4
ONE REASON why Varsity Revue went over big with a packed house of spectators last night was shapely Terri e Hare, the student "body" who is shown with Pat Brown and Tom Shorthouse in the Board of Governors skit. DIG THAT CRAZY SHIRT! The man underneath i t is Dt', N. A, M . 'MacKenzie, who made his .theatrical debu t in Varsity Revue . Helping him litter the library lawn with refuse is librarian Neal Harlow, left, and Dean Chant, right . —PHOTOS by JOE OUA N PROFESSOR BARNEY POTTS illustrates the fin e points of his assistant, cute little Jean Francis during hi s hilarious "The Chicken or the Egg" act . The Revue con- tinues tonight and Saturday in 'the auditorium . UB YSSZ Y vow= 'ado' Studen t Leader s H o ef Li . . The Most outstanding grou p of candidates to apply in years-- that would be a fitting title fo r the eight UBC students who ar e applying for British Columbia' s 1954 Rhodes Scholarship . ' Bath Ivan Feltham, AMS p rem . .-te nt Di ck Underhill are among the appli- cants . Both are law students . Another lawyer applicant i s Dave Anfield, past president o f the Inter Fraternity Council, ex - manager of the Thunderbir d rugby team and present presi- dent of Sigma Tau Chi, men' s honorary Fraternity . Rugb y player Peter Grantham, to p ranking med student, is a poten . tial winner . So is Gordon Oates, prominen i Applied Science student an d president of the Track Clu b Ralph (Buzz) Hudson, a me m ber of both the Thunderbir c basketball and football teams is. included in the applicatio r list along with Peter Smith , winner of the Governor-Ge n eral's Gold Medal as the highes t ranking Arts student at las t spring's graduation ceremonie s The honors classics student fro m Victoria compiled a 93 . 8average . Completing the list is Ia n Drummond, honors economic s student who is treasurer of th e Players Club . Council OK' s Constitutio n A revamped LPP club consti- tution passed Student Counci l with herdly a question Monday , in startling contrast to the storm y session at which the origina l policies were thrown back t o club executives for reconstruc- tion . The new constitution does no t include statements of policy bor- rowed from the national Labo r Progressive party to which Coun- cil had then hesitated to approv e on grounds of implicating itsel f with LPP policies , W . Indian Student s Wanted Now by CB C All West Incline students o n the campus are wanted immedi- ately by the Canadian Broadcast- ing Corporation . Mary MacKenzie, of CBU, i s asking all Indian students t o contact her at MArinc 6121 or a t 701 Ilornhy, immediately, s o greetings to their families in th e West Indies can be arranged . Maurice Rus h Although no one threw tome - Lees at the Communist speaker, a handful of students tossed ques- tion after question at him durin g the half hour question period . "Do you know what you're talking about," charged on e student , "Yes, I do, but do you, " shouted hack , URGES UDENTS AMP STAff HEL P BOOST ffA TIER CAMPAIGN . Vancouver ' s Community Chest drive was richer b y $4000 Wednesday, when UBC handed over to Red Feathe r officials the receipts of its campus drive . igsgg,cpptribution .to the donation , rya$ nude by uni- versity staff members, who gave nearly $3490 . The four-hour blitz by Commerce undergrads Octobe r 19 drew more than $600 from students about the campu s and in classrooms . With this amount, the University has given more pe r capita to the Community Chest Campaign than the city o f Vancouver . Existing' regulations are s o involved that it is virtuall y mpossible for proper disciplinar y action to be taken when case s arise . by Dick Dolma n Tremendous enthusiasm plu s "Brains and Brawn" in produc- tion of UBC's first Varsity Re- vue Thursday night climaxe d in a smashing success . 'l'hc Blue and (fold show go t six curtain calls from first - nighters who jammed into th e auditorium Thursday night . Months of preparation an d weeks of rehearsal tinder di - rectors Dorothy Somerset an d Phil Kenney made a drea m clone true for the hart) work- ing sludenis, four faculty mem- le g s, three professional slats , a janitor and LIB( . presiden t Dr . Norman MacKenzie ton fans at the g ame . There will be an importan t meeting of all Ubyssey staffer s in the Pub offices to-day a t noon . The Saskatoon safari wil l be discussed . Although some parts of th e show dragged because of loos e stage action, many of the danc e numbers and group activitie s showed great promise and re- quired only a title polish t o make tae actions smooth an d coherent . Last skit of the shots dwell s on the theme "Brains an d Brawn" in a stadium scen e which closes wine every 'mum - her of the cast on st t t' . The idea of uniting brain s wad brawlt in a group endeavo r as in this skit and as in th e whole Revue worked out ver y wel l (however, lot Litany basins Price 5c ; No . 11 Pre-Law Society _ .. To Meet at Noo n PRE-LAW society will mee t at noon today in Arts 104 . The agenda includes the election of officers and the ratification of the constitution . CAMERA CLUB will meet a t noon today in Room 859 of th e Library . PREMED Society presents th e film "Caudal Analgesid in Caesarian Section" at noon to- day in Physics 202 . NEWMANITES and their friends are invited to the Bellingha m Invasion . Cost of bus fare i s $1 .75 return and game ticket s at Bellingham will be 50c . Pleas e sign at the Newman Club if yo u wish to go . Bus will return late Saturday night . ~F 4F ~ STUDENT CHRISTIAN Move - meet presents a speech by Jer- ome Davis on "The Roots of Mc- Carthyism" at noun today . In Physics 201 . Continued on Peg* 3 See CLASSE S Revu e might. have been one of th e factors in preparation of th e show whiclr contributed to it s weak spots . In two or three skits ther e was evidence, of confliction o f ideas . We have in mind as a n example the Totem Park scen e where a long dramatic rendez- vous between two moon-struc k university- student takes plac e fit front of strictly burlesqu e style totem pules . Stage light- ing was al fault here too . Again in the Library scene , Teter lighting would hav e nnade the visions incorporate d nt Ilit skit more believable an d more disliuct as visions . i t . Rus h Vogel Head s Western IF C Dick Vogel, president of UBC's ; Inter-Fraternity Council, is the ' Hew leader of the Western Re- gional Inter-fraternity Council . , Vogel was elected president o f the Western Regional IFC at ' conference sessions last month on . the Oregon State College campus ' in Cornvallis, Ore . The Western IFC, composed o f all the major university If'C s from California to II .C ., meet s annually on the campus of on e of the members In discuss out - standing problems affectin g fraternities, . VANCOUVER, B .C ., FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 195 3 natural resources) He said 65 per cent of ail Canadian exports ciplinary committee is redraftin g go to America . ;the code, incorporating suc h He said 51 cents out of every changes as appeared to him t o dollar spent in Canada is used i be necessary . for war . "We raised money fo r war . We can raise it for peace MACKENZIE STEALS SHO W time also, if there is t a will for,' McNish stated that rules ar e Rush urged Canada to spend now "so gummed up" that th e more time developing its own wheels of justice refuse to move . I will begin Monday . A former member of the dis- Feltham said the crackdow n resulted from a "very strong complaint" by cafeteria worker s of students playing cards on th e tables . Selling Ou t Canad a The Liberal government i s 'selling out" Canada ' s indepen - fence to the U .S ., Vancouver AMS C LPP organizer Maurice Rush ' old over 100 students Wednes To Hear ()lsclpllne Case s day , Rush blasted the government Jim McNish, USC chairman and head of the AMS discipline or its secret orders in counci l and for its economi c c, policy. committee, has Fhosen his three-man group to hear disciplin e . LAS BETRAYED cases which may arise between now and May . "The Liberal Government has With him on the committee Cardplay i ,strayed the independence of ; are John McLeod, 2L ; Ar t Scholefield, 4A, and Douglas ng 2anada to the powerful countr y outh of the border," he said . Cole, 4PE . McNish is In 4AS .. Discipline will be meted out' Now Tabo o under a revised code of pro- cedure which will soon be ready A crackdown on campus card - for Student Council ratification .' playing has been ordered by Student Council President Iva n Feltham . Feltham Thursday said tha t except for the designated are a in Brock lounge, students wh o play cards anywhere on campu s will face a fine of $5 and suspen - sion of AMS privileges . The driv e ommittee Chose n Popular Dr, MacKenzie stol e the show as lie danced with a pretty freshette in his long - heralded stage debut . Mitch pt.thlicized effort an d ingenuity cont r ibuted by ill - most every faculty on the cam - pus and hilarious sons, skit s and music all accented by col- urinl cu_lurncs and done,(' n(nit - her, ; produced the soil ee l show . Strongesl criticism of th e show is based nil so much o n the individual enthusias m which every cast member pu t into his role, but rather on eer . lain transitional phases i n twee!' numbers and skits . out-numbered Wester n Full House Thrilled B y irds Battle Bellingha m In Big Blood-Stained Bash ; . : .. ' Crucial Battle Saturday ' As' UBC Invades State s One of the largest outbursts in campus rivalry in 'reo(eti t years is expected when UBC students make their annual Bol e iingham Invasion for the Thunderbirds-Western . W football game Saturday night . --- Traditional, and sometimes 'twain AIM S bitter rivals, the Vikings fro m Western Washington will b e going all out to prevent Thun- derbirds from racking up thei r first Evergreen Conference wi n ef the season , OI'licials of the Bellingha m school are doing their best to at - tract UBC students to the gam e which is played under lights . Banners and ads boostin g th e contest have been posted to pa y for a sound car to tour this cam - pus ' for three days advertisin g the game but the bid was turn- ed down to avoid conflictin g publicity with Varsity Revue . Vikings are the weakest Eve r green club UBC will meet thi s year . They have scored only 3 9 points in four games while hav- ing 104 scored against them . Don Coryell's Birds have scor- ed 50 points and have had 11 2 scored against them . Several organizations a r e chartering buses for the 65-mil e trip . Last year UBC student s Washing - 1

