4
VANCOUVER, .B .C ., FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1952 PRICE 5c ; No, 21 VOLUME XXXV Player Ai d At General Meeti n e —Ubyssey Photo by Hux Lovely , BOR ROLLAND, one of the firemen called to the scene of yesterday 's accident ; looks , over ,t .he damag done to Angus Tappay's Vanguard by the explosion ; Tappay, a UB C ':student lost one hand and part of another in the explosion caused by chemica,ls . De - fails of the accident, however, are still unk nown . r Chemistry Student Loses ' Fend In Chemical Explosio n 4plosion at 11 :30 yesterday morning in a car in th e parking lot next to the War Memorial Gymnasium resulted i n the loss of the left hand, and mangling and loss of fingers on th e right hand and possible loss of vision of Angus Robert Tappay . i"tture Homecoming Ball s he held away from th e campus . A mitinri passed ha AMS cou p No information coul d ill at thee' Met meeting reoom' about the condition o f mends "that fUtnre, Ilonleconiina eyes . Possible loss o f Balls he held off the cati'apus," feared . Motion was odwanced as a sole . !slimed that 'Pappas' was leanioe , Hon for the problem of the large, Reason fur 'I',appay's possession' leer the righ t consumption of liquor at home• or explosives is rumored to be that t••U' when the explosion occurred , coming dances, contours' to Ind- ge Ivan preparing a smudge It di At the time, it is difficult t o versity regulations . The admildst• rota uou•auUmrized campus p,p~uscortain the cause or r ho onto. ration regards this as a laxity club• !slot), but it is thought that th e student discipline, suet feels that! ATTRACT PEOPLE possible eombluation of red phos It should be stopped . ! The smudge pot was to he lit Phnrotts and Potassium cldorat e Connell felt that strict enforce . , Ili rront or the Armouries to at . Wright have caused the blast . mint of the ruling by a disciplinary tract more people to the noon hoar BOUGHT CHEMICAL S committee or even the lt('MP!, meeting . The club was then Tappay,It is assumed from hul a weald result •1n the ball being um. ' s ,s nppaed to put the fire out with purchase found in the car , xuecessrul . The ball would hove! the aid of n fire truck they had M . bought many 'or the chemicals at a to be helld downtown despite the rigged up beforehand . downtown store earlier in the de y fact that this might detract bola' Dr, Kenneth Young of the Ifni- and did not get them fronm th e the spirt of Iioniecotuiug, versity Health Service and his as-1 !chemistry department , ' Explosive substances such a s magneslum shavings . icing snot , coal oil and sulphur were foun d neat' the car untouched by the ex plosion , By DOT AUERBACH Special Train Hom e The seed of an idea planted three years ago has finall y taken root and may blossom in the spring with the first UB C Revue . For Edmonton Boy s "A number of student s' have al•• _ ready contributed good ideas and gl'arls to cnnl .rlbut e Whets interested met last night 'it Ie hook, " a special meeting in the I,x~eusion' "w" hope to hav e Department Library," ,aid Ernest' hook written by December tt1 at gory and their special train bac k ll . haw ,tuba Iti'ot'kinghaol and to the prairies , , and now it's th e group to go to work and write the lonely boy's from Edmonton . ' music . The sin g ly should he ready The train back to Edmonton vi a CNR fol . Christmas iv!ll lc we Van- couver on the night or Decembe r Somerset l i'nreeeml' (lei I rev Atirl "Flatly lets term mks sonrerset IS uud arrive in Edmonton 21 ham s Inter , row, and h;Irc Nlent, the a111ve1,4 . told use the glad new, that hot s Hy will have a ch'am, .rtic frae•I'nr•a l l, Itlauciol support and a dh'e'toi NUMBER AND FAR E a Spriuig''itn ' e Revue, will hc~ available toi l Nadi a Yhotw Fii'teen to twenty-four stnilen' ; "We are plauutiug six large pro . as tic had planned three yew's he makes the return fare $ :7,21 re dnctien numbers anti six rurtain ' tor" . I'ret'esaor :Utdiee gave his turn . II' over twenty-five make th e numbers ttith pretty girls and whnle•heinted support and we'so trip, the return rare will he $12,Yl i -lid Perrault in .on h iterwieu• I n day . TO THEIR EAR S "Het it' tills is In he a I'niver,eit y Itevne in tilt LI'n0 settee ni th e word Ilion underline's have to h e in it up to their i-are," lie ;g ilde d haws al . Irrested to tike alit la the Revu e Iwtlllcn nhnu,t live prndut -, twllirlt should pmru'ny et ' et ' y ' aspec t Lion numbers end we expect under lot university Ill's," he said . Students Condemn Senat e For' Frosh ' Football Rulin g Second emergency meeting within a week called to discus s athletics yesterday condemned the Senate's freshmen footbal l ruling, voted to investigate entrance into the Canadian Intel' - Provincial League with prairie universities and defeated a proposal to institute athletic scholarships at UBC . ' 1)artrel 'I'epoorten's controversial c .. . _ . a . _ motion asking for approval or tall ., After the defeat of the athleti c Ietle scholarships way resouudin •l Seholarsship motion, and evidenc e ly defeated by ti quiet crowd of or a decided reeling or apathy t'oward further participation wit h CANNOT BE BOUGH T Prominent footballer Georg e Putt said there Is nothing to Indl cote that we can buy a winnin g team and that scholarships wil l result in competitive bidding be . tween UBC 'and big money Ameri- can colleges . "We must develop our high schools, We can't pose ibiy expect to buy outside player s who can pass the entrance require- ments of the university . Give ou r unsubsidized team a chance," li e said . NO FOOTBALL FOR FROS H Motion stated on the petitio n calling for the second meeting wa s passed with only a murmer o f discussion . It asked the Senate t o "promote as far as possible, stn dent responsibility for their ac- tions, and to instill in students a desire for education , by mean s other than legislation and speclfl- f .tlly to withdraw the regulatio n respecting ellgibilty of freshme n to play, in i ntercolle g iate athletics . " ' , Ai ewe-SW ] . aria' ' at the Senate meeting last night , but no results are known . Hill Moulding, the big drive b e hind last week's meeting on the Mr . Henn has been chairman et ' re-shuffling or the athletic admin . the Faculty Hoard of Fine Art' , istration, put forward a motion member of the Fltzwill :om Museu m asking Students' Connell to sat Syndicate and of various tlnive's- ap a tutorial system for football Ity Administ rative Bodies, Dlrec• ' players dining the pre•Christina,,1 for or Studies In English at St , term . He was reminded that such Catherine's College, and in the pas t a system Is already in existence , at Trinity, ('bor e, Magdalene , through MAD . Ills proposal was de- Jesus, Sydney, Sussex, Peterhous e rested, ,, and Selwyn Colleges . 6 the e e son is ll tents for outsiders turd p .m . 'Those interested are ,to of January 1 :, 106 ;1 : free to members . bring along' a soft peurll ; dr:nwvlg g Rabbi D . C Kogan and a UBC & F &F paper twill . be provided , Professor will lead one or moreCONSERVATION of 11 .(' .'s lan d of the debates on : Resolved that tesonrces will be the topic of Dr . Jewish Fraternities should lieD . G, Laird, Prof . ni'soils, in today's VANCOUVER TRAVELS s,A S banned from the campus ; Resole , discussion fu the series on Con . SOCIATION are inviting 411 fa ed that Jewish 'traditional Prae• servatioti or Our Natural Resi . iii' es reign gir ls to a Film Showin g psi . ~ Party tonight al S p .m, nt , the Ip e ' i hums 01' i yitss Nora Drainie, 29'8. Wr est I ;th Avenue, i' i , 07261t , 4i Od ORGAN .' JEROME DAVIS, president o r meetiart the,American'revellers Federatio n :ton . and lecturer fur thirteen years ti t Pale University, will speak lit Art s Inn al 12 : :10 MI Monday, DereMhe r Jack GLEE CLUB rolleai ;vai at 12 :3n I . His subject will be "Korea , today in 11 :111 . It is lmportaut that l Profit or Loss, " Victim of yesterday morning' s freak car explosion on the Uni versity parking lot, Angus Robert Tappay was reported In "satlsfac - ma y' : tory condition" and "resting peace- window an d U11( fully" by General Hospital, mid•, blown oft by night last night . slelant, Dr. Prank Hebb explai n the loss of his arm' as being du e to the holding of some explosive. The front right window, hack the sun visor tver i the blast . be given LEANING OVER SEA T Tappay's Although there were no ey e vision ie 1 tt'itnP ;ay accounts present, it is a• th e front seat o f First UBC 'Musical Revu e May Blossom In Sprin g at IF+;I'It hatlt Everybody wants to ge t tor Christmas . hom e I t enough or ' the First l'al fron t was the boy' s Perrault the min t the production . FREE-FOR-AL L fader IIIe guidaure or F ;rnest liar production in February an d I'erraull anti w r ite the asitiutcc' presentation to early sP1 ;ing " and morel support or Mss Dorothy FINANCIAL SUPPOR T la charg e handsome boy's, dancing, sin lee . acting and lots of climate work,' well on the wily to steress! Perrault . 1'I1(' gradl :lte Ihln 11'il,nn . with ihrhlu'ai-h Ih Inn'uaeu l dirr .ct the show rnrd the rnuihiii : i limn stall iunl studie d should really ~ttuntlat c spirit . "There's room tar t y'ryuae i n abilit y r . iIillI U4 I'he special Fare I . o u sleoper with berth extra , :t2,sl) Is for coach, only . :Ulynu e "Eric 1irul awd mysel f ready less than SOO who deplored th e situation prevalent in most Ameri non football colleges, and calle d for . a "etinadian attitude towar d sports ." Henn To Discus s Invasion Planni n Today At Noo n Thomas Rice Henn, former col bnel of the British Army and Se . nior University Lecturer in Englis h will speak in Physics 200 today a t noon . Mr . Henn will speak o n "Planning an Invasion ." Herat will be sponsored by th e Committee In University Lectures , under the direction of Prof . Snwal'd . A clause limiting' the participa lion to tit time and place financiall y feasible to all the member uni versities was included in the mo lion . It was defeated, but on a re . quest from Dave Anfleld at th e end of 'the meeting that the pre posal , be reconsidered it wa s passed with no opposition . Continued on PAS 3 SEE AMS MEETIN G American Colleges, Al Goldsmit h proposed that competition wit h other Canadian Colleges be leveed. gated with an eye toward possibl e membership In the Western Inter . University Football Union . Fort Camp - Acadia Danc e To Feature Black Magi c For t hine erforts tomorro w stage a "Black Magic " Ilroek Hall, 8 :30. 12 p .m . Open to everyone, "especially al l girls," this dance will be the lus t held before , exams . Admission pric e lot* men with meal pass is 50 cents ; cost for others is 75 cents . Girl s will be admitted free . "The dance Is for those wh o want to blow off steam before th e exams," states John Sears, Acadi a dance committee chairman . it Is believed that the danc e amaiks the first joint co•operatlot i of this 'sort between Fort Cam p and Acadia . Officials from bot h camps expect the evening to b e twice as sucessl'ul us may previ- 1 one individual camp dances , Commenting on the fact tha t Five Debates Sciuur'e d .uu'ing will he held tu• VISUAL ARTS CLUB w illi'hol d In New Y ear morrow in the Women's Oynt• , thee' first, class today In the',At'i e Don't forget the "Pre-Exam Jaen" and Craft Workshop next to .tile Floe Jewish problems will be de- Tea 'Donee in the Brock Friday„ Art Gullets• in the Library . 1faNe- hated in a Illllel sponsored cal• I December 5 at 3 :30 p.m . Admisd mint, The class will bei,ln at' 4 thrill program durin g th w ek i 1 Camp and Acadia will corn• Acadia and Port Camp have sat las t night to ', recognized each other, Sear s in stated, "it is the sort of thing tha t makes us realize we are all in th e same boat, all on the same camp - us, " dance 'TWEEN CLASSE S Today last Chance For VO&S To Sign Up For Mount Baker I ' VOC INVITES everybody to ski sill members be there : at Mount Baker tills Sunday, Sign) & F 1W up today at noo'o in the Quad at' CHEMICAL INSTITUT E the VOC Notice Board . This is CANADA will present • Ur, It, , yam' lust chance, Clark, retired head of the Cttaoiid' 4 4 4 try Department today alt' MOO t o DANCE CLUB noon hour see,•'t'hemistry' 200 . Ile 's''iii spank o n miens will he discontinued until "FRtty Yea" of ' ('hernlatry ' a t Thursday, January s, with a gets- IIRC ." + e'al dance sessim6 ' said Student ., travelling to Saskatch - ewan or' other points beyond Ed- tires are no longer applicable ; sponsored by the three campu s nod uttfhtnn cite also get this speehil i what the Kinsey RepoPt revertls Utical clubs . The speec h aril' rate to Edmonton . about the ,news ; Resolved that the !given in I'(1 ion at 12 :30 . solution ill AIIti•Setnetism is Aso . coach cn ' w1 11e nil,,,, simllaliun ; and the Jewi,lt, lnfia•' CHRISTIAN SCIENC E 'lire on Western Culture . IZATIQN regular Iwnekl y Anyone Interested iii talking on' will he held 12 :30 in Physic s interested in the special one of the above topics is asked I .:very's ii' is w'ccnnw . rates she'd() contact Keith Kelly ;a go to liillel House or con . . 4 4 it .11 ., Is :,'i1' or Blurry Ilrahani at tact Dav e AL . OUIU between 7 and 9 p .m, ~Yolre, loungson o t. a

