coif-' coul d The gues s Varsit y name s Band wa s under presente d Arthu r At Toront o TORONTO, Out,—(CUP) — A mimeographed paper called we hal t (' given a feW suhsestien s (hot that governments are in A n ed i t o r of the university of to Ilulman . " torested only in the landowners i Toronto student newspaper stated 1 The new plan involves the set - and other privileged groups and 'ruesday that he was cluestioned I ling up of a 'ch i d court unde r n i d in the welfare of the enni . by U .S . border officials regardij live judges to try offenders . I n men !mettle . ing his position on the paper . ‘iei ;figatjon ;Ind prosecution 1'1)1 ' The opposition loader refuted : The incident fohowc i l the rc-I offences would still he eoiidueti j ii,u iii hh ' this saying that tlw governments, cent effigy burning of Senator by the Undergraduate sees 14 " nit," shied Hunter . luday' are on the most part think Joseph DiicCarthy on the Toronto] t it ies committee, "Ceilsentimi is the sourc e ing ()I' the welfare of the people ,campus . \inium ponaltv r or um . o r j lilt , Ireul)le His 1111 , studen t hug the s " li' n '" " " lie -en d in making the point that the American consulate later sloth fence can only he $ , is a truly Canadian party,ied that students are riot being h o i st \VOHI ' d ;Ode In r( i t i t,1 0 Webster said, "CCF policies are discriminated against becoisei mend mere scrims ; ;weer, I n in harnsins with Canadian triads they are cemieeled W i th the ;nlll I)y Hi e hour—a tradition of liberalism dent HeWspaptib', isi the Vocally Ciilwsdi wit h The paper, which professes to NEW LOUNG E tltpress stud ii opinion, said The new lounge-card room , University of Toronto was being' which is open to hlcn and wo- controlled by "Canadian capital- men, will have the same hour s ists," who haven't "one man of as other rooms in Brock Ball , scholarship in the entire group of:I front 9 a .m . to 5 p .m ., IVIonoa y 21 men ." to P nday . "Comment" said the "13 big one o f th e principle ar go t men" on the board of governors vents for the move was fo r r ea - "hold' no less than 6 presidencies sons of tidiness i n the mai n and 31 directorships," and add- I ° un d e . There have been co in - (el that this group shows 6,de_I plaints from students and th e cisively how one small group o r janitorial staff that card player s tend to constitute an untidy at- mosphere in the loun g e . Another reason is that du e le increased hookiess for Broc k lounge, the staff is forced t o close it more ()flee during th e afternoons, thereby making i t unavailable to students . uebec Aid NEWMAN CLUB will hold a n "after the Library party" in th e Newman Clubhouse, Hut L-5 , on Friday, Nov . 27 . Admissio n will be some canned goods fo r the Christmas Hamper . A t LES DAIS LURONS, the French folk song choir wil l , Peest,jea Maurice Duplessis is , attempting to protect Quebec's meet a t members noo n are today i n urgently HG4 . All asked to To Use Gaming . Rooms distinctive culture from being as - be present and all newcomer s Isimilated 'by the rest of Canada, will be very welcome . Campus card sharps who wish the added convenience of' the president said But he i s . Scheduled to begin at 12 :30 the J i t A t meet suffered from a total lack card tables will have to use the gaming room established in cracking all heads that rear PRE LAW SOCIETY present s whether they b e not get underway until 1 :45, end of Brock Hall . Maclntyre , of audience at that time and did the former double committee ' room, upstairs in the south themselves as possible attempts at Dr . Law professor , assimilatio n black or golden who will speak on "How to get . , p ies To Fly Two ofi the featured acts were' Student Council actin g forced to leave for another en - t student facilities committee, de- eft by students of the five Quebe c ' . In response to a brief prescmt-i n the Art s most 106 , out of law " , on the recommendation of the today noo n gagement before they even set j hi le Di foot on the stage . Press B lasts 6000 lu move all tables universities Premier Duplcssis A t At f ro m the main loun g e in order recently reiterated his stand toe FINE ARTS COMMITTE E rnes The Varsity band and magician , to facilitate card playing the ' refuse federal aid to universities . Presents Eric Newton , noted Eng Federal aid is a violation of the fish Art Critic and author in a n Roy Wheeler salvaged me' pro - gram with their music and magic . Governors . campus . illustrated lecture, "The mean . 'Their decision includes restrict rights of the province to auto - ing of modern art," in Physics hen of card playing to these nomy in the field of education, 200 noon today . A t At HIGH SCHOOL CONFER . ENCE COMMITTEE will hol e a general meeting in Arts 10 0 at noon today . STUDENTS' PERSONNE L Committee will present Lt .-Col . J . F . McLean, Director of Stud- ent and Personnel Services, wh o will ,address gtraduating Arts students in "Job Possibilities Fo r A B .A .," today noon in Physics 201 , Pep Meet Collects Clothin g For Greek Flood Relief Fun d and approximately one hundred Nevertheless, as long as gm students turned out . Quebec government refuses al l Large containers for clothing federal financial aid for the fiv e donations have been placed in Quebec universities, there is not all major buildings on the camp- much possibilit y us and will not be collected until aid for the rest of o f the Canadian increased I, universities . It will be difficul t tt go t _eh even to maintain the % presen t level of federal assistance . QUEBEC. STAN D locations : the gaming room, claimed Duplessis . Brock lounge, undergraduate ...4s common rooms and student Weekly pubster's meeting wil l club rooms . be held in the Pub offices today . "Comment" which appears on Furniture from the Mildredj All attend to discuss tonight' s the University of Toronto campus Brock Memorial Room, which is party . every two weeks charged that I being replaced, will be moved t o .he board of governors arc 'large- the new gaming room in orde r scale capitalists," and "Bean - to make it an acxiliary lounge' New Cou nc u ciers ." fur use when the main louag e i is closed . Coordinate s Club Event s An attempt to boost co-ordina- tion between campus politica l clubs and their interest to stu- dents was launched at tuesday' s meeting of the newly-forme d Political Council . The political council, wit h Maurice Copithorne, Parliament- ary forum head, as chairman, i s tomposed of the five politica l clubs and the CLU, SPC an d Parliamentary Forum . Cohn McDirmal, LSE Trees - Ares, said that any club tha t feels it is to their advantage t o itt associated with the counci l should be admitted . " The meeting day schedule fin - ally accepted by the clubs pro- vided that on Monday the I .,P P Ind Parliamentary Forum meet ; in Tuesday the CtI,thiLilieral s Ind COnSet'ViaiVeS ; WMI'WS - die.i the CCF : on Thursday th e Forum and on Friday the SP C and the Social Credit Club . presents recordings of hearing s of the Un-American Activitie s Subcommittee at noon today i n FG 100 . CAMERA CLUB will mee t today noon in Room 859 in th e Library . Movie by Kodak, "Hints for Better Colour Photography " will be shqwn . FROSH UNDERGRADUAT E SOCIETY COUNCIL meetin g will be held in A104 today noon , At At A t UNITED NATIONS CLU B presents Dr ,Grantham, speakin g on "UNESCO in Indonesia" to - day noon in Arts 100 . At A t MARDI GRAS DECORATIO N COMMITTEE will hold an organ ization meeting today noon i n the Double Committee Room i n Brock Hall . All students inter- ested are urged to attend . At A t earings On Wa x SOCIAL PROBLEMS CLU B SASK ATOON---(CUP) --Pro- fessor Bartholonusw X . Snavely , aced ()I' the Deparineint cd Fina l Examimhions, today annooncei l that a basic dividend of 49 03 h \timid' be awarded on all 195 4 pxonls at the university . UBC's Only ftQMEOWNED NEWSPAPER

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1~t,E UI YSSZY

VOLUME XXXVI

VANCOUVER, B .C., FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1953

Price 5c; No. 21-

- - •-- _ _

President Score sCRUMB KEEPS CALM WHIL ECLASS' CEILING COLLAPSES

Dr. J. A. Crumb kept his temper Wednesday, while th e

roof fell on him.