UB YSSZY - UBC Library Home · McNish stated that rules are ... or its secret orders in counci l and for its economic c, ... Tsr UBYSIZY MEMBER CANADIA1V UbiIVERSITY PUSS

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ONE REASON why Varsity Revue went over big with

a packed house of spectators last night was shapely TerrieHare, the student "body" who is shown with Pat Brownand Tom Shorthouse in the Board of Governors skit.

DIG THAT CRAZY SHIRT! The man underneath i tis Dt', N. A, M. 'MacKenzie, who made his .theatrical debu tin Varsity Revue . Helping him litter the library lawn withrefuse is librarian Neal Harlow, left, and Dean Chant, right .

—PHOTOS by JOE OUANPROFESSOR BARNEY POTTS illustrates the fin e

points of his assistant, cute little Jean Francis during hi shilarious "The Chicken or the Egg" act . The Revue con-tinues tonight and Saturday in 'the auditorium.

UB YSSZYvow= 'ado'

StudentLeadersH o efLi .

. The Most outstanding group

of candidates to apply in years--

that would be a fitting title for

the eight UBC students who ar e

applying for British Columbia' s

1954 Rhodes Scholarship .

' Bath Ivan Feltham, AMS prem..-tent DickUnderhill are among the appli-cants . Both are law students .

Another lawyer applicant i s

Dave Anfield, past president of

the Inter Fraternity Council, ex-

manager of the Thunderbir d

rugby team and present presi-dent of Sigma Tau Chi, men' s

honorary Fraternity. Rugby

player Peter Grantham, top

ranking med student, is a poten .

tial winner .

