4
TIlE UI YSSZ Y VOULME XXXV VANCOUVER, B .C .,THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 1953 PRICE 5c ; No. 5 3 UBC Claims Blood Trophy Wi n r Newspape r Dangerou s To College s HALIFAX — (Special)—Dr . A . E. Kerr, president of Dal- housie University, declared/tha t most student newspapers ar e "poor advertisements" fo r their universities. In a letter to student counci l 4 president, George A . Kerr, he asked that' students raise th e standards of the twice-weekl y Gazette, Canada ' s oldest col- TOTEM M ANNOUNC E r OUEENAT WITS SNO W lege newspaper. "The university recognizes th e freedom which belongs to the Ga- zette as an otficl'al student publi- cation and carefully refrains fro m infringing on its proper rights, " said Dr . Kerr In a lettdr addresse d tp Council President George A . Kerr and published its, the Ga- zette . The university and counci l presidents are not related . DISCRETIO N "I invite you and your associate s to consider whether the time ha s now' come for you to essay th e s'egovery t certain standards which too many college paper s have lost sight of In recent years . Senior teachers have more tha n once expressed to me thir con ern over the deterioration of th e Gazette within their own memory . Alumni of exemplary devotion t o their alma meter have conIesve d the same anxiety . It would not pu t them at ease to be told, as on e student told me, that the Gazett e still compares favorably with th e publications of other prominen t seats of learning In our country .' I)r . I .azire, staff member of th e This may very well be the case verduu I'rntestant hospita l for quite frankly most student refused admission to the Stain s Papers are poor advertisements for where he planned to take a post their universities and the henefit :t Lion at a hospital in Philadelphia . of higher education In general . SUSPECTED RE D 'I'ii official Consulate enaotnlce UNWORTHY tuent said that the action was a "There was u day when the Ga . "confiden t ial matter : . and coul d zette was eminently worthy of Dal• not he discussed with the press . !tousle," concluded Dr . Kerr, "and Later a consulate official was r e I see no reason why the present ported as stating that tile excit e generation of students, for wham ; slots wits prompted because of lie . I have the most cordial admiration, zure's extensive travels behind th e should not nuke it so again ." Iron Curtain, Feast Ovalle, Warsa w and Pra,gile . Laizere had been ttppointerl b y N1"('CS to attend it meeting of th e (otitnttlul .st dominated Internatio n at Union of Students in Prague I n the surnau'r of 1951) ; he attende d a second II'S !needle; •1liitalm" in 195I . ( Continued on Page 3 ) SEE LAZUR E East Studie s Canadian t Futur e HAMILTON (Special) - ..- Th e Most thorough long-range study o f Canada's future ever undertaken , bringing together some of the hes t mild,' in Canada to project Omit - died life during the next tdi years , iit no weeder way at McMaste r t•iiivel'slty' . This was revealed yesterday b y Dr . C . P . Gilmour, president of th e university and chairman (if th o 'donning committee of the ambi - tious protect . collodion cllm . parry will he fifty years old in July , 19 :ie and is marking Its anulverser y by sponsoring the study, Or . Gil- mour sold . Theis effort to project the pruh . aide future development o t en en . tire within for a hall' a century ! s tl . genuinely new type of ador n hn' Ire . Gilmour explained . The papers and attendant discu s s l o e will eventually he pnhli~hei l In book form . Wide distrilmth) n is likened throughout Canada an d re foreign countries, where interes t in Pala(e ' s future development I ; et ili ,,•4i pitch , Totem queen for 1963 has bee n narrowed down to a field of three . . They are : Molly Lou Shaw , 1st Arts ; Joyce Rohrer, 2n d Arts and Jan Dougherty, le t Home Economics . The winner has already bee n selected by the staff • of th e Totem and will be announce d at the Womens' Undergraduat e Society Fashion Show at noo n today In the Brock, ' Oregon Prof Seek s NFCUS Protests U S Expulsion Of 'azur e National Federation of Canadian University Students ha s lodged an official protest with the US Consulate in' Montrea l regarding the recent exclusion of Dr . Denis Lazure from the , States . 'Protest said that the refusal of entry indicated a slight o n the Canadian university student body and more especially o n NFCUS foreign policy by the US . OAKALLA TOU R Oakalla Priso n By MYRA GREE N "Shocking" and "deplorable " were among the adjectives use d Iby UBC criminology student s who toured Oakalla Prison far m lust week . Led by Dr . C . W . Topping , university sociology professor , over 60 students from the crim- inology class peered in cells an d visit was sponsored by Radsoc . behind the Betas Wi n Song Fes t Once A g ai n Fright sororities and twelve f'a ternitie4 sang for an audience of . ov . Wallac e 1300 which tilled the Brock Loung e and the balconies as well as th e hall outside at the unmet( "Song To Atten d Feat . " Beta Theta I'i won tine rap wit h Chi Gamma Delta losing by one Yearly Parad e point and Sigma Chi coming thir d lit the fr aternities section Ilill'I i,t e tiovernor Clarenc e I .tunvreuce directed the victorious will present eonuaissious and de - liver the address at the third au - sorority uual Tri•Service Parade to be hel d u s(Platts note ‘vith the them e "T r iers Mercies On," a 1'011011 O r ;tines from peat rest they soo n started the crowd leaghiug as they ' poked fun at sornrittrs and othe r fraternities and left site ing "Glor y glory Suciel Credit , . , and Tilly Park Pavilion Picke d For Pre-Med ' s Pran g \led 1IJ11e Illa,011 the Stan - If y Path Pavilion Ior their Annua l I're\I e td g all to he held ou Min'ch Montreal Defeate d By last 'Day Spur t By ALLAN FOTHERINGHA M University of B .C . has claimed the Canadian Intercollegiat e 3lood Drive . The announcement came as a surprise after officials checke d ever the handicap ratings and found that UBC was tops in th e race for the blood title with 79 percent of their quota, a total o f 2,972 pints . Although the drive is not officially over, University o f Montreal, UBC's nearest competitors, have finished their driv e with 72 .6 percent, and nearly all of the 14 remaining universitie s have completed their appeal for donations . March 1 Is the deadline tor e ompletion of university blood ' Tween Clasti s ;rives . LAST DAY WI N UBC's tremendous victory cam e as a result of students respondin g to an appeal for donations on th e last day of the drive Tuesday. Still 200 pints ' behind Montreal , Forestry students, sponsors of th e :drive, made a desperate last mi n -ute appeal for donations . Bot h ', Forestry and Engineering student s bodily dragged donors to the Arm . (metes . Professors voluntarily cancelle d classes and led students to the Red Cross clinic . The result was that the larges t single day total of donors, 41 7 students, gave a pint of blood an d virtually cinched the Corpuscl e Cup for UBC . RECORD LAST YEAR ' Last spring 54 .5 percent of th e student body gave blood to se t what was then a world's recor d for collegiate blood donations . This drive attracted 55 .3 percen t of the enrollment . Reason teat the announcemen t of UBC's victory came as a sur- prise was that to date the un1 - versity's totals had been expresse d . as a percentage of the enrollment . Rules state that all 16 participatin g schools are rated on a handica p basis on the laws of probability . 'LARGER UNIVERSIT Y As one of the larger universities , UBC received a larger rating . Uni- versity of Montreal racked up a toed of 55 percent of their 263 5 enrollment . t'Il(''s ee, ;i percentag e was tigured on the enrollment o f 5175 . Acadia University complete d their drive with a Ii'' percent tota l I but since they have less than 60 0 studeuts they were burred fro m !the Intercollegiate drive . SOCIAL WORK WIN S In inter-faculty competition, So - Work won the Forestry Cu p when 1t0 percent of their enrol - 1 meet trade the trip to the Arm- ouries. Forestry students piled u p l l l percent of their enrollment bu t graciously withdrew as they wer e sponsoring the drive . Other universities which hav e reported so far . are : Dalhousie 70, 1 Queens , 50 .5 percent ; McGill, 35 . 3 percent ; Toronto, t6L5 percent . ( Continued on Page 3 ) SEE BLOOD PREMED UNDERGRADS wil l bring Ih• . L . A, Patterson to (If4cus s General Practice vs, Specializatio n at noon tomorrow in Physics 200 . 0 MASTHEAD EDITORS will mee t who gnar•,in the Pub offices tomorrow e t noon fol . the election of next sea . lion's F;ditor•In•('lllef . EUROPEAN FL 00D DRIV E CONTRIBUTIONS WANTE D Flood Drive Committee reported yesterday that onl y $600 of the $1,000 objective has been reached . Students, campus clubs and organizations are asked t o send their contributions to Mr . White in the Accountant' s office in the Administration building . "Let's not have the repeat of the blood drive," sai d Jane Banficld, co-chairman of the Committee, "We wan t full support, " Cheques should be made payable to "European Floo d Relief Fund" . GRIMACING WITH PAIN is Jack Cullen, who was in Brock Lounge yesterday doing hi s CKNW broadcast to publicize the Flood Relief Drive . Trying to fit a Dutch wooden sho e onto the disc jockey are two "Dutch " girls, Irma Deering and Joan Mclvor . The two girl s passed the shoe around the room to collect nearly 12 dollars for the flood fund . Cullen's --Ubyssey Photo by Hux Lovel y Denounced talked with Inmates in thei r quest for information on priso n conditions . Warned by Warden ilug h Christie, a former UBC lectur- er tuft "factllties are terribly in- adequate" students were never- theless amazed to discover onl y nine showers for 893 men an d pools of dirty water seeping in the kitchen floor of the prison . The eager class was divide d Into three groups to visit th e main prison, the young offender s unit and the womens unit . Students were impressed wit h the facilities in the womens an d young offenders quarters and ap- plauded the arts and crafts pro- gram being conducted in the T B ward . But with their knowledge o f criminology treatment theorie s and ideal practices, collegiate s foiled it difficult to forget suc h tltiags as the damp, porous kit- chen floor and the out-dated ce - ItRot work table in that t roo p. ' . It's a startling and typicatex - hibitiun of government internee . Igenleut, " as,erted artsut ;ul Te d Harp who criticized the lack o f Iecreationel and treatment facil- ities . Coed Shirley Smith complain- ed that the stain prison "is gre y and depressing and . . , It smells, " Christie told students that th e nucleus of a treatment team ha d been formed and that iu•servic e b r aining for star' was takin g ( Continued on Page 3 ) SEE PRISON Wallac e Betas , Alpha (lemma Dells UBC Studen t For European Tou r .\ [Mt I'Sity of Oregon I'rol ' essut ' has naked for a student repre ;elita• I Ilne s five from this Ililiver'slly lAIl l tta ilm, h, inteiesled iii Iiahillg ; .' Graduate, Lecture r tutu . nl' I .;nrnpe ttii ; sulunier . pas' a i Ile . I' ;dnu ;it'd Bqurhortssnn, assn . To Give Recital IsLnul . riots prnl'e ;tier al' Tun nu ;'s al l :Aa t'x-,lud r ul and a lecturer wil l. lse l ' of O . orgauliiil a Ise cunibine Cheats et 8 :15 pat . Inds } Innalll rite . ui Vineland, I'rluce, in Ilse \uditnrinnr t" gltc a Ire e ady, Uernllulc, .Am ;lhii . seilam" recital to UUleuts rind the gi n Lnul, elilailen and IIoIIIntm1 era! public , \ie111I)elu nl Iii . loin' eel! Ienvi' They are elude rte Tcro) lam a Nt'w \IIIk Jane Y'n ,mini vl I Ii nil the v1oliu curd Icrhnrr .\iax I', d 'il ill Lr II tyre ,Ilio,inl the v :ards nu Tim phulo . 1eu ;h liner "Is Ilras<n " 'I T I)I ( ;tai, war turn in V ' nacnini r tl ill end in Nee 'lurk Amoist ,Ilee studied the violin limier Dou g It Milt ;,t :,t 1, oil \'' 1• n1, Ins tileivart . In I'I4~ is he VI il n ; (10 1 Iii Neu Aurh I 'II ,11 , 1 . ol the 01 .1 1 Areyuue tiler I, d - .holed \vrile tiy'Inpluut Orrhe'tra wet VAern loi n Il, ;1l ;1a,ti,,"u at lief,"n Stale eel nr, as n ,ulut .tl ilt Ilse l lilll (, l Marching (Jo, ,, Jes gn Iii the I're .Aled hu e !Well 110111' eel( , T r ine' dress i, ali'ul i I ; I'ulit,Ilt Jim I)raper, Al, . leti7A ' I,,r l ;ihic resery Rion ;, her ticke t \Vhenithe Hon . Clarenc e RCAF aircraft from Se a an y placed first, I'oliowed by Delta tomorrow . Offer Scholarship s Ilaautla and ( ;anima Phi Leta . Over 2011 students in the ('OTC , Ilighllght of tire, evening was RI'S and IrNTI) will receive com e Applications are now availabl e provided by Zeta I'sL tie,iiliii on missions ai the parade to he held i far scholarships to German iuu l in the Armouries . ,I.1ptutese universities , It(' :AI' 'l'uctlral (Troup Band from : Perlis stay' he picked u p Edmonton will he in altendaitce,A1'15 office : deadline to t at the panels, while the lt(!N band : fug them is march I . from hsiuimalt will supply the They are open for (lilt ye :n' tit ; uut,h for the hall to he heir) at ally ,indent w'Iro his at least se c II,AI('S I)iseovery iii the eveviing, on' 'i'1l' standing an d Wallace duties to return to (IBC for a t German, Japanes e Universities et the ' return Fashions Show n In Brock Today WWI Fashion Show will well . come men at 25c each when it i s held in Brock Hall today, noon . . . . NOMINATIONS for executive o f next year's Commerce Undergrad uete Society may now be turne d in to Marg Roes in the Commerc e Office, or to retut'ping officer Bil l Salter. VARSITY CHRISTIAN FE LLOWSHIP will hold an open meet ' Ing at noon today in Physics 200 . Speaker will be Ian Rennie, staf f secretary of predrie universities , who will speak on the "Relevanc e of the Death of Christ . " MUSIC APPRECIATION CUM will present a free recital by Tlw o Genie and Max Edwards in th e auditorium this evening at 8 :15. PHYSICS SOCIETY talk toda y will feature Dr . A . M . Crodko r speaking on "Topics in Aetropltys . ice at noon In P . 210 . 4 t ENTRY FORMS and informatio n about the UBC open pair bridg e championship are avail'able at th e cashier's wicket in the AMS of . flee . Deadline for entries is th e F relay . MOCK PARLIAMENT will te a tore a Pro-Con introduced bill' t o remove control of television an d radio from CBC . Meet will be hel d noon, today, In Arts 100. 4 EX•MAGEERS' dance will b e held In Magee Auditorium, 8 :30 to 12 p.m . Friday . Admission wil l be $1 per couple . sF J b GYM CLUB meeting Fill discus s pending displays and competition s In Mon's Gym, 210, Friday noon . DANCE CLUB will ,resent a noon hour show tomorrow In th e Auditorium . Admission will be l 0 tents . DANCE CLUB will have a semi . ferule! dunce entitled "M' .rin e Magic" In the Brock lion- nin e to one tomorrow . Everybody Is In- vited , salves at the airport from V'Iy• least alit store y'ear's study , tuna, he will be 'greeted by a t'ly . I')'llii, ; IIii ;i l'm' l il O . ! . n ll . 1

