8
g USYSSE Y VANCOUVER, B .C ., FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 195 9 Hungarian Issue Sparks U .N . Trying to wash down the tea is Ubyssey staffer Allan Graves . —Photo by Earle Olson Beer, Rain And Mone y Pour In Tea Cup Game Munro Asks Debat e Of Execution Questio n The annual Tea Cup game wa s -characterized by Mayhem an d $700 collected for the Vancouve r Children's Hospital . Home Ec . went down to de - feat 14-6 before the vicious tackl- ing of the heavier Nurses . _A courageous attempt by th e Engineers to halt the inexorabl e progress of the Aggie chario t failed when the farmers ra n right over an unfortunate red - shirt . A fanatical mob of fraternit y pledges and other cross-countr y .fiends ran into a colossal traffi c jam leaving the stadium . Need- les to say, there were severa l dented fenders . "Lovely" Engineers and For - esters, leading the cheering fo r Nursing and Home Ec . respec- tively, were assailed by variou s unpalatable leftovers from spec- tators' lunches . Five beer-bellied Aggies walk- ed off with the prize in the boa t race—more beer . Pubsters were disqualified , supposedly for cheating . One o f the pubsters accused the runner - TALEN T WANTE D Talented persons on . cam- pus interested in taking par t in a variety show for th e benefit of the CNIB pleas e contact Paul Hazell through the NFCUS box in the AMS office . Singers, musicians, poetr y to jazz readers or others wh o can contribute entertainin g patter for the benefit of the blind are urgently needed fo r this show which will tak e place Jan. 11 . up Engineers of pouring the stuf f everywhere but down thei r throats . Violence was the key-word i n the chariot race . Aggies pulle d the Engineers' chariot to piece s and dumped driver Bill _Rodin- chuk out on the track . Engineers retaliated valiantly but wer e beaten off by Aggie artillery . This consisted of a liquid ferti- lizer and blue dye . Incidently, there was also a football game . - Nurses dominated the firs t half with their hard blockin g and tackling . The gang tackling in the firs t half did not reflect the charac- teristic suggested in the ta g "gentler sex" . Nurses led eight to nothing a t the end of the half . They picke d up a safety on a girdle-poppin g tackle by Marg Lewis and Elain e Muth's dive over center for • a touchdown . Nurses, spurred on by such inspiring cheers as "give us a bedpan," increased their lead i n the third quarter when standou t back Barb Whittaker drove ove r for a second unconverted touch - down . On the next play flying Pat Foulkes circled right end for a gain of several hundred yard s and a touchdown . Pat was th e work-horse for Home Ec . The opening kick-off didn' t travel the required 10 yards sai d head referee, Ron Stewart, wh o was called many derogator y names, including "Dojack" . The first punt of the gam e travelled 15 yards and the kicke r fell flat on her - - er-uh - - back . Standout for Nurses wer e Carol Hunter, Wendy Dobson , Elaine Muth, Barb Whittaker , and Marg Lewis . Home Ec . was led by Pa t Foulkes, Helen Vukasovich and Verlie Abrams : Haskin s Brie f Presente d The establishment of a Repre- sentative Assembly with 42 members was the main recom- mendation of a brief presente d to the Haskins Commission a t noon yesterday . This assembly would consis t of two representatives fro m each faculty, as well as mem- bers of several important com- mittees and clubs on campus . Paul Hazell stressed tha t "The purpose of this brief is t o enhance and strengthen th e SEE HASKIN S (Continued on Page 6 ) President MacKenzie announ- ced Wednesday that a center fo r graduate students at UBC woul d be constructed with a gift o f $400,000 from Dr . Leon J . Koer- ner, the retired chairman of Alaska Pine and Cellulose Lim- ited . - The new center will occupy a site on the University's Wes t Mall, between International House and the Faculty Cluban d University Social Center . Tentative date for the begin- ning of construction is April, The question of continue d Communist executions of anti - Reds in Hungary burst into th e open at the United Nations Wed- nesday on charges by Sir Lesli e Munroe, special UN representa- tive . The fourteenth UN Genera l Assembly was to debate Si r Leslie's request that the subject be placed once more on th e UN agenda . . The UN special representa- tive on Hungary, Sir Lesli e charged that the Communist re- gime is carrying out execution s and trials of anti-Communis t rebels despite .promises that such practices had ended . The demand of Sir Leslie, o f New Zealand, that the assem- bly debate the question "as an important and urgent matter" , was supported by US ambassa - dor Henry Cabot Lodge, wh o declared "the assembiy must speak out strongly against th e brutalizing of the Hungaria n people . All those responsibl e in and out of Hungary shoul d work with the rest of us t o carry out the overwhelmingly adopted resolutions of United Nations" . - The move is bitterly oppose d by Russia, who says it can onl y worsen the cold war at a tim e of comparative warmth in East- West relations resulting fro m the meeting between Premie r Khrushchev a n d Presiden t Eisenhower. Canadian External Affair s Minister Greene, who returne d to Ottawa yesterday, earlier sai d he wanted to have the Hungar- ian question debated . "The Canadian people ha d been much disturbed by report s that Hungarian youths a r e awaiting execution for their par t in the 1956 anti-Communist up - rising," he said . Britain is also supporting th e demand for the debate, and wa s looking for concrete, facts as t o just what the situation is in th e Hungarian prisons . Foreign Sec- retary- Selwyn Lloyd said in th e General Assembly that if Hun- gary could refute charges tha t youths were being executed for 1960 . The center will take about ten months to complete . President MacKenzie said tha t Dr . Koerner's generous gif t would do a great deal to promot e the academic and social welfar e of graduate students. Dr. Gordon Shrum, .Dean of the Faculty of Graduate Studies , said that the eonstructian of the center would be "the greates t stimulus to graduate work sinc e the faculty was established a t this . university . taking part in the uprising, th e way to do so would be to allo w the UN observer, Sir Leslie, t o enter the country . Sir Leslie was appointed b y the assembly last year to try t o obtain compliance with previou s assembly resolutions' calling on ; Russia and the Hungarian gov - ernment to hold free election s and respect human rights . The New Zealander and a previous UN envoy with th e same mission ran into a soli d will in seekin gentry into Buda- pest and Moscow . UN sources first said that th e Assembly's 21-nation steerin g committee would debate toda y whether the subject should b e placed once more on the agenda , but they announced late las t night that the committee meet ing had been postponed indefi r nitely . 'Observers predicted that th e Hungarian question . will remai .z hot in any case . Peter Meekison commented : "It is an excellent idea . The U .N . is doing the world a great ser- vice . The U .B .C . together wit h other Canadian universities ha s helped provoke Munro into ac- tion . " 'tween classe s I .H . HOLDS FAI R THIS SATURDA Y INTERNATIONAL HOUS E The house will be closed to- night, Friday, for decorating . The I .H . Fair will be held Sat o urday . HAMSO C The regular radio theory clas s presented by Hamsoc will b e held on Monday at 12 :30 in P 301 . UN .DERGRAD WORKSHO P Would all members intend- ing to come to the meeting Nov. 23 in Dr ., Birney's home pleas e notify Mr . Friedson in Bu 17 0 at once . CHEMICAL INSTITUT E OF CANAD A A student chapter meetin g will be held Friday noon i n Chem 200 . Dr . H. C . Clark wil l speak on " Fluorine and Fluor - ides" . STUDENT CHRISTIA N MOVEMEN T Dr . Kay . Hoekin, travellin g secretary of S .C .M . will spea k on "Communist China and On e World", today at noon in Be t 205 . (Continued on Page 8 ) GRADS ! GET YOUR PICTURE S TAKEN NOW ! INQUIRE AT A .M .S . OFFICE FOR DETAILS . Koerner Grad Centr e Site On West Mall

USYSSEY - library.ubc.ca€¦ · and Marg Lewis. Home Ec. was led by Pat Foulkes, Helen Vukasovich and Verlie Abrams: Haskins Brief Presented The establishment of a Repre-sentative

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  • g USYSSEYVANCOUVER, B .C., FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1959

    Hungarian Issue Sparks U .N .

    Trying to wash down the tea is Ubyssey staffer Allan Graves .—Photo by Earle Olson

    Beer, Rain And MoneyPour In Tea Cup Game

    Munro Asks DebateOf Execution Question

    The annual Tea Cup game wa s-characterized by Mayhem and$700 collected for the Vancouve rChildren's Hospital .

