4
VOULME XXXV THE UI Y,S'S~ Y VANCOUVER, B .C ., FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1953 PRICE 5c ; No . 5 1 DRIVE TOTAL HALF WAY ; . FORESTRY STILL LEADIN G At Blood clinic closing yesterday 42 per cent of UBC 's total enrolment had donated blood . Forestry still led all faculties with a percentage of 102 . Social work was close behind with 83 per cent . Next three highest percentages were Nursing, 71, Agriculture, 63, and Applied Sicence, 55 . Today's total was 2'43 pints . This brings the driv e total to 2,234 pints . Pc liticaiHeads Vot e On Party Ballotin g By BRUCE McWILLIAM S Ballots of Wednesday's political preference vote will b e counted and published as the findings of the Liberal club, no t of Parliamentary forum as a whole . —Ubyssey photo by Flux Lovel y BIG BOTTLE (one pint) s)'rown above, has just been draw n painlessly out of the veins of Lizabeth Wallace, 2nd Arts , by Red Cross nurse Mrs . Edith Case . Mrs . Case, who has been a Red Cross nurse for 20 years will take a pint of you r blood just as painlessly if you go down to the auditoriu m today . _see Players, Radsoc Ai d Flood Relief Fun d Various clubs and organizations on campus have answere d the plea of the Flood Drive fund committee by staging benefi t performances . ampus Clinic . Remain s As Donations Increas e Slight Improvement , Shown By Student s Red Cross officials will continue operation of their donors ' clinic here, it was decided yesterday . Influx of donors had stepped up considerably during th e morning and early afternoon yesterday, persuading the clini c to remain on the hope that the donations will continue at a reasonable level . Ile .',lulle of tee poor response he-- - early in the week, officials Wed nesday had threatened to withdra w I'ronl the tempos If there was n o Increase In dotutious, Only twelv e donors had appeared Wednesda y morning . Clinic ,(uperttool' Mrs . Case wa s optimistic yesterday 3 :00 p .m . Sh e said that "it' has beer very poor . but there has been quite an im prevenient. It's much better th l afternoon . " TItls was the oi :bject of n ni t t hi n passed fly Purlhtment iry Fo r um executive yesterday' noon . M e tion Was presented by Progressiv e Conservative Club . At meeting Walter Schoen stat ed the CCF stand was "not o n posed to the ballot Itself, but deff finitely opposed to the manner i n which the election was Carrie I out. " Pat Thomas, ex-president cf t h club, said the balloting was carrie d out under false pretenses in tha t the Llbei l Club president, Dou g Steinman, told Students' Counci ' that he represented the opinion o f all the campus political groups . It ,was stated that Steinson re received permission from Counci ' to hold the election before co n den t ing with other political groups . Both the CCF' and Socred group : stated that titer were !uformed o f the election the day followin g Stelnson`e'grant of permission fro g ' Council . S9cla1 Credit president Ro y Trimble gave his poeitlon In say- ing that the election had bee n "handled unethically" hut in thi s charge, he emphasized that he wa s '(C*MMant . ^'Page 8 ) (SEE FORUM ELECTIONS ) IRWIN HOFFMAN Campus Hear s Symphon y Today In Gy m Irwin Hoffman and Vancouve r Symphony Orchestra appear In th e Gym today 'tit noon in their firs t rerfornta ace o a years . Selections from Revel' s Goos e •hhltvinrl (Magus cersimn n l Matht'r's suggestion, "Hive u ; rest drive " film Snclely fowl, 'hill ill ' ' sil l dent hotly ills ht'oo pushed ;1111 ni l ()ter the hcud an 'unsi,lently h ~ 1 )I 1I, I" f s I1nn11, 11 . '111 lu'IIn RETRACTION ' The Ubyssey printed a state- ment In Its last Issue of accus- ing Doug Steinson of "obtainin g (political preference) ',allots o n the day proceeding the votin g with the Intention of stuffin g the ballot boxes . " In spite of the Irate charge s of CCF and Social Credit official s on Wednesday, It le now quit e apparent that Mr. Stelnson's ac . Lions were more Indiscreet an d misguided than dishonest . Th e Ubyssey therefore apologizes t o Mr. Steinson . Comedy Film s To Be Show n Two Buster Keaton shows wil l be shown on Campus Tuesda y loon under the auspices of Fil m sec . Filmsoc officials state that th e enthuslastie response to the recen t Charlie Chaplin comedy reviv e prompted the coming show . Filming will start at noon in th e Auditorium with an admissio n price of 10 cents for each person . "They were not Divided'' is th e feature for Tuesday evening sho w Ubyssey last night, it was r e voided that Dr . Endicott had bee n prevented from speaking at th e l'nitersity of Alberta by the ee l varsity's Board of Governors . STOPPED AT ALBERT A Students chi rp ed a violent o h ,lcctiou to this action, and succee d ed in passing a resolution whic h ordered the Board of Governor s to "reverse their polity and mak e a full statement of that policy t ( students at this university ." Th o Detit[en will be presented throug h Students' Council , peals lin e faliul ;; upon deal' e,n' s IIu' 11 ;11'(Iened shlden! hotl y This t'olllpul ; ;il nl (Mill l ,II I rli ing 11 : teal Its (host h ' han1g 1110('11 pnunnled iu e,tr i t student bulb, I .'i l m (hies ti e In ei Itli•II'I11 In n . II ;III Action con 'Pros the until, ul' Ill s Iwo principal : : i n love ut1 :1r Erie Nicol, the 1111111111, is I I crud who i . now II Isulured (I t nwi < t Inc it (II)vyI1t(lvIl pape r ml 1%role (('1111(111 fel' the I hy, ;r t \\Nile IiilcuIBrl,, the nniter,ily . Supporting c,tsl Ine11ules 1,,111i5 ' De k us .\(int Alber t ' inllls(ll ns (itch(' John, hill Vet . gotten us I)r . h'ratI(Isn . Ilerly AVeh ) I'11ikall its .float Nellie . \1 ' Ie1 I'r d,ly, I'chrnary - n", n' ' I III I upplil abort I 'mr stir, Ill Int o v 111 II s pree1111 1, ,A r~'nnrl ht Ii i ' xidll lltlll c, shorts Maimed lo t ecru I . .i ' II Ill II l he ,n I!I c 11 Intl, 1 ' I I ' llnl ,I I . t , I ( ne'I oe' I, ;II I Ili III, , . ' I r ilnlsoe'S mo r ns, "Monsieur Ai n I 'ent," presented yeterdny . taile d to moot exptusen Mil thw exccuth' e he(Id,vl lu dolllte : "- rt e 1111111 gril l ('1'111 l(' y ('llne . UBYSSEY SALE S Collections obtained by the E n giaeers selling of the Ubyssey las t ) Tuesday resulted in 'a total of $15 : l towards the fund . A sun' of :t IL was obtui!aol yes . terday at noon . PLAYERS CLU B I'erl'nrm :ulces scheduled for nex t week, proceeds of uhirh are go!n ; I() flood relief include . tl play stage d by the )'layers ('hub entitled °Iles . Sciencemau Lover" schedaitd fo r Monday afternoon in the at1(Iitol'i- um,',uul 1I presentation by R,ldso c e :ltnriug lock Cullen, a local alit ' jocl(ey . Phrateres ' Forma l Tonight In Broc k 1 111 :111 I' , mill ;', Iol'lll ;ll hull (ril l la' !hell) Ielll : :hl It !) m' loci ; in th e ' Ilrnck I,nllnu ;' MAU MAU SECRET S REVEALED BY PROF . Mau Motu, with its secret rite s and terrorist techniques, will b e revealed when . Prof . G. O . B. Davies of the History Depart- ment speaks to a 'student meet- ing of the United Nations Clu b today at noon in Arts 100 . Mr . Davies, a former membe r of the British Foreign Service and an international relations ex - pert, has made a complete stud y of the entire oroblem of the re . cent developments in British Co- ionial policy, the rise of the Ma u Mau movements in Kenya, S . Africa . Tea To Hono r Int'l Student s All UBC over : ;oas students ,tire i n VIted to the afternoon receptio n to lie held in the Manhattan 17 2 AA' . [ ;roadway, r,n Sunday, Feb . 22 . Tea is under the auspices o f Vancouver Co-ordinating Counci l on Citizenship . Cunadtau Polis h ('oegress and ('zechoslohak N a tioual Alliance . both affiliated wai l the Citizenship Council, are host s for the affair . Patrons for the tea include : Senat e Rescind s Frosh Rul e Freshman ruling on athletic s has been rescinded by the Sen- ate of UBC and placed in th e `lands of the Men's Athleti c Directorate . Senate passed a motion at a meeting February 9 which allowe d students to have full authority on g overning eligibility of athletes o' t 'first" or Varsity squads . NEW REGULATION S As 'a result four new rcgulatlion s regarding freshmen will be writ ten Into the 'constitution of th e .'LAD . The regulations, as they wil l be entered, are printed on Page 2. At the beginning of ttpe ' 52•' 5 " sessioln, the Senate passed a rah ing which forbade any freshman' o r any student-coming to i1B0 for hi s first term, regardless of the yea r he was in, from participating o n any Varsity team . Students aroteoted and two gen- eral meetings of the Alma Mate r Society were held to discuss pro b lens and resolutions concernin g the ruling . RULING UNDESIRABL E Students at a meeting passe d motion ant a freshman relin e was not desirable beceuse man y students could carry an extra- cur- ricular activity and still maintai n good schoustic otendings . Raghbhr Bast , president of AMS , presented the resolution along wit h the MAD regulations to the So n ate at its last regular meeting o f 1952 . Senate recommended that pros i dent N . A . M . MacKenzie appoin t a slecial Senate committee t ( disc' .ISS the nroblem with Students ' Council, Dean Gage was appointe d head of the committee . RESULTS OF MEETING S At the meethlg of the two group ' the stud .eet representatives em . phaslzed the need of giving som e AUS %till pre+eat Irwin Holtma n Vlln(1111t''I' Symphony UceileS Ira in the New Uynurlsluln to(l,t y III, noon . Calnpa, in titre . regular Sunday col : following the loud ml ' Mather in Ihia NVednosdioth tol l lion of a local news p aper . Filulso , IS initiating, on bel :llf of tit ge e oral and Mud-op student body . an d wil l ('ut. taiu . travellin g Endicott Schedule d To Speak On` Campu s Dr, James Endicott, 'chairman of the Canadian Peace Con - BEHIND IRON CURTAI N Ex-United Church in oiste t past missionary of Chin a speak on "The Threat to Noce Ili, I hei r the Far bast ." Ile has recently rt . ,Alothet l turned from the ('eking ai'd \ i Suite . Bolero and IIIIydn's euuu Peace Congresses and h a lulth Symphony will be featured (lone extensiv e On the program . Program will take the Iro n the form of o public rehearsal t'o ' orchestra' s Ierl . Orchestra, which is one of Ca n od'e's three oath' symphony mom . ... .strati, tails formed early iu th e (arty 1920's . WORLD PEAC E Canadian fence (',,mores , he represento is held up to he n oon . sm(ttn'Inu And umn oelitic .11 o r ;anization devoted to the cause (' n o world pea' c , gress, will speak on 'the campus at a noon hou r Monday in Arts 100 . In ,a spe ' 'Ial bulletin to The '_ 'Scienceman Love r To Be Presente d For Flood Suppor t Ilex SciencelIHttI Lover, with th ' cost whhh captivated its and [ (owes , lust terns, %'IL1 ' :1g .till It, pre - sented in the uud[toriwr : ou Mor t this at 110011 in aid or thli'et'n' I Flood Relict [)rive on ta e Play, written by laic Nicol, wil l have 'foltt Slnrthouse and 1)l1v ' Sturges hi the leading roles m l Scieucenlau Lover and ('a, :tndr a fuller Ili(' IlutlrI, Alin i ) ml' i an oteliij,I Ir 6ee h under (()vet . meeting nex t SUGGESTIONS TAKE N Filmsoc Gives Show Deadlin e I :al•1't I help flood pi'tiIls, get uN anti ihrinnl to the cimam , vote, that student' Ire no inn er :'n(iel) is pl'esi , llt I!14 a u nnti(irlg the sound nudes . b,unlet t o (mad uelvr ;puper spre,ols The of 1 011111, lest . iti that Iin'sc a~(n'lhwllll~ .' all I'ilnl .;nc'< und ; l nriuul nr" , jerlors , ells, Pilot i I I I t I III ; I I Ii II I ahem' !ili o In I1 ,ld ;peel ll u1otie u,in : : I' . .nlidalss hit Ilse I'hnlle c , oe, Ihlul 'tr,( 11 I II I I" . Ilre ( 1 111 11 11 GREAT EXPECTATION S Up until three o'clock 192 stn dents had gone through the clinic . 27 of these were rejects . Indic : lions showed that well over 20 0 [ ' into would be given before th e clinic closed at four p .m . Only 13 5 donations were made Wednesda y fend 110 Tuesday . III(' ILtn ' e and Ile' oinuwr sit' y ucouhl~,, , i u hr c l ( I W lied ; I I m i d i t i : , h l I l (tee lullly ;I I the 'tent II hi' ii h't q .. Room :1I9, I,ihrar} , Survey To Discove r Student Treatmen t ( ill'negie Internalirulal R('sl~ln'cI l l'unnnilte" iS comluctinl, a)nn've y mi' the altitndett of Collodion st11 . dent ; to foreigners . For this purpose, they filly( pre . Lured ii (lotiotionairre to be fille d 11111 by Collodion students win hav e Ira Veiled nt'cr,ca- . Isti cnulmince would opprectnt c l very . In11rh if (hose students tvh .t l Kite ttuttilled myer,e1S wollld sen d their nano . . Mimic nuullu'r and (e l tire ;,, In the Campus !nail, 'So l Committee, et . to Pei\ 2 .2 aw l \ .AIS ollire, present I'rol'tsaor Do clot :, apeal(iu ; : and A1ar(e l ou "4VIml i' .. .hall mail,' tudlly ul I1nlin an d TWEEN CLASSE S 'Prince Of Peace Ad Pahkistan ' By Dr . Clarke VCF Presentatio n VARSITY CHRISTIAN FEL , CLUB PRESIDENTS or the n LOWSHIP io presenting Or . Den representatives will meet the LS E nip ('lark,, r(Illfne(I missionary . ; to discuss budget problems and a speaking on "'I'!It Prince ((I' Peace' hew mrgoaizutioulll syst .(,nl withi n and I'olcisLnl' today or, I : . : :9 ) \ggir Inn , Mayor and Mrs . IIulne, Brigadiel disciplinary power to MAD subjec t and ,Airs, Sherwood Lett, Ur antl'i to control of the Senate and St u Mrs . Norman MacKenzie . dents' Council . Foreign student ., and ('luu;diau ( Continued on Page 3 ) studying at CBC, are al! welcome . (SEC FRESHMAN ) UNITED NA (*IONS CLUB will JEAN de RIMANOCZY, violinis t Simmer will give ' a mono recital In Aud i Ill , the LSI':, today at :ten) in clu e I Room in Brook . 12 : ;I) ill Art, Ina, toritito ut nnmo oa SV'e(lues(lay , PREME D will shi m II ;leul(rrhu ;c . I'hysl(. 'i12 . y( CAMERA CLUB '.till apon :'u r shooing of r'rcul Illrti,.lits don" un' I i'n'letlIt' S.Irielt MARINE MAGIC, Dance Clli h ilm, "I'nsI-I'nrlum Inrnual, will he hell! Friday, h'ti, . nl 1" : :II' 'inky II ; to Uro(It flail from I1 to I p .m . ~' per ruuple, everyone tyelcouu' . k X de . is sponsoring 1'I'1) 1 olu .lIt i zulllnl will Ilnl'I it .: re :ul ;lr \tee!,, 11 . () li . I)Inles speaking all Nllll l ly meeiiu :; in I'hy ;ic . :' .no 111111 ,Ail l ,dnvrnu'nty hl Keay„ Impl y 111('1 All ;n( I%II nine . Ilnnn . In .AIL- ;r e hold I else M ; rife + :n11l Ile etel•'l CHRISTIAN SCIENCE llrgnu UN CLU B I IiI `III etli .rl,lil l ,1'11111 'Nut' ( . : A