So is Gordon Oates, prominen i

Applied Science student and

president of the Track Clu b

Ralph (Buzz) Hudson, a mem

ber of both the Thunderbir cbasketball and football teams

is. included in the applicatio rlist along with Peter Smith ,

winner of the Governor-Gen

eral's Gold Medal as the highest

ranking Arts student at last

spring's graduation ceremonie sThe honors classics student fromVictoria compiled a 93 . 8average .

Completing the list is Ia nDrummond, honors economic s

student who is treasurer of th e

Players Club .

Council OK' sConstitution

A revamped LPP club consti-tution passed Student Counci lwith herdly a question Monday ,in startling contrast to the storm ysession at which the origina lpolicies were thrown back t oclub executives for reconstruc-tion .

The new constitution does no tinclude statements of policy bor-

rowed from the national Labo rProgressive party to which Coun-cil had then hesitated to approv eon grounds of implicating itsel fwith LPP policies ,

W. Indian Students

Wanted Now by CBCAll West Incline students on

the campus are wanted immedi-ately by the Canadian Broadcast-ing Corporation .

Mary MacKenzie, of CBU, i s

asking all Indian students t o

contact her at MArinc 6121 or a t701 Ilornhy, immediately, sogreetings to their families in th e

West Indies can be arranged .

Maurice Rush

Although no one threw tome -Lees at the Communist speaker, ahandful of students tossed ques-tion after question at him duringthe half hour question period .

"Do you know what you'retalking about," charged on estudent ,

"Yes, I do, but do you, "shouted hack ,URGES

UDENTS AMP STAff HELPBOOST ffA TIER CAMPAIGN .

Vancouver ' s Community Chest drive was richer by$4000 Wednesday, when UBC handed over to Red Feather

officials the receipts of its campus drive .

igsgg,cpptribution .to the donation, rya$ nude by uni-versity staff members, who gave nearly $3490 .

The four-hour blitz by Commerce undergrads Octobe r

19 drew more than $600 from students about the campus

and in classrooms .

With this amount, the University has given more pe r

capita to the Community Chest Campaign than the city of

Vancouver .

Existing' regulations are so

involved that it is virtuallympossible for proper disciplinaryaction to be taken when case sarise .

by Dick Dolma n

Tremendous enthusiasm plu s

"Brains and Brawn" in produc-tion of UBC's first Varsity Re-vue Thursday night climaxe d

in a smashing success .'l'hc Blue and (fold show go t

six curtain calls from first -

nighters who jammed into th e

auditorium Thursday night .

Months of preparation andweeks of rehearsal tinder di -rectors Dorothy Somerset an dPhil Kenney made a drea m

clone true for the hart) work-ing sludenis, four faculty mem-legs, three professional slats ,

a janitor and LIB(. president

Dr. Norman MacKenzie

ton fans at the game .

There will be an importan t

meeting of all Ubyssey staffers

in the Pub offices to-day a t

noon. The Saskatoon safari wil l

be discussed .

Although some parts of th eshow dragged because of loosestage action, many of the danc enumbers and group activitie sshowed great promise and re-quired only a title polish t omake tae actions smooth an dcoherent .

Last skit of the shots dwell son the theme "Brains andBrawn" in a stadium scenewhich closes wine every 'mum -her of the cast on st t t' .

The idea of uniting brain swad brawlt in a group endeavoras in this skit and as in th ewhole Revue worked out ver ywel l

(however, lot Litany basins

Price 5c; No. 11

Pre-Law Society _

..

To Meet at Noon

PRE-LAW society will meetat noon today in Arts 104. Theagenda includes the election ofofficers and the ratification ofthe constitution .

CAMERA CLUB will meet atnoon today in Room 859 of theLibrary .

PREMED Society presents thefilm "Caudal Analgesid inCaesarian Section" at noon to-day in Physics 202 .

NEWMANITES and their friendsare invited to the BellinghamInvasion . Cost of bus fare is$1 .75 return and game ticketsat Bellingham will be 50c. Pleasesign at the Newman Club if youwish to go. Bus will return lateSaturday night .

~F

4F

~

STUDENT CHRISTIAN Move -meet presents a speech by Jer-ome Davis on "The Roots of Mc-Carthyism" at noun today . InPhysics 201 .

Continued on Peg* 3See CLASSES

Revue

might. have been one of th efactors in preparation of theshow whiclr contributed to itsweak spots .

In two or three skits ther ewas evidence, of confliction ofideas. We have in mind as anexample the Totem Park scenewhere a long dramatic rendez-vous between two moon-struc kuniversity- student takes placefit front of strictly burlesquestyle totem pules . Stage light-ing was al fault here too .

Again in the Library scene ,Teter lighting would havennade the visions incorporate dnt Ilit skit more believable an dmore disliuct as visions .

i t .

Rush

Vogel HeadsWestern IFC

Dick Vogel, president of UBC's ;Inter-Fraternity Council, is the 'Hew leader of the Western Re-gional Inter-fraternity Council . ,

Vogel was elected president of

the Western Regional IFC at '

conference sessions last month on .

the Oregon State College campus 'in Cornvallis, Ore .

The Western IFC, composed o f

all the major university If'C sfrom California to II .C ., meet sannually on the campus of on e

of the members In discuss out -standing problems affecting

fraternities,

. VANCOUVER, B .C., FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 195 3

natural resources) He said 65per cent of ail Canadian exports ciplinary committee is redraftin g

go to America .

