bonner faces student tide - library.ubc.ca · themes. . . . gnup, hindmarch, ... friday night, ams...

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9 LIK E Bonner faces Student Tid e THIS LUCKY MALE was attacked by a mob of sex-hungry campus femme fatales on th e lawn of Brock today . This is only a mild sample of what males will have to go through . . -Photo by Earle - Olson . Today Big Day For Mal e As Girls Take Upper Han d Semi-Finalists Chose n in UBC Glamour Contest SEMI-FINAL S Judges chose four beautifu l UBC co-eds as semi-finalists on BR O this campus in the continent- wide Glamour Contest which i s being run by GIamour Maga- CA 1MESSNES S zine . The four were Tani Camp - bell, Carolyn Wallace, Moll y McFetrich and Janet Robertson . Eleven girls paraded in Mil- dred Brock Lounge yesterday , competing in the Glamour Con - test. Allhoped to win the trip t o New York . The, contestants, al l from sororities or clubs on cam - pus, were : Tani Campbell, Caro- lyn Wallace, Donna Davidson , Denice De Laval, Barbara Drew , lge Gulbis, Judy Jack, Molly Mc - Fetrich, Marilyn O'Toole, Jane t Robertson, and Joyce Wilson . The judges were Mari e Moreau, Louise Van Allan, San- dra Shepard, Kerry White, an d Michael Sinclair . Miss Morea u commented, "I have never see n better dressed, better groome d girls, that were so -apt to fash- ion . . . they compared favour - ably with girls on other campi . " All judges echoed Miss Moreau' s statement, and Mr . Sinclair went. on to say that all the girl s were lovely, and it was ver y difficult to choose between them . Better Deal Fo r Campus Demande d Mr . Robert Bonner, provincial Attorney-General, may fin d himself running against thousands of UBC students in th e the coming provincial election . The suggestion has arisen be - cause of growing disconten t among students who feel that the university is not adequatel y represented by the present MLA - for its constituency, Robert Bon- ner, the provincial Attorney. General . The initiator of the movement , AIan Rimmer, lashed out against the Socred Government for fail- ing to keep its promise of match- ing, dollar-for-dollar to a tota l of $10 millions, any contribu- tions made by the public to th e UBC Development Fund . Rimmer claimed the Govern- ment owes UBC $7 .5 million i n matching' grants . To correct this situation Rim- mer's UBC Voters' Associatio n suggested that students shoul d nominate one of their number to run as an independent candi- date, having no political affilia- tions,' who could give the Uni - He envisioned Council as -a versity direct representation in twelve-man, policy-making body, the House, as well as draw at - the Undergraduate Societies tention to the needs of the Uni - Committee as a work-horse or versity in a dramatic way . ganization to administrate that The plans of ' the group a t policy, and the Student Court present are to : as a punitive body, the only ap- 1—Hold a general " meeting ,of , peal from which would be the the student body to establis h Faculty Council . the candidate's platform . Goodwin gave five reasons 2—Consult with campus orga n why AMS .Elections did not izations . draw many candidates . 3—Elect the candidate . 1. Council membership entails 4—Conduct a house - to - hous e too much work and responsi- campaign to solicit votes for bility . the candidate by impressing 2. Council members cannot de- on voters the needs of th e vote enough time to their student and the advantages of studies because of the heavy the idea . work load . In the elections for the Moc k 3. Communications between the Parliament on February 11 th e "Brock clique" and the rest Socreds placed a low fourth fol s of the campus are virtually lowed only by the CPC . This ' non-existant, non-Brock types might indicate a rising tide of do not have their latent in- discontent against the presen t terest in student government government from the studen t aroused. body . 4. "Joe-jobs" like picking up However, of the 10,000 stet . lunch bags and stopping eat- dents at UBC, at least half of ing in the Brock (Disciplin- them are either registered i n ary Committee), detract from other B .C. constituencies or ar e the prestige of the job, a fac- not B .C . residents . tor in every aspirants deci- So, if the UBC Voters Associa- tion to run . tion does run a candidate in th e 5. The attitude that, "If the coming provincial election, the Council is efficient and hap- majority of the votes must com e py, we do not have to worry from the non student . residents . —let them be ." of the West Point Grey -riding . _ PROGRA M Model Parliamen t MONDAY, FEB . 22, 7-10.00 p.m . hers' 'Bills . CCF—on Drug Ad- Opening ceremony and speech diction—to establish centres fo r from the throne . The speech to the treatment of drug addicts . be read by His . Worship Mayor • Social Credit : to annex the T . Alsbury who will represent Yukon to B .C . the Governor-General . Conservatives : An amendmen t TUESDAY, . FEB. 23, 12:30-4:30 ' to the BNA Act to make Ontario , p .m. Manitoba and New Brunswic k Debate on two government bi-lingual . bills : One on trade and the ADJOURNMEN T other on defense., Speaker : Tom Irwin—forme r WEDNESDAY, FEB . 24. 7 :00- speaker of B .C . Legislature . All 10 :00 (evening) sittings to take place in Brock Debate on four Private Mem- Lounge. Yes, people, today's the bi g day . . . It's the day for you UBC men to sit back and take life easy . It is your prerogative to ask to refuse,'but Old Sadie will b e any girl to buy you coffee, carry watching YOU and we think yo u books to your classes, etc . can expect the royal treatment . It is also the girl's prerogative A special pep meet in the Audi - ,torium is scheduled for Frida y noon . . . and boys, it won' t cost you a red cent . . . Just hang on to the arm of any co-ed, who by the way has to pay one thi n dime, and you may enter free . Please let go of arms when yo u enter the Auditorium, the seat s can only accommodate one per - son at a time . Excess arms wil l be donated tb the female caus e later that night . Top notch entertainment, es- pecially geared to the little wo- man, has been planned . . . with several novel and origina l themes . . . . Gnup, Hindmarch , Fire in the broom closet o f Brock Hall gave 'a hot prelude to the Aggy Banquet Wednesday Laithewaite, Mullins and Co . night .' } will present a melodrama . The fire was not caused by kleenex to be passed out by bas - four engineers roasting aeiners leetweaging majors . The cheer- in the closet, but by a cigarette leaders, Aggies, Foresters, Joh n butt which some careless "Brock - type " threw into a garbege ca n (apparently mistaking it for th e telephone booth) . . Peter Meekinson sent in th e alarm at 6 :20 Wednesday night , after noticing smoke pourin g out of the fireplace . The big question which comes up no w is "what was that garbage ca n doing in the broom closet?" Sparks' Q u a r t e t, and man y others will perform for you . Friday night, AMS prevent s the Dogpatch Drag in Broc k flail, 9 :00-1 :00, price is only two for $1 .49 .. . tickets in the AM S office pr at the door . Com e dressed in' your blue jeans, o r a Daisy Mae outfit . . . prizes for the people most resembling E ‘M . and L'il Abner . Girls are to make corsages for the boys .. Ian MacKenzie, Assistant they too will be judged . . . n o Brock Attendant, stated that the silly, not the boys, the corsages , garbage was placed in the closet Folk singer Rod Smith wil l provide the entertainment . because they were in a hurr y cleaning up the hall for the ban - quet . Damages caused by the fire girl's a bit shy, be persuasiv e were estimated at $300 .00 ." boys. See you there . the Dogpatch downbeats wil l provide la-dee-dums to dance to : Cha Cha to you too . If your By DEREK ALLE N The Students Council shoul d concern itself more with polic y and less with work, John Good - win told the Haskins Commis- sion"on Student Government yes- terday at noon . Out of a series of soap-bo x speeches, sponsored by the Stu - dent Christian Movement, ha s come an idea with great poten - tialities : UBC should be repre- sented in the provincial govern- ment by a student . Less Wor k Urged Fo r Council

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9LIKE

Bonner faces Student Tide

THIS LUCKY MALE was attacked by a mob of sex-hungry campus femme fatales on thelawn of Brock today . This is only a mild sample of what males will have to go through. .

-Photo by Earle - Olson .

Today Big Day For MaleAs Girls Take Upper Hand

Semi-Finalists Chose nin UBC Glamour ContestSEMI-FINALS

Judges chose four beautifulUBC co-eds as semi-finalists on BROthis campus in the continent-wide Glamour Contest which i sbeing run by GIamour Maga- CA1MESSNESSzine . The four were Tani Camp-bell, Carolyn Wallace, MollyMcFetrich and Janet Robertson .

Eleven girls paraded in Mil-dred Brock Lounge yesterday ,competing in the Glamour Con-test.

Allhoped to win the trip toNew York. The, contestants, allfrom sororities or clubs on cam-pus, were: Tani Campbell, Caro-lyn Wallace, Donna Davidson,Denice De Laval, Barbara Drew,lge Gulbis, Judy Jack, Molly Mc -Fetrich, Marilyn O'Toole, JanetRobertson, and Joyce Wilson .