Chemistry Student Loses ' Fend In Chemical Explosion · Fend In Chemical Explosion 4plosion at 11:30 yesterday morning in a car in th e parking lot next to the War Memorial Gymnasium

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Page 1: Chemistry Student Loses ' Fend In Chemical Explosion · Fend In Chemical Explosion 4plosion at 11:30 yesterday morning in a car in th e parking lot next to the War Memorial Gymnasium

VANCOUVER, .B.C., FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1952 PRICE 5c; No, 21VOLUME XXXV

Player Aid

At General Meetin

e

—Ubyssey Photo by Hux Lovely ,

BOR ROLLAND, one of the firemen called to the scene of yesterday 's accident ; looks, over ,t.he damag done to Angus Tappay's Vanguard by the explosion ; Tappay, a UBC

':student lost one hand and part of another in the explosion caused by chemica,ls . De-fails of the accident, however, are still unk nown .

r

Chemistry Student Loses 'Fend In Chemical Explosion

4plosion at 11:30 yesterday morning in a car in th eparking lot next to the War Memorial Gymnasium resulted i nthe loss of the left hand, and mangling and loss of fingers on th eright hand and possible loss of vision of Angus Robert Tappay .

i"tture Homecoming Ball s

he held away from the

campus .

A mitinri passed ha AMS cou p No information couldill at thee' Met meeting reoom' about the condition o fmends "that fUtnre, Ilonleconiina eyes. Possible loss ofBalls he held off the cati'apus,"

feared .

Motion was odwanced as a sole. !slimed that 'Pappas' was leanioe,

Hon for the problem of the large,

Reason fur 'I',appay's possession' leer the righ t

consumption of liquor at home• or explosives is rumored to be that t••U' when the explosion occurred ,

coming dances, contours' to Ind- ge Ivan preparing a smudge It di At the time, it is difficult t oversity regulations . The admildst• rota uou•auUmrized campus p,p~uscortain the cause or r ho onto.

ration regards this as a laxity

club•

!slot), but it is thought that th estudent discipline, suet feels that! ATTRACT PEOPLE

possible eombluation of red phos •It should be stopped .

! The smudge pot was to he lit Phnrotts and Potassium cldorat eConnell felt that strict enforce . , Ili rront or the Armouries to at . Wright have caused the blast .

mint of the ruling by a disciplinary tract more people to the noon hoarBOUGHT CHEMICALScommittee or even the lt('MP!,

meeting. The club was then

Tappay,It is assumed from hulaweald result •1n the ball being um. ' s

,s

nppaed to put the fire out withpurchase found in the car ,xuecessrul .

Theball would

hove!the aid of n fire truck they had M

.

bought many 'or the chemicals at ato be helld downtown despite the rigged up beforehand .

downtown store earlier in the de yfact that this might detract bola'

Dr, Kenneth Young of the Ifni- and did not get them fronm th ethe spirt of Iioniecotuiug,

versity Health Serviceand his as-1 !chemistry department ,

'

Explosive substances such as

magneslum shavings . icing snot ,

coal oil and sulphur were foundneat' the car untouched by the ex•plosion ,

By DOT AUERBACH

Special Train HomeThe seed of an idea planted three years ago has finall y

taken root and may blossom in the spring with the first UBC

Revue .

For Edmonton Boys

"A number of student s' have al••

_

ready contributed good ideas and gl'arls to cnnl.rlbute

Whets interested met last night 'it Ie hook, "

a special meeting in the I,x~eusion'

"w" hope to hav e

Department Library," ,aid Ernest' hook written by December tt1 at gory and their special train bac kll . haw ,tuba Iti'ot'kinghaol and

to the prairies,, and now it's thegroup to go to work and write the lonely boy's from Edmonton .

' music . The sin g ly should he readyThe train back to Edmonton vi a

CNR fol . Christmas iv!ll lc we Van-couver on the night or December

Somerset l i'nreeeml' (lei I rev Atirl "Flatly lets termmks

sonrersetIS uud arrive in Edmonton 21 ham sInter ,

row, and h;Irc Nlent, the a111ve1,4 . told use the glad new, that hot s

Hy will have a ch'am,.rtic frae•I'nr•a l l, Itlauciol support and a dh'e'toi NUMBER AND FAR E

a Spriuig''itn 'e Revue,

will hc~ available toi l Nadi a Yhotw

Fii'teen to twenty-four stnilen' ;"We are plauutiug six large pro . as tic had planned three yew's he makes the return fare $:7,21 re •

dnctien numbers anti six rurtain ' tor". I'ret'esaor :Utdiee gave his turn . II' over twenty-five make th enumbers ttith pretty girls and whnle•heinted support and we'so trip, the return rare will he $12,Yl i

-lid Perrault in .on h iterwieu• I n

day .TO THEIR EARS

"Het it' tills is In he a I'niver,eit yItevne in tilt LI'n0 settee ni th eword Ilion underline's have to he

in it up to their i-are," lie ;g ilde dhaws al . Irrested to tike alit la the Revu e

Iwtlllcn nhnu,t live prndut -, twllirlt should pmru'ny et ' et ' y ' aspec tLion numbers end we expect under lot university Ill's," he said .