    Home Ec . went down to de -feat 14-6 before the vicious tackl-ing of the heavier Nurses .

    _A courageous attempt by th eEngineers to halt the inexorabl eprogress of the Aggie chariotfailed when the farmers ranright over an unfortunate red-shirt .

    A fanatical mob of fraternit ypledges and other cross-countr y.fiends ran into a colossal traffi cjam leaving the stadium . Need-les to say, there were severaldented fenders .

    "Lovely" Engineers and For -esters, leading the cheering fo rNursing and Home Ec . respec-tively, were assailed by variou sunpalatable leftovers from spec-tators' lunches .

    Five beer-bellied Aggies walk-ed off with the prize in the boatrace—more beer .

    Pubsters were disqualified ,supposedly for cheating . One ofthe pubsters accused the runner -

    TALENTWANTED

    Talented persons on . cam-pus interested in taking par tin a variety show for th ebenefit of the CNIB pleasecontact Paul Hazell throughthe NFCUS box in the AMSoffice .

    Singers, musicians, poetryto jazz readers or others whocan contribute entertainingpatter for the benefit of theblind are urgently needed fo rthis show which will tak eplace Jan. 11 .

    up Engineers of pouring the stuf feverywhere but down thei rthroats .

    Violence was the key-word inthe chariot race . Aggies pulle dthe Engineers' chariot to piecesand dumped driver Bill _Rodin-chuk out on the track . Engineersretaliated valiantly but wer ebeaten off by Aggie artillery .This consisted of a liquid ferti-lizer and blue dye .

    Incidently, there was also afootball game .

    -Nurses dominated the firs t

    half with their hard blockingand tackling .

    The gang tackling in the firs thalf did not reflect the charac-teristic suggested in the ta g"gentler sex" .

    Nurses led eight to nothing a tthe end of the half . They picke dup a safety on a girdle-poppin gtackle by Marg Lewis and ElaineMuth's dive over center for • atouchdown .

    Nurses, spurred on by suchinspiring cheers as "give us abedpan," increased their lead i nthe third quarter when standoutback Barb Whittaker drove overfor a second unconverted touch -down .

    On the next play flying PatFoulkes circled right end for again of several hundred yardsand a touchdown . Pat was thework-horse for Home Ec .

    The opening kick-off didn' ttravel the required 10 yards sai dhead referee, Ron Stewart, wh owas called many derogator ynames, including "Dojack".

    The first punt of the gametravelled 15 yards and the kickerfell flat on her - - er-uh - - back .

    Standout for Nurses wer eCarol Hunter, Wendy Dobson ,Elaine Muth, Barb Whittaker,and Marg Lewis .

    Home Ec. was led by PatFoulkes, Helen Vukasovich andVerlie Abrams:

    Haskin sBrief

    PresentedThe establishment of a Repre-

    sentative Assembly with 42members was the main recom-mendation of a brief presente dto the Haskins Commission a tnoon yesterday .

    This assembly would consis tof two representatives fro meach faculty, as well as mem-bers of several important com-mittees and clubs on campus .

    Paul Hazell stressed tha t"The purpose of this brief is t oenhance and strengthen th e

    SEE HASKIN S(Continued on Page 6 )

    President MacKenzie announ-ced Wednesday that a center fo rgraduate students at UBC wouldbe constructed with a gift of$400,000 from Dr . Leon J . Koer-ner, the retired chairman ofAlaska Pine and Cellulose Lim-ited .

    -

    The new center will occupy asite on the University's WestMall, between InternationalHouse and the Faculty ClubandUniversity Social Center .

    Tentative date for the begin-ning of construction is April,

    The question of continue dCommunist executions of anti -Reds in Hungary burst into theopen at the United Nations Wed-nesday on charges by Sir Lesli eMunroe, special UN representa-tive .

    The fourteenth UN GeneralAssembly was to debate SirLeslie's request that the subjectbe placed once more on theUN agenda . .

    The UN special representa-tive on Hungary, Sir Lesliecharged that the Communist re-gime is carrying out execution sand trials of anti-Communistrebels despite .promises thatsuch practices had ended .

    The demand of Sir Leslie, ofNew Zealand, that the assem-bly debate the question "as animportant and urgent matter" ,was supported by US ambassa -dor Henry Cabot Lodge, whodeclared "the assembiy mustspeak out strongly against thebrutalizing of the Hungaria npeople. All those responsiblein and out of Hungary shouldwork with the rest of us t ocarry out the overwhelminglyadopted resolutions of UnitedNations" .

    -The move is bitterly oppose d

    by Russia, who says it can onlyworsen the cold war at a timeof comparative warmth in East-West relations resulting fromthe meeting between Premie rKhrushchev a n d PresidentEisenhower.

    Canadian External Affair sMinister Greene, who returne dto Ottawa yesterday, earlier sai dhe wanted to have the Hungar-ian question debated .

    "The Canadian people hadbeen much disturbed by reportsthat Hungarian youths a r eawaiting execution for their par tin the 1956 anti-Communist up -rising," he said .

    Britain is also supporting th edemand for the debate, and waslooking for concrete, facts as tojust what the situation is in th eHungarian prisons . Foreign Sec-retary- Selwyn Lloyd said in th eGeneral Assembly that if Hun-gary could refute charges thatyouths were being executed for

    1960 . The center will take aboutten months to complete .

    President MacKenzie said thatDr. Koerner's generous giftwould do a great deal to promotethe academic and social welfareof graduate students.

    Dr. Gordon Shrum, .Dean ofthe Faculty of Graduate Studies ,said that the eonstructian of thecenter would be "the greateststimulus to graduate work sincethe faculty was established atthis . university .

    taking part in the uprising, th eway to do so would be to allowthe UN observer, Sir Leslie, toenter the country .

    Sir Leslie was appointed bythe assembly last year to try toobtain compliance with previou sassembly resolutions' calling on;Russia and the Hungarian gov-ernment to hold free election sand respect human rights .

    The New Zealander and aprevious UN envoy with thesame mission ran into a solidwill in seekin gentry into Buda-pest and Moscow .

    UN sources first said that theAssembly's 21-nation steeringcommittee would debate todaywhether the subject should beplaced once more on the agenda ,but they announced late lastnight that the committee meet•ing had been postponed indefi rnitely .

    'Observers predicted that theHungarian question . will remai.zhot in any case .

    Peter Meekison commented :—"It is an excellent idea . The U .N .is doing the world a great ser-vice . The U.B .C. together withother Canadian universities hashelped provoke Munro into ac-tion . "

    'tween classe sI .H . HOLDS FAI RTHIS SATURDAY

    INTERNATIONAL HOUSEThe house will be closed to-

    night, Friday, for decorating .The I .H . Fair will be held Satourday .

    HAMSOCThe regular radio theory class

    presented by Hamsoc will b eheld on Monday at 12 :30 inP 301 .

    UN.DERGRAD WORKSHOPWould all members intend-

    ing to come to the meeting Nov.23 in Dr ., Birney's home pleas enotify Mr . Friedson in Bu 17 0at once .

    CHEMICAL INSTITUT EOF CANAD A

    A student chapter meetingwill be held Friday noon inChem 200 . Dr. H. C. Clark willspeak on "Fluorine and Fluor-ides" .

    STUDENT CHRISTIANMOVEMENT

    Dr. Kay. Hoekin, travellingsecretary of S.C .M. will speakon "Communist China and On eWorld", today at noon in Bet205 .

    (Continued on Page 8 )

    GRADS !GET YOUR PICTURES

    TAKEN NOW!INQUIRE AT A .M .S .

    OFFICE FOR DETAILS.

    Koerner Grad Centr eSite On West Mall

  • PA"GE yTWO

    THE UBYSSEY

    Friday, November 20, 1959'

    THE- USYSS~Y LETTERS TO

    EDITO R

    Authorized as sedond classimail by Post Office Department, OttawaMEMBER CANADIAN UNIVERSITY PRES S

    Published three times a week throughout the University year in Vancouve rby the Publications Board of the Alma Mater Society, University of B .C.Editorial opinions expressed are those of the Editorial Board of The Ubysseyand not necessarily those of the Alma Mater Society or the University of B .C.

