4
LAST DA Y FOR TOTEM PI X THURSDA Y xxxin LAST DA Y FOR TOTEM PI X THURSDA Y onference State s ews On Prejudic e VANCOUVER,'B .C ., MONDAY : OCTOBER 31, 1950 No . 10 —Ubyssey Photo by Bob Steine r BRINGING BACK the old baton twirling day's to UBC are these six coeds of the majorette s who will be showing their stuff at Homecoming Saturday . Six femmes pictured above, o f twelve in the club, are from left to right : Marilyn Grant, Mary Chadwick, Gloria Newell , Diane Leblanc, Joan Vanderwarker, and Pat Spring. Bruce Lee Chairman At Meeting ; Takes Decisions to 'New Yor k Removal of discriminatory clauses from the constitutions o f national fraternities was one of the recommendations resultin g from the recent Western Regional Inter-Fraternity Conferenc e held in Tuscon, Arizona . se Recommendations will be for . warded to the coming Nationa l Inter-Fraternity Conference a t New York by UBC'a representativ e Bruce Lee on November 28 . Lee chaired the WRIFC meetin g In Arizona where they recommend ed fraternities to alter their con- stitutions to eliminate racial dis- crimination . The recommendation particular. Ized further by saying that th e change in constitutions would stil l not take away the fraternity's "in - alienable right to pick and choos e ifs own members . " DOZEN' PRETTY CO-ED S Revived Drum Major pl a it s Show First At Homecomin g ARMORY TRANSFORME D FOR HOMECOMING BALL' A Who 1 . ,nef~'iOed' . EwIlJ :,greet grads tind aRude*te attend the Homecoming Ball Saturday night from 9 " pm . to midnight . The social event will also include the browning of a Homecoming Queen who will be chosen from a number o f candidates from undergraduate societies . Orchestra under the leadership of Ted Peters will pla y for dancing and refreshments will be provided . Cost of th e tickets, is $2 per couple and they are available in the AM S Office. Mamooks will handle decorations . Homecoming Floa t Preparations La g SPOKESMA N . The spokesman said that it i s Welled arose entrants will not le t the parade committee down . H e pointed out that there 1s still tim e ror other c{tmpus groups to ente r the parade . ' A , second attempt on the part o f officials to have the parade throug h downtown Vancouver has faile d the spokesman said . Official traf• Parade will leave UBC at noo n and tour suburban Vancouver vi a the following route : east on Uni versity Boulevard and Tenth t o Alma, north to Broadway, east t o Granville, south to Sixteenth, wes t to Arbutus, south to Forty-first , west to Dunbar, north to Tenthtan d retur n to UIi(' . ASSEMBLE INFIELD HOUSE i The parade will then assembl e in the field house and will circle UBC's drum majorettes' wer e finally unveiled Monday, " re- vealing a small group of ;thi n clad' coeds who haVe ' bee n working silently for the las t two weeks in preparation fo r fdmeicoftfing ' ' . ' The even dozen young 'female s who answered the call , ot organizer Gloria Newell, an old timer at th e game, have been practicing religi- ously In , their spare time and a t special sessions to be in shape fo r the Homecoming weekend . FOR HOMECOMIN G Miss Newell has been coachin g their all along to make'them hav e their routines down pat for Satur- day, November 4 . The troupe will carry on afte r Homecoming to add a little cheese - cake to the football games and various other sport events on th e campus where a show of feminin e frames is most appreciated . Working with a lack or equip meat, poor facilities and withou t cooperation of the weather lean , the dozen stalwarts have done ver y well, thinks Miss Newell , COMPENSATIO N Compensation may come later i n the term when a proposed trip t o Bellingham may be provided fo r the girls so they can strut thei r stuff in front of strangers . Batons i t'e about .the only thin g provided for the girls so tar, but , they have high hopes .of . gettin g The twelve stalwarts are Mere . (ntll Thomas, Irma Foster, Marily n McLean, Joan Kingsbury, Mayl l McAlpine, Pat Perry, Joan Vander lvitrl(er, hl ' r Y Chadwick, Pa t Spring, 111nne . Leblanc, Marily n Grant and Gloria Newell, COLLECTION B Y UNTD MEMBER S FOR BILL PARKE R UNTD fellow officers and ca dot} last night came to the res sue of staff officer Bill Parke r who was burned out of hi s trailer horns at Acadia Cam p early Sunday morning . A spontaneous collection rel sod a small sum of money t o aid the Parkers In refurnish . leg their gutted hems. Frank Turner, UBC Alumn i Secretary and CO of UNT D said "this voluntary gestur e 'Is a sign of the spirit which I s growing on the campus . " 'Twoen Classe s Humanityand U N Discussed B y Dr . A. R . Lor d Humanitarian aspects of th e United Nations will be discuss- ed today by Dr . A. R . Lor d in Arts 100 at noon . * * * EXCHANGE STUDENTS an d UBC students interested In ox - changing with other universitie s are asked to attend a meeting to . day in the men's club room i n brook Hall at 12 :30 tem . Official s have asked that all students wh o were on the NFCUS exchange lis t last year attend also . *' * * REGULAR REHEARSAL of th e University symphony will be hel d at 8 p .m . . Wednesday in the audi- torium . New members, especiall y violinists are asked to attend. Pic- tures will be taken at this meet- ing, and officials have asked tha t all members attend , * * * DR . BARNETT SAVERY, of th e UBC Philosophy department wil l have as his topic "An Analysis o f Marxism" when he speaks befor e the International Relations Clu b Thursday at noon, Meeting will b e held in the Double Committe e Room in Brock Hall . * * * MUSICAL SOCIETY will hold a general meeting in hut M1 today a t 12 :30 1.m . Ken Doges, presiden t of the club, has asked that al l members be in attendance . ural gas and oil, he said . "The proble m down to this" Mr . "Is Canada going t o with it s new lob s goin g materials to the CHAPTERS CHOOS E The change in constitution woul d leave the choice of discriminatio n up to the individual chapters wh o would be able to take in ne w brothers other than "bona fid e whitest' without violating their ea- tional charters . Lee commented on the editoria l in the Ubyssey which stated tha t he was repreeenting UBC's greek s at the WRIFC without knowing th e opinion of the greeks on this cam pea regarding the racial question . Lee said that he had drawn a cross-section opinion from repre sentatives from various fraternities at UBC and had voted for the re commendation accordingly . RUSHING IDEA S New ideas for rushing were pro- duced and revised plans to kee p scholastic standings of the frater- nity men to a high level were de- veloped . Lee will carry the opinions of 3 4 universities In the Western Re- gion, comprising about 60,000 I'r'a ternity melt, when he flies to Ne w York , Mi', Green declared, seems deter - mined to turn Canada into a "mere satellite of the United States . " Oil and gas pipelines should ana l must he built on Canadian soil , Mr. Green asserted . This was t h't Child Save d From Fire B y uac Studen t Tolhurst, Yamah a Rescue Two Yea r ' Old at Acadi a A 2 1 12-year-old child is i n fair condition in General H e pital today after being rescue d by two UBC students from a fire in Acadia trailer camp early Sunday morning . . f The child, Stephen Parker, owes his life to Artsmen George ol hm'st and Dick Yamabe, Tolhurs t climbed in a window to get th e child after Yamabe had broken ` it with` his fist . Stephen was take n to the hospital after being given ' artificial respiration , Dr . Forreste r Conducts Fal l Lecture Grou p Fall lecture series of the Var- sity Christian Fellowship open s today in Physics 200 at 12 :30 p.m . .Dr . James Forrester, a graduate of Queen's University and a note d theologian, will conduct the meet- ings . Dr . Forrester "was a chaplai n in the U .S . Air Force during th e last war, serving in the West Pa- cific . Ile was assistant to the presi- dent of Whitworth College in Spo- kane and latterly served as presi- dent of Westmore College, Califor- nia . Dr . Forrester holds the P1 Epsi- lon Theta key from the universit y of Southern California, where h e pursued his graduate studies . OR, JAMES FORRESTE R Undergraduate Societies Failin g To Back Up Student Committe e Undergraduate Societies are lagging in float preparation s for Saturday's giant Homecoming parade, a spokesman for Stu - dent Council said Monday . *--- after arrangement s Twenty-five groups had signified tid e their intentions. of entering float s in the parade, the spokesman . said , but undergraduate societies are do- ing little 1n a concrete way . for the par - coming Football Game . fie commission refused perntisslrnt In the evening, graduates ' an d because. they felt the, parade wooirl t'IM''s'I'hundorbird basketball tea m slow rush t r affic at noon hour, will square off for their annua l ALTERNATE ROUTE t .11t in the old gym itt 8 pant . Fo b An alternate route was given to ' lowing. the game, the Homecomin g the Kickapoo's, who are looking Ilia?! will be staged in the Armory . a Premiere Performance at Noon Wednesday . fewer uniforms lust as • soo n the cinder oval during half time of they show themselves' on th e the Northern Idaho-UBC H ome- pus . cant as own industrie s sources, makin g adians, or Is I t selling Its ra w United States," N O Liberals Make Canad a Satellite Says Gree n Canada can grow to a great nation, with a population o f 50 million persons if her own immense resources are properl y developed under a "Canada first " policy. That 'was the tenor of an ;nd-3 __-___. dress made by Howard Green, K P„ The recent Liberal government , M . P ., Progressive Conservativ e member for Vancouver Quadra rid- ing, who spoke in Arts 100 at noo n Friday. Canada has immense reserves o r three basic things—iron ore, nat . same situation faced at the tim e resolves itself or building the CPR, when grea t Green declared pressu r e was put on the ('anudi s ii build up its govermtent to build the in e own re, through the Iitdte(I States , for ('an- Under the leadership of the lat e to go Illl ,IIa('Itenaie Icing, the Liberal pe e ty, by maintaining that tIi i' should be no "'Empire bloc'' ha d reduced the power of the Britis h Commonwealth in world affairs, s o that now Commonwealth nations More than thirty Acadia teal - dents ; appeared on the scene to hel p douse the fire before the Universit y Endowment Lands fire truck s arrived, 'Fir emen estimated th e DISCRIMINATION damage et approximately $900 . On e half of the trailer was ruined, Ou t He said that UBC is so tree from the bedroom was damaged only b y discrimination compared to many l smoke and water . other universities in the Unite d States that he heft sure he was act- ing In the interests of the whol e of UBC when he voted . Lee came back from the three . (lay conference with a list of re - commendations to take with hint to New York at the end of Novem- ber , Specia l Continuing their policy of pre- senting the best entertainment tha t Vancouver can produce, the Spees ial Events ('olntlt t te' presents th e prnduct .inns ('luh Bullet Wednes- day at 12 . 1 u in the Auditorium . Students will view a specia l miere performance of Iwo hornet s They wilt he Theorem A . au ah- ;clii iwely to the ballet . rue of th e at'alt in 1,2,en010tI , and 'I'Im Tip . most rigornaa of all the ;tits , ay Ititt . a study in Gallic iuebrla-, At the head of the company a s tiott . i lls director and guiding light is the leading British ballet expert , :Mara :\icBirney who has been re . siding in this city for the pas t re11' Seal's . The choreography for both th e ballets that will he seen hits bee n a season with the Los Angele s Civic Light Opera Company, Regu- lar alteuttuis at the Theat r e Un• der the Stars last year will re . member his speettuular dancing . This is his first appearance as a serious choreographer . have become satellities of 'th e i ' SA , "What a tragedy that is" Mr . (liven ridded, " ( ' amidst should 'i!1 I can become the first nation in th e ('onuuenwealth a working worl d organization that in the pilo , through iwcl terrible world watt's , has kept freedom alive anti served Texas Student s Protest Cal . Ba n Mare than I,3Io >,t idents at th e 1'oivelsit% of Texas halve joined a nation-wide protest of the dim - missal of I'itir,'rslty or (' .hirer - Ilia proitts'Ots tar ri'ln~ii1 to sig n the I' ;lllftuuia rt' nls locaIty oath . The it ;ill} 'I'cs ;IIl, -Inil('ul non's paper, Iii r ircldol~~il tilt' campu s with It petilint I'i~r "d~vnurrati c ttlethods' fu nitIO Ig runuuuni ;ii i These two ballets will form a part of 1'ancouver's contribution t o the National Ballet festival whic h trill be betel in •lot real during No 1'elllbel' . The group is l'ol'led or hard . working stenographers, clerks, etc . who devote their spare time ex . Events Brings Ballet Her e Members of the company belittle ; arranged by David Ada p ts, Cana- Diana Bourne, Lorraine Blisnn as tin example of eoopeletion be - (la's leading male dancer who has Dale ('lark, :Marina Katrouis, Rabs tweet nations . " Just returned to this country alter I Warden, Josephine Slater, Denise "Whenever bully you belong to , ' Saul, Lois Smith, John Dennis , nwhatever your political thoughts , Stilly Petch, Jerome Tremblay and put 1'tutnda first" Mr . Ureen cos - Nikolas Yule . eluded,

