ubc library home - dailyubyssey · if brousson doesn' t iich;rve ns,i pal animal should . miss...

4
VOL, XXXI she Daily Ubysse y VANCOUVER, B .C ., TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1948 No, 28 The name of Dougie Reid be - came a legend Saturday . The scrappy, devil-may-car e fullback of UBC's American foot - ball team joined the ranks of th e university ' s athletic "greats" i n a game that brought disaster t o UDC, but still will be remembere d for years by the 2000 fans at Var- sity Stadium . Tortured with pain from boil s on his neck, Reid fought throug h the first three quarters of the gam e refusing to be slowed by the biting agony that came with every move . Jabbing pain in his neck cam e every time he turned his head, bu t the stocky . 180-pound fullback con- tinued to fight . In seven plays he carried the bal l for UBC until finally in the fourt h quarter he fell in agony to th e field and coach Don Wilson sen t him to the showers . "I could feel it every time I ben t my head," Reid said . The respect of UBC fans for th e stocky player could be felt as h e left the field alone and dejected . There was almost a shocked silenc e a flurry of "ohs" and comments Daily Ubyssey Photo By Bob Steine r like "there goes the game." Reid himself sat unhappily on th e bench for a few minutes befor e going to showers , "I felt I was holding back," h e told fellow players who crowde d around him . "I felt I was runnin g upright when I should have bee n plunging . I was holding back on tackles ." Reid went into the game despit e the warnings of friends . He pass them off with a laugh and said th e pain would only make him ru n faster . 'I Could Feel The Pain Every Time I Moved ' Laid Out Twice ' Scrappy, Hard tacklin g Fullback Becomes Legend Aid To Europ e Radsoc Topi c "Are We Giving the Eur- opeans enough financial aid " is the topic of the Universit y Radio Society's student partici- pation broadcast to be held i n the Brock lounge today at 12 :30 . The problem will be,discussed b y two student speakers and moderate d by Dr . J . A . Crumb of the economic s department. Questions and comment s will be asked for from the audience . The discussion will be recorded by CJOR for presentation next Susda y afternoon . Hansard Society will hold gen- eral meeting on Wednesday, Novem- ber 10th at 12 :30 in Arts 206 . Professor H . F . Angus, head of th e Department of Political Science, Ec- onomics and Sociology, will addres s the meeting , Today is "D Day" for the Un- dergraduate Societies Commit - tee's clean-up campaign . The campus is being "invaded" b y 1 squads of students whose main ob- jective will be to keep paper an d lunch-bag titterers from indulging i n their favorite outdoor sport . Offending students "captured" b y the squads will be forced to surrende r their AMS cards . The campaign is being conducte d by members of USC, acting in thei r disciplinary capacity . Legion official s have been asked to take charge of th e clean-up in the area of their hut , OPERATIONAL AREA S The campus has been divided int o operational areas, each of which wil l be policed by members of one of th e undergraduate societies . Such places as the parking lots and the librar y lawn will be patrolled . As a result of their campaign USC officials hope to stir up some prid e in their campus' appearance among ludents, and cut down the activitie s of litter-louts . 'Tween Classe s Memorial Gymnasium .. Construction text Sprin g Tenders For Million Dolla r Erection To Be Called Soo n "D Day ,, Clean-up Drive Starts Toda y As USC "Invade" First to be constructed will he th e main gymnasium with two basements, and a memorial entrance, but fund s are still short for this project. Approximately $611,000 will he needed to build the first part of th e gym, Brousson said . Later, a swimming pool and auxili- ary gymnasium will be added . No further campaign to raise th e needed $143,000 is planned until plan- ners hear the reply of the provincial governmest to a request for financia l assistance, Brousson said , SWIMMING POOL Construction of the swimming poo l would take an additional $150,000 ; Brousson said, and the planned aux- iliary gym woadi cost as extra $200, - 000 . Total cost will approach one million dollars, twice the expenditure origin - ally planned for. Despite the shortage of funds, con- struction of the gym will go ahead , with planners building it is stages as ands are raised . Bowling alleys and several specia l gymnasiums will be constructed i n the two basements of the main build- ing . The modersistic new gym will b e built on the site chosen some tim e ago, University Boulevard and West - brook Crescent . OVERLOOK HOWE SOUND A war memorial lobby will overloo k Howe Sound and a memorial garden through large plate glass windows, Legion Branc h Plans Weekl y Meet Schedul e A new system of meeting s for Branch 72, Canadian Le - gion, will be inaugurated o n Wednesday in Applied Scienc e 202 at 12 :30 . The branch will meet four times a month, at noon hours, instead o f once a month, in the evenings, fo r the remainder of the term . FULLER DISC VSIO N Change of routine comes as an ef - fort to enable more student . veterllns to participate in the activities of th e branch and to provide fuller diaot l - sions of current topics, Legion offical s stated . Following the last Legion meeting , president Mike Lakes threatened t o resign and close the branch if at- tendance did not increase at futur e meetings . . LEGION CRESTS The agenda for Wednesday 's mee t ing wil include presentation of I .eglost crests to the track team which Wo n the inter-mural cross-country. The team members are Bill Husband, Art Porter, Andy Thompson, John Ehren- holtz and Mike Waldichuk . - There will also be a full discussio n on the loans and grants subject, pro- vided the attendance is sufficient to constitute a representative group of the branch . Construction of UBC's long-awaited war memorial gym- nasium may begin by March 1 . Tenders for the futuristic new UBC gym ,are expecte d to be called within a few weeks by the provincial departmen t of public works, student President Dave Brousson said Monday . Before the building can be corn- 0 pleted, however, planners must find New Syste m an additional $143,000. Present funds available for build- ing, Brousson said,total $461,000, col- lected through student fees, publi c subscription and support from UB C hoard of governors and the provincial government . MAIN GYMNASIUM CHEM STUDENT 'DIVINER ' WET FROM BALKY BUNSE N Maybe you can't get blood from a stone, but if you ca n get water from a Bunsen burner you deeserve a place wit h the Society of Water Diviners at least . Recently, a chemistry 300 student, preoccupied wit h thoughts of more important things, had his Lab mates in a n uproar by doing just that . It seems that he prepared his equipment, plugged i n the burner hose, lit a match, turned on the (Bunsen an d got a five-foot column of water in his face . Of the assorte d outlets ranged in front of him, he inadvertantly chose th e one for water hoses . Vic Students Roll U p Sleeves ; Dig Gridiro n Victoria College students have found that if you want a football field you have to dig in and build it yourselves . Applyint•I action to their words, the y lulnee( out lest Friday, three hundred footag e foul fifty strong and put in a solid School Boar d day with pick and shovel on then re- weak bee, admitting that the student s centlt acquired field by Victoria s efforts had saved the work lade n Lausdowse Road . bo,irrl much time and a "considerabl e M•il ., end females . teal e,nting amount" of money , Iola lath, it the cnlles tot il cn- Owing to Foa l r„Inrent, ! .iked their nniMFy Vie% of lectures, many suulcnte went t o thruut~ii lee) thousand feel of dram- u ;orI, in school clothes, is spite of th e eta' dailies durmg the d,iy and fact that the entire project wds un t t u,~un~l ul, h} I :i%ins; the etpiivalert( pWoly vulnnt,ny bos'ua . in tile drains . officials lauded th e minute Cancellatio n Coed Wins Male Animal, Finds Him Housebroke n Critics of the Student ' s Council can s now level blame at a higher authorit y than president Dave Brousson . The brass is Betty Ball , Miss Ball won Brousson at th e Women's Undergraduate Soiet y cotume hijinks, as reward for bein g; the best-dressed coed there . She went as a tough lady cop, com- plete with billy-stick and a manacle d miserable string of chain gang pris- oners. As a prize, which was announce d beforehand to he an "animet", sh e was given Brousson , Now, by law, Miss Ball is respons- ible for Brousson' :, actions end Brous - on is classified as the chattels of Mis s Ball , Here is how the legal experts fig- ure it : Animals are classified as eithe r domesticated or undome :.thaied . Brousson, who is married, ;Ind th e father of two sons, is obvtou-IV rlole- eticaled . Therefore, his owner is respensihI c for his actions, if 13routtou commit : a tort against others . Pet animals are also classified is t i special type of chattets, that k . i f anybody tries to remove Brous :,n n without Miss Bull's permission, it i s class ificd ,H a theft teal the ca n prosecute . If Brousson doesn ' t Iich ;rve ns ,i pa l animal should . Miss Ball eau man - mend him-provirlit i e the SPCA Mie s not uh ,j 't'! . Shadow Of Approachin g Exams HangsJ'Jeavil y Unsubstantiated Rumor Say s December 2 Is Starting Dat e The ominous shadow of approaching Christmas examina - ttions hangs heavily over UBC undergraduates this week . And, like a game of truth and con - sequences, students are wonderin g vaguely what they can do to requit e it . At this time, the $64 question is , when will exaninaton sessions be - gin ? Unsubstantiated rumor currentl y electing the campur claims that exam s will begin early—very early— o n December 2, much to the dismay o f undergraduates . A group of statistics I students o n the basis of data which includes a survey of examination condition s from the present back to 1922, pre- dict that December 10 will be th e opening date . The students clai m that their calculations are far mor e scientific and authentic than any re - cent ones made by Gallup, Roper o r Crossley . CRYSTAL BALL ARTIS T A superstitious crystal-ball artis t claims that December 7 will be th e fatal date . Somehow, because of th e mystic properties of the number 7 , :he explains, "dire things happen, " including Pearl Harbor . Registrar's office has been non- commit'al on the issue . However, a n nffici,tl exam announcement is ex- pected "later on this week ." "We, in B .C . are on the thresh - hold of collapse," he stated, suggest- ing that, the lumber and fishing la- dustries are lasing their markets . In protesting Gordon Martin's de - hill meet from the law society h e elided th .~l a rumor has been circulat - ed to the effect that a certain prac- ticing lawyer may be expelled fro m the Society for having similar politi ' rail feelings ; , Establishment O f Jewish State Topic At Meetin g The establi s hment of a Jewish stat e eta the chief means of rejuvenatin g Jewish life everywhere, Miss Ben - Grith told the campus I-Ii11e1 grou p v csterlay . Miss Gen-Brlllt, Pacific reheat or- q;nnlrer for Hillel, was speakine o n behalf of the inter-collegiate Federa- ion of University students . She stilted that Jewish universit y ,ludents Should. take more of on ec- tivc interest n the affairs of the rac e which they helrngeil and in th e Vilna of the society of which the y c, naimbersThat , she am!, shniitr l 'ee the fi!nction of young Antieta m Jctwry in the flam e Livingstone Return s Former LTC Students' Counci l President Grant Livingstone is ex- pected back in Vancouver Friday . hiriagstune, centre of a s ter n student finances was UDC re - presentative at a conference of In- icrnational Student Service in Tor - lest week . Sat, Five New Playin g Fields For UB C UBC is to have five new playin g fields this Perm . The fields are to be built by th e university at a cost of $1 .001111 the ex - h ense io he financed thron ;h a he m from war memnrinl minim lul u hinds , The iuciverait} will ropnv the loa n aver ;a period of five eau :, , bl'urk is expected to heyin thi s tt inter . LPP Speake r U .S . Dependence Fate Of Canad a "The turning of Canada int o a militarized American depend- ancy is a part of the drive o f U .S . big business to achiev e world mastery," according t o Stanley Ryerson, National Or - ganization Secretary of th e LPP . ADDRESSING STUDENTS In Physics 200 yesterday, the LP P secretary dealt with "Casada and th e Fight for Peace," asserting the nee d for a peoples movement to resis t atomic war . LESSER OF EVIL S Commenting on the American elec . Lions he said that the people ha d selected the lesser of two evils . Th e " . . . Republicans have been break- ing the backs of labor" he noted , while the Democrats could at leas t point back to their New Deal, .