THE UI Y,S'S~Y - UBC Library Home · S9cla1 Credit president Roy Trimble gave his poeitlon In say-ing that the election had been ... ('1'111 l(' y ('llne. UBYSSEY SALES Collections

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VOULME XXXV

THE UI Y,S'S~YVANCOUVER, B .C ., FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1953 PRICE 5c; No. 5 1

DRIVE TOTAL HALF WAY ;. FORESTRY STILL LEADING

At Blood clinic closing yesterday 42 per cent of UBC 'stotal enrolment had donated blood .

Forestry still led all faculties with a percentage of 102 .Social work was close behind with 83 per cent . Next threehighest percentages were Nursing, 71, Agriculture, 63, andApplied Sicence, 55 .

Today's total was 2'43 pints . This brings the drivetotal to 2,234 pints .

Pc liticaiHeads Vot eOn Party Balloting

By BRUCE McWILLIAM SBallots of Wednesday's political preference vote will b e

counted and published as the findings of the Liberal club, notof Parliamentary forum as a whole .

—Ubyssey photo by Flux Lovel y

BIG BOTTLE (one pint) s)'rown above, has just been draw npainlessly out of the veins of Lizabeth Wallace, 2nd Arts ,by Red Cross nurse Mrs . Edith Case . Mrs. Case, who hasbeen a Red Cross nurse for 20 years will take a pint of you rblood just as painlessly if you go down to the auditoriu mtoday .

_see

Players, Radsoc AidFlood Relief Fund

Various clubs and organizations on campus have answered

the plea of the Flood Drive fund committee by staging benefi tperformances .

ampus Clinic . RemainsAs Donations Increase

Slight Improvement,

Shown By Students

Red Cross officials will continue operation of their donors '

clinic here, it was decided yesterday .

Influx of donors had stepped up considerably during the

morning and early afternoon yesterday, persuading the clini c

to remain on the hope that the donations will continue at a

reasonable level .Ile .',lulle of tee poor response he--

-early in the week, officials Wednesday had threatened to withdra wI'ronl the tempos If there was n oIncrease In dotutious, Only twelv edonors had appeared Wednesda ymorning .

Clinic ,(uperttool' Mrs . Case wa soptimistic yesterday 3 :00 p .m . Shesaid that "it' has beer very poor .but there has been quite an im •prevenient. It's much better th lafternoon . "

TItls was the oi :bject of n ni tthi n passed fly Purlhtment iry Fo rum executive yesterday' noon. Metion Was presented by Progressiv eConservative Club .

At meeting Walter Schoen stat •ed the CCF stand was "not o nposed to the ballot Itself, but deff •finitely opposed to the manner i nwhich the election was Carrie Iout. "

Pat Thomas, ex-president cf t hclub, said the balloting was carrie dout under false pretenses in tha tthe Llbei l Club president, Dou gSteinman, told Students' Counci 'that he represented the opinion o f

all the campus political groups .It ,was stated that Steinson re •

received permission from Counci 'to hold the election before co ndent ing with other political groups .

Both the CCF' and Socred group :stated that titer were !uformed o fthe election the day followingStelnson`e'grant of permission frog 'Council .

S9cla1 Credit president RoyTrimble gave his poeitlon In say-ing that the election had been"handled unethically" hut in thischarge, he emphasized that he wa s

'(C*MMant . ^'Page 8 )(SEE FORUM ELECTIONS )

IRWIN HOFFMAN

Campus HearsSymphonyToday In Gym

Irwin Hoffman and Vancouve rSymphony Orchestra appear In th eGym today 'tit noon in their firs trerfornta ace oayears .