Revived Drum Major pl its Show First At Homecoming · They wilt he Theorem A. au ah- ;clii iwely to the ballet . rue of the at'alt in 1,2,en010tI , and 'I'Im Tip. most rigornaa of

  • Upload
    others

  • View
    0

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: Revived Drum Major pl its Show First At Homecoming · They wilt he Theorem A. au ah- ;clii iwely to the ballet . rue of the at'alt in 1,2,en010tI , and 'I'Im Tip. most rigornaa of

LAST DAYFOR TOTEM PI X

THURSDAYxxxin

LAST DAY

FOR TOTEM PI X

THURSDAY

onference States

ews On Prejudice

VANCOUVER,'B.C., MONDAY: OCTOBER 31, 1950 No. 10

—Ubyssey Photo by Bob Steine r

BRINGING BACK the old baton twirling day's to UBC are these six coeds of the majoretteswho will be showing their stuff at Homecoming Saturday . Six femmes pictured above, o ftwelve in the club, are from left to right: Marilyn Grant, Mary Chadwick, Gloria Newell ,Diane Leblanc, Joan Vanderwarker, and Pat Spring.

Bruce Lee Chairman At Meeting ;

Takes Decisions to 'New York

Removal of discriminatory clauses from the constitutions o f

national fraternities was one of the recommendations resultin g

from the recent Western Regional Inter-Fraternity Conference

held in Tuscon, Arizona .

se

Recommendations will be for .warded to the coming Nationa l

Inter-Fraternity Conference atNew York by UBC'a representativ eBruce Lee on November 28.

Lee chaired the WRIFC meetin gIn Arizona where they recommend •ed fraternities to alter their con-stitutions to eliminate racial dis-crimination .

The recommendation particular.Ized further by saying that thechange in constitutions would stil lnot take away the fraternity's "in -alienable right to pick and chooseifs own members . "

DOZEN' PRETTY CO-EDS

Revived Drum Major pl aitsShow First At Homecomin g

ARMORY TRANSFORME DFOR HOMECOMING BALL'

AWho

1 . ,nef~'iOed' .

EwIlJ :,greet grads tind aRude*te

attend the Homecoming Ball Saturday night from 9" pm. to midnight .

The social event will also include the browning of aHomecoming Queen who will be chosen from a number o fcandidates from undergraduate societies .

Orchestra under the leadership of Ted Peters will playfor dancing and refreshments will be provided. Cost of thetickets, is $2 per couple and they are available in the AM SOffice. Mamooks will handle decorations .

Homecoming FloatPreparations La g

SPOKESMA N. The spokesman said that it i s

Welled arose entrants will not le tthe parade committee down. H epointed out that there 1s still tim e

ror other c{tmpus groups to enter

the parade . 'A , second attempt on the part o f

officials to have the parade throug hdowntown Vancouver has failedthe spokesman said . Official traf•

Parade will leave UBC at noonand tour suburban Vancouver vi athe following route : east on Uni•versity Boulevard and Tenth toAlma, north to Broadway, east t oGranville, south to Sixteenth, wes tto Arbutus, south to Forty-first ,west to Dunbar, north to Tenthtan dreturn to UIi(' .ASSEMBLE INFIELD HOUSE i

The parade will then assembl ein the field house and will circle

UBC's drum majorettes' were

finally unveiled Monday, " re-

vealing a small group of ;thin

clad' coeds who haVe ' bee n

working silently for the last

two weeks in preparation for

fdmeicoftfing ' '.

' The even dozen young 'female s

who answered the call , ot organizer

Gloria Newell, an old timer at the

game, have been practicing religi-

ously In , their spare time and a t

special sessions to be in shape fo r

the Homecoming weekend .

FOR HOMECOMING

Miss Newell has been coaching

their all along to make'them have

their routines down pat for Satur-

day, November 4 .

The troupe will carry on afte r

Homecoming to add a little cheese -cake to the football games andvarious other sport events on th ecampus where a show of feminin eframes is most appreciated .

Working with a lack or equip •meat, poor facilities and withou tcooperation of the weather lean ,the dozen stalwarts have done verywell, thinks Miss Newell ,

COMPENSATIO N

Compensation may come later i nthe term when a proposed trip t oBellingham may be provided fo rthe girls so they can strut thei rstuff in front of strangers .