    't

  • Friday, November 20, 1959

    THE UBYSSEY

    PAGE. THREE

    "No Room For Chased Mirlds"States India's Dr . Pandia :

    DR BELA NAGY, well-known Hungarian pianist and profes-sor of music at Indiana University, will play some of th eworks of three composers of his native country—Liszt, Bar-tok and Kodaly, in Bu . 106 at noon today. His first piece willbe "Variations on a Bach theme, by Liszt ." Next on the pro-gram are two pieces by Bartok, "Improvisations on Hungar-ian peasant songs, op. 20" and "Sonata (1926) ". Dr. Nagywill finish with two pieces by Kodaly—the most modern com-poser on the program . The pieces by Kodaly are "Il pluetdons la ville ", and "Dances of Marosszek . " This concert issponsored by Special Events and Fine Arts . Admission isfree .

    By VLAD ROMACHYCH(Ubyssey Staff Reporter )

    "We cannot live in this worldalone, we must face the prob-lems of the world together . "

    Dr. Pandia, sponsored by theCommonwealth Club, made thisstatement Thursday when speak-ing on "India and the Common -wealth . "

    Dr. Pandia said, "We now liv ein a dynamic world in whic hthere is no room for people wit hclosed minds . We must have anobjective and tolerant view o fthe world . "

    Commenting on India's pro-gtess, the speaker said that In-dia is now thinking as a unifiednation, giving attention to thechanges in living conditions ofthe people .

    India's most important prob-lem is its rapid increase in popu-lation .

    He also stated that Common-wealth ties were not affiliationsof economic, politics, culture or

    DR. PANDIA

    religion, but common historic as-sociations with Britain .

    Each member of the Common -wealth has borrowed Britain' ssystem oil law and responsiblegovernment .

    The most significant factor o fIndia and all the other Common-wealth members, is that after re-ceiving independence from Brit -ain, they have remained friendlyto Britain .

    sDr. Pandia, formerly with In -

    dia's foreign office in Madras ,India, now practices law in Van- .couver .

    This was the second of a serie sof "Country and CommonwealthRelations" to be held by the Com-monwealth Club .

    MATZ & WOZNY548 Howe St . MU 3=4715

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    For the postgraduate or graduate student in science or engineering thereare opportunities for research at

    Wendy Barr took the affirma-tive , in the Student Forum de-bate Thursday, at noon : Resolv-ed that the cafeteria is a seatof learning . Len Geddes spokeagainst the resolution .

    The Forum voted in favour o fMiss Barr's arguments. Shepointed out that discussion i simpossible in most classes andthat in the cafeteria this cantake place .

    She said that as much time asdesired mlay be spent on on etopic, and one need remembe ronly the important points tha tarise from this discussion sinc ethere are no examinations t oWrite .

    Geddes agreed with the reso-lution to an extent. He saidthat the cafeteria is the "verybackside" of learning . He sai drather than stimulating conver-sation, the atmosphere of noise ,smoke, and din made it impos-sible to hear anything .

    There was a certain intimacy

    and blending of cultures, inas-much as someone else's ar mmight be in another's food .

    He described the coffee asbeing partly "cocaine" and hav-ing the effect of paralyzing th evocal cords, which rendered oneunable to speak .

    A discussion on the tutorialversus the lecture system ofeducation arose out of the de-bate .

    The Student Forum meetsagain next Thursday. Theirtopic: Resolved that the Collegeof Education should be remove dfrom the campus .

    Matz & Wozny548 Howe St.

    MU 3-4715

    Custom Tailored Suit sfor Ladies and Gentlemen

    Gowns and HoodsUniforms

    Double breasted suit smodernized in the .newsingle breasted styles .

    Special Student Rates

    FOR SALE$25.00 full price—1952 May -flower. Looks fairly respect-able but goes only after con-siderable persuasion. In coldweather even persuasion fails .Phone RE 3 ,4806 after S .

    Added:

    JIMMY TROY"Comedy King of the Air "

    Avoid DisappointmentReserve Now .

    MU 1-8728 - MU 3-8719

    National Research Council

    Your placement or employment service office has more information abou topenings in N .R.C. The latest issue of the N.R.C. Review in your University

    library describes much of the technical work .

    Applications for continuing employment are invited from highl yqualified graduates at all times .

    Appointments for summer employment in the scientific and engineerin glaboratories are made on a scholarship basis and applications should besubmitted not later than December 15th .

    Travel assistance is given to appointees from distant universities .

    There are a few openings for summer work for which other studentsmay be considered at lower salaries and without travel assistance .

    4

    A REPRESENTATIVE OF N .R.C. WILL BE ON THE CAMPUSNOVEMBER 23 AND 24 . CONTACT YOUR PLACEMENT

    OFFICE FOR MORE INFORMAION .

    !PEA. , Gf

  • 1

    PAGE FOUR

    THE UBYSSEY

    Friday, November

    A Look Back In LanguorCRITICISM A

    EDITOR: M3

    YOU AS KA r

    S O

    (The curtain has just descend-ed on the third act of Romanoffand Juliet, Peter Ustinov's playwhich was produced last wee kby the Players' Club and direct-ed by Ian Thorne . )

    DRAyfA CRITIC: No, don' tleave the 'stage .

    GENERAL JOHN SPARKS :Why not? -

    DRAMA CRITIC : I want tohear lots more about your de-lightful country. Everybody i sSO nice.

    THE GENERAL : Certainly .Who you are I don't know, butall are welcome here.

    D.C . : Even drama critics ?G . : We allow them entry .

    They soon lose their critica lfaculties—the climate, y'know.After that, they ,become quit edecent fellows; settle down,raise families instead of objec-tions.

    D.C . : I defy your climate!(Leaves his seat and clamber sonto the stage) I've a few ob-jections to raise, right now .

    GENERAL (taking his arm) :My dear fellow, be as object-ively objectionable as you wis h(glancing over his shoulder a tthe clocktower) . Time is amus-ingly irregular here. We eitherhave lots of it or none at all,I'm not sure which. Cigar?

    DC.: (somewhat disconcert-ed) Oh . . . thank you .

    G . : Now, what did you wan tto know ?

    D.C . : .(after short, torturedpause) I wish to be neither in -grate nor boor, but

    G . : Yes ?D.C . :—but this play canno t

    go unchallenged . There is nota jot of invention in the plot

    G . : Granted .D.C . : —not a tittle of origin-

    ality in the situationsG . : Quite right .D.C . : —not a single charact-

    er one hasn't met before in adozen tired and tiring drawingroom comedies .

    G . : My dear fellow, I agreeentirely .

    D.C . : Even the themes. Lookat them! The Bear, given hal fa chance, will lie down withthe Eagle; Love Conquers All ;Over-Civilization is Hell : Iwouldn't dare set them as es-say topics for English 100 ,they're so outworn . And theplot . Boy Meets Girl. I askyou! Why, Ustinov hasn't eventhe grace to be hypocritica labout it . (With an attempt a ta conversational, rather than adidactic, intonation) : By theway, how does it feel to be rid-ing in Ustinov's vehicle ?

    G . : Well, the seat is a longway from the controls . But Imake adjustments, y'see. It'snot the first vehicle I've ridde nin.- (He emits a tinkling laugh ,and drops his monocle . )

    D.C . : (With genuine enthus-iasm) I thought you were verygood. You were amusing ,warm, sympathetic—and youhave that indefinable some-thing on stage; a touch of act-or's magnetism .

    G . : I say, old boy, you're to ogood! (Aside to empty audi-torium) Climate's getting himalready !

    D.C. (Catching the aside) O hno it's not! I can still remem-ber the way you delivered thatspeech which begins "The onlyone who's always ,punctual i sDeath": like an English upper-class Edwardian era mino rpoet apostrophising a field ofBerkshire turnips wreathed iuearly morning mist. Ustinovmay have been full of self-pit yand dinner when he wrote it ,but a line like "a thousand

    men are destined to die i norder to capture a farmhous eno one has lived in for years "can only be delivered with bit-ter, angry irony .

    G . : Anger? Irony perhaps,but anger? Not here, surely ?

