the - university of british columbia library griculture and bead o [the department of agri-culture,...

8
The VANCOUVER, B . C . . FRIDAY, MARCH 18, 194 9 AMS Meet Decide s Peace Council Fat e Tom Waldron, Other Supporter s Agree To Drop Referendum Deman d Backers o 1 UBC's aborted Peace Council will appeal to th e student body Tuesday for permission to organize on th e campus . amendments arising from the Financ e investigation Committee report wil l be dealt with . Presentation of Honorary eward s will be made by AMS President Dav e Broussori . EDITORS WRITE 30 ' To 500,000 UBYSSEY S Today's issue of The Daily Ijbyssey drops the curtai n on Volume 31 of the campus newspaper . Its editors today write the newspaperman ' s "30" t o 800,000 words of university news carried in The Ubysse y this year , . The paper produced 80 regular issues, one "extra " following the home economics hut fire, a 16-page anniver- sary edition and a 20-page open house edition . Students grabbed up exactly 529,500 copies of the news - paper during the year . –K Backers of TJB'C's aborted peac e council will appeal to the studen t body Tuesday for permission to org- anize on the Campus . Tom Weldon, leader of the grou p which hopes to establish the peac e group here, has been assured that dis- cussion of the controversial issue will be first on the "new business " agenda at Tuesday's general Alm a Mater Society meeting . Walden and other peace counci l supporters agreed to submit the issue to the general meeting as a compro- mise with Student Council Monda y night . Student Council several weeks ag o refused the group permission to for m on the campus . The Peace Council backers had firs t demanded either a referendum vot e among students of. a special genera l meeting and presented a "protest" petition of 300 names to support thei r proposal . Because of Brousson's promise t o bring the issue before Tuesday' s general meeting, however, peace council supporters agreed to leav e the decision over until then . Broad, ha firmly inp l hearts of s t through h i his bouncil e grasp of al chosen fiel d Dean Cle n ally interes t each stude n than just a His habi t coming stw problems or troubles they may have Big, jovia Dear F, M . Clement, . Dean of lb taculty of agriculture His friendlY, ever -P leasant 1)01' - and head of e department of agricLil- SDI)alily has won him a large circl e ttiral cc'OflOIDF, will vacate his o ffi ce friends both at the university an d the AggitBuilcling sc)1)etin10 this oU1IdC . I he Dean will l('C\'e 1(1 go into 0 farm consulting service with his son , Said President N .A .M . MacKenzie , The board of govei'ndrs are deepl y U nil)) Cr. KINDLY DPOPULAR Dean F . M . Clement, dean of the Faculty griculture and bead o [the Department of Agri - culture, ietiring this summer from 33 years of active uni- versity h f His retii'cnfll concludes 33 years o n the faculty, :Il them as Dean of til e faculty . in ion& UDC Dean End s 33 :m ars OF Work Here Pro n Sponsors Socrec b Lea er Low Here March 8 Solo ow, national leader of Social Credit Party, wil l speak at *iiversity of British Columbia on his western tour . --- This information was communicate d 1FC DI Retak e Songf4t For Floo d Brock Halt1te's will ring Tuesda y next when top-flight Greek lette r songsters l)I$nt a noon music lest . The pi'og I' , sponsored by the In- tci'-F'atet'nit Council, will featur e the three l) fraternities and th e tin 1 CC t()) 40' Mee , i Cs, singing tile melo- dies that them last Tuesday' s GI tielr son g The date March 22nd, the tiI)1( ' Be Jovial Dean F M . Clemen t 'K Every Student In 'Facult y niversity's best-loved ' . I S 1eavin this year . opportunity to discuss with them an y COIISCiOUS of the valu e ended Dean CicInent env, energy, wisdo m enteci himself in the ation for the problem s nts and faculty alike, tint studen t atient understanding , energy, and his fir m 'IattciI'S related to hi s has always been vit a in each professor an d s an individual rathe r in a machine . interviewing eac h has given him Meeting Tuesday : May Hea r nces 'In Red ' Ago1, Plant Hint s Treasurer, spite Year's Austerity, May Fai l To Make U Surplus Needed To Repay Past Debt s UEC's student goverririeut may fail to gain its hudgete d $12,000 surplus which hadbeen planned to make up a capita l deficiency in funds of the lma Mater Society . Vet s N ame d This was indicated ThursdBy by All 1l30 lectuies have been can - student Treasurer Paul PlAflt 1!an . . cvlled for the meeting . flouncing that the final general Iet . Long awaited plant financial re- ing of the society will be held 'ues- l)!'t and outcome of the budget wil l day, 11 :30 am . in the UBC Army . be revealed at the meeting , Report Out On besda y ' Financial outcome of certain Ijo r events of the year will alsp be kpw n by that time . It is indicated thai th e much-touted Mati and Han coed y dance team lost money . Plant, Ow - - aver, is noncommittal . Remainder of the consttuona l lighter Controls Forecas t In addition, the meeting ' WlILdis . cuss remaining proposals from :th e I 'lant finance investigation coimit- tee which delved into student bud - , geling last fall . th e in - to the Daily Ubyssey today by Mar- clOth Bray president of the Campu s 'regressive Conservative club . . ' , it is with genuin e regret, bulb officially and personally , dIL't we accept the severance of Dea n Clement from the life of the Univer- sity which, as one of the pioneers , he did so much to build . " Dean Clement, Head of the Depart- ment of Agriculture, has bee n OWOL'dCdl an 1-Ionorc'y Doctor of La w Degree by the UBC Senate, it wa s announced late Thursday . Bra said that, "NI) campus grou p tllPeal's willing to Sl)d)Osd)I' Ma . Low' s LPl)(I'LI!)c(' and that if VaL'iOLLS oI'g- afliz&itiOflS on the campus can sponso r such speakers as unfrocked priest s and dismissed University professors , tlieti the Conservative club could cer- tainly sponsor the leader of a repu- table political party, " Mr . Low will be speaking to stu- dents on March 8 in the Auditorium . His topic is as yet UnanflOIli1CC(l but i t is expected that this information \gil l soon be forthcondng . of Dean Clem - and consider - of the individ - ' The committee will proposeih*t all New student President Jim Suther - future capital expenditures over WOO land will take office at the conclusio n Glee Club Present s Pop Concert Toda y UBC Glee Club will present a bid e selection of popular music din g their noon hour concert today , At 12 :30 in the Auditorium the pa l concert of the season will be pres te d by the Glee Club , Piano soloists will he Miss Alen e Nimmons, 4th year Arts, and Mis s Pamela McTaggart-Cowan, Ap, , Bob MacLelland, baritone, be VOCIlI soloist , 'me program will feature selection s from Porgy and Bess, Oklahoni( 1 and Aida . Piano selections will include ihoP - in's E'allaclein in G Minor . 'Tween Classe s .1 4 The Women ' s Auxiliary of the Ai r Force Association (Branch No. lifE Canadian Legion issues an invitati o n to all ex-servicewomen of the RCAF ' or those who had any male relative s who served in the Air Force, t be - C()ifle members of the above breech . Realizing that many of the studen ts attending UBC wish to make cia l contact, the members extend a l'ar t welcome to those interested, by rakin g them to attend the next, meetig t o he held in the Au' Fore Asan, Clu h looms, 1407 Laburnum Street, o n Tuesday, April 12th at, 8 :15 p .m eral of the meeting together with hi s 10 new councillors . It will also ask for closer tie s between the social co-ordinator an d the treasurer to eliminate clashes i n social events anti the risk of financia l losses , Pharmacy Party As Increase s Fall Throug h Questonaires G o Unanswere d Student veterans on the cam - pus were blamed for the fail- ure of Branch 72, Canadia n Legion, to press for an increas e in grants this year, accordin g to Mike Lakes, retiring presi - :lent of the branch . Presenting hIs annual report to a general meeting of the Legion Wed- rtecday noon, Lakes stated that res- ponse to the grants questionnaire cir- c'ulatecl last term had been disappoint- ing. Although forms were submitted to all student veterans at the university , c1ly 766 were returned, he said . As a result, the grants and gratuities com - mittee decided that veterans on thi s were not sufficiently inter - t) jOIit 0IItI'It'0 I() northern peal :M g I t : , I l I l I ( ' t h e P i i I ft j I I . les 1 111 0' 1 (t o ' , T . e'en ten using Univerait g 1I3 I I I 101 I t I , ' I I I I',\ L't)I t I , I &' I, Ii i UI 5Oi1('lI!IIJ 0\'d'Y H ( ' hflhI('('llO" it i s 1 'find : ;l ii ILL' " Whtil te use LI the dIOc'Stid)Il . 1t'tt t \\ I)LIlI'\'L'I' you OLLL' 10' sOld' , OL I ' 'III' (IL RL'L iiacnce—pulicc wil l LI,LL it loll ' liLy hLI(E Wt'LlII('SLlO\', fLLLI'0tL)II ol' driver ., license d I Kappa, the American PhilologicatAs - c II Al I •t i ono r i sociation and the Classical Associo n of the Pacific States . He was elited a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada in 1942 . The Board of Governors joined pit h President MacKenzie it expressin g apj)i'eeiatlOii of Dr . Todd's services and a genuine regret upon his retireijent . There will be agenoral meeting of 12 :30, the )!i is the Brock 11111!, an d the Campus Progressive Conservative all PI'OCeedl$I) to Flood Relief . Act - Club in Hut LI on Monday, March 21 . mission is 1feents . All Roads Lead To Varsity Sa y imploring Provincijii Polic e Fire Dept . Tested B y False Alarm s Committee Checks ; Campus Still Blaze s The mettle of the UBC Fir e Department was tested b y puckish Professor J . Young , head of the president's Fir e Prevention Committee in a false alarm turned in on las t Friday morning . The firemen fell out of the Fir e Hall in just 40 seconds in a care - fully checked test by the Fire Com- mittee , At 12 :31 a.m . the alarm sounde d and inside of 2 minutes and 31 second s they were at the Law Huts, the sup - posed scene of the fire. Mother false alarm was turned in on Thursday at 11 a .m . This one came from the Physics Building and arose out of an over - loaded circuit, according to electri- cians . Again, the firemen arrived on th e scene In record time . Three minute s tiller the alarm sounded the blue-boy s were on the spot . However, on Open House UB C DID have a fire. The floor of the Architectur e Building had been painted with a fish oil base paint, in preparatio n for Open House . M 7 am . on Saturday an aler t maintenance man spotted a smal l blaze in the room containing th e Architecture Department's display . A small square yard area of new platktng was necessary to repair th e damage in the floor . The odor of fish hung over th e exhibit all day, anxious exhibitors tried to shoo out the smell all da y and simultaneously shoo in the visit - ors . Spontaneous combustion was ' cred- ited with being the cause of the blaze . Irene Ginwal a ISC President Elections for the executive of th e International Students Club were hel d on Wednesday . F'rene Ginwala, founder of the clu b was the unanimous choice for presi- dent, Felicity Pope was chosen b y acclamation for vice-president . Joan Gonnasson was elected in a hotly contested race for program - director . The balance of the executive wa s made up of Peter Steeki as treasurer , and Ernie Payne as secretary , Dr. N . A . M . MacKenzie has al - ready accepted the position of honor- ary president of the club . "To use or not to use whic h boulevard" ees the nueshon campu s Provincial Police are pondering smc e the departing of the snow . Since the lower mninlend' s r mninlend's nwn Shades Of Th e Supernatura l BERKELEY, Calif—A "spirited " interruption occurred this week in the midst of a lecture by D. W. MacKin- non, professor of psychology at Uni- versity of California . He had just ruled supernaturte agencies out of oulia boards, insisttn g that iseomotor activities resultin g from unconscious suggestion cause d their activity . As if in defiance of his statement . the large venetian blinds covering a window of Cal hail proceeded to rol l themselves up with a ghostly shudder . Pircfesor MacKinnon never di d quite regain the confidence of hi s audience. St O1() 1I winter left a l l roads a I C again. U "perfect" shape and Pro- vincial Police are again livin g et L-itUCIc'tItS of UBC to use "al l i'acls to vai'sitv, " "It' Volt etc Ilsiog 1V1II'IIII .' !')jivi' campu s ested . " VETERANS' APATH Y He emphasized that it was not th e Legion executive nor the grants corn- miltee who had dropped the grant s campaign, but the student veterans , by their apathy ." Lakes said the Branch was by n o means complacent about the fac t that the membership was down . Work being done by the membership com- mittee to improve the situation woul d be continued through the summe r months, he said . However, the Branc h was still in good financial shape . Turning to the brighter side, th e retiring president said the Legion' s housing c'omittee had placed a tota l of 116 families during the year . Thi s included the re-uniting of low' fami- lies with twins, one from as far awa y as England . !MAR PRESIDEN T New president of the Branch is Joh n Ham', third year artsman and firs t vice-president on the retiring execu- tive . Haar was elected by acclamatio n to succeed Lakes . New first vice - president, Mary Lundeen, was als o elected by acclamation . Remaining executive posts were fil- led at Wednesday's meeting . Success- ful candidates were Roy Widmeyer , second vice-president, Charles Perrin , treasurer, All Wescott, secretary an d Ann Robertson, Murray Ryan an d Rod MacDonald, executive members . Delegates elected to represent th e Branch at the Provincial Comman d convention in Victoria were Haar , Lakes, MacDonald, Bob Thorpe an d Barney Russ . More will be selecte d if the quota allotted the Branch al - lows. PRIZE MONE Y Meeting decided to support th e navy in its fight for prize mone y frod World War II when it approved a resolution to be presented at th e lu'o'incial convention that the Dom- inion Government distribute prize money to navy personnel as origin - ally intended, instead of to the navy's benevolent fund . home A sesond resolution urged that th e Army-Benevolent Fund Committe e "give immediate aid to the childre n of deceased or disabled army veteran s to enable a fall education for such children. " It was pointed out that time wa s running out for such children, wh o required the money for their educa- tion now . Tentative support was given to a I'OSOl(ItI()IL urging the Provincial Gov - (eminent to reconsider the applicatio n (LI 0 group of veterans fol . it brewer y beetled Final decision rests with th e ee('1IIiVd', pending submission of ful l df'bIIS of 1110 matter by the move r or I he resolution . To Use Or Not To Use , BCE Grants Ne w Aggie Scholarshi p A new 800 scholarship has bee n donated by B .C . Electric Company t o agriculture graduates in Canada wh o wcsh to take advanced training in tha t field . The award will be granted for firs t time in 1950 . According to the ECER officials thi s brings annual grants by company t o Canadian educational institutions t o $5000 . Included in this amount i s $4200 granted to UBC . The new scholarship is offered through Agricultural Institute o f Canada . Selection of winners will b e handled through the central scholar - ship lurid of this organization . Graduates interested in this ne w award may obtain application forms and other information from the Dea n of Agriculture . _ram Retirement : Of Dr . Tod d Ends Thirti Year Er a Dr . Otis J . Todd, profor and head of the Department o f FC 1IIasic sco, ha sdes t announc erty d h14 retirement . DSCr . Tond dcl,uAB,, hiPh .D . (H~rrd) --- - - years ofIr - vice on the teaching staff of BC, •Pill-Pushers PI a n having conic to the campus as A$st - nt Professor in 1918. Di', Todd is a member of Phi On the evening of March 25, 4 8 members of the first graduating clas s in pharmacy from UBC will he host s to those successful members of th e pl'(LfeSsiOfl who can ciffoi'cl the price o f admission for t}lelliSeIVeS and thei r wives to a Hotel Vancouver banquet . Dr . G . F . Amyot, Deputy Minister o f Health and Welfare, will be the mai n speaker, together with representative s from other professional groups . A teatui'e of the evening will be th e presentation of honorary member - ships in the British Columbia Phar- maceutical Association to veterans o t o years or flIOI'O in pharmacy . a_ a a et_ Highly Successfu l Year Announced by Aero Club Member s The successful completion of th e first years operation of the UDC Coop Acre Association and inaugura l flights of students to their homes o n the Island and related outlying dis- tricts will be revealed to the member - ship at their annual general meeting , Tuesday, March 29, in the club room , A rtnoui'iCS . Along vi h club added a other projects, the Acre new "fly home servic e At . Social Problems Club presents prof . Dixon, of the Social World Department flt nicnibi'i' s cc'' . today, Friday, at 12 :30 in Arts 100 . Tile '" 11)1)51 'ec'eot soloists in th e His topic will be "Mental I'lospilalS L L L Micky 1,,,,,,L ,-,,i,f '(i Sin - cI .., , March ", ". .',-,' .' in tttic, iii1't ' vill be an SPC Baldness Meeting . Next Years Executive will be Clcctc'dl ' Ai. ae . :t ''' ' Carnival in Flanders, a Fi'flCE 1 tilni 'ith English titles, will b c welted In the auditorium Marith 2 2 by the Film Society, '1['E Setlii'g lot ' the )I'OdlUCtit .11 is dl 51)1011 Flemish towi l .'\dtflhiSSi011 LL 2 (LeflIS , .'Y . : Chia it dIll Science Orgaeiratie n UBC c(11'dIaItlV mwloa you to Wen d its FlILlil',' 11(11)11 IIId'etjIlps Vl1teh Il ' 'liii, tLLStiIIlLLIIj('LL d)l CllIkt ! 1 ' lL'I'L ' . li(LIfjIIg . and Mental Health ." On MOltdl'l\ LI I) .i I 1 1111 ., Arts ' iltii' . IVliiis Sinclair IS the first gu t seluist of the club . The (21(11 .) 'ill be functioning throug h the sIlI)itllL'r 01001115 "it .1i both of thei r ai'C1'0ft . GlIdILlaluog stl.IdieflLs are ldi'iSOdl tilcY can 11)11) the ('1111) new 01111 II"S MEETIN G It .I t'iC .ilUl(IILIl There is no time CANCELS 1 l :30' s limi t to the general student body thi s s1)riug when Acre club member s offco'c'cl to fly students to thei r towns . So far, about eleven trip s l)eeIi made to Victoria and Nanaim o iia cI two to Powell Rivet' . All it costs is Gas and Oil . A total of 19 students are undei' - ti'',i ifl ing lot' their Private license s cindll't' the new government $100 .0 0 SLI))iii(ly plan bringing the total 1oCt11 - , I'Lt L M e ., . , LL , . 1k to 53, iilClLldtiII g , ",LI XT T1F S ' Fit! h Sdei'is Fhie d li :ll! UIIC StlI(l('IItL Ll)f)&iIlI'Q il l : .Iti' L'L)LlII Mart'1 l in tllLS\V'd I L ('l1LIl'L(L of (IlivillO on till \Vl()LI L wlc (LI ILL ILLILI ;eel nl)i il l have \ I I 11 :'10 eau . lectures on Tuesday , .tti,I.(.lI 22II($, 1919, will he ('tiii('elle(l . 'Ellis is to Cl1itl)lt elf StililciltS to at - 1111(1 the last Gemmel Meeting of th e Aline ltit'i' S1)1'!Vt , '

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TheVANCOUVER, B . C . . FRIDAY, MARCH 18, 1949

AMS Meet DecidesPeace Council Fate

Tom Waldron, Other SupportersAgree To Drop Referendum Deman d

Backers o 1 UBC's aborted Peace Council will appeal to th e

student body Tuesday for permission to organize on th e

campus .

amendments arising from the Financ e

investigation Committee report wil l

be dealt with .