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Page 1: UBC Library Home - DailyUbyssey · If Brousson doesn' t Iich;rve ns,i pal animal should . Miss Ball eau man - mend him-provirliti e the SPCA Mies not uh,j 't'! . Shadow Of Approaching

VOL, XXXI

sheDailyUbysseyVANCOUVER, B .C., TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1948

No, 28

The name of Dougie Reid be -came a legend Saturday.

The scrappy, devil-may-car efullback of UBC's American foot -ball team joined the ranks of th euniversity ' s athletic "greats" i na game that brought disaster t oUDC, but still will be rememberedfor years by the 2000 fans at Var-sity Stadium.

•Tortured with pain from boilson his neck, Reid fought throughthe first three quarters of the gam erefusing to be slowed by the bitingagony that came with every move .

Jabbing pain in his neck cam eevery time he turned his head, bu tthe stocky . 180-pound fullback con-tinued to fight .

In seven plays he carried the bal lfor UBC until finally in the fourthquarter he fell in agony to thefield and coach Don Wilson sen thim to the showers .

"I could feel it every time I ben tmy head," Reid said .

The respect of UBC fans for thestocky player could be felt as heleft the field alone and dejected .There was almost a shocked silenc ea flurry of "ohs" and comments

Daily Ubyssey Photo By Bob Steine r

like "there goes the game."

Reid himself sat unhappily on th ebench for a few minutes befor egoing to showers ,

"I felt I was holding back," h etold fellow players who crowde daround him. "I felt I was runningupright when I should have beenplunging . I was holding back ontackles ."

Reid went into the game despit ethe warnings of friends . He passthem off with a laugh and said th epain would only make him ru nfaster .

'I Could Feel The Pain Every Time I Moved 'Laid Out Twice

'

Scrappy, Hard tacklingFullback Becomes Legend

Aid To EuropeRadsoc Topic

"Are We Giving the Eur-opeans enough financial aid"is the topic of the UniversityRadio Society's student partici-pation broadcast to be held inthe Brock lounge today at 12 :30 .

The problem will be,discussed bytwo student speakers and moderate dby Dr . J . A. Crumb of the economic sdepartment. Questions and comment swill be asked for from the audience .

The discussion will be recorded byCJOR for presentation next Susda yafternoon .

Hansard Society will hold gen-eral meeting on Wednesday, Novem-ber 10th at 12 :30 in Arts 206 .

Professor H. F . Angus, head of th eDepartment of Political Science, Ec-onomics and Sociology, will addressthe meeting ,

Today is "D Day" for the Un-

dergraduate Societies Commit-

tee's clean-up campaign .

The campus is being "invaded" by1 squads of students whose main ob-jective will be to keep paper an dlunch-bag titterers from indulging i ntheir favorite outdoor sport .

Offending students "captured" b ythe squads will be forced to surrendertheir AMS cards.

The campaign is being conductedby members of USC, acting in thei rdisciplinary capacity . Legion officialshave been asked to take charge of theclean-up in the area of their hut ,

OPERATIONAL AREA SThe campus has been divided into

operational areas, each of which wil lbe policed by members of one of theundergraduate societies . Such placesas the parking lots and the librarylawn will be patrolled .

As a result of their campaign USCofficials hope to stir up some prid ein their campus' appearance amongludents, and cut down the activitiesof litter-louts.

'Tween Classe s

Memorial Gymnasium . .

Construction text Spring

Tenders For Million Dollar

Erection To Be Called Soon

"D Day,,

Clean-up Drive

Starts Toda y

As USC "Invade"

First to be constructed will he th emain gymnasium with two basements,and a memorial entrance, but fundsare still short for this project.•

Approximately $611,000 will heneeded to build the first part of thegym, Brousson said .

Later, a swimming pool and auxili-ary gymnasium will be added .

No further campaign to raise theneeded $143,000 is planned until plan-ners hear the reply of the provincialgovernmest to a request for financia lassistance, Brousson said ,SWIMMING POOL

Construction of the swimming poo lwould take an additional $150,000 ;Brousson said, and the planned aux-iliary gym woadi cost as extra $200, -000 .

