no. 19 second 'trek' begins - ubc library home · indians in council and buy their see...

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Second 'Trek' Begin s 1922 To Be Repeated I n Student Drive For Fund s UBC's "Second Great Trek " got underway Monday night, when Students ' Counci l voted to present a student brief to the Provincial Government requesting increased financia l aid to the University . Volume XXXIX VANCOUVER, B.C ., TUESDAY, NOVEMBER6, 1956 No . 1 9 The- Lan d By VAL HAIG-BROWN Details of the proposed camp- Indians aign for funds have not yet bee n I worked out, but AMS Co- ordin- ator Ben Trevino said Monday ! i the campaign would concentrate ' Still Ovin on (1 thre e A ) ma i letter n - appeals . wrflinq campaign rtween classe s by out-of-town students, appeal- ing to relatives and friends bac k home for their support of stu - dents' drive for Provincial aid . Jazzsoc Discusse s (2) A student delegation to 1 Victoria, armed with a compre- ~ h hensive, student-prepared brie f stating the needs of the Univer- sity, especially in relation to spe- 1 cific student needs . (3) A petition, similar to th e one circulated in 1922 on the oc- casion of the first Great Trek . The first 'Great Trek" oc culled in 1922, when U1 ;C stu - Deadline for 'Tween Classe s is 1 .30 p.m . on day prior t o publication . e Swing Era " Grace Maclnni s Featured By CC F AN ENVIABLE TASK awarded to the "Great Trekker " i s that of crowning Jo Mary Bell, Homecoming Queen . J o Td : .ry was chosen fairest of the fair at the gigantic ball tha t el :masted the "Pagan Rites'' of UBC . ost Goes DAVID FULTO N The TOTEM staff will hol d a general meeting Thursda y !or all staff members : Senio r Editors, Section Editors, an d workers, and Faculties Sectio n editors . The main topics unde r (1 cusion will be sorting o f Lode rgrad pies, Loy-outs . Ev - rvone out please . Thursday . 12 :30, Board Rocm of N .E . Frock . In a speech before an audienc e of a hundred in Physic's 20 1 Monday noon, Paull stated tha t the land of British Columbia had, dents sparked a downtown par- i never been bought frc . .m the In-! ade and a monster petition , dians . which induced the Provincia l "It has always been the policy ' Government to effect the long - of the British to meet with the' (Continued on Page 3 ) Indians in council and buy their See SECOND 'TREK' BEGIN S land . This was never done in j British Columbia," said Paull . M .P . Fulto n Kicks Of f Campaig n MP Davie Fulton will "Kic k off" his campaign for the Tor y leadershi p President of NFCUS at the Mon-' . need more grazing land, freer in Arts 100 . s!c l Pipe-line Debate . treal Conference last month . hunting and fishing rights and Mr . Fulton, Member for Kam - In his application, Heron, restocking of fur animals to al-' loops, is a contender for the Con - Totemites Gather The stated he would throw local low trapping ., servative leadership left by re - NFCUS influence behind an ap- tiring leader, George Drew . Clan for A Meeting peal for increased University aid NO ANSWER 1\Ir . Fulton, a late starter i n from the Provincial Government . ! Paull feels that enfranchise- 1 the race is opposed by Saskat - He also promised a stepped-up ment is not the answer to the' chewan M .P . John Diefenbake r NFCUS scholarship program . : Indian problem because his pee-' and Member for Toronto-Eglin - The NFCUS inter-regional sc ;-,ol-1 plc wish to retain the it calture . ton Donald Fleming , arship, in existence for years, ' and because enfranchised lr .di- Dr . Sidney Smith, Presiden t has not been fully utilized in ans hove no place in Indian or of the University of Toronto has . 'recent years, he said . white society . !also been mentioned by man y In addition, Heron stated he In conclusion, Pool] said,' observers as a possible candidate ' s "Human rights are the granc,est for the Conservative leadershi p thing we can enjoy one if (-very Dr . Smith, however, has made ! would strive to make the aim s and activities of NFC't'S bette r known to students, and to the! one respected these rights this no public statements regardin g people cf B .0 i ould be a better world . ' his intentions . i Andy Paull, president of th e North American Indian Brother - hood, says, "The Indians of Bri- tish Columbia still own the lan d of the entire province . " TODA Y JAllSOC p r e s e n t s Gerr y Hodge speaking on "The Swin g Era" at noon in the Brock Stag e room . FORESTRY CLUB present s Mr . Monte Newnham who wil l give an illustrated lecture o n "Silviculture Aspects of Euro- pean Forestry, " at noon in F G 100 . SOCIAL CREDIT club wil l hold general meeting at noon A 208 . A e . FILMSOC presents "Olive r Twist " this evening, and noo n today "The Battle of Russia " will be shown . DR . COTTON MATHER wil l discuss "Erosion of Land an d People in the American South " in Physics 200 at noon today . NEWMAN CLUB a specia l meeting for all males at 12 :3 0 in the Club house , Ni PARLIAMENTARY . FORU M general meeting will be in A 106 at noon . Ae i LUTHERAN STUDENTS' AS - SOC . meeting to be in HL 2 noo n today . S .C .M . Social problems in Pay . Hut room 2, 12 :30 . Dr . Blac k will discuss "Alcoholism . " VISUAL ARTS CLUB 4 B .C . artists will discuss their ow n work in the Art Gallery at 12 :3 0 today . •Yi PARLIAMENTARY FORU M Debating and public speakin g will meet Wednesday night a t 7 :30 as usual . (Continued on Page 5 ) See 'TWEEN CLASSE S EXPLOITATIO N Paull traced the history of th e exploitation of Indian land b y the British and Canadians and ' described the Indian attempts t o obtain justice in the matter . Originally the Indians wer e to be given one third of the rev - , enue from the sale of the land i n B .C . The first session of th e Legislature after Confederatio n The C .C .F . Club is sponsoring Grace Maclnnis Wednes- completely ignored this agree - day in F & G 100, speaking in competition with Conservative ment . --- ,----re -- Petitions were presented by , Davie Fulton, also on campus . --- s 1 the Indians to the Privy Counci l The C .C wil l s "Winnipeg De 1 ~o NFCU and the Parliament of Canada . l claratinn " will be the subject , In 1926 a Parliamentary Corn - cf interest to students, It is thei r r .ow policy of combining public , private and cooperative enter - prise into our economy . Mrs . 1?acInnis is the winner of ', hero n the 1954 Governor - General ' s ' i award for the biography of her Fourth Year Arts student mission stated that the Indian s had no claim, but allowed an a n nuity of $100,000 .00 . "This annuity has been re- ceived, " said Paull, "but the In- dians are not told how or wher e it is spent and they have no con- iathcr . L . J . S . Woodsworth, the Peter Heron was appointed trot over it . " founder of the C .C .F . Party . Her ! chairman of the local UBC Com- husband is Angus Maclnnis, re- 1 mittee of the National Federa e tiring M . P . for Vancouver- tion of Canadian University Stu- , Kingsway, she was for many dents by Students ' Council o n years an M .L .A . herself . tennial, in view of these facts, t o Monday night . "a successful bank robbers' cele - Mr . Maclnnis is one Of the Heron will succeed Law stu bratio n M .P .'s sitting longest in Ottawa . being joined by the ban k dent Stan Beck, who was forced manager . " He spoke recently on campus to resign the local post when he ask- about the Parliamentary proced- Paull said, "We are only ask - was elected Western Regional' ing for a chance to live . W e ores used during the controver- Wednesday at 12 .3 0 B .C . CENTENNIAL Paull compared Indian parti- cipation in the 1958 B .C . Cen - BIG REPERCUSSION S ABOUT TO REPERCUS S Defenestration will be th e cruel fate to befall all Edito- rial Board members who mis s today's meeting in the Doubl e Committee in Brock, at noon . Defenestration comes fro m the Latin paxualoatum whic h means boola, boola .