    D.C . : Shynkaryk got real jo yinto Vadim Romanoff's ac -count of t h e • Revolution .Honest emotion can be workedin among the synthetics o fpuppy-play and platitudinousparental indignation .

    G.: You liked Shynkaryk' sperformance, then ?

    .D.C .: I thought it the bes tI have ever seen him give . Sav-ing your presence, easily thebest of this production; pol-ished, convincing, sustained .

    ,G . : And the rest of the Rus-sians ?

    D .C . : Elizabeth Kaiser, Mrs .Romanoff, needs more exper-ience. She lapsed from accen tand, more seriously, character ,on several occasions . She hadan honest manner, though, anda warm and willing submissio nto a unaesthetic part whichNfartin Bartlett also brough tto the characterization of The

    , Spy.G.: Unaesthetic? Not in ou r

    country, surely? You mustmean unsympathetic .

    D.C . : There are no unsympa-thetic characters in this play .By unaesthetic I mean a corset-less female or a kneeling man .Bartlett thre* himself aboutwith a Thurber-dog-like devo-tion .

    G . : And that startling andun-Illyric intruder, Junior Cap -tain Marfa Zlotochienko?-=who, you'll have noticed, suc-cumbed to our hot-house hap-piness in two acts ?

    D.C . : Some girls succumbafter one .

    G . : I say, may I use that ?D.C . : Work it in somewhere .

    The Junior Captain, Maxin eGadd, reminded m,e of Garboin "Ninotchka ." Chalk-whiteface; flashing eyes, imperious ,military manner : too bad theyput that silly hat on her in thelast scene. Barney Baker' sIgor had the same necessarystiffness, though marred by asometime stoop ; his embarrass-ment entertainingly right, hi slack of belief in the love scene squite suitable

    G . : Just a minuteD.C . : (imperturbably) con-

    sidering the plot and his part - ,ner. His partner! • Listen :Shakespeare's Juliet wa $twelve years old, but did thisone have to be too? I don' tknow if Penny Gaston orthe director was to blame .All I ,do know is that Iwould sooner have expectedher to declaim the "Wreck o fthe Hethperuth" from that bal-cony than any words of eve nadolescent love . Not that itmatters much. The young lov-ers, despite their star billingin the title, have little mor ethan a symbolic significance i nthe play. I did think of call-ing my review, "The Unim-portance of Being Igor .' (pause )General, did you hear me ?

    G . : Not even the demands o fdiplomacy can force a smil efor that one. But her family?

    D.C . : (Pedantically) Drawnas the most convential of thi suninspired set of puppets, theywere more or less competentlycoloured in by Les Wager andLloy Coutts. I liked the for-mer's Amurrican Ambassador ,though God knows what hemust have been doing to his

    vocal chords; he had lots of

    vitality, and a certain flori d,precision of. gesture . His wifewas—okay, but the number ofthat little brown number shewore was definitely up som eyears and sizes ago . And sheneeded a floor-length petticoa tin the last act .

    G . : (staring impatiently atthe clock-tower) Some sain tshould shortly save us from,this sartorial sabbatical .

    D.C . : While we're on he sub-ject, why didn't Mike Mat-thews shine his shoes ?

    G.: (Airily) A mere quibble .What about his acting ?

    D.C . : Misinterpreted t h erole. Freddie is stupid ; whichmakes his occasional cleverline—"one thing about base-ball, it never lets you down" :all the funnier .

    Matthewsmade him too intelligent .

    Then there's the A r c h-bishop-

    ARCHBISHOP (Dodderin gin from wings): How was I ?

    D.C . : Well, it would be hardto go wrong in a part likethat

    ARCH . : (Cupping ear) Eh ?What's that you're saying ?

    D.C . : Patriarch of the See ofSore Knees, almost completelydisguised by beard and mitre ;you were, nonetheless,

    ARCH . : Speak up !D.C . : (despairingly) What' s

    the use! (Aside to General) Iwas trying to tell Mr . Kramerhe was good .

    ARCH: Good, you say? I'mglad to hear it . (He toddle soff . )

    G . : Really in character, tha tboy. (A scraping noise isheard.) At last! The clock—no, just one of my men, slop-py as ever. (Enter Cockneysoldier, trailing his rifle .)

    JOHN SPARKS as Ustinov' sGeneral : ". . . a touch of actor'smagnetism. "

    G . : You! Stop dragging yourbutt! You're a shahr, andabsolute shahr! What d'yo uwant?

    COCKNEY S.: Fought I'dlike to h'ad-lib a bit wiv yo utwo. 'Oo's this bloke?

    D .C . : (with heavy dignity) Iam a Drama Critic .

    C .S . : Blimey! What wouldwe want wiv one of them? Theplay was funny, wasn't it ?

    D .C . : (taken aback) Ye . . es .But it was so hackneyed

    C.S . : Nah, wot d'yer want ?A jolly little warm-'earte dsatire on 'unl4an foibles, lots o flaughs from the General ' ere ,the odd titter from meself

    D.C . : More than that fromyou. Yours was a very con-scientious performance: youknowr how to listen as well a stalk. And the opening of th ethird act

    G . : You didn't approve?D.C . : .On the contrary, I

    What's jazz ?Something .

    What's jazz ?Anything .What's jazz ?Nothing .Are you nuts ?No.Well then, what is jazz ?Many things .A few of them

    Jazz can be a moment . Amoment starting deep in a nunderground stream of no-where . Notes seep down fromthe soil above . Through littleparticles of earth, throug hlarger particles of stone . Hit abase then start long journeyupward. Journeys upward attimes go downward at times gosideways but always upward .Little bits of water join othe rlittle bits of water and togethe rmake themselves a route . Apattern conceived .

    A pattern to develop . Todevelop to grow to search fo rthe top. It takes a dip . It take sa similar dip . Soon the dip be-comes the pattern .

    Then a surge towards air .Another pattern . Yet the dip i sstill there . And so is the base ,that's peculiar, so is the base—in a meshily distinct distance .But dip fades and new pattern sasserts itself . It rushes, it rushe sin a hurry to grapple with air .But a strong sound hits it, clay .Disperses the pieces . Quicklythey run and meet togetheragain . This time a more conge-nial pattern formed . Upwardthey push. Together, altogether .Heave .

    loved it . And the other littletouches: the imaginary-door-knob business between yo uand Vadim Romanoff; yourexit through the invisibl ewall

    G . : (deprecatingly) Oh, tha twas in the script .

    D .C .: You don't surprise me .The play leans heavily on gim-micks like that .

    C.S . : But you just sed youenjoyed them .

    -D.C . : (faintly) I know. I'm

    rather confused. (rallying)Dammit, this play said noth-ing; if you preclude some en-tertainingly dry comments onmankind . No social injustice ssubjected to sustained attack ,no Establishment routed wit ha rapier pen, no . . . no . . .what was I saying? (he yawn swidely )

    C.S . : (taking his arm) Wotyou need's a good nap. Liedown 'ere, matey .

    D .C . : (stretching himself o nthe stage) I think I will .

    C .S . : That's the way. Youcan go on talking when youwake up .

    D .C . : (smiling languorousl yat nowhere in particular) Idon't think I want to . , G'nigh t—it's been lovely. (his eye sclose . The General and theCockney Soldier exchangeknowing smiles . The Genera lputs his on and comes downleft to close the curtain) .

    —DAVID BROMIGE

    The part below pushes thepart above . Then air takes over .Air wants a pattern . She sucks . 'Thin hilly air pulls, clean hillywater pushes . And makes it.Water makes it . Moment i sborn .

    Moment herself is wonderful ,free. Flitting and darting . Kiss-ing one needle of a fir tree;dusting the top of a fern . Upover a log, and down a hill.Then a rest on a cedar boughand a visit to a spider . Wher-ever she wants : one mountain ,two mountains ; ten clouds, noclouds . Below her a bluff,through her a whisper . Delight-fully free to the finish .

    Then she is gone . But theexperience of her remains,Maybe just remembered till thenext time. Or maybe lingeringand relingering by giving to .new moments what were bes tparts of herself . In them, re-creating .

    Jazz is sometimes a scenedeveloped : Acadia Camp atbreakfast . Seven-thirteen : dooropens once, closes once. Firstperson has arrived. Open*again, closes again. Second per-son has arrived. Opens andcloses, opens and closes, forms .a pattern, dee dee dah dee dah ,dee dee dah dee dah .