Just as he was telling 150 Econmics 200 students about

"high ceilings" and "falling prices", an Arts building janito r

allegedly put his foot through the ceiling and showere d

students with plaster and lathes .

No students were injured as the six-foot-square piece

of plaster fell . "It's lucky the seat right underneath was

empty," one student reports.

"The lecture was completely disrupted," he added ,

S~creds Oppose 'Health Services '

B.C . Hospital Insurance is a shame to Canada as it is ad-

ministered today, stated the Liberal Government in the UBCMock Parliament yesterday, when its Bill of extension of

National Health Services passed after two hours heated debate .

--' 4 Social Credit formed the of-

MAGICALLY LASSOED by sleight-handed Roy Wheeler are , two amazed students who

volunteered to assist the magician at the pep' meet Thursday. Although only 100 students

attended the meet 200 pounds of clothing were collected for Greek Flood Relief.

—Photo by John Robertson

B eyFirst pep meet of th e

off to an Inauspicious start in Delamont added tremendously t o

the Armouries Thursday noon, the program with popular music .

but it contributed approximately CLOTHES DONATE D

two hundred pounds of clothing

An article of clothing or 1 5

to the "Clothes for Greece" drive . cents was the admission charged Tuesday .

Sponsored by Lamnda Chi 1

Alpha for the World Universit y

Service the pep meet was to

have' b0ensthe bight point of the

clothing drive for victims of th e

recent Greek earthquakes .

DELAYED BEGINNIN G

CoalitionPracticesDenounced

"Welfare State" practices of

the nowgdefunct Coalition gov-

ernment of B.C . were criticized

by J. 'Friend Day, economic con-sultant 'ex-professor of the

Commerce department, in a

speech to the Social Credit Clu b

Tuesday .

Denouncing welfare state poi-

icles ' as pestilential, Day said

that B.C.'s old coalition govern-ment was "trying to outdo thewelfttre state concepts that th eCCF is rapidly implementing i n

the province of Saskatchewan,"

The speaker cited the various

control boards which had been

set up under Coalition to regu-late freemen ,trFsklesand the Hos-

pital InaSim as esemples .

Centissued on Page 3Bee MOCK

ARNOLD WEBSTER. . . Explain s

CCF Leader

tidal opposition at the meetin g

which had to deal with one major

bill proposing to extend service s

under the National Health Pro-

gram from grants of $30 million

per year to $100 million .

Progressive Conservatives sub-mitted an amendment to the bill ,aimed at stopping the illicit traf-fic in narcotics by making it un-profitable .

The government replied .thatthe information available on thewhole problem of drug addictswas inadequate to undertake suchmeasures as proposed at the tim ebeing .

CHARGESTo charges that no such thing

as a National Health Progra mexists, the Liberal Minister point-ed out that the program is car-ried out through grants to ever yprovincial government ,

The Social Creditors wished t oreplace the Liberal bill with on econcen.tratln 'i on increased train-ing of medical personnel . Theyfeared strongly federal domina-tion. Their amendment was de-feated .

Continued on Page 3See SOCRE D

ingham and editors Peter Syp-nowich, Jerome Angel and EdParker will stand on a platformalong with Applied Science un-dergraduate president Dave Dutt-on and other applied sciencestudents .

Students will bid for chance sto pelt them with pies . Moneycollected will go to the AppliedScience sponsored March o fDimes fund for the Children'sHospital .

Other "attractions" during th eDec . 3 "big show" will besensational" wrestling matc hstaged by the girls physical edclasses .

Home Ec and Nursing wil lfight it out in a football game ,wearing strip and pads .

Organizing chairman Gran tHepburn said 80 applied sciencestudents will take collection tin saround to all morning classes 1

Wheeler echoed the sentiment s

of Lamnda Chi when he sai d

"Good afternoon Ladies and Gen-tlemen, and the people in th evacant seats . "

Wheeler's act, which includedburning flower-pots, cards tha tvanished and appeared insid ehandkerchiefs, rings that only a ninnocent girl could take apart ,and, for one lucky young couple ,an Egyptian wedding. Even anuclear fission machine tha t

Discipline

Committee

Reorganizes

First hints of the plans fora neW Discipline committee ar-rangement on campus were givenby Jim McNish to his Under -

graduate Societies Committee o nIVionday .

The actual organization of th e

new committee is being left t o

Rollie Selman, third year com-merce, Mchhsh said. Ills recen tmendations will be submitted t oCouncil before Jan . 15, 1954 .

"Se far, 1hiltharn and I hav e

just eel and talked about. life

powerful men representing re-iistionary finance and capita lcan wrest control of the univers-i ty from the people of Ontario . "

Need Room

Says Hunter

iVhal this campus needs i snew self-service bookstore wil t

plenty

()I' space,

eommenle d

monaser Jahn limiter followin g

res ent l i bsitsce criticism or t h e 'hookstore service .

"Of course *hi service is not salisfoclory as it should lee

tvllal ji would like 14) see is ii

POOL TABL EMembers of the facilities corn .

millet, hooded by Mike Nuttali ,ids() recommended investigatio ninto the possibility of installin g

billiard taint' in the new gon eiiis rosin . A report will be madeI() council regarding the feasi-bility of thi s

The Heiliien committee, vtihe h

inshmos Ahts President Ivu tlh llbam Allan Goldsmith, Dic kUnderhill and Johann Stuyva ,recumn,isled

Ih ;il .ftadsneiennilthd lo install four new t

hmdnpvitkers

the main Iotmst iIt) improve nuinieal

r(yro(tue-hon Connell ;ireal,.

olicy

MacKenzie Outlines

Aims Of Education

By ED PARKER

Quebec's refusal to accept financial aid for universities {re m

the federal government might endanger the extension of

educational opportunity in Canada, UBC President N . A. M .

MacKenzie intimated Thursday . .. ,

"It is going to be difficult t o e tween classesmaintain the present level of fed- j

t.

eral aid to universities if Pre- SPC to pImier Maurice Duplessis con •

tinues to refuse such aid forQuebec universities," said Dr.MacKenzie in a Ubyssey inter.view .

The president, back on thecampus this week after attend-ing a "Canada's Tomorrow" colaference in Quebec City, was com-menting on his speech at the con-ference .

OBJECTIVESAt the conference, Dr. Mac -

Kenzie cited as the four basicobjectives of Canadian educa-tion : 1) To prepare the youngCanadian to make a living ; 2) 'Coprepares him for enlightened ci-tizenship in a democracy ; 3 (To

attempt to refine his emohons ,his intellect and his taste, and 4)To extend thruogh him "the rideof love among men."

The attainment of these objec-tives "will require a more gen-erous conception of the assist-ance which the Federal Govern-ment may be able to give theuniversities than ' has hithert obeen the case in our Canadia neconomy," the president stated .

At

At

WOMEN'S RESIDENCES are

holding a dance in the Brock a t

9 p.m. tonight .

STUDENT CHRISTIAN Move-ment will sponsor Mr. Donald K .Farris, who will speak on "Re -construction in Korea," Monda y

noon in Arts 100.

ACADIA CAMP MIXER will

be held in Brock Lounge Satur-day at 9 p .m . Admission is 50cfor men, 25c for women . Every-one welcome .