Presentation of Honorary eward swill be made by AMS President Dav eBroussori .

EDITORS WRITE 30 'To 500,000 UBYSSEYS

Today's issue of The Daily Ijbyssey drops the curtai n

on Volume 31 of the campus newspaper .

Its editors today write the newspaperman 's "30" to

800,000 words of university news carried in The Ubyssey

this year ,

. The paper produced 80 regular issues, one "extra "

following the home economics hut fire, a 16-page anniver-

sary edition and a 20-page open house edition .

Students grabbed up exactly 529,500 copies of the news -

paper during the year .

–K Backers of TJB'C's aborted peacecouncil will appeal to the studen tbody Tuesday for permission to org-anize on the Campus .

Tom Weldon, leader of the grou pwhich hopes to establish the peacegroup here, has been assured that dis-cussion of the controversial issuewill be first on the "new business "agenda at Tuesday's general AlmaMater Society meeting .

Walden and other peace counci lsupporters agreed to submit the issueto the general meeting as a compro-mise with Student Council Mondaynight .

Student Council several weeks agorefused the group permission to for mon the campus .

The Peace Council backers had firs tdemanded either a referendum vot eamong students of. a special genera lmeeting and presented a "protest"petition of 300 names to support thei rproposal .

Because of Brousson's promise t obring the issue before Tuesday'sgeneral meeting, however, peacecouncil supporters agreed to leavethe decision over until then .

Broad, hafirmly inplhearts of s tthrough h ihis bouncil egrasp of alchosen field

Dean Clenally interes teach studenthan just a

His habi tcoming stw

problems or troubles they may haveBig, jovia Dear F, M . Clement, .

Dean of lb taculty of agriculture

His friendlY, ever -P leasant 1)01' -

and head of edepartment of agricLil- SDI)alily has won him a large circl e

ttiral cc'OflOIDF, will vacate his o ffi ce

friends both at the university an d

the AggitBuilcling sc)1)etin10 this oU1IdC .

I he Dean will l('C\'e 1(1 go into 0farm consulting service with his son ,

Said President N .A .M. MacKenzie ,The board of govei'ndrs are deepl y

U nil)) Cr.

KINDLY DPOPULAR Dean F . M . Clement, dean of the

Faculty griculture and bead o [the Department of Agri -

culture, ietiring this summer from 33 years of active uni-

versity h f

His retii'cnfll concludes 33 years o n

the faculty, :Il them as Dean of til e

faculty .

in

ion& UDC Dean Ends33 :m ars OF Work Here

Pro n Sponsors Socrecb

Lea er Low Here March 8

Solo ow, national leader of Social Credit Party, wil l

speak at *iiversity of British Columbia on his western tour .

--- This information was communicate d

1FC DI Retake

Songf4t For Flood

Brock Halt1te's will ring Tuesda ynext when top-flight Greek lette rsongsters l)I$nt a noon music lest .

The pi'og I' , sponsored by the In-tci'-F'atet'nit Council, will featur ethe three l) fraternities and th etin 1 CC t()) 40' Mee , i Cs, singing tile melo-dies that them last Tuesday' sGI tielr son g

The date

March 22nd, the tiI)1( '

Be Jovial Dean F M . Clement

'K

Every Student In 'Facultyniversity's best-loved ' .I S 1eavin this year. opportunity to discuss with them any

COIISCiOUS of the valu eended Dean CicInent env, energy, wisdo m

enteci himself in the ation for the problem snts and faculty alike, tint studen tatient understanding ,energy, and his fir m'IattciI'S related to hi s

has always been vit ain each professor an d

s an individual rathe rin a machine .

interviewing eac hhas given him

Meeting Tuesday: May Hear

nces 'In Red' Ago1, Plant Hints

Treasurer,

spite Year's Austerity, May Fai l

To Make U Surplus Needed To Repay Past Debts

UEC's student goverririeut may fail to gain its hudgete d

$12,000 surplus which hadbeen planned to make up a capita l

deficiency in funds of the lma Mater Society .

Vet s Named

This was indicated ThursdBy by

All 1l30 lectuies have been can -student Treasurer Paul PlAflt 1!an.. cvlled for the meeting.flouncing that the final general Iet .

Long awaited plant financial re-ing of the society will be held 'ues- l)!'t and outcome of the budget wil l

day, 11 :30 am. in the UBC Army. be revealed at the meeting ,

Report Out On besday

'Financial outcome of certain Ijor events of the year will alsp be kpwn

by that time. It is indicated thai th e

much-touted Mati and Han coedy

dance team lost money . Plant, Ow--aver, is noncommittal .

Remainder of the consttuonal

lighter Controls Forecast

In addition, the meeting ' WlILdis .

cuss remaining proposals from:the

I 'lant finance investigation coimit-tee which delved into student bud -,geling last fall .

thein -

n

to the Daily Ubyssey today by Mar-clOth Bray president of the Campus'regressive Conservative club .

. ' , it is with genuin eregret, bulb officially and personally ,dIL't we accept the severance of Dea nClement from the life of the Univer-sity which, as one of the pioneers ,he did so much to build . "

Dean Clement, Head of the Depart-ment of Agriculture, has beenOWOL'dCdl an 1-Ionorc'y Doctor of La wDegree by the UBC Senate, it wa sannounced late Thursday .

Bra said that, "NI) campus grou ptllPeal's willing to Sl)d)Osd)I' Ma . Low' sLPl)(I'LI!)c(' and that if VaL'iOLLS oI'g-afliz&itiOflS on the campus can sponso rsuch speakers as unfrocked priest sand dismissed University professors ,tlieti the Conservative club could cer-tainly sponsor the leader of a repu-table political party, "

Mr. Low will be speaking to stu-dents on March 8 in the Auditorium .His topic is as yet UnanflOIli1CC(l but i tis expected that this information \gil lsoon be forthcondng .

of Dean Clem -and consider -of the individ -

'The committee will proposeih*t all

New student President Jim Suther -future capital expenditures over WOO land will take office at the conclusio n

Glee Club Presents

Pop Concert Toda yUBC Glee Club will present a bid e

selection of popular music din gtheir noon hour concert today ,

At 12:30 in the Auditorium the pa lconcert of the season will be pres tedby the Glee Club ,

Piano soloists will he Miss Alen eNimmons, 4th year Arts, and MissPamela McTaggart-Cowan, Ap, ,

Bob MacLelland, baritone,

beVOCIlI soloist ,

'me program will feature selectionsfrom Porgy and Bess, Oklahoni( 1 andAida .

Piano selections will include ihoP -in's E'allaclein in G Minor .

'Tween Classes

.14The Women ' s Auxiliary of the Ai r

Force Association (Branch No. lifECanadian Legion issues an invitati o nto all ex-servicewomen of the RCAF 'or those who had any male relative swho served in the Air Force, t be -C()ifle members of the above breech .

Realizing that many of the studen tsattending UBC wish to make cia lcontact, the members extend a l'ar twelcome to those interested, by rakin gthem to attend the next, meetig t ohe held in the Au' Fore Asan, Clu hlooms, 1407 Laburnum Street, o nTuesday, April 12th at, 8 :15 p .m

eral of the meeting together with his10 new councillors .

It will also ask for closer ties

between the social co-ordinator an dthe treasurer to eliminate clashes i nsocial events anti the risk of financia llosses ,

Pharmacy Party

As Increases

Fall Through

Questonaires Go

Unanswere dStudent veterans on the cam-

pus were blamed for the fail-

ure of Branch 72, Canadia n

Legion, to press for an increase

in grants this year, accordin g

to Mike Lakes, retiring presi -

:lent of the branch .Presenting hIs annual report to a

general meeting of the Legion Wed-rtecday noon, Lakes stated that res-ponse to the grants questionnaire cir-c'ulatecl last term had been disappoint-ing.

Although forms were submitted toall student veterans at the university,c1ly 766 were returned, he said . As aresult, the grants and gratuities com -mittee decided that veterans on thi s

were not sufficiently inter -

t) jOIit 0IItI'It'0 I() northern peal:M g

I

t : ,

I l I l

I ( '

t h e P i

i I ft j I I .

les

1 111 0' 1

(t o

' , T . e'en ten using Univerait g

1I3

I I I 101 I t I , '

I I I I',\

L't)I

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Ii

i

UI 5Oi1('lI!IIJ 0\'d'Y H ( ' hflhI('('llO" it i s

1 'find

: ;l ii ILL' "

Whtil te use

LI the dIOc'Stid)Il . 1t'tt t\\ I)LIlI'\'L'I' you OLLL' 10' sOld' , OL I

' 'III'

(IL RL'L

iiacnce—pulicc

wil lLI,LL it

loll '

liLy hLI(E

Wt'LlII('SLlO\', fLLLI'0tL)II

ol'

driver .,

licensed

I

Kappa, the American PhilologicatAs -c

II

Al I •t i

onori sociation and the Classical Associon

of the Pacific States . He was eliteda Fellow of the Royal Society ofCanada in 1942 .

The Board of Governors joined pit hPresident MacKenzie it expressin gapj)i'eeiatlOii of Dr . Todd's services anda genuine regret upon his retireijent .

There will be agenoral meeting of 12 :30, the )!i is the Brock 11111!, an dthe Campus Progressive Conservative all PI'OCeedl$I) to Flood Relief . Act -Club in Hut LI on Monday, March 21 . mission is 1feents .

All Roads Lead To Varsity Say

imploring Provincijii Police

Fire Dept.Tested ByFalse Alarm s

Committee Checks;Campus Still Blaze s

The mettle of the UBC FireDepartment was tested bypuckish Professor J . Young,head of the president's FirePrevention Committee in afalse alarm turned in on las tFriday morning .

The firemen fell out of the Fir eHall in just 40 seconds in a care-fully checked test by the Fire Com-mittee ,

At 12:31 a.m. the alarm sounde dand inside of 2 minutes and 31 second sthey were at the Law Huts, the sup -posed scene of the fire.

Mother false alarm was turned inon Thursday at 11 a .m .

This one came from the PhysicsBuilding and arose out of an over -loaded circuit, according to electri-cians .

Again, the firemen arrived on th escene In record time . Three minutestiller the alarm sounded the blue-boy swere on the spot .

However, on Open House UB CDID have a fire.

The floor of the ArchitectureBuilding had been painted with afish oil base paint, in preparationfor Open House .

M 7 am. on Saturday an aler tmaintenance man spotted a smal lblaze in the room containing th eArchitecture Department's display .

A small square yard area of newplatktng was necessary to repair th edamage in the floor .

The odor of fish hung over th eexhibit all day, anxious exhibitorstried to shoo out the smell all da yand simultaneously shoo in the visit -ors .

Spontaneous combustion was ' cred-ited with being the cause of the blaze .

Irene GinwalaISC President

Elections for the executive of theInternational Students Club were hel don Wednesday .

F'rene Ginwala, founder of the clu bwas the unanimous choice for presi-dent, Felicity Pope was chosen b yacclamation for vice-president .

Joan Gonnasson was elected in ahotly contested race for program -director .

The balance of the executive wa smade up of Peter Steeki as treasurer ,and Ernie Payne as secretary ,

Dr. N . A . M. MacKenzie has al -ready accepted the position of honor-ary president of the club .

"To use or not to use whic h

boulevard" ees the nueshon campus

Provincial Police are pondering smc e

the departing of the snow .

Since the lower mninlend' s r mninlend's nwn

Shades Of Th eSupernatura l

BERKELEY, Calif—A "spirited "interruption occurred this week in themidst of a lecture by D. W. MacKin-non, professor of psychology at Uni-versity of California .

He had just ruled supernaturteagencies out of oulia boards, insisttn gthat iseomotor activities resultin gfrom unconscious suggestion cause dtheir activity .

As if in defiance of his statement .the large venetian blinds covering awindow of Cal hail proceeded to rol lthemselves up with a ghostly shudder .

Pircfesor MacKinnon never di dquite regain the confidence of hisaudience.

St O1() 1I

winter left a l l roads a I C

again. U "perfect" shape and Pro-vincial Police are again livin get L-itUCIc'tItS of UBC to use "al l

i'acls to vai'sitv,"

"It'

Volt

etc

Ilsiog

1V1II'IIII .'

!')jivi'

campu sested . "VETERANS' APATHY

He emphasized that it was not th eLegion executive nor the grants corn-miltee who had dropped the grantscampaign, but the student veterans ,by their apathy ."

Lakes said the Branch was by n omeans complacent about the factthat the membership was down . Workbeing done by the membership com-mittee to improve the situation woul dbe continued through the summermonths, he said . However, the Branc hwas still in good financial shape .

Turning to the brighter side, th eretiring president said the Legion' shousing c'omittee had placed a tota lof 116 families during the year . Thi sincluded the re-uniting of low' fami-lies with twins, one from as far awa yas England .!MAR PRESIDENT

New president of the Branch is Joh nHam', third year artsman and firs tvice-president on the retiring execu-tive .

Haar was elected by acclamationto succeed Lakes . New first vice-president, Mary Lundeen, was als oelected by acclamation .

Remaining executive posts were fil-led at Wednesday's meeting . Success-ful candidates were Roy Widmeyer,second vice-president, Charles Perrin ,treasurer, All Wescott, secretary an dAnn Robertson, Murray Ryan andRod MacDonald, executive members .

Delegates elected to represent th eBranch at the Provincial Comman dconvention in Victoria were Haar,Lakes, MacDonald, Bob Thorpe an dBarney Russ . More will be selectedif the quota allotted the Branch al -lows.PRIZE MONE Y

Meeting decided to support th enavy in its fight for prize mone yfrod World War II when it approved aresolution to be presented at th elu'o'incial convention that the Dom-inion Government distribute prizemoney to navy personnel as origin -ally intended, instead of to the navy'sbenevolent fund .

home A sesond resolution urged that theArmy-Benevolent Fund Committe e"give immediate aid to the childrenof deceased or disabled army veteransto enable a fall education for suchchildren. "

It was pointed out that time wasrunning out for such children, wh orequired the money for their educa-tion now .

Tentative support was given to aI'OSOl(ItI()IL urging the Provincial Gov-(eminent to reconsider the applicatio n(LI 0 group of veterans fol . it brewerybeetled Final decision rests with theee('1IIiVd', pending submission of ful ldf'bIIS of 1110 matter by the move ror I he resolution .

To Use Or Not To Use ,

BCE Grants Ne wAggie Scholarship

A new 800 scholarship has bee ndonated by B .C . Electric Company t oagriculture graduates in Canada wh owcsh to take advanced training in tha tfield .

The award will be granted for firs ttime in 1950 .

According to the ECER officials thi sbrings annual grants by company toCanadian educational institutions to$5000 . Included in this amount i s$4200 granted to UBC .

The new scholarship is offeredthrough Agricultural Institute ofCanada . Selection of winners will b ehandled through the central scholar -ship lurid of this organization .