Total cost will approach one milliondollars, twice the expenditure origin -ally planned for.

Despite the shortage of funds, con-struction of the gym will go ahead ,with planners building it is stages asands are raised .

Bowling alleys and several specia lgymnasiums will be constructed inthe two basements of the main build-ing .

The modersistic new gym will bebuilt on the site chosen some tim eago, University Boulevard and West -brook Crescent .OVERLOOK HOWE SOUND

A war memorial lobby will overlookHowe Sound and a memorial gardenthrough large plate glass windows,

Legion Branch

Plans Weekly

Meet Schedule

A new system of meetings

for Branch 72, Canadian Le -

gion, will be inaugurated on

Wednesday in Applied Scienc e

202 at 12:30 .The branch will meet four times a

month, at noon hours, instead ofonce a month, in the evenings, forthe remainder of the term .FULLER DISC VSION

Change of routine comes as an ef -fort to enable more student . veterllnsto participate in the activities of thebranch and to provide fuller diaot l„ -sions of current topics, Legion officalsstated .

Following the last Legion meeting ,president Mike Lakes threatened t oresign and close the branch if at-tendance did not increase at futur emeetings .

.LEGION CRESTS

The agenda for Wednesday's meeting wil include presentation of I.eglostcrests to the track team which Wonthe inter-mural cross-country. Theteam members are Bill Husband, ArtPorter, Andy Thompson, John Ehren-holtz and Mike Waldichuk . -

There will also be a full discussionon the loans and grants subject, pro-vided the attendance is sufficient toconstitute a representative group ofthe branch .

Construction of UBC's long-awaited war memorial gym-nasium may begin by March 1 .

Tenders for the futuristic new UBC gym ,are expectedto be called within a few weeks by the provincial departmen tof public works, student President Dave Brousson said Monday .

Before the building can be corn- 0pleted, however, planners must find New Syste man additional $143,000.

Present funds available for build-ing, Brousson said,total $461,000, col-lected through student fees, publi csubscription and support from UBChoard of governors and the provincialgovernment.MAIN GYMNASIUM

CHEM STUDENT 'DIVINER'WET FROM BALKY BUNSE N

Maybe you can't get blood from a stone, but if you canget water from a Bunsen burner you deeserve a place wit hthe Society of Water Diviners at least .

Recently, a chemistry 300 student, preoccupied wit h

thoughts of more important things, had his Lab mates in a nuproar by doing just that .

It seems that he prepared his equipment, plugged i nthe burner hose, lit a match, turned on the (Bunsen an dgot a five-foot column of water in his face. Of the assortedoutlets ranged in front of him, he inadvertantly chose theone for water hoses .

Vic Students Roll U pSleeves; Dig Gridiron

Victoria College students have found that if you want afootball field you have to dig in and build it yourselves .

Applyint•I action to their words, the ylulnee( out lest Friday, three hundred footag e

foul fifty strong and put in a solid

School Boardday with pick and shovel on then re- weak bee, admitting that the studentscentlt acquired field by Victoria s efforts had saved the work lade nLausdowse Road .

bo,irrl much time and a "considerabl e

M•il ., end

females . teal e,nting amount" of money ,

Iola lath, it the cnlles tot il cn-

Owing to Foa lr„Inrent, ! .iked their nniMFy Vie% of lectures, many suulcnte went t othruut~ii lee) thousand feel of dram- u;orI, in school clothes, is spite of th eeta' dailies durmg the d,iy

and fact that the entire project wds un t tu,~un~l ul, h} I :i%ins; the etpiivalert(

pWoly vulnnt,ny bos'ua .

in tile drains .

officials lauded the

minute Cancellation

Coed Wins Male Animal,Finds Him Housebroken

Critics of the Student ' s Council can snow level blame at a higher authoritythan president Dave Brousson .

The brass is Betty Ball ,Miss Ball won Brousson at th e

Women's Undergraduate Soiet ycotume hijinks, as reward for bein g;the best-dressed coed there .

She went as a tough lady cop, com-plete with billy-stick and a manacle dmiserable string of chain gang pris-oners.

As a prize, which was announcedbeforehand to he an "animet", sh ewas given Brousson ,

Now, by law, Miss Ball is respons-ible for Brousson' :, actions end Brous -on is classified as the chattels of MissBall ,

Here is how the legal experts fig-ure it :

Animals are classified as eithe rdomesticated or undome:.thaied .

Brousson, who is married, ;Ind th efather of two sons, is obvtou-IV rlole-eticaled .

Therefore, his owner is respensihI cfor his actions, if 13routtou commit :a tort against others .

Pet animals are also classified is t i

special type of chattets, that k . i fanybody tries to remove Brous:,n nwithout Miss Bull's permission, it i s

class ificd ,H a theft teal the ca nprosecute .

If Brousson doesn ' t Iich ;rve ns ,i pa l

animal should . Miss Ball eau man -mend him-provirlit i e the SPCA Mie s

not uh ,j 't'! .

Shadow Of Approaching

Exams HangsJ'Jeavily

Unsubstantiated Rumor Says

December 2 Is Starting Date

The ominous shadow of approaching Christmas examina -

ttions hangs heavily over UBC undergraduates this week .And, like a game of truth and con -

sequences, students are wonderingvaguely what they can do to requiteit .

At this time, the $64 question is ,when will exaninaton sessions be -gin ?

Unsubstantiated rumor currentl yelecting the campur claims that examswill begin early—very early— onDecember 2, much to the dismay ofundergraduates .

A group of statistics I students onthe basis of data which includes asurvey of examination condition sfrom the present back to 1922, pre-dict that December 10 will be th eopening date . The students claimthat their calculations are far mor escientific and authentic than any re -cent ones made by Gallup, Roper orCrossley .CRYSTAL BALL ARTIST

A superstitious crystal-ball artis tclaims that December 7 will be th efatal date. Somehow, because of th emystic properties of the number 7 ,:he explains, "dire things happen, "including Pearl Harbor .

Registrar's office has been non-commit'al on the issue . However, annffici,tl exam announcement is ex-pected "later on this week."

"We, in B .C . are on the thresh -hold of collapse," he stated, suggest-ing that, the lumber and fishing la-dustries are lasing their markets.

In protesting Gordon Martin's de -hill meet from the law society heelided th .~l a rumor has been circulat -ed to the effect that a certain prac-ticing lawyer may be expelled fromthe Society for having similar politi 'rail

feelings; ,

Establishment OfJewish StateTopic At Meetin g

The establi s hment of a Jewish stat eeta the chief means of rejuvenatin gJewish life everywhere, Miss Ben -Grith told the campus I-Ii11e1 grou pv csterlay .

Miss Gen-Brlllt, Pacific reheat or-q;nnlrer for Hillel, was speakine o nbehalf of the inter-collegiate Federa-ion of University students .She stilted that Jewish universit y

,ludents Should. take more of on ec-tivc interest n the affairs of the rac e

which they helrngeil and in th eVilna of the society of which the yc, naimbersThat , she am!, shniitr l

'ee the fi!nction of young Antieta mJctwry in the flam e

Livingstone Return sFormer LTC Students' Counci l

President Grant Livingstone is ex-pected back in Vancouver Friday .

hiriagstune, centre of a sternstudent finances was UDC re -

presentative at a conference of In-icrnational Student Service in Tor -

lest week .

Sat,

Five New Playing

Fields For UBC

UBC is to have five new playin gfields this Perm .

The fields are to be built by th euniversity at a cost of $1 .001111 the ex -h ense io he financed thron ;h a hemfrom

war

memnrinl

minim lul uhinds

, The iuciverait} will ropnv the loa naver ;a period of five eau :, ,

bl'urk is expected to heyin thistt inter .

LPP Speaker

U .S . Dependence

Fate Of Canada

"The turning of Canada into

a militarized American depend-

ancy is a part of the drive o f

U.S. big business to achieve

world mastery," according to

Stanley Ryerson, National Or -

ganization Secretary of the

LPP .