UNITED NATIONS CLUB is

sponsoring the sale of Christma s

cards in the Quad everyday at 'noon, the AMS office anytines in the foyer of the Mem-orial Gym on Monday, Tuesda yand Wednesday and in Arts 100every Friday al noon . Proceedsof the sole will go to the Un-

ited Notions International Chil ij dr('HS Emergency Fund .

At

At

AtSOCIETY OF MICROBIOLO-

GISTS will show ii film, "Trac iing' Infectious Diseases" Monda ymiss in Wesbrook 201 .

Continued on Page 3See CLASSE S

Are Marchi

Voices Idea l

Before Crowd

In an explanation of Socialis tprinciples, Arnold Webster, ML Aand leader of the opposition i nthe B .C . legislature, defended th eCCF stand to a large crowd in

Arts 100 Wednesday ,

Emphasizing that social chang eis inevitable, the MLA stated tha tnothing was sacred about huma ninstitutions. It was his opinio nthat once an institution has beenoutdated, there is nothing unpat-riotic about re-adapting it o feven abolishing it ..

Further, Webster said that the iBorder Cc sCanadian public needs a new

Thursday .

JIM CARNEYyear got

The chance of a lifetime, t othrow mushy pies at Lji byssey ed -

Mors, will be realized next Thurs-day during the annual campu sMarch of Dimes campaign .

MAGIC MACHIN ESeveral students took part i n

Editor-in-Chief Allan Father -

concept of the function or gov e

crnmvnt. lie stated that Cana-jtO

Editor

ehlinittee," he continued, A(1m o

dians still held to the old coif-'

couldThe

guessVarsity

names

Band

wasunder

presentedArthur

At Toronto

TORONTO, Out,—(CUP) — Amimeographed

paper called

we hal t (' given a feW suhsestien s

(hot that governments are in

A n ed i tor of the university of to Ilulman . "torested only in the landowners i Toronto student newspaper stated 1 The new plan involves the set -and other privileged groups and 'ruesday that he was cluestioned I ling up of a 'ch id court unde rn i d in the welfare of the enni . by U .S . border officials regardij live judges to try offenders . In

men !mettle .

ing his position on the paper .

‘iei ;figatjon ;Ind prosecution 1'1)1 '

The opposition loader refuted :

The incident fohowc i l the rc-I offences would still he eoiidueti j ii,u iii

hh 'this saying that tlw governments, cent effigy burning of Senator

by the Undergraduate sees

14 " nit," shied Hunter .

luday' are on the most part think Joseph DiicCarthy on the Toronto] t it ies committee,

"Ceilsentimi is the sourc e

ing ()I' the welfare of the people ,campus .

\inium ponaltv ror um . o r j

lilt , Ireul)le His 1111 , studen t

hug the s " li' n '""" lie -en din making the point that the

American consulate later sloth fence can only he $ ,is a truly Canadian party,ied that students are riot being h o i st \VOHI 'd

;Ode In r( i t i t,1 0Webster said, "CCF policies are discriminated against becoisei mend mere scrims ; ;weer, I n

in harnsins with Canadian triads they are cemieeled W i th the ;nlll

I)y Hie

hour—a tradition of liberalism

dent HeWspaptib',

isi the Vocally Ciilwsdi

wit h

The paper, which professes to NEW LOUNG Etltpress stud ii opinion, said The new lounge-card room,

University of Toronto was being' which is open to hlcn and wo-

controlled by "Canadian capital- men, will have the same hour sists," who haven't "one man of as other rooms in Brock Ball ,scholarship in the entire group of:I front 9 a .m . to 5 p.m ., IVIonoay21 men ." to P nday .

"Comment" said the "13 big one of th e principle arg o tmen" on the board of governors vents for the move was fo r rea -"hold' no less than 6 presidencies sons of tidiness i n the mainand 31 directorships," and add- I °unde. There have been co in -(el that this group shows 6,de_I plaints from students and th ecisively how one small group o r janitorial staff that card player s

tend to constitute an untidy at-mosphere in the loun ge .

Another reason is that du ele increased hookiess for Broc klounge, the staff is forced t oclose it more ()flee during th eafternoons, thereby making i tunavailable to students .

uebec Aid

NEWMAN CLUB will hold a n"after the Library party" in th eNewman Clubhouse, Hut L-5 ,on Friday, Nov . 27 . Admissio nwill be some canned goods fo rthe Christmas Hamper .

• AtLES DAIS LURONS, the

French folk song choir wil l,Peest,jea Maurice Duplessis is ,

attempting to protect Quebec's meetat

membersnoon

aretoday inurgently

HG4. Allasked toTo Use Gaming . Rooms distinctive culture from being as -

be present and all newcomersIsimilated 'by the rest of Canada,will be very welcome .Campus card sharps who wish the added convenience of' the president said But he i s

. Scheduledto begin at 12:30 the

Jit

Atmeet suffered from a total lack card tables will have to use the gaming room established in cracking all heads that rear

PRE LAW SOCIETY present s

whether they benot get underway until 1 :45,

end of Brock Hall .

Maclntyre , of audience at that time and did the former doublecommittee ' room, upstairs in the south themselves as possible attempts at Dr .Law professor ,assimilation

black or golden

who will speak on "How to get

.

,

pies To Fly

Two ofi the featured acts were'

Student Council actin gforced to leave for another en - t student facilities committee, de- eft by students of the five Quebe c '.

In response to a brief prescmt-i nthe

Artsmost 106

,out of law ",

on the recommendation of the

today noon

gagement before they even set j

hi le Di

foot on the stage .

Press B lasts

6000

lu move all tables universities Premier Duplcssis

At

At

f rom the main loun ge in order recently reiterated his stand toe FINE ARTS COMMITTEErnes

The Varsity band and magician , to facilitate card playing

the ' refuse federal aid to universities . Presents Eric Newton , noted Eng•

Federal aid is a violation of the fish Art Critic and author in anRoy Wheeler salvaged me' pro -

gram with their music and magic .Governors

.campus .

illustrated lecture, "The mean.'Their decision includes restrict rights of the province to auto -ing of modern art," in Physicshen of card playing to these nomy in the field of education,200 noon today .

At

At

HIGH SCHOOL CONFER .ENCE COMMITTEE will hol ea general meeting in Arts 100at noon today .

STUDENTS' PERSONNE LCommittee will present Lt .-Col .J . F. McLean, Director of Stud-

ent and Personnel Services, wh o

will ,address gtraduating Artsstudents in "Job Possibilities ForA B.A .," today noon in Physics201,

Pep Meet Collects Clothing

For Greek Flood Relief Fund

and approximately one hundred

Nevertheless, as long as gm

students turned out .

Quebec government refuses al l

Large containers for clothing federal financial aid for the fiv e

donations have been placed in Quebec universities, there is not

all major buildings on the camp- much possibility

us and will not be collected until aid for the rest of

ofthe Canadian

increased

I, universities . It will be difficul ttt go t _eh even to maintain the % present

level of federal assistance .

QUEBEC. STAND

locations :

the gaming room, claimed Duplessis .

Brock lounge, undergraduate ...4scommon rooms and student

Weekly pubster's meeting wil l

club rooms .

be held in the Pub offices today .

"Comment" which appears on

Furniture from the Mildredj All attend to discuss tonight' s

the University of Toronto campus Brock Memorial Room, which is party .

every two weeks charged that I being replaced, will be moved t o.he board of governors arc 'large- the new gaming room in orde r

scale capitalists," and "Bean - to make it an acxiliary lounge' New Cou ncu

ciers ."

fur use when the main louagei is closed .