;the code, incorporating such

He said 51 cents out of every changes as appeared to him t o

dollar spent in Canada is used i be necessary .

for war. "We raised money fo rwar. We can raise it for peace MACKENZIE STEALS SHO Wtime also, if there is t a will for,'

McNish stated that rules ar e

Rush urged Canada to spend now "so gummed up" that th emore time developing its own wheels of justice refuse to move . I will begin Monday .

A former member of the dis- Feltham said the crackdow nresulted from a "very strongcomplaint" by cafeteria workersof students playing cards on th e

tables .

Selling OutCanada

The Liberal government i s

'selling out" Canada ' s indepen -

fence to the U .S ., Vancouver AMS CLPP organizer Maurice Rush '

old over 100 students Wednes To Hear ()lsclpllne Casesday ,

Rush blasted the government

Jim McNish, USC chairman and head of the AMS disciplineor its secret orders in counci land for its economi c c, policy.

committee, has Fhosen his three-man group to hear discipline.

LAS BETRAYED

cases which may arise between now and May .

"The Liberal Government has With him on the committee

Cardplayi,strayed the independence of ; are John McLeod, 2L; ArtScholefield, 4A, and Douglas

ng2anada to the powerful countr youth of the border," he said .

Cole, 4PE . McNish is In 4AS . .

Discipline will be meted out' Now Taboounder a revised code of pro-cedure which will soon be ready A crackdown on campus card-

for Student Council ratification .' playing has been ordered by

Student Council President Iva n

Feltham .

Feltham Thursday said tha t

except for the designated area

in Brock lounge, students wh o

play cards anywhere on campu s

will face a fine of $5 and suspen -

sion of AMS privileges. The drive

ommittee Chose n

Popular Dr, MacKenzie stolethe show as lie danced with apretty freshette in his long -

heralded stage debut .

Mitch pt.thlicized effort andingenuity cont r ibuted by ill -most every faculty on the cam -pus and hilarious sons, skit sand music all accented by col-urinl cu_lurncs and done,(' n(nit -her,; produced the soil ee lshow .

Strongesl criticism of th eshow is based nil so much o nthe individual enthusiasmwhich every cast member pu tinto his role, but rather on eer .

lain transitional phases intwee!' numbers and skits .

out-numbered Wester n

Full House Thrilled By

irds Battle Bellingha m In Big Blood-Stained Bash; . : . . '

Crucial Battle Saturday '

As' UBC Invades States

One of the largest outbursts in campus rivalry in 'reo(etityears is expected when UBC students make their annual Boleiingham Invasion for the Thunderbirds-Western. Wfootball game Saturday night .

---

Traditional, and sometimes 'twain AIMSbitter rivals, the Vikings fromWestern Washington will begoing all out to prevent Thun-derbirds from racking up thei rfirst Evergreen Conference winef the season ,

OI'licials of the Bellingha mschool are doing their best to at -tract UBC students to the gam ewhich is played under lights .Banners and ads boosting th econtest have been posted to pa yfor a sound car to tour this cam -pus ' for three days advertisin gthe game but the bid was turn-

ed down to avoid conflictingpublicity with Varsity Revue .

Vikings are the weakest Evergreen club UBC will meet thi syear. They have scored only 3 9points in four games while hav-

ing 104 scored against them .Don Coryell's Birds have scor-

ed 50 points and have had 11 2scored against them .

Several organizations a r echartering buses for the 65-mil etrip . Last year UBC students

Washing -

1

PAGE TWO

.THE UBYECET

Friday, November 6, 1953

Tsr UBYSIZYMEMBER CANADIA1V UbiIVERSITY PUSS

Authorized as second class mail, Post Office Department, Ottawa .Student subscriptions $1 .20 per'year (included in AMB fees) . Mail subacrip,

tions $2 per year . Single copies five cents . Published in Vancouver throughout theUniversity year by the Student Publications Board of the Alma Mater Society ,University of British Columbia . Editorial opinions expressed herein are those ofthe editorial staff of The Ubyssey, and not necessarily those of the Alma Mate rSociety or the University . Letters to the Editor should not be more than 150 words .The Ubyssey reserves the right to cut letters, and cannot guarantee publicatio nof all letters received .

Offices in Brock Hall

For Display AdvertisingPhone ALma 1524

Phone Aiiraa 8253EDITOR-IN-CHIEF AL LAN FOT&ERINGHAMManaging Editor .-- . .- Peter SypaowichExecutive Editor, Jerome Angel

City Editor, Ed ,ParkerSenior Editor, this issue Ray Logl •Women's Editor, Helen Donnelly

Photo Director, Bob KendrickStaff Cartoonist, Howard Mitchel l

Reporters: Bruce McWilliams, Pete 'Pineo, Murray Brisker, Aib Kent, Bo bBridge, Marybeth Kowluk, Bud Oluckeman, Sam Curtis, Mike Ames,

(The Ubyssey has no obligation to print letters to the editor which are not signed ,Pseydonyms may be used if the writers name is submitted with the letters. . Letters should

not be more then 150 words .)

the recommendation by theCanadian observer at the las tIUS conference that the affili-ation be made. At the follow-ing NFCUS conference it wa sdecided that they would loo kInto the matter, but the gener-al sentiment reflected disap-proval of the plan .

Here at UBC, the first ste pin favor of the recommenda-tion was taken by SCM wh oapproved the principle of ex-changing views. Several stu-

twin countries—such as by sev -ering our relations with IUS—we are hastening the approac hof another war .

The Student Peace Move-ment's policy is guided by th ebelief that Capitalism an dCommunism can peacefully co-exist, and therefore support sany move that may better ourrelations with the countries be-hind the iron curtain .

Malcolm MacDonald .

The teacher training schools of the coupe

try—and of the campus—seem to lack th e

mysterious appeal that draws the youth of the

university into law, . engineering and other

favoured faculties .