ADDRESSING STUDENTS

In Physics 200 yesterday, the LPPsecretary dealt with "Casada and th eFight for Peace," asserting the nee dfor a peoples movement to resistatomic war .LESSER OF EVILS

Commenting on the American elec .Lions he said that the people hadselected the lesser of two evils . The" . . . Republicans have been break-

ing the backs of labor" he noted ,

while the Democrats could at leas tpoint back to their New Deal, .

Page 2: UBC Library Home - DailyUbyssey · If Brousson doesn' t Iich;rve ns,i pal animal should . Miss Ball eau man - mend him-provirliti e the SPCA Mies not uh,j 't'! . Shadow Of Approaching

Page 2

THE DAILY UI3YSSEY

rruescl1y November 9, 1948.

Mernhe, rnnacuan University Pres sAuthorized as Second Class Mail, Post Office Dept ., Ottawa. Mail Subscriptions—$250 per yenr

Publisheci

rouu the wuVuIty y&dr by the Student Publications Board of the Alma Mater Society of th eUniversity of 1iitis1i Columbia.

se.Editorial opinions xflr'SS(c1 herein are those of file editorial stiff of The Daily t.Tbyssey and not necessarily tnos e

of the Alma Itr (XiC1y nor of the University .:

Offices in Brock Hall . Phone ALma 1624

For display advertising phone ?Lm 325 3i :D1fOR-IN-CIIIFF - - . - RON IIAGGAI1TMANAGING E!)lfOIt - - - - VAL SEARS

GENERAL STAFF : News Editor, Bob Cave, Novia Hebert ; Features, Ray Dairies ; CUP Editor ,

Jack Wasserman ; Photography Director, Ellanor Hall ; Sports Editor, Chuck Marshall ;

The 4J.1: Ely Ubyssey

letters to the editor

E<lItci This Issue — CHRIS CROMtUE Asochite Editor — PETE HEPHER

Here Go Again

Asking univer.ity students to sto : litter-

ing the campus is like asking the tide t ostop coming in, but every year the Under-graduate Societies Committee goes throug hthe formalities with Canute-like solemnity .

This week his been set aside for the an-nual "Clean Up Campaign" during whic hstudents are asked to lobb their cigarett epackages into the nearest ashcan .

The traditional requests have been sen tto the administration to have more rubbishreceptacles placed around the campus forthe disposal of Daily Ubysseys and the tradi-tional guartntee received .

Putting a new twist in an old tale theUSC this year has divided the campus int o"blocks" each block to he patrolled by adifferent faculty. These debris detectives will

be empowered to arrest any offenders and try

them before the discipline committee wher e

they will he stripped of their AMS passes i f

found guilty .

While the effectiveness of these measure s

is doubtful their aim is a creditable one .

If the University of British Columbia

didn't have such a magnificent site in the firs t

place that even old army huts couldn't spoi l

it, there wouldn 't be much worry about the

litter of rubbish .

But the UBC campus happens, in its tid y

state, to be one of beauty .

Unfortunately, when the litter louts ar e

through strewing their rubbish about the cam

pus, the beauty is something to be hunted

rather than appreciated .

SIGNBOARD

For Sal e1934 AUSTIN SEDAN . 350 . RELI -

able, fully reconditioned. 40 miles

to gallon, Phone ALma 3225L .

RLMINGTON PORTABLE TYPE -

writer with foreign keyboard hav e

accents required for condition or

Teutonic languages, in perfect condi-

tion, price, $55. Phone after 5 p .m .

Mrs . West, CEdar 7071 .

TWO ROOMS, SEPARATE OR ASsuite, suit quiet couple . BA 1029-Y .3229 West 11th Ave

VETERAN STUDENT AND WIFE

require 3 or 4 room suite, furnished .No children . Phone MA 3843 durin goffice hours,

Lost

FRIDAY, OCT. 29, "ENGLISH DRA -ma 000-1642" Phone Jack, AL . 1768' .Urgently needed,

Transportation

5 RIDERS WANTED LEAVING 49th

and Ontario for 8 :30's Monday to

Saturday . Phone FRaser 6479, Lloyd .

2 PASSENGERS WANTED 8 :30 LEC -

ture from Crown and West 10th . J .

C . Davie, 4000 West 10th, AL 3459E .

RIDE WANTED FOR 8 :30 LECTURE ,

from 34th and Dun1ar . Contact Bob a tKE 2232-L,

FCR SALE--1930 CHEV . COUPE IN IOT ON THURSDAY 28th, A BLAC K

good running order . A bargain for Shaeffer pen with 14K gold nib ,

$150. Phone BAy . 5960, evenings . i CWird . Fleare phone AL 2387E, Dave ,

1230 MODEL A ROADSTER, OVER- FC UNTAIN PIN, EVERS}IARP— .l e 1 '

hauled, new top, curtains, good rub-

• top, maroon bottom. Return t oLost and Found er phone Malty, B A4696R .bet, $385. CE 2248 .

PASSENGERS WANTED FROM VIC -inity of 34th and Dunbar' for 8 :30' ssix days per week. Call KE 3757-M ,

WANTED 4 PASSENGERS. LEAV .. I

ing 49th and Ontario Mon. throughSat , Route, 49th Ave. to Uni'ci'ity .Phone FR 6479 . Llcycl .

LOST THURSDAY NOV .

'wen Law Library and Mai nC )-OIL000ti '/ C house with congenial I

blue parker pen enggaggg ._He .g .y

adults, $35 ret' month . BA 9548,

'Waters . Finder please return to Los tROOM IN QUIET HOME FOR MAL Estudent . Breakfast and dinner, Garag eBA 5577-L .

RELI -able, fully reconditioned . 40 miles t ogallon Phone AL 3225-L,

FOR SALE OR RENT, 17 FT HOUSE GOLD BRACELET NEAR GYM RIDE FROM VICINITY OF MAC -trailer established in No . 2 trailer PHI KAPPA PT PIN NEAR OR IN donald Road and 4th Ave for 8 : 0

. Science building, Name on back Pat lectures. Phone Bill BA 6821Y afterNo . 2 Black, KErr . 0809R ,AL

f :00 p .m.

LECTURAS IJISPANICAS IN HM 9 2 PASSENGERS WANTED 8 :30 LEC -1)1flno Mary AL 0380Y .

j puree from Crown and West 1O' : .ESSEX COACH . TIRES EXCELLENT

i AL 3459-L ,original paint, hcdy and engine per- WILL THE PERSON WI!() ''BOlt -

IOWe(l" a blue I)elt('([ (vi e ' L

bur -terry tl'Ofll the 1Cfl '.' .

. .[

Ll il l

the library on Sat . Nov. Gill

',tee n11 :30 am . and 12:15 p .m .

1 'L' centtact Gordon Poffc'ni'oth t

7 \V t15th

1)hOflC AL 0251-H, T LL1k L

HUCBY EQUIPMENT IN GOODcondition, Includes hoot. ,

rhoulder and kidney pads .N 2445-R afto six ,

HAVE ROOM AND BOARD IN A

ROOM FOR RENT—la MINUTES OFFcampus . Breakfast . ALma 3375L .

trailer crimp Acadia Phon e

96-Y. evenings

camp S Ideal for two students o rmarrie d

feet . Tcted, M A

1934 AUSTIN SEDAN, $350

Accommodatio n

couple, T . M. Osten ,

3283 . "flabby'" .

pants ,Phone

LADIES WRIST WATCH IN' CA RSlat gave two girls a ride fro m'foirlie onci 10th, Phone Umela a t„\,[,, MSS-L .

WILL THE PERSON WHO PICKE Dup overcoat at Field house 12 :30-1 :3 0Thurs. Nov , 4 kindly return same t oR . \VaO'un, 1788 Bayswater, Phone B A3131-H, I have your cote in exchange .

and Found cr Fort Camp offi :e ,

4 EE-Libre p y

Meeting s

THE UI3C FILM SOCIETY FRE -seats in the University Theatre Toe' : ,

, Nov . 9 12 :30 Film Digest "Land of the.