Batons i t'e about .the only thin gprovided for the girls so tar, but ,they have high hopes .of . getting

The twelve stalwarts are Mere .(ntll Thomas, Irma Foster, Marily nMcLean, Joan Kingsbury, Mayl lMcAlpine, Pat Perry, Joan Vander •lvitrl(er, hl ' r Y Chadwick, Pa tSpring, 111nne. Leblanc, Marily nGrant and Gloria Newell,

COLLECTION B Y

UNTD MEMBERS

FOR BILL PARKER

UNTD fellow officers and ca •dot} last night came to the res •sue of staff officer Bill Parkerwho was burned out of histrailer horns at Acadia Cam pearly Sunday morning .

A spontaneous collection rel•sod a small sum of money toaid the Parkers In refurnish.leg their gutted hems.

Frank Turner, UBC Alumn iSecretary and CO of UNT Dsaid "this voluntary gesture

'Is a sign of the spirit which I sgrowing on the campus . "

'Twoen Classes

Humanityand UN

Discussed By

Dr. A. R. Lord

Humanitarian aspects of the

United Nations will be discuss-

ed today by Dr . A. R. Lord

in Arts 100 at noon.*

*

*EXCHANGE STUDENTS and

UBC students interested In ox -changing with other universitiesare asked to attend a meeting to .day in the men's club room inbrook Hall at 12 :30 tem. Officialshave asked that all students wh owere on the NFCUS exchange listlast year attend also .

*'

*

*REGULAR REHEARSAL of the

University symphony will be heldat 8 p.m . . Wednesday in the audi-torium. New members, especiall yviolinists are asked to attend. Pic-tures will be taken at this meet-ing, and officials have asked tha tall members attend ,

*

*

*DR . BARNETT SAVERY, of the

UBC Philosophy department wil lhave as his topic "An Analysis o fMarxism" when he speaks befor ethe International Relations ClubThursday at noon, Meeting will b eheld in the Double Committe eRoom in Brock Hall.

*

*

*MUSICAL SOCIETY will hold a

general meeting in hut M1 today at12 :30 1.m. Ken Doges, presiden tof the club, has asked that al lmembers be in attendance .

ural gas and oil, he said ."The problem

down to this" Mr ."Is Canada going t o

with it snew lobs

goingmaterials to the

CHAPTERS CHOOS E

The change in constitution woul dleave the choice of discriminatio nup to the individual chapters whowould be able to take in newbrothers other than "bona fid ewhitest' without violating their ea-tional charters .

Lee commented on the editoria lin the Ubyssey which stated tha the was repreeenting UBC's greek sat the WRIFC without knowing th eopinion of the greeks on this cam •pea regarding the racial question .

Lee said that he had drawn across-section opinion from repre •sentatives from various fraternitiesat UBC and had voted for the re •commendation accordingly.

RUSHING IDEA SNew ideas for rushing were pro-

duced and revised plans to kee pscholastic standings of the frater-nity men to a high level were de-veloped .

Lee will carry the opinions of 3 4universities In the Western Re-gion, comprising about 60,000 I'r'a •ternity melt, when he flies to NewYork ,

Mi', Green declared, seems deter -mined to turn Canada into a "meresatellite of the United States . "

Oil and gas pipelines should ana lmust he built on Canadian soil ,Mr. Green asserted . This was t h't

Child Saved

From Fire B y

uac Student

Tolhurst, Yamaha

Rescue Two Yea r

' Old at Acadia

A 2 112-year-old child is in

fair condition in General H e

pital today after being rescued

by two UBC students from a

fire in Acadia trailer camp

early Sunday morning . . f

The child, Stephen Parker, oweshis life to Artsmen George ol•hm'st and Dick Yamabe, Tolhurs tclimbed in a window to get thechild after Yamabe had broken` itwith` his fist . Stephen was takento the hospital after being given'artificial respiration ,

Dr. Forrester

Conducts Fal l

Lecture Group

Fall lecture series of the Var-sity Christian Fellowship openstoday in Physics 200 at 12 :30 p.m .

.Dr. James Forrester, a graduateof Queen's University and a notedtheologian, will conduct the meet-ings. Dr. Forrester "was a chaplai nin the U .S. Air Force during th elast war, serving in the West Pa-cific . Ile was assistant to the presi-dent of Whitworth College in Spo-kane and latterly served as presi-dent of Westmore College, Califor-nia .

Dr . Forrester holds the P1 Epsi-lon Theta key from the universit yof Southern California, where h epursued his graduate studies .

OR, JAMES FORRESTE R

Undergraduate Societies Failin gTo Back Up Student Committee

Undergraduate Societies are lagging in float preparation sfor Saturday's giant Homecoming parade, a spokesman for Stu -dent Council said Monday .

*---after arrangementsTwenty-five groups had signified tid e

their intentions. of entering floatsin the parade, the spokesman . said ,but undergraduate societies are do-ing little 1n a concrete way .

for the par-

coming Football Game .fie commission refused perntisslrnt

In the evening, graduates ' an dbecause. they felt the, parade wooirl t'IM''s'I'hundorbird basketball teamslow rush tr affic at noon hour,

will square off for their annual

ALTERNATE ROUTE

t .11t in the old gym itt 8 pant . Fo bAn alternate route was given to ' lowing. the game, the Homecomin g

the Kickapoo's, who are looking Ilia?! will be staged in the Armory .a

Premiere Performance at Noon Wednesday

.

fewer uniforms lust as • soo n

the cinder oval during half time of they show themselves' onthe

the Northern Idaho-UBC H ome- pus.

cant •as

own industriessources, makin gadians, or Is I tselling Its ra wUnited States,"

N O

Liberals Make Canada

Satellite Says Green

Canada can grow to a great nation, with a population o f50 million persons if her own immense resources are properlydeveloped under a "Canada first " policy.

That 'was the tenor of an ;nd-3 __-___.

dress made by Howard Green, K P„

The recent Liberal government ,

M . P., Progressive Conservativemember for Vancouver Quadra rid-ing, who spoke in Arts 100 at noo nFriday.

Canada has immense reserves o rthree basic things—iron ore, nat .

same situation faced at the tim eresolves itself or building the CPR, when grea tGreen declared pressu re was put on the ('anudi s i i

build up its govermtent to build the in e

own re, through the Iitdte(I States ,

for ('an-

Under the leadership of the lat eto go Illl ,IIa('Itenaie Icing, the Liberal pee

ty, by maintaining that tIi i'should be no "'Empire bloc'' hadreduced the power of the Britis hCommonwealth in world affairs, s othat now Commonwealth nations

More than thirty Acadia teal -dents; appeared on the scene to helpdouse the fire before the UniversityEndowment Lands fire truck sarrived, 'Fir emen estimated the

DISCRIMINATION

damage et approximately $900 . Onehalf of the trailer was ruined, Ou t

He said that UBC is so tree from the bedroom was damaged only bydiscrimination compared to many l smoke and water .other universities in the UnitedStates that he heft sure he was act-ing In the interests of the whol eof UBC when he voted .

Lee came back from the three .(lay conference with a list of re -commendations to take with hintto New York at the end of Novem-ber ,

Specia lContinuing their policy of pre-

senting the best entertainment tha tVancouver can produce, the Speesial Events ('olntltt te' presents th e

prnduct .inns ('luh Bullet Wednes-day at 12 . 1 u in the Auditorium .

Students will view a specia lmiere performance of Iwo hornet sThey wilt he Theorem A . au ah- ;clii iwely to the ballet . rue of th eat'alt in 1,2,en010tI , and 'I'Im Tip . most rigornaa of all the ;tits ,

ay Ititt . a study in Gallic iuebrla-,

At the head of the company a s

tiott .

i lls director and guiding light is

the leading British ballet expert ,:Mara :\icBirney who has been re .siding in this city for the pas tre11' Seal's .

The choreography for both th eballets that will he seen hits been

a season with the Los Angele sCivic Light Opera Company, Regu-lar alteuttuis at the Theatr e Un•

der the Stars last year will re .

member his speettuular dancing .This is his first appearance as aserious choreographer .

have become satellities of 'th ei ' SA ,

"What a tragedy that is" Mr .(liven ridded, " ( ' amidst should 'i!1 Ican become the first nation in th e('onuuenwealth a working worldorganization that in the pilo ,through iwcl terrible world watt's ,has kept freedom alive anti served

Texas Students

Protest Cal . BanMare than I,3Io >,t idents at th e

1'oivelsit% of Texas halve joined anation-wide protest of the dim -missal of

I'itir,'rslty or (' .hirer -Ilia proitts'Ots tar ri'ln~ii1

to signthe I' ;lllftuuia rt' nls locaIty oath .