The judges were MarieMoreau, Louise Van Allan, San-dra Shepard, Kerry White, an dMichael Sinclair . Miss Morea ucommented, "I have never see nbetter dressed, better groomedgirls, that were so -apt to fash-ion . . . they compared favour -ably with girls on other campi . "All judges echoed Miss Moreau' sstatement, and Mr. Sinclairwent. on to say that all the girlswere lovely, and it was verydifficult to choose between them .

Better Deal Fo rCampus Demande d

Mr. Robert Bonner, provincial Attorney-General, may findhimself running against thousands of UBC students in thethe coming provincial election .

The suggestion has arisen be-cause of growing discontentamong students who feel thatthe university is not adequatelyrepresented by the present MLA-for its constituency, Robert Bon-ner, the provincial Attorney.General .

The initiator of the movement ,AIan Rimmer, lashed out againstthe Socred Government for fail-ing to keep its promise of match-ing, dollar-for-dollar to a tota lof $10 millions, any contribu-tions made by the public to theUBC Development Fund .

Rimmer claimed the Govern-ment owes UBC $7 .5 million inmatching' grants .

To correct this situation Rim-mer's UBC Voters' Associatio nsuggested that students shouldnominate one of their number torun as an independent candi-date, having no political affilia-tions,' who could give the Uni-

He envisioned Council as -a versity direct representation intwelve-man, policy-making body, the House, as well as draw at -the Undergraduate Societies tention to the needs of the Uni-Committee as a work-horse or versity in a dramatic way .ganization to administrate that

The plans of ' the group atpolicy, and the Student Court present are to :as a punitive body, the only ap- 1—Hold a general " meeting ,of ,peal from which would be the

the student body to establishFaculty Council .

the candidate's platform .Goodwin gave five reasons 2—Consult with campus organ

why AMS .Elections did not

izations .draw many candidates.

3—Elect the candidate .1. Council membership entails 4—Conduct a house - to - hous e

too much work and responsi-

campaign to solicit votes forbility .

the candidate by impressing2. Council members cannot de-

on voters the needs of thevote enough time to their

student and the advantages ofstudies because of the heavy

the idea.work load .

In the elections for the Moc k3. Communications between the Parliament on February 11 the

"Brock clique" and the rest Socreds placed a low fourth fol sof the campus are virtually lowed only by the CPC. This 'non-existant, non-Brock types might indicate a rising tide ofdo not have their latent in- discontent against the presentterest in student government government from the studentaroused.

body .4. "Joe-jobs" like picking up However, of the 10,000 stet.

lunch bags and stopping eat- dents at UBC, at least half ofing in the Brock (Disciplin- them are either registered i nary Committee), detract from other B .C. constituencies or arethe prestige of the job, a fac- not B.C. residents .tor in every aspirants deci- So, if the UBC Voters Associa-tion to run .

tion does run a candidate in the5. The attitude that, "If the coming provincial election, the

Council is efficient and hap- majority of the votes must com epy, we do not have to worry from the non student . residents .—let them be ."

of the West Point Grey -riding._

PROGRAM

Model Parliamen tMONDAY, FEB . 22, 7-10.00 p.m. hers' 'Bills . CCF—on Drug Ad-

Opening ceremony and speech diction—to establish centres fo rfrom the throne . The speech to the treatment of drug addicts .be read by His . Worship Mayor • Social Credit : to annex theT. Alsbury who will represent Yukon to B .C .the Governor-General .

Conservatives : An amendmentTUESDAY, . FEB. 23, 12:30-4:30 ' to the BNA Act to make Ontario,p.m.

Manitoba and New BrunswickDebate on two government bi-lingual .

bills: One on trade and the

ADJOURNMENTother on defense.,

Speaker : Tom Irwin—formerWEDNESDAY, FEB. 24. 7:00- speaker of B .C. Legislature . All10:00 (evening)

sittings to take place in BrockDebate on four Private Mem- Lounge.

Yes, people, today's the bi gday . . . It's the day for youUBC men to sit back and takelife easy .

It is your prerogative to ask to refuse,'but Old Sadie will beany girl to buy you coffee, carry watching YOU and we think yo ubooks to your classes, etc.

can expect the royal treatment .It is also the girl's prerogative A special pep meet in the Audi -

,torium is scheduled for Frida ynoon . . . and boys, it won' tcost you a red cent . . . Just hangon to the arm of any co-ed, whoby the way has to pay one thindime, and you may enter free .Please let go of arms when youenter the Auditorium, the seatscan only accommodate one per-son at a time. Excess arms wil lbe donated tb the female causelater that night .

Top notch entertainment, es-pecially geared to the little wo-man, has been planned . . . withseveral novel and origina lthemes . . . . Gnup, Hindmarch ,

Fire in the broom closet ofBrock Hall gave 'a hot prelude tothe Aggy Banquet Wednesday Laithewaite, Mullins and Co .night .'

} will present a melodrama .The fire was not caused by kleenex to be passed out by bas -

four engineers roasting aeiners leetweaging majors . The cheer-in the closet, but by a cigarette leaders, Aggies, Foresters, John

butt which some careless "Brock -type" threw into a garbege ca n(apparently mistaking it for thetelephone booth) .

..

Peter Meekinson sent in th ealarm at 6:20 Wednesday night ,after noticing smoke pouringout of the fireplace . The bigquestion which comes up nowis "what was that garbage candoing in the broom closet?"

Sparks' Q u a r t e t, and manyothers will perform for you .

Friday night, AMS preventsthe Dogpatch Drag in Brockflail, 9 :00-1:00, price is only twofor $1 .49 . . . tickets in the AM Soffice pr at the door. Comedressed in' your blue jeans, or

a Daisy Mae outfit . . . prizes forthe people most resembling E ‘M .and L'il Abner. Girls are tomake corsages for the boys . .

Ian MacKenzie, Assistant they too will be judged . . . no

Brock Attendant, stated that the silly, not the boys, the corsages,

garbage was placed in the closet Folk singer Rod Smith willprovide the entertainment .because they were in a hurry

cleaning up the hall for the ban-quet .

Damages caused by the fire girl's a bit shy, be persuasiv ewere estimated at $300 .00 ."

boys. See you there .

the Dogpatch downbeats willprovide la-dee-dums to dance to :

Cha Cha to you too . If your

By DEREK ALLE N

The Students Council shouldconcern itself more with polic yand less with work, John Good -win told the Haskins Commis-sion"on Student Government yes-terday at noon .

Out of a series of soap-boxspeeches, sponsored by the Stu -dent Christian Movement, ha scome an idea with great poten-tialities: UBC should be repre-sented in the provincial govern-ment by a student .

Less WorkUrged Fo r

Council

)iuthorized as second class mail by Post Office Department, OttawaMEMBER CANADIAN UNIVERSITY 1'R .ESS

Buck A SquarePublished three times a week throughout the University year in Vancouver Editor ,

litthe Publlcatipns Board of the Alma Mater Society, University of B.C.

itorial opinions.expr.essed are those of the Editorial Board of The Ubyssey The Ubyssey.and not -necessarily those of the Alma Mater Society or the University of B.C .Telephones : Editorial offices, AL. . 4404; Locals 12, 13 and 14; Dear Sir :

It has been a week since Mr .Tim Buck visited the Campu sand the hue and cry about thereception which he got still' hasnot diminished . Everybody whohad thrown as much as an em-barrassing question on thi sself-styled prophet is called ajuvenile delinquent .

I do not want to protect th ebehaviour of those who triedto stop Mr. Buck, but I wantto point out that they are theonly ones who at least feel thegrave danger what Tim- Buckpersonifies and considering th ecircumstances they did nothave any other way to expresstheir feelings .

In my opinion Mr. Buckshould be- silenced with firmregulations and not with a feworanges and paperbags peltedat him, but I learned : to knowthe true face of the commun-ism from personal experiencewhich the students on thiscampus fortunately lack yet. Isaw what happened in Europ ewhen Hitler's brownshirts andafter them Stalin's hordes over-ran it . I learned that the onlymedicine against dictature an dtotalitarian terrorism is thepreventive medicine. Only ifthe maniacs of totalitarianismare mercilessly silenced befor ethey can spread their deadlybacteria, can Are hope to evad ethe slavery in which they tryto push us :

I only want to point out thatthe only people with enoughdetermination to show theirconscience toward the future oftheir country, toward the idealsof freedom, even toward thebetter future of mankind, areironically those few, who haveat least the courage to throwsome lunchbags at Tim Buck ,this spreader of leprosy. Thesad thing is that their actio nwas so half-hearted and lookedmore like a nasty joke than asign of serious repulsion .