Maharajaha" Free admission, 3 :4 5

6 :00, 8 :00, "Phantom of the Opera "

in technicolor, Nelson Eddy, Susann aFoster, Claude Rains , Admission 20e .

MR. A.B. RECKNAGEL, HEAD O Fthe Management Divilon of St. Regi sPulp & Paper Co ., will address theForest Club inn Ap . Sc. 100 Moday ,Nov . 8 , Everyone welcome. Dean G.A .Garrett, School of Forestry, YaleUniversity and Dean G .D. Merck -worth, College of Forestry, Univers-ity of Washington, will speak i nPhysics 200, Tuesday, Nov . 9. at 12 :30,

LEGION SA'IISFlE D

Dear Eh. :

In the recent Parliamentary For -

ur-, Mt . Mike Fine-good stated ;

"to Uh3'ey had been dis :usscd

c.ften in the Lion office, an d

I've never heard a DVA student

yet who supported it ." ThL ex-

pression is net repre3cntative o

the Legion executive or memiier s

The rublicity committee of' the

Legion desires to make it Metter

that it has received a great dea l

of co-operaticn from the editors

of The Daily Ubyssey, and ha no

complaint to make in respect to

this emaciation's affairs .

Yours Truly ,Legion Publicity Committee.

EOIL :T:CAL ANALYSIS

Dear Sir :This letter i.s prompted by the

thought that your ether readers

might he 'interested in an item

which I culled from yesterday' s

edition of the Christian Scienc eMonitor . It appeared in the syndi-

cated column, "Hanging out our

Washington," written by the dis-tinguihed news analyst, amateur

meteorologist, and part-time pin-

boy, Elmer Gluepci', It reads in

part as follows :

"One does nct have to study the

voting ,tathtics in order to analyse

the recent election. A brief loo k

at the recerds of the weather ccn-ditiots before and after November

2, will give one a complete and

honest picture of what happene d

and why. Herewith, allow me to

present this meteorologist's-ey e

view of the election .

"For months preceeding Novem-ber 2, a Republican high pressure

area had been lying all over th e

U .S.A. Not resting, mark you, bu t

lying s'eadiI' and consistently a s

if it were to be permanePt . Thi s

led the Republican party to pre-

diet that the weather in Washing-

ton follving the e1ection woul dbe dewy, Seth, and eubject t o

chcnge . "

"Iiovcver, in Octc her, a Mir -e

oenslhly sot, burs t

forth bruising w ith it mu hot

air and blevring . The result wa s

that the Republican high pleasur e

area \V5 blcwn up in Vermcn t

where it belonged, the Missour i

run d :SI)l000Cl the dewy atmos-

phre fl Whingtcn . mid the R'-

-i'he'a wore snowed unite i e

TCxa' . "

"All h .'uu' prood 0V2' 'ann lo t

roe . [hen lichee Me vote tees

( .r-rfl ,-i I l':ne',',' tbat ¶h'' Re1i'hi -

Cal'

had

I( t the ceoti ii . The

V ctIe': foresee for November 3

'.'a .s : tIi' oci n predicted hit

vV'auhlztcn '.'i1l not be foi'thcc n -

I ng . . , .

GENERAL BUSINESS MEETING O F

United Nations Club . All membe rs

moot. in Arts 100 at 12:30 Toes., Niel .

9, Film will be shown first folov'ecl

by general business cliscusscn ,

GLEE CLUB REHEARSAL. NOV. 0 ,HM-1 at 12 :30 .

T ; .i

', :cld analysis :

cif [see'

I ni L 'o' .: c mac I,i' . Glucct isn' t

ci- . ci'

C 1'.y by-night nc' s

flu\ :

T :z Sic contrite, he Iiu

been going amend with re are -

mc retcr f( r yer r3, end he know s

wliL h 'aty the win? is blowing .

113it mere than can be raid , fci'

met'. nc wsa- e' columnirts an d

pcJtki .Lar .

Yours truly ,

Rupert Rtiddcl l

THE RED DEA N

Dear Sir :

I acte in the columns of you r

daily that several political groups

cci the campus, including the CC? ,

the Communist-line Social Prob .'emit Club, and I presume th eLPP are indulging in a mad scram-ble to sponsor an address by th eRev. Hewlett Johnson, Dean ofCanterbury . This will inform the mthat they are wasting their tim ebecause several weeks ago the Un-ited Nations Club decided to in-vite him to the university and i tmay be assumed that if he speak son the campus at all, it will beunder UN soponsorship. Most c fthe preliminary arrangements are,in fact, completed.

It '.',oulcl be a tragic mistake t oallow a partisan group to try andmake political capital cut of DeanJohnson's visit . He is one of thoserAre world personalities—a prac-ticing Christian who has professeda sympathetic understanding (fall .big far short of full endorsemen thowever) of Soviet Russia . These.charactcris'tic'3 make him uniquel ycapable of delivering a vital me

ssage to Canadians which migh twell be a step towards satisfactoryworld understanding, It is import -ant, therefore, that in developingthis message he is associated wit ha non-partisan organization whic hwill not solve to prejudice his re -mains in any respect . The organ-ization which eminently fills thi srequirement is the UBC UnitedNations Club .

The sponsorship of Dean John-ron is consistent with the polic yc Cie United Nations Club. Tothose narrow-minded bigots h owil charge that sponsorship of th eso-called "lied Dean" is prim alade evidence of left wing sym-pathies, it would be well to pointout the basic difference betwee nPr :- :nut :ig peaceful and honorableei .:eme:t between conflicting ide -C '(l'r : :, These equally narrow -n'::(i(,cI I Stets eho blend u s"tight-wing" for sponsoring Dea nCc: II t''aonn during UN Week a tl]flC any well t : :Ie note of t oSL :mC thought .

Don Lanskail ,President ,

United Nations Club .

MEN'S PAG E

Emir Lditcr :\!h,

1nt tee I of ;i "Moo' sPage" onc a wccot ?Surely the (n ihe

metres would li!e as ranch pub-licity as the sororities arc no wsetting .

A noted editor once said tha tthe best way to keel) a paper pop -pier is to include as many name sas possible .

If this is true, the Uhyssoyshould he a very popular sheet—with She sororities .

Yours truly,Ma n

HEADGEAR AND WOMEN

Dear Sir :What on earth is the matter with

UBC women?It would almost appear gentle -

men that the fair sex don't lik eour headgear . Such slander as op .peared in Friday's paper must h eattacked and the lie given to thetheory that women like only in nwho don't wear hats. '

In our humble opinion it seem sthat the table quoted should haveread, ,'either will do 99.9% ." Who -ever hoard of a woman turningdown a man because he wears ahat . The computation of this tabl emust have taken all of five minutesto finish as both of the women Iknow don't give a continental.

In view of the recent Americanelections it seems fairly certai nthat the women's section of thi spaper has committed the unpar-donable sin cf the statistician andhave made the wrong prediction .

Uncle Bewley of Children's hou rfame wears a hat and his hair isneither missing nor queer. Perhapsthis is to protect his estimable per-srnage from the mud that is oc-easionally thrown his way, bu tthat crushed Stetson reposin gjauntily on his head dissipatesmuch of the gloom that often per-meates various sections of ou runiversity .

Every day it rains there is, Imust admit an outbreak of decrepi trainwear (even red porkpies andsquashed Stetsons) . No man espec-ially a UB'O man wants to be th ehardy outdoors type who cavort sabout hatles and in imminen tdanger of Pneumonia. These ec-centricities are merely a mani-festation of the will to survive .

Just a little over a week ago th egirl's fashion editor told the girl sthat they were not at all in styl ewith their long (too long) skirtsand sadde shoes but nary a nia nraised a word about it . Why thenpick on the poor men who don' t,ivc [I damn about fahion, and tel lthem that their headgear doesh' tar,ree w ell the women's taste i nthe matte :' ,

In short girls : Shcrten your skirt swear decent shoes and then com e'i'cuncl and talk to us .