TIlE UI YSSZY - University of British Columbia Library · TIlE UI YSSZY VOULME XXXV VANCOUVER, ... Home Economics. The winner has already been ... 1 meet trade the trip to the Arm-

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TIlE UI YSSZYVOULME XXXV

VANCOUVER, B .C.,THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 1953

PRICE 5c ; No. 53

UBC Claims Blood Trophy Win

r

Newspape rDangerousTo Colleges

HALIFAX — (Special)—Dr .A. E. Kerr, president of Dal-housie University, declared/tha tmost student newspapers are"poor advertisements" fortheir universities.

In a letter to student council4 president, George A . Kerr, he

asked that' students raise thestandards of the twice-weekl yGazette, Canada 's oldest col-

TOTEM M ANNOUNCErOUEENAT WITS SNO W

lege newspaper."The university recognizes the

freedom which belongs to the Ga-

zette as an otficl'al student publi-cation and carefully refrains fro m

infringing on its proper rights, "

said Dr . Kerr In a lettdr addresse d

tp Council President George A .

Kerr and published its, the Ga-

zette. The university and counci l

presidents are not related .

DISCRETION"I invite you and your associates

to consider whether the time has

now' come for you to essay thes'egovery t certain standards

which too many college paper s

have lost sight of In recent years .

Senior teachers have more tha n

once expressed to me thir con •ern over the deterioration of th e

Gazette within their own memory .

Alumni of exemplary devotion t o

their alma meter have conIesve d

the same anxiety . It would not put

them at ease to be told, as on e

student told me, that the Gazett e

still compares favorably with th e

publications of other prominent

seats of learning In our country .'

I)r . I .azire, staff member of th e

This may very well be the case verduu I'rntestant hospita l

for quite frankly most student refused admission to the Stain s

Papers are poor advertisements for where he planned to take a post •

their universities and the henefit :t Lion at a hospital in Philadelphia .

of higher education In general .

SUSPECTED RE D'I'ii official Consulate enaotnlce •

UNWORTHY

tuent said that the action was a

"There was u day when the Ga . "confident ial matter : . and could

zette was eminently worthy of Dal• not he discussed with the press .

!tousle," concluded Dr . Kerr, "and Later a consulate official was r e

I see no reason why the present ported as stating that tile excit e

generation of students, for wham ; slots wits prompted because of lie .I have the most cordial admiration, zure's extensive travels behind th e

should not nuke it so again." Iron Curtain, Feast Ovalle, Warsa w

and Pra,gile .Laizere had been ttppointerl b y

N1"('CS to attend it meeting of th e

(otitnttlul .st dominated Internatio n

at Union of Students in Prague I n

the surnau'r of 1951) ; he attende d

a second II'S !needle;•1liitalm" in 195I .

( Continued on Page 3 )

SEE LAZUR E

East StudiesCanadian t

FutureHAMILTON (Special) - ..- Th e

Most thorough long-range study o fCanada's future ever undertaken ,bringing together some of the hes tmild,' in Canada to project Omit-died life during the next tdi years ,

iit no weeder way at McMastert•iiivel'slty' .

This was revealed yesterday b y

Dr . C . P. Gilmour, president of the

university and chairman (if th o'donning committee of the ambi -tious protect .

collodion

cllm .

parry will he fifty years old in July ,19 :ie and is marking Its anulverser yby sponsoring the study, Or . Gil-

mour sold .Theis effort to project the pruh .

aide future development o t en en .tire within for a hall' a century ! stl . genuinely new type of ador nhn'

Ire . Gilmour explained .The papers and attendant discus

s l o e will eventually he pnhli~hei lIn book form . Wide distrilmth) nis likened throughout Canada andre foreign countries, where interes t

in Pala(e 's future development I ;et ili ,,•4i

pitch ,

Totem queen for 1963 has bee nnarrowed down to a field ofthree . .

They are : Molly Lou Shaw ,1st Arts ; Joyce Rohrer, 2ndArts and Jan Dougherty, le tHome Economics .

The winner has already bee nselected by the staff • of th eTotem and will be announce dat the Womens' UndergraduateSociety Fashion Show at noo ntoday In the Brock,

'

Oregon Prof Seeks

NFCUS Protests US

Expulsion Of 'azure

National Federation of Canadian University Students ha s

lodged an official protest with the US Consulate in' Montrea l

regarding the recent exclusion of Dr. Denis Lazure from the ,

States .

'Protest said that the refusal of entry indicated a slight on

the Canadian university student body and more especially o n

NFCUS foreign policy by the US .