    A line starts to form . Stillnobody talks . Muscles move bo-dies up lines to grab trays .Muscles move bodies up linesto give cards to get punched .Juice, two eggs, milk and cot-fee. Go sit down and slowly re-fuel . All quiet instruments, al lnon-asserting, all in commun -ion .

    Not for long . A dirty saxcomes through the door . Hisfeet make a racket . Hear himmarch to the back of the line .Something's going to happen,something's going to happen . I tdoes. Through other door

    Book sDescribed below is a pre-view of the books to be pub-lished this winter which arelisted in a catalogue issued b ythe Oxford University Press ,and just received by us .SELECTED CRITICISM1916-1957 : J . M. Murry. This_collection of criticisms wa schosen by Richard Rees wh osucceeded Murry as -editor o f"The Adelphi" and brings to -gether the best of Murry' sliterary criticism. This selec-tion has been made with greatdiscrimination and presents astriking picture of Murry's out-standing gifts as a critic, in.which his personal enthusiasm*were not allowed to blind himto the shortcomings of some o fhis favourite writers .REASON AND IMAGINA -TION: R. L. Brett . In thisbook the author discusses way sin which poetry expresse sthought; how imagination, asColeridge describes it, may b ecome "the agent of the reason" .Brett discusses the claimsput forth by the "New Criti -

    s

  • 1959

    'T'HE UBYSSEY

    PAGE FIVE

    Music To Sleep B yII REVIEW S3INCLAI R

    MEEssa y- in Jaz zes a wicked trombone . Co- farmers' wives who go aroundthe same hot footsteps . cutting off tails with carving

    What do you think you're knives off things . that haveng to do?" asks sax .I can do anything I want .

    a free country," evade snbone.

    loud brashy argument, In -s and cuts . No one listensno one. People suddenlyike and join sides . Everyon eats . Everyone bellows. You't hear the door now, butstill there . You can't fee lcommunion, but in its way

    there. Underneath, the door ;ve, noise .;1st noise to one isn't noise t other but it's noise to me s onoise noise. With the dirty

    slicing wicked trombonetrombone slurping cagily

    over, winning by outsmart -Not -good, smart, noise .

    tight-thirty: most studentse left . A pattern I can fol-starts appearing again . The

    r can be heard faintly in theance. Finally all students7e . Nine: eight bars of snarethe man with the broomscles pushing wood touch-floor) sweeps up .

    nr jazz can be a nurseryme. Two. Mary had a littl eb' whose fleece was whit e;hree blind mice in a pre s

    cooker's who didn't reallyanyway because they

    idn't see, so blind were the yping after a farmer's wif e

    wasn't in the pressur eter, not knowing why the ye-ehasing her but that's no tortant because it's just th ethings are in this arena ofupside down cake worldch is really right side upwe call it upside down any-

    this life in this pebble d!apple sugar sucked earthold steel hot damp dry pres-shere feet are the only "in

    tact" part of one and wheres instinct makes rats choose

    To Watch Fo rrequired by the ordinary par-ish choir for psalm chanting i salso included .

    THE ART OF JAll : Edite dby M. T. Williams. This boo kis primarily devoted to essay son the nature and developmen tof jazz; essays that examinejazz as a form of art worth yof serious consideration, an dnotable jazzmen such as KingOliver, Duke Ellington, orBessie Smith as artists in theirown right .

    These essays discuss thevarious phases of jazz from th eFirst World War to the presen tday, and deal with' ever yaspect of the music. Thesesignificant articles will helpenthusiasts to listen to jaz zmore intelligently, and wil lmake the best introduction fo rbeginners, to a form of musicwhich has inspired the West-ern world for the past fou rdecades.

    Intelligent jazz criticism isvery rare indeed, but here atlast is one which is more tha nadequate .

    Richard Strauss was a manwho saw visions . Fantastic ex-tramusical images were turnedin his fertile but uncontrollablemind into harmonies of endlesscomplexity and vast bodies oforchestral sound piled on eachother in crashing sonorities .His pen, vainly endeavouring t okeep pace with his imagination ,blackened page after page o fmanuscript with "leit-motiven "and thickly scored instrumentalintricacies. Frequently this mu -sic is played . It is always bad ,and sometimes intolerably so .

    No more can usefully be sai dabout the Vancouver Sym-phony's rendition of Strauss' s"Don Juan" at last Saturday' sconcert . It is of no purpose tocomment on the performance it -self ; the composer's only con -cession to formalism is to con-tain (grudgingly) his intellec-tual orgasms within the restric-tions of the conventional nota-tion system; therefore it is awork that is probably impos-sible to play incorrectly with-out a conscious effort to do so .

    "Don Juan" was preceded b ythe pleasantly trivial overture"The Italian Girl in Algiers "by Rossini . The orchestra unfor-tunately made slush out ofwhat should be lightly drive nsnowflakes .

    The concert ended, after som etime, with Dvorak's Symphon yNo . 6. In customary Dvorakstyle, the work was lengthy ,and seemed to consist largel yof perorations . The third move-ment had a certain amount ofrhythmic energy, despite the

    fact that the modal implica-tions of his folk-song them epassed unnoticed by the com-poser . It was not enough, how-ever, to save a number of theaudience from an excursion in-to the realms of not Orpheu sbut Morpheus .

    The main work of the pro-gramme, and the one which, byany objective musical standard ,was much the most worthwhile ,was the Piano Concerto No . 2 ,by Bartok . The work is in threemovements, the first of which ,an Allegro, is scored for pianoand wind instruments only ,rather in the manner of Stra-vinsky's Concerto for Piano an dWind s. Percussive piano ef-fects and the antiphonal treat-ment of the solo passagesagainst the orchestra heightenthe resemblance . The magnifi-cent melodic resource, and thesure, precise scoring and orga-nizational development is Bar-tok's own, however . The secon dmovement introduces thestrings with happy effect . Bar-tok does not bring them in asan extralogical afterthought ,like the choral movement ofBeethoven's 9th, but they gro wlogically out of what has gonebefore: The first movement ,with its clear, crisp outline sand percussive textures did notneed them, therefore_ they wer enot there . The second move-ment makes its point felt byextremely simple means a tfirst : an etching of chords, an da restricted, and yet wonder -fully expressive repeated-not emelody in the piano . The stringsare needed to contrast their

    warm tone with the soloist' snew lyric role . The result iscomplete and purposeful ful-filment . This ternary secondmovement is interspersed witha scherzo, heightening the ef-fect of the slow sections andthrowing its own virtuosic in-tricacies into sharp relief . Thelast movement whirls the workto a close with much syncopa-tion and a great deal of anti-phony .

    Despite Lloyd Powell's pro-gramme note, the work make sno concession to popular taste ."Don Juan" does that, and end sup a dismal failure. No, throughsuperb craftsmanship and con-scious intellectual control Bar-tok crystallizes his imaginativeprocesses into something tha tappeals to the emotions of th eaudience on the highest planepossible, and in Wallace Stev-ens' words, make s" . . . The basses of their beings

    throbIn witching chords, and their- thin bloo dPulse pizzicati of Hosanna . .Conscious intellect is probabl y

    the only thing which makesman what he is, and an appealto this is an appeal to his tru esoul .

    Geza Anda has an under-standing and an affinity forthis type of music, and with hisgreat technical accomplish-ments he brought out all th esalient points of the music andthe interpretation was movingand profound .

    The orchestra followed alongas best they could . .

    —Martin Bartlett .

    BibliographyLITERARY MAGAZINES

    Raven . Student literary mag-azine. University of Britis hColumbia, Vancouver, B .C. Bi-annualy . Short stories, poetry,reviews .

    Prism. 2862 Highbury Street,Vancouver. Poetry, s h o r tstories, verse . Quarterly .

    Saturday Night. Weekly, atToronto . Short verse, ligh tarticles, criticism, reviews .

    Tamarack Review at Toron-to. Quarterly . Verse, shortstories, light articles of goodquality .

    University of Toronto Quar-terly. Literary articles of highquality. No verse or shortstories .BRITISH MAGAZINES

    Encounter at London. Leftwing literary journal of veryhigh standard . Monthly .