We have ten thousand stu-dents on this campus. Tenthousand young men and wo-men who in a short time willbecome a substantial part i nthe upper strata of our society .They will form that nucleus inthis country whose critica ljudgment the less educatedmasses will adopt . Last weekthese ten thousand let fill fourpositions out of five on theStudent Council by acclama-tion. Ten thousand young menand women with a supposedlybetter than average intellect ,behaved like a herd of cattle .They did just what the com-munists wanted them to do ; be-cause for the communists everypassive, thoughtless individua lis worth as much as an activ eparty member . It is frighten-ing to think what would havehappened if the communist shad discovered some constitu-tional loophole and had slippedtheir men into the position swhich are filled now by accla-mation .

he Nazis used to say "wh odoes not support us, is agains tus." The communists hav emore finesse, they changed thisslogan and are declaring now"who does not actively opposeus, potentially is a supporterof our cause . "

The fathers of these tenthousand students condemnedthe German people for theirpassivity, which helped Hitler

PAGE TWO

THE a

ss Y .. .

Friday, February 19, 1960 ' t

Business offices, AL 4404; Local 15 .Editor-in-Chief: R. Kerry Whit e

Associate Editor

_ Elaine BissettManaging Editor Del Warre nNews Editor John Russel lC.U.P. Editor Irene Fraze rClub's Editor Wendy BarrFeatures Editor Sandra ScottHead Photographer Colin LandiePhotography Editor Roger McAfe e

TNEnUP

Y LETTERS TO THE EDITO R

and his minority group intopower, although the Germansdid not have a historical ex-ample to learn from . These tenthousand have every opportu-nity to learn what a dictatoria lsystem means, whether it i scommunist or Nazi . They canobserve and analyze the result sof such a system and they ar efortunate to be able to do i twithout the sufferings of per-sonal experience . Instead of do-ing this they lead a thought -less life and what little activityleft in them, they channel i tinto childish extracurricularactivities . Those few who, how-ever ridiculously, tried to sil-ence the pusher of communis tdrugs, get silenced by som efifth columnists and ignora-muses who think that commun-ism is only a slightly differentset of political thoug.hts, aboutwhich it is intellectually fash-ionable to lead some discus-sions. These self - appointedchampions of democracy fail t osee that there is absolutely nodifference between Tim Buc kand the swastika smearers .

Meanwhile the Communis tParty sits back and enjoys theshow. With one slick manouvrethey have succeeded to silenc eagain some of those few wh ostill actively oppose them an dthe actual silencing was don eby those halfwits, who think i tis a very noble deed to protec tpoor dear old Tim Buck . Nexttime some of those orange -throwers will not even throwan5 orange, but will join the in-different majority . Slowly allopposition will quiet down.Everybody will assume the

comfortable, relaxing attitud eof opinionlessness and then th ereds will not need nuclear mis-

siles to force their "ideology"on this country also . Then thes eten thousand will see a differ-

ent phase of the communismand will learn what it meansto live as a slave in a Sovie tcolony .

Yours truly,—Arpad Fustos .

CLEARANCE

`MEN'S

TO COATS

Special Group

1/a PUCE`

Second Grou p

Harris Tweed

tlnifed Mar- s

British Woollens

549 Granville

!Senior Editors : F . S . & F. F .

Reporters and desk : A.G., D.G., D.A., D.M., B .L ., M.L . ,1Vf.L .C ., G.K., G.K ., F.F., F.F., I .F ., S .S ., . V .E .D., M.B .

Most of the above staffers have been or are on th esick, sick list! The female-senior-editor is really sick ,and the male-senior-editor always has been sick !And 'Good Evening' to all SICKNIKS!! !

i l E SYSTEM !The proposal of the UBC Voters' Association to sponso r

a student in the provincial legislature is undoubtedly worth yof our support. Here at last is an effective method of increas-ing the volume of our little voice, heretofore merely a squeakfrom the corner .

Two of the many requirements of this representative areintelligence and verbal forcefulness. And if by chance hi srecommendations were not heeded, then it is possible that hi sp esence alone would serve as a reminder to the other MLAsthat we expect the government's promises to the universit yt_QQ be carried out . That is, a student MLA would take the plac eof the underworked consciences of forgetful delegates .

However, we must.not lose sight of .the fact that a studen tMI,A would be representing many individuals whose onlyconnection with the university is that they live comparativelyear it. He must therefore be well-informed on all issuesPar

with by the legislature, . not simply those which affectthe university.

In addition to these qualificationshe would also have tosses those c aracteristics which one usually expects in an

(and selr ra gets) integrity, forcefulness, reliability, an devQtlon to the tltirnate good, not just the next election.

`lie initiats of this movement stress that a student dele-g"" 'at'e m ' '` st have 'no phtical affiliations. Rather, he must follow'

9princes insfekd of party politics. This is essential as hewould have to win the support of many partisan individualswho place the welfare of their party above that of the uni-versity .

The backing of the lJbyssey will be forthcoming if the_Promotion of such a candidate is done with the utmost sincerity .S'honla our candidate be elected we would be prepared toprint regular reports of legislative activities .

An excellent suggestion has been placed before thestudents of this university . It is the time to act, not the time6' be apathetic and disinterested . Let's make this proposal mor ethan a suggestion . Let's make it an actuality .

A warning note to Mr . Bennett : U.B.C . is mobilising itsforces. It is through with petitioning, begging, and trekking for

recognition. It is going to Meet you on your rounds, the politicalbattlefield .

'STUDENT MLA'Thank God they have seen the light at last !They have really seen the light .They really have.At last they are going to let all our student councillors

be acclaimed to office .This year was a definite improvement over last year . Just

tiirlit, six people were spared the expense of mounting th ectdmpaign that would have been necessary if they had beenopposed.

Or at least six people would have been spared this ex-pense, but one of them was stupid enought to doubt THESYSTEM.

John Goodwin doubted THE SYSTEM. The silly ass wentout and spent $25 on posters, pictures, and tags, and now h eWill not have to use them, because THE SYSTEM worked .John was acclaimed to office.

But the other five did not' doubt THE SYSTEM. Theydidn't spend $25 on posters, pictures and tags. They saved theirmoney for the victory celebration .

They really did see the light .They really did save the money.-After all, its much better this way. Just think how much

doubt and uncertainty could be avoided if nobody had to ru nfor office . Why should .we' put a good man through the tortureof waiting for a week to find out whether he will or will no tbe the proud wearer of a blue blazer in the coming year ?Why not let him find out months in advance . He could be toldthat he was not chosen to be acclaimed . He could be told tha tsome other member of the Brock Gang was being groome dto slip into the clique . Just think . .

. And not only the candidates will save money under TH ESYSTEM, the AMS will save all that cash they put out fo rballots, and the cokes for the eager workers who count th eballots, and for thumbtacks to put all those nominations upon the bulletin board .

It really is nice that THE SYSTEM is in the light at last .It really is nice.

They kept warning me this wouldhappen if I didn't think of some superway to describe that absolutely uniquegood taste of Coca-Cola . So who's aShakespeare? So no ad . . . that's bad !But, there's always Coke . . .and that's goodl

SIGN OF GOOD TASTE

SAY'CQKE' OR 'COCA-COLA'—BOTH TRADE-MARKS MEAN THE PRODUC TOF COCA-COLA LTD.—THE WORLD'S BEST-LOVED SPARKLING DRINK.

• H I LLEL PRESENTS .

NILLEL'S SPECIAL BOB WEEKTheme : `JJ gmaep 4 Man"

February 22 - February 26, 1960 - All Events at Noo n

DATE

SPEAKER

POINT OF VIEW

PLACE

Feb. 22 Mon . . . .Father James Hanrahan Catholic. . .„ Buchanan Bldg. ,Philosophy Dept ., U.B.C .

Room 102

Feb. 23 Tues . . ..Rabbi Bernard Goldenberg Jewish Buchanan Bldg .Director Hillel Foundation, U .B.C.

Room 202

Feb . 24 Wed.___Dr . W. S . Taylor Protestant Room 205Principal Union College

Buchanan Bldg.

Feb . 25 Thurs . .Mr. Allan Neil Beat and Hipster. .Buchanan Bldg .Jazz pianist

Room 204

Feb . 26 Fri Mr. Watson Thomson Humanist Hillel House, directl yEnglish Dept ., U.B.C .

behind Brock Hall

Feb . 26 Fri Brotherhood Evening Schara TzedeckDinner and Service

Synagogue19th and Oak

Friday, February 19,1960

THE UBYSSEY

PAGE THREE

The ever-flickering beauty of her ayes. "—Photo by Earle Olsen

"The Image of Man" will bethe theme of this year's Hille lFoundation Special Event sWeek.