Coordinates

Club Events

An attempt to boost co-ordina-tion between campus politica l

clubs and their interest to stu-

dents was launched at tuesday' s

meeting of the newly-formed

Political Council .The political council, wit h

Maurice Copithorne, Parliament-

ary forum head, as chairman, i s

tomposed of the five politica l

clubs and the CLU, SPC an d

Parliamentary Forum .Cohn McDirmal, LSE Trees -

Ares, said that any club tha t

feels it is to their advantage t o

itt associated with the counci l

should be admitted . "The meeting day schedule fin -

ally accepted by the clubs pro-vided that on Monday the I .,PP

Ind Parliamentary Forum meet ;in Tuesday the CtI,thiLilieral s

Ind COnSet'ViaiVeS ; WMI'WS-die.i the CCF : on Thursday th e

Forum and on Friday the SPCand the Social Credit Club .

presents recordings of hearingsof the Un-American Activitie sSubcommittee at noon today inFG 100 .

CAMERA CLUB will meettoday noon in Room 859 in th eLibrary. Movie by Kodak, "Hints

for Better Colour Photography"will be shqwn .

FROSH UNDERGRADUATESOCIETY COUNCIL meeting

will be held in A104 today noon ,At

At

At

UNITED NATIONS CLU Bpresents Dr ,Grantham, speaking

on "UNESCO in Indonesia" to-

day noon in Arts 100 .

• At At

MARDI GRAS DECORATIONCOMMITTEE will hold an organ •ization meeting today noon inthe Double Committee Room i nBrock Hall . All students inter-ested are urged to attend .

• At At

earings On Wax

SOCIAL PROBLEMS CLU B

SASK ATOON---(CUP) --Pro-fessor Bartholonusw X . Snavely ,aced ()I' the Deparineint cd Fina lExamimhions, today annooncei lthat a basic dividend of 49 03 h\timid' be awarded on all 195 4pxonls at the university .

UBC's Only ftQMEOWNED NEWSPAPER

PAGE TWO

THE UBYSSEY

Friday, November 27, 195 3

MEMBER CANADIAN UNIVERSITY PRESS .Authorized as second class mail, Post Office Department, Ottawa .

Student subscriptions $1,20 per year (included in AMS fees) . Mail subscrip.!ions $2 per year . Single copies flye cents . Published in Vancouver throughout theUniversity year by the,Student Publications Board of the Alma Mater Society ,University of British Ci bia, Editorial opinions expressed herein are those ofthe editorial staff of a Ubyssey, and not necessarily those of the Alma MaterSociety or the Univeril . ;,etters to the Editor should not be more than 150 words .The Ubyssey reserves the right to cut letters, and cannot guarantee publicationof all letters received.

Offices in Brock gall

For Display Advertisin gPhone ALma 1024

Phone ALrna 325 3EDITOR•IN•CHI Y F ... ALLAN FOTHERINGHA MManaging Editor ;

_

_

Peter Bypnowic hExecutive Editors Jerome Angel

City Editor, Ed Parke rStaff Cartoonist, Howard Mitchel l

Senior editor, tbls issue Ray Logle

Desk : Mary Lou Sifts, Anlee Brickman, Betty Mowat .Reporters : Mike Atees, Bruce McWilliams, Pete Pineo, Peter Krosby, Ab

Kent, Bob Bridge, Keti''L9mb, Pat Carney, Jim Carney, Rosemary Kent-Barber ,Bud Glucksmaa, Dick Delman, Murray Brisker .

Not "Cricket, " Mr. Gunderson

Tilt UYSSZY. LETTERS TO THE EDITO R

The fact that Mr . Kent, the.. author of the above-mentione d

diatribe, has spent some thre edoesn't lend much strength .toor four years at Fort Cam phis argument, or any degre eof credibility to his judgment .

We most especially take ex-ception to the aspersion infer-ently cast on Mrs . Heathfield ,the head dietician at Fort Camp .Mrs . Heathfield is a highly com-petent individual in additio nto being a person of sterlin gcharacter, To malign her as Mr ,raise the wrath of a great man yKent did will do nothing bu tpeople. We can only hope tha tMr. Kent will prove as suc-cessful in his field of endeavou ras Mrs . Heathfleld has provento be in hers. If, however, Mr .Kent's field of endeavour is tobe journalism we can predic tquite categorically that he wil lnever achieve the degree ofcothpetence in that field tha tMrs . Heathfleld has In the fieldof dietetics ,

In closing, may we say thatwe feel that Mr . Kent owes apublic apology to the entirestaff of the Fort Camp Dinin gRoom .

Yours truly ,S. ENDERTON ,E. HONG.

(And we feel that Messrs.Enderton and Hong owe an ap-ology to MI. Kent for theirlack of a 'Sense of humour . I fthey will reread the last para-graph of Mr. Kent's epic, theywill notice "headers will notethat facetiousness has played amajor role in this account—Ed, )

ViruloncoThe Editor, The Ubyssey

Having been Cesldents of For tCamp for the past several years ,we would like to point out afew facts which, we believe ,are not appreciated by most ofthe camp, residents, inclyding

TE( AL BOOKSWe are specialists in the direc timport of technical and scion-tific literature, manuals, text -books, dictionaries, magazines,etc., from Germany, Switzer -land, Sweden, Austria, France ,Italy and Holland. Ask us forany information about modernbooks from these countries .we can give you gll details ,prices — and we obtain you rbooks quickly !

Continental Book CentreThe Home of the European

Book914A W. PENDE R

(opposite Hotel Abbotsford )Phone PAcific 471 1

The aim of this paper was not to part .cularly condemn the kitchens in Fort Cam pand 'Acadia or to call down the :clerks an dmanagement of the bookstore . As well asanyone we realize the almost impossible taskof adequately 'serving students with thefacilities which are provided in both the book-store and the residences . What we ARE try-ing to say is that these facilities must beimproved.

No one will argue that the bookstore ca nprovide competent clerks when the adminis-tration pays students 72 cents an hour . Andthe thing that most students resent is that ,besides having to pay unnecessarily high

We feel that the following,coluntn sum sup the current public relations squabbleperfectly. It was written by Eric Nicol, anold Ubyssey staffer, '47 grad and always abooster of this university .

Except for the Christmas season, whenthere's time for .goodwill to all men, thes eare the months when the public can deploreuniversity students .

So far this has been a good year for de-ploring the college kids . Back east at theUniversity of Toronto some students burnedSenator Joe McCarthy in effigy. This wasdeplored as far south as the Chicago Tribune ,whose publisher, Colonel McCormick, com-plained that the Canadian students shouldn 'thave picked on the senator from Wisconsin .I agree. If they only had one effigy to•burnthe honor should have gone to Colonel' Mc -Cormick, who is bigger than Senator Mc -Carthy and would burn longer .

In Vancouver the student shenanigan shave been less political and more social, asmall riot of partying engineers who trie dto turn over a police car . The papers madea good deal of this, knowing that many ofthose subscribers who never got past grad e10 would relish the evidence that higher edu-cation breeds terrorists . "U,BC HOOLI -GANS" is what one paper called th estudents, smacking its home-owned chops .

Needless to say, to blame the Universityfor the antics of some of its students is likesaying that the Church of England is corrup tbecause one of the members of the congre-gation blows town with the bank receipts.

At universities such as Oxford and Cam -bridge, where the students are in residenc eand proctors rick herd on them, the institu-tion can justifiably be held responsible for theconduct ul' the inmates . But not so with Ca-nadian universities .'I'hauks to the educationalstandard set by the department of education,which is acting on behalf of the public, ther eis nothing to stop half-wits and even mor e

vulgar fractions of intelligence from register-

looking after them, not only jeopardized thegoodwill Gunderson built up among the8000 citizens of Victoria who voted for Mm ,but also has raised some new questions i nthe minds of all politically conscious citizensof this province.