    London Magazine . Very sim-ilar to Encounter .

    New Statesman and Nation.Left wing weekly of very highstandard. Reviews, humorou sarticles, some free-lance poli-tical commentary . Short, lightverse . Inquire of editors .

    Punch. Weekly msg . of com-mentary and humour .

    Spectator. London, W .C .I .Eng. Quality essays. (Thereis only the sketchiest informa-tion available on these maga-zines . Students are referred tothe appendix to New Worl dWriting No . 15 for more infor-mation. Most of these magsare low-paying, high-prestigepieces that operate under theauspices of either a Universityor a settled intellectual group .They all need really first-classmaterial . Will those havingmore information,. please giveit to Mr . Zilber of the English

    Dept .)

    never seen any sight in thei rlives so blinded by little whit elambs are they

    that follow Mary everywhere, everywhere, ever y -where, through schools tha tlaugh and play at you so youcan become a million dollarbaby in a five and sugar soure dcurdled pineapple store of we tblind mice running and run-ning naked of tails in a pres-sure cooker, bleeding slowlypineapple squeezed apple re ddrop by drop perplop perplopdid you ever see such a sight inyour life as little Mary comin ghome crying to the three hol-low straws in the breeze of th egreen stream that were pluckedby the farmer's wife thenthrown into a pressure cooker,rats running pressing paws topressure dark damp lid feelingfarmer's wife's palm finger sabove pressing down pullingthem up, perplop perplo plittle pineapple apple red dropby drop they rush rush rus hand Mary cries cries cries be -cause wife chops chops chopsand Mary has lost lost lost al lcontact contact contact with theearth -earth earth .

    Save me dear little mice, sav eme .

    We can't Mary—the farmer' swife the farmer's wife we lov ethe farmer's wife, here we g oround the Mary do you reallyhave a little white lamb whos efleece is as . : .

    So what's jazz you asked me .So what's jazz I didn't answer .Because I can't in words . ButI've tried to give you in word-thought somewhat the experi-ence of jazz-thought . So whatdid I give you? One mountain ,two mountains, ten clouds, n oclouds .

    —Gladys Hindmarch.

    a" and by the disciples of.g, but maintains the tradi-ial view? that historica lrpretation is a necessar yt of literary criticism .

    be author devotes separatepters to .Milton's "Lyci-

    Pope's "Essay on Man" ,eridge's "Ancient Mariner" ,

    T. S. Eliot's "Four Quar-", describing in each casea the philosophical temper;he poet and his age is re-ted in his poetic idiom an da meaning and form cohere .

    HE OXFORD CHAN TOK FOR THREE-PAR Tf LING: Compiled and ar- .ged by Henry Coleman .s book contains a short col-ion of well-known chantsanged with the usual har-aies but in three parts sot either tenors or altos areneeded. Clear and intelli-

    t notation in easy key-iatures, and a vocal rangeich does not tax any voicemuch are other advantagesthe book . All that may be

    POET AND PIONEE R"And what," said the Emperor, "does this poem describe? "

    "It describes," said the Poet, "the Cave of the Never-never ."Would you like to see what's inside?" He offered his arm .

    They stepped into the poem and disappeared for ever .

    George Barker set these four lines as introduction to hi smost recent volume, Collected Poems, 1930-1955, and now thePoet extends the invitation to students and faculty to step insid ewhen he comes on Monday for a week long visit to the university .That you will disappear forever if you step into one of Barker' spoems is rather unlikely, but that you will never again b eexactly the same person, is more than probable . The enfant ter-rible of the young prodigies of the thirties is still baffling th ecritics, shocking the respectable, irritating the refined and de-lighting the discriminating . He has been praised and blamed withequal fervour . Most critics extol his sonorous verbal magnificence ,but even so partisan a reviewer as David Daiches regrets that "th eabsence of residual emotion in Barker's verse spells a fundamen-tal limitation ." How does one measure residual emotion? I sug-gest that such poems as "The Amazons", "Vision of England" ,half a dozen of the songs in "Cycles of Love Poems" and some ofthe Elegies hold all the-emotion the poem can contain .

    His ability to convey atmosphere by means of uncann yimages and powerful verbs reminds us of John Donne, and' hi sfascination with the sound of words recalls Swinburne equall yhypnotized with rhetoric . His mastery of technical devices hold sthe reader, even though the obscurity of the allusions perplexe shim. A dozen examples spring to mind :

    Meeting a monster of mourning wherever I goWho crosses me at morning and evening also ,For whom are you miserable I ask and he murmur sI am miserable for innumerable man . . .

    andWith burning fervou rI am foreverTurning in my handThe Crystal, this moment .

    But that any exposition of a poem would be unsatisfactor ywhen set beside the poem itself is obvious when one reads suchan elegy as this :

    Incubus . Anaesthetist with glory in a bag .Foreman with a sweatbox and a whip. AsphyxiatorOf the ecstatic. Sergeant with a grudgeAgainst the lost lovers in the park of creation ,Fiend behind the fiend behind the fiend behind th eFriend . Mastodon with mastery, monster with an ach eAt the tooth of the ego, the dead drunk judge :Wheresoever Thou art our agony will find TheeEnthroned on the darkest altar 'of our heartbreak .Perfect . Beast, brute, bastard . 0 dog my God !

    It is important to listen to George Barker reading his ownpoetry .

    —M. L. Mackenzie.

  • PAGE SIX

    THE U ..B Y S: S.,D Y

    Friday, November 20, 1959.,

    International House Fai rTo Have Worldwide Talen t

    Swim MeetSaturday

    The girls' second Intercollegi-ate Telegraphic Swim Meet wil l

    be held on Saturday in Crysta l

    Pool .

    -University teams from all over

    Canada will compete in the meet .

    UBC's -defending championswill host the meet from Nov . 2 1

    to Dec . 5 .

    HASKIN S(Continued from Page 1 )

    position of the students council . "He advocated the abolishment

    of the -fall general meeting,which he said had become in-effectual.

    Concerning Council proper ,he wished to lighten the loadplaced upon the president, vice-president and USC representa-tive; strengthen the .position ofthe undergraduate societies com-mittee; eliminate either thefirst, second or executive mem-ber; and, through the Assembly

    1 meeting, improve communica -

    tions between the Council an dthe student -body .

    His main -point was that th eCouncil is regarded as an IvyTower separated from the cam -pus . This he proposed to rem -edy by making their meetingsmore accessible to the studentbody .

    His Assembly would meetmonthly on Thursday at noon inthe Brock Lounge .

    Council, acting as a Cabinetto this House of Representa-tives, would continue to hold it sweekly , meetings .

    A question period followe dthe presentation of the brief ,and the five members of theaudience joined the commissionmembers in discussion .

    Problems raised concernedthe manner of dividing busines sbetween the weekly and month-ly meetings, keeping order dur-ing the Assembly, and the mat-ter of representation of differentsized faculties by the same num-ber of members in the Assem-bly .

    Hazell stressed that he wasopen to criticism for his views ,and would like to hear fromanyone who has a constructivecomment to make .

    Contact either . Hazell, a Com-mission member, or the Uby-ssey if you have ideas to offer .

    The first big InternationalHouse Fair will be held Satur-day at the International . House .

    An "International" floorshow ,bakery, and cafe as well asfilms, dancing and sideshowswill be included in the enter-tainment .

    The dance group which per -formed in the Brock Thursda ynoon will be featured, as wellas Hungarian, Indian and Indo-nesion performers .

    POOLE COLLECTIO NSTILL ,MISSING

    The 26 paintings from thePoole collection are still miss-ing .

    A check with the RCMP re-vealed that no new light ha sbeen thrown on to the discov-ery of these paintings .

    When asked if the student scould help in the search th epolice said not immediately .

    The rest of the Poole collec-tion has been withdrawn from

    .exhibition . and. the Fine . ArtsGallery will be closed untilNov. 24 .

    When the gallery reopens itwill feature an exhibition on th eart of printing .

    Successful Stud y

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    In Service AwardsAnnounced By Gage

    Four University of Britis hColumbia students have beenawarded Tri-Services UniversityTraining Scholarships totallin g$600 it was announced today byDean Walter Gage, chairman ofthe awards committee .