Each day at ripen a differentspeaker will offer` the `image o fman' from different points o fview .

The first speaker will be Rev .James Hanrahan, of the UB Cdept of Philosophy, who wil lgive the Catholic point of view .He will speak on Monday, Feb .22 in Bu 102 .

On Tuesday, the Jewish imag ewill be given by Rabbi Bernard

Deadline Nearin gFor Counci l

Applications for appointe dpositions in student governmentmust be in the hands of th eSecretary on the Students' Coun-cil by 2 :30 Monday, Feb . 29 .

That evening the incoming andoutgoing councils will meetjointly to make the appoint-ments .

The most important position sopen are those of Co-ordinato rof Publications, Public RelationsOfficer and Editor of the Ubys-sey. These are the three non -voting positions on council .

There are eleven importantnon-council posts to be filledalso. They are as follows :

1. Chairman of the loca lNFCUS committee

2. Chairman of the UBC WorldUniversity Services com-mitteeHigh School Conferencechairman

4. Leadership C o n f e r e n c echairman

ELECTIO NRESULTS

Two councillors rejoined theGoldenberg, director of the UBC blue-blazer brigade Thursday vi a; fillet Foundation. He will speak the acclamation route .in Bu 202 .

First Member, John Goodwin,Dr . W. S. Taylor, principal of was acclaimed Vice-President

Union College will speak on the because nobody ran against him .Protestant point of view, Wed-

Co-ordinator Russ Brink ha dnesday in Bu. 205 .

his term extended by a yearThe Beat and Hipster image when the man running agains t

will be given by Allan Neil, him was declared ineligible.Jazz Pianist . Mr . Neil will speak

There are three candidates forThursday, Feb . 25 in Bu 204 .

chairman of the UniversityThe final view given will be Clubs Committee : Jim Papsdorf ,

that of the humanist . Mr. Wet- Mir Huculak and Patience Ryan .son Thompson will speak on For Executive Member, Jud yFriday in Hillel House, directly Jack is running against De lbehind Brock Hall .

Warren .

UPI • SICKNES S

.. .insure confident living

NORTH AM E RICAN,V.4h and raduatty rcmpan,

4letACCIDENT - GROU P

5. Academic Symposium chair-man

6. Editor of Raven7. Library Committee chair -

man (for quiet in the li-brary)

8. Special Events Committeechairman,

9. Editor of Totem10. College Shop Manager (pai d

on a commission basis)

11. Open House Committeechairman (this is a tri-annualappointment) .

The committee chairmen an deditors appoint their committeesthemselves, although many ofthe appointments require coun-cil ratification .

Student Court judges wil lalso be appointed at the jointcouncil meetings (February 2 9and March 7) but appointmentis not by application .

Applications for the other pos-itions should be in the form ofa letter stating the applicantsqualifications and reasons forwanting the position .

UBC FraternitiesStage Song Festival

UBC fraternities and sororities form selections varyin gwill stage their Song Festival in

the Queen Elizabeth Theatre .next Wednesday night .

Ten fraternities and nin e

sororities will take part in it ,and their song teams will per-

frompopular song to formal choralarrangements .

Tickets costing 75c for stu-dents and $1.25 for adults canhe obtained at the AMS office ,or at the Queen Elizabeth thea-tre on Wednesday .

"Reserves insureagainst reverses"

Knute Rockne, the famous football coach, deviseda system of substituting players that practicallyinsured his Notre Dame team of victory . His strong

second team wore down the opposition early inthe

game. Then the irrepressible first team would movein, fresh and sound, to clinch the victory. NotreDame ran up a record of victories that has neve rbeen matched .

+

Of course, this system depends on strong an ddependable reserves . Unfortunately, most of uscan't count on a large reserve to fall back on in theGame of Life, particularly in these days of theshrinking dollar. Only too often, we fall short of ourgoals because we cannot muster the "shocktroops" at the right time.

That's one reason why sound insurance planningis so important, because it does assure you ofreserve protection whenever the need arises . Youcan protect your income, your home, your health,your family . . . so that your struggles for themneed never be lost. Call the NALAC representativefor a talk. He is part of a team that knows theimportance of reserve strength !

R. D. GARRETT - Provincial Manager619 Burrard Building

Phone MUtual 3-3801 -

H . P. SKOGLUND, President

PAGE FOUR

THE UBYSSVY

Friday, _

The Greater Cut of Unkindness

CRITICISM A lEDITOR: MIKI

A DINOSAUR ONCE ' REMOVED

"Let us be kind, and. rathercut a little .

Than fall, and bruise to death "

There it is, measure formeasure, the intention of th eadaptor a n d producer o fN .B .C.'s production of Shake-speare's The Tempest . Realiz-ing that some cutting and. adap-tion must be made to suit themedium, these persons too khold of a text, investigated i twith the dull knife of a but-cher's apprentice, then slashe dat the still quick and grinningflesh, until no glow of theGlobe was left to light theactors along their precariou sway. For the power of a tele-vision producer is awful. Theonly people able to check himare. the financial hacks of hiscompany, and if the sponsordoesn't complain, the produc-er's head rests comfortably andsecurely upon his shoulders .

However, producers usuallydo try hard to do what theythink is right <and surely, inthe case of The Tempest. thesponsors minded their ownbusiness so that here, pro-ducer and adaptor both mus tshare much of the blame fo rwhat was almost a farcical per-formance, and the cast mus tshare the rest .

Initially, the fault stemme dfrom a deliberate misapprehen-sion of the conditions unde rwhich Shakespeare wrote - hi splays . These plays were all de-signed to take .place on a three-dimensional stage—up anddown, left and right, above andbelow—and not in the plastic ,almost four-dimensional med-ium that is television, The pro-ducer knew this well enough ,and could not see how, withoutpresenting the play in its tra-ditional pattern, he mightavoid the difficulties that wer e

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presented . In the end, he tookthe easy way out, shootingclose-up shots to accentuat ewhat were often unnecessar yfacial disturbances . (Poor Rod-dy -McDowall as Ariel, camein for much of that. )

Furthermore, the plays wereto . be peopled with flesh-and-blood nympths beautifu lenough to attract kings, andboys coy enough to enslavelechers—not visions that ap-peared in a wave of my ,han dfrom crystal balls . And again ,the actors were supposed t oshow genuine emotion—anger ,sorrow, greed, jealousy—nota power of grace that wouldsweeten the nature of an angel .Lastly, wherever suggestions

.of the fantastic were- includedin the play, these were to b eput over by the powers of act-ing and speech—true sugges-tion—rather than by coy mon-tage shots .

-All these things the adapto r

and the producer understood ,and failed to realize . But thiswas not their worst fault. No !that was to remove the play al-together from the bounds ofspace dictated by common-sense, and to make the wholeearth available to their char-acters . For The Tempest is con-cerned with an Utopian island ,rather than with the wastespaces of the world. Only inimagination, in dreams, didShakespeare draw the cloud sback to reveal somethingvaster .

Against the island, hemme din by the sea, Prospero is se tto exercise his wizardy in or -der to regain his Dukedom ofMilan. Now Prospero is a ma nwhom we might reasonably ex-pect to be at least angry at th escurvy treatment he has earlie rreceived, and certainly Shakes-peare thought of him as a cold ,almost sinister -figure, withtrue love only for his daugh-ter. He frequently refers, i nopprobrious terms, to his bro-ther who Made sucha sinner of his memory,/To cre-dit his own lie, . . . "and tothe King of Naples . . ." . . , anenemy/To me inveterate . . ."The common interpretation o fProspero's role certainly callsfor a quality of malice to b edirected against these persons ,even in the last act, where, for-giving Alonso and Antonio, hestill is unable to rid his min dof the memory of their cruel .behaviour . "Unnatural thoughthou art," he says, "I do for-give thee . "

But Maurice Evans, as Pros-pero, displayed throughout theproduction a singular misun-derstanding of Prospero's rea-sonable dislike for his brothe rand his royal neighbour . Hesoftened his face and his voicewhenever he spoke of them ,and one expected him, whenfinally he came face to fac ewith . his enemies, to put them

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across his knee and chastisethem, in the English manner ,kindly. Only to Richard . Bur-ton's Caliban did he show truemalice, and then only when hereminded Caliban of thatbeast's attempted rape of Mir-anda, for which, considerin gth'e scanty garment in whichthe wizard allowed her to runaround, he might reasonablyhave been expected to blam eonly himself .

This misapplication of mo-tive was evident everywhere i nthe production . N.B.C.'s Anto-nio, . for instance was seen tourge Sebastian on to fratricidefrom the most disinterestedmotives,. instead of from a per-sonal concern with the crownof Naples, and Sebastian, in-stead of presenting the pictureof weak cupidity that'was in-tended for him, stepped int othe Twelfth Night role of Si rAndrew Aguecheek .