Selections from Revel' sGoose

•hhltvinrl

(Magus

cersimn

n l

Matht'r's suggestion, "Hive u ;

rest drive "film Snclely fowl, 'hill ill ' ' sill

dent hotly ills ht'oo pushed ;1111 ni l()ter the hcud an 'unsi,lently h ~

1 )I

1I,

I"

f s

I1nn11,

11 . '111

lu'IIn

RETRACTION 'The Ubyssey printed a state-

ment In Its last Issue of accus-ing Doug Steinson of "obtainin g(political preference) ',allots o nthe day proceeding the votin gwith the Intention of stuffingthe ballot boxes ."

In spite of the Irate charge sof CCF and Social Credit officialson Wednesday, It le now quiteapparent that Mr. Stelnson's ac .Lions were more Indiscreet an dmisguided than dishonest . TheUbyssey therefore apologizes t oMr. Steinson .

Comedy Film sTo Be Shown

Two Buster Keaton shows wil lbe shown on Campus Tuesda yloon under the auspices of Film

sec .Filmsoc officials state that the

enthuslastie response to the recen tCharlie Chaplin comedy reviveprompted the coming show .

Filming will start at noon in theAuditorium with an admissio n

price of 10 cents for each person ."They were not Divided'' is th e

feature for Tuesday evening show

Ubyssey last night, it was r e

voided that Dr . Endicott had bee n

prevented from speaking at th e

l'nitersity of Alberta by the ee l

varsity's Board of Governors .

STOPPED AT ALBERT AStudents chi rped a violent oh

,lcctiou to this action, and succee d

ed in passing a resolution whic h

ordered the Board of Governor s

to "reverse their polity and mak e

a full statement of that policy t (

students at this university ." Th o

Detit[en will be presented throug h

Students' Council ,

peals lin e faliul ;; upon deal' e,n' s

IIu' 11 ;11'(Iened shlden! hotl yThis

t'olllpul ; ;il

nl

(Mill

l

,II Irli ing

11:

teal

Its

(host

h '

han1g 1110('11 pnunnled iu e,tr

i t

student bulb, I .'i l m (hies ti eIn

ei

Itli•II'I11

In

n . II ;III

Action con 'Pros the until, ul' Ill s

Iwo principal : : i nlove ut1 :1r

Erie Nicol, the 1111111111, is I I

crud who i . now II Isulured (I t

nwi < t Inc it (II)vyI1t(lvIl pape rml 1%role

(('1111(111 fel' the I hy, ;r t\\Nile IiilcuIBrl,, the nniter,ily .

Supporting c,tsl Ine11ules 1,,111i5 'De

k us .\(int

Alber t' inllls(ll ns (itch(' John, hill Vet .gotten us I)r . h'ratI(Isn . Ilerly AVeh )

I'11ikall its .float Nellie .

\1 ' Ie1

I'r d,ly,

I'chrnary

-n",

n' 'I III I upplil abort I 'mr stir, Ill

Int ov 111

II

s pree1111 1,

,A

r~'nnrl

ht Ii i' xidll lltlll c,

shorts

Maimed lo tecru

I

. .i ' II

Ill II l

he

,n

I!I c11 Intl,

1 ' I

I ' llnl

,I

I . t ,

I (ne'I

oe' I,

;II

I Ili

III, , . '

I r ilnlsoe'S mo rns, "Monsieur Ai nI 'ent," presented yeterdny . taile dto moot exptusen Mil thw exccuth' e

he(Id,vl lu dolllte :"-rte 1111111 gril l('1'111 l(' y ('llne .

UBYSSEY SALESCollections obtained by the E n

giaeers selling of the Ubyssey las t)Tuesday resulted in 'a total of $15 : l

towards the fund .A sun' of :t IL was obtui!aol yes .

terday at noon .

PLAYERS CLU BI'erl'nrm :ulces scheduled for nex t

week, proceeds of uhirh are go!n ;I() flood relief include . tl play stage dby the )'layers ('hub entitled °Iles .Sciencemau Lover" schedaitd fo rMonday afternoon in the at1(Iitol'i-um,',uul 1I presentation by R,ldso c

e:ltnriug lock Cullen, a local alit 'jocl(ey .

Phrateres ' Forma l

Tonight In Broc k

1 111 :111 I' ,

mill ;',

Iol'lll ;ll

hull

(ril lla'

!hell)

Ielll : :hl

It !) m'

loci ;

in

th e 'Ilrnck I,nllnu ;'

MAU MAU SECRETS

REVEALED BY PROF.

Mau Motu, with its secret rite sand terrorist techniques, will b erevealed when . Prof. G. O. B.Davies of the History Depart-ment speaks to a 'student meet-ing of the United Nations Clubtoday at noon in Arts 100.

Mr. Davies, a former membe rof the British Foreign Serviceand an international relations ex -pert, has made a complete stud yof the entire oroblem of the re .cent developments in British Co-ionial policy, the rise of the MauMau movements in Kenya, S .Africa .

Tea To Honor

Int'l Students

All UBC over : ;oas students ,tire i nVIted to the afternoon receptionto lie held in the Manhattan 172AA' . [ ;roadway, r,n Sunday, Feb . 22 .

Tea is under the auspices o fVancouver Co-ordinating Counci lon Citizenship . Cunadtau Polis h('oegress and ('zechoslohak N atioual Alliance . both affiliated wai l

the Citizenship Council, are host sfor the affair .

Patrons for the tea include :

Senate

Rescinds

Frosh Rule

Freshman ruling on athletic s

has been rescinded by the Sen-

ate of UBC and placed in the

`lands of the Men's Athletic

Directorate .

Senate passed a motion at ameeting February 9 which allowedstudents to have full authority ongoverning eligibility of athletes o't'first" or Varsity squads .

NEW REGULATION SAs 'a result four new rcgulatlion s

regarding freshmen will be writ •ten Into the 'constitution of th e.'LAD. The regulations, as they wil lbe entered, are printed on Page 2.

At the beginning of ttpe '52•' 5 "sessioln, the Senate passed a rah •ing which forbade any freshman' or

any student-coming to i1B0 for hisfirst term, regardless of the yea rhe was in, from participating onany Varsity team.

Students aroteoted and two gen-eral meetings of the Alma Mate rSociety were held to discuss pro blens and resolutions concernin gthe ruling.

RULING UNDESIRABL EStudents at a meeting passe dmotion ant a freshman relin e

was not desirable beceuse man ystudents could carry an extra- cur-ricular activity and still maintaingood schoustic otendings .

Raghbhr Bast , president of AMS ,presented the resolution along wit hthe MAD regulations to the Sonate at its last regular meeting o f1952 .

Senate recommended that pros ident N. A. M . MacKenzie appointa slecial Senate committee t(disc'.ISS the nroblem with Students 'Council, Dean Gage was appointe dhead of the committee .

RESULTS OF MEETING SAt the meethlg of the two group'

the stud.eet representatives em .phaslzed the need of giving some

AUS %till pre+eat Irwin Holtma nVlln(1111t''I' Symphony UceileS •

Ira in the New Uynurlsluln to(l,tyIII, noon .

Calnpa, in titre.

regular Sunday col :

following the loud ml '

Mather in Ihia NVednosdioth tol l

lion of a local news p aper . Filulso ,

IS initiating, on bel:llf of tit geeoral and Mud-op student body.

an dwil l

('ut. taiu .travellin g

Endicott Schedule dTo Speak On` Campu s

Dr, James Endicott, 'chairman of the Canadian Peace Con -

BEHIND IRON CURTAI NEx-United Church inoiste t

past missionary of China

speak on "The Threat to Noce Ili, I hei rthe Far bast ." Ile has recently rt .

,Alothet l turned from the ('eking ai'd \ iSuite. Bolero and IIIIydn's euuu Peace Congresses and h a

lulth Symphony will be featured (lone extensiv eOn the program . Program will take the Iro nthe form of o public rehearsal t'o 'orchestra' sIerl .

Orchestra, which is one of Ca nod'e's three oath' symphony mom .....strati, tails formed early iu th e(arty 1920's .

WORLD PEAC ECanadian fence (',,mores ,

he represento is held up to he n

oon . sm(ttn'Inu And umn oelitic .11 o r

;anization devoted to the cause (' n o

world pea' c ,

gress, will speak on 'the campus at a noon hour

Monday in Arts 100.In ,a spe' 'Ial bulletin to The '_

'Scienceman Lover

To Be Presented

For Flood Support

Ilex SciencelIHttI Lover, with th '

cost whhh captivated its and [

(owes , lust terns, %'IL1 ':1g .till It, pre -

sented in the uud[toriwr: ou Mort

this at 110011 in aid or thli'et'n' I

Flood Relict [)rive on ta e

Play, written by laic Nicol, wil l

have 'foltt Slnrthouse and 1)l1v '

Sturges hi the leading roles m lScieucenlau Lover and ('a, :tndr a

fuller Ili('

IlutlrI,

Alin

i ) ml' i

an oteliij,I Ir 6ee hunder (()vet .

meeting nex t

SUGGESTIONS TAKE N

Filmsoc Gives Show Deadline

I :al•1't I help

flood pi'tiIls, get

uN

anti ihrinnl to the cimam ,

vote, that student'

Ire no inn er :'n(iel) is pl'esi , llt I!14 a u

nnti(irlg the sound nudes . b,unlet

t o

(mad

uelvr ;puper

spre,ols

The of 1 011111,lest . iti that

Iin'sc a~(n'lhwllll~.' all

I'ilnl .;nc'< und ; l nriuul

nr" ,jerlors ,

ells,

Pilot iI I I t I III ; I I Ii III

ahem'

!ili oIn I1 ,ld ;peel ll u1otie

u,in : : I' . .nlidalss

hit

Ilse

I'hnlle c ,

oe, Ihlul 'tr,( 11

I II I

I" .