Students Condemn Senate

For' Frosh ' Football Ruling

Second emergency meeting within a week called to discuss

athletics yesterday condemned the Senate's freshmen footbal l

ruling, voted to investigate entrance into the Canadian Intel'-

Provincial League with prairie universities and defeated a

proposal to institute athletic scholarships at UBC . '1)artrel 'I'epoorten's controversial c

. . . _ . a ._

motion asking for approval or tall ., After the defeat of the athleti c

Ietle scholarships way resouudin •l Seholarsship motion, and evidenc e

ly defeated by ti quiet crowd of or a decided reeling or apathy t'o•

ward further participation wit h

CANNOT BE BOUGHTProminent footballer Georg e

Putt said there Is nothing to Indl •cote that we can buy a winnin gteam and that scholarships wil lresult in competitive bidding be .tween UBC 'and big money Ameri-can colleges. "We must developour high schools, We can't pose •ibiy expect to buy outside playerswho can pass the entrance require-ments of the university . Give ou runsubsidized team a chance," li esaid .

NO FOOTBALL FOR FROSHMotion stated on the petitio n

calling for the second meeting waspassed with only a murmer o fdiscussion . It asked the Senate t o"promote as far as possible, stn •dent responsibility for their ac-

tions, and to instill in students adesire for education, by meansother than legislation and speclfl-f .tlly to withdraw the regulatio nrespecting ellgibilty of freshmento play, in intercollegiate athletics . "

' ,Ai ewe-SW ]. aria''at the Senate meeting last night,but no results are known .

Hill Moulding, the big drive behind last week's meeting on the Mr. Henn has been chairman et 're-shuffling or the athletic admin . the Faculty Hoard of Fine Art',istration, put forward a motion member of the Fltzwill :om Museumasking Students' Connell to sat Syndicate and of various tlnive's-ap a tutorial system for football Ity Administ rative Bodies, Dlrec• 'players dining the pre•Christina,,1 for or Studies In English at St ,term . He was reminded that such Catherine's College, and in the pas ta system Is already in existence , at

Trinity,

('bor e,

Magdalene ,through MAD. Ills proposal was de- Jesus, Sydney, Sussex, Peterhous erested,

,, and Selwyn Colleges .

6 the

e e son is ll tents for outsiders turd p.m .

'Those

interested

are ,toof January 1:, 106 ;1 :

free to members .

bring along' a soft peurll ; dr:nwvlg g

Rabbi D. C Kogan and a UBC

&F

&F

paper twill . be provided ,Professor will lead one or moreCONSERVATION of 11 .(' .'s landof the debates on : Resolved that tesonrces will be the topic of Dr .Jewish Fraternities should lieD . G, Laird, Prof . ni'soils, in today's VANCOUVER TRAVELS s,AS

banned from the campus ; Resole , discussion fu the series on Con . SOCIATION are inviting 411 fa •

ed that Jewish 'traditional Prae• servatioti or Our Natural Resi. iii' es reign gir ls to a Film Showing

psi . ~ Party tonight al S p.m, nt , the

Ip e 'i hums 01' iyitss Nora Drainie, 29'8.

Wr est I ;th Avenue, i' i , 07261t ,

4i

Od

ORGAN .' JEROME DAVIS, president o r

meetiart the,American'revellers Federatio n:ton. and lecturer fur thirteen years ti t

Pale University, will speak lit ArtsInn al 12 : :10 MI Monday, DereMhe r

Jack

GLEE CLUB rolleai ;vai at 12 :3n I . His subject will be "Korea ,

today in 11 :111 . It is lmportaut that l Profit or Loss, "

Victim of yesterday morning'sfreak car explosion on the Uni •

versity parking lot, Angus Robert

Tappay was reported In "satlsfac -ma y' : tory condition" and "resting peace- window an dU11( fully" by General Hospital, mid•,

blown oft bynight last night .

slelant, Dr. Prank Hebb explain

the loss of his arm' as being du e

to the holding of some explosive.

The front right window, hack

the sun visor tver i

the blast .

be given LEANING OVER SEA TTappay's

Although there were no eyevision ie

1tt'itnP ;ay accounts present, it is a• •

thefront seat o f

First UBC 'Musical Revu eMay Blossom In Spring

at IF+;I'It hatlt

Everybody wants to ge ttor Christmas .

home

I tenough or' the First l'al •frontwas the boy's

Perrault the mint

the production .

FREE-FOR-AL Lfader IIIe guidaure

or F;rnest liar production in February an d

I'erraull anti w r ite the asitiutcc' presentation to early sP1 ;ing "

and morel support or Mss Dorothy FINANCIAL SUPPOR T

la charge

handsome boy's, dancing, sin lee .

acting and lots of climate work,'

well on the wily to steress!„

Perrault .

1'I1(' gradl :lte Ihln 11'il,nn .

with ihrhlu'ai-h Ih Inn'uaeu ldirr.ct the show rnrd the rnuihiii : ilimn

stall iunl studiedshould

really ~ttuntlatcspirit .

"There's room tar t y'ryuae i n

abilit y

r . iIillI U4

I'he special Fare I . ousleoper with berth extra ,

:t2,sl) Is for coach, only .

:Ulynu e"Eric 1irul awd mysel f

ready

less than SOO who deplored the

situation prevalent in most Ameri •non football colleges, and calle dfor . a "etinadian attitude towar dsports ."

Henn To Discuss

Invasion Plannin

Today At Noon

Thomas Rice Henn, former col •bnel of the British Army and Se.nior University Lecturer in Englis hwill speak in Physics 200 today a tnoon. Mr. Henn will speak o n"Planning an Invasion ."

Herat will be sponsored by th e

Committee In University Lectures ,under the direction of Prof . Snwal'd .

A clause limiting' the participa •

lion to tit time and place financiall yfeasible to all the member uni •versities was included in the mo •lion. It was defeated, but on a re .quest from Dave Anfleld at theend of 'the meeting that the pre •posal , be reconsidered it waspassed with no opposition .

Continued on PAS 3SEE AMS MEETIN G

American Colleges, Al Goldsmit hproposed that competition wit h

other Canadian Colleges be leveed.gated with an eye toward possibl emembership In the Western Inter .University Football Union .

Fort Camp - Acadia Dance

To Feature Black Magic

Fort

hine erforts tomorro wstage a "Black Magic "Ilroek Hall, 8 :30.12 p .m .

Open to everyone, "especially al l

girls," this dance will be the lus theld before , exams. Admission pric e

lot* men with meal pass is 50 cents ;

cost for others is 75 cents . Girl s

will be admitted free .

"The dance Is for those who

want to blow off steam before th e

exams," states John Sears, Acadi a

dance committee chairman .

it Is believed that the dance

amaiks the first joint co•operatloti

of this 'sort between Fort Camp

and Acadia. Officials from bot h

camps expect the evening to be

twice as sucessl'ul us may previ-1one individual camp dances ,

Commenting on the fact tha t

Five DebatesSciuur'e d .uu'ing will he held tu•

VISUAL ARTS CLUB w illi'hol d

In New Year morrow in the Women's Oynt•

, thee' first, class today In the',At'ieDon't forget the "Pre-Exam Jaen" and Craft Workshop next to .tile

Floe Jewish problems will be de- Tea 'Donee in the Brock Friday„ Art Gullets• in the Library. 1faNe-hated in a Illllel sponsored cal•

I December 5 at 3 :30 p.m . Admisd mint, The class will bei,ln at' 4thrill program durin g th w ek i

1

Camp and Acadia will corn• Acadia and Port Camp have sat las tnight to ', recognized each other, Sears

in stated, "it is the sort of thing tha tmakes us realize we are all in th esame boat, all on the same camp -us,"

dance

'TWEEN CLASSES

Today last Chance For VO&S

To Sign Up For Mount Baker I'

VOC INVITES everybody to ski sill members be there:

at Mount Baker tills Sunday, Sign)

&F

1W

up today at noo'o in the Quad at' CHEMICAL INSTITUTE

the VOC Notice Board. This is CANADA will present • Ur, It, ,

yam' lust chance,

Clark, retired head of the Cttaoiid'•

4

4

4

try Department today alt' MOO t o

DANCE CLUB noon hour see,•'t'hemistry' 200 . Ile 's''iii spank on

miens will he discontinued until "FRtty Yea"of ' ('hernlatry ' a t

Thursday, January s, with a gets- IIRC ."

+

e'al dance sessim6

'

said

Student., travelling to Saskatch -

ewan or' other points beyond Ed- tires are no longer applicable ; sponsored by the three campu snod uttfhtnn cite also get this speehil i what the Kinsey RepoPt revertls Utical clubs. The speecharil' rate to Edmonton .

about the ,news ; Resolved that the !given in I'(1 ion at 12 :30 .solution ill AIIti•Setnetism is Aso

.coach cn 'w1 11e nil,,,, simllaliun ; and the Jewi,lt, lnfia•'

CHRISTIAN SCIENC E'lire on Western Culture .