The it ;ill}

'I'cs ;IIl, -Inil('ul non's •paper, Iii r ircldol~~il tilt' campu swith

It

petilint

I'i~r "d~vnurrati cttlethods' fu nitIO Ig runuuuni ;ii i

These two ballets will form apart of 1'ancouver's contribution t othe National Ballet festival whichtrill be betel in •lot real during No •1'elllbel' .

The group is l'ol'led or hard .working stenographers, clerks, etc .who devote their spare time ex .

Events Brings Ballet Here

Members of the company belittle ;arranged by David Ada pts, Cana- Diana Bourne, Lorraine Blisnn as tin example of eoopeletion be -

(la's leading male dancer who has Dale ('lark, :Marina Katrouis, Rabs tweet nations . "

Just returned to this country alter I Warden, Josephine Slater, Denise

"Whenever bully you belong to , 'Saul, Lois Smith, John Dennis ,

nwhatever your political thoughts ,Stilly Petch, Jerome Tremblay and put 1'tutnda first" Mr . Ureen cos -Nikolas Yule .

eluded,

Page 2: Revived Drum Major pl its Show First At Homecoming · They wilt he Theorem A. au ah- ;clii iwely to the ballet . rue of the at'alt in 1,2,en010tI , and 'I'Im Tip. most rigornaa of

Page 2 THE UBYS

SEY6, Monday, October 91,-1930

ThEMEMBER CANADIAN UNIVERSITY PRES S

Authorized a.; neon! Class Mall, Post Office Dept ., Ottawa:Mall Suhscrlptions-$2 .00 per init .Published Umeu Unul the university year by the Student Publications Board of the Aline

Nettie Soviets of the University of British Columbia.Editorial ophtions t' .Clntssrt, herein are those of the editorial staff of The Ubyssoy and !le t

necessarily those of the Alma Muter Society nor of the University ,tellers hi It roeh IItt , Phone Alma 162i

Fur display advertising Atone 'Mane 3 :G 1

EDITOR-IN-CHIEF IlIdMT

MANAGiNG EDITOR Uti6N lA i lOh

GENERAL STAFF : Copy Editor, Jim Benham ; CUP Editor, Joan Churchill ; Women's

Editor, Joan Eraser ; Sports Editor, Ron 1tuehin ; Flee Arts Editor, John Brockington .

Senior Editor ANN LANOBEI N

Associate Editors—LEONORE 6fEINER, JOHN NAPHER-018MY

4 F I

We are sure you 'll pardon us if we 're in-clined to smile behind our hands the nex ttime certain members of the Undergraduat eSocieties Committee begin to talk about theirvital roles in student life on the campus.

The latest incident to prompt such deri-sive mirth is the proposal for a big paradein celebration of Homecoming next Saturday .

At press time, Homecoming organizer stold us that only three out of 14 potentia lparticipants had signified their intention ofentering a float in the parade.

Most of the other 11 slap-happy, do-noth-ing outfits are USC members .

Just for the record, the Engineers, theArtsmen and the Fresh were reported yes .terday to be planning entries .

By the time this appears in print, a fewmore will likely have signed up. But wereoffering odds that the majority of the othersare still sitting around on their hands, wait-ing until it's too late .

If these USC people aren't going to takepart in such activities as Homecoming, thenwe'd like to know just what they are going

Another Handf1 f Mu dThe Ubyssey has been a trifle disturbe d

by the calibre of political pot-boiling tha n

has been served up by student political club sin the past few weeks .

,Latest to join the unhappy school ofopen-mouthed word-mongers is Vancouver' sM.P. for Quadra, Howard Green. It is withno great applause that we greet his wildstatement that Canadian Liberals are "desk -thumping, yes-voting, smug slouches."

Nobody will doubt that there is muchwhich Liberals might do to improve their go vcrnment . Nobody will doubt that some Libor-rtls vote yes, that some thump desks or thatsome slouch during commons sessions .

The Bird CageRecent editorials in the Ubyssey have

been gently prodding the Young Tories for

their "lethargy" in not manifesting them -

selves a little more vigorously on the campus .

Judging from letters written by Young

Liberals their main occupation at the mo-ment is the composition of a worthy epitaphwhich will be defiantly placed on a tomb-stone for the edification of future generations .

Such is the present condition of the clu bthat we can only speculate on the natur eof its members and its atmosphere . "Young"is a relative term. Therefore, in applying i tto the Tories, we can safely guess at thei raverage age as being 65.

Scene: The club room of the Youri gTories .

"Since, gentlemen, we can no longeroperate effectively as a unit, I suggest thatwe simply vote ourselves into non-existence ,thereby throwing confusion into the ranks o four arch-enemies, the Young 'Liberals (bel-lows of approval), and disrupting the edi-torial staff of the Ubyssey (disdainful guf-laws) "

-'he meeting here ends with a virtualuproar of throat clearing and whispering .

Needless to say the defunct group wil lerect a modest but impressive monumen twith a suitable epitaph in Victoria 's BeacorHill Park. Here the Young Tories, clad i nwhite flannels and old school blazers, wil lpass away their days, rattling' their tea spoon sand passing judgement on the quality of th ecricket games, while Bumleigh's ghost hoversnearby.

Meanwhile the Young Liberals will be~t orking themselves into a fine froth, and th eUbyssey will be flooding its pages withhysterical editorials .

oaf

to do .

All of them have budgets which, thoughsmall in comparison with some other campusorganizations, were intended to prdefide't ie mwith plenty of opportunity to participate Cullyin activities that come within their scope .

CSC might as well face it: nth aiidbrgr"ad .uate societies have the 'money and the mem-bership. Now it's time they had the get-up-end-go.

The Engineers and Fresh are probabl ythe only fines who hat+tt spent some tim ethis term floudering around drift in 'a se aof inactivity and indecision. 'Moat are Millfloundering, and a few appear to be goingdown for the third time .

In terms of organization, now is the timefor USC representatives to `do a bit .bf life•saving .

H they pass up their' dhance'`this week ,there'll scarcely be` enough 'Of this terT loftto worry about .

the Ubylisey utould ' like to report inThursday's issue that caeh of,the delinquen t11 is planning'a ' Hoinetoming float .

But so do'ProgressiveConservatit►es andwe have even' heard ruiners of,Ccrers wh ofollowed the ;party line .

.

What's more, it's impossible to chuck allLiberals into one pot just as it's irtipoiisibleto prove that all Tories support 'Heinle Ana -comb .

Mr. Green might have trade a construc-tive effort to convince Students that his partyhas more to offer than the opposition . Insteadhe simply convinced students that the Torie sare so hard up for ideas that they are lef twith only a small handful of mud to slin gat the Liberals and, when they get tired ofthat, to sling at one another.

Passed away, you know . "

"Yaws," murmurs another stalwart nod-ding sympathetically, "I noticed head beer.awfully quiet at meetings, and he never cam eto meals."

Eyes turn curiously in the direction ofBumleigh's chair, now empty .

"As you know," the chairman continues ,"The Young Tory Club simply isn't theYoung Tory club without Bumleigh, and i fwe're not the Young Tory Club I can see n oreason for continuing to be the Young ToryClub . "

Dumbfounded by such reasoning, th eYoung Tories burrump'h and bury their chinsin their waistcoats .

The chairman rises to speak . He is athin man with a drooping, melancholy jowl ,and tufts of hair sprouting from his ears . Isislong, ridged nose has acquired a varicose ro daspect from perpetual snuffling . His harri stweed ruil, apparently in the last stages o fdry rot, emanates horse odors and stale pip ew hecco. His watery eyes bespeak profus eepo1orties for intruding on the leisure of theeronp .

The frig- lei the leather chairs blin kuneomprr'hendin ;;ly, like owls awoken d„r -;ng the clay .

"Gentlemen, ,, he announces, " we are;icing a sews crisis ,

" ifenh, !well," roars an irascible gentle -ma' . with ri chest ful of Finer War medals, hi sface purple with indign'.lion at anyone eaImpudent

In Piing about a grave crisis .

Th- eh ;tirnum ,:webs:: his eve-brows it sthe mete ner (,f a we ll-bred clog and con-Unt i es :

"You're probably heard about Bumleiglt

by lip BlE ifi#ir

fs arweltert `there b p '~ineak '

nit in Ti urrdda s 'sib•~diwtet{op .On

'rr'hursday tarn 001dent bodywitl~rubber atemp, 'lrttlady st

Wiseen. ar'isoiutloa ttiltich b yedp(afa pans of ttve per.

such 1 digger ed.recy it there plans are as "inno•gent" its their proposers claim ?