OAKALLA TOU R

Oakalla PrisonBy MYRA GREE N

"Shocking" and "deplorable"were among the adjectives use dIby UBC criminology studentswho toured Oakalla Prison far mlust week .

Led by Dr. C. W. Topping ,university sociology professor ,

over 60 students from the crim-inology class peered in cells an d

visit was sponsored by Radsoc .

behind the

Betas Win

Song Fest

Once Again

Fright sororities and twelve f'a •

ternitie4 sang for an audience of .

ov. Wallace1300 which tilled the Brock Loung e

and the balconies as well as th ehall outside at the unmet( "Song

To AttendFeat . "Beta Theta I'i won tine rap wit h

Chi Gamma Delta losing by oneYearly Parade

point and Sigma Chi coming thir d

lit the fr aternities section

Ilill'I

i,t etiovernor

Clarenc e

I .tunvreuce directed the victorious will present eonuaissious and de -liver the address at the third au-

sorority uual Tri•Service Parade to be hel d

u s(Platts note ‘vith the them e

"T r iers Mercies On," a 1'011011 O r

;tines from peat rest they soonstarted the crowd leaghiug as they'poked fun at sornrittrs and othe rfraternities and left site ing "Glor y

glory Suciel Credit , . , and Tilly

Park Pavilion Picked

For Pre-Med 's Prang\led 1IJ11e Illa,011 the Stan -

If y Path Pavilion Ior their Annua lI're\I e td gall to he held ou Min'ch

Montreal Defeated

By last 'Day Spurt

By ALLAN FOTHERINGHA M

University of B.C . has claimed the Canadian Intercollegiat e

3lood Drive .

The announcement came as a surprise after officials checked

ever the handicap ratings and found that UBC was tops in the

race for the blood title with 79 percent of their quota, a total o f

2,972 pints .

Although the drive is not officially over, University of

Montreal, UBC's nearest competitors, have finished their driv e

with 72.6 percent, and nearly all of the 14 remaining universitie s

have completed their appeal for donations.March 1 Is the deadline tor e

ompletion of university blood 'Tween Clastis;rives .LAST DAY WI N

UBC's tremendous victory cam eas a result of students respondin gto an appeal for donations on thelast day of the drive Tuesday.

Still 200 pints ' behind Montreal ,

Forestry students, sponsors of th e

:drive, made a desperate last min

-ute appeal for donations . Both', Forestry and Engineering student s

bodily dragged donors to the Arm .

(metes .Professors voluntarily cancelle d

classes and led students to theRed Cross clinic .

The result was that the larges t

single day total of donors, 41 7

students, gave a pint of blood an dvirtually cinched the Corpuscl e

Cup for UBC .

RECORD LAST YEAR 'Last spring 54 .5 percent of the

student body gave blood to se t

what was then a world's recordfor collegiate blood donations .This drive attracted 55 .3 percen t

of the enrollment.Reason teat the announcemen t

of UBC's victory came as a sur-prise was that to date the un1 -

versity's totals had been expresse d

. as a percentage of the enrollment .

Rules state that all 16 participatin gschools are rated on a handica pbasis on the laws of probability .

'LARGER UNIVERSIT YAs one of the larger universities ,

UBC received a larger rating . Uni-

versity of Montreal racked up atoed of 55 percent of their 263 5

enrollment. t'Il(''s ee, ;i percentag e

was tigured on the enrollment o f

5175 .Acadia University complete d

their drive with a Ii'' percent tota lI but since they have less than 60 0

studeuts they were burred fro m!the Intercollegiate drive .

SOCIAL WORK WIN SIn inter-faculty competition, So -

Work won the Forestry Cupwhen 1t0 percent of their enrol -

1 meet trade the trip to the Arm-ouries. Forestry students piled upl l l percent of their enrollment bu t

graciously withdrew as they weresponsoring the drive .

Other universities which hav ereported so far . are : Dalhousie 70, 1

Queens , 50 .5 percent ; McGill, 35 . 3percent ; Toronto, t6L5 percent .

( Continued on Page 3 )

SEE BLOOD

PREMED UNDERGRADS wil lbring Ih• . L. A, Patterson to (If4cussGeneral Practice vs, Specializatio nat noon tomorrow in Physics 200 .

0

MASTHEAD EDITORS will mee twho gnar•,in the Pub offices tomorrow e t

noon fol . the election of next sea .lion's

F;ditor•In•('lllef .

EUROPEAN FL 00D DRIVE

CONTRIBUTIONS WANTED

Flood Drive Committee reported yesterday that onl y

$600 of the $1,000 objective has been reached .

Students, campus clubs and organizations are asked t o

send their contributions to Mr . White in the Accountant's

office in the Administration building .

"Let's not have the repeat of the blood drive," said

Jane Banficld, co-chairman of the Committee, "We wan t

full support, "

Cheques should be made payable to "European Flood

Relief Fund" .

GRIMACING WITH PAIN is Jack Cullen, who was in Brock Lounge yesterday doing hisCKNW broadcast to publicize the Flood Relief Drive . Trying to fit a Dutch wooden sho eonto the disc jockey are two "Dutch " girls, Irma Deering and Joan Mclvor. The two girlspassed the shoe around the room to collect nearly 12 dollars for the flood fund. Cullen's

--Ubyssey Photo by Hux Lovel y

Denounced

talked with Inmates in thei rquest for information on priso nconditions .

Warned by Warden ilughChristie, a former UBC lectur-er tuft "factllties are terribly in-adequate" students were never-theless amazed to discover onl ynine showers for 893 men an dpools of dirty water seeping in

the kitchen floor of the prison .

The eager class was dividedInto three groups to visit themain prison, the young offenders

unit and the womens unit.Students were impressed wit h

the facilities in the womens andyoung offenders quarters and ap-plauded the arts and crafts pro-gram being conducted in the T Bward .

But with their knowledge ofcriminology treatment theorie sand ideal practices, collegiate sfoiled it difficult to forget suchtltiags as the damp, porous kit-chen floor and the out-dated ce -ItRot work table in that t roo p .

' . It's a startling and typicatex -hibitiun of government internee .Igenleut, " as,erted artsut ;ul Te dHarp who criticized the lack o fIecreationel and treatment facil-ities .

Coed Shirley Smith complain-ed that the stain prison "is gre yand depressing and . . , It smells, "

Christie told students that thenucleus of a treatment team ha dbeen formed and that iu•servic eb r aining for star' was taking

( Continued on Page 3 )

SEE PRISON

Wallac e

Betas ,Alpha (lemma Dells

UBC Student

For European Tour

.\ [Mt I'Sity of Oregon I'rol' essut '

has naked for a student repre ;elita• I Ilne s

five

from

this

Ililiver'slly

lAIl l

tta ilm, h, inteiesled iii Iiahillg; .' Graduate, Lecture rtutu . nl' I .;nrnpe ttii ; sulunier .

pas'

a i

Ile . I' ;dnu ;it'd Bqurhortssnn, assn . To Give

Recital

IsLnul .

riots

prnl'e ;tier

al'

Tun nu ;'s

al l

:Aa t'x-,lud rul and a lecturer wil l.

lse l ' of O .

orgauliiil

a Ise

cunibine Cheats et 8 :15 pat . Inds }Innalll

rite . ui

Vineland,

I'rluce,

in Ilse

\uditnrinnr t" gltc a Ire e

ady, Uernllulc, .Am ;lhii . seilam" recital to

UUleuts rind the gi n

Lnul,

elilailen

and

IIoIIIntm1

era! public ,

\ie111I)elu nl Iii . loin' eel! Ienvi'

They are elude rte Tcro) lam aNt'w \IIIk Jane Y'n

,mini

vl I

Ii

nil the v1oliu curd Icrhnrr .\iax I', d'il

ill

Lr

II tyre

,Ilio,inl

the v:ards nu Tim phulo .1eu ;h

liner "Is

Ilras<n " 'I T I)I

( ;tai,

war turn

in

V ' nacnini rtl ill end in Nee 'lurk Amoist

,Ilee studied the violin limier Dou g

It Milt ;,t :,t

1, oil \''

1• n1,

Ins tileivart . In I'I4~ is he VI i l n ; (10 1

Iii Neu

Aurh

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ol

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Areyuue tiler I, d -.holed \vrile tiy'Inpluut Orrhe'tra wet VAern loi nIl, ;1l ;1a,ti,,"u at

lief,"n

Stale eel

nr, as n ,ulut .tl

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Marching (Jo, ,,

Jes gn Iii the I're .Aled hu e!Well 110111'

eel( ,T r ine'

dress

i,

ali'ul i

I ;I'ulit,Ilt

Jim

I)raper, Al, .

leti7A 'I,,r l ;ihic resery Rion ;,

her ticke t

\Vhenithe Hon . Clarence

RCAF aircraft from Sea

any

placed first, I'oliowed by Delta tomorrow .

Offer Scholarship sIlaautla and ( ;anima Phi Leta .

Over 2011 students in the ('OTC ,Ilighllght of tire, evening was RI'S and IrNTI) will receive com e

Applications are now availabl e

provided by Zeta I'sL tie,iiliii on missions ai the parade to he held i far scholarships to German iuul

in the Armouries .

,I.1ptutese universities ,

It(' :AI' 'l'uctlral (Troup Band from :

Perlis stay' he picked up

Edmonton will he in altendaitce,A1'15 office : deadline to t

at the panels, while the lt(!N band : fug them is march I .

from hsiuimalt will supply the They are open for (lilt ye:n' tit ;uut,h for the hall to he heir) at ally ,indent w'Iro his at least se c

II,AI('S I)iseovery iii the eveviing, on' 'i'1l' standing an dWallace duties to return to (IBC for a t

German, Japanese

Universities

et the 'return

Fashions Shown

In Brock Today

WWI Fashion Show will well.come men at 25c each when it i sheld in Brock Hall today, noon .

• . .

.