IZATIQN regular Iwnekl yAnyone Interested iii talking on' will he held 12 :30 in Physic s

interested in the special one of the above topics is asked I .:very's ii' is w'ccnnw .rates she'd() contact Keith Kelly ;a go to liillel House or con .

. 4

4it .11 ., Is:,'i1' or Blurry Ilrahani at

tact

Dav eAL. OUIU between 7 and 9 p .m,

~Yolre,

loungson o t.

a

Page 2: Chemistry Student Loses ' Fend In Chemical Explosion · Fend In Chemical Explosion 4plosion at 11:30 yesterday morning in a car in th e parking lot next to the War Memorial Gymnasium

PAGE TWO

THE UBYSSEY

Friday, November 28, 195 2

Tsr uasszvMEMBER CANADIAN i1NIVER TY P1tESi3

Authorized as second class Mall, Post Office department., Ottawa .

Student subscriptions ,$1 .20 per year (Included in AMS fees) . Mail sunscriptions

$2,00 per year. Single copies five cents . Published throughout the University year h y

the Student Pnblieations Hoard of the Alma Mater ,Sncfet ,y, University of Brltsu

( :ulnntbia . Editorial opinions expresser) het'ein are those of the editorial staff of theIlbysegy, tool not neronmicily those of Ills Almn Muter Society or of , the -University .

Offices In hock HMI

For display advortIaln t

Phone Alma 1524

Phone ALma, 325 ,

EDITOR-IN-CHIEF . .

. . . . .

. JOE SCHLESINGE R

Executive Editor, Gerry Kidd ; Feature Editor, Elsie Gorhat ; City Editor, Myra Oreen i

News Editor, icon Sapera ; Women's Editor, Flo McNeil ; Literary Editor, dolt Plkington ;

CtrP Editor, Patsy Byi'pe ; Circulation Manager, 11 'arlon Novick ; Editorial Asslst.nnt ,

Vaughan Lyon ; glair Photographer, ilex Lovely .

Senior Editors Ed Parker, Pete. Pineo

1)eskmen : iiarvey King, Toni Shorter, Marie Adam ; Reporters, Anlee Brickman, Edith

Campbell ; Feature Reporters, I)ot Auerbach, Elizabeth Norcross, Valerie Qarstlh ,

Letterp to the Editor should bb restricted to 150 words The Uby$1er r8eiirVBi th e

rl ht to cut le tees and cannot guarantee to,publlah all letters received .

ts Indecisiveinclination to table controversial motions un-

til some distant date In the hope that the con-

troversy will just fade away in the interven-

ing time,

,

Students seem to forget completely tha t

Special General Meetings are called to discuss

controversial matters . After all, we have an

elected student government to take care of

the everyday business of running our Alma

Mater Society .

We cannot escape forever by tabling mo-

tions or by just dumping problems Into the

laps of various specially struck committees

which can play around but never solve the

problem,

'

ire second AMS General Meeting calledi+

4 x11 : :• !F

uss athletes has shown that the studen t

4 h

hal nhh intt

thitteiter teeres nore sagac yzI

Ott,

ojustify any demands for more studen t

rcan ttrot of the athletic organigatiion .

its lack of a de facto quorum is proof ofQ

to est The proceedings of the meet-

f showed only a wavering of studen t'1ct on

e most illuminating indication of this in -s is the fact that a' motion that had bee n

defeated was passed unanimously on recon -t

~ trav

,

ceratian only minutes later without any .

debate .Furthermore, there seems to be a growing

llhyssey , to a recent editorial, attempted t o

1nllrlylt t,hat the CCF has abandoned socialism .

.been thought that the problem need s

nom $ Psittrlrlcation . Therefore, the MP club aske d

A APeakee to speak on the topic : "Is the C(' I

1pit>llistic? "tt .

1,11 ortupately, there were apparently no I'hyssey

rlal writers at that meeting. For the further

1 orlon of the Ubyssey, therefore, here are aPSI",NI . Nets. Draw your own conclusions as to th e

CCF and Socialism .

e expression of CCV principles is still to be

,tn the Regina Manifesto . To quote, In part :

e aim to replace the present capitalist system ,

with Its inherent injustice and Inhumanity, by a

social order from which the domination and ex-

plriltatton of one class by another will he ellmin -

iMted .• ,r "No CCF Government will test conten t

t.11t It has eradicated capitalism and put int o

pperation the full program of socialized plannin g

l`fi~IlFh will lead to the establishment in Canada o f

the Co-operative ('rnnmonwealt.li, "

1

ow, while we recoenire that. much of the

Sgeializatioa of tier economy depends upon federa l

ttctipn, nevertheless, lit the only provin c e where1

the , CCF has attained power, it has already begu n

uorogl'ani t)I' w'ell'al'e measures, government an d

¶4qpprative enterprise, and financial activity al l

,ptmgd at placing control of the economy in the

han'ds of the mettle, and removing the dictatoria l

Nickel

t 'Dnring the past few months ,

N,Io .sorts of people have heon stop .

t lli( :k, me In the streets, in la y

ctll$sses, on my door•atep, to th e

hnith-tub, etc ., to ask i io the fol-

lowing question :

"Is it not t r ue that Canada .

striving as she is Lo build u p

within itself a NEW NA'T'ION, i s

woefully in need of a clear, con-

cise summation of its history i n

an q(un(inIir, psyrhologicel an d

:cleut.ifi( Paine of rc1'eren( c

which would he readily availabl e

tit the man on the street?„

Then they hurry away, swing •

leg from tree to tree and (hatter -

lug excitedly .The point is well taken . I n

fact It's well taken to the cit y

dleaosal dump, lint, sieve i brough t

It lip Isoniething I et, no (hmh t

we may as well sit down and Ms -

cuss it . I). stop scratching your .

self and pull up a tree .

My contention is that Canad aneeds a history for the Commo n(1'gh!)''Ian . I propose to give i tone. So here goes, in rive queasy

instnIIrnents :

Childish History of Canad a

("Ire the Dickens" )Canada is the evened ur thir d

biggest reentry in the world, d e

pending on whether you includ eOuter Mongolia and Tibet in th earea of ('Mina .

Well, de yon? Me honest . )It is surrounded I . the I'arili (

on the west, Ills .AIlnnlih on t.li ecant, II tariff-wall to Ilse smith ,and millions nl' hill-hoards aroun d

(verythiug .

The first European to set foo tin ('anadl was Lief Ericson allie s

Eric the Red which name seg .gags why he (am( lo Canada :

Ilo (ai(idn't get into the States) .

Erie was out looking for saga s(Norwegians' were gaga over th e

saga) and ended up being decapi-

tated hy some Fiardy Danes (i naccordance with an old custom

known as the lrueiaw) . Ile there .

lipnn became known as the Head -lest; Norseman .

Neat lo Canada crone one Joh n(',lhol, who first authoritativel y

discovered the North America n('oirtlnea) ,

Yeas. Before Colef» bus yet .trailing Made his mark in Cana-

da, he naturally headed down t othe ESA where he settled hiHeston . His descendants are saidto talk only to (ltd, I thin k

they're just muttering under their 'breath . '

Next (ante Gall who landed InNerd Scotia and was therefore

executed hy MacDonald who op •potted "making Nova Seotia Eng-

lish by making her French", The n! . It e r in was Verrazzano, il eshould've stood in bed .

In 152 .1, however, Jacques ('ar-

tier, rain() le New France on a

paleface-radian exchange scholar -ship. 1,11 the saute time locti -

Ii :t it is was sent to London) . Th eidea . seas la) (Teat better Illlltllll lunderstanding between the In •d' :uis and the French . It didn' twork .

Cartier made three voyages in .ti) the interior with Ile

India n

( It 1 I' Donnaeona 1"Insnlato d1V'all•Hoard) . Daring one of thei runaleruns•portages past the un -

Il I igahle I,n(hhle Rapids, Donna -I1nuu

is repulod tU have stai d"\Vint this place needs is a Sea -w•a)

evident hat head stro p s,cousin.-4 In Ilig Southland can't

by franc

get the d'anlit thing out of th e

committee stage . "

Champlain, in 1809, discovere d

Lake Champlain, which was quite

as coincidence, all things conshl •

erect, This made him feel ver y

successful, 140 he headed for Wls -

censile USA, and that was that .

In 1600, the French comedy

team of Raddishos and Gooae-

henries headed into the North-w'a4t for furs, closely followe d

by tie : Jesuit, Jean de Ilrebeuf,

who taught the Indians ('hris-

tiaility so well that they bnrntr dbiro at. the stake .

Since there weren't many ,

women ftir-traders around, tied 'considering the long, cold Quo •

bee nights, the 'Wrench govern -

ment, in the first fatal step t o .

wards Iiie . welfat'e state, applie d

the principle of forcible' dlstrihu-

t ion of surpluses . In this case the ,

local bureaucrat (hours XIV) had '

P, surplus of Illegitimate daughter s

known as Filler du Rol, and Que .

!we needed greaten .

LETTERS

Editor, the lthyssey ,

Dear f h' :

Fascfnated by Ills conception

of himself as the "snob above

snobs" columnist Franck leas en-

tirely overlooked one ,importan t

representative group that certain-

ly clererves glentiou in his "Bookes

,g ,of Canaclyan Snobs,"

,

We refer, to note other tha n

the ''International S'noh ."