There is no doubt that when tin.ally disclosed, the 'volution tobe lammed through a paeked as-eeSnbly will stem l arifnlere endugbin itself. But there are disturbingand persistent rumors that th eresolution is a mere front hiding aframework for an organisation tha twill permit handing of student ath -letics over to ''a *indicate of genpr -ous outside sp~rts promoters

Watch Otit . The h itters go so faras to suggest that these outside"interests" will in' effect take overcontrol of Well piaperties,ttie title' sfootball franchise, the Stadium andeven the Memorial Oym.''It fa sue.pelted tai these ,"Interests" ar ehot u fl fndtul of the "approaching

itlrb Thitplre Games .In allowing students no time to

examine that real purpose of thi srirsolu ttton, its proposers have com •t'nieted a breach of faith .

If there Is even ,a remote posal -bility that under the tanner frontof this resolution student athleticsare to be turned into a commercia lventure by outsiders, student smust defeat it on Thursday .

Yours sincerely ,Cautious .

Illy . RENE SIOU X

Director University Art Galler y"So they call this art?" observ-

ed one old lady peering at a can-vas titled flower market . cov-ered with thick, brushy, rhythmi cpaint. "Oh, that!" cried another ,dismissing with hopeless gestur eand a curling lip the sketch calle dchildren which catches in anInstantaneous, linear shorthand th eintent attitudes of a group ofmalt children,

I was surprised., The show ha dpleased me. I thought, "Here i ssurely a show that will deligh treliny people . This woman has awarns and charming personalit yand it comes through in her work .It's full of vitality, color and ac •tivlty . '

Perhaps it is these last tw owhich create difficulties for som epeople ,

Pegi Nicol herself dent rthed hervision as kaleidoscopic . Selectivityis not her chief virtue, Many or he rcanvasses are teeming, crowded ,even confused .

She was only 45 when she died ,and the resolution of her expert •meats and the development of aclear as well us a .persanal styl ewas far from complete .

,But paintings like the material ,

aerial-whimsy "Children in Plle .film," the cool and sophisticate d"Salade de Dames, " the sensitiv eline and color of her studies "Pi-geons" are among those welc hmake her contribution to Canadia nArt worthwhile, amt this show de .llghtful and rewarding .

Editor, The Ubyssoy ,Dear Sir :

I see by your Issue of October 2 4that the peace proposal of theStockholm Appeal will be allowedto circulate on the carpus .

Mr. Midwinter remarks that w emust protect freedom of speech .It is rust' denying freedom or bein g

, intolorant to' prevent the growthof a system which is morall y

Art Rev-re' w

United Nations, This pats secre tservice agent Burt Lancaster o nher trail, To cultivate the lady andfind out It sbe can lead him t oMinter . VW, 'C plater has an ae.oolipjtlice 'tiny. to pick Mies meoluire

#

n front Of an art store. Tan•tr ktteridtpti tine masher ,

polt4 him gold and begins histilttivatioh, l he 'whole 'scene fs

filmed from inside the art stor etat no pokeh "works are beard ,

liht ,11+tiy Mini McGuira back •tiraiklt, finds out why she's beingcultivated 'and bones hp on counter -'Wang tertiu co ,she can keep Lan-cNster around. 'Web ahe give s•Uf iiway in a nightclub, she is

subjected to t subdued grilling b yDoncaster while a string orchestr aserenades theta with gypsy lov esongs .

Counterfeiter Gwena, meanwhil e

wrong and against the fundamenta lrights of map.

The system to Which I refer icyCemmunfam . iTlie Stockholm Ap •peal is mouthpiece for Commun eism and is spreading Communist

Cotcid not the Ubyssey publish aneditarlai eftposidg this appeal forwhit It li, a devise to soften byour defenses t sin net the Cotamuni'et states and the Communis tparty?

Editor, The Ubyssey ,

Dear Sir :In our democratic system of mis•

government, we must, of course ,glee ample room for expression t oall kinds of freak opinions . Itseems needless, however, to giv eextraordinary publicity to idea smerely becaWe they are freak . 1hive in mind the Stockholm Ap •peal, shined by half the men, wo •men and morons Of Noah Kore abefore they had to lay down thei rpenfin order to massacre thei rneighbors . I have in mind moreparticularly, however, the mentalmeanderings through liturgicallabyrinths by friend Armour. Itpins the normal, healthy, God.fepring, typical young Canadianred bloods like myself to have t odell 'attention to their efforts b ycriticising them in the hope that ,like good little monsters, they willwittier for lack of attention .

Armour's article, however, wa sthe last straw. In it, or rather, un-der It, one sees a deep and undyin gfaith by Armour—1n Armour, Ar •moor the hope, Armour the salva-tion, Armour the infinite . HI* utte rlack of respect for the sincere,and very possibly well-founded, i fspot universally-acceptable faith o fOthers, can only be explained i nterms of self-deification .

We, who deposit our faith else .where. wish Mr . Armour luck i nhis effort to find his own salve .tion within himself. If his divinityis real enough, he might even havethe good fortune to be crucified ,whether by the FBI or by his fol -lowers .

Till that occurence makes Mr.Armour's freak views news, how -ever, I see no reason for continuingto ram them down students' throat sIn handy series of 10 or 20 arti-cles . The Los Armour, the Better .

T. Franck .

A yieng Jean's wisest investment,ens which gives protection at theMille titre — a participating polic ywith . . .

4484 W. 10th Ave. AL 3803

CHIROPRACTO R

Byrne F. DeLong, D .C.

Vancouver Branch Office . 402 W. Pender Stree tERIC V. CHOWN, LL.B., Branch Manager

Reg Clarkson .

keeps on with his usual ways, ne wer passing off nrorp than one bill t oa person and using a lot of the pro.ceeds for good will . In the proces she even manages to pass one offon agent Lancaster.

The courtroom scene which cul •nifnates the picture is a masterl yblending of fun and emotion whichsees Gwenn packed oft to th epokey with only a nominai gen.Once and fine .

Other pictures worth the tri pdowntown include :

Sunset Boulevard, along, ;hardlook at the seamier side of Hay-wood starring Gloria Swan$oh,. a san old-time star living in the Sat ,William Holden plays her kep tman and establishes himself as on eof Hollywood's better male actors .

The Breaking Point, an abov eaverage adaption of Ernest Rem •ingway's novel, To Have or Hav eNot, stars John Garfield ;'andPatricia Neal.

Irtal tatssas ea strw wines

Is•IwilkMstsl e

:IfN8

D*AWING P'ENCItMADI IN CANADA

VENUS PENCIL CO. L`tb .N

t

l•

cot,eRIM SO

V,eCktacbkd

eTotted

Venue Dtswbi;Penetls give yet

i

Wetly tie thyou

y clean

Wont.

hadows, . .sett

s os ,,,madatton'' I

And the gleesecrackle tttdsh hie

lust the tightled

tot drawtn9 ~91i to1

1 813airowsea Bvibtclt

to choose'

TORONTO, ONT.

"Mr . 880" concerns the attempt sof the United States secret sere•ice to trap one of the most 1o vable counterfeiters who ever print •ea Itophony one 'dol ie bill. ksa '; t It bye at the + bait of theyiar,' ` dl tuA Oweua, 'a thepui4i . tUt is ip cite of the bea tpefVorinSuoesof Id. 'l"on`g earSeer

Producers apd writers bate to nfed off the itihor of the ' fllihonto f oat `a 'ipark of a atim at endthe re lt

xir apnohst too ctod `to betitle, ihMe idt111ed itiddr ttie torycould dtitte tiil~lty have turned Intoa d,

atatid1aa pot b tier but 'with clev

er ettirg aW1 thaws even the1is1►e 'scenes 'ste a pLeasui'e towatch .'Kindly old counterfeiter Mena

mistakenly paasits off two of hi squeer bills one dey , on pretty nor•otliy tfcOulre, . translator at the

Page 3: Revived Drum Major pl its Show First At Homecoming · They wilt he Theorem A. au ah- ;clii iwely to the ballet . rue of the at'alt in 1,2,en010tI , and 'I'Im Tip. most rigornaa of

Monday, October 31, 1950

IHAI •PULLING may be frowned upon by football referees,but there will he no holds barred at 12 :45 p.m. today when thecombined WUSePhrateres team kicks off against the Pan-Hel-lenic eleven in the Stadium . WUS-Phrateres team is represent-ing VAC while Pan-Hell is masquerading as the "conferenc eChamps . "

—Ubyssy Photo by Bruce Jaffrayen.

at '— ex F~~tbaii

01 Missionarytrefary Talks

TOdayMissionary secretary of the Can-

adian Student Christian Move-ment, Mee Helen Burlton, will ad -dress students at t1BC ' Friday o nthe topic "Mission and Thumb -screws in Arts 204 at noon .