NOMINATIONS for executive o fnext year's Commerce Undergrad •uete Society may now be turne din to Marg Roes in the Commerc eOffice, or to retut'ping officer Bil lSalter.

VARSITY CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP will hold an open meet '

Ing at noon today in Physics 200 .Speaker will be Ian Rennie, staf fsecretary of predrie universities,who will speak on the "Relevanceof the Death of Christ . "

MUSIC APPRECIATION CUMwill present a free recital by Tlw oGenie and Max Edwards in th eauditorium this evening at 8 :15.

PHYSICS SOCIETY talk toda ywill feature Dr. A. M. Crodkorspeaking on "Topics in Aetropltys.ice at noon In P . 210 .

4t

ENTRY FORMS and informationabout the UBC open pair bridgechampionship are avail'able at th ecashier's wicket in the AMS of .flee . Deadline for entries is th eF relay .

MOCK PARLIAMENT will teatore a Pro-Con introduced bill' t oremove control of television an dradio from CBC . Meet will be heldnoon, today, In Arts 100.

4

EX•MAGEERS' dance will b eheld In Magee Auditorium, 8 :30to 12 p.m. Friday . Admission wil lbe $1 per couple .

sF Jb

GYM CLUB meeting Fill discus spending displays and competitionsIn Mon's Gym, 210, Friday noon .

DANCE CLUB will ,resent anoon hour show tomorrow In th eAuditorium. Admission will be l 0tents .

DANCE CLUB will have a semi .ferule! dunce entitled "M'.rineMagic" In the Brock lion- nin eto one tomorrow. Everybody Is In-vited ,

salves at the airport from V'Iy• least alit store y'ear's study ,

tuna, he will be 'greeted by a t'ly .

I')'llii, ;

IIii ;i

l'm'

l

il

O . ! . n ll .

1

Page 2

THE UEYSSEY

Thursday, February 26,195,

THZ UBYSSEY

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

Who ControlsThe action of the Senate in rescinding thei r

freshman eligibility ruling has been heraldedas a worthwhile step toward student auton-omy. Now that the freshman ruling on ath-letics is to become part of the constitution o fthe Men's Athletic Directorate rather thana xuling by the Senate, the principle of stu-dent control of student affairs has been up-held.

Under the Ostrom plan the supervision ofathletics on campus is under the joint faculty -student administration of the Men's Athleti cCommittee. This control is, however, moredesirable than a ruling by the Senate whic hthe students had no part in formulating .

The principle of student autonomy in this -

matter has been reaffirmed, but as far aschanges in the freshman ruling are concernedlittle was gaine4 ., The present ruling affectingfreshman participation in Varsity athletics i salmost identical to that originally passed bythe Senate.

When the question of athletics was unde rdiscussion at AMS general meetings in thefall the students indicated that they wante da change in the freshman ruling and that suchrulings should be under student contro lrather than under the control of the Senate.Only half of this has been achieved . The

For days now we have been preparing towrite an editorial glorifying the beauties o fSpring . The weather, however, has playeda tantalizing ,game of hide and seek, runningthe gamut from Florida climate (the adver-tisement kind) to Winnipeg winter( the night -mare clime) . Our patience) is now exhausted .Spring it will be even if we contract pneu-monia in the process .

After all, it would certainly not do to bebeaten by The McGill Daily, or worse, th eManitoban, in announcing the coming o fSpring . We, therefore, now categorically stat ethat we know a man who claims a friend ofhis saw crocuses in bloom .

Not that we have really any particula raffection for the spring season : we are only i n

fur University students to bau(t together 111 flub sis a common enough undergraduate activity In an yInnti . 'rho 1)xpre 31s''(1 I,urpese Unity vast', it on eassumes !hat congeniality is a major goal . Slln ;ent ;wha e11 .jn ,y rllnppiug al each elites wills xahrr'l

were,' hardly rind an ass(etative ( . o lIII ion i nwhat Is esteemed by' Ile ('orLtthluus at an nil :Ind .coming School ()r

the

reunite(' oi l1411iI,r 9p01'I9 w)III(I lint solicit

the cull ;sirlsl a sx01'11 ; a poet

ill some rnlmmllnities, with hi 1,11111)1 %have to go it, :lose nut congeniality its v'iew'ed hy 'Isle nndergraduatt i eau aIY4sunle strange Dud )fle aballing forms ill the sy,;lem of t ;reeh letter tt ,ter .

notes which cutt;litnt0 the social clubs al mos tit.lueri(sin colleges ;utd univcrsiti)ti .

The ( . 1111), in this r :e ;e, i :; usually a local ' ' chapter '0i' a national nrsnuic.11inn whose nano, consi l< .IIwo ur the„ letters Iron) Illy ( ;reek sliphabel .'Thorn ;ire score , : or these urg,uli/,thous(, ;unl thei rchapters 111 ;13, number ;ut3,Ihin ,r 1'r)m a dozen I nna Innldrrtl .r snore . 'I'h„ I)reuro .;f ()t' dent (i ;tiu )

it tidal nn'ntltI.• hip of ;Wont 'I,31111,11Im, it who mperhaps;1' ;I tetlt II or 'ill eighth ir e

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Yet some thousands ()I'plrr~ remain, ;11111 it

I, their 1'eLttl)u1Ilip I,, th e

national nrl:auti/uli)n ; I11,11

hies here t°Ilr+ill ; . i n11'c11I11

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Athletes?

recommendations of the Men's Athletic Di-

rectorate were apparently made in a spirit of

compromise in the hopes that the Senate

would agree to their ruling if it were essen-

tially the same as that passed by the Senate .

If this is the case, then the talk of studen t

autonomy is quite meaningless because th e

students are giving way completely to the

wishes of the Senate .

The arguments of the Senate in favour of

the freshman ruling have a certain merit an d

should be carefully considered.i The fear of

commercialized Varsity athletics and consid-

eration of the high percentage of failures in

the freshman year are strong points in favou r

of the ruling . Nevertheless, it is still the case

that on this campus the immediate enforce-

ment of such a ruling would place the Varsity

teams in dire straites at a time when they ar e

desperately trying to build up teams whic h

can make a good showing in competition wit h

other universities .

How carefully these factors were consid-

ered by the MAD in drawing up their recom-

mendations is debatable. The MAD would

perform its functions much better if it more

carefully considered the needs of the campu s

and the wishes of the students and did not

try so' carefully to duplicate the rulings of

the senate.

the weather boasting racket for sheer pat-

riotic love of Vancouver and the tourist dol-

lar. All these associations of Spring an d

Love seem to have gone sour in this province .

Come spring, loggers go back to camp fo r

the love of money, fishermen come back from

California for the love of the dollar, UBC

students cone out of hibernation for the lov e

of the Regist rar, who has to keep up hi s

statistics of the falling level of spring exa m

marks .

What love with a capital L is there on a

fishing boat in Hecatus Strait, in a loggin g

camp on one of the upcoast inlets, in th e

library just before exam time ?

Thanks, we have taken our choice . We are

going back to our winter sleep .

(AIM will o1),11y ttii•t lien oft 01cai101 to lurlte II malumni against him It he persists in policies at . odd swith Iho :t et' the national fester ;Illy . Ily inchdclll gthe presence 01 ' Isle Beta Bela stapler 01 its CAM .pits . the rnllege Wily Iitvi' wandered 1100 a kin d0f rumpnl'l with Beta Beta und ;lnd Implied Cndm'se •meat or Its views. 'I'hl4 Gun hec0nle elrbau'rass111g ,especially to a Slut . university supported by publi cfltuds, when nets) Bet a ' s t ou;tltnllo11 and Iht' cha r .1(1' n1' its local ch'.tpt .r are 1'o1111(1 to ,xtInrlt, haw' .rear I'hul l r the Protestations o f high purpose, al lNegroes, Catholics curl Jews from the sacred an dittt1isru,lulle hones or brotherhood, etc ,

'1'h0 hor'I'ling twist on this situation anun•s rus hy'ean' :it lie alerti n g; or the National luter-fraternll yh''Iiulell ;I ktnl or trade assoeialtion or the Yrat .rnil y

~indu4h'y .1t the In..tlle; in New York recently usp,'rial committee held out for 'autonomy” in wha tit railed " ;tmlents' organizations" ;

It inveighe dl ;aitt I colleges where fraht'rtill l .s have live n

orllelyd It cud tb0ir avtiverl ratriul alud rtitgltu stii,n'rimimllien or trace expllsinn t'r"In the cattnpms .Pitt the saute spei(r's11ha1 htHI•tted that flu) right t oht , ' ;eleelivt' tor U,w umalim's should I . held onl yIy the national oh'ganizat(ttt x1111 ant by the loca lchapters Ott other wards, the stu(lonts ,

~)nu tenderness I'or the national fraternity o nHip 'sort Ill' its 11t4ir .rs is onderstatulable ; for th e0tn .t AlII t' ~,I' iIt'' It It' .I it , lob, :III 0rclputiun, uu l'Ith' gels lit . impression that the whati s enterpri :, ei (imply a I irtntur exercise in loll' prrprhlltiou .The I ;xl catiae I)itt'i'tor dints the allnnht 1' 01' mom' sI)

used In stiIit11111titI :; the chapters t) produc emore .)I'Intni to I . (1rauss .

It t4 tr ail' to say Ilm lmost )I the c)rrespondence I) allunni lakes th ehim)] ul ' hrr;tin tenors, Saute Ideal or wtmt III ,alumni !;e1 it rolilrn may be g,tt.ilerca front the lis tof arllleetm'nl .'stunted h , ' 0 110 untisee g It s;lt .'rnll rIn a L e tter

the ltaynn e tlt of "grudaat efur

Ih petaled tram

Lit

CerraptotlEditor, the Ubyssey,

Deer She

After reading the recent I"h,n •

gtlteers' " edition of the Ubyssey ,

and after reviewing reports I have

received In the last few days, i

believe I have grounds on whic h

to base a protest against the pu b

Mallon of that issue. While the

immorality of that papa' prob'

slaty he little effect on the ate -

dente on the tempo, as most of

us must realise that this tags o fhumour(?) is encouraged and,en.