We would like to know whether the rulesof "cricket" in politics in B .C. have beenreplaced by the eye-gouging spectacle of T Vfree-for-all wrestling. We realize that theelection campaign in Victoria became rathe rheated towards its end, but cannot excuseor jusfify Mr . Gundei'son's action becausethe pre-election political mud-slinging .

We presume, of course, that the Victoriaofficers took no side and had no stake in theelection . If Mr. Gunderson had reason to be-lieve that this was not so, it was not only hisright to place a guard over the ballot boxes,but it is also now his duty to inform the publicon what basis the integrity and capability o fthe election offiicals was to be doubted .

Until Mr. Gunderson satisfactorily ex -plains the motive of his action we shall leaveall other assumptions and implications unsai dbecause we believe in another traditiona lBritish "cliche"—Honi soft qui mal y pense .

ing as undergraduates and boarding at someprivate squirrel cage .

As for the students, they have been ap-palling the public ever since they starte dhanging around with that old bum Socrates .At the age of 19 or 20 the human male hasmore energy than sense, so that we can ex-pect a blow-off in some direction .

I think that, while tut-tutting over thebroken glass and the sowing of wild oatson the frosty ground of our constabulary, w emay be secretly glad that the riots are notthose of young people seeking freedom fromtyranny or hunger, as they are in more coun-tries than you can shake a billy-stick at .

Also, I can testify personally that it 's agood thing to be a hellion, if a hellion youmust be, at college age . I missed my chancewhile I was an undergraduate, fussing to omuch with courses and grades, with the re-sult that the urge to grab fire hoses andswallow goldfish is still within me. Andthough it may be deplorable that a collegeyouth should raid a girls ' dormitory to carryoff captured panties, in a middle-aged ma nthe impulse may be fatal. Especially if he i smarried .

No, college is the place to indulge ex-cesses of body, in sports if possible, and ofmind, in studies if possible. When Mr. RonGostick, editor of an anti-Semitic rag, re-cently deplored the 'number of student Com -munists on the campus, he revealed a charac-teristic intellectual myopia. Being a Com-munist on the campus is the mental equiva-lent of the rolling of toilet paper up Gran-ville street . It's silly, but you're not likelyto make a habit of it .

The free world needs vitally both it suniversities and the students in them. Itseems to ore, therefore, that we are doing bot hthe college and ourselves a large disservic ewhen we allow our indignation at studen tpranks to carry over into a prejudice againstthe university itself . City editors, please copy .

—Reprinted from The Vancouver Province .

Good QualityEditor, The Ubyssey :

I see by your Tuesday issuethat a McGill professor hasbeen attacking their studentpaper for illiteracy and juven-ility, The McLean's editoria lyou quote, no doubt by thateager professortbalting PierreBerton, did not seem to me t ocome to any profuond conclu-sion. But it did move me tosay something that has been onmy mind for some time .

In some years I have foundmyself in cordial agreement 'with my McGill colleague' spoint of view. This year, how-ever, the quality of your paperhas been such, especially on theeditorial page, that I must riskbewildering you by a word bfpraise. Your editorials hav ebeen almost uniformly stimulat-ing in their critical point ofview, meaningful in substance ,and intelligently mature instyle. Indeed, they generallyput the editorials of our down-town papers to shame. Theproof-reading, and the standar dof your paper as a whole, hav ealso shown great improvement.

This is not to say that therehave no; been errors in expres-sion, and lapses in taste or judg-ment. But I feel that these hav ebeen lapses . In the main th eUbyssey this year is proving acollege paper worthy of thename by which I mean that i tis neither a feeble imitation o fa city daily nor a self-con-scious attempt at being . "dif-ferent . "

I would voice two hopes :one, that you are ensuring suchcessors to maintain your stand-ard; two, that some of our stu-dents . are seeing in your edi-torials what a university stu-dent's level of expressiQna ca nbe.

PROFESSOR W . ROBBINS ,Dept. of English .

Moro ResidentsEditor, The Ubyssey :

We feel that the virulent at-tack made by Mr . Ab. Kent onthe Fort Camp Dining Roo mmust not go unanswered .

The attempt to improve th econditions at Fort Campthrough the written column itscommendable, but to publisha column such as Mr . Kentwrote—which is nothing morethan an abusive harangue ,wrought with inaccuracies an duntruths—can do nothing butdefeat the cause . If an attemptis to be made to improve thelot of 'Fort Campers' it must b eclone intelligently and withou tbias .

One must first consider tha tthe Department of Food Serv-ices is feeding upwards of fiv ehundred people three meals a

'day, seven days a week on abudget slightly in excess ofthirty-five dollars per perso nper month . The facts here spea kfor themselves ; further corn-ment on this point would besuperfluous.

CLASSIFIE DEXPERT TYPING, PICKUP &

delivery service Sundays .DURING THE ABSENCE OF

Mrs. A, O. Robinson, studentsWest 10th, Al, . 3682 . (21)

$45 MONTHLY, Large 2-roomFR. 9591 .

(30 )FOR SALE 1950 AUSTIN, good

condition, ideal transporta-tion to school $675 . . PhoneKE. 5407Y eves or this week-end .

WANLED RIDE FROM 6th Av eand and Cypress for 8 :3 0lectures. Phone Nein, CE.7156 .

DON'T FORGET THE WO -men's Residence dance to-night, Nov. 27, in Brock Hall .All you past residence girl sbe sure to bring your Lit 'Abner along to our Sadi eHawkins Dance . Admission

-$1 .00 per couple .URGENTLY REQUIRE TYP -

ing to do at home . Mrs. F . IFoye, 218 8th Ave ., New

Westminster. N.W. 3952R.EVENING DRESS SUIT (Tails )

38-40 6'—Excellent conditio n$15 Phone Edar 5500 .

EXPERT TYPING, PICKUP &Delivery Service Sundays .Phone FRaser 9591 .

FOR SALE SINGLE BREAST -ed tux . Size 36, Dress Shirt! •X30. North 948Y ,

LOST--PARKER "51" PEN !finder please contact S . W .Cameron, 1740 Nelson, MA .2695 .

WOULD ANYQ E KNOWIN Gthe whcreabo its of a greenwooden irate taken from 459 8West 4th on or :shout ONE „31 please phone ALma 1071 '

Reward ! !GOOD QUALITY RECORD

player, nine ('h;,nke, three .seem-l . AT . 0934Y eves ,

TYPING AND MTMFOCGRAPIT .

the overly critical authors ofthe article and letter whichhave appeared in this paper .These facts are :

1. The dietician, Mrs . Heath -field, has only $1 .15 per stud-ent per day with which to op-erate the dining hall .

2. Out of this sum wages o fthe dieticians, cooks, meal ser-vers, and dish washers—abou t25 people in all—must be paid .

3. Also out of this sum al lexpenses of the hall itself suc has heat, electricity and ne iequipment must be paid .

4. After all expenses there, i sonly about 70c out of the orig-inal $1 .15 left for food .

Yours truly ,W. G. PEARCE,H. E. McLEAN ,

Soft cashmere-treated Lambswool . . .full-fashioned . . . hand-finished . . .shrink-proof . . .moth-proof. $6 .95,$7 .95, $8 .95. Jewelled and others higher .At good shops everywhere .

In the latest instalment of his memoirs ,Sir Winston Churchill writes: about theBritish general elections in 194k when thesoldiers' votes taken abroad were'.beld inn

for three weeks before balttg counted .He notes that it was felt in suet l continen-tal countries that there could 'be no doubtabout the outcome of the elections if theballot boxes were in the government's keep-ing over such a period .