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Second 'Trek' Begin s1922 To Be Repeated I nStudent Drive For Fund s

UBC's "Second Great Trek" got underway Monday night, when Students ' Counci l

voted to present a student brief to the Provincial Government requesting increased financia l

aid to the University .

Volume XXXIX VANCOUVER, B.C., TUESDAY, NOVEMBER6, 1956

No. 19

The- LandBy VAL HAIG-BROWN

Details of the proposed camp-

Indians

aign for funds have not yet bee nI worked out, but AMS Co- ordin-ator Ben Trevino said Monday !

i the campaign would concentrate '

Still Ovin on(1three

A)

mailetter

n-

appeals .wrflinq campaign rtween

classes

by out-of-town students, appeal-ing to relatives and friends bac khome for their support of stu -dents' drive for Provincial aid . Jazzsoc Discusse s

(2) A student delegation to 1Victoria, armed with a compre-

~hhensive, student-prepared briefstating the needs of the Univer-sity, especially in relation to spe- 1

cific student needs .(3) A petition, similar to the

one circulated in 1922 on the oc-casion of the first Great Trek .

The first 'Great Trek" oc •culled in 1922, when U1;C stu -

Deadline for 'Tween Classesis 1.30 p.m. on day prior to

publication .

e Swing Era"

Grace MaclnnisFeatured By CC F

AN ENVIABLE TASK awarded to the "Great Trekker " is

that of crowning Jo Mary Bell, Homecoming Queen . Jo

Td : .ry was chosen fairest of the fair at the gigantic ball tha t

el :masted the "Pagan Rites'' of UBC .

ost GoesDAVID FULTO N

The TOTEM staff will hol da general meeting Thursda y!or all staff members : Senio rEditors, Section Editors, an dworkers, and Faculties Sectioneditors . The main topics under(1 cusion will be sorting o fLode rgrad pies, Loy-outs . Ev-rvone out please . Thursday .

12 :30, Board Rocm of N .E .Frock .

In a speech before an audienc eof a hundred in Physic's 20 1Monday noon, Paull stated tha tthe land of British Columbia had, dents sparked a downtown par-

i never been bought frc..m the In-! ade and a monster petition ,dians .

which induced the Provincia l"It has always been the policy ' Government to effect the long -

of the British to meet with the'

(Continued on Page 3 )Indians in council and buy their See SECOND 'TREK' BEGIN Sland . This was never done in

j British Columbia," said Paull.

M.P. FultonKicks OffCampaig n

MP Davie Fulton will "Kickoff" his campaign for the Tor yleadership

President of NFCUS at the Mon-'. need more grazing land, freer in Arts 100 .s!c l Pipe-line Debate .

treal Conference last month . hunting and fishing rights and

Mr . Fulton, Member for Kam -In his application, Heron, restocking of fur animals to al-' loops, is a contender for the Con -

Totemites Gather The stated he would throw local low trapping .,

servative leadership left by re -NFCUS influence behind an ap-

tiring leader, George Drew .Clan for A Meeting peal for increased University aid NO ANSWER

1\Ir . Fulton, a late starter infrom the Provincial Government . !

Paull feels that enfranchise- 1 the race is opposed by Saskat-He also promised a stepped-up ment is not the answer to the' chewan M.P. John Diefenbake r

NFCUS scholarship program . : Indian problem because his pee-' and Member for Toronto-Eglin -The NFCUS inter-regional sc ;-,ol-1 plc wish to retain the it calture . ton Donald Fleming ,arship, in existence for years, ' and because enfranchised lr.di-

Dr . Sidney Smith, Presiden thas not been fully utilized in ans hove no place in Indian or of the University of Toronto has .

'recent years, he said .

white society .

!also been mentioned by manyIn addition, Heron stated he In conclusion, Pool] said,' observers as a possible candidate 's

"Human rights are the granc,est for the Conservative leadershi pthing we can enjoy one if (-very Dr . Smith, however, has made !

would strive to make the aim sand activities of NFC't'S bette rknown to students, and to the! one respected these rights this no public statements regardin gpeople cf B .0

i ould be a better world . '

his intentions .

i

Andy Paull, president of theNorth American Indian Brother -hood, says, "The Indians of Bri-tish Columbia still own the lan dof the entire province . "

TODAY

JAllSOC p r e s e n t s GerryHodge speaking on "The Swin gEra" at noon in the Brock Stag eroom .

FORESTRY CLUB present sMr . Monte Newnham who wil lgive an illustrated lecture o n"Silviculture Aspects of Euro-pean Forestry, " at noon in F G100 .

SOCIAL CREDIT club wil lhold general meeting at noon A208 .

Ae.FILMSOC presents "Oliver

Twist " this evening, and noo ntoday "The Battle of Russia "will be shown .

DR. COTTON MATHER wil ldiscuss "Erosion of Land andPeople in the American South"in Physics 200 at noon today .

NEWMAN CLUB a specia lmeeting for all males at 12 :30in the Club house ,

NiPARLIAMENTARY . FORU M

general meeting will be in A106 at noon .

AeiLUTHERAN STUDENTS' AS -

SOC . meeting to be in HL 2 noo ntoday .

S.C.M . Social problems in Pay .Hut room 2, 12 :30 . Dr. Blackwill discuss "Alcoholism . "

VISUAL ARTS CLUB 4 B .C .artists will discuss their ow nwork in the Art Gallery at 12 :3 0today .

•YiPARLIAMENTARY FORU M

Debating and public speakingwill meet Wednesday night a t7 :30 as usual .

(Continued on Page 5 )See 'TWEEN CLASSE S

EXPLOITATIO NPaull traced the history of th e

exploitation of Indian land bythe British and Canadians and 'described the Indian attempts toobtain justice in the matter .

Originally the Indians wer eto be given one third of the rev -

, enue from the sale of the land i nB.C . The first session of theLegislature after Confederation

The C .C .F. Club is sponsoring Grace Maclnnis Wednes- completely ignored this agree -day in F & G 100, speaking in competition with Conservative ment .

--- ,----re

--

Petitions were presented by ,Davie Fulton, also on campus . --- s 1 the Indians to the Privy Counci l

The C .C wills "Winnipeg De 1 ~o

NFCU

and the Parliament of Canada . l

claratinn" will be the subject

, In 1926 a Parliamentary Corn -cf interest to students, It is theirr .ow policy of combining public ,private and cooperative enter -prise into our economy .

Mrs . 1?acInnis is the winner of ',

heronthe 1954 Governor - General ' s 'i

award for the biography of her

Fourth Year Arts student

mission stated that the Indian shad no claim, but allowed an a nnuity of $100,000 .00 .

"This annuity has been re-ceived," said Paull, "but the In-dians are not told how or wher eit is spent and they have no con-

iathcr . L. J . S. Woodsworth, the Peter Heron was appointed trot over it . "founder of the C .C.F . Party . Her ! chairman of the local UBC Com-husband is Angus Maclnnis, re- 1 mittee of the National Federa etiring M . P . for Vancouver- tion of Canadian University Stu- ,Kingsway, she was for many dents by Students ' Council onyears an M .L .A. herself .

tennial, in view of these facts, t oMonday night .

"a successful bank robbers' cele-Mr . Maclnnis is one Of the

Heron will succeed Law stu brationM .P .'s sitting longest in Ottawa .

being joined by the bankdent Stan Beck, who was forced manager . "

He spoke recently on campus to resign the local post when he ask-about the Parliamentary proced-

Paull said, "We are only ask-was elected Western Regional' ing for a chance to live . We

ores used during the controver-

Wednesday at 12 .30

B.C. CENTENNIALPaull compared Indian parti-

cipation in the 1958 B .C . Cen-

BIG REPERCUSSIONS

ABOUT TO REPERCUSSDefenestration will be th e

cruel fate to befall all Edito-rial Board members who mis stoday's meeting in the Doubl eCommittee in Brock, at noon .