When intelligent students are asked i fthey ever considered teaching as a career ,many say they have, but offer a multitude o freasons why they do not take teacher train-ing. One of the most frequent excuses among

males Is the sacrifice of esteem which on e

suffers on the campus . A boy in teache r

training is a strange, unnatural type .

It is significant that the age-old excuse

of "teachers don't make enough money to

live" is seldom heard. It seems that there issomething other than salary that keeps peopl e

from teaching. This something, expressed in

many ways, seems to be the low standard s

of achievement accepted in Teacher Train-

Campus Chaff

Just back from a Canadian Universit y

Press conference in the city of Saskabush o nthe wide-open prairies which makes on e

realize that this campus still has it in spades

when it comes to student autonomy or natural

beauty (sorry girls, we're talking about th e

scenery) .Delegates from the universities of Mani-

toba, Saskatchewan and Alberta found it har dto believe that this rag, as it is so fondl ycalled by the letters-to-the-editor contribu-tors, can blast away at Student Council or a t

the administration with equal. gusto. Backthere, in the wild and wo,lly west, studentnewspapers are more of a spokesman fortheir Councils—a role which we feel ma yhave been hunky-dory back in King Tut' sday but is as out-of-date today as is grand -pop's handle-bar lip-tickler .

On the front of The Sheaf, Saskatche .wan's paper, it statse that the paper is pub-lished by the Student's Representative Coun-cil . I believe Feltham and his boys haveenou gh troubles now without inviting anotherulcer by supervising this stout defender o ffreedom of the press and other such heroi cterms . On the masthead at the top of thispage it states that The Ubyssey is publishe dby the Alma Matter Society, somethin gslightly different than Student Council . We'reGLAD .

The Editor-in-chief of The Sheaf i schosen ,by Council and anyone can apply fo rthe position. Just send in your entry, enclos-ing a dead Applied Science student, and you ,too can be editor .

The Sheaf staff, hampered by lack ofoffice space, make up the paper on Wednes-day, but it doesn't hit the campus unti lFriday. Editors say they have plenty o fmoney to publish two issues a week bu tsimply cant' find the staff (exactly opposit eproblem here) . The wheels on this year' sSheaf are all , lawyers . The legal boys a tSasks ., unlike the species here, . are noted fortheir spirit . Last spring all 26 members o fthe third year law class ran for the sameposition on Council—drama director . . . can' ttell your hams without a program .

Vancouver Sun)

Education generally is under fire thesedays by Little Red Schoolhouse enthusiasts .Incredible. as it may seem, there are peoplewho think a; grasp of the three R 's is ampleeducation for the modern world .

Such people will 'seize all too quickly onUBC student disorders as "evidence'1 thatuniversity students ire' frivolous and moneyspent on UBC is wasted .

Students who let" high spirits" give sem-blance of support to attacks on UBC can im-pair their own studies there,inflict unfair dis-advantages on all other students and heav ydamage on students in years to come .

ing and in the profession as a whole. Any-one who fails out of Commerce or Arts canbecome a teacher. Consequently 'there is nochallenge for the honours student .

Teachers have been working for year sin the Teachers' Federation to obtain "pro-fessional' salaries. They are now finding tha t

many of the graduates of the Teacher Train-ing institutions are not of professional calibre .

How will the standards of education b e

raised. The first prerequisite is a higher stand-

ard Of training. When the highly com-

petent students of the campus enter teacher

training, competent, well-trained teacher s

will enter the teaching profession and well -

educated children will come from the schools .Many students in teacher training will

be excellent teachers, but they are the few

who have courage to withstand the notoriety

of being ""just a teacher."

Al Fotheringham

The Sheaf has no editorial policy what-soever and has the audacity to say so . The

2100 students at Saskatoon pay a student

fee of $19 . The amazing thing is that on th elively prairie campus $30,000 of their $54,00 0budget is raised from ticket sales and othe r

revenue. Council spends $495 for public re-lations (are you listening, Mr. St. John?) .UBC, more than twice as la rge, allocates about$100 for its sorely needed public relations .

Switching to another province, the 4800

student at Manitoba contribute $13 each tokeep their dear ole Alma Mammy going .Council also picks the editor here, a dastard-ly trick . The ,paper is made up Saturday andWednesday, for distribution on Tuesday an d

Friday. The Manitoban office is off the cam-pus, which 'doesn't help matters any . Medi-cine, Law, and several other faculties also

are located out of town .

Students at University of Alberta see m

to be loaded with loot, in entreat to UB C

where they are usually just loaded . Alberta' s

paper, The Gateway, is given 400 in hono-rariums to split among its editors--Edmon-ton and true-blue Social Credit, here w e

come, The capitaistic pubsters at The Gate-

way also get $200 for parties . A Ubyssey re-

porter leaning over my shoulder Is weepin g

into his canned heat flask as he reads this .

'Council can hire and fire the editor a tAlberta, probably the reason why Gatewa ydelegates backed down on a motion at theconference recommending more autonomyfor student newspapers . Students at Albert adon't pay any fees, they just cash in a fewoil shares .

Tipplers in Saskatoon were permitted tobuy tomato juice with their brew for th efirst time Monday . . . one of the reasons fora pantie raid on the women's residence there ,resulting in $50 of the lacy and foam rubbe rarticles being stolen . Although Ubyssey dele-gates neglected to bring this type of souvenirhome, they did show up with a 90-pound cor-nerstone from the new med building a tSaskatoon. Actually It was taken to serve a sa contribution to the Applied Science geo-logy students . . . to be taken internally.

Let's Play GamesEditor, The Ubyssey :

Indignation, wild epithets ,outcries on all sides , . . Thosedirty Engineers are at it again !