Bob Stephens,Comm . 3

K & E POLYPHASE DUPLEX SLID Etub . Write to J . A. Cowlin, For t

I Camp, UBC .

Found

Miscellaneous

TYPING, ESSAYS, ETC . REASON -PARKER FOUNTAIN PEN IN ohio 1-alec, Vivian MacDonald, 913 Escience 100 . Phone Gordon, KE 6228L . 41st . FR 2755.

WORDS OF CHAUCER VANCOU- EXPERT TYPING REASONABL EVcr Library copy. Card inside . Frank price . Joan A . DavieQ 4000 W 10th . ALStefanuk . Loser can have same b ycontacting Harry, Cdar 6940 .

Wanted To Buy

HAMLET IN ANY EDITION EX -cept Stevenson's . Plearo phone F A

EXPERT TYPING — REASONABLE1)11CC . Joan A. Davie, 4000 West 10th, 1 PAIR OF SKIS, ABOUT 6' 2” AN DALma 3457E.

harnesses if possible, Phone BA 5908R

The hildren's Hour

by Ies bewley

A. P0I hand at saying "no'', your old

lowlife Uncle last summer permitted himsel f

to be dragooned into working as a gratuitous

laborer in the vineyard of the Canadian In-

stitute of International Affaire ,

Institute PCOPl(, t1) doubt iI)resecl by

dogged, capable manner in which poor grat-

uitou 101)O1'Ci pei'Ioi'nccl menial tasks as- '

3ign( :cl tL) NUll . 11i( :o1CcteCli\' paid off wit h

i'ewai'cl. in sli)c (if in :omgrt . hen . ible boo k

by hj ;t)1'Li1 AilL)I(l IOVUI)CC ,

Poo

lb()i-e1',

tlunbii

wkv,'iid y

through lllIOjd' : S l)fl)l, with (LllIOUeCt lJU1 l

and reading big words out loud, v.-s fascin-ated to find that repetitive cycles of huni i

history are ucally ox-curt wheelie Tlumeind y

is ox-cart itself, tiding' on top of wheels .

Vv heel (human histw'v ) may revolve in scorn-

ingly useless circle, but ox-cn

( h tnnn il\ )i'diin Above is PrP'l('! !'n', :

I,

s r'e :uli ,

T%V(Y-HFiEi

Pt it" id .]

Lowlife Un(' n

' loyn)c '

clung OI way to fci 'drivel ' i' tWO-h efiii l

i 0

'Lr"H ' ' t

And lox

' t '

R'h

from London reviewing activities of Britis h

Humane Society, National Society for the

Abolition of Cruel Sports, and League agains t

Cruel Sports .

National Society for Abolition of Crue l

S1)O1, supported by League Against Crue l

Sports, has drafted a bill it hopes to get be-

into parliament to make any person takin g

part in hunting or coursing liable to a $100fine o: imprisonment up to three months ,

l'vcn theme who looked on at such sport s

\V( ;tl CI be 1011)10 to I)LlfliShmCllt ,

FP!VfLE(ED AND WEALTH Y

P1'OtflOtC'I'S of the bill assert they have

he pledged support of 405 of the 640 mem-

bers of pai-liainent . Labor members, apparent-

l y regarding hunting as sport of privilege d

and wealthy, 1 :•1y.' Mite opportunity to sho w

filthy land c",1 r',' wilt t frt . 1,y demonstrating

Slat IrH . .? (' :

1' u ;:' :t iiirhen in form

.i ;t'-,

f hH'' ln:d'[ ti '

ti'v t}ot ,

me z e e te lei deprived

(d c :

- ihtin ,

no d

1 y Wil l

I I 1

y

\Y

I

' ' :c' i [ '

kj .

other hand, is currently badgering British

Education Minister in frantic attempt t ohave blood thirsty nursery rhymes free d

of "examples of primitive savagery" to which

innocent children should not be exposed .JACK-KILLING GIANT

Sensing growing popular belief that al l

evils of world can be cured by magic legis-

lation, and no longer fearing old fashione d

burst of laughter from adult population, Hu -

mane Education people insist kiddies shoul d

no longer be allowed to sing of Jack Killin g

(Slants Tommy throwing pussy down well ,

four and twenty blackbirds baked in pie ,

farmer's wife cutting off tails of three blin d

mice, Tom, Tom, Piper's son stealing pigs ,

and unfortunate demise of poor cock robin .

Lowlife Uncle, noting growing tendency t o

regard ancient folklore as immoral, danger- .

(015, suggestive and antisocial, i : even mor e

c'nflrrned in vies ;" of T()\i 1l l :p Trail( r 'Lhor)r, '\','1c :1 he remember ). l)Cl (bce to limn

1 1

rx('ri)

"n)pi'\'eJ" conlic si

cho 'art 01' -

o : ' 0

n : 'not

0l I:

I

In

l•i :. : . I

v

' I

"

't'iL ; '-I H ;liP I1 '

And l'ii

Co I'

10

: di ;

'ME t'\'on In 1 1:ibl

to climb on "it-wasn't-my-fault-I-was-victim -

CA-society" school, wonders when next razor

murderer, surpised in act of snicking off last

shred holding victims head to shoulders, will

escape old-fashioned rope by producing cop y

01 Amazing Stories digested at age ten .

Lowlife Uncle ci J L'cyz other die-bards

will still be protesting that any()ae\vho hasn' t

icn'ned new idea since age of ten deservesbarbarous rope, anyway .

CHILDHOOD MELODY

And lowlife, calloused, die-hard Uncle ,

trying to match up Humane Education Soc-

ieties of world with Toynbee Trailer Theory ,

can only end by rocking in forgotten corner

and crooning old childhood melody whic hhor .

"I :cnic

I11('r1l .',

nil') i "

(lntuh n

i:' :- . to,

ip"i,

: : : i

I ' 1 T0

,,

limit

r :cl awai t1

I I itri oc:

• 1

I '

0

,'\ I

1 i i

:

ii

i fL''

I kni ,

'II :

n' '

e on: , olli'

n . l

I( ;I

i :ccl b ,',' ;eri( ;L1 ; cNlicnm o i To rat n A lo

Page 3: UBC Library Home - DailyUbyssey · If Brousson doesn' t Iich;rve ns,i pal animal should . Miss Ball eau man - mend him-provirliti e the SPCA Mies not uh,j 't'! . Shadow Of Approaching

TueacIay, November 9, 1,03. THE DAIJ,Y UBYSSEY Page 3

canstruction of the $600,000 building by March 1, tenders ar eexpected to be called this winter . Funds are still short by$143,000, however, and must be raised before central part

of gym can be finished . Swat-dining heel rho^!n on left wil l

take an additional .;105,000 . Memorial window will look out

over gardens and new playing field .. ; .

GLASS-FRONTED G~' ,'IINASItUM soon to be built on UB Ccampus at Westbrook Crescent and University Boulevard wil laccommodate 6000 persons in main hall. Planners hope to begi n

,ae a

Fire Hoses

III Types , . al(e PlayersCkb fast Cosmopolita n

Lang Awaited Gym Soon A Reality

*fe#

SS'ETA

eft-Aug (I NpRfjucKA E

Class RivalryDevelops IntoFree-For-Al l

Toronto (CUP)—An estimated $15 0

to $200 damage was done to Vittori a

allege at the University of Toront o

recent:iy, as a result of friendly rivalr y

between freshmen and Sophomor e

classes ,

Most damage was inflicted on wall s

end ceilings when Sophomores at -

tempted to break up a Freshma n

meeting with fire he's-es .

from the second floor cf the colleg e

the fight wcunl up i..l the basemen t

where the' floor was covered to a

depia of four inche i

Casue1t :e, cf the battle included a

badly mutilated 16asement door an d

two Seidl invaders who left rather

hurriedly sans trousers ,_neeen_

_

Opening Night Fo rPlays Change droll 11 n

'cirrr',ll'c

to ly r e n Ina .