Graduates interested in this ne waward may obtain application formsand other information from the Deanof Agriculture ._ram

Retirement: Of Dr. Todd

Ends Thirti Year Era

Dr . Otis J . Todd, profor and head of the Department of

FC

1IIasic sco, ha

sdes

t announc

erty

d h14 retirement .

DSCr. Tonddcl,uAB,, hiPh .D. (H~rrd) ---

--years ofIr -

vice on the teaching staff of BC,

•Pill-Pushers PI a nhaving conic to the campus as A$st -nt Professor in 1918.Di', Todd is a member of Phi

On the evening of March 25, 4 8members of the first graduating clas sin pharmacy from UBC will he hoststo those successful members of th epl'(LfeSsiOfl who can ciffoi'cl the price o fadmission for t}lelliSeIVeS and thei rwives to a Hotel Vancouver banquet .

Dr . G . F . Amyot, Deputy Minister o fHealth and Welfare, will be the mai nspeaker, together with representative sfrom other professional groups . Ateatui'e of the evening will be th epresentation of honorary member -ships in the British Columbia Phar-maceutical Association to veterans o to years or flIOI'O in pharmacy .a_ a

a et_

Highly Successfu l

Year Announced by

Aero Club Members

The successful completion of th efirst years operation of the UDCCoop Acre Association and inaugura lflights of students to their homes onthe Island and related outlying dis-tricts will be revealed to the member -ship at their annual general meeting ,Tuesday, March 29, in the club room ,A rtnoui'iCS .

Along vi hclub added a

other projects, the Acrenew "fly home servic e

At.Social Problems Club presents prof .

Dixon, of the Social World Departmentflt

nicnibi'i' scc'' .today, Friday, at 12:30 in Arts 100 .

Tile '" 11)1)51 'ec'eot soloists in th eHis topic will be "Mental I'lospilalS L L L

Micky 1,,,,,,L ,-,,i,f

'(i Sin -cI

.., ,

March ", "..',-,'.' in tttic, iii1't 'vill be an SPC Baldness Meeting .Next Years Executive will be Clcctc'dl '

Ai.

ae. :t''''

Carnival in Flanders,

a Fi'flCE 1tilni

'ith English titles, will b cwelted In the auditorium Marith 2 2by the Film

Society, '1['E

Setlii'g lot'the )I'OdlUCtit .11 is dl 51)1011 Flemish towi l.'\dtflhiSSi011

LL 2

(LeflIS ,.'Y.

:Chia it dIll Science Orgaeiratie n

UBC c(11'dIaItlV mwloa you to Wen dits

FlILlil','

11(11)11

IIId'etjIlps

Vl1teh

Il ''liii,

tLLStiIIlLLIIj('LL d)l

CllIkt

! 1

'

lL'I'L '.

li(LIfjIIg .

and Mental Health ."

On

MOltdl'l\

LI I) .iI 1

1111

., Arts

' iltii' . IVliiis Sinclair IS the first gu tseluist of the club .

The (21(11.) 'ill be functioning throug h

the sIlI)itllL'r 01001115 "it.1i both of thei r

ai'C1'0ft .GlIdILlaluog

stl.IdieflLs

are

ldi'iSOdltilcY can 11)11) the ('1111) new 01111

II"S MEETIN G

It .I

t'iC.ilUl(IILIl There is no time CANCELS 1 l:30's

limi t

to the general student body thi ss1)riug when Acre club membersoffco'c'cl to fly students to thei r

towns .So far, about eleven trips

l)eeIi made to Victoria and Nanaim oiia cI two to Powell Rivet' .

All it costs is Gas and Oil .A total of 19 students are undei' -

ti'',i ifl ing lot' their Private license scindll't' the new government $100 .0 0SLI))iii(ly plan bringing the total 1oCt11 -, I'Lt L

M e.,

. , LL

, . 1k to 53, iilClLldtiII g, ",LI

XT T1F S'Fit! h

Sdei'is Fhied li:ll!

UIIC StlI(l('IItL

Ll)f)&iIlI'Q il l

: .Iti'

L'L)LlII

Mart'1

l

in

tllLS\V'd

I L

('l1LIl'L(L

of

(IlivillO

on

till

\Vl()LI L

wlc

(LI

ILL

ILLILI

;eel

nl)i

il l

have

\ I I 11 :'10 eau . lectures on Tuesday ,.tti,I.(.lI 22II($, 1919, will he ('tiii('elle(l .

'Ellis is to Cl1itl)lt elf StililciltS to at -1111(1 the last Gemmel Meeting of th eAline

ltit'i' S1)1'!Vt ,

'

1'a i

THE DAILY UBYSSEY

Friday, March 18, 194 9

its

loge '49 Is On :lime

SIGNBOAR D

At approximately 10 :00 A.M. las t

Wednesday, a group of people stand-

ing around a printing press in a

local establishment watched a press -

man pull a switch that star ted the

gigantic press rolling. To most o f

them, that simple little act signified

the high point of their last yea r

in the Publications Board . The 194 9

Totem had gone to press .

To Editor Dick Blockberger, i t

signified the end of hours of gruel -

Jury Finds GundlachGuilty of Contempt

folk rotate

this Year;

Dr. Ralph H. Gundlach, dismissed University of Washing -

ton professor, was found guilty of contempt of State Legislatur e

following a State, 'S.upreme Court trial yesterday .After several hours deliberation

jury found that Gundlach's refusa l

to answer questions before the Can -well Committee regarding his politi-ec,l affiliation constituted contempt o fLegislature ,

De. Gundlach, who addressed UB Cstudents two weeks ago, may b efined a maximum of $1,000, sentencedto a one year jail tern(, or both .

Sentence had not been passed a tpress time .

Saturday, in the trial of Dr . Her-bert J . Phillips, jury found that fall -tin e to answer similar questions di dnot constitute contempt .

Gundlach may appeal his case t oa higher court .

at prices ranging from Sin ',O nThe trailers th r

worthy and well-ka a .Ric light and runny, ,have sinks and plenty of „!i jw-roam .tied all are warm and comfortable .

Not entirely convinced by the gli bpatter of the trailer camp salesmen ,I walked over to Acadia to find ou tfor myself the degree of fact or lfiction that underlaid their ccstadti cutterances .

The Acadia residents shi,tvcd me ,with no little piide, things that con -tribute to their comfortable life . Th efriendly lounge with its telephone ,bake-ovens, laundry-room with it selectric washer and ample tubs an ddrying-racks, bath and shower, room yclothes lockers, and enormous boile rwhich supplies an endless quantit yof hot water, are all housed i ncentral, permanent buildings aroundwhich every-clay activities of trailer -

,

terity Budget, " only 2600 copies o f

the annual publication are bein g

run off the presses . Most of these

copies have already been purchasedby students who have gambled wit h

the Pub that the book would he

out on time . The few extra copies

left over will bes old over the coun-ter after regular subscribers hav e

received their copies .Students wishing to place an ad-

vance subscription may still do s oat tilt AMS offices in Brock Hall .

Cunliffe New

Radsoc ChiefDon Cunliffe, present productio n

manager of University Radio Society ,was elected president of the campu sservice organization for 1949-50 ses-sion at annual meeting.

Cunliffe, whot akes over the reign sof the club after exams won theposition over the only other candi-

d a t e, Rick Dispcakcr .

Past president, George Barnes ha dto leave his post early this mont hwhen he was called east because o ffamily trouble .

49-50 ACTIVITIESTO BE LISTED WITHCOORDINATO R

Any Undergraduates Societies oroilier organicalions planning to slw nsot off campus or on-the-campu sftuictions during the 19 .19-50 sessio nmust make application to the Coordin-ator's office for bookings and date sby Friday, March 25 . if application sare not received before this date th eCoordinator can take no responsibilit yfor holding dates open .

$300 Loot Taken By

Selective ThiefThere is selective farming, selectiv e

breeding, selective reading, selectiv eeating and now there is a new one t oadd to the list—selective thieving .

This came to light during a policereport Wednesday,

,Police reported that a selective

thief had broken into the store she dof Barr and Anderson, plumbing con-tractors on UBC 's new Applied Sci-ence building and selected over $30 0in scarce tools .

The thief reportedly forced the loc kon the shed door and selected onl ythe tools he needed .

PRE-MED SOCIETY present sCanadian Army Film on Malari aApplied Science, Friday, March 1 812 :30 p .m .

TWO-ROOM UNFURNIS SUIT Ewith complete bath, able fo rstudent and working 4j ApplyBox 2, co The Daily U y ,

ONE PAIR PARIS CALF 00TS .Size 7, Phone Bob . CH,35 ,

TUXEDO, SIZE 38 . GOt ONDI --Y .

M, 200 ,

For Sale -

NE SNIPE SAILBOAT L O .K .Sails and rigging need repair sand replacements, Pictur 116 194 8

Totem. See Lee. HM 1 .TUXEDO SIZE 38 . GO( ONDI -

tion $35 . Phone AL 0929-'t i

FOR SALE i . . ,

'36 DODGE SEDAN, Tf ;SHAPE ,

8695 . Phone FR . 7836 . Askn Al .

RIDES „ RIDE WANTED FROM V

,27th and Dunbar . Urgent .

3292.TWO MALE STUDENT DESIR Etransportation East of Deli or To-ronto after exams . Sharir4penses .Phone Bob, FA . 5480-L .

Miscellaneou s

PARKER 51 PEN LIFETIME GUAR-entee, Please call at VCF club roo many noon or phone AL . 0902-L, Bil l

Burnett .

GOLD WALTHAM POCKET WATC Hin parking lot . Phone NW 1659-L .

Wanted

TUTOR FOR MATH 1 COURSE ;

must be willing to work hard . Pleas e

phone Audrey, CH . 6171 ,COACHING WANTED IN CHEM 20 0Phone Rob, AL 1316-R .

Lost

NAVY BURBERRY COAT TAKEN

by mistake from the Caf at 3 :30 Wed .

Beverley Roberts . KE. 0864 .

WRIST WATCH WITH BLAC K

strap . Lost Monday . Reward. J . Wih

hams . Phone AL . 1591-Y .

LOST IN GIRLS LOCKER ROOM

old App. Sc, Bldg, Wed. 1:30, man' s

I,limo watch. Please leave at Brock

A NEW RUSSIAN GRAMMAR TEXT

on Wednesday morning in the vicinit y

of the auditorium . Will finder please

contact Art at CE 9400, Thanks ._

et_

ling work, preparing over 200 pagesof copy, To Sports Editor Fre dItlaunen it meant the end of hi sgrin(' over the pages of sports copy .To students on the campus, it mean tthe fulfillment of the Publication sBoard promise — "The ' 48 was ver ylate, but the '49 will be on time . "

It is expected that the 1949 Tote mwill hit the campus approximatel yApril 15th ,

Due to the rest r ictions imposed byAMS Treasurer Paul Plant ' s "Aus -

Utopia Onl yStone's ThrowFrom Campus

Trailer CampsTo Be Evacuate d

A stone 's throw from th e

UBC campus there 's an idealcommunity where "good neigh -bor policy ' really works . Ilen eyou can buy a share in friendl yliving and own your own mo-bile home as well .

It sounds a - little idyllic, but Acadi aresidents are all agreed that, whe ngrrduation comes, they will leav etheir trailer homes and their garden sby the woods with the deepest regret .Commencing at end of April, traile rcamps No. 1 and No . 2 will be com-pletely evacuated, and the trailerswill be sold to stied(Me needing home :

SI pn

Air Crews NeededRCM Flights

Graduates of 1949 who wish toapply for Aircrew Training In th eRCAF are asked to apply at th eOrderly Room in the Armouries.

Qualifications up on application ar ees follows : 1 . must be single ; 2 . mus tr,u } he mior tmt, " t '' fire years of age ;

ew medical cate-sry ; 4 .

be a graduate of 1949 .

Those successful in Aircrew Train-ing will be granted permanent corn -missions in the technical or aircre wlist of the regular RCAF .

mnra.r. .~e..ars.

FOR FAS T

PRINTIN G

SERVICE

For Any Campus Activity

CollegePrinters

Married students, plagued by high I ~'°°"""°~"""~•""~rents and transportation costs, if in -terested in purchasing a trailer at th eend of the term, are asked to contac tSteve Germaniuk or Jim Lorimer i nTrailer Camp No . 1, or Al Macfarlan ein No . 2 camp .

Printers of The Ubysse y

4436 W,10th

ALma 325 3Halt Block From Sasama t

Yee . We 're glad tocheek your brakin gefficiency any tim ewithout charge . Andproper adjustmentcan usually be mad ein short order a temail cost, When yo ueeneid'r' What goo dIntakes nrty ;save yo u

and Dt!ICrs -- wele a

y u u won' tward io mien this freeclek-up .

w

ai nat

lion, $35 . Phone LAngar a

COACHING WANTED IN;

Phone Bob. AL, 1316-R .

ITY O Fone CFE

Foun dMANHEIM SLIDERULE FJND UN -deli the snow in front' of . ctp, build-

ing . Phone Herb . KE, 2

K, & E. POLYPHASE ERULE .

As this is the last event of the term Owner may have same bYeptifying .

all Pre-Mods are urged to be present,tleil MacDougall . AL, 234'1

r

The blacksmith of 1889 forged a great variety of tides with hammer and anvil an d

the strength of his brawny arm. Today a giant fofg hammer rains 50-ton blows o n

the anvil . A hammer made of ordinary metals cot`not stand the strain or vibration .

8o Nickel Steel and Nickel Cast Iron are used to Vide extra strength and durability .

Nickel Brings Dollars to Canada

UDIVERSITY BOON STOR E

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

LOOSE LEAF NOTE BOOKS, EXERCISE BOOKS

AND SCRIBBLERS

GRAPHIC ENGINEERING PAPER, BIOLOGY PAPE R

LOOSE LEAF REFILLS. FOUNTAIN PENS AND INK

AND DRAWING INSTRUMENTS

OWNED ANII OPERATED BY TIIE UNIVERSITY OF B.C .

C~3 00 Y Lzl L3 O 01F IX C~ Cc~7 MP 1U OGIIMG Uhl T

Il t

Since more than ninety per cent of th eNickel produced in Canada is sold to th eUnited States and other countries, it bring sa constant flow of dollars back to Canada .In fact, Canada's Nickel industry is one o four chief sources of U .S. dollars so essentia lat the present time to maintain our foreig ntrade and make available products no tproduced in this country.

Thee dollars help pay the wages of the

14,00 Nickel employees, and help provid e

the (ollars which make it possible to pa y

mil tns in freight to Canadian railways, to

buy imber, steel, coal, machinery and sup-•plieamounting to many millions each year .

Tjese millions, flowing into all industrie s

thrtgh the length and breadth of Canada ,

hellcre tte jobs for Canadians .

CANADIFIRST PRODUCED IN CANADA IN 188 9

N NICKE L

Hers

THE INTERNATIONAL NICKEL COMPANY OF CANADA, IIMITED, 25 KING STREET WEST, TORONT O

4i'bl'Ft

i

;tl;li91

Servicei,-i ),'t

SERVICE:l :dv 'tVts.l llitir Avenue

ALma 1688

Friday, March 18, 1949 1 1ib~ w ..

Europe For $350 ReturnTo Air MiAded Sty clents

NFCUS Arranging Special Europea' aAir Travel Rates Fa Students

Three hundred fifty dollars will befall students have to pa yfor a return trip to Europe this summer was the announcemen tof Jerry MacDonald, western regional vice president of theNational Federation of Canadian Univsity Studetns, today . __

`

Possilility of using

and BOACnircraftin place of ships for studen ttravel

road this summer is to b einveslig ed by the NFCUS commit -tee at

cGill ,

Ask for it either way . . . bothtrade-marks mean the same thing .

SASE $500Rent Per YeaOwn Your Own Home !

BU1A TRAILER25 Fully Equ iimmediate oc

d Trailer Homes For Saleancy . Come and see them !

DIA CAM P

E

Presents A Ca

Seminar to

Be In EuropeISS will hold a special sem-

inar for UBC students in Eu-rope this summer .Its purpose will he to acquaint.

C'anaclir,n students with those fro mEurope .

Students will he chosen on th ebasis of scholastic standing, interse tin student affairs and political mat-urity . There is also a stipulation tha tall those who go must return to UB Cnext year .

The seminar will start on June 1 an dend on September 10.

There will be a minimum of threeand a maximum of five student schosen from UBC . Those wishing t oapply can obtain application form sin the ISS hut. These forms mus the handed in not later than March 30 .

Also open to UBC students is ameeting in Oslo, Norway and a Euro-pean trip sponsored by the Worl dFederation of Students .

All information regarding thes etrips is available in the ISS hut be -hind the Brock .

Bridge Player's Fin eLate–Now Five DollarsJohn Biggin, who last week wa s

fined one dollar for playing bridge inthe cefeteria has now had the fin eraised to five dollars .

Mr . Biggin was issued a fine of on edollar last week which he failed to pa ywithin the time specified by council .As a result he is now facing a fiv edollar fine .

Optometrist

GORDON TELFORD, M.A.