Lee Remmick's M i r a n d aprobably presented the great-est innovation to Shakespear-ian theatre since Shakespearehimself went to the continentfor his material . Soft, winsome ,and middle-Western, she i sideally suited to the bootedand divided-skirt cowgirl partthat she played so well with -out those traditional orna-ments . At times Miss Remmickdisplayed all the emotion suit-able to one whose faithful stee d

Two actors must come in fo rspecial attention. Roddy Mc -Dowall was given what, underthe circumstances, was an. ex-tremely difficult role, and im-proved on it with magnificen tskill and courage .

Ariel, written as a boy' spart, is increasingly played byolder actors, and it offers themgreat trouble . Under the con-ditions established by pooradaption and direction, Mc -Dowall played his part for allit was worth, and so pulled th eproducer out of a really nast yspot . I would quibble withmuch of his acting, of course ,and especially with his exces-sive use of fantastic hand. im-ages, but most of the time h eplayed what was left ofShakespeare in fine, troupertradition. He left me with afeeling of distaste that hassince turned to admiration . It

This is to be an interim re-port, an anticipatory samplingcf crumbs from under the tableof the Master, who was indis-posed on the opening night . Apre-prandial, pre-Bromwegiancrumb-fest, as it were . Crumbs !

To pursue the metaphor .Don Soule's new play, A Dino -

wasn't his fault - that the pro-ducer didn't cast a fifteen yearold Ariel .

Richard Burton's Caliber'was the best piece of theatrethat was presented in this per-formance . Beginning veryslowly, Burton realized to th efull all the opportunities to pu tthe rest of the cast in theshade . One wished that Shake-speare had included a scenesolely between Caliban an dAriel, so that Burton and Mc-Dowall might have made, ful luse of their talents . Burtonglowered, frothed, and cringe ddelightfully, and the fines tpiece of real acting in thewhole performance was hisslow realization of the tru e

natures of Trinculo and Ste-phano. He was at his best a she remembered . .

" . . . the isle is full ofnoises, sounds and sweetairs, that give delight an dhurt not"

and as he called down cursesupon Prospero's head .

What else? There were to omany cuts, both of lines an dof whole characters, and ther ewere too many rearrange-ments . Maurice Evans, w'h omust have tangled with theproducer over the part o fProspero . was not given hi sway, and the wild-western ele-ment predominated strongly .No attempt at all was made t ogive appearance to Shakes-peare's wider view of the Uni-verse, and this world of men .

One is forced to come to theconclusion that. t e l e v i s i o nought to do one of two things t oShakespeare; either leave himalone; or-serve him - up proper-ly, not insist upon either slash-ing his skin, or burning himto a charcoal .

M . P. Sinclair.

saur's Wedding. titivates thepalate very satisfactorily . If i tdoes not send us replete fro mthe theatre . the reasons are notfar to seek .

The modern palate is adjust-ed to problem plays of one sortand another . It is a poor playwe are' almost tempted t othink, that does not provide uswith a good indigestible prob-lem. Comedy, even musicalcomedy, has become pervertedto serve some code-psychologi-cal end .

Mr . . Soule's comedy leavesus no indigestible residue, andwe leave the theatre unsatis-fied. It is just a matter of pal-ate adjustment. In the OldDays, we could have beenhappy seeing a jolly comedyby Ivor Novelle, with nothingleft in the craw. Nowaday seven Terence Rattigan has togive us something we can con-strue as -a problem .

Gently satirizing, as it does ,some no-longer-extant conven-tions such as chivalry, TheDinosaur's Wedding seem srather to satirize earlier spoofsupon deeds of derring-do, whenthey were not such dodos a sthey are today . Arms and theMan is one such spoof.

Opening night found TheDinosaur's Wedding an almostfaultless production. It is awell-made play, with cast tomatch . Characters come on an doff stage with consumate easeand grace . They are all therein plenty of time for the fina lcurtain, so that they don' t haveto scramble in from the wingsfor curtain calls . Little Amelia ,played by Barbara Jay, is suf-ficiently vacuous . Prospectiv emother-in-law, played by Rose-mary Malkin, is sufficientlycharming and conniving . Pete rHaworth is sufficiently dino-saurian. Hilda Thomas is awonderfully irascible old re-tainer . Nonie Stewart wouldbring out the dinosaur in anyman. John Sparks, who no whas only to walk onto a stag eto .be wildly acclaimed, almostdeserves the acclaim, and SamPayne is urbane and polished•as his father. Last, and per-haps foremost, Ian Thorne!!—here perhaps we may be per-mitted the luxury of subject-ivity—did not fail to raise ourcritical metabolic rate severalpoints with his wonderfully in-fectious vitality .

E. L. OLDFIELD

MEDAL AWARD SThe Photographic Society

are offering an award of te ndollars for the best design forthe annual Ben-Hill Toutaward medal. Until now,' th emedals have been those stand-ard in Birks Jewellers, an dhave been engraved to suit th eterms of the awards . Now.however . the Society is an-xious to cast a distinctive die .'and is seeking designs tha twould be suitable . Designsshould be suitable to theaward, and to the memory ofits founder, who was a manmuch admired about the cam-pus. Interested persons shoul dcontact the secretary of thePhotographic Society .for moreinformation .

U .B .C . Players Clu bPresent s

THE GLAS SMENAGERI E

COMING SOON

WITH MY APOLOGIFS to The White Sheik, this fits the_Miranda-Riding Horse situation better than any satyre o n"Darling Rudy . "

has been harnessed to a horridfarm cart . She will undoubt-edly be offered a role opposit e,T'mes Arness . in one of theGunsmoke series .

.tltary = 19, 1960

THE UBYSSEY

PAGE FIVE

D REVIEW SECLAIR

`he Prism Board's Prism 1 : 2been on sale for som e

nths, and all that time , I'e put off saying anythin g

ut it . However Prism 1 :3 i shing me in the back wit hlthy strength, and I mustsomething . or be run over.

'he problem is . what to do ?can either try to be clever ,dismiss the magazine in

se or four hundred words ,nee can be clever, and writeengthy critical review of

collection of sketches ,ms, short stories, and evenes. I _have neither Mr .insby's. cool judgment, no rfinery's unfortunate wit

ny disposal . I can only sayit I liked, and what I dis-d, and why . My task i s*less. No matter what Isay,-I will be attacked byparty or another, who wil lIse me of insolence or in-:nee, bigotry or dogmatism ,tit or injury .

ut Alice McConnell won'tet me. Of that, I'm sure,I have only the pleasantestgs to say about her collec-

of sketches, "Profile . "se three pieces, by them -es, have been worth all theble that the Prism Boardbeen put to, to bring ou tiagazine. Mrs. McConnell,g a childhood as her corn -

denominator, offers u se moods, if you like, fromekperience. She has all th ermination that a writerIs, plus something—know-e or whatever — withIt to back it up . Of here sketches, I prefer theI don't know why, exceptit might be for the sen-

es . . . "He was still talk-He told me that he had

t in the water with hisdy, on top of a log and onel his Daddy . He had bee nie boat, too . "ere is unusual honesty i nwriting about such a sit-

)n .

>r the rest of Prism 1 :2, Iflatly that with the excep- •

of George Bowering'siloquy on the Rocks", an de Dawe's "At the Boom -Ground", I didn't like it .efing, a former winner of9issenden award, has pre -sly published his poemvhere, and I would onlylire here whether or nots quite sure that his im-and his allegory in the

stanza of his poem are suf-ntly unmixed to stand ex -ration . Dawe's patentl ynic poem has an attrac-quite beyond that intend-ie is, for a Coast poet, ac-te in his meteorology .

onel Kearns' collection ofis leave me as puzzled a srest of the words that h epoetry, and that I haveelsewhere . I believe that

poem there must be some-; that allies it to others offamily, but with Kearns '

I can find nothing—nole, no internal meter, on eve very poor images (tha tid one critic to refer toas that peeping Juan) andmusing determination to1 the common rules ofttiation .

. . .1 : 2

Claire Sanford's "AugustNot Over" -is, frankly, con-cerned with chicken shit—thecommon or garden kind—thetype that people think smells .This story won the McMillanAward for Miss Sanford on eyear ago. I am told, and per-haps properly . so. It is not thesort of story I much care for .However, one must say tha tMiss Sanford has an excellen tunderstanding of the use ofdialogue in order to revea lcharacter by accident, so tospeak .