And yet everyone—villiaps ,innocent policemen, righteou snewspapermen et al—is in vary-ing cloudy Ogres aware it i sjust a big game . The red me nchuckle, they have abig game .chuckle; they have publicity andcan push out their chests oneinch more before their , girls .The newspapermen and police-men chuckle—those who do notget hurt ; they have their jobs.

Education, character devel-opment consists in learningthese quite artificial modes ofliving and reacting. "He knowsthe ropes," "He's been around,""She wasn't born yesterday,""He's grown up"—all these re-fer to somebody particularlyadept at these games, these art-ificialities

If people were educated toproduce rather than to be richand successful ; to be prudentand not think it fashionable t osow . -wlld-•oats ; to be kind andshare instead of to spend one -self and not use others ; to behonest instead of saving face ;there would be fewer games ,fewer newspapermen, very fewpolicemen. And more engin-eers ,

Why do we educate people t oplay games? Is it because theywould be bored without them ?Would they not produce unlessa game were involved? Wouldthey stagnate if they could notget ahead of somebody ?

Do we educate people to plajgames because they could nothire and fully develop as menwithout them, or because theyhave been educated to the poin tthat they could not live anddevelop without them. Are thegames natural, artifccal or both ?

Anyway, why blame Engin-eers for playing games-

BILL PINSEN,Engineering Physics .

Editor, The Ubyssey :During the put severa l

weeks there has been consid-erable controversy over thequestion of whether or ' notNFCUS should affiliate withthe International Union of Stu -dents .

What started the issue wa s

CLASSIFIEDEXPERT TYPING, PICKUP &

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( ;i0 )DURING THE ABSENCE OF

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(21 )THE BRITISH AMERICAN OI LCompany is sponsoring a mixedchoral society which has beenfunctioning for one year . Thisyear plans have been made texpand the group, and all thoseinterested are welcome to at -tend .

The choir, which is under thedirection of Mr . Tom Wright ,meets every Wednesday eveningat 8:00 p.m., Aberdeen School ,Burrard and Barclay Streets .For more information please con -Net Mr. Dave Anslow—eves ,KE. 3940R, during the Day MA .0411 .FOR SALE 1950 AUSTIN INexcellent condition . Bargain forstudent who wants reliable trans-portation . Phone KE. 5407Y eves .'42 CHEV. GOOD MECHANIC -ally, city tested $375. KE. 812 1or Rich, 0754L2 .WILL PERSON WHO TOO Ka brown wallet from the "Y "Wed., by mistake, please return i tas soon as possible to the owne ror the Pdb office .ROOM AND BOARD FOR MAL Estudent. 4435 West 12th . $58.00month . Phone AL, 1011R .

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Reports of mass demonstrations, inter-ference with citizens' cars, clashes with police,campus tomato throwing and other prankis hdisorders could easily hurt UBC and student sof today and tomorrow .

.UBC desperately needs more money forthe permanent buildings it still lacks, to holdits fine faculty together with better salaries ,

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LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

Friday, November 6, .1953

THE UBYSSEY

PAGE TRREI

JapaneseUnlikelyTo Rear m

Dr. Stuart Jamieson, CBC new scommentator and one-time' UBClecturer, told the CCF club Wed -nesday that the Japanese do notwant to rearm.

Dr. Jamieson, who has justreturned from a tour of Japan ,said the Japanese have indicatedIn their last election that theyare not in favor of rearmament .

"They are hard pressed no wto pay for the 110,000 memberNational Security Corps an dcould not afford the propose d200,000 more," said Jamieson .

lie said the lobbyists in Ot-tawa and Washington, are try-ing to keep Japanese imports toa minimum, This will leave Jap-an to only one recourse, he con-tinued, and that is to trade withCommunist China .EVERYIIODY ELSE

"The lobbyists and everybod yelse do not like that either" h eadded, but he did not say wha tthe ,00nsequencea would be ifJapanpgvas not allowed to trade .

Dr. Jamieson, said the toplevel discussions with the Japan-ese are successful and states -manlike but the Japanese haveunderlying resentment Lor theAmerican soldier .' The soldiers, said Jamieson ,

seem to have little respect forthe people they decisively con-quered.

SASKATOON ; Nov . 1—(Special to The Ubyssey)--An es-timated $50 in , undies was removed from a girls ' dormitory atthe University of Saskatchewan early Sunday morning in a

Nov. 9 in Westbrook 100 .

POPPY DAY will be sponsor-ed by Phrateres today from 11 :30a .m. to 2:30 p.m .

—Ubyssey Photo by John Robertso nHALTING A HOT SESSION in Brock lounge is as-

sistant proctor George Deavin, who finds that keeping th ehail in order entails more than just straightening the fur-

niture .

Early Spring Necking ..Incites Frigid SI ares

By AB KENTHe placed an arm around her supple waist, whisperin g

unintelligibly into an ear which quivered with expectation .Her flushed cheeks' radiated the thrill of new love and he rspine began to arch. But the proctor spotted them from themezzanine. Things were going a bit too far .

Love in the lounge at Brock® Next time you and the hone yare in the lounge try to be alittle discreet in your relations ,or at least keep them clean . Wehave prudes on the campus .

On lOtS

DisconfinuedStudent Council will take no

further action with regard tothree UBC studgn*s,eel(arged wit hassault and tobst!ruetlnr' policeunless important ne,w factorsarise, declared Ivan Fletham ,AMS president, In a letter thisweek to UBC president, Dr . N .A. M. MacKenzie .

The students, 'John MacKin-non, 1st Applied ; Robert Gieger -ich and Peter Mitphell,•hoth Arts ,appeared in Vancouver policecourt this morning Pr!, answer t otheir charges .

.a

Neither Dr. MacKenzie norFletham had comrnents to makewhen asked forrAtiarkes by theUbyssey Thursday .