Defenestration comes fro mthe Latin paxualoatum whic hmeans boola, boola .

THE UBYSSEYTuesday, November 6, 1956. 2 Southern Semina r

TIiS UaYsszYAuthorized as second class mail, Post Office Department ,

Ottawa.MEMBER CANADIAN UNIVERSITY PRES S

Student subscriptions $1 .20 per year (Included in AMS fees) . MailSubscriptions $2 .00 per year. Single copies five cents. Publishedin Vancouver throughout the University year by the StudentPublications Board of the Alma Mater Society, University ofBritish Columbia . Editorial opinions expressed herein are thos eof the editorial staff of the Ubyssey, and not necessarily those o fthe Alma Mater Society or the University . Letters to the Edito rshould not be more than 150 words . The Ubyssey reserves the righ tto cut letters, and cannot guarantee publication of all lettersreceived .EDITOR IN CHIEF SANDY ROS SManaging Editor

Pat Russell City Editor _ _ Jerry BrownBusiness Manager_ _ Harry Yuill Sports Editor, Dwayne Erickso nCUP Editor Carol Gregory Feature Editor, R . Kent-Barbe rPhoto Editor _ _ _ _ Dave Wilder File Editor Sue Ross

SENIOR EDITOR THIS ISSUE OLIE WUR M

Reporters and Desk : Barry Hale, Marilyn Smith, Dave Rob-ertson, Hank Hawthorn, Mike Raynor, Murray Ritchie, Art Jack -son. SPORTS : Bruce Allardyce, Ken Wiebe, Lynn Clarke, RalphCroizier .

Wait A MinuteThe swift and troubled current of events in Eastern Eur-

ope and the Middle East over the past two weeks present s

a chequered picture . On one plane, nothing certain can be

discerned. The picture changes almost hourly, and we ca nfairly draw no lasting conclusions from it until the situatio n

achieves some measure of equilibrium. On this plane, wemust suspend judgment, and hope to God our leaders kno wwhat they are doing .

This necessity for reservation of judgment is rendere despecially important, because the issues at stake happen t obe especially susceptible to extreme and unwise partisan -

ship. It is tragically easy, for instance, to denounce Britain's

intervention in the Middle East as a misbegotten recurrence

of reactionary gunboat imperialism . But whatever superfi-cial appearances may indicate, history may yet vindicate

Mr. Eden and Mr. Mollet as men of swift and courageous ac-tion, who did the supremely proper thing at the decisively

important instant .

On the other hand, it is all too easy to condemn Presi-dent Eisenhower 's decision to side against Britain as an act

of gross political expediency. Voters are not fond of sending

their sons and husbands to small and faraway wars, and the

President, we are sure, is well aware of this. But again, it

may be that the U .S . action was dictated less from motives of

political cunning than from a deeply sincere passion for

peace. But whatever interpretation is correct, it is —again—

too early for us to tell . Our duty in this matter is clear . We

must reserve judgment for the present, and do all in ou r

power to minimize the agonizing strains that now wrac k

the Western Alliance . On this first plane, our only course

of action is really no course at all : we must wait and see .

`+t But on another, more basic level, our course of action

is clear. For never in our short lifetimes have the battle line s

between decency and evil, between freedom and tyrann y

been so plainly drawn. Never has our opportunity been great-er, nor the need more desperate, for decisive, courageou s

action. The savage suppression of Hungary 's yearnings for

freedom has revealed the naked face of Soviet imperialis m

in its true and shameful colours . And those of us who might

have liked to believe that Russian policy has really change d

since the advent of "peaceful co-existence" had better revis e

our opinions in a hurry .

Not merely as students or Canadians, but as presum-

ably decent human beings, we must realize the true issue s

of the cold war: not capitalism versus communism, but free-

dom versus tyranny. Communism, for all we know, may be

a better economic system than our own ; we don't know,

and we don't fear communism . But we do fear and hate th e

custodians of that system, who have extended their swa yover one third of the world's peoples by just such method s

as we have dramatically seen applied in Hungary over th e

weekend . The face Russia has recently tried to presen t

to the outside world might well be symbolized by Premie r

Bulganin, smiling at the world over a glass of vodka . We can

suggest a more accurate symbol, however ; the picture of a n

ugly, snub-nosed Russian tank, crushing the courageou s

resistance of unarmed . freedom-loving people . In the con s ex t

of this struggle, our allegiance and convictions should b e

clear . Our minds and hearts should go with the Hungarians ,

and if necessary-, our blood—if only in bottles .

By KASTARI CHOPREAs a member of an interna-

tional seminar organized by theAmerican Friends Service Com-mittee, and held at Davidso nCollege, North Carolina fromJune 22 to July 21, 1956, i tgives me great pleasure t orecollect the memories of th eeventful month of the seminar .Leaving aside most of the in -valuable experiences of theseminar, as well as a tri pthrough the Southern U.S., Ishall concentrate on the mai nfeatures of the seminar .

The Seminar, as mentionedalready, was held on the -cam -pus of Davidson College, nearCharlotte, North Carolina . Thebeautiful campus, shaded b yelms, maples and century-ol doaks, had an atmosphere of in -formality and calmness . Thegenerosity of the College, in-terest of students and faculty ,academic traditions of the col-lege, its position in a crucial"border" state with regard t othe segregation issue — an dhence an opportunity for thecombination of a study pro -gram with work projects wit hboth the white and negro com-munities — were some of th emain reasons for the choice ofthis location .

There were 22 seminar par-ticipants representing ten coun-tries — Japan, Korea, Norway ,England, Jamaica, Canada, Ni-geria, Phillipines, India, andof course, the United States .

In addition, for the guidanc eof the seminar, there wereseven faculty members wh ovisited consecutively durin gthe four-week period .

The participants were mostl ygraduate students specializin gin different fields, and so ha dan extensive theoretical know-ledge of different aspects ofhuman affairs .

They were selected from farand near parts of the USA.

A foreign studentfrom India, Kastar iChopre attendeda month-longSeminar in Nort hCarolina last Summer .In this article, h etells how, despitethe 'Krew Kut Klan,'the seminar groupmanaged to give asmall Southern townsomething new tothink about. Thisis the first of twoarticles.

Thus, the intimate fellowshi pof students from many landsoffered a valuable means o fplacing their American experi-ences in a broader internatio-nal perspective .

In brief, one could say tha tthe participants represented across-section of human aspira-tions from all parts of theworld . As for the faculty, i twas represented by some well -known authorities in differen taspects of world problems .

Their names and the topic sthey discussed will be mention-ed in the second article .

The purpose of the seminarwas to consider in an informa land searching way, the prob-lems pertinent to the presen tinternational situation, and toevaluate the possibilities fortheir peaceful accomodationand solution . Therefore, thetheme of the Seminar was "In-ternational Tensions and Peace-ful Change . "

The study program of theseminar was supplemented withthree work projects in t h e

Ignorance ands or non-under-standing cannot carry with i ta license to defile and deface .Would we burn Joyce 's "Ulys-ses" because we cannot under -stand his "stream of conscious-nes," destroy the buildings o fFrank Lloyd Wright ?STUPID DOL T

To the dolt who so stupidlydemonstrated his intoleranc eand lack of understanding o fabstract art by defacing a wor kof art, it would require only ashort leap of the imaginatio nto tar and feather a devotee o fa religion or philosophy tha the could not understand, or amember of a country he couldnot tolerate .