Ilre ( 1 111 1 1 11

GREAT EXPECTATION SUp until three o'clock 192 stn •

dents had gone through the clinic .27 of these were rejects . Indic:lions showed that well over 200

[ ' into would be given before theclinic closed at four p .m. Only 135donations were made Wednesda y

fend 110 Tuesday .

III(' ILtn ' e

and Ile' oinuwr sit'

y ucouhl~,, , i uhr

c l ( I W lied

; I I

m i d i t i : , h l

I l (tee

lullly ;I I

the

'tent II

hi'

ii

h't

q..

Room :1I9, I,ihrar} ,

Survey To Discove r

Student Treatment

( ill'negie Internalirulal R('sl~ln'cI ll'unnnilte" iS comluctinl, a)nn've ymi' the altitndett of Collodion st11 .dent ; to foreigners .

For this purpose, they filly( pre .Lured ii (lotiotionairre to be fille d11111 by Collodion students win hav eIra Veiled nt'cr,ca- .

Isti cnulmince would opprectnt cl very. In11rh if (hose students tvh .t l

Kite ttuttilled myer,e1S wollld sen dtheir nano . . Mimic nuullu'r and (e ltire;,, In the Campus !nail, 'SolCommittee, et . to Pei\ 2 .2

aw l\ .AIS ollire,

present I'rol'tsaor Do clot:, apeal(iu ; : and A1ar(e lou "4VIml i'.. .hall mail,' tudlly ul

I1nlin an d

TWEEN CLASSES

'Prince Of Peace Ad Pahkistan '

By Dr. Clarke VCF Presentation

VARSITY CHRISTIAN FEL , CLUB PRESIDENTS or thenLOWSHIP io presenting Or. Den representatives will meet the LSEnip ('lark,, r(Illfne(I missionary . ; to discuss budget problems and aspeaking on "'I'!It Prince ((I' Peace' hew mrgoaizutioulll syst.(,nl withi nand

I'olcisLnl' today or, I :. : :9 )\ggir Inn ,

Mayor and Mrs . IIulne, Brigadiel disciplinary power to MAD subjec tand ,Airs, Sherwood Lett, Ur antl'i to control of the Senate and StuMrs . Norman MacKenzie .

dents' Council .Foreign student ., and ('luu;diau

( Continued on Page 3 )studying at CBC, are al! welcome .

(SEC FRESHMAN )

UNITED NA (*IONS CLUB will

JEAN de RIMANOCZY, violinis tSimmer will give 'a

mono recital In Aud i

Ill , the LSI':, today at :ten) in clu eI Room in Brook .

12 : ;I) ill Art, Ina, toritito ut nnmo oa SV'e(lues(lay ,

PREME Dwill shi mII ;leul(rrhu ;c .I'hysl(. 'i12 .

y(

CAMERA CLUB '.till apon :'u rshooing of r'rcul

Illrti,.lits don" un' I

i'n'letlIt'

S.Irielt

MARINE MAGIC, Dance Clli hilm,

"I'nsI-I'nrlum Inrnual, will he hell! Friday, h'ti, .nl

1" : :II' 'inky II ;

to Uro(It flail from I1 to I p .m .~' per ruuple, everyone tyelcouu' .

k

X

de.

is sponsoring

1'I'1) 1olu

.lIt i

zulllnl will Ilnl'I it .: re :ul ;lr \tee!,,

11 . ()

li .

I)Inles speaking all

Nllll lly meeiiu :; in I'hy;ic . :'.no 111111

,Ail l ,dnvrnu'nty hl Keay„ Impl y111('1

All ;n( I%II nine .

Ilnnn . In .AIL- ;r e

hold I else M ; rife + :n11l Ile etel•'l

CHRISTIAN

SCIENCE

llrgnu

UN CLU BI IiI

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etli .rl,lil l,1'11111

'Nut'

( . :

A

Page 2

THE UBYSSEY

Friday, February 20, 195 3

UIYSSZY

MEM13I';lt ('ANADIAN UNIVERSITY PRES SAuthorised as secant class mail, Post Office Department, Ottawa .

Student subscriptions $1 .20 per year (included in AMS fees) . Mail subscriptions $2 .0 0tier year. Single copies five cents . Published in Vancouver throughout the Universit yyear by the Student Publications Board of the Alma Mater ,Society, University of Britis hColumbia. Editorial opinions expressed herein are those of the editorial staff of th eUbyssey, and not necessarily those of the Almh Mater Society or the University, Letter sto the Editor should not be more than 160 words, The Ubyssey reserves the right t ocut letters, and cannot guarantee publication of all letters received .

Offices In Brock Hall

For Display advertisingPhone ALmtt 1624

Phone Alma 335 3EDITOR•IN•CHIEF JOE SCHLESINGE R

Executive Editor, Ed Parker ; Feature Editor, Elelo Oorbat ; City Editor, Myra Greet ;News Editor, Ran Sapera ; Literary Editor, atilt Elkhlgton ; CUP Editor, Patsy Byrne ;Cir culation Manager, Marlon Novak ; Staff Photographer, flux Lovely .

Senior Editor this Issue Pete Plneo

Associate : Harvey King . Deskmel and Reporters : Bruce McWilliams, Anise Wickman ,Res Logic, liniry Clare,

Now that the third act of the AMS electioncomedy is over it is quite clear that constitu-tional amendments must be on the agenda ofthe spring general meeting of the society . Theelections committee got themselves into ho twater by not adhering to the section of th econstitution governing elections, and lef tthemselves open to protest and criticism . Theywere forced to reverse their decision as to themethod of ballot counting as a result of thes eprotests .

Ballots with one or two (but not all) of th echoices marked were accepted and counte din the election of the new AMS president, bu ton the second and third slate no ballots wer eaccepted unless all the choices were marked .The elections committee were definitely i nthe wrong in not staying with the constitution ,but the fault is not entirely theirs . The inade-quacy of the constitution was a major factor .

In order to avoid this ballot-counting con -fusion in future years the preferential ballo tshould be retained, but all ballots whic hclearly indicate the voter's choice should b eaccepted .

The elections committee also erred in ea-

Th following motion was passed at the Feb.9 meeting of the University Senate . It concernsthe regulations governing men's athletics a tthis university,—ED .

That Senate approve and accept the followingregulations concerning nthleties as approved I nprinciple by the Men's Athletic ( t om mittee and th eMea t s Athletic Directorate, and as approved by th eStudents' Council tar inclusion in the MAI) eonst ittttnn, on the understanding lull Section : ; o rRegulation ,1 is subject to Section I eF the salm iRegulation .

A . Regulations gnyrruing Flit ihilily ut' wale ;11 eV r ies participating on any University "Mist. "

athletic team (I .e ., the Varsity or Thunderbirdteam) :

II) 'I ' runsl'ers from universities or colleges no taffiliated with the University of BS' . anus (have attended the University of B .C . or 1'Ic •

turlu College as a full•tiine student for at Mus tone winter session before becoming eligible t oparticipate on a rrirst team .(2) No student shall be eligible to compete o na first team unless In the Lunt winter session ,It, any, previously attended, he was grunte dstan(Iing, in lvhule or in part, for the work o r

Plugged NickleAt last I have gotten around to putting in why oa r

about the Tobacco Road case . I had not done soearlier became by legal training forbids comineu tOtt tl case while it Is before the court, and becauseI coll(Ilt't think ill' anything to say . New, however ,the Super bruin is in ferment

.n really %vll li Ils edips ;

Entirely aside from tIF' lIIiiits of the law upo nwhich the (teclnlou %vas h8sed . I think .Magistrat e1leinues was; right .

()It the outer hand, I think that the law upo nwhirl' the decision was eased, is wrong .

The charge against the Avon For staging a n"Indeceu and lewd' perl'ornlIuce was laid ende rthe criminal riffle . Unfortunately, or perhaps fo rfmm~l( ly the rude Slue., nut nttrwpt aI del'Iiitiun o r"lewd and iudeceul ' and this is where the dil'I'icnit ycomes in, because lie g e is, it course, no ahsulld estandard by . which lit term, can he measured 'I'Im %are purely shb,iectice relative II) the audience a twhom a. w'al'k is Ilireetell , and to the persons %%il esec It .

I,PI hie Mutilate 1111 IIngi ' ,ltill of as Sillil y , lyin gby Itself' iu hnlh inanimate eel animal . luclnded i uan artist's manual ante read hy persons trained t oileerrciat t ,11111 IIInl1 I'ni Ilhe aest h e tic beastly ur th e11111111111 farm, it I runll' :H'I' the highest s p ear .I'luuerl an al pool-rnum wall, lucre to h p leered al b %leering patrons, it beeollles pnl'llugl'alpIly sled i s

"hard . 'I believe that the Avon lheitt'e's production ,

regill'dlnsa alt %vinnn it

I . "aimed' appealed prin twittily

to

Ill s

punt (' 1111111

rrnl' ' II

'I'll :'

%lI'y

1 .li

tha t1111('11

()I

the

SEISMS'

(ii

Ilnl'

lll)Iilll :lull

);Ill

VII IShp Swats . wit' tinlil 1)111 tut' ILL', 111 :110is (nth LLn h''rr ell

IIIose "ail'

It%eln

were during theI ''''dly,

si p,

lunalll,

n'to r n

the sales roulI)iliI I ie'li to ail hilt I'ilipty Ionises ,

I' r rlalnly, III

phallic ( ;lined is III,

,illpree i sthin 1,1 literature uuai Ile' Ihr;lllI' sae the artisti celement,

it,

Ills

his

1'11,i

tending the deadline for nominations for the

position of Junior Member before it was de-

termined whether any of the defeated candi-

dates wished to contest the position. The

constitution states that defeated candidate s

for other offices may have an additional 4 8

hours in which to submit nomination papers .