16 • h_ tie i se t pt

r nod one clo g ,

T'!,, c : '

C :u')

c :') ::

:eel tuned

S crtcrd :

1' .e

c' :

(I

sr it e

c•. ., It "tl'^ ; I : y cr .

;~I :b L °chin 's fo r

th e Aucli',ori_,a C H ..!tie ~l is .111 tTs e

v ec'• ;iy f!m ,l cvn

or the UBC

Film Society .

1I'"c the Film Soo ety atreec i

to transfer its boaking fit in Novem-

l :c : 13 to November 16 ,

As a re-olk studcni nights for th e

Fall Plays will be November 17 and

13, with Plcten:I I0 and 21 hiein g

opens to the faculty and general pub-

ic .

Women's sororityEffects Members

Ti ;h t

c

D:Ita 'lama Pi, honorar y

.'orcrily .

They are: Isabel Cameron, Helen

1 ind s ay, Me.rguret Low-Beer, Nor a

MacDermc,t, "sTarr;cry Montgomery ,

Eileen ir'rloyls, Nona„ h it!chardson ,

DRAUGHTIN G

6 :'d8',1'ILU ENTS

Front 81 P .0 0

T-Squares, Protractors, Set Squares

1l

AMEAL ENGINEERS

AND

POLYPILASE SLIDE GULP S

rri n li :S LETTERIN G

INSTRUMENTS

ZIPPER RING BOOK S

Complete ,with Sheets and Intc .e

From $2.6'1

FOUNTAIN PENS

lay, Players' Club c :i Cog d 10 J O

IIOVO fowl ; .

The cost of the "Dvil en! fl it

: Webster," is i lmcst ir'er.netonl v, .t ; l

a Chilean, an English immigrant, a

tuc;ent born in Alaska and two others

alto have spent tome ;gars in Chinc .

Tino Connie . '. lii t cf c' :>c iusrc •

net Dale( Gould, :quire (lance ed .-

fl II the Physlc :el Et'.uceticn

lc ;lei 1 acid, LCIA to the Ccrmopolita n

...cot . The re le of D .i : :i .l \VC' ; t s „

,dyed I .y a student who in also a

tuslland and father .

:Lichens we rl :o1 for a trove in the

u or

Lld :ce, the

littl e

' :I0 r ; completely unite d

, i,

the dn,tlh of Hlein -

h

{I , tur'ch•

VA lc

end

c',allurn l

c'i I

tu'L0 held moult Cre, : h

h i r . ode s

rt 1 . . :,, I :

riudcnts, the C''r l r

v .,'

I

Ihr

ns s rl.tel i e'n

c r I

i'!I

(ll •'I r

I ll'

('

N•'. n o

('I

S'

h .1

,

,l '1N .

T

i .y F .

1111 rin(I Delhi( u . ti,r, Lei ;ser e

stet

hi .

the C ' .c

r ;

its , l

the tt u~,'III0i'I c1 up Ii i

In

lt'r ', : ;I

I't,'_ .

'

Ilk.

' I

trril : ilr,

',

c u e, , ',

rlu I l

t,•''lIulIl;

es , c!

(Vol

C 'uti c u!•

to

1'r

v

I :i1

)r1. r Idt :in ,

I l l°

,. .l1

Co- r<.

'

'r,Icn

th e001( of 1 ;73(" .s new

' :r. :r ; n

till .I' r! 11CV'n ,

/tes t rid i ng r o Deese I II

N . A, ;a .:t T :e-K( 11II/ I' I ' u' (r' i_

of til e r o:il ltars

. :c„

;i l :ra'.i'n I' ui'r 10 th eI .,

rrl of

r,: . .r•„r

7 '. rI

,I : to

r'c icd .

n1 ; ;'C lie n€ omit inforarlt t,nn ubcu tIt 1 ! e '_l tail' for the pnhs,I!cn Ire

th( t'I

: I .,:.i!

Cr .

Cri'' nall rr I•'11' 0 ew

New Talent Needed

As. Forum Prepares

For Cup Debates

Call for potential McGou n

Cup debators is being made b ythe Parliamentary Forum .l^'ilh tI .nuts or the ttoon which v.11 1

tic with the Universities of Alheri n

;d u' ;lca tchcwel slated 11Tcn -

(10 , the FOI'U 11 is sechin i., new talen t

Morro 'I In t

term of Art 1Tilln ,

Stu Chi :rnb^rC, Bela ICeenr,n tu r d Bon

MtCc nno'l 1111

.ciinb' e

TRYOUTS ^IONI)A V

:':

r e s t

trv„ II l is I'.el l

n ti c

b'r cl :0011lce seem. Brock Hull .

I' n m 2 . I to se 1 . .:r, A' tirants c°. n

'left, I_rief , eeC101 on any (110 c . f

' uh1CCL

Resolved that ;

1

Chine-he, ,nupom ng I) folicw I 1 . r,

(hove (if C'hrit should be unified .

2 . The lL .

. f i,nr; i0 l

7'lcrl

l ck ,

',there should be enacted a Canndi-

an bill of ri g hts ,

Gonzaqa Enforce

No Smoking Laws

Faculty at Gon7a, i

U!Iit,ersity in Spokane are re-stricting smoking on the univer-sity 's campus ,

Ein,t wigc6 of Il e low is

n o

nr' 1 ;

any'v:bar: .

cc

tI l_'

~ . I

oth er iron i l t'IC tint c.,r. ,

Knights of the I :c^n :1 tol l

,Club this will 111001. `' . . . n

<reekirIor '\',' brie bet in cinch In n

There will be three alternatives i i

'Smoking hes long been a thorn i n

our side," say faculty members . "1 f

e slur c .>h dell I I t 'eel I'

1'c a I I

Irate to Attn:( kin; I'1 : , 1h . ."

When you arrange a loan from your .

bank, you gain an extra asset . Your per-

sonal credit is now confirmed by you r

bank credit .

You may use it to take advantage of a

business opportunity, or for sonic per-

sonal purpose . It is tangible evidence of

your initiative and enterprise .

Your bank becomes a place of referenc e

and goodwill in your future business an d

personal life . Cr.edir at your ban k

becomes one of your Wiucd assets . Thi s

is the way Canadian 1aa111,ing works .

rl) Woo l

Englis h

Ankle Sock s

Specia l

White, Pink, Green, Yellow .

1?un'n• Size 812 to 10 1.'2

Oast Wavcrlie Watscn •

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Page 4: UBC Library Home - DailyUbyssey · If Brousson doesn' t Iich;rve ns,i pal animal should . Miss Ball eau man - mend him-provirliti e the SPCA Mies not uh,j 't'! . Shadow Of Approaching

I

Page 4 THE DAILY UBYSSEY

By RAY BAINES

Once again U'BC football fanswere reminded that sheer gut salone does not add up agains tstar-studded lineups, smart of-fensive plays, and apparentlyunlimited reserves as they sawcrushing 34-0 defeat last Sat-the hapless 'Birds go down to aurday .

Lead by the rocketde drives of

liille Harold Ellmers and the rower -house attacks of fullback Stan Blair ,the league leading Lewis and Clark

Pioneers featured a vicious cffens ewhich went through for big gains o n

I nearly ever ;; 1' iii : . To add to thei r

power, the I0',vi .; and Clark team

taking, unlimit ed edventege of th esubstitut 'ien :mbar. threw in a ne w

line for d, It n•r when they lost th e

ball .

Amazin g

SPORTS EDITOR - -CHUCK MARSHALLEditor This Issue — DOUG MURRAY-ALLA N

UBC Hoop SquadsDrop Weekend Tilt s

Chiefs Run Game Into Overtim eSwenson . And Fraser Starry

Twin defeats were the fate of Senior A hoopsters over th eweekdne as both the Chiefs and the Brays dropped clos edecisions .