410 Birks Bldg .

TA. 2913Eye Examination ' Visual Training

CHHART IA rep

commiI t

Library Sacred

Warns President

The administration has pointed anacrusing finger at people who dis-rupt the silence of the library .

President MacKenzie has announce dthat university regulations are bein gbroken by students who smoke andconverse in the library .

Normally, public opinion has bee nsufficient to remedy the situation ,hiut if the rules are not observed, i twill be necessary to place a proctorIn the library to enforce discipline ,the president said .

The salary of such an official woul dbe paid out of an extra library fe eCollected from the students .

Students are reminded that they ar e(p ermitted to smoke in the washroom sand the basement concourse betweenthe ' washrooms, but not in the corri-dors or any other part of the building .

JERRY McDONALD. . . Vice-Presiden t

mmer Semina r

Utrecht, Holland

A course on "The Future of WesternCivilization, Theory and Practice, "will he conducted at the University ofUtrecht, in the center of The Nether -lands, from July 15th to August 4th ,1949 .

Lectures in English will be give nby well-known professors . Excursion sto interesting sites will he organized .Discussion groups will gather in th eafternoons ; evenings will be spent a tthe social center .

Cost, including shipboard fare, room ,board and tuition, is $369 . Informationmay be obtained from, and applica-tions sent to, the Press Attache ,Netherlands Embassy, 168 Laurie rAvenue East, Ottawa .

3ookstore P.O .

Established

At long last Post Office has recog-nized IJBC as the "big town" that i tis, with the announcement of estab-lishment of a Sub-Post Office on th ecampus .

The new office, located in Univer-sity Book Store will transact all th eusual post office functions includingmoney orders, postal notes etc .

Letter and parcel pickup hoursfrom the boxes outside the office arefrom Monday to Saturday : 10 :10, 2 :4 0and 8 :10 p .m ., and on Sundays at 5 :1 0only.

ISS Summer

to Canadian need sonce .

COSTS LOWERsentative of TCA told thisthat at present it is no t

possiblelo guarantee a reduction i netudent tares . However, it is possibl eto chartr a 40-passenger plane fo rtranspca Lion across the Atlantic a ta cost 0112 per mile,

esThe cglnmittce is also to gathe r

informatibn on overseas travel, Th eUSNSA as volunteered a pamphle tcontaining information concernin gmonetaryl exchange rates, clothin gneeded, customs and orientation . Thisis to he adapte danti published a t

LITTLE MOR E

Air travel costs $35 more than shiptravel . Based on the view that stu-dents would not be travelling firs tclass aboard ship the difference woul dhe used up in meals and tipping.

Further information on this pla nmay be obtained from the UBC NF-CUS committee in Hut B2 behin dBrock Hall .

swat

l rlrnatire""«+w'

ottl'e L° (

/la)

Your hat is young and gay as Spring itselF .

keyed to your short hair-do . It may be clea r

cut in contour for tailored fashio n

have a dipping brim for Sprin g

prints . . . or be demurely flower -

laden . . . let EATON ' S match th e

feminine mood of the season!

q10 4 Nlf IION r4N4014Nf

' taken 'Sleeping Habits of the

Human Young' as my subject",

That baby is putting quite a "damper"on Egbert's baby-sitting enthusiasm, notto mention that home assignment he's gotto hand in tomorrow.

But one thing that can dampen yourspirits even more is the realization that it'sthe day for the big prom, and you're freshout of that sluff that glitters .

Get that money from your spare-tirejob into a " .?vIY BANK" savings account .You'll find your little red passbook justas useful as your little black book .

BANK OF MONTREALWORKING WITH CANADIAN S

IN

EVERY . WALK OF LIFE .SINCEj,l8177

IM+ww" -"Maybe I should have

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Page 4

THE DAILY UBYSSEY

Friday, March 18, 1949

In TouchWith Ron Grant

Still wiping the silt from their eyes and the sweat fro m

their brows, Varsity 's Thunderbird ruggermen, Sunday arrive dhome after their two-game southern tiff with Calift'nia' s

Golden Bears .

The games were played under chaotic conditions in th emud lined swimming pool the Berkleyites lovingly refer.. to asGilmour Stadium, but which Varsity coach Albert Laithwait e

dubbed "the better 'ol@" .

Rumor has it in the South, that the wily "Doc " Wilson,

Golden Bear coach, in co-operation with the Florida Clambe r

of Commerce pre-arranged the mighty cloudburst .

Similar Downpou rTypical of the California prexy and undoubtedly tree, th e

charge is further borne out by the fact that last yeti, theAustralian Wallabies, playing in place of the "Birds" because o f

an eleventh hour schedule change, were greeted by a simila r

downpour .As a result even the mighty Aussies found the gang se

tough that they eked out only a last-minute three-point victory .The excess avoirdupois of the California players when

combined with the mud and a slippery ball is a tremendou s

advantage against a lighter team such as the "Birds " , is spit e

of the fact that some o f the sideline generals would have u s

believe it makes no difference .

In last week 's southern encounters the vastly outweighe c

Thunderbird scrum played magnificently . However, in the fir s '

lame the weight factor proved too great an advantage . With.

men like 255-pound forward Hank Wright leading the Californi a

pack,- the 'Birds suffered an 8-3 defeat, their first in over a year .

The second tilt played under similar conditions, thoug hnot in an actual downpour saw the 'Birdmen fight the Bear :

to a standstill, gaining a 0-0 draw.

No Try AllowedThe fierceness of the encounter was climaxed by a Cali .

fornia forward rush which actually surged over the Varsit \line, but was bodily hurled back before the ball could be

grounded for the try .No respite lies in store for the 'Birds however, for thi f

Saturday they are pitted against a much improved Vancouve rLion fifteen, in a McKechnie cup tilt .

The game which is scheduled for the Stadium at 2:30 is o fthe crucial variety, for a win for the Thunderbirds will cinc hthe coveted silverware for the fifth straight year .

The following Thursday and Saturday, March 24th and26th, the 'Birds play a return engagement against the Goldentears .

The two encounters should provide the campus with som eof the most thrilling rugby seen hereabouts for many years .

World Cup At StakeIf the Varsity fifteen are to retain their present hold on th e

World Cup, they have to take both of these contests .

Coach Laithwaite has promised a double victory contingen tonly on the weatherman giving his charges half a break .

Lectures are tentatively cancelled for the Thursday noo ngame, and there are no lectures Saturday afternoon, so here isyour chance to "Back the Pack'' against the invading Californi aGolden Bears .

Arrow Transfer Donate sTruck To Help Parade

Earl Butterworth, parade marshall of the Evergree nBowl, didn't know how he could engage three trucks andseven convertibles for the half-time entertainment a tThursday's game, gratis .

Finally, he decided to ask the Arrow Transfer Compan yif they would "donate" three of their large trucks, explain-ing that the Alma Mater Society was undergoing an auster-ity program. Much to his surprise, they immediately con-sented.

With the truck situation solved, Earl then had to facethe problem of finding seven convertibles in which to pu tthe campus beauties .

Now as Monsieur Butterworth has an "educated " eyefor the fairer sex, he immediately resolved that this was ado or die situation. Being a true blue person, Butterworthproduced . . . three trucks, seven convertibles and a bev yof beauties to add to his list!

Pep Even s :park Rugger

SPORT EDITOR — CHUCK MARSHAL LEditor This Issue — RAY FROST

NO LACK OF ACTIVITIE SFOR EVERGREEN BOWL FET E

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 23 :Pep Meet, 12 :30 in the Armoury (free) .Night Rally, 8 p.m ., South East playing field (free) .

THURSDAY, MARCH 24 :Game time, 12 :45, Stadium .Mammoth parade at half-time .SATURDAY, MARCH 26 :Game time, 2 p.m.Saturday evening, dance at the Commodore .

Robertson Calls Firs tPractice For Basebal l

Tentatively planning a two-game schedule with the Wester nWashington baseball squad, UBC enthusiasts are holding theirtirst practice this weekend to organize a team capable of pla yamongst city-league groups as well as American diamond -mites . —_

Coaches Sandy Robertson an dHarry Franklin have called the firs tworkout for UBC's baseball team thi sSnlurdey at 1,00 p .m, on the UBCgrass hockey field .

It is anticipated that between fift yand seventy-five Thunderbird hope-fuls will turn out for the initia lpractice, which should give Robertso nplenty of material to choose from ,

The Birds will have a limite dschedule of two games this yea ragainst Western Washington, but I t

there are enough ball players avail -able during the summer months, th oteem will probably round out it sschedule with exhibition game sagainst local learns .

Players who will be turning out ar easked to bring their own spikes an dgloves . If it rains, venue of the prac-tice will be switched to the Fiel dHouse .

Tickets for the Evergreen Bow lSeries arc on sale at the office of theGraduate Manager . The price of ad -mission at the Thursday game is onl y''tfly cents a head . It is advisableto buy your tickets early as it i sexpected that they will go verb 'quickly . Monsieur Bakken says, quot e"a million dollars worth of enter-tainment for only fifty cents," un-quote ,

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'ROTECT'ING THE SILVERWARE and with it the Pacific Coast inteegiafe rugby supremacy will be the UBC Thunder-

urds pictured above in full strength . They play hosts to the UniversityCalifornia Golden Bears next Thursday and Satur-

lay and need a couple of wins to hold on to the World Cup. From left right are : back row, Paul Stockstad (manager) ,

Don Nesbit, Jack Nelson, Hilary Wotherspoon, Phil Nickson, C huck I'Jle, Gerard Kirby, Bill Allard and Johnny Owe n

trainer) . Second row, Dougie Reid, Geof Corry, Hartt Crosby, Marl Smith, Alex Carlyle, Les Hempsall, Jack Armour ,

uric Cardinall, Bill Dunbar and Albert Laithwaite (coach) . Front r pick Ellis, Bob Croll, Dave Storey, Stan Clarke ,

John Tennant and Frank Watt .

I

Graduate Manager The Greeks immediately consente dto Dunbat's suggestion and conse -

Has Rugby Tickets (lucidly the committee has receivedt total of $130 from IFC and Pa nhell,

TENNIS NOTIC E

All those interested in trying ou tfor the Thunderbird Tennis team areasked to sign the entry sheet on th egum notice hoard by tomorrow . Thematches will be posted in the gym onTuesday and it is imperative tha tall matches be played off before nex t

Saturday .

The Sororities and Fraternities cam eto the rescue when they agreed t ohelp the Evergreen Bowl Committe eentertain the visiting Californi aGulden Bears .

Greeks Hel pCommitteeWith Funds

It seems as though the committe ewas a little short of funds so Bil lDunbar came up with a smashin gsuggestion .

He proposed that the individua lGreek Letter Societies donate fivedollars each to help out the Com-mittee .

Evergreen

lNiar End Of

f

Oita 11'I'HE SEASON because of a thigh injury aggravate d

in the rugby game at the University of California is fleety

Thundg.d backfielder Bob Cr'oll . His place on the 'Bird's

three 1 will probably be take by veteran grid and rugb y

player to Storry when the UBC squad lines up against the

Goldenm's next Thursday and Saturday .

British iumbia

58 Alciarlyle

59 Les imp-A l

57 Ha1'irosby

61 Meal Smith

30 Gen Kirby

64 Erictrdinall

62 GeCorry

63 Ballard

56 Johrennant

55 Davitorey

53 Rusatha m

52 Starlark e

54 Jaicllson

51 H . Aherspoo n

50 Bill nbar

LETTFG)F THANK SSo gm en impression did th e

UBC In leove i.m the trnvelliugCtilifornnlntrr~ ; III Imevieui) sc'u-wn thetreenal letters of thanlc swere recerl by the chiurruan o fthe cooler I ' r'on the grelefe lguests .

1tAY FROST

Rubgyiggest buildup in thehistory IBC climaxes on Thurs-day where first of the two rugge rgames smelt California Boar sand ULI'hunderhirds is playe doff .

Thurso Evergreen Bowl gam eis only , beginning of the festi-vities n-ing the annual meetingof theses colleges on the rugge rfield, bu the bond-woo'kiog com-mittee ethers who have slaved t omake alt el a success, il is almos tthe end

nit- t'lost Iwo months, th econunilti members have bee nwrackinuemr brains and slackingtheir aline to assure the visitin gBears tuheh' UEC hosts an eve nbetter Mule of festivities tid e

a ;easnn t . last

car .

Probable Startin g

P05itiou

Hook

Front Ro w

Front Ro w

Loc k

Lock

Break

Break

Wing Forward

'Receiving Hal f

First Five Eighths

Centre Three

Centre Three

Wing

Win g

Fullback

Striving to repeat the record se tlest season and even do it onelief ter, the over-worked group o f'thinners hove conic up trills th ebrightest looking program of activi-tic . that hid graced his campus fo ra long time .

TOP ENTERTAINMEN TFirst on the agenda is t .t mas s

rally end pep meet scheduled fo rthe Armories rat noon Wednesday ,Top form of entertainment is Idea sncrl for tie rally which shoul dIt the student, in the awed fu rtthet will he t;oin{ on iu the follow-ing three days .Oreenin'r of Ile' committee whic h

hes dent :,o much to put UBC o nlet) of tie' list ni' hospitable nni -\m' :itic,s i ;, Inure Glendinning, wh ohie), hold ilia I-oiiI

Ia' IIa' ae,nn d0Irco ;;loI

year .Lyrae is putting everwlhind h e

led ten,l that', irate a let) behin dIl,r

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wouOho rfttl

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Californi a

3 Jim Cullom

29 Viilbur Lenz

10 Monty Koep f

24 Heinle Wright

28 Bob Witter

9 John Elliot t

30 John Reggio

14 Grog Sheehan

lG Carl Van Heuit

13 Bob Losey

i7 Art Mower

4 Joek Bowke r

23 George Irwi n

2'2 John Goss

1 Bill Craig

When the University of Cali -

fornia Golden Bears come to

tu'xn to play rugby with th e

Thvmderbirds, that is a spe-

cial occasion in itself, but thi s

year the Pep Club has built the

occasion into a week-long se-

ries of events to pass under the

name of the Evergreen Bowl .

The program consists of the tw ofinal games of the World Cup Rugb y

series against the University of Cali-

fornia . The games will be played in

111r stadium on Thursday, March 2 4

and Saturday, March 26 . The entire

Cat Crowd will he in attendance a t

both games .

I'OTLACHSecond only to the games in interest

and importance is the Potlach whichwill be held on Wednesday, March

23, The festivities will begin at noon

in the Armoury with a Pep Meet .Heading the long list of entertain-

ment will be a "name group" current-

ly playing in downtown Vancouver

night-spots . Bob Thurston and Don

Urquhart will be co-emceeing th e

effort with, for a change, a new line

of gags .

Wednesday night will see a mam-

moth rally scheduled for eight o'clock

on the Southeast playing field. Enter-

tainment will be in the hands of

messers Ellis, Penn and Watt .

This will consist of songs, skits an d

yells. The highlight of the evening

will he the gigantic bonfire erecte d

by the Varsity Outdoor Club . The

VOC will also be selling hot-dogs

and cokes to ensure . that the throng

attending will not go hungry.

EXCITEMEN TThe whole idea of the rally is that

rooters should go in crowds or groupsto add to the excitement of all con-cerned . The Varsity Military Ban d

will supply music .

The first game of this crucial serie swill begin at 12 :45 . The Thunderbirdsmust win this game to retain a chanceat the World Cup and must win theSaturday game also to keep possession

of the silverware .Playing on their home field, the

Birds feel confident of a win whic hensures a good gam?, from the spec-tators point of view .

SPECIAL EVENTSAlso for the benefit of the spec-

tators will be the parade, a panoram a

of Varsity events . The fact that EarlButterworth is Marshall of this par -tide, ensures that it will be enter-taining from the first Drum Major-ette to the rear bumper of the las tmodel T .

The climax of the Evergreen Bowlarrives Saturday afternoon at 2 p.m .when the Thunderbirds and Golde nBears take to the field for the finalclash .

The cessation of hostilities will bemarked with a celebration at theCommodore Cabaret Saturday night ,when the local Fraternities and Sor-orities fete the Golden Bears . It i shoped that all those who attendthe games and the rally will be i nattendance whichever side is the Vic-tor .

BOUQUET SA vote of thanks is in order to al l

those who worked so hard to mak ethe Evergreen Bowl a success . Har dworkers were Nancy Wells, Elv aPlant, Earl Butterworth, Doug Frank -tin, Bill Anstis, Connie Bisset, BobTalbot, Bob Thurston and Don Urqu-art. Also, thanks to Dick Penn, Nor mWatt, Dick Ellis, the Varsity Out -door Club, the Varsity Military Band ,

and the UBC Pipe Band .

owl Workers

ig lask

miracle man at digging up neede dequipment, Nancy Wells, Elva Plant ,Doug Franklin, Bill Anstis, Conni eBisset, and Bob Talbot, who havebeen no less enthusiastic in th eschemes than their far-reachin gchairman .

But the end is almost in sight forthese rugby pushers . On Saturdaynight, after the final game is ove rand the smash-up party is underone, they can relax for the firstlime in about two months, gloryingin rho` knowledge that they havechine a tough job and clone it toperfection .