The committee (which was upheld by th e

Student Council) claimed they were actin g

cbnstitutionally when they extended the

nomination deadline . If the constitution isthat ambiguous it should be clarified at the

spring AMS meeting, and future elections

committees should be made to adhere strictl y

to the regulations .

According to the constitution the vice-

president is to be elected on the second slate ,

and not on the third slate of candidates a s

was done in this election. The committee was

certainly right in thinking that there woul dbe little interest in the third slate if therewere no major office being contested . The

constitution shoud be amended in such a wa ythat the decision as to which officers run o n

the various slates is left up to the electionscommittee .

that session, and after writing any neet(Mlsar y5npplemwntllis, he completed all hut at mos tthree units (or the equivalent) of a full year' swork .(3) A student with no prevlotw attendance u tthe University of British Columbia or Victori aCollege may not compete on a first athleti cleant unless he has standing which admits hi m%%ithuut condition to the second year of lin t .versify work . A student In this ualegnry, ho w .p eer, noy, with Ihn approval the m e n aAthl etic ('enhmittee he Permitt e d to plus ;1 1 1 1 II' 110 IS (I'' i twruty•twn year's of age : o r11 )1 It' no freshman or ,I .\' . team (alt ho or .gaillzed .

B . 1,6115 of tit players for all teams are to be soh •noted by the Athletic Director to the R p gis •t'ar's Office not later than one week prior t oscheduled games . ['layers' ellgibillty will tee nhe verified or otherwise and the Athleti cDirector will he responsible to the Men ' s•1i111etr committee for enforcing the Regis-trar's ruling .

This motion was approved on the uttderNtatl(Illl ;that the Students' Council and the Men's Athleti cCommittee will give effect to the terms of theitropoeal .

by franck

majority dhl°no1, '1'I1r, "common lean" did not ..1ud to the law, that Is what camlts . If the "ordirmu' ymatt" would see the "lewd" rather than the "arti M .lie" aspect or the production, them the Cotle nppllrs .and the 11aglstahi %vas right in his judgment .

Wo Inllst, tharet' iii, tiro our attention to 111)1('ode Itself . I do not believe that ally govermmo'n tcan legislate to protect men's murals . Grown me nunl women %sill chart Ihelr own conr.ac at morality ,

and, n' they want sin, or if they want liquor the y%%ill get It regardless or ilrohibltious, It Is almos ttrite to say that the prohibition only makes It th emore desirable . 'rime rush to the mediocre versio nill' Tobacco Road, however, is eloquent on thi spules .

I do not believe either that the removal of all suc hmorality" legisultlou wouid have any more harm-

ful effects than the ending of prohibition . I believe ,on the ((lici t hand that the present laws ani houn dIn make for a mediocre surir'ty . PrOgrPsS is 11111th'by the Few . The " shut in the street" is merel yhurried along. The whole or tshatever we rai l"culture" in fact, is based upon the creativenes sacid the appreciation of the Ir e%% . It' they are to h edenied freedom of mention and upprrclatloll merel yle g alise a painting, a play, a piece of elide expel .hewed tinder Ilse wrong conditions or by the un •trained mind may be purl)g'raphy, then (Teat hi t' ar tmust cease . Lots race It . ar tistic ceratlon is Moll .Oiled by 1'OI' I :Nl)11' \V'Mau r and for all the tim ethe n i iiitvl eye will seek out the "artistic" limutioll .III untrained %vllt toms for the "lewd" pssion .

The •,oInlal'I of the !env dl'nialuds that Ilse les tmils! rue that et (he ordlhary eau . "(Tillers " bu ssloe ; !wen Ilio " contemn" mauls uiedlam or ez .nr;•.ieu, sell it it is to he judged by his standard s

mast ;Ilea ys he round %sambas, II%vd ,It

I

llllrin

lliii lii ii hie pu)hissieniil i

l eur,iphhi . -;Iii Ilnprle;s il . 11 :11 1

-1 1'1111'-.i

lo

.111

st,llllhllll .

Alumni • Chat

To Be Given

Next Sunday

First featur e of another Alumn iAssociation series of firesid echats and Informal discussio n

groups will he a talk by I)r . Hen •ry C. Gunning, president and hea dof the Geology and Geograph,idepartment .

Gunning will speak next Su nday evening, February 22, at 7 :3 0

p. m, In Brock bail . Free admit,olive is offered to all those wh oInform the Alumni AssociationBrock Hall, of their intention t o

attend •FOUR SUBJECTS

Series of cleats will Sailed (four rubiects, Geology, Home E t . .

,onomics, Pharmacy and Soch iWork ,

8ubsequeet speakers will b e

Mies Charlotte S . Black, March 8 ;Dean Arnold W . Matthews, March

511; Miss Marjorie J . SmithMarch 19 .NOT CONFINE D

Attendance to any of thes efunctions Is not confined to t!B( 'alumni . Anyone lutsrerted i nIon'iihig More about British Co-lumbia's university will be we lcorned, Alumni Association an .p ounced ,

Alum ►d Association must l bnotified either in person or b ymail, by each person planning t oattend . All meetings will be hel don Sunday evenings at 7 :30 pan .In the Brock .

/.d

TYPING : ESSAYS, THESIS.Notes, expertly and promptl ytyped, Moderato rates . We useCampbells' book of rules, Blakeyand Cook's, and Essay Specifica-tions by the inept . of Applied Sci-ence, Serving students since 1945 .Mrs . A. O. Robinson, 4180 W 11t hAvenue . AL. 0915R .

(G6 )TYPING : ESSAYS, 'I'III.SIS ,manuscripts, mimeographing . E helse Street, No . 7 Dalhousle Apts . ,University Blvd . AL. 0655R. (GG )STUDENTS, I1AL1') OC FEMAI, ;wishing to earn t 10 tip per wee kjust by bring alert and observan tconso r t Doug Hughes, PA . 1111 1 . 2- ,II a .m. to 10 p .m .

(lit; )FRENCH 1.1'16AK? COACHING INgraunnar and conversationtermer I I I;(' lecturer . Past sa c(s eises mill) students . Ite,l,nlrlhhlaths .

1'tiiversily

era .

I'hou e111' :, ids ;all, .11, . II'ISIL .

(55 1CHEMISTRY

COA('IIIN( ;honors gradm .II', euperlemcl'd i ntearhiug . .1rthur Lietze, 17.93 W .Ink .1%e . AI, . 1317 . (51 1TYPING OF ALI, KINDS . ttt' ;A •suitable rates, ;61h \V, II111 Ave .Al, 119IJI,,

I ; 2 2 IFOR SAI,I ;,

til'1'I' (lei 'I'AlL' ,sine :1t, tall, Thom . Rod, Al .t9Ir. ;Y .

(51 1EXPERIENCED STI .;Nt )take all types of work ill home .'dss, ell . typed . Plume

131 1I'Olt

S,1I,F;,

OilIi ;INAI ,wicroscnpe, enlih'giig free' 4(1 : Ilu iO30 :1, with all atlaeh11nnt• ;In

AI

condition .

I'home

I,',1 .sail; , 1 .

(11 111'11,1,

1' .11'

OI'"I'It,I( ;l:o1 SI, Yfor one (I) size 12• ;4 large tiiz .('I I . 7165. (;, I Ihilt 5 .11,1';, I'OIti' i(N S'I' .A .111 ; .111(1 covrr5 : ('anad,I mint shoe :falls leaning . ILA . : : :'!)I .relit

S,1Li' ;,

RAItl ;books on all, leisure, I)5sc1,(10gy ,

THE Y

WER E

NOT

DIVIDED

BUSTER KEATON

Comedy Of Revival12,30 Tuesday, February 24, 10 c

FILMSO C

TUESDAY

FEBRUARY 243,45, 6 .00, 8 .1 5

25c AUDITORIU M

We Have A Constitution?

Freshman Eligibility Ruling

etc. t. .\ . 32 .11 .$'Olt L\I .i :, AUSTI N'la . license ',•i . :, fu .1I rendition .See and drive it and you'll oily i t

ILA .

291 .

Letters To The Editor

Billetees Needed

For Conference

Billets are urgently needed I' mhigh school students who ar escheduled to attend their annua lconference at I113(' February 26 ,

27 and 2 S

Only one steal need he fur-nished by the i'flstee, althoug hthe delegates will he stayin gtitre nights .

Anyone willing to provide ac-commodations is asked to pleas ecall Don Jahour ut KE, 1!1 :11L o rcontact the conference conmit •tee in the tIiga School Office i nthe Brock Ihu1 1

Thls will be the sixth straigh tyear that !113(' has entertaine dthe representatives of the B .C .high s ; noels, Purpose of th econference is tc orient the pros-pective students to campus lif ecourses offered .

Looking Back

capture presidencies of 1VAI) an dMAD .

10 YEARS AGO, 194 3Robert S . Whyte wine pres ; •

deney of AMS . Soccer squad drop .:1 .1 counter to Bonds brealthi 'long winning streak .15 YEARS AGO 1938

•, McGill Stwleuts' Council e :;

dudes Conuuunist Tim Buck from '1the McGill Union, 1''potball : J. .Birds crush North Shore L!oua, i17-0 .

5 YEARS AGO, 194 8USC Debating Team w'Ins over 1

I,hlfield College : "Resolved tha tatomic energy be exclusively coo .trolled by United Nations ." Roger IPederson becomes AMS presiden tIncrease in Vet's Allowanc eboosts 1300 undergrads morale . ,Jackie Shearmaa and Bud Spiels

Feller, the I'by,scy',Dear Sir :

Following up Mr, Loosmorcs"Socialistic I imyssey" I sugges tthe following regulations in th etree socialistic tradition .

Marketing of the paper.1 Each student will have him .