Before the heated Tolerance

>mgtis rush nt us witl► poisone d

aqfmay we point out that our

clasa~~icatlon•ts l neither alined a t

tin aorlll Sul depicted , in . a

tliyssgyt, cartoton. nor is it l aimed

• aarf~ou~arl ly at tgrel n' students

In, internatlona1 .cltlds .in the, oast iCnnadlan

,

a re strictly within our Iffne of

Ytrle , , : •To best 4o a'study of this group

or snobs one tnua4 soethem i n

tit Ir proper surroundings .

, .,

i' pro su 'I'Uke an avei ag e

IA Ametae a handrail(,anttgllu

.

;

sli tf ~rnr} l laor}8 ► artll tan' and mix

ivp~l

tlj t 'as Feral variQtlep (fOar~

e jt -etudonts l ,l *AO. ,I

a h . . .

exotic music and a few uninitiated

piles

Trot tlnvgtf a,. a~Ill a 1 ,

'aopibn

r{ ue t t} t.,and suppose(?

it

r ialul e

.

:

nmeftfrel ehot 14

,

sare

cR

l

,~

. I

I

, (etong t

I' pin r R lled :40vernl vll,r e,, ,jnd comp orta, lie

al4 . Nct4 1 tttatoll,l ti>t,s4cstPeat() cn th : dept,(One rhtla t1

t

t

tt

i '

ar ,huge proper

~pphe're )

,1 ,flt' ,tn ,

. .,r t,

(Fwo cngadii}a , l rtt ar . ipv er-

Ing tiietr I)uCp , coated l eyeitds In

a seductive manner as they shyl y

store at a tin ,Fernando 1santa s

type who is himself sotto! , pen -

lively at a package of claarette s

in the Ildnd,ot anather 'person . ,

"Hasn't ;Andrei got the most

wotiderul French accent," eights

one ,girl .

"Mmmm, it's so foreign and ,de-

ticiously sexy," agrees the other.

"These Canadian accents are s o

boring and unimaginative," sh e

whines In east Canadian tone.

"I think that ICs so nice that

Ciau4Ied

'TYPING : ESSAYS, THESIS,al a n n s (ripts, mimeographing ,

Eloise Sheet., No. 7 Dalhousie

Apts ., l .'riversit.y Blvd . AI, Ii(i5iiit .

(66 )

TYPING 'ESSAYS . THESIS, ET C

Campus pates . Phone Cll . 51S !

1715 Dunbar .

TYPING : ESSAYS, T FI E S I S .

Notes, expertly mind promptl y

typed . Moderate rates . We use

Campbell's book of rules, Blake y

and Cook's and Essay Speciflrlt .

Hens by the Department of An a

plied Science. S'ervin'g students j

since 1918. Mrs. A„C, Robinson, I

41$0 W. 11th Ave ., ALMa 09151t .GENTLE',IIAN'S' F A W ENCL .

fish gabardine raineoet, ('or1ditionpet1'ec1 . Very 1'easenable, Klirr .

51501i .

\IAN'S BROWN TWO .trouser snit, size 3S, hardly warn .

KP;rr . 51501, .

WANTED', RIDERS

TO .THE EDITOR

"Certainly, back to mg Italy,"

oh

interrupts another. "Oh how I

long for our food," he amens, tek-

tltg a huge chunk out of ills ho t

dog .

"And tile. culture . , , just loads

and loads of culture . Away fro m

this l)ar1)a ► ic attempt at civi1ize-

tlon track to tenl earthy life, "

responds one female stral ghten -

In filer sort, ity fg

n •I can't to once again walk

along the Cligmps Elms an d

have pn aliertif at e, sidewal k

cafe, groans another boy'h(`q

1 ,I

vb Ic,, , ,)en did you leave your

cailntr ?' psks.a friend.

country? a, I was bor n

tytlit

, t!

,4t

,L ,i1 C err i It! l ived here all, my'Ift but I feel l at the bistro sJ .11( 1 It,ltlln lit

1}(IIV,,r

.1t'

r lLind aunts ofI 1,1 N old FluropeIore m y

Ill

lt1I1 F'

, Iteats holes

Hoye I dread titl eV 11 it

-,

* 1

ILL'

el

It)

u,•vieiotis striving fo►mmoney

.laTt~hAt°`Is It w rt

nyw{jys? Thi sy !a1 P!(a11 1'1r kS I,~

,

iTuterieap y,ewlpf recurlty,isidriv.

l ilia u}e mad By the way lack, •1 4,

I-

IF

~votf,ati } l T( i wJ~it'

, e that ntwo hl~'" ,1 "Ch I worlld'plat love to he a t

re whin t,r s

,tt

I

lr .

f4ree wcn' i

rgpe ' glgl one

V'I K,e4fSiHu U1

r,

I rcoed stret('h~ng' outl her arms to

I

I

,

It ,, ,r . I Iem

('e All man d

"nutt dear, I tittered to maket

t li

x

utoi

it

,

rrYn'I a!, .trge wvft~lart, itt Canada, "

fl lIrm_ I an ion jnitinted male sit-

t

n te,,vRrnepj w

.

:a•

,

,roue, JltIlnottfopl f(11It, my deer

titttta tadrvj It is t)ieae stupid

°f',~'~Ia,N(Jnpl~~,,, a4sw4r~; >laths~r .i g 4 .

~,,it

s f flow, of anwhfle utI1h en ,lIIta

r~)t'a ,hFS rollnn1( pt' r tf,4 'a.iq t,,f h , 'Thes er,(' ru'

aye nD tgofy .f4}0, " rtit,

t -

Y 6# u

„ - :rat ,Ih mItn,p4ln4 ,ci, (: adta~

male LipnouneOp riot he is goin g

omme p ti r e p(a~ppty breaks up a s

over(yone, regardless of, national-

tv. ,wo~m~d) e,t~allp , to 4ccept 14 IIlia ,(tome n his car (America n

make) .

STUDENT TOUR TO

qu a

Sail from Montreal S.S. Ascania June 11th, Scotland ,English Lakes, Chester, Shakespeare Country, North an dSouth Devon, London, Holland, Belgium, Germany (th eRhine and Black Forest), Switzerland, Italian Lakes ,,Venice, Rome, Hill Towne, Florence, Italian and Frenc hRivieras, Paris .

72 DAYS — $1194

including complete land programme plus

round trip tourist class steamship space

to value of $310 .

72 DAYS — $1394

including complete land programme plu s

retold trip first class steamship spac e

to value of $510 .

ask for detailed itinerarie s

UNIVERSITY TRAVEL CLU B

57 Steer Street, West, Toronto, Kingsdale 699 4

Management : J . F. &. G . H. LUCA S

—PAT' THOMAS .

Unfortunately, the girls looke d

somewhat like Louie, and no nigh tis that cold . So Louis gave awa y

a biu'i'el Of pork with each gi r l ,

which freq'irently led to embarras-sing conl'tlalo'ns I"Stop pattin gthat . lau'r'el and pouring salt on

Me") . With the adde(IImpetus ,

funnily life soon began to flouris h

in New France, and the arrival i

of armed settlers for "trained

killers"I uss(ired Llle neiv ch i

ont''s shrtival .

It also assured the colonists of !

a measure of prosperity which

made it possible Mr twiny of the m

to move down to Louisiana, 115 :1 .

To he Continued, Sometim e

Bower of big huslneg s and finance concerns .

Also, from the B.C . CCF program in the last

election : "Within . , . P.O. the Cale will seek

political power to apply the principle of socialis t

planning to provincial affairs . . , ' teach step I n

such a program, will be taken , . . with the view

to ultimate inclusion in n dominion-wide socialis t

economy . "

Admitting that the CCF may In recent years hav e

been guilt}' of underemphasizing Its basic objects ,

this earshot be assumed to mean that the CCF ha s

deserted those principles . '

I suggest that llhyssey editorial writers stud y

literature available through the Socialist shelf I n

the library, from CCF Members, and at CCF Meet-

ings . I will personally 'u glad to go over the Regina

Manifesto, the Saskatchewan government record ,

and the B .C . CCF program with anyone interested ,

to determine objectively whether or not the CC F

has deserted socialism.

It depend,; of course, somewhat on a definition o f

socialism . The ('Cl)' definition was well-expresse d

by Frank Snowsell--a society in which the peopl e

through vurlons instruments own and control thei r

economy .And, come to think of it, that editorial writer

never did define "Socialism" .

How ;Mont It?

you've been able to preserve you r

Parisian accent Eespite the fact ithat you've been here since 1933, "

one girl whispers to Andrei .

"Ah yes,', answers the Parisia n

with a quick lift of one eyebrow .

"But how I long for my Paris . .

uh Pierre can you forget , . . "

"C'est impossible," answers his i

buddy, "You gir ls may think usnaughty boys but as soon es we !

~get our V.lttzensltlp papers we'r e

going heck to name . "

from West Van . for S :3 0

Mon .-Fri . Phone Mel, ofte r\Vest 1603Y,

He tarther etgtee that/lie know s

ol' "at leant half, .a dgpen high -

school, pltl,yeys perfuming, wit h

ly„hie tigperiors in all roonrplay-• or againstfltday, who Were clear -

inn ,M.htlity." A would, likg Mr .