On Thursday she will hold adiscussion group

Fracas In SfaditimPitted Against , Pan Helleni cWUS • Phrateres Combination

The fair .sex will take over the gridiron in the Stadium todayat noon when they battle in the first allagirl football pane ofthe year.

0

Two distaff squads, one com •pose of members of WUS andPhrateres and the other Pan-Hol-lenic, will charge out on the fieldtoday to stage ' h meek footbal lgame to open Homecoming Weekat UBC . The stunt is also designe dto boost campus spirit .

VRlans of the heur•lotig dramawill be members of the Pan-Hel lteam, while the WUS•Phraterian swill assuthe the colors of UBC .Both teams will wear blue jeansand football sweaters .

Prelude to the game will be acar parade which will honk it sway around the campus preceede dby a public address car. Entertain-ment at half time will be stagedby Phrateres .

Referee, of the affair aaill beThunderbird coach Orville Burk eand Dick Ellis, former head of th eJokers Club, will announce thegame .

Starting time of the game is12 :46 .m .

AMC Team for the grid fixture :Daphne Harrison, Sally Heard ,

Katie Melish, Nonie Donaldson ,Fran Smith Rose Richards Char -lie McKenzie, Joann Strutt, Pegg yHenniger, Theo' Oyles, Diane Pat-erson Shirley Malcomson IreneMarshall Beverley Nelson, Ann eWinter, Biro Schrodt.

All-Conference team :Jean Long, Sheila Stewart, Rut h

Bromley, Pea Bradley, Mauree nGrant, Dodie Gould, Anita Jay, Bet-ty Ridley, Liz Abercrombie, Dodi eO'Brain. Doreen Rutledge, Bar-bara Barnes, Gwen Bradley, Mon aHopkins, M a r 11 y n I-Iollenberg ,Marnie Sick .

theder in the ('\1' .a(' . AI'Ior gr,ulnntine

Sunday Plight Serie s

Lucking ahead, next .5und;ay wil leve the v, icond event in the Sunda y

[Nall the United (Tata r (

'i'rniuin^ Night Scri p s . On November 5 a tSchool, she ha'ean worl ;ine

I sale pee . in Doak !toll lounge ,traveling secrcltar~• rot

the

Die

( .least,' . lelll Im pm .:Hiss fiurltou tr ;ua'lled tluonc,hetat ;ruled

in

a

ra it tl

I 'onlnriug nEastern 1?!n'npr iu Ille summer e l, alunrt~'l hy I'1 1(i instrnclor-campus '11 1 49 .

Barletta Pentland ,

war

the SCM roomin the audi-torium e n -titled

"So .dial 11' or l ;vs . Chris -tianity ." . .

Miss Bel .Ion receive dher il . A.

rem th eufversh y

or Toronto ,and durin .e,'

served as perso1111e1 Mai -

in

Students need only to submi ttheir AMS clads and to sign thei rnames at th e tlorist, The system ,approved by AMS solicitors, Is an

extension of a plan already usedby several campus fraternities .

Increased discounts are plannedfor seeeiel functions, AMS treas-urer John MacKinnon, who de-veloped the arrangement, stated .Should the plan prove satisfactory ,tudeat,a till the allowed a 10 per

i eta . discount with a further tat pe rreel . going to the gym fund fo ethese hea p functions ,

Special Price ForStudents AtCampus Florists

Reduced prices on corsagesare now available to studentsin the first plan developed un-der t h e merchant - discoun tscheme to aid the War Mem-orial Gym fund .

Campus Florists, 4528 10th Av-enue, have slgtned an agreemen twith the Alma Mater Society t ogive students 7 1/2 per cent . dis-count from the list price of corsag-es and other flower's and at th esaute time give an additional 7 1,2per cent to the gym .

meeting Friday .

LOSTPARKER PEN, black without top .Finder please turn into Lost an dFound .STRING OF PEARLS, Monday th e80th of Oct . , possibly in car givin gride that morning. Please retur nto Lost & Found.PARKERS PEN, blue and blackstriped in Chem 312. Phone Isobelat North 1365M .WILL THE MAN WHO FOUN Dmy Pychology and Life please pho•ne ICE 1953 again.GABARDINE RAIN COAT . It per-son who took my coat by mistakeat Southlands Riding Club, Sat . ,will return it to Hut 72, Room 1 5In Acadia Camp, he can have hi sown coat back .OBEY OVERCOAT lost on Wb .1 .the 25th in Arts 106 . Please phoneKE 4197 .

FOUN DDOOR KEY, Corbin, may be obtain•ed at Lost & Found.BLUE NAVAL 'RAINCOAT. Maybe obtained at the Lost t Pound .GREY GABERDINE RAINCOA Tmay be obtained upon identifies.Min at Lost & Found ,UMBRELLA, blue may be obtained'uiIon identifisbation at Lost &Found .BRACELET, chain, Lost at Engl.nears Smoker possibly by Nurse .Cali at Lost & Found,SCALPELS, etc . in case may beidentified at Lost & Found ,GLOVES, with fur wristlets. Maybe identified at Lost & Found .GLOVES, navy blue, may be iden-tified at Lost & Found .TRANSPORTATIO NRIDE WANTED FROM vlctpity o fMonday to Friday. Phone Pat a t49th and Granville for 8 :30's from

DRAGGED TO HUT

(lids were urged to attend themeeting by members of the Mon' sBlock Club who harnessed the mwith towing rope in the cat, anddragged them off to HM 10 wher ethe meeting was held .

Meeting approved the amend-ment of the constitution to includ ethe president of the Women'sDormitory and a publicity repro ..mutative as ex-oficio members o nwas executive,

TWENTY MODEL STwenty models chosen from

eighty-five co-eds for the WU Sfashion show November 17th wer eannounced to the meeting . Thefashion show is being sponsored b y11'oodtvnrds Ltd .

VOC'ers Granted

Additional Morle yVarsity Outdoor Club has bee n

awarded an additional $1,000 t osubsidize the proposed] construc-tion of a cabin on Mount Seymour .

The original grant. of $8,500 .termed insufficient by chub offi-cials due to increased cost of ne tterials and labor, was loaned a t3 per cent interest by the Alm a'..Muter Society last Atarch . Treasur-er John McKinnon stated that th enew grant Is "absolutely neces• ~eery for the realization of thi sproject . "

Terms of the original contrac tne that the title to the . bnildhi etrill rest with the AMS, and th eVOC will maintain its repairs .

CLASSIFIE D

1Cb, 7295L .

RIDER WANTED for 8 :30's, 6days a week . Route : West acrossBroadway from Manitoba. PhoneJoe after 6 p.m. FA 53534RIDER WANTED for 9 :30 lec-tures Mon. to Sat. 12th Ave fromWillow St . FA 3943E Ted .

RIDERS WANTED leavink Kings -way via 161h or 12th every morn . 'ing for 8 :30 classes, Phone FA9335M.RIDERS WANTED for 8 :30's everyday from vicinity of 41st and Gran-ville or on 41st and Marine Drive,Phone Charlie at KE 3186Y.

WANTE D3 OR 4 COEDS AND 1 MALE STU-dent preferably with a bear, to rideon float' for homecoming . ContactPeter Dyke, UBC Barbel' Shop, inBrock.

FOR SALETEXT BOOKS—Ec. Geog,-Bengs •ton, Physics-Stewart, IndustrialManagment•Folts and World At .lam. Phone FA 9335M .

'31 CHEV ROADSTER, motor per-fect, fine paint job, good rubber ,flew roof and side curtains,' sea lbeams, parking lights, etc . $200 .Phone AL 0673R after 4 p .m .ANSCO 2 V.4 2 1-4 CAMERA . F.4,5 tense, flash synchronized . Spee dto 1.400 sec. $49 .75 . Western Mateter exposure meter, $25 . Total cos tnew 3 months ago, $120. 4638 W10th Ave.RIDERS .WANTED leaving Kings .radio, portable type. Holds,12cords . Excellent condition like new ."Fleetwodd" model. Will include

Specializing In '

PRINTIN G

FOR

Fraternities

and

Sororities

GEHRK E

STATIONERY ANDPRINTING CO .

566 Seymour St .

CAMPBELL STUDIOS NEE D

ictURE 'PROOFS SOON

Quick return of proofs for the Totem, student annual ,has been asked for by Campbell Studios, currently takinggrad pictures In huts behind Brock Hall .

This is positively the last week that grads can hav etheir pictures taken, Hugh Cameron, editor of the boo ksaid Monday. After Friday, students will have to go tostudios in downtown Vancouver .

Studio officials say that members of the faculties o fTeacher Training, members of Student Council and greekundergraduates are still not turning out .

Denise Pierce New .