MUNRO'S . . . Tenth at Tolrni e

or from

The Editor, Suite 5, 2414 Main Street, Vunepuver 111

Do some widows with . dependent's have insuperabledifficulties in obtaining their legal rights under th e

Workmen's Compensation Act ?

Do some injured workmen with dependent children ge trelatively small pensions whim totally disabled under theprovisions of the present Workmen's Compensation Act ?

React "Two Widely Divergent Disability Pension Awards "on Page 15 o f

"STRICTLY FROM THE RECORD "

Now available a t

W eI F1

N( : Wlln (ANAIIIAN, IN FVFNY WAIN OF IIFF SINeI IW V

self pun( tied every time he talce aa copy .h' the Ubyssey, Thi

s prevent hoarding. No studen tshall lake more than two liby .t •seys every puree editions ,

To cous('1 ve paper, the st,u1entcrake not take two copies of th sthree editions . He must take onecopy twice In every three edi .lions .

2 No studr'lt may refuse t otake more than one Ubyssey ever ytutee editions, Itefusal to take th eulloted number will be considere dwl!If :11 bigotry and will be subJer 'to Regulation 2456731.8 k, "Wil lfill mel'usal to broaden the mind . "

'I Fluids fol . publication and des •t'ibutioi of the Ubyssey shall b etaken from the consolidated AM Sfund, which provides the student $on campus with flee clothe s(Pattern 5't;7-ii--without swallo wtail), books, medical care, fals eteeth, membership in Peoples 'Fellowships toenail clippers an dbicycles .

AMS tee shall be kept to e ,mere $276 to cover cost of pre •ductiou, distribution and adniinis-tration .

TOM FItANCK .

DRAUGHTINGINSTRUMENTS

.From $10.00

T-SQUARES, PROTRACTOR SSET SQUARE S

MECHANICAL ENGINEERSAN D

POLYPHASE SLIDE RULE S

ZIPPER RING BOOK SComplete with Sheets and inaee

AMES LETTERINGINSTRUMENT S

FOUNTAIN PEN S

STATIONERS and PRINTER S560 Seymour St . Vancouver, E.C .

AT/Wep,14M

PRACTICAL ECONOMICSV ,

"))

at "MY BANK" ,where students' accounts arewelcome . You can open a naccount for as little as adollar.

BANK OF MONTREA L

ea, ada a ?cads' GaKk

EUROPE -Student Tours

73 DAYS - $1230Julie 6 — Sail one class S.S. Groote Beer, chartered by

Holland American Line, from Montreal .EUROPE BY MOTOR! Holland, Brussels, the Rhine ,Bavarian Castles, Austrian Tyrol, Italian Dolomites ,Venice, Rome, the Hill Towns, Florence, Italian an dFrench Rivieras, French Alps, Switzerland, Paris . Scot -land, English Lakes, Shakespeare Country, Devon, th eWest Country, London .

Aug. Itl — Sail from Southampton one class on S .S .O'Toole Beer .

Aug . 18--Arrive Montreal .

72 DAYS - $1194Julie 1 I — Sail tourist class from Montreal S .S. Ascaniu .

Scotland, English Lakes, Chester, Shakespeare Country ,North and South Devon, London, Holland, Belgium, Ger-many (the Rhine and Black Forest), Switzerland, Italia nLakes, Venice, Rome . Hill Towns . Florence, Italian an dFrench Rivieras, Paris .

J II'. . i i — Sail from Lc IIi11're S .S,Sailii119a, tourist class .Alai 21

Arrive

ask for detailed itinerarie s1'NJVERSi'I'Y TRAVEL ('LU B

5( Bloor St . West, Toronto, Kinysciale 698 4Mucagenient : J . F . S . G . H . Luca s

II.

Friday, February 20, 1953

THE UBYSSEY

Page 3

(ELLU LOSE HEAD I'O $fl!4K►Nft4INOWAY'S MORAL STANDARDS

;'AT (OMMERCEMENS' UMW TOPIC FOR CHURCHDISCUSSIONMaxwell W. Mackenzie will discuss Public Service

and Private Gain" at the annual Commercemen's banquet

to be held at Hotel Vancouver March 5 .

Executive vice-president of the Canadian Chemical and

Cellulose Company, Mr. Mackenzie has held many govern-

ment offices, prior to his present appointment. He has

served as Executive officer of the Foreign Exchange Contro l

Board, deputy chairman of the Wartime Prices and Control

Board, and Deputy Minister of Defense Production .

Vancouver Board of Trade and Canadian Manufac-

turers' Association are co-operating with the School o f

Commerce to sponsor the banquet .

Cam pusBranc BanOnly One In Canada

By ELIZABETH NORCROSSThis university, youngest in Canada and unique in so many

respects, even has unique banking facilities . The bank in th eAuditorium building, whose facilities so many of us use, is th eonly branch bank on a university campus in Canada . $ In September, 1948, the Dank o f

Montreal opened a sub agenc yPere, under the managership ofMr. M. C. Kirby, which became a

full braneh the following summer .still under Mr. Kirby

ALL. SERVICESCampus branch became equipped

then to provide all the bankin gservices offered by any othe r

Once again 14 lucky people have

won prizes simply for donating on e

pint of blood to a worthy cause .

Winners are as follows : W . O .

Richardson, necktie, Murray Gold -

man ; Helena Martin Horla, gif t

certificate ($3 .00), Dominion Furn1 •

Nee; Howard Oborge, ski goggles ,

Sports Centre ; Deudie Dewey , pas s

for two, Studio Theatre ; R. J. Le •

Brasseur, gift certificate (52 .00) ,

George Sperling Sporting Goods .

FIN FOR AN~EE

Ken Doolan, lubrication job, Pat

Oliver Service ; Anise Brickman ,

gift certificate ($5 .001, Woodwards ;

Elaine Kennedy, gift certificate

($2.50), Nancy's Ladles Wear ; D.

Fraser, gift certificate ($1 .30), Ber t

Amer Ltd.

meat tor UBC graduates and unde rgraduates , or even to funetlen a ra matrimonial bureau, but a g l anceover the payroll makes it look tha tway .FORMER STUDENTS

Mr. Jack ©ldtin, second office rof the brunch, 'etas a student here

These gift certificates may be for three years, as .Is Miss Jua ncollected at the Librarian's desk, l Hooper, teller. Mrs . Marie Marsh .Forestry Library, upstairs in the' also a teller, ie a graduate, antiForestry Geology building, anytime there have been others who halt 'between 13 noon and 1 p .m . It not, since married or ben transferred .phone Doug Little at ALma 1798L, One member of the staff is marriedafter six .

to a present student .

Faculty Member, Ex-StudentJoin Talents For Recita l

By ELIZABETH NORCROSSMusic lovers on and off the campus are promised an enjoy -

able evening when a former student and a present facult ymember of this university gives a recital in the auditorium nex tThursday. Mr. Teno Genis is the violinist and Mr . Max Edward ::the pianist .

alt', Qrnls ens burn in Vise"II -vet and le a greduute of the (lut everslty of Ilriti ,,Ii Cohunhla• He i s

a keen musician and trained as e t

violinist under 11r, Douglas Ste w

art .

HONOR SOLOIS TIlls curter , e s a musician include.

twinning Iintlers as a sotolst in th e

Knights I. Pythias Musical Fee dveil, playing hl the Music Societ yConcert Orchestra end actin ; a .,

Concert ineetei' of the Uuiversit y

Symphony Crehesh'a in 191'•4 :Ills other Internals rung's from th ephysical sciences to the draurati '

arts .

()err . S,tr(nl I'syclwhety . :1Iai'II'hapdelnine, Ilieln ,gy ,Ind liuhlu y

ill this ceUtll'y•

Uepl,

lab

exercises .

Erne'

tlu 'ell.

h ;dveerds, wit,' will aee(m

(Irma( I'll . !lemon I'Ilt'sielu ; :,y, ,I .Pall e Ur . (iiiF ; al the piano, has A. Killed .been ioIttellt t,l to 1 'hys .eey read I

Itlaell ring hinder, h :eiihie,y ante srrs belure, I l e leis often g i v e n re

Ie e tHras

I? ru illn ;,

Louse

lea l' ~(i te l-i u( t :e nanerstl)' during Shan rinse . .1 ;runumr =II : nnles . ,Al .

('rinnnnu

I' :Iiglteh

him

fulle d'truck ,UMBRELLA S

Preen, cle,ilk!i pI - i, handle sProm

and

i)i,lld ,rtBell

,rr . luutilr .

I'm pie .

I, II

hull

rrlluvvIimed in ( ' ,anal

lull

I I ii'

vellevt

Forum Elections

(Continued from Page 1 )servative era+ident, moved that th e

ballots be counted on the condition

1 that Stelnson submit a letter o f

apology for his action . This motion

was seconded by Joe Nold . An

amendment ay CCF representative ,

Walter Schoen, to the effect tha tresult of the ballot be given us the

1finding of the Liberal Club , wasincorporated in the motion .

Amended motion read : "That

upon the condition that Mr. Stein •son publish an apology for the in .convenience caused the memeber s

of the political clubs through hi s

lack of discretion re : the recen tpolitical vote, the ballots be count-ed and the result be published a s

the findings of the liberal Club . "This motion was passed by te r

executive and the meeting weadJourned by chairman Peter Hens -

John ;'rarer, Progressive ('on' I (owe .

'Her Scienceman Lover'

Here In Auditorium Monday

"Morality of Ernest Hemingway" will be the topic ck n

by Professor Watters, of the UBC English dgpa tipept, OF, a

talk and a discussion session, this Sunday at $ y,an., elt floe

Unitarian Church, 1550 West 10th .Hmingway, who, incidentally, - ---

waked for some time as a reporter

I'or Hemi.njway, ae for i * yothers of his generation ,noihing

on the Toronto Star, is a pnrticu. is certain any logger, 'a;pQ fortally interesting author, not only things in life are wortheyhU7 . leisbecause of the fine literary quality means that the author has ha4 toof his work but that lie speaks for Mein his own standards, work ep ta generation in which traditional his own' approach to jifq . Tb15 gyp •moral standards have completely I preach will be the topic of Prong sbroken down, will be the theme .