    Winners of scholarships of$150 each are: open to all units,Michael•Jack Brown, 4755 West4th Ave . ; for the U .N .T .D., JohnF . H. Idiens (Comox) 2326 West14th Ave .; for the C.O.T.C . ,Robert Stuart Thomson (Vic-toria) 4559 West 8th Ave . ; forthe R.C .A.F., Ernest John Hen-wood, 3309 West 13th Ave .

    Victoria Hold sOpen House

    On Saturday, November 21 ,Victoria College throws its door sopen to the public of Victoriaand Vancouver Island generally .

    The Gordon Head campusactivities begin with a soccermatch at 2 :00 p .m. between Vic-toria College and UBC .

    Other features will be gras shockey, women's volleyball ,basketball and rugby .

    Open House tours of theLansdowne campus • are sched-uled for 1 :00 to 3:00 p .m .

    MacDonald To SpeakAt Campus Meeting

    Alex Macdonald, past provin-cial president of the CCF wil lspeak today at noon in Bu 104on "Should Canada Disarm" .

    MacDonald, a lawyer, ha sspecialized in the study ofworld affairs .

    He attended the United Na-tion Founding Conference i nSan Francisco in 1945, in theposition of private secretary t oM. J. Coldwell, former nationa lCCF leader .

    MacDonald is also past MPfor Vancouver-Kingsway . Whilein Ottawa, as a member of th eHouse of Commons, he concen-trated on international affairs .

    ;(L- aw 52) says:Sue . Vurseiph

    Irestany casefor the-

    future on a growing

    Savings Account-at . .

    BAN K OF MONTREAL6

    d 7bule &v 4 pit Steede ceYour Campus Branch in the Administration Bldg.

    MERLE C . KIRBY, Manage ra big step on the road to success is an early banking connection

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    Dear Diary. . .

    4nnounce,nen t!A New Look Has Been Added at

    THE COLLEGE SHO PIT IS NOW STOCKED WITH . . .

    Casual Clothing . . . Designed Especially for

    University Wea r

    THIS SPECIAL DISPLAY IS SUPPLIED B Y

    As I take my pen in hand, I takemy bottle of Coke in the other hand!Yes, dear diary, where would I bewithout Coca-Cola? Just a social outcast .Why, everybody drinks Coke! Johnand Bill and Barry and Charley.Horace too . Confidentially, I think I'llhave another bottle of Coke.

    SIGN OF GOOD TAST ESAY 'COKE' OR 'COCA-COLA'—BOTH TRADE=MARKS MEAN THE PRODUCTOF COCA-COLA LTD.—THE WORLD'S BEST-LOVED SPARKLING -DRINK. -•

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  • Friday, November 20, 1959

    THE UBYSS .EY

    PAGE SEVEiP

    Cloverleafs Visi t'Birds 'r ds . Cage: Saturi a

    UBC ' s basketballing Thunderbirds will be fighting for firstplace in the Inter-city league this weekend . Last night th eBirds were busy with the big Dietrieh-Collins boys, and to-morrow they take on the fast-rising Cloverleafs' team .

    Prior to last night's encounter, Jack Pomfret's Birds werein a three-way tie for first with the D-C's and the Albern iAthletics. Birds have played two more games than the res tof the league .

    . And everyone loved it-especially nurses, who won the annual Powder Puff classic 14- 6in a driving rainstorm .

    Thunderettes Score UpsetFinal Score 43-39In Thrilling Gam eThunderettes are on the move . The UBC girls' team sho t

    its way to a 43-39 upset triumph over the powerful Hastingsteam Wednesday night .

    The victory was Thunderettes' most impressive showin gto date . The last time these two teams met, Hastings were eas yvictors .

    Diane Beach, giving a tremen-dous display of hooking- and set-ting, sparked the UBC quintetwith 16 points .SCORES 1 2

    Scrappy Marilyn Peterson wa srunner-up in the individual scor-ing with 12 points .

    The match, which got off to aslow start, turned into the tight-est, hardest fought contest of th eseason . Score at halftime23-22 in favor of Hastings .DEADLOCKED 27-2 7

    By three-quarter time th eteam's were deadlocked at 27-all .

    Set shot artist Anne Lindsa ysewed up victory for Thunder-ettes in the last 25 seconds ofplay, after Marilyn Peterson hadbeen awarded a foul shot .NARROW MARGI N

    At no time in the game wa s

    MUST WINCoach Pomfret said Thursda y

    that "We've got to win tonight(against Dietrich-Collins) . Theteam was pretty unhappy withtheir showing in Alberni lastSaturday, and they'll be reallyfighting for this one . "

    Pomfret added that the teamwas tired after last weekend'sgames. "Playing a tough tea mlike Dietrich-Collins and the nmaking the trip to Alberni is

    Collegiate Union

    Discussed In Toronto

    "Steps are being taken to-wards the formation of a Cana-dian inter-collegiate athleti cunion . "

    Thus reported Ian Stewart onhis return from Toronto .

    The president of the MA Astated that the organizatio nwould be a body designed toco-ordinate inter-collegiate ath-letic events and rules through -out Canada .

    Stewart was particularly hap-py with the way that Westernrepresentatives took the lead indiscussing the setting up of sucha group .

    Volleyball Win

    The UBC first team edge dthe Vancouver Starts aggrega-tion, 2-1, in a Wednesdayafternoon men's volleybal lgame at War Memorial Gym-nasium .

    Coach Kurucs reports tha tthere will be an Inter-HighSchool boys • volleyball tour-nament at Memorial Gym to-day. UBC will enter a fresh-man squad in this tourney.

    UBC RacquetsWi ,n Tourney

    UBC Badminton Club racke dup a decisive victory over theVancouver Badminton Club ina Wednesday night tourney .

    The UBC club won 10 of the12 events .

    Men's doubles winners forUBC included Corrigan andPaterson and Trabert and Tol-man .

    Women's doubles winnerswere Whittaker and Shakes-peare .

    LJBC was victorious in allmixed competition .

    Winners included Ashby an dPaterson, McKelvey and Corri-gan, Shakespeare and Tolman ,and Whittaker and Trabert .

    KEN WINSLADE . . . lead-ing scorer on the 'Birds squadto date. Winslade will be inaction when Birds hostCloverleafs at gym tomorrownight .

    .7J. /•I.~ 'I'JY1.~!Y. 'iCYlJllJY./l./a/1

    SPORTSMEN U

    r.I ?iD CY./ll:IJl.I DGs~S1JJrC/~SATURDA Y

    Footbal lUBC Thunderbirds- at Easter n

    Washington .Rugby .

    UBC Braves vs . North Shoreat UBC Gym .

    UBC 'Birds vs . Meralomas atUBC Stadium.

    , Basketbal l'Birds vs . Cloverleafs, 8 :3 0

    p .m ., U.B .C . Gym .Grass Hockey

    Varsity vs . Cardinals at 3 :15p .m. on UBC No . 1 Field .

    UBC Blues vs . India A at 3 :1 5p .m. on UBC No. 2 Field .

    UBC Golds vs . North Shore Aat 3 :15 p .m. on Memorial No . 1Field .

    UBC Pedagogues vs . Hawksat 8:00 p .m. on UBC No. 3 Field .

    SUNDAYSoccer

    Varsity vs. North S h o r eUnited at 2:00 p.m., North Van-couver Kinsmen Park .

    John StarsIn ' H=ockey

    JOHN DAVIDSONBy ALAN DAFOE

    Ubyssey Sports WriterIf you should happen to

    watch the UBC Blues - India Amen's grass hockey contest onUBC No. 2 Field tomorrow, yo uwill notice a short skillful cen-tre half for the Blues . This i sJohn Davidson .

    John, a three-time Big Bloc kaward winner at UBC, com-menced his grass hockey career16 years ago at the tender ageof eight . Seven years ago ,Davidson became the Varsityeleven's team manager. Afterthat Varsity, which had prev-iously been an obscure and un-recognized grass hockey tea mon the campus, improved thei rposition in the old Pacific CoastField Hockey Association . Var-sity rose to second place and ha snever dipped below this markin regular league standings sinc ethen .CREDITS DR . McGREGOR

    To digress, John gives muchof the credit to the presence ofDr . Malcolm McGregor, wh owas invited and accepted th einvitation to become the Varsitycoach and referee at this time .Since then, McGregor has beenactive in raising all standard sof play .