WUS Vice president-

Well-known campus figure and former cheer leader, DenisePearce, 4th year Arts student, was elected vice-president o fWomen's Undergrad Society in a special general noon-hou r

Running against Denny wer e—iiMaureen Guild and Sheila McGiv -

ern. Nominations were receive dfrom the floor (luring the meeting .Elections were necssary to replac ethe vacancy left by Bally Hoar dwhen she assumed the presidency .

Sally assumed Nonie Donaldson'sposition to prevent duplication .

tl

PACific 5321

ies of lectures by Bob McLella n

of the Civil Eng. Depit, 3ponsered

by VOC

PHILATELIC SOCIETY club meet-ing Wednesday noon in Arts 201 .

DOES YOUR CLUB NEED MIME-ographing? Bulletins and immolatetore are always needed. For supe rcopy clearness in mimeo work, seeStan Buchanan at th Radio So•ciety, South Brock Base or phone 'KE 4689 any evening .

SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA rehear •sal on Wed, 6 p .m, in Aud. Totemphotographer to take pictst'es, Onl y3 rehearsals before the concert .

1

I

N4<IM hMw,.

records for $50 . BA 2428 after fl •

ROOM & BOARD, ETC .3 ROG'MS in warm basement suit •able for 3 male students sharing .Housekeeping facilities or break -fast optional . AL 0104M.

ROOM for male student . Brightroom close to UBC bus, single o rsharing. Reasonable. M4 1467K.ROOM to rent on Acadia Camp .Unfurnished . 6602 Fairview Ave . ,Acadia Camp.

.

MEETINGS, NOTICES ETC .VOC meeting on Wed. 12 :30 inEng. 200. Films and color slides .CLIMBING LECTURE on RockWork, Fri. noon, second in a her .

"I'm sparking all night. Listen to me 24 hour s

a day — CKNW, "Top Dog" on your radio

dial."

"Darling, I said the Player's were to that little bon-

tbovew

UNIVERSITY BOt'K STAGE

' Hrs.: 9 a.m. to 5 p .m.; Sattrrilays 9 a.m, to noon

Loose Leaf Note Books, EXertisN 'Books

And Scribblers

GRAPHIC ENGINEERING PAPER, BIOLOGY' PAPER

LOOSE LEAF REFILLS, FOUNTAIN PENS AND iNK

AND DRAWING INSTRUMENTS

Owned and Operated by the University of B .C.

Save Wisely TODAY . .

for TOMORROW

Consult ally of the following Sun Life Represents •

fives who have had wide experience in budgeting

your income to meet essential insurance needs :

HARVEY STRANG

LARRY WIiICJ1X T

PETER MATHEWSON J . J. CAP=I

JOAN

J. R . BRANDON

i,GVAL BANK BLDG ., VANCOUVER

SUN LIFE CECANADA

Page 4: Revived Drum Major pl its Show First At Homecoming · They wilt he Theorem A. au ah- ;clii iwely to the ballet . rue of the at'alt in 1,2,en010tI , and 'I'Im Tip. most rigornaa of

THE UBYSSEY Monday, October 31, 1950

—Ubyssy Photo by Bob Steine r

EXCHANGING SWEATERS are Thunderbird and Beaver coxwains Nolaq Peters and Dic kBixler, Birds captured honors during the revenge battle of the waves which UBC won b ythree lengths .

fives 'Bird Rowers Reveng elack of Equipment Man Perfec tRecord as Jaycees, Fr~sh Edged

1

?fire 4

LefferHighBy RON PINCHI N

What Is an athletic scholarship ?The answer• to this question de•

Vends largely upon whether ornot you agree with an athleti cscholarship program .

Let us, then, fir stly look upo nthe negative side of the problem .

It you disagree with the inatitu •dons of an athletic scholarshi pplan, you probably feel 'that such aprogram would only be detrimen •till to the university, or college ,of the case may be .

"Athletic scholarships, " you may

say, "only ,encourage the 'athleti cbum' to attend university, thereb ylowering the educational standar dwhich has been established . "

You may further contend thatIt a student wishes to take par tin campus athletics, then let him

do so, but there is no reason whythat student should be remunerat-ed for his pains . Scholarships wer eoriginally designed to aid deser yittg students to attend universitygird ehould be maintained as such .

What Purpose?Nit, let us investigate the affir -

Illative approach to athletic schol-arships in terms of this negativ estand .

The entire problem of whether o rnet you agree with athletic assts.

tnnoe depends upon one basic clues -Meta Why did you come to univer •elty ?' Prom this question, stems twoothers, What did you intend tha tthe university do for you? Wha tdid you plan to do for the univer-sity?if, primarily, yo had planned to

attend universityit the sole pur •pose of obtaining an education ,then, you will no doubt be in com-plete disagreement with any pro .gram that would aid other than th edeserving scholar,' r lf you came tothe university from the point ofview of what it will do for you ,then, in the eyes of many, you area 'hopeleed case. '

It, however, you came in th eframe of mind of what you can d ofor the university, while obtain .tag your education, then you are thetype of person for whom advoca •teas for an athletic assistance pro -gram are searching .

From the viewpoint of athleticscholarship supporters, there i sno more deserving student on th euniversity campus than that stu-dent who is willing "to go out anddo battle for his dear, old Alma

Extreme CareMeter. "

This does not mean that thestudent who earns a scholarshi pon the baste of his mental superio •rity should be frowned upon ; i tonly means that the student wh omaintains liis scholastic standing ,while participating In campus ath •letics, is more deserving .

Certainly such a program mus tbe handled with extr eme care . Af-firmative supporters agree thatthe athletic bum should not be en-couraged, but , the' athletically in-clined student should.

The "Nays" may argue favorit-ism in the conducting of the ath •letic assistance scheme.

But In answer to this question ,plan supporters need only poin tout the number of general and pro-ficiency scholarships, at the Uni-versity of British Columbia for ex -ample, never claimed .

Of the argument that the athlet-ic scholarship is designed only t osupport a particular sport, herei nlies the problem of the manage-ment of the assistance program .

it should he remembered, that aplan of this nature must begi nSomewhere, but the ultimate en dshould be realized in terms of as-

sistance for all campus athletic sIf you are to have a whining foot-ball team, otherwise your programis doomed for Mental failure .

It must therefore be understoo dthat no tine definition of an ath-letic scholarship exists . No one per .

son can say what an athletic seho •larshlp Is or Is not .

Only a fool would sit down andattempt. to (hart an half-clad deuinitlon for this terfn, hut it takesan Intelligent person to draft a nadegnate interpretation .

In the mind of this writer, tit s"Ayes" have it .

'Bird Soccerite sAfter League Lea d

Sunday afternoon the un(lel'eatedThunderbird Succor squad playe dtoe two-all tie against the league -leading South Burnaby Legionnair-es at Snatlt Memorial Pak .

Varsity led at the halfway nan(

'Bird Icemen

Prepare For

Fume DebutThe UBC Thunderbird hoc-

key team opens its home sea-son next Monday night at Ker-risdale arena when they tacklethe powerful Nanaimo crew ina Pacific coast senior "B" hoc-key league game .

Thunderbirds have obtained th euse of Kerisdale arena for home ,games this season .

Last time these two teams met ,they played to a hard fought tw oall draw In the hub city . Since the nhowever, the Birds lave had sev -eral arduous practices and are no wbeginning to round into top condi -tion .STRONG DEFENS E

Lineup for the locals will hav eDon Adams, one of the top goalie son the Pacific Coast, guarding th elacing. Defense will he composedof veteran Ken Hodgert and Pau lKavanagh a , transfer student fro m,the University of Toronto ,

The second defensive combina -tion will be selected from a trio o fnewcomers Peter Scott, who playe dwith Kerrisdale, is developing fast ,and will, in all probability, he i nthe starting lineup. Bob Peeblesand Mal Hughes are the other as .pirants contending for position ,SCORING PUNC H

Forward lines have been juggledin an endeavour to obtain greate rscoring punch . Haas Young ha smoved up to right wing flankin gcentre Clare Drake and port side 'Bob Lindsay . This line was res •possible for both goals in Nana! •mo, and should ''ate as one of th ebest forward lines in I'BC history .

Gunner Dailey has been move dInto centre 110th his former righ twing position . Move was made t oconsolidate the second line and t otale advantage of his outstandin gpiaymaking ability ,

Ile centres a line with rookiesMac Carpenter and Al Hood o nthe wings . Trio will make up I nhustle what they may lack In fin-esse ,

Third attacking unit will find a n .other iCerrisdale product at centre ,ifs Is Ken Hole, a smooth-skatin gperformer, Bob Couplaid who waswith Kerrlsdale juniors last seaso nwill oporat(' from the right side .Will .Iiiiir, a transfer student fro mthe University of Manitoba, wil ladd experience to the group .