"However," he continues, "ln , our countrythese matters are treated exactly as if theywere a cricket match, or eth r sporting

Chefs

event."rAt first glance this ove

ified com -parison seems but one of those es so dea rto the British heart. However, itt full , mean-ing was brought home to us , this week bythe events following the defeat of FinanceMinister Einar Gunderson in the by-electionin Victoria .

Mr.' Gunderson was defeated by a nar-row margin of 93 votes out of Some 20,000votes cast, and, quite naturally, guested arecount. However, his action posting aguard of two Social Credit pa ' membersover the ballot boxes, as if tl returnin gofficer was not trustworthy orcapable of

Not Scientistsprices for books, they have to contendpoor service in a building which is hopelessl yinadequate .

Some of the letters state the feeling thatthe kitchens in the residences are doing th ebest they can considering the facilities the yhave .

We'd suggest that the Food Service sCommittee pay a little more attention to foo dand a little less attention to calories. Thearmy packs a lot into one of their K-ration stoo, but those dried food kits don't tastevery good . .

What Fort Camp and Acadia need i smore cooks and less dieticians .

with

Jabez Rides Again

sNrurnte work Reavon-,hlm rates Celt rniyiime . MrsT' Cow, 4458 W . 10th, A

L 3682.

Every smoker wants one !

BOTTLE-LIGHTE R

. . .perfect miniature of a Coca-Cola bottle

An ice-cold Coke is the campus favourite any tim e

"Coke" Is a registered trade mark

COCA-COLA LTD .

V Lights .at the flip of your thum b

V Furnishes lights for days on en d

V Only 2% inches tall—fits pocket

or purse

V A novelty that attracts attention

every time you light it ML-I

RETIRING COMMANDING OFFICER of the UBC Con-tingent of . the Canadian Officers' Training Corps., Lt:-Col .the Hon. R. W. Bonner is pictured above . One the left ishis successor, Lt.-Col. John F. McLean.

Board have been condemning , the Recently, the Publication '"Applied Vence students" for many things . The (Applied Scienc estudesltss) .were criticized by the Ubymey for their handling of th eFrosh Orlentatinit Week while the Law students, who did a finesob but wot4d have had no "clients" were it not for the enthusias mof the (Applied Stunt' Students) were applauded. While UBCgained recognition for meritorious response to the Blood Drive ,the (Applied Sciends students) who had to be tokd to stop bringingstudents to give blood as all the bottles were One, received none .The (Applied Science students), have been,given a "raw deal" b yBelfrighteous Putla Boards who, while vigorously flaunting itsfreedom of the press, 1' constantly abusing it by printing biase dopinions and rumours ,about the (Applied Science student) an drepresenting them as facts .

It cannot be comprehended that an organization who dis-played extreme immaturity by squirting beer on parade observers ;an organization who did material damage to the University o fSaskatchewan, by . steaiit$g, its Medical Building's cornerstone canaccuse the (Applied Science students) alone of fostering poor publi crelations. .

Think it over, 0 slanderer. of (Applied Science students) .

In continuing Thee Ubyssey 's policy of fostering culture andintellectual discussion' Among 'UBC students, the editors of

this paper proudly announce an exoiting new contest restricte dexclusively to English 100 students .

The fallowing artigie, contained in something called the"Applie Science Newsletter " was handed in to our office . Itis reprinted below. Now all you English 100 students, have todo is to add up the mistakes in grammar, spelling and, so-calle dEnglish in the article. Winner will receive absolutely free, th eApplied Science building .

All together now—Go!

STUDENT TOUR Sail June 12 t88 DAYS $1098

lantic from Qued tour limited

London, Holland including Vollen dBrussels, Cologne, the Rhine by st eBlack Forest, Liechtenstein, AustCastles, Dolomites, Venice, Adriati cSan Marino, Rome, the Hill Towns ,and French Rivieras, Franch Alps, Stour of Scotland, English Lakes, N oCountry, Exmor, Glorious Devonon the S .S. Atlantic arriving Queb

INDEPENDENT

Choose you rdates; includeyou wish in th

choice—all on a pre-arranged, prepthat is made to order for you .

Ask for descriptive

University Tray

riot class on S .S. At-ec on special conduct-

Students . A week i nand--Isle of Marken .

er. Motor tour of thefan Tyrol, Bavaria noast, tiny Republic o forence, Rome. Italiantzerland, Paris . Moto r

Wales, Shakespeareturnips tourist clas sAugust 18,

parture and returns much or as little asprice category of you rd basis. ,An itinerary

In a letter to- NFCUS presi-nt Tony Enriquez, UBC studen tuntil president Ivan Feltha mursday expressed sharp criti -m of NFCUS financial poll -s and suggested that Enrl-ez' proposed visit to UB Culd be a waste of time .

Enriquez proposed to visit Dec ., 13 and 14 to discuss UBC'snd on NFCUS financial or-

nization .

C WITHDRAWALrlier Ivan Feltham andughan Lyon indicated thatC would withdraw from thetional Federation of Canadia niverslty Students if the pro-sed NFCUS fee increase wasplemented .nriquez answered to the ef-

t that he would have UBCtpone their decision until he

s able to visit the campus an dcuss the matter with Feltham ,

is proposal to vist UBC drewfollowing letter . from Fel-

m :TTER'The action of the Toronto

Inistrative Council (whichersed the stand of Its dele-es, and opposes the fee in-ase) makes fools of their con-tion delegates . It is unfort-te that Canada's largest stu -t association failed ,to sen degates who knew the score . "eltham suggested redrawingNFCUS budget on a sounds, in his letter to Enrlquez .

The foolish action of the dele-es in approving a tight budgeth such uncertain revenue ma yult in a financial shambles .t does, NFCUS as an associa-

will suffer a serious set-k."

e Handicrafts of India dis-y, a sale and exhibition trav-,ng across Canada, will be o nw in the Foyer of the Wa rmortal Gym next week .

orld University Service Com-tee, sponsors of the sale, areking for students to help sel l

articles . Those intereste dgo to the . WUS committeeupstairs in the $rock .

n sale will be articles carvedivory and walnut, jewellry ,

ses, belts and scarves . Therealso be many special item s

exhibit .will be held on Monday ,

. 30 from 7 to 10 p .m . anduesday and Wednesday, Dec .d 2 from noon to 10 p.m .rofits from the continent-e display go to the Worl dversity Service,

New Featurearound campus who' s

been cherishing a yen to hearthemselves on the air will ge ttheir chance in "UBC Digest's "new feature .

Starting early in the New Yearthis feature—"Hometown Per-sonalities"—will consist of talk sby students on and about theirhome town.

Those wishing to participatein this feature are asked to comedown to Radsoc's studio in theBrock as soon as possible .

If you go down to the woodsSaturday night, kiddies you'r ein for a big surprise. The welkinwill wring as the Rowing Club'sbiggest bash since the last on egets underway. Dress is option -al, with or without, you all endup the same .

CLASSE SContinued from Page 1

NEWMAN CLUB will holdCommunion Breakfast at theSacred Heart Convent, 29th andHighbury, 9 a.m. Sunday. Ad-mission is 75c. A special Invita-tion has been extended to theAlumni .

~

4P

~RTENNIS CLUB will not mee t

Saturday as the field house i snot available .

CONCERT SERIES, sponsore dby the Fine Arts Commite eand the Department of Music ,Monday noon in Physics 200 .Natalie Minunzie, soprano, andGenevieve Carey, pianist, willbe feature artists .

Prof FormsDialect Club

Linguistic studies are assuredof promotion at UBC by the for .mation of a Linguistic Circle un-der the "leadership of Prof . A. W.de Groot .