    Returning to Davidson, he re-mained grass hockey's seniormanager 'for two and a hal fyears and later became captainof Varsity . during his four yearsof undergraduate studies here .Illness forced him to restrict hi ssubsequent activities to coach-ing and refereeing for severalseasons .PLAYING COACH

    John is the A D vision Blues 'playing-coach for 1959-60 . Be-sides this, he serves as refere efor B Division contests .

    John Davidson"is the livingproof that a small man can b esuccessful in this fast-movin gand often rugged sport . Hestands five feet seven incheshigh and weighs 135 pounds .

    Davidson is at present work-ing: towards his Master of For-estry degree.

    there a greater margin than threepoints separating the two teams .

    Difference in the two team swas Thunderettes' s u p e r i o rshooting .SECOND VICTOR Y

    The victory was Thunderettes'second one of the current cam-paign and gave them third spotin league standings .

    Thunderettes' only other wincame against Sea-Fun .

    Tired 'BirdsTo Spokane

    Frank Gnup's weary Thunder-birds travel to Spokane todaywhere they are scheduled toplay the last game of the sea-son tomorrow afternoon againstEastern Washington .33 MAKE TRI P

    Thirty - three players w i L Imake the trip, including severa lJayvees .

    Denny Argue and Jack Henswood of the 'Birds will be athome while their teammates d ebattle with the powerful East-ern team.

    PLAY IN SNOWReports from Spokane say

    that about four inches of sno whas fallen in time for Saturday' sclash .

    Frank doesn't know yet justwhat type of footwear his clubwill wear for this one .

    The exhibition tilt is 'Birdslast scheduled game of the sea-son .

    SAME LINEUPThe lineup, with a few ex-

    ceptions, will be predominantl ythe same as the one which wentunder to Western Ontario, 35-7 ,in last week's Canadian final atToronto .

    Girls OffTo Oregon

    The UBC Golds outdistancedtheir Varsity rivals in the Intra-Mural cross-country race a tnoon on Thursday. Golds cap-tain Dave Fraser led the Goldscompetitors in this run.

    rough on a team like ours . Mostof the kiss have 8 :30 lecture sSaturday morning . "

    The coach thought they lostthe last two games through slop-py play . The Alberni game wa sapparently very poorly handled,and a rough, ragged, and sloppygame resulted . The Birds are go-ing to work on some defence i npreparation for the games .

    EXPERIENCE WINSPomfret said that Dietrich-Col-

    lins' experience won the las tgame for them. Ed Wilde an dBrian Upson repeatedly stoppe dthe Birds' offensive before it go tairborne. "They kept switchin gdefences on us, which is reallytough on our boys ." But hethought the Birds could winthese games, which they must ifthey are to be a threat for firs tplace .

    was

    JOHN DAVIDSO NBlock Winner

  • PAGE EIGHT

    THE UBYSSEY

    Friday, November 20, 1959 -

    'tween classes(Continued from page 1 )

    GEOGRAPHY CLU BPlans for the trip to the air-

    poirt will be finalized todaymoon at a meeting in FG 208 .

    PRE-SOCIAL WORK SOCIET YMr . Ken Hanson, progra m

    and camp director for the Van-couver Boy's Club Associatio nwill speak and show films onMonday at 12 :30 in Bu 217 .

    ~

    3F

    sFLUTHERAN . STUDENTSASSOCIATIO N

    Discussion of "Mixed Mar-riages " Monday at noon in B u216 . Also this Sunday themonthly Fireside will be held .Topic to be discussed will be"Birth Control" . Anyone in-terested phone FA 5-6115 .

    PSYCHOLOGY CLU BJohn Huberman, head of in-

    dustrial relations for WesternPlywood, speaks on "Applica-tions of Psychology in Indus-try"--including testing, wag edetermination, union relations ,etc: Question period . Fridaysioon, HM 2 .

    VARSITY CHRISTIANFELLOWSHI P

    Since the speaker scheduled

    is not able to come, there wil lbe a student panel on the topic"Christianity — A Personal Re-lationship" at noon today inArts 100 .

    SOUTHERN BAPTISTSTUDENT UNION

    Devotional meeting today a tnoon in Bu 227 . A talk will be .given on the convention held atRichland, Washington .

    3F ~ $V.O.C.

    Ski exercises today noon inthe Fieldhouse .

    NEWMAN CLU BFree coffee every afternoo n

    at 4:00 in the club lounge. Comeand bring a friend .

    Ae-EAST ASIA CLUB

    Two films . from NationalistChina will be shown at 12 :30today in Bu 100 . There will b ea short executive meeting afterthe films .

    ,CAMERA CLUB

    Showing of all competition

    entries with the judges' re-marks .

    ALPHA OMEGA SOCIETYAll students of Ukrainian

    descent please attend a meetingin Bu 216 today at noon .

    PHYSICS SOCIET Y"How cold can you get? "

    Hear Fred McCourt and Dr .Brown on low temperaturephysics at 12:30 Friday inP 201 .

    Did you know that one out offive foresters is a fire hydrant?

    CLASSIFIEDLOST—Chem . 300 lab text in

    Chem. 200 on Nov. 9. Finderphone Al at AL 2457-R .

    APPLICATIONS are being re-ceived for manager of the For tCamp Canteen . Candidates mus tbe married and have accountingexperience in double entry . Con-tact Cec Plotnikoff . AL 1270-L .

    Married Accommodationin Acadia available for under -

    graduate students, all years .Call at Housing Office

    Rm. 205-A, Physics BuildingA. R. BAIR DHousing Administrator .

    University Hill UnitedChurch

    Worshipping in Union CoNeg eChape l

    5990 Chancellor Blvd.Minister — Rev. W . Buckingha m

    Services 11 :00 a .m . Sunda y

    DANCE CLU BAnyone interested in tryin g

    out for dancing and singing 1 NEWMAN CLU Bparts for the play "Wot a Life",

    The eighth in a series of le emeet in HG 4 at noon today. tures on Catholic moral prin-

    ciples will be given Monday a t7 :00 p .m .ALLIANCE FRANCAISE

    Two French films : La Vie deBalzac and Alpinisme, tre sbelles images, will be showntoday noon in Bu 102 .

    OVER 500,000USED AND NEW POCKET BOOKS, MAGAZINE S

    BOOKS, COMICS, PRINTS, MAPS AND RECORDS,ETC .

    AT CANADA'S LARGES TUSED BOOK STORE

    TED FRASER'S BOOK BIN1247 Granville Street

    The Upjohn Company of Canadaa well-established, ethical, pharmaceutical house, offersopportunities for a professional sales career . Our contacts

    are with professional people—physicians, pharmacists an d

    hospital personnel . A stimulating and interesting future

    is to be found in this field .

    SALARIED POSITION_ . __FRINGE BENEF' 'ITS .

    AUTOMOBILE FURNISHR D

    Our Representative will visit Your Campu s

    November 26, 1959

    For further information, obtain our brochure "A Caree rWith a Future", from your personnel officer .

    Continental StylingGoes to College . . .

    CONTINENTA LSLACKS ~ .

    Pair 16.95See this new Continental conceptin campus wear . . . slim, taperedslacks with pleatless front, fla pback pockets and slanted sidepockets . In fine wool worstted .

    In six exciting shades. Sizes 28-36 .Wear with or without cuffs.

    Alterations Free !

    On Sale Now at HBC 'sMen's Casual Shop, Main Floor

    nus.vtto ' ia uir dac e0c3JO lsod Sq Iletu . ssvIo . .puooes--s$. paaiso[flnp

    You are invited to a meeting to be held next

    WEDNESDAY for presentation of full details of

    the program whereby qualifications for B 0 T H

    the Bachelor of Commerce degree and admission

    to The Institute of Chartered Accountants of B.C .

    may be obtained CONCURRENTLY.

    This program is of particular interest to studentsnow enrolled in their first year at U.B.C .

    WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 2 5

    at 12 3O;; p.m . in Buchanan 318The Institute of Chartered Accountants of

    British Columbia

    ME NTWO BARBER SHOPS

    TO SERVE YOUinside the gate s

    • Brock Hall Extension• 5734 University Boulevard