Once again, the visiting' Californiaemissaries will return to their hom ecampus with a wistful look in thei rryes, hoping the day will com etdeiin next year when they will b eAle to return to the good times a tUBC .

The reputnton of UBC will sprea domen further throughout the coun -Irw, inakinl ; Varsity students wet-(sell(' wherever they go .

All this cite lot attributed to th eI t i l iii I0(1. efforts of Lorne Glenndin-ouaa, Emil liulirrtenr(h urul thei rMIluwers,

Pate 5Friday, March 18, 1949

'1'lIi DAILY UllYSSfi;I'

The Armchair th1ete r

By Chuck Marshal l

Can We Beat The Bears ?Ever since the UBC Thunderbirds returned from thei r

jaunt to California and a somewhat disappointing rugby serie s

with the Golden Bears, the question that everyone has bee n

asking is, "Can we beat them up here? "The answer to such a query is an emphatic "Yes" .

1 `i eA`

I-iowever, the job won't be easy; in fact i t

: .'. will be one of the toughest assignments tha t

the Thunderbirds have ever taken on and i t

guilt take rill of their skill and know-how t o

meet the challenge .

This year's version of the Golden Bears i s

undoubtedly the best in the university 's his -

tory. They are big, rough, tough and they ar e

looking more like rugby players than ever before .Unfortunately for the game as a whole,' however, thes e

ever-irnproving Bears still haven 't mastered some of the bare

ecsentiuil=namely the rules .The Californians are still ignorant of many of the nicetie s

of rugby and the onus of their ignorance is falling right wher e

it hurts most, on the necks of the smaller and lighter Thunder -

birds .There constant off-sides, charging - in the scrum loose

'packing and other misdemeanours combined to give the 'Bird sa rough time during the Berkley series .

The biggest difficulty down there however was the almos tequal ignorance of the referees who officiated at the contests .They allowed a great.deal of fouling on both sides but naturall ythe more polished 'Birds came out second best on the deal .

It Happens To The Bes tWhen the contest gets underway on Thursday, the UB C

ruggermen will face a situation that they haven't come across

since before the war. While they won't exactly be the under -

dogs, they definitely will have their backs against the wall .A loss for them on either day would send the World Cu p

scooting back to San Francisco from whence it came, since th eBears already have one victory to their credit .

The local students need at lea st another tie and a decisivewin to retain the cup but no one, especially members of th eteam will be satisfied with such a hungry arrangement .

They have declared openly, that they want two clear win sand will settle for nothing else .

With such determination they need only a few breaks, goo dweather, good refereeing but most important of all sincere stu-dent support .

With this behind them they can beat the Bears,

t.'1`o6t`f 1 :!DiToR, -- CH,UC .i . MARSHAL L

Editor This Issue — RAY FROST

Undefeated So . F ar This Seaso n

After Pyii, 11 Fear Games

Perennial .stron ,hold of intercollegiate rugby on the Pacifi c

i Coast, California , seems destined to field another juggernau t

in 1949. At least early season results point in that direction .In their first two games 'orthe'1919 ;- -

--campaign, the Bears met and over- i,Lelmcd the University 'Chtb?' t, alld 'UCLA, Scores were by lopsided .15 . 0imd 18-0 margins, respectively ,

BEST YET . ,Coach Milgs Hudson, 38 yeses oh l

and an American by birth but wh osr.cnt nwst. of his boyhood in th eruby-playing country of New Zeal -and, has already termed his 1949 Data' ses ''probably the best in Californi ahistory . " Hudson, who has been hea dcoach since 1939 and who seems t ohave acquired the winning habit sincethat time, knows whereof he speaks i

Sixteen members of the squad wo nletters in the sport last season, severa lo f them for the second and third time .Those who earned their third lett'e`r si n . 1948 and who are back again thi syear are Bill Craig, the flashy'fltll -beck, Art Mower, the dependabl efive-eighths, and Hank Wright , , thehuge lock who tips the scales' a taround 255 0 pounds.

' -e h

Four veterans, Forward Bob Affix ,Left wing George Irwin, Breakawa yIohn Raggio, and five-cightbs'aer tHave have won letters in the spor ttwice .

In r asnl,n d

Ij9,tIJi

S e

tewns eo~•

Badminton honors came t o

the university over the week-

end when a third year Arts

student captured two Oregon

State titles man open meet in

Portland .Bruce Benham, a champion on the

UE'C campus, swept the open single sin the south and paired up with Ran -dolph Phillips, took the doubles chim -pionships hands down ..Getting off to a slow start in th e

first game of the singles events, Ben -ham lost the opener to defendin gchampion Russ Hilt 12 .13, but cam eback in the next two games to wi nthem both, 15-11 and 15,13 to tak eaway the crut'.lt .

Ii, Uac dr,ub!' : . Benham and part -ner Phillips did j ;tst e ., well . puttin g!town their foe,, Jins Paul and Rus sTipp in three gimlets .

The two losers, both of Seattle an dLoth candidates to the U .S . Nationa lTotlrnantent, lost the first game 15- 1front the thinning duo, but forced th esecond game to trio 15 .10 ,

But Benham and Phillips fough tback' in the third round of the set t obring tho game to a deuce, %ther etrue)" hrob:e the tie to win the grim eand the title with a score of 18-16 . ,

YPUI+ :i is 'iB :i?tiD'iEii''LZ 9R from Cttliloenia is Bash Lay.3uy (left), talented performer with th e

.;o]dcn Bars . A well known grid star on the B ;alley campus, Lowrey gave the 'Birds . a lot o f

trouble with his, beautiful 50-yard kicks to tent ell w ;ticlt pul l ed hot team out of a tight spot o n

more than one ccca:dun . Ile is pictured here with Bert Rowe, ent :lher California backfie l der

during one of their practice sessions .

LtoLSTiERED SQUAT)Other Dears returning who've wor n

h i-Tie letters are Allen Armstrong, afits-ciglths, Jim Cullom, a forward ,Jelin Goss, a back, John Herring, aI .ward, Bob Kniptash, rear row, Wil -hue Lenz, a furwaid, Bob Losey, ahell, and Mike McGuire, left wing .

Additionally the squad has bee nhu!stcred by several men who, thoug hwithout previous experience, sho wgrout promise. Foremost among thes eh; Carl Ven l[cuit, a small but toug hhill who Ilr.id,on feels has the in -stincts to become one of the bes tBear ruggers of all time,

,

These 1949 Bears will certainly hav eample opportunity ' to prove . that,-al lthe nice things Hudson has said o fthem are true, They arc facing a nextremely rugged schedule .

In addition to playing four gameswith the always tough Thunderbirdsfrom the University of British Colum -bia, the Bears meet the Victoria Rep stwice and clash once with , a Stan -fw,rd team that is being hailed as th e'best ever " at Palo Alto .

gi,~Lvaticia

Conversion Exper t

In conclusion we would like to play

tal: -

'11g udvunt,a,, i of the two v;cek

To The Attic With The Armchai rSince this is the last regular issue of The Daily Ubysstt y

and consequently the last time probably that this column wil l

appear in print, it seems only fitting that we should make a

few sage remarks in conclusion and even drop a nostalgic tea r

or two .Looking back on UBC sports over tie past term, even th e

most ardent supporter cannot say that it has been a "big year' ; .

As a matter of fact for the senior squads in particular i t

has been a tough session, what with the new conference an d

everything .The grid squad did not win a game, the basketball tea m

ran sixth in the league and the hard working icemen reache dthe hockey finals only to have the thing snatched away fro mthem at the last moment ,

There was a bright side, however, for student interest i nsports generally has never been higher . They got behind thei

r teams, even though they were not winners, and made the playersknow that they really appreciated what they were doing .

Thuydeeliinl ruegertnc nDrew Pearson and

make a few predictions :1. The football team will continue to have a rough time

of it for several years yet .2. The baskelballers will continue to improve until prob .

ably the year after next they will be up around the top of th econference .

3. Hockey will beccme a major sport on the campus withi nthe next two years if the team gets to play in the new Kerris-dale arena .

4. The rugby team, within the next five years, will b eplaying in a league with U of C, Stanford and UCLA and th esport will increase rapidly in impoccttance at the America nschool .

'ull in tit( ir :;cries with the;olden Bear i, return to loca l)ley this ;lalurday when theyine up tai. iiltet the Vancouve r.,ions fcr a regular I47uKechnic

Cup rg me .

A. victor ;,' for the ' Birds i nibis contest would cinch W ecup t•' ;r Went and with it th e

Lower 1Ulti milend. rugby su-oremiacy ,

ound

Iers a fterSeciid Spot Sturd

The thuds are presently holding th e

i .ilverware from lost yaw's series ant ithus for arc well out in front in thi sseason 's play .

rFIT AS EVER and ready to'go this Saturday when the Thunder -

bird, play Vancouver Lions for the McKechnie Cup here onthe UGC campus are forty• aids Eric Cardinal (left), Les Hemp -

sal], Girard Kirby and Geoff Corry . Along with Alex Carlyle ,Tara Crosby and Marshall Smith, who make up the rest of the'Bird scrum', they scored a moral victory over the much heavier

Bears Sqt d

' ass Fi~

-~ ,

ose Bowlers n

W h e n California "Goldq, n?',errs come to Vancouver thi s

steel : to take on . the. Universityif British Columbia "Thunder-hir-d ", they will have five me nwho played for California i nhe Rose Bowl game agains t

vTorthwcstern on Janu .rry 1st .Heading the list of footballers i s

235 pound first string tackle Jin nCullom, who did all the Inching ;fat'the Bears and set a Conference recordof 21 successful conversions . .

His season record was 33 conversion sin 42 attempts . Biggest man on th eCalifornia team is another footballe rHank Wright, who tips the scales a ta modest 255 pounds .

Still trying to take over solo possession of that elusiv esecond spot in the league standings, Varsity entertains Coll iung-wood in a V and D first division soccer fixture oti the Campu sSaturday .

them scoreless in theate boys were slow in getting starte dtlii : year, and cane up with a ti cas their best effort of the season tw oweeks ago,

~0a2 «5'.',resrn~ ;oar. -`.+ yNOT AS BAD as he looks i n

this ' picture is Thunderbird

rugby captain Alex Carlyle

who was injured during th e

second game with the Golden 'Bears in Berkley . Although,Alex appears to be missing aleg, a hand and a couple o ffingers in the freak shot above,he really suffered only a twis-ted knee and will be back inaction when the 'Birds playagain on Saturday .

In direct contrast to Wright is dimin -utive Carl Van Heuit, receiving hal lof the Bears, and a football ., hal fback, who weighs in' at 150 pnlnTdb ; .

second I Other footballers are Dick LeAlon andWilbur Lenz, 200 pound scrum artist son the Golden, Bear team a1

t .

Golden Bears when they heldgame on the Berkley campus . .

Varsity !Miffed finer best importun -ity in some tine to annex sh :cin1 Whe nthey dropped a 2-1 r :c :is ien to th elest place South hill eleven las tweekend, while Renders were losing t oNorquay .

NEW SCHEDUL ELeague moguls have come up wit h

a revised, abbreviated schedule. i nwhich each game counts for fou rpoints, Thus a couple of wins at' thi sstage could make a big differenc ein standings .

Cup games, tvhich were started jus tbefore winter set in in December ,will now be played off after th eschedule is completed . Thus the cam -pus clubs will not be able to partici -Fete, as there Is the little !natter o fc .mats to claim their full attention .

The UBC intermediate team ha spicked up for the season after losing,in a knockout series last Sunday .Like Varsity, UBC will pima up th enap g'ur's this ycar . The intcrrtedi -

Togdate they have won two Mante sn two starts so that they need onl y

a win on Saturday to cinch the cu pfor still atiolhur year.

It is to be expected that the BirdScrum will dominate the !ante an drive the baukficld countless oppor-tunities to !make ground on runnin g

plays .

In past genres the htcl :fieltl hasshown fine running ability in every; .action of the field except in th e

last ten yard :; to the opponents line .

This Saturday will see the return t oaction of Jack Nelson the fleet foote dB ind Wingmnn who is expected to ad d

1 the punch that the bud1:hu'lrl has beent racking in its past showthis year ,

When you watch the game loo kout fur Nelson's high-knee runnin gaction that hake hint a fearsome ,

in the eyes of would-be tack- j

EASY ONE SVarsity has had a fairly successfu l

season, but the team seems to hav ethey should win handily . However ,the unhappy knack of losing game swith the weighted point system no win effect, the students could captur esecond place with little difficulty ,but no tram is likely to catch th erampaging Norquay club, tvhiclt ha snot been beaten all season .

At best, Varsity can dream of bette rthings next year . Big things will b eesgiecte ;t of Dnhvon, Renton, and 'Foster, who hm'e Halle such a spec -Macular start this season as rookies .With mast of the veterans returning ,anrd two or three pruntsing playe rready to move up from the UB Csquad, next ',ear Wright be the big on efur caint,ns Soccer,

Fi:AR AND TREPIDATIO NBreak forwards Dougie Reid an d

Eric Cardinall threw fear and trep -idation into the opposition scru mhalf, with their fast-breaking, har dtackling tactics .

Dougie was injured in the firstencounter, when he fell into a mud -hole and wort ably replaced by Bil lAllard v'ho played heaths- up bal lfor the rernainuler of the. series .

Last but by no means least wa :;the larches hail-handlii,e of tail lea nCcoff ( .arty, A vent run of

: yy, :n

rtr ;t '. c~prr :rnc , thief! pu ttill he ; k'.tuw,edge

wed: in Io, : hthe Icu'tl . fought , u,, .'ui .tc, . . .

record half oC the final encounterwith e badly kicked knee .DOWN' TO SIZ E

Ilempsall and Crosby, smaller b yfar than their opposite number sin the front rank, nevertheless cu ttheir heftier opponents clown to size .

The dynamic second row combina -tion of Marsh Smith and Gerar dKirby weds a picture, wheeling an dholding with grenadier-like pre -

Allrre .i i ng with them was th eI toner conrhin ;dion of Flavelle andNis„n whose pl, ;ying in this gam em,ul :,al Them le ; tncn to hatch i n;'.ny [uoLfP ~ .rnlca1, ; ,

nr,,lncd in Varsity territory fo rsiuuly of the regulation eighty min -

O n . one occasion there were eightaLICCe1uave scrums On Varsit y ' s on eyawl line .

Only once did the beefy Catershit pay dirt but, h'furc they wer eable in ground the ball for th ethree pnual nm•gitt of victory, th ernpiued 'Birch; had thrown the mL ., c

'I' , smile out .,nv neat would h etutit,,

he tinter., [runt row cum -of llentpsall, Catlylc an d

ti1,,shy con ;istantly outhuukcd thei rol,l,onuil . : . Cal lsle played tlac entire .

By RON GRAN T

By for the most outst ruling fea-ture of the Golden Emir-Thunder s}Mel rugby series in the South wa sthi '1'rejan like shind of the 'Dol sli,rwerd-r ,

In bath games the forwards playe dMe . u ; a pu :, .t(' .c L 1 . Time and tim e

tltc Bears tried to snw,i ove rfrom ono yard scrums ., only to b erepulsrd by the outweighed bu tnot outdone 'Bird forwards .

ip,h tIcr ., .

With this ad,hitien to hi :: well con- ja'iliuned teen Coach AIbcrt Laithe-w'aite shonid c sI)u L to Will by nt Ieas ttun I .n', ;it ..s with a wet hail ;end by at .

!rmt htte,'n points with a dry bell ,

T1u-co post s1 : ;rc trill he en th e

,id, line ; in the: t ;,uur . Used; Rei f,tack Armour, ;til Er,uuIc AC,~!l, wil l

he reld ;crd hr AlinrdStercy, an dNe t >.,m r,

to, Ply .

('L1 :11aX.

'I'h ' , strut ;'dl' re ;ached its zenit h

n rl ;e src nil encounter . In that

Lome the C:,rlifurniaurs actually rc -

Page 6 Friday, March 18, 194 9

The Dully UbysseyThis Corner , S by jim banhamMember Canadian 'University Press

Authorized a Second Class Mail, Port Office Dept ., Ottawa . Mali Subscriptions-$2.50 per year.Published throughout the university year by the Student Publications Board of the Alm a

Mater Society of the University of British Co!uthbia,-

Editoriai opinions expressed herein are those of the editorial staff of The Daily Ubyssey an dnot necessarily those of the Alma Meter Society nor of the University .

:

.

SOffices in Brock Hall . Phone ALma 1624

For display advertising phone Alma 32.53EDITOR-IN-CHIEF - - - - EON IJAGGART

-MANAGING EDITOR - - - VALI SEARS -

GENERAL STAFF: Copy Editor, Laura Haahti : News Editor, Bob Cave . and Novia Hebert;eatures Editor, Ray Baines ; CUP Editor, Jock Wasserman ; Photography Director, 1!anor Hall ;

Sports Editor, Chuck Marshall ; Women's Editor, Len! -Eranole.