We are not suggesting tha the \ ; II 1(1 actually do thes ethings, ' . e are merely pointin gout that 11 ese inferences can b elogically drawn by what wa sprobably intended to be nomore then e foolish, thought -less rera n

Neverl! !e : ;, these are th esubtle bli terrifying implica-flol'.s conl,l'led ill the asinineact consunun .Ited by SUMO st uMen enuing us .

Think atl'?ut it, and keep_ o nshreaging it off if Vul.l can!

-

community . Three afternoon sa week, we helped in the con -construction of a hut for the lo -cal white Boy Scout group ,and repairs and program a tthe local negro communitycentre . The Seminar held "OpenHouse" once a week for inter-ested members of both whit eand Negro communities, a twhich time we tried to inter-pret the nature and purposesof our discussions .

Alhough. these panel discus-sions on "Open House" and als oon TV proved very fruitful i nimproving our relations an dunderstanding with the com-munity, yet "black sheep" ofthe community continued i ntheir efforts to embarras us .Among a number of embar-

rassments (those which had wid ecirculation in press and radio)was the burning of "the cross "—a shameful device of the un-lawful Ku Klux Klan (KrewKut Klan, as I called them) .to warn people against non -Christian practises — desegre-gation and integration .

We were welcomed . on thefirst day of the Seminar atnight by a tiny cross-burningceremony by some fanatic stu-dents on the Campus . Luckily ,we didn't see it, and so, at leas tI did not care at all, presum-ably because of my ignoranceof the significance of the cross-burning . However, in the las tweek of the Seminar, lookingthrough my window, I saw abig cross across the street se tablaze at one a .m. It horrifie dme . In spite of all such inci-dents and episodes, we wereall convinced that our Semina rhad accomplished something ,not only in discussion amongourselves, but also in givingsomething to a southern com-munity to think over .

(Mr. Chopre's second articlewill be printed in a later issu eof the Ubyssey .

LETTERSEditor, The Ubyssey ,Dear Sir :

It may be necessary to invad ea country — just as it may benecessary to hang a man o rbreak into a house. But w eshould take good care not t omake the invader the judge o fthe invasion — just as we tak egood care not to make thehangman and the housebreake rthe judges of their actions .

Otherwise, how could er ehave this more and more scarc ecommodity called independ-ence, or this obvious thing : thesafety of our necks and homes ?

I am afraid that there is to omuch affinity between Canad aand England for Canadians t obe in the position to be the;judges and do the whitewash-ing . Wouldn't it be more fairto select the jury from the coun -tries outside the British Corn-monwealth ?

And what do they say abou tthe action of England, Franc eand Israel ?

May I point out, Sir, that i fwe attempt to justify the actio nof the trio in Egypt, we s`toulcldo '>ur utmost to justify Ilitloet'' sattack on Poland in 1t)39 Afte rall, dicin't the Poles ' preveke "him to d

lli.at :'Yours truly ,BILL SIR; KA ,I La w

Sculpture Vandals :A Dangerous Sig n

By BEN TREVINO

moods and his thoughts .Our first reaction to the van-

dalism perpetrated on the sta-tue "Three Forms" was t owrite an open letter invitin gthe incredibly stupid individua lresponsible for the painting o fthe statue to absent himsel ffrom this University, since h ewas obviously too "far gone "for this institution to do hi many good at all .

On second thought, however ,we suggest to the person or per -sons who desecrated a work o fart that the first thing he mus tlearn at this University is atolerance for the works an dopinions of others .THREE FORM S

We do not pretend to under -stand what "Three Forms" ha sto say . We do not even pre -tend to know by what criteri ait won the acclamation o f

Messrs . Sir Herbert Read an dAlexander Archipenko .

We do know that these menare internationally respecte dleaders in the field of Art, an dthat they are doing what the ycan to instill in the public abetter knowledge of the scope

of art-forms and techniques b ywhich a man can report an d

represent to other men hi s

Burning CrossesAnd Crucial Ideas

SECOND 'TREK' BEGINS(Continued from Page 1 )

overdue transfer or the universi-ty campus to Point Grey, from itsobsolete site in the Little Moun-tain area .

Trevino emphasized Monda ythe student appeal would notbe speciically limited to studen tlousing. "We will work withthe Administration to secure ablanket grant from Victoria," hesaid . "We'll be satisfied to leav ethe decision of where the moneyis to he allocated to the Boar dof Governors," he said .

However, UBC President Nor-man A, M . MacKenzie has indi-cated that if a grant were se -cured through student efforts ,these cforts would be amply re- 1warded by an Administratio ngrant to student housing .

Trevino said the student dele-gation to Victoria would prob-ably ask for $14,000,000 . If thisdemand coui ;i not be secured,the delegation will press for im-mediate receipt of the $10,00 0000 P:;ovincial grant made i n1954 .

The $10,000,000 grant wa shave been awarded at the rat eof $1,000,000 per year for tenyears, but President MacKen-zie has stated he would prefe rto have the grant in a lump sumif possible .

Trevino

OBJECT D 'ART or symbol of ignorance? The controversia l"Three Figures" showing what it is commonly used for onthe campus . Those blissfully biggoted boobs who "decorat-ed" it on Hallowe'en exhibit not their smartness but'. theirtotal ignorance of eommon decency .

UBC Hailed As AnExemplary Bleeder

-THERE STILL IS A CHANCE,YOU BUDDING JOURNALISTS

The Ubyssey has a few openings for new reporters .Course language, beer drinking has stopped, The Ubys-sey has become a model, quiet, sober, paper—a joy t owork for .

Drop down to the quiet sober clean office on Fridayand have a talk with quiet sober clean-living staffers .Only a limited number of openings left . Act now .

in Canada .

has already spoken

THE UBYSSEYTuesday, November 6, 1956.

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MIL DBURLE YTOBACCO

at its best . . .

at Fort Camp Council meetings ,to 1 and has secured the support o f

80 students, who are willingto collect petition signatures ove rthe Christmas holidays .

An organizational meeting o fthe `Second Great Trek" com-mittee is slated for Wednesda ynoon in Arts 103, Trevino said .

SowardHas NoRemarks

UBC's Dr. F. H. Soward, re-cently appointed to the Canadiandelegation to the United Nations ,would not commit himself o nthe current crisis in the MiddleEast, when interviewed Monday .

Dr. Soward, Associate Deanof Graduate Studies, stated hehad not been in contact with theCanadian party since the callin gof the extraordinary session ofthe U.N. last week. For thisreason he was unable to expres sthe views of the Canadian gov-ernment at this time .

He will be one of the fiv ealternate representatives on th edelegation when the General As-sembly convenes on Novembe r12. Dr. Soward will leave Van-couver on Thursday, November8, and will travel direct to th eBeekman Towers in New York ,headquarters of the Canadia ndelegation .

Dr. Soward stated, "I feel veryhonored to be appointed as oneof the alternate representativeson the delegation ." He will beone of the five alternate mem-bers serving on the Canadia ndelegation of ten at the U.N .GENERAL SADNES S

He remarked that "I share th egeneral sadness at the brief mo-ment of freedom in Hungary be-ing so ruthlessly extinguished, "

coming U .N . assembly wouldM. have to deal further with th e

cur rent situation in that country .The Canadian delegation i s

headed by the Hon . L. B . Pear -son and has five permanen tmembers including the Secre-tary of State, Mr . Pinard. Thecoming General Assembly has66 items ' on its agenda whic hwill be studied in committee b ydifferent countries .

Dr . Soward's appointment wasannounced about two weeks agoby the Foreign Affairs Depart-ment . He will be in New Yorkuntil the end of the general as-sembly which should finish som etime in mid-February .

He will be in consultationwith the Canadian members up-on his arrival to be brought u pto date on the current situation .His official work for the delega-tion will be announced at a laterdate .

UBC has been hailed as an exemplary University by W. A .Freeman, blood donor panel organizer, Vancouver branch, and stated that he felt that th e

Norman A .Canadian Red Cross Society in a letter to Dr .