The circle will provide an op-portunity for the faculty an dstudents of various department sto get together and pool theirideas about languages .

The first meeting will be hel din the Faculty Club on Friday ,Dec. 4 at 8 p.m. All Interestedfaculty members and studentsare invited to attend .

Conclude TuesdayMcGoun Prelims

Final debates for those tryin gfor the McGoun Cup Debatin gTeam will be held in the La wSchool Tuesday at 2 :30 p.m .

Debating finalists are : DannyGoldsmith, Keith Hillman, Davi dYoungson, John Whittiker, KenPerry, John Coates, Peter Lowe sMaurice Copithorne, Frank Paw-lowski -and Brian Daniels .

Conte het lifli ''I

CCF supported the bill, butfound it diftlatttt to talk for It .It was much easier, they said ,to talk against the government ,so they pointed out a number ofthings they did not like abou tthe bill and a lot of things theymissed in it .

.Put to a vote, the bill was

carried, 28 to 15, after PC hadwithdrawn the proposed amend-ment . -TENSE

The present tense situation i nCanadian-U .S. relations wastouched upon ,by the Socred op-position, suggesting a vote .ofconfidence in the Minister ofForeign Affairs.

Jack Austin was a very ablespeaker, handling a very un.ruly House with a firm hand .

Continued from Pap 1He emphasized that the hos-

pital insurance plan was one ofthe most difficult problems thatthe Social Credit governmenthad inherited from the Coali-tion .

In a short discussion of finan-cial problems, the Socred sai dCanadian economy was tied tothe American :. dollar, and thatwe could only hope to extricateourselves from financial diffi-culties by adopting the SocialCredit financial scheme; •

The essence of this scheme a soutlined by Mr . Day was tha twe should sell what we can onthe foreign market for good swhich we do not manufactureourselves and return the surplu sto the public through an annualdividend, policy.

.

Radsoc Airs

IBC Personnel DirectorHeads Campus COTC

New Commanding Officer of the UBC Contingei)t of theCanadian Officers' Training Corps is Lt : Col . J. F. McLean, di-rector of UBC's Personnel Services .

He succeeds Lt.-Col . the Hon. R. W. Bonner, provincial® Attorney-General and Minister

of Education,Col, McLean served with the

Seaforth Highlanders duringWorld War II, and retired fromactive force with the rank 'ofmajor. His promotion to the rankof lieutenpnt-colonel is concur -rent with this new appointment .

Bonner was recently appoint-ed Honorary Vice-President ofUBC's Student Council, a posttraditionally filled by the Min-ister of Education .

tiers

Club Ltd .M. 6984

S,WOMWAfirliaMNOW

'ti~'~,

.~., rYfi

aye.,:r

a .

..

' . .'. .°, : :' .{ ::.'•

Strolling on the Campus . . . in the classroom

. . . dating in the snackshop . . . Dazzling

white Cardigans look right wherever they're seen.

They're obtainable at EATON's alway s

Simulated pearls, patterned wit hthe delicacy of Lice on shinin gmetal cases . A lovely ensemble

Friday, November 27, 19 5

By

Jack Pomfret 's

hectic weekend tonigh

up against the New

Jake Donnelly's highl

urday night .

Thu derbirds Meet St. 'Martin's and ModernIn eekend Exhibition Basketball Battles

Easter AcesBoost Martin's

UNC THRASHERunderbird basketball squad begins a

n the Memorial gym when they warmstminster Moderns prior to taking ontouted Saint Martin's Rangers on Sat-

The game against the muchImproved Rangers should be a

dandy as the Saint Martin's crewhave lost only two or threeseniors from last year's team andfigure to give the 'Birds a toughbattle .

ANNUAL UBC XMAS SKI TR/

HEADS FOR RED MOUNTAIN

The annual Xmas ski trip is on again this year . It

leave Vancouver on December 26 and return on Januar y

2 . The trip will cost $68 .50 per person and will cover th e

return fare to Red 'Mountain, two meals a day and the

use of the chairlift .

Those planning to go should sign the bulletin board i n

the cafeteria as soon as possible . Additional information

can be had from John Banfield at Kerr . 1849 .

Soccer SqMeet HalIn Stadi u

The Varsity socce r

host Hales this Saturda

noon at 2 p.m. in the st a

what should be one of

games of the season .

Varsity appear to be

ing rapidly and are abo

to vacate the fifth place

they have been occu p

the last month .

juniors will go a distance of twoand a half miles for possession ,of the Grassie Team Trophy be-ing defended by Victoria Hig hSchool .

Entries for the junior race

Jim Carter gave a lot of support to Penn's enthusiasm. In their his new charges were to take the far compiled a record of five have been received from mos t

first game against 'Westminster the JV 's lived up to their battle field filled with a new' Wins (including four shutouts) lower mainland schools and fro mp

and no losses, and have scored as far south as Levenwood Hig hrave notices by sinking a phenomenal 51t% ;,~ of their shots and 'sp

71 points to their opponent's 5 . School near Pullman, Wash .irrt .

beatin g the Moderns 60-55 . . The boys looked just as good the

After as week's sojourn in the ._ _

next week as they downed the Arctic Club 46-39 .Then the deep, dark woods with only a

bow and arrow and the Rugby j'dreams of glory' were tudely shattered .

Union manual to occupy his time ;In thin first `real' test against the defending champion ' Don expects to return filled wit h

Cloverleafs the JV's had no defence against Ron Weber 's patent zest for the English game—an d

fast-break and lost 62-57 . Losing to the 'Leafs was no disgrace pos,,ibly some radical new ideas

but what has happened in the last two weeks is .for the said old sport .

Against the same Arctic Club that they had beat with edclown l's enthusiasm has seep

the line and as a result ;ease the JV's sank a grand total of 19':i, of their shots and lost t

ftblll

Gd EI_~w 0 00a reguarsory•

, at,y, _45-40. Last Tuesday night they last their third game in a row liott and Bill Kushnir, are turn :,

to the lowly Westminster Moderns 54-47 . This was the teim, mg out far the Tomahawks .

remember, that the JV's had sunk 51' i of their shots against

The Tomahawks will meet Ex- !Tech at Ilillcrest Park in an at e

m wil l

after-

itim in

e best

prow,

ready

of thatthe hottest basketball region in

g for the States .

Besides his five Seniors ConchDonnelly has brought along fourfreshmen who were high school ,phenoms last year. But threeof them were not stars at West -ern schools, no sir! Donnelly'ssquad only had a 7-13 won lostrecord last year, that's not near-ly good enough, s6 he went t oIllinois, Indiana and pointsEast, and gathered up three ofthe top high school stars from

Saturday's game 'thou

hard fought affair as th,

have already bested the

XI twice this year andare looking for revenge.

be a

Halesarsity

e boys

The leading scorer of the tea mlast year was Ken Killam, a 20 -year-old Senior who averaged 1 2points a game last year and mea-sures a dwarf-like 5'11" .

Dick Penn's Junior Varsityquintet lost their third straigh t

The "C" Division UBC Chiefs, game Tuesday night as the ywho have been enjoying consider• i were beaten 54-47 by New West -ably more success than the Var•m inster Modern over at th esity• also play on the campus this Royal City .week. They play Sons of Nor- Scoring leaders for lye JV' sway on Sunday and will be try- were Bob Ramsay who notche ding for their sixth straight win 12 and Glen Drummond with 11 ,without a 'defeat .

, hile steady Don Hill garnered 9 .

Coach Ed Luckett es to

have the club at full rength

for the first time in man weeks .