Joyed by a type o tperson NOT

typical of the student body, it ha sa tremendous potential effec t

among those OFF the campus.

I have received reports tha t

cotes of the issue are appearin g

throughout the Juvenile poputa •

lion in Vancouver, both ht and ou t

of Eleeptatary and High Schools.

Copies have spread amongst th eadult populace as well . possibly

giving a gross misrepresentatio n

'of our university .

For these reasons I feel tha t

in future more discretion shouldbe used in the publication of such

edition* of the Utbyssey.David H. Fordo,

Royal .international Fed-

eration of Youth Re.

search for the 'Correctionand Rehabilitation of our

Rejected Children,Canadian Command,

Vancouver .

Sl.ught.r

Editor, the Ubyssey ,Dear Sir :

No one is more ('tiger that th efunctions of the Pre-Mode be wel l

supported and successfui than th e

group who co-ordinate and pla nthem. Nevertheless this need forparticipation Is not so urgent tha t

we need to stoop to the sex•or •

crime level of writing to enticethe throngs to our parties. We re-fer of course to the staff mem-

ber who found it necessary to

practice his 'wit' at our expenseand dig his fingers into the claythat was someone else's mould.Mg ,

To those who -spent a goodl ynumber of hours drafting cop y

for the Pro•Med Page of the Tues-day Ubyssey in an attempt t o

publicize In a decent and respect -

able manner our forthcomin gspring hall, this complete slaegh-

ter of material submitted 14 a slg -eifi l . uit Indication not only of dIa •

resp,('t fnl' ' ability hut also of dis-poragCUwnt of sincere effort ,

lour the remaluder of the 1'n .

dergrad Soc . such a hideous re -

port brings questions of the slant •hll'llli of decertnu that in pas t

years has been maintained at our

social functions . It is not the wis hof the 200 members of the (NU Sto disgrace themselves or th e

;nests of honor among whom ar e

the Dean of the Faculty of Medi-

cine and the President of the Uni-versity himself .

It is of course the privilege o fthe writer to Wtpre4e himsel ffreely and It is the right of the

editor of the lfbyseey to let puss

what muterttl his subordinateswrite or 'mash up' as he sees It .We should ask, however, Ihat hi s

ptare•huntlug' newspaper men h esupervised to the extent. that thei r

talents are directed towards ac-

tivities less harmful to so many .

Yom's truly .

THE EXECUTIVE .Pre-Med Underarm! geodetic .

Explanation

Editor, the Ubyssey ,

Dean' Sit

I world like lu slants' my pull .Hon in regard to ylllit' article o f

Thursday, February 19, entitle dStelnson Nixes Voting, etc .

I was speaking oil behalf of th e

exernllyo ul' Blt' rallnpus ('(' PCloth and upon their itistriletion .i did not charge anyone with "fi x

hog" or "stuffing" anstliing . Nordill I say that I u'Ilue.setl "Stet ssou lu0u1lns out ballots to stu-

dents tend crying) 'Vote iAtwell 'ceh .uevrr Ile WI vs a ballot ." \Gna tI fill say %vas Itat. lies Sl((I11wtl l

handed a toile, 1me only) ballo tI) Ito ('('h execiitlte on Tuesda yafternoon, Indi'tting ILat lie wu ,its porasessios of ballots herot'e III ,election .

'I'Inu'te is a wide difl'eren( .e 11, .turn arid P-sls o f

11 .11

13 II it It

were

nlaldt',

;Ilt d,•1'jr :;e,

)I'

I'ranulnleur«' .

whic hwere iudiceled by the prexs ,

1')0cs trldv .

11' .11,'I'1?It

SI'IIthl'',\'

MEMBER CANADIAN UNIVERSITY PRESS

Authorized as second class mail, Post Office Department, Ottawa ,

Student subscriptions $1 .20 per year (included in AMS fees) . Mall subscrlptlogs $2.0 0

per year . Single copies give cents,' Published in Vancouver throughout the Universit y

Ye ar by the Student Publications Board of the Alma Mater Society, University of 'British

Columbia . Editorial opinions expressed herein are those of the editorial staff of thetihyssey, and not necessarily those of the Alma Mater Society or the University, Letter s

to the Editor should not be more than 150 words . The Ubyssey reserves the right to

rut letters, and cannot guarantee publication of all letters received.

Offices In Brock Hall •

For Display advertisingPhone Alma 1024

Phone ALma 3$63EDITOR-IN-CHIEF JOE $OHLEEINOE R

Executive Editor, Ed Parker ; lo cative Editor . Elsie aorbat ; ('ity Editor, Myra Green ;

News Editor, iton Saporta Literary Editor, 1lhtlt Elkington ; ('UP Editor, Patsy Byrne ;

Circulation Manager, Marlon Novak ; Staff Photographer, Hux Lovett%

Senior Editor this Issue Peter gypnowish ,

Desk and Reporters.: 'sIike Ames, Pat Carney, Nonny 8ypuowich ,

Who Wants Spring ?

FROM PUNCH

Fraternally Yours, Bobo

At the present time it in c►p•

parent that t he L'onimunisla ar e

trying to conoUdate their terra •

tortal gains, They have recentl y

brought under the control R u

mania, Hungary, Pot-and, Czech()

Movable, Latvia, Lithuania . Es-

tonia, China, East Germany, Al •

bania, end Haig',3rfa, and . before

they can continue witp thei r

program of expansion to, as they

hope, world domination, the y

mast reduce the possibilities ,o f

revolt from within .

It the peop:e, in these subju.

gated countries, lose all hope o f

delivery from their oppressors .

then they may give up their re •

sistence and resign thewselves

to their fate . The Commutate .

therefore, try to convince thes e

people that the Western World

no longer cares about thei r

plight . Indeed we care so littl e

about the What we are

()rattail with the Communietr. A

littla exehung can help the Cam -monist program to a considerabl e

Editor, the t'hy'lasey .

Dear Sir :

A recent letter by Uartrell .

Parker and Wakhr'mceeff abou t

the proposed Canadian-Soviet ex -

change dutch, "The question to

keep our eye oft In this dispute h e

Would the ex'.irange help or hind-

er the (suss of tae deiuucrutic

world?" With' this part of th e

letter I can agree but not with the

rest of

The Dean Is an intelligent roan ,

and holds a position of authority ;and although he may be a Com-

munist, he should not be denied

the right to speak. He has trav-

elled extensively in sections of

the world not frequently visite d

by those. living outside the Iro n

Curtain, and without doubt he ha s

many interesting and controvers-

lal experiences to relate . If, afte r

he has given his talk, the audi tence violently disagrees with hi p

ideas, then, surely, Is the time

to make its feelings known.

Yours faithfully .

A. W. Itll(1ir'~;S ,1st Arts .

No Immaturity

Editor, the Ubyssey ,

Dear Sir ;

It is no doubt possible that i)i' ,

Hewlett ,lohnson Dean of Cant-

erbury, !nay come to speak in

Vancouver or perhaps at our uni-

versity, during his Canadian tour .

I sincerely hope that I'BC stn sdents will not ghat him the saut e

immature nod undisciplined treat -

ment that he received from th e

students of the University of

Western Ontario when he at .

tempted to !weak at a meeting in

London . Out:trio, recently . (See

the News•llerald, Page 1, Feb . 2'1 ,

1053) ,

I would like to extend my comp -liments to Hie student hotly fo r

their Insistence ()II the right o f

hearing I)r . Endicott . Special con -gratulations must he offered to

the president of the AMS fol .

establishing and maintaining the dignity and t fairness or the meet-

Mg. Though I Indies() that Itr .Endicott, is very, very mistaken .

i think that this university ca n

he proud ul' giving; expression t o

those rights which Dr . Fsidicot tIs unwittingly seeking to destroy .

K . (Ht . IiA :M ,

I .M' Biological Srien( .es olds .

Endicott WrongEditor, the Ubyssey ,

hear Sir :Please 'WOW sine . through th e

medium of this paper, to ro e

meat upon the ('elltltl(t el' th e

meeting at which the Rev . Julne s

Endicott spoke regarding peac e

in Korea. To introduce my re -

marks in their true light, let Inc

say that I disagree with the hast e

premises upon which Dr . End'

cotes arguments rest, As n re-

search biologist and an entomol-ogist, I find the conclusion s

which he drew from his evidence

on germ warfare quite unsound .

I spent many hours studying

his document, 'I Acense .'t Th e

entomological "evidence" Is a

complete farce . 'I'Ile Ieagedy o f

I)r . Endicott is his obvious sin-

cerity in erroneous conclusions .

Paradoxically. sincerity a:

lows !Me to employ an illogica l

or crooked line of inference ,

–extent. "John Canuck attends th e

University in Moscow" is ti t

story for Pravda. Only the true

facts mead to be given, but the y

carry with them the Idea, "ge e

the Western Democracies ar e

working with us now, you ha d

better give up your resistance . "

A good example of this type o f

propaganda to the recent peac e

congress attended by many o h

servers and ;,eople who wonte d

to find out wha t it was reap ;

like, The true facts are given to

us, "High Church Dignitaries A t

tend the Condress," then we art

supposed to get the idea tii a

these churchmen approve of Ur

movement . H an observer write s

a' contrary renort we might see

It, but the opatessed peopel amid (

of . the Iron Curtain never will ,

they must base their action s

the true facts as presented .Yours truly ,

BOP de Pr'YI''EEI{ ,

4th Aggie,

on

)?b too\

,ng Q°nuts -es

V°nuslire `v„weet ;Veee

°e pith

teat)

incrackle 1 giw$eti

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because thec°nfi

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leodt o'° „ot dean,

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epotilessvisen, es

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a.90g

tl.4 Pencils gn

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Vst u s % orp°nln9 and

♦ you Im 11 becou~tM

IOn9Nteed

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(o thee bonded et said' °

e et peril

fi

UNIVERSITY 1100K X't'O .IIE

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Sat . : 94t .n) . to Nou n

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Graphic Engineering Paper, I,lit)tugy Pager, I tit c-leaf

Refills, Fountain Pens an clink and I)rnt'inia', instrument s

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FREE Venus Sketching Book,complete instructions on the art o fpencil sketching when you buy tw o

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the regula r

II price of 25tt

Thursday, February 26, 1953 THE VBY$SE T

r

films

Director To , Defend

'Tobacco Road' HereDorothy Davies, well known director of the Everyman

Theatre production of "Tobacco Road", . will discuss "Tobacc oRbad and Censorship" at UBC Monday .