THE DAILY UBYSSEY

' letters to th

, -

editor S

WANTED! FACTS

S A l'rst-iuuiurrte docision—doatless brought o n

by the fact that we could get in cheaper, i)elrg,(

it student—took us to see Margaret \Vehstcr' s

j .rociucticn ('f Macbeth at the Internationa l

Cinema last week .

Senior Editor This Issue — ART V ELSI L

Thank You Mr. Wismer ?Young people of British Columbia, includ-

ing those at university, have a special interes t

in the announcement made by the attorney -general this week that liquor reform in theprovince is to be delayed at least anothe r

year .It is in the role of defender of youth that

Mr. Wismer fends off the demands for cock-tail bars and the sane distribution of liquorinB.C.

S

"For many years I have been fighting juve-nile delinquency and for alcohol education,"Mr. Wismer told the House . In viewof thi sprevious position, Mr. Wismer says he wouldnot feel "justified" in opening three or fou rhundred "Wismer bars" where young peopl emight be attracted to their first drink ,

Further, he says, the opening of attractiv edrinking places could only lead to more bed -room and back seat drinking which, he tacitl yadmits, today's prudish laws have fostered

For the sake of Mr . Wismer's own intellec-tual honesty, we hope his noble defence o fyouth was no mbre than the tongue-in-cheeksincerity common in an election year . Andfor the sake of Mr . Wismer's political future ,we hope his buck-passing on the liquor ques .

tion does not come from fears of lost votesshould so-called "Wismer , bars" break ou tjust as voters are going to the polls .. Mr. Wismer should know by now that the

question of cocktail bars Is not a party issue .In Ontario, it was the Tories who brought i n"Drew bars"; inBritish Columbia, 90 percen tof the CCF is said by Mr.' Winch to favor

svilciuou; are ' speaking their dialogue, soldier sli-2ii'i elm army parade back. and forth beforethem with a good deal of hustle and bustle ,thus creating the illusion of invisibility .

Another crafty piece of staging is havingMacbeth come onto the stage with a blood redtube on after murdering the king and beforethe discovery by Nlacduff . The symbolism ofthe robe as the bleed of the king on Macbet hi_'i not evident at first . The effect of the robeis to distract your attention from the othe r'characters on the stage. Unconsciously, th eeye shifts to this scarlet robe continually ,

The witches of the play are a well staged lot .Thcii' faces are never shown and the first witc hlu :, ; a set of elongated talons that she con-tinually rncves over the red glow of the po tduring the pot-boiling scene. Their dialogu eis ccmpetentiy spoken with rasps and othe rwitch trademarks .

I '

This reviewer is a little jaded on sword fight-ing after seeing Laurence Ohivier's duel wit hI unertes in Hamlet, which was to our mind th ebest in pictures . The sword play in Macbethwas, to say the least, amateurish and consistedcf a few swipes over the head, while the res tci the time they crossed rapiers and talker! .

u Further liberty is inoken with the staging whe nthey draw daggers and grapple after Macduffknocks the sword from Macbeth's hand .

There were few parts of the dialogue poorl ys-cken, but one which we thought lost a lotof its punch was the speech of dcjecvion byMacbeth just before the battle in which h eclubs life "a tale told by an idiot, full of soun dand fury, signifying nothing" .

The first part of the speech was spoke nc ftly end in keeping with the spirit of th e

thing, but Irolland spat out the last two linesas thought he were angry at himself for believ-ing them. It was hardly in keeping with th eSjsiri'i of the rest cf the speech .

On the whole though, the performances wer eeven and competent, with no player outshinin gthe cthcr . Margaret Webster remains one o fthe few Shabcspeat'ean producers in Americawho can instill intelligence into her ccc-it- r ma n ces .

The opinion one comes to after mulling overthe produhtion for while is that it was, in th elast analysis, intelligent, and set without hig histiictcn. Mrgaret Webster is well know n

for her dramatic stature and her competenc ewith Elizabethan drama, and she is packin gahcut a cast in which no one actor clearly out -shine the other It would appear the compuoha y

is ii training field for something bigger an d

better .

The role of Macbeth was taken by Josep hHclland, strapping six foot, two inch man wh omanaged to inject enough fire into most of hi sspeeches to make the role of the ambitiou sitohienuan cOnic alive, pest scene he did wa sthe banquet episode, in which the ghost of th ei'cocntiy murdered Iiancjuo rises to tormen thim .

more liberal liquor legislation .If Mr. Wismer is afraid that new, liberalize d

liquor legislation might lose him votes, he canhe reassured that no .party would be foolish

S en'ough to appeal for support on the basis o ftoday's hoop-skirted liquor system

But, says Mr. Wisnier, the will of thepeople must prevail . If there is a demand ,the government will put liquor to a referen-dum vote next year. (Next year, that is ,when the government is prsumably returne dto power and will have four. or five yeais t owork the kinks out of a cocktail bar syste mbefore going to the people again .) That isjust quaking political cowardice .

It is difficult'iiOt to call Mr . Wismer's nobl edefence of youth out-and-out hypocrisy. Theattorney-genera Ihas triven to introduce al-cohol education into high schools, a campaignin which he has been successful, but at th esame time he forces those young people wh ohave been taught a sensible attitude toward sliquor into committing a crime every tim ethey take a drink at a night club or dance .

The attorney-general, whose duty it is t oadminister the laws of the province, canno thope to build in young people a respect fo rlaw and discipline when British Columbian smust flaunt the law with a phoney bravad oalmost every time they seek-- to follow th eaturi desire to take a drink in pleasan ttu'roundingsYounT people appreciate Mr . Wisrner's

iathci-ly benevolence, but really, they wis hhe'd let them out in the big, wide world.

Lady Macbeth was something to behold . Shewas exactly as we had pictured her—dark ,almcsC rwnrthy, with long black hair, and t oa certain degree, sexy. Her portrayal of atncnsoicnce-stricken woman in the sleep walk -log scene was perhaps her best speech, althoug hof all the players, she perhaps put the mostverve and motion into her performance.

One of the better supporting roles, eve nthough it was a minor role in the play wasgiven by young Alfred Ryder as Malcolm, so nof the murdered king. His diction was hi sbiggcst asset, and if you closed your eyes an ddidn't look at him there was a strong voic eresemblance to Laurence Olivier, particularly 1 1his laid spcech in the play after the battle,

Mnui'gaict Webster has taken some libertie swith the play that have in many ways merl eit it more enjoyable presentation techniciall ythan drarntically .

Her opening scene in the play, in which th ewitches start the ball rolling is done by moon sci' an inner stage which is slightly set bac kl,chirrd an inner curtain . All the time that th e

ore Letters to the Editor

letters to the editO!

Those two erstwhile gladiatorswho have spent a good portion ofthe '.-inter jousting in the "Letters "column of The Uhyssey — Clif fGreed and Les Bewley — hav eevidently decided to kiss, make up ,sled unite in the face of that darig-cl'ous common enemy, the Campu sLiberal Club .

This "Greer-Bowley Axis" o fcialists and tories, which was suf-

ficiently attractive to gain evenI_pp ,SUppOI'( and strong enough t ofrustrate the purpose of the bloc kpiii'l moment (to debate is-cues on thei rmerits), is the answer to man yutote :- toinoo concerning the politicii lru :oornolt

and

i'cspnruu :iboiiitv

of

th eCCI .'

ninol

('onsc,'rv :oti'.o:

sol ;d ;u1'c lho ate to

0 .11 the Cromlul, ,Pro Bono Public o

THIS DRAMA CRITI CEditor, Daily tThyssey, Dear Sir :

Bob Russell, "critic," "actor, 'and "idealist" (self appointed )should undertake a little researc hparty bcoe h tries lb use hi stalents (also soi:5f appointed) dk-Cu,ng j

. tiIiihict v ;hen ob-viously uF5'j'.I- ; fc-d to do so . Gree nroomers will be among the firs tto agree with the eminent Mr. Rus-sell's ideas of experimental theatr e\•()I'k (they have had hern fo ryears however, they have enoug hknowledge of the circurnstancwiacting against its portrayal in thi scampus to realize the impossibilit yof presenting modern plays a tU13C5

and crumpets and of English ac -cents .

-It's bad enough to be considere d

a foreigner in, an English speakin gcountry but when they start ex-pecting us to be either Indians o rEnglishmen and when our fellowCanaclans come down and imply,ivSr that, it takes a lot of eplaining to convince people thatCanada is just like the States.

Now tell me honestly, do you havetea and crumpets at 10 :00 everymorning and do you drop every-thing at 3 :00 him., rush out and hav eyour afternoon tea? That's wha ts',' :os uoroicl in one of the UBC articles .I to a cinch I don't and never brave .A . n nu : .ttco- of Cwt . Is-'u octet' eventasted

Crlllllret ,\Vouici you please do me a favo r

nroucl i'cr ;oorocl your readers that whe nthey visit the States to rememberthe plight of (belt' fellow country-men and go easy on the baloney .

Sincerely yours ,

criticism of the Bencher's decisio nby the Conservative paper, Ottaw aJournal, liouldtit be taken seri-ously because it reflects only th elcl scllo(rl of Tory thinking ; wai t

till 'Gorgeous George' canoes t oCoster, The I3unchci-s will (Iro nFCilt) the t'r'r'lit they so riglrteurr ;) ydeserve .

there is a clique, (there are pleb-ably hundreds of then.; i on th ecampus) but it is a scia1 effor tonly . The acting niciiibcrs of th eclub, tnd the plays to be produced ,ore SCld-0t01 not by the clique a s,'0i.l infer, but by an

idvsrr y})uarcl . This I,00i'rl aim oht

till 't .r,its in the pl :rs if'r- fit try -1)0(5 . And this l,rar-1, iii' . Russell ,is composed of ''Lt1' Miss Doroth ySciriiei'set, Elsie Grahitm, De Ear lDirney, John Powell, onui the lire -siding president of the Player' sClub, If you wir;lr to "wrong suc hhr norahie nICO" (and -u nien (1)0 ,Mr. Rrirell ) by inferring (hit theyshow favoritism to a clique, that i syour bu'iness .

In t lie meantime, :.1, Russell ,r OS . confine your crititism t o

;irhjetrr yeti undorstn'!, and tile')eliminate the large pei-cenl ;ige o fplagiarism front your articles, Yo uare like the typicel student takin gan "arty" course, Mr . Russell ; youspout your instructors' ideas in al lyour conversational citle, I i'cfc rto the large amount of ideas tha tMiss Somerset so aptly formulatesin English 421 (theatre practic ethat you have confused into a narticle . I can show you three parr -sages (in the portion that does no tcriticize the Players Club) in you rarticle that Miss Soniei'sct has re-peated at least once a lecture sincethe beginning of the term . Thesewithout quotation mar-Its tsk, tsk ,Mr. Russell . Think for yoursel for leave criticism alone ,

So go ahead and blow your nose ,Mr. Russell, but at the same tun ehide your face .

Norm Young ,

WHY, UNCLE B lAn open letter to Mr. Iiess'lc-y .We must say, Mr. }3c,c'ley, ths t

we are delighted Ii .yririd nrcasui' eby the conetant you hav egiven to our ifliOli and its aol-i\'i(ies by ',':oy of the F1010dli)(l .tnc lsiifth coounenL

orrtoircd in you r' -vrekly columns .

The rlCtl()Oi ol well over ninet y)CiCOiii of the one throriannrl stun -

cuts in (ienlauldiiug, at the secon dhinds Martin meeting, ttrot the Lrr-pill Professions Act he amende dto iii''Vnruit frirtlr't' political in-quisitions, 's'as not the voice o fthese students it id!, bet only th efunotic (C110 of t' .c'nts--orro ado -Il'Sl'('iIt

and

iiijSli'O(I

urnI'rinlei's

o fthe Civil T.,ihcit ir.'

tm

0)1 . 'i' hi

fac tt tort the Toting Libeled Conventio ns-c'iit on red-old 1

,Ln'ii, tt' ,Ct ni timil : wnlnrrl'!,dmourt in (H' ui :noc of brim -ruontrL' riiiliw dewed( prove thing ,Young Jo b011 I . ; are the :iinno or-;CCl"or runt C( 't",r' ; ;r ;'(' (Sri) ( ' urn -lrdlr ;i, ;

ill

i ; .- ;trui .' .

Thor

;td'iri

, JIOOCl!Y-IOOCIl YFitor, Daily Uhyssey ,Dime Sir :

It daily apeats more obvious tha tthe VEC co-ed feels improperl yturned out without that little blu e

article provided through the cour-tesy of the House of Seagram .

One can only imagine the argu-ments that arise as fathers, brothers ,and current escorts are goaded int othe purchase of high priced hooc hin order that milady may spout tha tlittle blue hag Sheet niciioiic snob-bery !

1unuotui' ha,s it Irouvevet' that youn glrociics ','io tore the flirt nos'out'ec inh ;-tnoinurrs 001(1 who have "neve rCVni nrrorr'tI" .t the ;MIT," think ruor -ttoior,

cif (ermine time . Ig, Mite ,looricbro's and lII/0rOgO"

in that iitrt eblue brig .

It is rii,so) riinucorurenl that oconre o four nucut'o lroiti(ot gills coo-i's' only tha tfroniotr .s hiriiiici for

t'hiclu the lit t io uhlr,ie hag

vnos oi-igirrcoliy dr'signeci ,Nlight we suggest loot 'lime ftioi s

who are not as irunc'st i'enolrovc th elnohc'luo from their Cfli'l'Y ells union -the contents ;or'ce whit the oral-iil euinis'ri-tisirrg . 'Iloo' thor o'iric (of ()100 '"coffee tined 'eider' . would I boo r" 00)1'inut'h

t' ;or,io'r'

01111 otoylo

roo

(!0100h) t50111(0 form of di ;,c-nioruiru ;otioon

','ooitii iensue .

Editor, Daily Ubyssey ,Dear Sir :

I find the exposure of the falacics ,misrepresentations, inconsistencies, '

ard ambiguities, which were con -tamed In Mr . Macdonald's articl eof March 1, a duty — an obligatio nto a brother who fell fighting i n

Hong Kong, to my fellow Canadians ,and to myself.

Mr . Mcdonald quotes Dr . Rabino-witch, Mr . Klein, Muhammed Shabe ,Mr. Freeman, as sources of infor-motion . What sort of tom-foolery i sthis? These are only opinions, a tbest, opinions of individuals wh oare neither spokesman for Jew no ror Arab. Chaim Weizmann, Mosh e

Shertock, Ben Gurion are the elect-ed spokesman of the Jewish peopl eef Israel, as the Mufti, and the Asa b'League are spokesmen for the Ara bpnople. 'These generalizations yo ugive us are not facts, and they d onot permit valid conclusions . Idemand facts, facts which can b eobtained from seventeen Britis hcommissions who were sent to Pal-estine for the express purpose o finvestigating the problem which ex-isted there, from universally valid-ated reports, and from on-the-sconeobservers .

European Jewry was driven t oPalestine by a viscious and. barbari cpersecution which claimed the live sof six million Jews. The politica lZionists, Mr. Mcdonald, are notdriving the Jews toward Palestin eto protect the wealth which lies i nthe Dead Sea, They are welcomin gthe Jewish refugees, giving the mhomes and a chance to start lif eanew. Your accusations are nothin gless than slander, a slander tha tsmells to high heaven .

Furthermore, I feel assured tha tpeople, hemmed in by barbed wire,starved, beaten, facing extermina-tion, do not think of resurrecte dKing Davids . Palestine was a sanc-tuary from a "Black Plague ." Thewhole vot'lcl has shut its eyes, andclosed its doors. You, Mr . Mcdonald ,at the meeting in which you spok eto the student body, emphasized th efact that we would not wan Van-couver Island settled by Jewis himmigrants. In other words, letthem die . Is that what you mean tMr. Macdonald?- No, you 'do . no twant them on .Vancouvei- Island, nordo you and your kind ever c'rrnt t osee them leave the DP camps o fEurope . I,.et the resert lie in rso .ste ;is toat whet you rr)earr iVTi, 1Vtacbooi -Ohoi_ You, I'vlr, l't,orduruaid ore th eccludctl one ,

tri'o:' you M. Miicrliinidil, aware ofthe fact that 'Coed El Kdukji le tthe Arabs in (bolt- iiivbori of I eke -tine, and is the snmnuic man wh oorganized (with the aid of theMask) hands of iiioir5iudeus wh oIrnornosseci and snohotnogi'cl the allie dwar c'thrrt in the VlidCi1o' East, Hav eyou 'begotten where the Mufti of,J'r'uoiern spent the duration of th e\,,'il u-? Let tnt' i'cfresh your memory .lie spent Lie tune undo' Hitler'sv5'irrg, in Berlin . Another feet tha t?uo :iy he of mlii r'tt to O)Ll is tha tone iitiiicii'd and sixty Gt-rirr ;oui utfi -Cl'iS V.0010 ahruo)uigt the Arabs vhtcl ithe lst-ac'ijs cnoptnrrecl in tire F .oiujnriiuekct, "Amu : ccl "

But now, ,Ti . Bewley, on to you r' acrdernic cri'rrmcnt on the 1'icii-tiu imatter . The CLI], 1\Tr, Bewley, be-lieves that a democratic societ ymust strive to guarantee the fre eexchange and competition of ideas .It believes that the PePit.2 as a.'ho1e have tilQ Capacity to (lCC'i(li .iwhich ideas are true, and whic hOIL' false, It. alit() ITlaintaInS tha tCiti'/.Cli ; should be cncc)ur ;Idl .'(l t ogive orgrruiii.rri CXlrt'Cinln) to thei rbeliefs th4iiuigh political partie swithin the frame-work of law . Ou rUnion believes that the cic'ni ;ul o ffree political thought and a5soci ation is far worse than the potentia labuse of this right by any on epolitical party should it come t opower, And why, Mr . Bewley? Eh-cause by saying a certain politica lpsychology is absolutely wron gand by denying its free expressio nyou are furthering the very at-titude of mind which encourage sthe totalitarianism which you pro-fess to fear . You are encouragin gsubmission to one political philos-ophy and discouraging a rationa levaluation of all others . it- is i nsuch a mental climate, Mr . Bewley ,that the political demagogue, th ered traitor, and the opportunis treign SLtpICtflC .