I sor Wetter a talk ,

Prizes WonBy StudentsFor Bleeding

branch except, perhaps, safety de •posit boxes . riowever, they tell us .

that some headings under whic ha regular office would showamouts us assets ur liabilities ar e

devoid of any entry .The monthly statement of th e

campus branch shows 'hat Its 11 •

abilities are made up mainly o fdeposit accounts .

COUNSEL GIVE NThere Is one service In particle

file that undergraduates are invited to make use of . Mr . Kirby ,the genial matinger, is glad at an ytime to give financial counsel t o

,any who may want It . It woul dseem that this advice bas bee ntaken many times over since sale sof Canada Savings Bonds by thebranch here exceeded in 1952 thos ein 19;1 •

It is unlikely that the Bank o fMontreal opened a branch ou th e

W. R. Omerton, gift certificate campus In order to provide employ

($3,00), W. M . Gm ; Pat Annealey .doable pass, Plasa Theatre ; G. T .Campbell, two double passes, Mar -pole Theatre ; Christine Weir, gif tcertificate ($5 .00), Modiste Ladie sApparel ; and Jerome Angel, choco •later, t.,aug Tom .

Freshman

(Continued from Page 1 )Results ul' the meeting were th e

rescinding of the freshman rulin g

APPEALIN : PROGRA M

Program of 1 ,'eilr'iill 'y is an

iuteres l lug MM . (leads will plo y

four 8on.3tiIs for vlellu and pian othree of which ar e by English

(°mowers . (Tort I lilt century) ,

Somervell 1IJth century) , and Irelaud (u t•ontentpprery writer ogreat importance) .

In addition he will play a ee lknown Sonata I,y 1lozart (No : 1 0

In II flat, I( . ;i7$) . told will end by

S laying Bartok 's Six Itoteminla n(Sauces, Jed S e lmiait's II nmjn !Rondo op 5 : : .

It

ie

.1Ilogether u fascinating

PENS, PENCILSPete Felipe(' "Ilu)ded Kit get ,

Pen, Parker, Wee. I'en, dark blur, 'no truth. marl( . Seriph, pin, net .roue' and go l d . idons Chili rtes[ ,I'en, IVaterttem . blue ,

PURSES, GLASSES, ETC .Meek

p&t!se,

glasses

Inside .Itassrs brown leather rase . ( ;lass ',case, brnvU . ( ;tassel, (•I(-'ur phlsti rGlasses, hrutwti horn elm, in b plr

Last, on hearing the news . said"The. Senate has realized the st ndents' ability to mamtge their ow laffairs . The Alight infringemen tOut had been cast on the etident erespouetbility has been welder( u pand mice again, student autonom yhas been restored ,

"'I'he students have reason hl hproud that we bare :t uulversit ywhere all the altenuee for true uui !versa), education are still open, 'ho concluda(I .

TEXTS, NOTEBOOK E, ETC .Nlet'rinlmoa, 9 ;nglish Text . (', l

ieelinu of Iliclums, Kleiller Niaci nteeth. , in .1rts ;tidg, Rank coutuhl ,tug Spanish course, Ilnr(l covere d,letehoele I?tl ,;iisi notes. ( ' cllt .'-1)Ivers d,' Ted, Sheltie . rile card .;n Innull,l I'uId . r

liar work and It ron•ItitiUrs 01101

(hied( I:xp'~,'lali"Irv . red tutcIucoof the most important cuulrih uliens to He . ;Iter tune of the violi n

prugrait which should appeal t o

laymen owl musicians alike be

r~ause of its rich warl .ty of stylesand of its raroi'iil balance . Perhaps

the Soauht by John Ireland wil l

attract Ih . ,ItIcntien et ' must li etoner~ for its spirited idiom an dbrlllianve el l'otitpoeitioll --ther e

is uU' our ,hill au,rilent in Ilse .0

rase .

1u,1

}evil

uud Ills b,~eu als ohr,nd (Ili Ihr air ,

I'd

IIII)

IIIeWlie,

(II

the

11 . 111 1

he

Ivetiie ,

i

Seluisl i

.nel

i•1in~ ll

hole

,ni l

:;,'arIti to

in

1Insir

:unl

i ; ;lI

l : u

uprlln Ili,lur

tram I,nlldinl

t ; i!Mill

Id

\( u

1 i'l ,

not discussing Steinson's persona lintegrity . Trimble maintained tha tStehnson "should have conferre dwith the other political club :first . "

Liberal position was defended b yVaughan Lyon and Dave Humme lLyon queried, "What's wrong wit hthe Liberal club running a pol ltbe;nselves to measure etudeut po-litical opinion? "

Opposing groups answered tha tthe Liberal presldent 11 id nils•re':, •resented the other clubs in thathe said he was; represutlug themas well as his own club .

Liberal representative, D a v eHummel, moved that the executivepass a motion to vindicate Stein -son on a point of honor . There wereno seconders to this motion,

O

EATON'S al* Moo

t

—ea

T.a'~ /\

i etc

t'

I1'~tiw1

lal,Wf

1~ e ~'

C 1 r~ argil ~1 ~~

Iy,'>,t

r,,

ill

I\

i(/ea-

B. Heraldic Belt : Net .Hall, proven sad red .

5.95

C. Evening Belt : (lan dmade in India'letalli c(I( s ign ua velvet

11 .95

Winners with every spin of the wheel . . ,

belts that acid variety to your wardrobe (

Choose from the carnival of colours and

styles at EATON'; .

A . Cincher Belt : Mack ,red. green and navywith

shnnhited

,it' t' lffr " nt . •

1.49

.'. in belt4

F. Cowhide MoneyBelts : About luclro swide . 'Moen. navy. OA -den cheat .

P•PgBelts • Main Floo r

E . Metallic Belts: Art -Urtued capper( ' D i s hwith Indian o r Cowbo yscenes ,

D. Italian

Heraldic :I'lashin leather in rus tcolour . S.,S

a

THE UBYSSEY

Friday, February 20, 1953

HARLOT'S MILLMARK MALLMOOSE and Engineer 's Ben Guzzelwits have jumped for

the ball in yesterday 's Joker-EUS game, but apparently the ball has gone west . Harlot 's ,

sponsored by the UBC Joker 's club, winged their way to victory .

Thunderbirds Finish ScheduleMee' Gladiators And Logger s

Gladiators aren't a nice team to who looked tremendous In pre

watch. They play a tight, posses College of Puget Sound Loggers ,

lion brand of ball, concent r ating season exhibition games when they

on a tough defense and they don't racked up 12 straight wins, hav e

throw away many shots . proved they can beat everyone i nthe conference except league lea d

ing Eastern Washington .Loggers have a well balance d

team, they have only one playe runder six feet, and they have Jak t

11aberry .Joltin' Jake is about as nice a

ball player as you will see anywhere . Wherry can, and does pals'anywhere on the floor and is egood play maker as well as on 'of the top scorers In the North

west .Last reason he ranked third h'

the nation In percentage of free

throws. Last year he sank 7!) pe rcent of his gar- tosses in Confe renee ill,ly .

Jake Is barked all by ,luuutl 'playing t(sun Which ranges fro m1, 51" to 6', mm' s higher . no s p aes' ,

, .Mors,

()ther e

ntohiti

th e

Iuar n

Lit hide Sag .

Shei k

()rall i es

furl

.Islay

Lei!, li f

IiUll

11101 1 1 4 11 r .

'Pile

el' ,11

nl

11 ;I,ti111II'stel l

nItL I .

Its,, 1

lit

\1,sil,111,1

.Iasi

Birds Face Van Reps

In Final Cup Match

fireATIROS TRAVEL; Sudden Death Playoff

LEAVE FOR ISLAND

At Stadium Tomorrow

UDC's head rugby coach Albert Laithwaite is renowned i n

local tugger circles for his irrepressible ' optimism regarding hi s

boys, the Varsity Thunderbird rugger squad .It, therefore, came tam no shock . . -

when our Albert confidently pre Igridder, thrlh s{Iper er . weight and

dieted that the lairds would wallo pVancouver Ito I'M in their suddr1, bel ;hl Bears controlled nearly al l

death payoff too th ,, JluceKrhiti,, the serums and flue outs end et -

:'up, to be played iu Varsity Ste .11ectively stlti'J the I •nd thru m

alum tonim'row al'turnl,oll,

hue. Relyln„ un (he 'urtutnatk

Ilotvever, nptlmislir Alien's pre• kfekiug of the rigantlr Itleltter Yo m

('irtioos nwp sometimes suuiul Il uv 1 fheir srurlug pnurh Be'nn playe ddefeuslvc ru :;ga rare usually pretty accurate, Birds '

letting an amazing ability for estate!strictly

throug h°tit the series .

Belting his wildest prophecies .

Jokers And

Palsies Sink

Hoopsters

By MIKE MUDDLE SEughieers uui Jokers teed of t

on whet will be remembered a severything but a basketball gain (yesterday in the New Gymnasiu m

But the bruising Joker squa daided by Ilghter•thani'aIr fulsieswinged their way to a triumphan t188 .2 victory over a crestfallenEl'S crew .

A powerful Engineering tea mdressed In light fitting shorts an dloose fitting shirts , rumbled ont ,the floor .

CURVACIOUS LONG-JOHN SDressed in even' tighter fittin g

unherwear were the curveciou 'bunch of Jokers . At least they were .mupposed to be Jokers . Their of-ficial name was the harlot Globe-trackers, a tearing professiona lgir ls team .

They had the right paddies i nthe right places to help them pla yt he part .