Active, In Vancouver Theatrical *acircles both as an actress and adirector, Mist, Davies was recently 'charged in connection with th e"Tobacco Road" production .

Miss Davies, who volunteered t otake all ,responaibility for theEveryman production, will discus svarious aspects of the "Tobacc oRoad" issue,

Court called the production "lewdand filthy" and declared that theaudience "tout to see the grosseraspects of the play ,

Although Magistrate W. W. Mc-Innes judged Miss Davies and othe rmembers of the cast guilty thegroup will- appeal their case at thecounty court .

UBC student Louise DeVick ,president of Players' Club, alsotook port in the play,

'Meeting will be held at 12 :30

Mandey, in Physics 200.

dragged lie rtowards the armourie sdespite her vigorous ' protests .

It wasn't until they w,ere inside

the door that the thouroug(nly pttdlences of the prosperous USSR ,mussed up and embarrassed 01.0 the advantages of being underconvinced the Engineers to re . Communist rule .lease' her ,

"But I can't give blood," sheblushed, "you see, I'm pregnant .'" '

. 1

P

ond0 Films

To Bo Show n

By Mmsac SoonCommunist propagand a

grabbed a terrified coed and will be shown at Film Society' snoun hour show Tuesday .

The film's, two of them, wer eproduced In Moscow and show' i ne very eubtlp manuer to convinc e

C/a. •/ePar Rid Breast Says

A bill to remove the present con .trot of television and radio fro mthe ('U(' will be introduced by the 'Progressive Conservative govern-ment at the Mock Parliament to b e

held today at noon in Arts tee ,

Galt Wilson . first year law stat e;dent, 'as Minister of Transport ,will present the bill to the Ilous e

for debate. The Pointe Ministe rwill be John Fraser, president o f

the .campus Progressive Conserva-

tives .The official opposition . Socia l

Credit, will be led by Roy Trimble ,president of the student Social !Creditors, who is expected to In •u'oduce an amendment . The CC Fand Liberal parties will also be in

opposition .Ton) Franck, well kmnvn Can)—

Pus Pa rlicatnetttariam, will act s(s ~Speaker of the House I the dlffi 1cult job of maintaining order dnr• ~

lug the debate .'rite pleurae of the hill is to '

remove control of television andradio from the ('U(' and place It 'is the hands of as independen tGuard controllin g

First Meeting of the \ ' ('I'' Sprlo gSeries was 11( . 10 VInherduy 11001 1ill I'hy'slcs ;110, Speaker was Ian ]Renal)', I\ ('I" S toll Si . . ' relsr Y

PRISON

lion and vocationa lstudent Flo McNeil lthat the prison fa r mmore than a lock-up, "

Prison officials admitted tha tlittle was; being done by outsid eagents to find jobs for dlscharg'-ed lunettes but stressed "tha tthe situation has improved great-ly during the past months . "

'four guide: eels' surp'isedwhen sludeuts greeted inmate ;~of Y.O.U. by first times, The ylater learned that students o fcriminology and social work 19 9had paid im informal visit to th e

'young effeneers some weeks be -bore canc. had become acquainte dat that time .

Dr . 'Popping has been takin ghis criminology classes on a tou rof Onkalla since I :12" . He feel sthat it gills student .. a greate runderstanding of Canadian pen-ology 'and promotes better rela-tions witli the prison ,

Prairie HeadDeliver sVCF Speech

dent", Woollard said, "As a studen tat the University of Saskatchewan ,I started out as an idealist . "

He told the audience of the in-fluence Saskatchewan premier T .C . Douglas had on himself .

"! wouldn't be in the ministrytoday if it wasn't for the impact ofTommy Douglas' personality ."

A member of parliamentar y

forum at the university, Woollardbecame an independent after grad-uation .

The speaker asked students to besympathetic towards J. A. Reid, th eSocial Credit member for Salmo nArm who recently charged that ou reducational system was corruptin gchildren ,

"Reid is Illiterate in the ways of

parliamentary debate . Hee learn-ing, just like you are learning. Theonly thing is that he has jus tflunked his first course . "

Woollard said that the CCF de-mand for the resignation of Reidla a good "publicity trick," but

'that's all .lie mentioned Education Ministe r

Tilly Rolston's recent statemen tthat "The Social Credit party i sin power, not by the will of th epeople, but by the will of God."

Woollard said statements lik ethis Infer that God has decide dwhich politicians are most fit t ogovern .

Commenting on the use of re-ligion In politics, \Vollard saidthat the newly formed Christle nDemocratic party would "get no .where because they have an axeto grind and most people recognis eit. "

Conservatives 'To Denounce )TV And Radio

Bons and the CRC, which will con-tinue to operate 'ts a goveruulea tsponsored broadcasting agency .

The debate will continue for tw ohours and a vote will be taken n uthe measure before 2 :31), '

Science ComparedWith Religio nBy SCM Speaker

"Scit,ttre and religion both come

eon' the saline source," stated t)r ,J . H . McDermott, editor of theB .C . Medical :As .sr(iatiou Journal ,when he wall guest st►ealcet iron th eStudent Christian Movement yes •telalat' morn .

I)r . .1l'I)erm"tl pointed out tha teven *aide man associated sicknes smid its healing with faith hl thei rearls . Ile stressed however. tha twe sloop) not think disease rh owill of God as ,vas formerly hetit'vtal

be(at)s(, "Disease is

no lthe will of tied, iris the ignoranc eof the wars of (incl . "

Ile rlfnchuled its talk by illu sbailie ; IIIe pl,as hllilles et (nmlhill i

reti¢ioa and medicily

'nl th eii•h!ama

field .

,t Iterluhll

fel l' err g i g

to

Ilse+

geld ,ul IIH'Ih( Inc i ;ul wIo ether ,

astonished today in the Broc kCoffee Shop when a friend point ,ed out the paintings on the wal land told me who the artist was .

,llo you know?

,It seems that the cook's hus-

band, Mutt Hass, one day, fel tthe urge to express himself o n

,1 roAm

FOR PRESli' WWIIDean Gap has announced tha t

the deadline for applications fo rThe Canadian Women's Pres sClub Scholarship will be Marc h16.

Scholarship has a value of 500dollars and Is given to any gir lIn second or third year who In .tends to work In Journalism.

Full details concerning theaward can he obtained at DeanGage's office, Room 10, ArtsRending .

,

BLOOD( Continued from Page 1 )

Pre-Med took a second place with81 percent, Agricultural student

swere third with 77 percent whil eHome • Ec gleefully smeared En-gineers 72 to 67 percent, EvenMedicine beat Engineers with 6 9percent .

Other totals were Phys Ed 59percent, Commerce 57 percent ,Architecture 52 percent, Arts 4 9percent, Pharmacy 48 percent, La w46 percent, Teachers Training 2 1percent, Grads 18 percent .

One feature of the last day drivecame when boisterous Redshlrt s

TYPING : ESSAYS, THESli?manuscripts, mimeographing . Elelse Street, No . '1 Dalhousie Apts . ,University Blvd . AL. 0655R. (66 )

FRENCH WEAK? COACHING I Ngrammar and conversation b yformer WIC lecturer . Past sue•cessea with students . Reasonabl erates . University area. PhoneMrs . LeGall, AL . 098IL .

(55 )

CHEMISTRY COACHING B Yhonors graduate, experienced i ntea(hlug, Arthur Lietzc, 4595 VV .6th Ave. AI,, 1547,

(51 )

LOST ON ('AMPUS, ANTIQU Esilver bracelet ; roses carved ;coral insets . Reward .

AUS'T'IN SEDAN, '40, LICENC E'5 in A I(0ndltlon . Ak e anddrive it and you'll buy it , $5Gr ,(tare German books on art, sci-ence, psychology . etc. Foreig n.ttamlp4 and (()vets ( ' Rhoda tltln tsheet, Patty leaving . BA, 3291 .

(57 )

I RED 1 :00SELEAP LOST I NGeography lee, on Wednesday, to .Return to Lost and Found .

RIDE. WANTED I''Ott 4 : :;li ;Monday to h'riday from vicinit yof Blenheim and 41st . PhoneNancy, KE, 0 :1141 . ,

:A'I"t'IiNTION, .11J, TYPING O! 'all kinds ; Notes, essay s , )setapap('rs, thesis, Pte . . (tune neatl y0110 promptly at renshnable rat eby !vial stenographer .

PhoneHiss

I ;Ih'is

\V'Iettley

lit

I'I?da r1971 , after 1; p .m,

I .it )

1 \ 1 Alt OLD R(' .A ('Alt RADIO.Speaker unit fits in dash of sayannul . Just checked . ('heap o fSS :) . Name

4i2S

151 .

IllO

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(' .\I!I, thnrucss, slccl rIl ('-, pairs, 4

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laid

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lt :Alilt)

I'l)It

SAI,I :

I'Itl( 'rd to sell . Phone Mere . hl• :

Wage S

NewMiqieA

Unv(hd

By Filmset

Film society's genera lto tie held today in F(i 102 at *ta nwill .highlight twc imppptagt ppi,ttts .

New production 4quipplegt in•eluding camera, edl,tpI', titter, tri-•pud and exposure mete' YOU be

Sketched is an original "Miss

Sun Valley" model with flare d

skirt featuring unpressed

pleats, deeply fringed stole .