Fetham had declared in hi sletter to the president that coun -cil members were satisfied tha tthe smoker had been carried o nwith "reasonable order main-tained," there having been mem -bers of the faculty of Applie dScience, including Dean HenryC. Gunning, present.

"Concerning three studentsarrested," the letter concluded ,"the Council . will express noopinion. It is to be judged thattheir conduct will be judged bythe court ."

lost Stone

RecoveredA cornerstone from the Uni-

versity of Saskatchewan medi-cal building now under con-struction at the Saskatoon cam-pusoniade a mysterious appear-ance on the UBC campus Wed-nesday morning.

The 100 pound "Greystone,"which disappeared from the Sas-katchewan campus late Monda ynight, was found in The Ubysseyoffice in Brock Hall early Wed-nesday.

Ubyssey staffers could give noexplanation for the mysteriou sappearance of the lost stone .

"Perhaps if they send us en-ough of them we'll be able toreplace some of the ancient hutswith a new building ;" comment-ed editor Allan FotherIngham .

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CLASSE SContinued from Page 1 .

liiolt SCHOOL ConferenceCommittee will meet at noo ntoday in the Brock Board Room .

M

+0

SPAIILIAI>4ZNTARY FORU M

presents a Public speaking classat noon on Monday, Nov . 9 inArts 201 .

dF

~

4FUNITRD NATIONS Club meet-

ing at noon today has been can -celled .

sit

e►McOUN CUP debating team

at noon today in Arts 108 .• sit

.STUD NT PEACE Movemen twill meet at noon on Monday ,Nov. 9 in Arts 10 . Executive wil lbe elected and plans made foractivities this year .

$ 4< ~NEWMAN CLUB will meet at

noon on Saturday, Nov. 7 .POLICE APPOINTED

MICROBIOLOGISTS Society! In an effort to combat thi swill meet at noon on Monday, 1 wave of illicit love, it has bee n

suggested by the proctor that th ediscipline committee appointone or two dependable men tobe on duty in the lounge when -ever there are students present . ~

Hall is something which has ha dto be kept in constant check, i tseems; spring has little to d owith it .

If there Is a year-round camp -us pastime, apart from the tame-ness of interdigitaliation, indoorintimacy qualifies for the title .

The AMS discipline commit -tee is hardly able to cope withviolators of lounge privileges i fthey are not on the scene to ap-prehend culprits, Therefore i tfalls to the janitorial staff to pol-ice the occupants, and frankly,,they are getting tired of it.RESPECT LACKING

The Inclination of students toparticipate in this . extracurricu-lar activity is understandable ,but there are limits to promis-cuity, one of them being im-pressions of Brock lounge gaine dby visiting dignitaries who ar eoften shown the building b yhigh-ranking faculty members .

well-organized campus pantie raid .---4 The raid, conducted about 4

a.m . Sunday after a Saturdaynight masquerade parade ball o nthe Saskatoon campus, is report-ed to have been conducted by si xuniversity students .

Most of the loot was reporte dto have been left hanging ontrees outside the residence whilepolice were making plaster castsof footprints in other parts of th egrounds. Bras, panties, and slip swere taken to the police stationfor identification.

The raid was not reported t othe police immediately . It is re -ported that phones in the build-ing were disconnected .

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PAGE FOUR

THE UBYSSEY

Friday, November 6, 1953

UBC Grid Squad Invades B~1Ifrih~niSaturday. For Annual Tilt With

Lappie ImpressedWith 'Birds Record

By RON SAPERAUBC students will get their final opportunity to see Don

Coryell's 1953 Thunderbirds in action Saturday night whe nthe football team meets the Vikings of Western Washington inan 8 p.m. fixture at Bellingham .

The 'Birds, still smarting from 50-0 and 51-0 defeats atthe hands of the Norsemen last year, will be out to aveng ethemselves and gain their first conference victory at the hand sof their arch-enemies .

SATURDAY

BELLINGHAM

UBC S -se FORUM $(overtime )

Maybe the 'Birds didn't wintheir first hockey game of theseason at the Forum on Wednes -day night, but for a team thathas just had one practice, theyput up a terrific fight .

As a matter of fact the boyscame within an ace of winningthe game. With just a minuteand thirty seconds left in thegame, the 'Birds were aheaa8-7, but Tom McVie, who playeda great game for Chuck Mill -man's Forum crew, fired theequalizer at 18 .32 .

That goal took all the starchout of the UBC crew and theyjust didn't have anything leftfor the overtime period . On eagain it was McVie who sunkthe 'Birds. He took a doublerelay from John Bates and NickYanchuk and beat 'Bird goali eHowie Thomas for the winner .

Ray Ing with three goals andCliff Frame with two were th estand-outs for the Varsity six .In the third period Howie Tho-mas played some great goal fo rthe 'Birds, and he should be agreat help to the team thi sseason.

'A

44

'AThe 'Birds play the Kerrie s

at Kerrisdale Arena tonight a t8 .00 and the boys would likesome vocal support from th estudents, Coach Mitchell ha scalled a practice right afterFriday's game and would lik eall interested pucksters to turn game and the festivitie sout .

4 Western's coach, Charli e

I

Lap-penbusch, says that he is soot•

Hoe+ cey Birds tied about the UBC squad thisyear particularly since the 'Bird sscored 26 points against the Col -Drop Opener lege of Puget Sound . (CPS de-feated Western 34-0 last Sat-urday).