The Benchers' decision is open t othe most fervent condemnation ,not only because it was unjust andrepresents the exercise of a povci 'winch is the prerogative of par-liament alone, but because by i tSt('pS have been taken to creat ean atmosphere of fear on thi scampus in which lice thinking i nthe realm of recent columns an dfrom personal contacts I am le dto believe that the Red hysteria o nthe University of Waehington cam shll ; has been followed l' a dis-tinct apathy on the part of th estudents concerning Soc'irri and poli-tical issues- -i .c' . it cl,u€'srit p .-r,' t otiojirk too much . We do not \ .'norr ta similar situation to develop a tUBC . It is therefore of the utmos t

i110I-ai'lnm ;oro that Mnrxism he give nthe (lp :o r-lriroitv tO ('00011(00 fi-cu' i ,ywith I"rrru'r ;ot or' - Suoinitisrri, Lhh -0r,lt ;- ;nr, C'un',t'iv; ;titoor, and yea, M I . ,fj l'\ Icy, even i'nocism, frri' the ea -!heed Rccetitenco of universit yl .tlldorrtr;

nil chimes in gunorel .

,T,ocl-: ' M ;occio ma ri, Pres .,Civil halm hue Union .

PARLIAMENT MOCKIN G

Editor, Daily Ubyssey ,Dear Sir :

The hlromc for tlues taleinate a tthe PoIotn'k Pro :ij :ornent justifiably1(0,15 dot the door of the Young Lib-cral group which essayed to "goit oioune "

The ic ;odc'i- of the opposition shoul dItnive been called by the defeatedprime minister to form a governmen tas this is the usual practice in th e

British ,Commonwealth tradition . I twas evident a working between th eopposition parties existed for th epurpose of an education bill .

Usiirg the isolated "Ilyng preci-dent" to guide (item (which wa sdisavowed by the Imperial Confer-ence afterward) the premier "ad-vised" the Lieutenant-Governor t ociiso1vc the house . Despite theprotest front the majority the prom-ici' insisted .

When a parliamentary session i s

MOCK PARLIAMEN TEditor, Daily Uhyssory ,Donut' Sit' :

l\loocic Parliament shouldn't hav edissolved without business bein gtransacted and vitbrojtit consent ofol the majority, and ss'i(lroic:t aiho\v-ir'it : the rornijiorit)' to seek to for mii ileus, government parliament is not.the uuino ;;tor, rather it. 1rLits the do-founotoci Iirm:ruuicl' in the position of adicteior ever the House .

Purticularly i .; tide ;to whore ther eis (0 be no new election to follow(1 :tSoILtl ;ortr . Frank Trot, was atoneire stuos de-troo. rug the cr.'ciuing with -out lb jO' of got rig to the people i nn new ('Id don and nt rue's' .' .sL 'n,,, ion t ofo 1 to os' ,

('or this vital i'el :trrn, in all con -cloned he ib0000,rid not have insiste d

en tl a

ri i r t ol I .

-

'i'lo .' Mt iii

r . n1-:i :u for :op :oottboniru gtill_S

boiior ;lo)

to

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ROOM TO YOU, TOOEditor, Deily' Ubyssey,Dear Sirs :This package was to have contain-

ed ii bomb — unfortunately tit thepresent tirouc flu :, private funds er ehe (iclufOte(l that I am unable t opurchtuio the material required t oCd' noon t oouoe ,

The

',rrjoroe of thor bomb \',' ;o ; : t ohi"- .,- the Uby; oty tnofi to . . .othe rloc :otioros . . , in which, if the pric eof nobc'stus paper has not i1ruioi'ec h(,t'('ti the AIOTS \vooi.ti(i refrain fro mfooting the 1,111 .

On Jntnotnii-y 7, (this year-) a Uhys -5-cy headline (oat'cl its oss'rr prais e•0'' t It :"('oiifcrcnee Judges Laud UhysscyEditorial Page, "Newshandling

'Sprightly'

ClaimJdges: Praised for Newsinutter .

'The lest three words of thaCcuotou ,

if ti-tic, leave a cuc . :tion of vhid-it3 of 'the judges dec ;sion undecided .Please eXI)iliitl these three bits b fnewsworthy infor-nuot ion :

I . The Sutherland Trophy .2 . The AMS vote "Today" — a da y

iohetcl of time ,3_ 'L'Ite missing II in flcdsitir'tu : .In tio voi'cis of the Greek, Antli-

io)()OS, "It is difficult for an indivi-dual to portray, all tho signs of'r ;tcijuiciitv ; but in. an aggregation i tin, a toito.n of .'otipr'eriuo enclentvoiir- . "Thus it is neccnoau'',' to praise th e'l,Jlv.'s :-:i'v staff ;for he collectivetttti'imiilv or cliiitouruce in misinter-preting rlc'v.-s .

Not sours ,

Your s

One of the mein obdacles, Mr .flrl'(.'1, .3 IC foot diet peyin eaudience is needed to appreoiat esuch work ( es, paying, VII- Rus-sell . When you, personally hav econvinced the audiences of Van-couver that they svu1cl enjoy mod -em drama over their usual fare ,conic around and let us know .This is a very commercial ago, Mr .Russell . Modern plays deman dmodern royalties, and despite th elack of costumes in many of them ,the "take" would not be enoughto compensate for 'hat can b etaken in a a Shakespearian pro-duction. This financial (hut I for-get—you are experimental, aren' tyou, Mr. Russell) trap is ver ylarge if not very obvious ,

Also if presenting a Shakesearia nplay is insulting the intelligenc eof the si'udents" (a direct quot efi'm'o the article in question) the nyou and the students you are re-ferring to, have been hiding i nS(,mC mighty strange places.

It is cr1131 by using plays of th eSliolcespeore or Sheridan type tha t'v.-e are able to combine the tw oX'IOC'CO5 t (5 of financial secedes an da demand for good acting . Shake-speare requires a good deal of tal-ent and 'soi'k if it is to he don ewell, Mr Russell ; you should b eready to dnit this after your at -tempt at 1h role of 'Fi :hstont' i n"As You Ike It . "

You have been on the c :aiii omerely )10O1' September, ?IL', Rus-stil iri'I ore in no position to eiitj -(.'i .fcS the "one-012t chestnuts . These

ill-c piolLlor'(l in the Mil to eneour -ego new iv miters by offprint; thor nrobs that C(litrO)ltte to

alt -

jug

Cp('oCrl(O

i]IICI

sI,, ,ie-oonf :-

d&'tici' . The distribution i f \ei('l'Eifl S

,l1oI1t

the

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for

c'IIryifl g

t, \,er 00 well as iii-ptesettletio n

1'111110,c- I .

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iTh5yoi .- Club, Mr . Rtimoll . Here

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SERE WT. DOE,rlitort', Doily Uhy .sscy ,Editor :

I would like to P :0' :;r a few corn -

meet, on the visit jo :nori by severa lITC students on our campus, th el :irivo--r' :-;ity of Washington, yestm'r-

nInny roroci tlro'tr hn:otttllioig of the 'I.J to f

\v D;uiit' ,Fir'tt of nolt I will iidmit diet ou r

:h'yc'l

roest'ro :opc'i'

is

h ;rdiy

i nneed id

Moroughioverhauhnd an dthe q rot it V of usoork put (itt by th e1010'r)iti,'rt

of yeur sniff ;termed t o

toll

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ARTISTRY ?Foni', Deily 1,iig.smy ,lh'ron Sri' :

I vas shocked to learn the otlici '(lily that two of the pictures in Mr ,Clifford Robinson's show in the ArtGallery had been defaced by some -One at the university. It win; athoughtless and disgusting thing, t o

do, and it reflect on the 'whol euniversity .

Apart from the gross 'lack o fcourtesy which this act implicitthere are other things to be corisici-t'i'cd, 'l'bie first un (loot the gallery i si'espoiisihie for all donna tus o thi ssort ; and as the grohicry budget i sInsufficient for such ncecii eat out -lays, we may consider oureelve sltoi'lcY that ve still have a g :tllcu' yt-,t all . In the scorourd place, our ar tgnuiloou'y is no piece for subnorma lbciroviour of the kind 'hic-hu 1 :0 ;)just been demunetretcd . And finally ,it SltO)t.u!(t 1)0 i'&OurOT'nrh)r'i'O(l tlurot suc hiit'(Sj)(OiOSiE .1l05 nets are bound to ceue e

no

c('rtnoin

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of

ill

'.'ill,

i°'ir .Robinson is round' (if the better-know nVnoricoitvt'r

;urt 05t : :, and

ofici

;rocit altnjopi'ruirig, it is iinoi'diy likely tbo :o tother not'tist' ; doii bc

oror' (000) t' :ogci- l o5100))''

hook

pictures here

in

th e10 I n nO ,

I enquired at the (leek, end foun dtbonot 1\li' . J'lorbuiru .'oroi vnolooed the dour -

tro,vu'd Iojotltt'('t not $710 00, It seems t oore tbonot t hoe icrost the responsibl e1_oct'oIOto 05000 do sc'tuol a ('bocc-tor t o

Mr . iI It I 0 0,0000 fur (hit aliment Mon gwith hie very I o to r oh ole a iouho ) it .

l'r'tOl' C,olt,0thv, 'itbo

An tIII4 AND )lAl-F I ' Pi- :chitoo',

Doily

(lot .-

,Doer Sir :

l';rI' intent

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sincerely ,

Lyman Jampolsk y

4th Yr . - Ai-hrI

COME AGAI N

Editor, Daily Uhysse yDear Sir :

Now that Open House at the UDCis past, and we, who came to hav ea look-see for ourselves, can thin k'Of no better way of thanking al lthose who had a part in the plan-ning, arranging, and carrying ou tof the Open House program, tha nby sending our congratulations t otoil of tireun through the medium o fyour paper.

All veto on their toes, trying t oexplain in simple language the mar-

vels of the nuarry things and subjectson view .

Thanks also to the Guides ; wh oclod their utmost and sat .' to it tha tone did not IiiI,-S any items .

We could not help but wonder ,01 the rnrnr'rise facilities winch ar epro'iciccl for the sttelents in thei r('lO.'s('tI professions, and visitors lik etoss must now have an c ;itir'o'iy dif-to-tOOt

eororcri)tioorl

of

ii

oniiir'euortt- ,orri' ieuo'i-t

it tionot

it is

mu -

iiotibii to .-o-(" tro'r'vthi ;rg in uri c(lily, evero tll()Llgh We were in th e

buildings and bouts for right hour's ,and it

is to be kuojoecl tionol,

vlu''i iOiirori House it lint. on Ot',iO that i tvs

he for two tkovs ruttenorl of (uric ,We i'rojuyo'cl c'ven's-1 hi io og wo lied a n

(rlrpr)r't runty to look not and thi

ru -ti-ic'stnng

ixplouunutioros

rti'-ro

b ytl ;r ;i'

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Dd',\' bL, No', \\' . .i .

Friday, March 18, 1849 '1'11E DAILY U1IYSSE Y

Hammers' and Sows Roar to Build New Lost and Foun d

By ACE WILLIAM SA new Lost and Found office, des-

cribed by Shirley Deck, the Publi-cations Beard secretary as being,

of the effects involuntarily achieve din the Pub . Under the carpenter-lik einspiration, Pulsators have been hittin gthe nail on the head more frequentl y

"more efficient" is now under con- and with competitive glee .struction in the north Brock base-ment .

The Pub at the most quiet of timesis like one of Shostakovitch 's more

brassy wor ks with the roar of type -writers, screams of editors matche dby the whines of reporters, but al lthat is past .SYMPHONI C

All that has been supplemented o rsubmerged with the ringing blows o f

'carpenters hammers and saws . It al ladds up to a regular cacophony o fsound and fury .

Not even the weird sounds pro-duced by Radsoc in the other, end ofthe Brock basement can match some

pens and pencils, and now with th eadvent of the Spring season, som esplendid brollies .'EVEN VALENTINE

Contrary to generally accepted fac ttiuii, students one not winebibbers, th elest and found has a neat array o fpotential headaches on file . In caseyou can identify the contents th eoffice will also supply you with , th elittle blue bottle .

And in conclusion if Miss Thais Hal l .

will drop down to the Lost and Foundshe will find a valentine under thebig pile of lumber in the corner.

little "lost girl" in a lower des kdrawer for a week. But as yet, no on ehas arrived to claim her .tit'ICKET S

Students corning down to clai mtheir articles will see formidabl ewickets facing them . They have beenborrowed from the old book exchangeand are definitely not stolen ;

Some of 'the queer articles now i ncorral include enough clothes fo rseveral walking out ensembles, eve nback to the pre-row look era, anexcellent assortment of cocoanu tshells, parlor games,' half a thousand

claimed for many a moon have th ename and address of their owners on

alt . "folding stuff ' inside . (How craz y

erne you get? )One senior editor of The Ubyascy

has been accused of harboring aWADERS NEEDED

For over a month now the usuall yorderly offices of the Pub have beenplagued by an assortment of diverseand odd articles lost by careless an dindifferent students . The normal eb band flow of lost and found articleshas been swollenn by a freshet o funwelcome articles brought over b ythe Library staff .

Ironically, not a few of the articlesunloaded at the Pub by the Librar yhave been lost, strayed or stole nlibrary books .

Quirks of students who play th elosing game, bring many a laugh t ojaded pubsters . Some of the 30 or

Legion Letter

40'O Year Old JokesNear bliss Can Campus

prefer thi spure, clea rhair dressin gTake the greatest situation-comedy ever written, add in

some top-flight acting, dress the whole thing up in Elizabethancolor and you've

NFCUS

Ottawa now and it is hoped a n

announcement will be made on it . atany time. Our paid-up membershi phas gone down but we shall con-tinuo our present work throughou tthe summer . I would ask all mem-bers who are not paid up to coop -crate with us and reply to th ecorrespondence the committee sendsyou from time to time . To all gradu-ates in particular, will you pleaselet us know whether you intendto carry on in this branch, transfe ror terminate your membe rship . Iwant to thank all the members .who have worked for the branch inthe past year and to urge even morerand wider participation next year .This is your branch, use it !

New ServicesTo Students

By MIKE LAKES

Marv . is giving me this space to

have the last word with you an d

especially those members who wer e

not at the meeting Wednesday . The

year has been marked with activitie s

which were all the more successful

because they were fraught with

difficulties, for example : Ope ration

Pigskin was successful as was th eAnnual Dance . On committee acti-vities, the Housing Committee place d116 families with 90 more yet to beplaced . One family was united fro mas far away as England . Grants addGratuities Committee dropped th egrants campaign because of the tota llack of interest from the veteran son the campus, but the committe edid concentrate on the problem o floans and forwarded the brief t oMinister Gregg . 9'hc brief is bein gconsidered for the second time i n

SHIRLEY RACK. . Guardia n

got a sure fire hit—or at worst a near miss . n The UBC Player 's managed to sta y

on target long enough with their '

O~ erSi crformance of "Twelfth Night " thi sweek to keep the audience laughing ;almost as much as the actors.MUFFS, FLUFF S

With first night wrinkles—fallingropes, creaking scenery and muffe dlines— ironed out the players ...dupe dit performance that squeezed evi rybit of humour from the four-bundledyear old gags and will probably keep

the Varsity Dance Band .

more wallets which hav e. Jain un-

Specializing i nPRINTIN GFORvice Clu bB .C. audiences amused for weeks to !come, when the troupe goes on tofu', Sponsors DanceEarl Bowen as Sir Andrew Ague -cheek turned in what was probably

Tlomance will receive major impetu sthe funniest performance of the this Satur day nigh ,tevening amply assisted by Jim Argu eas Sir Toby Belch . E'u' .vcn's acting ! The push will be given by the UB C

Dance Club with their Spring an d

of Stan Laurel and Hugh Ilrber•t es Romance' Dance at the Brock ,

well as contributing plenty of his ' The theme will he ethanccd by nrendition of the balcony scene fro m

hold out for the rest of the week he Romeo and Juliet, the epitome of love .

too can add another star to his al-

Prizes, surprises and a romanticmilieu will spark incipient sparking .