Vivacious Whittle Lottabulg estar Narlott player, frustrated el lfaltering attempts of the EUS boy swith Per brilliant checking . dri bbring and screaming .

She ran circles around the stille rheads of the rcdshirts, a dilticu hfete in any wa r t's math book .

With the score tied et nothing -nothing In the beginning of th eHest hall', the powder puff line o fMillmark, ti1alimoose, but ('arr .and Carol Girl striedee th r oug hthe MI-1W defence !u rack 111) all' 'foal shot .

v

There 's lots of excitemen t

around the dance floor—greeting

old friends, making new ones .

Part of the fun of campus parties;

is the pause to enjoy a Coke .

It 's delicious . ., refreshing, ton:

Campus

capers

call for

Coke

'P

By ALLAN FOTHERINGHA M

UBC Thunderbirds wind up thei r

Evergreen Conference basketbal l

seasbn this weekend when the y

bake on Pacific Lutheran Uladln'. -

ors and .- College of Puget Soun d

Loggers .A big crowd Is expected as Jack

Potnfret's Birds make an attemp t

for their second win of the season .

Hest chauce should come agalns ,

the Gladiators frotn Pnrklaud I'r l

-day night .lu

their

each fur I!t, two tvlelkend mast ,

and IiI'eu'L hired the next w eek Ithey don't du a satnsfecto'y .lul l

since that 51) cabbages susses i !

Pretty handy the majority of th e '

boys in the striped shirts mal e

c'u'e they gli'd'e the nnouageln I t

WOULD BE NIC EIt would be nice if the Eve r

green Conferenc e %vet a' big etlo11g i

leagn(' to btu,* official referees o r

even It system of seeding existing

arbitrers bin, es yet that ease "

happened .But back Io PI .(', which isn' t

very nice thing to come back to

first meeting of th e

season PLC egneeked by with a

5749 win on thei r home court alm s!

with thei r awn refs . 'i'hls is e t

important . rector as some of th e

refereeing in the smeller Kee l

green centres is striety from hu e

gem .Clefs are brought in, paid $ '

the five ieams in the inter-hig h

league .

Femme SkiersToGoOnTou r

have vululte( I red to help ruae' l

PE Faculty Promotes

High Schoo.I Footbal l

UBC's Physical Education Faculty is going all out to insur e

the future of Amer i can football on the campus .

And strange to say they're not instituting scholarships fo r

UBC—they 're promoting inter high school football in Vancouve r

on a big scale .1 big pll'• t of I'It(

" :1e i

the .tvltll much or their 1(10!1 1

Kids " program is the cumber or ' ea" 'd e a l . inclulli)„ PA- of erc)y (h

Physical

Eriuration ho sie r s

w•- . .

rriplinn, helmets ours boot everytllilrt the well dressed grid

stet needs .

In addition -soother kindly, hil t

111IItuthly efficient gest(II'e on till '

pert of the ;'Lys I ;d Schubl i' the

number el' referees and nlI'iria l

which Il ;n, item run hauls fur t h

htlel'•ali tt

uueS ,

And som e illu s trious msml)or s

of this ye,i ' . ; 'I'litoid Third mafios i

squads here heel retina; the pre p

senile

'r1'edue s dny'

11

I' ;zzy

flit ',

brui ;iug Into lelsvt \'ere hlu n

ine; Ihr fulls<Ilr, for the Lord L'y'e ; ;

Kit .,olona gene s

end th

1

stadiu m

Jelly ,ruderseu can also he gavel ,

ttmeh of the credit .--he is the ma n

who has 'w e ll supplying the n ee "

By RAY LEGER E

Varsity :(rls Ski Team is nil' I . )

Sletens Pees, 'tl'ashen Ual In ami d

to I'll(' ski Itllne The tV'uuten' -

luterrnllegi itr Ski Aleel gar- u u

dually

lad v

Walls

Iwllr

I0a111 .

011 1 ,1 .10 ;2, 11

1 1 , ; 1 4, 1 f . . wheel s

cnnlprting (1I Isle llnen, :l creel .

gre .lt lee tu .ulk you to

thin

I'nnatl ;I's third 'n e st .Ikon, S tnutn' it ufftc(als .

L(t;iIte

ul

L'Intff .

vkill

h i ,

(110

lo

1 0 1,

A, .111, j or ,

players .

I I11(' of IitrrE' yoiineet gloy rs I+ '

'Jenny

L'illin :~, e

•t'In"

redlu . 0

alai is all

111liaiince .

.an pup te e n' 111 from outside, the e

drive el for a lavnp when I,i (Ilse ;

tries to ;; ;card him closely .

llucuin ol) tuese two are tore '

0101O0s• IWn aophnmM'es rod se v

'u freshmen who can make thin e

'whiny 'ntere sting for the Bird s

JAKE IS REAL JAK E

Th e second place teen) in lhe'l

Evergreen circuit comae to towe l

_Uurdey uie;ht 'mil they hying one

of the fin est pl'tyers in the North -

west witst thine

man steams, th e

They're a geed rebound club

and beat Birds last time by,ex •culling in that department .

Coach Mary M4arsnmen can be

counted on to have a couple of

big football players on th e

boards with a pair of greased

lightning forwards up front .

Big Glen Huffman will be th e

man to watch tonight +at the gym .

At 203 pounds, Fluff . sun is a ha r

clan to move out of the buck e

and he has a good one-hand sho t

The only senior en the stilted , huf fyounger PI . (

inter-lnit;'h

lesaitull

le :tslII '1thsinesilay .

'''it's

,I

si nrnuWu't run Ihr" leieele vie s el l Phys Ed 1 who edged out VOC1110111111 Ih,

~'n tlu'I' ;Il sills ‘\

it . I't

to cep fleet place in the char -(

its!

from

I'll+'

nl'lira,'

II'arlea .

~ and I , t ,,

F u 1 I I 'IIIII' ,A Iii,

Ref rudiments

w e r e

,n ,r'I•t'I'r1 lI, wind up the meet fo r

lit', \Sal ,

ard to };nod f,dvlull .I r by

ti e

nl(i•Ie ;l ct l l , ,

,I I, Ile

',I„ ! , I

as twin ,

II I

Inn l's

The

Sport

Scene

INTRAMURAL RESULTS

50-Yd. Freestyle: McInnes ,

26 .1; Seymour, 28 .6; Brodie,

28.9 .

50-Yd . Breastroke: Thorne

39.4 ; Goldie 40 .4 ; Burley 42 .3 .

50-Yd. Backstroke: Lee 36.0 ;

Letson 37 .5; Smith 46 .1 .

150-Yd. Medley Relay: Zeta

Psi 1.55 :2: Kappa Sig 2 .09 :2 ;

Newman Club 2 .11 :5 .

200-Yd. Freestyle: Zeta Ps i

A 1 .52 :3; Zeta Psi B, Kappa Sig .

Individual Medley: Lee 50 .6 ;

Goldie 1 .6 :05 .

Zeta Psi won meet with a

total of 33 points . Kappa Sig

second with 11 points; Dekes

third with 5 points .

Jf-

On Wednesday, Feb . 11 some

75 girls gathered in the wom-

en 's gym to take part in the an -

nual intramural indoor trac k

meet, Health 's-a-Pnppin. In-

cluded on the program wer e

several games to introduce the

girls to one another, followed

by relays and "balloon" volley -

hall . Congratulations go t o

nr t IllGerry Legge who amassed the

,Bitted i largest number of points for M -

e , di vid ual

participation,

and

Il

This weekend Varsity will trav-el to Powell River for an ex-hibition game with the interio rso :cer team. Dick Matthews an dBud Frederickson will not beable to masse the trip but th eteam should undoubtedly giv ea good account of themselves .Tne team will be leaving on Sat .

urday at 12:30 (noon) and al lplayers are requested to be atthe Gulf Lines dock before 12 :00 .The dock is situated at the tootof Nicola .

February Clearance o f

Skiing Equipment

TRIXYLO SKISReg . $155 .00

now $49.75

ULVSETH SKISReg. $2.00 ' now $41 .00

MEWS SKI PANTSReg . $13 .50 now $14.9 5

FIBRE GLASS SKI POLESSpecial $8.9 5Many other items on sal e

Waxes, mitts, etc ,

Nova. swim

goal

4451 W. 10th Ave, AL. 1414

tubbornl ,yI mined .

SECOND TROPHY ?Given good ground condition :

Birds do indeed look like a cinc hto romp assay with their secon dtrophy . Birds have already adde dthe Miller (!tip awarded to the to nlocal rugger club to their troph ycabinet .

Looking ahead to the Culitorni' Igames, Birds are given an extreme-ly good chance of regaining ti tWorld Cup held by the Universit yof California {,olden Bears for th egust two seasons ,

This year's edition of the lairds 'has proved especially (' ;Ipubh .

Bird's only absenteeism lento srow' will be break fore ard ' , ran k(lower still crippled by torn angl eligaments . Jr lairds hit top fors . 'they could easily ov erwhelm th e

defensive

VIII1caIlV '

RICHTER GON EIn the four-game series last yea r

Birds won one and dropped thee (to a squad of six-foot, two hundreipounders, led by AILAmerica nes.

UNUS

V •

MGMice li ,iiei.red bade• n(et&Indudinq

fedora, NAM

COCA=COLA LTD.'Cd

,nou iov you& motet

/ BONUS

MEAT SPREADSPACKED WITH VALU EPROCESSED WITH CAR E

Open a can of Bonus Spread . . ,see howhilly peeked It is! No trace or fatt ywaste on tap . . . I'.III rich flavor through -out! All Bones Spreadr; are prepare dfrom Government suspected ingredient sin spotless kitchens . Every process i srigidly controlled and strictly super -

vised .Ham & Chicken Sprea d

Devilled Ham

Chicken Sprea dTurkey Salad Spread

Beef & Chicken Sprea d

(rrt'I'wn.11,e;., 1 1 11 II I e 1 ' I10 I

k