MacKenzie, UBC President .Mr . Freeman said the student blood donation of 1,71 4

pints "one that cannot be equalled by any other Universit y

He said the blood drives bythe students set "an excellent ex -ample of public spirit to theolder generations and provide u swith an invaluable way of bring-ing home, to our future civic an dbusiness leaders the value t othe public health of our fello wcitizens of a free Blood Trans -fusion Service ."

Nearly 2,000 staff and studentscarne voluntarily to the Armour-ies during Blood Drive week inOctober to be relieved of a pint .

Blood collected during th edrive is donated in the form o fblood transfusions in various hos-pitals throughout British Colum-bit .

The total amount collectedin the recent drive was 442pints less than collected in theSpring Drive, but the total of th eSpring and Fall drives came t o133 pints over the totals of 1955 .

Since the first drives of 1947 ,totals have climbed from 2,125to 28,352 in the combined Sprin gand Fall blood-letting seasons .

MisparkersCounselledTo Beware

Misbehaving people who hav eor are about to receive parkin gtickets are advised to take du enotice :

1. Parking tickets should bepaid within seven days of receiptof same .

2. Appeals may be made t othe Supt. of Buildings Monday sand Tuesdays, 9 .00 a .m . to 12 .00noon .

3. Unpaid fines are entered o nthe student's account and treatedas any other debt to the Univer-sity .

4. Students may park in area sdesignated for students . Un-marked areas are not parkin gareas .

5. To date only six student shave successfully appealed thei r

1 cases, but over six hundred tic-kets have been issued .

6. There is ample studentparking spaces near Biologica lSciences and Wesbrook .

"Coke" Ise registered hidae+erk . G6t COCA-COLA LTD:

Most CopsAren't UBCGraduates

By BARRIE HALE"What 's the parade for?" asked the truckdriver ."Goddamned if I know," answered the cop .But nobody on the floats seemed to notice the publi c

apathy, for they were on the mainline of college nostaglia, an d

as F . Scott Fitzgerald can tell you, there is no more euphori cstimulant this side of benzedrine.

UBC's Homecoming weekendgot off to a pulsing start last ' strumming student body movedFriday noon, with the Pep Meet' to the Memorial Gymnasium toappearance of the Don Strachen witness a gay, pagan basketbal lDancers, whose style may be game, which was won either bydescribed as half anthropology, the Alums or the 'Birds, I forge thalf strip-joint .

which .

In the interests of good taste ,we shall forego discussion of theFaculty-Council half time acti-vity. Fun is fun, but funny -looking, pink, hairy legs arefunny-looking, pink, hairy legs .

Following the gay, pagan par-ade on Saturday, was a gay ,pagan football game, which wa srah rah won by rah rah UBC' srah rah Gnupmen .(For furthergame highlights, see the sport s

Tom Tothill Billiards, at Dun-I page, where irrascible old Dwa-bar and Broadway. The finest yne Erickson will tell you al lof equipment .

about it) .

Then there was the gay, paga nHomecoming Ball on Saturday 'night in the Armouries, but my ;'notes on that are somewhat jblurred. I am told, however, 'that it was a fine dance, that th eFour Knights were perfectlyfine, that Jo-Mary Bell was fine .

There was also a dance hel din the Brock Lounge for grads, jalums, faculty, and the ubiquit-ous, Friends of the University .As I belong to none of thesegroups, I couldn't get in to thedance, but I am sure that it wa sperfectly fine .

Lost—Would the person wh ofound a wallet containing somemoney and several importan tpapers in the Chem . Bldg. lastFriday be kind enough to returnat least the papers, which are o fgreat importance to their pre-vious owner, to Mike, AL . 2454 -R, 3964 W . 19th .

Wanted — Riders from Wes tEnd, 8 .30's Mon . to Saturday .Phone PA.-7178 .

Lost--Brown brief case, con-tains Commerce Texts and notes . PAGAN PIGSPhone Bill Watson . CE . 7925 .

Michael Matthews, Perennia lLost—Man's wrist watch, ex- Freshman : "Don't ask me, I ha dpansion band . Phone EM .4735 .,

1 to stay home and slop the hogs . "Wanted — Experienced sten owill type essays, etc . Reasona b le!

IIappenstance Broomlean ,rate: . 4574 West 14th . Phone! ilor: "Jesus, what aAL . 3527-R .

shoul d j

j_

Wanted—Ride to University VSD . ' 'for 8 .30 lectures, from vicinit yof 33rd and Dunbar . Phn . Colin ,KE . 3841-L .

WANTEDYour old double breasted sui t

. to be made into a smar tnew single breasted model November 2 3with the new trim notch lapel .

UNITED TAILORS549 Granville

PA . 4649

POSING in typical UBC style is President

Kenzie is holding the sign presented to hi mN. A . M. MacKenzie and members of the fa-

by a student in recognition of his comin gculty soccer team who played student coun-

trip to Ottawa for the National Conferenc ecil during half time of the Old Thunder-

of Canadian Universities where he is ex -birds vs. the present 'Birds . Doctor Mac-

pected to ask for more Federal aid .

"THIMK or THWIM " a satire on world af-fairs. It was one of the many floats that in-vaded downtown Vancouver Saturday . Most

shoppers thought it was the P .N .E. startin gearly or a raid by the Vitcoria Chamber o fCommerce .

GAY PAGANISMFrom the Brock Main Lounge

UBC's racoon-coated, ukuelele -

CLASSIFIE DNOTICE S

Expert Typing — Theses, Re-ports, Essays, etc. Mrs . P . Down-ing, 3175 E. 20th, phone DE.3573-L .

Thrift Sale . Better rummageat Youth Training Centre, Acaedia Camp, at 11 a .m . on Friday, ' GA YNovember 9th .

.PAGAN BAL L

For Sale — 1940 StudebakerSedan with 1949 rebuilt engine ,passed Vancouver safety test .Will take any reasonable offer .Phone Ray at AL . 1751 L .

Coaching for exams in Frenchand German by experiencedteacher . Phone KE . 4815-M .

Typing and mimeographing- -Apex Typing Service . Mrs . FM. Gow. Moderate rates . Ac -curate work . 4456 West 10thAvenue . Phone AL . 3682 .

French lessons by French tea-cher, conversation . grammar,literature . Phone after 6 p .m . ,CE . 4959 .

Lost—Plastic raincoat in Brockon Friday, 12 .30 - 1 .30 . Pleasereturn to AMS office in BrockHall .

PAGANS POLLE D

Students polled by Ubysse ystaffers had this to say abou tthe weekend .

Jerry Brown, Arts 9 : Bloody-goodbloodygood - hoohoobloody-good .

Sandy Ross, Gay Paganism 4 :"I didn't go, I had to stay hom eand study ."

Jan -mess . I sure

have stayed with the

Barnacle Bal l

The UNTD's annual Barnacl e

DR . JOHN B . ROSEBOROUG H

DENTIST2130 Western Parkwa y

Behind the Canadian Bankof Commerce

University Boulevar dPhone ALma 3980

Ball is scheduled for Novembe r23 at IIMCS Discovery .

Feature of' the ball will betwo-count them, two bars . "Tra-ditionally a good party'' said on espokesman . He added that ser-vice connections were not neces-

j sary and that anyone was wel-come .

"SOLID HARMONY" was provided bythe Four Knights at the mammoth ball that

at which surprisingly enough UBC won.helped celebrate Homecoming Week . It was

augmented by a parade and football game

Council Urges WUSAction For Hungary

War ReelsFeaturedBy- FilmSoc

Noon-hour amusement thi s

week is provided by U .S . propo-

ganda films of World War II .

A great deal of history is cover-

ed by these films, which are

authentic newsreel footage on al l

phases of the fighting .