Music will be provided by theKeith Watson sextet, with a wid e

Phil Keatley 's Feste, clown of the' variety of dances, including sambas ,piece, was nicely handled in the best waltzes, tangos, and fox-trots .Kcatley manner . Unfortunately Eliza

The Dance Club is planning danc ebcthan music sounds a little strained demonstrations, for the Latin Ameri -to the modern car .

can dances.Malvolio, played by Ron Wilson,

Dancing commences at 8 :30 . Th ewas, outraged dignity to perfection . . passport to romuhce sell for $1 .25 a

The female leads, Betty Pe,,ma as ' couple, and are on sale at the AMS ,Viola, Jvsc Shcrv;ocd, as Olivia and/ `_. . .__ _

Muyra Mulholland as Maria wer eexcellent, Miss Bernie Ricci s "lady" larcs a little overplayed,

• "Vaseline" Hair Tonic groom sthe hair naturally, gives it the soft ,clean good looks you want it t ohave . Just a Jew drops every morn -ing before brushing or combin gis all you need to condition you rscalp, keep your hair neat an dorderly all day And it saves yo umoney—your bottle of "Vaseline "Hair Tonic lasts for a long, lon gtime .*Symptoms : Itchy feeling; dam .draft ; rho, brittle hair ; loose hair sou comb or brush . Unless checke dmay cause baldness .

Fraternitie sandSororitie sNowmon Clu bElection s

Paul Kitos, third year member o fthe Newman club, who advocated achoir, study clubs, more active par-ticipation in later-Murals and in-e:eased Public Relations for the org-anization, recently was elected presi-dent .

I'osifions of first and second vice -presidents were won by Chuck Ready ,and Gerard Ferry while Gray Clarkwas elected Treasurer .

GEHRKE :STATIONERY AN DPLZiNTING CO .566 Seymour St .

P€'ize E ;say Deadline sNear Warns Professor

Viet

?cif t .&Ida" ae

t , , lE 'S SPOR TJACKETS .Here : good value in well tailored sport jackets fo rcampus or "off" hours .Goal serviceable tweeds in fine Herringbones andsolid shades, styled in the season's popular singlebreasted model . Sines 35 to 46 ,

This year National Federa-

tion of Canadian University

Students offers students three

new services .

Any UBC student with a secon dclass average in his `ear's work ma yparticipate in the Canadian Studen texchange plan, w'a'sh offers thir dyear studies at any one of the univer-sities within the federation .

In addition to the Canadian plan i san American Exchange project . Underthis plan a 'Canadian student maypay his fees here and take the plac eof a student from an American uni-ve rsity who will have payed his fee s

in the States .Ten Canadian and fifty-two Ameri-

can universities have assented to par-ticipation in the scheme . Knownnumber of Americans — desiring t oexchange with Canadians is six fro mOberlin College, Idaho .

Another new cxperiment involve sovoseas travel . Thereby a group o fforty Canadian students may charte ra plane which will fly from Mon-treal to London. Return cost wil lapproximate 5310 per passenger . Th egrc up will be able to set dates forflying and will make its own arrange-ments in Europe .

In addition to these three new ser-vices NFCUS is arranging travellin gfare reductions for students in Canadaand many other schemes which wil lbe of great value to the average stu-dent,

combines°the funnier characteristic s

own humor. If Argue 's laugh can

ready stellar record .

SOME PERFEC T

FELONS MUSTFORK OVER O RBE PUNISHE D

Discipline committee head, Dav e

Williams, has issued a warning to all

offenders who have not yet paid thei r

fines .

Williams stated that the registra r

has been notified, and until such time sas those students pay up, their mark swill be withheld,

;

Professor W . Sage yesterday warne dthat the deadline for students ' sub -mission of prize rsssys is dra',virgnear .

Prize essay contest spot sored bythe United Empire Loyalist Assosi, -lion of Canada, has set April 7 as th edue date fo r entries .

Du! Its on,piiucs, essay topics, an datl .ci rc!cvant material is posted o nthe bulletin hoard outside Professo rSage's office, Roan S in the Art sLiuiIding .

UBC St'udent's Musi cTo Be Played In Bosto n

1Phil Nimmons, BA '44 will have on e

of his musical compositions played a tthe symposium of the InternationalFederation of Musical Students i nBoston, March 16-19 .

Nimmons, now a student at the ;Royal Conservatory of Music, Toronto ,was for several years the leader of X45 .00

DOUBLE - BREASTE DBLUE BLAZER SThl : ; :'c :scn " s popular double-breasted blue blazer. . cut cn ti free and easy style ift either one-to -l ;t ;t'on o ; two-to-button models . Half lined forc . mfort . Sizes 34 to 44 .

$19.50 and $29 .5rAlen's Clothing, Maiti Floo rQUALITY - FIT - COMFORT .

I;;''. if11 ;Cx~l AT

Page 7

"Oh,, you men are all alike! "All then alike? Look at ?cm! Tall, skinny,

squat, plump. But it doesn't faze us — in ourArrow shirt family you'll find collars to suit al l

male shapes and tastes . Every Arrow shirt i s

Sanforized — labelled— guara 'nteecl never to

shrink out of fit!

iN FINE SHOES FROM WOODWARD'S ,If your good taste dem,r,nc'1s quality . , , if your feet deman dihat extra attention , , . cone iii .nd discover vi y ;'So man ymen it: ist on el?e M. t' :csc famous brands . . , if foot comfor tmeans anything to you, 'lay a

i t , for yeurae l f ,Pil :narno : t, Scotlan dAda N°:-'iria :.—Ant ..1C .'.a . :'ti .1Cd . . .

Under that perfect-fitting Arrow collar sli p

a colourful smooth-knotting Arrow tie .1il 1 0 t .«

UG : fast iti.ttt hathcr S

.9 :x.3

Men's Shoe' :, Main F1e:or

South-east of your lapel you'll find,a pocket.Tuck a matching Arrow handkerchief into it .

Look for the Registered Trade Mark ARRO W

ARRO T SHiRTS Vancouver's 1'as!li : ;, Centro

TIES • HANDKERCHIEFS

THE DAILY UBYSSEY Friday, 11Iarch 18, 19 .1 9

0 Keepner Fields UDC Pugilistic And Wrestling

Frostm et, Thunderbird swim team, finished

' u ' ee lest Saturday night when they edged

Crystal Gardens at the Island City . The

Mimed out of team competition in a manne r

ecord this year. This team is one of the fe w

n the campus to end the season with an unbroken

ice to their credit . Theirs has been a highly

'lde ' .etason has been no more of a success than th e

iiieml The year - before, Varsity captured the Pacifi c

met Conference tilt .s_nior swimming team has proven twice that UBC hit s

lent necessary to bring victory to the school in aquati c

competition . The only things lacking on the campus are th e

vital facilities which every winning club must have„ namely ,a swimming pool right on the university grounds and a ful l

time coach to keep the boys in shape. '

.

Pool Included In Memorial ' Gym'The first problem of the two, the new pool, is supposed

to be taken care of when the UBC Memorial Gymnasium i s

built. Included in the original plans for the structure, the poo l

is to occupy the bottom of the new gym .

.

but ` from the way that things are going now, it looks as i f

the gym is still in the . dream stage of , construction. Unless

work begins right away ,on, the structure, the realization of th e

dream may not , come until the end of 1950 .The biggest blow to the, Thunderbird Swimming Club wan

that the actual construction'of the pool will have to wait eve nlonger, or at least until-another $125,000 is secured for th e

project . When they build the gym in 'the next year, or two, th e

proposed site ` of the pool to the ,basement of the building wil l

be roughly molded by the cone fete foundations in anticipatio n

of the day when enough ,funds will be available to finish the

project.The site of the pool is ideal . There is enough space devote d

to the 'pool in the plans for it to be 75 by 42 feet in size, just

about the same size as the fine tank at University of Washing -

ton in Seattle .

UW 'Progressed With New PoolUW has had its own pool on the campus for the last eigh t

years, during which time they have built tip from a mediocr e

club to one of the top teams on the coast, taking the Norther n

Division Collegiate swimming championships a few weeks ago .

They are far ahead of UBC in class, and the fact that they had

their own pool was bne of the chief reasons that they were abl e

to produce such high-calibre clubs.It isn 't as if Seattle was a breeding ground for natural

swimmers. The reason for UW 's rise to swimming 'fame is tha tthe presence of their home pool is the eye-catcher that draw sfine aquatic performers from near and fat . who are searchingfor a place where they can get much practice to keep in con-dition, good coaching to develop their style, and generall y

enough pleasure out of their hard months of conditioning t okeep them satisfied .

UBC Following In UW's Footstep sUW started out in the same way that UBC is now operating .

UW swimmers were compelled to travel downtown to the loca lYMCA pool just as Thunderbirds are forced to hike across t othe Crystal Pool for their needed practice . In the early stagesiof development, UW had only second rate squads . Back in1932 and '33, teams from UBC even beat the Seattleites . Butafter they built their pool, UW Huskies have been in the to pswimming bracket of the coast .

British Columbia produces some of the country's bes tswimmers. Young water enthusiasts of B . C. who are anxiousto carry on their education would, under natural circumstances ,enter UBC and would bring glory to the university throug htheir swimming talents . But the poor conditions that prevai lfor them at UBC makes them look for greener pastures . .

Pete Salmon, swim specialist from Victoria, who ordinaril ywould have enrolled here, is now receiving his learning fro mUW. His water ability made him one of the big cogs in th eswim machine that captured the Northern Division champion -ships for UW.

Varsity Stars Leaving For States ?It is also rumored that a few of UBC's aces have got th e

itch to travel to Seattle next year, instead of waiting aroun dhere for their new pool to he built . No one can blame them .

Foreign interests are'at the present time tapping our sourc eof aquatic stars. The young star from Victoria, Stewart, ha sbeen talking to Jack Torney, swimming coach for UW, an dhe has almost made up his mind to go there . He said he wouldlike to come to UBC for his education, but they can offer hi mso much more down south that he can't pass it up. The twoPortlance brothers from Ocean Falls are in the same boat ,while Gilchrist from the same town has his eye on Ohio U .

UBC must have a new pool slated for one of the firs tprojects to be started next year if it wants the supply of wa,te rtalent from , British Columbia to continue to swarm to thi scampus ,

Full Time Coach Needed BadlyThe other necessity of the club is the selection of a full -

time coach . Doug Whittle, coach of the swim team, only man-ogt'd to get out to the practice about once a week . His manyother duties, ranging . from teaching Phys, rids, to coaching theChiefs basketball team, kept him too busy to devote very muc hof his time to the swimmers . So far, the boys have had t ostruggle along without him most of the time, yet they haveenough talent in themselves to sweep B . C . for swimmin ghonors .

UI3C has the chance to produce the best water squads o nthe Pacific Coast, but it must have the necessary facilities . Thehost of potential talent from the Lake districts; of the province ,from the sea-side towns up the coast, and the many spotte dtownships on Vancouver Island will keep UBC supplied wit hhigh-calibre water squads for a good ninny years . All UB Ch1, to do is supply the pool and the ranch,

SPORT EDITOR -CHUCK MARSHAL L

Editor Thls Issue — RAY FROST ,

UBC Trackmen Prep ' Daily.j fl Hop es OF New Title ,

In preparation for their entry into Evergreen track com-petition, a tougher loop than the Pacific Coast Conference oflast season, U,BC ' s thinclads commence daily spring training

Finalists To Compete Tonight

' Golden Boy Codville Featured

In Welterweight Fist Struggl e

UBC's third annual boxing and wrestling extravaganza

will get under way tonight at 8 :00 p.m. in, the UBC gymnasium ,

when a full field of student opponents in both sports will pai r

tot en_ins Lyall Sundberg and Art Porter .

A group of newcomers are turnin gevents and thei r.the forthcomin g

Ver y

cut ,in the field

on March 7 .

This year's schedule calls for fou rmeets in May with the Evergree nConference Meet concluding the sea -son in Spokane on May 27th and 28th .The Birds open their Evergreen com-petition when they journey to Olym-pia to compete in the Third Annual

St . Martins' Relays on May 7th. Last This year's freshman group Is oneyear Central Washington's, "Wildcats" of thestrongest to hit the universit ywon the team championship but if the sinco Piercy and company ., WallyBirds field a large squad they should Alexander, number one sprinter i nenter the meet as favorites on the Western Canada last year and sixt hbasis of last years performance.

and fourth in the 100 and 200 metre sIn addition to four relay 'events, respectively in the Olympic Trial s

the full track and field program is last July leads the group . Dave Red -also scheduled and a large team will din, sprinter-hurdler-jumper fro mhe needed to cop top honors. As ex- Magee is another talented newcomer .Wing records in most of the events Freshmen distance stars, John Chap -are, below performances made by the p ell and Jack Ldwther are tenon sBirdmen last season the thinclads the nine 'milers who broke 5' las tshould have a field day .

fall . Ken Campbell, sprinter, Al God -

On May 14th there will be a tri- third, miler, and Bill Strange, high

angular meet at the Stadium with jumper are other prominent fresh .

St . Martins and Western Washington man contenders .

invading Vancouver . The Universityof Washington Frosh will be out to strong bid for a place on the team ,avenge last year's defeat on May 21st are Gerd Poffenroth, fiddle distance,when they journey to Vancouver for Rey MacDonald and Duguid sprinters

, and Mel Cruikshank, hurdler .

After a full week of gruelling elim-

inations, the finalists are now pre -

pared 'to meet in open warfare . Al lthese reaching the final stages of th eeliminations are in the best of condi-tion from the intensive workouts inthe ring .

off to decide the mural winners' Phil Anderson and Pete Worthing -ton match blows in the light-heavydivision while John McDonald meet sformer Golden Gloves Champion Phi lOlson in the heavy weight bracket .

In the wrestling fixtures which wil ltake over where the boxers leave off ,heavy weights Keith Maltman an d

UBC's Golden Glows Champion and Mike Phillips hold the limelight in(Tilden Boy Award double winner Ithe feature event of . the evening.

Lightweights Roy Sherman and Denn yShields pair off in 'the semis .

in Victoria and Vancouver, Don Cod-ville, will he one of the contender sin the -feature bouts . Art Beaumont All together, twelve boxing and six

Gym Club Sponsors

Provincial Meet

The UBC Gym Club wil l

play host to the first Provincia l

Gymnastic Championships i n

the University gymnasium on

Saturday, April 2 at 7 :30 pint .Teams from Vancouver Island ,

Mission, Pro-Ree, YMCA and ot1 e rorganizations will compete in th emeet which hopes to foster gymnastic sin clubs, high schools and communi-ties .

-

The UBC"Gym Club will enter a tleast .two teams into the event .

Each team must enter at least threeevents which include side horse, par -

allel bars, rings, mats, high bar, team is scheduled to supply the competi- wrestling events are scheduled for th echampionships and all-round champ-1 lion for Codville in the Welter weight evening, packed into the two hou r

'ionships,

I class .

i nperformancesintramurals will he watched

closely .

NEWCOMERS STRONG

show .

rvv

Among the newcomers making a

a return engagement .

BLAIR GON EBiggest loss from last year's team is

Dave Blair, three ' year Conferenc eHigh Jump Champion and Olympi cTrials runner-up in Montreal las tJuly . Also gone from the undefeate dteam are Pat Minchin two year winnerin the mile, Doug Knott, conferenc ehalf-mile record holder and DennisNickerson, pole vaulter. Al Bain is adoubtful starter this season . Com-peting in the half mile in the pas ttwo years Bain showed more promisein the mile as he ranked fifth ir eCanada in this event for 1947 and 1948 ,on his performance during the sum-mer ,

The remaining six men of th eeleven man team will spearhead ateam which is expected to be at leas tas strong as the 1918 Ei•dnun . ChickTurner, 9 .8" hundred man and co -hiilder of the eiurference 1OJ recan t

enter ; his lief im of coupe : Sio nAlso graduating el Ez Ilenniger, UBC ' ssole representative on the Canadia nOlympic Track team .TIUtEE YEARS YET

Bob Piercy, Varsity's distance ac ehas still three season 's left at theUniversity, John Pavelich, shot pu tstar and conference champion in 191 7and 1943 is expected to carry on th etradition in the Evergreen Conference .

Russ Hoy, javelin point winner las t:ices is expected to in, rove his die -'mice over last season. On 1918 per-

formances both Pavelich and Hoytanked second in Canada in thei rrespective events . Pavelich place dsecond in the Olympic Trials in Mon-treal last July but Hoy did not mak ethe trip owing to lack of expenses .Broad Jumper and sprinter Pete Ket-chen is switching to the 220 lowhurdles this year and is expected t ocause a few surprises in this event.

Bill Husband, sidelined with a sor eleg last year is expected to give sup-port to Piercy iii the mile and twomile along with the rapidly improv -

It is too early in the season for th eteam to be picked but the heavy ax emay fall on some of the above who 'have been relying on past perform-ances rather than on spring trainin gfor a place on the team . With th etalent on hand there will be no needto play favorites and the race fo rplaces on the team is still wide openespecially in the field events whichhave been a weak spot for year swith one or two exceptions.

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