Gana) oil November 6th promis -es to he a suitable conclusion toI lotnioming ,

NOTICE SBlg Block ChM meeting will h e

held Wednesday at 12 :30 p .m. inthe Council Rome, Brock Hell .

Coaching the Inter A team i sJan Crafter and Eleanor MacKen -zie, track star and British Empire 'Games sprinter, has been appoin t -ed manager . Inte r A girls practiceon Mondays from 6 t o 8 p.m! , an dfrom 5 :30 to 7 p .m . in the FieldHouse on Thursdays.LINEU P

Lineu p for the senior team in-cludes four of last year's Thunder-ettes, Dorene Drinham, Eleano rNyholm, Mimi Wright, and SheilaMoore, Newcomers to the squa dare Janet ('rafter, Eleanor ( r ave ,Pat Donovan, Dolores Hartman ,Erma-Jane Foster and Margot.Salter.

Composing the inter A group ar eJean Schafer, Plot Worsely, Blanch eBallard, Adele Aseltine, MaryWard, Marylia McInnes, Nanc yBottum, Ann Winters, Doreen Cum -Pu' ngs and Eleanor MacKenzie .

Inter A girls dropped thei rfirst city league game to Richmon d24-21 on Friday night .HIGH SCORE R

Game was fast and closely chec kea with UBC leading 8-7 at hal ft.imo, but Richmond netted i tpoints in the last frames to wi nthe game .

Eleanor Cave, who played forthe Majorettes Senior B on Fri -day, was high scorer for the eve -ning with 14 points, Doreen ('um •mings gathered 6 to top the In t e rA teams ,

UBC-Ilanard, Schaefer 4, ti1'or -sely i, illclunes, Aseltine, 5 Cum -filings 6, Ward, Bolton, N1cKenrl o1, Winters . Total 21 .

Next games are scheduled fo rFriday with the Inter A teams meet -ing Simpsons at 7 :45 p.m ., andSenior B meeting Milers at S :4 1p .m. Both games are in the Join tOliver High School gym ,

Grudge Hoop lead

Goes to Soph CrewAlthough the flow of blood wa s

not as profuse as previously anti -cipated, the flow of baskets wa sby no means absent as 9ophs too ka 5-1 hoop series lead by downin gthe Freshmen crew 32 .29 in thegymnasium Friday .

Pacing the losers, Thunderhly dforward Ron Bissett tallied 1 2counters, while !Irian Upson le dthe wlnuers with time .

'lost cashing play carne in thelast minute of regnitttion Ilnte when

LateDrive Gives

Braves First Wi nA 10-point drive in last eigh t

minutes of play gave UBC Inter-mediate A Braves a decisive 38-2 9victory over the Arctic Club i nKing Edward Gym Thursday

i night .Eight fninutes to go and ViI C

led 28 .27 wilt thoth teams playin gloose ball . Tightening their de -fence, Braves allowed Antics onl y2 points in those last minutes ,both on foul shots, whilst findin gthe hoop for 10 ,

First blood was drawn by HerbForward of the Braves on a foul ,only to have Ifarry Johnson o fthe Arctics tie it tip the same wa ya minute later . At the end of th ehalf Arctics led 15. 17 .

Second halt', except for thos efew exciting minutes was a repe -tition of the fi r st with both team swithin a point or two of one an -other ,

Don Grisdale led the way for th ewinners with 10 points .

Cross Country' Ru n

To Go TomorrowAnnual intramural Cross Conn -

try will be held in the stadiu mon Wednesday with at least 20 0aspirants competing for honors .

The gruelling 2.7 mile cours estarts at the stadium, goes alon gthe West Mall to Aggie Baru ,north to WeSh l ' (lnl(, west to Angli -can College across Grass hocke yFields and around the Stadiu mtrack,

At the one mile marker, Thund -erbirds moved ahead by a full -length . and from that point, thei rmargin steadily increased .

Coming into the stretch driv eunder the guiding oar of strok eDon Robertson, the UBC eight step -ped up the pace to increase thei rlead by three lengths .MORE EXPERIENC E

During the last 100 yards, thenumber seven man of the visitin gcrew had trouble with his rigging ,breaking an oarlock, but in spiteof the fact that OSC had to slo wtheir pace to a one-half stroke, rac ecould never have told a differen tfinale.

A mdt'e experienced Oregon Stat efour got' an early jump on UBC' sJaycee entry, but sheer power bythe home team closed a two -length gap to one and a hal flengths before the final wire ha dbeen crossed .

Chief Rugger Tea m

Drops Burnaby For

Second Season Wi n

UBC Chiefs scored a decisive11 points against the NorthShore squad's somewhat ques-tionable 5 points in a rugge lMiller Cup game last Saturday (at North Vancouver .

The Birds have tightened up con -siderably since their last games a swas evidenced by the tact thatthey were rarely threatened, an doutplayed the Reds throughout th egame .

Three-line man Jerry Main drib -bled the ball 40 yards and fell o nIt to make the score 3 .0 . Conver twas missed . Immediately after -wards, John Newton, right wing ,went over for the second try fol-lowing a perfect three-line passin gattack . This time Austin Taylorcompleted the convert .ROUGH GAM E

Near the end of the period, Chiefswere given another chance to scor ewhen they were awarded a penalt ykick, and once again Taylor pu tthe ball between the crossbars .

The second half was rather o nthe rough side with flailing boot soccasionally connecting with th eheads of players rather than wit hthe ball . About the halfway markNorth Shore was awarded a techni -cal try because of "obstruction" b ythe Chiefs . Ray Grant convertedto give them their five points .

In other tilts, second divisio nBraves slogged to a 3-all tie wit hRowing Club ,EFFORTS FOILE D

Floundering about on the mudd yfield at Douglas, Park, neithe rteam could wet started in the firs thall'• and, excepts fol. a breakawa ytry by Rowing nub's Bob Lyman ,the period was uninspiring .

Other team In this league, Toma -hawks, beat Exlritannia 3 .0 .

overtake .LACK EQUIPMEN T

"With the amount of rowing ex.perience in the 13BC boat compareed to the Beaver crew," said as-sistant coach Bruce Garvie, "noti ring but praise can be offered trithe Thupderbirds for the showingthey made. "

Lack of equipment, the team' snemesis, hampered UBC a fiel dday pn the water. Only two fourswere serviceable for the Froth•Vancouver Rowing Club battle, an das a result, one university grou phad to watch from the sidelineswhile their fellow oarsmen absorb -ed a heartbreaking loss to the ex-Varsity team .

Rowing Clubbers garnered athree-quarters of a length victory.

DRAUGHTIN GINSTRUMENTS

From $10.00T-SQUARES, PROTRACTORS ,

SET SQUARE S

Inc Rowing

1 . 0, hit South nuruahy caste on lu Arts 211E at 12 ,10 pm .

to tie the game twice,

i day .

Iu(J scorers were Ihid Dobson

I'ra(tices wil l

('huh

w'll l

ho

held' eac hand Ken Campbell .

t'('k•enl as per usual ,

Last general tneetlag o fhe held ! Soplts surged to a ;1 2 . 211 lead . otul y

by five points ,final tvhistin .

11'odnos•i to ace j) dwind h ,seconds before th e

NO pemllty wit ;( awti(I oul to los• il ing officials .

4 1

Femme Basketb'a eNameInter—City

gueeaTeamFormer Stale Fill CoachingSlots, But Girls Lose Opener

Senior B and Intermediate A girls basketball teams wer enamed last week.

Joan MacArthur, former Edmonton Gradette and Vancou-ver City League star for ten years, will coach the senior squad,while Dorene Brinham will manage . Practice sessions are enWednesday from 6 to 8 p.m., and Thursdays, from 5:30 to 7 p.m ,in the Field House

'

Clarke & Stuart

Complete with Sheets and Indo g. From $2,69

Co. Ltd.

s'I'.YIIONERS and PRINTERS550 Seymour SI, Vancouver, B .C.

MECIIANICAL ENGINEER SAN D

POLYPIIASE SLIDE RULE S

ZIPPER RiNG BOOK S

AMES LETTERINGINSTRUMENTS ,

FOUNTAIN PENS

Thorough Whipping Of Braves

r

UBC's rowing start was worked to perfection at Coal Har-bor on Saturday when the home crew jumped to ' a one-hal flength lead in the first ten seconds of their race with the .OregonState 'College, Beavers . Lead was never relinquished throughoutthe contest,

(e r— —From start to finish, UBC an dOSC rowed stroke for stroke . En-tering the final phase of the race ,the visiting four faltered slightly ,but the damaging early lead wa stoo much for the home crew to .