Their coverage of historica l

events of a not very distant past

is of a definite interest to History

students. They were intended t ocreate hatred towards the Ger -

Mans in newly recruited soldiers .

The U.S . was an ally of Russi a

at the time of their making, and

they provide unconcious humor .

Their showing is a campus in-stitution .

Tuesday, Wednesday, and Fri -day are the days for the show-ing of the films, Admission i s10c or by pass .

(The following letter wa swritten by AMS president, Do nJabour to Dr . Milolos Udvardy ,head of the Vancouver Hunga-rian Liberation Committee inresponse to Dr . Udvardy's , re-quest for AMS-sponsored aid .—Editor) .Dear Dr. Udvardy :

On October 29th, the Stu -dents' Council considered you rrequest concerning a Hunga-rian Students' Relief Drive togreat length . While being verymuch in sympathy with the po-sition they might now be in ,the Council decided not to tak eany personal action at this tim ebut would press the World Uni-versity Service committee t oinvestigate the possibilities ofsending aid to Hungary .

The situation has both a hu-manitarian and political poin tof view. We considered it bes tto wait until the political na-ture of the Revolution was bet -ter clarified before we decide don any action . On the humani-tarian side, we have not in th epast made any special effort t ohelp students who are in nee dof medical aid and clothing ,

There are a great many stu-dents in the world who have agreat need, but if we acted onthis basis we feel we would besponsoring w e l f a r e drive severy month .

At Monday night's AMS_meeting Students' Council . ,

(1) Approved a World Uni-versity Service Committee tosponsor a drive for clothin g

AMS At A Glance

RomanStudentsProteststudents demonstrated in th estreets of Rome, Monday after -noon, demanding U.S . interven-tion in I-Iungary .

I am sorry that at this tim ewe can not do more for you ,but I wish you good luck i nyour other endeavours .

— DONALD JABOU R

we have decided not to tak eany personal action at this time .The matter has further been re-ferred to the Undergraduat eSocieties committee on Charit yDrives, and they will decide b ynext Monday whether any indi-vidual or group will be allowedto canvass on the campus .

(3) Wrangled over Council' sresponsibility concerning th edefacing of the "Three Forms "sculpture on the Libraty lawn .President Jabour enunciate dhis policy that Council was notresponsible for independent ac-tion taken by students on cam -pus . This summer, he had ex-pressed this view in a lette rwritten to Dr. Norman Mac-Kenzie. Other members of th eCouncil pointed out that stu-dents might lose their autono-my if they didn't accept lia-bility for any vandalism, Afte rlengthy discussion, any state -

(2) Minutes later refuse dpermission to the Hungaria nRelief Committee, headed b yMiklos Udvardy, Assistan tProfessor of Zoology to can -vas the campus for financia laid to patriots . The counci lfretted over "political impli-cations" and "financial diffi-culties of students" in refusin gthe blitz plan which someCouncillors worried would b e"condoning forceful over -

throw of government . "

Thousand s

for Hungarian patriots, provid-

ing delivery will cause no ex-

pense to the committee .

of rioting Italian

PEPMEN FETE CREWAT SPEC/AL RALL Y

Friday noon in the Audito-rium, there will be a Pep Mee tfor the Rowing Team and UDCOlympic athletes .

The free entertainment fea-tures the Jazzsoc Orchestra ,The Four Squares, Ken Ham-ilton and others .

are oppose dto such drives, but we contri-bute 87,400 .00 to the WorldUniversity Service and one o ftheir main functions is to sub -ply academic, health and wcl- 'fare aid to students in need .

iThe Hungarian Revolutio n

It is not that we

crushed early Monday by a nvading Russian task-force .

armed assistanc ePatriots, whoserevolutionary governmen t

Later, the mob of

g nu s

has indeed been more dramatic marched to the Russia nthan any other cause concern- and shouted, "death to the Bus -ing student need in the rest of Mans . 'the world . However, on the' •basis of the reasoning above,

"Pigs, pigs," they chanted .

ment of policy, was deterred .(4) Selected Peter Hero n

new NFCUS chairman .

(5) Listened to an indignan treport that paper cups and tintrays ruined the solemnity ofPhrateres' pledging ceremony .

US CampaignersFace Their Natio n

The climate of a nation will be decided today as millionsof Americans go to the polls to choose between two middle-of-the-road presidential candidates .

Reports from south of the border indicates that Ike wil lbe returned with a Democratic Senate and House of Rep-resentatives .

Odds being quoted on campu stoday favored Eisenhower-Nixon2 to 1 .

CBC Radio and TV will carrysimultaneously all election new sfrom 3.30 on .

Radio CKWX will have a dir-ect wire to Seattle shortly afte r5 p.m . to bring results to Cana -

Stars of the Homecoming Ball ,dian listeners .

The Four Knights, will sing inOther radio stations will also1 return engagement at UDC .have complete coverage of thi s

event .Thursday's Ubyssey will carr y

an analysis of the election re -suits by its political news staff .

One-third of the Senate an d1 the whole House of Representa- will be numbers from their lates tLives are up for re-election,

Capitol Recordings ,Campus political forecasters The Place' the Armouries : th e

state that Eisenhower may be de- price, 25e : the time : 12 .30 tofeated because of Secretary of 2 .30 . Pep Clobbers free .

as_

State John Foster Dulles ' recent 'and many mistakes .

PITMAN OPTICA L

FILMSOC presents "Divid eand Conquer" at noon today .PRIMARY CLUB will meet in 'Ed . room 17, at 12 :30 .

GERMAN CLUB will meeton Wednesday at 8 :00 p.m. i nHL 4 .

• 01.S.C.M. presents Canon Watne y

at noon .01.

N.

MUSIC APPRECIATION Clubwill meet at 12:30 N . Brock Mu-sic Room .

PRE-MED. Soc . presents Dr.J . E . Hotchin speaking on Vir-ology in Physics 202 .

N.

N.

SECONDARY ED . Club meet- 1

ing Wednesday noon in Ed . room19 .

he.

BIOLOGY CLUB presents th e"Arctic Caribou" 8 :00 p .m . i nPhysics 200 . Non-members 25c .

*

*

*ROD and GUN meet in Ills 3 a t

12 :30 .*

HAMSOC sponsors Mr . Espeaking on "Moving

Meters ." All members arecome .

* * *

N

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FILMSO C

at 3:30, 6:00, 8:15presenting the controversia l

OLIVE RTWIST

see ALEC GUINNESS' cen-sor provoking characteriza-tion of Fagan that causedthe film to be banned inthe U.S.

and at noon . . .

WHY WE FIGHTToday

BATTLE O FRUSSIAWednesday

DIVIDE ANDCONQUE R

/2'?#et- Ia,e

— "HARD•ROILED" HARR Y(Ihe demon l urshasia- a ssent)

-4.Clear thinking in lectures mean s

better, more legible note-taking .To think well select a Venu s

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Choose this over-all writing instrumen t--it blends the best in pen and pencil .

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thanks to its hard chrome stee lball point with critical ink control ,

surprising at this price . Writes up to200,000 words, Blue, red, green o r

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Only 35t' .

VENUS PENCIL. COMPAN YToronto 1 4, Ontario

Knights ToRide Agai nFor Campu s

Thursday noon the popula rgroup will be sponsored by th ePep Club in a long concert fora campus audience . Featured in 'the special demand appearance

'TWEEN CLASSES(Continued from Page 1)

LTD .

• Specialists in framestyling

• Prescriptions duplicated

• Safety lenses

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Ground Floor

Vancouver Bloc k734 Granville St.