Ernest Langford's play "TheSnake" is surely the most con-trived and' awkward piece everto miss the boards . Mr. Lang-ford has, either by accident ordesign, contrived to allow hisdialogue to proceed in the man-ner of Joycean prose. That isto say, with every situatio nchange there is a change in hischaracters' manner .

All in all, Prism 1:2 is a dis-appointment, but it h a sachieved something. It gave us"Profile ." More of McConnell ,please .

M.P .S .

BEN-HILL TOU TThere are, in the Fine Arts

Gallery, two exhibitions of in-terest to everyone who ,takeshis own photographs. One isJoseph Karsh' travelling ex-hibition of portraits of th egreat, and the other display is 'the Ben-Hill Tout Salon, hel dannually and open to facultyand undergraduate members o fthe university .

The Ben-Hill Tout competi-tion began in nineteen fifty-si xto honor the memory of th ewell-liked and admired univer-sity photographer who died o fcancer in the previous year .His will left a small bequest t othe University and it was de-cided to use the funds from itto set up an annual competi-tion and exhibition . Each yea rsince then has seen an increasein theability of university ama-teur photographers to take an ddevelop their own photo-graphs, and the present ex-hibition is the best of whathas been a very good showing .

Awards as follows . . . Stu-dent division Black and Whit eto Norman Pearson: Facultydivision Black and White toDr. Akulitch: Color divisiontransparencies to Dr . Wain-man .

Judges opinions on the sub -missions were often at var-iance, and their selectionswere a surprise to many peo-ple . They were very critical, asindeed they should be . Gen-erally, their conclusion wasthat the photographs showe dtechnical excellence, and pho-tographic artistry.

Amongst others, there isgroup of Mr . Ben-Hill Tout' sown technical photographs ,made while he was the officialphotographer for the univer-sity. Besides illustrating th equality of his work, theyshould serve as a measure foramateurs to compare their ow nattempts with .

S.S

Goodbye; and Why 'Not?Our old friend Charlie, the Charlie waved him away, read in this sheet is that any -

autobiographer, dropped in weeping . "Thanks a lot,"( he one who refuses to choose oneyesterday looking agitated and said, "You might as well go ." of several impossible alterna-profound, or perhaps only pro-

"Sure," said the senior . "I tives is apathetic."foundly agitated .

got to go to a committee meet-

"Well, it's the best we have, ""Well! Here 's Charlie, " we ing anyway ."

we said defensively .greeted him jovially, all fat

We sat silent for a moment

"Yes, it's better than 'Stig-and sassy and full of under- and watched him stroll across matized ' , or whatever tha tgraduate assurance.

the Brock and into one of those other sheet is called but that' s"Where?" he asked . "Oh, rooms from which come the rather like saying a garotte i s

yeah. Here," he continued, sit- sounds of gavels and of sin- better than a chain mace . "ting down. "But not for long." ister laughter .

Not leaving?"

"Charlie," we asked

We made an effort to con-"Charlie!

?'

quaver- centrate . "When you

ou first came

me"In two months," he said, ingly "are these the untouch- in," we said, "you said yo u

"and, you know, I can't get ed, or the Untouchables?"

were going out . Where are youworked up about it? The way

Charlie wept .

going?"this place is set up, you star tsaying goodbye the momen tyou enter, and every subse-quent 'mid-term is another -kiss-off . And when you get to theend, you just roll off."

"Into what?" we asked ner-vously .

Charlie spread his handsand threw back his head andcried aloud, scattering into con -fusion a pile of copy andfrightening away a nearbyLaw student who had wander-ed vaguely into our presencein search_ of orthodoxy

"Now take it easy, Charlie, "we pleaded, upset . '`Carf weget you anything?"

"No! There 's nothing to getanymore," Charlie bellowed ,springing to his feet . "Nothinghere. And nothing out there

"Out where?" . we asked .faintly, knowing full wellwhat was out there. But whowants to admit it?

'"Look," he said "for ex-

ample: there used to be a few ,not many, Beats out there .But by now, all of North Amer-ica has -dressed in black andgone to a Beat place for th eweekend; they have lookedabout them, seething with dis-traction, with thoughts ofHome—their washingmachinesfull of children, their babysit-ters full of guile—they haveseen about them their fellows ,spending the weekend thesame way, and have gon eback Home, announcing tha tthere is nothing to be foun din such places . Having bough tChablis instead of poetry, the yare no wiser "

"But we . . . ""But me no buts and we

me no we's," Charlie snorted ,growing three feet taller andtowering over us. "That's jus tthe trouble . Everybody says"we", and that's the end of it .You can attack all you' like ,but your attack is just route dthrough channels like every-thing else ."

He shrank back suddenly in -to a chair . "Trying to find a

We became evangellical . `Wesingle individual with whom must .educate our audience,"

JAllto deal," he sighed, ".is like we cried, brandishing our cig-tryipg to pluck a single cer- arette lighter in lieu of aamic tile from a wall of cer- torch .

JAllamic tiles . All you do is break

"With this rag?" he snorted ,your knuckles ."

brandishing a Ubyssey in lieu"Charlie," we

p 1 o r e d . of anything else. "All I ever

JAll`What about the hope ofYouth? "

"What about it? Wait a min-ute, I'll show you . Hey," hecalled to a nearby senior, "ste pover here a minute, will you? "

"Sure," said the senior, an dstrolled over to him noncha-lontly to lean against the doorjamb .

Charlie peered at him. "Areyou educated?" he asked atlength .

`"Sure," said the senior.Charlie winced. "Demonstra-

tion please," he said ."Sure," said the senior, and

furrowing his'brow he intoned :"Job Security, Explosion, En-lightened Democracy, Payola ,Beatnik." He slumped, gaspin gwith effort .

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Hope dawned. We , sat . up, . He stood and' stretched; healert . "But what about the looked tired . "To England ,creative minority? " we asked. maybe. Anywhere," he said.

'Hah!" Charlie said . 4 'Hah! "Like everyone else; to do theHe began to count- on 'his 'fin- same things that I do here, togers . "Actors : after four years write letters of discontent, an dof studying Classical' unities, to sneak in, under cover o fafter four years of living the darkness, into Canada Hous echaracter, they take their Ib- to read MacLeans ."sen and Chekov and Strinbergand Shaw to some West Endfurnished room and sit . Theyemerge three times a year cladin slouch hat and Mackina wto play a French-Canadianhalf-breed who gets to say`White wimmen . Zut!' beforethe first commercial, then at-tack some personable blond orother (who says . she's an act-ress but is really a quiz pan-elist at 'heart) before the sec-ond, all in order that the pri-macy of British Justice maybe demonstrated before thethird.

He counted off a second fin-ger. "Writers, they' producethe scripts that the actors play :They . . . "

"Charlie! They're not al lthat bad ."

"No," he said . "They're not .There are some good youn gpoets and critics and fictionwriters, even some of them o nthis campus . But these tend toget lost in the majority o fthose who, having made th efrightening discovery that theypossess some sort of creativ eability, immediately ally them -selves with the Establishmentso that they will only have t oexploit that ability superficial-ly . You know, one could very escape us .easily get the impression from The galley-boy finished it .most of the literature produced' He fell to his knees, and at -in our universities that the tacked the animal with hi scountry is populated souly by teeth, and their two faces cu tmenopausal mothers, English at each other in the shado winstructors, and baffled steno- of the white housing .graphers . Sure, there is somegood writing, but who is thereto read it, who is willing tofind it among that wildernessof literary conventions posingas short story collections andpoetry anthologies?"

JAll

JAll

HaleBarrie

EXCERPT FROM`JULIUS BETRAYED'The cat was brought up

from below, and passed care -fully into the daylight of themaindeck . We, stood about itas it squatted in a dirty anduntidy heap in a pool ofsticky caulking tar .

"The poor bloody animal! "said one, but we ignored him ,and stared at the creaturethat had caused such an up-heaval ;amongst us . It was ashabby, fight-torn tom, no wcowed and quiet,' but onc eking of its own dark world ,down there amongst the oak-urn-fleas and the rats .

"I don't believe it, "the -cook . "That can't be thething that caused all tha tnoise," and he loosed a kic kwith his hob-nail boots tha tsent the animal scuddin gacross the deck to fetch u pagainst a ventilator under th eafter bulkhead .

All at once we sprang at it,kicking and stamping whil ethe cat fought furiously, witha new desire for life, t o

said

PAGE SIX

THE UBYSSEY

Friday, February 19, 1960

DEL WARRE NI am very proud to second the

nomination of Del Warren fo rExecutive Member of the AMS .

Now in third year Arts, Ec-onomics and Political Science ,Del has come to UBC from theUniversity of Saskatchewan atRegina where he served tw oterms as student president .

Currently. Managing Editor ofthe Ubyssey, Del has evidence d

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to all with whom he has ha dcontact, a mature outlook and asincere desire to serve .