Mucl~o to p a m a , a Ar p ,thos e

half llipzen players who equalle d

1'44 l ud

s retold ,

It tt,day,, hag al,yto attacked up, ver y

admirably against .the, „bette r

American competition which he

1 mljy'llt say, Tigre ,than can he

eaid,lor some other 11,C . stars, so

(aUe 1, ,

,

,Quit, uf, these "brlhlaat ,gtars'

nlpnti9p.etl, how minty . made the

first ,,team : of eyen the lowly

T11(1' ox tds, or fpPr that,matter ,

ally Val's1ty; first team, in their

Freshman Year? . ,

Bill Whalen, Arts 1 .

Editor, the libyssey ,

Dear Sr :

In your latest edition of th e

Iihyssev . under Letters to th e

Editor, a Mr. D. Macleod stated

that Paul Buday of the ,Wester n

Washington Vikings basketball

team. was nothing, but .a, "myth"

dreaed up by "staling" Wrigh t

and the Impressionable Sport s

Staffs .

I'() ANI)

ie('t(res

Vr Brnch Offk:ancouvea e

rh :90,

4021'. Pander Street

• ,

Eric V. Chown, LL.B., C.L.U. .

Branch Manager

'

TORONTO, LINT.

I VENUS PENCIL CO . LTD .

Il TORONTO, ONT .

5) .f)2 aTatImo” is 250' for my copy of "Sketchingwith Venus"—and the Technical Tern Ku Iwith 2 Venus Drawing Pencils .

I

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Through a

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While you are working itsafeguards the future o fyour dependents, then ,usually dt 60 or 65, it pay sa 'regular monthly incomefor the rest of your life .

Only life insurance enable syou to save for the days whenyou stop earning and at thesame efmp provide an estatefor our~Ioved ones shouldanything llapten to you .You sllou d d ticnes this Amfir secant wh'ha Muusaltit*of Canada representative .

can ,l beat

provide igar '1ny

`et1re~taeint ? e

—A Snielt(eriig Snob .

GET

THIS

helpful ,illustrated

instructio nbrochure.

Wadi

MOSIR

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use Vends-tlte'pencil thatholds a fine point or sharp

chisel edge. The pencil that

gives you opaque lines fo rsharp, clear reproduction .Venus Drawing Pencils ar c

s»i„o16, strong, accurate an duniform in all 1 7 degrees .Buy them at your Colleg eBook Store.

AND FIRE Vcngs Drasyieg Pcn -ells! Send 25 for, She bro-chure on the art of pencil ren-dering. Included is a VenterTechnical Alt Kil—with twoVenus Drawing Pencils.

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Page 3: Chemistry Student Loses ' Fend In Chemical Explosion · Fend In Chemical Explosion 4plosion at 11:30 yesterday morning in a car in th e parking lot next to the War Memorial Gymnasium

' 'Friday, November 28, 1952

THE UBYSSEY

PAGE THREE

ear,

UN Forum Hiais

*, YAALT

114

L to,

LA *A'IsiKi,'ys

Now that Canadian Book Week l CONTEMPORARY VERSE

Occasionally passages in Shake-

Representatives or three faith s

is over, we can look beck on iti The week came to a climax last sPedre are ludicrous to the modern' spsok on "Is Religion contrary in '

i Othll w fid this refer %%odd Unity?" today at the Unitedneoe n

mg up -- a home product of this never belore has the morpholog y_

11 1vo .sity it's good news l of any language been tackled 4 n

for the five hunhIed ethdefit's off this way .$1 I '%z

n

the language here .

, BOTH UBC GReiDUATES

"frail ;this book," says Mr. P .

Mr . EdWards and

I8sCall8'

n,3;l, 1-l . leb'diw6atilei;rn",thyteilostudentsilLiflo (!,'a

graduates a

U Mi. . Missles a,11b

rleen

preently1wenaring he r

patterns without she help of a 'IA Iliesle ; Mr. Edwards, who hn aspeaker, and thus it will be studied at Berkeley and in New

pons to 'itt last for him to teacal York as ,well as at U.13C, has Jdsthimself litteslan, a teat impossible completed his thesis for the M A4tdite :"

'eb4gthdr ' of tlie new degree from Colilthbia t1iliversIDy

hook Ind teaclifir of Russian, Mr .

Miss Carlsen . born In Denmark,

rvjIsdti 1houll ,k,powl ,

ORK FO t OAST YEAR

received her early eduention ii fShanghai, end then came on

Mr. Edwards• and Miss Irene frtJBC . Scholarships 'won include the

Nilsen, also a teajer of Russiian George Lahning ,and,, Henry Les .

t

.

!

he,re,ave heep working on the ter,, two BOER HellolarghiPs,ttnew book for the pest year and Ukrainian prize, and the Koerne rhope to hgve li t ready for publlen- Giadiiate Scholarship in Slevonl e

tide '"

In 9" 53 . Because of flee ot)- Au4tes, offered hi honor oe Profes -,vidus difficulties in the public's- soy W. J . Rose, an outstandin g

Win or ,a book 1,1,04:A11e Russian suthotity on Polish and Las t

alplinbeLIhis text will come out hIiropeaq 'History at' BBC,. She

in a photographic or stencilled s'peaka Russian, French, Ragan

version .

and English fluently, and she has

new and .very interesting a mastery of Da n is h and Demur] . ,,."

ihiere were several ° 't0°ni

nt ' m e

principle Is revolved, In the `ar. FINNISH READ1R

rof,eaeor

,,for Providin g1 e o

ot the initial !MPhil, behind this ca•

rangament of Mtsp Carleen's and ,„Ar . Edwards' eareeris no lOs

to og !rea ape s . O ,those nadutn pot-.pavrt, which may sti r

A(1',' Edwards' text, Some 15,0oo i n te r ea ttu.g . He was horn in south . ,o .iels w o could aee the re to Britis h, 0 am,b aria Into realisin g'''A

IV

Words, of high frequency were se. west `Frans , !or ,British Il acenta , fh 'e

Dr. Birney read from that we have here more than

install

8)& Vtiehbii pnii E;g'i culad

En'gian tL otr i ng his new, hook Trial of a Clty,

mountains, trees and bad weather,

lacy, Ii, MMIT moan'N , la 'Onfige) and the war

serve in the §1 Wary !:*o play,. 8.ftt ripe • ye i rk, n ,tile

C~bl TODA Ytheft

11'et-imLorg we r e ylpt 'lilgench , gild 'Cetiamehlis as o future, that discusses wittily andWords in' the English ' tanguage

noted .

Ala er in rIfinish and Estonian .

profoundly, in the atmoephere ofhave been changing ' slowly In .

*, ,

1, ,,Foiirt , trlah %Olathe' Vanonyer(meaning K

TA 11

t.

He has been it lecturer n . or

aozne Mies , with start .iitmitial in Aell'i. ri)'h4eticios, loegign at t̀wo haver op Ol adun -evi l should be damned or not .

pin

ling ekCfa, For example. In themutations and etresieshifts have ning scheofs and a lecturer In

.

!

been retyrtn %it,

key. ttthls, nigh at London University's SimiThe tplay was ortginatV cane] SlXteOhtb Century I, XSY mean t

each Iti Arttiittitot'tsome

ado

numbers Imro e gr o;Sgwh o.

nOxford,,atunderewas

D Marion of Vitnoeuvsr but the

publisher thought this rile would t lleocnigie'sYva'rindlro''71 dint :"P' row:net' i'n8it oj':

In the 04

loao, '20100, sent totvenezuela to represent Vie an'nied t' a.teade",fit s ittai n,veer . '','ta an ter iei:lt

ttee' (''Innetmame:eflinSt:nseTileto -0

:

00mree8h8ol:Yn" 14144 tit ii

,,s3000, etc .),

le hundreds, Fo_t:a i$n Pfflse's division knoti' ti l week Miss, 8, omerset ,iolned him to Etigabet,haii minded would meanalai so fath.

ag the "British Connell ." He was read the part of the yatteOltVer a,theatrewith q high class brothelt• Imoo tiy cent tart ;all the p

British Commonwealth Culture] ',

housewIfe inthe

last act :

.. attached .A `any% e *Ord Attah f th Vnzel

Ti,ceoreeeuaner.total OW v .-

VIP*

end DETAILSO sTUb Y

which ritery only 1946 ,am

't '

tIl(ai

t un AMoirg the languages of which

.

y re er e to, the 'key he has made a more or lea* de .

' r snob componen tvru

s at.tll'e 't6Pti;ruittion tailed stildy are the three Sean .

patt

the dinavlaii tanguagest German, Pol .