ONE-WAY TEAMLappenbusch is bemoaning

the fact that all his players arespecialists or ','one way players"

In Overtime

so to speak ."I've got nobody who can go

both ways except one lineman, "he said . "But he's beginning t osuccumb to old age . "

Western's record for the sea -son isn't very impressive wit htheir three losses and one win .The win being a very narrow8-7 decision over PLC in theConference opener .NIGHT PRACTICES

UBC mentor Don Coryell isn'ttoo impressed by Lappenbusch'spredictions and knows that hi ssquad will have a fight on thei rhands .

Coryell has had the boys prac-ticing under lights this pas tweek and has only been missingfour or five boys a night in -stead of the usual 14 or 15 .

He said that the team is i npretty good shape physically aswell as mentally. Jack Hutch-inson aggravated the knee in-jury he received in the gameagainst Eastern but should bein top shape for the Vikings .STUART DOUBTFU L

This week's doubtfulis half back Bill Stuart,

starte rsuffer -

ing from a severe cold . His posi-tion will probably be taken over

came second and was the officia lough to keep Jim Carter for the winner of the race. VOC, asby Jerry Nestman, who is fully season they will have a centr e

recovered from the slight con

usual, won the team champion -man who ranks second only to ship with Applied Science acession he received in last week's Bob Pickell in the Senior "A"

close second .tilt . league. Carter who has been

The first fifteen runners earn• .A large crowd of UBC sup-' hooking them better than ever

tporters is expected to attend the this

the right to wear a brigh t

totot_ this year will start at centre .

red shirt iii the next Cross Coen -LOTS OF TALENT

1 try "lose your shirt" race onGlen Drummond who can Nov . 17. These races will be

really move for all of his six- run periodically throughout the feet plus will probably start at year and those who hold on to';

one forward position, Drum- their shirts will win suitabl emend can holm his own on the prizes .boards with anyone and canconnect from the inside or out• ; Meds, Betas, Eng. 1, Chemside .

Eng, Alpha Delt 'B' and UnionDon "twitter" Hill, former College all remained undefeat -

Alberni stalwart, will start at ed in the volleyball league andthe other forward post .

will meet in the playoffs i nFrank Tarling and Keith Mer- about two weeks . It looks as

rill are the two starting guards . though it will be the Meds andBoth of the more good ball- Betas in the finals again thi shawkers on defence and can hit year .from the outside or drive

(Badminton entries are du ethrough for cripples when they this week . Two singles player sare- checked too close .

land a doubles team is required . '

If the JV's are fortunate en -

low .

JV's Open Season

Against Moderns

BY HY DUNC THRASHERTHRASHERDUNC

The Cross Country intra-mural race was run Tuesda ynoon and provided its usualmixture of laughter and tears '

Although Jim Pollock is the to the watching crowd as wel lonly returnee from last year's as participants ,squad, Penn's crew of sopho• Peter Harris, one of Canada' smores and freshmen are begin- best long-distance runners, wo nning to get the hang of the basic the race, but was declared in -offensive patterns and should' eligible, because he is a mem-have a fairly smooth workingattack going for them Saturday .

Dick Penn's J .V. basketball squad open their season inthe Senior "A" league Saturday night when they tackle theNew Westminster Moderns in King Ed gym at 7 :30 p.m .

Penn believes that with the!' team helms this year, he should

be able to beat the Moderns an dArctics quite regularly and pos-sibly take a few from the strongEilers' squad .

POLLOCK RETURN S

JAYVEES CENTREMAN Jim Carter . Dick Penn's squad is prepping for Saturda yleaps up for rebound while forwards Don

league opener with New West Moderns atHill (29) and Glen Drummond rush in . Coach

7:30 in King Ed gym.—Ubyasey Photo by John Robertson

ber of the track club .Vic Stephen§ of Lambda Ch i

Intra-Murals

Rugger Joins Footbal lIn Ineligibility Blues

By GEOFF CONWA YTomorrow is the day for UBC rugby supporters

their first look at the 1953-54 "Thunderbirds ."South Burnaby will be providing the opposition at 2 p .m.

in the Stadium as Varsity primes itself for their opening Mc-Kechnie Cup match to be held on Remembrance Day inVictoria .

,'r__

Although winless thus far in Soccer Squadfour starts, the Chiefs—as th e'Birds are called in city charn-pionsilip play for the Miller TCup--are rapidly improvin g 0 Avengethrough line-up changes, and arestill a definite threat for Provin- Lone Defeatcial honors .

'BIRDS TOPS

By MIKE GLASPI E

On their record alone—hold- The Varsity soccer XI wil lors of the McKechnie Cup fo rthe last nine years, and of theI try to avenge their lone defea t

Miller Cup for seven of the last ! of the season on Sunday a tten seasons—the Thunderbirds Memorial Park West whe nmust be regarded as one of the ytop rugby organizations in the J they meet Hales, who beat

Province's history .

Varsity by a 3-2 score in th e

World Cup play, against the league opener .University of California an dsometimes Stanford, has extent(•

With one third of the league

ed the 'Bird's reputation to the' schedule completed, Varsity ha sSouth with four series victories the mediocre record of one win .in seven years over the power- one loss and three draws . Cur•ful California machine,

rently in a fourth place tie wit hThe Chiefs' troubles this sea •

son may largely be attrlbulc(i Resat Oaks, the Blue andGold

to heavy siuclies and the Ineligi- could rcpl(rce Hales

in

th i rd lbflity rules. Seven of last seag sPot with a win on Sunday .

ison 's best lettermen, almost hal fthe team, have been effected . ; Varsity hopesIf they can't get off the list, or strength, but a tif the rules aren't lightened to , Knight and Do nlet them play some home games, ~ lured, It is passible bot hIJBC's hopes in World Cup play

see limited action, but Bob Tai lor in the March 11 contest ag •ainst the touring New Zealand sad Ian Todd are. filling thei rAll Blacks will be mighty dirt, posittous well .

to catch

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6