I urge your support for Del`Warren for Executive Member .

Brad CrawfordLaw 2

PATIENCE RYANIn the selection of a Studen t

Council member, experience i simportant, even critical . Mis sRyan's record testifies to a broadbackgro>nd of experience in theactivities of clubs and in Uni-versity Clubs Committee .

Consider the following :UCC Clubs Editor for the

Ubyssey

ROOM and BOARD is avail-able for 3 male students -$65 per month .

4606 W. 11th Ave. AL 3460Ask for Tim.

MIR HUCULAKIt is with great pride that I

second the nomination of MI RHUCULAK, first year Law, fo rPRESIDENT OF THE UNIVER-SITY CLUBS COMMITTEE. Heis eminently qualified for thisimportant office because th ecombination of a genuine warmpersonality, and years of ex-

TATEMENTSUCC Clubs Day Committee perience, make his capabilitie sUCC Mamooks nvestigatory legion .

Committee

A member of five clubs, an dUCC Secretary (1959-60)

President of two, culminate dIt is evident that Miss Ryan' his high school service record .

has contributed a considerable On campus he is now Presidentamount of time, thought, an deffort to UCC. It is my belie fthat Patience Ryan is well quali-fied to use this background o f

benefit ofon campu s

experience for theUCC and the club sin the coming year .

Rod DobellGrad Studies

in this last year as : President o fthe Lutheran Student Associa-tion; - Vice-President of thePsychology Club ; and as a U.C.C .representative, chairman of th econstitution revision committe e

of Alpha Omega, and is on the and now Vice President of th eexecutive of Clbnova .

U .C .C .Dedicated, capable, and ex-

He. stands on his record o fperienced that is my honest ap- past achievement and having anpraisal of Mir Huculak .

amiable disposition is assured o f

Seconder—

keeping the peace among UBC 'sRON HOLMES. conglomeration of clubs . Besides,

he's a friend of mine . It is withmuch confidence that I propose

JIM PAPSDORF

Jim Papsdorf as President of theJim Papsdorf, Honors Psych- U .C.C.

ology, comes originally from

—KENNETH KUHN, 3 Arts .Medicine Hat, Alberta . With, anmate ability to work hard him -self and to inspire those around 1

RUSS BRINK

him, Jim keeps an organization I take pleasure in secondingRuss Brink for co-ordinator . Russrunning efficiently while lead- iing it into new' and challenging s well acquainted with all phases

areas of activity .

of the AMS and his experienc emakes him the ideal candidate

These qualities he has shown for this office .1959-60

_-

Co-ordinator—Students' Coun-cil ;

National Affairs Vice-Presi-dent—NFCUS National Ex-ecutive ;

Chairman — Brock PlanningCommittee ;

Canadian Representative --U.S . National Students' As-sociation Congress ;

Representative — NFCUS Na-tional Seminar .

1958-5 9Western Regional President

NFCUS National' Executive;

Chairman — U B C NFCUSCommittee ;

"PRO—University Clubs Com-

mittee .

—JOHN BUTTERFIELD.

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"ridgy,' February 19,1960

THE UB.YSSEY

PAGE SEVEN

UBC THUNDERBIRDS, Mike Potkonjak (11) aims ashort jump shot at the basket as Dietrich-Collins guard Bria nUpson flies toward him. Potkonjak starred in a losing cause,scoring .20 points, as Dietrich-Collins eliminated Birds fro mB'..C . playoffs with a 98-84 win Tuesday .

—Photo by Earle Olsen .

Birds Will Qui tInter-City

By ERNIE 'HARDERUBC Thunderbirds have played their last gam e

ter-City Basketball League .According to Athletic Director R. J. "Bus" Phillips it is

certain the Thunderbirds league competition will be confine dto the WCIAU nestt season .

Mr. Phillips stated there wa sno reason why UBC shoul dcompete in the Inter - CityLeague in future years . Theywere forced by the CanadianAmateur Basketball Associationand the B .C. Association to playout a schedule in the city in or-der to qualify for Olympic trialsthis year .CABA AFFILIATIO N

UBC will put forward a mo-tion at the annual WCIAU meet-ing that the Western Conferenceaffiliate directly ' with the CA-BA. This would mean th eWCIAU league champion team

in the In-

scheduled to get underway a t2:30 p.m. Saturday.

Tt the same time UBC Braveswill take on Meralomas a tBrockton Oval, Stanley Park in-another Miller Cup Series .

FOUR WINSIncluding their match tomor-

row against Trojans, Thunder -birds have four league gamesleft . They hold first place bytwo and a half points .

Selection of the team for th eCalifornia trip will be made be-fore the weekend .

Birds will leave February 2 4for California where they willmeet the University of Califor -

Varsity Grass HockeyScores Noon Shutout

Varsity shut out UBC Golds210 in men's A Division grasshockey yesterday at noon .

Vic Warren and Gordie For-ward were goal scorers fcr Var-sity . Both goals came in the sec-ond half of the rough encounter .

Varsity's record of 10 winsand one loss leaves them in sec-ond place behind Grasshoppers

A, who have a 10 wins, one lossand one tied record .

Hockey TeamVisits Regal s

UBC's Thunderbird Ice Hock-ey squad travels to Powell RiverSaturday, where they will playan exhibition . game against thePCAHL Regals .

Dick Mitchell's boys hope tohave overcome their Monda ynight defeat at the hands of Ker -risdale Juniors .

The Juniors dumped UBC 5-3in a hotly contested battle . Bothteams displayed ragged hockey ,with excitement being limited toa general free-for-all late in the .game .

The game was finally calle doff in the third period .

Thunderbirds are - preparin gfor their annual Member Cupseries with the University ofAlberta, which is scheduled fo rKerrisdale Arena early nextmonth .

D-C's OustBirds FromB.C . Playoff

- By MIK&, HUNTER •UBC Thunderbirds were elixh-

inated Tuesday from the B .C .playoffs and the CanadianOlympic trials when they weredefeated 98-84 by Dietrich-Col--tins .

Almost 1400 fans, most ofthem pro-TJBC, watched an in-spired D-C crew pile up a hugelead in the third quarter an dhang on to twin in the highest-scoring game of the year.

DISASTROUS QUARTERIn that disastrous third quar-

ter, D-C's outscored the Birds25-12 . The Birds missed count -less easy shots, and didn't hi tthe scoreboard' in the third quar-ter until almost seven minuteshad , passed. At , the start of thefourth quarter, they were be-hind 74-56 . The Birds twice cutthe margin to 12 points, butwere unable to 'get any closer . -Again, lanky Mike Potkbnjak ,up from JV's, was the Birdsstar . Mike canned 20 points andfouling out late in the game .

REBOUNDS : Saturday night' sgame against Seattle Pacific ha sbeen cancelled because of theSeattle school's heavy schedule. . . JV's will play YMCA jun -iors at 7:30 instead . . . Bird snow have only two scheduledgames remaining, against Sas-katchewan here next ,weekend

. Birds have now played 3 3games in all, and have won 19 ,lost 14 . . . Mike Potkonjak waslucky Tuesday, it seems . he gotaway with six fouls. Apparentlywhen the fifth was called, heheaded towards the bench, butthe scorer held up a "one", s ohe stayed on . . .

would have the right to futureOlympic playoffs by challeng-ing the CABA western winners .

UBC was eliminated from fur-ther playoffs earlier this weekwhen Dietrich-Collins defeatedthem 98-84 in the third game o ftheir best of three semi-final .

Meanwhile the University ofManitoba, a poor second in theWCIAU regular schedule, wil lmeet the winner of the Winni-peg Senior A league for theright to represent Manitoba infurther playoffs with Saskatche-wan winners .

Contradictory to a CABA pol-icy se tdown in print and dis-tributed to universities through-out the country, UBC was re-cently refused its right to chal-lenge B.C. senior A championsfor the right to represent thisprovince in further Olympicplayoffs .CHALLENGE WINNERS

AMS President Pete Meekisontold a Men's Athletic Associa-tion meeting ,Wednesday thatUBC should investigate possi-bilities of challenging winner sof the B.C.-Alberta basketbal lseries in its capacity as 1960WCIAU champion, for the rightto represent western Canada inOlympic playoffs .

MAA unanimously approve da motion to this effect . It wasto go before the Men's Athleti cCommittee for further consider-ation last night . .

SPORTS

Awards Banquetlockets on Sale

Tickets for the annualAwards Night and ReunionBanquet are now on sale.

Tickets for the March 22banquet may be obtained fromany team manager .

Top flight entertainmentfrom Las Vegas will be onhand for nee occasion, wfidiis expected to draw over 40 0people .