Choose navy, powder blurt Pr

brown all-wool tweed patted,

LAZUR E( Continued from Page 1 )Ile returned from these confer-

ences with an incisive and hostil eIndictment of 'US and his , recent .mendatlon became the foundatio nof the "hands-off" policy NFCU Shas followed vis-a-vis the IUS eve rsince .BAS . DENOUNCE S

Rnglrbir Bast, president of th eNational Federation of Universit yStudents, charged that the US' sexclusion of Denis Lazure from th eStates would seem to be a direc tresult of Lazure's activities forNFCUS.

"I have the pleasure to kno wLatium personally and can . safelyvouch for him," said Basi, "an dthat whatever he did as a repre-sentative of Candian universit ystudents was in complete sincerit yto further international under -Mending and was backed by 1 Gout of 20 Cv tnadiau University shedent bodies . "

Executive of NFCUS has dis-cussed the matter with Prim eMinister Louts St . Laurent, and onbeing referred• by him to DanaWllgren, Under-Secretary of Statefor External Affairs, the case wa sfurther clarified to the Canadia ngovernment. Mr. \\'1lgren understood the case and promised to dealwith the US government throug hofficial diplomatic channels .

( Continued from Pap 1 )place but agreed with student sthat these measures were In-adequate for the Impetus.

Discussing lack of reltablllta-facilities .remarke d"is littl e

the prairie universities ,Spl'.Ilcillg on the topic "Is V'u!I I

'I'hinkin ;, al a house 1:nd :" 1111 .Rea

ac spoke ()I' the Christian apt)roacl iI" various field rl' thought . 'I'll "('hristi,iu epistouulluai(,II view, hl '

said, did not diaconal reason . Ot l

the contrary, reason is a (•1111 .pirtcly valid source of iatrrmallnn .Iluwcrcr, re,,lsnn, mtvlidod by roc,, .

laden, mast always he,inudegmlte !Ina 10)""I(.'I'," rl' a frallsl'endent ~Cont .t .

Mr, Itcnnie w"n1 on I, ahnw he wthl ('hritian view 01' thing-; (0I11 0

set to In retitle' , t(II ;!(lli betw'e('l lt,ninm+ 1'11'111

ul' slndy, us well av+

relnnvins

latelleetaal

arrogance ,Ile Final )laded by pointing hilt thennhlue

curlhln'_Itiea

hl

strengt hulll ticutlenr'ss, power I MO hrnlili -

fV

wilt(

i-

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ill

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Al t ,11 ;n, ('bl t'4t, anal pnin(Ins;his till ('heist

Thal Ili' sai dlion Ie own' :. t 'uhlems lily in a

p,nlliul~n

relallhn-ihip Iu Ilimsel f

I l riMiele n Illu• ,o lar' .I' ~

sancta )

II

1 nn '

I

r Reverend Blast sReligious Politic s

Blasting blind political partisanship, Reverend Keith Wool -lard told students Wednesday that it was impossible to imbe dChristian principles in a political party and expect that partyto succeed .

The minister of St . Johns United Church, talking on "MyPolitical Pilgrimage ", said that the present Social Credit us eof religion in politics will result in a new kind of fanaticism i npolitical activity . 4 Branding himself an "Indepen .

bout private sta .

TYPING : ESSAYS ,

Paintings Adorn Campus

By JAiN' IE WRIGHT

canvass, and the results now " smith, a critical judge of the fe-

Ever curious as to who deco-

adorn the walls Ip tfle Brock,

male sex, favors the portrait o f

rates the rooms on campus? I teas

and Fort Camp Dining Rooms,

the girl hecadse it embodiesHis wife stated that he took up

character and natural pose . "Thepainting 15 years ago when he

Blackout" was the most appeal -was encouraged by )another

ingto Gerry Duclos, and Geoff D ,artist who advised him to con-

found that the Ballet Dancer re-tinue the good work, .

mind'him of someone he knows .A, few of the opinions from the

Betsy Forbes favors the Brewery unveiled . On hand to explain an dUBC students continues, Al Gold-

because—well—just appeal .

discuss the equipment will be Nor-man Barton , supervisor of , VisualEducration for the Extension De-partment ,

Plans for the annual banquet t obe held March. 7 will also be re-vealed and discussed. Also on th eagenda will be constitutional rq•vision to provide for the formationof a production department ne tyear .

THESIS ,Notes, expertly and promptly

'.

typed, Mod reate rates, V'e use('amphells' beak of rule, FSlakey IT'S SKIRTS AND STOLES FOR 'P II# :)and Cook's, and Essay Specific &Lions by the Dept, of Applied Sc lonce, Serving students since 194' ; .Mrs . A. O. Robinson, 4180 W 11th 1Avenue . AL. 0915R .

'

(66)

inboti•,;1a Lmpnn .INCORPORATED a-- MAY 1e7 0

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Campus and casual wear . . . thg;e _p -

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Answers

Fotherighan,

THE UBYSSE Y

UBC ThunderbirdsOff To Tame Bears

Laithwaite Confident Of VictoryAs His Ruggermen Invade California

Thursday, February 26, 1953

Votheringhuni

Answers

Notch

Coach Albert Laithwalte's Thunderbirdof the four-game World Cup series played

• California .

rugger squad leaves tonight for the California en d

annually between UBC and the University o fBoasting their finest team, in' !

years, Birds are given a good Well, I can see my leering friend across the page wants

chance of regaining the Cup won in to wrassle . Only too

decisive fashion by the Californi aholden hears for the last two years .Birds have already won the Millerand McKechnie Cups while trounc •lug all opposition both here andin Victoria .

GOWER, MCMILLAN OU TLimited to only eighteen player s

because of the ever present moneyscarcity and with two regulars ,Frank (lower and Doug McMilla nunable to make the trip surds willhave to go great guns to boat th epower-laden California team .

The thirteen regulars are rein -forced by five players from th esecond division Brave squad. StuClyne, fullback for the Braves will .on the strength of his two trialswith Media fill the fullback slot .

Donny Spence, who has playe dfullback for the majority of th eieason and who Is equally at hom eto any of the backfield positions .will be held in reserve .

BRAVES MOVE U PPlaces of Gower and McMilla n

will be taken by Bob 'Bartlett wh ohas proved himself worthy ofsenior ranking and )Mike Bell, an .other of the husky Brave forwards .

Peter Terppleman and Jim Mc -Williams, also of the Brave forwardpack round out the eighteen-manexpedition ,

OWEN WON'T FL YCoach Albert Laithwalte, man-

ager John Anfield and traine rJohnny Owen will accompany theteam on their southern jaunt . Theexpedition 'will travel to Berkeleyby train ne trainer Owen refusesto fly In one of those new-tangle dcontraptions .

First match of the series will b eplayed In the Golden Bear's hom estadium on Saturday afternoo nwith the second game schedule dfor the same site on Monday after -noon .

California will play at the UBCstadium on March 12 and 14 in th efinal two games .LINEU P

Probable line up for the Birds o nSaturday afternoon will see St u('lyre at fullback with the regula rIIn'ee quarter line of wingers John )Newton and George Pull an dcentres Gerry. Main and RossWright remaining intact .

Forwards are Charles Brumwell ,Bob Morferd, Derek Vallis, Bill ,Bice, Bill Mulholland, Bob Bartlett ,Mike Bell and Jim MacNicol .

Captain Danny Oliver and Bill lWhyte will be in their usual seru mhalt and fly half positions .

At this time of year, after bein gslaughtered at football and crud .fled on the altar of professiona lsport during the basketball sea -son a few peasants on the campu salways start the cry, "Let's get ou tof the Evergreen Conference ." Thi stime I number myself amongs tthese pariahs who call for n retur nto sane sensible sport—Canadian ,in other words .

Despite the cluin g of Dick Penn' sdarling, my ass . editor, Al Fotherffgham, all has not been rosy Irthe Yankee dominated circuit thisyear ,

Claims and counter claims o fprofesstonallstn, subsldation an dpacked ball clubs have floated bac kand forth at the big wheels meet •Ing, (which of course our studentrepresentative couldn't attend )flies have been handed out an dteaches have quit .

(Mt, naturally, everyone . claim sthat the Evergreen is the onl yplace to play because our minorapoi'te dominate the loop .

.Certainly swimming has coppe dthe honors, as have track, golf an dthe girls, but who on the campus ,besides those vitally interested i nthese sports (their f r iends orthemselves take part) really careor realise who won .

'it's' time we faced facts. Theonly sports that the students o r

the public care about are footbal l

add basketball ; and to say the bestabout these `sports . their records

hare been none' too . good.Mind you I don't blame thes e

fiascos on either the players or th ecoaches . Who would expect ou rboys to measuer tip to the pro con -tracts and standards .of the grea t"Hershey Bar" land to the south ,when our administration and en' .

dents are against scholarships ., he 'l l figure- the best thing to do

to give our ball players (who hav ethe guts) equitable and fair com-petition is to drop from this OII •bent and Sullivan farce of is confer -elm and get ourselves some team sto play against that have more o ntheir minds than money and won.

Wit records .Sport . after all, is supposed to

promote good feeling and a spiri t

of? .uamardle amongst the partici-pants. How many trips do ourteams make in which they onl ysee. their opposite members on th efield or the court ?

Just ask the hockey team abou tthe' treatment they received o ntheir : joyful , jaunt to hospitalityhayen? They were wined (wow) .dined, found dates and mixed wel lwith Vieille opponents, but whathappens when the Thunderbir db'ball sand football teams tour downto the flew S . of A ?

The• great American sportsme n►ueet them on the floor or field ,beat the living out of the mand then casually go hack to thei rcase of Lucky Lager and forget th eplebiunM from up here in the col-onies .

It utn't that way on the prairies ,Al, don't let the Engineers lea dyou to idiotic conclusions. som eCanadians are good heads .