MA . 0928

MA. 2948

The angry nob, waving flag sand displaying banners, gather- 7(` red front of the United States '

embassy in downtown Borne, an dshouted slogans demanding U .S . I

to Iiuungaria nnewly-formed

SKI TEAM there will be ameeting, for all those intereste din trying out for the girls' sk iteam on Thursday at 12 :30 i nArts 203,

*

*

*CONSERVATIVE CLUB wil l

students present Davie Fulton, M .P . forembassy, Kamloops making his inaugural '

speech in his campaign for th eConservative leadership . Wed-nesday, Nov .7, 12 :30, Arts 100 ,All welcome .

* *Fra-Coi lwcl -

.4 -

THE STORY OF SUCCESS ,

Victory Came Easy; Practice Comes Hardoarsmen, and UBC would behard to beat . .

Canada saw its Olympic con-tender ,

SLOPPY START

AT PEA KAfter a sloppy start the Thun-

derbird eight battled to the lead Victory came sweet for th ewith a driving sprint. But the Vancouver crews and they look -boys knew they were not at ed forward to a week long res ttheir rest and could see their before the gruelling road to th elead being c :lollenged and short Olympics. It was a week of

!public receptions, photographs ,New York publicity and Home -coming . They were Canadia nchampions and they celebrate dlike champions . But after oneweek, they wanted to get bac kinto the shells .

They had to — Olympic com-petition is tough .

Varsity XV TakeOver First Place

By BRUCE ALLARDYCE

Varsity 's rugby XV took over undisputed possession offirst place in the Miller Cup standings Saturday when theydefeated Kats 16-3 at Lower Brockton .

ened .With worts of inspiration

booming from bowman Fil Kue-her, veteran strokesman Lauri eWest eased the crew into a lon grhythmical stroke . The powercame on and UBC slid awayfrom the eastern eights .

The crew was at its peak an d

- It was the first victory byUBC over Kats in two years ,as Kats were undefeated las tyear . Hugh Barker opened thescoring for the 'Birds, kickin ga penalty try, and Gerry Mc -Gavin converted to make thescore 8-3 at the half .LONG PASS

Gerry Sinclair put his drop -kick to work in the secon dhalf, taking a long pass-out fro mTed Hunt and kicking a drop -goal for 3 points . Jack Maxwel lran 30 yards down the sidelinefor a try and Hugh Barker kick-ed a penalty goal .

Braves easily defeated Bar-barians for their third straigh twin at Douglas Park, trouncin gthe Barbs 17-3 .MAY WIN

Ex-Brits handed the Toma-hawks their second setback o fthe season, winning 1 1.6 at Doug-las-West, and the newly forme dteam, the Papooses, lost a goo dgame to Rowing Club 25-8 . Red-skins did not play when a Bur-naby XV failed to show up, an dthey may win by default .

John Turner scored three try sfor the Braves and Merlin Howestallied twice in their 17-3 wi nover Barbarians . Marc Bell con-verted once .TWO GAME S

Ralph Bagshaw and Row Ma-son both kicked penalty goalsfor the Tommies against Ex -Brits, and George Saarich an dMike Engels both scored tri pfor the Papooses.

The name of the touring teamwhich is to play in Vancouverthe week of April 24 has beenreleased just recently. The tour-ing side will be the Barbarians ,

Apply for our Passport

to Better living at

your nearest Branch of th e

Bank of Montrea l

••

MERLE C . KIRBYManage r

Your Campus Branch in the -Administration Building

The difference betweenSecond Best . . .

. and Best is often the balanc ein your Savings Account

maze of publicity for the Brock-ville, Ont. crew that had me twith great success at the Henle yRegatta just a few weeks befor ethe trials . According to reports ,the Ontario four would wineasily and UBC was hardly a

At the gun, the Varsity boa tcame away with a smooth start ,punching out a fast 45 strokesper minute, and the boys wer enever seen by the eastern crew s

The UBC Men's Grasshockey lost a 3-2 decision to the Cardi-

teams managed two wins in nals .

three games on Saturday. AtSouth Memorial Park, Varsity In soccer, ° the Varsity squa ddefeated Vancouver City 2-1 . At whipped the Stanford IndiansBrockton Point the spirited UBC 9-1 . Colin Arnott was the bi gGolds upset North Shore 2-1 . scorer with four goals . BruceOn the campus the UBC Blues Ashdown followed with three

again. At the halfway mark, i twas a seven-length lead on asteady 38-40 stroke and at thefinish line, it was back to a hard45 for a ten-length victory an da world record .

fic'.ent Varsity four .!length victory woncrews fr :. m Ottaw a

on the course for the eights com-petition; one race between ourVarsity, St . Catherines and Tor-onto Argonauts. St . Kits wasthe eastern "big gun," Argoswere a powerful dark hors eeight selected from 120 proven

a team of internationals selecte dfrom England, Ireland, Scotland ,Wales and France .

They will play two games i nB. C. gainst a B .C. all-star XV ,one in Vitcoria, and one unde rthe lights at Empire Stadium.

Birds Win •Swim Meet

By KEN WEIB E

Football wasn't the only sporUBC won on Saturday .

Peter Luszteg's swimmin gcrew stroked their way tq 1

three-point lead over thei rclosest rival to win an exhib ition swim meet over three otherclubs at Empire Pool on Satu rday .WON RACES

Although the meet featurewomen's events, Varsity copiled their 50 winning points ientering only the men's even tThey won all the races they etered with the exception of t hbutterfly event, which was woby Cliff Walker of VASC.

Vancouver YMCA gained seand place with 47 points ; NeWestminster YMCA placed thi rwith 28 points, and VASC tra ied with 5 points .UBC STARS TOPS

Most of the top performan cat the meet were turned inUBC stars . Bob Bagshaw swain two winning relays and wthe 110 yard freestyle . DoKilburn (co-captain with B ashaw) and Tim Louis placed fi rand second respectively in tbackstroke .BRIDE FIRST

Mike Bride, Don Brown aArt Burges placed first, th iand fourth in the breaststr oDave Taylor won the 55-yafreestyle and Dennis Fiewalker placed second in the bterfly event .

Three freshmen who s wvery well and helped boostteam to fiat plane are frcesty lDoug Mayne, Al Dick an dBrodie .EMPIRE POOL CLOSE D

Since the Empire Pool wil lclosed this week, Coach Lus zannounced that the tea mpractice at YMCA pool T hday noons and Tuesday n iand at Crystal Pool Mo nnights .

Anyone interested in joi nthe team should contac tYoung ,

(This is the second in a seriesof articles on UBC's Olympi crowing crew. The next articlewill appear in Friday's paper) .

By DAVE MANSON

mighty Brockville . This was a"sure victory" for the east .

Brockville wa sThe story of the success of our contender .

secondThunderbird oarsmen in the

.Ideal rowing conditions gracedeastern trials last sur :ner was

The finalsomewhat of a rcp_ai of the dra- tole St . Catharines waters on the climax to th

ematic victory o : ti .e EEC; eight . ; h'y of the trials ; a slight breez e

The two UBC i:rev;s sere un- ; and little water current .tried in any :aajor comb:clitio nsince their training pregremme "SURE VICTORY "started, and although feared , bythe eastern supporters, they The fours were first o nwere never acknowledged astheir record warranted .BIRDS LOST

The eight was runner-up t othe world champion Penn crewin 1955, but eastern Canada wa sstill skeptical of the UBC 8'spower .

The Bird four was lost in a

peg .the y

water ; the Birds heated against

Afternoon saw a slight

seemedinspired

en anti -and con -

a disappointed

It was threeeasily overand Winni -

chop

AND THEY'RE OFF. It was a great

year. Varsity compiled 50 points in theday for the Varsity swimming club as

racing, diving and relay events .they won their first meet of the new

Weekend Sports In Briefand Fred Green and Felix As -soon each tallied one . Ned Arv-ery beat UBC goalie Clive Hughsfor Stanford's lone counter .

-di:

*

*

In golf, Gordie Mundle wo nthe low gross prize in the Home -coming contest with an 83 eigh-teen hole total .