Swim TeamHosts Meet

UBC Swimmers splash intoCrystal Pool for the last homemeet on Saturday when theymeet the top place "Cougars" ofWashington State University.

The aquatic Birds have beenimproving steadily and ' shouldshow top condition this Satur-day. Team captain Bob' Bag-shaw, who in his swimming ac-tivities. - has set , a fair . number ,of records, will lead his team'seffort in the 440 yard'frdestyle ,as well as the fifty and hundredyard relays.TRAVEL SOUTH "

After this last big home at-tempt, the Varsity swimmerstravel south of the border for

-three meets in three . days .

Hockey Schedule --A DIVISIONUBC, Blues vs West Coast Ran-

gers on UC No. 2 Field at 3p.m. Saturday . .

B IIVISIONUBC. Pedagogues vs Hawks on

U$C No. 1 or 2 Field at 1 :45p .m . Saturday .These B Division games ar e

all rescheduled games whichhave previously been postponedby unsuitable weather condi-tions .

Rugby Team TortsTro tans Saturday

UBC's Thunderbirds rugby squad plays its final game a tthe stadium this weekend before travelling to California fo r

the World Cup series next week .Trojans will visit the Birds nia and' UCLA .at UBC Stadium in a match They are scheduled to face th e

University of California Feb-ruary 25 in the first game of theWorld Cup . The same two team swill meet February 27, beforethe Birds go on to competeagainst the UCLA Bruins March1 in Los Angeles .

Bowling Club AcceptedInto Men 's Athletics

The Men's Athletic Asso-ciation has accepted the Bowl-ing Club's application formembership in the MAA.

A meeting of the MAA ap-proved the application Wed-nesday. The club, to entertwo teams in the City Senior"A" loop, also plans to com-pete in telegraphic meetswith other Canadian Univer-sities.

UBC's wave skimmers travelto Seattle Friday to compete inthe Northwestern Intercollegiate `Yacht Racing Association Cham-pionships Regatta .

UBC captured first prize inthe previous two meets and willbe looking for a repeat perform-ance .

Steve Tupper, John Coleman ,Tim Irwin and John Sanderso nare skippering the local dinghy .

The regatta Friday and Sat-urday is the third and final oneto be held this year . It takesplace at Seattle's CorinthianYacht Club on Lake Washing-ton .

Competition will be on a tea mbasis, governed by teams racingrules . 'WRESTLERS MEET

All wrestlers who have notwon any previous championshipwill get a chance on Saturday tomeet competitors of equal stand-ing .

The B .C . Novice Amateu rWrestling Championship wil lsee the following UBC mat menin action: Kamill Apt, Bill Mas-lechko, Joe Komolossy, andKeith Caspersen .

Time and place for the bi gmeet is two o'clock Saturday inthe Memorial Gym .BASEBALL

A meeting of all those interest-ed in playing baseball for UBC,will be held Tuesday at 12 :3 0in Room 216 of the Men's Gym .Athletic Connoisseur Fran kGnup wil give details .

'fween classe sPRESO.CIAL WORK SOCIETY

A new film entitled "TheProbation Officer" will beshown in Bu . 203 on Monday ,Feb. 22 . Admission, 10c . to non-Members.

* * *

CHINESE VARSITY CLU BGeneral meeting today at 12 :30

In Hut Ll . . Elections . Get outand vote !

FRONTIER COLLEGEneeds

Laborer - Teacher sSummer and/or Winte r

Interested Male Students shoul dmeet in Boom 100, the BuchananBuilding, at 12 :30, Monday Feb. 22(A 20 minute film will be shown )

Personal Interviews can b earranged at the PersonnelOffice for the same afternoon(check Notice Boards for Furthe r

Detgils)

SOCIETY OF BACTERIOLOG YPresents the film "Careers in

Bacteriology" Friday, Feb. 19 a t12:30 in Westbrook 100 . Mem-bers free, non-members 25c .

* * *

V.O .C .Get nominations up in club-

room by 5:30 today . RememberDam Downhill!

* * *L.S.A.

L .S .A. presents James Paps-dorf speaking on "Sin and the .Guilt Complex ." Monday ai12:30 in Bu. 216 .

* * *NEFMAN CLUB

Communion Breakfast thisSunday. Mass at 9 :00. Guestspeaker will be Jack Richards ,former Sports Editor and nowDrama Critic for VancouverSun .

* * *COMMONWEALTH CLUB

Remember the CommonwealthClub's program of speaker andfilm every Tuesday noon in Bu ,102 .

-

PRE MED SOCIETYFilm "Growing Up," Tuesday ,

Feb. 23 . Bio. Sci . 2000, 12 :30 .Free. Everyone welcome .

PSYCHOLOGY CLU BFilms: "Mental Defectives"

and "Search for Happiness "with commentary by Dr . Mac-Kay . Details of Oakalla fiel dtrip will be announced . Fridaynoon, HM2 .

* * *

U.N. CLUB,There will be a meeting held

at' 8 :00 p .m . Sunday the 21st at2069 Pendrell St . Ride, phoneRE 1-4287 .

* * *S.A.M .

A meeting and film will b eheld Monday, Feb. 22 in Bu .105. The film is entitled "TheAssembly Line Worker . "

* * *SOUTHERN BAPTISTSTUDENT UNION

Hear: Rev. G . O. Skaar . "Deityof Christ, " Friday noon in Bu.227 . -Everyone welcome .

University Hill United.Church

Worshipping in Union Colteg e. Chape l

5990 Chancellor Blvd.Minister — Rev W. Buckingham

Services 11 :00 a .m . Sunday

L.S.A.

L.S .A. will be having it smonthly fireside this Sunday a t3 :00. Topic is "Jazz and theFaith." Anyone interested cal lGarry Retzleff at AL 1020-Y .

* * *PHYSICS. SOCIETY

Dr. D. K . C. MacDonald, o fthe Division of Pure Physics—N.R.C . will speak on Tuesday,Feb. 23 at 12:30 in P 200 . A filmwill be shown . All welcome .

* * *

JAll SOCIET YPete Jolly, world-famous jazz

pianist, noon today, BrockLounge, 25c, members free .

* * *CARIBBEAN STUDENTSASSN.

A general meeting of the As-sociation has been called forThursday, Feb . 25 to revise theconstitution .

* * *

PHILOSOPHY CLUBDr. Rowan presents his pape r

on "Advocacy" tonight at 8 :0 0p.m. The meeting takes place atTony Sharman's, 3321 West 27 .

* * *-MEDICAL UNDERGRADUATESOCIETY

Nurses-Medical skating part yat north Forum on Saturday,Feb. 20 at 9:30 p .m. Admission50c . Skates can be rented at theForum .

EUROPESTUDENTTRAVE L

Individual trans - Atlanticand European travel --Conducted tours in cent-ral and eastern Europ eincluding the Sovie tUnion — Student hostelsand restaurants -- Sum-mer . schools and. workcamps

Internationa lstudent identity card.

NFCUS TRAVELDEPARTMENT,

FOR INFORMATION '375 Rideau - Ottawa

Friday, February 19, 1960

VCF, SCM, LSA, BAPTIS TUnited Worship Service toda y

at noon in Bu. 106. Studentsfrom each sponsoring group per-ticipating .

BIOLOGY CLU B"The Mackenzie Delta and It s

Reindeer Herd," an illustratedtalk by Mr. Charles Krebs ,Ph.D, student in Zoology. Fri-day, Feb . 19 at 12 :30 in Biologi-cal Sciences 2321 .

* * *

A.S.U.S.All those interested in singin g

in the inter-faculty songfestchoir for the Arts faculty, pleasemeet in Bu 104, at noon today .

* * *_

ARCHAEOLOGY CLU BDr. Borden will give an illus-

trated talk on the Marpole Sets .This meeting is to be held inArts 104 rather than Room 102 .

CLASSIFIEDWANTED — Oriental student

for light household duties in ex-change for accommodation nearUniversity Gates . Contact CY.9-5103 .

FOR SALE—Men's ski boots ,size 10—for $7.00 . Phone Gerryc/o RE 8-5719 .

LOST — Beige leather walletand brown plastic folder con-taining personal effects, driver' slicence, birth certificate, etc .Finder please return to Mrs. G.Chan, c/o Rm. 2208, Biologica lSciences Bldg .

ALCOHOLICS -- Attention—Wanted: 11 thirsty people inter-ested in purchasing a case —Object vodka . Phone RE 3-9776 .

LOST — Silver lighter, en-graved ".G. W." Please phoneGary at HE 4-5477 . Reward . ,

WANTED TO BUY—1950-195 1Morris Minor or Austin . Must bein excellent condition — Cash .Phone Larry at AL 4662-IL .

PAGE EIGHT

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