0iaiti code 'limper is easily Ms- lab. Czech , Itathantan, Georgian ,covered. A Whrd bearing, for in- 'Basque, Siamese, Korean, even E s -pilaw*, the number v.0713, would penul t° .

re a'vel'n and woe78'iiow i'0 1R 'AM 'tot 'eprnie breath left? Coto

ll Pale *As of ifOetion he- currently with ;A that, m t . . E' d .0 11;

(" h h e (- in

e mi n ( li mn wards is an iieeomplished pianis tt he rude

s'eia-'ehin g In t he v and alit) a cothposer, although hee'olmn'll' for 5'', ans, Yho- 10 and

re • refu ges to allow the adjective "fie .

coMplished" to be attached to th elitteer . Rather curiously, MI* Carl •sen's hobby Is 'also music. , 'an she .the. i'a excellent pianist .

fn - (*.lie 'only our Rtisgfan Ku-

dents are aware of it, t'iir has ( ,bepartnieht Slavonics whic hcompares favorably with any eathis continent

1.1tergreen Conference, on the

grnitnds that the lack of athletic i! Woman Honorariasc,lialarshis and the unwillingnes s

tif the dtphgnt '406 t'o play Cana 1 SoietyWisleoMiti(Iian s rthall Imputed that footbal l

ghoul be' a[Ml'ished at the Infer

11 New MembersBob bin iffitl4ill captain or thi s

CnllesiiO eve! pit UBC .

year's Thnae'erbirds, told the meet .

Women's Honorary Society, ,Del -

1 1 '$,Ignfa P110 tha hit diclsions ot this sort toettmtfd we yen

to the .n .thiet, , s members !recently at the society' s

themssives . "We are playing this list meeting of the tall term ,

game fiis'Caftke we like to play, net New members are .Brigltta Eu1 -

)mi : ease we want win," he said la, .j

Haneead ,

llan

Jun e

field,

Kirk ,

Betty

Marion ."The football team, in a confldtot dea n-tin)

a

'hays ' g '4 was llro 'wn, Mary Franees Munro, Jean

In favor of dropping out of the McNeely . Anne Willis, Hilary

efifeeretice amp trYineYates, fires Stewlr't ,rt

President Sally Heard, enamel . -to estab ab

financfallY reasibl ,Plan to play in the WIFU." The fVted* the ouglificittons of the 86 •

clety, which are scotarshinlead-motion was tabled until the springership, and set vitae

ealnpus ac -general meeting.

POOR A'Jl'ttiifbA NCE

Itivities . The society was founded .

y

go to reorganiieAttende'fice At the Meeting, was some ten efirs 'acontribute dpoor . At !the bog4nniag ei 'tile 'Meet ., those girls who

campus oSgatiliatimis .leg, the quorum was ehalielfged, c a

and a temp of interested . Since 'tha't Hine, the society ha sroun e nup en ough atndents hi, each year Invited to fnetntlership !

satisfy tthe 20 percent qtmrtnn re . 'theae lvhn h'a 've filled the society' s

enlreMents .euireenent or 106 students,

re

This year the society plans t o4t

#

carry out

Program of di g cussio nmeigl'c A4iiClATION CLOl i ptinelg and groans and to hold

will present Whiten's Violin Con '. Joint meeting with the Men'a Hon .(Pilo on Mdnday at 12 :30 in the"orary FrItternity, Sigma Tau Chi ,Meu's Club ilaonn in Brock Hall .

Executive for 1952 .53 lucludsYit

*

Stilly 1-beard, president ; Jane Bart .SOND 'RECITAL of International! Held, vice . presldent sand Betty !

:iiuslc by Ro's'el All*ek Holilstlilth Black, secretary-treasurer . 01 dWhich was cancelled due to the!metubers on the campus are Ana lAMS meeting will he held ThArs- ! Chanel, Anna Wooten, Joan Ma t s ,(MY . December 4 At 12 :10 in the Arthur, Lila Scott, Dorothy Chine 'Aylyttif6lA um .

Sally tieard, Irene Carlson .

'nave articles nave been foiled ' bliie g itItirring, rhinestone .and may l'ie Sluit'red hi the ANIS1

Silver Coin pin. Silver bracelet .(Ifn . , Brock MK het'Ween 10 Pettrl rieckince. Science pin . Witte . .. !0 .M . hurl HMIS

'Man pen, blue. Waterman pencil, !:shrills, %riffle

Scarf,!grey Siul bhle'k. NeVthrlte baU . iw;lllie

silk .

Kerghlel

ki:. rehiei, : polio pea. Waterman net, brown !blue doe'! on White, untie g Iveat . and greefi ,Atha . Keri . liler, Seel ligured . Mae,

Ballpoint

pots

blue .

Glasses, !belt,

Mite, ulott rs, whlospiaSilc 'and gold frame. "Writing !(iToVes, line .

With ii Parpos p." Black looseleaf :Kerchief, grey edg . Black t inslaMseleaf . Algebra hook, French '

Wove, red knitted. Hlovca, fawn . grammar book . Plays, Pleasant . !hl :ich

suede,

Kerchief_ Umbrella, . bgoWti ond plaid, Uni . lgreen . Kerchief, pink floWers

brella, mauve . Slide rule .

New "Teath Yoursel fRusiitn Text O n.

.

.

.

."ELIZABETH NORCROd

speetivelY ,

there 's i hew iiiissian text coin

$o far as the authors are aware 0hi"tivelY . Canadians are too Pr idnv eveni ng at the Nmien.tiver once to Venetian tailoring when -Nations Round Tulle dho . ussloelittle aware of the literary activity! Art Gallery . A paeked audience Othello is said to

to be held in Arts 109 at noon .

D, C ,

Jewis hIn theiii4tiIntrY, and this lively ; heard readings by Allan CrawleY'

Make love's quick pants in Des . , Speakers will he Rabb i

week of readings and criticisms1 editor of-Conterliporary Verse, Er i c ' demona's arms—

Kogan, a member of th e

of Canadian prose rind poetry] Nicol, Miss Dorothy Somerset and

T9 the active twentieth century faith, Canon Dudle y1 Lo s

mind this can mean a great deal',, Anglican ,should reflect itself in greater! pr, Birney .

not intended by Shakespeare .

a unitedsales of Canadian books, UfIC

The most aneeeattd , to Judge ;

Played a large 'part in the week's from the r eactionof the audienc e

activities, and justly so, as the, was 'brit mew , wh o was very r im1 I

'

n

J 'centre of culture in the province, ny . He read from Stephen Lea .

Tile Week started hiantRitetously re0ek and Other ca ttatuan humor.

With readlaits iiy 'Mr . Osoir Wit . ' Ists, and 'then read au article o f

Hams largely ttr wn from his, an- his own on inflatable braamleres ,,

etiology, Littple reasaey of Mod that the V,ageeuver Proviuce

ern Vine, ' e fo. t nd it strange fam11Y tsnewspapes had refused t o

ts st ;'s . s prInt, lie explained , the eemplica •that a man sr no coma . eompue such tong

that wpittil arise when a wom •a 11%1)4 and interesting eelleetion 0' n so equipped, went flying ., no dcould be so dull on the platform, ,ihlz reduced the audience to almost

lie relict without ezpreaslon o3 hysteric* mirth . Projessor head

,animetIpp , his own, poetry and the of ,the,'EngliZh Depitr0ent, introi tleapt amggitigof the light verso duced the speakers Vigorously .,

,"

(6

4

... AE fikiAN NATuR g

t . 1 !e would

to ,, ecmgrptula,t e, 1

in the anthology .

'44 ' 41140

n 1

MILD

' BURLEY

TOBACCOJ ;

at its

best. . .

4-sS !!„t'''..'sSt

Kemp, al t

and Rev . Keith Wollard ,Church minister ,

to co .

.wl'th(14.atng r

AM* Msotih r

Wage 1t aC

.%,t (it OMEN ADAI'Si

flut before the reconsideratio neit inidian competition m o

lion, oG void isit'eit the meeting.on] t'le - -.

. gAT

Ir

haf "MACK" Touch

GLEAMING JEWELLERY

Ads so match to a gown, a dress, a suit, a sweater !

ieWellery to suit almost any occasion . . .

'tin the cieMittis or off! You too can weave a spell b y

'Adhig glEigMing jewellery to your outfit .

See The Wide selection for your choice at EATON'S .

A. <6'riental-Ty' ne

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earrings .Complete Set

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Page 4: Chemistry Student Loses ' Fend In Chemical Explosion · Fend In Chemical Explosion 4plosion at 11:30 yesterday morning in a car in th e parking lot next to the War Memorial Gymnasium

PAGE FOUR

THE UB'YSSEY'

Friday, November 28, 195 2

Student AdmissionTwo Pits, Prizes . Too

The Men's Athletic Directorate, the Vancouver Commercia lHockey League and the UBC Thunderbird hockey team aregoing all out on ,Monday nite, December 1, at the Kerrisdal eArena to give student a bang-up evening of entertainment .

Besides a hockey game featur-t--- -

rledale Wheelers the Varsity Band' command mach respect from

will be there along with UB(' posing forwards.

cheer leaders and there will be an

Ken Ward, ex-Toronto Marlboro,ubundatwe of prizes to be given defence man, has been u tower o faway . *strength along with veteran Ma l

Hughes, while smooth) skatingMike Giroday mends out a poten tdefensive trio. .

Kw.,

eInv the Thunderbirds and the

t0 tll Bird defence and he wil l

of prizes .