(This discussion all ire carrieden next week, when the Pointed(lead from Chllliwack and I co ntinue to cross rapiers,—W . E . H e

Badminton Clu bSponsors Alumni,Undergrad Tourney

The 1'R('. Badminton ('huh wil l

sponsor a badminton tournamen topen to all students on campus . re •gerdless of club affiliation . 1'ac •nity members ore also eligible .I'lay will commence et 7 p.m . ;

Thursday, Pole 28, in the Memorial I(lye' and all enthusiasts are aske dto submit entries by Feb .

An lavitational tournament ope nt° all UBC alumni is being spin e

sifted In conjunction with the ('am .In(1

"While the Birds are away, the Tomahawks will play" ,says rugger manager Dave Anfield . This is true, fans, forthe newly amalgamated Tomahawk-Redskin rugger tea mwill take on the North Shore All-Black seconds on the secredturf of Varsity Stadium at 2 p.m.

Forced to meld( a canasta term repulsive to our ears )the two clubs because of the lack of interest, manager Bil lHutchinson feels that the team stripped this Saturday willbe a powerhouse .

Taking on the Meralomas, with a trip to Victoria a tstake will be the Braves . Though some of their players areaway with the first team the boys are hot to win . Game timeis 1:30 at Connaught .

snares .

I'm from 'Saskatchewan too, but.1 hope it doesn't show on me lik eit does on yonder yokel .

Now don't get me wrung, I lov esir John A. MacDonald, 1867, the !Maple Leaf Forever and Princes sMargaret as much as you do, (es .ped1ally Princess 'Margaret), bu t

,I just can't see 'where we are goin gto get the money to fly 25 footbal lplayers to Winnipeg.

It would be nice If we could pla yputty-cake with the prairie boys ,hut we haven't that sort of mool alying around the MAD's piggy bank .Mayhe Alberta, ,Saskatchewan an dManitoba, all with smaller enrol-ments than UBC, have the neces-sary cabbage but I doubt it.

Aside from the cost of Johnn yOwen's safari to the wilds of thewheat province, the Western Inter-Provincial couldn't offer us enoug hgames . UBC would have exactlythree home games .

Right now I can hear Hutchscreaming fro macross the pag ethat we can fill out our schedul ewith exhibition games with Ever-green squads . Playing exhibitiontilts with the Evergreen schools i squite all right with me as long a swe play all our games with them .Why play half in one league an dhalf in another?

I think the bi gthing the Wester nInterprovincial supporters are ig-noring are the minor sports . Sure,football Is the big glamour sport ,with basketball a close second .Football and basketball get all th eheadlines and therefore all th ecriticism when they lose . The factsthat are being ignored is that onthe whole we do okay in the Ever-green—with—scholarships circuit .

Fleet, I think it should be votedthat Hutch is a little prejudice dwhen it comes to dealing with th eWestern Interprovincial hook-up .

.S11s . 1 green title two of the last thre eof I years, including last year .

Golf—We have 'won the gol fehanlpiouahip every year since w eentered the Evergreen Conference .

Track--Considering there Is n oone at UBC when the Evergree nmeet is held in May, we get by ,

Skiing—Again, we've never bee nbeaten by an Evergreen team .

Baseball--At present baseball isnot played in the Evergreen bu tUDC walloped (and we mean clob-bered) Western Washington twic elast Spring.

Stuff that into your bay window,hutch, and digest it.

Are you going to fly swimmers,tennis players or golfers fro mUB(', Alberta, Saskatchewan an dManitoba to a central spot formeets? The farthest distance UB Chas to travel to an Evergree n

'sehoo lis Spokane, 403 miles away,The nearest prairie school is Ed-monton, over 800 miles away. Interms o icash and travelling timeit just ain't practical .

Come on down out of the clouds ,Hutch. Your ivory tower is begin -.nlng to get stained with green dol -lar bills .

He was recently run ou tkutchewan and still spend s

spare time weavinghis .

Swimming--UDC swim team ha s

Here's the record :

glad to, Hutch .

o fmos tgopher

never been beaten In the Evergree n

Conference meet .

e'I'auis---We have won the Ever.

hreukI u

By JIM CARNIE

KEN'S GOOD IN OTHE RTHINGS, TO OGymnastics are not Ken Doolun' sonly field of athletic endeavor .lie is very interested In pole vault .Inge did a lot of it iat Kits ., and ha s

ca ll a ., hopes of turning out for the Vars.ity hack team if and when he getsthe time .

Of great import now is Ken'sa diver, lie won the seadiving championship a t

1'°w 12 poiltt sAI Sheila Moore

In the next game the Thunder-ettes were sadly defeated by Wash-ington P .E. 11ajjurs 23-12 . Glenda ,hauco(k was again high starerwith II points .

it

pionshlps on that apparatus, but t oKen, compete in the unwound class, a s

tend . ' Ken did, one, has to be expert in ia tIheI, least six different events . Being

expert means achieving a first ,second or third place standing i nthe Individual classes .

Iligh two years nup t oEd. mal .won th e

(Hein )

a

Gals Have Good

Luck On Southern

Your With B'bal l

By VERN DONALDSO N

Heeding the oft heard cry o f

Vrarsity 's female athletes, toda y

the editor has consented to le t

girls sports appear on this pre-

lominagtly male page, so her e

goes nothing .On February 14, the t '.o girls '

basketball teams played In Seattle .In the first game the "Thunder . ;ettes" defeated "Washington tint•varsity Intramural' '25 . 20 . Hig hscorer was Glenda Hancock wit h

whil escored 4 each .

Stevie' Kent and

6iEeVAWK

with the new baby rolled

collar and cuffs

Like all Kitten sweaters . . . it's made of

Cashmere-treated super Lambswool . . . it' s

full-fashioned, hand finished, guarantee d

not to shrink, and is moth-proofed with•MITI N

for the life of the garment! )

Exciting colour combinations highligh t

the new baby rolled collar an d

matching cuffs for Spring .

At $6.95, $7.95, $8 .95.

Better stores

everywhere.

203

SMILING ALBERT LAITiWAITE, though sick with theflu, will be leading his British Columbia Champions dow nto the sunny steppes of California with high hopes o fregaining the World Cup from the Richter-less Bears ,

Rugger Teams Play Saturda y

Canadian Cham pComes To UBC

pas tournament The purpose of lined semi of the more simplifie dIt is to stinnlla.te interest an ))ad• sallethenl' whit .h include : gab .w e el', and to give both Mimed ; hiu!; oteselt by the huh' and hold .amI nndergruds the opportunity to in , oneself at arm's length whil eportieipnte In and observe some singing "hail I'll('' or Iln'uwin,gS e ed games. Invitations have been a hoer bottl e aft' Ha t Hotel Can .accepted by fleece dienhum, Randy causer wafll010 letting go. I('oaa hPhill i ps, ,luck ('mderlllll, Ken Mere- Dime tV'Itittk, recently forbade Ibi sditle and Jelin Bourke so tlm'r0'll be pr+u lice . the boys wor eeit' greet displays of champion . too teeny bear bottles) ,ehip play . 'i'h('I'e ere un finis fo r

Init)'n,n,mrttt,

Late yesterday afternoon,'neath the grey stone battlementsof the library, I, with crumpled notebook in quivering hand ,and trusty pencil clenched desperately in my teeth, slunk fur-tively into the dismal shadows of the aforesaid library wher eI was to rendezvous with (surprise! surprise!) one of Canada'smost promising athletes .

One should hardly cal lDoolan promising, for at th eer age of 19 he has alread yhilt,) leaped to fame .

PRAIRIE BOY, OF COURS EBorn in Edmonton, pa small vll •

(age a few miles east of Nelson ,

L .C .) Krim moved to Vancouve rwhen hr' was all of ten year's old ,and three years later (when h ewas I :1) he began the gymvawti cgame, Despite the handicap of gat -tending Kitsllano High School ,Ken, when only 17 . w'on th etitan all-round Gymnastic ('harm .

1)10nahll r

The Canadian Itymnestic slee t

Is sponsored In turn by v;u'ious ability u s

prm•rec organizutk ns throug'hoti ku buy' s

(wands. In I.e5l 1'aneouver was Kitsllan o

the host, the '52 meet scheduled and last Yo;' was runner

for Edmonton . was culled oft', but Borthw'rk, 4th Year Phys .

rumor has it that an Interior city °r and also of nit' . who

will he the favored spot this year, Everg reen Conferenc e

maybe Kimberley le small villlg0 championshhip ,

a few miles east of Nelson, II .(' .) .

IVath these two top ('inference

The Varsity team in them far>; tGYMNASTICS EXPLAINED

0ivers on our side, l'li(' should be ~)

, game, walloped (Ts 39 to i . Chri sThe

term

gymnastics

covers I "Its Ir .aI)1ie a t t heir 01011 (1 08 in symnls, Elmo (ievin and Edit hmany activities : parallel bars, the tan' year's l'ouferenco which °pens Niathesou flipped II 12 . S mid s re ,high her, tumbling, spring board at ileilin,gham an about two weeks . speOGvely .

The 'game

aguius tend trambol(ne m)rk pyratuiditp Ken's greatest thrill, he admits i 41'ashin,,'ton I'niversit.y Iah'aulura l

tielistleinic' are some . Ken out' munleshy , was holding on his head . sous numb closer . Varsity, how •In feet most gymnasts agree tied! ever, managed to win 22 to le withthere is nothing quite like it . I'ruu I''lett ,scoring It points an d

As my' more alert readers have , Nancy ,Toro and Edith elathesolprohahly already

realized,

Ken, 5 uticl ,now in his first soar at does fn this tournament no deem' i snot plats to major in Phys . Ed„ hut declared, but our girls were fa nIn Engineering. Whatever it i,, superior in hall handling Lied shun -Ken Doolen, Canadian (iymnestie fua . They found difficulty, how• •champ ei 17, anal tops es a pole, ever, an playing girls' rules as thi staultor and diver, as en athlet0~hunlls ug rossive play . On Nehr uI It(', I ;nuy°uver, and all (')a)aila .,ary 97 the teams !level to Rollin geel he rand In call their own .

Men h, play 1y ' ^ : tern Weithineten . i

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