Thunderbirds Win First Gam eOf Season; Wildcats Victims

Kronquist Stars

In Final ContestIt was a great day way back in '47. The 'Birds field boss,

Bob Murphy, completed 25 forward passes as UBC dumpe dthe Lewis and Clarke Pioneers 27-7 before 3,500 homecomingspectators .

Then in '51 when UBC was fly in the fourt h

still a small settlement out in the Central ha dwilds of Point Grey, the 'Bird sgave 5,000 screaming student sand alumni an exhibition of foot -ball that they would never for-get as they turned the Home-coming fesivities into a riot bywhipping the Central Washing -ton Wildcats 20-12 .

ROY JAKANOVICH gets set to pounceon Central Washington halfback Bu dSnaza (carrying the ball) in Satur-day's Evergreen Conference game a tVarsity stadium. Mike Williams (46 )and Tom Toynbee (77) rush in t o

oopmen Get Two

eekend VictoriesBy RALH CROIZIER

Lady Luck was riding with the U .B,C . Thunderbirds

ver the weekend as they eked out a couple of very close wins .

Friday night the Hoemcoming grads were the victims .

ng in experience, but short in wind, they blew a 21-16 half -

me lead to lose 47-46 .ett, is interested, there were som ereal finds in the faculty lineup .One was tricky forward, Dr .Ralph James, who scored th ewinning goal . The other was asure-handed goal-tender by thename of Dr. Norman MacKenzie .

SERIOUS?

Saturday night things weremore serious when the 'Bird sfaced Clover Leafs of the Sen-ior A City League . Despite avery weak offence, 'Birds edge dthe even weaker Leafs 36-34 .

U.B.C . jumped into an earl y9-2 lead, but weakened in th esecond-quarter to lead only 25 -24 at the half . Points were ata premium in a lack-luster sec-ond half . After dropping behin d29-25, the 'Birds rallied in th elast quarter to finally go ahea don Skip Montgomery's baske twith five minutes left .

SHOOTING POORFor the 'Birds, top scorer was As the score indicates, 'Birds 'ok-shot artist Laurie Witch ; shooting was way off . They hi tith ten points, and the hero less than 25'7; from the flooras Barry Drummond, whose and just over 50

at the free -e-hander with 12 seconds left throw line .oke up a see-saw battle. Mel- i

Coach Jack Pomfret didn' ts with seven and Ron Webber think the performance prove d

ith six points were Grads high anything one way or the other .orers .

"We let all the boys play an dO MATCH got a good look at some of theDespite their hijinks, the bas- new ones," he commented .tbalie 's almost lost the sho wa half time soccer game be- '

een the Faculty and Students 'until . The dissipated council-

rs were no match for their sci-tific opponents, who humiliat -them 2-1 ,

In .'Use soccer coc i, Ed Luck -

STANDINGSWon-Lost Tied Point s

Western

1 34 0 2CPS

8 0 0 10PLC

4 1 0 8Whitworth 3 2 0 6Western

1 34 0 2Eastern

1

3

1

3Central

1

3

1

3UBC

1 5 0 2

NOW

Now in the year 1956, the'Birds under the coaching of th eenergetic Frank Gnup, explode danother bomb in UBC's bac kyard as . they thumped Centra lWashington 7-6 before Home-coming crowd of close to 1,50 0fans .

For Roger Kronquist, Don nSpence, and Ian and Ron Stew -art, it was a great day to en dfour tough seasons of collegefootball . It was Kronkuist wh otossed the 70 yard pass and I twas Donn Spence who caughtthe pass for the 'Birds lon eTD. And it was Ron Stewart wh okicked what proved to be thewinning point .

TWO PASSES

The 70 yard pass and run playwas one of the two UBC com-plete passes, The other pass wen tfor six yards giving the 'Birds76 yards through the air .

Central marched 70 yards t oscore the first time they got th eball, battering through a leth-argic 'Bird defence for five an dsix yards per carry. The con-vert attempt was wide to th eright, a seemingly unimportan tdevelopment at the time .

NOT UNTIL . . . .

It was not until the secon dquarter that the Varsity squa dbegan to show any spark, andthe 70 yard pass and run playfor a 'Bird TD took the starc hout of the Wildcats .

Not one person in Varsity Sta-dium would have believed thefinal score would be 7-6 . Especial -

quarter whena first down on

the UBC eight inch line .

STOPPED COL D

However, Central fullback JimThrasher was stopped cold, a noffside penalty put Central backon the five, a sweep to the righ twas forced out of bounds on th efour by Kronquist, quarterbackBud Snaza was thrown for a loss ,and an atempted fake field goa land sweep to the left was pile dup by Donn Spence and the'Birds took over on downs o ntheir own 20 yard line .

DESPERATION

Desperation passes and trickplays by Central in the dyin gminutes were foiled by a 'Birddefense which seemed to gro wstronger and more alert everysecond . The gun went as Kron-quist ran out the clock with aquarterback sneak and a roll-ou tto the right .

It was the first Conference vic-tory for the Thunderbirds thi syear, and lifted them into a tiefor last place with Western Wash -ington Vikings .

IN THE END ZONE . . . 'Birdquarterback Kronquist playedthe game of his life offensivelyand defensively: Donn Spenc ecould do no wrong: Mike Wil-liams, Ron Stewart and Jac kHenwood all are officially de-clared 60 minute ball players .They did a hell of a jab .

. . . . Fellows like Roy Jakano-vich, Bill Crawford,and Osca rKreutziger went most of th eway ; and Injun Chuch Kule scame to life too. Final game ofthe year goes here next Satur-day when the Varsity play Seat-tle Ramblers in an exhibitio ntilt .

The wily veterans came u pith a bag full of tricks in atile attempt to make up for theungster's stronger legs .

IG STAL LIn the third-quarter they wen tto a Lance Hudson's famou sig stall ." This maneuver suit -the puffing oldsters fine, but

e 'Birds soon forced them t oart running again .The grads also snuck a ringe rto the lineup . After a fewngaroo jumps, however, h'e

as discovered to be none othe ran Peter Mullens, a real old-mer from Aussie land by wa y

Washington State University .ENN TRIE DFinally, in the dying moments ,ick Penn tried to sneak intoe game as the sixth man. Bu tick has become too large t o

much sneaking and the refer -disallowed his last secon d

sket,

After this look, Pomfret wil lstart cutting the squad dow nto size for the weekend visit toAlbers,' The Athletics are con -

* cakes than last year .but the 'Birds will still needmuch better shooting to kee ptheir budding win streak alive .

help "Jocko." Blocking for Snaza areGuard Dave Tucker (60) and full -back Jim Thrasher (29) . 'Birds tackl eSeattle Ramblers next Saturday fortheir final outing of the year .

—Photo by Dave Wilder

YARDSTICKUBC Centra l

812 3

767227

355

55

First DownsYards Rushin g

Yards PassingPasses Attempte d

Passes CompletedIntercepted by

PuntsAverage Yards

Penaltie sYards Penalized

2 15 1

2581 2414

325

25

For Pure Pleasure. . .HAVE A

Inco Metals at Work in Canada

A Copper is one of the metal sobtained when Inco work-men mine, mill, smelt andrefine the ore.

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C The number of fins in eachradiator depends on coolin grequireai'ents .

D Radiators are assembled ,soldered and painted .

8 out of 10 automobile radiatorson Canadian cars are made from

lNco COPPERE Along the assembly line

in automobile plants, th eradiators are installed oncars and trucks .

Automobile radiators are made almost entirel yof copper. And on Canadian cars, it's almostalways Inco copper. Here's how this copperhelps make jobs for thousands of Canadians:

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Inco produces over 250,000,000 pounds o fcopper a year . And more than half of this coppe ris used by Canadian industries.

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