Coaches Frank Fredrickson an dDick Mitchell have promised , tohave • the hockey squad in tip-to pstodge for , this game . After thei r'lo in Nanaainie last 'Saturda yflight the Birds are out to repeattheir pertormance.• Thta year'. aatfad b easily on eof 'the youngest to don the blue

and gold strip and consequentlythey -have , plenty of hustle. Theirrecord of two wise, one. tie andfour losses to date this aaason doesi Flashy Don Haworth has prove nnot aptly describe ' the°ieam's po his ability as a fast skating pla yteatiallties, Coati) Pt'edrlekson has maker and provides his forwar dbeen constantly ahl1ting the Heel line of Bob Groulx and Mac Car •to come up with a winning cowl penter with many scoring oppor •blnatton' and the lineup used In I amities ,N*$i 1ttio .May prove to be the so. That is your Thunderbird lineu phitiop . . . .',; ''

tor Monday night's game . The• So tur'Stevb O tilcbak and Peter boys ore in top shape and Wil l

Tome have beep grabbing the aeon proylde • the Kerriedale Wheeler s•tpg honors .vitii Gunner Bailey and with plenty of college tight.1: 13 fl worth. close •behind . (4rys. All students attending will b eobjik, an* itume . ire : both ex .New treated to an exciting hockey gam eYork Raker pl'opl rty as is Cliff besides having a chance to winFreese the latest addition to Birds 'defensive power.

,! .glue bps played two gamesfde• UBC and In both contests h ehas tried' very successfully t odrape eaeif opgoaing team over th eboat*. He is a welcome addition) in .town for the lowest price .

Athletics Odd, —Nice Spot Says LowesBy RAY LEGERE

Institute . During his sojourn there ' went back to his studies at Ne w

;'having seen' many athletic set he was captain in basketball, foot . York .Uhirersity . where . , he krndu •

ups in Canada aid the

, ball and track and field .

rated ; with an MA with majors

t'litd .that , this is the most , unasual ; A SHARP REFEREE

!Recreation .

bile that 1 have yet encountered," ; A Most unique experience lies ' OVERSEAS STUDYwas the opinion of Canada's first't ' in the test that Harry Lowes ref•

Lowes, now married, spent 104;Public Recreation Course Director Breed all the Dominion Basketball months in Europe and the Middlein a recent interview .

finials in emit, classiflcatli)n at the East studying adult education en dBarry Lewes event onto say ; "11 age of sixteen . Since then he bus recreation progrnins in 'sixtee n

feel that if a committee of respono• handled Canadian Olympic •trials countries . While in Europe, li e

isle people, made tlp of both fee .,I in 1943 and '52 . . . served as Canidian delegate o nulty members and mature atudents . From Bloot' he went to U of 'I . ! mien' education' ;and leisure timea sound pltin could he 'devised that where he took the Emma Scott' at UNESCO .at the Mondzee Con-would overcome many xoorces ors Naismlth Award for Academic Pro . terence in Austria . ,friction and make the program op . f, fleleney with honors at graduation . tipnn his return to' Canaan, th, ,crate much more smoothly to the ! At the university . ha .was ,active talented recreation ' wm'ker wa spdvantnge of everyone concerned!" as a member of the varsity basket.! employed by the Department o n

` bld dal squa an the Athletic Direct . Education for Ontario on the Con eorate .

Phaedj'u,r philosophized.

You will soon break the bow

if you keep it always stretche d

Fabler

].ewes was born In Wellesey ,England, but came to Canada inearly childhood . He has been ac-tive in YMCA work since the ag eof seven, a factor which later le ito Ilis choice of Recreation for hi s

, life's work .11e won the J, R . McNichol

munity Programs Branch as flee-reatlon Adviser ,

NOW, A- NEW JOB

Ile wrote a 'limber of public aLions for the. Branch ; two of whic hwere reprinted by the Departmen tor National Health and Welfar e

Award for Scholarship and Leader- directtoti of intramm'als .

for

Dominion-wide distribution .ship at Toronto's Moor collegiate I After two years of U of 'r,tnwas The topics "Basketball Coaching "

op -

All studentw with privilege tetrawill be allowed in for 25 cents ,This le a wonderful opportunity fo rstudents to see their hockey team

The Kootenay stalwarts Jim Mc .to action and to bring home a load Mallon and Jim Todd have been

xkey Hullaballoo onirds and Plsners

Goalkeepers . 11111 Olsen and DonAndersen in the nets have donetheir share of gymnastics prevent .

ing goals and with a little moreassistance In back•checking wil lmost certainly pick' up eojne wel learned shutouts .

COACHES TOO1'pan graduation, the Universit y

of Toronto employed Lowes as alecturer in the school of Physica land Health Ed•uoation . His dutie sincluded basketball coaching, trac kand field administration, and th e

working well together and Monda ynight may be their goal getting de-but, The ex•Vletorla forward Bil lSherwood BIN out this line an dkeeps the Kootenay boys on thei rtoes.

Birds,UBC Thunderbirds hope to come out o f

wars Monday morning as the top hoop squad in Vancouver .Already victors over league-leading Eilers, Pomfret's boystackle the Clover Leafs tonight in the War Memorial gym,

free season tickets to all UBC

t8,30.basketball games, free dinners an dmany more prizes .

, Jayvees will meet Arctic Club in the opener at 7 ;00Monday et 8 :30 p .m. at Kerrie.

Saturday night both teams invade•King . Ed gynl, Jayveesdale Arena is the time and p lace

meeting Eilers in the girst game and Birds will be swampingfor the best night's entertainment

Arctics in the feature go . Go Birds !

Bill Hutchinson a— EditorAI Fotherttigham — Associate Editor .

HOPING TO IMPROVE on this season's record the ' Thun-

derbird soccer teatn will be out on the campus this Satur-

day when they play host to Sapperton on the Point Gre y

Campus,

..

BARRY LOW E Sand "Baseball ?'caching" were de- iveloped .in these publications .

This fall Garry Lowes came t oUBC to take up full direction ofthe newly-formed Public Recreu 'tlon'Diploma Course .

'

the basketball

ve cnutell tPsychologists are'supposed to , w e

Abe able to analyze obsessions R" ' 'eeu .Next time you want to read a

and manias . If so I wonder if tnyetely story, don't Iwtnet' bu ythey could explain to this ob• lug Unsolved Crhne Stories, jus tserver why the jokers on the i buy a copy of the morning Paper .Vancouver morning paper are

so obsesfled with the idea of ! Varsity Femme s

First of all, ae to 'the "secre tmeeting," Well I don't know wha tcertain sports writer's' definitionof secret is, but this meeting hap•pened to' have been advertised anthis sports page for two issuesprevious to the meeting. How,peeret can you got ?

-Secondly the "secret . meeting "took place in the double .committeer000r of Brock Hall . That doesn' tconvey the Idea of k darkly-li tcellar with guards at the 'door t ome. Finally the '"secret meeting "was held at 12,30 during the Mon . -day noon hour . Maybe the mornin gpaper is in a different time zon ethan UBC, but any ,way you lookat it (even through sensationally.Onto glasses) it wasn't Mondaynight .

i ,But oveu g then they couldn't ge t

the facts straight. The Birdsdidn't vote to t'ttn home to motherand get away from the big bad boy sin the Evergreen forest as quickl yas possible, as the morning- paperreported. The team decided thatiF the Western Conference wa sorganized with all four westernprovinces' as members (only Sask ,has officially given their okay a syet) and IF the financial prob .Ions could be worked out theywould like to join . They also aske dthat the other major sports beincluded in any such set-up .

otherwise they said, if the West .I ern Conference proved impractical ,

"secret meetings" at UBC. It j

is more than an obsession with Exhibition Bai lthese boys; it 's a hobby .

Several weeks ago they printed Week Saturdaya story dealing with "the powerfu lminority grump" which was goin, tto revolutionize the athletic eye .tam ut .UBC and assasinute Dic kPenn, Jelly Apderseh and Bob Os•borne.

Now I see they breathlessly re-vealed in Tuesday morning's pape rthat the Thunderbird football tea mhad secretly met Monday nigh tand had voted to get out M th eEvergreen Conference, but. quick .

While this probably nutde ver ygood reading. for the people InBongo•Hongo It bore U'tie ' rosotnb .

lance to the faete .

Cgs de Jewellers

4560 W. 10th

752 Granvill e

WATCHE SUse our Xmas Lay-away Pla n

A deposit will hold articles

Special Discount to Student s

E7RA WHEATCROPT

The Compost Heap

The Ui3C team, playing' wit hthree girls slioi't, lost their game ,3 to O .

On December 6, Western Wash •ington is coming up to ploy a nexhibition game with tge''k!a;t'sit yteam .

The second gir ls basketball gamewas played against Chalmei"s Int.B on Monday, The "Thunderettes" ,a ' combination of the two girls 'teams, defeated Chalmer' q 3tt to37, Glenda Handcoe, was th ehigh scorer with 13 . points . '

Next Monday hoth ttle ,teams playthe Normal School, one at 7 p.m .and the other at 8 p.m., in theGirls' gym .

Thi world's

to stay in the Ever-

' .

blest tobaccos

the most- .ptasing

:Orono

you can smoke!

Recipe for relaxation—take th e

contents of one frosty bottle of

Coca-Cola . Delicious, too .

WadingWend bass

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PURCELL .P•F construction unsurpassed

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LITENFA Sfor all games, P- F

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a

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