Expected to return from the in-jured list are Bud Doh1 n andIrving Knight, who did an ex-cellent job of holding ,' Hale'shigh-scoring Neal ' McE1p ►nle i ncheck in the last contest s ,

Although last week gamete was alosing effort it was the Varsity'sbest played game to date; If theboys can keep this form up theyshould give the power1 l HaleXI a real battle . The teat wouldappreciate it if they Id atleast have a little vocal' pportthis Saturday at 2 :00 In

UBCstadium .

STAN BECK

of Bob Lovett and you have the ' Among top seniors who will contest Last week they brokeI.

To quote a well worn phrase from Bill Shakespeare, coach getting many good nights I attempt to take Meyer's title are the existing cross country recordWashington Stat e"Something is rotten in the War Memorial Gymnasium ."

of sleep,

I Al Fisher of Washin~mr the Oregon champion,ghips ,

At the beginning of this still young basketball season the

althoug h they finished secon d

speculation on how the Thunderbirds would fare in the Ever•

and third .

,green Conference was all but nil compared to the predictions

Rugger Rules And Coryell , Prior to the running of ,theI

senior race a large field o fon where the JV's would finish in the Senior A, league .

The worst that the JV's were figured to finish was second . Play' Robin Hood With Dee rTheir coach Dick Penn was heard to say, "We'll beat New West -

minster and Arctic Club regularly and take a few games announced his intention to coach the Tomahawks (UBC's thirdfrom the Eilers ". rugby fifteen), took one look at the rugby rule book and then

The likes of Bob Ramsay, Keith Merrill, Twitter Hill and skipped town—two days before

Football mentor Don Coryell, who earlier in the we'? k

UBC's two top distance runners, Pete Harris and DougKyle, will attempt to win the individual title of the Sixth

Annual Pacific Northwest Cross Country races when they get

underway Saturday at 1 p.m. from Varsity Stadium.

Running against them will be Denny Meyer, considered

one of the top men in his field in the United States, who wonthe title and the Hudson's Bay

_ _

Company Perpetual Trophylast who was the two mile champion

in the pacific Coast Conferenceyear .

in 1952 and Ken Reiser fro mThe meet, sponsored jointly

by the University of Oregon, wh oUBC and the Amateur Athletic last week broke the Orego n

pleasant surprise to coach Mit- Union of Canada, has already at- Inter-Collegiate record for th echell, When the season started tracted entries from the Uni -the boys had just had one prac- varsity of Washington, Washing

.' thr Ia mile run •

tice and nobody knew just what' ton State, University of Oregon,

mpan y ;his debutin

wash.

the 'Birds would be like this University of Idaho, Western company will be Western as hington's Gerry Swan, 1'urme' yyear,

Washington and Seattle Pacific. of New Westmiristrr, who cap •

Cliff Frame and Jimmy Todd TOP' MEN ENTERED

tared the junior titles here lastgive the team one of the stout-

The 0 . B . Allan Trophy, ' year .est defences in the league. Add awarded to the top team enter . 'to this the prolific scoring of , ed, will be defended by Wash•

Harris and Kyle'

have been

S TAN S PRIVATE LINE

battling each other all seaso nI'ttiIcCulloh and the play making fasten State .

and are rn top shape for this

One of the freshmen, JackieMay brings a one-game scorin grecord of 86 points with him toSaint Martins .

Another is a mere 6'6" 23-yea rold weighing in at an anemic210. Sounds like a combinationof Ernie Nyhaug and GeoffCraig .

a Kit

Looking over the height-weight statistics the Range rsquad reads like a well fed foot-ball team . The average height ofthe twelve man team is 6'3 "with only two men under the 6 'mark. Craig, McLeod and beefyBob Bone have fun on the boardscome Saturday night .

There are a total of seven let-termen returning led by SeniorNero Wise a three-year letter -man .

.Puck Squa dPlay TonightShould Waltz

Just how good is the Varsity

hockey team? That is the ques-

tion that everyone is asking

themselves as the 'Birds moved

into a tie 'for first place after

dropping their first two games .

The team plays New West-minster tonight at the Kerrisdal e

Arena at 9:00 . The game should '

be no more than a good work -

out for Dick Mitchell's boys and

after the game they should be

secure in their first place birth .

The way in which the tea m

has come along is certainly a

ONE OF THE TOP long-distance men ` on the Pacific Coast who will be seen here Satur-

day is Washington State's Bill Link . Link will be one of the 35 entries in the Pacific

Northwest Cross-country Championships who will start from the stadium at 1:00 . UBC'sDoug Kyle and Pete Harris are among the avorites .

Will You

Three weeks ago .

WHAT has gone wrong ?It would be easy to say, as many do, that Coach Dick Penn to"tPL to h ick up their first rui n

is to blame. However, we think it is unfair to place all theof the season, aller earning thei r

first ' point in the standings las tblame on Dick ' s shoulders,

' week with a 3.3 tic .Nobody will argue that Dick is the best basketball coach .

in the world, least of all Dick . But a coach no matter how good Me;tnwlilie the winless Var>fly

rmust have players who are willing to give everything they have ("hiefs will a ,gal" plain the I?x-for the team . We feel that the JV's are not. giving their all for Iii is ,)I 2 :30 on the ('onnau li tDick .

Park pitch In an earlier cncnini•' '

The altitude that some of the JV's are taking is childish and ter wiIii the seem filteeli Ult( '

Iris no place on a University basketball team . After last Tues. ( 1R ul (Ili Life sruie lra,

on a ,hur l' ~I

I I 8dot' niiyhl's game mine of the players threatened to quit because ri d '

,Pt.they felt bud (smelling lost the game . We weren' t there and

tv'e " 11 '1 kmnw it the game %v'`Is badly coached or not. But we The unctel'catelt Isar . . ,til lb(I'"cirri, (heir treake,l rnmp~t

ido know that the players tonic the attitude that "the cause

et the dear when Ihe 0 ruee l‘,\,i, . lox, and ' wiin ~•we

use,, Nlcit'br the cnnching wit,„ id " y „rlh ;`',liars ;It Ilnilecleto I'rl <but that's no tmime lee the We not trying all the way

ut 2 to Tim L'rste~ have ilium

FILERS NIP PENN'S

BOYS IN CLOSE ONE

Dick Penn'a fighting J .V .basketball crew didn't endtheir string of losing game slast night but they gave Eiler squite a scare before losing ou tto the Jeweller quintette in aspine tingling finish 53-50 atLord Byng Gym!

Grimly determined J.V.' soutscored Eilers 16-4 in thelast quarter. Jim Carver andGlen Drummond with 14 and10 respectively, led J .V.'s .

SHIRTS 19(Ilnllnim fmmdr,rd- Sall of klunfv ,

DMI$LE YOUR MONI.Y N' SIf F BUTTON MIS',IN( .

rink!

.' r

SASKATOON—(CUP) — Dr .Harvey Q. Thaddeous Martins ,noted biologist and explorer, ha srecently discovered that the hu-man toenail would reach thelength of seven feet if left unat-tended during a normal life span .

1Y‘ BAN K

TO A MILLION CANADIANS

ENJOY

OF IC E

New Westminster Fraser Valley Branch Office

Vancouver Interior B .C . Yukon Branch Office

Zodiac Bldg ., 6044 Columbia St ., New Westminster

Stock Exchange Bldg ., 475 flaws St .

Fred 13 . (1 ' ftocrer, Branch Manager

II . C . Webber, C .14 .U ., Branch Maumee'Vancouver Branch Office, 402 W . fender St .

Erie V. ( ' hewn,

li e C .l, Lis s Brunch Manage r

Victoria Branch Office, 2U1 Licullurd Bldg . Hunt, M . Moore, C .L,U,, Branch l\,laiabe r

B~Fka~dally Secure At Age 65?