Thunderetfes

Drop Close til t

With Nuthouse

UBC Thunderettes amazedcrowds last Friday wheen theycame close to beating the pow-erful Nuthouse squad .

The Nuthouse team, runners up t o

the Canadian Championship last yea r

are in the senior A league, while theThunderettes are a notch below i nsenicr B. This is a significant thin gin that Nuthouse won with only a

four point margin .

Thunderettes held their own fo r

the first two periods, and at hal f

time the score was tied 13-13 . How -

ever, the Nuthouse squad managed t o

pull away in the third quarter with

a five point lead , The Thunderettes

came back again to tie it up a few

minutes before the closing whistle ,

but they were unable to hold thei r

opponents down . Final score was

41-37.

BehindThe

TouchlineBy DOUG MURRAY-ALLA N

The football season is comin gto a close and sport fans are be -moaning the losses of the unluck y

Thunderbirds, Most of them, sun k

deep in their misery, are over -looking the amazing series of win s

the Senior Varsity rugby squa dhas chalked up this year.

The team has come out on to p

at the end of the first' half of th eMiller Cup series with five win sbehind them, and last Friday the ychalked up their first win of th esecond half by subjecting the UBCsquad to a 19-0 defeat.

The victories of the V a r s i t y

squad are offset by the equa lnumber of losses of the UBC team ,however . It is unfortunate that A lLaithwaite must sacrifice his sec-ond team in order to preserve th eunblemished record of the Var-sity .

After Christmas Mr. Laithwait epromises to have two winnin gteams, but Christmas is still quite

a few games (and losses) away .

Lack Of Player sMeanwhile the second divisio n

squads are suffering also, mainl y

from lack of players . At the begin-

ning of the year close to a hundre dhopefuls turned out, but thei r

numbers have been slowly dwind-ling since then .

The Soph crew is fairly well of f

but the two frosh teams are havin g

a sad time of it, The Wedneda y

practices have a very poor at-tendance . This is a very bad sig n

as many of the future Varsity an d

UBC players will have • to bepicked from these junior teams .

Aside from these items, rugby

has a sparkling series of futur e

games ahead of it . Plans hav e

been made to play a return match

with California next year . Also o nthe agenda is a game agains t

Stanford .

There are also rumors of a con -

test with University of Washing -ton, but no definite tatement ha s

been made as yet .

Bermuda BoundRugby officials are working ove r

time to swing the much talke d

about trip to Bermuda , At th epresent moment no one seems toknow how their negotiations ar egoing, but there is a fairly goodpossibility that the trip will take

place .Well it seems that the old pre -

war Rugby Club is being revive s :The club which has been dorman tfor several years should prove o fgreat help in explaining the theor yof rugby to the player by mean sof "chalk talks ." All those in-terested should get out to themeetings and find out all abou tthe game they're playing .

Next month, rugby will tak eover where football left off, as a

major sport on the campus . Al lplayers should realize this, andhow that they realize it by get-ting out to all the practices an dsupporting their teams in any tang

they can . Not enough people cal l

see that rugby is an up and comin g;

sport on the west coast, and th e

sooner they wake up to the fac t

the better .

GRID SCORES

EASTERN COLLEGIATE

Toronto Varsity 4—Queens 0

Western 34—McGill 9

PACIFIC NORTHWEST

Eastern Washington 60—St. Marli n ' s 7

CPS 6—Central Washington 0Pacific Lutheran 19—Whitworth 1 3

ROWING NOTICEOarsmen are to turn out for prac-

tice at 11,30 am . on Thursday, Arm-

istice Day .

Public Stenograph y

Manuscripts, MimeographingTyping, These s

CATHERINE STEWARTItErr, 1407R

On Friday night in New Westmis-

ster, the scrappy Chiefs after trailin g

for a good part of the evening forced

the Luckies into overtime before go-

ing down 58-51 .

SHORT END

'The Braves, en the other linnet, 111 1

tut nv rc re ,' n is I,eLtt deficit . a t

l' tl~ ' to Ted 1'II'ntt' . ; Acted',; In

wind ti p on the them end id a -12-31 ;

crutnt in Saturday's matc h

In the Chiefs-Luckies affair, th estudents came from behind in the fin -

al quarter to take a :hurt-lived 41-36

rnaugls ,

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OVEl1'IL%lE PERIO D

In the first extra ses ten the tw oclubs fought it out to a 48 all drawiu,l in the second overture period ,

tl,e Brewery men broke ewes' for 11 1quick points lo the Chief 3 to wra p

tip the contest 58-51.

Os Saturday might the Braves afte rIreilin„ Arrow; ;12 . 14 al half tim e

slrlgerl n tremendou.e rally and all bu tceught the Neely trnnsfermen .

Disci by thin Swenson ;md Bill. Foe cr, the student :; oul' :rorcd the op-

xt il!on 22-lll is the second part o f

i the tilt, but the rally wasn't quit e

c,iout;h allot at the final whistle the yseta' down 42-36 .

Varsity Soccerme nWhip South Hil lIn Torrid Matc h

Paced by a pair of hustlin gnewcomers, Varsity trounce dSouth Hill 7-2 Saturday, forthe most convincing score of th eV and D soccer league season .

Bud Dobson and Don Renton cam e

up from the intermediate league t o

t,hr over the inside spots on the for -

\w: 'd brine . and made an ,ntspiciou s

, le a f, getting' two goals apiece ,

Stn Todd also collected a pair, an dDint Cleig ruundecl out the Vursit y) . il . The whole team was in to p„rm ,mil tinned in probably the bes t

L ; rfi :rnt,utcc cf the year, althoug hIl inus the service of regulars Howie()borne end Bobby Moulds .

BREAKAWA YTodd gave Varsity a 2-0 lead in the

first half, scoring from a corner andepain from a breakaway. In the los thalf, Dobson and Renton each scoredtwice, and Don Gleig headed in aneat center by Mutrdo McLeod, fromhe right wing .

The forwards were playinng a smar t,tas,lug game and looked dangerousevery time they came clown the field .Nearly all the Varsity goals Caine a sa result of two and three cornere dpassing attacks .

EVEN TERM SIn out intermediate game on Sunda y

UBC blurted on even terms wit hNorth Shore Reds until the last fe wminute' when in an attempt to ti ethe score they left themselves open ,and the Reds swept in for four fast

COFFIN-CORNE R

Hugh McArthur's pin-point kickinginto the coffin-coner was the starriestperformance the 'Birds could muster .

Despite the one-sided score, the'Birds did not fall completely apart .The last minutes of the last quarte r

saw them driving hard on a coupl eof successful aerial plays down to th ePioneers' 6-lard line . They lost th eball on another of the many inter-

cepted passes .Next week's game against Linfiel d

College will be an important one fo r

the injury-ridden UBC team. Boast-ing at least one tie to their credit, awin over Linfield will keep them ou tof the cellar position in the Confer-

ence .

Tuesday, November 9, 1948.

RUGBY MEETING

There will be a meeting for all

those interested in reviving the Rug -

by Club on Tuesday at 12 :30 in ICE 12 .

The club will feature Rugby discus•

sions and clalk talks by Al Laith-

waite.

1 LOSS OF IIEI D

SWITCHOVER from goal-tending to defense will be the lotExcuses don't soften the blow bu t

it is only fair to comment on the dis -of iceman (Bob Saunders this year when the Senior B hockey advantage to the 'Birds in the loss ofseason gets underway for the Thunderbirds Wednesday n ight',Dough? flied during the game . Even

in the Forum. A two time Big Block winner, the 24-year-old ' when he was in, his painful injuries

Saunders will team up with Terry Nelford to form the 'Birds lessened his drive as UBC's star bal l

first string defence set-up•

carrier .

The 'Birds one big hope, their hith-erto powerful passing attack, brok eclown under a driving rain and the

lightening interceptions of the Pion-eer backs,

There were occasional bright spotsin UBC's defense plays, but thesewere mostly on the initiative of in-dividual players whose fight brough tpraise from opposition and fans .

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